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■MM THE NINETEEN FORTY-TWO HJ .. TWO HARVARD SENIOR ALBUM HARRY NEWMAN JR. Chairman DAVID R. ROBERTS Business Manager JOHN P. BUNKER Literary Editor JOHN A. HOLABIRD JR. Art Editor FRANCIS D. PASTORIUS Advertising Manager HARVEY P. SLEEPER JR. Photographic Editor HOWARD W. YOUNG Feature Editor 1942 ALBUM JR. IUS K PRESIDENT JAMES BRYANT CON ANT A.B., Ph.D., LL.D., L.H.D., S.D., D.C.L. President PRESIDENT EMERITUS ABBOTT LAWRENCE LOWELL Ph.D.. LL.D., L.H.D., LL.B.. Litl.D.. D.P.D. President, Emerilm The Class of 1942 will be remembered as the last Harvard class to graduate in conformity with a plan of educa- tion which has been followed for more than a quarter of a century. Although some of its members left the university during the senior year for war service, and although the faculty has suffered some diminution in numbers from the same cause, most of the men in 1942 have been able to carry through the program of study which they had planned. To the members of future classes, who will find their opportunities for the leisurely pursuit of knowledge hampered by accelerated programs and a steadily shrinking faculty, the lot of 1942 will surely seem enviable. It may indeed be questioned whether the college will ever return to a schedule of two terms a year and a long summer vacation. The Class of 1942 leaves college for a world which faces what seem almost insoluble problems, but for the in- dividual, the immediate future presents only one question: what can I do to contribute most to the war effort and the peace which must follow? That the members of the class may find a satisfying answer to this question and to the many others that will confront them is the wish of all members of the faculty. GEORGE H. CHASE, Dean of the University University CORPORATION It took the young college, Harvard, only 14 years to learn that a small group must be responsible for administra- tion. The Board of Overseers, while fitted for more general decisions, was unwieldy, or unwilling to attend to the details of administration. In 1650, therefore, President Dunster petitioned the General Court for a charter. The charter set up the Corporation, a small and efficient group to supplement the Overseers. The First Colledge Booke, containing the minutes of the Corporation ' s first meetings, gives some idea of the scope of its powers. In these early days the Corporation seems to have been much concerned with the behaviour of the stu- dents. No schollar shall take Tobacco unlesse permitted by ye President with ye consent of their parents and guardians on good reason given by a Physitian. Freshmen shall not at any time be compelled by any Senior students to goe on errands or doe any servile work for them. Students wearing long hair after the manner of Ruffians and Barbarous Indians were to be disciplined. There is evidence that as far back as the seventeenth century the college was having biddy trouble. Concluded by the Corporation . . . that old Mary bee yet connived at to bee in the Colledge with a charge to take heed to doe her worke, undertake, to give content to the Colledge students. Under the heading Methods to Prevent Disorders at Commencements is ruled: Commencers not to have more than one gallon of wine. As a final example of thorough supervision, there ap- pears a searching inventory of the kitchen equipment, com- plete even to 1 old knife, verie rustie and 2 jugges, with- out lids battered. The make-up and powers of the Corporation have not changed in three centuries. It consists of five Fellows, the President, and the Treasurer. Three of the present Fellows live near Boston and two in New York, and, with the excep- tion of Dr. Roger I. Lee, all are lawyers. To a great extent the Corporation ' s procedure is informal and takes the form of dis- cussion followed by definite votes. The Corporation initiates all university legislation. In some cases its decisions are The Corporation plans general university policy, and has a mountain of detail to attend to ; seventeenth final, and in other instances, such as the appointment of in- structors, the consent of the Board of Overseers is necessary. The Corporation has complete legal and financial responsibility for the university, and, hence, a considerable part of the time at the bi-monthly meetings is spent in consid- ering business matters. The Treasurer has charge of the invest- ments which the Corporation has undertaken, subject to the authority of the finance committee. Long lists of gifts to the university have to be acknowledged at each meeting; specific appropriations for proposed projects — for a new House, or an expedition to Mt. Sinai — must be considered, and all de- partmental budgets approved. With increasing expenses of operation and decreasing revenue from bonded interests, the Corporation has had to introduce the 10 per cent budget cut, and the Corporation will have to determine how to meet the needs of all university employees, for whom living expenses have doubled with no increase in salary. But the powers of the Corporation extend far beyond mere financial control. It is the Corporation ' s duty to make all appointments on the basis of recommendations from the Deans. The approval of the Board of Overseers is required in the case of all instructors for terms of over one year. The Corporation also grants degrees, again with the consent of the Overseers, and appoints all holders of scholarships and fellowships. The Corporation, then, has a mountain of detail to attend to, but always the most important function is the plan- ning of general university policy. It was the Corporation ' s decision when, a few hours after the declaration of war with Japan, the university ' pledged its resources without reserva- tion ' to the country ' s war effort. The complete adjustment of program now under way is the Corporation ' s responsibility. HENRY L. SHATTUCK A.B.. I.L.B., LI.. r — Follow ROGER I. LEE AH.. MI).— Fellow HENRY JAMES A II . II. H. I.I. 1). Follow WIMIAM H CLAFLIN J S 11 ORENVII.I.E CLARK II. I I II Mb CHARLES A. COOLIDGE IK II . I.I. II Follow JEROME D. GREENE l . I I ii ■nrtury 4 i r UNIVERSITY DEANS GEORGE H. CHASE, Ph.D., L.H.D., I.itt.D. Dean of the University, John E. Hudson Professor of Archeology and Curator of Classical Antiquities For all Freshmen the drab gray, ivy hung walls of University Hall house something between the Lords of Creation, moving the moving finger, and an awesome In- quisition, weighing the Chosen and the Damned. Slowly, however, this terror is calmed, and these perfectly human men become no more fearful than prep school headmasters. University Hall contains a tight, intertwining hierarchy directing the activities and futures of faculty and students alike. Meeting each Tuesday morning as a group, the Chap- ter, (the deans and their assistants) , mulls over problems of the university, and then in the afternoon Deans Hanford and Leighton present unsolved questions to the Administrative Board, an elected group of the faculty. The faculty room, lined with portraits of past administrators of Harvard, is the site of these meetings. The three king-pins of the Deans ' office are the Dean of the University, of the College, and of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. First is George H. Chase, John E. Hudson Professor of Archeology, whose offices are actually in Mass Hall next door to President Conant. Dean of the College is A. Chester Hanford, Professor of Government, whose domain is the college proper, the core of the university. To the posi- tion of Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences this year came Paul H. Buck, Professor of History and formerly Assist- ant Dean of the Faculty. He succeeded William S. Ferguson in February and thus became the third manager of tenure and budgets since the Class of 1942 was in college. The first was George D. Birkhoff, whom Dean Ferguson replaced. On the third floor of University Hall is conceived the undergraduate ' s first impression of Deans There, under the firm hand of Delmar Leighton, Dean of Freshmen, exists PAUL H. BUCK, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Professor of History ALFRED C. HANFORD, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean of Harvard College, Professor of Government SARGENT KENNEDY 8.M., M.B.A. Assistant Dean of Harvard College HENRY CHAUNCEY, A.B. Assistant Dean of Harvard College F. SKIDDY VON STADE, A. B. AMbtant Dean of Harvard College wis of ards of me In- Slowly, lumen S. ierarchy students lediap- )lems of ford and listrative ty room, id, is the the Dean f of Arts Hudson in Mass the posi- this year ly Assist- Ferguson :enure and e first was I. ceived the ere, under len, exists a miniature bureaucracy of assistant baby deans and attractive, mark-knowing secretaries. But the average Fresh- man never climbs those stairs until the customary spring summons, except to get his grades or to discuss probation or scholarships. Sophomore year, students are moved down- stairs, and, in addition to being assigned to an appropriate assistant dean, receive their marks from the office of Assistant Dean Reginald H. Phelps. For many students the Deans ' office, like prayer, is a place to turn to when in trouble. Long and varied is the list of services the deans have performed for worried under- graduates. They will deal with angry civil authorities, listen to all kinds of complaints, try to solve any kind of problem, but they never hesitate to punish sternly and thoroughly at the proper time. Their knowledge of the records and move- ments of each student is fantastic and creditable for any gestapo, despite the fact that it is all received through official channels. The usual toll has been taken of the Class of 1942 by Deans ' office standards. Nine hundred and fifty-eight stu- dents entered as Freshmen in the fall of 1938, but by the fol- lowing November only 782 of those were left. Supplemented by additions, the class as sophomores totaled 938 plus 65 dropped Freshmen. As juniors ' 42 had 694 of its charter members and a total registration of 824. Last fall there were 648 of the originals left with enough outsiders to make an even 700. There were, moreover, 69 dropped juniors, 19 dropped sophomores, and six dropped Freshmen. Be- tween November of senior year and March 24, 57 members of the class had left for the war, a total of 8.1 percent of the 700 registered in the fall. Some of these had received their degrees early and others had, impatiently or forced by the draft, left without one. CHALRES S. BURWELL A.B., M.D., LL.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Research Professor of Clinical Medicine JAMES McC. LANDIS A.B., LL.B., S.J.D. Dean of the Faculty of Law and Professor of Legislation LAWRENCE S. MAYO, A M. Associate I r)Wi of the (Irailinilc Schools of Arts and Sciences WALLACE B. DONHAM A.B., LL.B. Dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration and George Fisher Baker Professor of Business Economics DELMAR LEIGHTON A. It , M.B.A. Dean of Freshmen in Harvard College, Instructor in Economics REGINALD H. PHELPS AH., KM. AKfiNlunt Dean of Harvard OoUogQ and Secretary of the Faculty of Art anil Science and aWrtMl in History und in German itoH {12} GIORGI t. PLIMPTON n. 1 1. it k m u d mf Dtaa of Mbt   H CoIWp JOHN McP. RUSSELL, til Anwlant to ill- l r«-.el. i. WILLARD L. 8PERRY MA , l l Daaa of the i noni ■ofaoot, Plum- ii„ r l ' r.,le .r of f ' hri ' liaii Morula, and Prnfraaaor of Homdclirw 4 r HAROLD M. WESTBRGAARD I ' ll 1) , I h BttQ . Dm Tm ii . H l l)i '  ii of tin Ortthttt Befaool • ( lEiiilii— ring Gordon MoKay Pro- ffMMir of fit il FfllfJlUMllH. nii ' l ( ' hmrmnti ol the I  i|mrlin ii( of I EflgtMl nun S« ii ' iipp ARTHUR P. WHITTEM ■!in ..f spurn! Students, Director i.f Ualvendty ExtonaioSi wd Amo- nii profoBMW  f RomuuM L n fttflfOI OFFICERS OF D. W. BAILEY CAPT. G. N. BARKER RAYMOND BENNETT COL. DONIAT C. W. DUHIG R. M. GUMMERE Publication Agent Professor of Naval Science Graduate Secreta ry, Phillips Professor of Military Science Director of Student Chairman of the Committee Brooks House and Tactics Employment on Admissions ATHLETICS W. J. BINGHAM Director of Physical Education and Athletics N. W. FRADD Assistant Director of Physical Education C. F. GETCHELL Assistant to the Director of Athletics F. O. LUNDEN Assistant to the Director of Athletics A. W. SAMBORSKI Director of Intramural Athletics C. B. VAN WYCK Secretary to the Department of Physical Education MAINTENANCE R. B. JOHNSON Superintendent of the Maintenance Division G. K. SAURWEIN Superintendent of tfie Engineering Division J. R. STEWART Superintendent of Caretakers Many of the operations connected with university life are carried on so smoothly that the student body is not conscious of the vast machinery of administration that makes it possible. The men responsible for the efficiency with which the university is operated often do not receive recognition. The duties of a number of the officers allow them to become acquainted with the undergraduate — we all know Bill Bingham, Ray Dennett, Dr. Bock, and Dr. Gummere — but many are known to us by name only, or by their pictures in the Album. The operation of a large institution requires an enormous amount of work not directly connected with academic instruction. It is the men on this page, the officers of administration, who direct most of their efforts to helping the student to function more efficiently. Much of their extra-academic administration is devoted to maintaining the health of the student. The men in the Athletic Department try to give him the exercise ■{14} The fall of the academic axe is imminent Most university records are kept here l MINISTRATION D. M LITTLE Secretary to the f Diversity Master of Adams House J. W. LOWES Financial Vice-President DUMAS MALONE Director of the Harvard University Press W. G. MORSE Purchasing Agent R. V. PERRY Bursar ARTHUR WILD Director of the University News Office LIBRARY K. D. METCALP Librarian of Harvard College T. F. CURRIER Ajaooistt Librarian of Han ani College R. H. HAYNES Assistant Librarian of Harvard College W. A. JACKSON Assistant Librarian of Harvard College C. A. MAHADY Supcrinlt ' iuifiit of the Reading Koom C. E. WALTON A.s.ms taut Librarian of Harvard College MEDICAL A. V. BOCK A. W. CONTRATTO F. A. SIMMONS AOGOSTUS THORNDIKE K uln.r IWaaur IMivinaii ill tlir I f ' |mrtiin-ut Amistaut Uurgica! Adviwr SurKi ' uli ill t In- Depart inrtit • ( Mvcuttw (if HyKli ' lK ' of llyKJi-hc necessary to keep him in condition. The Hygiene Department also aims to prevent illness; but, when a man is ill, they do everything to restore him as quickly as possible to normal. There are other problems less obviously connected with the welfare of the student. The Maintenance Department attempts to keep the physical equipment of Harvard effective at all times. The business officers are doing their best to reduce the operating costs of the university and thus ease the financial burden of the student. The libraries require a large staff to insure maximum speed in the handling of the thousands of books that circulate each week. There is a host of other duties: student employment, alumni placement, the University Press, publicity, Phillips Brooks House, and admissions all require detailed and careful administration. There must be capable men responsible for each, men who think and work to make them better. These are the men. This is the Administration. fn Committee on English aids undergraduates University information is always on the job HUMANITIES Philosophy has been defined as a study of the world in the light of the fact that the world is known. This defini- tion could be broadened to include the humanities in general. For the humanities assume that man is the central fact in the world in which he lives, that he is fundamentally different from other animals, and that a knowledge of what has been thought and recorded of his nature, in philosophy and art, is an essen- tial part of wisdom, and hence of education. The humanities enrich man ' s awareness of himself and the world through an ordered appeal to the mind and the emotions. They give pleasure and solace and they increase sympathy and under- standing. They are a storehouse of recorded values. By giving to educated men a common standard of reference they make the past available for the present and the future. THEODORE SPENCER, Associate Professor of English an P. G. E. Miller, Associate Professor of History and Literature, in his office CLASSICS Freshmen are usually introduced to Classics through the elementary courses, Greek G or Latin B, taught by Professors C. N. Jackson and E. K. Rand, respectively. To most, these courses are the requirements for the Baccalaureate, but to a few students in this unclassical age, they mark the beginning of four years ' concentration in the field. Professor Post, and Dr. Finley, new Master of Eliot House, lecture on Homer and the Greek dramatists. Seniors learn to write Greek and Latin in the composition courses of Professors Jackson and Pease. Classics concentrators learn the poetry of Homer, Ovid, Vergil, Horace; read the natural histories of Pliny and Herodotus. They learn satire and the satirists with the humorist Professor Pease, and recall the Augustans with Professor Rand. Professors Jaeger, Hammond, Greene, Dr. Else, and many others help to give the liberal classical education, beloved by many, that was until recently the symbol of a Harvard education. COMPARATIVE PHILOLOGY, INDIC PHILOLOGY, SEMITIC LANGUAGES AND HISTORY Indie Philology is a scholarly field, giving the student a basic knowledge of the Indo-European languages, as well as an acquaintance with the philosophy, religion, and history of Classical India. Ele- mentary Sanskrit has a range of interest for philologists and anthropo- logists, and attracts students from other languages. Professor W. E. Clark and Junior Fellow D. H. H. Ingalls constitute the department. Comparative Philology is a similar field, more suited to gradu- ates, because it takes time to become familiar with the many languages required. For that reason only two undergraduate courses are regularly given in the department, while graduate courses include Celtic, Ro- mance Philology, Baltoslavic Philology and Old Persian. Comparative Philology attracts the phoneticist, the linguist, and those who have a knowledge of many languages and wish to study their relationship to one another. Semitic Languages and History, today of interest to students of the Bible, the Near East, and religions, steadily hold their own, I Hkir IIP LJ ULi ' f ■i ■f 2lHlI Ran J retirts after 41 years of Latin teaching at Harvard { } J. H. FINLEY W. C. GREENE Assoc. Prof, of Greek and Latin Assoc. Prof, of Greek and Latin MASON HAMMOND Assoc. Prof, of Greek and Latin W. W. JAEGER University Professor A. S. PEASE Professor of Latin E. K. RAND Pope Professor of Latin W. E. CLARK Wales Professor of Sanskrit K. H. JACKSON Associate Professor of ( Yin.- JOSHUA WHATMOUGH I ' c.l. ...,r ..f ( ' ..ni|.iirstive PIiIIoIok.v J. N. D. BUSH Professor of l-lnglish D. H. CLOUD HccieUrt ..( ih« CoamrillM oil I he I K of I Indian C. T. COPELAND Hoylstoti Professor ol |{lnt.„i. and Oratory, IJmerilus V R. S. HILLYER Boylston Prof, of Rhetoric, Oratory F. P. MAGOUN Prof, of Comparative Literature F. O. MATTHIESSEN Assoc. Professor of History and Literature P. G. E. MILLER Assoc. Prof, of History, Literature J. B. MUNN Professor of English K. B. MURDOCK Francis Lee Higginson Professor of English Literature F. C. PACKARD Associate Professor of Public Speaking H. E. ROLLINS Gurney Prof, of English Literature G. E. SHERBURN Professor of English because the subjects treated maintain their importance despite fluct- uating world affairs. Hebrew, a required subject in the old days at Harvard, attracts many students from other fields. Dr. Pfeiffer and Professor Wolfson both explain the language well, and interpret books of the Bible in a modern and illuminating manner. For biblical students, and those interested in Mesopotamian archaeology, the department gives courses in Assyrian, while Arabic and the Koran under Professor Thomson draw theologians and historians. ENGLISH English, the largest, most comprehensive, and best-staffed field in the Humanities, reaches most undergraduates in some form. A splendid variety of courses are offered, covering all periods of English writing, and all branches of the English-speaking world. The linguistic aspects are stressed in Spencer ' s Forms of the Drama, courses on Old, Middle, and Chaucerian English. The courses in English and American literature range from Professor Howard Mun- ford Jones ' on the development of English literature, to Munn ' s lectures on the Bible, and discussions of translations of Proust and Mann, and the meanings in Joyce. Nor is the student limited to study of others, for he is encouraged to express himself; verbally in Professor Packard ' s courses in Public Speaking, poetically in Professor Hillyer ' s courses, and in the many prose courses in composition. Concentrators are urged to write novels, novelettes, or short stories, and may com- pete for prizes. With such a wide range for study, the individual interests , lost in smaller fields, come to light in a multitude of courses. There are more than a dozen courses on the novel, an equal number on the backgrounds of literature, a half-dozen on the linguistic background of English, a half-dozen for the creative writer. Concentrators specialize on some period or phase of literature, and write their thesis within this phase under a tutor chosen because of his familiarity with the subject. Some fields of English literature are at present gaining in popularity, as a recent trend in modernism favors the psychological writers and the more recent American and British novels. The old standbys — Shakespeare, the Bible, and Chaucer continue to hold their place. More and Hillyer analyze recent trends in poetry THEODORE SPENCER Assoc. Prof, of English B. J. WHITING Assoc. Prof, of English ■{ 18 FAR EASTERN LANGUAGES Far Eastern Languages have come into their own since January, for the boom in Japanese has more than doubled students of that language. Japanese B under Professor Reischauer has undertaken the job of teaching elementary J apanese in a half year to provide trained men for governmental agencies. Professor Serge ElisseefF, head of the Chinese directory, gives advanced courses in Japanese, as well as courses and instruction in Literature and Civilization. Chinese, centered in Boylston Hall, and aided by an extensive library, and supplemented by a number of brilliant philologists, offers a greater variety of courses including several courses on Chinese history, and political institutions. Elementary Chinese has become popular in recent years, both among concentrators in related fields and as a course for distribution. The present increase in elementary courses will soon be reflected in growing interest in advanced studies and research. FINE ARTS Fine Arts, commonly thought to be the field of dilettantes and easy-doers, presents a bewildering array of courses, general and specialized. Centering at Fogg Art Museum, the department does much to keep alive artistic endeavours in a college rapidly gone superpractical. Indicative of this tendency is the number of excellent exhibitions at the museum given during the year. When Thomas Benton, artist extraordinary to smart-setters, and Billy Rose tossed verbal tomatoes at the museum, Fogg replied by holding an exhibition of Benton ' s works. Indicative, too, is the exhibition of Picasso ' s heavy (500 pounds) geometrical and physiological black-and-white of the Spanish Civil War-Guernica. Fine Arts lb, the common undergraduate course, attempts to present by lecture and picture an understanding of the artistic principles of all t mes. Under Professor Rowland, students taking this course look at pictures, study picture cards, and view lantern slides. Courses range from Renaissance and Baroque Architecture (5a) to the new practical, and surprising X-ray technique in the study of Art History. But the real work of Fogg is done in private seminars, and in the laboratories, where Professor Holt and others repair and study canvasses, frescoes, and wood carvings. GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES This field includes the history and culture of the German peoples, as well as the teaching of the language itself. While a large 1. ones tracts Colt ridge along the mad to Xanadu {19} SERGE ELISSEEFF Prof, of Far Eastern languages J. R. WARE Assoc. Prof, of Chinese K. J. CONANT Professor of Architecture W. R. W. KOEHLER Professor of Fine Arts C. L. KUHN Assoc. Prof, of Fin - Art LEONARD OPDYCKE Assoc, Prof, of Has An- ARTHUR POPE Profassot of Plus Arti C. R. POST Williiitn l rr BoudtDM) Professor of Fine Art BENJAMIN ROWLAND Profr« or of Fun- Art P. J. SACHS Profenm.r nf I ' iim i ( ■W r. W. C. tUDIR Awuristn l ' r fnm r of tirmmii TAYLOR STARCK I rofr««nr of « ■KARL VIETOR Professor of German Literature EDWARD BALLANTINE Associate Professor of Music A. T. DAVISON Ditson Professor of Music A. T. MERRITT Associate Professor of Music W. H. PISTON Associate Professor of Music G. W. WOODWORTH Associate Professor of Music RAPHAEL DEMOS Associate Professor of Philosophy W. E. HOCKING Alford Prof, of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity C. E. LEWIS Professor of Philosophy R. B. PERRY Pierce Professor of Philosophy number of students are enrolled in the lettered courses — German A, B, C, D, E — most of these are interested only in gaining proficiency in the language. The concentrators in German and allied fields, are found in the seminars, and advanced courses. Despite the anti-German feeling in the country, enrollment in introductory courses did not fall off as it did in the last war. Students recognized the need for a knowledge of German, while the department kept pace with sections in Military German as part of German E. MUSIC Music offers a complete selection of courses covering the history of music from early times through still living modern compos- ers, like Strawinsky and Hindemith. At the same time there are ample- provisions for the concentrators interested in composing, orchestrat- ing, or choral writing. The presence of several great musical organiza- tions in and near Harvard, as well as the Thursday recitals of the Stradivarius Quartet for Associate Professor Ballantine ' s course on the String Quartet, are of great aid to the student. Professors Ballan- tine and Piston are both noted American composers, and their in- fluence is reflected in the compositions of their students. Professor Davison ' s elementary course on the History of Music is easily one of the most popular and pleasant courses in the college. This is followed by courses on various musical periods and noted composers. Asso- ciate Professors Woodworth and Merritt share in teaching orchestra- tion, harmony, and counterpoint. PHILOSOPHY Philosophy at Harvard has come a long way since it was first taught as a required subject, along with Greek and Hebrew. The name; in Harvard Philosophy are outstanding, Demos, Hocking, Bixler, Perry, Wild, and the Dutch-born Divinity School Professor Auer. They all contribute to the fame maintained in the past by Williamjames and Santayana. Philosophy is a broad field; courses range from the General Theory of Value, to the Philosophy of Mathematics. But correlated with the general trend of the university, such courses as Problems in the Philosophy of Science, and Philosophy of the State are gaining ground over the older, better-known philosophies. Perhaps the statement in the university catalogue under Phi- Nock brings Zeus and Olympus into History of Religions W. V. O. QUINE Assoc. Prof, of Philosophy H. M. SHEFFER Professcr of Philosophy { } Us, are irtfl |20t losophy D exemplifies the attitude of the Philosophy Department. This course aims to give the student such self-knowledge, and such command of his mental instruments, as will be useful in any field of college work or professional activity. ROMANCE LANGUAGES Students today seem to be inte rested in language training more than literature, for courses in Spanish and some French classes are crowded, while usually popular literature courses and tutorial work have slipped. Still lectures go on. Humorous Professor Cons no longer tells about the days of the Marquise de Rambouillet, but Professor Morize spices dull subject matter about Voltaire and Ros- seau with stimulating bits of wit. Associate Professor Francon, Asso- ciate Professor Mercier, Dr. Rice and Mr. Penny are continuing to keep interest awake in the dreary rooms of Emerson and Sever Halls. The South American tendency and the rise of the Good- neighbor Policy has increased the number of potential rancheros who mill into the elementary Spanish courses. Graduate courses, too, have their share, as the influx of Latin Americans bring more men interested in Spanish drama, Old Spanish, and Spanish-American Literature. Italian Literature and Composition continue to be favored by artistically inclined students and Italian-speakers. SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE The Russian novelists, Russian Literature, and drama, as well as language are treated in various courses offered by this department. Slavic 1, Introduction to Russian Literature and Culture, and Slavic 7, the Russian Drama and Theater, both given by popular Professor Cross, have proved interesting to a large number of students this year, who wanted to gain a working knowledge of Russia without learning the language. Meanwhile, for military and economic reasons, the num- ber in Slavic 10, Elementary Russian, has greatly expanded. Philology courses in the forms of Old Slavic, and Introductions to Ukrainian, Serbo-croatian, and Polish are offered for linguists. The works of Pushkin, Merezhkovski, Leskov, Turgeniev, are discussed in courses with Professors Lednicki and Cross for the benefit of scholars inter- ested in literature and the novel. Spencer (reals English literature from Shakespeare to T. S. Hint {21} A. N. WHITEHEAD Professor of Philosophy, Fmeritus D. C. WILLIAMS Assoc. Prof, of Philosophy LOUIS CONS Late Professor of French Literature J. D. M. FORD Smith Professor of the French and Spanish Languages ANDRE MORIZE Professor of French Literature GUILLERMO RIVERA Associate Professor of Spanish L. F. SOLANO G. B. WESTON Assoc, Prof, of Itonuincr L: tii(ul|M Associate Professor ..f Woinanci Language , Knierilii R. H. PFEIFFER Lecturer on Semitic I junom © WILLIAM THOMSON lira ■f i Prof mot of rt bta If. A WOLFSON Littmi ' -r EVofMMM M J «i h Literature mnl Philo-nphy S. H. CROSS ProfflNBf of Hlslie l unu i if- nikI LitefStltfM SOCIAL SCIENCES Instruction in the social sciences is given chiefly in specific disciplines — history, government, economics, so- ciology — organized as departments. Though the under- graduate often concentrates excessively in one of these disciplines, and though his teachers, as specialists, are often distrustful of other specialists, the interdependence of the social studies is a fact that is steadily forcing itself on the recognition of all. At Harvard there are two ways in which the undergraduate may break down the limitations of excessive specialization. Within the regular departmental concentrations he may with tutorial guidance work out a well-rounded group of courses; and, if he is an honors student he may, beginning with the class of 1944, concentrate in the new area of the social studies, covering a far wider range than has hitherto been possible. CRANE BRINTON Associate Professor of History v Ei a n h U K Tozzer, famed anthropologist a, id authority on Mayan Culture ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology is the study of man, and at Harvard this study is subdivided into Archaeology — the remains of man. Ethnology — the culture of man, Ethnography — the distribution of man, and Physical Anthropology — the biology of man. Thus Anthropology, hybrid that it is, falls in part into the Natural Sciences, part in the Social Sciences, while it has been combined with Biology, Sociology, and the Classics to make combination fields. The concentrators in Anthropology at Harvard, most of whom are in Social Anthropology, study savages, measure Indians, dig for Aztec relics, ponder over old bones, and learn the actions and inter- actions of societies under four noted professors; Professor Hooton in Physical-Anthropology, Professor Tozzer in Archaeology and Social Anthropology; and Associate Professors Carlton Coon, and Clyde Kluckhohn in Ethnology and Social Anthropology, respectively. Headquarters of the department is Peabody Museum, which has one of the country ' s best collections and the best library of an- thropological literature. ECONOMICS Economics concentrators say that the Economics Department is running the finances of the country. That is quite near the truth, for most of the faculty are either in Washington or make frequent trips there. Several professors are lost for the duration, and others will soon leave. At the present time most of the courses deal with theory, but war pressure is changing this academic picture. Con- centrators, many of whom go on to the Business School or the Law School, can choose from a long list of courses on general, American, European and International Economics, or go into the principles underlying banking, finance, accounting, or public utilities. Even such unusual fields as the Economics of Socialism, and a course on Karl Marx show the alertness of the department to modern affairs. Even before the war began, the department experimented with the economy of defense and war, and now gives a regular course in that subject. c. s. COON Assoc. Prof, of Anthropology E. A. HOOTON Professor of Anthropology A. M. TOZZER J. D. BLACK ProfcaMr of Anthropology Lee Professor of Economies H. H. BURBANK E. H. CHAMBERLIN Wells Professor of Pol. Kconomy I ' rofrssor of Economic! W. L. CRUM Ptovmmi f Ki ' nitoNiie GOTTFRIED HABERLER ProfHeof of BoononlM Museum Director PleasanK sets up a new exhibit A. H. HANSEN I iti 1. 1. 1 Prof of Pol. K. my S. E. HARRIS  o. , rntfi— lit of Economic 03 W. W. 1.EONTIEF KM, I ' r ' -f- r ' ' ' lit. n.p K. S. MASON I i.l l. .ilH.IIlKil A. E. MONROE Lecturer on Economics J. A. SCHUMPETER Baker Professor of Economies S. H. SLICHTER Lamont University Professor P. M. SWEEZY Faculty Instructor in Economies O, H. TAYLOR A. P. USHER Lecturer on Economics Professor of Economics Lot If Much attention is given to labot problems, as they loom large in the national picture. Concentrators gain a basic knowledge in History and Government to complete their training in Economics, while cooperation with the Graduate School of Public Administration and the Business School allows undergraduates to use their facilities. Frequently Ec men go on to these schools and are able to complete much of the first year ' s training during their undergraduate career. The number of courses are still a mystery, as faculty men have to relinquish teaching for war-time work. Probable consolidation and reduction in the number of courses, and increased practicality of those that remain will be marked in this department, where the promptness of the lecturers at class depends on the plane from Washington. GOVERNMENT The Government Department has grown rapidly since its founding in 1911. Then it had three professors and three assistants; now it boasts eight professors, four associate professors and a large staff of instructors, who teach 23 half courses, and five full courses, covering every phase of the field, both theory and practice. Such courses as Principles of Politics, Party Government, Modern Im- perialism, and Government Regulation of Industry have proved very popular because of world conditions. Nineteen hundred and forty-two is very Government minded; 14 per cent are in this field, the largest percentage of any class to date. This year it is the largest field, with nearly an even hundred concen- trators, half of whom are candidates for honors. The faculty is outstanding, for Professors Yeomans, Hol- combe, and Mcllwain are well-liked veterans in the department. Professor Holcombe, chairman of the department for 19 years, relin- quished the post to Associate Professor B. F. Wright in February. Professors Elliott, Friedrich, Lambie, Bruening and Hanford are as well known in the national scene as they are in the scholastic. The war emergency is causing a slight reduction in the number of courses, for five instructors are already contributing their experience and knowledge to the nation ' s war effort. They are Professor Elliott, HEINRICH BRUENING Littauer Professor of Government W. Y. ELLIOTT Professor of Government C. J. FRIEDRICH Professor of Government E. P. HERRING Lecturer on Government Historian hanger, another migrant to Washington {24} A. N. HOLCOMBE Professor of Govern ment B. C. HOPPER Associate Professor of Government I are is i : Ei • ' ■[ ) Associate Professors Emerson and Hopper, Dr. Fainsod, and Dr. Gordon. This places a greater burden on the remaining men, for undergraduates, realizing the value of studying government, have crowded into the field. HISTORY This study of the documentary evidence of events is a popular one at Harvard. Outstanding is the large and famous faculty, who teach many courses, to large and crowded classes. With History 1, given this year by Professor Karpovich, instead of Frisky Merri- man, the history concentrator can go on to a large and glittering array of courses dealing with periods, peoples, or geographic areas. With the notables of Classics and Semitic Languages, he can learn the his- tory of ancient times, while mediaeval Europe, and modern Europe each have their corps of learned men. Professor Morison, tracer of Columbian voyages, gives an insight into the history of America, and Professor Haring treats Latin America and her problems, a subject now increasing in popularity. Asia and Africa are given in connection with the departments teaching the languages of those continents. Professors Mcllwain, LaPiana, Fay, and Nock as well as Associate Professor Taylor, aid the others who teach the methodology of his- torical research. The concentrator has the opportunity of learning the historical progress of religions, philosophy, and sciences, as well as collaborating in courses offered in the sister-fields of Economics, and Government. They may also take complementary courses in Fine Arts, Anthropology, and other adjacent fields. Specialization is wel- comed in this broad field, and ample opportunities are offered to the concentrator for individual initiative under noted historians. HISTORY OF SCIENCE, RELIGION, LEARNING These Background courses provide a viewpoint often missed by concentrators within the fields, who often fail to know about the men behind the discoveries and theories they use in everyday courses. History of Science, covering the earlier discoveries, and the Stevens combines electronii I and psychology i } M. B. LAMBIE Professor of Government. C. H. McILWAIN ISaton Professor of the Seienee of Government ROSCOE POUND University Professor P. S. WILD Assoeiate Professor of Government B. F. WRIGHT Associate Professor of Governrni ' iit H. A. YEOMANS Professor of Government R. P. BLAKE Proftmof of History C. C. BRINTON Professor of History P. H. BUCK Pr f«wor of History P. P. CRAM Karulty Instruetor in History STERLING DOW Asoriel ProfsssOl of History 8. B. PAY Professor of 1 I W. S. FERGUSON c H - HARING McLean Professor of Ancient BUM Professor of Latin American ami Modem History History and Economics. MICHAEL KARPOVICH Associate Professor of History W. L. LANGER Coolidge Professor of History D. C. McKAY Associate Professor of History FREDERICK MERK Professor of History R. B. MERRIMAN Gurney Professor of History and Political Science. S. E. MORISON Professor of History D. E. OWEN Assistant Professor of History ELLIOTT PERKINS Lecturer on Ilistory work of the last two centuries, is frequently taken by Humanities concentrators who want to take a look at the scientific forest, without studying the individual scholastic trees. Similarly, the two courses in the History of Learning describe the development and status of universities, and the history of science and learning in the Middle Ages for those desiring a survey course. Graduates and concentrators can do advanced work in historical methods, or on the history of a particular science, country, or period. History of Religions, and Philosophy of Religions combine the courses given by many departments into a plan, by which a student may get a quick look at the religions and philosophies of historical or present times, or delve deeply into the non-material aspects of cul- tures. Courses range from the Religions of Primitive Peoples — given by the Anthropology department, to contemporary irreligiousness. The religions of all peoples are represented, while the philosophies of these beliefs and the social and psychological causes behind them are adequately treated. Brilliant Professors from the Divinity School, Philosophy, Sociology, Anthropology, Semitics, and Celtic Depart- ments help to explain the history of man ' s ideas about God. PSYCHOLOGY The Department of Psychology presents the various problems in dealing with the human mind, its quirks, and foibles. Plenty of opportunity is given to the undergraduate concentrator to work out problems, case histories, and research, for many of the courses de- mand personal study of the problems dealt with in the lectures. Cooperating with hospitals and welfare organizations, students may observe clinical work at closer ange, or choose to watch any one of the many experiments carried on at the Psychological Clinic on Plympton Street. Associate Professor Murray ' s course on Dynamic Psychology, for example, requires an extended case-history of one person, while on the other hand, Psychology 30, on Public Opinion, deals with large groups and mass action. The same freedom of action is reflected in Boring psychoanalyzes a dictaph one GAETANO SALVEMINI Lauro de Bosis Lecturer on the History of Italian Civilization R. B. SCHLATTER Instructor in History {26} the liberal rules for concentration and the wide variety of subjects for senior theses. Theory, however, is not neglected, nor is the depart- ment concerned with training a horde of miracle-working psychoan- alysts. But the premise that knowledge of people can not be gained at long range make most of the courses pretty practical. The usefulness of this knowledge has made Psychology a popular pre-medical or pre- law course, while many concentrators, though not interested in further work in psychology, find it generally valuable in later life. The im- port of psychological testing to armies, and the use of psychological methods to treat war-time neurosis finds increased cooperation be- tween the department and governmental agencies. SOCIOLOGY Sociology at Harvard is mostly theoretical, aiming at producing sociologists and scholars familiar with sociological problems, rather than social workers. Professor Sorokin, colorful and interesting Rus- sian-born theorist, proves a great attraction in Sociology A (Principles of Sociology) and has gained much fame for Harvard ' s department. Associate Professor Zimmerman, now on leave of absence, is popular because of his courses on the family, and Rural Sociology. His optimum 4-child-family theory, which he has put into practice, has gained much favorable notice. Recognizing that the name alone does not prevent out-of-field courses from treating social problems, con- centrators are allowed to sample the works of other departments, with a low minimum of courses in the field being required. On the other hand, the large number of attractive courses offered, covering education, crime, the prevention of poverty, and other present-day problems, attracts anthropologists and psychologists in large numbers. Courses are also given in connection with the School of Public Health and the Law School. War-time problems, requiring many men skilled in human engineering, are developing interest in Sociology, and at the same time interesting the department in remedies, as well as causes of social ills. Ford Harvard ' s expert on Social Ethics and Housing { } } A. M. SCHLESINGER Higginson Professor of History C. H. TAYLOR Associate Professor of History A. D. NOCK Frothingham Professor of the History of Religion GEORGE SARTON Professor of the History of Science G. W. ALLPORT Ajtoo. Prof, ol Psychology E. G. BORING Prnfim uf Psychology H. A. MURRAY • L. WELLS Amir. iWiiMuir ..f Piyrbology AMtottnl iw.- .nr ol Pty«holo«y JAMES FORD A«« 0. I ' rnf i.l „ i.l 1. 1 1, Hi TALCOTT PARSONS A.«. ■. Pto fa wo i ) BoHolog) P. A. SOROKIN ProfM or of .Sociology C. C. ZIMMERMAN Amoc. Profenor of Sociology NATURAL SCIENCES A considerable proportion of the subjects represented in the area of the Natural Sciences are new in academic educa- tion. This is not true of mathematics and it applies in part only to astronomy and physics, but recognition of chemistry, biology, and geology has come only recently. Here at Harvard the Natural Sciences received little attention until the middle of the last century, and it was only under the regime of Eliot that they received adequate acknowledgement as subjects for undergraduate study. How different this is from the situation now, when no Harvard student can graduate without at least one course in the sciences, and so much of the energies of students and professors flows in the channels of science. But the change is a natural one. It only reflects the temper of our time, which is so largely the result of the scientific develop- ments of the last hundred years, developments which have come in great part from the universities where, more ex- clusively than perhaps any other branch of thought, science finds its natural environment. JEFFRIES WYMAN JR., Associate Professor of Zoology Lamb teaches chemistry with smoke and chalk ' escnted - educa- in pan Mistry, ! middle of Eliot jeas for t ai least ergies of science. temper of hich have more ex- t, science ARCHITECTURAL SCIENCES Students in Architectural Sciences, most of whom plan to do graduate work in architecture, learn the appear ance and functions of various historical architectural methods, and then go on to create their own designs. Work centers about the lecture halls and work- rooms in Hunt and Robinson Halls, and close connection with the Graduate Schools yields increased opportunity for study. Concen- trators take preparatory courses in Physics, Mathematics, and Engi- neering, and rhen go on to the intensive two years of seminars. These small conference groups are informal and illustrated by slides, pictures, and models. Seniors take a course similar to the first year of the Graduate School, making models, plans, and designs. The field is professional training, and the staff of instructors, mostly from the Graduate School, contain many noted architects and experts, including Gropius and Breuer. ASTRONOMY The Department of Astronomy at Harvard is small in number of concentrators, but ranks among the world ' s best in equipment, faculty, and fame. The concentrators work at the student laboratories on Jarvis Street, or take the half-mile walk to the Observatory on Garden Street. Courses range from Navigation to Celestial Mechanics. Mathematics is a prime requirement, for many of the courses require calculus to compute the movements of planets, and the orbits of comets. Professor Shapley, Associate Professor Bok, and Dr. Whipple give most of the courses, while Professor Menzel ' s course on Astro- physical Theory attracts other science concentrators. BIOLOGY Biology, the study of living things, centers around the Biolog- ical Laboratories on Divinity Avenue. The divisions include the Farlow Museum, The Grey Herbarium, the Arnold Arboretum, and the Biological department of the University Museum. Shapley is noted for astronomical observation { } H. A. FROST Professor of Architecture JOSEPH HUDNUT Professor of Architecture Dean of the Faculty of Design B. J. BOK Assoc. Prof, of Astronomy D. H. MENZEL Professor of Astrophysics HARLOW SHAPLEY j. T . EDSALL Peine Prof. Practical Astronomy Assoc. Prof. Bioloajoal C ' Im nistrj R. M. FERRY Associate Professor of Biochemistry G. M. ALLEN Professor of Boology C. T. BBUBS Professor of RntoanoJosy W. C. DARRAH Faculty Instructor in Biology A. B. DAWSON Professor of Z Mil sxy M. L FBRNALD l-i-hcr Professor of N ' lilnriil History. I im tlet of tin Qray Herbarium LEIGH HOADLEY Professor of Zoology E. D. MERRILL Arnold Professor of Botany Director of the Arnold Arboretum A. C. REDFIELD Professor of Physiology A. S. ROMER Professor of Zoology KARL SAX Professor of Botany K. V. THIMANN Assoc. Prof, of Plant Physiology J. H. WELSH Assoc. Professor of Zoology W. H. WESTON JR. Prof of Cryptogatnie Botany R. H. WETMORE Associate Professor of Botany JEFFRIES WYMAN JR. Associate Professor of Zoology A large variety of courses are given with a wide range of interest. For the casual student there are elementary courses in Zoology and Botany. For the medical student there are courses in Physiology and Comparative Anatomy, while fungi, insects, mammals, and sea-life are treated in other classes. Recent war-induced interest has increased enrollment in the elementary courses, while special Defense Classes such as Biological Resources of the United States, and Medical Entomology have attracted many. The large number of courses, the excellent facilities for work, and the staff secures for the department many concentrators, who can do original research if they desire. Likewise it is easy for them to do graduate work, since there are a large number of middle-group courses in semi-specialized fields. The drudgery of pure study is reduced in many courses by after- noon, day, or week-end field and collecting trips, while individual plant or insect collections, and class cultivation of plants, or studies in the genetics of insects or animals give the student a personal interest in his work. The availability of a large staff of skilled graduate instructors and the presence of famous professors have given the department a national reputation. CHEMISTRY Chemistry, of prime importance to a nation at war, has changed its pace to a more rapid tempo. Elementary courses, A, B, 2 — have expanded despite the reduction in college enrollment. Chemistry 2, the basic organic course and a medical school requirement, was only slightly under last year ' s record, and applications from medically- minded students resulted in the formation of a double intensive half- year course beginning in February. While no professors have been lost, since their value is greatest near their laboratories, many make weekly trips to Washington to confer on defense problems. Several section men have been transferred to defense research, while the old Woolcott-Gibbs laboratory, empty since the Public Health Depart- ment vacated last year, has been converted into a defense laboratory. Sabotage fears brought armed guards to Mallinckrodt. Spotlights were A museum skeleton gets an overhauling G. P. BAXTER L. F. FIESER Richards Professor of Chemistry Emory Prof, of Organic Chemistry {30 Merest. WtSWB mounted outside the buildings to illuminate the doors at night, and door outlets were frosted. Other courses were increased, and double courses added. Gas Chemistry, and Advanced OrganicChemistry were greatly increased. Priorities caused a shortage of supplies; so by February students were conserving solvents like Acetone, alcohol and ether, while substitutes for German and Czechoslovakian glass wers supplied. Iron, rare- metal, aluminum and magnesium instruments and compounds were rationed, while a temporary lack of hydrogen sulfide, usually piped to Chem 3 students, proved a bottleneck in that course. ENGINEERING SCIENCES The war, and its consequent demands for technically trained men, makes the Department of Engineering Sciences assume a more important position among the fields of concentration. As a result the number of concentrators has increased more than 50 pe r cent over last year. The Harvard engineering courses do not attempt to turn out a finished engineer, but rather demand technical ability and general knowledge. After training in Mechanical, Electrical, and Civil Engineer- ing, the department considers one year of graduate work enough to complete the training. Tutorial work is not required in this field, but the number and variety of impressive courses, undergraduate and graduate, is imposing. Drawing, Geometry, a summer course in Surveying, Dynamics, Statics, Thermodynamics, and Areodynamics are only a few of the courses the embryo engineer needs. GEOGRAPHY, METEOROLOGY, AND CLIMATOLOGY The Department of Geography is concerned with the physical surface of the world, the relations of geography and man, problems in mapping, and exploration. Popular Geography 1 under Professor Whittlesley and Dr. Kemp is the introductory course and the largest in the department. Concentrators may choose courses in the geography of special areas, or may take Economic, Political, and Historical Geog- raphy. Present conditions have made knowledge of the geography of remote regions important . and the number of students enrolled reflects Research expert checks his scientific findings {jo} ii G. S. FORBES Professor of Chemistry L. J. HENDERSON Late Lav renoe Prof, of Chemistry GRINNELL JONES Professor of Chemistry G. B. KISTIAKOWSKY Professor of Chemistry A. B. LAMB Erving Professor of Chemistry IH ' iin of the QrsduaU School of Arts mid BctsBPSf E. B. WILSON JR. Associate Professor of Chemistry C. H. BERRY McKay Prof, of Mseh fogine ALBERT HAERTLE1N McKay Prof, of Civil Kngiheerinir C. P. BROOKS Profsasof of Msisorolafy, Itlue Hill Observatory Director A. H. RICE Professor of leasjrapbli Exploration D. 8. WHITTLEHBY Ammt. I ' rofcMor of Qsjojsjrapfay M. P. BILLINGS Ammic. Professor of Geolotfy KIRK BRYAN Assoc. Professor of Physiography R. A. DALY Hooper Professorof Geology RUSSELL GIBSON C - S - HURLBUT JR. Assoc. Professor of Econ. Geology Assoc - Professor of Mineralogy E. S. LARSEN JR. Professor of Petrography d. h. Mclaughlin Professor of Mining Geology, Emeritus K. F. MATHER Professor of Geology Director of the Summer School P. E. RAYMOND Professor of Paleontology RALPH BEATLEY G. D. BIRKHOFF Associate Professor of Education Perkins Professor of Mathematics this. Climatology and Meteorology offer opportunities for the study of weather factors, and their connection with geographic areas. Several courses make use of the aviation facilities near Boston to present their material more successfully. Instruction in surveying, mapmaking, and areophotography are given in connection with the Department of Geographical Exploration. GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES Unaffected by the war, the faculty of Geological Sciences has undergone a reduction in the number of graduate students. Professor Reginald A. Daly, former head of the Geological Society of America, retired this year, and (Offsetting these losses Dr.Thurneaure has joined the department. Prof. D. H. McLaughlin left to become Dean of Engineering at the University of California.) In an effort to correlate geology and war, a new course, Military Geology, is given by Associate Professor Kirk Bryan. Otherwise the faculty and courses are the same. Professor Kirtley F. Mather, Director of the Summer School, continues to head popular Geology 1, while Professors Graton, Raymond, and Larsen continue their lectures. Mineralogy and Petrography stress the use of physics, chemis- try, and optical instruments in the more technical problems of ores, minerals, and deposits. Professor Larsen and Associate Professor Hurlbut lecture in Crystallography and Petrography. MATHEMATICS Mathematics, thought by many to be an abstract science, or a handmaiden to chemistry or physics, is also valuable as a contribu- tion to a liberal education. It develops an ideal of clear, precise reason- ing, creates an aesthetic sense, from the directness and simplicity of a precise, mathematical proof. Most Mathematics concentrators take Math A — introductory course in analytic Geometry and Calculus, and continue with Math 2 and 5 in their sophomore and junior years, while Math 3, Introduction to Higher Geometry, Math 4, Elements of Mechanics, and Math 6, Higher Algebra, are optional. Courses on functions and probability are also elective. A physicist ' s dream! A layman ' s nightmare! J. 1. COOLIDGE E. V. HUNTINGTON Professorof Mathematics, Emeritus Professor of Mechanics, Emeritus 02} . The war has increased the number of concentrators by one fourth, while graduate students have shown a proportionate decrease. Math A and B have swelled because of military and naval requirements, and two new half courses have been added for defense training. The Summer School will give many courses over again, while others have been made divisible. Today, Mathematics, like many sciences, strives to provide necessary defense training, without sacrificing the high calibre of the advanced courses. PHYSICS The Department of Physics at Harvard is large, well equipped, and rapidly growing to meet present needs. In the past, elementary courses B, C, and F attracted pre-medical students and concentrators from other departments requiring a physics course. Now these same courses are overflowing because of the importance of this training for war-time communications and engineering. Mathematics, formerly merely recommended, is now a definite prerequisite. Physics C added an intensive month in electronics and radio theory, while B is re- duplicated in an intensive, full-credit half course. Besides these beginner courses, the laboratories in Jefferson offer facilities for a range of studies from Optics to Music. Theory is dealt with adequately through 14 courses in theoretical Acoustics, Electricity, Relativity, and other similar subjects. Practical work in radio transmission, communications, and measurements provides a basis for industrial work. Several special courses for concentrators in other sciences are offered. At present the laboratories are crowded with representatives of the armed forces using the facilities at Jefferson and Cruft to learn electronics and communications. Nineteen hundred and forty-two has seen a substantial increase in concentrators, and the beginning of a rush to learn the science behind modern mechanics. Courses extending into other fields have shown the value of Physics in Chemistry, Biology, Architecture, and Engineering, while the wind tunnels and high-tension apparatus at the department ' s headquarters show very practical applications of this science. H i j Wit v ' I J,  JV 1 ml A i JtMm W k m Professor Parker, eminent Zoologist, examines a report l  03} M. H. STONE Professor of Mathematics J. L. WALSH Professor of Mathematics D. V. WIDDER Professor of Mathematics K. T. BAINBRIDGE Associate Professor of Physics N. H. BLACK Assistant Professor of Physics, Emeritus P. W. BRIDGMAN Mollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy E. L. CHAFFEE E. C. KEMBI.E Romford Professor of Physics Professor of Physiol H. R. MIMNO AflHlltlO Professor of Physics OTTO OI.DENBERG I ' rofeH ' .nr of Physics P. A. SAUNDERS Profsssor of Physics, Kmsntus J. H. VAN VLECK Professor of Mathematical Physios Ten years ago the House Plan was physically complete, the plans were already laid by President Lowell, and the several Masters were put to trial. Altogether, the venture has more than stood the acid test of experience, and in so doing, it must have given lasting satisfaction to the wise President and generous donor who made it possible. The early skepticism of undergraduates has changed to enthusiastic approval. And the staffs and undergraduates alike perceive that their lives are broadened and enriched by associations made so much more easily in the Houses. The material improvements are indisputable. Happily, too, the Houses have begun to de- velop individuality, character, and loyalties of different sorts — some take pride in cohesiveness, others in the opportunity to continue in the ways of complete individualism. But today all are united in the spirit of serving the Country in the critical days in which we live. Wartime has given rise to new problems and must, perforce, place some of our plans in abeyance. We can, however, be confident that the Houses will, in these days of necessary specialization, play an increasingly important role in preserving some of the broader aspects of education. And when the dark days are past, the Houses will have learned what is worth preserving and will know better how to play their part in education — in its broadest sense — of citizens for life in a democracy. RO NALD M. PERRY, Master of Winthrop House ouses 04 5 ADAMS HOUSE Apthorp, the Master ' s home Late in September, 1939, 80 members of the Class of 1942 entered the Gold Room in Adams House, to become a part of and to help build a tradition which is spread over the nooks and crannies of an architect ' s nightmare. Adams con- sists of five buildings which defy description, so that it will have to suffice to say that it is filled with corridors, stairways, and tunnels, and that no man is a true Gold Coaster, until he can direct one of the uninitiated from C entry to Westmorly without drawing a map. Hidden among the rococo walls are a great number of luxuries that make Adams a pleasant place in which to live. Sandwiched between A and B entries is a swimming pool, product of the lush nineties. In its colorful history, its waters have been graced by Roosevelts, Hearsts, Ziegfeld Follies ' beauties, and slightly intoxicated underclassmen who insist on riding into the pool on bicycles. By careful searching, Adamsmen inevitably uncover other rooms for ping pong enthusiasts, budding cameramen, music lovers, and artistes. Colonel Hayes ' emporium, however, is the real center of interest for Adams gourmands, who daily throng the hall to partake of the Colonel ' s strange-named delicacies. Life in Adams House is divided into seasons. In the fall football is the cry. Bottles, all empty, hurtle down the C entry shaft more furiously than at any other time of the year. Neagle, Jackson, and Macgowan set the dining hall gawkers gawking as they lead Wellesley queens to conspicuous tables every weekend without fail. Gordon, Friedkin, Williams, Thomson, Kobak, Lidstone throw victory or consolation parties, that make the ancient Greek Bacchanalia look like tea parties. This is the time for football dances, great profits for the Optner- Hathaway combination, good fun for all. But there are other things in the crisp air. Neagle and May lead „ tea at ■,M over « Dr. L« U ' hh 3( ! their cohorts to victory in the House football league, and take the measure of the best that Yale has to offer. Foote still claims the mythical ping pong championship from the bowels of Randolph. Lee captains the best Harvard varsity football team in decades. Tatton collars hapless athletics-dodgers in the dining hall. The autumn is Bimbo-time, too. Out come the cigars, then Flint in a new weave, with a red carnation. When the results are in, the new politicos settle down to work, with Dr. Little throwing out suggestions for what they are worth and Webber zealously guarding the purse strings. As the giant elm in front of Westmorly sheds its leaves and the courtyard in front of Apthorp puts on its coat of snow, a new season dawns on Adams. The exultant cries of pinball echo all along windy Bow Street. Harry ' s Arcade Spa is filled with pinsters, fans, shills, as the nightly after- dinner trek brings Bertrand, McConarty, Doyle, Sodin, Shul- man, and others to the boards. Wintry winds also carry the Muse to the House with the short tower and no bells at all. Foote ' s Thespians continue the impressive Adams dramatic tradition with Androcles and the Lion, as Kuhn portrays a brute only too convincingly. But the Muse ' s activity doesn ' t end here. Lampl, Hyman, Gordon, and Doyle turn out songs like a miniature Tin Pan Alley, with the latter two producing a new House fight song, Adams You ' re There. Toward Christmas the flame of ingenuity burns low as a few unfortunates like McNeill, Kuhn, Newman brave the vacation and enjoy their share of the delightful Little hospitality. When life returns to Adams, books suddenly grow important. Judell and his minions age ten years trying to keep the black list up to date. But after exams books are stowed away for a few more months; skis suddenly appear, and stalwarts like Rothschild, Barker, and Thurston set off on long weekends in the mountains. The great indoors makes its bid, too, as Harris, Stearns, Tine contribute their talents to varsity swim- ming and wrestling, adding a few more names to Adams ' long list of big-time athletes. Then there is the winter formal, the Tenth Anniversary Dinner with President Conant, Dr. Baxter, and its tremendous cake. But winter has its serious side, for it is the season of war. And war makes great inroads on the lives of Adamsmen. Rogers looks slick in his uniform. Trumbull is the first to go to the air force, then Stearns, Shepard leave. To the Army go Rothschild and Barker, following in the Fay tradition. Stories of special attention for Harvard men float back from Army camps. The scare is on. There is a rush for math courses, for the Business School, for technical training. Navin, Doyle, Orchard run around checking math answers; Optner, Kuhn, Harris, Hathaway, Barnet are talking about industrial management. And in the spring . . . Flint heralds the season with a new weave, immaculate white shoes, and a white carnation. On the first balmy days, there is a barrage of water, but these are not the traditional April showers. The Gold Coasters are known for their cool aim, and proximity to the Lampoon and the Crimson provides these aqueous sharpshooters with ample practice. This is fun time again; time for Whitman to row, for Haussermann to play varsity ball, time for the big spring dance, for divisional and finals and graduation. This is the time when memories of three times three seasons in Adams House return with great clarity — memories of the March of Times; the Mole Campaign; the Raid on the West- morly Gambling Den; dinners at the Littles ' ; Sunday nights at Doc Leopold ' s; the long tables; Brill ' s harangue against Marquand; MacMahon ' s famous joke on Gotham; elaborate precautions in the kitchen against Spoonerman; Archie ' s dogged quest for window-breakers after every snowfall; Lou Polster ' s work with defense stamps; the rise of O.G. cultists. These make up the tradition which is the contribu- tion of the 80 men of 1942 in return for three years of real Life in Adams House. in if 0 '  Champions take Dudley ' s measure Captain Neagle receives the trophy Dr. Little and Dr. Baxter cut the House ' , tenth birthday cake Intermission during the winter formal DUDLEY HALL I A late afternoon study of Dudley •{40} This year is the seventh for the Dudley Hall Com- mutets ' Center, and, unlike the Houses, Dudley continues to change profoundly. Under the guidance of Charlie Duhig, the Graduate Secretary, Dudley has passed out of th e experi- mental stage, and now occupies a recognized place in the House system of the university. Before 1935 commuters at Harvard had nothing to do with undergraduate life outside of the lecture hall and the laboratory. A commuter then was a true social outcast. Through the foresight of Dean Hanford, and the steadfast zeal and effort of Mr. Duhig, the Commuters ' Center was established, and it has steadily developed. At first Dudley consisted of a common room, dining room, and lockers. The first improvement came when the lockers were moved downstairs; then two ping-pong tables were installed and the foundations for a library laid from the donations of books by graduating members. But still Dudley was not luxurious enough, nor were its advantages so fully realized that it could sell itself without high-pressure sales- manship. In intramural athletics its entries in football at first were lucky to make one touchdown in two years, and most of the other sports were not participated in because of failure to get teams together. Each year, however, with the material and external growth of Dudley, there seemed to keep pace, as it were, a sporting growth, and an esprit de corps, which today can compare with that of any of the Houses. The House grew in membership from 130 in 1935 to 294 in 1941. More enthusiasm was aroused for athletic competition, and in 1940 Dudley was able to boast of a foot- ball team that ended in second place in House standing, with two players chosen on the all-House team. 1941 saw similar progress, with Dudley again having a top football team and furnishing worthy competition in all the sports. But the year 1942 has marked the final emergence of Dudley into full ma- turity. Returning seniors last fall were greeted with profound and amazing improvements in the Center they had known for three years. The university had presented Dudley with a complete House library, a new common room, new lockers Charlie Duhig at his desk in University Hall The cafeteria serves over 2%) commuters The main common room and discussion center The chess concentrators in the junior common room and luxurious furnishings. No longer did a Dudleyite have to make apologies to his friends, male or female, for his sur- roundings, but could feel proud to show anyone his House. Starting the year with the largest membership in the seven years of Dudley ' s life, the House Committee, headed by John Tully, and numbering among its other seniors, Maurice Helpern, George MacDonald, Joseph Miller, Edward Kilroy, Farahe Maloof, Eugene Reilly, and Herbert Yarrish, ran the most successful smoker ever conducted at Dudley. This first success was followed up with one of the best attended dances Dudley has ever promoted. With Arthur Murphy as chairman, the Dance Committee has already had two socially and financially successful dances, and is considering another. In the intellectual sphere, Larry Shubow has inaugurated a series of forums, in which leading men in their fields have presented for forum discussion pertinent subjects of the day. Among such subjects and their leaders, we find A Philosophy of History discussed by Mr. John Greene, Junior Fellow, and Contemporary American Music by Mr. W. W. Austin, Teaching Fellow in Music. In the field of sports Dudley lost the championship in football by virtue of a tie, placing second to Adams. Two members of the team, Len Cummings, and Gene Reilly, were named to the all-House team. Members of the Class of 1942 participating in football were George MacDonald, Maurice Helpern, Richard Loomis, Solon Candage, Edward Kilroy, Farahe Maloof, George Calt, Melvin Kohan, Maurice Lyons, Eugene Reilly, Robert Robinson, and Gerald Segal. In boxing Dudley took second place in the House standing, when Gene Reilly successfully defended his cham- pionship in the 145 lb. class. The hockey team, led by Walter Whittaker and Len Cummings, also finished in second place. Able athletic secretary George MacDonald organized other teams with equal success, calling on such stalwarts as Hawthorne, Candage, Whittaker, Loomis, Meli, Reilly, Maloof, Kilroy, and Tully. The Ramblers were not only famous for their athletic prowess and numerous brain waves. Theirs was the only House scandal-sheet, and it was a plenty tough competitor for Harvard ' s only other breakfast daily, the Crimson. One man staff and editor-in-chief George Calt not only covered all athletic events, but managed to do plenty of successful snooping on the side. Rumor had it that the great problem of financing the paper had been neatly solved by this gossip column. (Men-about-town like Reilly, Maloof, Tully, and Kilroy, Healy, and Candage furnished plenty of copy with their escapades at the D. U. House.) Not to be outshone in sports by the sensational headlines used by Boston tabloids, Calt had a few printers ' slugs up his sleeve. After the dis- astrous Adams debacle, the following headline appeared: Changing clothes befo re Mil Sci drill {42 Dudleyites study in their new and attractive library ti Checking the bulletin board for latest news Fat Boy in Center of Dudley Line Fails to Make Tackle and Causes Adams Touchdown. The university and the Student Council might have saved themselves a lot of time in their investigations of the value of cafeteria-style dining halls, had they taken their cue from Dudley. Rivaling even Adams House for meal-time noise, the cafeteria was the social center of Dudley. For only one price, you could get a good meal and plenty of advice on the situation from Uncle Rudolph Maloof, official cashier. One particularly famous situation concerned adopted Irishmen Frankie Lewis and Leon Kahn, who ap- peared in bright green apparel on Saint Patrick ' s Day. There were other amusing incidents and plenty of pleasant memories. Who will forget the weighty intellectual discussions by mental giants Potash, Leiter, OToole, and Shubow? Or the inevitable trend the conversation would take when Lewis, Marder, Mac- Donald, Reilly, and Meli got together to review the merits and demerits of their last dates? Howie Bennett, Assistant Graduate Secretary and general handyman, Dave the janitor . . . these are names that have marked the years for men now leaving the Center. But for those departing seniors there is a comforting thought. ... No longer in its adolescence as it enters its eighth year, Dudley can now claim its rightful position in the system as the eighth house. 443} DUNSTER HOUSE {41} msi  dumr House spirit, they say, dies at the corner of DeWolfe and Cowperthwaite streets — and they are proud it is so. A man may study in Dunster, he may exercise, go to parties, or do nothing at all. He may lead his own life, though to do so he probably has to soundproof his room, or waterproof his ceiling. There is no insistent demand to do this or that for the House, and he can easily avoid such organizers as athletic managers and House committeemen. With such indifference must exist extreme informality. The athletic notices, the dance posters, the Forum announce- ments neither ask, nor expect enthusiasm. But this is not to say that the Dunster man is inactive. If he does not do what he is expected to do, or what is arranged for him, it is because he can find within the House, informally, resources and friends to meet his intellectual and social needs. Dunster House has a life certainly no less full, no . ' ess rewarding, if much less organized. For ten years Dunster has ignored its athletic teams. This year has been no exception, for again Dunster is strug- gling with Leverett for last place in the race for the Straus Trophy. Yet a championship team, indeed an undefeated team, was produced in November. Sparked by Captain Joe Romano, the touch football team flashed a lightning passing attack to rout the undefeated Kirkland team by six touchdowns in the league finale and went on to win from Silliman, champion of the Yale colleges. The regular football team ' s opening game win over the champion Adams eleven gave hopes of twin championships, but the hard-working team had too many off-days and landed in sixth place. Don Cole was outstanding at halfback and represented the House in the all-House back- field. The squash, indoor baseball, swimming, cross country, track, basketball, hockey, and boxing seasons have come and gone. And they, too, have brought more defeats than vic- tories. But Dunster men are not indifferent about their dances. Gone are the days when hay rides in the country and boat rides on the Charles preceded the spring dance, but the same insanity which won them the name Funsters survives and continues to make their dances more fun than anything. The Funsters ' loftiest dreams — a free dance for Dunster men only — came true this fall, following the Cornell game. They had their Yale dance, too, and rolled in enough to pay for the dividend dance. Moon over Dunthrums, or the Follies Rost-Schall, starring Bobo at the bottle, introduced the bouncing Christmas party. Highlight of the dance was the unveiling of the new Dunster bar, and the christening with sparklingest grape-ade. The winter informal was equally outstanding, and was featured by the brand new Ford con- vertible which wasn ' t given away with six new tires. Alas, the spring costume party has not yet come, but on that evening the Funsters will double the drinks and climb into color to forget the trials of a cruel college. Despite their blatent claims to anti-intellectuality, Dunster House and its inhabitants play host to one of the most significant features of Harvard life —the Forum. Here, in the argumentative pre-war years, when to declare one ' s opinion for war or peace, for right or left, for Hemingway or Proust, for Roosevelt or Willkie, was to risk being recognized as the founder of a pressure group, Dunster formed a group to discuss problems rationally. Once a month the House, led by the Master, Professor Haring, would gather together the local tutors, professors, and experts on a given question of pol tics. The House Committee has a luncheon meeting llnusemaster Haring relaxes in his study K «} After dinner lounging in the common room economics, or arts — and let them spout. The idea has each time been to secure at least two men who would disagree and present completely different sides of an issue. When the ex- perts have been pulled away from each other ' s bald heads, the students, usually composed of as many visitors as residents, have had a chance to put in their oars. The result has invari- ably been a satisfying draw decision, with the participants intellectually the better for wear. But the big noise was the spring costume party, very wet. Unfortunately, so was the grass, but in every other re- spect it was as devastating as any in the long line of devastating post- divisional Dunster binges. A week before the dance, Chairman Archie Lupia got himself caught serenading all of Radcliffe for a date — in vain, for everyone was coming al- ready. And there was the big contest to choose Harvard ' s outstanding exponents of swing, who played with Andy Kirk ' s band at the dance, followed by the gin punch in K entry for judges Count Basie, George Frazier, and Jimmy Rushing. After singing the Harvard Blues several times, Rushing asked, Say, boys, who is this guy Reinhardt, any- way? The Berkeley College crew came up from Yale, and both crews donned the handle bar moustache for a Gay Nineties boat ride. Yale won. The dance itself was all Andy Kirk and his Clouds of Joy, very loud. Very loud also were the costumes: air raid wardens, first aid victimes, pajamas, underwear, and Phil Walters as Max Keezer. And twenty-five barrels of beer disappeared. Tutors gather informally to discuss House affairs {46} The House Committee, led by Chairman Adrian Re- cinos, has been more a directive than a regulatory body in undergraduate affairs An outstanding achievement this year was the near doubling of the House library record collection. The war effort in the House has meant an organization for air-raid protection with more runners, firefighters, and spotters than students to protect; and through the House Committee the Red Cross has already enlisted the services of forty Funsters as blood donors. Far from the civilization of Square and Gold Coast, Dunster men continue to live in madness and torpor: savage complaints of vicious noise bring midnight raids and asbestos doors. The one-armed bandit is gone ( . . . want $1.20 change for a buck? . . . come on up to the room for a minute . . . ' ), but the numbers racket lives on. Squash court eight harbors a thriving still. A runner in E says sure he ' ll help in the air-raid practice, but when the real thing comes, he ' s going out to save his girl. The bicycle boys race to Smith (the Smith girls do not turn out en masse to greet them). C entry slushes to Intervale, and E entry waddles to Narra- gansett to try a new system. Betty and the DeWolfe Street debs say hello Henry, Gordon, Seymore. The boys call the FBI to report the subversive activities of a prominent econ- omist at two in the morning, and the call is put through to Washington. The library committee cracks down, and half the House is excluded for two weeks. The crew loses oars and shirts at Yale. Leo has his canvas bathtub. The House has its tenth birthday; ambassadors from South America come to speak; the Stradivarius Quartet plays Mozart, Haydn, and Beethoven; the common room exhibits Walt Disney Dumbo originals; and Dunster lives on as the House with the Forum, the House with the spring party, the House with the hike. Volunteer firefighter tests out new equipment A fast backhand in a House squash match funster sizes up his date at the winter informal «7 ELIOT HOUSE i : («} Frisky gives his farewell address The famed weeping willow in the courtyard New Housemaster Finley refreshes his memor Eliot ' s first era closed this year almost neglected by an outside world too busy with Bataan and Batavia. House- master Roger B. Merriman, who mothered and lorded the House to its place as the social core of the college, resigned his position and let his communal protege carry on without him. Short, sparse John H. Finley Jr. was named to fill the gap he left. For the whole college, senior year started as any other in the past two decades, giving no inkling of the Pacific war to interrupt it before midyears. The tabletalk which threw isolation and intervention around turned rapidly to a much more limited discussion of selecting a service. But it became more than just talk, and as men began to leave in a thin, yet steady stream and new men quietly slipped into their places, the House moved in a state of flux. The war added a new seriousness of air raids and Red Cross; but sports, Christmas play, House dinners, dances, never lost their front-page place to the novelties of war. There was none of the polite sham in the Harvard undergraduate after the Indian ' s fall grid upset, which The Daily Dartmouth so hastily accused the House wall pillars of exhibiting. On Soldiers Field there was the perennial complaint of the mediocrity of the Elephant teams compared with their individual talent. With Bob Brundage ' 42 snapping the whip as House athletic secretary, a galaxy of stars turned out, led by seniors Peter Black in fencing and Jack Hull in hockey, foot- ball, and basketball. Captained by junior George Waters, the football team lived up to its fans ' boasts in the crucial Lowell conflict. On the Yale weekend the eleven tied Jonathan Edwards, 6 — 6, with Hull and Nat Greer holding the line. A spontaneous cross country team of Brundage, Johnny Burton, Lyman Bullard, and Gerry Lenane ran fourth in the university race. Other fall sports included the soccer aggregation, which turned out the best Eliot performance by regularly keeping the Freshman seconds in their proper place, and by taking a second in the league, missing first by AWOLing a climactic contest. Pete Gill ' 43, Jack Hulley ' 44, and Steve Winship ' 42 were the booting eleven ' s mainstays. Winter and the Indoor Athletic Building saw the Ele- phants mixed up in a ha lf-dozen sports. In the university boxing championships 175-pound Cecil Robinson and 165- pound Tom Bartlctt took their weight crowns. On the mat junior George Hibbert won the 165-pound wrestling title. On the team side, Gordy Lyle and Peter Black sparked the trackmen to a third and the fencers to a second, respectively. i. o Lyman Bullard was high scorer in the House hockey league and Captain Hull placed third. By spring vacation the crew prospects appeared excep- tionally strong. Only four men were missing from the two championship shells which swept the Houses from the Charles one year earlier. At the head of the hopeful oarsmen was Captain John Carpenter. Professor Merriman kept up the Christmas play tradi- tion by filling the title role of Shakespeare ' s Henry IV. Bob Tyson ' 43 played the boisterous Falstaff and George Blackman ' 41 the roue, Prince Henry. Professor Finley nervously inter- preted the country soldier ' s nervous tic, and Ben Hazard and Jordan Whitelaw, as the two justices, came near to stealing the show from the more important players. Charlie Bridge, Hal Thewlis, Newbold Landon, Larry Davis, and Steve Winship The keeper of the books in the library A class in first aid has mass practice A lonely sophomore just before closing time Fiedler and guests at formal winter dinner Btfi fell Quit isaia r s - Ktta W y. t - Wtf § •{50} in g from the u- ■owes from the hopeful oarsmen istmas play tndi- sHmrjIF. Bob torn d Ben Hazard and Mr to stealing the harlie Bridge, Hal id Steve Inship a ii gte rim were the other seniors in the cast. The play was directed under the erudite guidance of Associate Professor Francis Matthiessen and Instructor Harry Levin, with Eliot Hartford doing the greater part of the staging. Realizing their position as the college ' s social foglights, Eliot ' s dances played their usual prominent role in House life. In view of this importance the House Committee, chaired by Loren G. MacKinney, and including seniors Jack Peterson, Charlie Bridge, and Bill Young, insisted upon reform. Revolu- tionizing the entire dance committee idea, a Permanent Dance Committee was organized to design and run all the House ' s dances. Juniors Kennedy Smith and Bob Commanday were selected as co-chairmen to lead the experiment. Most important among the dances were the Army weekend with Roly Rogers and the winter formal played by Chappie Arnold. Slightly more informal was the party thrown by the Roaring Forties on the top floor of B and C entries. Most memorable event of that memorable evening was the chandelier which nearly decapitated Professor Merriman. Jani- tor Martin Ratchford was forced to give ample warning before restoring the chaotic lighting system. The Annual House Dinner this senior year took a solemn tone despite the quantities of free-flowing ale, for this was the occasion of a farewell banquet for Housemaster Merriman. President Conant flew back from Washington to be present and Raymond Gram Swing keynoted the speeches. Professor Finley ' s classical allusions were the most crystal memories on this anniversary of Charles William Eliot ' s birthday. But with all that, with the continuing of Eliot life in traditional pattern, the spectre of war could never be forgotten. Eliot was the first House to hold a trial blackout and the hypo- thetical students that were left bleeding to death on the jani- tor ' s steps pointed dramatically to the need for coordination of House defense units. Under E. Bernard Fleischaker such an organization was evolved. Red Cross courses under Steve Winship, blood donations, and air raid-wardening came to be a regular part of extracurricular activities. Throughout the college, it was a final year of duplexity with war and peace, college and Army conflicting at every turn. For Eliot there was the added memory of leaving the social cradle. Bikes in cold storage after the first snow storm PBH tutor Orduay instructs a Boston high school student KIRKLAND HOUSE A winter view of Per sis Smith Hall Kirkland courtyard scene in} If it weren ' t for the chauvinism of janitor J. C. Yule ' s house air-raid wardens, the Deacons ' battle-cry this anti-Nazi spring would be, as in the past, Kirkland Ueber Alles. First in sports, first in camaraderie, and first in the hearts of Eliot House were Uncle Money Munroe ' s little muscle boys down by the postern of Squire Merriman ' s preserve. It wouldn ' t be quite cricket to call them hoarders, but if the athletic Deacons gather up any more inter-House sports trophies, they ' ll warrant a visit from the Cambridge salvage committee, if not from the vandals who filched the silverware in Lowell and Leverett Houses. With House championships already bagged in soccer, Softball, swimming, squash, and track, the famous Straus loving cup bids well to add another year ' s dust to the three-years ' layer which already coats it in the House feeding hall. And any medals the Harvard Dames are passing around for Hah-vud spirit, House fellowship and wholesale inebria- tion are certain to be copped by the motley, yet jovial crew, which salaams before the Master, Walter E. Clark, Professor of Sanskrit and authority on the mysteries of the paddy fields. The professor ' s omnipresent briar has been a trifle hot around the bit several times this year because of the excessive alco- holic ebullition of the House members, but neither he nor friendly Mrs. Clark, the House mother, would change the Kirkland geniality for the pomp of bells and high table or the glitter of a thousand Phi Beta Kappa keys. It ' s as difficult to put one ' s finger on what the Deacons have as it is for a Yard cop to catch the right man in a spring riot. Maybe it ' s the athletic versatility of fellows like Jack Eberle, Lou Sandler, Tom Conlin, and Tex Myers, who go out for about every House sport and help win them all. Maybe it ' s the fact that tutors like Jack Lester, Ed Hewitt and Bob Stephenson take as active a part in the quest of the Holy Straus Trophy as the undergrads, who don ' t live in private suites. 