Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1943

Page 1 of 343

 

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 343 of the 1943 volume:

THE NINETEEN FORTY-TH REE HARVARD LBUM THE ALBUM BOARD DANA REED, Cloairrnan HAROLD W. SOLOMON WILLIAM FISCHMAN Vice- Chairman Bayinexx Manager RICHARD N. SWIFT Biograpniex Editor JAY KAY LAZRUS Pbotograploie Editor MYRON S. KAUFMANN J. ROBERT MOSKIN Literary Editor Sportf Editor BRUCE BARTON, JR. JOHN L. HOFFMAN Featare Edito r.r JAMES E. MCNULTY Adoertifing Manager JOHN W. SULLIVAN Circulation Manager ERIC LARRABEE Art Editor 2, 0.0011000111 J 9 ll .L f 1,1 I - . 'J' '- f!A-YQ-.LXQA-Mlxfgil LCN fvnddx. S-NS-dp m '+--o..,,,,, . .,,. .- ' -dm , A ff v 4, Q . .z ,::: -..-1-ff mic' - ' H.-:fi 55ffff5f . 1- :::r ' X I I .W I, if ,i if -if J: X- n J A 'Ja Wg if L.. E VE RI TAS I I HARVARD ALBuM In this volume UNIVERSITY HOUSES Q CLASS GF I943 Q ACTIVITIES Q CLASS OF I944 ATHLETICS FEATURES When war came to Harvard, President Conant im- mediately declared that all resources of the university would be devoted to the cause of victory. The Album board on its part, endeavoring to clarify and define the nature of activities carried on during the past year by both students and faculty, has wherever possible altered the familiar structure of the volume in order best to depict the state of the college as it performs the duties that such a time has imposed upon it. This year's board has made many changes, all of them de- signed to record more effectively the university as it is today. And we can only hope that, if we have succeeded at all in what we have attempted to do, this 1943 Album will be a worthy contribution to the story of Harvard at war. The board, in carrying out its plan, has faced many problems that arise only in periods of emergency. The lack of sufficient time and the restrictions upon production have created obstacles with which previous boards have never been confronted. As a result, we felt unable to sustain the expense and the unnecessary effort involved in printing the Faculty section as it has been in the past. And when it was impossible for us to obtain new photographs of teams or activities in time for publication, we have been forced to use material from other years. We have had scarcely half the effective working time that has always been available to pre- ceding boards, Yet, despite this, we have, in combining the Classes of 1945 and 1944, put out a larger book than ever before. Although many changes have been made as a result of these difficulties, the board has for the hrst time, seriously considered the creative possibilities of the Album. In the Faculty section and in the history of the two classes, we have attempted to give some special meaning to parts of the book that have heretofore been mere tradition. By including three articles by faculty members and a conscious effort to evaluate the past three years within the framework of a class history, we have tried to compile a volume that will be not only a yearbook, but also a meaningful record of our attitudes and our actions in college during a time of giant events. And if this should be the last Album for many years to come, we hope that we will have succeeded in our effort to express the life and thought of a university at war, and to portray to some ex- tent the meaning that the conflict of today holds for us. uard over 179-Year-old 'onary War School sentry stands g soldiers in Revoluu Training tered 640 A Naval hich quar Ho llis Hall, w lgrrsirielrf gfflfltllflf 5 Message To the lass s of I943 and I944 There is no need for me to dwell on the unusual cir- cumstances under which you terminate your Harvard under- graduate careers. The fact that this Album contains the records of two classes and is published in anticipation of a mid-winter exodus of graduating members will stand in Harvard history as a symbol of the changes wrought by a total war. The day after Pearl Harbor we pledged the resources of the University to the prosecution of the warg here as else- where throughout the nation only one thought was upper- most-how could we assist in speeding the day of victory. Every week if not every day the academic scene altered as one change after another was required in the fulfillment of our pledge. Laboratories were turned over to war research, members of the faculty asked for leaves of absence to join the armed forces or to accept civilian posts in Government agencies, in increasing numbers the Army and the Navy oc- cupied dormitories and classrooms for the purposes of special training. The curriculum of Harvard College was altered to allow of the maximum saving of time for those who so desired. As a result many of you will complete your undergraduate program before you leave to enter the Army or the Navy. In spite of the changes to which I have referred, the life of Harvard College has continued for one year of war, at least, without radical transformation. The most dis- turbing element has been the result not of the physical changes incident to the influx of the Army and the Navy schools, nor the acceleration of the schedule, nor the losses from the staff, but the uncertainty in many of your minds as to the role you were called upon to play. It would serve no useful purpose for me to attempt to review the history of the relation of the Army and the Navy to the colleges since war began. That there have been mis- takes on all sides I am sure any impartial observer of the changing scene would readily admit. It was inevitable that a period of confusion and experimentation should follow our entry into the war. Neither the academic community nor the Wat or Navy Departments were ready with plans by which collegiate education might be modified in a country plunged into a desperate conflict. It was only slowly that many in academic institutions began to be aware of the full impact of a total war and the extent to which young men would be called upon for active service. There can be no question but that many important branches of the Army and the Navy, such as aviation, require young men. Recognizing this need, many below the draft age have already volunteered. While no one can quarrel with the policy of the Army and the Navy which has led to the recruiting of these young men, there can be no escape from the conclusion that an unfortunate situation has resulted from the draft age being fixed at twenty, while re- cruiting has been active for those much younger. Men of eighteen and nineteen in college and elsewhere have wondered where indeed their duty lay. The ideal in a total war is surely that the Government should requisition the services of every able-bodied young man and then allocate his talents for the best interests of the war. Now that the draft age has been lowered to eighteen, it seems probable that such a condition will soon prevail. One result will be to remove the element of uncertainty in the minds of undergraduatesg the other will be to bring about a drastic alteration in Harvard College. Except for the relatively few who are below eighteen or are unfit for military service, our students will be confined to those as- signed here for whatever education the Army and the Navy may prescribe. The period of transition through which you have lived will be complete, the call for men of eighteen and nineteen having now become a Federal mandate, Harvard College must make a corresponding readjustment. As a consequence many of its most important functions must lie dormant until the return of peace. In normal times about half the graduates of Harvard College continue their education either in this University or elsewhere. Therefore, I may express the hope that the members of the Classes of 1943 and 1944 will return in force to Harvard after the war is over. For professional education will be as significant in the future as in the PZLSE. To borrow from the current military phraseology, one may say that you have received your basic training,weducation for specialized skills is yet to come. But whether your work in the post-war world will be the result of further study at a university or not, you will be among the relatively small number of your age group who have had this basic training. Your responsibility will be correspondingly heavy. You will be among the most highly educated of a war generation. You will be both col- lege men and veterans. Future leaders of the country will be drawn from your ranks and supported by your endeavors. Much depends on your efforts in the war, but still more depends on your attitude towards the grave problems which must be faced once the war is won. With few exceptions Harvard has taught you but little which will be of direct assistance in your military duties. But we hope that the tradition which this College fosters- the tradition of tolerance and understanding based on knowl- edge, of passionate belief in the prime significance of freedom -will serve you in good stead in the years ahead. It is for us who remain within the academic walls to cherish this tradi- tion and to make it have renewed significance in a nation dedicated to the principles of liberty and opportunity for all. It is for you, by your words and actions to show the stupidity and folly of those who only yesterday proclaimed the death of all democraciesg it is for you to show how free men may organize with justice and with tolerance a mechanized civiliza- tion in a contracted world. JAMES BRYANT CONANT FT I lf, 5 ,-Jv..r,qp' 'Q ff., MT .., , , . .51 M. ,,'. U J, 3, , N ,h -V ,,,,,.-v A f 7 . .V -. 4' 5 : I, I bl Y N ,L .gf M,-wigs-8,3 C ' in , Q, 51541, Q A ,TE ,' ,' If I 1 J . 9- K U I v,55. ,A 1, Y ' 444. ai +1 4 an ,- , - ' fi. f 1- ' f 1 .. 'fr ,F 'fwlyxfif ' 'I ' ' - ' ' W fx 'ff '. ' I . - ,. A' , f- '-' 74? if '-' 4 ' 3,1 ' I 0' if , , l-' 1- . L ii , ' ws -ff Q' .A fff ff . W' fy , , ' ' 1 f ' up ' - n I - Q Q C fl U M,-figs: ' ,fn wilt., A Q - W k sg f ' 4 pgs., ., ' A ' 41 . ' Q ,--5 ' :M- X 2' ' W' ,El-jgitfj 'P' 65 'w if Q 'fi A' wg., ' , . ,. P- as -V , ' -4' ff J . ,fha J S -,Q f fl h W ' :V 4 ,. Ji I ,kt f ff. U 4 ' A' ff 1f:f:-21221: Q ' ,-f1fi:.' ' Q- , ., 1 - v JM' A 51 ii Y W 4 an - .. FA ff' N -1. 1 1 V l . A 1- g . , .. - ,,-ing' , V- ,. I, A y .A - - S , -4. lp , S I 6 gpg-v,ia?, ' .A W HA F ' in.- ,I 1 J -N wr ' , M, J,-1: X I V 1, , ., my 'f ,Y Q f,,L. 4, y jp' rpg? 4:31, 11 l 5 . 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A , . .1 ' f4L '1 ' A V 1- X :A. , i - ,ix ' C . , I 5 C -an ' M . 2 , ..,-:A V fv A - ' ' ' ,,A.I1 j'i.,f E.4 V -f ' W 4 ,I 1 ,pu -..T, -s.. , . ,,.V,.d! -' ' fbi. Q .1526 ,gc 5 , ' vga- -' av- ,,...,,-,rx - pn. 0 r ..,,,d' --L, if Ph-bg? .,., . ,Vw- e , snuff? V- W-ff' ,V 'V ' Q -wifiw - ' - T Xia. D A Y . . . Uzree year in rcfrvspecf HE history of an average class at Harvard has been in the past a studious compilation of events both serious and amusing, so contrived that the alumnus, on rereading the Album, could indulge in the relaxation of nos- talgia and reminiscence. In that time, the writer was faced with the problem of combining the best elements of the historian and the raconteur in such proportion that what to him was the immediate past must somehow be sub- limated into a prose of flavor and association. The Classes of 1943 and 1944, however, are not average ones. Entering with the usual proportion of minds and dullards, of Easterns and Westerners, they have been broken in mid-shaft, to peter out into three graduations and a mixture of three or perhaps four classes. They are war-conscious classes that entered under the tired optimism of Archibald MacI.eish and are now leaving for immediate participation in the conflict itself. In the future, we will want to know more of our early reactions to the war, of the changes it brought about throughout the college, and-most important-of the changes it brought about in our own lives at Harvard and in our ideas and attitudes. Indeed, these classes can only be conceived against a background of war. Even the traditions which every previous class had held were being subtly readjusted at the very moment we were to adopt them, changing without our realizing it, never again to be the same. When we mention a dance in Novem- ber 1939, we must realize that as the dance took place, captured Polish prisoners were being shot. This does not mean that we were on the offbeat of a burning Rome or that we were callously unaware of the vast conflict ravaging both Europe and Asia, it meant that the same conflict was altering the foundations of the life we ourselves had always known before. Our traditions were in transit. The 301st Freshman class entered as Hitler completed the sack of Poland. The first week was not oriented towards the warg for it had been a week of sizing-up roommates, calibrating the eating places about the Square, and of slowly realizing how vast and complex was the heretofore simple concept of the Harvard man. But the week ended on an abruptly different note. After the bewilderment of registration, the class had assembled in the Union to test their board for the first time and to hear the inevitable assort- ment of welcoming speeches. They were to go home to their still unfamiliar rooms, filled with a mixture of fear and excitement that Archibald MacLeish's Freshman address was to inspire in them. Those of you who will be alive Hve, seven, or ten years from now will have a task of reconstruction, the labor of creating a world in which men can live together. Then, in the same note . . . Your class has a prototype, the Class of 1918. That generation, my generation, believed that the future was the war and there was no future after fwfrzrrarri Zcfiwfrfiy . Q. the war .... Now we do not see the war as a Hnality. The last war was not an end, but a beginning. In the same issue of the Crimron that printed this speech appeared an editorial which was to set the tone for the news- paper all through the fall and winter. We must convince ourselves now that no war is a holy war, that we might be heading for another great double-cross .... Freshmen met with their advisers, decided upon their courses, attended their first classes, and the year really began. Registration statistics had shown that the majority of '43 planned to be doctors, lawyers or teachers. These new students were planning for peace, and yet, the enrollment in Military Science I was higher than ever before. In the second week Freshmen heard much about the highly complex problems involved in the tutoring and tenure question, but these problems as yet meant little to them. What concerned them more were the friendships that they were making each day and the Harvard-Radcliffe Phillips Brooks House tea that was fast approaching. As the weeks fluttered by, they went to the football games, worried about the absence of concerted cheering, read that a Professor Sorokin had stated that a long war would mean the end of Europe for decades. And while discussion over the repeal of the Arms Embargo Act seethed in Congress, the .Union Committee was selected. As November came, three-quarters of the undergradu- ates voted that they were in favor of non-intervention. Then, when the first hour examinations were safely passed, relaxing Freshmen were distracted from the troubles of the classroom by the heated argument raging over the college administrations refusing to allow Earl Browder to speak here. The Crimron rebuked the administration for its de- cision, and for several days, letters and editorials, sometimes vituperative, sometimes coldly analytical, were written pro and con. Meanwhile, as lkzyjfazire Browder wore itself out, occasional editorials appeared emphasizing the necessity of remaining at peace, but these were careful, dispassionate Business School officers, loaded down with packs and assorted equipment, climb into one of their trucks to prepare for maneuvers. 'l12l' statements, replete with such terms as: let us avoid indis- creet words and to an impartial observer .... Winter came, and a disappointing Yale game passed. As a dull month crept by, the thorny problem of faculty tenure was hnally settled in a rather unsatisfactory compromise. Irwin Shaw's Bury the Dead, put on by the Student Union, was the dramatic success of the semester. Then, at last, Christmas Holidays arrived to relieve the monotony of cold morning classesg and the Freshmen, tweed coats draped over their shoulders and new pipes in their mouths, went home to show what they had learned. After the student body had returned to college and when mid-years with their all-night cram sessions were over, the heaviest snow in twenty years fell, blocking the streets of Cambridge and forcing unhappy science majors to wade through hip-deep drifts to reach their laboratories. Mean- while, a few enterprising students of '43 started the Yfzrnlling a newspaper for Freshmen. The months now were going by at a faster pace. In March, Freshman finally had to choose their fields of concen- trationg and when the statistics appeared, it was found that ffl K T1 152 -1 Tv qJS?2J X -C7 ,192 Future officers do physical as well as mental exercise at Harvard. Here ensigns do their daily calisthenics in front of Weld Hall. 4151 Jia mm! Caddy. . . the number of students who planned to major in Government was larger than the number in any other single field. A few days later, students' attention was drawn to Bertrand Russell's clash with Gloria Kay and Justice McGeehan of New York City. Harvard, with the overtones of the Browder incident still ringing in its ears, had suddenly appointed the philoso- pher to a teaching position here. The Boston press yelled in protest against the appointment of a man who entertained such immoral Views on sex, love, and marriage. Mickey Sullivan, red-baiting Cambridge politician, hit the front page by holding up for half an hour a Student Union production of Waiting for Lefty. Ironically enough, Mr. Sullivan did not realize that the other half of the Student Union's program was Archibald MacLeish's anti-fascist Fall of the City. In the early spring, a Freshman amateur hour took place, and a few days later, a peace rally, one thousand strong, at which Norman Thomas was the chief speaker was held in Memorial Hall. Copey gave his annual reading just before his birthday. The same issue of the Crimson that carried the Yard walks are widened for Navy formations Symbolic of Harvard's alertness in wartime, the air-raid siren on top of Widener sends its warning alarm in all directions i14l' ge avi-1. Iii 5 MUS- Members of Harvard's guerilla unit gather behind the Business School to learn how to use hand grenades and to practice commando tactics. report of this also carried the following editorial: Our fleet still has a marked superiority over Nippon's. So long as we maintain that edge, and so long as we hang on to our iron clad defense line in the Pacific, we are safe from the Land of the Rising Sun .... May was active. The largest riot in five years followed the kidnapping by an M. I. T. fraternity of Rochester, radio comedian, from the Smoker. A few days later, as Freshmen began to file their applications for the various Houses, reports in the newspapers indicated that France was cracking. Of more immediate concern, however, was the new Willkie-for President Club that had been started by the inhabitants of an obscure room in Gray's Hall. Events moved quickly, now. As preparations for thejubilee were well under way, the whole issue of College versus Tutoring Schools was brought to a head. From the Dean's office came a decree absolutely for- bidding any student to enter or make use of these schools. An old tradition of Harvard Square was at an end. Towards the end of May, a Freshman climbed a tree and threatened to remain there until a Radcliffe girl consented to give him a date. The day that France was divided in two by the German armies, the Crimson, now virulent and vitu- perative, printed an editorial .... lf America is truly an- xious to remain free of the war at the cost of a German victory -and this is the grim possibility we must face,-then the first essential is to get rid of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, and the present administration as quickly as possible. Final examinations came in a hotjune. And the class, disbanding to go home, found itself no longer Freshmen. It did not know it, but the historical forces that had been at work throughout the past three decades, culminating in the fierce conflict in Europe, were sweeping towards their shores and towards their own lives. The last Crimson of the academic year 1939-1940 came out. On that day, France capitulated. Y Throughout the year 1940-1941, college life continued much as it had before. Early in November, during the heat of Presidential elections, Wendell Willkie with entourage passed through Cambridge, and in Harvard Square spoke a few moments to a crowd of students who jammed street and sidewalk to hear him. The winter passed, and spring brought with it a three-day battle between the Lazmpoon and the Crimron. Then, when the Lazmpoon had Hnally released the Crimronk kidnapped president and as broken windows were being mended, students turned their attention to a more important matter. At Annapolis, Harvard's star negro lacrosse player had been forced to remain out of the Navy game. This display of prejudice and lack of courtesy on the part of Annapolis's administration brought in its wake cries of protestafrom the liberals of the student body. Petitions were circulated, editorials and letters were written, meetings were held . . . until, finally, Mr. Bingham was forced to declare that henceforth Harvard would play no college unless 'l15lL fe 1 fn his-if f mira? a a , Q , the entire Harvard team could participate in the game. For liberal opinion throughout the university this was a victory, and the subject was finally dropped. In june, however, as parents and alumni began to flock into Cambridge for the graduation of the Class of 1941, a most awkward paradox confronted them, a paradox that seemed to summarize the divided attitudes of both the college and of the nation. For, up until the very moment of the graduation ceremony itself, seniors in caps and gowns, bearing placards protesting the pro-war attitude of the college administration, paraded incessantly before the gates of the Yard. Meanwhile, President Conant, only recently returned from England, was accompanied on graduation day by the elaborately be-robed Lord Halifax. At the ceremony, with what seemed at the time like an unnecessary amount of pro- British fanfare, he gave up his seat to the Ambassador from Great Britain. It was not, on the whole, a very popular gesture. . . and there were some embarassing moments beneath that hotjune sun. During the summer months, Russia declared war against Germany. Whether it was because of this or not that students changed their opinions concerning America's position Two lieutenants, in their summer and winter uniforms, check the luggage of newly arrived naval officers in front of Littauer. Students, air-raid wardens, white-helmeted auxiliary policemen, ensigns and visitors learn how incendiary bombs should be extinguished. H61 in the world conflict is hard to say. The fact remains, that when the college once again opened its doors, all was not the same. Perhaps, with the death of Professor Kittredge, the era of the old college with its traditions of the isolated scholar and of the eccentric but dramatic lecturer dehnitely passed away. The great professor died, the last of his kind died with him. Now a new type of professor held the academic chairs that had been left by the old. William Langer, the very an- tithesis of the isolated scholar, had been called to Washington for special work, and William Y. Elliot was to commute by plane from his desk in the nation's capitol to his lecture plat- form in Cambridge. If the place of the professor in society had changed over the past two decades, so had the place of the student. Bur the most striking and immediate change, a change that had taken place over merely the past two months, was expressed in Chapel by President Conant in his first address of the fall to the undergraduate body. He spoke, not of the scholar's duties in a peacetime society, but of his duties in wartime. These seemed indeed ominous words. Dr. Conant, however, though himself an advocate of immediate declaration of war, recognized the still-existing opinion against war. Only when no voice of dissent is heard, he said, must we fear that a group of free men has been transformed into a regiment of slaves. A few days later, as the news columns of the Crimron were reporting a serious water shortage at Mt. Holyoke college and as Harvard men were gallantly offering their female colleagues the use of their own shower baths, an editorial Ensigns line up in front of Hollis Hall before marching to class. appeared which announced a complete shift in the paper's policy. The editors, almost solidly non-interventionist but a few months before, had come to a different conclusion. Either we must believe that Hitler has to be defeated, they declared, or we must believe that America can live alone and like it. We believe the former. But the most spectacular, if not surprising, change was the volte hte of the Student Union. A year before, at an angry meeting, members of the Union had not minced words in declaring their stand. We protest, they had cried, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's attempt to belittle the desires of the American people to keep at peace! How different were their words as the academic year of 1941-1942 hit its stride: . . the goal of all persons wishing to preserve democracy . . . must be the military defeat of Hitler. For them, as for so many others, the character of the war had somehow changed. Meanwhile, there was still doubt, and because of this doubt, there was confusion in thought and action. Students themselves were torn between their own problems at the university and the problems that arose from a future of mili- tary service. They were torn very literally, as the Lazmpoon put it, between Scylla the Dean and Charybdis the Draft. And every once in a while, over this rising tide of pro-war sentiment, a voice still loyal to the cause of non-intervention could be heard. On the very day that President Conant was announcing plans for the formation of courses in Civilian Defense, john Haynes Holmes '02, in words reminiscent of his stubborn but courageous stand in 1917, wrote to the Crimron: There is a reason for this pro-war campaign .... It Undergraduate ROTC marching to Stadium in spring review. -l17lr r . , . lies in the fact that the imperialistic interests of this country are coincident with the imperialistic interests of the British Empire. But there were, as always, distractions from the world conflict. There were football games and cocktail parties and lectures on Sociology or Fine Arts. A Crimron editorial on The Heathenjapaneen which declared that the overthrow of Prince Konoye set the stage for further aggression whenever Nippon feels the time is ripe .... passed virtually un- noticed. More important were the results of the Dartmouth game: a victory for Harvard and several thousand dollars, worth of damage for the Hotel Statler. Now, as November came, it began to grow colder. Ambassador Cudahy and Senator Wheeler spoke at an America First Rally in Boston. The president of the Student Union was there with a picket line which, he hoped, would contribute much to bringing Harvard students into action against Hit- ler. And Harvardls own edition of Senator Wheeler, Tudor Gardiner 1G, screamed a vituperative reply to Comrade Bennett . . . and his pink playmatesf, Such young men, cried Mr. Gardiner, have clearly demonstrated that, in their bellicosity, V stands for Vicarious. If they want to fight, they can go to Canada and enlist with the blessing of all con- cernedf' Meanwhile, there were vague rumors that ex- Chancellor Bruening of Germany, now a tutor at Lowell House, was being considered by the British for post-war Students, conditioning in the shadow of the Stadium, take time out to watch naval officers march past them on way to drill. 2 i- -1- ,Y-- -H Y, ----.,..,.... .... ,, 1L......,. . .,, ,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,..m,,,,mmKm,, leadership of his native land. Professor Sorokin published another book called Cririr of our Age, and Maria Montez, glamorous Hollywood starlet, was, strangely enough, the dinner guest of the very serious-minded Student Union. But students were, as Armistice Day came, coming to a definite conclusion. Women and war aims, wrote the editors of the Crimson, must be understood before they can be handled .... For Americans today, November 11, 1918, represents the beginning of a great defeat-one that must not be repeatedfl There seemed to be a growing feeling among students that war for the United States was not only necessary, l 3 2 In the largest parade in I-Iarvard's history, the ROTC unit marches through the Square to Stadium with 3000 other troops. but perhaps even inevitable. The voices of intervention, the voices that praised the gallant fight of the Russians and of Londoners, were growing louder. But if students knew that war was sure to come, and if they knew that in the years after the war America must play a dominant role, they did not know where or how war would come. Here, then, lay the source of their confusion. As the month of November sped by, the President of the United States and his State Department were beginning to have serious troubles with japan. And while few Americans could believe thatjapan, exhausted by so long a conflict with China, would be strong enough to be a real threat, Foreign Minister Shigenori Togo was telling the japanese Diet that there naturally is a limit to our conciliatory attitude and that Uniformed men use all of Harvard's facilitiesfnot just in the Yard. Here ensigns pass each other near the Law School between classes. japan must have a firm and resolute stand. But by some strange irony, Dean Landis spoke over the radio a few nights later. Said the future head of the Office of Civilian Defense, Russia and England can defeat the Nazis without the help of an American expeditionary force . . . and this defeat will come very soon. A forum for the discussion of post-war problems was set up in Lowell House. The tone of these discussions was Wilsonian, but the pure idealism of Wilson was tempered by the lessons of the last time. Meanwhile, another matter began to occupy the minds of students. In Minneapolis some labor leaders were about to be tried for a charge which seemed entirely unjust. By these trials the Harvard Liberal Union was reminded very forcibly of unpleasant labor trials in the last war. Harvard students, then, had come to the conclusion that their way of life was worth preserving and that to preserve it meant to light. But when and how would America enter the war? Because they could not see the events of the next few weeks, they could only turn their minds to problems about which they were most deeply concerned: the protection of Civil Liberties in the present and the preservation of Democracy in the post-war period. On Saturday, November 22nd, Harvard defeated Yale, 14-O, to complete its most successful season in years. The skies were bright over Cambridge . . . and they were bright over Washington, too. A special envoy was being sent to the United States to continue peace negotiations. Mr. Saburu Kurusu, smiling and bobbing, would arrive any day. Again the Crimion rallied to the cause of Civil Liberties. In an editorial on The Dark Side of Defense, protesting the discrimination against negroes in factories, it said: It is nonsense to refuse a man the right to make a shell or shoot a cannon because of his color when the very weapon is aimed at the same sort of intolerance abroad. Meanwhile, as Pro- fessors Matthiessen and Holcombe again protested the Minneapolis trials, the Harvard Defense Group was urging immediate delcaration of war against Germany. But when declare war? How declare it? The first issue of the Crimson in December carried an ominous editorial, an editorial which could not really be understood until a few days later. Though Secretary Hullis stand leaves the next move up to japan, and though that next move might very conceivably mean war, comparatively little attention is paid to japan by the American public, and if war does come, it will undoubtedly take us by surprisef, The next day, December 2nd, Admiral Stark was sum- moned to the White House. On December 5rd, President Roosevelt was demanding an explanation of japan's recent aggression in Thailand. On the same afternoon, j. P. Mar- quand, somewhere in Widener Library, was presenting to the college the movie script ofil-I. M. Pzalbazm, Exqzzire. On December 5th, Grantland Rice announced that he was placing Chub Peabody on his all-American Team. Mean- i19l- Ha mm' Caddy... During Summer School studying was done on the Yard grass. while, in Tokyo, the officials of the Rising Sun were very doubtful as to whether they could accept the American terms. Then, a week-end came, and on Sunday, those who were listening to the New York Philharmomic Symphony Orchestra were surprised by a break in the program. Thejapanese had Harvard, like the nation, had to change almost over- attacked Pearl Harbor. night from a university at peace to a university at war. Some plans had been made beforehand for air-raids, blackouts, and even acceleration. But, as a few students went off at once to the army and navy, and as others realized that their time at college would be very small, acceleration became almost universal. New courses concerned directly with war work -camouflage, navigation, courses in physicsan d mathematics that would be of use in the services-suddenly appeared in the official academic program. Athletics became compulsory for everyone, registration for summer school reached an all-time high, the Navy took over the Yard for special officers' candi- dates, and sugar disappeared from the tables of House dining halls. And so, Harvard became a modified military training station. The history of the classes of 1943 and 1944 was l20l complete. They had passed through QU the violent anti-war sentiment of 1939-40, Q25 the prologue to war in the fall of 1941, and f3j war itself in 1942. IN the fall of 1942, as Naval and Army officers crowded into the Yard, as students suddenly dropped their college courses to enter the armed services, and as the Dean's office began to worry and wonder over the future of the university itself, there came to those who had been Freshmen in 1939 and 1940, when hope ran high that the United States would remain at peace, new ideas and new attitudes. These new ideas, however, were not the direct result of the war alone, for these ideas had rested somewhere in the back of young men's minds for many years. The war did not create the new set of values that students were gradually adopting: it merely dis- interred it from the mental confusion under which it had lain buried for so long. Perhaps, no student had ever really believed that his country could remain at peace for very long in a world of flaming hatreds. And perhaps this doubt itself caused both the deep resentment against the warmongers of 1939 and the feverish demonstrations at that time for peace at all cost. It was more than a question of this nation's duty as a world power, more than a debate between non-intervention and inter- vention. 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They must determine the place of the community of scholars in a society at warg and they must make every possible prepara- tion for whatever may come in order to insure the nation of the university's continued service during peace. They must, in these times, learn and teach intellectual leadership for the presentg and they must learn and teach intellectual leadership for the future. For in their hands lies the hope of thinking men and of the education of a great nation. Z.. ' . 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X w., .fzlv-:rw lx- it ,il ,4q.x1-Li IVER PRlESllDlElXllll IEMERHT S The college ought to produce, not dejifctiue Jjzecialixtx, hut men intellectually well rounded, of wide Jympathieer and unfettered judgment .... Surely the efxence of a liheral education contiltr in an attitude of mind, a familiarity with methods of thought, an ahility to ufe information, rather than in a memory ytoched with -l24l jQtct.v, howeiter ualuahle ,meh ez .vtorehouje may he .... The uniuerxity touchef the community at many pointy .... It if there that character ought to he Jhaped, that aljtirationy ought to he hrmed, that citizen! ought to he trained, and .vcholarly tattex implanted. A. Lawrence Lowell, Inaugural Address, 1909 PRESHDEN' Learning muxt he adnaneed af well ax perpetuated. Indeed, in the laft analyfif it if only hy aduaneing learning that it if poffihle to perpetuate it. When knowledge ceasef to expand and develop, it hecomes deuitalized, degraded, and a matter of little importance to the prexent or future. The community lofef intereft, and the youth of the country rexpond to other thallengef. Ahle young men enlift in an enterpriye only If they are persuaded that they, too, may eontrihute hy creative work. A zeft for intelleetual adventure Jhould he the charaeteriftic of eoery uni11er,fity. James Bryant Conant, First Annual Report, 1934 41251- CQR QRAN When President Dunster got the General Court to charter the Corporation in 1650, he created a staid tradition as well as a solid foundation for future Harvard generations. The small group of seven replaced the unwieldy and unwork- able Board of Overseers as the guiding force behind everyday University life. And in this responsibility as in its form, it has remained unchanged through three vibrant centuries. The number of officers in the group has endured intact, but the work per man has grown with the University. Re- sponsible for most financial and legal matters affecting the University, the Corporation has duties as specific as granting fellowships and as comprehensive as granting approval. It has to approve just about everything. Special appropriations for specific objectives, departmental budgets, the issuing of degrees-all await a friendly nod. Even gifts to the college have to be approved and acknowledged. Filling in the spare moments come such minor details as the determination of The Corporation meets every few weeks to plan general Universi- ty policy. They are fleyi' to rigbtj: Henry L. Shattuck, Grenville scholarships and fellowships, and the appointments of instructors. Its decisions are generally final, but for some, such as the appointment of instructors and the bestowal of degrees, the Board of Overseers has the last word. Every year the work of the Corporation has had to expand to keep pace with University activities. Formulation of general University policy has presented the President, Treasurer, and five Fellows with a complex problem to wrestle with in their bi-monthly meetings. But if larger and more involved, the policy problem is no less vital and personal to the undergraduate than it was when the eighteenth century Corporation puzzled over untidy maids and unsober students. Thus back in December 1941, the Corporation echoed the student's opinion as well as exemplified unity and precision in dedicating all University resources to the winning of the war. Thus, ever since, it has worked to make real its pledge. Clark, Henryjarnes, President Conant,jeron1e D. Greene, Charles A. Coolidge, jr., Roger I. Lee, and William H. Clafiin, Jr. f x ..... 1261- -ug ADMHNHSTRAT QN For the lirst time in Harvard's history, some stu- dents lasted longer than some deans. The University was dedicated whole-heartedly to the war, and that meant the top as well as the props. the deans as well as the students. The exodus was steady, the destinations varied, Of the under- graduate deans, F. Skiddy von Stade was the lirst to go. He went to the Navy. In fact, the Navy had a priority as baby deans Christopher Huntington and Richard Sullivan went on special duty in Washington. Richard F, French, Assistant Dean of the college, joined the Army. The voices of authority changed, but somebody was always on hand to tell '43 and '44 how, when, and what to do. The administrative structure still stood. Into the intricate hierarchy of deans at University Hall was woven the authority and numbers of the faculty. And neatly laced into this net- work came the officers of administration. The student was alone, snared in an irresistable web-a spiderlike web of au- thority to some, a silver web of guidance to others. Probation, marks Qin a ghoulish sensej, and trouble in all forms no less than employment aid and scholarships were the features of the typical dean's ofiice, George Henry Chase, professor of Archaeology, con- tinued as Dean of the University, and headed the administra- tive hierarchy. The social sciences provided the others of the big threezn A. Chester Hanford of the government de- partment served as Dean of the College, and Paul H. Buck, ll' --, 'W r , ,U ff'-A Pulitzer Prize winner Paul H. Buck, Historian of the South, has been Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences since last spring. A C Hanford is Colle e Dean and Professor of Government. George H. Chase, archaeologist, is Dean of the University. . . g fl27l' professor of history, as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Beset by a constant stream of new freshmen, vari- ously termed '45, '45a, and '46, Freshman Dean Delmar Leighton plunged into a flood of problems. Settling freshmen in a university hopelessly entangled in war-time confusion was no picnic even with two capable assistants and a corps of beautiful secretaries. The Law School put in a patriotic year. It lost most of its students to the armed forces, and lent its faculty dean, james McCauley Landis, to the government as chairman of the Office of Civilian Defense. Edmund Morris Morgan, acting Dean of the Faculty in Landis, absence, guided the dwindling crop of lawyers through the year. Another major change in graduate administrative personnel came with the appointment of Donald Kirk David as Dean of the Business School. Dean David replaced Wallace B. Donham who, however, remained on the Business School Faculty. Where Dean Morgan's tasks slackened, Dean David's increased with the impetus of the war. Both the army and the navy introduced special courses training men for supply work, and in so doing presented the engaging problem of integrating the military with the regular graduate instruction. This problem-the planning of a program satisfactory for immediate exigencies and yet in line with the national war effort-plagued all the graduate schools. Thus overwhelming demands for doctors forced the Med School, under Dean Charles Burwell, to grind out M.D.'s at an unheard-of rate and at the other end to admit undergraduates without diplomas. Thus, too, everybody not precisely necessary to the war effort tried desperately to be so. More immediately concerned with the undergraduates as individuals were the ofhcers of administration. Known to some but strangers to most, they pulled the strings that regu- lated the studentls daily life. Dedicated to helping the student function better, they worked to keep him in shape, in health, in books-in just about everything. Inter-collegiate athletics, developed under the eye of Director of Physical Education and Athletics William J. Bingham-now a major in the army-put some in shape. Inter-House athletics on a broad scale together with the newly instituted compulsory conditioning program took care of the rest. And for those few who played too little or too much, the ones with the Edmund M. Morgan ftapj is Acting Dean of the Law School while james M. Landis works as head of the Office of Civilian Defense. Wallace B. Donham fnziddlej, retiring Dean of Business School, discusses problems with Donald K. David, the new Dean. Charles S. Burwell, Dean of the Medical School, has been an ac- tive member in the Infantile Paralysis and Cancer commissions. sneezes or the sprains, the Hygiene Department headed by Dr. Arlie V. Bock provided prompt and eflicient solace. Most students chose to study. And when they did they had access to thousands of books well-classified by the numbers of capable librarians, under the direction of Keyes Dewitt Metcalf. Not even the autumn blackout of Boylston upset the methodical exactness of the staff. Less in the lime' light than these bookworms, but equally important were the many members of the Maintenance Department. The part of Harvard that never changes, the buildings and equipment, was their province. Business Manager Aldrich Durant and Dining Hall Director Roy Westcott provided the physical comforts and Publicity Director Arthur Sampson the emotional angle. There were others, many too numerous to name but all deserving of mention. They were the worksg they made Harvard click. From the moment when Chairman of Admissions Rich- ard M. Gummere said okay to the end of their college career, '45 and '44 saw the University through the eyes of its adminis- trators. And the visions they evoke in future years will be more the product of these men than of professors, as much of biddies as of instructors. ,,,.4--V x lux Dean R. F. French held office from March to October of this year. Dean Hanford discusses undergraduate academic affairs at periodic meetings with assistant deans in his office in University Hall. ' 'T V ar.. .saw . ,..:,..,?,,-T: 7' ' if-Y . l in r l 1 Jl29l THE FACLI LTY President Conant fvigbrj leaves the White House with Bernard President Roosevelt on the national rubber problem. As in the Baruch and Karl T. Compton of M. I. T., after reporting to last War, Mr. Conant is again doing vital scientific research. iso? and the W HE participation of Harvard experts and scholars in government planning under the New Deal became of greater size and importance after September 1939, and in- creasingly so since December 7th. Our entry into the war did not create an original condition, but intensihed the in- tegration of faculty activities in national efforts as it had effected a reorientation of university policy. Financial and legal experts, political scientists and historians, had been known to visit Washington prior to the war, but neither in such numbers nor with such frequency as later. As the needs of the National Defense Program increased, younger men, especially, had the opportunity to make considerable contributions in research and administration. Pre-war work done by Faculty men has often fitted into the trend of events, and they have adopted themselves to war conditions. john D. Black, author of the AAA pro- grams, has turned to work on Allied food problems, Rupert Emerson is an adviser on foreign and colonial arfairsg and Alvin Hansen's dehcit hnance plans have been adapted to war time needs. james M. Landis, William Y. Elliott,-lohn H. Williams, and other experienced men are devoting all or part of their time in civilian war capacities. Many men have almost entirely removed themselves from Cambridge to do war work, including Arthur N. Holcombe, special adviser in the WPB, Lincoln Gordon and Merle Fainsod in the OPA. William Langer, Donald McKay, and Edward S. Mason pro- vide the Office of Strategic Services with vital information. The amount of secrecy that has come over their work is indicated more by the removal of scientific research in Cambridge from the public view. Details which are now necessarily obscured will provide an illuminating record of Harvard's contribution to victory. The amount of special consultative and research work that is being carried on by Harvard scientists is of great diversity and magnitude, and anticipating the minutest needs of total war. Many commissioned faculty men are already close to the nerve points of action. Perry Miller, Charles Taylor, james Casner, Mason Hammond, and Myron Gilmore are in such positions. Crane Brinton and Bruce Hopper are among others on secret missions of a civilian nature. In these four wartime capacities-Military, Civilian, Scientific, and Consultativeh-over 400 Faculty men are now engaged. As Harvard further adjusts herself to final victory, increasing numbers of trained men will turn to the vital and varied tasks which the government has already indicated it demands of our universities. Prof. Alvin H. Hansen describes his views on economic post-war President Conant, on the day after Pearl Harbor, speaks to a planning in a nationwide Town Meeting of the Air broadcast. huge Sanders Theater audience on the role of Harvard in the war. fail af- HE humanities were under fire in our universities for several years before the war. At Harvard, as the Dean has announced, the nineteen twenties were the last period when the humanities had the largest group of concentrators. In the thirties the trend was to the social sciencesg and the forties have already been promulgated as the decade of the exact sciences. It cannot quite be claimed that we planned it that way, although the Tercentenary, with its overwhelming preponderance of honorary degrees in the sciences, symbolized a marked break with what Harvard had traditionally been. Nothing could be more futile at this point than stirring up again the rear guard action of the formerly entrenched humani- ties against the inroads of newer disciplines. And nothing could be more obscurantistic than to deny that the charac- terizing productions of our age have been owing to those disciplines. But the most perceptive scientists now grant, as they did not do in the eta dominated by simple mechanistic views of progress, that there are limitations to their kind of knowledge, that there are modes of truth which the arts and philosophy and religion alone can articulate. It is the role of the student of the humanities to recognize those limitations and to raise questions of value. A magnificent concrete instance ofjust such discrimination is furnished by one of the great achievements in modern painting, Frederick G.White flepj, instructor in English, chortles with Professorsjames B. Munn, Howard M.jones, and H. E. Rollins Rivera's frescoes in Detroit. Their main subject is the building of the Ford car, and as a modern man the painter was fascinated with studying every technical aspect of that process. But as a humanist he was also concerned with scrutinizing the ends to which our industrial age was moving, and in two companion panels he contrasted beneficent science, finding its expression in the hospital laboratory, with male- volent science, producing poison gas. It is these very discriminations that war tends to oblit- erate, and that thereby compels the humanities to re-examine their role. We have not yet begun to comprehend what the war is doing to our educational system, or how drastically that system may be transformed as the war goes on. What we can be aware of on every hand is the upsurge of a narrowly pragmatic frame of mind that has been part of the American character since pioneering days. Everything not immediately useful tends to be lopped off, and in so far as this curtailment is required for winning the war, there can be no quarrel with it. Nor is it necessary to deplore the further extension of vocational training in our schools, since one lesson that the years of the depression taught us was that the education of millions of our citizens had not fitted them at all for the world in which they had to live. The long-run solution is to break down any rigid divisions in our high schools between in aWarren House office. jones, Conant appointee, is prolific magazine contributor. Munn and Rollins are Elizabethan scholars , uv- 'W F-I -I :- Uma X Q I Kenneth Murdock, critic of 17th Century English and American literature, and Leverett's first Master, is we ' the vocational curriculum and the arts curriculum, and thereby enable our students to master skills both with their heads and their hands, as Thoreau and john Dewey would be united in urging. But what must be deplored and fought-and this brings us specifically to the function of the humanities in a university -is the tone that is currently rife towards all non-practical d or non-technical study. When the newspapers commende the Yard last summer for being hardly distinguishable from f satisfaction in their report that Greek and Latin and philosophy were in the doghouse for the duration, and that there would be no honors essays this year on the experimental novel. When wn into some of the elements that an see what the bias towards the humanities now tends to be. In the first place, the naked utilitarianism of industrial America has often clothed itself in odd vestiges of misapplied Puritanism, and has asserted a moral superiority to any more complex culture that it failed to understand. Furthermore, this peculiar blend of business ethics avails itself, in times of crisis, of all the slogans of humanitarian service, and then produces that special blossom of American idealism, which European observers have often noted: the e for the sake of sacrificing, to sacriiice what is held important by someone else. When you add to this . . . . h trait the anti-intellectualism that grew so fiercely during t e years of disillusion after the last war, you do not get only the fantastic travesty of traditional values I have been sketching. You may get something much more s a military camp, there seemed a definite strain o that tone is broken do condition it, we c desire to sacrific inister. If it becomes ll known for a dry Wlt. ature and the other arts are the standard assumption that liter luxury products, permissible in peace time, but to be cut down d if the war goes on for several on now just like excess sugar, an years, our universities will gradually be reduced to tech- nological schools. Our students will be well instructed in all . . . . bl the techniques they need for War, but it is not inconceiva e that ignorant of philosophy and cultural history, they will 3 be as limited and hard and anti-intellectual as the Fascists they go out to exterminate. What you think of such a situation and how you meet it naturally depend on whether you can conceive the humani- ties as a dynamic force in creating an anti-Fascist culture. Here again are many false assumptions, for which the prac- titioners of our education are directly responsible. Henry . . d Adams wrote one of the classic descriptions of Harvar College when he said that young Brookses and Gorhams and Adamses had always been sent here by their families, since any other education would have requ ired a serious effort, but no one took Harvard College seriously. So far as Harvard is a rich man's college, providing the right veneer for entrance into the Racquet Club and the serious business of life, Adams' definition still holds. That phase of college education is one ' ll d of the distinguishing consequences of what Santayana ca e the enteel tradition. In that tradition the humanities were 8 Qand arej conceived by their professors as polish and refine- ment. They are conceived by their students as being OK when not interfering with more pressing engagements. To recall the freshman who told me him to concentrate in history and litera- keep it in that vein, I vividly that his father wanted Us I Ralph Barton Perry, philosopher, was among the first to realize threat of Nazism. He heads American Defense, Harvard Group. ture so that he would know how to make the right kind of cultured conversation when he met business contacts for cocktails at the Ritz. The genteel tradition is not wholly a recent phenomenon. It can be traced back to certain of the softer elements in the education of the Renaissance gentle- man, who often thought of the arts in terms of ornament and display, as a badge of class. But the vital tradition in the humanities has been a lighting faith. To cite instances from the three centuries that have formed our American past, this is the tradition of Milton, ofjefferson, of Emerson, who, no matter how widely divergent in frame of mind, were at one in their belief that the thought and expression of the great writers of all countries provided the most organic means for comprehending human experience. In this functional conception, the humanities would be even more important in time of crisis, and the real treason of our intellectuals would consist in any defiection from that truth. One of the most disturbing weaknesses shown up by the present war has been the lack of conviction on the part of too many of our educators as to the importance of their own work. Too many administrators and professors alike have acted as though the cultural life of the country was something you could lay away in mothballs for the duration, while you turned to more pressing duties. It comes down to the question of putting first things first. At the point when a man is needed by the government, either in the army or because of some special skills, no issue exists unless the man is a conscientious objector. But what our naked utilitarianism fails to perceive is that the first things for a thinker or an artist must remain, in war no less than peace, the life of the mind, the life of the spirit, the creative resources of the whole com- munity. We do not cease to exist as sentient and reflective beings, no matter what our role in the war, and to the degree that our educators are blind to that fact, to that degree will they fail to provide the continuing bases for a rich democratic H41 Theodore Spencer, critic of drama and fiction, is well-known poet. Appointed by Cambridge Univ., he lectured here in 1940. culture. And without those bases we are reduced to the posi- tion of fighting against fascism instead of fighting for values in which we profoundly believe. The right sense of proportion between duties could be symbolized by Shostakovitch's continuing to work on his Seventh Symphony in the time not required of him as a fire hghtet during the siege of Leningrad. Or by the Hungarian Arthur Koestler who has preserved through a decade of anti- Fascist activity, through one of Franco's prisons and a concen- tration camp in France, the unwavering conviction that, no matter what the hazards, it was his responsibility as a thinker to record what he had experienced, since that record was it- self a weapon. Or by Eisenstein's recent rededication of his art of the film as one of the strongest of mass weapons for a healthy culture. Or by the young Chinese novelist T'ien Chun, whose Village in Azzgzut, a simple narrative of the start of the resistance to the japanese, has dramatized for millions of readers the issues involved in that struggle. Or by the increas- ing awareness in Britain after three years of war that education too is one of the arsenals of democracy, and that unless teach- ing is regarded as indispensable as other defense work, the whole cultural fabric can collapse. These various examples from our allies should indicate that the important thing is what you take with you to war, not what you leave behind. What Harvard graduates take depends in large part on what opportunities Harvard has afforded them. Since some years before this war we have been witness- ing an interesting situation wherein the students have been demanding a more organic system of education than the faculty has been willing to accede. Again and again the student council reports have pointed out how far the curriculum has drifted from the time when educated men, regardless of their fields of special study, shared in a common core of knowledge. The remarkable opportunities for concentration provided by a big university have tended to produce such Walter Piston and Archibald Davison lead Music Depart- Wernerjaeger, scholar who came here in 1938 from University of ment. Davison made Glee Club nation's best college group. specialists that, in the standard example, concentrators in chemistry and in English have hardly been able to be on real speaking terms. What the student council has urged is no curtailment of the possibilities for a man to develop his full bentg but simply that, on the introductory plane, there should be a more planned distribution, so that during the first two years in college everyone would get a broad introduction to each of the three major disciplines. The faculty, on the other hand, has tended still to cling to the lazirrez yizire tradition in- herited from President Eliot, and, regarding the rights of in- dividual choice as paramount, has contented itself with pointing out the difficulties inherent in carrying out any such plan on a mature level. Arthur Darby Nock, an encyclopedia of early Christian and He- brew lore, is noted for his sharp wit, cane, and swinging stride, Berlin, is greatest living authority on classical civilization. Where you incline in this debate may well depend on how you define democracy, on whether you conceive it mainly in terms of individualism, or whether you believe that today we must think in terms both of the one and of the many, both of the individual and of the community. To keep the discussion in cultural rather than in political terms, it would seem apparent that for the student of the humanities a system of planned distribution, such as, for instance, that at Chicago, would be an unquestionable gain. It would strengthen the bonds of communication between minds, and would thus establish firmer grounds upon which the student of the humanities could build his own work. For the goal of that work, as its name suggests, must always be to rediscover and reaffirm what values are most central for man. A generation ago the humanities seemed about to lose themselves in mere historical process: only too frequently you could take a course, say, in eighteenth-century literature and learn a great many details about the minor coffee houses before you possessed more than a smattering of the works of Swift and Fielding. But we should know better now how to subordinate the mass of information that historical research has bequeathed to us. The scholars should realize anew what the common reader has always known, that the great authors are the real centers of light, that to know the essence of Plato's age or of Milton's is to know first the great texts themselves. There is a danger in that method. Unless you proceed to reinforce your knowledge of the texts with every bit of relevant social and intellectual history you can command, you will be insulating your authors out of space and time. To one phase of that insulation the Harvard man has been peculiarly prone. It has been often noted how little the recent graduate has known of his own country, of that dark hinterland stretch- ing west of Dedham. Harvard has often been a symbol, not last F. O. Matthiessen, liberal faculty leader, is Shakespearean scholar, critic ofpoetry, and widely known as author of American Renaissance. as the home of lost causes, but of splendid isolation from the concerns of the general community. The strength of this position has been its independence, its refusal to be swayed from the pursuit of the truth by any narrow jingoism. But its weakness is that it may cause you to misconceive the truth. I remember a recent discussion when a brilliant graduate of a decade ago was opposing President Conant's often stated wish that every Harvard undergraduate curriculum should include some phase of American civilization. This graduate declared that the greatness of Harvard was its freedom from any such prescription, that he, for instance, had been able to take nearly all his courses in science, and yet had felt no limitation in his essential knowledge, since his electives had been a course on business cycles and Babbitt's history of criticism, wherein he had learned that America is the place to which European ideas come when they die. He argued his position with such naive good faith that he was quite unaware what an appalling object lesson he showed himself to be. And just such an object lesson the Harvard graduate has often been, in so far as all that he has grasped of America is our business structure 11361 and a superior tone towards our native culture. Babbitt could have taught a more capacious mind a very different lesson, as, indeed, he taught a whole generation one of the significant methods by which the student of the humani- ties arrives at the discipline of truth. His main subject matter was European critical thought from Aristotle to Croce, but though he insisted on the most rigorous standards in judging our national literature, you never forgot in listening to him the strength of his admiring debt to the tradition from Edwards and Emerson. A point that Babbitt can make in the present discussion is that there is no special virtue in studying Ameri- can literature rather than a foreign one. But the way I could define the crucial issue-and here Babbitt's aesthetic limita- tions can also instruct us-is that no matter what phase of the humanities you are concerned with, you must hold to the perception that a piece of literature is both a work of art and a social organism. Ifour minds operate on that double basis, we can avoid both the danger of reading the great texts in a vacuum, and that of losing sight of them in the historical flux. We should then be able to read the poets and dramatists of every age both for their universal values, and with the realization that universal values emerge only from specific social contexts. We should then have learned that though the basic traits of man seem enduring, nevertheless we cannot understand those traits ifwe remain on the heights ofacademic detachment, but only ifwe live and suffer with actual men, with groups of men, who through the significance of their actions rise to the stature of Man. If we can learn this, we know what the humanities can teach. The importance of holding fast to that double basis of interpretation may be exemplified through the career of one of the most distinguished of the Harvard intellectuals who went oli' to war in 1917. Whatjohn Dos Passos found in his first impact with the world, was, if we can judge from the heroes of his early novels, that the literature and art he had studied at Harvard gave him no coherence on which to build. His college studies had come to him on such a special and sheltered plane that there seemed to be no possible connec- tion between them and the daily chaos of existence. Then, after the war, when he began to grow beyond his first dis- illusion, his thought had apparently been so isolated from our American past that he could find a living revolutionary chal- lenge only in Europe. Not until after long years of patient self-education could he break through the void in which Har- vard had left him, and see that democracy need not merely be equated with finance capitalism. Veblen helped him first to that discovery, and in his recent thought he has redis- covered the vigor of Franklin and Paine and jefferson. But again my example should not be made exclusive in its application. The double grasp both of the concrete work of art or of philosophy and of its environmental condi- tioning certainly does not demand prime attention to American works. The kind of equipment with which the student of the humanities can confront the world may be suggested by a recent concentrator in French culture who has told me that, since he has been in the Navy, the most powerful force in making him see wherein this war can be a people's war is his lasting memory of the novels of Malraux. But that example may seem to put too much of a premium on contemporary literature alone. The inexhaustible resources of the humanities extend to their student the whole range of the past. He must start with an awakened sense of his own age, or-else both present and past will seem remote. But, once awake, his instances of the dignity of man will come to him from every quarter, from the structures of Bach, from Giotto's dramatic frescoes, from the vast social and religious tensions which lie behind the tragedies of Aeschylus. The responsibility of the student of the humanities is to keep open our communica- tion with the sources of vitality in every culture. For the humanities are the way of knowing how mankind has lived and is living, the farthest reaches of his imagination, his sulfering and joy, his reverence before life, before the in- dividual life and the common collective life. F. O. MATTHIESSEN, Proftrror of Hirfory and Lilemtzzre William E. Hocking is well known for his Types of Philosophy. Serge Elisseeff, with Edwin O. Reischauer, has developed the De- Like Perry, he continues tradition of Royce andWilliam james. partment of Far Eastern Languages into one of the nation's best. St e Z7 N the threefold classification of academic studies under the faculty of arts and sciences at Harvard, the social studies fll somewhere between the humanities and the natural sciences. Both history and the analytical and there- fore more scientific studies like economics and sociology have deep roots in our literary and philosophical cultural inheritance, yet even history, and still more clearly the ana- lytical social studies, attempt to draw from their subject matter the kind of working laws or uniformities the natural sciences draw from theirs. Many ofthe difficulties facing the social studies spring from their position as links between the older humanities and the newer natural sciences. 4 as li Alfred M. Tozzer,anthropologist and authority on CentralArneri can archaeology, is famed for his studies on Mayan civilization. First, there is the problem as to whether a given social study is a science or an art. The old guard of historians, who have distinguished representatives at Harvard, answer that history is a branch of the art of letters. The more radical economists, who also have distinguished representatives at Harvard, answer that economics is, or is about to become, a science capable of attaining the hallmark of scientific respect- ability, mathematical formulation. Probably most workers in the social studies at Harvard have resigned themselves to a less clear-cut answer. They do not believe that the most important problems in the study of men in society can be given the exact statement and resolution the natural sciences arf ll I .ii ,n 5 . it set up as their goal. On the other hand, they believe they can profitably employ in the study of men in society objectivity in establishing facts, hypotheses, conceptual schemes, tenta- tive uniformitiesfin short, the method and attitude of the natural scientist, adapted to the uncertainties and complexities of human behavior. Second, there is the problem as to whether a social study is practical oreto give the usual antitliesisfutheo- retical. This problem, of course, runs through all our academic life, and debate about it gives rise to great heat, Perhaps the debate is peculiarly warm among those devoted to the social studies, in which the kind of rough working agreement achieved between the laboratory or experimental physicist, for example, and the theoretical physicist does not exist. Moreover, very few students of subjects like sociology or anthropology can bring themselves to resolve the problem as some of their brethren in the humanities do, by glorying in the assertion that their discipline is in a narrow utilitarian sense impractical. Here, as so often at Harvard, there are many minds both among faculty and students. Perhaps it can be said that in the Harvard of 1942 many students in the social studies feel that their teachers tend to take refuge in academic abstractions and that many teachers feel that their students are unreasonably insistent on getting in the class- room practical solutions to their own and the world's problems. The dilemma has been neatly put by a Harvard economist, Professor Leontieff, who said that to expect economics to solve the problems of a business depression is like expecting fire-fighting equipment that can't pump above the tenth story to put out a fire in the top story of a forty-story building. Better, he says, not to nag the economists, but to let them work in academic peace at the perfecting of their fire-fighting equipment. Some day, perhaps, it will be able to pump to the highest story, This is not, to eager youth, a very heart- ening answer. Finally, there is the problem presented by the vested interests of departments, a problem not unknown to the natural sciences and the humanities, but, again peculiarly W. L. Crum ftopj, economist, taught math at Yale before coming to Harvard, is member of National Bureau of Economic Research. Historian Gaetano Salvemini fmiddlej, vigorous anti-fascist and former Senator in Italy, was imprisoned by Mussolini in 1922. Earnest A. Hooton Qbotlomj, author of numerous books, likes to use titles like Why Men Behave Like Apes and Vice Versa. William Ferguson andA.M. Schlesinger continue great scholastic tradition. Ferguson, expert on Athenian politics, proposed acute in the social studies. Shall government control of industry be a held in economics or in government? Ob- viously it should be, as in fact it is, a held in both disciplines. Equally obviously, the economist should keep up with what the political scientist is doing and the political scientist should keep up with what the economist is doing, and there should be co-operation and mutual respect all around. Actually, the co-operation is imperfect and the mutual respect lacking. This is by no means a situation peculiar to Harvard, nor are govern- ment and economics the sole departments guilty of such ex- clusiveness. There is less of die-hard conservatism than might be inferred from the common reputation of the institution. In the social studies, the conservative is usually a defender of what might be called departmental autarky. He tends to distrust the demand for practical results from his discipline, and to be at least unhurt by references to taking refuge in an ivory tower. He is a stickler for rules, even for the ritual and etiquette, of the special pursuit of knowledge in which i40l new dating of ancient records. Schlesinger, prolific author of text-books, is authority on American intellectual development. he has been brought up. He is not unduly alarmed by the dangers of specialization, He may value the questioning and independent student, but in practice he is not altogether unaverse to finding evidence in examination papers that what he has said in classroom has been duly recorded in the memory of the student. He loves good hard facts, and distrusts what he used to call, when he himself was an undergraduate, bull. He is likely to seem to eager and radical young men a hopeless and useless old fogey. But he has the value that conservatives in every phase of human life have-he holds on to what has been gained. This imperfect and composite portrait of a conserva- tive is not quite from life-not even from Harvard life. It would be possible to construct a portrait of the radical or progressive teacher in the social studies by putting down the exact opposite of each of these traits. But such a portrait would be even more unrealistic. It will be better to point out certain ways in which, at Harvard as elsewhere, the es- tablished, conventional forms of instruction and investiga- tion are slowly undergoing change. The sum total of these changes, if not revolutionary, is very considerable. There are many signs that the worst barriers between the departments are being broken down. One such sign is the recent establishment of an area of concentration in the social studies. Even in the departmental concentrations, though the student who insists on it can still build up a pretty narrowly departmental program, the student who wishes to range widely Ends a liberal choice of related courses. In spite of attacks on it, the requirement making History 1, Government 1, and Economics A all essential for concentra- tion in any one of these subjects has stood up. Finally, many individual teachers in specific departments are interested in research which cuts clean across established departmental lines, and are quite willing to hunt for their material, without any guilty sense of poaching, wherever it seems likely to be. Naturally, their teaching reflects this freedom. There is also an increased willingness to try to guide the student in his thinking about contemporary problems. Historians, whose discipline is the oldest and therefore in some ways the most conservative of the social studies, are by professional training and prejudice reluctant to study very recent history. But the Harvard history department has at last recognized that its students have no memories of the War of 1914, the settlement of Versailles, Locarno, and a good deal else for which there is plenty of documentary material, and has at last brought its major courses down to the out- break of the present war. Moreover, what is sometimes called the new history, the attempt to study the whole complex of human activities in a given time andjplace, and to draw from such a study generalizations useful to us in the present, has taken firm root at Harvard. History cannot be accused of retiring to an ivory tower. In the analytical social studies there are signs that the older insistence on pure theory is breaking down. Such insistence was, indeed, never as complete as hostile critics have made out. New foundations like the Littauer Center of Public Administration and the Nieman Fellowships have brought economists and political scientists into fruitful rela- tions with people actually trying to find guides to action in these disciplines. Even the Graduate School of Business Administration, which was once thought a little vulgar and unworthy of Harvard, has, especially through work done there by men like the late Lawrence Henderson, Elton Mayo, North Whitehead, F. J. Roethlisberger, stimulated the work of sociologists, anthropologists, historians, political scien- tists, and perhaps even economists, on this side of the Charles. Finally, the war has brought to those in charge of the social studies the challenge to justify, in programs inevitably and desirably weighted with mathematics and natural sciences, a study of the problems of men in society. The standardized War Aims course which the regime of the Student Army Training Corps imposed in 1918 is not to be duplicated in the present crisis. But all the departments know that, how- ever self-conscious their members may be about propaganda, their students need, and should be given, the kind of orienta- Michael Karpovich, former Russian civil servant, G.W. Allport has written books on personality, Frederick Merk, disciple of F. J Turner, gives is a distinguished historian of modern Europe. social psychology, andWelles' Martian invasion. a detailed treatment of the westward movement IQ' VPN aa- as, M-fiat 44 1 Crane Brinton, leading Senior Fellow, is authority on French Revolution. Book-a-year author, he has popularized new intellectual history. 3 7 A ,J . ,ja i -.I . .. H .em -Q , lm Sumner Slichter, labor economist, is local arbiter for theWar La- bor Board and advisory member of War Manpower Commission. 'l42l- tion that will enable them to face more confidently the prob- lems of the war and the peace to follow. Towards this end, some of the requirements for elementary courses have been relaxed, and special courses on such subjects as the economics of war, the role of the armed forces in modern society, the development of Anglo-Saxon traditions of self-government, and contemporary international relations, have been made available to students who have no special preparation. In the background for many years, and in the present crisis merely brought forward to a clearer focus, is the problem everyone concerned with the social studies must face: to what end, in what spirit, should these studies be pursued? Are they to be so taught that the student will receive a set of closed beliefs, formulas, dogmasfa faith, if you likeethat will set all his doubts at rest? Or are they to be so taught, that the student will find his mind and spirit constantly aware of the possibility of new solutions-and new doubts? Put this way, the dilemma is so simple as to be unreal. The most dog- matic education will never make the solution of all problems automatic. Presumably the most doctrinaire of great educa- tional systemsfthejapanesefleaves in the individual some leeway for questioning and initiative. Nor does the most progressive kind of Socratic education altogether fail to give the student some kind of anchor in the assurance of habits, customs, and value-judgments learned and made f' 1 l WW' 3 3 we 1 lp 1 f x K1 I A 4 ik ' Y .-.N a- .,.w im .. , i l '1 1 'Siva it 44- L . .-' . '. e 1 . -+'- -V 'A J i' 9' , 'NN- X Ha. 'fu Carl Joachim Friedrich, popular theoretician of political admin- istration, is analyst of public opinion and propaganda methods. second nature. Still, the dilemma remains: to teach is to affirm, or, to teach is to question. There is no doubt that in modern times Harvard has committed itself to educating by raising doubts and ques- tionings in the student's mind, by encouraging him to find so far as possible his own answers. The tutorial system is a poor, and very expensive, method of indoctrination. It must try to work as Socrates worked, or it fails altogether. A distinguished neo-Thomist, guest of the University, once asked a Harvard tutor what he did. Do you mean, said the distinguished guest after the tutor had explained, that you spend a whole hour with just one pupil, discussing something back and forth? What a waste! Put two or three hundred together in a room, and tell 'em! Such statements are not limited to neo-Thomists. Indeed, there is here a trace of the eternal conflict of the generations. Many of our young men complain, as did the undergraduate orator at Commencement in 1942, that their teachers give them nothing to hold on to, no beliefs, no solutions, that their teachers are cynics, skeptics, who can only answer, yes, this may be partly true, but, on the other hand, other things being equal, which they never are .... a ri.. Z lx joseph A. Schumpeter, authority on banking-business cycle prob- lems, was former Finance Minister of Austria before Dollfuss. The war has sharpened, though it did not create, the dilemma. lt is hard to ask men to die for an hypothesis. Yet, unless we are to accept as real an even harsher dilemma-that is, that to beat our totalitarian enemies we too must become totalitarians-we must preserve something of the Socratic method of doubt. If democracy has any meaning in the realm of the intellect, it means that no one is wise enough to know everything, that invention, discovery, novelty, are always possible, even-indeed, above allmin morals and politics. The social studies at Harvard need not inculcate the attitude scornfully called debunking They need not breed cynicism nor despair. But they must continue even in war-time, even in a coming peace-time when government and authority must inevitably bulk larger than formerly, to encourage in the individual the virtue of doubting. A Harvard without heretics would be an unthinkable repudiation of three centuries of Harvard history. CRANE BRINTON, Profhfor of Hiflory l45l- Mmm ,mug Arthur B. Lamb, Dean of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 1 takes great delight in doing experiments like this in Chemistry A. l44l Seivuca HAT exactly is the scientist trying to do? Why is it that a man will gladly spend ten or twenty years of of his life examining the lice of Eastern New Guinea or redetermining the atomic weight of Barium? To some extent the answers are different for different persons. Most people get the same satisfaction out of scientific work as artists and musicians get out of painting and composing. It is the satis- faction of building:Mof gradually elucidating facts one by one, and fitting them together into a body of new knowledge. For some, the element of curiosity is of prime importance, and this holds greater implications than at first appear, for once one's curiosity about a particular scientific matter has been aroused, the feeling of ignorance becomes more and more a limitation,-a shackle,-which must be broken. Ig- norance is, after all, the most irksome of the chains that bind us down, and the satisfaction of curiosity is the struggle for afraid' JW ufaaaat George B. Kistiakowsky, physical chemist, was a Russian tank corps commander in the last war. liberation- the truth shall make you free. lt is in this psychological approach that the scientist has much in common with the mystic. I do not believe that many men have gone into science because of a conscious desire to alleviate social ills. How- ever, this may be true of some medical men rather than of scientists. The social fruits of scientific work so often arise in an unexpected way that the possibility of applying the re- sults of oneis work to the troubles of the world can only lie very far in the background. The studies of Hertz on the transmission of electro-magnetic waves were undertaken without any realization that they would bring us the benefits fand miseriesj of the Radio Hour. It was from careful but purely academic experiments, aimed at first simply at determin- ing why bacteria can be stained with certain dyes, that one of the greatest contributions to human welfare, the sulfanil- amid drugs, arose. Such examples could be multiplied in- definitely. Why, then, should a young man select a career in science? The reason should be the same as for a career in anything else'-because the more he reads about it, the more it grows upon him, until he comes to feel that only in doing scientific work will he be happy. He should, of course, have some obvious aptitude for it, that is, he should be skillful with his hands, quick at figures, independent and critical in his thinking, and with a strong touch of imagination. But these are things about which one cannot always be sure while still at college. That is why there are many changes in the field of concentration after the first, or even the second, year of college work. Certainly a man should not plan to go into science, or even to major in a scientific field, simply because it offers a respectable and perhaps interesting way of making a living. If he is dominated by his social conscience, let him go into politics or settlement work, if he is a slave to an inferiority complex, let him go into business and make enough money to compensate it, if he craves excitement, let him go into the diplomatic service, if he is looking for respectability, he should try banking or the law, On the other hand every man should know something about science as it affects everyday life, for ours is a scientific and technological civilization, and an acquaintance with the methods and some of the results of science is every bit as much a cultural necessity as an ac- quaintance with the literature of one's language. It is just Mathematician George D. Birkhoff is widely known expert on relativity as well as differential equations and quantum mechanics. as inexcusable to know nothing about soap, electricity and vitamins as it is to know nothing about the Constitution. For this reason it seems to me that a student should take more than one course in science while at college: laboratory work is as much a part of modern education as literary criticism, and the classic writings of science can open to the imagination new vistas as inspiring as the magic casements of Keats. You who have majored in one of the natural sciences, and no longer feel that it holds your interest, may well reflect that a training in scientific method,-in a willingness to repeat a procedure many times before drawing a conclusion, in a refusal to accept statements without inspection of the evidence on which they rest,-all this is the most workmanlike possible introduction to the modern world. No one should imagine that the pursuit of science is the cold and passionless thing which many writers, especially H. G. Wells, would like to have us believe. It is true that the working scientist has to have the facts before he can be convinced, it is true that he usually has to repeat an experiment over and over again, learning something new each time, before he can feel he understands it, it is true, too, that he must be ready to scrap his most cherished hypothesis as soon as the evidence turns against it. In respect of the repeatability of his work he is at a great advantage compared, say, to the historian, who has to make all his judgments from limited descriptions of events which occurred long ago. On the other hand, it is not true that a scientist is balanced, unpreju- diced and emotionless about his experiments. Science is just Louis F. Fieser, cancer expert, is now working on incendiaries. He is shown here setting off a flare on the roof of Converse Lab. Kirtley Mather, professor of Geology, felt the full force of the accelerated program this year as Director of the Summer School. as warm and human as any other activity of the human mind. In fact it is the hunches, foibles and prejudices of the scien- tific man that make his work lively and stimulating. The war, of course, influences all our thinking about scientific education. The large majority of natural scientists at Harvard are engaged in whole or part time war research. Laboratory doors are locked, the buildings guarded and watched, the free flow of shop talk over the luncheon table is dried up. Because science depends for its very life on the interchange of ideas between men in related fields, in this respect alone, quite apart from any other, war conditions are doing science great harm. On the other hand, scientific work is playing an enormous part in this war. If it had not been for the radio-locator, the British might have lost the great aerial Battle of Britain. Scientists, of course, are very proud to be able to make such a valuable contribution. As the National Research Council state in their annual report: More than ever before this is a contest of brain power. Scientific knowledge and engineering skill will count for much more than in previous wars, in addition to the energy, courage, and steadfastness of the soldier. This is especially apparent in the fields of mechanized transportation and aviation. It means that advanced knowledge, and ingenuity in applying technical knowledge, will be of critical significance to this country in obtaining its national objective. Moreover, modern warfare is more than ever before a technical enterprise, sup- ported by highly organized industry producing intricate equipment on a very large scale. Naturally the wide publicity given to statements of this 'iksif .', .N D. S.Whittlesey brings geography up to the minute in his course on geopolitics. It emphasizes German views of space-planning. kind has had a big effect on students' career plans. One result is that many students who would not otherwise have done so are going into medicine. Is this a good idea? Under the accelerated plan, medical training takes three years. Even if the subsequent period of internship is reduced to half a year, as is not unlikely, still those of you who are entering Medical School now will not be finished with your training until late in 1946. But most informed people do not expect the war to last much beyond this time. Thus, with the best will in the world, many young medical men will very likely not be able to play any considerable part in this war. And after the war they may find themselves in a profession for which they have been hurriedly and imperfectly prepared, and in which perhaps they have no really deep interest. Students, in discussing their plans, are apt to say, Well, after all, why bother, because I expect to go into the Army. Nothing could be more unreal. The war will not last forever, and, even if our casualties are heavy, most of us will survive it. It is essential that we win the war, but it is almost as important that the peace should not find us unpre- pared, either as regards our personal lives or our vision for the world of the near future. Careers should be considered just as carefully now as at any other time, and even though one's ideas will undoubtedly change with increasing age and per- haps under the influence of many adventures in far-off places, still everyone should keep abreast of his ideas and modify his, planned career accordingly. It is often pointed out that science knows no bound- aries, that there are few, if any, important scientific ideas E. L. Chaffee, physicist, has been credited with a large part in winning the Battle of Britain by his work on the radiolocator. Kenneth V. Thimann, educated in England, is authority on plant growth. He has done pioneering research in vitamins and auxins. i47l Harlow Shapley, astronomer, has advanced cause of all science. He works on affairs of scientific societies at revolving desk. which developed in one country. The internationalism of science is true not only ofits material but also ofits personnel. There is something strange in the fact that a Harvard manls closest scientific acquaintance may be a man whom he has never seen, but who works, perhaps, as curator in a museum in Turkey. These two men, bound together by their common interest in some particular group of plants or animals, ex- change notes and correspondence with the utmost regularity for many years. Perhaps one day they meet at a scientific congress, may even feel mutually disappointed that the other turned out not to be quite the kind of fellow that was ex- pected. Nevertheless the memory of that man as a man will stick always in the scientist's mind, and in his mind's ear he will hear the other's criticism as he writes his next paper. I have a scientific acquaintance of this kind at Oxford and another at Dresden. When I am writing a paper in the particular field in which they are interested, I am unconsciously influenced by them. I hear the almost feminine voice of the one raised in patient objections and continual reservations, the scholarly tones of the other in gentle but devastating criti- cisms,-and I go back and do another experiment to bolster up my weakest point. Of course the same relationships are found in all Helds of knowledge. The man who has been through college, even if he goes no further in intellectual work, is in a very real way a participant in this world-wide heritage of learning. We have seen, too, that the same complete lack of national boundaries exists in scientific and technological industry. A good example is furnished by the recent rubber inquiry. The evidence in this showed that the American and German industrial laboratories had exchanged results of their experi- ments rather freely. Although the industries were bitterly l48l Kenneth Conant gives courses in Architecture and Fine Arts. At present he is an exchange professor in a Mexican university. George Howard Parker, zoologist, here examines a report. He is a specialist in the nervous reactions and activities of animals. reproached for this, and although it certainly did us harm in the prosecution of the war, it was really only a perfectly natural continuation of the usual international co-operation between technologists. The trouble was only that it con- tinued beyond the point where national interest supervened. As far as the development of synthetic rubber was concerned, national boundaries really did not exist. Nothing could show more clearly how we have really outgrown national interests in the world of today. But if science and technology are beyond national interests, then the whole world is also, for dern civilization. science and technology certainly dominate mo In the long run, national interests will have to go. The logical time for this to happen is now, or at the close ofthe war. For the educated man, perhaps for the scientist more D than others, it is increasingly clear that the bursting of the bonds of nationalism will be the greatest and most important mental struggle mankind has faced. Ignorance, reaction, ' ts and even tradition will oppose it. Only the ' ' fi 'ht for it. The Harvard J G f C H Qld se . 5 X '--5? ves educated man will have the r can play a leading part, for he has hich springs from his Z' ted interes vision to g an of today the under- s 1 whole w l the creation m standing of the world a. . background. By studying the problems whicm ofa world without national barriers will involve, by influencing others, and by preparing his own intelligence for acceptance ofthe idea, he can do a great deal to make the phoenix of world government arise from the ashes of the present de- struction. KENNETH V. THIMANN, ' Pfam' Pbyrinlngy Afro time P 1' 0 jirro 1 of .Vxx E t 1 491 ures, 'l Percy W. Bridgman, wor1d's foremost authority on high press to lava under a pressure of 3,500,000 pounds. CHD IH ake rock turn 'il 7 V . rf, f f - ' 2 5: 22 y ffffg:?zigfgf,e:g5s1':: 1- ---, : , :Qiisf 4 'ig s., H3HW Xi,.3,::.,,:T....5-.W...T.,----f--4-- - l 1 'ig ' 3 ,J -..,.,.g.,-..a.---N - - - f ., --,.--- ,. ,A f z ' , y ' ...W PQ,-M ' A,..4.-Lf-.r rf- ..,..,,,. f',': ' --S---L, V -'A - ' P . g - ,fr 415 4:Ifjq,J55E5'rIQE'v'f-I -- 511513:-I--4,'.'.,'?' ' 5252-f.' ', .2. t. I-EE.,lu.-Q-.-Q:51.-flf-.-:-5252151135i:1E2??'2'E-Ef 'f'Q 5 -' ,,...4 9 - M.. 4 ..- . 5gnuu1zgo',f1n'rfw,5, VW., MM N r M ' ' 'rr 111' 'Up fr, ' , ., 19 1 1-I. . -,. - I 4 ' X, ..J ,-,....., 'L 1 un'!' 1 C fy 1 : ' 4 ' 1, 2 I X fffjz - -iff f La ' I I1 ,g-P 3 Y 1 S Dr. Little relaxes in his Apthorp House study. Wx N Adams J-fcfusc EAVING Adams House is not like leaving just one more ivy-covered building. It is more like saying goodbye to an old friend you have known for years, a friend whom you have watched change and who has watched you change with each passing year. Thus, it is with regret that we bid adieu to Adams, so notably distinct from the other college Houses with its live separate buildings and its mongrel architecture. Our first emotion, upon leaving, is mostly sadness, not only the sad- ness of parting, but also regret that the present Freshmen members will never know the true, peacetime Adams Houseef the House we knew as Sophomores. In fact, as departing juniors and Seniors, we know that the memories that we will carry away will be mostly of pre-war Adams House, not of present-day Adams House. dimmed by the shades of another world conflict. Although we know that war must inevitably bring changes, we must admit a certain amount of regrets for some of the changes that have taken place. Some of us fear that the real, normal, carefree Adams may never live again. Parts of the House, which we always thought would never change, are no longer distinguishable. People whom we thought were permanent fixtures are no longer present, while hordes of unfamiliar newcomers, uninitiated in the true style and tradi- tions ofthe Gold Coast, have been rushed in to plug the dike of Adams' manpower reservoir. But even though there are three Freshmen for every one former Adams man, any number of newcomers is insufficient to fill the gaps left by former classmates. All these changes mean that Adams has gone to war. Dull green shades, dusty from lack of use, nightly unfurl for the benefit of ships and men at sea. And practice blackouts, in preparation for the real thing, test the air raid organization and effectiveness by bringing home to Plympton Street occasional small doses of the grimness of actual war. Shovels and sand pails add new beauties to circuitous entry stairways, while numerous air raid instruction posters give little help to outsiders trying to solve the mysteries of the tunnels and S-turns of Westmorely and Randolph. Proof of the earnestness with which Adams has gone to war is the fact that more war stamps have been purchased here than in any other House. In fact, Adams has led all other Houses in weekly war stamp sales almost uninterruptedly since April. Most of the credit for this impressive record goes to Richard N. Swift '44, who not only conceived of the idea but personally saw to it that every one of the other Houses was selling war stamps and war bonds. While Adams House itself has girded for war, Adams men have also answered the call for war service. Latest and The Adams House library Qzborej excels in history and literature. jim Higgins and Bill Cahall fbelozuj put up an athletic notice. Adams' High Command Qbelouj discusses the wor1d's events. Of these men,W'alsh, Leopold, and Taylor have left for war service. i ,-, n. 1-K. af. .- most significant of Adams, personal contributions to the war program has been the departure of Dr. Richard W. Leopold, former Assistant Senior Tutor and history instructor, who is now in the Army Air Forces. His absence already has been keenly felt, not only at the regular 8 olclock break- fast table, but at House affairs in general. Other additions to the armed services or government work at the expense of Adams personnel have been three tutors and professors, Bruce C. Hopper, joseph L. Walsh, and Charles H. Taylor. Outside of the faculty circle, but no less important a loss has been the resignation of Miss Anne Beatty, House Secretary and general encyclopedia on House affairs. Older residents will also remember Mrs. Call, the mistress of the old Randolph switchboard, who left a year ago when the University terminated its switchboard operations and de- cided to let the students do their own dialing. Gone also are famous Adams athletes, like Franny Lee, Don McNicol, Hank Vander Eb, and Doug Pirnie, symbols of the erstwhile athletic might of Adams. The long list of Varsity captains, which was the constant boast of the sports conscious Gold Coasters, now includes only Bill Drucker, swimming captain. Adams men play a large part in extra-curricular activities. Be- low are Bill Rand, House Committee chairman, Bill Drucker, Along with well-known personalities also have gone numerous less well-known personalities, representing by far the majority of our classmates. So great, in fact, has been this exodus that, out of a total of 87 1945'ers starting out as Sophomores, only 50 are still active members of the House. Some have graduated early and left for broader fields, while others have done everything from getting married to just plain running away. It is obvious that the war is changing life in Adams. It is no longer the House that we remember as Sophomores. Only shadows of the past are the gala survival of the fittest punch parties of A-entry, the springtime water fights of C- entry, the personal feuds with the Lazmpoon, and other affairs slightly hinting of rowdyism. Gone also is much of the very spirit of the House that made Adams dances the envy of all other Houses, and the football team the envy of the whole intramural league. In spite of the changes in the House, however, Adams has somehow managed to maintain its traditional leadership on the social front by having the only formal college dance of the past fall. Although Powers models were notably absent as well as the Uhandsomest Harvard man , Don Forte, the swimming captaing Stan Kenyon, Gmzrzliazzz president, Dave Place, football manager, talking things over in an E-entry bull-session. affair could be placed almost on a par with previous A-House dances. Any moistness missing in the atmosphere inside was more than made up for by the usual rainstorm outside that now seems to be a necessary part of the success of any A-House dance. Offsetting this high point of the social season, however, was without doubt one of the lowest points in the social season when Dr. Little trustingly drank a half- beer, half-water cocktail inadvertently served to him by a nervous, unprepared host in an F-entry get-acquainted party. Adams has also changed on the football field. After a reign oftwo consecutive years as House football champions, Adams gridiron gladiators finally found it impossible this fall to make it three in a row, dropping their most crucial contest Forte is chosen uhandsomest Harvard man by Connie Moore. with Leverett, the new House champions, early in the season by a 6 to 0 count. Most impressive Adams performances were the 7 to 6 victory over powerful Winthrop and the one- sided 13 to 0 defeat of Kirkland House, in spite of an abortive Kirkland attempt to outrally the Gold Coasters on the eve of the game. Captain Culliton's men played scoreless ties with Dunster and Dudley, while, in the other game played to date, an underdog Eliot eleven surprised everyone by defeating the Gold Coasters 6 to 0 in a mid-season upset. The players seemed to have the goods and certainly the light for another championship this year, but, like every good team, it could not' always win. Noticeable absentees from the team and veterans of previous seasons were Sam May, Phil Neagle, Charley Tobias, George Kuhn, Howie Gleason, Bob Hurley, and Andy Muldoon. Playing their last varsity football for Adams, in addition to double-threat Culliton, were john Ryan, Bill Murphy, Beast Broderick, Bill Rand, and Dick Manegold. Still the strongest sideline supporter was Dr. Little, whose loyalty to Adams House football, if counted in the score, would continually keep Adams at the top of the league. Even though the House has undergone many changes as a result of the war, they are not all permanent. Many of them are only temporary. That intangible but ever-present thing called House spirit, for instance, still lives on although slightly dimmed out by the war. In fact, it will live on forever as long as Dr. and Mrs. Little still live in Apthorp and serve tea to Gold Coasters, old and new, on Wednesday afternoons. As the Hrst family of the Gold Coast, they have been personally responsible for the amazingly rapid growth of the popularity and prestige of Adams House in recent years. There are other memories that we will carry on with us long after graduation. The early morning dips in the only swimming pool in any House will still live in our minds. We will remember singing around the piano in the common room, or reading its excellent assortment of magazines. Beer parties, bull sessions, and ping-pong games will be memories, but potent ones, in years to come. And most of all, we shall remember the members of Adams Housefone of the finest groups of students in college. The Littles, along with the other pesple on the House staff-Archie,jim thejanitor, Mrs. jerrett and Colonel Hayes are all permanent parts of the real Adams House. They symbolize the spirit and life of pre-war Adams, the Adams of our Sophomore year, and the Adams we expect to be able to return to after the war. In fact, as long as the fortunes of Adams House rest in their hands, we feel a certain degree of assurance and confidence that these rather vague indescribable virtues ofthe Gold Coast which are already becoming memor- ies will once more live again in all their former glory. QW l55l Mfg ,HQ ONLY a minute from the Harvard Square pill-box and just a bit off the main stem onto Dunster Street, you come to the grey stone facade of Dudley, rendezvous of temporarily homeless boys. Don't bother to knock, you merely push your way past the outside doors into a vaulted court which basks in electric sunshine all day long. The boys are sprinkled profusely over the leather upholstery. Some are fi' reading or possibly scrutinizing a brain twister in math. But whence the grating roar that converges on the unguarded ear? Oh! merely a hundred odd vocal strains in competition f jg -everything from a Caltian bellow to a Zilberian whisper or sigh. Many a tongue is in a state of feverish palpitation l y either in jest or in high seriousnessf' Now that's open court or open forum, and take your pick. Well, how's that exploratory complex? Then into the adjoining libraryH Harvard stuffed and N.Y.A. staffed. Cold, unwelcome silence X Z and slow time to a man about town. So back again to the KL ' N V f central cacophony. Lo! a mumbled, jumbled verbal barrage K QU V discussing indoor baseball, touch hockey, immortality, yx V sex, hormones, or pure thought. 20th century salon touch. V2 Everybody happy. junior Common Room to the left. More J of it! Magazines get the once over ad infinitum. Radio entertainment featured, but a bit on the speak-easy side during the matinee. Hungry? Step into the long mess hall, co-op set-up via the Union. Good grub for a pittance. A mouthful and an earful at the same time. All-out oral mastication, Dudleyites read the Crimsozz every morning at the entrance to the dining hall, checker-players and kibitzers gather in junior Common Room. l57l manual gesticulation, verbal manipulation. Lunch, supposed- ly, but youlre all wrapped up in sights, sounds, and tastes. Now grab your hat, if you can find it. Quite possibly that sombrero from Adam has been whisked below in a scrupu- lous moment by some custodian or other. Down to the land- ing, old man, and wade through a pot-pourri of what-nots. Two to one, you'll come up with a somewhat deilated head gear. Strangely, no one's to blame, for even Dudley wouldn't be Dudley without a constraint or two! Such a side show on the Harvard Yard Dudley used to be! Since Pearl Harbor it has inevitably changed, but the smiles and the good fellowship still linger on. The Commuters' Center, now in its eighth year of life, has been forced by the pressure of circumstance to alter its tempo and temperament. With a war going on, there is al- most a surplus of lucrative jobs to tax the commuters' time. Graduate Secretary Charlie Duhig has helped several men in acquiring part-time positions, while many students have ob- tained good money in defense work outside the University. So much work, so much less play! Yet Dudley has managed to keep up the fight on the House sports front. Under the capable leadership of jack Hurwitz, athletic secretary, the Ramblers have realized their quota of intramural competition in the major sports. On Soldiers Field the Ramblers roam In every ball game on their own, They play for keeps and then go home As all the opposition moan! Football was tops in favor, even though Dudley's record against House foes was a bit off form. QTwo wins, four losses, and one tie.j Air power was the team's forte. Steve Gilman and Paul Quinn could pass prettily enough, but somebody usually sidetracked the downfield receivers. However, yeoman blocking was consistently turned in by Bob O'Brien and Ed Sullivan. As a climax runner, Bud Murphy was a lively threat. Bert Huberman and Hurwitz piled it up aplenty at the tackle slots. On two memorable occasions, Dudley synchronized this sort of activity to good advantage, pinning identical 6 to O setbacks on Lowell and Kirkland. Hailing from good skating communities in and about the Hub, the Ramblers could skate circles around most of the House hockey sextets. Len Cummings, Len Kilfoyle, Vin Lovett, Barry Thompson, Red Gormley, Bud Murphy, Paul Dudley Hall's common room is the daily meeting-place of practically all students who do not live in the college or its immediate vicinity. hu---.su Inexpensive meals are served in the dining hall in cafeteria styleg there is always a line on the right waiting to play a game of ping-pong. Delahoyde and Mike Lovezzola were fast travellers on the ice. During the first summer sports schedule. baseball held its full share of favorable attention. Portly Larry Feloney surprised about everybody by his part-time pitching of no mean parts. Chris Kennedy caught his slants. jim Reidy and Lovett teamed up well around second base. O'Brien held down the hot corner to his own satisfaction. Hurwitz, Gilman and Wolf pulled down what flies they could in the outfield. On-the-record, the ball team was fair enough. Besides taking a healthy interest in sport and a bene- ficial draught or so of medicine in the form of compulsory athletics, the Commuters did pool their brains on occasion in infrequent House Committee sessions. Chairman Bud Murphy and Treasurer Sumner Marder sat along the executive side of the table with Charlie Duhig. Then the following members chimed in with their parliamentary say-so: Mort Gondelman, Art Scully, Mel Wolf, Bert Huberman, jim Reidy and Len Kilfoyle. For sport's sake jack Hurwitz attended the meetings. The lift in membership upwards to 400 brought a problem in readjustment that the House Committee was forced to face. Some 100 more freshmen than usual had crammed into Dudley. Yet Bud Murphy aided Mr. Duhig considerably in getting the newcomers acclimated, filling in the breach left by Howard Bennett, assistant graduate secre- tary, who left to join the Navy, Lest we forget, Leonard Wolsky and Richard Hyman rode the crest of the brain waves with Phi Beta Kappa honors. . . . Others likejoe Zilber and Charlie Alex could do mental gymnastics with mathematics .... Dave the janitor shared his fatherly advice and Winsome wit with us all .... Such were the names and the themes that have marked our years at Dudley together! QW L ,g if if . tj . 4 g . i59l' 3 1 I ..', sv N r . ,. s 4, 1 -.- '. -1 41 iw, . 55 .0 .-- M, .. 5 an '-Ric. K i .ff + si 'S-Ns: my A: +- Dun fer Hausa F s as ligllil. OMEONE once said, while crossing the Weeks Bridge, that Dunster House looked like a great sphinx frowning down on the Charles River. In years gone by, the characterization htted Dunster well. For traditionally the Sphinx rarely spoke. Here, beyond the corner of DeWolfe and Cowperthwaite Streets, laissez-faire philosophy, dis- credited elsewhere, still flourished while House spirit languished. House members were left to follow their own Professor Hating is an expert on Latin American life and history. 7 t ififr 5 Q Q - t li ls' designs. They were seldom urged in any direction, and rarely expected to manifest enthusiasm over athletic announcements and dance posters. Apathy towards athletics was, in fact, chronic. Towards the rest of the University the attitude was similar. In relative isolation and unconcern Dunster remained aloof from the currents that swept the rest of the college. Here remained the last vestige of far-famed Harvard indifference. This year the characterization breaks down. If Dun- ster still resembles the sphinx, it has altered its attitude and lost much of its reserve. Part of the change can undoubtedly be attributed to the war. Like all institutions, Dunster has undergone a metamorphosis. Freshmen have taken residence in the House for the first time in its history. Double rooms have become triples, and singles have become doubles. Double-decker beds have invaded the living quarters with scarcely a murmur of protest and the once genteel rooms have sacrificed their comeliness to the war effort. In Dunster, surprising as it may seem, the transition was made with rela- tive ease. Couples stop to refill at one of Dunster House's summer dances. 