Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)

 - Class of 1932

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Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 336 of the 1932 volume:

I 9 3 C O P Y R I G H EDWARD W. MATTINGLY Edz'tor-irt Chiaf DANIEL MPLLER BMJz'nersfHanazier V I932 ULLABAL. E lN ANNUAL l PUBLICATION BY THE SENIOR CLASS IS THE- I'Q'B'Q BM. EDICNION To Johns Hopkins- The Man-The University To the high altruism of a mind that fostered a University of Learning, and to the physical essence of that same University, the Class of '32 dedicates this Hullabaloo. With the setting of our College Days so beautifully and allegorically portrayed by the sun beneath the woody slopes of Wyman's, the kaleidoscopic years bursting with memories which, even now are becoming infinitely precious with the passage of time, rush before us in swift retrospect, bringing with them the Fragrance of deWrdrenched magnolia trees-the sombre silhouette of Gilman ethe winding labyrinth of Howerastrewn botanie cal gardens. To these scenes and to the noble in, fluence which made them possible, the Class, with a Feeling that its task, at best intangibly done, leaves this, its heritage. FOREWORD There is some intangible something about every College and University campus which inspires the spirit of the men in their pursuits, to strive not only for personal amelioration and accomplishment but For the better advancement of the wholetinstitu, tion. To most adequately express the genuine love which the Class of '32 has For the Campus of Our University and for its ideals, this Hullabaloo has for its purpose a sincere expression of the essence of the spirit with which the University was endowed, rather than the glorification of an individual. The Westminster Chimes From Gilman reverberate For the last time For us. The Campus grows golden in the rays of a setting sun and from Far over near the dorms, somewhere drifts the strains of Dear Old Johnny Hopkins. BOOK BOOK BOOK BOOK BOOK BOOK II III IV VI UNIVERSITY CLASSES ATHLETICS ACTIVITI ES FRATERNITIES FEATURES fHefg M??? Mslauglztgrof old, 4 ' ihex iwgymgping, Happj of :lbkqesi nong wer- wili know. f UNIVERSITY Faculty PRESIDENT JOSEPH SWEE'I'MAN AMES page fourlcen DEAN EDWARD WILBUR BERRY flags jfzcm ' J. HLATANC ' INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS GERMAN JCW. FRAZER ' QVEN GE. R u , , ACOHEN MATHEMATICS page sixleen Q.D.Cova:$ E.MWCHELL zoomcv pOLmCAL I I 3' FDMUQNAGHAN MATHEMATICS JCFQENCH LIBRARIAN ' .. Q t .DBSEOIZYD Magglgeauiagnlnmc DSY Mo. WEVFOQTH POLITICAL ccowow page xn'enlwvt Seniors mm Efiwut Juumb SMALLWOOD. HONORARY: MEMBER SKORSKK 7-.A0AM MM xmnmrc swam; SECRETARY ,, 2.- .K page lwenly-lwo . fiage lwenty-lhrec 'x' h l le'h w. w 1 X R, I x w H . -,. , m ; . I y, 1 V th h !w h u w. .: 2 1n J le ' 1h :3 ,: ,1 , 1' H l w? w M: w I ' i I H h 9 HM w 1m $1 LUV : uxil . t w w 42 m9; 5;? ih :MM 5 : v H 1' 'Htll 2:: 5 11W l-Jh : qgm U' 1 ftlH !w WM H$' 311g?! w WW 1:59 I mm 1.1, w Hm I; ' wiiU L, 1 ;Q..; lav M121 um . hE-H :9 L i, um. I. , WW. w , 1 .1 ' 4 page Iwenly-jour RALPH M. ABRAI-IAMS HAdJ Prc-Aledical Entered 1928 from Bord-entown Military Institute. A quiet youth with a military car- riage entered the University in '28. He seemed interested only in matters musical, and in his work so thus he devoted little time to delve into the realm of paste pots and printer's ink. Thus we missed knowing Ralph a little better than we should. Our best wishes, tho Ralph, go with you in your chosen field. Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Seal 3, 1,, ADDRESSw Belle Harbor, Long Island, N. Y. LEO MOSES ALPERT Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Baltimore City College. A forceful speaker, an industrious worker, Alpert is but making the logical selection for his professional work-Law. He will be remem- bered, however, not only for his Eloquence but for his outstanding and sharp opinions concerning many campus activities. He has been difficult to know intimately, but the result has been worth while. Varsity Debating Team, Captain 1, 2, 4; Debating Council 1, 2, 4; Alexis de Tocqueville Medal 1; Adams Medal 2; Cross Country Team 4; T rack Squad 2, 4; Varsity Seal 4. ADDRESS- 2430 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. WX 'X X33 ::3 ll; page twenIy-nve GEORGE M. ALTSTETTER Elcdricul Engineering Entered 1928 from Oakland UVIary- lantD High School. Western Maryland made its noble contribution in the person of George, who derived his greatest pleasure from questioning the profs in the middle of their dis- courses, thus waking the Class froxn its slumbers. George has been an energetic, studious and cheerful pal during the past years, and we know he will achieve success. Sophomore and Junior Alanagcr of Track and Cross-Cnmztry Teams; Manager Cross-Cazmtry 1,; Avialion Club 1; Electrical Club 3,1,;R.O.T.C, :3, ll; Ojlicers Club 1,. ADDRESS-- Oakland, Md. page Iwcnly-six LEON BECICMAN BACK Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. There are many who claim you can- not properly do two things at once. Leon has certainly proven the in- correctness of this statement. He has now acquired an education in both engineering and law. The former has given him the powers of reasoning and deduction and the latter the ability to forcibly express his opinions. Class Debating Team 1, 2; Debating Council 1, 3; Electrical Club 3, 4; A.I.E.E. 3, .4. ADDRESS- 2521 Brookfield Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page IwenIy-xcvm page me ty-right .1; JOHN MORGAN BANDEL Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Morgan has the distinction of being the Engineers' sole representative on the Hopkins tennis team. In the classroom, Morgan can usually be found either listening in on a risque joke or discussing some difficult engineering problem. Morgan's earnestness and diligence both in the classroom and on the outside should be ample reason of our prediction for his future success. Tennis 1, 2, 4: A.S.M.E. 2, 4; Oficers Club 4. ADDREssh Linthicum Heights, Baltimore, Md. sz-Ax va'. DAVID MOORE BARRETT A'PQ. 'PBII Gas Engineering Entered 1928 from Sayre High School, P21. Smooth, brilliant and carefree, Dave has sailed through four years of the rough engineering seas like a Clipper ship on a lake of glass. Nothing seems to worry him, although from time to time he becomes a bit dreamy-eyed and thoughtful until another Wednesday night comes along which for HDave means a date at Goucher. U Dave possesses one of the keenest brains in the Engineering School and will, We feel sure, make an ingenious Hgas man. HGasia Vivimus. Assistant Manager Track 1, 9; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, l; Vanity Seal 4; G.E.A. 8, 4; Gas Engineerx Scholar- ship 1, 1'2, .9, 4. ADDREss Buffalo, N. Y. page Iwew-nine THOMAS MCADAM BECK tl'lLX .-l.l3. in English Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. In every graduating class there must: he one man who possesses t0 the greatest extent the qualities of a gentleman. Pom with his quiet yet impressively pleasant nature and a prohlc that rivals that of a Barrymore has filled this niche per- fectly. The Vugahomls, a theatri- cal organization of renown in Balti- more, have brought to our attention :1 hitherto unknown talent of HTom's, namely acting. Luck and 21 happy future, Tom. H' Muxicul Club I, 2, J, l; Qmmet :3, 1,; Black and Blue Jay 1,; Freshman Lacrosse 1; Barnslormrrs :3; Inter- fmlnrnily Board ,9, 3; Vanity Seal 3, X. Amnucssh 3911 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page Ihirly DAVID JAMES BECKER Electrical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. H Dave is one of those fcllmx's who are always on hand with :1 cheerful remark. He has never been known to appear without his characteristic good humor. An energetic and aggressive student, he always has his work in on time and done well. The University will be losing a good student when h'DaveH leaves. Rifle Club 2, 4; Electrical Club 9, 4; A.I.E.E. 2, 4; Oflwrs Club 1,. ADDRESS- 731 East 20th Street, Baltimore, Md. izage llzirly-onc page lhirIy-two ALFRED JOHN BEKSINSKI Mechanical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Ladies and Gentlemen, meet Beck, the Engineer's friend. His wisc-cracks and general good humor are ever present to brighten the atmosphere of the classroom. Under the leadership of the Johnson- Beksinski combine, the A.S.M,E. has hourished and has had an excep- tionally successful year. Football 1, 2, 3; State Scholarship 1, 2,3, 4; Lacrosse Squad 2; A.S.M.E.; Vice-Presidcnl 3; Secretary 4; Engi- neers Dance Committee 4; QHicers Club 4; Rifle Club 3. . ADDRESS- 1809 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, Md. WALTER BELCO BELITZ 0K0 Merlzanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. 136100 is one of the few quiet Mechanical Engineering Seniors. We are thankful that there exist some men of this type--who work hard without making a lot of com- motion about it. Belco has limited his activities almost solely to the R.O.T.C. but his achievements in this quarter can predict but one thing-success in the future. R.O.T.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; A.S.M.E. 3, 4; R.O.T.C. Lieutenant 4; Ouyicers Club 4. ADDRESS- 3913 Dalrymple Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page thirly-thrce Page IhirIy-four i i t i . ADAM R. BIALOSKORSKL EibE Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Everything about Adam marks him as an athlete. His ability, endur. ance, and unquenchable spirit on the football field have won him honor and acclaim as an aIl-Mary- land tackle together with the respect of his class-mates. His activities have not been limited to the campus, however, for he has been a devotee of both the army, and with justifiable variations-blondes. Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Major H 119,524; Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain of Football 3; Sergeanl-at-A mm 1; Treasurer 2, 3, 4; Electrical Club 3, 4; Vice-Presidcnt l; 0$cers Club 4; R.0.T.C.1,9,3,4,'A.A.Board3. ADDRESS- 1710 Aliceanna Street, Baltimore, Md, EDGAR GORDON BIGGS 0K0 IIAIC Buxim-ss Iiwnonnl's Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Although an epitome in campus affairs, Gordon has been the quiet man of the campus. In dress, per- sonality, and character he is all that one can seek for in any individual. Etching with :1 finer tool than the pen, he has inscribed upon us all, memories more lusting than the pages of this hook. hYe wish you, Gordon, Hles bonnes choses du monde. Assistant Business Alanagcr, Black and Blue Jay 3: Buxincss Almmgvr- elect l; Vursily Seal 4: Freshman Banquet Cmumillvv. ADDRESS- 1702 Ellnmont Avenue, Baltimore, Md. wzwm page Ihirly-Me DONALD STUART BITTINGER A Y 0er Engineering Entered 1929 from American Uni- versity. Coming to the Hopkins after four years at American where he was captain of football, HDon studied earnestly for three years and gradu- ates as perhaps the best educated man in the Class. Enjoying danc-es and track meets. Don, although . he has devoted Most Of his time to serious pufsuity$as had a well balanced College career. Gasia Vivimux ! Track 3, 1,; Gas Engineering A s- sociation 3; Viw-President 4. ADDREss Washington, D. C. ROBERT BORTNER Scabbard and Blade t t t ' A rls and Science, Civil Engineering . r t . . i ' Entered 1928 from Franklin High l School. It is with much sadness that we see Bob leave us to enter the cold, cruel world of practical engineering, . for he has been a well-liked hgure on -' -' the campus for the last tenv-or was it twelve years. Of course hets President of the Old-Timers Club. . . We used to wo'nderx why HBob hcarried a club whenme went out on his dates but'we have since found out that it was merely a means of .protection when he visited Mary- kmd College for Women. -.-u ,v . ADDREs'se .1 Upperco, Md. page Ihirly-sevcn pugs IhirIy-righl RONALD BOWER BROOK 'l'Ath TBII HAE OAK Scabbard and Blade Gus Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Scholarship? URon is President oszul Beta Pi. Activities? Helms the most Varsity Seals that have ever been awarded. And now a hit about H Ron himself. HRon p05- sesses the most infectuous laugh on the campus, and never hesitates to use it, if it will make a single person feel just 21 wee bit better. HGASIA VIVIMUS! Blue Jay ,9, 3, 4, Managing Editor 3, Editor-in-Cln'ef 1,; HULLABALOO 2, 3, Managing Editor 1; Debating Comt- oil 9, 3, President 4; Musical Club :2, 3, A Band 1, 9, 3, 4; Barnstnr- mm 9, 3; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet 9, 3' N twicers Club X; Track Squad :2, 4'. Interfralcmily Board 9, 8, 1,; J11, U. Symphony Orchestra 2; Junior Ban- qua Commillee; Student Activities Council 1,; Gus Engineers Associa- Iizm, Secrelary 3, President 1,; Vanity 301113, I; szrlel X ; 110.10 Caplain f; G. 6? E. Co. Scholarship J, 2, 3, 4. Annulasse 3200 Brighton Street, Baltimore, Md. WILLIAM MORRIS BRULLE Business Economics Entered 1929 from Walter Reed High School, Newport News, Va. In his three years here although he has not gone out for activities, HBill has virtually Hstuck to his knitting as far as studies are con- cerned. as evidenced by the crop of good marks he has received. Who can tell? Perhaps the young man has a wife unbeknown to us who has first call on all his spare time. Good luck and may all your troubles be little ones. R.O.T.C. First Sergeant 4. ADDREssh 2807 VValbrook Aven ue, Baltimore, Md. page Ihirly-nine l'v' e Ax VIVA IN e u 323V 1 ..V A 21V .6 W. E. H. CALDWELL, II tbFA Pre-Mcdical Entered 1928 from Linsly Institute. To earn the friendship of one's class- mates constitutes a great achieve- ment in a man's college career. In this respect Hughes has been singularly successful. For the past few years, Hughes has been the mainstay of the Hopkins Track Team in the High Jump. To men- tion track at Hopkins, causes one to think simultaneously of Hughes and jumps. His ultimate aim is medicine and we predict that he will Hjump high in his future. Treasurer of Class 1; T711678 WI 1' ,9, 3, 1,; Basketball Squad 1, 2. Anmuzsse Wheeling, W. Va. I f, RA ' X l , WW , ,. h ..'