1 r M frl i?i ' J i 1 i I • 1 1 j Brody escorts Harvard model of the year Housemaster Clark is noted as an expert on Oriental languages Pierian Sodality gives a concert in the common room You can ' t grasp the Zeitgeist, but it ' s more in evidence this year than ever before. It seems to go with no tower and a library which reminds you of your grandfather ' s study instead of Widener. It ' s there in hail-fellows-well-met, such as Ted Meredith, House Chairman and special guide to the Oxford Grille. It ' s there in singing around the piano in the common room after supper, when Frank Dunham strikes up Broadway ' s a Tame Street, Compared to Our Main Street and everybody joins in with the chorus of Bring the Drummer to Our Home Town. It ' s there in nocturnal collations of doughnuts, crackers, and beer, and in night-before-football parades to Adams House. The Kirkland something probably accounts for un- forgettable guys like Chuck Griffith, who drive the waitresses crazy by tossing buns and lead the wolf calls when some fellow sits down at a twosey to talk to another fellow ' s girl. Where but in Kirkland House would an all-round chap like Magerk Meredith eat his supper off the floor after an Army football game? Where but in the Deacon ' s dwelling would you find such spunk as Lampy President Coles Phinizy ex- hibited, when he turned down the honor of Class Poet on the grounds that he couldn ' t write a poem? What House outside of Kirkland would draw enough of a crowd at a Yale game dance so that the dance chairman would be able to offer a regular Christmas formal to House members for nil? Consultation in the cloakroom during the winter formal {54} - d fh0 Besides homespun hospitality, happiness, and hootch, Kirkland has a certain amount of distinction. Take for ex- ample Big Mike Brody, the former Navy plebe, who enter- tained models in a $35,000 suite rigged out like a combina- tion of the Oriental room in the Fogg Museum and the cock- tail lounge at the Ritz. Or one can point to Jud Shaplin of the PBK Senior Sixteen, who did so well in his anthropological studies that he was able to take off two months in the year to measure air pilots for Uncle Sam. Then there ' s Bruce Sted- man, President of the Glee Club and Class Chorister; and Coles Phinizy, who got a Class Committee appointment even after he had abdicated his poet job. In a way, too, Kirkland was as cosmopolitan as a Henry James ' novel. It had three-letter man Ed Buckley as a transient in the fall; bunked in Time correspondent Serge Fliegers all year; and in the spring, after George Stephenson had won a commission in the Coast Guard with his sextant and parallel rules from Astronomy 2b, housed Lieutenant Donald T. Lowery, F. A. who was studying at Cruft Lab how to work radio locators. And of course there was Kirky, the Janitor ' s little Scottie who bathed the sun dial daily in the main court- yard. And Grace, the most luscious waitress that the Square could boast of since Ida was at Hayes Bickford ' s. And so with defiance to Martin Dies, the F.B.I., and the D.A.R., every Deacon was entitled to chanticleer this spring the rally call of Kirkland Ueber Alles. Muthis awaits the gun in an interhouse swim meet 56 Attacks on Subs for lunch helps digestion Careful examination of the latest Petty drawing Checkerboard brains exercise in the lounge iii} LEVERETT HOUSE Courtyard facade of McKinlock Hall ; :. ' . I lot ' s Leverett may not be the most beautiful House — it may not even have a tower all its own; Leverett may not win the Straus Trophy, or have the most Phi Beta men, or give the wildest parties, or be outstanding in any of the customary fields. But the House with the lop-sided dining hall is not the drab, uneventful place to inhabit that one might suspect from a cursory glance. In its own individual and bizarre manner Leverett leads the field in more ways than one. While the other six were busy on the stereotyped job of watching for planes, blacking out windows, and placing sand pails in the fireplaces, it was Leverett that first experi- mented with the fifth column. The Radcliffe girls who, weep- ing, staggered home will not forget the illustration proffered them in spy technique when Cecil Drinker unloaded his imi- tation pen filled with tear gas. Nor will accomplices Gordon Dewev, Pete Eustis, and Stan Brooks fail to recall their con- fab with the new Housemaster, Leigh Hoadley, after J -Entry occupants had been routed by the fumes. First episode to forewarn Professor Hoadley of the House he was to rule came during the fall dance. It was a gay affair, deftly handled by dance chairman Brad Haseltine, deftly decorated by nude-artiste Eric Larrabee, and deftly stimulated by various liqueur connoisseurs. As has been the tradition for several years, the library was left open but dark. Snapping on the lights without giving the all-clear signal, Hoadley found himself gazing at a mass demonstration which he termed shocking andwhich he afterwards outlawed, despite verbal protests by smoothies Big Jim Hannah and Languid Lee Foster. In the athletic field as well, Leverett has taken first place for freakishness. It doesn ' t win the Straus Trophy, and its football team didn ' t end up very well in the final league standing; but the green of Leverett left its mark just the same. Trailing Winthrop 6 — throughout the major part of the game, the Bunnies, aided by a spectacular pass snatch by athletic secretary Will Eustis, clambered over the goal-line and tied the score. Trying for the extra point, the line gave way; and swarms of Puritans dashed through the gap to ward off Norm Cameron ' s attempted place-kick. The ball was blocked, but not decisively. It careened high into the air, plummeted onto the cross-bar of the goal-post, and, after teetering there a second, dribbled over the far side. Winning the game, 7 — 6, Leverett was unfairly called lucky for some time afterwards. While other Houses staged plays of various sizes and shapes, Leverett again proved unique by casting Joshua, tutor Wex Wechsler ' s cocker spaniel, in one of the leading roles. If it hadn ' t been for Joe Scott ' s facial contortions, Charlie Palm ' s vocal crescendos, and Arsen Charles ' s eyebrow in- nuendos, Joshua would have stolen the show. The fact that Wechslcr, along with companion Bill Minton, directed this year ' s thespian achievement, George Farquar ' s The Beaux 4 W«ft5 St fro , t ' Urals Strategem, may have had something to do with Joshua ' s prominent position in the cast, although dramatic club chair- man Bob Neiley termed him a born actor. To put the au- dience in the proper mood for Restoration comedy, Gabe Jackson whistled into a flute and Bob Moevs scampered over the piano between the scenes; while Henry Steinhardt, who supplied the sets, encouraged the visual willing suspension of disbelief. A little amateur sleuthing is not beyond the scope of Leverett members ' acumen, and here again the Bunnies prob- ably have a slight edge on other Houses. Just previous to the annual Christmas party, observant janitor Bill Keane noticed the loss of the majestic pine which had been artistically mounted in the right-hand corner of the common room. The alarm was promptly sent out, whereupon versatile House Committee Chairman George Cunningham, tutor Bill Ross, and Secretary-treasurer Dumbo Dave Roberts rounded up a vigilante group, numbering some 27 arboreal-lovers. An ill- concealed trail of silver tinsel led to a neighboring rat-house, where one of the nefarious conspirators was forced to carry the tree back and remain to redecorate it. In the shadow of this holiday symbol, Leverett ' s rite Miss Metcalf, House secretary, busy as usual Head Tutor Freeman prepares for a musical evening ( ) original German Band opened the Christmas party by playing completely through its repertoire — Tannenbaum — some four times, while the beer-guzzling audience tossed pennies down Joe Scott ' s thundering tuba. Following Professor Theodore Morrison ' s rendition of selections from Clarence Day, Alan Epstein nearly blew the roof off the senior common room when he chortled a parady of The Night Before Christmas, complete with smut and not-so-subtle subtleties. Each House has lost men this year because of the draft, but Leverett upset the custom by retaining one member whose end appeared imminent. Told he would be called without fail on April 8, Sam Worthen grabbed himself a case of the mumps, with complications, which deferred him for a month. No story of Leverett House should be terminated with- out a word about the success of the House glee club, headed by John Kessler. With one concert already behind it, the club is planning on another during the spring. Here, however, is apparently the sole aspect of Leverett that cannot be termed unique or bizarre, as are all other aspects of the House, from its un-appetizing dining-hall to its met hods of winning athletic games. Lettuce for the Leverett bunny Post -exam and p re-vacation hilarity : ' .!! After the dance — lights on, books out 09 LOWELL HOUSE From the dining hall arch — the Lowell tower k) 1 Dr. Perkins, Lowell Housemaster, refuels Fall is a good time of year in Lowell House. The air is clear and strong and the vines turn a sympathetic red to the redness of the Georgian walls. It is in a fall like this that we entered the house three years ago. We did not know, then, the intricacies of a high table, or the location of the squash courts. We did not know, then, of the record library, or of the tower room. We had not been in a lewd and bawdy Christmas play or sung in the opera; we had not set out the pilaster lights for a dance, or tackled, viciously, a Kirkland House half-back. We did not know about room permission, or the Master ' s teas; we probably hadn ' t met Dr. Perkins or chatted with Billy Graney at two o ' clock in the morning. We have absorbed parts of this life in the last years, but each fall we can remember our youth . . . the fall is a good time of year in Lowell House and we shall miss it and each other in the fighting fall of 1942. Last year the great political battle of all time swept through the house. Munson and Lacy put Phillips Brooks House aside. Robbins rested from the Crimson. Brooks gave energy. Velizar Dragomir Stanoyevitch, known as Stan, ran for House Committee on a platform of radical relaxation of rules regarding women, and for procuring a ping-pong table. There were beer parties galore . . . rendezvous in the rooms of entry precincts . . . whispers and leaflets. However, the House Committee and fate closed in. A new ping-pong table appeared and Stan, faced with hour exams in Cambridge and defeat in the Balkans, failed . . . and in Crimson next day a notice appeared: Stanoyevitch supporters please meet in Lowell House phone booth for reorganiza- tional meeting. We spread ourselves throughout college: McMechan is bleary-eyed from acting in countless plays . . . Penson survived the goalguard position to captain varsity soccer . . . Robbins has editorialized vehemently against friend and foe . . . from periods of moodiness Class Poet Feltenstein has risen to the heights of Advocate poetry . . . Talbot has developed from a callow tenor to a Glee Club secretary . . . and then there are some who enjoy sitting peacefully on the lawns, not bothering anyone or being bothered. Phi Beta Kappa keys again came to men in the House; to Cannon, Kluss, Symon, Middleton, Murphy, Cunning- ham. Others of us labored without distinction. In the spring we become opera conscious. The Musical Society presents a precious relic opera of earlier days and the house is drafted for duty. Venus and Adonis was so successful that the staff not only threw a beer party and dance, but went on an expedition to Peaches Point for a steak picnic. There on the sands and during a thunder shower, the staff revelled while Smoky Stover, possessor of the highest note in captivity, massaged the larynx of Mr. French and other celebrities. A sad conclusion came when hungry sophomores devoured the left-over steaks. We are prepared! Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks. Defense Coordinator Talbot has welded from the men of Lowell one vast machine. There are hundreds of air Kirklandite Goodman joins Bellboys Knowlton, Prudden, and Axtell in song 61 House Committee worries over collection of dues Kamp announces bond winners during the winter formal raid wardens, dozens of firefighters, scores of first aid squads, multitudes of auxiliary policemen. Indeed, one hopes that there is some lone sophomore sitting hungrily in his room so that the machine may function. The first blackout was splendid. Fire fighters had arranged three bridge games and a cribbage corner. Breunig and Murphy were tyrants of the courtyard, while other wardens sat quietly, hopeful that a feeble light would appear for them to smash viciously. Murky block wardens slunk through murky streets, passing other black shrouded shapes and talking in shrouded whispers. There were no casualties — Holderbaum came blinking from his grotto and Davis climbed the tower to see what was cooking, while the clever one dropped light bulbs to give the warlike atmosphere, but this was incidental. With hall windows blacked out, all the en- tries were shut off from the sun and the court, arousing many a resolution to avenge bruised knees and shins in action against the enemy. And there is the history of our tutors. When war came, four of them married immediately and we all said ah ha, and waited. But we were the surprised ones. Barnaby Keeney, called Prof affectionately by his army buddies, is com- placently marking army aptitude exams in which, strangely enough, he himself stood highest . . . Jimmy King is a member of the armored division unit . . . James Field has put aside the intellectual torch to serve as an ensign. Our friends are going and changing quickly — Elmer Taylor left suddenly to take intensive Japanese with the Navy . . . Bill Munson has been tinkering with radios in the Signal Corps . . . Lacy, resplendent in ensign ' s regalia, went off to the Navy . . . Winslow Smith, less resplendent but more terrifying, is now flying . . . Spaeth goes soon to the Navy . . . Dick England has gone . . . Feltenstein has jumped from philosophy to intensive Russian. Some of us scurry to Casner, others to Washington; some sit back with cool or numb indifference waiting for lightning to strike. Our world is changing rapidly. There are some happy thoughts which come to our mind of our years: of Col. Jumbo Hayes in his cups or chanting some glorious song ... of Middleton, pausing from his straight lines, to swat French with his squash racket ... of Rottschaefer wending an uncertain way from a C Entry Party ... of Lampert attacked by the Stalinist menace, and Edelheit grinding out the stream of consciousness . . . of snooperman reversing books in wild jubilation ... of Hugh Barbour, pajama-clad, attacking with water bucket . . . of Merrill beating out a sad and melancholy wail on his flute ... of innumerable bridge games, culminating in our Ed Rothschild ' s winning the crown at the inter-collegiates . . . of Musgrave contemplating financial ruin after a waltzing ball or two ... of Mr. Lowell leaping enthusiastically and fragilely on and off the stage to congratulate the young actors {62} to) on the wild and unleashed House play. Of Perk dodging the liquid refreshment plummeting from M entry before the Black-Out Ball ... of pugilist Hank Smith winning major encounters with shadowy opponents. The first crocus was discovered early in March. This is an indication that life is soon to begin again. Davis will appear with his golf clubs, Rothschild will start pitching pennies, the small courtyard will take the sun cure, and R entry will begin bridge games on the sun deck. With the warmer weather the House becomes more alive. The library is at the mercy of the noise of the court and the tennis ball. Lt. Col. Hayes and Captains Robbins and Penson and Devereux glisten as they go to drill. The Master takes to his bicycle and soon Mason Hammond will get out his bowling balls. During Commencement the courtyard is blooming pas- sionately. The mountain laurel is loaded with pink blossoms, and the formal red brick has been tickled and softened by the vines . . . the music of the Senior Spread can be heard and couples sit at little tables under lanterns. We shall be leaving the House in June, and it is fitting that everything be at its finest when we do. It is the nicest picture we can take away to the world from which nice pictures are fleeting. Friday night in Lowell, sans wolves Usually standing room only for books, easy chairs, and the best House record library 63 WINTHROP HOUSE Standisb Hall from the court Gore Hall from the Charles {64} .- J. 1 111 I 1 111, ' i 1 - ttl . m 1 1 II . V 1 t l 1 i L N W ' ■A F V«fe IV f 1 pp % w 1 ' - c« 9 0 a Dr. Ferry and the Winthrop mascot After the lucky winners got their bonds Probably very few of the present seniors in Winthrop House can remember the reasons they gave for choosing this House in the first place. Winthrop, we were told, was the athlete ' s House. We were not athletes, most of us, who nerv- ously awaited the notification that would either admit us or condemn us to a year at least of sordid quarters in the wilds of De Wolfe Street. We had naively praised and commended Winthrop ' s central on the river location in our application blanks, extolled and approbated its all-encompassing library, eulogized, panegyrized, and exalted its excellent tutorial staff. Actually the majority of us probably preferred Winthrop House because it had a reputation for informality and no objectionable reputation for anything else. And once we were lucky enough to get in, we never had occasion to regret it; we even, to our surprise, often found ourselves in arguments with less-foruntate inhabitants of foreign Houses and un- wittingly abandoned our indifference to discuss the merits of Winthrop over those of all others. Our reputation for prowess on the playing-fields is well-deserved, we modestly admit, but is not to be necessarily considered a characteristic and inescapable birthright. We deny the doctrine of inherited brawn. The list of Winthrop men in the Class of 1942 who have played on varsity teams is too long to print. In the inter-House league as well, Win- throp has generally placed high. The emphasis in the Winthrop athletic program, organized this year by Ab Fenn, has not been on victories, or on outstanding teams, but in the number of men who have taken part. During our sophomore year we won the House football championship and went on to beat Davenport College of Yale, sparked by such stars as All-House George Dreher, Dick Loomis, John Lowell, and Ben Whitehill. But then Dick Loomis got married, and George got indifferent, some of our standouts rose to the varsity or got drafted, and consequently our football fortunes last fall were low. After a giant rally before the final game with Adams, our team went out and battled to a frustrating — tie. Among the seniors who played were Kay Rogers, John Sopka, Ev Brown, Ab Fenn, and Tom Cook. The Winthrop House hockey team has set the pace in House hockey circles, remaining undefeated for the past three years, and has won the Yale series each time. Bill LaCroix, Dick Loomis, and John Lowell were outstanding, with able support from Tom White, Paul Lamothe, and Al Casey. LaCroix, captain, coach, and chief umpire-heckler, capped the season by scoring both goals in the 2—1 victory over the fast-skating Davenport College sextet. Our crews have consistently rivalled those of Eliot for top honors, but we try to forget the time that our shell was inadvertently sent crashing into the bank and nine men were forced to walk back along the shore carrying the telescoped wreck. The sweepmen were coached by Buck Anderson this 65 ' Boy Meets Girl in production spring, and fortunately have not yet had any steering trouble to report. Basketball, squash, baseball, and other sports have also done very well for themselves and have been enthusias- tically supported. This year ' s House Committee, seniored by Chairman Nelson Darling, John Lowell, Ab Fenn, and Frank Mc- Kechnie, has sponsored a program of events in the best of Puritan traditions. The dances, managed by McKechnie and John Veblen, have been successful socially, if not financially, and provided good opportunity to show off our taste in women without having to suffer the embarrassment of bringing them around for Sunday lunches. While our dances are not of the type known as orgies, in which at least one other House is known to indulge, moonlit walks in the Gore quadrangle during after-divisional mixed celebrations provided a gentle- man ' s entertainment. As a feature of the winter dances, and as a contribution to paying for the war, girls received chances on defense bonds instead of corsages, and at midnight four lucky ticket holders won twenty-five dollar bonds. The Christmas dinner, at which Ben Landing was awarded the prize given annually to the outstanding senior Huddle off the football field {66} all-around man, was a memorable occasion. Then it was, as the Crimson inimitably reported, that Dr. Ferry asked all the boys to donate blood for the use of the armed forces at Christmas dinner. In spite of the implication, over 200 men volunteered and Winthrop has led all other Houses by many pints in the amount donated to the Red Cross. Dr. Ferry pioneered by being the first to submit to the needle and tube, but before long almost every member could proudly show his membership card in the volunteer blood donor service. The climax of Winthrop ' s intellectual season beyond doubt was the presentation of this year ' s play, Boy Meets Girl. Starring Stan Durwood, Vern Miller, and a non-resident named Misty Fallon, with Herb Weiner as director, the play provided plenty of color and off-color. The common room was jammed for the two nights, and the re- writing job which was done on the script during rehearsals would have made it first-rate entertainment on Broadway or in Scollay Square. Dr. Else returned from his Sabbatical in the grand manner, to appear on the stage just as the final curtain dropped. All this is to the good. But any fair account of Win- throp House in the Year of Our Lord 1942 must consider as well a great tragedy. For many a moon heretofore the residents of John Winthrop have cultivated the fine art of water-throwing. Over the years this technique has developed from the manipu- lation of ordinary glassware to the scientific use of stratosphere balloons. Even Herb Fulton and Dr. Ferry have taken an occasional soaking in good spirits. A high official of the university even received a paper bag-full during one of the test blackouts, with no remarks but a few unprintable words. But this spring, in an excess of vernal frivolity, two irrespons- ible members (who will wear sackcloth and ashes for the rest of their lives) had the asperity to douse several maiden ladies and a lawyer promenading on Mill Street. The combination was too much. As a result, water-throwing has been banned forever — even the famous D-entry solarium has been officially declared out of bounds. Informality, then, has been the keynote of Winthrop House as long as we have known it; it represents in innum- erable ways the ideal Harkness and President Lowell had in mind when they founded the House system at Harvard. The focal point of this spirit has been in the person of Mrs. Doe, to whom hardly a man in the House has not gone at one time or another for maternal advice, or borne the brunt of one of her jokes. For the Dee Dee grapevine is without parallel. She is one of the major reasons why we of 1942 will in the years to come look back with pleasure upon our visit in the Puritan Homestead. Another Hollister duel or scream from the stacks would liven up this scent { ) Members of the Class of 1942 Not for a quarter of a century has a graduating class faced a responsibility which is akin to yours. In my opinion, only once — in the War of Independence — have Harvard seniors been called to arms in a struggle so momentous for the future of this land. Never have the alternatives of future history been projected more clearly before our eyes: victory or defeat, our way of life or that of the Axis Powers, the development of our unique heritage or an enslavement patterned on that of prostrate France. As a nation the choice is ours. As indivi- duals, each according to his lights must through bitter years participate in the great events which shake the world. You and your contemporaries more than any others will determine the outcome. On your fortitude and skill largely turns the country ' s answer to the Axis challenge. That you are ready and able, no one need doubt. On your acts hang our hopes for the future realization of the ideals of freedom, equality, and peace. Personally and on behalf of Harvard University I wish you well. -V JLo n l cj- u m ■{68} I, quality, Loren G. MacKinney First Marshal MARSHALS The oldest and yellowest parchments in Widener ' s subterranean archives indicate that the office of Class Marshal existed as early as 1704, and probably goes back farther. A decree from the President in that year directs that for the mayntenance of goode order in the Commencement Proces- sion, one Marshall shal march in front and one Marshall shal march behind. There is, however, no further remaining record of the Marshals until the turn of the last century, when both Marshals headed the procession, and apparently had been doing so for some decades. By this time, of course, the office had become honorary and had lost its disciplinary character. No one really knows when or how the number of Mar- shals grew from two to three. But there were three in 1830, when the undergraduate Harvard Register jestingly wrote a description of the two lesser Marshals holding up the trail- ing gown of the first Marshal. And there is an old, but hardly credible, legend that the third Marshal was added to prevent splits, such as occurred when one Marshal was sup- posed to have passed to the south of University Hall and the other to the north, creating untold confusion. Traditionally, then, the offices of First, Second, and Third Marshal have been purely honorary, and their duties have ended by heading the Class parade at Commencement. The Marshals are, of course, the outstanding men of their class, and as such the Class of 1941 felt that they should have a more functional connection with the Class after graduation. The Class Constitution was consequently revised to include the Marshals as ex officio members of the Permanent Class Committee, and the Class of 1942 has ratified that constitution. Endicott Peabody II Second Marshal Eugene D. Keith Third Marshal A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches {70 nets irshal rther. w the oces- 1 shal ining when ' had TO, liiury Mat- 1830, otea edto i sup- id the meat. f their lhave larion. ldiide Class ution. CLASS OFFICERS Although the origins of Qass Day itself can be traced back to the earliest days of Harvard, how most of the Class Day Officers began is rather obscure. The best known story, and probably an authentic one, deals with the evolution of the Ivy Orator from a lowly teller of anecdotes to a lecturer in the Stadium. Late in the last century the graduating stu- dents developed the custom of gathering informally behind Sever Hall on Class Day morning, for the purpose of listen- ing to racy tales told by one of their number. But when the sisters and other female guests of the seniors found that the stories could be listened to from Sever ' s upper floors, it be- came necessary to polish up the oration and promote it to the rank of a presentable and official Stadium event. Less is known of the Qass Odist and the Class Poet. Their function has been traced to the earliest Commencement exercises, in which Greek and Latin parts of varying degrees of humor were presentt J. On the other hand, they have also been traced to similar positions in the long-extinct Navy Club, an undergraduate society which entertained the class with public poetry readings in Commencement Week. No one knows when or how the Chorister started. Apparently he was well under way when first mentioned in existing records — about 1880. The same may be said for the Secretary and the Treasurer, but their beginnings were no doubt quite prosaic in comparison with the origin of the Ivy Orator. The remaining class officer is the Class Agent, who was first appointed in 1907, for the purpose of looking after the 25-year fund. John P. Bunker Treasurer Abbott T. Fenn Secretary R. Bruce Stedman Chorister Robert H. Coleman Odist William C. Murphy Orator Harry D. Feltenstein Jr. Poet Class day exercises in the Yard and Stadium in} Richard G. Pfister Chairman J. Christopher Finegan Thomas Gardiner CLASS DAY COMMITTEE While the actual Committee is hardly more than a generation old, the Class Day which it supervises hails from the forgotten century when senior sophisters sat solstices instead of taking divisionals or finals. The class used to finish its recitations on March 10 of its fourth year, and the custom of presenting the Class Tutor with pieces of plate at this time was the earliest ancestor of the confetti battle. The sophisters drank prohibited liquors and their two Vale- dictorians, in as witty Latin as they could muster, declaimed before their classmates and the Corporation. When, after the establishment of the Hollis professor- ships, seniors were required to attend public lectures from March 10 until Commencement, and hence remain in Cam- bridge, the exercises were transferred to June, and gradually became more of a festival. In 1773 a sophomore recorded that the college was all drunkenness and confusion as a result of the Corporation ' s depriving one Scholar — the Valedictory Orator — to make an entertainment for the senior class which has always before been customary. This ceremony was the rudimentary beginning — and not only of Harvard Class Day. The seniors ' farewell gradually grew more alcoholic and uninhibited, and it seems probable that the presence of President Quincy ' s four unmarried daughters had something to do with its transformation into the more easily supervised Class Day. The Class Poem became part of the proceedings around 1795, and other formalities gradually were added. Nevertheless by 1838 Class Day had become such an orgy that Quincy warned the rowdy class about to graduate to abstain from punch and dancing, or they would lose their degrees. The famous remark, No dancing! Take partners for a cotillion! was made when Professor Webster found young men and girls strolling under the elms to the tune of dance music, and was the origin of the senior spread. Confetti battles in the Stadium, private parties, enter- tainments, and orations characterize the modern version, and the Class Day Committee has replaced the Collectors of Theses who planned the earliest ceremonies. PE A. Theodore Lyman Jr. Vern K. Miller Edward I. Rothschild Bill Webber It ., {12} EE PERMANENT CLASS COMMITTEE In the days when classes consisted of less than 60 men, class unity was far greater than at present, and there was no need for the permanent committees which are required by the bloated colleges of modern times. Almost until the beginning of Eliot ' s administration each Harvard class functioned as a mutual aid fraternity, and no Alumnus went hungry or bank- rupt as long as his classmates knew of his plight. Oliver Wendell Holmes ' poems to the Boys of ' 29 were something more than a sentimental abstraction. Early in the nineteenth century the customs of Class Reports and Class Reunions grew up. Before a class graduated, the members wrote their class lives, often with the most interesting details on their struggles for an education, in an album, which the class secretary carried off with him and kept up to date. The Class of 1822 was the first to print a report. Periodical reunions at Commencement began at this time. Classmates who lived in or near Boston dined frequently at some member ' s house, and drank their own Madeira, with the class numerals blown into every bottle. In the seventies, the size of the college grew rapidly. This situation, coupled with the elective system introduced by President Eliot, gradually gave the class a more impersonal aspect which made the old system unworkable. The Class of 1877 consequently appointed the first Permanent Class Com- mittee, with the express purpose of holding the Alumni together. By 1905 ,the present system of reports and re- unions in the third, sixth, tenth, fifteenth, twenty-fifth, and fiftieth years was established. The first three of these are characterized by brightly colored costumes worn by the old grads as a means of recapturing the gay spirit of their undergraduate days. Twenty-five year men and their families live in the dormitories in the Yard. For them the Class Committee arranges outings to Swampscott and Dedham, track and swimming meets in Cambridge for sons and daughters, a musical show in the Union, a dinner-dance at the Hotel Somerset, and a Pop Concert in Symphony Hall. C. Burgess Ay res George W. Heiclen Peter Macgowan 0. William llaussermann Jr. Class Agent (Appo ntit i ) 473} Coles H. Phim ) William B. Parsons Jr. Harry Newman Jr. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES ROBERT TUCKER ABBOTT Born September 28, 1919, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Humberside Collegiate, Toronto, Ontario. Home address: 16 Franklin Street, Watertown, Massachusetts. Living at home. Phillips Brooks House (1). Biology Club (1-4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Biological research. ANDREW BORDEN ADAMS Born December 20, 1919, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 1012 Madison Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Rifle Club (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Medicine. NATHAN ADLER Born June 18, 1921, in Little Rock, Arkansas. Prepared at Westport High. Home address: Bellerive Hotel, Kansas City, Missouri. Dun- ster House. Rifle Club (2). House Committee (4). Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM EDWARD ALBERS Born May 16, 1920, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 55 Irving Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Crimson (1-4), business manager (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. RICHARD ORTH ALDRICH Born February 13, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at North Quincy High. Home address: 117 West Elm Avenue, Wollas- ton, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Track squad (1); wrestling team (1-4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Diplomatic service. LUCIEN VICTOR ALEXIS JR. Bornjuly 23, 1921, in New Orleans, Louisiana. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 4634 Wil- low Street, New Orleans, Louisiana. Adams House. Fencing team (1); lacrosse squad (2, 4); lacrosse team (1, 3); House football (2-4). Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Medicine. 1636 — On October 28 the Great and General Court of Massachusetts passed the legislative act that founded Harvard College, but no classes were held for two years. GORDON ALLEN Born October 27, 1919, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Concord High. Home address: Pine Acre, Elm Street, Concord, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House swimming (2-4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (1); inter-race council (4). Biology Club (3, 4). Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Research or Teaching. JOSEPH MARK AMBROSE Born May 10, 1921, in Arlington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 3 Butler Avenue, Danvers, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. House crew (2). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1, 2). German Club (2, 3). Caisson Club (3, 4), vice-president (4). Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Law. EDWARD AMES Born October 8, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Millbrook. Home address: Old Lyme, Connecticut. Kirkland House. American Civilization Group (1); Liberal Union (3, 4), president (4); Defense Service Commit- tee (4); Council on Post-war Problems (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Economics. THEODORE ANASTOS Born November 27, 1920, in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 592 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Cambridge Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government administration or Law. ALAN ROBERT ANDERSON Born March 6, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 2221 Newton Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Kirkland House. House squash (2-4); House crew (2-4). House library com- mittee (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Retail merchan- dising. ALBERT ELVING ANDERSON Born September 7, 1921, in Hyannis, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Barnstable High. Home address: 25 Louis Street, Hyannis, Massachu- setts. College address: 1746 Cambridge Street. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. {74 } 4 75 ' 5BERRIEN PALMER ANDERSON JR. Born January 28, 1920, in San Francisco California. Prepared at Hocchkiss. Home address; La Quinca, San Rafael, California. Winthrop House. Crew squad (I, 3, 4). Lampoon (2-4). Mountaineering Club (2). Glee Club. Hasry Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Foreign service. RALPH AINLEY ANDERSON Born October 8, 1920, in Iowa Gty, Iowa. Prepared at Prescott High, Arizona. Home address: 938 Hilldale Avenue, West Hollywood, California. Lowell House. C. A. Borden Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. SUMNER ROBINSON ANDREWS Born May 14, 1920, in Upper Montclair, New ' ersey. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 112 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Massa- chusetts. College address: 45 Mt. Auburn Street. Lampoon (2-4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. ROGER ANGELL Born September 19, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 61 East 93rd Street, New York, New York. College address: 44 Mt. Auburn Street. Squash squad (1). Student Union (1,2). D. U. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Publishing. ALAN JOSEPH ANSEN Born January 23, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Woodmcre. Home address: 891 Academy Road, Woodmere, New York. Leverett House. At Harvard 3 years. Union library committee (I). French Club (1, 2); modern language conference (1 3); classical club (1 4). John Harvard Scholarship. Phi Beta kappa, junior eight, second marshal. Field of concentration: English, intended vocation: Scholiast. Present vocation: Grad- uate School. JOHN WILLIAM ARMSTRONG JR. Born July 24, 1920, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Prepared at Berwick High. Home address: Berwick. Maine. Dunstcr House. American Civilization Group (I). Henry B Humphrey Scholarship. Field of concentration ' History. THOMAS BUFFUM ASHWELL Born May 28, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 49 Park Street, New Canaan, Connecticut. Lowell House. House hockey (2-4); House soccer (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iro- quois Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Teaching. JOHN ADAMS ATCHLEY Born May 30, 1920, in Baltimote, Maryland. Transferred from Williams. Home address: 262 Oakwood Road, Englewood, New Jersey. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. Present vocation: Medical school. ELISHA ATKINS Born November 16, 1920, in Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 10 Juniper Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Football squad (1-4). Council on Post-war Problems (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Owl Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended vocation: Teaching. JACOB ATKINS Born September 24, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 30 Reedsdale Street, Brighton, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House football (2); House basketball (2). Boston Latin Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Statistics or Actuarial work. HERBERT BARTHOLOMEW AULET Born September 25, 1920, in Poughkeepsic, New York. Prepared at St. Peter ' s High. Home address: 28 Davies Place, Poughkeepsic, New York. Winthrop House. Baseball squad (1). Engineering Society (1, 2). Field of concentra- tion: Engineering. EUGENE SMITH AUSTIN Bom August 23. 1°20, in Mt Pleasant, Tennes- see. Prepared at Hay Long High Home ad- dress: Rural route 4, Mt. Pleasant. Tennessee. I.cvcrett House Biology Club (4). Glee Club. Harvard College National Scholarship. !-• -!• I ol Concentration: Biology. Intended vocation; Medicine. 1640- On AufjM 21 ibirty-yiar-old Htnry Duniltr btcamt the lecond preiidenl, uplaane. Salhanitl Raton, who had flowed hit aimtant and itr ltd insufficient bet , brtad, and bttr. ROBERT FREDERICK AVERY Born December 17, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared ar Adelphi Academy. Home address: 461 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Levererr House. Crew squad (1); House crew (4). House glee club (2-4). Glee Club. Field of concenrration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Medicine. CHARLES BURGESS AYRES Born February 2, 1920, in Wallingford, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 355 North Main Street, Wallingford, Connecti- cut. Winthrop House. Football team (1-4); hockey team (1, 3, 4); baseball team (1-4); House hockey (2). Jubilee Committee (1). Undergraduate Athletic Council (4). Permanent Class Committee. Varsity Club; FoxClub. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Teaching. GUY NORMAN BACON Born February 10, 1920, in Westbury, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Jericho Turnpike, Westbury, New York. Col- lege address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Crew squad (1), junior varsity (2), combination (3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Banking. ROBERT BACON Born August 6, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Santa Barbara. Home address: 210 Highland Street, Dedham, Massa- chusetts. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Foreign service. CHARLES ADAMS BAKER Born July 1, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Grand Haven High. Home address: 3241 Hazelwood Avenue, Detroit, Michigan. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Architecture. GORDON MILTON BAKER Born January 29, 1920, in Chester, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home ad- dress: 2709 Mt. Holly Street, Baltimore, Maryland. Dunster House. Engineering Club, secretary (4). Field of concentration: Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Engineering. I« tiwnawga a mi 1642 — First commencement was held and degrees were given to nine students. A dinner, enlivened with Greek and Latin orations, was attended by fifty persons. HAROLD DORTIC BAKER Born January 4, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 281 Lake Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Squash team (1-4), captain (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fly Club. Field of concentration: History. NORMAN IRVING BAKER Born June 13, 1921, in Haverhill, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Haverhill High. Home address: 44 Newton Road, Haverhill, Massa- chusetts. College address: 33 Sacramento Street. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. GEORGE APPLETON BALL Born April 12, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter Home addtess: 6452 Overbrook Avenue, Phila delphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Swim ming squad (1-4); House swimming (2-4) Glee Club. Harvard College Scholarship Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Aeronautical Engineering. JOHN WINTHROP BALLANTINE Born October 1, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Council Rock, Oyster Bay, New York. College address: 24 DeWolfe Street. House squash (2, 3); House golf (2, 3). Crimson (1-4), executive editor (4); Council on Post-war Problems, chairman (4). Hasty Pudding-Insti- tute of 1770; Delphic Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Journalism or Law. HUGH STEWART BARBOUR Born August 7, 1921, in Peking, China. Pre- pared at Bryanston School, England. Home address: 3521 Cornell Place, Cincinnati, Ohio. Lowell House. Soccer squad (1), junior varsity (3); House soccer (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House: social service committee (1, 2). Pacifist Association (2-4); Committee for Food Relief, chairman (3). Work Camp Association (4). Outing Club (3). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Science. JONAS ALEXANDER BARISH Botn March 22, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 41 Ellwood Avenue, Mt. Vernon, New York. Leverett House. Crimson (2-4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: English. {76 } 1 1 YALE ARTHUR BARKAN Born January 1, 1921, in Vilna, Poland. Pre- pared at Cleveland Heights High. Home address: 3000 Corydon Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Leverett House. Progressive (1). Student Union (1-4). Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. DANIEL DAVIS BARKER Born February 9, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: West Street, Litchfield, Connecticut. Adams House. Swimming squad (1). Phillips Brooks House (1). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: German. Intended vocation: Teaching. THOMAS PIERCE BARNEFIELD Born March 2, 1920, in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Prepared at Pawtucket High. Home address: 97 Summit Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Dunster House. House squash (2-4); House basketball (2-4). Phillips Brooks House (1-4), vice-president (4): information committee, chairman (3). Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM ARTHUR BARNES JR. Born July 16, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at St. Thomas Military Academy. Home address: 226 West Minnehaha Parkway, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Leverett House. Football squad (1), junior varsity (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Business. ROBERT BARNET Born June 6, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 248 Marl- borough Street, Boston. Massachusetts. Adams House. House squash (J, 4). Crimson (2-4), house committee chairman (4), assistant business manager (4). Field of concentration : Economics. Intended vocation: Business. MARVIN GALBRAITH BARRETT Born May 6, 1920, in Des Moines, Iowa. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address. 1408 Forestdale Drive, Des Moines, Iowa. College address y Mt Auburn Street. Ad- tteau (I 4). president (4). Phi Beta Kappa. Signet Society. Field of concentration: En g- lish. Intended vocation: Publishing. 77 } JOHN MALCOLM BARTER Born March 12, 1920, in Beverly, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Beverly High. Home ad- dress: 7 Highland Terrace, Beverly, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House (1). Howard Rogers Clapp Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Journalism. CARL FREDERICK. BARTZ Born October 17, 1921, in Dallas, Texas. Prepared at Texas Country Day. Home ad- dress: 4209 University Boulevard, Dallas, Texas. Lowell House. Lacrosse team, man- ager (4). Guardian (3, 4), secretary (4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (2, 3). Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Education. WILLIAM HENRY BATCHELOR Born February 4, 1921, in Palmerton, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 117 Columbia Avenue, Palmerton, Pennsyl- vania. Lowell House. Boylston Chemical Club (2-4). Harvard College Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. EMERY JOHN BATTIS Born May 30 , 1915, in Arlington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 1010 Massachusetts Avenue, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Price Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Drama instruction and direction. CHARLES THEODORE BAUER Born March }, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 18 Rutlcdgc Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Track squad (I, 4). Engineer- ing (lull (2). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. PHILIP CHARLES HEALS Horn October 4, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 179 Front Street, Wmchendon, Massachuseiiv College address: 24 Cedar Road, Belmont Lampoon (. ' i) lltingCluh (1). Hasty Pud- ding liiMiiutc ut 1770; Fox Club; Signet My. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Manufacturing. I6J0 The charier, mil in me today, uai ob- tained from the General Court. It continued the Board of Over uer i ai il had keen or fanned in 1642 JOHN MAURICE BEATON Born April 18, 1920, in Montreal, Quebec. Prepared at Milton High. Home address: 91 Meredith Circle, Milton, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. Dramatic Club (2-4); House dramatics (3). Glee Club. Field of concentra- tion: French and Greek Literature. Intended vocation: Stage design. WALTER JOSEPH BECKHARD Born September 20, 1920, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 30 Powell Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Film Society (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Busi- ROBERT CHARLES BENCHLEY JR. Born August 26, 1919, in Bronxville, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 2 Lynwood Road, Scarsdale, New York. College address: 45 Mt. Auburn Street. Wrestling squad (1). Lampoon (2-4), Ibis (3), president (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club; Spee Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Advertising. DAVID PERRY BENNETT Born December 24, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 41 Avon Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Student Union (1-4), president (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government HOWARD CURTIS BENNETT JR. Born July 5, 1921, in Kuling, Kaingsi, China. Prepared at Glens Falls. Home address: Loudon Road, Latham, New York. Eliot House. Advocate (3, 4). Classical club (3, 4). Phi Beta Kappa, junior eight, secretary. Charles Haven Goodwin Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Classics. Intended vocation: Writing. RALPH BLACKHURST BENNETT JR. Born July 4, 1920, in Portland, Oregon. Pre- pared at The Dalles High. Home address: The Dalles, Oregon. Crimson (2). Henry Miller Club, president and founder (4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Classics. | 1654 — President Dunster resigned because of his conviction that infant baptism was unscriptural, and Charles Chauncey succeeded him. A short lived Indian college was founded. CHARLES PRESCOTT BERDELL III Born May 3, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 105 East 53rd Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. House squash (2-4). Honor Scholar- ship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended voca- tion: Chemical Engineering. LEONARD HAROLD BERNSTEIN Bornjanuary 22, 1921, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at William Penn High. Home ad- dress: 2817 North Second Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Dudley Hall. Student Union (1-4). John Reed Society (3-4). Field of concentration: History. HAROLD CHARLES BERTRAND Born July 11, 1920, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Quincy High. Home address: 63 Centre Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. Adams House. Spanish Club (2-4); French Club (1-4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Transportation. ARTHUR LYMAN BESSE JR. Born September 26, 1919 in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: 37 Morris Lane, Scarsdale, New York. Dunster House. House soccer (2-4). Yacht Club (1-4), commodore (4). Bicycle Club (3), secretary-treasurer. Ski Club (2). Outing Club (4) . Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Engineering. JAMES SAVAGE BISHOP Born July 14, 1920, in Louisville, Kentucky. Transferred from Duke University. Home address: 138 North Hite Avenue, Louisville. Kentucky. Adams House. Guardian (2) House yearbook, art editor (3). Harvard Col lege Scholarship. Field of concentration Sociology. Intended vocation: Letters. PETER GAMBLE BLACK Born September 4, 1918, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 304 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Fencing team (1); House fencing (4). Advocate (3, 4); Monthly (2). Hollis Club (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. (78 j! l ROBERT BRUCE BLACK Born May 23, 1920, in Arlington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 180 Kent Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Crimson (1-4), advertising manager (4). Foreign Relations Club (2, 3). Outing Club (3, 4), treasurer (3). Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: Govern- ment service, farming. HARRISON TWEED BLAINE Born August 7, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: 6 Club Drive, Hewlett, New York. Claverly Hall. Football squad (1); House football (2, 4); wrestling squad (2, 3); wrestling team (1, 4). Student Council (3, 4). Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Iroquois Club; Fly Club; Signet Society. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Law. LIONEL ROBERT BLATTNER Bornjanuary 7, 1921, in Cairo, Egypt. Prepared at Merccrsburg. Home address: 112 Central Park South, New York, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Civil service. THOMAS WILLIAM BLAZEY Born September 15, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Euclid Central High. Home ad- dress: 1452 East 196 Street, Euclid, Ohio. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House: under- graduate faculty (2). Julius Dexter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics and Mathematics. EVERETT FRANKLIN BLEILER Born April 30, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 565 Central Street, Holliston, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: International Club. International Club (2 4). Henry Ware Clark Scholarship. Field of concentration: Anthropology. JAMES MORTON BLl MGARTEN Born November 25. 1920, in New York. New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address looo Park Avenue. New York. New York Kirkland House. Crew squad (1); House crew (2. 3). Monthly (2). Radio workshop .). director (4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Radio script writing. {19 r WILLIAM JOSEPH BOBEAR Born March 19, 1920, in Schenectady, New York. Prepared at Haverford High. Home address: 24 Greenview Lane, Llawerch, Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended voca- tion: Chemistry. RONALD BOLLAY Born December 12, 1921, in Stuttgart, Germany. Prepared at Chevy Chase. Home address: 1404 Valencia Avenue, Pasadena, California. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Swimming squad (1-3); basketball squad (1); House basketball (2); House football (2). Engineering Club (2). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Aeronautical Engineering. EUGENE LEWIS BONDY Born December 14, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at New Rochelle High. Home address: 6 Brookdale Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. Lowell House. Dramatic Club (2-4). Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Law. JAMES DONALD BOWMAN JR. Born March 11, 1920, in Millersburg, Pennsyl- vania. Transferred from Dickinson. Home address: 557 Union Street, Millersburg, Penn- sylvania. Eliot House. House squash (4). Liberal Union (4). Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. RODNEY HOYN TON Born June 1, 1919, in Arlington, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 7 Pad- dington Road, Scarsdale, New York. Kirkland House. Crew squad, 150-pound (1). Naval Society (3, 4). advisory board (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field cm concen- tration: Psychology. Intended vocation: United States Navy. LEON HAROLD BRACHMAN Born July 21, 1920, id Marietta, Ohio, Pre- pared at Marietta High Home address: 2308 Medlord Court West. Ion Worth, Texas. College address: 50 Pollen Sircct. House de- bating (J) Pierian Sodality (2 4), treasurer (2 •(), Symphony orchestra (1 I), Concert master (2 •!). Harvard College Scholarship, held of concentration Astronomy. Intended vocation: Oil Production, 1672 On Chaanay ' l Jtalh IjnnarJ Hoar bt- (ami prtiidtnl. Tun ytan tattr ibt Uudmll Jut r it J in a b Jy, forcing Hoar to rtiifn in Man , I67i. THORWILL BREHMER Born September 15, 1921, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Montclair High. Home address: 105 North Mountain Avenue, Mont- clair, New Jersey. Eliot House. Swimming squad (1, 2); House swimming (2). Boylston Chemical Club (3). House dramatics (3). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. CHARLES BREUNIG Born November 27, 1920, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Shortridge High. Home address: 1818 North Talbott Avenue, Indian- apolis, Indiana. Lowell House. House Com- mittee (4); House musical society (2-4); House dramatics (3, 4). Glee Club. Henry D. andjonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Educational Administration. CHARLES SHARTLE BRIDGE Born March 5, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 303 Elm Street, Franklin, Ohio. Eliot House. American Civilization Group (1). Debating (1), execu- tive council (1). Smoker Committee (1); Union Committee (1). Phillips Brooks House, secretary (4), undergraduate faculty (1-3). Student Defense League, executive committee (3, 4). Liberal Union (3-4). Student council (4). House Committee (2-4). Glee Club. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law or Teaching. RICHARD NATHANIEL BRILL Born September 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at A. B. Davis High. Home address: The Commodore, Long Beach, New York. College address: 45 Winthrop Stteet. Phillips Brooks House (1, 2). Field of concen- tration: Philosophy. Intended vocation: Busi- ROBERT BOWDEN BROADWATER Born August 14, 1920, in Oakland, Maryland. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: Oakland, Maryland. College address: 53 Dunster Street. Advocate (1-4), pegasus (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. MICHAEL JAMES BRODY Born May 15, 1914, in Duquesne, Pennsylvania. Transferred from United States Naval Academy. Home address: Schenley Apartments, Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Governmental economic planning. p 1684 — Hoar ' s successor, Urian Oakes, died during, a total eclipse of the sun, and was followed by John Rogers. Two years later Increase Mather began his presidency. ROBERT WALTER BROGE Born October 27, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepare at Glenville High. Home address: 18101 Landseer Road, Cleveland, Ohio. Lev- erett House. Harvard Club of Cleveland Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemis- try. Intended vocation: Research Chemistry. THOMAS JOSEPH BROIDRICK JR. Born February 22, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Carteret Academy. Home address: 177 Clairmont Terrace, Orange, New Jersey. Dunster House. Baseball team (1): football team (1), junior varsity (2); House football (3-4); House hockey (3). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended voca- tion: Engineering. JACK EDWARD BRONSTON Born January 10, 1922, in Plainfield, New Jersey. Prepared at Plainfield High. Home address: 1130 West 7th Street, Plainfield, New Jersey. Eliot House. Cross country squad (1) ; House baseball (2-4); House football (2, 3). Debating Council (1). Red Book (1); Guardian (2-4), secretary (2), managing editor (3), editor-in-chief (3, 4). Student Union (2); Liberal Union (3, 4). Spanish Club (3, 4); Pan-American Club (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. STEPHEN BROOKS Born February 14, 1920, in Berwyn, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: Leopard Road, Berwyn, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Soccer team (1); track team (1, 4); House soccer (2-4); House squash (2-4). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Mechanical Engineering. WALTER DENISON BROOKS JR. Born November 17, 1919, in Milton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 956 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. College address: 28 Mt. Auburn Street. Hockey team (1); House hockey (2). Phillips Brooks House (2). Pennoyer Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. BARTLETT WILLIAMS BROWN Born December 3, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 98 Silver Street, Dover, New Hampshire. College address: 65 Mt. Auburn Street. Football team (1); wrestling team (1); House track (2, 3); House wrestling (3). House dance committee (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. I s {80 } « 4 81 } DUNCAN FRASER BROWN Born May 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at South Kent. Home address: 2423 Ingleside Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. College address: 48 Mt. Auburn Street. House foot- ball (2). Yacht Club (2). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Comparative Philology. In- tended vocation: Business. EVERETT HENRY BROWN III Born August 15, 1920, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 5720 Wissahickon Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Crew squad (1-3); House football (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. LAURENCE ALLYN BROWN JR. Born March 29, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at MUton. Home address: 434 Marlborough Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Classical Club (1-4). Milton Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; D. U. Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. ROBERT PERCIVAL BRUNDAGE Born June 13, 1920, in Westfield, Newjersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 169 Chris- topher Street, Montclair, New Jersey. Eliot House. Track team (1, 2); House cross country (2); House soccer (2); House base- ball (2-4); House golf (2-4); House hockey (2-4); House track (2-4). House assistant athletic secretary (3); House athletic secretary (4). Outing Club (3, 4); Hollis Club. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Diplomatic Service. EDWARD TIMOTHY BUCKLEY JR. Born July 2, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Ely Memorial High. Home address: 605 East Harvey Street, Ely, Minnesota. Kirk- land House. Baseball team (1-4), basketball team (1-4); football team (1 ); football squad (2,3). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Sociol- ogy. Intended vocation: Athletic Direction. BENJAMIN LANGLEY BUCKLIN Born December 6, 1919, in New London, New Hampshire. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 45 Cottage Street, Brooklme, Massachu- setts. College address: 72 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 3 years. Golf team (I); House football (2); House golf (2); House hockey (2). Hastv Pudding-I intitule of 1 770, Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Engineering. CHARLES MELVILLE BUCKLIN Born June 28, 1920, in New London, New Hampshire. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 45 Cottage Street, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Golf squad (1); House golf (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM EDWARD BUNCE Born February 21, 1921, in Fargo, North Dakota. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 104 South 50 Avenue, Omaha, Nebras- ka. Leverett House. House tennis (3); House squash (3). Chemistry Club (2). Outing Club (3). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. JOHN PHILIP BUNKER Born February 13, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home ad- dress: 74 Sttatford Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Track team (14). Jubilee Committee (1). Senior Album, literary editor (4). Student Council (3, 4), treasurer (4). House committee (3, 4), treasurer (3). Class Treasurer. Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Pi Eta; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. EUGENE FRANZ BURGSTALLER Born December 22, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 55 Maxfield Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of con- centration: German. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM CRAIG BURLEIGH Born January 1, 1921, in Merchantville, New Jersey. Prepared at Episcopal. Home address: Cherry Bend, Merion, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Crew squad (1, 2); House crew (3). Photography Club (1). Instrumental Clubs (1-4). Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Business. JOHN THAYER BURR Born September 13, 1919, in North Scituatc, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Green- ough. Home address: Chestnut Street, Need- ham, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Crew •quad (1-3); House crew (2); House hockey (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: United States Navy. I ' i 1 A number of I far ur J graduate! founded the Co ieftate School of Connecticut ' . Seventeen year i after uarj it adopted the name of Y,ilr. LINDLEY JAMES BURTON Born April 1, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Blake. Home address: Deep haven, Wayzata, Minnesota. Lowell House Ski team (1, 3); tennis team (1), squad (2-4) House hockey (2-4); House squash (3) Pacifist Association (3, 4), president (4) Student Union (3). Ski Club (3, 4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Teaching. ALEXANDER ROURKE BUTLER Born February 27, 1920, in Dover, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Dover High. Home address: 19 Main Street, Durham, New Hampshire. Adams House. Field of concentration: Archi- tectural Sciences. Intended vocation: Archi- tecture. RICHARD EVELYN BYRD JR. Born, February 19, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 9 Brimmer Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Fox Club. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Politics. GEORGE BERNARD CALT Bornjuly 21, 1919, in Melrose, Massachusetts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 31 Pratt Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. Living at home. House baseball (3, 4); House foot- ball (3, 4). Dudley assistant athletic secretary (4). Daily Dudley News Sheet, founder (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (3, 4). Field of con- centration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Teaching. RICHARD HOOD CAMPBELL JR. Born May 11, 1920, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Lenox. Home address: 36 Chestnut Street, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Adams House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering. WILBUR DARE CANADAY JR. Born August 31, 1921, in West Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Stamford High. Home address: 162 Fifth Street, Stamford. Connecticut. Eliot House. Photography Club (1, 4). Student Defense League (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Teaching. 1707 — John Leverett named president, holding the position for seventeen years. He started the Inauguration ceremonies, which except for the feast, have continued through the present time. JOHN CANCIAN Born December 22, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at East Boston High. Home address: 47 Edgehill Road, Winthrop, Massachusetts. Living at home. Warren H. Cud worth Scholarship. Field of concentration: French. Intended vocation: Business. SOLON JOHN CANDAGE Born September 27, 1920, in Medford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Stoneham High. Home address: 325 William Street, Stoneham, Massa- chusetts. College address: 396 Harvard Street. House baseball (2, 3); House basketball (2-4); House football (2-4); House hockey (2-4). French Club (1, 2); Spanish Club (2-4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. Intended voca- tion: Teaching. WARREN MARTIN CANNON Born November 26, 1920, in Fresno, California. Prepared at William Chtisman High. Home address: 322 South Grand Streer, I ndependence, Missouri. Lowell House. Basketball Team, associate managet (4). Debating Council (3, 4). Phi Beta Kappa. Harvard College Na- tional Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics and Economics. Intended voca- tion: Industrial Management. WARREN EDWARD CARBARY Born November 18, 1920, in Elgin, Illinois. Prepared at Northwestern Military and Naval Academy. Home address: R. F. D. 3, Box 27, Elgin, Illinois. Dunster House. Fencing team (1); House cross country (2); House fencing (2, 3); House football (2). Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Law. FRANCIS ELLIOTT CARLSON Born May 12, 1920, in Winchester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 45 Mystic Valley Parkway, Win- chester, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House hockey (3); House soccer (4); House track (2); House wrestling (2-4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Ski Club (1). Caisson Club (4). Field of concenttation: Economics. Intended vocation: Public Service. PAUL IVAN CARP Born August 7, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Madison High. Home address: 2738 Southwest 20th Street, Miami, Florida. Dunster House. House Baseball; House football (3,4); House track (2). Crimson (1-4). House debating (2). House dramatics (3). Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended voca- tion: Business. •{82 } K% Brooklyn iV JOHN ALCOTT CARPENTER Born August 1, 1921, in Boonton, New Jersey. Prepared at Morristown. Home address: 605 William Street, Boonton, New Jersey. Eliot House. Crew squad (1); House crew (2-4); House football (3, 4). Glee Club. Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Foreign Service. FRANCIS HENRY CARR JR. Born August 26, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Transferred from Tufts. Home address: 79 Elm Street, Charlestown, Massachusetts. Claveriy Hall. House football (2-4); House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House track (4). Advocate (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic dub (2-4); Boylston Chemical Club (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. THOMAS CHARLES CARROLL Born September 1, 1921, in Louisville, Ken- tucky. Prepared at Shepherd sville High. Home address: Shepherdsviile, Kentucky. Eliot House. Jubilee Committee (1). Debating team (1, 4). Student Defense League (2, 3), exe- cutive committee (3); Committee for Military Inrervention (3); Harvard League for a De- clared War (4). James A. Rumrill Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. NEIL BURTON CARSON Born February 1, 1921, in West Lafayette, Indiana. Transferred from Purdue University. Home address: Hotel Wynne, Denver, Col- orado. College address: 20 Mellon Street. Music Club (2-4). John Appleton Haven Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of con- centration: Music. Intended vocation: Com- posing. JOHN WARD CARTER Born August 9, 1921, in Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 12) Elm Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Liv- ing it home. Harvard Club of Belmont Scholarship. Delta Upsilon. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended vocation: Public Administration. WINTHROP LAKEY CARTER JR. Born January 6, 1921, in Nashua, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 326 Hammond Street, Chestnut Hill. Massachu- setts. College address: 4) Ml Auburn Street. Tennis team, manager (4); House assistant athletic manager (3) Instrumental Clubs (2, 3). Lampoon (3. 4), treasurer (4 ). Hasty Pudding- 1 nstitute of 1770; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration. Government. In tended vocation: Business. « } ARTHUR GERARD CARTY Born September 14, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Home address: 6 Adelaide Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Living at home. Baseball squad (1); House baseball (3, 4); House indoor baseball (4); House squash (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN JOSEPH CARTY Born February 10, 1919, in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Public- Latin. Home address: 6 Adelaide Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Living at home. Baseball squad (1); House baseball (2); House squash (2, 3); House basketball (2, 3). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Naval Society (3, 4). Premedical Society (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. JAMES GORDON CATE Born September 1, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 71 Marion Road, Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Fencing team (1). Outing Club (4). France Forever (4). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. SPAFFORD CAVANOR Born September 1, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Washburn High. Home address: 5016 Belmont Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Eliot House. Soc- cer squad (1); squash squad (3); House squash (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. HARRIE ROGERS CHAMBERLIN Botn June 13, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 29 Woodbine Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lowell House. House cross country (2-4); House swimming (2 4); House track (2-4). Ornithological Club (2 4). Photographic Club (2-4), executive committee (4). Instrumental Clubs (3, 4). Mountaineering Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM ELY CHAMBERS JR. Born June 2, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pawling. Home address: 2 Ives Road, Hewlett, New York. College address: 46 Mt. Auburn Street. Crew squad (4); House crew (2, 3); House football (2, 3); House squash (2, 3). Lampoon (3, 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of lomcniraiimi: English. In- tended vocation: Journalism. 1721 Pint periodical, The Telltale , containing Sptitator-Uke enayi, founded. In 1722 Uuard WwJetuortb initalled in ftrit endoued chair, the Holl i Profennnhip of Divinity . ARSEN ELIAS CHARLES Born February 27, 1920, in Braintree, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Braintree High. Home address: 648 Washington Street, Braintree, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Band (1-4). William Royal Tyler Scholarship. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. FREDERICK HUNTINGTON CHATFIELD Born March 14, 1920, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Hunt ' s End, Madeira, Ohio. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Golf squad (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended vocation: Business. ROBERT FRANKLIN CHICK Born November 8, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home ad- dress: 317 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Hockey team (1); House hockey (2, 3). Pi Eta; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. ALLEN REYNOLDS CLARK Born April 8, 1920, in Atlanta, Georgia. Prepared at Proctor Academy. Home address: 201 Pleasant Street, Laconia, New Hampshire. Kirkland House. Band (1, 3, 4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (1). American Civilization Group (1,2). Glee Club. Henry B. Humphry Scholarship. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. DAVID WILLIAMS CLARK Born May 17, 1920, in Bala-Cynwyd, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home ad- dress: Belmont Avenue, Bala-Cynwyd, Penn- sylvania. College address: 24 DeWolfe Street. Crew squad, 150-pound (1-4) ; House crew (2) ; House squash (2,3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Iroquois Club; Fly Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Journalism or Law. FREDERICK WINSLOW CLARK Born April 26, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 3110 West Coulter Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Track squad (1); tennis squad (1); House squash (2-4). Instrumental Clubs (2-4), secretary (4); Music Club (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concen- tration: Music. 1737 — On September 28 after a long debate, Edward Guts Holyoke was inaugurated as president. He was to reign for 32 years, longer than any president except Eliot. VICTOR FULLER CLARK Born January 30, 1920, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: Ellsworth Road, West Campton, New Hampshire. Winthrop House. Field of con- centration: Geology. Intended vocation: Me- teorological Research. LOUIS MALCOLM CLAY Born April 25, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin and The Lawrence Academy. Home address: 358 Central Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. College address: Varsity Club. Baseball team (1-4), captain (4); House hockey (2-4). Joshua Green Scholar- ship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. JESSE FRANKLIN CLEVELAND II Born October 21, 1920, in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Prepared at Spartanburg High. Home address: 589 East Main Street, Spartan- burg, South Carolina. College address: 5 De- Wolfe Street. House football (2, 3); House basketball (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3); House assistant athletic secretary (3); fencing team, manager (3), assistant manager (4). Lampoon (3, 4). Flying Club (1, 2, 4), treasurer (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Pi Eta; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Textile manufacturing. FRANCIS DOUGLAS COCHRANE JR. Born August 2, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 18 Exeter Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 52 Mt. Auburn Srreet. Golf team (1); squash team (1-4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: United States Naval Air Force. HERBERT BERTRUME COHEN Born November 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 61 Gardner Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Football squad (1). Liberal Union (2-4). Avukah (1-4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. EDWIN JOSEPH COHN JR. Born February 21, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 183 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Squash team (1-4); House tennis (2, 3) ; House crew (2, 3) ; House soccer (2-4). American Civilization Group (1-3). Yacht Club (3). Student Defense League (3). Field of concentration: History. XT ' fa Am Boon m ;: si {84 } { ) MELTON LK)UGLAS COLE JR. Born June 6, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pawling. Home address: Mill- brook, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Writing. ROBERT HENRY COLEMAN Born May 26, 1920, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Hill. Home address: Eccleston, Maryland. Kirkland House. Instrumental Clubs (1, 2), president (2). Class Odist. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spec Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Architecture. WALTER JOHNSON COLEMAN Born January 5, 1921, in Rockland, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rockland High. Home ad- dress: 190 Howard Street, Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Field of concentta- tion: English. Intended vocation: Business. ALFRED THOMAS CONLIN Born April 18, 1921, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 52 Monmouth Street, Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Lacrosse squad (1-4); wrestling squad (1); House football (3, 4); House basketball (3, 4); House hockey (2-4). Naval Society (3 4). Field of concentration: Mathema tics. Intended vocation: United States Navy. GEORGE IGNATIUS CONNOLLY JR Born February 28, 1921, in South Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 1) Oakland Avenue, Arlington, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Football squad (1); baseball squad (1); House football (3); House hockey (2 4). House baseball (2 4). Caisson Club (3, 4). St. Paul ' s Cath- olic Club. (1-4). Field of concentration: Latin and French. Intended vocation: Business. JAMES FRANCIS COOGAN Born May 7, 1918, in Everett, Massachusetts. Transferred from Holy Cross. Home addres 36 Pierce Avenue, Everett, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House squash (4), House (rack (4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. 4« } THOMAS MITCHELL COOK Born February 26, 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Cleveland Heights High. Home address: 2193 Cottage Grove Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Winthrop House. Rugby team (1); House football (2, 4); pistol team (3, 4). Red Book (1). Debating Council (1-4), executive committee (1). Glee Club, librarian (3, 4). Caisson Club (4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Law. PAUL CONSTANT COOLIDGE Born Septembet 8, 1920, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 1355 Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. At Har- vard 3 years. Spee Club. Field of concentta- tion: Music. Intended vocation: Horse breed- ing. ROBERT RICHARD PAUL COOMBS Born June 25, 1920, in Norwich, Connecticut. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home ad- dress: 704 Georgia Stteet, Louisiana, Missouti. Eliot House. House football (3, 4); House soccer (4). Phillips Brooks House: social service committee (2, 3), undergraduate faculty (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Episcopal Min- istry. LOVAT FRASER M. COOPER-ELLIS Born February 19, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: Marlboro, New Hampshire. College address: 44 Mt. Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding Thea- tricals (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; D. U. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. STANLEY GEORGE CORNISH JR. Born April 5, 1921, in Amsterdam, New Yofk. Prepared at Patk School, Buffalo, New York. Home address: R.F.D., Westville, New Hampshire. Dunster House. House swim- ming (3, 4). Glee Club. C. L.Jones Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended vocation: Architecture. ROBERT WILLIAM CORSON horn February 1, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prcpated at Exeter. Home address: 74 Van Winkle Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Polo team, manager (I). Ameruan ( mM ation Group (I). Caisson Club (I). Field of concentration: HiMury Intended vocation: Business. ' ft V ' hilefitlJ brought the - Greeel Aualemnf. to llarurj When he ua) not ihiiii J hd,t It [treat h jgain. be denounced the tel ege f« imfiiel) and tin. ™mr WILLIAM MORRIS COUCH JR. Born August 10, 1917, in Kansas City, Miss- ouri. Prepared at Kansas City Junior College. Home address: Platte City, Missouri. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Track team (1-3); House baseball (2, 3); House football (2, 3); House track (2, 3). Edward Whittaker Scholarship. Varsity Club. Field of concen- tration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Teaching. NORMAN LESTER COWAN Bornjuly 29, 1920, in Haverhill, Massachusetts. Prepared at Haverhill High. Home address: 72 Marshland Street, Havethill, Massachusetts. College address: 27 Clinton Street. Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (3, 4). Avukah (1, 2). Music Club (1-4). Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Music. STUART HAMMOND COWEN Born September 23, 1921, in Coventry, Rhode Island. Prepared at Coventry High. Home address: 8 Hill Street, West Warwick, Rhode Island. Eliot House. House basketball (3). Pierian Sodality (1, 3, 4); Band (1-4), drum major (3, 4). Harvard Club of Rhode Island Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. RICHARD BEUTLER CRAIG Born August 1, 1920, in Mingo J unction, Ohio. Prepared at Mingo Junction High. Home address: 322 Templeton Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Adams House. House basket- ball (3, 4); House football (4). Monthly (2). Caisson Club (3, 4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Delta Upsilon. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Digger of graves. JOHN DOUGLAS CRAWFORD Born March 13, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 109 Pinckney Street, Boston, Massachusetts. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. JOHN BRUCE CRUME Born July 23, 1920, in Louisville, Kentucky. Prepared at St. Xavier High. Home address: 154 Pennsylvania Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky. Dunster House. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government work. 1759 — On the historical date of April 24, the Board of Overseers added to the richness of college life by recommending the repeal of the Law prohibiting the drinking of Punch. ROBERT CRYAN Born April 24, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Chillon College, Montreux, Switzer- land. Home address: 217 Glenn Road, Ard- more, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Soccer squad (3); House soccer (3); House hockey (3). Badminton Club (3); Judo Society (3); Ski Club (3); Rifle Club (3). Pan-American Society (3); Foreign Relations Club (2); France Forever (3); Spanish Club (3). Phil- osophy Club (3). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Business. GEORGE C. CUNNINGHAM JR. Born November 5, 1919, in Milron, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 27 Griggs Lane, Milton, Massachusetts. Leverett House. House crew (2); House A-Entry Ping- Pong tournament, tunner-up (4); Yacht Club (1). House committee (3, 4), chairman (4). Quiz Kid, Harvard Chapter (4). Glee Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Club 79. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Business. JOSEPH OLIVER CUNNINGHAM Born October 23, 1918, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home ad- dress: 630 West Washington Avenue, South Bend, Indiana. College addtes s: 31 Concord Avenue. Hockey squad (1); House hockey (2); House baseball (2, 3). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Government Administration. ROGER ALLEN CUNNINGHAM Born May 3, 1921, in Paxton, Illinois. Pre- pared at Kent State High. Home address: 227 North Depeyster Street, Kent, Ohio. Lowell House. House tennis (2, 3). House drama- tics (2, 3). Radio Workshop (2). Pierian Sodality (2-4), vice-president (4). Phi Beta Kappa, junior eight. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT FULTON CUTTING II Born June 8, 1920, in Beverly, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 15 East 88th Street, New York, New York. College address: 60 Mr. Auburn Street. Soccer team (1); soccer squad (2-4); House hockey (3,-4); ski team (4). Red Book (1). Caisson Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Law. ROBERT GRIMES VINCENT DALLAHAN Born April 22, 1922, in Canton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Canton High. Home address: 25 Endicott Street, Canton, Massachusetts. Adams House. William Henry Gove Scholarship. Field of concentration: Classics and Compara- tive Philology. {86 } iMiss ' d 1 3 , i t «7 PETER DAMMANN Born February 21, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 853 Prospect Avenue, Winnetka, Illi- nois. Claverly Hall. Red Book (1). Crimson (1-4), managing editor (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; D. U. Club; Signet.Society. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. JACOB DANA Born July 31, 1920, in Locust Valley, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 350 East 57th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Squash squad (3). Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN KENNETH DANE Born March 29, 1920, in West Franklin, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Maiden High. Home address: 139 Linden Avenue, Maiden, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Track squad (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching or Journalism. NELSON JARVIE DARLING JR. Born December 27, 1920, in Erie, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 96 Beach Bluffs Avenue, Swampscott, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Soccer squad (2, 3), team (4); House hockey (2, 3); House squash (2, 3). House assistant athletic secretary (3). House committee (3, 4), chair- man (4). Fox Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. FELLOWES DAVIS Born January 11, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 471 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. Hasty Pudding Theatricals (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spec Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended vocation: Law. LAURENCE ANTHONY DAVIS Bornjanua y 14, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania Prepared at Tucson High. Home address: 3251 East Broadway, Tucson, An oiu Eliot House. Rifle team (I • ) Spanish Club (I 1). Italian Club (2, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (I 4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT TYRRELL DAVIS Born August 24, 1920, in Lake Ronkonhona, New York. Prepared at Richmond Hill High. Home address: 8531 96th Street, Woodhaven, New York. Lowell House. Golf squad (1); House athletic secretary (4). Phillips Brooks House (2-4): social service committee. (3). House committee (3, 4); House dance com- mittee (2, 3). Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM SHIPPEN DAVIS JR. Bornjuly 10, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home addtess: 1309 Cedar Avenue, Hewlett, New York. College address: 45 Mt. Auburn Street. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: United States Army Air Corps. ROBERT KROST DEUTSCH Born September 2, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Evanston Township High. Home address: 159 St. Paul Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. House football (2, 3); House crew (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3); House basketball (2-4). House assistant athletic secretary (3). Field of con- centration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. NICHOLAS EDWARD DEVEREUX III Born January 18, 1920, in Utica, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Fort Ontario, New York. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: English. JOHN JOSEPH DEVINE JR. Born December 20, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence. Home ad- dress: Arden, Greenbush, Massachusetts. College address: 44 Follen Street. At Harvard 3 years. Football team (1). Philosophy Club (2, 3). Joshua Green Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended voca- tion: Writing. JOHN JOSEPH DEVLIN Born November 15, 1920, in Newton Center, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Hume address: 309 Langley Road, Newton Center, Massachusetts. Living at home. House golf (2, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1 4). Caisson Club (4). Lieutenant Brown Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Business or Govern- ment work. f( 4 On January 24 ,jn,, Harvard .) un ' l dnailtr, uhtn Old Han at J Hall hurntd during, a nnlton inouiiorm Only tltttn , . nil Hnl n Hall aid hanii  u « ih, library utri laird. WILLIAM CARR DIAS Born October 8, 1919, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 42 Amory Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Cross coun- try squad (1); track squad (1). Engineering Club (2-4), treasurer (4). Field of concen- tration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Civil Engineering. JOHN DIMEFF Born July 2, 1921, in Detroit, Michigan. Pre- pared at Los Gatos High, Los Gatos, Cali- fornia. Home address: 802 South Third Street, San Jose, California. Kirkland House. Track squad (1); football team (1, 2); House track (2). Harvard College National Scholarship. N. C. Club. Field of Concentrarion: Physics. Intended vocation: Physical research. JOSEPH LEONARD DOBROWOLSKI Born October 6, 1916, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 210 Columbia Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of con- centration: Sociology. JOHN ARTHUR DOLAN Born November 1, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 7 Lakeview Terrace, Winchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. FRANK ARTHUR DONALDSON JR. Born August 19, 1919, in Minneapolis, Minn- esota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 4807 Sheridan Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota. College address: 203 B Holden Green. Track squad, manager (1-3); House squash (2, 3). House dance committee (2, 3). Harvard College Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended voca- tion: Engineering. LEONARD GRANVILLE DORAN Born April 13, 1921, in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Darrmourh High. Home address: 262 Chase Road, North Dartmouth, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House (3, 4). John C. Sickley Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. 766 — First college rebellion over bad butter at commons occurred with Asa Dunbar, Henry Thoreau ' s grandfather, pointing out to Tutor Hancock, Behold our Butter stinketh. ALBERT DOUGLAS III Born September 23, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Kent. Home address: Tuscan Court, Great Neck, Long Island. Eliot House. Crew squad (1-4). Advocate (2-4). Field of concentration: English. WALTER LAWRENCE DOWNING Born September 17, 1920, in Montreal, Canada. Prepared at Lexington High. Home address: 35 Marlborough Road, Waltham, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Swimming squad (1-4). Classical Club (2-4). Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended vocation: Law. RICHARD ERSKINE DOWNS Born December 2, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Homeaddress: 13 Chestnut Street, North Andover, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Diplomatic Service. ROBERT CARR DOYLE Born April 24, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Transferred from George Washington Univer- ity. Home address: 5500 33rd Street, Washing- ton, D. C. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. House baseball (2-4). Crimson (3, 4); House entertainment committee (3, 4). Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770; Pi Eta. Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Busi- ness. GEORGE RAYMOND DREHER Born November 29, 1919, in East Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 3 Berkeley Court, Wellesley Hills, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Hockey squad (1-4); football squad (1); House football (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3). Pi Eta. Field of con- centration: Economics. JAMES GARFIELD DUCEY Born August 18, 1918, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: 407 Marlborough Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Crew squad (1), junior varsity (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Fly Club. Field of concentration: French. Intended vocation: Business. ha M I m tm im Cm ft! m la m. ioi L..:, tak In -.- rr:o W Ufa rod I I Bon I Hoi Up M {88 } [ | ; $ (l JACOB MEIR DUKER Born February 22, 1921, in Rypn, Poland. Prepared ar Pirtsfield High. Home address: 200 John Streer, Pittsheld, Massachusetts. Leverett House, liberal Union (4); Avukah, (2-4), vice-president (4). Sales Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. HENRY FERREY DUNBAR Born December 29, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Cotuit Road, Sandwich, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Rifle team (1, 2, 4); House golf (2, 3). Rifle Club (1-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. JOHN FRANCIS DURANT JR. Born October 9, 1915, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton High. Home ad- dress: 85 Cedar Terrace, Milton, Massachusetts. Living at home. Track squad (2); House hockey (2). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN EARLY JR. Born October 1, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Rockford High. Home address: 1302 National Avenue, Rockford, Illinois. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. House track (2, 3). Phillips Brooks House: under- graduate faculty (2, 3). House dramatics (2, 3). Pi Eta Theatricals (2, 3). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Industry. ROBERT SIDNEY EASTON Born January 7, 1921, in Peoria, Illinois. Prepared at Peoria High. Home address: 904 Moss Avenue, Peoria, Illinois. Dunster Houir. Fencing squad (1). Ornithological Club (1 }). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. WALTER DELMONT EBBITT JR. Born October 2, 1919. in New York. New York Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 405 Park Avenue. New York. New York. Leverett House Glee Club. Field of concen- tration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine iw JOHN KNAPP EBERLE Born August 31, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Oak Park and River Forest Town- ship High. Home address: 415 Washington Boulevard, Oak Park, Illinois. Kirkland House. Track squad (2, 3); Swimming squad (2). House committee (3, 4). Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. HENRY EDELHEIT Born January 17, 1920, in Binghamton, New York. Prepared at Binghamton Central High. Home address: 11 Main Street, Johnson City, New York. Lowell House. Pierian Sodality (1-3). Thomas William Clarke Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Education. CRAIG EDUARD EDER Born September 6, 1919, in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania. Prepared at William Penn. Home address: 224 Gowen Avenue, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. Phil- lips Brooks House (1-4). German Club (2-4), treasurer (4). Biology Club (3-4), secretary (4). Field of concentration: Biology. JEAN-JACQUES COUPER EDWARDS Born November 7, 1919, in Lc Havre de Grace, France. Prepared at College J anson de Sadly, Paris. Home address: 376 Randolph Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. French Club (1-2), president (2). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Diplomatic Service. EDWIN GUSHING EELLS Born October 4, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Chicago Latin. Home address: 2134 Pierce Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. House football (3, 4); House basket- ball ( . I); House tennis (2 4); House squash !3). Photography Club (1). Psychology Club 3). Phillips Brooks House (J, 1): social service committee (3). House musical society ). Glee Club. Tyler Bigelow Scholarship. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Social work. MARSHALL ROUVEN EFFRON Bom June 3. 1920. in Poughkecpsie, New York. Prepared at University of North Caro- lina. Home adtlrcss: II Noxon Street, Pough- kecpsie, New Yotk Eliot House At Harvard years. Harvard College Scholarship Field il loiucmraium. 1 i unomic s. Intended voca- tion Business Administration. ' Intrtatixc Jtffiiulf, nf arr nf,in% btyi by ihtir lorial rank ntetiiilal J a rt orm; it ilnJrnl liili utrt maJi up alphahtiually afltr thai. GERALD EISNER Bornjune 13, 1920, in Red Bank, Newjersey. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 515 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Pistol Team (2). Phillips Brooks House (1-4), cabinet (4), social service com- mittee (1-4), chairman (4). Junior usher (3). Yacht Club (2, 3). Caisson Club (3, 4). Flying Club (2-4). Outing Club (3). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. EDWIN GUSTAF EKLUND JR. Bornjune 3, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Moorhead High, Moorhead, Minne- sota. Home address: 418 Central Park West, New York, New York. Dunster House. House basketball (3,4); House football (4); House swimming (3). Phillips Brooks House (1). House dramatics (2-4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Business. ALLEN WATERS ELDRED Born November 19, 1920, in Springfield, Massachusetts. Prepared at Springfield Classi- cal High. Home address: 58 Englewood Drive, Longmeadow, Massachusetts. Win- thtop House. Glee Club. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN BARKLIE ELIOT Bornjune 25, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: Lincoln Avenue, Manchester, Massa- chusetts. College address: 45 Mt. Auburn Street. Crew squad (2, 3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club, president (4). Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. JOHN ELLIOTT JR. Born January 25, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 220 East 62nd Street, New York, New York. Claverly Hall. Soccer team (1); Hockey team (1-4). Advocate (3, 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club; Fly Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Publishing or Magazine work. RUSSELL WEBB ELLIS Born December 31, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 9 Madison Avenue, Win- chester, Massachusetts. Tennis team (1, 3, 4). Debating Council (3, 4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. 7770 — On September 11 the Speaking Club, a secret and banned organization known as the S g C , was founded and later adopted the name American Institute of 1770. WILLIAM VINCENT ELLIS JR. Born December 12, 1919, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 146 Hyslop Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Living at home. Football squad (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: History. WILLIAM TEMPLE EMMET II Born September 21, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Old Tappen Road, Glen Cove, New York. College address: 24 DeWolfe Street. Crew squad (1, 2); House hockey (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Law. MONROE ENGEL Born April 22, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at A. B. Davis High. Home address: 103 Stuyvesant Plaza, Mount Vernon, New York. Lowell House. Swimming squad (1); House squash (4). Crimson (2, 3). Radio Workshop (1). House Symposium, chairman (4). Council on Post-war Problems (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Writing. RICHARD ENGLAND Born February 11, 1920, in Pittsfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Pittsfield High. Home address: 159 Wendell Avenue, Pittsfield, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Soccer squad (1); House squash (3, 4). Crimson (1, 2). Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Field of concentration: Government. DEAN PAUL EPPERSON Born September 1, 1920, in Aberdeen, South Dakota. Prepared at Oconomowoc High. Home address: Knollcrest, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. Lowell House. House football (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House (3, 4). Har- vard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended voca- tion: Medicine. JOHN MORSE ERSKINE Botn September 10, 1920, in San Francisco, California. Prepared at Thacher. Home address: 233 Chestnut Street, San Francisco, California. Winthrop House. Crew squad (1,-3); House squash (3,4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of concen- tration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. {90 } m t r 1)01 HARRY LOUIS ETSCOTVITZ Born December 8, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Fort Kent High. Home address: 13 Elm Street, Fort Kent, Maine. Leverett House. Avukah (3, 4). Rifle Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING EUSTIS Born July 10, 1920, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Fountain Valley. Home address: 1432 Canton Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Crew squad (1); House foot- ball (3, 4); House hockey (2-4); House crew (2, 3); House swimming (3, 4). House Ath- letic secretary (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government MAXWELL EVARTS Born January 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 530 East 86th Street, New York, New York. Claverly Hall. Squash squad (2-4); crew squad (1-3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. DAVID MASKELL EWING Born November 20, 1918, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Timber Point, Biddeford, Maine. Lowell House. Lampoon (3, 4). Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Economics. ROBERT MALCOLM EWING Born August 24, 1919, in Rye, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Timber Point, Biddeford, Maine. Lowell House. House soccer (3, 4). House dramatics (3). Field of concentration: History and Literature. HOWARD HENRY EZELL Born June 29, 1921, in Spartanburg, South Carolina Prepared at Spartanburg High. Home address: 616 Rutledge Street, Spartan- burg, South Carolina. Kirkland House. Basketball squad (I), tennis team (1, 3, 4); House basketball (2 1). House tennis ( i House soccer (I), House squash (V House committee (3. 4). treasurer (4). Pruc Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. 91 } EDWIN HENRY FAIRBROTHER Born March 30, 1921, in Hayden, Colorado. Prepared at Fairfax High. Home address: 205 East Fairview Boulevard, Inglewood, California. Leverett House. Premedical Society (2, 3). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ELIOT FARLEY JR. Bornjune 30, 1920, in Scituate, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Charles River Street, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Dun- ster House. Hockey squad (1); crew squad, 150-pound (2). Flying Club (3, 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fox Club, secre- tary (3), librarian (4). Field of concentration: Fine Arts. JOHN FREDERICK FARRELL JR. Born August 14, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Needham. Home address: 399 Broadway, Cambridge, Massachusetts Living at home. Stamp Club (1-4), secretary- treasurer (3, 4). Photography Club (1). Class of 1900 Memorial Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. FRANCIS STOCKLEN FAUST Born October 11, 1920, in Long Branch, New Jersey. Prepared at Asheville. Home address: 1093 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: United States Army Air Corps. JOHN FREDERICK FAUST Born November 2, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 317 Burlingame Avenue, West Los Angeles, California. Kirkland House. Field of concen- tration: Classics. JOHN ANDREW NAIRN FEA Bora November 6, 1919, in Sutton, Surrey, England. Prepared at Hackley School, Tarry- town, New York. Home address: 36 Farley Road, Scarsdale, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Banking 1771 John llamoit, iht utallhinl young, mirchanl in iht toloniti, uai named Trraiurtr in appredalion for inch donation! ai bil carptlinf iht itcond floor of Harvard Hall. JOHN LOWE FELMETH Born August 13, 1921, in New Kensington, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Pingry. Home address: 539 Riverside Drive, Elizabeth, New Jersey. Lowell House. House football (2-4) House baseball (2-4); House basketball (2-4) House hockey (2-4); House swimming (4) House wrestling (4). Chapel usher (1-4) Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Field of concentra tion: History. Intended vocation: Ministry. HARRY DAVID FELTENSTEIN JR. Born November 6, 1920, in Saint Joseph, Missouri. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 1207 North 26th Street, Saintjoseph, Missouri. Lowell House. Monthly (1, 2); Advocate (3). Class Poet. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended vocation: Writing. ABBOTT THAYER FENN Born May 26, 1921, in Concord, Massachusetts Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Fenn School, Concord, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Hockey team (1-4); Baseball squad (1). House athletic secretary (3, 4); House committee (3, 4). Undergraduate athletic council (4); Intramural athletic committee (4). Photography Club (3, 4). Class Secretary. Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fox Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering or Teaching. WILLIAM WALLACE FENN Born December 31, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brighton High. Home address: 1394 Highland Avenue, Rochester, New York. Cross country team (1); track squad (1); lacrosse team (1-4), captain (4); House cross country (2, 3); House hockey (2-4); House soccer (3, 4); House track (2-4). Band (1). Outing Club (1, 2). Field of con- centration: Biology. BERNARD FENSTERWALD JR. Born August 2, 1921, in Nashville, Tennessee. Prepared at Duncan. Home address: Leake Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee. Kirkland House. Golf squad (3, 4); squash squad (2, 4). Phillips Brooks House (3, 4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN MANSFIELD FERRY Born February 24, 1919, in New York, New York. Transferred from Williams. Home ad- dress: 895 Park Avenue, New York, New York. College address: 24 DeWolfe Street. Polo squad (1-3). Instrumental Clubs (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Medicine. 1774 — After the Boston Port Act went into effect, the Corporation voted that no more public Com- mencements he held because of the present dark aspect of the situation. There was not another until 1781. OTTO EMIL FIEDLER Born December 21, 1919, in Nurenberg, Germany. Prepared ar Fairmont High. Home address: 46 Zero Avenue, Dayton, Ohio. Eliot House. German Club (2-4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Art. CHARLES WALKER FIELD Born March 4, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 5642 Ken- wood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. College ad- dress: 24 DeWolfe Street. Hollis Club (3-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; D. U. Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Archi- tecture. MELVIN FIELDS JR. Born June 30, 1920, in Muncie, Indiana. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 1911 Burlington Drive, Muncie, Indiana. Winthrop House. Phi Beta Kappa. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concen- ttation: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chem- istry. JOHN CHRISTOPHER FINEGAN Born March 10, 1920, in Gloucester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Beacon. Home address: 7 Kent Circle, Gloucester, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Basketball team (1-4), captain (4); baseball sq uad (1); House baseball (2-4) ; House track (2) . Phillips Brooks House (1, 2, 4). Undergraduate athletic council (4). Intercollegiate bridge championship (3). Class Day Committee. Jeremiah Parmenter Scholar- ship. Varsity Club; Pi Eta. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Bank- ing. JOHN ALBERT FINNERAN Born May 22, 1921, in Rye, New York. Prepared at Rye High. Home address: 97 Apawamis Avenue, Rye, New York. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House: social service committee (1). Field of concentration: Geol- ogy. EDWARD IRA FIRESTONE Born September 16, 1921, in Littleton, New Hampshire. Prepared at Stevens High. Home address: 118 Myrtle Streer, Claremont, New Hampshire. Kirkland House. Band (1, 3, 4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: United States Navy Air Corps. i {92 } 4 93 } JOHN VAN NESS FISHER Born January 15, 1921, in Winnetka, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 949 Fisher Lane, Winnetka, Illinois. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engi- neering. Intended vocation: American Field Service. ROBERT LEWIS FISHER Born April 13, 1919, in Cantrall, Illinois. Prepared at Athens Community High. Home address: Cantrall, Illinois. Kirkland House. House football (3); House crew (3, 4). House dramatics (2, 3); House hospitality committee (3, 4). Harvard Club of Chicago Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ALBERT ATTERBURY FISK Born June 5, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Pawling. Home address: 333 45th Street, Des Moines, Iowa. College address: 53 Mt. Auburn Street. House squash (4). Advocate (2-4). Field of concentration: English, Intended vocation: Publishing. REGINALD HEBER FITZ Born October 28, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 56 Walnut Avenue, Brookline, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Crew squad (1-4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D. K. E., Owl Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Medicine. ROBERT THOMAS FITZGERALD Born April 27, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 1 1 Brook ford Street, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Engineering Club (2-4). Cambridge Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended voca- tion: Electrical Engineering. DENIS ANTHONY FLAGG Born September 26. 1921, in Santa Monica. California. Prepared at Culver. Home address: IH liajt Central Park South, New York, New York. Levetett House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. PAUL JOSEPH FLAMAND Born April 25, 1919, in Paris, France. Prepared at Sharon High. Home address: 15 Longfellow Road, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Basketball squad (1); basketball team, manager (4). Phillips Brooks House (2). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: French. Intended vocation: United States Navy. GEORGE MEADE FLANAGAN Born September 11, 1920, in New Britain, Connecticut. Prepared at Milton and Andover. Home address: 96 Forest Street, New Britain, Connecticut. Dunster House. Field of con- centration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. EMIL BERNARD FLEISCHAK.ER Born March 11, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 225 West 86th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. House football (3). Phillips Brooks House (1-4), cabinet (4); social service com- mittee (1-4), publicity committee (4), senior advisory committee (4), defense service com- mittee (4). Pan-American Society, president (4); Student Defense League, executive com- mittee (4). Film Society, executive committee S3, 4). League for a Declared War, president 4). Spanish Club (3, 4), secretary (3), president (4). Coordinator, undergraduate A. R. P. activities (4). Ornithological Club (3,4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concen- tration: History. WARREN EDMUND FLEISCHNER Born August 13, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton High. Home ad- dress: 276 Centre Street, Milton, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. House football (2); baseball team, manager (1). Pierian Sodality (3, 4), manager (4). Swift Scholarship. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Music. JOHN WYMAN FLINT JR. Born March 5, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 3534 North Hackett Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Adams House. Lacrosse squad (1-3); basket- ball squad (1); squash squad (■!); House squash (2, 3). Lampoon (2 4), advertising manager (4). House committee (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field hi concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Manufacturing. PAUL DANIEL FOOTE Born May 18, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Richmond Mill High Hume ad- dress ' ■. DoM her Street, Brooklyn, New York Adams House. House crew (2 4). House entertainment committee (2 4), chairman (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Government service. 177} On Mar h I the fint blood of the. Revolu- tion almoii tpih w Harvard Hall when Tory ilnJenn brought in tea. Paucity retolvtd there would be no more lea at the college. ROBERT FENCIL FORKER Born March 5, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 5833 Howe Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Dunster House. Squash squad (1-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fox Club. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemical Engineering. CHARLES NATHAN FOSTER Born February 3, 1920, in Leominster, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Leominster High. Home address: 78 High Street, Leominster, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Busi- iness or Government administration. FRANCIS LEON FOSTER Born February 16, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 144 President Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. Leverett House. House foot- ball (3); House squash (2-4). Red Book (1). Instrumental Clubs (2-4). Pi Eta Theatricals (2-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). House Glee Club (2). Pi Eta, secretary (3, 4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. DWIGHT MARSHALL FOWLER Born June 3, 1921 in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Middleboro High. Home address: Wareham Street, Route 28, South Middleboro, Massachusetts. College address 22 Vernon Street, Brookline. Chapel usher (1) Biology Club (3, 4). Mary Saltonstall Scholar ship. Field of concentration: Biology. In tended vocation: Medicine. GEORGE KESSLER FRAENKEL Born July 27, 1921 in Deal, New Jersey. Prepared at Walden High. Home address: 25 West 11th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Physical Chemistry. BERNARD DAVID FRANK Born December 17, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 34 South Russell Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. Pierian Sodality (1). Caisson Club (4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government and Philosophy. Intended voca- tion: Administrative Law. IRVING MELVIN FRIED Born November 3, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Tredyffrin-Easttown High. Home address: Old Eagle School Road, Strafford, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. Ten- nis squad (1-4); House tennis (2-4); House football (3, 4); House squash (2-4). House Glee Club (2); House dramatics (2). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. DON STUART FRIEDKIN Born August 7, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 956 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Adams House. Red Book (1). Jubilee Committee (1). Phil- lips Brooks House, cabinet (2, 3): publica- tions committee, co-chairman (2, 3). Crimson (1-4); Senior Album. Field of concentration: Sociology. JULIAN RICHARD FRIEDMAN Born June 2, 1920 in New York, New York. Prepared at University South Side High. Home address: 18 Davison Place, Rockville Centre, New York. Dunster House. House baseball (3). Council on Post-war Problems (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Foreign Service. WILLIAM ROTCH FROTHINGHAM Born May 20, 1920 in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Marks. Home address: 157 Bay State Road, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Squash team (1-4); tennis squad (3,4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. GEORGE IWAO FUJIMOTO Born July 1, 1920, in Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Franklin High. Home address: 2811 18th Avenue South, Seattle, Washington. Leverett House. House crew (3). Moun- taineering Club (3, 4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. GERARD AQUINAS FULHAM Born March 7, 1920, in Winthrop, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 39 White Oak Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Crew squad (1); House football (4). Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Wholesale food industry. {94 } 1775 — On October 4 the College began an exile to Concord lasting until June 11, because Cambridge was the rebel headquarters for the siege of Boston. FRANK SMITH FUSSNER Born September 21, 1920, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at University School. Home address: 4008 Rosehill Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Lowell House. Fencing team (1). Council of History and Literature Concentrators (3, 4). John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended voca- tion: Teaching. ALVIN MILLER GALLANT Born December 16, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home ad- dress: 26 Rosalind Place, Lawrence, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended vocation: Business. THOMAS GARDINER Born May 1, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Gardiner, Maine. Claverly Hall. Football team (1-4). Undergraduate Athletic Council (3, 4). Com- mittee on Regulation of Athletic Sports (4). Junior usher (3). Camera Club (1). Class Day Committee. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Porcellian Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: United States Navy. NATHAN HENRY GARRICK. JR. Born March 18, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 416 Marlborough Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. Lacrosse team (1); football squad, junior varsity (3); House hockey (3); House track (3). Caisson Club (3, 4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business. THOMAS FRANCIS GARVEY Born August 2), 1921, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 2)4 Adams Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Football squad (1), junior varsity (3); House baseball (2, 4); House basketball (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. RICHARD JEROME GEEHERN Born January 27, 1921, in Wcstfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Wcstfield High. Home address: 1) Highland Avenue. West held. Massachusetts. Winchrop House. Choir (3. 4). Radio Workshop (2). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (3). Council of History and Literature Concentrators (3, 4). Glee Club. James Woolson Hurlbut Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: History and Literature Intended vocation: Teaching. in } JEROME CHARLES GELLER Born December 10, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 1857 East 24th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Law. VICTOR HENRY CHARLES GIBSON Born June 5, 1919, in Washington, D. C. Transferred from Cambridge, England. Home address: 107 La Merced, Arequipa, Peru. Col- lege address: 46 Mt. Auburn Street. At Har- vard 3 years. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: International Trade. GEORGE FRANCIS GILBODY JR. Born August 19, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston College High. Home address: 3 Ely Road, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House football (2). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. EGDAR SHEPPARD GILCHRIST Born March 7, 1919, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Chestnut Hill. Home addtess: 111 West Willow Grove Avenue, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Crew squad, 150-pound (1, 3). Crimson (1, 2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spec Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. PETER LAWRENCE GILL Born February 21, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Sherwood High. Home address: 1522 31st Street N.W., Washington, D. C. Eliot House. House basketball (2); House baseball (2, 3), captain (3); House soccer (3). Rifle team (3, 4). House Athletic Secretary (I) Harvard Club of Maryland Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government. GEORGE GORDON GILMORE Born June 28. 1914 in New York. New York. Transferred from Fordham. Home address: 412 Main Street, Hackensack, New Jersey. Adams House. At Harvard 2 years. Class of 1835 Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. 1776 Tit Corporation mil in Valtrlj wn on April II uilh lome of ihi Oitrittri and mitJ (antral Vmhinflon an LL.D. Tht Jrfrrr uai lonfirrtd that Jay in Crait.it Homt. LEONARD JOSEPH GITSON Born February 27, 1921, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Prepared at Shaker Heights High. Home address: 3350 Maynard Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Winthtop House. House crew (2-4); House football (3). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industry. ANDREW LOUIS GLAZE JR. Born April 21, 1920, in Nashville, Tennessee. Prepared at Webb. Home address: 2811 Nia- zuma Avenue, Birmingham, Alabama. Lev- erett House. Glee Club. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. CHARLES SHERMAN GLEASON Born May 18, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Wareham High. Home address: 121 High Street, Wareham, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine or Real Estate. RALPH CARLYLE GLEASON Born March 31, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 15 UnderclifT Road, Montclair, New Jersey. Col- lege address: 40 Kirkland Street. House squash (3, 4). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. THOMAS PETER GLYNN Born October 16, 1920, in Colebrook, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Gilbert. Home address: Smith Hill Road, Colebrook, Connecticut. Kir kland House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Law. THOMAS BARHAM ANGELLGODFREY Bom May 15, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Swim- ming team (1); swimming squad (3). Har- vard Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Fly Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. 1777 — In November Gentleman Jack ' ' Burgoyne was kept a prisoner in Apthorp House after use of the college buildings was denied his troops. STANLEY DAVID GOLDSTEIN Born Aptil 22, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Huntington School. Home ad- dress: 69 Somerset Road, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Music. ELI GOLDSTON Born March 8, 1920, in Akron, Ohio. Prepared at Warren G. Harding Senior High. Home ad- dress: 2915 Crescent Drive N. E., Warren, Ohio. Adams House. House football (3); House squash (3). Crimson (2-4), assistant editorial chairman (4). Radio Workshop (1-4), di- rector (3, 4). Debating Council (1-4); House debating (2, 3), chairman (3). American Civilization Group (2). House Yearbook (2). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Ad- ministrative Law. LEON MEYER GOLUB Born August 27, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 90 Corbet Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Living at Home. House crew (3). Psychology Club (2, 3). Avukah (2, 3). Stoughton Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. CLIFFORD S. GOODMAN JR. Born December 20, 1920, in Louisville, Ken- tucky. Prepared at New Trier High. Home address: 612 Patterson Street, Chicago, Illinois. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House (1). Harvard College National Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma; N. C. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistty. Intended vocation: Medicine. JEAN IRWIN GORDON Born February 3, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 173 Woodland Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachu- setts. Adams House. House football (2). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (1). Harvard Associaton of Composers (4). Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. IVAN JENNERY GOTHAM JR. Born September 15, 1919, in Watertown, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 622 Washington Street, Watertown, New York. Adams House. Lacrosse squad (1); House football (2-4); House crew (2-4). Pre- medical Society (3, 4), sectetaty (4). Crimson Network (4). House dramatics (3, 4). Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ■t lie hi ?:::.• In ■e F.r I fr.c 50} F. at Mflib cam M I {96 } (X) MEYER HARRY GRAY Born July 16, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 81 Maple Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Living at home. German Club (2-4). Burr Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: German. In- tended vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM MORRIS GREEN Born May 20, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 1010 Fifth Avenue, New York. New York. Lowell House. House baseball (2); House football (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House (1-3). Stamp Club (1). House Chronicle (3, 4); House dramatics (2-4). Chapel usher (2-4). Crimson Net- work (4). Field of concentration: History. ALLEN WALKER GREENE Born August 21, 1921, in Passaic, New Jersey. Prepared at Montclair Academy. Home ad- dress: 285 Aycrigg Avenue, Passaic, New Jer- sey. Leverett House. Pierian Sodality (14), secretary (3), president (4). Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Music. Intended vocation: Music. RICHARD WALTER GREENEBAUM Born August 20, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 1300 North State Street, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. Student Union (1). Dramatic Club (1-4), treasurer (3), president (4). Pacifist Association (2). Foreign Relations Club (3). F.lm Society (4). Pan-American Society (4). France Forever (4). Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Sociology. In- tended vocation: Teaching. CHARLES ALLEN GRIFFITH JR. Born May 13, 1921, in Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Oak Park High. Home address: 503 Forest Avenue, River Forest, Illinois. Kirkland House. Hockey team (1, 4), junior varsity (2, 3); House swimming (2); House hockey (2, 3); House football (2 4), House baseball (2 4); cheerleader (3. 4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended voca- tion: Medicine. NORMAN NELSON GRIFFITH Born August 14, 1921. in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Lincoln High. Home address: 2137 South East Taylor Street, Portland. Oregon. Dunster House. Cross country team (I). House cross country (4); House track (4). Union Committee (1). House debating O) Rifle Club (4). Class of 1856 Scholarship Field of concentration: Government. Intended viHJiion: Public admimstiation. 97 , GEORGE JOSEPH GRINDLE Born January 8, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Sidwell ' s Friends School. Home address: 4215 7th Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Eliot House. Guardian (3). William Gaston Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. RALPH WIER GROVER Born December 26, 1920, in Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 91 Hudson Road, Bellerose, New York. Dunster House. House squash (2 4). Phil- lips Brooks House (2). German Club (3). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Medicine. JAMES K.ITCHELL GRUNIG Born February 26, 1920, in Roy, New Mexico. Prepared at Portales High. Home address: Routel, Portales, New Mexico. Eliot House. Football team (1, 4); football squad (2, 3); University boxing tournament, runner-up (1); wrestling squad (3, 4); House track (3). Geological Club, secretary (4). Bronson Cutting National Scholarship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Mining Geology. SIDNEY ABRAHAM GUBERMAN Born September 1 5, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home ad- dress: 36 Lothrop Street, Newtonville, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Student Union (1, 2), executive committee (2). Liberal Union (3, 4). Avukah (2-4), executive committee (4). Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. DAVID HADDEN Born January 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 114 Jefferson Street, Falls Church, Virginia. Adams House. Soccer team, manager (4). Hasty Pudding Theatricals (2 4), president (4). Lampoon (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. JOHN BELFORD HAERTLE1N Born July 10, 1920, in Watertown, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 44 Marion Road, Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chem- istry. StuJinh pitilinntJ « turn Ml PruiJtnl tjtnt,dnn, laying as a Prtiidtnl ut ililpitt f$M. l mfjon rt intJ ami ititnliil Htvtrtnd Jonph WillarJ uai ihmtn in hil plact. HOWARD GARBERICH HAGEMANJR. Born April 19, 1921, in Lynn, Massachusetrs. Prepared at Albany Academy. Home address: 450 Weston Avenue, Albany, New York. Eliot House. Classical Club (1-4), secretary (4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (3, 4). Glee Club. Phi Beta Kappa. Teschemacher Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended vocation: Ministry. PHILIP MARRINER HAMMETT Born December 21, 1920, in Portland, Maine. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 39 Clare- mont Avenue. New York, New York. Dunster House. Track squad (l); House basketball (2-4). Pi Eta Theatricals (2, 3). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. EDWARD ISRAEL HANDLER Born September 9, 1920, in Maiden, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Memorial High. Home address: 134 Devon Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Living at home. Ph.llips Brooks House (1). Radio Workshop (2). Council of History and Litetature concentra- tors (3,4). Liberal Union (4). Avukah (1-4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended vocation: Government service. WILLIAM FLOYD HANEMAN Born October 18, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Hewlett Bay Park, New York. College address: 52 Mt. Auburn Street. Soccer squad (1); crew, 150-pound junior varsity (3); House squash (2, 3); hockey team, manager (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Sociol- ogy. Intended vocation: Banking. JAMES BLAIN HANNAH Born October 26, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 4849 Morgan Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Leverett House. Flying Club (4). Speakers ' Club. Field of concenttation: History and Litetatute. Intended vocation: Law. FREDERICK JOHN HARRIGAN Born February 21, 1920, in Bethlehem, New Hampshire. Prepared at Lisbon High. Home address: Lisbon, New Hampshire. Baseball squad (l); House crew (2) House baseball (3). Band (1-4). Pierian Sodality (3, 4). Harvard Club of New Hampshire Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. 1782 — The first graduate school, the Medical School, was founded in Holden Chapel and twenty-nine-year-old John Warren was named Professor of Anatomy and Surgery. ■■■HI JOHN TIMOTHY HARRINGTON Born May 26, 1921, in Madison, Wisconson. Prepared at University of Wisconsin High. Home address: 136 Lathrop Street, Madison, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Advocate (3, 4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. EDMUND JOHN HARRIS Born August 16, 1920, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Waltham High. Home address: 87 Hall Street, Waltham, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. House hockey (2-4); House squash (2-4); House golf (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3). House dance committee (4). Band (2-4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Henry D. andjonarhan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. RICHARD GORDON HARRIS Born Seprember 22, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: Mt. Carmel, Connecticut. Adams House. Swimming team (1-4), cap- tain (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration- Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ARTHUR SEYMOUR HARRISON Born May 31, 1920, in Wheeling, West Vir- ginia. Prepared ar Triadelphia High. Home address: 19 Byrd Avenue, Wheeling, West Virginia. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Economics. DAVID HARRY HART Born March 10, 1920, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Dodge City High. Home address: 110 8th Avenue A, Dodge City, Kansas. Phillips Brooks House (1). Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Politics. ELLIOT HOWARD HARTFORD Born September 19, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Norfolk. Home address: Bourne- dale, Massachusetts. Eliot House. House baseball (3, 4); House dramatics (2-4). Yacht Club (2). Outing Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. 4 98 } i l 99 JOHN THORNTON HASSELL Born December 9, 1918, in Salem, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 9 Vale Street, Salem, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Economic Geol- ogy. MELVIN SPENCER HATHAWAY Born November 28, 1920, in Hartford, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 78 Walden Street, West Hartford, Connecticut. Adams House. Track squad (1); House cross country (2, 3); House golf (2, 3). House dramatics (3,4); House dance committee (2- 4), co-chairman (4); Instrumental Clubs (2). Phillips Brooks House (1-3). Glee Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Accounting. OSCAR WILLIAM HAUSSERMAN JR. Born August 17, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 42 Dudley Lane, Milton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Baseball squad (2-4); basket- ball squad (1). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. ALLAN SINCLAIR HAWTHORNE Born March 8, 1920, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Somerville High. Home address: Lowell Road, Concord, Massachusetts. Living at home. House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2-4). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Intended vocation: Teaching. HOWLAND HAYES Born July 1, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Millbrook. Home address: High Ridge Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. Col- lege address: 4) Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 3} years. Photography Club (1). Lampoon (3, 4). Speakers ' Club; Phoenix S. K Club. Field of concentration: English. HAYES ASHBY C. HAYES-KRONER Born September 17, 1919, in Tientsin, China. Prepared at Oxford. Home address: 12 Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven. Alexandria, Virginia. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Foreign service. JAMES GRIFFITH HAYS JR. Born February 10, 1920, in Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. Prepared at Asheville School. Home address: 1555 Washtenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Lowell House. House boxing (2-4). Pistol team (2-4), captain (4). Cais- son Club (3, 4), ptesident (4). Glee Club. Harvard College Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Economic Geology. BENJAMIN MUNROE HAZARD Born February 18, 1920, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: The Castle, Narragansett, Rhode Island. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House: under- graduate faculty (3, 4). Classical Club (2). Glee Club. Spee Club. Field of concentration: English and Greek. Intended vocation: Teaching. CHARLES HEIDELBERGER Born December 23, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Birch Wathen. Home ad- dress: 333 Central Park West, New York, New Yotk. Winthrop House. House squash (2, 3); House crew (2, 3); House soccer (4). Pierian Sodality (1-4). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. GEORGE WILLIAM HEIDEN Born August 5, 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 3526 North 54th Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Winthrop House. Football team (2-4); House baseball (3, 4). Permanent Class Committee. Hatvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institutcof 1770; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Teaching and Coaching. JACOB HEITIN Born April 20, 1920, in Milford, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milford High. Home address: 173 Congress Street, Milford, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Debating Council (1). Avukah (1). Crimson Network (3-4), chair- man artists ' bureau (4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Foreign service. MAURICE MILTON HELPERN Born December 7, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 20 Amory Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. At Harvard 3 years. House football (2); House hockey (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3). Field of con- centration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Mcdiunc. 1786—Preiidrnt V ' lllard banned the uearing of iilk or silver ate and prescribed uniform bl$n-gray tailed coali with clan distinguishing cuff buttons. Black academic gowm were encouraged. ROGER CAMPBELL HENSELMAN Born December 10, 1920, in San Francisco, California. Prepared at Medford High. Home address: 119 Crater Lake Avenue, Medford, Oregon. Lowell House. House dramatics (2, 3). Guardian (1-4); Crimson (2-4). Student Union (1). Dramatic Club (3, 4). Debating Council (3, 4). Liberal Union (3). Glee Club. Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. JOHNSTON SUMNER HEPBURN Born January 4, 1921, in Bowton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Huntington. Home address: 820 Neponset Street, Norwood, Massachu- setts. College address: 8 Story Street. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. FREDERIC PRATT HERTER Born November 12, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 61 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Crew squad (1), junior varsity (2, 3); hockey team (1); House hockey (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club, Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Medicine. THOMAS A. J. HERZFELD Born July 5, 1921, in Hamburg, Germany. Prepared at Lycee Pasteur, Neuilly, France. Home address: 3240 Henry Hudson Parkway, New York, New York. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. France Forever (4). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industrial Chemistry. CLARENCE WILSON HEWLETT JR. Born June 20, 1921, in Iowa City, Iowa. Prepared at Nott Terrace High. Home ad- dress: 1770 Wendell Avenue, Schenectady, New York. Dunster House. Band (2). Chess team, captain (1-4). Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Physics. THOMAS LEE HIGGINSON Bornjanuary 2, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Orange Hill Farm, Marshall, Virginia. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Polo team (1-4), cap- tain (3, 4). Jubilee Committee (1). Caisson Club (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. 1788— On December 9 Professor Eliphalet The Elephant Pearson wrote in his Journal of Dis- order, Bisket, tea cups, saucers, and a KNIFE thrown at the tutors. NORMAN PIERCE HILL Born December 14, 1920, in Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 15 Oxford Street, Arlington, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Ornithological Club (1-4), director (2-4). Biology Club (2-4), president (4). Browne and Nichols Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. ROBERT DRAPER HILL Born January 12, 1920, in Fayette County; Kentucky. Prepared at Versailles Kentucky High. Home address: Route 1, Wilmore, Kentucky. Leverett House. Samuel Crocker Lawrence Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. ERWIN OSKAR HIRSCH Born January 31, 1920, in Vienna, Austria. Transferred from Gymnasium, Vienna, and Oxford. Home address: 4001 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. At Harvard 2 years. House crew (3). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biochem- istry. Intended vocation: Medicine. DAVID HODGDON Born June 7, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Tabor. Home address: 68 Green- wood Avenue, Greenwood, Massachusetts. College address: 40 Mt. Auburn Street. Lampoon (2, 3). D. U. Club. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM HODSON JR. Born March 25, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Hill. Home address: Pali- sades Avenue and 246th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Tennis squad (1); House tennis (2, 3); House squash (2-4). Guardian (2, 3), managing editor (3). Liberal Union (3, 4), vice-president (4). Pierian Sodality (1-3). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Public Ad- ministration. BALLARD BRUCE HOGG Born January 22, 1921, in Portland, Maine. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 28 Clare- mont Road, Scarsdale, New York. College address: 60 Boylston Street. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: United States Air Corps. {100 } (1101 JOHN AUGUR HOLABIRD JR. Born May 9, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Francis W. Parker. Home address: 2236 Lincoln Park West, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. House crew (2, 3). House committee (2-4), chairman (4). Student Union (1-3). Dramatic Club (1-4). Student Council (4). Senior Album, Art editor (4): Glee Club. Signet Society, presidenr (4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentrtion : Architectural Sciences. Intended vocation: Design. JAMES B. I. HOLDERBAUM II Born February 6, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Bennett High. Home address: 494 Crescent Avenue, Buffalo, New York. Lowell House. House musical society (3, 4). Glee Club. Harvard Club of Buffalo Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. MARK HOLLINGSWORTH Born January 3, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 191 Marlborough Street. Boston, Massachu- setts. Adams House. Crew squad (1). Lampoon (3, 4). Naval Society, advisory com- mittee (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Paper manu- facturing. GUY HOLMAN JR. Born September 28, 1921. in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Stoneybrook Road, Westport, Connecticut Dunstcr House. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended vocation: Chemical industry. DONALD HOLMES Born February 5. 1919. in Wayland, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home ad- dress: Wayland, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation Business. QUENTIN MANNING HOPE Born April 23. 1923. in Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at St. Lukes Home address: Brook- side Avenue, Darien, Connecticut. Kirkland House Italian Club, secretary (I) Glee Club. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Teaching. Ooi ) JOHN OLAN RADBURN HORNE Born March 16, 1920, in Ward Hill, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Keith Academy. Home address: 212 Parkview Avenue, Lowell, Massa- chusetts. College address: 53 Mt. Auburn S.reet. Franklin Nourse Scholarship. Field of concentration: Rorrance Languages. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM HENRY HOUGH Born March 3, 1920, in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Home address: 269 Prospect Street, Woonsoc- ket, Rhode Island. Eliot House. House squash (4). Rifle Club (4). Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Business. ROBERT BIGELOW HOUGHTON Born April 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Howe High. Home address: Andover Road, Billerica, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. Track team (2-4), captain (4); cross country (4); House track (2); House cross country (2, 3). Foreign Relations Cl-D (3). Edmond Ira Richards Scholarship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: History. JOSEPH FRANCIS HOWARD JR. Born July 14, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 226 Roslindale Avenue, Boston, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Boxing (1-4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended vocation: Business. LAWRENCE HOWE JR. Born November 16, 1921, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 175 Chestnut Street, Winnctka, Illinois. Clavcrly Hall. Red Book { ). Hasty Pudding Theatricals (2). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Law. FRANK TWOMBLY HUBBARD Born May 15, 1920. in New York, New York. Prepared at Tabor Home address: 52 Wild- wood Road. New Rochelle, New York. Dun- ster House. Track squad (1, 2). Liberal Union O) Pierian Sodality (1) Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Publishing. ■' )! 1 ht Porttllidii Club uai fnunJrJ an J talltJ lit PiiCJub . htiautt hi members .line, I in Moore i Tavern on man pit. JOHN WING HUGHES Born June 8, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Groton. Home address: 2 North Awahnee Road, Lake Forest, Illinois. Leverett House. Polo team (1), manager (4); swim- ming squad (3, 4); House football (2, 3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: United States Army. JOHN GREILICH HULL Born November 6, 1919, in Tupper Lake, New York. Prepared at Northwood. Home ad- dress: Demars Boulevard, Tupper Lake, New York. Eliot House. Hockey squad (1); House hockey (2-4), captain (4); House football (3, 4). Premedical Society (3, 4), president (4); Biology Club (3, 4), treasurer (4). Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Medicine. GEORGE NEWELL HURD JR. Born November 11, 1919, in Milton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 8 Ruggles Lane, Milton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Henly crew, assistant manager (1); 150-pound crew, manager (4); inter- collegiate sculling championship, runner-up (3). Jubilee Committee (1). House orchestra (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Owl Club, secretary (3), president (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Diplomatic service. JOHNWOODWORTH HURSH Born October 8, 1920, in Duluth, Minnesota. Prepared at Cloquet High. Home address: 2231 West Fourth Street, Duluth, Minnesota. Dunstet House. Clement Harlow Condell Scholarship. Field of concentration: En- gineering. Intended vocation: Mechanical Engineering. LOUIS GERARD-VARET HYDE Born June 2, 1920, in Maiden, Massachusetts. Prepared at College de Semur. Home address: 730 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. French club, treasurer (3). Field of concentration: Government. ARTHUR CHARLAP HYMAN Born January 13, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 149 Esplanade, Mount Vernon, New York. Adams House. Red Book (1). Crimson Net- work (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House (1-4). Instrumental Clubs (l); House orchestra (4). Radio Club (1, 2), vice-president (2). Spanish Club (2). Rifle Club (2); Pistol Club (4); Caisson Club (3, 4). Harvard Association of Composers, co-founder (3). Field of concen- tration: Psychology. 279.5 — Hasty Pudding founded. After Saturday night ' s scant college meals the group collected in a member ' s room to indulge in the pudding. DAVID BELL INGRAM Born March 21, 1921, in Mansfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Mansfield High. Home address: 42 Warren Avenue, Mansfield Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Fencing team (1). Pistol team (3). Caisson Club (4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business administration. ROBERT HORD INGRAM Born January 10, 1923, in San Francisco, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Alameda High. Home address: 2201 Clinton Avenue, Alameda, Cali- fornia. Kirkland House. Rifle Club (1). Sru- dent Union (2). Council on Post-war Piob- lems (4) Saltonsiall Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Business. GABRIEL JACKSON Born March 10, 1921, in Mount Vernon, New York. Prepared at A. B. Davis High. Home address: 60 West Broad Street, Mount Vernon, New York. Leverett House. House soccer (2,4). House library committee (3). Phillips Brooks House (1). Student Union (1, 2). American Civilization Group (1, 2). Liberal Union (3, 4). House committee (4). Council of history and literature concentrators (3, 4), chairman (4). Student Council (4). Pierian Sodality (1-4). Phi Beta Kappa. William Henry Meeker Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History and Literature. Intended voca- tion: Law. RICHARD MONTGOMERY JACKSON Born December 9, 1920, in Jacksonville, Florida. Prepared at St. Pauls. Home address: 169 Chestnut Hill Road, Chestnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Football squad, associate manager (4); tennis squad (1); House hockey (2-4); House tennis (2-4). Engineering Club (2-4), president (4). Phil- lips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (2, 3). Naval Society (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Fox Club. Field of concen- tration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Aero- nautical Engineering. WILLIAM SHARPLESS JACKSON JR. Born June 4, 1920, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 228 East Kiowa Stteet, Colorado Springs, Colorado. Adams House. House squash (2); House tennis (2, 3); House basketball (2-4). House committee (3, 4). Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM PAUL JACOBS Born May 25, 1919, in West Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston English High. Home address: 555 Weld Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Kirkland house. Red Book (1). Band (1-4); Instrumental Clubs (1). Dramatic Club (2). Botanical Club (4). House yearbook (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-3). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Biological research. •1102 } • Mim. |ll l MARC HENRY JAFFE Born November 6, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Oak Lane Country Day. Home address: 309 Pine Street, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Adams House. House football (2); soccer squad (1). Red Book (1). Phillips Brooks House (1). Student Union (3, 4). Progressht (3, 4). House dramatics (2, 3). John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. PAUL JARETZK.I Born April 21, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Walden. Home address: 25 East 93rd Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. House soccer (4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Crimson Network (3, 4), music chair- man (4). Junior usher (3). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Business. PHILIP SHELDON JASTRAM Born January 28, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 104 Prospect Street, Providence, Rhode Is- land. Lowell House. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Physics. ROBERT DEAN JAY Born January 16, 1921. in Paris, France. Prepared at Stowe School, England. Home ad- dress: 1 Sutton Place South, New York, New York. Eliot House. Track squad (1, 3); cross country team (1 1); House golf (2); House swimming (2 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; A. D. Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Industry. WILLIAM HENRY ENOCH JAY HI Born March 6. 1921, in Woodmere. New York. Prepared at Williston. Home address: 1148 West Broadway, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Swimming team (1 3), House swimming (4). House crew (2). Phillips Brooks House (1). Student Council Scholarship. Delta Upsilon. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chem- istry. BRONISLAS deLEVAL JEZIERSKI Born July 18, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address. 62 Latch wood Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Slavic. Hioi r JOHN QUINCY JOHNSON JR. Born July 18, 1919, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home ad- dress: 88-27 191st Street, Hollis, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. NORMAN FREDERICK JOHNSON Born Oc tober 16, 1918, in Florence, South Dakota. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 418 Second Avenue S.E., Watertown, South Dakota. College address: 65 Mt. Au- burn Street. Student Union Theatricals (2). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. In- tended vocation: Government service. PAUL HENRY JOHNSON JR. Born August 31, 1920, in Mount Vernon, New York. Prepared at Muskegon High. Home address: 1633 Climon Street, Muskegon, Michigan. Kirkland House. House crew (2-4); House football (4). Boylston Chemical Club (1-4). Glee Club. Delta Ups Ion, treasurer (4). Field of concentration: Chemis- try. Intended vocation: Industrial Cl.en.istry. RICHARD EARLES JOHNSCN Born October 5, 1920, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 600 High Ridge Road, Winnetka, Illinois. Eliot House, house football (2-4). Red Book, editorial chairman (1); Advocate (2-4), circulation manager (3), treasurer (4); Senior Album (4). Harvard Club of Chicago Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. WINSTON RALPH JOHNSON Born October 16, 1920, in Santa Maria, California. Prepared at New Mexico Military Institute. Home address: 201 East Cook Street, Santa Maria, California. College address: 44 Follen Street. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. RUDOLPH WAGNER JONES JR. Born November 12, 1920, in Macon, Georgia. Prepared at Lamer High. Home address: 236 Stanislaus Circle, Macon, Georgia. Kirkland House. House track (2, 3); House football (}, I). House basketball (4). Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended venation: Medicine. IHIX tltimd Samuel Wthher, Ho lJ, PrtftUH of Malhtmaini.  « frindi or enemin wen ihoim pmidtmt. He (tnUrmatd iht WH Jul mi MautuAmmi Hull ALBERT CLIFFORD JOYCE JR. Born October 25, 1919, in Salem, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 63 Hawthorne Street, Salem, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Track squad (1); House soccer (4). Dramatic Club (1, 2). Crimson Network, production board (2-4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT LEWIS JUDELL Born November 28, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Riverside High. Home address: 3353 North Frederick Avenue, Mil- waukee, Wisconsin. Adams House. House tennis (2-4); House swimming (2-4); House squash (3, 4). Red Book (1). House library committee, chairman (4). Edmund Ira Rich- ards Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. LEON ALFRED KAHN Born April 11, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 87 Ellington Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. House football (2-4); House baseball (2, 3). Field of concentration: German. Intended vocation: Medicine. THEODORE ESTACE KALEM Born December 19, 1919, in Maiden, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 32 Grace Street, Maiden, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Law. MELVIN HYMAN KAPLAN Born December 23, 1921, in Maiden, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Maiden High. Home address: 30 Baird Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. College address: 31 Chatham Street. Avukah (1-4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. EUGENE DICKSON KEITH Born August 6, 1919, in Richmond, Kentucky. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 567 Lan- caster Avenue, Richmond, Kentucky. Leverert House. Basketball squad (1); House basket- ball (2, 3); House squash (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3). Union Committee (1). Red Book, chairman (1); Crimson (2-4), editorial chair- man (4). Student Council (3, 4), president (4). House committee (2, 3). Third marshal. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Journalism. 1810 — After Webber s death, Reverend Thornton Kirk and, called Fair Face by the Oneida Indians, was elected president and became one of Harvard ' s most beloved heads. ROBERT ALVIN KELLER Born August 1, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at University School. Home address: 2258 Demington Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Winthrop House. Field of concentr a- tion: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medi- cine. HENRY STEARNS KENDALL Born November 14, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 876 Beacon Street, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. Living at home. Band (1-4). Field of concentration: Literature. Intended vocation: Architecture. DOUGLAS JAMES KENNEDY Born November 24, 1919, in Holyoke, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Canterbury. Home ad- dress: Country Club Road, Smith ' s Ferry, Holyoke, Massachusetrs. Claverly Hall. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: English. WILLIAM HENRY JOS. KENNEDY JR. Born November 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 31 Wellesley Park, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House baseball (2-4). Field of concentration: Literature. Intended vocation: Teaching. JOHN ALEXANDER KESSLER Born December 19, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 96 Bidwell Parkway, Buffalo, New York. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (1). House glee club (2-4), conductor (4). Choir (3, 4); Glee Club , vice-presidenr (4). Field of concentra- tion: Music. NATHANIEL REMINGTON KIDDER Born April 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Olney High. Home address: 7622 Lafayerte Avenue, Melrose Park, Pennsylvania. Dunster House. Football squad (1). House record concert committee (3, 4), chairman (4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Student Defense League (3). France Forever (3, 4). Council of Gov- ernment concentrators (1). Council on Post- war Problems (4); Foreign Policy Associarion (3, 4). Wesley Foundation (1-3), executive (2, 3). International Club. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. { 104 } f 1 u (nut 41M ) EDWARD FRANCIS KILROY Born January 18, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 8 Chisholm Road, Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. College address: 396 Harvard Street. Crew squad (1); House crew (2, 3); House football (3, 4); House baseball (3, 4); House hockey (3, 4). Caisson Club (4). Sales Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. DONALD DeWOLF KING Born August 7, 1919, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Munroe High. Home address: Waldoboro, Maine. Lowell House. House squash (2-4). Yacht Club (1). Boylston Chemical Club (1, 2). House dance committee (3, 4). Field of concentration: Engineering. FRANKLIN KING JR. Born October 9, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 1020 Boylston Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Ski team (2, 3); 150-pound sculling champion (1); football team, manager (4). Committee on Regulation of Athletic Sports, secretary (3, 4) ; Undergraduate Athletic Council (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K E.; A. D. Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Industry. KARL WENDELL KIRCHWEY JR. Born July 30, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Brushy Ridge Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. Dunster House. Pierian Sodality (1); Instru- mental Clubs (1). German Club (4). Harvard College Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: His- tory. Intended vocation: Aviation. WILLIAM FREDERICK KIRSCH JR. Born June 28, 1921, in Paragould, Arkansas. Prepared at Western Military Academy. Home address: 310 West Garland Street, Paragould, Arkansas. Kirklarui House. House football (2 4); House soccer (4). Field of concentra- tion: History. ROBERT KIRSCHHAUM Born January 9, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress 95 Geneva Avenue, Roxbury, Massachu- setts Living at home. House football (2. i) . House basketball (2 4). House baseball (2, ). House tennis (2 4), House squash (2 1) Botanical Club (1) Ornithological Club (s. t). Avukah (l 4). FwM ofcooctntnKion Biology Intended vocation: Medicine. CHARLES ERNEST KITCHIN Born October 3, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 10 Winthrop Street, Winchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. Rifle Club (2, 3). Spanish Club (4). Outing Club (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Spanish. Intended vocation: Teach- ing or South American Relations. OWEN WILLIAM KITE JR. Born June 10, 1919, in Trenton, New Jersey. Prepared at Blair. Home address: 298 Spring Street, Trenton, New Jersey. Dunster House. Glee Club Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. MARVIN ADRIAN KLEMES Born September 23, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Long Beach High. Home address: 35 East Olive Street, Long Beach, New York. Winthrop House. House foot- ball (3); House crew (3); House swimming (2-4). House debating (2, 3); House drama- tics (3). Photography Club (1). Rifle squad (1-3). Radio Workshop (2 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. WILFRED MARTIN KLUSS Born June 19, 1921, in Waterloo, Iowa. Pre- pared at Franklin High. Home address: 245 23rd Street Drive, S.E., Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Lowell House. House football (4). Instru- mental Clubs (1). House Chronicle (4); House musical society (2, 3), treasurer (2). Foreign Relations Club (2, 3). Guardian (3, 4). Phi Beta Kappa. Harvard College National Scholar- ship. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Government administration. JOSEPH GILBERT THORP KNOWLES Born December 26, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 167 Marlborough Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. Adams House. House hockey (3, 4); House swimming (4). Flying Club (1 4), secretary (3), vice-president (4). Instrumental Clubs (1). House orchestra (3, 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Owl Club. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Business. EDGAR COLBY KNOWL TON JR. Born September II, 1921, in Delaware, Ohio. Prepared at B. M. C. Durfee High. Home address: 44 South Street, Fall Kiver, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (I). Phi Beta Kappa. Fall River Scholarship. Field of concentration Romance Languages and Literatures. Intended vocation: Teaching IHll- Harvard Waihinflon Carpi firmed, lasting f r 20 yean. It paraded on the Common and, when a Briliih attack was expected, marched on Slate Street. NORMAN POMEROY KNOWLTON JR. Born February 6, 1922, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at J. M. Vogt High. Home address 18 North Maple Avenue, Ferguson, Missouri Lowell House. Cross country squad (1) House cross country (2, 3) ; House track (2-4) House football (4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Premedical Society (2). Ornithological Club (2). House dance committee (2, 3). Harvard College Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma, sectetary (4) ; N. C. Club, Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. LEIF LADEGAARD KNUDSEN Born January 26, 1922, in Columbus, Indiana. Prepared at Columbus High. Home address: 1926 Lafayette Avenue, Columbus, Indiana. Kirkland House. House football (3, 4); House tennis (3, 4); House squash (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Industrial management. JAM ES BENEDICT KOBAK Born March 4, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 975 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Adams House. Swimming squad (2-4); House swimming (2-4); House table tennis (2-4); manager (4). House dramatics (4). House yearbook, (3). Senior Album. S. P. A. Club. Field of con- centration: Government. JOSEPH MYERS KOCH JR. Born June 12, 1918, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 405 Cowell Avenue, Oil City, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Fencing team (2-4), captain (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. STEPHEN ANDREW KOCZAK Born November 13, 1917, in Trenton, New Jersey. Prepared at Immaculate Conception High. Home address: 261 Ashmore Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey. Dunster House. Ameri- can Civilization Group (1). Poetry Group, Widener Library (1). Classical Club (1-4). Philosophy Club (4). William Samuel Eliot Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philos- ophy. Intended vocation: Teaching. MELVIN IRA KOHAN Born March 11, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 74 Highland Avenue, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Football squad (1); House football (2, 4); House basketball (2, 4). Cambridge-Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemis- try. Intended vocation: Chemistry. 1817 — Law School founded and graduated its first class in 1820, but did not really click until Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story was named Dane Professor in 1829. DWIGHT ARCHIE KOHR Born September 25, 1920, in York, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at North York High. Home address: 680 Florida Avenue, York, Pennsyl- vania. Winthrop House. Track squad (1). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT WILLIAM KOMER Born February 22, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Clayton High. Home address: 725 Skinker Road, St. Louis, Missouri. At Harvard 2 years. Lowell House. House swimming (4). House debating (4). Guardian (3, 4). Foreign Relations Club (3). Phillips Brooks House (4). Crimson Network (4). Student Defense League (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Histoty. Intended vocation: Journalism. FREEMAN FU-CHANG KOO Born July 19, 1923, in Peking, China. Prepared at Macjannets Country School, St. Cloud, France. Home address: Chinese Embassy, London, England. Eliot House. Squash squad (1); track squad (2, 3). Instrumental Clubs (2). Crimson (2, 3). International Club. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ALOIS WILLIAM KRAUSE JR. Born December 19, 1918, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 16 Pickwick Road, West Newton, Massachusetts. College address: 1654 Massa- chusetts Avenue. House baseball (2,3); House Softball (2, 3). Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Wholesale coal selling. NATHAN KREVOR Born August 3, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 81 Chambers Street, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Avukah (2-4). Robert H. Harlow Scholarship. Field of con- centtation: Sociology. Intended vocation: Social work. LOUIS ROBERT KROLL Bornjune 22, 1921, in Los Angeles, California. Transferred from U. C L. A. Home address: 130 North Beverly Glen, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Government. { 106 GEORGE AUGUST K.UHN JR. Born August 26, 1920, in Indianapolis, In- diana. Prepared at Park. Home address: R.R. 17, Box 113, Indianapolis, Indiana. Adams House. Football team (1); House football (2-4); House basketball (2-4). Smoker Committee, chairman. (1). House yearbook (3); House dramatics (4). Manager of Freshman intra-mural athletics (2). Phillips Brooks House (3). Pi Eta Theatricals (3, 4). Pi Eta Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. GEORGE JOSEPH KYTE JR. Born March 15, 1920, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 88 Bainbridge Road, West Hartford, Connec- ticut. Mellon Hall. Soccer squad (1), junior varsity (2, 3). Caisson Club (3, 4). N. C. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM PAINE LACROIX Bornjuly 10, 1920, in Swampscott, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 34 Spooner Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Baseball team, manager (4); football squad (1-3); football team (4); hockey squad (1, 3, 4); House hockey (2, 3). Fox Club. Field of concentration: Geology. JOHN CLEMENT LACY Born December 12, 1919, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 14 Glen Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House: fresh- man committee (1), speakers ' committee (2, 3), chairman (3); senior advisory commit- tee (4). Naval Society (2-4), secretary (4). Fox Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN PETER LACY Born September 20, 1921, in Red Bank, New Jersey. Prepared at Choate. Home address: Lewiston Heights, Lewiston, New York. Col- lege address: 40 Mt. Auburn Street. Phillips Brooks House (I, 2). Red Book (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: United States Navy. JOSEPH HE A DON LAIRD Born December 7, 1920, in Fort Wayne, In- diana. Prepared at Dearborn High. Home address. 22043 Francis Street, Dearborn, Michigan. Lowell House Fencing squad (2 4). team (1). Boyiston Chemical Club (I 4), executive committee (4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration. Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemical en- gineering. U 7 MORRIS WILLIAMS LAMBIE Born September 30, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 18 Hawthorn Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House crew (2-4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (1, 2). Student Union (1). Biology Club (3, 4). Premedical Society (4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. PAUL ALBERT LAMOTHE Born April 19, 1920, in Holyoke, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home ad- dress: 90 Scituate Street, Arlington, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Pistol team (3, 4); House football (3); House golf (3, 4); House hockey (3, 4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Premed- ical Society (3, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended voca- tion: Medicine. MURRAY ALFRED LAMPERT Born November 29, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 78 14 Austin Street, Forest Hills, New York. Lowell House. Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Mathematics. JACK WILLARD LAMPL JR. Born March 20, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Quaker Heights High. Home ad- dress: 3008 Courtland Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House (1). Harvard Association of Composers, co-founder (3). Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Business. SHELDON LEON LAND Born March 8, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 2 Sacramento Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Pistol team (3, 4), manager (4). Caisson Club (3, 4). German Club (3, 4). Daniel A. Buckley Schol- arship. Field of concentration: German. Intended vocation: United States Army. WILLIAM LAND Born December 14, 1919, in Revere, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 67 Wild wood Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts. Living at home. House base- ball (4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ISIS Emerion joined rally around ibt Rebellion Tret It proltit the rmiuaiinn of claumalei after a Sunday night food and crockery fight. He alio wai rusticated. BENJAMIN HARRISON LANDING JR. Born September 11, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Findlay Senior High, in Findlay, Ohio. Home address: 1613 Leer Street, South Bend, Indiana. Winthrop House. Track squad (2); House basketball (2). Phil- lips Brooks House (2-4). Biology Club (2-4); Entomological Society (2-4); Ornithological Club (2-4). Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Biology. NEWBOLD RHINELANDER LANDON Born September 14, 1921, in Dobbs-Ferry, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address 4403 Bedford Place, Baltimore, Matyland Eliot House. House soccer (4). Phillips Brooks House (1-4), vice-president (4) undergraduate faculty (3, 4), chairman (4) Defense League (3); Liberal Union (3) Flying Club (4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholar ship. Field of concentration: History and Lit erature. Intended vocation: Politics. DAVID THEODORE LAPKIN Born February 28, 1922, in Richmond, Virginia. Prepared at William Penn High. Home ad- dress: 3008 North Second Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. College address: 1734 Cam- bridge Street. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. MARSHALL LEBOWITZ Born March 4, 1923, in Roxbury, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Memorial High. Home address: 470 Warren Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Living at home. Avukah (2-4). Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Actuary. FRANCIS MATTHEW LEE Born December 26, 1918, in New Haven, Con- necticut. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 1985 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut. Adams House. Football team (1-4), captain (4); House basketball (2, 3) House track (2, 3). Phillips Brooks House (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Law. H JOHN EDWARD LEFFLER Born December 27, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 24 Radcliff Road, Waban, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Boylston Chemical Club (2-4), executive committee (2), secre- tary (3), president (4). Phi Beta Kappa. John Harvard Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. 1823— Great Rebellion found Class of 1823 throwing cannonballs from upper windows and holding bonfires in the Yard. After a student informed 43 of the class of 70 were expelled. NATHANIEL SAUL LEHRMAN Born May 26, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High. Home address: 115 Ryckman Avenue, Albany, New York. Eliot House. Pierian Sodality (1-4). Avukah (3, 4), secretary (4); Inter-faith, Inter-race Council, executive committee (4). Student Union (2, 3). Samuel C. Cobb Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. SAMUEL LEITER Born January 1, 1922, in Chelsea, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Chelsea High. Home ad- dress: 40 Marlboro Street, Chelsea, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Fencing squad (1, 2); crew squad (1, 2); House crew (2-4); House baseball (3, 4). American Civilization Group (1,2). Philosophy Club (2). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Germanic Languages and Literatures. Intended vocation: Law. THEODORE LENDLER Born April 27, 1920, in Wallingford, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Lyman Hall High. Home address: 286 South Main Street, Wallingford, Connecticut. Kirkland House. House base- ball (4) ; House basketball (4). Phillips Brooks House (2, 3). Instrumental Clubs (2). Avukah (2-4). Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. In- tended vocation: Business. CHARLES REGINALD LEONARD JR. Born April 16, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 160 East 70th Street, New York, New York. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Hockey team (1); soccer team (1); House hockey (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended vocation: Busi- CARTER HUSTON LESLIE Born December 23, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Glenbard High. Home address: 654 Park Boulevard, Glen Ellyn, Illinois. Kirkland House. Track team (1); House football (2-4); House crew (3). Red Book (1). House dance committee (3, 4); Inter-house athletic council (4). Undergraduate athletic council (4). Phillips Brooks House (3). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. ROBERT WARREN LEVIN Born January 6, 1921, in Parsons, Kansas. Home address 3565 N.E. Knott Street, Port- land, Oregon. Eliot House. House basketball (4). Crimson Network (3); Boylston Chemical Club (3). Fatrar Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industrial Chemistry. I HI SOI is- ' . H ?■;:.■;. ::t - .. MM I la Qo .:..■: ■Mb J .: BM iAin.: -V ' . ' .t :•■:.. b ■Ml 5; ' ■w 1 i ■: I .V. It, m (108 } Hi. ROBERT STANLEY LEVINE Born June 17, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Chicago Latin. Home address: 5555 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois. House dramatics (4). Council on Post-war Problems (4); Premedical Society (3, 4). Field of con- centration: Government. SOLOMON BERNARD LEVINE Born August 10, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookhne High. Home address: 21 Gibbs Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. House football (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House basket- ball (2); House squash (3, 4). House drama- tics (4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. HAROLD SELIN LEVITAN Born December 12, 1919, in Rome, New York. Prepared at Rome Free Academy. Home ad- dress: 225 North Washington Street, Rome, New York. Eliot House. House Softball (4). Avukah (1-4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Com- mittee on Post-wat Problems (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. ALAN LEONARD LEWIS Born October 19, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 52 Dana Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Avukah (2-4). Charles Joseph Bonaparte Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. LLEWELYN ERIC LIBERMAN Born June 5, 1921, in Tulsa, Oklahoma Pre- pared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 135 Fuller Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Living at home. Lcvcrctt House glee club (2). Boylston Chemical Club (1 3), Premedical Society (I 4). Photography Club (2). Radio Workshop (1, 2). Class of 1877 Scholarship Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. HERRICK KENLEY LIDSTONE Born April 2. 1921, in Bellingham, Washing- ton. Prepared at University of Iowa. Home address: 538 North Main Street, Denison, Iowa. Adams House. House football O), House baseball (2 4), House fencing (3, 4). Classical Club (2, 3). 8. P. A. Club Field of concentration: Literature. Intended vocation: law. 4 109 r JOHN BAXTER LIEBLER Born March 31, 1921, in Greenwich, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Avon Old Fatms. Home ad- dress: Box 884, Old Greenwich, Connecticut. Kirkland House. House fencing (2-4). Spanish Club (2, 3). Boylston Chemical Club (2-4). Phillips Brooks House: freshman com- mittee (1), social service committee (1), senior advisory committee (3, 4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ALBERT LAMB LINCOLN JR. Born October 27, 1920, in Chesnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 543 Hammond Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Crew squad, 150-pound (3, 4), captain (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Geology. AARON IRVING LIPSON Born May 9, 1922, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Pteparcd at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 26 Richfield Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House football (2); House indoor baseball (2). Avukah (1-4). Boston Newsboys Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business or Government. FREDERICK KAYE LISTER Born May 23, 1920, in Rye, New York. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address Greenhaven Road, Rye, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: English. PAUL DAMON LITTLEFIELD Born June 8, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Bronxville High. Home address: Annisquam, Massachusetts. College address: 5 DeWolfe Street. Fencing team (2 4), assistant manager (4). Yacht Club (1). Naval Society (4). Pi Eta. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: United States Navy. DEMAREST LLOYD Born July 10, 1919, in Marblehead, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 1825 R Street N.W., Washington, D. C Eliot Mouse. House football (2 4); House bite- ball (2 I). House squash (2 4); hockey team (I 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Varsity Club. Field of concen- tration (lovetnment. Intended vocation: Publu sctvuc. 1814 — Mtd I ' at Club itnl farc ' nal diploma In limptmr • Ruuia. uho tboufbl ht uai actually htint hnnnrtd by Harvard MrJttal Sthnnl He itnl hn than i 1 and appropriate fjfll. HEYWOOD LOERY Born June 22, 1920, in Staten Island, New York. Prepared at Staten Island Academy. Home address: 83 Taylor Street, Staten Island, New York. Lowell House. Rifle Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. ALVAN JACKSON LOEWENBERG Born November 11, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 296 Tappan Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. Baseball team (1); House baseball (2 4); House tennis (2-4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. RICHARD STILLMAN LOOMIS Born June 2, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 26 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Hockey team (1); House football (3, 4); House baseball (2-4); House hockey (2-4). Pi Eta. Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Teach- ing. CHARLES UPTON LOWE Born August 24, 1921, in Pelham, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 180 East 79th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Soccer team (1-4); lacrosse team (1); House golf (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3); House track (2, 3). Field of concentra- tion: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medi- cine. WILLIAM HYSLOP LOWE JR. Born March 14, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 575 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Claver- ly Hall. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Philosophy. JOHN LOWELL Born September 3, 1919, in Westwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Fox Hill Street, Westwood, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. House football (2-4); House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2, 3). Grenfell Mission (1, 2). Phillips Brooks House (2). Naval Society (4). House committee (2, 3), treasurer (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: United States Navy. 7826 — Nathaniel Bowditch demanded economies, including selling the college sloop Harvard, which periodically brought firewood to the college. PAUL THORPE LOWRY Born September 11, 1920, in Price, Utah. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: c-o Carbon-Emery Bank, Price, Utah. College address: 3 Langdon Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Medicine. MARTIN LUBIN Born March 30, 1923, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Boys High. Home address: 770 St. Mark ' s Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. Phillips Brooks House (1). Council on Post-war Aims (3). Boylston Chemical Club (1). Matthews Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Academic medi- cine. FRANK CAMERON LUDWIG Born June 27, 1920, in Jamaica Plain, Massa chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home ad dress: 125 Lee Street, Brookline, Massachu setts. Adams House. House football (3, 4) Instrumental clubs (1). Crimson (1, 2) House entertainment committee (4). Pan American Society, secretary (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation Foreign service. RICHARD HANNAH LUKE Born March 22, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 1125 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. RUFUS WORTH LUMRY JR. Born November 3, 1920, in Bismarck, North Dakota. Prepared at Bismarck High. Home address: 311 3rd Street, Bismarck, North Dakota. Winthrop House. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. THEODORE HILDAGUARD LUNINE Born September 7, 1920, at Reading, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Wyomissing High. Home address: 923 Hamilton Place, Wyomissing, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. House foot- ball (3, 4) ; House track (3, 4) ; House wrestling (3, 4); House crew (4). Liberal Union (2-4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Public service. {HO } - ' -.Pnctfti; I Ll ' DVIG Ftf c iii } ARCHY LOUIS LUPIA Born February 14, 1921, in Jersey Gty, New Jersey. Prepared at East Orange High. Home address: 28 Tremond Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey. Dunster House. House swim- ming (2); House golf (2, 3); House squash (2, 3); House football (3). House committee (2); House dramatics (2, 3); House dance committee (2, 3). Glee Club. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended vocation: United States Navy. ARTHUR THEODORE LYMAN JR. Born November 20, 1919, in Dedham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Thatcher Street, Westwood, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Football squad (1-4); crew squad (2-4), captain (4). Under- graduate Athletic Council (4). Union Com- mittee (1). Class Day Committee. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, secretary (3), president (4); Fly Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: United States Navy. HARRISON FRANKLIN LYMAN JR. Born November 26, 1920, in Winchester, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 15 Lawson Road, Winchester, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. House squash (2, 3); tennis squad (1-4). Rtd Book (1); Crimson (2-4), assistant editorial chairman (4). House dance committee (2, 3). Crimson Network (3), production chairman (4). Ski Club (3, 4). Pi Eta. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Law. JAMES DOHERTY LYNCH Born May 2, 1921, in Belmont, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 279 Nesmith Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Baseball team (2-4); House football (3). Pi Eta; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: United States Army. GERALD JOSEPH LYONS Born March 19, 1920, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Thayer Academy. Home address: 60 South Street, Quincy, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Track squad (3, 4). Geology Club; St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2 4). Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Geology. MAURICE ALBERT LYONS Born May 4, 1921. at Quincy, Massachusetts. Prepared at Quincy High Home address: 60 South Street. Quincy. Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Government. ALFRED MacALLISTER Born October 4, 1919, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Howe High. Home address: Carlisle, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Band (3). Union Now (3). Choit (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biochem- istry. Intended vocation: Medicine. GEORGE EDMOND MacDONALD Born Septembet 21, 1920, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Somerville High. Home address: 24 Wheatland Street, Somerville, Massachusetts. Living at home. Dudley assistant athletic secretary (3), athletic secre- tary (4); House basketball (2-4); House hockey (2 4); House baseball (2-4); House football (4). House committee (3, 4). Field of concentration: Latin and French Literature. Intended vocation: Surgery. PETER MACGOWAN Born March 5, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Flintridge Preparatory, Pasadena, California. Home address: R.D. No. 3, Brewster, New York. Adams House. Basket- ball squad (1); golf team (1- 4), captain (4); House basketball (2 4). Red Book (1). Head Junior Usher (3). House committee (2 4), chairman (4). Student Council (4). Defense Service Committee, chairman (4). Permanent Class Committee. Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Public administration. ROBERT TANDLER MACK JR. Born April 27, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 296 Hazel Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois. Leverett House. House tennis (2, 3); House squash (3). Band (14); Pierian Sodal- ity (I, 2); House glee club (2 4); House orchestra (2, 3). Crimson Network (3, 4). House dance committee (2, 3); House debat- ing (2); House dramatics (2, 3). Film Society (3, 4). American Civilization Group (1, 2). Union Photographic Club (I). Union Debat- ing Club (1). Student Union (1). Orni- thological Club (2). Council of Government concentrators (2). House ten-year book, advertising manager (3). Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Public DANIEL HARPER MACKAY JR. Born October 13, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 76 Aberdeen Avenue, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Music Club (1 4). Daniel A Buckley Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Music criticism. LOREN GREENWOOD MacKINNEY Horn AuguM 26. 1920. in Liberty, Missouri. Prepared at Chapel Hill High Home address: Westwood Way, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I hut House. Track team (I), House tr.uk !2, J): football team (2 4). Union Committee 1). House committee (2 4), chairman (4). Student Council O. 1). president (4). House ISiUtaJH athletic secretary (3). Varsity Club, executive committee (4). Glee Club. First marshal. Francis H. Burr Scholarship. Delphic dub, Field of concentration: History. In. tended vocation. Medicine. 1829 On June 2 the rt oiming mayor of Boston, Jonah Quint), uai maueuraltJ and firom il ) beiame tht least-liked president since Hoar. I g «y « «««-mij WILLIAM FRANCIS MACOMBER Bornjuly 27, 1921, in Duxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at North Quincy High. Home ad- dress: Star Route, Brunswick, Maine. Leverett House. Outing Club (2-4). Field of concen- tration: Comparative Philology and Classics. Intended vocation: Farming. FARAHE MALOOF Born January 24, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston High and Latin. Home address: 4 Dwight Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 396 Harvard Street. Football squad (1); House football (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House swim- ming (2-4); House hockey (4). House com- mittee (2 4); House dance committee (4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Field of con- centration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. MARTIN ROBERT MARKS Born April 30, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 25 Tennis Court, Brooklyn, New York. Leverett House. House football (3, 4); House tennis (2-4); swimming squad (1). Rifle Club (14). Band (1-4). Pierian Sodality (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation; Law. RANDOLPH LAUGHLIN MARSHALL Born April 18, 1921, in Berkeley, California Prepared at Mt. Diablo Union High. Home address: El Rancho Del Arroyo, Walnut Creek, California. Winthrop House. John Harvard Scholarship. A. D. Club. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended voca- tion: Law. ANDREW CONANT MARSTERS Born October 6, 1919, in Morristown, New Jersey. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Millstone Road, Wilton, Connecticut. College address: 48 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of L770; Fox Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Research engineering. DANIEL FRANCIS MARTINI Born February 19, 1920, in Shamokin, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Shamokin High. Home address: 716 North Sixth Street, Shamokin, Pennsylvania. Claverly Hall. Caisson Club (3, 4); Pistol Club (3, 4). Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Law. 1854 — All sophomores expelled for the year, following a riot and hanging of the black flag of rebellion from Holworthy. Quincy threatened to call in police to find who rang the bell in the night. JOHN EDWARD MASSENGALE III Born November 18, 1921, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Evanston High. Home address: 2020 Hawthorne Lane, Evanston, Illinois. Winthrop House. Union Committee (1). Senior Election Committee (3). Red Book (1). Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: English. In- tended vocation: Law. ALLEN WASHINGTON MATHIS JR. Born April 29, 1920, in Gadsden, Alabama. Prepared at Maine TWP High. Home address: 331 Cuttriss Place, Park Ridge, Illinois. Kirkland House. Swimming team (2-4); House football (3, 4); House baseball (2). House committee (4); House dramatics, presi- dent (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. SAMUEL CASAMERE MAY Born September 19, 1920, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Williston. Home address: 41 Brookside Drive, Hamden, Connecticut. Adams House. Football squad (1); House football (3, 4); House hockey (3, 4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. In- tended vocation: Medicine. DAVID MAYER Born August 20, 1921, in Easton, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Easton High. Home addtess: 115 North Fourteenth Street, Easton, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House (1-3); House Chronicle, editor (3, 4); House drama- tics (2). Dramatic Club (4). Psychology Club (2-4). Premedical Society (4); Boylston Chemical Club (4). Outing Club (2-4). Film Society (4). Pan-American Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. RICHARD BUDD McADOO Born March 25, 1920, in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Crew squad, 150-pound (1), junior varsity (2, 3); House hockey (2, 3). Advo- cate (1-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Signet Society; Field of concen- tration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Journalism or publishing. MALCOLM ROBERT McARDLE Born December 26, 1920, in Chelsea, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Huntington. Home address: 51 Westland Avenue, Winchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. House swimming (4); House crew (4). Classical Club (1-4). Christian Science Society (1-4). Student Defense League (3, 4). Field of con- centration: Latin and French. Intended voca- tion: Business or teaching. {112 } JAMES BERT McCANDLESS Born January 19, 1920, in Bellevue, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Avalon High. Home ad- dress: 314 Home Avenue, Avalon, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended voca- tion: Biochemistry. JOHN DEAN G1LLETT McCLURE Born June 27, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 31-D Shaler Lane, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: United States Navy. PETER COLEMAN McCONARTY Born February 8, 1920, in Wollaston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 21 Taylor Street, Wollaston, Massachusetts. Adams House. House hockey (2-4); House soccer (2-4). St. Pauls. Catholic Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. GEORGE CLARK McELHENY Born April 21, 1920, in Tiffin, Ohio. Prepared at Columbian High. Home address: R.R. 2, Tiffin, Ohio. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House (3). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemical re- search. THOMAS JOHN McELLIGOTT Born July 4, 1919, in Watertown, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 33 Harnden Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts. Living at home. Track squad (1-4); cross country squad (2, 3); cross coun- try team (1, 4); House hockey (3); House cross country (3). Caisson Club (1) Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism or business. CHARLES JOSEPH McELROY Born November 28, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 217 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. 4 115 } WILLIAM WINN McGINNISS Born July 3, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Pre- pared at Hughes High. Home address: 3514 Gelford Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Dunster House. Football squad (1); tennis squad (1); House football (2-4); House basketball (2-4); House squash (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House tennis (3-4); House track (2). House assistant athletic secretary (3). Har- vard Club of Cincinnati Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Advertising. GORDON RANDOLPH McGRATH Born May 20, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Mt. Kisco, New York. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Hockey team (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. FRANKLIN BOWMAN McKECHNIE Born August 21, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home ad- dress: 111 Manthorne Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Track squad (1-4). Jubilee Committee (1). Drama- tic Club (2-3). House Committee (2-4); House dance committee, chairman (3, 4). Pi Eta; Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. JOHN CRANE McLAUGHLIN Born September 21, 1921, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 69 Highland Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Premedical Society (3, 4). St. Pauls Catholic Club (2-4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Medicine. BERNARD JAMES McMAHON JR. Born August 9, 1919, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Richmond Hill High. Home address: 101 36 I ith Street, Richmond Hill, New York. Adams House. Cross country squad (1); basketball squad (1); House basketball (2 4) ; House baseball (2, 3). Debating Council (1). Smoker Committee (I). House debating (2). House dramatics (•!). Crimson Network (3, 4), president (4). Crimson (4). Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. II KVIS BELL McMECHAN Born March 27. 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 286 l.anhlca Drive, Birmingham, Michigan. Lowell House. Dramatic Club (1 4), secretary (2), executive committee (3, 4). Advocatt (1 ' ) MiC ' .rcgnr Fund Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- InMitutc of 1770. Field of concentration English. Intended vocation; Theatre . IH ( On Stpltmhtr ft tht Bictnltnnial held with 40 main and tht iin rinK of Pair Harvard by Samuel Oilman fo r tht fir it limt. Adoption of tht Vtrilai ital ua announced HERBERT THOMAS McMEEKIN, JR. Born March 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Northwood. Home address: 26 Whitson Street, Forest Hills, New York. Kirkland House. Swimming team, manager (4); House squash (3, 4). Red Book, advertis- ing manager (1). House dance committee (3, 4). Chapel ushet (1-3), chairman (2). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. MALCOLM PERRINE McNAIR, JR. Born December 25, 1919, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 11 Gray Gardens East, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Ski squad (1-4), manager (4); House crew (2-4). Ski Club. Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Busi- JOHN STANLEY McNAYR Born April 14, 1920, in Colmar, France. Pre- pared at Newton High. Home address: 92 Bullough Park, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Living at home. Caisson Club (3, 4); Pistol Club (4). Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Meteotology-Climatology. DAVID DANA McNEILL Born February 10, 1919, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Proctor. Home address: Pine Bluff, North Carolina. Adams House. Crew squad (1). Phillips Brooks House (2-4): undergraduate faculty (2, 3). American Civili- zation Group (1). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business. AVROM IZAK MEDALIA Born February 3, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 78 Bay State Road, Boston, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Glee Club. Edwin A. W. Harlow Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemis- try. ALTON MEISTER Born June 1, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at DeWitt Clinton High. Home ad- dress: 315 Riverside Drive, New York, New York. Winthrop House. House squash (4). Crimson (1-4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Photography Club (1). Field of concentration: Biochemistry . Intended vocation: Medicine. 1838 — Firs! Class Day resulted when the strict rule that there could be no punch or dancing was voided by Old Quin crying, No dancing. Take partners for a cotillion. HENRY JOSEPH MEKOSKY Born November 27, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Dorchester High. Home address: 31 Nottingham Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. GUY GEORGE MELI Born January 11, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Huntington. Home address: 19 Ford Street, Revere, Massachusetts. Living at home. Football squad (1); Junior varisty (2-4); baseball squad (1); House baseball (2-4); House basketball (2-4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. JAMES EDWIN MEREDITH JR. Born September 22, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Metcersburg. Home address: Haverford Villa Apartments, Ard- more, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Track squad (2-4); cross country team, manager (4) House football (3); House soccer (4). Smoker Committee (1). Dramatic Club (1, 2), execu tive committee (2). House Committee (2-4) chairman (4). Inter-House chairman (4) Junior Usher (3). Student Council (4) Harvard Club of Philadelphia Scholarship Pi Eta. Field of concenttation: International Relations. Intended vocation: Business. RICHARD KITCHELL MERRILL Born August 2, 1920, in Evanston, Illinois. Ptepared at Governor Dummer. Home ad- dress: 925 Greenwood Boulevard, Evanston, Illinois. Kirkland House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Anthropol- ogy. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM HOWARD MERZ Born September 29, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Jenkintown High. Home address: 252 Wyncote Road, Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. Adams House. House squash (4). Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (2, 3). Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. IRWIN ROBERT MESSINGER Bornjuly 17, 1920, in Jersey City, Newjersey. Prepared at Jamaica High. Home address: 115-46 205th Street, St. Albans, New York. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3j years. Student Union (1-4). Boylston Chemical Club (1-4). Stamp Club (1-3). Photogtaphy Club (2, 3). Premedical Society (4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. {114 } jiiO HENRY JOSEPH METZNER Born March 2, 1920, in Glens Falls, New York. Prepared at Glens Falls High. Home address: 34 Union Street, Glens Falls, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT ROSS MEZER Born February 2, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston High and Latin. Home address: 205 Ward Street, Newton Center, Massachusetts. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Boylston Chemical Club (1-3). Premedical Society (1-3). Rifle Club (2, 3)- Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. JAMES WALKER MICHAELS Born June 17, 1921, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 82 Dana Road, Buffalo, New York. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Phillips Brooks House: social service committee (1). Liberal Unio n (2). CrmiioH (2) Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. DAVID MIDDLETON Born April 19, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Deerficld. Home address: 25 Vandam Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Crew squad (1); House squash (3. 4). Class pf 1802 Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Industrial and Scientific Research. DONALD SCOBORTIA MILES Born July 31. 1920, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 30 Sheffield Road, Wakefield, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Wrestling team (1); track squad (1), wrestling squad (2 4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biology. JOHN CORNISH MILLARD Born April 26. 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Staten Island Academy. Home address 102 Radcliff Road. Staten Island, New York Eliot House At Harvard 3 years. Boxing (2. 3) Phillips Brooks House (I 3): undergraduate faculty (3) Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Law. 1U } JOHN HARPER MILLER Born July 1, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Asheville. Home address: 1740 Wesley Avenue, Evanston, Illinois. Lowell House. Basketball squad (1); House football (3, 4). Pi Eta, president (4). Field of concen- tration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. JOSEPH MORTON MILLER Born November 9, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 5 Park Street, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Living at home. House baseball (2). Jubilee Committee (1). House Committee (3, 4), secretary (4); House library committee, chairman (4). Premedical Society (2, 3). Junior Usher (3). Edwin A. W. Harlow Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. PAUL JOSEPH MILLER JR. Born June 9, 1920, in Poughkeepsie, New York. Prepared at Poughkeepsie High. Home address: 216 South Cherry Street, Poughkeep- sie, New York. Dunster House. House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2-4). Edwin A. W. Harlow Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Busi- ness Administration. VERN KENNETH MILLER Born February 8, 1921, in Milwaukee, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 2762 North 53rd Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Winthrop House. Football team !l-4); wrestling team (2-4); House basketball 2). Chess team (1). Class Day Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field ofconcentration:History and Literature. Intended vocation: Law. JESSE COBB MILLS Born February 13. 1921, in Morristown, Tennessee. Prepared at Whitesburg High. Home address: R.F.D. No. 1, Bulls Gap, Tennessee. Leverett House. Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Foreign service. RICHARD LOW MILLS Horn May 19, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Mt. Herman. Home ad- dress: 67 Thatcher Street, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Football squad (1). Phillips Brooks House: freshman committee (1). Augustinian Society (3, 4). Naval So- ciety (3, 4), treasurer (4). Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. 1841 Aflir thru ytari of huilJine. Gort Hall uai nptntJ as tht library wi th 41,000 btoki. ROBERT WALTER MOEVS Born December 2, 1920, in La Crosse, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 1602 Cass Street, La Crosse, Wisconsin. Leverett House. Fencing team (1-4); crew squad (1). House glee club (2). Music Club (2-4). Crimson Network (3, 4). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Music. ROBERT KNAPP MOONEY Born May 30, 1920, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: Gilead Road, Waterford, Connecticut. Eliot House. Field of concentration: English. In- tended vocation: Law. LEWIS MORRIS Born July 5, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Roslyn High. Home address: Serpentine Avenue, Roslyn, New York. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. Music Club (2). Field of concentration: Music. JOHN VICTOR MROZ Born May 16, 1921, in Peabody, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Salem Classical and High. Home address: 149 Derby Street, Salem, Massa- chusetts. College add ress: 5 Divinity Avenue. International Club (2-4). Polish Students ' Club (1-4). Browne Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. DONALD NEWBY MUNRO Born October 23, 1915, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge Academy. Home address: 59 Hammond Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Banking. LAWRENCE SHIPLEY MUNSON Born January 10, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Garden City High. Home address: 57 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. House golf (2-4); House baseball (3, 4). Dramatic Club (2). Glee Club. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Public Relations. 1848 — In this year of world revolt, there was only one expulsion. This era of good feeling followed a reign of riots and brazen indignities for President Edward Everett. LESTER JOSEPH MURPHY Born March 20, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 22 Brookview Street, Dcrchester, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Football squad (1); House hockey (2-4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. In- tended vocation: Medicine. MALCOLM PURVES MURPHY Born June 7, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Ridley Park High. Home address: 113 Welcome Lane, Ridley Park, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Band (2-4). Radio Workshop (2-4), director (4). Pierian Sodality (4). William Stanislaus Murphy Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Aviation. WILLIAM CELESTIN MURPHY Born December 5, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at West High. Home address: 659 Garfield Avenue, Aurora, Illinois. Lowell House. House football (2-4); House basket- ball (2-4). Jubilee Committee (1). Red Book (1). Debating Council (2-4), vice-president (4). House Committee (4). Class Orator. William Stanislaus Murphy Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Economics. ROBINSON MURRAY JR. Born May 14, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Scarsdale High. Home address: 21 Lockwood Ro ad, Scarsdale, New York. Lowell House. Track squad (1); House football (3, 4); House track (2-4). Glee Club, manager (3). House dance committee, chair- man (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. HOMER STEFFEN MUSGRAVE Born September 11, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Mt. Lebanon High. Home address: 350 Parkway Drive, Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Boxing (2-4); House hockey (4); baseball team, associate manager (3,4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Harvard Club of Western Pennsyl- vania Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM GREENE MUSGRAVE Born December 31, 1919, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 80 Sparks Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lowell House. House squash (2). House dance com- mittee, chairman (3, 4). Photography Club (3, 4). Mathematics Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Banking. I {116 } . 1 116 J 4117 } FREDERICK BAGLEY MYERS Born April 5, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Fox Hill Farm, Westwood, Massachusetts. College address: 44 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 3 V2 years. Spanish club (2-4). Skeet Club (2-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; D. U. Club. Field of concentration: English. Present vocation: New England Aircraft School. JAY SCOTT MYERS Born March 22, 1921, in Houston, Texas. Prepared at San Jacinto High. Home address: 2009 McGowen Avenue, Houston, Texas. Kirkland House. Basketball squad (1); House crew (2); House squash (3, 4); House basket- ball (2-4); House soccer (4). Naval Society. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. MORTON MYERSON Bornjune 21, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 114 Westbourne Terrace, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Soccer team (1-4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government service. ROBERT GEORGE NASSAU Born October 2, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 3766 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Lowell House. Tennis squad (1); House tennis (2); House squash (3); House baseball (4). Student Union (1-4), executive committee (2 4), vice-president (3). Class of 1836 Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. ROBERT FRANCIS NAVIN Born May 4, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at North Quincy High. Home address: 124 East Elm Avenue, Wollaston, Massachusetts. Adams House. Basketball squad (1), )unior varsity (2); House basket- ball (3). House assistant athletic secretary (3). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Consular service. NORMAN MOULTRAP NEAGLE B.irn June 29, 1920, in Watertown, Massa- chusetts Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 16 f.liencry Terrace, Belmont, Massa- chusetts Kirkland House. House (ennls (2 4); House hockey (2 4), House squash 3, 4); House soccer (4), tennis squad (3. 4). U Club. Fidd of conccntraiiitn. Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Engineering , ' ; PHILIP McENTEER NEAGLE Born November 26, 1920, in Bronxville, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 82 Millard Avenue, Bronxville, New York. Adams House. Lacrosse team (1), squad (2, 3); House football (2-4), captain (4); House basketball (2, 3). Yacht Club (1, 3). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. ARTHUR GUY NEFF JR. Born December 7, 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 863 Knox Street, Bitmingham, Michigan. Eliot House. House tennis (2-4); House baseball (3, 4); House basketball (2-4); soccer team it, 2); Instrumental Clubs (2); Pietian Sodality (2-4); Band (2-4). Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Automo- bile business. AARON LOUIS NELSON JR. Bornjune 23, 1920, in Deer Lodge, Montana Prepared at Erie Academy High. Home ad- dress: 704 Beverly Drive, Erie, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. HARRY NEWMAN JR. Born September 22, 1921, in St. Louis, Miss- ouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: Box 592, Beverly Hills, Cali- fornia. Adams House. Red Boot, business manager (1); House yearbook, business manager (2), chairman (3); Senior Album chairman (4). Smoker committee (1). House committee (4). Phillips Brooks House (1 1). president (4): undergraduate faculty (1, 4), handbook committee, assistant chairman (1 ). Freshman committee, chairman (1), social service commirtee (2, 3), chairman (3), com- munity service conference, chairman (3, 4), defense service committee (4). Student Coun- cil (4). Permanent Class Committee. Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: German. Intended vocation: Business. ARTHUR GEROULD NEWTON Born August 10, 1920, in New Haven, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Roxbuty Latin. Home address: Main Street, West Chatham, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. House football (3. 4); House baseball (2 4); Rifle Club (4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Business Administration or United States Navy. NORMAN ARNOLD NIELSEN Born August II, 1920, in Ipswich, Massachu- setts Prepared at Hamilton High. Home address: 42 Cutler Road, Hamilton, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Charles Downer S In l arship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. IH4V On Not ember 2i o.mrred Irurnrdi frmfeil iidmlal. uhen Dr John Wehiler murdered and dntri ' rd hii irtdllor Dr George Parkman in iht ehtmutry laboratory 0 the Medieal School. JOHN MARTIN PETREE NILSSON Born November 17, 1921, in Peekskill, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 136 Smith Street, Peekskill, New York. Levetett House. Biology Club (2-4); Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Medicine. ARTHUR HARRY NORTHRUP Born July 3, 1920, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Shortridge High. Home address: 3033 College Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana. Lowell House. House football (3, 4); boxing tournament (3, 4). Union Committee (1). Jubilee Committee (1). House dramatics (3, 4). Debating Council (1-4), treasurer (4). Glee Club. Bowditch Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economic Theory. Intended vocation: Business or Law. JOHN JOSEPH NORTON JR. Born August 28, 1920, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Home address: MacPherson Avenue, Egypt, Massachusetts. College address: 6 Walter Terrace, Somerville. At Harvard 3 years. Band (1). Mountaineering Club, president (2). Field of concentration: Economics. JAMES RAWLEY NYGREN Born September 12, 1921, in Frayee, Minne- sota. Prepared at Milaca High, Milaca, Minne- sota. Home address: 520 West Avenue, De- troit Lakes, Minnesota. Leverett House, House glee club (2-4). Choir (3, 4). Dance Group (2-4). Student Union Theatricals (3). Glee Club. Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended voca- tion: Industrial chemistry. EDWARD LOUIS EMIL OCHSNER Born October 18, 1919, in Mansfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Mansfield High. Home address: 255 Chauncey Street, Mansfield, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (2, 4). House dramatics (3). Radio Workshop (2). German Club (2). Boylston Chemical Club (2). Premedical Society (2). Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Sur- gery. WILLIAM O KEEFE Born July 20, 1921, in Denver, Colorado. Prepared at Curtis High. Home address: 33 Haven Esplanade, Staten Island, New York. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Mechanical engineering. 1857 — Faculty banned fraternities until 1865 and inaugurated blue books and final exams. Pi Eta was founded when the fraternities were restored in 1865. OLIVER SANFORD OLDMAN Born July 19, 1920, in New York. New York. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 1317 Meadowbrook Avenue, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House (1). House debating (2). Band (1, 2). Pierian Sodality, managerial assistant (1, 2). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Accountancy. ALLEN FRANCIS OLINGER Born July 27, 1920, in Algiers, North Africa. Prepared at Pelham Memorial High. Home address: 1118 Washington Avenue, Pelham Manor, New York. Kirkland House. House football (2, 3); House swimming (3, 4); House fencing (2-4). French Club (2-4). Glee Club. Field of concentrarion: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. THOMAS FRANCIS O LOUGHLIN Born March 21, 1920, in Winsted, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 540 New Britain Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut. Kirk- land House. Football squad (1-3); track squad (1-4). Spanish Club (1). Price-Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Graduate School of Busi- ness Administration. JOHN EDWARD ONEIL JR. Born July 27, 1920, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston College High. Home address: 64 Lincoln Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. House football (2, 3); House squash (2-4); House baseball (2-4). Pi Eta Theatricals (3, 4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN JOSEPH O NEILL Born December 18, 1918, in Tautnon, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayet Academy. Home address: 15 Bennett Street, Taunton, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Football squad (1). Union Committee (1). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. MYRON OPPENHEIMER Born April 13, 1920, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Coughlin High. Home address: 63 South Washington Street, Wilkes- Barre, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Foreign Relations Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government. U8 } ■m Di ■I U :; , STANFORD LEVIN OPTNER Born December 26, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at St John ' s Military Academy. Home address : 3920 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois. Adams House. House crew (2). House dance committee (2-4), co-chairman (4). Phillips Brooks House: publications committee, as- sistant chairman (3,4). Field of concentration: Anthropology. CHANNING HASKELL ORBACH Born March 17, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 8 Custer Street, Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: Government. ROBERT HARRY ORCHARD Born December 24, 1920, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy, Hud- son, Ohio. Home address: 421 Baker Avenue, Webster Groves, Missouri. Adams House. House swimming (2, 3), Red Book (1). House yearbook (2); House entertainment committee (2). Phillips Brooks House: hand book com- mittee (1), publications committee, co-chair- man (2, 3). S. P. A. Club. Pinsters ' Local No. 487, president. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Paper business. JOHN AMOS ORDWAY II Born January 31, 1920, in Bronxville, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 181 South Main Street, Franklin, New Hamp- shire. Eliot House. House squash (4); House swimming (4); House basketball (4); squash squad, manager (1 3); tennis squad (1, 2); track squad (2 4). Library Committee (1). House library committee (3. 4); House dance committee (3, 4). Classical Club (1, 2). Defense Group (3. 4). William Cross William- son Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa, junior eight. Field of concentration: Classics and Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Politics. THOMAS JOSEPH O TOOLE Born October 13. 1921, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 21 Rogers Street, Newton, Massachu- setts. Living at home. At Harvard 3V£ years. House tennis (2, 3); House crew (2, 3). Phillips Brooks House (I, 2). Debating Coun- cil (2 4). secretary (4). Guardian (1 4). president (4). Liberal Union (4). Caisson Club (3. 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1 1) Wendell Phillips Memorial Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. DONALD OTTENSTEIN Bom February 2, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Polytcchnical Preparatory. Lowell House At Harvard 3 years. House basketball (2), House tennis (2), House squash (2. ), Boylston Chemical Club (I) Student Union (2) Field of concentration: Fine Arts and History. U9 ROBERT PAINE Born March 31, 1921 in Aberdeen, Missouri. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 565 Lemaster Street, Memphis, Tennessee. Lowell House. Tennis team, manager (3); House tennis (2, 3); House squash (2, 3). Instrumental Clubs (3). Biology Club (2, 3); Premedical society (2, 3). John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. RICHARD WARE PALMER Born October 20, 1919, in Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Country Day. Home address: 109 Allerton Road, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Track squad (1); crew squad, 150-pound (1-4); House hockey (2-4); House squash (2-4). House dance committee (2, 3), chairman (3). Alan Hudson Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. ROSS ISAAC PARKER JR. Born December 21, 1920, in Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Hinsdale High. Home address: 226 South Elm Street, Hinsdale, Illinois. Kirkland House. House football (3); House hockey (3, 4); House squash (3). Red Boot (1); Crimson (1, 2). House dance committee (2-4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. WILLIAM BARCLAY PARSONS JR. Born December 31, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 208 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Baseball team (1-3); football squad (1, 4); junior varsity (2); House hockey (2-4). French Club (1). Jubilee Committee (1). Undergraduate Athletic Council (4). Permanent Class Committee. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Field of concen- tration: Literature. JOSEPH RUSSELL PASSONNEAU Born January 19, 1921, in Pullman, Washing- ton. Prepared at Atwater High. Home address: Atwater, Minnesota. Eliot House. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Architectural Sciences. FRANCIS DANIEL PASTORIUS V Born October 4, 1920, in Scranton, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Soccer squad (1); House soccer (2); fencing squad (3). Rtd Book (I); Stnior Album, advertising manager (4) . Glee Club. Field of concentration: Eco- ikiiiiii Intended vocation: Law. (11)1 IH1H On June 12 at tht Hmi,,,, C.it Rtgatta, iht Harvard irru- uur t trims i andktrihief around ihtir htadi. and ihii m or uai nffiiiafh adnfiled in I ' lid DONALD JOHN PATTON Born May 18, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared ar York Community High. Home address: Box 11, Cortaro, Arizona. Dunster House. House crew (2-4). American Civiliza- tion Group (1-2). German Club (1-4). Chapel Usher (1-4). Rebecca Perkins Scholar- ship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Teaching. ENDICOTT PEABODY II Born February 15, 1920, in Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 847 James Street, Syracuse, New York. Eliot House. Football team (1-4); hockey squad (3, 4); tennis squad (3, 4). Union Committee (1); Student Council (3, 4). Second marshal. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club; Varsity Club, vice-president (4). Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM TYLER PEABODY JR. Born March 17, 1921, in Melrose, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home ad- dress: 76 Ardsmoor Road, Melrose, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Football squad, junior varsity manager (4); House hockey (2-4); House baseball (3, 4). House hospital- ity committee, chairman (4). Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. DANIEL MILTON PEARCE JR. Born September 11, 1920, in Ripley, Tennessee. Prepared at Ripley High. Home address: Ripley, Tennessee. Dunster House. House squash (2-4). Lady Mowlson Scholatship. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Mechanical engineering. LESTER MANARD PEARLMAN Born June 11, 1919, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brighton High. Home address: 27 Warrington Drive, Brighton, New York. Eliot House. House basketball (3, 4); House baseball (4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. THOMAS CHALMERS PEEBLES Born June 5, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 53 Morton Street, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Tennis squad (1); House tennis (2-4). Band (1-4), manager (4). House dance committee (2-4), chairman (3, 4). Field of concentration: French. 1860 — Annual Freshman and sophomore football fight suppressed, but it was replaced by Bloody Monday, first Monday of the school year, when Freshmen were thoroughly hazed. FRANK ARTHUR PEMBERTON JR. Born June 19, 1920, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 97 Laurel Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. House squash (2-4). Crimson (2-4), assistant advertising manager (4). Field of concentra- tion: English. PAUL GEDDES PENNOYER JR. Born February 11, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Locust Valley, New York. Claverly Hall. Crew squad (3). Delphic Club. Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Law. JOHN GORDON PENSON Born September 11, 1920, in Dorchester, Dorset, England. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Glen Head, New York. Lowell House. Soccer team (1-4), captain (4); basketball team (1, 2); House basketball (3, 4); House baseball (2-4). Red Book (1). Phillips Brooks House (1). Christian Fellow- ship (1-3), executive board (2, 3). Chapel usher (1-4), head usher (3, 4). Senior elec- tions committee (3). House committee (3, 4); House Chronicle (3, 4); House dramatics (3, 4). Undergraduate Athletic Council, presi- dent (4). Caisson Club (3, 4), tteasurer (4). Harvard Club of Long Island Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Ministry. ALLEN CLARE PERCIVAL Born November 13, 1921, in Greensburg, Kansas. Prepared at Fitchburg High. Home address: 211 Blossom Street, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Rifle team (1); pistol squad (4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Harvard Club of Fitchburg Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended vocation: United States Army. ROBESON PETERS Born April 5, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home addtess: 310 South Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. College address: 24 DeWolfe Street. Field of concentration: History. JACK MILTON PETERSON Born April 25, 1920, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Parkrose High. Home address: 4725 N.E. 101st Avenue, Portland, Oregon. Eliot House. Football squad (1); House football (4); House basketball (3, 4). House committee (2-4). Farrar Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Physics. IS lmi (H 4120 } fq (121)1 RICHARD GORDON PFISTER Born May 27, 1920, in Edgemonc, South Dakota. Prepared at Edgemont High. Home address: Edgemont, South Dakota. Winthrop House. Football team (2-4); track team (3, 4); House basketball (3, 4). Class Day Com- mittee. Varsity Club Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Ranching. MALCOLM GILKEY PFUNDER Born November 11, 1919, in Miles City, Montana. Prepared at Washburn High. Home address: 4901 Garfield Avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Leverett House. House basketball (3, 4). House committee (4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN NASH PHILIPS Born July 18, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 1)3 Upland Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Living at home. Soccer squad (1). Crimson (2-4). Field of concentration: English. In- tended vocation: Law. ARTHUR HYDE PHILLIPS Born June 7, 1920, in Wenham, Massachusetts- Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 61 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Foreign service. COLES HARISON PHINIZY Born September 29, 1919, in Augusta, Georgia. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 114 South Princeton Avenue, Ventnor, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Football team (1); track team (1); swimming team (I 3); House swimming (2, 3): House track (2, 3). Student Union (2, 3). Junior Usher (3). Lampoon (2-4), president (4). Hasty Pudding Theatri- cals (3). Student Council O) Permanent Class Committee. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Spee Club, treasurer (4); Signet Society. vice-president (4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Journalism. FRANCIS ANTHONY PIANO Born February 23, 1921, in Leominster, Massachusetts. Prepared at Somerville High. Home address: 13 Grand View Avenue. Somer- ville, Massachusetts. Living at home Band (I 4). French Club (2. 3); Italian Club (2 I) Field of concentration: Romance Languages Intended vocation: Teaching. 4121 } DAVID PICKMAN Born May 21, 1921, in Bedford, Massachusetts. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 17 Chestnut Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club, assistant treasurer (3). Field of concentration: English. GARDNER HART PIERSON Born March 3, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Kolaneka Farms, Pittsford, New York. Eliot House. Hasty Pudding Theatricals (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. NORMAN HOBSON PIKE Born July 24, 1921, in Sioux City, Iowa. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 3932 Grandview Boulevard, Sioux City, Iowa. Kirkland House. House squash (3, 4). William Whiting Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Philosophy. WALTER MILBANK PILLSBURY Born September 21, 1919, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 1811 Hermitage Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Adams House. House debating (2). Rifle Club (2). Radio Workshop (2). Foreign Relations Club (3). Guardian (2 1). secretary (3). German Club (3, 4); Student Defense League (3, 4), president (4). Lib- eral Union (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House: defense service committee (4). Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: United States Foreign Service or Law. MAURICE CHARLES PINCOFFS JR. Born December 18, 1919, in Baltimore, Mary- land. Prepared at Gilman Country Day. Home address: 3110 Frederick Avenue, Balti- more, Maryland. Kirkland House. Student Union (2, 3). Harvard Club of Maryland Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business or Law. ROBERT EUGENE PITTIS Bom July 16. 1919. in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Hill School. Home address: Box 510, Washington, D. C. Winthrop House. KrJ book (I) Iroquois Club. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Business, ■■nv Mil On Jnnt 27 iht Ntw York hmibail game uai p aytj for iht firil limi with Brown; Harvard won, 27 17. Alio wan iht first Yali game in IH6H, 2i 17. ORVILLE FARLIN POLAND Born April 24, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Reading High. Home address: 75 Oak Street, Reading, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Soccer team (1); track squad (2, 3); House soccer (4); House track (4); House hockey (4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Teaching. ALEXANDER HEILBRONER POLLAK Born August 14, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at New Rochelle High. Home address: 5 Claire Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. Leverett House. House football (3). Dramatic Club (1-3). Guardian (2). John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. LEWIS HAROLD POLSTER Born June 12, 1921 in Cleveland Heights. Ohio, Prepared at Cleveland Heights High. Home address: 2669 Euclid Heights Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. Golf squad (3). House A. R. P. Coordinator. Field of concentration: Government. DANIEL SIDNEY POOR Born December 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 108 East 81st Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Soccer squad (2-4). Glee Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. FREDERICK POPE JR. Born August 12, 1919, in Scarsdale, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Wilton, Connecticut. Eliot House. Football squad, junior varsity (4); associate hockey manager (3, 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. ROBERT LICKELY POST Born November 4, 1920, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 9 College Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. House wrestling (2); House cross country (3); House soccer (4). Crim- son Network (3, 4); German Club (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ROBERT AARON POTASH Born January 2, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 28 Hurlbut Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Avukah (1-4), secretary (2), president (3); Liberal Union (3, 4). Edward Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Government service. CHARLES ANDREW POUTAS Born March 20, 1921, in Weston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Weston High. Home address: 402 Lexington Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. Lowell House. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Agriculture. JOHN HARE POWEL Born April 3, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: Potowomut Neck, Warwick, Rhode Island. College address: 28 Mt. Auburn Street. Crew squad, 150-pound (l, 3); ski squad (1, 3, 4); rifle team (1, 3, 4). Instrumental Clubs (l). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: United States Navy. FRANK JOSEPH POWER Born July 11, 1921, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Wilmington High. Home address: 2735 West 6th Street, Wilmington, Delaware. Kirkland House. Lacrosse squad (1); House football (3); House squash (2-4). Liberal Union (3, 4), executive council (4). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. MANUEL IGNATIUS PRADO Born September 19, 1920, in Lima, Peru. Prepared at Oxford, England. Home address: 931 Amargura, Lima, Peru. College address: 46 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 3 years. Polo squad (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Busi- ness. AMOS LESLIE PROCTOR Born December 19, 1920, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Somerville High. Home address: 42 Tennyson Street, Somerville, Massachusetts. Living at home. Edwin A. W. Harlow Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. 4122 } 1866 — The Advocate first appeared as The Collegian, but was suppressed after three issues. It reappeared five weeks later with its present name. He.M liM (1221 m } ROGER WARREN PROUTY Born March 12, 1920, in Littleton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home ad- dress: Littleton, Massachusetts. College ad- dress: 71 Mt. Auburn Street. House squash (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3); House crew (3). Student Union (2). Glee Club. Phillips Brooks House (3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: History. JOHN FLETCHER PRUDDEN Born February 4, 1920, in Fostoria, Ohio. Prepared at Fostoria High. Home address: 106 South Grant Street, Fostoria, Ohio. Lowell House. Swimming squad (1); House baseball (2, 4); House squash (2, 4); House basketball (4). House dramatics (3, 4). Chapel usher (1). Premedical Society (2, 3). Phillips Brooks House: speakers ' committee (3). Guardian (3, 4), circulation manager (3). business manager (4). Student Defense League (3). Robert Henry Harlow Scholarship. N. C. Club, secretary (3); Alpha Chi Sigma, secre- tary (3), master of ceremonies (4), chairman, entertainment committee (4). Field of concen- tration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. FREDERICK KYLE QUEEN Bornjune 23, 1920, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 47 Alfreton Road, Needham Heights, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. THOMAS CYRIL QUIRK Born July 5, 1920, in Norfolk, Virginia. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 254 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Band (2-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (2-4). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching or Business. RAYMOND VICTOR RANDALL Born August 1, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 1200 Juniper Street N.W., Washington, D. C. Kirkland House. House wrestling (3); House track (2). Field of concentration: Biochemis- try. Intended vocation: Medicine. FREDERIC GARNER RANNEY JR. Born February 21. 1919, in Chicago, Illinois. Transferred from Cambridge, Bwghnd. Home address: London, England. College address: 64 Mt Vernon Street. At Harvard 2 years. London School of Economus: president. League of Nations Union (2); secret ary. Conservative Party (2). Cambridge University Committees ' League of Nations Union (t); C U. History Society (I). Field of concentra- tion: English Intended vocation: Teaching. ADRIAN RECINOS JR. Born September 30, 1919, in Guatemala City, Guatemala. Prepared at Western High. Home address: 1614 Eighteenth Street N.W., Wash- ington, D. C. Dunster House. House swim- ming (2, 3); House track (2, 3). House com- mittee, secretary (3), chairman (4). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. JAMES JEWEL REDMON Born December 18, 1920, in Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 1447 Kewalo Street, Honolulu, Hawaii. Dun- ster House. Crew squad (2); wrestling squad (1-4), manager (4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. HENRY WHEELOCK REED Born June 23, 1919, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Meade. Home address: 1244 Went- worth Avenue, Pasadena, California. College address: 40 Mt. Auburn Street. Lampoon (2-4). Flying Club (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Oil or mining. JOSEPH REED Born January 14, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 127 East 91st Street, New York, New York. Claverly Hall. Crew squad, manager (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vexation: Law. WILLIAM ALLEN REED Born April 17, 1920, in Opheim, Montana. Prepared at Glasgow High. Home address: Glasgow, Montana. Lowell House. Boylston Chemical Club. Alpha Chi Sigma. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. HENRY GILLAM REIFSNYDER JR. Born July 3. 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 3119 West Penn Street, East Falls, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. College address: 48 Mt. Auburn Street. House football (2). Hastv Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iro- quois (lull. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Graduate work. 1969 On Chmher 19 ihirlyfiiiytaj-oU Charles Vtlliam lilttil was inaugurated as president and it as lo remain at that post until 1909, EUGENE JAMES REILLY Born July 23, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 3 Orchard Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachu- setts. Living at home. House boxing (2-4), all-House team (4); House hockey (3); House baseball (2-4); University boxing champion, 145-pound class (3). Dudley House commit- tee (3, 4), secretary (3, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. RALPH RENWICK JR. Born March 9, 1920, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 1220 Gregory Street, Wilmette, Illinois. College address: 7 Chauncey Street. At Harvard 3 years. Glee Club accompanist (1, 2, 4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. DONALD MONTGOMERY REYNOLDS Born August 1, 1918, in San Francisco, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Andover. Home address: R.F.D. 184, Manette, Washington. Lowell House. German Club (1-4), secretary (3), president (4). Biology Society (3, 4), vice- president (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Teaching and research in biological science. LEONARD DAVID RICHMAN Born May 12, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Hyde Park High. Home address: 6914 Oglesby Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Eliot House. House baseball (2, 3); House football (3); House squash (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House: social service committee (2, 3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Governmental or social work. CHARLES HARTMAN ROBBINS Born October 9, 1920, in Iowa City, Iowa. Prepared at University High. Home address 1049 Woodlawn Street, Iowa City, Iowa Lowell House. Cross country squad (1, 4) track squad (4); House basketball (2-4). House golf (2-4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Teaching. JOHN CLAPP ROBBINS JR. Born January 22, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Univetsity School. Home address: 3296 Bradford Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Lowell House. Crimson (1-4), ptesident (4). Student Council (4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; D. U. Club; Signet Society. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation:Journalism. 877 — Daily college prayers were suspended for five months. When it did not make the students morally lax, Eliot wanted to make them voluntary, but Emerson delayed it until 1886. DAVID RHODES ROBERTS Born July 7, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Duluth Central High. Home ad- dress: 38 Kent Road, Duluth, Minnesota. Leverett House. Crimson Netwotk (3, 4). Advocate (3, 4). House committee (3, 4), secretary-treasurer (4). Senior Album, business manager (4). Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law or business. WILLIAM FRANCIS ROBERTS ' Born July 20, 1920, in Rockland, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rockland High. Home address: 19 Payson Avenue, Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. House boxing (2). House dance committee (4). House dramatics (4). Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended vocation: Architecture. ROBERT ROBINSON Born February 27, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 388 Arborway, Jamaica Plain, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House football (2-4); House track (2); House baseball (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business. EDWARD WALTER ROBITSCHEK Born May 10, 1919, in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Prepared at Realgymnasium. Home address: Prague, Czechoslovakia. College address: 34 Irving Street. International Club (2-4). German Refugee Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Economics. DAVID WESSON ROCKWELL Born August 26, 1920, in Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Belrose Lane, Radnor, Pennsylvania. College address: 52 Mt. Auburn Street. House golf (2, 3); House squash (3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. PAUL COCHRAN RODGERS JR. Bornjune 20, 1920, in Belmont, Massachusetts. Prepared at Loomis Institute. Home address: Forest Place, Glendale, Ohio. Dunster House. Track squad (1, 2). Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Teaching. ■fid U). M i« Wl S:.i- 124 } (125 1 |lHl MELVIN HERBERT RODMAN Born May 9, 1922, in Maiden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Maiden High. Home address: 425 Main Street, Everett, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Debating Council (1). Student Union Theatricals (2, 3). Crimson Network (2-4); Radio Workshop (2-4). Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. FREDERICK VAN DUSEN ROGERS Born December 15, 1919, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home ad- dress: 1914 LaSalle Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. College address: 78 Mt. Auburn Street. House squash (2, 3); House tennis (3). Crimson (2-4). Phillips Brooks House (2). Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Government work. JAMES TRACY ROGERS II Born June 9, 1921, in Binghamton, New York. Prepared at Staunton Military Academy. Home address: 647 Chenango Street, Bingham- ton, New York. Adams House. House boxing (2, 3); House baseball (2-4); House crew (2 4). Band (1, 2). Phillips Brooks House (1-3). Caisson Club (3, 4), secretary (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Foreign service. KAY TROWBRIDGE ROGERS Born March 25, 1920, in Appleton, Wisconsin. Prepared at Appleton High. Home address: 911 East North Streer, Appleton, Wisconsin Winthrop House. Basketball squad (1); track team (1,2) cross country team (2-4), captain (4); House track (3); House basketball (4). Undergraduate Athletic Council (4). Orni- thology Club (14); Biology Club (2-4). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Teaching and research. ROCHESTER HART ROGERS JR. Born November 28. 1918, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 98 Argyle Street, Rochester, New York. Dunster House. Lacrosse (1). Senior Album (4). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: United States Navy. GERARD ROHDE Born December 28, 1920, in Greenfield, Massa- chusetts Prepared at Greenfield High. Home address: 52 Mill Street, Greenfield, Massachu- setts Kirktand House. Bind (I 4). Avukah (3, I). Student Union (I) Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. 4 125 r JOSEPH FRANCIS ROMANO Born May 27, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Worcester. Home address: 1900 East 5th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dun- ster House. Basketball team (2-4). Under- graduate Athletic Council. Varsity Club. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM LOUIS RONEY JR. Born January 26, 1921, in Atlanta, Georgia. Prepared at Winter Park. Home address: Temple Drive, Winter Park, Florida. Eliot House. House swimming (2); House squash (3, 4); House football (2-4); House tennis (2-4). House dance committee (2). Instru- mental Clubs (1-3). Student Defense League (3, 4). Union Now (3, 4). Phillips Brooks House; entertainment commit tee (2-4), under- graduate faculty (3, 4). Glee Club. James A. Rumrill Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. WALTER KLAPP ROSEN Born November 5, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooklyn High. Home address: R. D. 2, Elizabeth Street, Bound Brook, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Track squad (1); House crew (2, 3); House squash (3, 4). Boylston Chemical Club. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. JAY LEO ROST Born May 19, 1921, in Montreal, Canada. Prepared at Louisville High. Home address: 2990 Flamingo Drive, Miami Beach, Florida. Dunster House. House squash (2-4). Smoket Committee (1). House dramatics (2, 3). Barbuut (2-4). Field of concentration: So- ciology. Intended vocation: Business. EDWARD ISAAC ROTHSCHILD Born November 6, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 517 Cherry Street, Winnetka, Illinois. Lowell House. Lacrosse team (1, 2); basket- ball team (1 4); House baseball (3). Red Hook (1). Class Day Committee. Varsity Club. John Harvard Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. WALTER NATHAN ROTHSCHILD JR. Born February 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 41 East 70th Street, New York. New York Adams House. Crew squad, 150-pound (2, 3); House squash (2 4). Independents (I). Phillips BfOokl House: undergraduate faculty (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, execu- tive committee (t) held of mru duration: Government. Intended vocation Business. 1671 Medital Sftool reformed after a report had it that a iraJkult had overdoied and killed three patienli in Quirt y Written exams were required, despite plea that undents could not write. WILLIAM F. ROTTSCHAEFER Born December 7, 1920, in Cranford, New Jersey. Prepared at Marshall High. Home address: 603 5th Street S.E., Minneapolis, Minnesota. Lowell House. House hockey (2-4). House chronicle (3,4). Engineering Club (4). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. RICHARD CLARENCE ROW Born July 11, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 96 Prescott Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Football team (l); football squad (3). Field of concen- tration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. MALCOLM JAMES ROWE Born November 6, 1920, in Poughkeepsie, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 514 Lafayette Road, Merion, Pennsyl- vania. Kirkland House. Swimming team (1); House swimming (2-4). Phillips Brooks House (1). Guardian (1-4), advertising manager (3), business manager (4). Naval Science rifle team (1-4), captain (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. HERMANN GUNTHER RUDENBERG Born August 9, 1920, in Berlin, Germany. Prepared at Felsted School, England. Home address: 32 Ross Road, Belmont, Massachu- setts. Living at home. At Harvard 3 years. Photography Club (3, 4), president (4). Glee Club. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Engineering or physics. ROBERT BLONDEL RUSSELL Born July 12, 1919, in Farmington, Maine. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Farm- ington, Maine. Lowell House. American Civilization Group (2,3). House dramatics (3, 4); House musical society (2-4). Boylston Chemical Club (4). Glee Club. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. ALLAN MAXWELL SACHS Born July 13, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 25 Claremont Avenue, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Lacrosse team (1); soccer team (1-4); House basketball (2-4); House tennis (2-4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. 1872 — On December 3 in Holden Chapel the Harvard University Football Club was founded and played two games with McGill University in 1874. MILOS SAFRANEK JR. Born April 22, 1922, in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Prepared at Lycee Carnot, Dijon, France. Home address: 220 East 73rd Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. French Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Philos- ophy. Intended vocation: Diplomatic service. PAUL LEON SAGALYN Born March 21, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 240 West End Avenue, New York, New York. Leverett House. Student Union (1-3). House dramatics (4). Boylston Chemical Club (2). Premedical Society (4). Field of concentra- tion: Engineering. Intended vocation: En- gineering. ROBERT C. C. ST. GEORGE JR. Born July 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lyceum Alpinum, Zuoz, Switzer- land. Home address: Glentrasna Farm, Old- wick, New Jersey. Lowell House. Boylston Chemical Club (2-4). Harvard College Schol- arship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club; Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemical research. MERRITT BRANDON SALDINGER Born November 15, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 72 York Terrace, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. House crew (2). Phillips Brooks House (1). House committee (2). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. LEWIS NATHANIEL SANDLER Born July 30, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Montclair. Home address: 100 Morningside Road, Verona, New Jersey Kirkland House. Basketball squad (l); foot- ball squad (1,2); House baseball (2-4) ; House football (4); House squash (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business. BRADY SANDMAN Born September 26, 1918, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 502 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Dramatic Club (4). Field of concen- tration: English. {126 adciiess: ' . ' ■■■t GUIIX SANTOLIQUIDO Born May 29, 1921, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home ad- dress: 78 Harlow Street, Arlington, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. JOHN CHRISTIAN SAROK.HAN Born March 2, 1921, in Diarbekir. Turkey. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 137 Knickerbocker Avenue, Patterson, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Soccer squad (1); crack squad (2); wrestling squad (1,2); House football (4). Boylston Chemical Club (2,3); Premedical Society (2-4). German Club (3,4). Philosophy Club (3,4); Psychology Club (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. CHARLES NELSON SATTERFIELD Born September 5, 1921, in Dexter, Missouri. Prepared at Senn High. Home address: 42)6 North Moody Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House: under- graduate faculty (2,3). Boylston Chemical Club (1-4), executive committee (4). Glee Club Harvard College National Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Teaching or Chemistry. NICHOLAS SAVAGE Born May 29, 1919, in Duluth, Minnesota. Prepared at Exeter. Home addtess: Clearwater Farm, Deerwood, Minnesota. Dunster House. RtJ Book (1). Fidd of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Geology. WILBUR HENDERSON SAWYER Born March 23, 1921. in Brisbane, Australia. Prepared at Hastings High. Home address: 29 Ferndale Drive. Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. Dunster House. House football (3). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. In- tended vocation: Medicine. FRANCIS XAVIER SCANNELL Born December I), 1918, in Roslindale. Massa- chusetts Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 137 Metropolitan Avenue. Roslin- dale, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House baseball (2). House track (2.3) Phillips Brooks House (2.3). House yearbook (3). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Library work. W ROBERT THOMAS SCEERY Born October 28, 1920, in Hartford, Con- necticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 486 South Quaker Lane, West Hartford, Con- necticut. Kirkland House. House swimming (2); House crew (2); swimming team (3,4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM ARTHUR SCHALL Born June 12, 1920, in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 1405 Wall Street, South Bend, Indiana. Dunster House. Crew squad (2,3); House hockey (2-4); House squash (2-4). House dramatics (3,4). Bicycle Club (2-4); Ski Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Business. Present vocation: United States Naval Air Corps. JAMES ERWIN SCHEVILL Born June 10, 1920, in Berkeley, California. Transferred from University of California. Home address: 77a Tamalpais, Berkeley, Cali- fornia. Eliot House. Glee Club. Field of con- centration: Music. PAUL JACOB ROBERT SCHLESSINGER Born March 9, 1921, in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Holyoke High. Home address: 103 Blaisdell Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. College address: 341 Harvard Street. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ALFRED CARL SCHMIDT Bom September 22, 1921, in Berkeley, Cali- fornia. Prepared at University High. Home address: 2612 Piedmont Avenue, Berkeley, California. Dunster House. Red Book (1). Bicycle Club (3, 4), president (4). Outing Club (3, 4). Yacht Club (4). Engineering Club (3, 4). Student chapter of American Society of Civil Engineers (4). Field of lon- tenttation: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. EDMOND LOUIS SCHMIDT Horn April 26, 1920. in Argonne. Wisconsin. Prepare at Argonne High Home address: Argonne. Wisconsin. Winthrop House. House basketball (2 4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of lontcntr i Biology . Intended vocation: Teaching or Biology IHTi Biuttkly muiibttl, ultiih l tltr bttami tht HarmrJ Crimion. founded ai the Ma ft ' i- . A ltr a tmmhfr t iuutl, the Hal] atttmpltd lo mir f unit iht Adi malt, which rrfuitd. f aw ROBERT LANE SCOTT Born March 20, 1922, in Santa Rosa, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Santa Ana High. Home address: 2208 North Ross Street, Santa Ana, California. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House: undergraduate faculty (2, 3). Student Union (2); Liberal Union (3, 4). Foreign Relations Club (3). Boylston Chemical Club (1-4). Harvard College National Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemical research. THOMAS WILLIAM SCOTT Born September 3, 1918, in Champaign, Illinois. Prepared at Tabor. Home address: 193 Lake- land Avenue, Newton Highlands, Massachu- setts. Eliot House. Track team (1); House soccer (4). Student Union (1-3). American Civilization Group (1). Pacifist Society (3). Committee against Military Intervention (4). Instrumental Clubs (1). Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Foreign service or merchant marine. JOHN EDWARD SCULLY Born December 12, 1920, in Warerbury, Con- necticut. Prepared at Crosby High. Home address: 76 Farmington Avenue, Waterbury, Connecticut. Leverett House. Classical Club (4). Philosophy Club (4). Field of concen- tration: English. FREDERICK JAMES SEARS JR. Born November 5, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at North Attleboro High. Home address: 131 High Street, North Attle- boro, Massachusetts. Lowell House. At Har- vard 3 years. Football squad (1, 2). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Trucking business. GERALD SEGEL Born February 11, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 1.31 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. House football (2); House basketball (2); House baseball (2); House tennis (2). Buck- ley Scholarship. Field of concentra tion: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Business. HERBERT BROCK SHANNON Born July 21, 1921, in Washington, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at East Washington High. Home address: 90 South Wade Avenue, Wash- ington, Pennsylvania. Dunster House. House basketball (2). Phillips Brooks House (1). House dramatics (3). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Transportation. 1875 — Memorial Hall was opened and dedicated on the day before Commencement. The H.A.A. wasfo rmed, and in the first track meet A . Lawrence Lowell, ' 77, set the mile and half-mile records. MANUEL HERBERT SHAPIRO Born December 14, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 68 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Living at home. Boylston Chemical Club (2, 3). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemist. MARVIN JAMES SHAPIRO Born August 7, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory. Home address: c-o Dr. Gruskin, 175 West 76th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. House squash (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3). Guardian (3). French Club (1). Pacifist Association (l-4). House Music Club (3). Field of concenttation: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Art and Advertising. JUDSON TIFFANY SHAPLIN Born March 16, 1918, in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Transferred from Girard College. Home address: 813 McKnight Street, Reading, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Excavator ' s Club (3, 4). Harvard Club of Philadelphia Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa. Field of con- centration: Anthropology. Intended vocation: Professional anthropology. PHILIP PRICE SHARPLES Born December 29, 1919, in St. David s, Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: Grays Lane, Haverford, Penn- sylvania. Dunster House. Swimming squad (1, 3, 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industrial chemistry. LAWRENCE KELLER SHAUL Born March 17, 1920, in Scranton, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1112 Gibson Street, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Rifle team (1-4), secretary- manager (3), president (4). Engineering Club (1-4). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Industrial engineering. LEONARD GRIFFIN SHEPARD Born October 29, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Prepared at Lenox in Lenox, Massa- chusetts. Home address: 1421 North State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Aviation. •(128 } )!«} {129 ) HENRY RICHARDSON SHEPLEY JR. Born July 23, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 99 Warren Street, Brookline. Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Crew squad, 150-pound (1, 2). Rifle Club (1). Ski Club (1, 2). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Law. MARSHALL SEYMOUR SIFF Born September 7, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts Prepared at Worcester Classical High. Home address: 34 Morningside Road, Worces- ter, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Cross country squad (1); House cross country (2). American Civilization Group (2). House Glee Club (2, }); House yearbook (3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended voca- tion: Law. SUMNER EARL SIMMONS JR. Born March 29, 1920, in Somerset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 30 Pleasant Street, Somerset, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Lacrosse team (3, 4); House hockey (2-4). House dance committee (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business or teaching. GERALD SIRKIN Born December 1, 1920, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Coughlin High. Home address: 321 South River Street, Wilkes- Barre, Pennsylvania. Adams House. Band (1-4). House orchestra (4). Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Busi- ness. BERTRAM ALLEN SLAFF Born October 19, 1921, in Passaic, New Jersey. Prepared at Passaic High. Home address: 330 Parle Avenue, Paterson, New Jersey. Eliot House. Debating Council (1). American Civilization Group (1). Student Union (2); Liberal Union (3. 4). Glee Club. Prcmedual Society (3, 4). Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Public administra- tion. SHERMAN RALPH SLAVIN Born January 16, 1922, in Watcrtown, New York. Prepared at Carthage High. Home address: 30 West Street, Barre, Vermont. Kirkland House. Basketball team, manager (1). House hockey (3); House soccer (4). Field of concentration: Government. HARVEY PRESCOTT SLEEPER JR. Born June 13, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Milburn High in Milburn, New Jersey. Home address: 327 Lupine Way, Short Hills, New Jersey. Eliot House. Intra- mural sports, manager (1). Dramatic Club (1-4). Student Union (2); Liberal Union (3,4). Senior Album, Photography Editor (4). Edwin A. W. Harlow Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Physics. Intended vocation: Physics. LAWRENCE HOWARD SLOANE Born June 2, 1920, in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Williston. Home address: 24 Blake Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Pierian Sodality (1-4), librarian (2-4). Avukah (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Civil service or business. GURDON HOWARD SLOSBERG Born August 4, 1929, in Norwich, Connecticut. Prepared at Norwich Free Academy. Home address: 180 Washington Street, Norwich, Connecticut. Dunster House. House basket- ball (2-4); House baseball (2-4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field or concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Grain nutri- tion. IRVING GOODELL SMALL Born June 4, 1921, in Peabody, Massachusetts. Prepared at Peabody High. Home address: 21 Columbia Boulevard, Peabody, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. ALBERT JORDAN SMITH Born February 6, 1920, in Indianapolis, In- diana. Prepared at Arsenal Technical. Home address: 1208 North Rural Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. College address: 134 Mt. Auburn Street, St. PauFs Catholic Club (1 4). Har- vard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended vocation: Ministry. HENRY MAYALL SMITH Born September 2, 1919, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul ' s, St. Paul, Minnesota. Home address: 6)4 Fairmont Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota. Lowell House. Crimson Network (3, 4). Camera Club (1). N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: United States Army. 187) -- Harvard won lh firil football faint with Yalt on Noptmbtr 13 by four goalt and four lourhdoum, but continual dtfiati from 1878 to 1890 at tin banJi of Walttr Camp ' i ttami dt- rtloptd Harvard mdifftrtntt. HENRY WORTHINGTON SMITH Born June 24, 1920, in Westboro, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Westboro High. Home address: 22 Blake Street, Westboro, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended vocation: Business. PHILIP ALAN SMITH Born April 2, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home ad- dress: 24 Cutler Street, Belmont, Massachu- setts. Living at home. Harvard Club of Belmont Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. WILLIAM WINSLOW SMITH Born October 24, 1920, in Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 1800 Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. House football (2); House squash (3, 4). House musical society (3, 4); Glee Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Education. DANIEL CHARLES SMOLENS Born February 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Memorial High. Home address: 24 Normandy Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. House football (4). Avukah (1-4), president (4). Phillips Brooks House (1, 2). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. GEORGE LYMAN SNOW II Born July 19, 1921, in Winchester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 14 Glen Road, Winchester, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Tennis squad (1-4); House squash (2-4). Red Book (1). Ski Club (2-4). Music Club (2). House glee club (2, 3). House committee (2, 3), secretary- treasurer (3). Pi Eta Theatricals (2-4). Caisson Club (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended vocation: Teaching. GEORGE DEXTER SOHIER Born April 9, 1920, in Concord, Massachusetts. Prepared at Concord High. Home address: 51 Monument Street, Concord, Massachusetts. House crew (2); House soccer (4). Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. 1884 — The statue of John Harvard by Daniel French was presented to the university by Samuel J. Bridge and placed on the Delta next to Memorial Hall for 25 years; then it was moved to its present site. JOHN JOSEPH SOPKA Born December 27, 1919, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Prepared at Jefferson High. Home address: 648 South Park Street, Elizabeth, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Cross country squad (1, 3, 4); track squad (2-4). Mathe- matics Club (4). Hodges Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Teaching and research. EDMUND BENJAMIN SPAETH JR. Born June 10, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Germantown Friend ' s School. Home address: 7021 Clearview Street, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Swim- ming squad (1); tennis squad (1-4). Judo (3, 4). House debating (2). Union Commit- tee, chairman (1). House Symposium (3, 4). Crimson (2, 3). Pacifist Society (3, 4). Food relief committee, chairman (3). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. RICHARD HENRY SPEIDEL Born June 18, 1920, in Louisville, Kentucky. Prepared at Louisville Male High. Home ad- dress: Upper River Road, Louisville, Kentucky. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. Phillips Brooks House (3). Hasty Pudding Theatricals (3). Lampoon (3, 4). Premedical Society (3, 4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Medicine. GEORGE DAVID SPENCE Born February 7, 1922, in Alexandria, Louisiana. Prepared at Kenneth High. Home address: 401 College Avenue, Kenneth, Missouri. Kirkland House. At Harvard 2 years. House golf (4); House squash (4). Premedical Society (3, 4). Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. LEWIS HENRY SPENCE Born October 31, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 620 Chauncey Lane, Cedarhurst, New York. College address: 314 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Literature. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM CUSHMAN SPENCE Botn November 3, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: Prospect Park, White Plains, New York. Eliot House. Crew squad (1); House crew (2); squash squad (1); House football (3). Field of concentration: French. {130 jtflt MELVIN SPITZ Born May 28, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 210 Riverside Drive, New York, New York. Eliot House. House swimming (2-4); House squash (2-4). Defense League (2-4). Camera Club (3, 4). Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended vocation: Business. GEORGE PETER SPRINGER Born May 21, 1919, in Bruenn, Czechoslo- vakia. Prepared at Staatsreal Gymnasium, Prague. Home address: 5 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Pierian Sodality (2-4); Band (2-4). Interna- tional Club (2-4). Harvard Refugee Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Teaching. ERNEST CHARLES STABER Born April 15, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Bronson Road, Greenfield Hill, Fairfield, Connecticut. Eliot House. Soccer team (1-4); lacrosse team (1); House basketball (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3). Pi Eta; Varsity Club. Field of concen- tration: Engineering. Intended vocation: In- dustrial engineering. FRANK CANNING GREELEY STAHL Born November 21, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory, Home address: Rehoboth House, Chappaqua. New York. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Classics. NORMAN RICHARDSON STANLEY Born January 23, 1919, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Norwich University. Home address: 78 Grampian Way, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House hockey (4). Caisson Club (3. 4). Pistol Club (3. 4). Yacht Club (2, 3). Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ROBERT ALLEN STAUFFER Born June 26, 1920. in Dayton, Ohio. Pre- pared at Stivers High. Home address: 27 woodland Avenue. Dayton, Ohio. Kirkland House. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chem istry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. IM r DAVID BROOK STEARNS Born October 31, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at Shorewood High. Home address: 4146 North Murray Avenue, Mil- waukee, Wisconsin. Adams House. Swim- ming team (1-3), captain (1). Crimson (1-4), sports editor (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended vocation: Journ- alism. RICHARD BRUCE STEDMAN Born August 20, 1920, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at Montgomery Blair High. Home address: 1113 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Maryland. Kirkland House. House cross country (3). Glee Club (1-4), president (4); Choir (4). House music committee (3, 4); House dramatics (3). Class Chorister. Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended vocation: Business. HENRY STEINHARDT Born November 15, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 33 East 70th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Student Union (1-4). Crim- son Network (3, 4). Photographic club (1). House dance committee (4); House dramatic s (4). Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended vocation: Architecture. DOUGLAS C. STENERSON Born August 29, 1920, in Barron, Wisconsin Prepared at Central High, St. Paul, Minnesota. Home address: 442 Lincoln Avenue, Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Kirkland House. House squash (4). American Civilization Group (1, 2). Glee Club. Richard L. Perry Memorial Schol- arship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Teaching. GEORGE EUSTIS STEPHENSON JR. Born December 25, 1919, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Ocean Avenue, Marblehead, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. Football squad (1); House squash (2, 3); House boxing (2, 3). Field of concen- tration: Chemistry, intended vocation: Chem- istry. Present vocation: United States Coast Guard. RICHARD STERN Born March 13, 1921, in New Haven, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Lanier High, Macon, Georgia. Home address: 2019 13th Street, Columbus, Georgia. Eliot House. University boxing tournament (3). Liberal Union (3, 4). Field of concentration: Government. Ml J At the 2V)th aitmteriary President CJtve- land rffmeJ an LL.D. became bis education u,i Hill), and Preiidenl McCmh of Prince on uenl home afltr latmi offense at Ho met ' poem. GILBERT HENRY STEWART JR. Born May 15, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1 Armory Square, Springfield, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Cross country squad (2-4); track squad (2, 3). Phillips Brooks House: under- graduate faculty (3, 4). Field of concentra- tion: Physics. PETER PAULS STEWART Born May 26, 1920, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Culver. Home address: Stoneleigh Hotel, Dallas, Texas. Winthrop House. House crew (2, 3); House tennis (2, 3); House wrestling (2, 3). Pi Eta. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended vocation: Transportation. ROBERT BREWER STILES Born February 21, 1921, in Melrose, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 59 Hillside Avenue, Melrose, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. German Club (4). Railroading Association (4). Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: In- dustrial work. ROGER PROVINES STOKEY Born January 27, 1921, in Cincinnatti, Ohio. Prepared at Atlanta Boys ' High. Home ad- dress: 624 Rockmont Drive, Atlanta, Georgia. Lowell House. Chess team (2-4). Price Green- leaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. BAYARD COREY STONE Born March 29, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Chettenham High. Home address: 8227 Westminster Road, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. Freshman tennis tournament, champion (1); tennis squad (2-4); squash squad (2-4); House football (3); House squash (2, 3); House hockey (2,3). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Manufac- turing. HENRY BALDWIN STONE Born September 10, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 9 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island. College address: 48 Mt. Auburn Street. Yacht Club (1, 3), secretary- treasurer (3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: Government. 1886 — Atten dance at classes was made voluntary, until one day a father received a pile of letters, which had been mailed by the goody at one time instead of periodically by his son ' s roommates. His son was in Havana. JACK ARTHUR STONE Born February 26, 1921, in Evansville, Indiana. Transferred from Indiana University. Home address: Outer Lincoln Avenue, Evansville, Indiana. Adams House. Crimson Network, technical director (3, 4); Crimson (3, 4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Law. RAYMOND WALDO STONE Born August 6, 1920, in Newport, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Kimball Union. Home ad- dress: Meriden, New Hampshire. Claverly Hall. Wrestling team (1-3). Naval Society (3, 4). International Club (3, 4). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Teaching. JOHN WENDELL STRAUS Born June 17, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 465 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Crew squad (1); House crew (2-4). Flying Club (3, 4), president (4). Field of concentra- tion: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Soldieting. HENRY SCHOFIELD STREETER Born May 2, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Sus- sex Avenue, Morristown, New Jersey. Col- lege address: 44 Mt. Auburn Street. Harvard College Scholarship. Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concenttation: History. Intended vocation: Law. THADDEUS VENZLAW STREZYNSKI Bornjune 29, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Poughkeepsie High. Home ad- dress: 73 College Avenue, Poughkeepsie, New York. Dunster House. Football squad (l-4); House tennis (3). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmentet Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. JAMES HARVEY STUBBLEBINE Born December 28, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Buffalo Bennett High. Home address: 1 Church Street, Grafton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. w i 132 } it] DAVID ALEXANDER STUNTZ Born August 14, 1920, in Denver, Colorado. Prepared at Findlay High. Home address: 218 Elm Street, Findlay, Ohio. Leverett House Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended voca- tion: Qvil Service. CARL EMERY SULLIVAN JR. Born October 26, 1920, in Foxboro, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 106 South Street, Foxboro, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Soccer squad (1); lacrosse squad (1, 3, 4), captain (1); House football (4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. JOHN JOSEPH SULLIVAN JR. Born August 14, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 7 Danforth Avenue, Cliftondale, Massachusetts. Living at home. Baseball squad (1, 2, 4); House baseball (3). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Naval Society (3, 4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: United States Navy. MERLE GREELY SUMMERS JR. Born October 12, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill and Lawrence- ville, Home address: 39 Claircmont Road, Bel- mont, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Foot- ball squad (1), junior varsity (2), team (3, 4); hockey team (14), captain (4); House base- ball (3). Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. DAVID HOWARD SUSSKIND Born December 19, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brookline High. Home ad- dress: 1} Everett Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government service. PETER JOHN SUTRO Born June 20, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 124 East 6lst Street. New York, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Physuv Intended vocation: Physics. 033 , JAMES ARTHUR SW ANSON Bornjuly 6, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Excelsior High. Home address: Box 36, Route No. 3, Excelsior, Minnesota. Kirkland House. Wake Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Law. KEITH RANDOLPH SYMON Born May 25, 1920, in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Prepared at Wiley High. Home address: 2260 Ohio Boulevard, Terre Haute, Indiana. Lowell House. Tennis team (1, 3, 4); House tennis (2); House track (2). Debating council (l, 3, 4); House debating (2). House dance committee (2-4); House Chronicle (3). Phi Beta Kappa, junior eight, first marshal (4). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy and Mathematics. Intended vocation: Law or Physics and Philos- ophy. EPHRAIM TAKVORIAN Born November 12, 1913, in Chemishgatzat, Armenia. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 55 Plymouth Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Robert Ridgeway Scholarship. Engineering Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Electrical engineering. WALTER LEMAR TALBOT JR. Born July 8, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 605 West Phil-Ellena Street, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Glee Club, secretary (4). Music Club (2-4). House musical society (2-4), president (4). House A. R. P. coordinator. Photogra- phy Club (1). Field of concentration: Music. Intended vocation: Business. RICHARD GABRIEL TANSEY Born October 26, 1919 in Newark, Newjersey. Prepared at St. Benedict ' s. Home address: 765 Clifton Avenue, Newark, Newjersey. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Teaching. ELLIOT STANLEY TARLOW Born November 7, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 197 Moraine Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Golf team (1). Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. 1887 Pint of Blaichka flair- ftoueri began to arrive ami toon became one of the chief attraction! for alt tiiitori to the universii ROGER EDWARD TATTON Born February 28, 1920, in Maplewood, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 41 Mountain Avenue, Maplewood, Newjersey. Adams House. House hockey (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House squash (3, 4); House basketball (4); football squad, junior varsity (2-4). House Athletic Secretary (4). Under- graduate Athletic Council (4). Glee Club. Held of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ELMER HUGH TAYLOR Born August 25, 1920, in Rushville, Illinois. Prepared at Rushville High. Home address: Rushville, Illinois. Lowell House. House football (2-4); House basketball (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House track (2-4); track team (2-4). Philosophy Club (2-4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended vocation: Law. HARVEY CLINTON TAYLOR JR. Born March 8, 1920, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 96 Islington Street, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. College address: 28 Mt. Auburn Street. Hockey team (1). Union Committee (1) . Jubilee Committee, chairman (1). Hasty Pudding Theatricals, publicity manager (2, 3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentration: Engineering. JOHN GRANTLEY TAYLOR Born June 22, 1921, in Jamaica Plain, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 214 Buckminster Road, Brook- line, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Cross country squad (l); House crew (2). Instru- mental clubs (2). German club (1, 2). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. LEON SEYMOUR TAYLOR Born August 31, 1921, in Chelsea, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 137 Crawford Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended vocation: Bacteriology. JOHN ROBERT TERRALL Born July 16, 1918, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 227 Euclid Avenue, Long Beach, California. Leverett House. House basketball (3, 4); House baseball (3, 4); House football (4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics and Physics. Intended vocation: Physical research. 1899 — Professor Julian L. Coolidge, ' 95, former master of Lowell House, joined the staff, and three years later, Professor Roger B. Merriman, who resigned this year as Master of Eliot, came over from Oxford. HAROLD MALFORD THEWLIS Born February 8, 1921, in Paris, France. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Old Post Road, Wakefield, Rhode Island. Eliot House. Student Defense League (2-4); Liberal Union (2-4). Field of concentration: History and literature. ORSON HEAD THOMAS Born December 23, 1920, in Windsor, Vermont. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 32 Hawthorn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: History and literature. RICHARD NELSON THOMAS Born March 3, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Omaha North High. Home ad- dress: 4709 Wakeley Street, Omaha, Nebraska. Dunster House. Wrestling team (1-4), captain (4); football team (1). German Club (2, 3). Associated Harvard Clubs Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Teaching. GEORGE BREED THOMSON Born January 10, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 164 Atlantic Avenue, Swampscott, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: So- ciology. Intended vocation: Law. CHARLES THURLOW III Born May 17, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 69 High Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Civil Engineering. ROBERT FREEMAN THURRELL JR. Born October 11, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Prepared at Brewster Free Academy. Home address: East Wolfeboro, New Hamp- shire. Adams House. Baseball squad (1); House baseball (2-4); House football (3, 4). Stamp Club (1, 2). Geology Club (4.) Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economic Geology. Intended vocation: Geologist. U34 jiju 1JJ ) WILLIAM RICHARDSON THURSTON Born September 21, 1920, in New Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 44 Cooudge Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. College address: 40 Mt. Auburn Street. Track team (1); ski team (1-3). Crimson (1-4), photographic chairman (4). Sales Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Economic Geology. Intended vocation: Naval aviation. NORRIS LOWELL TIBBETTS JR. Born August 12, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at University of Chicago High. Home address: 5616 Kenwood Avenue, Chi- cago, Illinois. Eliot House. Track team (1); House track (2, }). Ouring Club (3, 4). Student Union (2). Phillips Brooks House (1-4). Glee Club. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Sociology. HAROLD TINE Born October 6, 1918, in Wakefield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Wakefield, Massachusetts. Adams House. Football squad, junior varsity (1-4); wrestling team (2-4). S. P. A. Club. Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. Intended voca- tion: Foreign service. LEO WILLIAM TOBIN JR. Born August 4, 1920, in Hammond. Indiana. Prepared at Flint Central High. Home address: 1302 Blanchard Avenue, Flint, Michigan. Lowell House. Rifle Club (2). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Communica- tions engineering. LESTER HAROLD TOBIN Born April 6, 1921, in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lynn Classical High. Home address: 347 Summer Street, Lynn, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Boylston Chemical Club (2 4); Premedical Society (3, 4). Thomas Hall Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. GEORGE CLAIR TOOKER JR. Born August 5. 1920. in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Howell ' s Point Road. Heliport. New York. College address: 69 Dunster Street Phillips Brooks House (2). Student Union (2 • ) Signet Society. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Painting. ALLAN EDWARD TREVASKIS Born February 24, 1920, in Cumberland, Mary- land. Prepared at Fort Hill High. Home ad- dress: 220 Baltimore Avenue, Cumberland, Maryland. Kirkland House. Glee Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. JAMES EDWARDS TROTT Born February 19, 1920, in Andover, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 85 Central Street, Andover, Massachusetts. Living at home. House swimming (1). House dance committee (3, 4). William Stanislaus Murphy Scholarship. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Industrial design. HENRY TRUBNER Born June 10, 1920, in Munich, Germany. Prepared at Cranleigh School, England. Home address: 225 Centra] Park West, New York, New York. Adams House. Field of concentra- tion: Fine Arts. Intended vocation: Museum work. CARL WILLIAM TRUTER JR. Born July 10, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: 22 West Francis Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Leverett House. At Harvard 3 years. House golf (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. Present voca- tion: Medical school. SHUNSUKE TSURUMI Bornjune 25, 1922, in Tokyo, Japan. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 38 Sakuradacho, Azabuku, Tokyo, Japan. College address: 43 Irving Street. Field of concentration: Philos- ophy. Intended vocation: Writing. THEODORE FRANCIS TUCKER Born January 29, 1921, in Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 117 Walpolc Street, Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. House football (2). Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Business. I ' XI ' I A I..IU rtnu l.nufll IMJ (hinru pinhlrtU laituuf) li a J u,i i : gutMr, m (hlobtr, l i tinning a fitrinj « nrgani.iti iht innttnlrattun ry ltm am txpmndin% mittrut) fiuilii JOHN EDWARD TULLY Born August 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 27 Burard Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. College address: 396 Harvard Street. Swimming squad (1); House football (2, 3); House crew (2-4); House baseball (2, 3). Debating Council (1-4). Caisson Club (3, 4). St. Paul ' s Catholic Club (1-4). Dudley House committee (2-4), chairman (4). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Classics and Government. Intended vocation: Law. EDWARD HARRISON TURNER Born December 21, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at East High. Home address: 1455 East 114th Street, Cleveland, Ohio. Leverett House. Lacrosse squad (1). Phillips Brooks House (1). Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Physics. WILLIAM JOEL TURNER JR. Born March 6, 1921, in Sewell, Chile. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: 520 East Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Wrestling team (1); swimming squad (1); House squash (2-4); House crew (2-4). Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Mining engineering. HERBERT UNTERBERGER Born June 13, 1920, in Edwardsville, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Wyoming Seminary. Home address: 555 Main Street, Edwardsville, Penn- sylvania. Adams House. Premedical Society (2-4); Boylston Chemical Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. ROLAND MORRIS URFIRER Born April 19, 1921, in New Haven, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Lake Placid High. Home address: 137 Main Street, Lake Placid, New York. Kirkland House. House hockey (2, 4). Red Book (1). Edmund Ira Richards Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. KONSTANTINE P. VALASOPOULOS Born February 4, 1921, in Salem, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Salem High School. Home address: 9 Stearns Place, Salem, Massachusetts. Living at home. Edmund Ira Richards Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. HENRY GERARD VANDER EB Born May 11, 1918, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 20 Fernbel Lane, West Hartford, Connecticut. College address: 28 Langdon Street. Foorball team (1-4); House baseball (3); Track team (1). House basketball (2, 3). Varsity Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ROBERT VANTINE Born October 28, 1919, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Norwich University. Home address: 14 Scarsdale Road, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: French. Intended vocation: Photography. GEORGE WASHINGTON VARN Born December 1, 1920, in Jacksonville, Flor- ida. Prepared at Bolles. Home address: 1875 Avondale Circle, Jacksonville, Florida. House football (2, 3). House swimming (2); House track (2, 3). Red Book (1). Debating Council (1). John Harvard Scholarship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law or business. JOHN VEBLEN Born May 13, 1920, in Big Timber, Montana. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 5810 Cowen Place, Seattle, Washington. Winthrop House. House dance committee (2-4); House dramatics (2-4). Waite Mem- orial Fund Scholarship. Field of concenttation: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. ANTONIO LIPPINCOTT VILLA Born March 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 18 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Ctew squad (1), junior varsity (2). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. ARTHUR WILLIAM VINER Born April 22, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at University of Chicago High. Home address: 5554 Kenwood Avenue, Chi- cago, Illinois. Eliot House. Soccer team (1); House football (2, 3). Lampoon (2-4), Narthex (4). Student Defense League, treas- urer (3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Business. ft  ' 9 {136 } 19H — Ambulance and hospital units began moving overseas, and with the college rabidly pro-Ally, olunteers began enlisting in various foreign services. 11 1 EDWIN WILLIAM VOGLER JR. Born December 10, 1920, in Belleville, Illinois. Prepared at Western Military, Home address: 601 West Main Street, Carbondale, Illinois. Kirkland House. House basketball (2-4); House track (2-4); House golf (2-4); track team (4). House library committee (4). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chem- istry. KENNETH RUSSELL VOLKMAN Born August 28, 1921 in Medford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Somerville High School. Home address: 31 Chandler Street, Somerville, Massachusetts. Living at home. Liberal Union (3, 4). Student Defense League (3). Council on Post-war Problems (4). Council on Inter-faith and Inter-race Relations (4). Phillips Brooks House (4). Somerville Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Government economist. HUGH GORDON VOORHIES JR. Born February 9, 1920, in New Orleans, Louis- iana. Prepared at Hoover High School. Home address: 4221 Madison Avenue, San Diego, California. Leverett House. James Walker and Charles Downer Scholarships. Field of con- centration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Electrical engineering. GEORGE REMEY WADLEIGH Born September 13, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at St. Georges. Home address: 2440 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C Leverett House. House crew (2, 3). Mountaineering Club (2, 3); Outing Club (2, 3). Naval Society (3, 4). Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Foreign service. CHARLES CONGDON WADSWORTH Born December 1, 1920, in Dobbs Ferry, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 677 James Street, Pelham Manor, New York. Claverly Hall D. U. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Anthropology. Intended vocation: In- dustrial relations. ROBERT MELVILLE WAER Born April 9, 1920, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Prepared at Grand Rapids Central High. Home address: 135 College Avenue S.E., Grind Rapids, Michigan. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Latin and French. Intended vocation: Law. i  37) ALLAN GRIGGS WAITE JR. Born December 9, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 50 Griggs Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Soccer team (1); wrestling squad (1); House soccer (4). Ski Club (3, 4). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Biology. JACOB ALLEN WALKER JR. Born August 20, 1921, in Opelika, Alabama. Transferred from Alabama Polytechnical. Home address: 900 North 10th Street, Opelika, Ala- bama. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. JAMES EWING WALKER Born July 25, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Valley Road, Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Crew squad, combination (1); House crew (2). John Crowne Companionship (2, 3); Hollis Club, president (3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. NORMAN MARSHALL WALLACK Born April 17, 1921, in Stoneham, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 25 Columbia Road, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. House swimming (2, 3); House football (3, 4); House tennis (2, 3). Film Society (14). Avukah (2 4). Stoughton Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Government. CHAPIN WALLOUR Born May 14, 1919, in Springfield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Country Day. Home address: 233 Grant Avenue, Newton Center, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Fenc- ing team (1). House dance committee (4). Yacht Club (1 3). Camera Club (2, 3). Rifle Club (2 4). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. WALDEMAN MELCHERT WALTER Born September 20, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 12 Gray Garden East, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home Ornithological Club (2 4); Biology Club (2 4). Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Conservation. 191? In April French officers came to drill Harpard students, mint, Freshnfan balls ai barracks and Prtib Pond for Irtnchtt. By Christmas 1918, all sludinl units were demobilhed. PHILIP GARRISON WALTERS Born March 3, 1921, in Bethlehem, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Hughes High. Home address: 45 Rawson Woods Circle, Cincinnati, Ohio. Dunster House. House track (2); House football (3, 4); House basketball (2-4); House squash (2-4); House baseball (2-4); House tennis (3). Smoker Committee (1). House assistant athletic secretary (3); House athletic secretary (4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law or business. WALTER ANTHONY WARD Born May 6, 1919, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence Academy. Home address: 108 Chilton Street, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Caisson Club (3, 4). Field of concentration: Economics. In- tended vocation: Banking. GEORGE DE PONCET WASHBURNE Born June 13, 1920, at New York, New York. Prepared at New Rochelle. Home address: 41 Emerson Avenue, New Rochelle, New York, College address: 53 Mt. Auburn Street. Fencing team (1, 2). Phillips Brooks House (1). Advocate (3, 4). Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Foreign service. JOHN AUGUSTINE WASHINGTON Born May 4, 1920, in Clarksburg, West Virginia. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home ad- dress: 208 East Main Street, Clarksburg, West Virginia. Eliot House. Hotchkiss Prize Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. GURDON WALLACE WATTLES JR. Born May 5, 1920, in Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Hollywood High. Home address: 1824 North Curson Avenue, Hollywood, Cali- fornia. Eliot House. Advocate (3, 4). Classical Club (1-4). Phi Beta Kappa. Harvard College Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended vocation: Teaching. BILL WEBBER Born May 2, 1920, in Des Moines, Iowa. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 3639 Woodland, Des Moines, Iowa. Adams House. Basketball team (1-4). House com- mittee, secretary-treasurer (4). Liberal Union (2, 3). Class Day Committee. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: History. 1928—Edward S. Harkness, Yale ' 97, offered President Lowell $3,000,000 for an Honors Col- lege, after his alma mater had delayed accepting. He soon increased it to $10,000,000 for seven houses. ROBERT MOSES WECHSLER Born April 25, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 35 East 84th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. House basketball (2, 4); House track (3, 4). Premedical society, treasurer (4). Student Union (1-3). Field of concentration: Biochemistry, intended voca- tion: Medicine. CLARENCE HORSMAN WEEKS JR. Born December 29, 1919, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 66 Chestnut Street, Andover, Massachusetts. Dunster House. House football (2); House baseball (2, 3); House basketball (2, 3). Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: Engineering. HARRY H. WEISS JR. Born October 26, 1921, in South Bend, In- diana. Prepared at James Whitcomb Riley High. Home address: 2501 Miami Street, South Bend, Indiana. Lowell House. House basketball (2). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended vocation: Business. EDWARD JAMES WELCH Bornjune 5, 1918, in Harverhill, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 186 Naples Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: English. HOLMES HINKLEY WELCH Born October 22, 1921, in Weston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 1733 Canton Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Advocate (2, 3), secretary (3). Brooks School Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Signet Society. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended vocation: Teaching. EDWARD CHASE WEREN Born November 26, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 166 Ossining Road, Pleasantville, New York. Winthrop House. Dramatic Club (2-4). Signet Society. Field of concentration: Archi- tectural Sciences. Intended vocation: Archi- tecture. (138 : Arrfu- )! } WILLIAM WESSELHOEFT Born May 1, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 315 Marl- borough Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. House crew (3) ; House football (4). Lampoon (3, 4), secretary (4). Naval society, president (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: Law. GEORGE RAYMOND WEST Born April 11, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 31 Dunbarton Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Living at home. Delta Upsilon, president (4). Field of concentration: Economics. DONALD CAMERON WETMORE Bornjune 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 653 Franklin Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Pierian Sodality (1-4). Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Journalism or personnel. JOHN ROBERT WHITE Bornjune 8, 1919. in New York, New York. Prepared at Morristown. Home address: 11 Wayland Drive, Verona, New Jersey. Adams House. Football team (1); track team (1); football squad, junior varsity (2). House entertainment committee (3.4). Slocum Scholar- ship. S. P. A Club. Field of concentration: Government. THOMAS JOSEPH WHITE Bom March 10, 1920, in Cambridge. Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 60 Ellery Street. Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. House football (2-4); House hockey (2 4); House golf (2 4). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Business. THOMAS TAYLOR WHITE Born September 13. 1920, in New York. New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 103 East 86th Street. New York. New York. Dunster House. Track team (1 4); House swimming (4). Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine 4 39 , WINDSOR THOMAS WHITE II Born November 28, 1918, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 2335 Delamere Drive, Cleveland, Ohio. Kirkland House. Polo team (1-4). Pi Eta Theatricals (2, 3). Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: United States Army. NORMAN HALE WHITEHEAD JR. Born February 10, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 150 Melrose Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Dunster House. Lacrosse team (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN WHITEHILL II Born July 4, 1920, in Columbus, Ohio. Pre- pared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 1150 East 26th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Winthrop House. Baseball team (1); House baseball (2, 3); House football (2); football squad, junior varsity (3); football team (4); House squash (2-4); House golf (2, 3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Pi Eta; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Economic Geology. Intended vocation: Petroleum in- dustry. JORDAN WHITELAW Born October 15, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 565 West End Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House (2, 3). Student Union (2-4). House dramatics (3). Music Club (2, 3); Glee Club. Field of con- centration: History. Intended vocation: Teach- ing. ROYAL GOODRIDGE WHITING JR. Born August 11, 1920, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Ptepared at Belmont High. Home ad- dress: 228 Boston Post Road, Weston, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. House crew (2, 3); ski squad (2). Ski Club (1, 2). Student De- fense League, president (3), vice-president (4). Council on Post-war Problems (4). House dramatics (4). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Business. GERALD WHITMAN JR. Born January 20, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home ad- dress: Vineyard Road, Greenwich, Connec- ticut. Dunster House. Football squad, junior varsity (2). Field of concentration: Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Mechanical engineer- ing. I ' iJ Memorial Church, the Ian structure in the Yard except or the Houghton Library, uai ereilei lo honor the Harvard dead of the World War, in- iluding three men uho died in the Herman service. HENDRICHS HALLETTWHITMAN JR. Born July 16 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 28 Union Park, Boston, Massachusetts. Adams House. Crew squad (1-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Spee Club; Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Manufacturing. WALTER ELTON WHITTAKER JR. Born July 21, 1920, in Maiden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Home address: 135 Walnut Street, Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Living at home. Hockey team (1); House hockey (2-4). Premedical Society (2-4). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. GILBERT FRANKLIN WHITTEMORE Born August 30, 1919, in Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 235 Beech Street, Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. College address: Varsity Club. Baseball squad (2-4). Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. FREDERICK GILBERT WHORISKEY Born February 13, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin and Belmont Hill. Home address: 1712 Massachu- setts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Swimming team (1). Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. THOMAS KAHLE WICKES Born November 9, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Huntington Prep- aratory. Home address: 48 Adella Avenue, West Newton, Massachusetts. College ad- dress: 5 Divinity Avenue. International Club: social affairs committee, chairman (4), publicity committee (4). Edmund Ira Richards Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended vocation: Anthtopology. GEORGE HENRY WIECH Born January 19, 1920, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 74 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Football squad (1). Cambridge-Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industrial chemistry. 1933 — James B. Conant was chosen president after a long wrangle. The Lampoon printed a fake Crimson naming a Chicago businessman as the new head, completely fooling the Associated Press. RICHARD CARRINGTON WILCOCK Born September 30, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at De Veaux School, Niagara Falls, New York. Home address: 44 Martin Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Field of concentration: History and Literature. DAVID BENTON WILLIAMS Born May 18, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Bronxville High. Home address: 79 Summit Avenue, Bronxville, New York. Eliot House. Hasty Pudding Theatricals (3). Lampoon (3, 4). Harvard College Scholar- ship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Pi Eta; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: French. Intended vocation: Business. LEONARD WARE WILLIAMS Bornjanuary 4, 1918, in Wellesley, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 130 Abbott Road. Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Boylston Chemical Club (1). Engineering Club (4). Yacht Club (3, 4). House dramatics (2-4). Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Insurance. RICHARDS CARY WILLIAMS Born February 9, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Phoenix S. K. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Aviation. ROBERT WEFER WILLIAMS Born January 27, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Northwick, Southhampton, New York. Adams House. Squash squad (1); House squash (2-4). House entertainment committee (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medicine. DONALD BAGGE WILSON Born July 25, 1920, in Winchester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 23 Yale Street, Winchester, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Football squad (1), junior varsity (2-4); lacrosse squad (1-4); House hockey (2-4). Field of concen- tration: History. Intended vocation: United States Navy. O40 I (1«) i Ml } GRAFTON LEE WILSON JR. Born June 13, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 245 Clinton Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Dun- ster House. House hockey (3, 4). Ski Club (2-4). Field of concentration: Geography. ORME WILSON JR. Born July 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 2342 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. College address : 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Squash team (1, 2, 4), squad (3); tennis team (1-4), captain (1, 4). Junior usher (3). Senior Elections Committee (4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Foreign service. SLOAN WILSON Born May 8, 1920, in New Canaan, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Florida-Adirondack School. Home address: River Road, Ormond Beach, Florida. College address: 16d Holden Green. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Business. RICHARD WINCOR Born August 18, 1921, in Far Rockaway, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 1100 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Kirkland House. House soccer (3, 4). Classical Club (1, 2). Chess team (1, 3, 4). Liberal Union (3, 4). Radio Workshop (4). John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Law and writing. ALAN MURRAY WINKELSTEIN Born June 12, 1921, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Putney. Home address: Westlake Road, Cazenovia, New York. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House (1, 2). Crimson Net- work (3, 4). Glee Club. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Law. THOMAS WINSHIP Born July I, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: King Phillip Road, Sudbury, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Ski team (I 4). captain (4); House hockey (3, 4); House crew (2); House football (4). Rid Book (1). House committee (2). Ski Club (2 4), president (3, 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Fox Club. Field of concentration Anthropology. Intended vocation: Personnel. REUBEN WISOTZKY Born May 11, 1921, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brockton High. Home address: 25 Erie Avenue, Brockton, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Med- icine. DAVID WILLIAMS WITMER Born January 28, 1920, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Belmont High. Home ad- dress: 210 Witmer Street, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Eliot House. Lampoon (3, 4). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Business. CHARLES HOLMES WOLFE JR. Born September 5, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 830 Amberson Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. College address: 48 Mt. Auburn Street. Red Book (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Law. SHELDON JEROME WOLFE Born August 5, 1921, in Terrc Haute, Indiana. Prepared at Wiley High. Home address: South 6th Street, 506, Terre Haute, Indiana. Leverett House. House tennis (2-4). Rifle Club (4). Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Business. PAYSON RICHARD WOLFF Born January 8, 1921, in Worthington, Minne- sota. Prepared at Worthington High. Home address: 1325 8th Avenue, Worthington, Minnesota. Lowell House. Band (1). Phillips Brooks Home (2 4). Debating Council (1 4), president (4); chairman inter-House debating (3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business. JOHN UNGEMACH WOLTER Born August 13, 1920, in Rochester, Minne- sota. Prepared at St. Charles High. Home address: St. Charles, Minnesota. Eliot House. Basketball team (1); House basketball (4). Wane Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Industrial chemistry. I ' if, Hart aril ir ihraltd ill three-hundredth birthday with an impreifHe tercentenary celtbra- lion, uhich featured U. S. President prank in D, Roosevelt, ' o.f, and olhtr notables. CORNELIUS AYER WOOD JR. Born June 11, 1920, in Andover, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Arden, Andover, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Monthly (2, 3); Advocate (3). Caisson Club (3, 4). Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Ministry. WILLIAM HIRAM WOOD JR. Born July 6, 1921, in Boston, Msssachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 279 Pleasant Street, Canton, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Swimming team (1); House swimming (3, 4). Red Book (1). House dramatics (3). Band (4). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM MADISON WOOD III Born May 10, 1919, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home ad- dress: Brownsboro Road, Louisville, Kentucky. Dunster House. Soccer squad (1). Lampoon (3, 4). Hasty Pudding Theatricals (2). Glee Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Law. HAROLD WILLIAM WOODCOCK Born November 1, 1919, in New Bedford, Massachusetts. Transferred from Drake Col- lege. Home address: 138 Laurel Street, Fairhaven, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Track squad (1, 2). Phillips Brooks House (3). Rifle Club (3, 4). Premedical Society (2-4). Thomas Hathaway Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Biology. Intended vocation: Medi- cine. SAMUEL EVERETT WORTHEN Born May 25, 1920, in Bristol, New Hampshire. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Bristol, New Hampshire. Leverett House. Track squad (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: English. THEODORE YARDLEY Born February 3, 1920, in Pittsfield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 75 Ponce de Leon Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia. Leverett House. Glee Club. Field of concen- tration: English. Intended vocation: Episcopal ministry. HERBERT MARSHALL YARRISH Born March 20, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 10 Long Avenue, Brighton, Massachu- setts. Living at home. House football (2); House crew (2-4); House basketball (4). House committee (4); House library commit- tee (4). Avukah (1 _ 4). Edwards Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Semitic Languages and History. Intended vocation: Clergy. HOWARD WINTHROP YOUNG Born August 16, 1920, in New Britain, Con- necticut. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 501 Lincoln Road, New Britain, Connecticut. Leverett House. House hockey (2, 3); House football (2, 4); House golf (2, 3). Red Book, assistant editorial chairman (1); House ten- year book, chairman (3); Senior Album, feature editor (4). Yacht Club (1). Flying Club (2). House dramatics (2, 3). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Journalism. NATHANIEL JAMES YOUNG JR. Born September 26, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 22 Oceanside Drive, Scituate, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Track team (1); track squad (4); football squad, junior varsity (3); House football (4); House baseball (2-4); House hockey (2-4); House track (2,3). Rifle Club (2-4). Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Law. WILLIAM HURLBURT YOUNG JR. Born June 1, 1920, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Elgin. Home address: 104 South State Street, Elgin, Illinois. Eliot House. Track team (1-3); cross country squad (1); House cross country (2, 3). Cheerleader (3, 4), head cheerleader (4). House committee (3, 4). Rifle Club (4). Glee Club. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Medicine. MICHAEL ZARA Born December 12, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Cedar Avenue, Hewlett Bay Park, New York. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Track squad (1-3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Delphic Club, president (4). Field of concen- tration: Sociology. ROBERT LEWIS ZION Born March 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Transferred from Hamilton College. Home address: 19 Wentworth Place, Lawrence, New York. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House (1). Monthly, associate business editor (1). House dramatics (2, 3). Rifle Club (2). Glee Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Law. {142 } 1942 . . . In June Harvard graduated its three hundredth class, just ahead of compulsory athletics and the year-round academic program. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES MILTON LEONARD CANTOR Born April 28, 1917, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Transferred from Northeastern Univers- ity. Home address: 28 Whitman Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Living at home. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Journalism. JOHANNES V. R. von IMHOF Born June 26, 1919, in Mariental, Austria. Prepared at Theresiarium, Vienna. Home ad- dress: 5 Divinity Avenue. Living at home. At Harvard 3 years. International Club (3). Field of concentration: History. OTTO JAEGER Born January 24, 1920, in Kiel, Germany. Transferred from University of Chicago. Home address: 43 Bailey Road, Watertown, Massachusetts. Living at home. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Economics. JOHN MARSHALL KERNOCHAN Born August 3, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 7 Sutton Place, New York, New York. College address: 1839 Trapelo Road, Waltham, Massa- chusetts. At Harvard 2 years. John Harvard Scholarship. Fly Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Anthropology. THEODORE LIPIN Born December 5, 1920, in Frankfort-am Main, Germany. Prepared at Stuyvesan High. Home address: 7 Avondale Road, Crest wood. New York. Winthrop House. A ' Harvard 3 years. House crew (2); House soccer (3). Phillips Brooks House (1) undergraduate faculty (1,2). Glee Club. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. GIRARD RICE LOWREY Born September 1, 1921, Plattsburg, New York. Transferred from University of Vir- ginia. Home address: 107 Bradford Street, Charleston, West Virginia. Dunster House. At Harvard 1 Vi years. House hockey (3). Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Business. RALPH HARVEY NUTTER Born September 4, 1920, in Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Syracuse University. Home address: 64 Elm Street, Norwood, Massachusetts. Perkins Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Law. Intended vocation: Law. GERALDYN LIVINGSTON REDMOND Born September 21, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Locust Valley, New York. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. Crew squad, 150-pound (1-4). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended vocation: Aviation. VELIZAR D. STANOYEVITCH Born January 13, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Belgrade State Gymnasium, Bel- grade, Yugoslavia. Home address: 745 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Government THOMAS G. A. WIENER Born May 4, 1917, in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Prepared at Prague University. Home address: Prague, Czechoslovakia. College address: 38 Upland Road. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Student Defense League (3, 4). International Club. Harvard Refugee Scholarship. Field of con- centration: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. LAWRENCE GERALD WEISS Born November 29, 1920, Chicago, Illinois. Transferred from Northwestern University. Home address: 504 Aldine, Chicago, Illinois. Winthrop House. At Harvard 2 years. House crew (2). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Writing. ASSOCIATES OF THE CLASS OF 1942 Ho ■.Nff MICHAEL KIRCHWEY CLARK Born June 27, 1919, in New York, New York. Transferred from University of North Carolina. Home address: 3 Claremont Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Field of concentration: History and Literature. ROBERT BRIGHAM ELLERY Born February 17, 1920, in Toledo, Ohio. Prepared ac Bay City Junior College. Home address: 6110 Grayton Road, Detroit, Mulli- gan. Wigglesworth Hall. Crew squad. At Harvard 1 year. Intended vocation: Advertis- ing. Present vocation: United States Navy. JOHN REID FITZGERALD Born July 14, 1919, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts Transferred from Boston College Home address: 3) Gale Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. FRANCIS HARRISON HANIGAN Born January 5, 1919, in Schenectady, New York. Prepared at Nott Terrace High. Home address: 1182 Waverly Place, Schenectady, New York. Adams House. At Harvard 2 years. House football (3). Field of concentration: English. ARTHUR MASON CRANDAL HAZARD Born October 29, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 35 A Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Living at home. At Harvard 2 ' i years. Track squad (1). Spanish Club (I). Field of concentration: Economics. JOHN WILLIAM LINZEE III Bornjune 22, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Transferred from Syracuse University. Home address: 848 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. Clavcrly Hall. At Harvard I year. German Club (2). Field of concentration: Sociology. FREDERICK CHARLES SPREYER Born November 15, 1918, in West Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Choate. Home ad dress: 21 Walnut Street, West Haven, Connec ticut. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years Football team (1 3); baseball team (2) Muuim Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: German Intended vocation: Medicine, Teaching. Pres ent vocation: United States Army. EDWIN THOMAS WOOD Born December 1H, 1920, in Boise, Idaho. Prepared at Armijo Union High. Home address: Box 331, Suison, California. Matthews Hall. At Harvard I year. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended vocation: Teaching. jlCl i U3 Adams Amyot Austin Baekeland Crane-Baker Baxter Beardsley Berman BlNNEY Birckhead Blaine Blake Bodine Bradley Browne Burke Burley Burnham Byer Byron Cawley STEPHEN SHEPHARD ADAMS Born April 14, 1921, in Bilcmore, North Carolina. Prepared at Asheville. Home address: Biltmore Estates Biltmore, North Carolina. Wigglesworth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. PIERRE AMYOT Born March 15, 1919, in Quebec, Canada. Pre- pared at Canterbury. Home address: 45 Dorchester Stteet, Quebec, Canada. Lowell House. At Har- vard 2 Vi years. Monthly, business manager (2). Field of concentration: English. COLBY MERRILL AUSTIN Born December 22, 1919, in Hollis, New York. Prepared at Peddie. Home address: 8824-191 Street , Hollis, New York. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. House golf (2, 3); House squash (2-4). Lampoon (2, 3). Field of concenttation: History. Intended vocation: Business. GEORGE MIDDLEBROOK BAEKELAND Born February 7, 1921, in Golden, Colorado. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Golden, Colorado. College address: 4 Story Street. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemistry. JOHN CRANE-BAKER Born May 10, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Staunton Militaty. Home address: 210 East 68 Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. Phillips Brooks House (1, 2). Student Defense League (2). Federal Union, chairman (2). Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Journalism. STOWELL DUNWOODY BAXTER Bornjuly 14, 1919, in Framingham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Pawling. Home address: Colstteam Farm, South Shaftsbury, Vermont. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended vocation: Farming. JOHN POST BEARDSLEY Born December 28, 1919, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Hun. Home address: 1919 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lever- ett House. At Harvard 2 years. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: English. ROBERT CURTIS BERMAN Born December 30, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 1820 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton, Massachusetts. At Harvard 1 year. Fencing squad (l). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Industrial Engineering. ROBERT HAYWARD BINNEY Born April 8, 1918, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 294 Marlborough Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard Vi year. LENNOX BIRCKHEAD JR. Born February 25, 1919, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Gilman Country Day. Home address: 529 Dunkirk Road, Baltimore, Maryland. Kirk- land House. At Hatvatd 2 years. Phillips Brooks House (1). Student Union (1). Glee Club. Field of concenttation: Economics. RICHARD GILLESPIE BLAINE Born April 23, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 55 East 65th Street, New York, New York. College ad- dress: 60 Mount Auburn Street. At Harvard 3 years. Crew squad (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Porcellian Club. Field of con- centration: English. Intended vocation: Journ- alism. JAMES BRONSON BLAKE JR. Born February 21, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Hill. Home addtess: 2915 East Ken- wood Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. At Harvard Vi year. WILLIAM WARDEN BODINE Born May 29, 1918, in Villa Nova, Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: County Lane Road, Villa Nova, Pennsylvania. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 years. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Owl Club. FREDERICK WILCOX H. BRADLEY January 11, 1920, in Newtonville, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 512A Lake Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. Grays Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Cross country team (1); track team (1). Red Book, circulation manager (1). Harvard Club of St. Louis Scholarship. In- tended vocation: Medicine. Present vocation: Canadian Air Force. EDWARD RANDOLPH BROWNE Born November 3, 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 45 Jefferson Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 years. Field of con- centration: German. JOSEPH PAUL BURKE Born onjune 15, 1918, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 13 Cottage Avenue, Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Claverly Hall. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Government. CLARENCE AUGUSTUS BURLEY Born May 3, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Asheville, North Carolina. Home address: 651 Prospect Avenue, Winnetka, Illinois. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. House squash (2, 3). Student Union (1-3). Dramatic Club (2, 3). Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Publishing. HENRY DENISON BURNHAM Born October 23, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Bolton, Massachusetts. At Harvard 2 years. Football squad (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E. Field of concenttation: Psychology. Intended vocation: Mining. CHADWICK ROBERT BYER Born January 31, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 460 Waverly Avenue, Newton Center, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Economics. WALTER HARWOOD BYRON JR. Born February 18, 1920, in Williamsport, Mary- land. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Weston, Massachusetts. College address: 26 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 years. Football squad, junior varsity (2). Field of concentration: Sociology. FRANK STANTON CAWLEY Born January 4, 1920, in Jamaica Plain, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 65 Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Adams House. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: History. {144 } liRU ' LEY Cjiui BROVNE ikliie, Missichu- . Home idtes: , Missichusetts. ' v V LOB Chandler Cholm ele y -Jo ne ClFRINO H. B. Clark II. V. Clark Clsmbnt Clukct Cos ant CONOER Cotton Cowgill Crawford Crowley C ' t m (l NMN ' .ll I CfSHlNO Davidson Dawe Daw kins D. Dennis : of 17 is: 26 JOHN STENGER CAYLOR Born February 21, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Shady Side. Home address: 17829 Fernway Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio. Dudley Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Christian Fel- lowship, executive committee (2). Field of con- centration: Economics. ALBERT MINOT CHANDLER Born December 23, 1918, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 169 Fuller Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. Weld Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Hockey team (1). Rrd Both (1). Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended vocation: Business. EDWARD STURGIS CHOLMELEY-JONES Born May 24, 1921, in New York. New York. Prepared at Lenox. Home address: Underdene, Hilispoint Road, Westport, Connecticut. Dudley Hall At Harvard 1 ' } years. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Admiralty Uw. ALPHONSE frank cifrino Bornjune 27, 1921, in Dorchester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 40 Virginia Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Straus Hall At Harvard 1 year. HUGH BROOKING CLARK Born January 26. 1921, in London, England. Prepared at Harrow. Home address: Castle Cary, Somerset. England. Thayer Hall. At Harvard I year. ROBERT VERNON CLARK Born July 16, 1920, in Des Moines, Iowa. Pre- pared ac St. George ' s Home address: Windover Road, Des Moines. Iowa. Wigglcsworth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. EVER KIT CLEMENT Born September I. 1918. in Peterborough. New Hampshire Prepared at Dublin. Home address: Elm Hill. Peterborough, New Hampshire. Thayer Hall At Harvard 1 year. Wrestling squad (1). HOWARD VERNON CLUKEY Born April 18, 1920, in Spokane, Washington. Prepared at John R. Rogers High. Home address: East 2006 Gordon Street, Spolcane, Washington. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. JOHN HEYWOOD CONANT Born May 18, 1921, in Tamms, Illinois. Prepared at Tamms Community High. Home address: Tamms, Illinois. Weld Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Chapel Usher (1). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. WILLIAM BEECH CONGER Born July 11, 1920, in Youngstown, Ohio. Pre- f ared at Rayen High. Home address: 381 Cata- ina Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio. College address: 12 Trowbridge Street. At Harvard 1 year. JOHN PAGE COTTON JR. Born May 3, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 21 Fairmont Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Wigglcsworth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. DANIEL EVERETT COWGILL Born May 22, 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Pre- pared at tipper Sandusky High. Home address: 403 North Walpole, Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Leverett House. At Harvard 3 years. Swimming squad (1 3). Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended vocation: Statistics. BRUCE CRAWFORD Born August 26, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Solebury. Home address: Princeton, New Jersey. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. JAMES BERNARD CROWLEY Born October 30, 1919, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Academy. Home address: 1 Avon Place, Cambridge, Massachusetts. At Harvard I year. Band (I). Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Advertising. NATHANIEL FREDERICK CULLINAN Bornjune 16, 1919, in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 135 East Haverhill Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 45 Winthrop Street. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: English. MICHAEL McENERY CUNNINGHAM Born May 22, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 10 South Goodman Street, Rochester, New York. Mower Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Phillips Brooks House (1). DUNCAN LEIGH CUSHING Born September 30, 1920, in Mcdford, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Mt. Hermon. Home address: 16 Rosemary Street, Norwood, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 years. Boylston Chemical Club (2). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. ROBERT CHARLES DAVIDSON Born December 31, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Harwich High. Home address: Elwood Road, West Harwich, Connecticut. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. CHARLES DOUGLAS DAWE Born December 15, 1920, in London, England. Prepared at Eastern High. Home address: 113 North Francis Avenue, Lansing. Michigan. Col- lege address: 1709 Cambridge Street. At Harvard 2 years. International Club (2). Charles E. Rogers Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. RICHARD BACHELER DAWKINS Born November 6, 1918, in Gcrmantown, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 12 Ellington Avenue, Rockville, Connecticut. College address: 24 Irving Street. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: English. DAVID DENNIS Born February 2, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: Convent, New Jersey. Massachusetts Hall. At Harvard 1 year. itfO 4145 } . A. Dennis Derby Des Pbez Devens Dorsey Drexel DWAN Eastman Eddy Edwards Eipper Faoet Fales FARNL ' M Fat Feldman Field Fisher Fitch FOOTE Forbes WARREN ARTHUR DENNIS Born January 2, 1920, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul ' s in St. Paul, Minnesota. Home address: 740 Linwood Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. German Club (2). Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. ALLAN LAWRENCE EASTMAN Born July 28, 1918, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 190 Middlesex Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. House tennis (2, 3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Funeral direction. DAVID WILLIAM FAY Born October 14, 1919, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 162 Collins, Hartford, Connecticut. Adams House. At Har- vard 3 years. Football team (1), junior varsity (2, 3); track squad (l); House squash (3); House wrestling (3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Business administration. JOHN HARLAN DERBY Born February 5, 1920, in Pinehurst, North Carolina. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 156 East 71st Street, New York, New York. Hol- worthy Hall. At Harvard 1 year. RENKERT JOHN DES PREZ Born March 2, 1921, in Canton, Ohio. Prepared at McKinley High. Home address: 1515 Cleve- land Avenue N.W., Canton, Ohio. Dudley Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Golf squad (1). DAVID WETMORE DEVENS Born April 10, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 49 Hereford Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 years. Squash squad (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; A. D. Club. Field of concentration: English. JAMES EMMET DORSEY JR. Born April 18, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 2204 West Lake of the Isles Boulevard, Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Kirkland House. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Geology. JOHN ROZET DREXEL III Born October 6, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: 515 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Dunster House. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. AUSTIN GEORGE EDDY Born December 1, 1919, in Greaney, Minnesota. Prepared at Horace Mann High. Home address: Orr, Minnesota. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Henry D. andjonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. GEORGE JAHNELL EDWARDS Born September 8, 1920, in Montgomery, West Virginia. Prepared at Montgomery High. Home address: 500 Fifth Avenue, Montgomery, West Virginia. College address: 1709 Cambridge Street. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended vocation: Teaching. ALFRED WARD EIPPER Born November 16, 1919, in Montague, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Putney. Home address: Dalhousie, Canada. Dunster House. At Harvard 2 years. Ski team (1, 2). Band (1, 2). Field of concentration: English. WALTER H. FAGET JR. Born December 30, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 3147 Washington Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. Massachusetts Hall. At Harvard 1 year. HALIBURTON FALES II Born August 7, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Gladstone, Newjersey. Leverett House. At Harvard 3 years Crew squad, 150-pound (1-3). Advocate (1-3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Fly Club. Field of concentration: English. IRVING SYLVAN FELDMAN Born August 25, 1918, in McKeesport, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at McKeesport High. Home address: 621 Fifth Avenue, McKeesport, Pennsyl- vania. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. SPENCER FIELD Born July 22, 1918, in Buffalo, New York. Pre- pared at Milton. Home address: 114 Chapin Parkway, Buffalo, New York. Wigglesworth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. CHARLES PAINE FISHER Born June 20, 1921, in Weston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Love Lane, Weston, Massachusetts. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: Psych- ology. EZRA CHARLES FITCH Born May 11, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Montgomery. Home address: 2 Brim- mer Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 year ' s. Student Defense League (3). Field of concentration: Government. STERLING DE GROOT FOOTE Born March 11, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: 163 East 62nd Street, New York, New York. College address: 78 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 years. Mountaineering Club (1). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: United States Coast Guard. ' ROBERT DASPIT DWAN Born December 12, 1919, in Laredo, Texas. Prepared at Drew. Home address: 414 P Street, Fresno, California. Weld Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Phillips Brooks House (1). JOHN COBB FARNUM Born February 27, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Suffield. Home address: 412 Prospect Street, Westfield, New Jersey. Weld Hall. At Harvard Vi year. ALLAN FORBES JR. Born November 14, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Westwood, Massachusetts. Holworthy Hall. At Harvard 1 year. { 146 } Dwis F.usrK FAY :: C HO ' ess: 162 Collins, House. At Hit- ), junior nniiy luash (3); House Don: Economics. LDMAN •espott, Pennsyl- t High. Home ;esport, Pemsyl- lyeat. New Yodc. Pit- ess: in t; ; ISHER ■l .. ' -- Iress: Love U«- stet Hon « fjranon: Pip ' ITCH i M«ss tbiWS . ' iddress:2Bnffi- ,ts. EfaH fenseW 1 ' ieni. iT FOOTI ' Hasty P [ L Coast Gioii Foster Freeto French Gelvin Gianis Gilman Girton Gobbik Goldstein Gordon Green-ouch R. C. Griffin W. A. Griffin W. E. (iKIFFIN Grosvenor B. Hall J. N. Hall Hamilton Hanna Harrington Harris RICHARD WINSLOW FOSTER Born January 4, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 9 Common- wealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. At Harvard 2 years. Biology Club (1, 2). Fox Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended vocation: Marine Biology. ROBERT PHILPOTTS FREETO Born February 27, 1919, in Waltham, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home ad- dress: 38 Frederick Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. FRANK HOWE FRENCH Born August 15, 1919, in Bristol, Rhode Island. Prepared at Hill. Home address: Hope Street, Bristol, Rhode Island. At Harvard 3 years. Field of concentration: History. JOHN EDWARD GELVIN Born March 14, 1920, in Batesville, Indiana. Prepared at Batesville High. Home address: 108 Mulberry Street, Batesville, Indiana. Matthews Hall. At Harvard 1 year. SOCRATES GEORGE GIANIS Born June It, 1917, in Toledo, Ohio. Trans- ferred from Wayne University. Home address: 427 Mendan Drive, Dearborn, Michigan. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. House football (3). Dramatic Club (3). Lampion (3). Liberal Union (3). Field of concentration: Sociology. JAMES HENRY GILMAN JR. Born October 21. 1918, in Miami, Florida. Trans- ferred from University of Miami. Home address: 1887 Brit ltd I Avenue. Miami, Florida. Dunster House At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. GEORGE BENNETT GIRTON Born July 2, 1920. in Neuilly-sur-Seine. France. Prepared at Merchant Taylors ' School, Sandy Lodge. Nonhwood. Middlesex. England Home address: 117 Paulding Avenue. Tarrytown. New York. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. Swim- ming (1). Field (A concentration: History and Literature. H7 , ANTHONY FRANCIS GOBBIE Born November 24, 1919, in London, England. Transferred from Kingswood. Home address: 1951 Albany Avenue, West Hartford Connecticut. Grays Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Rifle Club (1). GEORGE SAUL GOLDSTEIN Born October 24, 1919, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Weaver High. Home address: 121 Blue Hills Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut. Lev- erett House. At Harvard 3 years. Student Union (1-3), secretary (3). Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Government service. BERNARD GORDON JR. Bornjanuary 14, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Pawling. Home address: Alden House Apartments, Larchmont, New York. Stoughton Hall. At Harvard Vi year. WILLIAM GREENOUGH II Born January 2, 1919, in Paris, France. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 1408 31st Street, Wash- ington, D. C. Wigglesworth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. ROGER CASTLE GRIFFIN JR. Born October 18, 1920, in Belmont, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Needham High. Home address: 9 Washburn Avenue, Needham, Massachusetts. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Chemistry. In- tended vocation: Chemistry. WILLIAM ALEXANDER GRIFFIN JR. Born June 10, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Pre- pared at Nichols. Home address: 80 Oakland Place, Buffalo, New York. Straus Hall. At Harvard 1 year. WILLIAM ELY GRIFFIN Bom April 6, 1921, in Eugene, Oregon. Pre- pared at Garfield High. Home address: 1211-21 Street, Avenue N, Seattle, Washington. Little Hall. At Harvard IV, years. Track team (1). Phillips Brooks House (I). Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Chemistry. WILLIAM GROSVENOR JR. Born March 7, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Hilltop, Ruggles Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island. Win- throp House. At Harvard 2 years. Crew squad, 150-pound (1, 2); football team, junior varsity (2). Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Geography. BRISTOL HALL Horn December 13, 1919, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Pembroke High. Home address: North Pembroke, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: Varsity Club. At Harvard 1 year. Crew squad (1). Pierian Sodality (1). Glee Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended voca- tion: Teaching. JOHN NORMAN HALL Born April 15, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roslindale High School. Home ad- dress: 1610 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. JOSEPH HEBERLING HAMILTON Born August 8, 1920, in Iowa City, Iowa. Pre- pared at Iowa City High. Home address: Mount Burge, Iowa City, Iowa. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Field of concentration: English. WALTER CLARK HANNA JR. Born October 25, 1920 in San Marcial, New Mexico. Prepared for Harv.inl .it Albuquerque High. Home address: San Martial, New Mcxito. Dudley Hall. At Harvard 1 ' A years. Field of concentration: Government. EDWIN HARRINGTON Horn April 12, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at William Pcnn Charter. Home address: Shcaff Lane, Whitcmarsh, Pennsylvania. Hol- worthy Hall. At Harvard 1 year. PHILLIP LOMAN HARRIS Born July 14, 1920, in Ithaca, New York. Pre- pared at Andover. Home address: Bard College, Annandalc-on-Huo ' son, New York. Kirkland House. At Harvard 2 years. Track team (1); House tratk (2). Glee Club. Field of concentra- ikiii: Engineering. Hartle Harvey Henderson HOFF HULINQ Irving M. B. Jackson- . C. Jackson Johnson D. W. Jones W. D. Jones W. N. Jones Joyce Kelly Kennedy Kimble Klippel Knapp Lebowitz Levin Lewis ROBERT WYMAN HARTLE Born September 1, 1921, in Kongmoon, China, Prepared at Admiral Farragut, Pine Beach, New Jersey. Home address. 286 Cathedral Avenue, Madison, New York. Matthews Hall. At Har- vard Vi year. WILLIAM BRADBURY HARVEY JR. Born February 11, 1920, in Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 106 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Massachusetts. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended vocation: Busi- ness. BILLIE DICK HENDERSON Born May 2, 1920, in Bridgeport, Illinois. Pre- pared at Bridgeport Township High. Home address: 620 Gray Street, Bridgeport, Illinois. Thayer Hall. At Harvard Vi year. Field of con- centration: Engineering. JAMES EMERSON HOFF Born June 20, 1920, in Howell, Michigan. Pre- pared at Howell High. Home address: 616 West Washington Stteet, Howell, Michigan. Matthews Hall. At Harvard 1 year. JOHN WILLIAM HULING Born September 11, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Western High, Washington, D. C. Home address: 244 Park Street, Morgan- town, West Virginia. Winthrop House. At Hatvard 3 years. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended vocation: United States Army. JOHN EVELYN duPONT IRVING Born March 17, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: Mont- chanin, Delaware. College address: 60 Mt. Au- burn Street. At Harvard 3 years. Soccer team (1); hockey team (2, 3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. MORTON BARROWS JACKSON Bornjuly 17, 1921, in Devils Lake, North Dakota. Prepared at Central High. Home address:2120 S. W. Spring Street, Portland, Oregon. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. House football (2); House crew (2). Glee Club. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Harvard Club of Minnesota Scholarship. ROBERT CLEMENCE JACKSON Born January 28, 1920, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 39 Page Street, Somersworth, New Hampshire. Matthews Hall. At Harvard 1 year. THOMAS LEO JOHNSON JR. Born February 28, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 20 Chapel Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Holworthy Hall. At Harvard 1 year. DANIEL WILLIAM JONES JR. Born November 7, 1919, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Mark ' s. Home address: Prescott Place, Newport, Rhode Island. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. Cross country squad (1); track squad (1). Glee Club. Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. WILLIAM DEAN JONES Born June 6, 1920, in Montclair, New Jersey. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 231 Upper Mountain Avenue, Montclair, Newjersey. Massa- chusetts Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Red Book (1). Field of concentration: English. WEBSTER NEWTON JONES JR. Born November 21, 1920, in Akron, Ohio. Pre- pared at Arnold. Home address: 562 Briar Cliff Road, Pittsbutgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Glee Club. Harvard Club of Western Pennsylvania Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. FRANK JOHN JOYCE Born April 29, 1920, in Waltham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Hebron. Home address: 39 Green- wood, Lane, Waltham, Massachusetts. Wiggles- worth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. GRAHAM McDONALD KELLY Born May 6, 1920, in San Diego, California. Prepared at San Diego High. Home address: 2952 Cedar Street, San Diego, Califotnia. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Edmund Ira Richards Schol- arship. GIBSON BELL KENNEDY Born September 1, 1920, in Chestnut Hill, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Montgomery. Home ad- dress: 529 Manor Road, Wynnewood, Pennsyl- vania. Apley Court. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Football team (1); ttack team (1). Field of con- centration: Engineering. Intended vocation: En- gineering. ROBERT EARL KIMBLE Born July 14, 1921, in Lancaster, Ohio. Pre- pared at Stivers High. Home address: 323 Wy- oming Street, Dayton, Ohio. Eliot House. At Harvard 1 ' A years. Edmund Ira Richards Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Govetnment. CHARLES HAWN KLIPPEL Born September 25, 1920, in Sioux City, Iowa. Prepared at Hamilton High. Home address: 198 Brevoort Road, Columbus, Ohio. Grays Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Phillips Brooks House (1). Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended vocation: Medi- cine. WILLIAM ROHAN KNAPP Born December 29, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 357 South Main Street, South Manchester, Connecti- cut. College address: 53 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2Vi years. Advocate (2, 3). Signet So- ciety. Field of concentration: English. HERBERT LEBOWITZ Born June 25, 1921, in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 103 Devon Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 years. Avukah (1, 2). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. MICHAEL IRA LEVIN Bornjuly 1, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Shaker Heights High. Home address: 104th Street and Broadway, New York, New York. Lowell House. At Harvard 2 years. Jubilee Com- mittee (1); Smoker Committee (1). Debating Council (1). Crimson (2). Field of concentration: Government. ROBERT CAVISH LEWIS Born December 28, 1920, in Springfield, Missouri. Prepared at Roosevelt High, St. Louis Missouri. Home address: Sutton Place, New York, New York. Winthrop House. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Advocate (1, 2), editor (2). Harvard Club of St. Louis Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended vocation: Chilean wine exporting. { 148 } I . ! ■' .I! PRTOXE I.I VI NORTON I-ONO Love Mac A LESTER Maguihe Marder Marshall Mason M ASSET Matiron McConnell Mel ntosh McKlNLJET M« Vciuh M ENTER MtKHll.L Mkvkh A. Miller A. K. Miller Moot OWEN COSLETT LIGHTSTONE Born August 11, 1920, in Montreal, Canada. Prepared at Westmount High. Home address: Mount Royal Hotel, Montreal, Canada. Claverly Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Economics. GOODHUE LIVINGSTON III Born September 18, 1920, in New York, New York. Transferred from Princeton. Home ad- dress: 170 East 78th Street, New York, New York. College address: 40 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 ' i years. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Phoenix Club. Field of concentration: Philosophy. WILLIAM BOWDITCH LONG JR. Born September 11, 1918, in Cohasset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 35 Marlboro Street. Boston, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 16 Hilhard Street. At Harvard 2 ' } years. Ornithological Club(l,2). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Owl Club. Field of concentra- tion: Anthropology. LLOYD PHILLIP LOVE JR. Born February 16, 1920, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at U. S. Grant High. Home address: 2733 North East 29th Avenue, Portland, Oregon. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Track squad (1). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. EDWARD CHARLES MACALESTER Born February 28, 1919, in Paris, France. Pre- pared at Harrow. Home address: Villa La Tour, 1 34 Avenue des Arenes. Cimiez, Nice. Stoughton Hail At Harvard 1 year. EDWARD FRANCIS MAGI IRK JR. Born November 29. 1919. in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 28 Mingo Street. Milton, Massachusetts College address: 5 Linden Street. At Harvard 2 yean. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended vocation: Retail Merchandising IRVING MARDER Born August 10. 1921. in Lawrence. Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 62 Main Street. North Adams. Massachusetts. Eliot House At Harvard J years. Imernaiinn.il Club (3). Student Union ()) Avukah (2.  . Field of concentration: History and Literature. {149 , WOODBRIDGE MARSHALL Born December 3, 1920, in Concordia, Kansas. Prepared at John Muir Technical High. Home address: 2418 Highland Avenue, Altadena, Cali- fornia. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: United States Army. ARTHUR CRANDALL HAZARD MASON Born October 29, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 35A Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Track squad (1). Spanish Club (1). Field of concentration: Economics. ROBERT EUGENE MASSEY Born February 3, 1920, in Moline, Illinois. Pre- pared at Moline High. Home address: 938 19th Avenue, Moline, Illinois. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. Golf squad (1); House football (3); House basketball (3): House golf (2, 3). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended vocation: Production management. SUMNER ELIOT MATISON Born April 18, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Dover High. Home address: 60 Sum- mer Street, Dover, New Hampshire. College ad- dress: 333A Harvard Street. At Harvard 1 year. WILLIAM CHARLES McCONNELL JR. Born March 2, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 7 Everett Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home At Harvard 1 Vi years. Field of concentration. Psychology. ROBERT BENNETT McINTOSH Born February 12. 1920. in Bronxville, New York. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 8 Summer Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. Lever- ett House At Harvard 3 years. Band (3). Field of concentration. History arnl Literature. ROYCE BALDWIN McKINLEY Born February 20, 1921, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at St. Albans. Home address: 713 Forest Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Dunster House. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: English. WALTER BACON McVEIGH Born December 25, 1918, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hun. Home address: 40 East 71st Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. At Harvard 3 years. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Porcellian Club. SANFORD MENTER Born July 25, 1920, in Middletown, New York. Prepared at Middletown High. Home address: 155-7 Highland Avenue, Middletown, New York. Straus Hall. At Harvard Vi year. CHARLES EDWARD MERRILL JR. Born August 17, 1920, in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 515 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Student Union (1 3). Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Government. ROBERT MEYER Bornjanuary 29, 1917, in Belmont, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 231 Park Drive, Boston, Massachusetts. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. ALAN MILLER Born July 4, 1920, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 609 East Street, Dedham, Massachusetts. Eliot House. At Harvard 2 years. Crew squad (1); House crew (2); House hockey (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Spec Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended vocation: Business. ARNOLD ERNEST MILLER JR. Horn February 21, 1921, San Francisco, California. Prepared at Beacon, Wcllcslcy Hills, Massachu- setts. Home address: Clover Hill, Old Lyme, Connecticut. Apley Court. At Harvard 1 year. RICHARD EVERETT MOOT Born March 24, 1942, in Buffalo, New York Prepared at Nichols. Home address: ) Gates Circle, Buffalo, New York. Kirkland House. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Phillips Brooks House (I). Sruilcni Defense Lcaguc(3). PhotographyClubO ). Yacht Club (1). Field of concentration: Geology. A. B. Morrison R. W. Morrison Muldavin MUNSON Murphy Myerson W. Nichols W. L. Nichols Nolan Notov Overstreet Padilla Pearson Pepper Perkins Perry Phiupsborn Pitch ford Price Rand Reardon MILNOR BOWDEN MORRISON JR. Born February 24, 1919, in Pawling, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: Pawling, New York. Stoughton Hall. At Harvard Vi year. ROBERT WARREN MORRISON Born January 4, 1921, in Mahomet, Illinois. Prepared at Mahomet Community High. Home address: Mahomet, Illinois. College address: 29 Dana Street. At Harvard 2 years. Union Now (2). Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Law. SEMYON MICHAEL MULDAVIN Born December 8, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: El Carrizito Ranch, Ribera, New Mexico. Straus Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Student Union (1). Glee Club. WILLIAM THOMAS MUNSON Born June 1, 1919, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Staunton Military Academy, Staunton, Virginia. Home address: 22 North Street, Gran- ville, New York. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Phillips Brooks House (1-3), vice president (3). Field of concentration: History. HENRY ROBERT MURPHY Born February 5, 1919, in Stoughton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 910 Washington Street, Stoughton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. At Harvard 3 years. Soccer team (2, 3). G. S. Murphy Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended vocation: Public administration. ROBERT ISAAC MYERSON Born July 24, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day. Home address: 754 Rugby Road, Brooklyn, New York. Wigglesworth Hall. At Harvard ' A year. WALTER NICHOLS Born June 18, 1919, in Tokyo, Japan. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 50 Oakwood Avenue, Upper Montclair, New Jersey. College address: 19 Farwell Place. At Harvard 2 years. Swimming squad (1). Band (1). Caspar Henry Burton Jr. Scholarship. Delta Upsilon. Field of concentra- tion: Fine arts. WENDELL LLOYD NICHOLS II Born January 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 43 Sumner Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. House baseball (2, 3), captain (3); football squad, junior varsity (2, 3). Speakers ' Club. Field of concentration: English. Present vocation: British Army. WILLIAM REESE NOLAN Born December 31, 1919, in New Haven, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Gunnery. Home address: Washington, Connecticut. College address: 40 Quincy Street. At Harvard l A year. RAYMOND MARSHALL NOTOV Born July 30, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 1170 East 54th Street, Chicago, Illinois. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Fencing team (1). Waite Mem- orial Fund Scholarship. ROBERT BUTLER OVERSTREET Born June 11, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: 3237 Klingle Road, Washington, D. C. College address: 71 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Glee Club. Field of concentration: English. ESTEBAN PADILLA Born November 18, 1922, in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. Prepared at Arecibo High. Home address: Box 172, Arecibo, Puerto Rico. Winthrop House. At Harvard 3 years. Spanish Club (1-3). Pan- American Society (3). Field of concentration: Biology. JOHN PEARSON Born April 4, 1921, in West Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar. Home address: 20 Old Farm Road, Hamden, Connecticut. Lionel Hall. At Harvard 1 year. ALBERT JAY PEPPER Bornjanuary 29, 1921, in Mt. Vernon, New York. Prepared at A. B. Davis High. Home address: 406 Nuber Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. College address: 5 Linden Street. At Harvard 2 years. Chess team (1,2). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Dentistry. EDWARD CLIFFORD PERKINS Born July 30, 1919, in Ridgefield, Connecticut. Prepared at St. Paul ' s. Home address: 252 East 68th Street, New York, New York. College ad- dress: 5 Linden Street. At Harvard 2 years. Crew squad (1, 2). Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended vocation: Law. WHITALL NICHOLSON PERRY Born June 19, 1920, in Belmont, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: Pleasant, Dover, Massachusetts. Dunster House. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Instrumental Clubs (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended voca- tion: Anthropology. JOHN DAVID PHILIPSBORN Born September 8, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Francis W. Parker High. Home ad- dress: 70 East Goethe Stteet, Chicago, Illinois. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. House football (2, 3); House baseball (2, 3). Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended vocation: Journalism. ALFRED LESTER PITCHFORD Born March 15, 1917, in Moultrie, Georgia. Prepared at Hebron. Home address: 9 Cedar Street, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. College address: 14 Story Street. At Harvard 2 years. Baseball team (1). Varsity Club. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended vocation: Teaching and Coaching. JAMES EDWARD PRICE II Born September 1, 1920, in Glenolden, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 22 East 69th Street, New York, New York. Wiggles- worth Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Swimming team (1). Track team (1). Glee Club. ROBERT MORRISON RAND Born June 22, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Hebron. Home address: 3 Colonial Terrace, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. WILLIAM THEODORE REARDON Born May 23, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 34 Beacon Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard Vi year. 150 Keddt ScHOOXHAKF.lt K. B. SMI in lit.!. I. Ill Shaw l M. Smith Rice Shepard Fkhiioxt-Smith RlUBY Sim. i.i Mi Solomon Rorr Simmon- Bvwra Rydeh SlMONHS Stokkh SC ' IIOKN-KKMAKOK Sl.oroMBE Stout . House {1J0. EDMUND JOSEPH REDDY Born September 22, 1918, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence. Home address: 92 Draper Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. PETER REGGIO Born October 1, 1919. in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 20 Chestnut Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. MAURICE ELDER RICE Born May 18, 1918, in Augusta, Maine. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 10) Cushing Avenue, Belmont. Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Basketball team (1). Base- ball team, captain (1). Field of concentration: Engineering. JOHN DANIEL RIGBY Born May 1), 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 23 Berry Street. Quincy, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. Basketball squad (1, 2); House golf (2. 3); House crew (2, 3). House dramatics (2, 3). Varsity Gub. Field of concen- tration: English. Intended vocation: Advertising. HENRY CLIFFORD ROFF JR. Born October 30, 1920, in Naugatuck, Connecticut. Prepared at Naugatuck High. Home address: 29 George Street, Naugatuck, Connecticut. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. Photography Club (1). Field of concentration: Biochemistry. WILLIAM VERNON RYDER JR. Born June 10, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 16 Clark Road, Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts. College address: 5WDt Wolfe Street At Harvard 1 Vi years. Field of concentration: Engineering. HEINZDIF.TF.R VON S( HOENERMARCK Born September 3, 1918. in Heidelberg, Germany. Prepared at Straubenmullcr Textile High. Home address: 120 West 7ith Street, New York, New York. Matthews Hall. At Harvard 1 year. De- bating Council (1). Harvard Club of New York Oty Scholarship. i li r THEODORE PETER SCHOONMAKER Born February 22, 1920, in Paterson, New Jersey. Prepared at Bloomfield High. Home address: 508 Belleville Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey. Winthrop House. At Harvard 2 years. Swimming squad (1, 2); House swimming (2, 3); House football (3). Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended vocation: Business. LAWRENCE MERRILL SHAW Born October 11, 1919, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 136 High Street, Exeter, New Hampshire. Leverett House. At Harvard 2 years. House tennis (2); House squash (2). Engineering Society (1, 2). Field of concentration: Engineering. WARD SHEPARD JR. Born October 22, 1919, in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Box 162, Petersham, Massachusetts. Weld Hall. At Harvard 1 year. WILBUR LEO SHILLING Born August 30, 1921, in St. Joseph, Missouri. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 1106 Prospect Avenue, St. Joseph, Missouri. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Harvard Club of Kansas Oty Scholarship. JULIAN SIMMONS Born December 13, 1919, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 3417 Falls Road Terrace, Baltimore. Maryland. Claverly Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Football team (I), junior varsity (2). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Owl (.lull. Field of concentration: Sociology. HENRY GOUVERNEUR SIMONDS JR. Born March 14, 1920, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 280 Warren Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. At Harvard 3 years. Hockey squad (I). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770; Iroquois Club; Fly Club. Field of concentration: Fine arts. ALAN GILSON SLOCOMBE Born November 4, 1919, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at The Cambridge School Home address: 2HI I Rivermont Avenue, Lynch- burg, Virginia. College address: 27 Ware Street. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Glee Club. Field of con- centration: Biochemistry. KENNETH BATES SMITH Born June 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: Cliff Street, North Weymouth, Massachusetts. Adams House. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Mathematics. MONTGOMERY MEIGS SMITH Born April 1, 1919, in Annapolis, Maryland. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 21 Kay Street, Newport, Rhode Island. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. International Club (2). Field of concentration: Government. PAUL FREMONT-SMITH Born April 1, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 1 1 Willard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 Vi years. Charles William Eliot Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. ALAN ROBERT SOLOMON Born August 13, 1920, in Quincy, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brockton High. Home address: 380 Ash Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Weld Hall. At Harvard Vi year. SPENCER BENNETT STERNE Born October 1, 1920, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 8 Sacramento Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard Vi year. JOHN STOGDELL STOKES JR. Born October 21, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Spring Valley Farm, Huntington Valley, Pennsylvania. Adams House. At Harvard 2 years. House tennis !2); House squash (2). Phillips Brooks House 1, 2): Freshman committee (I), social service committee (2). Field of concentration: Engineer- ing. Intended vocation: Industrial engineering. ARTHUR LESLIE STOUT Born June 23, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at M rblehcad High. Home address: 19 Rockaway Avenue, Marblehead, Massachusetts. Little Hall. At Harvard 2 years. Track team (1). Field of concentration: Psychology. Sullivan Sweetser Swift Thomas W. L. Thompson W. R. Thompson Trumbull Walker Watt We a re Weihl Westervelt Whitney Wigham P. D. Wilson WlNSOR Winter Withington J. H. Wulsin EDWARD JOHN SULLIVAN JR. Born December 21, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared ar Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 117 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Government. JOHN ANDERSON SWEETSER III Born August 25, 1919, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 819 Madison Avenue, New York, New York. Weld Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Football squad (l); rugby team (1). Dramatic Club (1). Field of concentration: English. Intended vocation: Writ- ing. GEORGE HASTINGS SWIFT JR. Born January 24, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 17 Common- wealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Thayer Hall. At Harvard 1 year. Polo squad (1). In- strumental Clubs (1). Present vocation: Meat packing. JESSE BURGESS THOMAS Born December 7, 1920, in Iloilo, Philippine Is- lands. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 31 North Street, Georgetown, Massachusetts. Lowell House. At Harvard 3 years. Swimming squad (1); track squad (1); House swimming (2, 3); House track (2). German club (2, 3). Stamp club (2, 3), vice-president (3). Photog- raphy club (2, 3). Outing club (3). Classical club (2, 3). Hollis Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Greek and English. Intended vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM LADD THOMPSON JR. Born March 8, 1921, in Paris, France. Prepared at Wakefield High. Home address: 1 Sidney Street, Wakefield, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. WILLIAM ROBERT THOMPSON Born September 27, 1921, in Melvin, Illinois. Prepared at Melvin Community High. Home address: Melvin, Illinois. Grays Hall. At Har- vard Vi year. Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. PHILIP WINSOR TRUMBULL Born July 17, 1920, in Weston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Meadow- brook Road, Weston, Massachusetts. Adams House. At Harvard 3 years. Crew squad, 150- pound (1-3). D. U. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Music. Intended vocation: Aviation. SCOTT VAN SCHOICK WALKER Born October 27, 1919, in North Andover, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 283 South Main Street, Andover, Massachusetts. Lived at home. At Harvard 1 year. Fencing team (l), manager (1). Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended vocation: Medicine. ROBERT ALEXANDER WATT Born June 3, 1921, in Methuen, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 1421 Massachusetts Avenue N.W., Washington, D. C. College address: 60 Boylston Street. At Harvard 3 years. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Engineering. WILLIAM HENRY WEARE Born February 6, 1920, in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Ogunquit, Maine. Dunster House. At Harvard 3 years. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. CARL WEIHL Born December 11, 1920, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High. Home address: 1008 Marion Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Kirkland House. At Harvard 3 years. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended vocation: Medicine. DIRCK DE RYEE WESTERVELT Born March 4, 1921, in Albany, New York. Pre- pared at North Shore Country Day. Home address : 465 Polar Street, Winnetka, Illinois. College ad- dress: 45 Winthrop Street. At Harvard 2 years. Field of concentration: Economics. WILLIAM GILLETT WHITNEY Born July 20, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Westtown School. Home address: Westtown, Pennsylvania. Matthews Hall. At Harvard Vi year. REGINALD EASTMAN WIGHAM Born June 5, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 131 East 65th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. At Harvard 3 years. Dramatic club (1). Band (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, business manager (3); Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Ro- mance Languages. PHILIP DUNCAN WILSON JR. Born February 14, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 134 East 74th Street, New York, New York. College ad- dress: 69 Dunster Street. At Harvard 3 years. Intracollegiate single sculling champion (2, 3); football squad, junior varsity (3). Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Spee Club. Field of concentra- tion: Anthropology. Intended vocation: Medi- cine. ROBERT WINSOR III Born September 29, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Fountain Valley School, Colorado Springs, Colorado. Home address: North Hampton, New Hampshire. College ad- dress: 28 Mt. Auburn Srreet. At Harvard 3 years. Hockey team (1); soccer squad (1). Phillips Brooks House (1). Instrumental clubs (3). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, treasurer (3); Spee Club. Field of concentration: English. MONROE ADAMS WINTER Born April 22, 1920, in Evanston, Illinois. Pre- pared at Lake Forest High. Home address: 942 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois. Dunster House. At Harvard 2 Vi years. Phillips Brooks House (l). Field of concentration: Fine Arts. LOTHROP WITHINGTON JR. Born February 16, 1917, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill and New Prepara- tory. Home address: 114 Clyde Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. At Harvard 2 years. Football squad (1), junior varsity (2); House hockey (2). Champion swallower of gold- fish (1). Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. K. E.; Fox Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended vocation: Advertising. JOHN HAGOR WULSIN Born May 28, 1920, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at St. George ' s. Home address: 2444 Madison Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. College address: 60 Mt. Auburn Street. At Harvard 3 years. Crew squad (1). John Harvard Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770; Fly Club; Signet Society. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended vocation: Medicine. i 152 } IN MEMORIAM MARTIN COHEN DAVID WINDER DEAN HOLLIS CUSHMAN DENNEN SOLOMON SCHNAYERSON MARTIN COHEN Born March 9, 1921, in Fall River, Massachusetts. Died November 5. 1938. Prepared at West port High. Home address: 371? Forest Avenue, Kansas City. Missouri. Grays Hall. HOLLIS CUSHMAN DENNEN Born November 23, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Died February 22, 1939. Prepared at Waltham High. Home address: 162 Dale Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Major Harrison Briggs Webster Scholarship. DAVID WINDER DEAN Born September 1, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Died April 9, 1940. Prepared at Putney. Home address: 7638 North Rogers Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. Rifle team (1). Debating Council (I) Student Union (1). Band (1, 2). Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Government and Philosophy. SOLOMON SCHNAYERSON Born April 1, 1920, in Bobruisk, Russia. Died December 24, 1940. Prepared at Grover Cleveland High. Home address: 43 Ocean Avenue, Brook- lyn, New York. College address: 140 Mt. Auburn Street. Chess Club (1). Student Union (1, 2). Avukah. Bowditch Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Mathematics. i i} FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST- Before an d After of courtyard between Gore and Standish Halls at , • „ ■thp ' 18 Hurricane the time of the 1° Education? That ' s a laugh! All you have to do is be in residence at Harvard four years and they give you a diploma. Or — Good Lord, I ' ll be glad to get out of here. If I ever graduate, I ' ll utter a prayer of thanks and spend the rest of my life wondering how I ever got through. No matter which theory one may individually hold to be true, it is universally true that the class of 1942 is finished, as far as undergrad- uate life is concerned. Wafted into Cambridge on the breath of a hurricane, ' 42 has for some months now been drifting out on the chill winds of a draft. Regardless of whether or not the graduation cere- monies are super-spectacular, the three-hundredth graduating class of Harvard has not left flabby footprints in the sands of Crimson history. Right from the riot in the Legion Parade to the seriously subdued at- mosphere in Sanders Theatre following the outbreak of the war, 1942 has been a War Class through and through. Lighter moments have not been missing, however, for it was ' 42 that began the nation- wide craze for goldfish-gulping, campaigned for drum majorettes at football games, turned books upside down in libraries, and tried valiantly but vainly to rescue the Mole from Dick Tracy ' s heartless, crime-does-not-pay clutches. The hurricane should have given us an idea of what a storm we were in for at Harvard. What we saw when we arrived that late afternoon in September was far from what the class of 1938 had bade farewell to the previous spring. Trees were felled that had towered even over Frisky Merriman for many a decade, and Massachusetts Avenue win- dows were smashed up and down the square. 100-MILE HURRICANE CLAIMS SEVENTY TREES IN YARD; $100,000 DAMAGE With cheery, though quizzical faces, we as a whole filed our moun- tainous registration cards late; but classes started right on time just the same. The night-life of Boston, after we had learned that it was not true that the Yard gates were locked at nine o ' clock every evening, had to be temporarily abandoned. Small Fry, struttiri through the poolroom Small Fry, should be in the schoolroom My, my, put down that cigarette You ain ' t a groun-up, high-and-mighty yet. At least, most of us abandoned it for a while. Harvard was absorbing us into her walls and crevices like so many termites. Harvard was impersonal, even to the choice of courses, which we selected pretty much depending on what adviser we had. Our voices, soon cognizant of the Reinhardt cry, resounded constantly throughout the Yard, which we seemed to have taken over as our own personal property, allowing upper-classmen to use it during the daytime only. First Yardling to hit the papers was John The Whizzer White when he ran amuck and anude. FRESHMAN GODIVA CALLS FIRE FIGHTERS TO OPEN HIS DOOR After the second weekend was exhausted in discovering Harvard and its environs, we were plunged into the football season. College foot- ball with its dates, parties, women, and tremendous crowds, were new to most of us. The brawls over goal-posts were a novelty, too. Some Freshman, terror-stricken, ran home after being slugged by a Bruin rooter, some met the wrath of the deans by selling unwanted contribution book tickets. CRIMSON IS GIVEN EDGE IN SEASON ' S OPENER but the following Monday — SUPERIOR BROWN ELEVEN DEFEATS HARVARD 20—13 We didn ' t care. We had found a source of amusement in football weekends that grew stronger and stronger, till our senior year saw more football enthusiasm at Harvard than had been rocking the stands since the Terrible Twenties. Football wasn ' t the only outlet for Harvard Freshman emotions. When the American Legion staged a parade past our windows and down Massachusetts Avenue, jubilant though jeering cat-calls and whistles from the Yard reverberated throughout the Square. The next day, it was a different story. FOUR FACE TRIAL AS ' 42 STAGES MINIATURE RIOT, ROUTS PARADE DENY TAKING ANY PART, — DISCIPLINE HINTED ht±i ■-■- -- - -- ' ,,-.? V l ' Regular English A themes plagued ' 42 Freshmen FRESHMAN RIOT LAID TO LONELINESS BY BOSTON SCHOOL COMMITTEE MEMBER Loneliness or whatever, the four hapless hecklers didn ' t stay lonely very long. Jailed for a night and meeting deans every day, they enjoyed plenty of not so enjoyable company until December when finally — ' 42 RIOTERS WIN LONG LEGAL FIGHT AS CHARGE IS DROPPED Dropped but not forgotten. Probably the Freshman Legion riot is the most remembered incident of our years at college, perhaps because it was the first major event we instigated. HICKS, HARVARD COMMUNIST, ARRIVES AND SETTLES QUIETLY 10,500 AT COMMUNIST RALLY GREET HICKS WITH PROTRACTED APPLAUSE Extra-curricular activities were far from all that occupied our minds, much as the Boston papers may try to promote such ideas. The Hicks struggle threw many of us into the Student Union to defend him, others to sign petitions for his retention. His rocky seat at Harvard collapsed in the spring, however, when the University refused to have anything more to do with him. But many of us still felt that such ac- tion was hardly liberal education. SULLIVAN KNIFED BY G O P, CALLS LANDIS CARPET BAGGER In the more intentionally political vein, Michael, Mickey, the Dude, Sullivan provided the Yard with more humor than serious thought. Kicked in the pants, he derided Harvard for a while; and the ' Poon, in an editorial, said that his publicity truck rolled through the Square raucously playing a hit, though censored tune. Now, way down in a log hut With a funny crooked nose There lived a funny little old man And we called him old Man Mose. Oh, Old Man Mose, he kicked the bucket Yea, man, buck, buck . . . Harvard -Sullivan tension waxed and waned throughout our four years here, a smaller edition of the ubiquitous town and gown relations which, despite the inauspicious beginning, developed into a highly favorable condition by the time of our graduation. The war and consequent air-raid practices did more than a little in tying the sym- pathies of the University and the City into a common bond. Although the local liquor merchants stated Harvard men to be most partial to Scotch and rum, those who preferred the old home brew were not lacking. Doubtless, they wished at one time that they had stuck to the bottled-in-bond variety when they proved to be the first of the ' 42 bootleggers to gain prominence. WIGGLE SWORTH DISTILLERY BURSTS, FLOODING ROOMS One by one the football weekends reeled off, each one augmenting the Freshman ' s knowledge of Harvard recreational facilities. Then in late November, plans shaped up for a sally to New Haven to support an underdog Crimson eleven. The weekend was wet, the weather playing not a small part in that nor in the final score of the game. CRIMSON DOWNS STUBBORN BULLDOG 7—0 Hildegarde leads Harvest Moon at the Freshman Smoker HARLOWMEN WADE AWAY WITH BIG-THREE TITLE AS WEATHER SLOWS UP OFFENSE; FOLEY-MacDONALD PASS SCORES The Monday following this weekend was the sordid occasion for one of History l ' s hour exams; even the Crimson dubbed it a Crime. Politics came into the lime-light once more in Harvard affairs when Yardlings took avid interest in the outcome of the Georgian cafeteria walk-out. Many supported the workers, while others battled against them. All Republicans, led by ' 42-man Fred Sears, convened and took over the operation of the Georgian during the strike. HARVARD FRESHMAN CALLS REPUBLICAN VOLUNTEERS TO BREAK GEORGIAN STRIKE By this time, we had learned for good that Harvard was neither one thing nor another. It could not be pigeon-holed as many people assumed, for Harvard did not house Communists alone, nor was it the site for nothing but snobbish aristocracy. There were all kinds Of {156} 7-0 ids Of oxf French art comes to Thayer Just before the noon rush ' Reinhardt! during sophomore year people here, with all types of sentiments, a fact which reached a cres- cendo junior year when military and non-military rallies were held every week, or more often. When the Deep Pur pie falls Over sleepy garden walls And the stars begin to flicker in the sky, In the mist of a reverie You ' ll wander back to me, Breathing my name with a sigh. Debutante parties were swinging into stride, and it was many a Freshman who forced an entrance either through the front door with an invitation or through the kitchen without. Debutantes liked even lowly Freshmen, it appeared. ' $5000 AND NOT EVEN A HUSBAND, WAIL DEBS; OH, THAT ' S O.K., SAY STUDENTS GIRLS COME OUT ONLY TO LIE ON THE SHELF, FORTUNE CONCLUDES IN CURRENT ARTICLE The end of vacation found the weary Freshman staring mid-years in the face—and a Dracula face it was too. Lights glowed from win- dows from sunset to sunrise, night after night, as the Yardlings tried to envisage a three-hour exam at Harvard and how hard it might be. Pipes were the vogue not only in male institutions but elsewhere. RADCLIFFE TAKES TO PIPES AS COLLEGE AUTHORITIES KICK WELLESLEY GIRLS PUFF PIPES Harvard ' s big achievement for the month of January was the announce- ment of Felix Frankfurter ' s withdrawal from the Law School staff. FELIX FRANKFURTER PICKED FOR COURT- LIBERAL JURIST APPOINTED BY ROOSEVELT Another strike at the Georgian, and mid-years were on. Tutoring school advertisements in the Crimson and in the mails were long, loud, and frequent; and it was a rare Freshman who did not take advantage of the educational brothels in one way or another. What they didn ' t know was that the Crimson was going to advocate the outlawing of such establishments by the end of the year. When they begin, begin the Beguine Some of us disappeared silently, others not so silently, after the mid- year debacle; but on the whole the whittling away was nowhere near so tremendous as we had anticipated. Life once more settled down to what we had known before. YARDLING TO EAT GOLDFISH ALIVE TONIGHT IN $10 BET He won the bet and started a nation-wide fad for eating. With a chaser of water, some crackers, and a photographer, Lothrop Withing- ton swallowed a slithering fish in the midst of Union gapers. His rise to fame was immediate, and follow-ups in this and other colleges came in rapid succession. 