Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH)

 - Class of 1943

Page 1 of 238

 

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1943 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 238 of the 1943 volume:

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K IQI Wa i f f?Q,YE'2?5-f's Q' -,V 1 '01, D The history of Dartmouth College is f ' 1 I 7 ,YJ 1,-1 . .fje , ' 'H QsY5 A, , r J , K 4 QL 'Iii' ,, w ' '- fm , C'-H' wwf., 1 ' Us 4 'f I - , it , Axim fs- JA, b,T.lt14K, r9 ..,..-,.M ,M V ' n .5 1 ,,, .2 - 6 R , fg,, is Q' M, M we - . rife- f -.M WM ' , ,g ,ay ,ff -ev 'Q , A 2, 2-...M 'V 'Zi' 'fl' t -If y N . NN 91- ,,. X-V W 5' -g x ffx. s- M - ff?-Q' 'T' 'W' N, W, f x., an QWT ilu, ti fl 1, ,' the United States. Since 1770, the College o for freedo name Dartmouth kind of the When tions reach which body. That bomb cut deeply a peaceful blacker ent. way wer Today Slnce a sophomor avesi, ln June, other colleg Cavaliers tram of wagons from and mo t f th D o 'L' ' '1 'fm y i If pfttudufmmu portituof wg mandeti Som' r pemtofmeufjnz annum Q, tttturr5'0 f M tttuetfttetf' f1'0IIlEnldi5aul . Mmostgllelillfm' was held ill lm' M the lterolutiftllr I' 1' ri Army W5 55 1' an and the hlre. As the fifufif Pd whether there 'WU i mouth in the fall 556 But in September T7 Army Ttttllllllg t mouth studmh. npr enrolled in the Army 1 of the Army. Thu mt in dormitories uid Q 5UPtftiS0ti hours. fm activities md mm each student ofa military nature. hmuirimtinnd W iSIl'y he ttteht lhe Ina for this. My ' rigiilsnrmiitm 2 WN. thiud th, F mi tmoulh. xiii Q ll standsb will last f mouth IQONW' That 'lldnnslu w.. ,,,,. ru Q . 54. Y Q . , ,X , S Xx , 5 Xe . NA ' X Y 1Qx,k XY Y gf.. . l vu ll 1 nil llyndl ugh - . lb 1 l ,MU 1 'Hr whit, m 'Ufu5rF1ml5 . LE Wi. Du... f V may-ibm . .0-, 1 M! -tl E14 nr 'M?Tq,,. ' 1 . :wi rl' we buzl 44.9 tmyhhrw .iii 3,8 ,wth Al . , ' Q., 1 lil' . 53941. 1 H :h un ' 1 ... Mr- illk Q 'mt All' jr My YQ vm-4 wah.,- P' 314-uf-:vf.LSug,.a4 as inn 5 and A ffl 'uw fn Mai, '4' 'if lub?-0.1 influx: nloki 3. marina latin-tv I '1r1f!'l!!!l'lli?! .in mi uwn nt M W .jg in SV' .4 WWW K-,,,,,ff,a.,,nrf rw I it -mv W 'md I mir nil 'W' 111 ir ni? 'Q if ,Q uf Jw 1 .nf 7y 92:17 V-' 4 ----...mr ,W wg. -M, .. , .. V- ' -I-,.gv.,. ,, W-' X .x -In Wg.. -- . , ' ' 7 ,,,,,, ...Quran fr 5 I, ...,.-, I -'1 1.1 , 1 , ' .:. 3,-.fwr A 1 , ., 'r f ,V 1 ,, Q ' l .. -aww '1,..:,., A '- ,,, 'j? 'f- v-A .mv -- W ,, ' , A ' . .....,'2:j.c-.-qu,,,:,,,, . .1 ,A ,.., Nui ---.T 2' fl.. ,,. ' f f . 1 A A l gif ' ff y . FS 'Q sfff? , f, f V, .,'. Q f---- . ... Q :D . . n A 'hA -Q ......A.,, 9 111 3111111 CS prepared to fight again. A few weeks after the declaration of war, a large portion of the student body enlisted. Those who remained in College de- manded some form of military training and this was provided at the ex- pense of the trustees. Almost at once, over one thousand students enrolled .in a military organization which drilled as much as four hours a day. A A lllilitary Stores Course was instituted by Tuck School under the supervision of the Ordnance Division of the War Department and five hundred men from fifty different colleges attended this school for periods of six weeks. Almost all extracurricular activities were curtailed and Commencement M 372 was held in May, recalling the action taken by Eleazar Wheeloclc during! ,rr f A the Revolution. In June of 1918, a Training Detachment of the Nationa 1 lll Army was sent to Hanover for a course in telephone woi2 5,,,,r4aw - - i l v p and the like. ' J W 1 - V As the College year 1918-1919 approached, there was some doubt as .a M whether there would be enough students to warrant reopening Dart- , 1 mouth in the fall. lllost of the men of college age were in the armed i . X 1' But in September 750 students appeared and by October.,NQ5:, ' ii it'al K Army Training Corps had been established. Six hundred and ti , I by A mouth students, representing all the men over eighteen in enrolled in the Army and were subject to all the discipline and regu tio n A . i'i' of the Army. These men received the regular Army pay, ate toge f-1 if in dormitories which were treated as barracks, and studied during strictly ,,? ,iy ,g fu.. .W ,f supervised hours. Fraternity houses were closed and all extracurricular A activities ceased completely. ln addition to this regular College program, each student enrolled in the Army plan was required to take two courses of a military nature. a The second war class now graduates from Dartmouth. These men have ' been taught many things. They have been taught Economics and Chem- xx... ' istry and Sociology and English and Physics and Psychology. Now they will be taught the meaning of America. They will not receive a mark or a diplo- ma for this. Their only reward will be freedom, the first appreciation of which, Dartmouth, with its spirit of independence and freedom by means of liberal arts, has given them. The light of liberal thought, the fight for the right, will never cease. That thought stands behind the flag of our nation, it stands behind the principles on which Dartmouth College rests and they . u will last forever. That is why there is meaning behind, the words, nDart- mouth Undyingf' . GILBERT R. M.-. QABRIEL, JR. if' . .wg -il ' , A e - . y p . w '- , L . ' ' s Hfiiif' 1 . ' ,, 1' rf yd: 5 , f ' . ... - . N 5,5 e , , LQ-15 ' wif' .e v P N 5 I X , ,f , , , 2 ,Q , X, wx 4 Y Q f N' 5 Z i QQ I , X fx , 1, M 1 W f ,, H , K A . Q K - ,MQ Ex x K f ix 4 1,7 f V f , X WM, I 5. W V. , EA -Jfgw, Mk V 7 ES fqgiigikfgi xg K ,Q X W V7 N3 - 9 ' . , ' , N , X , 'Mag f Q ' . ,f H NWN ' Y x Q xl-wa x' A Y ,V an N . , f :aff dlljb 'v AW' K f k h ff fx W7 X X 1 f f f ff DARTM UTH NAM x if na. 4..f,.4. lK? 9 1 JW , .ll1lmIln.W,, , ..., , ,,,,, ., ' ,M ,,,. , ,,:,gg ll 1 ,.. ' .V . X f f -X - wxwuwwldmva-1-mY . --3-, A r x Y fa. W.M--MW, .W ..,,, . W-N.,-X T XA xx e f xf X E9 ei f ivZ W 1 N Q -.f xv ff aw a Za ffl? xp 1 x QV at K I 'V ,V I kj. k..l V57 'Q V Clk' Q90 . QQ? ,ag fb? s Qgisgf. Quay fgilikrk N -Q Q . 4' Wav?-5 'W 0? fo, 'Y - 'iff 0 4' 0' Q: HX 9- ww A Mai. ,igfx Q5Lii,1?' if f.5,KQXg7 fxvff' Ak Z fp X I ' -f K ,QQXCJ5 499, QQXXM3 453966 ,gig fr - Q -Q25 , R f' I Q35 X gig!! 63 .QS xx' ,,,fTf:'f w K W , ,A . f, -H , QM KS, xv' xwff ajlbf f,S,Wf A qgrgkla :X 'Y ,W x 2, JK, wifiw 'ff' 1 fir' ' ' 944 if, f ,I xv Hf x fin' o, mf Sm 111 - N lllgkanv- bquantum Indlan Umt foffidfll Navy Pholuj I ia E l L O 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 A FRU UNE IO JANUARY i firearm-MMyNsf',Q Lg ' I if x I if V ,, EN C ,xk, , f R Q f d 0 Q 0 W, L 51 A GVICWO tu ent Activities A A x I iw-,ix ,X Q . Iziztigi I . 'W' 7 ' It Was true that there Wasn't the Shar tan in the air that -- - I I . J u 1 I V I. A 'Km p g ..,, Q ' A Af,4 C We found in the fall, nor the crisp cold of the Winter, but to the , , ' ' f ' A , 1082 Dartmouth men returnin for the summer semester on Ma .1 A ww 4, I, S Y fig p A I 25th, 1942, the College seemed to be about the same. Perhaps K ' SQQQ? the campus Was a little greener and the Weather somewhat warmer A ,pw - Q - 5 p vp U I I . . . I 14,3 'Q s I 1 ' ,Q ...surely there were a great many iamihar faces missing. No H SQ? 4rs,LL2i4gy5 , so ,q,,QT one could be quite certain what the summer school session held f ,, , A Oi f ' e.e in store for them, but ever one seemed uite ositive that there u ty, to y. , , Y 01 D 5 I 1 s A44 ' 2 ld b th v ' t N' ht 't h f th p 3 W lbxt p cou never e ano er arie y ig qui e as muc un as e A ff's5f23j.W W X one held in Webster Auditorium on lNIarch 24th, at which the Band - 5. A I A and the Green Colle ians la ed and the Whole show was ke t QM X 'f,qNa,ff g p y p 1 i 4gAy ifS I A running in a swift humorous key by the Master of Ceremonies, ' sg, CZ? 'ififvsf A '4f3's own Doc Fielding. A Q iid? K . - . , uywssmfyi? AW if 4 As the summer students swarmed off from the trams at Wliite 'Iliff' fi? I- 441- River or drove the not-so-many cars ast the Hanover Inn, the '., 1 'faqm ffm Aff' 2451 'iff . ' p . y ii f,g,5f9fs',.f24fS riff 3 ',sy,f 4,53 still remembered the night the Sports Banquet was held in the 4 . X f af . Zfgm N As . 3,5 ' 5,76 , 0545? is ,gi uw ' Inn. It was a grand banquet with good food and good speeches. 5 gg! ff 'i?lQs,,Z,-I i f It was the banquet at which Whitey Fuller gave a stirring talk 'Z ' A ' 4 si Z A W , t - - - - We 'C 6? fi? 6, fm? 4 Veg? ix is and the night that the Indian Flying Unit at Squantum was con- , 2125, N ff K A tw .Y as if rr? ,l ,S 1 -.-: U I . '5,gf,'93Z,, 504124 W! gfw X7 pi c'7.y?!fQif X 1 ' f ceived. Then there had been the frenzied, last-minute rehearsals Q W I 4 f I A W , f , - - - 7 I ,,f?,,g, Wffkgyiw 123 A '71 for the Interfraternity Glee Club Contest in the spring, Watched X My q Y fg3L fg6f:, X Q 21 , X X V gfyvqy V 1 gfzp H Q ff ' Z ,wg 'I' w A , ' . . m V' , I .552 1 ' WV1nners of Interfratermty Glee Club Cup Doctor M.C. IQ,-1 J f, I , , 3 C f 1 Jima we by hundreds, admired by Wandering mongrels and won by the Sigma Chi's. Certainly no one had forgotten the whirl-Wind, Lap for Palaeopn campaign complete With sound trucks, flyers and speeches. . .not to men- tion The Dartmoutlfs stern reprimanding editorial, As a gag, the 'Lap for Palaeop' campaign is great. As a method of election it is dangerous if only because cam- paigning may foreshadow fraternity politics which would harm both Palaeopitus and the College. . . Just before the end of the Spring Semester the Col- lege had witnessed the traditional and digniiied Wet Down l' ceremony and the installation of Paul Parker as the President of Palaeopitus. Spring sports consisted largely of baseball, but if the results were to be any prediction of the summer,s scores, Dartmouth's hopes should not have been raised too high with a 17-7 loss against Temple University and a double header clash with Columbia on April Q5th in which Columbia Won the first game, 3-2, and Dart- mouth Was victorious in the second 11-3. Unfortunately, X f- AP Jim Olsen takes the 'Palaeopitus pledge 0 Jones goes in for a long stretch 'if , wg 'I O I I I I I I I V I ,, 1 l aw Mazza most of the undergraduates could not be present at the impressive Graduation of 444 grand old Seniors at the Bema on June 10th to hear President Hopkins' inspiring and confident Words, F or men of your gen- eration more and greater opportunities to live import- antly will be available than have ever been offered to any generation of mankind in human history. Later the College read that 8975 of the Graduating Class had immediately enlisted in some aspect of the War ef- fort. Even while the incoming summer students Were deep in these reveries, the Physical Education Department was demanding a demonstration of physical prowess from every student. Ingenious tortures were set up on I 65' 7:55 B'etter than 5:-L5 anyhow 11100 Herb Westis class is informal and fun 2:30 The expertsw off for an afternoon game of doubles withal!- EIMMIQI5 aaaimmma M5 3 1Q 4. ...... . af Q 8:00 Shadowy Hgures enter lVIcNutt 10:00 One should say Yes!', 10:30 Breakfast in Allens for first class 4:30 VVhy do '43's get all the Queens? 8:30 Study in Baker,s Tower Room completes a Dartmouth Day l13l X ii' Wi Saff- V 'KAW' llurcllmg holds no horrors for Hurry brxeger 4 , OlltSt2lllCllIlg members of the Glee Club gather around Director Cobleigh to rezlcl of their Special Awarclw by Fred lllaring L14 I '51 .x' 4 '4 E O I O 0 A O O Memorial Field which included a 100-yard dash which had to be run in 13 seconds, a military obstacle course, and a rope climb that defeated 364: students' best efforts. Next, tired, but jubilant, Glee Club members returned from a memorable trip to New York where they had represented Dartmouth in Fred Wa1'ing,s College Glee Club Contest. Bowing before the audiencels cries of Take it off, U they had presented a semi-strip tease act in ad- dition to their singing, Carnegie Hall notwithstanding. The audience appreciated Dartmouth humor and Fred Wariiig liked their performance so well he presented them With a special prize for showmanship. But everything added up, it was a more serious group of College men that returned for the summer. They passed up 'gsnapn courses for such tough ones as Math 3A-LLA, Physics and Chem- istry, . .all the courses that would help them prepare themselves for the services. Many students joined the Army Enlisted Reserve l15l a eilhaw Don Burnham breaks the tape ahead of Leslie Mac-Mitchell Stairs, music, warm grass, spell summer Sunday night hand concerts But ump, his foot was off the ba mn S K I , why, pq! ,dwg I U61 like ? .... Corps, a newly created division similar to the Navy and lVIarine Reserve Corps Which already contained numerous Dartmouth undergraduates. Sports occupied a prominent place in the summer's activities as the baseball team Won its first game of the season against Windsor to the tune of 5-3, While the Corinthian Yacht Club Won the famed MacMillan Cup. Dartmouth's foremost runner, Don Burnham, beat ICLLA champ MacMitchell to the iinish in the mile run adding more honors to Dartmouth's athletic fame. There was an active Fraternity Baseball League playing all summer on the campus Whose first match was with Psi U and Theta Chi. The long summer evenings were not dull for there Were Jam Sessions, Band Concerts and Blackouts. On the steps of Robinson Hall, Doc Fielding held forth, bringing the toWn,s hidden talent to light. At a final gigantic Jam Session to end all Jam Sessions, held by Webster Hall, over 60 entertainers were present. Hun- dreds of townspeople and students turned out every Sunday night to lie on the Warm green campus grass and listen to the Band's renditions. There were many blackouts, some of them coming off with perfect coordination While others Were ragged and lam Session tonight Con steps of Robinsonj Dartmouth's Navy T .nf 3 pi ' I Q . p jr is 5 X Q Q Ili . 'ei A comes through at Harvard 17 ' he cw! ' -f 1- . ,ff ' . w 1,iI? .-lg., . H 1 I -ff 'll l f if s af eg 'fff Nz: Xxx! -f T A E . 1 ' JL' ,I , ,xliqffg ,QA ' l, S fl, x Wim , I, aj :I-V4 i l l 1' 1' N disorderly, such as the time a watchful warden was punched 111 the nose by an irate cigarette-smoking student. The big news broke on June 18th. The Dartmouzflz confirmed the rumors that 1000 Navy officers were to train at Dartmouth be- ginning July 15th. They were to take over Topliff, Ripley, Wood- ward, Smith, New Hampshire, and College, students in those ClOI'ITl5 were dispossessed. Mr. Porter, dispenser of rooms, became an all- important figure. Thus Dartmouth College felt the war br0U8hl forcefully to its doorstep. It was good for Dartmouth men to talk with these serious-minded Naval Officers, to watch them eating in Commons, studying in Rollins, and marching up and dowll Hanoverls shady streets in their precise columns. They brought a forceful, quiet, determined air to Hanover and all Dartmouth was the better for it. U81 Navy men play baseball ou the campus 19 Hep, two, three, four CK fag M . 5 .5 ' X X N 2 sl-H9 Nm, ,X Y' A - U' . WJ-5K 5 qlfiifza 'Y 2 E p in Inqui 6 has 'Wes -are I , A I O ? o o o 0 0 All was not grim. . .there was an amusing incident when VVarner Willcox and date, too preoccupied with each other to steer their boat, plunged over Wlilder Dam smashing their small craft to bits but escaping unscathed themselves. A Nazi spy claimed the Dart- mouth Alumni Award for 'coutstanding character but officials hastily pointed out that there Was no such award presented. The distinct odor of cached gasoline after rationing had begun prompted Chief of Police Ferguson to threaten gasoline hoarders With prompt official action. Three students Were fined and all the remain- ing gasoline immediately evaporated. Green Key sponsored the first summer dance in its history. Down into the Gym streamed half a thousand men and dates to hear Claude Hopkins and his orchestra. lllany Navy men and their Wives also were present at the dance. The Gym, transformed into a colorful sea of blue- white streamers, flags and fraternity seals, Was admired by every- one. Even the inevitable Green Key rainstorm could not prevent its success. A final accounting of Summer Sports placed Gile Hall as the Remember when Boat Over Green Key weekend Sigma Chi's held house party and dates date and lfVarner Willcox plun ed over dam? 5. K muah 11' 1 so ,C - ...- sw ,pn sv' ., if ai' ...sl if V oi a-' 5 lflll 4-4' he Am Q21 fl A xx J , X-C 6 l M Interdormitory Baseball Champions and Sigma Chi, after an ex- citing final game With the Dekes, as the World Champions in a strongly contested VVorld Series baseball contest. The only thing left to report in the summer semester was the final examinations in the Gym, but We don't talk about them. '6For the immediate future, the increasing cultivation of the liberal arts must make Way for the development of capacity in the applied arts, U read President Hopkins, Fall Convocational Speech in 'Webster Hall on September 14, 1949. It served Warning on the 1984 students gathered there Qrepresenting the lowest registra- tion of Dartmouth College in Q0 yearsj that all their efforts must be devoted toward a single objective. , .preparation for service in the nation's armed forces. No man who is not seeking. ., enlargement Cof the mind, heart and soulj has any right to be in College at this time. Conversely, no man Who is genuinely seeking such enlargements need feel any doubt as to his right to free conscience in delaying his entrance into the armed forces Q , Z W ' XX.. 'Y W, :M , 'sf QW ft .QM H , .Wf 2 , 1 f 2 Zh ,Q 1 7 1 f 1 S Y si f , Mu? 2 M 7 , , I, 2 ,w,f,X 'W ynk W X x W, Jw ' 'f ag 7 fw l? W If Y 5 1 f Z 5.f,,W, KMA if 'vw ff! f. f, ,f 'f 0 2 ? f4,f,,,' , f , H f if ff' ww Nw , f 2 4 amy ,ff , f' ,V X Z X 2 ? 2 1 4 X 4 1 2 f Zf ,WM HMM ww ww. ,Wa ,Mwffff X 'J K , ww ,wfff ,Mm 'Wm wwf. My . ,, 'Ny gf. 5 'iz XX 'Q-Q X. M 5 X N WM W ',M2.MWxf!M,M mt , I X W Wf WIWWWWXWQM.,:::4..:.X,Xg::rf X-91.11 2,1 -- My n,:f..::,.:1, 3 Z WW -WW -zwfffwmwmWMMff-W,MWw.wfa.wwMWm.wW.....W MWM f,..U, , fl. , NX, ,xv , Xww: Z ,, ,X . .X V - Www ' X ' ,, X- iz' ' X Q , Q LX . X4 Q 1 , .. - X. -X X 4 W Q .Fx X X Wig 3 X X X X. :ef .X 4 X MXX X X .. Q S gl .. ,. XA X1 X X2 . My X Q2 ' ' k Sim Q5 X X 3 4 ' 4 Q . Sa X ZQX -X X XX i. f X fx x Q9 sq f 'f XXX li Aw if . XX v X QW! ' X, X5 . X X X X X XXX Q XX . X. ' , X . Q wg XS QQ ' . X ' ii ,, , XX -Q X ,X 1.0 - NX X. N N 'xiii-ez. fees? mmwz , WX X XX X 3, X3 N9 -SRM X X-XX. XX wx 'X X -XX X ' f gk- . .. X ---X . ., www ,. QQ: M wwXXrXsQ7r.1'11XvX ' . X -f XX XXX' X ,, . x W' F ' A -XI' XX-XXW 'W'XXKX X ' M XXKXXYXYEKXY XT XX X X XXX , . ,,A.X,w. X' . XR. K V X, .X .X 1 S X, X XXX X K- XX f- .. X. , QS .N .z X .N ifS:frQXNRws1vXi,:g..,Xg1QtzLTg:qit.exfvx- ' - S, Xp- 1 S XX N5-X3 XX X9 f K X .XXX X X .X 2 'X X X ,XX X. -X x X' X X . XX - y X XXQQ . X X 'XM M W f l fy 1' ' until specific call is made, continued hir. Hopkins. But the vast majority of Dartmouth men needed no such warning, they were here for that express purpose. They were not trying te live on borrowed timeug they were training to do a dirty job that had to be done in the most efficient and quickest way pos- sible. Even though these 1984 students represented the lowest Col- lege registration in twenty years, there were insuflicient rooms. The Navy,s occupancy of six dormitories necessitated the reopen- ing of old Hallgarten Hall, situated in the rear of Topliif and used as a storage building for many years. However, the new inhab- itants of Hellgate,, bore the Navy men no grudge. VVe'll trans- plant the delicate flower of culture to Hallgarten, U they boasted, stirring Crosby up to a white heat of anger. To add to the confusion, the Freshmen, aided by their not so green brothers who had already attended one semester during the summer, took complete charge of the annual Football rush. . . v 4 H at w Q Wi W Z W V if . ...Am...,,,j1W Wwm,, Z M x in l24l -4 wi' r Hallgarten threatens to smash all records , K 25 'Q wffflfw Palaeopitus notwithstanding. Like an angry hive of bees they swarmed over the green campus stinging the bewildered and thrice outnumbered '4i5,s into a humilating, record-making six- minute defeat. Then they fell to fighting among themselves while shadow-faced upperclassmen in up-turned collars insidiously urged them to, Try and rush the Nuggett! But in a few hours a bloody, but unbowed, Palaeopitus rose faltering to their feet and restored order. Next the Freshmen attended a reception held in Dartmouth Hall under the auspices of Green Key. Coach Tuss McLaughry showed moving pictures of last year's game while President Hop- kins and Professor Folger suggested the proper attitude to be taken by the Freshmen in the new duties and responsibilities they faced. Later the D.O.C. also held a Rally at which Leo Silberstein was the Master of Ceremonies and movies were shown both by Deborah Bankart and Chick VVebb. I No more riots here Hey, this football rush is funlu says Peter Heggie Give ,em the axe, Chick , I 4 ii mu W C--7 -1-Ugg.- .. , ., ,, I I Q W 0 lu an IW, I , SS' A WN! ! 3 X I kim X M mt f Z fwfw I 9105 ' fi la ef' ,Q jew N2 y T as 104449, fwfu. In a few days, the whole College followed the well-exercised Freshmen in a mass migration to Memorial Field for the second in a series of Physical Achievement Tests. This time most of the passable tests were gone. The 3-mile hike, the baseball throw, the football kick had all been superseded by a more demanding and enervating 440-yard obstacle dash. But speeding past their unlucky companions who had fallen by the wayside, the majority of men reached the finish line in the required time. After scoring all the tests, the Physical Education Department called the general physical ability, good Then the Sophomores held the center of the stage during a four- day rushing period. At the expiration of the strictly-supervised period, the Interfraternity Council announced that Q01 SophO- mores had been pledged with S.A.E. admitting the largest single delegation. Roadwork, wiped out by the rubber and gasoline shortage, held no terrors for these men. On the 17th of September, the second group of Navy ofHce1'S arrived in Hanover. Two days later the Hanover Inn had its liquor license suspended. There was no connection. Civilians not already l28l rf-.. Q-'Q Civilians, like Navy rnen, observe colors Firstlphase of fraternity rushing Just one more push-Surely you can make two i991 fufffwlflffvfai - Wd , observing the seven o'clock colors ceremony around the flag-pole were warned by Commander Stubbs that their participation was expected. A Joint Army- Navy-Marine-Coast-Guard Nlilitary Board held con- ferences answering all inquiries and explaining the requirements of different services both in Webster Hall and individual conferences in NIcNutt. lVIarine Corps Captain Perin nixed men having, allergies, asthma, hay fever or flat feet. We want blithe, debonair fellows. . .not too buxom, 5' he said. Coach Harry Hillman said of Dartmouthls Cross- Country prospects, Prospects are even better than last year during which the squad won all of its meets, took the Heptagonal and placed sixth in the ICLLA meetf' Forty to fifty baseball candidates showed up for the fall baseball practice, according to Jeff Tesreau and they elected Al Barrett as their new Captain. The Tennis team held a series of fall matches in which they beat Nliddlebury by a large 8 to 1 margin. The Soccer team held its opening game against Amherst Point, game, set, match-Cohen! Tommy Dent gives final instructions to Meig's and Price . 1 O G WW X' .Kp A? ax Ai ,sl A --lbs.. ts th-M dropping the game 5 to 0 due to a lack of reserves. The Intramural Department's first scheduled Football game was between D.T.D. and Phi Psi with D.T.D. victorious by a score of 18-7 while the first dormitory game. . .Crosby versus Russell Sage, was won by Cros- by, 38-0. But all these sports were subordinate to the new king -Football. For many weeks before the opening of the Fall term the teams had been going through rigorous training and drills on lVIemorial Field and although their first game-a secret practice against Norwich University on September 21st, showed many defects, the general forecast for the team was favorable. The first chance the general public had to observe our team in action was in Worcester at F itton Field on the follow- ing Saturday when Dartmouth pitted its strength against a highly-rated Holy Cross team. In Hanover, Jim VVells, clear description of the game blasted over D.B.S. and through loudspeakers located all over the town. His voice rose as he enthusiastically described the touchdowns made by Wolfe and Frost and the final victorious score, 17-6. Elmer Stevens' article in The Dartmouth, Why Count Green Out Before the Whis- tle, ', had certainly proven to be prognastic. Next week end a full strength Indian team over- powered a weak hliami squad in the first home game to win by the astronomical figure of 58-7. The following Saturday saw a hard-hitting game. . .an exceptionally Ted Brush snags a long pass during a fraternity football game Captain Ed Kast with Coach McLaughry The band Cin perfect stepj marches on lVIemorial Field 33 7 I strong Colgate team met an undefeated Dartmouth Squad in the second home game of the season. The result-a defeat for Dartmouth but a game whose score of 19-27 does not tell the whole story, the story of a very valiant Dartmouth squad battling against over- whelming odds. The following weekend was the traditional Harvard- Dartmouth game with the after-game meetings at the Statler Bar. Although no longer an official holiday, Dean Neidlinger said that cuts would be allowed. Han- over was almost a ghost town as Dartmouth men watched their team defeat Harvard 14-2. There were still five more games left in the season. Five more op- portunities to add to the team's laurels. Meaiiwliile many social and extracurricular events had taken place at school. Green Key held its fall series of Freshmen Feeds at the Occum Pond Outing Club House and Gile Hall led the list. There had been a Freshman rally sponsored by the twenty newly- appointed Vigilantes to learn Dartmouth songs and cheers. The Players had presented Sherwood Anderson's newest play, The Eve of St. Markn with great suc- cess. fraternity held a huge founding ceremony with a Centennial Banquet in Thayer Hall. Among the speakers were Governor Blood and President Hopkins. A once-great New York Yankee baseball team went down to defeat at the hands of the St. Louis Cardinals Tri-Kaps pose for their Centennial picture in an unpredictable World Series. Sportsman Park in St. Louis saw an over-confident Yankee team take the opener 7-44 only to lose the final four games in New York. Paul Robeson, and Albert Spalding were perhaps the two most widely known musical artists brought to Han- over by the C.O.S.O. in the fall. One kind of condition- ing was represented by the Ski Patrol dance given in Robinson the eve of the College gameg another kind of conditioning was warned of by Captain Stubbs in his statement that all V-5 men would have to take early morning exercises under Navy supervision. This fall's annual Dartmouth Night carried even more meaning and importance for the thousands of Dartmouth graduates scattered all over the globe. Sen- ator Bridges of New Hampshire was the principal out- of-town speaker, while telegrams were read by Professor Foley and a memorable speech was made by Mr. Hop- kins. Previously the President had announced that Seniors would be excused from all elective finals so they might leave sooner for military service. A final report on sport standings was not possible but at press time we knew that the Sigma Chi's had beaten the Dekes to win the Interfraternity Football Contest while Crosby was the victorious dormitory. Art Cohen won his third College Tennis Open Tourna- ment while Stan Rice won the College Golf Champion- ship. Prof. Foley tells Freshmen B stands for Braille l34l A ,IJ Chaperons are surprisingly wonderful people Dartmouth rooters were sadly disillusioned by our team's per- formance in the Yale Bowl when Eli,s men were victorious by a score of 17 to 7. Next week end was Hallowe,en-and Houseparties too. Seven-hundred dates, or witches, as The Dartmoinfh persisted in calling them, found their way up to Hanover. Even a Big Green defeat at the hands of a vastly superior William and Mary team Cscore 35 to 140 and the inevitable rainstorm could not dampen the holiday spirit. Next week saw a change of luck as Dartmouth,s men crushed a weak Princeton squad, 19 to 7. Palaeopitus withdrew the Barrett Cup because of the steady stream of outstanding men into the armed services. It also passed a resolution banning all cars which was accepted by the College authorities in modified form. So all through the fall semester Dartmouth felt the war de- termining all its policies and actions. Although every day brought new problems and uncertainties, the Administration, the faculty and the students were not fearful for the future-they knew of America's growing might, they cheered our men on Navy Day, but they waited impatiently for the time when they would be best prepared to actively join the struggle so that our democratic principles might live and the spirit of Dartmouth be Undying. l l36l ' ':'::. -- - - f- V - 4... . . lff , V ! Xsn-, 'o N C 'n dr. f. 1 .,. uiggifl- 53346 :l.f -1 tal' fx x .s . E55 Qi , fi, .X 'a'.'4'.' .W x .fi li A 13' ' C Ifig, ll.wYLlfT L ,51 ' 'C u .QNX 5.gXw ' J-fx Y L + -P' J Q N . lil IIRGAN 0Ns 1 Q5 5 J Skang and Munroe prove Palaeop men still have a good sense of humor Short-handed The 1943 Palaeopitus served as the Dartmouth Col- lege senior governing body from May, 1942 until De- cember of the same year. It Was, therefore, the first Palaeopitus to be faced with the problems arising from the summer session and the new Naval School. The 1943 group functioned throughout the summer with 12 members, as Olsen, Skaug, and Munroe did not at- tend college at this time. At an early meeting of the organization held in J une, the 1943 Palaeopitus voted to adopt an aggressive and definite policy in regards college affairs, rather than seek to mould undergraduate opinion by exerting individual influence. It was in line with this idea that Palaeopitus Wrote the Administration a letter in July requesting undergraduate representation on certain faculty and administration committees. Although the ultimate end Was never attained in this instance, progress was made. The Naval school at Hanover naturally brought new problems to the fore, and Palaeopitus, in conjunction with the Interfraternity Council, formed a committee which met frequently with navy officials to discuss com- mon problems. A series of athletic contests Was arranged between navy men and college students. The summer Palaeopitus carried on with its more routine activities, regulating freshman activities, assist- Mneck, Parker and Bock road a letter of criticism One of Palaeopitus duties is the policing of the Football Rush vt, Q f il .li f 1 14.01 nlfilwi P211 i 1 4 l A s. Y Palaeopitus Still Efficient ing with draft registration, and registering automobiles. The Hrst Dartmouth summer house-party was the direct result of a Palaeop petition to the Dean of the College. The return of Olsen, Skaug and Munroe brought the membership of Palaeop up to its full quota of 15 as the fall session opened. Walter Powers, treasurer of the group and an outstanding member left college at this time, his place being taken by Frederick Stockwell. George B. Mrinroe was elected treasurer for the re- mained of the semester. The fall semester saw Palaeopitus continue to carry on with its traditional activities as well as assuming some new ones. The freshman activities, the frosh- sophomore rush, the rallies before football games, the appointment of the 1945 Vigilantes-these were some of the things that kept the group busy during Septem- ber and October. The 1943 Palaeopitus met with considerable success in many Of its ventures, it failed in others. It was never afraid to take a bold stand on a campus issue, although it was well aware that it often invited violent criticism by such boldness. It met new problems with intelligent solutions, and carried on its traditional activities with assurance and efHciency. Much was left undone-but there are other classes to carry On. PAUL L. PARKER President PETER HEGGIE Vfee Preszflcnt ROBERT WILLIAMS Seereta ry GEORGE B. MUNROE Treasurer WILLIAM T. RIAECK WILLIAM C. S. REMSEN CHARLES S. FEENEY STANLEY D. SKAUG WALTER POVVERS JR. EDNVIN A. BOOK JAMES OLSEN JR. ROBERT W. THEDE THOMAS N. SCHROTH WILLIAM H. WIERMAN ROBERT I. LAPPIN FREDERICK F. STOCKNVELL Thede, Lappin, Schroth, Maeck, Olsen, Stockwell, Bock, Feeney VVierman, Monroe, Heggie, Parker, VVilliams, Skaug, Remsen 41 PALAEOPI l US Junior, Sophomore, Societies Briggs, Snobble, Cook, Antaya, Hughes, Barrett, Pratt, Patterson Holmes, Whiting, Hoffman, Springsteen, Jenness, Farley, Musser, Davies, Miller Maleno, Fox, Baum, Tarlow, Wells, Oakes, Bird, Cohn Jones, Blood, Shell, Burnham, DuVal, Myers, Arnold President Donald L. Burnham Vice-President Merlin K. DuVal, Jr. Secretary Hugh W. Hitchcock Treasurer Horace S. Blood Roger A. Antaya, Roger P. Arnold, Richard H. Backus, Allen M. Barrett, Arthur C. Baum, John C. Bird, Horace S. Blood, James G. Briggs, Donald L. Burnham, Roger A. Clark, Fred C. Cohn, Albert W. Cook, William R. Davies, Merlin K.. DuVal, Jr., David T. Eckels, Charles M. Farley, Charles E. Fox, Jr., William Harrison, Hugh W. Hitchcock, Junius Hoffman, Stephen W. Holmes, Henry W. Hughes, Delbert L. Jackson, Jr., John S. Jenness, Benjamin F. Jones, Joseph A. Maleno, Jr., Robert A. Miller, Karl R. Musser, Robert J. Myers, Donald T. Oakes, David K. Patterson, Robert W. Petersen, Augustus K. Pratt, Richard L. Revenaugh, West Shell, Jr., John K. Snobble, George Springsteen, Thomas VV. Streeter, Jr., Richard N. Tarlow, Whitc-omb Wells, Richard A. VVhiting, Gerald S. Yudkin. Gus Pratt directs a Navy officer GREEN KEY LLQ The 1944 Green Key is the first group of the society to have been elected in wartime. Thus, besides the function for which the Green Key was primarily formed, U. . .the entertainment of representatives of other colleges and institutions while they shall be guests of Dartmouth College, it was given other war- time responsibilities. The College's first wartime summer semester found Green Key, minus about twenty men who did not take advantage of the speed-up session, with an extra burden on its hands: not only were they responsible for the reception and orientation of some two hundred freshmen, but also were given the job Of meeting the first thousand men of the Naval Training School instituted at Dartmouth this summer. Despite the College's questionably stringent cur- tailment of social activities during the war, Green Key was put in charge of Dartmouth's first Summer House- party. The highlight of the affair, a dance in the gym- nasium, was a huge success, the decorations stressing the new naval emphasis in Hanover. The forty-one members in the Green Key are electefl from their various campus organizations and the clasS at large. During the year, they fulfill a number of tra- ditional functionsg among these are the Dick's House service and ushering at Commencement. Accept New Responsibilities Tewksbury, Tyler, Lewis, Fessenden Salford, Merrill, Monahan, Aishton, Southwick, Brown Chase, Duke, Peacock, Doole, Carroll, Brundage, Pine Marked with Sophomore distinction, the bane of the Freshmanis existence, are the wearers of the black Vigilante hats. Founded in 1935, the Vigilante Society is an honorary group of Sophomores chosen at the be- ginning of their second year in Dartmouth College. About twenty men are selected from a normal class and they are chosen because of their high standing in regard to studies, athletics, extra-curricular activities and all- round ability. Each member must have attained a 2.0 average during his Freshman year. The extra-summer semester affected the 1945 Vigil- ante Society because many of its members did not at- tend the summer semester and therefore a short-handed group of Vigilantes had to carry out its principal func- tion--that of requiring all Freshmen to wear their caps. The new 416's, being a particularly tough bunch of fellows, created additional difficulties. This year, as a result of the abolishment of all class officers, the Vigilantes have been entrusted with the organization of the Sophomore Class. As in the past, the Vigilantes have given Palaeopitus valuable assist- ance in organizing the football rallies and they also organized a rally to acquaint the Freshmen with Dart- mouth songs and cheers. 43 President V ice-Presid ent Secretary 4 Treasurer Preston K. Aishton Martin G. Anderholm Norman N. Brown Howard D. Brundage Russell E. Chase, Jr. Roy F. Duke Philip D. Fessenden Stern and James E. Doole John L. Carroll Jerome Peacock Ralph G. Tyler Nlorton H. Lewis John F. lVIonahan Gunnard F. Reynolds Theodore Safford, Jr. VVilliam F. Schacht, Il Richard H. Southwick Peter Tewksbury relentless are the Vigilantes VIGILANTES Big dogs, little dogs, hot dogs. . .all in one dormitory Tenny Robinson . HU' Interdormltor The experience and training which men acquire by attending college is not the product of the classroom and study only, but is effected by the conditions under which they Work. The student acquires in college not only mental skills, but habits of Work and conduct, patterns of thought and action, and standards of value which become part of his equipment for living. The influence of his companions and his environment is never negativeg it is helpful or harmful and the institu- tion cannot be unconcerned with the nature of it. For this reason the College maintains supervision over liv- ing conditions and social activities. College government has been traditionally autocratic and paternalistic. The student,s relationship to the institution is temporary and voluntary and does not entail the right to determine college law or policy. However, the trend has been to invite the participation of undergraduates in the affairs of college government both as a means of avoiding the friction which paternal- ism engenders and as a means of training men to deal with the problems of community government. Under- graduate agencies have been developed to share the responsibility of determining regulations and enforcing them under authority delegated by Faculty or Adminis- trative Committees and oflicers. VV. Baker Graham Ward Reddington Shemzen E N eidlinger Deakins Coith Campbell H41 Council Shows Initiative Under these ideals the Interdormitory Council is formed and under these ideals it functions and strives to help guide the undergraduate. Each dormitory elects a committee of five men, one of whom is elected chair- man of that particular dormitory committee. These chairmen make up the Interdormitory Council which meets at frequent intervals. A Judiciary Board is ap- pointed by the President of the Council. At the Council meetings such things are discussed as orientation of freshmen, control of conduct, regulation of guests, detection of thefts, and all cases dealing with infractions of dormitory regulations. This year, which included the new summer semester, found the student coopera- tion in obeying dormitory regulations unusually good. The only flagrant abuses in obeying dormitory rules came as a result of the new houseparty restrictions placed upon the fraternity houses and which, conse- quently, caused an increase in both the size and number of dormitory parties. One of the more important tasks of the dormitory committees this year was their assistance during black- outs. The dormitory committees helped the supervision and handling of this task with efiiciency. Also the com- mittees were effective in administering the college chest drive in the dormitories. Aside from the Inter- dormitory Council Banquet given by the Committee on Student Residence, the individual dormitories are given very enjoyable Freshmen Feeds to help foster dormitory spirit and friendship. In glancing back upon the activities of the Inter- dormitory Council, there can be seen a decided step in helping to knit together the undergraduate body. Many of the most enjoyable moments in college life spring from dormitory life and the Council has tried to maintain this standard of living for both the enjoyment and welfare of the students. Being the most direct rep- resentative of undergraduate opinion, it is hoped that this organization can grow stronger and more effective through the years. B utterji eld Crosby Faycrweather North F ayerweathcr South F ayerureather Gile Hitchcock Lord M ass achusetts North M assachusetts South M assachusetls Richardson Russell Sage Streeter Ilfheeler 45 Smedley VVard, President of the Interdormltory Council E. Smedley Wfard, Jr. '43 WVilliam A. VVhite '44 James H. Turnure, Jr. ,45 Robert F. VVilson '42 Donald P. Ash '45 Burroughs Barstow Jr. '43 VVilliam A. Baker '43 Harry M. Judge '45 George T. Shimizu '43 George A. Graham Jr. '43 George F. Barr '45 John E. O'Donnell Jr. '43 Henry N. Blansfield '45 Robert F. Coith '44 Donald deJ. Cutter '45 ,fee , f . One of Howie Penninv'ton's rote res sells an AEGIS to dubious D E I freshmen A6glS VVar is helll' applies just as much to the publishing of a yearbook as it does to any other endeavor. The most pronounced effect the war had upon the 1943 AEGIS was the change in personnel. Early in the summer, after two years of intensive Hheelingn among stiff competitign Dave Eckels had been appointed Editor-in-Chief of the yearbook. Credit for the ideas that make this yearbook stand out from any other ever published-its theme of Dartmouth Undyingf' its cover and new sectional arrangement-credit for these ideas belongs to Dave Eckels. But early in June all the male members of Dave's family joined the armed forces, necessitating his return home. The job of executing his ideas still remained and a new recruit was brought in. . .the present editor. Be- sides his great handicap of inexperience, there was also a shortage of one of the most precious elements in a quality yearbook-that of TIME. The speeded-up system gave us less than half the time usually available for taking of pictures and planning of articles. Most of them had to be postponed until late in September when new members, officers, and Sophomore fraternity men had been determined. There also was a shortage of manpower. lVIany freshmen who would have liked to work with us on this book felt the demands of their Freeman, Adams, Cleary, VVitte, Bokor Donohue, Beaumont, Donnelly, Fox Ccclitorj, Pennington, Hutchins, Hewlett I 461 . hi uality Not Hit by schoolwork too severe to allow heeling,' for any Organization. Such conditions called for sacrifices of time, energy and even grades on the part of almost all staff members but these sacrifices were cheerfully given so that we might fulfill our obligation to the students and to the college-that of putting a yearbook equal in quality to any previous AEGISY0l1t on time. The standard set by the 1942 AEGIS under the editor- ship of Jim Stewart was a difficult One to achieve for the National Scholastic Press Association had given it the highest possible rating-that of All-American. It was a great temptation because of the urgencies of time to substitute something that was just good enoughf, but this pitfall, we feel, has been avoided. However, never Once did we regret that we had accepted the job and its accompaning responsibilities, never once did we feel that the effort was unworthy of the goal. The interest of a great many students, par- ticularly Seniors, made this an impossibility. In short, we feel that even with the many troubles that have beset us the 1943 AEGIS is a book worthy of representing Dartmouth, the men and the ideals that Dartmouth stands for. Although it was constructed in record-making time it has been built upon a solid ever- lasting foundation-that of 4'Dartmouth Undyingf' George Higgins, tOwn's foremost photographer and hence official AEG1s photographer l 47 31' Tim Hartnett shows editor Charles FOX some of his work - Editor-in-Chief CHARLES E. Fox Business Manager ITOXVARD W. PENNINGTON Advertising Manager JAMES C. DONNELLY, JR. Graduate Director CHARLES E. WIDMAYER 1945 BOARD THOMAS P. BEAUMONT WILLIAM E. DONOHUE RICH.ARD G. HEWLETT FRANK M. HUTCHINS 1946 BOARD THOMAS F. ADAMs GENE J. BOKOR GERALD V. CLEARY, JR. JAMES H. DOLAN PETER H. FREEMAN TIMOTHY V. H,-XIITNETT JOHN T. VVITTE I AEGIS Editor Ed Bock, God to his Friends T e Dartmouth Four years, four ordinary, pre-war years, is a College lifetime, and in a lifetime things change and opinions and attitudes are refined and modified. The change and modification will come faster now with the accelerated College lifetime of three years, But the 1943 Directorate of The Dartmouth, which trained in three full years and edited during an accel- erated spring, summer, and fall, came close to the reg- ular quota of College days and edited more than the customary number of issues. After the Class of 1945 graduates, no undergraduate in College will have a life span in Hanover that runs over three years. We think of this, and write of it, because it means a lot to future Dartmouth Directorates, because it means it will be harder than ever to turn out a professional daily newspaper, presenting all the news interestingly and concisely and accurately, on the basis of only twb years background in the community which The Dart- mouth serves. We think and write of it because every Editorial Directorate of The Dartmouth is a part of the continuity of its 103 years and every Editorial Directorate moulds that continuity only after it is itself moulded. In the past, a man got three years of moulding before it was decided whether he could have even a small position on the board Which would take over The Dartmouth. Now the discipline and training that goes into corralling a bunch of 18-year-olds into an accurate, efficient daily newspaper staff will be focused for almost the same number of days and semesters, but the whole training Don Davidson shows a heeler how the paper is put to bedu HI-1ow's that article sound?,' says Junius Hoffman to Bill Turpin I fe, V, l . 431 Direetorates Face New Difficulties period itself will be compressed into three years-or one year less to watch the world, report and study it, grow older in it, and argue over it. Some things there are, important things to The Dart- mouth and its readers, which must be retained no matter how brief the future Dartmouth reporteris life span in Hanover. The 1943 Directorate has retained and continued to emphasize some of these important things of The Dartmouth's continuity. It has retained and intensified and expanded The Dartmouth's Hhumanistic social consciousnessn which began in 1935 and will, we hope, never be replaced with stock, insincere editorializings or by sloppy, unsubtle distinctions. The 1943 Directorate has never forgotten that one year before its arrival in Hanover, The Dartmouth Hnally Won its fight for continued independence in the Publications Controversy of 1938-39. It has never for- gotten that for its complete freedom, it behooves The Dartmouth to maintain high professional standards of reporting and editorializing, to hold fast to speaking the truth always. Finally, we hope that future Directorates will always remember that The Dartmouth will have lost its use to Dartmouth College and the community if it does not draw protests and arguments and criticism by virtue of stimulating College opinion and keeping ahead of it. All this we have tried to do, speaking always from within the community and the College. And we have done a little moulding ourselves. EDITORIAL DIRECTORATE Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Editorial Chairman Associate Editor Technical Editor BUSINESS Business Manager Local Advertising Manager National Advertising illanager Circulation Manager Junior Editorial Board Donald McL. Davidson Junius Hoffman Russell B. Hurlburt John S. Jenness George H. Tilton, III William N. Turpin Sophomore Editorial Board Frederick W. Bonacker, Jr. John H. Buttler John E. Leggat Lee S. Kreindler Donald H. C. MacKay Henry T. Moore, Jr. Russell F. Stryker, Jr. Lumbard, Hurlburt, Jenness, Guattery Field, Cover, Ungar, Hoffman, Samuels, Jones Edson, Davidson, Little, Cartwright, Davenport, Slavik, Skutch Troster. Stevens, Fuiks, Bock, Schroth, Marx, Barnum, Barkhorn Edwin A. Bock Herbert L. hfiarx, Jr. Elmer G. Stevens, Jr. Guy C. Nlallett, Jr. Richard E. Barkhorn DIRECTORATE Thomas N. Schroth Robert S. Fuiks John G. Troster Robert C. Barnum Junior Business Board J. Jerome Brody C. McLaury Farley Richard N. Tarlow Raymond VV. Zrike Sophomore Business Board John IV. Allen Paul F. Cover Eugene H. Edson James A. Field Joseph M. Guattery Robert J. Hausman John W. Little, Jr. A. Willis Robertson, Jr. Edward R. Samuels, H Alexander Ungar THE DARTMOUTH Jack-0 Proves Humor J . .3 80 ff1mf Y f'-is afvow 46 u Suave business men draft hapless freshman .lack-U had been operating under unfavorable cir- cumstances for nearly a year when the 1944 board took over in the Fall of 1942. These unfavorable circumstan- ces were caused solely by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Advertisements, materials, personnel and sub- ject-matter were all made scarce by the coming of war. But the 1943 directorate, taking over control of the magazine in the Spring of 1942, believed that there still was a place for a humor magazine on the college campus of a wartime America. We were still thinking that way in the Fall of the same year. Vfe tried to make of Jack-O a publication which would afford pleasure and amusement and at the same time continually remind our readers of the duties which they were expected to perform in behalf of the safety of the nation. Vile never thought of Jack-O as purely escap- istf, NVQ always attempted to portray the Dartmouth scene as it was during the first year of Americals partici- pation in the conflict. The 1943 boardls first two issues, in the Spring of '42, did, we thought, reflect the great changes which a new situation had brought to the College, and still amused their readers. .fuels-0 continued publication during the first war- time summer semester, and although only two issues appeared, they also served as a record of the further 50 changes which occurred in the Hanover scene. The establishment of the Naval Indoctrinational School at Dartmouth, the 'fdefensev courses instituted in the College curriculum, and the many other innovations which that Summer brought were reflected in the col- umns of the J ack-0. And at the same time we believed that the humor in the magazine furnished a welcome change from the dismal headlines of the period. As the 1944 directorate took 'over in the Fall, we were still convinced that Jack-O was needed on the Dartmouth campus and we were determined to publish a magazine which would be current, stimulating, and, at the same time, humorous. ' The 1943 directorate retired to take comprehensives, get married, and spend nostalgic evenings in the Coffee Shop, and, feeling that they had given Dartmouth a magazine of which it could be proud, we were sorry to see them go. We remembered the early morning dum- mies and the midnight rewrite sessions, Frisenman's C.C.C. coat thrown on the floor, Zeitung's last jazz column, Harrigan's laziness, the DU rug donation to the lit office, and Costello's breezy wit. The '43s took a Zeitung, Costello, and Hutchinson bolster morale with laughs 'G' --l avi A -- ,,,, 44 ff .i X4 . ff ,X J' ., ,,, ,, .. fi., Q, ' -.44 ' '41 . if 2 1 - l S ml ,Hi Hgflvf Jul if wh' Mi. lllr gl Ei! ly oigdiif , ,, . mtl tiir-1 V liliif' lillfl X, in ll' -'l if ll' 1 if 7 ghip, it Silt' iff-Q Bari- f H, V: 4 ci 1 ,. 1 . pr- . .liig-t WI V s Not Rationed last look at the Feller murals on the office wall, sighed, and went out into the college community they had re- flected editorially, later to meet at Tony's bar on 12th street and collapse together in a scattered heap of '70- lb. coated stock, printer,s ink, and J. Press coats. One of the highlights of the year was the founding of the Lantern Club by the incoming directorate as an organization by means of which writers and artists might give focus to their college activities and be recog- nized as a campus force. It was given initial impetus by a member of the incoming staff who wanted a club listed after his name when his marriage is announced in the New York Times. VVith current and past members of the Jael:-0 stag as a. nucleus, the Club took form as an institution devoted to wit, liberalism, and good fellow- ship. The standards of membership were high, making it somewhat exclusive, and the applications for mem- bership were voluminous. The Lantern Club has given new prestige to membership on the Jack-0 staff, and as the members quaff goblets of good cheer on cold wintry nights at their special tables in local bistros, they make plans for the establishment of a permanent club-and- dining-room, probably in Fletcher's back room. Ellitor-z'11-l'l1z'cjf .llanaying Efliior Art Editor Associate Editor Eflitorirzl flllflliflllllll Bz1sz'1zc.s.s dlnllllllglfl' Afllvertising ilfmlagcr H I reasurer fllil'ClllCltI'0lI Illrllllflgfl' Editorial Staff' 1944 Jolm WI. Handy, Jr. Alfred A. Hormel, Jr. Stephen J. Lewis, Jr. Gregory L. Rabassa I-Iaiden Ritchie Charles W'ilder Gerald S. Yudkin Yolney Croswell 1945 IYilliam N. Banks, J Vincent Canby James H. Fannon Paul S. Newman Hormel, Epstein EDITORIAL BOARD Alvin Eisenman IYilliam I. Zeitung Robert Costello C'. Herbert Harrigan, Jr. ' John L. Hutchinson BUSINESS BUA li D William E. Brayton Wiilliam M. Jones H. Brcreton Hall Chester B. Roche, Jr. ' Bn.sz'11e.s.v Sta 1944 Illallace C. Benjamin Robert A. lVIiller IYillard F. Sporleder H. Bruce Thomson, Jr David G. Wlilkes 1945 Harry B. Bissell, Jr. Robert J. Epstein Charles E. hlurphy, Jr Guilio Pontecorvo, Jr. Russell J. Stanbaugh C. Leslie Thompson 3 s 1 a a 1 Jack S. Wlachtel Lewis, Canby, VVilder, Cleveland, Nfurphy, Bissell, Benjamin, Ritchie, Thompson Zeitung, Jones, Hall, Eisenman, Brayton, Roche, Harrigan ' I 51 l JACK-0-LANTERN 1946 Green Book ! 