.L LN My, x wrunpn ELMER EARL CARPENTER K2 Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Holy Cross College. Yes, dear reader, you've guessed it. The beaming countenance you recognize is none other than our own Elmer Earl, God's gift to- right again. After some time of seeking for an inspiration, Earl realized his true vocation, hence his appearance as a Pre-Med. In his short stay, Earl has made his presence felt by his cheeriness and good-fellowship and we wish him Godspeed in his further activi- ties. ADDRESS- . New York, N. Y. VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV U? V. haw: .sF'S' n, ,g h; ' . $a. 9: 3M. -, r- , s. s ngi' s . KM sk-ai... A . ' f 03:. . -'A . u- f. x , ' k g s . AAAAAAAAAs page forIy-one ROLANDO AUGUSTO CHAN IS $13K Prc-Mediwl Entered 1929 from Panama National Institute. In the Fall of '29 a quiet modest student came to the Hopkins from Panama. Registered as a Pre. Med, the assiduous care with which he completed the course in three years prevented him from becoming well known outside his Classes. nRO. land leaves us With a scholastic record any man may be proud of, h Hasta luego senor! Charles Carroll Club 1, 2, 1,; Cosmo- politan Club 1, 2. ADDREssh- Panama. page: forly-lwo JACK O. CHERTKOF Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Forrest Park High School. Jack is one of the more serious engineers. He has had more than usual experience in the business world and is a source of information to the Class at large. His good nature and witty remarks make these inquisitions a pleasure. His excellent work in designing the Electrical Club key will always be remembered and appreciated by its wearers. Electrical CluFA.I.E.E. 3, 4. ADDRESS- 4406 Springdale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. A A A A A A A A A page forty-leree A m -Tve , --:.A .m. a. .uug .- A VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV 8' -1 'ChF- , '4 .v. v..- .'. . . Y . ,. 1 . a Q 'r . .D u- GEORGE ISAAC CHINN 9, TBI'I Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. George's scholastic abilities have won him not only the admiration of his class-mates, but also election to Tau Beta Pi. , Because of his steadi- ness and reliability we predict that George will prove to be one of the most successful engineers in this year's graduating class. Trustees Scholarship 1, 2, 3, 4; Electrical Club 3, 4; R.0.T.C. 3, 4, Q52cers Club 4; A.I.E.E. 3, 4. $95? x 'nsm - -; go: div d ym fl: -. . .l. ADDRESS- 1642 N. Monroe Street, Baltimore, Md. WAAAAAAAAA page forIy-four LEONARD COHAN 1DEH tli B K Prc- Medical Entered 1930 from Baltimore City College. It is superfiuous to attempt in the short space at our disposal, to extol Leonard. With us only two years, he had no time to spend with extra- curricular activities, devoting all his eFforts on the other hand to the acquisition of a scholastic record of which anyone might be proud. We can but stand by and applaud this affable and industrious chap for the Splendid record he has created. ADDRESS- Cordova Apartments, Baltimore, Md. A x. . 4' 2X A in page forly-fwe l i '15 .i WILLIAM W. COOPER E 4W1 Entered 1928 from West Notting- ham Academy. Nature has created us all, but upon HBill she has bestowed more ambi- tion. Bill succeeded in enriching his college days with his interest in music. His vocal training has made him a more rounded man than most: of us. A good student and a faithful friend, HBill leaves dear Old Johnny Hopkins with the satisfaction of having not only made good, but also-many good friends. ADDRESS- Hillsboro, Md. page forIy-six JOHN C. CORCKRAN dWA Bushman? Economim Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. A University's Chin aim is to develop educated gentlemen and not necessarily men who are laden down with activities or athletic accomplishments. hjohnny has Carried out the prime motive per- fectly. Although a very valuable member of the Musical Club and an indispensable part of the Hockey Team, we choose to remember John for his affable personality, his Spontaneous wit: and his unfaltering generosity. We know of no finer example of an educated gentleman and scholar than John. Ice Hockey !; Musical Club1,2,3,4; HULLAnALoo X; Vanity Seal 3, 4. ADDREssh 2211 Elsinor Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page forty-sevcn WILLIAM NORRIS COX, JR. ETA Scabbard and Blade Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. HBill is a most likeable chap. Both in scholarship and in extra- ' curricular activities he stands high on the campus. He has proven h ' h himself an excellent: soldier as indi- J cated by the Scabbard and Blade 1 membership. hBill should have no trouble in conquering future problems if he uses the same all-around ability which he now seems to possess. Lacrosse 1; Wreslling Team 2, 4; Chairman Military Ball Committee 1,; Interfmlernity Board I, 2, 3' 4,. A.S.M.E.2,l,;01iicers Club 1,. ADDREsse 6103 York Road, Baltimore, Md. page forly-cighl BEN DAB ROiVSKI ET A Arts and Sciences Entered 1028 from Baltimore City College. The old saying appearances are deceiving certainly applies to Ben. On first sight Ben would seem to be a quiet young man who did nothing but study. To those who know him, however, Ben is a cheerful, wise- Cracking individual with a sense of humor all his own, always willing to lend certain persons his psychology notes, which are celebrated for their coDiousness and neatness. Good luck to you Ben. R.O.T.C. 1, 2, ADDRESS- 629 S. Patterson Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 1' - A ,. xdprkafihvdihxfitM.. page forly-ninc 2v : IV M ge Jilly CHARLES H. DOELLER, JR. OKO Scabbard and Blade Pre-Medical Entered 1928 from Friends School. During his four years here hCarl has become a familiar figure on the campus. Whether swimming or helping the Musical Club to make some noise, he has displayed a capability which should serve him well in the medical profession. We wish you all the success in the world! Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain 3- Lacroxse 1; Football 1 ; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Blij Club 2, 3, 4; Hawaiian Troupe 4.; HULLABALOO 3, 4; A, A. Board 3; Student Council 4; Ohicers Club4. ADDREssh 207 Chancery Road, Baltimore, Md, J. WILLIAM DORMAN, JR. , ATQ i , '1 Pre- M edical f Entered 1928 from Friends School. ; At hrst impression, UWill gives us the picture of a care-frec young man. His intimates know, however, that on sufficient occasions, he can draw upon a natural reserve which strenghtens them in their opinion of him. We leave him with sincere regards for he has been a pleasant and sympathetic friend. Football 1; Swimming 1, 2, .9, 4; Track 1, 3, 4; Student Athletic Assacialion 1; Glee Club 9, 3, 4. ADDRESSw 2200 Jefferson Street, Baltimore, Md. Page ,Mty-one Nam page Jifly- wo , W V ; 1;;thxdk XX . h r, X , r '2 h h 1; A h 17 evx'zt ;h h I 5 X 15th .CVN AA E D WA R D C. DU K EH A RT tb K W O A K Busincsx Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Leadership is the result of the un- selfish activities of 21 man who has the best qualities of gentlenmnli- ncss and enthusiastic fellowship. thd, by his athletic ability and sincere work in the management of Class affairs, has achieved that leadership on the campus which justifies our describing him as one of the Finest of the fine. Class President I, 9, 3; Honorary President 1;; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3; Cane Club 2. 3, 4; Varsity Club 1, 2, 1'3, 4; June Week Committee 4; Cage Fund Committee I, 2. ADDRESS- 2744 Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. LEONARD EAGAN 21th Prc-Medical Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. There is much in that'fmnous saying by one W. Shakespeare which says, 'hT'is no mean advantage to be - seated in the mean. While not having been conspicuous on the campus, HLen, has always given us the impression that he has been enjOying life to the fullest, and that's something. His pleasant nature and ready smile will give H Len many a boost in the great struggle. ADDRESS- 2822 Overland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page jifty-Ihree JOHN FRANCIS EISENHARDT Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Calvert Hall. John is quite a problem to his friends. We can never tell whether HJohnny is an electrical engineer with music and pigeon racing as hobbies, or a musician and a fancier with engineering ideas. He is as adept at his problems as he is at tooting his far famed saxes. His vast number of friends is justly due to his contagious good nature. R.0.T.C. Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Seal 3; Electrical Club 3, 4, ADDRESS- 3704 Dorchester Road, Baltimore, Md. page hfIy-four JOSEPH T. ENGLAND AND Arts and Sciences Entered 1928 from the Donaldson School. Whenever you walk near Levering you always see the likable chap above. We have always wondered what the Tudor and Stuarts did at: their meetings and we have had many tales from the lips of Mr. England to soothe our quivering emotions. We shall secrete them, however, and join in bidding him a pleasant adieu. Freshman Banquet Committee 1; Lacrosse Squad 4; Tudor and Stuart Club 4. ADDRESS- 1213 Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. Page IifIy-Mc bage jfly-six ? i l i i v ROBERT S. FISHER tbFA Business Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. The first glance at our t' Bob might convey the impression that he is just one of those boys who hasn't time for anything except books. Dclving beneath this dignified exterior of his, we soon find that first convic- tions were entirely wrong. In the four years that we have been as- sociated with him he has proven to be a delightful companion, friend and fellow student. itBob's theory is that he missed his profession and should have been an automobile mechanic but whatever his line we wish him the best of luck. Barnslormcrs 1, 9, 3; Musical Club 2, 3; Assistant Football Manager 1, 9, 3; Rifie Club 1, 2, 3; Lacrosse 1. ADDREsss 126 Forest Drive, Catonsville, Md, w 1 JOHN ROYDEN FORSYTHE, JR. Arts and Sciences Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. A militaristically inclined gentleman who can always be found on the 1r rifle range is the youngr man at: whom you are looking. H ROY came to Hopkins for an education in the liberal arts. In this he used his summers very profitably by visiting South America and Europe- Rille Team 1, 9, :3, .4; R.0.T.C. Lieutenant 4. ADDREssh 4222 Pcnhurst Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page fifIy-scven pug: .Mly-cighl ALBERT WESLEY FOWBLE Eicclrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Franklin High School. The man from Reisterstown. No one envied his long train ride each morning before early class. Yet it did not deter HAl, for each day found him with the remainder of his class-mutes waiting for the instructor. Perhaps this quality of determination is the reason for his graduation as an electrical engineer. Electrical Club .3, .6; Qyicers Club 4. ADDREssh Reistcrstown, Md. MARVIN FRIEDMAN m: A Prc-Mcdical Entered 1923 from Schenectady High School. Marvin like many of his fellow- graduates has found more interest in the activities of his fraternity than he has in the campus activities. When all is said and done it is in the eyes of his Close-associates that one finds the best reflection of the abili- ties of a man. If so, Marvin stands among the First. A close friend, a helpful class-mate, we bid good-bye to him with feelings akin to sorrow. ADDRESS- Schenectady, N. Y. page jifIy-m'nc page sixty WALTER ALBERT FREY 2DPA Business Etonomics Entered 1928 from Friends School. Possessed with the courage of his convictions, refreshing good humor and pleasing personality; Walt's unfailing willingness and faithful attitude have provided enjoyable moments for the students on the campus. Wherever he goes these traits will serve as a shining light on the road to success. Black and Blue Jay 1, 2, 3, 4; Barn. stormers l, 2; Musical Club 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 2, Y.M.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 2, 3; Basketball Manager 4; Major 2211 4; Varsity Seal 4; Varsity Club 4. ADDRESS: 3243 Powhatan Avenue, Baltimore, Md. WALTER HOWARD GARRETT 23th M echum'cal Engineering Entered 1927 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Walter is a fellow one cannot help but like, and while not a prominent social ngre 0n the Hopkins campus, he excels at track. In the classroom Garrett insists on wise-cracking: 21 quality which is fully appreciated by those present. He leaves us With the good wishes of all who knowhim. Track 1, 9, 3, 4; A.S.M.E. 3, 4; ADDRESS- 734 N. Fulton Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page siA'Iy-ons HARRY S. GIMBEL Prc-Medical Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. Harry has not been an active man on the campus, having spent most of his time, towards the realization of an education. However he has not been sclf-satisficd; his friends will testify to that. His pleasant and spontaneous greetings together with his good humor will be missed when he passes into the ranks of the alumni. Truslcc's Grant 1. ADDREsse 3622 Glen Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 11an sixly-twa HERMAN K. GOLDBERG HAd, Pre-Medical Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. Unsurpassed personality, Clean Sportsmanship, scholastic ability, and athletic attainments have placed Herman on a lofty peak on the Hopkins campus. It is upon these laurels that he will travel on the road to success, and with him go the sincerest wishes for good fortune in his future medical career. Varsity Tennis 1, 2, 3Y 4; Captain Varisty Tennis 2, 3, 4; Varsity Fool- ball 1; Captain Freshman Basketball 1; Varsity Baxketball 2, 3; Banquet Cymmitlee 2; Barnstormers 3; Phy- szcs Research 4; Varsity Club 1,. ADDRESS- 2210 Eutaw Place, Baltimorey Md. page Sixly-lhrec page sixly-four JACK GREENFIELD HAwD Prc-Medical Entered 1929 from James Madison High School, New York City. Jack is another of our famous Pre-Meds. His success in the laboratory sciences gives promise of a rich future. Although his social life is known only to a few inti. mates, our slight contacts enable us to judge what a really likeable chap he is. We leave him with the cer- tainty that he will fulfill all ex- pected of him. News-Lettcr 1, 2, 4; Junior Varsity Lacrosse 1, 9, 4; Cross Country 2; Varsity Seal 4. ADDREssa Brooklyn, N. Y. HAROLD GREENWALD IIAE Business Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. What we admire in any individual is the consistent effort to gain a goal. After three years of persistent labor, Harold was elected Business Manager of the Blue Jay. Clear- headed, liberal and sympathetic, we bid him a lingering adieu, for he has been a close and friendly associate. Freshman Banquet Committee; HUL- LABALOO 1, 2, 3, 4; Staf 2, 3, 4; Black and Blue Jay I, 2, 3, 4; Stajr 2, 3; Buisness Manager 4; Student Activities Council 4. ADDRESS- 4005 Reisterstown Road, Baltimore, Md. page siny-Jive page sixly-xix SEEDON ANDREW GRIKIT Electrical Engineer Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Silence is always maintained by this member of our Class regardless of heat of argument, 'TJrik will always remain silent. The groups that have worked with him have had an enviable experience, for when he does break his silence at defmite settlement of the point in question may be expected. Electrical Club 3, 4. ADDRESS: 1920 Parksley Avenue, Baltimore, Md. LORNE RANDOLPH GUILD AT OAK 'PBII Scabbard and Blade Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. Four years ago a tall, handsome, but very sleepy looking young man crossed our portals and immediately began doing things and has kept on for four years. Despite the fact that he has garnered nearly all the laurels that he possibly could in his sojourn here, Lorne has not sub- stituted anything for that ready and pleasing personality. Needless to say we feel a great regret at his leaving and wish him all success in future fields. Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 1; Football 9, 3, 4; Varsity Club 1, 9, 3, 4; Vicc-Presi- dent 3; President 4; Vice-President Sophomore Class; Student Council 3; Oj7icers Club 4. ADDRESS- 3418 Guilford Terrace, Baltimore, Md page siny-seven page siny-aighl ISADOR CYRUS GUTMAN KDA OAK HAE Business Economics. Entered 1929 from Perth Amboy High School. At this point the task of the editors reaches one of its most Enjoyable stages. Cy, while working in our midst and attaining positions of leadership, has impressed upon us one of those memories which, pleasing as it is now, will be in- finitely precious with the passing of time. Bottoms up, old man! Ncws-Lctler 1, 9, 4; Wice Manager 2; Advertising M anager 4; Black and Blue Jay 1, 2: Advertising Manager 4; HULLABALOO 1, 2, Advertising Manager 4; Track 1: 2v 4; Manager 4; Cross Country 1, 2; Swimming 1, 2, 4; Manager 4; Barnstormers 1, 2, 4; Varsity Club 4; Junior Banquet Commitlee; Student Activities Coun. til 4; Secretary A. A. Board 4; 4411, Track 4; Varsity Seal 2, 4; June Week Committee 4; Trustee's Grants 2, 4. ADDRESS- 61 Madison Avenue, Perth Amboy. N. J. NORMAN HACKERMAN Clicmislry Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. A chemist is always surrounded by a certain indefinablc something that always denotes his work. We don't mean odoriferous scents, of course. Norman has worked on such proh- Iems as the valence of mercury in mercurochrome, and others too numerous for these pages. Seriously, he is a good fellow, whom we will miss. If he will ring molecules as he shoots baskets. there's nothing left to be said. ' Freshman Football and Basketball; Varsity Buskclball Squad 4. ADDRESS- 18 N. Montford Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page siny-nim' page seventy RICHARD HAHN $1311 ebBK Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Baltimore City College. We first met h'Dick in the odori- ferous environs of a chemistry hlab and followed him from there into many musty libraries; for Dick as evidenced by his Phi Beta Key is a scholar. Although he is, as has been said a serious student, he is nevertheless well-known on the campus by virtue of a pleasant, affable nature. We wish him, with all expectation of fulflllment,a11t11e best; for no one deserves more. Swimming Squad 1, 2, 4. ADDRESS- 6013 Park Heights Avenue, Baltimore, Md. NATHAN MANUEL HARRIS tDA Business Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. HNate, of pleasant smile and cheery greeting is leaving the campus. Somehow it does not, and should not, seem so to those who know him and remain. His de- parture leaves a void that will not be filled. He will enter the field of real estate, where it is said great things are to happen and a lot of dirt is to be sold. HCheerio. News-Leller 1, 9, 3, 4; Barnslormers 9, 3, 4; Club .9, 4; Varsity Seal 3, 4; Football 1, 2; Lacrosse I, 2; Swim- ming I , 2. ADDREsss 2442 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. page sercnIy-one OSCAR JOSEPH HELM EKDE OAK A. B. Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. To those who have had the good fortune to know this man inti- mately it will be immediately apparent that any eulogy in mere words would be grossly superficial. His is a nature which impresses it. self indelibly upon his associates. What need therefore for the pen to perpetuate that which has already been etched with a finer tool? Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Secretary- Treasurer 3; Student Council 8, 4; President 1,; President A. A. Board 4; Captain, All-Muryland Football Team 4. ADDRESS- 1729 Hollins Street, Baltimore, Md, page scuenIy-lwa DANIEL LOEB HERMAN Pre- M edical Entered 1929 from Baltimore City College. We like HDan ahd who doesn't? Friendly, spirited and the proud possessor of a cheery smile ll Dan has finished his College Career standing high in the personal esti- mation of his colleagues. If per- sonality means anything in the medical profession, as it surely must, UDan will reach as high a height as he has here. Envying your fellow class-mates in the future, and bidding you adieu, we close. ADDRESS- 2425 Lakeview Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page :cvenly-Ihrne page scwnIy-four MYRON HERMAN 412A Prc-Mcd'ical Entered 1928 from James Monroe High School, New York City. Where the grunting, growling, gasping behomeths have their play on the padded mat, Myron is found, You are right; he is a wrestler. As a Pre-Med, Herman had but little time for cxtra-Curricular acti- vities, but with the time he had to spare, he utilized that to the best of his ability. Upon his departure from johns Hopkins University, we all wish him the best of luck and success. Swimming 1; Wrestling 3, 4; Barn- xtormers 3, 4; Debating Cauncil 3, 4. ADDRESS- 3208 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md, JAMES BOYD HOFFMAN KA iDBK Arts and Sciences Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. When one asks to see a genuine Hopkins Hsmoothie our thoughts turn almost immediately to our Jimmie. It's just a miracle to us how he seems to be on the go all the time, there being no one to dare rise and accuse him of having been seen studying, yet he literally gathers in the HH's. tiJimmie has made many a lasting friend on the campus who will regret his leaving to furthur pursue his studies at uDeah Olde Hawvawd, but there is no doubt in our minds that his magnetism and fairness will lead him on to bigger things. Assistant Lacrosse Manager 1, 9, 3; Interfralemity Board 1; Tudor and Stuart Club 4. ADDRESS- 3929 Cloverhill Road, Baltimore, Md. page scvmly-Jiz'a DAVID H. HOLLAN DER Pre- M edical Entered 1931 from Haverford Col- lege. i 1 u K To all observers HDave is a quiet, yet purposeful person. We do not have cause to doubt the latter but we are not so certain concerning the poetivity of the former. At any rate, although he is far from assum- ing, he is none the less sincere. All who know him or have come in contact with him realize his worthi. ness. We hope that our parting is au revoir and not good-bye. ADDRESS-- ; 1802 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md, .1 .' w i , . 7 V v '357'71 A A A 1' 1 KLXXmiV ii i, page seventy-six LESTER HERMAN IIORWITZ IAtD Pre- M cdiwl Entered 1928 from William Penn High School, IiInrrisburg', Pa. A Pennsylvanian who will some day he a Doctor of Medicine finishes his required course. An excellent logic- iousness with a resonant bass is found in him; cheer and good camaraderie go with him. XVith such qualities, it is apparent that we shall miss Lester in a way these few words so pitiably express. Musical Club 1, ,9, 3, l; Varsity Seal 3; Freshman Debating Team; Sopho- more Debating Team. ADDRESS- Harrsiburg, Pa. page sevenIy-xeven Hli Imgc scwnly-cighl DAVID ARMON HUGHES 'I'AhD TBII Electrical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. A sense of humor is one of the most important; attributes for a happy life. But when a man can combine an exceedingly cheerful nature with the qualities of a scholar, an earnest worker, and a well-rounded College man, he is sure to be successful. David is one of the most likcable fellows in the Class. He works hard, laughs much, and has made a splendid record in every branch of his College career. Muxical Club 1, :2, l; Barnstormcrs 1' 2; y.M.C.A. 2, 1,; Electrical Club 2, 4; President 4; O.Hicers Club 4; Varsity Seal 4- ADDRESS- 3921 Greenmount Avenue, Baltimore, Md. C. I'IARLAN I-IURLOCK, JR. SMDO Bachelor of Arlx Entered 1928 from Boy's Latin High School. T0 strive for a worth-while goal is deserving of praise. To attain that goal, in spite of considerable 01y position, is an even greater accom- plishment. Harlan was out of school for a year and a half. Yet, When he re-entered, he was deter- mined to graduate with his class. It took hard work and considerable berseverance. He had no time for outside activities. Now he has reached his objective and Ends that along the course he has acquired the merit and esteem of many friends who regard his departure from the campus as a real deprivation t0 Hopkins. ADDREsse 4309 Charles Street Avenue, Baltimore Md. page scvcnly-ninc BENJAMIN HERBERT ISAACS Pre- M edical Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. WScn is another one of those Baltimore boys who entered Hop- kins with hopes of success and con- flicting ambitions. Once decided upon 21 Pre-Medical course he followed it through to a successful finish. We who know him feel sure that by the continuation of the honest hard work such as he has already shown he will arrive at his desired end. Freshman Football 1; Sophomore Football 9. ADDRESS- 1827 E. Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md. page eighty CURTIS B. JEFFERSON KA Prc-Medical Entered 1928 from Vo0dberry Forest, Orange Va. Four years ago a Pre-Medical fresh- man entered our hallowed halls of learning. Years passed and we Find him regulating the society in Alumni Memorial Hall. His zest for work and his striking per- sonality earned him this position and he leaves us now for new worlds to conquer. Although it is un- necessary to wish him a fond fare- well, for he has heard it expressed too often before, may we apologize and reiterate. Good luck! Old man. Rifle Club 1; Member of the Board of Governors of the Alumni Memorial Hall 3, 4; Secretary 1; Glee Club 4; Inlerfratemity Board 4. ADDRESS- Tampa, Fla. page tighly-onc page zigth-Iwo A. PEMBERTON JOHNSON ErDE TBH Scabbard and Blade M echam'cal Engineering Entered 1928 from Annapolis High School. HPem's list of activities indicate his versatility. It would be difficult in the space allowed, to cover his merits. He is a real friend. Pem is very industrious and successful in anything that he undertakes. His Tau Bete Key furnishes suPEcient proof of this. The world is yours for success, HPem: good-luck. HULLABALOO 1: Y.M.C.A. 1, 2, 3; Vice-President 4; Rifie Team 1, 2, 3; Captain 4; A-S-MJE- 3, 4; President 4; Ofcers Club 4. ADDRESS- Annapolis, Md. CHARLES ISLMER JUNO EtDE Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Now clear reader allow me to intro- duce to you another outstanding electrical engineer, Charles Jung, a native of Baltimore and captain of the track and cross-country teams and a captain in the R.O.T.C. A tall, blondc, good-looking athlete whom we are proud to number among ourselves, we take leave of him, selfishly for he is sure to create as Fme a record in the future, as he has created here. Basketball 1, 2; Band 1, 9. Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, I; Track 9, 3, x.- HULLAIMLOO 3, 4; A. A. Board 3, l.- Eleclrical Club 4; A.I.E.E. 4: Officers Club 1,. ADDREss 1726 N. Montford Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page eigth-three page eighly-four FRANK JURAK Electrical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. It was three years ago that Frank entered Hopkins and in those three years he has won both the respect and liking of those of us who have been associated with him. He did not choose to devote all his time to athletics and other activities but rather he has successfully balanced studies against activities with the result that even though his scholas. tic standing ranks among the highest, he has not neglected other phases of college life. Electrical Club 9, 4; A.I.E.E. 2, 4; Rifle Team 9, 4; Track Squad 2, 4. ADDRESS- 4415 Fairhaven Avenue, Baltimore, Md, J. DAVID JUTKOWITZ HAID Bachelor of Arts Entered 1929 from Yonkers High School, Yonkers, N. Y. David is not one of the students who has been particularly active in affairs on the campus. It is not an easy task for one who is completing his course in three years to do 50. Yet within his own crowd he has been a leader in all lines of college activity. His friends have learned to depend on Dave whenever help is needed and are sorry to witness the departure of a man who combined scholastic ability with a pleasing personality. Lacrosse Squad 1; Track N umeral s 1. ADDRESS- Yonkers, N. Y. page cighly-jirc WILLIAM R. KAI-II. 4,10? Civil Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. While not winning all the prizes offered by the civil engineering department for scholarships, ttBill divides his time between the wheels of the great Hopkins lacrosse machine and preventing the Hop- kins Cotillions from being anything but successes. He has succeeded splendidly all around and we con- gratulate him for the nerve he por- trays in owning that tin ttvan he calls a Ford. Cotillion Board 1, 9, 4; Treasurer 1,; Banquet Committee 1, 2; Assistant Lacrosse Manager 1, 2; Manager 4; Varsity Club 4;!1. A. Board 1,; sze Week Committee 4; A.S.C.E. 9, 4. ADDREssh 2219 Arden Road, Baltimore, Md. page eigth-six lVALTER FRANCIS KNEIP, JR. tDFA OAK Business Economics Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. When a. man is chosen to lead what many regard as the foremost Honor Society on the campus it means