23 FINNY DENIZENS SUCCUMB TO RAVENOUS HARVARD EATER This was Link Clark who shattered all previous records, but nevertheless never quite eclipsed Wellington ' s original publicity. CLARK MAY GULP FOR GOLDFISH CROWN ON NATIONAL TOUR AS CIRCUS FREAK The final record rose to 146 fish swallowed in one sitting. Phonograph - eating championships evolved out of this craze, and even girl kissing. While one Freshman kissed thirty-three Wellesley dolls in 14 minutes to claim the mythical national title, both fish-eating and girl-kissing was brought to a sudden satirical halt when two undergraduates trotted down to a local fish market and mugged some MS dead herring. At about this time, a new song was climbing into popularity. Three little fishies in an ittie-bitty poo Oh, three . . . etc. Next to bring on Freshman publicity was an innovation which has since been followed by each succeeding class. A petition to abolish Freshman class officers resulted in a wild ballot-stuffing election. FRESHMEN VOTE DOWN CLASS ELECTIONS IN REFERENDUM Levity went by the board when History 1 scholars started frantically to copy notes, take notes, borrow notes or buy notes. The course was causing more than a little anguish. SECTION MEN ASK HISTORY 1 NOTES FROM IRATE YARDLINGS We meet and the angels sing The angels sing the sweetest song I ever heard. TWO-THIRDS OF YARDLINGS TAKING HISTORY 1 USE REVIEW OR NOTES Life wasn ' t always constant misery for History 1 students even though no one planted alarm clocks behind the busts and even though Merri- man refused entry to some Crimson initiates. DOORS CHAINED AT HISTORY 1 LECTURE, DOORS THEN BROKEN and to climax the year in the course — SUNBURNED STUDENT WEARS BATHING SUIT IN FINAL EXAM Bringing an easy laugh such as is heard at a corny joke in the midst of a nerve-tingling movie thriller, Max D. Gaebler sauntered into Memorial Hall in deshabille to take the exam. He passed it, which is more than some of us did. After optimistically filing study cards at the Dean ' s Office, we then had to try gaining admittance to a House. Interview followed on the heels of interview. There was slightly more hope this year since the new policy of associate members to Houses had recently been adopted. Soon after word of admission or rejection had been received, the annual Smoker was staged before a slightly inebriated throng of Freshman, the first time it had been held in San- ders Theatre. THOUSANDS THRONG SANDERS THEATRE AT ANNUAL SMOKER FRESHMEN HAVE WILD TIME AS EVERYTHING FROM FREE GUM TO SWING IS OFFERED AMMONS, ELDRIDGE, HASSETT, HILDEGARDE, HILL, AND MANY OTHERS SHOW LATEST STYLES The riot that had been so highly anticipated proved to be a squabble with M. I. T., and actually the Smoker ended in a blaze of respect- able glory, few of the undergraduates ever realizing the trouble that George Kuhn and his committee experienced in putting it together. It was the first year that a telephone bill in excess of one hundred dollars had been amassed for such an affair. It was the first year too that the Lampoon president was expe cted to be introduced in a coffin. Colonel Apted put a stop to that angle, however, although he hadn ' t been able to stop Ned Read ' s previous exhibition — that of winning the Wellesley hoop race. Junior year isolationism Senior year militarism, as ' 42 registers for the draft {158 i°ke in the mid st a ssed it, which is S Heads « M « to a Houx. wis slightly more m l«s to Houses ion ot rejection WO | ;!;.... U held in Sin ' . ST STYLES to be a squabble blaze of respea- ; the trouble that i of one hundred the tirsi year too duced in a cofia. tat of winning the CRIMSON INAUGURATES CAMPAIGN TO ELIMINATE TUTORING SCHOOLS AS AN ORGANIZED VICE RACKET VIOLATING UNIVERSITY RULINGS AND ETHICS UNIVERSITY ACTS TO RESTRICT TUTORING This was the last spring that this son of tutoring was in evidence. Front-page headlines, long feature stories, and general blasting of the entire set-up put the tutoring schools in the direct line of university fire. The next fall, when students returned, there was but one tutoring school left in the Square, and that was running under a new name. IGOR STRAW IN SKY GETS POSITION AS NORTON PROFESSOR Hicks out, Strawinsky in. It wasn ' t easy to think seriously of finals when the Smoker had stirred up such a feeling of joviality and convivial college life. Cries of Reinhardt resounded from one ugly Yard building to another, and the Jubilee coming up made exams seem a long way off. FRESHMEN EXPECT MORE THAN 250 GUESTS HERE TONIGHT FOR ANNUAL DANCE IN MEMORIAL HALL LUNCEFORD PLAYS Decorated by indirect lighting and so much paper that Donald Nelson would step in if it happened nowadays, Memorial Hall assumed a far different aspect from what it customarily exhibits. It was hard to believe that the next time one would be inside those mildewed walls would not be of his own volition. By the grace of God and some native intelligence, we struggled through and went our ways for the summer, just as we had arrived, singing. This time, though, we may have been a little punch-drunk from being exposed an entire year to such an institution of higher learning, for what we sang hardly sounded like what we might have learned in lectures. Well, all right— A dig, dig, dig, Well, all right— A chop, chop, chop Well, all right A hoy, hoy, hoy Well, all right, well, all right, Well, all right! During the summer, world events were taking place at a furious pace. It appeared that no Munich could save Europe from an all-embracing war, but when the day finally did arrive, it was with more than a modi- cum of surprise that we accepted another world war as a fact. It was just three short weeks before the opening of college and eclipsed our previous emphasis on returning to Harvard as upperclassmen this time. The war was most predominant in our minds. Around Septem- ber 20, we started trickling into Cambridge, some to live in Houses, some others with boarding house contracts, others living at home or in a dormitory. Some didn ' t come back at all. Harvard had gnawed away at our class during the summer. Summer, Yon old Indian summer, You ' re the ghost that comes after Springtime s laughter; You ' re the ghost of a romance in June Going astray Fading too soon That ' s why I say — Farewell, to you Indian summer. It was more fun coming to Cambridge the second year. We weren ' t strangers to the environs, and we felt so far superior to the lowly Freshman that life at Harvard assumed a rosy glow. Even the war, once it was underway, didn ' t bother us much. At that time, we ail hoped and expected to keep out of this one. It seemed a long way off and totally divorced from us. POLL SHOWS THAT % OF UNDER- GRADUATES SUPPORT ISOLATIONISM People all over the country were not seriously upset by the war. There were no catch-phrases that took the public ' s fancy, no panegyrics to the doughboy. ELLIOTT ALLOWS LITTLE HOPE OF PEACH FOR EUROPEANS IN IMMEDIATE FUTURE CLAIMS THERE IS NOT MUCH DANGER OF U. S. ENTRANCE INTO WAR Despite this popular belief, undergraduates who felt most sttongly about the possibility of American intervention began to join ranks as tOOfl as registration had been completed. STUDENTS ORGANIZE FOR POWERFUL PEACE DRIVE Quite close to 1942 was the European conflict when John Crane-Baker announced his intention of joining the French foreign legion. War comes to Harvard on Dectmhtr 7, 1941 U r SOPHOMORE WILL BATTLE IN MAGINOT LINE WITH LEGION Following in his footsteps a year later, Wendell Lloyd Nichols signed up with the British Army in June, 1941. In the lighter vein, Boston flowered with an uninterrupted series of smash musical shows, probably the best of which was Too Many Girls. Songs from the show about Pottowattomie College, far different from anything Harvard had ever seen, were popular for more than a few months. J didn ' t know what time it was, Then I met you; Oh, what a lovely time it was, How sublime it was too. The joke about the Harvard man who was killed in a Worcester theatre when he reached for an usherette and fell over the balcony, drew a tremendous roar from the Crimson-packed Shubert every night for a couple of weeks. It may have been this gag that started a new campaign in Harvard circles before the football season had progressed very far. DRUM MAJORETTES FOR BAND WILL BE JUDGED BY CRIMSON The plan was burst decisively, however, when some girl, having sufficiently fired her esprit de vie by artificial means, tried to dash onto the gridiron and lead the band under the goal posts. She was forcibly evicted by a corps of Cambridge bluecoats. With Hicks out of the picture this year, the tinge of Harvard pink seemed fainter than ever until early in November. GREENE REFUSES MEETING FOR EARL BROWDER IN YARD JOHN REED SOCIETY PREVENTED FROM SPONSORING LECTURE BY COMMUNIST LEADER Going into the Yale game a high favorite on all bookie charts, the Crimson football team appeared to have the big-three championship sewed up. Cocktail parties were the scenes for celebration even before the game. That Yale team was lousy. Then it rained. Yale scored first and from then on it was a rout. WE JUST DIDN ' T CLICK, MacDONALD STATES AFTER YALE TAKES UPSET, 20—7 The football season was over. November hours were over, not that we worried much about them this year; we weren ' t frightened Fresh- men any more. The war too seemed to be as good as over, for it had settled down to its stagnant winter of waiting and watching. Life didn ' t seem very exciting at that time. She had to go and lose it at the Astor She didn ' t take her mother ' s good advice Now there aren ' t so many girls today who have one And she wouldn ' t have let it go for any price. It turned out to be a year of novelty songs, each one getting its share of the limelight in the Harvard circuit. Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh, What makes me love you so; You ' re not handsome it ' s true But when I look at you It ' s just — Oh, Johnny, Oh Johnny, 0-0-0-0-0-0h! Though Harvard may be averse to its Cambridge female neighbors, the reverse proved far from true when a poll showed Harvard men to be most popular by a wide majority. Some of the boys, however, were feeling rather quizzical as to whether they would be able to keep up a front with Radcliffe dates any longer. LIQUOR NOT TO BE SOLD TO MINORS ON HARVARD SQUARE McBride ' s was in possession of a list of every member of the under- graduate body who had not passed his twenty-first birthday. It was worth most sophomores ' entire bull ability to get a beer near the college. This was only a temporary measure and was soon relaxed. I want the waiter With the water I want the waiter with the water for my daughter Don ' t want the butcher, The baker, The candlestick maker I want the waiter with the water on the tray. New Harvard Cyclotron is most valuable scientific addition in four years f Harvard, ID 1ST LEADER booiue duns, the hree championship braooneveabefote a it rained. Yjfc X 2H were over, aot that t frightened Fresh- I as o ver, fot it had nd watching, life U N it. c its share e female neighbors. ved Harvard men to the boys, how f ft odd be able to to TO 1ARE ,berofihe and«- l:J„Im It  . bed ' ■' ■:■,d was soon relaiw- fcW- Willkie campaigns in Harvard Square during Presidential elections Christmas vacation gave that little ditty a chance to wear itself almost into oblivion although some stooges were still humming the thing in and out of classes almost throughout exam time. ELEPHANTS FACE CRISIS AS BUILDING IS DISCOVERED TO BE SINKING INTO SWAMP It was at this time, just before, during, and for months after exam period that Gone with the Wind enveloped almost every city in or near Boston. Some of us went to see it two or three times (Lord knows why); some of us avoided it. While Vivien Leigh was the subject of a bad pun, Joe Lyford was snooping around Phillips Brooks House and turned up with a Bund group which had been holding meetings there for several weeks. Later the F. B. I. took over. DIES INVESTIGATOR ACTING IN YANKEE-AMERICAN ACTION On Valentine ' s Day, it started to snow in Cambridge. It started to snow everywhere. All evening it kept falling. Undaunted, several of us went to parties, to the movies, and even to a dance at Radcliffe. By midnight, we were decisively snowed in. Undergraduates skied on the Square and answered the taxi telephone, erroneously informing frantic callers that we ' ll send a cab right over for you— oh yes! Obviously, no taxis could move. The next day men, just returned from a snow-bound party, went to labs and classes in tails. It was the biggest blizzard in twenty years, and the snow remained, becom- ing dirtier and dirtier, for weeks on end. No one seemed to bother to clean it up. ADVOCATE TAKES FIVE MONTHLY MEMBERS; MONTHLY HEAD QUITS By dint of folding in early March, the Monthly passed on into one of Harvard ' s has-beens. Taken into Mother Advocate ' s endearing arms, Cranston Jones immediately stepped out again. {I6 r STEWART NEW HEAD OF YARD POLICE AS APTED SUCCESSOR Samuel E. Morrison ' s expedition from Portugal, sailing the route of Christopher Columbus, took five months before he returned fot duty at Harvard soon after mid-years. His achievement was eclipsed, how- ever, by the Lampoon ' s blasts at top Hollywood actors and actresses. ANN SHERIDAN SHARPSHOOTS AT LAMPY: CALLS HARVARD HUMOUR SHEET SAD RAG Only a pale copy of Captain Billy ' s Whiz-Bang, the Oomph girl termed the ' Poon. However irate many people may have been because of the Lampoon charges, Harvard ' s comic received its greatest and big- gest publicity from the stunt. Confucius say: A boy, a girl, a moon Make wedding bells Ring out in month of June Confucius said a lot more things too, things about female aviators and such, but they didn ' t get into the song. The Lampoon wasn ' t the only source of sophomoric frivolity as spring approached. A trained seal was seized by Doug Kennedy after appearing (the seal, not Kennedy) in a musical show in Boston. COPPERS UNCOVER KIDNAPPED ACTRESS IN DORM BATHTUB The seal was a female and was found in one Jess Cleveland ' s tub. Having been featured every few days on Crimson front-pages all year, Robert The Ap Orchard was headlined in a blaze of publicity for the last time. Using the House grandfather ' s clock for a roulette wheel he conducted a gambling racket soon apprehended and over- thrown. ADAMS HOUSE GAMBLING HELL RAIDED BY VIGILANTE GROUP For some time, it was a toss-up whether or not the Ap would be carted up the river. I took a trip on a train And I thought about you 1 passed a shadowy lane And I really felt blue Spring vacation over and tanned sophomores returned from north, south, or sun-lamp, Harvard settled down to more serious thoughts for a while. 1000 ATTEND PEACE RALLIES HEAR QUILL, NORMAN THOMAS MORE THAN 300 STUDENTS BACK PEACE REMINDER IN FORM OF PAPER WEIGHT TO BE SENT TO FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT The winter period of non-activity had ceased, and the Germans were marching on to victory after victory. As Norway, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium fell, the Harvard undergraduate felt more and more  K concerned with the war ' s developments. Isolationism and inter- ventionism were fast taking on high importance in the lives of students, who did have time for some la belle vie just the same. POLICE RIOT SQUAD STEMS LARGE CRIMSON TIDE IN SPRING PUTSCH The march to Radcliffe proved a failure, the rioting thousands never reaching their goal, but traffic in the Square was halted and most of Cambridge ' s armed forces were needed to quell the revolt. Six under- graduates were arrested before the evening ' s festivities were br ought to a premature close. CAMBRIDGE COURT FINES SIX SEIZED IN TUESDAY RIOT BRILL APPEALS DECISION It was in April that the Crimson network first came into being, one of the original college broadcasting stations in the country. With the technical aid of Bill Tyng, Charlie Pollak, and Dave Roberts, the first broadcast originated in Winthrop House basement quarters. It was not highly successful, and it wasn ' t until the following fall that the network really came to be an active organization. Boston Puritanism showed its head twice during this spring, once when Mickey the Dude Sullivan held up the Student Union play for some time because he deemed it immoral, and the other when Bertrand Russell was investigated prior to being offered a position on the Harvard faculty. The eminent philosopher was front-page news in all the eastern newspapers for many weeks. The previous year it was Ned Read winning the Wellesley Hoop race and being tossed violently into nearby Lake Waban. This year it was a Harvard float, complete with plump Venuses and Adonises, that upset the traditional Wellesley spring exercises. Unlike Read, however, the Harvard entry did not win. Student Union invites Maria Montez as its final gesture The last of the year ' s many novelty songs came out just as reading period drew to a close. Six lessons from Madame Lazonga And you 11 discover what practice can do You count One, two, three Use your hip and your knee It ' s bound to bring out The Latin in you. While we left the tritely hallow ' d walls of Harvard Freshman year with high hopes and an innate desire to be back the next year — as upperclassmen — sophomore year we left with a touch of seriousness about us all. The war was close to us. France was about to fall, and who knows what might happen to England. If she went, then what? No one knew. CONANT SPEECH TODAY TO URGE U. S. AID TO ALLIES WAR CASTS SHADOW ON CLASS DAY PROGRAM NON-INTERVENTION AND PREPAREDNESS MEETINGS The new scholastic year saw the war playing an increasingly more integral part in the life of Harvard undergraduates. The Student Graduate Record Exams test four years of academic struggle ■{162} Freshmm year « next year— as i of seriousness taut to fall, and ' «it, then  k? rainglp mote Hie Student Air-raid siren dominates the Harvard scene as blackouts and war come to Cambridge in ' 42 ' s last year jijwa Council established war libraries in the Houses, and various pressure groups were molded. The Student Defense League, the Harvard Committee against Military Intervention, the Pacifist Society, Union Now, and the Harvard Committee for Relief to Small Democracies were just some of the rapidly-appearing groups. AMERICAN STUDENT DEFENSE LEAGUE TO ORGANIZE MILITARY DRILL HERE Some students were becoming highly aroused by the development of the war and began talking of enlisting in foreign armies. CONANT URGES STUDENTS TO CONTINUE STUDIES IN FACE OF WORLD CRISIS Despite his stand on education, however, the President was not reticent regarding his pro-Ally sympathies and his belief that it was to the advantage of the U. S. to enter the war as soon as possible. He favored the draft law, and in November received an undergraduate petition. STUDENT PETITION PRESENTED TO CONANT REPUDIATING HIS INTERVENTION POLICIES Only a week later, undergraduates with similar sympathies picketed the Militant Aid Rally and staged rather frequent gatherings in the Yard. The war wasn ' t the sole cause of Harvard solemnity with the start of junior year. Tin- presidential campaign caused various political groups to come into being, from the strongly-supported Willkie group with offices on Plympton Street to a frantic Babson Club with avid, though sparse supporters. Both Roosevelt and Willkie came to Boston on their campaign tours, Willkie ' s speech in Harvard Square drawing almost the entire undergraduate body out to hear him. From the blat- ant Republican sympathies at Harvard, one would never have guessed that the Hoosier candidate didn ' t have a chance. Not only were there numerous foreign relations organizations and political groups springing up all over Harvard, but a brand new club of an informal nature, broke into the open early in the year. Harvard was building its sole addition to the Yard and the only major new edi- fice in the University during our entire four years. EXCAVATION BEGINS FOR NEW LIBRARY NEAR WIDENER TO HOUSE TREASURE ROOM VOLUMES It wasn ' t long before a seven-foot fence was thrown up around the hole that was to be three stories deep in the ground, and undergraduates stormed violently against this infringement on their rights. Win- dows were consequently cut in the fence, one student prankster hold- ing a large plank in place while the workman sawed and sawed from the other side, never comprehending why his meagre job was drag- ging on so long. The lampoon came out with an explanation for the whole affair, saying that the hole was going to be used by Conant to throw his old razor blades into. All year, while work was progressing Latest addition to the Yard houses Harvard ' s rare books on the Houghton Library, students stood at the fence peep-holes and stared deep into the ground. Known as the Sidewalk Superintendents ' Society, this club had a very flexible membership policy. An hour ' s watching at one standing qualified any undergraduate to be a member with or without whistling the popular tune of the day. In a little honky-tonky village in Texas There ' s a man who plays the best piano by far He can play piano the way that you like it But the way he likes it best is eight to the bar And when he jams with the bass and guitar They all holler Beat me Daddy eight to the bar ' ' It was our junior year that saw much excitement in the football pic- ture. YALE WILL SHUN STEAM-ROLLER GRIDIRON MACHINE; TO ABANDON BIG-TIME FOOTBALL The Crimson blasted forth with charges against Cornell subsidized football, charges which Cornell promptly denied. But the biggest news in the Harvard gridiron horizon was the game at Pennsylvania, when a decided underdog Crimson eleven outfought and tied the powerful Philadelphia team. If the referee had not flubbed a decision, the chances were good that Harvard might even have emerged the winner. CRIMSON EXONERATES FR IE SELL OF CRUCIAL PENN GAME BLUNDER While the 10 — 10 tie might have been a 14 — 10 victory, the Harvard showing that warm Saturday afternoon was enough to dampen many a Pennsylvanian ' s spirits. Later in the fall, Penn students voted the Harvard game the biggest upset of the year. Down by the — hio I ' ve got the cutest little — my — This song may seem to have a connection with Malcolm McNair ' s Dunster House stunt, though it ' s too far-fetched to swallow. DRIPPING FUNSTER DUNKS DUNSTER, DEFIES DRAIN Standing on the shower drain for a good part of an hour, McNair flooded not only the bathroom but his entire living room as well. It was all just a gag, he afterward maintained. Also just a gag ac- cording to most critics was Professor Sorokin ' s novel theory for the ideal college. SOROKIN PLANS TEMPTATIONS FOR IDEAL ENTRANCE EXAM Wanting to line the Yard with luscious harlots and platters filled with an epicurean ' s pipe-dream, Sorokin thought that an entering student should be required to resist both food and frolic for three days. In that way, a college would get only the best men, accord- ing to the Professor, who received repercussions from his theory all the rest of the year. Even Click magazine took him for a ride. The Harvard student didn ' t appear in such an unfavorable light when the Yale game resulted in a beautiful 28 — smearing to wind up a much more successful season than expected. Even Charlie Spreyer ' s amnesia in the beginning of the game didn ' t halt the surge of victory once it was unleashed. Last gag to hit the papers before Christmas vacation was Adams House ' s strike against hubbard squash. FED-UP JUNIORS INITIATE SQUASH MUST GO PETITION But a few days later: ADAMS WRITHES AS SQUASH APPEARS IN ANNUAL DINNER Henry M. Smith and Robinson Murray gathered sympathetic cohorts to their ranks by the dozens, but hubbard squash still found its way into the House meals. No petition could abolish it, and frustrated, the petitioners gave up the attempt. Snooperman put in his initial bid for fame by reversing 5500 books in the Winthrop House Library as soon as vacation had come to a close. House libraries left lights on all night, and kept constant vigil against the attacks of the mys- terious stranger. MYSTERIOUS SNOOPERMAN CAUGHT RED-HANDED ran a headline in the Crimson over a picture of Joe Lyford, Lowell House white-haired boy, as he handled books in the library. The revelation was hardly taken seriously, however, and the real snooperman, David B. Mayer, ' 42, was never once apprehended. Probably the best stunt in our four years in Cambridge, the snooperman trick worked wonders in alleviating the semi-annual examination stress and strain. What ' s the tune they like the best When the jive becomes deluxe? What ' s the Number 1 request? 720 in the books. But Harvard was not all frivolity. The war was far from forgotten. HANFORD REVEALS 3 NEW ACADEMIC RECORDS— COLLEGE ACTING DEAN TELLS HOW STUDENTS LOST INDIFFERENCE 164 ■V::; 1 164 Far from causing a live-for-the-present attitude, the seriousness of the world situation brought on a corresponding solemnity in the under- graduates. CHASE REPORT CITES CHANGES IN ATTITUDE ON WAR, REPORTS MORE SERIOUS OUTLOOK ON STUDIES Conant ' s increasing interventionism caused every kind of student reaction. When he went to England as a government representative, many supported his interest in world affairs, others criticized his meddling outside the university. As the winter term progressed, more and more interventionism appeared on the Harvard scene. The Crimson had a knock-down battle over its new policy which was slowly turning toward war. STUDENTS FAVOR MORE AID TO ENGLAND; WAR HELD INEVITABLE It was right after mid-years that the Square lost one of its most color- ful and renowned characters. MAX KEEZER, UNDERGRADUATES ' FRIEND IN NEED, DIES AT 73 The parietal rules, long a sore point in House living, were at this time undergoing thorough investigat on by the Student Council, which later on in the month came out with a report favoring major revision of the system. It was largely due to the Council ' s efforts that the following fall inaugurated a new, Oxford-card system of signing in and out rather than the previous red-tape method of obtaining per- mission a day in advance. Women entered the Houses by the score after this new ruling, now that Harvard undergraduates were freer to entertain. Do I worry Cause you ' re stepping out Do I worry Cause you got me in doubt 8 ENGINES CALLED TO ELIOT HOUSE; 200 STUDENTS SEE BLAZE Not long after this calamity in the Merriman strong-hold, the House master himself announced his intention of dropping History 1. This itself was a calamity for the History department and a shock to all the undergraduates who had remembered how Frisky was the mainstay round Harvard ' s toughest course. Let ' s take a trip in a trailer — No need to come back at all Let ' s take a kyak to Quincy or Nyack Let ' s get away from it all. NETWORK TO PUT FRISKYS LAST LECTURE ON THE AIR This was one major event at Harvard that did not affect our class directly. English A was made a credit-counting course the year after we had been forced to take it. A new system of seating at football games by Houses rather than by classes was initiated the beginning of our senior year. And it was our junior year that was the last time seniors were not forced to take final examinations. Probably every undergraduate at one time or another figures that his class has been given a raw deal. NEW FACULTY REGULATIONS LIMIT COURSE REDUCTIONS AND COMPEL NON- HONOR SENIORS TO TAKE FINAL EXAMS «65 Though the man ' s dead. Somewhere I read Shakespeare once said, You folks can have the men who make laws Give me the music makers. Serge Koussevitsky of the Boston Symphony orchestra was conduct- ing the Harvard Glee Club once more this year for its annual Symphony Hall concert. SERGE KOUSSEVITSKY SAYS HARVARD- RADCLIFFE CHORUS IS FINEST IN WORLD The encomium was inspired by the choristers ' marvelous work with the Bach B Minor Mass, not by their spontaneous enthusiasm over the latest musical absurdity. Hut-sut rawlson on the rillera And a brawla brawla suet Hut-sut rawlson on the rillera And a braw — la suet. And twenty-five years from now When you were Freshmen we exposed you to our coaches and our equipment. We required you to exercise three days a week. We taught 69 of you to swim, and some of you were sure you never would pass that test. We gave six weeks of corrective exercise to more than a hundred of you, and many of you felt it worth while to come back for six weeks more. And I hope we taught you how to play some games which you will continue to play after you have been graduated. Many of you discovered that you had some athletic aptitude, and surprised yourselves by making some of our teams. For you who could not make the teams the House athletic program was a natural. Not only is there good com- petition among the Houses, but, fortunately, Yale has the same type of program among its colleges, and this affords many students a chance to compete against Yale. The war will change our program. We plan to shift the emphasis from recreation to conditioning and toughening. We cannot have athletics as usual, although we shall strive to retain the best features of our athletic program. Perhaps you have discovered that you have been able to take advantage of only a small portion of all that Harvard had to offer. This was true of our athletic program, but I hope that during these four years you have learned the value of exercise, the joy of athletic struggle, and the spirit of camaraderie. WILLIAM J. BINGHAM, Director of Athletics and Physical Education. Athletics { 166 } {[ } ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION William J. Bingham Director of Athletics and Physical Education Adolph W. Samborski Director of Intramural Athletics 168 Thomas D. Bolles Crew Earl M. Broun Jr. Basketball John Chase Hockey Richard C. Harlow Football World War II has wreaked havoc among Harvard athletes and coaches, and has made necessary two drastic revisions in H. A. A. policy; the organization of a compulsory athletic program, and the admission of Freshmen to varsity squads. The toughening-up plan, compulsory for all students except seniors, got under way after the April vacation and included calisthenics, obstacle races, and scrambles up the concrete tiers of the stadium. Since chances are that few Freshmen will be proficient enough to earn a place on a varsity squad, most of the coaches of Yardling teams recommended the continuance of Freshman sports. Most important of this year ' s coaching changes was the mid-season resignation of Clark Hodder, J. V. football, golf, and hockey mentor. He was replaced by John Chase, ' 28, who played for the Crimson three seasons, captaining the sex- tet his senior year. He was also leader of the 1928 Olympic team. Other men who left Harvard during the year, or just before it began, were Chief Boston, Bill Neufeld, Dick Snibbe, Nick Mellen, and Norm Blotner. Boston, Snibbe, and Blotner were drafted; Mellen joined the Navy. Neufeld was called by the Navy, together with 200 of the nation ' s outstanding coaches, to help in the physical education program. Ben Martin, former Syracuse star, and George Hanford, last year ' s varsity goalie, took over the reins in lacrosse, while Jay Hicks was appointed to succeed Chief Boston as wrestling coach. No one has been appointed to take either Mellen ' s or Neufeld ' s place, and the chances are that the posts will remain vacant. Although all intercollegiate sports were cut out during the last war, only polo has been eliminated by this one. Ponies will not be available, since they are all in service in the Military Science courses. To fulfil the requirements of the new compulsory train- ing program, the intra-mural organization has been expanded, and all coaches will remain in Cambridge during the summer, when informal contests with other colleges will be scheduled. Henry N. Lamar Football Jaakko J. Mikkola Track Floyd S. Stahl Baseball Harold S. Ulen Swimming 4169) HARVARD Captain Frannie Lee and Coach Dick Harlow discuss the Crimson hopes before the 1941 Yale game {no} R VAR[J EVELOPS BEST TEAM IN A DECADE In spite of the toughest opposition which the Crimson has faced in more than a decade, the 1941 football team piled up the impressive total of five wins, one tie, and two losses. Headed by a group of seniors who had dominated Harvard football since 1939, the eleven started poorly, then picked up, first defensively, and finally offensively, as the com- plicated system of Coach Dick Harlow was mastered. The feature of the season was the development of Harvard ' s first ail-American since Barry Wood, Chub Peabody. And Peabody was just one member of the greatest line in Harvard history, the seven rocks of Gibraltar. These seven really loved football, often scrimmaging among themselves overtime. Largest rock was Vern Miller, who publicly revealed his weight of 292 only after the Yale game. MacKinney, Miller, Peabody, Page, Pfister, Gardiner, Forte, the line reads from end to end. Don McNicol and Captain Frannie Lee starred in the backfield, which was con- siderably weakened when Charley Spreyer was drafted. Harlow invented a new formation, known as a modified T, a kind of double wing-back to make best use of McNicol ' s plunging ability. The Harlow defensive, on the other hand, was not solved all season and is best described in the words of an opposing line-man: You line up and you see your man in front of you. Signals are being called and you see him out of the corner of your eye. When the ball is snapped he ' s nowhere in sight. Pomrth Row: B. P. Vhiuhill. D. A Goldthwail, J. V. Morgan, V. Barnes, V. P. LaCroix, V. B. Parsons, V. G. Lylt, L. M. Anderson Third Imp; Richard C. Harlow, Coach I V. C. Wilson, G. A. Hihiard. R. B. Slannard, J. H. Pap, J. K. Grunig, V. Johnson, R. C. Row, C. A. ODonntll, • ' . King, Manager Smm Cmf; M. G. Summers, T. Gardiner, G. V. linden. D. Porte, P. M. Let, Captain; L. G. MacKinney, V. K. Miller, P.. Peabody, R. G. Pfister Front Row: A. T. Lyman, H. G. Vandir Eh, C. B. Ayres, D. E. McNicol • - . •T llfci £ i ' r t C - ' s - - u ; ■iiy — ' ™ MB M0 fc ■p i : L- ss « -ir I ■ijwj •; £ Ste WS iU 5 ■- t  k li ' jjinjiii ' 1 ■■■■J Harvard Stadium on a crisp fall Saturday afternoon PENNSYLVANIA 19 -HARVARD The Pennsylvania game was a dismal affair. In ninety degree heat which saw all the players shed pounds like water ( Vern Miller lost the most — fourteen of his mythical 250) , the Quakers trampled Harvard, 19 — 0. The Blue and Red wreaked havoc with the later great Harvard line. Bert Stiff crashed through center time and time again as Pennsylvania went up and down the field almost at will. Even the desperate insertion of the experienced Burgy Ayres, who had just re- recovered from an appendectomy, was not enough to stop Stiff from ripping up the center of the line. Offensively the Crimson was impotent without the services of key-man Don McNicol, signal-caller, passer, and plunger. A fourth period drive to the Pennsylvania six-yard line, sparked by a thirty- five-yard pass from Lee to MacKinney and a MacKinney end-around, was the closest Harvard could come to scoring. The off-tackle smashes of sophomore Wayne Johnson as substitute for McNicol were the only bright spots of the game. CORNELL 7 -HARVARD Not having acquired an offensive punch, Harvard was unable to overcome Cornell ' s first period touchdown, losing 7 — 0. Two end runs by Stofer and Bufalino netted the Big Red 65 yards to put them in scoring position. A pass from Stofer to Bufalino resulted in the score on the eighth play of the Cornell march. After the first quarter Cornell was never able to gain through the Harvard line, but neither could the Crimson penetrate farther than the Big Red fifteen-yard stripe. MacKinney ' s kicking was the major offensive weapon for Harvard, as the veteran left end compiled an average of 47 yards on his punts. McNicol ' s passing reached its high point for the year, with a total of seven passes out of 17 completed. Harvard ' s most dramatic bid for a touchdown came on a pass late in the fourth period when Doug Pirnie, fastest New England sprinter, easily outdistanced the surprised Cornell secondary, only to fumble when the speedy Bufalino tackled him from behind. Unfortunately, McNicol ' s pass was just a little short, and Pirnie had to break his stride to catch it. Even in defeat the Crimson line seemed to have slightly the better of the argument after the first quarter, although Lee had to come up from his safety spot to make last-ditch tackles on two occasions. L HARVARD 7 -DARTMOUTH The line first showed its true strength as Harvard broke Dartmouth ' s seven year jinx, 7 — 0. The Crimson pushed the Indians all over the field throughout the game, gaining 218 yards on the ground to 76 for the Green, while bottling up such stars as jitterbug Ted Arico and Johnny Krol. Chub Peabody and Dick Pfister led the onslaught as the line be- came impenetrable for the first time. Loren MacKinney kept the Hanover boys from unleashing any kind of attack, as his coffin-corner kicks time after time forced the Green to take the ball in the shadow of its goal posts. Frannie Lee finally made the score in the last period climaxing the game-long threats of the Crimson, and Hank Vander Eb brought his educated toe into the game for his first extra point of the season. The injury to MacKinney ' s leg late in the clash lent a lone gloomy note to the victory. ■F « ie , re v ts , ?ea bodl w c the £ a:. st extra point of late in the clash k HARVARD O-NAVY The Navy game was a real triumph. Going into the game prohibitive underdogs, Harvard played on even terms with the team hailed as the greatest in the East to gain a — tie. The Crimson made the only real offensive threat in the opening minutes of the game when it pushed to the three- yard stripe, only to be denied a score. The line-men were really rocks of Gibraltar in this game. The Annapolis boys could not make an inch through the line. Highlights were Chub Peabody ' s tackling Bill Busik so hard that he fumbled and Dick Pfister ' s catching speedster Busik from behind on an end run. Frannie Lee did most of the kicking with the injured MacKinney on the sidelines. But when the Captain received a bump on the head, Mac hobbled onto the field to make some tremendous boots which kept the Navy from get- ting out of its own territory. Lee ' s flat pass miraculously grabbed by Forte in a score against Army HARVARD 6 — PRINCETON 4 Using all its horseshoes, Harvard defeated Princeton in unplayable conditions, 6 — 4. On a field ankle-deep in mud the Crimson ' s complicated offense was unworkable, and only ten fumbles of the slippery ball by the Tigers, six recovered by Harvard, saved the game. One play worked perfectly for the Crimson when Frannie Lee went 88 yards for a touchdown off the weak side. A blocked kick which bounced out of the end zone netted Princeton its first two points. An intentional safety by MacKinney when Harvard was backed up to its two-yard line gave the Tigers its other score. Throughout the game offense was impossible as the Crimson made only four first downs, and Princeton but two. With rushing and passing the sodden ball out of the question, the game became a kicking dual, thirty-eight punts in all. The Tigers did what pressing there was, keeping Harvard in its own territory most of the game. The Army Cadets march to the Yard before the game { 176 ' Princeton P in mud e, and only recovered ttfectly for touchdown I out of the 1 up to its Hiroughout made onlv rushing and me became :rs did what tritoty most HARVARD 20 -ARMY 6 Underdogs again, Harvard trounced by 20 — 6 an Army team which had held one of Notre Dame ' s greatest teams to a scoreless tie the week before. It was all Harvard after the cadets had marched to a score in the opening minutes. As the offensive throttle was opened wide for the first time during the season, Lee, McNicol, Wilson, and Forte furnished the push for the initial six points. Lee and McNicol carried most of the way to the second score, and Johnson went over for the third tally after Lee ' s run had brought the ball within scoring distance. An offensive almost netted another touch- down in the closing minutes after jubilant fans had taken the goal-posts down and swarmed over the field. Highlight of the line-play, which was as staunch as usual both offensively and defensively, was Vern iMiller ' s broken-field running after he had intercepted a pass. McNicol finds an opening in the Brown line for a long gain Another of McNicol ' s long gains, this time off tackle against Yale HARVARD 23 - BROWN 7 Favored for the first time, Harvard trounced Skip Stanley ' s Brown team, 23 — 7. Fears that Stahley, who had just left an assistant coaching job at Harvard and was well acquainted with all the Crimson players, would be able to pull something out of the bag were dissipated when the line turned on its power to crush the inexperienced Bruin forwards. Harvard completely dominated the play, gaining 359 yards to Brown ' s 52. MacKinney tallied on an end-around, Vander Eb kicked a field goal, and Summers and McNicol scored touch- downs on short plunges to build up the Crimson total of 23. Swingler galloped 87 yards on a kick-off return to make Brown ' s lone score. In this game Peabody clinched his Ail-American title, playing outstanding football throughout the game, climaxed by an impossible play on which he tackled punt receiver Savage and at the same time wrestled the ball away from him. Lee to Forte for the second touchdown against Yale — and the seasons outstanding thrill All- American Chub Peabody, first for Harvard in nine years HARVARD 14 -YALE After an almost disastrous first quarter, Harvard took the play away from Yale to climax the season with a 14 — triumph over the Elis. The first period was a nightmare as the underdog Blue quickly drove deep into Crimson territory, clicking both on the ground and in the air. Yale actually did cross the Harvard goal to climax this march, only to have its touchdown called back because of a back in motion. After this threat, Harvard could not be stopped and rolled 80 yards to score. McNicol ' s runs on the now famous — 1 strong side play brought the Crimson its first score. A miraculous catch by Forte of Lee ' s running pass accounted for the second touchdown. — 1 was the answer to a prayer for Harvard. Yale had overshifted its line to the weak side to stop Lee on his inside tackle plays and McNicol on his cutbacks. This made the blocking angles good for — 1, and McNicol was able to compile a total of 114 yards in seven tries with the play. Peabody was not abl e to stand out as usual because of a double charley horse suffered in practice, but still was the bulwark of the center of the line. As usual the Elis hit harder than any other team the Crimson faced all season — and Forte ' s two missing teeth stand as mute reminders of this. Of the eleven men who started the game, eight were seniors. In addition, two juniors, Don McNicol and Johnny Page, are planning on leaving school before the next football season gets under way. This leaves Coach Harlow the difficult job of completely re-building the team around Captain-elect Forte. Left to right: Harvard Managers Patterson, Putnam, Arnold, King, Place, Cummings, Campbell Left to right: Harvard Football Coaches Clarke, Boston, Brown, Harlow, McCoy, Lamar BASKETBALL For the first time in four years, Harvard seemed to have the makings of a better-than-average basketball force, as Earl M. Brown Jr., Notre Dame, ' 39, arrived from Brown University to take over where Wes Fesler left off. Facing the young coach was what might have been called a perfect setup, a group of five veteran seniors and a host of promising sophomores from the good Freshman team of the previous year. Captain Bud Finegan led the senior platoon of Ed Buckley, Joe Romano, Ed Rothschild, and Bill Webber, while Bunks Burditt, the new 1942-43 captain, led the sophomore contingent of George Dillon, Hugh Hyde, Chick Lutz, Don Lutze, Bill Snyder, Jack Torgan, and Tom Axon. Art Scully was the only junior kept on the squad by Coach Brown. To offset this apparently rosy picture was the thought of going through the toughest schedule ever attempted by a Crimson court squad. For the first time in five years, the team was to make a western trip, meeting some of the best teams in the country. In its first public showing, Coach Brown let his team run wild as it threw everything but its opponents through the basket in trouncing M. I. T., 61 — 31, which incidentally, set Coach Brown and Captain Finegan discuss prospects for the season The Marine Hymn holsters Central Baptist self-styled nickname for the Crimson squad seemed to wbdall force, ed from Brown i. ight have been 1 seniors and a Ashman team W the senior ischild, and Bill ■43 captain, led . Hugh Hyde. Jrgan, and Tom m the sqi was the thought ' attempted by a t years, the team f the best teams a new high scoring record for a Harvard team in the Indoor Athletic Building. Zee Buckley, although playing only half of the game, scored 20 points, 16 of them coming in the first half. Unfortunately, however, this victory over the Engineers from down the River and a win over Northeastern proved to be merely a flash in the pan as the team proceeded to fall before eight opponents, before hitting its season ' s brightest spot, the 49 — 36 defeat of the powerful Dartmouth Indians, five- time Eastern Intercollegiate League champs. Some court critics explained these defeats as the results of an acute case of senioritis, while others said that it was simply the impact of the new Notre Dame style of play on an entirely different system embedded in the veteran members of the team. Whatever the explanation, the Crimson quintet was distinctly a hot and cold outfit, as it proved during the season. )wn let his team ents through the incidentally, set PI Romano hooks one through, as Burditt and two Northeastern men get set for the rebound The teams that took the measure of the Crimson after the opening night victory were Brown, which won an overtime contest, and Wesleyan, which grabbed a 33 — 31 verdict. The team then whipped Northeastern 54 — 33 in its final home stand before taking the road on its Christmas vacation invasion of the Midwest. Although the trip ended in five losses in five starts for a batting average of .000, the team succeeded in making every game close and throwing a few scares into its superior op- ponents. The best game from the Harvard standpoint was the 39 — 33 loss to Illinois, a team which later became champion of the Big Ten Conference. Playing a close, defensive game, Coach Brown ' s men succeeded in working up a 17 — 11 half-time advantage, but succumbed to the taller, more ex- perienced Illini in the second half. The other teams to take the measure of the Crimson were Detroit, Bradley Tech, Notre Dame, and Michigan State. Returning from the Christmas trip, the team started its league schedule with a weekend double-header with Cornell and Dartmouth. The Crimson was hardly conceded a chance in either contest. However, Coach Brown ' s men almost beat the Big Red, 3 1 — 27, on Friday night, and they pulled the biggest Burditt pivots around Army ' s Simpson, picking up two points. Army ' s Captain White looks on {182} he Crimson after won m overtime 53 31 verdict. ' n its final home vacation invasion inf ive starts fori tat its I midpoint was the wame champion , defensive game.  g up a 17—11 ! taller, more ei- ther teams to take it, Bradley Tech. the team started eader with Cornell :onceded a chance i men almost heat iflst upset of the year out of the hat the following night when they beat Dartmouth. Bunks Burditt, who landed a position on the All-League second team at the end of the season and finished fourth in league scoring, more than proved his worth as he collected 21 points while holding his All-League opponent Jim Olsen to only one field goal and two foul shots. After this remarkable performance, the qu intet slid into a mid-season slump of five straight games, losing to Tufts, 35—33, Dartmouth, 58—36, Columbia, 56 — 44, Prince- ton, 54—52, and Cornell, 40—34. Then came another record-breaking performance, the 71 — 54 victory over Columbia in the Indoor Athletic Building. It broke the record set by the M. I. T. game and also estab- lished a new high for points scored in a league affair. As the Dartmouth upset was featured by a sophomore hitting his stride, this game also saw a sophomore, Hugh Hyde, blossom out with 15 points, a result of Brown ' s careful coaching. Although hardly playing at all before this game, six-foot-four Hyde averaged 10 points a game for the rest of the season. After dropping two more games to Army and Princeton, the team reached another high spot as it had an on night at Philadelphia. The result was a 53 — 40 victory over Penn, which had beaten Cornell and Dartmouth in its two previous games. For the first time during the season, the Crimson won two games in a row, as it returned home to beat Boston Uni- versity, 63 — 57, and garner the Greater Boston championship. Don Lutze and Chick Lutz, two sophomore stalwarts were declared ineligible to play in this game and in the remaining games because of marks. This brought to three the total of men lost during the season from the original starting lineup which faced M. I. T. in December. The other casualty was Joe Romano, who seriously injured his knee in the first Dart- mouth game and was forced out of action for the rest of the season. Harvard ' s first victory over Yale since 1938 came in the next contest as the Elis were swamped 60 — 47, Buckley and Hyde sharing honors with 14 points apiece. But after trimming Penn for the second time, the team ended its up and down season on a down beat as it succumbed to the Blue, 37 — 34, in a roughly contested encounter at New Haven. By virtue of its late-season surge, it wound up in a tie for fourth place in the league with five wins and seven losses, best since the 1937-38 team, which reached second place. The complete season record was eight wins against 16 defeats. I Burditt on a tip in the record breaking 71-54 Columbia game A scramble in the opening game of the season, Captain Finegan in the foreground Sophomore Don Lutze lets a one-hander go agai Army, Burditt watches HOCKEY In winning 10 of its 19 scheduled games the vatsity hockey team not only turned in a far better performance than that of a year ago, but also left the foundations for still better records in the future. Only two seniors started consistently, but seven mem- bers of the Class of 1942 received their major H ' s for skating. William F. Haneman managed the team until his departure into the service, when he was succeeded by Frederick Pope Jr. Gordon McGrath was the team ' s offensive sparkplug and high scorer. First on the wing and later at center, he was a constant threat to the opposing goalie with his clever stick handling, hard shot, and natural offensive ability. At the sea- son ' s end he ranked sixth in Pentagonal League scoring. Captain Greely Summers, the other regular senior starter, produced a steady game at defense, improving as the season progressed. He was the best bodychecker on the team and in his last few games played way over his head, closing his career with a blaze of glory in the final Yale game. Veteran goalie Ab Fenn had to prove himself worthy of a starting position, and in the middle of the season he did so in a most convincing manner. Against Dartmouth and in the second Yale game his work in the nets was sensational, and between these two peaks his showing was more than adequate. Coach Ch ase goes to the boards in a tense moment Johnny Paine comes from behind the Army net George Dreher rushes the puck down the ice {184} After the last game Fenn was awarded the John Tudor Memorial Cup, presented each year to the player who is of the greatest value to Harvard hockey, not so much because of his ability but because of his heart. The Angier Trophy, for the most improvement, went to Chuck Griffith, second string defenseman. Until this year Griffith had played only House hockey, but his constant scrap and eagerness made him a most valuable player. Other seniors to see action in varsity games were George Dreher, defenseman; Demi Lloyd, forward; and Jock Elliott, utility man. The junior varsity, as usual, functioned on a highly informal basis, but in its one excuse for being, the Yale game, it showed up well, holding the more experienced Elis to a 6 — 4 verdict. Elliott, Burg y Ayres, and Bill LaCroix formed the jayvees ' backbone. The season started auspiciously under Coach Clark Hodder when on December 6 the varsity defeated St. Nicks, 5 — 3- The Crimson spotted the former National A. A. U. champs a 3 — lead, then tied the score just before the end of regulation time, and scored twice more in the overtime. At this time it was obvious that Harvard had plenty of good forwards, but the defense seemed a little shaky, and this held throughout most of the season. A week later Dartmouth did the unexpected by handing out a 4 — 3 defeat. The Indians were on ice for only the third time that year, but in spite of this lack of practice they man- aged to capitalize on the breaks. Before the holidays the team evened counts left over from the preceding year by disposing of Boston University, 5 — 1, and Northeastern, 5 — 4. At Lake Placid the Varsity bowed to Princeton in the Third Row. C. T. Cowen, J. Elliott, A. P. Everts, M. Beebe, C. Loring Second Row: J. P. Chase, Coach; E. D. Acker, G. H. Hackett, G. C. Gebtlein, G. R. Harding, J. C. Burton, D. Lloyd, F. Pope, Manager Front Ron-. G. O ' Neill, G. R. McGrath, J. A. Paine, M. G. Summers, Captain; G. R. Dreher, C. A. Griffith, A. T. Fenn [ } { « Gorcly McGrath in front of the net tries for a goal against Army. George Gebelein comes out from behind annual social series. The Tigers took the first game, 6 — 2, and the last, 3 — 2, but in between the Crimson inserted a 2 — 1 victory of its own. Back at college, the varsity administered a 7 — 1 trounc- ing to Williams and then moved up to Hanover, where, in sub- zero weather, the Indians won, 5 — 4. After two bad periods the Crimson thawed out and completely dominated the play in the third, but by then it was too late. During midyears the coaching system underwent dras- tic revision as Clark H odder, who had coached the team for four years, resigned under fire because of the disastrous conse- quences of a training break at Lake Placid. With him went his assistant, Fred Maloon. For the difficult task of filling the breach, Bill Bingham called on John Chase, ' 28, former Harvard and Olympic captain. He and Skeeter Canterbury guided the team through the rest of its season, an arduous task which they performed to everybody ' s satisfaction. The Chase regime opened successfully when the Crim- son trounced a weak Army team, 6 — 2, on the Cadets ' vast rink. The following Wednesday, February 11, St. Nicks turned the tables and came from behind to chalk up a 6 — 4 victory. Hard luck still dogged the team when at Princeton the Tiger captain, Dan Stuckey, scored all his team ' s goals un- McGrath and Loring maneuver for a score against Dartmouth {186} J i r r- £ 30U . Af rr Ztofe shoots for a goal against Yale ■■■■■■■■■■••£ = ■■■■■■■■■« •• ::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::: :um ; :::::::: ■■■(•ill iiiSHBl 1 11 SI - V : :::::! HT— 1:::::: assisted, two of them in the final two minutes of play, to break up a previously closely contested game and give Princeton a 4 — 2 win. In its worst game of the year, the varsity then barely sneaked by B. U., 3 — 2. Dartmouth ' s championship team next inflicted a 9 — 5 trouncing, during which Fenn had his baptism of fire and the Crimson showed that it could at times play inspired hockey. The following Monday Harvard edged Army, 3 — 2, in a sloppy game. The first Yale game, played February 28 at the Arena, was a heartbreaker. Throughout the evening the Crimson had command of the situation, but the Eli goaler, Cord Meyer, thwarted Harvard scoring bids time and again. In the third period Yale ' s fast breaks down the ice resulted in a 4 — 2 victory for the Blue. Against Princeton the following Wednesday, the team played its best hockey of the year, and the Tigers were slaught- ered, 5 — 2. Princeton scored first and last, but between these two tallies the Crimson placed five of its own in a very heart- ening display of power. Yale won the final game at New Haven, 4—3, but the Elis were a far different team from before, and it was only Fenn ' s magnificent goal tending which held the score down. The team finished fourth in the Pentagonal League standings with a record of three wins and five losses. Harvard ' s three top scorers— Gebeltin, Paine, and McGrath SWIMMING Captain Shrewbury, Coach Ulen, and Captain-elect Drucker confer with a spectator Although the war started off the season by diverting Captain Dick Harris and backstroker Allen Mathis from the water to the Business School, the depleted swimming team chalked up seven wins to five losses for the 1941-42 season. But it was unfortunately unique in being the first Ulen- coached squad to lose more than three meets or to yield to Dartmouth. Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth topped it in the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League, still leaving it a fourth place ahead of Navy, Columbia, and Pennsylvania. The Crimson mermen compiled a 75 per cent average in the first four contests of the season. They were ducked by the narrow margin of 32 to 34 by a bunch of prominent alumni, including several from the outstanding teams of recent years. As a parting splash before Christmas vacation, they left M. I. T. on the short end of a 52 — 23 tally. Between Christmas stockings and Midyear sockings, their floating power won them a 68 — 7 shut-out over Greenwood Memorial, and effectively cut short the hopes of Brown swimmers who looked for an upset, but could only account for 22 points against 53 for Harvard. But to the northward, Ezra Wheelock ' s bullfrogs pre- sented a more imposing obstacle when the boys left blue books and headed for Dartmouth. The first events did not Second Row: Hal S. Ulen, Coach; D. Curwen, J. D. Eusden, W. L. Downing, H. T. McMeekin, Manager Front Row: W. B. Patterson, R. T. Sceery, W. R. Drucker, T. B. Shrewsbury, Captain; D. F. Barnes, G. A. Ball, H. S. McCutcheon {188} I It IB indicate a break in Harvard ' s traditional string of wins against the Green. Not until the final medley relay was the deadlock finally broken. The breaststroke leg, previously weak, at last collapsed, giving a 36 — 39 win to Dartmouth. This was the first for the Hanoverian swimmers at the expense of the Crimson in many moons. The next week the Ulenmen took it out on a graduation-riddled Navy fleet, sinking it by a 52 — 23 margin. Then trips to West Point and the City of Brotherly Love saw old man average split a double-header. Pennsylvania could not keep the Crimson from swimming away with a 45 — 30 victory, but Army turned the tables, 34 — 41. Once again, as at Dartmouth, the medley was the failing event. Steady improvement in all events as experience and skill piled up through the winter could not match the power of the Tiger team, which sent Harvard down to Davy J ones to the tune of 53 — 22. But, sharpened up by stiff competition, the Crimson rose from the depths and took Providence Boys ' Club and Columbia by respectable scores in home waters. A disappointing but hardly unexpected climax to the season was the Yale meet. As universally acclaimed as Chub Pea- body on the gridiron last fall, the Eli swimmers were hailed McCutcheon in a back jack-knife off the high board The team rests comfortably before the Princeton meet { ) by the coach of Michigan ' s consistently good teams as undoubtedly the greatest aggregation yet assembled. So the Ulenmen considered themselves lucky when Johnny Eusden defeated Johnson in the 50-yard free style, contribut- ing to the small end of a 20 — 55 count. Three weaknesses became evident in the 1941-42 Harvard swimming team; depth, balance, and experience. Good breaststrokers were scarcest, and it wasn ' t until near the end of the season, when distance man Darcy Curwen was shifted to the job, that Hal Ulen got the balance he wanted. Several earlier meets might have been rescued by strength in this division, especially against Dartmouth and Princeton. Of many promising sophomores on the squad, experience might develop Eusden, Myrer, and Stocker into a freestyle and backstroke combination which would be hard to beat. The Class of ' 42 had only three permanent letter spots on the team. When Captain Dick Harris turned his energies from Coach Ulen to Dean Donham across the river at mid- years, George Ball, Walter Downing, and Bob Sceery were left to uphold the seniors ' share. Tom Shrewsbury, who was elected to replace Harris, is officially in the Class of ' 41. Most strength in this season ' s team was recruited from the ranks of juniors and sophomores. Junior power came from versatile Bus Curwen, backstroker Bill Drucker, breaststroker Sandy Houston, freestyler Frank Tiny Gor- man, and Shaw McCutcheon and Brad Patterson, old stand-bys Captain Shrewsbury climbs out after one of Hal Ulen ' s easy workouts They ' re off to a flying start { 190 } Pod teams as ■ssembled. So wll «i Johnny tyk, contribut. n the 194142 ■nd experience. ' sn ' t until neat Darcy Curwen wcehe I by sttf and md, experience into a freestyle e hard to beat, tent letter spots ted his energies he rivet at mid- Sceery were left ibury, who was lass of ' 41. (i was recruited . Junior power er Bill Drucker. ik Tiny Gor- in, old stand-bys on the spring boards. John Eusden, Dave Barnes, and George Christman were the outstanding sophomores. Eusden turned out to be the most brilliant swimmer on the team, — often a double winner in sprint events. He finished well up in the Eastern League and was the winner of the Wyman Trophy, presented to the Harvard swimmer scoring the highest num- ber of points in the regular season. Several members of the varsity rounded out the year ' s swimming activity by trying their luck at the Eastern Inter- collegiates Championships at New Haven, and the National Intercollegiates in the Indoor Athletic Building. Attracting athletes from all over the nation to compete for the coveted titles in Harvard ' s pool, the Nationals was the big event of the collegiate swimming season. Competition was a little too tough for the Crimson to make a concrete showing in the final results. Under the newly revised rules about awarding letters, the number of major H ' s given out this year was much larger than usual. The Athletic Association no longer restricts the sweater award only to men placing in the Yale meet. Nine men won the capital H; Christman, Myrer, and Stocker won their minor ones. And, ah yes! The annual Water Carnival at mid-season took the edge off too-serious competition with local champion- ship tilts, — but the real attraction, executing a dazzling water ballet, was a flotilla of Wellesley aquabelles! Split second timing is essential in relays and starts Barnes and Scetry finish the lap Captain-elect Drucker in a driving backstroke start i w } 1 BASEBALL The Freshman baseball team, 1942 edition, piled up what was the most impressive Yardling record in recent years with its 16 wins as opposed to three defeats, and it developed players who were to be the mainstay of Crimson teams for three years to come. Among these, Burgy Ayres, Lou Clay, Zee Buckley, Bill Parsons, and Gil Whittemore should be mentioned. At least one of the three games lost, it is now claimed, was dropped as a direct result of a highly-spirited Jubilee dance the week before. But the squad fulfilled the main pur- pose of all Freshman teams with extraordinary success; that of providing varsity coaches with trained, talented material. Given their first chance to break into the varsity line- up, the Class of 1942 as sophomores played a vital part in the machine that upset favored Yale to take the annual series at the end of the season; and six of them earned major H ' s. Captain Tom Healey ' s team was not noted for its proved players; so Coach Floyd Stahl was glad to get the crop of able second-year men to fill in the gaps. The new-comers received their first taste of big-time competition on the southern trip, and were instrumental in that junket, one of the most successful in several years, with wins over North Carolina and Navy, and a close battle with powerful Duke. pot. but [I owl I9CI pkcini becaus W.« stnigb man, mln is just formal Aim. i 1 pracnrii Captain Lou Clay and Bill Parsons talk it over Third Row: Floyd S. Stahl, Coach; P. V. Quinn, J. P. Phelan, E. S. Fitzgibbons, J. B. Wilcox, J. A. Farley, W. S. Berg, B. N. Heath, W. P. LaCroix, Manager Second Row: M. Waldstein, G. J. Callanan, E. T. Buckley, W. Barnes, L. M. Clay, Captain; J. Gleason, F. B. Harvey, W. B. Parsons, 0. W. Haussermann Front Row: A. S. Macmillan, E. T. Drake, P. F. Delahoyde Absentees: C. B. Ayres, G. F. Whittemore, A. J. Scully, F. S. Troy, G. R. Harding i 192 } A complete capitulation of the campaign, game by game, would only serve to point up a rather average season, but the victories over Yale were particularly pleasing. Al- though the nine lost the first game, 8 — 7, at New Haven, they came back to take the other two by identical scores, 4 — 3. By the start of practice in the junior year, the Class of 1942 had broken into the starting line-up with a vengeance, placing five men in regular spots. Ed Buckley, Lou Clay, who had to give up pitching because of a sore arm, and Bill Parsons monopolized the out- field, while veteran Gil Whittemore was on third for the second straight year. Bill Haussermann, who served as general utility man, was especially outstanding as a base-runner, and Burgy Ayres shared the pitching duties. As in the preceding year, a careful recounting of wins and losses would give an impression of a ball club much weaker than this one really was. As the Album goes to press, the 1942 diamond campaign is just getting under way. Except for the spring trip, an in- formal meeting with Boston University, and a game with Army, the varsity has seen no intercollegiate action. Before the snow was off the ground, the nine was practicing in Briggs Cage and was out on the field under the Coach Stahl plans the strategy with Captain Clay and Manager La Croix The squad talus it easy in the dug- out as Harvard takes its turn at hat iw Panorama of the 1941 Yale game, which the Elis won 3 — 1, making it two in a row over the Cantabs Stadium by spring vacation. The outlook was not bright at that stage and the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League publicist predicted that the Crimson would do little better than its tie for fifth in 1941. Graduation did the squad no good and Captain Fred Keyes, catcher Bob Regan, first baseman Bill Tully, and Jack Schwede were missing. Snow was the team ' s worst enemy on the spring tour to the southward. Three of the six scheduled games had to be cancelled and the varsity never did get its hands on George- town, Johns Hopkins, or George Washington. After a day ' s delay, however, the season was begun at Annapolis on April 2. There the Crimson walloped the Navy 15 — 4, amassing 16 hits while pitchers Joe Phelan and Jack Farley held the mid- shipmen to seven bingles. Hero of the game was sophomore first sacker Ned Fitzgibbons, who was credited with every- thing in the book; single, double, triple, homer, and a walk. The next day the nine met Penn at Philadelphia and added another feather to its cap. With junior Mort Wald- stein holding the Quakers to five hits, the Crimson totaled twice that number to take the ball game, 7 — 3. Fitzgibbons again starred at bat with a double and two singles, and Wald- stein also came through with a two-bagger. ' { 194 jtitshandsonGeorjtl ihingtoo. After a i« ' j t AnnapoisonA[ri-| On April 4, the 1942 varsity received its first taste of defeat. Penn caught on to Captain Lou Clay ' s hurling in the seventh inning and gained three rapid-fire runs to take the ball game, 6 — 5. Harvard thoroughly outslugged the Quakers in this match, totaling 12 base hits to Penn ' s five, but a homer by Art McQuillen of the opposition accounted for the three crucial tallies. Four of the Crimson ' s hits were for extra bases, with Bill Barnes knocking out a three-run homer and Fitzgibbons, Bart Harvey, and Gil Whittemore slamming doubles. After snow again wiped out a game, this time with Boston University on Soldiers Field, the Crimson met the Terriers in a practice contest on April 15. With novices Phelan, Garley, and Warren Berg doing the hurling, the Varsity easily swept to an 8 — 4 triumph. Largest hit of the day was Ed Buckley ' s long triple to center field, while Bart Harvey totaled two singles and displayed some fancy base running. Then on Saturday the seventeenth, the varsity played its annual game with Army at West Point, losing 12 — 9- Clay on the mound was unable to control the Cadets who accumulated four runs in one inning. The next week, Roy Talcott, Princeton hurler who had been undefeated in eight previous league starts, held the Crimson in check, while his teammates amassed eight runs to win easily, 8—4. Buckley connects in a practice session, with Delahoyde behind the h Buckley and Ayres await their turn at the plate egarnewassopws is aefol ltbe 1 ,le,homer, andi ' ! % junior Mortal ts the Crimson tco J.-j W r • ■m CREW In recent years crew has been one of the few consis- tently bright spots of Harvard athletics, and, although this article goes to press over a week before the varsity ' s first race, it looks as though the Crimson would finish the season in its usual position; if not on the top of the Eastern rowing heap, very close to it. The varsity has lost just two races since members of the Class of 1942 came to College. Both were to Cornell, in 1939 and 1940. Yale has been in a rowing eclipse for almost two college generations. The last time an Eli varsity won was back in medieval 1935, and for four straight years now Harvard has swept the Thames, winning the combination, Freshman, and junior varsity races, in addition to the main event. It would then appear that this is a weighty tradition of invincibility under which the Crimson sweepswingers must labor, but there is no indication that this year ' s squad will not be equal to the task. Coach Tom Bolles has said that he does not expect his current varsity to be as fast as the 1941 shell, but, barring accidents, it should still be good enough to defeat any other eight it meets. Emulating last spring ' s crew will be difficult, for Bolles states that that eight was the best he has coached Coaches Tom Bolles and Harvey Love, Washington ' s contributions to Harvard rowing and I m U dtf be Ml 5 -.: Hilia v: to. •,1 BUI toi :■' .: ■v - ; Third Row: Tom Bolles, Coach Second Row: D. Curwen, D. Challinor, H. H. Whitman, A. T. Lyman, Captain: J. M. Erskine, S. Andrews, J. Richardson, C. W. Jenks Front Row: J. G. Ducey { 196} The Crimson leaves Princeton and Tech behind in the 1941 Compton Cup Race .Jail { ) since first he came to Harvard, in 1937. Early season time- trials indicate, however, that Captain Ted Lyman ' s shell is not to be trifled with. On April 9 the varsity was clocked in 9:03 over the mile and three quarters, extremely satisfactory for that early in the season. Five days later the same boat did a 6:36 downstream Henley, four seconds under the course record. At this time the first race was still eleven days distant. Faster Henleys have been rowed, but not in races, and so the 6:40 mark set by the 1941 150 ' s still stands officially. The varsity lined up for these trials and will probably race in the Rowe Memorial Cup on Apr il 25 with Tommy Boynton, coxswain; Bus Curwen, stroke; Dave Challinor, 7; Hallett Whitman, 6; Captain Ted Lyman, 5; Johnny Erskine, 4; Schofield Andrews, 3; John Richardson, 2; and Pop Jenks, bow. Of these only the engine room trio of Whitman, Ly- man, and Erskine are seniors, but, except for Andrews, the rest are juniors and will probably be accelerated out of college before another spring. The stern three of Boynton, Curwen, and Challinor have worked as a unit almost continuously since coming to Cambridge. Harvey Love placed them in his 1943 boat as they are now seated, and last year as sophomores they made the big jump to the varsity. With such a stern nucleus, Bolles ' worries about pace-setting are negligible. Curwen, the third of the great C ' s (Jerry Cassedy and Spike Chacc were the other two), is about to move to the peerless class, and by this May he should be the best stroke in the country. Bolles admits he is the best he has had at i 197} Harvard, and that includes the great Chace. Equally at home, both in and on top of the water, Curwen has burned the candle at both ends successfully for three years. As a Freshman he captained both the swimming team and the crew, and for the past two winters he has swum against Yale on the varsity. The late finish of the swimming season prevents his arriving at Newell for work until the middle of March, and then it is several weeks before his hands toughen up sufficiently to make rowing a pleasure. These handicaps never seem to have bothered Curwen particularly, however. When the Fatigue Laboratory was testing members of the crew squad for recovery rates following strenuous exercise, the charts had to be revised drastically when Curwen ' s figures were tabulated, so exceptional was his response. To see seven man Dave Challinor, one would think that Bert Haines was passing up good material for his light- weights, but Challinor is more securely seated than any other starboard oar on the boat. His beautiful coordination and timing make him a perfect number seven, and although he seldom weighs over 170, he holds his own with men 20 pounds heavier. At number six is six- foot- seven Hallett Whitman, animated proof of the fact that not all good things come in little packages. Not much was expected of Whitman, but the lanky oarsman caught fire last spring, pushed Captain Sherm Gray back to number four from six, and made himself at home behind Challinor. He has been there ever since. Next comes Captain Ted Lyman, the last holdover from the 1941 eight. Although he did not row his Freshman year, Lyman made the third varsity the next spring, moved CO the jayvees for the first half of last spring, before being shifted to the varsity at midseason. Four man Johnny Erskine developed suddenly. After a year on the first Freshmen, he dropped to comparative ob- scurity, and it was not until this spring that he showed enough potentialities to win the slide behind the Crimson captain. At three is the only sophomore, Scho Andrews, who rowed on his Freshman boat last spring. Two and bow men are John Richardson and Pop Jenks, and both have been rowing in these positions since they came to college, first on the undefeated ' 43 eight, then on the third varsity, and now on the firsts. At the time this article goes to press the junior varsity is seated with Bryce Seligman, stroke; Dave Sohier, 7; Gerry Prince, 6; Mike Marshall, 5; Dudley Lamson, 4; Reggie Fitz, 3; Dave Noyes, 2; and Ev Brown, bow. The coxswain ' s seat is still a toss-up between Jimmy Ducey and Dick Palmer. Marshall, Fitz, Brown, Ducey, and Palmer are all seniors, veterans of three years. Two men on whom Bolles was counting are not now available, and their absence is severely felt. Paul Pennoyer, two man on the varsity last year, was a certainty to repeat, but after midyears he left to enter the service. Fred Herter, who is now in Medical School, captained his Freshman boat and spent the first half of last Bert Haines ' 150 ' s head for the Boat House Varsity spacing well in a fall workout ,„, - - trains tn ' spring on the varsity, before giving way to Lyman. Bolles feels sure that he would have been on the firsts if he were rowing this spring. Bolles ' chief secondary duty is the building of reserves to buffer the losses of both seniors and juniors for next year. To do this he has kept a promising group of sophomores on his third varsity, who, together with Andrews and Noyes, should provide a base on which to build. In its four races this year the varsity will meet Tech, Boston University, Syracuse, Princeton, Navy, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Yale, and possibly Cornell. Of these, Syracuse, with some fine sophomores, and Wisconsin, about which nothing is known, are dark horses. In view of its fine record, Navy rates as the crew to beat. Cornell, which has twice before upset the Crimson applecart, and Yale, which has never been badly outclassed in six years of defeats, remain as threats to Tom Bolles ' third undefeated season. For obvious reasons Derby ' s two-mile course has been substituted for New London ' s four, but Bolles states that if Yale can win at two they would have won at four. w} TRACK Coach Mikkola raises the bar for ace jumper Bunker skies, and his own squad down, the team came through with a resounding upset over the Indians, 71 — 61. Ted Meredith took a third in the dash in a meet featured by such former greats as Jim Lightbody and Don Donahue. A week later came the Heptagonals at Franklin Field, Philadelphia, for the mythical championship of the Ivy League. The favored Yale team walked away to first place and shoved the Crimson down to fifth, with only Lightbody saving some glory from the wreckage. Although J aakko had the team well primed and at top strength for the Yale meet at the end of May, the highly favored Elis won, and Harvard was lucky to stay within six points of them. Bill Young served as Lightbody ' s pace-setter in a meet that produced four records. As the team swung into its junior year, sophomores, led by Doug Pirnie, threatened to take control, but such regular winners as Dick Pfister and John Bunker kept 1942 in the running. To open the winter campaign, J aakko sent a large number of men to the Veterans of Foreign Wars meet, including juniors Rolla Campbell, Bob Houghton, and John Bunker. The Crimson ended up with a fifth and a tie for second as the result of the efforts of 1942. Bob Houghton got fifth in the 1000, while Bunker tied for second in the high jump. The season officially opened with the Army meet in the middle of February. The Mikkolamen took the Cadets 46 — 44, with Dick Pfister contributing a first in the shot, and Bunker a tie for top honors in the high jump. The team had high hopes for the Yale meet, but they The history of 1942 track started off anything but auspiciously. The Freshmen were beaten by Andover and Exeter, both indoors and outdoors. Yale also took its measure outdoors, while the Deans ' office and injuries badly crippled the squad. But the careful coaching of Jaakko Mikkola and Bill Neufeld, who has recently left to join the Navy, managed to produce a well-balanced team which supplied the next three varsity teams with good material. In the winter of sophomore year individual members of the team competed in the Knights of Columbus games, the B.A.A. meet, and the Millrose games; but the most important meet was the Quadrangular, in which Harvard scored an upset over powerful Cornell, Yale, and Dartmouth. Star ' 42 placer was Johnny Bunker, whose leap of six feet, three-eighths inch earned him a tie for first with Dartmouth ' s Don Blount. This was the last year of the Quadrangular games, which have been replaced by dual meets with Army, Dartmouth, and Yale. After informal meets with Holy Cross and Northeast- ern, the regular season opened with Dartmouth, and the Crimson was conceded little chance of winning. But, as so often happens when Jaakko plays his opponents up to the Dick Pfister, consistent point winner, puts the shot { 200 } -:,. were rudely dashed when the Elis came through with a 56 — 35 walk-away. Bunker and Pfister won again in their events. Hopes were up again for the Dartmouth meet, but the Indians put the damper on, 66 — 42. Rolla Campbells win in the 600, and the performance of Bill Young and Bob Houghton in coming in three-four in the 1000 were good signs for the spring. In the spring, after the usual succession of practice meets, including a meet with the Boston Athletic Association, the squad scored upset wins over Dartmouth and Yale. Against the prohibitively favored Indians, the Harvard team maintained its long-standing stadium jinx to win, 76 Vi — 58 Vi. Houghton ran the fastest mile in recent Harvard history with his 4:30, and was awarded a Sav cartoon for his achievement. Pfister pulled off another double win, and Campbell took first in the half mile. After placing third in the Heptagonals at Princeton, the squad looked toward the climactic Yale meet. Although the Bulldogs were heavy pre-meet favorites, the Crimson again came through, 70 Vi — 64 Vi. Helping to avenge the dis- asterous winter slaughter were Bill Young ' s third in the mile, Campbell ' s second in the half, White ' s second in the hammer, Jay ' s second in the two-mile, Pfister ' s first in the shot, and Bunker ' s first in the high jump. Bob Houghton ' s thrilling upset triumph over Main, who had beaten him a week before at the Heptagonals, was the highlight of the meet. Houghton led the Yale star down the backstretch, but Main passed on the last corner and built up a lead of four yards going into the last hundred yards. Houghton came back with a tremendous kick in the backstretch to win by inches in the dash for the tape. After the meet Houghton was elected Captain. The past year started with a serious blow when Doug Pirnie, star junior sprinter, entered the Army, but a senior- studded team managed to upset Yale and nearly knock off Dartmouth during the winter season. Intensive practice started in mid-November, in preparation for the first meet, an in- formal affair with Tufts on December 13- Dick Pfister, Rolla Campbell, Bill Young, and Bob Jay were missing when the first practice session got under way, but Houghton, Mc- Kcchnie, Bunker, Steve Brooks, Adrian Recinos, and Ted Bauer were on hand. As it did to every branch of university activities, the war brought countless changes to the track team. But Jaakko said, we must carry on and forget the war; so the season went into the first meet, the informal meet with Tufts, which Harvard won easily with 16 firsts. Best performance was Pfister ' s first in the shot, with but one week ' s practice behind him. Clean sweeps were rung up in the shot, hammer, and pole vault. Ooi r Coach Mikkola acts as starter for his dash men in the Briggs Cage Don MacKinnon polishes up his technique in the high hurdles Captain Bob Houghton leads some milers around the indoor track Mike Ford measures his vault during a meet in the Stadium to win eight points in the high jump, and Pfister won the shot. The next week the team met Yale, and it was a pessi- mistic squad which headed for New Haven on February 23. But they won, 52 — 48, and with seven records toppling. Tom White walked off with the weight throw, Bob Houghton anchored the two-mile relay team to an overwhelming vic- tory, Dick Pfister took the shot, and Steve Brooks nabbed a second in the pole vault. This meet was the high point of the season, for after it came the loss to Dartmouth, as great a disappointment as the Yale win was a pleasure. The score was the same as against Yale, only in reverse. But Bob Houghton turned in a tremendous mile, and records fell as the Crimson went down fighting. The spring season opened with a farewell to Bill Young, Rolla Campbell, and Frank McKechnie. In the inform- al handicap meet Pfister won the discus with a sensational 140 feet in the snow, and Bunker walked off with the high jump, while Tom White, Steve Brooks, Ted Bauer, and Adrian Re- cinos all placed. The team ran away with the informal meet with Boston College, winning every event but the shot, discus, and the broad jump. Captain Houghton came in second in the mile and won the half, Adrian Recinos won both the 100 and the 220, Ted Bauer took three seconds and a third, Pfister was second in the shot, and Bunker won the high jump. To replace the canceled K. of C. games, another in- formal meet was held with Tufts on January 10. Again the Crimson took the lion ' s share of the firsts. Bunker ' s first in the high jump, and Houghton ' s second in the mile were the 1942 contributions. Still another informal meet, with North- eastern, was undertaken by the cindermen before the regular winter season started. Again the team ran off with most of the firsts. The two relay teams were entered in the Millrose games on the first of February, but did not make out very well, with a third in the two-mile relay, and a fourth in the mile. But their team-mates who entered the New England field event competition here in Cambridge did rather better, with Ted Bauer and Johnny Bunker tying for first in the high jump, Dick Pfister taking second in shot, and Steve Brooks tying for second in the pole vault. Finally the official season got started with a victory over Princeton and Army at West Point on February 16: Harvard 44, Army 39, and Princeton 14. Best performance was turned in by Captain Bob Houghton, who battled Princeton ' s Don Jordan all the way, closed up a 15-yard gap in the last lap, and was only nipped by inches at the tape with a clocking of 4:26:7. Steve Brooks tied for first in the pole vault to cul- minate his steady improvement, while Bauer and Bunker tied The Track Table at a Varsity Club celebration dinner { 202 ' on the shot. «apessi. February 2}. Is toppling. ■b Houghton helming vie- ks nabbed i point of th, as great a ■The score e. But Bob xotds fell as sell to Bi In the inform- ie high jump, id Adrian Re- t with Boston sous, and the id in rhe mile e 100 and the d, Pfister was The last meet before the Album went to press was the quadrangular meet with Holy Cross, Northeastern, and Rhode Island State. Rhode Island took eight firsts, Holy Cross five, Northeastern three, and Harvard two. But heavy scoring in the second and third places gave the team a second in the unofficial point score, behind Rhode Island. It was a very hot day, and the times were poor, but juniors Gordy Lyle and Don MacKinnon were outstanding in the 220 and the high hurdles. Lyle, running this year for the first time, turned in an excellent 22:4 in the 220, and MacKinnon did 14:7 in the highs. Captain Houghton ran second in the half and third in the mile, Pfister took second in the shot, Bunker tied for first in the high jump, and Bauer scored two thirds and a fourth. Adrian Recinos ran 10:1 in the hundred, his fastest time to date, but was shut out in a photo-finish at the tape. Dartmouth had to cancel the meet at Hanover on May 9 because of exams, depriving the Crimson of a chance to revenge the winter defeat. The remaining meets are the Hepta- gonals here in Cambridge, the Yale meet at New Haven, and possibly a meet to replace the one with Dartmouth. Third R u: D. r. Read. D. V. S inger and, N. J. Yung, H. C Tmtle, 5. Haydtck, T. Coggeihall, C. T. Bauer, W. S. Ellis, C. EhtrharJi, S. V. Gifford Stttnd R v: Jstkk J. MJUtlt, Coatb; E. H. Btrmnn, V. B. Prjmark, V. C. Pa im, C M. Howard, V. G. LyU, R. B. Kmt, R. J. MraJ, D. R. MatUk, J. D. Mac- Kinnon, V. DalrympU, Manager Prmi R u:- P. V. Phiixn. L. P. Ctrbtll, A. Ridn i, J. P. Bunker, R. B. Htu tlon, Captain; R. H. Treeicher, P. Peldman, T. T. While, U. B. Mather J. V. FOOTBALL • ' t £ f Fo r A R «v C. P. KrfK Pelt, A. L. Lawson, R. E. Tatton, B. B. Wilson, R. M. Davenport, F. B. Harvey, C. T. Cowen Third Row: H, N. Lamar, Coach; G. R. MacLellan, C. S. Putnam, T. A. Rogstad, C. P. Fleischauer, R. M, Chase, B. N. Heath, W. T. Peabody, Manager Second Row: S. W. Gifford, G. H. Lawrence, J. L. Sosman, C. Loring, W. P. La Croix, Captain; W. V. Ellis, R. T. Fisher, H. W. Goethals, T. J. Broidrick Front Row: E. Atkins, W. B. Kamp, H. Tine, G. E. George Coach Lamar congratulates Captain La Croix on the victory over Yale Vastly improved over the team which faced Princeton in the opening game, the 1941 junior varsity climaxed its season with a smashing 19 — victory over Yale. Harvard scored early, and the team, inspired by the great defensive play of Captain Bill LaCroix, was never in danger. The game with Princeton was heart-breaking: outplayed in the first half, and trailing 7 — 0, the team rallied to score late in the game, but was unable to kick the extra point. In losing to Army, 13 — 6, the team again showed power and spirit, but once more lack of finesse and coordination cost a close game. Easy victories over Northeastern Freshmen and the un- official Tech team filled out the schedule. Spearheading the running attack were backs Doug McLelland, Bob Chase, and Steve Gifford. It was Gifford who broke away on a long run for the lone Princeton score, and who scored one of the three Yale touchdowns. Also outstanding was Happy Hal Tine, who consistently smashed through the center of the line for first downs. The team ' s unorthodox style was ex- emplified by the after dark offense developed by Coach Lamar, in which all but the center spin as the ball is passed — extremely deceiving in the late afternoon scrimmages, but un- fortunately, not usable in regular games. { 204 } CROSS COUNTRY Despite the loss of Langdon Burwell and Bob Mc- Loughlin, stars of the 1940 season, the cross country team displayed enough balance to win all but one of its dual meets, take the triangular meet with Yale and Princeton, and finish third in the Heptagonals. More conditioning work than usual contributed heavily to the early-season wins over Boston University, 15 — 50; Holy Cross, 21 — 48; and New Hampshire, 34 — 75. Dartmouth had too many stars for the more balanced Crimson and captured the dual meet, 26 — 34. The Green also won the Heptagonal meet at New York, Cornell placing second just two points ahead of Harvard. Bill Palson, captain of last year ' s Freshman team, was the star throughout the season, leading the Crimson runners with a seventh place in the Heptagonals and a fourth in the tri- angular encounter, which Harvard unexpectedly won at Prince- ton by defeating Yale, 26 — 37, and Princeton, 27 — 32. Nine Crimson runners crossed the line after Palson with less than two minutes separating them. They were Bob Houghton, Captain of track, Tim Coggeshall, Fred Phinney, Tom Mc- Elligott, Johnny Sopka, Joe Scott, Bob Jay, Don McCaul, and Captain Kay Rogers. Rogers never regained his outstand- ing form of last year because of an ankle injury which, added to a chronic cold, kept him out most of the season. Captain Rogers receives a few pointers ijto . but ft StttmJ R u: Jaakkt J. Mikktla, Oath; D. R. McCaul, T. OtngtihaU, J. C. Salt, J. E. Mtrtdith, Mattagir Pr,nt Um R. B. .