1 5- ,f W f, 'P ' ' V . . j f J I Q ' mm. f61l The great number of new men in the House and dis- ruption ofthe healthy group of cliques that once flourished has resulted in a greater interest in House affairs and in the college. The loss of the gambling gang and the disintegration of certain spots of decadence such as K-entry has produced an over-all wholesomeness that would have embarrassed the Dunster House of years gone by. Only the International Set remains. Yet in some aspects the House is unchanged. The freedom and informality that always characterized the House still exists. The House Committee has continued its policy of being more a directive body than a regulatory one. During the summer, the accelerated program kept the House in full operation. The great sphinx unbent and wel- comed new freshmen between its outstretched arms. Master and Mrs. Hating invited the new men in small groups to after dinner coffee in the pleasant surroundings of their home. The summer sports program was less formal than during the regular session, but under the guidance of Alan Winnick, dynamic Athletic Manager, the House did far better than usual. Previously undiscovered talent came forth to win first honors in volleyball and second in soft ball. At the end of the summer term, Colonel Charlie Gates, popular and efficient Chairman of the House Com- mittee, was called into the Army to take his commission. This loss and the need for a Freshman representative on the House Committee necessitated elections this fall. The new committee consisted of Ladd Thurston, Chairmang john The Dunster Forums present a wide range of faculty speakers. 'l62l f- 1117 The library is noted for its. collection of social science books. Eusden, Secretaryg Don Cole. Treasurerg Archie Lupia, Bud Van Raalte, Al Kivinsky, and Bill Ziegler. This fall the House, which according to last year's Album has ignored its athletic teams of years. showed an amazing change in attitude. The football team. previously known as the perennial door-mat of the league. scored an undefeated season in the Inter-House series. This was in a league which offered tougher competition and a better brand of football than it has in many years. Sparked by Lee Sosman, All-House back, the team showed more fight and determination than has been evinced by a Dunster aggregation in many years. Despite the fact that Dunster was the sole undefeated team in the series. it wound up second in the hnal standings. This disappointing circumstance was due to the four scoreless ties which crippled the team's average. The social side of Dunster life, though somewhat compromised, has not been forgotten this fall. The dance after the Brown game proved a tremendous success, chiefly because of the expert direction of Ernie Mitchell. Some seven hundred people crammed the dining hall to dance to the music of Kent Bartlett. The Christmas play and dance are scheduled as usual for December, despite the problems .xg N'-., -vt- 2 1 - Trent Lucas and Archie Lupia fEast andWestj try to set Charlie Gates and Bob Deutsch in a final game before Gates leaves for the army. presented by an overcrowded dining hall. Archie Lupia, master of ceremonies, is in charge of the production, while Gene Benyas is contributing most of the music. Lupia's confidential report on the play indicates that there will be as many raised eyebrows as in the past. The dance itself will be handled by Bullock Hathaway. The Spring Costume Party is almost too far off for contemplationebut not quite. The Dunsters have frequently been accused of anti- intellectuality, but this allegation they deny. They point to Fred Cunningham and Bob Solow, current representatives of the House in Phi Beta Kappa. Furthermore, the Dunster House Forum still holds forth to discuss topics of current interest. Thus the Dunsters have a serious side, and occasion- ally conversation strays away from Rose la Rose, Ted Williams, and Whirlaway. Towards the war effort the men of Dunster have been far from indifferent. Dick Beyer has conducted a continuous drive to sell war stamps, whilejohn Kendall has sought blood donors. With apprehension concealed, if not entirely dis- pelled, Dunster men have gone forth to tangle with the vampires of the Red Cross. At the last tabulation only Win- throp had bled more profusely. In addition, the House Committee bought a ive hundred dollar bond with the profits of the Brown dance, rather than spend the money for a free dance. In the future Dunster House will do more for the war effort. Most of its present residents will probably see action in the Army or Navy or Marine Corps. Perhaps the House will cease to be a residence for undergraduates, and become barracks for men in officer training courses. In any case the Dunster House of tomorrow will be greatly changed from the Dunster of today, But many of its old characteris- tics may return after the war, even though isolationism, provincial as well as international, be dead. lts informality, its live-and-let-live philosophy, and the opportunity to pursue any activity-social, intellectual, or cultural-without inter- ference may be here in the future as it is today. Those who leave the House will remember it for these things-they will remember the comfortable, easy life, they will remember Master Hating for his keen interest in House activities, they will remember the dances, and some may even remember the football team. . v 0 .-7 in 67 i l ', X L: L ' ai o. .6 u . 37, If V- U I ieal 5112111 ffwzscf X 1 5 X ig ,ZX X TURN those lights out, this is an air raid! Sorry you are too late for breakfast. It's 8.46 A.M. No, no seconds on dessert. These are the new phrases that greet the resident of Eliot House today. And to those who knew the House before Pearl Harbor they indicate a change. For Eliot House, along with the country and the college, has been profoundly affected by America's participation in the war. Yet strangely, and perhaps typical of the times, it was not the war which led to the greatest change in Eliot House. On September 1, 1942, Professor Roger Bigelow Merriman officially resigned as House Master and was suc- ceeded by Dr. john Finley. The names Eliot House and Frisky, as Professor Merriman was affectionately called by all, had become synonymous. Master since the founding of the House, he had instilled a spirit and character into it which will ever be remembered. But the House could not have been more fortunate than in having Dr. Finley chosen to succeed Professor Merriman. Associate Professor of Greek and Latin and tutor in Eliot House for nine years, Dr. Finley has already gained the respect that he so deserves and is ably carrying in his new duties amid extremely trying circumstances. For the war has created many problems in Eliot House. For the first time in its History, the House was occupied continually during the summer. In accordance with the University's plan for accelerated programs, the House is now running on an all year round basis. As a result 517 students occupied its rooms during the two six week sessions of the Summer School. This fall the total has risen to 585 men. Swelled by 92 Freshmen, this is the largest population that Eliot House has ever had. To accommodate this number, boys have been asked to add one or more roommates to their suites. Though perhaps a little less comfortable than before, the members have gladly responded. The increase in the Houses' population has equally strained the dining hall facilities. Serving up two meals at a sitting, the dining hall staff has been greatly burdened. Gone are the bountiful seconds of old on dessert and bever- ages. But even more felt by the luxury laden pre-war resident of Eliot, are the new dining hall hours. Breakfast closes at 8.45 a.m,, dinner at 6.45 p.m. Surely the new morning hour will help condition us for the early strains of reveille which we shall soon be hearing, and perhaps only then will we realize how well off we are now. But more than these indirect repercussions of the war in the House, Eliot has actually entered the conflict. Scores of former members are already in the country's armed forces and, since the opening of college in September, 20 more have left the House to join the Army or Navy. Within the House itself an Air Raid organization exists, with wardens in each entry who have undertaken to see to it that black-out and dim-out regulations are observed. Under the leadership of Mr. Ratchford, the House Superintendent and Senior Air- Professor Finley, humanist, has recently written Thucydides. The dance committee Qabozfej works in the dining room on decor- ations for the informal after the victorious Princeton game. The dining hall Qazbovej and the grille Qbeloiwj manage to satisfy the appetites of Eliot men at all hours of the day and of the night. Raid Warden, who has been ably assisted by R. A. Shwitzer '45, WJ. Hertz '45, andj. E. McNulty,jr. '45, this organiza- tion has effectively disciplined the House in the necessary precautions. First aid classes have also been instituted under the instruction of Richard Herr '43 in which many House members have qualified in the Red Cross examinations. Furthermore, the Red Cross appeal for blood donors met a ready response in the House with scores contributing. The effect of the war, however, has not been to lessen the success of the social activities of Eliot House. The annual dinner of the House given on March 20th, President Eliot's birthday, took on an added significance this year since it had the nature of a farewell dinner to Mr. Merriman. Ray- mond Gram Swing, President Conant, Dr. Finley and Loren MacKinney, '42 House Committee chairman, all were speakers. At the conclusion Mr. Merriman was presented with a very lovely silver tankard by past and present members of the House and the tutors. Equally successful have been the dances of the House managed by the Permanent House Dance Committee under the direction ofjohn Kennedy '44. The Spring Formal was very well attended and for the first time in the history of the House the weather was such that the couples were able to dance on the House terrace. In the Fall the Princeton Game Dance, given in conjunction with Leverett House, was hailed by all as the best ever. Attended by 250 couples, it marked a hnancial success unheard of before in the annals of Eliot House dances. Along with these more formal affairs several gatherings of an informal nature have been held with the chief purpose of acquainting new members of the House. Record dances, entry beer parties during the warm summer months, and open house at the Master's Lodgings served admirably in this re- spect. Further, the annual Christmas play will not be cur- tailed by the warf Eastward Ho! by Chapman, Marston, andjonson being in rehearsal at the time this article is written. And if the social activities of Eliot House have met with success, so too have its athletic endeavors. Foremost of course, was the fine triumph of the Eliot House crew in the House Championship Races over Adams House on Wed- nesday, May 13. As a result of this the Agassiz Cup remains on the pedestal on which it has so long rested in the House Dining Hall. On Saturday, May 16, the same boat met and defeated by ten boat lengths the Yale champion, Trumbull College. Stroked by Eugene Wulsin '43 the boat was seated as follows: Q75 H. Church '44, Q6j H. Manning '44, Q55 Capt. J. Carpenter '42, Q45 E. Peabody '42, Q35 H. Campbell '43, QZD j. Grant '43, and Qbowj C. Putnam '43. By many this was considered the best Eliot House crew in the history of the House. Incidentally the second boat, stroked by john Bullard '43, was the outstanding boat in its class and superior to many House first boats. This crew record was a fitting tribute to Mr. Merriman who is almost personally responsible for Eliot Houses fine rowing tradition. Eliot House football also took a notable upsurge. Paced by Captain Peter Dorsey '44 and Freshman Dick Chenoweth, a squad of 35 players compiled a record of 3 wins and 4 losses. Beating Dudley, Lowell, and Adams in a row, the team won more games than any previous Eliot House eleven. Chenoweth and Baer, both Freshmen, were standouts, making the All-House Team at back and center respectively. The play of Captain Dorsey, Line, Ambrose, Hooper, Bremer, Stromberg, Goldberg, Corrigan, Gordon, Blackeby, Cole, and Brady was also outstanding. In the minor House sports, the House stood out in track and softball. Withington, Goldberg, and Dorsey sparked the track team to a third place in the summer meet. Under the leadership of Captain Al Danoff '44 the softball team tied for second place in the Spring and took third in the Summer League. The baseball team, though good, succeeded in winning but one game though all their losses were by slim margins. Handball, volleyball, touch football, and tennis teams also represented the House and provided a great deal of enjoyment for the participants. Thus we may say that in all respects Eliot House, though profoundly affected by the war, has had a highly suc- cessful year. What the future holds in store for the House is very hard to tell at this time. But whatever may be the fate of Eliot House and its members in the next few years, we all know it will continue to serve both the college and the coun- try in the future as it has in the past. George Goetz watches a rail shot in the Eliot House pool room. A portrait of former Master Merriman looks down on the library. .. .B il i 1 'gig' . 'A 'J sg' u l , .i :ffl ,gil sl 15,:2E'i': .4 Kirk land 75 k X few 7 a s nna 4 . ' -44 .4 SOME day some great intellect will be able to tell us just what made Kirkland our home of homes. He alone will clarify that quality ofliving which made K house unique in the Harvard world. Today, that description still eludes us. We feel the existence of the particular difference. We know that in our hands is a tradition of greatness. But how it came to be or what is perpetuating it we will never quite know. That something is in actuality our clear distinction. Dimmed a wee bit by the lack of a tower, bells, or a girl-clad Charles River bank, the Smith and Bryan Halls have more than compensated the apparent disadvantages by producing the best in life at Harvard. Under the benevolence of Dr. Clark, the pipefsmoking Sanskriter, and Dr. Uncle Money Hausa Monroe, the Deacons have gained the heights of athletic and social fame. It would be in form heresy if Kirkland ueber alles were not once again printed here. In years past the Deacons have not failed in their joyous mission. Somehow they have gathered more of the cups and more of the points than troubled dreams could conjure in the marveling minds ofthe opposition. This year the torch-caught by the '45ers and supported by the high-tension athletes of '-lrif will once again be carried on high. The quest for our Holy Grail, the Straus Trophy, is on in a maelstrom. The rallying crier, Frank Dunham, has a mighty task in emulation of Moose Leslie. Yet the spirit will exist as before, and the triumphant we won will be the never-failing answer. And part and parcel of athletic glory has been the unequaled popularity of the Deacon's dances. McCroskey's wearied men worked hard to bring gaity to the Deacons and succeeded not only in our eyes but also in those ofthe visiting populace. To him and to the preceding dance chairmen the retaining of the phrase in all Harvard of K House dances top the best has seemed a burdenless mission. And to the home of House spirit have come the best minds in con- cocting spirits, From Roth's broth -concocted and guaranteed by the long and short of Burt-dom-to the Tanks 'Draw one more,' the open spirit has not lacked in gathering guzzlers. Yet inebriation has not reigned to the elimination of sober thought and a cosmopolitan existence. In our midst have dwelt Seligman, Von Mehren, Schwartz, DePres, Perry, Wearyfescholars alleyet scholars without the saddened eye, the weakened shoulders and the hunted look. Let us assure the world ffthe riotous spirit, the congeniality of living of the Deacon's Den have not lessened academic and intellectual standards. Housemaster Walter E. Clark, editor of Harvard's Oriental series which is famed throughout the world, can read Sanskrit like a native. rI69l Open to the gathering clans the junior Common Room has been the scene of vigorous debate for the past several seasons-from i'Greece in the coming Rule to Bill Elser's next checker move. Within its walls first rose the wail of When whiskey and blood flowed together which in the hands of Dunham, Wee Williej' and the Lewk may well rise to the rank of Alma Materf, Here too, the Deacons have squatted often to laugh at-and with- the Mighty Kirk- land Playersf' Trained by that master buffoon, Mathis, the remaining quintet of Stahs have a well established reputa- tion. No where could be gathered under one roof such a group of characters, as Plant, Lewkowitz, Gaudielle, and the perennial hags Wiechmann and Lafferty. To this list add Cook, Olsen and Coolidge and you have a stage, lighting and mad men ready to perform. Guaranteed to be 10 degrees below the poorest summer stock they present twice a year the happiest of eveningsemugged, mauled, but recognizably enjoyable. To the genial hospitality of the Dunster Street home with the polished knob has gone many an enlightened Deacon to whom tea and crumpets have been made more enticing by the friendliness of Mrs. Clark, the House mother. But even though Tuesday afternoon has been enjoyable to all, only the House Committee has been led into the inner sanc- tum of the Clark menage. Here, at a dinner fit for kings, jack Morgan gives instructions on etiquette to his little flock. That he succeeds is evidenced in the firmness of poor- white Sommers' hand on the salad fork as well as on the cash-box, by Cleveland's firm right as if mixing the mash in his father's still, by the cautious hand of Lewkowitz in fear of Arizona cactus in the steak, by the suave knife of Went- worth, and especially the nonchalance of Broderick's attack on the deep dish lemon meringue. Yet in this holy dwelling of the happiest of Gods the hand of war has been felt heavily, firmly on every man's shoulder. Gone to serve in what seems a more concrete way are many of the Deacon's best. And scurrying in an effort to sheep-skin before it's too late are all remaining. Black- outs, air-raids are heeded by an ever-better-oiled machine of Kirkland's men. The Library is filled with men hard at the task of covering ground in a minimum of time. As to all the changes which will evolve in Kirkland's midst, it remains to be seen. The advent of Freshmen and Sophomores has already placed a heavy problem in the hands of Morgan and his henchmen. Their task certainly is not enviable. All this is Kirkland-and those things which cannot be said. To those of thus who have lived in the past here Kirkland has changed. Yet, ever-present, is its spirit, its laughter, its realness. Surely this is Harvard as we shall remember it. This is Harvard at its best. Charlie McCroskey, chairman ofKirkland's dance committee, assists in dimming out Common Room in preparation for the summer dance. -l70lr ,Wir ,, .ll V? WW 'X ,, . I 'I f ' gi 'ef Y- ' l. +1 i l l X PW' X Kirk1and's hostess sorts out House slips after an evening meal. Kirkland Common Room is used more than those of most Houses. Both it and courtyard are scenes for discussion on wine,women and war. -l71l 44 i E E - x eittrrntf waste HE name of Leverett is found in the reign of 'lohn Q1109j and his successor Henry III Q121oj. It is of great antiquity in Lincolnshire, and is recorded as bearing arms in the Herald's Visitation U56-lj. lt appears briefly on the records of Harvard University QIQBOQ under the curious titles Harkness Unit Number 5 . From then until the present day the name Leverett is inextricably bound up in the history of the House with which we are here concerned. It has been said Q1.94Zj that no house. and least of all the House of Leverett. bears a distinct individuality of its own, Falling between the two High Tables fto mix a meta- phorj of Lowell and Eliot. Leverett House has appeared to some a mere stop-off on the way to Dunster. This. neverthe- less. presupposes a desire to go to Dunster House, an urge that has seldom troubled the breast of a self-respecting Bunny '. Was it not a Dunster man who years ago was responsible for the theft of Hudson Leveretts beloved mascot? More of this. however. at the proper time. The word bunny is. strictly speaking. an inaccurate application of the term. The arms of the honorable ,lohn Leverett. governor of Massachusetts and President of the University fc. 1066j bear. of course. three leverets, rampant. in a field of clover. If one realizes that a leveret. from which the name is obviously derived. is French for a small hare. a careful examination of Pierre La Roses design for the House Seal fnow framed in the Senior Common Roomj, will show that the leverets are properly hares and not bunnies at all. The history of the House proper begins in about 1930. Mcliinlock Hall had of course been standing for an odd four years as a Freshman dormitory, with George jackson, the janitor poet. in attendance from the very beginning. The construction of Mather Hall to complete the House was supervised by President Lowell in his usual direct manner. He is rumored to have investigated H-41 long before the room even had a floor. From this period dates the oft-told story of the Presidents door. President Lowell, being a man of great years and wisdom. had required that there be placed in Mc- Kinlock Hall a door leading from thejunior Common Room into D Entry, in short. nowhere at all fthere being at the time no Dining Hall connected with the Housej. Popular opinion was thus somewhat inclined to ridicule the door, labeling it Lowell's Folly' and other such disagreeable terms. When Mcliinlock became part of a House and the Dining Hall was completed, the Presidents purpose was suddenly made clear . . . the door was of inestimable convenience to House members who wished to reach the Dining Hall without having to brave storms and tempests of one kind and another. Wisdom. in short. had triumphed, and the memory of the Leverettls library takes pride in a complete set 0fW'odehouse and one mystery book a PhiloVance given by former Housemaster Murdock. President's farsightedness is preserved in the name which the door still bears to this day. The keynote of the Leverett spirit would seem on first glance to be a kind of dignified frivolity. The House began its real life one day in 1931, when according to tradition the candidates for the mastership gathered in De Wolfe Street, with Dean Greenough to insure fair play, and fiipped a coin. Kenneth Murdock won, a few tutors were appointed and the House was finally opened to the eagerly expectant students themselves. The same tone is perhaps to be found in the actual furnishings of the House. No other Senior Common Room, for example, possesses a portrait that is so definitely and dis- concertingly cross-eyed. The bilious eighteenth century divine in question, doomed to look down forever on endless, hard- fought games of Shove Ha'penny, can probably be numbered among the vital influences in the House. No one who has caught either of his eyes for the briefest of moments ever was the same again. Hudson Leverett, who takes his name from the father of the original john Leverett, has been the mascot of the House ever since these early days. The sordid tale of his theft by a scoundrel from Dunster House, a source of shame to all of its members, has been put in verse by Perry Miller. A neighboring House fnot up, but down, the riverj Sent forth a fiend fperdition take his liverj . . . Who . . . , when, it seems, no one upon him looked . . , Seized with irreverent hand, and hooked Our Hudson, who had stood with knowing leer O'er all House dinners, high upon his rear . . W. L. Puterbaugh sets the dials on Leverett's own radio station. f 1w Dr. Hoadley is a leader of Harvard's air raid precaution system. The affair finished gloriously enough for Leverett when Laning Roper, after skillful investigation, hid for some hours in a laundry bag in the culprit's closet and returned triumphant- ly with Hudson in tow, The mascot, wearing his usual black tie, has since appeared faithfully at major House functions. To continue, for the benefit of younger readers, with these morsels from the nearly forgotten past, we come to the little-known phenomena of the Leverett House miracle. Visitors to the irregularly shaped Dining Room may have noticed such odd things as the fact that a cigar in the portrait of Kitty has been painted out as completely as the Professor Muensterberg in The Three fformerly fourj Philosophers in Emerson, but the larger figure of Bishop William Lawrence to the right has an even more curious story. It was a physics tutor who hrst discovered that at a certain hour of the day from a certain point in the hall a faint but unmistakable cross could be seen traced across the portrait. Finding no rational explanation for so obvious a demonstration of divine ap- proval of House affairs, the poor, troubled tutor was well on the way to giving up his material and mechanistic view of the universe. House opinion, still sceptical, approved of innumerable tests for shadows or other definitely material forces at work. None was forthcoming and Bishop Lawrence was tentatively inscribed in the volumes of House hagiography, when a group of experts arrived on the semi-annual tour from Fogg and announced that the canvas of the portrait needed badly to be stretched. The frame, in fact, was showing through from behind. The radical reaction from this disillusionment may possibly account for the appointment of Granville Hicks as Counsellor in American History and the name Moscow-on- the-Charles, which was subsequently applied to the House. .Zaw- The bulletin board is always good for a laughg Alan Epstein gets together with the cast of OfThee I Sing -a musical without any music. Those days, however, are quite of the past. Leverett. although it has never been stuffy, has now shown unsuspected energies of its own. Were the victory over Pierson at Yale for the Intra-mural championship not enough. it can cer- tainly claim to the distinction of being the only l-louse to possess its own private radio network. This renascence of House activity, though deplored by conservatives as rank innovation, can undoubtedly be of genuine use when turned to the support of venerable traditions. Last year, for example, two alien or trans-Plympton Street importations, sun-bathing and penny-pitching, attained some prominence as reputable Leverett activities. Needless to say, Shove-HalPenny is, as it has always been, the only true House sport, and Shaw McCutcheon on the roof of C Entry is, in an aberrational sense, far more typical of natural Leverett sun-bathing than the abject Lowell imitators in the quad below. The danger of sullying the minds of impressionable freshman and sopho- mores should discourage loyal members of the House from continuing such un-Leverett activities. The tradition in the matter of House dramatics has been somewhat relaxed in recent years, largely owing to the fact that there plainly are not enough bawdy Restoration plays in existence to give one every year. This year there is to be an even greater innovation in Of Thee I Sing without the music, otherwise known as OfThee I Talk. This year's group, directed by Alan Epstein, will miss the incalculable aid of Mr. Irving Wechsler, director emeritus, not to mention joshua, a dog faccording to Wechsj of infinite wit and sagacityf' The rumor that josh formerly did most of the casting for House plays, indicating disapproval of readings by leaving the room, is without foundation. In short, as juniors and Seniors now leave the House, in the second year of Mr. Hoadley's mastership, they can find cause, as former-Housemaster Murdock advised in an intro- duction to the Hutch Hirtory, for looking both backward and forward. Contemporary events seem to indicate an even greater future. The House Committee under Tom Baker now meeting at breakfast, might well pass the butter, am- 7 munition and a vote of commendation to all concerned. Leverett has only one cause for complaint . . . in the im- mortal words of the late George jackson, janitor extra- ordinary . . . The air ii' filler! with zzewy that ir fad, The papers each day print their yfllg Bat it ufozzldvfl he nearly hahfto had If the Lowe!! Home hellr would he Mill. C if C 1-751' E?- ,AFV laws!! Hou 6 O an outsider, Lowell House is just another of Harvard's seven masses of brick and steel. But buildings, particularly college buildings, have a way of impressing them- selves on the minds and memories of those who live in them, of developing personalities of their own. And so it is with Lowell. In retrospect, the individuals concerned seem un- important, no one man or group can stand out in the history of the large and constantly changing population of one of the Houses. When thinking back on our four, three, or fewer years in college, it will be the general atmosphere of the lives we led that will stand out, and Lowell House contributed much to the lives of Lowellians. Our thinking will be confused with a multitude of small but significant incidents. We will vaguely remember our Freshman year in the Yard. a year of war for most peoples but not as yet for much of this hemisphere. We were serious then, at least in comparison with later years, but Weld, Holworthy, Matthews, et al., were also the settings for numer- ous bull sessions and acquaintanceships. Then we took April Hours, made up tentative schedules for a full four years of college, and were informed that the Master and Tutors of Lowell House are happy to announce that we were to become Bell-boys. Few of us knew many of the others who were to live with us in the same House for the remainder of our college careers. We wandered hesitantly over the rooms which were to be ours, admired the warm Georgian architecture and the beauty of the courtyards in the spring, and left for home feeling well satisfied with our choice. The next year we became true Lowellians and plunged into House activities as well as scholastic duties. Later we will remember a few of those ever-present classes and ever-imminent cram sessions, but the things that will stand out will be the extra-curricular activities-such as the dances, football parties, excursions to Radcliffe, Erskine, and Wellesley, and the snowball blitz- kriegs in the courtyards. What were some of the events? Who can forget the college organizations he joined! The Crimson, Lazmpoun, H.D,C., Network, Glee Club, and many others received more than a fair proportion of Lowell men. The Advocate, the Mountaineering Club, the German Club, and dear old N. C. were almost completely Lowell-owned. Our interests reached out towards the field of sports as well. We continually struggled with Kirkland for the Straus Trophy and had the pleasure of never losing a football game to the Deacons dur- ing our stay in Harvard. The vast majority of us played our best for Lowell at some time, even before the institution of compulsory exercise. Football, baseball, swimming, basket- Sunbathing on courtyard lawn was Lowell's favorite summer activity, Tom Matters, in dining hall, threatens Leonard Kent with homicide. i77l Dr. and Mrs. Elliot Perkins converse on steps of Lowell House. Winter means a lot of shoveling for Lowell's nineteen entries. ball, and many other sports had some of us on the varsity squads, our greatest triumph in the varsity theater came in soccer, where for three years Lowell dominated the first team and for the two last years had the captain in its midst. Then there were the House dances-the chief financial support of the House Committee and the focus of much of our social life. Never in our years here could we say that a Lowell dance was poorly planned, that the music was poor, or that the atmosphere was unfriendly. Thanks to dance committees were continually deserved for their success in decorations, a case in point is the Spring dance of 1942, when our be-chndeliered dining hall was miraculously transformed into a lush Caribbean cruise. A new and ambitious House Committee imported johnny Scat Davis for the event and lived to regret it-financially speaking. Another dance worthy of note was the 1941 Yale game brawlg enough said. But there were other social events which did not rely on the desire for female companionship. Who will forget our annual House play in celebration of former President Lowell's birthday! There was a solemn moment in that pre-Christmas occasion when Mr. Lowell cut his huge birth- day cake and saw to it that every House member devoured a piece, but soon light-heartedness reappeared as our friends came upon the stage and provided amateur but always ribald entertainment. A few days after the play came our Christmas dinner, highlighted by candles, tablecloths, carols, and a Yule log. Then before long we deserted Cambridge for a 'l7Sl- few weeks and came back to find that old friends acted much as they had before but somehow had developed circles under their eyes. In the Spring we had our annual House opera, an occasion which may become another war casualty, The operas were promoted and managed by Lowell's music lovers, but attracted talent from all Harvard and Radcliffe. Artis- tically, they were frequently superb, and to the surprise of everyone connected with them, were always well attended. Most of us played liddles, sang, acted as ushers, or at least patronized our operas. We chuckled at the title of the 1941 presentation- Venus and Adonis, byjohn Blow. A rush of memories overtakes us if we look back care- fully on Lowell and our lives there. just a few of these include: Snooperman, whose nocturnal pranks in libraries began in Lowell and spread over all Harvardg the reappearance of Snooperman in the spring of 1942, when library-goers found a Renoir nude over the fireplace and some scurrilously informative pamphlets in the showcaseg the penny-pitching champions and their soon-impoverished challengersg getting lost in the Catacombs under the Houseg the Hitler-hexing, according to LWE formula, on the banks of the Charles in the spring of 1941g chasing that Cambridge thief around the House in thejune of 1942, and our delight in those blackout pranks flight bulbs a la time bombs, and a woman's having a baby in L-entrynj. We had our institutions too. We looked uncertainly upon our first invitation to High Table, but later discovered that it was far from unpleasant to participate in the ceremony of the salt cellar, in the sherry and cigars, and in random conversation with the tutors. And we had our famous Russian bells in our tower, with all the amusing stories about both of themg unfortunately. our only contact with the bells came when vibrations and shock hurled us out of hed at noon on Sundays. Lastly we had our continued dominance of Phi Beta Kappa, with two First Marshalships in a row and a great many keys held by House members. Dan MooreX-rays Tom 1'rmer's date at informal Bellboy dance. The problems which arose when freshmen were ad- mitted to the Houses in 1942, and the specter ofa war suddenly become personally important which threatened us all, featured out last year at Harvard. Precedents fell, courses accelerated, and We now leave Harvard's hallowed halls on the way to the battlefield. Perhaps some day we can return to the scenes of these now-past years. When we do, we will find a great many memories rising to meet us. Once more we will stare at the bewildering wallpaper in the Common Room, at the library where we spent so many happy hours-sleeping-and at the rooms we once called our own. But now we have a responsibility to meet for our world. So to you, Lowell House, we say Ave atque Vale. f 'Ifxf ' E f rlf J 17 ' S- 'I ,W ' . , ill s ' ffm? ,I . - K :Aj 2 ' ,V li fl il - -Q Penny-pitching against the wall attracts the after-dinner crowd .-a ' 1 . Winthrop THERE are those who say that Winthrop House is noted for its athletes, Others point to the high proportion of biochemists within its walls, and deduce that the Winthrop man of today is the medico of tomorrow. Still others, when you talk to them about Winthrop, will shake their heads sadly and recall to you the last time they got a scrapbasket full of water on the head while passing the House. You of course explain that it was probably only some hard pressed student bailing out his room, with no evil intentions, after an inter- entry fight. After all them days are gone forever anyhow since a certain University official got an unexpected bath during the first Cambridge blackout. But still some will shake their heads and say Winthrop men are not the con- scientious scholars they should be. Well, maybe not, but Winthrop men cannot be accused of laziness. Take a look at the record of this past year: ln House Sports Winthrop featured a champion hockey team starring Apthorp, LaCroix, Tilghman and Lowell in the nets. Some may cry over-emphasisf but as proof that the l80l team was thinking of more than hockey we point to the fact that Lowell and Tilghman were both busy courting at the same time-and need it be said?-successfull y. A successful softball season followed and this fall, Winthrop came up with an apparently bowl-bound football team, starring I-laffner, Weinsteitrjackson, Goodale, Corbett, Moore, Healy, and Apthorp. Only a fumble came between this spirited team . d ' ' an the championship. In varsit head high. Captains Phinney of cross country, Bus Curwen of crew, Bunks Burditt of basketball, along with Al Sunn y t Everts in tennis and Stan Sixty-minute Durwood and , and many others in baseball and y sports Winthrop also held its collective Tom Cowen of the gridiron soccer represented Winthrop on Varsity teams. Yes, Winthrop men haven't been sitting around as Regardless of which way up you hold it this ictur h , p e s ows two Puritans walking up one of Winthrop's expansive stair VVHYS. D' f 4 'fpggw lb 41' NCNN Sf-9 Smal. .5 1r f'f:- 'if ' '--- --X is - -,' .. V Q. gl .5 ,:, gi, 1 -am M5 r.r,r .i ZziT?W'eu.s..,. ,. A , ,,,, .4 , Q2 1 Professor Ferr , bioch ' l y emist, re axes in his library with his dog- far as athletics go-for further evidence look in on a 4:30 conditioning class sometime and see the unsung heroes work out. When your typical Winthrop man is not breaking lass 8 in the chem lab, or busting up the opposition on the field, you may find him with an armband on, exhorting his friends to get inside or put out their lights Under the leadershi ' P of Bob Bishop, who neglected his Economics tutees for the purpose last year, and then left them and us out in the cold this year by getting married and leaving, the air raid tests were well managed in Winthrop. This year Dick Ober took over and his organization would delight an efficiency expert as well as Mr. Durant, the head Univers accidents will happen-few will forget the time when a fire burst forth outside Gore. Phil Anders Thayer Drake, and Bill Palson watched with amazement, 6 . . . . ngering their armbands, while a mysterious person surveyed h t e blaze he had lit with satisfaction. They wondered- ld cou it be a prankster-and if so should they slug him or call th - ' e cops or was he a Nazi and should they do ditto? Unfortunately it took them some little time to discover the answer-that it was D L and waiting atientl uincendiary. ity warden. Of course on, Pierre Noyes, ean eighton conducting an incident p y to see his fire squad deal with the l81l Lloyd Wood andjohn Ranney, instructors in chemistry and gov- ernment, converse inWinthrop House's junior Common Room. Far from blackouts were the Winthrop dances of the past year. Organized under a new system by which a different group in the House is in charge of each dance with the advice of elder statesman Brad Sageman, these dances have been a great success, particularly Stan Durwood's brainchild, a free dance given in july, and under the guiding hands of Gus Esselen and Olie Taylor. Later on came another fnot quite freej managed beautifully by Steve Mallett. Then after the Army game Winthrop had a bang-up football dance in co- operation with Adams and Kirkland. This dance, under the chairmanship ofjim Murphy, was a smashing social Qand financialj success. Speaking of the summer dances can anyone who was there forget the Robinson-Esselen-Wam- baugh rendition of Frankie and johnnyf' or the Wiggins- Drake-Wilcox-Burditt quartet? Or the Durwood Plan to import flocks of Radcliffe girls and otherwise to the dances through a personal date bureau in Stan's head? And since the subject of Durwood has been brought up, who will forget his speeches in the dining hall, or his annual appearance in the House Play? Whether it was Herb l82lr Weiner, director of the play, or Dr. Else by his side at dinner, one request always preceded his appearances: Be careful, Stan! Sometimes he was and sometimes not, but he never failed to bring down the House-which, incidentally, owes him a real debt of gratitude as the most tireless Winthrop supporter of them all. Besides Stan, on the House Committee for the past year were Chairman Richardson, Treasurer Murphy, Bliss, Drake and Kennedy. Added to these in the fall elections were Burditt and Burton. The Committee supervised the dances, ran smokers, co-operated on Air Raid Precautions, and, as the catalogue puts it, consulted with the staff in matters affecting the members such as social events, entertainments, dinners, and any other subjects needing attention. These ranged from introducing a ping-pong table into thejunior Common Room and secur- ing Qand finally fillingj a House Rogues Galleryll in G Entry, to trying to curb Winthrop vigilantes and Councillor Sullivan in the pre-election Harvard-Cambridge troubles. With Dr. Ferry, Dr. Else, and Dr. Wood, who need no eulogy for any Winthrop reader, the Committee consulted frequently to good purpose, No article on Winthrop House would be complete Ben Dudley entertains ata Winthrop informal dance. The picture was taken before all of the streamers had been pulled down. without mention of Mrs. Dee, whose title is Dining Hall Hostess but who has made it her job to do everything in her power for the House and every member of it. She, together with genial Herb Fulton and many others have added im- measurably to the charm of Winthrop. What else did Winthrop men do in the last year? Well . . . they fell out ofdouble decker beds . , . looked for a place to sit in the dining hall in vain . . . gave blood and bonds with such liberality that Winthrop stood at or near the 1 'AZ I iw. top in both departments . . . spent the summer studying diff 'XS A and cursing the heat and eating in their shirtsleeves . . . got ' 5 House permission extended from seven to eight . . . watched A f almost half the Senior Common Room disappear to be super- CSX OK ef' 4 seded by new rooms . . . gave more than any other House A X!iifljt5fii,if?7!f!Jf. to the Harvard Service Fund . . . and talked about Egypt 'iff and Guadalcanal and Midway and Stalingrad. In other words, i' like everything else, the House found itself permeated by the war in every crevice. Ifthe war goes on and if the Army takes over Winthrop they will find a House with fine traditions and high standards. When the war is over some of us will come back to see how those standards and traditions have been maintained and developed, as they surely will be. Lowell and Winthrop men team up in barbershop joe Dunn plays the saxophone for enlightenment of Count Basie, George Frazier, quartet in theWinthrop Senior Common Room. and friends. The jamboree attracted several hundred enthusiasts this summer i83l- THOSE who are members of the Class of 1943 entered college the year that war was declared in Europe. They will remember more clearly than any other class the changes that took place while a university at peace became a university at war. They will remember the political disputes of their Freshman year and the bitter arguments between those who were for and against American participation in the world conflict. They will remember Harvard as it had always been and as it may never be again. In this they were fortunateg for even in a time of crisis, they still had the opportunity of making Harvard's past a part of them. Z1 if pf I ff! CLASS QF I943 Adelbe rt Amer, I I I Firrl Marilyn! Tbonznr Matter! Second M ezrrlonl MARSHALS In the year 1704, when the works of Cotton Mather were still second only to the Bible on Colonial best-selling lists, and when jonathan Edwards was but one year old, a decree from the President of Harvard College directed that for the mayntenance of goode order in the Commencement Processions, one Marshal shall march in front and one Mar- shal shall march behind. The years passed. jonathan Ed- wards grew up and died while President of Princeton, and still one Marshal was marching behind and one Marshal was marching in front. The Declaration of Independence was signed and the Revolution fought, and still, one Marshal marched behind and one Marshal marched in front. The War of 1812 ended and Mr. Adams and Mr. Clay returned from London after signing a peace treaty, and still, one Marshal marched behind and one Marshal marched in front. In the year that President Andrew jackson at his birth- day banquet proposed his famous toast Our Federal Union: it must and shall be preservedln the two class Marshals were still conducting from behind and from in front the procession at the graduation ceremony. But, according to the Harvard Regirter, a third Marshal had been added, and the two lesser Marshals were described as holding up the trailing gown of the first . . Whatever the reason for the addition of the third officer, the office itself had become by this time purely honorary. In the sunny days before the Civil War, rigid discipline at the Commencement exercises seemed unneces- sary. And, indeed, the three offices of Class Marshal have remained purely honorary ever since. Yet, in 1941, when Europe had already been at war for almost a year, it was decided that the three Marshals should have a more functionary connection with the Class after graduation. Consequently, these three honorary officers were made ex ofeio members of the Permanent Class Day Committee. But what they will do besides their historic task of leading the graduation parade, history alone will tell. -1861 PHI BETA KAPPA OFFICERS F. Barton Harvey, J r. Robert S. Scbweznter Milton W. Hnnzolrky Frederic Clznninglmrn Tlazrd M ezrrnezl Firrt Mezrylanl Second Mnrxloezl Serretezfy CLASS OFFICERS During the third decade of the reign of the grand old party, when every carpet-bag still contained at least one bloody shirt, a strange tradition was growing up at Harvard College. On every Class Day morning each year, a group of students were seen to gather surreptitiously behind Sever Hall to listen to the words of a fellow student. For several years, the Senior who spoke at this gathering had been ac- customed to give an oration composed of nothing but lewd stories which he unearthed from a large and rich repertoire that he had been nursing since his Freshman term. On one of these occasions, however, a member of the group noticed in one of the upper windows of Sever the Hutter of a small lace cloth. He stared at the clothg and gradually through the windowed dimness he was able to make out the outline of a female form. As he stared a little longer, he noticed the out- lines of another, and another, and still another form. These forms were the sisters and friends of the graduating Seniorsg and for years they had been listening to the racy tales of the orator. No doubt, there were embarassing moments. But fortunately, the orator was able to rescue the situation from an intolerable collapse by completely altering the tone of his speech. Humorous, but pure, he spoke on, and gradually, the word spread that behind Sever Hall each year one could be amused without being shocked. The obscure Ivy Orators of these clandestine gatherings soon found themselves in the Stadium, a traditional part of the graduation ceremony. History has been unkind to the other class officers, for not one of them can boast of such a tradition. Whether the Class Poet and the Class Odist are the modern counter- parts of those grim students who, in the first graduation cere- monies of Harvard, delivered Greek and Latin parts to proud friends and prouder relatives, is hard to say. The origins of Class Secretary and Class Treasurer are equally obscure. As for the Chorister, only conjecture and myth remain from the annals of Harvard history. George R. Clay Eric Lazrmbee Cborirrer Orlirt Robert G. Axtell jolm Riclnzwlron, jr. Treazrmfer Secretary is jolm W. Sullivan George W. Goetbalr Omror P061 l87l Dany Curwen Donala' Forte Riclaara' P. Gzyjfo rd David A. Goldtlowazt Walter B. Kamp john W. Morgan 1881- jalian Ricbardron CLASS D Y COMMITTEE In the days when Harvard students were learning that lightning was an exhalation raised up from the earth by the sun and shut up in a cloud and that if anybody looked at it his face might swell up and become covered with scabs, Seniors in the latter half of their Hnal year would gather to present pieces of plate to the Class Tutor. But as this cere- mony seemed a trifle tedious to those of gay spirits, liquor of various sorts was introduced and a great deal of the plate intended for the poor Tutor was tossed about the room from one student to another. The expense, however, was greater than the Seniors upon soberer reflection could withstandg and at some time during the dim years of Harvard history, the plate disappeared and scraps of paper, or confetti, were sub- stituted. The festival remained during the Revolutionary years, and became more and more of an orgy. Ale and rum flowed freely throughout the administration of President Quincy, whose four spinster daughters were forced to hide for hours on end and in a closet in their father's house until all the rum and all the ale had been consumed. In 1838, the exasperated Mr. Quincy warned the graduating class that unless this rowdy exhibition ceased, each member of the class would lose his right to a degree. The announcement was something of a blow, and gradually the quieter and more formalized Class Day became established. From the Collectors of Theses that had planned the earliest ceremonies arose the Class Day Committee of the present. But the traditional spirit of the day still prevails. Confetti and whisky still play their inimitable roles. And al- though rnodern Harvard students no longer think that sleep is caused by streams of food and blood ascending to the Brain, by whose coldness they are said to be condens'd into moisture, which obstructs the passage of the Spirits that they can't freely permeate to the Grgans and the Senses, the pass- age of the Spirits still has its effect . . . and nothing much, strictly speaking, has changed about Class Day at all. l l f A v at- i ' 4 . Olill C Blzllrlrcl Clymer W. jenkr Donnlrl E. McNicol PERMANENT CLASS CCDMMITTEE During the mellow years when Boston really was the Hub of American culture and not just a reasonable facimile thereof, Harvard's graduating classes were small, Alumni- poets and doctors, novelists and statesmen, big men and little men-knew each other even after several decades had passed since their graduation. An Oliver Wendell Holmes and an unfortunate little man who had been a failure in trade remembered each other well, and there was little danger that an alumnus could marry the cook's daughter without every dinner table of every member of his class discussing the scan- dal with various degrees of severity or sympathy. It was indeed a small world for Harvard men, and no member of any class could go hungry without his classmates hurrying to his rescue. As the classes grew larger, however, and as students from every part of the country flocked to the hallowed class- rooms that had been previously reserved for the Brahmins of Boston, the traditional unity disappeared after graduation. As President Eliot swung into his policy of expansion, any alumnus was quite free to marry a chorus girl without fearing the repercussions that the scandal would make over glasses of old Madeira. A failure in trade was most certainly not the good' friend of a New York celebrity, and if any member of the class began to starve to death, he simply starved. Consequently, the Class of 1877 appointed the first Permanent Class Committee in order to hold the Alumni together. By the beginning of the 20th Century the custom of reports and reunions had been firmly established. And every summer, old, older, and oldest graduates began to crowd themselves into the Yard and suddenly, and miraculous- ly, lose decades from their lives. Grey hair turns suddenly to black, stomachs suddenly dwindle to trimriessg facial wrinkles suddenly iron themselves outg and the capacity for liquor is suddenly renewed while stomach ulcers and indigestion evaporate. William llfl. Rand Dann Reed john W. Sullivan -i89l 1901 JOHN RADFORD ABBOT, JR. Born September 10, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 14 Arlington Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval Society C1-4J. Football squad CU: 150-lb. crew fl-3Jg House hockey C2, D. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. I WALTER HANS ABELMANN Born May 16, 1921, in Frankfort a-M, Germany. Prepared at Kantonales Gymnasium, Zurich, Switzerland. Attended University of Virginia 1 year. Home address: 151 Central Park West, New York, New York. Lowell House. Boyl- ston Chemical Club QZ, 591 Pre-Medical S0- ciety Q2, 3Jg Yacht Club GJ, Foreign Relations Club Q2, 3J. Field of concentration: Psychol- ogy. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JUAN CLAUDIO SANCHEZ ABREU Born January 11, 1922, in Paris, France. Pre- pared at Ecole des Roches, France. Home address: Quinta Palatino, Havana, Cuba. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. FERDINAND JAY ACH Born April 9, 1921, in Dayton, Ohio. Pre- pared at Walnut Hills High. Home address: Benckenstein Drive, Wyoming, Ohio. Adams House. A.R.P. QWarden 3, 4J. Swimming team QU: House track C2-4J. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. LEO POLD ACKERMAN, II Born October 29, 1921, in Clayton, Missouri. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home ad- dress: 16 West 77th Street, Apartment 16-E, New York, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Government. RICHARD BROOKS ADLER Born May 9, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: Box 131, Route 2, Norwalk, Connecticut. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Physics. SETH MARSHALL AGNEW Born July 26, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Webb School of California. Home address: 612 Landor Lane, Pasadena: California. Eliot House. Glee Club Q1, 2J, Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. JAMES MADISON ALDRICH Born December 9, 1919, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 270 Boylston Street, Brookline, Mas- sachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval Society C1-BJ. Football squad fl-4J, hockey squad fl, 2Jg House hockey C1-SJ. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Diplomatic service. CHARLES GEORGE ALEX Born August 30, 1921, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 68 Pleasant Street, Carn- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Wrest- ling squad Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. MARVIN GEORGE ALEXANDER Born April 29, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Western Reserve. Home ad- dress: 2929 Washington Boulevard, Cleve- land Heights, Ohio. Adams House. Glee Club CIJ, Crimson Network GJ. House baseball Q-IJ. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Manu- facturing. WILFORD SWETT ALEXANDER, JR. Born March 7, 1921, in Portland, Maine. Prepared at Western High. Attended Georgetown University 1 year. Home address: 10 Prescott Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Caisson Club GJ: St. Paul'S Club CZ, 3Jg Cheerleader GJ. Field of concen- tration: English. Intended war service: Field Ar- tillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. OLIVER ELLSWORTH ALLEN Born June 29, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Deerheld. Home address: 121 East 35th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Lawpomz Q2-10, Ibis Ui, president Q-IJ: A.R.P. G, lil. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: Speakers Club, Signet Society. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Infantry. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. Cflb' 6171 XVILLIAM WHITE ALLIS Born May 1, 1921, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day. Home address: Dean Road, River Hills, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. College address: 52 Mount Au- burn Street. Golf team C2, 35. Hasty Pud- ding-lnstitute of 1770, Delpliic Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. jOHN BRADFORD ALLYN Born July 28, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 162 Highland Street, Holliston, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Swimming squad C15. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. War service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Flying. ADELBERT AMES, III Born February 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 12 Rope Ferry Road, Hanover, New Hampsl1ire. Eliot House. Student Council C55. First Marshal. Ski team C1--15. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. OLIVER FILLEY AMES Born December 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Elm Street, North Easton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Lampomr C2-45: Rerl Book CBusi- ness Board5g Hasty Pudding Theatricals CTicket Manager, 25, Committee on Regula- tion of Athletic Sports, Athletic Council. Golf team C1, Manager 55, House basketball C253 House football C25. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. EDWARD LOVELL ANTHONY, II Born September 24, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Holderness. Home address: 44 Coolidge Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Adams House. Boylston Chemical Club C155 Music Club C2-45. Crew C15. Field ofconcentration: Music. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. LAWRENCE C. ANTONELLIS, JR. Born September 26, 1921, in Falmouth, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 157 Locust Street, Falmouth, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Thomas Hall Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. af 1943 WILLIAM HERR APPEL Born October 24, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 15 Hilliard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. EDWARD APTAKER Born August 29, 1922, in Roxbury, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 60 Walnut Park, Roxbury, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Psychology. WILLIAM OSGOOD APTHORP Born November 21, 1921, in Salem, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton, Home address: Marblehead, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval Society C1-45, Yacht Club C1-45. Football squad C155 hockey team C155 soccer squad C2, 35, House crew C2, 55, House foot- ball C45g House hockey C2-45, House Athletic Secretary C55. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Delphic Club. Field of concen- tration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RYOZO ARAI Bornjune 11, 1920, in Greenwich, Connecticut. Prepared at St. George's. Home address: Glen Avon Drive, Riverside, Connecticut. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding Theatricals C25. Lacrosse team C15. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Fox Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. GILBERTO ARIAS Bom May 26, 1921, in Panama City, Republic of Panama. Prepared at Peddie. Attended Georgetown University 1 year. Home address: 7 Calle Colombia, Panama City, Republic of Panama. Kirkland House. Pan-American Club C25, Chairman Social Committee, France Forever C353 Spanish Club C35. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Aviation. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. WILLIAM AMES ATCHLEY Born May 17, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 262 Oak- wood Road, Englewood, New jersey. Eliot House. Field of concentration: 'Biochemical Sciences. 1911 1921 SHAILER AVERY Born March 14, 1921, in Winchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 19 Sheffield West, Winchester, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Signal Corps. l 1 ROBERT GRAY AXTELL Born April 22, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Evanston High. Home address: c-o Post Engineer, Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Lowell House. jubilee Committee, Phillips Brooks House, chairman freshman committee 115, vice president 145, Caisson Club15, 455 Verein Turmwaechter 12, 35, treasurer 145, Class Treasurer. Baseball squad 135, base- ball team 11, 253 football squad 115, House football 12-45: House Committee, chairman 145. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur 125. N. C. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. EDWARD RICHARDSON BACON, III Born March 5, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Harris. Home address: 446 Briar Place, Chicago, Illinois. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Government. GROVER CLEVELAND BACON Born April 8, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 875 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Colle e address: Eliot House. Football team 115, House crew 155. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ROBERT CRAM BACON, JR. Born August 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 93 Garden Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Field of concentration: Economics. HAROLD MORTON BAILIN Bornjune 20, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 2200 South Phillips Avenue, Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Kirkland House. Debating Council 11-55, president 135, Crimson Network. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. 'K nl- CRAIG PARMENTER BAKER Born January 31, 1922, in Newport, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. George's. Home address: 15 Francis Street, Newport, Rhode Island. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House 115. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. , EDWIN 'TURNER BAKER Born july 16, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 124 Corona Avenue, Pelham, New York. Lowell House. House crew 1455 House Dance Committee 155. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Navy. GRENVILLE KANE BAKER Born March 17, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's, Home address: 75 East 93rd Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. THOMAS ERIC BAKER Born October 3, 1921, in Cardilf, Wales, England. Prepared at Tonawanda High School. Home address: 274 Grove Street, Tonawanda, New York. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House 125, War Service Committee 135, A.R.P. Coordinator 13, 45. Squash squad 11, 25, squash team 13, 45: tennis squad 12, 35g tennis team 11, 45g House committee 12, 55, chairman 145, House dance committee 12, 35, House entertainment committee 12, 355 House war service committee 135. James D. Tew,Jr., Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. WILLIAM HENRY BAKER Born March 16, 1922, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 686 Center Street, Newton, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Pre-Medical Scoiety. Football squad 115, House football: House squash. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. STEPHEN PEACOCK BALD XVIN Born May 12, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 76 Monument Street, Concord, Massachusetts. College address: 7 Linden Street. Crizzuorz, Photographic Board 11, 25. Field of concentra- tion: Anthropology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Chr 615153 HENRY BANKS Born March 9, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 560 Central Avenue, Needham Heights, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Boylston Chemical Club QZJ, Pre-Medical Society QZJ: Rifle Club OJ. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. JOHN LEE BARBER Born February 17, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1257 Dean Street, Brooklyn, New York. Adams House. Second Freshman football squad: Lacrosse squad MJ: Pistol team QZJ, captain CU. manager GJ, Caisson Club Q5, fljg Speaker's Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Banking, GEORGE AUGUSTUS BARNARD, III Born January 15, 1921, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home ad- dress: 12 Wheeler Avenue, Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Lalzfpoon Q2-41, A.R.P., Warden 13, -IJ: Spanish Club CID. Swimming squad Q1, 5b. Harvard Club of Worcester Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Insti- ture of 1770. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Electrical Engineer. WILLIAM BARNES, III Born November 16, 1920, in Decatur, Illinois. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 612 South- moreland Place. Decatur, Illinois. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Baseball team Q1-5J, football team Q1-41 Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770, D.K,E., A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Banking. DAVID LEON BARNETT Born January 21, 1922, in Savannah, Georgia. Prepared at Savannah High. Attended Uni- versity of Virginia 2 years. Home address: 511 East Gaston Street, Savannah, Georgia. Lowell House. House basketball, House crew. Field of concentration: Government. Intended wat service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Public Administra- tion. DELBERT LELAND BARNETT Born June 9, 1918, in Salina, Kansas. Pre- pared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 1043 North Seward Street, Los Angeles California. Leverett House. Field of concen- tration: Literature. of 7943 HARRY WARREN BARROW Born January 18, 1921, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Wilbraham. Home address: 9 Highland Avenue, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Glee Club fl-EJ, Red Cross fl-51: Caisson Club Q1-51, House baseball f2jg House track CZJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Irr- tended war service: Field Artillery, Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. RICHARD SHEPARD BARROWS BornJuly 1, 1920, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 623 Lakepointe Road, Grosse Pointe, Michi- gan. Lowell House. A:fvoaz1ef2, if Field of concentration: Philosophy. GEORGE BARTLETT Born July 6, 1921, Dover, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Claybrook Road, Dover, Massachusetts. College ad- dress: 56 Plympton Street, Hasty Pudding- Insritute of 1770, D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Government service. THOMAS FOSTER BARTLETT Born November 28, 1918, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Prepared at Central High, At- tended University of Oklahoma, The Cita- del, 2 years. Home address: 325 East 14th Street, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Eliot House. Caisson Club G, LD, St. Paul's Club fi, flj. House baseball Q5, 45, House basket- ball 13, 45, House football 15, 10. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: International Commerce. BRUCE BARTON, JR. Born December 4, 1921, New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 117 East 55th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Advocate C1-3J, President C455 Album, Feature Editor: Class Day Com- mittee. Signet Society, Secretary CBJ. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. JOHN HARVEY BASS, JR. Born July 11, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Evanston Township High. Home address: 1812 Colfax Street, Evanston, Illi- nois. Red Bolle, Pierian Sodality of 1808 Q1-4J, Student Union Parmenter Schol- arship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Intelligence. Intended permanent vocation: Law. wal 1941 ROBERT ADAMS BASTILLE Born March 5, 1922, in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Prepared at Exeter. Home ad- dress: Norway Hill, Hancock, New Hamp- shire. Lowell House. Dramatic Club Harvard Club of New Hampshire Scholarship. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Architecture. SHEAL LOUIS BECKER Born October 14, 1921, in Fort Thomas, Kentucky. Prepared at Highlands High. Home address: 503 North Fort Thomas Avenue, Fort Thomas, Kentucky. Winthrop House. Glee Club C2-41, BaseballsquadC1j, House baseball C3, AU, House crew C3, LU, House football C3, 41, Manager, Freshman Interdorrnitory Athletics. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Air- craft Industry. Intended permanent vocation: Law. EDWARD ARTHUR BEEMAN Born May 1, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Attended New York University 1 year. Home address: 113 Colboutne Road, Brighton, Massachu- setts, Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club C2, 31, Pre-Medical Society C1-35. Pho- tography Club CU. Sigma Xi. Field of con- centration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT SINNOTT BENSHIMOL Born December 11, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 15 Shore Road, Arlington, Massachu- setts. College address: 113 Brattle Street. Hockey squad C2, 33, House football C2, 31: House hockey C2, 39. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. BERNARD ROBERT BENSON Born May 16, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Westmount High, Home address: 11 Windsor Avenue, Westmount, Quebec, Canada. Adams House. Yardling, Photo- graphic Chairmang Phillips Brooks House, Social Service Work C2j, Crimson Network C2, 35, International Club CU, Photography Club CU: Adams House Yearbook C2j, Photographic Chairman Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Royal Canadian Air Force. EUGENE CASSELBERRY BENYAS Born September 5, 1922, in Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Honolulu, Hawaii. Dunster House. Field of concentra- tion: English. WINERED EDWARD A. BERNHARD Born july 19, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 1309 Poplar Avenue, Annapolis, Maryland. Win- throp House. Verein Turmwaechter C2-4jg Outing Club C3, 4b. Field of concentration: History. Intended permanentivocation: Teach- ing. JACOB LOUIS BERNSTEIN Born August 7, 1921, in Chelsea, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 56 Addington Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club C3, LU. House crew, coxswain C3j. Field of concentration: Chemistry and Physics. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT MACKENZIE BETZ Born May 30, 1922, in New Haven, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home ad- dress: 1216 Rollins Street, Columbia, Missouri. Eliot House. Glee Club C1-41: Choir C3, 49. House crew. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Air transportation. OLIVER CALDWELL BIDDLE Born November 30, 1921, in Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address. West Chester, Pennsylvania. College address. 56 Plympton Street. Soccer team CU, 150-lb. crew Cl, Zj. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17705 D.K,E.g Potcellian Club. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Navy. JOSEPH SMITH BIGELOW Born August 18, 1921, in Cohasset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Black Horse Lane, Cohasset, Massachusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. 150-lb. crew squad C2jg 150-lb. crew CID. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 177Og Fly Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. ROBERT GIBBONS BIGELOW Born july 29, 1921, in Columbus, Ohio. Prepared at Columbus. Home address: 45 Franklin Park West, Columbus, Ohio. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Quartermaster Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business. Che Glu 5 CARROLL BINDER, JR. Born June 23, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Highland Park High. Home ail- dress: 837 Forest Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois. Adams House. Smoker Committee, Crimson Network 12, 3J, Dramatic Club C1-ij, Liberal Union C2, 5Jg Radio Workshop GJ. Track squad CU, House baseball: House foot- ball: House track, Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Journalism. WILLIAM BINNIAN Born April 25, 1922, in Cohasset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 90 Margin Street, Cohasset, Massachusetts. Winthro House. Yacht Club 12, 3J, Ski Club Q25 Crew, freshman manager. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770, Owl Club, Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Coast Guard. NATHANIEL LANE BLANCHARD Born November 18, 1920 in Concord, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Middlesex School. Home address: Independence Road, Concord, Massachusetts, Adams House. Phillips Brooks House Q5, -ij, Naval Society CZ-4J. 150-lb crew squad 11-43, House crew CZ, SJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Economic Geography. Intended war service: Navy. WARREN EDDY BLANDING Born December 9, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 129 Nayatt Road, West Barrington, Rhode Island. College address: 127 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Psy- chology. Intended war service: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Psychology. CHARLES MELBOURNE BLISS Born October 9, 1921, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Evanston High. Home address: 2507 Colfax Street, Evanston, Illinois. Win- throp House. Red Book, Chairman: Union Committee, House Committee C2-4J. Harvard College Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RICHARD MILTON BLOCH Born June 18, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Benjamin Franklin High. Home address: 57 Northview Terrace, Rochester, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Mathematics. of 1943 JOHN MORTON BLUM Born April 29, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Shore Front Park, South Norwalk, Connecticut. Lowell House. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur GJ: Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Signet Society. Field ofconcentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government. JOHN FRANCIS BONNER Born February 15, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 245 Scott Avenue, Hubbard Woods, Illinois. Lowell House. A.R.P. C3, 4J, Verein Turmwaechter fl, 2J, St. Paul's Club Q1-4J, Kappa Kappa Society. Track squad C1-3J: track team C1-3Jg House baseball 13,455 House track QZJ. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. CHARLES STONE BORDEN Born November 5, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at St. Albans. Home address: 2910 Woodland Drive, Washington, D. C. Eliot House. Adrfomleg CI'iNl.l'07Z Q1-3J, Managing Editor MJ, Crimson Network. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN SYDNEY BOTTOMLY Born August 12, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 29 Greenough Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Massa- chusetts. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Advnrdle Clj, Business Manager f2, 5J. House crew QZJ, Speakers Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOHN THOMAS BOWERS, JR. Born November 27, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 115 Theodore Parker Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club Q1-Zij. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. DAVID PARKER BOYNTON Born November 10, 1920, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Lenox. Home ad- dress: 41 Hawthorn Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Yacht Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Navy. 1951 1961 THOMAS WHITNEY BOYNTON Born July 24, 1921, in Hull, Massachusetts. Prepared at Hackley. Home address: 7 Pad- dington Road, Scarsdale, New York. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Naval Society Crew, Coxswain C2-4J. Field of concentration: Sociology. EDWIN ELBERG BOYSEN Born June 29, 1921, in Pelican Rapids, Min- nesota. Prepared at Pelican Rapids High. Home address: Pelican Rapids, Minnesota. Winthrop House. Glee Club C113 Verein Turmwaechter Henry and Jonathan Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. BENJAMIN C. BRADLEE Born August 26, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Saint Mark's. Home ad- dress: 267 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. College address: 56 Plympton Street, Crimson QU: Naval Society 13, -Q. Baseball squad C315 baseball team OJ, Squash team QU, House hockey QD. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D.K.E., A.D. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. HENRY BRANDT- Born January 21, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Columbia Grammar. Home address: 211 Central Park West, New York, New York. Lowell House. Soccer squad Cl, 3J. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. ROBERT A. W. BRAUNS Born June 2, 1921, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 4403 Underwood Road, Baltimore, Maryland. Col- lege address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Chemistry. SEYMOUR BRESLOW Born October 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Staples High. Home address: 178 Riverside Avenue, Westport, Connecticut. Eliot House. Rec!Book, Phillips Brooks House QU, Band Q1-LD: Pierian Sodali- ty of 1808 C1-41: Pre-Medical Society OJ, Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. EDWARD JOSEPH BRODERICK Born November 3, 1920, in Clinton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Clinton High. Home address: 41 Pine Street, Clinton, Massachu- setts. Adams House. Caisson Club Q3, 45 St. Paul's Club Q1-4J. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Chemi- cal Analysis. CALEB BROKAW, JR. Born April 17, 1922, in Plainfield, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 225 Oak Parkway, Dunellen, New Jersey. Adams House. Lazmpoon 15, fijg Mountaineering Club fl-4J. Crew squad CU, 150-lb. crew f2, 3J, Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Speakers Club. Field of concentration: His- tory. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Accounting. WHITFIELD GRAYSON BROOKE Born September 25, 1921, in Biloxi, Mississippi. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 161 Seal Avenue, Biloxi, Mississippi. Little Hall. Glee Club 11, 2Jg Band fl, ZJQ Choir Q1, ZJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. EDMUND HOSMER BROWN .BornJune 19, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 10 Viaduct Street, Sharon, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Music. JOHN XVILLIAM BUDDENBERG Born May 16, 1921, in Ottawa, Kansas. Prepared at Gothenburg High. Home ad- dress: Rural Route No. 5, Gothenburg, Nebraska. Kirkland House. Glee Club C2-LU, Band CU: A.R.P. Warden G, 45: Boylston Chemical Club C3, aj. Harvard College Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Army Air Forces. Intencled permanent vocation: Chemistry. JOHN CRAPO BULLARD Born February 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Georges Home ad- dress: 1 Hill Street, South Dartmouth, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Crimrarz Q1-3Jg Permanent Class Committee. House crew 12, 3J. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Medicine. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. Chr Klrzss JOHN MARSHALL BULLITT Born July 9, 1921 in Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: Fal- mouth Foreside, Portland, Maine. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House 11, ZJ: House Committee CZJ. English I prize GJ. Detur CD. Field of concentration: English. In- tended permanent vocation: English Teaching. XVILLIAM EDXVARD BUNCE Born February 21, 1921, in Fargo, North Dakota. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 109 South 50th Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska. LeverettHouse. Boylston Chemi- cal Club fl, 2Jg Photography Club CID, Outing Club OJ. House crew Cjsjg I-louse dance committee OJ. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. EUGEN FRANZ BURGSTALLER Born December 22, 1920, in West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 55 Maxheltl Street, West Rox- bury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: German. JOHN PHILLIPS BURNHAM Born February 8, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: Del Carmen, Pampanga, Philippine Islands. Kirkland 1-louse. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army. ALFRED GRAY BURR Born March 20, 1919, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Hill, Attended Dartmouth 2 years. Home address: 122 South 50th Street, Omaha, Nebraska. College address: 53 Dunster Street. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. CARLETON BURR Born June 5, 1921, in Needham, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Chestnut Street, Needham, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval So- ciety Q3, 4J. Hockey squad GJ, hockey team CID: lacrosse squad f2Jg lacrosse team fl, 305 House hockey A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. of 1945 CURTIS ANTRIM BUSH Born September 4, 1921, in Davenport, Iowa. Prepared at Davenport High. Home address: 1918 Farnam Street, Davenport, Iowa. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Economics. LOUIS WELLINGTON CABOT Born August 3, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 31 Farm Road, Weston, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Photography Club CIJQ Ski Club Q1-4J. Herschel Prize in Hydraulics. Hasty Pudding-Institute ot'177Og D. U. Club, Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy, Intended permanent vocation: Executive engineer. JOHN LODGE CADY BornJuly 17, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton High. Home address: 12 Lodge Street, Milton, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Harvard Graduates of Milton Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. JOHN ALEXANDER CAIRES Born September 13, 1921, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 220 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Wool business. JOHN DARR CALHOUN Born May 8, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 28 Ash- mont Street, Springfield, Massachusetts. Dun- ster House. Yai-filing, Phillips Brooks House CI, 2Jg A.R.P. Soccer team Q1-4J, lacrosse team Q1, Zjg House dance committee QD. Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentra- tion: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Consular service. EVAN CALKINS BornJuly 15, 1920, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 49 Farlow Road, Newton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Crimson Q1-55: Phillips Brooks House, Fresh- man Committee CU, Social Service Committee CZJ, Publications Committee, Co-Chairman GJ, Band Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: History and Science. Intended war service: Army Medical Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. I97 if 'l98l GERARD JOSEPH CALLANAN BornJune 22, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 197 Tremont Street, Newton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Baseball team C1-41. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. W NORMAN WINSTON CAMERON, JR. Born October 28, 1921, in Baltimore, Mary- land. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 314 East Joppa Road, Towson, Maryland. Lev- erett House. Basektball squad U13 soccer team Q11, lacrosse team QI1, House baseball Q2-415 House basketball C2-41, House foot- ball Q2-41, House track Q2-41, House Athletic Secretary. Speakers Club. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. HENRY MUNROE CAMPBELL, III Born May 6, 1921, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at St. Georges Home address: 355 Lakeland Avenue, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Eliot House. House crew KZ, 31. Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. SYDNEY DOR AN CAPLAN Born June 15, 1921, in Harrisburg, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn High. Home address: 244 Maclay Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Liberal Union C219 Red Cross C313 Stamp Club C1-31, Avukah Society Q1-31. House basketball Q2, 31. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. PHILLIP GEORGE CARLSON, JR. Born May 24, 1922, in Roslindale, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roslindale High. Home address: 294 Kittredge Street, Roslindale, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. Band Q31. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Accounting. ROBERT LEWIS CARRINGTON Born August 26, 1921, in Short Hills, New Jersey. Prepared at Millburn High. Home address: South Terrace, Short Hills, New Jer- sey. Leverett House. Crew squad 111. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Navy. ALBERT VINCENT CASEY Born February 28, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 34 Bartlett Avenue, Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Outing Club C513 St. Paul's Club Q1-41. House hockey C2, 31. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JAMES DOUGLAS CASKIE Born July 15, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 199 School Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Caisson Club f3, 41. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. LINUS WILLIAM CAVE Born November 15, 1922, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 129 West Borden Avenue, Syracuse, New York. Kirkland House, Pierian Sodality of 1808 Q11, Vetein Turmwaechter fl-41, Ride Club 121, Foreign Relations Club C41. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. SHERMAN BILLINGS CAXVLEY Born April 2-1, 1920, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 100 North Street, Watertown, Connecticut. Leverett House. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. JOHN BANCROFT CHADXVICK Born January 31, 1922, in Wilmington, Dela- ware. Prepared at Deerheld. Horne address: Old Lyme, Connecticut. Kirkland House. Boylston Chemical Club C113 Ornithological Club Q1--11, Photography Club C2, 31, Bio- logical Society CZ, 51, President 141. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. DAVID CHALLINOR, JR. BornJuly 11, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Horne address: Noro- ton, Connecticut. College address: 42 Mount Auburn Street. Crew Q2. 31. Hasty Pudding- Institute of1770, D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: English. Che Hlfzss VINCENT JOHN CHARTE, JR. Born September 19, 1920, in Gloucester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rockport High. Home address: 15 Summit Avenue, Rockport, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Coast Guard. RICHARD BREED CHASE Born May 10, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1 Bryant Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Dramatic Club f1,2J. Field of concentration: Electrical Engineering. ln- tended war service: Signal Corps, Intended permanent vocation: Electrical Engineering, ROBERT MANLEY CHASE Born April 26, 1921, in Portland, Maine, Prepared at Kennebunk High. Home address: -E3 High Street, Kennebunk, Maine. Kirkland House. Track squad 12, 3J, Field of concen- tration: English. DAVID EVERETT WADE CHATFIELD BornJune 29, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Pre- pared at Middlesex, Home address: 2521 Salem Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. College ad- dress: 42 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. ABRAM JOSEPH CHAYES BornJuly 18, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Serin High. Home address: 2150 Lincoln Park West, Chicago, Illinois. Eliot House. Debating Council CU, Crimson Network Q2-ID: Caisson Club Q3, LU, Avukah Society CU. House football Q2-fijg House track GJ, House Dance Committee CBJ. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur QZJ. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. CHARLES FRANCIS CHOATE Born November 21, 1921, in Southboro, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home ad- dress: 5 Louisburg Square, Boston, Massa- chusetts. College address: 5 Linden Street. Field of concentration: Anthropology. In- tended war service: Army. of 1943 JOHN RICHARD CHRISTIAN Born October 28, 1921, in Spokane, Washing- ton. Prepared at George Washington High. Home address: 2064 14th Avenue, San Fran- cisco, California. Adams House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Navy. NILES CHUBB Born March 27, 1922, in Davenport, Iowa. Prepared at St, Marks. Home address: 508 Torcido Drive, San Antonio, Texas, Lowell House. Lampoou K2-4Jg Glee Club QU, Dramatic Club C2-dj, ROTC Muzzle Blast CD, editor MJ. ROTC Pistol Team C1-5J, captain MJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770: Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. FRANCIS JOSEPH CICHOCKI, JR. BornJuly 8, 1921, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Plains Memorial High. Home ad- dress: 140 North Main Street, Plains, Pennsyl- vania. Little Hall. Field of concentration: English. FRANK BERNARD CLANCY, JR. Born November 20, 1921, Nashua, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 268 Main Street, Nashua, New Hampshire. Adams House. St. Paul's Club. Lacrosse team, House baseball Q2-3Jg House crew CZJQ House hockey Q2-BJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Law. CHARLES MOSELEY CLARK Born October 4, 1921, in Newburyport, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 345 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Crimron CBJ, Phillips Brooks House CZJ. Crew squad. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Fox Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. MICHAEL KIRCHWEY CLARK Born June 27, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 5 Clare- mont Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Field Service. -l99l 11001- JOHN LESLIE CLARKE Born May 30, 1921, in Jamestown, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 402 Chandler Street, Jamestown, New York, Lowell House. A.R.P. 13, 41. Basketball squad 12, 515 basketball team 111, soccer team 11, 31, lacrosse squad 1113 tennis squad 12, 31: tennis team 111, House basketball 131. Field of concentration: Economics.. Intended war service: Army. GEORGE ROBERTS CLAY Born October 23, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 7915 Seminole Avenue, Chestnut Hill, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Crimxan 12, 31, edi- torial chairman 141, Phillips Brooks House 111, Dramatic Club 11, 2, 31: Hasty Pudding Theatricals 121, Council on Post War Problems 13, 41: Class Chorister. Squash squad 12-41, squash team 111, tennis squad 11, 21. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: History, Intended war service: Navy, Intended permanent vocation: Law. WILLIAM WEST CLEVELAND Born June 1, 1921, in Carthage, Tennessee, Prepared at Carthage High. Home address: 105 Fisher Avenue, Carthage, Tennessee. Kirkland House. House Committee 141, A.R.P. 13, 41. House crew 131, House football 12-41. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemical warfare. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. CARLYLE VAN DOREN COCHRAN Born December 20, 1942, in Washington. D. C. Prepared at Saint Paul's. Home address: 2360 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix- S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. JOHN MacGREGOR COCHRANE BornJune 26, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rivers Country Day. Home ad- dress: 101 Longwood Avenue, Brookline, Mas- sachusetts. Lowell House. Crimron, Radio Board 12-41, Crimson Network 11, 41, Chief Engineer 12, 31, Technical Director 131.Crew squad 111, House baseball 12, 31g House football 12, 31, House track 12, 31, Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. JOEL COHEN Born May 20, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts, Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 339 Seaver Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House 12, 41: Classical Club 121. Stoughton Scholarship. Field of concentration: Classics and History Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law and government. LOUIS HERBERT COHEN Born November 9, 1922, in Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Westport High. Home address: 3715 Forest Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri. Dunster House. Pietian Sodality of 1808 11-41: Harvard Council on Post War Problems 13, 41. House squash. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: State Department. ' NATHANIEL MAURICE COHEN, JR. Born August 24, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home ad- dress: 77 Colchester Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. House crew 12, 31. Field of concentration: Bio-chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. RICHARD JACKSON COMEY Born November 18, 1918, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 17 Farrar Street, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Philosophy. ROBERT PAUL COMMANDAY Born June 18, 1922, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Dwight. Home address: 18 Ridge Road, Yonkers, New York. Eliot House. Band 11, 21, Pietian Sodality of 1808 11, 21, A.R.P., warden 131, House Dance Committee, chairman 12, 31. Field of concentration: Music and History. Intended war service: Band conductor. ROBERT GREGORY CONLEY Born November 21, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 23 Maple Avenue, Cambridge, Ivfassachusetts. Lived at home, Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. ELIOT JEROME CONNOR Born August 19, 1922, New Bedford, Ivfassa- chusetts. Prepared at New Bedford High. Home address: 90 South Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Pietian Sodality of 1808 111. House football 121. Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Newspaper advertising. Uhr' 6171 EDWARD HERRICK COOK Born August 17, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. I-lome address: 414 Johnson Avenue, Englewood, NewJersey. College address: 99 Brattle Street. Criflfxafl, Editorial Board 121, Phillips Brooks House Q1 . Cross country team QZJ, lacrosse squad Q3 :lacrosse team QIJ. Field ofconcentration: Literature. Intended war service: Chaplain. Intended permanent vocation: Minister. PAUL XVENTXVORTH COOK Born July 17, 1921, in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 2 Morgan Terrace, New Bedford, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. LAURENCE PAUL CORBETT Born October 7, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home ad- dress: 5 Whiting Avenue, Dedham, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Cercle Francais QE, 41: St. Paul's Club Q1--IJ. Track team fl-35: cross Country squad CU: House football MJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RICHARD STANCLIFFE CORLEY Born May 25, 1921, in Beirut, Syria. Prepared at du Pont Manual Training. Home address: 2504 Wetstein Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky. Lowell House. A.R.P. C3, -IJ, Boylston Chemical Club K1--IJ. Track squad fljg House track Q2-LU. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemis- try. Intended war service: Chemical Warfare Service. Intended permanent vocation: Chemi- cal research. KIRKHAM RANDOLPH CORNWELL Born August 26, 1920, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Groton, Home address: 865 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Lampoon f2J, A.R.P., Fireman QD, Naval Society 15, 41, Flying Club, secretary GJ. Crew KU: NROTC Rifle team CU. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Aviation. GILBERT CORWIN Born February 10, 1921, in Dayton, Ohio. Prepared at Steel High. Home address: 607 Belmonte Park North, Dayton, Ohio. Lev- erett House. Band MJ. Geology Club, treasurer Q3, LD. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. af 1943 GERARD HOLSMAN COSTER, JR. Born March 21, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 112 East 74th Street, New York, New York. Eliot I-louse. Hasty Pudding Theatricals, technician QD. 150-lb. crew squad QU: House crew CZJ. I-lasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Navy. JOHN DANIEL COTMAN, JR. Born August 10, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 20 Soden Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club MJ. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Industrial chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. SAMUEL PENDLETON COWARDIN, III Born November 8, 1921, in Richmond, Vir- ginia. Prepared at Darrow. Home address: Darrow School, New Lebanon, New York. Winthrop House. St. Paul's Club fl-SJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Camouflage. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM KING COWSER Born February 18, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at West High. Home address: 9614 Clifton Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio. Adams House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. RICHARD ANSEL CRAIG Born March 25, 1922, in Abington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Abington High. Home address: 734 Plymouth Street, Abington, Mas- sachusetts. Leveretr House. Robert Wheeler Wilson Scholarship. Detur flj. Field of concentration: Astronomy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Astronomer. FRANK ERSKINE CRAWFORD, JR. Born March 23, 1921, in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: Berkshire School, Sheffield, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. -f101J- 41021 THOMAS JOHN CROCKETT, III Born December 4, 1921, in Unionville, Con- necticut. Prepared at Farmington I High. Home address: P. O. Box No. 1, Farmington, Connecticut. College address: 8-10 Nutting Road. Advocate, Pegasus f1-4Jg John Har- vard Society Q2-4J, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intendedwar service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Magazine work. THOMAS IRVING CROWELL, III BornJu1y 9, 1921, in Glen Ridge, NewJersey. Prepared at Putney. Home address: 72 Gould Place, Caldwell, New Jersey. Lowell House. Band Cl, BJ, Pierian Sodality of 1808 fl, ZJ, secretary GJ, president f4J, Mountaineering Club QZJ, Lowell House Opera C1, 55. Har- vard College Scholarship, Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemical research. KIERAN PATRICK CULLITON BornJune 24, 1922, in Clinton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Clinton High. Home address: 158W West Street, Clinton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Student Council. Football squad 145, House football Q2, 353 House track CZJ. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. FRANCIS MITCHELL CUMMINS Born August 10, 1921, in Baltimore, Mary- land. Prepared at Northwood. Home ad- dress: Mineville, Essex County, New York. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, Social Service QD, Pierian Sodality of 1808 CU, Red Cross, First Aid GJ, St. Paul's Club Q1-3Jg John Harvard Society QD. Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. FREDERIC CUNNINGHAM, JR. Born September 6, 1921, in Cooperstown, New York. Prepared at Thacher. Home address: Springfield Centre, New York. Dunster House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 K1-413 A.R.P. GJ. House crew GJ. John Har- vard Scholarshipg Wister Prize. Detur QU, Phi Beta KappagJunior Eight, recording secre- tary. Field of concentration: Mathematics. ROBERT JOHN CUNNINGHAM Born January 29, 1925, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 58 Channing Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House, Ski Club Q1-25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent Vocation: Law. ARTHUR STAFFORD CURTIS Born August 11, 1914, in Connecticut. Pre- pared at Washington. Home address: Balti- more, Maryland. Kirkland House. Advocate MJ, Phillips Brooks House MJ, Outing Club f4J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DARCY CURWEN Born April 18, 1921, in Canton, Ohio. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: Court Street, Exeter, New Hampshire. Winthrop House. Student Council Q3, 4jg Caisson Club Q3, 4Jg Class Day Committee. Crew C1-4j, captain Cl, 41, swimming team K1-4J, captain QU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17703 D.K.E.g Spee Club. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neering. ROBERT ALLERTON CUSHMAN Born September 29, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 4 Acres, York Harbor, Maine. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Phillips Brooks House C215 Yacht Club CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute 051770: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. RICHARD MORTIMER CUTLER ,Born September 24, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Graybarn, Marion, Massachusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: King's Own RiHes, England. HEYWARD CUTTING Born December 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Eton, England. Home address: P. O. Box 151, Far Hills, NewJersey. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Canadian Army. LEWIS STACKPOLE DABNEY Born March 50, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: West Main Street, Medfield, Massachusetts. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. U15 Elrzss PETER DALAND Born April 12, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: Provi- dence Road, Wallingford, Pennsylvania, Col- lege address: 5 Linden Street. Field of concen- tration: History. XVILLARD DALRYMPLE Bornjune 21, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 253 Walnut Street, Brookline. Massachusetts. Lowell I-louse. Pre-Medical Society Q, 111, American Student Defense League, executive committee 12, 51. Track squad, manager Q1, 41, cross country squad, manager Cl, 41: I-louse track C2. 31. Field of concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. PAUL DANA Born November 5. 1921, in Locust Valley, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 350 East 57th Street, New Yorke New York. Eliot I-louse. Field of concentration: Physics. DONALD POTTER DANIELS, JR. Born june 23, 1921, Pasadena, California. Prepared at Flintridge Preparatory. Home ad- dress: 645 Prospect Crescent, Pasadena, Cali- fornia. College address: 74 Mount Auburn Street. Squash squad C1-41, tennis team U-41. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Navy. ORRIN POTTER DANIELS Born April 22, 1920, in Pasadena, California. Prepared at Webb School of California. Home address: 645 Prospect Crescent, Pasadena, California, Eliot House. Field of concen- tration: History. ROBERT PHILIP DANIELSON Born january 1, 1921, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Evanston Township Hih. Home address: 1625 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, Illi- nois. Kirkland House. Glee Club Q2-41. Track team C115 cross country squad 111: House baseball Q51, House crew C2, 315 House track 12, 51. Field of concentration: Archi- tecture. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Architecture. of 1945 FRANK DARDENO Born September 22, 1921, in Albi, Italy. Pre- pared at Somerville High. Home address: 236 I-Iighland Avenue, Somerville, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Student Union Cl, 21 Somerville Scholarship. Detur f21. Field o concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. i RALPH MARTIN DAVENPORT, JR. Born October 30, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 400 East 58th Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Football squad 131, track squad C21: track team QI1. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. DAVID j AMES DAVIS Born june 7, 1921, in Madison, Wisconsin. Prepared at Swarthmore High. Home address: 37 Amherst Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Mathematics. HOLBROOK REINEMAN DAVIS Born May 10, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Marstons Mills, Massachusetts. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. PHILIP J. DAVIS Bornjanuary 2, 1923, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 720 Fort Washington Avenue, New York, New York. Dunster House. Yazrrllizzgg Phillips Brooks House, Undergraduate Faculty Q2-41, Student Union C1-51. Burr Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. GORDON LEE DAWBER Born May 28, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 143 Marl- boro Street, Wollaston, Massachusetts, Col- lege address: 96 Prescott Street. Field of concentration: Economics. 41031 11041- FRANCIS LESTER DAWSON, JR. Born November 24, 1922, in Lynn, Massachu- setts: Prepared at Lynn Classical. Home address: 132 Myrtle Street, Lynn, Massachu- setts, Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House GJ, St. Paul's Club C1-41, Poetry Club House crew GJ. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. GEORGE VAN BUREN HUGO DAY BornJune 17, 1921, in Springfield, Massachu- setts, Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 41 Mulberry Street, Springneld, Massachusetts, College address: 71 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding Theatricals, business manager Q2, 3J, president Q41 Football squad Q1-3J, J.V. manager Q41 Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, vice-president C455 Iroquois Club, sec- retary f4J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. HENRY HINCKLEY DEARING, JR. Born May 31, 1922, Hollywood, California. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High, Wash- ington, D. C. Home address: 5370 Lynnheld Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Lowell House. Swimming squad CZJ: swimming team CU. Harvard Club of Washington, D. C. Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Government. War service: Naval Air Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Navy. JOHN QUENTIN DEAVER Born October 22, 1942, in Casper, Wyoming. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1416Jul1o Herreira y Obes, 3 Piso, Montevideo, Uruguay. Adams House. Soccer team Field of concentration: History, Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. J. A. FRANCOIS de CHADENEDES Born November 18, 1920, in Flushing, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 43-24 Union Street, Flushing, New York. Lowell House. Glee Club Q1-45, Dramatic Club C2-4jg A.R.P., Fire-fighter GJ: Interna- tional Club Qljg Mountaineering Club Q2-45, Foreign Relations Club C3, 4j. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Paleontology, Geology. ARTURO FRANCISCO DE LAGUARDIA Born January 27, 1922, in Panama City, Re- public of Panama. Prepared at Colegio De la Salle. Attended University of Santa Clara 1 year. Home address: Avenue Nicanor Avenue de Obarrio, Panama City, Republic of Panama. Kirkland House. Aaluomte Q3, fljg Boylston Chemical Club 13, 41: Photography Club C3, 41. Harvard College Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- eine. ROBERT THOMAS DENNEHY Born June 5, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rindge Technical, Home address: 26 Chatham Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Psychology. WHEELER DENNIS Born November 17, 1920, in Rutherford, New Jersey. Prepared at Rutherford High. At- tended Amherst 1 year. Home address: 246 Fairview Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. Dunster House. Verein Turmwaechter Q2-4J, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN DAVID DES PREZ, JR. Born August 1, 1922, in Canton, Ohio. Pre- pared at Canton Lehman High. Home address: 1515 Cleveland Avenue, N.W., Canton, Ohio. Kirkland House. Caisson Club GJ: Boylston Chemical Club C2, 3J. House football Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Field Artil- lery. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial management. JEAN ENGLAND DE VALPINE Born December 14, 1921, in Sr. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Kirkwood High. Home address: 126 Peeke Avenue, Kirkwood, Missouri. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House C2, 3Jg Caisson Club Q3, 4Jg Verein Turmwaech- ter QZ, 3J. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Par- menter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. JOSEPH BAILEY DILLON Born July 31, 1921, in Pueblo, Colorado. Prepared at Pueblo Central High. Home ad- dress: 130 East Grant Street, Pueblo, Colorado. Leverett House, Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. FRANCIS CHRISTOPHER DIMOND, JR. Born March 17, 1922, in Gloucester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Beverly High. Home address: 14 Lowell Street, Beverly, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House, Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. he 6171 JOHN XVALTON DIXON Born March 3, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Is- land. Prepared at Hope Hi h. Home address: 45 Drowne Parkway, Rumgord, Rhode Island. Kirkland House. House Committee ffl 5 War ServiceCommittee 3 . Soccerteam - C I 1-4 , House baseball C2-KU: House basketball E2-4 Q House hockey C2-10, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- UCSS. ROBERT EDXVARD DOBBYN Born August 9, 1920, in Quincy, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home ad- dress: 44 Faxon Avenue, Quincy, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Pre-Medical Society 125, St. Paul's Club fl-35. Basketball squad QD: basketball team CII. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOSEPH LEONARD DOBROXVOLSKI Born October 6, 1916, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical High. Home address: 210 Columbia -Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Sociology. JOSEPH PLATT DOWNER Born July 11, 1922, in Coblenz, Germany. Prepared at Trinity. Home address: Bellport, Long Island, New York. Eliot House. Lam- poon, business board C2-45. Basketball team CU, cross country squad QU: House baseball C355 House basketball CZ, 31: House track CZ, 3j, House committee, chairman C3, 41: House dance committee QI. Charles Downer Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Gov- ernment Service, EDWARD THOMAS DOWNING Born September 20, 1921, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 9 Blossom Street, Arlington, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Army Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Research. JOHN JOSEPH DRISCOLL Born March 19, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 1427 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. of I 943 WILLIAM RICHARD DRUCKER Born April 5, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 1125 Mohawk Road, Wilmette, Illi- nois. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, social service committee CZJ, assistant chair- man 132, House Committee MJ, Cheer Leader GD. Swimming squad Q1-ajgswimming team fl-31, captain MQ: House crew Q2-35. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM HOLLAND DRURY, JR. Born March 18, 1921, in Newport, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. Georges. Attended Haileyburg College, Hertford, England 1 year. Home address: Paradise Road, Middletown, Rhode Island. Lowell House. Ornithological Club, director, C1-djg Biological Society C2-41. 150-lb. crew squad C1, Zjg 150-lb. crew GJ, House hockey C2, 3D. Edwards Whitacker Scholarship. Detur CU, Phi Beta Kappa: Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Biol- ogy. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Museum curator. GUILFORD ALLERT ON DUDLEY Born May 1, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 320 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Adams House. A.R.P. 13, 41. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. j AMES CHITTENDEN DUDLEY Born May 11, 1921, in Duluth, Minnesota. Prepared at Milton Academy. Home address: 3600 London Road, Duluth, Minnesota. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Football squad QU: House football, House hockey. Hasty Pudding-Institute ot' 1770: Fox Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Engineer Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Mining engi- neering. FRANK CLYDE DUNHAM, JR. Born February 26, 1920, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Prepared at Landon Preparatory, Washington, D. C. Attended George Wash- ington University 2 years. Home address: 26 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Naval Society C2-41. House baseball C2-41, House athletic secretary MJ. Field of concentration: Economics. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Navy. PETER DUNHAM Born May 3, 1921, in Cedarhurst, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home ad- dress: 210 East 73rd Street, New York, New York. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Golf team Cl, 3j. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concen- tration: Economic Geography. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Air transportation. 11051- -I 106 I- JOHN MACONAUGHY DUNLAP, JR. Born November 30, 1920, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: Glenmary Road, Radnor, Penn- sylvania. Winthrop House. Field of concen- tration: Music. SAMUEL WATSON DUNN Born August 24, 1918, in Vanderbilt, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Dunbar Township High. Attended California State Teachers 1 year. Home address: Vanderbilt, Pennsylvania. Dun- ster House. Red Bank, editorial board, Red Cross, First Aid, Radio Workshop, script writing. House dance committee, record dance. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Adver- tising. WILLARD SCHENCK DURHAM Born April 25, 1920, New Brunswick, New jersey. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 7 Oneida Circle, Winchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of Concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. STANLEY HUGH DURWOOD Born August 5, 1920, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Pembroke Country Day. Home address: 801 West 60th Terrace, Kansas City, Missouri. Winthrop House. House Com- mittee K5, 41. Football squad fl, 2j, football team Q4j g wrestling squad C2, 4D 3 House basket- ball C2, 3, 4j, House football GD. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Motion picture theatre business. WILLIAM CHARLES DUTTON Born December 51, 1920, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Monroe High. Home address: 61 Field Street, Rochester, New York. Lowell House. Mountaineering Club GD: John Harvard Society CZ, BQ. House crew Q2-4j. Harvard College Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Industry. Intended permanent vocation: Electrical engi- neering. J OHN PETER DWORETZKY Born February 20, 1923, in Liberty, New York. Prepared at Liberty High. Home address: 7 Law Street, Liberty, New York. Leverett House. Pre-Medical Society C1-3Jg St. Paul's Club C1-35. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. WALTER RATHER EBERLEIN Born August 29, 1921, in Shawano, Wisconsin. Prepared at Shawano High. Home address: 125 South Franklin Street, Shawano, Wiscon- sin. Adams House. Field of concentration: German. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. EMIL LUDWIG EBERT Born January 15, 1921, in Perrmaseno Germany. Prepared at john Bassett Moore. Home address: Goldsboro, Maryland. Dun- ster House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. a GEORGE WILLIAM EISENBEIS Born December 19, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Arnold. Home address: 400 Glen Arden Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. THEODORE DAVID EISLER Bornjuly 26, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Blair. Home address: 144 West 86th Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Yrzrrflifrg, assistant sports editor: Phillips Brooks House, social service worker QU: A.R.P., warden 15, 41. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. DONALD HERBERT ELDREDGE, JR. Born July 5, 1921, in South Bend, Indiana. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 215 West Marion Street, South Bend, Indiana. Lowell House. House baseball: House foot- ball. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. XVILLIAM HAROLD ELSON, jR. Born August 6, 1925, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Prepared at Tulsa Central High. Home ad- dress: 2144 Norfolk Terrace, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Apley Hall. Field of concentration: Geo- logical Sciences. Che Hass RICHARD PUTNAM EMERSON Born March 30, 1921, in Bulfalo, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Attended Dartmouth 1 year. Home address: West Road, Short I-lills, New Jersey. Leverett House. Glee Club C2-45. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Biologist. ROBERT KENNERLY EMERSON Born February -1, 1922, in San Francisco, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Oak Park High. Home address: 605 Jackson Avenue, River Forest, Illinois. Eliot House. Red Cross C35. Swimming squad C253 swimming team C153 House baseball C3, -153 House football C25. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. KEITH DALLAS EPPERSON Born October 15. 1921, in Madison, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at Oconomowoc High. Home address: P. O, Box 45, Route -1, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Field of concen- tration: Biology. ALAN STEUER EPSTEIN Born May 7, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 217 East 62nd Street. New York, New York. Leveretr House. Album: Phillips Brooks House, Undergraduate Faculty C2, 353 Crimson Net- work C3, 45: Dramatic Club C1, 253 Student Union, Dramatic Committee C153 Photography Club C153 House Ten-Year Book, photographic chairman C35. House baseball C2-45. Boyl- ston Speaking Prize C353 Sales Prize, honor- able mention C553 Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Industrial supervisor. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. MARVIN ALLEN EPSTEIN Born June 14, 1925, in Sharon, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Sharon High. Attended Western Reserve University 1 year. Home address: 1145 Highland Road, Sharon, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. A.R.P. Warden C253 Red Cross C253 Pre-Medical Society C253 Photog- raphy Club C15. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROY BERNHARDT ERICKSON, JR. Born December 6, 1921, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 7504 North Chautauqua Boulevard, Portland, Oregon. Dunster House. Caisson Club C451 Pistol team C15. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intendecl war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Diplomatic service. of 7943 HERNAN JOSE FACIO Born March 21, 1920, in Limon, Costa Rica, Prepared at Liceo de Costa Rica, Home ad- dress: Passo Colon, San Jose, Costa Rica. Kirkland I-Iouse. House Committee C553 A.R.P. C35. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN ALOYSIUS FARLEY, JR. Born April 9, 1921, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Loyola High. Attended Johns Hopkins University 1 year, Home address: 5909 Overland Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Base- ball squad C5, 453 football squad C3, 453 football team C15. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. NORMAN CLIFFORD FARNLOF Born February 21, 1921, in Waterbury, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Crosby High. Home ad- dress: 148 Elliott Avenue, Waterbury, Connec- ticut. Dunster House. Glee Club C1, 25. Harvard Club of Connecticut Scholarship. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching and Ministry. WALTER CLARENCE FEELEY, JR. Born November 28, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 809 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. HORACE ZEIGLER FELDMAN Born May 5, 1925, in York, Pennsylvania. Prepared at William Penn High. Attended Dickinson College 1 year. Home address: 35 North Queen Street, York Pennsylvania. Lowell House. A.R.P. C3, 453 Spanish Club C3, 45. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. PHILIP FELDMAN Born January 22, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 656 Morton Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Track team C1-35. Boston Newsboy's Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. 11071- LAWRENCE C. FELONEY, JR. Born September 11, 1921, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at 'Cambridge High and Latin, Home address: 178 Appleton Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. GAELEN LEE FELT Born October 15, 1921, in Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 936 Dale Street, Pasadena, California. Adams House. Squash team Q1-SJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Army, Intended perma- nent vocation: Foreign service. FRANK FERDINAND Born December 22, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 25 Fairmount Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Dunster House, House football QZJ. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. MALCOLM MAGOUN FERGUSON Born October 1, 1919, in Arlington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 472 Broadway, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Stamp Club fl, 35, President QZJ, Harvard Unity Club Q1, 2J. Crew OJ. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Publishing. OLAF HOFF FERNALD Born October 23, 1921, in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. Prepared at College High. Home address: 102 Lorraine Avenue, Upper Mont- clair, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Caisson Club C3, 4j. House crew C2-4J. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended perma- nent vocation: Engineering. RONALD MANSFIELD FERRY, JR, Born April 26, 1921, in Concord, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 966 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Biology. JOHN MAURICE FIELD Born May 17, 1922, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Detroit Country Day. Home ad- dress: 1659 Longfellow Avenue, Detroit, Michigan. Kirkland House. Album C3, 45: Debating Council QU, Caisson Club QZ, 4J. La- crosse team QU: House football QZJ. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. PHILIP ST. GEORGE FIELD Born March 24, 1920, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at International School at Geneva, Switzerland. Home address: 144 Chapin Parkway, Buffalo, New York. Dunster House. tiki team Q1-ZJ. Field of concentration: Fine tts. AARON SAMUEL FILLER Born February 17, 1920, in Bronx, New York. Prepared at B. M. C. Durfee High. Home address: 623 Woodlawn Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Glee Club Q2-4J, Band C1-4J: Mathematics Club CZ-4J. Field of concentration: Mathematics. LAWRENCE ARTHUR FINE Born September 11, 1922, in Chelsea, Massa- chusetts. PreparedatNewton High. Attended Boston University 2 years. Home address: 101 Stuart Road, Newton Centre, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. JAMES CLEIVIENTS FINKENSTAEDT Born January 21, 1921, in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 6 Woodland Place, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Eliot I-Iouse. Soccer squad GJ, House baseball Q2-4Jg House hockey C2-4J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE THEODORE FINNEGAN, JR. Born January 16, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston College High. Home address: 72 Concord Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Uhr' 6171 MILTON XVILLIS FINSTEIN Born April 27, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 111 Magazine Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Literature. XVILLIAM JOSEPH FISCHMAN Born August 25, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared atlixeter. Home address: 287 Claremont Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. Adams House. l'rn,qnxrrirfe, Business Board 11, 21: Album, business manager: Crimson Network, production board 12--IJ, advertising manager 1-U, business manager 1-U, A.R.P. Warden 13, dj, Radio Workshop 11j. Soccer team 11,3 House baseball 1-lj. Field ol' con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Accounting, SIDNEY STUYVESANT FISH Born june 7, 1921, in Roslyn, New York. Prepared at Santa Barbara. Home address: Carmel, California. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Crinlrnu, Business Board 11, Zjg Hasty Pudding Theatricals 12Dg Naval Society. Soccer team,j.V. 125. Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 1770: Porcellian Club, Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. In- tended war service. Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. ROBERT THOMAS FISHER, -IR. Born November 2, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 68 School Street, Weston, Massachu- setts, Varsity Club. Football squad 11-47: track team 11-31. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Business. ROGER DUMMER FISHER Born May 28, 1922, in Winnetka, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 949 Fisher Lane, Winnetka, Illinois. Adams House. Liberal Union 12, 4j, president 155, War Service Committee 15,1 A.R.P. Warden 13, 41. Crew squad 115, House crew 12-LU. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Meteorology. SIDNEY FLAX Born October 19, 1920, Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 80 Lorna Road, Mattapau, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Music. Intended permanent vocation: Music. af 1945 CHARLES PAUL FLEISCHAUER Born March 15, 1921, in Lincoln, Nebraska. Prepared at Lansing Eastern High. Attended Columbia University Extension 6 months. Home address: 421 Linden Street, East Lans- ing, Michigan, College address: 1709 Cam- bridge Street. Phillips Brooks House 12, 5j: Verein Turmwaechter 145, Circolo Italiano 149, Cercle Francais 141. Football squad,.I.V. 12,31 Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Infantry. Intended permanent vocation: Teacher. ROBERT WILLARD FLINT Born October 51, 1921, in Concord, New Hampshire. Prepared at St, Paul's. Home address: St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire. Lowell House. Crimrozr, editorial board 11, 29, music editor 13, 4jg Phillips Brooks House, Social Service Committee 11j, Glee Club 12-45: Mountaineering Club 11-4j. Track squad 11, Zjg cross country squad 11-lij. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Uncertain, TRUMAN MITCHELL FORD Born April 27, 1921, in Albany, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: Castle- ton-on-Hudson, New York. Leverett House, Phillips Brooks House 1133 Glee Club 11, 25. Track team 11-AD. Speakers Club, Phoenix- S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army. HENRY HAMILTON FORSTER Born September 20, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Soldier's Fortune, Garrison-on-Hudson, New York. College address: 7 Ware Street. Field of concentration: Government. DONALD FORTE Born May 19, 1921, in Longmeadow, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 205 Windsor Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Student Council 110: House Committee 131, Class Day Committee. Foot- ball squad 12j, football team 11, 3, 41, House hockey 12, SJ, House track 12, 39. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D, U. Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. GEORGE WORTH FOWLER, JR. Born December 23, 1921, in Aberdeen, Wash- ington. Prepared at Everett High. Home address: 1602 Wetmore Avenue, Everett, Washington. Eliot House. Dramatic Club 11, Zj. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Psychiatry. 11091: -11101 HARRY WINTHROP FOWLER Born.December 26, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's, Home address: Katonah, New York, New York. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, D.K.E., Delta Upsilon, Porcellian Club, Field of concentration: Fine Arts. , PARKER BROWNE FRANCIS, III Born May 28, 1921, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 1415 Drury Lane, Kansas City, Missouri. Adams House. Soccer squad 115, squash squad 115, lacrosse squad 115. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of con- centration: Sociology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business and Manufacturing. ROBERT SIDNEY FRANKEL Born june 24, 1922, in East Orange, New jersey. Prepared atEastOtange High. Home address: 80 North Oraton Parkway, East Orange, New Jersey. Dunster House. Ref! Book, Literary Board. House baseball 12-45, House basketball 12-45. Matthews Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. DANIEL FREEDMAN Born August 17, 1921, in Lafayette, Indiana. Prepared at Crawfordsville High. Home ad- dress: 10 Mills Place, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army. GABRIEL PHILIP FREEDMAN Born October 9, 1921, in Malden, Massachu- setts, Home address: 106 Pleasant Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club 11, 25. House crew 135, House football 125. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. SANFORD JULIAN FREEDMAN Bornjune 26, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home ad- dress: 271 Normandy Street, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Ym-ailing, editor, Phillips Brooks House, social service work, Student Union 135, Liberal Union 155, Red Cross, first aid 11, 2, 35, Pre-Medical Society 115, Yacht Club 11, 25, Avukah Society 11-35, Rifle Club 115, Foreign Relations Club 11, 25. Football squad, j.V. 135, soccer squad 115, riHe team 115, House football 12, 35. Stough- ton Scholarship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Administrative Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. STANLEY ARNOLD FREEDMAN Born October 5, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Polytechnical Preparatory. Home address: 32 Beverly Road, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. t SAM LEO FREIER Born December 7, 1920, in jablonow, Poland. Prepared at Cristobal High. Home address: 8064 9th Street, Colon, Republic of Panama. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, social service work 125, Pieriari Sodality of 1808 115, Pre-Medical Society 115. House crew 135. Field of concentration: Bio-chemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JOHN REED FRIAR Born December 23, 1920, in Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Wilbraham. Home address: 315 Salisbury Street, Worcester, Mas- sachusetts. Kirkland House. Lampann 12, 55, circulation manager 145, Phillips Brooks House 11, 25, War Service Committee. Har- vard Club of Worcester Scholarship, Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Navy, Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. LIONEL JOSEPH FRIEDMAN Born May 6, 1921, in Aurora, Ohio. Prepared at Shaw High. Home address: 2510 West- minster Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Dunster House. Harvard Club of Cleveland Scholarship, Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. MAURICE STANLEY FRIEDMAN Born December 29, 1921, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Prepared at Tulsa Central High, Home ad- dress: 1407 South Carson Street, Tulsa, Okla- homa. Eliot House. Gmzrdifzrz, editor 12, 35, Phillips Brooks House, special service work 125, Director week-end work camps 155, Glee Club 11, 2, 55, Debating Council 115, Student Union 115, treasurer 125, Liberal Union, chairman foreign policy committee 125, Council on Post War Problems, executive committee and chairman of political organiza- tion committee 155, chairman 145. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur 155, Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Government and labor work. RAYMOND FRIEDMAN Born August 28, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Clayton High. Home address: 7556 Wydown Boulevard, Clayton, Mfissouri. Winthrop House. Crimrozz, business board 12-45, Ref! Book, advertising manager. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Advertising and sales promotional work. Uhr' Hlass ROGER THORPE FRITZ Born September 16, 1921, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge. Home address: 6 Hubbard Park, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Government. HOXVARD ARTHUR FROMSON Born August 28, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Shaker Heights. Home address: 3696 Menlo Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Kirkland House. Glee Club C11: Liberal Union C1,21,A.R.P. C31. Lacrosses uad C31g House baseball CZ, 31, House baskei-ball C213 House football C2, 31, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy Ordnance. Intended permanent vocation: Economist. THOMAS COLEMAN FURNAS, jR. Born May 16, 1922, in Wlayside, Kansas. Prepared at Independence High. Home ad- dress: 315 South 11th Street, Independence, Kansas. Lowell House, Boylston Chemical Club C113 Pre-Medical Society C11, Photogra- phy Club C111 INlountuineering Club C2--111 Stamp Club C1, 21. Harvard College National Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended war service: In- dustrial Chemist. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemical research. IVIATTHEXV PAGE GAFFNEY, jR. Born August 1, 1921, in Claremont. New Hampshire. Prepared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 525 Ash Street, Win- netka, Illinois. Adams House. Glee Club C11. House basketball C2, 31: House football C21. Harvard Club of Chicago Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army Signal Corps. NELSON WILLIAM GAGE, JR. Born February 26, 1920, Albany, New York. Prepared at Hill. Home address: i'West Wind, Delanson, New York. Straus Hall. JAMES LAWDER GAMBLE, JR. Born january 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 33 Edge Hill Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Ski Club, Gliding Club, president C21. House crew, House football, House hockey. PiEta. Field ofconcentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. af 1943 BENJAMIN OUTRAM GARDINER Born july 11, 1921, in Needham, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Oaklands, Gardiner, Maine. Adams House. Hasty Pudding Theatricals C21g Student Union C113 A.R.P. Warden C31. Crew squad, Second Freshman, House crew C31. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g D.K.E., Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish History. Intended war service: Army. STANLEY MARION GARN Born October 27, 1922, in New London, Connecticut. Prepared at Providence Classical High. Home address: 40 Glendale Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. Lowell House. Album C3, 41, Smoker Committee C1, 21, De- bating Council C11: International Club C215 Photography Club C21g lnterhouse Debate C211 Excavators Club C2, 31. Field of concen- tration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Legal medicine. EDWARD WILLIAM GARRISON Born September 22, 1919, in Camden, New jersey. Prepared at Haverford. Home ad- dress: 6 The Strand, New Castle, Delaware. Kirkland House. House crew C2-41, House football C3, 41. Sigma Xi. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. CHARLES BERNARD GATES, JR. Born April 20, 1921, in Charleston, West Virginia. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 1307 Virginia Street, Charleston, West Virginia. Dunster House. House Committee, chairman, A.R.P. House football Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service: Infantry. ANDREW WEBSTER GAUDIELLE Born May 2, 1921, in Hackensack, New Jersey. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 163 Prospect Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey. Kirkland House. 150-lb. crew C1-31. Field of concentration: Psychology. GEORGE CHRISTIAN GEBELEIN, JR. Born March 27, 1918, in Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Prepared at Beacon. Home address: 4 Cliff Road, Wellesley Hills, Massa- chusetts, College address: 71 Mount Auburn Street. Hockey squad C11: hockey team C2, 31. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Army. 11111- GEORGE EZEKIEL GEORGE Bornjanuary 28, 1920, in Leipsist, Macedonia, Greece. Prepared at Shelby High. Home address: 177 West Main Street, Shelby, Ohio. Lowell House. Pi Eta Theatricals C355 Naval Society Q1-41 Football squad Q5, 41, wrestling squad 12, 5, 41, House baseball QU, House basketball MD, House crew MD. ,Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. ARKADI GERNEY Born October 11, 1920, Berlin, Germany. Prepared at Maiden Erlegh, England. Home address: 955 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Dunstet House. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. RICHARD PITMAN GIFFORD Born February 9, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 111 East 70th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House C3, 45: House Committee Q2-IU, treasurer C303 A.R.P. Warden 15, 40, Lowell House Musical Society 13, 43, treasurer CSD. Soccer team C2-43, captain MQ. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. CARY STUART GILES Born February 10, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerheld. Home ad- dress: 29 Crescent Road, Longmeadow, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. A.R.P., Lowell House Opera C2, 35. Soccer team C-ijg House baseball. Field of concentration: Chemistry. EDWARD BENJAMIN GINSBURG, JR. Bornjune 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: Townsend Harbor, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Glee Club QD, Liberal Union K2-41, Harvard Film Society. Harvard College Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended wat service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. SAMUEL LANDSBERGER GITTLER Born October 16, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 320 West End Avenue, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Yarfllingg Pre-Medical Society QB, lil. Swimming squad House crew Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended wat service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. DAVID EATON GLASS Born August 9, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 310 Old Church Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. Col- lege address: 56 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. ROBERT LORING GLASS Born june 15, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 25 Watson Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Harvard Club of Belmont Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended permanent vocation: Dentistry. jAY WALLACE GLEASON Born December 20, 1921, in Malden, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Horne address: 75 Summit Street, Newton, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Yacht Club CZJ. Baseball team Q1-lijg soccer team Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: So- ciology. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. THOMAS ALEXANDER GLEESON Born August 11, 1920, in Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Great Neck High. Home address: 2 Grenwolde Drive, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Astronomy. Intended war service: Army. XVILLIAM ARTHUR GLYNN Bornjanuary 10, 1922, in Hopkinton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Medford High. Home address: 5 Madison Street. Medford, Ivlassa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Band Q2-IO: Crimson Network Q5, -U3 Committee for Federal Union, vice-president C41 Bliss Prize, Samuel Crocker Lawrence Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. ELIOT REED GODIN Born May 10, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at University. Home address: 4102 Meadowbrook Boulevard, University Heights, Ohio. Winthrop House. Yzzrrfliugg Boylston Chemical Club lj, Cercle Francais C3, 10. Baseball squad Q1 :Football squad QU, House baseball CZ, ESD: House football QZ, SQ. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended war service: Coast Guard. Intended permanent vocation: Business. he Hia GEORGE W. GOETI-IALS, III Born August 14, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 140 North Street, Buffalo, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. THOMAS RODMAN GOETHALS Born May 24. 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 54 Hawthorn Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Smoker Committee C15. Track squad CZ, 55. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended war service: Army. FREDERICK CHARLES GOETZ Born June 22, 1922, in Fond du Lac, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at Fond du Lac Senior High. Home address: 140 East Merrill Avenue, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Adams House. Rez! Book, Pre-Medical Society C-45. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Army Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. MARK GOLDSMITH Born-July 14, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hyde Park High. Home address: 6856 Crandon Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Adams House. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended war service: Chemistry. In- tended permanent vocation: Chemistry. DAVID ATWATER GOLDTHWAIT Born November 7, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Longacre Farm, Medheld, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Union Committee, Jubilee Committee, chairman, Ski Club, treasurer 12, 35. Football team C355 House crew f2, 353 House hockey f2, 55. Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. MORTON NOAH GONDELMAN Born November 16, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 20 Royal Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. House Com- mittee, Dudley Hall C453 Avukah Society C2-45. House baseball 135, House crew C5-45, House football Q3-45. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended permanent vocation: Business. nf 7943 RICHARD LEBARON GOODWIN Born January 8, 1920, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Detroit University School. Home address: 550 Seyburn Avenue, Detroit, Michi- gan. Winthrop House. Caisson Club 13, 45. 150-lb. crew squad f15, House crew C45. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Field Artillery. FRANK MCGOWN GORMAN Born September 19, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at University. Home address: 3117 Huntington Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio. Kirkland House, Swimming team Q1-55. Field of concentration: English. CHARLES JAMES GORMLEY Born September 3, 1920, in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 40 Louder's Lane, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Pre- Medical Society: St. PauI's Club, Boxing 125. House hockey 155. Edwards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. AUBREY VAN WYCK. GOULD, JR. Born January 12, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Georges Home ad- dress: 24 Red Brook Road, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Psychology. JOHN SELLS GRAETTINGER Born June 24, 1921, in Ontario, California. Prepared at Chaflfey Union High. Home ad- dress: 581 North Euclid Avenue, Upland, Cali- fornia. Winthrop House. Field of concen- tration: Biology. JOSEPH LEWIS GRANT Born October 25, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 9012 Crefeld Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Yacht Club QI5. 150-lb. crew squad Q1-35, House crew 12, 35. 'Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fly Club. Field' of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. -1115 lt JOHN PEASLEE GRAVES Born April 1, 1922, in Dubuque, Iowa. Pre- pared at Dubuque High. Home address: 1960 Coates Avenue, Dubuque, Iowa. Eliot House. Band HJ, Pre-Medical Society G, 4Jg Yacht Club f2Jg Psychology Club OJ, John Har- vard Society f2-3J, vice president f3Jg Har- vard College Printers C3-4Jg Harvard Memorial Society QIJ. Crowinshield Scholarship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. ROGER COLGATE GRAVES, JR. Born April 14, 1919, in New Haven, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 107 Dean Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Field of concentration: German. MORRIS GRAY BornJune 19, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 549 Marlboro Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Crew squad GJ, football team GJ, House crew G, 4J, House football CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. JOHN RAEBURN GREENE, JR. Born January 7, 1922, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 66 Arundel Place, St. Louis, Missouri. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: English. NORMAN SUMNER GREEN Born February 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended University of Wisconsin 2 years. Home ad- dress: 2005 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Dunster House. House football GJ. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. lntended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. NATHAN CLARENCE GREER BornJanuary 19, 1922, in Santa Fe, New Mexi- co. Prepared at New Mexico Military. Home address: 505 Don Gasper Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Eliot House. Caisson Club G, 4Jg St. Paul's Club C1-4J. Field of con- centration: Economics. RAY WILSON GUILD, JR. Born August 22, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 425 Broadway, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Smoker Committee. Football squad: football team Q1-4Jg track squad C1J. Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. RAYMOND CHARLES GUTH Born November 3, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High. Home address: 79 Woodruff Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Winthrop House. Glee Club GJ, War Service Committee GJ: Verein Turm- waechter Q2-4J. Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. DONALD BENJAMIN HACKEL Born July 7, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 136 Pleasant Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Band C1-4Jg Pre-Medical Society CS, 4J, Biological Society C3, 4J. Ed- mund Ira Richards Fund Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field ofconcentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. GEORGE HAYDOCK HACKETT Born October 18, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 848 High Street, Dedham, Massachusetts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Naval Society K5, 4J. Football squad CIJQ hockey squad C2Jg hockey team 11, SJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17705 D.K.E.g Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Navy. XVILLIAM H. Y. HACKETT, JR. Born February 14, 1921, in Milton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 848 High Street, Dedham, Iviassachusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Marine Corps. ROBERT RUSSELL HACKFORD Born April 4, 1921, in Gardenville, New York. Prepared at Gardenville High. Home address: 85 Orchard Avenue, Gardenville, New York. Phillips Brooks House Q1-4Jg Debating Coun- cil GJ, A.R.P.g Caisson Club Q3Jg Pistol team GJ, Rifle Club CIJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. U15 6171 THOMAS HADLEY Born October 1, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 92 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Football team CU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fly Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Architecture. JAMES ALLEN HAERTLEIN Born January 23, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 44 Marion Road, Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Band CZJ: Caisson Club C5, 4J. Sigma Xi. Field of concentra- tion: Geological Sciences. Intended wat service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Mining geology. HARRY SAMUEL HALL Born May 8, 1922, in West New York, New Jersey. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 4565 Saturn Street, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. College address: 31 Everett Street, Arlington, Massachusetts. Field of concen- tration: Government. LAWRENCE PERCIVAL HALL, JR. Born January 17, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Moorestown High. Home address: 50 West Maple Avenue, Moorestown, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Caisson Club C3, 4J. Basketball team C1Jg House basketball. Harvard Club of New Jer- sey Scholarship. N. C. Club. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- istry. RICHARD LELAND HALL Born June 14, 1925, in Roseland, Nebraska. Prepared at Roseland High. Home address: Roseland, Nebraska. Kirkland House. Stu- dent Council C3, 4Jg Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty C2-4J: Liberal Union C2, 4J, War Service Committee C3, 4J: A.R.P. Warden C3, 10: Red Cross C3, 4Jg Boylston Chemical Club C2, 4Jg Alpha Chi Sigma'C5J, president C4J. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field ofconcentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Chemistry. MORRIS L. HALLOWELL, III Born April 13, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Independence Road, Concord, Massachusetts. College address: 40 Mount Auburn Street. Glee Club Football squad C203 House hockey C3J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fox Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. of 1945 FRANCIS PERCIVAL HAMILTON Born September 4, 1922, in Jacksonville, Florida. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 2323 St. Johns Avenue, Jacksonville, Florida. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. JOSEPH ROCHEMONT HAMLEN, JR. Born December 8, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 125 Holland Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Adams House. Laz171fJo01zC3,4J,Hasty Pudding Thearricals C2Jg St. Paul's Club C1-4J. House baseball C2, 3j. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: English, Intended war service: Army, In- tended permanent vocationzjournalism. FRANK HOFFSTOT HAMMOND Bom October 9, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Tenth Street, Garden City, New York. Dun- ster House. Red Cross C3, 41. Crew squad CD: House crew C2, BJ. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Government. In- tended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Conservation. MILTON WILLIAM HAMOLSKY Born May 25, 1921, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lynn Classical High. Home ad- dress: 99 Commercial Street, Lynn, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Biological Society C3, 4J. Harvard College Scholarship: Elizabeth Wilder Prize in German. Detur CIJ, Phi Beta Kappa, Junior Eight, Second Marshal: Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Hospital orderly. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN LITTLEFIELD HANDY, JR. Born August 19, 1920, in Akron, Ohio. Pre- pared at Milton. Home address: Main Street, Barnstable, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. EGON L. S. HANFSTAENGL Born February 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's, England. Home address: 28 Gunterstone Road, London. West 14, England. College address: 5 Divinity Avenue, Field of concentration: German. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. -1115 GEORGE RUSSELL HARDING, JR. Born July 18, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 81 Fairmount Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Baseball squad C1, 29, baseball team GJ, football squad QU, hockey squad C2Jg hockey team C1, ESQ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. GOODWIN WARNER HARDING Born December 11, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 44 Circuit Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Yacht Club Hockey squad QZJ: hockey team CU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History, 1 JACK RUSSELL HARNES Born November 21, 1922, in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 55 East 65th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. EDWIN DUNNE HARRINGTON, JR. Born March 6, 1922, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Abington High. Home address: 108 East Carmel Avenue, Glenside, Pennsylvania. College address: 2345 Massa- chusetts Avenue. Field of concentration: Chemistry. FREDERIC W. HARRINGTON, JR. Born July 10, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at North Quincy High. Home ad- dress: 56 Garden Street, Milton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Stamp Club QZJQ St, Paul's Club Q1-4j. Crew squad, associate manager Q1, 29. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. JOHN MICHAEL HARRINGTON, JR. Born July 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Roxbury Latin. Home address: 56 Summer Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House f2Jg Caisson Club QB, 41 Harvard Club of Boston CU. Field of concentration: Classics and Govern- ment. Intended War service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ARTHUR STANLEY HARRIS, JR. Bom October 6, 1920, in Winchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 4 Hillside Avenue, Winchester, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. DAVID NEWCOMB HARRIS Born March 19, 1922, in Keene, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 23 Stevens Street, Winchester, Massa- chusetts. Senior House. Baseball squad fl, ZJ. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. WILLIAM SHAW HARRISON Born March 50, 1922, in Milton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 21 Spafford Road, Milton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Economics. RICHARD FOREMAN HART Born March 17, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 215 Orchard Lane, Highland Park, Illinois. Adams House. Red Book, literary board: Liberal Union GJ: A.R.P. GJ. House squash GJ, House tennis GJ. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Communications. Intended permanent voca- tion: Government service. RICHARD HARTE, JR. BornJune 28, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: Route 21, NVilliamstown, West Virginia. College address: 52 Bfiount Auburn Street. Jubilee Committee, head usher, Flying Club: Junior Usher. House football GJ: House hockey QZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. JOSEPH HAROLD HARTSHORN Born June 25, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Hershey High. Home address: 541 West Queen Street, Chambersburg, Pennsyl- vania. College address: 17 Humboldt Street. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. U15 gfll FREDERICK BARTON HARVEY Born june 22, 1921, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Hill. Home address: Brightside Road, Baltimore, Maryland. College address: 52 'Mount Auburn Street. Ltllllflllffll C5, 4jg Union Committee: Student Council C5, 45, Varsity Club, president, H. A. A, Committee, presidentg Third lvlarshal. Baseball team fl-415 Football squad C5, dj: tennis squad QZJ. I-Iasty Pudding-lnstituteol'1770: D.K.E., A. D. Club: Signet Society. Field ofconcentra- tion: History. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: ln- surance. JOHN FRANCIS HARVEY Born August 1, 1922. injefferson City, Miss- ouri. Prepared at Eldon High. Home address: 107 West High Street. Eldon. Missouri. Leverett House. I-louse Committee C5, 45, House baseball C5, -ij: House basketball Q2--lj. Clement Harlow Condell Scholarship, Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. BRADFORD DAVIS I-IASELTINE Born October 26, 1921, in Bradford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home ad- dress: 52 Lexington Avenue, Bradford, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. House Committee CZ, 51. House crew 15, -ij: House Football 15, 41, American Civilization Group Prize QU. Field of concentration: History. ln- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. WESTON BRADFORD I-IASKELL, JR. Born October 4, 1920, in Bangor, Maine. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 77 Woodcliti' Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachu- setts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Biology. WILLIAM HARTMAN HASKELL Bom April 18, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 415 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 56 Plympton Street. 150-lb. crew squad GD. D.K.E.g Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. Intended War service: Army Air Forces. ABRAM WOOLDRIDGE HATCHER Born December 9, 1921, in Nashville, Tennes- see. Prepared at Bloomfield High. Home address: Essex County Hospital, Cedar Grove, New Jersey. Dunster House. Glee Club C1-423 Wesley Foundation Q1-41, Harvard Chapel Choir GD. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medical Ad- ministrative Corps. Intended permanent voca- tion: Physician. of 1943 JAMES DUDLEY HAWKS Born july 1, 1921, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Concord High. Home address: Musketaquid Road, Concord, Massachusetts, Leverert House, Football squad CU, House baseball C253 House football C21 Field of concentration: Government. Intended perma- nent vocation: Civil Service, NORMAN JOHN HAYES Born january 14, 1921, in Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lexington High. Home address: 825 Massachusetts Avenue, Lexing- ton, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Research chemistry. HOWARD THOMAS HEALY Born October 15, 1920, in Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston College High. Home address: 11 Bradheld Avenue, Roslin- dale, Massachusetts. Wintlirop House. Un- ion Committee, Naval Society C415 St. Paul's Club C1--41. House crew CZ, BD: House foot- ball 141. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English, Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT BICKFORD HEARNE Born August 25, 1919, in Medford, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 101 Dudley Street, Medford, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Track squad CU. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. PETER JACOB HEARST Born March 51, 1925, in Stuttgatdt, Germany. Prepared at Columbia Grammar, New York, New York. Home address: 946 San Benito Road, Berkeley, California. Dunster House. Ski Club CU, Film Society Q21 Field of Concentration: Chemistry. EDWARD MICHAEL HEFFERNAN, II Born April 8, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at All Hallows. Horne address: 1075 Grand Concourse, New York, New York. Field of concentration: English. 11171- -fusi- GERARD CARL HENDERSON Born September 5, 1922, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Dublin. Home address: 70 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. RICHARD HENRY Born February 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton Country Day. Home address: 324 Linden Street, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. College address: 26 Divinity Avenue. Glee Club CI, 2, 4Jg Orni- thological Club QU, Harvard Pacifist Associa- tion Q1-4J, president GJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philos- ophy. Intended war service: Chaplain. In- tended permanent vocation: Ministry. ROBERT WALTER HERBERICH Born November 5, 1922, in Akron, Ohio. Prepared at Buchtel High. Home address: 317 Kimberly Road, Akron, Ohio. Lowell House. A.R.P. C3, 4Jg Outing Club GJ. House basket- ball C2-4J. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Secondary school teaching. CARL MORSE HERBERT, JR. Born August 7, 1922, in Spring Lake, New Jersey. Prepared at Peddie. Home address: 70 Ocean Avenue, Manasquan, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Pre-Medical Society Q1-55, secretary MJ. House crew C2-4J. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. In- tended war service: Navy Medical Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. RICHARD HERR Born April 7, 1922, in Guanajuato, Mexico. Prepared at Walnut Hills High. Home address: 5626 Michigan Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Eliot House. Red Cross C3Jg Verein Turm- waechrer C2Jg Outing Club Q2, 3J. House crew John Harvard Scholarship. Detur QU. Field ofconcentrationtl-Iistory. Intended war service: Army. MONROE EDWARD HERSKOVITS Born March 30, 1921, in Cedarhurst, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 262 Central Park West, New York, New York. Lowell House. Swimming squad QU, track squad f2Jg track team Cl, BJ, soccer team Q1-3J House track KZJ. Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN WALTER HEWITT Born June 16, 1921, in Randolph, Vermont, Prepared at Enfield High. Home addfesgg Prospect Street, Enfield, New Hampshire. Dunster House. Swimming squad. Field gf concentration: Physics. Intended war ser- vice: Signal Corps. Intended permanent voca- tion: Electrical engineering. HENRY RUETER HEYBURN BornJuly 15, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: R. R. No. 1, Box 393, Mocking Bird Valley Road, Louis- ville, Kentucky. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House, speakers committee 11, 2Jg Caisson Club C453 Junior Usher. Football team OJ, junior varsity QZJ. Hasty Pudding- Institute of177Og D.K.E.g Owl Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. GEORGE WILFRED HIBBERT, JR. Born August 1, 1921, in Toledo, Ohio. Pre- pared at Culver. Home address: 1068 Prospect Avenue, Toledo, Ohio. Eliot House. House Committee MJ. Crew Q1-3J. Field of concen- tration: Philosophy. ROBERT LLOYD HICKEY Born March 20, 1921, in East Ely, Nevada. Prepared at Culver. Home address: East Ely, Nevada. College address: 22 Plympton Street. 150-lb. crew squad Qi, 2J. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemi- cal Warfare. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. JAMES SLOANE HIGGINS Born May 3, 1921, in Weehawken, New Jersey. Prepared at San Diego High. Home address: 912 Carolina Street, Vallejo, California. Adams House. Wrestling squad C3, 4J: wrestling team fl, 2Jg House football MJ, Senior athletic secretary MJ. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, president MJ. Field of con- centration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE ANDERSON HINCKLEY Born May 1, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Pre- pared at Andover. Home address: -1655 North- west Garfield Street, Washington, D. C. Dunster House. Glee Club GJ: Red Cross GJ. Soccer squad GJ. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. Che Cflrzss JOHN WOOD HIRD, II Born July 22, 1921, in Plainheld, New Jersey. Prepared at Bound Brook High. Home ad- dress: 118 East Maple Avenue, Bound Brook, NewJersey. I.oweIlHouse. Pi Eta Theatricals IZ, BJ: Naval Society GJ: Verein Turrn- waechter Q2, SJ: Naval Science Bulletin f2, 3J, Naval ROTC Rifle Team CID: Lowell House Chronicle CZJ, editor CD. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Diplomatic service, RICHARD ALLAN HIRSCHFIELD Born March 2, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 1540 Lakeshore Drive, Chicago, Illinois. Adams House. ISIDORE ISAAC HIRSCHMAN Born November 22, 1922, in Washington. D. C. Prepared at Huntington High. Home address: -128 11th Avenue, Huntington, West Virginia. Lowell House. Mathematics Club: Phi Beta Kappa, Junior Eight. Field of concentration: Mathematics. FRANK HAROLD HIRST, JR. Born April 8, 1921, in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Prepared at Laconia High. Home address: 46 Merrill Street, Plymouth, New Hampshire. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House 11, ZJ. HOWARD KINSEY HODDICK Born April 21, 1921, in Easton, Pennsylvania. Prepared at George Washington High, Alexan- dria, Virginia. Home address: 1314 Victoria Street, Honolulu, Hawaii. Leverett House. Red Cross 3,4Jg Yacht Club GJ. House squash CZ, 5 . Harvard College Scholarship. Senior Sixteen. Field of Concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Government. Intended permanent vocation: State Depart- ment. WILLIAM SPR AGUE HODGSON Born February 19, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 72 Penniman Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Phillips Brooks House, A.R.P.: Red Cross: Circolo Italiano. Football squad, second freshman and junior varsity: lacrosse team C1-BJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770: Owl Club. Field of concentration: French. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Diplomatic service. af I 943 CHARLES FENNO HOFFMAN, JR. BornJune 24, 1921, in Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: Rad- nor, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks I-louse Cl, D: Dramatic Club Q2-455 Student Union KID, A.R.P. 13, 4J, Ski Club C1-4J. Field of concentration: English. In- tended wat service: Coast Guard. JOHN LESLIE HOFFMAN Born November 3, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: Old Lyme, Connecticut. Lowell House. Ld77If1007I CZ, 3J, Ibis MJ. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. WILLIAM AMOS HOFTYZER Born April 10, 1922, in Westfield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at I-Iingham High. Home address: 11 Cliff Road, Wellesley Hills, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Baseball squad C3, 41, House baseball QU: House basketball QU. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. RICHARD MAYNARD HOLCOMBE Born February 2, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill, Home address: 20 Berkeley Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Hockey squad CU: lacrosse squad CU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. PHILIP BRICE HOLLAND Born March 14, 1923, in McKeesport, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at McKeesoort High. Home address: 2700 5th Avenue, M:Keesport, Pennsylvania. Adams House. House foot- ball. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JOHN WALKLEY HOLMES Born July 28, 1920, in Augusta, Maine, Pre- pared at Drury High. Home address: 1460 Pearl Street, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent Vocation: Mathematics teaching. -11191 11201- RAMER BUNDLIE HOLTAN Born June 20, 1921, in Zumbrota, Minnesota. Prepared at Zumbrota High. Home address: Zumbrota, Minnesota. Adams House. Cais- son Club 121. Basketball squad 111g basket- ball team 111: golf team 121: House basketball 111. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. , TIMOTHY JOSEPH HORAN, JR. Born February 7, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge, High and Latin. Home address: 4 George Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. ROBERT HEYWOOD HOSKINS Born January 15, 1922, in Hartford, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 1245 Windsor Avenue, Windsor, Connecticut. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden 13, 41, Boyl- ston Chemical Club 111, Mathematics Club 121, treasurer 131, vice president 141: Harvard Film Society 13-41, secretary-treasurer 131: Junior Usher. Baseball team, associate man- ager 131: House baseball 13, 41. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Statis- tician. Intended permanent vocation: Actuary. PAUL FRANCIS HOURIHAN Born May 29, 1922, in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 815 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Baseball team 111, track squad 111, House baseball 11, 21. Field of concen- tration: English. COLIN ALEXANDER HOUSTON Born November 28, 1920, in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Prepared at Exeter. Home ad- dress: R. F. D. 2, Box 182, Fairfield, Connec- ticut. Adams House. Naval Society 15, 41. Swimming team 111. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Navy. HERBERT WARREN HOWARD, JR. Born April 16, 1921, in Medford, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 37 Fox Hill Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Cercle Francais 13, 41: Outing Club 121, Spanish Club Baseball squad 111: House hockey 141. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Public Utilities. STUART EVANS HOYT Born September 12, 1922, in Madison, Wis- consin. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day. Home address: 2428 East Linnwood Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Kirkland House. Glee Club 12, 31, Photography Club 11-31, Spanish Club Field of concentration: German. PRESCOTT FOSTER HUIDEKOPER, JR. Born May 12, 1920, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Milton. Home address: c-o Mrs. Hugh Nelson, Millwood, Virginia. College address: 30 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: History. WILLIAM KARL HUMPHREY Born June 3, 1920, in Houston, Texas. Pre- pared at New Trier High. Home address: 520 Ash Street, Winnetka, Illinois. Dunster House. Boylston Chemical Club 11, 41. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Industrial chemistry. Intended perma- nent vocation: Industrial chemistry. XVILL ARD PEELE HUNNEWELL BornJune 1, 1921, in Wellesley. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Wash- ington Street, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Lev- erett I-louse. Boylston Chemical Club 121. House crew 12-41, House hockey 12-41. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- lstry. EDXVARD EYRE HUNT, JR. Born March 9, 1922, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: The Bookhouse, Riverside, Connecticut. Yrzrdlirzg 111g Instrumental Clubs 111, Student Union 121, Liberal Union 151, A.R.P. 151. Track squad 111. New England Preparatory Schools Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Physical anthro- pology. ROBERT TAFF HURLEY Born April 20, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 85 Langley Road, Newton Center, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Sociology. U15 Hlzzss Josi-nm JACOB HUIKWITZ Born November 211, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton Hifh. At- tended Cornell 2 years. Home addiress: 29 Mayflower Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Lived at home. House athletic secretary MJ. House basketball GJ, House crew GJ, House football U, IO, House hockey UD: House track GJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical School. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. RICHMOND NELSON HUTCHINS Born February 1, 1922, in Cape Ncddick, Maine. Prepared at York High. Home ad- dress: Box 113, Cape Neddick, Maine. Eliot House. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Short-story writing. ALBERT FILLMORE HYDE, II Born May 50, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Marks Home address: Spook Hollow Road, Far Hills, NewJersey, College address: 78 Mount Auburn Street, Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. RICHARD JOSEPH HYMAN Born February 11, 1921, in Malden, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Malden High, Home ad- dress: 565 Eastern Avenue, Malden, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society Q2-4J. Harvard Colle e Scholarship, History and Literature Prize C55 Detur QU, Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: History and Literature, Intended war service: Army. CARL HUDSON IMBY Born December 21, 1919, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 3955 Livingston Street, North West, Washington, D, C. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. SCOTT RUSSELL INKLEY Born March 8, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Charles F. Brush High. Home ad- dress: 5124 S encer Road South Euclid, Ohio P i , - Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Biological Sciences. af 1943 ROBERT EDGAR ISAACSON Born December 21, 1920, in Marquette, Ne- braska. Prepared at Grand Island Senior High. Home address: 684 North 57th Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska. Dunster House. Glee Club C1-4J: Golf team OJ. Field of concentration. Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Investment banking. PETER ISELIN Born August 22, 1920, in Rochester, New York Prepared at Brook. Home address: 104 East 71st Street, New York, New York. Dun- ster House. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. STANLEY MARTIN JACKS Born September 24, 1917, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 96 Preble Street, Boston, Massach- serts. Lived at home. David A. Wells Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Public administration. SIDNEY CHAREES JACKSON Born May 27, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Wisconsin High. Home address: 7413 Northwest 12th Street, Wash- ington, D. C. Lowell House. Jeremy Belk- nap Prize, Edward Whitaker Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended permanent vocation: Surgery. FREDERICK ARTHUR JACOBI Born September 14, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 90 Pomeroy Terrace, Northampton, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. JACK HERBERT JAMES Born December 20, 1920, in Marshall, Missouri. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 706 South Cheyenne Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. College address: 104 Lakeview Avenue. Union Committee, Jubilee Committee, Naval Society Q3-10. House basketball Harvard Col- lege Scholarship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. -112111 MARCUS GILBERT JAMES Born. December 27, 1920, in Colon, Republic of Panama. Prepared at Kingston College, amaica, British West Indies. Home address: Kingston Street,Jamaica, British West Indies. College address: 99 Brattle Street. Gurzwlirzzz C1-31, Phillips Brooks House Q1-31, Crimson Network Q1-21, International ,Club Q1-313 Council on Post War Problems. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Ministry. FRANCIS THOMAS JANTZEN, JR. Born December 28, 1920, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Attended Notre Dame University 1 year. Home address: 15 Kilsyth Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Pi Eta Theatricals 131, Pre-Medical Society C213 St. Paul's Club Q2, 51. House baseball H313 House crew 131: House football G13 House hockey 12, 31, House track QZ1. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Law. BROOKE LESSIG JARRETT, JR. Born January 51, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 106 Centennial Avenue, Sewickley, Pennsyl- vania. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: English. RICHARD NEILAN JAYSON Born July 11, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Columbia High. Home address: 51 Plymouth Avenue, Maplewood, NewJersey. Leverett House. Band Q1-31, Ski Club QI1. Football squad 01, track squad U13 lacrosse squad f2, 31, lacrosse team C113 House base- ball f2-41, House basketball Q2-41: House football C2-41, House track K2-41. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Army Signal Corps. CHESTER WALTON JENKS, JR. Born July 29, 1920, in Manchester, New Hampshire. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 971 Chestnut Street, Manchester, New Hampshire. Eliot House. House committee f2, 31, chairman Crew squad C215 crew fl, 31, football team C11: hockey team 111, House football G13 House hockey 12, 31. Harvard Club of New Hampshire Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g A.D. Club. Permanent Class Committee. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Government service. JOHN PERSINGER JEWETT Born January 23, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Yakima Senior High. Home ad- dress: 502 North 3rd Street, Yakima, Washin - ton. Winthrop House. Gmzrclimz Q3, 41, Mountaineering Club, treasurer C51, vice- president Q41. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. KENNETH DAY JOHANSEN Born March 17, 1921, in Mukilteo, Washing- ton. Prepared at Everett High. Home acl- dress: Route 3, Box 1439, Everett, Washington. Eliot House. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended war service: Technical Service. In- tended permanent vocation: Engineering. DONALD CARL JOHNSON Born February 3, 1923, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Riverside High. Home address: 14 Brinton Street, Buffalo, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Economics. EUGENE PARR JOHNSON Born January 17, 1921, in Casey, Illinois. Prepared at Casey Township High. Home address: 100 West Buckeye Avenue, Casey, Illinois. Matthews Hall. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. MARTIN COLLINS JOHNSON BornJanuary 15, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 68 Mon- tague Stteet, Brooklyn, New York. Leverett House. Aduarale QI, 21. Harvard-Choate Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation:-Journalism. PETER DEXTER JOHNSON Born July 1, 1921, in Norwich, Connecticut. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 407 Washington Street, Norwichtown, Connecticut. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. PAUL SIGURD JOHRDE Born August 21, 1921, in Grand Island, Nebras- ka. Prepared at Grand Island High. Home address: 320 East Bismarck Street, Grand Is- land, Nebraska. Thayer Hall. Track team 111, cross country team, captain C11. Zfhc 6171 HOWARD VALLANCE JONES, JR. Born April G, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Newton High. Home address: 185 Oliver Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Crimson Network 13, LU, Radio Work- shop 13, 4J. Field of concentration: History. XVILLIAM NVARNER JONES Born May 22, 1922, in Huntington, West Virginia. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 699 13th Avenue, Huntin ton, West Virginia, Adams I-louse. Field olg concentration: Lit- erature. Intended war service: Field Artillery, HOXVARD ARTHUR JOOS Born May 27, 1922, in Albany, New York. Prepared at East High. Home address: 82 Franklin Square, Rochester, New York, Lowell House. Philli s Brooks House, social service 11Jg Glee Cluli 11-3Jg Choir 11-3J. Baseball team, manager 115. Harvard Club of Rochester Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT ARTHUR JOY Born April 13, 1922, Dedham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 10 Kingston Road, Newton Highlands, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Glee Club 12J. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Administrative Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CHARLES WILLIAM JOYCE Born July 17, 1921, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Prepared at Woodberry Forest. Home address: 1101 West 4th Street, Winston- Salem, North Carolina. Dunster House. Iro- quois Club, Field of concentration: Psychol- ogy. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JACOB HARRY JURMAIN Born September 23, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 595 Broadway, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Cais- son Club 13, 4Jg Photography Club 11Jg R.O.T.C. Muzzle Blast Swimming squad 11-4J. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. iff 1943 WALTER BAIRD KAMP Born March 12, 1921, in Mankato, Minnesota. Prepared at Whitefish Bay I-Iigh. Home ad- dress: 6310 North Santa Monica Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Lowell House. House Committee 13, 4Jg A.R.P. 13, 4Jg Class Day Committee. Football squad 11-3Jg football team 14Jg House baseball 13, 4J, House track 12, 4J. Harvard Club of Milwaukee Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. JOEL MAURICE KANE Born May 20, 1922, in Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Fairfax High, Attended University of California 1 year. Home address: 255 South Highland Avenue, Los Angeles, California. Dunster House. Crimmn 11-353 Progrerrive 11-3Jg Red Bunk 11Jg Phillips Brooks I-louse, speakers committee 11-3Jg Debating Council 11-3Jg War Service Committee 12, 3jg Outing Club 11-3J. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. MANUEL EDWARD KANE BornJuly 19, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 528 Harris Avenue, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. Winthrop House. Lacrosse squad 13Jg House basketball 13J, Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. ISAAC GEORGE KANTROVITZ Born September 7, 1922, in Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 23 Hansborough Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Student Union 11, 2J, Avukah Society Field of concentration: Economics, Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HAROLD KATZ Born July 1, 1921, in Vaslui, Rumania. Pre- pared at Wiley High, Terre Haute, Indiana. Home address: 302 West Amelia Avenue, Tampa, Florida. Dunster House. Debating Council 11Jg Avukah Society, treasurer 12, SJ, vice-president Wrestling team Harvard Club of Indiana Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy and Mathe- matics. MARSHALL SHELDON KATZE Born July 6, 1921, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 30 Tyler Park, Lowell, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Photography Club 11, 4J. Fencing team 11J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. -f123l imp SUMNER ROY KATZE Born September 2, 1919, in Lowell, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 30 Tyler Park, Lowell, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty C1-353' A.R.P. C352 Photography Club C15. Fencing team C15. Field of concentration: English. Intended Awar service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. MAXWELL KAUFER Born July 4, 1922, in Wilkes Barre, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Kingston. Home address: 118 First Avenue, Kingston, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Red Book, advertising man- ager, Jubilee Committee: Phillips Brooks House, freshman committee, secretary C15, social service committee C1, 2, 35, medical clinic committee C25, summer jobs committee, chairman C2, 35, senior advisory council C3, 45, Debating Council C153 War Service Committee C35. 150-lb. crew squad C15. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. ANDREW JOHN KAUFFMAN, II Born November 27, 1920, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Saint Paul's. Home address: 51 High Street, Bangor, Maine. Lowell House. Mountaineering Club C2, 35, president C45. Crew squad C1, 25, crew C45g House crew C35. Harvard Class of 1900 Schol- arship. Field of concentration: English. In- tended war service: Mountain Infantry. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. MYRON STUART KAUFMANN Born August 27, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 43 Barnard Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Crimson, editorial board C2, 35, assistant editorial chairman C453 Guardian, managing editor C35, Albffm, lit- erary editor. 150-lb. crew squad Cl, 25. Robert H. Harlow Scholarship. Signet So- ciety. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Writing. DANIEL THOMAS KELLY, JR. Born March 22, 1921, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 531 Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Eliot House. House football C35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, A. D. Club, Speakers Club. Field of concentration: His- tory. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. MILTON WALLACE KELLY Born October 13, 1921, in Devils Lake, North Dakota. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 921 Sixth Street, Devils Lake, North Dakota. Kirkland House. Glee Club C15. Associated Harvard Clubs Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE TWISS KELTON Born January 10, 1922, in Bryn Mawr, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Radnor High. Home address: 420 Midland Avenue, Saint David, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Band C1-45, Pierian Sodality of 1808 C3, 45: Liberal Union C2, 35. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Corporation law. CALEB KENDALL Born June 26, 1920, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home ad- dress: 9 Acorn Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. ROBERT BRYDON KENT Born December 2, 1921, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Kimball Union Academy. Home address: 66 Huntington Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Red Cross C3, 45. Track team C2, 35: cross Country team C1, 3, 45: House hockey C35. Field of concen- tration: English. Intended war service: Army. SAMUEL LEONARD KENT, III Born May 20, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Haverford. Home ad- dress: 630 Winsford Road, Bryn Mawr, Penn- sylvania. Lowell House. C1-immrz, editorial board C2-45, Dramatic Club C1-45, A.R.P. Warden C3, 45. House crew C2-45. Field of Concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Government work. T. STANXVOOD KENYON, JR. BornJanuary 9, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 80 Belle- vue Avenue, Summit, New Jersey. Adams House. Guardian, president C353 Student Union C155 Liberal Union C2-45: Red Cross, first aid, C3, 45: Student Defense League C2, 35. Field of concentration: Latin-American History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. BRIAN KIELY Born September 23, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High. Home ad- dress: 5 Hedgerow Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio. Eliot House. Caisson Club C45, Outing Club C2, 35. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. The Hia 5 ROBERT STEINER KIEVE Born December 9, 1921, in Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 106 Park View Avenue, Weehawken, New Jersey. Dunster House. Crimrnu 12-453 Crimson Network 11-55, president 145: Radio Workshop 11-115. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Radio work. LEONARD LAXVRENCE KILFOYLE Born August 2-4, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 157 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. House Committee 155: St. Paul's Club 155. Football squad 1351 House baseball 12-45, House basketball 12-115: House hockey 12--15. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war ser- vice: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. HORACE GOODXVIN KILLAM, JR. Born January 25, 1922, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Classical High. Home address: 71 Mount Hope Avenue,-Providence, Rhode Island. Kirkland House. A.R.P. Soccer squad 125, soccer team 11, 35, I-louse baseball 12, 55. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Navy. DRUE KING, Ja. Born August 19, 1920, in Augusta, Georgia. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: Veterans' Administration Facility, Tuskegee, Alabama. College address: 19 Kenilworth Street, Roxbury. Glee Club 11-55, vice-presi- dent 145, Student Union 115, Pre-Medical Society 11, 2, 45, Choir 135. House football 11, 5, 45. Signet Society. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended perma- nent vocarion: Medicine. HENRY PARSONS KING, JR. Born December 20, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton, Home address: Manchester, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Lampawz 13, 45, Dramatic Club 115, Hasty Pudding Theatricals 125: Yacht Club 155. House crew 155. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army. HENRY WARD FORD KING Born April 10, 1918, in New York, New York. Prepared at Asheville School. Home address: 45 East 62nd Street, New York, New York. College address: 14 Ware Street. Flying Club 135. Crew squad 135: crew 115. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Civil Air Patrol. rff 1943 HAYWARD STUART KIRBY Born November 21, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: Rye, New York. Kirkland House. Crimran 115, Phillips Brooks House, settlement worker 1154 Crimson Network 13, 45. House crew 135. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Psychologist. Intended permanent vocation: Psychiatry. PAUL EDWIN KLEINSCHMIDT Born June 25, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri, Prepared at Kirkwood High. Home address: 520 Crescent Drive, Kirkwood, Missouri. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House, social service 12, 35, Verein Turmwaechter 12, 35. House dance committee 12-45. Har- vard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war ser- vice: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN R. M. KLOTZ, III Born August 12, 1920, in Montclair, New Jersey. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 165 Midland Avenue, Mont- clair, New Jersey. College address: 5 Linden Street. Field of concentration: English. NELSON RULISON KNOX, JR. Born May 26, 1921, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 8014 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Phillips Brooks House 115, Hasty Pudding Theatricals 125. Wrestling team 115. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Owl Club. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. ROBERT FREDERICK KOLKEBECK Born March 13, 1916, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Manual Training High. Home address: 1 Arsenal Square, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. House committee, treasurer 155. Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Quarter- master Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial psychology. SIDNEY KORETSKY Born December 30, 1921, in Chelsea, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Chelsea High. Home address: 167 Walnut Street, Chelsea, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks House 13, 45, Boylston Chemical Club 13, 45, Pre-Medical Society 13, 45: Mathematics Club 12, 55. House track 12, 3, 45g William Hilton Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Hospital orderly. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. -11251 VICTOR MONTWID KUMIN ERIC I-ARRABEE WILLIAM HARRISON LATIMER, JR. 41261 HERBERT JULIUS KRAMER Born July 27, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 59 West 12th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Born August 2, 1921, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 39 Auburn Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Debating Council QU: Crimson Network Q2-45. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: lndus- trial management. FRANK ROBINSON LACY, JR. Born September 16, 1921, in Dubuque, Iowa. Prepared at Dubuque High. Home address: 1090 Langworthy Avenue, Dubuque, Iowa. Eliot House. Class of 1902 World War Mem- orial Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial chem- istry. STANLEY LAMPERT Born November 23, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brighton High. Home address: 301 Allston Street, Brighton, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Radio Workshop QIJ. House football Edmund Ira Rich- ards Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. PAUL DUDLEY LAMSON, JR. Born October 15, 1921, in Baltimore, Mary- land. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Stanford Drive, Nashville. Tennessee. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Crew, junior varsity, House crew GJ, House football I5, 4J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Spee Club. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Navy. JAMES PATRICK LANNON, II Born November 22, 1920, in Flushing, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 75 Maple Avenue, Flushing, New York. College address: 7 Ware Street. Field of con- centration: Fine Arts. ADRIAN CRAVATH LARKIN Born September 23, 1919, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 903 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Ro- mance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Born March 6, 1922, in Melrose, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Bromsgrove. Home ad- dress: 1645 Wendell Avenue, Schenectady, New York. Leverett House. Lrzmpoozz C2, EJ, secretary QLD, Alzzm1ziBnllelin reporter C3, 4J: House Committee MJ: House Library Commit- tee f2Jg Odist. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Signer Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. War service: Army. BornJune 16, 1921, in Carnegie, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Arnold. Home address: 6902 Yorkshire Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Pi Eta Theatricals GJ, Naval Society G, -IJ. House baseball C2, 3J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. NATHANIEL PAGE LAURIAT Born March 22, 1922, in West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 71 Highland Avenue, Hull, lNIassa- chusetts QP. O. Box 582. Eliot House. Yrzrdling, contributing editor, Student Union fl, ZJQ Liberal Union C3. 4Jg A.R.P. C391 Red Cross GJ, Radio Workshop Q1-4J. Field ofconcenttation: English. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. ARTHUR LAURID LAWSON Born August 30, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 19 South Sydney Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Caisson Club C1-BJ, Verein Turmwaechter C2-LU: St. Paul's Club C1--ij. Football squad C3, 4J: House crew GJ: House football Q2, LID: House hockey Q2-4J. Field of concentration: German Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. XVILLIAM MALLOY LAYTON, JR. Born April 28, 1921, in Manslield, Ohio. Prepared at Mansfield High. Home address: 38 Wellington Avenue, Mansfield, Ohio. Dunster I-louse. Biological Society Q2, 51. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. Che 6171 RICHARD LEACOCK Born july 18, 1921, in London, England. Prepared at Dartington Hall, England. Home address: R. F. D. 1, Glen Gardner, Newjersey. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Physics. JOSEPH MICHAEL LEAHEY Born March 17, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at McBride High. Home address: 4108A Camellia Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. Adams House. St. Paul's Club 11, 45. Track squad 115: House track 12, 115. Harvard Club of St. Louis Scholarship. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. WALTER JAY LEAK Born May -1, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Miami Beach Senior High. Home address: 1010 West Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida. DunsterHouse. l.iberalUnion13,45, War Service Committee, treasurer, bonds and stamps committee 135: Pre-Medical Society 11-35, president 1451 Stamp Club 11, 25. Student Defense League 12, 35. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HAROLD JACK LEAVITT Bornjanuaryl-1, 1922, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Swampscott High. Home address: 18 Orchard Circle, Swampscott. Massachusetts. College address: 16 Harvard Terrace, Allston. International Club, vice-president 135. Field of concentration: Psychology. ALFRED DIX LEESON Born November 26, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 390 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Spot- ter 135: Naval Society 13, 45. Crew squad 11-45: House crew 135: House hockey 12, 35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Owl Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Aviation. PERRY DEYO LE FEVRE Bornjuly 12, 1921, in Kingston, New York. Prepared at Northwood, Lake Placid Club, New York. Home address: Plattekill Avenue, New Paltz, New York. Leverett House. Committee on Curriculum and Tenure 13, 45, Harvard Pacifist Association 12-45. Price- Greenleaf Scholarship. Detur Field of concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Ministry. of 1943 ROBERT WARREN LERNER Born May 16, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hun. Home address: 1016 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. College ad- dress: 30 Mt. Auburn Street. Lamjwoaz 12, 35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war ser- vice: Signal Corps. JACOB CLAVNER LEVENSON Born October 1, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 5 Druce Street, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Yawllingg Liberal Union 12-45, Film Society, chairman 145. Field of concentration: History and Literature. ALLAN LEWIS LEVINE Born October 16, 1922, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 202 Gibson Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Glee Club 115, Naval Society, 13-45. Harvard New England School Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. DEAN BAILEY LEWIS Born February 18, 1922, in jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 38 Brookdale Road, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. House football 125. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Public administration. FRANK LEWIS Born September 25, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 28 Deckard Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Civil Service. WILLIAM HORATIO LEWIS Born january 14, 1921, in Spokane, Washing- ton. Prepared at North Central High. Home address: 1623 West Sharp Avenue, Spokane, Washington. Lowell House. Verein Turm- waechter 135, vice-president House basketball 12-45: House crew 13, 45. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Physics. Intended war service: Naval Research Laboratory. Intended perma- nent vocation: Electronic Research. 11271 11281 BURTON RALPH LEWKOWITZ Born November 1, 1921, in Phoenix, Arizona. Prepared at Union High. Home address: 720 West Palm Lane, Phoenix, Arizona. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House CZ, 31: House Committee MJ, A.R.P. 13,41 Golf team QU, House baseball f2, EJ: House basketball GJ, House football CD3 House xtrack Q2, 3b. Field of concentration: Government. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. MARK LINENTHAL, JR. Born November 12, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 6 Gerry's Landing Road, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Azfimrate literary board C3, lil, Yazrdlizzgg Student Union, freshman executive committee QU, Liberal Union Crew squad QIJ. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war ser- vice: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. THOMAS WOLCOTT LITTLE, JR. Born February 23, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 11 Ross Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Cz-imrarz, business board 11, Zjg Naval Society fl, 2, 3J. House crew Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Present war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. JAMES DUGALD LIVINGSTON Born August 24, 1921, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Saint Louis, Missouri. Winthrop House. 150-lb. crew squad 11, ZJ, House crew 13, 4J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Cavalry. Intended permanent voca- tion: Writing. ROBERT MINTURN LOCKXVOOD Born August 28, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 6 College Circle, Haverford, Pennsylvania. Lampaon GJ: Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. WILLIAM LOGAN Born September 4, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Chillon, Switzerland. Home address: c-o President R. M. Hutchins, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. WALTER SCOTT LONG, JR. Born October 2, 1921, in Mayfield, Kentucky. Prepared at Mayfield High. Home address: R-3 Dukedom Road, Mayfield, Kentucky. Leverett House. Glee Club f2, 3J. Track squad Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. MATTHEW JAMES LOORAM, JR. Born March 26, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Saint Paul's. Home ad- dress: 775 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House C1-4J. Squash squad Hasty Puddin -Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club. Field ofgconcentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. CALEB LORING Born February 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 569 Hale Street, Pride's Crossing, Massachu- setts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Naval Society CBJ, Yacht Club Q1-31. Baseball team CZJ, Football squad 12, 3Jg football team QU: hockey team C1-35. A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. FRANCIS EUGENE LOW Born October 27, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Ecole Internationale. Home address: 27 Washington Square, North, New York, New York. Eliot House. Liberal Union C2, SJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa: Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: War research in physics. Intended permanent vocation: Research in physics. XVILLIAM TRENT LUCAS Born November ZS, 1922, in Knoxville, Ten- nessee. Prepared at Fort Lauderdale High. Home address Southeast sith Street, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Dunster House. Crew squad GJ, House crew CZ, 3J. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. XVINSTON SLOVER LUCKE Born July 23, 1921, in Loudon, Tennessee. Prepared at Knoxville High. Home address: 112 Fern Street, Knoxville, Tennessee. Dun- ster House. House baseball CZ, 313 House basketball 12, 3Jg House football QZJ. Har- vard College National Scholarship. Detur CZJ. Field of concentration: Engineering -Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Electrical engr- neering. Che 617155 ALFRED LURIE Born March 28, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Pasadena Junior College. Home address: 622 South Austin Boulevard, Oak Park, Illinois. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty 12, 35, Chair. man 1-155 Crimson Network 12. 115, secretary 155, Caisson Club 15, 45. House baseball 125. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended watt service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT SAMUEL LUSSKIN Born December 111, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Dwight Morrow High. Home address: -1317 Mountain View Road, Englewood, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Yurrlfillqq, sports editor: Student Union 11-35g A.R.P. 15,1153 Pre-Medical Society 1-15. Base- ball squad 12-45: baseball team 115 House: baseball 15, 45: House basketball 155. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. ln- tended war service: Medical School. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. XVILLIAM GORDON LYLE, JR. Born December 10, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 169 East 80th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Jubilee Committee 11753 House Committee 13, -15, St, Paul's Club 11-45. Football team 11-115: track squad 115: track team 135, House hockey 12--15, House track 12-55: House athletic manager 12. 55. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. ln- tended permanent vocation: Government. AUSTIN LYNCH, III BornJune 2, 1921, in Canton, Ohio. Prepared at Lehman High, Home address: 1832 Wood- land Avenue Northwest. Canton. Ohio. Kirk- land House. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RICHARD WILSON LYONS Born November 29, 1920, in Randolph, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 57 Ellis Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. WERNER KARL MAAS Born April 27, 1921, in Kaiserslautern, Ger- many. Prepared at Cherry Lawn. Home ad- dress: 425 Central Park West, New York, New York. Dunster House. Yarrllifrg 115, Glee Club 115, A.R.P. 135: Verein Turm- waechter 11, 25: Avukah Society 11, 25, vice-president 135, Biological Society 12, 35. Soccer squad 115. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching biology. of 7943 GERALD CALLAN MCCARTHY Born January 9, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 405 Allison Street Northwest, Washing- ton, D. C. College address: 49 Alteresco Road, Codman I-Iill, Boston. Pre-Medical Society 15, 45, Circolo Italiano 11-45, Cercle Francais 11-45: St. Paul's Club 12-45, Spanish Club 11-45. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. LAWRENCE JOSEPH MCCARTY Born December 22, 1920, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 20 Abbottsford Road, Brook- line, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Sociology. DONALD ROBERT MCCAUL Born November 25, 1920, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Waltham High. Home address: 418 Main Street, Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Track team 12, 35, cross country squad 125: cross country team 135, House track 125. Field of concentration: Anthropology. HENRY CABELL MCCLELLAND Born December 24, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1771 Church Street Northwest, Washington, D, C. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. JAY MCCONVILLE Born October 28, 1920, in Fort Totten, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Storm King. Home address: Pinebrook Road, Bedford Vil- lage, New York, Leverett House. Field of concentration: Sociology. ANSON GEORGE MCCOOK Born July 24, 1921, in Pasadena, California. Prepared at Catalina Island. Home address: R.F.D., Groton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. 11291 l 41501- CHARLES HENRY MCCROSKEY Born August 17, 1921, in King City, Missouri. Prepared at Wyandotte High. Home address: 1111 Quindaro Boulevard, Kansas City, Kan- sas. Kirkland House. House Committee C455 A.R.P. Warden 13, 41. Swimming team, House hockey CSD, House track QD. Harvard Club of Kansas City Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HOWARD SHAW MCCUTCHEON Born October 11, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 2450 Lake View Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Leveretr House. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army, DONALD FRANK MCDONALD Born April 8, 1921, in Freeport, Illinois. Prepared at Davenport High. Home address: 40 East Oak Street, Chicago, Illinois. Eliot House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. DANIEL ELLIOTT MACK Born April 5, 1921, in Windsor, Connecticut. Prepared at Windsor High. Home address: 55 Mack Street, Windsor, Connecticut. Dun- ster House. Phillips Brooks House fir, 411 Pre-Medical Society fl, 3, 4j. Field of concen- tration: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN DONALD MacKINNON, JR. Born July 15, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home ad- dress: l8 Ridgway Terrace, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Track team fl-31, Captain CLD. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Field Artil- lery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. STAFFORD MCLEAN Born March 10, 1921, in Paris, France. Pre- pared at St. Mark's, Home address: Tuxedo Park, New York. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: History. GEORGE ROBERT MacLELLAN Born September 11, 1922, in Manchester, New Hampshire. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 397 North Bay Street, Man- chester, New Hampshire. Eliot House. St. Paul's Club GJ. Field of concentration: History. ROBERT LEMPEREUR MCMURTRIE Born November 10, 1922, in Berlin, New Hampshire. Prepared at Gorham High. Home address: Bellevue Place, Gorham, New Hamp- shire. Eliot House. Price Greenleaf Scholar- ship. Detur GQ. Sigma Xi. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. ROBERT EDWIN MCNAIR Born March 27, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 11 Gray Gardens East, Cambridge, Massachusetts. DunsterHouse. Photography Club QU, Outing Club L5, 41, Bicycle Racing Club CZJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Engineering. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. DONALD EDWARD MCNICOL Born August 11, 1921, in Kew Gardens, New York. Prepared at Flushing High. Home address: 3221 156th Street, Flushing, New York. Adams House. Union Committee, jubilee Committee, Student Council QQ, Permanent Class Committee. Football team Q1-53, House hockey CZD. Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Delphic Club. Field of Concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Law. NICHOLAS j OY MADEIRA Born December 18, 1918, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: The Land, Greenway, Fairfax County, Virginia. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. NORMAN KINGSLEY MAILER Born january 51, 1923, in Long Branch, New jersey. Prepared at Boys' High. Home ad- dress: 555 Crown Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. Adtramfe, literary board 12, BD, Red Book, editorial board, Phillips Brooks House, social work fl, 25, Engineering Society CU. House football Q, 35. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Che 6fLI5'5 WILLIAM ARTYN MAIN Born July 11, 1921, in San Diego, California, Prepared at Bremerton High. Home address: 1500 East Ocean Boulevard, Long Beach, Cali- fornia. Leverett House. Lfzmprmu G, AJ, Caisson Club MJ. Field of concentration: Economics. THOMAS HERBERT MALIM Born January 11, 1922, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Southeastern High. Home ad- dress: 410 Manistique Avenue, Detroit, Michi- gan. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. RICHARD FRANK MANEGOLD Born October 25, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Greenville, Delaware. Adams House. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Biology. ln- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. HAROLD LOUIS MARANTZ Born October 15, 1922, in Paterson, New Jersey. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 135 Central Park West, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House 12, 5Jg A.R.P. G, 4J: Red Cross G. 4J: Yacht Club Q2-4Jg Outing Club C2-4J. House crew CZ, BJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. SUMNER NORMAN MARDER Born August 24, 1922, in Dorchester, Massa- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 53 Georgia Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. House Committee KZ, BJ, treasurer MJ. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Sigma Xi, Field of concentration: Biology. JOHN GRIGSBY MARKHAM Born May 24, 1918, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Oconomo- woc, Wisconsin. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. af 1943 CHARLES CLARK MARSHALL, JR. Born October 30, 1920, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 105 Prospect Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Leverett House. Track team GJ. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: fftrmy. Intended permanent vocation: Journa- ism. DAVID MARTIN Born August 6, 1922, in Marysville, Texas. Prepared at Santa Ana, High. Attended U. C. L. A. Junior year. Home address: 2142 Elm Avenue, Long Beach, California. Adams House. Track team GJ, Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. ROBERT CARRUTHERS MARTIN, JR. Born January 16, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Glenville High. Home address: 1208 Salem Avenue, Dayton, Ohio. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House K1-3J. Har- vard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. ROBERT GLENN MARTIN Born November 7, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Cooley High. Home address: Box 368, Route 3, Greensboro, North Carolina. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Philosophy. VYV BYRON MATHER Born December 7, 1921, in Defiance, Ohio. Prepared at Columbian High. Attended Heidelberg 2 years. Home address: 395 Coe Street, Tiffin, Ohio. Debating Council G, 4Jg Dramatic Club GJ: A.R.P. GJ, Radio Work- shop GJQ Council on Post-War Economics. Swimming squad GJ: track team GJQ House football GJ, House track G, 4J. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Ordnance. Intended perma- nent vocation: Financial law. THOMAS MATTERS Born March 19, 1918, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Tome. Home address: 36 Gate- way Drive, Great Neck, New York. Lowell House. Smoker Committee Q1Jg Student Council GJ, president MJ: Phillips Brooks House, speakers committee GJ: House Com- mittee G, 4Jg Glee Club OJ, Freshman De- bating, president, Willkie Club C2Jg Second Marshal. Tennis team, manager GJQ House athletic secretary GJ. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Government work. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law or Business. 11311: 11321 WILLIAM V. G. MATTHEWS Born january 5, 1921, in Pasadena, California. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: The Cuyaniaca Club, San Diego, California. Adams House. Stamp Club Q1-45. Soccer team C1, 3, 45. Field of concentration: History. In- tended permanent vocation: State Department, foreign service. l l MYLES MAXFIELD Born August 5, 1921, in Portland, Maine. Prepared at Deering High. Home address: 335 Westbrook Street, Portland, Maine. Lowell House, Field of concentration: Chem- istry. ALEX RICE MAYER Born March 12, 1922, in Denver, Colorado, Prepared at East High. Home address: 910 Saint Paul Street, Denver, Colorado. Kirk- land House. Student Union 125. House baseball C25. Harvard College Scholarship. Field ot' concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Industrial. Intended permanent vocation: Civil Service. PHILIP EMIL MOULTON MAYER Born May 5, 1920, in New York, New York, Prepared at Arosa, Switzerland. Home ad- dress: 1 Madison Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Government. WILLIAM MCLEOD MAYGER Born February 2, 1921, in Manila, Philippine Islands. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Helena, Montana. Leverett House. Smoker Committee. Caisson Club G, 45: Cercle Francais Q35. Track squad Q1-45, soccer squad Q1-45. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Army. JERE MEAD Born August 30, 1920, in Madison, Wisconsin. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 88 Rutledge Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Red Bank, literary editor: Band Q1-55, manager 145, Pierian Sodality of 1808. Field of concentration: Biology, Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JAMES MEANS Born December 13, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home ad- dress: 15 Chestnut Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Mountaineering Club 13, 45: Ski Club 155. Crew squad 155. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended permanent vocation: Aviation. ALEXANDER D. MEB ANE Born February 21, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Birch Wathen, Home address: 138 West 92nd Street, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. ARTHUR TAYLOR VON MEHREN Born August 10, 1922, in Albert Lea, Minne- sota. Prepared atjohn Marshall High. Home address: 12 Orlin Avenue, S.E., Minneapolis, Minnesota. Kirkland House, Freshman De- bating Society. Fencing team fl, 35. Har- vard College Scholarship. Detur 125: Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JAMES RUSSELL MELLMAN Born December 4, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Shaker Heights High. Home address: 17120 South Vifoodland Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio, Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House C15g A.R.P. 13, 45, Red Cross G, 45, Music Club Q2-45. House basketball Q35. Field of concentration: Music. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Music. HAROLD THAYER MERYMAN Born February 5, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Dublin, New Hampshire. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Lrzmpoon K2-55, Narthex K45: Pre-Medical Society CZ5. Crew squad 145. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Naval Medical Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: hfledicine. NORMAN MEYER Born December 2, 1917, in Medford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lincoln Preparatory. Home address: 51 Morton Street, Forest Hills, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Divinity Avenue, Phillips Brooks House, freshman committee C15, cabinet member QZ, 353 Glee Club Q1-25, International Club, di- rector Q55. Crew Q15. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. U16 Hlrzss ROBERT EVAN MEYER Born December 10, 1921, in Lynbrook, New York. Prepared at Saint Paul's. Home ad- d'ess: 50 Wilson Street, Lynbrook, New York. Wintltrop House. 150-lb. crew squad 115. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemistry, DANIEL BOORSE MICHIE, JR. Born July 28, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Olney High. Home ad- dress: Rydal, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Philosophy. ROBERT EARL MIDDLETON Born November 18, 1920, in Diamond. Ohio. Prepared at Ohio State University High. Home address: 2054 Tuller Street, Columbus, Ohio. Dunster House. Field ofconcentration: Music. GOODWIN WARNER MILLAR Born July 2, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 25 Greenough Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. FRANK GUSTUVAS MILLER Born February 8, 1921, in Leroy, Kansas. Prepared at Leroy High. Home address: Leroy, Kansas. Eliot House. Waite Memorial Fund Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Electronics. Intended permanent vocation: Communications engineering. JAMES NATHAN MILLER Born November 16, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 52 Washington Square West, New York, New York. Eliot House. Cfimrnn Q2-45. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journ- a ism. af 1943 MAYNARD MALCOLM MILLER Born January 23, 1921, in Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Stadium High. Home address: 5927 North Gove Street, Tacoma, Washington. Lowell House. House Committee 145, Naval Society 15, 45, Photography Club f15, Moun- taineering Club Q1, 25, president Q3, 453 Outing Club QB, 45, Naval R.O,T.C. Rifle Team, Junior Usher. Soccer team Q1-55: 150-lb. crew K1-35, House soccer. Harvard College Scholarship. Sigma Xi. N, C. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences, Intended War service: Navy, submarine duty. Intended permanent vocation: Mining engi- neering. DAVID THEODORE MINTZ Born March 8, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: P. O. Box 539, Mount Kisco, New York. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House U53 Glee Club 115: Band G53 Instrumental Clubs 135, Crimson Network 35: Red Cross C35: Boyl- ston Chemical Clu CI, 45, Radio Workshop 12, 55, Music Club K1-45. Field of concentra- tion: Music. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. RICHARD GORON MINTZ Born September 26, 1921, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 95 Longwood Avenue, Brookline, Mas- sachusetts. Dunster House. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Navy. SAMUEL JASON MIXTER Born May 5, 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 209 Sargent Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Adams House. H. A. A. Photographer C35. Football team, assistant manager CI, 25g House hockey CZ, 35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17703 Owl Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Business. EDWARD JULIAN MODEST Born September 9, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts, Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 131 Magazine Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boyl- ston Chemical Club Q-45: Avukah Society C45. Daniel Buckley Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemist. EARL MONTGOMERY, JR. Born April 17, 1921, in Memphis, Tennessee. Prepared at South Kent. Home address: 167 South McLean Boulevard, Memphis, Tennes- see. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. 11551 4I134J- JAMES MORTIMER MONTGOMERY Born February 5, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 173 East 80th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Guardian, editorial board C2, BJ. House crew GJ. Spee Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended wat service: Army. N . HAROLD MORTON MOONEY Born December 15, 1922, in Northfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Montpelier Seminary. Home address: South Hero, Vermont. Eliot House. Band Q1-LU. Charles Downer Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Physics. In- tended war service: Electronics. Intended permanent vocation: Electronics. DANIEL ELDREDGE MOORE Born May 21, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Clayton High, Home address: 418 Carrswold Street, Clayton, Missouri. Eliot House. Glee Club Q2, 51. Field of concentra- tion: Music. EARLE KENNEDY MOORE Born December 21, 1921, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Nichols. Home address: 271 Argonne Drive, Kenmore, New York. Kirk- land House. Soccer team, manager f2, 3J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ROBERT MARTIN MOORE, JR. Born July 20, 1920, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 5617 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. College address: 15 Oxford Street. Field of concen- tration: Biology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM SCOVILLE MOORE, JR. Born August 4, 1920, in Bar Harbor, Maine. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 7 East 96th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Field Service. JOHN RUTHERFORD MOOT Born February 12, 1922, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Nichols. Home address: 105 Chapin Parkway, Buffalo, New York. Eliot House. Lacrosse team C1-553 House football CZJ, House hockey Q2, BJ. Field of concen- tration: Engineering. Intended war service: Navy Engineer. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering administration. BERKELEY DAVIS MORE Born October 21, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 101 Brookside Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut. Leverett House. Caisson Club CB, 4J. Crew QU. Harvard Club of New York City Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. COUNCILMAN MORGAN Born September 7, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 11 Hilliard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Glee Club GJ. Hockey team CU, House hockey CZ, 5J. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. HUGH BURDICK MORGAN Bom May 21, 1921, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Santa Barbara. Horne address: 24 Bar our Terrace, Bloomfield Hill, Michigan. Adams House. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. JOHN XVILLIAM MORGAN Born October 22, 1921, in San Francisco, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Covina High. Home address: 1656 East Badillo Street, Covina, California. Kirkland House. Jubilee Com- mittee CIJ, secretary-treasurer: Student Coun- cil GJ, House Committee f2J, chairman CBJ, A.R.P. C2, 3J, Class Day Committee. Football squad fl, 2, SJ: Track team QU, House base- ball f2J, House track Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business Ad- ministration. CHARLES HENRY MORIN Bom August 18, 1922, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 47 Hancock Street, Lexington, Massachusetts. Adams House. Pi Eta Theatticals CZ, 3Jg Caisson Club QS, 4J. House baseball Q2-4J: House basketball QZJQ House football QQ. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. U15 61a JAMES WILLIAM MORLEY Born July 12, 1921, in Trenton, New Jersey. Prepared at Northwood. Home address: 50 West Avenue, South Norwalk, Connecticut. Leverett House. Cl'f1ll.l'0ll C313 Glee Club fljg Band C1-31, Crimson Network CZJ, business manager UD. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Phi Bern Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration. History and Literature. ln- tended permanent vocation: Foreign service. ALVA MORRISON, JR. Born March 18, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 2 Garden Terrace, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Winthrop I-louse. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences, XVILLIAM LINDSAY MOSBY Born November 30. 1921, in Rockford, Illinois. Prepared at Rockford High. Home address: 2209 Clinton Place, Rockford, Illinois. Dun- ster House. Boylston Chemical Club C21- Ouring Club GJ. Field of concentration: Organic Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemical research. CLARENDON MOXVER, JR. Born May 17, 1921, in Rockford, Illinois, Prepared at Rockford Senior High. Home address: Spring Creek Road, Rockford, Illinois. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial per- sonnel. FRANK BEARSS MUHLFELD Born September 14, 1920, in Greenwich, Connecticut. Prepared at St. Georges. Home address: Highview Road, Englewood, New Jersey. Leverett House. Field of concentra- tion: Government. CHARLES WILLIAM MULCAHY, JR. Born March 17, 1920, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 190 Dudley Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Field of con- centration: Government. of 7943 HENRY WHITNEY MUNROE Born August 16, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home ad- dress: 159 East 70th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: History. KENNETH M. T. MUNZERT Born October 10, 1920, in Baltimore, Mary- land, Prepared at Staunton. Home address: 1192 Scott Avenue, Hubbard Woods, Illinois. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House CU, Student Union CU, Naval Society 13, 45. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Navy or Medicine. REA ALLEN MURDOCK, JR. BornJuly 13, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: South Street, Middlebury, Vermont. College address: 30 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentra- tion: Government. JOHN PINKNEY MURNANE Born April 13, 1920, in Montclair, NewJersey. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Syosset, Long Island, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. ALBERT STANLEY MURPHY Born September 9, 1921, in Poughkeepsie, New York. Prepared at Poughkeepsie High. Home address: 33 Hammersley Avenue, Pough- keepsie, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Economics. ARTHUR WILLIAM MURPHY, JR. BornJanuary 25, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 64 Radcliffe Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. House Committee C1-3J, chairman C4Jg Debating Council C3, 4Jg Caisson Club 13, 45. House baseball C2-4J, House football C2-433 House hockey Q2-4J. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. 11351 11561- JAMES AUGUSTINE MURPHY, JR. Born May 30, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High. Home ad- dress: 127 Amersfort Place, Brooklyn, New York. Winthrop House. House Committee OJ, treasurer MJ, A.R.P. Q3, 4J. Swimming team QU, House football f2, 3J. William S. Murphy Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial re- lations. WILLIAM THOMAS MURPHY Born September 29, 1920, in New London, Connecticut. Prepared at Providence Classical High. Home address: 118 Providence Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Adams House. Football squad QZJ, House football 135. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. LLOYD ALLEN MURRAY, JR. Born December 17, 1919, in Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 1 Arsenal Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. EDWARD HERBERT MYSLIWY Born February 8, 1920, in Salem, Massachusetts. Prepared at Salem High. Home address: 11 Hodges Court, Salem, Massachusetts. Adams House. House Committee Q3, LIJ, Interna- tional Club f1-3J. 150-lb. crew squad GJ, House track GJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Industry. HENRY HOLLISTER NASH Born September 29, 1922, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Putney. Home ad- dress: St. Paul's, Concord, New Hampshire. Lowell House. Glee Club fl-3j. House crew GJ, House football C3J. Field of concentra- tion: Psychology. ' DANIEL NEEDHAM, JR. Born March 9, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 345 Highland Street, West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Pi Eta Theatricals CZ, 3J. House crew, House football. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. ROBERT GRANT NEILEY BornJuly 17, 1920, in Binghamton, New York. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 527 Padon Street, Endicott, New York. Leverett House. Dramatic Club C1-4J, president Crew squad QU, House crew Q2-4Jg House entertainment committee C2-4J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. GEORGE ALBIN NELSON, JR. Born January 17, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: 80 Kilburn Road, Garden City, Long Island, New York. College address: 42 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: His- tory. WALTER BENNO NEUBERG, JR. Born September 29, 1922, in New Rochelle, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 20 Lincoln Street, Larchmont, New York. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. ROBERT LINCOLN N'EW'BERT Born April 20, 1920, in Waban, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Horne address: 131 Windsor Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WILLARD NICHOLL Born May 1, 1920, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: Box 67, Babson Park, Massachusetts. Leverett House. C7'illI50Il CU: House Com- mittee CZJ. Tennis team fl, 3J, House foot- ball C2, 3Jg House hockey 12, 3j. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. GEORGE NICHOLS, JR. Born May 15, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, New York. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: English. Chr 601 BERNARD WILLIAM NIMKIN Born April 15, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Townsend I-larris Hall. Home address: 165 West 91st Street, New York, New York. Adams House. A.R.P. fi, 41, Red Cross 141: Radio Workshop 141. House baseball Qi, 41, Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. SAMUEL HENRY NOON Born1une17, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 10 Appian Way, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Glee Club 131, Choir Q31. Cross country team C11. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended perma- nent vocation: Physician. AMOS NORMAN Born November 25, 1921. in Vienna, Austria. Prepared at Malden High. Home address: Astraea, West Medway, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Band C413 Pierian Sodality of 1808 C1-51. House baseball CZ. 31, House football CZ, 31, House track C21, Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physics. WILLIAM CLAY NORMAND Born August 3, 1922, in Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Southwest High. Home address: R.F.D. 3, Parkville, Missouri, Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Farming. MAURICE TIRSO OBREGON Born january 29, 1921, in Barcelona, Spain. Prepared at Stonyhurst College, Attended M. I. T. 1 year. Home address: Fabrica de Tejidos Obregon Barranquilla, Colombia. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House C3, 41, Red Cross C41, International Club Q3, 41, St, Paul's Club Q3, 41. Hasty Pudding-Insti- ture of1770, Iroquois Club. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Red Cross. Intended permanent vocation: Architectural engineering. FRANCIS JOSEPH O'CONNOR Born October 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 78 Bradfield Avenue, Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Cercle Francais C415 St. Paul's Club fl-41, Spanish Club House crew C213 House football CZ, 31. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended War service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. of 1943 HOWARD TREDENNICK OEDEL Born july 9, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton Country Day. Home ad- Jress: 44 Hundreds Circle, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Naval So- ciety 13, 41, Outing Club, trips director CZ, 31, president C41. House crew C3, 41, House dance committee Q31. Field of concentration: His- tory. lntended war service: Navy. VINCENT DEPAUL O'GORMAN Born December 9, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- sects. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 109 Rockdale Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club K1-41, Harvard Engineering Society C1- 31g Rifle Club K11. House crew 121, House football C21. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Engineering. HARRY O'HARE Born September 11, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 556 Newton Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, Leverett House. Pi Eta Theatricals C5, 41: Naval Society C5, 41. Base- ball squad C11, golf team C11, House baseball 2, 51: House hockey f2, 31. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended War service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. THOMPSON DECKER ORR Born March 26, 1921, in New York, New York, Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Garner Lane, Bay Shore, New York. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Caisson Club Q1-41. Squash team C1-41. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fox Club. Field of concentration: War Service Sciences. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. CLAY HARDIN ORVIS Born May 25, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 164 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. RICHARD OSBORNE Born March 26, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Pomfret, Home address: South Street, Auburn, New York, College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Crimrozz C1-21. Crew squad Q1-31. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. -I157l 11381- ROBERT ENDICOTT OSGOOD Born August 14, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 10 Chauncy Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Adams House, Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended permanent vo- cation: Government, MILES HARVARD OVERHOLT, JR. Born September 30, 1921, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Catalina Island. Home address: West Terrace, Avalon, California. Winthrop House. Soccer squad OJ: lacrosse team C1-4Jg House basketball KZ, BJ. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Diplomatic service. JOHN HALL PAGE Born March 26, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: R.F.D. No. 2, Huntington, Long Island, New York. College address: 280 Warren Street, Brookline. Phillips Brooks House Cl, 2J, Yacht Club Q1-4J. Football squad KZ, 5J: football team GJ: wrestling squad 12, EJ: wrestling team CZJ: House crew C2, D: House hockey Q2, EBJ. Delphic Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. SHELBY HARBISON PAGE Born June 4, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 955 Lex- ington Avenue, New York, New York. College address: 9 Linden Street. Rfli Book, business manager CIJ. Football squad, second assistant manager KZJ. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Delphic Club. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces, Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. JOHN ADAMS PAINE, JR. Born July 12, 1920, in West Newton, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 19 Exeter Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street, Hockey squad fl-LU, hockey team Q1-4J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770: Owl Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Aviation. DUDLEY BALDWIN PALMER, JR. Born March 12, 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Pauls Home address: Bay Island, Sarasota, Florida. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. ALEXANDER STANLEY PARKER Born November 26, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 148 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Squash team fl-4J, tennis squad flj. Speakers Club. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. i ARNOLD WILLIAM PARKER Born October 8, 1922, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Somerville High, Home address: 57 New Hampshire Avenue, Somer- ville, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society C2-4J. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur CZJ. Field of concentration: Economics. CORTLANDT PARKER, JR. Born December 14, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Marlt's. Home address: Greenvale Farm, Newport, Rhode Island. College address: 71 Mount Auburn Street. Student Council, social service com- mittee C2, 5J, Phillips Brooks House, social service work GJ, Squash squad 12, 5J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Government. OLIVER AMES PARKER Born August 7, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 23 North Main Street, North Easton, Massachu- setts. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g D.K.E. Field ot' concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WILLIAM JAMES PARKER Born September 5, 1920, in Keene, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Elizabeth- town, New York. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Philosophy and English. HENRY PARKMAN, III BornJuly 15, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 42 Fisher Avenue, Brookline, Massachusetts. College address: 42 IVIount Auburn Street. Crew squad QU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentra- tion: Romance Languages. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. The 612155 HADLEY PARROT Born May 17, 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Hancock Point, Maine. Adams I-louse. Foot- ball squad, junior varsity CZJ. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. VINCENT L. di S. PASCIUTO Born October 27, 1919. in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brown. I-lome address: 1340 River Street, Hyde Park, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Dramatic Club C21 Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war ser- vice: Field Service. HAROLD CLARENCE PASSER Born November 27, 1921, in Lakelield, Minne- sota. Prepared at Faribault High. Home address: Faribault, Minnesota. Leverett House. Gilldflfidll, advertising manager QQ, business manager QQ, Student Council C-0, Phillips Brooks House C2, Hg War Service Committee QU: Council on Post-War Problems O, -aj. Henry D. and jonathan M. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Detur GJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Economist. XVILLIAM BRADFORD PATTERSON Born june 25, 1921, in New Rochelle, New York. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 528 Fern Street, West Hartford, Connecticut. Leverett House. Swimming team C1-55, House baseball GQ. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended permanent vocation: Organic chemistry. DICK S. PAYNE Born june 10, 1921, in Waterloo, Iowa. Pre- pared at Abraham Lincoln High. Home ad- dress: 537 Woodland Drive, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Lowell House. Glee Club C103 Band C1, Zjg Pierian Sodality of 1808 C453 Ornitho- logical Club K1-45. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Administration. FERDINAND L. L. PECCI-BLUNT Born August 1, 1921, in France. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 9 East 84th Street, New York, New York. College address: 22 Plympton Street. Hasty Pudding Theatricals QZJ. Soccer team Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. of 1943 RUSSELL HASTINGS PECK. Born December 17, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 17 Elm Street, Concord, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Sociology. ROBERT YOUNGS PELGRIFT Born December 50, 1921, in Hartford, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 61 North Main Street, West Hartford, Connec- ticut. Leverett House. Red Book. S.A.E. Fraternity. Basketball team, manager CU, House football GJ. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Qrmy Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: aw. ANTHONY LOUIS PELLEGRINI Born july 20, 1921, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brockton High. Home address: 527 Crescent Street, Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Circolo Italiano, Treasurer C2, 55, president-treasurer House baseball GD. Baxendale Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. GEORGE CI-IAMBERLAIN PERKINS Born july 11, 1921, in Cohoes, New York. Prepared at Albany. Home address: 10 Sara- toga Avenue, Cohoes, New York. Leverett House. Re:!Ba0kC1j. Field ofconcentration: American History. Intended war service: Navy. ROBERT WILDER PERKINS Born October 31, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Marks. Home address: 81 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 74 Mount Auburn Street. Red Book C115 Glee Club CZ, 3b. 150-lb. crew, manager. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Chemical engi- neering. DONALD DUNHAM PERRY Born June 9, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Edgewood. Home address: 42 Claremont Road, Scarsdale, New York. Kirk- land House. Glee Club fl, 2, 41, Student Union CU, Liberal Union C2-45. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemical research. 11591 l rrror JACK GROSS PERRY Born July 12, 1921, in Altoona, Pennsylvania, Prepared at Altoona High. Attended Pennsyl- vania State 2 years. Home address: 218 East Walnut Avenue, Altoona, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. RAY POTTER PERRY Born July 10, 1922, in Upper Montclair, New Jersey. Prepared at Saint Louis Country Day. Home address: 464 North Taylor Avenue, Kirkwood, Missouri. Eliot House. House baseball Q2-41. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Army. RICHARD WHITNEY PETERS Born January 50, 1921, in Medford, Massa- chusetrs. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 20 Elm Street, Concord. Massachusetts. Eliot House. Red Cross GJ, Outing Club GJ. Track team CU: House track C2, 33. Field of concentration: English. EDWARD SCHMIDT PETERSEN Born November 19, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Chicago Latin. Home address: 1522 Astor Street, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. Pre-Medical Society Q1, 21: Verein Turmwaechter CZ, 35, Fuchsmajor GJ: Outing Club f2, 3Jg John Harvard Society KZ, 5J. House crew C2, 3J. John Harvard Scholarship Detur Field of concen- tration: Biology. War service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JAMES FLETCHER PETERSON Born January 26, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1172 Park Avenue, New York, New York. College address: 14 Story Street. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. SVEN RICHARD PETERSON Born October 17, 1921, in Sloinge, Sweden. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 280 East Walnut Street, Wadsworth, Ohio. Col- lege address: Lowell House. A.R.P. GJ, Mountaineering Club House crew National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Matliematics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JOSEPH PATRICK PHELAN, JR. Born July 12, 1921, in Fall River, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 1246 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Senior House. Pierian Sodality of 1808: Avukah Society. Baseball squad Q1-45: soccer team 11, 4J. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. CHRISTOPHER HALLOWELL PHILLIPS Born December 6, 1920, in Hague, Holland. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Highover, North Beverly, Massachusetts. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. Field of concentration: History. FRANK MAURICE PHILLIPS Born November 19, 1921, in London, England Prepared at Dartington Hall. Home address' 110 West Heath Road, London, N.W. 3 England. Leverett House. Band C1-20, Crimson Network CS, 41. Field of concentra- tion: Electrical Engineering. Intended perma- nent vocation: Electrical engineering. JAMES MCGEE PHILLIPS Born October 1, 1922, in Hartwell, Georgia. Prepared at New Canaan High. Horne ad- dress: 22 Houston Mill Road, Atlanta, Georgia. Adams House. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. FREDERICK XVARREN PHINNEY Born May 15, 1922, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brown and Nichols. Home address: 69 Yale Street, XVinchester, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Track team Q1-10, cross country team, captain MJ. Field of Concentra- tion: Philosophy. Intended war service: Navy. WILLIAM XVHITNEY PINNEY, JR. Born March 24, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 175 Belle- vue Avenue, Summit, New Jersey. Apley Court. Phillips Brooks House C1-5j, chairman library committee QLD, House Athletics, assistant secretary CBD. 150-lb. crew squad QU: House baseball KD, House football 12, SJ, House hockey CZ, 51, House track KZ, 3J. Fox Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial administration. he 617155 DOUGLAS DURYEA PIRNIE Born February 6, 1920, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: Nashawtuc Hill, Concord, Massachu- setts. College address: 5 DeWolfe Street. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. DONALD MacKENZIE PITCAIRN Born March 23, 1921, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Ulysses S. Grant High. Home address: 2511 N.E. Schuyler Street, Portland, Oregon. Eliotl-louse. Field ofconcenttation: Biochemical Sciences. PARKER DE SALES PITTS Born September 30. 1920. in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 85 Chestnut Hill Road, Newton, Massachusetts. Adams House. House foot- ball, Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Mining. DAVID ELLIOTT PLACE Bornjune 10, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: The Shipyard, Neal Gate Street, Greenbush, Massachusetts. Adams House. Rad Beale, secretary, House Committee, secretary-treasurer 13, 453 A.R.P., House assistant head 13, 45, Naval Society 13, 45: Yacht Club 13, 45: Harvard Skiing Club 115. Football squad manager 115 g varsity manager 145, football team assistant varsity manager 135, wrestling squad 115: House baseball 145, House golf 13, 45, Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fox Club, Varsity Club. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. THEODORE HUBERT PLANT Born May 30, 1922, in Miami, Florida. Pre- pared at Miami Senior High. Home address: 923 Southwest 10th Avenue, Miami, Florida. Kirkland House. Student Council, Phillips Brooks House, social service 115. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended War ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. CHARLES WARNER PLUMMER Born April 20, 1921, in Paris, France. Pre- pared at Sharon High. Home address: 54 Brock Road, Sharon, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 11-45. Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended war service: Coast Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial chem- istry. of 1943 DAVID ARMSTRONG POOLE Born May 15, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 1250 Canton Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House Field of concentration: History and Science. Intended war service: Army. FRANK HARRISON POOLE Born May 30, 1920, in Watertown, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: Eastern Point Boulevard, Gloucester, Massachusetts. Leverett House, Phillips Brooks House 115: House Committee 13, 45: A.R.P. 135: Caisson Club 13, 45, Boylston Chemical Club 125. Basketball team, varsity manager 13, 45, crew squad 1153 House crew 145. Field of concentration: Geology. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RALPH I-IUBERT POTTER, JR. Bom October 25, 1942, in Des Moines, Iowa. Prepared at East Grand Rapids High. Home address: 334 Madison Avenue Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan, Winthrop House. Tennis squad 115. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT STURGIS POTTER, JR. Born April 28, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Marks Home address: 215 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Baseball squad 115. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Industry. STUARD EDGAR POWER Born May 22, 1921, in Redlands, California. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: Mariposa Drive, Redlands, California. Dunster House. Field of concentration: History. STEWART LIVINGSTON PRATT Born February 4, 1919, in Montreal, Canada. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 33 Gatehouse Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Wigglesworth Hall. Wrestling squad 115, 150-lb. crew squad Field of concentra- tion: History. 41411 -11421 WILLIAM VEAZIE PRATT B0rnJuly 29, 1917, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hun. Home address: Belfast, Maine. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. GEORGE NOTMAN PRINCE Born November 20, 1922, in Schenectady, New York. Prepared at Penn Charter. Home address: 50 Washington Avenue, Schenectady, New York. Eliot House. Crew squad 12, 31, crew 111. George Emerson Lowell Prize 111. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Philos- ophy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOSEPH COTTON PRINCE Born September 27, 1920, in Cohasset, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Springdale Avenue, Dover, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: English. CHARLES SHERBURNE PUTNAM Born April 22, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Jericho, Long Island, New York. Eliot House. Crim- .razz 121, Hasty Pudding Theatricals 121. Crew squad 111, football squad 12, 51, football team 111: 150-lb. crew 111: squash squad 11-31, House crew 131. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E., Delphic Club. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. GEORGE ENDICOTT PUTNAM, JR. Born April 22, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Jericho, Long Island, New York, College address: 56 Plympton Street. Union Committee chair- man, Jubilee Committee 111, Instrumental Clubs 121: Hasty Pudding Theatricals 121. Football squad 11, 21, hockey squad 121: hockey team 111: tennis team 111. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g A. D. Club, D U. Club. Field of concentration: English. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DONALD POWELL QUIMBY Born February 12, 1921, in Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at Ridgewood High. Home address: 300 Orchard Place, Ridgewood, New Jersey. Leverett House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 111, manager 121. House crew Field of concentration: Music. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. WALTER ALPHONSUS QUINLAN Born June 2, 1921, in Alameda, California. Prepared at Monson. Home address: 119 Kent Street, Scituate, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House 111, St. Paul's Club 11-31: Rifle Club: Grant Study 11-31. House football Jeremy Belknap Prize 111. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Permanent vocation. Naval aviation. JASON MORRIS RABINOVITZ Born August 17, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended University of Wisconsin 1 year. Home ad- dress: 48 Buswell Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Avukah Society 12-41: American Student Defense League 121. Har- vard College Scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Mod- ern European History. Intended war service! Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. JAMES ALLAN RAFFERTY Born December 27, 1921, in Louisville, Ken- tucky. Prepared at St. Xavier High. Home address: 2019 Maryland Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky. Winthrop House. Ornithological Club 12-41, St. Paul's Club 11-41. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur 121. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Biology. JOI-IN BORN RAND Born May 21, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: Ambassador East Hotel, Chicago, Illinois. Lowell House. Dramatic Club 11-41, executive committee 12-413 Student Union 11-21. Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army. XVILLIAM MCNEAR RAND, JR. Born February 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Trapelo Road, Lincoln, Massachusetts. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House 111: House Committee 13, 41, chairman 1413 House Year- book Editor 151, Permanent Class Committee. Lacrosse team 12, 51: House football 121. Fox Club. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. DAVID STORY RANDOLPH Born March 4, 1922, in Chestnut Hill, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: Seminole and Chestnut Av- enues, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Lowell House. A.R.P., assistant warden 13, 41, Red Cross, First aid 1313 Caisson Club 13,-11. Polo, manager 111. Harvard College Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of177O, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of con- centration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Field Artillery. The 617155 ROBERT GLENN RAVDIN Born February 15, 1923, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Friends' Central. Home address: 2015 Delancy Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concen- tration: Mathematics. ALAN LEE READE Born April -fl, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Peekskill. Home address: 12 West 72nd Street, New York, New York. Adams House. Baseball squad 1115: basketball squad 115: House baseball 12, 35. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Navy, THOMAS J. L. REDMOND BornJune 23, 1920. in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Tivoli, New York, New York. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Hasty Pudding-'Institute of 17703 D.K.E.: Fly Club. Field of concentra- tion: Sociology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Politics. CHARLES EMMETT REED, JR. Born March 13, 1922, in Boulder, Colorado. Prepared at Hackley. Home address: 5-I River- side Drive, New York, New York. Dunster House. Boylston Chemical Society 12--45, Pre-Medical Society 12-45, John Harvard Society 155, Archivist 145, Harvard College Scholarship. House squash 145. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. DANA REED Born March 25, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 88 Hillcrest Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Crizmorz, news board 11-45, executive editor 145, Gmza-diam 125, Album, chairman, Student Council 135, Alumni Bullelin Reporter 13, 45, Permanent Class Committee. Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Journalism. BENJAMIN OWAIN REES Born August 27, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Omaha Central High. Home address: 5165 Leavenworth Street, Omaha, Nebraska. Kirkland House. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. nf 1943 ROBERT R. RESOR Born May 1, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Taft. Home address: Ridgevue, Ridgefield, Connecticut. Lowell House. Phil- lips Brooks House 11-35. Track squad 115, soccer squad 125, House soccer 135. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Advertising. JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS Born April 3, 1923, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 322 Harvard Street. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Glee Club 12, 45. Buckley Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field ofconcentration: Physics. Intended permanent vocation: Research. JAMES HENRY REYNOLDS, Ja. Born April 26, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lowell High. Home address: 54 Barasford Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts. Winthrop House, Caisson Club 13, 45. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engineer. ANDREW ELIOT RICE Born August 29, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Wisconsin High. Home address: 1815 Vilas Avenue, Madison, Wis- consin. Eliot House. Gzmrzfiazz 125, Phillips Brooks House 11, 25, social service committee, assistant chairman 13, 45, Pierian Sodality of 1808 11-35, Student Union 115, Liberal Union, membership secretary 125, War Service Com- mittee 145g Red Cross, head, First aid squad at Eliot House 135, Harvard Post-War Council 135, Charles William Eliot Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Intelligence. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. GEORGE SHATTUCK RICHARDSON Born December 1, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 617 Boylston Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Glee Club 13, 45, Dramatic Club 12-45, Ski Club 13, 45, Classical Club 12-45. Delphic Club: Signet Society, president 145. Field of concentration: Literature. JOHN RICHARDSON, JR. Born February 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough School. Home address: 1359 Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Union Committee, Smoker Commit- tee, chairman, Student Council 135, treasurer 145, Phillips Brooks House, secretary 14,5 House Committee 135, chairman 145: Caisson Club 13, 455 Class Secretary. Crew squad 1255 crew 11, 35, football team 115. Fly Club. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. 11431 41441- JULIAN HAYDEN RICHARDSON Born October 15, 1921, in Needham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Laneside Farm, Charles River, Massachusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Ward- en C3, 4j, Adams House Yearbook, business manager GQ, Harvard Volunteer Orderlies Unit of the Massachusetts General Hospital C3, 41, Class Day Committee. House crew, first Adams Q2-42. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K,F,., Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. SAMUEL BOICE RICHARDSON Born August 5, 1923, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia, Prepared at New Mexico Military. Attended University of California 1 year. Home address: San Francisco, California. Adams House, Field ofconcentration: Philoso- phy, Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law, KENNETH IRVING RICHTER Born April 3, 1921, in Randolph, Massachu- setts. Prepared ar Bridgewater High. Home address: 53 Clarence Avenue, Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Astronomy. MELVIN RICHTER Born April 6, 1921, in Revere, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 107 Ormond Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Glzarzliaw C2-40, Verein Turm- waechter C215 Council on Post-War Problems C3, 45. House baseball C2-45. Stoughton Scholarship. Detur. Field of concentration: History and Literature. RICHARD CANDELA ROBERTIELLO Bornjune 20, 1923, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Townsend Harris High. Home address: 214 East 16th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Pre-Medical Society C3, -ij, St. Paul's Club C1-45. House baseball C2, 3jg House football john Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. PRESTON THOMAS ROBERTS, JR. Born May 31, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at George. Home address: Blackwood, New jersey. Leverett House. Harvard Pacihst Association C1-4j: American Civilization Discussion Group CU. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature, Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. CECIL ROBINSON Born July 19, 1921, in Old Greenwich, Con- necticut. Prepared at Portsmouth. Home address: 7-13 Washington Square North, New York, New York. Eliot House. St. Paul's Club Q1-35. Field of concentration: English. PETER BARRETT ROBINSON Born July 11, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 65 Bayview Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Kirkland House. Swimming squad Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Marine Corps. WILLIAM ELLIS ROBINSON Born August 30, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Jefferson High. Home address: 345 Club Drive, San Antonio, Texas. College address: 25 Palmer Street, Watertown. Dramatic Club Q1-lib, Photography Club CU. Fencing team CU. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Writ- ing. WILLIAM EUGENE ROBINSON Born April 5, 1921, in Randolph, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 33 Clarence Avenue. Bridgewater, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House, Field of concentra- tion: English, PAUL VINCENT ROCHE Born May 14, 1921, in East Weymouth, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Weymouth High. Home address: 1640 Commercial Street, East Weymouth, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. CLARKE ALDEN RODMAN Born August 31, 1921, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 32 Wyatt Road, Garden City, Long Island, New York. Winthrop House. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Che 614155 JOSE NICASIO RODRIGUEZ-FEO Born December 1-1, 1921, in Habana, Cuba. Prepared at Choate. Home address: Calle B entre 12 y 14, Reparto Almendares Habana, Cuba. Adams House. Spanish Club, Pan- American Club of Harvard. Soccer team. Field of concentration: History and Literature. XVALTER FORD ROGERS, JR. Born February 15, 1921, in Jacksonville, Florida. Prepared at Lee High. Home address: 2950 St. johns Avenue, jacksonville, Florida. Dunster House. Smoker Committee, Phillips Brooks House 12-111: A.R.P., assistant warden 1315 Caisson Club 13, 111, Red Cross 131: Photography Club Swimming team, associate manager 131g House crew 12, 31. Harvard College Scholarship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. THOMAS ALLEN ROGSTAD Born February 10, 1921, in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. Prepared at Shattuck. Home address: 1124 Summit Avenue, Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. DunsterHouse. Pi EtaTheatricals 121: Caisson Club 131g Pre-Medical Society 121. Football squad, junior varsity 12, 313 football team 111, wrestling team 11-31. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. BERNARD SEYMOUR ROSEN Born September 1, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 49 Westmore Road, Mattapan, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Richards Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Army. HAROLD ARTHUR ROSENBLUM Bornjanuary S, 1923, in Sharon, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Farrell High. Attended Western Reserve University 1 year. Home address: 1857 Haywood Street, Farrell, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. A.R.P. 13, 41: Red Cross 141. Field of concentration: Psychology. AUSTIN ROSS Born May 6, 1921, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 64 Ever- green Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut. Lev- erett House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Navy. af 7943 DONALD ROSS Bornjune 9, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Riverdale Country. Home address: 376 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Radio Workshop 11-31. Track squad 111. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Physics. In- tended war service: Physicist. Intended perma- nent vocation: Physics. BERTRAM STANLEY ROTH Born October 19, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Central High. Home address: Petty Road, Muncie, Indiana. Student Coun- cil 141, Phillips Brooks House, instructor in settlement house 111, House Committee 141g Student Union 111g A.R,P. 13-41g Pre-Medical Society 11, 41. Crew squad 12-41, track squad 111g House crew 12, 31. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. FRANK HAROLD ROUDA Born October 4, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High. Attended Wisconsin University 1 year. Home address: 3896 Reading Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. Lowell House, Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Writing. CHARLES FREEMAN ROWLEY Bornjanuary 23, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 195 Middlesex Road, Chestnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. ARTHUR EDWARD ROWSE, III Born April 30, 1920, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 38 Somerset Road, Lexington, Massachusetts. Adams House. Crimson 11-31, sports editor 131: Instrumental Clubs 121, Outing Club 12, 31. Tennis squad 11-31: House hockey 12, 31. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of con- centration: Histoty. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. CHARLES COST ROYER Born June 18, 1921, in Bellefontaine, Ohio. Prepared at Bellefontaine High. Home .ad- dress: 404 East Brown Avenue, Bellefontaine, Ohio. Lowell House. Caisson Club 121. Basketball squad 121: basketball team, captain 111, House basketball 12-41: House crew 12-31. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. -11451 41461- ELIHU ZUNDER RUBIN Born February 4, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts, Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 1800 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton. Lived at home. House crew 13, 41. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. ARMAND PETER RUDERMAN Born November 19, 1923, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High. Home address: 201 Eastern Parkway, Brook- lyn, New York. Kirkland House. Gfzmdian 11-41, managing editor 131, editor 141: Yrzfdlingg Student Union 1113 Liberal Union 12, 51. Wrestling squad 111. Field of concen- tration: Economics. LOUIS ALFRED RULE Born November 29, 1920, in Keene, New Hampshire. Prepared at Keene High. Home address: 71 Sullivan Street, Keene, New Hampshire. Kirkland House. Field of con- centration: Romance Languages, REX RUPPA Born May 14, 1922, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day. Home address: 1555 East Olive Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House 111: Pre-Medical Society 11, 21, Verein Turmwaechter 11, 215 Photography Club 131. House dance committee 12, 31. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ARCHIBALD LOWELL RUPRECHT Born February 1, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Episcopal. Home ad- dress: Conshohocken State Road, Bala, Penn- sylvania. Eliot House. Cl'flIZ.YOI1, editorial board 12-41, Phillips Brooks House 111: Hasty Pudding Theatricals 121, Pre-Medical Society 13, 41. Soccer squad 141, squash squad 13-41. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g Owl Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. RICHARD HENDERSON RUSSELL Born February 14, 1922, in Otsego, Michigan. Prepared at Western State High. Home ad- dress: 416 South Westnedge Avenue, Kala- mazoo, Michigan. Adams House. Student Union 121, Liberal Union 12-41, A.R.P. 13,.41: Red Cross 1313 Harvard Memorial Society 111: john Harvard Society 12, 31, treasurer 121. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JOHN LATHROP RYAN Born july 16, 1921, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: R. R. No. 1, New Augusta, Indiana. Adams House. Football squad 111, House football 12, 3, 41. D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Biology. FRITZ MAX SABL Born April 19, 1921, in Vienna, Austria. Pre- pared at Andover. Home address: 15 Central Park West, New York, New York. Leverett House. Glee Club 111, House Dramatics 141. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. SHELDON MANN SACHS Born February 24, 1922, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Benjamin Franklin High. Attended Hiram College 2 years. Home ad- dress: 1564 St, Paul Street, Rochester, New York. Lowell House. House baseball 15, 415 House basketball 13, 41, House football 13, 41g House track 13, 41. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Laboratory technician. ABRAHAM HARRY SADOVE Born September 8, 1921, in Lake Placid, New York. Prepared at Lake Placid High. Home address: 125 Main Street, Lake Placid, New York, Adams House. Glmrdialr 141, Yard- liug. Squash squad 11, 31, tennis squad 11-41, tennis team 111, House Athletic secretary 141, assistant 151: House baseball 13, 41, House basketball 12, 31, House hockey 1315 House track 12, 51. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Signal Corps, Intended permanent vocation: Economics. CLIFFORD BRADLEY SAGEMAN Born july 23, 1921, in Saranac Lake, New York. Saranac Lake High. Home address: 52 Park Avenue, Saranac Lake, New York. Winthrop House, Boylston Chemical Club. Pre-Medical Society, St. Paul's Club, Student Council Committee on Curriculum and Tenure 13, 41, Winthrop House Dance Committee, chairman. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army Ivledical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. PETER BROOKS SALTONSTALL Born May 14, 1921, in Chestnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 240 Chestnut Hill Road, Chest- nut Hill, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Smok- er Committee: Dramatic Club 111. Football team 111 House football 12, 31. Pi Etag Hasty Putldin -Institute of 1770: Porcellian Club. Field otgconcentration: Psychology and Sociology. War service: Marine Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. Che 6161 5 RICHARD CARL SANBORN Born January 13, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Collinwood High. Home address: 906 East 150th Street, Cleveland, Ohio. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biology. ALLEN DXVIGHT SAPP, JR. Born December 10, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: Mermont, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Music. COMPTON SARGENT Born September 24, 1920, in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Buck Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Anthropology. BENJAMIN HARRISON SAUNDERS,JR. Born October 15, 1921, in Wadena, Minnesota. Prepared at Parkers Prairie High. Home ad- dress: Parkers Prairie, Minnesota. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House 11Jg A.R.P. Warden 13, 4Jg Pre-Medical Society 14J. Track squad 11Jg House football 12, 4Jg House track 12-4J. Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JOHN ELDEN SAWHILL, JR. Born May 30, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Water Witch Club, Monmouth Hills, Highlands, New Jersey. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House 11-4J, freshman committee 11J, speak- ers committee 12J, chairman 13J, president 14J, War Service Committee, adviser 13, 4J, Caisson Club 13, 4J: Vice-President of Freshman De- bating: I. C. C. S. Conference Chairman: O. C. D. Conference Adviser. Soccer team 11-4Jg lacrosse team 11Jg fencing team 11J. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Army. EDWARD LEIGH SAWYER Born October 24, 1920, in Attleboro, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Watertown High. Home address: 28 Fuller Road, Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Student Council 14J, Glee Club 11, 2J, Cercle Francias House baseball 11-4Jg House basketball Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. af 1943 JOHN MARTIN SCANLON Born January 28, 1922, in Boston, Maggaghu. setts. Prepared at Clinton High. Home address: 297 Greeley Street, Clinton, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. House baseball 12, BJ, House football 12, 3Jg House hockey 12J, Field of concentration: Sociology. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. JOHN PHILLIP SCHAFER Born November 10, 1922, in Lansing, Iowa. Prepared at Lansing High. Home address: Lansing, Iowa. Dunster House. A.R.P. Fire-watcher 13, 4Jg Boylston Chemical Club 11J, Photography Club 11J, Outing Club 13J, Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Botanical research. MARK PASCAL SCHLEFER Born May 9, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston, Home address: 320 West End Avenue, New York, New York, Kirkland House. Gmzrdimz 13Jg Yazrdlifzg, advertising manager: Liberal Union, vice- president 15J, Basketball squad 11J. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Public service. WILLIAM DAVISON SCHORGER Born July 26, 1921, in Madison, Wisconsin. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 168 North Prospect Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Biology. JAMES LEON SCHWAB, JR. Born December 8, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 243 Woodbourne Drive, St. Louis, Missouri. Adams House. Red Boole. Soccer squad 11, 3J, tennis squad 11, 2J. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. ROBERT SIDNEY SCHWANTES Born July 11, 1922, in Lancaster, Wisconsin. Prepared at Lancaster High. Horne address: Route 4, Lancaster, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Gzzezrdimz 13, 4J, A.R.P. Auxiliary Police 13, 4Jg Lowell House Symposium 13J. Harvard College National Scholarship. -Detur 11Jg Phi Beta Kappa, Junior Eight. First Marshal. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Law. 41411 41481 LIONEL ABBOTT SCHWARTZ Born August 19, 1922, in Kansas City, Miss- ouri, Prepared at Westport High. Home ad- dress: 5417 Harrison Street, Kansas City, Missouri. Kirkland House. Radio Work- shop 115. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur 145. Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen, Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. JOSEPH CRAWFORD SCOTT Born February 16, 1920, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 17 Humboldt Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Advocate 115, Yazrdling, Student Council 145, Band 12-45, Caisson Club 145. Track team 115, cross country team 12, 35. House track 12-45, House tennis 12-45, House squash 13, 45: House committee Harvard Prize Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Classics and History, Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. WALTER PHELPS SCOTT Born November 10, 1921, in Marblehead, Massachusetts. Prepared at Marblehead High. Attended St. Lawrence University 1 year. Home address: 24 Birch Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Wrestling squad 115, wrestling team 135. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- istry. ARTHUR JAMES SCULLY Born March 1, 1920, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 59 Chestnut Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Baseball team 11-455 basketball team 11-45. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. HERBERT BRUCE MCINTIRE SEARS Born March 7, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 472 Crafts Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Caisson Club 13-45: Pistol team11, 3, 45. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended wat service: Army, Intended permanent voca- tion: Army. THOMAS WARREN SEARS, jR. Born january 8, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Haverford, Home address: Williamson Road, Ardmore, Penn- sylvania. Kirkland House. Naval Society 125. Squash team 11-35, tennis squad 12-45, tennis team Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Geology. CARL BRYCE SELIGMAN Born january 8, 1923, in Dinuba, California. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Din- uba, California. Kirkland House. Boylston Chemical Club 115. Crew squad, freshman second 115, crew, junior varsity 135: House crew 125. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Detur 135, Phi Beta Kappa,junior Eight. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Research physics. RICHARD BLAISDELL SEYMOUR Born May 21, 1922, in Waltham, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Quincy High. Home address: Main Street, Lancaster, Massachusetts. Adams House. Ornithological Club 11-45, Yacht Club 125, French Table Committee 115. House soccer 12, 35. Harvard Club of Quincy Scholarship. Detur 125: Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: So- ciology. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. WILLIAM DAVID SHAMBROOM Born -Iune 11, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Country Day. At- tended Brooklyn College. Home address: 1237 East 23d Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. A.R.P. 13, 45. House base- ball 135g House basketball 135, House crew 135: House football 135. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Manu- facturing. EDWARD THOMAS SI-IANKS Born February 19, 1917, in New Bedford, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 9 Newton Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. SEYMOUR SHARNIK Bornjuly 5, 1922, in New Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Weaver. Home address: 1554 Asylum Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut, Lowell House, Pierian Sodality of 1808 11-45: A.R.P. Warden 135. House football 135. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. XVILLIAM SHARPE, JR. Born April 22, 1920, in Louis Rivet, New Jersey. Prepared at Choate. Home address: ,Iob's Peak Ranch, Minden, Nevada. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Che 617155 JOHN RIDGE SHATTUCK Born July 20, 1921, in Portland, Maine. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: 712 Main Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. Adams House. Pi Eta Theatricals, assistant advertis- ing manager C41: Undergraduate Athletic Council, track representative. Football squad C51, track team C1-31. Hasty Pudding-Instb tute of 1770, Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DONALD HARDY SHAW Born June 1, 1922, in Oelwein, Iowa. Pre- pared at Oelwein High. Home address: 150 Fifth Avenue Southwest, Oelwein, Iowa. Kirkland House. Red Bank, advertising board, Phillips Brooks House, settlement work C11, Glee Club C11, Debating Council, secretary C31, Liberal Union C51. Philo Sherman Ben- nett Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Public adminis- tration. WILLIAM JOSEPH SHEA Born July 10, 1921, in Manchester, New Hampshire. Prepared at Exeter. 'Home ad- dress: 621 Lake Avenue, Manchester, New Hampshire. College address: 61 Oxford Street. Phillips Brooks House Cz-41, social service C2, 31. senior advisory committee C41, St. Paul's Club C1--41. Field of concentration: Government. GERARD PHILIP SHEEH AN Born January 22, 1922, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 250 Mason Terrace, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Dramatic Club C21, Radio Workshop C11, St. Paul's Club C41. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. PAUL CUSHING SHEELINE Born June 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: Hotel Charlesgate, Boston, Massa- chusetts, Winthrop House. Cr-imran C1-41, president C41, Smoker Committee, advertising manager, Student Council C41, War Service Committee C3, 41, A.R.P. C31, Ski Club C1-41. House crew C31, House squash C2, 31. Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. MORRIS VICTOR SHELANSKI Born August 20, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at South Philadelphia High. Home address: 1647 Mayland Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pre-Medical So- ciety C1-41. Biochemistry Society C1, 21. House crew C31. Price Greenleaf Scholarship C11. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. of 1943 DANIEL ABRAHAM SHEPARD Born March 17, 1921, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at Walden. Home address: 435 Goth Street, West New York, New Jersey. Kirk- land House. Phillips Brooks House C11, Crimson Network C2-41, Dramatic Club C1, 21. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Radio, ROBERT B. SHERWOOD Born January 15, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Harbor Road, Southport, Connecticut. Lowell House. Lfzmpnou, treasurer, Phillips Brooks House, freshman committee, information com- mittee chairman, cabinet C5, 41, Yacht Club. Squash squad, manager C1-41, varsity manager C3, 41. Hasty Pudding-Institute of177O, Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT WILLIAM SHOEMAKER, JR. Born October 3, 1921, in New Philadelphia. Ohio. Prepared at Anderson High. Home address: Rural Route No. 8, Anderson, In- diana. Kirkland House. Crimson Network C2. 31, A.R.P. C3, 41, Foreign Relations Club C21. 150-lb. crew squad C1-51, House year- book C51. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Steel industry. MELVIN IRVING SHOUL Born April 22, 1922, in Newburyport, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 33 Nobscot Road, Newton, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Pre-Medical Society, Allianz, Photography Club, Swimming C11. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. RALPH THEODORE SIEGLER Born March 13, 1922, in New York, New York, Prepared atJames Madison High. Home ad- dress: 2215 Newkirk Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Winthrop House. Crimron C2, 513 Yrzrdlizzg, news editor, Student Union C1, 21. Basketball squad C11, House baseball C1-513 House basketball C1-31. Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. HERBERT RALPH SILVERMAN Born August 21, 1920, in Danville, Virginia. Prepared at George Washington High. Home address: 507 West Main Street, Danville, Vir- ginia. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House C1, 21, Pre-Medical Society C1, 21, Yacht Club C1, 21. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. 11491 11501- DAVID LEONARD SIMON Born June 18, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Shaker Senior High. Home address: 2885 Litchfield Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Kirkland House. Debating Council Q3, 45, Student Union C253 A.R.P., first aid f35, Radio Worskhop C253 Avukah Society 12, 35. Field of concentration: Government. In- tended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. EUGENE PROTTER SIMON Born May 29, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Brooklyn Friends. Home address: 772 Linden Boulevard, Brooklyn, New York. Adams House. A.R.P., first aid Q3, 45, Red Cross Q3, 45, Pre-Medical Society fl, 25, Harvard Volunteer Orderlies Unit of the Mas- sachusetts General Hospital C15. House crew Q2-45. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. RICHARD GEORGE SISSON Born November 30, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 31 Gibbs Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. A.R.P. Warden C3, 45. 150-lb. crew squad, cox C1-35: 150-lb. crew fl-45, House baseball Q51 House basketball 12,355 House hockey Q2, 35, House track C25. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ALAN GREGORY SKELLY Born December 16, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High. Home address: 11 Charles Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Glee Club C3, 45. Fencing team New York Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. HAROLD CHARLES SMALL Born November 17, 1921, in Chelsea, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Holten High. Home address: 21 Summit Avenue, Salem, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Naval Society K3, 45: Boylston Chemical Club Q1-45, Photography Club K15, Avukah Society Q3, 45. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. ANDREW ERNEST SMITH Born january 14, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 23 Manthorne Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Dramatic Club fl, 25. Baseball squad f15g House base- ball Q2, 35. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Finance Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Advertising. KENNEDY SMITH Born july 12, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Arnold. Home address: 1336 Shady Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House fl, 2,5 House Committee Q2-45. 150-lb. crew squad fl-35. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. OWEN ROGER SMITH Born February 13, 1922, in Akron, Colorado. Prepared at Scottsbluff High. Home address: 1807 8th Avenue, Scottsbluff, Nebraska. Kirkland House. Jubilee Committee. Swim- ming team, manager. Harvard College Na- tional Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics, Intended permanent vocation: Accounting. PRESTON WOOD SMITH, JR. Born September 17, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 208 Harvard Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Adams House. Caisson Club C3, 45. Francis Reed Austin Scholarship, Field of concentra- tion: Mathematics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Army. THADDEUS LOCKWOOD SMITH Born january 19, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge. Home address: 82 Federal Street, Brunswick, Maine. College address: 1750 Cambridge Street. Field of concentration: Economics. FRANK VREELAND SNYDER Born june 29, 1922, in Bayside, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 57 Beverly Road, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. College address: 52 Mount Au- burn Street. Ski Club. Crew squad, junior varsity. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. RALPH EUGENE SNYDER Born April 13, 1922, in Herkimer, New York. Prepared at Herkimer High. Home address: 310 Marion Street, Herkimer, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Uze 6161 5 HAROLD WILLIAM SOLOMON Born April 29, 1922, in New York, New York, Prepared at Fieldsron. Home address: 115 Central Park West, New York, New York. Adams House. Pr'ugrc.trirfe C11, managing editor C213 I,all'rl!flI4LfQ Album, vice-chairman, House Library Committee C31, chairman C413 Glee Club C1, 21, Student Union C1-31, Choir C2-41, Harvard Film Society C3, 41. Harvard College Scholarship. Si 'net Society, vice-president C41. Soccer team CSI1. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Journalism. GEORGE WAISSBORD SOLOVIEFF Born July 20, 1921, in Berlin, Germany. Prepared at College de Geneve. Home address: Westchester Country Club, Rye, New York. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House C113 Dramatic Club C21, A.R.P. C311 Verein Turm- waechter C1-319 Cercle Francais C1-31. Golf team C11, Field of concentration: Govern- ment. SAMUEL ALEXANDER SOMMERS, JR. Born May 31, 1921, in Selma, Alabama. Pre- pared at Selma High. Home address: 509 Dallas Avenue. Selma, Alabama. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House C11, House Committee C2-41. Track squad C213 track team C113 House basketball C5, -I1: House football C2-41: House track C2--11. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN LELAND SOSMAN Born September 15, 1920, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 24 Lee Road. Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Dun- ster House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Police C3, 415 Red Cross, hrst aider C315 Pre-Medical Society Cl, 21, Verein Turmwaechter C1-415 Outing Club C31, treasurer C41, Harvard Volunteer Orderlies Unit of the Massachusetts General Hospital C3, 41. Football squad Cl-41, wrestling team C2, 31, captain C413 lacrosse squad, captain C11g House hockey C2-41. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. PAUL SOUTHWICK Born March 27, 1920, in West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Gilman. Home address: 221 Ridgemede Road, West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Economics. DONALD BAXTER SPARROW BornJune 4, 1921, in Eastham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Eastham, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Boylston Chemical Club C2-41, secretary C31, president C41, Matthews Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemistry. of 1943 THAXTER PARKS SPENCER Born June 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 38 Devon Road, Newton Centre, Massachu- setts. Eliot House. Naval Society C3, 41: Yacht Club C215 Outing Club C31: Naval Science Bnllcliaz C21, associate editor House crew C31. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. ELIOT BRUCE SPIESS Born October 13, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Braintree High. Home address: 320 Tremont Street, Braintree, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Harvard Memorial Church Choir C2-41. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching. WALTER SHELDON SPIKE Born August 31, 1919, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 56 Carrolton Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club C2-41. 150-Ib, crew squad C2, 31. Field of concentration: English. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. CONSTANTINE C. SPILIOTAKIS Born December 9, 1919, in Athens, Greece. Prepared at The Old Downs, Kent, England. Attended Bristol University, England, 1 year. Home address: The Plaza Hotel, New York, New York. Dunster House. Cercle Francais C2, 313 International Club C213 Harvard Council on Post-War Problems. House crew C3, 41: House track Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Royal Greek Navy. THEODORE LOUIS SQUIER, JR. Born June 2, 1922, in Battle Creek, Michigan. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day. Home address: 2619 East Wood Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Field of concen- tration: English. OLIVER R. B. STALTER Born November 13, 1920, in.Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at Barringer High. Home ad- dress: 424 Fourth Avenue, Newark, NewJersey. Kirkland House. Cfimron Cl, 21, buS1H6SS manager C31, Publisher, Harvard in Por- trait C2, 31. Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Navy Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. -11511 l l l -C1521 FRANCIS EDGAR STANLEY Born February 10, 1920, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: Winniconnet Farm, Stratham, New Hampshire. Squash squad CU: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Architecture. Intended war service: Coast Guard. Intended permanent vocation: Agriculture. RUSSELL BASKIN STANNARD Born February 6, 1920, in Bronxville, New York. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Rye, New Hampshire. College address: 1558 Massachusetts Avenue. Football team C1-43. D. U. Club. Field ofconcentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. ,Intended permanent vocation: Criminal investigation. BYRON WILLIAM STEELE, JR. Born May 30, 1921, in Princeton, West Vir- ginia. Prepared at Culver. Home address: Mullens, West Virginia. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. JOHN LESLIE STEPHENSON Born December 4, 1921, in Farmington, Maine. Prepared at Lowell High. Home address: 348 South Main Street, Attleboro, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. A.R.P. C3, lil, Radio Workshop CZJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Physics. PRESCOTT ALLEN STEVENS Born-July 19, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton Hi h. Home address: 67 Hammond Street, Camiridge, Massachusetts. College address: 67 Hammond Street. Field of concentration: Mathematics. ROSS DAVID STEVENS Born October 21, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Shortridge High. Attended Butler University 2 years. Home address: 5301 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. Dunster House. Economic Com- mittee 'on Post-War Problems. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Quartermaster Corps, Intended permanent: vocation: Accounting. ROBERT BOONE STEWART Born February 19, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 145 East 44th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Dramatic Club C1-31. House hockey C1-31. Field of concentration: French. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. SAMUEL KEATLY STEWART Born June 11, 1920, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brockton High. Home address: 37 May Avenue, Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Band. House crew. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. EDMUND JOHN STEYTLER Born November 6, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Peabody High. Home address: 4716 Ellsworth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. JULES ROBERT STICH Born December 28, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 333 Central Park West, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Advocate CU, Yardling CU. Baseball squad CU, track team C353 House basketball C2, 35: House track C31 Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Research chemistry. GALEN LUTHER STONE Born july 4, 1921, in Brookline, Iviassachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 575 Boylston Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Phillips Brooks House, social service CU, Glee Club CU: Instrumental Clubs Football squad C1, 22, Hockey team, manager Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D,K.E,: Owl Club. Field of concen- tration: Government. War service: Army engi- neer. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. WILLIAM ROBERT STONE Born july 28, 1921, in Smith Center, Kansas. Prepared at Smith Center High, Home address: 126 North Grant Street, Smith Center, Kansas. Kirkland House. Crimson Network C1-3j, Radio Workshop CU, Rifle Club CU. Har- vard College National Scholarship, Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Army Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Electronics. U15 Glass HARRY CLEMENT STUBBS Born May 50, 1922, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rindge Technical High. Home address: 7 Story Street, Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. A.R.P. Warden GJ: Red Cross, Hrst aid instrucrior UD. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship, Field of concentration: Astronomy. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Research astronomy. HENRY SPRAGUE STURGIS, JR. Born May 51, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Albro Lane, Cedarhurst, Long Island, New York. College address: 7 Ware Street. Field of con- centration: History. EDMUND GRIGOR SULLIVAN, JR. Born August 1, 1920, in Salem, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1 Naples Road, Salem, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Red Cross 13, -IJ: Outing Club Q5, 4J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. GERALD JAMES SULLIVAN Born November 24, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Quincy High. Home address: 54 Samoset Avenue, Quincy, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Cross country team GJ, House hockey UD. Field of con- centration: Literature. JOHN WALTER SULLIVAN Born May 4, 1921, in Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 14 Park Street, Caribou, Maine. Adams House. Red Bank: Student Council 13, 4J, Debating Coun- cil f2-4J, Crimson Network: Dramatic Club QQ, Pi Eta Theatricals: War Service Committee GJ, Chairman, House Entertainment, Chair- man, Harvard Forum: First prize, Boylston Speaking Contest GJ, Junior Usher, Class Oratorg Permanent Class Committee. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. PAUL MCCULLOUGH SUTTON Born December 3, 1921, in Minerva, Ohio. Prepared at Minerva High. Home address: R. D. No. 1, Minerva, Ohio. Lowell House. Band Q1-LD, A.R.P. House football C2-4J. Harvard College National Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Naval Communications. Intended permanent vocation: Physics. af 7943 RICHARD WINSLOW SWANSON Born April 11, 1922, in Woburn, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 47 Cambridge Street, Winchester, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. 150-lb. crew C1-ij. Pi Eta, Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. MILTON WILLIAM TALBOT, JR. Born February 1, 1922, in Meridian, Louisiana. Prepared at Leesville High. Home address: 1001 Fifth, Leesville, Louisiana. Eliot House. Band C4J1 Crimson Network C2-4J, Red Cross ffl, 10, Photography Club C2-4J. House foot- ball CZJQ House track GJ. Field of concentra- tion: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CHRISTOPHER T. TALOUMIS Born March 15, 1921, in Salem, Massachusetts. Prepared at Salem High. Home address: 221 Lafayette Street, Salem, Massachusetts. Adams House. House Yearbook GJ. Basset Schol- arship. Detur f2J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. CLIFFORD CURTIS TAYLOR, JR. Born September 10, 1922, in Ames, Iowa. Prepared at Westminster School, London, England. Attended Georgetown University 2 years. Home address: 260 Cloverdale Road, Ottawa, Canada. Dunster House. A.R.P. Warden G, LO, Mountaineering Club C3, 4J. House crew, coxswain 15, 4J. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemist. GEORGE WARNER TAYLOR Born December 31, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Goodwives River Road, Noroton, Connecticut. College address: 552 Harvard Street. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. XVILLIAM ROBERT TAYLOR Born June 10, 1922, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Shattuck. Home address: 420 East 45th Street, Kansas City, Missouri. Eliot House. Wrestling squad. Field of concen- tration: Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Diplomatic Service. 11531- 11541- GRANT FAY THOMAS Born August 15, 1921, in New York, New York.' Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 3 East 75th Street, New York, New York. Levetett House. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. IAN MURCHIE THOMPSON Born July 12, 1921, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Trinity. Home address: 30 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. College ad- dress: 51 Brattle Street. Field of concentra- tion: English. ROLLAND DINWIDDIE THOMPSON Born April 29, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Deerfield, Home address: West Chestnut Avenue, Chestnut Hill, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Ad- vomte C1, 25, secretary C353 Dramatic Club C2, 55. Polo Signet Society. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences, In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Architecture. WILLIAM MCNUTT THOMSON Born February 10, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Burris High. Home address: Hollywood Place, West Palm Beach, Florida. A.R.P. Warden C3, 45, Verein Turmwaechter, C1-45, president C35. House basketball C2-45. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur C15, Phi Beta Kappa, junior Eight. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Navy. ELLIOTT LADD THURSTON, JR. Born September 23, 1921, in New York, New York. Western High, Home address: 4414 Q Street Northwest, Washington, D. C. Dunster House. House Committee C3, 45: Student Union C153 Liberal Union C2-45. House baseball C355 House basketball CZ, 35: House football C355 House track C25. Speakers Club, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Labor relations. HENRY ASHE TILGHMAN Born May 27, 1921, in Morristown, New jersey. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 8100 jefferson Avenue, Detroit, Michigan. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: English. CHARLES HARRISON TOBIAS, JR. Born April 16, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 960 Red- way Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Adams House. House Committee C25. Football team C155 track squad C2, 35, track team C15. House football C2, 355 House track C2, 35. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. CLEMENT JAMESON TODD Born-June 8, 1921, in Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Corona High. Home address: 178 Southeast Boulevard, Corona, California. Grays Hall. Field of concentration: Mathematics. ROBERT ARNOLD TOWNSEND Bornjuly 24, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 181 Nehoiden Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House C15, Naval Society C45, Outing Club C2-45. Soccer squad C15,lacrosse squad C153 rifle team C3,45. House crew C2-453 House football C3, 45, House dance committee C55g House athletic secretary. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Navy. WILLIAM EDWARD TRAINOR Born August 14, 1921, in Braintree, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Braintree High. Home address: 560 Main Street, Braintree, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Caisson Club C5-45: St. Paul's Club C1-45. Track team C1-35, House football C5, 45. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Public adminis- tration. ROBERT HENRY TROES CHER Born September 5, 1922, in Lynbrook, New York. Prepared at Lynbrook High. Home address: 85 Winter Street, Lynbrook, New York. Adams House. A.R.P. C5, 45. Track squad C1-45, track team C155 cross country squad C1-45: cross country team C15. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Law. FRED STEPHEN TROY, JR. Born July 31, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 7 March Avenue, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval Society Cl, 25. Baseball squad C2, 55. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Coast Guard. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. Zfhr Kia 5 EDWARD MORRILL TUCKERMAN Born September 27, 1919, in Cohasset, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: Atlantic Avenue, Cohasset, Massa- chusetts. College address: 50 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Anthropology. HERBERT SEARS TUCKERMAN Born May 2, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Marks Home address: South Hamilton, Massachusetts. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. DONALD JOHN TURNER Born May 28, 1920, in Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at New York Military. Home address: 134 Walker Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts, Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: English. HUGH CLARKE TUTTLE Born March 51, 1921, in Dover, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Dover High. Home address: Dover Point Road, Dover, New Hamp- shire. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Biology. ROBERT GLENN TYSON Born July 24, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Arnold. Home address: 4247 Bryn Mawr Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Psychology. ROBERT PLATT ULIN Born May 7, 1922, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 278 Clinton Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Debating Council Track squad C313 cross country squad Q21g House baseball G15 House track Harvard College Scholarship. Detur C513 Phi Beta Kappa. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Naval Supply Corps. af 7943 SAMSON O. A. ULLMANN, JR. Born June 18, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Country Day. Home address: 120-18 Newport Avenue, Rockaway Park, New York. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House 111: Pierian Sodality of 1808 C2, 31. House hockefy QZ, 51. John Harvard Scholarship. Field o concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Meteorological Corps. HOWARD EDWIN UPSON Born March 29, 1921, in Newark, Ohio. Prepared at Newark High. Home address: 445 Hudson Avenue, Newark, Ohio. Win- throp House. Grant Study Q1-41. House basketball C2-41, House football C213 House dance committee C2, 31. Field of concentra- tion: Geography. Intended war service: Navy, Intended permanent vocation: Advertising. SERBAN VALLIMARESCU Born May 17, 1922, in Bucharest, Rumania. Prepared at College Francais, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Home address: 1847 Orenales, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Leverett House. Student Union, A.R.P. Warden QB, 41, Cercle Francais, secretary C51, president C41g Inter- national Clubg Free French, vice-president I3, 41. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Diplomatic service fRumania1. BYRON EMANUEL VAN RAALTE, JR. Born September 15, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 2 Hicks Lane, Cedarhurst, Long Island, New York. Dunster House. Crimson Network C2-41, Production Director C415 Caisson Club 141. Tennis squad C1-31: House baseball QS, 41. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. RICHARD VANTINE Born November 24, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 14 Scarsdale Road, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: German, Intended war service: Army. ALFRED FRANCIS VARONE Born August 14, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Classical High. Home address: 101 Home Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. Grays Hall, Phillips Brooks House, social service work Q11g Circolo Italiano f11. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. 11551 JOHN HEATH VAUGHAN Born November 7, 1921, in Richmond, Vir- ginia. Prepared at St. Christopher's. Home rddress: 201 West Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House GJ, Fencing team C2, D, House crew f2J. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. ALFRED JAMES VOGEL Born April 17, 1921, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Nash- otah, Wisconsin, Adams House. Field of concentration: English. MORTON WALDSTEIN Born May 11, 1920, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 8 Fairbanks Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks House, Mountaineering Club. Baseball squad Q1-LID, football squad fl-4J. Field of concen- tration: Sociology. RUFUS FLANDERS WALKER Born October 27, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 81 Middlesex Road, Chestnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Football squad, associate manager QU. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Iroquois Club, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOSEPH WALLACE BornJuly 5, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended New York University 1 year. Home address: 6 Tennis Road, Boston, Massachusetts, Lived at home. Pre-Medical Society CU, Photog- raphy Club Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. JOHN MARTIN WARD Born November 14, 1921, in Delaware, Ohio. Prepared at Shattuck. Home address: 146 12th Street, Pacific Grove, California. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House GJ, Classical Club Q1-4j. Track team fljg fencing team QI, 41, House track. Harvard Club of Minne- sota Scholarship. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. X1 GEORGE HENRY WARREN, III BornJune 17, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 118 Mill Street, Newport, Rhode Island. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. DONALD FREDERICK WATERMAN Born April 1, 1921, in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Prepared at East Grand Rapids High. Home address: 437 Glenwood Avenue, Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Leverett House. Debating Council OJ. Harvard College Honorary Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. WILLARD MILLS WATEROUS Born June 22, 1921, in Manila, Philippine Islands. Prepared at Williston. Home ad- dress: 23 Pilar Street, SanJuan Heights, Manila, Philippine Islands. Lowell House. Glee Club QD, Red Cross, John Harvard Society C1-4J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. GEORGE FRANKLIN WATERS Born December 17, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: The Ambassador East, Chicago, Illinois. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Crimson, news board C2-4J. Baseball squad QU, football squad, junior varsity MJ, soccer team HJ: House football, captain GJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17705 D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RICHEY LAUGHLIN WAUGH, JR. Born February 5, 1921, in Manila, Philippine Islands. Prepared at Alcee Fortier High, New Orleans, Louisiana. Home address: Marine Hospital, Brighton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club C5, 4Jg Pre-Medical Society QZJ. Crew squad OJ, cross country squad C315 House crew C2-4Jg House track GJ. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- Cine. ROBERT JOHN LEAMER WAUGH Born September 22, 1922, in Manila, Philip- pine Islands. Prepared at Alcee Fortier High. Home address: Marine Hospital, Brighton, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Crimson Network Q2-4J. Field of concentration: Biol- ogy. hc' C771 ROBERT KIRKPATRICK XVEARY Bornjuly 14, 1921, injunction City, Kansas. Prepared at Junction City High. Home ad- dress: 459 West First Street, junction City, Kansas. Kirkland House. Red Cross 15, 45. Tennis squad 125, House basketball 125: House football 155. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Detur 155. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. FRANK JOSIAI-I WEBSTER Born August 5, 1920, in Manila, Philippine Islands. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 35 Millard Avenue, Bronxville, New York. Eliot House. Swimming squad 125: swimming team 115. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Signal Corps. JOHN XVINGATE WEEKS, II Born june 12, 1920, in West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 97 Valentine Street, West Newton, Massa- chusetts. College address: 52 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Government. CLIFFORD EINIMONS XVEIHMAN Born April 5, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: -101 Monterey Avenue, Pelham Manor, New York. Lowell House, Verein Turmwaechter 11-55, 150-lb. crew squad 11, 35: House crew 12, 55: House hockey 12, 55. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Aeronautical engineering. RICHARD LESLIE WEINBERG Born February 25, 1922, in Memphis, Tennes- see. Prepared at Memphis Central. Home address: 1567 Vance Avenue, Memphis, Ten- nessee. Winthrop House. Red Book, Union Committee, Debating Council, vice-president 115, Crimson Network 12, 35, chairman news board. House crew 125, Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HERBERT MAURICE WEINER Born February 6, 1921, in Vienna, Austria. Prepared at Harrow School, England. Home address: 4 Templewood Avenue, London, N.W. 3, England. Winthrop House. Pra- grerrive 115: Glee Club 115, Dramatic Club 12-45, Liberal Union 125, Red Cross 145, Mountaineering Club 11-45. Soccer squad 115, Squash squad 115, ski team 115. Harvard College Scholarship. Detur 135, Sigma Xi, Signet Society. Field ofconcentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. af 7943 LEONARD OSCAR WEINSTEIN Born October 24, 1921, in St. Augustine, Florida. Prepared at Ketterlinos High. Home address: 103 St. George Street, St. Augustine, Flordia. Winthrop House. La- crosse team 115g House football 13, 115. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. ROBERT EDWARD WEISKOPF Born june 25, 1922, in Mount Vernon, New York. Prepared at Lake Placid High. Home address: 56 Lake Street, Lake Placid, New York. Adams House. Glee Club 12, 45, Band 12-45, A.R.P. 145. Wrestling squad 115, tennis squad 1155 House hockey 13, 45. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Chemical engineering. LYNDON WELCH Born April 17, 1925, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Walpole High. Home address: 129 Plimpton Street, Walpole, Massachusetts. Adams House. House hockey 135. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Architecture. SIDNEY WERBER Born December 18, 1921, in Milford, Massa- chusetts. Milford High. Home address: 36 Bancroft Avenue, Milford, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House 11, 25, social service 13, 453 Debating Council 115, Liberal Union 13, 45, A.R.P. 155: Avukah So- ciety 11, 25, secretary 15, 45, Economic Com- mittee on Post-War Problems 13,45. Wrestling team 115. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Marine Corps. FLOYD GERALD WERNER Born June 1, 1921, in Ottawa, Illinois. Pre- pared at Township High. Home address: 702 Pearl Street, Ottawa, Illinois. Adams House. A.R.P. 115, Harvard Biological Society. Chicago Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Entomology. DUDLEY SETH WHEATLEY, JR. Born December 27, 1921, in Greenwood, Mississippi. Prepared at Webb. Home address: 112 West Adams Street, Greenwood, Mississippi. Lowell House. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. 11571 11581- FRANK REGINALD WHEELER, JR. Born May 1, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 440 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Little Hall. Field of concentration: Government. DAVID PAGE WHEELWRIGHT Born May 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Chesham, New Hampshire. College address: 53 Dunster Street. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WILLARD HERBERT WHIPPEN Born june 11, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 25 Warland Street, Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. GERALD HOWARD WHIPPLE Born February 6, 1925, in Turlock, California. Prepared at Berkeley High. Attended University of California 2 years. Home address: 2924 Russell Street, Berkeley, California. Dunster House. Summer School Chorus 141. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. GEORGE MERRITT WHITE Born November 19, 1921, in Long Beach, California. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 3328 Runnymede Place, North- west, Washington, D. C. Kirkland House. Fencing team 11, 31. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. MARC ANTHONY WHITE Born june 8, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Arlington High, Home address: 840 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Hockey squad 135, House baseball C2-41: House hockey C2-45. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ROBERT YORK WHITE Born August 28, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Halfred Farms, Chagrin Falls, Ohio. Kirkland House. Caisson Club CU: Pre-Medical Society House hockey CZ, SD. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. ANDREW GLADDING WHITESIDE Born November 13, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: R. F. D. 2, South New Berlin, New York. Eliot House. Iroquois Club. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. ANTHONY ROGERS WHITTEMORE Born April 25, 1921, in Orange, Newjersey. Prepared at Fountain Valley. Home address: c-o john R. Tunis, Rowayton, Connecticut. Winthrop House. 150-lb. crew GJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Advertising. ROSS WHITTIER, JR. Born November 7, 1920. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Farm Street, Dover, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House, Field of cori- centration: Economics. ROBERT C. M. XVICKLIFFE Born May 15, 1922, in Lebanon, Kentucky. Prepared at Calumet High. Home address: 1167 Calumet Avenue, Calumet, Michigan. Adams House, Wrestling team CU, soccer team QU. Field of concentration: Physical Anthropology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- Cine. RICHARD JERDONE XVIECHMANN Born October 21, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Riverdale Country. Home address: 50 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Glee Club QU, Dramatic Club C1-AU: Radio Workshop CSD. Fencing team CID, House crew QLD: House football Qsilg House fencing 12, 5,5 House softball G, LD. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Starving author. U15 6171 DOUGLAS MacNEIL WILBER Born November 20, 1920, in North Bergen, New Jersey. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 509 Burr Street, Fairfield, Connecticut. Adams House. Lacrosse team UD: 1-louse hockey. Field of concentration: Anthropology. PHILLIP LEXVIS XVILLIAMS Born August 30, 1922, in St. Louis, Missouri, Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 21115 North Bay Road, St. Louis, Missouri, Winthrop House. Naval Society. Lacrosse team Clj, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. JOHN FINLEY XVILLIAMSON, JR. Born April 21, 1921, in Delaware, Ohio. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: East Nassau Street, Princeton. New Jersey. Lev- erett House. Field of concentration: Music. HAROLD BUCKLEY XVILLIS, JR. Born May 5, 1921, in Weston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Concord Road, Weston. Massachu- setts. College address: 50 Mount Auburn Street. Field of concentration: Anthropology. ROBERTO HERNANDO WILLS Born February 14, 1921, in Paris, France. Prepared at Gimnasio Amoderno, Bogota, Colombia, Attended Universite de Lausanne 1 M years. Home address: Calle F8 No. F-98, Bogota, Colombia. Dunster House. House crew f5j. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Iroquois Club. Field ofconcentration: Geology. Intended permanent vocation: Business. MORTON CHARLES WILSON Born March 16, 1921, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 25 Lanark Road, Brighton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House C2-45, A.R.P. MJ: Pre-Medical Society, treasurer 15, 41. House crew CZ, 51 Field of concen- tration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. af 1945 ROGER BLISS WILSON Born November 17, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Putney. Home address: 245 Clinton Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Ski Club L1-5J, secretary C2, 5J, acting treasurer MJ. Lacrosse team GJ: ski team Q1-51, House hockey 12, 5J. Fox Club. Field of concentration: Geology. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Law, ALAN MALCOLM WINNICK Born June 5, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Tome. Home address: 540 West 72nd Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House CU: A.R.P. Spotter C5, 45: Photography Club QU, House Athletic Secretary Q5, 45. Wrestling squad C1, ZJ, wrestling team, manager f5J: House crew f2Jg House football QZJ, Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Supply Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RICHARD KENELIN WINSLOW Born June 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 248 Dudley Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Manter Hall. Field of concentration: History. JOHN GANO WINTER BornJune 25, 1921, in Fort Sheridan, Illinois. Prepared at Wooster. Home address: R. F. D. No. 4, Ridgefield, Connecticut. Field of concentration: Physics. DAVID WISE, JR. Born January 15, 1925, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 5818 Harrison Street, N.W., Washing- ton, D. C. Winthrop House. Red Book: Album: A.R.P. 15, 4Jg Photo raphy Club Stamp Club C1, ZJ. House iasketball C2-4J, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Coast Guard. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. EDWIN THOMAS WITHERBY, JR. Born April 4, 1919, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 157 Marl- boro Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Hockey team CZJ. Field of concen- tration: Semitic Languages and History. In- tended permanent vocation: Navy. 1159 1 ATWOOD CHARLES WOLF, JR. Born January 3, 1925, in Jersey City, New Jersey, Prepared at Newark. Home address: 61 Duncan Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JAMES MITON WOLF Born September 21, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at East Denver High. Attended Michigan University 2 years. Home address: 725 Church Street, Albion, Nebraska. Kirk- land House. Red Cross, Naval Society, Post- War Problems Council. House football, House entertainment committee. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. MELVIN HARVEY WOLF Born July 5, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 28 Verndale Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. House Committee, commuters' center, Band C1-BJ, arranger MJ, Pierian Sodal- ity of 1808 C2-4J, vice-president C3, fij. House baseball Q2-4J, House basketball C2-4Jg House football MJ, Assistant athletic secretary, com- muters' center. Field of concentration: So- ciology. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. WILLIAM ALCOTT WOLFE Born November 2, 1921, in Marinette, Wis- consin. Prepared at Appleton High. Home address: 414 North Union Street, Appelton, Wisconsin. Leverett House. Field of con- centration: Biochemical Sciences. RICHARD FREDERICK WOLFSON Born January 7, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Country Day. Home address: 570 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Leverett House. Student Union CD. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ALFRED CONARD WOOD, JR. Born November 24, 1923, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Prepared at Friends Select. Home address: 2035 Walnut Street, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. Field of concentration: History and Literature, JOHN ARCHIBALD WOOD Born May 5, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Far Rockaway High. Home ad- dress: 1821 Cornaga Avenue, Far Rockaway, Long Island, New York. Lowell House. Glee Club C2-4jg A.R.P. Auxiliary Police G, 4J. Fencing team GJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. THOMAS JACKSON woop, JR. Born March 15, 1921, in Berea, Kentucky. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Forest Hill Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio. Dunster House. Lampoan Q2-4J, Narthex MJ, Yardling, art editor, Hasty Pudding Theatricals, art editor CZJ, Naval Science Bulletin, art staff GJ: Adams House Yearboale, art editor. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Advertising. THURSTON WOOD Born January 15, 1921, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at Saint Paul. Home address: 89 Virginia Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, work group QZJ, A.R.P. Warden Q3, 4J. Track squad f1Jg House track CZ, ESJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Marine Air Corps. Intended permanent voca- tion: Mechanical engineering. DAVID THORNDIKE WOODBURY BornJuly 30, 1921, in Beverly, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 244 Lothrop Street, Beverly, hfiassachusetts. Win- throp House. Boylston Chemical Club CIJ. 150-lb. crew Q1, ZJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Surgery. RICHARD FOSTER WOODWARD Born March 19, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 80 Oak Avenue, Belmont, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Naval Society MJ, Boylston Chemical Club C5, 45. House baseball QSJQ House basketball Q2-4J. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Navy. WILLIAM WOODWARD Born June 12, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 9 East 86th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Navy. U16 6111 DOUGLAS GORDON WOOLF Born March 23, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Tabor. Home address: 4 Avon Road, Larchmont, New Jersey. Dunster House. Field of concentration: English AUSTIN MCGIFFERT WRIGHT Born September 6, 1922, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Hastings High. Home address: 74 Hillside Avenue, Hastings-om Hudson, New York, Leverett House. Field of concentration: Geology, BROOKS WRIGHT Born October 14, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 9 Lowell Street,'Cambridge. Massachusetts. Leverett House. A.R.P. Warden C5, 41: Circolo Italiano Qi, 41, secre- tary Q-'11, Harvard League for a Declared War f21: Harvard Railroading Association CB, 41. New England Private Schools Honorary Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. CHARLES DYER XVRIGHT Born April 15, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at St. George's. Home address: Orwell, Vermont. Leverett House. Naval Society C1-41. House football Q31. Field of concentration: Government. WILLIAM CHARLES WRIGHT Born February 10, 1921, in Milwaukee, Wis' consin. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day- Home address: 2963 North Lake Drive. Col- lege address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Hockey squad C113 lacrosse team 121. Fox club. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Manufacturing. EUGENE WULSIN Bom August 16, 1921, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at St. George's. Home address: 2444 Madison Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Crimrrm, news board fl, 21, news editor 131, Instrumental Clubs 11, 213 Hasty Pudding Theatricals 421. Crew squad f11g House crew f2, 51. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E., Fly Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. iff 7943 WILLIAM GRAY WYE Born March 17, 1921, in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Prepared at Morristown. Home address? 1004 5th Avenue, Asbury Park, New Jersey. Eliot House. President, Boston Unitarian Student Council 13, 41. House football QZ, 515 House track C2-41. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. FRANKLIN WYMAN, JR. Born March 27, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 21 Arlington Street, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. ADAM YARMOLINSKY Born November 17, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 300 West 108th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Crimmn, editorial board C2, 31, assistant editorial chairman Q3, 41, Guardian C2-41: Yarrfling, chairman: Student Council, secretary 13, 41: Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty CZ, 31, cabinet 141: Liberal Union C2-41, secretary Q3, 41: War Service Committee, chairman G, 41: A,R.P. Fire Fighter C3, 41, Post-War Problems Coun- cil, secretary Q31. Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Public administration. MARK YOHALEM Born April 28, 1925, in Mount Vernon, New York. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 160 Westchester Avenue, Crestwood, New York. Leverett House. Glee Club Q1-31, secretary f41g Biological Society, vice-president Q41. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Plant pathology. JOSEPH MARVIN YOUNG Born October 16, 1920, in Marshall, Texas. Prepared at Greenville High, Home address: Route 1, Box 20, Greenville, Mississippi. Kirkland House. Associated Harvard Clubs Q11. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- crne. ROBERT JOSEPH YOUNG, JR. Born November 5, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 17 Bonad Road, West Roxbury, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. 4161 1- FREDERICKJOSEPH DE SLOOVERE, JR. Born September 15, 1919, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. I Prepared at Scarborough. At- tended University of Notre Dame 1 year. Home address: 54 Beechwood Terrace, Yonk- ers, New York. Eliot House. FINN CHRISTIAN FERNER Born March 10, 1920, in Oslo, Norway. Prepared at Hegdehaugen Gymnasium. Home address: 14 Fritznersgate, Oslo, Norway. Dunster House. Ski team Q1-3J, captain CBJ. LLOYD STANLEY EPSTEIN Born February 15, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Cleveland Heights High. Attended University -of Chicago 1 year. Home address: 2669 Euclid Heights Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Winthrop House. A.R.P. 23, 4J. House basketball f2-4j, House crew 2-4J. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. KENNETH OWEN GHORMLEY Born August 16, 1921, in Tacoma, Washington. Prepared at Franklin High. Attended Whitman College 2 years. Home address: 910 53rd Avenue, South, Seattle, Washington. Kirk- land House. HERBERT HAHN Born April 21, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Attended Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology 1 year. Home address: 58 McLellan Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: English. EDWIN ERVIN HAMILTON, JR. BornJuly 8, 1921, in Westfield, Massachusetts. Prepared at Wilbraham. Home address: 11 South Maple Street, Westfield, Massachusetts. College address.: 7 Ware Street. Field of con- centration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. 11621 JOSEPH ABRAHAM ZILBER Born July 27, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 140 Quincy Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks House, social service committee f2, BJ, Avukah Society Q1-ZJQ Mathematics Club C2, 3J, secretary C4J. Matthews Scholarship. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended permanent vocation: Mathematics teaching. BERNARD ZIMMERMAN, II Born June 26, 1921, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul. Home address: 1530 Edgecumbe Road, St. Paul, Minnesota. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. PETER CHARLES ZOEPHEL Born September 8, 1921, in Blackheath, Kent. England. Prepared at Westminster, England- Home address: Elmstead Garth, Chislehurst. Kent, England. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Economics. CARYLYLE HAROLD HURXVITZ Born August 25, 1921, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at M. C. Durfee High. Attended Northwestern 1 year. Home address: 1360 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. Photography Club QZJ. NORMAN EDWARD JOHNSON Born January 8, 1920, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Attended Bates College 2 years. Home address: 44 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Kirkland House. WILLIAM ALEXANDER KORNS Born November 5, 1920, in Peking, China. Prepared at Olean High, Olean, New York. Attended Dartmouth 1'year. Home address: 185 Riverview Avenue, Tarrytown, New York. College address: 2A Forest Street. Field of concentration: Government. LEON EZRA KRUGER Born July 15, 1921, in Winthrop, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home ad- dress: 42 Fellsmere Road, Newton, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House QZJ, Pre-Medical Society UD. Sigma Xi. Field of concentration: German. ROGER SHERIDAN LINDSAY Born May 17, 1920, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 135 Fenno Street, Revere, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Economics. PETER COLEMAN MCCONARTY Born February 8, 1920, in Wollaston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 21 Taylor Street, Wollaston, Massachusetts. Adams House. St. Paul's Club GJ. House hockey C4J. ROBERT MICHAEL MAYER BornJune 17, 1922, in Dallas, Texas. Attended University of Texas 1 year. Home address: 6865 Tokalon Drive, Dallas, Texas. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Government. EDWARD WALTER DILLON NORTON Born January 3, 1922, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Home address: 418 Hatherly Road, Egypt, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club Q2-4J, Pre-Medical Society Q2-4J: St. Paul's Club Q1-4J. Field of concen- tration: Biochemical Sciences. GEORGE ROBERT O'SULLIVAN Born August 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Attended Boston College 2 years. Home address: 118 Allston Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Royal Air Force. EINAR CHARLES PALM Born September 11, 1918, in Winsted, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Suffield. Home address: 636 South Main Street, Torrington, Connecti- cut. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. RALPH PFEIFFER, JR. Born June 1, 1921, in Natick, Massachusetts. Prepared at Green Mountain Junior College. Home address: 58 Walnut Street, Natick, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. JOEL PITCAIRN Born June 12, 1921, in Bryn Athyn, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Bryn Athyn. Home ad- dress: Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania. Leverett House. Boylston Chemical Club Q2, 353 Mathematics Club C1-4J. Field of concen- tration: Physics. Intended war service: Sig- nal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Mathematics. JOHN CONRAD RUSSELL Born November 16, 1921, in London, England. Prepared at Dartington Hall. Attended Uni- versity of California at Los Angeles, 2 years. Home address: Little Datchet Farm, Malvern R. D. 1, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: British Royal Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Politics. CHANDLER DXVIGHT SIMONDS Born December 12, 1914, in Seattle, Washing- ton. Attended University of Michigan 4 years. Home address: 419 Berkley Place, Dearborn, Michigan. College address: 20 Sumner Road. Field of concentration: Economics. RICHARD SPINNEY Born March 8, 1921, in New York, New York. Attended Brown University 2 years. Home address: West Cornwall, Connecticut. Win- throp House. Field of concentration: English. XVILLIAM PARK STALNAKER, JR. Born February 10, 1921, in Portland, Oregon. Attended Reed College 2 years. Home address: 2760 Southwest Old Orchard Road, Portland, Oregon. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. GEORGE ALEXANDER STEELE, JR. Born August 1, 1918, in Stoneham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Fairhaven High. At- tended Annapolis 2 years. Home address: 55 Walnut Street, Fairhaven, Massachusetts. College address: 5 DeWolfe Street. Field of concentration: Economics. STANLEY FOSTER WASS Born April 29, 1914, in Seattle, Washington. Attended Bates College. Home address: Box 114, North Cohasset, Massachusetts. College address: 13A Ware Street. Field of concentration: Government. RICHARD CARRINGTON WILCOCK Born September 50, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at De Veaux. Home address: 44 Martin Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. American Civilization Group Q1, ZJ. Tennis squad, Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. kc' Hia MEMORI M BENJAMIN NASON BARKSDALE Born June 11, 1921, in Charlestown, West Virginia. Died September 19, 1942. Prepared atCharlestownI-Iigh. Home address: 513 Nancy Street, Charlestown, West Virginia. Leverett House. Baseball team, manager CU, track team, manager CU. Field of concentration: Psychology. PETER BULKLEY Born January 6, 1920, in New York, New York. Died November 16, 1940. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Dongle River Farm, North Salem, New York. Claverly Hall. Track team CD. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. HENRY GILBERT FRANCKE, JR. BorrrJune 7, 1922, in Winchester, Massachu- setts. Died June 22, 1940. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 3 Berkeley Place, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Matthews Hall. of 1943 JAMES BENJAMIN JENKINS Born October 11, 1920, in El Paso, Texas. Died November 29, 1942. Prepared at Weston High, Weston, Massachusetts. Home address: c-0 Col W. E.Jenkins, F.A.R.T.C., Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Adams House. Basketball squad CU, tennis team Q1-3J, House basket- ball Field of concentration: Government. PETER LEON SIMON Born July 5, 1920, in Tientsin, China. Died August 24, 1940. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 225 West 106th Street, New York, New York. Thayer Hall. 4163! .0 , Q62-5 At fffi . , , 4.24 j 11. 1- ffi ' xx-ss: Q., .,.-A-g.aa3.ss.-xt s+ 4f:2.1fv 1. -4 ' -g: .Q J ', ' ,, A ' W fw 5 ' Q 1 iffy M, ,.,V A ' 5' Q I ,A--A 5. s. S, F' X ' 1 ' ,. - . I. ,M If I 'Ax V f F Q ' ' - I if 1- r l '- ' s f' Qu.- s ., V . N i YQ, J' . 'ix Aqq 3, . Y' x 'N W2 V Th ornas Matters and associates obtain pledges from registerin S Freshmen to help support the Stud C ' ' ' ' ' CHI 0l1l1C1l S DIHDY HCUVIIICS. TUJE ENT C UNCU 1 F the government of the College, and to keep the Administration in touch with undergraduate opinion, -the Student Council h . . . . as progress1vely extended its functions and IIS services. Its strength rests in the gentlemen's agreement with the Dean's Office that the College will make no major chan e of ol' 8 P ICY without first consulting the Council. Today, however, the function of government as such h ounded in 1908 to give the student body a voice in as been in part over- shadowed by such activities as the Council Scholarships, the Committee on Curric l d Committee. u um an Tenure, and the Freshman The membership was reduced in 1924 from 40 to 17 b . mem ers nine seniors and ei ht 'uniors some elected b 7 7 Y their respective classes and the others appointed by those 11661- Student Council leaders Adam Yarmolinsky, Thomas Matters, and John Rich d d' ' ' ' ' ar son iscuss college affairs in their PBI-I office. elected. Each of the Houses is represented, and there must be two members from the non-House group, of which one must be a non-resident of Cambridge. Reports to the Faculty and Administration on various College problems has formed perhaps the most important single function of the Council. The fanqned Committee on Curriculum and Tenure, consisting mainly of non-members of the Council but under the Council's guidance, has representa- tives from every Held of concentration. Similar committees have studied and reported on the Tutorial System, students' expenses, inter-House athletics, out-of-House men, parietal rules, board rates, and the problem of the accelerated schedule. Dean Hanford wrote last year, No important step has been taken in Harvard College in the last quarter of a century in which the Council has not played a leading role. a Supervision of class activities was taken over early by the Council. All Freshman activities, such as dances, Redbook and Smoker, are underwritten by it. It also handles class elections, and co-operates with the activities of the Under- graduate Athletic Council, War Service Committee, and the P.B.H. Social Service Committee. An importantipart ofthe Council's activities concerns its annual budget, which depends for its success upon the support of the undergraduates. This year, in order to eliminate drives by outside organizations, the Harvard Service Fund was set up. Contributions were solicited not only for local charities and social service work but for the Red Cross, the U.S.O., and the World Student Service Association. Phillips Brooks House is also largely supported by this Fund, and the Council scholarships are derived from it. The House Committees, originally an offshoot of the Council, now operate independently. Running all the House social events, such as plays and dances, and supervising its athletic activities, the Committees meet in their respective Houses under the headship of their Chairmen. They generally work independently but this year an Inter-House Dance Committee was set up underjohn Kennedy '44, to eliminate competition. House Committees in each of the seven Houses and in Dudley Hall are composed chiefly of upperclassmen, but this year for the hrst time Freshmen have been included in the membership of most committees. This has been an attempt to integrate Freshman activities into the life of the Houses. Because the Freshmen have lived alone in the Yard for more than a decade, their presence in the Houses has created an entirely new set of problems. These have not been merely a question of crowded dining halls and doubled-up bedrooms. They have included, most important of all, the fact that the Seeo11dRow.' B. Heath, O. D. Fifley, T. Drake, T. V. Keene, G. M. Bfzrzlifl, jr., G. Hooper, j. Kennedy, G. A. Saxfozz Front Raw: F. B. Hawley, j. Seotl, B, Roth, j. Rirbardron, jr., Trea.rurer',' T. livldlfflif, Prefidezzn A. Yarmolimky, Secrefaryg H. Hyde, j. Eurdefz 11671- Freshmen have no unity as a class-that they think in terms of Adams or Lowell or Dunster House instead of the Class of 1945. The Freshman Committee grew out of the Council's efforts to save some of the class unity which threatened to disappear as a result of lodging the Freshmen in the Houses. A Freshman from each House was chosen to serve on the Committee, and Freshman dinners were arranged in each of the Houses, which were attended by Freshmen from other Houses as well. At the end of the summer a Freshman Dance was held in Lowell House, under the sponsorship of the Freshman Committee, The group was led byjoseph L. Ray, jr. '46 and was supervised by George Saxton '44. Student government at Harvard turned inevitably, however, more directly to the problems of war. In October a tour of the College and a reception were arranged for British, Russian, Chinese and Greek war heroes. During the debate on the draft law, the Council, representing the student body, sent a telegram to Chairman May of the House Military Affairs Committee urging defeat of the Senate amendment requiring one year's training before overseas action, in the belief that military considerations should precede political. In similar fashion, the Council hopes to play a leading role, when victory is secured, in the Collegels post-war life. House Committee chairmen meet in Kirkland House small dining room to cope with problems of Harvardls overcrowded Houses. Second Raw: W. M. Rand, Adamrg J. Rirlnzrdmz, jr., Winfbropg R. G. Axtell, Lowell Fran! Raw: L. Tburfton, DllIZJf8l',' T. E. Baker, Lerzeretly J. W. Morgan, KirEla11rl,' J. P. Downer, Eliot riser Serena' Row: j. M. Kane, T. L. Farmer, G. M. Blzm'ill, jr., j. Rifhd7'L!.f0ll, jr., Serrelaryf R. Harwood, A. Ufrigbl Front Raw: A. Lurie, W. Shea, R. G. Axfell, Vice-Pre.ricle11f,' j. E. Snwbill, Prerirlefzff R. B. Slaerwood, R. N. Stow, A. Yrzrmolimky PHILLIP BROGKS HCDUSE Raymond Dennett, graduate secretary of Phillips Brooks House, converses with committee chairmen on the steps of the building. To the entering Freshman, Phillips Brooks House is that red-brick building on the northwest corner of the Yardf' He goes there in the first few days for meetings, get-acquainted parties, and so forth. But present-day conditions has given PBH far more to do than this. As was the case for most Harvard organizations, the entry of the United States into the war caused much re- orientation in Phillips Brooks House. It had the choice of remaining in the field of community service, of turning its efforts entirely to war work, or, the course which was adopted, attempting to cover both fields at once. Although the en- larged program might easily have brought administrative troubles, especially at a time when it was very possible that student assistance might lag, the results were always satis- factory and in some cases spectacular. It was during the summer session that plans were made and consolidatedg during the fall term Phillips Brooks House became a focus of activity under the leadership of Elden Sawhill, president, Bob Axtell, vice-presidentg and Ray Dennett, the graduate secretary. The physical plant became overnight a center of social life for the armed forces. The Committee on Relations with Wartime Personnel established itself on the second Hoot, took over half of the office space for use as a lounge, and pro- -f 169 l Ed Bodman disguises himself as Santa Claus for the benefit of Cambridge chil- Ray Dennett takes time out from his Work to play dren. PBH gives them baskets of food at Thanksgiving and gifts at Christmas. ball with his cocker Spaniel, Dink, in his office. ceeded to hold record dances-previously unheard of within the sacred walls-teas, and bridge parties. In addition, the committee set up a housing board to care for the families of students at the military schools. This board took over most of the duties previously rendered to graduate students by the committee on information, led this year by George Goetz and Wade Rockwood. Another service done by Phillips Brooks House affected every student. This was the administration and canvassing for the Service Fund Drive, which was under the aegis of the Student Council. In the realms of the activities carried over from pre- war days, the ruling principle was to consolidate and hold firm. Thus the Social Service Committee, led by George Burditt and Andy Rice, continued its practice of sending undergraduates to help in Greater Boston settlement houses. Typical of the older activities was the Freshman Handbook, distributed to over 1400 Freshmen. The Undergraduate Faculty, under Al Lurie and Walt Rogers, kept up the pace of its efforts to bring scholastically-minded non-college men together with students who were willing to aid them, And Dick Swift continued the efforts of the Community Ser- vice Committee. These and the other activities of PBH show the trend of the times-to keep up the old standards as well as to branch out into new fields wherever possible. JI17Olh l Gwendolyn and Genevieve Sullivan turn bottoms up at a party for them and friends in a Phillips Brooks House common room. R ERVIC CQMMITTEE It just isn't possible to escape the impact of the war by hiding behind Harvard's ivied walls. Even the 4-F man who concentrates in Romance Philology must pass a war stamp table as he goes into the dining hall, and is besieged in his own Sanctum by wardens on dimout patrol. From the moment when he fills out a War Service Questionnaire at registration, to the final visit of the scrap man as he leaves his college room, he gets a practical demonstration of what total war means. This demonstration is the work of the War Service Committee, Hrst organized a year ago this fall, and renovated, on a more functional basis, last spring. The Committee carries on all the non-protective civilian defense work in the College, and helps to recruit and train workers for the pro- tective jobs, such as wardens, fire-fighters, and auxiliary police and firemen. Confidential war work with the First Fighter Command has been the most exciting job which the volunteer division had to offer, but several hundred men flocked to join the volunteer orderly unit which is filling in at the badly under-staffed Boston hospitals. Pre-medical students find a splendid opportunity here to learn the trade from the ground I Numerous buttons adorn lapels of Harvard men who have given blood at Boston Red Cross Center. Silver means three donations. Serond Row: A. H. White, W. B. Kamp, T. Drake, B. Cobb, j. E. McNulty, R. Ryan Franz Raw: R. A. Karla, T. L, Farmer, G. M. Bzzrdill, jr., A. Yarnzolimky, Cbairmafzf R. N. S-wij5', F. de Hojman, S. Mina! H711 Tom Farmer discussesWar Service Committee's Chairman Adam Yarmolinsky fextreme rigbtj talks over the Harvard bonds and program for Hrst aid lessons with Robert Koch. stamps drive with Dick Swift, Jim McNulty, George Burditt, and Thayer Drake. up, although a good proportion of the group makes virtue its own reward. The committee has filled emergency calls for jobs ranging from registrars for fuel oil rationing to can- vassers in a house-to-house drive to get Christmas gifts for soldiers. In response to a frantic request from the Radcliffe Forum, which was planning a program of war films, it even managed to dig up an operator for a home movie projector. Three wagon-loads of metals, rubber, and old rags were carried away from students' rooms by the junkman at the end of last summerls scrap drive, and more material is being carted off regularly from the scrap piles in the basement of each House. Among the more interesting items collected have been several pianos, each of which will provide enough metal for three machine guns, and a very different sort of music. One ofthe most lucrative sources of scrap metal was in and around buildings of clubs and publications. Iron, old boilers and pipe have been cleared out of basements, and fences are hard to find now along Mt. Auburn Street. War stamps have been on sale in House dining halls two days a week, and Harvard's weekly contribution to the war effort has run between 35400 and 35500. Intensive cam- paigns to get every student to sign a pledge card have so far had very little success, despite wide publicity and a thorough canvass. Continued efforts may, however, raise the current figure nearer to the proportion set aside by the rest of the United States. In contrast with the slow trickle of money, 11721 Harvard's blood is running freely for victory. Several gallons a week are pouring into the Red Cross blood bank in Boston, in fact the one hundred men who go down every fortnight are donating considerably more than an A card gas ration. Each of the Committees divisions: volunteers, scrap, bonds and stamps and blood donatingworked throughrepresen- tatives in the Houses, Dudley, and the Clubs. In addition, all the representatives in each House were brought together into a House Wat Service Committee, under its own chairman, and reinforced by a staff of WSC Aides who signed up on the questionnaire at registration, as willing to help in the committees work. In this manner the organization was kept in smooth running order throughout, and it was held together at the top by its executive group, composed of the various division heads, and also by the work of the Information di- vision. Not as evident as a pint of blood, but equally important has been the work of this Division. It has procured speakers and arranged publicity both for the Committee itself and for other undergraduate organizations, notably getting B.B.C. news transcriptions on the Crimson Network, and exhibiting outstanding British war posters in classroom halls. Its latest project at this writing is a clearing house for information and ideas among college War Service Committees throughout Greater Boston. Future opportunities are limited only by hope of early victory. Wwfif i X,- Q Qgjliflllfilddgl WariJaiiF22la.1f?,,,555ri3g, TmQ4,fffjgkB'C11FFE Wig' SCHOQEQMQM1 ffKqc ww'-,R E SUPPL - 1 .rETmW 'ZliwfM'ml' QKQAEW HSEEABER 31 RWAV ..-- ii lfnmffyff E K DE K, f.: ,fgwfffi -' OSEE' if ,,mAW'n. at yt f ClgwgrgisZcabfwiinglnasfwlA lr. Z.. ., ..., . Vvlb . nwfuz, ,. ni ,W eggzamw -- ,1,, H-fi A '- gi:.1'2iE'1f51f N tf'Ti 1.3: -fflli ref F. Q :.ff..l T wx :ir 'V .7f1f :-1 1Q1f,-'ff' ' ' Q 1 'll fir:-Jlfigif if iclisriililc T0 TW , ..,.. 1-fx ,. L Fitliiill' .. ' - 53 Ag-13j'.'gaL: ?-lf.-litillvlggg 1, - A I 4 ,QLJ2 -fb, Wm , . N. fl, ' 'V Cow 0 , . , . ,. Pom .QW ' 5mr1H 9 n A' G 1- TIL , ' ' - W N uw K' ,, Wai W- . 4 , 591 ln ,155 To h fdi' 1' Comelofg 5, Nxleom H .rm Huff, . H .. saw., W f ' ..1 ' , - Wmn Q 'ASYFOVQ , . Wm . S .2 f-fest' f.rwlonpiff2lSRi 1' S T wah H' ' U p t' Liwliliiillir Y 5 3l9'3i:Qig3i 'ff 5' - Z'r'- 31. fi' E1 TF-J 1 ff x '- e.-- - .f3T,-3--- - ' .. e 1-Il' . , f 11L--?::g..