that he possesses all the qualities typifying a gentleman and a scholar. To extol uSonny would be superficial in the light of his achievements. HSonny, the class wishes you a fitting enough record in the future to match that which you have created here. Barnslormm I, 9, 3, 4; Basketball 1; Cotillion Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Inter- fraternity Board 1, 2, 3; President 4; Lacrosse 1, 9, 3, 4; Musical Club 3, 4; Lacrosse l'II 3, 1; June Week Committee 3, 4; Chairman 4; Student Activities Council 4; Varsity Club 3, 4; Varsity Seals 3, 4. ADDRESS- 3402 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page eighly-seven page cighly-eighl LOU IS JOSEPH KROLL TAQ Pre- Medical Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. One of the most important requisi- tes of a gentleman is that he should be unselfishly interested in his friends. Louis would do almost anything to aid someone he knows. A clever debator, he was elected Vice-President of the Debating Council and has done much toward making this year the most Suc- cessful debating season Hopkins has ever had. HULLABALOO 2, 3, 4; Debating; Junior Team, Debating Council 3; Vice-President Debating Council 4; Adams Prize 2; Varsity Seal 1,. ADDREsse 4101 Springdale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. MILTON w. K'RONSBERG MA Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. Just before this goodly book was about to go to press, there entered the HULLABALOO oHice a young man in a highly excited state of g mind. This was none other than t t'Milt. He was greatly worried :-'w - t that he would not get in the year- t 2 1 book: but he's in so he can't be out. i E I ' t Though not active on the campus, ' e ' t t HMilt was a good student and while at Hopkins, has made many t friends and will probably continue h t to do so, being a likable chap. Baltimore Cily College Alumni Scholarship. ADDRESSe 1 702 Lennox Street. E Baltimore, Md. : page eighly-ninc page ninety GEORGE WILLIAM LAMONT ATQ Political Economy Entered 1928 from East End High School, Rochester, N. Y. During his four years of study at the Hopkins, George utilized his spare time in working on the Business StaFf of the News-Letler and in work in the Musical Club. George is an extremely hard worker and a good student. He has spent a great deal of his energy and time in soaking up the higher culture and knowledge that the University is ready to give to all who go in search of it. News-Letler, Business Slafl, 2, 3, 4; Circulation Manager 4; Musical Club 2, 3; Bankers' and Finance Club, Secretary 3; Assistant Basket- ball Manager 2; Varsity Seal 3, 4. ADDRESS- Websters, N. Y. SYLVAN LEBOW 11 Ad! Iiusincxs Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. With his hat at a rakish angle, dangling cane and white carnation, Sylvan is a perfect exponent of the Don Juan Club. We count our- selves unfortunate not to know more of him in this capacity. Frankly we are sorry to see him leave. Although it is the usual thing to express wishes for future success, in his chosen lield of Journalism. News-Lcller 1, 2, 3, .4; Managing Editor 4; Tennis Team 1, :3; Manager 3; Swimming 1; Glee Club I, 2; Varsity Seal 1,. ADDRESS- Templc Gardens Apartments, Baltimore, Md. page nimly-one page nincIy-t'wo SIDNEY S. LEICHTER HAqi Arts and Sciences Entered 1929 from Clark School, New York City. Although Sidney has not taken an active interest in cxtra-curricular activities, he is not unknown to those who have. His pseudo- seriousness has not fooled us, for those of us who are among his intimates realize he is to the con- trary. It is with great sorrow that we bid him farewell. ADDRESS-- New York, N. Y. LEROY LOUIS LEVITT lilcclricul Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Some people persist in hiding their candles under a bushel basket. Leroy is a Charter Member of this Society. He has so much under the surface that only his real close friends appreciate it. We have to Stand back and wonder what will happen when he finally Casts OH the basket. May your candle shine 'Wightly, Leroy-we'll be waiting. A.I.E.E. 2, 4. ADDkEsse 900 N. Bentalou Street, Baltimore, Md. page nincIy-Ihrte raga ninely-four RONALD BRAIN LEVY AI' OAK .-1 .13. in Clmm'xlry lintcrod .1928 from Friends School HSIiII water runs deep, and thus beneath a docile and retiring cx- tcrior lies an ingenuity surrounded hynsingularlyntmu'livcpersonality which will carry HRon to great heights. In a quiet and unassuming nmnner, HRon has acquired pres- tige and distinction 0n the Hopkins Campus. He has proven his merit as a gcntlcnmn, an zllhlete, :1 scholar and :1 friend. Cotillion 1301er I, .9, .3; President ,7; Musical Club 1, 2, :i: Prnsirlcnt J; .S'ccrrlary 0f Chm J1; Lacrosse 1, J3, .3, .7; Football 1, 9. 3, X; Varsity Club .2, 3; Secretary 1,; Y.M.C.A. 1,9,14,- Chairman Junior Dance Committee 3; J mm Week Committee .4. Anmuass- 5 West 20th Street, Baltimore, Md. AUSTIN jENKINS LILLY, JR. Adi Business Economics Entered 1928 from Boy's Latin School. Here was 21 student; let it he lamented that there are not enough of them. Evidently knowing that Hobkins was an institution of higher learning, Austin passed the lighter things in his search for the more solid increments of College. We can repeat the concensus of ODinion . . . . a mighty fine man. ADDREssh 2742 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. page nincly-jiwe page ninczy-six WILLIAM B. LITTLEPAGE Arls and Sciences Entered 1927 from Fishhurne Mili- lzlry School. A serious-minded Chap named ttBill came to Hopkins with a defmite purpose in mind, namely to cultivate to the best of his ability the edu- cational facilities that the Uni- versity offered. Consequently HBill was rarely seen in the social world. We have been proud to have been able to enjoy the friendship of such a man for the impressions he has created upon US- ADDRESS- 3110 Ferndale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. H. DONALD M.vxcl.IiLI.AN 0K0 'FBII M-clnmiml linginwriug Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- 1ec1mic Institute. HGot your report started 3'01, Mac'? HYes, sure its finished! want to look at it? Alxmys has his work doncanu wonder T1111 Beta Pi chose him :15 one of their selected number. He has con- tributed generously of his talents 10 the HULLABALOU. His leaving us makes :1 gap that will be hard 10 F111. Good luck! Fella! HULLAHALOO 2, ,4; Vursily Seal .1; American. Sociely of Aledmnriml Engineers 2, 1,. Anmu-zss 2807 Mt. Holly Street, Baltimore, Md. Mgr niany-scwcn page ninaly-cight EDWARD XV. MATTINCI.Y tDK 11W HAE Mcclzmliml Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- tcchnic Institute. While ably holding down the dual role of a gentleman and student, HWiggy has learned the secret of social charm, and how to he an artist on polished floors. While nmintaining an excellent scholastic standing for his short stay of three years, HWiggy has run the affairs of the HULLABALOO, played La- crosse, helped the Barnstormers and seems, as is unusual for an engineer, to be a convincing talker even when ignorant of the subject under dis- cussion. Zounds, a good man passes! Barnstormers 1, 2, 4; Club :13, 4; HULLABALOO 1, 9, 4; Fraternity Editor 2; Editar-in-Chief 4; Y.M. C .A .; President Freshman Cabinet 1; Class Cabinet 2, A Lacrosse 1, 9; Cross Counlry 9; Sludent Aclivitiex Council I; A.S.M.E. 2, !; Varsity Seal: 2, 4. ADDRESS-h 4146 Roland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. PAUL EDXVAR D MCCOY Chemical Engineering Entered 1928 from Culvert Hull. No one but a chemist can appreciate the concentration and undivided interest that a chemistry course requires. Only two men survived the four hectic years in Remsen to graduate in 1932. Paul enjoys playing tennis almost as much as chasing the elusive electrons in their involved orbits. A good feIIOW1steady and sen- sihle-Paul dons his cap and gown to take his place in the old world. Burnstormers l, 9; Rifie Club I. Annmassa- 4011 Edmondson Avenue, Baltimore. Md. page m'nely-nhw fmgc one hundred GEORG E MEI DLING 3 $13 Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Yes children, even though he is an engineer he has his good points. There's a gleam in his eye that spells death to all the intricate problems of the HCivils and this gleam really must scare them, be- cause the boy really gets results. So here's to you George, 01' Boy, Ol' Boy. We're sure even the depression won't alTect your bread winning capacity when you crash through with a sheepskin in your fist. Black and Blue Jay I, 2, 8, 4; HULLABAI.00 2, 3, 4; A.S.C.E. 2, 3, 4; Treasurer 3: Secretary 1,; Barn- slormers 2, 3; Varsity Seal 3, 4. ADDRESS-- 3608 Hamilton Avenue, Baltimore, Md, THOMAS WILLIAM MELE Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Never say die! That's HTom, whether on the track, replacing lost 0U locks or getting his work done. Trained by the Y.M.C.A., Track Coach Hambleton, he has developed a line with women that makes even the coldest of us jealous. We are more certain than ever that this little giant will take a generous slice of this thing called success. Au Revoir, ttTom. Y.M.C.A. Cabinet 1, 2, 4; Track Sanad I, 2, 4; Cross Country Team 9: 4; 6116 2, 1,; Member A.S.M.E. 9, 4.; State Scholarship 4; Wrestling Team 4. ADDRESS.- 502 N. Payson Street, Baltimore, Md. page om: hundred one MILTON H. METTEE, III IDPA Business Eronomim Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly. technic Institute. Every time one approaches Lever- ing Hall a knot of fellows may be seen clustered around a derby and then one will know that UCrooning Bill is springing another one on the boys. Of course it's not all play with uBill as you can surmise upon seeing him come out of class With that worried look spread all over his usually cheery pllysiognomy. Gloom never lasts long with Bill, however, and his very presence provides a willing incentive for flm. Foalball Squad 1, 2; Lacrosxe Squad 1, 2; Glee Club :3, 3, A' Ive Hockey 4; Swimming 4; Varsity Seal .4. ADDRESS- H Ash land , Frederick Road, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred lwo DANIEL MILLER AT IVIAE OAK Ari: and Sciences Entered 1928 from Brunswick School. As the business head of two organi- zations, HDan was more than a technician; he was a personality and the results of his work possess a force more obvious than outwardly appears. When society keys and athletic awards lie in bureau drawers almost forgotten. Dan Will always be remembered for his disbosition, friendship and his whole. some smile for everybody. Football 1, 2, 3; Lacrosse I, 9, 3; Barnslormers I, 2, 3, l; Business Mumlger Burnstormers 4; HULLA- BALOO 1, 9, 8, 4; Business Manager HULLABALOO 4: Chairman Junior Banquet Committee and Dance Com- millee 3; Van'sty Seal 3, 4. ADDRESS- Stamford, Conn. pug: one hundred Ihrez Page one hundred four LEONARD MILLVIAN am Elt'clrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. 2'I.en is a fine-looking fellow With set ideas about nearly everything. His manner of speaking is very con- vincing, and he is usually enthusi- astic about all of the things or persons in which he is interested. He is a better athlete than the record would indicate, and in addition is a splendid R.0.T.C. commander and a leader in every sense of the word. With qualities such as these it is not hard to predict a successful career for this man. Freshman Football; Freshman La- crosse; Electrical Club 3, 4; 011mm Club 4; Student Council 4; A.I.E.E, 1,. ADDRESS2 2228 Ruskin Avenue, Baltimore, Md. JAY ELI MlSI-IHER Prc- M edical Entered 1928 from Atlantic City High School. You have all heard about those youngsters who are born with silver spoons in their mouths. Well, here we have one who, judging from past perfornmnces, must surely have embarked upon this life holding in his dexterous mitts a violin or guitar having at least one string. While assuming the heavy duties of a Pre-Med, jay has found time to have a good time, and we feel that his good humor and personality will stand him in good stead when he leaves us. Glee Club 1; Banjo Club I, 2, 3, 4; Hawaiian Troupe 2, 3, 1,. ADDRESS- Atlantic City, N. J. page one hzmzlml Mm page onc hundred six WILLIAM M. MORRILL EN Prc- illediml Entered 1930 from Colorado State College. From the rustling of cows and the holding-up of stage coaches it is a long step to the dignity of a Pre- Med, but: ii Bill took it and for the last two years we have had him in our midst. He has made his presence felt and his studious methods will stand him in good stead in the days to come. So long HBill.H ADDRESS- Resiterstown, Md. JOHN KEENER MOUNT, JR. A .B. English Entered 1928 from Marston's ; School. What we have to say of the chap above although of no great length is nevertheless concise. Industrious, and unselfish he has been a loyal member of the University. Candid and sympathetic he has been a true friend. Confident that he will acquire the material and spiritual fulfillments of his wishes we bid him a lingering adieu. Musical Club I; Debating 2, 3, 4; Adams Medal 2; Adams Prize 3; Y.M.