'V' x fx x Green Book Editor Jim Donnelly This year, as usual, the Green Book presented the pictures, prep school records, names, and home and college records of the entire freshman class, the smallest in the recent history of Dartmouth College. With September sales reaching almost the entire class, and numerous copies going to administrative offices, faculty members, and fraternities, the staff found little difficulty in disposing of the greater part of its supply of cloth- bound and paper-bound copies. When it appeared in November, the 1946 Green Book was bound in the same type of bright green cover that proved so attractive on last year's volume, the clear and timely photographs were Well brought out by the use of high grade glossy paper, and the advertisement section was made appealing by the placement of pic- tures of freshman activities amongst its pages. The foreword emphasized the necessity for maintaining on a national scale the same type of unity which the Green Book makes possible in the undergraduate years at Dartmouth College. - The Green Book fuhilled its yearly objective in assist- ing the incoming class to get better acquainted, and it once more proved useful to the fraternities in rushing as Well as to faculty members desirous of learning readily the names and faces of the new students. Donohue, Beaumont, Donnelly, Hutchins, Hewlett GREEN BOOK l5Q w 32 tl i 5 'Ni - .5 , 'i ....'5 -1 js we tra ,vii 4 'Q we rn ra Press Club Reports MacKay, DeBerard Gilman, Stevens Dartmouth's undergraduate correspondents share the double responsibility of service to both the College and to their newspaper. Although no spectacular news stories broke during the past year, the establishment of a naval indocrination school on the campus supplemented the coverage of the entire college community. Presentation of unbiased, complete and honest an- alysis of Dartmouth news is the objective of the Dart- mouth Press Club, and adherence to this ideal has given the organization a top ranking among collegiate press clubs. Since its inception the Dartmouth Press Club has remained small and select in order that its high standards and accurate coverage will be main tained. The opportunity to become a correspondent for a metropolitan newspaper is given on the basis of ability which has been shown either on College publications or through work done in either the news service or athletic publicity offices. Memberships are under the supervision of Charles E. Widmayer '30, director this year of both the Dartmouth News Service and Athletic Publicity. Three new mem- bers, Richard Gilman '45, Donald McKay '45, and Guy C. lVIallett, Jr. '43, were added this year, and with the graduation of two senior members in December several new undergraduates will be selected to fill their posi- tions. HONORARY MEMBERS Professor Eric P. Kelley '06 Charles E. Wiidmayer '30 Robert P. Fuller '37 R. Stanley 'Woodward Arthur Duffey Philip E. De-Berard, Jr. '45 Richard C. Gilman '45 Donald H. C. NIacKay '45 Guy C. Mallett, Jr. '43 Elmer G. Stevens, Jr. '43 Robert A. Williams '43 MEMBERS New York Times Tlze Boston Post The United Press The Boston Globe The Manchester Union The Springfield Republican International News Service New Y orlc Herald Tribune Cnewsl The Boston Herald The Boston Traveler New York Herald Tribune Csportsj The Associated Press The lVoreester Telegram Plays look like this from the Press Box M. l53l PRESS CLUB Moose Rowan leads a DBS workshop program DBS-The The fall of 1942 marked the first anniversary of DBS, a year of broadcasting, more than fifteen hundred hours on the air. Along with other extracurricular organizations DBS felt the war shortage of personnel. However, a new and better method of transmission brought an ever increas- ing audience, and the influx of two freshman classes in two semesters brought new men, ideas, and programs. The programming problem of DBS is a large one, Originating as many hours of programs as the average network station takes a lot of time from a lot of men. Not only must the programs have appeal to the stu- dent, but also they must be aired at the right time. One of the major tasks of the program director is to avoid conflicts with important happenings on campus. One method of solving this problem is to broadcast all im- portant happenings. The summer schedule featured weekly VVorkshops with new and old radioplays, members of the college community in recitals of chamber music, broadcasts of the jam-session to Dick's House, lectures, roundtables, book reviews, play reviews, and concerts. In the middle of the summer DBS Hlled in the time between its special early evening feature to Dick,s House, Bed Pan Bleegan, Levine, Alpert Rice, Davies, Kanter, Sandoe ' lVIorgan, Hirschberg, WVells, Shaw, Grant, Sandberg, Varney 2 l54l artmonth College Station Alley, and its regular schedule, bringing the number of broadcast hours to four a day. The fall semester brought a revival of sports. DBS began its sports broadcasting with something new, its first out-of-town pick-up. Jim Wells WL3, assistant station manager and head of the DBS sports staff, broadcast the opening game of the Dartmouth football season from Fitton Field, Worcester. The Holy Cross broadcast originated at a point over one hundred miles from the station. The program was sent by DBS engin- eers over telephone lines from VVorcester to Hanover, and out over the DBS transmitter. Receiving permis- sion from other stations, DBS rebroadcast the remain- der of the Big Green's away games. Such DBS features as the Holy Cross broadcast built up the stationls listening audience, and a consis- tently improving program service sustained that in- terest. More than fifty men participated in preparing DBS,s daily program, building equipment, and doing other work out of range of the microphone. In its first year members of DBS developed tech- niques and laid the groundwork for further develop- ment. At the same time the College was the benenciary of a program service which brought information and entertainment to dormitory listeners, and tended to integrate the College community. DBS SENIOR MANAGEMENT Station Director John Haviland Shaw '43 Assistant Station Director James Doring lYells '43 Production Director Robert L. Grant ,453 Co-Teclznicat Director Joseph G. Hirschberg '43 Co-Technical Director Edward M. Jones I-L3 Commercial Program Director Stanley B. Sandberg '43 Publicity Director Thomas B. Morgan '43 Blasic Director Curtis D. Cecil '43 DARTMOUTH COLLEGE RADIO COUNCIL Chairman Professor Stearns Dlorse Efeecative Qffieer Professor Almon B. Ives Alumni Representative Douglas Stores Sidney C. Hayward John H. Shaw DBS engineers like Stan Felberg are often short on sleep Jim Wells interviews Ray Riddick 55 l DBS EG? H 'a S DART MCLBUEENT Ofmiii CAQUMOL 12,2 Zu, CO 0 Grows Even Greater ,v 1.1 5 wi' we N if.. :' iw ,r f The Council is composed of two faculty members, two members of the college administrative staff, and three undergraduates, appointed by the President, after consultation with Palaeopitus. This group of men govern the general policy and manage the finances of all the recognized non-athletic student organizations, with the exception of the publications. The direct manage- ment is in all cases delegated to faculty coaches, direc- tors, and advisers, or student committees. The principal purpose, and problem, of the Council, aside from the efficient and orderly handling of funds, is that of co- ordinating the Work of numerous and diverse groups Whose aims and needs frequently overlap to such an extent that regulation by a central body is highly de- sirable. In attaining this coordination, the Council on Student Organizations has steadily increased in im- portance and service to the College, the Naval unit in training at Dartmouth, and the Hanover community. Through its programme of plays, concerts, lectures, the Council has adapted itself to the wartime demands of providing Worthwhile entertainment in keeping with the needs of the times. P For the purpose of training undergraduates for managerships of the business affairs or the various TenEyck, Hartranft, Sharr, Grant Ferguson, Gately, Johnson, Kingsley, Aldom, Johnson Tourtellot, VanCleve, Burleigh, Clark, Cook, Prosser, Yates .1 l56l in Importance organizations under its control, the Council conducts a managerial competition. Each semester a group of heelers from the Freshman class work under the student managers in competition for managerships. The tive managerships for which they compete are those of the Dartmouth Players, the College Glee Club, the College Band, the Council's Publicity Department, and the position of Executive Assistant to the Graduate Man- ager. In the middle of their sophomore year those heelers chosen by the Council become Assistant Managers, automatically assuming full managership of their re- spective organizations in their Junior year. The management and direction of musical and lecture programmes is delegated to faculty and student com- mittees. The Council thus has general supervision over all lectures, plays, and concerts presented for the college community, and its office has become a valuable clearing house for the solution of calendar conflicts which inevi- tably arise in the scheduling of such events by the many groups which sponsor them. The Council on Student Organizations has successfully met the wartime de- mands of directing the various student organizations under its control, and this year the Council reports a most successful year under the direction of the Acting Graduate Manager, Warner Bentley. C O S 0 Executive Board Convenes Acting Graduate Manager Executive Assistant to the Graduate Dfanager Players Glee Club Publicity Band 4 :30 Office Group Warner Bentley Roger A. Clark '44 Albert W. Cook '44 George S. Ives '44 Walter R. Prosser 44 John J. McManus '44 ASSISTANT MANAGERS Executive Andrew TenEyck '45 Players Buel C. Kingsley '45 Glee Club VVilliam J. Ferguson '45 Banfl Robert S. Aldom '45 Publicity Homes A. Yates '45 FRESHMAN HEELERS Matthexxf E. Gately III Glenn Hartranft John W. VanCleve Arthur A. Sharr lVIelvin F. Johnson Wlilliam C. Grant COSO g Navy and THE PLAYERS DIRECT ORATE Director W'arner Bentley Technical Director George W. Schoenhut President Peter Heggie '43 Business Manager John R. Burleigh, Jr. T43 Publicity lllanager Thomas B. Morgan, Jr. '43 Student Director Robert R. Costello, Jr. '43 Student Technical Director Edward NI. J ones ,43 Erperiinental Theatre Representative William R, Ogmun '43 Assistant Business Manager Albert W. Cook '44 Assistant Publicity Dlanager VValter R. Prosser 'M Building Carpenter N Peter Tewksbury '45 Light Crew Dlanager Thomas VV. Streeter, Jr. VM Electrician Robert M. Schaeberle '45 Tom Morgan acts up to VVarner Bentleyls amusement THE DIRECTORATE Burleigh, Cook Costello, Bentley, Morgan, Prosser G. Schoenhut, Heggie Sl 1 Iwi -'Ny W -Qfllf 451.-9 1- , t, Z V . I 1 ! Q. , - 1 4' 1 -'-. f . l F K - ' Mt, Q wsi T tudents Applaud the Players When the College readjourned in June, The Players had only the performance of The Jlale .-fnimal in August 1941 to act as a precedent for a summer season. There were indications of severe handicaps. Although the Experimental Theatre had been scrapped for the dura- tion, The Players planned to continue as full a season as possible and with the departure of Ted Packard, Assistant Director, VVarner Bentley had to shoulder the entire directing job. This year The Players more than ever before resembled a summer theatre. Bob Brown was called into the Army Reserve before the year started and there are reports from old Players members from as far away as the Solomons and Libya. Perhaps the most serious loss, though, was Henry Wil- liams who is now contributing a Victorian influence to Army Officers school. Letters from him show that mil- itary discipline has in no way dampened his sense of humour. However, much of the success of the current season has been made possible by George Schoenhut who has stepped nimbly into the shoes Henry left behind him. The first play chosen by the directorate was a re- vival of All, Wvildernesa' We were fortunate in having Marion Folger to repeat her role of Mrs. Miller, with all the sympathy old Players will recall. Charles Jobes, turned in a finished though not inspiring performance as Mr. Miller. Tom Wright teamed up with Roxanne A scene from the Eve of bt Mark George Schoenhut, technical director, also serves as make-up man Cowles to bring a nostalgic portrayal of sixteen-year- old love to the Robinson Hall audience. Elaine Perry, of New York and Skowhegan, was the guest star, Howie Brundage and Gracie Sanborn were the other Millers. Franny Dodge and William Moseley played the aunt and uncle and brought to their roles a poignant humour that rounded out a well-accepted performance. The next play was Night Mizst Fall with Bob Cos- tello giving a gifted performance. However, the play was no one-man ob. The experienced playing of Franny Dodge and Sally Drury as lVIrs. Bramson and Olivia, lent much of the terrible realism which made the show so effective. Allan Dingwall added some excellent Eng- lish foppery, all of which when mixed well with some authoritative eookney serventry by Nlarion Folger and some humorously moronic servility by Eleanor Mur- tagh as housekeeper and maid, formed some easily digested play-going. In the last few weeks of rehearsal of Night Nlust Fall, Peter Heggie was having a taste of his own medicine fed to him as he tried to direct Room Service. There is a certain amount of turn-about embarrassment in an actor with faults turning director, who must point out faults. Nevertheless, VVarner Bentley was able in the two weeks that followed to turn the play into more than adequate Houseparty material. Room Service dis- covered some excellent talent among the freshmen in Olly Rea, who shouldered one of the leads. Dick Kelly, Joaquin and Demetrio Castillo were other freshmen PRODUCTION Jones, Costello, G. Schoenhut, Streeter, Schaeberle Tewksbury, Batter, H. Schoenhut . XV' ,-if V 1 6 . K .5 -Y 1 ,u,,v2. A ff l60l who gaxe lI1CllC'1tlOl1 ol capable veork Playels alumn1 Ioseph D Esopo and Norbert Hofman xx ere on hand to add comedy to the shovs The fnst show ol the Pall semester xx as L ple B10 ul vs ry Sl1OVS1l1g of lllaxvs ell Anderson s llze I ze of blllllf lllarl Hovsard Blundage and Pearl IClf3l1 played the young couple vslth 1 S1II'lpllCllly that made thelr convle TIOIIQ behex able and there W ts some excellent rlbald solehermg by Bob C ostello Peter Heggw Bxll Moseley George bprlngsteen and Toe Mlcllael VVarner Bentley and lWar1on Folgel were the olel folks and Sally Dlllly and ElL111OI lllurtagh accomphshed the headache roles of two Southern gnls who velged on the prolesslonal The play was a success and was revlved 111 November For Pall Housepartles Bob Costello took up the Job of re CI'G31t111g Robelt Molltgomery roles and played the pr17e Hgl1t6I IH Heaten Can W alt the Hele Comes Mr Jordan of the movles VVhen the fighter was roammg about under the heavenly leadersh1p of Mr Jordan CPeter IT6gg1CD and messenger Peter Tewksbury the play was one of the best eomedles seen ln Hanover The p0SllllO11S of many JUHIOTS leaving college soon mll fall on pI'OIIl1SlI1g Sophomores and Freshmen for the Players plan to CO1'lt111L1G as long as posslble As Presldent Hoplelns has saxd Even IH a war sltuatlon I do not see that the shghtest degree of escaplsm at taches to enjoyment of muslcal and dramatlc offerlngs On the contrary there IS partlcular value to be found 111 cultural offermgs and lndeed IH stralght entertaln ment ot lngh quahty 1n such tlmes A seene from Nlght Must Fall Phe Players know 1 good pubhcxty stunt xx hen they see one . . . , A - . V . Y , c . C n A I., A , A - fl r e 1 1 ' x X C x 7 ' T ' A ' . . , . . 4 AQ f 1 I I w 1 I v V' ' - . 1 1 5 x. lc 1 E ' 2 ' I . V, ' 1,5 X ' 'gi ' ' 9 IT w v - I . ' fs v r Q - ,-ff .. Sy: 'Z - 7 7 X - 2 D ' 1 L ,' Y W 'Lg --3f1-,, M , . ,. 'N Y l - , , , 1 F , ,. ..x' , . . 1. , x J , ,K ju A J 3' 'iii-W . . . . , , . f'vf-V' v v C 1 1 , 1 .- H as , . . 1 . . . J - 'A l A ff , , 5 A , N . . ' ' K Q . A 1 L - . . -, - K C . . . Xt ' i X - K J ik' V K 'I ' H A - v v 'A ' , .U f , 1 A . . A 1 ' ' L ' , , 4 ' w . ' 1 - . 'I ' ' . . - ' - V, 1 v - V. , I 4 ' , ' L . ' - 1 , ,I v v - v - ' I 1 v u. C 1. ' . . . . . . 1 . Y. . H . . . L 9 . s 1 s ' , . . . . ,, l if ' 91 61 PLAYERS nd the Band Pl Bogart, Rothwell, Lazo, Whitten, Mandell, Jones King, Fuller, Bailey, R. H. Morgan, Bush, Bell, R. A. Morgan, Brundage, Van Otteren, Howard Robinson, Ebaugh, Smith, Schwarz, Frye, Chase, Stahl, Rankin, Grove, Burner Johnson, Capps, Armstrong The 1942 Band season opened with the return of Professor Longhurst from his vacation of 1941. During his leave of absence, the Band had been handled by Mr. Daniel Shand. But with Professor Longhurst,s return work started for the annual Variety Night. This event took place on March 28th and the Band was one of the principal attractions. Also featured in the program were the Green Collegians, the Barbary Coast-both of which are made up from Band members and the inimitable '6Doc Fielding. After this, preparations for the Commencement Con- certs began and this hurdle was taken in stride with our playing for Senior parades and evening concerts. We missed Alumni attendance since reunions were held a week later. An entirely new problem now presented itself- VVliat should be the Band,s course of action during the summer? VVe decided to hold concerts each Sunday evening drawing on the Navy and Hanover for feature soloists. These concerts proved to be so successful that we were invited to perform at the Eastern Slopes Inn at North Conway. Together with the Green Collegians we lived at the Inn for a glorious, three-day vacation. In our third semester of the current year, we faced a severe cut in the number of men in our traveling Band. The number was reduced from 80 to 50 men. Due to this cut the Band has followed a policy of eliminating its stunts and concentrating upon the formation of a military-drilled Band. The value of this policy was evi- dent when we were called upon to play for the Navy reviews. In return We have received drilling three times a week under the tutelage of the Chief Petty Ofl'1C6I'S- It has been interesting to see just how this military marching evolved. Before the opening games, the 'fChief', put us through the simplest paces such 25 column lefts and oblique turns. By the Miami game, the boys had mastered the 'gcenter march -a simple but clever maneuver which divides the band in four divisions. For Colgate we added the oblique across the whole field and this has been our favorite and IIIOSJC effective maneuver. At Harvard we added a few inno- vations while at Yale we completed the Band's march- ing repertoire by performing the rather complicated maneuvers of squads to the reari' While Playmg 62 l Played 11 'hw wa-S.. .., ' ' d'Mv', .l f ,,3.,r'.. .f.i5Z.:. I ' .1 .a AAA: '-:. i - ' yah xwa, - I V y,-,L V hiartell, VVeatherby, Bullis, Ruetnik, Rudnick, Bruce Dunklee, Gray, Blood, Chapman, Olin, Ashley, Vitalini, Case, Joslyn Sanderson, Eldredge, lVIills, lVIacbeth, McElroy, Genert, Zuck, Barrows, Koenig The men who run the Band register their approval 63 Boola Boolaf' As a result of the fall training with the Navy, We have a Band that marches as Well as any in the East. At the present time the Band is preparing for the Navy Reviews on October 27th and November 14th. Perhaps we may be even fortunate enough to attend the Columbia game. But the closing climax to a good many Seniors who have stuck by the Band for four years will be Variety Night on November 28th. It promises to be a grand show. As to the Dartmouth's Bandls future, no one can say with any certainty. VVe know that While College foot- ball lasts, there is a chance of the Band's journeying to the games. But nothing can be counted as certain and the Directorate is making no plans far into the future. VVe can hope that with the boys left in the school during the coming year or years there will be great enough in- terest in such a fine institution as the Band to keep this extra-curricular activity a going proposition. Certainly the time that being a Band member takes is time well spent. To verify this statement ask any man in the white flannels and special Band sweater. He will tell you itls true, and who should be the better judge? BAND 0 J G Q ' .-. M X in Y evo-'X 1 ' 'ui K Glee Club Director Donald Cobleigh Everyone in the Glee Club was in keen pitch during the Commencement concert early in May, for there was no thought of breaking up the club, there was every hope to be together again at the end of the month for what should certainly be the climax of the year. During the concert itself, the news came-over the telephone offstage, from New York-Dartmouth had been chosen for the finals in Fred Waring's National Glee Club Competition. By Friday, May 29, eight clubs from all over the nation had arrived in New York, had registered at the Park Central Hotel, received their pamphlets of in- structions, their competition buttons, and had met the mayor, had even joined in singing in front of the City Hall under the direction of the mayor himself. Dart- mouth, it happened, wasnit present then, for at that moment they were rolling down the Connecticut valley in a private parlor car, courtesy of Chesterfields. Four of the clubs performed Saturday night, in Car- negie Hall, four Sunday afternoon, each performance concluded by a show put on by WVaring,s Pennsylvan- ians and Bob Shaw's Collegiate Chorale. Dartmouth's turn was fourth, Saturday night. The audience, tightly strung by that time, had heard some great singing, they had seen three fine, disciplined, very formal glee clubs, Finally, the huge curtain drew for Dartmouth. The crowd was shocked to see the stage bare, and they instantly relaxedg a chuckle swept through the hall. Director Cobleigh walked onto the stage, talked with the audience, the fellows, dressed in senior jackets began drifting in from the side doors, down the aisles' 9 Allan Dingwall, '42, promptly started to imitate Mr. Colileiglfs accent, and the club swung into its HVVed- nesday Night Rehearsal H skit. The famous hall re- sonnded with A Son-of-a-gun For Beer, U the galloping Bold Turpin,', then hushed to a deep silence as the men sang their Dartmouth Undyingf' An iiigtgmfg pause, then Dartmouth made history as the Glee Club 1942 Glee stripped off their clothes in Carnegie Hall. To an im- provised ditty, they tore off their coats, assembled their Buster Brown bow ties, pulled off their trousers Cleaving Buster Brown pantsj, mussed their hair, and exposed A bunch of boy sopranos, as cute as they could be. Three silly songs in falsetto set the audience howling, and it was agony to sing with a dead-pan. During the summer, a big box came to Hanover from Tiffany's. Inside was a beautiful cup, with this inscrip- tion: 1942 Special Award for Best Entertainment Fred Waring,s Pleasure Timen National College Glee Club Competition Sponsored by Chesterfield Cigarettes A modified club immediately convened again for the summer session. Although school was concentrated, re- hearsals were regular, and another fine group was ready in July to give a full concert for Dartmouth's Naval Training school. They felt their strength that night, and were ready for the following week end, the great event of the summer. They were to sing at the Mountain View House, magnificent hotel in the White mountains. There was dancing, tennis, golf, a swimming party, President Don Jones leads the Club in song i64l 54-- CI ty 1 si liqll the 'lil 'ir filriia in mi . r IW LL tint, In R iii IIN X in laik r fit? ff twin-QT.: llgliimilx is it iii- p limi wr N. fait. 'fr . plan puny 'X ing, Fw ,N .'f U1 R , x xi '42 W 'sf li '1v T'-f c- avoa Q 7K 'rk mn-:ig 141.2 ,. e-ings? 19' lub ins Waring Ward Hackett, Johnson, Roberts, Heussler, Bohle, King, Waterman, Bensing, Comins, Reagan Leech, Holmes, Miner, Baker, Gray, Long, Bevan, Sholl, Brown, Williamson, Lewis, Morga.n, Brown, Owen Gatlin, Morris, Dahl, Gaskill, Cleveland, Cover, Jones, Thomas, Smith, lVIorse, Pert, Pounds, McLane, Bernheim, Wright, Tewksbury, Hitchcock plenty to eat, and in turn, the fellows sang heartily for the guests both Saturday night, and Sunday afternoon on the lawn. The summer afforded most enjoyable op- portunities for singing. Twice, the club sang for the guests on the Hanover Inn Terrace, with refreshment at intermissions, and often the college listened to hums in the summer evenings in front of Old Dartmouth. VVith another group of incoming freshmen in Sep- tember, the club expanded considerably. They went right to work on the Ballad for Americans, assisting Paul Robeson in that number when he sang here early in October. Nor was there a rest after that. The club's repertoire had to be built up for the Houseparty concert, and it grew more and more salty in flavor-several numbers ,smacked of the sea: one of them was Walt Whitman,s vigorous City of Ships,', another was Lieutenant Cj.g.D Robert Bilder's hit, sung for the first time by the Navy in their show given in August, Take Me Down to the Sea. Finally, the club unexpectedly had the chance to give a joint concert with Princeton during the Princeton week end. And so was brought to a close the seniors' last semester. Vw! Patsy Garrett is convoyed to corner soda-fountain 4 Cocoaxur ' A liiih' Q92 It was an eventful year. Not once did the glee club sink in spirit or activity, for fellows who love to sing will always get together and sing for the fun, and the lift, and the good fellowship that singing gives them. GLEE CLUB ' Green Collegians Koenig, Stevens, Ashley, Judge, Campbell Robson, Bruce, Bell, Robinson, Carpenter, Quackenbush Leader J. Dacy Stevens '43 B'llS1'I1f'S8 rllcnmgcr Donald deB. Campbell '45 BIENIBERS Sczxoplzorzcx Thurston J. Carpenter ,45, Wendell C. Robinson '45, Derek Van Quackenbush '43, Thaddeus G. Bell ,46. Trinnpets: Carl F. Koenig, Jr. ,44, VVilliam H. Ashley ,45, J. Dacy Stevens '43, Tromb011es.' Daniel R. Robson ,46, Donald YV. Bruce '-15. Drums: Harry Nl. Judge ,45. Piano: Donald deB. Campbell '45 I311.vs.' Charles J. Wlcbb '-43. A symphony in jazz GREEN COLLEGIANS 66 The quick rise to success of the Green Collegians during the past year has been one of the most amazing occurrences among Dartmouth extracurricular organi- zations. Throughout last spring and summer the Col- legians steadily gained popularity, not only on the campus, but throughout New England. One of the milestones in the Collegians' march to fame was the bandis prominent part in the local U.S.O. jam sessions during the summer. During the past year the Collegians added consider- ably to their total mileage, which is now approaching 90,000 miles. One of the highlights of the year was the two-thousand-mile trip to the well-known National Park Junior College near WVashington, D. C . MSO among the engagements of the Collegians recently have been such colleges as Skidmore, Smith, and Stone- leigh and several exclusive country clubs in New EHS' land and New York. This fall the Collegians tapped the Class of '46 and found two sterling musicians to fill the only vacancies on their roster. These men, together with veterans like Leader Dacy Stevens on trumpet, Harry Jlldge 011 drums, and Don Campbell on piano, are helping to make the Collegians still a finer group and even better able to live up to their title, Dartmouth's Dance Bandf' Will orgmm mnlllh onff 35 iilslrlllll cvurdill CQH:l Tlllr l surpaft ' v, f i OHV ng its C'i'H1l howl, mar. 254 It is ii wuflllj' 5 job nfl - continual fllill l lim. a most nn wail iii ' Simpsua if lluiluiil f llis lf 4 inthe li.-1 i I. 1, f A i 3 i I J,,- 4 2, ,I ,xi 1 4, i ,s . -v:j x .K Barbar Coast VVith the beginning of the college year came the re- organization of the Barbary Coast Orchestra of Dart- mouth for its twenty-fourth season, as the orchestra once again gathered into its ranks the best available instrumental talent in the college. It was most en- couraging to find that all twelve men from the 1941-42 Coast were on hand to carry on thc fine reputation enjoyed by this organization. This edition of Dartmouth,s own orchestra has surpassed all its predecessors in musicianship-both collective and individual. One of the outstanding features of the Coast has been its complete library of special arrangements. This book', is the product of a former pianist, Relly Raff- man, and Norman Simpson. It is hard to narrow such a group down to a few men worthy of special mention, for each man has done his job and done it well. Briefly noted, Leon Chapman continued to amaze his listeners with his beautiful lead and solo tone, and with his technique and ideas. Charlie Lazo, a much improved musician, played some of the most amazing tenor that this writer has ever heard. A word of praise is due both trombonistsg to Norman Simpson for his consistently fine sweet and to Jim Rudnick for his inspired rides. This Coast may well be called the best college band ini the Eastf, Leon Chapman takes a solo Leader and illfmuger Norman L. Simpson '44 Trumpets: Leon J. P. Chapman '43, WValter H. Olin '44, George WV. Miller '45. Sarc0phon.es.' Rudolph G. WVhitten, Jr. '44, VVilliam NI. Stahl Jr. l44, Charles R. Lazo '45. Trombones: Norman L. Simpson '44, James E. Rudnick '44. Piano: Herbert F. Storfer '44, Drums: Kenneth F. Eldredge '45. Bass: Eugene Roitman '43. Olin, Chapman, Miller, Storfer, Eldredge, Roitman Rudnick, Simpson, Stahl, VVhitten, Chase, Lazo BARBARY COAST Handel Society ' st, sf ,. A X sf X , Mr. Shand, Lieberman, Woythaler, Mr. Chamberlain, Hyde, Winter, Lothrop, Mrs. Bowen, 1VIr. Moulton, Prof. Joyce Miss Neef, Pettit, Miss Clark, Prof. Silverman, lVIiss Moiilton Conductor Raymond Kendall David Shand, Uoncertmaster V iolivzs Robert E. Riegel John G. Baker '44 Ruth McCarter Leslie T. Dewing Kathleen Finney Florence L. Sessler Robert S. Hyde '44 David MacLane '43 VVilliam Waythaler '43 Hewett Joyce Thomas NV. Moran '45 Katherine Bowen Melba Shand Robert W. VVinter '46 Bernard Lieberman '45 Elaine J. Cook VVinifred Neef Mary Moulton VYednesday night rehearsal MM HANDEL SOCIETY Z 68 Violas Louis L. Silverman James Crow Claude Plummer 'Cellz' Marion Clark VValter Pettit '41 Ray B. Chamberlin David Kendall '45 W Bass Richard Kerwin '44 Joseph Hirschberg '43 Horns John S. Allenron John T. Bressler '45 Oboe Frederick Johnson Functioning during the Autumn Semester of 1942 43 mainly as a string orchestra, the Handel Society re- hearsed and presented two concerts: one at Colby Junior College on November 8th, and a joint concert in Webster Hall with the American Ballad Singe1'S 011 November Qlst. t Two novel works claimed considerable attention Oi the orchestra during rehearsals. One, the Music f0I' Strings by Quincy Porter, Dean of the New England Conservatory of music, the work of a contemporarb' Americang the other the Ninth Symphony of lVT6f1' delssohnf' The latter, an unpublished work, WHS written in 1893 when 1VIendelssohn was only 141 Years old. A World premiere of the work was given in 1941 over YVOR. The Hanover performance Was the third OH record since 1823. artmouth Post War Councll John Bird officiatin at an DCPP meeting I acuity Azltzlsor Professor John G. C azley Prcsfdezzt Iohn C. Bird ' ' Vice-President Andrew BIcKa5 -5cott ' Secretary Joshua B. Clark Treasurer Takanobu lllitsui ,f In tht lall ol -Xmeiici s last pcfictlul ytar 1 Suiior Iicllow namtd lack Hirriman mailul 1 hancllul ot pcnny postals to ccrtain stuclcnts ol Dartmouth lhe post cards cilled lor a mccting to establish a c impus discussion group lor tht problems ol world OI0'L111lL tion The students came 'md heard without lictd Pio lessor Iohn Gazlcy s words ot caution against ox ei enthusiasm This was thc beginning of what Vs as later to be the Dartmouth Council on Post wal Problems All during 'what was for many the fiist exptiicncc with summcl school thc little group of from filtccn to twenty five convened once a week to hc tr piolcssors out ot class and question them Though they gained information about the great and unknown nations ot C l1lI'1EI, Russia India Germany and Iapan and though they sampled lectures from economics psychol- ogy geography and power politics' there was no cor- rclation except a vague bearing on the period 'Liter the Wai. At the end ol the summer Carl Batter Bob Lee and Shih X. Wong represented the Council Lt the International Student Assembly in VVashington. The last semester tor the Class ot 43 was a triumph tor the DCPP in that its members were able to frame a correlated program lor thc cntire discussion period. The strong leadership of President John Bird and a more sophisticated executive committee has succeeded in giving the organization a coherence it has not known before. Porter, Durgin, Batter, Goodman, Mallett, Wang Prof. Gazley, Cornell, Clark, Bird, Mitsui, Lee, Tate l69 1 POST-WAR COUNLIL Dartmouth Christian Union . ' 'af hleinbers of the Club leave for a work trip Prcsirlcnt Richard C. Gilman '45 Secretary Frederick W ulfekuhler '44 Treasurer Louis Wiederhold '45 Faculty Advisor Dr. Roy B. Chamberlin Student religious activities on the Dartmouth campus are directed by the Dartmouth Christian Union, a non- sectarian organization Which functions for the purpose of helping the students find the place of religion in life, and to provide adequate opportunity for the expression of a religious spirit. Weekly meetings are held Sunday evenings during the college year at the home of the faculty advisor and college chaplain, Dr. Roy B. Chamberlin. The Work of the Social Service Commission is prob- ably the Widest known of all Christian Union activities. This Commission conducts weekly Work trips to nearby farms Where students assist destitute farmers in farm tasks. At the present time at least four undergraduates are regularly conducting church services in their own parishes in the Hanover vicinity, and in addition to these full time church responsibilities, many other stu- dents participate in or conduct worship services in nearby churches from time to time. This type of Chris- tian work is in charge of the Deputations Commission of the Union. In addition to the aforementioned program, the Dartmouth Christian Union also participates in the activities of the New England Student Christian Move- ment, and co-operates with the local churches in con- ducting the daily community chapel. Pert, Durgin, Bowen, Bull, Fitzsimmons Joy, Heintzelman, Johnson, Frye, Oakes, hIacBeth Chamberlin, Leavitt, Berthold, Gilman, Symonds, Wliederhold, Rice CHRISTIAN UNION l70l 'n N 9 si N 'a 'N awk N hh N 'ffm 'fm 'Q tr l WN 'f u :L fu we W! 'w Forensic Union Steiner, Porter, Tate, Turpin, Kreindler, Eban J. V. Neale, Bemsen, Oppenheimer, Dinsmoor, Goodman, G. V. Bohman Because of the war, the Forensic Union's activities have been somewhat limited. However, o11e of the most encouraging signs was the reappearance of well-at- tended weekly meetings. Faculty talks, intra-squad de- bates, and social meetings provided a variety of pro- grams. Faced with a summer session the Union had to be content with intra-squad debates and discussions, and with round-table discussions over DBS. But in the fall when the Union was able to resume its inter- collegiate program, the tendency was to substitute tournaments for single debates to solve the transporta- tion problem. The varsity debaters met Middlebliry at Hanover, traveled to Amherst for a triangular meet with Amherst and Yale, and attended a larger tournament at Vassar. The fall schedule was climaxed by Dartmouth's own tournament on November 20, 21. Among the New England colleges which attended were Holy Cross, Yale, Brown, Bates, New Hampshire, Vermont, Colgate, iMiddlebury, Wellesley, and Hamilton. Freshman debating was limited to a few college de- bates. lt is expected to continue the usual schedule including the sixth annual New England freshman tournament at Hanover in the spring. EXECUTIVES President James R. Oppenheimer '43 Vice President Robert i . McQueen '43 Secretary-Treasurer John C. Bird '44 Director of Debate John V. Neale Director of F rcshnzfuz Debate George V. Bohman Bob Steiner will take the negative: Resolved. . , The seventh annual interfraternity debate tourna- ment, sponsored by the Forensic Union, again found the majority of fraternities participating. FORENSIC UNION German After an inactive summer semester, due to the ab- sence of Dr. Stephan Schlossmacher, Faculty Advisor and founder, who spent a summer of study in lllexico, the German Language Club resumed its normal pro- gram at the start of the fall semester. VVith the Begrues- .5-ungsabend on October 1, the Club began its 25th sem- ester of giving to Dartmouth students better under- standing of the German people and encouragement in the study of the German language. The weekly get- togethers were held as usual in the attractive Clubroom in Robinson Hall, where the facilities such as the record collection, radio-phonograph, small library, and piano offered a variety of entertainment as well as opportunity for more serious study of German culture. A sad note was struck at the first meeting when the club noted the death of Thomas R. Conolly, UL5, of Glen Cove, N. Y., who was killed in an auto accident during the summer. He was a quiet and well-liked mem- ber, whose presence will be missed in coming semesters. At the second meeting of the semester Dr. Schloss- macher gave an amusing talk about his experiences in Mexico, which was followed by motion pictures Club Fulfills Social showing a great deal of the picturesque color of Mexican life. Some of the later programs of the semester as- sumed a more serious nature this year. Due to world conditions, the Club sponsored three lectures by mem- bers of the faculty, concerning Germany as a nation at war. Prof. Albert S. Carlson talked on Germany's Geographyl' and Prof. Charles L. Stone widened the Club's interest in and understanding of German Psychological Warfare. The last lecture of the season was delivered by Prof. Herbert R. Sensenig who dis- cussed Germany-Race or Nationlw. All of these lec- tures were well attended, by the faculty and non-mem- bers as well as by members, and occasionally refresh- ments were served at the end of the evening. One of the highlights of the season was a program devoted to Missa in B Mifnor by Johann Sebastian Bach. The Club listened to recordings of the music, and Prof. Donald E. Cobleigh gave a commentary on the composer and his work. One feature motion picture, Zwei H erzen im M Takt, was sponsored and shown on Sunday afternoon at the Nugget, local movie theater. The two dinners held at the D.O.C. house, and in the Bowers, Van Otteren, Hewitt, Kitselman, J. Wolfe, R. E. Smith Menefee, Moore, Roberts, Gallup, Cook, Bowen Schaefer, M. Smith, Trier, Bissell, Tirrell, Tate, Spencer Barker, Boedtker, Dittmar, R. Smith, HI, Blackett, M. B. Smith, Altorfer Schlossmacher, Borofsky, Porter, Grubb, Paidar, Hopper, Hirschberg, G. T. Schaefer Bennett, Gammel, Vitalini, Brunner, Garben, Sanderson Q l and Educational Functions Hanover Inn provided an entertaining time for all. The first dinner was held for the initiation of new members, the second Was the Thanksgiving H errrenabenfl, the first in the history of the club, and a large attendance at which was made possible by the new one-day Thanks- giving vacation. As at the regular meetings, group sing- ing, readings, and the pervasive jollity of Dr. Schloss- macher made the evenings a success. New members discovered and old members found again that good fellowship over good food and good beer is something very special indeed. The final dinner of the season will be the lllaerchen- abend, at which new officers are elected. This will be followed by the Christmas celebration, the final meet- ing of the semester, which for the first time will be a farewell to the Seniors in the Club as well as an observ- ance of the Christmas season. This promises to be a gala affair, winding up one of the most successful semes- ters in the history of the Club, one in which the at- tendance has been exceptionally large, and the pro- grams consistently interesting. When the last strains of the Burschenstrophe have been sung the members will have the memory of a semester well spent in the pursuit of currently pertinent phases of German life, and in the promotion of good fellowship. Dr. Schlossmacher cordially greets all members Faculty Advisor Prcsiclent Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer J. H. Altorfer M. Borofsky JV. B. Davies C. J. Dittmar P. E. Enz R. O. Eymann E. G. Blackett H. B. Campbell T. R. Crowder VV. R. Davies S. J. Lewis J. B. Long W. B. Adam H. M. Barker G. F. Barr P. Beck J. Bernheim H. B. Bissell H. A. Boedtker F. W. Bonacker E. H. Gallup S. S. Hull D. S. Kleckner E. C. Menefee F. E. Bennett R. H. Bohn C. M. Bowen W. V. Bowers N. H. Brunner T. K. Burnap J. D. Condit L. J. Gammel A. C. Garben H. G. Hewitt R. NI. Kitselman OFFICERS Professor Stephan Schlossmacher Class of 1943 Class of 19.4.5 R. J. Tompa Class of 1945 L. lviederhold Class of 19.46 John T. Paidar 43 lv. Norton Grubb 43 Theodore R. Hopper W. N. Grubb J. G. Hirschberg T. R. Hopper J. T. Paidar E. C. Porter G. T. Schaefer J. E. Nlock J. Rexford P. R. Sholl BI. B. Smith R. Smith III S. Tate H. T. Moore T. W. Moran J. F. Plummer H. S. Porter H. L. Roberts G. A. Rogers L. F. Schaefer H. M. Smith C. T. Spencer R. VV. Tirrell A. P. Trier E. B. WVhite A. B. Lutz R. C. Sanderson VV. J. Schaldach R. E. Smith YV. S. Trump L. YV. Tyler D. Van Otteren J. B. Vitalini D. C. VVeld R. H. VVenzel J. H. VVolfe GERMAN LANGUAGE CLUB mhas Americas At the time of this publication Arnbas Americas is in the fourth year of its existence, and in this year it has made further strides in the direction of achieving the purpose for which it was founded, namely, to further understanding, sympathy and fellowship among stu- dents of the two Americas. Under the capable leadership of Jim Drumm '45, the organization has held movies, informal discussions, cele- brations in honor of great men in the history of Latin America, and, inevitably, dinners in the grand style. hlusical sidelights to these occasions have been con- jured up by Joaquin Aguirre '46, whose knowledge of the rhythms of the bolero, the tango, and the conga is second to none. Greg Rabassa '44 has handled the financial end of the club's business with a skill and elan which, to say the least, have kept the group running full steam. And Herb Harrigan '43 has managed from time to time to get a bit of public notice for the organization by al- ternately cajoling and threatening The Dartmouth. Ambas Americas, whose function is more important than ever in these days, goes into the New Year with a full and active membership, a definite program, and a sincere belief in the ideals which guide it. Professor Jose BI. Arce remains the faculty adviser and moving spirit of the organization. lVIurray, Drumm and Harrigan discuss plans for a Hesta Faculty Advisor Professor J. M. Arce Secretary James H. Drumm Jr. '45 Treasurer Gregory L. Rabassa '44 Bennett, Cohen, WVinter, Kornblith, Soto Beaumont, Harrigan, Drumm, Arce, Rabassa, Aguirre, Murray AMBAS AMERICAS l4l fx fl . H 5: 'Q Si E Centro Espanol Poole, Rabassa, Herze, Rein, Prof. Brown, Banks, Hemphill Arlt, Soto, Evans, Dick, Mann, Bennett, Woolman The object of the Centro Espanol is to follow a pro- gram which will create an interest and understanding of the Spanish language and peoples, especially of Latin America. VVe try to get away from formality at meetings, so that new members will practice speaking Spanish with the more proficient members. At the beginning of the year we held an organization meeting, and, with the invaluable aid of our new faculty adviser, Dr. Brown, we arranged a schedule. The first meeting welcomed new members and featured a movie of Brazil, after which Spanish songs were sung. The next meeting was on Columbus Day with Prof. Williams of the History Department as the guest speaker. On October 27, a short play 6'El Ninow taken from a text book of Spanish 5, was staged in the club room. Mr. Carlson is to speak to the club on the economic setup in South America. To wind up the semester, a Thanks- giving dinner and dance is planned with the Smith College group. One of the newest innovations and most pleasant additions to the club's present program is an eating group which meets each Tuesday noon in Thayer and converses only in Spanish. It is hoped that, under these informal and more natural conditions, those who feel a slight hesitance over the language may more speedily overcome it. President J, C, Dick '44 V 1'ce-President D, R, Evans ,45 Secretary-Treasurer S, A, lVIann '45 Faculty Advisor Dr. R. F. Brown A scene from 'SEI Nino ,z EL CENTRO ESPANOL The French luh Jones, Clark, Brown, Doty, Pennington Denoeu, Marino, Weston, Smith, Gauntlett, McKenzie, Verriest OFFICERS Przfszklcril Renshaw Smith III '44 l'Y1'!'t' Pf0.91.ffE'Ilt and Treasurer Claude H. Venon ,416 Secretary lVillia1n H. Gauntlett '45 Faculty Afl1'1's0rs Francois Denoeu Leon X erriest French Club meetings are not only educational but also enjoyable 1 u -E .fi 'M gfwfvtzwfifgfzmlink ,V I tg e txt, ,Z,,ga,ilQ '1m.,,4Qf,hf3,i,,i Mg V mfg' ku af! '. V' 4 ,A , , . 1. la til p lb J 17 5 THE FRENCH CLUB 76 The French Club is a social as well as an educational group open to all students, without regard to enroll- ment in French courses. The aim of the club is not only to give members an opportunity to practice French, but also to create a congenial social atmosphere and to bring the students in closer contact with the department of Romance Languages. The Club is indeed fortunate in having as faculty advisors such men as Francois Denoeu, whose invalu- able and undivided efforts have helped make the club what it is today, Leon Verriest who, in charge of the dramatics, has done many a. fine jobg and Harold E- VVashburn to Whom we can thank for his devoted loyalty. To date the organization has only had one meeting at which Prof. Denoeu showed pictured of the Coast of France and spoke on the possibilities of a second fl'0Ilt there. However, we are having as guest speakers PI'0f- Elliot G-rant of VVilliams who will speak on Victor Hugof, and lVIrs. Vernon Michaud Hall who will speak on Montaigne.,, Occasionally French films are SPOH' sored. For example on October 25, the Nugget Pre' sented Ballerina, In spite of War, the French Club is strong and WC hope it will continue as actively as previously. JW, lf' API QV'- fja ' , J J Pre ilu Balt and Bullet President Farrell takes the world upon his shoulders P1'c.vz'1lUl1l Aritliouy li. Farrell J r. '43 Sf 'Uff '!l-Trfusurz1 Eclwzlrfl D. Knight '44 1Y:1ltcr I.. Bl2lCkilll2lI' '44 ltolaert B. Cute Jr. '45 John B. Cliurcliill '44 John Xl. Frzlissinet '45 Frederick T. Ilzitcll '45 John H. llelningwziy '45 George D. hluson '13 Alexander I.. McPherson '44 lYilliam C. Portman '43 John D. Reed '45 William E. Schumacher '43 Chandler Stein '45 lYilli:1m H. Stein '43 HONORARY MEMBERS Professor Leland Griggs '02, Honorary Prcsiclvnt Professor Frank A. Conell 'QS Dr. John F. Gile '16 Professor Richard H. Goddard Dir. Sidney C. Hayward 'Q6 Professor Herbert YV. Hill President Ernest M. Hopkins '01 Mr. C. Ross McKenney 1N1cClary, Farnsworth, Hatch, Portman, Youngman, Beatty, Nehring, lVIcDonald Cate, h1cPherson, Morin, Haffenreffer, Knight, Reed, Stevens, Blachadar Fraissenet, Dorkey, Mc1Villizims, lVIcKenney, Schumacher, Farrell, 'Witter CPicture includes fall 1941 and 1949 membersl mv BAIT AND BULLET Honorary Prcsiflcizt C'r1b1'l1 and Trail Faculty Ifep1'c.smz,tf1tz'rc Ross MCKenney, source of inspiration for many an outing EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Preece, Doi-key, Farrell, Frothingharn Prof. Proctor, Dittmar, Silverstein, Thede, Dent f'l1c1z'1'n1f111 of thc Board Qf Trzzsfees lass of 'Fred H. Harris ,II 1Jl'l'Si!1CIlf Leo Silverstein, Jr, '43 Woorlcruft AcIz'z'.90r C. Ross MCKQ-nnoy EXECETIYE COlNIl1ITTEE Chill-I'I7ZllIl Leo Silverstein. Jr. '43 Sccrvtury Charles J. Dittmzir H3 ,lfcllzbwsllip Edward N. Seiclrnrin Fl-L Winter Sports Nlicliael Frothingliann '43 PubZz'cz'z'y Wlarren E. Pre-ec-e ,453 Robert W. Tlieclo VL3 Anthony Fzirrcll '43 Clmrles E. Dorliey '43 Thomas J. Dent Clizirles A. Prof'tor ,OO .J l73l af. M If ljsbi IM W ' ii.- gf. ' lf F' A Q Fi-f 1- Slf l, V fm, ilvifi' .iff lm' ' ,,iE,..r iiiilf limes l lffkgl. . , , I, '43 Has Seen Il Phases of D. O. C. C11 fi frm fl ri Seercfarz CABIN AND TRAIL COI'NClL L I J Trails and S11z'I1'e1'.v Trips Cabi ns Insfrzzetioii I.0.C.A. Sncreiury ,JTOIIIIfG7'lII?t'I'I'lIg Special P lllll I.Cfll'l.0IlS E.rccutz'z'e Com nzittcc 1 C!CIIIfy Rf'pre.s-entatz'rc.s' Chairnzaiz Ski Team Ski Team Freshman WINTER SPORTS C O f'nptu1'11 Jfuziagcr Ski Team Jlanuger Skatizzg Team Co-Cczptaiizs Slrating Team ilfcznager Com pc1f1'tz'ons Sidney Bowers '44 Edward Seidman '44 James Lang '44 Robert NY. Thede '43 Anthony Farrell '43 James Hardigg '43 Charles Dittmar '43 .Ioseph I-Iirsehberg '43 Charles Dorkey '43 Chester Solez '43 Wiilliam Schumacher '43 Charles VVebb '43 IYilliam Nlussey '43 Anthony Farrell '43 Frederick S. Page James IV. Goldthwaite UNCIL Charles J. Dittmar '43 Robert Meservey '43 I.eo Silverstein, Jr. '43 llichael Frothingham '43 Robert A. Harris '44 Wlarren V. Van Dyk '43 John YV. Cooke '43 Amasa Pratt '43 Robert IV. Thede '43 Frederick Hickey '44 Rowley IVIosser '44 James Deakins '44 On September 13, 1939, just a few weeks after the outbreak of a war which was soon to affect almost everyone of their college lives, three truck loads of young and very green men from various parts of the Country left IIanover for three days in the famous Dartmouth-North Country. They visited the beautiful Summit House, they hiked, and Hshed, and sang, and swam, and laughed. It would probably be an exaggera- tion to say that when they came back to Hanover a few days later they were full-fledged Dartmouth men. It is certainly safe to say that they were already members of the Class of 1943 and they had acquired ar conscious- ness of the type of life which for many years had made Dartmouth famous. It was a consciousness that would make the process of becoming Dartmouth men an easier one. Almost all of those men who have not already done so, and the larger class of Which they were a part, leave Hanover in December 1949. In leaving they bring to a close the undergraduate portion of their Dartmouth and Dartmouth Outing Club lives. For many of them class rooms, hiking trips, skiing, fishing, and the other attributes of life at Dartmouth may well be crowded out. But there Will also remain the memories. The Class of '43 is unique in that those memories will be a curious Bud Silverstein, President of DOC, ready to fill the roster 1791 D. 0 C Johnny Halstead of Summer Crew plunks out a tune in front of old Summit House composite of the old and the new. For two years its members saw Dartmouth and the DOC as it was. Both Dartmouth and the DOC have been changed by the war, and for almost two years the members of the Class of '43 have seen Dartmouth and the Outing Club as they will probably be for a good number of years to come. . When we came to Dartmouth, the DOC meant to most of us Winter Carnival andthe best known ski team in the country. lhlost of us soon learned that those three letters also stood for something else. Many have been the visitors to Hanover to have been im- pressed by and have commented on the value of the Outing Club as a means of bringing out the fullest potentialities of the unique environment of the College. This is in keeping with the purpose of the DOC which has been expressed as making it possible for you to enjoy the New Hampshire countrysidef, And so, while for some the DOC continued to stand for Winter Carnivalhand thus really had no meaning when war came, for others it came to mean skiing on Oak Hill, skating on Occum pond, a trip to Moosilauke during the brisk fall, or a canoe trip during the wonderful spring. In a word, Outing Club came to mean just that- Outing Club. But while the Club will always continue to mean different things for different people, according to what they have brought with them to the club in the line of past experience and present interests, for every Dart- mouth man it will probably always mean Winter Carnival. Carnival, 1940. In the late fall of 1939 Elmer Browne '40, then chairman of the Carnival Council predicted that future carnivals would be severely handicapped by the fact that the College had decided to install a five-day vacation just before Carnival thus making it possible for students to go home instead of staying in Hanover to work on Carnival plans. Only a short time later one thousand students, most of them freshmen, proved that he was wrong by reporting to a Carnival meeting to find out what they could do. That was the beginning. During the time that followed we learned what it meant to freeze an artificial pond in the deep of the night with the temperature sinking below zero, or to help make a statue of ice and snow in the center of the campus. VVe learned what it meant to prepare ski courses, to pat the snow on the jump, to do any one of the thousand jobs necessary to a successful Winter Carnival, pre-war style. Carnival 1940 was a big event for the freshmen class. So big that as seniors we could irk the new freshmen with stories of what they had missed, with stories of the unveiling of Nat Sample's tremendous statue of Kwanupakwa-the Star Shooter, stories of torchlight 'parades to the golf course, stories of a ski meet in which Dartmouth just narrowly beat out McGill to retain its championship, and stories of blue-eyed and brown- Bob Thede's still able to smile under that blanket roll l haired 1 QW' The l lf95hme g00d 35 hff Camjwi in 3 CIM of HW' jjglienrl and T13 spoils acl llheh America. Chrh was ln 194i was chang al llhih waihug li has still 2 The much show had trappings llhat hz degrees to hvihies. G Lk. Y hi HN hi' -4 f ti, haned lNIar1or1e lean C arlln who becmme our earnlxal queen It ramed that Veal The 1941 Qarnn al was blg too But we vw ere no longer freshmen so It could never seem qulte as blg OI qulte as good as the one belole It ralned that year too The Olltlllg C lub Cllflll t 1ust cease to eX1st between C 311111 als There vsele stlll trlps to hlt VV2LSl1ll1gl1Ol1 to lxflt Illfllll OI to one of the elghteen cahlns spread out mn a elrele CXllGI1CllI1g Q0 mlles south and 60 mlles north ol IIHIOXLI There was stlll deer huntlng Wltll Ross Mclxennev at the College Grant There wele stlll C1l7lI1 and Trall teeds and Csanoe C lub trlps and WlI11Q6I' spol ts aetlvltles to keep the Skl team gOll1g 11 hen the ual came and It became 6VlClLI1t that 'XIUCTICJL at long last was 111 lt the Daltmouth Outnw C lub vs as not lillled It was changed ln 1942 there was a Carnlval C ouncll But Cwarnlval xx as changed There was no mad rush to meet the traln at Vsl1ltG Hlver There were no dates There vsas no Viltlllg llst ol 500 names at the Hanover Inn There was st1ll a skl meet and there was stlll a skatmg meet The nucleus about V!l1lCl1 Dartmouth s bxggest wxnter shovs had grown was st1ll there Onlv the external trappmgs had changed V1 hat happened to Clarnlval also happened 111 V3,I'ylI1g degrees to most ol the other aspects ot Otltlllg C lub ae t1V1t1es Gas ratlonlng made It somewhat dlfficult to In TXIGUIOFI un . I - - 1 ' . ., x P at W ,. . . A i . , - 1 . I . , 1 L A rx r -, ',L ,lv V km -S y A My . . . Q A 'A A - . - r , . - g w - 9 ' - A V, VA' A 11 ' . 1 i ', , 7 .A 1 ' Y 1. f K . , ,, . . - . 4 ' A1 etc , , . ' J L ,xx - A ' - ,xv J ' 3 ' . 2 7 . . ,' 73, A I J- l ' I f . ,, fc V . . 1 , . , , M c ' f -9 . - Y A , . . ff 3 1 v .x .x , ' 4 1 - . 'Q a a O ' r - I 7 ' . 1 . , 1 1 V1 , J v A A T . V 7 T . . ' . 1 g C . . A . , . . 7 - 1 1 . , U ,T A v . . - y , 1 J ' .. Cx I CABIN AND TRAIL COUNCIL Allenby, Brundage, Halstead, Brown, McPherson, .Mussey Hieoek, White, C'ampbell, Kendall, Silverstem Hirsehberg, Solez, Hardigg, Thede, Bowers, Dittman, Farrell Hikers make their way down Carriage Road get to a cabin some sixty miles from Hanover, but there were still plenty of them nearby. Cabin and Trail uses trains instead of trucks, but they still sponsor their trips. Maybe not as many, nor as big as in the past, but there's still as much fun in making them. Possibly there won't be as many hunting trips to the Grant, maybe even gun shot will be scarce, and who knows but what there will be no gasoline to run ,the Oak Hill ski tow next winter. These too are but alterations in size rather than kind. VVith the war we lost Walter Prager to the army. He was followed by Percy Rideout who had succeeded him as coach of the varsity ski team. VVe lost Johnny Rand who had suceeeded Hans Paschen as General manager to the same organization. These have been losses which the club could not help but feel, and yet it is belittling these men in no way to point out that the Outing Club is still carrying on under increased student administra- tion and faculty advice. When those members of the Class of 1943 experi- enced their Hrst contact with the Outing Club territory, they had as their base of operations, so to speak, the famous Summit House atop lVIoosilauke-Dartmouth's own mountain. Here they enjoyed the utmost in wilder- ness lodging facilities. Like thousands of Dartmouth men before them they came to love this lodge and the mountain on which it stood. Since 1860, the year in SPORTS COUNCIL Cook, Harris, Lang, Hickey, Preece, Bowers Prof. Meservey, Silverstein, VanDyk, Dittmar, Frothingham, Thede. Prof. Proctor l8Q l llqm ll il W cuff hall wht giir' Siu Flllf ,OI lnllll lhr H that weft blah' lizlil if WH Qlicer by ii Allin! almng pllllla Dui when its Hill iulpolf lllf - v inila' much i iilio. llllllll' .si - in lil 1 valiiabl. the in ln ll' V wrougtq that lla l lt urilly, l lnmanr of mm in whim fl0feli' A 11 lift ami li lllr flllllyljrrl 'fail llfllitr N 5.1 rl fllmlln , fllr l. ln gh, dllll Dwi K A fdfflil-. l 'line . Uh , l ri , seq. U3 ,., rrp :rfy '. but Qld uf liecomf i which the Prospect House had been built and dedi- cated to the music of the Newbury brass band, there had always been a lodge on the top of the mountain where members of the Dartmouth family and their guests could find rest, and comfort, and hospitality. Since the Class of 1943 entered school, that, too, has changed. On October 23 of this year the Summit Camp burned to the ground. Apparently caused by lightning, the fire had done its job well and investigators reported that there was little that was worth salvaging. Gone were the beds, blankets, plates, furniture, and building. Standing still was that spirit for which the lodge itself had always stood. Someday, President Bud Silverstein and his co- oflicers feel certain, the Summit House will be replaced by a new lodge. In the meantime, the Club will get along without a Summit Camp even as it has gotten along without many other things which formerly made it what it was. During a period of transition, such as the present, when the Club finds itself without a general manager, its advisors and other permanent ofHcers take on new importance, not only in providing mature leadership, but also in providing an element of continuity through the years to come. The Club is fortunate in having available the services of Mrs. Bishop, without whom much of the actual problems of administration would become a hopeless morass of detail, Professor Proctor, who, as usual, is present to lend his wisdom and en- thusiasm to the plans of the Club, Tommy Dent, who, in his first year as new advisor to the Club proved a valuable asset, and Professor Meservey to help guide the affairs of the Winter Sports Department. In looking back over the changes which have been wrought by time and the war, it would be wrong to say that they all have been welcome. Many of them, nat- urally, have not been. Rather, they have been accepted. In many ways they have made the Outing Club a new- or rather an old-club more closely atune to the spirit in which it was originally formed and conducted, more closely atune to the original spirit of Dartmouth Col- lege and the original stereotype of Dartmouth College as the home of men who loved the out-of-doors. The chubber, who, with the advent of fast cars which brought New York close to Hanover, had stood in danger of becoming only an oddity, is once more be- coming a campus figure. The trend thus started will probably not soon end. In the meantime we may all look back on what was and compare it with what is. Buildings burned and carnivals cancelled may all some day be replaced. And so we might also look at what may be. Fresh from the experience of conducting an outing club program during the summer in a territory more known for its winter activities, the outing club feels that it should not be considered out, nor even down. 8. Off for the Summit via I-Iell's Highway These are the trips that you can't forget D. 0.C. atural Hi Taxidermy is just one of many activities offered ljI'l'SI.IfI'Ilf Gilbert C. Anthony i-L4 Secreiriry Buell C. Kingsley '45 Trvu.s11rc1' Robert B. Cate Jr. i-L5 stor lub The college Natural History Club affordsistudents who are interested, an opportunity to develop their interests in the various fields of natural history. Taxi- dermy, nature photography, botany, bird-study, zool- ogy, and conservation are just a few of the activities in which the fellows participate. The rugged and beautiful setting in which the college finds itself, is naturally conducive to awakening and stimulating interest in the out-of-doors. In the past, week-end trips have been made to Moosilailke and other scenic spots in the YVhite Mts. for pictures, to Vermont for bat-banding, to Mt. Tom in lVIassachusetts to observe hawk migrations, and to the sea coast and Lake Champlain for an annual water- fowl census. Bird records, and plant and mammal col- lections are kept by some of the members. This last spring, the club undertook to build and maintain a sizeable wild-life sanctuary on the outskirts of Hanover. After four years of increasing success, the club, this fall, suffered a great loss when Dr. VVeaver, the college naturalist, left to accept a position at the University of New Hampshire. However, several faculty members of the zoo department and the interested students expect to continue the former program until another naturalist can be procurred to take Dr. VVeaver's place. Bevan, Portman, Suddarth , Newmvan, l raissinet, Schumacher, Kendall, VVillcox, Hinckley Beers, X an den Noort, Kingsley, Weaver, Anthony, Wlest, Porter NATURAL HISTORY l Led ard anoe Club OFFICERS fSurnmer 'l'ermD P,-ggiflmzt Edward C. Porter '-L3 Vice'-Prc.91'rlc'11I Charles E. Dorkey J-L3 Secrciury Sydney D. Bowers '44- Trffwwurer Wiilliam C. Nlussey 31-4- DIRECTORS Fred C. Cohn VL-L John K. Snobble '-l-L David L. Kendall ,45 19.423 Donald Frothingham, J. Burton Headley, William Scott, James B. Thompson. 