« • , J. J. Sopka, V. V. Phinnty, K. T. Ripri, C pl in; R. D. Jay, T. J. McEUigoii, W. C. Palson  } WRESTLING The wrestling team, riddled by more than its quota of injuries and changes, was not outstanding this year in athletic achievement, but never lacked team spirit. From over fifty sinewy upperclassmen, Coach Chief Boston began to mold a team. A dislocated knee put two-year veteran Jim Redmon ' 42 out of action for the season. Before the team was ready, the Engineers hit and walked away with the first Tech victory in many a year. After Christmas the team went into action again, but with more success, defeating Tufts by a wide margin as Captain Dick Thomas won his second fall of the season, and big Vern Miller moved in. During the mid-year exam period the team slackened its pace and returned to find Chief called to active duty with the Army. A popular referee, Jay Ricks, was named the new coach. Before he had time to organize, the team was blitzed by West Point. After Captain Dick Thomas sparked a vic- tory over Columbia, the team lost to Pennsylvania, Princeton, and finally, most heart-breaking of all, Yale. With a new drive, the team struck at the New England Intercollegiates and came home with Tom Rogstad a runner up, and Ted Guild and Dick Thomas champions. Coach Boston grins and bears it, all 292 pounds Second Row: Jay Ricks, Coach; D. S. Mites, T. A. Rogstad, D. C. Burns, J. J. Redmon, Manager Front Row: B. Marshall, J. L. Sosman, R. N. Thomas, Captain; E. M. Guild, H. T. Blaine Absentee: V. K. Miller •{206} k SOCCER Fourth Row: G. W. Mallory, E. T. Drake, J. L. Clarke, A. M. Sachs, W. V. G. Matthews, D. W. Slingerland, W. S. Bucther, H. G. Killam Third Row: James MacDonald, Coach; W. L. Truscott, J. D. Calhoun, R. J. Harbison, J. E. Sawhill, J. W. Dixon, M. E. Herskopitz, D. Hodden, Manager Second Row: N. J. Darling, D. S. Poor, R. P. Gifford, J. G. Penson, Captain: E. C. Satber, M. Meyerson, F. Taylor Front Row: H. P. Ma loy, L. J. Vorhaus, F. F. M. Kempner, E. H. Berman Captain Penson stops one in the net The soccer team piled a record of five wins and one tie to finish fifth in the Intercollegiate League in its first year under Coach James MacDonald. Captain Jack Penson was the standout of the season with his goal-tending. His four shut-outs were climaxed by the 5 — win over the previously undefeated Brown team in the next to last game of the season. Sawhill and Herskovits were the offensive stars, scoring six goals each during the year. Sawhill started the season with a bang, tallying three goals in the opening 6 — victory over Tufts, two in the 6 — 1 Clark win, and a lone counter in the 1 — 1 Springfield tie. Herskovits netted the ball twice in the Tufts and Clark encounters and once in the victories eked out over Army, 1—0, and M. I. T., 2—0. The only losses of the season were to Dartmouth, 2 — 0, Princeton, 2 — 1, and Yale in the final encounter, 2—1. Gifford scored early in the Eli game and the Crimson held its lead for two periods. In the third stanza after Penson had been forced to leave the game with an injury, Yale tied the game up and took the heart- breaker in the final minutes. Captain Jack Penson, Monroe Herskovits, and Captain- elect Jack Gifford were rewarded for their fine playing of the season by being placed on rhe All-Eastern Soccer team of the Intercollegiate Soccer Association. i n RIFLE Although only five former team members returned in the fall of 1941, and the government withdrew ammunition grants for the rest of the war, the rifle team defeated Yale for the first time in three years. Close guarding of stocks and H. A. A. collection of dues solved the cartridge trouble. But only with extreme difficulty, and with the assistance of two recruits, Townsend and Gill, was a full team kept in the field. Up to ten men per team fire in New England League matches, but luckily for Harvard only five scores count. First rate shooting, therefore, from Shaul, Davis, Powell, and Rowe, hold-overs from last year ' s varsity, and Alan Shaw, a remarkable sophomore, with the occasional assist- ance of some of the Club ' s dead-eyed Freshmen, proved all that was necessary to stay in the running for the league lead. Besides the Yale win, the team won fourth place out of 16 in the postal schedule of the New England League and fourth out of 14 in its shoulder to shoulder match at New London. With but one exception, every collegiate team in New England, including Coast Guard, Vermont, and New Hampshire, at some time during the season fell before Har- vard ' s marksmen. After a postcard victory On the range in a match Third Row: C. Lang, E. 0. Appleby, G. E. In galls, A. B. DuBois, R. Berman, S. Wolfe, F. Adams Second Row: A. C. Petite, D. J. Crowley, D. P. Desbon, W. C. Dunekel, W. Burry, I. E. Spalding, L. Gerstleg, R. S. Morrison Front Row: N. C. Nash, P. L. Gill, M. J. Rowe, L. A. Davis, J. H. Powell, A. B. Shaw, Manager; G. H. Nelson Absentee: L. K. Shaul, Captain { 208 } SKI Second Row: R. Wilson, M. McNair, Manager; H. Bigelow, L. Burton, D. Reid Front Row: F. King, F. Ferner, Captain; A. Ames, T. Winship In the down Ml Captain Ferner After a slow start this year ' s ski team gathered mo- mentum each week to match the best in the east. Coaching themselves after popular Coach Halsey joined the service, financing all their activities, training without nearby facilities and often without snow, the team compiled the best Harvard record of recent years. Much credit must go to Finn Ferner, the team s Norwegian leader, and to the spirit of the entire squad. The four-event team met its first test at the Williams Carnival, scoring third in the downhill, and fourth in the jumping. At the Dartmouth Carnival the team landed in sixth, in spite of Ferner ' s bri liant tie for first in the downhill. Two weeks later the team took fourth in the Intertollegiates at Middlebury against ten top eastern teams. At the Eastern Team Championships run by the Hockebirgn Ski Club, Harvard took second in the downhill and third in the slalom, and the next week in the Appalachian Mountain Club race, Harvard ran second only to Dartmouth. Ferner beat Bob rV. ' eservey, eastern champion, in his second run and tied him for first in total time. The high point of the downhill season was the Harvard victory in the Schussverein against Dart- mouth and New Hampshire. { } FENCING A 17 — 10 victory over Yale was the 1942 fencing var- sity ' s only claim at a better than mediocre ranking. Although in dual competition the duelists won three of their four meets, they displayed a much lower average in the Pentagonals and the Eastern Intercollegiates. Statistically, the team beat Brown 14—13, and Amherst, 17 Vr— 9 Vi, only losing to M. I. T. ; 16 — 14. Only one man, George White, placed in the Penta. gonals, and the team took a tenth out of 13 colleges in the Intercollegiates. Leader of the team and only senior to make the first string was Joe Koch, foils specialist, who won two of his three Yale matches in that event. Junior George White, an epee expert, and sophomore George Wilbur, a consistent winner in all three sword classes, were the other two standouts. Army and N. Y. U. were the team ' s nemesis in the larger meets, with the Cadets taking the Pentagonals at West Point and placing high in the Intercollegiates. The Yale meet saw the team overwhelm the Blue in the foils, led by Koch and Vaughan, with Wilbur sweeping five of his scheduled six matches in three events. Coach Peroy lacked good material In a practice session Second Row: Rene Peroy, Coach; J. M. Ward, M. S. Olmsted, A. T. von Mehren, R. H. MacNeal, R. E. Welter, Acting Manager Front Row: G. M. White, J. H. Vaughan, J. M. Koch, Captain; G. B. Wilbur, H. N. Coolidge 210 htbuct, SQUASH Second Row: John M. Barnaby, Coach; VP. MacDonald, J. W. Flint, T. W. Sears, A. Gould, R. B. Sherwood, Manager From Row: 0. Wilson, G. L. Pelt, H. Baker, Captain; T. E. Baker, W. R. Frothingham fytain-elect Gaelen Felt . . . gets set for one of his famous corner shots j;io} The squash team, captained by six-foot-seven-inch Hal Baker, finished a season marred by illness, probation, and the draft, with losses only to Princeton and Yale, 5 — 2 and 6 — 3. In the Princeton match Decker Orr, playing Charlie Brinton, National and Intercollegiate Champion, led 2 — 1, but lost 15 — 13 in the fifth and final game. For most of the season Captain-elect Gaelen Felt played number one and was unde- feated throughout the year. His beautiful corner shots won him every game in his intercollegiate matches. The team started the season by overwhelming Tech 9 O.and the following week scored a 7 — 2 victory over Dart- mouth. After midyears Harvard defeated Pennsylvania, 6 — 0. In a trip to Amherst and Williams following the Princeton match, the racquetmen won by 7 — 2 and 6 — 3 scores. The Williams squad put up a good battle and was beaten only after long, tense matches. The outlook at New Haven was not too bright, since the previous week Yale had placed three men in the semifinals of the Intercollegiates. No Harvard man had lasted beyond the quarter-final round, in which Baker and Orr were put out by Dugan of Yale and Brinton. Nevertheless the match was hotly contested, and Yale won only after many five-game matches. Felt was brilliant in overcoming Dugan at number one, while Tom Baker and Aubrey Gould, at seven and nine, were the other Harvard winners. 150 LB. CREW Coach Bert Haines has stated that he expects this year ' s 150-pound crew to measure up well along side the 1941 boat, and that means that the veteran mentor forsees a bright future for his lightweights, for last year ' s boat shattered the Charles River Henley mark and dropped only one race during the course of an arduous season. That one blemish on an otherwise clean slate was caused by M. I. T., which the Crimson beat both before and after the disaster, so that the fifties could be termed the best lightweights in the East without question. At the time this article goes to press, the varsity is composed of Caleb Brokaw, cox; Johnny Abbot, stroke; Dick Moot, 7; Dick Swanson, 6; Andy Gaudielle, 5; Captain Bobby Lincoln, 4; Ted Wilson, 3; Tony Whittemore, 2; and Snell Robinson, bow. Frank Cunningham has been stroking a jayvee boat of changing composition which has been press- ing the varsity hard. Brokaw, Abbot, Swanson, and Lincoln, all rowed against Yale in last year ' s 6:40 Henley record, and the others, except for Moot, Wilson, and Robinson, who are sophomores, saw action on the jayvees. Tech and Princeton appear likely to give the Crimson its toughest races, and in 150-pound races, there are many which are won by feet rather than lengths. Up and over with the shell into the Charles Then a practice race for the promising crew Second Row: J. R. Abbot, R. D. Moot, R. Swanson, A. Gaudielle, A. L. Lincoln, Captain; E. S. Gilchrist, A. R. Whittemore, C. S. Robinson Front Row: C. Brokaw 212 u 1 raw m mm Captain Aiacgtuan, no. 1 man on the team Coach Peddie took over from Clark Hodder GOLF When Clark Hodder quit Harvard ' s coaching circles in a sudden resignation last winter, he left the golf team without a mentor. For a time it appeared as though the Crimson divot diggers would have to struggle along without a coach for the entire season, but D. Donald Peddie ' 41 filled the gap, taking over as coach early in March. Peddie, number one man on last year ' s squad, which placed second in the Eastern Inter- collegiates, was well acquainted with the present varsity material. Although losses suffered by graduation were fairly heavy, Peddie found a nucleus of veterans, about whom he has molded his squad. Senior Peter Macgowan, Captain of the team, was moved up one position from his 1941 ranking to fill the num- ber one post, and his classmate, Bill Allis, holds down the number two slot. Ollie Ames and Ned Tuckerman, both juniors, have shared the third ranking, with Henry Shepley, also ' 43, at number four. Art Tarlow and Don Davis, two sophomores who sparked last year ' s Yardling aggregation, occupy the fifth and sixth slots. In matches played previous to this writing, the Crimson fell before a highly-rated Holy Cross squad, 7 — 2, and then bounced back, on an upset triumph by Tarlow, to down Brown, 5 — 4. V.om Kau Don PiJJn, Coatb; D. Dam, VP. Shtrtr, 0. Amu, G. VUntry, J. MtCrinMt front K u: V. Alln. P. Dunham, P. M (f U4H. Otpuiin; B. Bmklin, G. If. Solovit f, A. Tarhw {2M [M LACROSSE ■I Second Row: C. F. Bartz, Manager; H. Tine, W. S. Hodgson, M. M. Donahue, C. Burr, M. H. Brodrick, D. C. Park, D. W. Green, Ben R. Martin, Coach Front Row: J. M. Hurley, A. T. Conlin, C. E. Sullivan, W. W. Fenn, Captain J. R. Moot, L. V. Alexis, B. Barber, C. W. Blanchard Coach Martin and Captain Fenn A game on the Business School Field A new coach, Ben Martin, greeted Captain Wally Fenn and a small group of lacrosse enthusiasts last winter at the start of the practice season. Back from last year ' s squad was a group of midfielders, but last year ' s Freshman team, the first ever to beat Yale, was expected to supply an attack and fill in the defense. After a month of practice, the team headed south for its annual spring vacation trip. In every game the Fennmen were at a disadvantage, because they had lacked a practice field. Nevertheless, they made an excellent showing in their first game, though losing to Pennsylvania, 4 — 3. In the following games, Navy and Maryland swamped the stickmen by over- whelming scores. In a very close game, the team next fell before M. I.T., 8 — 6, in a game which saw further improvement both on the attack and the defense. Captain Wally Fenn led the team at second attack, while Carl Sullivan at center and Tom Conlin at second defense completed the midfield in most of the games. With sophomores leading the attack and making up a good part of the defense, the team will probably end up the season with a considerably better record than last year. The team is bigger, faster, and more experienced. Thus Ben Mar- tin ' s first year should turn out to be a successful one. 214 TENNIS Second Row: John M. Barnaby, Coach; J. C. Burton, R. W. Ellis, H. H. Ezell, T. Coin, L. J. Burton Front Row: W. Nicboll, J. B. Jenkins, 0. Wilson, Captain H. M. Hyde, W. T. Kissel Absentees: R. C. Sorlien, A. P. Everts fell before M- I-T- t both on ::: For the first time in several years, Coach Jack Barnaby defied the changeable New England weather and put his tennis team off to a head start this year with a spring vacation trip below the Mason-Dixon line. With this worth while venture under their belts, plus the experience of veteran seniors on the squad and a host of brilliant sophomores, it seems certain that the players will come through this year ' s stiff schedule much better than last year ' s group. Sophomore Al Everts, a ranking player in New England, is the outstanding prospect, and, provided he gets over his present sickness before the important matches, he will play number one singles on the team. Behind him in the second slot will be Jim Jenkins, a junior who played number one all last year. Captain Orme Wilson leads the parade of other poten- tials trying out for the remaining positions on the team. Although he, Russ Ellis, and Howie Ezell, all seniors, seem to have an inside track for the jobs because of their experience on last year ' s team, it is not unlikely that other seniors may break into the lineup. Among the aspirants are Keith Symon, Lindley Burton, Bill Frothingham, Bud Lyman, Norm Neagle, Bud Snow, and Irving Fried. {2 } Captain Orme Wilson returns a fast forehand Coach Barnaby talks over lineups for match INTERHOUSE ATHLETICS Sam looks over a tennis tournament schedule During the past ten years, Bill Bingham ' s brainchild, House athletics, has proved a good answer to the charge that America takes its exercise in the grandstand. By offering an opportunity for the average college man to participate in organized sports, the system has attracted a large proportion of House members. Last year, for example, 1202 men played on 159 separate teams. This amounts to 57 per cent of the eligible total. With the beginning of the new compulsory athletics program, which does not, however, affect this year ' s senior class, the House setup will see further expansion. The amount of increase is hard to prophesy, but it seems sure that many who have not played on House teams before will choose this method of satisfying their requirements. One of the major factors in the success of House athletics is the breadth of the program. It includes almost all of the sports in which there is inter-collegiate competition: football, touch football, soccer, and indoor baseball in the fall; basketball, squash, hockey, wrestling, boxing, and fenc- ing in the winter; baseball, crew, tennis, softball, and golf in the spring. There are track meets in each season. Thus a broad field is offered for the man who wants to play on an organized team, without devoting all of his time to the sport, the man who likes to play with good equipment, but doesn ' t want to train rigorously. ■5pci . - Griffith connects in a Kirkland House softball game Adams stops Berkeley in post-season championship In charge of the program is the Inter-House Athletic Council, composed of Adolf W. Samborski, who is director, referee, judge, and arbitrator of all intramural sports, Director of Athletics Bill Bingham, Dr. D. M. Little of Adams House, representing the Housemasters, and the eight student athletic secretaries. For 1941-42 the latter group included Roger Tatton (Adams), George MacDonald (Dudley), Philip Walters (Dunster), Robert Brundage (Eliot), Carter Leslie (Kirkland), William Eustis (Leverett), Robert Davis (Lowell), and Abbott Fenn (Winthrop). The secretaries and their assistants gradually became used to gulping down their lunches while lining up the various teams of the day. For football and crew they obtained coaches from graduate schools to direct the teams. The past three years will probably be described by future historians as the period of ascendency of Kirkland, for Kirkland won the Straus Trophy in 1939-40 and 1940-41, and by the end of the winter program in 1942, had again climbed to its Yankee-like perch. In sophomore year the Deacons were hard pressed by Lowell. They piled up 1427 points, only 9 Vi ahead of the Bellboys, in the Straus Trophy competition. Winthrop finished third. The next year saw Adams rising as Compulsory athletics brings indoor calisthenics and sore muscles nw '  t Sixty-nine men of ' 42 were taught how to swim in this way a formidable contender to compete with Kirkland and Lowell in the final count, but Kirkland again came out on top. The beginning of the 1941-42 season featured a close football race. Despite Kirkland ' s midnight rallies and band- playing, Adams managed to recover from a first-game upset defeat by Dunster to cop the coveted title. Freak of the season was the game-winning extra point in the Leverett- Winthrop game. A placement kick was partially blocked, but the ball landed on the cross-bar of the goalpost. After a moment ' s hesitation, it finally went over. Dunster took the touch foot- ball championship, while Kirkland won in soccer. The Deacons also topped the other Houses in the fall and winter track meets. Indoor baseball, which fills the gap between the fall and winter seasons, found Kirkland well established in its pleasant rut and winning again. Much of the sport involved seemed to be in out-heckling umpire Floyd Stahl. A triple tie for second resulted between Lowell, Leverett, and Winthrop. For the third straight year Kirkland turned out a junior varsity crew of mermen to splash by the Leverett water- I y ■oo Tr ::- b Hi la Dudley faces off in a House hockey match, while others wait to get on the ice bunnies. The Deacons also proved best at braving the wintry blasts in their shorts, winning the squash crown. The monoto- nous flow of Kirkland winter wins was broken by Lowell and Winthrop in basketball and hockey. The Bellboys won 12 out of 14 hoop contests to edge Leverett. Every Monday saw four hockey contests at the Skating Club. Styles for managers in the early season seemed to con- sist of a Chesterfield, a Bowler, and a big black cigar. Kirkland offered its fun line which garnered more laughs than goals. Winthrop won its yearly struggle with the Dudley Ramblers to clinch the championship. In the special sports division Adams won wrestling, Lowell, fencing, and Eliot, boxing. An epidemic of colds kayoed a number of fistic entries before they reached the ring, but spectator interest remained high. Volley ball became a regular sport for the first time this year, filling in the two-week period between the winter and spring seasons. After a series of hotly contested games — verbally as well as physically — Kirkland came out on top. Kirkland House football team recuperates during the half ■{ 218 a | I km Despite possible shortages of golf and tennis balls, the spring season will probably be the most successful in history because of the compulsory athletics hypo. Rowing has attracted more hopefuls than ever before, with the Elephant oarsmen looking to repeat past triumphs. Most of the other sports are expecting wide-open races, but it seems fairly certain that Kirkland will walk off with its third straight Straus Trophy. Adams, Lowell and Leverett will probably fight it out for the runner-up spot. So far this year the championship teams have piled up a considerable lead over the Yale College winners in the com- petition for the Harkness Trophy. For the past two years a tie has occurred. This year, however, Yale ' s only victory has been in squash, where Silliman defeated Kirkland, 5 — 0. Harvard ' s teams have already won five contests and need only only one more to clinch the trophy. Adams ' eleven downed Berkeley, 6 — 0, while Dunster turned back the Silliman touch team, 6 — 3. During the winter the Lowell quintet sub- dued Calhoun, 53 — 41, Kirkland beat Silliman in swimming, 29 — 28, and Winthrop ' s hockey team squeaked out a 2 — 1 win over Davenport. Touch football game on Soldiers Field H. A. A. distribution center for equipment Subs and spectators shout their approval m 2 9} The best friendships, as divers wise men have told us, are based on common interest in work . . . Harvard Col- lege contains hundreds of groups of men who come together to work for the love of it; and in some one of these an earnest man is sure to find or make his friends. What Dean Briggs wrote on the bond between activities and friendship in 1903 is as true of Harvard today, as it was forty years ago. Such organizations as the Crimson, The Liberal Union, Brooks House, and the Glee Club are a few of the innumerable so- cieties at Harvard. A Frenchman once commented upon Americans, saying that they love nothing better than per- petual organization, and certainly that bent manifests itself at Harvard, where two men together make a society. The history of Harvard organizations is littered with unsuccessful ventures and rivalries. The Harvard Monthly gasped its last, and gave up the ghost to the Advocate. The Harvard Journal, once vociferous side-kick and rival of the Crimson, only recently paid the last of its gargantuan debt, while the files at University Hall are filled with cards of now defunct literary, social, and political clubs. Since 1900 more than 500 organizations have appeared and disappeared on the Harvard scene. But it is not the speed with which they come and go that counts; what is important is that they have supplied the mcrtar that holds an otherwise vast, unintegrated, and disparate student body together. Activities debt. STUDENT COUNCIL Second Row: J. W. Sullivan, J. A. Holabird, T. Matters, D. Reed, J. Richardson, A. Ames, J. E. Meredith, F. B. Harvey Front Row: H. T. Blaine, C. H. Phinizy, J. C. Robbins, J. P. Bunker, Treasurer; E. D. Keith, President; L. G. MacKinney, Secretary; P. Macgowan, C. S. Bridge, G. Jackson Absentee: H. Newman December 7, 1941, gave the Student Council something new to think about, as it did every other organization and individual at Harvard. The old questions were still with us: the quality and cost of a Harvard education, the direction of athletics, food, Class Day; but they suddenly seemed sharper and more immediate. Having shaken itself into alertness, the Council shortly after midyears still had before it many of the local problems arising from active United States belligerency. This year has been unique, since no formal reports have been written for extra-Council circulation. However, much has been accomplished in services to the student body and interpretation of student opinion for the Administration. On their return in September, the students found a flat $8.50 board rate, a new parietal system and N. Y. A., all of which the Council recommended last spring. The lower board rate was one means of reducing costs for the students. By organizing a Consumers ' Committee, the Council hoped to save them more money on purchases in the Square. Bart Harvey was made chairman of this group, which received complaints about high prices or unfair practices, and adjusted each case with Square merchants. Another early fall activity, undertaken by Ted Meredith and Coles Phinizy, assisted Raymond Dennett, Graduate Secretary of Brooks House, in establishing the P. B. H. Placement Office. In line with its policy of service to the students, the Council felt it should help to fill this definite need, which had arisen from the closing of the University Placement Office last spring. The Education Committee was headed this year by Gabriel Jackson and Adelbert Ames, and for the first time had a broad representation, including seniors and juniors in every field of concentration. First studying tutorial as the focal point of liberal education at Harvard, the Committee widened its activities to include recommendations for midyear degrees and advisory conferences with Deans Hanford and Buck on the new twelve-month program. A report on educational trends in wartime appeared late in March. Besides donating most of its charity funds to war re- lief, the Council aided Harvard ' s defense effort by co- sponsor- ing the Defense Service Committee, which P. B. H. had formed in October. With Peter Macgowan as chairman, this com- mittee coordinated activities of various student groups in many different kinds of defense service — these included A. R. P. and first aid training, blood donations, social service and relief work, sale of defense bonds and stamps, etc. In addition, the committee was constantly at the call of the university for filling any and all emergency defense requests. Because food prices had gone up 50 per cent since last year, Harvard faced the alternative of raising dining hall { 222} McKinney, Keith, Bunker, and Bridge, discuss plans for Class elections rates or making drastic economies. The Council, conferring with university authorities, agreed that the $8.50 rate should be preserved if possible, and approved experimental charges for frills. Later it recommended that second beverages should not be chargeable luxuries and began its own investi- gation of dining hall economy. Other Council work includes extension of the war libraries by Harry Blaine, and the still-pending Pan-American scholarshi ps. On the financial side, Treasurer John Bunker handled more money than any other Council since the depression, considered plans for new methods of collection next year to meet the valid complaints that Freshmen are high-pressured into pledging, and drew up a new budget. This included $2000 for charities, $4600 for P. B. H., $400 for class activi- ties, $300 for Council expenses, and $2200 for Student Coun- cil scholarships. The draft and pressure of studies took a toll of two members of the Council, when Keith left at midyears, and Blaine in March. To replace Keith, Loren MacKinney was elected President, and Endicott Peabody became Secretary. Gabriel Jackson of Leverett House and Harry Newman of Adams House were elected to fill the two vacancies. Waiting for their picture in the Winthrop House common room 22i PHILLIPS BROOKS HOUSE Second Row: M. Kaufer, R. R. Alters, E. Calkins, R. G. Drake, R. B. Sherwood, R. G. Axtell, W. W. Phinney Front Row: J. E. Sawhill, E. B. Fleischaker, C. S. Bridge, Secretary; H. Newman, President; T. P. Barm field, Vice President; J. B. Liebler Absentees: R. H. Orchard, D. S. Friedkin, N. R. Landon, G. M. Burditt, R. Davis, J. Dampeer, R. Stevens G. Eisner Instead of closing its doors as it did in the last war, Brooks House this year placed a new emphasis on civilian defense work and accelerated its regular social service program. Feeling that P. B. H. had a definite part to play in the national emergency, the ' 42 Cabinet organized the Defense Service Committee early in October. Brooks House took over those activities that lay within its scope, and other cooperating organizations handled work for which they were particularly suited. During the national defense program, P. B. H. ran two dances and one Harvard week-end for soldiers from Fort Devens. After December 7 plans of this nature were necessa- rily discarded. Other defense activities consisted of filling requests for volunteers to instruct draftees, and arranging entertainments for Army and Navy groups at recreation centers and training camps. Continuing its policy of plugging gaps in the university structure, as it did several years ago when it initiated a com- muters ' center, P. B. H. took over the placement service which the university discontinued last spring. Other interesting innovations included the work camp in Grafton Center, N. H., a project that Brooks House co-sponsored, and the Inter- collegiate Committee on Community Service, which P. B. H. organized into a 17-college unit last spring. Over 200 seniors have been connected with Brooks House at one time or another; yet, few of these men realize the full scope of its activities. Functioning through eight Foreign Students ' Committee leads a forum at International Club {22A (j. Bin undergraduate and three graduate committees, it has pro- vided a multitude of ser vices to Harvard, as well as to the community. During the year, graduate students were furnished with information on housing facilities available in Cambridge. Textbooks were rented to scholarship men in the college and Law School. A placement service for summer social service jobs was available to undergraduates. Dances and teas pro- vided social activities for Law School men and college Fresh- men. Squash tournaments in the Medical School and inter- dormitory athletics for Freshmen were conducted regularly. Finally, P. B. H. published the Harvard Handbook for all new students, and the Brooks House News for its own members. Continuing its policy of improving Harvard town-gown relationships, this year Brooks House sent over 380 volunteers to greater Boston social agencies. The majority of this group was engaged in directing activities, which ranged from a Negro mothers ' music appreciation club to a heavy-weight wrestling class, handled by a 120-pound optimist. Speakers covered a multitude of varied topics, including public health and Japanese flowers, and Harvard tutors instructed under- privileged Bostonians in every subject. In addition, Brooks House ran dental and medical clinics in three settlement houses, collected old clothes and books, distributed Thanks- giving baskets, gave Christmas parties for Cambridge children, and supervised the International Club. Like a complicated maze the Phillips Brooks Associa- tion defies complete description. One descriptive term, how- ever, covers the situation adequately: P. B. H. is an education within an education. X. Raymond Dennett, ' 36, Graduate Secretary, with P.B.H. committee chairmen on the steps of Brooks House A radio club shorn its achievements Harvard man leads a stamp club at a settlement 22i} [ . PHI BETA KAPPA Second Row: G. Jackson, R. A. Cunningham, M. Fields, J. M. Peterson, B. H. Landing, L. E. Liberman, W. C. Murphy, J. E. Leffler, H. G. Hageman Front Row: D. Middleton, W. M. Kluss, A. J. Ansen, Second Marshal; K. R. Symon, First Marshal; H. C. Bennett, Secretary; J. A. Ordway, G. W. Wattles, K. T. Rogers Absentees: M. G. Barrett, D. J. Patton, J. T. Shaplin, E. I. Rothschild, N. B. Carson, W. M. Cannon, R. C. Henselman Dinner before the election of the Junior Eight The Harvard Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1781 as a secret literary society. The Society soon aban- doned its secrecy and has gradually become an honorary fraternity, whose purpose is to recognize and encourage intel- lectual achievement. From each class eight members are elected in the junior year, sixteen in the middle of the senior year, and 30 to 40 additional members are elected just before graduation in June. The Senior Sixteen of the Class of 1942 were initiated at the annual winter dinner of the Society in December, at which time they were presented their keys. At this dinner, Mr. C. H. Page of the Class of 1890, writer and state senator from New Hampshire, and Mr. C. P. Curtis of the Class of 1914, prominent Boston lawyer and former lecturer at Harvard, spoke on the responsibilities which Phi Beta Kappa men must shoulder in the present war. The war has made itself felt in every phase of academic life, and Phi Beta Kappa is no exception. A special committee has been appointed to study the changes in the Society ' s methods of election, which will be required in order to fit them into Harvard ' s accelerated war program. And it is very probable that 1942, the first class to graduate during this war, will be the last class, until the war is over, to have a regularly elected J unior Eight and Senior Sixteen. {226} ; pecial comminec in the Sodew ' lor dertofitd«n this 111 ; „ m ,krlv eleaed PUBLICATIONS { ) ALBUM The Board discusses the production schedule for the Album Senior panels represent many long hours work Paralleling the topsy-turvy events of the year, the Album engineered in almost every department its own drastic shake-up. Articles were planned to be written by the board itself in many cases rather than by organization heads. Lay- outs were designed with an eye toward reader-interest and modern design. Allotment of space for pictures was increased many times over, and the time-worn system of placing new or, more often, old pictures in old slots was totally abandoned. Naturally, such ambitious plans necessitated a more complete staff than had originally filled the Album positions. Re-write men were needed and a host of photographers. The introduction of advertising last year added new worries to the perennial problems of the business staff, which this year was increased to three times its previous size. Coordinating the various departments and sub-departments, an Album office first saw the light of day this year, and it was there that write-nights and board discussions worked material into its final form. The Holabird murals, painted by the Art Editor, produced the only will to live during long vigils in the office. After the fall term had been squandered with little work having been accomplished except by Chairman Harry Newman, who designed the pages and kept contact with the photographer, printer, and engraver, the Album hit its stride in February. Dave Roberts was added to the board to take over circulation duties and general business work, a position left open by the Russian-studying Charlie Bridge; and from his efforts emerged the amazingly efficient and awe-insipiring •(228 } record books. Alongside Roberts worked Francis Pastorius, who took over the advertising worries in the second semester. Advertising was a major problem, until contracts finally began to filter in and saved the Album from appearing as a mimeo- graphed pamphlet at Commencement. Angle-shot make-ups, countless new photographs, and the reduction in price from the ten dollars of two years ago, all put enormous pressure on the business board. By the middle of March, John Bunker had already turned in a good proportion of his stories, and Howard Young, eventually aroused from his lethargy, had shown signs of completing the feature section before many moons. The photographic board of Scott Sleeper, Stan Gam, and Jay Kay Lazrus was flooding the office with prints of all sizes and descriptions, ranging from candids of President Conant to amazingly anatomical cheesecake. Days and nights, spent time and again at the printers, and thorough organization and spasmodic goading by Chairman Newman spurred the book into completion very nearly in time for the deadline. Now that our task is at long last finished, nothing remains but either to skip town im- mediately or to wait placidly for the discovery of those in- numerable errors, ferreted out by the inevitable sadist. Howard Young gets help on the senior biographies h little i Ham r with the S  J R u. M. I. W.W, K Uzrm, S. M. Gsrn, A. 5 F.p,t,m, R. R Albtr,, R. L. Stoll, L. R. B acimtr, J. R. Mojim, M V Km mmj Pr,„t R,u: B. G Uu,n, D. S. Fritdkin, H. V. Y „ , K , D. R. R b,r„, H. Stum . J. P. B hr, H. P. SUifitr, R. E Jobmon, C. H. PbinitJ Akmttti: J A IhMirJ. D Finn, J. C. BultarJ. F D Ptltirht {$} {2V CRIMSON The high point in the life of the Crimson in 1941-42, and one of the high points in its 68 odd years of existence (very odd) came early one fine spring morning when Billy Albers and Dave Stearns climbed to the leaky roof of the Lampoon building and threw down from its perch the metal Ibis which adorns the jokesters ' citadel. The bird hit Bow Street with a resounding clang that boded ill for its future, but it recovered during the day enough to disgrace itself with a burlesque queen, a Public Garden swan boat, and countless pigeons. The frustration connected with the Lampoon building seems to be limitless. No great crusades filtered out from the journalistic sanctum on Plympton Street this year, except an abortive attempt to cleanse some drought-beridden Mount Holyoke girls. Gene Keith and his assistant brains maintained a high level for the editorial content of the paper, fighting for racial tolerance, advances in education, preservation of democracy as they saw it, and the inevitable House food reforms. The most tangible result attained was the lowering of restrictions on entertaining young ladies in House rooms, brought about by a series of Crime eds. During the spring the Crimson Stag Club scene — atmosphere for Life goes to Harvard ' Fourth Row: E. McD. Casey, R. S. Sturgis, E. J. Sommer, D. A. Brown, J. C. Bullard, M. E. Bovarnkk, W. H. Forster, D. Reed, S. L. Kent, A. E. Rowse, E. Calkins, 0. G. Saxon W. P. Cunningham Third Row: J. N. Miller, W. J. Elser, R. T. Siegler, J. M. Kane, A. Meister, D. H. Fenn, P. I. Carp, J. MacG. Cochran, H. W. Monroe, E. Wulsin, A. L. Atherton, W. Young, B. J. McMahon, J. W. Michaels Second Row: J. W. Ballantine, Executive Editor; R. B. Black, Advertising Manager ; E. D. Keith, Editorial Chairman; W. E. Albers, Business Manager; P. Dammann, Managing Editor; J. C. Rohbins, President; P. C. Sheeline, C. S. Borden, G. R. Clay, 0. R. B. Stalter, R. Bamet, House Committee Chairman Front Row: R. Friedman, A. M. Rockwood, J. B. Smith, B. E. Van Vort, J. N. Phillips, M. S. Kaufmann, H. N. Piatt, A. Yarmolinsky, J. K. Lazrus, J. R. Moskin 230 SUCO top SMi Mi the yi in to be ' . ' .. hod, •Uoiq r £«t H Hind 3 a.m. and the final check-up as the Crimson rolls off the press Once there was a chambermaid . . . initiation of new members ,0.0 J: ; ; ' ; ' ' f. ) ' « ■faupt fought to keep the country out of war and succeeded, and dur- ing the fall it fought to get the country into the war, and succeeded. In all matters the Crimson made a definite effort to get off the fence, which it had occupied for so many years. Peter Dammann ' s efficient news hounds raised the standards of the front page to new highs. The Michael Mullins Chowder Gub only had to march three times during the year to fill up space, and the Dammann red pencil crashed downward on so many fake stories that people almost began to believe what the paper was saying. One of the great triumphs of the year was the new headline type and banner head, secured by the joint efforts of Messrs. Dammann and Albers. War, bankruptcy, and the national cigarette companies played hob with the business department. By the end of the year the men of the business board had turned the art of writing a humorous filler ad into a science, and someone ac- tually did come in the building and buy a subscription at the new low rate. The superhuman work of Billy Albers and Bob Black was all that kept the Crime from ending up deep in the hole. Among the other major successes of the year were the drives to keep Radcliffe girls out of Widener (a success from a tactical point of view) ; the persuasion of the Alumni Bulletin to hire a beautiful stenog (a success from all points of view) ; the election of our capable secretary, Mrs. Anna S. Hoke, as an honorary editor (an unmitigated success); and the decisive defeat of the Lampoon baseball team, 23 to 2. 231 U.P. teletype uncovers more usually reliable sources in Moscow LAMPOON Fourth Row: R. H. Speidel, E. R. Corbett, W. Wood, K. Cornwell, D. Hadden, J. H. Bacon, S. Andrews, R. G. Drake, E. H. Mahoney, B. K. Home, R. T. Eckfeldt Third Row: C. B. Straus, J. P. Downer, M. Hollingsworth, 0. F. Ames, W. Wesselhoeft, W. E. Chambers, H. T. Meryman, H. W. Reed, H. Hayes, D. Hodgdon, D. W. Witmer, G. A. Barnard, R. M. Lockwood Second Row: D. B. Williams, S. R. Andrews, Circulation Manager; J. W. Flint, Advertising Manager ; A. W. Viner, Narthex; W. L. Carter, Business Manager; C. H. Phinizy, President R. Benchley, Ibis; 0. E. Allen, R. B. Sherwood, C. W. Mulcahy, E. Larrabee Front Row: N. Chubb, J. L. Hoffman, T. J. Wood, J. R. Friar, F. B. Harvey, T. E. Van Metre The year 1942 added the 65th candle to Lampy ' s birthday cake, but still thejester did not quite learn how to act his age. As the Class of ' 42 leaves him, he is still trifling with 12 issues of a humorous magazine each year, and peddling Dutch tiles on the side. In most ways, it was just another year: local politicians agitating; drab trolls whimpering behind closed doors in the Crimson building; Mother Advocate look- ing distastefully down her mealy nose at such rowdy antics; knights in varnished Cadillacs screeching all the way from Hollywood to chuck the Jester under the chin; University Hall prodding the Jester ' s conscience with its Sunday best of disciplinary scowls. It was, in brief, the same old nonsense, and it was the same old fun. For once Lampy managed to keep in step with the Law; or, if not in step with the Law, only two steps ahead of it. Either way you look at it, everyone had a good laugh at the expense of Hollywood. And even Hollywood ' s glamour merchants became Lampy ' s warmest friends — justly so, since thejester has made it plenty hot for them. Thejester managed to squeeze another parody issue onto the newstands between the stacks of newspaper hysteria, y line ■:x. i ■::..- Eva gin Ml wins tev jud- der Nen die} yen i audi tkl ksj Jesta ¥ eat it The Ibis on its one day off visits relatives in the park {232 Ittjtllt i, D. F. rmtf, top; for Lampy succeeded in finding a few laughs in between the lines of world-wide news. Frankly the J ester was disappointed that more of his readers did not seem to appreciate the justice of his plan to let Hitler marry the Queen Mother and settle this whole mess. As a consequence, the Jester has crossed his fingers and returned to his activities as head of the Com- mittee to Defend Brookline by Flooding the Middlewest. Dollars for Dutch tiles, is still Lampy ' s cry, and the Jester will be at the side door every sunny day to collar anyone who seems interested. The Crimson climbed onto Lampy ' s roof last spring and carelessly knocked something over; but the damage has been fixed, and no one feels the worse for it. The annual Crimson-Lampoon ball game turned into a rout, Lampy winning by the singular score of 23 — 2. Wagering on the heavy end of the odds, the Crimson editors lost their shirts, and — as the contest became more spirited — in some cases, their pants. In addition to this, Lampy putsched the Crimson Network and gave the Boston press a column of nonsense. More important than all this, however, is the fact that the Jester put out 12 more issues of the Lampoon and grew a year older, none the worse for wear. The Jester has struggled and limped along through the lean years with the same spirit that he had when times were ripe for speculation. The Jester has gone through two wars, his best laugh forward, and the Jester is going to try to take this one in stride. Whatever happens, the Jester still believes you can have your cake and eat it too, even if you drop the icing on the floor. The Lampoon building is the scene of many water fights, dutch tile sales, and general riots 1J0 1 Funnymen put the pressure on to meet printing deadline President Phinizy, backwards as usual ADVOCATE The seat of literary expression at Harvard While the guns of the second World War roared over Europe and Africa, the Harvard Advocate went through the seventy-fifth year of its existence without ostensible change. The year seemed on the surface to be a very unimportant year for the magazine, a year in which it became especially unpop- ular and in which the young writers seemed to have become what many of its readers termed as decadent. Yet, in a broader sense, the very fact of ostensible changeless ness, the very ivory-tower aspects of the magazine made the year an outstanding one. There were, of course, several stories and poems that directly treated the events of the world outside. Norman Mailer ' s The Greatest Thing in the World won the annual Story Magazine contest, and Curtis Thomas ' Duration was an excellent treatment of certain aspects of American reaction to England ' s war. But the majority of the stories and poems, — and, in- deed, even the drawings of Rolland Thompson and John Crockett, — were concerned with subjects that were vague and remote. Marvin Barrett and Bowden Broadwater, President and Pegasus of the magazine, were constant contributors, and their skillfully polished work concerned the era of the 1920 ' s or the problems of old Southern families. These Second Row: N. Mailer, R. D. Thompson, A. Smith, B. Barton, R. Harrison, D. Roberts, J. Bausman Front Row: G. Washburne, H. C. Bennett, A. Douglas, R. Johnson, H. H. Welch, Secretary; A. Fisk, T. Harrington, J. Elliott Absentees: M. G. Barrett, President; R. B. Broadwater, Pegasus 234 certainly seemed anachronistic during times like these. Yet Barrett and Broadwater, along with Robert Clureman and Howard Nemerov, were writers of undeniable talent. The tone of what was written, then, was a new tone. On the one hand, it seemed too polished, too genteel to those accustomed to American realism; on the other, it seemed to dwell with an unnecessary persistence upon the sordid and degrading aspects of life at home and of life at college. These Advocate writers were experimenting with and groping for new forms of expression, — and that, certainly, is the func- tion of a college literary magazine. But, as the authors of the future, they and their success at the present can be only partially judged. If they are, in fact, the literary leaders of to- morrow, their early work indicates new directions for American literature. Yet, as the war continues, one cannot help but feel a certain disgust for the dilettantish cocktail parties that took place at the Advocate House. If these writers can be taken as an indication of the future, one cannot help but also feel a trifle anxious as to the overintellectualized attitude of snobbish superiority that characterized the work published during the year 1941-1942. The tense sparkle of an Advocate punch The year ' s last issue is born in a late meeting The Pegasus shows the Advocate library to candidates GUARDIAN Is the Guardian merely a pale wisp upon the news- stands; a medium for the satisfaction of the vanity of people who like to see their name in print? Or is it a vital, authorita- tive source of current thought on current problems; required reading for all who would keep abreast of the times? Opinions, where they existed, have differed consider- ably. We have indicated two polar schools of thought. Perhaps the truth could be more warmly pursued somewhere between the poles. But whatever less may be said of it, the Guardian, even after six years of publication, remains unique among college journals. Some members of the staff have found this a source of pride; others have been embarrassed by it; a few have suggested that uniqueness establishes a claim only to — uniqueness. The lack of competition has certainly not impaired the magazine ' s vitality. During the past year it has continued publishing articles by men of national prominence, such as General Arnold and Aubrey Williams. In a series of brief notes on current questions it has afforded an additional outlet for faculty opinion. The major portion of its pages has been devoted to encouraging undergraduate writing on questions in the area of the social sciences. It is through these and similar means that the Guardian affords an opportunity to acquire journalistic experience, while seeking to contribute to an understanding of the problems which currently confront society. Ruderman and President-elect Keny on read pro of Bronston and O ' Toole look over their last issue Third Row: C. W. Young, H. C. Passer, T. S. Kenyan, W. M. Kluss, M. P. Schlefer, H. D. Sharpe, W. V. Suckle Second Row: A. Yarmolinsky, W. Snower, R. S. Schwantes, H. Legum, M. Richter, D. I. Fine, M. S. Kaufmann Front Row: R. C. Henselman, C. F. Bartz, Secretary: M. J. Rowe, Business Manager; T. J. O ' Toole, President: J. E. Bronston, Editor; W. Hodson, Managing Editor J. F. Prudden, Circulation Manager {236} ' dfmf utm MUSIC and DRAMA ,,;««!« « ' [M Popular Yard concert in the spring Joint rehearsal with the Radcliffe Society GLEE CLUB As Woody has emphasized during the Glee Club ban- quets of the past two years, music takes on a new significance in wartime. The select ion of a program pleasing to all becomes more difficult, as illustrated by a note received protesting the unintentional omission of German music in one concert. This year, especially, the Harvard Glee Club has presented cosmopolitan programs, including the works of Lotti, Bach, Mozart, Handel, Dvorak, Offenbach, Cherubini, as well as Eliott Carter ' 30. Starting things off with a bang in the fall at a get- acquainted smoker, new members were introduced to the Club and to Dr. Archibald Davison, the man who is not only responsible for the present musical policies of the Club, but largely for the standards of choral music throughout the coun- try. Later in the fall a party with members of the Radcliffe Choral Society was held in the Winthrop House common room. Two kegs of beer, a victrola, and a dance floor helped to enliven a relationship, which, though of long standing, has usually been oppressively formal. As a result, many a girl spent the next few joint rehearsals with her eyes definitely off the beat, to Woody ' s surprise and consternation. For the past few years, entertainment before and after the concerts has been limited, because the primary considera- tion has been in the building of a fund to secure the future independence of the Club. This year the manager has kept a weather eye on dances and other entertainment, as well as on profits. Such a policy gave the boys a chance to spread Performance with the Boston Symphony, K,oussevitsky conductin 238 ] their charm among the teacups or dance floors of Bradford, Framingham Teachers ' , Pembroke, and Wellesley. This was in addition to the regular spring vacation tour, which included Elmira, Sarah Lawrence, and Wells. Thus the club definitely had its less serious side. But the chief function of the Club is to sing, and this it did. The high points of the year were the joint concerts with the Radcliffe Choral Society. It was at the annual Sanders Theater Concert that the racy Defense of Corinth was presented for the first time. Written for the Glee Club by a graduate, its innuendos lay well buried in a modernistic style. The seldom heard Requiem of Cherubini was revived, and the program concluded with three Bach Chorals. The concert was broadcast over the Crimson network and was repeated at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts before an audience of three thousand. At the Pension Fund Concert in Symphony Hall, the two choruses and the Boston Symphony Orchestra performed the Bach Magnificat and Beethoven ' s Ninth Symphony, under the direction of Dr. Koussevitsky. Rehearsing and perform- ing under the Boston orchestra ' s great conductor was, as always, both a privilege and a pleasure. Other concerts were given at Gardner Museum, Arlington, Wakefield, and Wor- cester. Concerts with the Radcliffe singers on the Government- sponsored program, I Hear America Singing, and also at Fort Devens, were arranged and were highly successful. Individual members participated voluntarily in the Harvard Defense Group ' s radio programs, contributing to that organ- ization ' s support of national morale. The season closed with the three Yard concerts in May on the steps of Widener. During the last half of each, the whole college had an opportunity to sing with the Glee Club. This is but an expansion of the purpose of the Club; to provide an opportunity for anyone to sing, and not just to give concerts or attend social affairs. The Harvard Glee Club has a record of great accom- plishment in its past. With its standards and its recognition of the importance of the great music which has been written for voices, has come a renewed interest in choral music both old and new, throughout the country. In spite of less favorable conditions this year, and singing a more difficult repertoire than ever before, the singing itself was far above average, and the Club was received by enthusiastic audiences throughout New England. Much of the credit goes to Ralph Ren wick for his contribution as accompanist, to Dick French for his capable playing and directing, and particularly to Mr. Wallace Woodworth, Woody, for years the backbone f the Club, for his ' inspira- tion as leader and director. b«j,- The Harvard Glee Club before the Sanders Theater Concert { l I 2W BAND The Harvard University Band on the steps of Widner Library The woodwind section warms up for Saturday medleys Harvard ' s student-run, student-financed university band continued its custom this year of entertaining those spectators, who refuse to risk the dash for a hot dog and cofTee between halves of the football games with a wide varia- tion of maneuvers and special arrangements, ranging from a flying airplane to a red cross. Among the year ' s innovations was the joint playing of the National Anthem, accompanied by the raising of a flag on one of the corners of the Stadium. Initiated before the Dartmouth game, the ceremony was continued before every following contest as a result of the stream of favorable comments. At the Army game, when the band spelled out HELP THE RED, and followed the words with a large crimson cross, most of the spectators did not know that it was departing from an old established tradition of never supporting a national organization. For the Navy, the band spelled out KEEP ' EM FLY- ING and, forming an airplane with the twirling baton of the drum major as the propeller, marched into an anchor. For Brown, a V for Victory was featured, while the season ended with the ever popular arrangement of Wintergreen. Next year, Malcolm Holmes, ' 28, conductor of the university orchestra, will take over from James W. Holt Jr., 4D, the 1941-42 leader, while Jere Mead, ' 43 will head the managerial staff, succeeding Thomas C. Peebles, ' 42; {240 Fight Cheer Anchor formation for the Navy Middies V :evm offwol iHHJ cKEEP ' EMR-V- .irltngbatonof e the season ,8 conduaor ot « Peebles, ' 42. Boa ' W arrow forecast win over Dartmouth Band pays tribute to Captain Frannie Let u,V.V- PIERIAN SODALITY With the election of Deems Taylor as an honorary member, the Pierian Sodality this year evidenced one of its most distinguished membership lists since its foundation some 134 years ago. The annual spring concert in April closed the travelling season for the Sodality, and home appear- ances ended with an April concert in Paine Hall. This year ' s trip during vacation will probably be the last to be undertaken for some years because of the war. Under the managership of Warren Fleischner, the Sodality gave many concerts both in Cambridge and on trips, not the least of these coming during the Easter vacation when the Sodality visited Princeton, Mary Baldwin College, and Sweet Briar. The third annual trip, this year ' s excursion was devoted to orchestration of chorals, with singing done by various women ' s groups. The Selective Service Act took more than its share of musicians from the Sodality during the summer, so that the year began with a large handicap. However, the musicianship and technical ability of the players developed so favorably that critics called this year ' s Sodality the best in recent times. President Allen W. Greene early set to work in organizing the group and has rounded out an orchestra that presented one of the best opening concerts in many years. Since Paine Hall The orchestra rehearses in the Paine Hall music room for its heavy ten-concert schedule Malcolm Holmes, ' 28, has just completed his eleventh year as director of the Pierian had always been over-applied for the Sodality concerts, San- ders Theatre was commandeered last fall ; and even then no empty seats were left. In addition to Vice-President Roger A. Cunningham, Greene was ably assisted this year by Treasurer Leon H. Brachman and Secretary Thomas I. Crowell. In addition to the joint concert in Cambridge held with the Radcliffe Orchestra and the Radcliife Choral Society, the Pierian Sodality played once more during the fall, at the Pom- fret School in Connecticut. Highlight of the fall was the Sunday afternoon that Deems Taylor devoted his intermission talk during the New York Philharmonic broadcast to the So- dality. The celebrated composer and music critic pointed out that though most people assumed the Philharmonic to be the oldest orchestral group in the country, the Pierian Sodality actually anteceded it by 34 years. He went on to outline the history of the orchestra and stressed its tradition-filled stan- dards. It was after this talk that Deems Taylor was elected an honorary member of the Sodality. The tenth annual trip to Colby Junior College was climaxed this year by a special celebration at the dance fol- lowing the concert. Along with the Colby concert and the spring trip, other concerts this spring have been at Putney School in Vermont, Mt. Hermon, and Wellesley; the season ending with the Paine Hall concert in April. Outstanding in this year ' s program was not only the Deems Taylor panegyric but also the highly successful spring trip. At Princeton the Pierian Sodality combined with the Radcliffe Choral Society and with the Princeton Choir in presenting Bach ' s Magnificat and two cantatas. In Staunton, Virginia, at Mary Baldwin College, Debussy ' s Blessed Damozel was rendered by the orchestra and a women ' s chorus; and for the third and last concert of the trip, Handel ' s Messiah was given, sung by the Sweet Briar and Duke glee clubs; the eve- ning being rounded out with a number by the Sodality alone. During the season, the orchestra was conducted by Malcolm Holmes, ' 28, who has just completed his eleventh year. His ability to stimulate interest in and develop the natural talents of the players has contributed no small part in assisting this year ' s Sodality in the presentation of an excellent repertoire of concerts. Third Row: L. Korar. R. Jaffr. P. Canning ) , E. Lamdin, J. BarrictUi, J. A. Morgan, C. W. Plammtr, S. Enlmacbtr, M. Maris Stttnd Row: G. Jackion, J. C. Hornbtrgtr, J. A. SobU, H. A. DiUtr, V. Van Gtmtrl, L. H. Cohtn, R. Wolff, P. Goodman, S. A. Ul man, P. Law or From Ink L. H. Sloam, Librarian. R. A. Cunningham, Via Prnidtni: M. Wolff, T. I. CrtwtU, Stcrtlarj; M. Van Dyki, V. H. Htad, W. E. PUiichntr, Managtr; C. Htidtlhrpr, S. H. Co urn iw DRAMATICS The most striking fact about the drama at Harvard is that it carries on without any support or encouragement from University and Massachusetts Halls. Harvard was long note- worthy as a center for creative work in the theater, until in 1925, President Emeritus Lowell ' s shoulder grew so cold that the late Professor George Pierce Baker moved the famous 47 Workshop to Yale. But today Harvard has no Drama Depart- ment and, worse yet, no theater. This means that student- written plays are few and that student productions involve great difficulty and expense. But the drama stays alive at Harvard, because there are always students who are interested in drama as a creative art, and because there are always many who love the theater for its entertainment alone. The latter find their outlets in the A scene from the H.D.C. ' s ' Shoemaker ' s Prodigious Wife Club president Greenebaum enthroned in the Big Tree clubhouse A new member receives his Dramatic Club medal at initiation {244} Third Row: E. Vet row, R. Bermait, E. Dalgin, J. Faulkner, N. Gilles Second Row: C. Rbeault, J. Stern, M. Singer, R. Keahey, P. Hancock, D. Fine, V. Robinson First Row: R. Greenbaum, President; R. Neiley, T. Squier, E. Weisgal Hasty Pudding, and Pi Eta Theatricals, and in House plays Hasty Pudding found it advisable to cancel its 1942 show because of the war. Coles Phinizy and Arthur Viner had already written an amusing satire on Hollywood, entitled Hey, Mr. Hays! Even without the 1942 production, several members of the class have made their mark in Pudding shows, notably Robert Bacon, who set a new high in leading ladies; Gardner Pierson, who capably plugged the songs of the ' 40 and ' 41 shows; John Holabird, who designed the ' 41 production. One on the House; and Robert Coleman, composer of published and catchy tunes. Pi Eta gave its 1942 production on schedule in spite of the uncertainties of war time, and maintained its high standards of funmaking. The revue, Blondes for Defense, concerned a fifth-column attempt to hypnotize an official in charge of priorities on can-openers, in the hope of thus paralyz- ing the nation. The antics of Scoop, the reporter, Flash, the photographer, and Marcel, the society editor, will long be remembered, not only by the Harvard audiences, but also by the soldiers who saw it at Fort Devens. The Houses presented their usual varied assortment of plays. Lowell House showed that 16th century humor was still funny by producing Gammer Gurtoris Needle, in which Jack Prudden, Charles Breunig, and Bill Greer played import- ■t t W- i i- Ik . a JBT W m ■■' ■$ i i l | - : mm I % I 1 1 1 , ■■.:.. ' ■■' ' ■L jK Trr ' Club initiates new members at annual post-production banquet Another scene from Lorca ' s gay Spanish farce Officials ponder over production problems ant parts. Eliot House chose Shakespeare ' s, Henry IV, Part I, starring the retiring housemaster, Frisky Merriman. Leverett House revived Farquar ' s, The Beaux Stratagem, which was enlivened by the gay scenery of Henry Steinhardt and William Roberts. Boy Meets Girl carried on the Winthrop House tradition of reviving Broadway comedies, and owed its success largely to Mel Rodman and Vern Miller. Moon Over Dunthrums, an original musical comedy by Leo Rost and Bill Schall, was the Dunster Christmas produc- tion. Emphasizing the baser side of life on the river, it de- scribed what might happen to a poor rich Harvard man in the hands of an unscrupulous roommate. Androcles and the Lion provided Christmas entertainment for the Gold Coasters, starring Paul Foote as Androcles and the terrible George Kuhn as his vigorous muscle-man Christian converter. The Deacons presented Utter Relaxation and Hot Water to a slyly smirking and occasionally guffawing male audience. The Student Union and the Dramatic Club were the chief organizations occupied with the drama as a serious form of artistic expression, although they were not unaware of the fun which amateur theatrical productions can offer. The Theater Committee of the Harvard Student Union is at present inactive, but has made a distinct contribution to Harvard drama with its four productions in the past two years. In The Cradle Will Rock, Bury the Dead, and a double bill of MacLeish ' s Fall of the City, and Odets ' Waiting For Lefty, it brought to Cambridge for the first time contemporary drama of social significance. The Student Union reached its climax in its final production, Aristophanes ' Peace, in a streamlined version last spring. The greatest single contribution to the Studying in the clubhouse between rehearsals Preview of the spring play, The Inspector General {246} ay dv Patriotic number in Pi Eta ' s Blondes for Defense ' 7 like my women big . . . from the same show group ' s success was the uniformly excellent designing of John Holabird, who accepted the challenge of Sanders Theater, which not only lacks the rudimentary structural elements of a theater, such as a proscenium arch, but which has the additional drawback of a fire regulation, preventing the use of ordinary painted canvas scenery. Holabird ' s talent was also conspicuous in the Harvard Dramatic Club ' s productions both in Sanders Theater and elsewhere. Until the fall of 1939, the Club used various Boston theaters for its productions, but union closed-shop contracts with the metropolitan houses forced the amateur group to give its plays in Cambridge. Aware of the obstacles of Sanders, Holabird in his sets for Vinton Freedley Jr. ' s Too Late to Laugh, Auden and Isherwood ' s The Ascent of F6, T. S. Eliot ' s Family Reunion, and O ' Neill ' s The Great God Brown, gave life to the plays by exploiting the unique area available with suit- able arrangements of curtains and platforms. The Dramatic Club was also greatly aided by the man- agerial work of Richard Greenebaum, who was President in 1941-42, by the help of Eugene Bondy, and by the acting of JervisMcMechan. Others who worked on its productions were Edward Weren, who designed the set for Too Much Johnson in the fall of 1940, Brady Sandman, David Mayer, and Scott Sleeper. The dramatic organizations at Harvard now face the problem of functioning during wartime. A first result will probably be the replacement of the more serious plays by lighter entertainment, as Gogol ' s Inspector General, the Dram- atic Club ' s spring production. And it may be that soon there will be no time for comedy, ' ' that dramatics will have to follow suit and suffer further curtailment. Vera Zoriiui instructs the Pi Eta chorus in the art of ballet {if, CRIMSON NETWORK President Conant about to address the college on the war When on December 8, 1941, President Conant faced an overflow audience in Sanders Theater and considered Har- vard ' s part in the new war, his voice was heard as clearly in the remotest corners of Dunster as it was in the auditorium in which he spoke. The Crimson Network had formerly brought into the rooms of Harvard students the voices of Norman Thomas and Andre Maurois, of George Jessel and Sally Rand. The Glee Club, the Pierian Sodality, Harvard ' s Association of Song Writers, numerous student and professional swing groups — all had sent their tones buzzing through the heating tunnels and into radios placed throughout the House system. But even these Network achievements had failed to impress student and University Hall opinion as favorably as did the December 8 broadcast. Now, after exactly one year ' s operation, the Crimson Network is recognized as an integral part of Harvard life. Under Bernard J . McMahon, the Network underwent considerable expansion. Its membership rose from 30 to 50; its hours of daily broadcasting jumped from three and one half to five; it took the tottering Radio Workshop under its wing and nursed it back into a-script-a-week activity; and after months of discussion, it secured permission to accept adver- tising contracts, thus making possible further Crimson Net- work expansion. Third Row: R. S. L. Waugh, R. L. Weinberg, B. P. Block, A. C. Joyce, J. C. L. Hulley, R. W. Shoemaker, R. W. Moevs, H. U. Jones, I. J. Gotham, R. T. Mack Second Row: H. E. Frachtman, H. M. Spiro, R. P. Kleeman, M. W. Talbot, R. B. Benson, R. W. Stone, B. E. Van Raalte, H. C. Fleming, J. W. Morley, R. L. Post Front Row: W. J. Fischman, D. R. Roberts, A. Lurie, M. H. Rodman, Production Director; J. A. Stone, Technical Director; B. J. McMahon, President; J. M. Cochrane, Chief Engineer; R. S. Kieve, Program Director; P. Jaretski, Music Director; J. Heitin {248} ORGANIZATIONS DEBATING COUNCIL Second Row: D. L. Simon, U. Mather, T. S. Kuhn, S. K. Beren Front Row: T. S. Baer, H. M. Bailin, P. R. Wolff, President: J. E. Corrigan President-elect Bailin with Council members . . . receive advice from President Wolff Among the highlights of the Harvard Debating Coun- cil ' s season were debates with the Socialist Workers ' Party of Boston, in which the Harvard debaters were hissed and booed by the audience; and the Vassar debate in which three Council members were anything but booed by an audience of 500 Vassar girls. Aside from such regular forensic events as the fall Yale debates, the spring triangulars with Yale and Princeton, and a bi-weekly series of debates over the Yankee-Colonial Radio Network, the Council sent its representatives on trips to Fordham, Columbia, the University of Ohio, Rhode Island State College, Middlebury (Vt.) College, and many other leading debate colleges. In addition to this, Harvard played host to Northwestern University women ' s team, Holy Cross, Johns Hopkins, Bowdoin, and others. The most widely-debated topic of the fall season, that of immediate declaration of war, was abruptly made academic on December 8th. In fact, a scheduled debate on that date and on that subject was quickly converted into an informal discussion of the military, social, and economic phases of the war. Since that time, the Council has concentrated upon Federal regulation of labor unions, Union with the British Commonwealth of Nations, and other problems of equal timeliness. {250} LIBERAL UNION ist Worker- ' s were biv. bate in which three 1 by an audiena ct events as the H [ ' ale and Prifl® ie Yaokee-Coloo« :senutivesofl- Dhio, Rhode IsbJ . and many his, Han, be fall seas : ttffo debate on ed into an nomicpl concentrated ? Founded in the fall of 1940 by a group of students concerned about the issues of the war and the national elec- tions, the Liberal Union later became the most active of the undergraduate political organizations which flourished before the outbreak of the war. After the declaration it was the only one whose reason for existence had not been obviated. Before the outbreak of war, the Liberal Union rallied sympathy behind the Lend-Lease Bill and the repeal of the Neutrality Act. It actively aided the Defense Service Com- mittee then. Later on, its members took civilian defense courses, donated their blood to the Red Cross, sold defense bonds, working in all possible ways to help the victory effort. Domestic problems also play an important part in the Liberal Union ' s activities. Prominent liberals, such as Mrs. Roosevelt and Max Lerner, spoke at Harvard under the auspices of the Liberal Union. Members indicated their support of collective bargaining by helping a CIO union organize Bethlehem Steel at Quincy. The climax of collaboration with similar student organ- izations in other colleges came in December, 1941, with the formation of the Student League of America in a convention at Harvard. In short, the Liberal Union has exerted its efforts, wherever possible, to rouse students to be more active in winning the war and extending democracy in the United States. most active undergraduate political organization ... Gavel passes to new President Fisl. retiring head Ames S n J R u. X. Tina. S. B. Lillj. M. P. Sthtt tr, P. P. Grtj, L. S. SbtpU), L. H. PolUk, J. C. Ltvimon pr.nl Rtu: A. Ytrmetiiih. K R VtHmmn. P. J. Ptutr, P.. Amtl, PreiiJtnt; V. Heditn, Vict PrtiiJtnl; R. Sltrn, R. D. Fishtr 4 2M Watching the results of an experiment CAISSON CLUB The Caisson Club, after a period of several years of a rather tenuous existence, has finally established itself as the social and military club of the R. O. T. C. cadets at Harvard. Originally composed of all advanced course students, the Club has expanded to include the cadets of the newly estab- lished Quartermaster R. O. T. C. unit at the Business School. With a membership of over 100, the future appears promising. The Club ' s purpose has been to provide a social organization for the members, help in their training to become officers, and promote interest in the national security provided by our Army. The war has emphasized this need. Two successful dances were given this year by the Caisson Club; the first after the Army-Harvard football game for the West Point cadets. The second was a military ball held in March to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the R. O. T. C. at Harvard. In line with the Club ' s efforts to advance the military education of its members, a series of lectures given by officers of the Department of Military Science was inaugurated to cover the historical back- ground and the strategy and tactics of the present World War. The talks have presented a clear and orderly picture of the various campaigns that have been fought throughout the world. This year ' s officers have been J. G. Hays, ' 42, President; J. M. Ambrose, ' 42, Vice President; J. T. Rogers, ' 42, Secretary; and J. G. Penson, ' 42, Treasurer. CHEMICAL CLUB Founded in 1885, and consequently one of the more ancient undergraduate associations, the Boylston Chemical Club has constantly served its original purpose of entertaining and educating undergraduate chemists, with a view to keeping over-worked lab-men from becoming indistinguishable from their apparatus. The first meetings of the Club were of course held in Boylston Hall of history-gov-ec fame, then a chemical laboratory, but it moved with the Department to spacious Mallinckrodt in 1928. The fact that this year ' s membership was an all-time high testifies to the continuing virility of the venerable organization. The advantages of the Club were not restricted to con- centrators, however. A substantial proportion of the member- ship consisted of men from other fields, with no more than a cultural interest in the mysteries of the Bohr theory and nylon. Dilletantes and research men alike listened to prominent acad- emic and industrial chemists, and drank tea together after- wards. Some of the speakers this year were Professor William H. McAdams of M. I. T. who spoke on the cracking process, John T. Blake of the Simplex Wire and Cable Co. who dis- cussed the chemistry of vulcanization, and E. A. Chandler of the B. B. Chemical Co., who entertained the Club with demonstrations of emulsions. The executive committee this year consisted of John Leffler, ' 42, President; Donald Sparrow, ' 43; William Batche- lor, ' 42; Joseph Laird, ' 42; William Reed, ' 42; and Richard Yaleman, ' 44. Finding the range for the artillery {252}- FILM SOCIETY 1 spacious o more than a irj ( l Harvard, like America in general, is a highly movie- conscious community. It is the function of the Harvard Film Society to study the history, technique, and uses of the film and to afford that opportunity to the entire population of Harvard. As in the past, the Society ' s chief medium has been a series of notable films. Starting in 1936 with a survey of the American film during the 40 years leading to the early talk- ies, the annual programs have depicted the development of the German and French film in the same period (1895-1932), the American film from the peep-show to the present era of sound, the international silent film in its Classical Era (1922- 1928), and the technique and form in the modern American film. This year, the Society studied the uses of sound and its successful coordination with silent techniques. This modern international series was shown to a subscription audience of 650 associate members. The Society has also sponsored talks and seminar meetings. Future programs, including that of the summer term, will be selected with a view to both the aims of the Society and the results of this spring ' s poll of Harvard desires and opinions. This year ' s nine-man Executive Committee included the following seniors: W. Beckhard, E. Fleischaker, R. Greene- baum, and R. Mack. The Cer e Francais practices conversational French 25J Final check-up on films for the Society ' s show LANGUAGE CLUBS Discussions in foreign tongues, lectures on literature and culture, and joint meetings with nearby women ' s colleges have continued to characterize the la nguage clubs. The Verein Turmwaechter, complete with beer, pretzels, music, and Mr. James Hawkes met bi-weekly in the Lowell House tower room throughout the year. Guest speakers were usually followed by group singing and general colloquia entirely in German. The highlight of the year was the annual Maifest, which opened with two German plays at Agassiz Hall, Radcliffe. On the following day the Harvard and Rad- cliffe clubs played games and concluded with dancing. There were also two joint meetings in the Winthrop House common room, a skating party, and a waltzing party at Wellesley. An open meeting addressed by officers of the Free French submarine Surcoufw s the high spot this year for the Cercle Francais. Although the Studio around which the club ' s activities formerly centered has been relinquished, the bi-weekly meetings, conducted entirely in French, have con- tinued undiminished. Informal discussions of French litera- ture predominated, but talks were frequently given by faculty members, particularly by Professor Louis Cons. Then there- was the annual meeting at Wellesley. The Circolo Italiano, under Dr. John Bricca ' s tutelage, has secured many prominent speakers on Italian literature during the year. Dinners were held at the annual joint session with the Radcliffe club, and at the final meeting under the 1942 officers. Local rock ascent for the H. M. C. PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB The Harvard Photography Club was founded in 1939 by a group of upperclassmen who wanted to have their own darkroom, rather than sneak into the Union darkroom dis- guised as Freshmen every time they wanted to do some photo- graphic work. The club ' s beginnings were necessarily very humble. The founders were fortunate in obtaining a room in the basement of Claverly Hall for its darkroom, and with it some lockers in which to store equipment and supplies. They painted the room over themselves, and they contracted with the Maintenance Department for essential electric and plumb- ing installations. By now the club has most of the basic dark- room equipment it needs, though much of it is lent by club- members. Today the position of Harvard Photography Club is still humble. Because of the war, the present officers have found less students than usual who are interested in such an activity as this. And since the membership is small, the club is badly limited financially. The officers have had to restrict the club ' s activities accordingly. Nevertheless, they are hop- ing that the club will survive and grow, and eventually take its just place among the more popular of Harvard ' s extra- curricular activities. The officers of the club this year are J. B. Chadwick, ' 43; H. R. Chamberlin, ' 42; S. E. Hoyt, ' 43; and M. W. Talbot, Jr., ' 44. MOUNTAINEERING CLUB Founded in 1924, the Harvard Mountaineering Club has had as its main aim the fostering and development of mountain climbing among students of the University. This aim has in the past been divided along three lines: one is de- voted to sending Club expeditions to climb hitherto unsealed peaks in distant parts of the world; another involves summer trips to well-known American or European mountain ranges to develop first class mountaineers for bigger expeditions; the third, and most important work of the club, is to develop expert rock and ice-climbers locally and give them a taste and appreciation of the sport. This year, despite the war, the club has been especially fortunate in all three fields. The H. M. C. ' s first Peruvian Expedition last summer made a number of minor first ascents in the Andes and thoroughly reconnoitered 19,000-foot Mount Huagoruncho, simultaneously opening up new country for American mountaineers. Other members of the organization climbed in the Tetons, Sierras, Cascades, and in Alaska. Many local trips, including several rock and ice ascents in the White Mountains have displayed to new members the thrill of climbing. Mountaineering may be curtailed by the war (except for such work as testing equipment for the Army ' s mountain troops), but as long as there are mountains to climb there will be men to climb them — with Harvard continuing to play a prominent role in their conquest. Success for photo-man Thurston {254} G J H mentof ■University. This lines: one is fc hitheno unsaid tinvolv 1 W expeditions; club, is to develop ' e them a taste and his been especially C ' s first Peruvian minor first ascents 19,000-foot Mount ' new country for )f the organization s, and in Alaska. dice ascents in the members the til if the war (except ! Army ' s mountain ; to climb there will RADIO WORKSHOP After a lethargic first semester, the Harvard Radio Workshop revived in the second half year to become the ac- tive dramatic unit of the Crimson Network. This renewed activity followed a reorganization, in which the leadership of the Workshop was assumed by a group of sophomores, with Harold C. Fleming ' 44 as executive director. The only note- worthy production of the Workshop during the first half years was a series of scripts entitled Let ' s Dream Out Loud, written and directed by James Blumgarten ' 42. In January, however, the Workshop began a weekly series of original plays, presented over the Crimson Network, which varied from such melodramatic horror scripts as Blumgarten ' s The Funeral, to experiments in radio technique like Fleming ' s The Leaning Tower of Ivory, and Louis Eno ' s An Experiment in Sound. Adopting as its policy close cooperation with the Crim- son Network, the Workshop afforded experience in radio writing, acting, directing, and producing to more than 25 students who were interested in one or more of these aspects of radio drama. Also, in spite of limited equipment, the Work- shop was able to make several successful experiments with new forms, the development of which was envisaged by Archi- bald MacLeish, when he founded the organization in 1938. Getting ready for a race Working over a new script YACHT CLUB The completion of the Community Sailing Association boathouse has at last furnished the Yacht Club with necessary facilities. The new boathouse is owned by the Metropolitan District Commission as part of their recreational program. In the spring and fall, however, Harvard, Northeastern, Boston University, Boston College, and Tufts have almost exclusive use of the thirty dinghies. Dual and triangular matches were arranged during the fall between these five colleges. Harvard won the varsity series, with Northeastern second, while in the Freshman competition the order was reversed. This round-robin series was designed to provide racing for as many as possible and to develop new skippers for the teams com- peting in the more important regattas. This fall the team did well in local meets in the Basin. In addition to winning the series at the Community Boathouse, they placed well in several small regattas, and ended the season losing the Schell Trophy by three points to Dartmouth after leading half way through the finals. Plans for the spring include a full set of races in dinghies with local colleges and away at Navy and Coast Guard. The Club also hopes to re- main active during summer school so that those taking the accelerated scholastic program may sail and race. For its officers the Yacht Club had Arthur L. Besse ' 42 as Commodore, George Nichols, Jr. ' 43 as Vice-Commodore, and George O ' Day ' 45 as Freshman Director. 1 1  C.A.A. flight instruction for Mai Rowe Perhaps the most distinctive feature of Harvard is its division into small and diverse groups. Its clubs and small organizations reflect this in their variety, representing nearly every academic, hobby, military, or political interest which men from widely scattered backgrounds might embrace. The war has been the cause of more intense participation in some of these groups; it has created others. At the same time, certain of the liberal and pacifist societies have disbanded, or were not revived in the fall of the year. Technical clubs, on the other hand, have received a marked impetus, with more men directing their attention towards concrete preparation for the armed services and industry. Reflecting the new emphasis on technical training, the Harvard Engineering Society boasts a membership of well over 100 men. A parallel expansion in activity has been regis- tered by the Harvard Pre-Medical Society, which has spons- ored a series of lectures designed to publicize medicine and the alternatives available to men planning to enter medical schools. Similar to the Pre-Medical Society is the Harvard Biochemical Society, which, with a smaller membership, is quite specialized in its meetings and discussions. The Naval Society Smoker on December second was featured by a significant statement by Admiral Yarnell, warn- MISCELLANEOUS ing the future officers not to underestimate Japan ' s fighting power. After December 7, the Rifle Club, perhaps under the stimulus of Sergeant York, became a major activity and minor sport. At the same time, the number of rounds fired on the range by the R.O.T.C. Pistol Club trebled, and a re- stricted but aggressive Flying Club undertook to sponsor air force recruiting instead of cross country flights in their newly- acquired Taylor Cub. With the demise of socialist, pacifist, and opposition groups in the college, came a corresponding increase of interest in the Student Defense League, the Union Now programs, the Committee Against Dictatorship and Imperialism, the Committee for Improving Spanish-American Relations, and the Pan-American Club. More thoughtful students turned to the gatherings of the Harvard Foreign Relations Club, while the International Club offered the cosmopolitan man the chance to know men of nearly every nationality and viewpoint. International politics and problems replaced domestic politics and reform movements, although the Harvard Liberal Union and the John Reed Society maintained a jealous eye over the freedom of speech in the college and in Congress, and the newly-formed Committee to Free Earl Browder raised the important question of political tolerance. A growing interest Popular Pre-Medical Society at one of its meetings 256 I NEOU Mandate. °k to sponsor air tits in their newly. 1 programs, ■owing interest ORGANIZATIONS in the peace that will come out of the war was demonstrated by the formation of the Harvard Council on Post-War Prob- lems, which has received the active support of more than 60 students. A new-comer to the hobby-horses, the Harvard Rail- roading Club was founded in the Yard by enterprising Fresh- men to build models which are well-nigh perfect. The Music Club continues its exclusive, but talented recitals at Professor Ballantine ' s hospitable home. Less pleasing aesthetically, but more erudite perhaps, the Chess Club holds forth in the Union, where the chess board is but a starter for discus- sion. The collectors find expression in the Stamp Club, whic h gathers in old coins, letters, and pistols, as well as stamps. In the fall and spring, the Outing Club conducts mass forays to Wellesley ' s Lake Waban to idle about in canoes with fair maidens, and the Bicycle Club pumps to Smith and Wheat- on in search of beauty and admiration. More athletic than these two, and strictly an indoor activity, the Barn Dance Association attracts those who like a vigorous fore-and-after with their beer and pretzels. The bird-catchers, on the other hand, confine themselves, with the out-door minded biologists, to the Ornithological Club. ' III Lowell House Musical Society ' s Solomon and Balkis A secret member of the Stamp Club Religious organizations are chiefly denominational. In size, the Avukah is the largest, with the Christian Science Organization, the Harvard Christian Fellowship, and the St. Paul ' s Club all having sizeable membership. Sponsors of lectures, forums, and discussions, the academic organizations are characteristic of the loosely-knit, but forward-looking Harvard system. These groups include the Council of Government Concentrators, the Psychology Club, the Sociology Club, the Philosophy Concentrators, the Classical Club, the Business Economics Council, and the Mathematical Club. Not recognized perhaps as part of formal Harvard organizations, yet part of a far more extensive service, are the many men who have devoted long hours this year to the A.R.P. course, the Red Cross volunteer services and training. Defense activities have absorbed many of the hours previously spent at lectures or in other organizations. Over 600 Harvard men are serving in the Federal A.R.P. services, in House block organizations, in Red Cross work, on the Defense Service Committee, and as blood-donors or hospital orderlies. These activities have only begun at Harvard; the next few Albums will probably devote this same space to defense organizations alone, and record the passing of even Mike ' s Club. THE CLUBS |H ' Initiation in the Yard Cooper-Ellis, Michael Zara and Douglas Cochrane, Harrison Blaine and Theodore Lyman, William LaCroix and Richard Jackson, Roger Prouty and Peter Black, George Hurd and Lawrence Howe, Everett Brown and Berrien Anderson, and Robert Coleman and Walter D. Brooks. The Porcellian, be- cause of the war situation, has had three Deputy Marshals this year: Walter McVeigh, William Emmet, and Thomas Higginson. An organization which does not regard itself as a club, but which possesses many similar qualities of congeniality is the Signet Society. It elects 28 men from each class by Sevens, recruiting its members with an eye towards the recognition of distinction in literary and extra-curricular fields. Under the leadership of John Holabird and Coles Phinizy, the Signet presented this year its first exhibition of under- graduate and graduate art. Similar to the final clubs, and selecting their member- ship from a slightly wider field, are Harvard ' s two remaining chapters of national fraternities, the Delta Upsilon and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon. This year the S. A. E., feeling the pres- sure of the times, took down its sign from the 60 Boylston Street clubhouse and moved to the smaller 2 Holyoke Street quarters , which it occupied during the last war. Its officers were B. Bruce Hogg and Charles Gates, while those of the D. U. fraternity were Raymond West and Richard Craig. The only remaining waiting club, from which the members may be elected to the several final clubs, is the The publications and other activities, although they have their serious side, have a unique conviviality as well: the Crimson has its Sanctum, the Advocate its literary punches, and the Lampoon its purple vests and Thursday dinners. But apart from these, there also exist organizations whose sole aims are sociability and good fellowship — the final clubs, waiting clubs, and fraternities. The final clubs, ten in number, are for the most part offshoots of national fraternities. Taken by outsiders as the typical Harvard club men, their members supposedly have as their watchword the famous Lampoon remark, Don ' t speak until you see the stripes of their ties. Each December the clubs elect eligible sophomores who have previously been confronted with a bewildering round of punches, dinners, and outings. Members of the senior class hold the chief offices in the clubs. In alphabetical order the A. D., D. U., Delphic, Fly, Fox, Iroquois, Owl, Phoenix- S. K., Porcellian, and Spee had as their presidents and vice-presidents for 1942: Endicott Peabody II and Randolph Marshall, Walker Field and Lovat The Fly — one of the ten final clubs ■{258} Cochrane, HarrisoQ ix and Richard Gew ge Hurd and len Anderson, and The PorceUian, be- :I Vy Marshals met and Uoraas ' M itself asaclub. ' es f congenialirv from each class i 1 eye towards the tra-curricular fields. and Coles Phinizv, Aibition of under- ird ' s two remaininc taf E, feeling the pres- lit the 60 Boylstot er 2 Holyoke Street st war. Its officers those of the Richard Craig. i, from which the ., is the Speakers. For this fall the Iroquois, which had formerly been a protege of the Fly, achieved its independence and, with the approval of the final club presidents and the Deans ' Office, became the tenth final club. The officers of the Speakers were John B. Eliot and Sumner R. Andrews. Larger than the other social clubs, the Pi Eta Club and the Hasty Pudding Institute of 1770 are known for their dramatics as well as for their dances and other functions. The Pudding also serves as a meeting place for members of the various final clubs. This year the Pi Eta, with John Miller and Russell W. Ellis as president and vice-president, staged as its annual original production Blondes for Defense, which it gave at Fort Devens, in addition to the usual run at the Cambridge clubhouse. The Pudding, although it con- ducted its traditionally colorful D. K. E. initiations in the fall, felt that the war would not mix with its usual spring trip of female impersonators. Its officers were Theodore Lyman and Robert Coleman. With their members joining the services and with a rising tax rate, the clubs perhaps feel insecure, but the uni- versity ' s wartime program may bring them added problems. Under the accelerated program the clubs will have to select members on a year-round basis. Moreover the new regulation that all undergraduates must live in the Houses at a 21 meal rate may cut into the table attendance at the clubs. But the need for congeniality is no less today than it was when the system was founded. President Eliot in the lounge of the Speakers ' Club Hurd, President of Owl, chats on the clubhouse steps { Cartoonist Gluyas Williams at Signet 2J9) Signet members read latest magazines and books in the library O nameless Dead of yore and yesterday Who rest untroubled in deep quietude Long from the sharp alarums of the fray, You sleep so silently in the subdued Unchanging dusk of dreamless solitude, How should you know that still the same gaunt war Plows the old field of battle where you stood, And flings the seed of suffering afar! Now quiet twilight woos the evening star, Now falls the respite of a silent hour, Inviolate and calm the slumbers are Of saints in holiness, of kings in power, And calm the legions are that lie in peace, The dead who sleep the white sleep of the last release. Garrison Prize Poem by ROBERT SILLIMAN HILLYER, ' 17 Features ; gaunt war he last release. fotnb] [HEYER 1 ' es THE HARVARD POLL PREPARED AT PRIVATE SCHOOLS BELONG TO CLUB DEANS LIST- EVER EXPECT TO DO AFTER GRADUATION CHANCE OF SURVIVAL NORTH EAST DOO III OOOi CHAD STUDY ARMY CIVILIAN iiiiiroiiii mini SOUTH EAST i — W ODO i OOOOi iiiii ttff ii imiii MIOOLE WEST 2S Sl i (■ «« iiiiiiiiiii • • • « iiinni FAR WEST 1 Hifftifffii • ••••• • i fflllfll t WWW  « • ffflffflll Each unit in this pictogram represents ten per cent When the Department of Agriculture recently compiled statistics on American women, they found that the average United States female had little resemblance to Atlantic City ' s Miss America or McClelland Barclay ' s enlistment poster goddesses. She was short, squat, and tended to droop on her frame. Boys wouldn ' t whistle when she passed, but the floor might creak. Likewise, the Senior Album Poll of the Harvard Class of 1942 revealed a man who didn ' t even approach the popular stereotypes of a Harvard graduate. Mr. John Harvard ' 42 does not have the smile and personality of Franklin Roosevelt, ' 04. He hasn ' t the brains of A. A. Berle, ' 13, nor the brawn of Chief Boston, ' 39- The poetic ability of T. S. Eliot, ' 10, and the prose style of Walter Lippman, ' 10, are beyond him. In fact, he tends to spell Wellesley with a varying number of l ' s, to use words like goverment and extra-curriculer, and to transpose the letters in common foreign words. Neither banker J. P. Morgan, ' 89, nor radical Corliss Lamont, ' 24, would share his sentiments and beliefs. All in all, the average John Harvard ' 42 is a pretty drab sort of creature, of whom you could find thousands of counterparts in Nevada State Normal School or Pomona. One might well wonder where the famous and notorious Harvard graduates come from, if it weren ' t that the class shows a great deal of variation from its colorless central tendency. The average senior comes from a medium-sized town in Pennsylvania {e.g. Jenkintown), prepared for college at the public high school, and lived in a House at Harvard. With a bit more than four hours of study per day he managed to make group IV or V of the rank list. Only two hours per week of this studying was done in the libraries — almost all men preferred to study in their own or their friend ' s rooms. About fifteen books were read each year for course work, and the average senior also read about ten non-assigned volumes. How many hours per week do you spend studying? Of SURVIVAL !