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; President 3; Student Activities Council 4. ADDRESS- 2207 Chilham Road, Mt. Washington, Md. VI A lgik W x x Xi X 13.1w page one hundred xeven page one hundred'eikhl i E I g E l ? f l r l ? JACOB F. MURBACH A M T Electrical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Some three years ago, Fred came to our midst in a somewhat serious vein. Times may have Changed but not HFred. Always in that nonchalant mood that has won him many lasting friends, HFred believes in being active in the extra-curricular as well as in the ordinary phases of College Life, and has some splendid ideas on making a success of either. However, Fred has cherished one weak- ness-8.30 classes. Rifle T eam 1; Secretary-Treasurer 2, 4; Electrical Club 2, 4; CMicers Club 4; First Lieutenant 4. ADDREsst Bellona Avenue, Govans, Md. ROWLAND MCDOWELL NESS ATQ IIAE Scabbard and Blade A rlx uml .S'cz'rm'cx Entered 1928 from Friends School. In H RowlyH the Class of '32 had a man who could accomplish things. One glance at his activities is sufficient: proof that he possesses the priceless knack of leadership. It is the usual thing to predict success but often it is impossible. With ii Rmvly it is impossible not to predict it and we anticipate great things. Newx-Lellcr 1, 2, 3, I, Asxistanl Managing Editor 3, Editor-in-Chief 4; Bamstormers I, 2 Club 3, l,; Lacrosse I, 2, H11 ii, I; Caplain, R.O.T.C. l; Y.M.C.A. 3; HULLA- BALOO 1, 2, 3, X; Sludmt Activities Council Secretary 4; Banquet Canz- millee I, 3; Vanity Club 3, 4; Vanity Seal 3, J; Olympic Finance Commillec l; inivers Club 3, 4. ADDRESS- 2213 Chilham Road, Mt. Washington, Md. Imgc om' hundred int HENRY GEORGE NEUMAN EdlE . Civil Engineering Entered 1029 from Baltimore Poly- tcchnic Institute. Why Henry refrained from expres- sing his musical talent more openly until his senior year remains a mystery. It was a loss to Hopkins for his work as accompanist to the Blue Jay Orclicslra was one of the bright spots in the club this year, A quiet, fun-loving fellow, Henry should join the ranks of Ben Bernie or Guy Lombardo but he will probably build bridges instead. Blue Jay Orchestra 4. ADDREss0 2000 Ashland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred lcn JAMES WILLIAM PENNEY AMT Gas Engineering Entered 1028 from Forest Park High School. Someone has said that a firm will hire Hjim to keep the employees constantly in a good humor, rather than for his engineering ability. No one ever knows what to expect from this jolly little pllilOsopher. for he is undoubtedly the most original thinker Hopkins has boasted for many years. Take care of that bottle, HJimmie. HGasia Vivimusl Rifle Team 2, 3, 4; R.0.T.C., First Lieutenant 4; Officers Club 4; Gas Engineers' Association 3, 4. ADDRESS- 24 Seven Mile Lane, Pikesville, Md. page one hmxdml clcvcn fmgc one Immln'd twelve MARLOW PERRY AT Scabbard and Blade Gas Engineering Entered 1928 from Central High of Washington, D. C. To attempt to express adequately the whole hearted gentlemanliness of Marlow in a few words is an impossible task. Friendship With men like him makes college life more than the mere acquisition of an education. In track and other activities Marlow has added diver- sity to his creditable record in his engineering studies. HGasia Vivi. mus! Track 1, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3, 4,. News-Lctter Staf 3, 4; Student Council 2; Scrgeant-aI-A rm: 3; HUL- LABALOO 1,; Varsity Club 3' 4: Varsity Seal 4. ADDRESSv- Washington, D. C. EUGENE LEO PESSAGNO, JR. ETA HAE Pre-Medical Entered 1928 from Loyola High School. Knowing iiGene's ambition to become a Doctor of Medicine, one can readily understand by his enthusiasm, smiling and radiant personality, and friendliness, why he should succeed in his chosen pro- fession. It requires the character of a man like HGene to instil the proper confidence in patients. He's just a great little kid, full of fun and the true Hopkins spirit. Swimming, Freshman Manager; Freshman Lacroxse; Freshman Ban- quet Committee; Band 2, 3, 4; HULLABALOO 2, 3, 4; Barnstormers 2, 3, 4; Black and Blue Jay 2, 3, 4; Varsity Seal 3, 4; Associate Editor HULLABALoo 4; Property Manager Barnstormers 4; Photographic Editor Blue Jay 4; Treasurer of Pi Delta Epsilon 4. ADDRESSe 514 Drury Lane, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred thirteen ALFRED QUIC K A'I'Q Business Economics Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. itMikc is the sort of a chap one enjoys meeting and running into. Gifted with the ability to place one at his ease he has made many friends. Enhanced with the ability to combine scholastic interests with others, we do not doubt that his ambitions will be realized. We join with the rest of his many friends in bidding him good luck! Cotillion Board 2, 3, 4; Inter- fralcrm'ty Board 2, 3, 4; June Week Committee 4; Junior Dance Com. millee; Student Activities Council 4; Varsity Seal 3, 4. ADDRESS- 2312 Chelsea Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred fourtzen SAMUEL M. RIQK'IIICL P rw- M V11 I'rul Entered 1929 from Annapolis High School. Contrary to some of the current opinions that to go to College one must he collegiate, there is one fellow who has specialized in the gentle art of being himself. That's HSam. Our hut comes OH to one who has haul the ambition and perseverance to complete four years work in three, and especially to knock olT such consistently high grades as HSan has. hYc feel that his pleasant nature and high ideals will carry him far in the held of medicine. Rifle Club ,4; HULLMMLOO Phala- gm 121: 1'6 Staff 4 . Anmmssh 67 West Street, Annapolis, Md. Mgr our Immln'd jifh'm MILTON REIZIENSTIEIN, JR. Elpclrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. When HReizcy first came to our University he put much of his freshman enthusiasm into swim- ming and later gained a place on the varsity team. With his inherent ability for writing jokes and creating humor HMilt naturally focused his attention upon the Black and Blue Jay, where he found a welcome outlet for his contagious blithe- somcncss. Swimming Team 1, 2, 3, 1,; Lacrosse 'Team I ; Numerals 1; Assistant Manager Swimming 1, 2, 3; Black and Blue Jay 9, 3, 4; Managing Editor 1,; Electrical Club 2, 3, 4; Chairman of Electrical Club Blm- quet Committee 3; Varsity Seal 3, 4; HULLABALOO 3, 4. ADDREssh 2134 Brookfield Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page om: hundred sixteen .t w.wwhh 'h '7wu t- ,w K- V' PAUL VERNON RENOFF Electrical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Old. Neptune called HP. V. away from his Alma Mater for a year to i show him the mysteries of seafaring aboard both tramp steamers and fast liners. It is rumored that he I picked up the word Hboogger tso vital to Electrical Engineersh either y ; t i in China or the South Seas. Paul's V t . easy-going and understanding na- 3 h :1 ture, plus good humor and keen, 5 tin clear-thinking ability will achieve enviable success in any following. R.0.T.C. 1, 2, 1,; Radio Club I; t: mmmwawaaALEEam 'W Ojiccrs Club 4. i t a '1 1 ADDRESS- 1501 East 28th Street, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred seventeen JACK T. RETTAIJATA 0K0 Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Jack is another of that ever existent group known as HSmoothies. His quiet, easy-going manner is a great asset which we all admire. Though not prominent on the campus, Jack may quite frequently be found gliding over the dance floor to the strains of some dreamy melody. Good luck to you Jack in your future endeavors. A.S.M.E. X: Track 2. ADDRESS- : 2335 Harford Road, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred eighteen WILLIAM MONROE RIMMEY 'I'Atl, Elecirical Engineering Entered 1928 from Havrc dc Grace High School. HBill is a fellow well worth knowing. He believes in doing only a few things but doing them well. Although study and commuting takes up most of his time he has. nevertheless managed to give ample time to work on the Blue Jay staff. His capabilities in this capacity resulted in his being elected to the position of Circulation Manager. HBill is a hard worker and a mighty loyal friend. R.0.T.C. I, 9; Blue Jay 2, 3, 4; Circulation Manager 4; Varsity Seal 4; Eleclrical Club 3, 4. ADDRESS- Havre de Grace, Md. page one hundred m'mrlem k l f a f xiv V w I , VVVVW WWWA V AA 11337th f I 9 ,w. n- my mm... . -- l- -hyA-..h..-,M.,. MVP... page one hundred twenty 7f ., w ,w..;.g;w:M XANAM M! J x W X .3. .7 JOHN HENRY RITZ K2 Entered 1929 from Catonsville High School. John is one of those men who are happy when surrounded by a small group of friends and accordingly has confined himself to mostly fraternity affairs. Those of us who are fortunate to be counted among his friends and associates can testify to his affability, sincereness and loyalty. ADDRESSw Beaumont Avenue, Catonsville, Md, h'VVVVVVVVVV'VVVVV HYMAN ROSENWASSER ITtb Pre-Medical Entered 1928 from New Utrecht High School. We regret that we have only a few words to describe the affable young man above. Paralleling his scholas- tic and other work is a personality, , ' . t . so rich in candidness and sym- - h .N' EEEEAE pathy, that it will be remembered - V by all those who came in contact with 'lHy. This semi-vague quality is so perfectly blended with the in- 3- ; t . - $h'a'msyk dividual as to make one harmoni- f ous whole that will be hard to forget .. ' n , N l . v after he leaves these halls. To a 7' . i? '4'; 1.3.5 u 'w53531x L , , l ' hkgm 7 true friend and a resourceful . 3., . l g ,j . . .L 115i. $333 worker, we bid farewell! l 'vsn t . ' . ' . J . V . txfgihqgmig. 453?; V3? l1 42hr . u. Avukah 1, 2; Secretary-Treasurer. :3 ;: .1532'4', 4a.... .p. . ?mm- :7? F a ADDRESSw Brooklyn, N. Y. . $ .3? R?,fh: V l :JsEK-W C F AAAAAAAAA page one hundred twenIy-one IRVIN SAUBER tDE A tDB K Pre- Medical Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. It seems that wherever we turn we collide with a Pre-Med. They are generally 01' such a secretive nature, burrowing in the bowels of the labs that we slink past whenever they emerge. Nevertheless we feel that possibly our judgment has been too hasty in the case of HIYV. We would like to impart a warning but we dontt know what to say other than a fullsome future awaits him. ADDREs'st 3003 Garrison Boulevard, Baltimore, Md, Puge onc lmndrcd twcnly-lwo HENRY UAYMER SCHMIDT KS Buxiucss Economirs lintered 1928 from Hinsdzlle High School, Ill. Our Henry came a long way to study big business methods in :1 big city, but as you can readily see, he did not lose his zest for activities in various Helds. When he wasn't gooscstcpping with the glorihed boy scouts from Levering Hall he was either swelling the chorus of the Glee Club or dashing off a few lines for the Nrws- Loltcr, and although he will he missed by all those who know him, we wish him the best of luck when he graduates. R.O.T.C. 1, J; Nc'wx-Lcllvr l; Barnslormcrs l; Glee Club :3. Amnucsse I'Iinsdallc, Ill. page om; Iumdrrd twcnly-Iltrcc VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVXi 'llH' JOSHUA SEIDEL Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. A Pre-Med who completes his course in three years is little able to spare time for activities other than his studies. We thus introduce you to the man at whom you are looking. In the final analysis it is evident that Seidel will be a success in his profession. Good luck UJosh 01d boy! 1 . b t, aw i 3 am 0 '3. '- h... Runz'ifionhn': ADDRESS- 2404 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md, yAAAAAAAAA tage one hundred IwenIy-four ALOOJVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV ARTHUR SIEGEL HACIJ Entered 1928 from George Wash- ington High School, N. Y. C. During Art's College career he has been one of the mainstays of the Basketball Team. This, however, is not the only reason for his popu- larity; quiet, friendly and tactful he is one who is thoroughly at ease with his companions. We hope that he will remain so after College for he will be rewafded in the future as he has at Hopkins. Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 1; Lacrosse 3; Varsity Club 3. 4; Varsity HH 2, 4; Glee Club 2. r' Jllcy'v'hmham ADDRESSe Brooklyn, N. Y. JKAAAAAAAAXWWM izage one hundred twenIy-jive KENNETI'I C. SHARRETTS ibPA OAK Scabbard and Blade Prc- Wind fall Entered 1928 from Shenandoah Valley Academy. v Through four years, Ken' has endeared himself to his associates by virtue of his generous share of the qualities portraying a gentle- man. If our well wishes can in any way repay these endearments, we extend them heartily. Supported by an enviable record HKen is entering the medical profession. We can but stand by and applaud. Musical Club I, ,9, 3, l; Junior Manager 3; Y.M.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 1,; Treasurer 3; Student Activilics Coun- ml 3, Prexident Z; Secretary of C1033 l .' Lacrosse Squad 1 , 9, 3, l ; Truslcc's Grant I; Varsity Seal 3, X; Chairman of Olympic Finance Committee. ADDREss 4209 Maine Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Page one hundred lwcnIy-six ROBERT GUNTHER SHIRLEY wDPA Pre-Medical Entered 1928 from Creighton Uni- versity High School. Nebraska may well be proud of this, her native son. Four years ago, Bob joined our midst as a particularly innocent and dignified Freshman. Underneath this digni- Fned front we found a fun-loving, well balanced, energetic youth. His spontaneous good humor and re- fulgent personality provided a scource for many an enjoyable moment. Shirley's keen sense of good sportsmanship has instigated a feeling of comradeship and good will with all who have been for- tunate enough to know him. Vice-President of Class 1; Track 1, 2; Tudor and Stuart 3; R.0.T.C. 1, 2. ADDRESS- Omaha, Nebraska page one lmndrcd Iwenly-xcven WILSON c. SHUGERMAN ; MOP thK Pre-Med'ical Entered 1929 from St. Alban's, Washington, D. C. Needless to say HW. G. has made a name for himself due to his varied and consistent abilities. Hardly any musical concert: could have been complete without the sonorous voice of Wilson, which, we must say, has always sent a flutter into the coldest feminine hearts. In his three years stay everyone has found uW. G. a most pleasant and sociable chap and his excellent qualities will take him far up the road. So long. i ; ' V Track I, 9: Cross Cmmlry Team 1, 2; ' Lacrosse Squad 2, M usiwl Club 1, 9; 1 Junior Manager I; HULLAHALOO 1; 1 j ; ; Editorial Staff9; Fraternity EditoM; C 1 Q ; . Y.M.C.A. Cabinet 1, 2, 4; Chairman ; Z 1 .I of Board of Governors, Alumni Memorial Hall 4; Trustees' Scholar- ship 9, 4,- Varsity Seal 4; Tudor and Z 1 Stuart Club 4. ADDRESSa ; 2601 Calvert Street, Washington, D. C. page one lnmdrcd twcnly-righl , , -..V ! . .. w. vHii EDGAR M. SKINNER, JR. KA Business Economics Entered 1928 from Cambridge High School. When the dimpled-cheeked rascal pictured above rolls down Charles Street in his Ford testing his special horn you can hear the f Windows going up and the fair sex i I t ; s ; applauding even as far off as ; : t, x - 1 ' 7 t Goucher. h It seems that HEd's biggest prob- lems are getting back from his week- ends in time to go home again on Wednesday and keeping his sword sharp so he can drill the Freshmen. We feel that there isn't a more SCluare, a quieter or a more likeable fellow than 'tEd among us, and We shall miss his face next year. R.O.T.