19.L3: David Bortz, Arthur Brockway, Ged Carrington, Arthur Cohn, Robert Craig, Charles Dittmar, Charles Dorkey, Paul Enz, Robert Hobart, Howard Leavitt, Arthur Lynn, Nelson McClary, Morton Pechter, Edward Porter, John Smith, Chester Solez, Robert Thede, Warner Willcox, Frederick VVorthen. 19.543 John Blackburn, Sydney Bowers, Frederick Cohn, VVilliam Foye, James Hardigg, Don Hinckley, VViley Hitchcock, Stephen Horner, Carl Koenig, Craig Macbeth, Malcolm Nlorse, Wlilliam Mussey, Phil Penberthy, Don Pfeifle, John Snobble, John Stephenson, Albert Storrs, Dudley 'Wilson 1945: Roger Brown, Peter Brundage, Frederick Covalt, Roderick Curtin, Charles English, Howard Farrant, John Halstead, Henry Herzl, Gordon Hinners, David Kendall, Byron King, Edmund Kohn, Philip Lewis, Donald Moore, Charles llfliller, Robert Nelb, Edward Samuels, Frederick Schmidt, VVayne Smith, Robert VVilcox, David Wilkes, Charles Zalk. 1946: Wlilliam Branch, Channing Bowen, Peter lVIallett, Clayton Sikes, John Underhill, YVilliam VVarwick. Faculty: Helen Abbott, Professor Herbert Hill, Leroy G. Porter, Ford Sayre, George Schoenhut. Faculty Advisors: Professor Goddard and Professor Mesevery. Members help to keep club property in condition hlacbeth, Schmidt, Thede Herzl, Mallett, Hardigg, VVilson, Halstead, Smith Bowen, Lewis, Hinkley, Covalt, Solez, Dittmar, Enz VVillcox, Cohn, Mussey, Porter, Bowers, Kendall, Lynn .1-g A CANOE CLUB The fall varsity starting on a practice run Crew at Dartmouth started with a distinct interest in canoeing in 1873. In 1937 the Fuller Boathouse was dedicated, and in 1941 the new shell was christened the Ernest Martin Hopkinsf' Interest in rowing has steadily increased ever since, until the war disrupted normal conditions. Last spring the Varsity and Freshmen crews entered the Dad Vail Regatta and the Bill Cup Regatta on the Charles River in Boston. The crews had only been on the water three weeks and were also hindered by the lack of a coach. The Varsity had seven experienced oarsmen and one green oarsman in their boat. They had at stroke, Hud King '43, at 7, John Rexford '44, SPRING VARSITY Ready All, at 6, Charles Geer '44, at 5, Captain Rumsey Ewing '49, at 4, Bill Trier '44, at 3, Mort Pechter '43, at Q, Bill Craig ,43, at bow, Al Storrs '44. The freshmen were not as lucky as the Varsity. They had only three ex- perienced oarsmen. Stroke, Captain Bert Martiin, who had stroked the Culver Varsity, 7, Bob Phillips, who had captained the Pomfret crew, 6, Bob Haffenreffer captain and stroke of the Roxbury Latin crew, 5, George Pierce, 4, Bill Anderson, 3, Rog Brown, Q, Stan Luce, Bow, Fred Plum, Cox, Bert Hicock. In the Dad Vail and Bill Cup Regattas the Varsity came in fourth. The Freshmen out-fought a favored Boston University eight for second place, losing only by 3 small margin to the Rutgers Frosh. Rutgers took first in both the Varsity and Freshman races. On October 23, the Varsity crew raced Harvard. M.I.T., and Boston University on the Charles River. This was the first time the Dartmouth sweepswingers had raced either Harvard or M.I.T. We plan to continue this practice of fall races with other crews, and feel the day is not too distant when we will be rowing against Harvard, Yale, and Syracuse annually. Again this fall the crew had no coach and really felt the need of having one. At the time this article is written, the Varsity has been making good progress and hopes to give a good performance in the race. They have ar- ranged to have Jim Smith, the regular coach meet them in Boston the day before the race and add the finishing touches to a crew which has great possibilities if they 1945 SPRING CREW Stroke, King? 7, R6Xf0I'd3.6, Greer, 5, Ewing CCapt.D, 4, Trier, 3, Pechter, Q, Stroke, Martin CCapt.D, 7, Phillips, 6, Haffenreffer, 5, Pie1'C01 41 Craig, Bow, Storrs, Cox, Miller Anderson, 3, Brown, Q, Luce, Bow, Plum, Cox, Hicock 5 Z . f ' wg , ' 1 Q 0 had 3 ' hlhdf I ReSff'f', Fhhhhh gpeflth gamgnl f thflll ff' Piperlthhh The C01 T119 ix John HHS 4, Cgplaf Ggorgf li Nearihh i tho llltll boat. The all their I to row rl' Behihfh who are lr to make he -. fi pI'0I1ll:1S 'fi ihstnhchfiih .hh llmhler W L lllh hh: Navy in H new fighfiii great inhrf the hoah ho hauling th ohh ehjchth Ill at 1 l Forward llg Row! had a coach to bring them out. This year's Varsity is made up of eight experienced oarsmen. fMartin and Rexford have six years experience behind them, Trier Fairbanks, Bronson and Miller each have two years experience, Pierce and Brown have only the experience gained on last year's Freshman crew. All but three of them rowed in prep school, and two had several years experience in rowing clubs before coming to Dartmouth. The cox was the only green man in the boat. The varsity line-up is: Stroke, Bert Martin '45, 7, John Rexford '44, 6, Bill Trier '44, 5, George Pierce '45, 4, Captain Bob Fairbanks '44g 3, Roge Brown '45, 2, -George Bronson '46, Bow, John Miller '45, Cox, Dud N earing '46. John Rexford and Bill Trier are the only two men from last year's Varsity who made this year's boat. The boat is made up of men who have given up all their week ends this fall and who have been willing to row every day and train for the race. Behind this Varsity eight is an enthusiastic squad who are learning the fundamentals of rowing and hope to make next year's boat. Several of them are showing promise of developing into good oarsmen under the instruction of John Rexford, Bert Martin, and manager Al VVinkler. With the advent of the indoctrination school of the Navy in Hanover, our Dartmouth Navy assumed a new significance, because the ensigns quickly showed a great interest in the crew. A few of them appeared at the boat house to End out about rowing, some of them wanting to learn and others who wanted to resume an old enjoyable recreation. VVinkler, Trier, Fairbanks, Martin Scarlett, Rexford, King FALL VARSITY Stroke, Nlarting 7, Rexfordg 6, Trier, 5, Pierceg 4, Fairbanks fCapt.lg 3, Brown, Q, Bronsong Bow, Miller, Manager, Winklerg Cox, Nearing President John Rexford '44 Treasurer Bertram T. Martin '45 Secretary Robert F. Fairbanks '44 illaaager Albert Winkler, Jr. '44 Assistant Manager Stanford L. Luce, Jr. '45 Captain Robert F. Fairbanks '44 Faculty Advisor Prof. A. J. Scarlett '10 Boatswain 1Villiam Trier '44 SCHEDULE NIAY 9, 1942 ,vr BosToN Dad Vail Regatta and Bill Cup Regatta Combined V.xusITY 1. Rutgers 2. Boston University 3. American International College 4. Dartmouth FRESHMAN 1. Rutgers Q. Dartmouth 3. Boston University October 23, 1942 at Boston CREW Dartmouth, Harvard, hI.l.T., Boston University artmouth Corinthian Yacht luh I , l r jig if ' ff-' ' - 4 f f Q LM ,A -n ,. L.. .... MM ' N ..-..:.,.-.qw X .. -w...- . sw. , -.. 4--.... ,. .M .Nm , ....... . .-..,.,,, ' 'W'-f at . .W I W Yacht Club sailing on the Charles River Com 711061070 V IC!!-C0111 171 od orc Sccrctary-Jfmzagcr Treusilrcr BOCII-91l'!l'liIl f'rui'sing H0prcscl11f1t1'1'c Dinghy 1 ur'11Ity Arlvisor Emil hlosbacher Jr. Robert A. VVight W. Arthur Staub Frank Bousquet Edward S. Spicer Jr. John D. WValton Wfarner WVillcox Professor R. I-I. Goddard ww, In the fall of 1941 a strong Dartmouth sailing team left its spell on the Eastern colleges by winning all the major competitions of the New England section of the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association. The winning streak started with the New England Coast Guard Championship that May, under the able skippering of Bus Mosbacher, and VVarner VVillcoX. As the college adjourned for its summer recess, our unbeaten status, of which we were justly and rightly proud, fell. However the two defeats we suffered during the vacation spurred us on, and in July the team of Mosbacher, Wight, Tay- lor, and O,Day brought home the IVIcIVlillan Cup, highly cherished trophy of the racing body, for a second successive year. As a result of this fine record, the D.C.A.C. recognized the club again by awarding' skippers Mosbachei' and Willcox, and crew members Taylor, Wight, and Staub their varsity letters. One of our objectives for the future is to keep this record high enough so that the D.C.A.C. recognition will be permanent. So far this fall the D.C.Y.C. has competed in the Jack VVood Trophy Regatta and the Coast Guard Invi- tation Meet, capturing third and second places re- spectively. As yet the Dartmouth team is to compete in a triangular regatta with Princeton and Navy, the Fall Invitation Regatta at Brown, the Annual Erwin H. Schell Trophy Regatta, the Invitation Freshmen Regatta, and various other dual regattas, for all of which we have highest hopes. J. Ruppe, Schmidt, W'achtel J. W'olfe, Buckingham, Mott, F. Adams, E. IVIorgan Prof. Goddard, IVIarion, O,Day, VV. VVillcox, J. VValton, L. Wfood, Staub l YACHT CLUB l88l CMJ? -1 1. l, '.:1 A...., ,.A. 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Ns 1 -- lv . 1 X4 Q li W4 lvilliam H. lVIcCarter, Director of Athletics Athletics at Dart- Since 1893 Dartmouth College has boasted of a fine and dependable Athletic Council, completely run by the undergraduates and backed by VVilliam H. lVIcCar- ter, the director of athletics, and a group of faculty advisors. The council itself consists of three alumni members nominated and elected by the Alumni Coun- cil, three faculty members belonging to the Faculty Committee on Athletics, and elected by the faculty, and three undergraduate members elected by the Athletic Council at the last meeting of the academic year. It is authorized by the Trustees to organize and direct all athletic activities of Dartmouth students which in- volve the representation of the College in competition with other academic institutions or organizations. Two of the main assets derived from Work in the com- petition are experience and responsibility, as all de- cisions are in the hands of the undergraduate managers and subject only to the approval of the athletic direc- tor. All the necessary preparations for the athletic trips are handled by the student managers. These responsi- bilities consist of obtaining transportation, sleeping facilities, and seeing that all equipment is made ready and sent on time. The election of numeral men of each freshman class, and lettermen of the varsity sports is carried on under the aegis of the Council. The Athletic Council Competition is one of the many undergraduate extracurricular activities and stands McCarter, Murch, MacDonald, Low Feeney, Parker, Rudolph Q90 mouth Are Run h very high among those on campus. The candidates for positions spend the period from November of their freshman year to the following November wheeling for each sport, a week at a time. On the basis of their talent displayed during the period of competition the heelers are eligible to win an assistant managership during their sophomore year. Junior assistant managers are automatically made managers of their respective sports in their senior year. Because of the importance of this organization one man is elected to Palaeopitus and six men from its junior managers to Green Key. To all managers D sweaters are awarded in the spring of their junior year. H This year the Competition has suffered severely from the effects of the war. In previous years the Coun- cil has found it necessary to turn down the applications of men desiring to enter the competition for it is limited to only forty-five competitors. This year saw only twenty-one heelers come out but, by the middle of November, the number was reduced to fourteen men. Of course the war is mainly responsible for this reduc- tion. VVith the new draft regulations in order, the boys don't know how long they will remain in college and don't feel that it would be worth their time. However, it is assured that as long as there are any athletics left in Dartmouth College, the Athletic Council will remain to continue directing them. deGruchy, Bennett and Oakes keep tabs on DCAC heelers l91l apahle Men DARTMOUTH COLLEGE ATHLETIC 1943 Dlanager 1944 Manager Coach 1943 Dlanager 1944 Manager Captain Coach 1943 Manager 1944 Dlanager Captain Coach 1943 Manager 1944 Dlanager Director of Athletics 1Villiam H. McCarter, '19 President Carl F. Ivoods '04 Secretary Fletcher Low '15 Treasurer Nlax A. Norton '19 MEMBERS Alumni Representatives William D. Knight '08 James M. l.VIathes '11 Carl F. WVoods '04 Faculty Representatives Fletcher Low '15 Joseph L. McDonald ,Leslie F. lVIurch Undergraduate Representatives COUNCIL Charles S. Feeney '43 QBaseball Managerj Paul L. Parker '43 CFootball Managerl Richard H. Rudolph '43 CBasketball Managerj Undergraduate Managers Walter Powers '43 Whitcomb VVe1ls '44 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Yvalter Powers '43 Whitcomb Wells '44 BASEBALL Charles IVI. Tesreau Charles S. Feeney '43 West Shell '44 John A. Koslowski '43 TENNIS Edward G. Hoehn Donald H. Taylor '43 Paul V. Mor an Jr. '44 CROSS-COUNTRY g 1 Arthur Cohen '43 Harry L. Hillman 43 Dale F. Ruedig, Jr. ' Edward R. Rehurek '44 Robert E. lhlilliams, Jr. '43 Captain GOLF Caaali Thomas F. Keane, Jr. 1943 ilfanager Varnum R. Mead '43 Carptain Roy H. Cutting '43 SOCCER Coach Thomas J. Dent 1943 Bfangggr Frederick S. Richardson '43 1944 Nlanager Q Karl Sore ,44 Captaiql hlartin S. Meigs, Jr. 43 FOOTBALL Coach De Ormand McLaughry Assistant Coaches George T. Barclay Osborne B. Cowles John B. Handrahan '37 John D. Isola Edward Jeremiah '30 Ray Riddick Tyafiyjgr JODII F. Bronk 1943 ajaytagar Paul L. Parker '43 1944 iljaiiagar Benjamin F. Jones '44 Captain Edward R. Kast, Jr. '44 D.C.AC Z ttbff' of ll? K squdfl fl ,1 ifpfml' . 2 ' Sift' lf' l' Schftlule V 'I despite ll tlftlf' 2' a F hw W 'e 'M 'Www lltfl' I had Emil' collegiate 1 Qt the fr? Hlmoi rlr, lleliinfl tif 1941 Htl. the jot. ld' loc llalff. 1 tht miti 11 was tht 131135 'lf . Captain Johnny Koslowski, in one of the unusual plays of the season, tags an Amherst man out at home ggmpftgt, 001,011 Charles NI. Tesreau 19,43 llfuaaycr Cl12ltI'l6S S- Feeney 194.5 ,llunagcr Wlest Shell C'aptnz'n John A. Koslowski RECORDS 1942 SUMMER BASEBALL SCHEDULE Dartmouth -L Goodyear Rubber Company Dartmouth IQ St. Michaelis College Dartmouth 4 Cone Automatic Dartmouth Q Williams Dartmouth Q Claremont Dartmouth 3 Amherst Dartmouth 10 Wlilliams Dartmouth 16 Wlinooski Red Sox Dartmouth l Cone Automatic Dartmouth 8 Lebanon Dartmouth ti Brown Dartmouth 3 Proviflence Dartmouth ti Brown Dartmouth 3 Proviflence Dartmouth 9 Amherst 921 brief arf: bitt his ' Al Barrett '44, Captain-elect, looks 'em over Baseball Season Was Good When Coach Jeff Tesreau called the first practice of the summer season, not even the rudiments of a schedule had been made. Nevertheless, an enthusiastic squad of about forty men, most of them sophomores, reported, led by Captain Johnny Koslowski. Their de- sire to play ball was regarded when a sixteen-game schedule including nine college games was scraped up, despite the ever present transportation problem. The daily practice sessions under Jeff's watchful eye took on a new vitality and life in the scramble for positions. There were few returning from the spring team which had finished a lackadaisical last in the Eastern Inter- collegiate League, many having graduated and most of the rest spending the summer out of school. For almost every position, therefore, there was a hot fight. Behind the bat, heavy-hitting Johnny Koslowski, the 1941 E.I.L. batting runner-up, had a stranglehold on the job, but when he doubled in brass on the mound, Joe Maleno was always ready and eager to fill in with the mitt and mask. On the hill sophomore Jim Doole was the only hurler who had seen any kind of varsity competition and that had been slight, however, in his brief appearances he had shown potentialities, and, to from the freshman squad, big Ralph Bowman, a fireball relief man, and the aforementioned Captain Koslowski. Around the infield, Al Barrett, steady fielding hold- over, was virtually assured of his second base position, and Fred Campbell, a fancy Dan around the initial sack who had seen some action in the spring campaign, seemed to have the jump on his rivals. The other posi- tions were wide open until finally the two little men of the squad, a fast-moving sophomore Phil Fessenden and fire plug Charlie Schumacher clamped the reserved sign on the short stop and third base section respective- ly. Don Kleekner and Charlie lXIottola took care of any slack that this capable quartet let slip. Dixie Daniels, he of the slipping bat, by virtue of his superior slugging and rifle-like arm, seemed to have the right field job sewed up, but there was a brisk battle for the other sections in the garden. Bill Cary, a hard- hitting junior who had taken the spring season off, and Earl Flood, another sophomore that the opposition soon found could both hit and run, finally won the coveted positions with Buzz Beattie close behind. The White Indians were to pace the Goodyear VVingfoots in their first game, and the charges of back him up, the Indians had li.ennie Friedman, up Coach Tesreau's, and Assistant Coach Jeremiah's, Feeney, Fessenden, Sayers, Barrett, Friedman, Snell Beattie, Cary, Daniels, Koslowski, Tesreau, Doole, Flood J l93l BASEBALL 1.51 F- V fi 'Tir Ne, 1 A ' 'iff 'W?N went into the game with high hearts and plenty of confidence. The confidence and the Coaches, teachings were regarded as the Green defeated the Wingfoots more hardily than the score would indicate, 4-3. Jim Doole pitched all the way for the Tesreaumen allowing only six hits and having trouble in only one inning, the third, in which the Windsor team scored all three of their runs. Earl Flood had a perfect day at bat for Dartmouth with two for two, and Dix Daniels also weighed in with a brace of blows, including a triple. A week later the St. Michael's College team arrived at Memorial Field and the Green rolled on, scoring 12- 2. Jim Doole was again on the mound and this time turned in an even more masterly performance setting the visitors down with but two hits. Every Dartmouth starter but one got at least one hit, Earl Flood got four in five trips to the plate while Captain Koslo got three and Bill Cary slashed a long triple. The very next day the Indians journeyed down to Windsor to face the strong Cone Automatic team and became a cropper. After scoring four times in the first frame they could not get themselves unmired and watched the Conaumats peck slowly away at their lead and finally nose them out, 5-4. Lennie Friedman pitched and did an acceptable job allowing but six hits. Errors and wildness in the wrong spots betrayed him. Dartmouth hustled all the way but the factory boys, a Brooklyn farm, were just too strong, Giuriceo, their Dixie Daniels waits for a. good one 94 Billy Orcutt proudly holding down position as team mascot shortstop, was magnificent in the field. Dartmouth got eight hits, all singles, Daniels connected for two of them. The following week after the second Goodyear-Wing foot game had been canceled by the weather, Dart- mouth's first college opponents of the summer arrived in Hanover. The Williams game turned out to be one of the most exciting and closely contested of the season. Doole of Dartmouth and Smith of Amherst hooked up in a pitcher,s dual, in which Jimmy won his third straight game of the year in a fluke play in the tenth inning, Q-1. With the bases loaded in the tenth Charlie Schumacher hit a ball which VVallace, the Williams first baseman, couldnit decide how to handle, until Phil Fessenden scampered home with the winning run. It was a heartbreaker for Williams to lose, but Jim Doole pitched such a fine game that he really deserved to win it. The Green got only five hits but Dix DanielS got two of them. Reinforced by the freshmen who had just entered school, particularly Jack Sayers, a first baseman Wh0 added power to the attack, the team journeyed to Claremont and, behind the three-hit pitching of Lennlff Friedman, shut out the home team, Q-0. Earl Flood lead the Green attack with two blows. Going on their first real trip of the campaign, Jeff'S boys swung south first to Amherst where they knocked over Rollo Smith and the Amherst team, 3-935 Dart' 1 A Piidrf mouth made fi lheyhad mail: the way for if? rallfred his l had an as 33 llllfllllllll Wag g lm lllllfll ffl' 3'- lUfflil11'r far, lie, Dirham 3 J calmed for I Eff l 'i l dia L ll 'ul ' ll? lm fri . infillevm K itlllarlg gf rirlfq if t UP PL'-1 l . ibdlllll- lib , with rr sc V. 'Q AM.. .D dflttiymhrx U illnlfllaail. f Hmmm Rui 'i'f5'3 VN . lltle. Thi' lt? '. H fl-t ,ht 4. ills: X dr .. VplUli1l.,, f mpg lil ' Ririif 5 ,i Q 1, . llll Vx, Nqll T 5 1 Nl T1 Pitcher Jim Doole poised to deliver crucial pitch mouth made only one hit but capitalized in breaks they had made to win. Johnny Koslowski pitched all the way for the Indians, letting Amherst down with six scattered hits. The next day in Ivilliamstown the Green had an easy time with Williams winning 10-8. Lennie Friedman was well in command until the heat proved too much for him. Bowman relieved in the ninth, but just didnit have it, Jim Doole came in to put out the fire. Dartmouth hurried home to play host to VVinooski, pounding them, 16-7, with eighteen hits. Fessenden collected four and Cary three, Jim Doole, though not at his best, got credit for the victory. In three days the Indians racked up as many wins. The next week end proved more disastrous, resulting in an even split, Cone defeating Jim Doole for his first setback of the season, 8-1, while Lennie Friedman racked up another victory the following day over Lebanon, to the tune of 8-Q. Dartmouth advanced on its last five and more major games with little trepidation, and their confidence was rewarded as they journeyed to Providence and slew the Brown Bears, 6-0, behind the five-hit flinging of Jimmy Doole. The Indian squad pounded out eleven safe blows off Bed Nichols, the Brown chucker. The next day proved more disastrous as the strong Providence nine tied off on Lennie Friedman early in the contest. Ralph Bowman was magnificent in a relief job, but it 95 was too late and the Indians went down, 7-3, as Cariglia and McCo111io11 hit home runs for the Friars. The following week Brown journeyed to Hanover and collected five hits and no runs off Doole's slants while the Green runners crossed the plate again, six times in nine hits. Coincidentally, the next Saturday Providence defeated Dartmouth, 7-3. This time the game was closer all the way, Providence finally break- ing through in the ninth to score three times and put the game on ice. Jim Doole went the route and lostg Earl Flood connected for three hits. In the final game of the campaign the Green pounced on Rollo Smith and the Amherst team to win, 9-7. Cap- tain Koslowski, ending his career in the proverbial blaze of glory, pitched the team to victory. Bill Cary had a perfect day at the plate getting 4 for 4. The season was a good one, the team chalked up 11 wins and 4 losses, and these 4 to two good teams. Five men hit over the coveted three hundred mark, and Earl Flood over four hundred to lead the team at bat. He was followed by Sayers. Koslowski, Daniels, and Cary. The pitching was good and, at times even brilliant. Jim Doole and Lennie Friedman have great possibili- ties as college pitchers. Should there be baseball next year let. the other teams in the league beware of the Indians, they are looking backward to a great year and forward to a better one. Earl Flood menacingly protecting his title as number one batter BASEBALL Brilliant Individual Pla Marks Season ..4 Captain Cohen l Coach Hoehn During Commencement week end the only home game of the Spring was played with Harvard who de- feated the Hanover team 6-3. The UIQ Captain Hal Eckardt won his singles and doubles matches and Larry Austin, playing in No. 2 position duplicated this. After Commencement, the entire team left for Wes- leyan to compete in the New England Intercollegiates. Eckardt was seeded No. 1 and advanced easily to the semi-finals where he was upset by unseeded Don Richardson of Springfield in straight sets. Richardson played perfect tennis and in those two sets made few errors. Eckhardt played well, but could not match that brand of tennis. Richardson won the tournament easily the following day. Eckhardt and Austin advanced to the finals of the doubles in the tournament but unfortunately, the final round was scheduled for VVednesday which conflicted with matches with West Point. Eckhardt and Austin were forced to remain at Wesleyan while the remainder of the team left for West Point. The Indians lost their matches at both places. One consolation was the bril- liant playing of '43 Captain Art Cohen, who played No. 1 instead of his usual No. 3, at West Point. After the Army match, the forces rejoined to play Yale at full strength. Again Eckhardt won his singles Chambers, Steiner, Dryer, Geiger, Boedtker, Petersen Judge, Caldwell, Cohen, Bugbee, VVoods TENNIS 1961 i Captain Cohen and satellites confer at the net and combined with Austin to Win the best played doubles of the day. Cohen Won the only other match at No. 3 singles, proving that he Was capable of playing high calibre tennis. Yale Won the match 6-3. The next day, Dartmoutlfs lone victory of the spring was produced against Columbia. Eckhardt, Austin, Cohen, and Barradale won their singles matches and Austin and Eckhardt won their doubles. In general, the team had the best No. 1, 2 and 3 men that it has had in many years. In Captain Eckhardt the team had one of the best collegiate players in the east. He Won every singles and doubles match he played, although against tough competition. Austin and Cohen were superior to most players, as is proven by their record of wins. The other members of the team were far too inexperienced to match the players of competing colleges. This much is in the team's favor-most of them are juniors of Whom much can be expected in the future. Those appearing promising in the sophomore ranks Kenworthy, and Bill are Johnny Gooding, Bruce Bates. Bill Woods, battling his Way through the college tournament, faced Art Cohen he Was defeated, he holds the in the finals. Although coveted No. Q position, and is next year,s potential No. 1 man. 97 3 6 ' Captain Arthur Cohen '43 Coach Edward G. Hoehn Manager Donald H. Taylor '43 Assistant Manager Paul V. lVIorgan '43 SCHEDULE D Opp. llia 9 Harvard at Hanover 3 6 11 New England Intercollegiate fAustin, Eckardt, run 12 at VVesleyan lners-up in doubles 13 Army at West Point 1 8 14 Princeton at Princeton cancelled 15 Yale at New Haven 4 16 Columbia at New York 6 3 1943 George L. Austin, Jr. Richard M. Bugbee Arthur Cohen 19.4.4 Eric G. IV. Barradale Hardwick L. Caldwell J1'. Herbert A. Ivolff Coach 19.43 Manager 19144 Manager Captain Dartmouth 15 Dartmouth 24 Dartmouth 19 Dartmouth Fifth Harriers Start Coach Hillman Harry L. Hillman Dale F. Ruedig, Jr. Edward R. Rehurek Robert E. Williams, Jr. RECORD Colgate 50 Harvard 34 M.I.T. 39 in New York Heptagonal ltleet Season Well Led by Captain Bob Williams, the Cross-Country team got off to the start of what promises to be a good season, by decisively beating Colgate in their first meet. Paced by Don Burnham, five of the squad crossed the finish line in a dead heat for first place. In winning Dartmouth took nine first places, two more than are required for a perfect score. Stressing the idea of 'fbunch running, U Coach Harry Hillman prepared his harriers for the Harvard meet which was to be the Big Greenfs first real test of the year. In spite of a heavy downpour, which cost the team many points, Don Burnham and John Watkins '45, finished together to take first place. Nevertheless it was a hard-fighting squad that the Green faced, with Bill Palson and Captain Fred Phinney of Harvard, battling with Burnham for first place at the end of the first mile. Chuck Richardson, suffering from a cramp, placed sixth, Stan Waterman took seventh place and was followed by Captain Bob Williams in the eighth spot. It was definitely a better balanced team that Coach Hillman sent to New York on November 6 to defend the Heptagonal Championship than that which made the trip last year. To the surprise of every one the Yale entry ran away with individual and team honors. With John Watkins in sixth place and Burnham in eighth, the Indians settled for Hfth place in the meet. Hillman, Ruedig Gray, Brown, Tracy, Tewksbury, Whiting Waterman, Burnham, VVilliams, Richardson, Watkins l98 CROSS-COUNTRY 'Q .f Golf Team Loses 0111 One Match L i -if. ' .L . ., of ff X ff ' I Caldwell, Rice, Robinson, Handwerg Under the able leadership of Coach Tommy Keane and Captain Bill Martin the spring edition of the 1942 varsity golf team opened its season at the Worcester Country Club where the New England Intercollegiates were played. Dartmouth's prospects were not bright because the team had been hastily organized and the late spring made all practice impossible. Those making the trip were Bill Martin, Stan Calder, Buzz Cutting, Richard Remsen, John Handwerg and Fred Witzel. Although they finished a somewhat dismal fifth, the team show- ing was offset by the outstanding individual play of Cutting and Witzel. This proved to be the last match for the Green. Because of the shortened semester, all the others were cancelled. This fall's captain, Buzz Cutting, led his team to a successful season marred only by a 5M-3M defeat in the opening match at the hands of a very powerful Williams squad. Wiiining points for the Green were Caldwell, Shorty Robinson, and Handwerg. The second match saw them defeat the highly favored Holy Cross team 5-4 in a thrill-packed contest. It was the play of Fred Caldwell, defeating his opponent on the twentieth green, that decided the game. Stan Rice, John Truxal, and Handwerg also won their matches. The Green golf team, in rounding out its season, de- feated a hapless Middlebury team with a score of 8-1. 99 Coach Keane Coach Thomas F. Keane, Jr. 19.43 Manager Varnimi R. Bflead Captain Roy H. Cutting RECORD Dartmouth 3M Wlilliams 5M Dartmouth 5 Holy Cross 4 Dartmouth 8 Middlebury 1 GOLF xox: nusrfg SHN PEMSENCQECO A3 USNQC ' A5 USMC Wm Qmmaow Bw WWAQN A3 USNR Cline AA, Uswu s msn M mam M USNR JOHN VNQUL JOE MQUEWT A4 USNQC EMR? 44 USNQC MCKQU X , 4 Q NEC BM MCJLCLN M US JCE H Jam ilmzzoma M, MSN rm unvmuusw ' l BJDTRCXEL M USW51 Qcmx Cmmew 45 L13 :mow A5 ESQ 44 MSN ' I QC QC Q our-l1NIf,I I - .4 llglnw, prol ' lrllv . - dia slay names of D t HI' mouth playera ar Hits Dartmouth Football quad VVhen Coach Tuss McLaugl1ry called the Dartmouth football squad together for the first practice of the fall semester, it was hard to say whether the coaching staff or the playing personnel had suffered more in the one year that lVlcLaughry had been in Hanover. Of the original coaching staff that Tuss had gathered together, only line coach George Barclay was on hand, for the armed services had deprived Dartmouth of line coach Bill Bevan, and backfield coaches Charley Ewart and Dick Cassiano. To meet this loss in his coaching staff, MeLaughry moved John Handrahan and Johnny Dell Isola up from the freshman ranks and also added former Green Bay Packer star, Ray Riddick, to the staff. Ozzie Cowles and Eddie Jeremiah were given complete control over the junior varsity team. On the players' side of the picture, the losses were even heavier. Twenty-one A squad players who would have been eligible to participate in intercollegiate ath- letics this fall failed to return to college, and such a loss could not of course be made up easily. Most, if not all of the 21, went into some sort of military service, and one, Remsen Crego '43, one of the most respected men on the team, had already been killed while in training for the air corps in Florida. McLaughry started the season, therefore, with a team that was largely green and inexperienced. Al- though the new rule permitting freshmen to play var- sity ball gave the squad some new talent, on the whole the team was lacking in reserves, particularly in the line. In spite of this misfortune there were a few bright spots, perhaps the brightest being the return to college of Captain Bud Kast, a capable backfield man as well as a great team player and leader. Another veteran who was not expected to play was Harry Gerber, a letter- man at end for two years, whose heavy scholastic schedule had prompted his retirement from football. Just before the Harvard game he showed up for prac- tice, explaining that he couldn,t stay away from the sport any longer. Because of this lack of reserve strength Mcliatighry early began to change men from one position to another in an effort to find a balanced combination. Two of the most important changes saw Lee Anderson moved from guard to tackle and Maurice Dampier switched from tackle to the guard slot. As the opening game with Holy Cross on September Q6 drew near, the coaches finally found a capable start- ing team. This team had Moe Monahan and Joe Crow- ley at the ends, Nick Daukas and Lee Anderson at the tackles, Maurice Dampier and Rog Antaya at the Tom Douglas snakes through for a gain in the Holy Cross game 1 101 1 FOOTBALL Meryll Frost about to break through in the Yale game guards with Norm Brown at center. The backfield was composed of Jack Burroughs at quarter, Captain Kast and Bay Wolfe at the halfs with Tommy Douglas in the fullback position. Of these men, Nfonahan, Brown, and Burroughs were all sophomores with no varsity experi- ence. The reserve strength of the team was largely in the hackiield where Meryll Frost, Larry Bartnick, Keith Deffourcy, Art Carey and others served. In the line, freshman Hal Bowman and junior VVarren Leopold hacked up Brown at center, while at guard, Steve Holmes, Carl iVIc,Kinnon, Mike Diaz and Spence Baird saw much action. Al ltlyers and Hal Lewis were second string tackles, and at the ends, Bog Arnold, Hal Vannon, Bud Vlleleh, Harry Gerber and others were prominent figures. The Dartmouth football team invaded VVorcester on September Q6 as the decided underdog in their battle with Iloly C'ross. Ank Scanlon had built his team around the great Johnny Griegas, and few sports experts ex- pected the Big Green to be able to stop the Holy Cross eleven. But the sports writers were in for a surprising afternoon. The Dartmouth team uncovered a classy running attack, a well poised and well balanced team with a rock-hound defense. The famous Holy Cross running attack was smothered at almost all times, and although a few Crusaders' passes did considerable I 02 Bud Kast '43, Captain W' th., llc INC 7 fri 35 ufljlllt' - and fattt' Speffaif ,L ness. l T with ,, .V an - Karel if In Wt' fi ' , at Thj. r of 'Q' 9 . . w . ,af in -, If ,. damage, the game belonged to Dartmouth from the opening kickoff. Leading '7-0 at the half, the Big Green faltered momentarily to let Holy Cross score in the opening minutes of the second half. VVith the score 7-6 the Dartmouth eleven began to function again, and another touchdown, plus a neat Held goal by Captain Kast, put the game away for Dartmouth. The final score was 17-6 and the upset startled the entire east. If the line was weak, it certainly gave no indication of being so as it stopped Holy Cross for four downs within the two-yard line. The following week saw the Dartmouth team play its one breather of the season, Miami of Ohio in the first game played at Hanover. The visitors failed to show much of an attack, and their defense was utterly unable to cope with the power of the Dartmouth backs. Tuss Mclaaughry uncovered all his talent in this game, and such freshman standouts as Larry Bartnick, Jack Sayers, Bud Schuster, and Carl Mcliinnon played good ball all afternoon. Bartnick was particularly spectacular, passing and running with deadly effective- ness. For the first team, Captain Bud Kast starred with one of the best displays of broken field running seen in recent years on the Hanover field. lVIiami scored once, but Dartmouth tallied nine different times to win the ball game 58-7. The third game on the Dartmouth schedule saw two of the east's major undefeated teams meet in a great YZVLTZZVZYWM' a '? '7j3'Y ' . K Y .. If, 'f.? 1'7Yf'lZ':5'ag,' ' 'Wi ,- 'cf-f., AW ' , f ,. I ,, ,,,, mf, ..,, .f,, Z Q, , ,9l,z,t,c, , Mr, ., w,-,W an -- f m' ., -, , L 'L ' f wgg, f H41 .5 ,rf3,p ' -1 V,--1 A - . .f,, f af e'fi4:.f-' , - if Vg, at , . .. 2 'tff1f,.. I p,, 'e f',:,:i -ff. 5, . Q71 1 , 1 , , . ,!iif',,'n'.,.ff,, figs A--, elfihgjifg :fx 'jan , , ,f ,,y,,, A, ,V,.,,, ,A ,, , ,, ,.,. 1 .. , M Wy, - f fa f, f I -W:pzff'1'f..'zbQ,vg wa '. ff - .2fvfhge.,,,,-. Aw, 35, ,..j.:,-4,,., '12 , , ' w 'fs 1 ,'4.:1fv ' '- . Q y V1 T571 l 1 , Tom Douglas '44, fullback Ray VVolfe 713, halfback Meryll Frost VIA, halfback l103l FGOTBALL McKinnon '46, guard Holmes '44, guard Diaz ,43, guard Welch '44, end Lee Anderson '43, tackle Nlonahan '45, end Leopold '44, center game at Hanover. The wily Red Raiders of Colgate under the crafty Andy Kerr invaded Hanover, intent upon avenging last year's defeat. The game was ex- pected to be a high scoring affair, and turned out as an- ticipated. The Colgate team scored first, but Dart- mouth came back with a scoring pass to Monahan and trailed 7-6. Colgate added a second touchdown before the half on an intercepted pass and broke loose with a vengeance in the third quarter to score twice more and lead 27-6. But the game was not yet over. The Dart- mouth team never once gave up and the fighting In- dians scored twice before the final whistle and were not far from a third tally when the game ended. Final score Colgate 27, Dartmouth 19. Maurice Dampier '43, guard Q f , ,K V , WW ,X X 45,2114 f 7 ,,o 1 4 ' ff ,yay f ftfvfwf , y - 1 ' lf The lil in the Wig!-1 5, won. Tr play ttf half, lfli gillllv Tl- ing llir is dom, tally. T11- lpouilf ii .V- imig me make itfi Haiinf ' .v ix Q 'X lg X si ' N C91 . 12 if .lf + 1 i S E 1 Antalya '44, guard Arnold '44, end The Harvard-Dartmouth game of 1941 still rankled in the minds of many Big Green players, and there was no game that this year's team would rather have Won. The Crimson adopted a tight defensive style of play that kept Dartmouth from scoring in the first half, but the second part of the game was another story. VVith Larry Bartnick and George Pulliam carry- ing the ball, the Big Green moved quickly to a touch- down, Joe Crowley taking a Bartnick pass for the tally. This put the Green ahead '7-2 CHarvard made Q points on a safety in the second quarterj and the first string backs added another TD for good measure to make the final count 14-Q. Having played consistently good ball for four games, Nick Daukas '44, tackle Norm Broun 40 center l The men from Colgate fail to stop Ray 'Wolfe the Dartmouth team now proceeded to fall apart in the fifth contest and Yale won an easy 17-7 victory over a startled Dartmouth team. The complacency of some of the team members, the inspired play of the Yale team, and the inability to solve the Yale running attack cost the Green the ball game. There was little that could be praised on the Dartmouth team that day, but even in defeat, the figure of Ray ivolfe stood out on the entire field. Dartmouth bounded back from the Yale and Wlilliam and Mary defeats by playing alert, aggressive football against Princeton in Palmer Stadium, and upset the favored Tigers, 19 to 7. Ray 1Yolfe set up two of the Green touchdowns with his sparkling runbacks of punts, while Tommy Douglas, in his finest kicking form. kept Princeton back in its own territory most of the afternoon. Hlost vital factor of all was the play of D21I'll11CJLllll,S supposedly underdog line, which out- eharged the Tiger frontier and stifled the home team's running attack. The following Saturday, in the frigid setting of Buffalo's Civic Stadium, Dartmouth and Cornell staged one of their typical thrillers, and although each scored three touchdowns, the Ithacans made good on allthree conversions and won, 21 to 19. The Big Green had a 13-0 lead in the first period, forged ahead again in the third after Cornell had scored 144 points, and finally succumbed when a Kretz-to-Rogers pass covered 54 yards to the 1-yard line. In the closing minutes, VVolfe almost got away for a touchdown after catching Sayers, pass but was pulled down on the 14. Bud Kast attempted a field goal from that spot but it was partially blocked and fell short. Tommy Douglas tallied the first two touchdowns, a Q0-yard aerial, VVolfe to Monahan, accounted for the third. Once again Ray Wolfe was the big gun of the Dartmouth attack. VVolfe, who ranks with the best Of Dartmouth backs, has been a great runner and a g00fl passer, a star defensively, and a source of inspirati0H to his team for three years. l106l l John Bronk, tramerg John Handrahan, backfleld coachg De0rmand McLaugl1ry, head coachg Ray Riddick, end Coachg John Dell Isola, line coach: George Barclay, line coach lVIeryll 1 rost carrles ln the NIIQIITII game H071 FOOTBALL Soooermen Rely on New Material With the graduation of seven lettermen last May the soccer team suffered a great loss. The squad lost two more valuable men this year, whose help were greatly needed. Charles lNIottola, the goalie of last season, left college to join the Naval Air Corps. Brad Copeland, a halfback and one of last year's outstanding players, is carrying a heavy schedule at llledical School. This makes it impossible for him to see any action. Thus Coach Tommy Dent was left a nucleus of only four lettermen, around which he had to build this year's squad. He recruited the remainder of the team from those who had had little experience and added some newcomers to varsity soccer squad. Working under and in spite of these difliculties Coach Dent shaped up a team which he was able to put on the field and show with some success their ability as a working, cooperating Coach Dent team. With a squad of untried material, the booters played their first game with Amherst and suffered a 5-0 defeat. Playing a sterling game for Dartmouth center half, Bill Orr consistently broke up Amherst scoring threats, While George Pert put in an excellent defensive showing at his outside left slot. The Amherst reserve strength began to tell in the final period, in which they pushed those tallies past the tiring Green. Their two scores were chalked up in the opening quarter. Captain Meigs Roberts, Porter, Richardson, Dent, Price, Crawford, Ashley Wllashburn, Stryker, Kerwin, Saunders, Schell, Orr, Mallett, Grubb J. Pert, Gillespie, Eddy, Meigs CCapt.D, Wfeiderhold, Young, Furfey, G. Pert 11081 for a Fair Season Rebounding with a vengeance from the last setback, Captain Whitey lNIeigs led the soccer eleven against Massachusetts State, trouncing them 41-1. The line, which seemed unable to function the week before re- deemed itself completely. It kept the ball almost con- stantly on the safe side of the midfield stripe and drove goalward time after time. Howie Price, shifted from inside to outside left for the encounter, starred with two goals. Jim Pert, who was left out of the Indian line-up in the Amherst game by an infected foot, ac- counted for the third goal. VVarren Gillespie made the final tally. A wet, heavy ball on a damp, soggy field was kept in play by evenly matched Springfield and Dartmouth soccer elevens for two periods. The Indians weakened, allowing two goals to be scored against them, and were unable to recover in the last period. Springfieldis air- tight defense left their goalie virtually inactive and their opportunist forward line outplayed the Green in the second half. Lou Wiederhold and Fritz Witzel did more than their share of work at fullback positions for the Indians, stopping numerous scoring threats. Freshman Jim Pert and his classmate, Pete lNIallett gave much of the color and iight to the forward line. Bud Scheu played well in the goal, making several fine saves. On Booters leave ground to head ball l ! 1 9 Howie Price gives this one the heavy boot the first score the ball was screened from his sight, and the second was a clever head of a good corner kick. Freshman Bud Scheu improved greatly, as the sea- son progressed, at goalie and was a tremendous asset to the team. Playing all of every game, Lou Wieclerholcl, at full back, could be depended upon for a steady game. Con Young, a senior, who hadnit come out for varsity before, showed a lot of the needed fight at halfback. Bill Orr, tall junior halfback, also starred at that posi- tion. Junior Johnny Furfey, another newcomer to the team, became a regular after the first game, replacing Captain Whitey Meigs, who was moved up to the for- ward line. Fritz VVitzel, stocky fullback, was outstand- ing on defense. Prominent on the offensive, throughout the season, were brothers George and Jim Pert, Captain Meigs, and Howie Price. Following the first game, George Pert was shifted to center forward where his speed helped make the attack stronger. Howie Price, plucky little forward, was a constant threat to Indian opponents. Meigs, most versatile member of the team, having played as goalie in his freshman year, and halfback for the last two years, was shifted to outside right where he sparked the team. Because the squad relied on freshmen and sopho- mores, who, incidentally have improved considerably since September, the prospects for next year appear very favorable. N091 SOCCER Intramural Department Adjusts Director Delahanty of Intramural Department The Intramural Department was developed in re- sponse to a growing demand for an authoritative body having systemized regulation of intramural athletics on the campus. An Intramural Department was formcdg first organization consisted of three managers, one in charge of the oHfice Work, another supervising fraternity sports, and the third handling dormitorv contests. Three assistant managers were then appointed from a group of heelers that had Worked during their Freshman year. Since that time there has been an an- nual competition for positions in the department. Now a group of five managers and Mr. R. J. Delahanty, Director of Recreational Activities, determine the policies followed by the Intramural Department. Since the outbreak of War on December 7, 19411, there has been a marked change in the attitudes and feelings of most Dartmouth men, and in this respect the Intra- mural Department has done its utmost to cooperate and to give them a balanced program of well-organized athletics, and special features. For the first time since the advent of the college a full intramural program was run throughout the entire summer. With the War playing such a huge part in the lives of all Dartmouth men the Intramural Department has, Obstacle course forms a new pattern at border of Memorial Field H101 Its Pro ram to artime Activit Bennett, Ross, Billing, Armstrong Colwell, Sampson, Baum, Cain and will further, attempt to give the student body all it can in the way of competitive athletics. Several sports have been introduced to achieve this end in the past year. Soccer was begun last fall and met with such great approval that it has been made a regular Intramural sport. Mr. Delahanty, in collaboration with Tommy Dent, soccer coach, has set up rules for a six- man game with three forwards, one halfback, one full- back, and a goalie. Tiedust, a combination of military map reading and cross-country running, is the second important sport that has been added to the department's rapidly grow- ing list. It was brought here by Lieutenant Piltti Heiskanen, formerly of the Finnish Army. In the event that was run this fall, the winning team was composed of Harries and Bird of Delta Upsilon, while McAuliiTe and Waldron of Theta Chi placed second. The course for this event is mapped out ahead of time by Lieu- tenant Heiskanen, and the reporting places for the teams are marked out on a map given to each pair of contestants. Following the map, they are to cover the course as rapidly as possible and report back to the Sym, after having reported to all the spots designated on the map. This summer the twenty-two fraternities were di- vided into two baseball leagues, the American and the l 111 INTRAMURAL BOARD Director of Intramural Athletics Robert J. Delahanty Chairman of Managers Robert C. Colwell '44 Managers Marshall Clark '44 A. CliHord Baum '44 Assistant Managers Thomas H. Armstrong '45 Herbert E. Brooks '45 Edwin G. Bennett '45 Craig J. Cain '45 Wyly M. Billing '45 - Robert Ross, Jr. '45 Baseball dominates summer activity on campus 1 IN TRAMURALS Solidly through shortstop. . . but Tommy lVIcNIanus won't let him get beyond first Sigma Chi smiles over its hard-won victory A high one for 1-ight field f . x , 00, -I ,, av j Q 77 . ' sw V ' ,mf , fir ,t Q5 ff Q V If X , , U ' Y , LW Af, I , , s v. X ,f M, ,4 ' 2 ,V ' 4, ,Q A x sf' , WX 1. 3 A , 5 A NAA I f Abba .,,LiM I ahh? H121 National. The most outstanding teams in the American League were the Dekes, who ended in victory, Delta Upsilon, with a record of eight won and two lost, A.D., until they lost the services of Ray Wolfe, whose pitch- ing kept them in the upper brackets of the standings, and D.T.D., amassing another 8-2 standing. Behind the fine pitching of Dick Fuller, '45, the Dekes were able to finish the season exhibiting a record marred by only one loss, that to D.U. Not only was Fuller out- standing on the mound, but his hitting, along with that of Lee Anderson and Warren Leopold, was a major factor in snagging the pennant for his team. For D.U. the battery of Seward MacDonald pitching, and Buzz Cutting catching proved so effective that an upset in the early part of the season was the only thing that stopped them from pushing the winners right down to the line. If MacDonald had had more support from his team at the plate, his pitching, which was about the best in the American League, would have run off with the honors. The D.T.D.'s, another well-balanced squad, were very effective behind the good twirling of Paul Hackstedde, and stellar first base play of McManus, who stood head and shoulders above any of the first basemen in either league. Here again their lack in hit- ting power, if made up, might well have given them the pennant. In contrast to the American League, where the Dekes seemed to have arelatively easy time of it, the National League was a hotly contested race to the very finish. In fact, a three-way tie resulted between Beta Theta Pi, Pi Lambda Phi, and Sigma Chi. How- ever, before even getting to a three-way tie, these teams had to meet Kappa Sigma, whose excellent battery of Buck and Sullivan, and the fine hitting support of the rest of the team almost brought them into the select circle. To determine who was to meet the Dekes in the Little World Series, it was necessary to enter two teams in a playoff, with the third team getting a bye. There- fore, Pi Lam encountered Beta, and after a hard fought game, with Fielding and Levin pitching for the former, and Muller doing a very fine job for the latter, the Pi Lams won to put them into the finals of the National League against the powerful Sigma Chi outfit. During the entire season Johnny Eaton had carried the brunt of the pitching burden for the Sigma Chis and at this point he lost none of his effectiveness. Turning in another masterful performance Eaton, together with the steady catching support of Dick Simpson, and the batting power of the rest of the team, led by Sparky Adams, turned back the Pi Lams in a relatively easy victory, thus making them the team to face the Dekes. In the Little World Series Dick Fuller took the mound for the Dekes, and Eaton was on the hill for Sigma Chi. Scoring early in the seven-inning game, the Jim Olsen chalks one up for the Betas Witten and Sherwood of DTD fraternity tennis champs l I H3 IN TRAMURALS The Tri-Kaps in deep consultation latter took a lead which was too much for the hard- battling Dekes to overcome, and with the aid of Sparky Adam,s home run, Johnny Eaton turned in a three-hit job to set down the American League victors to the tune of 8-1. In spite of the limited attendance in some of the dormitories there was a very successful season with softball in a circuit of two leagues. Crosby was the win- ner of its league after beating Butterfield, which had previously defeated them, in a playoff. The winners of the other two leagues were Gile, and No. F ayerweather, with the former defeating the latter for the right to meet Crosby in the Dormitory Finals. Led by pitcher, Dave Bortz, whose artful slants were too much for all competition, the boys from Gile turned on the pressure and sent Crosby, led by Bill White, down to a 5-4 decision. In another program of Intramurals for the summer semester, there were three track meets initiated by Coach Harry Hillman. The first meet was won handily by the Phi Gams, with Paul Hanlon of the winners leading the scoring with ten points. In the50-yarddash they placed in the first four positions, and in the ob- stacle race Charlie Swartzbaugh, of Sigma Nu, took second place to prevent them from making another clean sweep. The standings at the end of the meet were: Phi Gam Q0, DKE 5, Psi U. 3, Sigma Nu 3, and Beta Q. Streeter goes into action on the north campus I1141 Grimshaw, DKE goalie, makes a. save in the fraternity semi-finals Sigma Chi,s, winners of fraternity football leagues, hold their own on XVltl'l Phl PS1 home ground In the second meet the Betas nosed out D. U. by one point to come out on top. Steve Holmes, Beta, was first in the wall-scaling, a new event, Jones and Cutting, D. U., were first in the 50-yard three-legged race, and Dixie Daniels, D.K.E., captured the running broad jump with a leap of 18 ft. 5 in. In the third and final meet another newcomer to the winners' circle appeared. This time the Theta Delts won by defeating Chi Phi 165 to 15. Larry Blood won the potato race for Theta Delt, followed by Paul Hanlon, Phi Gam, and Bob McQueen, D. U. The Intramural Department rounded out its summer schedule with a fraternity tennis doubles tournament. After very close matches right up to the finals the D.T.D. team composed of Sherwood and VVhiten put the clincher on Sigma N u's stars, Scharf and Conklin, to the tune of 6-2, '7-5, 6-41. Both teams were very evenly matched, but it was the superior volleying, and im- proved net play of the victors that brought them through. The activities this fall opened up as usual with dormitory and fraternity touch football. In the fra- ternity League 1, Sigma Chi eliminated all opponents, the most powerful of which were D.T.D. and Phi Sigma Kappa, and forged to the head of their division. In League 2 was the ultimate winner after a play- Off which was necessitated by the fact that Kappa Sigma gained a tie by an upset win in the last game of the season. League 3 conquerors were Phi Gamma Delta, being pressed by Sigma Nu and Theta Delta Chi. The fourth and last League was won by Theta Chi, despite the strong opposition from A.D. In the playoffs of the four leagues met Phi Gam in a game that resembled tackle more than touch football and the Phi Grams outroughed the Tri-Kaps in one of the toughest and tightest games of the season, 12-6. Late in the third period Max Edwards pitched a scoring pass to Ed Bundy, tying the count. In a sudden death overtime Phi Gam pushed across the winning tally on a pass from Johnny Koslowski to Snook Hughes. In the other semi-final game the strong Sigma Chi eight put on the pressure and slammed their way to a Q7-8 win over the usually strong Theta Chi squad. Despite the reliable combinations of Bob Rader, Dusty Lewis, Gerald Peterson and Fred Page, the running and passing attack of the victors was too much to overcome. With the semi-finals over, Phi Gam met Sigma Chi in the fraternity finals. In the last quarter, behind by 19 points, Phi Gam released the brakes and countered with two touchdowns, which just fell short of tying their opponents, who went on to win 19-12. As in previ- ous games, Longfield, Ard, and Flood were topnotch. On the other side of the fence, the plays that almost brought victory for Phi Gam were executed by Mara, 115 INTRAMURALS College Football Champs pose beside the venerable walls of Crosby and a pass from Koslowski to Walt Daggatt, in the waning minutes of the game. Thus another football season for fraternities came to a close. In the dormitory competition the winners of the three leagues, into which this contest was divided were Over the top-the hard way Hitchcock, Crosby, and Butterfield. During semi-finals, in which Crosby received a bye, ButterHeld's power- house rolled over the unprotected Hitchcock men to the tune of 25-0. Sparked by Johnny Gooding, Sam Cutler, and Martin Brussie they showed that they fully earned the right to meet the champions from Crosby. Through- out the entire season it was the throwing arm of Good- ing that proved the vital factor in the Butterfield at- tack, along with the ine running and passing of Cutler, and the pass catching of Jack Novascone and Brussie. Although Crosby was the eventual winner, Butter- field led up to the very end of the last period, when Crosby pushed across a counter, and forced the game into two overtime periods, including a sudden death. The deciding touchdown was on a short pass from Dick Rondeau to White and Crosby went off the field again victors by the rather large score of 24-18. Sigma Chi and Crosby met in the college champion- ship, a game resplendent with trick passes, intercep- tions, and small gains, the latter came out on top by virtue of an extra point, 7-6. With the exception of the two scores the teams were never very near each other's goals, and most of the action took place between the twenty-yard lines. This game showed a very fine brand of football, with Sigma Chi having the edge in decep- tion, but Crosby the edge in power and straight plays. At the present time the hockey schedule is nearing completion, and Gamma Delta Chi and D.K.E. are the only undefeated teams in the double flight elimination tournament. However, the bracket is such a compli- cated one, and the necessity of playing more games may appear, so that it is hard at this time to make any pre- dictions as to the final outcome of this hotly contested activity. SEASONAL SPORT CALENDAR SUMMER BASEBALL Fraternity Sigma Chi SOFTBALL Dormitory Gile FALL TENNIS DOUBLES Fraternity Delta Tau Delta ' TIEDUST RACE Fraternity Delta Upsilon X TOUCH FOOTBALL ' Fraternity Sigma Chi Dormitory Crosby TRACK Fraternity Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity Beta Theta Pi Fraternity Theta Delta Chi A 1 116 1 INT RAMURALS I I Q M. 0CI Phi Beta Kappa Osberg, Solez, Daggett, Miller Oppenheimer, Copeland. VVaterman, Reps, Mettendorf, Grubb Cahn, iNest, Blanchet, Hirschberg, Keefe, Bolster MEMBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA, ELECTED OCT. 15, 1942 Jeremy Blanchet Arthur Stanley Bolster, Jr. Charles Maurice Cahn, Jr. Bradley Ellsworth Copeland Wfalter Russell Daggatt VVarner Norton Grubb, Jr. Allan Robertson Hardie Joseph Gustav Hirschberg, JI IYilliam Maclrarlane Jones John Miles Keefe Prankl Robert Charles McQueen John Harlan Middendorf Edmund Gillmore Nliller James Richard Oppenheimer Calvin John Osberg John W'illiam Reps Horace Ensign Rockwell Chester Solez James lVIacKenzie Stewart Larned Allen Ivaterman in Howard Yvest OFFICERS l,l'C'SI.fllfIlf, Dr. F. P. Lord lYlC'l'-IJI'0SII1Ullf, C. A. Proctor Scrvrffury- Tflfll-S1lfUI', H. G. Rugg .