■• nnr M III! Mil IUI ■■■■I lium-sized torn red for college ouse at Harvard. day he managed ly two hours per aries— almost all ir friend ' s rooms. course work, mi ssigned volumes. Mfiffi M ' f - ' la This recreational reading tended more toward Philo Vance and The G- String Murders than toward the weightier tomes. Though Life is his favorite magazine, Johnnie Harvard ' 42 reads a wide variety of periodicals, ranging from the Quarterly Journal of Economics to the American Nudist Monthly. This reading, classes, eating, and sleeping leave about five hours per day for more active recreational activity, such as pin-ball. Johnnie tends to fancy himself as quite a pin-sharp — Mike ' s Qub jargon for a master of the marble-board — but he is more fond of merkling, while others carry on the grim strug- gle of man vs. machine. You can get him to bet on anything: Jai lai, horses, dice, cards, exam marks, and the weather. In general his wagers are small, and in the long run losses and wins pretty much even out. The poll did show, however, that Harvard betters lost more than they won. This unfavorable balance of trade would seem to indicate that Harvard is a bit less astute than the outside world. The average senior also reports that he is a moderate drinker and that he sees about three movies per month. Though there is pretty general agreement with the Lampoon ' s annual choices for skunkweed bouquets, there is little choosiness in selecting movies. Drama, adventure, comedy, sex all rate equally. Whatever is at the handiest theatre generally is preferred. Gary Cooper (with Donald Duck a close second) and Ginger Rogers win favorite movie star honors. And classical music is the most popular program for the one to two hours Johnnie listens to the radio daily. How much do you spend on an average date? Which sport do you like most to watch? Since only one out of five seniors belongs to a club, the usual social life tends to center about the Houses. There is a general feeling that House spirit is a logical substitute for, and an improvement on, the Joe College do-or-die-for-dear-old- Siwash attitude. Most seniors nevertheless would favor more all-college activities, such as prom weekends, etc. Social cliques tend to draw from all sources. Pre-school, home city, and House entry are important, but far from dominant influences in the determination of circles of friends. Financial status, field of concentration, and religion are relatively unimportant. This social unit tends to be pretty much the same for all functions except studying, where there is a natural separation into fields of concentration, and for going out on double dates, where a fellow with a car received a good number of write-in votes. The average senior does not belong to any political organization and does not spend any time at labor or political demonstrations. He knows about 50 men in his House well enough to join them at dinner without any hesitation, and, though a little uncertain, he would like to know more. He has some prejudice against fellows with unlimited allowances; he states of Catholics, Jews, and Negroes that he is not par- ticularly prejudiced against these groups except to the extent that he would not want to intermarry with them. A healthful omen is the fact that he confesses these prejudices with a  )) Is there enough contact between teachers and students outside of the classroom? frequent explanation that he has come to realize the irration- ality of early attitudes and that he has succeeded to some ex- tent in conquering his bigotry. Wellesley is first, with Smith and Vassar a neck-and- neck second in popularity. Johnnie spends about $2 to $4 on an average date and $4 to $8 on a super date. Personality is considered predominantly important in a girl, but face and chassis are not ignored. Brains and availability appear to be minor considerations — which probably helps explain the poor Radcliffe showing (the cliff-dwellers barely nosed out Yale and Kentucky State Teachers College in the balloting). The average senior isn ' t married, engaged, or in love. But though he doesn ' t care, he would like to get married in from one to five years and expects to get married in five to ten years. The average college career has cost about $1200 annually, of which about $200 has been earned rather than come from John Harvard Sr., Ohio State ' 14. Seniors have usually made four annual treks to the Old Howard and one stop at the Raymor. In New York, the Stork and the Automat rate equally; in Boston, Durgin-Park is the favorite restaurant. Boston night clubs are considered all below average with the average below sea level. Fewer weekends are spent away from college than was true of earlier classes for which in- formation was tabulated. Looking back on curricular work, seniors feel that the tutorial system has not been sufficiently stressed and that the grading has not been fair because of too much emphasis on exams. Cheating on examinations is strongly denounced, not because it is immoral, but because it is unwise with such alert proctors as University Hall provides. Beer sessions of small groups of tutors and tutees with more mixing in the dining hall of students and faculty are common suggestions, but a sizable part of the senior class isn ' t very sure it wants anything more to do with the faculty than at present. Since he spends so little time in libraries, John Harvard ' 42 is not well enough acquainted with the facilities to suggest many improvements in Widener beyond happier attendants. A pacifist in his sophomore year who became an inter- ventionist in his junior year, the average senior foresees a five to ten year war. He feels that his chances of survival are pretty good and will enter the services willingly. Given the option, Johnnie would take a naval over an army commission. The combined air force command of Germany and England is considered superior to our own split forces, and German troops are felt to have the finest officers. Studying has been diminished a little since the war started. Ten years from now John Harvard ' 42 expects to be making $3,000 to $6,000 per year — an estimate which is probably optimistic in view of the findings of John R. Tunis, ' 11, that his class after 25 years was averaging under $4,000, including unearned income. The anticipated earnings are also hard to reconcile with the fact that the seniors expect a tendency toward socialism, with the accompanying increase in the power of labor. In short, Johnnie is a slightly skeptical young man who looks at the future, after four years of quite pleasant college life, with the anticipation of long life and financial success. He expects to enter the services and his marital plans are some- what vague because of the long war he fores ses. But these are the only major differences between the graduate of 1942 and his more immediate predecessors. As a member of the last class to enjoy an unaccelerated program, non-compulsory physical training, and complete freedom from worry over tires, razor blades, and pant cuffs, John Harvard ' 42 represents the last generation, which for many years will enjoy the tradi- tional American carefree college days. As Harvard enters a new era of science and military preparation, the gay weeks of little study and pin-ball for exercise must go. Whatever the future may bring, it will not bring to Harvard for a long time another class like that of ' 42. However, as suggested earlier, there is a good deal of deviation from the average described above. Statisticians would explain that our average man is not by any means a mode; the standard deviation is prodigious. The personifica- tion of Johnnie Harvard ' 42, or even a reasonably accurate facsimile thereof, is no t likely to be found in Cambridge. It is too much to expect that four years together in a Boston suburb can gloss over fundamental differences of heredity { 264 i emphasis ( : means 1 [ft] _• Are you a pin-sharp? and environment, which for 18 years previously have been form- ing the characters of the men who come to Harvard. A few lectures and courses together cannot bring to a common denominator native intelligences and social attitudes, which are basically different. Some very interesting correlations of poll answers on various grounds are possible — these correla- tions are not offered as positive and scientific. They are merely interesting threads in the rich pattern of Harvard life. There is a danger in attempting any breakdown of poll results that one will fall into false correlations of cause and effect. H arvard is not a very good cross section of America, despite the administration ' s attempts in admittance policy to get diversity, and our poll had as much a humorous as a scientific slant. So the following correlations (tabulated by D. Dana McNeill) are offered merely as an interesting picture of the poll results, not as any excruciatingly exact study of a representative American group. The most conspicuous differences revealed by the poll were based on geographical correlation of regional prejudices. The North East, by far the most prejudiced of any region, reported on 20 per cent of its ballots a dislike for Southerners, a 10 per cent dislike for fellows with unlimited allowances, and a 60 per cent dislike for Mid westerners. One North East senior remarked of this last group, ' Midwesterners are crude — ineffably crude. The fact that half the North East expressed a dislike for New Englanders is due to the general distaste for the codfish area by those from North East United States who are not in the New England states. But there was a small group of New Englanders who were themselves prejudiced against the home area. A Bostonian wrote on his ballot, We arc a cold and distasteful people. The weather is also bad. I hope to leave Boston upon graduation for the Far East and forever. 0 5r Did you earn part of your college expenses? The South, on the other hand, noted no prejudice against Southerners or against fellows with unlimited spending money. A third were prejudiced against Midwesterners, and two thirds found New Englanders not to their liking. Like- wise, the Midwesterners showed no prejudice against their home area. 30 per cent of them disliked the Southerners; recipients of unlimited allowances were disliked to the same extent. They liked New Englanders far better than North Easterners liked the Midwest. Only 20 per cent of the Mid- How much have you won or lost gambling in four years? Should the usability of Widener be improved? west ballots showed a prejudice against their present geo- graphical hosts. An interesting and perhaps significant sidelight on these geographical prejudices is that the Dean ' s List men were in all cases prejudiced to a much less percentage than their geographical bedfellows. But the PBK division ' s lower per- centage of prejudice against the Midwest is perhaps better explicable on the grounds that the Dean ' s List tends to have a Mid-western origin, than on the grounds that it takes more brains to get along with someone from the corn belt. Since there was no way on the ballots to indicate how strongly these prejudices were felt, Nazi fifth columnists might still find it hard to blow sectional squabbles into a full- fledged Civil War. But there were some individuals who seemed ripe for fifth column work. One senior, who placed five carefully drawn checks after every group on the ballot and wrote in two or three of his own, remarked, I am not especially prejudiced against any one of these groups in par- ticular. It is merely that I detest Americans and am very anti-social in general. That the intellectual center of America has gradually moved from the vicinity of Boston to the neighborhood of Cleveland is indicated by the geographical breakdown of the Dean ' s List, which shows that nearly three fourths of the Mid- westerners and Far Westerners at one time or another had the necessary B average. Pre-college training seems to have had What do you look for most in a date? How often do you go to the flicks? {266} I itir IBt P r «cnt geo- too n ' s List men were entage than theit ision ' s lower per. is perhaps better • ' St tends to have at it takes more com belt. s to indicate how ffih columnists abfc into a foil- individuals who fflior, who placed up on the ballot arked, I am not :se groups in par- ans and am verr rica has graduallv neighborhood of breakdown of the lurthsofthe Mid- 31 another had the eems to have had ARE YOU PREJUDICED AGAINST Every unit in this pictogram represents ten per cent little to do with this excellent record, since these same areas also showed large percentages coming from the supposedly inferior public high schools. Sixty per cent of the New Englanders expect to be in uniform, and nearly half the rest of the seniors expect to enter the military services after graduation. Only the Dean ' s List men showed any great deviation from this — just 30 per cent of the intellectual elite expect to don the khaki or the blue and gold. Most of them expect to do graduate or re- search work of some sort. Coupled with a tendency for men in scientific fields to form a larger than proportionate section of the Dean ' s List, this would seem to indicate that a goodly part of the brightest section of our class will hole up for the duration in the labs and medical schools of the country. From the North East and Far West one fourth of the seniors will enter the armed forces grudgingly, and 21 per cent of the Dean ' s List men won ' t exit cheering. Only 12 or 13 per cent of the Midwest and South will resent slipping from cap and gown to uniform. This opposition to armed service does not seem to be due merely to fear of not surviving the conflict, since the Midwest is least optimistic of its chances of return- {267} Do you think there is too little class spirit at Harvard? ing from the war (though the North East follows only one point behind with 33 per cent on a one way trip.) The Dean ' s List men are the most optimistic about survival; but then Mallinckrodt is probably somewhat safer than the Japanese area of the Pacific. The North East, apparently resentful at its coming military service and despondent as to its future, also reports that 54 per cent of the men have studied less since the war began a percentage 12 points higher than the second place South. The West and South seemingly have beaten the other areas to the punch so far as the fair sex is concerned. 60 and 72 percent of them, respectively, are engaged and-or in love, as compared to the 42 per cent average of the rest of the class. Dean ' s List men, it appears, like classical music far less than the class as a whole and (with their gusty Midwestern compatriots) lead all other groups in attendance at the Old Howard and in steady drinking. One member of the class reported that he had viewed the Old Howard performances over 80 times, but this includes three weeks of work as an usher. Dean ' s List men, naturally enough, find least to complain about in the grading system. Surp risingly, however As a drinker, are you the moderate and steady type? Do you smoke cigars, cigarettes, pipes, or not at all? they break with the Midwest and join the South in feeling a lack of class spirit. Here the Midwest, breaking all predic- tions, ranks lowest in feeling the need of more Joe College atmosphere. Some of the explanation can be seen in the anno- tation of one Midwesterner that, I live in Kirkland House and class spirit thrown on top of our hysterical House pa- triotism would drive the most normal of human beings to raving schizophrenia. The upper 10 per cent of the class scholastically is also the only segment which strongly feels that cheating on exam- inations is immoral. The Far West was next with 55 percent. The North East showed least compunction about cribbing, with only 32 per cent finding it a moral rather than a practical issue. The North East consistently reported t he largest per- centage who cheat at solitaire. One North Easterner after the question which began Assuming that you are honest in writing exams . . . wrote in screamingly high letters, YOU DAMNED SUCKERS. Southerners reported the least drinking and the fewest gamblers of any region — which can be taken for whatever it may be worth. North Easterners showed the only significant group of cigar smokers and the only corn silk smoker. One attempt was made at segregating the New York City ballots, but the only significant correlation discovered was that the amount of unprintable side remarks was much higher from Gothamites. All hope of enlisting University Hall steno- graphic assistance in tabulating the poll had to be abandoned after a survey of the blistering ballots turned in by the seniors from the City. Several of the questions called for general comment, and the tenor of the response can best be shown by random excerpts from the replies. Do you think there is enough contact between the students and teachers outside the classroom} How do you think the students might have more contact with the teaching body at Harvard} No, but it might corrupt the faculty. Yes, and if you want more contact you can get it. I think seminars in more courses and open to not too serious undergraduates might wake a few of us up. No. Most teachers are not interested in under- graduates outside of class. More mutual interest is the solu- tion. No. Try inviting one of them to your house for dinner sometime. Ha! No. Abolish tutors ' tables, break down coldness of Harvard indifference. More beer and cocktails, tutorial for every one. History and Literature Department is best. Yes, we see enough of them as it is. I personally have no desire for it. No. I don ' t know any professors at all, and only those lower instructors who have been my tutors. And of the seven tutors I have had, only four or five have even been respectable. There should be more conferences of small groups. Yes. structors. No. But if you want more contact, get women in- At least this way we seldom come to blows. Do you think the system of teaching at Harvard might be improved through more conferences and less lectures or other reasons} Perhaps a few more private conferences to straighten students out on difficult points. More conferences, smaller groups, less platform bullslinging. Fire high power professors and get some teachers. { 268 } lappe, i Easterner after the y°u are honest in ' ¥ letters Use first names and don ' t wait for each other to say hello. Lectures, when good, are best. Should be broad survey courses, less concentration. Exams should assume knowledge of facts more and emphasize originality and organization. Students should have more say. No possible improvement. Good for grinds and loafers alike. A student can get just what he wants. More individual conferences but no need to reduce lectures. By students showing more academic interest and self- reliance. Lectures are for getting the lecturer ' s viewpoint not for teaching. If it ' s teaching we want, we need more con- ferences. What improvements do you think could be made on the usability of Widened I don ' t use it enough to know its weaknesses. None. Improve the lighting. We may be mice but we ' re not cats and can ' t see in the dark. More stack permits. Open the stacks or enlarge the capacity of the reading room. None since the damned thing is already built. Happier attendants and more girls. Widener smells and the House library is always cold Do you think the system of grading may be unfair? r house for dinner blo«- s to straighEe less pi ■latforffi [■ ] NOOTM l JT tewrn mi a — n _ j  ie wist is PS? IS CHEATING vwjtii „- .${  u ii ' • ' r«a 9«NT ;(• .iic.t L % mum- mmffit IS SYSTEM OF GRADING FAIR D €? m ENGAGED . IN LOVE wvwwvvv MORE CLASS SPIRIT ll ± Qffl BOOKS READ 71 1 1 Each unit in this pictogram represents ten per cent; each colored book, five books read im and drafty. The delivery desk should be placed at the side door, so books can be taken out without having to enter the atmosphere of that place. Shroud the murals and hang the attendants. Jot down a few characteristics the term meatball brings to mind. Dull tool . . . something which if rolled leaves a trail of blood . . . a grind . . . hacker . . . dinner at Lowell House . . . greasy, hammerhead . . . pedantic, neurotic, un- shaven, obscene, high school graduate . . . sexually frus- trated Salisbury steak . . . apple orchard . . . louse ... a boneheaded yoke ... a red-headed fatso in a green double- breasted suit leading a conga line at Eliot House . . . guy who tries to induce you not to study by saying he hasn ' t when, ah, but he has . . . PBK . . . Lampoon . . . Crim- son . . . Advocate man, tee hee, that ' s what I said old fel- low . . . Student Union member . . . Liberal Union mem- ber . . . YCL . . . patrons of Eliot House grille . . . the people who made up this questionnaire . . . euphimism for hamburger ... a Kirkland House drip ... a meatball is a grind who is also a dull tool . . . guy who walks around Symphony Hall at intermission with a simpish grin . . . someone who acts differently, dresses differently, thinks dif- ferently, or studies differently from the person who is speaking. I never use the term. What is your favorite girls ' college? Do you prefer to concentrate on one girl at a time? Or keep them guessing? Do you prefer to date college girls? working girls? debutantes? When they go out with me, they ' re all working girls. Better put it: Do you prefer college or girls? I like intelligent conversation — working girls every time. College women have more swish — especially Vassar. How do you classify Yale undergraduates? I prefer high school girls. Every debutante I ' ve seen come out should have been put back in again. Give me college girls and more of them. In four years of college I ' ve only had one date, and I regret wasting even that time. What the heck. So long as they ' re friendly. I prefer debs. Nothing but the best. It depends on my bankroll, and my intentions. I take out a woman, not an institution or a social structure. Any girl from anywhere so long as I like her. Debs are dreary but Wellesley women are wonderfull Twenty-five years from now, when another poll is taken of the paunch-bellied survivors of this year ' s graduating class, the tabulators may be startled to find that the witty, cynical, self-reliant class of ' 42 has sunk into the dull mediocrity of the average man ' s life. Just as John R. Tunis ' 11 said of his Class, some ' 42 magazine article writer may report that Harvard has again produced a group of men whose chief ambitions, if their record tells the truth, is to vote the Republican ticket, to keep out of the bread line, and to break 100 at golf. From the results our poll has shown — the racial and sectional preju- dices, the lack of any general intellectual fervor, the apathy toward the finest faculty of any college in the world — one might well expect even worse than Tunis found and grow despondent over the future of the world entrusted to such men. On the other hand, the Class of ' 42 has shown a healthy skep- ticism, an attempt to escape from stupid prejudices, and a calm, if none-too-determined approach to the problems thrust upon us. We have not partaken fully of the rich intellectual fare Harvard has to offer, and our interest has often been distracted from the food to the table manners; but, all in all, Harvard in our four years here appears to have given us all one thing in common. There is no subject in the world upon which the Class of ' 42 is unwilling to express an opinion — ungrammatical, illogical, and incorrect though it may be. And the percentage of grammatical, logical, and correct opinions is probably some- what higher than it would be if we had spent these last four years at home in Warren, Ohio, or East Junction, California. It is this, the relative rather than the absolute result, which can make even a Harvard dean come to the final conclusion that college is worthwhile. In your opinion which ' army has the best officers? iiqptli itktani ' re all working girls. ege or girls? -working girls ever. i— especially Vassar. graduates ' ' out should have bee sand more of tnerr. dyhid one date, ifc y ' re friendly. best. | my intentions. ' nsritution or a socai angasIIfe ' V omen are worArt- nanotherpoll i takes ear ' s gra. k :- ' hat the witty C he dull mediocntr c Tunis ' U vhosechief t heRep bbc - Last year were you a pacifist, an interventionist, or didn ' t you give a hang? 4 271} z! ' ' m ifo d?arkV,ay ' Common l t b Avwuz, llarva r d unit TWENTY FIVE YEARS How vain it seems, how vain the valiant strength Of nations risen in splendour to the sun, For down the weary stretch of battle-length Surges a conflict that is never done, And of all victories and losses none Survives the memory of a day, and time Takes back the withering garlands one by one Of vaunted triumph and of cause sublime. Dead who sacrificed your years of prime, You sacrificed them vainly, and but died Like actors in some oft-repeated mime, Some outworn play of Lust and Greed and Pride, Some allegory writ by bloody hands Far in the unknown past in devastated lands. No traitor trumpet summons for retreat Down lusty lines of shuddering despair, No trampled victory or red defeat Screams a loud torment through the smoky air, Dead, or breaks your sleep; and yet somewhere Your weary comrades struggle overhead As you once struggled, and all unaware They fight the same fierce battles in your stead. Awake once more! Rise from your ashen bed! You died to end these wars, now rise to life Again on the wide plains where once you bled And lost or won; there consummate the strife, Cry from the bleeding earth, from the shadowy past, This is the last of wars! Forevermore the last! By Robert Hillyer in 1917 In their senior year the Class of 1917 was confronted with a somewhat different situation from that which faces us today. The men of the Class of 1917 had been brought up to think war was still a Kiplingesque illusion of flaming guns and s wordplay, a bright adventure, where the other fellow always gets killed. Like the Stephen Crane hero, they believed the soldier was still the Roman hero who went to war prepared to return either with his shield or upon it. They were brought up in a society which still retained a hangover from the nineteenth century. During their early childhood, they were fed on the romance of war. There was still talk of Teddy Roosevelt and the rough riders, of San Juan Hill and Manila Bay. Through the nature of their read- ing, they picked up a romantic preconception of the war, which their parents did little to discourage. Although they did get a better chance than we have had to learn of the actual •{272} AND HISTORY REPEATS horror and cruelty of war before they went over, this miscon- ception tended to carry on. For three years they had been fed on the propaganda of hatred. Cartoonists had evolved a standard caricature of Germany in the person of the iron-helmeted Prussian officer. Neutrality was a hollow phrase, for, with the rape of Belgium and, more practically, with the beginning of an effective allied blockade of Germany, our destiny was decided. Although Wilson had been reelected in 1916 on the platform — he kept us out of war — by the time he started his second term there were few in the country that did not want to join the conflict. Despite all this pressure, however, there were many in the college who were not over-anxious to get in the war. In fact there was an undergraduate neutrality league active until the very outbreak of the war. The reason for their reticence in the face of this propa- ganda and of their misconception was occasioned by several factors. In the first place, it was comparatively easy to get overseas. All one had to do to see immediate action was run down and enlist in an ambulance corps. Norton-Harjes, the French unit, and the American Field Service were badly in need of volunteers, and those men of ' 17 who left college to get into the fight were speedily obliged. Still others joined up directly in the British and French armies. Several of the men who had seen service returned to college to complete their course, before war was actually declared. They swiftly destroyed any cherished illusion concerning the war. Other wounded men returned, graphic proof that the war was some- thing more than week-ends in Paris. This stayed somewhat their desire to see action. Also the propaganda left them cold, for they recognized the save the world for democracy battle cry as just a slogan. At the time war broke out, the class thought of it as a distasteful business, but a necessary one. Despite their hesitancy to declare war, they were not loathe to get into action once the step had been taken. There was still a feeling that, although war was a gigantic waste of men and machines, they would come through unscarred as the opposers of wrong-doing. It was largely due to their agita- tion that President Lowell secured six French army officers to help train the Harvard regiment in the fundamentals of war. By the time Class Day rolled around most of the senior For the Class of 1942 will graduation mean war, victory, and reconstruction? im class was training at Plattsburg. For many of the men graduation consisted of a train ride to Boston, the march through the Stadium, and another train ride back to Platts- burg. They felt there are times when a country ' s safety depends on men who have made themselves ready, spiritually and technically, for leadership in the armed forces, and they endeavored to give of themselves as freely as possible. The war record of the Class of 1917 shows that over 90 percent of its original members were engaged in some form of active war work. Although Harvard ' s Military Record in the World War lists 508 members of the class who were in military service, this figure is inaccurate, because some mem- bers never replied to the questionnaire on which this record was based. Actually, almost fifty more men were in military service. About 80 per cent of those in service were in the army, about 17 per cent in the Navy, and the rest in the marines and foreign services. These menf ought ferociously, with the idea in the back of their minds that it was better to fight over there than to wait until the Germans were ready to carry the fight to our shores. They did not expect a short war, anticipating it to last at least five more years, nor did they expect a picnic, but they did expect a fight, and they got one. When the final tally was made, the class ' s total of 27 deaths in the service was not only the largest of any Harvard class, but also the largest of any college class in the United States. Thirteen of these men were killed in action. Besides the fatali- ties, 23 were wounded, and of these, four were wounded twice, three were gassed, and three were taken prisoner. President Conant addresses the university the day after declaration of war vices bcrs Sen owl 0«( (lull imbi in 42 ' s first blackout is shown here — contrasting same area under ordinary conditions {274} i(i« if mr the services, the problem of making a lasting peace arose. Originally, the men entered the war with the idea of pro- tecting America, but they emerged from it with the hope that they had fought a war to end war. They had seen that war was far from a Kiplingesque adventure, and they were resolved to have no more of its brutality. A strong indication of how the class felt on the completion of the war may be seen in the incompleteness of returns to Harvard ' s Military Record in the World War — the men were so sickened by it they didn ' t even want to talk about it. After the Armistice they looked with confidence towards a future, where lasting peace was not merely a dream, but an actuality. Romanticists of ' 17 returned from the front, realists, and soberly looked down thirty centuries of futile conflict. Aware of the inconclusiveness of war, they and their leaders strove to secure a board of mediation to settle international disputes. In comparison with the battle of the diplomats, Chateau-Thierry was merely a skirmish. For the pot-bellied politicos across the pond were so taken up vying with each other for top billing, that they lost sight of the fact that they were there, not to carry out the ideas of any political-minded clique, but a world of peace-minded men. The light opera company that met at Versailles so disillusioned the sincere, that they were willing to accept al- most any settlement, as long as the League of Nations would be established. At home petty politicians who ' ' couldn ' t see beyond the grease spots on their vests blasted even that dream. ROTC, Harvard Unit, receives decorations for excellence [ ) By the Armistice, over 80 per cent of those in the ser- vices were officers, and 48 men had received honors. To mem- bers of the Class of 1917 were awarded five Distinguished Service Crosses, two Navy Crosses, one Legion d ' Honneur, one Military Cross (British), 26 Croix de Guerre, 19 citations, one Croix de Guerre (Belgian), two Cruce al Merito di Guera (Italian), and one Etoile Noire du Benim. Most of the men in the ambulance service were awarded Croix de Guerres as a matter of course, but the men who came over in ' 17 had to show heroism under fire to win one. In the air the class built up a distinguished record, six men being credited with the destruction of 15 enemy airplanes. Among these was Douglas Campbell, one of America ' s firs t aces, who shot down six enemy planes. For extraordinary heroism in action he was awarded the Croix de Guerre, the Legion d ' Honneur, and the Distinguished Service Cross with four bronze oak leaves. With the war over and with the men mustered out of Afijdeton Church Memorial for World War I dead. ' 42 may have even larger mortality rate Joyously reflecting upon the possibilities of interna- tional amity, which they believed they had established, the men of ' 17 set about shaping the minds of the generation which they fostered. Gone was the hangover from the 19th century! In their children they inculcated a realization of the horrors of the war through which they had lived and by which they had ended all war, sparing them and their children a similar experience. The Henry Flemings of The Red Badge of Courage and The Knights of the Round Table were supplanted by the Christophers of Three Soldiersand the Sergeant Henrys of A Farewell to Arms. Brutally realistic pictorial records drove home their message to the war babies. Little by little during the next 20 years they saw their dream fall apart. They finally came to realise that the politicians had rendered impotent the international institutions they had created to preserve peace. The fault, they saw, lay in the fact that they had themselves believed as truth their own propa- ganda for this dream of a warless world. In the twenty-five-year biographies the members of the class have shown little malice as to the state of the world. There seems to be a genuine feeling of guilt in regard to the present difficulty. One member expressed the feeling that they should have done better. There was no inexplicable force working against them. They botched their chances and sin- cerely regret the situation, in which they have placed the younger generation. Perhaps if they had seen to it that the Under the accelerated program, summer no longer means vacation, but more work philosophy of peace had been spread among the Germans as effectively as it was over here, today ' s predicament might not have arisen. Also, the biographies seem to show a surprisingly strong religious influence, with frequent allusions to the Bible. Surveying the period since graduation, one member said that the class has a definite place in history as the link between two eras, the past and the present. Just as ' 17 was the link between the past and the present, so the Class of ' 42 is the bridge between the present and the future. It is the Class of ' 17 that has brought us to where we are today. Nurtured on their ideals of peace and goodwill, we were totally unprepared for the international complications of the last decade. Taught to know the horrors of war, so we could avoid them, we found another struggle pressed upon us, before we had a chance to do anything about it. Without any romantic preconceptions from our youth, we have been more reluctant to enter the struggle than was ' 17. Twenty years of progress have served to bring an entirely different type of war. Today ' s battle is one of machines and production, where the individual is a negligible factor. Even if we strove to build up a romantic ideal of a soldier overcoming tremen- dous odds, we could not do so. Although we have not had occasion to see the wounded of this war, that lesson was impressed upon us in early childhood. It has been a war in which the course of action has not been as decided; until the last minute great credence was given to the pacifist and isolationist blocs. At the start of the last war American neu- trality was taken for granted. Britain was still regarded as the traditional enemy and corresponding to this feeling, there was was much pro-German sympathy. The Class of ' 17 reflected this national schism. The Class of ' 42 on the other hand, has been over-whelmingly anti-Nazi since the beginning of the war and even before. They were divided on an entirely differ- ent issue: isolationism versus interventionism. Convinced by our reading, our parents, and our teachers that all war was materialistic, that all ideals were propaganda, our class was predominantly isolationist until the fall of France. Even after that we were not interventionist; about 60 per cent of the class favored aid to the Allies, leaving a still strong isolationist bloc. The fall of France shocked us into the realisation that we had been basing our concepts on a false system of values. Through two decades we had grown up under the influence of a new philosophy, the false philosophy of GIANTISM. We had been led to evaluate empirical entities according to size. We had learned to believe that the biggest buildings we built were our architectural masterpieces, that the greatest paintings of our age were the biggest murals. When war came, we applied this same system of evaluation to the inter- national situation. We reasoned: the United States has the greatest industrial and economic structure in the world; therefore the United States is the strongest nation in the world. 276 Field maneuvers for the spring review Harvard ROTC will produce 500 officers in 1943 We had, moreover, forgotten that men would fight for something besides purely sensual substances. We realised of a sudden that men are willing to die fighting for a non- empirical idea. Two years ago, less than one-third of the class favored intervention and, last year, only slightly more than half. But now that we are actually engaged in the war, close to 80 per cent are willing to enter the armed forces. There is no thought of chances for individual heroism or of escaping unscathed, since only about one-third of us feel that our chances for surviving the war are better than fifty-fifty. Com- pared to the men of ' 17, 80 per cent of whom chose the army for service overseas, 60 per cent of the class favors the navy, which thus far has provided the chief theater of action. What the future may bring, none can tell. Beyond the horror and bloodshed of this monstrous war lie even greater horrors and privations to be endured in the years of rebuilding an exploded world. Like ' 17 we graduate, not into a world, but into an armed camp; but we have a greater fight before us than they, and the problems which will face us when the war is finally over will be the same which faced them — but on a far greater scale. The men of ' 17 hope we will profit from their experience in reshaping the world of tomorrow, after we have won the war. Long hours ago the reveille has sounded. The day wears on. Our friends still hold their aunt, But if ue waif, then hy black night surrounded. We shall not find them. We shall fight alone. Then truly ue shall be so long benighted We shall forget the glory of our days. Camp fires will flicker where we should have lighted All earth and sky in one triumphal blaze. It was not thus our fathers hesitated And heard the alien cause plead overlong; While the bland coward legally debated Their strength, they struck and proved that they were strong. They knew, with wisdom equal to their strength: Life is not measured merely by its length. Robert Hillyer In 1941 Radio practice for Military Science students in communications Un tt FAIR HARVARD, THY SONS TO THY Top Row: Night and day studies of the Houses along the Charles. Memorial Hall. . . . John Harvard ' s statue in front of University Hall, of Eliot House. . . The impressive tower of . . Across-the-river view Bottom Row: President Conant ' s Quinc y Street home. . . . Ivy-bedecked Emerson Hall, facing the Widener quadrangle. . . . The steps and columns in the front of massive Widener Library. . . . Mallin- ckrodt Chemical Laboratory, home of Harvard science. . . . University Hall, administration center, from the Yard. . . . Harvard Hall, framed by the corner of Massachusetts with its famous clock. Sag? ! JUBILE ■tlWij if m J KK 10,000 MEN OF HA Coach Harlow outlines a few of the plays on the board Harvard rooters get excited over another Crimson touchdown A new angle of the Harvard back field for Boston sport fans { 280 } 71 [ N0 HARVARD WANT VICTORY TODAY km BT band out-maneuvered all of its opponents on the field ( R« )tr ! aB£ a P ta ' n Grannie Lee wishes Captain-elect Forte good luck All Amerk Peabody, no. 61, tackled Busik so hard, he fumbled Bill Young and his cheerleaders, as good as the football team [ ) im} DIVERSITY IS THE Winter scene Field artillery in gunnery practice ' Remember Pearl Harbor in Harvard Square Lowell Forum Wellesley aquabelles perform for Harvard This rally helped to break a 7 -year jinx The eleven o ' clock jam at the Eliot grille Album unveils Snooperman as David Mayer, { 282 } SITY THE KEYNOTE OF COLLEGE LIFE ! l 4 A hWM IHM ■■•■■■1 mt it i JMMKMM1. -ft. lBpS l? lJ -■BkM H ki H iff ' ' ' IK flPB? rwaHM - 1 f :: . J £F ■IM ► V B i Harvard lost this one to Perm Festivities at the Caisson Club ' s Ball Fun and skiing at Tuckerman ' s Ravine John Harvard dons his u inter a A new course at Harvard, Air Raid Wardens A chamber music octet from the Pierian An Album photographer is on the jo, THE GREATEST EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION N Ancients frown on neo-classical hatwear style and the Roman heritage was unity, unity, unity 9:05 in the Yard and the daily rush to classes Freshmen have a practice session in the shallow end {284} l J IN THE NEW WORLD TO THE AGE 1 If M m Zt ' WW m % t v ttimi M ' . til. THAT IS WAITING BEFORE Top Row: Frontal view of the Biological Laboratory. . . . Vista of Harvard from the top of the Stadium. . . . Life Study of Kosciuszko plaque and Memorial Hall. . . . Sever Hall forms the eastern side of the Widener Quad. Bottom Row: Langdell Hall is library and classroom center for the Law School. . . . A spring scene in the Freshman Yard. . . . The tower of Eliot House. . . . An aerial view of Kirkland, Eiot, and Lowell House from the Lowell tower. . . . The beauty of the spire of Appleton Memorial Chapel is unique. . . . A newer edifice, Littauer Center, shows modern architectural trend at Harvard. PHOTOGRAPHIC CREDIT Since this year ' s Photographic Board needed an unusually large number of pictures, more than 400, it had to draw from a variety of sources. The cooperation received from the numerous contributors is deeply appreciated. The senior portraits, activities and spring sports groups were taken by Sargent Studios of Boston, Massachusetts. They also con- tributed many candids in the House, sports, and activities sections, and were very helpful in enlarging many of the Photographic Board negatives. The Board is grateful to Arthur Wild for access to Harvard Athletic Association photographs, to Ronald Tabois of the News Office for his help with the faculty section, and to the Widener Archives for contributing the three photographs on page 272 and the Richard Carver Wood photograph of Professor Copeland on page 17. The Board is particularly indebted to Otto Hagel of Life Maga- zine for his photographs which appear on the following pages?: 5, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 24, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 37 (lower right), 43 (lower left), 53 (bottom), 57 (lower right), 155, 199, 217 (bot- tom), 224 (lower right), 230 (top), 238 (lower left), 242 (top left), 242 (bottom), 258 (top), 262 (bottom), 266 (top), 275 (bottom), 280 (top right), 283 (bottom center), 284 (top left), 284 (bottom left), 285 (top), 285 (bottom left), 287 (top left). We thank William Forster ' 43 for the use of the Crimson dark- room and the Crimson pictures on pages 59 (upper right), 161, 162, 167, 168 (lower right), 179 (upper left), 182 (lower right), 183, 186 (top), 187 (upper right), 193 (bottom), 196 (top), 200 (bottom,) 202 (top), 207 (bottom), 209 (bottom left), 210 (top), 214 (top), 215 (top), 218 (top), 221, 225 (top), 231 (top right), 232 (bottom), 237, 241 (bottom), 247 (bottom), 248 (top), 256 (top), 257 (bot- tom), 261, 265 (top right), 267 (top right), 274 (top), 275 (top), 277 (top), 279 (top right), 282 (bottom upper center), 282 (bottom right), 283 (top right center), 287 (bottom left). The fall and winter athletic groups (except Ski and Rifle teams) were taken by Notman Studios of Auburndale, Massachusetts. Further photographic credit goes . . . To the Alumni Bulletin for pictures on pages 6 (lower left), 7 ( ' .ower right), 26 (Professor Ferguson), 71 (bottom), 198 (bottom), 271 (bottom), 274 (bottom), 279 (bottom right), 283 (bottom left), 315 (top). To the Harvard Fund Council for the top picture on page 163. To Julian Agoos for the bottom left picture on page 266. To James K. Ufford for the top picture on page 240. To Richard Tucker for the bottom picture on page 202. To Bachrach Studios for pictures of Professors Hansen, Hudnut, and Merritt on pages 20, 23, and 29. To Sau ania for the lower right picture on page 238. To Hartley and Arnold for the top picture on page 172. To the Kirkland House Year- book for the pictures on page 55. To the Boston Globe for the pictures on pages 172 (bottom right), 173 (bottom left), 173 (bottom right), 177 (bottom right), 182 (top), 197 (top), 215 (bottom), 281 (top right). To the Boston Herald- Traveler for the pictures on pages 69, 176 (bottom right), 178 (top), 178 (bottom), 187 (bottom), 188 (top), 206 (top), 273. To the Boston Post for the pictures on pages 175 (bottom) and 241 (center). The rest of the pictures were contributed by members of the Photographic Board, consisting of Jay Kay Lazrus ' 44, Stanley Gam ' 43, Melvin Shoul ' 43, Alan Epstein ' 42, and Arthur Gutter- man ' 43. HARVEY P. SLEEPER JR. Photographic Editor { 288 } Seto-ice ta tUe Readebi In modern advertising, service to the reader is an objective of prime importance. In what products are the readers of a medium interested? What does the consumer want to hear about these products? Our advertising section tries to answer these questions by classification of products advertised and by careful selection of copy. The advertisers have chosen the Album as a medium in the belief that increased sales will result. The consumer is better satisfied when he buys known merchandise and ser- vices. Only by your constant reference to these pages, when in need of goods and services, can this two-fold goal be achieved. FRANCIS PASTORIUS, Advertising Manager u FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— (Continued from page 165) While Radcliffe was cohorting in song with the Harvards, the sweater- gitl scandal btoke from Hollywood. No more would luscious star- lets in tight-fitting woolens appear for publicity. This Hays office ban had even Harvard repercussions, Lowell House taking the lead in Harvard ' s new moral standards. SWEATERS MAY BE TABOO FOR GIRLS EATING IN BELLBOYLAND Former Boston big-shot, James A. Curley, invoked charges against Harvard on moral grounds — all of which reminded one of the pot call- ing the kettle black, an old and sage axiom. CURLEY CONDEMNS SMOKER, SALLY RAND FOR IMMORALITY Sally herself was present at the annual Crimson dance. Casey would dance with the Strawberry Blond, And the band played on. She was not the only guest there, however, for the Lampoon ' s cherished Ibis atop its building was still in Crime hands, after having been cut, down mysteriously in the dead of night. Taken to the Old Howard, the Ibis had a whopping time meeting burlesque queens and even Boston Common swans, before the ' Poon boys retrieved their mascot. Peter Black, working with hammer and saw all winter, finally launched his reproduction of a Chinese junk late in April with due ceremony and a large gathering to watch. BIG CROWD SEES BYRD ' S DAUGHTER CHRISTEN CHINESE JUNK AMID FESTIVE SPEECH MAKING Black ' s speech at the auspicious event was a trifle too late to make headlines in Life magazine, which ran a large spread on Harvard, the greatest educational institution in the New World. B. M. I. Y. Langdon P. Marvin, ' 41, was featured as the head-man in undergrad- uate affairs and got more publicity than Conant himself. LIFE FEATURES MARVIN AS JOE COLLEGE OF HARVARD I ' m not the guy Who cared about love and I ' m not the guy Who cared about fo rtunes and such, Never cared much, But look at me now. Probably the classic line of the tin-pan alley year was inserted into this song, when Tommy Dorsey ' s vocalist stuck in the ad-lib I ' m a lover! between the stanzas. {Continued on page 292) Merle G. Summers Agency LIFE INSURANCE In appreciation of our most satisfactory business relations with the Harvard Student and Alumni Body. 97 MILK ST. BOSTON {290 I 1 and even «dthe lrmascot • fi MUy launched ' h due c CHRISTEN MAKING I0 o lite to nuke ' tJ d on Harvard. W B.M.i.y an in u ms inserted into the ad-lib I ' m a Gentlemen ' s Tailor British French Accessories TO ACHIEVE A HAPPY MEDIUM COMBINING TRADITIONAL STYLE WITH DISCRIMINATE TASTE IS A PRIME REQUISITE OF THE GENTLEMEN ' S TAILOR. IN AN EFFORT TO MERIT THE CONFIDENCE OF OUR CLIENTELE, WE BEND OUR EVERY ENDEAVOR TO THE ATTAINMENT OF THIS STANDARD. 1VA ML Auburn St. Cambridge, Mass. 264 Elm St. New Haven, Conn {250} Km The world ' s finest piano at a price you can afford HPllKKK is one piano, and one piano ■■alone, which has gained the esteem of musicians and cultivated people everywhere. That piano is the Stein- way. No other instrument compares with it. Vet the Stein way is not expensive. When you consider that it will last 30, 40, or even .50 years, tin- Stcinway becomes thr trinrxl of all litinu Iimstmruls! There are Stcinway styles for every budget. Trices begin at ♦. ' ifl. ' i for the Stcin- way Vertical, Sheraton, ami at 91 n.5 for the Stcinway Grands. The glorious new small Regency, at $(J7. ' J, is now one of the most popular of all Steinways. Prices «uhj«rt to rhanftr without notice. Transportation rttra. lotion M. STEINERT SONS CO., INC. SprrnffisM S T E I N W A y THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMORTALS FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— {Continued from page 290) The 1940-41 year was completed on a sad note, nevertheless, when Colonel Apted succumbed to an illness early in June. DEATH ENDS CAREER OF GENERAL APTED The Crimson had dubbed the famed Colonel a general , although no other group took up the title. He had always been known as the Colonel and always will be, an immortal name for a Harvard character, who will always be immortal to those of us who knew him during his last days here. A second grievous death occurred during the summer, when Pro- fessor George Lyman Kittredge, ' 82, died. In early October, a gather- ing was held in his honor, which brought many persons together who had mourned his passing. FRIENDS, STUDENTS, AND ASSOCIATES PAY TRIBUTE TO LYMAN KITTREDGE I don ' t want to set the world on fire, I just want to start A flame in your heart. This rather trite song was being ushered into prominence as we were being ushered back to Cambridge for our last year. Some of us didn ' t 9 it Gallecfe ok Qui . . . dress governs the mood and sets the pace at which a man lives. Lester W. Ross has made this reputation through the designing of clothes with this thought in mind. Dis- tinctiveness seen in materials, patterns, and tailoring have set these clothes apart and identified their wearers in all walks of life. FERDINAND ROSS, Inc. 1026 Chapel St. New Haven, Conn. 73 Mt. Auburn St. Cambridge, Mass. come back at all, because of trouble with local draft boards, and several more of us left at various intervals before the end of the year. NATIONAL DEFENSE SLASHES AT RANKS OF FACULTY It was the faculty section of Harvard that appeared to be most hard hit by the growing United States Army. 3513 UNDERGRADUATES REGISTER, TOTAL FIGURE DECLINES ONLY 70 Public feeling over the summer had swung even more sharply against the Axis. The invasion of Russia had more than a little to do with intervention sympathies growing daily, and the Student Union took a sudden reversal early in the fall, demanding intervention rather than complete isolation. Harvard was becoming steadily more conscious of its roll in the war effort, and even before December 7, ARP and First Aid Courses were instituted as voluntary study. In addition to these courses, the university established a defense council under the leadership of Law School Professor Casner. This innovation, however, caused the disbandment of the perennlai Univer- sity Placement Office which was, therefore, reorganized in Brooks House. Brooks House was also the site for Cambridge ' s local draft board number 47. CASNER HAS ADVISED OVER 125 STUDENTS ON DEFENSE JOBS (Continued on page 294) % HERE ' S a solidity about the St. Regis. - -Not alone the physical sturdiness of its great stone facade, its massive walls and its marble-lined halls ; but the more important solidity of time, tradition, principle and character, -fe These are the solid things that give us confidence now, and for the future . . . that enable hotels, or men, or nations to face whatever demands this extraordinary world may make. ■To- day the St. Regis gives you, as always, service that has distinguished it in the minds of thousands of people . . . and offers you, almost at its doorstep, New York as thrilling and entertaining as ever. Booklet On Request ra 5tJ Sis FIFTH AVENUE AT 5Sth STREET NEW YORK {292} lie to Jo nidi Most people, alas, are like horses! A pparently, the grass on the other side of the pasture Fence always looks greener to a horse. Most people are like that, too. Steam-fitters go around wishing they were electric crane operators. Electric crane operators go around wishing they were steam-fitters. Etc., etc. Maybe it ' s just human nature (and horse nature) to be that way. But whatever it is that makes most folks think they ' d be happier and more successful in the other fellow ' s job, it certainly makes life more difficult for 700-odd representatives of the Interna- tional Correspondence Schools. You see, we at I.C.S. have learned a lot about different jobs during the past half century. We ' ve learned that almost every field of business and industry offers rich opportunities to the ambitious man who has acquired sound, practical, up-to-date training. That ' s why it ' s part of the I. C. S. representative ' s job to convince men who are dissatisfied with their present Cbt that the fault is not in the job, it in themselves. The I.C.S. representative says: Mr. X, our Course in Diesel Engines (or Iladio Repairing, or whatever Mr. X is interested in) is a fine course. But you have worked at your present occu- pation long enough to acquire a lot of valuable experience. You would be unwise to throw that experience out the window by starting from scratch in a new and unrelated field. Trie reason you aren ' t getting ahead faster is not lack of opportunity, but lack of training! And then, from among I. C. S. Courses covering 400 business and technical subjects, the representative selects the one (or a combination of several) that will help Mr. X to master his present job and prepare him for a better one. That ' s one reason why almost 90% of the 100,000 ambitious men cur- rently enrolled with I.C.S. are study- ing courses directly related to their work in business and industry! Executives, especially, will be inter- ested in how I.C.S. works with indi- vidual industries. A request addressed to Box 5369 will bring full information. iCO. ' I nternational U orrespondence schools SCRANTON, PENNA. OrriCCS IN ALL LEADING CITICt IN THC UNITCD VTA™ , and MMirMl I Lanrfan Calf • « nan ha I • Havana • Hanalulu • Mailaa Cltr • Bwanaa Alraa • Manila • Cap Tiwn m Km Countrywide Patronage Through traveling representatives and the facilities of stores at New York, and New Haven, Rosenberg continues to serve many Harvard men after graduation. NEW HAVEN Farley Harvey Company LINENS BEDDING BLANKETS 115-122 Kingston Street Boston ORIENTAL RUGS Prices relatively lower than Domestic BROADLOOMS From the seven leading mills FURNITURE X s ™ k We have been favored with Harvard University orders for many years, ask for rebate. BROOKS, GILL CO. Inc. 28-30 CANAL STREET BOSTON the CENTURY PAPER CO., Inc. Printing Papers Big enough to supply all your needs Small enough to give personal attention 275 CONGRESS ST. BOSTON, MASS. HANcock 1245 FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— (Continued from page 292) So said the Crimson early in November, when the Defense bureau had been running for only a few short weeks. Blue champagne, Sparkling shadows And blue champagne. Holyoke girls last fall weren ' t howling for champagne, blue or other- wise. It was just a little water that they craved. A severe drought in mid-Massachusetts had forced the Holyoke College girls to accept rations on water, scrubbing their clothes in the river and cutting down on showers. HARVARD TO HELP HOLYOKE TO H 2 0; CRIMSON STARTS CAMPAIGN TO SHARE SHOWERS WITH GALS Under President Johnny Robbins, the Crime was exchanging wires with the Holyoke girls in rapid-fire succession. One of the typical telegrams which poured from Robbins ' prolific typewriter read: Have heard of your waterless plight. Crimson extends invitation to all Mount Holyoke girls to come to Cambridge and share our showers. Harvard men find best way to make friends is sharing common bath facilities. Now when you feel like girls in soap ads and when bathless Yalemen won ' t come within ten feet of you, Harvard wants to make friends. Our showers are big enough for two. R.S.V.P. While the college girls were praying for a shower, Leo Rost, colorful Dunsterman, whose room is a den of slotmachines and other sources of camaraderies, scorned his own shower and moved a portable bathtub into his room. FUNSTER SENIOR OBJECTS TO HOUSE SHOWERS, BUYS TUB Why he objected, unless he was wary of sharing a shower with some one, was never revealed. Pardon me boy, Is that the Chattanooga Choo Choo? On track twenty -nine. Boy, you can give me a shine. Can you afford to board The Chattanooga Choo Choo I ' ve got my fare And just a trifle to spare. Possibly the Advocate was expected to supply Ann Sheridan with her fare to Cambridge, which may have been a pretty shrewd idea at that. NANNIE SHERIDAN TO VISIT HARVARD SOON Trying to follow up their success with the Ballet Russe chorus of the previous year, the Advocate boys claimed lots of publicity by inviting Lampoon-scorned Sheridan to one of their intimate cocktail parties. {Continued on page 296) {294} UNUSUAL K jems z Livet L JltU TREFRY PARTRIDGE CORNER PARK and BEACON STREETS BOSTON, MASS. spflULDinG - moss compuny BOSIOO, mflSSflCHUSCTTS UTERIS sofd I FEDERAL NATIONAL LINEN SERVICE CO., Inc. Renters of COATS, APRONS, TOWELS, GOWNS, UNIFORMS Wholesale Laundry Department Always on Time 1310 Columbus Avenue, Boston, Mass. Tel. Highlands 7330 New Hampshire Offices at Portsmouth, Tel. 940 Dover, Tel. 278 4 r FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— (Continued from page 294) Unfortunately, she snubbed them and never appeared at all, even though numerous Cambridge urchins languished about the Advocate doorway waiting to get a look at a real live movie actress. About this time, the gas shortage was proved a hoax and Harvard boys were freer to take dates all over the Massachusetts map. The request by Dean Hanford at the beginning of the fall that under- graduates do not bring cars to Cambridge had not gone unheeded and a decided drop in the automobile population of Harvard was evidenced at the beginning of the year. Undergraduates as a whole were study- ing harder this year than before, and many men in the lower classes were speeding up their academic programs in order to complete col- lege in three instead of four years. What makes a gander meander after a goose What makes a lady of eighty go out on the loose What puts the kick in a chicken — the magic in June It ' s just Elmer ' s tune. E. Bernard ( Flypaper ) Fleischaker could have been the subject of a tune all by himself, even that tune. Known as that gregarious senior, his name was listed in most all the organizations around the Yard. VERSATILE SENIOR HAS THUMB IN 24 UNDERGRADUATE ORGANIZATIONS When the war broke, he even took over all student civilian defense, and few were the days that Flypaper wasn ' t seen sauntering into the Dean ' s office on official business or inspecting the local air raid siren atop Widener Library. A veritable mi nstrel, it was a shock to under- graduates to find he was voted down in the elections for Class Chorister. One group he didn ' t have his hand in, however, was the Student Council which started the year off with a bang under the leadership of Gene Keith, Loren MacKinney, and John Bunker. With new parietal rules now going into effect as well as the reduced standard board rate in Houses, the Council put its efforts into donation col- lection. In this, as in so many other drives, the Council was a smash- ing success. DONATIONS TO COUNCIL ARE LARGEST SINCE DEPRESSION Opening a not-too-promising season for our Senior year, the football boys lost to Pennsylvania 19 — in blistering heat. They went so far as to put ice cubes in their pants before leaving the field house. But after a slim defeat by Cornell, they never again bowed; and as the leaves on the trees began to fade and fall and finally disappear altogether, it was obvious that Harvard had one of its best teams in many years. Indomitable Navy was held to a scoreless tie. Even Army was trounced — Army who had been a sure-fire 4 — 1 choice. Why don ' t we do this more often Just what we ' re doing tonight. {Continued on page 298) THORP and MARTIN CO. 66 FRANKLIN STREET • BOSTON THo STATIONERY and OFFICE SUPPLIES jf4 . MINNEAPOLIS • Nestled gently in Minnesota ' s beauty of forest and lakes - - invites you to come and partake of its rich and healthful living. Come for business or for pleasure - - come anytime. • Come to Minneapolis and to The Curtis Hotel, which offers the visitor every modern convenience at minimum expense -- beautiful guest rooms ONE PERSON - - $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 TWO PERSONS - double bed, $3.50, $4.00, $6.00 TWO PERSONS, twin beds, $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 All Rooms with Private Bath Excellent Dining Rooms — Write for interesting Minnesota brochure. CURTIS HOTEL MINNEAPOLIS . m m {296} COIEMAN nwwefaal Spetfap idtdmztift K v i 4MQ H T ASA LABORATORY  OL Lr Covering the spectral range of 300-800 m«. THE COLEMAN UNIVERSAL SPECTROPHOTO- METER IS IMMEDIATELY ADAPTABLE TO PRACTICALLY ALL COLORIMETRIC PROCEDURES. THUS, IT MEAS- URES VITAMIN A. BOTH «™« «— n-a — « _-. OIRECTLY AT 328 M« AND AS THE ANTIMONY TRICHLORIDE COM- PLEX AT 620 M„. A SPACIOUS SAMPLE CHAMBER ACCEPTS CUVETTES RANGING IN SOLUTION DEPTH FROM O.SOTO SCO MM.. ALLOWS CONVENIENT SPECTRAL EXAMINATION OF TRANS- PARENT SOLIOS ANO MAKES INSTANTLY AVAILABLE THE AMAZING SENSITIVITY OF SPECTROCHEMI- CAL TITRATIONS. . ' ' — L - — ' — ' — - ■— ■— WRITE FOR AN ACCESSORY UV ILLUMINATOR FURTHER ADAPTS THIS VERSATILE INSTRUMENT TO FLUOROMETRIC ANALYSIS — EXACT ASSAYS OF SUCH IMPORTANT PHYSIOLOGICALS AS VITAMINS B Attn B,. POR- phrin and the like. Precise, rugged and extremely simple the universal is recommended both to the re- searcher interested in fastidious data ano the industrial chemist who must also concern him- self with simplicity and speed. U L L E T I N N s 1 S S 1 s v N | i RMIM1K — . .. m M — . 2 4 HOWE FRENCH, Inc. New ImikIuiiiI ' - T.niMir ii rv Hupply Hniw 99 BROAD STREET: BOSTON, MASS. LI. HAN 5910 E t 1834 297 FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— {Continued from page 296) And it did happen more often, all the rest of the season in fact, until Chub Peabody was chosen Ail-American and Loren MacKinney joined him as a member of the All-East team. STUBBORN ELIS HOLD CRIMSON TO 14—0 WIN And so our undergraduate football days were rung out. Even those of us who hadn ' t the ability for varsity teams had been playing in the House matches for three years, and we were sorry to see it all end. MERRIMAN RESIGNS AS MASTER OF ELIOT HOUSE John H. Finley, Classics scholar, succeeded him. It looked as though our class was the jinx for Friskey, because it was during our last years here that he quit both his old principal positions: History 1 lecturer and Eliot Housemaster. But more important events for us as under- graduates were in the air. Negotiations with Japan were on a rocky basis in Washington, and life outside the army camp seemed perilous indeed. Even so, when we were told, while studying in the library that Sunday, to put down your books, brother; you might as well can studying forever, we couldn ' t believe the news that was coming over the radio. CONANT PLEDGES UNIVERSITY COOPERATION IN WAR EFFORT CONANT ADVISES MEN TO WAIT FOR CALL BEFORE ENLISTING CASNER CALLS FOR CALMNESS Killing in the tropics was one thing, but killing in the comics was something else again. Harvard couldn ' t tolerate it, and they let poor old Chester Gould know about it. The Mole came to be an A-House mascot before long, while Mole-doesn ' t-just-take-his-share; Mole- takes-all was the password. MUST DICK TRACY KILL MOLE? GOLDCOASTERS SEND PROTEST The Keep Mole Digging Committee, the Mole First Committee, and the Society for the Prevention of the Extinction of the Mole, that un- fortunate little man trapped with dare-devil Dick in a sub-dumpheap Fort Knox, were all spreading like wild-fire throughout the college. A frantic wire was whisked to ghoulish Gould as soon as that Mole ' s end seemed imminent. All out aid for the Mole. Keep America ' s spirits alive by letting that Mole live. That Mole must live. What a sensational charac- ter. Kill Tracy if some one has to die! Undergraduates joined the ranks by the jeep-load, and Gould was flooded with requests. (Continued on page 300) You are leaving Harvard but You may retain your membership at The COOP An alumnus may join The Coop each year and find it very profitable to do so. Those not conveniently located nearby for personal shopping may eas- ily purchase books and staple merch- andise by mail, so that the savings by the Dividend will be really worthwhile. •{298} IN THE ARMY Blouses Slacks O ' Coats Shirts Caps Insignia ESTABLISHED looo HARDING UNIFORM AND REGALIA COMPANY 3 FRANKLIN ST., BOSTON, MASS. Service Blues Dress Whites Work Khaki Raincoats Caps Metal and Embroidered Insignia . IN THE NAVY Arthur K. Pope Francis S. Snow Ebt ' ii A. Tliacher CYRUS BREWER CO. INSURANCE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Telephone CAPitol 6090 44 KILBY ST. BOSTON, MASS. Long After Graduation you will continue to seek the Finest in imported and domestic wine liquors and beer. you may be served by our delivery service to Metropolitan Boston. Harvard Provision Co. ; Inc. 94 MT. AUBURN ST. CAMBRIDGE. MASS. KIR. 66 4 6685 A LETTER n FOR ITRC IIASINO AGENTS TO READ ! ! DAVIS SQUARE MATTRESS CO. 89-109 WINSLOW AVE., SOMERVILLE, MASS. PHONE: SOMerset 43X3 Dear Purchasing Agent: May we add your institution to this partial list of our satisfied customers? Bath Iron Works Shipyard Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp. Federal Shipbuilding Dry Dock Co. Harvard University Massachusetts General Hospital If you would like to have us send you our price list, just mail a postcard to me. Very truly yours, A. V. Hart Sales Manager itoi Sprlna 1 .11 Miitlr Inrn vaprlnft Msllr Mrmirulliiil K.I. nil. II. Hi PHlawi Chair tUnrrm i iii. Covin {wr DIEMONT LEVY CO., Inc. Direct Importers of SPONGES CHAMOIS SHELLAC GUMS Manufacturers of SHELLAC VARNISHES f 3970 CAPitol 3971 [ 3972 PAINTS VARNISHES ENAMELS COLORS CALCIMINE GLASS Distributors for ACME WHITE LEAD COLOR WORKS M. EWING FOX MURALITE RUBBERSET CO. BRUSHES 57-59 PORTLAND ST. BOSTON MASS. J Power Lawn Mowers a size and model for every lawn Power Lawn Mower Service Co. Somerville, Mass.: fc« 15 Tenney Court ||L SOM. 0504 flo n |u|l Pawtueket, K. [.: iinj 102 Montgomery St. ■■■rmJ- I1I.1IU ma Perry [632 KIRkland 5090 Full Insurance Coverage American Cleaning Co., Inc. 20 Central Sq., Cambridge, Mass. General Cleaning Contractors Window Cleaning Floor Waxing and Maintenance Office and Building Maintenance Night and Day Service METROPOLITAN PIPE SUPPLY CO. PLUMBING HEATING SUPPLIES Pipe - Fittings - Valves - Traps - Pumps - Boilers Radiators - Industrial Steam Supplies Pipe To Sketch 145 BROADWAY CAMBRIDGE, MASS. TROBRIDGE 6448 FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— (Continued from page 298) WHOLE LOWELL MOLE PATROL JOINS AXIS AIDS BURROWER But the demon of a comic strip artist had no mercy; the Mole, though saved from death, was jailed for eternity, and the society was dis- banded, amid sighs and tears. But when that sweet talk is done, A woman ' s a two -face A worrisome thing Who ' ll leave you to sing The Blues in the Night . . . A whooey da whooey . . . Christmas vacation may or may not have brought the Harvard Senior back to college believing what he sang, but Blues in the Night were not unusual during the next few weeks during reading and exam period. Actually, the war, rather than causing a decrease in the study- ing of the average student, served to increase his ambition to learn what he could, while he could. Some of us, though wanting to work harder and faster, were forced to leave for the army without diplomas. STUDENTS LEAVING COLLEGE EARLY TO ENTER U. S. ARMED FORCES WILL RECEIVE WAR CERTIFICATES Besides other factors, the war in general was affecting financial con- ditions all over Harvard. In the bursar ' s office, frantic tearing of hair was the result of an immense loss taken on dining hall contracts since the inauguration of the $8.50 rate last fall. Soon after the close of mid-years, a strict clamping down on all extra orders and price charges for any substitutions was thrust at the undergraduates, resulting in wailing and complaining, fights with waitresses, and new songs such as Starved last night, Starved the night before ... But it wasn ' t too long before hostilities ceased, much to the joy of all, most of all the waitresses. TWO RESTRICTIONS EASED AS FOOD REGIME COVERS LOSSES Gratitude for this near renewal of the old standard was hardly dis- played when some joker absconded with a bit of the Tool-box cutlery — 650, to be exact. BELLBOYS REGAIN SILVER LOST IN DARING SPOONERMAN RAID Coinciding with the restrictions of cost of the dining halls, was the proposed cut in our own graduation exercises. SENIORS APPROVE SIMPLE CLASS DAY Take your shoes off, baby, Take your shoes off, baby, And start running through my mind (Continued on page 302) { 300 } WHAT IS MM DAY is Mechanical Mobilization Day — its importance is supremely critical— about it revolves our National destiny. It ' s the day your plant completes its quota in fulfilling the President ' s 1942 production order for 60,000 planes— 45,000 tanks— 20,000 anti-aircraft guns— 8,000,000 tons of shipping- uniforms— shoes— beans and buttons. MM Day can be any day — the sooner the better. But it can ' t be later than December 3 1 , 1942. That ' s the deadline set by Donald Nelson. That ' s the deadline we, American Industry, must beat. Let ' s set our own MM Day. Let ' s set it well ahead of the deadline— £ -« let ' s beat that. The goal— victory. Here at our plant we are doing our 24 hour best to supply you with handling equipment so essential to this all-out war effort. Modern Materials Handling Equipment are tools behind the arms that will win the war. They save time — provide desperately needed hours for production. Every time a tank, plane, gun, or ship comes off the lines ahead of schedule, modern Materials Handling Equipment sped it. . . . Beat Your MM Day Quota. Our trained industrial engineers, located in all metropoli- tan centers, art available without obligation to uiers of our type of equipment to advise as to its proper application, full use and service. Consult your telephone book or write us. THE VALE AND TOWNE MANUFACTURING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA DIVISION • PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MATIHAIS HAN0UNG IQUIrMlNT ■• HOISTS — HAND AND tllCTRIC • TRUCKS-HAND LIFT AND INDUSTRIAL IlECTRIC m} WHILE AT COLLEGE THE FAMILIAR SAYING WAS meet me unciet the clock at the SUtmote BUT IN COLLEGE OR OUT — ™. BILTMORE OFFERS THE USUAL DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AS IT HAS IN THE PAST THE BILTMORE HOTEL DAVID B. MULLIGAN, Pres. MADISON AVE. at 43rd NEW YORK CITY FROM THE AGE THAT IS PAST— (Continued from page 300) Theses over, parties prevailed throughout the college, some of them more than a little wild. One jubilant senior tried to lift his bar of weights over his head and, failing, crushed a lamp, twenty phono- graph records, and the arm of a chair. For many .drinking certainly is a major part of college life. And it ' s not only the undergraduates who know it. W. C. T. U. DEMANDS HALT IN COLLEGE DRINKNIG While the Temperance Union denounced Harvard students as too gay, there was one person, at least, who denounced them for their mild and quiescent manner. J. DORSEY CONSIDERS MOST HARVARDMEN STUFFED SHIRTS People may not like the average Harvard man at times. The Cambridge residents were, however, highly pleased with them at least once, and that was in March, when the local blackout was staged. The university put on an excellent showing under the tutelage of Dean Chauncey and his crew. No firecrackers were tossed from windows or lights frivo- lously blinked on and off as at the Business School. Spring vacation was approaching, a vacation that we were more than glad for, since most colleges had abandoned theirs to speed up the scholastic schedule. Happy too were we that we did not have to dread returning because of the recently-instituted compulsory athletic pro- gram, which went into effect immediately following Easter. • Lounge lizards we still could be if we so desired. We could arise at noon, listen to the radio, go to movies, play pinball, bridge, or indulge in similar diversions. The draft was getting mighty close, and our ivory- tower, civilian lives were about to close on us for a good long time. Those in R. O. T. C. here had no doubts but that graduation would be a short stepping-stone to the war. Others of us anticipated being called within a fortnight after the ceremony. Looking back on our four years with that point of view makes them seem highly pleas ureable, even for those of us who thought once that we would be glad to leave. Most of us have gone through four years of mixed emotions here at Harvard, which, once we had become ac- customed to it, seemed like the happiest place in the world to live. As time wore on, we found ourselves at low points every now and then. For some, it was this nasty Cambridge weather; for others, it was those indignant deans, whom we had seen only too much of already; for still others, it was disheartening failure to be the part of college life that we had hoped to be. But no matter how we felt when we came or what our thoughts were while we were here, we have been uni- versally sad at leaving. It was in many respects a good college and maybe even, as Life said, The Greatest Educational Institution in the New World. Some of us had fun at our studies and found that Widener, inaccessible as it is, was worth the many hours spent in it. Some of us had fun with friends in the Pudding, in their shows, and in other of the various clubs around the college. Some of us had fun working on extra-curricular activities; Brooks House, ' the publications, the music groups. Some of us found the best part of our college life in sports, varsity or otherwise. Vern Miller will probably never forget the pass he intercepted in the Brown game, which roused the stands (Continued on page 304) {302 STEAM SPECIALTIES BOILERS - RADIATORS PIPE FITTINGS and VALVES SPIRAL WELDED - STEEL COPPER PIPE BOSTON PIPE FITTINGS CO., INC. 149 Sidney St., Cambridge, Mass. PLUMBING REPAIRS REPLACEMENTS Joseph A. Pink i CHURCH ST. BOSTON, MASS. NOVAKOFF BROTHERS Navy Uniforms and Equipment 41 Wapping Street Charlestown, Massachusetts {303} (Continued from page 302) in mirth. And some of us just had fun bulling and making, what they call, those invaluable contacts of college. For most of us, these years have been fairly well-rounded. Few would be the seniors who would write a letter such as the one that arrived last winter from a man, whose connections with the university have long since been severed. . . . my career at Harvard was not really . . . limited. My roommate and I gave a ' drinking-and-eating ' party for 100 people — around supper time just before vacation Fresh- man year. I spent that night in jail and the rest of my time at Harvard in the Dean ' s office (God preserve him). I was an untiring party-goer, and was known to be the best dancer in Boston. There were many enjoyable dances, luncheons, and dinners in and around Boston those years. The girls were charming and the stag line was, at least, familiar. . . . Nobody ever cared as long as the party wasn ' t dry. Boston and the North Shore were often foregone for New York, Philadelphia, Long Island, Baltimore. Energy was abundant. Gaiety reigned supreme. It was the golden time of life, and if there was ever a lull in the program .between skiing trips there were different lectures to be heard on a multitude of educational-type studies offered there. I still owe one night club — Zero Hereford — four dollars which I am resolved to pay. . . . But whatever we concentrated on during our four years here, it ' s all over now. So long to our Alma Mater, and — Goodby Mama We ' re off for Yokohama! END NEW CATALOGUE JUST OUT Phone HUBbard 0474 For Your Copy LAFAYETTE RADIO RADIO WIRE TELEVISION, INC. 110 FEDERAL ST. BOSTON, MASS. DESKS TOO . . . add to the efficiency of modern industrial institutional offices. Our spacious show- rooms display a com- plete line of distinc- tive office and home furniture. MACEY-MORRIS CO- 95 Bedford St. Boston, Mass. STEEL FOR EVERY PURPOSE • BRASS and COPPER • WELDING SUPPLIES • BOLTS, RIVETS, SCREWS • TOOLS and MACHINES ARTHUR C HARVEY CO. ALLSTON DIST. BOSTON, MASS. J. AUGUST 1320 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. OFFICERS ' ARMY NAVY UNIFORMS and ACCESSORIES ' SERVING NEW ENGLAND FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY G. GIOVINO CO. ESTABLISHED 1884 WHOLESALE FRUIT AND PRODUCE WHOLESALE GROCERS CAPit ol PHONES f 7628 7629 7639 7739 19-21 COMMERCIAL STREET and 64 SOUTH MARKET STREET BOSTON, MASS. H. J. DOWD COMPANY, Inc. Paper and Twine BOSTON CAMBRIDGE { 304 } ad z tev Too few people have an appropriate under- standing of the tremendous amount of time and skill necessarily spent to create such a college annual as the Harvard Album. Whether or not the achievement as planned will live brilliantly in its ultimate form of reproduction, depends upon that last step . . . the printer Recognizing the responsibility entrusted to us, our staff has strived to interpret faithfully every infinite detail of design, color and tone. Such accomplishments are not the results of mere chance, but rather by means of skilled craftsmen, many of whom have spent a life time in the Graphic Arts industry. As the recipient of this book, we hope you will preserve it, since it truly is a record of your life at Harvard, and especially now that you too are approaching . . . That Last Step. 4m fun WARREN PRESS 160 WARREN STREET BOSTON • MASSACHUSETTS { 506} axaent f tudca nc. i  } OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS TO THE 1 939, 40, 41, AND 42 HARVARD SENIOR ALBUMS 154 BOYLSTON ST BOSTON, MASS i l THE HARVARD SENIOR ALBUM DENTISTS EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES CRIMMINGS, J. J. CO. High Grade Prosthetics, Dental Equipment and Supplies 120 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. Industrial Trust Bldg., Providence, R. I. HOOD, JOHN CO. Manufacturers and Dealers in Dental Supplies 178-179 Tremont Street REYNOLDS, S. H. SONS CO. Manufacturers of Dental Goods, Dealers in Dependable Dental Merchandise 100 Boylston Street WHITE, S. S. DENTAL MFG. CO. Little Building 80 Boylston Street DEPARTMENT STORE Harvard Cooperative Society 1400 Massachusetts Avenue Technology Store — 40 Mass. Avenue (See adv. page 298) DESKS MACEY-MORRIS DESK CO. 95 Bedford Street (See adv. page 304) DRAWING MATERIALS Spaulding-Moss Co. 42 Franklin Street (See adv. page 295) DRY GOODS Farley Harvey Co. 115 Kingston Street (See adv. page 294) FISH COLLUPY COLLUPY, INC. Serving Hotels, Clubs, Institutions — Sea Food of All Kinds 140 Atlantic Avenue FRUIT - WHOLESALE GIOVINO, G. CO. 19 Commercial Street (See adv. page 304) HOSPITAL SUPPLIES REED, THOMAS W. CO. A cordial invitation is extended to all subscribers of the Harvard Senior Album to visit our new showrooms at 533 Commonwealth Avenue at Kenmore Square. HOTELS THE BILTMORE New York, N. Y. Madison Ave., at 43rd St. (See adv. page 302) THE CURTIS HOTEL Minneapolis, Minn. (See adv. page 296) THE PONTCHARTRAIN HOTEL New Orleans, Louisiana 200 rooms and apartments. An exceptional hotel, appealing to a discriminating clientele seeking quiet, convenience and attentive service. St. Charles Avenue at Josephine THE ST. REGIS New York, N. Y. Fifth Ave., at 55th St. (See adv. page 292) VENETIAN APARTMENTS Miami Beach, Florida 1623 Lenox at Lincoln Road. On Miami Beach HOTEL EQUIPMENT JONES, McDUFFEE STRATTON CORP. Duparquet Kitchen Equipment China, Glass, Silver, Furniture 640 Commonwealth Avenue INSURANCE BREWER, CYRUS CO. 44 Kilby Street (See adv. page 299) SUMMERS, MERLE G. 97 Milk Street (See adv. page 290) JEWELERS TREFRY PARTRIDGE 22 Beacon Street (See adv. page 295) LABORATORY EQUIPMENT HOWE FRENCH, INC. 99 Broad Street (See adv. page 297) LAWN MOWERS POWER LAWN MOWER SERVICE CO. 1 5 Tenney Court, Somerville (near Sullivan Square) (See adv. page 300) LIGHTING ENGINEERS THOMPSON ENGINEERED LIGHTING CO. 143 Newbury Street Illumination (Incandescent, Mercury, Fluorescent) — De- signed and Engineered for Harvard ' s Lehman Hall — Lit- tauer Center Rare Book Library LINEN SUPPLY SERVICE FEDERAL NATIONAL LINEN SERVICE CO. 1310 Columbus Avenue, Roxbury (See adv. page 295) LIQUORS - RETAIL HARVARD PROVISION CO. 94 Mt. Auburn Street (See adv. page 299) h U to CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SECTION MATTRESSES DAVIS SQUARE MATTRESS CO. 89 Winslow Avenue ( Sec adv. page 299) NOVELTIES DADDY JACKS JOKE SHOP The One and Only Daddy Jack ' s 22 Bromfield Street PAINT DIEMONT-LEVY CO. 57 Portland Street (See adv. page 300) PAPER CENTURY PAPER CO., INC. 275 Congress Street (See adv. page 294) DO WD, H. J. CO. INC. 217 Thorndike Street (See adv. page 304) PIANOS STEINERT, M. SONS 162 Boylston Street (See adv. page 291) PIPE BOSTON PIPE FITTINGS CO., INC. 149 Sidney Street, Cambridge (See adv. page 303) METROPOLITAN PIPE SUPPLY CO. 145 Broadway, Cambridge (See adv. page 300) PLUMBING SPECIALTIES PINK, JOSEPH A. 22 Church Street (See adv. page 303) PLUMBING SUPPLIES METROPOLITAN PIPE SUPPLY CO. 145 Broadway, Cambridge (See adv. page 300) RADIO EQUIPMENT PARTS LAFAYETTE RADIO CORP. (Radio Wire Television, Inc.) 110 Federal Street (See adv. page 304) RESTAURANTS LOCKE OBER 3 Winter Place VIKING RESTAURANT 442 Stuart Street RUBBER PRODUCTS THE GREENE RUBBER CO. Wholesalers of Industrial Rubber Goods, Approved Eire Equipment and Safety Materials 12 South Market Street RUGS - ORIENTAL BROOKS GILL CO., INC. 28 Canal Street (See adv. page 294) SCHOOLS INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS Scranton, Pa. (See adv. page 293) SPORTING GOODS McCARTHY-MORRIS CO. Mormac, Inc. Successors — Athletic Outfitters 76 Summer Street, Hancock 8160 STATIONERY SLATE, BOB 1284 Massachusetts Avenue THORP MARTIN CO. 66 Franklin Street (See adv. page 294) STEEL PRODUCTS HARVEY, ARTHUR C. CO. Harvey Steel Road (See adv. page 304) TAILORS - CUSTOM CHIPP, INC. 73 Vi Mt. Auburn Street (See adv. page 291) FERDINAND ROSS 73 Mt. Auburn Street (See adv. page 292) ROSENBERG, ARTHUR M. CO. 1014 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. 16 E. 52nd St., New York, N. Y. (See adv. page 294) TOBACCONIST Smokers ' Den Cambridge, Mass. UNIFORMS AUGUST, J. 1320 Massachusetts Avenue (See adv. page 304) HARDING UNIFORM REGALIA CO. 30 Franklin Street (See adv. page 299) NOVAKOFF BROS. 41 Wapping Street, Charlcstown (See adv. page 303) WINDOW CLEANING AMERICAN CLEANING CO, INC. 20 Central Square (See adv. page 300) City is Boston unless otherwise specified. Mr. Paul K. Blanchard Mr. Milton Fitch Mr. John Marshall In the publication of a yearbook, there are always many people behind the scenes, who are instrumental in its ultimate success- The Album is no exception to this general rule. If it were not for the professional assistance of the photographer, engraver, printer, and binder, there would be no Album. The photography was ably serviced by Irving Green of Sargent Studio and his ace photographer, Charles Ianello. The efficient scheduling and checking up by Miss Dorothy Cooper, the excellent layout executions of Jack Marshall, and the over-all coordination by Milton Fitch made the engraving service of Howard-Wesson Company extremely valuable to this year ' s Board. Like praise is due the Warren Press for the printing. From the servic- ing by Paul Blanchard to the technical execution by Joseph Wood, Ashley Stowell, Dominic Di Donato, and Howard Galbraith, the calibre of the work was always high. The binding was capably handled by Alan Stevens of Burlen Binders, under the watchful eye of Robert Burlen. Just as essential in the production of a yearbook is the large group of voluntary workers. The Album was fortunate in having a great number, who willingly devoted much time and effort to the book. Near the top of the list must come Miss Rosalie MacGruder, Execu- tive Secretary of the Records Office, who saved the biography section with her senior lists, and who was always helpful to the Board in time of emergency. To mention all contributors would be impossible, but the Board wishes to express its appreciation to the following for their assistance on articles; Eli Goldston for his work on the Harvard Poll with the assistance of Coles Phinizy, Dana McNeill, and Marshall Effron; Don Friedkin on the 1917-1942 feature with the aid of Douglas Kennedy; Howard Young on the Age That is Past with the help of Richard Johnson. Others who contributed articles include E. Ames, J. Ballantine, M. Barter, B. Barton, C. Bennett, C. Borden, J. Bullard, L. Burton, J. Chadwick, G. Clay, G. Cunningham, N. Darling, R. Davis, I. Delappe, R. Doyle, H. Feltenstein, M. Fields, P. Flamand, H. Fleming, S. Gam, J. Gordon, A. Greene, R. Greenebaum, J. Hays, R. Henselman, J. Holabird, J. Hughes, G. Jackson, P. Jaretski, E. Keith, R. Kieve, F. King, W. Kluss, J. Kobak, J. Koch, W. La Croix, J. Lazrus, R. Leacock, J. Leffler, H. Lyman, P. Macgowan, L. Mac- Kinney, H. McMeekin, M. McNair, E. Meredith, G Nichols, R. Neiley, T. O ' Toole, T. Peabody, T. Peebles, J. Peterson, F. Pope, A. Recinos, J. Redmond, J. Robbins, W. Rogers, W. Rottschaefer, E. Rowse, J. Scott, L. Shaul, P. Sheeline, R. Sherwood, B. Stedman, R. Sturgis, K. Symon, J. Tully, P. Walters, H. Welch, D. Wetmore, B. Whitehill, D. Williams, P. Wolff, and others. The Album is a non-profit organization, operating on an approx- imate budget of $7500. The book is printed on a 100-lb. Warren ' s Cumberland stock with a 10-on-12 and 12-on-l4 point Monotype Number 648 body type and Lydian display. CHAIRMAN Air. Irving P. Green Mr. Charles Ianello Mr. Robert Burlen Miss Rosalie S. Magruder INDEX ' orbntlieHimt: cNeil.andMinkil i theaidofDoogbi st with thehdprf BorietiJ.Bulfc im, N. Dariing, I Fields, R FluMaL reenebaumj. Hm. son, P. Jaretski, L Koch, W. la Cm, Wacgowan, L Mac- di, G. Nichols, I. Peterson, F. Pep. s, f RortschA ■rwood, B. Stedtm X?elch, D. Wetmott rating on an afpw- i a 100-lb. Vana ' i 14 point Mooww Acknowledgements Aaivities Adams House Additional Clubs Advertising Administration Advocate Album Athletics Athletic Administration Band Baseball Basketball Boylston Chemical Club Caisson Club Class Officers Club System Corporation Crew Crew, 150-lb. Crimson Crimson Network Cross Country Debating Drama American Cleaning Company J. August Company The Biltmore Boston Pipe and Fittings Company Cyrus Brewer and Company Brooks Gill and Company Century Paper Company, Inc. Chipp, Inc. Coilupy and Collupy J.J. Crimmings Company The Curtis Hotel Daddy and Jack ' s Joke Shop Davis Square Mattress Company Dicmont Levy Company H.J. Dowd Company, Inc. Farley- Harvey Company Federal National Linen Service Co. Page 302 310 36 256 289 14 234 68 166 168 240 192 180 252 252 70 258 10 196 212 230 248 205 250 244 Page 300 304 302 303 299 294 294 291 308 308 296 309 299 300 304 294 295 Page Page Dudley Hall 40 Phillips Brooks House 224 Dunster House 44 Photographic Credit 284 Eliot House 48 Photography Club 255 Features 260 Pierian Sodality 242 Fencing 210 Poll 262 Film Society 253 President Conant 6 Football 170 President-Emeritus Lowell 7 Football, J unior Varsity 204 Radio Workshop 255 From the Age That Is Past 154 Rifle Team 206 Glee Club 238 Science 28 Golf 213 Senior Album 228 Guardian 236 Seniors 74 Hockey 184 Ski Team 211 Houses 34 Snapshots 278 Humanities 16 Soccer 207 Index 301 Social Science 22 Interhouse Athletics 216 Squash 208 Kirkland House 52 Student Council 222 Lacrosse 214 Swimming 188 Lampoon 232 Tennis 215 Language Clubs 253 Track 200 Leverett House 56 University Hall 8 Liberal Union 251 University Deans 12 Lowell House 60 Winthrop House 64 Mountaineering Club 254 Wrestling 209 Officers of Administration 14 Yacht Club 255 Phi Beta Kappa 226 1917-1942 272 ADVERTISERS Page Ferdinand and Ross 292 G. Giovino and Company 304 The Greene Rubber Company 309 Harding Uniform and Regalia Co. 299 Harvard Cooperative Society 298 Harvard Provision Company 299 Arthur C. Harvey Company 304 John Hood Company 308 Howard-Wesson Company 306 Howe and French, Inc. 297 International Correspondence Schools 293 Jones, McDuffee, and Stratton 308 Macey-Morris Desk Company 304 Metropolitan Pipe and Supply Co, 300 Mf.rm.il. Inc. 309 NovakofT Brothers 303 Joseph A. Pink 303 Pontchartrain Apartment Hotel 308 Page Power Lawn Mower Service Company 300 Radio Wire Television, Inc. 304 Arthur M. Rosenberg Company 294 Thomas W. Reed Company 308 S. H. Reynolds, Sons Company 308 St. Regis Hotel 292 Sargent Studios, Inc. 307 The Smokers ' Den 309 Spaulding-Moss Company 295 M. Steinert and Sons 291 Merle G. Summers 290 Thompson Engineered Lighting Co. 309 Thorp and Martin Company 296 Trefry and Partridge 295 Venetian Apartments 308 Warren Press 305 S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Co. 308 Yale and Towne Manufacturing Co. 301
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