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Interfralemity Board 2, 3; Wrestling Squad 3, 4. ADDREsst Cambridge, Md. page one hundred lwcnly-nine page one hundred thirty LLEWELLYN F. STANTON TAtIJ Mechanical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. We've often wondered why such an eloquent speaker should keep So quiet in the Senior Room. But that's the way with Llewellyn. He'll speak when spoken to, chastise us when we need it and With time out for eatsh work the rest of the time. Such plodding surely pre. dicts a bright and rising future and that's our wish too. Debating 1, 9, 3, 4; Y.M.C.A. 2; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; I nterfraterm'ty Board 2. ADDRESS- 610 Register Avenue, Stoneleigh, Md. WALTER LEROY STEGMAN ETA TBII Scabbard and Blade lflcclriml Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute Somewhere near the center of the group you can always find HSteg- giE, matching his wits with any- one's. Heihas a serious nature too as one may see by his long list of accomplishments. His pet hobby i5 Playing soldiers either with the R.O.T.C. or the Junior Navy. We may be assured that in later life HSteggie will attain the same degree of success that has been his at Hopkins, and we give him our very best wishes. Freshman Football; Track I, 2. 4; Rifie Team 1, 2, 1,; Electrical Club 3, 1,,- Ojicers Club 3, 4; Engineering Scholarship 1, 2, I; A.I.E.E. 4. ADDRESS- Coast Guard Depot, Curtis Bay, Md. page one hundred Iht'rly-onc VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVXl m , - . .J 'Illl' JAMES PHILLIPS STRONG, JR. Electrical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Quiet and unobtrusive, HJimmy has earned the respect and liking of all about him. His decorum assures us of an intelligence that needs no loudness to afford a means of recognition while his geniality has won him many friends. After everything is written we are forced to admit that Strong deserves and will acquire the fulfillment of his wishes. Electrical Club 3, 4; Rifle Club 3, 4; Ojicers Club 4. ADDRESS- 4115 Massachusetts Avenue, Baltimore, Md. AAAAAAAAA page one hundred lhs'rty-two HELMUTH F. STUDE Entered 1929 from 'Catonsville High School. Folks, you've heard of the HSmiling: Barefoot Boy, well he's not really barefoot but smiling. He's nothing else but. Therds a legend on the campus that once he had a serious expression but this has not been authenticated. Outside of his ter- rible habit of spreading cheer, he's - a good friend and well liked, even by his fraternity brothers. So here goes-Good Luck- and just keep smiling. ADDREss 18 Beaumont Avenue, Catonsville, Md. page one hundred lhirty-Ihree JOHN L. SULLIVAN, JR. EdHC Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Holy Cross College. When HPat leaves the campus, there will be two large vacancies in the undergraduate realm-the most all-around pleasing personality and the smoothest orchestra director the campus has had for a long time. Always smiling and greeting his friends with a cheery greeting Pat has won his way into the hearts of us all. Consequently our farewell to him is of necessity a sad one. Glee Club 1, 9, 3; Black and Blue Jay Orcheslm 2, 3; Students Aclivitiex Council 3. ADDRESS- Pittsfield, Mass. page one hundred thirly-four DAVID SAMUEL SYKIZS thU IIAE Arlx and Sciena's Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. After three years of persistent labor, H Dave was elected Business Manager of the Ncws-Lclter. Need- less to say the results justified the choice. An interested regard from his associates will follow his future efforts. We feel no censure when we express fullest confidence in his merit. News-Lcller I , 9, 3, l: Adverlixing Mmmgt'r H3 Business Manager .4; Lacrosse 1; Varsify Seal 3, 4; Sludenl Arlivilies Comm'l l; Blue Juyl,. Annunss 6210 Park Heights Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page om hundred lIzirIy-jiw ALI .AN M . THATC H ER t1, B K Entered 1928 from B. M. C. Durfec High School, Fall River, Mass. A whimsical philosophical little fellow, Allan first took a step into the limelight: by declaring that he thought his contribution to a cer- tain issue of the Jay was the best and that he should win the prize. He won, and was also elected to the staff for his originality. Allan's originality and unusual pleasantries at all times are his most outstanding attributes. Black and Blue Jay Editorial 511117 .9, 4; Varsity Seal 4. ADDRESS- 1511 Bolton Street, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred Ilzirly-six RICHARD NELSON TILLMAN BGII Arts and Sciences Entered 1929 from Towson High School. Honestly now, to look at the young man you couldn't possibly predict his accomplishments, could you? We don't know how the Glee Club is going to get along when H Dick leaves, and certainly his manly form will be missed seen Hashing across the court to make a hard shot. As long as he retains his good nature we know he'll get along, and we think that's a long time. Tennix 1; Musical Club I, 9, 3, 4. Anmusssh Walnut Road, Ridcrwood, Md. page om? lmndrrd thirIy-chn lmgc om: hundred lhirly-cighl 1 JAMES ROYALL TIPPETT, JR. diKT Scabbard and Blade A.B. English, Entered 1928 from Marston's, A gentleman. an officer and an actor, HBuddy, while he has not made a really big name for himself on the campus, has, by his quiet personality, put himself in the h Hall of Popularity rather than in the h Hall 0f17aIne. No one could ever say that h Buddy's career at: Hopkins has been anything but a credit to his fine character and earnest work in all his activities and studies. Lacrosse 1, ,9, J, l; Swilmning 1; Barmlnrmers 1, 9 8, 1; Tudor and Smart Club 13, 4; Secrerury-Treasurer ,4; Cane Club ,9, 3, 4; Olliccrs Club 1,; Varsily Seal 4. Anmuasr'r- 2007 Cheston Avenue, Baltimore, M d. '1!!, IN 232! GUSTAVE TRI BULL, JR. Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. I 3 - : Clack, bang! ???FCVK; Up rattles 21 , Studebaker touring. Out jumps f. : HGus. Those days are over, for now up rolls a slick, shining Chevro- let, and out lightly steps Mr. Tribull. College has changed HGus 11e raised a mustache, 0r sumpin ', on his upper lip. But changed or ' ,t unchanged, we still claim and acclaim our own. Good luck, ; HGus. $ I A.S.M.E. 2, 4; Rifle Club 9:01f1ccrs Club 4; State Scholarship 1, 2, 4. Annulass 2601 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, Md. .1: 'X 1x 4?ka EV! X! 145. Jail 1 Ax: .3 page 0ch lmmlrcd lhirty-ninc page one hundred forty JOHN IGLEHART TURNBULL tbKW OAK Mechanical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. ttjack came to Hopkins with a fme athletic record. This record now that he is leaving is brighter than ever. Being air-minded among other things, Jack succeeded in obtaining his pilot's license last fall. We feel sure that he will soar to great heights. It is rumored that HJack has the highest average with the least studying of any engineer graduating at Hopkins. And we can vouch for the latter without doubt. Football 1, 2, 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 4; President of Class 1, 2; Captain Lacrosse 4; Banquet Committee I, 2; Varsity Club 1, 2, 4; A.S.M.E. 3, 4; Ice Hockey 4. ADDREssh 2106 South Road, Baltimore, Md. ROBERT UMBERGER Pre- M edical Entered 1928 from Lebanon High School. A harcl-working Pre-Med, he is possessed of the qualities of a gentleman. Nevertheless, we know from experience that he shines at a bull-session. While HBob h does not belong to the Cane Club, ; he is quite in sympathy with their ideals. We know that a brilliant future will be his, and, although we envy him for it, we feel that Providence has made no mistake. ADDRESSe- Mt. Gretna, Pa. 11.5 ' gut ii; page one hundred forly-one Imgc om: hundred forIy-lwo DAVID w. VAUTIHER A cadcm'fc Entered 1928 from St. Alban's School, Washington, D. C. H Dave is always smiling. Doesn't; that man ever have anything to worry about? Is what a stranger might ask about him. We do not think that the professors have worried him, for he has a good record in the books. Girls never have caused any real stir in his life so far, and he lets the other fellow worry about the depression. So why shouldn't he smile? Swimming 1, 2, 3; Lazrmssc I, 3' 4,. RQT-C- 1, 21 3, 11; Lieutenant K; Truslcc's Grant 4. Anmmsst Millersville, Md. ROBERT EARLE WATTS $KW' TBII Gas Engineering Entered 1928 from Purdue Uni- versity. A man who can concentrate upon studying as earnestly as HBobbyH 1ms,and still have time to manage a football team through a successful season deserves much credit. HBob- by has done splendidly in both activities and academics, and has proven his ability as an engineer by being elected to Tau Beta Pi. u Gasia Vivimusl Assistant Football Manager 1, 9, 3; Manager 4; Inlcrfmlemity Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Scaralary-Treasurcr 4; Varsity Club !; Scrgcmtl-at-A rms 4; A.A.B. 4; G.E.A. 3, l; Treasurer I; C.P.S.C. Scholarship l, 2, 3. 4. ADDRESS- Princeton, Ind. page om: lnmdrctl fnrty-llzrcc page one hundred forty-four WILLIAM F. WEITZEI. 241E Mechanical Engineering Entered 1928 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Here is a true scholar, gentleman, and athlete. HBillH has combined these three qualities so smoothly that he is considered one of the best liked men in the class. His election as class president substantiates this statement. HBill is an outstand- ing football and lacrosse player. See you at the Olympics, HWeitz. Foatball 1, 9, 3, 4; Basketball 1; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 2, 3, 4; Class Vice-Presidcm 3; Class Presi- dent 4; Junior Dance Committee 3; Rifle Club 3; I-IULLABALOO 3, 4; Student Council 4; Ojicers Club 4; Varsity Seal 4; Vicc-Presidenl. Anmusssh 1613 East 33rd Street, Baltimore, Md. GIBSON JACKSON WELLS P rc- M cdicul Entered 1928 from Baltimore City College. A Pre-Med has little time for activities, leaving them to the tender mercies 0f the Engineers and Collegians. This in no way, how- ever, detracts from the likeahle merits of the personality above. We are certain that Gibson wilI be successful according to his definition of the term, and it is with the greatest sincerity and pleasure that we stand by, assured of his success. ADDRESS- 309 East 33rd Street, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred forIy-tvc CIVIA RLES WH ITBY ATS! 'FBII Entered 1928 from Friends School. HCharley has been known to us for several years. In that time we haven't observed much change as regards personality; that, we hope never changes. Never a delver into the intricacies of campus politics, he is nevertheless a familiar figure on the campus. In him we lose a friend and n class-mate. Need we say more? A.I.E.E. 3, X; Bamslormerx 1, 9; Radio Club 4; Electrical Club 3, X; Scholarships I, 2, 3, 1,. ADDREsse 1743 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred forIy-six DANI EL WILFSON, JR. diEH Prc-Medicul Entered 1928 from Forest Park High School. HGive it to Wilfson has often been heard on the football sidelines indicating confidence in one ability of this many-sided young chap. hDanny has not only been actively interested in both football and track but he has succeeded in acquiring a successful scholastic record. His associates who number many are sure that he will carry forward in medicine as he has done in our midst. Football 1, 9, 3, 4; Major HH 4; Track 2,3,l,;114?1j0rH I 1,2,3,1; Varsity Club I, 2, 3, l; Spiked Shoe4. ADDRESS- Owings Mills, Maryland page one hundred forIy-smlen JAMES NELSON WITHERELL BGH Scabbard and Blade Business Economics Entered 1928 from Army-Navy Preparatory, Baltimore. When you see this broad shouldered he-man coming down the walk you just step aside. It's safe to suppose he's following in the footsteps of that famous Englishman whose name he bears, but no boats for him, 116,5 :1 land soldier. Johns Hopkins has been bencfitted in no small way by the presence of Iimmie and will miss him much, Assistant Manager Lacrosse I, 2; Assistant Buxiness Manager HUI.- LABALOO 2, 3; I nterfraternily Board 2, 3, 4; Cane Club 3, 1,; Major, R.0.T.C. 1,; Ojiccrs Club 1,. ADDRESS- Camp Holabird, Md. page one hundred forly-cight 'HH' THOMAS s. WOLLENBERG Chemical Engineering Entered 1929 from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. Sincerity of motive and word seems to symbolize best the career of a man like our HTommy. To know him is to realize that there is more to Tom than in the average student. His ideals have been crystallized in all his endeavors and the keeping of them should lead him to further success in the occupation to which he so firmly aspires. Editor Y News 2, 3; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet 2, 3. w 3 5; t 3;. r' m: :3 gt??? t '5? 