- .'lft'f.'lli:E5Ji' 'ffl ' T lift' 'A Charles Borden points out to Bob Moskin, his successor as man- aging editor of the Crimson, line points in dummying the paper. C D S M While the Lazmpoon was forced into a back-to-the-wall alliance with the Radcliffe News to guarantee their continuance through the war, the Crimson expanded, seeking broader fields and greener pastures. Cambridge's only breakfast table daily was soon found in the Business School, in the Yard where the Navy's Scuttlebzztt became a protege of the Crime, in the Chaplains School, and in extra-curricular excursions into journalistic fleld. The year was marked by the publication of a special two-edition extra on the Princeton week-end, and the campaigns resulting in our being given the blueprints and in the re-election of Governor Saltonstall. The campaign for expansion began under Paul Shee- line's regime. The Crimron replaced the Summer School Newy and appealed to the female contingent at Harvard by allowing women to write for its columns. The Crimronk own Ivy League, which sprang into existence full-panoplied from the head of Myron Kaufmann, bedecked the walls of the sacred mansion with real ivy. The Crimrofz crew invaded the sanctity of Newell, hardy Crimsonians, starting from scratch in the Leviathan, nnally became so expert that large crowds no longer Hugh Calkins, BurrVan Vort, and Tom Kuhn are amused by latest remark in comment book. Daily red-ink sheet lies next to it. 4174! gathered on the dock just as the newsmen were about to take to the water. President Sheeline evacuated the prexy's chair early injuly, and the destinies of the age-old news dispenser were left in the hands of Dan I'm sorry, Mr. Hanford Penn, Bob Don't get nasty Moskin, Tom Listen-guy Kuhn, Ed Let's not Sommer, Burt Finleycorliss Van Vort, Bill Don't rush me Forster, Lou Now, gentlemen Krohn, Doug Pay up Brown, and all the lads. Neophytes though they were, the biggest scoop in years was ferreted out in the coming of the WAVES to Radcliffe. Denials poured forth from the Shepard St. Annex for days, but it was ofhcially confirmed three weeks later, thus vindicating the well-known Crime accuracy. And, shouting Scrap thejapj' Mrs. Hoke and Brave Dave Coulter single-handedly pulled up the majes- tic wrought-iron fence which surrounded the Fourteen Plymp- ton Street edifice. All in all, an enjoyable year was had by 511, and, as Tiny Mike, with gold bars on his shoulders, observed, God bless Crimeditors, every onef' :rv -' 17' ' .fi -. . 5,2-1L.., , 5 N sl .A . Ll ,ia Q i A ' j. I lrf L, 4 ' - ' id: 'ZA H! - i' 'gif L o,. , , . , ' . ' . if .ES , ' f ,A , if - br, Ken Lynn and Bob Landau cooperate to get a story over phone Crimson's telephone bill amounts to well over 351000 every year FUIIFIB Row: T. S. Baer, T. L. Fnrlner, M. Bozfarnick, H, Bfmurer, j. C. Friednmn, j. Carhrrzne, R. A. Koch, j. D. Greene II, M. j. Karel, L. H. Warner, M. I. Goorlinau, C. F. N. Irving, B. Warner Third Row: R. H. Weinrlein, j. K. LIIZVIU, W, P. Cnnningheun, j, M. Kane, E. Larrer, K. S. Lynn, A. Srhwezh, W. Cowen, I. M. H0l'01t'ilZ, E. D. Bnflnmn, jr., H. Calkinr, G. A. Saxton, jr. Second Row: C. W. Young, A.f.ri,rta11IEn'iloriul Chairinanf j. B. Slllilh, AJ.ri.ffun1 Edilorial Chairinunf E. j. Carey, Loral Aiz'zferliJing Managerg L. M. Krohn, Advertiring Mamzgerg D. A. Brown, Executive Eriitorf j. R. M orhin, Managing Editorg D. H . Feun, Pre.fidenl,' E. j. Sommer, Businers Mamzger,' T. S. Kahn, Edilorial Chnirmanf W. H. Fowler, Pholngraphif Chairman: B. Van Vorf, Sportr Elfilliff D. Reed, Exemtive Eifilor Front Row: R. S. Kieve, L. M. Wrighl, M. S. Kanfmium, A.fri.rlanl En'ilorirzl Chuirlnanf G. H, janlzen, jr., D. L. Simon, j. H. Shezrlill, R. S, Landau, A. Yarznolinrky, A.f.rirlunfEr1'i1oria! Chuirnlanj IV. Algeo, I . 117. Spalding 1175 1- f, Q X ffl ! . Ne? e im, r . .F . .if ,K y ,V xx., Q '. nrnl' lv Ti XX! My ly. . -'!- .-,g.:: xl 4 x X 't f-,gl ,lr X X il fl, lvl ,fx 1 1 .V Q X,,-,.:.- .. I .i .Q A l. ,,,,!9l!..:x I ef... 'yr F5519 wk 1 if ef-X 'Q f.f .r le-ax l '1'?? 7f'a. y' 'i ill. A-'.?lf:--'fiif ig , --'- 2 l -: LJ t . ,,z.,M.1. V .fff-5-'Q fx 'fi' Y - if I ,I .V g Xi-IPL, tgp,-A., . . 2 -rw 23110 ,.Q.i.gg.3- .. ...NX XVTY 5 H 1 - P ' 'liii-'M 1.9 7:'i..'T?x- A ... .,,.7y.,?' LW If Y. .. 'cv ' ,Z -.L 5.3-rf 'ifi'E?Al 'i' ,r 1 .ie . gMxi.1i.,x xy, 'x n - !,,.,.-.. ...,4 . ., 'i V, .. Lv .- New v-.. . T' V Y, . 3 i W N x A 'Ni P N LAMPQQN When the team came out for its first practice last january, everybody knew it was going to shape up into an aggregation of some sort. As Coach Sherwood said, there's nothing like a good frostbite to work up your dander. After a few plays had been run off on the linotype machine, it be- came known that a mysterious form of hoof-and-mouth dis- ease was spreading rapidly through the squad, this was blamed on Benchley, that lovable old cynic, who had been seen enter- ing the building one day with his cuts upside down. Gradually the trick plays began to work themselves out. The favorite of all, perhaps, was the one where Charlie Straus, after being runover on page 28 and staging a magnifi- cent fake sleeper, took the issue around end and ran for the printer's. And then there was the modified scunner play, run from model T formation, in which Meryman took the oblate, faded back, fading, fading, until he seemed to be lost in the tall grass. Then from somewhere came the long pass, way down into the end zone and into the waiting arms of either Larrabee or Corbett, depending on whichever of them hap- pened to have friends in the end zone. This, then, was history. Third Row: J. Le11y,j. Reed, C. Howe, C. Brokaw, R. Wbeaflazzd, W. A. Main, B. K. Howie, j. P. Drzzwzer, M. Flelcber Sefozzfl Row: F. Reed, M. M. Orbarne, E. Mahoney, H. S, Mielzle11rlorf,jr., A. Olney, j. F. McCri1m'le, D, Ladd, j. Crorker Front Raw: E. Corbeft, E. Larrezbee, SecreIar'y,' H. T. Merymazz, INlar1bex,' -I. L. I-Iojfnzzw, Ibir: O. E. Allen, Preriflezzff R. B. Sherwood, Ti'eaJ1zrer',' S. Azzzlrezur, Azlverlirizzg Marzugw, N. Chubb, Cirmlafiou Mfzmzgerg F. B. Harvey 41161 O. E. Zwoncus '43 UQl'Fg!'0lfl1l0, in Sing Sing's varsity uniform Crimson Lampoon s star batsman holds axe to show how he will primes his Lampoon mates before the annual ball game with the slug to final victory P S The Crlmson won handily 25 to 2 Somehow in the middle of the season, as the presses began rolling faster and faster, things got more and more confused, and then it seemed we were no longer playing foot- ball, but were all sitting in a shell, rowing, jack the Ripper Hoffman, aided and abetted by the auld Shad, cracked the whip violently, while Ed Mahoney stood aside and did twenty bendays. The effect was terrific. ln a few weeks everyone was in shape and could do at least one push-up. Finally came the opportunity: we girded up the old mortgage and challenged the Crimrofz to a race. The terms were simple. The Lawzpoon would take one side of the Leviathan, the Crimron the other, and there would be a race to see which side could turn the boat around first. If there was enough room on the Charles, we had the jacks to do it. With Scho Andrews and Bart Harvey in the boat, and with Oscar Allen and Mac Osborne out of it, there was hardly any doubt of the issue. But no reply came from the Crimron. As the Album went to press, the issue was still in doubt. As we waited on our oarlocks and the ice formed around the boat, there was still no word from the aged Crime. ISSUE mr SEPTEMBER No i 1947- ,I TUE B MBE it AN AR THOM,rgx it CEC AN DO DAW IXQCHNEER Af, ITATE THE HP-PNA I fir Y C GEMS B ER R Psauct PHEMiSiHoMA5 FOLEYS N AND D BOOK R150 MUSIC AN r ' aswwr . BY gums i T' rssrv. ia , President Bruce Barton entertains his successor, Harold Smith, who is sitting on the piano, and other members of the Advocate. ADVOCATE Early in january, 1942, a new board took over on the Harvard Advocate. Meanwhile throughout the university,- even before the thunder that had roared on December 7th over the sleeping decks of American warships had died away -students were beginning to prepare as much for the army as for their finalexaminationsg and while professors wavered between Washington appointments and their lecture platforms, a university at peace changed to a university at war. On the Advocate, however, the change to war came more slowly. The first issue, celebrating the 75th anniversary of the magazine's founding, still concerned itself with subjects quite apart from the conflicts of the days: it concerned itself with a critical analysis of Proust, with an article on Harvard architecture, even with a morbid little story of two young girls and a dead cat. Professional authors from Djuna Barnes and Mark Schorer to poets such as Wallace Stevens and Conrad Aiken appeared in the issue, but at this impressive windfall of names, the Crimron in its review deplored the publication ofthe worst things of the best people. In its way, the issue had been a brilliant one, and the work, principally of Pegasus john Crockett, had been spectacular, but the readers of the Adwotrzte seemed to be waiting for something different. When the next three issues appeared, however, the tone of the magazine had definitely changed. The experi- mental prose and poetry of the year before that had placed such emphasis on form rather than on content, that had been written at a time when students had the freedom and the lei- sure to try new forms, to taste of this, to sip of that, and when they still retained to some extent their gilded isolation from what lay beyond the university wa'ls-these had disappeared. Now, what men had been thinking all over the nation, what politicians had argued in the halls of our legislatures, what columnists had worried over in their daily articles, young writers put into their fiction. What they wished to express, as well as how they chose to express, were more than ever before important. The negro question provided a subject for both Norman Mailer and Douglas Woolf, and at each publication date, the number of War stories and poems con- some extent the mind of its time. And while Eric Larrabee's By-Paths on the Road to Rome could well conclude with the declaration that it is not our task at present to Find new eternal verities, but to live without them, with strength and with stylef' the editors, with pardonable, albeit self-conscious, seriousness, were trying-if not to find a Credo in their writers-at least to furnish them with a channel through which to express their ideas on their world. This may, at this time, seem a small thing. But perhaps, later on when we look back from the leisures of peace to the present-if the 1943 editors have succeeded in their task at all-this will not seem to have been without value. ' The 1943 oflicers were: Bruce Barron, jr., President, john Maher, jr., Secretary, and john Crockett, Pegasus. Heading the 1944 board were: Harold W. Smith, President, john Maher,jr., Secretary, and Arturo de la Guardia, Pegasus. Advocate meetings to plan forthcoming issues and discuss poems and stories are held around oaken table in Bow Street building. Third Row: E. Park, D. Lee, R. C. Harrixorr, K. Ervin, O. ale Kay, T. A. Foley, E. R. Squibb, Circzzlaliozz Mamzger Seror1dRau': H. M. Spire, BllJiIl!'.fJ Mmmgery D. Srbzzeider, D. B. Green, j. B. Hallmzzfay, A. P. Mfzrplay, M. Lizzentlaal, jr., j. W. B. Baurmazz Front Rowf E. K. M orrir, T1'?d.fllI'0l',' N. K. Mailer, B. Barlorz, jr., Pl'l'.filf6'lIf,' I-I. W. Snzilb, Pre5in'c1zl,' j. A. Maher, S.?L'I'L'f4I'J',' A. :le hz Gzmrclifz, Pegzzmr -11791 M.. Second Row: IV. J. Firrbman, Burizzerf Mczmzgerj J, E. McNally, Advefvifing Maurzgery j. M. Field, R. N. Suf'M, Biograpbier Edilorg j. R. Malkin, Sperry Editor Front Raw: W. H. Forfter, E. Lazrrabee, Art Edilo r,' H. W. Salomafz, Vine Cblli7'I77l1Il,' D. Reed, Cl?!lifIlI!1I1,' M, S. Kdllf-NIQIZIZ, Lilerary Edilor, j. K, Lazrzzx, Plaolograpbir Editor For several decades the Harvard Album was a stodgy, ponderous tome that was hardly more than a catalogue. Last year's book, however, was revolutionary-pictures were angled or bled off the page, articles were made more numerous and more interesting, new type was introduced, and a host of other changes were made. The result was that almost overnight the Album became one ofthe finest yearbooks in the country. The current board has tried to continue rather than reverse this trend. Most of the major changes in the 1942 Album have been carried through into this Album, and at the same time several innovations have been made. Most ob- vious, of course, is the inclusion of two classes in one volume. This step was felt necessary because most of 1944 would graduate so soon after 1945 that its members would not have sufficient time to put out an Album. The two-class Albam was not the only new idea which the present board put into practice. The Faculty section, bugaboo of all past Albums, was made completely different, 118011 Business Manager Bill Fischman points out to Chairman Dana Reed the need for keeping all sections ofthe book on schedule. with informal portraits of important professors and long arti- cles by three of them. Shorter articles, more pictures, and longer captions were also emphasized in this year's book. Little was done during the summer term, although Chairman Dana Reed worked on general organization and design and layout of the book. As soon as the fall term began, however, the Album went into high gear. Photographic Editor jay Kay Lazrus began a hectic campaign of picture- taking, while Vice-Chairman Harold Solomon started the literary ball rolling by getting the Faculty section out in short order. The rest of the board soon fell into line, with Myron Kaufmann egging on various people to get the shorter articles written, Bruce Barton working on features, Eric Lar- rabee pepping up the book with his sketches, and Robert Moskin handling the sports section. The triple-headed busi- ness board, composed of William Fischman, john Sullivan, and jim McNulty, performed the colossal task 'of collecting about 39000 in three months. Finally, the brunt of the work involved in combining two classes in one book fell on Dick Swift, and he took care of the more than 1800 biographies very efficiently. If the Album actually does appear in-Ianuary as sched- uled, it will be a minor miracle. Meanwhile, the crucial fall term, which can make or break the book, will be remembered by the present Album Board as the hundred days. ls Y:-'-V l i. x ,XX yr 't ' WW -'f--... ' 'fit lg - A . . lL t 1 V J. . 4 'T 0 V ' ,.-- A ,,'Lf-gf, , . I, :H Picture panels mean long hours of work. Dick Swift checks on biographies of both class- Questions of layout are ironed out in the Albun1's office months before the es, while jim McNulty writes a business letter. book appears. Proofs of picture cuts are pasted into dummy book on table. 11811- GLUA DU The board of America's only undergraduate social science pub- lication meets in Shepard Hall office to discuss next issue. Hardly had a new Guardian staff taken office in Decem- ber, 1941, when the war struck. Enthusiastic draft boards and accelerated programs threatened the existence of most extra-curricular activities, the Guardian included. However there was a bright side, editorial and 'even organizational. Interest in the army suggested the article by General Arnold, general anxiety over the war with japan was the basis for Robert Komer's keen analysis of naval strategy, and the exploitation problem provoked Dr. Sweezy's report on India. The long summer session provided a splendid oppor- tunity for wartime reorganization. But the recent announce- ment that Enlisted Reservists will be called up soon, in addi- tion to the recent lowering of the draft age, makes the Guard- iau': future much more uncertain. If, for lack of manpower, the Guardian cannot last throughout the war, the present edi- tors hope that it will be revived when peace comes, so that it may play its part in the discussion of post-war questions. There were two sets of officers this year. T. Stanwood Kenyon and A. Peter Ruderman filled the '45 posts, while jerry M. Brown and William Snower headed the '44 board. Sefof1dRow: N. Reifizer, M. Ricbier, C. W. Young, P. Fay, E. Weld, J. Cohen, W. Surkle, j. Marlon Fran! Row: M . S. Kaufmann, S. Berfzrteizz, Cirfulation Mazlagerf D. Fine, Advertiring Managerg j. M. Brown, Pre.rider1f,' T. S. Kenyon, jr, Preridenlj W. Snower, Editorial Cbairmazzg H. Payer, Bzziinets Managerg H. D. Sharpe, Fealnre Editor' -iisz 1- Lf GLEE CLUB The Harvard Glee Club is among the Harvard organiza- tions which have set their own precedents, it is a unique college glee club in its aim, its organizaton and method of financial upkeep. The Club was founded eighty-four years ago, but it was not until 1919 that the decision was made by the undergraduate ofhcers which put aside the pleasant but essentially conventional and commonplace music which college glee clubs had always sung and undertook the experi- ment of singing first-rate music, classical and modern. Al- though many other colleges have now adopted similar ob- jectives, in those days it took Doc Davison to show the men that they could aim higher than the Bulldog on the Bank type of music without being stigmatized as high- brow. When the Glee Club divorced itself from the Banjo and Mandolin Clubs of the College, it tried to keep its in- dependence and freedom from hampering obligations. Un- like most organizations of its kind, the Club is entirely self- supporting. The active members of each year are free to determine what that year will offer. Fees earned by each season's concerts have paid the running expenses and have Woody leads what Serge Koussevitzky has called, along with Radcliffe's chorus, the world's finest group of amateur singers. Fourth Row: H. N. Cooledge, R. H. Foster, A. Slaelly, R. Wilcox, R. M. Betz, R. P. Emerron, J. D. EIIJIZBII, W. H. Forrzer, D. NlL'fIUl1, N. K. Eilar, R. J. Harbixan, G. Lenane Third Row: N. R. Whitney, S. E. Daren, J. W. Blzdalezzberg, D. Perry, L. Kumi, J. W. Frezmizzg, W. P. Hall, R. P. Danielxorz, J. R. Thompfon, R. Wakefield, W. W. Haines, J. A. Brifzla, C. R. Weaver Seeond Row: P. B. TOWZki7lI, J. F. cle Cbanlefzedef, J. E. Reyfzoldr, F. L. Haley, D. Harfirzg, Managerf J. D. Lowell, Prerialezm G. W. Woodu'of'tlo, Condurtu rg M. Yoloalem, Serrefarjq' D. King, Jr., Vice-Pre.ri:le1zl,'P.Jerome, Jr., C. Lanxing Front Row: F. A. Hagar, E. G. S. Cloalkeley, H. Oster, W. W. Wood, A. Karpauirlo, R. L. Creiglotofz, P. Ba11ku'ilz,J. L. Tbatrber tially created a fund which will enable the Club to meet any lean war years which may lie ahead. The war has lowered to two hundred the size of this year's Club, but it has also made it one of the most manage' able for a good many seasonsg time is a precious factor and the men who spend three evenings a week in Sever 11 are the men who have a real interest in good music. Glee Club trips have provided fun in concentrated doses. It is pretty hard to look back on the Bradford con- he Smith concerts, the Wellesley concerts, the Yale concerts, and all the Spring Trip concerts without having a myriad of dinners and dances, laughter and singing, dinner partners and bridge partners, going through your mind. The great thrill of the year-singing under Dr. Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra-is an opportunity that we have included in our college education, a taste of a baton at the height of the musical world. The undergraduate officers of the Clubfor 1942-43 are: President,J. Drennan Lowell, Vice-President, Drue King, certs, t Secretary, Mark Yohalemg Manager, Donald I-lartingg As- u I Sistant-Managers, Harry Oster and Paul Morgan' Yard concerts on the steps of Widener Llbrary attract hundreds of students, townspeople, visitors, and urchins every spring. Folzrtla Row: R. Golomb, H. .Mo.fer, D. Rfllffb, F. M. Warburg, R. H. Doyle, IV. F. Ellllif, B. F. Beck, j. H. ilflmrball, E. P. WebJler', I-I. B. janet, G. R. Killim, T. A. Wood, jr., A. L, Skinner Third Row: R. T. Keiue, R. B. Lt2ZlZl'll.Y, E. L. Leriazger, R. S. Kuhn, j. R. George, M. S. Elfll10I7J0ll, R. O. jacobron, R. C. McQ1zifle12, E. Lyne, W. W. Dunn, R. P. Barr, jr., M. E. Miler, B. N1fgez1f,j. E. Ezlwardf, S. D. Balrloelor, H. S. Holder, j. J. Dakar ' ' .K.Hd!e C.N. Second Row: L. Fl'E6'tf771t1I1, T. S. Weary, E. Surnt, R. K. Lnrxoo, B. E, Grfiu, R. D. Moor, jr., G. INldkl.7lIIkldl7, H. W. Melvin, R. B. White, N. T. Wang, R en y, Van Dorm of 'l, P. Y. j. Urbimz, P. D. Wzztroo, G. A. V411 Pell Front Row: R. T. Smlly, j. F. Tollexon, C. M. Haywood, D. G, Arzmtrorzg, R. S. Reyooldf, D. W, Goo wr: R 41851 Malcolm Holmes led Harvardls Band for the first time this year. ND For the first time the Band continued beyond the basketball and hockey seasons last spring. With the two fold purpose of keeping lips in shape and giving entertain- ment, it held weekly rehearsals, and in May made its debut as a concert band outside the confines of the stadium, assist- ing the Glee Club in two Yard Concerts. During the summer the Band continued to meet informally and twice played twi- light serenades for the Navy in the Yard. Toward the end of the second summer term marching practices were held, and the first serious work for the fall football season began. The pre-season game with Chapel Hill Navy Pre-Flight School came on the twenty-sixth of September, and sixty Band members cut their vacations short to get back Friday for an afternoon and evening of practice, The next day the Band formed an anchor and an airplane, and played Leroy Anderson's Navy Medley -all in all a creditable showing for so small a band with just one day of rehearsal. At Freshman registration that week-end the musical talent of '46 was canvassed. These tactics had been prompted by fear of the effects of accelerated schedules on extra- curricular activites. The result was a band of over one hundred men at the first regular rehearsal. Encouraged by the possi- bilities of this tremendous turnout, but somewhat staggered The Band lines up on the steps ofWidener Library just before marching to the Stadium to play for 5000 uniformed men at the Army game -' ' w- - -N-vwwamwswm-wwmw .. , V by the prospect of getting hfty-six new men in shape for the Penn game three days away, Malcolm Holmes, '28, the Band's new Conductor, and Guy Slade, '32, Drill Master, set to work. Saturday saw a band twice the size of the previous week's spelling out HELLO PENN with considerable effect, and playing the Harvard Medley. in a brand new concert formation to the Harvard stands. For William and Mary the next week the Band took the southern college's name in a somewhat humorous vein, and featured a tiny a larger and and a tremendous MARY. For the Harvard stands they formed HAR- LOW, changed this into six built these into one huge double line H, and played Anderson's ever popular Winter- greenf' The next week-end Dartmouth came to town bringing its band with it. The annual battle of bands was at its best with Harvard's band drawing the nod with its presenta- tion ofa medley of Dartmouth songs arranged by Anderson. Bill Cunningham, a Dartmouth man, called the playing of this medley the most beautiful music heard in the stadium in over twenty years. The Band also presented its version of the traditional Dartmouth Indian, joe Scott, '43, in blanket and head dress, carried a bass horn on his back, with a papoose stuffed in the bell of the horn. For the Army game the Band had the task of leading four thousand men of the Army and Navy units at Harvard on to the field. The parade started from the Yard at one oiclock and the beat was kept up almost without stop until the last Naval unit came on the field at close to two. At this point the Band hurried off the field to get in a valuable twenty minutes of practice before coming back on to the field to play the National Anthem before the game, Despite the minimum of rehearsal time the Band performed during the full fifteen minutes of the between halves, forming ARMY and BUY BONDS, and playing a new Service Medley arranged this fall by Leroy Anderson, and dedicated at the game to all of the Harvard men in the service. The medley featured a dive-bomber attack with the ttombones as the diving planes, the snare drums as the machine guns, and the giant bass drum, struck with a three foot crimson headed drum stick, as the exploding bomb. During the playing of the medley the near capacity crowd quieted down, and the softest passages were heard clearly, at the end the entire stadium rose and joined in the applause. At the time of writing there remain three games at which the Band will perform: Princeton, Brown and Yale. If its present level of entertainment is maintained it should complete one of its most successful seasons, and perhaps set a standard that will be looked back to after the war when a Band of its scale will again be possible. The Band attains mid-season precision in spelling out a wel- come for the visitors at Harvard's second game of the season. Eighty-three musicians fbelowj are shown in the act of shifting from five little H's to a big one at the William and Mary game. Network technicians spend several hours a week at the controls. Experience gained at Harvard prepares them for radio careers. Not much more than a year ago the comment book at the Crimson Network was used about as frequently as the Eliot House gate which faces on Boylston Street. But now- adays, when a Network member decides to visit Wellesley for the evening, he finds, when he returns, that he's five pages behind in what has become almost required reading at 31 Holyoke Street. A comment book can often be used as a measuring rod. The general community spirit of an organization can frequently be judged by the number of days that it takes for twenty of the book's ,pages to be filledg the percentage of active members can be determined by examining the number of men who regularly express their opinions. And such is the case with the Network comment book. For the Network has in the past year become increasingly aware of its place in Harvard, it has begun to develop its own traditionsg it has begun to stiffen requirements for membership-so much so that, of the 58 men who started the Network competition in August, only ten remained after the election meeting eight weeks later. And the Network has also made every effort to increase its percentage of active members, what was once a bare 20fZ, has now become a husky 90fZp. One reason for the stimulated interest among under- graduates is the fact that the Network now runs as if it were a professional station. If the Network one year ago had been at all concerned with definitions, it might have spoken of a well timed show as a program which ends either three minutes before or two minutes after the time alloted to it has elapsed. Nowadays newscasters and interviewers hang their 111881 CRIMSON Bob Kieve and Dick Kleeman, Network's two 1942 presidents, discuss inundation of Radcliffe girls for Swing Out program. heads when programs end more than five seconds before they should, while men whose shows run even one second overtime feel as awkward as a coalminer at a Harvard Faculty Club tea. Network programs have also contributed to the sta- tion's increased popularity. True, the backbone of the schedule, two and a half hours of classical and swing record- ings-mostly classical-have always met with the greatest approval, and since surveys show that at least half the student body studies while listening ro the radio, these musical pro- grams will probably always attract the largest audiences. But non-recorded shows have also done well. One evening during the early part of last summer, the Winthrop House Common Room was the scene ofa Network- sponsored swing contest. When word got around that the famed Count Basie would not only act as co-judge of the contest, but would also take part in some special numbers, one out of every three men in college either jammed his way into the capacity-crammed common room, or listened to the proceedings over the Network. ETWORK This program was in line with the new Network policy of turning the station over to Harvard. Soon the Network produced its first House Amateur Showg held in the Leverett Common Room, the program ran for forty-five minutes and attracted radio and on-the-spot listeners not only in Leverett House itself, but throughout the College. And a big step was taken when Network officials started the practise of broad- casting the entire freshman registration proceedings, giving every new man the chance to be interviewed. But it takes more than that to keep a college audience happy. The Network did its best. It presented programs with Mrs. Roosevelt, conductor Erich Leinsdorf, Hildegarde, and Wendy Barrie, it gave over a daily period of time to Radcliffe announcers and performers, and it arranged to have a live microphone taken into Grays Hall during one of those eve- nings when summer school classes were all busy at work. There has, during these last few months, been nothing smug about the Network attitude, but all members are begin- ning to feel that the Crimson Confidential Guide was right when it said: The Network is Harvard's fastest growing organization. Kink... Dick Kleeman interviews aWRUL executive. Third Row: A. Lorie, H. Vim Uzmfierrezz, B. P. Bfork, A. R. Bagguley, A. N. Hnngbfon, R. L. Berzzrleiu, Prograzzf 1iVl1ZIIdgt'2',' A. H. Colaeu, R. M. Brown, W. H. Helm, M. D Van Dyke Serozld Row: H. E, FVHCZUIIIHII, j. B. Slllflb, E. L. Mark, A. L. Eno, jr., V. Lauderdale, E. R. Biddle, T. D. Connolly, B. S. Glamzmn, C. Sorafider, R. W. Merriam Front Row: H. M. Spiro, Brzrinerr Mazzagerf H. C. Fleming, Radio Worprbop Chllifllldilf R. L. Wallgla, Technical Dil'66!0f,' B. E. Van Raalle, Production .Mamzgerj R. S. Kzeue PI'6.fIC!6'17l,' R. P. Kleemmz, Pre.ride11t,' W. J. Firrbmmz, BIIIIIIFJI Mmmgerg D. A. Shepard, Prodlzrlion Mamzgerg j. M. Cofhmzze, Terlmioal Direflor 11891 Fenno Hoffman and 'Cliffedwellers work on stage sets. DRAMATIC CLUB The Dramatic Club concluded its 1941-42 season last spring with a handsome production of Gogol's Revizor. Directed by Theodore L. Squier, jr., '43, and with decor by Rollo Thompson '43, the classic comedy filled Brattle Hall with color and laughter for four nights. Robert F. Keahey '45, was outstanding in the title role, while Earl Montgomery '43, bowed out from the Harvard stage with a fine interpretation of the mayor. John Wasley '45, Gerard Sheehan '43, and Harry Munroe '43, ex- celled in comic character parts, though it was Mendy Weis- gal '45, and Andrew Gerrick '45, who really brought down the house with their antics as the two town busybodies. Radcliffe lent Edith Bronson '45, to play Marya, while Jac- queline Proctor, Erskine '42, made the most of Anna, the mayor's wife. Elizabeth Collins, Gertrude Wind, Donald Fine '43, and Charles Rheault '45, performed well in sup- porting roles. August saw the first play produced at Harvard during a summer session. After much deliberation it was decided that entertainment rather than art for art's sake would be the keynote of the summer production, and with this in mind the Second Row: E. Wedrow, M. Sbwartz, N. Giller, O, deKay, M. Singer, j. Wusley, A. Nirkerran Front Row: A. Allporf, R. Stewart, S, L. Kent, Vine Prerizleizn R. G. Neiley, Preficlentf C. Rbeuull, PreJizfe11r,' j. Marlon, Sen'etury,' W. E. R0bil1.T072, D. Fine i190lL club pounced on Dracula as its selection. To the accompaniment of weird music, green lighting effects byjohn Stern '45, and a semi-impressionistic set by Franklin Hancock '44, the show played for three very suc- cessful nights in the harmoniously eerie atmosphere of Sanders Theater. Wolves howled, women screamed, lunatics raved, and bats whisked on and ohf stage on a fishline. The cast, directed by Robert F. Keahey '45, and S. Leonard Kent, III '43, was headed byjohn W. Sullivan '43, as Professor Van Helsing, with Bradley Cummings, III ,46, in the title role. Adams Nickerson, also of the dramatical- ly fertile class of '46, played the insane Renfield, a patient of Dr. Seward, portrayed byjohn Wasley '44, Miss Claire Birsh, Vassar '45, took the part ofthe doctor's strangely ailing daugh- ter, while Alexander W. Allport '45, played the part of her nance. Jerry Maslon '45, and Barbara Torre took the comic parts of the attendant and maid. With the ablest members leaving for the service, shows on the old scale are diflicult, but nevertheless the HDC will attempt to stage an entirely new play this yearethe North American premiere ofAf1nogenev's Mashenka. Hancock, Neiley, and Kent Qojvj and members Qbelowj talk over' plans for plays in I-IDC office, which was once a swimming pool. Gogol's Inspector General as it looked in rehearsal and on stage. In keeping with Dramatic Club's wartime policy, it toured army camps. 1 K-.,Y ,W , Y . 3 . ,,, . ii. Al 191 l Third Row: E. Cbrzrmgzzer, W. j. Greene, R. M. NEfb7IIdl7, j. A. Morgan, G, T. Keltozz, D. Mirlmro, IV. Bennett Second Row: L. Kovezr, S. O. A. Ullman, A. Errig, R. See, R. G. A. S. Szzfkirzd, D. Trafzmmlz, R. W. Miller, F. W. Lawlor From' Row: R. Wolff M. D. Van Dyke, Sen'eIezry,' M. Wof Vire Presirfezm T. I. Crowell, PreJia'e11f,' V. Head, Tr'ea.rzrrer,' R. jczfe, Mczzuzgery K. Le Baron PIERIAN SOD LITY Malcolm Holmes puts University Orchestra through a workout. fl 192 lr After 135 years of masculine music-making, the Harvard University Orchestra this year went coeducational and became the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra. Only the Pierian Sodality itself, sponsor of the Harvard Orchestra, still remains closed to Radcliffe. The annual spring tour of the South was abandoned for the duration of the war as Manager Robert Jaffe began arranging concert engagements at schools more easily reached by railroad, and during the fall the orchestra played a series of local concerts. In November the orchestra played in the annual joint concert with the Radcliffe Orchestra and the Radcliffe Choral Society. The Paine Hall concert featured piano and cello concerti. A week later the orchestra presented a concert at Wellesley. Thomas Crowell, president of the Pierian, was assisted this year by Vice-President Melvin Wolfe, Treasurer Vernon Head, and Secretary Milton Van Dyke. And Mal Holmes goes into his twelfth year as conductor of the Sodality, cajoling music out of even the most mediocre fiddle, and inspired by the presence of Radcliffe to ever more lavish similes to describe a sour Pierian pizzicato. Organ! afim Serond Row: H. D. Slmrpe, S. Berzzrteizz, C. Adamrozz Front Row: F. de Hofmann, M. Rirbter, Preridezzg' L. H. Coben, Prefidentg R. Kaye, Secretary COUNCIL O OST-W R PRQBLEMS Post-War Problems Council executives plan for committee forums. rl 194 lr The Council on Post-War Problems has attempted to break through the political quiet that followed Pearl Harbor by emphasizing that the discussion of fundamental issues, far from weakening the war effort, gives it added fmpetus through presenting positive aims-that to those privileged to attend college there belongs responsibility for seeking an understanding of the causes of the war. Two world wars within twenty-five years seem ample proof that we cannot afford to win the war and lose the peace. Public opinion must be prepared well in advance or else another settlement will be rejected by a nation never made to realize what was involved in its professions of faith. Beginning in October, 1941, and continuing most suc- cessfully through the Summer School, the Council has pre- sented open meetings with Mrs. Roosevelt, Corliss Lamont, Ralph Barton Perry and others, as well as radio programs and discussion groups. Without any pretensions to being authoritative fact-finding groups, the discussion meetings have continually provided the best expert opinion in Profes- sors Kohn, Salvemini, Hansen, and Black, to mention a few. LIBERAL U I0 The Harvard Liberal Union, founded in the fall of 1940, is today the sole surviving college organization de- voted to partisan political activity. The Liberal Union was formed by students convinced by the Fall of France that the war for freedom is a world cause-an idea at the time quite alien to the sceptical youth of the nation. For over two years the Liberal Union has carried out a varied program of activities-meetings, election campaigns, work with civil liberties and labor groups-designed to implement the strug- gle against democracy's enemies abroad and at home. The Liberal Union has brought before the student body speakers known to the college community and many of national reputation as well-including such Hgures as Tom Eliot, Harry Bridges, Max Lerner, and Eleanor Roosevelt. But believing that a student can best understand his obliga- tions as a citizen of a democracy by actively participating in the workings of that democracy, the Liberal Union has de- voted its major energies to election campaigns, municipal and national alikeg to labor organizationg to bond sales and civilian defenseg and to successful cooperation with similar college groups throughout the nation. Shapley, Pollak, Kuhn discuss HLU'S election-day campaigns Serum! Row: A. Srlnwab, jr., T. S. Kulm, J. Leuemoaz Fro11iRow.' D. Lowenfbul, L. H. Pallak, Pl'EJid8I1l,' L. Sbapley, Vive Preridezm A. Yarnzalinrky 11195 J Outing Clubbers rest on their way up a New Hampshire mountain trail. Members can enjoy outdoor life during all four seasons. OLITI G CLUB The Harvard Outing Club was organized only two years ago for the purpose of bringing together all outdoor en- thusiasts interested in sharing their experiences with others. The response to this effort has been extremely gratifying, for now the Outing Club is one of the largest college organiza- tions, maintaining a vigorous program the year 'round, including such activities as hiking, camping, biking, canoeing, skiing, and skating. Outside affiliations of the club are numerous, and offer interesting and unusual advantages to club members. By joining the American Youth Hostel this past year, the Outing Club has been able to afford greater privileges to skiers, hikers, and bicyclists. Club membership in the United States Eastern Amateur Ski Association has aided qualified skiers to secure ratings for ski racing. The incorporation of the Bicycle Racing Club as a wing of the Outing Club has pro- vided the nucleus of a particularly active and enthusiastic group. Also one of the club's 'most attractive features is its membership in the Intercollegiate Outing Club Association, through which joint trips with the clubs of other colleges are made available. Four outings are sponsored annually by the I. O. C. A. itself, including the Dartmouth Ski Week-end on Mt. Moosilaukee. This year the Outing Club has been confronted with many serious problems as well as new responsibilities. Transportation difficulties and the consequent limitation of time available for trips make more meticulous planning neces- sary. With a three-semester college year, the club has assumed the handling of all recreational activities of the Harvard Summer School. Membership in the Club has also been offered to all graduated students in the University. H9611 HEMICAL CLUB Since 1885, when the Boylston Chemical Club was founded, its original purpose of entertaining and educating undergraduate chemists has been constantly served. One of the more ancient of the undergraduate associations, the club presents interesting and diversified programs to keep the over-worked lab men from becoming indistinguishable from their apparatus. When the club was first organized, the meetings were held in Boylston Hall of History-Gov-Bc fame where the University chemical labs were located. But in 1928 the department moved to spacious Mallinkrodt and the club, too, transferred to the new building, with its more adequate accommodations. The continuing virility of the organization is attested by the fact that last year's membership was an all-time high. Contrary, however, to popular belief, the advantages of the club are not limited to chemistry concentrators. Membership is open to all members of the University and during the past year a large proportion of the membership consisted of men from other fields with no more than a cultural interest in the mysteries of quantum mechanics as applied to chemical equilibria or Bohr's theory of energy levels in the hydrogen atom. Dilletantes and research men alike listen to prominent academic and industrial chemists and enjoy refreshments afterward. The officers for this year are: Donald B. Sparrow, President, Daniel M. Shook, Secretary-Treasurer, Richard S. Corley, Harold Small, and William Buddenberg, Executive Committee. Chemical Club members work in the laboratory. At meetings they drink from chemical glasses fpreviously rid of residuumj. FILM SOCIETY The Harvard Film Society was formed six years ago for the purpose of bringing certain memorable hlms to Harvard. Those who have participated in its work have believed that the motion picture could approach the high rank of an art, and in that belief they have presented a series of programs selected from the mammoth production output of the modern movie-industry. These pictures of genuine worth have appeared in all countries and in the many forms between the simple vigor of the early silents to the custom-made products of the glittering Hollywood studio. In 1942-43 the Film Society will for the first time have shown two programs: a special series was arranged for the hrst summer of our new three-term era. In these two series, there has been a wide scope of theme. The war, for instance, has received pertinent comment from the tragedy ofjeanne d'Arc, filmed in the last years of the silent lilm, and from the documentaries of the United Nations' War, which are still being acted on five continents. As for nationality, French, Russian, Swedish, Czech, Austrian, and British Hlms have been on the list with American pictures. The range of form has been from captions to surrealism, from slapstick to satire, from simple seriousness to valid tragedy. These programs have been the work of interested stud- ents on the Film Society Committee, but the response of the whole undergraduate body not only makes the exhibitions financially possible, but also makes the work worth while. For by their support, all the students become patrons of the film art and contribute to the growth of new standards in motion picture entertainment. Potemkin, the work of Russia's great director, S. M. Eisen- stein, has been a favorite of recent Film Society audiences. Mitglieder der VereinTurmwaechter versammeln sich im Low- ell Haus Turmzimmer um Lieder zu singen und bier zu trinken. ANGLI GE LUB The variety of student language groups indicates, in good part, the continuation of cultural understanding outside of the classroom. The Cirrolo Italiano held about half a dozen meetings in the year 1941-42. President Bricca led about twenty members, who listened to cultural talks in Italian and con- versed as much as possible in the language. Refreshments were served, and students from Wellesley and Radcliffe usually attended. The organization furthered interest in Italian cul- ture by offering twenty dollars in books for a prize essay. The Spanish Club met every three weeks in Phillips Brooks House. With Radcliffe invited, there were often thirty people to hear a talk by some Latin American consul r member of the Harvard faculty. Refreshments and informal mixing usually followed. Dr. Espinosa was Faculty Adviser and William Davis, President. The Verein Tzzrmwazecbter continued its meetings every other Wednesday evening in the Lowell House Tower Room. About forty members kept alive the traditions of pre-Nazi German student life with singing, beer, and Gemuetlicbkeii, Talks were made by German speaking faculty members. The club had several picnics with Radcliffe and held its customary banquet and dance in May. Mr. J. M. Hawkes was Faculty Adviser and William Thomson, President. The Cercle Francais was a small, but closely knit and active group, meeting every other week at Seven Ware Street. The meetings consisted of literary and political discussions, and the circle was closely associated with the Free French movement. It took a hard blow when its Faculty Adviser, Professor Louis Cons, died during the summer, but Professor Seznec was fortunately obtained to fill his place. -1I197l' PRE- EolcAL SOCIETY When the United States entered the war as an active belligerent, increasing importance was placed on the par- ticipation of all medical science in the nati'on's effort. But this trend only intensified an already existing condition in the relation between medicine and the problems ,of the armed services. Ever since the adoption of the conscription law in 1940, the Army and Navy made provision for the education of your physicians and surgeons through the close collabora- tion with the medical profession. Through a very successful series of meetings dealing with the general problems of the premedical student and the various fields of medical science, the Pre-Medical Society went far during the past year towards realizing its three-fold aim: education, service, and fellowship. At its open meetings, the Society presented such out- standing physicians as Dr. C. Sidney Burwell, Dean of the Harvard Medical School, Dr. Walter B. Cannon, eminent physiologist and authority on the autonomic nervous system, and Dr. Henry A. Murray, Director of the Harvard Psychologi- cal Clinic. Surgical films were shown at the closed meetings, each program being devoted to one branch of surgery and commented upon by an appropriate specialist. A discussion of courses for Freshmen, a guided tour of the Medical School, and a banquet honoring Dr. Donald M. Ferry, faculty advisor, completed the year's schedule. Officers during the spring and summer of 1942 were: Walterj. Lear, President, Carl M. Herbert, Secretary, Morton C. Wilson, Treasurer, Robert C. Rodger and Benedetto Fabrizi, junior Executive-Councilmen. During the fall- Richard R. Wood, President, Benedetto Fabrizi, Secretary, Richard L. Wechsler, Treasurer. Pre-Medical Society members gather around a projector before exhibiting a motion picture at one recent biweekly meeting. 41981- A mountaineer views unexplored Fairweather range in Alaska. Peaks in distance are 7000 feet from snow-covered base to top. MOU TAI EERI G Founded in 1924, the Harvard Mountaineering Club has had as its main aim the fostering and development of mountain climbing among students at the university. The war has made many changes, but it has not limited the ac- tivities of the club. The past year has witnessed the usual local trips to Quincy Quarries where new members learn the fundamentals of rock-climbing and obtain their athletic credit. Longer trips to the White Mountains, notably the ascents of Cannon Mountain by the Whitney-Gilman, and Old routes, the trips to the Pinnacle in Huntington Ravine and White Horse Ledge at North Conway have prepared men for rock-climbing in any mountain range in the world. Val- uable experience was gained last winter on the several trips to the club cabin on Mount Washington, where new and experienced members alike practiced ice-climbing in the Ravines. Noteworthy among these trips was the third ascent of the Pinnacle Gully by Maynard Miller '43, and Andrew Kauffman '43, on March 29, 1942. Last june, carefully selecting its most experienced members, the club sent an expedition to the Selkirk Range of British Columbia to test army equipment and special ra- tions for the air corps. Although hampered by had weather, the party succeeded in reaching two or three summits. The club's main efforts are now directed toward war. The club is prepared to train men for service in the Mountain Forces of the Army, and last summer the club continued on a minor scale the work of testing equipment which it had ac- complished in the Selkirks. President for 1942-43 is Andrew john Kauffman, 2nd '43, Vice President is John P. jewett '43, while William L. Putnam '45, and joseph Fitzpatrick '45 hold the offices of Treasurer and Secretary, respectively. Eno, Van Dyke, Fleming, Shepard rehearse one of their Radio Workshops plays before going on air in CrimsonNetwork studio. RADIO WORKSHOP Dedicated to the promotion and production of experi- mental radio drama, the Harvard Radio Workshop has con- tinued in the traditions established by its founder, Archibald MacLeish. Since its inception in 1939, the Workshop has experienced periodic slumps and revivals, but after its re- organization in 1941 by an enthusiastic group of sophomores, with Harold C. Fleming '44, as director, it has managed to produce a play a week, ranging from light comedy to highly experimental scripts. At the same time, a music department was organized to compose original music for the more important ofthe weekly plays. Chiefly due to the work ofjames Lawlor '44, the Workshop succeeded in producing its boldest experimental play, An Experiment in Words and Marie, which was described as an opera without singingf, Inqzzerz, a verse play for radio by Professor Theodore Spencer, began the 1942-43 season. Notable productions of the year were Milton Van Dyke's Take My Drnnz to England, a tale of the miracle of Dunkerque, and The Greekr Had a War, by Louis Eno. Also scheduled was a series of great plays, including the Oedzlbar Rex of Sophocles, a Fanrr in negro dia- lect, and The Emperor jones, by Eugene O'Neill. Besides its usual emphasis on Harvard and Harvard history, exemplified in such popular plays as Lo, the Batter Stinketbf and King Cotton Unrrowneci, the Workshop, recruit- ing a group of new writers, this year devoted much of its schedule to plays stressing the war and the war effort. Officers for this year were: Harold C. Fleming '44, Director, Louis Eno ,44, Secretary and Production Directorg Milton Van Dyke '44, Script Director, joseph B. Smith '44, Casting Director, andjames Lawlor '44, Musical Director. YACHT LLIB The last few years has definitely put Harvard among the top sailing colleges in the country. A large part of the credit for this fact must go to the Yacht Club. Composed of a group of enthusiastic mariners, it has gone all over the Eastern seaboard to bring back trophies to Cambridge. The yachtsmen occasionally use the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sailing Pavilion as their base for touring the Charles River Basin, but the Community Boat- house on the other side of the river is used more frequently. Though popular with Boston school children during the sum- mer, it is seldom used by them in the springand fall, Harvard yachstmen profit by these slack seasons along with North- eastern, Boston University, Boston College, and Tufts. Competition was provided by these other colleges in the Great- er Boston Intercollegiate Championship, but Harvard won both spring and fall matches handily. The Yacht Club has not rested content with these local laurels. Among the other honors the club has won in the past year are: the Boston Dinghy Cup, the Danmark Trophy, and the United States Coast Guard Academy Quad Meet. Over the last year the Club has undertaken some radical changes in its policy. Every member is encouraged to sail whenever possible. Those men whose teehnique improves considerably are given the chance to crew on the team, and if they go farther than this they are allowed to skipper the Crimson in future regattas. The club is still striving to get all of the experienced yachstmen in college into its organiza- tion, for there are still a few who are not regular members. And it has been said by racing olhcials that Harvard has more prominent yachtsmen in its ranks than any other college in the country. Yachtsmen cluster around a buoy at the start of a race. Harvard mariners use the M. I. T. boathouse and dinghies for many races. EAS! 41991 u tiff ' , .... A-., '7 ' -, , ,. f I Q ' --i. 3,- qjg-A-:-.-,,,. :ngekfgggyff .1 sf-,Q-f , ' -r , ' - f -. ,' ie,-ga' .1? t Q ew- 1, ,-ff i . , . M 5.4 i ,. ,A.Vn,t:.f Jg ,j ng 'V .- rfb' gg, ' ' 1' , :2:v,7.'xf . cj- ff' ,- ,' 'f - ..-1 - -- ff-tw ' --i'-.:ffef .,a-f- f , e -' -,.sf'f't at T M I S C E I. N E 0 U S . - , H1 .,..m,. .. .asm , -e A' bv , nl . . 'T Z - ' -ft ft 'R T 'i '3 ' u-24 ' 1 , , . x Q 's U Q . A f fs - - -' .1 ' ' '.-' to A,,- . ' -Q' bfi -ts, . , i E ' 12l i'.4 5?ht-sez-fire-is, - it 1 C ' q' ,,,, ' s A 4. :iff . Tin Q C ' 'I ' ' 'S ' , f it I E ig I -- 'F 'f t '-lf -' A J ' U -' ' Lil viii , as is , ,, . ...A . .A., .ole Skiers plod their way up the headvvall of Tuckerman's Ravine. TheWhite Mountains have some of America's best skiing slopes. There's a club or a society or an organization for almost everything at Harvard, and perhaps that's one of its most characteristic features. Their complexion has changed greatlyg a few years ago most were intensely political, repre- senting all shades of liberalism, conservatism, intetventionism and isolationism. Crowded meetings worked themselves into fnnnzies S enkin nl. nin Votin 1 The War has abolished Amember ofHarvardsguer1lla un1t,w1th realistically blackened gi gi g face re ares to blow u aerial of radio station WCOP much of that, and most of the organizations that have held , P P P ' on through greatly curtailed time appeal to some special interest, such as field of concentration, future vocation, or h0bbY- their hobby first-hand. The Stamp Club kept collecting, mix- France Forever had a sizable number of members who ing coins and pistols with the ordinary items, while the were actively engaged in publicizing Fighting France. French Photography Club kept developing in its own darkroom. movies and talks made up most of its program. Each of the While the wat meant the end of such organizations as R-O-T-C-S had fl SOCU11 Club HS 0116 Of ifS HllXi1i21fiSS- Mil the abortive Committee Against Military Intervention and the Sci's Caisson Club gave advance course students a chance to Student Defense League, one intrepid group stuck on, The get together without military discipline at frequent meet- Pacifist Society continued its frequent meetings, impressing 1085 H1 the Shf1f1HOf1 Hall hCHdqU2lffCfS- The 11811211 dances students with the difference between pacilism and America were curtailed by the usual war curtailments. Similarly, the First, The Society even made the Pages of the New Yorker Naval Society served as an embryonic officers' club for the when it invited men, women, and psychologists to one of Naval ROTC Juniors and Seniors, devoting its time mainly its Levetett House meetingg, to meetings at which distinguished Naval officers spoke. Both the Engineering Society and the Biological 30- Fastest-growing of the many hobby organizations was ciety were examples of the common-interest type of organiza- the Railroading Association, which was born in Holworthy tion. The Engineers, with headquarters in Pierce Hall, were by a group of Freshmen in 1941 and spread to the Houses last considerably swelled by the influx into the field as a result of fall. Enthusiastic members constructed and traded models, the war, and their meetings invariably concentrated on the saw movies of railroading, and even took train trips to study wartime aspects of th ' ' -I zoo y e profession. The Biological Society ORGANIZATICNS was also mainly for concentrators, but included as honorary members several professors and its meetings were open to all who were interested. Two more or less athletic organizations were the Bicycle Club and the Barn Dance Society. The former ran races to waiting females at Wheaton and Wellesley as well as holding less strenuous outings. The latter sponsored many dances in Mem Hall, at which either professional or student callers led panting devotees in the intricate maneuvers of country dancing. Flying Club members were first kept on ground by the prohibition against civilian flying, and although it seemed for a while that they would be able to take part in the civilian air patrol, the Club was finally forced to cease operation for the duration. The Chess Club, on the other hand, was not greatly affected by the war, and managed to continue the brain ex- ercise quietly but steadily. Of the many councils of concentrators formed to dis- cuss the scholastic problems of the field, only the Council of History and Literature Concentrators managed to hold on. Bringing faculty and students together, the Council worked on such problems as special requirements for degrees. The Classical Club was a more unofiicial group of men interested in a particular subject. Harvard's many foreign students had a means of getting together in the International Club, which held receptions and Militant Aid to Britain members break up a Student Union picket line in Yard. This was typical of factious disputes in 1940. dances for them. The Chinese Students' Club did the same job for one segment of the foreign Harvardians. Among the religious societies, Avukah was the largest, with the Christian Science Organization and St. Paul's Catho- lic Club also claiming student membership. Russian War Relief had a Harvard chapter which helped to raise funds and run rallies, and the Pan-American Club was the remainder of the various Latinophile groups, attempting to promote inter- American understanding. Bird-lovers joined the Ornithological Society and roamed the New England countryside looking for new species, and recording them carefully and happily. Meanwhile Rifle Club members practised on the Navy Sci range in Mem Hall, but more in order to get range proficiency than to kill the Ornithologists' friends. Best men in the Club usually made up the Rifle Team. Similarly, the Ski Club merged vaguely into the Ski Team. And the N. C. Club was mysterious and practically non-existent. But a small group of Seniors had revived the defunct john Harvard Society back in Freshman days, and although they did nothing at all they were happy in the knowledge that theoretically at least they were the custodians of the archives and official maintainers of tradition. The Debating Council's activities were considerably affected by accelerated schedules and transportation difficul- ties. Several debates were held with neighboring colleges, however, almost invariably on war-time subjects. Finally, perhaps the most active of the new organiza- tions fostered by the war was Harvard's guerilla unit. Prac- ticing almost every summer afternoon in the field behind the Business School, a large number of students gained proficiency in heaving hand-grenades and garroting sentries. Debating Chairman jack Corrigan plans rebuttal with Mal Milligan. Debates are held yearly with men from nearby colleges. 12011- Initiates to clubs suffer indignities like climbing stepladders through the Yard and measuring Widener's steps with a fish. For the benefit of their Pi Eta cohor T E Q S The purpose of all the clubs is to provide the means and the milieu for fun and friendship. Over and above this function, Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770 and Pi Eta have been occupied with the production of musical shows. While the famous Pudding shows have been abandoned due to war conditions, Pi Eta has gone on producing plays, giving a per- formance of Blondes For Defense last spring at Fort Devens. The president and vice-president of these two organizations in the past year have been respectively james G. Ducey and George Van Buren H. Day, Daniel Needham and William H. Latimer, Jr. On the other hand the aim of the Signet Society, headed by George S. Richardson and Harold W. Solomon, is to bring together people of a variety of backgrounds to a common meeting place of interests and abilitiesg it combines the fellowship of a club with distinction in literary and extra- curricular Helds. Presupposed in the notion of genial companionship in the case of the final clubs is community of background, in- terests and personality. This, aided by the fact that family membership gives priority to a candidate and that his election ts, Harry O'Hare plays the piano and Dan Needham tells a tall ' h B one in t e oylston Street clubhouse. 42021 must be unanimous, means that members of the linal clubs have usually lived in the same social group and gone to the same Eastern private schools. About one tenth of every class is represented by the members ofthe hnal clubs. Sophomores who are candidates have a chance to size up the clubs and be sized up by them at punches and luncheons which are now held in the summer as well as the fall. The presidents and vice-presidents of these clubs during the past year have been: A.D.: F. Barton Harvey,jr. and George E. Putnam, Delphic: Robert A. Cushman and George H. Hackett, jr.g D. U.: George F. Waters and Anthony R. Whittemoreg Fly: joseph L. Grant andjohn Richardson,jr.g Fox fDigamma lzjames C. Dudley and Anson G. McCookg Iroquois: Matthew L. Looram and Robert A. W. Braunsg Owl: Henry R. I-leyburn and john A. Paine, Jr.g Phoenix-S. K.: Thomas W. Boynton and Peter Dunhamg Porcellian: Richard Harte, jr. and S. Stuy- vesant Fishg Spee: Darcy Curwen and H. W. Ford King. The Speakers, a l'waiting club fwhose members may also become members ofthe final clubsl has been led by Joseph P. Downer and Laurence Groves. Threatened by the fact that all members must now pay for twenty-one meals in the House and by the expanding draft, the post-war future ofthe clubs will depend upon their ability to produce dynamic leaders, and above all, to profit from the change. Members of Hasty Pudding relax in their historic living room. Paul Robeson fnbovej talks with Dramatic Club guests at the Sig- net, while members Cbelowj converse in one of two dining rooms. vi ,vEU9f52 4V-Y V, A W . . . , . , . .. f5e3'f:i'?fi?ff, Because of the expense and time involved, club musicals, like Blondes for Defense Cbelawj, have ceased until the war's end. 42031 I 4 4 h . 4 '. 'Zig- v. '- 2 - - W , ' 4' 1 ' :,E'1ii5f?f ' 'Zz +45,:..,:, - xfi ff ---ws. ..-wx: .. ' -- f' ' , .,1.i.1.:-:+-:-'-- 1e:525!i1 f.:' ., . ,ff M' L V -- -',' :rf ,,,,, ' . I1?5,K113:U1f-Q'-5. . ,., .V '- 2. g . . -g: 3:-:agzpr-514,-12: ' w Q , 6 . f gm. f .... 1-4 ..,..... 'g:'.j'5:5:1:v-' -Q --.- V'-1-wwgg-., -lll -M 'img kI42'zz.a,,,2:r,.:,5:Ff- , ' 1:2 ----x 4 W 5 - g:: '- :',t'u 'f ff... ' X2.t.+g-y-g..-5.-.3ff.-.452-Q-25Eff2.iE., vfifgsf15:1:gi-:3r:112z3:5s::zr-Qx,if-:fea5-::zxa4:2x:2:2-'rf-'NA-'1 . .. ..-5 . .-1-. - . -'-A I ml Y 5 f I . -, ' .F . ,Q wan.. . V 2 , 23 vi Q2 ' - 'Y 5. I . ,-fx. ,y g. g . Q RQ. I -1 g.- Q: A 1 51,':s:z,e,:f w2- wx . -:fy :13z:iiz55:s:i5Z?'-.' ,de 5' 4 ! Vw? - Q WF T? .5 Q, .Q ,. .ww W4 I A .- -'-.: - . 4, 1 Q I .:..-eh A f . ix . 204 I 5 Q, W ., E ? 1 gf ' y v o f . .' M . Q I, f an . , QU U Sw X S. NS J Y Q 55 QF H 44 A S ALS George M. Bardilt, jr. john D. Ezzfden E. Thayer Drake, III Fim' Marina! Second Marylaal Third Marina! CLASS FHCIERS Dan H. Fenn, jr. Andrew IV. Weffhj Treamrer Sew'etary Donald Harting Robert Mofkin jolan E. Corrigan, jr. Tbonzax N. Bridge Cborifler Odist Oraror Poet 12061- C ass Day QO TIHUIIQQ Stephen W. Gzfo rd, I I I Permanent Cmmmmee Hngh M. Hyde . X W x A j. Thoniaf Axon Charlef T. Cowen Alhert P. Eoerzir, jr. Alexander L. jachfon, IH Cleo A. O'D0nnell, jr, William C. Palfon, jr. Hass A. LeRoy Atherton, jr. Broohf N. Heath john P. Kennedy, jr. Palmer Oyhorn Edward T. Wentworth, jr. 1 207 IL IRVING ASHER ABRAMS Born May 8, 1923, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Shady Side. Home address: 1200 Malvern Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Winthrop House. Tennis squad C515 House baseball 131, Field of concentration: Eco- nomics, Intended war service: Army. EARLE DOUGLAS ACKER Born August 19, 1922, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Prepared at North Quincy High. Home address: 51 Amesbury Street, Quincy, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Varsity Club C21, Hockey team fl, 21, House crew f21. Field of concentration: Chemistry. THOMAS JAMES ADAMS, JR. Born May 20, 1919, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 15 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Caisson Club f31. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war ser- vice: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Army. THEODORE MATTHEW ADELSON Born March 25, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 147 Austin Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Stamp Club C1, 21, president 131: Avukah Society C3, 41, House baseball C313 House basketball K3 . Daniel A. Buckley Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Army Intelligence. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. WILLIAM HORN AINSLIE Born February 5, 1921, in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 120 Clive Street, Metuchen, New Jersey. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, settle- ment work Q11, Riiie Club Rifle team Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Surgeon. GEORGE AINSWORTH, JR. Born September 8, 1921, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home ad- dress: Orchard Farm, New Hyde Park, Long Island, New York. College address: 59 Plymp- ton Street. Football squad Q11. Field of concentration: Mathematics. PAUL BIGELOW AKIN Born January 7, 1921, in Alton, Illinois. Pre- pared at Morristown. Home address: Box 581, Fairmount, Alton, Illinois. Kirkland House. Track team 111: cross country team John Charles Hill Award. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Steel Manufacturing. ROBERT RAMSEY ALBERS Born April 50, 1922, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 55 Irving Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Adams House. Red Book, business board: Phillips Brooks House, hand book committee 121, Naval Society Q11. Swimming squad Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. SUMNER GEORGE ALBION Born March 30, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 789 Commonwealth Avenue, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Red Book. Track squad C215 track team: cross country team f11, wrestling squad C215 wrestling team, manager C513 House baseball C213 House football f2, 51, House track f21. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Farmer. ALVIN SCOTT ALDRICH Born July 15, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 270 Boylston Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Football team 111, House baseball C215 House football 131, House hockey 12, 51. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HENRY TUREMAN ALLEN, III Born December 1, 1921, in Paris, France. Prepared at Kenmore High. Home address: Fort Myer, Virginia. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Field Artillery. RICHARD HERMAN ALLEN Born July 9, 1922, in Lakewood, Ohio. Pre- pared at Kenmore High. Home address: 97 Stillwell Avenue, Kenmore, New York. Eliot House. A.R.P. Warden Q2, 31. Soccer As- sistant manager fl, 21, varsity manager Harvard Club of Buffalo Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business Administration. 208 1 Uzr' 6172 ROBERT DORCHESTER ALLEN Bornjune 17, 1923, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Meriden High. Attended Boston University half year. Home address: 1153 7th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden C55, Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Geolo- gISC. WILLIAM ALBERT ALLEN Born November 16, 1921, in Bangor, Maine. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 66 Glen- dale Road. Sharon, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Ord- nance. JOHN SIMMONS ALLISON Born December 26, 1921, in Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress1 161 Myrtle Street, Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. House football 135. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. Intended war service:Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. MILTON AMILL Born January 11, 1925, in Yauco, Puerto Rico. Prepared at Worcester. Home address: Yauco, Puerto Rico. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. FRANCIS INMAN AMORY, JR. Born April 3, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 11 Lime Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Adams House. Baseball squad Q15g House baseball f25g House football C25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E., A. D. Club. Field of con- centration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Marine Corps. JAMES SHERRILL ANDERSON Born May 12, 1922, in Mayfield, Kentucky. Prepared at Asheville. Home address: 620 Chappell Court, Mayfield, Kentucky. Adams House. Glee Club C2-45. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. nf 1944 LLOYD MERRITT ANDERSON Born January 10, 1921, in Manchester, New Hampshire, Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 85 West Grand Avenue, Old Orchard Beach, Maine. College address: No. 1 Varsity Club. Football team Q1-35. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. PHILIP WARREN ANDERSON Born December 13, 1925, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at University of Illinois High. Home address: 811 Michigan Avenue, Urbana, Illinois. Winthrop House. Moun- taineering Club C55. Harvard College National Scholarship, Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physics. SCHOFIELD ANDREWS, JR. Born April 28, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at St. Pauls Home address: 9002 Crefeld Street, Chestnut Hill, Pennsyl- vania. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Ldll1fI0ll1l, advertising man G55 Cais- son Club, Varsity Club CZ, 55. Crew C1-55. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: American History, Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE MOTLEY ANGLE Born May 28, 1922, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 43 East Boulevard, Rochester, New York. Winthrop House. A.R.P. CZ, 55, Yacht Club C2, 55: Ski Club C2, 55. Crew squad f25g soccer squad 65, lacrosse team Q25, House baseball C2, 55. Fox Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. SAMUEL TARSHIS ANSELL Born May 25, 1922, in Montreal, Canada. Prepared at Williston. Home address: 142 Warren Street, Newton, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Lmzzpoon 115, Ref! Book, art board, Avukah Society fl, 25. Field of con- centration: English. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Car- tooning. NATHAN ANTHONY, II Born August 25, 1922, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home ad- dress: 365 Shore Road, Greenwich, Connecti- cut. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration- English. 12o9I HENRY WILLIAM APFELBACH Born September 8, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Chicago Latin. Home address: 6163 Winthrop Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Dunster House. Verein Turmwaechter 135, Yacht Club House baseball 125. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. DAVID BULLARD ARNOLD, JR. Born july 14, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 35 Spooner Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Smoker Committee 115, Caisson Club 13, 45. Football squad, assistant manager 11-35: House hockey 12, 35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Owl Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. WALTER RODES ARNOLD Born July 23, 1922, in Plainfield, New Jersey- Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home. address: Corbin, Virginia. Eliot House. Advocate 125. Field of concentration: English. HENRY ARONSON Born March 18, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- dtsetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 50 Bicknell Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts.. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Fine Arts. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. ' FRED GEORGE ARRAGG Born October 25, 1922, in Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 70 Cross Street, Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Pre-Medical So- ciety 115. Track squad 125. Rebecca C. Ames Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemi- cal Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ' JAMES OWEN ARTHUR, JR. Born May 16, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 93 Lincoln Road, Medford, Massachusetts. Filed at home. Field of concentration: Eng- is . 12101- HENRY ASHWORTH Born December 31, 1921, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 596 Madison Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Crimson Network 125. House crew 125, House hockey 125. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army, RICHARD WALTON ASPEN Born May 1, 1920, in Hubbardston, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Gardner. Home ad- dress: 324 West Broadway, Gardner, Massa- chusetts. College address: 15 Oxford Street. Pre-Medical Society 11, 25, Outing Club Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ALFRED LEROY ATHERTON, JR. Born November 22, 1921, in Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 98 Ellington Street, Longmeadow, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Crimron, editorial board 12, 35, Rec! Book, editor: Union Commit- tee, Caisson Club 135, Verein Turmwaechter 135. Signet Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. JOHN THOMAS AXON Born january 25, 1923, in West Plains, lyliss- ouri. Prepared at jefferson City High. Home address: 29 Southland Court, Towson, Mary- land. Leverett House. War Service Committee 12, 35. Basketball squad 11, 25, House base- ball 12, 35: House football 125. Harvard Col- lege Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. JOHN HEAFIELD BACON Born April 2, 1923, in Wellesley, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 93 Garden Street, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. THEODORE STEVENSON BAER Born November 29, 1922, in Macon, Georgia. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 12 Carpen- ter Street, Norwood, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Crimrozi 12, 55, Debating Council, treasurer 12, 35, Liberal Union 11-353 Student Defense League 115. Wendell Phillips Mem- orial Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Area of Social Science. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government service. Che 611155 JOHN CHRIST BAIMAS Born June 22, 1922, in Fitchburg, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Fitchburg High. Home address: 20 Simonds Street, Fitchburg, Massa- chusetts, Adams House. Band OJ, Classical Club fl-30. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. MORTON HOLBROOKE BAKER Born April 15, 1921, in Tacoma, Washington. Attended Pasadena Junior College 2 years. Home address: 175 South Mentor Street, Pasadena, California. Dunster House. Glee Club QD: Mountaineering Club 12, 20, Outing Club GJ. House basketball QZJ. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. THEODORE COLCORD BAKER, JR. Born February 15, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 5 Perrin Road, Brookline, Massachu- setts. College address: 9 Linden Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E,: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WALTER STEWART BAKER Born March 10, 1922, in Chester, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 2709 Mount Holly Street, Baltimore, Mary- land. Dunster House. Basketball team QU, track team CU, House basketball GJ, House crew C2Jg House football CZJ, House dance committee QZJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Telephone Com- pany. DAVID BALDWIN Born February 9, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Loomis. Home ad- dress: 91 Somerset Street, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House QU, Glee Club CZJ. Hockey team GJ: House football KZJ, House hockey f2Jg House committee CZJ. Owl Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Marine Corps. DONALD WEESNER BALES Born February 4, 1922, in Morristown, Ten- nessee. Prepared at Morristown High. Home address: 427 East 4th North Street, Morris- town, Tennessee. Leverett House. House basketball Matthew and Mary E. Bart- lett Scholarship. Field of concentration' Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation' Surgery. of 7944 HENRY HOFFELD BAME Born November 2, 1920, in Buffalo, New York, Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 818 Au- burn Avenue, Buffalo, New York. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks I--louse, social service f1JgA.R.P. Warden KZ, 55- Squash squad GJ: squash team CU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. RICHARD LANGE BANKS Born November 15, 1921, in Portland, Maine Prepared at Kimball Union. Home address: 12 Stonybrook Road, Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Leverett I-louse. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Journalism. ALVIN BARTON BARBER, JR. Born September 1-1, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Sidwell Friends'. Home address: R,F.D. 5, Bethesda, Maryland. I-lolworthy Hall. IRVING BARKAN Born June 29. 1922, in Kurjanitz, Poland. Prepared at Heights High. Home address: 3000 Corydon Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Leverett House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Policeman CZJ. Baseball team, associate manager 12, ZJ, House baseball C2, 5J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. DAVID FITZ BARNES Born May 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 75 Fletcher Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Adams House Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Adams House. Phillips Brooks I-louse, social service CID, Outing Club f2, 35. Swimming team Q2, 3J. Harvard Club of Belmont Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. DONALD GREY BARNHOUSE, JR. Born July 25, 1926, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: Barchdale, Doylestown, Penn- sylvania. Lowell House. Glee Club QZJ House football CD. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended permanent vocation' Ministry. 211 WILLIAM POLLARD BARTLETT Born January 19, 1923, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Mount Hermon. Home address: 62 Bartlett Street, Chelmsford Centre, Massachusetts. Lowell House. A.R.P. Wfarden Q, 3J, Red Cross, life saving QZJ. Swimming squad fljg House crew CZJQ House football 135. Class of 1897 Award. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Retail merchandising. ROBERT WENTWORTH BATES, JR. Born January 20, 1921, in Santa Barbara, California. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: Rincon del Mar Ranch, Carpinteria, California. Lowell House. Field of concen- tration: Geological Sciences. NORMAN PRESCOTT BEANE, JR. Born October 18, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 51 Saunders Street, Brighton, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Swimming squad QU. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended war service: Coast Guard. GR ANT DONALD BEARDSLEY Born March 13, 1922, in Eugene, Oregon. Prepared at Eugene High. Home address: 673 Tenth Avenue West, Eugene, Oregon. Adams House. Field of concentration: Biology. JOSEPH JOHN BECKER Born December 14, 1922, in Germany. Pre- pared at Winchester High. Home address: 9 Kenwin Road, Winchester, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Photography Club GJ, Engineering Society. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. MARCUS BEEBE, JR. Born August 25, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home ad- dress: 27 Everett Avenue, Winchester, Massa- chusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Football squad Q1Jg hockey squad, hockey team fl-3J, tennis squad Hasty Pudding-Institute of177Og D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Marine Corps. army MYRT ON FREEMAN BEELER Born April 27, 1922, in Winthrop, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 204 Marlboro Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. Adams House. Harvard Club of Quincy Schol- arship, Field of concentration: English. In- tended war service: Naval Air Corps. ROBERT JOHNSON BELL Born November 30, 1921, in Columbus, Ohio. Prepared at St. Albans Attended Bowdoin College 1 year. Home address: 115 East Rich Street, Columbus, Ohio. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. DAVID BENTON Born April 2, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 3 Pequos- sette Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Crimson Network CU: Engineering Society QU. Field of concentration: Psy- chology. SHELDON KUCIEL BEREN Born October 7, 1922, in Marietta, Ohio. Pre- pared at Marietta High. Home address: 111 Sacra Via, Marietta, Ohio. Eliot House. Rez! Book, editorial board, Debating Council fl, ZJ, vice-president C353 Boylston Chemical Club CZ, 3Jg Avukah Society Q2, 32. House basketball Q2, 32. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. WARREN STANLEY BERG BornJanuary 17, 1922, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 140 Line Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Varsity Club. Baseball team C1-55. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neer. JAMES SEYMOUR BERGER Born March 1, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day. Home address: 903 Park Place, Brooklyn, New York. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House QU: Pre-Medical Society QZJ. Wres- tling squad QU. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Che Zia STUART MARSHALL BERINGER Born january 27, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 219 Rockingstone Avenue, Larchmont, New York. Leverett House. Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. ELIHU HERBERT BERMAN Born july 20. 1922, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 132 Terry Road, Hartford, Connecticut, Dunster House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Police CZ, 31. Track team Q1-31, soccer team K1-31: House baseball 1313 House basketball f21. Henry D. andjonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. SHELDON DAVID BERMAN Born March 19, 1922, in Toledo, Ohio. Pre- pared at Western Reserve. Home address: 40 Proctor Place, Toledo, Ohio. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House C115 Foreign Relations Club C113 American Civilization Club Q11. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Motion picture exhibitor. DAVID GEORGE BERNARD Born October 30, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 15 Hillside Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachu- setts. College address: 22 Plympton Street. Naval Society C31. Owl Club. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. ROBERT LOUIS BERNSTEIN Born January 5, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lincoln School of Teacher's College. Home address 40 East 88th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Band 12, 31: Crimson Network Q2, 31. House basketball C213 House dance committee 12, 31. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. SUMNER THURMAN BERNSTEIN Born March 12, 1924, in Portland, Maine. Prepared at Deering High. Home address: 184 Bolton Street, Portland, Maine. Leverett House. Gmzrdian QZ, 31, Phillips Brooks House, speakers' committee Q11 Council on Post-War Problems, executive committee C31. House football C2, 31. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. af 1944 MALCOLM BERSOHN Born May 13, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Attended Columbia 1 year. Home address: 450 West End Avenue, New York, New York. College address: 5 Linden Street. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching, ROBERT CHARLES BERTUCIO Born january 18, 1922, in Fitchburg, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 63 Park Edge Avenue, Springheld, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Track team QI1. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ALFRED MILTON BETTMAN Bornjune 18, 1922, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Pre- pared at Loomis. Home address: 1421 Elmhurst Place, Cincinnati, Ohio. Leverett House. Yacht Club Q11. Field of concentration: Anthropology. ROBERT BUDD BETTS Born November 28, 1922, in Easton, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 1-1410 Washington Street, Easton, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House f11, Pi Eta Theatricals f21. Baseball team 111: House baseball, House basketball. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Field Artillery. RICHARD ARTHUR BEYER Bornjune 21, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Lake Forest High. Home address: Lake Bluff, Illinois. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House Q2, 31, A.R.P. Warden f2, 31. Tennis squad Q1, 21, tennis team: House war service committee KZ, 31, Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOHN LAWRENCE BIANCHI Born December 30, 1920, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Worcester, Home ad- dress: 428 Shrewsbury Street, Worcester, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. Track team C1, 21. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. 213 EDMUND RANDOLPH BIDDLE Born February 27, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Millbrook. Attended University of New Mexico half year. Home address: 1669 31st Street, Washington, D, C. Leverett House. Crimson Network, program board C2, BD, Liberal Union C1, Zjg Free French Club C2, 55, Student Defense League CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Government. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government administration. NICHOLAS BENJAMIN DUKE BIDDLE Born September 1, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 1009 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Crew Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Army. HENRY FORBES BIGELOW, JR. Born March 18, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: Main Street, South Lancaster, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Ski Club C1, ZJ. Ski team C1, 2J, captain Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. BRADLEY BIGELOW Born October 1, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Attended Williams 1 year. Home address: Jaffrey, New Hamp- shire. Winthrop House. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. FRANKLIN SWIFT BILLINGS, JR. Born June 5, 1922, in Woodstock, Vermont. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Wood- stock, Vermont. Winthrop House. A.R.P. C2, 3Jg Stamp Club C1-30, secretary and treas- urer C2J. Baseball team, manager C31 g wrestling squad CID, soccer team CU. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. MILTON NATHAN BINDER Born November 6, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Horne address: 55 Wildwood Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Economics. 12141- JOHN NORRIS BINGHAM Born December 24, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 145 Prospect Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: German. WILLIAM JOHN BINGHAM, JR. Born April 16, 1921, in Belmont, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 987 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. College address: 22 Plympton Street. Football team, manager C1Jg track squad C2-3J. Owl Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. FREDERIC HIGGINSON BIRD Born February 1, 1922, in Bala, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Episcopal. Home address: St, Asaph's Rectory, Bala, Pennsylvania. Win- throp House. Phillips Brooks House CU. Football squad CU, House football C2, BJ. Field of concentration: Classics. HAROLD WILLIAM BLACKEBY Born May 24, 1925, in Mount Kisco, New York. Prepared at Pawling. Home address: 42 Mountain Avenue, Mount Kisco, New York. Eliot House. House Athletic Secretary CSD. House baseball C2j, House football C2, 5J, House track CZJ. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Journalist. LUCIAN RICHARD BLACKMER Born October 28, 1922, in Webster Groves, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day. Home address: 411 Woodlawn Avenue, Web- ster Graves, Missouri, College address: 5 Linden Street, Rez! Book, circulation board, Phillips Brooks House C1J. Field of concen- tration: English. HENRY WILLIAM BLAKE, II Born February 15, 1925, in New Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Millbrook. Home address: 211 Nelson Road, Scarsdale, New York. Eliot House. Liberal Union CU. Field ofconcentration: Literature. Che Lyla GEORGE WHITFIELD BLANCHARD Born December 20, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day. Home address: 1044 84th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Kirkland House. Rez! Boyle, literary board. Football team C113 wrestling team C115 lacrosse team C1, 21, House football C2, 51. Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics, Intended permanent vocation: Business. HERBERT XVHEELER BLANCHARD, II Born November 18, 1920, in Concord, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Choate. Home address: Alcott Road, Concord, Massachusetts. Thayer Hall, Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Engi- neers. GEORGE HAROLD BLAXTER Born April 2, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania- Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 1414 Bennington Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 177Og Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Law. BURTON PETER BLOCK Born September 5, 1925, in Saginaw, Michigan. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 625 Tazewell Pike, Fountain City, Tennessee. Adams House. Crimson Network, technical board C2, 51. Assistant house athletic secre- tary C51. Harvard College National Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. DAVID BODANSKY Born March 10, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 454 West 120th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, settle- ment house work C11, Liberal Union C1, 215 A.R.P. C21. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physicist. CALVIN EUGENE BOE Born April 12, 1922, in Fergus Falls, Minne- sota. Prepared at Washington. Home ad- dress: 406 West Vernon Avenue, Fargus Falls, Minnesota. Kirkland House. Red Book, Band C1-51, Dramatic Club C11g Red Cross C21, American Civilization Group Har- vard Club of Minnesota.Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. af 1944 WYTHE MACRAE BOGY Born October 1, 1922, in Memphis, Tennessee. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 98 Good- wyn Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee. Leverett House. I-larvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Journalism. MASON LELAND BOI-IRER Born February 1, 1925, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Lake Forest High. Attended University of Arizona 1 year. Home address: 120 South Sheridan Road, Lake Forest, Illinois. Dunster House. Track squad C5, 41, cross country squad C5, 41. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Infantry. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ROBERT ROACH BOOT Born May 13, 1922, in Denver, Colorado. Prepared at East High. Home address: 1859 High Street, Denver, Colorado. Leverett House. Mountaineering Club C11g Ski Club CI1. Crew squad C11g House crew C2, 51. Rocky Mountain Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOSEPH CONRAD BOTHWELL, JR. Born August 2, 1922, in Palmer, Massachusetts. Prepared at Palmer High. Home address: 161 Westmoreland Avenue, Longmeadow, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden C515 St. Paul's Club, president C2, 51. House base- ball C21, House dance committee, chairman C21, N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Area of Social Science. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. WILLIAM JAMES BOUWSMA Born November 22, 1925, in Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Prepared at Lincoln High. Home ad- dress: 5551 North Street, Lincoln, Nebraska. Lowell House, Phillips Brooks House C1, 21, Student Union C11, A.R.P. C5, 41. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. MURRAY ELLIOT BOVARNICK. BornJune 22, 1925, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston English. Home address: 1152 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Crimron, business board C2-41, A.R.P. Warden C2, 51, American Civilization Group C11. House dance com- mittee C31. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government economist. 215 RICHARD BOWEN Born May 3, 1922, in Fall River, Massachusetts. Prepared at Providence Country Day. Home address: Box 4, Warren, Rhode Island. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden, fire lighter C2, 3J, Ornithological Club C1j, director C2, 3J: Yacht Club CU: Naval Science Rifle team C2, 35. Crew squad CIJ, House crew CZJ. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN BENJAMIN BOWMAN Born July 14, 1922, in Alliance, Ohio. Pre- pared at Alliance High. Home address: 602 West State Street, Alliance, Ohio. Winthrop House. Red Book, editorial staff, Caisson Club C3, 4J. House baseball C31 Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HALLOWELL BOWSER Born December 10, 1921, in New York, New York, Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 695 Madison Street, Brooklyn, New York. Winthrop House. Crimron, editorial board C2-45. House track CU. Signet Society. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Writing. DONALD STANLEY BRADSHAW Born January 6, 1923, in Bogota, New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Home address: 28 Elmwood Avenue, Bogota, New Jersey. College address: 46 Mount Vernon Street. House crew Clj Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business administration. JEROME IRA BRAWER Born December 1, 1922, in Paterson, New Jersey. Prepared at Eastside High. Home address: 411 East 50th Street, Paterson, New Jersey. Adams House. A.R.P. CZJ, Avukah Society CIJ. House baseball C213 House basketball C2j. Field of concentration: Area of Social Sciences. Intended war service: Infantry. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness management. ELLIOTT RICHMOND BREWER Born February 3, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Baldwin High. Home address: 115 Bay Street Drive, Baldwin, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentra- tion: English and Philosophy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. 12161- THOMAS NILSEN BRIDGE Born September 2, 1921, in Middletown, Ohio. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 303 Elm Street, Franklin, Ohio. Winthrop House. Liberal Union C1, 25, Class Poet. Football squad CU: football team CU, lacrosse team C1-35, captain CBJ: House football CZJ. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Navy. LEON ROYDEN BRIGGS, JR. Born June 15, 1922, in San Diego, California- Prepared at San Diego High. Home address: 5728 Herman Avenue, San Diego, California. Lowell House. Band C1-3Jg Red Cross C2, 3 . House basketball C3J, House football C3 . Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Naval Medical Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT MASON BRIGGS Born October 2, 1923, in Plymouth, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Plymouth High. Home address: Halfway Pond, Plymouth, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Ornithological Club C1-35. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended war service: Field Artillery. WILLIAM ELLERY BRIGHT, III Born March 6, 1922, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 14 Algonquin Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. 150-lb. crew, manager CU' House hockey. Hasty Pudding-Institute 0 1770, D,K.E.g Owl Club, Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. E JAMES ALBERT BRINK Born January 16, 1922, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home ad- dress: 34 Bailey Road, Watertown, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Glee Club C1,2J. House crew CZJ. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. HOBART M. BROCKWAY, JR. Born January 2, 1920, in Beacon, New York. Beacon High. Home address: 9 Rombout Av- enue, Beacon, New York. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House C1, 2J, Foreign Rela- tions Club CIJ. Lacrosse team Clj. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. The glll MALCOLM HOWARD BRODRICK Born February 25, 1923, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 150 Randlett Park, West Newton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. jubilee Committee. Basketball team CIJ, lacrosse squad CQJ, House football C2, 31. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. EDXVARD BROOKS, JR. Born November 8, 1922, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul. Home address: 176 North River Boulevard, St. Paul, Minnesota. Leverett House. Glee Club, assistant manager CIJ. Swimming squad Cl, ZJ, House football C2, 5J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Music. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Lumber and paper busi- ness. HENRY GILBERT BROOKS, JR. Born July 6, 1922, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 1015 Brook Road, Milton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Crew squad CIJ House crew CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Owl Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. STANLEY BROOKS Born April 24, 1922, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 956 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Leverett House Glee Club CZJ. Harvard Prize Scholar- ship, Field of concentration: Music. Intended war service: Navy. ROBERT HOPKINS BROWER Born March 23, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Melrose High. Horne address: 50 Albert Street, Melrose, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Verein Turmwaechter C1-BJ. Bright Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: College teaching. ' ARLING DIX BROWN, JR. Born January 30, 1923, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at East High. Home address: East Baird Avenue, Barberton, Ohio. Win- throp House. Harvard Club of Rochester Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Engineering. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial mathematics. of 1944 CURTLAND CHESTER BROWN, JR. Born January 7, 1925, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Beverly High. Home address: 209 Dodge Street, Beverly, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. DOUGLAS ALDRICH BROWN BornJanuary 18, 1922, in Melrose, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Malden High. Home ad- dress: 621 Main Street, Malden, Massachu- setts. Eliot House. Cl'ilIl.IOII, news board C1, ZJ, executive editor CED: Ret! Bowls, editorial associate, Crimson Network, sports CZJ, Yacht Club CU. Swimming team CIJ, House dance committee C2, SD. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. JERRY MILLER BROWN Born February 4, 1922, in Denver, Colorado. Prepared at South Denver High. Home ad- dress: 777 South Gaylord Street, Denver, Colorado. Leverett House. Gllldfilftlll, edi- torial board CZJ, president C3Jg Debating Council C2, 5J, Freshman Debating Council, chairman CIJ, Harvard College Scholarship. Signet Society, Field ofconcentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GORDON MERVIN BROWNE, JR. Born August 6, 1925, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis County Day. Home ad- dress: 6749 Bartmer Avenue, St. Louis, Miss- ouri. Winthrop House. A.R.P, CZJ. Basket- ball squad Cljg House basketball CZJ. Harvard College National Scholarship CID. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JAMES STUART BROWNE Born February 9, 1924, in Norfolk, Virginia. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: Partridge Inn, Augusta, Georgia. Dunster House, Field of concentration: Psychology, Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. KINGSBURY BR OWNE, JR. Born November 18, 1922, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 140 Dudley Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. College address: 22 Plympton Street. Crimron CU, Debating Council CIJ, Caisson Club C3, 4J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Owl Club. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended war service.: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Mining engineering. C2171 ARTHUR STANLEY BROWN-SERMAN Born September 14, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Andrew's. Home ad- dress: Theological Seminary, Alexandria, Vir- ginia. Claverly Hall. Phillips Brooks House Q15. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. FORREST MORGAN BUCKINGHAM Born February 12, 1923, in Hartford, Con- necticut. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 27 Cedar Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Mountaineering Club fl, 25. Field of concentration: Physics. LYMAN GREENLEAF BULLARD Born May 5, 1922, in Springfield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 4 Circuit Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Yacht Club fl, 25, secretary- treasurer Q35. Hockey team Q15, House hockey C25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E., Fly Club. Field of concentra- tion: Anthropology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. GEORGE MILLER BURDITT, JR. Born September 21, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Lyons Township High. Home address: 53 South Spring Avenue, La Grange, Illinois, Winthrop House. Student Council, Phillips Brooks House, freshman committee, chairman 115, social service committee chair- man C25, War Service Committee, personnel chairman 125, Class First Marshal. Basketball Q1-35, captain fl, 35, cross country squad Q35, House baseball C2, 35, House war service committee C2, 35. Harvard College National Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Law. DUGALD CAMPBELL BURNS Born November 2, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 21 Benvenue Street, Wellesley, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Outing Club 125. Wrestling team C1, 25, House crew 125, House library committee CZ, 35. Private School Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Mechani- cal engineering. THOMAS EDWARD BURNS Born November 27, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston English High. Home address: 11 Lenoxdale Avenue, Dorches- ter, Massachusetts. Lived at home. 412181- JOHN COTTON BURTON Born March 12, 1923, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Blake, Home address: Deephaven, Wayzata, Minnesota. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Yacht Club Cl, 25, vice commodore C35. Hockey team fl, 25, 150-lb. crew squad C15, tennis squad CZ, 35, Eliot House committee QZ5. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. DAVID BUSHNELL Born May 14, 1925, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Moorestown Friends'. Home address: 136 East Central Avenue, Moorestown, New Jersey. Adams House, A.R.P. Messenger Q35, Spanish Club C25, secretary 135. Mary Maria Adams Scholarship, Elizabeth Wilder Prize. Field of concentration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. WILLIAM SHERMAN BUTCHER Born january 26, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 38 Barnstable Road, West Newton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Hockey team 115, soccer team C1-35, House hockey C25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Eco- nomic Geology. JOHN JOSEPH BUTLER Born August 15, 1922, in Toronto, Canada. Prepared at Highland Park High. Home ad- dress: 1410 Western Avenue, I-Iighwood, ll- linois. Adams House. Union Committee, Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty Cl, 25. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur 115. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. PAUL FREDERICK BUTLER Born July 1, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 10 Martin Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club C1-35. Baseball squad, Cl, 25, baseball team Q15. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Aviation personnel management. GEORGE EDWARD BYERS, JR. Born April 16, 1921, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: Canaan Valley Road, Canaan, Connecticut. Adams House. Caisson Club 135. House baseball C25, House basketball f25. Spee Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Army. The 6171 NORBERT THOMAS BYRNES Born December 15, 1922, in Waterville, New York. Prepared at Waterville Central. Home address: 162 Elm Street, Waterville, New York. Winthrop House. Liberal Union f1,2J. Track squad QU. George Emerson Lowell Scholarship. Field of concentration: Classics. ROBERT DONALD BYRNES Born July 24, 1925, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 522 Hyde Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club C2--IJ. Football squad QI, 31: wrestling squad Cl, 3J, House football CD: House hockey f2J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. THOMAS DUDLEY CABOT, JR. Born October 15, 1922, in Boston. Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 31 Farm Road, Weston, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Ski Club CI, 23, Harvard Engineering Society, treasurer OJ. Hockey squad, manager QU, hockey team, manager CU, 150-lb. crew squad QI, ZJ, ski team CZ, 3Jg House crew fl, 3J, House football 12, 30. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17705 D.K.E.g D. U. Club. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy Specialist Service. Intended permanent vocation: Manufacturing. WILLIAM CANNON CAHALL, III Born December 24, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Germantown. Home address: 6715 Emlen Street, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania. Adams House, Liberal Union OJ, Caisson Club CS, 4J. House foot- ball f2, 35, House committee 12, 5J. Pi Era. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. ARTHUR VINCENT CAMPBELL, III Born February 13, 1923, in Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Townsend Harris. Home address: 1447 Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D. C. Eliot House. Advocate 11, Zh. Track team CU, House base- ball CZJ. Speakers Club. Field ot' concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. GEORGE LOTHROP CAMPBELL Born September 27, 1922, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at St. George's. Home address: 355 Lakeland Avenue, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Colle e address: 44 Mount Au- burn Street. 150-lE.crew,C1J. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. In- tended permanent vocation: Natural science. af 1944 WORTI-IINGTON CAMPBELL, JR. Born July 14, 1922, in Cambridge, Maryland Prepared at St. Marks Home address: Knollwood Road, Short Hills, New Jersey. Eliot House. Red Cross, hrst aid CU. Foot- ball squad, manager f2J. Hasty Pudding- lnstitute of 1770, Delphlc Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. HOBART ASHLEY CAPEN Born April 8, 1923, in Weymouth, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Rockland High. Home address: 150 Exchange Street, Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Sociology. FRANCISCO JOSE CARDONA Born July 28, 1924, in Juncos, Puerto Rico. Home address: P. O. Box 365,Juncos, Puerto Rico, Eliot House. International Club QZJQ France Forever KZJQ Post-War Council CZJ. Field of concentration: Philosophy. THOMAS JAMES CARENS Born March 22, 1922, in Arlington, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Country Day. Home ad- dress: 7 Edge Hill Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Ward- en CZJ. Crew squad C1,2J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. SAMUEL BALDWIN CARR Born August 3, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Powder Point Avenue, Duxbury, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 59 Plympton Street. Football squad, CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, A. D. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Marine Corps. MELVIN JEROME CARRO Born January 12, 1923, in Revere, Massachu- setts. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 1144 East 68th Street, Brook- lyn, New York. Dunster House. Football squad CU, House baseball Q2J,. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. V l 12191- MARSHALL ELLIOTT CARROLL Born May 14, 1923, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Prepared at Westlawn. Home ad- dress: Country Club Road, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Eliot House. Soccer team, manager QU. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. EDWARD MCDERMOTT CASEY Bom October 23, 1923, in Arlington, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 94 Franklin Street, Allston, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Crimron, business board CZJ, advertising manager fix Red Book, literary board, St. Paul's Club, vice-president f3j. Field of concentration: History. FRANCIS HENRY CASKIN, III Bornjanuary 29, 1922, in Peabody, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Holten High. Home ad- dress: 4 Oak Street, Danvers, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Band Cl, 21, co-manager GJ, Caisson Club GJ, Yacht Club QU, St. Paulls Club C1-3j. House baseball OJ. George Newhall Clark Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HERBERT HALL CASWELL, JR. Born May 21, 1923, in Marblehead, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Marblehead High. Home address: 1 Middle Street, Marblehead, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home, Ornithological Club QD. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Army. ADDISON SMITH CATE Born july 26, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: 49 Kenil- worth Street, Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Adams House, Ski Club Lacrosse squad QU, House dancing committee CU. Field of con- centration: Economic Geology. Intended war service: Army Engineer. Intended permanent vocation: Geologist. CHARLES JAMES CAWLEY, III Born May 3, 1922, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cheshire. Home address: 101 Alban Road, Waban, Massachusetts, College address: 59 Plyrnpton Street. Football team QU, hockey squad Field of concentration: Romance Languages. 12201- ERIC HASELTINE CAWLEY Born March 14, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 50 Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Eliot House. A.R.P. Warden QZJ. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Business. CHARLES ANTHONY CHACE Bornjanuary 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 131 East 66 Street, New York, New York. College address: 30 Holyoke Street. Union Commit- tee. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g D.K.E., Owl Club. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Advertising. PETER RODGERS CHASE Born February 15, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 24 South Cedar Park, Melrose, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. A.R.P. Warden QZJ, Stamp Club CU: Classical Club C1-31. john Harvard Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching, YU-TSAM CHENG Bornjanuary 3, 1921, in Peiping, China. Pre- pared at St. Joseph's College, Stanley, Hong Kong. Attended Hong Kong University 1 year. Home address: 102 Robinson Road, Hong Kong, China. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House CZD. Wrestling squad QD, squash squad 125. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- mg. ALAN HENRY CHERRY Born August 2, 1922, in Belmont, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home ad- dress: 38 Bartlett Avenue, Belmont, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. GEORGE CHRISTMAN, III Born December 27, 1922, in Cambridge, Ivlas- sachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 371 Belmont Street, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Swimming team Q1-31. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. Che Klrzss HERBERT CHURCH, JR. Born April 1, 1922, in Philadelpliiit, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at St, Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire. Home address: Spring l-lill Road, Villa Nova, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Caisson Club CBJ. Crew squad C1-5J, I-louse crew QZJ. Harvard College Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation' Government Service. CHESTER LINDSAY CHURCHILL, JR. Born November 17, 1920, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough Home address: 20 Holly RO11L.l,XY,11l7211'l,IVIllSSi1- chusetts. Winthrop House, Field of concen- tration: Geological Sciences. JULIAN BOUTON CLARK, JR. Born March 21. 1921. in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Westminster, Home address: Overlake. Burlington, Vermont. Eliot House Field of concentration: English. THOMAS HITCHCOCK CLARK Born July 15, 1922, in Westbury, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: West- bury, Long Island, New York. College ad- dress: 59 Plympton Street. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended war service: Royal Air Force. BRADFORD COBB Born September 8, 1923, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Berkshire. Home address: 32 Fountain Street, Clinton, New York. Winthrop House. Red Bank, War Service Committee, salvage director GJ: A.R,P. Warden f2Jg Radio Workshop f2, 5J. House dance committee 125. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medicine. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. CHARLES RUSSELL CODMAN, JR. Born January 26, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 53 Pinckney Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. af 1944 TIMOTHY COGGESHALL Born August 17, 1922, in Dover, New Hamp- shire. Prepared at Exeter. Home address' Oenoke Ridge, New Canaan, Connecticut. Lowell House. Track team f2, Hg cross coun- try team f2, 3J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. HENRY WEISKOIJF COHEN Born May 28, 1922, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Washburn High. Home address: 1576 West Minnehaha Parkway, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Winthrop House. Field of con- centration: Anthropology. JOSEPH MANUEL COHEN Born October 19, 1921, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lynn English High. Home address: 66 Hart Street, Beverly Farms, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Gmzrzlimz Cl-3J. Wrestling squad CU. Field of con- centration: History. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. THEODORE COHN Born June 15, 1923, in Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at Columbia High. Home address: 452 Twin Oak Road, South Orange, New Jersey. Dunster House. Phillips Brooks House 11, 2J, Band Q1-SJ, Red Cross 12, BJ, Yacht Club QU. Squash squad C1-3Jg tennis team C1-33. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Ac- Counting. LLOYD NORWOOD COLBAUGH Born June 25, 1922, in Medford, Oregon. Prepared at Medford High. Home address: 609 Dakota Avenue, Medford, Oregon. Adams House, Charles Downer Scholarship. Field ofconcentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Ministry. DONALD BARNARD COLE Born March 31, 1922, in Andover, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 16 High Street, Andover, Massachusetts. Dunster House, Baseball squad QU, football squad GJ: House baseball f2, Zwjg House basketball f2, 35: House football QZJ, House hockey QZJ, House committee, treasurer GJ. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy, Intended permanent voca- tion: Teaching. Jl221 1- GEORGE SCULL COOK Born August 15, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: 202 East Union Street, Somerset, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Band C1-4J, A.R.P. Q2-4J, Caisson Club QB, 4J. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Bank- ing. MILLER FREDERICK COOK BornJune 15, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 46 Kenwood Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. LAWRENCE EDWARD COOKE Born November 13, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 106 West Foster Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Debating Council Q, 3J, St. Paul's Club Q1-3J. Field of concentration: Area of Social Science. Inteded war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. HAROLD NORMAN COOLEDGE, JR. Born October 15, 1922, in Atlanta, Georgia. Prepared at Darlington. Home address: 217 15th Street, Atlanta, Georgia. Kirkland House. Glee Club Q1, 2J. Fencing team Cl, ZJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemical Warfare. Intended perma- nent vocation: Industrial Chemist. ROBERT JAMES COONEY, JR. BornJanuary 13, 1923, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 112 Standart Street, Syracuse, New York. Eliot House. St. Paul's Club. Tennis team, varsity manager C3J. Field of concentration: History. WILLIAM JOSEPH COONEY, JR. Born December 14, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 185 Walpole Street, Sharon, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: History. 122211 ELLIOTT RUGGLES CORBETT, II Born November 1, 1922, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Thacher. Home address: 300 Tryon Hill Road, Portland, Oregon. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Laznzpoon GJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of177Og D.K.E.g Fly Club, Signet Society. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. JOHN EDWARD CORRIGAN, JR. Born September 26, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Morgan Park Military. Home address: 5133 Potomac Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Eliot House. Album, business staff, Phillips Brooks House, student faculty 12, 35, Caisson Club GJ, St. Paul's Club C2, 3Jg Debating Council C1, ZJ, president CD: Class Orator. Football squad C2Jg House football C3J. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOHN ARTHUR COSENTINO Born November 25, 1922, in Paterson, New Jersey. Prepared at Montclair. Home ad- dress: 138 Valley Road, Clifton, New Jersey. Winthrop House. House baseball f2J. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. CLEMENT LEE COUNTS, JR. Born April 24, 1922, in Bluefield, West Virginia. Prepared at Huntington High. Attended Marshall 1 year. Home address: 1008 Johns Court, Huntington, West Virginia. Lowell House. St. Paul's Club CZJQ Harvard Auxliary Police, instructor CZ. ED. Field of concentra- tion: Classics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. CHARLES THOMPSON COXVEN Born November 22, 1921, in Boston, Massa chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 59 Pine Ridge Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. A.R.P. Warden C5, 4Jg Caisson Club GJ: Athletic Council OJ. Football squad CZ, 453 football team GJ: hockey team 12, 3J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g D.K.E.g Fox Club. Field of concen- tration: Sociology. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. NEVILL MURRAY CRAMER Born September 6, 1922, in Paris, France. Prepared at Santa Barbara. Home address: 31 La Veredn Road, Santa Barbara, California. Eliot House. Field of concentration: English. Chr Zlrz GEORGE FRANCIS CRANE, II Born October 9, 1921, in Pasadena, California. Prepared at Santa Barbara. Home address: 152 San Ysidro Road, Santa Barbara, California. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Crew squad CID, House crew CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Speakers Club: Spee Club. Field of concentration: English, Intended permanent vocation: Teacher. JACOB LESLIE CRANE, III Born August 30, 1922, in Lake Forest, Illinois. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 3811Jenifer Street, Washington, D. C. Adams House. Pi Eta Theatricals f2J, A.R.P. I-IousefootballC5J. PiEta. Fieldofconcentra- tion: Area of Social Science. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Women's Clothes Designer. JULIAN CROCKER Born August 21, 1920, in Cohasset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 198 Randolph Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Eliot I-Iouse. Laizipoofr CZJQ Red Book: Red Cross. Hockey team. manager freshman and varsity C1-5J. Field of concentration: Geogra- phy. Intended war service: Field Artillery. JOHN CARESTON SETON CROSBIE Born August 31, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Suffield Academy, Sufheld, Connecticut. Home address: Apartado A, Guantanama, Cuba. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. GEORGE ALLEN CULLERS Born July 7, 1921, in Trenton, Missouri. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 205 West 12th Street, Trenton, Missouri. Win- throp I-Iouse. Field ofconceritration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Engineer. JOSEPH WILLIAM CUMMINGS, JR. Born January 31, 1922, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Providence Country Day. Home address: 322 Langley Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street. Caisson Club GJ. Football Squad, associate manager GJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. of 1944 LEONARD CUMMINGS Born August 4, 1921, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Wilbraham. Home address: 15 Cutter Avenue, West Somerville, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Football team CI, BD: hockey squad QU, House base- ball C2j: I-louse football f2J, House hockey CZJ. Somerville Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of ccncentrationz Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Advertising. EDWARD CUNNINGHAM, JR. Born August 1, 1922, in Westwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home ad- dress: Bridge Street, Dedham, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Linden Street. Squash squad CIJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. FRANCIS CUNNINGHAM Born February 10, 1922, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 155 Butman Road, Lowell, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. 150-lb. crew squad f2J. D. U. Club. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Engineering. THOMAS D. CUNNINGHAM, JR. Born October 24, 1922, in Denver, Colorado- Prepared at St. Georges Home address: 3 Bates Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. A.R.P. C315 Red Cross GJ. Soccer squad CU. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM PILPEL CUNNINGHAM Born October 11, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 40 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Crimson, business board Q1-SJ, A.R,P, Auxiliary Police CZ, 33. Baseball squad GJ: House baseball f2, 3J, House football Q, 5j, House dance committee GJ. Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Area of Social Science. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. JOHN SANDT CURTIN Born November 2, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake. Home ad- dress: 4888 West Lake Harriet Boulevard, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. i 225 LEON ANTOINE DANCO, JR. Born May 50, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Roger Ludlowe High. Home ad- dress: 27 Noyes Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. Eliot House, Smoker Committee, Spanish Club, vice-president CZJ. 150-lb. crew squad CU, Fencing squad QZJ, House crew CZJ. Field of concentration: Government, Intended War service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. ALBERT NATHAN DANOFF Born September 9, 1925, in Glen Lyon, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Newport High. Home address: 47 East Main Street, Glen Lyon, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, social service work C2Jg Red Cross, First aid QZJ. House baseball 12, 5Jg House basketball f2, 5J3 House football 12, 5J, Field ofconcentration: Psychology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. HAROLD EDWIN DAVENPORT, JR. Born December 18, 1922, in Seattle, Wlashing- ton. Prepared at West Seattle High, Home address: 5057-51st Avenue, Southwest, Seattle, Washington. Leverett House. Harvard Chris- tian Fellowship Q1-51. Charles Downer Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Ultra high fre- quency research. ROBERT COOLIDGE DAVENPORT Born April 20, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 25 Park Street, Newton, Massachusetts, College address: 21 Divinity Hall. Crew QU. Field of concentration: Chemistry, Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. RICHARD LLOYD DAVIES Born February 27, 1922, in Dwight, Illinois, Prepared at St. Petersburg High. Home address: 5000 1st Avenue North, St. Peters- burg, Florida. Dunster House. Field of con- centration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Business. CHESTER PELKEY DAVIS, JR. Born August 1, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 15 Addison Street, Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Yacht Club CU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. 1 224 1- DONALD JAMES DAVIS Born August 25, 1922, in Ronkonkoma, New York. Prepared at Richmond Hill High. Home address: 8531 96th Street, Woodhaven, New York, Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House fl, 2J, crew squad QU: golf team C1, 2Jg House basketball f2Jg House track QD: House committee QZJ, House athletic secretary C2, 3J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. DONALD WELTON DAVIS Born April 3, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 229 Pearl Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Field of concentration: English. WILLIAM SHIELDS DAVIS Born March 17, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 152 River- way, Boston, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Liberal Union CU. Crew CID. Field ofconcen- tration: Anthropology. RUTHERFORD DAY Born February 5, 1924, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Central High. Attended American University 1 year. Home address: 1501 N Street, Northwest, Washington, D. C. Kirk- land House. Verein Turmwaechter C23 150- lb. crew squad QQ. Field of concentration: Government, Intended war service: Army. WILLSON DAY Born October 8, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 88 Congdon Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Adams House. Field of con- centration: Geological Sciences. JONATHAN DEAN Born June 15, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Riverdale Country Day. Home address: 255 East 51st Street, New York, New York. Adams House. Field of concentration: Anthropology. The 6111 XVALTER ARTHUR DEANE Born January 13, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 72 Squanto Road, Quincy, Massachusetts. Adams House. Band Q1-3J. Baseball squad CU, House baseball CZ, 355 House football 131: House hockey C2, 35. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. PAUL MALCOLM DEARBORN Born January 10, 1923, in Melrose, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 5 Mount Vernon Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. ALBERT CONRAD DEGE, JR. Born June 6, 1921, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 16 Bellevue Avenue, Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Fencing team QU. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. PAUL FRANCIS DELAHOYDE Born November 22, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence. Home ad- dress: 18 Bearse Avenue, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club Q1-3J. Baseball team Q1, 2Jg House hockey 12, 3J. Joshua Greene Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. EDWARD JOSEPH DERVAN Born April 14, 1922, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton High. Home address: 327 Thacher Street, Milton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended War service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT EUGENE DESAUTELS Born February 27, 1925, in Burlington, Ver- mont. Prepared at Boston English, Home address: 40 Fairmount Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Glee Club Q1-5J. Swimming squad Q1-SJ. Stoughton Fellowship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. of 1944 GORDON CHIPMAN DEWEY Born April 9, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fountain Valley. Home address: 45 North Drive, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Leverett House. Photography Club, executive board CU, Rez! Bank, photo- graphic chairman, Yacht Club Field of concentration: Physics. WILLIAM RICHARDSON DEWEY, III Born April 10, 1925, in Weston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: Pigeon Hill Road, Weston, Massachusetts. Winthrop I-louse. Naval Society CBJ, Ski Club CZJ. 150-lb. crew squad fl-D, House crew f2J. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. JAMES FRANK DICKASON, JR. BornJuly 5, 1922, in San Francisco, California. Prepared at New Mexico Military. Home ad- dress: 911 North Alpine Drive, Beverly Hills, California. Adams House. Crimntozz Cl, 2J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HOXVA RD ALBERT DILLER Born February 5, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Boys High. Attended City College of New York 1 year. Home address: 82 Rock- away Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. Adams House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 Q1-BJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. GEORGE CHAFFEE DILLON Born October 29, 1922, in Kansas City, Mis- souri. Prepared at Miller High. Home ad- dress: Route 8, North Kansas City, Missouri. Adams House. Naval Society. Basketball team C1-BJ, House committee Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Accounting. EUGENE AUGUSTUS DINET, JR. Born December 21, 1922, in Joliet, Illinois. Prepared at Joliet Township High. Attended University of Wisconsin 2 years. Home ad- dress: 902 Western Avenue, Joliet, Illinois. Kirkland House. Cercle Francais GJ. House crew GJ, House track GJ. Psi Upsilon Fra- ternity. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. 225 JAMES DANE DODGE Born October 15, 1921, in Newburyport, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 12 Rolfe's Lane, Newbury, Massachusetts. College address: 7 Ware Street. Lacrosse squad CIJ. Field of concen- tration: Physics. JAMES ARTHUR DOERING Born June 28, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 574 Weld Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Crew squad OJ. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JAMES ALOISIUS DOHERTY, JR. Born October 20, 1922, in Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Tilton. Home address: 746 Chestnut Street, Manchester, New Hamp- shire. Winthrop House. Field of concen- tration: Biology, RICHARD EMERSON DOLE Born June 9, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's, Home address: Boyce, Virginia. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Hockey squad CD. Field ot' concentration: Sociology. MALCOLM MARK DONAHUE Born April 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts, Prepared at Andover. Home address: 110 Williams Avenue, Hyde Park, Massachusetts. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Caisson Club GJ. Soccer team CU, lacrosse team C1-3J. Speakers Club. Field of concen- tration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT JOYCE DONAHUE Born July 25, 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 255 Forest Hills Street,Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. College address: 78 Mount Auburn Street. Liberal Union GJ: Crew, manager QU. Field of concentration: History. -I226J- JAMES HOMER DONALD Born January 30, 1923, in Dallas, Texas. Prepared at Sunset High. Home address: 1545 West Colorado Boulevard, Dallas, Texas. Winthrop House. Pi Eta Theatricals CZJ. Crew squad Q1-BJ. Pi Eta. Field of concen- tration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Physician. THOMAS FRANCIS DONOHUE Born March 18, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Home address: 168 Appleton Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club fl, 2J. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. PETER DORSEY Born August 22, 1922, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 2204 West Lake ofthe Isles Boulevard, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Eliot House. Football team GJ' u House football CZ, 3jg House hockey C2, 35, House track C2, 3J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. WAKEFIELD DORT, JR. BornJuly 16, 1925, in Keene, New Hampshire. Prepared at Hoosac. Home address: 84 Forest Street, Keene, New Hampshire. Adams House. A,R.P. CZ, 55: Geological Conference C1-BJ. Harvard Club of New Hampshire Scholarship. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Geologist. WILLIAM RICHMOND DOXVD Born February 28, 1922, in Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: West Street, Harrison, NewJersey. Little Hall. Field of concentration: Music. ERVIN THAYER DRAKE, III Born January 19, 1923, in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Prepared at Chatham High. Home address: 87 Fairmount Avenue, Chatham, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Jubilee Committee, Student Council GJ, Glee Club CZ, 5J, War Service Committee GJ, A.R.P. C2Jg Class Third Marshal, Baseball squad QD, baseball team f2J, basketball squad OJ, Soccer team C1-35, tennis team CU: House committee C2, 515 House dance committee 123, House war service committee GJ. Field of concentra- tion: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. The 617155 ROBERT GRANT DRAKE Born March 3, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: 304 Otis Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Lnlzlpoon, business board fl, 2J, Phillips Brooks House, information committee UJ, chairman q2J. Cross country team GJ, squash squad Q1Jg House football CZJ. Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concen- tration: Geography. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. CECIL KENT DRINKER, JR. Born May 7, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Home address: 64 Colbourne Crescent, Brook- line, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. ROBERT URQUHART DUGGAN Born September 22, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Glen Head, Long Island, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WILLIAM CALDWELL DUNCKEL, JR. BornJanuary 31, 1922, in Columbia, Missouri. Attended University of the Philippines 1 year. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JOSEPH ALTON DUNN Born December 7, 1921, in Rockland, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 175 Myrtle Street, Rockland, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Band fl, 2J. Field of concentra- tion: Sociology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN HENRY DYER Born January 3, 1922, in Beverly, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 386 High Street, Newburyport, Mas- sachusetts. Dunster House. Pi Eta Theatricals f2J, St. Paul's Club fl, 2J. Football team House basketball CZJ, House crew CZJ. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching. a nf 7944 FREDERICK WILLIAM EATON, II Born July 23, 1922, in New Canaan, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: Oenoke Avenue, New Canaan, Connecticut. Leverett House. A.R.P. 12, BJ, Caisson Club C2, BJ, Swimming team QIJ, soccer team CIJ, House baseball CZJ. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Engineering Executive. CHARLES LAMPERT EBERHARDT Born February 19, 1923, in Salina, Kansas. Prepared at Salina High. Home address: 755 South Santa Fe Street, Salina, Kansas. Dunster House, Track squad OJ, track team f2Jg House football GJ. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RICHARD NOURSE ECKERT Born October 211, 1922, in Watertown, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 12 I-Iall Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts. Adams House. Basketball team CIJ, manager GJ, House basketball CZJQ House football f2J, House committee GJ. Field of concentration: History. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT TURNBULL ECKFELDT Born August 6, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home ad- dress: 17 Ross Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Lampomr CZJ. Spee Club. Field of concentration: English. War service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Military aviation, GEORGE ARISTOTLE ECONOMOU Born June 24, 1925, in Manchester, New Hampshire. Prepared at Manchester Central. Home address: 676 Green Street, Manchester, New Hampshire. Leverett House. New Hampshire Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: Astronomy. Intended war service: Research. Intended permanent voca- tion: Optics. ARTHUR JOHN EGAN Born April 12, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Pelham High. Home address: 116 Second Avenue, Pelham, New York. Kirkland House. St. PauI's Club, fl, 2J, treasurer GJ. Field of concentration: English. 227 I- GEORGE E. EGAN, JR. Born April 12, 1923, in New York, New York. Attended Seton Hall. Home address: 116 Second Avenue, Pelham, New York. -Kirk- land House, Field of concentration: History. RICHARD GUY ELKEN Born January 6, 1923, in Mayville, North Dakota. Prepared at Mayville High. Home address: Mayville, North Dakota. Adams House. Basketball squad C1, 2J. Harvard College Scholarship. Pi Eta. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Engineers. Intendedperma- nent vocation: Engineering administration. WILLIAM SCOTT ELLIS Born March 8, 1923, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 30 Wabon Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Track squad C1J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. JOHN WILLIAM ELLISON Born May 23, 1920, in Loveland, Colorado. Prepared at Boise High. Home address: R.F.D. 2, Boise, Idaho. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, social service commit- tee C2Jg War Service Committee C3J. 150-lb. crew C1Jg House crew Charles Downer Scholarship. Field of concentration: English and Philosophy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Episcopal ministry. WILLIAM JOHN ELSER Born August 26, 1923, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 1246 Buffalo Road, Rochester, New York. Kirkland House, Crimrofz, news board C1-3Jg Phillips Brooks House CIJ: A.R.P. CZJ, St. Paul's Club C1-3J. House baseball C2, 3Jg House basketball C2, 3J. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Cor- poration law. ROBERT CLARENCE ENGGASS Born December 20, 1922, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 19344 Comberland Way, Detroit, Michigan. Field of concentration: English. 12281 WILLIAM MURRAY ENNIS, JR. Born February 28, 1923, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 884 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, New York. Kirkland I-louse. Soccer team C1Jg lacrosse C1J. Field of concentration: English. ARTHUR LOUIS ENO, JR. Born April 27, 1924, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 780 Andover Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. Adams House. Crimson Network C3J, A.R.P. Warden C2, 3J, Radio Workshop, production director C2, SJ: St. Paul's Club C1-3J: Classical Club C1, 2J, secretary-treasurer C3J. House library committee C3J. Warren H. Cudworth Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Classics. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. GUSTAVUS JOHN ESSELEN, III Born April 5, 1922, in Swampscott, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 437 Puritan Road, Swampscott, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House C1J: Caisson Club C2J. Football squad C1J: la- crosse squad C1, 2J. Owl Club. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. ALVIN ESSIG Born February 16, 1923, in Canton, Ohio. Prepared at Heights High. Attended Ohio State 2 years. Home address: 3536 Severn Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Eliot House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 CBJ. Field of concen- tration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JOHN DYKSTRA EUSDEN Born July 20, 1922, in Holland, Michigan. Prepared at Rivers. Home address: 666 Centre Street, Newton, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Student Council C2, 3J, Glee Club C1-3Jg Band C1, 2J, Chapel Choir Cl, SJ, Class Second Marshal. Swimming team C1-3J, captain C1J, House baseball C2Jg House crew C2Jg House committee C2, 3Jg House dance committee CZJ. Harvard College Schol- arship. Pi Eta. Field ofconcentration:I-Iistory. Intended wat service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Law. PETER EUSTIS Born February 4, 1923, in Milton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Fountain Valley. Home address: 1452 Canton Avenue, Milton, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. A.R.P. Warden C2, 3J. Crew squad C1, 2J, House hockey C2J. Spee Club. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Chemist. Uhr 617155 WILLIAM RICHARDSON EUSTIS Born january 31, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 52 Crafts Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. ALBERT PAINE EVERTS, JR. Bornjuly 18, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 114 Kirkstall Road, Newronville, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Baseball team C155 Hockey team C1-353 tennis team C25. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: D.K.E.: Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. BENEDETTO FABRIZI Born April 20, 1921, in Sandonato, Italy. Prepared at Watertown High, Home address: 242 Waverly Avenue, Watertown, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks I-louse, tutor for citizenship C253 Pre-Medical Society, executive committee C25, secretary C35. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Hospital Orderly. In- tended permanent vocation: Physician. THOMAS LAURENCE FARMER Bornjuly 26, 1923, in Berlin, Germany. Pre- pared at Great Neck High, Home address: 53 Arrandale Avenue, Great Neck, New York. Lowell House. Crimson, editorial board CZ, 55: Album, circulation, Phillips Brooks House, freshmen committee C15, publicity committee chairman C355 Debating Council C153 War Service Committee C353 Outing Club C1-55, Student Council Forum Committee C2, 35. Soccer squad C2, 55, soccer team C155 House war service committee C35. Field of concen- tration: Area of Social Science, Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Government law. WINTHROP FRANCIS FARRELL Born September 22, 1922, in Revere, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 130 Brookfield Road, Winthrop, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. GROSVENOR FARWELL, JR. Born April 9, 1921, in New York, New York. Home address: Goodwives' River Road, Noto- ton, Connecticut. Kirkland House. Red Book' jubilee Committee, Glee Club C253 A.R.P. C25 Football squad, manager C155 track squad, House baseball. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. 1 af 1944 JOHN CHARLES FAULKNER, III Bornjune 30, 1922, in Keene, New Hampshire. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 109 School Street, Keene, New Hampshire. Lev- erett House. Dramatic Club C25. House dance committee C25. Harvard College Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. RICHARD BR EWS'I'ER FAWCETT Born September 13, 1921, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Lexington High. Home address: 511 Marrett Road, Lexington, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Basketball squad C153 basketball team. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT ALAN FELTNER Born September 28, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Townsend Harris High. Home address: 25-12 Creston Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Post-War Council C2, 353 Boston Interceptor Command C2, 55. Track squad C1-55, cross country squad C1-55: House track C2. 55. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. DAN HUNTINGTON FENN, JR. Born March 27, 1925, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 6 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Crinzmzz, news board C1, 25, president C553 Crimson Network C353 War Service Committee C354 A.R.P. Warden C2. 553 Class Treasurer. House crew C25. George Leslie Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Government: Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government. PHILIP FERGUSON FICKETT Born March 27, 1922, in Flushing, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 144-55 Northern Boulevard, Flushing, New York. College address: 94 Prescott Street. Field of concentration: English. CHARLES WILTSIE FIELD Born October 15, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 141 Sandringham Road, Rochester, New York. Kirkland House. A.R.P. Warden C355 Pre-Medical Society C1, 25: Yacht Club C1, 25. Soccer team C15. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. 42291 ARTHUR MACY FINCH - Born February 8, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 152 East 54th Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. DONALD IRVING FINE Born April 19, 1922, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 260 Heywood Avenue, Orange, New Jersey, Lowell House. Guardimz fl, 25, business manager C3, Lil: Debating Council QU, Dramatic Club Q1-35: A.R.P. Warden CBD. Field of concentration: History and Literature. JOHN LYLE FISCHER Born July 9, 1923, in Kewanee, Illinois. Pre- pared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 569,Iackson Avenue, Glencoe, Illinois. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. BRADLEY FISHER Born July 10, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield. Horne address: Oenoke Avenue, New Canaan, Connecticut. Dunster House. 150-lb. crew squad CU, House foot- ball CZJ. Iroquois Club. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Navy. ERNEST LEWIS FISHER Born May 50, 1922, in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended University of Georgia 2 years, Home address: 16-4 Ruthven Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. JOHN COURTNEY FISHER Born April 19, 1922, in Wilkensburg, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Englewood. Home address: 70 Anderson Street, Hackensack, New Jersey. Eliot House. A.R.P. Warden 12,, Red Cross Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Engineering. -f250I'f ROLLIN BRADSHAW FISHER, II Born November 12, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 68 School Street, Weston, Massachu- setts. Varsity Club. Football team CU. Field of concentration: English. ROBERT FISHMAN Born April 19, 1923, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 71 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Cambridge Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Psychology. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. EDWARD SPENCE FITZGIBBONS Born August 19, 1921, in Whitman, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 467 Washington Street, Whitman, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Baseball squad CU. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. GEORGE PERRY FLANNERY, II Born September 50, 1922, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Prepared at Blake, Home ad- dress: 2416 Blaisdell Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Eliot House. Golf team QU. Field of concentration: Area of Social Sciences: Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Lawyer. HAROLD CURTIS FLEMING Bornjuly 27, 1922, in Atlanta, Georgia. Pre- pared at Boys'High. Homeaddress:815 Ponce de Leon Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia. Leverett House. Crimson Network, dramatic director C213 Radio Workshop, president QD. Asso- ciated Harvard Clubs Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Writing. WILLIAM MOWAT FLOOK, JR, Born july 7, 1921, in Briarcliff, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 77 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Leverett House. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences: Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Electrical engineering. E716 6171 PHILIP MANNING FOISIE Born March 14, 1922, in Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Franklin High. Home address: 5 Tanglewood Road, Berkeley, California. Lowell House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 QD: Dramatic Club QZJQ Outing Club Q21 Cross country squad C215 tennis team CID, House baseball CZJQ House track QZJQ House com- mittee QZJQ House dance committee CZJ, N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. JAMES MURRAY FORBES Born April 7, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton, Home address: High Street, Westwood, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Linden Street. Hasty Pudding- Insritute of177OgD.K.E.1 D. U. Club, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Slavic Lan- guages. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Navy. BAYARD STUYVESANT FORSTER Born April 5, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Millbrook. Home address: Gar- rison, New York. College address: 59 Plymp- ton Street. Field of concentration: Sociology. WILLIAM HALL FORSTER Born July 11, 1922, in Belmar, New Jersey. Prepared at Germantown Friends. Home address: 6820 Mower Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Crimmzr, photo- graphy board CU, chairman 12, ij, Album, photography board, Glee Club C1-3J. John Harvard Scholarship. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering, PHILLIP TEAGUE FOWLER Born September 28, 1922, in Salem, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Beverly High. Home address: 6 Somerset Avenue, Beverly, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House, Field of concentra- tion: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Oil geology. HENRY EDGAR FRACHTMAN Born March 27, 1925, in Suffern, New York Prepared at Sulfern High. Home address: 102 Washington Avenue, Suffern, New York. Lowell House. Crimson Network, technical board C2, 3jg A.R.P. First Aid GJ, Boylston Chemical Club C2, 31, Pre-Medical Society Q1-31, Avukah Society Q1, 21. House crew f2J. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. of 1944 THOMAS FRANK Born May 12, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fountain Valley. Attended Swarth- more 2 years. Home address: 66 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Dunster House. Cercle Francais CED. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanant vocation: Psychology. GEORGE BELL FRANKFORTER, JR. BornJuIy 20, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake, Home address: 525 East River Road, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Colle e address: 411 Mount Auburn Street. 150-lib. crew squad CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. MYRON EARL FREEDMAN Born June 17. 1922, in Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Great Neck High. Home address: 8 Willow Place, Great Neck, New York. Leverett House. Pre-Medical Society GJ' Harvard Volunteer Corps CD. Field of con- centration: Psychology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. ANDREW LANGDON FREESE, II Born December 19, 1921, in Bangor, Maine. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 144 Broadway, Bangor, Maine. Adams House. Rifle Club, Railroading Association. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. GEORGE WILLIAM FRENCH, III Born February 3, 1924, in Melrose, Massachu- sects. Prepared at Plainfield High. Home address: 817 Hillside Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. JOHN WINSLOW FRENNING BornJuly 19, 1922, in Belmont, Massachusetts. Prepared at Country Day. Home address: 65 Clark Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Phillips Brooks House, editor of Harzfarrl Handbook QD: Glee Club Q1-31 House dance committee GD. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service! Navy. 12311 HENRY ARTHUR FREY Born June 11, 1923, in Saranac Lake, New York. Prepared at Haverford. Home address: 1451 Wilson Avenue, Chambersburg, Pennsyl- vania. Winthrop House. A.R.P. Warden C2, BJ. House war service committee GD. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: English. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JOHN CHRISTOPHER FRIEDMANN Born December 20, 1922, in Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at White Plains High. Home address: 28 Lenox Avenue, White Plains, New Jersey. Adams House. Crimson, editorial board 12, 3jg Red Boolag Phi1lips.Brooks House fljg Debating Council QU. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army. WILLIAM BERNARD FRYMARK Born August 20, 1922, in Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at River Forest Township High. Home address: 1304 Monroe Avenue, River Forest, Illinois. Eliot House. Track squad QZJ, track team CU, House baseball, House track. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. WILLIAM EDDY FULLER, JR. Born October 19, 1921, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 568 Hanover Street, Fall River, Massachusetts, College address: 67 Hammond Street. Field or' concentration: Geological Sciences. ALBERT LOUIS FULLERTON, JR. Born August 25, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 14 Rawston Road, Roslindale, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Outing Club C1-3Jg Christian Science Organization Q1-35. Field of concentration: Physics. PAUL FULTON Born January 15, 1922, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 74 Belmont Street, Somerville, Massachusetts. Leverett House, Field of concentration: English. 1252? WILLIAM JOSEPH FURLONG Born January 6, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 96 Theodore Parker Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Naval Society C1-31, Outing Club QI, 25. Field of concentration: Philosophy and Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. WILLIAM HOWARD GABEL Born September 28, 1922, in Syracuse, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 402 Bradford Parkway, Syracuse, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. CHARLES PIERCE GABELER, JR. Born April 24, 1922, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 25 Central Street, Andover, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Glee Club QU, Pi Eta Theatri- cals Swimming team CI, 21. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biology. War service: Naval Air Corps. ROBERT AMBROSE GAFFNEY BornJune 27, 1921, in Peabody, Massachusetts- Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home ad- dress: 185 Maple Street, Danvers, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Football squad QU, football team Q2, D: House football CZ, SJ. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teacher. CHARLES THEODORE GALLAGHER, II Born December 18, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 50 Albion Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Area of Social Sciences. HERBERT GALLANT Born December 12, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 26 Rosalind Place, Lawrence, New York. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House, social work CU, Photography Club fl, 25, Stamp Club fl, 25. House baseball 121. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government. U15 Hass ROBERT XVILLIAM GALLANT Born October 29, 1922, in Newton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 150 Waban Street, Newton, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. A.R.P. GJ, Red Cross tsyg St. Paul's Club UD, Auxiliary Fire Department. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Marine Corps. JOHN JOSEPH GALVIN Born September 26, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 5-1 Baldwin Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St, Paul's Club fl-30. Cambridge Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial Chemistry. PABLO MANUEL GARCIA Born May 30, 1924, in San Sebastian, Puerto Rico. Prepared at Peel-:skill Military. At- tended University of Puerto Rico 2 years. Home address: Box 1567, Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. Leverett House. Field ofconcentration: Government. Intended war service: Intelli- gence Service. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOSEPH EVERETT GARLAND Born September 50, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 28 Allerton Street, Brookline, Massa- House crew, captain QQJ. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Army. ROBERT DAVID GAUCHAT Born November 27, 1922, in Warren, Ohio. Prepared at Harding High. Home address: 156 Bonnie Brae, Warren, Ohio. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House, usher, memor- ial chapel OJ, Pre-Medical Society CU. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Service. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. JOHN FRANCIS GAVIGLIO Born October 12, 1921, in Ludlow, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Wilbraham. Home ad- dress: 525 East Street, Ludlow, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Track team QU: cross coun- try squad Clj. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Hospital work. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. of 1944 BENJAMIN ESTHER GELERMAN Born April 19, 1925, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: as Angell Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home, Verein Turmwaech- ter C253 Avukah Society QZJ, president C31 John Harvard Scholarship: French Translation Prize CZJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. WILLARD MAX GENTRY, JR. Born May 2, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Gering High. Home address: 1705 9th Street, Gering, Nebraska. Adams House. Caisson Club f5Jg Boylston Chemical Club C515 Stamp Club fl-55. Swimming squad fljf swimming team, manager GJ. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemis- try. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. GEORGE HENRI LEO GERARD Born September 22, 1922, in Munich, Germany. Prepared at Lycee Janson de Sailly, Paris. Home address: Hotel Sherry Netherland, New York, New York. Dudley Hall. Field of concentration: Romance Languages, NORMAN GEORGE GERSH Born November 16, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Thomas Jefferson High. Attended College of the City of New York 2 years. Home address: 597 Christopher Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army. JOHN STIRLING GETCHELL, JR. Born February 5, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Meade. Home address: 1405 South Oakland Avenue, Pasadena, Cali- fornia. Dunster House. Gilldfffidll CU, Rea' Book, photography manager, Debating Coun- cil CD, Photography Club Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. STEPHEN WENTWORTH GIPFORD, III Born October 25, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: King Caesar Road, Duxbury, Massachusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Football squad C1-5J: track squad C1-5J. A. D. Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended War service: Field Artillery. 253 JOHN JOSEPH GILBODY Born March 21, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 3 Ely Road, Dorchester, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Government service, STEPHEN JOSEPH GILMAN Born Match 15, 1922, in Malden, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Caribou High. Home address: 11 Woodland Road, Malden, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Caisson Club C31. Baseball squad C11g House baseball C2, 31, House basketball C2, 31, House football C2, 31. Field of concentration: Government. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. MYRON JEAN GLADSHORE Born May 4, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High. Attended Washington Square. Home address: 1900 F Street, Northwest, Washington, D. C. Dun- ster House. Liberal Union C315 Week-end Work Camps Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Camou- flage, Intended permanent vocation: Museum work. BERNARD SHOLOM GLASSMAN Born june 13, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Devitt. Attended Duke University 1 year, Home address: 4839 Colorado Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D. C. Winthrop House. Crimson Network C2, 31, Outing Club C2, 31, Avukah Society C2, 313 Harvard Guer- rilla Unit Field of concentration: Archi- tectural Sciences, Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Architect. HOWARD ROGERS GLEASON Born November 14, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at South Kent. Home address: 33 Atlantic Avenue, Cohasset, Massa- chusetts. College address: 22 Plympton Street. Naval Society C31. Football team C115 House baseball C213 House football C215 House hockey C21. Owl Club. Field of con- centration: English, Intended war service: Navy. HENRY WEBB GOETHALS Born March 16, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 34 Hawthorn Road, Brookline, Mas- sachusetts. Leverett House. Football squad C1, 21, football team C31. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. 12341 GEORGE WILLIAM GOETZ Born November 2, 1922, in East Aurora, New York. Prepared at Nichols. Home address: East Main Street, East Aurora, New York. Lliot House. Phillips Brooks House, fresh- man committee, sectetary C11, information committee, co-chairman C31, Verein Turm- waechter C2, 31. House dance committee C21. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RALPH MORTON GOFSTEIN Born September 28, 1922, in Haverhill, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Haverhill High. Home address: 18 Sixteenth Avenue, Haverhill, Massachusetts, Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House C11. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Detur. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Research. Intended permanent voca- tion: Research chemistry. ABNER RATNER GOLD Born january 16, 1924, in Elizabeth, New jersey. Prepared at Williston. Eliot House. Liberal Union C1-31. Field of concentration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Writ- ing. STANLEY HAROLD GOLDBERG Born February 20, 1922, in Alton, Illinois. Prepared at Wood River Community High. Home address: 125 Seventh Street, Wood River, Illinois. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, speaket's committee C21, settlement work C1, 21, Debating Council C11. House baseball C2, 31, House basketball CZ, 31, House track C21. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. FR ANK FELBEL GOODMAN Born january 30, 1923, in Larchmont, New York. Prepared at Montclair High. Home address: 159 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, New Jersey. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House C1-31, Band C1-31, Pierian Sodality of 1808 CZ, 51. Lacrosse squad C1-31, House football CZ, 31. john Harvard Scholarship, Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Law. DAVID MILTON GORDON Born September 10, 1922, in Niagara Falls, New York. Prepared at Haverhill High. Home address: 97 Lakeview Avenue, Haverhill, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House, settlement work C113 Caisson Club C31, American Defense League Football squad C1, 21, track team C31, House baseball CZ, 31, House football C313 House hockey C21. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Army. The Klass STANLEY KOTZEN GORDON BornJuly 3, 1923, in Melrose, Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden High. Home address: 36 Plymouth Road. Malden, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Crimson Network QD: Boylston Chemical Club CZJ. House basketball QD. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. DANIEL GORENSTEIN Born January 1, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 103 Stratton Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Avukah Society GJ: Mathematics Club C3J. Squash team OJ, House football C2, 3J. Stoughton Scholarship. Detur CZJ. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Mathematics instructor. ALBERT GORVINE Born March 30, 1922. in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 21 Chandler Street. Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society C1-3J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Civil service. RICHARD CURRIER GOVE Born February 24, 1923, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 122 Lincoln Street, Newton High- lands, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Wrestl- ing squad OJ. Lt. Stafford Leighton Brown Scholarship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JOSEPH DANIEL GRANDINE, II Born March 5, 1923, in Crandon, Wisconsin. Prepared at Crandon Union Free High. Home address: R.F,D., Argonne, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House, settlement work C1-3Jg Wesley Foundation at Harvard C1-31: American Civilization Group CU. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching chemistry. DOUGLAS WALTON GREEN Born May 6, 1922, in Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: Willowmere, Roslyn, Long Island, New York. College address: 41 Mount Auburn Street. Caisson Club GJ. Lacrosse team Q2, 3J, House football CZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770: Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concen- tration: Literature. Intended war service: Field Artillery. of 1944 JOHN WALKER GREEN, JR. Born April 27, 1922, in Pana, Illinois. Pre- pared at Springheld High. Home address: 1800 Bates Avenue, Springheld, Illinois. Adams House. House crew 125, House dance com- mittee CZ, 35. Field of concentration: Psychol- ogy. Intended war service: Medical Corps, Intended permanent vocation: Physician. THOMAS HENRY GREEN, JR. Born January 26, 1923, Ligonier, Indiana. Prepared at Oak Park-River Forest High. Home address: 701 South Mercer Street, Bloomington, Illinois. Leverett House. War Service Committee C3J. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. EDWARD FORBES GREENE Born December 29, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 548 Lincoln Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. A.R.P. Warden CZJ. 150- lb. crew squad fl, ZH. Harvard College Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. DONALD ERNEST GR EENHOLZ Born February 25, 1923, in Newport, Kentucky. Prepared at Newport High. Home address: 2439 Alexandria Park, Southgate, Kentucky. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, boys' club activities Q1J,A.R.P. C333 Red Cross 135. Harvard Club of Cincinnati Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Corporation management. HAL CISCEL GREGG Born June 21, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared ar Exeter. Home address: 3570 Rocky River Drive, Cleveland, Ohio. Kirkland House. War Service Committee C353 A.R.P. Warden Q2, 3J, Pre-Medical Society Q2, BJ. Fencing team CI, 21. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. THOMAS M. GREGORY, JR. Born September 18, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Atlantic City High. Home address: 507 North Ohio Avenue, Atlantic City, NewJersey. Lowell House. Red Cross f2Jg Boylston Chemical Club QU. Track team OJ, House hockey C2Jg House track Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Government work. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial chemistry. 12351 FRANK ANDREW GRENIER, JR. Born December 7, 1921, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 66 Whitten Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. PETER POWYS GREY Bornjuly 14, 1922, in New York, NewAYork. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Palisades, New York. Eliot House. Liberal Union, treasurer C21. Squash team, captain Signet Society. Field of concentration: His- tory and Literature. Intended war service, Army. BERT ELDON GRIFFIN Born September 2, 1922, in Eugene, Oregon. Prepared at Garlield High. Home address: 1211 21st Avenue North, Seattle, Washington. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House fl, 31: Glee Club Q31, A.R.P. Cross country squad Q11. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Geology. THOMAS MCLEAN GRIFFIN Born September 12, 1922, in Lake Placid, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 151 Maple Street, Springfield, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Harvard Ski Club C1, 21. Ski team, manager C31. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. HASKELL GRODBERG Born April 6, 1922, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Classical High. Home address: 231 Park Avenue, Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, speakers' committee Q1-31, Band 12, 31, Debating Council Q1-31. Elnathan Pratt Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. HERMAN ELUAH GROSSMAN Born November 7, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 190 Ruthven Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Album, Avukah Society C51. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. -l236l- ALDEN ROBERT GROVE Born November 11, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 78 Rockview Street, jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Literature. WILLIAM ALEXANDER GR OVER Born August 12, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 671 Washington Street, Canton, Massachusetts. Dunsrer House. Naval So- ciety Q1-31, Yacht Club C115 Outing Club Q21, secretary Q31. House baseball C213 House football CZ, 315 House entertainment com- mittee. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. LAURENCE KNIGHT GROVES Born May 31, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Milton. Home address: 2985 Man- chester Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Pre- Medical Society C21. Crew squad C11. John Harvard Honorary Scholarship. Detur CI1. Speakers Club, Spee Club. Field of concen- tration: Engineering Sciences. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. PIERRE GUIET Born February 28, 1921, in Champaign, Illinois. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 70 Wash- ington Avenue, Northampton, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Cercle Francais Q1-31, France Forever KZ, 31, Harvard Student Defense League C11. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Infantry. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign Service. EDWARD MILLS GUILD Born April 18, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts- Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 234 South Street, West Hingham, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Naval Society Q31. Cross country team C113 wrestling team C2, 31, captain f11. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Fly Club. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Indus- trial chemistry. ARTHUR ZANE GUTTERMAN Bornjune 26, 1922, in New York, New York, Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 240 Central Park South, New York, New York. Eliot House. Album 121, Dramatic Club C1-31, Pre-Medical Society QI1, Photography Club Q1-31. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Inrended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. U15 6171 JOHN ALEXANDER HADDEN, JR. Born June 3, 1923, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Milton. Home address: 2787 Fair- mount Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. College address: 78 Mount Auburn Street. Crew, manager 11J. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. EDXVARD LOWELL HADLEY Born October 30, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Kingswood Country Day. Home address: 33 Van Buren Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut. Winthrop House. Caisson Club 135. Baseball team 11Jg basket- ball squad 12J, basketball team 115: football squad 1315 football team 11J. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. THOMAS CHRISTOPHER HALL Born November 26, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Evander Childs High. Home address: 678 East 225th Street, New York, New York, Lowell House. Field of concentration: Area of Social Sciences. FRANKLIN HANCOCK Born February 2, 1922, in Dubuque, Iowa. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1105 Highland Place, Dubuque, Iowa. Lowell House. Dramatic Club 11, 2J. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. GROVER CHURCH HANSEN Born July 14, 1921, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Friends'. Home address: 205 Rodney Court, Wilmington, Delaware. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House, social service work 11Jg Pi Eta Theatricals 1255 Naval Society, treasurer 135: Yacht Club 11J, Naval Science Bullezin 11, ZJ, business manager 131. Basket- ball squad 11J, track squad 11J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law and Business. ROBERT JAMES HARBISON, III Born March 2, 1923, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: Rydal Waters, Rydal, Pennsyl- vania. Lowell House. Glee Club 11-3J. Soccer team 11-3J. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. of 1944 CHARLES JOMART HARDY Born August 18, 1922, in Fairhaven, New Jersey. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 642 Esplanade, Pelham Manor, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentra- tion: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Metallurgy. JOHN JOSEPH HARDY BornJuly 28, 1921, in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Prepared at Medford High. Home address: 127 Fourth Street, Medford, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. RUSSELL INGMAN HARE Born September 17, 1922. in Paris, France. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Kent Oaks Farm, Millington. Maryland. Eliot House. Cercle Francais 1315 International Club 11J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Public relations. NORMAN HARROWER, JR. Born September 23, 1921, in Fitchburg, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Groton. Home address: The Hilltop, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Football squad 11J, hockey team 115. Field of concentration: English. PAUL HART BornJune 6, 1922, in Randolph, Massachusetts. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 14 Churchill Avenue, Arlington, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club 11J, Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. DONALD HARTING Born January 15, 1922. in Wilmington, Dela- ware. Prepared at Tower Hill. Home address: 430 Geddes Street, Wilmington, Delaware. Winthrop House. Jubilee Committee, treas- uter, Glee Club 11, 21, manager 13J, Class Chorister. Swimming team 11, ZJ. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Naval Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. 257 ALBERT ERNEST HARTWIG Born May 22, 1922, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Searles High. Home ad- dress: 19 Olive Street, Methuen, Massachu- setts. Adams House. Field of concentration. Chemistry. MAXWELL MORTON HARVEY Born February 8, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 2 Mason Terrace, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Band Q1-3Jg Pierian Sodaliry of 1808 C1, 25, concert master GJ, Avukah Society Q1-EJ. Field ofconcentra- tion: Music. Intended permanent vocation: Music. BARTLETT HARWOOD, JR. Born October 22, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 49 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Linden Street. 150-lb. crew squad fl, ZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Delphic Club. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. ROBERT FREDERICK HARWOOD Born January 7, 1924, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Township High. Home address: 806 Monticello Place, Evanston, Illinois. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House, fresh- man committee CIJ, speakers committee f2J, cabinet GJ: Outing Club fl-55. 150-lb. crew squad C3j,House crew C2, BJ. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Area of Social Science. Intended war service: Supply Corps, Intended permanent vocation: Business. BORIS HASKELL Born January 24, 1925, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Auburn High. Home ad- dress: 79 Martin Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. House football CZJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. GEORGE ARTHUR HASTINGS Born November 24, 1922, in Springfield, Vet- mont. Prepared at Windsor High. Home address: Ascutney Boulevard, Windsor, Ver- mont. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Engineering Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Mechanical engineer.J 42591- ARAM HARRY HATCH, JR. Born July 7, 1922, in Ancon, Canal Zone. Prepared at Balboa High. Home address: P. O. Box 193, Balboa, Canal Zone. Adams House. A.R.P. f2J. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JAMES BULLOCK HATHAWAY Born May 8, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Francis W, Parker. Home address: 516 Oakdale Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Dun- ster House. Azluorazte QZJQ Liberal Union 11, 21. House football QZJ. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. ROBERT LEELAND HAYDEN Born June 5, 1921, in Salem, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Horne address: 57 Wendell Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Daniel Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. SAMUEL HAYDOCK Born May 17, 1921, in Dedham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Albon Road, Hewlett, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Caisson Club GJ. Track team CU. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engineer. WALTER SUMNER HAYXVARD, JR. Born March 27, 1925, in Sharon, Connecticut. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Mount Desert, Maine. Eliot House. Band 11, ZJ: Liberal Union CU. Price Greenleaf Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Electrical engineer. VERNON HURST HEAD Born June 7, 1925, in Kansas City, lvlissouri. Prepared at Hickman High. Home address: 209 West Adams Street, Kirkwood. Missouri. Adams House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 CU, treasurer 2 5 . Swimmin team 1 . Field C , ,D l g ,C D of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended war service: Naval Air Corps. ln- tended permanent vocation: Aeronautical engi- neer. U16 Him' ALFRED RANDALL HEATH, JR. Born August 22, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Trinity. Home address: 26 East 91st Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. BROOKS NYE HEATH Born July 21, 1922, in Mason City, Iowa. Prepared at Newton High, Home address: 35 Leslie Road, Auburndale, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Union Committeeg Jubilee Committee: Student Council C5J. Baseball team C1-5Jg football squad Cl, zjg House foot- ball C3J. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Actuary. DAVID DEVOL HEATH Born June 14, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Home address: 1611 Harris Road, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Civilian Public Service Camp. FRANCIS BONTECOU HELD Born January 2, 1922, in Columbus, Ohio. Prepared at Upper Arlington High. Home address: 1826 Chelsea Road, Columbus, Ohio. Adams House. Band C1-3J. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. GREGORY HENDERSON Born June 13, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 19 Brewster Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Glee Club CU, Classical Club C2, 33. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended war service: Marine Intelligence Service. Intended permanent vocation: Orient- alist. PHILIP HARRY HENNEMAN Born January 27, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Memorial High. Home address: 263 Corona Avenue, Pelham, New York. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden CZJ. Squash squad CU, House crew C2Jg House football C2, 35. N. C. Club. Field of con- centration: Bioc-hemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. af 1944 KENNETH BEDORE HENRY Born May 15, 1920, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Huntington. Home ad- dress: 88 Forbes Hill Road, Wollaston, Massa- chusetts. Lowell I-louse. Music Club Cl, 351 Record Concerts CU. Burr Scholarship, Field of concentration: Music. NELSON FISCHER HERMANCE, JR. Born August 6, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Milton. Home address: 592 Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts, Leverett House. Glee Club C1, 21, Liberal Union C1J,Caisson Club C512 Outing Club C3J. 150-lb. crew, manager CBJ, House football C3J, I-louse dance committee C2, 3D. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. GEORGE ALLEN HERSHEY Born April 25, 1923, in Wilkes-Barre, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Wyoming Seminary. Attended the Citadel 1 year. Home address. 227 Reynolds Street, Kingston, Pennsylvania: Dunster House. House baseball CZJQ House basketball CZJ, Field ofconcentration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM LEWIS HEWES, JR. Born January 11, 1922, in Wilmington, Dela- ware. Prepared at Tower Hill. Home address: 180-fl Monroe Street, Wilmington, Delaware, Kirkland House. Pi Eta Theatricals CZJ. Swimming squad C253 swimming team C1, 3J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. ARNOLD GAY HEWETT Born November 27, 1922, in Canton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Scituate High. Home address: P. O. Box 196, Minot, Massachusetts. Eliot House. KENNETH ROBERT HEYMAN Born August 26, 1922, in Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at Newark, Home address: 574 Bergen Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, volun- teer worker CU, A.R,P. Warden C2, 39. Wrestl- ing squad C2, 3Jg House war service committee CSJ. Field of concentration: Government. War service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. 239 GEORGE ALBEE HIBBARD Born October 9, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 1584 Beacon Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Naval Society Football squad 12, 5J. Field of concentration: Economics. HOXVARD SCOTT HIBBETT, JR. Born July 27, 1920, in Akron, Ohio. Pre- pared at Culver. Home address: 822 Hamlet Street, Columbus, Ohio. Eliot House. Field of concentration: English. JAMES JACKSON HIGGINSON' Born December 10, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Marshall, Virginia. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Jubilee Committee OJ, A.R.P. Warden f2J. Football squad CIJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E., Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: His- tory. Intended war service: Field Artillery. FREDERICK JOSEPH HILLMAN Born December 21, 1922, in Augusta, Maine- Prepared at Township High. Home address: 1117 Paul Street, Ottawa, Illinois. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. BENJAMIN DICKSON HITZ Born October 28, 1922, in Indianapolis, In- diana. Prepared at Shortridge High. Home address: Brendonwood, Indianapolis, Indiana. Kirkland House. House dance committee CQJ. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. MAHLON BUSH HOAGLAND Born October 5, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Hill. Attended Williams 1 year. Home address: 150 Woodland Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Pre-Medical Society f5J. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. 12401- WILLIAM CHAPMAN HODGES Born September 24, 1920, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at University of Arizona. Home address: Ennis, Montana. Dudley Hall. Field of concentration: Sociology. KURT H OFF MAN Born December 28, 1922, in Vienna, Austria. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Attended Princeton University 1 year, Northwestern University 1 year. Home address: 187 High Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Warden GJ, Verein Turm- waechter GJ, International Club GJ. Field of concentration: Philosophy and English. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching and writing. THOMAS THEODORE HOFFMAN Born April 22, 1922, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Concord High. Home address: Sudbury Road, Concord, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. House Committee f2J, secretary- treasurer GJ, Smoker Committee: A.R.P.g House dance committee f2J, chairman GJ, Interhouse dance committee, chairman CBJ. House basketball C2. EBJQ House football C2. 3J. William Royall Tyler Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces Engineer. In- tended permanent vocation: Aeronautical Engi- neer. ROBERT USHER HOLDEN Born May 15. 1923, in Shirley, Massachusetts. Prepared at Fitchburg High. Home address: Horsepond Road, Shirlev Center, Massachu- setts. Adams House. Albnm. Field ofconcen- tration: Classics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. MANFORD HOLMAN Born March 14, 1922, in Sheboygan, Wiscon- sin. Prepared at North High. Home address: 2505 North 7th Street, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Kirkland House. Fencing team CIJ, House baseball QZJQ House football CZJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended permanent vocation: Mechanical engi- neer. THOMAS CAMPBELL HOLYOKE Born June 9, 1922, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prepared at Riverside High. Home address: 2968 North Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Winthrop House. Yrzrdling. Track team C1-3J, House baseball CZ, BJ. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detut CIJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Aeronautical engineering. Che Glass ROBERT PRINCE HOPEWELL Born September 27, 1921, in Newton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 315 Waverly Avenue, Newton, Massachusetts, Leverett I-louse. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. BECKFORD KIBBEY HORNE Born-Iune 28, 1920, in San Diego, California. Prepared at New Mexico Military, Home address: 2403 East Second Street, Tucson, Arizona. Dudley Hall. Observation Post QU, Intertlormitory Athletics, managers com- mittee QU. Field of concentration: Sociology. HARRY LINDLEY HOSFORD Born june 20, 1942. in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul. Home address: Com- modore Hotel, St. Paul, Minnesota. Leverett House. Crimson Network, technical board QD: Pi Eta Theatricals 125. Swimming team, manager CID: House football 135. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RICHARD AYER HOUGHTON Born June 23, 1922, in Haverhill, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Raymond High. Home address: Route 1, Box 75, Raymond, New Hampshire. Dunster House. Harvard Col- lege Scholarship. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Gov- ernment service. FRANCIS AUGUSTINE HOUSTON, II Born January 7, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Elm Terrace, Concord, Massachusetts. Eliot House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Fireman f2, 3jg Caisson Club Q31 Wrestling team QU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. ROBERT BRUCE HOUSTON Born july 29, 1923, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Southwest High. Home address: 235 West 62nd Street, Kansas City, Missouri. Lowell House. War Service Committee, Boston information center GJ. Tennis squad CU. Detur QU, junior Eight. Field of con- centration: Physics. Intended war service: Physics Research. nf 7944 WILLIAM JAMES HOUSTON Born April 19, 1923, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Prepared at Thomas jefferson High. Home address: 14 North Avenue, Elizabeth, New jersey. Basketball squad QU, football squad fly The Harvard Club of Newjersey Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. In- tended permanenr vocation: Business. CLIFTON MERTON HOWARD, -IR. Born August 11, 1922, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton High. Home ad- dress: Roberts Street, Greenwood, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. Track team Cl, 23 l-larvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Field 0 concentration: Engineering Sciences, Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Communication engineering. i JOHN HOWARD Born October 19, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Manchester, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Band OJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Geography. Intended war service: Field Artillery. VICTOR ELLIOTT HOWES Born February 5, 1923, in Malden, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Malden High. Home ad- dress: 148 Beltrau Street, Malden, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Advertising. GALEN STONE HOYT Born june 5, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 825 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Claver- ly Hall. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. WHARTON DREXEL HUBBARD Born November 3, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Gt-:orge's. Home ad- dress: c-o Mrs. D. Dahlgren, Bellevue Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Field of concentration: Biology. 241 BERTR AM ARNOLD HUBERMAN BornJune 11, 1923, in Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended Clark University 1 year. Home address: 91 Abbots- ford Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks House, social service committee C2, 33. House basketball C2, SJ: House crew C213 House football C2, 513 House committee C2, 353 House dance com- mittee CZJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Mercantile. JOHN CHARLES LINCOLN HULLEY Born August 15, 1925, in Deland, Florida. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 5824 Legation Street, Northwest, Washington, D. C. Eliot House. Glee Club CU: Crimson Net- work C2J. House basketball C2-35. Harvard Club of Washington, D. C., Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. RICHARD F. HUNNEWELL BornJuly 26, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 14 Chestnut Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: Fine Arts, Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. JOSEPH MANUEL HURLEY, JR. Born November 21, 1922, in Lynn, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 93 Munroe Street, Lynn, Massachusetts. Lev- erett House. Lacrosse team C1-BJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. GEORGE BARKLEY HUTCHINSON, JR. Born October 18, 1922, in Lexington, Kentucky. Prepared at Louisville High. Home address: 1717 Windsor Place, Louisville, Kentucky. Lowell House. Caisson Club CED: Pre-Medical Society CU. James A. Rumrill Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HUGH MUSGRAVE HYDE Born December 29, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 131 East 94th Street, New York, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Student Council CZJ. Field of concentration: Literature. 112421- ALEXANDER LOUIS JACKSON, III Born February 7, 1920, in Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Prepared at Andover. Attended University of Pennsylvania 1 year. Home address: 5535 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Winthrop House. Rea' Boole. Foot- ball squad CU, track squad CU, House base- ball C2, EQ, House football C2, 3J. Signet Society, Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended wat service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. EARNEST HARDING JACKSON Born October 15, 1920, in Clay County, Arkansas. Prepared at Santa Fe High. Home address: South 59th Street, Belleville, Illinois. Wrestling CU, Interdormitory Athletics CD. ROBERT JAFFE Born January 16, 1923, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Oak Lane Country Day. Home address: 309 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Adams House. Red Book' Pierian Sodality of 1808 CIJ, manager C2, SJ. House crew CZJ. Price-Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. i JOHN GEORGE JELATIS Born February 6, 1920, Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Somerville High. Home address: 60 Clarendon Avenue, Somerville, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Pierian Sodality of 1808 C1-SJ. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended permanent vocation: Physicist. JOHN SAMUEL JILLSON Born January 12, 1922, in Newport, Rhode Island. Prepared at Wing High. Home ad- dress: East Sandwich Massachusetts. A.R.P. Warden CZJ. Track squad CZJQ track team CU cross country team C1, ZJ. Henry J. Wing Scholarship. Field of concentration: Econom- ics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Agriculture. JOHN WILLIS J OHANNABER Born March 17, 1923, in Rockford, Iowa. Prepared at North High. Home address: 2505 Ames Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House CU: Band CU, Pierian Sodality of 1808 CU. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Chr' 6171 5 ARTHUR MENZIES JOHNSON BornJuly 21-I, 1921, in Waltham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 371 Waver- ley Oaks Road, Waltham, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Yacht Club CIJ. Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching. EDXVARD PIERCE JOHNSON Born June 1, 1921, in Columbus, Ohio. Pre- pared at Exeter. Home address: 212 Laurel Street, Longmeadow, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Glee Club CU, Band OJ. Cross country squad OJ, Field of concentration: History. WALTER JAMES JOHNSON, JR. Born February 1, 1925, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Germantown Friends'. Home address: Penn-Ingle, Black Rock Road, Gladwyne, Pennsylvania. Adams House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Fireman 12, BJ, Harvard Pacihsr Association QI, SJ. Soccer squad KU. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Civilian Public Service. Intended permanent vodation: Mechanical engineering. WAYNE JOHNSON, JR. BornJuly 11, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St, PauI's. Home address: 35 East 76th Street, New York, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Foot- ball team C1-3J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: English History. Intended war service: iflarine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: aw. ROBERT NELSON JOLLIFFE Born November 15, 1920, in Montclair, New Jersey. Prepared at Westminster. Home address: P. O. Box 12, Upper Montclair, New Jersey. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Government. PAUL WALTON JONES, JR. Born May 19, 1922, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Prepared at Central High. Home address: 135 Lafayette Avenue Northeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Lowell House. A.R.P. Warden CZJ. Field of concentration: Government, Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teacher. of 1944 ROBERT KAGAN Born March 19, 1923, in Malden, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 91 Fuller Street, Brookline, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Glee Club f2Jg Avukah Society QU. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Area of Social Science. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Psychiatry. JOSEPH RICHARD KAMEESE Born July 15, 1922, in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. Prepared at Worcester. Home address: 1755 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. St. Paul's Club fl, 2J. House baseball, manager CZJQ House basketball f2Jg House football CZJQ I-louse track Field of con- centration: Government. Intended wat ser- vice: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE JOSEPH KEEGAN, JR. Born July 41, 1921, in Houlton, Maine. Pre- pared at Van Buren High. Home address: 114 McKinley Street, Van Buren, Maine. Leverett House. Band fl, 21. Henry D. and Jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. JOHN HENDRICKS KEELER Born August 9, 1921, in Madison, New Jersey. Prepared at Trinity. Home address: 88 Fourth Avenue, New York, New York, Field of concentration: English. MARVIN MYRL KEIRNS Born June 23, 1922, in Continental, Ohio. Prepared at Findlay High. Home address: 2515 North Main Street, Findlay, Ohio. Lowell House. Harvard College Scholarship, Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ALBERT CHARLES KELLY Born December 28, 1922, in Bristow, Okla- homa. Prepared at Bristow High. Home address: 119 East Twelfth Avenue, Bristow, Oklahoma. Leverett House. Red Book, busi- ness board, Union Committee, Band Q1-3Jg Mountaineering Club 12, 3J, Yacht Club QU. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Economic geolo- gist. 12431: GEORGE RAYMOND KELLY Born July 6, 1917, Norwood, Massachusetts. l Attended Boston College 2 years. Home address: 395 Nahatan Street, Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended permanent voca- tion: Civil Service. WARREN ARTHUR KELSEY Born June 12, 1923, in Quincy, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 1389 Walnut Street, Newton Highlands, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Literature. ROBERT DAY KEMBLE Born July 3, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home ad- dress: 8 Ash Street Place, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House, settlement house work 115, A.R.P. Warden 12, 35: Red Cross, first aid 125. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Psychology. FREDERICK F. M. KEMPNER Born April 2, 1921, in Amsterdam, Holland. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 145 East 52nd Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Phillips Brooks House, social service committee 11-55: Rugby Club. Soccer team 11, 25. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. CHRISTOPHER FRANCIS KENNEDY Born October 4, 1922, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 31 Wellesley Park, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club 11, 25. Baseball squad 115: wrestling squad 125, House baseball 125: House basketball 125, House football 125. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. JOHN PRESSLY KENNEDY, JR. Born August 1, 1922, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Prepared at Central. Home address: 416 Queens LRoad, Charlotte, North Carolina. Eliot House. 'Union Committee. Student Council 1353 Glee Club Crew squad 125, crew 115, House-.crew 125, House committee 125, secretary-treasurer 135, House dance com- mittee 125, chairman Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. 42441 WALTER KENNEDY Born December 12, 1922, in St. Paul, Minne- sota. Prepared at St. Paul. Home address: 514 Grand Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota. Winthrop House. House Committee: A.R.P, Warden 12, 35, Rugby Club. Football squad 115: House football 12, 35, House hockey 12, 35. Spee Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. GEORGE WARREN KENNERLY Born March 11, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont High, Home ad- dress: 39 Bartlett Avenue, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club 12, 35. Class of1844 Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended Perma- nent vocation: Chemistry. STEPHEN COES KENNEY Born July 27, 1921, in Tampa, Florida. Pre- pared at Loomis. Home address: Stony Batter, Marshallton, Delaware. Eliot House. Field of concentration: English. JOHN MARSHALL KERNOCHAN Born August 5, 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. John Harvard Scholarship. Fly Club, Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Anthropology. GERALD AUSTIN KERRIGAN Born September 4, 1920. in New York, New York. Prepared at Canterbury. Home ad- dress: 11 Glendale Road, Summit, NewJersey. College address: Winthrop House. Cri111.ro11, news board 11, 25. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HERMANN EUGENE KESSLER Born April 26, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Manual Training High. Home address: 7116 10th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Leverett House. Caisson Club 135. Harvard College Scholarship, Detut 115. Field of concentration: Comparative Philology and Germanics, Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. Che 617155 LEON SAUL KIND Born December 26, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Winthrop High. Home address: 18 Dolphin Avenue, Winthrop, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Student Union QU. Baseball squad QU: soccer squad Q1,2Jg House basketball CZJQ House track QD, Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Coast Guard. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. BAYARD LE ROY KING Born May 15, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. PauI's. Home address: Indian Spring, Newport, Rhode Island, College ad- dress: 59 Plympton Street. Field of concentra- tion: History. JOSEPH ANTHONY KING, JR. Born May 6, 1925, in North Attleboro, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at North Attleboro High. Home address: 169 South Washington Street, North Artleboro, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Pre-Medical Society UD, Yacht Club fl, 21: St. Paul's Club C1, 25. House football CD. Field ofconcentration: Biology, Intended permanent vocation: Doctor. ROBERT CUSHMAN KING Born March 5, 1922, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 120 Cen- tral Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Linden Street, Field of concentra- tion: Biology. WILLIAM JAMES KING Born November 22, 1915, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Syracuse Central High. Home address: 7 Trowbridge Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physics. PAUL JAMES KIRBY Born July 4, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge Latin. Home address: 15 Centre Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Baseball squad QU. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law, of 1944 WILLIAM THORN KISSEL, JR. Born February 6, 1920, in New York, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 53 East 67th Street, New York, New York. Adams I-louse. Tennis squad OJ. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. ROBERT MERRILL KITCI-IIN Born April 12, 1925, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Winchester High. Home address: 50 Hastings Street, Wellesley Hills, Massachu- setts. Winthrop I-Iouse. Rez! Bunk, photog- raphy board. Field of concentration: Physics. JOHN WILLIAM KLAGES Born July 11, 1922, in Columbus, Ohio. Pre- pared at Columbus. Home address: 511 North Drexel Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. Lowell House. Ref! Boob, editorial board, Pi Eta The- atricals CZJ. Football squad CID: House foot- ball CZJ. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. KARL HOOKER KLAUSSEN Born September 28, 1921, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: Center Street, Lewiston, New York. Dunster House. Soccer team C113 lacrosse team QU. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Chemistry. RICHARD PENTHAGE KLEEMAN BornJune 24, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 600 West 116th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Crimson Network, CU, program man- ager QZ, 3j. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Radio. GEORGE G. P. KNAPP, JR. Born June 26, 1923, in New Rochelle, New York. Prepared at Bronxville High. Home address: 3 Alden Place, Bronxville, New York. Eliot House. Crew squad Harvard Col- lege Scholarship. Field of concentration: Eng- lish, Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. 245 ROBERT GALEN KNIGHT Born September 19, 1922, in Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: 41 Ogden Road, Scarsdale, New York. Dunster House. Red Cross C2, 55: Pre-Medical Society C1-553 Hospital orderly work CZD. Field of concentra- tion: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT ALLEN KOCH Born May 17, 1925, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Barrington High. Home address: Bateman Road, Dundee, Illinois. Leverett House. Crimfon, editorial board C2, 55, Red Book, literary board, Glee Club C5Dg Liberal Union CU, Council on Post-War Problems House crew C2, 55, House committee C2, 53: House war service committee, chairman CSD. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Govern- ment service. ROBERT LEWIS KOEHL Born March 4, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Kenosha High. Home address: 1505 69th Street, Kenosha, Wisconsin. Dun- ster House. Verein Turmwaechter Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching. KAM CHEONG KOO Bornjune 20, 1920, in China. Prepared at St. Josephs Home address: 191 Des Voeux Road, Central, Hong Kong, China. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. ARTHUR FRANK KOSKINAS Born June 24, 1921, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Worcester Classical High. Attended Clark University 2 years. Home address: 8 Gold Street, Worcester, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Law. LEO KOVAR Born November 11, 1922, in Albany, New York. Prepared at Albany. Home address: 394 Quail Street, Albany, New York. Kirk- land House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 C1-51: Pre-Medical Society C2, 53, Music Club C1, 23. Field of concentration: Chemistry. 12461- N HAROLD KRESBERG Born February 28, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Bordentown Military. Home address: 71-50 68th Street, Glendale, Long Island, New York. Winthrop House. Rez! Bank, Pre-Medical Society C1, Zj. Tennis squad CU. Field ofconcentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ARTHUR LOCKWOOD KRETCHMAR Botnjuly 20, 1921, in London, England. Pre- pared at Culver. Attended Flintjunior College 1 year. Home address: 2546 Nolan Drive, Flint, Michigan. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. LEWIS MILES KROHN Born July 5, 1922, in Utica, New York. Pre- pared at Utica. Home address: 107 Pleasant Street, Utica, New York. Kirkland House. Crimron, business board CZD, advertising man- ager C5j, Red Book, advertising manager, Caisson Club C5D. House baseball Czb. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. THOMAS SAMUEL KUHN Born july 18, 1922, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Taft School, Watertown, Con- necticut. Home address: 250 East 50th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Crim- ron, editorial board CD, editorial chairman C5j, Debating Council C1-55, Liberal Union C1, 21, executive committee C5, LU. john Harvard Scholarship. Detur CID: Phi Beta Kappa. Sig- net Society. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Communications. In- tended permanent vocation: Research in Theoretical Physics. LIONEL JACK KUNST Born February 6, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Davis High, Mount Vernon, New York. Home address: 157 Riverside Drive, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Glee Club C253 Liberal Union CU. House crew CZD. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Civil service. ROBERT FULTON KURTZ Born March 11, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Home address: 7002 Wissahickon Avenue, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Caisson Club C5j. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service. Field Artillery. he 65155 SHEPPARD DONALD KUSSELL Bornjuly 6, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Worcester. Home address: 89 Pleasant Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Adams House. Ref! Bank, circulation: A.R.P. C3-D. House baseball KZ, Sjg House football GD. Field of concentration: Sociology. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business administration. XVILLIAM LYDNEY KYDD, JR. Bornjanuary 8, 1914, in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at New Bedford High. Home address: 307 Ash Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. College address: 5 Divinity Avenue. Red Bank, photography board, Student Union CU: Photography Club CID. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences, Intended war service: Army Air Forces. DOUGLAS LADD Born September 10, 1922, in Framingham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 1114 Division Street, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. Lowell House. Lanzpnazz 12, jj, Phillips Brooks House CID, Photography Club CU, Stamp Club CU. Field of concentration: Economics. -IULES CALVIN LADENHEIM Born April 21, 1922, in Weehawken, New jersey. Prepared at Memorial High. Attended Vermont 1 year. Home address: 20 62nd Street, West New York, Newjersey. Leverett House. A.R.P. QZQ: Red Cross QD, Verein Turm- waechter QD. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CLARENCE JAY LAFFERTY, JR. Born February 7, 1921, in Canton, China. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 100 West 58th Street, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Union Committee QU, A.R.P. GJ. House crew CD, House dance committee GJ, House entertainment committee CBJ. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Publishing. GEORGE WILLIAM LAHAGE BOTH MHICI1 50, 1923, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Hingham High. Home address: 30 Rockland Circle, Nantasket, Massa- chusetts. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. Field of concentration: English. of 1944 JOHN HOPKINS LAMONT Born january S, 1925, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: Wash- ington Depot, Connecticut. Eliot House. Field ofconcentration: Classics and Philosophy. NEUNERT FREDERICK LANG Born july 28, 1922, in Portland, Oregon. Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 2526 Southeast Market Street, Portland, Ore- gon. Winthrop House, Price Greenleaf Schol- arsliip. Field of concentration: History. In- tended permanent vocation: Episcopal min- istry. ELLIOT KENNEDY LA NGSTAFF Born February 1, 1925, in Brooklyn Heights, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home ad- dress: 59 Garden Place, Brooklyn Heights, New York. Eliot House. Glee Club C1-3,3 Stamp Club Cl, ZJ, Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Area of Social Sciences. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government, ROBERT MORRIS LASKER Born February 17, 1923, in Eau Claire, Wis- consin. Prepared at Eau Claire High. Home address: Oakwood Place, Eau Claire, Wiscon- sin. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Economics. ELLIOTT CHARLES LASSER Born November 50, 1922, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Nichols. Home address: 14 Linwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York. Kirkland House. Crimson C1-392 Rm' Book. House basketball QD: House football Q2, 39. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. BENTON CALVER LATTIN Born December 23, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Bronxville High. Home address: 3 Bretton Road, Scarsdale, New York. Leverett House. A.R.P. Runner CZ, 39. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended permanent vocation: Electrical engi- neering. 247 FRANCIS EDWARD LAWLOR Born September 11, 1922, in Lawrence, Massa- ' chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 24 Winthrop Avenue, Lawrence, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Band C1-35, Pierian Sodality of 1808 C1-55: St. Paul's Club C1-35, Music Club C1-35. Field of concentra- tion: Music. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JAMES JOSEPH LAWLOR, JR. Born October 29, 1923, in Montague City, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 374 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Glee Club, accompanist Cl, 25, Crim- son Network, musical director C255 Radio Workshop, musical director C25. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. GEORGE HUGH LAWRENCE Born December 2, 1922, in Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 119 Willard Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Football squad C25: football team C155 wrestling squad C15. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Fox Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Naval Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JAY KAY LAZRUS Born March 11, 1923, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Cryder's Point, Whitestone, New York. Dunster House. Crimrozz C1-35, Ren' Book, Album, photographic chairman, A.R.P. C2, 35: Pho- tography Club C15. Soccer squad C15g squash squad C15g lacrosse squad C15, House baseball C2, 35. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. DUNHAM BARNEY LEFFERTS Born July 10, 1922, in Farmington, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Thacher. Home address: Pomfret, Connecticut. College address: 48 Mount Auburn Street. Dramatic Club C1-35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Spee Club. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. HOWARD LEGUM Born May 27, 1922, in Norfolk, Virginia. Prepared at Maury High. Home address: 909 Grayson Street, Norfolk, Virginia. Leverett House. Gzzardiazz C253 Verein Turmwaechter C25. Tennis team Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business, 12481- EMIL WENDEL LEHMANN Born February 16, 1923, in Urbana, Illinois. Prepared at University High. Home address: R.F.D, No. 2, Urbana, Illinois. Adams House. Glee Club C25. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. RICHARD LEHMAN Born june 12, 1923, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: Box 1596, University, Virginia. Adams House. A.R.P. C35g Caisson Club C35. Fencing team Cl, 25, House crew C25. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Field Artillery, Intended permanent vocation: Army. MELVERN KREHBIEL LEISY Born October 18, 1922, in Newton, Kansas. Prepared at Highland Park High. Home ad- dress: 3523 Asbury Street, Dallas, Texas. Winthrop House. Crimson Network C2, 35: Wat Service Committee C2, 35. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. SAMUEL CUTLER LELAND Born April 4, 1923, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Lockwood High. Home address: 165 Bay View Avenue, East Green- wich, Rhode Island. Winthrop House. Crew squad Cl, 25, House crew C35. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. ln- tended war service: Engineers. Intended permanent vocation: Administrated engineering. EDMOND JEAN LE MOAL Bornjanuary 12, 1924, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lee High, Home address: 39 Gordon Street, Brighton, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Liberal Union C155 Pre-Medical Society C15g Cercle Francais C15, St. Paul's Club C1-35. House baseball C2, 35, House basketball C2, 35, House football C2, 35. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended war service: Merchant Marine. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. GERALD LENANE Born October 19, 1923, in Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 1200 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Glee Club C2, 35, St, Paul's Club C1-35. Track team C1-35. Harvard Club of Andover Scholarship. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business. Zfht' 6121 ROBERT LIVINGSTON LEO POLD B01-11 October 5, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Cheltenham Township High. Home address: Oak Lane .Manor Apartments, Melrose Park, Pennsylvania., Lo- well House. Debating Council CZ. 551-Liberal Union QZ, 35: A.R.P. Firefighter GI. Field! of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physician. KURT WOLFGANG LESSEN Born June 7, 1918, in Laibach, Yugoslavia. Prepared at Real Gymnasium Oberschuetzen, Austria. Home address: 94 Cantonments Cana, Range, Cawnpore, U. P. British India. Lowell House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching His- tory. THOMAS WALDO LESURE Born April 22, 1922, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 40 Texas Avenue, Lawrence, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. DANIEL KALMAN LEVIN Bornjuly 18, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Madison High. Home address: 1784 East 21st Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. LEONARD LEVIN Born january 12, 1923, in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Mount Pleasant High. Home address: 600 Main Street, Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. Adams House. Lib- eral Union f1Dg Harvard Auxiliary Police QZD. Field of concentration: English. PHILIP LEVINE Born September 8, 1922, in Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 10 Rhine Street, Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Price Greenleaf Schol- arship. Detur QD. Field of concentration: Classics. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. aff 1944 GEORGE KNOWLTON LEWIS Born january 11, 1923, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Cochituate Road, Wayland, Massachusetts. College address: 46 Mount Auburn Street, Football team CID, lacrosse squad CU. Phoe- nix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Geog- raphy. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Aerial surveys. GUY SPALDING LEWIS Born july 1, 1925, in Augusta, Georgia. Prepared at Richmond County. Home address: Lake Forest Drive, Forest Hills, Augusta, Georgia. Lowell House. Track team CU, House crew CZQ, House football KD, House dance committee QZD. Delta Upsilon. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. In- tended war service: Signal Corps. TRUMAN SAUL LICHT Born December 16, 1922, in Hartford, Con- necticut. Prepared at New Britain High. Home address: 77 Buell Street, New Britain, Connecticut. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House MD, settlement house work CU, Band fl-59: R.O.T,C. Pistol Team fl, 2J. Field of concentration: Chemistry and Physics. SCOTT BARRETT LILLY Born May 19, 1922, in Garden City, New York. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 600 Elm Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Liberal Union Cl, 29, president fijg Film Society GD. Signer Society. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Signal Corps. HARVEY ALAN LINCOFE Born August 22, 1920, in Homestead, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Arnold. Attended University of Pittsburgh 3 years. Home ad- dress: 5875 Bartlett Street, Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania, Winthrop House. House crew Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. GUSTAF BERG LINDQUIST Born September 20, 1923, in Worcester, Massachusetts. Prepared at North High. Home address: 41 Nottingham Road, Worces- ter, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Band C1-5j, Pre-Medical Society GD, Stamp Club QU. House baseball. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cme. .i 249 I ALLAN PRESCOTT LOCKE Born August 16, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 31 Fox Lane, Newton Centre, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Liberal Union QU, Naval Society Q31 150-lb. crew squad GJ, 150-lb. crew CD, House crew f2J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: English. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RUSSELL FRANK LOCKE, JR. Born October 30, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier High. Home address: 849 Hill Road, Winnetka, Illinois. Dunster House. Glee Club f2Jg Liberal Union f2J: Music Club f2, 3J. Field of concentration: Music. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. JAMEs LOGAN, JR. Born April 2, 1921, in Mount Holly, New Jersey. Prepared at Episcopal. Home address: High Street, Mount Holly, New Jersey. Kirkland House. Pi Eta Theatricals f2J, Yacht Club QZJ. House baseball CZJ, House basketball CZJ, House football QD, House hockey Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Marine Corps. MORRIS LONDON Born May 7, 1923, in Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden High, Home address: 31 Newton Street, Malden, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society f2, 3J. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biology. BRIAN ARTHUR LOVERIDGE Born October 24, 1922, in Helensburgh, Dumbartonshire, Scotland. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home address: 27 Everett Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. VINCENT DANIEL LOVETT Born July 28, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 34 Garfield Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. 12501- MICHAEL MARTIN LOVEZZOLA Born September 11, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 73 Barnes Avenue, East Boston, Mas- sachusetts. Lived at home. Band Q1-3J, House hockey Q2, 3J. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Doctor. JAMES DRENNAN LOWELL Born April 9, 1922, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 4 Burgess Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Glee Club CID, manager CZJ, president CSD. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g Iroquois Club. Field ofconcentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- Cine. DAVID LOWENTHAL Born April 26, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lincoln School ofTeachers College. Home address: 1 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House QU, Glee Club C1-333 Liberal Union K1-3Jg A.R.P. Runner CZ, 3J. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. ROBERT MILLER LUTZ Born November 1, 1921, in Angola, Indiana. Prepared at Horace Mann High. Home ad- dress: 616 Roosevelt Street, Gary. Indiana. Adams House. Basketball team CZJ. Field of concentration: Economics. DONALD MCALPINE LUTZE Born November 28, 1921. in Naugatuck, Con- necticut. Prepared at Peddie. Home address: 150 Cliff Street, Nau atuck, Connecticut. Kirkland House. Basketiall team Q1-31. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces, Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. FRANK GREGORY LYNN, JR. Born November 8, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 23 Hurlcroft Road, Milton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Phillips Brooks House CU: Student Defense League OJ, St. Paul's Club CU: Rifle Club QU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Che 6121 SINGERLY CLYDE MCCARTNEY Born November 23, 1921, in Utica, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Barneveld, New York. Leverett House. Field of concen- tration: History. STUART MCCARTY BornJanuary 20, 1923, in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Kirkland House. War Service Committee C574 A.R.P. Warden C553 Caisson Club C55. House war service committee C55. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. ROBERT ALTXVIG MCCLEARY Born January 9, 1925, in Dayton, Ohio. Pre- pared at Fairview High. Home address: 416 Brookside Drive, Dayton, Ohio. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House C25. House dance committee C2, 55. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Research. ROBERT VANCE MCCORMICK Born August 12, 1921, in Manchester, Con- necticut. Prepared at Manchester High. Home address: 226 Center Street, Manchester, Connecticut. Adams House. House dance Committee C25. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. JOSEPH FEDER RONALD MCCRINDLE Born March 27, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 973 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Eliot House. Lampaon C2, 35, St. Paul's Club C1-35. Hasty Pudding-Institute of177O. Field of concentration: Literature. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. WALLACE MCDONALD Born February 24, 1923, in Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Benson High. Home address: 589 North 38th Street, Omaha, Nebraska. Dun- ster House. Union Committee, A.R.P. Warden C2, 35. Squash squad, Squash team C1, 255 tennis squad C55, tennis team C1, 25. Price Greenleaf Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Insti- ture of 1770, Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. nf 7944 JOHN ROGER MCDONOUGH Born November 8, 1922, in Fork Union, Virginia. Prepared at Columbus High. Home address: 401 Yeager Avenue, Fort Benning, Georgia. Kirkland House. House football C2, 55. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. ln- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN STORER MACDOUGALL, JR. Born October 22, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter, Home address: 367 Main Street, Haverhill, Massachusetts. Dun- ster I-louse, Phillips Brooks House, under- graduate faculty C255 A.R.P. Spotter C2, 35. Track squad C15g cross country squad C353 House baseball C25. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. ln- tended permanent vocation: Law. ROBERT FRANCIS MCGIVERN Born April 7, 1921, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Emerson. Home address: 16 Wal- cott Road, Watertown, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Gnu:-rlimz C15, Red Book, Soccer team C155 lacrosse squad C15. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war service: Army. JOSEPH BERARD MCGRATH Born August 20, 1922, in Malden, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Malden High. Home ad- dress: 98 Wesr Border Road, Malden, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Band C1-35, Pierian Sodality of 1808 C553 Caisson Club C55, St. Paul's Club C1-35: Council on Post-War Problems C353 R.O.T.C. Mnzzle Blast C2, 35. Track team, manager C353 House committee, treasurer C25g House dance committee C1, 25. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. JULIAN WILLIAM MACK, II Born April 10, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 296 Hazel Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois. Leverett House. Glee Club C1, 25, Red Cross C35, Caisson Club C353 Ornitho- logical Club C1-35, Yacht Club C25, American Civilization Group C15, Foreign Relations Club C25. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. ROBERT ANTHONY MACK Born October 15, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Collinwood High. Home address: 875 East 144th Street, Cleveland, Ohio. Lev- erett House. Crimson Network, technical director Harvard College National Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Communications. In- tended permanent vocation: Physics. I251l JOSEPH PERRY MCKENNA Born September 22, 1922, in Julesbur, Colorado. Prepared at Scottsbluff High. Home address: 212 Clayton Brush, Colorado, Leverett House. William Hilton Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Statistician. THAYER MILLS MACKENZIE Born January 19, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Milton Academy. Home address: Cooperstown, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Hasty Pudding Thearricals QD, Liberal Union OJ, A.R.P. Warden CZJ, Pre-Medical Society fl-31. House crew f2J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Fly Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CHARLES ROBERT MACKEY Born February 19, 1923, in Camden, New Jersey. Prepared at Germantown High. Home address: 619 West Sedgwick Street, Mount Airy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lo- well House. St. Paul's Club fl-3Jg Engineering Society Q1-35. Track squad, manager KU, lacrosse squad, manager C2, 353 House foot- ball Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Elec- trical engineering. EDWARD ATKINSON MCLEOD Born December 20, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Shaw High. Home address: 15681 Brewster Road, East Cleveland, Ohio. Lowell House. Verein Turmwaechter fl-3J. Swim- ming squad fl, 2J. Field of concentration: English, Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cme. ALEXANDER S. MacMILLAN, JR. Born July 23, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 65 Aga- wam Road, Waban, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Baseball squad CZJQ baseball team QU, hockey squad QD, hockey team QU. Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Biology. ln- tended war service: Navy Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physician. RICHARD HENRI MacNEAL Born February 25, 1923, in Warsaw, Indiana. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 3336 West Penn Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Adams House. Fencing team QU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences and Economics. 4l252J- FRANCIS PAUL MAGUIRE Born October 19, 1921, in Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared ar Thayer. Home address: 372 Moraine Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. GAUNTT MAHAN Born October 4, 1922, in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 409 Newtonville Avenue, Newtonville, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Field of concentra- tion: American Government and Economics. Intended war service: Naval Supply. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial management. EDWARD HAROLD MAHONEY BornJ une 21, 1921, in Medford, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 138 Forest Avenue, West Newton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Lampoon 12, 3J, Red Book CU: Jubilee Committee CU, Yacht Club GJ, St. Paul's Club f1-35. Track squad QZJ, House dance committee f2J. Hasty Pudding-Insti- ture of 1770. Field of concentration: Archi- tectural Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Advertising. JOHN PETER MAHONEY Born February 18, 1923, in Springlield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Classical High. Home address: 35 Glendell Terrace, Springfield, Massachusetts. Little Hall. EDWARD FRANCIS MAHONEY Born December 26, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 170 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, 150-lb. crew squad CU, lacrosse squad fl, ZJ. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: 87th Mountain and Ski Regiment. ARTHUR GORDON MALING BornJune 11, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at Francis W. Parker. Home address: 554 Stratford Place, Chicago, Illinois. Adams House. American Civilization Group OJ, Adams House Yearbook Committee QD. Harvard College Scholarship flj, Second Prize in American Civilization Essay Contest OJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended perma- nent vocation: Journalism. U15 617155 STEPHEN PARKER MALLETT, JR. Born January 10, 1920, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Kimball Union. Home address: 65 Wauwinet Road, West Newton, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Union Committee. Football squad, captain CU: football team C2, 31: House dance committee. Field of concentration: Anthropology. GEORGE XVOLCOTT MALLORY Born November 20, 1922, in Hankow, China. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: East 74th Street, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Ren' Book. Soccer team Q1-31. Field of concentration: History. Intended war ser- vice: Army. HOXVARD PHILIP MALLOY Born December 2, 1923, in Hamilton, Bermuda. Prepared at Saltus. Bermuda. Home address: La Grange, Pembroke West, Bermuda. Dun- ster House. Phillips Brooks House, speakers committee C2-40: Volunteer Orderlies Unit of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Soccer team CZJ. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN JOSEPH MALLOY Born March 25, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton High. Home ad- dress: 20 Pine Grove Street, Milton, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club fljg Pistol Team, captain QU, Rifle Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. BERNARD NATHAN MANDELBAUM Born December 11, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical. Home address: 2 Dodge Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Cambridge Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemical Warfare. Intended permanent vocation: Chemi- cal research. SALVATORE NICHOLAS MANGANO Born December 10, 1922, in Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 69 Elm Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Circolo Italiano QZJ, St. Paul's Club C1, 25. Cambridge Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemistry. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. af 1944 DAVID EDWIN MANN, JR. Born February 15, 1922, in Johnson City, Tennessee. Prepared at Needham High. Home address: 865 Great Plain Avenue, Need- ham, Massaclrusetts. Kirkland House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Fireman GJ, Boylston Chemical Club Q1-3jg Pre-Medical Society C1-35: Hos- pital Orderly f2Jg Guerrilla Unit QD. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Surgeon. ALAN SUSSMANN MANNE Born May 1, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Towsend Harris I-ligh. Attended College of the City of New York 2 years. Home address: 172 West 79th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended perma- nent vocation: Economics. HUGH MANNING Born April 26, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 401 Wal- nut Street, Englewood, New Jersey. Eliot House. Crew squad Cl, 25, House crew QZJ. Iroquois Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. WARREN MANSFIELD Born October 18, 1922, in West Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Kingswood. Home address: 6 West Hill Drive, West Hartford, Connecticut. Winthrop House. Swimming squad, assistant manager, House hockey C2, D. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neering. SAMUEL JOSEPH MANTEL, JR. Born November 17, 1921, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 5650 North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. Kirkland House. Student Defense League QU, Lacrosse squad CU. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. LAWRENCE NEWELL MARCUS Born June 26, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Boys High. Home address: 85 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, Eliot House. Field of concentration: Government. 253 JASON MARKs Born December 9, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 128 Pleasant Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Lrzmpoarz CZJ. Track squad. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Writing. PAUL EVERHART MARSH, JR. Born August 25, 1922, in Baltimore, Mary- land, Prepared at Peabody High. Home address: 626 Hastings Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field ofconcen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army. BRECKENRIDGE MARSHALL Born November 15, 1921, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Pornfret. Home address: 105 Prospect Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Adams House. Wrestling team QU. Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Navy. HENRI JACK MARSHALL Born February 26, 1922, in Grenoble, France. Prepared at Lakewood High. Home address: 1545 Westwood Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio. Eliot House. Cercle Francais C1-EJ. Harvard National Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Diplo- matic service. GUY LEACH MARSTERS, JR. Born March 20, 1921, in Norwich, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 135 North Broad Street, Norwich, New York. Adams House. Field of concentration: Litera- ture. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. PETER VINCENT MARTIN, JR. Born July 31, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Upper Darby Senior High. Horne address: 4205 Huey Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended wat service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. 12541 AUSTIN BLAKE MASON, JR. Born October 28, 1921, in Weston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough, Home address: 22 Church Street, Weston, Massachusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Smoker Committee Chairman: Foot- ball team CU: hockey team CU. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. DAVID RUSSELL MATLA CK Born May 25, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn Charter. Home address: 3400 West School Lane, Ger- mantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Win- throp House. Phillips Brooks House QU, Boylston Chemical Club C1, 25: American Civilization Group CU. Track team C1, 25. Harvard Club of Philadelphia Scholarship. Detur CU. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Chemistry. ROBERT MATTAIR BornJuly 19, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 1 Davidson Avenue, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- istry, FRANK JARVIS MAXXVELL, JR. Born July 13, 1921, in Clarksburg, West Virginia. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 555 Buckannon Avenue, Clarksburg, West Virginia. Eliot House. Liberal Union C1-SJ. Field of concentration: History and Literature of England. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. RICHARD EARL MAXXVELL Born March 1, 1921, in Manly, Iowa. Pre- pared at Jefferson High. Home address: 6924 Southeast 66th Avenue, Portland, Oregon. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English. ROBERT JAMES MEAD Born March 8, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 139 East 79th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Red Book, photography board: Track team CU, cross country team CU. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Uze 6161 JAMES CARSE MELROSE Born March 27, 1922. in Spokane, Washington. Prepared at Lewis and Clark High. Home ad- dress: 104 West 26th Avenue, Spokane, Wash- ington. Adams House. Rm! Enola, business manager. Whitaker Scholarship 12j. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. ALVIN PIZA MENDES Born February 10, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Collegiate. Home address: 1085 Park Avenue. New York, New York. Adams House. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. THOMAS NEXVELL METCALF, JR. Born June 10, 1922, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 210 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. HENRY HIXON MEYER, JR. Born March 16, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home ad- dress: 31 Kilburn Road, Belmont, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. House crew 12J: House hockey 127. Owl Club. Field of con- centration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. JULIAN ERDREICH MEYER, JR. Born November 11, 1922, in Columbus, Ne- braska. Prepared at Kramer High. Home address: 1556 53rd Avenue, Columbus, Ne- braska. Kirkland House. Field of concentra- tion: History. CLARENCE JAHNESTOCK MICHALIS Born January 17, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Garrison-on-Hudson, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Crew 11J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770, D.K.E., A.D. Club, Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Navy. of I 944 EDWARD JOHN MICHON Born December 25, 1922, in Ipswich, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Ipswich High. Home address: 9 Prescott Road, Ipswich, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. ROY MCMICHAEL MILLEN Born November 12, 1922, in Coin, Iowa. Prepared at Coin Consolidated High. Home address: Coin, Iowa. Eliot House. Dramatic Club 1153 Phillips Brooks House 115. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. MERTON HOWARD MILLER Born May 16, 1925, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 126 Talbot Avenue, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Adams House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. ST ANLEY WALTER MILLER Born January 8, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Dorchester High. Attended Northeastern University 2 years. Home ad- dress: 46 Hiawatha Road, Mattapan, Massa- chusetts. Eliot House. Wrestling squad 141, House crew 15, lib, House football 15, 453 House committee 1-IJ, House dance committee 14J, House entertainment committee 14J: House war service committee 141. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Advertising. WADE NORMAN MILLER Born July 2, 1922, in Akron, Ohio. Prepared at University School. Home address: 13610 Shaker Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Winthrop House. Liberal Union 11Jg A.R.P. Warden 12, 3Jg Pre-Medical Society Crew squad 11J. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. KIR BY MITCHELL MILTON Born May 4, 1923, in Sr. Joseph, Michigan. Prepared at St. Joseph High. Home address: 1922 Niles Avenue, St. Joseph, Michigan. Dunster House. Boylston Chemical Club 12-4J. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. 255 ERNEST ALBERT MITCHELL Born September 1, 1922, in St. Louis, Missouri, Prepared at Cleveland High. Home address: 3819 Wilmington Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. Dunster House. Caisson Club G53 Boylston Chemical Club 155. Football squad C153 foot- ball team 115, track squad C155 wrestling squad C153 House baseball KZ. 55, House basketball CZ, 35: House crew KZ, 35: House football f2, 55. St. Louis Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended perma- nent vocation: Industrial chemist. JOHN ERSKINE MIXER Born January 29, 1922, in Onset, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence High. Home address: 40 Pleasant View Avenue, Falmouth, Massachusetts. Leverett House. A.R.P. C25. House tennis f25. Henry T. Wing Memorial Scholarship. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Econo- mist. ROBERT CUTLER MIXTER Born June 3, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Georges Home address: Hardwick, Worcester County, Massachusetts. College address: 274 Beacon Street, Boston. Field of concentration: English. EDGAR JOSEPH MONGAN, JR. Born March 17, 1923, in Plymouth, Massachu- setts, Prepared at Plymouth High. Home address: 195 Sandwich Street, Plymouth, Mas- sachusetts. College address: 119 Arlington Street, Brighton. Field of Concentration: Geological Sciences, ALBERT RICHARD MOORE Born June 18, 1922, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: 180 Newbury Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House 115: Caisson Club f35g Outing Club f25. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war ser- vice: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DAVID STANDISH MOORE Born December 8, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Choate. Home address: 350 East 57th Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. International Club KZ, 35. Field of concentration: Government. 11256 J- RICHMOND DANA Moofr, JR. Born July 25, 1922, in Schenectady, New York. Prepared at Nott Terrace. Home ad- dress: 1082 Ardsley Road, Schenectady, New York. Kirkland House. Red Book: Glee Club QZ5, Debating Council f15: Naval Society 05, Yacht Club Q15. 150-lb. crew Q1-35, Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. JOHN ACTON MORGAN Born February 7, 1922, in Oskaloos,a Iowa. Prepared at Oskaloosa High. Home address: 1109 C Avenue East, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Adams House. Band C1-45, Pierian Sodality of 1808 C1-45, Instrumental Clubs Q25 , Boylston Chemi- cal Club C2-45. Crowninshield Scholarship. Alpha Chi Sigma. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. JOHN E. P. MORGAN, JR. Born August 11, 1922, in Mexico, D. F., Mex- ico. Prepared at Middlesex. Home address: R.F.D. No. 1, Portchester, New York. Clav- erly Hall. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. HORACE MORISON, JR. Born July 2, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 5 Louis- burg Square, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot I-louse. Rez! Book, Student Defense League 415: Ski Club C15. Field of concentration: History. CHARLES JAMES MORRIS Born April 17, 1919, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 51 East Elm Avenue, Wollaston, Massachusetts. Clav- erly Hall. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. RICHARD IRVING MORRIS Born May 12, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 145 Lakeview Avenue, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Sociology. he 6fll5'5 CHARLES FESSENDEN MORSE Born November 20, 1922, in Weston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 44 Pigeon I-lill Road, Weston, Massa- chusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Crew squad fl, ZJQ Hast Pudding-Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. JOHN ROBERT MOSKIN Born May 9, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Mann. Home address: 300 Central Park West, New York, New York. Lowell House. Crimmu, C1-3J managing editor f3Jg RerlBor1b: Album, sports editor, Phillips Brooks House 425: Class Odist. Soccer team CU. Signet Society. Field of concentration: American History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. WILLIAM JOHN MOSS Born August 31, 1921, in Duluth, Minnesota. Prepared at St. Thomas Military. Home ad- dress: 1978 Portland Avenue. St. Paul, Minne- sota. Eliot House. Wrestling team KZJQ House football. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philoso- phy and Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. GEORGE MOSTOW Born July 4, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 15 Browning Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society 13, 10, Mathe- matics Club C3, 4J. Stoughton Scholarship. Detur CU. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Teaching. EDWARD PREBLE MOTLEY, JR. Born May 28, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's, Home address: South Hamilton, Massachusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Football squad QU, hockey squad CU. Field of concentration: Government. ROLAND ERNST MUESER Born May 14, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Mountain Lakes High. Home ad- dress: 105 Lake Drive, Mountain Lakes, New Jersey. Lowell House, Phillips Brooks House QU, Band Q1-4J, Verein Turmwaechter f1Jg Outing Club C1-3J, secretary QU. House hockey C3, 4J. Field of concentration: Elec- tronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neer. f 7944 ANDREW ROBERT MULDOON Born September 21, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Lake Forest. Home address: 117 East Bellevue Place, Illinois. Adams House. Tennis squad CU. Field of concentration: Economics. THOMAS PATRICK MULKEEN Born May 28, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooklyn Preparatory. Home address: 172 Crown Street, Brooklyn, New York. Eliot House. Baseball team OJ. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. ANDREW PHILIP MURPHY Born September 27, 1922, in Swampscott, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Marblehead High. Home address: 12 Sapphire Avenue, Marble- head, Massachusetts. Leverett I-louse. Yacht Club CZJQ St. Paul's Club CZJ. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. PAUL ROBERT MURPHY Born November 7, 1921, in Newburyport, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newburyport High. Home address: 13 Lincoln Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Industrial chemist. SEAN BULLER MURPHY Born January 25, 1924, in London, England. Prepared at Downside School, England. Home address: 355 East 86th Street, New York, New York. Lowell House. Pre-Medical Society C3, 4J. House crew QZJ. Field of concentra- tion: Psychology. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. MICHAEL HUNT MURRAY Born April 21, 1922, in Cambridge, England. Prepared at Groton. Home address: 1211 Madison Avenue, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. 257 I ANTON OLMSTEAD MYRER Born November 3, 1922, in Worcester, Massa- ' chusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 86 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, Massachu- setts. Winthrop House. Field of concentra- tion: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. MERTON ROLAND NACHMAN, JR. Born December 21, 1923, in Montgomery, Alabama. Prepared at Sidney Lanier High. Home address: 117 Thomas Avenue, Mont- gomery, Alabama. Eliot House. Pierian Sodal- ity of 1808 CBJ: Liberal Union CZJ. House baseball: House basketball: House track. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. GEORGE NAKHNIKIAN Born November 12, 1920, in Varna, Bulgaria, Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 50 Trapelo Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Glee Club GJ: Student Council Committee on Curriculum and Tenure GJ. Edwin A. Harlowe Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Biochemistry. Intended war ser- vice: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. GERHARD NELLHAUS Born September 16, 1925, in Stettin, Germany- Prepared at Wiley High. Home addressi R.R. 6, Box 167, Terre Haute, Indiana. Dun- ster House. Verein Turmwaechter C1-3,3 Harvard Volunteer Orderlies Unit of the Massa- chusetts General Hospital Field of con- centration: German. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. JOHN LEVISEUR NEWMAN Born May 19, 1920, in New Haven, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Governor Dummer. Home address: 124 Bay State Road, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Winthrop House. Yacht Club CU, Lacrosse, manager QU. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army. TOD RACHMIEL NISSLE Born February 23, 1922, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook. Home address: 14870 Sussex Road, Detroit, Michigan. Soccer team QU. Field of concentration: Government. 12581- DAVID SHEPHERD NIVISON Born January 17, 1923, in Farmingdale, Maine- Prepared at Gardiner High, Gardiner, Maine' Home address: Spring Hill, Mobile County, Alabama. Winthrop House. Glee Club Q2-41 Harvard College Scholarship, Detur C59- Field of concentration: Classics. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. HENRY MARTYN NOEL, JR. Born May 21, 1923, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Prepared at New Hampton. Home address: East Andover, New Hampshire. Kirkland House. A.R.P. 12, 33: Red Cross KZ, 35. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Field Service. ROBERT LEO NORTON, JR. Born June 18, 1922, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 53 Mon- mouth Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Dramatic Club flj. House crew QZJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. In- tended permanent vocation: Chemistry. ALBERT HOLDEN NORWEB Born November 20, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 9507 Lake Shore Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. WILLIAM ALAN NOTZ Born January 15, 1922, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 5422 59th Street, Washington, D. C. Leverett House. A.R.P. Warden QZJ, inter- ceptor Command CZJ, Red Cross, ambulance driver 121, Rifle Club QZJ. House baseball QZJQ House football CZJ. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps, Intended permanent vocation: Research in physics. DAVID CHESTER NOYES, JR. Born April 29, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Liberal Union CU: Yacht Club, commodore GJ. Crew, junior varsity OJ. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770: D.K.E.g Fly Club. Field of concentration: Mechanical Engineering. In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Mechanical engineering. U15 6171 5 HENRY PIERRE NOYES Born December 10, 1923, in Paris, France. Prepared at University of Illinois High. Home address: 11111 West Oregon Street, Urbana, Illinois. Winthrop House, Liberal Union CU: A,R.P. Warden CZ, 35g Boylston Chemical Club C251 Mountaineering Club C3Jg Assistant Chairman of Student Council Com- mittee on Curriculum and Tenure C31 Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Research in physics. XVILLIAM LEROY NUTTING Born July 26, 1922, in Pepperell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Thornton. Home address: 104 King Street, Saco. Maine. Winthrop House. Cambridge Entomological Society CZJ. Henry B. Humphrey Scholarship. Field ofcon- centration: Biology. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Eco- nomic entomology. GEORGE NYE Born June 29. 1921, in Brookline, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Attended Uni- versity of Arizona 1 year. Home address: 32 Lawrence Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Golf team CU. D. U. Club. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service : Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. RICHARD OBER Born April 5, 1921, in New York, New York, Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Dromore Road, Scarsdale, New York. Winthrop House. A.R.P, Warden CZ, 33: Caisson Club. Crew squad C1-31, crew C11 Hasty Pudding-Insti- tue of 1770. Field ofconcentration: Philosophy and History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. ROBERT CHARLES O'BRIEN Born January 21, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 4 Florence Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club C1-3J, Engineering Society C1-313 Varsity Club C2, 35. Football squad C1-355 House baseball C2, 31: House hockey C2, 31: House dance committee C2, 33. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Electrical engi- neering. JAMES BERNARD O'CONNELL Born May 7, 1923, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 159 Hancock Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Living at home. Glee Club C2, 55: St. Paul's Club C1-4J. Crew squad C1, 25, Daniel Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. of 1944 CLEO ALBERT O'DONNELL, JR. Born November 5, 1921, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Worcester. Home ad- dress: 1301 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Varsity Club. Baseball team C1, Zjg football team C1-3J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Marine Corps. SIDNEY LAMONT O'DONOGI-IUE Born September 29, 1923, in Saloniki, Greece. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Embajada de los EE. UU., Mexico D. F., Mexico. Dunster I-louse. Glee Club CU, Crimson Net- work C311 Verein Turmwaechter, secretary C1, 21. Track squad CU, fencing squad CU, 1-louse dance committee C335 House entertain- ment committee C3j. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Marine Corps. intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. RICHARD BERTON OGREAN Born October 15, 1921, in Quincy, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 28 Bedford Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Hockey team CU. Field of concentration: History. JOHN ALOYSIUS O'KEEFE, III Born August 6. 1920, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Huntington. Home address: 137 Colberg Avenue, Roslindale, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. ROBERT GERALD O'KEEFFE Born February 3, 1923, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 988 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. MICHAEL SEYMOUR OLMSTED Born May 27, 1923, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High. Home address: 783 Foxdale Avenue, Winnetka, Illinois. Adams House. Liberal Union CU, A,R.P. Warden CZJ. Fencing team C1, 25. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sci- ences. Intended permanent vocation: Public administration. 12591 AUSTIN GILL OLNEY Born October 13, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: Hampton, New Hampshire. Winthrop House. Lczmjzoan C2-lil, Phillips Brooks House CU. Track squad QU: 150-lb. crew squad QU, D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. ALBERT GJERDING OLSEN Born August 19, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Pleasantville High. Home address! Hardscrabble Road, Pleasantville, New York. Kirkland House. Verein Turmwaechter f1,-ZJ. 150-lb. crew squad CZJ, 150-lb. crew CU. Field of concentration: Organic Chemistry. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. GROVER O'NEILL, JR. Born December 30, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St, Marks. Home address: Fleetwood, Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York. College address: 5 Linden Street. Caisson Club O, AU, St. Paul's Club C1-4J. Hockey team fl, ZJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770g Delphic Club. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended wat service: Field Attil- lery. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- istry. CASPAR REUBEN ORDAL Born May 5, 1922, in River Falls, Wisconsin. Prepared at River Falls High. Home address: River Falls, Wisconsin. Eliot House. Susan B. Lynn Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. EDWARD JAMES O'ROURKE, JR. Born November 18, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 2280 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Daniel A. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Physician. ROBERT JAMES ORR Born August 30, 1921, in Denver, Colorado. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 750 Clarkson Street, Denver, Colorado. Lowell House. American Civilization Group CID, Rifle Club QU. Field of concentration: Anthropology. 12601- PALMER OSBORN Born February 12, 1923, in Hastings, Michigan. Prepared at Hastings High. Home address: 888 West Walnut Street, Hastings, Michigan. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Aeronautical Engineer. JOHN FREEMAN OTTO, JR. Born June 10, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Hughes. Home address: 875 Ludlow Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Kirkland House. Jubilee Committee CU, Phillips Brooks House QU, Pi Eta Theatricals C235 A.R.P. GJ, Pre-Medical Society CI, 3J, Pistol team CU. House dance committee C2, 3J, Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In tended permanent vocation: Physician. PAUL RAYMOND OVERHULSE Born June 26, 1922, in Hamlet, Ohio. Pre- pared at Marion Township High. Attended Miami University 1 year. Home address: Hamlet, Ohio. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. FRANK DAVID PADGETT Born March 9, 1923, in Vincennes, Indiana. Prepared at Lincoln High. Home address: 905 State Street. Vincennes, Indiana, Adams House. A.R.P. Messenger 13, fljg St. Pau1's Club CZ, 31. Swimming team C1-LU. Harvard Club of Indiana Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. EDXVIN HARTSHORN PALMER BornJune 29, 1922, in Milton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Quincy High, Home address: 36 Hilda Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Classics and History. HOWARD LONGYEAR PALMER Born November 4, 1921, in Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 395 Washington Road, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Eliot House. St. Paul's Club fl--IJ. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770. Field of concentra- tion: Area of the Social Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Che Hass XVILLIAM PRESTON PALMER, JR. Born December 31, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Purchase Street, Rye, New York. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Economics, Intended war service: Navy. XVILLIAM CRANE PALSON, JR. Born August 2, 1922, in Gloucester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Winchester I-Iigh. Home address: -17 Myrtle Terrace, Winchester, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Track team QI, ZH, captain KID, cross country team 11, 2J, captain QU. Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. HOXVARD JOSEPH PAR AD Born March 17, 1925, in Roxbury, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin. Home address: 35 Stratton Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Avukah Society K2, 3J. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Science. Intended permanent vocation: Social work. JOHN RAYMOND PARISH Born September 27, 1924. in London, England. Prepared at King's College, Wimbledon, Eng- land. Home address: 9 Gray Gardens East, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineer. DAVID CHAPMAN PARK Born September 29, 1921, in New Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Pomfret. Home address: Birdwood, Garrison, Maryland. Uni- versity A. Internarional Club Cl, ZJ. Lacrosse team Cl, 2J. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. HOWARD LANGLEY PARKER Born December 2, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 119 Oakley Road, Belmont, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Crew squad, cox- swain QIJ. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. :ff 7944 JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER Born June 6, 1924, in East Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at Music and Arr High. Home address: 1801 Marmion Avenue, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Pre- Medical Society GJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. SAMUEL COULTER PARSONS Born August 7, 1922, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 17 Lantern Lane, Cowesett, Rhode Island. Lowell House. Field of concentration: English. Intended wat service: Coast Guard. RUFUS LENOIR PATTERSON, III Born August 11, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Groton. Home address: '10 East 62nd Street, New York, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street, Field of concentration: English. ROBERT CARLTON PAUL Born April 22, 19211, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Sharon High. Home address: 133 South Main Street, Sharon, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Football squad CU. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war ser- vice: Army Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. IRA PECK Born August 13, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at De Witt Clinton High. Home address: 835 Walton Avenue, New York, New York. Kirkland House. Gfzardimz KZ, SJ. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. MURRAY ETHAN PENDLETON Born December 10, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 571 Willow Street, Waterbury, Connecticut. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks Houseg Rifle Club. House dance committee CZJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. 261 HAROLD DOUGLAS PERCIVAL Born May 29, 1923, in Greensburg, Kansas. Prepared at Fitchburg High. Home address: 112 East Street, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. ARTHUR JOHN PEROS Born May 22, 1925, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 26 Tufts Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Cambridge Scholarship. GEORGE TOWER PETTUS Born July 21, 1922, in Saint Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Saint Louis Country Day. Home address: 4949 Pershing Avenue, Saint Louis, Missouri. Eliot House. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Signal Corps. ARTHUR HOLL PHELAN, JR. Born May 20, 1922, in Weehawken, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 518 Standish Road, Teaneck, New Jersey. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House, A.R.P. Warden f2J. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature of England. Intended war service: Naval Reserve. Intended permanent vocation: Law. DANIEL BURRET PHELAN Born November 8, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Andrew's. Home ad- dress: 165 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, New York. Thayer Hall. JAMES ANDREW PHELAN Born December 5, 1922, in Fall River, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Dublin. Home address: 1246 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Field of concentration: English. 12621 ' BRUCE BRANDON PHEMISTER Born March 14, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at University of Chicago High. Horne address: 5621 University Avenue, Chi- cago, Illinois. Lowell House. Advocate, editor GJ. Field of concentration: Philosophy. In- tended permanent vocation: Teacher. ALAN JAY PIFER Born May 4, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Center Road, Shirley, Massachusetts. Student Union CU, Liberal Union Track squad Q2jg track team CU, House hockey 123, House track QZJ. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. In- tended war service: Army. HAROLD PILVIN Born May 19, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 25 Wales Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts, Stoughton Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. DANIEL ROGERS PINKHAM, JR. Born June 5, 1923, in Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: c-o Mrs. Olive C. Pinkham, Hotel Commander, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Leverett House, Phil- lips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty QU, Glee Club CZ, 35, Yacht Club fl, 25, President Harvard Music Club 13, AJ. Leverett House glee club and orchestra, conductor CZ, 35. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Music. Intended permanent vocation: Music. WALTER HIRAM PISTOLE, JR. Bom February 23, 1921, in Memphis, Tennes- see. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1566 North Parkway, Memphis, Tennessee. Col- lege address: 11 Hawthorn Street. Field of concentration: English. DONALD STEVENSON PITKIN Born January 6, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: Country Way, Scituate Center, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Caisson Club 15, 4J. Crew squad C1, ZJ, 150-lb, crew squad Cl, 25, House crew QD, House football f2J. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: D. U. Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: State Department. Uhr Zia HENRY NORRIS PLATT, JR. Born March 23, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Saint Paul's, Home address: Laverock, Chestnut Hill, Pennsyl- vania. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Cr-Imran C1, 25. Cross country team 115. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Fly Club. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. DANA RUMSEY PLUMB Born March 19, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Rose Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania. College address: 96 Prescott Street. Field of concen- tration: English. SHERMAN SXVETT POLAND Born December 15, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Reading High. Home address: 75 Oak Street, Reading, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Liberal Union C1, 25. Cross country team 115. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. LOUIS HEILPRIN POLLAK Born December 7, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 84 Macdougal Street, New York, New York. Eliot House. Guardian fl, 25: Student Union 115, Liberal Union Cl, 25, president C353 A.R.P. Warden K35, Freshman Debating Team. Signet Society. Field of concentration: His- tory and Literature. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. LOUIS ADOLPH POST Born July 28, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin, Home address: 109 Anawan Avenue, West Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Crew fl, 25: track team f25, House crew Field of concen- tration: English. PHILIP BARTON KEY POTTER, JR. Born January 7, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at New Preparatory. Attended Clark College. Home address: c-o Fifth Ave- nue Bank, Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Lrzmpoozz 135. House crew QZ5, House squash Q25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770: Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Eng- lish. Intended war service: Navy, of 1944 FREDERIC DEAN POWELL Bom-iJune15, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 20-A Prescott Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Kirkland House, Glee Club fl, 25. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army. GEORGE BAILEY PRATT Born December 8, 1922, in New Bedford, Mas- sachusetts. Preparedatlixeter. Homeaddress: 203 Brunswick Street, Rochester, New York. Adams House. A.R.P. Warden. Field of concentration: Chemistry, Intended war ser- vice: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. JEROME PRESTON, JR. Born November 15, 1922, in Staten Island, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 161 Main Street, Hingham, Massa- chusetts, Winthrop House. Glee Club C1-45 Squash squad, manager fl, 45, Field of con- centration: Electronics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Radio. JOHN DUNCAN PRESTON Born September 14, 1921, in Southampton, Long Island, New York. Prepared at St. Pauls Home address: 125 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. Field of concentration: English, Intended war service: Army. EDWARD OAKLEY PROVOST, JR. Born July 9, 1923, in Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Fremont High. Home address: 243 Bowling Green Drive, San Leandro, Cali- fornia. Leverett House. Red Book, A.R.P. Warden C253 Red Cross, ambulance driver House dance committee f25. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended war service: Army, Intended permanent vocation: Archi- rect. CHARLES MURRAY PURINTON Born February 8, 1922, in Waterbury, Connec- ticut. Prepared at Loomis. Home address: 10 Murray Street, Waterbury, Connecticut. Lev- erett House. Wrestling team U53 lacrosse team 115, House baseball: House football. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: American Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. 265 ROGER LOWELL PUTNAM, JR. Born July 12, 1922, in Springfield, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home address: 216 Central Street, Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Committee for Militant Aid to Britain CU, Ski Club Field of concentration: History. WILLARD SAMUEL PUTNAM, JR. Born February 18, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home address: Summer Street, Cohasset, Massachu- setts. Kirkland House. Pi Eta Theatricals QZJ. House baseball QD: House hockey QZJ. Pi Eta. Field ofconcentration:English. Intended war service: Navy. PAUL VINCENT QUINN Born July 21, 1922, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St.John's. Home address: 54 Haskell Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Baseball team fl, 2Jg House basketball f2J: House football CZJ. Cam- bridge Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Advertising. FRANCIS WALLACE RAMSEY, III Born May 1, 1921, in Newton, Massachusetts, Prepared at Milton High. Home address: 459 Pleasant Street, Milton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. JAMES ALEXANDER RAMSEY Born November 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 250 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Crew squad 11, 2J. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army. ROBERT WHEELER RAND Born January 28, 1925, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Fairfax High. Home address: 140 South Norton Avenue, Los Angeles, California. Winthrop House. Swim- ming team CD. Field of concentration: Biology. 12641- THOMAS RAPHAEL Born June 9, 1922, in Somerville, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Somerville, High. Home address: 23 Franklin Street, Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Band fl, 2J. Som- erville Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. STANLEY WALTER RAYMOND Born May 22, 1922, in Pasadena, California. Prepared at Thacher. Home address: 554 Moreno Avenue, Brentwood Heights, Los Angeles, California. Adams House. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. DAVID WESTCOTT READ Born July 22, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Pur- chase, New York. Eliot House. Hasty Pud- ding-Institute of 17705. Field of concentra- tion: English. Intended war service: Army. JOSEPH WOODWARD REDMOND Born August 7, 1921, in Pelham, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: Tivoli, New York. College address: 59 Plympton Street. Hockey team CID. Field of concen- tration: Psychology. SUMNER MURRAY REDSTONE Born May 27, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: Copley Plaza Hotel, Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Debating Council CU, Avukah Society GJ. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Classics and Government. Intended war service: Japanese Language Of- ficers' School. Intended permanent vocation: Civil Service. FRANK WILLIAM REEB Born September 3, 1922, in Dwight, Illinois. Prepared at Dwight Township High. Home address: 120 East Seminole Street, Dwight, Illinois. Dunster House. Debating Council 12, 313 A.R.P. House football Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Government. he 617155 HARALD ANTON REICHE Born February 14, 1922, in Berlin, Germany. Prepared at Andover. Home address: Apart- ment SK, 44-'15 Post Road, Riverdale, New York. Lowell House. Classical Club Q1-3j. Teschemacher Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Classics. Intended war service: Army. JAMES FRANCIS REIDY Bornjune 16, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 11 Rawston Road, Roslindale, Massachusetts. Lived at home, St. Paul's Club Q1-fly. Wres- tling team 1-55g House baseball CZ, 302 House football ts 3 House hockey CZ, SDQ House committee CZ, 55. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Field Artillery, Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. DAVID EMERSON REILLY Born April 15. 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 75 South Crescent Circle, Brighton. Massachusetts. Lived at home. Glee Club C1-31. Field of concentration: Government. Intended perma- nent vocation: Newspaper work. GERARD XVILLIAM RENNER Born December 23, 1921, in Dorchester, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 51 Bellevue Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. St. Pau1's Club Q1-41 Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Communica- tion engineering. Intended permanent voca- tion: Communication engineering. ALFRED HOWARD RENSHAXV Born March 21, 1922, in Albany, New York. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: Loudonville, New York. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Insti- ture of 1770: Fox Club. Field ofconcentration: Area of the Social Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. JOHN EUSTACE REYNOLDS Born October 22, 1923, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 3020 Q Street Northwest, Washington, D. C. Lowell House. Glee Club, accompanist fl, 35. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- t1Ol'1! Economist. of 1944 WILLIAM ALEXANDER RICH Born May 2, 1922, in Staten Island, New York. Prepared at Kent. l-lome address: 24 St. Austin's Place, Staten Island, New York. Kirkland House. A.R.P. Track squad CID, soccer squad CU, House crew QD: House track f2j: House entertainment committee Q21 Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sciences. Intended war service: Ameri- can Field Service. PAUL IRVING RICHARDS Born February 8, 1925, in Orono, Maine. Prepared ar Cambridge High and Latin, Home address: 119 Washington Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Daniel Buck- ley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended permanent vocation: Re- search. WILLIAM ALLEN RICHARDS Born August 26, 1925, in Waltham, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Waltham High. Home address: 75 Ellison Park, Waltham, Massachu- setts. Lived at home, Field of concentration: Chemistry. THOMAS REASER ROBERTS Born March 13, 1925, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at West High. Home address: 2105 Irving Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Leverett House. Album. Har- vard College National Scholarship. Detur KU. Pi Eta, Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. CHARLES SNELLING ROBINSON, II Born july 4, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio. Pre- pared at Milton. Home address: 1242 North State Street, Chicago, Illinois, Winthrop House. 150-lb. crew Fox Club. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Navy. RICHARD GEORGE ROBINSON Born February 26, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lincoln. Home address: 50 East 96 Street, New York, New York. Leverett House. International Club, social director C21 Field of concentration: Psychol- ogy. Intended war service: Army Psychologi- cal Service. Intended permanent vocation: Clinical Psychology. 12651- ALBERT MILLER ROCKWOOD Born March 1, 1922, in Columbus, Ohio. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 173 South Parkview Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. Eliot House. Crimrozz C1-3jg Album, Glee Club C1-32. Fencing team CID. Field of con- centration: Engineering Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Aeronautical Engineer. WADE ROCKWOOD Born September 12, 1922, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Nichols. Home address: 793 East Main Street, East Aurora, New York. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks 'Houseg Pre- Medical Society Q2, 35, Eliot House Dance Committee. Field of concentration: Biology. ROBERT COURT RODGER Born july 30, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 22 Garden Road, Lowell, Massachusetts. Dunster House. A.R.P. Warden C2-41, Pre-Medical Society Q1-35. Lacrosse team Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. HOWLAND PENDLETON ROGERS Born-Iuly 11, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Tuxedo Park, New York. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Spee Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. JAMES TRACY RONAN Born january 16, 1922, in Salem, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence. Home address: 348 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. HAROLD REDFIELD ROOKS Born December 12, 1922, in San Francisco, California. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Horne address: 705 McGilvra Boulevard, Seattle, Washington. Lowell House. Red Book: A.R.P. Warden f2, 35, Verein Turmwaechter C2, 31, Photography Club UQ. Field of con- centration: Government and Philosophy. In- tended war service: Navy. -I 266 1- GILBERT JACOB ROSE Born May 9, 1923, in Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden High. Home address: 340 Ferry Street, Malden, Massachusetts. Adams House. Avukah Society C1-41. Cross country squad CU. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. GERALD DAVID ROSENBLOOM Born April 27, 1923, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Southwest High. Home address: 807 Romany Road, Kansas City, Missouri. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House, social service committee Q1-33. Golf team CU. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sciences. VERNON ROWLAND Born August 11, 1922, in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Prepared at Heights High. Attended Oberlin College 1 year. Home address: 2832 Scarborough Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Dunster House. Glee Club, librarian 12, 3Dg Pre-Medical Society CZJ. House baseball QZJ. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. In- tended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. BERNARD RUBIN Born july 1, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 779 Morton Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Boylston Chemical Club CZ, 3j Dudley Hall crew C21 Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial chemistry. ELIHU ZUNDER RUBIN Born February 4, 1922, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 1800 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton. Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Psychology. EDWARD GARDINER RUDD Bornjuly 23, 1922, in Boston, Ivlassachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Home address: 15 West Cedar Street, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentra- tion: English. Cha Hlass PHILIP HUNT RUSSELL, JR. Born March 30, 1923, in New Haven, Con- necticut. Prepared at Hamden High. Home address: Box 1100, New Haven, Connecticut. Dunster House. Outing Club, secretary, C2, 3J: Harvard Safety Patrol, treasurer 425. Pennoyer Scholarship, Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neering. DAVID ROBERTSON SAUNDERS Born March 11, 1923, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Webb. Home address: 860 Dartmouth Avenue. Claremont, California. Winthrop House. A.R.P, Warden C3J. Swim- ming team CIJ: track squad C1J, Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Chemistry and Physics. Intended war service: Chemical Research. Intended permanent vocation: Chemical research. WALTER BARNWELL SAUNDERS Born January 20, 1923, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at University of Minne- sota High. Home address: 1968 Kenwood Parkway, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Leverett House. Pi Eta Theatricals C2, BJ. Swimming squad C1, 2, 3J: Swimming team CU, House baseball C2, 3Jg House football C2J: House dance committee CZJ. Pi Eta. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. WILLIAM PETER SAX Born December 16, 1922, in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: South Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Adams House. Wrestling squad CU. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. OLIN GLENN SAXON, JR. Born March 12, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Loomis. Homeaddress:53 Edgehill Road, New Haven, Connecticut. Eliot House. Crimson C1, 21: Outing Club, secretary C2J. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. GEORGE ALBERT SAXTON, JR. Born April 7, 1923, in Paris, France. Prepared at George. Home address: Short Hills, New Jersey. Eliot House. Crimron CZJ, Union Committee, chairman CU: Smoker Committee CIJ, Student Council CZJ: Phillips Brooks House, social service committee CZJ. Crew squad CIJ, House crew CZJ. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. af 1944 PI-IILLI P JA MES SCANLON Born December 10, 1922, in West Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 25 Fairheld Street, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Engineer- ing Society C1-3J, vice-president CSJ. Tennis team C1-3J. Henry D, andJonathan Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces, Intended permanent vocation: Elec- trical engineering. ERWIN I-IASKELL SCHELL, JR. BornJuly S, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks. Home address: 67 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Glee Club Cl, ZJ, Dramatic Club C1, 2J, Red Cross, Ornithological Club C1, 2J. Soccer team C1J, 150-lb. crew CIJQ House crew C2J. Pi Eta. Field of concentra- tion: Biochemistry. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medical research. DONALD GEORGE SCHNABEL, JR. Born February 8, 1922 ,in Berkeley, California. Prepared at Mamaroneck High. Home address: -'12 Hillcrest Avenue. Larchmont, New York. Adams House. Larchmont University Club Scholarship, Field ofconcentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. CECIL JACK SCHNEER Born January 7, 1923, in Far Rockaway, New York. Prepared at Far Rockaway High. Home address: 1035 Dickens Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York. Dunster House. International Club CZJ. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. STEPHEN MICHAEL SCHOEN BornJuly 13, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 11 West 81st Street, New York, New York, Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of con- centration: History and Literature. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. WARD MICHAEL SCHULTZ Born September 10, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Polytechnical Preparatory. Home address: 8936190 Street, Hollis, New York. Winthrop House. Pre-Medical So- ciety Clj. Lacrosse team CIJ, Field of con- centration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. 267 1- HERBERT DIETRICH SCHULTZ Born July 16, 1922, in Munich, Germany. Prepared at Lynbrook. Home address: 46 Reyam Road, Lynbrook, Long Island, New York. College address: 56 Plympton Street. Cross country squad CU Hasty Pudding- Institute of 17703 Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Anthropology. Intended war service: Marines. Intended permanent voca- tion: Art Publisher. JOSEPH GORDON SCOTT, JR. Born April 1, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 445 Pleasant Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Eng- lish, RICHARD HERBERT SEGNITZ Born December 17, 1922, in Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day. Home address: 4470 North Lake Drive, Mil- waukee, Wisconsin. Winthrop House. Phil- lips Brooks House C3, 41, Pi Eta Theatricals GJ, St. Paul's Club Q1-4J. Baseball team OJ: wrestling s uad fljg House baseball 12, 3Jg House fooilball C4J, House hockey QB, 4J. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Biology. In- tended war service: Medical Administrative Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. NOEL HERBERT SEICOL Born November 5, 1923, in Hartford, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Brookline High. Home ad- dress: 525 36th Avenue, Northeast, Seattle, Washington. Little Hall. Pre-Medical So- ciety Cljg Avukah Society CU. Field of con- centration: Biology. JOSEPH SANFORD SHANLEY, JR. Born April 27, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Home ad- dress: P. O. Box 93, Seabright, New Jersey. Dudley Hall. Field of concentration: English. LLOYD STOWELL SHAPLEY Born June 2, 1925, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Kirkland House, Liberal Union Q1, ZJ, secre- tary GJ, Mathematics Club CZ, 3J. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. 42681 ' HOWARD D. SHARPE, JR. Born May 19, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts, Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 10 Temple Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Gmzrdiazzz QU, secretary CZJ, feature editor CBJ, Liberal Union 12, 3J, Harvard Council on Post-War Problems, House library committee Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Lawyer. ALAN BOSWORTH SHAW Born March 28, 1922, in Englewood, New Jersey. Prepared at Garden Country Day. Home address: 3449 79th Street, Jackson Heights, New York. Dunster House. Soc- cer squad fljg rifle team QU, manager f2J, president CBJ. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Geology. ROBERT BRUCE SHEEKS Born April 8, 1922, in Shanghai, China. Pre- pared at North Central High. Home address: 1309 West Mallon Avenue, Spokane, Washing- ton. Adams House. Glee Club CU, Fencing team CU. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Naval Intelligence. WILLIAM HARRISON SHERER Born November 24, 1922, in South Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: Gregory Avenue, West Orange, New Jersey, College address: 7 Ware Street. Crimson Network KU. Golf team, manager GJ, House baseball CZJ. Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Diplomatic service. DONALD HOWARD SHIVELY Born May 11, 1921, in Kyoto, Japan. Pte- pared at Canadian Academy, Kobe, Japan. Home address: 294 East College Avenue, West- erville, Ohio, Tennis squad CU. Harvard- Yenching Scholarship. Derur QU. Field of concentration: Far Eastern Languages. War service: Marine Corps Intelligence. Intended permanent vocation: Research in Far Eastern studies. DANIEL McKAY SHOOK Born September 15, 1922, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Prepared at Ottawa Hills High. Home address: 534 Fuller Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Lowell House. House football. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. We 65155 WARREN EDGAR SHRYOCK Born September 2, 1921, in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Kansas City junior College. Home address: 5229 East 28th Street, Kansas City, Missouri. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: Economics. ALLAN MARTIN SHUBIN Born july 211, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Sufheld. Home address: 998 Biltmore Avenue, Dormont, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Field of concen- tration: Geology. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Geolo- gist. LAXVRENCE DAVID SHUBOW Born November 50, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 55 Greenock Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Progretrirr, editor CU: Phillips Brooks House, speakers committee CD: Student Union, treasurer C291 Avukah Society C21 House committee C2, 55. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sciences. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Economist. WILLIAM ALBRIGHT SHUE Born May 18, 1921, in Fall River, Massachu- setts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 219 Harvard Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Police CD. Field of concentration: Sociology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. MARTIN SHWARTZ Bom September 50, 1925, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 140 Lucerne Street, Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Dramatic Club, press department C5, lil, Red Cross, first aid C5j. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. RUSSELL ADAMS SIBLEY Born March 15, 1922, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 500 Main Street, Spencer, Massachusetts. College ad- dress: 5 Linden Street. Crew, manager C1-55: track team Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Army. nf 1944 HAROLD JULES SIGOLOFF Born August 22, 1925, in St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Clayton High. Home address: 6514 Sun Bonita, St. Louis, Missouri. Kirk- land House. Guczrrliuzz C2jg Phillips Brooks House C1-52: Student Union C213 Liberal Un- ion C1, 25, Cercle Francais C2, 55, Field ofcon- centration: Government. HENRY BRIGGS SILSBEE Born january 15, 1925, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 2620 Quebec Street, Northwest, Wash- ington, D. C. Lowell House. A,R,P. C2-41, Outing Club CZJ. john Harvard Scholarship. Detur C2jg Phi Beta Kappa, Senior Sixteen. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended permanent vocation: Physics. JAMES CARTER SKINNER Born November 26, 1921, in Hamilton, Ohio. Prepared at Hamilton High. Home address: 404 Ross Avenue, Hamilton, Ohio. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House C1-55, A.R.P. Warden CZ. SJ. Fencing squad N. C. Club. Field of concentration: English, ln- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. EDXVIN CHESTER SKORNIK Born july 20, 1925, in Salem, Massachusetts. Prepared at Salem Classical and High. Home address: 7 Piedmont Street, Salem, Massachu- setts, Lived at home. Field of concentration: Psychology. WILLIAM PENCE SLICHTER Bom March 51, 1922, in Ithaca, New York. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home ad- dress: 10 Wyman Road, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. A.R.P., Radio Operator C2, 5j, Red Cross, first aid C2, 5j. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial or academic chemistry. DORRAINE WARD SLINGERLAND Born October 6, 1922, in Mount Kisco, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 89 Martling Avenue, Pleasantville, New York. Winthrop House. Track team C2, 51, soccer team CZ, 55, House track CID. Crawford Memorial Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. 269 SIDNEY JEROME SLOMICH BornJuly 15, 1921, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Dorchester High. Home ad- dress: 199 Callender Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Lived athome. J. M. Richard- son Scholarship. Field of concentration: Gov- ernment. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Civil service. NEAL EDWARD SMALL Born December 31, 1922, in Liberty, New York. Prepared at Balboa High. Attended Tufts College 1 year. Home address: P. O. Box 412, Balboa, Canal Zone. Adams House. Rifle Club GJ. Field ofconcentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Diplomatic Service. BENJAMIN SEAVER SMITH Born May 30, 1921, in Yonkers, New York. Prepared at Belmont Hill. Home address: 35 Windsor Terrace, Yonkers, New York. Adams House. American Civilization Group OJ. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. HAROLD WENDELL SMITH Born August 29, 1922, in Massillon, Ohio- Prepared at Washington High. Home address: 1117 11th Street Northeast, Massillon, Ohio. Leverett House. Adaomre, treasurer 125, president 155. Harvard College National Scholarship. Signet Society, secretary. Field of concentration: English. Intended war ser- vice: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. HENRY ST. JOHN SMITH Born November 25, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Thacher. Home ad- dress: Pleasant Street, Groton, Massachusetts. College address: 16 Story Street. Crew CU. JOSEPH 'BURKHOLDER SMITH Born June 16, 1921, in Harrisburg, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at William Penn High. Home address: 2225 North Third Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. Crimson QZJ, assistant editorial chairman Q3, 4Jg Phillips Brooks House CBJ: Crimson Network C2-fijg Radio Workshop CZJ, assistant director G, fij, Harvard College Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Government administration. 12701- MATTHEW EDWARD SMITH Born August 16, 1925, in Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Grafton High. Home address: 12 Merriam Road, Grafton, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Football squad 115, House baseball. Worcester Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry, ROBERT HENRY SMITH Born July 22, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Home address: 254-15 41st Drive, Little Neck, Long Island New York. Kirkland House. A.R.P. GJ: Red Cross GJ: St. Paul's Club GJ. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. In- tended war service: Medicine. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT STEWART SMITH Born January 25, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Stuyvesant High. Home address: 1080 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Rifle Club CU. House football QZJ. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Quartermaster Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Real estate. SHERWIN DOUGLAS SMITH BornJuly 11, 19211. in Quincy, Massachusetts. Prepared at Thayer. Home address: 13 Well- ington Street, Braintree, Massachusetts. Kirk- land House. Photography Club CU. Harvard Prize Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Journalism. WENDELL FREDERICK SMITH Born October 28, 1922, in Lowell, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 58 Westview Terrace, West Newton, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Swimming squad fl, ZJ, rifle team f2Jg House baseball Cl, ZJQ House basketball Cl, 2Jg House foot- ball C1, 21. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Aero- nautical engineering. WILLIAM EDWARD SMITH Born June 15, 1922, in Paducah, Kentucky- Prepared at Belmont High. Home address: 127 Lewis Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Caisson Club GJ. Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Insur- HIICC. he 60158 WILLIAM SNOWER, JR. Born August 8, 1922. in Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Culver. Home address: 5819 High Drive, Kansas City, Missouri. Lowell House. Gillllfllillll C2. 35. editorial chairman C31 Harvard College Scholarshipg English I Prize Book CU. Signet Society. Field ofconcentra- tion: Government. Intended permanent voca- tion: Government service. WILLIAM FIRTH SNYDER Born September 17, 1922. in Amsterdam, New York. Prepared at West High. Home ad- dress: 530 Wellington Avenue, Rochester. New York. Adams House. Basketball team C1, ZJ: Cheerleader C3J: House baseball C1-35: House football C31 Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. XVILLIAM DAVIES SOHIER, JR. Born September 21, 1922, in Manchester, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's. Home address: 28 Union Park, Boston. Massachu- setts. College address: 59 Plvmpton Street. Crew squad C251 crew CU. Hasty Pudding- Institute of1770g D.K.E.g A. D. Club. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. AUGUSTO JOSEPH SOLIMENE Born December 1, 1921, in Atripaldo, Italy. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 29 Radcliff Road. Waban, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended permanent vocation: Business. RICHARD DAVID SOLO Born November 3, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared Oak Lane Country Day. Home address: 1000 66th Avenue, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Eliot House, Council on Post-War Problems C3J. House basketball C2, 315 House dance committee C2, 35: House soccer C2, 3J. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent voca- tion: Government service. ROBERT SOLOW Born August 23, 1924, in Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 165 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Dunster House. Gmzrdimz C1, 2J. Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. De- tur C1Jg Phi Beta KappagJunior Eight. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sciences, Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. af 1944 EDWIN JOHN SOMMER, JR. Born January 22, 1923, in Ogden, Utah. Prepared at Culver Military. Home address: 519 East Wabash Avenue, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Eliot House. Cr'im.mz1, business manager C2, 3Jg Rez! Bnolz, circulation mana ret, Phillips Brooks House, social service CU, Debating Council C2, 3J. House dance com- mittee, vice-chairman C2, 3J. Field of concen- tration: Economics. ROBERT LEONARD SOMMER Born April 10, 1921, in Cambridge, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Huntington. Home acl- dress: 21 Van Ness Road, Belmont, Massachu- setts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Government. RICHARD CLARKE SORLIEN Born June 23, 1922, in Minneapolis, Minne- sota. Prepared at Pelham Memorial High. Home address: Apartment 6-fi Wilherbee Court Apartments, Pelham Manor, New York. Lowell House. Ref! Bnale, literary editor: Album, assistant biographies editor, War Service Com- mittee C3,4jg A.R.P. CZ-aj. Football team CU, tennis squad C1-3Jg tennis team C1-3Jg House basketball C2, 3J, captain C313 House football C2, 3J, captain C313 House hockey C253 House committee C3J: House dance committee C2, 35, House athletic secretary C3, 41. Field of con- centration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness. XVINSOR SOULE, II Born December 3, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 58 Euston Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: Engi- neering Sciences. Intended war service: Army, SHERMAN F. P. SPAULDING Born July 10, 1919, in Worcester, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston English High. Attended Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology 2 years. Home address: 242 Massachu- setts Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Aeronautical engineer. DE FOREST SPENCER, JR. Born June 7, 1922, in St. Paul, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake. Home address: 421 Grove- land Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Lev- erett House. Harvard College National Schol- arship. Field of concentration: English. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. -12711 JOSEPH STEWART SPENCER Born April 26, 1922, in Kilbirnie, Scotland-' Prepared at Lynn English High. Home ad- dress: 4 Herbert Road, Arlington, Massachu- setts. Lived at home, Field of concentration: Romance Languages. HOWARD MARGET SPIRO Born March 25, 1924, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts, Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 19 Stuart Road, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Advocate f2, 5j, business manager GD, Red Book, Phillips Brooks House, service committee QQ, Crim- son Network Q1-51, A,R.P, Warden Q2, 51: Pre-Medical Society QU. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. FRANTS SPORON-FIEDLER Born December 5, 1922, in Copenhagen, Den- mark. Prepared at George Washington High. Horne address: 182 52nd Avenue, San Fran- cisco, California. Eliot House. Ref! Book, advertising. Henry D, Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. HENRY BRADFORD STANTON Born August 12, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Deerfield. Home ad- dress: 501 Onondaga Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Winthrop House. Lfzmpoon GJ, Ornithological Club CU. 150-lb. crew squad flj. D. U, Club. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended war service: Army. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. THOMAS MITCHELL STANTON Born September 50, 1922, in Cincinnati, Ohio- Prepared at Western Hills. Home address: 2909 Werk Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. Eliot House. Phillips Brooks House flj, chairman library committee C5, 41, War Service Commit- tee, Caisson Club G, LD. House war service committee KB, 45. Harvard Club of Cincinnati Scholarship. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. ALBERT MYER STARR Born August 17, 1921, in Medford, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 155 University Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. . Lived at home. Mitchell Freiman Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended war service: Army, In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. -I-272 1- CHARLES STATHOPOULOS Born August 6, 1921, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 880 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Buckley Scholarship. Field of con- centration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Chemist. NORMAN STANLEY STEARNS Born October 17, 1925, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 16 Fuller Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts, Band C1-51, Director, Freshman Frolics. Crew squad CZJ, crew CU. Field of concentration: Biology, Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. PAUL ROBERT STEIN Born January 7, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 70 Neptune Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. Dunster House. john Harvard Schol- arship. Signet Society. Field ofconcentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Chemical Warfare. Intended permanent vocation: Chem- ist. WILLIAM ALEXANDER STENZEL Bornjanuary 21, 1925, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 59 jackson Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Hockey squad Qjg wrestling squad C5, 423 wrestling team C5, 45. Cambridge Aid Scholar- ship. Field ofconcentration: American Govern- ment. Intended war service: Army. EDGAR BLOOM STERN, JR. Born September 1, 1922. in New York, New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: 11 Garden Lane, New Orleans, Louisiana. Kirkland House. Crew,150 squad QU: House crew CZJ. Field of concentration: Electronic Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Electrical engi- neering. EDWARD BROOKS STEVENS Born March 25, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts, Prepared at Groton. Home address: 72 Great Pond Road. North Andover, Massachusetts. College address: 48 Mount Auburn Street. Squash squad C51 Hasty Pudding-Institute of 17705 Spee Club, Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Manufacturing, he 6171 XVILLIAM FREDERICK STIFEL, II Bornjune 6, 1922, in Toledo, Ohio. Prepared at Western Reserve. Home address: 2265 Scottwood Avenue, Toledo, Ohio. Dudley Hall. Field of concentration: Physics. MERRILL SILVER STOCKER Born january 141, 1923, in Newark, New jersey. Prepared at Salem Classical and High. Home address: 49 Summer Street, Salem, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Swimming team 115. Field of concentration: Economics. HOXVARD NORDAS STONE Born April 7, 1922, in Marblehead, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Marblehead High. Home address: 19 Green Street, Marblehead, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Franklin Reynolds Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Engineering. ALBERT WAY STRANG Born February 22, 1925. in Richland Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Sellersville-Perkaise High. Attended The American University 1 year. Home address: 4600 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Maryland. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Government, Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. CHARLES BENNETT STRAUS, JR. Born March 29, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at McDonough. Home address: 101 Central Park West, New York, New York. Claverly Hall. Field of concentration: English. RAYMOND LEE STRONG Born July 10, 1922, in Lamar, Colorado. Prepared at Albuquerque High. Home address: 115 Harvard Avenue, Albuquerque, New Mexico. LowellHouse. CercleFrancais13,45g Circulo Espanol 12-45. Track squad 13, 45, cross country squad 15, 45, House baseball 12-45, House basketball 12-45: House track 13, 45. Harvard College National Scholarship, Field of concentration: Romance Languages. Intended war service: Army. of 1944 I-IARBORNE WENTWORTH STUART Born November 25, 1921, in Swampscott, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nich- ols. Home address: 12 Reservoir Street, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Crew 115. Field of concentration: Geological Sciences. ' JOHN WALKER STUART Born july 17, 1920, in Albany, New York, Prepared at Milton, Home address: London- ville, Albany County, New York. Eliot House. Soccer team 115. Field of concentration: English. ROBERT SHAW STURGIS Born july 8. 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Marks Home address: South Avenue, Weston, Massachusetts. Adams I-louse. Criwxozz, news board 11, 25, Phillips Brooks House 1153 Ski Club 11, 25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of1770, D. U. Club. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. In- tended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Architecture. XVILLIAM VICTOR SUCKLE Born November 24, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Olney High. Home address: 5014 North C Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lowell House. G11arn'iurz125, Phillips Brooks House 125, Debating Council 11, 25. Henry D. and jonathan M. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Area of the Social Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Public service. EDMUND LEON SUGARMAN Born April 9, 1925, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at English High. Home address: 30 Evelyn Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Pre-Medical Society 115. Stoughton Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CLAYTON ALBERT SWENS ON Born November 11, 1923, in Hopkins, Minne- sota. Prepared at St. Louis Park High. Home address: 6308 West 35th Street, St. Louis Park, Minnesota. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Research. Intended permanent voca- tion: Research. 42751 RICHARD NEWTON SWIFT Born March 5, 1924, in Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at College High. Home address: 101 Hawthorne Avenue, Bloomheld, New Jersey. Adams House. Red Book, editorial chairman: Album, biography editor, Phillips Brooks House, social service committee CZJ, vice-presi- dent GD, Glee Club G, 415 War Service Com- mittee CBJ: A.R.P., hrst aid: Radio Workshop Q1-3J, Grant Study C2-41. House library com- mittee C2-551 House war service committee, chairman Q2-3J. New Jersey Harvard Club Scholarship. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Teach- ing. PETER GRAM SWING Born July 15, 1922, in New York, New York.- Prepared at Putney. Home address: Coney- hurst, R.F.D. 1, Westport, Connecticut. Eliot House. Glee Club CD, Pierian Sodality of 1808 QU, Foreign Relations Club QU. Field of concentration: Music. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. DONALD BRUCE TALMAGE Born March 5, 1923, in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at New Bedford. Home address: 100 Bedford Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. Adams House. House dance committee CZ, ESD. Harvard College Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Busi- ness administration. NORMAN ISADORE TANANBAUM Born May 25, 1923, in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 45 Winsor Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Red Bookgflj Phillips Brooks House fl-313 Boylston Chemical Club 13, 4j, Pre-Medical Society C1-41. House football 141: House hockey Q2, 3Jg House track CZ, 5b. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Physician. ARTHUR SUMNER TARLOW Born December 20, 1922, in Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Andover. Home ad- dress: 197 Moraine Street, Brockton, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. A.R.P. Warden CB, 4J. Golf team Q1-4J. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. KURT PHILIP TAUBER Born October 6, 1922, in Vienna, Austria. Prepared at Melrose High. Home address: 1105 Franklin Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Parmenter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Armored Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Research chemist. -mu FENT ON TAYLOR, JR. Born April 12, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 227 East 57th Street, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Caisson Club GJ. Hockey squad CD, hockey team QU, soccer team fl, 25. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, Spee Club. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. In- tended permanent vocation: Engineer. STERLING PRICE TAYLOR Born October 26, 1922, in New Haven, Con- necticut. Prepared at Choate. Home address: Washington Avenue, North Haven, Connecti- cut. Dunster House. Band Q1-335 Photog- raphy Club Clj. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. JOHN JEROME TEAL, JR. Born February 7, 1921, in New York, New York. Prepared at Newman. Attended Dart- mouth 2 years. Home address: 55 Otter Rock Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut. Eliot House. Football squad fl, 2Jg track squad Cl, Zj. Speakers Club. Field of concentration: Anthro- pology. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. JOSEPH DAVID TEKULSKY Born July 27, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: Wildacre Avenue, Lawrence, New York. Lowell House. Red Book KU: Phillips Brooks House CU, speakers committee CZJQ Band Cl, 21. Field of concentration: History. In- tended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Law. JACKSON LEE THATCHER Born January 31, 1924, in West Monroe, Louisiana. Prepared at Ouachita Parish High. Home address: 606 Wood Street, West Mon- roe, Louisiana. Lowell House. Phillips Brooks House, undergraduate faculty GJ, Glee Club QU. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended permanent vocation: Chemistry. GEORGE FRANKLIN THOMAS, II Born August 24, 1922, in Cleveland, Ohio, Prepared at University. Home address: 2587 Wellington Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Lowell House. Crimran U, 21. Field of con- centration: Government. Intended war ser- vice: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Investment banker. I Che 61a HARVEY LOWELL THOMAS, JR. Born January 29, 1922, in Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 805 Main Street, Hart- ford, Connecticut. Lived at home. Swim- ming squad 115, lacrosse squad Q15. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. JAMES WILLIAM THOMPSON Born February 25, 19251, in Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Holderness. Home address: 86 Greenough Street, Brookline, Massachusetts. Dunsrer House. Field of concentration: History and Literature, In- tended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. MICHAEL BARRETT THOMPSON Born March 10, 1923, in Caribou, Maine. Prepared at Lexington High. Home address: 30 Intervale Road, Arlington, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Caisson Club f55. House baseball 11, 35: House hockey QZ, 55. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. ALAN CALDER TINDAL Born January 15, 1922, in Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at West Springfield High. Attended Springfield Junior College 1 year. Home address: 227 Rogers Avenue, West Springfield, Massachusetts. Adams House. Red Book. House dance committee KZ, 35. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: Government. Intended War service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Corporation Law. HAROLD CHARLES TINT Born May 22, 1922, in New York, New York, Prepared at Newark. Home address: 117 Kensington Avenue, Jersey City. Adams House. Band f2, 35, Liberal Union House baseball C25. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. CLEMENT JAMESTON TODD Born June 8, 1921, in Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Corona High. Home address: 178 South East Boulevard, Corona, California. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Mathe- matics. af 1944 JACK LEONARD TORGAN Born June 19, 1922, in Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at James Madison High. Home address: 1851 Burnett Street, Brooklyn, New York. Adams House. Basketball team fl, 25. Harvard Club of Long Island Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. JOHN WOLCOTT TORREY Born November 19, 1922, in Willimantic, Con- necticut. Prepared at Windham High. Home address: Storrs, Connecticut. Leverett House. Phillips Brooks House C15, International Club f25. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended war service: Mountai n Troops. Intended perma- nent vocation: Forestry. EDWARD MITCHELL TOWNSEND, III Born September 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: North Avenue, Westport, Connecticut. Lowell House. Field of concentration: Chemistry. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. RICHARD BARR TUCKER Born October 25, 1922, in Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Norwood High. Home address: 117 Walpole Street, Norwood, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. A,R.P. CZ, 55. House basketball C2, 55. Field of concentra- tion: Romance Languages. Intended perma- nent vocation: Business, SAMUEL ARTHUR TUCKER Born August 16, 1922, in Decatur, Illinois. Prepared at Decatur High. Home address: 180 Linden Place, Decatur, Illinois. Leverett House. Caisson Club C555 Radio Workshop C2, 35. Mary L. Whitney Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Civil service. SAMUEL LOMBARD TUCKER Born, May 16, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 235 West Elm Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. Win- throp House. Naval Society C35. 150-lb. crew squad 435. Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Law. 275 JOHN LEBARON TURNER Born September 11, 1922, in Geneva, Illinois., Prepared at Brooks. Home address: Silver- mine, Norwalk, Connecticut. Eliot House. Glee Club CU, Dramatic Club Q1-Us Par- menter Scholarship. Signet Society. Field of concentration: Psychology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Psychiatry. DONALD JOSEPH TWOMBLY Born November 14, 1922, in Lewistown, Mon- tana. Prepared at Parkrose High, Portland, Oregon. Home address: 4505 Northeast 102nd Avenue, Portland, Oregon. Leverett House. A.R.P. QZJ, St. Paul's Club Q1-31. Boxing QZD. Charles Downer Scholarship. Field of concentration: American Government. Intended war service: Army. Intended perma- nent vocation: Civil service administration. D'ARCY GLEN VAN BOKKELEN Born June 9, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Newburyport High. Home address: 43 Federal Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended permanent vocation: Consular service. MILTON DENMAN VAN DYKE Born August 1, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Portales High. Home address: 1312 Buena Vista, Reno, Nevada. Lowell House. Pierian Sodality of 1808 Q1-35, secre- tary QD, Crimson Network Q3, 4J, Moun- taineering Club Q3, 41, Radio Workshop f2, 3j, script director C403 Engineering Society Q1-3J, president Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur QU: Phi Beta Kappa, Junior Eight. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: Mechanical engineering. WILLIAM RUSSELL VAN GEMERT Born April 19, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roslindale High. Home address: 28 Cotton Street, Roslindale, Massachusetts. Lived at home, Pierian Sodality of 1808 f2, 3J. Field of concentration: American History. Intended permanent vocation: Law. THOMAS EARLE VAN METRE, JR, Born January 11, 1923, in Newport, Rhode Island. Prepared at St. Paul's School, Con- cord, New Hampshire. Home address: c-o Captain T. E. Van Metre, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Eliot House. Lampoozz Q2-45. Football squad QU: 150-lb. crew squad 115, 150-lb. crew QU, House committee Q2-4Jg House library committee 13, 43, House war service committee QZJ. Phoenix-S. K. Club. Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. 42761 CHARLES B. P. VAN PELT Born May 2, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Groton. Home address: County Line Road, Radnor, Pennsylvania. College address: 60 Mount Auburn Street. Football squad Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E., Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. NICHOLAS VAN SLYCK Born October 25, 1922, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Kent. Home address: 161 East 79th Street, New York, New York. College address: 45 Winthrop Street. Dra- matic Club QU. Field of concentration: Music. HAROLD F. VAN UMMERSEN, JR. Born September 15, 1923, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 145 Cabot Street, Newton, Massachu- setts. Lowell House. Crimson Network C2,3J, A.R.P. Warden Q, 3Dg Classical Club C1-33. House library committee GJ. William Cross Williamson Scholarship. Field of concentra- tion: Classics. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. BURTON EBERT VAN VORT BornJune 28, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1160 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Winthrop House. Crimmzz, sports editor C1-10, Fresh- man Debating Council: Council on Post-War Problems. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Journalism. HAIG VARTEBEDIAN Born February 22, 1923, in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. Prepared at Medford High. Home address: 3 Longfellow Road, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Field of con- centration: Government. DAVID DUPUY VAUGHAN Born October 9, 1922, in Richmond, Virginia. Prepared at St. Chrisropher's. Home address: 201 West Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia. Lowell House. Red Cross CZ, Sl. Wrestling squad QU, House baseball CZJ, House crew QD, House football GJ, House track QZJ, House committee CZ, 33, House dance com- mittee C2jg House entertainment committee GJ. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended war service: Medicine. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. U15 611155 GERALD DELMAR VISTE Born March 29, 1925, in Foley, Minnesota. Prepared at Foley High. Home address: Foley, Minnesota. Leverett House. Field of concen- tration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. LOUIS JACK VORHAUS, II Born November 7, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Birch Wathen. Home address: 27 West 86th Street, New York, New York. Eliot I-louse, Ren' Book: Debating Council CU, Liberal Union Q1-515 A,R.P. Entry NVarden GJ, Outing Club C1-3J. Track team QU: soccer team Q1-3J. John Harvard Scholarship. Field of concentration: Bio- logical Sciences. Intended war service: Medi- cal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. MARSHALL XVAINGROXV Born March 26, 1925, in Bridgeport, Connecti- cut. Prepared at Monroe High. Attended University of Rochester 2 years. Home ad- dress: 28 Overdale Park, Rochester, New York. Leverett House. Tennis squad GJ, House basketball C553 House war service committee GJ. Field of concentration: Economics. In- tended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. RICHARD PARKER XVAKEFIELD Born July 20, 1921, in Shefheld, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Berkshire. Glee Club C1-21. Swimming squad Cl, 2J. Field of concentra- tion: Romance Languages. Intended perma- nent vocation: Teaching. MORTON SUMNER WALDFOGEL Born November 5, 1922, in Somerville, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 113 Kilsyth Road, Brighton, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Football team QD, House football 12, 35. Field of concentration: Mathematics and Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. HENRY ALEXANDER WALKER, JR. Born March 5, 1922, in Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at St. Paul's. Home address: 2616 Nuvanu Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii. Lowell House. Field of concentration: English. af 1944 WILLIAM BENTLEY WALKER Born September 27, 1922, in Manchester, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton. Home address: Woodholm, Manchester, Massachu- setts. College address: 45 Mount Auburn Street. Glee Club fl-335 Red Cross, First aid QD. Football squad, assistant manager Qlj, second assistant manager f2J. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Speakers Club. Field of concentration: English and Music. Intended war service: Medical School. Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine, WILLIAM WILSON WALLWORK, JR. Born December 4, 1922, in Fargo, North Dakota. Prepared at Moorhead College High. Home address: 715 6th Street South, Moor- head, Minnesota. Kirkland House. House baseball OJ. Field of concentration: English. JOHN DA MIEN WALSH BornJune 15, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 501 West Roxbury Parkway, Boston, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House, Field of concen- tration: Economics. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. MILES COIT WAMBAUGH BornJuly 14, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 25 Ship Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. Winthrop House. Field of concentration: Music. GEORGE RICHARD XVARFIELD, JR. Born September 26, 1920, in Gardner, Massa- achusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: St. Petersburg, Florida. Adams House. Field of concentration: English. Intended war ser- vice: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. JOHN SECHRIST WASLEY Born November 5, 1921, in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Webb. Home address: Santa Maria del Oro, Durango, Mexico. Adams House. Glee Club QD: Dramatic Club Field of concentration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Army. 277 WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON Born November 21, 1921, in Baltimore, Mary- land. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Home address: Whippoorwill Farm, Westport, Connecticut. Eliot House. Wrestling squad C25g wrestling team f15g House football Field of con- centration: Biology. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. CHARLES REGAN WEAVER Born October 5, 1922, in Grosse Isle, Michigan- Ptepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: 15 Keswick Street, Garrett Park, Maryland. Lowell House. Glee Club C1-355 Crimson Network C355 Caisson Club Harvard Club of Washington, D. C., Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Romance Lan- guages. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DAVID KENYON WEBSTER Born June 2, 1922, in New York, New York. Prepared at Taft. Home address: 33 Millard Avenue, Bronxville, New York. Lowell House. Field of concentration: English. RICHARD LAWRENCE WECHSLER Born April 22, 1923, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Shady Side. Home address: 1220 Inverness Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Winthrop House. Red Cross C255 Pre-Medical Society C1-25. Track team fl, 25, House track f25. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Phy- sician. PHILLIPS NOBLE WEEKS Born August 25, 1921, in Calcutta, India. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: Booth Hill Road, North Scituate, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Glee Club C155 Band K3 3 Intramural Athletic Director's Committee Q1 . Tennis squad U53 House baseball QZ, 55, House basketball f2, 55. Field of concentra- tion: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Business. WILLIAM FREDERICK WEEKS, JR. Born January 18, 1922, in Sheboygan, Wis- consin. Prepared at Sheboygan Central High. Attended University of Wisconsin 1 year. Home address: 413 Center Avenue, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Lowell House. Grant Study QZ5, Student Council Committee on Curriculum and Tenure K35. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Architecture. Intended permanent vocation: Architecture. 12781- ROBERT SHERMAN WEINER Born September 29, 1922, in Lawrence, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Lowell High. Home address: 223 Parkview Avenue, Lowell, Massa- chusetts. Dunster House. Pre-Medical So- ciety QI-35. House baseball Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps, Intended perma- nent vocation: Medicine. ROBERT HOWARD WEINSTEIN Born December 7, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 63 Winthrop Road, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House. Crimron KZ, 55, Band fl-35. Squash squad fl-55, tennis squad Cl, 25. Field of concentration: Fat Eastern Languages. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent vocation: Law. LEONARD WALTER WEIS Bornjune 25, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Fieldston. Home address: 225 West 86th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. A.R.P. Auxiliary Fireman C2-45: Photography Club Q25g Outing Club C15, trips director KZ, 353 Foreign Relations Club C15. Assistant House athletic secretary C35. Field of concentration: Geology. In- ended permanent vocation: Geology. ANDREW WILLIAMS WELCH, JR. Born March 14, 1921, in Cambridge, Ivfassa- chusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin. Home address: 28 Woodard Road, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Leverett House. Jubilee Committee, chairman, Pi Eta Theatricals, usher, Naval Society Cl, 253 St. Paul's Club fl, 25. Baseball team 115, football squad C15. Pi Eta. Field of concentration: English. In- tended permanent vocation: Business. JOSEPH MERTON XVELLS Born January 14, 1922, in East Chicago, In- diana. Prepared at Roosevelt High. Home address: 4240 Wegg Avenue, East Chicago, Indiana. Dunster House. Waite Fund Schol- arship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Foreign service. RICHARD STANLEY WELSH Born November 15, 1921, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Germantown Friends. Home address: 7519 Elbow Lane, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Win- throp House. Glee Club C153 Boylston Chemi- cal Club Q53 Pre-Medical Society 135, Photog- raphy Club C1-25. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: lvledicine. Intended permanent vocation: Biochemical research. Cha 65155 STEPHEN JEROME WELSH Born November 29, 1921, in Morristown, New Jersey. Prepared at Morristown. Home address: West Main Street, Brookside, New Jersey. Eliot House. Squash squad Cl, Zjg tennis squad QU. Harvard Club of New Jersey Scholarship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Army. RUSH EASTMAN XVELTER Born September 28, 1925, in Hartford, Con- necticut. Prepared at Curtis High. Home address: 245 Wardwell Avenue, Westerleigli, Staten Island, New York, New York. Dun- ster House. Liberal Union QU: Yacht Club QU. Fencing team CU, freshman manager fl, 2J, varsity manager C2-10. Harvard Club of New York Scholarship. Field of concen- tration: History and Literature. Intended war service: Field Artillery. EDWARD TUBBS XVENTWORTH, JR. Born April 27, 1921, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 10 Sunset Boulevard, Pittsford, New York. Kirkland House. Union Committee CU, Band, A.R.P. Runner CZJ. Crew Cljg House crew CZJQ House track C253 House committee 12, 5J, Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. PHILLIPS WHIDDEN Born June 27, 1922, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1608 Forest Avenue, Evanston, Illinois. Kirkland House. Phillips Brooks House C1, 21, Glee Club KZ, 53. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. ROBERT MAYER WHITE Born February 15, 1925, in Dorchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 60 Greenwood Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. Adams House. Field of concentration: Geology. Intended war ser- vice: Meteorology. Intended permanent voca- tion: Geology. THOMAS ROBERT WHITE Born May 5, 1925, in Rochester, New York. Prepared at Arlington High. Home address: 840 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Lowell House. Field of concentra- tion: Architectural Sciences. af 1944 RICHARD THOMAS WHITELY Born August 1, 1922, in Decatur, Illinois. Prepared at Hill. Home address: 509 North Pine Street, Decatur, Illinois. Lowell House. Field of concentration: History. JOHN DOANE WICKS, JR. Born March 15, 1925, in Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Moses Brown. Home address: 120 Crescent Avenue, Gastonia, North Caro- lina. Leverett House. Glee Club QU, Music Club flj. Harvard Club of Providence Scholarship. Field of concentration: Music. Intended war service: Navy. Intended perma- nent vocation: Navy. GEORGE BROWNING WILBUR, III Born January 19, 1922, in Iowa City, Iowa. Prepared at Yarmouth High. Home address: South Dennis, Massachusetts. Kirkland House. Fencing team flj. Field of con- centration: Anthropology. J AMES BLACK WILCOX Born April 9, 1922, in Grove City, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at New Preparatory. Home address: 16 Maple Street, Arlington, Massa- chusetts. Adams House. Baseball squad KZJQ baseball team UD. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. ROBERT BYERS WILCOX Born April 5, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Pre- pared at North Shore Country Day. Home address: 852 Cherry Street, Winnetka, Illinois. Winthrop House. Glee Club Q1-45, Pre- Medical Society CZJ. Swimming team QU: golf team QU, House baseball Q2-40, House dance committee KZJ, Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Govern- ment service. WILLIAM FREDERICK WILCOX Born October 15, 1922, in Oneida, New York. Prepared at Oneida High. Home address: 555 Main Street, Oneida, New York. Adams House. Basketball squad QU, House baseball QZJ, House basketball CZJQ House football QD: House hockey Field of concentra- tion: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent voca- tion: Law. -12791 JAMES SEYMOUR WILEY Born May 14, 1922, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 1547 Washtenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Leverett House. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended war service: Army. RAYMOND GEORGE WILKINSON Born June 2, 1922, in Duluth, Minnesota. Prepared at Denheld High. Home address: Lighthouse, Port Huron, Michigan. Win- throp House. Field of concentration: Chem- istry. Intended war service: Chemistry. In- tended permanent vocation: Chemistry. ALEX WILLIAMS, JR. Born June 6, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lenox School, Lenox, Massachu- setts. Home address: Harvard, Massachu- setts. Leverett House. Red Book. Harvard College Scholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. DE DE WILLIAMS, JR. Born February 7, 1923, in St.-Joseph, Missouri- Prepared at Fort Lauderdale. Home address: 333 West 57th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Field of concentration: English. Intended war service: Army. HERBERT JosL1N WILSON, JR. Born April 15, 1921, in Bethel, Vermont. Prepared at Exeter. Home address: 635 Washington Street, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Little Hall. Phillips Brooks House QU. Field of concentration: Biology, THEODORE HALBERT WILSON, JR. Born October 15, 1922, in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. Prepared at McDonough School. Home address: 113 Oakdale Avenue, Catons- ville, Maryland. College address: 1626 Massa- chusetts Avenue. Glee Club fl-3Jg Chapel Choir Q2, 3Jg Grant Study QD, Orderly work 131. 150-lb. crew Q1-3j. Harvard Club of Maryland Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. 12801- WALTER CHADBOURNE WILSON, JR. Born July 28, 1921, in Washington, D. C. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 31 Adam Terrace, Lowell, Massachusetts. Col- lege address: 56 Plympton Street. Baseball squad CID, Baseball team QU, football squad Q1-3J, football team C1-55. Hasty Pudding- Institute of 1770, Porcellian Club. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Business. DOUGLAS HENRY WILTSHIRE Born November 28, 1919, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Colegio Nacional Domingo F. Sarmiento. Home address: 1786 Obligado, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Lowell House. Swimming team CU. Field of con- centration: English. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial management. PHILIP LIONEL WINTER Born October 20, 1923, in New York, New York. Prepared at Stuyvesant High. Home address: 242 East 19th Street, New York, New York. Adams House. Phillips Brooks House, social service Cl, 2Jg Photography Club Q1 g Stamp Club Cljg Council on Post-War Problems f3, 4Jg American Civilization Group QU. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Law. CHARLES WOLF, JR. Born August 1, 1924, in New York, New York. Prepared at De Witt Clinton. Home address: 161 West 75th Street, New York, New York. Dunster House. Rez! Book: Debating Council C1-35, A.R.P. House Reporter 12, BJ: American Civilization Group CU. Swimming squad QU, tennis squad C1-3Jg House squash C2, 35. Detur CZJ. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Business administration. ANDREXV DOUGHERTY WOLFE Born June 22, 1922, in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Prepared at Milton. Home address: 830 Amberson Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania. Harvard College Prize Scholarship. Hasty Pudding-Institute of 1770, D.K.E.g Del- phic Club, Signet Society. Field of concentra- tion: English. RICHARD WOLFF Born August 20, 1923, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Brookline High. Home address: 221 St. Paul Street, Brookline, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Pierian Sodality of 1808, assistant manager C255 Pre-Medical Society fl, 21. House baseball QD, House football QU. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended permanent voca- tion: Medicine. Che 6171 XVILLIAM HOWARD XVOLFGRAM Born December 1, 1920, in Milwaukee, Wis- consin. Prepared at Northwestern Military and Naval. Home address: 5109 North Palisades Road, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Clav- erly Hall. Glee Club CU, 0b.reru.f11iou P011 Field of concentration: English. RICHARD HOWARD WOLFORD Born August 12, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Brawley High. Home address: 355 K Street, Brawley, California. Eliot House. Caisson Club GQ, Mountaineering Club QQ. Henry M. and jonathan D. Parmenter Scholar- ship. Field of concentration: Economics. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Law. EDWARD XVOLPER Born December 2, 1922, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 25 Woolson Street, Mattapan, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Economics. Intended war service: Navy. Intended permanent vocation: Economics. LEONARD WOLSKY Born March 24, 1923, in Roxbury, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 128 Ruthven Street, Roxbury, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. jonathan Parmentet Scholarship. Detur CU: Phi Beta Kappa, Junior Eight. Field of concentration: Bio- chemistry. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medical research. RICHARD ROBINSON WOOD Born November 8, 1922, in Salem, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Marblehead High. Home address: 8 Rose Avenue, Marblehead, Massa- chusetts. Kirkland House, Boylston Chemi- cal Club Q2-45, Pre-Medical Society Q2-4j. Track team CU, ski team C1-LU, House foot- ball Q2-41g House entertainment committee QZJ. Field of concentration: Biochemistry. Intended wat service: Medical Corps. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. WILLIAM WARREN XVOOD Born December 23, 1922, in Lake Village, Arkansas. Prepared at Haynesville High. Home address: Dermott, Arkansas. Winthrop House. Glee Club f1, 25, Harvard University Choir fl, 21. Henry and Jonathan M. Par- menter Scholarship. Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences, Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. of 7944 CHARLES FLORIAN WOODHOUSE Born April 5, 1922, in India. Prepared at St. Joseplfsjunior College. Attended St. Xavier's 1 W years. Home address: 1120 South Ingle- wood Avenue, California. College address: 8 Acacia Street. Field of concentration: Bio- chemical Sciences. Intended war service: Medical Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. EDWARD WOODWARD, JR. Born March 10, 1922, in Staunton, Virginia. Prepared at Mercersburg. Home address: 229 East Beverley Street, Staunton, Virginia. Lowell House. Red Cross. House crew f2j, House war service committee. N. C. Club. Field of concentration: Philosophy and Psy- chology. Intended war service: Navy. In- tended permanent vocation: Medicine. GEORGE ARMISTEAD WORK, III Born November 10, 1922, in Sacramento, Cali- fornia. Prepared at Lowell High. Home ad- dress: 12 Green Street, Santa Cruz, California. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Engineering Sciences. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. BENJAMIN TAPPAN WRIGHT Born August 24, 1922, in Berkeley, California. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Home ad- dress: 15 Hawthorn Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Leverett House. Caisson Club GD. House crew. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. CHING PEI WU Born August 31, 1919, in Canton, China. Pre- pared at King's College, Hong Kong. At- tended Hong Kong University 3 years. Home address: 1 Kai Tack Bund, Hong Kong, China. Adams House. Field of concentration: Eco- nomics. FRANK HERBERT WYMAN Born December 19, 1921, in Prague, Czecho- slovakia. Prepared at The Old Downs, Kent, England. Attended Cambridge,England, Zyears. Home address: 502 Park Avenue, New York, New York. Lowell House. Tennis squad G, 45. Field of concentration: Engineering. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. In- tended permanent vocation: Engineering. 281 HOLLIS JUDSON WYMAN, JR. Born April 15, 1924, in Boston, Massachusetts, Prepared at Newton High. Home address: 18 West Pine Street, Auburndale, Massachusetts. College address: 6 Berkeley Street. Swimming team Edmund Ira Richards Scholarship. Field of concentration: German. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Language teacher. PARKER DRUMMOND WYMAN Born August 23, 1922, in Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Lake Forest High. Home address: 1055 Woodbine, Lake Forest, Illinois. Eliot House. Liberal Union CID. Harvard College National Scholarship. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Air Forces. Intended permanent vocation: United States foreign service. RICHARD GEORGE YALMAN Born April 16, 1923, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Prepared at Bexley High. Home address: 2662 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio. Winthrop House. A.R.P. C2-453 Boylston Chemical Club CU, Avukah Society f2j. Harvard College National Scholarship. Detur 121. Field of concentration: Chemistry. In- tended permanent vocation: Chemistry. JOHN RICHARD YODER Born April 7, 1922, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Pre- pared at Lakewood. Home address: 1481 Clarence Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio. Kirkland House. Lampoun QU, Red Cross Q2-41, Yacht Club 150-lb. crew squad QU. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. Intended perma- nent vocation: Production engineering. CHARLES WILLARD YOUNG Born january 28, 1921, in Winchester, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Middlesex. Home ad- dress: 9409 Montgomery Avenue, Chevy Chase, Maryland. College address: 44 Mount Auburn Street. Crimran CZ, SJ, assistant editorial chairman C313 Guazrdian C1-3j, Debating Coun- cil fljg Liberal Union Q1-3j, Student Defense League, chairman D. U. Club, Signet Society. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Army Ground Forces. Intended permanent vocation: Government service. -lzszf MAURICE YOUNG Born April 9, 1922, in Lawrence, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Lawrence. Home address: 20 Bellevue Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts. Lowell House. Football team 635: track team GJ. Field of concentration: Philosophy. Intended war service: Navy. DAVID POTTER ZAMORE Born March 2, 1921, in Toledo, Ohio. Pre- pared at Montclair High. Home address: S00 Grove Street, Montclair, Newjersey. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Economics. ROBERT EUGENE ZAUGG Born September 8, 1921, in Boston, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home ad- dress: 190 Clare Avenue, Boston, Massachu- setts. Dunster House. Student Council: Verein Turmwaechter f2, 3j. Fencing team Cl, 35. Field of concentration: Architectural Sciences. Intended permanent vocation: City planning. PHILIP THOMAS ZEIGLER Born May 3, 1920, in York, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Andover. Home address: 1502 First Avenue, Elmwood, York, Pennsylvania. Eliot House. Track squad CID. Field of concentration: History. HERBERT ZIMMERMAN Born February 5, 1923, in New York City, New York. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home address: 84 Beals Street, Brookline, Massa- New York. Prepared at Boston Latin. Home chusetts. Lived athome. House baseball QQ, House football CZJ. Field of concentration: Mathematics. Intended permanent vocation: Medicine. Che 612155 JAMES STUART CAMBRIDGE Born February 9, 1924, in Norfolk, Virginia. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Home address: Partridge Inn, Augusta, Georgia. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Biology. Intended permanent vocation: Medi- cine. JEAN HENRI DOURIF Born August 25, 1920, in Huntington, West Virginia. Prepared at Faculte de Paris, Paris, France. Home address: Eighth Street, Park Hill, Huntington, West Virginia, Eliot House. Field of concentration: Fine Arts. Intended war service: Naval Air Corps. GEORGE EDWARD EGAN, JR. Born September 11, 1922, in Waterbury, Con- necticut. Prepared at Belmont High. At- tended Seton Hall 2 years. Home address: 65 Richardson Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Lived at home. St. Paul's Club GJ. Field of concentration: History. Intended war service: Marine Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Teaching. EDXVIN HENRY FOX Born September 5, 1922, in London, England. Prepared at Bradlield College, England. At- tended New York University 1 year. Home address: 15 Edswold Way, Saxonwold,Johan- nesburg, South Africa. Eliot House. Ad- zfoazle, literary board Q2, SJ: Cri111.ton, editorial board KZ, SJ. Field ofconcentration: Chemistry Intended war service: Chemical Engineering. Intended permanent vocation: Industrial chem- istry. NORMAN SUMNER GREEN Born February 25, 1921, in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin. Attended University of Wisconsin 2 years. Home ad- dress: 2005 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Dunster House. Field of concentration: Government. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Business. LEWIS WILLIAM HORATIO BornJanuary 14, 1921, in Spokane, Washing- ton. Prepared at North Central High. Home address: 1625 West Sharp Street, Spokane, Washington. Lowell House. Verein Turm- waechter fl, 2J, vice-president GJ. House baseball GJ: House basketball CZ, 3J. Har- vard College National Sholarship. Field of concentration: Physics. Intended war service: Signal Corps. Intended permanent vocation: Electronic research. ARMIGER LOUIS JAGOE, JR. Born April 27, 1921, in Okalona, Mississippi- Prepared at Gulfport High. Home address? 3000 Connecticut Avenue, Northwest, Wash- ington, D. C. Kirkland House. Rez! Bowel Crew Cljg Pistol team, manager QU. Field of concentration: English. ' ALEXANDER D. MEBANE Born February 21, 1925, in New York, New York. Prepared at Birch Wathen. Home ad- dress: 138 West 92nd Street, New York, New York. Liberal Union C211 Boylston Chemical Club 121, Photography Club CU, Outing Club CZJ. Field of concentration: Chemistry. HAROLD WESLEY MELVIN Born May 21, 1922, in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton High. Attended Middle- bury College 2 years. Home address: 44 Houston Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts. Eliot House. Field of concentration: Govern- ment. Intended permanent vocation: Consular service. DANIEL LAURENT SALEM Born January 29, 1925, in Paris, France. Pre- pared at Lycee Janson de Sailly, Paris. Home address: 140 Foster Street, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Lived at home. Field of concentra- tion: Mathematics. ARTHUR JAMES SCULLY, JR. Born March 1, 1920, in Brockton, Massachu- setts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Home address: 59 Chestnut Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Lived at home. Baseball squad C1, 2Jg baseball team 13, LD, basketball squad C2j: basketball team C1-SJ. Buckley Scholarship. Field of concentration: Engineer- ing Sciences. Intended war service: Field Artillery. Intended permanent vocation: Engi- neering. RICHARD FERREE SMITH Born August 12, 1921, in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Prepared at Germantown Friends. Attended Duke University 1 year. Home ad- dress: 105 West Moreland Avenue, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania. Kirkland House. Field of concentration: American History. Intended war service: Army. Intended permanent voca- tion: Business. MEMORI M BROADDUS EMBRY ROBINSON Born August 19, 1922, in Birmingham, Ala.- bama. Died November 29, 1942. Prepared at Ramsay High. Home address: 1459 Milnen Crescent, Birmin ham, Alabama. College ad- ' dress: 48 Mt.AuEurn Street. Harvard College Scholarship. First Prize American Civilization. Field of concentration: History. of 1944 WILLIAM RILEY SNOW, JR. Born August 27, 1924, in Kansas City, Mis- souri. Died September 27, 1942. Prepared at Abilene High. Home address: 1542'North Third Street, Abilene, Texas. -Winthrop House. Red Book, assistant advertising man- ager: Glee Club QD, Band C1, 21. Baseball, team, manager CU, track team CID, manager QZJQ cross country squad CU, manager John Harvard Scholarship. Detur Field of concentration: Biochemical Sciences. -12831 F P 1 I 1' 5 'l T ag: 5,1 .rf-ws 4315! Q ,fig . v . Lf-1 1-I . N, '53, Q g. . ip -' 1:-'grin' H ' 'rl L J 'wT.:vsAjaZf?:1tT'i ff' ii mi' 'M ' ' '.. .a. '1- .113 H' af 3 LQ ty , ,V i .Af .' 4 ipfiifii' .f,3?mt4. i r'Airl K V 'Y 'V' -A .ai -V ' M T, ' . W, n ' ,Q 'T 1- i ' M 21117, 1 A '1 -nfs, , . -, 1 . :1 'rs-we ,f . S on other aspects of this life, war forced upon the undergraduate new athletic programs and responsibil- ities. Conditioning replaced competition as the motive for participation, and major and minor came to connote not letter awards but divisions ofa training program. 