-I lIffI'l'01', A. YY. Pre y l'1XI'IC'I I'IYl+I COMMITTEE C. lf. Bolscr IV. E, Stevens J. P. Poole Dr. F. P. Lord ll. G. Rugg C'OBlMI'l l'EE ON NEW CHAPTERS I, . R. Bafflcv I-1 . W. R. Ntiaterman A. J. Truxal f'OM3ll'l l'EE OX SENIOR. I EI.I.OWS Al. I.. l.indal1l J, B. 'Folger I.. F. March I 1 181 On the 20th of August, 1787, the New Hampshire Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa, differing from the two other societies in its selective nature, was founded at the University of Hanover. Principal among the benefits hoped to be realized from the formation of the society was freedom of thought. In the words of Aaron Kins- man, first President of the chapter, S'Here you may dis- engage yourselves from scholastic cares and communi- cate without reserve, whatever observations you have made on a variety of objects, remembering that every- thing which is transacted within these walls is trans- acted sub-rosa and detested be the wretch who pre- sumes to violate itf' The selective system followed by the New Hamp- shire Alpha society admitted such distinguished mem- bers in the past as Daniel Webster, George Ticknor, Rufus Choate, Salmon P. Chase, Amos Tuck, Richard Hovey, Edwin D. Frost, all Dartmouth presidents fol- lowing the VVheelocks, Ralph VValdo Emerson, John Boyle O'Reilly and Charles Dudley VVarner. In recent years Phi Beta Kappa has passed even more stringent scholastic requirements than formerly. However, many men are admitted in their Junior year and an effort is made to have them participate in all of the Society's activities. phlnx .IOHN EDIVIN ADAMS, JR. LEE ALEXANDER ANDERSON, JR. HARRY JOSEPH ARMSTRONG GEORGE HERBERT BARLONV, II ORMAND N. BIRKLAND, JR. JOSEPH ALFRED CROVVLEY XVALTER RUSSELL DAGGATT JAMES ERVIN DEXVEY THEODORE G. DRISCOLL RALPH HOXVARD DLISHAME JAMES DAVIS ELLEMAN HARRY GRANT GERBER JAMES HORN GILBERT NVILLARD RICHARDS GRAY HONVARD BRERETON HALL PAUL DAVID HANLON RICHARD KIMMEL THOMAS IIUDNER KING JOHN ADAM KOSLOXVSKI JOHN STANISLAUS KROL ROBERT XVARREN LIMING JACK DALE MACK RICHARD PHILIP O,BRIEN JOHN IVILLIAM O,CONNOR STANTON BLISS PRIDDY PAUL ALLEN SCHROEDER FREDERICK FRANKLIN STOCKXX ELI DONALD LATHAM IVA LLS XVILLIAM H ENRY IVIERMAN GEORGE RAYMOND NVOLFE FREDERICK P. XVORTHEN H19 Q P3 011 XVILLIAM ALLAN BAKER, JR. JACK CLAUD BEHRINGER PHILIP SOMERVELL BOW'IE MAURICE SIDNEY DAMPIER DIXON HALL DANIELS MANUEL DIAZ, JR. GEORGE CLEMENT EADY JOSEPH KENT HUTCHINSON RICHARD EILERT KOESTER CHARLES HENRY LONGFIELD XVILLIAM LOTHMAN, III THOMAS LA XVRENCE MCMANUS NI 'pf' ,gif -A ' . 1 '!g gy ..-' A-nf - I , Q 43 fm '-!',fy frf H901 JOHN COIT MELENEY ANDRE WATERS MOSENTHAL THOMAS JEFFERSON MUNN RICHARD LGROY NOBLE DANIEL F. NORTON, JR. DEXTER RICHARDS HORACE ENSIGN ROCKWELL JOHN H. STENSON LOUIS EDWARD TUFFLY JOHN DAVENPORT WALTON ELLIS SMEDLEY WARD, JR. Casque and Gauntlet X . ' EDVVIN AUGUST BOCK ROBERT DANA BROWN STANLEY GUNNISON CALDER CHARLES STONEHAM FEENEY ALLAN ROBERTSON HARDIE PETER HEGGIE JOHN LINDSLEY HUTCHINSON, WILLIAM TRACY MAECK GUY CHANDLER MALLETT, JR. DONALD MCCORKINDALE JR. ROBERT HILTON MESERVEY GEORGE BARBER MUNROE JAMES OLSEN, JR. PAUL LANGE PARKER WALTER PONVERS, JR. NVILLIAM CLINTON STORY REMSEN STANLEY DOUGLAS SKAUG FRANK PETER SLINGLUFF CHARLES JAMES WEBB l1Q11 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer FnATEnNI'rY Alpha Delta Phi Beta Theta Pi Chi Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tan Delta Delta Upsilon Gamma Delta Chi Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Sigma Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Plzi Sigma Kappa Pi Lambda Phi Psi Upsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi Zeta Psi lnterfraternity Council Regulates OFFICERS OFFICERS Frederick Franklin Stockwell Wlilliam Tracy Nlaeck John Adam Koslowski Robert Francis Ehinger PRESIDENT Herbert Bailey VValten Jack Dale Nlack David Austin Schirmer Frederick Franklin Stockwell Robert Francis Ehinger William MacFarlane Jones Albert Preston lVIoore Thomas Hudner King John Dacy Stevens Daniel Field Norton, Jr. John Adam Koslowski Vllilliam Tracy Maeck Geddes Wlarren Carrington VVilliam Moses Glovsky Richard Remsen, Jr. John Henry Stinson Robert Hatfield Hobart Charles Edward Swartzbaugh Robert Bruce Power Richard Dawson Longacre Robert Clinton Barnum John Marshall Jenkins President Secretary Treasurer FRATERNITY Alpha Delta Phi Beta Theta Pi Chi Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Gamma Delta Chi Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Sigma Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Lambda Phi Psi Upsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi Zeta Psi INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Glovsky, Carrington, Jenkins, Stinson, Hobart, Swartzbaugh Stevens, Mack, Longacre, King, O,Day, Vllalten Power, Ehinger, Maeck, Stockwell, Koslowski, Barnum, Moore Paul David Hanlon Robert Benjamin Grimshaw Horace Ensign Rockwell VFREASURER Charles Renfrew Thomson James Olsen, Jr. Daniel Joseph Donovan Robert Benjamin Grimshaw Josiah Wlhitney Brown YVilliam Reinhardt Davies Alden lvlygatt Taylor Donald Harris Taylor Raymond John NIC-hlahon, Jr. Forbes Delany Paul David Hanlon John Thompson Billington Richard Milward Bugbee Charles Mayer Arnstein Horace Ensign Rockwell Wlilliam Ambrose Coughlin John lVIcCarthy, II Bradford Dean Cole Clarke Seth Lyon Vllillard Edwin Tostman William Perreau Moseley John Fielding Wynne iieei Brothers and Welcomes Nav INTERFRATERNITY TREASURERS' COUNCIL Donovan, Barnes, Taylor, Bugbee, Corner Lyon, Tostman, Mcl,oud, Davies Delany, Coughlin, Grimshaw, Hanlon, Goedecke, fMcCarthy, NIcMahon Pool is one of the many means of relaxation oH'ered by fraternity houses 11231 The 1942 Interfraternity Council, aided and advised by Dean Chamberlain, will be remembered chiefly because of its action concerning the drinking situation. The now famous Plan 1-A Was the result of the Whole investigation. Another outstanding problem the Council had to face was the rearrange- ment of the rushing system to fit the speeded- up program. The proposed plan sounded great, but it proved to be ineffective. An- other committee then studied the situation and put forward a revised plan, which, when adopted, proved very successful. As usual, supervision of Houseparties was done by the Council and Green Key in the spring, summer and fall l-louseparties. The reign of the present Council Was the first to be so short, but it was kept busy with all the problems that confront such a body. VVith the War and the coming of the Navy to Hanover, the Council had a new situation to cope With: the relations between the fra- ternities and the Naval officers. The prob- lem was adequately solved and friendly re- lationship established. ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Medical Fraternity Copeland, Porter, Solez, Lena, Schumacher, Kane, Taylor, Clarke, Worcester, Hunt, Hoffman VVest, VonWedel, Burke, Crenshaw, Behringer, Carlson Tyson, Costello, Thomson, Regan, Syversten, Delaney, Bishop, Kramer, Jenkins Lawton, NIcElin, Eisenman, Magee, Smith, Hoch, Hempstead, lVIartz, lvilson, Robinson, Chandler MEDICAL SCHOOL I Bled. I: Glenn E. Behringer, Harry C. Bishop, George H. Burke, Berger H. Carlson, Charles W. Clarke, Jr., Bradley E. Copeland, Forbes Delany, David L. Hoffman, VVilliam Hunt, Charles F. Kane, Hugh F. Lena. Jr., Edward C. Porter, VVilliam J. Regan, Jr., VVilliam E. Schumacher, Chester Solez, lvarren J. Taylor, .Jerrold O. Von lvedel, Franklin H. West, William VV. lvilson. . .I ,ii- Wig. 1 124 MEDICAL SCHOOL II Med. II: John P. Chandler, John L. Crenshaw, Jr., Paul J. Cos- tello, VValter Eisenman, Richard H. Hempstead, Eugene L. Hoch, E. VVa.yne Martz, Ward Jenkins, Henry F. Kramer, Jr., Richard W. Lawton, Thomas W. lVIcElin, Richard B. Magee, James W. Robinson, VVilliam C. Scott, David S. Smith, Charles R. Thomson, Ralph R. Tyson, Robert F. WVi1son, John T. VVorcester. In 1888, a group of students at the Dartmouth Medi- cal School organized the Alpha Kappa Kappa Medical Fraternity. Today, Alpha Kappa Kappa possesses forty-six active chapters with a total membership of over fifteen thousand. The fraternity was organized on the broad foundation of social and mental development, scholarship and mutual assistance. The Alpha Chapter has been particularly fortunate in maintaining a close relationship with the Dartmouth Medical School and its associated teaching hospital which has served to materialize these basic tenets. In the past two years, the fraternity has made an especial effort to offer social and athletic diversion to itS members, and in this attempt has been quite successful. l pg., 31 f if fl '.i I at 2 W f. V ff .. 1- . as . 's K QU! .1-1. , 'I' Q lk' ff 'Lvl 'Qu .1 ,, . 4 si' up M, Ay W if s , 1 .4 .J ,f is nv , ,W ' A af H. I ALPHA DELTA PHI Dartmouth Chapter A During the year 18412-3 the Tau Delta Theta Society was organized at Dartmouth with fourteen members. In 1846 the Society secured, through the Amherst and Yale Chapters, a charter for the Alpha Delta Phi, mak- ing it the second national fraternity at Dartmouth. Until 1872 the chapterls headquarters were on the third floor of Dartmouth Hall. In 1922 a chapter house was built on East Wheelock Street. Since that time the chapter has continued to grow and it is now in its ninety-sixth year at Dartmouth. With the arrival of the Naval Training Unit we have met brothers from all parts of the country, and we hope we shall meet more brothers as succeeding classes come to Hanover. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Louis B. Benezet, Prof. Edmond H. Booth, Mr. Albert I. Dicker- son, Dr. Henry Heye, Prof. Francis E. llierrill, Dr. Joseph G. Pollard. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: John H. Altorfer, Harry J. Armstrong, Francis G. Bridge, James E. Dewey, Harry G. Gerber, William Hunt, Nelson C. Mc- Clary, Dale F. Ruedig, Jr., Paul A. Schroeder, Stanley D. Skaug, Herbert B. Walten, Roger K. Wolbarst. 1944: Roger P. Arnold, Allen M. Barrett, Ralph A. Bogan, Jr., Robert E. Callan, Roger C. Chapin, Harry H. Davidson, James C. 4 Y X 12532 I . V ' ..- 1 Q 4 Ea Donnelly, Jr., Henry T. Douglas, III, Edward F. Eubanks, George L. Galbraith, Jr., Robert E. Hirschfield, Hugh W. Hitchcock, Allen E. Howland, Robert H. Kaatz, David H. Merrill, Fred L. lVIills, Jr., Francis P. Murphy, Jr., Robert W. Peterson, David Pierson, Richard L. Ranger, Charles M. Secor, John W. Tope, Frederick C. Witzel. 1945: Preston K. Aishton, John R. Brandt, Don Campbell, James C. Eckels, Ronald G. Egan, Alvin C. Gluck, Horace G. Hedges, Jr., Ralph G. Hinners, Jr., Arvis A. Johnson, Jr., Robert S. Katherman, William D. McNeely, John C. Mann, Charles D. Miller, George WV. Miller, Louis V. Mills, John VV. Ormond, Jr., Jerome Peacock, Robert VV. Pease, Eugene T. Pinney, John W. Tolley III, VVilbur E. VVebster, Jr. T Aishton, Kaatz, Mann, C. lVIiller, G. Miller, Katherman, Ranger, Mckeely, Hedges, Pinney Howland, Johnson, Hempstead, Luttrell, Campbell, Brandt, Hinners, Tolley, Eckels, Gluek, Webster, Ormond Callan, Bar ett, Donahue, Davidson, Pope, Mills, Bogan, Chapin, Bridge, Mills, Pease, Eubanks, Douglas Wolfe, Wlolbarst, Thomson, lVIcClery, Armstrong, Schroeder, WValten, Merrill, Altorper, Galbraith, Dewey, Ruedig, Donnelly, Hirschfield 11251 BETA THETA PI Alpha Omega Chapter 1 1 Beta Theta Pi is fifty thousand strong in its one A 1 hundred and fourth year. Founded at Miami Univer- sity in 1839, it has 90 active chapters. It was the sixth college secret fraternity to organize, the first West of the Alleghanies. The house was completed in 1933 through generous aid of the alumni. At Dartmouth the Alpha Omega Chapter is in its 85th year, that is, counting thirty-one years it existed as the Vitruvian Society. It was in 1889 that the Alpha Omega Chapter was organized, and all Vitruvian mem- bers became ipso facto Betas. Since its founding Dart- mouth Betas have played an important part in campus activities. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Frank 1VI. Anderson, Prof. Robert M. Bear, Dr. Hanford YV. Eldredge, Prof. Nathaniel L. Goodrich, Prof. Elden H. Hartshorn, Prof. Hewette E. Joyce, Prof. Alexander M. Meneely. FRATRES IN URBE Harris P. Dawson, Jr., VVilliam H. Foster, Jr., Albert E. Rogers, Adna D. Storrs. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Ormand Birkland, Jr., James D. Elleman, Joseph K. Hutch- inson, Jack D. Mack, John C. Meleney, Richard R. Morner, James Olsen Jr., Frank P. SlingluH, Ellis S. VVard, Jr., Charles J. Webb, 2nd, hielvin hi. Fenichell, Lewis YV. Seidman. 1944: Herbert A. Brandt, James G. Briggs, Theodore T. Brush, Lafayette H. Caldwell, Jr., Paul T. Carroll, 1VIarshall Clark, Robert LaH. Coith, Charles E. Fox, Jr., Stephen VV. Holmes, Donald E. Bday, Robert J. 1VIyers, Earl T. Owen, Philip E. Penberthy, Robert J. Riggs, Jr., Charles H. Schumacher, West Shell, Jr., John NI. Shellen- berger, Jr., David McC. Spencer, Joseph R. Vancisin, William C. VVelch. 1955: Cyrus G. Allen, John VV. Allen, James M. Andrew, William C. Bates, John L. Carroll, Andrew P. Carstensen, Robert F. Collins, Douglas A. Donahue, Raymond NI. Hicks, Jr., Russell B. Kenworthy, Gregg C. McDonald, James P. MacPherson, Walter C. Muller, Grover TV. Penberthy, Murray Sams, Jr., Richard BI. Seybold, YVilliam A. Schmitt, Robert J. Stumm, Fredrick R. Williamson, Jr. Spencer, Owen, Clark, Muller, Caldwell, Myers, Coith, Shell, P. Carroll, 1VIacDonald, Collins, Hicks Vancisin, Schumacher, Shellenberger, Briggs, Holmes, VVelch, Brush, Riggs, May, Fox, Brandt, P. Penberthy Ward, Elleman, Olsen, Hutchinson, Morner, Mack, Finichell, Webb, 1VIeleney, Slingluff, Birkland Donahue, J. Allen, Baker, MacPherson, Kenworthy, VVilliamson, J. Carroll, YV. Penberthy, C. Allen, Schmitt, Sams, Seyhold, Andrew f126j CHI PHI 2. Chl Chapter Ai --x C ' X111 .A 5.2 ZT11 -A - In'ni if ai 5 ' i Schaeberle, Perry, Peno, Fessenden, Spencer, 1NIacIntyre, Clunie, Ashley Vosler, Maleno, Spicer, Conroy, Donovan, Jacoby, Brown, McDowell, Basbas Sorlein, Andree, Gordon, Haskell, Schirmer, Hooker, Cooper, Burr, Simpson Habein, Rice, Cantwell, Roberts, Patton, Anthony, Crabtree, Zildjian, Kleckner FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Howard A. Bradley, Dr. Robert K. Carr, Dr. John A. Coyle, Prof. Arthur Dewing, Prof. Robert VV. Frey, Prof. George L. Frost, Mr. Richard L. Funkhouser, Prof. Everett W. Goodhue, Prof. James D. McCallum, Prof. VVilliam H. McCarter, Mr. George F. Theriault. FRATRES IN URBE Mr. Gordon Bridge, Gordon R. Ingram, Robert Funkhouser FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Robert VV. Andree, VVilliam C. Burr, David A. Cooper, Alfred Chi Phi is the oldest of all national fraternities. The Chi Phi Fraternity of today is a result of a union of three earlier organizations of the same name. The first of these was known as the Princeton Order, originating at the College of New Jersey CPrinceton Universityj in 1824. The Chi Chapter of the Chi Phi Fraternity was or- igillally a local society, Alpha Alpha Omega, founded in 1897. In 1901 a petition was addressed to the Chi Phi National Congress for enrollment. The Chi Chapter Was installed on May 2, 1902. A new House was built in 1929 through the close C0Operation of the alumni corporation and the under- graduate chapter. I 127 1 IVI. Crowley, Herbert S. Gordon, Theodore H. Haskell, Jr., James W. Hooker, David A. Schirmer, Kenneth E. Sorlien, Roy Watson, Jr., VVilliarn F. lvhitmarsh. . 1944: 1VIonte G. Basbas, David A. Brown, Robert G. Conroy, Daniel J. Donovan, VVilliam A. Jacoby, Joseph A. lVIaleno, Jr., Charles E. 1VIcDowell, Norman L. Simpson, Sheldon E. Spicer, Jr. 1945: Robert J. Anthony, lVilliam H. Ashley, Roger C. Cantwell, Fredrick B. Clunie, Richard C. Crabtree, Philip D. Fessenden, Harold C. Habein, Donald S. Kleckner, Wlilliam R. 1VIacIntyre, Jr., Charles H. Patton, Robert R. Peno, Jr., Robert H. Perry, Donald fM. Rice, Robert A. Roberts, Robert NI. Schaeberle, John 1VI. Smart, Carlisle T. Spencer, Robert Zildjian. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON kA-'Q' Pi Chapter AKE f xt 1y X, Lewis, Coleman, Rice, Hoffman, Burroughs, Duke, Monohan, Hemingway, Brown, Heneage, lVIortimer, NIorris Williams, Strasenburgh, Fuller, Brundage, Newton, Felton Distin, Southwick, Ellms, Davidson, Antaya, Roberts, Leopold, Daukas Hale, Dryer, MacDowell, Smith, Saul, Lawrence, Davis, Brewster Kenny, Grimshaw, Stockwell, Anderson, Herrera, Daniels FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Dr. P. Bartlett, Dr. E. H. Bartlett, Mr. J. Del Isola., Dr. G. D. Frost, Mr. E. S. Hoehn, Dr. E. M. Hopkins, Mr. A. E. Jensen, Prof. David Lambuth, Prof. F. P. Lord, Prof. G. D. Lord, Mr. K. B. Mich- ael, Prof. L. F. lVIurc-h, IVIr. T. Packard, Prof. F. D. Parker, Mr. John Pearson, Prof. C. A. Proctor, Prof. E. B. Watson, Prof. H. R. VVell- man. FRATRES IN URBE Mr. Donald B. Albertson, Mr. Harry R. Heneage, Mr. Dan C. Richardson. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1U.5.i: Leo A. Anderson, Jr., Dixon H. Daniels, Robert B. Grimshaw, 5 x , N281 Roberto Herrera, Edward R. Kast, Kevin B. Kenny, Frederick F. Stockwell. 1944: Roger A. Antaya, William R. Brewster, Jr., Abbott H. Davis, Jr., Donald MCL. Davidson, Nicholas J. Daukas, VVilliam G. Diston, Joseph F. Dryer, Jr., William B. Hale, Jack C. Lawrence, Warren S. Leopold, Andrew S. IVIacDowell, Jr., John C. Roberts, Arthur D. Saul, Jr., Richard P. Smith, John K. Snobble. 191,55 Norman VV. Brown, Howard D. Brundage, John H. Bur- roughs, Russell E. Chase, Jr., John S. Chambers, VVilliam H. Cole- man, Theodore M. Douglas, Jr., Roy F. Duke, Jr., Carleton VV. Ellms, Rex Felton, Richard C. Fuller, John H. Hemingway, Peter Heneage, Carl F. HoHman, Jr., Morton H. Lewis, John F. Monahan, Hugh R. NIorris, John D. lVIortimer, Stanley L. Newton, Stanley L. Rice, Richard H. Southwick, Edwin G. Strasenburgh, Jr. Delta Kappa Epsilon was founded at Yale in 1844 and now numbers 47 chapters in all parts of the country. Pi, the Dartmouth chapter of D.K.E., was founded in 1853 by two members of the Xi chapter at Colby Uni- versity, who transferred to our college in that year.The Pi chapter is now the fourth oldest Dartmouth frater- nity. The site of the chapter house has moved four times before establishment of the present residence. The house is over 150 years old, and is a famous Hanover landmark. D.K.E. at Dartmouth has always upheld its princi- ples of loyalty and fellowship, and its brothers remain, as the motto states, 'cfriends from the heart foreverfl DELTA TAU DELTA Gamma Gamma Chapter Delta Tau Delta vs as founded at Bethany College in Delta Tau Delta vias not established at Dartmouth until 1901 One of the prominent men among its first members and organizers was 1 ictor Cutter 03 who r I West Virginia in 1859. The Gamma Gamma Chapter of i i hs ' .. I was later to become president of the United Fruit Com- pany and trustee of Dartmouth College. The chapter has had several different locations during its 42 years at Dartmouth, the present house dating from 1927. Since the beginning, Delta Tau Delta has partici- pated to the fullest extent in interfraternity athletic and non-interfraternity competition, and has always made numerous contributions to a wide variety of college activities. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Chester H. Forsyth, Prof. Norman E. Gilbert, Prof. Lloyd Rf . we FRATRES IN URBE A. Murray Austin, Ernst Bowen, Arthur Carter, Earl Hewitt, John M. Piane, William H. Spence. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Arthur M. Brown, James A. Doucette, Robert F. Ehinger, Robert T. Gaskill, Paul R. Hackstedde, Lloyd S. Holton, Roy H. Kirch, Jr., Walter C. Leonard, Jr., Thomas L. McManus, Raymond D. Reich, Richard H. Rudolph, Thomas N. Schroth, Frank P. Sher- wood, Robert E. Williams, Jr., Conrad S. Young. 1944: Richard J. Allenby, Jr., Flavel B. Beattie, Jr., LeRoy F. Briggs, Josiah YV. Brown, Herbert B. Campbell, Roger A. Clark, Jr., Malcolm D. Corner, Franklin G. Ebaugh, Jr., John H. Furfey, Jr., John WV. Handy, Jr., John S. Jenness, Louis B. King, Eugene MCD. Kinney, John B. Long, James J. MacFarland, James T. McClintock, Paul V. Morgan, Arthur A. Peabody, Gordon C. Plummer, Don T. Sheridan, Rudolph G. Whitten, Jr. 1945: Wallace W. Barnes, Stevens Belknap, Henry N. Blansfield, Edward I. Comins, Jr., John C. Gosgrove, Frank WV. Edmands, Jr., George Ehinger, Jr., Maurice E. Frye, Jr., Earle B. Goldsmith, Jr., John P. Hartz, Stanley M. Howard, Richard G. Kendall, John A. MacDonald, Jr., Charles C. lVIorgan, Jr., Simon C. Nielson, Jr., William C. Portman, William Stewart, Andrew Ten Eyck, Jr., Peter Tewksbury, Louis VViederhold HI. Sheridan, Allenby, Portman, Long, Briggs, Goldsmith, Clark, Edmands, Kinney, Handy Campbell, King, V. Morgan, MacFarland, McClintock, Sherwood, Holton, Doucette, W. Brown, Peabody, Ebaugh, Plummer Leonard, Reich, McManus, Rudolph, R. Ehinger, Hackstedde, Gaskill, Kirch, A. Brown Jenness, Barnes, Nielsen, Cosgrove, MacDonald, G. Ehinger, Kendall, Blansfield, Hartz 11291 5 DELTA UPSILON 5 Dartmouth Chapter FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Arthur H. Basye, Prof. Harold R. Bruce, Prof. Allen R. Foley, Prof. John IV. Harriman, Prof. Ralph P. Holben, Prof. Ray- mond W. Jones, Prof. Kenneth A. Robinson, Prof. lVilliam K. Stew- art, Prof. Herbert F. West, Prof. George C. VVood. FRATRES IN URBE Kenneth W. Foley, Eric R. Haessler 912, T2, Arthur E. Stukey '4-2, T2, Earl VVard. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Burrows Barstow, Jr., George N. Beaton, Jr., George H. Burke, Donald E. Clark, Roy Coningswood, Charles R. Cusack, Roy Among the younger and more vigorous fraternities at Dartmouth is Delta Upsilon which began as a local, Epsilon Kappa Phi in 1920, receiving its national charter in 1926. The national, a strong one of 62 active chapters throughout the country, was founded as an Anti-Secret Society at Williams in 18344, and democratic non-secrecy remains its byword today. In 1939 the chapter moved to the present house. At this time the war has temporarily postponed our plans for building a new house. However, the Dartmouth chapter stands financially secure, with a large and active membership and alumni body, and has an envi- able record both scholastically and athletically. H. Cutting, Richard IVI. Dunbar, Robert L. Grant, Harry L. Gustaf- son, Jr., C. Herbert Harrigan, Jr., VVilliam III. Jones, Stanley M. Lambert, Seward WV. 1VIa.cDonald, Robert C. IVIcQueen, Varnum R. Mead, John T. Paidar, J. 'William Woythaler. 1944: John C. Bird, James J. Dahl, William R. Davies, Alexander J. Gillespie, Jr., Donald D. Harries, Jr., R. Frederick Heidner, Jr., James C. Mocas, Ralph E. Oberlin, Charles A. Pappas, George H. Pert, Gordon L. Ross, P. Richard Sholl, Raymond C. Snell, Jr., John F. Tyler, Jr., Lawrence W. Widdecombe. 1945: VVilliam N. Banks, James E. Burton, Donald P. Cole, Jr., Donald R. Evans, Richard C. Gilman, Frederick T. Hatch, H. Henry Heintzelman, Donald H. Heller, Charles WV. IVIatthews, Adair W. WVhite. Hatch, Gustafson, Cole, Wfiddecombe, Heller, Tyler, Oberlin, Pert, Heintzelman, 'White Snell, Harries, Mocas, Gillespie, Barstow, Davies, Heidner, Ross, Pappas, Hoffman V Woythaler, MacDonald, Mead, Cusack, Beaton, Grant, Jones, Cutting, Harrigan, Clark, Dunbar 11301 GAMMA DELTA CHI l1 Dartmouth Chapter Campbell, Brooks, Stephenson, Dyke, Ruppe, McCrum, Buehler Churchill, Gatlin, Carey, Grennell, Parks, Ross, Sutherland, Best, Beckwith, Trier, Aguirre Holzhauer, VVeinbrenner, Oppenheimer, Lindley, WVight, Moore, Goedecke, Chilcote, Earle, lVIosbacher, MacElwee Perry, Kirby, Baldwin, Nelb, Holmes, R. E. Clark, Roberts, Boedtker, lVIorgan, Ewell FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Dr. lYilliam VV. Ballard, Prof. Robert J. Delahanty, Prof. James W. Goldthwaite, Mr. Willard M. Gooding, Prof. VVarren E. Montsie, Prof. Leon B. Richardson, Prof. Lauren M. Sadler, Mr. Harry XV. Sampson, Prof. Charles VV. Sargent, Dr. Frederick K. Sparrow, NIL Richard E. Stoiber, Prof. Joseph VV. Tanch, Prof. lvilliam B. Unger. FRATER IN URBE Albert S. Abbott. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 194-3: VVilliam A. Chilcote, John L. Earle, Allan lVI. Hirshberg, Albert J. Holzhauer, Jr., Harold YV. Lindley, Thomas H. MacElwee, In the spring of 1936, a report of a social survey of Dartmouth College was issued by a committee selected from the faculty, the alumni, and the students. A ma- jority report of this group revealed an overwhelming conclusion, that the major change in fraternities should be a complete abolition of all ties with National fra- ternal organizations, thus making all houses 10095 Dartmouth institutions. lt was just a year before the movement for locals became the center of discussion for an eager campus that two national chapters, Phi Kappa Sigma and Alpha Chi Rho, set the pace for this trend by amalga- mating and forming Gamma Delta Chi. H311 Albert P. lVIoore, Emil hiosbacher, Jr., James R. Oppenheimer, Paul VV. Wleinbrenner, Robert A. Wight. 1944: John L. Beckwith, Henry A. Best, Harry H. Carey, John B. Churchill, George E. Dyke, Jr., William E. Gatlin, Oscar A. Goed- ecke, 3d, Bradford D. Grinnell, Harry R. Nlorse, David B. Parks, VVilliam B. Roberts, John H. Stephenson, Jr., VVillard J. Sutherland, Wlilliam Trier. 1945: Joaquin Aguirre, Earl F. Baldwin, Jr., Herbert A. Boedtker, Herbert E. Brooks, Jr., Albert C. Buehler, Jr., Donald deB. Campbell, Fletcher Clark, 3d, Charles A. Cleveland, Wfinchester H. Ewell, Don XV. Hawley, John D. Holmes, John J. Kirby, Jr., Edward A. Allen, Edward A. hlorgan, Richard Y. Nlurray, Robert G. Nelly, Fred S. Perry, Robert Ross, Jr., John P. Ruppe, Jr. Egri Q: ..'l x g .q Sift?- ..1r 'WK W' fu . Q . .f 9, '. ..:.y.l1'x ' I g f 533 , gl- -A- .L nw fi. ,556 .. N KAPPA KAPPA KAPPA I Dartmouth College Pounds, Nuber, Gile Wheeler, Marshall, Shuchter, Mansfield, Sitley, Shea, D. Evans, Buckley, Rice, Anthony, Mussey, Martus Lena, Breed, VValton, Fosdick, Taylor, Edwards, R. M. Clark, Hyde, F. Geller, Thomas, King, Sweeney, Sherburne Burke, Cutler, Bundy, Nate, Geller, Maver, Watkins, Clark, Hufstader, Davis, Duffy FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Mr. Charles D. Chamberlin, Prof. Donald E. Cobleigh, Prof. Ivil- liam F. Geiger, Prof. John H. Gerrould, Dr. John F. Gile, Mr. Charles B. Hadley, Prof. Maurice F. Longhurst, Prof. Fletcher Low, IVIr. hlax A. Norton, Mr. Elliot B. Noyes, Prof. James P. Richardson, Prof. John B. Stearns. FRATRES IN URBE I. Nicholas Bielanowski, Nelson P. Brown, Jr., Joseph A. D'Esopo, Ralph E. Farnum, Jr., Archie B. Gile, Eugene WV. Martz, Jr., Edmund A. Tanzi. ' FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 19413: Trac-y S. Breed, Robert Ill. Clark, Jr., James P. Evans, Robert F. Fosdick, Frederick S. Geller, John L. Hyde, Thomas H. I . . h f , ..,,,.-4 ...a.-- as .,.-.-.4 In ,,,-.,...p- .. .. .V Liam King, Hugh F. Lena, Jr., James M. lVIullins, Jr., Russell K. Sher- burne, William R. Sweeney, Donald H. Taylor, Howard C. Thomas, Jr., John D. Walton, Holden N. Waterbury. 1944: Gilbert C. Anthony, Joseph J. Buckley, William A. Duffy, Max N. Edwards, James N. Elliot, Donald D. Evans, John M. Hughes, John J. Lewis, Joseph C. Mansfield, Henry L. Marshall, Charles N. Martus, William C. Mussey, Richard Redington, Richard S. Rice, Martin F. Shea, Jr., Claude F. Shuchter, Ralph L. Sitley, John S. Wheeler. 1945: Edward S. Bundy, Robert K. Burke, Robert L. Clark, Samuel E. Cutler, Jr., Lawrence E. Davis, William J. Ferguson, Jr., William R. Geller, John F. Gile, Jr., Theodore VV. Hufstader, Alan W. Lott, Andrew J. llflarks, William H. Nate, John R. Nuber, Arthur McC. Pounds, Thomas B. Maver, Richard IVI. Spaulding, John R. Watkms. Kappa Kappa Kappa was founded by Harrison C. Hobart, Stephen G. Nash, and William D. Philbrick. The list of honorary members include such men as Rufus Choate, and Daniel Webster. This year Tri-Kap celebrated its 100th anniversary. lVIany alumni came to Hanover and the festivities, which were high-lighted by a formal initiation and a banquet, at which Presi- dent Hopkins and Governor Blood were guests of honor. Tri-Kap has consistently maintained its DartII10l1'Ch affiliation, continually refusing to join with any national fraternity. To the many men in our armed forces, H1611 who are sacrificing privileges so that institutions 35 Tri-Kaps may live, we give our humble thankS- WV , iw W' i.:l'.'l f-1' an ' 1 1, 3, 5, K F b 'D 1 lx J ' ixg ? KAPPA SIGMA ., :fam Gamma Epsilon Kappa Sigma, the second largest national fraternity, was founded at the University of Virginia in 1867 by five men who had come into possession of knowledge concerning an ancient European esoteric order, which was founded at the University of Bologna between 1395 and 1400. The Dartmouth chapter, Gamma Epsilon, was es- tablished in 1905. Kappa Sigma has maintained a full and active life in all collegiate activities and social events. Stressing the importance of varied interests among the brothers, yet realizing the value today of singleness of mind and purpose, Kappa Sigma is striving to make its contribution to the prosecution of the war. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Joseph M. 1NIcDaniel, Jr., Prof. Henry Odbert, Prof. 1Yilliam A. Robinson. FRATRES IN URBE Ives Atherton, Donald Barr, Glenn Behringer. FRATRES IN UNIVRSITATE 19.Q.3.' James Cruickshank, Jr., Robert S. Fuiks, R. Radford Hib- ben, John H. Lear, Jr., IVIarshall Lowman, Raymond J. McMahon, Scott Mitchell, Herbert VV. Nolan, Paul R. Rill, Norman B. Smith, J. Dacy Stevens, John G. Troster, Larned H. VVaterman. IKIM: Edward L. Bailey, Russell S. Burdge, John Callow, 1Yilliam II. Cary, George D. Cummings, Harry R. Davis, Bruce E. Dean, Jr., Charles BI. Farley, John E. Grimm. George S. Ives, Carl F. Koenig, Paul L. Livingston, Wiilliam Orr, II, Maurice E. Park, David K. Patterson, Arthur J. Pegler, Howard W. Pennington, Wiarren Sulli- van, Jr., Ralph B. Welsh, Jr. 1945: James A. Brown. Eugene V. Calvelli, John B. Campbell, David 111. Davidson, Gwynn F. Elias, Holden K. Farrar, Jr., Robert P. Fisher, Raymond J. Fontana, Earl H. Gallup, James R. Grant, Jr., Channing E. Harwood, Jr., John E. Leggat, John W. Little, Ian lNIcKinnen, GeoHrey G. Nlaclay, Thomas IV. lVIoran, Peer T. Peder- son, Wendell C. Robinson, William F. Thayer, Charles D. Waterman, Jr. Davis, Patterson, Pegler, WVaterman, Livingston, Robinson, Elias, Lear, Calvelli Ives, Dean, Carey, Park, Farley, Burdge, Welsh, Cummings, Grimm, Bailey, Farrar Hibben, Nolan, Lowman, Orr, Bill, Stevens, McMz1hon, Troster, Callow, Fuiks, Smith, Cruickshank Pennington, Harwood, Thayer, Maclay, Leggat, Gallup, Davidson, Morain, Fisher, Little 11331 PHI DELTA THETA il Alpha Chapter I ,. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Bancroft H. Brown, Prof. Henry lVI. Dargan, Prof. Arthur B. y- FRATRES IN URBE lVard Amidon, James Campion, Jr., Edgar H. Hunter, Dr. Ralph Hunter, Dr. George A. lYyeth. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1942: Henry F. Kramer, Jr. 1943: James E. Adams, Norman A. Askey, Jack C. Behringer, Forbes Delaney, George C. Eady, Frederic R. Lent, Daniel F. Nor- ton, Jr., Richard H. Proctor, Robert A. Ivilliams, Richard lN'ood. Mescrve Phi Delta Theta, one of the three fraternities, com- posing the Miami Triad, was founded in 1848 at Miami University at Oxford, Ohio. The chapter at Dartmouth, New Hampshire Alpha, was established in 1884. At the present time Phi Delta Theta has 106 active chap- ters and is one of the largest national fraternities in the country. The present house, built in 1900, was the first fraternity house to be built on the Webster Avenue Fraternity Row. The Chapter is supervised by a corporation Whose members are drawn from its vast alumni. Phi Delta Theta plays a prominent role in Dart- mouth's social events, as Well as participating in ath- letic and non-athletic interfraternity activities. 1944: Edward VV. Anderson, W. Dale Brougher, Jr., Walter F. Burke, Jr., James S. Deakins, Albert H. Faber, Jr., Burgess H. Griffin, David DeL. Hernandez, David IV. Little, Alexander L. NIcPherson, Edward A. Mortimer, YVilliam W. Paine, Thomas H. Price, lvalter R. Prosser, Arnold C. Sanders, Robert D. Wiley, Thomas G. Wright. 1945: Douglas K. Armstrong, Harry B. Bissell, Jr., Franklin P. Bousquet, Jr., Harold A. Breen, Jr., Thomas C. Davidson, Jr., Craw- ford L. Elder, Jr., James H. Fannon, Floyd H. Farrant, II, William E. Fellows, Sidney WV. French, Evan R. Goltra, Jr., Donald G. Gra- ham, Jr., Stephen S. Hull, Donald H. C. MacKay, Jr., Bertram T. Martin, John P. Meegan, James L. Murray, Jr., Charles A. Rowan, Jr., John L. Ryan, Vllinthrop T. Sargeant, Robert B. Taylor. Mortimer, Faber, Deakins Anderson, Paine, Rowan, Taylor, lVIeegan McPherson, Hernandez, Bousquet, Ryan, Wiley, French, Davidson Brougher, Adams, Askey, Williams, Delaney, Eady, Lent, Proctor, lvood Graham, Armstrong, Breen, Hull, Fellows, Bissell, Elder, Martin, Fannon, Murray, Farrant . H341 WN .YW .Q W PHI GAMMA DELTA Delta Nu GNFU .. ics Gifs- QA.. 1 1 1 1 Plum, Field, Burnham, Doole, Colwell, Turner, Martin, Ivooldredge, Kennedy, VVallace, Safford. Zetterberg, Schultz Hughes, Sisson, Whiting, Daley, Campbell, Burns, Mara, Mulhern, lVIonroe, Drummey, Rondeau, Zarod Shaw, Thurston, Kimmel, Driscoll, Barlow, Daggatt, Hall, Koslowski, Hanlon, Gibbs, lVIiller, OlConnor, Dushame, Pelren Pulliam, Grunditz, Foster, Cashin, IVIclIinn, Johnson, Swick, Moore FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Nathaniel Burleigh, Mr. Robert 0. Conant, Prof. Winslow R. Hatch, Prof. Russell R. Larmon, Prof. Ivilliam H. Murray, Prof. John Neale, Dean Herluf V. Olsen, Prof. William K. 1Yright, Dean Henry L. Duneombe, George Barclay. FRATER IN URBE Ford Marden. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITAT E 194-3: George H. Barlow, Ambrose Broughton, VValter R. Daggatt, Ted Driscoll, Charles Donovan, Ralph H. Dushame, Ralph S. Gibbs, Founded at old Jefferson College Know VVashington and Jeffersonb in 1848, Phi Gamma Delta is the thir- teenth oldest Greek-letter society in America. Today there are '74 undergraduate chapters in the United States and Canada. The Dartmouth chapter, Delta Nu, was founded in 1901, and its first organized meetings were held in a second story room above what is now the VVestern Union oflice. The first house, a wooden structure some- what resembling the aged DKE house, was built on the present site and remained until 1937 when the new house was constructed. Phi Gamma Delta has been a strong force in the lives of many Dartmouth men. H351 H. Brereton Hall, Paul D. Hanlon, Rolland W. Higgins, Richard W. Kimmel, John A. Koslowksi, Donald L. Miller, Michael Mc-Cormick, Thomas J. Munn, John W. O'Connor, Robert 0. Pelren, Connor B. Shaw, Iilurray IV. Thurston. 1944: Phillip IV. Brown, Donald L. Burnham, Frank H. Burns, Frederick YY. Campbell, Harry E. Colwell, Frederick M. Daley, Joseph L. Drummey, William Harrison, James M. Hayes, Henry W. Hughes, Frederick R. Kennedy, Robert M. Mara, Robert E. Mul- hern, Theodore P. lNIunro, John P. Riley, Richard E. Rondeau, John A. Schultz, Dale R. Sisson, Charles Spallino, Everett YY. Turner, Wlilliam Y. 1Vallace, Richard A. Whiting, Stanley J. Zarod, York B. Zetterberg. V N PHI KAPPA PSI Q, P P All ha Cha ter ffl iff!!! O,Keefe, Towsen, Fraissinet, Mills, Storrs, Noble, Truxal, Billington, Barnes, Schacht, hlosenthal Shannon, Turnure, Parker, Barss, Hacker, Coombs, Jones, Priddy, Feeney, Walton McCarthy, Livingston, Keck, Robinson, McCorkindale, Maeck, Cook, Baker Hartshorn, Candler. Reynolds, Mille1', Plummer, Staub, Torian, Russell, Carey FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. John G. Gazley, Prof. Lewis D. Stilwell, Prof. Andrew G. Truxal, Prof. Xvilliam R. IVaterman. FRATRES IN URBE David Dodge, Charles H. Dudley, Charles IVI. Dudley, lVIartin J. Rcmscn, Parker Soule, John P. Chandler, Horace S. Nlaynard, Theodore R. Schoonbeck, William C. Scott. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1!!.5.f.' William A. Baker, Jr., Berger H. Carlson, John IV. Cook, Charles S. Feeney, Richard D. Livingston, Wlilliam T. lNIaeck, Eugene li. Mcfarthy, Donald McCorkindale, Andre IV. Mosenthal, George 11361 B. Nlunroe, Richard L. Noble, Paul L. Parker, Stanton B. Priddy, John S. Robinson. 1944: Samuel B. Barnes, Hamilton C. Bates, Jr., John T. Billing- ton, Samuel H. Coombs, Merlin K. DuVal, Jr., Benjamin F. Jones, John S. Lovewell, David O. Blills, Robert V. 0'Keefe, Albert M. Storrs, James VV. Towsen. 1945: Joseph A. Barss, Thomas E. Candler, Arthur NI. Carey, Jr., Donald J. Cutter, John IW. Fraissinet, Robert YV. Hacker, William IW. Hartshorn, James IVI. Knowles, Jr., IVilliam H. hlerrill, Dean D. lVIiller, John F. Plummer, Gunnard F. Reynolds, Allen S. Russell, William F. Schaeht II, Philip 111. Shannon, John A. Skakle, Wilfred A. Staub, James G. Torian, James H. Turnure, John G. Truxal, Howard R. Walton, Jr. The chapter was founded in 1896 and had its head- quarters in a college building Where the Coffee Shop now stands. The main function of the chapter was to serve as an informal, social meeting place. Shortly after 1900, the fraternity moved into its present house. This building was erected in 1810 by Professor Libby, and its one hundred and two years of existence make it one of the oldest on the campus. During the Hdilettanten period of the Coolidge El'-H, many modern conveniences were added to the house, but not until after the Depression did Phi Psi and the other fraternities take life seriously and fully realiZC its important connection with college life. 'xi i . ., P- ,dgi a , 1 .xv 5 1 U' 13 vi -:Q .-4 .wr 1 ,rl Vfvc dd! M ,I H wif Q .-if PHI SIGMA KAPPA Tau Chapter Phi Sigma Kappa was founded in 1873 at lVIassa- chusetts State College and in 1905, Tau, the nine- teenth chapter, was established at Dartmouth. At that time there was a very definite need for more fraternities on campus if fraternities and the spirit of the college were to remain intact. A congenial group of undergraduates decided to do something about this, and, led by Charles A. Rice, ex-Alpha '07, this chapter came into being. The fraternity developed rapidly and acquired a high fraternity standing. In 1925 the present house was built on the old site. Sometime after this the traditionally famous Phi Sig barn had to be razed to the chagrin of old timers. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Mr. Chester R. Berry, Prof. William A. Carter, B112 E. T. Cham- berlain, Jr., Prof. Howard F. Dunham, Mr. Harold Evans, hir. Robert H. Falconer, Prof. Joseph B. Folger, Prof. Sidney C. Hazel- ton, Prof. John Hurd, Jr., Mr. Edward Jeremiah, Mr. Joseph S. Tidd. FRATRES IN URBE Dana Goldthwaite, Earl Gordon, Jr., Caryl F. Holbrook, H. Clay Mellor, Lydon Amy. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Richard M. Bugbee, Geddes VV. Carrington, Harvey N. Dan- iels, William B. Davies, Robert S. Garvie III, Powell C. Groner, l1f, l -a 41' -.'-9f,-f- 'iff-I ,Aix 38, J . rf- ,,-ix' 'Cl ,L AQ1..::.i.,' 's . .43 Robert YY. Kerwin, Van Voorhees Lloyd, Arthur D. Lynn, Jr., Robert H. Perkins, John H. Smith, Alonzo VV. Stedman, Robert P Stokes, Ivarren V. Van Dyk, Fred. E. Ivoodward, 19l,.5.' Ralph G. Beaman, John R. Blackburn, John W. Downs, John R. Englehorn, Robert F. Fairbanks, Joseph W. Hatch, William B. Hirons, Henry D. Lindell, John R. Lindsay, Donald T. Oakes, Edward B. Price, Jr., Ryland E. Robbins, Harry E. Sc-hoenhut, Ralsey B. Scofield, Jr. 1945: Robert D. Allen, Fred Byers, John L. Byrnes, Craig J. Cain, George NI. French, 1Varren B. Gillespie, James F. Houghton, Richard C. Johnson, Thomas G. Lantzas, Carl H. Loewenson, Har- rison J. O'Connor, Robert D. 0'Connor, George E. Rice, Jr., Paul R. Sweeny, Wallace G. Taylor, John M. Van Buren, VVilliam H. Woods Robbins, Oakes, Schoenhut, Lindsay, Blackburn, Lindell, Byers, Hatch, Hirons, Beaman, Price, Johnson Byrnes, 'Woods, H. O,Conner, Rice, Englehorn, VanDyk, Lynn, Davies, Groner, Garvie, Smith, nfoodward, Houghton, Allen Perkins, Lloyd, Stedman, Scofield, Carrington, Bugbee, Stokes, Kerwinn VanBuren, Sweeny, Kehoe, R. O,Conner, Loewenson, Cain, VV. G. Taylor, Gillespie. Lantzas 11371 vi '! I 4 W: A .I M h PI LAMBDA PHI as ,.1Nx --xwr , A5 Pi Chapter Pi Lambda Phi was founded at Yale University in 1895. The New Hampshire Pi Chapter of the Pi Lambda Phi National Fraternity was established at Dartmouth College in 1924. From but seven members the fraternity has gradually grown to its present membership of fifty. Professor Louis L. Silverman has always been the L i L many years Pi Lambda Phi led all Dartmouth frater- 5 . nities in house averages. ii Frater in Doctoribus. 39 , Pi Lambda Phi's recent years have been featured by the rejuvenation of its participation in interfraternity ' ,L athletic competition, at the same time the chapter,s I first goal has been scholastic achievement, and for i J' FRATER IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Louis L. Silverman. FRATRES IN UNIV ERSITATE 1943-Charles M. Arnstein, llartin Borofsky, Charles M. Cahn, Arthur Cohen, VValdo L. Fielding, William M. Glovsky, Philip R. Jackson, Richard M. Lansburgh, Stanley Levin, Herbert L. Marx Jr., Morton H. Pechter, Norman Probstein, William Stein. 1944: Ira J. Brody, Joseph A. Dammann, Roger T. Feldman, Gil- bert R. Gabriel, Joseph Goldstein, Ross H. Higier, David L. Judson, Richard T. Kanter, Miles E. Krohn, Allen Nlyers, Irl VV. Rose, Sey- mour Shutz, Edward N. Seidman, Richard M. Silberstein, Malcolm B. Smith, Herbert F. Storfer, Richard N. Tarlow, Eugene I. Zins. 1945: M. Richard Carlin, Eugene H. Edson, Charles L. Friedman, Peter Geiger, David Goldstein, Bertram Glovsky, Robert Hausman, Lee Kreindler, Lawrence S. Levine, Burton Manton, Eliot Nlover, Victor J. Sherman, Robert C. Taymor, Jack VVachtel. 1945-pledges: Maiirice L. Baruth, Alan L. Buchsbaum, Raphael Eban, Jerome L. 'Weinstein. Charles L. Zalk. Edson, Freidman, Hausman, Levine, Storfer B. S. Glovsky, VVachtel, Sherman, Geiger, Kriendler, Mover, J. Goldstein, Carlin, Higier, Tarlow, Kanter, D. Goldstein Gabriel, Silberstein, Zins, Seidman, Lansburgh, Schutz, Arnstein, B. Glovsky, Jackson, Borofsky, Stein, Peckter, lilarx Wleinstein, Zalk, Eban, Baruth l PSI UPs1LoN 1, 1 Q Zeta Chapter lVIinor, Lewis, Rodney, Corroon, Pleasants Allen, Marsh, White, IVIacGreg0r, Purnell, Recke Bontecou, Agry, Ludwig, Glover, Trischett, Stewart, 1VIiller, Carpenter Gilbert, O'Day, Hardie, Remsen, Dampier, VVorthen, Richards, Rockwell, Diaz Bellit, Rolph, Fallon, Anderholm, Booth FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Charles J. Armstrong, Prof. Donald Bartlett, Dr. Roy B. Chamberlin, Prof. Leland Griggs, Prof. Robert A. LTCKEHHZIH, Prof. Francis J. Neef, Dean Lloyd K. Neidlinger, Prof. Lucien D. Pearson, Prof. William Pressey, Dean Robert C. Strong. FRATRES IN URBE Sydney E. Junkins, Moses B. Perkins, Francis G. Soule, Jr., Nor- man Stevenson. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Joseph A. Crowley, Maurice S. Dampier, Manuel Diaz, Jr., Psi Upsilon Was the first fraternity to appear on the Dartmouth campus. The fraternity was established at Union College in 1833, and the Zeta Chapter was founded here at Dartmouth on lVIay 10, 1842. It was the sixth chapter in the fraternity which has twenty- seven chapters in this country and Canada, the last of which was founded at the University of British Columbia in 1935. In the east, Psi Upsilon is repre- sented at Williams, Amherst, Brown, Cornell, Colum- bia, Bowdoin, Trinity and VVesleyan. The chapter moved into its new house in the autumn of 1940. The structure replaced a forty-year-old house. l139l James II. Gilbert, Allan R. I-Iardie, Guy C. Mallett, Jr., John R. O'Day, William C. S. Remsen. Dexter Richards, Horace E. Rockwell, Wiilliam H. Wiierman, Frederic P. Wiorthen. 1945: Robert D. Allen, John A. Corroon, Riilliam R. Epply, Charles R. Lewis, Wfilliam Wh lVIarsh, Granville T. lVI. Nliner, Rich- ard H. Pleasants, Robert M. Purnell, George E. Recke, 1Villiam T. VVhite, Jr. 15155: Warren C. Agry, Jr., Martin G. Anderholm, Theodore C'. Belfit, Irving D. Booth, Jr., Frederic H. Bontecou, Daniel D. Car- penter, Emmett J. Fallon, Jr., Paul W. Glover, Frederic M. Johnson, Thomas M. Ludwig, John C. Miller, James M. Rodney, William I.. Rolph, Robert J. Stewart, Jr., Ivilliam A. Trischett. . SX! iii! E' SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Alpha Chapter i i . i l l Brown, Brundage, Alworth, Cordell, Pringle, Hildreth, lVIorse, Densmore, Halstead, Smith Saunders, Mayberry, deLeuw, Cray, Price, Shearer, Miller, Harris, Conklin, Gilchrist, Averill, Spaulding Tower, Phillips, Koester, Wolf, Pearson, Stinson, Coughlin, Bowie, Hinkley, Ruppe Weatherby, Calli, Osborn, Joy, Hampton, Hagen, Jennings, White, Blackburn, McNamara, Donohue FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Raymond Kendall, Prof. John NI. iVIecklin, Prof. .Andrew J. Scarlett, Jr. FRATRES IN URBE Charles G. D,Olive, Dr. D. Parkinson, F. Billings, Robert J Smith i-IQ, TQ, Duncan E. Williams '42, TQ. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Philip S. Bowie, William A. Coughlin, Richard E. Koester Robert D. Pearson, Allen Phillips, John H. Stinson, Richard B Tower, Louis Tuffly, lvilliam T. IYolf. l 1 I-L0 1944: Royal D. Alworth, Jr., James H. Averill, Franklin C. Behrle, James A. Browning, John T. Cordell, Paul S. Cray, Rolf G. deLeuw, Alfred J. Densmore, Thomas A. Donahoe, Robert G. Gilchrist, Robert A. Harris, Don R. Hinkley, Jr., Richard E. Mayberry, Robert F. iVIiller, John E. Mock, John E. JNIorse, lvalter S. Price, Ralph P. Pringle, VVilliam B. Saunders, John F. Shearer. 1945: Ralph Blackburn, Jr., Roger S. Brown, R. Peter Brundage, Nvilliam Calli, Richard S. Conklin, Edward B. Crane, Hfilliam E. Donohue, Oscar F. Falling, Jr., John P. Halstead, Harry L. Hampton, Philip E. Hildreth, John G. Jennings, Robert C. Joy, John D. Mc- Namara, John C. Osborn, Frederic G. Ruppe, lVarren B. Smith, Sam- uel L. Spalding, Stephen D. Weatherby, John W. L. White. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was founded on the ninth of lVIarch, 1856, at the University of Alabama. After weathering many storms, S.A.E. was finally able to establish their first northern chapter at Pennsyl- vania College in 1883. Following this the first New England chapter was established at Boston University in 1899. Our own chapter, New Hampshire Alpha was founded on May Q, 1908. In the first great War S.A.E. gave seven thousand of its sons to the armed forces. In this war S.A.E.'s can be found serving their country in all branches of the armed forces. Today S.A.E. has 113 active chapters and is the largest national fraternity in the country. lf K '. in .1 7' ir? 1.1-if' nf' ,ul 5' ,Wu ff' .. qw .2 5 ,M M 4. V .49 .Mi av wtf ,ff . J' , in 4 SIGMA CHI Eta Eta Chapter Founded in 1893, the Eta Eta chapter of Sigma Chi, was the ninth fraternity to appear at Dartmouth col- lege. It is Dartmouth's representative of one of the oldest national fraternities. Among its brothers are many of Dartmouth's most prominent alumni. The present brick house, known to the brothers as the '4Ivy Lodgen, on account of the beautiful vines which completely cover the front side, was built in 193Q after fire had destroyed its predecessor. Sigma Chi, with the enthusiastic support of its mem- bers, has consistently been a leading contender in intra- mural sports. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Norman K. Arnold, Prof. Charles E. Bolser, lVIr. Sidney C. Hayward, Prof. Almon B. Ives, Prof. Bruce VV. Knight, Prof. Martin L. Lindahl, Richard WV. Olmstead, Prof. Earl K. Sikes, Prof. Donald L. Stone, Mr. Robert L. Veres. FRATER IN URBE Clyde C. Hill. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1943: Edwin J. Adams, Jr., Ralph T. Entwistle, Jr., Howard E. Geer, Jr., Robert H. Hobart, Joseph D. Hurley, Jr., Henry B. Kidder, EX Charles H. Longfield, Jr., William Lothman. III, John McCarthy, Il, Marshall A. Souers, Jr. 1911.03 VVilliam T. Ard, Lorenzo P. Baker, Jr., John IV. Berry, George C. Bruce, Albert W. Cook, John W. Craig, Jr., Sherman W. Davis, John B. Eaton, Charles T. Glines, Frederick L. Hier, Gordon lVIcKernan, Malcolm McLoud, Robert. A. Miller, Richard Ostherg, Robert L. Riebow, Herbert B. Thomson, Jr. 1945: Thomas H. Armstrong, Albert IV. Ash, Jr., Huntley Bennett, VVilliam F. Benoist, Jr., Frederick WV. Ferbert, Earl F. Flood, Albert VV. Gruer, Jr., Richard H. Hinman, Philip N. Jackson, Richard BI. Jordan, Blair lVIcClenachan, W'illiam R. McKenzie, VVilliam G. Porter, Richard H. Simpson, Ralph G. Tyler, Jr., Ashley M. Van Duzer, Edward I-I. Wfilson, Albert L. lVorthen, Jr. Jordan, Simpson, Bennett, Ferbert, Hinman, Flood, Porter Lothman, Ostberg, Crawford, Cook, Ard, Miller, McLoud, Hier. Davis, Riebow Thomson, Kidder, Geer, Souers, Hurley, Hobart, Craig, McCarthy, Adams, Entwistle, Copeland Jackson, Benoist, McClenachan, Ash, Gruer, Armstrong 4 l141l g N . .. . FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Arthur H. Chivers, Prof. Eric P. Kelly. FRATRES IN URBE Charles N. Batchelder, Charles C. Batchelder. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 194-3: Ernest E. Armstrong, James N. Capps, Arthur H. Clement Bradford D. Cole, Graham B. Conklin, John W. Conn, Charles J Dittmar, George R. Hebard, Robert C. Holder, Larrabee M. Johnson James B. Blalley, George D. Mason, John Odeneal, WVarren SIGMA NU Delta Beta Chapter Founded at the Virginia Military Institute in 1869, Sigma Nu grew rapidly, until at present it boasts of 96 chapters, in 46 states. At Dartmouth, the Delta Beta Chapter was founded in 1907 from a local fraternity known as the Pukwana Club. The Pukwana, or peace pipe, of the Indians was its symbol, which was so highly esteemed as a token of friendship and good fellowship that attempts to nationalize the club were resisted repeatedly. However, through the efforts of William F. English, the president of the Pukwana Club and the first Com- mander of the house, Delta Beta Chapter was finally installed at Dartmouth. Preece, John C. Pritchard, Arthur I-I. Stein, Charles E. Swartzbaugh III, Robert VV. Thede, Fredrick H. Wvallis, James D. Wlells. 1944: Arthur C. Baum, Nolan P. Benner, James S. Carter, James G. Clark, Carleton G. Eldridge, Wayne P. Eves, Frederick F. Hickey, George B. Kent, John W. LaBounta, James A. Lang, John F. Mc- Allister, Wa.lter H. Olin, Robert J. Remmer, Ernest F. Rice, Arthur L. Scharf, VVilliam M. Stahl. 1945: Arthur VV. Backer, Thomas P. Beaumont, David C. Beer, Edwin G. Bennett, William G. Berge, William A. Brindley, Richard W. Brown, Sherman J. Crough, Robert H. Dyer, Kenneth F. Eld- redge, David L. Kendall, Russell C. Johnson, Gilbert J. Jones, Harry L. Roberts, VValter S. Rothwell, Chandler Stein, VVilliam L. Swartz- baugh, Robert E. Wottrich. Eldridge, Carter, Scharf, LaBounta, Stahl, Eves, Hickey, Rudnick, Clark, Benner, Remmer Holder, Conklin, Pritchard, Dittmar, Clement, Capps, Armstrong, Thede. Kent, McAllister, Lang, Baum, Rice L. Johnson, Odeneal, Mason, Hebard, C. Swartzbaugh, Cole, Preece, Wallis, Wells, Conn Eldredge, Beaumont, Roberts, Brindley, Crough, Brown, Kendall, Bennett, Dyer R. Johnson, Backer. Beers, VV. Swartzbaugh, Olin, Rothwell, Jones, Berger, Stein, VVottrich H421 SIGMA PHI EPSILON aug XF Sb ,egfli- A 1' E' . 55,1 . v i '.u.'?' Alpha Chapter QVQ V. Smith, Prentice, H. S. Porter, Nystrom, Lesser, Davis, Tate Kerley, R. G. Smith, Kimball, Close, Power, Lyon, Rirdsell, Miichemore, Baldwin A. H. Porter, O,Crowley, Tirrell, E. B. Smith, Nichols, Greco, Trumbull FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Prof. Ralph A. Burns, Dr. Howard N. Kingsford, Dr. Ralph E. Miller, Prof. Frederick S. Page, Dr. Savage, Prof. 'Wayne K. Stevens, Dr. Radford C. Tanzer. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 194-3: Clifford A. Baldwin, Curtis D. Cecil, .James NI. Kellers, James J. Kerley, John L. Muchemore, Robert B. Power, Ralph P. Trovillion. Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded at Richmond College in 1901. From there the Fraternity spread rapidly and it now boasts of '70 chapters in 37 states. New Hampshire Alpha was founded in 1909 through the incorporation of the local Omicron Pi Sigma as the twenty-fifth chapter of the national fraternity. In 1917, the chapter moved to its present location at 37 North Main Street, being one of the first Dartmouth fraterni- ties to possess its own house. The present house has been extensively remodeled as an alternative to con- structing new quarters until after the war emergency. At Dartmouth College the fraternity has contributed its full share in participation and cooperation in college activities. I 143 1944: Thompson WV. Close, Richard A. Davis, Donald R. Hiltz, lvarren F. Kimball, Richard G. Lesser, Randolph A. Lomas, Robert E. Nystrom, Robert G. Smith, Stephen Tate. 1945: Thornton WV. S. Birdsell, Jerome F. Farrell, John T. Greco, Arthur N. Nichols, M. Raymond O,Crowley, A. Hamilton Porter, Herdman S. Porter, Edward B. Smith, Victor C. Smith, Robert IV. Tirrell, Elmer R. Trumbull. A-,,. L - . , .. ..?.Q,, .fi ff v ..f.,,i, 1 4' I THETA CHI Alpha Theta Chapter Moore, Colwell, Sawyer Shaw, Samilson, Martell, McAuliffe, Smith, Germain, Billings, Beers, Campbell, Liota Tompa, Rader, Scotford, Brown, Landon Costello, Weeks, Holman, MacGregor, Southwick, Scholl, Gray, Page, Musser, Van den Noort Waldron, Berry, Williams, Osberg, Tostman, Longacre, Tillson, Peterson, Lewis, Tuttle Kugelman, Kirkpatrick, Quimby, Alexander, Castle, Robinson, lNIeyer, Sisson FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Mr. Halsey C. Edgerton, Dean Frank W. Garran, Prof. Norman H. Hinton, Prof. Vllilliam H. VVood, Prof. Erville B. Woods. FRATRES IN UNIV ERSITATE 1943: VVilliam A. Berry, Jr., George A. Graham, Jr., Robert R. Gray, Edward C. Ingraham, Jr., Dustin C. Lewis, Richard D. Long- acre. Calvin J. Osberg, William A. Scholl, Peter F. Southwick, George F. Tillson, WVillard E. Tostman, Morton C. Tuttle, II, Jeremy R. Waldron, Jr., VVarren B. VVilliams, VVilliam I. Zeitung. 