117.2 .t .1 f -; 3: ' , 73 'R . '- bra 2; t '3' ADDRESS- 1734 N. Bond Street, Baltimore, Md. 3, AVAWMWVWAVM , V . ' ' page one hundred forly-nine HOWARD GRAHAM WOOD KDPA diBK Scabbard and Blade Arls and Sciences Entered 1928 from Cilman Country School. To be able to do many things is fine but to do them well is something else so let's doff the chapeau to Graham who has met with success, particularly in the line of dropping basketballs through the basket. The face of this likeable Chap will be greatly missed on the campus but nevertheless, here's to his future success! F reshman Foolball 1; F reshman Basketball 1; Class Football 9; Basketball 2, 3, 4. ADDREssh 400 VVoodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. page one hundred Jifly CHARLES YAVELOW thA Pre-Medical Entered 1929 from Fordham Uni- versity. - May we present in the likeable chap above, a Pre-Med, who although too busy for activities was nevertheless as well-known on the campus by virtue of his pleasant and affable personality as anyone. College to HCharlie was not an institution of pins, decorations and back-slapping but was on the other hand an opportunity to derive a cultural background for his pro- fessional future. More cannot be said of any one individual. Allow us to wish you all the luck in the world. ADDREss- Mt. Vernon, N. Y. page one hundred JifIy-one Senior Class History A period of retrospection has now been reached by the Class of 132. We are just bringing to a close one of the most important phases of our lives. The four years of undergraduate work at Hopkins is drawing to a finish. The most vital question right now iSehas it been worthwhile? Have we done anything during this time which will help to make us better individuals? By this we do not mean simply whether or not we have studied diligently. Although this is necessary, of course, yet there is more to be derived from Hopkins than the knowledge of books alone. The main objective is to have become better fitted for life. The back- ground of this preparation is knowledge, but built up around this background is a most vital framework consisting of the possession of diversified interests, an agreeable personality, a definite set of standards, and the ability to make the right kind of contacts. We reflect and our decision is made. What that decision is depends on the individual. Yet the vast majority of us decide that it has not all been in vain. Ilagc one hundred .MIy-Iwa g? THWWWWWEWKEV 33y Qywwwy nyxxyvlwxwxex :H We are proud of our school and proud of ourselves for making use of it. In the mental processes required for deciding this question, there pass before our eyes all the events of our college career. Like a brilliantly vivid motion picture, every detail comes before us. Four long years ago-there is a crowd of fellows standing in line, waiting to be officially welcomed to the University. A few days are spent in becoming accustomed to the campus and then comes an introduction to Hopkinsl ideals and background through the opening speech by President Ames. The Class of ,32 starts out in a fine manner. They immediately enter into the spirit of things and proceed to win exemption from Freshman regulations by beating the Sophomore Class in a fast and hotly contested lacrosse game and by cleverly outmaneuvering them in the Class Rush. The football game results in a disappointment, however, and is lost, partly due to some bad luck in decisions rendered by the referee. As Sophomores we strive to do our part in the pulling of the oars and to get men on athletic squads and boards of publications. As the year goes on, we attain a false sense of importance with lowly Freshman beneath us; and, during the banquet season, we try to make the first year men realize what regulations used to be like, with their beatings and rough-and-tumble Fights. Time rolls on and the third year commences. We now feel very definitely our status as upperclassmen, and the first two years of hard work is various fields begins to bear fruit. In addition, athletics start on the upward trend once more- a rather weak football season being followed by a series of good basketball games with the Kelly brothers as stars. The lacrosse season shows up some promising material; and, with a nucleus of veteran lettermen, a fairly successful season results, marred only by a disappointing loss to Maryland. The Barnstormers incor- porated a few girls into their cast and the result is so successful that a small pro- duction is given in the spring. The Cotillion Board secures Don Bestor for an Interfratemity Ball and June Week is made into :1 wonderful affair by having Guy Lombardo as the feature entertainer. And now we are in the final lap of the race-Seniors, resplendent with keys and chains, who have to carry on and whose turn it is to head the campus activities. Oscar Helm is President of the Student Council, and aggressively carries out AAAAAAALA page one hundred fifty-lhree VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVWHE his duties at the assembly every Thursday morning. 'The Black and Blue Jay changes its policy and becomes a more literary magazine. The finishing work of school approaches, after a good athletic season, and then comes the pre-com- mencement excitement. Now the scene shifts once more. Again we are about to embark on an un- known sea. To some of us will come the task of further study in advanced lines, while others will have to engage in the battle of life itself. Yet we have few fore- bodings as to our future success. We firmly believe that we have received a training that will prove exceedingly beneficial. We enter into our new line of activity courageously and unafraid in the true spirit of a Hopkinsl gentleman. Then mark what ill: the scholar': life 455417, Tail, envy, want, the future and the jail. m l VAAAAAAAAA page one hundred Iifly-four Juniors yx Wywai 3w; Witty ml MCCABE C. KELLY COCKEY Vite-Pruidmt Pruidmt l Secremry DAVIS HUGH ES Treasurer Strgmm-at-Arm: History of the Junior Class In reminiscing over the three years gone by, both memories ofjoy and sorrow are brought to our minds. But as Tennyson puts it,- uThis is truth the poet sings, That a sorrows' crown of sorrow is remembering happier things. No one can but remember their day at college. Tales and stories of every description had for many years come to us about college life, every one of which helped to whet our imagination and curiosity as to what it is all about. There was a period of great expecta- tion. Some of our conceptions we are to prove true. Others were soon to be forgotten. We then started attending classes with the full seriousness of a Freshman only to be dislodged from this noble intention within a week or so by fraternity rushing and all the excitement that comes therewith. By the end of the month each fraternity had done its share trying to show why it was the best. Meanwhile, the Freshman football aspirants worked hard almost every night in building up a team. Moreover, their efforts were not in vain, and, not only did they win several games with outside schools, but also they furnished us with one of our fondest memories by their victory in the Freshman- Sophomore game. The Freshman also began showing their ability in other lines of endeavor. The Barn- stormers gave us quite a task that year by causing us to give three plays before the regular practice season started. Many members of the Class of' 33 did very well in the play of the year, IFI Were King, some of the main roles being taken by Freshmen. WW page one hundred jfly-six The Junior Class 1n debating, the Freshmen also excelled. They won the Freshman-Sophomore debate and a Freshman won the De Toqueville Medal. We continued throughout the year with little more chance to show our true lclass spirit due to the lack of Freshman regulationsafor better or for worse. The banquet season provided an ample outlet for the spirits which had been stored up all year. Numerous free-For-all battles, accompanied by bloody noses and tom clothes Got the most part R.O.T.C. uniformsl formed a common portion of campus life. After spending four months at home, we came hack to school, having gained a little more ofthat air of self-assurance and also a little more Ofthe spirit of friendship. lt was a wonder- ful feeling to meet all the old pals once more, and to discuss the adventures of the past summer. One great disappointment for many was that this year all the fraternity men were going to have to wait until the second term to paddle the pledges for this was the first year of the new second semester rushing rule. The banquet season was met with the same enthusiasm as the year before, and the same degree Ofsportsmanship was shown. The battles were rather one sided as the Freshmen outnumbered the Sophomores about three to one. Thus we passed our second year. A few more dropped out, while others, due to excel- lence in scholastic ability, soared above us. However, the majority of us came back this year with the determined purpose of Fulfilling the station of a Junior. Many of the members of the class were now possessed of high positions in various campus affairs. We believe that we carried out our duties in a manner that was both fitting and proper: Now we pass out of the realm of dreams into that of realities. We pass from thoughts of the past to hopes for the future. We are looking With great expectation once more to the future. We realize full well the responsibilities we must necessarily assume along with the title of Senior, but we assume gladly and with full confidence that we will carry on in a manner suitable to the ttaditions of this University. 4 page one hundred jifly-scvcn 9 3'me Harry toohey . POPU 0r 'uniors .4 Kn u'imm ;' hind? V 9,qu 0 J y . page one hundred ,Mly-cighl Sophomores IJ TAYMAN CURTRIOHT STERN Vict-Pruia'mt Pruident Suretary D. KELLY CARTER Tmzmrer SergeanI-aI-Arm: History of the Sophomore Class September, 1930, three hundred youths, with only the choice of a college in common, entered the portals of the Hopkins. Exceedingly llgreen and innocent, as all Freshman are, the Class of '34 gathered impetus for the history, which today justifies a feeling of pride by any of her members. Delving, enthusiastically, into Hopkins life, the Class of 34 made her- self a vital factor academically, athletically, and in an extra-curricular manner. The same body of three hundred youths, that entered September, 1930, became by June, 1931, a body of well organized, cooperative college men. They had met the tests and proven their in- tegrity academically, socially and athletically. Probably the greatest laurel of our classl achievements is the opportunity it has provided by the common bond of class-mates to form friendships whose continuity will long exist when Hopkins days are a thing of the past for us of 134. On the athletic Held, our prowess is well evident. The eHorts of our class-mates have aided considerably in writing the name of Hopkins on the annual of sport history. The position of ngkins in the national lacrosse situation, we feel, is partly due to the unfaltering support of the Class of 34. We are righteouSly proud of those in our number who have been successful athletically. h VAAAAAAAAA tage one hundred sixty The Sophomore Class We have been no lessinfiuentiul in the quieter pursuit of non-athletic activities than in sports. The activity does not exist which has not strongly felt the influx of the Class 0f 34. Particularly noticeable have been those Sophomores who swing hammer and brush, to say nothing of pen and pencil for the Bnrnstormers, us it is no inconsiderable addition to our record that these men have made. In the Musical Club, the Sophomores continued the good work of achieving prominence by the excellence of their performance. The publications, staffs, too, have been quick to recognize the abilities of our members. In the eHorts of the latest Debating Council for renewed vigor and support by the campus, Sophomores have been playing an important part even to the point ofcontributing to Hopkins international recogni- tion in the Oxford Debate. The latest of undergraduate activities, the Chess Club owes its existence largely to our cluss-mates. We are well represented in every campus group from the greatest to the smallest, but in the end it is not these things that give us our claim to distinction. The criterion which designates 21 classis worth is the spirit and organization behind its own activities. Banquet seasons have for time past stood as the test of a class, and for two years we have made banquet season history. We have shown ourselves as scrappers and strategists of the first order, and we, it was, who so completely surprised our immediate predecessors by adding our banquet season to the chronicles of our countryis naval history. We feel, however, that the best is yet to come. June, 1932, is the halfway mark of the Class of ,34. Let,s hope that the next two years will exhibit the same Comradeship, sports- manship, character, scholastic ability, and athletic integrity shown by those just past! page one hundred :iny-onc he;1ny beeler- popular page one hundred siny-lwo Freshmen ADAMS Iv as ORTH V ite-Pruia'ml Prt: idem Secretary M UNDZ WHITE Trmmrtr Sergeanl-aI-rlrms History of the Freshman Class When an individual enters into a new environment, there must necessarily be a period Of reconstruction and acclimation. There must pass a certain length of time in which he must make careful observations of the functions of the group or surroundings, so that he may prepare himself to be a proper constituent of it. Perhaps the situations that he has to deal with are vastly different from the ones he has previously encountered, or perhaps there will be only a slight change. In either case there is a call for a complete readjustment and re- organization of his ideas and perhaps of his ideals. This change must come about deliberately and consciously. While the greater portion of the necessary knowledge is ordinarily gained independently, nevertheless, some external aid is often required. The present Freshman class was no exception to the rule. It did not immediately become a coordinate branch of the undergraduate organization, working smoothly and harmoniously. Several weeks passed before its members attained the feeling that they were really an integral part of the student body. The sensation of being alone in the midst of a vast throng was clearly impressed in the minds of the entering students during the long wait in the registera- tion line. Cognizant of nothing except of signing numerous papers and handing out quite a bit of money, the Freshman wondered what it was all about. Many of the members attended Freshman Camp where they received a slight perception of life at Hopkins This was in- stilled in them through the medium of orations by several men of consequence on the campus. The chief purpose of the camp was to enable the Freshmen to become better acquainted with one another. Although it is admitted that the camp has its worthwhile features, apprecia- tion of it was not heightened by the inclement weather. Later there were held several as- semblies at which school traditions were explained. Here there was impressed upon the class the significance of the honor system as it is employed at Hopkins. They were further informed by Dean Berry that the fundamental purpose of the University is to develop gentlemen. At first there seemed to be a lack of school spirit and there arose some agitation nglvifvrMSMMi Adah Page one hundred sixly-four The Freshman Class for Freshmen regulations, but this soon died out. The class took :1 large part in :1 little pre- game quarrel with the students ofSt. Johnls College. . Moreover, in the service of this worthy cause quite :1 few Freshmen not only endured physical discomfort but :tlso were forced to spend several hours enclosed in the cheerful atmosphere of the AnnapoliSJail. At an early assembly the class was organized and the oHicers were elected. The dominant factor at the election appeared to be the political activity of several groups of graduates of local preparatory schools. The oFFlcers proved to be competent and were successful in main- taining an eHiCient organization throughout the year. Although the necessary functions of the body were not of :1 great number, they appeared to be well planned and managed. Many of the Freshmen sought positions in the various activities on the campus. They were liberally represented on all of the athletic teams. Some had experience in certain sports, having previously starred at various high schools, and had only to transfer their abilities to the field of collegiate activity. Others came out inexperienced and with only the will to do their best in an effort to win :1 position which would elevate them to the status of :1 representative of the school. In many of the latter, latent abilities were discovered, which, under proper coaching, developed to :1 state of great prowess. Others, who were musically inclined, sought positions in the band. Those with dramatic ability devoted themselves to the Barnstormers, while others performed worthwhile work for the literary productions. To win a position on these activities was no easy task. All the candidates, of course, could not be successful. It was :1 perfect example of the survival of the fittest. Ability had to be proved. Certain tasks had to be accmnplished before the goal was reached, but the reward certainly was worth the effort. The end of the Freshman year has been reached successfully by most of the class. It was :1 long trail and :1 hard one, beset by many pitfalls. There was :1 period ofvirtually wandering arouhd in :1 fog, an event which has occurred year after year. To find the right trail seemed :1 diHicult task for :1 time. In the individual there were periods of what amounted to despair, and in the group there were periods of stagnnncy. Yet the class had :1 clearly defined goal in view. They had :1 purpose and were determined to accomplish it. Just like the classes in the past, they emerged from the stage ofdoubt :md hesitation, found the beaten path, and proved themselves as capable us their predecessors. Mgr om: Izmulml xixly-jizm ' ' Raradise?