1945 and '44 were introduced to college athletics with the peacetime system of Freshmen teams and regular exercises each week, and even enjoyed the undictated use of Harvard facilities for a brief time as upperclassmen. With war and the need for fit men the compulsory athletic and House programs were organized to include all students. Still, the two classes had the last chance to help build a mighty Crimson football team in 1941 and several of her greatest crews, before a rapidly- depleted staff and student body threatened the end of inter- collegiate competition for the duration. J I i XX ATHLETICS 42861 Athletic Director Bill Bingham Cleans up his desk before leaving to join the Army as a major Adolph Samborski works on new intra-mural schedules. ,Q 3 5'f . - A ll-llLlEll'lC A MlNllS'lRAlllON Tbomax D. Boller Earl M. Bl'0ll'Il, r. Crm' Baxkofball The Classes of 1943 and 1944 have tasted both peace and wartime Harvard physical education. When they came to the Yard, team sports and intercollegiate competition were the chief concerns of Director William Bingham, inter- dormitory athletics were a new venture, and conditioning was a discipline for students with bad posture. War, however, brought the need for fit youths, con- ditioned and co-ordinated, and the athletic department and the H.A.A. set out to meet that demand. Chiefly under Nor- man Fradd a compulsory conditioning program was organized with R.O.T.C. students directing fundamental drills and coaches teaching boxing, wrestling and setting-up exercises. Intercollegiate sports involved many a headache under wartime conditions, but Director Bingham set the keynote by insisting on the benefits of competition and on continuing them at Harvard until the government ordered otherwise. The accelerated summer term complicated matters but the only-:contests held were informal ones in baseball and track. House sports, under Adolph Samborski, took on a new im- ,john Cbare Ricloara' C. Harlow Hockey Football portance as all students sought out the most enjoyable forms of exercise. While Yale announced the abandoning of crew for the duration, the Harvard football team added a pre-season encounter with the North Carolina Pre-Flight School to its already heavy schedule and the baseball and soccer squads took on service teams. Only two additions were made to the athletic depart- ment's staff after the Class of 1942 graduated. Arthur Samp- son, Boston Herald columnist and former assistant football coach at Harvard, was appointed director of publicity and jay Schalfran was made wrestling coach. Soon after the Yale game, the two cornerstones of Harvard athletics, Bill Bingham and Dick Harlow, enlisted for service, the former as a major in the Army and the football coach as a lieutenant commander in the Navy. Al McCoy, backfield coach, entered the Navy before the fall season began, joining the growing list of coaches in service which already includes Chief Boston, Bill Neufeld, Dick Snibbe, Nick Mellen, and Norm Blotner. Henry D. Lamar jaakko Mikkola Football Track Floyd S. Stahl Harold S. Ulen Bareball Swimming 112871- M, ,,,ggv1nw'5Q2il'P6e ' 3' ,Qwv1 FOOTBALL Old grads who may look up the records of Harvard football teams in future years will probably be inclined to say that the Crimson's record for 1942 was among the weakest ever compiled by a Harvard team. For after a long space of time the only things that are apparently kept in print are the cold, hard, often inaccurate statistics, which, in this case at least, will say that Harvard lost five, won two, and tied one in the year 1942. These statistics will obviously not show that the schedule for 1942 was probably the hardest ever faced by a Harvard football team. They will not show that the Crimson was plagued with injuries throughout, and that the weekly routine of some Crimson first stringers comprised a sojourn in Stillman Infirmary from Monday to Thursday, then over to the Stadium on Friday and Saturday and back to Stillman on Monday. Nor will these statistics indicate that even the most hard-bitten, cynical Boston reporters were invariably agreed that the 1942 eleven was the greatest ever, for sheer spirit and fight. Pwfiff' Cleo O'Donne11 is captain of next year's nebulous football team. FOIll'lb Row! j. C. Comerfzrd, S. O. S111ilb,jr., S, Gifford, W. Firber. W. V. Ellir, jr., P. F. Perkins, jr., C. T. Cuwefz, D. B. Arnold, jr., Mmzager Third Row: R. C. Harlow, Coarluq H. W. Gfwlbclff. L. j. Cllllllllfilgf, C. B. Gmluilir, P. Garland, G. A. Hibbarrf, R. Firber, G. Barton, D. E. Plate, jr., Manager Seror1dR0u'.' D. W. Rirbarrf.r, W. jabnmu, jr., L. M. A1m'errnu, C. A. O'Dmmcll, jr., D. Furla, C.rzp1ai11,'j. W. Firlarr, S. H. Durufaocf, R. B. Slrzmzard, W. C. W1lron,jr. Frou! Roux' R. F. fI11a'e1'.rcf1, IV. B. Kamp, L, M, Ffwal, F. B. Hdl'1f'Lf1', jr. 1289? Fooled by Harvard's much-disputed double shift, Gallagher helps to roll up Penu's 110 yards of penalties. Russ Stanuard, right tackle Wally Kamp, right guard jack Fisher, center 1290 1- 'Wir' l l f f The Crimson opened its season this year against the North Carolina Pre-Flight Cadets, a team composed of ex- colleve stars and former All-Americans. Whenever a Harvard O football team has trotted out on the field to open its season fears it has usually been the custom o sit back in their seats and say, We probably VVOHYE see much today, because Harlow-coached 1 s rarel hit their stride before November. That is e even y that was said on September 26th of this past year when the vi Crimson opened its campaign, but the people who voiced such opinions were soon proved mistaken. Instead of being overawed by the vaunted Pre-Flight attack, instead of playing the sloppy game predicted by the Thursday afternoon quarter- backs, Harvard played superb ball up to the last six minutes . . d of the game, when the inherent power of its opponents ma e ' ' t r ' lf felt with two quick touchdowns and 13 to O vic 0 y itse for the future naval aviators. Len Eshmont, 'the former Fordham Hash, was the individual star of the game and asses which set up the during the past five or six y of the spectators t Harvard's nemesis. It was his two p game's first touchdown, and it was his 25-yard romp scarcely four minutes later that scored the second tally. More im- portant, however, was the psychological effect created by the Fordham Phantom. Throughout the contest he continually Charley Gudaitis, left g uard Stan 'M 1' es a lay on blackboard. Dick Harlow, master strategist, out in p Durwood, left tackle 42911 Ai? , -b .X C ll , , R, .,-9-, 'A 4 - ' , M V ,N -x1 ' ' if A, . ,A ,,,. -,41'y.v0.V..- 1 ,, N A '- . ., xp . - . Mm ' , -fi' -. aw ag, inf- 4. I is VA .y 1' ,fy-S 'w tent 1 mu: 1-. W . ta ,as Ney 4w?S-...V me-..f..1 A 5. Wat L fa, Cf.. ug , Q' .- ..-.Hyip V 4- .. AY12. 'C' 1 J, I. 2 .ff My l r:,p-.'gI'4:nf7'v,, 2' ' in Hu ., -f. 5 -ygjg-4 gs' '.m '-.f ' -X. .. f sf., .aft-. . M, '- 'X 4 A as x .. 791 -fa . v., F ,Ii fjuiiv ft. Q. 1 ' ' 1.5 Q' ag. 1-.gn lm! I -nu, .1-w-.,' . - 53:5 I . .f?:1.5' N. .su...a..un.l1 :, ' -1 ' Nr .Tia -e N' 1' . .. :,:- 4-': 'ii Don Richards plows through a wide hole in the Army defenses. George Waters K2 lj and jack Comerford C410 helped to clear Way for him. --51 threatened to break away, and the fact that one and some- times two men had watched him at all times somewhat hampered the otherwise adequate Crimson defense. As a matter of fact, so tricky was the defense devised by Harlow that without Eshmont it is probable that the Cadets would not have been able to make any ground at all through the Harvard line. With the possible exception of bigjoe Martin, . hard-driving fullback on last year's Cornell squad, none of the Cadet backs could solve the five, six, and seven man line set-ups which Harlow threw against them. And time and time again the Crimson linemen found it possible to charge through and break up the Pre-Flight plays before they could ever get started. The campaigrfs second game was against Pennsylvania, a team that, at the time, was considered the classiest of the Ivy League. This was the game in which Coach Dick Harlow pulled his celebrated double shift, which caused the Quakers to amass the total of 110 yards lost mainly because of off-side penalties. There were those who claimed that using the double shift was not sportsmanlike, but it was finally agreed that the use of the double shift is certainly nothing new and that, Bill Barnes, left end 'l292 1. provided one has definite plays hinged on it-as Harlow did- it is not unsportsmanlike. Although not too badly outplayed, the Crimson lost this one 19 to 7, the highlight of the game occurring, as far as Harvard is concerned, when left end George Boston, despite a broken thumb, caught a touchdown pass in the last few minutes of the game. William and Mary was the next opponent. Although a definite underdog at game time, the Crimson was able to eke out a 7 to 7 tie before the afternoon was over, Boasting a great line and an All-Southern fullback in Harvey Stud johnson, the Indians were slightly superior in yards gained rushing and in the general tenor of the game, but a touchdown pass from captain-elect Cleo O'Donnell to Sophomore Paul Perkins neutralized any William and Mary superiority. The following weekend Dartmouth came to town and went back to Hanover on the long end of a 14 to 2 score. The first half was all Harvard's, in fact, at halftime the Crimson had a 2 to 0 lead and should have had more if the statistics were taken into account. The second half, however, saw a surprising turnabout as the Big Green backs tore gaping holes in the Harvard front wall. Exactly what happened in that fatal latter half is a hard thing to determine. In many respects it was a mixture of Crimson fatigue, questionable quarterbacking, not particularly good support from the student body, poor blocking, and just line playing on the part of the Hanoverians. Like Marshal Foch in the last war, Dartmouth's Tuss McLaughry was stopped on the left Hank and stopped on the right flank. So he attacked through the center, and he did it with enough success to push over the one touchdown needed to put the game on ice and then a second tally for good measure. Probably the best explana- tion was offered by Coach Dick Harlow himself when he said philosophically, We just ran out of gas. Army followed Dartmouth. With an excess of am- munition tucked away in their cartridge belts, the West Pointers did not need to praise the Lord in order to ring up their first victory against Harvard since 1938, by a score of 14 to O. Army never was in any danger of losing the game, although occasionally there were times when its lead might have been whittled down to one touchdown. One of these occasions gave rise to a controversy which was finally settled in the Crimson's favor by the movies of the game. That in- cident occurred early in the fourth quarter when tailback jack Comerford threw a 25-yard pass in the direction of right end Len Cummings who was standing on about the 13-yard l'ne with no one between him and the end zone. just before the aerial was about to fall into Cummings' arms, someone knocked the ball into the hands of Cleo O'Donr1ell who was trailing close behind. Field judge A. W. Palmer ruled that Cummings had batted the ball to O'Donnell and that the play Wayne johnson, fullback Swede Anderson, quarterback Don Richards, left halfback 42931 Harvard's cheerleaders reach climax in N ew Locomotive cheer. Trainer Jimmy Cox rolls a bandage in preparation for scrimmage. ..- --.s 4- if -v-S johnson bucks over for a second-half Princeton game score. was thus void on the grounds that two players on the same team cannot touch the ball consecutively on the receiving section of a forward pass. There were many people near the play, however, who claimed that Army's Hank Mazur was the someone, who knocked the pass into O'Donnell's? arms, and the pictures later indicated that Cummings wasfhardly in a position at that moment to touch the ball before Mazur did. Even had Cummings touched it, it appears improbable that, being off-balance, he could have exerted enough force to push the ball from five to ten yards back to O'DonneLl. The next game was with Princeton, and it was a battle that will be talked about for many years to come. For not even a Hollywood script writer could have thought up a thrilling enough ending for a hair-raising story to compare with what actually happened in the Hnal seconds of the Tiger contest. When the half ended, Harvard was behind 14 to O. In the third and fourth quarters the Crimson got back these two touchdowns but failed to make the extra points. The result was that with 25 seconds to play and the ball in Princeton's possession, the score read 14 to 12 in favor of the Nassau men. It was at this point that the Crimson-clad eleven illustrated the old proverb that a team which wonit be beaten can't be beaten. Princeton fumbled the ball and right guard Sid Smith recovered for Harvard. On the very next play Freshman tailback jack Comerford faded back and shot a perfect 40 yard pass to Gordy Lyle who caught it on the dead run on Princeton's 28. Lyle, a trackman in his own right, legged it for the end zone and Harvard had its first victory of the campaign by a score of 19 to 14. p Michigan and Brown followed Princeton. Michigan, with one of the best teams in the country, routed Harvard 55 to 7. Although the Wolverine defense was no great shakes, their offense was superb and not to be denied. The Crimson, true to form, never stopped fighting. One example of this was Gordy Lyle, who broke his leg trying to block Michigan's 35th point. Brown was another story, however. The Crim- son won this one 7 to O on Don Richards' 48-yard, off-tackle dash, and was easily the better of the two teams. It was a dreary and drizzly day in New Haven when the 1942 Crimson eleven took the field for the last time against a favored Eli squad. It was just as dreary and drizzly for Harvard fans when the game was over. No Crimson rooter to this day can quite understand how it happened, but every- one has a nightmare-like picture of a fleet Yale back snatching a routine ten-yard pass on the Harvard 40, slipping out of the encircling arms of steady backer-upjack Fisher, and twist- ing his way across the Bowl and over the Harvard goal-line. And everyone groans again as they remember the series of luckless breaks in the last minutes of play with their passes and runs that were just not enough. But they will also remember a third-string guard who broke into his first Varsity game to mark up three points that looked like the winning margin. Bob Fisher, who had his hour of glory as his brothers jack and Willo had their's, nearly wrote himself down in Crimson grid annals with a beautiful field goal that missed winning the game by all too thin a hair. They will also remember such men, who played the best games of their careers, as Wayne johnson and Swede Anderson, Russ Stannard and Stan Durwood, Charlie Gudaitis and Sid Smith, jack Fisher, Bill Barnes and Captain Don Forte. They will remember jack Comerford, who went into the game with a bad charleyhorse to try desperately to connect with a winning touchdown pass in the last few moments. They will remember Don Richards, who dashed for a dis- qualified touchdown and played the whole second half with a wicked charleyhorse, because there were not other tailbacks available. And above all they will remember the plucky little wingback from Worcester who sparked the team all year, and reached his greatest proportions against the Elis with his Hght and courage. They agreed with his teammates when Cleo O'Donnell was chosen captain of the 1943 eleven, a team which will probably never exist. Bob Fisher gets off the xield goal that almost won the Yale game. The score was later nullified by a last-minute Eli touchdown pass. ----W wi -. - --.:--- Y- -- - --. i 1...-, - i--...Wd ... v av... - - .. .A Z - --- -:V - .-213. 4 V- . J a. ,z-1 l CREW Stamina rather-than shirts has been the-aim of Harvard oarsmen, and for this rreason Newell boathouse will probably continue to boat oarsmen as long as undergraduates attend Harvard. The days of Crimson shells victorious at New London, Derby, Carnegie, Cayuga, the Severn, and the Schuylkill may be of the past, but rowing as such probably will not become a war fatality. The last real Harvard crew was a good one with which to end an era. Undefeated in four starts, it was undisputed leader of Eastern rowing, defeated Wisconsin in its only inter- sectional encounter, and victimized Yale for the seventh straight year. If times were normal Coach Tom Bolles would have five Seniors and ajunior left from his 1942 Varsity, and, to JI296 1 Oarsmen spend many winter hours in Newell Boat House tank fill in the vacancies, a handful ofjayvee oarsmen and a very promising group of Sophomores which was unbeaten as Freshmen. Now Bolles is not so much interested in producing one good eight as in the development of physical toughness. The highpoint of the fall rowing season must not be consid- ered the sweep by three Harvard crews of their one regatta, but rather the large number of boats rowing daily from Newell. Generally there are 16 or 17 eights in addition to several trips by the ponderous old Levirztlafzrz. Formerly fall practice was a fairly lax season. Party-going oarsmen sweated out the pre- vious night's dissipation, and a good time was had by all. This is now past, and although his crews are out only the same amount of time Bolles is driving them much harder. Saddest blow of the year occurred ' early in the fall when Robert F. Herrick, long the benefactor of crew in general and Harvard crew in particular, died. Since his graduation in 1890 Herrick devoted himself to the sport as coach and advisor, and but for him the status of crew at Cambridge would be far different. In several ways the Class of 1943 has left its rowing mark. Not only did it contribute three members to the 1941 eight, which Bolles considers his fastest, and five to the '42 shell, second only to its predecessor, but also it yielded one hopeful soul, nameless, who proved Bolles wrong in his as- sumption that he could coach to row properly anyone who was willing and physically able. Never saw one like him beforef' says Bolles. Captain Bus Curwen, the legend that walks, is the best stroke Tom has ever coached or seen, and the successful mentor has traveled in rowing circles for quite some time. Curwen started as a coxswain some eight years ago, and as a Freshman captained the swimming team and Freshman crew, which went undefeated. There is nothing unusual about that, Bus has not been beaten in three and a half years of college rowing. Curwen did not make the Varsity until midway through Rowing machines are invariably crowded late in the afternoon Third Roux' j. Reed, Mazzagerj S. Af1zlrcu'J,jr., j. Rirburzlran, jr., C. W. je11k.r,jr., T. D. Boller, Coach Second Roux' j. M. Errkifze, H, H. Wbil111a21,jr'.. A. T. Lymazz, jr., Ctlflldillf D. Cballinar, jr., D. Curwen, jr., Captain FVUIII Roux' T. W. Boynton -f297l'- J Tom Boynton coxed the Varsity to most of its 1942 victories. his Sophomore year, and to succeed then he had to displace Jack Wilson, who had the experience of stroking the Varsity at Henley in 1939 and the whole season of 1940, and Colt Wagner, who early in 1941 had beaten out Wilson. just before the Adams Cup race Bus rose to the first boat. The race was held at Annapolis under extremely trying conditions. Navy's light crew gained and held an early lead, while the Crimsonis heavier crew almost bogged down. Cur- wen did not lose his head, and, keeping the stroke low, eked out victory as Navy collapsed in the final minutes. With the aid of a young hurricane blowing down course, the Varsity shattered the course record by over thirty seconds. In the opening regatta of last spring Cornell gave Curwen his only other real race. Pulling away from Harvard in the middle stages, the Ithacans held a substantial lead until Bus uncorked a blistering sprint in the last 400 yards. The winning margin was two tenths of a second. Bolles says that Curwen has everything: timing, en- durance, strength, intelligence, and a will to win. Nobody else could unleash a sprint like that, says Bolles thinking of the gray hairs accumulated during the Cornell race. Both he and Mr. Herrick have clocked Curwen at 50, with his oar in the edge of the puddle made by the number two man on the -12981 preceding stroke, and a stroke and crew which can space at that stroke is truly exceptional. Dave Challinor moved directly to the Varsity seven slide his Sophomore year, and Tommy Boynton became cox- swain after the first race, these two, with Curwen, forming the vital pacesetting trio of the superlative 1941 eight. Challinor may have looked like a fugitive from the 150's, but his beau- tiful sense of timing made him an ideal counterpart for Cur- wen. Both graduated in September, Boynton spending his last days at College as an assistant crew coach. Another unit to row together through College was bowman Pop Jenks, and a number two, John Richardson, who filled these positions on the Freshman crew, then the third Varsity, and the Varsity last spring. Jenks accelerated, but Richardson and Scho Andrews, the only Sophomore on the Varsity last year, remain with Curwen to give Bolles a nucleus around which to build, providing there is anything to build for. . Besides defeating Cornell, Syracuse, M. I. T., Boston University, Princeton, Navy, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania, the Varsity concluded its season by trouncing Yale on Derby's two-mile course, thus keeping its slate clean since Mayl25, 1940, when Cornell beat Harvard. A sad commentary on the fifth consecutive sweep of the Yale series was that the Crimson combinations were much more overjoyed at posting a better time than their hated rivals, the Harvard jayvees, than at leaving the laboring Elis well astern. Schofield Andrews is one of mainstays on the starboard side. Q, T' A T' V 5, WA., Wm., , ga! Robert F. Herrick, rowing enthusiast and patron of Harvard crews for years, talks over old times with Tom Bolles just before his death. This fall's Varsity lined up for its one regatta with veteran jimmy Ducey in the stern, Captain Curwen stroke, and Frank Snyder, a senior who late last year made the jay- vees, seven. Stu Clark, from the strong T45 boat, rowed Number Six, and Andrews moved down from Number Three to Number Five. Two more Sophomores, Bobby Stone and Gus Merwin, took over fourth and third slide. Richardson again rowed Number Two and Dave Noyes shifted from port to starboard to take overjenks' bow slide. The Varsity won easily in 6:47, only seven seconds over the official record, rowing most of the race at the amazingly low beat of 28, bearing out Bolles' statement that his fall crew would have little to be ashamed of in a regular season. Harvey Love's Freshmen provided the competition, finishing a length behind, and third, by another length, came the Varsity '50's. Then came M. I. T., Boston University's Varsity, and Dart- mouth. Accelerated schedules depleted the reserve oarsmen usually available and Bolles will miss Gerry Prince, two-year jayvee six man, Chuggy Lamson, Bryce Seligman, George Hibbard, and Manager Bill Atchley, all 1943. From the 1944 ranks, Dave Sohier and jim Donald are no longer active. I The Varsity shoots under Larz Anderson Bridge late in the day. 4 299 I Hugh Hyde, guard -I 300 It Coach Earl Brown outlines defense strategy before the squad. Captain Bunks Burditt, center G BASlQE BAl,l.. At the time this article is written, Earl Brown is enter- ing his second season as Varsity basketball coach with a squad containing five lettermen-the complete quintet that represented the Class of '45 last 'year-and several good Freshman prospects. The team has started off with two impressive wins. In the season opener, an exhibition game, the Crimson triumphed over a highly-touted Boston Coast Guard team, 44-35. And then, in their first inter-collegiate contest, they ran over a rather impotent M. I. T. squad, 53-27. Most of last year's Varsity is in the armed forces now, but Coach Brown was fortunate enough to have his high scorer from last season, Bunks Burditt, return to lead the team as captain. Bunks led off with 25 points from the pivot position against Coast Guard and with 15 against M. I. T., a record that foreshadows an even better season than last, when he was fourth highest scorer in the league. Tall Hugh Hyde, who developed rapidly at the end of last year to rival Bunks in points per game, started the season eorge Dillon, forward at forward but has returned to his former guard position. A possible guard or forward, but at any rate a sure Hrst-stringer for Brown, is red-headed Freshman Mike Fansler. An all- Indiana prep school player, Fansler has an exceptional amount of coolness for a Freshman and has displayed an accurate shooting eye from out on the Hoot in his first two games. Fighting hard for the starting right forward position, Frank Bixler and Dean Hennessey of the '45 team and George Dillon and Tom Axon, Varsity lettermen, have not yet shown enough to warrant naming one of them as a dehnite starting forward. Dillon had a good night against Coast Guard, but Bixler and Hennessey stole the spotlight against M. I. T. Don Lutze, who saw a good deal of action last winter until he became ineligible before the B. C. game, adds a steady, experienced player to the team at one guard spot. No predictions, optimistic or pessimistic, were forth- coming from Brown about his second Crimson lives chances. He feels that the number of Freshmen and other relatively inexperienced players who will probably see plenty of action makes any reliable forecasts impossible. But there is a lot of optimism among the Crimson rooters who saw the first two games. Burditt and Brown look things over on the basketball court Scr01ulRou'.' Earl M. Bl'fIIl'lI. Cum'6,' L. 'I'urgm1, W. F. Sllj'llL'l', R. G. Elini. T. flxarl, E. L, Hadley, P. Fftlllldllll, Mazzagei' Fi-our Roux' G. C. Dillon, G. W. I-Vvblzwg G. M. Bllfrffll, Ca,bmiu,' C. Finegan, Caplaillf E, T. Blll'kl4!J', E. Ralbffbilzf, H. M. Hyde .1501 It HGCKEY Third Row! C. T. Cowen, j. Elliozt, A. P. Ezferlr, M. Beebe, C. Loring Sem1m'R0w.' j. P. Cbare, Coarbj E. D. Acfeer, G. H. Hackett, G. C. Gelzelein, G. R. Harding, -I. C. Bzzrfau, D. Lloyd, F. Pope, Mazinger Frorzt Row! G. O'Nei!l, G. R. MrGwzlla, j. A. Paine, Cdplllilly' M. G. Sznnmerr, Captaizzj G. R. Dreber, C. A. Griffith, A. T. Femz Participating in the winter upswing of Harvard athletic fortunes, the Crimson hockey team in what looks to be a return to the form of champions in years past piled up 54 points in its four contests before the vacation to smother opponents by unbelievable scores. Coach johnny Chase, in his hrst full year as the string-puller behind Crimson puck fortunes, seems to be moulding the greatest sextet in a decade behind Captain johnny Paine and sophomore defenseman Dick Mechem. Tufts was slaughtered 8-Og then Tech was handed a 13-4 varnishing. And still the first team didn't dress for the third period. But in the track meets with Northeastern and Boston University, Chase not only closed the gates of mercy, he slammed them. Keeping his lirst-stringers on the ice steadily, and exhorting them to chalk up higher and higher totals, he managed to reach the climax with the 15-3 massacre H021 of the Huskies, and, winding up the pre-Christmas season, the steam rollering of the Terriers 18-2. The key to this revival seems to be a group of hard- skating second-year men lead by Mechem, the captain of last season's undefeated Yardling squad. But another factor is the re-entrance of the name Harding into the Harvard sports picture. Austie, who graduated several years ago, was a legendary hockey player and no mean gridiron ace. His brothers Bill and Goody have teamed up with cousin George fDick, or Tookerj to inject a shot of drive into the sagging corpse which has been recent Harvard hockey. Dick leads the Held with nearly a dozen red lights, Bill scored three in the Tufts debacle, and Goody has been holding forth in the cage. Behind him are Gus Summers, whose work has been excellent, and Steve O'Neill. Dick Mechem and Captainjohn- ny Paine have been the top defense men, and both have better- than-average shots as well as effective checks. Mechem has come soloing down the ice on several occasions to tuck the rubber home, and Paine rang the bell twice within a half a minute against M.I.T. Caleb Loring and Marc Beebe, press- ing Dick Harding for top scoring honors, are the veterans on the first line, with Bill Harding the new comer. Al Everts and johnny Burton are the two other men who have figured most prominently in the twine-denting activities of the squad. Each game seemed to uncover a new scoring ace, and these two were among those uncovered. Against Tufts, the Harvards kept the pressure on all night long. Bill Harding was the star of the contest, with his three goals and one assist, in his Crimson debut. Mechem produced the outstanding goal in the one- sided M.I.T. horse-whipping with a solo from his defense position at the start of the third period for the tenth Harvard point. He skated down the left aisle, and slapped a fine angle shot between the gas-pipes after only 35 seconds of the final canto had expired. , The third murder was committed on Northeastern and the Huskies went down for the counthof 15-3. This battle was much faster than the other pair, and didn't look like so much of a breather at first. For eight minutes, the merciless red-shirts were held to no score, but then all H-arvard broke loose, and when attendants swept up the pieces they found seven Crimson markers in the Hrst frame, four in the second, and ditto in the third. What can be said about that B. U. affair? Suffice it to say that it was the first time this season that thejawnies have strayed from home-ice, and the score-keeper at the Boston Skating Club must have been mighty glad it took place at the Arena instead of in his own bailiwick. Coach Chase isn't taking any chances now that he appears to have a good ice-skating sextet in his possession. He is carefully drilling two groups of players so that when the first batch leaves in February, via graduation, Uncle Sam, and other media, there'll be another crew who have worked together ready to step in and take their place. If the Army wants to leave such things as college hockey around, the puck-Chasers should have their best record in years. Harvard storms the Army nets flopj in a game last winter. Captains Summers and Paine fmiddlej converse in locker room. Marcus Beebe Cbelowj closes in for a goal against Yale's team. TW Captain Drucker and Coach Ulen tell the swimmers what's what. Bus Curwen gets set for a fast etawa i th H d 1 S HM HNG Washington permitting, Coach Hal Ulen expects to have a better swimming team than the 1941-42 aggregation, on the basis of five weeks intensive practice. However, Captain Bill Drucker will definitely leave College in February, and a good many others are on the doubtful list. But until the War Department or some other bureau puts the quietus on intercollegiate sports, the tankers are going right ahead preparing for the opening meet at M. I. T. on December 16. Although the team has not yet been tested except in intra-squad races, it appears that the 50 and 100 yard freestyle events will be the Crimson's main strength, unless Ulen shifts some of his sprinters to other distances. johnny Eusden is the top man in these events, and if he lives up to the promise he has shown in previous seasons, he is likely to break 24 seconds in the 50, and 54 seconds in the century. Bob Goodspeed, a Sophomore transfer from Bates, is another g y n e arvar poo. Three swimmers poise for a start in an intercollegiate meet. likely point-snatcher in these events, while Freshmen Perry Stearns and john Watkins have also demonstrated potentiali- ties. Last year's Yardling outfit contributes Bill Prier and Don Perry, both consistent scorers in the sprints. Unfortunately, no other event boasts similar depth. In the dive, there are Harvey Pastel, high scorer on the '45 squad, and Bill Hewes, who was not out last year. The quarter mile is also strong, with Dave Barnes and George Christman back from last year's Varsity. Crew captain Bus Curwen can swim either freestyle or breaststroke, and Ulen has not yet decided where he will be most needed. In the backstroke, Drucker is pretty much the whole story, and his departure will force a reallocation of manpower on the squad. Discussing prospects for the year, Ulen said, The team looks a little better than last year's, and if we can keep all these boys we ought to have a pretty good season. Drucker, Curwen, Eusden, Barnes, and Christman are the only ones who've had any real experience, and it really depends on the new fellows. Gnce they get a little action, ofcourse, it will be a lot easier to say how the team will do. But they've been working very hard, and should be pretty successful. john Eusden and friend spring out in approved belly-whoppers Sc'ror1:lRau'.' H. S. Ulen, Cnarbj D. Cnrrrefz, j. D. Enulen, W. L. Downing, H. T. MrMeeki11. Manager' Fl'0l1f Roux' W. B. Paflerzrowz, R. T. Sreery, IV. R. Drutker, Caplaifzf T. B. Shezvxbrrry, Caplainf D. F. Barzm, G. A. Balf, H. S. MfCIllFh6UIZ l 15051 45061 ...f' Bart Harvey snares a low peg from the direction of home plate The only sport which pulled an expanded schedule from the accelerated wartime program was the Varsity baseball nine, which followed its customary spring season with a set of highly successful but informal summer games made possible by the organization of Summer School. Floyd Stahlis team played only the Hrst series for the books, but its round of local contests in july and August would not disgrace the records. During the spring campaign the Varsity split its 18 played games with nine wins and as many defeats, finishing second in the Eastern Intercollegiate circuit, while it took 10 of its 13 warm weather starts, chiefly against service and twilight league teams. What really counted as far as statistics were concerned was the runner-up position the 1942 squad captured in league competition. Princeton swept the field easily with 11 victories in 12 frays, but Harvard's .500 average of five triumphs and five defeats was good enough to come next. It was quite satisfactorily above the fifth place of the previous year and the sixth position in which Yale finished. In team play, the Crimson placed third at bat with .260 and fourth in the field with 28 errors and a .937 average. Individual star on the books was Mort Waldstein, left handed hurler and outfielder who finished sixth in the batting lists with a .367 total and sixth among E.I.B.L. pitchers with ASEBALL an earned run average of 2.40. Incidentally, he was walked 12 times during the league season and took the honor of the most passed up batter in the circuit. Three other batters finished with the top dozen as Captain Lou Clay and Ned Fitzgibbons tied at .333 taking eighth and ninth, and '43 Captain Bart Harvey ended eleventh with 326. In other fields, Fitzgibbons tied Turner, Cornell's catcher, with 11 runs batted in and Harvey easily cinched stolen bases honors with eight. Captain Lou Clay ran into hard luck at the outset when inclement weather washed out three of his squad's six spring vacation trip games, and the nine never did get a crack at Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, or George Washington. After a day's delay the team took its opener from Navy, 15-4, sparked by Ned Fitzgibbons hitting for everything in the books, Bart I-Iarvey's three for four at bat, and Joe Phelan's handy hurling. Closing the trip, they split a two-game series with Penn when Mort Waldstein pitched a 7-3 win and Clay dropped a tight one, 6-5. A disappointing Patriot's Day excursion found Clay losing a contest at West Point, 12-9, and Leroy Talcott taking the first round in his feud with Waldstein at Princeton, 8-4, before the squad with Clay on the mound could collect a victory from Columbia by a 5-2 count. On this second trip, I-Iarvey's hitting did whatever sparking was achieved and Thayer Drake broke in forjay Gleason at short. On April 22 the Varsity opened its home stand in red ink with a 5-2 loss to Northeastern before it got on the right foot with two rapid-fire wins over N. U. aided by two homers by Bill Barnes and one by Harvey. Holy Cross, however, shut out the Crimson as Harvey accounted for half the team's four hits, but Waldstein nearly turned the story around when Columbia only prevented a 11-0 whitewash with a ninth- inning run. With Warren Berg on the mound and each squad scoring twice in the ninth, the Varsity eked out a 6-5 win over Brown and then split its lone doubleheader with Cornell, 5-8, and 8-5, in a thrilling program accented by Fitzgibbons' four bagger. In a classic, which lasted fourteen grueling in- nings, Talcott and johnny Eide combined to defeat the Crimson and Waldstein, 6-5, for Princeton on May 23. Each team collected 11 hits in the battle which saw Harvard making up a two-run deficit in the ninth, both teams scoring in the tenth, and Princeton nosing ahead in the fourteenth. Three days later the Varsity threw away a seemingly 3-0 win over Holy Cross as the visiting Crusaders took the contest, 6-3. Cleo O'Donnell hit for two of Harvard's four bingles. In a home-and-home commencement week series, the Varsity split with Yale. Eli errors and Waldstein's 11 innings of hurling gave the Crimson the first contest at New Haven, 5-3, after a 14 inning struggle. Waldstein and Ted Harrison repeated their pitching duel on Soldiers Field on june 6 in a ten-inning ten-frame game which the Elis finally took 3-1 after the teams had deadlocked in the first inning at one all and fought scoreless the rest of the route. After a brief respite, the summer season began on the Fourth ofjuly with a 3-2 defeat by the Lincoln Mohawks. The new session found an altered Crimson line-up. Warren Berg replaced Waldstein as the pitching mainstay, I-loss Hamlen was behind the plate instead of Gerry Callanan and Paul Delahoyde. Freshman Billy Fitz took over at f1rst while Ned Fitzgibbons shifted to center field. Captain-elect Bart Harvey and Thayer Drake remained to protect both sides of the the keystone sack but jimmy Gallagher came in for Gil Whittemore at third. Flanking Fitzgibbons in the outheld were usually Bill Barnes again in right and Frank Leahy in left for Lou Clay. But a constantly fluctuating lineup was featured on the summer team which won ten of its 15 games. It consistently trounced Camp Devens' nines and whipped Brokvn informally, 15-1. Only Westover, the Harbor All-Star team, and Lincoln were able to overcome Floyd Stahl's forces in its first and quite laudable attempt at summer baseball. A Cornell player is tagged out in Harvard's only double-header Third Row! F. S. Sfabl, Coatbj P. V. Quimz, j. P. Phelan, E. S. Filzgibbouf, -I. B. Wilmx, j. A. Farley, W. S. Berg, B. N. Healb, W. P. LaCroix, Manager Second Row! M. Waldrleizz, G. J. Callamuz, E. T. Barkley, W. B4r11e.r,L. M. Clay, Caj1Iair1,'j. Glerarou, F. B. Harvey, Captainj W. B. Parfom, O. W. Haufsermann, jr. Frou! Raw! A. S. Marmillan, E. T. Drake, P. F. Defabnyzle 1l307l TRACK Third Row' F W Pbimz ', D. W. Slifzgemfarzd, G. Lemzlze, M. E. HEVJk0l'flI . . . eg Second Row! j. j. Mikkola, Cozzclaj W. C. Palton, jr., J. R. Slidllllfk, j. F. Bonner, IV. G. Lyle, jr., D. R. Matlark, I. P. Delappe, Manager Front Raw! E. H. Berman, R. M. Chute, -I. D. I-l'il1l'kil7IZ0l2, jr., Caplaizzf R. B. H0llghf011, Capfairzj T. T. While, T. M. Ford, T. C. Holyoke Mike Ford sets his sights for the pole vault in a stadium meet. i . 1' L' - l -1 For the runners and field events men of 1943 and 1944 1 I -NMM- ax-Q44 . l the climax of their college track careers will always be the 1942 spring season, and above all the outburst of pent-up Harvard power in the Heptagonals. There, in a five point victory over favored Yale and forty points ahead of Dart- mouth, Harvard had its last great track victory before the riddling of undergraduate ranks by the armed forces began. Thirteen 1943 and 1944 men scored two-thirds of the Crim- son's 66 points in' that meet. Almost two years earlier, Yale's Freshman teams had beaten Bill Palson's 1944 squad by forty points and the year before Don MacKinnon's 1943 group by Hve. Fifteen who had scored in these meets for Harvard had left college or track by the spring of '42, led by Doug Pirnie who had accumulated 18 points for his Freshmen team and had set a new 220-yard record of 21.3 seconds in a brilliant Sophomore season before going into the Army. But the Heps got off to a favorable start under Senior stars miler Bob Houghton, shot putter Dick Pfister, high jumper john Bunker, and hammer thrower Tom White, and 1943 and '44 slowly rolled up the score in the nip-and-tuck Stadium battle which was climaxed by jack Bonner's discus triumph. 1943 Captain Don MacKinnon proved the backbone of the Crimson squad with a hrst and second in the hurdles, a tip off to his double win the next week against Yale which was one of the few bright spots in the Varsity defeat at New Haven. Around the records of the other Harvard scorers in the Heps could be written a history of two years of Crimson track. Mike Ford, who scored seven points in the pole vault and broad jump, starred on Don Donahue's 1942 team which had pulled up from a disastrous winter season to a brilliant spring performance that included a twenty-point win over Dartmouth, a five-point victory over Yale, and a third in the Heps. The 1942 winter season, during which Army, Prince- ton, and Yale went down in defeat, marked Ford's peak as he twice broke the college pole vault record. Two otherjuniors, two-miler Fred Phinney and hammer-javelin hurler Bob Chase, also climaxed two year's of competition by scoring eight points between them. Nineteen hundred and forty-four, led by the fourth places of Bill Palson, brilliant miler-Captain of its Freshman 42's star miler, Captain Bob Houghton, puts on track shoes. team, and broad jumper Tom Holyoke contributed a share to the victory that was only statistically less than the juniors' part. Among those others who completed the scoring in this climax meet as in the rest of the season were shot putter johnny Shattuck '43, javelin thrower Monroe Herskovits '43, distance runner Bob Kent '43, and sprinters Tom Goethals '43, Eli Berman '44, and Dave Read '44, Still others, Larry Corbett '43 and Sophomores Bill Ellis, Ward Slingerland, Tim Coggeshall, Dave Matlack, and Jerry Lenane among them, contributed added necessary depth and important points to the squad's effort throughout the season. The greatest innovation in Harvard track during cur- rent history came before '43's Sophomore season with the transformation and revitalization of the winter season. jim Lightbody's 1939 indoor team won the last quadrangular meet from Yale, Dartmouth, and Cornell in the Boston Garden, and the next year three dual meet trips appeared on the winter schedule. These contests with Army, Yale, and Dartmouth were intended both to increase the opportunities for intercollegiate competition and to weld the team into a more smoothly functioning unit than can be achieved solely through home meets and daily practice. Captain Don MacKinnon skims over a hurdle in outdoor meet. 'l309l Seco11dRnw.' J. J. Mikkolnz, Caacbj O. D. Filley, jr., H. IV. Pfam, M. Turtle, W. Dalrymple, Manager Frozzt Row! R. B. Kent, W. C. Palnm, jr., F. W. Plyinney, Captnizq' T. Caggexlmll, D, R. MrCau! Fred Phinney led the cross-country team to four wins over Yale. -l510l GSS CQ NTRY To 1943 and 1944, Harvard cross country competition is now a memory of hard fought victories, including four over Yale, tempered with disappointing defeats, especially two by Dartmouth, against a kaleidoscopic background of scenes: jaakko calling encouragement from his car to runners on the riverbank, Fred Phinney's masterful handling of his 1942 team, strenuous workouts through the fall-tinged Medford woods. From 1943's Freshman year when Penn Tuttle's Varsity won the Big Three and Heptagonal titles, Coach jaakko Mikkola has turned out steady, strong cross country aggrega- tions. '43 Captain Fred Phinney's team of Bob Kent '43, future- Captain Bill Palson '44, Tim Coggeshall '44, Oliver Filley '45, Herby Pratt '46, and Mark Tuttle '46 kept up the tradition by capturing the Big Three championship and scoring second to Yale in the I-Ieps. Beyond jaakko's coaching, the credit for the 1942 team's success goes to its captain, Fred Phinney. Pulling his team through early season setbacks by Rhode Island and Dartmouth, he sparked the last two triumphs by his leadership and front running. SQCCIER Although the 1942 soccer Varsity accumulated a respectable record during its fall campaign, pre-season hopes for an undefeated season crashed under defeats by Spring- held, Princeton, and Yale. Dick Gilfords eleven did lick Brown, M. I. T., Clark, and Tufts, and tied Army and Mass. State, but the key losses ending with a 2'f0 Eli shutout made it only an average season. A lack of offensive punch and a series of injuries accounted for the mediocre showing. ln the goal Doug Thompson and Mike Keene guarded the nets until Howie Hodgson played for the Yale game when Keene broke his wrist. Bob Harbison doubled up with Dick Forster, Bud Killam, and occasionally Ward Slingerland at fullback. The halfline was the strongest section of the team withjack Clarke, Bill Butcher, George Mallory, Herb Allen. Dave Ogden, and Slingerland seeing most of the action. On the line a con- stant shifting went on to find a winning combination. jack Calhoun played center with all-New England Captain Dick Gifford and '44's Captain Thayer Drake at the insides, and Eli Berman and jim Apthorp or Paul Morgan at the wings. .-. 1, . Dick Gifford was a member of all-New England soccer team Fonrtb Roux' L. Vvrb:m.r, II, S. f1f11bor,l1, E. Siltvlviff, D. S. Tbmlzjzrnlz, lf. B. Clare. ju, C. S. Gilrr, I-I, P, Nfgllgfyx LV, Djxgu Tbira' Roux' .MarDonalcf, Caarbj H. B. Hndgrozi, L. Cfariv, R. l'idI'bj.l'llI1, III, D. W. Sfiflgvrfmzrl. R. H. F0l'.flL'I'. D. D. Ogden, T. V. Keene, jr., R. H. Allen, Manager Sefw11fRou'.' E. H. Berlzmzl, W. S. Bnlrber, E. T. Dmie, III, R. P. Giflbnf, Cdplrlfflf D. Ccllbhllll, G. W. Niallofy, P. S. Morgan Frou! Roux' C. W. Care, H. S. Affeaz, F. M. Blliffllghdlll, F. F. M. Kumpuer Hill ODTBALL ' O O . Q, Putting on the November finish that has become typical of Harlow-type teams, the jayvee football eleven found itself in its last two games to wallop Brown, 26 to 7, i T -A --A-if and go on to upset undefeated Yale, 7-O, insuring a success- . W ful season. Because there were not enough players of sub-Varsity caliber to make up ajayvee squad, the regular junior Varsity was merged with the Freshmen after both teams had played and won a game apiece. The combined squad, while boasting more individual talent than either of its progenitors, took time to get rolling as a unit, while losing to Andover, Exeter, and Army. . Captain jack Farley sparked the team from his left end position, and his circus catch of Freshman Charley Tarbell's pass was the biggest step of the Crimson touchdown advance against the Elis. In the backfield, Ed Bump Hadley at wingbaclc, Tarbell at fullback, and Paul Lazzaro provided a dangerous team that could and did score on just 8.bOL1f CVCIY type of Play. The -Iayvees practice against some regulars late in the afternoon. Fourth Row! R. F. Walker, Mazzfzgerj D. B. Cale, G. F. Wate:'J, C. f. Allairzy, E. K. Nnlzlmaz, W. Campl1ell,jr,, Mezrmgerg' j. W. Czmzmizzgr, jr., Manager Third Row! H. N. Lamar, Coezclzj G. T. Tefrieu, C. M, Kidner, S. B. Smarl, jr., A. Bazmzan, G. A. Hibbezrzl, C. B. Gmlailif, V, F. Leahy, G. V. B. H. Day, Manager Serond Row! J. F. Crane, R. M. Drezzizezzz, R. F. Witbingzorz, C. L. Tezrlzell, j. A. Farley, jr., Capzaim' E. L. Hadley, L. P. Brazlerirk, M. Kahn, L. A. Beezzmn Front Row! G. E. George, T. E. Mraz, P, G. Garrity, P. Luzzara l312l Sammi' Roux' jay Rich, C0dl'lG,' D. S. Miftar, T. A. Rogxlarl, D, C, Burns, REJIIIUII, Manager Fr0f11Rou'.' B. Mrzntbalf, L, SILYUILZII, Cufilrlillj R. N. TLTUIIIHJ, Caj11ai11,' E. M, Gzrifzl, H. T. Blaine WRES'l'l.lNG Rebounding from the effects of last season's disastrous record, the wrestling team this year starts off under a new coach, and with one of the strongest squads in recent years. jay Schaffran, former Michigan star, has taken over the coaching reins, and with a strong Freshman team and a number of returning lettermen, the squad should give a good account of itself throughout the season. Returning lettermen Lee Sosman '45, newly elected captain, Ted Guild '44, New England 121-pound championg and Dugal Burns '44 and Pete Sacks '43, veterans in the high-weight brackets, head this year's prospects, with Fresh- men Pete Fuller and H. H. Schless as more than ample sup- port. Running from December through March, the schedule includes meets with Tufts, M. I. T., Navy, Yale, Penn, and Princeton. Stan Durwood '43, football star, is being groomed for the heavyweight slot, and is expected to see action before the season is very far advanced. Fenno Hoffman ,45 is another Senior who will probably hold the regular position in the 128- pound bracket. A J Coach Schaffran and Captain Sosman prepare to throw each other. 43131 ,f Semnd Rowf f. M. Barnaby, Coarbj IV. MacDonald, j. W.Fli1z!, T. W. Seanr, A. V. W. Gould, R. B. Sberwaad, Manager Front Row! O. Wilmzz, G. L. Felt, Capminj H. Baker, Capiainj T. E. Baker, W. R, Frothingbam Captain Gaelen Felt specializes in ,covering the whole court. -'l 314 I- SQLIAS If he can get a schedule put together, squash Coach jack Barnaby expects to have a banner year, with about 25 capable racquetmen Fighting for positions. The Massachu- setts State League has not yet come through with a schedule, thus wiping out most of the regular Crimsonls contests and preparation for the intercollegiate contests. And transpor- tation difhculties may even force the cancellation of these. For the second year in a row, Captain Gaelen Felt is expected to hold down the number one spot. Felt, an ex- ceptionally steady player, won his Yale match 3 to 0 last year while the team bowed 6 to 3. Pressing him for top ranking are Decker Orr and Tom Sears, probably in that order. Orr was ineligible in '41-'42, while Sears was a regular on the A list. Wally MacDonald, whom Barnaby considers the most improved player on the squad, has risen to the fourth spot from his number eight post of last year. Following him are Dudley Palmer, Tom Baker, George Clay, and Cortlandt Parker, with the ninth position still very much in doubt. FENCING Perhaps no team is less certain of its future than the fencers. The swordsmen have been practicing for a good part ofthe fall, but, with their hrst meet scheduled for the 11th ofjanuary, no one has the remotest idea how many of the regulars will be able to fence at that time. George Wilbur was captain ofthe team, but he has been called into service and a new captain will have to be elected. Last year the fencers had a fairly mediocre season, al- though a 17-10 victory over Yale helped to brighten the picture. Rene Peroy's charges did well in dual meets, winning three out of four of them, but fell down in the Pentagonals and the Eastern lntercollegiates. Under normal conditions, this year's team would be an experienced one, for only one regular graduated last yearv Captainjoe Koch. If it were not for the war and accelerated graduations, White, Ward, Vaughan, Wilbur, von Mehren, Olmstead, Coolidge, and MacNeal would all be among those present. But as things now stand, the future ofthe fencers in '43 is very dubious. Foilmen square off in Indoor Athletic Building fencing room. Serum! Rau-'.' R. Peroy, Coafbj J. M. Ward, M. S. O1Il1.fl2d:l, A. T. ron Mebren, R. H. MMNMZ, R. E. Weller, Mzzmzger Front Row! G. M. While, j. H. Vaughan, j. M. Karla, Captaizzj G. B. Wilbur, Captain, H. N. Coolidge l315l- I 0 LB. CREW Bert Haines' trouble last year started when the jay- vee hfties upset the Varsity just before the first race, but by the second Captain Bobby Lincoln's boat had reasserted it- self, defeating Yale and Princeton. When Haines left for Princeton for the season's final meeting he did not know which would be his Varsity. Finally he chose Lincoln's shell, which, upset by an early spot of bad water, towed too low until too late. The Varsity's closing spurt fell barely short, as Princeton nosed Penn by two feet and Harvard by four, all three smashing the existing record. In the fall regatta the 150,s lined up with Dick Sisson coxingg Bill Malcomb, stroke, Fitz Drayton, a Freshman from St. Paul's, seven, Dick Swanson, six, Ned Greene, five, Freshman Bob Potter of Exeter, fourg Dick Moot, three, Captainjohn Abbot, two, and Snell Robinson, bow. Abbot captained and stroked the 1943 eight, and as a Sophomore took over successfully where Vince Bailey left off, pacing the Varsity, but let Haines groom his successor this fall. The 15O's flip their shell into water, get ready for trial run Third Row! H. Heiney, Coarhj C. S. Robinxon, II, A. R. Wbitfemore, R. D. Moor, jr., G. N. Hurd, jr., Manager Second Row! W. H. Drury, fr., R. W. Swanion, A. L. Lincoln, jr., Caplzzinj A. W. Garmlielle, j. R. Abbot, jr. Fro11tR0w.' C. Brokaw, jr. 13161 S, L, ,I Thirrl Roux' j. M. Barnaby, II. Caacbj T. Colm, IV. T. Kiuel, jr., W. Nifbnll, H. H. Ezell, T. 1lflatlerr,Ma11age1' Semmf Roux' R. C. Sarlierz, j. B. Jfllkfllf, Captainj O, l17ilfof1,jf-., Caplaizlj H. M. Hyde, W. R. Frofhingbum Frou! Roux' L. j. Burlon, W. MrDonald TENN S A .500 percentage was rung up by the '42 tennis team in spring competition, although the netmen did considerably better in summer matches against local service teams. In individual play, Al Everts won the University Tournament in the summer, but was unable to compete in the fall when Bob Freedman of the Business School beat Varsity Captain jim jenkins in the finals. jenkins also lost in the last round of the New England Intercollegiates, but Dick Sorlien and Hugh Hyde won the doubles title. The Yale meet, a microcosm of the entire season, saw the Crimson bow by an 8 to 1 score, with Hyde and Lin Burton combining for the single point. Coach jack Barnaby had jenkins in the number one spot, with Hyde, Captain Orme Wilson, Ted Cohen, Bill Kissell, Dick Sorlien, Howie E zell, Wally McDonald, Lin Burton, Bill Frothingham, and Will Nicholl following in that order. Several promising Freshman pros- pects appeared during the 1942 summer, especially Mal Moley, Californian, who gave Everts his toughest battle in the University Tournament and won the Red Cross Tourna- ment by defeating Sorlien in the finals. Captain jim Jenkins sends a blistering backhand over the net Third Row! G. W. Blalzrlnarelx G. NI. Angle, M. H. Ozferbafl, jr., M. Hurley, Jr. Second Row: B. R. Mezrtizz. Coezrlaj M. M, Donahue, W. M. Ra1zcl,jr., C. Burr, D. W. Green, W. S. Hoelgsorz, C. F. Bartz,j1'., Manager From' Row! S. E. Simmom, jr., C. E, Szzlliwzz, jr., T. N. Bridge, IV. IV. Femz, Capraizzj j. R. Monl, A. T. Conlin, L. V. Alexir, jr. The lacrosse team plays its meets behind the Business School. -i 318 l LACROSSE Compiling a record of only one victory in ten starts, the 1942 lacrosse team made a showing below even the low Harvard par in the sport. Captain Wally Fenn's squad came close in the opening game, bowing to Penn only 5-4, but on the rest of the spring trip could only count 15-2 and 17-4 losses to Maryland Navy. Back home again, the stickmen were nosed out 8-6 by M. I. T. before being crushed by Springfield and Tufts. They then walloped a makeshift Boston Lacrosse Club 15-3 but in the next game a powerful Yale ten won 12-3 and in the season's finale, Dartmouth topped the Varsity 11-4. Starting against the Blue and in most of the Crimson's other engagements, newly-appointed Coach Ben Martin had Doug Green in the nets, johnny Moot at point, Hal Tine at coverpoint, '44 Captain Tom Bridge at first defense, Tom Conlin at second defense, Carl Sullivan at center, Fenn at second attack, high scorer jay Hurley at lirst attack, Dink Donahue at outside home, and Sumner Simmons at inside home. GOLF Inasmuch as Coach Don Perldie is a Business School contribution to the war effort, the 1943 Varsity golf team has an extremely doubtful future. But if the impossible occurs and a number of golfers are left in College in spring, a team of some experience may yet represent the Crimson. No suc- cessor to Peddie has yet been appointed. Captain Ned Tuckerman leaves College at midyears, along with Bill Allis and Ollie Ames, so that the only hold- overs from last year's squad are Don Davis and Art Tarlow, provided these men are still in mufti by next April. From an exceptionally strong Freshman squad of '41 will come Tyke Wilcox, Foster Boardman, and George Nye, if Fate and the draft boards do not intervene. Last year's club enjoyed a fair season, but the Yale team was too strong for the Crimson, which bowed to the Bulldog, 5 to 4, in a driving rain at New Haven. When and if the golfers ISC off this season, the Belmont Springs Country Club will be used for practice and probably for several con- tests. '42 Golf Captain Peter Macgowan follows through after a drive Sero11dRou'.' D. D. Peddie, Coarbf A. S, Tarlow, O. F. Amer, Manager Fran! Roux' W. W. Allix, E. M. Tlll'kfI'07d7l, Caplaiug P. Matguwuu, Capiaing F. H. Chalfeld, D. j. Dazuif -fi-191 d had little precision. struck a severe blow we the undergraduate nmer-fall seasons in mletics Adolph Sam- went by and another l its sports program, irst word of the new House sports were vere all to be assigned ticipate in the House , the spring schedule if the 2000 who took ldoor Athletic Build- :arry their colors into scheduled and all six n as head of the intra- e half dozen spring golf the Deacs were race for the runner-up Winthrop and Eliot I TRAMLIRALS in track, Eliot and Winthrop in tennis, and Leverett and Win- throp in golf. Sweeping the river for the third successive year, Eliot's oarsmen easily stroked to the rowing crown. Finley's men asserted their superiority early in the season and captured every race, ending with the triumph that gave them the rowing championship for the year. Baseball, the baby of intramural sports, took a leading role in the early activities. The advent of softball some years ago has provided for added participation, and the days in May and June find the regular nines or the softball ten-man teams at work in all of the diamonds of Soldiers Field. The hard- ball honors went to Dudley's commuters, with Winthrop's Puritans close behind. A third place tie was recorded when Adams and Kirkland ended in a deadlock after a last-day, 13-inning battle. Softball, fast rising to a new high in student popularity, continued to draw droves of fans and players during the warm months. The originally speedy game was paced even faster Though not numerous, House football fans are always partisan. 5 . .,. ,,.. Name+.. J 1 P fl? - -1,-g.- Jay?-:ET Q Qffv.-,:. e. by the adoption of a smaller ball, and the entire schedule was marked by tight and close jockeying for leading positions. Winthrop finally took the lead late in the campaign, while Dudley and Kirkland ended in a second place tie. Travelling to New Haven to take part in the annual House-College tussles, three spring squads carried the Crimson banner into the fray. In the golf match, Lowell, which was leading the linksters at the time, was defeated by an outstanding Silliman aggregation, and at the same time Eliot, fast becoming legendary in its stroking prowess, easily topped Trumbull College. The hardball game, supposedly an even match between Dudley, Cambridge leaders, and Davenport, the New Haven champions, ended in an easy victory for the commuters, 11-2. This brought the total of Harvard victories in House-College competition for the year, including fall and winter contests preceding, 7 wins for Har- vard and 2 wins for Yale. The House managers and Mr. Samborski's office could well be proud of the record, one of the best in the annals of House competition. Back at Harvard, the moguls at the Indoor Athletic Building were hard at work with their slide rules, compiling scores and looking for the eventual winner ofthe Straus Trophy symbol of House Athletic distinction. But there was little doubt as to the eventual champion, and the Deacons of Kirkland House annexed the title, walking away for the third Coach Samborski checks in men for pre-game conditioning. consecutive year. Starting with an early superiority in points piled up by a leading football team, Kirkland breezed through the winter season and did well enough in the remaining events to end up over 200 points ahead. The point totals were: Kirkland, 1640, Adams, 1410, Lowell, 1402, Winthrop, 1342, Eliot, 1144, Leverett, 1110, Dudley, 990, and Dunster, 917. The summer of 1942 was epoch-making in athletic history as well in the general story of the college. For with the opening of the enlarged summer session, the Athletic Department was ready with an improved and expanded House sports system, prepared to absorb the numbers of Freshmen that would enter the Houses. With the addition of but one sport, the summer pro- gram took much the same shape as that of the spring, but the student participation mounted to new heights. With com- pulsory conditioning a reality since April, men in the Houses found intramurals a convenient and pleasant method for work- ing off those large major credits. And the records showed the numbers of participants mounting and mounting. Leverett continued its year-old athletic renaissance by taking the top prize of the new session, the hardball trophy. Kirkland, striving to offset the Bunnies drive, took second spot, and Winthrop took third. And again, softball was one of major attractions, with the Lowell bellboys ramping to an almost undefeated slate. A late, one-run defeat at the hands of Winthrop marred an otherwise perfect record. A Freshman softball league ended in a triumph for Winthrop, which was also rising to unexpected spots in league standings. Tennis, track, and the addition of volleyball rounded out the warm-weather program. The tennis tournament, run on a round-robin basis, ended in two ties. Eliot and Kirk- land drew for top honors, while Adams, breaking into the show column, deadlocked with Winthrop for second place. The runners of Lowell, led by two all-House stars, romped to the track laurels, followed by the ubiquitous Kirkland and the improving Elephants of Eliot. The Volleyball tussles were marked by the excellence of the leading teams, who proved that a great deal of latent talent in this undeveloped sport existed around the Yard and in the Houses. Kirkland, the ever-threatening, took the Hrst championship, but was followed closely by Dunster's Eunsters, and Leverettis Bunnies. . The point standings at the end of the summer, con- taining the cumulative standings of the teams after a sum- mer's activity, showed all-powerful Kirkland once again on top, but not with the lead of old. For Leverett was hot on its heels, and the fall season was to show an even closer fight for all-around supremacy. The football season, with but a mediocre record on the Stadium gridiron, boasted the most successful record of the ten-year House history in the inter-House program. By far the outstanding single event of a singularly outstanding season was the meteoric rise of the Leverett 15211- football team. Out of a House that had rarely boasted strength when it came to the ways of the pigskin, came an eleven that was unequalled in House history, and is already becoming legendary. Undefeated, untied, unscored on until late in the season, and impregnable to the extent of not having a first down notched against them on the ground-that is the record of Leverett in the fall of 1942. Four all-House players were chosen from the Bunnies, and they went to Yale to down the top Pearson College aggregation in one of the most thrilling games that old New Haven has seen. But there were other teams in the League at the same time. Dunster played the role of spoiler, and upset Adams in an early season tilt to win the Gold Coasters' chance for a shot at the title. The Funsters then went on to notch the runner-up spot. Winthrop's Puritans, using the best passing attack in the League, managed to slip ahead of Adams and stay there for the third honors. Leverett still was the topic for amazement late in the season. Their game with Pearson will rank with any of the famous games of Harvard history. Fighting the stubborn Eli team up and down the field, the Bunnies could not quite -l3221- x mouse uuuxcy games au: piaycu ru vain,-us uustuu snauua HQAS. get close enough to push a score across. Then, in the fourth quarter, they stood on the Pearson 15-yard line and from there booted a side angle placement for the three-point margin of victory. The remainder of the contests at Yale saw the Crimson squads lose every other House game, including a touch game between the championship Adams touch football team and the Silliman bulldog leaders. Cross country and soccer played a minor role in the fall program. Lowell won the harrier meet, while Leverett, with another surge, took the booters' title. Undoubtedly, the amazing showing of Leverett's teams can be termed the single feature of the fall campaign. Looking ahead into a future clouded by the war and all that it means to any college program, the outlook for House sports is certainly not good. But up until the last man leaves college, there will be some form of intramural competition set up for student use. And when the men return, following the toughest form of competition, the fast-developing House sports system will be able to assume its ever more permanent place in Harvard life. We Har ard Po!! WHIIIHDFT Hess Br NERAL C UNCEP TSCUMESCL 0sEsT TU Youre IDEA UFTHE KIND uFPasr-WAR Womb We Sunuw HAVE? Q QQ G WTQQQQQQQWGQQ iMQQQ1QQ5566wf Q Q IQ Q Q 601 WWQQQQQ 66 we QQQQSQQ I6 FEDERAL UNION STRONGEIZ LEAGUE STRUNGEIZ UNITED 14 FEDERAL UNION AMERICAN NEITHER FEDERATION 1 UNDECIDED 1-ia OF THE WOIZLU-P OF NATIONS ii NATIONS-DISADMED AXISQ UF DEMOCRACIES--P CENTURY .Q OR CONFEJERATION-PQ Each unit in this pictograph represents ten per cent. Federal Union of theWorld attracted one third of the vote throughout What are polls?', quipped jesting Pilate and would not stay for an answer. And indeed, the result of the average poll-unless one deals in vague general terms like Trends and Movements and other favored phrases of assorted and nameless history departments-the result approaches more closely the brain-child of a mad taxidermist than any logical representation of the situation. And what a conglom- erate monster faces the would-be analyst! Its beak from Kan- sas, its bushy tail from Chillicothe, its claw-feet from Bar Harbor, and the rest of it from goodness knows where, our enfeznt terrible, our bete noire is as likely to answer Yes as Non to a civil question, and if its spleen is particularly livid at the moment is equally willing to vociferate a petulant UHELL, NOV, But be all these facts as they may, we are still con- fronted by our beast and by consciences demands to skin, pluck, stuff and bake our problem child and serve it up on erudition's table with a spicy sauce of carefully blended 'l324l- I the country. Only 392 wanted Mr. Luce's American Century, on the other hand, only 3 CZ, wanted no international co-operation. insight, and then refer to the whole by a fashionable French title, adding, as we hide our snigger behind a slightly frayed cuff, Chef's Specialty. Perhaps, we venture for a start, as we add a pinch of salt to our ha-ha piquante sauce, one of the most significant aspects of the poll is the time in which it has been given. By this we mean that heretofore the usual college poll has confined itself, properly enough, to a choice of best sellers, movie actresses on a desert island, and similar bits ofwhipped cream, charlotte russe, and sugared ruffles. To indulge in a bit of understatement, things are different now. We have two simultaneous wars on our hands, and any number of simultaneous results from these at our heels, so no wonder our interest wanders from Clara Bow, the It girl, to more profound channels. In this sense our poll will be useful in two ways-first, as a partial analysis of what these two classes at Harvard are thinking and have thought, and, second, as a record of thought in as tumultuous a time in world history as any. Naturally, a poll is not exact. One says Answer Yes or Nof' when one's victim may have labored through some thousand hours of intricate thought on the question so glibly posed to him. He cannot qualify his statement, and probably answers No by a 57 per cent mental majority alone. But on the whole, we can hope that the variations will cancel out, and that the total result will have some significance for each particular question alone, if not for an intricate analysis of the private philosophy of each member of the two classes. And so, with doubtful fingers and even a faint consoling of whisper of Moral Concept, we sharpen our carving knife, assume an alert stance, and lunge for the left wing of our roasted cassiwary. GENERAL INFORMATION Wbicb f0lZ.ff,ff.l' of revenzl zj1fe.rti0m', rome imllnertifzezzl amd ,rome fmt.- Where Did You Prepare for Harvard? Harvardmen are snobs, Harvardmen wear striped ties, Harvardmen are Sassiety. And such statements have a cer- tain mythological value but not much else, for barely two per cent more of the entire conglomerate total of the two classes attended private schools than attended public schools. And when one considers that of this first group only a select few of the Eastern sectarian institutions have any real value as snob-appeal, the myth dwindles even further until it fades into delicate echoes reverberating feebly behind obscure brick walls and painted doors on Mt. Auburn Street. Why Did You Come to Harvard? Here tradition takes the reins while the sleigh-bells jingle 12 per cent, and one maladjusted wag even answers, Because my father didn't. Tradition tires easily and is superseded by those who wished to study primarily in a certain field-14 per cent. Scholarship follows with 10 per cent, and then numerous puny drivers assume the reins in rapid succession-2 per cent to get an eastern education, 3 per cent to meet people worth knowing, 5 per cent because it's near Boston. These few tiring rapidly, we are led safely along to the end of our ride by the largest group of all- those innocent moths attracted by the glittering candle of Harvard's high academic standing-over half the entire group-a healthy 56 per cent. Combing a few truisms out of our great grey beard, we add fand partly from personal experiencej Perhaps the reasons why one came to Harvard are quite different from the reasons why one stayed once one arrived there. Take that bone, reader, it's yours to chew on or bury, as you see fit. Have You Ever Been On the Dean's List? Well, Sophomore, year, I . . Which is probably quite true, for nearly two thirds have been on the dean's list, with the Midwest surpassing the East, and the Far West emerging victorious with a total of 81 per cent to its 19 per cent no. New England makes the poorest showing of all with a mere 59 per cent yes. What Is the Income Per Year of Your Family? or How Greasy Is Your Palm, jack? . At the top of the pile we find a blissful 15 per cent who confess to a family income of 320,000 or More. The largest group falls in the s5,ooo to 37,500 class with a stable 25 per cent, the percentages declining in either direction from this peak, less sharply toward the higher brack- ets, and more steeply toward the lower ones, which dwindle away to a bare 3 per cent for the Under 31250 group and the 3.1250-352500 group. Harvard is fairly well off, but doesn't bump its head very hard against the new 325,000 ceiling. What Is the Occupation of Your Father? Commerce and law gallop to a photo finish with 14 per cent for each, while medicine and finance are close seconds with 13 per cent apiece. Manufacturing follows with 12 per cent, and engineering with 9 per cent. Education claims 6 per cent, and transportation 3 per cent, while a full tenth of Harvard fathers are engaged in government service. The lowest groups of all are journalism-2 per cent, arts and letters-2 per cent, research 1 per cent, and similarly, one minister for every ninety-nine otherwise occupied fathers. What Is Your Intended Vocation After the War? An interesting correlation between answers to this question and the occupations of fathers is found in the per- centages at least, while there is a very high correlation be- tween the actual father-son attention to medicine. On the whole, the solid national stand-bys of finance and manu- facture and commerce suffer a slight relapse, losing several per cent apiece, while engineering, research, arts and letters, journalism and medicine undergo an increase on about the same scale, with medicine in the lead of all the others with a full 15 per cent. And there is still one potential minister for every ninety-nine less divinely inclined classmates. Perhaps, we reflect, these figures-the increases and the decreases fa tenth was undecidedj-will filter back into the old patterns, as numerous hopeful painters and poets discover that the general public cares more for a bad double feature than for a carefully contrived chef d'oeuvre. The days when arts and letters bought bread, though not over, are spaced more sparing- ly throughout the year. It would be interesting to see how nearly fact simulates desire. V 45251- U15 fin mrd 2901! ATTITUDE TOWARD THE WAR AND AFTER Non-interventionist to Interventionist. This general movement, which the graph will show with more clarity than verbal percentages, is certainly what one would suspect to be the case. The more interesting figures are those on student opinion as to the probable length of the war. The Harvard man is no optimist, for almost a tenth expect it to last five years or more. They are slightly over- balanced by the rose-colored-glasses contingent which claims a minimum of a year or more. The largest group of all, a full half, believes it is a matter of two to three years more, while the remaining 28 per cent hold out for a three to five year siege. Confidentially, reader, we have it third hand from a totally unreliable Belgian counsul, that Germany was going to collapse by New Year's. You can have the information for what it's worth. We also have it second-hand from the fashionable Cliveden set why Rudolph Hess came to Eng- land, but we're not breathing a word, not a word. Do You ThinkWe Should Have a Second Front . . . Immediately! exclaimed an eager 29 per cent, while a less impassioned 69 per cent advocated the front when our military authorities deem it wise. One per cent advised next spring, while another per cent confessed total confusion. Italy was the favorite on the invasion parade, France was a close second, while Norway, the Balkans, and the Caucasus were extremely weak followers. Finland survived with a negligible per cent-zero, to be exact. Think and Fight, or just Fight? That Harvard is well aware that a peace cannot be made merely by winning a war, is shown by the fact that four- fifths of the voters favored constructive thinking along with the fighting. Although the old attitude of Well, we ought to go in there and give them what they gave everybody else and what we should have given them the last timeu may be cur- rently popular throughout the country, it certainly is not popular at this university. The largest group of all, a liberal 46 per cent, wants Germany to be accepted as an equal after the war. The next group-31 per cent-advocates policing the territory by the United Nations-a more practical view, temporarily at least, considering the fascist education to which so many of our enemies have been exposed. A more radical 10 per cent wanted the country divided into small states, a greedy two per cent favored its division among the United Nations. Twice that number wanted the German people scattered. il3261r The attitude toward the peace is that certain nations should have more right to speak about it than others-a two-thirds majority in this, with the United States leading the list of peace-makers, Eng'and coming second, Russia an ex- tremely close third, fvae Brittaniaelj while Canada and China follow as not too strong fourths and fifths. Police! Only two per cent wished to assume total responsi- bility for the disciplinarian job after the war, while a full nine-tenths of the voting group favored a companion or com- panions in such a duty, like policemen, back to back, in some particularly undesirable section of an equally undesirable city. A certain residue believed that it was not our job at all. Union, Thank You, Mr. Luce Which shows that although the idealists rated low in policework, they came out high in government, the highest group-a third-favoring a federal union of the world, while the old League of Nations was not yet dead-26 per cent alive, in fact. Mr. Luce and downright isolation rated the lowest of all, thus exploding the myths of the American Empire and the American Clam. Let us hope that the frag- ments of these myths will not have reassembled themselves by the time peace is actually to be made. The entire attitude of Harvard toward these aspects of the war might be termed a Firm Liberalism. PERSONAL ROLE IN THE WAR In which the fmmerozzr whims and rrotclzeff of the dimztirjfed .fiudefzt come to Zigbl, ar doe! the not .vo laiezzt molnbery of the !l'fbl'?J6lidlfJ61'J071. Join the Navy and See theWorld And that precisely is what the majority of students are looking forward to, as far as the various aspects of military life are concerned, or not concerned. It must be added, sadly enough, that the lure of a uniform attracted another 11 per cent, while the combination of good-time good-paljohnnies and ruddy cheeked outdoor types with their total, of 26 per cent came within an ace of superseding the amount of Cook's Tour addicts. The seven-year-old mentality went an all-out 8 per cent for the Thrill of Combat, while only two per cent decided that they would enjoy riding in a jeep or a plane or an et cetera. The easy-virtued members of the fair sex populat- ing the Boston Common dragged down three times as many votes as the jeeps did. Any witticism at this point would only be coarse, so with prim restraint, we maintain an admirable silence. Then too, it might be mentioned that the poll presented only a certain set of questions under this heading, and that a full tenth favored some reason other than those listed. Eight per cent added of their own account that the aspect of military life that they would look forward to most would be nghting for democracy. You'l1 Never Get Rich by Digging a Ditch Or, what aspect of the martial life do you look forward to least? Although a quarter voted for for, rather, againstj K.P., it makes us quite happy to observe that a strong De- generate Bloc, coffin-nail in one hand, and martini in the other, crashed through with an unhealthy 8 per cent against the Outdoor Life. Another 17 per cent, still mentally un- conditioned, at least, by the athletic conditioning program, objected to the exercise involved in waging a war. We trust that they will be kept comfortable by mechanized units of one sort or another. Oveta Culp Hobby and her undomestic cohorts come in for a lusty lathering from the rich foamy suds of a soapy 12 per cent that approved of neither the WAVES, the WAACS, the WOOFS, or the WUNIPS. Woman's place, we have always maintained, is over a hot cookstove, with maybe a young 'un tucked under one arm, and three more crawling around her feet and getting hot grease spilled on them from time to time. To you, you great big beautiful Twelve Per Cent, we extend our heartiest thanks. Chivalry is not yet dead, it breathes on in the hearts of Harvard men. The club contingent voiced its dainty taste too, for the great unwashed, the calloused proletariat, received 8 per cent worth of censure at the hands of those who did not wish to mingle with them. This was equalled by disapproval of sergeants, and disapproval of inspection, but was surpassed by a strong and rebellious 12 per cent who could not stomach the prospect of discipline. A mere 4 per cent found themselves at odds with Other. You and the Army Which proves that although 44 per cent are going into the Army, only 27 per cent would really like to, whereas the factual 19 per cent going into Navy are exceeded by 26 per cent who would give their socks to be in the first group's shoes. The only other significant group is the Air Corps, 5 per cent if by land and two if by sea. Nobody more wants to be in the Navy Air Corps, but 15 per cent would like to be in the A. A. C. Industry claims 6 per cent in fact, but a con- scientious O per cent in fancy fpass me my glass eye with the castle in a snow-storm scene in it, jack,-the one that makes to snow on the castle when I jump up and downj. Seven per cent are specialized, while 10 per cent would like to be. Fourteen per cent accounted for Other, Don't know, and Don't care. The Coast Guard and Marines claim their own at 2 per cent apiece. Nobody wanted to be a commando. Would You Like to Get a Commission? Whether b an honest and strai htforward estimate of Y 8 personal worth granted by an education in one of the country's best universities, or by mere wishfulness and the lure of gold AT THE Becmmue or Fnom SEPTEMBER I, I939 Frzom FRANCE THE WAR TO THE FALL or Fmwce TO PEARL HARBOR, 68Z ' 442 36 36 0 Z 7 sm 11771, 172 WZ HZ 1277 GZ 31 I l Pacifist Non lnterventionist Undecided Pacifisi: Non lnterventlonist Undecided lj-SCifiS'C Non Interveniionisl: Undedded lnferventionist lnterventionist lnterventionist In the three years covered by this graph interventionist senti- evenly divided up to the Fall of France, thereafter were as much ment rose steadily while all others fell. Mid-Westerners were in favor of entering the war as students from other sections. -l327l' Uhr Ha VLIIZI' 2901! braid, prestige, and the chance to live like a gentleman far away from the drab realms of peeled potatoes, all but hve per cent of the two classes admitted or proclaimed, as the case may be, that they could do very well with a commission, thank you. One might at this point pull out the stops for a triumphal blast of the not unfamiliar strain of educated men being the better leaders, and Harvard men being better edu- cated than other men, so therefore .... But despite secret convictions of the veracity of such strains, we feel that any outward statement of them is slightly over the demarcation line ofgood taste-and even good judgment, for although family affluence does not get any one into the college, lack of it does keep some out. There is no unlimited cornucopia of scholar- ship funds to provide for those less fortunately situated. So it is unfair, we believe, that those who would certainly deserve the advantages of a higher education are unable to get it, and as a by-product of such a situation are also unable to obtain commission in the armed forces. In this connection it is possible to foresee a continuation of the new universal cream-of-the-high-schools and one-year-of-college program proposed recently as a wartime measure. Such a program after the war would have its undeniable advantages-and these in a country where Cforgive the pink flagj socialism is and will need to become increasingly important. And all this is a long way from the bare quotation of statistics on preference for or against commissions. As for the estimate on whether they actually would get a commission or not, the wishful undergraduate took a somewhat more pessimistic approach, with only a cheerful 74 per cent maintaining that its chances were good, while ll per cent thought that its chances were only fair, 8 per cent didn't venture to conjecture, and the remaining 7 per cent swore that it would scarcely rise above the role of sergeant. How Are You Entering Military Service? Surprisingly enough only an extremely small quota is being seized by tentacles of the draft octopus-a paltry 17 per cent. R.O.T.C. accounts for another 6 per cent, Others takes care of 5 per cent, while actual enlisting clasped 29 per cent to its not so expansive bosom. But by far the largest group of all, that which takes into consideration the fact that a college education-even in wartime-is more valuable than not, is the enlisted reserve, including the remain- ing V45 per cent in its scope-nearly half of the entire college group. The Athletic Program At first it seemed a violent encroachment upon the proverbial Indifference and a bunion on the toe of personal -i323l liberty, this absurd potpourri of push-ups and flank move- ments. But time passed quickly enough, and the average calisthenic victim discovered that through force of habit or a necessary tolerance, he became somewhat more adapted to such nonsense, and, shameful though it may sound, perhaps almost grateful for the firm but not ungentle hand of the hygiene department that persuaded him from exercising his muscles solely in climbing the stairs of Widener, transport- ing himself to the U. T., or even shuffling him about the particular floors of the Raymor, Radcliffe receptions, or the Ritz Roof. Then, too, there was the small matter of a war .... However, an earnest and crusty few stuck to their guns, and grumbled with a sullenly outraged conviction that they weren't going to be shoved around by anyone-and continued to do push-ups. But, then, there was scarcely another course. The final statistics: 'Excellentli'-52 per cent. Valuable but not necessary, -25 per cent. Waste of time! -23 per cent. SOCIAL AND CU LTU RAL The private crotchets and preferences and general nature of the particular breed of Cantabridgian nurtured by our colleges are again revealed in this section. The average, typical specimen could be described something as follows: has studied less since the war began, has about three hours a day spare time, prefers to listen to classical music best of all on the radio, looks for personality most of all when fete-ing a member of the fair sex Qbut hasn't met her yetj, drinks more than 3.2 somewhat more often than only after football games, reads about a dozen books a year in addition to his courses and tutorial, buys LW, Tbe New Yorker, and Time from his newsstand Qin that orderj, and tolerates the Lazmpoon more often than not. Some of these glib facts might bear individual interpretation. Study Time The decrease in this field might be accounted for by two explanations: first, this group that has studied less hails from the classes of '43 and '44, both of which were probably well started in fields of concentration before the war began, or before we entered it actively, at any rate. Then they applied for various forms of the enlisted reserve or partied the draft board awhile with brief deferments, or actually enlisted. Consequently with a military career of some sort looming up in the near future, they discovered that Walter Savage Landor, Aristotle, and Henry the Eighth seemed somehow slightly more remote than in the palmy days of their innocent fresh- man life. Consequently 66 per cent did study less. How- ever, we should be interested to see the figures on the scien- tifically-minded younger generations that depend for their future standing in the armed forces on their present showing in mathematics, engineering, physics, and chemistry. WHERE DID YLIU PREPARE 'Y public School privafe School EVER BEEN ON THE DEAN'S LIST? HAS THE ATHLETIC CONDITIONING BEEN? Excellenf Valuable buf ntzi necessary wash nf lime IS THERE T00 LITTLE COLLEGE SPIRIT AT HARVARD ? aaaaiaaaaaa anime I 33313ae yyfyyaaaaa QQQQQQC I! 33335 3 333313 3333333333 QQCEQQG IE 3333333331333 313331933333 QQGBQQQQC E WWVWM3333. QQQQQQQQ1 VW33333333 333333333332 QQQQQQG E VVVW333333 Tabulation showed the classes of '45 and '44 were fairly even- ly divided between public and private prep schools, most stu- Radio Programs The favorites are ffrom multiple answersj: classical music, 65 per cent, news, 54 per cent, jazz, 42 per centg comedy, 31 per cent, residue, 4 per cent. Apparently this is any man's horse-race, but we wouldn't put our deuce on the news-commentator to win or even place if there were not a war going on. Women, Dates, Etc. There were on the whole a rather well balanced group of multiple answers for this question. The most outstanding value employed in selection of quail, finch, frail, and skirt, was, as mentioned before, personality-55 per cent. And the most refreshing part of the reply lies in the fact that only a bare 5 per cent really considered that Mayflower ancestors and other signs of superior breeding-all classed under the title Family-were of any importance. Brains and chassis, whatever that may be, balanced each other with about twenty per cent apiece, while the subtle allure of an angelic counten- ance ensnared another 27 per cent. Availability rated a prac- tical 16 per cent, while the lechers licked their libidinous chops and chalked off a sin-infested 17 per cent in favor of what the compilers of the poll euphemistically termed moral liberal- 1sm. War. Marriages A-s far as the actual statistics go, there is a peak of 58 per cent about the Have not met her yetn center, which tapers away through in love and don't carew on either side to a mere 8 per cent for engaged, and a 7 per cent for loused upf' Practically no one is married. For observa- tions,-if this is the war of quick marriages and numerous engagements, Harvard hasn't heard of it yet. Liquor ' Some -significant figures: 3 per cent, beer, 86 per cent, dents got on dean's list at one time or another, and New Eng- landers liked conditioning more than the rest of the country. stronger, and 11 per cent, nothing worse than cider. We can see them now, leaving the barrel on the window sill, and throwing away the ice of the perimeter in the morning. There's more than one kind of cider. Books And it seems too bad that over a fourth of the two classes reads only one to three books on its own initiative per year. About the same amount reads four to eight, while the percentage dwindles away from there to 5 per cent for over twenty-five. WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? Those are the facts, such as they are, and what are we supposed to conclude from them all? What do they mean, and what good is a poll of that sort anyway? Of course we can don the oracle's mask and mutter ambiguously about the combined significance of the Facts, or of how a Movement is Definitely Afoot, and that Many Changes Will Occur, and that our poll is an Arrow pointing to a Future. But somehow we would feel that we were deceiving scarcely anyone, let alone ourselves. Obviously the poll is of no empire-shaking importance, yet with an equal clarity it is apparent that as a weapon for disturbing ant-hills, it is considerably over-sized. Succinctly, it does give a general cross section of a certain period of time and of a certain type of person in that time. The exact inter- pretation of such facts may be given partially by a knowledge of the past and the present, but the final ingredient, the future, is lacking. And it will be only then, when that ingredient is at last supplied, that we will be able to make any final and definitive judgment. Perhaps the poll then will arouse only a faint nostalgic smile, but at least it will be a part, albeit a small one, of a whole, and as such, will have its place. l329l THE HE YUUHS Time alone will tell 'what you banish flights by Over the land, across earth, hundreds of dependability, for which the fields and then is in the air there. But as time your of the marvelous precision of Watches bears no small responsibility. than -H301 flu mm' Uday. . . fCo1zti1111e1f F0111 page 201 worth its cost, a belief, rooted in the writings of the 192O's, in a thorough second-hand knowledge of war itself, and in a complete distrust of international politics,-a belief so strong that neither the patriotic shibboleths of chauvinists nor the reasoned arguments of interventionists could avail against it. And there was, in the minds of students who had thought or wondered or questioned at all, a fear that was, again, more than merely the terror of war's physical tortures. It was the fear that wells up within one who is approaching a task that is entirely new and for which his past training had been entirely futile. Students who had spent or who were planning to spend four years at college, and especially those to whom academic work meant more than a degree, realized in fact that they were being trained to take a leading place in the science and art ofa nation at peace. And not until America had been openly attacked was there to be at Harvard any ex- tensive training for leadership in a nation at war. These students, therefore, saw, as the web of the international con- flict seemed to spin itself about the nation and as the govern- ment rushed through Congress a bill for universal compulsory military service, the plans and hopes they had built for them- selves melt away. The education they had received seemed no longer of value to their society, and in the new society that a perpetual emergency created they, who had been trained for cultural leadership, could do little more than obey. Yet, the fear that lay behind the doubt and confusion of so many university students was also the fear of the war's aftermath as well as of the war itself. The older generation in 1939 to 1941 had deplored the post-war disillusionment in the past, but the younger generation feared its recurrence in the future. If, in 1914, there had been talk of a war to end war, there was in 1959 a feeling that this war would end civilization itself. Had not young people seen H, G. Well's Things to Come, had they not themselves lived through the 1920's with its fantastic extravagance, its brutal intoler- ances, its cruel greed, and had they not read the history of Germany and realized that Fascism was born out of the confusion after World War I? Their logic was clear: they simply assumed that a world conflict more horrible and more vicious than the last would produce a more horrible and more vicious aftermath. The extravagance, the intolerance, the greed of the 1920's could well become, as it had in Germany, an American fascism. Nor did the events of 1940 and 1941 belie their logic. They saw the supression ofjehovah's witnesses, they saw the ,rising flood of anti-semitism during the elections of 1940, and they heard again the same voices shouting the same cheap slogans that they had read about in Walter Millisis Road to War. Their logic again seemed to lead them to but one con- clusion: if these things occur even before the nation goes to war, what will happen during and after it? At the beginning of the Fall term in 1941, however, a fundamental change had come over the thinking of students. In reviewing the events of that complicated and confusing period, we have seen that out of the confusion emerged a new tone, a new attitude. Here, then, was the moment, as far as the thinking of students is concerned, that was most im- portant. It was not the attack on Pearl Harbor that caused the change, for the change itself came several months before. The sudden switch in the official policies of various under- graduate organizations was important only as a reflection of the switch that had taken place in the minds of the individual students throughout the university. A year before, the events of the present produced fear and apprehension for the future, now, they presented a challenge. Neither the excitement of a war nor the emotional slogans of patriotism had succeeded in altering the attitudes of undergraduates: the change came, indeed, as had the fears of the year before, from logic. By this time the United States was nearer to war than ever before. The nation seemed to have become hopelessly entangled in the web, and the compromise between our ideals and our actions seemed no longer tenable. For the most part, students accepted the inevitability of war and even called for it. And QConlinzzed on page 333D 13311- You are lezzfvzkzg Harvard but You may remifz your memberffzzf at The COOP An alumnus may join The Coop each 'W' year and find it very profitable to do wr J . so. Those not conveniently located QQ 1 K , ' - Z' J, 15 .4 was , 'A fi 975-Q., Y Q? ' 4 ' J' 5 -.- ,swag L A -sl N, 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. FEDERAL NATIONAL LINEN SERVICE CO., Inc Renters of COATS, APRONS, TOWELS, GOWNS, UNIFCRMS 'clhlholesale Laundry Departmenti, 6'Always on Timen 1310 Columbus Avenue, Boston, Mass. Tel. Highlands 7330 New Hampshire Oifices at Portsmouth, Tel. 940 Dover, Tel. 278 13321 ffa ala! Today. . . fConti221zedji'om page 3311 since the war was inevitable, their logic declared, and since the fact that we could protect out ideals only by fighting be- came inescapable, it became their obligation to make the most of it. The energy that had been expended in anti-war demon- strations was now re-channeled. Indeed, in many ways, this period was far less emotional, far less intense than the year before. From the writings and words and actions of students came unmistakable evidences of calm criticism of the present, and of constructive planning for the future. Crimrozz editorials cried out more than once against the treatment of Negroes in defense factories and in the army. More than once had pro- fessors and students regretted the nebulous wording of the Atlantic Charter and called for more definite war aims that would help solve specific as well as general problems for the entire world. And more than one organization was set up to discuss reconstruction of the world after peace had been established. Confusion and doubt existedg but if the war itself became at times hidden by the trivia of college life and if no one knew exactly when or how war would come to America, the fact of war within the near future was undeniable. And although far too little attention was paid to our diplomatic negotiations with japan, the confusion and the misplacement of emphasis was only surface-deep. Students were pre- occupied with issues that seemed more fundamental: the pro- tection of civil liberties today and the protection of democracy tomorrow. After December 7, 1941, the main trends of student thought did not change, but became merely clearer, more direct, more pointed. Now that war had come at last, a cloud seemed to have been lifted, now students knew where they were going and they knew what they must do. Surely in times of crisis, men and women find strength that seemed never before to have existed 3 and the new litera- ture upon which students now fed was the literature that describedpthis new strength. First, the battle of Spain, so long considered an isolated struggle, became for young people a part of the gigantic pattern of the whole world conflict. Then, London, then Moscow and Stalingrad. Al- though students continued to feel that war was the ghastly blight they had always considered it they saw that it was not devoid of nobility and dignity. Many read Malrauxg many read the new Hemingway. These men presented something quite different from the warmongering of 1939, they demonstrated unmistakingly that very literally there were forces of evil at work in the world and that it was the duty of the men of good will to combat them. And they showed, too, fContinaed on page 3359 When Ora'erz'ag Laboratory Supplier . . lNf1AY YVE PRESENT Your New Laboratory Affzktant QY RMU 5 ZAPBPQXRATU Consult UNABRIDGED INDEX pp. 1121-1216 for more than 220,000 kinds and sizes of Scientihc Laboratory - Apparatus. Q R E-.gg This American Book is Dedicated to Dar Men za tire ffLao who have given freely of their time, labor and native ingenuity toward the end that scientific knowledge and its practical application to the needs of mankind might make for world progress and for better living. For quick reference, see the author'ized,factory designations of Corning, Kimble, Coors, International Centrfifage, Precision, Freas, Bausch E59 Lomb, Spencer, Coleman, Ainsworth, Becker, Parr, Evnerson, Bafrnstead, Buehler, etc., etc. HOWE 81 FRENCH, INC. 99 BROAD STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 13551 Wlhile in college you will need printing for yourself, your club or your coinrnittee-our experience in college printing will be helpful. Stop in for a free engagement calendar-conveniently located in the Arthur K. Pope Francis S. Snow HARVARD CRIMSON BUILDING Eben A. Thacher Tel. TRO. 3390 vivvssova 1'imfin5 ovmfany CYPRUS BREWER 84 CCD. INSURANCE DIEMONT OF EVERY DESCRIPTION IJEVY CU., Inc. park few .qzjajafej Direct Importers of SPONGES CHAMOIS SHELLAC GUMS Manufacturers of SHELLAC VARNISHES 3970 CAPitol 3971 3972 PAINTS Dixlribuiors for VARNISHES ACME WHITE LEAD Telephone CAP1tol 6090 ENAMELS Ee coLoR WOEKS M. EwrNG Fox COLOR S HMURALITEU CALCIMINE RUBBERSET Co. GLASS BEUSHES 57-59 PORTLAND ST. BOSTON MASS. 44 KILBY ST. BOSTON, MASS. U.. . W A 'c ,A X W' We .d 'f 3 Power Lawn Mowers HA L E 'I' 'I' E Ri-H G S7520 fm-fl model Fon PURCHASING AGENTS TO READ for every lawn DAVIS SQUARE MATTRESS CO. ' 89-109 VVINSLOVV AVE., SOMERVILLE, MASS. PHONE: SOMerset 4383 Power Lawn Mower Service Co Somerville, hIass.: 15 Tenney Court SOM. 0504 Dear Purchasing Agent: May we add your institution 1' X if 'ga f . 5 X Qi fJl'i.s'3'53 ' 3435 'Clk ' :ani Fil .MEFI-fzeef in ,,,.. , .I S. A4 ' life? to this partial list of our satisfied customers? Bath Iron Works Shipyard Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp. KIRkland 5090 Federal Shipbuilding 8 Dry Dock Go. Harvard University Massachusetts General Hospital If you would like to have us send you our price list, just Full Insurance Coverage AMERICAN CLEANING Co., INC. 20 Central Sq., Cambridge, Mass. General Cleaning Contractors mail a. postcard to me. Very truly yours, A. V. Hart Sales Manager 7' ' . - - . VY lndow Cleaning Office and Building Box springs Pillows Floor Yvaxing Nfaintenance Felt Mattresses Renovating Chair Covers . . . I 1 M rr R b nal T bl c and Blaintenance N ight and Day Service mmrspr ng 8 ms S e U ng a B overs ! l3341h 952' a a a t M cCOIIff11lIC'!f j5'om page 333, that a struggle so vast presented, along with the possibility of destruction too overwhelming to fight, an opportunity for rebuilding, for repairing, for reforming. just as the war had gradually become for young people an inevitability, so the idea that the war was also a revolution became a fact. But the revolution was more than an economic or political upheaval: it was an intellectual revolution as well. In no way, however, did this mean that the majority of students believed Communism to be inevitable or even desirable for America. It did not mean that young people felt that their political institutions should be radically altered. It did not necessarily mean the establishment of some sort of classless society. It meant a revolution in values. When in 1939 members of the older generation accused students of having lost their faith, there were right. The loss of faith in the traditional standards of the 19th century will in the future seem perhaps the most unique and overwhelming element of this war. Long ago the Church had lost its in- fluence over the minds of young people, and now, the idea of progress as manifested through the last century became an idea with which few could hold. Progress had raised a stand- ard of living, but it had also created a depression . . . and students could still remember the tragic sight of beggars and apple-sellers and bread lines. Progress had created a democ- racy, but the tyrannies of the present world seemed more brutal than any in history. Progress had caused medicine to perform miraclesg but it had also invented bombs that could, in a split second, snuff out the lives of thousands, and gas that could burn out the lungs of millions. But the idea of progress in itself could not be so completely dismissed, Once again the logic of young minds brought an answer. You cannot fight a wat and you cannot make a peace without a faith, you cannot build while believing that the world will not progress, The idea of progress is, indeed, a necessityg it has merely been misinterpreted. The obligation of those who will lead tomorrow, therefore, is to provide a new interpretation for themselves and for their own generation. It is not, then, the idea of progress or the idea of freedom that should be discarded as having failed, but these ideas as limited to a narrow and tyrannical materialism. The power of tbingr must no longer masquerade as the power of ideazr. Automobiles and radios can not alone produce a way of life, nor can battleships alone protect it. Ideas are also necessary to create and protect democracy. A heritage, as Malraux would say, is not transmitted, it is conquered. And it becomes the duty of students-whether the teachers or officials or businessmen of the future-to re-interpret their heritage in the light of the new ideas they have found, and to give to the world new standards and values which will work better than the old. It was logic, then, that produced fear in 1939, logic that transformed feat to challenge in 1941, and logic that transformed challenge into intellectual action in 1942. These students could not fight or live without faith. They could not fight or live with the old faiths. And so, they must live with new ones produced and remodeled from the old. But their fight will not end even when peace has been restored. Today, their weapons will be guns, tomorrow, as educated men, their weapons will be their ideas. For a stimulating change, for com- plete relaxation-tIiere's nothing like a weekend in New York. And h ' d d I y y I S R X I1 may pris y f f l greatl els of I ld S gle rooms from 36.00 D ble rooms from 88.00 Th beautiful Iridium Room d h famous Maisonette are informalv for dining and dancing ith no cover charge. f'5f,Reg is FIFTH AVENUE AT 55th STREET, NEW YORK Booklet on Request THORP AND MARTIN CO. 66 FRANKLIN STREET A BOSTON STATIONERY AND OFFICE SUPPLIES l-l. J. DOWD COMPANY, INC, Paper and Twine BOSTON CAMBRIDGE DESKS TOO . . . add to the efficiency of modern industrial and institutional offices. Our spacious showrooms display a com- plete line of distinctive office and home fur- niture. MACEY-MORRIS CO. 95 BEDFORD STREET, BOSTON, MASS. UNIVERSITY SHOP Extends Congratulations fo the Classes of T943 and T944 it it vi' By Special Appointment We Are Authorized Government Agents for Army and Navy Officers' Uniforms it it it Leopold Morse Harvard Square isaei , STEAIVI SPECIALTIES BOILERS - RADIATORS PIPE FITTINGS and VALVES SPIRAL WELDED - STEEL COPPER PIPE BOSTON PIPE 84 FITTINGS CO., INC. 149 Sidney St., Cambridge, Mass. U N U S UA L ema cgfvez Qibflfa TREFRY 8g PARTRIDGE CORNER PARK and BEACON STREETS BOSTON, MASS. OIRIIENTAI, A Prices relatively lower than Domestic BROADLOOIVIS From the seven leading mills FURN ITUR E CUSTOM AND STOCK E We have been favored with Harvard Uvzizversity orders for many years. Ask for rebate. BROOKS, GILL 8: CO. Inc. za-so CANAL STREET BOSTON S 'I' E E I- FOR EVERY PURPOSE 0 BRASS and COPPER O WELDING SUPPLIES 0 BOLTS, RIVETS, SCREWS 0 TOOLS and MACHINES ARTI-ILIR C. HARVEY CO. 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 SERVING NEW ENGLAND FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY G. GICDVINCD 84 CCD. ESTABLISHED 1884 WHOLESALE FRUIT AND PRODUCE WHOLESALE GROCERS Double G Brand-Blue Orchid Brand Grocery Department 19-21 COMMERCIAL ST., BOSTON, IVIASS. Tel. CAPitol 7628 4337! Zghvfagraphic 611777 In keeping with the accelerated schedule of the 1943 Album, the Photographic Board has had to provide for several hundred separate pictures during the course of a few short months, Without the assistance of a number of people this would have been impossible. The board is perhaps most deeply indebted to William D. Tamberg, University photographer, who not only has taken many of the pictures appearing in the book, but also has developed and enlarged most of the Albumlt photographs. In addition, the staff of the University News Office, especially Ronald Ta'bois and Mrs. Elizabeth A. Thompson, has been very helpful in working on the Album'.f pictures. The Board is also grateful to the Crimron for the use of its darkroom and many of its photographs, to the Harvard Ath- letic Association for certain sports pictures, to the Alumni Bzfllerin for the use of its photographic files, to LW for many of the pictures not used in its photographic essay on Harvard, and to William H. Forster, Warren Algeo, Maynard M. Miller, Albert M. Rockwood, David I.. Simon, and Irwin Spalding for various pictures throughout the book. All athletic group pictures were taken by the Notman Studios of Auburndale, Massachusetts. All other group pictures, as well as all of the individual portraits in the book, were taken by Charles Ianello of Sargent Studios, Boston, 3 A listing of the sources of most of the fllbzmfr pictures is given here for the benefit of those who may be interested in the individual photographs in the book. Unless otherwise specified, all pictures on a page were taken by one photog- rapher. Pictures not included in this list are either groups portraits, or ones which have appeared in preceding Albzzmr. The following abbreviations have been used: t, top, m, middle' b, bottom, 1, left, r, right. Massachusetts. 7 5 Opening-4-5, 7, William D. Tamberg, 9, William H. Forster, 10-11, 12, 13, 14t, Tamberg, 14b,jay K. Lazrus, 15 113381- 16, Tamberg, 17, Crimrony 18, 19, 20t, Tamberg, 2015, Crimron, 21, Tamberg. University-22-3, 27, 28t, m, Tamberg, 28b, Forster, 29t, Cffimrong 2913, LW, 30, Associated Press, 311, Tamberg, 31r, Crimson, 32, 33, 341, Lazrus, 34r, LW, 35t, Lazrus, 3515, LW, 36, 37, Lazrus, 38, LW, 39t, Lazrus, 39m, LW, 3915, 40, 41, 42t, Lazrus, 42b, LW, 431, Lazrus, 43r, 44, Lila, 45t, Laz- rus, 45b, 46, 47, Forster, 48tl, LW, 48tr, Forster, 48br, Lifie, 49, Forster. Houses-50-1, Tamberg, 53, 54, 55, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 63, Lazrus, 65, Forster, 66, 67, Albert M. Rockwood 69, LM, 70, 71, 75, 74, 75, Lazrus, 77, 78, Forster, 79t, Lazrus 79b, Forster, 81, 82, 83, Lazrus. Class of 1943-84-5, Harvard Film Service. Activities-164-5, 166, 168t, 169b, Lazrus, 170t Crimrong 170b, 1711, 172, 173, 174, 175t, 177m, b, 178, 179t 180b, 181b1, br, 182, Lazrus, 184t, Forster, 186t, Lazrus 187t, m, Tamberg, 187b, Rockwood, 188, 189t, 190, 191t Lazrus, 192b, LW, 193, Maynard Miller, 194b, 195t, Lazrus 196t, Crim,r0zz,' 197t, 198b, Lazrus, 198t, Miller, 199b, 200 2011, Crimro1z,' 201r, Lazrus, 202t, LW, 202151, br, 203, Lazrus Class of 1944-204-5, Lazrus. Athletics-284-5, Barton Po.fz',' 286t, Tamberg, 288 Lazrus, 289t, Crimxofzg 29Ot, Port, 29Ob1-r, C1'imr011,' 291t LW, 291bl-r, Crimrom 292t, Part: 292b, 293, Crimrofz, 2941, Lazrus, 29-4tr, H. A. A., 295, Barton I-Ierf1Zrl,' 296, 297t, LW, 298, 299t, 300, C7'I77Z.f0IZ,' 301t, Lazrus, 303, C7'flI.7.I07Z,' 304t, Lazrus, 304151-r, 306, 307, Crim,m77,' 309, Lazrus, 31015, 3111: Crimrozzg 312, 313b, Lazrus, 314b, Crim.m1z.' 315t, Lazrus, 317b, Crimrozzg 320t, Lazrus, 321, C7'fl72,l'0II,' 323, William V. Rittase. Harvard Poll-324, 327, 329, Howard-Wesson Com- pany, 331, Crimrom' 335, Tamberg. 7 5 7 v Che Pr Mez' . . . We hoped you would ask this question. The work was entrusted to us and our skilled craftsmen have faithfully endeavored to carry out the assignment. 0 WARREN PRESS Wclnfeza of Caffefe y4!vLnvm!.4 1 60 WARREN STREET BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS 13401 waged Swap, JM. OFHCIAL N40TQGRAPHERS TO THE 1939, 40, 41, 49, APJD 43 HARVARD ALBUMS 154 BQVLSTON ST BOSTGWL MASS ,lick cfufledgm nfs Forced to do almost twice the work that preceding Albam staffs have done in half the time, the 1943 Album Board has had to ask the co-operation of many people who were given little time in which to do the task set before them. That they have come through with flying colors is attested by the fact that the Albam is appearing on schedule. The actual production of the book was handled under four headings: photography, engraving, binding, and printing. Irving P. Green and Charles Ianello, of Sargent Studios, worked overtime for many weeks in order to complete the more than 1800 portraits in the book. Milton W. Fitch of Howard Wesson Company was invariably helpful in designing the book and supervising the engraving. And Alan Stevens and Robert Burlen of Burlen Binders handled the binding of the largest overall-size yearbook in the country. Most of all, however, the Board is indebted to Paul K. Blanchard and the Warren Press for the printing of the 1943 Album. The reader may obtain some comprehension of the task of printing this book by realizing that for 344 pages, printed in 21M 16-page signatures, with a total of 1200 copies, more than 26,400 sheets of paper had to be run through the presses. Each sheet was printed on both sides in both black and red, meaning that a grand total of well over 105,600 separate impressions had to be made. All this was done on one press in a little over a month. It is obvious, therefore, that the Board is extremely grateful for and not a little overwhelmed by the work of Ray Rafuse in typesetting, Howard Galbraith in proofreading, Ashley Stowell in make-up, Dominic Di Donato, in lock-up, Mark Richards in corrections, andjoseph Wood in printing. Finally, the helpful co-operation of Mr. Blanchard has been invaluable. But there would have been no Album if it had not been for the help of many Harvard students and faculty members. Among the latter there are four who should be singled out. President Conant has written a stirring message that will be read and reread long after graduation. Professors Crane Brinton, Francis O. Matthiessen, and Kenneth V. Thimann have produced three excellent articles on the relation of their fields to the war. 134211 Of the student body, we are particularly indebted to Harry Newman, editor of last year's revolutionary Albam, for helping us in many instances to grasp the scope as well as the details of our work. In addition, we are very grateful to the following men for various articles and editorial work: Oliver E. Allen '43, Robert G. Axtell '43, john C. Bullard '43, George Calr '42, Willard Dalrymple '43,Joseph P. Downer '43, E. Thayer Drake III '44, A. Louis Eno, jr. '44, Dan H. Fenn, jr. '44, john M. Field '43, john C. Friedmann '44, Donald Harting '44, Irvin M. Horowitz '45, Andrewj. Kauffman '43, Robert F. Keahey '43, T. Stanwood Kenyon, jr. '43, Melvin J. Kessel '45, Robert S. Kieve '43, Robert S. Landau '44, Walter Lear '43, jacob C. Levenson '43, Burton K. Lew- kowitz '43, Norman K. Mailer '43, Jere Mead '43, David C. Noyes '44, Howard T. Oedel '43, Louis H. Pollak '44, George S. Richardson '43, john Richardson, jr. '43, Melvin Richter '43, A. Edward Rowse '43, Armand Schwab,jr. '45,joseph H. Sharlitt '45, E. Ladd Thurston '43, Milton D. Van Dyke '44, Burton E. Van Vort '44, Leonard M. Wright '45, and Adam Yarmolinsky '43. The Business Board wishes to thank the following men for their help on the financial end of the book: john E. Corri- gan,-Ir. '44, Thomas L. Farmer '44, Herman E. Grossman '44, Raymond C. Guth '43, Bradford D. Haseltine '43, Burton K. Lewkowitz '43, Alfred M. Lurie '43, james A. Murphy,Jr. '43, and E. Ladd Thurston '-43. For her help with the two biographic sections the Album is very grateful to Miss Rosalie S. Magruder. In addition, the work of Robert U. Holden '4-4 and Thomas R. Roberts '44 in this department has been extremely valuable. Personally, I wish to express my deepest appreciation to the members of the Board itself. They have devoted much of their time and energy so that the men who graduate in 1943 may have a permanent record of their Harvard careers, a record that appears before the majority of them are called into the armed services of the nation. DANA REED, Cbfzirzmzn


Suggestions in the Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) collection:

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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