1944: Spencer L. Baird, Jr., Phillip H. Brown, Robert C. Colwell, . 1 ' . 11441 Robert B. Holman, Jack W. Landon, David B. MacGregor, Frank J. Martell, John J. McManus, Jr., K. Rowley Musser, Fred H. Page, Jr., Alfred E. Peterson, Robert W. Rader, David M. Scotford, Robert J. Tom a Gordon Van den Noort Harold J. WVeeks Jr p 9 1 9 ' 1945: Ernest J. Alexander, Roland F. Beers, VVyly M. Billings, Frederick H. Campbell, Richard B. Castle, Howard B. Germain, Robert O. Hooker, David D. Kirkpatrick, David J. Kugelman, Victor J. Liota, David J. T. McAuliHe, Albert H. Meyer, Jr., Henry Moore, Jr., lVarren S. Quimby, John M. Robinson, Robert L. Samil- son, Howard P. Sawyer, Jr., Robert P. Shaw, Donald M. Sisson, VVayne C. Smith, Jr. Theta Chi Fraternity was founded in 1856 at Nor- wich University. The Fraternity spread nationally and the Alpha Theta Chapter was established on the Dartmouth campus in 1921. Today, the Fraternity is represented by seventy chapters in colleges and uni- versities of every state. This chapter is the thirty-first. Finished just in time for the 19111 Winter Carnival, it has the newest house on the campus. On the campus, Theta Chi has representatives ill major college activities, athletic and non-athletic. Each region holds a Regional Conference each year, the one in this district being known as the BoSt0I1 Tea Party. It is a big social event and almost the entire chapter attends it. 45 1 Q' 'fit V P? ri K . ,Q A 1 '. Mg' . .3 + . :iw Q H 5-1. l Q t t J r'-Ova ...w if .:aIl'f 'lli 3 Vi .clk .W5 N tr ,f ts' si' 1-' D in Omleron Deuteron The Theta Delta Chi Fraternity, founded at Union College in 1867, chartered its Omicron Deuteron Charge at Hanover in 1869, Where it was the fifth Greek letter secret society to appear on the campus. Theta Delta Chi has remained in continuous existence at Dartmouth since that time. Like most of the early fraternities at Dartmouth, it owned no house of its own but had rooms in the old bank building situated where Robinson Hall is today. A corporation, under the leadership of J. Frank Drake, purchased the present site on VVest Wheelock Street in 1912, the old Bisbee house, which Was used until the erection in 1926 of a new building more Htting for a fraternity advancing in all ways. FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Dr. John P. Bowler, Prof. Gorden H. Glidden, Dr. Jarrett H. Folley, Prof. George L. Scott. FRATRES IN URBE Francis R. Drury, Richard S. Southgate. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 19.5-3: Robert C. Barnum, Jr., 'William E. Brayton, Robert B. Costello, Jr., Donald W. Crance, Gail G. Grant, Jr., Bruce W. Jones, John Kimball, Jr., Frank K. Lallande, Martin S. Meigs, Jr., 'William 1 air., be I - m H P U m r ti CP 41 L' li P. lVIoseley, Frederick S. Richardson, Chester B. Roche, Jr., Elliott B. Sweet. 1944: Alexander L. Bensinger, James R. Bodine, Donald A. Comes, Jr., Melvin A. Friberg, Carlton P. Frost, IV, Maurice M. Frost, Richard T. Murchie, Augustus K. Pratt, Charles C. Richardson, Haiden Ritchie, Whitcomb Ivells, Hudson J. Wilson, Jr. 1945: George L. D. Baker, George F. Barr, Granville A. Beals, Laurence A. Blood, Stephen A. D,Arrigo, James A. Field, Philip 0. Gray, Kenneth A. de Gruchy, Robert H. Haffenreffer, Frank M. Hutchins, Stanford L. Luce, Jr., Alexander Mc.-Xliley, John W. McCauley, 3rd, Lloyd C. Nintzel, Robert D. Oldfield, Jr., George B. Pierce, Edward C. Pirie, Chadwick D. Ramsdell, John D. Reed, Nichol IVI. Sandoe, Jr., Roger B. Washburn. Field, Hutchins, Gray, Beals, Blood, 1VIcAliley, de Gruchy, Nintzel Friberg, Comes, Bodine, Wlilson Bensinger, M. Frost, VVells, C. Frost, C. Richardson, Roche, Sweet, Brayton, Ritchie, Pratt, Murchie, Oldfield Jones, Costello, Crance, Grant, Barnum, Moseley, Lallande, Meigs, F. Richardson D,Arrig0, Ramsdell, Hatfenreffer, lVIcCauley, Pierce, Reed, Pirie, Barr, Sandol, Baker 114.51 -I PS1 Epsllon ZE li A PSI aging Q, X g I ff W 0 ' Agar .Syl-j. Egg- tltu ba- Q- u v , X Y FRATRES IN DOCTORIBUS Dean E. Gordon Bill, Prof. IVIalcolm C. Henderson, NIL Alexander Laing, Dr. Nathan T. Miliken, Prof. Harry L. Purdy, Prof. Anton A. Raven, Mr. Harold G. Rugg, Prof. Charles L. Stone, Prof. Royal C. Nemiah. FRATRES IN URBE William S. Cashel, Jr., John P. Hands. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 19.5115 Lewis B. Anderson, Jr., Ernest E. Ball, 2nd, John R. Bushnell, Zeta Psi is the fifth oldest fraternity at Dartmouth. Since its founding in 1853, the Chapter has traditionally been one of the outstanding fraternities on the Dart- mouth Campus. The three-story brick house on Web- ster Avenue became the new home of the chapter in 1926 and carried on the Well-established scholastic and non-athletic records. The Zetes have over 36 champion- ship cups to their credit in interfraternity competition. This year, though many of our undergraduates have entered the country's armed forces, the chapter con- tinues to be the center of activity for both past and present Zetes, and also for guests from Canadian Chapters. James A. Donahue, Jr., Donald J. Harty, John NI. Jenkins, Martin T. Kane, Jr., John IV. Kearney, Harry A. Lockwood, John J. Blurphy, Jr., John F. Wynne, Edward T. Younglove. 1944: Edwin B. Beacham, Jr., IVallace C. Benjamin, Harold C. Cannon, NIichael A. Costa, Kennard P. Perry, Louis D. PfeiHe, Stephen IVI. Tenny. 1945: Edward Wh Bush, Jr., Paul J. Caravatt, Jr., G. Cameron Cray, George C. Grubb, Stanley G. Quackenbush, Robert S. Rogers, Richard H. Simpson. Carney, Bushnell, Costa, Beacham, King Bush, Quackenbush, Lockwood, Pfeifle, Cannon, Kane, Bennett Murphy, Ball, Younglove, Jenkins, Wlynne, Anderson, Donahue Perry, Sayce, Caravatt, Cray, Rogers, Benjamin, Grubb, Simpson N461 Lk: Y .Mm if X Q' if EDWIN JOHN ADAMS, JR. 130 Kenilworth Pl., 1Yebster Groves, Miss. Ivebsier Groves High School Tuck School EX Sphinx, Freshman Football C1943jg Vigilantes, JAMES EARL ADAMS 116 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, Blass. Auburn High School Tuclr School CDAQ AYILLIAM JOHN AHEARN 191-44 116 Ave., St. Albans, N. Y. Andrew Jackson High Sehool Tuul: School llOIzEu'l' JOHNSON .XLESBUIKY 199 Maple SL.. Summit, N. J. 'lllle lleddie School Ill1l'lIll'.'fll'.U-Zflfllflfjjj E.-XE Dragon: Freslunun 'llrucli ll913,l. 1.15111 Al.l'1X.XNIJIClt Xwnifusox IR ..,..,-. -- , .N . ol-:Jlli Sl. S.l',., Nl2lSSlllUll,i,l1l0 Alussillou lligli Svluml IJUOII om lm .Xlili Sphinx: lfoollmll llin, llSlJ,:51, 148l LEXVIS BRUCE ANDERSON, JR. 19 lNIzIyheW Ave., Larchmont, N. Y, N ewman School Tuck School Z qi- ROBERT XNILLIAM ANDREE 72 Arleigh Rd., Great Neck, L. l., N. Y Blair Academy Topical IV Xfb Track C19-135. ERNEST EDNVIN ARMSTRONG, JR. if 352 Everegreen Pl., Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood High School English EN Freshman Glee Club, Varsity Glee Club Freshman Track. CHARLES BIAYER ARNSTEIN 315 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass. Boston Latin High School Tuck School HAfD lnterllruternity l11l'Q2lSLlI'GI'lScl0lll1C'll1.l2lCli- O-Lantern Business Board. NORMAN ARTHUR :XSKEY 55 l.ocust Ave., New Rochelle, N. 3- New Rochelle High School Econonz ics IPAQ fiILHERT LEXVIS :XUGENBLICK 44 lYyoming Ave., South Orange, N. J. Newark Academy Tuck School Arnlias Americas GEORGE l',.xwRENr'E AUSTIN, JR. GQ lligllland St., Vlest Hartford, Conn. Loomis School K 'lzmizisiry-Zoology EAR Dragon, lnterdormitory Council, Fresh- man Tennis Q194-31, Captain, Varsity Tennis KDJQ Squash Team CDD, Captain. AYILLIAM ALLAN BAKER, JR. 265 Hampshire Rd., Akron, Ohio University School Topical III CIDKIP' Dragon. CI.IIf1f'oRn ASHTON BALDNVIN, JR. 2114 Merchantville Ave., MeI'clIantville, N. J. Merehantville High School Clze1m'stry-Zoology ECIJE Fencing C1943J. ERNEST ELIJAH BALL, QND 410 Summit St., New Haven, Conn. Suilield Academy Tuck School ZIP' A Freshman Football, Manager. l I 149 liI4'II.XIlD liimixuo IJAICKIIUIKX -l-5 Johnson Ave., Newark, X, J. XXX-eqiialiic lligh School ll I'.S'f0I lj The Dartmoulli, '1'c-cliiiical limlitorg liandg Sword Clulig l enc-ing 5151!-251. GEORGE IIEICBEICT B.xRi,ow Q3 LaSalle Ave., ,llI'CIll0Il, N. J. Trenlon Iligh School Fcononz ics IIJVA Sphinx, Baseball f19'l-33. ROBERT CLINTON Baizxlm, JR. lleadow Rd., Riverside, Conn. Edgewood School Political Scicrzcc SAX The Dartmouth, Circulation Manager, Interfraternity Council. , BURKONVS B.xRSTou', JR. 33929 Ingleside Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio University School Ecofzornics AT' Jack-O-Lantern, Business Board, Inter- dormitory Council. CARL JOHN BATTER, JR. IQQ5 Woodside Pwky., Silver Spring, lid. Roosevelt High School Tuck School Track C1943J. GEOIYGE NATHANIEL BEATON, JR. 169 Davis Ave., Auburn, Blaine Edward Little High School T hnycr School AY GLENN EWING BEHRINGER 152 South Blain St., Florence, Blass. VVilliston Academy Ch cm isfry-Zoology KE Green Keyg Freshman Glee Clubg Varsity Glee Club. Jack CLAUD BEHRINGER 3060 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Park School Economics KDAQ Dragon. C11.xRi.1cs GREENLEAF BENNETTHIR. 17146 Parkside Ave., Detroit, hlich. lhiversily of Detroit lligh School Tuck School Zllf' Fivilian Pilot Training. lil-IUIKGE W1L1.1,xx1 BENZ 255 l'urilan Ave., Y1ilIC'liHllUC, N. Y. Roosevelt lligll School ClICIl11..5'lI'jj 150 XVILLIAM ALBERT BERRY, JR, 427 Wlarren Ave., Brockton, Mass Tabor Academy Democratic Institutions GX Corinthian Yacht Club, Secretary. ORMAND N. BIRKLAND '71 Stonebridge Rd., hflontclair, N. J. East Denver High School Topical I V B911 Sphinx. HARRY CRADEN Brsnoi- 119 Grace Ave., Great Neck, L. I., N. Y Great Neck High School Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa Undergraduate Scientific Society. JEREMY BLANCHET Trudeau, N. Y. Saranac Lake High School English EDWIN AUGUST Bock 84 Wlheeler Ave., 1Vestwood, N. J- Westwood High School Political Science Casque and Gauntlet, The Dartmouth, Editor-in-Chief, Pa1aeopituS5 Illlcfflofml' tory Councilg Junto. 9 J.. F 1 rl I 4 S il i B1 f 4 a f il llicxier f'ii,iiu,ics lioiimi, Ja. 24- Roxlniry Hd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Chateau de Changins If II gl ish Yarsityfilee C 'luhz l renc-h C 'lulm, Sec-rotary. Anriiric S'r,xNi,I2Y BOLSTEII, Jn. 6 Abbott SL., Nashua, X. H. Nashua High School Ilislory Intramural Manager. 31.-XRTIN Bonorskv 70 Center Sl., Concord, X. H. Concord Senior High School l 'lzcndstry HAIIJ German Clnbg Dartmouth Broadcasting System. Davin K. BoRTz 15416 Lake Ave., Lakewood, Ohio Lakewood High School 13011-ll.C!ll Science Civilian Pilot Trainingg Varsity Glee Clubg Ledyard Canoe Club. PHILIP SOMERVELL BOWIE Edson Lane, Rockville, hld. Saint Albans School Thayer School BAE Dragon. 151 Rom-Jiri' Wui'rxioai': liaxmfoizn :ZSII Grove St., Melrose, Mass Nlelrosc- Iligli School l'.'f1g1l1'sl1 llonorx in-rinau f luli. hYII.l,I.X3I l'li.'1'INr: l5u,xY'i'oN 221 Montrose .XVI-., Soulh Orange, N. l,aw1'cnr'ex'ille .Xcunleiiiy Tuck School WAX .lack-U-lianlern, Business Manager. 'l'n.xc'Y Smixun liaifzicn Haverhill, N. H. New Hampton Sc-hool Geology KKK Band: Freshman Ski llfllfii. Au'rnUn I,.xwuENc'E Iiicocmxixx' 16650 S. Woodland Rd., Shaker Ileigh Ohio Shaker Heights High School Tuck School D Ledyard Canoe Club. P1II1.Ir Pmasrox Bnooks, Jn. IQ5 Eclgell Rd., Framingham Centre Blass. Framingham High School Tuck School IDEK Interdormitory Council. ARTHVR MASON BROWN American llniversity, Beirut, Syria Tabor Academy Ph ilosophy ATA Dramatic Club. .AIITHIYR BERTRM1 BECKNAM, JR. 4 Willowclale Ave., lYaterhury, Conn. Froslmy High School Economics GX Freshman Football ll943l. llICIIAIiD BIILNVARD BVGBEE Q2 Synimes llcl., xYl1'1Cl1GStCI', Blass. lYinchester High School Psychology fll E K Tennis C19-LID, lnterfraternity Treasurers' founcil. Wi1,L1.xM IJAYID BlfLLOf'H 290 Livingston Ave., l.ynclhurst, N. J l.j'Ilfllllll'St lligh School Biology DDE l,.llll0I'QI'2lIlllZllC Scientific Society, Fross- Vounlry Q19-135, Track C194-3,l. Sxxirizi, ifxnicx' BUi.1.oc'K 408 'l' Si. NNY., lYasliington, D, if Dunlwar lligli School Soc fol Ogjy 1521 GEORGE l'lEItBERT BURKE 56 Riverview St., Springfield, Mass, Classical High School .llccl icinc AT' Alpha Kappa Kappa. JOHN RIDDLE BURLEIGH, JR. '73 Oxhow Rd., Wlellesley Hills, Mass. Phillips Exeter Academy Tuck School Dartmouth Players, Business Manager AYILLIAM CAM PBELL BURR 16 Park Hill Pl., Yonkers, N. Y. Gorton High School Tuck School XCID Basketball 09435, Baseball 09435. ANDREXV AUGUSTINE CA1fifREY 10 Ridge Rd., Lawrence, Mass. Tilton School Tuck School CHARLES BIAUKICE CAHN, JR. 6701 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Nfl Friends School Tuck School HAKD Phi Beta Kappa. SMXLIQY Grxxisox C.Xl.lJEli 80 I'nrlcrclif'l' Rel., Montclair, N. .I. Blonlclair Iligh School Tuch' School flllill' flJiSfIll1' :intl fianntlct: Green Kcyg The Aegis, Business Manager: Varsity Golf KDJQ llaskelhall tlfllfij. . 1 1 1 IIAIILES C 0I.f'0ltD C ,'xLI..xIi.xN 43.1, NN. 13th Sl., Oklahoma Clly, Okla. .fl rl a ml .lrchrzcology JAMES NELSON CAPPS 6 Sage Ct., Utica, N. Y. New Hartford High School C 'h cm is! ry-Z 001 ogy EN lntcrclormitory Conncilg Band, Director. BEIIGEII TTOXVARD CARLSON 51 South St., Concord, N. H. Concord Senior High School ,lledicine KIPKHI' Alpha Kappa Kappag Football C1943j. GEDDES XYARIKEN CARRINGTON Q33 East lYalton Pl., Chicago, Ill. Pembroke-Country Da y Sociology IDEK Leclyard Canoe Clubg Interfraternity Councilg Track 1194353 Track CDD 153 C'i'n'ris Dn.xm: Viccii., Jn. -203 Napoleon .KW-., New Orleans, lia lilan' .Xf'1lfll'lll.Y lf11g1l1'.s-I1 Xflflf Dart nionth llroailc-asl ing S-vstcing The llartinonlh: l'l:i-x'oi's. Licox .lI'I.IXN I'ii.xrn.xN XYashinglon St., lloclicstf-i', N. ll. llochcslor High School II I'Sf0l'-lj,' .ll 1r.v1'1f,' l','rl11r'r1l1'o11 liarlmary Coast Orcln-slrag Collcgc llanrl llanrlcl Soc-ictyg Prokoficll' Soc-it-ly. XYILLIABI .X1'ca's'r fllIIl,1'U'I'IC 13-L15 Shaker Blvd., Clcvclancl, Ohio l'nivcrsily School Tnch' School VAX -lack-O-Lantern Bnsincss Boarcl. XYALTER KING CIIISIIOIAI 61 Fairfielfl St., Brockton, Blass. Brockton High School f 'hem istry-Z 001 ogy Efllli Sword Cluhg Corinthian Yacht Clnhg Germania. DONJKLD ELLIOTT CL.xrcK Sagamore Beach, Mass. The American School of Paris French .XY Yarsity Glee Clnbg French Club. JOSHUA BOYLSTON CLARK 5 Sylvan St., 1Vest Newton, Blass. Phillips Exeter Academy Foreign Helatioizs Dartmouth Post-1Yar Reconstruction Council Secretary: Aegis Artist. JOHN I'IARIiY CLARK 839 Thorne Ave., Fresno, Calif. Fresno High School Econ onzies ROBERT NIETCALF CLARK, JR. 97 So. Lincoln St., Keene, N. H. Tabor Academy Topical I V KKK Green Key, Varsity Lacrosse, hlanager C'n.xRLEs XYALTER CLARKE, JR. GQ Arlington Ave., Caldwell, N. J. College High School f 'l1c1n'z'stry-Zoology Alpha Kappa Kappag Band, Glee Club, Green Collegians: Prokotielgf Society. .XIKTIIVII HENRY f,lI.ICMEX'l' -H7 No. Maple Ave., Cree-uwicli, Conn. EN TOIJITTIII II 154 C. CARLTON COFFIN 30 Cortland St., Nashua, N. H. Nashua High School E II gl ish AKE Hockey Nlanager. ARTHUR C OHEN 118-11 84t Ave., Kew Gardens, N. Y. h T Bewtown High School Clzemisiry-Zoology HND Green Key, Tennis CDD C19-LSD, Varsity Tennis, Captain. RAYMOND EMERSON COLBY 10 Kilburn St., Littleton, N. H. Vermont Academy Educationg English and History EX Football C1943lg Skiing C1943D. FREDERIC Roost COLDNYELI. 90 Teller Ave., Beacon, N. Y. Beacon High School Econonzics Golf 09435. BRADFORD DEAN COLE QGQ1 University Pl., NW., Wasllillgtfm D. C. Central High School Topical II EN Varsity Glee Club, Dartmouth Broad casting System, Interfraternity TF01' surers' Council. .?? Roi' CoN1Nc:swooD 148 Carlisle Ter., Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood High School Econ om ics AY G R.x1uM BAUER CONKLIN Q65 West End Ave., Ridgewood, N. J Ridgewood High School Infernritional Relaliorzs EN Tennis Q1943j. JOHN W ESLEY CONN 213 Gilbert St., Ada, Ohio Ada High School Tuck School EN Vigilantesg Football C1943j. JOHN NVINSTON Cooii TVestchester Apts., VVashington, D. C. New Trier High School Spanish CDKLP' Ledyard Canoe Club, Wlinter Sports Councilg Manager of Skating. KENNETH WILMOT CooK Thetford Center, Vt. Thetford Academy History Cerele Francais. M551 KElmi'r XY.XI.I..Xf'E Vooig 'lllietforrl Venter, Yi. 'l'l1ell'orcl .Xcudeiny llixiory l renc-li Vluli. Rom-zum' Wii.i.i,xxi Coox 306 Milton Dr., NYilininglon, Delia. Belleville lligli School Ilisfory D2lI'lI11illllll Christian Vniong Truck 519439. ALBERT CooNs, Ju. 300 Hatliziway Pk., Lebanon. Penna. Phillips Exeter Academy lfllglll-S11 The Glce Club, Soccer 0943? 3 Soccer CDD DA VID An1u,xN COOPER 21 Carmita Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Xcb Psychology Freshman Glee Club. BRADLEY ELLSXVORTH CoPEL.xNn 60 Blountain Rd., Pleasantville, N. Y Pleasantville High School JIccl'z'cz'ne EX Alpha Kappa Kappa DOCQ Soccer CDD. ROBERT EDXVARD COSTELLO, JR. 35-Q5 78th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Dwight School English Drama GLX Jack-0-Lantern, Art Editor, Dartmouth Playersg Council on Student Organizations. 1YII.I.I.-IM A. COUGIILIN, JR. 40 Atkins St., Brighton, Blass. Boston Latin School Ilistory SAE ROBERT LESLIE CRAIG 2030 Kakela Dr., Honolulu, T. H. Punahou Academy plI07II7'.Sffjj-ZOOZOQZI PAX Ledya rrl Canoe Club. IJONALD 1Y.kDSXVORTH CHANCE 2 DeLancey Dr., Geneva, N. Y. Geneva High School IfI'0Il0IllI'CS K-JAX Lacrosse Cl943l. .losicmi :ALI-'RED LVIQONYIJZY liarflncr Sl., Allston, Mass. liiski lligli School I I fxlory qw. Sphinx: Foollmall llljg 'llrack H9431 5-. ' H561 X X JAMES CRUICKSIIANK 30 Kilburn Ave., Saylesville, R. I. Pawtucket High School History KZ CHARLES ROBERT CUSACK nclrie Dr., Old Greenwich, Conn. Greenwich High School H fistory AT ROY LIARLOXV CUTTING Amherst, Mass. Peterborough Collegiate High School Economics AY' Golf C1943j. WVALTER RUSSELL DAGo,ITT 2157 N.E. Tillamook, Portlancl, Ore. Grant High School Economics fP1-lA Sphinxg Vigilantesg Freshman Basketball, QCaptainD 19129 Freshman Baseball 1942, Phi Beta Kappag Senior Fellow. RKIAURICE SIDNEY DAMIQIER 2111 Blendon Pl , St. Louis, M0- Maplewoocl High School Local Problems and Institzzifous IVY Dragong Football CDD, C19i3PS Tlflck C1943J, CDjg Vigilantesg Green hey- lJlX,XN ll.XT.L l,.XN1El,S 05 llrcharfl SL., Xrlams, Blass. .Xclams lligh School Topical II ' A KIC Dragong liaskclhall 119432: liaschall CD1 noisy. 11.1 uvisv NELSON IJANIELS 50 Shore llcl., 0141 Grccnwich, Conn. Dccrliclcl Acaclcmy Tuclr School 41111K Wn,1.1.xM BENJMIIN DAN'IES Rohsarl Pl., Kenilworth, 111. North Shore Country Day School f7l1c'n11's1'ry 4112K Gorman C'1uhg Freshman Glcc Club. FORBES DELAN1' 40 Brzullorcl Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Mamaroneck High School ,lICII1'C1.llC JTAG Alpha Kappa Kappa: Interfraternity 'l'rcasurers' Council. J,uu1ss EIIYIN DEWEY 555 Sheridan Rd., lliinnetka, 111. New Trier High School Tuck School AAKIJ Sphinxg Baseball C19-1131. 11571 Kl,KX1'El. Dux, .l1'l. 1.30 .lacksou Xvc., l'c-lhaui Manor. X. Y. Loomis School I I rfvlory l1'1' Dragoug l'oo1lmall 11012111 1191. ,l.XNI1-I5 .xIl'l'111'll IFINSMUHII 335 llrislol llfl., 1Ym-lrslcr Grow-s, Blo. We-hslcr Grows lligh School l'ol1'l1'1'r1l S1'l'1:11L'C l orcusic lvllllllll Vlass ol' 1800 Uralorical Prizc. fl1I.XliI,ES ,lI'1.II'S DI'1 1'BI.XlC 85-22 100 St., llicluuoncl llill, N. Y. Richmonrl llill lliggh School IJf'IIl0!'l'!1fI-C Ill-'ill-fIIfl.0llS EX Gcrman Cfluh, Sccrclaryg Cahiu and 'l'rai1g Director, 1Yinlcr Sporlsg Darl- ruoulh Outing Vlulm, Scc-rotary: 1.1-rlyarfl Vanoc Vluh. l'Il.Xlil,ES Wouoswouru Dons 115Sn1ith lirl., Klillon,1lass. Milton lligh School l lllflll I.Nll'!j-Zfllllflffjj .lmizs AxTi1oNY Doxullis, Jn, 113 No. Blain Sl.. Yvhilc Rivcr Jct., YL lflartforrl lligh School 1fC0ll om ics 711' A DAX'ID CUMMINGS DONALDSON Buffalo, Wlyo. Johnson County High School Tuck School Cheerleader. CH.xnLEs NIAHONEY DONOVAN 83 Bradford St., Lawrence, Mass. Phillips Academy, Andover Englislz IDFA Interdormitory Councilg Freshman Glee Club. 'l'mO'rHr IKEYNOLDS DONOYAN 405 Lakeland St., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Grosse Pointe High School Economics ZW' CIIAIKLES liDw.'xn1J DONKEY, Jn. 3339-80 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Trinity School Tuffl' School l'ndcrgrarluatc l irc Squad, Outing Club lixcculivc Council: Cabin and Trailg Lcdyard Canoe Club: Bail and Bullet. .lull-Ls .Xnuxxn l,0l'f'I-I'l l'IC :SS lgl'lIlllJll'l'0Ill Sl., Lynn, Mass. Lynn lfnglish lligh Sf-liool Y'ucl.' School All lfrcslnnan Cross-Coiinlry 41514253 158 THADDEUS GiXLW'IN DRISCOLL 40 Broad St., Lynn, Mass. Blarblehead High School illatlzcmatics TFA Sphinx, Baseball, Captain Q1943lg Base- ball CDD. DOUGLAS MONTEITH DUFFY Q08 North hi ain St., Wlest Hartford,ConI1 'William Hall High School Economics EX Dragon. RICPI.XRD BIACDONANLD DUNBATi 435 Wlalnut St., Nlanchester, N. H. hlanchester Central High School Sociology AY' RA LPH HOWARD DUSHAME QS Stevens St., hlethuen, Mass. Hebron Academy Tuck School CIPFA Sphinx, Hockey CDD, Tennis 09431. GEORGE CLEMENT EADY Hurstbourne Lane, Louisville, Ky. Culver Military Academy Topical III KDAGJ Dragon. llicxm' l'1clcLm' lC.io1.ic Grc-1-nvillc, llainc Xhrzilizun Lincoln High Sr-hool lfnylish Ifllli Sworfl fflnh Prcsiilcnlg il'lCIlCll1j.f llll-l-ffllg l cnc-ing KDJ, l':1pl:1ing Junlo. .lonx linwix LYELL l'lAliI,E 251 lf. IQ Sl., Ncw York, N. Y. Wosllown School, lYcstlown, l':1. TWA' School VAX D.lJ.C'.g Nlllllfill Hislory Clulag l'lz1yc1's1 fl0f'C'0l' HD . BENJ.xM1N l,.Xll'l0liEST EDMUNDS New Boston Htl., Fall River, Blass. Proviflcncc Country Daly School Ilisfory ROBERT l'lR,'XNi'IS EHINGEH Kings Higliwzly, Dover, Dcla. Blount Hcrinon School Tucrlf School ATA Ii1lcl'l'1'ale1'11ity Council, T1'ensu1'erg Cross- l'ounl1'y C194-Slg Bzlsketlmll C19-1:31. A1.v1N EISENM,-iN Weston, Vt. Horace Greeley School Graph ic Art -l2lCli-IJ-Lil11lGI'I1, Editor-in-Chief. l159 i .luiics lhvis l',l,l,1-:xux lliQ-l- lice-vcsloln llml., liiclnnonrl, lnm U Nlorlon llighfchool ll zfvlory lil-ill Sphinx: llnslu-llmll flfl-l-iii. l.i:wis lll.IYI4Ill l'lNC2l.1Sll 725 thu-lil-lil Rel., Nlclrosc, Mass. Nlclrosc High School Tlzoyrr Srlloof ll.x1,i-n 'l'.n'i.ou l'lN'1'wIs'1'i,i-3, Ju. Iiilircf-11 SL., Monson, Blass. Monson .Xczulc-lily Tufrlf School EX Soccer l 194-32. l,.Xl'l. limi, ICNZ 55 Kcnzcl Avi-., Nutlcy, X. J. Nntlcy High School Uwology flcrinaui fllllllg cl1lll0Cc:llllJ. .I.xx1Es 1'n11.n' EVANS Klinc Hill Rrl., l nirliclrl, Conn. lfuirfil-lcl High School Sociology KKK JAMES I'I,xRI'Er EXVING 530 Park St,, Cpper Montclair, N. J. llontclair High School I 'hem istry-Zool ogy SAX Green Kcyg Varsity Glee Club, Managerg Interclormitory Councilg Track Q1943Dg Cnrlergrarluate Scientific Society. ALBEu'r ANDREW' EXENDINE, Ju. 1808 Gatewoofl St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Classcn School Psychology EN RICHARD 0sw.xLD ICYMNINN 115 North Ohio St., Anaheim, Calif. Anahciui Union High School I'olz'i1'cf1l Sf'IiL'llf'U Germania. rXN'ruoNY l3u.xDi' 1'l.XliliICI,I., Ju. fi Rope l c-rry Rfl., llauovcr, N. H. .Xlbzuiy .Xcarlcuilv Zoology llanflcl Soc-in-ly: Outing Club lfxccutivc Couunillcc: Bail uurl Bullet, Prcsiflcnl Cabin anfl Trail, Sec-rclaryg Corinthian 'Yuclil Club. C'uxuI.14:s 5'l'flNI-111.131 l EENEY Q3 llic-lior-x' Dr., lluplcwoocl, X. J. Coluiubizu lligli School llixlory flflill' Casquc :uul fi2ll1l1ll0l1fil'l'Cll Key: Palac- opilus: Nlzuiagcr ol' liaseliallg l'11gll-1-- gramluulc llcinbcr ol' .Xllilclic Council NIELVIN M. FENICHELL 11187 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N, Y. Erasmus Hall School Geology B911 Bandg Glee Club: Squash CDJ, ROBERT EDWIN FIELD 114 Clinton Ave., Tiffin, Ohio Columbian High School Tuck School VVALDO LEWIS FIELDING 4 So. Lenox St., Wlorcester, Mass, Classical High School C'lzemz'stry-Zoology HAQD Dartmouth Playersg Undergraduate Sci- entific Societyg Dartmouth Broadcasting Systemg Swimming 09439. ROBEIQT JOSEPH FIELDSTEEI. 175 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Delvitt Clinton High School Englzlslz lnterclormitory Council. RoBEuT Fiuxcis FOSDIVR 364 1Yest hlorgan Ave.,Briclgeport,C0011 Roger Lucllowe High Sch00l Topical ll' K KK ll.xicoi,n M.x1'iur'E FnoST,.lic. QI School St., llanovcr, N. ll. Wellesley lligh School I 'III'IIl'liSfl'jf-ZOUl0fjjj .Xlpha Kappa Kappa. TX. Nlrciiani, I no'r1nNc:H.xM 1060 Park Avc., New York, N. Y. Chateau dc Chaufins Tuck School Freshman Ski Team, Manager, Outing Cluh lflxeculivc Committee: Carnival Council. ROBERT SPINDLER FUIKS 103 Franklin Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Barnard School History KE Green Ke-yg The Dartmouth, Local Advertising Mzinziger. ILAYMOND FUNK Q00 Lenox Ave., Wlilkinsburg, Pa. Wilkinsburg High School Economics Football C1943l. ROBERT STUART GARVIE 38 Garfield Rd., Wlest Hartford, Conn. Hall High School Topical II CIPEK The Pictorial, Circulation hlanagerz Winter Carnival, Publicity llanager. 161 Roni-:ic 'l'xi- 1' fiXSlill,l. lil l.iuflall Sl.. l,illlY1'l'S. Hass. llanvcrs lligh School Tllfllljff Nrlmul All frlcc f lull. Ilowxlcn l'l.xiu, Guida, Jn. Q4-l--09 90th Xvc., lic-llc-rose, N. Y -l2lIlHll1'Zl lllgh School T11cl.'-Tllrlyrr School VK .U 1'lliEDEliIC'K SYDNEY Giaimigu P. 0. Box 199, OWL-go, N. Y. Owego Free .'xf'Elil0II1'V .lI!lfllClIlfI1I-ITS KKK Freshman Lacrosse C19-Lfijg Varsity Lacrosse KDJ. I'I.x1ucY flltANT flEllBEll -L615 hleadow Rd., Blinncapolis, Minn. Kimball Union Acadciny Thayer School ALVD Sphinx, Green Key, Frcslmian Class President, Yigilantesg Hockey KDVJ, Vap- tain 1942--L31 Foothall flll. RA LP11 ST UART fl1BBS 192 Richmond Ave., Worcester, Mass. Worcester Classical School Tuck- Thayer QWFA Track 09431. JAMES HORN GILBERT Rimmon Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. Deerfield Academy Hisiory ,FY Sphinxg Glee Clubg Lacrosse C19-135. JAMES LAWRENCE GILFILLiKN 191 St. Marks Pl., Staten Island, N. Y. Perkiomen School Zoology WILLIAM MOSES GLOVSKY Q1 Arlington Ave., Beverly, lVIass. Beverly High School Sociology HAKIJ Debating. IIEHBERT STEBBINS GORDON 476 East hlain St., North Adams, Blass. Drury High School Tuclr School XCIJ Forensic bniong Debating Team: Inter- fratcrnity '1'reasurers' Council. GEORGE .hll'l'llL'K GRAHAM, JR. SQ ',l'1'Ou'lmriclgc l'l., Naugatuck, Conn. Naugaluclc lligh School l,0lI'fI-Nl, SOIUUIICC QJX L 162 G1KIL GROVER GR,ANT, JR. 362 Mentor Ave., Painesville, Ohio VVestern Reserve Academy Tuck School SAX Freshman Glee Clubg Varsity Glee Club. ROBERT LUCAS GRANT 165-11 Chapin Ct., Jamaica, N. Y. St. Paul's School English AT Dartmouth Broadcasting System. CHARLES J. GRAY 6 Stone Ct., Gloucester, Mass. Gloucester High School Tuck School ROBERT REED GRAY 85 Rockland Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Charles E. Gorton High School Economics GX Glee Club: Film Workshopg Camera Club, Crew Ql943l. ROBERT BENJAMIN G RIMSHAW 8908 187 Pl., Hollis, N. Y. Boys High School Tuck School AKE Forensic Union, Secret21I'y'TreasuFerl Soccer C1943jg Interfraternity TreasurerS Council, Secretary. POXVELI. CMIPRELL flRONEIl, JR. 1256 West 61st St., Terr., Kansas City, BIO. l'cmbroke Country Day School lfeononz ics flfllli Leclyard Canoe Club. XYARNER NORTON GRUBB, JR. M t. Pleasant St., Newtown, Conn. Taft School Econonnics Germania, Vice President. IIARRY LEONARD GUSTAFSON, JR. 9 Devens Rd., Worcester, Mass. North High School Tuck School AY Dormitory Manager. PAUL IIICHARD HACKSTEDDE 3536 Raymar Blvd., Cincinnati, Ohio Asheville School T uck- Thayer ATA :HOWARD BRERETON I'IALL 1007 Washington Ave., Iowa Falls, Iowa Iowa Falls High School Interncztiozzal Relations CIPIIA bPl1l11X3 Green Keyg Jack-O-Lantern, Treasurer. 631 IIORFIHT BIC,'.xI.l,I5'l'l-Ili ll.xx11LL 1:21 llillsidc Ave., llolyolie, Hass. llolyolce lligli School f'hunI.vlr'!1-Zoology flflli llanclg Xalural llislory Club, ',l'reasurer lA'1lj'1lI'1lc2lllUL'f lub. .XRTIIUR AIITCIIELI. llxxor Catauniet, Hass. Bourne Iligli School lioluny Cndcrgrziduaile Scientific: Society. PAUL DAVID I IANLON Q-L Rustic Rd., West Roxbury, Mass. Roxbury Latin School Erzglislz fI1f'A Sphinxg Yigilantesg Green Keyg Inter fraternity Treasurers' Councilg Cross Country 094353 Track C19-LSD, Captain Track CDD, Captain. ALLAN IIOBERTSON l'I.KliDIE Blain St., Farmington, Conn. The Choate School Erzglislz qi-T Casque and Gauntletg Phi Beta Kappa Senior Fellowg Green Key, President Class Secretaryg Class Executive Council Vigilantesg Soccer f1943j. ROBERT PARKER HARDY Peacham, Vt. Peacharn Academy French and Spanish French Club. DANIEIJ JOSEPH IIURLEY, JR. 651 College Ave., Elmira, N. Y. Elmira Free Academy T uclf School EX JOSEPH IQENT IJUTCHINSON 224-1 Forest View Rd., Burlingame, Cal. Los Alamos Ranch School I571gl'l-Sll BGJH Dragon: Carcajou Ski Club. JOHN LINDSAY HUTCHINSON Choate Lane, Pleasantville, N. Y. Greenwich High School E11 gl1'.S'll, Casque and Gauntlet, Jack-O-Lantern, Editorial Chairman, Yigilantes. JOHN LIVINGSTON HYDE 403 E. hlichigan St., hlarquette, hlich. Santa Barbara School Botany KKK Ba nd . lllsxm' PIQYTON INOE 3908 Sliannan Lane. Dallas, Texas Texas Country Day School lfIlfjl1'Sl1 3 3 ,,,t,x. :Qt ,, ,, I 166 EDXVARD CLARKE INGRAHAM, JR, 32 Dolge Ave., Dolgeville, N. Y, Dolgeville High School English GX PHILLIP RICH.XRD JACKSON 32 Vesta Rd., Dorchester, Mass, Public Latin School Thayer School Y HAQJ Football C194-SD. JOHN EIARSHALL JENKINS '77 Kensington Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Culver Military Academy Topical I I Zllf' Interfraternity Council. LARRABEE NIACNIILLAN JOHNSON 22 Lincoln Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. Binghamton Central High School Tuclc School EN Forensic Union, Rowing Club: Green Key, The Pictorial, Business Manager, Daniel Webster Debating Award. BRUCE WILSON JONES Ridge Fields, Hall, N. Y. Geneva High School English DAX Varsity Track CDD. A 1 Dom LD Wan' Jox E5 1044 Columbine St., Denver, ffolo. Fast IJCHVCI' High School If Il ffl ish Green Key: Glcc- Club, Presidentg Cabin and Trail. limvaim MONRAD JONES 25 Lyme ltd., Hanover, N. H. Plzysics Players Technical Directorg Bandg Dartmouth Broadcasting System. JVILLIAM 1X1,xcm RLANE JONES 310 N. Linden Ave., Highland Park, Ill. Highland Park High School Aclziuriol Mathemaiics AY' Interfraternity Councilg Interdormitory Councilg Jack-O-Lantern, Advertising Managerg Freshman Football C1943Jg Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES FAILQWEATHER IQANE 41 Hillcrest Ave., hlelrose, Blass. Melrose High School Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa. LIARTIN THOMAS KANE, Jn. 124 Grove St., Stamford, Conn. The Choate School E Il glish Z T' 167 limvucn lt. lixsr, Jia. 1. '- r ' ' ' .H .Iolm Sl., learl River, X. H. lfn gl I'.X'll Alilf Sphinx: Football fltll-Zim Footlmll Qllj iaplain. Jolix W11,i.1.m lil'l.XliNEY 2696 Preston Ave., New York, X. X lloracc Mann School K'!1cn1z'.s-try Zil- Frack flflhlffijg Foolliall fl!!-Lily. IIENHY ClI.XI'M.XN KIZCK 48 Avillllllt-Cl'6SCOIlt St., Montclair, N. J hlontclair Iligh School Tuck- Thayer School Klflilll' The 1942 Aegis, Managing litlitor. JOHN BIILES KEEFE 9 Tanglcwylde Ave., Bronxville, N. Y Tucf: School EN Gcrmaniag Spanish Clulig Forensic Union Freshman Hockey H94-313 Senior Fellow ship. KEVIX Biximr KENNY 32 Lincoln St., Hartford, Conn. Weaver High School H istory .XKE Lacrosse 09431. J.aMES JOSEPH KERLEY, Jn. Q22 XV. Sth St., Erie, Penna. Medina High School Thayer School EKIJE Interfraternity Council. ROBERT XYOODXVA RD K1-:aww 13 Southmoor Dr., Clayton, BIO. John Burroughs School I5IIIlC1IfI'0lIj lirzglislzg H istory KDEK Glee Cluhg The Players. 1'1ENnY 11 onons KIODER 128 lYestwoorl Dr. S., Lima, Ohio lllestern Reserve Academy Tuck School EX llUl3Eli'l' f'OnNEI.1I'S IQIGER 121 lYarfl Pkwy., Kansas City, BIO. Southwest High School English mlyarcl Canoe Cluhg Natural History Cluh. .lonx lf1lI13.Kl,I. l-ll llc-llxins Sl., llclrosc, Mass. Blclrosc lligh School Y'uf'l.' School SAX c'lYlll1lll l'ilOl Trainiiig. 168 IQICHA no IQIMMEL Wlalclemere Ave., Wfilloughby, Ohio . Union High School Topical I I KDF A Sphinx. '.l.l1-XOMAS IIUDNER KING 150 Purchase St., Fall River, Mass. Tabor Academy Mathematics KKK Sphinxg Crew CDD, Captain. XVILLIAM DOUGIAAS KIPP 1 High St., Charlernont, Mass. Blount Hermon School Economics ROY H.A1l1lISON KIRSH, Ju. 601 Prospect St.. Maplewood, N. J Columbia High School English ATA Banclg Green Collegians. JAMES CH.xic1.ES KNOEPFLELQ 1617 lllilson St., lowa City, Iowa Central High School Tuck School lnterclormitory Council. .losicvu KUCI, Jie. SJ Butlcr St., Vos Vob, clibllll. Gm-xiwir-li Ilig-li School T0llI.I'fll ll' NY11,1,1.xx1 lliamux li0ES'I'I'Ilt, Ju. S015 St. G4-orgcs lid., Baltiniorc, Md. Gilman C'ount,ry School .Al rl unrl .fl rchrlvoloyy BAE Dragon. Jo11N AD,-X181 IQOSLONYSKI 1522 Pleasant St., hlanchcstcr, hlass. Govcrnor Dummer Acadcmy CDFA Sphinxg lI1fGI'fl'2llCl'lllty Council, Sccrc tary: Football U9-LSDQ Basketball C19431 Baseball f19+3l3 Baseball CDD, Captain. 1 11.xNK K11uiP.xTR1C1i LAL1 ,A NDE Box 2872, San Juan, Puerto Rico Central High School Tuck School SAX Centro lflspanolg Swimming C1943Dg Swimming CDD. ST.xN1,Ex' BIAXNVELL L,x1x113E1z'r, Jia. 360 Windsor Dr., Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood High School Tuch School h AT Spanish Club: Dartmouth Uliristian Ynion: Ambas Ainericas. 169 K'1l,x1c1.1-:Q K l'1Y'l' I,xx1-: ttl t.l'i'Sf'l'lll Sl.. lloclilaml, Nlasa. llot-klaiitl Iligl1Scliool XHI'lAHl0fj!f 5I7IllllNll K lub. RIVIIXICIJ Nl XICIUN l,.tNSltt'ltIill 72011 l,1ll'li llcighls Xvc., llaltiiiiorc, Mm l,1lI'li School Trnpliwll ll ll,Xfl' l,2lf'l'USSt' ill 1, lloisl-11c'1' ls11.x1':1, l,.Xl'l'lN 4-IU Lafaycttc St., Sillblll, Blass, lI1Xfl1 fllIl'NII.Nfl'jj llalacopitus. 3111.155 liicu' lhxssrglc tial Fprucc St., 'l2llIlt'Sl0WIl, X. Y. .laincstown lligll School Tuff: School Circcn Kcyq lntrainural l':XOCllllVL' flllllll lllllll. l,.x1g1cExc1: Buclcows I,.x'r1111o1f, Ju. Q31 li. Gcncsscc St., .xllllllI'll, N. Y Auburn Senior Iligh School S pu Il ish OLIVER LAZARE Hotel VVarwick, New York, N. Y. Fieldston High School E11 glislz HAKIJ Squash CDD. JOHN IEIENRY LEAR, JR. Hudson River Rd., Vilaterford, N. Y. Albany Academy Botany KE Undergraduate Scientilic Society. :HOXVARD BLISS LEAVITT American University, Beirut, Syria Vermont Academy English The Dartmouth Players, Dartmouth Christian Union, Treasurer, French Clubg Ledyard Canoe Club, Chess Teamg DOC, Soccer, Squash. ALBERT EUGENE LEBIARBRE 32 Pleasant St., Marlborough, Mass. hlarlborouggh High School f'l1cfn1islry-Zoology HUGH 1'l1i.XNi,'IS LENA, JR. 160 Broad St., New Loiiclon, Conn. Bulkclcy School .ll ml l.CI.Il 0 K KK Alpha Kappa Kappa. I 170 FREDERICK ROTH LENT 1821 2nd St., Peru, Ill. LaSalle Peru High School Topical I I QJAG VVALTER CHURCHILL LEONARD, J R. 12 Penshurst Rd., Ben Avon. Pa. Arnold Preparatory School Economics ATA Varsity Track, lVIanager. STANLEY JOSEPH LEVIN James St., Brookline, Mass. Brookline High School Economics HACIJ DUSTIN COLE LEWIS 2516 View Ct., N.W., Canton, Ohio Lehman High School Economics GX EDNVARD AYARREN LIDER 151 Brownell St., New Bedford. M2155 New Bedford High School Topical I I Glee Club. 1 i Ronnm' WAIUIEN LIMING 48 Bullard St., Newton Center, Blass Newton lligh School fflmzn 1'.s'l ry-Zoology .3 lili ilfootlizlll U9-1-3l. HAROLD lYOODRUFF LINDLEY 17 Bedford Ave., Milford, Conn. Milford High School liofznzy FAX Rxcn.-iran DONNAN LIVINGSTON 3009 Van Buren St., Wilmington, Del. duPont High School Thayer School fl1KlIf' Corinthian Yacht Club, Executive Councilg Sailing CDD. h7AN YOORHEES LLOYD 4 Vera Pl., Montclair, N. J. Montclair High School Psychology CIYEK Glee Club. HARRY ALBERT Locrcwoon 911 Hollywood St., hlonroe, lVIich. Monroe High School Tuck School ZW' Swimming C1943l CDD. l'lItI'1lJliltll'K ltxuioxn l,or'm:nr:N 171- lluninorclaml Sl., Springfield, Blass. hYlllll'2lllilIll .M-mlciiiy Turf: School l rcsliiuan Lacrosse lllll-Il'1.l.Y. lslllllllllll. lllC'll.XliD Ihwsox l,oNc:.xclir: ll.l .lD. 2, .Xliron lid., Nlcdina, Ohio Medina Iligli School Tuck School C-J X lnlcilralcrnity Council: f'amera Club, C,'11.x1cI,ES lllzxm' ll0NGl4'IELlJ, JR. 1360 Fifth Ave., Youngstown, Ohio University School Englfslz BX Dragong Football Clflhlfilg Golf C19-LSD WILLIAM l,O'l'IlM.fXN, III 375 So. Gore Ave., Webster Groves, Mo Webster Groves lligh School Tuck School EX Dragong Track C1943l. M.xrcsH.x1,L I .owM.xN Q18 Coleman St., Elmira, N. Y. BIcDonogh School English K2 Freshman Baseball Q1943j. C LARKE SETH LYON 118 Biadison Ave., Holyoke, Blass Loomis School History ECDE Prokoficff Society, Fencing CDD. ARTHUR DAIRE LYNN, JR. S27 NY. 52 Terr., Kansas City, NIO. Classical High School Thayer School 4112K 'lQcclyarfl Canoe Club. ALAN .1onNsoN BICBEAN, JR. 752 Summit Ave., Bronxville, N. Y Economics Corinthian Yacht Club. l'Iu:EN E linwrx RD 31CC.K1i'1'11Y Q1 Gilhcrl Pl., XYhitc Plains, N. Y 1Yhitc Plains lligh School Tucl: School flflilll 1945 Grccn Book, Eclilor-Manager. Skating f194?5iJ: Phi lic-la Kappa. .loux NIc'CxR'1'iir, ll JUS 'lluxcmlo lllvcl., 111-lmslm-1' Gro ' ' . Wvclnslcr Grove-s Iligh Schf Tllfh' School VX 1ntcrfi-au-1-nity 'll1'C8Sll1'0l'.i. Council. 172 ROBERT MCCAW 19 Linden St., Framingham, Mass, Framingham High School Tuck School NELSON CALDNVELL BICCLARY 745 Locust St., Winnetka, lll. New Trier High School T11 clc- Th a ycr AND Bait and Bulletg Leclyarcl Canoe Club. DONALD NICCORKINDALE 73 Lexington Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Deerfield Academy Psychology CIJKW' Casque and Gauntlet: Freshman Glee Clulog Varsity Glee Club. SEXVARD AYILBER M,xCDoN.iLn 57 Euclid Ave., Albany, N. Y. Albany Academy Sociology AY' Bait ancl Bullet. THOMAS IHIART BIACELWEE 38 Scquams Lane, West lslip, N. Y. Babylon High School EC'0Il07ll1.lf'V PAX JM14 lJAI.E BIAVK 955 .Xrlams Sl., Dcnvc-r, Cul. lfasl llcnvcr lligll Sc-lmol Tn,,1'rfrll ll' llf'lll Hpllinxg liitc-l'fi':ilci'xlily fi0llIlC'll, .lmlir-ial - w lloarflg .l. X. l'oolli:1ll lhvm 'l'ri,1zic M.xcl,,xNic lil livcrslcy Xvc., Norwalk, funn Loomis School .llzzsic l'i-uknlit-H' Sovicly, Clmirman: llamlel Soc-icty. R.xx'M0Nn JOHN BICBIAHON, Jn. 104 Glcmwocl Avo., Pawtucket, R. l. l.aSallc Academy E11 glish K E l11terl'1-atornily Treasure-rs' Council. 'l'H0MAs LAXVKENCE NICNIANUS Bennett Rel., Wayland, Blass. Phillips Exeter Academy P11ilosoplzy-C'on1parative Litarrztzzre ATA Dragong Glec Clubg Natural History Clulmg Baseball C19:l3l. JAMES LESLIE BICNAMARA -1-S Woodley Rd., Rock lslaucl, Ill. lloline High School Thayer School KDEK Bait and Bullet. 1131 tiin KDJQ Squash fDlg Yigilantcs, Yicc Prm llill!!-1li'l' i'ilxi:i.i-1- N11 lQlAI'1PIN lil lflm l'l.,F1':i lllill, X. Y. .Xmli-lplii .xt'2llll'lllj' .lV,IlIll'l'1ll .llulll a'l1 lulffzv A 1' l'l1i lim-la Kappa: film- Vlulmg l ui'm-iisiv - 1 V V . - liimmg l'rm-flimaii lravla llflflilig N-limr l'lL'lllbXN . l ltl'IlllClCll' .XHLISUIIY Nlc-li xi-1 '70 l'i'usp1-1-l Xvc., flzlrilm-ii flty, X. X. lll'lIlpSll'ilIl lliggli Svluml l'.vyr'll0fr1gfy lYIl.I.I.XM 'l'n.xc'Y M.xi:c'iQ SllL'lllllI'Ill', Vt. Xm'tlixx'oml Svluml Tllrlf Svlzoul flllill' Clisqiiv ancl Gauutlc-lg fil'i'0Il Km-qv, Scc'rr- yg lnlcrfralcrnity ,lll'l'2lSlll'K'I'Sy Coun- cil: llll0l'l'I'illCI'llllj' 0111111-il, Yic-c-l'rcsi- ilg llalacopitusg Yigilanlcsg Glcc Vlulmg ulc-nl Urganizaticms c'0llfll'llI Vrcw 619439. 1 V hm' flI.XNlJl.I'IIt Nl.Xl,l.lC'l l', Jn. 94 llrook Sl.,cl1ll'llCIl Vily, N. Y. Taft Sf-liool lf11yl1'.vl1 'l l Vasquc aml Gaunllvtg 'l'l1c Dartmouth, f'l:1ssl'lxccl1tiVf,- C'uuncil. .l.kNII-IS BL'llNSA3l.kLI.I5Y lucligo Ilill llrl., 50IIl0I'5XVOI'lll, N. ll. gXclmiral lfarragut .fXc'aclt-my I1 istory EX Xssocialc liflitorg Frcsliman Ilamllimik, lfclitorg Press Vlubg Socrcr C19-l-32. Vap- -sirlcnlg Grc-cn K1-y, Xivc l'1't-sitlm-ntg HERBERT LEwIS BIAHX, JR. 874 Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y. hiilne High School English HAIIJ Green Keyg The Dartmouth, hlanaging Editor, Dormitory Committee. GEORGE DURHAM BTASON 4 North St., Brattleboro, Vt. Deerfield Academy T ack School EN Bait and Bullet, Hanover Ski Patrol CLcaderDg The 1942 Aegis, Advertising Nlanager. hvARNUM RUSSELL BQIEAD 8 Hillcrest Rd., Belmont, Blass. Kimball Union Academy H istory A 1' Freshman Swimming, Manager. RIARTIN SCIIENCK BIEIGS, JR. Elm St., Concord, Blass. Loomis School 1511 gl ish C-JAX Soccer CDJ, Vaplaing C'ivilian Pilot Training .lonx C'oIT BIIQLENEY 73 1Yaync Ave., 1Yl1ile Plains, N. Y. Tall School Ilzhslory Bitlll Dragon: fllcc Vlulmg fl2ll'l'2l.l0ll Ski Club. H741 T JOHN PIARLAN NIIDDENDORF 84-'74 Homelawn Ave., Jamaica, N, Y. Jamaica High School English Phi Beta Kappa: English Honors, RICHARD VICTOR TVIIEHER Q16 East 21 St., Tulsa, Okla. Tulsa Central High School History AT DONALD LANG MILLER 47 Prescott St., Reading, Mass. New HaInpton:School Tuck School CDFA EDMUND GILLMORE MILLER 161 Forest Ave., Wlest Newton, MASS Erzglish Phi Beta Kappa. JOSEPH BYRNS NIISKELL. JR- Falmouth, Mass. Lawrence High Sch00l Tuck School Tennis C19-L3l. Scorr Hoon NIITCIIELL 751 Maclean Avo, Kenilworth, 1Il. Columbia lligh School Tuck School KE Green Collegians. T,xKixNo13U RIITSUI Tokio, Japan Morning Star Middle School Plz ysics Annnizfr 1'1eEsTON MOORE North Point, Rumford, Va, Ile Roscy High School Tuck- Thayer FAX Freshman and Varsity Glee Clubg Inter- fraternity Councilg Skiing C19-131. THOMAS BRYNMOR BIORGAN, Jn. 382 Fire Island Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Babylon High School Infeniatiozzal Relations Council on Student Organizations, Pub- licity Managerg Dartmouth Broadcasting Systemg Dartmouth Players. RICHARD ROBINSON BIORNER 1690 Walnut Terr., Springfield, Ohio Springfield High School Chemistry B911 Corinthian Yacht Club. 1751 lln,xli1.i:r 'llllUllI'li Nlousis Blain Sl., lfulielil. X. ll. Stratford lligli School li2lI1f'0I' 'l'l1colo-fic-il 41-iniirirv ll D D ,., . . 1 , . . 1Z'Il!llli.N'll lllfl.N'Nl.l'N limi, 3l0Sl!,Xl'lIlCll, Ju. 384- lloscdalc jvc., Whitc Plains, N. 'l'hc Clioalc School lfcozzozn ics VAX Sailing CDDQ fl0IIllIl0fl0l'C DCTYC. 1YI1,LI.m1 1'Euu1s.x1: Mosicnm' 1733 Newton St., lVashington, D. Phillips lixeler Acadcniy English Honors QAX Dartmouth Playersg Soccer C194-31 ANDRE XY.V1'EltS BIOSENTII ,x L 171 Wildwood St., Montclair, N. .l, hlontclair lligh School History IIJK ll Dragong Lacrosse CDD. ROBEn'r SISSON Movnu 31 Elincrest Ave., Providence. R. I. Mt. Pleasant High School History STANLEY LESTER NEISLOSS 172 90 Highland Ave., Jamaica, N,Y Jamaica High School Tuck School RICHARD LEROY NOBLE 119 Wloodbridge Ave., New Haven, Conn Kent School English CIJKW' Dr IEOIIQ Debating Teamg Swimming CDQ C19-L3l: Rowing CDD, f1943j, HEIQBEIQT XYALLACE NOLAN 388 Spring St., Portland, Maine lliilbraham Academy Philosoplzy-Conzp. Litercztun' KV .4 D.XNIEL FIELD NORTON, JH. 41 Olmsted Rd., Scarsdale, N Y. LeROsey High School Tzlclr School CD59 Dragon. IKICHAHD PHILIP 0,BKIEN 7 lYashingtOn St., Newton, M1155- Yermont Academy Erzglzlslz lI Y Sphinx, ,Io1iN W1L1,1.xM O'CoNNo1c 254 Grant Sl., l'lramingliam, Blass. lframingham lligh School If con om ics flfllb. Sphinx: llockey lDJ, 5194-filg Baseball 119435. JOHN R. O,D,xY, JR. Q00 Buekniinslcr Rd., Brookline, Mass. Rivers School Topical IV qry' Corinthian Yacht Cluhg Sailing CDD. JOHN FRANZ ODENEAL Beach Rd., Gloucester, hiass, Berkshire School Psychology Z N JOHN EDXVARD O,DONNELL, Jn. 163 Highland Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. Naugatuck High School Botany J,xMEs OLSEN, Jn. 356 Eugenia St., Lombard, Ill. Glenbarcl Township High School Economics B611 Basque and Gauntletg Yigilantesg Green 11-QF: Palaeopilusg Basketball CDD, H9431 .lull-15 llll'lI.KlllJ llI'l'liYlllilNll-Ill Tlili l,inxx'oo4l l'I., Sl. Paul, Nliiiii. Sl l,illll .xC'lllll'lll.X' Tool: School l 'AX llln llcta lxappag lnla-rlralcrmllx' lrcas- lll'l'I'S C ounc-il: l'orl-ilsic l mon. l rcsulcnl: l,L'llllllllQ ,ll1'Illll. l,.XI,X'lN .loux Hsin:-:ma 1-l-5Youlc-Sl., Melrose, Nlaw. llclrosc lligli School Tuck Sf-hoo! l-PX W11,I,1.xxI ll.n'xxoNo llSAIl'X 580 Newark Ave., l'llizalicll1loxx'n, X. J. l.awrcnceville .Xcarleiny I I islory Darlmoulll lllaycrs. Joux '1lIIOM,XS lfxioxic Q21 S. Stone Avo., La Grange, Ill. Lyons 'l'ownship Iligli School Tuck School Al' German Clulm, Presirlcnt. l'.xIii. I.,xNoE Iixicknic 311 421141 St., Des Bloines, Iowa Phillips Exeter Ac-arlcmy History f11KllA' Vasque and Gauntletg Green Keyg Vigil- anlesg Palaeopitus, Presidentg Varsity Football, Manager, ROBERT DUGALD PEARSON 2425 North Park Blvd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Shaker Heights High School H isiory ZAE NIORTON H. PECIITER 565 Wlest End Ave., New York, N. James Madison High School Tuck School HAKIJ Ledyard Canoe Clubg Crew ROBERT GIBBS PELREN I 94 School St., Concord, N. H. Phillips Academy, Andover Englislz TPA Hockey 1943 CDD. ROBERT PIARRISON PERKINS 7 Monadnock Rd., Arlington, Nlass. Arlington High School Tuck School QPSK Cross-Country C1943D. l R,xNKI.IN TERRY PERLEY Black llountain, N. C. Western Reserve Academy Thayer School Intramural hlunagcr. VVALTER FOVVLER PETT11- Ridgelfield, Conn. Putney School Tuck School JACK RUDOLPH PFEIFFER I . Hackensack High School Tuck School Freshman Track, Manager. ALLEN VVHITMARSH PHILLIPS Hillsboro, N. H. Phillips Exeter Academy Romance Languages ZAE ROBERT D. PINTO Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America Escola Americana Tuck School EDXVARD CHANDLER PORTER 85 Rockland Ave., Malden, Mass' Ma.lden High School Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa? H U lb Club, Treasurerg Ledyard Canoe Cu Presidentg German Club. I 178 1 WW 929 Summit Ave., River Edge N J N t ral Hist01'Y WILLIAM IlrfN'r1xcsToN PORTER 113-Ol lfnion Turnpilce, Forest llills. N. Y. llayport High School Topical Il' Zll' ITINTIYJSSC IDP, 519431. l1onERT BRuc'E PONVER ll FD. No. Q, Yic-tor, N. Y. Cananclaigiia Free Academy f 'hem1'.vfr-if-,llcltlzmlzalics INDIE Sword Club, '1'rc:isurerg Interfraternity Trcasurers, Count-ilg lnterfraternity Councilg Varsity Fencing, hlanager. WALTER PowERs, JR. 42 Pinckney St., Boston, hlass. Noble :incl Greenough School lrzterizaliozzal Relations WT' Casque and Gauntletg Palaeopitus, Trea- surerg Interfraternity Council, President, Executive Manager, Green Key. AMASA PRATT 119 Fairmount St., Lowelhilllass. Lenox School Thayer School Outing Club Directorateg Corinthian Yacht Club. WARREN EVERSLEIGH PREECE Q Roland Ave., E. Norwalk, Conn. Norwalk High School English Honors EN Outing Club, Executive Committee. 9 5'1'xNl.i-:Y BLISS l'uiom' -18 S2lll5llllI'j' llil.. llr tntn kliiu-, Blass. llli.YlUI'lIf 1l'li'l' SpliiuxgYaiiwilytilt-vl'lul1gllm-lit-yi19131 illi. .Ioiix C'i.xx'row l,ltl'l'l'll um llil 'IX-in .Xt-iw llfl., Xt-w llriluiu, Conn. l,l5Illl.l'l'l Sc-liool 7'ur'l.'- 7'llll4ljl'l' School vy .... 'rm if ' ' ' icflorml. Business Nlaiiagcrg l'I'l'Sll- main Ski KISH-fir. Xomrxx Koi-i.,xR l,llOI3S'1'ElN 6304 hYOSl.IlllIlSl0l' Pl., Sl., Louis, NIO. John Burroughs Iligh School Trwh School IIIVD Dartinoutli College Films RICHARD I'IE.x'r1I PHUCTOR Hampshire House, Central Park South New York, N. Y. Blumuroneck High School Tuck School KIJAGD ERNEST KEITH PIIOUTY Pelclean Ct., 17 Fifth Ave., Pelham, N. Y Pelham Memorial High School Tuck School Dartmouth Rowing Club. DEREK X7AN QUACKENBUSH Le Sueur, lllinn. Culver hlilitary Academy Spanish Bandg Green Collegians: Orchestrag Amhas Americas, El Centro Espanol. PAUL IIERBERT RANDALL 10 Wlorcester Sq., Boston, Mass. Boston English High School Tuck School THOMAS ERNEST REDSTONE Q70 Bronxville Rd., Bronxville, N. Y Tuck School Hanover Ski Patrolg Camera. Club. XYILLIAM JosEPH ISEGAN, JR. 338 Sanders Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. Buffalo Bennett High School Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa. ll.n'MoNn DON.XI.D REICII Q01 North Broaclway, Yonkers, N. Gorton High School 1'ol1'iz'cul Science ATA. Y. WILIIIAM CLINTON STORY ISEMSEY 64 Qnd St., Garden City, N, Y. Choate School l TI' I History I Casque and Gauntletg Sophomore and Junior Class, President g Freshman Class, ' Vice-Presidentg Vigilantes, President: Green Keyg Football 094313 Hockey, C1943D, Captain CD54 Golf mp, Senigr Fellowg Undergraduate Fire Squad. JOHN XVILLIAM REPS 605 South Fremont St., Springfield, MO, Springfield Senior High School Regional Planning Phi Beta Kappa, lnterdormitory Council, Secretary, Green Key, Swimming 09435, CDDQ Senior Fellow. FREDERIC PRICHETT RHOADS Washington Lane, Huntingdon Valley, Penna. William Penn Charter School English KE DEXTER RICHARDS S Vera Pl., Montclair, N. J. Phillips Academy, Andover H istory LPT Dragong Jack-O-Lantern, Advertising Nlanagerg Hell Diversg Swimming Cl94QlS Lacrosse 119425. FREDERICK SEIBERT RICHARDSON 35 Cushing St., Dover, N- H' Phillips Academy, Andover Dc'mocratz'c I Il.S'fZ.llll1.0Il-5' DAX Green Keyg Varsity Soccer, Manager- 1801 finonom Loxo RIDER 2115 W. Church St., Oxford, Ohio Mcfiuffey High School ,llCIl1'f'lllIC GEICAIKIJ CONRAD RILEY 291 Pcshinc Ave., Newark, N. J. Dover High School 0116711 istry PAUL ROBERT RIILL 1100 Rcmington Rd., Overbrook, Pa. Culver Military Academy Thayer School K2 JoHN STAGG ROBINSON 49 Aubrey Rd., Upper hlontclair, N. J- Kent School Hisfory CIJKIP' CHESTIQII BRONVN ROCHE, JR. 176 Chestnut St., Gardner, fMass. Gardner High School Erzglislz OAX 'laCk'0'L2mf01'H, Circulation and Mer- chandising Blana ger. 181 lloicwi-3 lixslcax liom'mi'14:1.I, 1.1.1 Nuirlmorouuli wl., llziriforil, C Ullll liiiigkwooml School ,JI'lHU4'f!l,I'l' lllNflAflll1.UlI.S ,VY llrzngon. l'll'Ci1'IN1-1 lioirxixx l-4 hh2lSl1ll1gfl0ll Ave., xhllllllfiixl, Klux xvllllllflblb Iligl1Svliool .llzmfv l'rokolicf'l' Sociclyg llanflcl Sociclyg liilllil llarliary ffoasll l'lI'CSl1Il1f1I1 film- Vlulm LEE lioxiixxow 58 Cll21II1llCl'S Sb., Boslon, hlasrl. Boston Latin School IQIIHIIISII l'l1'CSllI1121Il lilasclmall, Maiiagc-r. Gsnsox M,xx liosI3x'I'II.xI., Jn. 131 Bartlctt Avo., Pitlsfielcl, Mass. Pittsfield High School Zoology Axruoxx' Goimox Run -119 lYcst 119th St., New York, N.Y. EN Plzilosoplzy Honors Dartmouth Broadcasting Syslcm. RICHARD HILL RUDOLPH 17 Hedge Pl., Kingston, Penna. Wyoming Seminary Polilical Science ATA Basketball llianagerg Student hlember of Athletic Council. DAIJE FRANK RUEDIG, JR. 999 Michigan Ave., Evanston, lll. Evanston Township High School T uck School AACIH Cross-Country, 1V1anager. STANLEY BARRETT SANDBERG 91 Harvard Ave., Brookline, lVIass. Horace Mann School English Dartmouth Broadcasting Systemg Fenc- ing C1943l. T'lARHY CLINTON SAYICE, JR. 12 Linden Pl., lllarwick, N. Y. I'l1cmz'stry-Zoology LDA6 GEoRc:E TIIEoooRE SCHAEFER 144 Buckiiigliziiii Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Roosevelt High School 15411101111-OII,' BICll1IL'IIllIlI'C.S,' I'l1y.s1'c.s Gcrinaniu. l18Q1 HERBERT HESS SCHAFFNER 415 19th St., N.W., Canton, Ohio Lehman High School Tuck School Band, Camera Club, Cercle Francais DAVID AUSTIN SCHIRMER 9 Park Ave. Terr., Bronxville, N. Y. Bronxville High School Economics XID Freshman Hockey, Manager. VVILLIAM ALBERT SCHOLL 2 Beechwood Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. Manlius School Economics SX PAUL ALAN SCHROEDER 1114 Forest Ave., River Forest, lll. Oak Park High School Tuck Sclzool AACD Sphinx. THoMAs NOLAN SCHROTII 40A lVIonroe Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Wlyoming Seminary Tuck School ATA Green Key, Palaeopitusg The Dartmouth Business Managerg Director, 1942 COIH munity Chest Drive. W11,1,I.xM limi, SCIIIIMACHER Q73 X. Franklin St., Hempstead, N. Y. Baldwin High School illcfliczfne Alpha Kappa Kappag Cabin and Trail: Bait and liullct, Prcsidcntg Natural History Clulmg Green Kcyg Gun l'rcsirlenL. Louis XVILLIAM SEIDMAN Club 2861 Honncll ltd., Grand Rapids, lVIich. East Grand Rapids High School Tuck School BGJH Ricnixrm DQSVID SH.-xP1R0 40 W. 77th St., New York, N, Fieldston High School Psychology HAKI1 Track C1943Dg Track CDD. GERALD BOGER SHATTUCK 116 Middle St., Portsmouth, N. Portsmouth High School C'l1cnz1'st'ry-Zoology CONNOR Buss SHANV X7 H. 6901 02J1GSbyAve., Chicago, 111 Asheville School Ecozzonzics YDFA Basketball C1945-lj, QDD, .lHllY ll ix imxn Su xxx' NlllIll'llt'Sll'l' lX.ll.l ifculral .llllllIilll-Nlfllllillll mul lfmfiu llircctor, DHS: llamlin f'tllllll'll1 I.t-4-li lir'ssi5i.i. Kxicairr 5Ill'IlHll'IlNl-1 Nlidrllcscx lid., 'l'yngslmoro, Blass. l.owvll lligli School .lIfl'll1'1lllllliCS KKK l'll!ANK P1-:icsoxs Smzicwoon 739 25th St., San Diego, f'alif. San Din-go lligh School lJOlI.ll.l'lll Science .YPA Gnoiioi-3 'lfxoiisiii Snmizu 83 D St., Salt Lake City, lvlllll American School Ilixtory lnterrlormitory Council. Liao SILYEHSTEIX, Jn. 15 Wlest 81 St., New York, N. Y. Blair Acadcrny Economics Dartmouth Outing Club, Presirlentg Varsity Ski Team, llanager. 1831 ' 13615 hYilSlllIlQlllIl Sl.. llrooklinc, xllltli f'ommil1cc: film-c ftllllll llnwing Vlnli AYILLIAM IXOBERT SIMONDS 1100 Evergreen Ave., Plainfield, X. J. Pennington Preparatory Medicine STANLEY DOUGLAS SKAUG Box 15-1-, Clarkfield, llinn, Clarkfield High School History AAMID Casque and Gauntlet, Green Key, Bas- ketball lDD, C19eL3l, Captain. FRA NK PETER SLINGLUFF 9.220 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. Sl. Albans High School Geology B911 Casque and Gauntlet, Lacrosse H9131 llelldivers Ski Club. .loux HENRY SMITH, JR. 1:2115 West 57th Terr., Kansas City, Mo. l,0l11lJ1'0liC Country Day School Economics CDEK Cabin and Trail. Al.V1 1'lIlCXY PETER Smirru Q33Al:lIllll11I'lll'liflqhycsl lioxl,mry,Alass. Clark Sc-bool l'l11'1111'.vf1'-11 l.lNlt'1'Ql'2ltlll2llC Svienlilir' Society. 9 H841 CHESTER SOLEZ 418 E. 3rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y, Chemistry-Zoology Cabin and Trail, Directorg Ledyard Canoe Club, Archery Club, Presidentg Alpha. Kappa Kappa: Phi Beta Kappa, IQENNETH EUGENE SORLIEN G-4 Wlitherbee Ct., Pelham Nlanor, N. Y. lVIama1'oneck High School Psychology X119 Glee Club. BIARSHALL ANKENY SoUERs, JR. 3236 Elmwood Dr., Des 1VIoines, Iowa Theodore 'Roosevelt High School Topical I I I EX D.O.C.g Skating Team. PETER FREDERICK SOUTHWICK 49 Jefferson Ave., Wlhite Plains, N. Y. Wlhite Plains High School Geology GX Dartmouth Players. ALONZO AVEIR STEDMAN 321 Jefferson Ave., Haddonfield, N. -I Bloorestown Friends School Cl1em'z'stry 1112K Sword Club. Auriiuu IJENRY STEIN, Ju. Wellesley, BLISS' Albany Acaclemy Biology EN Bait ancl Bullet. XYILIJ.-X181 Howixnn STEIN 9330 W. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Dewitt Clinton High School Economics HAKIP Jack-0-I,antcrn, Circulation hianagerg Swimming C1943,J. EITHER GILMAN STEVENS, Ju. 12 Union St., Exeter, N. H. Phillips Exeter Academy History Press Club, The Dartmouth, Editorial Chairman. JOHN DACY STEVENS Polly Park Rd., Rye, N. Y. Port Chester High School English KE - hiterfraternity Council, Green Collegiansg Handel Society, Band. JAMES MACKENZIE STEWART 6 Calumet St., Rochester, N.Y. Monroe High School Clzcmistry-Zoology AKE AQSIS, Editor, Christian Union, Secre- taryi Phi Beta Kappa, Green Key, Freasufefi Francis L. Towne Scientific Prize. 185 .loux lll-:Nui Srixsox IH!! South Willarul Sl., llurliuglou, Yt llhrlhps .xl'IlIlt'lll.Y, .hI1llUYl'l' Zlllllllfl-If I ,X li l,I I Ull' lrwck 'lWl +' lrtncl' 'll-' lllll'l' 1-. . . .-, ix 1 ' lrulcrull x' I ouucll. w w , l'lt1-Illi-IICIVK l'1tXXIiI.IY P-'i'ocuu'1ci.l. Q1 hviltlflllllll' lhl., lichuoul, Mass. H4-huoul lligh School NUl'liUlU!l.lj AKE Sphinx: Palacopil usg llllt'l'l'l'Ill0I'Illly f 'oun cll. Sccrclziry. Roniawr Pu-Jusox S'l'UKI'IS 97 Walchung Ave., C halham, X. .l, clllillllillll I'uhlic High School Tlmycr School flPEK fllce Clulm. v w 1 C 11.XRI,ES lunwxun 51Y.K'l'ZIi.XIfGlI, Ill 2196 Glcnwootl .Xvc., Tolcclo, Ohio Scott Iligli School Tuck- Thnyzfr School EN lntertlorinilory Council: Swiuuniug mural, mi. Wii.L1.xx1 RExw1cK SWEENEY 11 Elm St., 1Yootlsvillc, N. II, 1Yooclsvillc High School Ilislory KKK ELLIOTT BOYD SNVEET zslrouf Mile Rd., west Hartford, Conn. The Loomis School Zoology GAX ELLIOT COVELL TABER. JR. 271 Hawthorne St., New Bedford, Mass. Psychology ALDEN TXTYGATT TAYLOR 247 hlountain Rd., Englewood, N. J. Hackley School Sociology FAX Corinthian Yacht Clubg Sailing CDD. DONALD ITARRIS TAYLOR 511 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, R. I. lwoses Brown School National Problems KKK Tennis, Managerg Squash, lV1anagcrg lnterfraternity Treasurers' Council. ROBERT GEDDES TAYLOR Sli Blackburn Rd., Summit, N. J. Summit High School Tizclr- Thayer School 1861 WARREN JUSTIN TAYLOR 1 Oakdale Ave., Dedham, Mass, Dedham High School Chemistry-Zoology IDEK Alpha Kappa Kappa, Football C194-32 ROBERT HENRY TENNEY 817 Forest Ave., Evanston, Ill. Evanston Township High School Economics Interdormitory Council. ROBERT WVILLIAM THEDE Glen Acres R. R. No. 6, Cincinnati, Ohio Walnut Hills High School Tuck School EN Cabin and Trailg WViuter Sports Com- mittee, Chairman. HONVARD CLARK THOMAS, JR. 35 Calvin Rd., Newtonville, Mass. Newton High School History KKK ROGER ARTHUR THOMAS 1083 Hunter Ave., Pelham Manor, N- Y- Pelham Memorial High School Tuck School Publicity Committee, 1940 Winter Carnival. Mummy WINTHROP THURSTON Bethel, Blaine Gould Academy Dffmof'ralz'c I 11.5-lz't11t1'ons fl1l'A J. V. Foothall. GEORGE FAIRLAMB TILLSON 3003 No. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Harrisburg Academy Economics GX AYILLARD EDWIN TOSTMAN 19394 109th Ave., Hollis, N. Y. Andrew Jackson High School Tuck School GBX Rowing Club. RICHARD BINNEY TONVER 119 Hancock St., Auburndale, hiass. Vermont Academy Thayer School EAE JOHN G. TROSTER 92 Franklin Ave., Yonkers, N .Y. Culver Military Academy Geology KE The Dartmouth, National Advertising Milmlgefi Dartmouth Broadcasting Sys- UAU13 Freshman Football M9435 187 lt.xl.l'u Vioxx lnoximiox 7121.3 hhiililllllgltlll Sl., 1lIllYt'I'Sllj' City hlo. C'ulx'cr Klililar-v .hl'illlt'Illj' S1111 ll ilvh Iflflf Spanisli Cflnlm: l'll't'Ill'lI Vhahg folli- llamlg ,Xinlms ,xlllt'I'lt'1lS11il'l'l'Il Vollm-glial 1 fi .,, . l,o1 In l,lm.x1co lui-'I-'LY 2111 lloscclalc St., llouston, 'll-xas San Jacinto lligh School T111'l.' School ll.Xl'l Dragong llor-key tl!!-LIU. MOHTON Ciusm '1ll 1 l'I.I'l, QNIJ Q57 Pleasant St., C'onc-orcl, N. ll. Concord lligh School lfco11ol111'z'.s GJX Banrl. JOAQUIN J. Y.xLL.x1cINO, Jn. 4-lfth St., Panama, Panama Culver Blilitary Academy Spa II ish KV .4 Spanish Chili, Pre-sirlcnt. lY.XItIiEN YALTZ VAN DYK 1 rr h I5 Stony Ridge Rd., Saddle River, N. J Mount Hermon School Economics CDEK Skating lDj, Captain. GEORGE TURELL XQAN PETTEN 600 South hlarket St., hlarion, Ill. Aberdeen High School Chem istry-Zoology Christian Union: Undergraduate Fire Squad. IIOBERT JACKSON XTARNEY S0 South St., Littleton, N. II. St. Paul's School ll1'.9I01'y JEIQROLD VON XYEDEL Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Loomis School ,llcrlical School 'l rcshman Glee Cluhg Alpha, Kappa Kappa. -IEREMY Ri4'u.xmJ W.xLuuON, Ju. 774 Middle Sl., Portsmouth, N. H. l'orlsmoulh lligh School Topfrffrl .llajor II HX ilrccu Kcyg Dartmouth Baud, RlZlI12l 'Ol'. D l 1cEnEu1c'k ll.x1:O1.n hY.Xl,l.lS 1 - N w 4 lou- l'ork l'arms, Durango, Iowa Dulruquc Sr-mor lligli School I'.'11gI1'.vl1 IX l.m-kwoocl l'iIl131llSll llI'lZC. l'lEltBERT B.XILEY XVALTEN 6318 Mossway Rd., Baltimore, Md. Gilman Country Day School English AACIP Dragon: Hockey C19-LQD. JOHN DAVENPORT XYALTON Snowden Pl., Glen Ridge, N. J. Glen Ridge High School Truck School KKK Dartmouth Players: Corinthian Yacht Club, Sailing IDD. ELLIS SMEDLEY XY,-XRD, Ju. 119 Chester Pike, Ridley Park, Penna. lvilliam Penn Charter School English BGH Dragon, President, Boxing, Interdormi- tory Council, President. SETH WASHBURN 621 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J. Physics l'lOLDEN NELSON W .vrEuBUuY Central hlachete, Guayama, Puerto Rico Kent School Thclycr School KKK Cross Country C19+L3lg Varsity C1055 Country CDD. 1881 r IHKHNEIJ ALLEN XYATERMAN 506 Riverview Terr, Bcttenflorf, Ioxxa The Hill School lgllyllzdl Honors KX lfreshman Golf H94-fijg Senior lfcllowg Phi Beta Kappa. Roi' WATSON, Jn. 593 9th Ave., SW., Rochester, Minn. Rochester High School Topical IV X111 C'urxi:LEs JAMES WEBB 7th and Chelten Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Penna. Penn Charter School English BQH Casque and Gauntletg Dartmouth Bloun- taineering Club, Presiflentg Carajou Ski Cluhg Bait and Bullet, Secretary- Treasurer. PAUL XVORTH XVETNBRENNER 666 E. Columbia St., Detroit, lVIich. Lake Forest Academy Englislz FAX JAMES DORING WELLS 38 Washburn Ave., Wellesley Hills, Blass. Huntington School Tuck School EN Dartmouth Broadcasting System, Asso- ciate Manager. l 189 318 Pleasant St., East Walpole, Blass l'l:xxm.lx llowxuo Nliasr EHICS llr-vu llaur .Xvm-.. Xarlicrlli, l'euua l.ouer Nlcriou lligli School ,llt'4lIil'1iIlt' ,Xlpha Kappa Kappa: l'lrcsl1u1au lit-lial iuut Natural llislory Vluli, l'rm-siilclll lJxx'1o l'lI.I,lU'l l' lYlll'l'I-I ll.l .ll. No. l, Xorwicli, Yl. ,.. , l llllllph lzxclcr ,Xcailemlv l:'f'm1ol11 lr-.v XYILLLXM l'llCOS'1' lYIlI'1'MXIiSll G2 Lloyrl .Xvc.. l'rovirlcnce, ll. l. Moses llrown School l'll'l'IlI'll Xflf luterfralernity Vouncil, Treasurerg Intra- mural Nlauagier. WILLIAM Iliaxm' WIEIQMAN 1790 'Forest Sl., Denver, Volo. lfast High School .ll Url 1.61.11 1' llfl' Hphinxg l'alac-opilusg Green-Kcyg Vig- ilantesg lfootlxall lDjg lioollmll llfll-fijg Baskcllmall llfl-1-fly. ROBERT :XXDREXY Wmirr llvalpole High School Sociology I' .XX Dartmouth fforinthian Yacht Club, Treasurer anrl Vice Cfommorlorcg Sailing lD,r. EUGENE TAYLOR YYILEY 999 Michigzin Ave., Evanston, Ill. Evanston Township High School T wok School WARNER TNTIFFLIN YYILLCOX 280 Vvest 11th St., New York, N. Y. Lincoln High School Tuck School Corinthian Yacht Club, Executive Boardg Pistol Clubg Ledyard Canoe Clubg Freshman Glee Club, Swimming CDM Sailing CDD, FRANK EDXVIN WILLIAMS, HI 19 VVilliams St., Rockville, lVId. Political Science ZW' The Pictorial, Advertising Manager. ROBERT ANNIS XVILLIAMS 18 hlelrose St., Wlorcester, Mass. North High School Natiolwl Problems fl1A9 Palaeopitusg Interdormitory Council. ROBERT IEDNVARD XYILLIAMS, JR. 29 NYest '70 St., New York, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School Psych ology ATA Cross-Country Q'43j, CDjg Track Qqgj, , CDD. I l190l WARREN BROOKS YVILLIAMS 380 No. hiain St., YVallingford, Conn, Choate School History GX ROGER KANN YVOLBARST 86 Burton Ave., WVoodmere, N. Y. VVoodmere Academy English AACIU Vigilantesg Freshman Baseball C1943l. WILLIAM TROUT YVOLF Nlt. VVolf, Penna. Peddie School Tuck School E AE GEORGE RISYWIOND YVOLFE 2510 Third Ave., Huntington, West Va Huntington High School Thayer School AACIP Sphinxg Vigilantesg Track Q1943l5 B35 ketball Q1943jg Football 119431 CDD. RICHARD HARVEY WOOD 48 Bank St.. Lebanon, N- H' Taft School Tuch School CIDAGJ IRED l RSKINF XX OODWAIIIJ 12 lilmrux St 1I'iI'Il1Ilg,lllIH Bliss l Flllllllgll H11 High School f,Il'NIISlI'Ll lb n ml IIIFIJLIIIQ l 'IINL Nl ORTHEN 183 Bloomficlrl Xvc ll Hiltforrl Conn lxinlgsxx ood School Ceoloqy II- Sphinx Ledx url C moe Club Smmmm CDi, C19lQD 1 X ol N I ll I If ,IU Ullf AIA N 1 lo rlx I l I I onn 5 14 lllrf Xtllllljf I 1 I Q . , V ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' foxnxn Fl'J'1'I.XNIJ 'Nu 1 1 ' ' t 71' ' ' hhl7lDo1lgI-. l.,llIl1lll1l, N1'll. 4 I 2 ' i fil'lllI'Jll lligli Svl mol 1 CIJXK ,. v VY ' W - lr-nl. . . . C' 1 ' 1 1 x1ll'Nll.Y . o1 cr. F J 9 1 31, pw 7 . , ,f 7 , l'.xI'l. l laxv'ls ' UNI: : -, - 1 I I - ff- ,.L . h 10 ISI-ve K' ll l., We-st Ilan- lmrxl, ' . , l,ooIl1i.' Fc-l aol I , lla r.' U: ' ,. ,. . 'Z . .' A U. .Xml I s .xllll'l'lK'IlS. A A y ,, 4 ' 23 JOSEPH XVILLIAM VVOYTHALER 36 Swift Rd., Framingham, lVIass. Framingham High School A ctua rial Illathematics A Y' Prokofici Society, Chairman. JOHN FIELDING VVYNNE N. Pease Rd., Wloodbridge, Conn, Hopkins Topical I V Zllf' Freshman Hockey C1943j. PHOTOGRAPHS UNAVAILABLE AT TIME or PUBLICATION: EDGAR STEXV.-KRD DRIVER FIIEDERIC GEICSIIOBI GOLDMKN ROBERT HILTON MESEIWEI' l191l Eonxxim 'l'IzoxI,xN YOUNGLOYE 465 Skokie llcl., Glencoe, lll. New Trier 'll0WIlSlllIJ lligh School S ocioloyy Zllf' Fresliiiian Glce Cflubg lutcrfrzitcrrlity Trezisurcrs' Comic-ilg Ilockcy C19-LSD. XVILLIAM ILLINGWUILTII ZEITUNG 791 Broad St., llcridcn, Conn. Choate School A rl HX Green Keyg Jack-0-Lantern, Managing Editorg Dartmouth lirozulcusting System. 1943 EX Members Aishton, Richard Henry, 2nd Alexander, William Henry, II Allman, VVilliam Hamilton Anderson, Walter Theodore Armstrong, Harry J . Atkinson, Robert Boone Barringer, Victor Janson Bartemus, John WV. Bartholomew, William Sayre Bates, Howard Thomas Berkley, John H. Bingham, Gordon Davidson Binswanger, Milton S., Jr. Bjorkman, Sigurd David Blaauw, Cornelius J . Boak, James Knox Bowman, Robert Gibson Bradley, Charles Worcester Brandt, William David Broughton, Ambrose Francis, Jr. Brown, Cyrus C.. Jr. Brown, Robert Dana Buckner, George Brader Bunce, Tyler Harold Burnap, Robert Luke Cabell, William Wymond, Jr. Card, John Henry, Jr. Carey, Fred Moody Carter, Gordon Henry Francis Chadwick, Richard Young Chase, Chester Francis Clark, Robert George Colson, Gardner Corrigan, Emmett Thomas, Jr. Coulter, Henry, W., Jr. Crawford, James Day Critchley, John Preston Crowley, Alfred Michael Cunningham, Bruce Taylor Curtis, Oakley Chester Dain, Frank INI., III Dale, IVarren Alfred Danhof, John James, Jr. Daniels, Forest Allen, Jr. Dawley, Gene H. De Lany, Walter Stanley, Jr. Denler, Harry Kirk Doar, William Thomas, Jr. Dodge, Freeman Forbes Drake, Albert Nathaniel Dunaway, James lN'eston, II Dunn, Robert Leslie Dwyer, John Clark Edison, Charles Bernard Ellis, Leon Thomas, Jr. Ellis, Thomas Francis Emerson, Richard Putnam Ernest, Edward A., Jr. Falck, Paul Milgard Feuerman, Russell Thoner Field, Robert Eugene Foley, Richard Morgan Font, Jaime I-Iiginio Forsyth, George Lewis Freedberg, Robert Melvin French, James Lucius Fuller, Harold S., Jr. Garlick, I-Ienry, IV Gerber, Thomas YY. R. Giusti, Ernest Henry Glover, Richard Mortimer Glynne, I-larry Nicholas, III Godfrey, Edwin Drexel, Jr. Goode, John Douglas Goodfellow, Millard Preston, Jr. Grant, Alan Frederick Gray, Willard Richards Grevatt, Rentoul Clarke Guyther, Jerry Mathews I-land, Aaron Allen Handrahan, Richard Fellows Harmon, Philip Mason Harris, Earl Felton Hartmann, Frank William Harvey, John Frederick Harvey, Joseph Paul Jr. Hatch, Francis March Hathaway, John S. Haviland, Theodore Z., Jr. Hazelton, Sidney C., Jr. Heenehan, James Thomas, Jr. Heneage, Thomas Hodgson, Jr. Higgins, Roland VV. o Robert Hunter Higg ns, . ' Holliday, VVilliam Jaquelin, Jr. Holton, Jesse Allen, Jr. Hooker, Burton Sanford, II Hopper, Harry Fox, Jr. Houghton, Richard W. Huse, Robert M. Hussey, Frank W. Infante, Jose M. Johnson, Lewis Pattee Johnson, Norman Peter Johnston, Frederick Elroy, Jr. Jones, Beckett Jordan, Conrad, B. Jouett, John Kellogg Judd, Cornelius Myers, Jr. Karlen, Russel Vincent Kauffroth, Sylvester Martin Keeler, Thomas Temple Kelley, Richard G. Kelly, Thomas Harrison, II Kersting, Donald Leslie Kimball, George R. Kimber, Richard Hartshorne Kingsley, Donald Wood, Jr. Klein, Richard Charles Knoop, Frank Bellows Koester, Richard Eilert Koncevich, George Theodore Korns, VVilliam Alexander Kramer, Daniel Ira Krol, John Stanislaus Lamb, Richard Dale Lamoureux, Arthur Alfred Lawson, John Harry, Jr. Lebovitz, Henry Irving Leene, John Edward, Jr. Leo, William David LeResche, L. Douglas Littlejohn, Lomax, Jr. Loesch, Franklin Christian Loughlin, David Culberson Lowden, George Horning McCord, lVIalcolm Christian McCormick, M. Arthur McKennis, Gregory McKeough, James A., Jr. Mallory, Paul Edward Mantliorne, Kenneth James Mara, Robert Mark Martens, Richard VV. Martin, Sherwood C. Meyer, Richard F. Middlebrook, VVilliam Theophilus, Jr. lV1ilburn, John D., Jr. Nliller, Charles Edmund, Jr. Nlills, Samuel John, Jr. Milmore, Charles VVilliam Mitchell, George Derr Moore, John Clark, Jr. Nlustard, Robert Morris lVIyers, Frank Clayton Nagle, Alexander Cooper, Jr. Newton, Alfred Whittlesey O'Brien, Edward Alovsius, Jr. O'Connor, Carey Brislan O,Connor, Daniel Ott, Robert Emil Perkins, Parker IYood Perry, Douglas Dards Peterson, Gerald E. Phelan, Rowland VYilliam Phelps, Richard Gurley l19Q1 Pierce, Richard Cushman Puelicher, John A. Purdy, Robert William Raffman, Relly Irving Reid, Richard P. Rhodes, Joseph E. Rill, Paul Robert Roberts, Robert Irvin Root, Douglass E. Jr. Rosenberg, Harry Arthur Rueckert, Charles Edward Russell, Earl Keith Sant, John W. Semmes, Harry Hodges, Jr. Schermerhorn, Victor Edward, Jr. Schroth, Raymond A. Scott, Robert Wetherbee Semmes, Harry Hodges, Jr. Shapiro, Chester Burton Smith, Gail C. Smith, John Henry, Jr. Smith, Olin R. Jr. Smith, Richard Barrett Smith, Russell G. Jr. Stevens, Almon Gerard Stevens, Chandler Lamberton Stevens, John Campbell Stratton, George F. Sweet, Richard Clark Swick, Thomas Ford, Jr. Taylor, Corydon Francis Thaxton, William Luther, Jr. Thompson, Errol Mitchell, Jr. Thompson, Warren B. Thorn, Charles Jordan Thornton, Edgar Sheldon Tilden, Scott Torney, Franklin Leslie, Jr. Townshend, Henry Hotchkiss, Jr. Tucker, Frederic Walter, Jr. Tyler, Neal Avery, Jr. Uhl, Edwin Fuller von Rfedel, Jerrold O. Walls, Donald Latham Wellington, James Ellis VVesterlind, George Carl Whittemore, C. Davis Wiggin, Blanton Culver Wilson, Hudson J., Jr. Wilson, VVilliam Walden Winters, Daniel McCoy Young, Jerry Ziegler, Bernard Carl, Jr. Graduate Schools TUCK SCHOOL First Year '42 Benjamin, WVallace Culver Benner, Nolan Paul Best, Henry Andrews Bickford, Barton Meserve Bird, John Commons Bowman, Ralph Brody, Ira Jerome Caldwell, Lafayette Hardwick, Jr. Cary, VVilliam Martin, Jr. Conroy, Robert Gerard Dahl, James Jacob Davidson, Harry Hildreth Donnelly, James Corcoran, Jr. Elliot, James Neily Frost, Carlton Pennington, IV Gifford, Robert Longueville Gilchrist, Robert Grant Gillespie, .Alexander Joseph, Jr. Goldstein, Joseph Graf, Frederick VVilliam Grieger, Harry Foster Grimm, John Edward, III Heidner, Raymond Frederick, Jr. 'j 15, 4 ., J mialf -mg-:' .I 'S . 1 i 4. tt' Iva' ,UE ., - .-y' v' M' ,,. . ff . .f ,w y Uv. ,J .! ' nf .1 ' ., we .wr ! 1 ,-, I.- .,- A fi E I I. .,, 1. ' 1' , Ross Harold Riilfn-:y, Don Raymond, Jr. Joneg, Richard Lefavour MacDonald, Richard Harvey McManus, John Joseph, Jr. Marshall, Henry Leland Martus, Charles Nicholas Mayberry, Richard Edwin Merrill, David Henry Morse, John Earle Peterson, Alfred Edward C455 Ranger, Richard Lee Rice, Ernest Frederick I Richardson, Charles Curtis Rickey, Robert Forest Reith, Ralph Arthur, Jr. Riggs, Robert Jennings, Jr. Rose, Irl Walter H Rudnick, James Elliot Schoenhut, Harry Edison, Jr. Shea, Martin Francis, Jr. Shell, West, Jr. Sisson, Dale Rufus Sporleder, Williard Frederick Storfer, Herbert Furman Tarlow, Richard Norman Thomson, Herbert Bruce, Jr. Welch, William Cave Welsh, Ralph Budd, Jr. Williamson, Robert Earl Witzel, Frederick Chase Yondorf, Milton S., Jr. Zrike, Raymond YVarren First Year ,43 Adams, Edwin John, Jr. Ahearn, William John Alexander, John CliHord Anderson, Lewis Bruce, Jr. Arnstein, Charles Mayer Augenblick, Gilbert Lewis Ball, Ernest Elijah II Barstow, Burroughs, Jr. Bader, Carl John, Jr. Bennett, Charles Greenleaf, Jr Brayton, William Elting Brockway, Arthur Lawrence, Jr. Brooks, Philip Preston, Jr. Burleigh, John Riddle, Jr. Burr, William C. Caffrey, Andrew Augustine Cahn, Charles Maurice, Jr. Conn, John Wesley Daniels, Harvey Nelson Dewey, James Ervin Donaldson, David Cummings Dorkey, Charles Edward, Jr. Doty, Edward VVilliam Doucette, James Armand Dushame, Ralph Howard Earle, John Lyell Ehinger, Robert Francis Entwistle, Ralph Taylor, Jr. Field, Robert Edwin Frothingham, Alan Michael Gordon, Herbert Stebbins Grant, Gail Grover, Jr. Gray, Charles John Grimshaw, Robert Benjamin Gustafson, Harry Leonard, Jr. Harty, Donald Joseph Holzauer, Albert John Howe, Charles Henry Walter Hurley, Daniel Joseph Johnson, Larrabee MacMillan Keefe, John Miles Kidder, Henry B. Klger, Robert C. Kimball, John, J r. Knoepfler, James Charles Lallande, Frank Kirkpatrick Lambert, Stanley lVIaxwell LHSSPT, Miles L. Lewis, Dustin Cole Lockwood, Harry Albert Lofgren, Frederick Raymond Longacre, Richard Dawson Lothman, William, III McCarthy, Eugene Edward NIcCarthy, John, II McCaw, Robert McCorkindale, Donald hflaeck, 'William Tracy Mason, George Dunham lVIiller, Donald Long lVIiskell, Joseph B., Jr. Nlitchell, Scott Hugh Oppenheimer, James Richard Osberg, Calvin John Paidar, John Thomas Pechter, Morton H. Pettit, Walter Fowler Pfeiffer, Jack Rudolph Pinto, Robert D. Priddy, Stanton Bliss Probstein, Norman Koplar Randall, Paul Herbert Redstone, Thomas Ernest Rehurek, Edward Emil Robertson, Hardie Allan Ruedig, Dale Frank, Jr. Schaffner, Herbert Hess Schroeder, Paul Allan Schroth, Thomas Nolan Thede, Robert William Thomas, Roger Arthur Trovillion, Ralph Penn Tuffly, Louis Edward VValton, John Davenport Wells, James Doring Willcox, Warner Mifflin VVolf, William Trout Wood, Richard Harvey Young, Paul Francis MEDICAL SCHOOL First Year Behringer, Glenn Ewing Bishop, Harry Craden Burke, George Herbert Carlson, Berger Howard Clarke, Charles Walter, Jr. Copeland, Bradley E. Delany, Forbes Fielding, Waldo Lewis Frost, Harold M., Jr. Hobart, Robert Hatfield Hoffman, David Leland Hunt, William Kane, Charles Fairweather Kramer, Henry F., Jr. Lena, Hugh F., Jr. Porter, Edward C. Regan, William J., Jr. Rider, George L. Schumacher, William Emil Solez, Chester Taylor, Warren Justin von Wedel, Jerrold O. West, Franklin Howard Wierman, William Henry Wilson, William Walden Second Year Chandler, John Perkins Costello, Paul Joseph Crenshaw, John Lewis Eisenman, Walter Hempstead, Richard Hartley Hoch, Eugene Louis Jenkins, Ward Sherman Lawton, Richard Woodruff McElin, Thomas Welsh Magee, Richard B. Martz, Eugene Wayne Morgan, Norman C. Robins, Alvin Lee Robinson, James Wesley Scott, William Coryell l193l Smith, David Stickney Thomson, Charles Renfrew Tyson, Ralph Robert iYilson, Robert Francis lYoodworth, llarold Cyril iYorccstcr, John Thompson TL'CK-THAYER '44 Briggs, LeRoy R. Holmes, Stephen XY. Hughes, John D. M. McLoud, Malcolm TIQCK-THAYER '43 Geer, Howard E., Jr. Gibbs, Ralph S. Hackstedde, Paul R. Keck, Henry C. McClary, Nelson C. Moore, Albert P. Pritchard, John C. Smith, Norman B. Swartzbaugh, Charles E., III Taylor, Robert G. TUCK-THAYER '42 Bell, Samuel M. Brown, Charles P. Haessler, Eric R. Roseboom, Jack H., Jr. Wagner, Thomas P. VVarren, David THAYER SCHOOL First Year '44 Acher, VVarren W. Arnold, Roger P. Beattie, Flavel B., Jr. Jones, Paul, Jr. Rice, Richard S. Staples, Paul S., Jr. First Year '43 Beaton, George N., Jr. English, Lewis O. Gaskill, Roger T. Gerber, Harry C. Jackson, Phillip R. Kerley, James J., Jr. Livingston, Richard D. Lynn, Arthur D., Jr. Muchemore, John L. Perley, Franklin T. Pratt, Amasa Rill, Paul R. Stokes, Robert P. Taver, Richard B. Waterbury, Holden N. Second Year '42 Amy, Lydon E. Billings, Robert Lee Breck, Paul B. Campbell, Robert hiosler Englert, Herbert Charles Falls, Lawrence H. Farnum, Ralph Edward, Jr. Garfink, Nlalcolm O. Knoff, William S. Latz, Nlurray Jesse lVIaynard, Horace Sheldon, HI Moore, Charles Robert O'lVIara, A. James, Jr. Osterberg, Thomas Karl Hugo Rugen, Richard L. Schoonbeck, Theodore R. Sewall, John L. Simpter, Roger A. Skinner, James S. Smith, Robert James, Jr. Stukey, Arthur Edward, Jr. Vilard, Nathan Vileinberg, Charles L. Williams, Duncan E. Class of 1944 Acher, 1Valter VVarren, 79 Edgemont Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Allen, Henry Percival, Petersburg, N. Y. Allen, Robert Davis, 133 Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass. Allenby, Richard John, Jr., 1334 Judson Ave., Highland Park, Ill. Alworth, Royal Delbert, Jr. 2627 East 7th St., Duluth, Minn. Anderson, Edward William, 44 Post Rd., Cos Cob, Greenwich, Conn. Antaya, Roger Arthur, 8 Boynton St., Gardner, Nlass. Anthony, Gilbert Chase, 95 Huguenot Ave., Englewood, N. J. Ard, William Thomas, 15 Bronxville Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Arnold, Roger Plunket.t, 191 Darwin Dr., Snyder, N. Y. Averill, James Halsey, 15 Garfield Pl., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Bailey, Edward Leo, Longview Rd., Port VVashington, N. Y. Baird, Spencer Lawrence, Jr., 1313 Broadmoor, Amarillo, Texas Baker, John Gilbert, 119 Elm Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Baker, Lorenzo Philip, Jr., 193 Woodland Ave., Columbus, Ohio Barker, Craig, 31 Hasbrouck Pl., Rutherford, N. J. Barnes, Samuel Bush, 709 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. Barr, Stanley, 52 Lakeview Ave., Haverhill, Mass. Barrett, Allen McCollough, 108 Laplow Rd., Baltimore, Md. Barry, Richard Wesley, 56 King St., Falmouth, Mass. Basbas, Monte George, 336 Union St., Manchester, N. H. Bates, Hamilton Canfield, Jr , Chester, Conn. Baum, Arthur Clifford, 327 Mulry Lane, Lawrence, N. Y. Beacham, Edwin Brand, Jr., R. F. D. No. 3, Easton, Pa. Beaman, Ralph Gardner, 17 Seaver St., Plymouth, Mass. Beattie, Flavel Blashfield, Jr., 10933 Longwood Dr., Chicago, Ill. Beckwith, John Lippitt, 62 Humboldt Ave., Providence, R. I. Behrle, Franklin Charles, 396 Washington Ave., Ansonia, Conn. Benjamin, VVallace Culver, 507 Second Ave., S.E., Pipestone, Minn. Benner, Nolan Paul, Jr., 25 S. 15th St., Allentown, Pa. Benoist, William Francis, Jr., 81 Locust Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Bensinger, Alexander Loder, 128 S. Green St., East Stroudsburg, Pa. Berlin, Richard Moore, 113 Clifton Ave., West Hartford, Conn. Berry, John VVilliam, 1155 Ridgeway Rd., Dayton, Ohio Best, Henry Andrews, 32 Edgehill Rd., Providence, R. L Bickford, Burton Meserve, 5 Broad St., Rochester, N. H. Billington, John Thompson, Wallingford, Vt. Bird, John Commons, 3539 Biddle St., Cincinnati, Ohio Blackadar, VValter Lloyd, Jr., Hillcrest Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Blackburn, John Russell, Jr., P. O. Box 28, Bedford, Pa. Blackett, Eben Greenleaf, 111 Kirkstall Rd., Newtonville, Mass. Blood, Horace Shepard, 25 Auburn St., Concord, N. H. Bodine, James Richard, Gladstone, N. J. Bogan, Ralph Alcott Lester, Jr., 733 Milburn St., Evanston, Ill. Bowers, Sydney Dana, 2501 Davidson Ave., New York, N. Y. Bowman, Ralph, 47 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J. Bradley, Richard Crane, Shorewood Hills, Madison, Wis. Brandt, Herbert Albert, 1165 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Brewster, William Russell, Jr., Meriden, N. H. Briggs, James Gale, 652 Glenway Ave., Wyoming, Ohio Briggs, LeRoy Frank, 18 Elm Circle, West Springfield, Mass. Brody, Ira Jerome, 12 VV. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Brougher, VVerten Dale, Jr., 504 W. South St., Carlisle, Pa. Brown, David Arthur, 3 Elliott St., Nashua, N. H. Brown, John Pairman, 7 Ripley Rd., Hanover, N. H. Brown, Josiah Whitney, 15 Shaw St., West Newton, Mass. Philli Hunter 399 Lincoln Ave Oran e N J Brown, p , . ., g , . , Browning, James Alexander, 335 E. Shore Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Bruce, George Cowan, 132 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Brush, Theodore Todd, 121 Allenwood Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Buckley, .Joseph John, 10 Park St., Methuen, Mass. Burdge, Russell Spencer, Beattie Ct., Huntington, N. Y. Burnham, Donald Love, 12 Gerrish Ct., Lebanon, N. H. , Frank Henry, 31 Lexington Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Burns Caldwell, Lafayette Hardwick, Jr., Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Callaghan, Eugene Francis, Jr., 15 Thorndyke St., Lawrence, Mass. Callan, Robert Edward, 10 Boyce St., Worcester, Mass. Callow, John Robert, 1121 E. 39th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Campbell, Frederic Weir, Jr., 94 Plymouth Ave., Milton, Mass. Campbell, Herbert Bradley, 695 East Villa St., Pasadena, Calif. n, Harold Charles, 78 Remsen Lane, Floral Park, N. Y. Canno Capek, Lubor Masaryk, 6 Park Place, New Bedford, Mass. Harry Hill, Pond Rd., Wellesley, Mass. Carey, Carroll, Paul Trowbridge, 166 Stanbery Ave., Columbus, Ohio Carron, John Aloysius, Massapequa Manor, Massapequa, Long Island Y. N. Carter, James Stanley, Jr., 161 S. Manning Blvd., Albany, N. Y. William Martin, Jr., 25 Carew St., South Hadley Falls, Mass. Cary, Chamberlain, John Gardiner, 14 Eliot Rd., Lexington, Mass. Chapin, Roger Coe, 200 W. Merrick Rd., Freeport, N. Y. Churchill, John Buchan, 262 Hillside Ave., Berlin, N. H. Clark, James Guyon, 2900 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Clark, Marshall, 70 Pine St., White Plains, N. Y. Clark, Roger Atherton, Jr., 319 Juniata Ct., Pittsburgh, Pa. Close, Thompson Wallace, 5 Saunders Ave., White River Junction, Fred Charles, 108 Starin Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Cohn, Coith, Robert LaHuis, 667 Reilly Rd., Wyoming, Ohio Colwell, Harry Edwin, 3rd, 32 Woodlawn Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y Colwell, Robert Carpenter, Jr., 12 Eck Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. Comes, Donald Arthur, Jr., 210 Poplar Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Conroy, Robert Gerard, 2402 Ave. N,,' Brooklyn, N. Y. Cook, Albert William, 59-40 69th Ave., Ridgewood, Brooklyn, N. Y. Coombs, Samuel Holcomb, Essex Fells, N. J. Cordell, John Turley, 218 E. 24th St., Tulsa, Okla. Cornell, George Dean, 1428 Highland Ave., Lakwood, Ohio Corner, Malcolm Douglas, 842 Washington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Michael Allan, 42 Tower Pl., Yonkers, N. Y. John William, Jr., 23 Quentin Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Costa, Craig, Crawford, Edward Buffum, 13705 Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Cray, Paul Stephen, 173 Main St., North Walpole, N. H. Crowder, Thomas Reid, Jr., 800 Lincoln Ave., Winnetka, Ill. Cummings, George David, Jr., 938 Sumner Ave., Springfield, Mass. Dahl, James Jacob, 626 W. Cavour Ave., Fergus Falls, Minn. Daley, Frederick Matthew, Jr., Madison Ave., Shelton, Conn. Dammann, Joseph A., 610 Kenwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio Daukas, Nicholas James, 2 Stevens Ave., Nashua, N. H. Davidson, Donald McLellan, 9 Keogh Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. Davidson, Harry Hildreth, 48 Ralph Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Davies, William Reinhardt, 1500 Madison Ave., Scranton, Pa. Davis, Abbott Hubbard, Jr., 30 Alston Ave., New Haven, Conn. Davis, Harry Richardson, 55 Langdon Terr., Bronxville, N. Y. Davis, Richard Allan, 61 Brantwood Rd., Arlington, Mass. Deakins, James Stewart, 230 Almur Lane, Wynnewood, Penn. Dean, Elroy Bruce, Jr., 621 Main St., Shrewsbury, Mass. deLeuw, Rolf Gustav, 530 N. Union Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Densmore, Alfred Jason, Jr., 162 Hanover St., Lebanon, N. H. Dick, James Colburn, 1010 Lookout Rd., Charleston, W. Va. Distin, William Garrison, Saranac Lake, N. Y. Donahoe, Thomas Andrew, 222 Colfax Ave., Scranton, Pa. Donahue, Daniel Jackson, 2d, 80 Mansor St., Lowell, Mass. Donnelly, James Corcoran, Jr., 3 German St., Worcester, Mass. Donovan, Daniel Joseph, 126 Mammoth Rd., Lowell, Mass. Douglas, Henry Thomas, 3d, 1854 W. Chase Ave., Chicago, Ill. Downs, John Wfilliam, Jr., 4 Dartmouth St., Winchester, Mass. Drummey, Joseph Leonard, 95 lVIt. Auburn St., Watertown, Mass. Dryer, Joseph Frederic, Jr., 685 Mount Hope Ave., Rochester, N. Y Duffy, William Anthony, Jr., Grafaster,,' Old Saybrook, Conn. Eddy Seidman amuscs the crowd at a football rallv XV-,lt Pros- , R Cl w h sh H . 1 1' r 4 ff 1 L 11941 ser urges oger ark and Al Cook, Come to t e S ow 1t Dunbar, Donald Stuart, 1804 Campbell4Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. Dutfal, Merlin Kearfott, Jr.,15 E..Rockcliffe Apts., Montclair, N. J. Dyke, George Edward, Jr., Sundial Farm, Ossining, N. Y. Eaton, John Brant, 35 Circle Rd., Scarsdale, N.iY. Eimugli, Franklin Gessford, Jr., 1788 Glencoe St., Denver, Col. Edwards, Max Nixon, 309 E. Gurley St., Prescott, Ariz. Eid,-iqlge, Carleton Gladstone, Jr., North Place, Mount Tabor, N. J. Elliott, James Ncily, 76 Pine St., Franklin, N. H. Englehorn, John Roberts, 1641 Carlyon Rd., East Cleveland, Ohio Epply, William Robert, 1910 Elm St., Manchester, N. H. lgulyfiinks, Edward Floyd, 1545 Monte Vista St., Pasadena, Calif. Evans, Donald Durgin, 309 S. Main St., Haverhill, Blass. Eves, Wayne Parvin, 741 Cummings Ave., Kenilworth, Ill. Fzibcr, Albert Henry, Jr., 350 Burns St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Fairbanks, Robert Franklin, 6 Harvard St., Nat.ick, Mass. Farley, Charles McLaury, Alumni House, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J. . Feldman, Roger Theodore, 55 Hallwood Rd., Brookline, Mass. Fox, Charles Ephraim, Jr., 286 Post Rd., Darien, Conn. Fave, William Owen, 161 Union St., Athol, Blass. Fribcrg, Melvin Anton, 25 Nelson St., Barre, Vt. Frost, Carlton Pennington, 4th, 233 Beechwood Rd., Ridgewood, N. Frost, Meryll Maurice, Jaffrey, N. H Furfey, John Hugh, Jr., 164 Harvard St., Newtonville, Mass. Gabriel, Gilbert Robert, Jr., 50 1Vest 96th St., New York, N. Y. Galbraith, George Lindsay, Jr., 25 Normandy Terr., Bronxville, N. Gatlin, William Edward, 22 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Gifford, Robert Longueville, 1815 6th Ave., VVatervliet, N. Y. Gilchrist, Robert Grant, 1843 Cadwell Ave., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Gillespie, Alexander Joseph, Jr., Stratford Rd., Rye, N. Y. Gilman, Howard Lee, Gilman, Vt. Glines, Charles Thomas, 65 Soundview Dr., Greenwich, Conn. Goedecke, Oscar Alwin, 3d, 9 Glenridge Parkway, Montclair, N. J. Goldstein, Joseph, 74 Marengo Park, Springfield, Mass. Graf, Frederick William, 357 Water St., Keene, N. H. Grieger, Harry Foster, 98 Woodlawn St., Hamden, Conn. Grimm, John Edward, 3d, Gipsy Trail Club, Carmel, N. Y. Grinnell, Bradford Davis, 827 Bogert Rd., River Edge, N. J. Hagen, Merle Edward, Jr., 300 Hillside Ave., Berlin, N. H. Hale, William Barton, 2d, Aqueduct Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Handwerg, John, Jr., Rivervale C. C., Westwood, N. J. Handy, John William, 125 Holmes St., Stratford, Conn. Hardigg, James Sutton, 4664 Reservoir Rd., VVashington, D. C. Harries, Donald Dunbar, Jr., 1715 Lakeview Dr., Duluth, Minn. Harris, Robert Adrian, Shawnee Trail, Aurora, Ohio Harrison, William, 72 Clapp St., VValpole, Mass. Hatch, Joseph William, 912 Blackshire Rd., Wilmington, Del. Hawkins, Robert Charles, 386 Union Ave., Framingham, Mass. Heidner, Raymond Frederick, Jr., 12 Princeton St., Holyoke, Mass Heller, Donald Hoff, Hanover, N. H. Hernandez, David DeLee, 339 Pleasant St., Laconia, N. H. Hickey, Frederick Francis, Jr., 2620 Crestway Park, Utica, N. Y. Hier, Frederick Lorenz, 234 Mountain Rd., Pleasantville, N. Y. Higier, Ross Harold, 157 Prospect Ave., Gloversville, N. Y. Hiltz, Donald Riker, 78 Park Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. Hinkley, Don Raymond, Jr., 62 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Hirons, William Beacom, 2004 Van Buren St., Wilmington, Del. Hirsehfield, Robert Elliott, 609 Park Ave., Bay City, Mich. Hitchcock, Hugh Wiley, Lowell Ct., Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Hoffman, Junius, 394 S. Columbia Ave., Columbus, Ohio Holman, Robert Bruce, 17 Maple Ave., Hackensack, N. J . Holmes, Stephen VVindsor, 2d, 3 Lakeview Rd., Vllinchester, Mass. Hormel, Alfred Albert, Jr., 18984 Oak Dr., Detroit, Mich. Horner, Stephen, 320 Parker St., Newark, N. J . Howland, Allen Eddy, 44 lNIaple St., Hudson Falls, N. Y. Hughes, Henry 1Yalter, 641 South St., Medford, M iss. Hughes, John Milligan, 1675 Montpelier Ave., Darin-nil, Pa. Hull, Richard Lawrence, 117 Highland Ave., Watertown, Conn Hurlburt, Russell Blair, Jr., 62 Sunnyside Way, New Rochelle, ' Y Hyde, Robert Spencer, 537 Brookline Blvd., Penfield, Pa. Ives, George Skinner, 174 N. Broad St., Norwich, N. Y. Jacoby, AYllll21II1 Arnold, 1111 Baldwin Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich Jenness, John Springsteed, 898 Chestnut St., Waban, Mass. Jones, Benjamin Franklin, 580 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. Jones, Paul, Jr., 1033 Brush Hill Rd., Milton, Mass. Jones, Richard Lefavour, 270 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. Judson, David Lawrence, 15 XY. 81st St., New York, N. Y. Kaatz, Robert Henry, 471 Broadway St., St. Paul, Minn. Kanter, Richard Theodore, 1409 E. 24-th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kennedy, Frederick Robert, 27 Eddy St., 1Yaltham, Mass. Kent,.George Benjamin, Jr., 11 Cherry Hills Dr., Englewood, Col. Kerwin, Richard Martin, 116 E. Ashbridgc St., West Chester, Pa. Keys, Loren Dick, Jr., 52 Sound Beach Ave., Old Greenwich, Conn Kimball, 1Varren Fuller, Jr., 114 Carpenter Ave., Crestwood, N. Y Kimmey, John Lansing, 540 Myrth Ave., Albany, N. Y. King, Louis Bradford, Jr., 184 Harvard Circle, Newtonville, Mass. Kinney, Eugene McDonald, 48 Beard Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Knight, Edward Dana, Jr., 1208 Kanawha Parkway, Charleston, 1Y.Ya Koenig, Carl Frederick, Jr., 1734 Harrison St., Philadelphia, Pa. Krohn, Miles Everett, 29 Higby Rd., Utica, N. Y. LaBounta, John lvorley, 831 N.W. Bank Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. Landon, Jack West, 7812 Grove Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. Lang, James Alan, 144 Greenbay Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Lawrence, Jack Charles, 1735 Holyoke Ave., East Cleveland, Ohio Leopold, 1Varren Samuel, 114 Linden St., Woodmere, N. Y. Lesser, Richard George, 310 W. State St., Jolmstown, N. Y. Lewis, Charles Rickert, 147-30 38th Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Lewis, John Joseph, 22 Dwight St., Ansonia, Conn. Lewis, Stephen Johnson, Jr., P. O. Box 204, Manassas, Ya. Lindell, Henry Donald, Silverside Rd., Wilmington, Del. Lindsay, John Robert, 701 WY 19th St., Wilmington, Del. Little, David 1Villiam, 117 Julian St., Naperville, Ill. Livingston, Paul Lucian, 403 Wfoodland Pl., South Orange, N. J. Long, John Bradley, 778 South St., Portsmouth, N. H. Lovewell, John Sherman, 34 Perkins St., lvest Newton, Mass. McAllister, John Fleming, 834 Emerson St., Denver, Col. Macbeth, Lowry Craig, 363 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N. J. McClintock, James Thomas, 4950 Dupont Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. MacDonald, Richard Harvey, 158 Longview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. MacDowell, Andrew Semple, Jr., 39 Brookside Dr., Rochester, N. Y. McDowell, Charles Eager, 907 Union St., Manchester, N. H. McElfatrick, George Charles, 2402 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. MacFarland, James Joseph, 104 Bellegrove Dr., Kearney, J. MacGregor, Clark, 4154 Pillsbury Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. MacGregor, David Brewster, 683 River Rd., Manchester, N. H. Mackoff, William Samuel, Box 511, Dickinson, N. Dak. MeLoud, Malcolm, 33 Valley Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. McManus, John Joseph, Jr., 831 Fellsway W., Medford, Mass. McPherson, Alexander Lemon, 2701 Folsom St., St. Joseph, Mo. Magoon, Thomas 1VIayo, 129 1Varren Rd., Framingham, Mass. Maleno, Joseph Anthony, Jr., 82 Phillips St., Greenfield, Mass. Mansfield, Joseph Colin, City Hall, Philadelphia, Pa. Marsh, William Warwick, 82-15 Abingdon Rd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Marshall, Henry Leland, 33 N. Hillside Pl., Ridgewood, N. J. Martell, Frank James, 407 Highland St., Manchester, N. H. lVIartus, Charles Nicholas, 13 Faneuil Pl., New Rochelle, N. Y. May, Donald Ernest, 447A lvashington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y... Merrill, David Henry, 1621 YVayne Ave., South Pasadena, Calif. lNIiller, Robert Andrew, 26 Olmsted Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 1VIiller, Robert Friend, 185 S. Orange Ave., South Orange, N. J. X. . 5 S 2 5 . S ti 5 . sl v Campions holds a big attraction for this group of Juniors D011 BU i A . 1 2 ' L . 'v' . . 9 I ' , t -4 . jj R N 4 , 5 . 4 rnham walks-not runs, down Main Street 195 l Mills, David Osborne, 2603 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Heights- Ohm Mills, Fred Leon, Jr., Box 194-B, St. Charles. Ill- u I Mills, Warner Everett, Jr., 315 E. Harrison St., Kirksville, M0- Miner, Granville Thomas Matlack, 814 Second Pl., Plainfield, N. J . Mitchell, Vinton Wesley, Jr., Compo Hill, Westport, COIIII- Mocas, James Coleman, 52 Courtland St., Nashua, N. H. Mock, John Edward, 1616 Forest Pl., Evanston, Ill. . Morgan, Paul Victor, Jr., 3527 Georgia.St., San Diego, Calif? Morgan, Richard Hanbury, 825 E. Main St., East Aurora, lX. Y. Morgan, Rodney Augstell, 825 E. Main St., East Aurora, N. Y. Morse, Harry Russell, 932 Main St., Brockton, Mass. Morse, John Earle, 132 Villa St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Morse, Malcolm Carr, 30 Whiting Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Morse, Richard, 2 Chase Rd., Hanover, N. H. I Mortimer, Edward Albert, Jr., 10310 S. Hayne.Ave., Chicago, Ill. Mulhern, Robert Earle, 6 Moss Hill Rd., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Murchie, Richard Taylor, 1267 Windsor Pl., Jacksonville, Fla. Murphy, Francis Parnell, Jr., 88 Concord St., Nashua, N. H. Musser, Karl Rowley, Cheney Ave., Peterborough, N. H. Mussey, William Clive, 1031 10th St., Rochester, Minn. Myers, Allen, 231 Washington Ave., Chelsea, Mass. U Myers, Robert Jackson, 9 West Hill Lane, Wyoming, Ohio Nutt, David Tysen, Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Nystrom, Robert Elmer, 1830 N. JeHerson St., Peoria, Ill. Oakes, Donald Thomas, 1325 Princeton Rd., West Englewood, J. Oberlin, Ralph Edwin, Jr., 425 Fourth St., N.E., Massillon, Ohio O,Keefe, Robert Vernon, 1206 S. Second St., Springfield, Ill. Olin, Walter Herbert 2d, 2200 Elm St., Denver, Col. Orr, William, 2d, 58 Pease Rd., East Longmeadow, Mass. Ostberg, Richard Smith, 42 Fenimore Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Owen, Earl Tracy, 3000 Rivermont Ave., Lynchburg, Va. Page, Fred Howard, Jr., 467 Ellsworth Ave., New Haven, Conn. Paine, William Wellington, 25 Sheflield Rd., West Newton, Mass. Pappas, Charles Arthur, 2038 Elm St., Manchester, N. H. Park, Maurice Elwood, 160 Maple St., Springfield, Mass. Parker, Frank Laton, Jr., 18 Sargent Ave., Nashua, N. H. Patterson, David Kingsnorth, 19 Summit Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Peabody, Arthur Adams, 41 Oakhurst Park, Cape Elizabeth, Me. Pegler, Arthur James, R.F.D. No. 1, Ridgefield, Conn. Peisch, Mark Lyons, Norwich, Vt. Penberthy, Philip Edward, 723 Seyburn Ave., Detroit, Mich. Pennington, Howard Wesley, 60 Colonial Rd., Bellerose, N . Y. Perry, Kennard Platt, 2151 Hawthorne Pl., Denver, Col. Pert, George Hutcheon, 36 Forest Rd., Tenafly, N. J. Petersen, Robert William, 1175 Josephine St., Denver, Col. Peterson, Alfred Edward, 220 Fernwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Pfeifle, Louis Donald, 156 Roxbury Rd., Garden City, N. Y. Pierce, Charles Worthen, 19 Canada St., Swanton, Vt. Pierson, David, 4 Orono Lane, Wayzata, Minn. Pleasants, Richard Hall, 3d, 122 Westloine Terr., Brookline, Mass. Plummer, Gordon Curtis, 38 Lincoln Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Potter, Frederick Wells, Jr., 25 Holden Rd., West N ewton, Mass. Sayce, Montford Herbert, Charlestown, N . H. Schoenhut, Harry Edison, Jr., 429 Vernon Rd., Jenkintown, Pa, Schultz, John Augustin, 379 Union Ave., Paterson, N. J. Schumacher, Charles Henry, 90-35 212th Pl., Queens Village, N, Y, Schutz, Seymour, 849 Manida St., New York, N. Y. Scofield, Ralsey Brush, Jr., 480 Shippan Ave., Stamford, Conn. Scotford, David Matteson, 497 N. Fulton Ave., Mt. Vernon, N, Y, Secor, Charles Martin, 2057 Meridian Ave., South Pasadena, Calif, Seekins, John William, 823 Andover St., Lowell, Mass. Seidman, Edward Nathaniel, 272 Oakwood Ave., Cedarhurst, N. Y, Shea, Martin Francis, Jr., 911 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Shearer, Jack Farwell, 32 Kingsland Terr., Burlington, Vt. Shell, West, Jr., 15 Reilly Rd., Wyoming, Ohio Shellenberger, John Mohler, Jr., 5 Elmwood Blvd., York, Pa. Sheridan, Don Tilden, 1601 Dean Ave., Ravinia, Ill. Sholl, Philip Richard, 11 Summit St., South Hadley Falls, Mass, Shuchter, Claude Francis, 142 Woodland Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y, Silberstein, Richard Malcolm, 1210 Inverness Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa, Simpson, Norman Loucks, 39 Salisbury St., Little Falls, N . Y. Sinon, James William, 38 Corlear St., Albany, N . Y. Sisson, Dale Rufus, 26 Garden St., Potsdam, N . Y. Sitley, Ralph Lester, 101 Chews Landing Rd., Haddonfield, N, J , Smith Malcolm Bernard, 2 Moody St., Amesbury, Mass. Smith, Renshaw, 3d, 435 E. 52nd St., New York, N . Y. Smith, Richard Philip, 24 Ulster Ave., Saugerties, N. Y. Smith, Robert Greeley, 44 Chester St., Nashua, N. H. Snell, Raymond Charles, Jr., Sasqua Hills, East Norwalk, Conn. Snobble, John Kinsey, 139 Hazel Ave., Highland Park, Ill. Sorg, Karl Gery, 527 N . Oakland St., Arlington, Va. Spallino, Charles Vincent, 15 Rutland St., Ansonia, Conn. Spencer, David McCulloch, Drury Lane, Troy, Ohio Pratt, Augustus Kingman, 7 Pearl St., Middleboro, Mass. Pratt, Howard Taylor, 330 Green St., Brockton, Mass. Price, Edward Bayes, Jr., 48 Birch Brook Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Price, Thomas Howard, Jr., Phoenix, Md. Price, Walter Stauffer, 4918 Hillbrook Lane, N.W., WVashington, D. C. Prin le Ral h Philli s 1550 E. 27th St. Tulsa Okla g f P P Q a , - Prosser, Walter Richard, Jr., 250 Lincoln Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Purnell, Robert Heywood, 11 Martindale Rd., Short Hills, N . J. Rabassa, Gregory Luis, Hanover, N. H. Rader, Robert William, 20 Crestwood Dr., Maplewood, N . J. Ranger, Richard Lee, 9 Farragut Rd., Swampscott, Mass. Rankin, Fred Martin, Jr., 1166 Sunset View Dr., Akron, Ohio Recke, George Edgar, 44 Summer St., Medway, Mass. Redington, Richard, 424 S. Euclid Ave., Pasadena, Calif. Regan, Charles Douglas James, 940 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. Reilly, Francis George, 20 Bunker Lane, West Newton, Mass. Remmer, Robert James, 25 Greenwood Ct., Utica, N. Y. Rexford, John, 310 Pleasant St., Concord, N. H. Rice, Ernest Frederic, Jr., 4049 N. Lake Dr., Milwaukee, Wis Rice, Richard Sherman, 60 Stevens Rd., Needham, Mass. Richardson, Charles Curtis, 35 Cushing St., Dover, N. H. Rickey, Robert Forest, 4621 Longdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Riebow, Robert Lundy, 35 Elderfields Rd., Manhasset, N . Y. Rieth, Ralph Arthur, Jr., 12 S. Lincoln St., Keene, N. H. Riggs, Robert Jennings, Jr., 214 Woodward Blvd., Tulsa, Okla. Ritter, Laurence Wilbur, Dogwood Lane, Stamford, Conn. Robbins, Ryland Edward, 201 Grayson Pl., Teaneck, N. J. Roberts, John Christian, 351 E. Church St., Marion, Ohio Roberts, William Bell, 1116 4th Ave., N., Great Falls, Mont. Rondeau, Richard Eustache, 157 Highland Ave., Providence Rose, Irl lValter, 2d, 145 IV. 86th St., New York, N. Y. Ross, Gordon Livermore, 56 Mackey Ave., Port Washington, N. Y, Rudnick, James Elliott, 6 Ogden Ave., WVhite Plains, N. Y. Sanders, John Robert, 95 Avon Hill St., Cambridge, Blass, Saul, Arthur Davis, Jr., 24 Gray St., Arlington, Mass, Saunders, William Baker, 407 Vose Ave., South Orange, N. J, Savage, Louis Dodge, 61 Brown St., Haverhill, Mass. Sawyer, George Wright, 227 Elm St., Montpelier, Vt. ,R. I. l 196 Spicer, Edward Sheldon, Jr., 158 Bowen St., Providence, R. I. Spitz, Nathaniel, 300 Ocean Ave., New London, Conn. Sporleder, Willard Frederick, 25 Idlewood Ave., Hamburg, N. Y. Springsteen, George Stoney, Jr., 112-11 68th Dr., Forest Hills, N. Y. Stahl, William Martin, Jr., 343 Main St., Danbury, Conn. Staples, Paul Sherman, Jr., 146 Knollwood Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Stein, Harold, 40 Stephano Lane, Waterbury, Conn. Stephenson, John Howard, Jr., 410 W. 50th St., Kansas City, Mo. Storfer, Herbert Furman, 239 Sheridan Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Storrs, Albert Miller, Jr., 3761 Vineyard Pl., Cincinnati, Ohio Streeter, Thomas Winthrop, Jr., Sussex Ave., Morristown, N. J. Suddarth, Sterling Baker, 652 W. 62nd St., Kansas City, Mo. Sullivan, Warren Jr., 82 Glenwood Rd., Englewood, N. J. Sutherland, Willard Janvere, 3d, 9 Euclid Ave., Albany, N. Y. Tarlow, Richard Norman, 286 W. Elm St., Brockton, Mass. Tate, Stephen, Pompton Turnpike, Pompton Plains, N. J . Tenney, Stephen Marsh, 1512 E. Grove St., Bloomington, Ill. Thomson, Herbert Bruce, Jr., Ivy Hill Farm, Forest, Va. Tilton, George Henry 3d, Fair Hill, Littleton, N. H. Tompa, Robert James, 529 Washington Ave., Belleville, N. J . Tope, John Wesley, 925 Lake St., Oak Park, Ill. Towsen, James Whittet, 40 Glen Ridge Parkway, Glen Ridge, N. J . Trease, Harold William, 433 E. 51st St., New York, N. Y. Trier, William, 1039 Fairview Blvd., Belleview, N. J . Turner, Everett Winslow, 34 CliH Rd., Milton, Mass. Turpin, William Nelson, 415 Hines Terr., Macon, Ga. Tyler, John Frederick, 19543 Augyle Oval, Rocky River, Ohio Vancisin, Joseph Richard, 1044 Hancock Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Van den Noort, Gordon, 21 Clifton St., Lynn, Mass. Vosler, Robertson Ellis, North Gravel Rd., Medina, N. Y. Wallace, William Young, 124 Effingham Pl., Westfield, N. J . Wang, Shih-Yueh, 205 E. 78th St., New York, N. Y. VVeeks, Harold John, Jr., 154 High St., Exeter, N . H. Welch, William Cave, 46 S. Kensington Pl., Springfield, Ohio Wells, Whitcomb, 74 CliHord St., Melrose, Mass. Welsh, Ralph Budd, Jr., 48 Oakland Pl., Summit, N. J . Weston, Peter DeWitt, Wilton, Conn. YVever, Harold Andrus, 90 Maple St., Hudson Falls, N. Y. Wheeler, John Stuart, 16 Pershing Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. White, William Arthur, 1738 Indianapolis Blvd., Whiting, Ind. White, William Turner, Jr., 919 W. 29th St., Wilmington, Del. Whiting, Richard Albert, 125 Pine St., Belmont, Mass. Whitten, Rudolph Gwinn, Jr., Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N. Y. Widdecornbe, Lawrence lNinstanley, Jr., 129 Tyson St., Staten Island, N.Y. Wilder, Charles McDuffy, 1712 15th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Wviley, Robert Dixon, 12 Lowell Rd., Port Washington, N. Y. Williamson, Robert Earl, 18135 Clifton Rd., Lakewood, Ohio WIISOII, Dudley Andrel, Jr., 6 Brookside Ave., Pelham, N . Y. W!lS0H, R1Ch21I'd Victor, 117 WVoodside Pl., Fort Thomas, Ky. Wlnklef, Albert Edward, Jr., 63 Gillette Ave., Springfield, Mass. lvlizel, Frederick Chase, 408 Dover Rd., Longmeadow, Mass. lVr1ght, Thomas Gordon, 124 N. High St., Lancaster, Ohio Wullekuhlelf, FI'6deI'iCk Reyburn, Chenekee St., Leavenworth, Kans. Yondorf, Milton Simon, Jr., 3720 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill- Yudkin, Gerald Simeon, Tallwood Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. Zarod, Stanley John, 539 Main St., Indian Orchard, Mass. Zffttefbefgi Y0I'k Benard, 63 Brantwood Rd., Worcester, MaSS- ZIIQS, Eugene Irwin, 18 Rutgers St., Maplewood, N. J . Zflke. Raymond Warren, 8801 shore Ra., Brooklyn, N. Y. l .409 l I fig ,. . -af Class of 1945 Abbot, Henry Merriam, 2319 Tracy Pl., N.W., Washington, D. C. Adiqm, William Burkhardt, 222 Broadway, Paterson, N. J . Agry, Warren Cram, Jr., Rye Ridge Rd., Harrison, N. Y. Aishton, Preston Kelsey, 261 Linden St., Winnetka, Ill. Alderman, Frederic Nelson, 33 French St., Fall River, Mass. .g1d0m, Robert Sadler, 80 Westover Ave., Caldwell, N. J . Aldrich, Frank Nathan, Jr., 214 Homer St., Concord, Mich. Alexander, Ernest John, 57 High St., St. Albans, Vt. Allen, Cyrus Gates, Jr., 4305 E. 14th Ave.,.Denver, Colo. Allen, John William, 1100 Romona Rd., Wilmette, Ill. Allen, Robert Day, 165 Westland Ave., W. Hartford, Conn. Allen, Robert Leonard, 54 Wells Farm Dr., Wethersfield, Conn Alpert, William, 56 Prentice Rd., Newton, Mass. Anderholm, Martin Gustaf, 51 Charles St., Gardner, Mass. Anderson, Leonard Martin, Jr., 60 Horace Rd., Belmont, Mass. Andrew, James Matthew, Jr., 1826 Baldridge Rd., Columbus, Ohio Anthony, Robert James, 528 State St., Alma, Mich. Armstrong, Douglas Knox, 498 Chestnut St., Waban, Mass. Armstrong, Thomas Hyland, 1558 West Forest, Decatur, Ill. Ash, Donald Pearson, 28 Lockwood Dr., Old Greenwich, Conn. Ashley, William Hutchins, 52 Grace Rd., West Medford, Mass. shton William Thompson Ashgrove Farms Sarato a S rin s N . Y. A 1 - v 1 g P 8 1 Backer, Arthur Warren, 140 Beechwood Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. Baker, George Logan Duval, 34-08 Parsons Blvd., Flushing, N. Y. Baldwin, Earl Fredrick, Jr., 195 Washington St., Norwich, Conn. Banks, William Nathaniel, N ewnan, Ga. Barker, Henry McKinney, Stonecroft, Bristol, Tenn. Barnes, Wallace Wentworth, 40 Ridgewood Terr., Maplewood, N . J. Barr, George Fisher, 111 Maple St., Norwood, Mass. Barss, Joseph Andrew, 272 Bartram Rd., Riverside, Ill. Baruth, Maurice 1rVolfl', 1450 Barnsdale St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Bates, William Colcord, 1219 E. 21st Pl., Tulsa, Okla. Beals, Granville Ames, Jr., 54 Highland Ave., E. Greenwich, R. I. Beaumont, Thomas Palmer, 211 Spencer Pl., Ridgewood, N. J. Beck, Peter, Alburg Springs, Vt. Becker, Hayward Charles, 180 Chestnut St., Winnetka, Ill. Beer, David Clark, 1308 Madison St., Denver, Colo. Beers, Roland Frank, Jr., Winter St., Lincoln, Mass. Belfit, Theodore Charles, 68 Sunset Ave., Watertown, Conn. Belknap, Stevens, 3553 Ridgewood Rd., Toledo, Ohio Bennett, Edwin Grow, 1060 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Bennett, Huntley, 325 Cherry St., Douglaston, N . Y. Berge, William Gordon, 1630 Clermont St., Denver, Colo. Bernheim, John, 136 E. 64 St., New York, N. Y. Berthold, Fred, Jr., 402 S. Elm, Webster Groves, Mo. Bessom, Robert Hartland, 16 Barnstable St., Swampscott, Mass. Billing, Wyly McGehee, Jr., 2300 Macdonough Rd., Wilmington, Del Birdsell, Thornton William S., Church Rd., Enfield, Pa. Bissell Harr Bradford Jr 20 Rollin mead Princeton N. J. a y Q '9 g 9 9 Blackburn, Ralph, Jr., Sasco Hill Rd., Southport, Conn. Blansfield, Henry Nelson, 1374 W. Main St., Waterbury, Conn. Blood, Laurence Alley, Mossy Bankf' New Hampton, N. H. Boedtker, Herbert Alfred, 1 Secor Dr., Pt. Washington, L. I. Bolpfeker, Frederick William Jr., 18 Bowdoin St., Newton Highlands, ass. Bontecou, Frederic Holdrege, Jr., Millbrook, N . Y. Booth, Irving Dennison, Jr., 950 W. Water St., Elmira, N. Y. Bousquet, Franklyn Philip, Jr., 12 Thorndyke Rd., Worcester, Mass. Brandt, Donald Carl, 110 W. Girard Blvd., Kenmore, N. Y. Brandt, John Roderick, 816 Forest Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Breen, Harold Allison, Jr., 29 Wakefield Pl., Caldwell, N. J. Bressler, John Tannehill, Jr., Pine Heights, Wayne, Nebr. Brmdley, William Arthur, Jr., 2 Mortimer Pl., Bronxville, N. Y. Broderick, James Joseph, Jr., 43 Hardy Court, Keene, N . H. Brooks, Herbert Euclid, Jr., 114 Pearl St., Gardner, Mass. Brown, James Algernon, 14 Axtell Dr., Scarsdale, N. Y. Brown, Norman William, 215 Tremont St., Malden, Mass. Brown, Richard Wallace, 36 Strathmore Rd., Wakefield, Mass. BTOWII, Roger Stanley, 621 Main St., Malden, iMass. Brown, William Silas, Jr., 54 Abbott Rd., Dedham, Mass. Bruce, Donald Walter, 27 S. Park St., Hanover, N. H. Brundage, Howard Denton, 209 Prospect St., E. Orange, N. J. Brundage, Robert Peter, R.F.D. Ne. 1, Dover, N. J. Buchsbaum, Alan Lorber, 15 Gedney Circle, White Plains, N. Y. Buckingham, Daniel Torrey, Box 1498, Billings, Mont. Buehler, Albert Carl, Jr., Box 35, Barrington, Ill. Bull, Robert Wesley, Box 264, Billerica, Mass. Bundy, Edward Stillman, 87 Oakland Rd., Southington, Conn. Burke, Robert Kimball, 11 weehingeen Rd., resin, N. J. Burroughs, John Hamlin, 7 Phillips St., Westboro, Mass. Burton, James Edwin, 825 W. 187th St., New York, N. Y. Bush, Edward Wallace, Jr., 95 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. Buttler, John Howland, 213 Ramsey Alley, Alexandria. Ya. Byers, Fred Custer, 1001 XY. 58th St., Kansas City, Mo. Byrnes, John Leonard, Jr., 1 Hudson Pl., Hudson Falls, N. Y. Cain, Craig Jolm, 6253 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, lll. Callaghan, John William, 15 Thorndyke St., Lawrence, Mass. Calh, William Salvatore, 19 Eastwood Ave., lftica, N. Y. Calvelh, Eugene Vincent, Country Club Dr., Flower Hill Estate, Port Washington, N. Y. Campbell, Don, 1007 Douglas Ave., Elgin, Ill. Campbell, Donald deBeauehamp, 415 W. 23rd St., New York, N. Y. Campbell, Frederick Hollister, 5002 St. Albans Way, Baltimore, Md. Campbell, John Boston, 2nd, The Pointers, Salem, N. J. Canby, Vincent, 485 Oakwood Rd.. Lake Forest, lll. Candler, Thomas Edward, 655 Rivard Blvd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Cantwell, Roger Clifton, Jr., 421 Weed St., Shawano, Wis. Caravatt, Paul Joseph, Jr., 43 Ansonia St., Hartford, Conn. Carey, Arthur Milham, Jr., 3 Shepard St., Marblehead, Mass. Carlin, Marcus Richard, 25 Tennis Court, Brooklyn, N. Y. Carpenter, Daniel Deehert, 1335 Howard Ave., Pottsville, Pa. Carpenter, Thurston John, 90 Center St., Concord, N. H. Carroll, John Lawrence, 1118 Birehard Ave., Fremont, Ohio Cagstensen, Andrew Paul, 3399 Superior Park Dr., Cleveland Heights, io Carter, Harry Tyson, 1500 De Kalb St., Norristown, Pa. Carter, Lisle Carleton QTransferD Cashin, Charles Benedict, 109 Lewis Rd., Belmont, Mass. Cate, Robert Bancroft, Jr., 134 Monowese St., Branford, Conn. Chamberlin, Frederick Jacobs, 4 Rope Ferry Rd., Hanover, N. H. Chambers, John Shearer, VVykagyl Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. Chanalis, John Gifford, 764 Lake St., Newark, N. J. Chase, Russell Edward, Jr., 60 Calumet Rd., Holyoke, Mass. Chivers, John Houston, 15 N. Balch St., Hanover, N. H. Clark, Fletcher, 3d, 10 E. Grove St., Middleboro, Mass. Clark, Robert Lee, 206 W. Hamilton Ave., Flint, Mich. Cleveland, Charles Ames, 429 Pelham Manor Rd., Pelham Manor, N.Y. Clunie, Frederick Bailey, Newcastle, Me. Coddington, Parker Lewis, 102 Haddon Pl., Upper Montclair, N. J. Cole, Donald Packard, Jr., 433 Rochester St., Fall River, Mass. Colegrove, Bruce Ward, 155-15 33rd Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Coleman, William Henry, Jr., 433 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. I. Collins, Robert Fulton, Washington Lane and Church Rd., VVyncote,Pa. Comins, Edward Irving, Jr., 12 Hawthorne St., 1Vorcester, Mass. Conklin, Richard Stark, 2609 North Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. Conn, Alexander A., 567 E. 23rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Connell, Evan Shelby, Jr., 1515 Drury Lane, Kansas City, Mo. Cosgrove, John Clifford, 217 Kingsland Terr., So. Orange, N. J . Covalt, Fred A., 600 N. Calvert Ave., Muncie, Ind. Cover, Paul Fisher, 26 Willis St., Westminster, Md. Crabtree, Richard Calvin, 10131 S. Leavitt St., Chicago, Ill. Crane, Edward Byington, 239 S. Prospect St., Burlington, Vt. Craver, Nelson Bates, 44 Crosby St., Webster, Mass. Cray, Gordon Cameron, 410 Churchill St., Englewood, N. J . Crough, Sherman Johnston, 181 Pleasant St., Newton Center, Mass. Cutler, Samuel Ernest, Jr., 31 Sargent Park, Newton, Mass. Cutter, Donald deJongh, 764 Centre St., Newton, Mass. Daniels, George Abington, Jr., 68 Soundview Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Daniels, Rupert Burdette, Jr., No. Adams, Mass. D'Arrigo, Stephen Andrew, 472 Pleasant St., Melrose, Mass. Davidson, David McClellan, Country Club Rd., York, Pa. Davidson, Thomas Charles, Jr., 92-4th St., Garden City, N. Y. Davis, Donald Pulford, 1408 Commonwealth Ave., W. Newton, Mass. Davis, Lawrence Eugene, 1318 Blanchard Ave., Flint, Mich. Davis, Morton Joseph, 1211 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. DeBerard, Philip Edwin, Jr., 1220 Greenwood Ave., Vllilmette, Ill. deGruchy, Kenneth Ackerman, 181 W. End Ave., Ridgewood, N. J . Dickson, James Francis, 3rd, 28 Fairmount St., Dorchester, Mass. Donahue, Douglas Alexander, 235 Forest Hills St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Donohue, William Edward, 932 N. 12th St., Manitowoc, Wis. Doole, James Edward Jr., 49 Bartlett St., Chelmsford, Mass. Q T Douglas, Theodore Miller, Jr., 20 W. Beech Croft Rd., Short Hills, IN. J. Drumm, James Harold, Jr., 875 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Duke, Ray Faldo, Jr., 36 Madison Ave., E. Orange, J. Durkin, Harry Anthony, Jr., 101 Roanoke Ave., Peoria, Ill. Dutcher, Henry Redman, Jr., 804 Hillside Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Dyer, Robert Hamilton, 54 Main St., Richford, 1' t. Eban, Raphael Ezriel, 303 W. Main St., Tilton, N. H. CHarrow, Engl Eckels, James Cameron, 1931 Fletcher Ave., S. Pasadena, Calif. Edmands, Frank Wiley, Jr., 76 Bradlee Ave., Swampscott, lVIass. Edson, Dwight James, Jr., Briar Hollow Lane, Rt. 12, Box 40, Hous- ton, Texas , Edson, Eugene Hirsh, 534 Stratford Pl., Chicago, Ill. Ehinger, George, Jr., Kings Highway, Dover, Del. Elder, Crawford Latterner, Jr., 930 Judson Ave., Evanston, Ill. Eldredge, Kenneth Frederick, Shore Rd., Chathalne Mass- Elias, Frank Gwynn, 802-87 Ave., VV., Duluth, Minn. 11971 Ellms, Carlton Warren, Jr., Boston Post Rd., South Sudbury, Mass. Elston, Richard David, 1 Dana Rd., Hanover, N. H.. English, Charles Brand, 400 College St., Urbana, Ohio Epstein, Robert Joseph, 91 Bainbridge Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. Evans, Donald Royal, Mine Hill Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Ewell, Winchester Hall, Livingston Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Falling, Oscar Fritjiof, Jr., 30 Clark Lane, Waltham,.Mass. G Fallon, Emmett John, Park Lane Apts., San Francisco, Calif. Fannon, James Harris, 30 E. 60th St., New York, N. Y. Farrant, Floyd Howard, 2nd, 327 Vandelinda Ave., Teaneck, N. J. Farrar, Holden Knapp, Jr., 1258 Scott Ave., Winnetka, Ill. Fellows, William Edwin, 45 Ohio St., Bangor, 1VIaine Felton, Rex, 370 Coe St., Tiffin, Ohio t Ferbert, Frederick Winzer, 1080 Erie Cliff Dr., Lakewood, Ohio Ferguson, William James, Jr., 4139 Franklin Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Fessenden, Philip Dresser, 29 Oxford Rd., Newton Center, Mass. Field, James Arthur, 26120 Hendrie Blvd., Royal Oak, Mich. Field, John Henry, 3rd, 1805 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. Fifield, Donald Sayre, Thetford Center, Vt. Fisher, Robert Peabody, 7 Cohawney Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Flood, Earl Freeman, 2734 'Wicklow Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Fontana, Raymond Joseph, 26 Pearl St. Pl., Springfield, Mass. Foster, Alan Stewart, 385 Summer Ave., Reading, Mass. Foster, John Webster, 47 Auburn St., Concord, N. H. F raissinet, John Mott, 78 Winsor Pl., Glen Ridge, N. J. Freese, William Sweet, 21 Main St., Pittsfield, N. H. French, George Moulton, Jr., 70 Berkeley St., Nashua, N. H. French, Sidney Watson, 347 Morris Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Friedman, Charles Leonard, 967 Washington Ave., Albany, N. Y. Frye, Maurice Eastman, Jr., 250 Locust St., Danvers, Mass. Fuller, Richard Calder, 4 Midland Gardens, Bronxville, N. Y. Gallup, Earl Howard, Jr., 344 Hudson Ave., Albany, N. Y. Gauntlett, William Harris, 211 Stewart Ave., Ithaca, N. Y. Geiger, Peter Erwin, 35 Woodlane, Woodmere, N. Y. Geller, William Rubert, P. O. Box 199, Owego, N. Y. Germain, Howard Benatar, 8056 Narrows Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Geyer, John Rockwell, 745 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Gile, John Fowler, Jr., 7 Choate Rd., Hanover, N. H. Gillespie, Warren Brown, 236 N. Yale Ave., Wichita, Kan. Gilman, Richard Carleton, 715 Belmont St., Manchester, N. H. Glass, Robert Akin, 404 Medical Arts bldg., Tulsa, Okla. Glover, Paul Williams, Jr., Bath, N. H. Glovsky, Bertram, 21 Arlington Ave., Beverly, Mass. Gluek, Alvin Charles, Jr., 2374 W. Lake of Isles Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. Goldsmith, Earle Brandon, Jr., 60 Wedgemere Ave., Winchester, Mass. Goldstein, David Israel, 74 Marengo Park, Springfield, Mass. Goltra, Evan Roy, Jr., 514 Union Court, Los Angeles, Calif. Gooding, John Quincy, 12 N. Balch St., Hanover, N. H. Gciocaman, Elliot Raymond, 301 Kessler Blvd., Crow's Nest, Indianapolis n . Goss, Thomas Ernest, 3024 Edgehill Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Graham, Donald Goodnow, Jr., 625 Henry Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Grant, James Robert, 296 Aberdeen St., Rochester, N. Y. Gray, Philip Owens, 1275 Manor Circle, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Greco, John Thomas, 175 S. Union St., Lawrence, Mass. Griesar, Otto Junior, 75 Dartmouth St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Grubb, George Craig, Newtown, Conn. Gruer, Albert William, Jr., 719 E. Big Bend Rd., Webster Groves, Mo. Grunditz, Robert Oliver, 15 Wakefield St., Worcester, Mass. Gauttery, Joseph Michael, 54 Beacon St., Middletown, N. Y, Habein, Harold Clinton, Jr., 726 10th Ave., S.W., Rochester, Minn, Hacker, Robert Waram, 17385 Muirland Ave., Detroit, Mich, Haffenreffer, Robert Hardy, 50 Burrough St., Boston, Mass. Halstead, John Preston, Jr., 109 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y, Hampton, Harry LeRoy, Jr., 72 Pine Brook Dr., Larchmont, N. Y, Harte, Edward Holmead, 925 Montecito Dr., San Angelo, Texas Hartshorn, John Elden, 10 Dresden St., Kensington, Md. Hartshorn, William McCutcheon, 16 Dresden St., Kensington, Md, Hartz, John Post, 3705 Grantley Rd., Baltimore, Md. Harwood, Channing Ellis, Jr., 107 High St., Middletown, Conn. Hatch, Frederick Tasker, 20 Jefferson Rd., Winchester, Mass. Hatt, William Swasey, 720 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow, Mass, Hausman, Robert James, 35 E. 76th St., New York, N. Y. Hawley, Don Wood, 50 Batavia Ave., Geneva, Ill. Heath, Robert, 3 South St., Manchester, N. H. Hedges, Horace Gabriel, Jr., 825 17th St., S.E., Cedar Rapids, Iowa Heintzelman, Huber Henry, 60 Lincoln Way, W., Chambersburg, Pa, Hemingway, John Hadley, Shore Acres Club, Lake Bluff, Ill. Hemphill, William Baldwin, 302 Washington Ave., Kennett, Mo. Heneage, Peter, Heneage Hill Farm, Hanover. N. H. Herzl, Henry Filix, 101 VV. 55th St., New York, N. Y. Hewlett, Richard Greening, 4161 River Rd., Toledo, Ohio Hicks, Raymond Martin, Jr., 239 Irving Ave., South Orange, N. J, Hicock, Henry Burton, Academy Rd., Cheshire, Conn. Hildreth, Philip Elwin, Main St., Marlboro, N. H. Hinckley, Harris, 130 Scamman St., South Portland, Me. Hinman, Richard Hugh, 257 Loring Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Hinners, Ralph Gordon, Jr., 910 Willow Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Hoffman, Carl Frederick, Jr., 10 Fairlawn Ave., Albany, N. Y. Hoffman, John Burress, 623 Broad St., E. Weymouth, Mass. Holmes, John Dempsey, 3968 Washington St., Roslindale, Mass. Holt, Charles Edward, Jr., 19 Ashcroft Rd., Melrose, Mass. Hooker, Robert Osgood, 24 Ruskin St., W. Roxbury, Mass. Houghton, James Francis, 50 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Howard, Stanley Morss, 25 Monument St., Concord, Mass. Hufstader, Theodore Willard, 9296 Perry Rd., Atlas, Mich. Hull, Stephen Simmons, 257 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hunsicker, George Jacoby, 115 Bethlehem Pike, Chestnut Hill, Phila delphia, Pa. Hutchins, Frank McAllister, 75 Berkeley St., Rochester, N. Y. Israel, Larry, 336 Central Park W., New York, N. Y. Jabara, Robert Benjamin, 8420 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jackson, Philip Nye, 29 Cresthill Rd., Crestwood, N. Y. Jennings, John Greenwood, Jr., 25 Westland Rd., Weston, Mass. Johnson, Arvis Andrew, Jr., 8 Riverside Ave., Rensselaer, N. Y. Johnson, Frederic Main, 95 Lawrence Rd., Medford, Mass. Johnson, Richard Corey, 751 Main St., Woburn, Mass. Johnson, Russell Croswell, 2 Cobb Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Johnson, Spencer Dean, 31 Vine Brook Rd., Lexington, Mass. Jones, Gilbert Harold, 14 Bonnie Brae, Utica, N. Y. Jones, Richard Borne, 4640 Garfield St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Jordan, Dick Matthew, 307 No. Michigan St., Chicago, Ill. Joslyn, David Dutton, 22 Liberty St., Montpelier, Vt. Joy, Robert Chamberlain, 10 School St., Proctor, Vt. Judge, Harry Mills, 560 Providence St., Albany, N. Y. Katherman, Robert Sharts, 4301 Perry Way, Sioux City, Iowa From DQUHS to FF6'SllIT10I1. they all like a good game of baseball Better not lean too heavily, Bebe and Johnny N981 Kehoe, James Walter, 5808 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, Ill. Kendall, David Lamphere, 811 Columbia Ave., Oak Park, Ill. Kcndall, Richard Goodwin, 1 Chandler St., Augusta, Me. Kenwortliy, Russell Bruce, 230 Schenck Ave., Great Neck, Kilner, Frederic Hammond, 430 Sheridan Rd., Kenilworth, King, Byron Adams, lvardrnan Park Hotel, 1Vashington, D. C. King, Thomas Andrew, Middle Brook Rd., Bound Brook, N. Kingsbury, David Hotaling, 23 Hudson St., Berlin, Conn. Kingsley, Buell Chapin, 81 Davis Rd., Pt. VVashington, N. Y. Kirby, John Jay, Jr., 827 VV. Park St., Butte, Mont. Kirkpatrick, David Dale, Jr., Box 155, Saegerstown, Pa. Klcckncr, Donald Street, 202 N. 8th St., Allentown, Pa. Knowles, James Myron Jr., 706 Coleman Ave., Fairmont, W. Va. Kohn, Edmund Root, 365 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. NY 111. J. Konigsbacher, Kurt, 23 Oberwilerstrasse, Basle, Switzerland and 115 Orchard St., New Bedford, lVIass. Kreindler, Lee Stanley, 1032 E. 23rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kugelman, David Jack, Park Lane Apts., Jacksonville, Fla. Kuhns, Richard Francis, Jr., 218 Vine Ave., Highland Park, Ill. Lantzas, Thomas George, 41 Chestnut St., Nashua, N. H. Lawson, Neale Knowles, 81 Blake St., Torrington, Conn. Lazo, Charles Robert, 1920 47th St., Washington, D. C. Lee, Robert Greeley, 43 Inwood Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. Leggat, John Elliott, 25 Fairview St., Lowell, Mass. Levine, Lawrence Stuart, 19 Sheridan Blvd., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Lewis, Morton Halbert, 680 Clinton Ave., Newark, N. J. Lewis, Philip Lewis, Elberon Square, Elberon, N. J. Lewis, Thomas Henry, Jr., Sunnydale Farm, Paoli, Pa. Lieberman, Bernard, 42 Concord St., Waterbury, Conn. Lilienfield, Edward Wlalton, 840 S. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, Ill. Liota, Victor Jennings, 159 Sunnyside Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Little, John Watson, Jr., 22 Woods Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. Loewenson, Carl Hanline, 932 Brooks Lane, Baltimore, Md. Loomis, Robert Nye, 2941 Robin Rd., Memphis, Tenn. Lothrop, John Parker, 12 Northport Ave., Belfast, Me. Lott, Alan Worman, 34 Meadowbrook Rd., Needham, Mass. Luce, Stanford Leonard, Jr., 144 Otis St., Hingham, Mass. McAliley, Alexander, 530 Pelhamdale Ave., Pelham, Manor, N. Y. McAuliffe, David John Thomas. 208 Clifton St., Malden, Mass. McCauley, John Warden, 3rd, 300 San Gabriel Dr., Rochester, N. Y. McClenaehan, Blair, 8 Main St., Trainer, Pa. McCrum, Edward Allen, 57 Duer Lane, Brighton Heights, Staten Island, N . Y. MacCurdy, Howard Leigh, Jr., 244 Bronxville Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. McDannold, John William, 652 N. Laurel Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. MacDonald, Gregg Crosley, Box 292, Bellevue, Wash. MacDonald, John Alexander, Jr., 92 Grofton Rd., Waban, Mass. McDowell, Fletcher Hughes, 2060 Dexter St., Denver, Colo. MeGetrick, Martin Aloysius, Jr., 60 Lake Ave., Danbury, Conn. Maclntyre, William Ralph, Jr., 1209 W. 8th St., Wilmington, Del. MacKay, Donald Hugh Clow, Jr., 4610 Reno Rd., Washington, D. C. MacKay-Scott, Andrew, Paeonian Springs, Va. McKenzie, William Robert, 94 Mayfield Ave., Akron, Ohio MacKinnon, Ian, 7 Tanglewyld Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. McMinn, Wiley William, Jr., 310 Beechwood Rd., Orange, N. J. McNamara, John Donald, 164 Somerset Ave., Fairfield, Conn. McNeely, William D., 139 Woodland Rd., ltiadison, N. J. MacPherson, James Paul, 271 'llillou Rd., South Orange, N. .l. McYie, 1Yilliam James, 21 Barstow Rd., Great Neek, N. Y. Maelay, Geoffrey Graeme, 4-13 Wellington Rd., Delmar, N. Y. Malalian, Yincent Patrick, 26 Forest St., Torrington, t'onn. Mflflll, John Cline, 2102 Liliha St., Honolulu, Hawaii Mann, Stephen Alexander, 1281 Ramona Ave., Lakewood, Ohio Manton, Burton Sherwood, 593 Dahill Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Marks, Andrew John, 54 Elmwood Ave., Manchester, N. H. Martin, Bertram Templin, 508 Dorchester Ave., Middlesboro, KV. Mgtiqv, Joseph Frederick, 3210 Henry Hudson Parkway, Riverdat Martin, 1Yilfred Wright, Jr., 1507 Camden Way, Oklahoma Vity, Okla Matthews, Charles Winton, 533 Monroe Ave., Seranton, Pa. Maver, Thomas Brulm, 10135 S. Bell Ave., Vliieago, lll. Mecgan, Joh Paul, 60 Parker Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Menefee, Edward Curial, 1150-lst St. S. W., Rochester, Minn. Merrill, 1Yilliam Hale, 31 Governors Rd., E. Milton, Mass. Meyer, Albert Henry Jr., 1447 Tolma Ave., Piltsburgli, Pa. Michael, Joseph Ernest Jr., 10 linion St., Rochester, N. 11. Miller, Charles David Hunting, 1201 Bryant St., Palo Alto, Calif. Miller, Dean Donaldson, 425 Arlington Pl., Chicago, Ill. Miller, George Warren, 610 Forest Ave., Wilmette, Ill. NIiller, John Campbell, 3801 Oak Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Alills, Louis Van Orden, 60 AV. Main St., Middletown, N. Y. Monahan, John Francis, Jr., 259 Prk St., West. Haven, Conn. Moore, Donald Milton, 53 River St., Arlington, Mass. Moore, Henry Thomas Jr., 46 Circular St., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Moran, Thomas Wesley, 401 Depot St., Latrobe, Pa. Morgan, Edward Alexander, Fire Island Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Morris, Hugh Ross, 2401 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. Mortimer, John Davis, 570 Sheridan Square, Evanston, Ill. Mott, David Bradley, 788 Pilgrim Rd., Birmingham, Mich. Mover, Eliot Stephen, 31 Bruce Lane, Newton, Mass. Muller, VValter Chance, 71 Merbrook Bend, Merion, Pa. Murphy, Charles Edward, Jr., 47 Midwood St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Murray, James Lee, Jr., 64 E. 73rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. Murray, Richard Young, 142 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Murray, Thomas Joseph, 420 Hawley Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Nate, William Henry, 214 Old Short Hills Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Nelb, Robert Gilman, 92 Salem St., Lawrence, Mass. Newman, Paul Sylvan, 300 Central Park YV., New York, N. Y. Newton, Stenley Louis, 123 Grove Ave., Leominster, Mass. Nichols, Arthur Norfleet, 273 Converse St., Longmeadow, Mass. Nicholson, Kenneth Ernest, 115 Wellington St., Springfield, Mass. Nielsen, Simon Christian, Jr., 3575 Bayard Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio Nintzel, Lloyd Charles, 33-49 172nd St., Flushing, N. Y. Nuber, John Richard, Jr., Box 3347, San Juan, Puerto Rico O'Connor, Harrison Joseph, 325 E. 41st St., New York, N. Y. O'Connor, Robert Donald, 325 E. 41st St., New York, N. Y. O'Crow1ey, Myles Raymond, 375 Berwick St., Orange, N. J. O'Donnell, Arthur Burgess, 163 Highland Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. Oldfield, Robert Donald, Jr., Oberlin Rd., R. F. D. 2, Elyria, Ohio Ormond, John William Jr., Apt. 804 Phelps, Cincinnati, Ohio Osborn, John Curtis, 303 N. Aurora St., Ithaca, N. Y. Passburg, Oslav, 57 Fairfield Terr., Longmeadow, Mass. Patton, Charles Heston, Jr., 235 So. 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Peacock, Jerome, 2299 Makiki Round Top, Honolulu, Hawaii , , Q , , ' , 5 -g ' 2 ' I -f ll Off for a good week end in the hills is this group of It s Freshman stfiff biit Soph All ire c 1llegkllsxfeiermiilzgilmen or t 6 sophomores OIIIOFCS OV61 199 Pease, Robert William, 3505 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland He1ghtS, 01110 Pedersen, Peer Terrill, 141 Neptune Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. T Penberthy, Grover Wardner, 7th Corps Area Med. CorpS, Omaha, Beb' Peno, Robert Richard, Jr., 79 Silver St., Greenfield, M3?S- Perry, Fred Scott, Cespedes 2305, Buenos AIMS, Argentina Perry, Robert Howard, Shipley Rd., W1lm111gt0I1, D91- Phelps, Gordon Winfield, Jr., North Adams, Mass. Phillips, Robert Kendall, 36 Church St., Putnam, Conn. Pierce, George Bruce, 26 Sargent Park, Newton, Mass. Pillsbury, Paul Whipple, West Andover, N. H. Pine, John Crane, 727 Park Ave., River Forest, Ill. ' Pinney, Eugene Taylor, 1915 Ridgeway Dr., Cedar Rapids, Iowa Pirie, Edward Clarence, 350 Tremont St., Barre, Vt. Plum, Fred, Jr., 7401 Ventnor Ave., Margate, N. J. Plummer, John Frederick, 128 Tudor St., Waterbury, Conn. Pontecorvo, Giulio Jr., 115 Park St., Montclair, N.. J. . Porter, Albert Hamilton, 1037 Maple Ave., Zanesvllle, Ohio Porter, Herdman Snowden, Moylan-Rose Valley, Pa. . Porter, William Glover, Jr., 211 Preston Rd., Columbus, Ohio Portman, William C., 6507 Blue Ridge Ave., Clnclnnatl, Ohio Pounds, Arthur McClement, 80 Ridge Rd., New Rochelle, N: Y. Prentice, John Maling 3254 Belvoir Blvd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Pulliam, George Simpson, 130 Bayview Ave., Cranston, R. I. Quackenbush, Stanley George, 4 Westwood Dr., Worcester, Mass. Quimby, Warren Sturtevant, 50 Myrtle Ave., Montclair, N. J. Ramsdell, Chadwick Donald, 156 Essex St., Saugus, Mass. Reed, John Davis, Harwood Farms, E. Rochester, N. Y. Reeves, John Edward, 133 S. Park Ave., Hinsdale, Ill. Reynolds, Gunnard Frank, 1711 Elliot Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Rice, Donald Martin, 2612 Densmore Dr., Toledo, Ohio Rice, George Ernest, Jr., 425 W. 15th St., Pueblo, Colo. Rice, Stanley Lloyd, 4 Webster Terr., Hanover, N. H. Ritter, Harry Wilbur, 1254 Coast Blvd., Laguna Beach, Calif. Robb, James Milton, Jr., 315 Lakeland Ave., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Roberts, Harry Lewis, Jr., 20 Woodlawn Pl., Longmeadow, Mass. Roberts, Robert A., 211 W. Minnehaha Parkway, Minneapolis, Minn. Robertson, A. Willis, Jr., 502 Highland Rd., Lexington, Va. Robins, Jay, 1304 E. 21st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robinson, John Martin, 1 Monroe Pl., Concord, Mass. Robinson, Wendell Clifford, 1124-44th St., Des Moines, Iowa Rodney, James Monroe, 15 Lyons Pl., Larchmont, N. Y. Rogers, George Ames, 304 Vine St., Abilene, Kan. Rogers, Robert Stewart, 1102 Shenandoah Dr., Seattle, Wash. Rolph, William Lindsay, P. O. Box 2990, Honolulu, Hawaii Ross, Robert Jr., 147 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Rothwell, Walter Spray, 100 8th St., New Bedford, Mass. Rolxgvan, Charles Aubrey, Jr., 408 Maple Ave., Edgewood, Pittsburgh, a. Ruppe, Frederic George, 712 Pine St., Calumet, Mich. Ruppe, John Paul Jr., 62 Bay Way Ave., Brightwaters, N. Y. Russell, Allen Stockton, 5252 W. Outer Dr., Detroit, Mich. Ryan, John Lawrence, 315 Curtiss Pl., Park Ridge, Ill. Salford, Theodore Jr., 210 Wilmuth Ave., Wyoming, Ohio Samek, Paul Herman, 80 Oxford Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Samilson, Robert Leblang, Fenimore Rd. and Cornell St., Scarsdale, N.Y Sams, Murray Jr., 408 E. Rich Ave., Deland, Fla. Samuels, Edward Rapp, 2nd, 5565 Lindell St., St. Louis, Mo. Sandberg, Herbert Joseph, 91 Harvard Ave., Brookline, Mass. Sandoe, Nichol Main, Jr., 23 Sherwood Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Sargeant, Winthrop Twining, R.F.D. No. 1, Manchester, N. H. Sawyer, Howard Pierce Jr., 68 Bigelow St., Fall River, Mass. Schacht, William Frederick, 2nd, 820 N . Jefferson St., Huntington Ind. Schaeberle, Robert Martin, 204 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N . J. , Schaefer, Ludwig Frederick, 20 Blackbourne Rd., Attleboro, Mass. Schmidt, Frederick George, 2063 N. Cambridge Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Schmitt, William Allen, 4800 Golf Terrace, Edina, Minneapolis Minn Scholer, John Frederick, 806 Bluemont Ave., Manhattan Kan, I Schuler, Valentine, 3rd, 25 Ranger Pl., New Rochelle, Y. I Seybold, Richard Mitchell, 1141 Cleveland Ave., South Bend Ind Shannon, John Robert, 190 Cedar Ave., Patchogue, N. Y. , I Shannon, Philip Mitchell, 201 No. Broadway, Yonkers N. Y Shaw, Robert Perreten, 6 S. Maple Ave., Park Ridge, J. i Sherman, Victor Julius, 137-Beach 144th St. Ne on i . i t, N . . Sh1e,rr1ck, Erastus Ralph Jr., 454 Morrison Dr., NR. Iiebanoii Pittsburgh a. ' glT1'1I'f10I1SifiJf3'lLI1, I1'oint'Rcg, Peoria, Ill. HHPSOD, IC ar ar ln , 80 herwood Rd., ' Simpson, Richard Jolm, gamp St., Plainville,1CgE1?iV00d, N. J' Sisson, Donald Mortimer, 2 High Ridge Rd., Worcester Mass Skakle, John Albert, 1504 Centre St., Newton Center Mass i Smart, John Murray, 27 Kensington Rd., Arlington Mass i smith, Allan Edward, 22 Hillside Ave., Newton N J' ' Smith, Edward Blatchford, American University,.Beirut Syria Smith, Harvey Matson, 309 Walhalla Rd., Columbus, Ohio Smith, Thayer Adams, Jr., Forest Dr., Short Hills, N. J. Smith, Victor Collins, Jr., 315 Oxford Rd., Brookline, Upper Darby, Pa, Smith, Warren Bryant, 40 Atkinson St., Bellows Falls, Vt. Smith, Wayne Carrington, Jr., 174 Curtis St., Meriden, Conn. Southwick Richard Hood, 22 Hole St., Beverly, Mass. Spalding, Samuel Luce, 291 South St., Southbridge, Mass. Spanos, James Sterge, 729 Chestnut St., Manchester, N. H. Spaulding, Richard Morton, 14 Crest Rd., Sharon, Mass. Spencer, Carlisle Tuttle, 199 Temple St., West Newton, Mass. Stambaugh, Russell Johnston, 2735 Ashley Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Staub, Wilfred Arthur, 1381 Three Mile Dr., Grosse Pointe Park, Mich, Stein, Chandler, 485 Myrtle Ave., Albany, N. Y. Steiner, Robert Livingston, 710 N. Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Stewart, Robert Judge, Jr., 95 Rockland Ave., Yonkers, N. Y, Strasenburgh, Edwin Griffin, Jr., 86 Reservoir Ave., Rochester, N. Y, Straus, Martin Louis, 3rd, 1325 Aston St., Chicago, Ill. Stryker, Russell Foote, Jr., 33-75 156th St., Flushing, N. Y, Stumm, Robert Joseph, 1006 Downer Pl., Aurora, Ill. Swartzbaugh, William Lamson, 2126 Glenwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Sweeny, Paul Rodman, 721 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Swick, Theodore Pockman, 47 Union St., Montclair, N. J. Symonds, Bruce Knight, Contoocook, N . H. Talbot, Paul Hopkins Jr., 14 Southgate Ave., Annapolis, Md. Taylor, Monroe Watson, 150 Somerset St., New Brunswick, N. J. Taylor, Robert Benson, 320 Paseo Encinal, San Antonio, Texas Taylor, Wallace Goodwin, 359 North Union St., Kennett Square, Pa. Taymor, Robert Cecil, 170 Boylston St., Brockton, Mass. Ten Eyck, Andrew, 18615 Oak Dr., Detroit, Mich. Tewksbury, Peter, 27671 Lake Shore Blvd., Euclid, Ohio Thayer, William Frederick Jr., 17 No. Balch St., Hanover, N. H. Thomas, Edgar Ellsworth Jr., 17 South Park St., Hanover, N . H. Thompson, Charles Leslie, 1431 W. 56th St., Kansas City, Mo. Tirrell, Robert Wilson, Jr., 223 Hopkins Rd., W. Haddonfield, N. J. Tobias, John Edward, 960 Redway Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Tolley, John Walter, 3rd, 47 Aberfoyle Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Torian, James Garnett, Petersburg, R. R. No. 8, Evansville, Ind. Tourtellot, Carl Thurston, Jr., 25 Calumet Rd., Winchester, Mass. Tracy, Richard Gordon, 17 Pendleton St., New Haven, Conn. Trier, Adolph Phillip, 660 W. Randolph St., Chicago, Ill. Trischett, William Albert, 170 Lawrence St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Trumbull, Elmer Roy, Jr., 114 Margin St., Lawrence, Mass. Truxal, John Groif, 69 Lebanon St., Hanover, N . H. Turnure, James Harvey Jr., 33 Barker Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Tyler, Ralph Gannett Jr., 417 West North St., Muncie, Ind. Ungar, Alexander, 241 Central Park West, New York, N . Y. Van Buren, John Miller, 30 Maltbie Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. VanDerveer, Dunbar N ickolas, 94 Cassilis Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. VanDuzer, Ashley McMillan, Jr., 28th Floor, Terminal Tower, Cleve- land, Ohio Wachtel, Jack Stanly, 15 W. 81st St., New York, N. Y. Walser, Rodney Austin, 218 W. 3rd St., Hazelton, Pa. Walthall, Charles Damon, 5550 State Line, Kansas City, Mo. Walton, Howard Roberts, Jr., 171 Lewiston Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Washburn, John Nelson, 28 E. Wheelock St., Hanover, N. H. Washburn, Roger Elliot, 32 W. Emerson St., Melrose, Mass. Wason, Austin Bartlett, 36 Newton Rd., Haverhill, Mass. Waterman, Charles Dana, Jr., 506 Riverview Terr., Bettendorf, Iowa Watkins, John Robert, 425 Front St., Owego, N. Y. Weatherby, Stephen DeWitt, 306 Elm St., Ithaca, N. Y. Webster, Wilbur Elmer, Jr., 122 Main St., East Jaffrey, N. H. Weinstein, Jerome Leonard, 133 Vista Terr., New Haven, Conn. Wheeler, George Warren, Jr., 42031-161st St., Flushing, N. Y. White, Adair Wayne, Jr., 2108 Rosedale St., Houston, Texas White, John William Loud, Falmouth Foreside, Me. ' Wiederhold, Louis, 3rd, 7210 McCallum St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphlai P3- Wllcox, Robert Franklin, 237 N yac Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Wilkes, David George, 169 Stratford Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Willcox, Robert Edwin, 98-11 65th Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. Williams, Charles Barnett, 34 Front St., Oakville, Ontario, Canada Wllllamson, Frederick Raphael, Jr., 282 N. Mountain Ave., UPP91' Montclair, N . J. Wilson, Edward Harlan, Jr., 395 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohi0 Wilson, James Reginald, McNamee, New Brunswick, Canada W1Sei Earl.Gronlund, Jr., 1030 N. Forest Ave., Oak Park, Ill. W00d, Lorlng Wayland, 31 Clearview Ave., Worcester, Mass. Woods, William Harvey, 141 Moffat Rd., Waban, Mass. Woolllfedgei Caspar Wistar, Jr., 80 Avalon Rd., Waban, Mass. Wottrlch, Robert Edward, 6 Oak Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. Yates, Homes Allen, Jr., Russell Ave., Orange, Conn. Youmans, Charles Leroy, Jr., 19 Maple St., Irvington-on-Hudson, N- Y- Zalk, Charles Leonard, 4760 London Rd., Duluth, Minn. Zlldjlan, Robert, 73 Summit Ave., Quincy, Mass. M001 i fu .Je 1 e' J. .rf X 4- .1 1. G 4 1. g . g - if .,. 1,44 .Q . Tet Q4 V5.4 eu 1 I. rt .'. ..i 1 ,, . if 4 , gf. .FS 6 3, ,4 if' any me .1- '.H' ,,,,g..0 Tr- 'K 'Q an-' ,.. . a' ,iffy 4941 ' ' v e. ,gif ,t I r ,.-'X' ff ' .4 A . 41' ew Ng- 39 If. J .J 5.- lfnff f .w'5n'1 J' 7, W' Wfgv L. .fa , .. ..1 'id 2' y g rr .-. It Class of 1946 Abbott, Louis Lee, 340 S. Kingsley Dr., Los. Angeles, Cal. Adams, Austin Lockwood, Jr., South St., Middlebury, Conn. ms Francis Thomas, Jr., North Rose Lane, Haverford, Pa. Ada 9 . T Adams, Wayman, Jr., Elizabethtown, IN. Y. Adamson, Robert Edward, 5 Paul St., Worcester, Mass. Alden, John Milton, 1210 Montello St., Brockton, Mass. Aldrich, William Learned, Dennis, Mass. U Allen, Charles Moore, 405 Corbitt Pl., Austin, Minn. Allen, Paul Montgomery, 12 Washington Ave., Silver Creek, N . Y. Allen, Richard Arthur, 1059 Chestnut St., IVIanchester, N. H. Alworth, William Frederick, 2627 E. 7th St., Duluth, Minn. d , N rman Keith, 23 Kensington Ct., Hempstead, N. Y. fiiritliielixiTlDavfid Kilton, 96 Highland St., Portland, Me. ' Andrews, Thomas Coleman, Jr., 3811 Chamberlayne Ave., Richmond, V . Arlt? Raymond Wlilliam, 251 Palma? Cha Iggdglesvlclod, J. A t , Dale gan, 2040 eec woo v ., itts urgh, Pa. AifTf1i1rfsi3nC?eng1hRobert,1Zf30J0gJiE1wvcgd Page., N iagira Falls, N. Y. A hb , o n erman, s or ., icago, . Aihleiy, William Vernon, Highfield Lane, Darien, Conn. Ashton, Charles Maybury, 3rd, Garden Ct. Apts., 47th and Pine, Phila- d 1 h' , Pa. Attirlalifflward Allen, 434 Chalmers Ave., Detroit, Mich. Bacon, Ross Chidley, 453 Dunham Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Baker, DeWitt Clinton, 3rd, Dutch Village, Albany, N. Y. Baldwin, William Charles, 28 Davis St., Wollaston, Mass. B- k r, John Calvert, 97 Pine St., Wallingford, Conn. Biifr,eDonald William, 27 Lyme Rd., Hanover, N. H. Barr, Harold Jules, 52 Lakeview Ave., Haverhill, Mass. Barrows, Robert Ames, 144 Forest St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Bartnick, Lawrence Paul, 48 Richardson St., Wakefield, Mass. Batte Brvan Mann, Jr., 2024 Hillyer Pl., VVashin ton, D. C. .Yi . g Beach, Rodney Van Rychen, Hatboro, Pa. Beaven, William Edwards, 248 Westminster Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Beck, Henry Joseph, R.F.D. 3, Manchester, N. H. Bedle, Craig Dorsett, 10 N. Ridgewood Rd., South Orange, N. J. Behnken, Donald Washington, 196-05 110th Ave., Hollis, N. Y. Belinkie, Alfred Robert, 1420 Kossuth St., Bridgeport, Conn. Bell, Jack Arthur, 1 Woods Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. Bell, Thaddeus Gibson, 279 Merriam Ave., Leominster, Mass. Bennett, Foster Elting, 5406 Izard St., Omaha, Nebr. Bennett, Hugh Wilde, 1539 Diamond Ave., South Pasadena, Cal. Bennett, Jack Lansing, 1 Inwood Dr., Rochester, N. Y. Bensing, Robert Harold, 1716 Woodmere Way, Brookline, Pa. Berglund, Paul Walter, 55 Florence Ave., Arlington, Mass. Berry, Lawrence Raymond, 152 Wilmington Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Bfsse, Harlan Frederick, Jr., 21 Mountain Rd., East Colncord, N. H. B ack, Francis Bryan, 2725 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburg , Pa. Blake, Thomas Franklin, 111 Ingraham St., N .W., Washington, D. C. Blankenhorn, David H., 6 Rural Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio Bodley, Charles Hammond, 7 Goss Ave., Melrose, Mass. Bogart, Robert Ellis, 4226 Bonnie Brook Dr., Toledo, Ohio Bohn, Richard Henry, 214-54 27th Ave., Bayside, N. Y. Bokor, Gene Jay, 123 Midgley Dr., Hewlett, N. Y. Bolton, Richard H., Box 366, Peru, Ind. Bossi, Eugene Edmund, 87 Russet Rd., West Roxbury, Mass. lgousa, Vgilter Shackley, 36 Cutler St., Stonington, Conn. owen, anning Metcalf, Camp Maxey, Paris, Texas Bowers, William Varner, Chatsworth Gardens, Larchmont, N. Y. Bowman, Harold Stuart, 614 Alameda Padre Serra, Santa Barbara, Cal. Bowser, Richard Leigh, 8 Berkeley St., Reading, Mass. Boyd, Robert William, 2 A. High St., Ft. Fairfield, Me. Boyes, James Gordon, 1326 Chetwynd Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Eragketi, Anthony I. H., River Valley Farm, Ely, Vt. ra y, rank, 8 Heckle St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. gfallch, gfilgiam Meserole, 102 Virginia St., Olean, N.NY.Y remer, ar ton Henry, Jr., 1614 Genesee St., Utica, . . Brennan, Joseph Richard, 86 Miriam St., Valley Stream, N. Y. Bflfldley, Audley, 380 Raymond St., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Bmldley, James McCord, 1327 Cass St., LaCrosse, Wis. . B1'0d, James Justin 33 Pintard Ave New Rochelle N. Y. Brodie, Robert rfeeieriek, 152 ciiebe Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. BFOHSOH, George Louis, 201 Hollywood Dr., Monroe, Mich. Broughton, William Beckwith, 22 Hollis Dr., Hohokus, N. J. BTOWII, George Alexander, 424 E. 3rd Ave., Roselle, N. J .- BFOWH, Samuel Gilman, American University, Beirut, Syria BPOWII, Willard Franklin, 495 Westfield Ave., Bridgeport, C0311- Bruemmer, Jay Porter, 140 Elbridge Rd., New Britain, Conn. Brumsted, Harlan Brown, 9 Summit St., Batavia, N..Y. Bfllllhoif, H. Edward, 175 Linden Dr., Wyoming, Ohio G Brunner, Neal Harlan, 22699 Shaker Blvd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Brush, Graham Manuel, Jr., YYinding Lane, Greenwich, Conn. Brusse, Martin, 1960 Fairfax, Denver, Colo. Bryant,.Nelson Steele, West Tisbury, Mass. Bull, lV1lbur Irving, Jr., AVaterford, Me. Bulhs, Andrew Smith, Jr., 39 Bedford Ave., Hamden, Conn. Bullock, Arthur Willard, Jr., 53 Payson St., Attleboro, Mass. Buloth, Edmund Charles, 1 Keilbau Ct., Lawrence, Mass. Burnap, Thomas Kelvin, New Canaan, Conn. Burner, Ashley William, 1785 Sleepy Hollow Lane, Plainfield, . ' Bush, Henry Huson, Jr., 611 Farwell Dr., Madison, Wis. Calder, Frederic Gunnison, 89 Underclifl' Rd., Montclair, N. J. Campbell, Crawford Murray, 1019 Ifnion St., Manchester, N. H. Campbell, Raymond Edward, 894 E. 35th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Canning, Robert Ezra, 5 Holbrook St., Palmer, Mass. Carlson, William Theodore, 846 Westminster Ave., Hillside, N. Carter, John Henry, 161 S. Manning Blvd., Albany, N. Y. Carver, Walter Dickinson, 65 Thetford Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Case, Robert Franklin, Fallbrook Rd., Troy, Pa. Castillo, Demetrio, Central Habana, Provincia de Habana, Cuba Castillo, Joaquin, Central Habana, Provincia de Havana, Cuba Caswell, George Frederick, 130 Turin St., Rome, Y. Chalmers, David Bay, 300 Gilpin St., Denver, Colo. Chaney, Homer Campbell, 5 Tennyson Rd., West Newton, Mass. Chapin, Bedford, 5500 Normandy Pl., Baltimore, Md. Chin, Austin Arnold, 17 Church St., Montego Bay, Jamaica, B. W. I Chisholm, Stanley Brown, 64 Bradley Ave., East Haven, Conn. Chittenden, Richard Sherman, 306 East Ave., Newark, N. Y. Clain, Albert Joseph, 140 Cottage Pl., Ridgewood, N. J. Clarke, David Wright, Cedarcrest, Hartford, Conn. Cleary, Gerald Vernon, 625 Oak St., Winnetka, Ill. Clifton, Robert Howarth, 1420 New Boston Rd., Fall River, Mass. Cohen, Julian, 4 VVelland Rd., Brookline, Mass. Cohn, Thomas VVilliam, 55 Shennecossett Rd., Groton, Conn. Cole, Frank Clyde, Jr., 4 Hawthorne Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Coleman, James Melville, Jr., 906 Pine St., Asbury Park, N. J. Colmery, Harry VValter, 138 Greenwood, Topeka, Kansas Conant, John Kingsbury, 11 Sandy Valley Rd., Dedham, Mass. Condit, John Dayton, 1719 Ridge Ave., Evanston, Ill. N. J. J. Conolly, Richard Lansing, Jr., 5223 Reno Rd., N .W., Washington, D Cooper, Milton, 43 VV. 36th St., Bayonne, N. J. Cortright, William Abram, 116 Wynndale Rd., Narberth, Pa. Crawford, Arthur James, 3rd, 3375 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Crawford, Harry C., 1123 Bonnie Brac Ave., River Forest, Ill. Cross, Schuyler Foster, Harlaine Farm, Skowhegan, Me. Cunneen, Jay Williams, 120 E. VValnut Ave., Merchantville, N. J. Cunningham, Charles Coolidge, 3 Bates St., Cambridge, Mass. Curry, Ora John, 50 Inverness Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Daisley, Gordon Walford, Jr., 104 Brookside Dr., Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. D'Albora, John Baptist, 68 Payne Whitney Lane, Manhasset, N. Y. D'Amore, Gerard Vincent, Meredith, N. H. Daniel, Peter Vivian, Chamouni Rd., St. Davids, Pa. Davenport, Joseph Howard, Jr., Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Davidson, William Brown, Newport, R. I. Davis, Paul True, 18 Pleasant View Ave., Concord, N. H. DeCourcy, Keith Raymond, Kliekitat, VVash. Dellinger, John Leyson, 3648 Strattford Rd., Dallas, Texas Dellis, Donald Livingstone, San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Rep. DeShazo, Charles Arthur, 33 Morse Ave., East Orange, N. J. Dewees, Walter Ray, Jr., Goss Manor, Dallas, Pa. Dewey, John Wheelwright, Galena, Ill. Dilsaver, Jewell I., Jr., 211 Wabash Ave., Mattoon, Ill. Dodd, Henry Hewitt, 636 Stratford Pl., Toledo, Ohio Dolan, James Henry, Fitch Ave., Noroton Heights, Conn. Donahue, Joseph Paul, 80 Mansur St., Lowell, Mass. Donohue, James Chandler, 122 Harland Rd., Norwich, Conn. Doran, Robert James, 41 McKinley Ave., Caldwell, N. J. Doty, Lawrence Gove, Little's Point, Swampscott, Mass. ' Dougherty, James Tonner, 134-17th St., N.W., Canton, Ohio Dover, John Robert, 46 Parkview Dr., Millburn, N. J. Drake, Donald Pierce, 88 Sea St., VVeymouth, lNIass. Dressel, Herman Otto, 2459 Glebe Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Drury, John Harley, 2 Grove St., Essex Junction, Vt. Duncan, Charles Tignor, 1600 T. St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Duncklee, John Calvin, Meriden, N. H. . - n Dunnavan, Richard Paul, 4908 Sunnyside Rd., Minneapolis, Minn. Dupkin, Manuel, Overbrook Rd., Dunbarton, Pikesville, Md. Durgin, Russell Franklin, 7 Glenwood Ave., East Northfield, Mass. Durham, Henry Francis, 49 Harding Ave., Belmont, Mass. Durkee, Allen Bruce, 28 Puritan Ave., Swampscott, Mass. ' red Stearns, Hanover, Conn. E3Slll:Jl1,FJ0l1I1 Mills, 1320 Judson Ave., Highland Park, Ill. Eddy, John Condit, Ledyard Apts., Hanover, N. H. Ellis, Robert Draper, 135 Willow Rd., Nahant, Mass. ,.vvLg I Q01 1 4 .W :ef aff -1. 'ee .1 ,eye Embree, Frederick William 170 Linden St., New Haven, Conn. Emerson, Roger Day, R.F.D. 2, Theinsville, Wis. Emery, John Colvin, 4 Colonial Ct., New Canaan, Conn. Emmett, Walter Charles, 14 Downes St., Calais, Me. Epstein, Louis Canner, 48 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Ettari, Frank Kern, 10 Glenwood Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Evans, John Cathcart, 345 Auburn Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Evers, John William, 154 Beech St., Highland Park, Ill. Fagan, George Adrian, 206 West St., Ilion, N. Y. Fairbanks, John Clough, 43 Summit Rd., Newport, N. H. 1 Fajen, Theodore Edmund, Jr., 4869 N. Cumberland Blvd., Milwaukee, Wis. Feldberg, Stanley Harris, 54 Welland Rd., Brookline, Mass. Felter, James Durand, 38 Beauview Terr., West Springfield, Mass. Ferrin, Charles Edwin, 870 Main St., Haverhill, Mass. Field, William Lane, 1805 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. Fifield, Ralph Brooks, Jr., 199 Pleasant St., Holyoke, Mass. Fitchet, Duncan Maclellan, 992 Beacon St., Newton Centre, Mass. Fitzsimmons, Donald Bruce, 24 Leicester Rd., Belmont, Mass. Fleming, Craig, 42 Edmunds Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Florman, Samuel Charles, 262 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Foley, Paul Edward, 17 Circuit Ave., Worcester, Mass. Forsythe, James Campbell, 77 Cottage St., Sharon, Mass. Foster, Roger Webster, Highland St., Lunenburg, Mass. Fraser, Owen Gordon, 18 Florence St., Natick, Mass. Freeman, Peter Hampden, 311 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. I. French, Charles Lewis, 41 Leslie Rd., West Newton, Mass. Frerichs, Douglas Wayne, 96 W. Lewis Ave., Phoenix, Ariz. Friedrich, Charles Richard, 52 Lexington Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Fritz, Leonard Alan, 225 W. 86th St., New York, N. Y. Fuller, Daniel Brown, 46 High St., Mystic, Conn. Fulton, Kenneth Earl, 55 Hillside Ave., West Newton, Mass. Fultz, Walter John, 32 Carle Rd., Wollaston, Mass. Furber, Donald Edward, 112 Main St., Concord, Mass. Furness, Charles Proctor, 581 Broadway, Everett, Mass. Gallagher, Raymond Charles, Jr., 1686 University Way, San Jose, Cal. Gammel, Leonard John, 2778 Derbyshire Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Garben, Allan Channing, 584 Main St., Islip, N. Y. Gardner, Victor Hugo, Jr., 118 Homewood Dr., Fairmont, Minn. Gately, Matthew Edward, 3d, Avenida Alvear 4490, Buenos Aires, Argentina Gates, Stanley Main, 837 Wheeler Ave., Scranton, Pa. Gaughen, Frank Xavier, Jr., 219 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. Gernert, Archibald Cattell, 719 Highland Ave., Westfield, N. J. Gerrish, Robert Sawyer, 3 Inverness Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Gibson, Duncan Law, 12 Winthrop St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gile, Donald Brook, York Village, Me. Gillaugh, Thomas Hugh, 726 Torrington Pl., Dayton, Ohio Githens, Donn Robinson, 88 W. Lincoln Pl., Freeport, N. Y. Glass, George Napier, Willoa Rd., Riverside, Conn. Goldman, Robert Maurice, 35 Pomona Ave., Newark, N. J. Gcioldsgeed, Harrison LeGrand, 62 Lakeside Dr., S.E., Grand Rapids ic . Gordon, Herbert Max, 534 Stratford Pl., Chicago, Ill. Grant, Robert, Jr., 67 Chilton St., Belmont, Mass. Grant, William Chase, Jr., Ruxton, Md. Graulty, VVilliam VVillard, Jr., 64 Lenox Ave., Albany, N. Y. 9 Green, Holmes, 4621 Wenonah Dr., Dallas, Texas Grey, Robert Allen, 44 Essex St., Beverly, Mass. Griffin, Edward Mitchell, 54 S. Second Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y, Grove, Mack Allan, 2810 Pembroke Rd., Toledo, Ohio Guarini, Frank Joseph, Jr., 16 Britton St., Jersey City, N. J. Guida, Vincent, James, 2401 Avenue R, Brooklyn, N. Y. Gurney, Calvin Harding, Cottage St., Marion, Mass. Hackett, Stephen Howard, Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York Hailer, Robert Charles, 665 Centre St., Newton, Mass. Hamilton, Charles Lyman, 94 Lincoln Rd., Medford, Mass. Hamilton, Kenneth Lee, 3 Quincy St., W'orcester, Mass. Hamilton, Martin Perry, 82 Elmwood Ave., Allendale, N. J. Hannigan, Judson, Gerrish Island, Kittery Point, Me. Harper, Philip Strickland, Jr., 10039 S. Seeley Ave., Chicago, Ill. Hart, William, 16 Vine St., Leominster, Mass. Hartnett, Tim Vincent, Jr., 1438 Rosewood Ave., Louisville, Ky. Hartranft, Glenn, 291 Beech Spring Rd., South Orange, N. J. Hawkridge, Allen Crawford, 230 Dudley Rd., Newton Centre, Mass. Headley, Richard Knight, 1173 Davern Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Heller, James Kenneth, 3508 N. Shepard Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Hellmann, Raymond Maxwell, 54 Butler Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Helmbold, William Gustav, 24-24th St., Troy, N. Y. Helsell, John Bringloe, Hunt,s Point, Bellevue, VVash. Herd, Robert Gordon, 33 Bishop Parkway, Pittsfield, lVIass. Hersey, Ralph Bertram, Jr., 20 Lancaster Dr., Westwood, Mass. Hessey, William Spaulding, 1346 Midland Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Heussler, Robert William, Porterville Rd., East Aurora, N. Y. Hewitt, Howard Conger, 18 Old Military Rd., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Hewitt, Richard Dole, Prospect St., Enfield, N. H. Hewlett, Timothy Younglove, 4161 River Rd., Toledo, Ohio Hiebert, Joelle Cornelius, Jr., 240 College St., Lewiston, Me. Hilton, George Woodman, 5555 Everett Ave., Chicago, Ill. Hinman, Abraham Buol, 102 Ft. Stanwix Park North, Rome, N. Y. Hoagland, Joseph Christoffel, Jr., 127 E. 35th St., New York, N. Y. Hodes, Robert Bernard, 645 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Holmes, Albert, 3 Alden Pl., Bronxville, N. Y. Holsworth, Donald Campbell, 900 Windsor Ave., Windsor, Conn. Hooper, Robert Nelson, 8 Washington St., Manchester, Mass. Hopkins, George Edgard, 46 Fifth Ave., Narragansett, R. I. Houlihan, Eugene Francis, 28 Ball St., Worcester, Mass. Hoveman, Paul George, 1498 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Howard, John William, 87 Chester Ave., Bloomfield, N. J . Howe, Donald Franklin, 103 N. 55th St., Omaha, Nebr. Howe, Richard Armstrong, 20 Ridgeway Ave., West Orange, N. J . Howell, William Warren, 94 Park Pl., Midland, Pa. Hubbard, Robert Cecil, 353 Piper Rd., West Springield, Mass. Huck, James Rudolph, 299 Fullerton Parkway, Chicago, Ill. Hunt, Robert Church, Jr., 212-15 39th Ave., Bayside, N . Y. Hurd, Kenneth Badger, Wesskum Woods, Old Greenwich, Conn. Hutchinson, Donald Lendon, Hanover, N. H. Ibelle, Bertram Patterson, 253 White St., Hartford, Conn. Ingals, Ephraim Fletcher, 52 Cottage St., Wellesley, Mass. Jackson, Charles Burnham, 10 Crestmount Rd., lVIontclair, N. J . Jacobus, Garry Curtiss, 1714 N. 71st St., Wauwatosa, Wis. Jamison, George Hill, Jr., 687 Morris St., Albany, N. Y. JelliHe, Walter Scribner, Palisade Ave., Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y. Jerman, LeRoy Underhill, Jr., Bayberry Lane, Wlestport, Conn. P.: . ll in 'V' ' ll ll rvg MPX? . '95 P 'Q A x 'Il' -al H ,I w., , x . Those lfreslnncn c in really get tough when thev want tg tx 5 ai UH0Pe they d0n't come this wayi' says Freshman Dean Strong to Paul Parker 12021 va, Q 11.1 lv , L N: lg . f'k.i,' le' A 1. N N fl, 5 JN is x . Q. 2- 9 lla by N5 2 va. 'lax U. V. in ,,,,. M ,.,. .v,...., 'Heil ff' mfg ' ... ' ., :v mini .ali sn. ' V -..:..,., u - --. + fl .-.f Q.. -tl .:.-as M .. ,wr . . .S F. .i.1'l .A - f, fm.. mm. af' L2'... ZR. A . Nas '-' I 'I 5-411128 gif l Ada .fr Johns, William Franklin, 1242 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. Johnson, Melvin Frederick, Jr., 1101 Erie St., Shreveport, La Johnson, Rayner, 2141 Overlook Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Johnson, Russell Lane, Park Ave., Salem Depot, N. H. Johnson, Samuel Glover, 363 Old Post Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Jones, Bradford Lattimer, 83 Autumn St., Malden, lVIass. Jones, James Crothers, 2711 Wadsworth Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Jones, Kimball, 87 Nowell Rd., llflelrose, Mass. Jones, Lawrence Jesse, Jr., 1010 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. Jones, Louie Snow, 27 Ten Acre Rd., New Britain, Conn. Jones, Robert Owen, 30 Wachusetts Rd., Rockville Centre, N . Y. Jones, Theodore Rawdon, 1200 Parkway, Utica, N. Y. Judge, Clark Voorhees, 47 College Ave., Mansfield, Pa. Judson, Morris Lionel, 15 VV. 81st St., New York, N. Y. Kaemmerlen, Paul Howe, 106 Glenwood Blvd., Hudson, N. Y. Kamensky, Harry, 1022-2nd Ave., Columbus, Ga. Kaplan, S. Stephen, 617 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Kenley, Warren Dennis, 701 Mill Plain Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Keckeisen, Joseph Thomas, 235 Berry Parkway, Park Ridge, Ill. Kelley, Ronald Graydon, Abbott Ave., Woodsville, N. H. Kelly, Richard Andrew, Kel-Kourtf' Elmsford, N. Y. Kennedy, James Drake, Jr., 1712 Ashton St., Chattanooga, Tenn. Kennedy, John Foran, 2444 Estes Ave., Chicago, Ill. Kennedy, Philip Barry, 1 Knollwood Dr., Rochester, N. Y. Kenseth, Donald Erling, 16 Standish Rd., Milton, Mass. Kent, Henry Mellen, 273 Nottingham Terr., Buffalo, N. Y. Kepes, Joseph Dray, 28 Winnicoash St., Laconia, N. H. Kerley, Thomas William, 222 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa. Kessler, Charles Albert, Jr., Greene Manor Apts., Philadelphia, Pa. Keys, Donald Gene, R.F.D. 4, Wichita, Kans. Kevs, Ronald Dean, R.F.D. 4, Wichita, Kans. Kibbe, John Foss, 1604 Second Ave., York, Pa. Kidder, Lawrence Borges, 128 Westwood Dr., South, Lima, Ohio Kimball, Robert Young, 4 Chestnut St., Melrose, Mass. King, Richard Maurice, 275 Capital Ave., Battle Creek, Mich. Kirkland, Edward Stevens, 15 Cleaveland St., Brunswick, Me. Kitselman, Richard Monroe, Riverside Ave., Muncie, Ind. Koeniger, John Crawford, 487 Berkeley Ave., South Orange, N. J. Kornblith, John Howard, 2300 Lincoln Park West, Chicago, Ill. Kruschwitz, Henry William, Jr., 12 Essex St., Amesbury, Mass. Kuhn, Edward, Jr., 500 Norway Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Laffey, Thomas Edmund, Bancroft Rd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Lagay, Frank Leo, Jr., 101 Montrose St., Newark, N. J. Lampert, David, 10 Gibson Rd., Lowell, Mass. Landis, George Elliott, Jr., 2350 Club Rd., Columbus, Ohio Leech, Thomas Robertson, 931 W. Market St., Lima, Ohio Leeger, Luther Lindsey, 409-3rd St., Union City, N. J. Lesh, Charles Perry, Brendonwood, Indianapolis, Ind. Leslie, Robert Elliott, Chateau Brittany Apts., Scarsdale, N. Y. Lewis, Emery Frederick, 2216 Douglass, Louisville, Ky. Libbey, John Shaw, 612 Main St., Lewiston, Me. Linsley, Edward Burch, 202 East St., Three Rivers, Mich. Livermore, Arthur Leslie, 6951 N.W., 6th Ave., Miami, Fla. Lochhead, Roger Potter, 215 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. Logan, John Daniel, 1737 McVicar ,Topeka, Kans. Loos, Dickson Randall, 45 W. Lenox St., Chevy Chase, Md. Lorraine, Rudolph Tyrone, E. Main St., Conway, N. H. Lothman, Fritz, 375 S. Gore Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. Lott, Lawrence Gordon, Westport, N. Y. I n Lugirger, Charles Frederick, R.F.D. 6, Van Zandt Rd., Cincinnati, io Lucey, Eugene Jerome, 56 St. Marks Pl., Staten Island, N. Ludtke, Fenton Alexander, 95 Moss Ave., Highland Park, Mich. Lull, Clifford Bell, Jr., 474 Argyle Rd., Drexel Park, Pa. Lumbard, Henry Griffith, 93 Hillcrest St., Auburn, Me. Lutz, Allan Bernard, 144 Wilmington Ave., Boston, Mass. Lux, Paul Abner, Central Rd., Middlebury, Conn. Lyon, Layton Stearns, 880 Hollywood Circle, Williamsport, Pa. McAllister, Donald Hoitt, 1191 Union St., Manchester, N. H. Macartney, Horace MacPhail, 5 Bedford Rd., Port Washington, N. Y. McBride, Linn Frederick, 1501 Asbury Ave., Evanston, Ill, McClelland John Howard 435 N. 7th St Cambrid 'e Ohio . , : -v 3, 2 . . McClintock, John Steven, 4950 Dupont Ave., So., Minneapolis, Minn. MacDougall, William Robert, 171 Columbia Ave., Edgewood, R. I. McDowell, David Barber, 30 Macomb St., Plattsburgh, Pa. McDowell. Gilbert Burns, 2060 Dexter St., Denver, Colo. McElroy, Donald James, 25 Randolph Ave., Dover, N. J. McKenzie, Leon Norman, Jr., 114 Cedar St., Pawtucket, R. 1. McKinnon, Carl Robert, 57 Ferry St., Everett, Mass. McLane, Malcohn, 940 Chestnut St.. Manchester, N. H. Mchiuthllll, Robert Bradford, 901 Detroit St., Denver, C010- MacLeod, Robert Chandler, 170-25 Highland Ave., Jamaica, N . Y. McMahon. Richard Paul, ev Paine Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. MCMHHHS, William John, Jr., 47 Eckington St., Springfield, Mass- McNama1'H, John Hawes, 48 Woodley Rd., Rock Island, Ill. MacNamcc, Duncan Hugh, -1-6 Fiske ltd., ll'ellesley Hills, Mass M21g00I1, George Arthur, 35 Lnion St., Littleton, N. Il. llalcolm, Henry Ehrlicher, 1000 N. Glen Oak, Peoria, Ill. Mallnosky, Paul Dany, 8 Englewood Ave., Bloomfield, Conn. Mallett, Peter Saltonstall, 94 Brook St., Garden City, N. Y. Mandell, Ilarvey Nelson, 8 Goldberg Ave., Norwich, Conn. Mann, Robert Patterson, R.F.D. 1, lvyland, Pa. Marden, Harold Edwin, 220 S. Main Ave., Alhanv, N. Y. BIUVHUO, 0Iurtin,'Jr.. 3428 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Marion, Benjamin Pope, Crescent Rd., Concord, Mass. Marjerison, Howard Mitchell, Jr., 630 Washington St., Wilmelte, Ill. Marlette, John Elmer, 223 Minnesota Ave., Bul'l'alo, N. Y. Mason, Donald Robinson, Jr., 1 Edgevale Rd., Towson, Md. Mason, Richard French, 18 S. Suffolk Ave., Ventnor, N. J. lNIead,'Donald Philip, lvenham, Blass. Meredith, John Vandeveer, 16 Meadow Lane, Muncie, Ind. Metts, Dale Eugene, 310 E. 216tl1 St., Cleveland, Ohio Millard, Peter, 102 Radcliff Rd., Staten Island, N. Y. Miller, Edward Wvashington, Jr., Romney, IV. Ya. Miller, Rufus Wilder, Accomac Rd., Wyncote, Pa. Milhans, Donald Edmond, Wyman Park Apts., Baltimore, Md. Moats, Benjamin Franklin, Jr., 40 E. 53rd Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Moncrief, Charles lveston, Jr., 10 Ontario Rd., Bellerose, N. Y. hlomgle, Joseph Patrick, 2809 Monroe St., lvilmington, Del. Montgomery, Thomas Reed, Jr., 52 Fort Ave., Cranston, R. l. lVIorehouse, VVilliam Bradley, 101 Toilsome Hill Rd., Bridgeport, Conn hlorrissey, John Fielding, 31 Devon Rd., Newton Centre, Mass. lVIorron, Richard Steele, 130 Westerly Terrace, Hartford, Conn. lVIorse, Richard Leigh, 69 1VIain St., Hatfield, Mass. Moss, John Russell, 55 Irving Ave., Providence, R. I. Munn, Robert Delisle, 6 Prospect Ave., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Murphy, John Burchell, 168 Maple St., Danvers, Mass. Nagle, Walter William, 1360 Garden Rd., Overbrook Manor, Phila delphia, Pa. Naitove, Arthur, 1439 Auerbach Ave., Hewlett, N. Y. Narva, David Morton, 263 Hawthorn St., New Bedford, Mass. Nassif, David Edward, 27 Kingsley St., Springfield, lVIass. Nearing, Dudley Woodruff, 3457 Manor Hill Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio Nelson, Oliver Cunningham, 11331 Manor Ave., Detroit, Mich. Nicholson, Donald Bruce, 7730 East Jefferson, Detroit, Mich. Nirenberg, Saul Warren, 20 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Norris, Robert Henry, 26 Francisco Ave., Caldwell, N. J. Norton, Edward Westfall, 110 Pickwick Rd., lvest Newton, lllass. N ovascone, John Lewis, 74 Glenview Rd., South Orange, N. J. Nylen, Richard Allan, 345 Lincoln St., VVorcester, Mass. Obermayer, Herman Joseph, 821 Westview Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. O'Brien, Bruce Roland, 17 Wheatley St., Lebanon, N . H. O,Brien, Nicholas Arthur Craig, 506 Portland Ave., St. Paul, Minn. O'Hara, Arthur Philip, 217 Grayson Pl., Teaneck, N. J. O'Neil, James Edwin, 5 Middlesex St., VVellesley, Mass. O'Neill, Frank William, 409 Arthur Ave., Scranton, Pa. Osberg, Philip Henry, 145 Youle St., Melrose, Mass. Owen, Robert Louis, 726 Washington St., South Braintree, Mass. Park, John Edward, 253 Lewiston Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Parker, Henry Whipple, 16 High St., Goflstown, N. H. Paterson, Grant Alvin, 266-6th Ave., North, Troy, N. Y. Patterson, Roger Francis, 5 W. South St., Hanover, H. Peregoy, Lamar S., 2275 N. Lake Dr., Milwaukee, Wis. Perkins, David Rockwood, 7 Monadnock Rd., Arlington, Mass. Perry, Charles Dyche, Jr., 305 W. Haydin St., Findlay, Ohio Perry, Raymond Stark Bogardus, Jr., 83 Winsor Pl., Glen Ridge, N. J. Pert, James Hutcheon, 36 Forest Rd., Tenaily, N . J. Peterson, Carl Frederic, 32 Lodge St., Manchester, N. H. Pettit, James Kenneth, Thiells, N. Y. ' Phagan, Knox Bryson, Jr., 53 Northway, Bronxville, N. Pierce, Reginald Franklin, 18-8th Ave., La1u'el Beach, Milford, Conn. Poet, Robert, 614 N. 4th St., Newark, N . J. Pogue, Shelton Law, Mill Hill Rd., Southport, Conn. Poole, Maynard Wallace, 526 Monroe Rd., Merion, Pa. Poole, William Whipple, 331 Spring St., Portland, Me. Porter, John Endicott, 4 Ashburton Pl., Yonkers, N. Y. Potter, John Watson, 209 University Ave., Providence, R. I. Potter, Norman Duane, The Dalles, Oregon Powers, Harris Warren, 80 Appleton St., Manchester, H. Prescott, Charles Edward, Jr., 124 Aycrigg Ave.. Passaic, N- J- Prew, Alexander Hade, Main St., Hatfield, Mass. Price, Richard Craig, 1645 Steele St., Denver, Colo. Priest, Richard Fletcher, Old Ayer Rd., Groton, Mass. 7 Prince, Willard Waldo, 1200 N. George St., Rome, N. Y Pringle, Richard Braden, 1550 E. 27th St., Tulsa, Okla. Pulliam, James Graham,l21'3 ISag Rafael, Pasadena, C211- ' h Bradle , G en i S, 3- Y Rhligkihfillgihn Joseplii 1070 Park Ave., New York, N- Y- Razee, George Wells, Center Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. Rea, Henry Oliver, Jr., Sewickley, Pa. mom Readey, Maurice, Jr., 31 Mt. Prospect Ave., Verona, N. J . Reardon, John Don, 32 Helmer Ave., Dolgeville, N. Y. . Regan, Charles Stephen, 2067 Taylor Rd., East Cleveland, Ohio Rein, George Timmins, Scarsdale Manor, Scarsdale, Reynolds, Abram David, 3rd, 2501 Woodbourne, Louisville, Ky. Rice, Earle Winslow, 12 Regent St., Worcester, Mass. Richardson, Fred Wetherbee, R.F.D, 4, Laconia, N. H. Richitelli, Pasquale James, Marsh Hill Rd., West Haven, Conn. Riley, William Joseph, 49 Alexander Ave., Medford, Mass. Roberts, James Houston, 2115 Livingston St., Evanston, Ill. Robson, Daniel Riggs, 63 Everett St., Southbridge, Mass. Rockwell, John Bradford, 72 Fairlee Rd., Waban, Mass. Rogers, Richard Hayes, Wolfeboro, N. H. Rosenfeld, William Isaac, 3rd, 1125 Fifth Ave., New .York,tN. Y. Rothenberg, Daniel Edward, 48 Williams St., Brookline, Mass. Rothwell, Bernard Joseph, 27 Willow Crescent, Brookline, Mass. Ruby, Thomas Charles, 17 Spruce Ave., Floral Park, N. Y. Rue, Charles Teale, 736 Haxtun Ave., Orange, N. J. I Ruetenik, Gustave, 10119 Edgewater Dr., Cleveland, Ohio Ruggles, Daniel Blaisdell, Briar Lane, Marblehead, Mass. Rutter, Newton Scott, 31 Burlington Rd., Tenafiy, N. J. Sampson, Luykin Clark, North Bridgton, Me. Samuel, Howard David, 983 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Sanderson, Robert Courtney, 152 Doncaster Rd., Kenmore, N. Y. Sandoe, Robert Marsh, 23 Sherwood Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Savage, John Tristram, Club Rd., Howlett, N. Y. Sayers, John Francis, Jr., 85 Leete St., West Haven, Conn. Scadron, Harvey Matthew, 47 E. 88th St., New York, N. Y. Schaldach, William Joseph, Jr., West Hartford, Vt. 0 Scharrer, Richard Calvin, R.F.D. 7, Marshall Rd., Dayton, Ohio Scheu, Edward Magnus, Jr., 566 W. Ferry St., Buialo, N. Y. Schiele, Herbert Sigmund, Jr., 80 Arundel Pl., St. Louis, Mo. Schiff, Harvey Gladstone, 266 Highland Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Schillhammer, William Renold, Jr., State St., Groveton, N. H. Schlander, William Alfred, 48 Wildemere Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Schlosser, Alan Edward, 284 Boulevard, Scarsdale, N. Y. Schneider, Jacob Howard, Jr., 118 N. Grant St., Palmyra, Pa. Schulting, Herman William, 3rd, 231 Boulevard, Passaic, N. J. Schuster, William Carl, Jr., 132 Chestnut Ave., Cranston, R. I. Schwarz, Bert E., 35 Godfrey Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Searles, Richard Stanley, 179 Sias Ave., Newport, Vt. Seiler, Theodore Cowden, 838 Locust Ave., Winnetka, Ill. Serafim, Perry, 261 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y. Shade, Robert Lewis, 1505 W. Macon St., Decatur, Ill. Shambroom, Richard Charles, 1237 E. 23rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Sharr, Arthur Anthony, 242 W. Main St., Plainville, Conn. Shute, Henry Woodworth, 5 Pine St., Exeter, N. H. Shute, James Duncan, Jr., 60 Selwyn Rd., Belmont, Mass. Sieburg, William Carl, 5263 Fieldston Rd., Riverdale, N. Y. Sikes, Clayton Reid, 6336 Ridge Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Silberstein, Laurence Ellis, 275 Central Park West, New York, N. Simon, Edgar King, 21 E. 87th St., New York, N. Y. Y. Skutch, Robert Edward, 285 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Slavik, Walter Lustig, 408 S. Spring Ave., LaGrange, Ill. Sloman, Howard Samuel, 29 Raymond Terr., East Norwalk, Conn Sly, Edmund Stewart, 154 Bagley St., Pontiac, Mich. Smith Smith 9 Anson Howe, Jr., 203 Highland St., Dedham, Mass. Donald Oril, 131 Russell Ave., Watertown, Mass. Smith Henry W., Jr., 127 Maple St., Lee, Mass. Smith, Maurice Daniel, New Hampton, N. H. Smith, Ralph Eliot, 206 Central St., South Weymouth, Mass. Smith, Smith, Smith, Ralph Kitchell, Jr., 521 Academy Ave., Sewickley, Pa. Robinson Vohr, New Hampton, N. H. Spencer Milton, 115 N. 6th St., Zanesville, Ohio Snickenberger, Walter Alexander, 27 School St., Hanover, N. H. Snyder, Frank WoodruH', 48 Keofferam Rd., Old Greenwich, Conn. Soto, Manuel Edgardo, Saldana St., No. 3, Rio Piedras, Puerto Ri Soule, William Carlton, 5306 Tilbury Way, Baltimore, Md. Southworth, Edward, Jr., 42 Magnolia Terr., Springfield, Mass. Spoor, William Howard, 1272 Washington St., Denver, Colo. Staley, William Converse, 1703 Wiggins Ave., Springfield, Ill. Staples, Earle Hart, Jr., 3 Woodbury St., Keene, N. H. Stearns, Raymond Edgar, Thomson, N. Y. Stedfast, Philip Alden, 66 Long Ave., Belmont, Mass. Steele, John Frederick, 3664 E. Grandin Rd., Cincinnati Ohio Stein, Myron, 24 Harvard St., Chelsea, Mass. i Stephenson, David John, 2265 Clermont St., Denver, Colo. Stern, Henry Fleishman, 3221 Monument Ave., Richmond Va. sttvenson, Robert William, 2418 E. 3rd st., Duluth, Mimi. C0 Stratton, Edward Jesse, 415 E. 40th St., Paterson, N. J. Strauss, John L., 1615 Government St., Mobile, Ala. Stroh, Edwin Arthur, 935 Fernwood Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Struhsacker, Philip Tull, Salem Center, N. Y. Swick, George Boice, 47 Union St., Montclair, N. J. Szopa, Frederick John, 55 Porter St., Manchester, N. H. Tanner, Thomas Hoswell, 661 N. 72nd St., Wauwatosa, Wis. Templeton, Irving Ray, Jr., 465 W. Ferry St., Buffalo, N. Y. Thalhimer, Morton Gustavus, Jr., 3202 Monlunent Ave., Richmond, Va, Thayer, Robert Niedner, 47 Mooreland Rd., Melrose, Mass. Thomas, Hubert Fleycher, Jr., 743 Race St., Denver, Colo. Thomas, Louis Edward, 11 Walter Pl., East Hartford, Conn. Thomas, Lowell Jackson, Jr., Pawling, N. Y. Thomson, Andrew, 604 Buchanan St., Gary, Ind. Thresher, Oliver Schoonmaker, 129 E. Central Ave., Moorestown, N. J , Tickelis, Ignatios James, 37 Brockton Ave., Haverhill, Mass. Todd, David Bradstreet, Summer St., Lynnfield Center, Mass. Treat, Sanford Morris, Jr., 3541-87 th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Trefry, Richard Greenleaf, 14 South St., Marblehead, Mass. Trump, William Stephens, 2930 N. Marietta Ave., Milwaukee, Wig, Turk, Richard Errington, 34 Emerson Ave., Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Tyler, Laurence Warner, 417 W. North St., Muncie, Ind. Ulrich, John Alexander, 74 Marmion Rd., Melrose, Mass. Underhill, John, 1056 Prospect Ave., Pelham-Manor, N. Y. Vallely, John Franklin, Boca Grande, Fla. Van Cleve, John William, 228 Highland Rd., South Orange, N. J. Van Orden, Louis Jackson, Jr., 16 Summit Rd., Verona, N. J. Van Otteren, Dale, 910 Pinecrest, East Grand Rapids, Mich. Van Syckle, Guy Weaver, 509 Tisdale Pl., Woodbridge, N. J. Venon, Claude, 41 W. 94th St., New York, N. Y. Verdi, Joseph Matthew, 1508 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Virgien, Norton Irving, 99 Seneca Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Vitalini, Joseph Batista, 22 Parker Hill Ave., Milford, Mass. Vogt, Ernest Barker, 1411 Goddard Ave., Louisville, Ky. Vogt, George Henry, 29 Winsor Pl., Glen Ridge, N. J. von Lackum, William Harrison, Jr., Walpole, N. H. von Rohr, James Herbert, 21 Hoburg Pl., Montclair, N. J. Vorys, Nick, 529 E. Fifth Ave., Lancaster, Ohio Wagner, Richard Dunbar, Monmouth Hills, Highlands, N. J. Wales, Donald Brewster, 36 Walnut St., Abington, Mass. Wallis, William Parks, 78 Oaks Rd., Framingham, Mass. Walsh, Harry Lawrence, Lakewood Estates, Dundee, Ill. Ward, Richard Alpheus, 61 S. Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. Waring, Edward Saunders, 274 Lincoln Ave., Fall River, Mass. Warren, David Lester, Jamshedpur, India Warren, John Charles, 49 Lincoln Ave., Orange, Mass. Warwick, William Paul, 158 Forest Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Waterman, Stanton Arthur, 58 Grandview Pl., Upper Montclair, N. J. Weisman, Laurence, 706 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Weissman, Norman, 1682 E. 28th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Weld, David Cheever, 136 Steele Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Wenzel, Robert Hill, 89 Herrick Rd., North Andover, Mass. Wetherill, Richard, 2nd, 20th and Providence Ave., Chester, Pa. Wexler, Bernard Carl, 8 Egremont Rd., Brighton, Mass. Whalen, Kenneth Joseph, 162 Broadway, Whitehall, N . Y. Wheeler, Willard Hastings, South Berlin, Mass. Whelden, James Henry, 516 Commonwealth Ave., Newton Centre, Mass Whipple, David D., Howell Parkway, Medina, N. Y. White, Frank Lambert, 3133 N. Marietta Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Whitescarver, Paul Sublett, 167 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood, N. J . Whitman, John Bowker, 20 Holyoke St., Cambridge, Mass. Wightman, Frederick Charles, 10 Kensington Ave., Jersey City, N. J . Wilcox, George Emmons, 1053 West Park Front, Joliet, Ill. Wilmot, Frederick Tousey, 270 Old Spring Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Wilson, Robert Deupree, 117 Woodside Pl., Ft. Thomas, Ky. Wingate, Walter Medley, 4041 Harriet Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn Winstanley, Robert Hoyt, 23 Channel Ave., South Norwalk, Conn. Winter, Robert White, 1439 Greenleaf Blvd., Elkhart, Ind. Witte, John Turner, 20 Birckhead Pl., Toledo, Ohio Witzeman, Louis Alexander, 406 North Portage, Akron, Ohio Wolfe, John Howard, 4731 Kahala Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii WOIH, John Lovejoy Elliott, 100 Soundview Ave., White Plains, N. Y- Woolman, Edward Esler, 2771 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Ill. Worton, Robert Allen, 137 Washington Ave., Somerset Centre, Mass. Wyckoff, ames Irvin, 94 N. Main St., Perry, N. Y. Wyeth, Willard Hiram, 300 Gramatan Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Zuck, John Marshall, 22 Broad St., Washington, N. J . M041 rv. , 'i,1l , 15 -rf JUS?- ,-AFV' I 1 M5 I qc, Mun A , 5,4-v if 5' if W1 ff: , .-2,1 I A . 7-.1 IMF- fy, J' ,,uf,.5U - A . .,V- il r,f,.- 1,1 9 ,v '7 1 Dartmouth Faculty John Clinton Adams, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1941. Chauncey Newell Allen, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Psychology, B.S., Dartmouth, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1925. Paul Stuart Allen, Reference Librarian, A.B., Dartmouth, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1929. Adelbert Ames, Jr., LL.B., A.l1'I., Professor of Research in Physiological Optics, A.B., Harvard, 1903. At Dart- mouth since 1921. John Page Amsden, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, A.B., Dartmouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1920. Jose Maria Arce, A. 1VI., Professor of Spanish, A.B., Columbia University, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1928. Norman Kiefer Arnold, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Zoology, B.S., Wesleyan Uni- versity, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1932. Kenneth Noel Atkins, A.lVI., Professor of Bacteriology, Medical School, Ph.B., Wesleyan University, 1908. At Dart- mouth since 1915. Theodore Eton Bacon, Assistant Super- visor of Teacher Training, A.B., Bates, 1917. At Dartmouth since 1926. Charles Rutherford Bagley, Litt.B. A.lVI., Professor of French, A.B., Duke University, 1914. At Dartmouth since 1930. Edwin Maurice Bailor, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Psychology, A.B., Washington State College, 1914. At Dartmouth since 1925. WiHiam Whitney Ballard, Ph.D., Professor of Zoology, Professor of Embry- ology, Medical School, B.S., Dartmouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1930. Adams Allen, C. N. Allen, P. S. Ames Bailor Ballard Harold lVlacCo1l Bannerman, Ph.D. Professor of Geology, B.S., Acadia Uni- versity, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1927. Robert Edward Bannon, Clinical Fel- low in Physiological Optics, B.S., Colum- bia University, 1934. At Dartmouth since 1935. Donald Light Barr, Assistant Treasurer of the College, B.S., Dartmouth, 1918. At Dartmouth since 1937. Rimhard Henry Barrett, 1VI.D., In- structor in Pharmacology, Medical School, A.B., Bowdoin College, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1941. Bannerman Bannon Donald Bartlett, A.NI., Professor of Biography, A.B., Dartmouth, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1927. Arthur Herbert Basye, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of History, A.B., University of Kansas, 1904. At Dartmouth since 1908. Robert Murray Bear, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, A.B., Washington and Lee, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1929. Ceorge.Kelly Beebe, A.R'I., Instructor in Spanlsh, A.B., Wesleyan University, 1937. At Dartmouth since 1940. B h ' lt C Nm Bell Bender Benezet Bentley Boardman Bowcn,jW. XY. Bradley Brid TC K B - V S. E rodle l Q06 l Brown, B. H. Brown, E- Amsderl ATCS Arnold Atkins If at-on liaglm' Barr Barrett Bartlett Basye Bear Beebe Walter Curt Behrendt, Eng.D., Lec- turer in City Planning and Housing, Eng.D., Technische Hoehschule, Dres- den, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1941 tpreviously 193-I-371. Harry Price Bell, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Economiesg A.B., Univer- sity of North Carolina, 1928. At Dart- mouth since 1934. Irving Edison Bender, Ph.D., Profes- sor of Psychology, A.B., University of Michigan, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1926. Louis Paul Benezet, Pd.D., Assistant Professor of Education, A.B., Dartmouth, 1899. At Dartmouth since 1938. BOIIIHHII Bolsey BFOWD, B. F. Bruce Warner Bentley, A.lW., Director of Dramatic Production, A.B., Pomona College, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1928. John Joseph Boardman, l1I.D., Assist- ant Professor of Anatomy and Obstetrics, Medical School, M.D., University of igggnont, 1927. At Dartmouth since George Vroom Bohman, A.lVI. Assist- ant Professor of Public Speaking, A.B., Monmouth College, 1929. At Dartmouth since 1937. Charles Ernest Bolser, Ph.D., Profes- sor of Organic Chemistry, Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Medical Sehoolg Booth Bowen, R. H. ' i Burian V Burleigh M071 A.B., Dartmouth, 1897. At Dartmouth since 1901. Ednlund Ilendershot Booth, A.M., Professor of Englishg A.B., Dartmouth, 1918. At Dartmouth since 1920. Bees Higgs Bowen, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology: B.D., Yale I'niversity, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1922. Wilfrid Wfedgwood Bowen, Curator of Wilson Museum, Assistant Professor of Zoology, B.A., Cambridge Pniversity, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1934-. Howard Aden Bradley, AAI., Profes- sor of Puhlie Speakingg A.B., Wesleyan University, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1923. Gordon Bridge, Assistant to the Trea- surerg A.B., Dartmouth, 192-1. At Dart- mouth since 1939. Bernard Brodie, Ph.D., Instructor in Political Scienceg Ph.B., Vniversity of Chicago, 1932. At Dartmouth since 19-1-1. Bancroft Huntington Brown, Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics, A.B., Brown University, 1916. At Dartmouth since 1922. Edward Stickney Brown, Jr., CLE., S.hI., Assistant Professor of Civil En- gineering, Thayer Schoolg A.B., Dart- mouth, 193-I. At Dartmouth since 1937. Reginald F. Brown, Instructor in Spanishg B.A., Iiniversity of Liverpool, England, 19323 KIA., 1'niversity of Liverpool, 1931, Ph.D., l'niversity of Liverpool, 1939. Harold Rozelle Bruce, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science: A.B., Beloit College, 1912. At Dartmouth since 1920. Herlnann Alarlin Burian, M.D., As- sistant Professor of Ophthalmology, Chief of Clinical Research, 'Phe Eye In- stituteg M.D., Belgrade t.IugoslaviaJ I'niversity,'1930. At Dartmouth since 1936. Nathaniel George Burleigh, A1.C.S., Professor of Industrial Management, Tuck School: A.B., Dartmouth, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1919. Ralph Arthur Burns, Ed.lVI., Professor of Education, A.B., Bates College, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1928. Ehner Howard Carleton, lVI.D., D.Sc., Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology: A.B., Bowdoin, 1893. At Dartmouth since 1905. Albert Sigfrid Carlson, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of Economic Geography: A.B., Clark University, 1929. At Dart- mouth since 1929. Robert Kenneth Carr, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Political Science, A.B., Dartmouth, 1929. At Dartmouth since 1937. William Ambrose Carter, A.M., Pro- fessor of Economics, A.B., Dartmouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1928. Charles Dean Chamberlin, A.M., As- sociate in Personnel: Instructor in Eng- lish, B.S., Dartmouth, 1926. At Dart- mouth since 1929. Roy Bullard Chamberlin, A.M., D.D., Fellow in Religion, Chapel Director, A.B., VVesleyan, 1909. At Dartmouth since 1925. Francis Lane Childs, Ph.D., Professor of Englishg A.B., Dartmouth, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1909. Arthur Houston Chivers, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Botany, A.B., Dartmouth, 1902. At Dartmouth since 1906. Michael Eugene Choukas, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, A.B., Dartmouth, 1927. At Dartmouth since 1929. Donald Edwards Cobleigh, Assistant Professor of Musica, A.B., Dartmouth, 1923. At Dartmouth since 1925. Robert Otheo Conant, A.1Vl., Registrar of the College, A.B., Dartmouth, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1919. Frank Herman Connell, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Zoology, Professor of Parasitol- Burns Carleton Carlson Carr Cobleigh Conant ogy, Medical Schoolg B.S., Dartmouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1931. Leroy James Cook, A.M., Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages, A.B., Tufts, 1909. At Dartmouth since 1921. llflerle Chandler Cowden, MS., A.M., Professor of German, B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1920. At Dart- mouth since 1929. Osborne Bryan Cowles, Coach of Basketball and Freshman Football, A.B., Carleton College, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1936. Connell Cook Sidney Cox, A.lVl., Professor of English, A.B., Bates College, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1926. John Alfred Coyle, NLD., C.M., Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Ophthalmology. Medical School, B.S., Dartmouth, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1931. James Franklin Crow, Ph.D., ln- structor in Zoology, A.B., Friends Uni- versity, 1937. At Dartmouth since 1941. James Francis Cusick, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of Economics, A.B. Am- herst, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1935. Daniels Dankert I Dafgfm DeGrange Delahanty Demaree Dickerson Diller Donohue Dow I 208 1 Duncombe Dunham Carter Chamberlin, C. D. Chamberlin, R. B. Childs q'1,3W,.. mmuk 5 'HS Cowden Cowles COX Coyle Crow Cusick Arthur Noyes Daniels, S.M., Assistant Professor of Power Engineering, Thayer Schoolg B.S., U. S. Naval Academy, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1937. Clyde Edward Dankert, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Economies, A.B., McMaster University, 1936. At Dartmouth since 1930. Henry lVIcCune Dargan, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of English, A.B., Mercer Univer- sity, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1923. McQui1kin DeGrange, A.1W., D. es L., Professor of S0ciolOgY3 A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1900. At Dartmouth since 1923. Robert John Delahanty, A.lVI., Recre- ational Director and Professor of Physical Education, B.P.E., Springfield College, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1926. Albert Lowther Demaree, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Historyg A.B., Dickinson College, 1923. At Dartmouth since 1927. Robert Howland Denison, Ph.D. Assistant Curator of the VVilson Museum, Instructor in Zoologyg A.B., Harvard University, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1937. D6I11SO1l Denoeu Dent Dewing Eflgeftoli Eldredge Qt Elsbree ElSt0f1 I 209 1 Francois Denoeu, L. es L., A. des L., Professor of French, Brevet Superieur, Arras, 1916. At Dartmouth since 1929. Thonlas Johnstone Dent, Assistant Professor of Physical Erlueation. At Dartmouth since 1924. Arthur Dcwing, A.h1., Assistant Pro- fessor of English, BS., Dartmouth, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1930. Albert Inskip Dickerson, Executive Assistant to the Presiclentg A.B., Dart- mouth, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1930. George Ellmaker Diller, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of French, A.l1., Princeton, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1930. Jerry Donohue, III, lnstructor in Chemistry, A.B., Dartmouth, 194-1. At Dartmouth since 1911. Peter Stauh Dow, C.E., Professor of Graphics and Engineeringg C.IC., Thayer School, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1910. Henry Lyon Duncomhe, jr., M.A., Assistant Dean of the Tuck School, As- sistant Professor in Business Statistics, 'Puck Schoolg H..-X., tiniversity of Chicago, 193-1-. At Dartmouth since 19-1-0. Howard Floyd Dunhani, AAI., Pro- fessor of French: A.B., Dartmouth, 1911. At Dartmouth since 191-1-. Halsey Charles Edgerton, ILCS., Treasurer of the College: ILS., Dart- mouth, 1900. At Dartmouth since 1906. Hanford Yventworth F1dredge,Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociologyg A.B., Dartmouth, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1935. Hugh Langdon Elsbree, Ph.D., Pro- essor of Political Seienceg A.B., Harvard tiniversity, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1933. Ellsworth David Elston, A.M., Profes- sor of Geology, A.B., Cornell University 1912. At Dartmouth since 1920. Carl David England, A.1VI., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, A.B., Baldwin-Wallace College, 1926. At Dart- mouth since 1938. Harold lvl. Evans, B.P.E., Assistant Professor of Physical Education, Coach of Freshman Basketball, B.P.E., Spring- field College, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1928. Robert Haven Falconer, Director, Dartmouth College Films, A.B., Dart- mouth, 1939. At Dartmouth since 1939. Herman Feldman, Ph.D., Professor of Industrial Relations, Tuck School, A.B., New York City, 1915. At Dart- mouth since 1923. John Wallace Finch, M.A., Instructor in English, A.B., Wesleyan University, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1939. Frank Cudworth Flint, A.lVI., Profes- sor of English, A.B., Reed College, 1919. At Dartmouth since 1929. Allen Richard Foley, A.lYl., Professor of History, A.B., Dartmouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1924. Joseph Butler Folger, Jr., A.1W., Pro- fessor of Spanish, A.B., Dartmouth, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1921. Roy Philip Forster, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Zoology, B.S., Marquette University, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1938. Chester Hume Forsyth, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Mathematics, A.B., Butler Uni- versity, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1916. Harry Tapley French, M.D., Professor of Neuroanatomy, Medical School, B.S., Dartmouth, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1916. Albert Wesley Frey, 111 .C.S., Professor of Marketing, Tuck School, A.B., Dart- mouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1920. England Evans Falconer Feldman French Frey George- Loring Frost, A.M., Professor of English, A.B., Dartmouth, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1922. Robert D. Funkhouser, Jr., M.C.S., Assistant Bursar, B.S., Dartmouth, 1927. At Dartmouth since 1937. Ch3l'16S J0hI1 Gaa, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Accounting and Finance, Tuck School, B.S., University of Illinois, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1941. Jesse M. Galt, Instructor in Medicine, A.B., Dartmouth College, 1936, M.D., Emory School of Medicine, 1939, Medical c oo . Frost Funkhouser John Gerow Gazley, Ph.D., Professor of History, A.B., Amherst College, 1917. At Dartmouth since 1923. Norman Everett Gilbert, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Physics, A.B., Wesleyan Univer- sity 1895. At Dartmouth since 1903. John Fowler Gile, BLD., Professor of Clinical Surgery, Medical School, A.B., Dartmouth, 1916. At Dartmouth since 1923. Gordon Harkness Gliddon, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Research in Physio- logical Optics, B.S., University of Roch- ester, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1923. Goddard Goldthwait G00dhl19 Gooding Goodrich Gramlich Guyer H. ll ' . ac ey Hall Harriman Hartshorn H2lSklI1S mio, In , ,r-sq, 4-'. 7 Y. Q p CS I .F ' ., ' .pg 1 1- ,f f 3' Finch Flint F1 V 4 'O 95 Folger l.',,rSu,,. lmrsylh Gaa Galt Richard Halsey Goddard, A.lN'l., Pro- fessor of Astronomy, Director of the Shattuck Observatoryg B.S., Dartmouth, 1921, At Dartmouth since 1927. James Walter Goldthwait, Ph.D., Hall Professor of Geologyg A.B., Harvard, 1902. At Dartmouth since 1908. Everett Walton Goodhue, A.lNl., Pro- fessor of Economicsg A.B., Dartmouth, 1900. At Dartmouth since 1921. Willard Merrill Gooding, C.E., Super- intendent of Buildings and Groundsg BS., Dartmouth, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1920. Gazley Gilbert Nathaniel Lewis Goodrich, B.L.S., A.NI., Librariang A.B., Amherst, 1901. At Dartmouth since 1912. Francis WiHiam Gramlich, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophyg A.B., Princeton University, 1933. At Dart- mouth since 1940. Ernest Roy Greene, A.lVI., Professor of Romance Languages, A.B., Harvard, 1901. At Dartmouth since 1907. Leland Griggs, Ph.D., Professor of Zotilogyg A.B., Dartmouth, 1902. At Dartmouth since 1907. Greene Griggs Gundersen Guthrie Hayward Hazelton Heiskanen Helmholz I 211 1 Gile Glitlrlon Sven Alartin Gundersen, NLD., In- structor in Physical Diagnosis and Medi- cine, Medical School: A.B., Vniversity of Vliisconsin, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1937. Ramon Guthrie, D. cn Droil, l rofessor of Frenchg License, Pnivcrsite clc 'Pou- louse, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1930. J Foster Erwin Guyer, Ph.D., Professor of French: A.B., Dartmouth, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1912. Charles Peleg Hadley, Instructor in Physics, A.B., Dartmouth, 1941. At Dartmouth since 19-l-1. Vernon Hall, .lr-, Ph.D., Instructor in Englishg A.B., New York Ifniversity, 1936. At Dartmouth since 19-1-1. ,Iohn Walter Harriman, D.C.S., Pro- fessor of Finance and Banking, 'Puck School, Ph.B., Brown Pniversity, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1932. Elden Bennett Hartshorn, Ph.D., Professor of Chcmistryg BS., Dartmouth 1912. At Dartmouth since 1913. Charles Nelson Haskins, Ph.D., D.Sc. Professor of Mathematics on the Chandler Foundationg BS., Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, 1897. At Dartmouth since 1909. Sidney Chandler Hayward, AAI., Secretary of the Collegeg BS., Dartmouth 1926. At Dartmouth since 1926. Sidney Channing Hazelton, Assistant Professor of Physical Education: A.B., Dartmouth, 1909. At Dartmouth since 1920. Piltti Heiskanen, Director of Recrea- tional Skiingz School of Journalism, Helsinki, Finland, 1936. At Dartmouth since 1941. Lindsay Helmholz, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry: Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Pniversity, 1933. At Dartmouth since 19-10. Nlalcolm Colby Henderson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics, Ph.B., Yale, 1923. At Dartmouth since 1940. Herbert Wells Hill, A.l1'l., Professor of History, A.B., Harvard University, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1928. Harry Livingston Hillman, Assistant Professor of Physical Education: Coach of Track and Cross-Country. At Dart- mouth since 1910. Norman Howard Hinton, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Political Science, A.B., University of California, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1938. Edward George Hoehn, Jr., Coach of Tennis and Squash, BS., University of Rochester, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1938. Ralph Penrose Holben, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Sociology, A.B., Franklin and Marshall College, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1921. John B. Holyoke, Teaching Fellow in Pathology, BS., University of Nebraska, 1937, M.D., University of Nebraska, 1940, Medical School. Clark Willis Horton, Ph.D., Assistant in Educational Research, A.B., Ohio Wes- leyan, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1938. Reginald Kimball House, iNl.D., In- structor in Pathology, Medical School, B.S., Middlebury College, 1933. At Dart- mouth since 1941. Ralph William Hunter, NLD., In- structor in Anatomy, Medical School, A.B., Dartmouth, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1939. John Hurd, Jr., A.lVl., Assistant Pro- fessor of English, A.B., Dartmouth, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1927. Henry Alfred Imus, Ph.D., Research Fellow in Physiological Optics, A.B., University of Rochester, 1931. At Dart- mouth since 1934. i Henderson Hill Hillman Hinton Hurd Imus Almon Bingham Ives, A.M., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, A.B., Illinois Wesleyan University, 1931. At Dart- mouth since 1939. Arthur Eugene Jensen, Ph.D., As- sistant Professor of English, A.B., Brown University, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1937. Edward Jeremiah, Coach of Hockey and Freshman Baseball, A.B., Dart- mouth, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1937. Raymond Watson Jones, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of German, A.B., Cornell Univer- sity, 1905. At Dartmouth since 1910. Ives Jensen Hewette Elwell Joyce, Ph.D., Professor of English, A.B., Yale, 1912. At Dart- mouth since 1919. Patrick Joseph Kaney, Assistant Pro- fessor of Physical Education. At-Dart- mouth since 1914. Theodore Francis Karwoski, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Ph.B., Univer- sity of Chicago, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1930. Thomas Francis Keane, Jr., Instructor in Physical Education, Coach of Golf. At Dartmouth since 1922. F Keir Kelly Kendall Kimball King Knight Lane La ng Lanphear Larmon I 212 l Larson Lathrop 1 Holben 4- Hoe in Holyoke Horton 110,150 Hmmlr Jeremiah Jones Malcolm Keir, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, B.S., University of Pennsyl- vania, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1919. Eric Philbrook Kelly, A.lVI., Professor of Journalism, A.B., Dartmouth, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1921. William Raynlond Kendall, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Music, A.B., Oe- cidental College, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1940. William Phelps Kimball, C.E., A.lW., Assistant Dean of Thayer School, Pro- fessor of Civil Engineering, Thayer School, B.S., Dartmouth, 1928. At Dart- mouth since 1929. Joyce Kaney Allen L. King, Instructor in Medicine, B.A., University of Rochester, 1932, M.A., University of Rochester, 1933, Ph.D., University of Rochester, 1937. At Dartmouth since 1942. Bruce Winton Knight, A.lVI., Professor of Economics, B.S., University of Utah, 1921, At Dartmouth since 1921. Frederick J. Knights, Assistant Profes- sor of Industrial Engineering, B.S. in E.E., University of Nebraska, 19283 M.B.A., Norwthestern University, 1938. Thayer School. KI11gl1tS Laing Lambuth Lancaster Lattimore Levi Lindahl Liflksz 1 213 1 KHP1X'0Skl Kcglng Alexander Laing, Assistant Lihrariang A.B., Dartmouth, 192.5. AL Dartmouth since 1930. David Lambuth, AJ1., Professor of English, A.H., Yanderhilt 1'niversity, 1900. At Dartmouth since 1913. Walter Brackett Lancaster, M.D., D.Sc., Professor of Ophthalmologyg Chief of the Staff. The Eye Institute: AB., Harvard, 1884. At Dartmouth since 1910. Harold Hooker Lane, A.h1., Instructor in Astronomy, A.B., Dartmouth, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1937. Robert Edward Lang, Graduate Man- ager, Council on Student Organizations, AB., Dartmouth, 1938. At Dartmouth since 1938. Roy Higinbotham Lanphear, AAI., Professor of Greek and Latin, A.B., Dartmouth, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1928. Russell Raymond Larmon, Nl.C.S., A.hI., Professor of Administration on thc Benjamin Ames Kimball Foundation, A.B., Dartmouth, 1919. At Dartmouth since 1919. ,lens Fredrick Larson, All., L.1I.D., College Architect, All., Dartmouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1919. Churchill Pierce Lathrop, A.M., Professor of Art, Litt.B., Rutgers l'ni- versity, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1928. David Lattimore, A.hl., Professor of History, AAI., Dartmouth, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1922. Albert William Levi, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy, AB., Dart- mouth, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1935. Martin Lelioy Lindahl, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Economics, AB., Carleton College, 192-1. At Dartmouth since 1931. Arthur Linksz, BLD., Instructor in Ophthalmology, BLD., University of Kiel, Germany, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1939. Francis Aron Linville, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Economics, A.B., University of Missouri, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1934. hlaurice Frederic Longhurst, ALI., Professor of Music, B.IVIus., University of Leipzig, 1919. At Dartmouth since 1991. Frederic Pomeroy Lord, NLD., Profes- sor of Anatomy, hfledical School, A.B., Dartmouth, 1898. At Dartmouth since 191L George Alexander Lord, NLD., In- structor in Surgery, Medical School, A.B., Dartmouth, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1938. Fletcher Low, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, B.S., Dartmouth, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1917. Charles Julius Lyon, Ph.D., Professor of Botany, B.S., Middlebury College, 1918. At Dartmouth since 1990. James Dow hIcCallum, Ph.D., Profes- sor of English, A.B., Columbia Univer- sity, 1914. At Dartmouth since 1991. William Hill h1cCarter, ABI., Director of Athletics, A.B., Dartmouth 1910. At Dartmouth since 1991. Joseph lVIilton 1VIcDaniel, Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Economics, A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1994. At Dartmouth since 1930. Allan Houston lvlacdonald, A.iVI., Professor of English, A.B., Princeton University, 1994. At Dartmouth since 1995. Joseph Lee McDonald, A.1W., Professor of Economics, Professor of Foreign Trade, Tuck School, A.B., University of Indiana, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1993. Dayton David McKean, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of Public Speaking, A.B., University of Colorado, 19974 At Dart- mouth since 1937. John Bernard lVIcKenna, 1VI.D., Resi- dent Psychiatrist, Instructor in Physical Diagnosis and Clinical Neurology, Medi- Linville Longhurst Lord, F. P. Lord, G. A. McDonald McKean cal School, B.S., Providence College, 1994. At Dartmouth since 1937. Robert Addison NIcKennan, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, A.B., Dartmouth 1995. At Dartmouth since 1930. Duncan Archibald Nlcllarty, Ph.D., Instructor in Botany, B.A., University of Western Ontario, 1934. At Dartmouth since 1939. DeOrmand 1VIcLaughry, B.S., LL.B., Football Coach, B.S. Westminster Col- lege, 1915, LL.D. Northeastern Univer- sity. At Dartmouth since 1941. McKenna McKennan Andrew Hamilton 11IcNair, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Geology, A.B., University of Montana, 1931. At Dart- mouth since 1935. Leo Francis 1VIadi gan, NLS., Instructor in Physiological Optics, Rochester School of Optometry, 1995-97. At Dartmouth since 1999. Daniel lwarx, Jr., Instructor in Eco- nomics, A.B., Dartmouth, 1999. At Dartmouth since 1941. George Lowell Blason, Instructor in Physics, A.B., Bowdoin College, 1941. At Dartmouth since 1941. Mathewson Maynard Meneely Merrill Meservey Messer Minnicli Mohrenschildt M0ntg0me1'y Montsie I 914 l Morgan Morrison Lyon McCallum M C LOW C after McDaniel Alt1i'1lUll2ll1l MCLHTW MCLa11gl'1I'y McNair Madigan M arxl Mason Louis Clark Mathewson, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Mathematics, A.B., Albion Col- lege, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1914. William Doty Maynard, A.1VI., Pro- fessor of the Romance Languages, AB., Dartmouth, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1919. Alexander Howard 1VIeneely, Ph.D., Professor of History, A.B., University of Washington, 1921. At Dartmouth smce 1929. Francis Ellsworth Nlerrill, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Sociology, A.B., Dartmouth, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1935. Arthur Bond Meservey, B.S. COxon.D, Professor of Physics, A.B., Dartmouth, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1911. William Stuart hlesser, Ph.D., Daniel Webster Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, A.B., Columbia Univer- sity, 1905. At Dartmouth since 1919. Karl Benndorf Michael, Coach of Swimming, attended Dartmouth, 1925- 29. At Dartmouth since 1939. Ralph English Miller, 1VI.D., 1W.Se. in Path., Assistant Dean of the Medical School, Professor of Pathology, Medical School, B.S., Dartmouth, 1924. At Dart- mouth since 1928. Michael 1VIiller Milliken lwillle M0136 Muller Murch Murray I 215 1 Nathan Townley hlillikcn, BLD., In- structor in Physical Diagnosis ancl Merli- cine, Medical School, Medical Director CActingD: A.B., Yale, 1928. Ar Dart- mouth since 1936. John hlilne, Instructor in Physical Diagnosis and Medicine, A.B., Dart- mouth College, 19375 M.D., Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1910, D.N.B., Diplomate National Board, 1942, Medical Examiners, Medical School. At Dartmouth since 1942. John H. hlinnich, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, B.S., Dartmouth College, 1927, C.E., Thayer School of Civil Engineering, Dartmouth College, 1929. Thayer School. At Dartmouth since 1942. Dimitri S. von hlohrenschildt, Visiting Lecturer, Ph.B., Yale College, 1926, 1V1.A., Yale University, 1930, Ph.D., Columbia University, 1936. Richard Alan hlontgomery, Assistant in Physics, AB., University of British Columbia, 1910. At Dartmouth since 19-1-0. Warren Edward hlontsie, A.Al., Pro- fessor of French, B.S., Dartmouth, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1916. hlillett Granger Morgan, E.l-I., In- structor in Power Engineering, Thayer School, B.A., Cornell University, 1937. At Dartmouth since 1911. Hugh Sinclair llorrison, A.M., Pro- fessor of Art, B.S., Dartmouth, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1932. Stearns hlorse, AAI., Professor of English, A.B., Harvard University, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1923. Richard Kenneth Muller, Assistant in Engineering, Thayer School, B.S., Massachusetts State College, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1911. Leslie Ferguson Blurch, All., Pro- fessor of Physics, A.B., Colby College, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1915. William Henry hlurray, AAI., Pro- fessor of Modern Languag6S, Tuck School: ,-LB., Dartmouth, 1902. At Dartmouth since 1905. John Anthony Murtagh, lVI.D., In- Instructor in Otolaryngol0gY, Medical School, A.B., Brown University, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1938. Ray Nash, Lecturer in Art, A.B., Uni- versity of Oregon, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1937. John Vance Neale, A.lVI., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, A.B., University of lVIissouri, 1930. At Dart- mouth since 1934. Francis Joseph Neef, A.lN'I., Professor of German, Director of Personnel Bur- eau, Ph.B., University of Chicago, 1905. At Dartmouth since 1909. James Van Gundia Neel, Ph.D., In- structor in Zoology, A.B., College of VVooster, 1935. At Dartmouth since 1939. Royal Case Nemiah, Ph.D., Lawrence Professor of the Greek Language and Lite1'ature, A.B., Yale, 1912. At Dart- mouth since 1919. lVIax Alonzo Norton, Bursar of the College, B.S., Dartmouth, 1919. At Dart- mouth since 1920. Elliot Bradbury Noyes, Instructor in Physical Education, Coach of Freshman Track, A.B., Dartmouth, 1932. At Dart- mouth since 1935. Robert Richard O'Brien, Assistant in Philosophy, A.B., Dartmouth, 1940. At Dartmouth since 1941. Henry Sebastian Odbert, Ph.D., As- sistant Professor of Psychology, A.B., Dartmouth, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1934. Kenneth Neil Ogle, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Research in Physiological Optics, A.B., Colorado College, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1925. Richard Wagner Olmsted, C.F.., Assist- ant Superintendent of Buildings and Murtagh Nash Neale Neef Ogle Olmsted Grounds, A.B., Dartmouth, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1940. Artemas Packard, A.lVI., Professor of Art, A.B., Harvard University, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1924. Frederick Smyth Page, M.S., Professor of Botany, B.S., Dartmouth, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1915. John Pearson, A.lVI., Executive Director of The Eye Institute, A.B., Dartmouth, 1911. At Dartmouth since 1940. Lucien Dean Pearson, A.lW., Professor of English, A.B., Williams College, 1914. At Dartmouth since 1921. Packard Page Scott F. Pedley, Instructor in Medicine, A.B., Dartmouth College, 1936, M.D., New York University College of Medicine 1939. Nledical School. At Dartmouth since 1942. John Pelenyi, LL.D., Visiting Lecturer in Political Science, Consular Akademie, Vienna, 1907. At Dartmouth since 1941. Fred William Perkins, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, A.B., Harvard Univer- sity, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1927. Alvin Louis Pianca, A.lVI., Professor of Spanish, A.B., Dartmouth, 1923. At Dartmouth since 1925. Picard Pollng P0llaI'd Poole Porter Pressey Rayton Rice Richardson, J. P. Richardson, L. B. Riegel Robinson, K- A- l2161 Nemiah N 1 N t ' .. . . ee or on 505 05 U Rrien UKIIN.,-I Pearson, J. Pearson, L. D. Maurice Picard, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, A.B., Columbia College, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1929. Virgil Ellsworth Poling, Director of Student Workshop, B.S., Ohio State University, 1930. At Dartmouth since 19-10. Joseph Greeley Pollard, lVI.D., As- sistant Professor of Physical Education, Assistant Medical Director, BS., Dart- mouth, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1931. james Plummer Poole, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Botany, BS., University of l'Pedley Pelenyi Maine, 1912. At Dartmouth since 1922. LeRoy Gardner Porter, Assistant Bur- sar. At Dartmouth since 1917. William Benfield Pressey, A.lVI., Pro- fessor of English, A.B., Trinity College, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1919. Charles Albert Proctor, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Physics, A.B., Dartmouth, 19 00. At Dartmouth since 1907. Harry Leslie Purdy, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, A.B., University of British Columbia, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1929. Proctor Purdy Rand Raven Robinson, R. Robinson W. A. Roper Rosenstock-Huessy term Perkins Pianca .lohn Appleton Rand, Assistant Blan- ager, Dartmouth Outing Club, A.B., Dartmouth, 1938. At Dartmouth since 1939. Anton Adolph Raven, All., Professor of English, A.B., Rutgers College, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1919. Willis MacNair Rayton, Ph.D., As- sistant Professor of Physics, RB., Ham- ilton College, 1931. At Dartmouth since 1939. Lloyd Preston Rice, Ph.D., Professor of Economies, A.B., Wesleyan l'niver- sity, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1920. James Parmelee Richardson, A.M., LL.B., Parker Professor of Law and Political Science, A.B., Dartmouth, 1899. At Dartmouth since 1917. Leon Burr Richardson, A.M., Lill.D., Professor of Chemistry, I.itl.13., Dart- mouth, 1900. At Dartmouth since 1902. Robert Edgar Riegel, Ph.D., Professor of History, A.B., Carroll College, 1919. At Dartmouth since 1929. Kenneth Allan Robinson, A.hl., Pro- fessor of English, A.B., Bowdoin College, 1914. At Dartmouth since 1910. Robin Robinson, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, A.B., Dartmouth, 1921-. At Dartmouth since 1928. William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science, A.B., Row- doin College, 1907. At Dartmouth since 1919. Kenneth Lawrence Roper, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmology, ILS., Creighton University, 1929. At Dart- mouth sincc 19-11. Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy, Ph.D., Professor of Social Philosophy, J.U.D., Heidelberg, 1909. At Dartmouth since 1935. Harold Goddard Rugg, A.lN'l., Assistant Librarian, Lecturer in Art, A.B., Dart- mouth, 1906. At Dartmouth since 1906. Lauren lVliller Sadler, Assistant Pro- fessor of Physical Education, B.S., Dart- mouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1928. Paul Sample, A.hfI., Artist in Residence, Assistant Professor of Art, B.S., Dart- mouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1938. Harry William Sampson, Instructor in Physical Education, BS., Dartmouth, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1923. Charles Wesley Sargent, A.lNI., Pro- fessor of Accounting, Tuck School, A.B., Dartmouth, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1930. Ford Kent Sayre, Manager of the Han- over Inn, A.B., Dartmouth, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1936. Andrew Jackson Scarlett, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Chemistry, A.B., Dartmouth, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1911. Stephan Johann Schlossmacher, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of German, Kaiser Wilhelm Gymnasium, Cologne, Germany, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1930. George W. Schoenhut, Acting Techni- cal Director. B.A., Lehigh University, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1942. George Lebbeaus Scott, A.M., As- sistant Professor of Education, A.B., Dartmouth, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1940. James Lang Scott, A.M., Professor of German, A.B., Swarthmore, 1926. At Dartmouth since 1927. Herbert Rudolf Sensenig, Ph.D., As- sistant Professor of German, B.S., Dart- mouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1932. David Austin Shand, Instructor in Music, A.B., University of Utah, 1936. At Dartmouth since 1941. Rugg Sadler Sample Sampson Scott, J. L. Sensenig Harry Farran Rance Shaw, A.lVI., Pro- fessor of Economics, A.B., Toronto Uni- versity, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1924. Earl Ray Sikes, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, A.B., Trinity College, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1922. Louis Lazare Silverman, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Mathematics, A.B., Harvard University, 1905. At Dartmouth since 1918. Elmer Emanuel Smead, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of Political Science, A.B., Shand Shaw University of Akron, 1927. At Dart- mouth since 1934. Ross Stagner, Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Psychology? B.A., Washington University, St. Louis, 1929. At Dart- mouth since 1939. ,Iohn Barker Stearns, Ph.D., Professor of Greek and Latin, A.B., Dartmouth, 1916. At Dartmouth since 1927. Wayne Edson Stevens, Ph.D., Profes- sor of History, A.B., Knox College, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1921. Stewart, C. C. Stewart, C. C., III Stewart, W. K. Stilwell Stoiber Stgne, C, l i i T: '. ' . - .. w - , , . UUCP 'l csrtau 'l hcriault 1 hompson Tidd Truxal I 218-1 Sargent Sayre Scarlett Schlossmacher Schocnhut 5,-UU gg. I , Sikes Silverman Colin Campbell Stewart, Ph.D., Brown Professor of Physiology tAlso in Medical Schooljg A.B., University of Toronto, 1894. At Dartmouth since 1904. Colin Campbell Stewart, III, M.D., M.Sc. in Ped., Assistant Professor of Physical Diagnosis and Pediatrics, Medi- cal School: A.B., Dartmouth, 1923. At Dartmouth since 1931. William Kilborne Stewart, A.lW., Pro- fessor of Comparative Literature: A.B., University of Toronto, 1897. At Dart- mouth since 1899. Lewis Dayton Stilwell, A.1W., Professor Smead Stagner of History, A.B., Amherst College, 1913. At Dartmouth since 1916. Richard Edwin Stoiher, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of Geology: A.B., Dart- mouth, 1932. At Dartmouth since 1935. Charles Leonard Stone, A.M., Pro- fessor of Psychology: A.B., Dartmouth, 1917. At Dartmouth since 1917. Donald LeRoy Stone, J.D., Professor of Political Science: Professor of Business Law, Tuck Schoolg Ph.B., Brown Uni- versity, 1909. At Dartmouth since 1924. Leslie Kenneth Sycamore, NLD., Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Ro- l l Stone, D. L. Sycamore Syvertsen Tamb Tryon Twining Tyson Unger 12191 C. Stearns Stevens cntgenology, Medical School: B.S., Dart- mouth, 1924. At Dartmouth since 1931. Rolf Christian Syvertscn, BLD., Sec- retary of the Medical School: Professor of Anatomy, Medical School: B.S., Dart- mouth, 1918. At Dartmouth since 1921. .loseph William Tanch, Ph.D., Profes- fessor of Physics: B.S., Acadia l'niver- sity, 1912. At Dartmouth since 1919. Radford Chapple Tanzcr, BLD., In- structor in Surgery, Medical School: B.S., Dartmouth, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1939. Charles Monroe Tesreau, Assistant Professor of Physical Education. At Dartmouth since 1919. George French Theriault, Instructor in Sociology: A.B., Dartmouth, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1936. James B. Thompson, lnstructor in Ge- ology: A.B., Dartmouth College, 1942. At Dartmouth since 1942. Joseph Shepard Tidd, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Botany: BS., Dartmouth, 1928. At Dartmouth since 1929. Andrew Gehr Truxal, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology: A.B., Franklin and Marshall College, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1928. Rolla M. Tryon, jr., lnstructor in Botany: B.S., University of Chicago, 1937: Ph.M., University of Wisconsin, 1938: M.A., Harvard University, 1940: Ph.D., Harvard lfniversity, 1941. At Dartmouth since 1942. Ralph H. Twining, Jr., Assistant in Chemistry: A.B., Dartmouth College, 1942. At Dartmouth since 1942. DI. Dawson Tyson, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery, Medical School: M.D., Yale, 1927. At Dartmouth since 1935. William Byers Unger, Ph.D., Professor of Zoology: A.B., Western Maryland College, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1925. Thomas Hume Vance, Ph.D., Assist- ant Professor of English, A.B., Yale, 1929. At Dartmouth since 1940. Alberto Vazquez, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages, A.B., University of Idaho, 1925. At Dartmouth since 1935. Robert Llewellyn Veres, Instructor in Physical Education, A.B., Dartmouth, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1938. Leon Verriest, A.lYl., Professor of French, AAI., University of Indiana, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1922. Harold Edward Washburn, A.h'l., Pro- fessor of Frenchg A.B., Dartmouth, 1910. At Dartmouth since 1919. William Randall Waterman, Ph.D., Professor of Historyg Ph.B., Brown University, 1915. At Dartmouth since 1921. Ernest Bradley Watson, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of English, A.B., Dartmouth, 1902. At Dartmouth since 1923. T Richard Lee Weaver, Ph.D., B aturalistg B.S., Pennsylvania State College, 1933. At Dartmouth since 1938. Harry Richmond Welhnan, A.lVI., Professor of hlarketing, Tuck Schoolg A.B., Dartmouth, 1907. At Dartmouth since 1919. Vance Vazquez Wheelwright White Herbert Faulkner West, A.M., Pro- fessor of Comparative Literature, A.B. Dartmouth, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1924. Philip Wheelwright, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophyg A.B., Princeton Univer- sity, 1921. At Dartmouth since 1937. Veres Verriest Widmayer Wilde Elliot Adams White, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Englishg A.B., Harvard University, 1912. At Dlrtmouth since 1920. Charles Edward Widmayer, Director of the News Servieeg A.B., Dartmouth, 1930. At Dartmouth since 1932. i Q WOOII, G. C- W00d, W. H- Woods Woodworth Wright 1 , I J-fi ., i ' ,- ,, 2 .M JL, Professor Schlossmaker chuckles in German lVIorning Al says Charles yvidmayel., to Albert Dickeyggn maui I D I- Washburn Wlaterman lYatson weaver ' woumll H wt. ul Wilder Vililliams, H. B. VVilliams, J. R. Wvilson, A. M. Wilson, C. L. Wing-tsit Charles Edward Wilde, jr., Instructor in Zoologyg A.B., Dartmouth, 1940. At Dartmouth since 1940. Charles Edward Wilder, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Mathematicsg A.B., Harvard University, 1912. At Dartmouth since 1922. llcnry Beates Williams, Instructor in English and Technical Director of the Playersg Yale School of Drama, 1931. .-it Dartmouth since 1931. John Robert Williams, Ph.D., Profes- sor of History, A.B., Dartmouth, 1920. At Dartmouth since 1926. Arthur lVIcCandless Wilson, Ph.D., Professor of Biography, A.B., Yankton College, 1922. At Dartmouth since 1933. Carl Louis Wilson, Ph.D., Professor of Botany, A.B., University of Denver, 1919. At Dartmouth since 1924. Chan Wing-tsit, Visiting Lecturerg A.B., Lingnan University, 19245 A.M., Har- vard University, 19273 Ph.D., Harvard University, 1929. George Campbell Wood, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Italiang AB., Harvard Univer- sity, 1916. At Dartmouth since 1920. William Hamilton Wood, B.D., Ph.D., Phillips Professor of liilmlieal llistory and Literatureg All., Pniversity of Toronto, 1901. At Dartmouth since 1917. Erville Bartlett Woods, Ph.D., l,.ll.ll., Professor of Sociology: .X.li., lleloit, Col- lege, 1901. At Dartmouth since 1911. George Wfalter Wbodwortll, Ph.D., Professor of Banking and Statistics, Tuck School: AB., Kansas Wesleyan University, 192-1-. At Dartmouth since 1930. William Kelley Wright, Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Philosophyg AB., liniversity of Chicago, 1899. At Dartmouth since 1910. XY ll ntlev, Director of the Players, Professor D-ir ' ' ' f 0- tt i' Professor John arner e . 4 gan of the Engl 'h De artment Retired, but not or o en .a n ' I ' . in his study? lb p Mecklin, formerly of tilae bociology Department ready for action f221l A Good Thing To Remember . . THE C0-OP Our Business is to Satisfy Dartmouth men CLOTHING v Hart Schaffner 81 Marx, Varsity-Town Suits 0 Bostonian Shoes 0 Manhattan Shirts SPORTING GOODS 0 Famous Dartmouth Skis and 6'Kandahar Bindings 0 Wilson and Spalding Guaranteed Equipment THE C0-OP DON,T FORGET YOUR 102, MEMBERSHIP DISCOUNT Memorief 0 Dartmouth . . that lam' HISTORY OF DARTMOUTH LEON BURR RICHARDSON ELEAZAR WHEELOCK JAMES Dow MCCALLUM SAMSON ORCUTT-BIOGRAPHY OF AN INDIAN PREACHER HAROLD BLODGETT I DARTMOUTH SONGBOOK ETCHINGS OF THE COLLEGE BUILDINGS ALICE STAND1s1-1 BUELL Dartmouth Bookstore A. D. STORRS On the Corner THE OLD DARTMDUTH HALL CHAIR Order today from: GEORGE W. RAND 8: SON Price .... 513.50 F. o. B. Factory Be sure to remember That Hanover is your second home and the Inn is your own uclubn when- ever you are back in town. That we will keep our buffet suppers going and it is one time when you can have all the food you can eat. That we would love to have you bring your bride here and we will welcome her with flowers and give you a room facing the campus. N 1 f ' . L '- 5, 3 N N ' A af'- -3 553 gala 1-mai-:JS H 3 333 K 1 ,Z ro .,-.1 ,I-:fi , -- ,:'f- ' -P.. gf? T o i a m I nz .A HW - rip , A .-:'- is ff' ' ' gf' I ,-, ,ff D. ' . .13-H Q...-1'. . Elllhhi :rg -e '- 15 E FP: ,R . 1: 5 ,vi M0 cglwltffag fwwizaf gn Q I ' msuailh -'gli 'Mt - - .-llc 5 . 7 v H,.,, THE HANOVER INN Tux jl ff 5 fn ' i D, ly .F 1 I Q ga,- 1 1 H T17 f HN lun N A l W HURK TIES- . .Aix ln! P O I vw M Winner 'Wa HH' Q .92 :Qi ,Z L QW 5 1 +-. rug-5 . 1, -...4 --Qi :X ' we 'I if rfzefnflfr Q , ,,.IilA-v ug gy:-'H NJ '.... ,. ., : 1 'VR .J u . 32. af wwf' uf21, Y. W H ,jafzu dl? 'mr , 'mmf VA K rf! L rr!! V 'ww 1 I' ' A,' C Y ' if , N riff' 1' W I . ,.. . sq. . MA., v 1 .. I THANK YOU 943 IN SINCERE APPRECIATION FOR YOUR VALUED I PAT- RONAGE, WE THANK YOU, 7431 IT HAS BEEN OUR PLEASURE TO SERVE YOU . . . . AS IT ALWAYS WILL BE..1i Serrygs DARTMOUTH CLOTHIERS SINCE 1907 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS Of 1943 EIVIERSON GARDENS Compliments of TANZI BROTHERS and MORGAN A. SIVIITH Dealers in Fruits, Vegetables and Grocerles Q23 DROP DOWN TO FLETCHER'S FOR 0 SMOKES 0 SCHOOL SUPPLIES 0 GUNS 0 RADIOS 0 LAUNDRY SERVICE 0 CLEANING AND PRESSING AT THE ALLEN ST. CORNER artmouth National Bank of Hanov 81' NIEN OF DARTNIOUTH HAVE HAD CHECKING ACCOUINTS I-IlyCEdgt hld E R Cl C N Bt D dC Cl W M HERE SINCE 1865 errill, A I tC I C mmercialD p Over S1 500 000 I Pull tVPdt tl Nlb f Fed lDp t I Cpt When Ifs Eating Time In Hanover . . .Visit C ,.,, .. A , ,.!,. ,, 3 ,U W., . Y I I f ff, H .Ut I r , , ,I JK, f j if . ff F ' Wir' f:f'3'ff:i ieii 'fi E A I A E I V' , J z,j,, Qff,Wi:, f W, RQ, Q ' - 1. Ani f Nikki, .vf ' i f . .at ,pf I - . ',, ttf' , ' wi 2 , .f . ..y.., 4 7 'Q time I - N 7 V I'-H? I ' I 'i'i -' ' V X' ' TE- FQ V :AWN , iwxfffw XXI ' 'Q' xeffff- -A iff R -,-,1. - XL' ' 4:5 RQ 1, if ' , .154 A ,iftfw-Qf'hg,. E:.215r fi --XJXX A54 'A , ,f, WN: XWCMI ' . ' A 1' n fx 'Q - if nwwgfmti, f 1 f f,,f I M 1 , ' f- 1' 1' v-4' 'IL 4417 gem-g , xi 'Qu X ',jA,5 WW ' A V ' ' 4 .zb 'R s,'. 'fi.f'zf V ffw-QQ ,Vffmvf h ,ggi W tx W . , 'fa jf. 1,3 ..QNl,f ff , K V? Zi? , S ' '75, Xzfffmfgf, . ,V ,153 . ' m .II UII bff f 4 y-J' ff,r'Wf7' Q if .fiiit IC-' E' - ' 'CJ' -'Eu If at xg, V, Ig u t .. 5 ,L.:-Kari' K., 2 A K H-...,, Y, - ,, Q 5 .. i' 1 .. g' ' ' ,...,,L, X.e. . 3l , ,-1, k - 1 A I f' A 4 .fig A mfg: ,, A f ff M, I A V E , - ,,4f'Nf'!iffS 3'f'f??4'rfvC' f V 'iii ' , I THAYER HALL DARTMOUTI-I DINING ASSOCIATION DARTIVIOUTH INFORIVIALITY Combined with . . . CITY MERCHANDISINC makes COBURN'S the ideal headquarters for Dartmouth jewelry and gift shopping. V COBURIVS JEWELRY STORE DEAR 74395, IT HAS BEEN A PLEASURE TO KNOW AND SERVE YOU. BEST OF LUCK IN THE YEARS TO COME. Sincerely, STAN HARRIGAN 0 COLLEGE SUPPLIES 0 ROOM FURNISHINGS 0 RECREATION FIVE AND TEN BOWLING GREEN Q24 M o 'F9i'Qf:,?lOX I- 'lflll , Hrlz Z ..., X x ' TW' .WN fl, nf ,lg 0 Y ,xf,ff'l'f: H, ull W HEEH ppilllla l Don't stop until the Whistle blows But always play the gameg For when the One Great Scorer Comes to mark your name He Writes-not that you Won or lost+ y But how you played the Game. 1 Crantlancl Rice GEORGE HIGGINS ll.A.PlfJ'VrE1li 1943 Aegis Photographer G L2251 mf BEST WISHES 'Dartmouth 5 clozfhzer '1 :: C L A S S 0 F 1 9 4 3 SW 1905 Your patronage has me Fafjpien coiuzcis SUPPLY sions Andover Press, The . James Campion . . Coburn,s Jewelry Store College Supply Store , Co-op, The . . . Dartmouth Bookstore . Dartmouth Dining Association . Dartmouth National Bank Emerson Gardens . Index to Advertisers . Q28 Five and Ten Bowling Green. . . Q24 Fletchefs . A .... . 223 , 226 . 224 Hanover Inn, The . . . 222 . Q26 George Higgins . . . . 295 . 292 Howard-Wesson Company . . 227 222 George W. Rand 8z Son . . Q29 QQLL Serry,s ..... . 9923 223 Morgan A. Smith . . Q23 . 223 Tanzi Brothers . . Q23 12961 .1 -W...--..,., '- ,, .w.......,,,,+,, y. A f' . Q - -. . , . ....- x 1 Yxw W 7 x x' K 3 V ,, .f,.y,'g.. . I 4 S Q 4 V X , 1 f I y,f, ., ,X , 1 'xi'3J ify, - '- x gwfm , A wh ff, 1 , , , , 4 ff J 1 :ff I I A 1 KP I , w - A f ,v f . ff , , ,xx A I z f 1 A I f .,.uM fu- ,, wx, , f M, QQ7 I HICH is the easiest on your eyes? For art in printing if not the way Of wild extraoagauce, weird dirplay, But rather the unohtrurioe thrall Of type that gioef you no .chock at all, But draw: your get to the page with zen And holds your mind to the thought expre.r.red,' We mutt keep ourfeloef to thi: .ruuple creed, Type was made-and if meant-to READ! QQ Because intelligent men and women spend a good part of their lives reading the printed word, the question of easyreadability of type is no mere academic one. But since no two people see type through the same pair of eyes, this has been a diflicult question to answer. For people as a whole there may be no answer. t Perhaps it is only as people are divided into age groups that a solution is possible. A type which is easy to read during childhood may not be the most legible during middle or old age. In an attempt to solve this problem, Carl P. Rollins of the Yale University Press conducted a University Type Test Poll in the following eight colleges and universities: Louisiana State, Mills, Amherst, Princeton, Harvard, Simmons, Syracuse, and Pennsylvania. The results of this poll show that of the twelve type selections submitted, Garamond, Scotch, and Baskerville were preferred in that order. That this firm should have had flne versions of these three distinguished book faces for some years previous to the test indicates that We had foreseen' and met the preferences of our college clients even before those preferences became articulate. THE ANDOVER PRESS - ffipriuters IN ANDOVER - MASSACHUSETTS of the 1943 Aegis? Thir aduertirement if t z Je 'n Garamond roman, italic, and hold. l 228 l A u 5 z f ,, JS ,', ,,,, i 1 1? '4 Y f' v ' 1 .I ' 2,1 N if I Zin Memoriam CLASS OF 1943 BRUCE TAYLOR CUNNINGHAM REMSEN HENRY RITCH CREGO JOHN ARMANDE FERRIS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The 1943 AEGIS stall Wishes to thank publicly all those individu- als and organizations Who have taken an interest in the success of this book. It is not from mere routine or tradition that We specially mention the gracious assistance of many members of the College Administra- tion. Our thanks are said with sincere feeling, for many have been the times when they have inconvenienced themselves to aid us. Certainly the Hrst editor of this volume, David T. Eckels, VM, Who created many of the original ideas in this book, deserves particu- lar mention. , On the professional side the AEGIS extends grateful thanks to Mr. Dino Valz of the Andover Press who Worked so industriously and cooperatively with Mr. Milton Fitch and Miss Dorothy Cooper of the HOW3I'd-WCSSOH Co., our engravers, to meet the speeded-up printing schedule of this, the 1943 AEGIS. CHARLES Fox ,M Editor-in-Chief, 1943 AEGIS M301 -XZ AcknowledgITlClltS - Aegis, The . . .Xlpha Delta Phi . Alpha Kappa Kappa Ambas Americas . . Athletic Council . Bait and Bullet . Band .... Barbary Coast . Baseball, Varsity . Beta Theta Pi . . Vasque and Gauntlet Chi Phi .... Class of 1944 . Class of 1945 . Class of 1946 . . Council on Student Organizations . . . Cross-Country, Varsity . . . . Dartmouth Broadcasting System . . Dartmouth Christian Union . . Dartmouth Outing Club Dartmouth, The . Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta . . Delta Upsilon . Dragon . . Faculty . . . Football, Varsity . Forensic Union . French Club . . Gamma Delta Chi German Club . Glee Club . . Golf, V arsit.y . Green Book, The Green Collegians . Green Key . T Handel Society . . Interdormitory Council Index 230 46 125 124 74 90 77 62 67 92 126 121 127 194 197 201 56 98 54 70 78 48 128 129 130 120 206 100 71 76 131 72 64 99 52 66 42 68 44 mem Intcrfraternity Council lnterfraternity Treasur Intramurals . . . Jack-O-Lantern . . Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Sigma . . Ledyard Canoe Club Nledical School . . Natural History Club Palaeopitus . . Phi Beta Kappa . Phi Delta Theta . Phi Gamma Delta A Phi Kappa Psi . Phi Sigma Kappa . Pi Lambda Phi . Players, The , . Post-VV ar Council . Press Club . . Psi Upsilon . Rowing Club . Seniors .... Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi . . . Sigma Nu . . . Sigma Phi Epsilon . Soccer, Varsity . Sphinx . . . Spanish Club . . Tennis, Varsity . Thayer School . Theta Chi . . Theta Delta Chi Tuck School Tuck-Thayer . V igilantes . . Yacht Club . Zeta Psi . ers' Council 122 122 110 50 132 133 85 193 84 40 118 134 135 136 137 138 58 69 53 139 86 147 140 141 142 143 108 119 75 96 193 144 145 192 193 43 88 146 4 2 E 1 l S I 5 'f I :, l if 1 if I il 5 91 l iN V I. .5 E2 l FN r V , 5, r f s i 1 I I F V1 Y : l 1 1 1 I I l i i 1 X n 1 I Q i 1. 4 I 1 3 , , 1 ' 5 4 Q I :li . ,l 1 4 1 .fm v ,Q-A-. ... -.. 71 ,,. 5 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 E 1 1 1 1 1- '1 ,. ' 1 1 1 N , ,43 3, , 21 . . '1 --...--K . V iw: K if 1 I r 1 .e x 4 X .x ' X -.X 1. I 4 5 l a ? 1 8 5 l ' 2 1 1 1 1 5 4 5 l E V 5 1 1 5 f 'E 1' i' A 1 154' f :V I 1 7


Suggestions in the Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) collection:

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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