-thm leave ' . ,tlzee, nativ? soil, time ; . . , ' happy walk: and 1 madam ' - VNTH LETICS COACH page onc hundred siny-nim: TURNBULL GOLDBERG KAHI. KELLY HANHART JOHNSON WATTS GUTMAN H E LM JUNG FR l'IY Athletic Association Board OSCAR L. HELM Praxidcrlt CHARLES JUNO Vicc-Prexirlml l. CYRUS GUTMAN Secretary DR. RAY VAN ORMAN Director of xillzlctim HENRY InmNs Eminent; Manager M EM BERS Foolbrtll Lacrosse Brukelball 7371M HELM TURNBULI. C. KELLY GU'FMAN VVAT'I'S KAHI. W. Fiu-jv JUNO Crow Colmlry Tmnix Swimming Rifl'c' Studwzl Council JUNG GOLDBERG HANHART JOHNSON HELM Until last year the Athletic Association, which regulated the General Athletic Associa- tion, was made up of men elected by the Undergraduate Student Body. In the spring 0f1929 a ruling was passed radically changing the membership of the Board. In compliance with this change, the present Board is made up of the managers and captains of the major sports, and one member from each minor sport elected by the letter men of that sport. The business of this Association is to make Varsity Letter Awards, to aid in the securing of coaches and to hack all moves for the development and betterment of sports at the Uni- versity. Time has demonstrated conclusively that the change inaugurated last year in the make- up of this Board, was :1 wise one. The present Board is :1 much more representative one and has been able to deal more fairly and wisely with the problems with which it has been con- fronted. 1mm: 0m: Inmdrcd scvcnly CHASSIN WATTS TURNINJLI. HERGER ILKIZI.I.Y STONE C.KI-ILI.Y 'l'.RUSSliL MERRIKEN CALDWELL LEVY GOLDBERG SIEGAI. KAHL Bl-ZI-ZH-Zk PERRY wm-zxs ram! DORMAN cocxlw REID WILFSUN GU'I'MAN PACKARD STUDF. WEITZEI. llIALOSKOKSKI GUILD HICLM JUNG KNIEIP NESS The Varsity Club LORNE R. GUILD Pracin'mt WILLIAM H. TRIPI.E'I r Vicc-Prmidmt R0 NA LD B. LE v Y Scrrctary- THVIIHI'KF The Varsity Club was organized at Hopkins in 1926 and is composed of all under- graduates and alumni who have won their major ii Hls. The primary purpose of the Varsity Club is the fostering of all athletic enterprises at the Hopkins. It further acts as a bond between the undergraduate and graduate athletes of the University and brings the member- ship of this large group into closer relationship with one another. One of the main functions of the Varsity Club is the reception and entertainment of all members of visiting teams from out 0ft0wn. Small committees are formed and each assigned to take care ofcettain stipulated visiting groups. Through this medium a great work is being accomplished, and through the working of this group more friendly relations are being built up between the athletes of the Hopkins and those ofother colleges and universities. During the past two years the Club has developed from a state of lethargy into one of activity and usefulness, and it has started upon the path that its founders intended it should follow. page one hundred strwnly-mlc ; .qu, 4 J A' ' 5'9nylt$9r: !!;,'1;7- . : $A:$ ' . .191! g 1 .- 1 ,1-.. .4 . 49.41.31 Football TURNBVLL KELLY REID page one hundred scwnly-Iwo 'fAAAAAIQ-AAAA Caplm'n HELM Coaclz VAN ORMAN Manager W A'rvrs It has been several years since Hopkins has had the good fortune of being represented on the gridiron by a winning football team. In fact, the elevens during the past two or three seasons had been so mediocre, that rumors arose t0 the effect that the board of directors and the faculty of the Hopkins were in favor of abolishing the sport from our extra-curricular activities. This autumn, pre-season forecasts of the Black and Blue team,s prospects were as gloomy as ever. Very little good material remained from last year; and the newcomers showed no signs of being capable varsity gridders. Again Coach Van Orman was confronted with the task of forming an aggressive combination out of a squad of green but willing players. JOHNS HOPKINS GeWAsmNG'rON COLLEGE 0 After three weeks of training, Hopkins opened its season on October 3 with Washington College at Homewood field. This battle turned out to be a typical opening season affair. Both teams played a sluggish game defensively and oPr'ensively. The Jays blocked poorly, and lost several opportunities to tally by fumbling at critical moments; while the Chester- towners played an entirely too conservative game, seeming to rely more on breaks than upon the ability of their ball carriers. With the opening of the second half, the Black and Blue team suddenly burst forth with a rush that resulted in Hopkins, first and only score of the game. From the Jays, forty yard line, Don Kelly ran to the Blackis thirty-eight marker, caught a pretty pass by Rey- nolds, and raced down to the four yard line. At this point, the Jay backfield gave an exhibi- tion of fumbling that must have added to Coach Van Ormanis disillusionment. Three mis- cues set the crowd frantic; but on the fourth play TiBilly Reid squirmed over for the winning touchdown. Weeks missed the try for the extra point. Although Hopkins had opened its season with a 6-0 victory, the chances of keeping a clean slate could only be answered with a great big question mark; the team lacked precision in teamplay; the backfield seemed entirely too light to get anywhere; and the reserve strength was none too good. page one hundred seventy-threc JOHNS HOPKINS zo-LEHIGH 12 With the Lehigh game coming on next, Hopkins naturally was conceded little chance of winning. The Brown and White always had a heavy qut team in the past, and this year's aggregation gave all indications of being as strong as ever. However, Conch Van Orman realized the futility of teaching his pony backfield line-play as a scoring weapon; and instead, he devoted the practice sessions to perfecting :1 strong passing attack. His hunch worked perfectly. Right after the kickoH, the Jays opened with a barrage of foreward passes that caught Lehigh completely Hat- f'ooted. The latter's aerial defense was poor, and before the Brown and White could master the Jay heaves, Hopkins had rung up 20 points during the first twenty-five minutes of play. But Lehigh refused to give up. The big Brown team kept pounding at the Black and Blue line until they were able to tally twelve points in the last quarter. Then the Jay forwards stiffened and retained their 20-12 lead, to chalk up their second victory in as many contests. JOHNS HOPKINS 24eSWAR'rHM0RE 7 On October 16, the Black and Blue played its first night game of the season against Swarthmore, and made a gala affair of it. This game turned out to be by far the Jays most perfectly played game of the season. Their plays were magnificently executed; and thus TTPete Reynolds and Don Kelly were able to dash for long runs by line thrusts or by receiving accurate forward passes from the able whip of Henry Beehler. The latter, in particular, deserves a world of praise. This was his first start as a page one hundred scwnly-four regular, having replaced uJack Turnbull, who was out with an injured knee. Likewise, the Hopkins defense, which had seemed so unreliable in the past two contests, gave its first creditable performance. Swarthmoreis line plays were completely bottled up; and, had it not been for one beautiful forty yard pass, Funke to Sipler, the Black and Blue goal would have been uncrossed. As it was, the Hopkins gridders finished the day with a well-earned 24-7 victory. JOHNS HOPKINS zoeS'r. JOHNhS 13 This clean victory placed the local team in a perfect state of mind for its next contest with an ancient rival, St. Johns From the standpoint of games won, the jays were the overwhelming favorites. HOPKINS had not been defeated, while the Johnnies had scored but a single victory out of three contests; hut, in a spirited battle of this type, past records mean nothing. After sixty minutes ofheart-throhbing play, the Black and Blue eleven trounced the Annapolitans 20-13 for the first time in three years. Despite the close score, Hopkins turned out to he a far superior team than St. John's. During the first half the Black and Blue scored almost at will. Don Kelly, Hopkins quarterback, mixed his plays beautifully; Reynolds was skirting through tackle for long gains; and Beehler was shooting beautiful passes. As a re- sult, theJays piled up a 20-0 lead during the first halfalone. The advantage, however, gave Hopkins an over- conf'idential feeling which proved almost disastrous. As the second quarter was drawing to a close, a Johnnie linc- man broke through, blocked :1 Jay punt 0n Hopkins' page mu' hundred winly-fiw IJ 33:: 71mm :5. J. thirty yard line, retrieved it, and dashed for a touchdown. Score: Hopkins 20; St. John,s 7. On the first play of the third quarter, Captain Oscar Helm was dazed and had to be removed from the game. This temporarily disheartened Hopkins, and the Orange and Black made use ofthe psychological advantage. Lynch tossed a forty yard pass to B. Cassassa that caught the Jays Hatfooted. The result was another Johnny touch- down; and that was our rivan last one. Hopkins tightened its defense considerably. Ron Levy, Phillips, and Yearley smeared everything. Result: Hopkins won, 2w13. JOHNS HOPKINS Ig-HAVERFORD o The next two duels turned out to be pushovers. A reserve Jay backHeld trounced Haverford, 19-0. The whole Hopkins squad contributed in annihilating American University, 61-0 JOHNS HOPKINS o-WESTERN MARYLAND 40 With a record of six scalps in the bag, the Black and Blue was ready to take on another state foe in Western Maryland; but the consequence was disastrous. The Terrors ran roughshod over :1 Jay team that never had a chance. Everything the former used was successful. JonesT or DoughtyTs passes rarely missed their mark, while Bolton's long runs were one of the outstanding features of the game. With such an advantage, Western Maryland had little diHiculty in piling up a 40-0 score against our team. JOHNS HOPKINS I4--MARYLAND 35 As Thanksgiving rolled around, and another Mary- land game in sight, the Black and Blue was determined M W page one hundred scvcnIy-six upon redeeming itself by conquering the Terrapins. The fates, however, decreed otherwise. Maryland was reputed to have one of the finest teams it had had in a decade; and when that team got going, it certainly looked it. At the end of the first half a Terp eleven composed mostly of substitutes was leading the Jays 14-7. In the second half Marylandis regular backfield was injected and had little diFFiculty in adding to its total with Berger and Poppleman shining. For Hopkins, the only bright feature was Don Kelly's eighty yard run from a kickoPF in the last quarter. The thrill came when he faked a lateral to his right and shot to his left, running to Marylandhs seven yard line, where Poppleman nailed him. On the next play, Beehler shot a pass to Ives for the Jays last touchdown. The final score: Maryland 35; Hopkins 14. This game concluded the football career of Captain Helm, center, who made this year's first All-Marylzmd team; and the career of Adam Bioloskorski, who clinched :1 tackle post on the second mythical eleven. Other Jays who graduate are Turnbull and Wilfson in the backfield; and Levy, Weitzel and Guild on the line. Despite the fact the this yeaHs eleven completed its season with two defeats, the team is still deserving of praise. The conquests by Maryland and Western Mary- land were not due to breaks, but to the superior calibre of these opponents. Had they been in our class, the story would undoubtedly have been a difTerent one. Considering the handicaps resulting from the lack of experienced first string men and reserve strength, Coach Van Orman and his staH'must be complimented for turning out a team that performed as well as did the eleven of 1931. A A A A A A A A 53V' i M :1 i. 171315; : . TiiadtinyiuW ; ' page one hundred scvcnIy-scven Basketball With prospects brighter than they had appeared in years, it seemed at the outset that the Jay court season would he one of- the most successful in Hopkins' brief basketball history. Coach Datley was more than pleased with the outlook, since but one regular had failed to return to the squad. The initial turnout exceeded the fondest hopes of the coach as far as numbers were con- cerned. It, however, failed to produce more than one man who appeared to he varsity material. Harold Camitta, a New York prep school athlete, soon won for himself a varsity post at center, by his clever Hoot play and accurate shooting. g. RUSSELL D. KELLY c. KECLY CAMITTA 'SIEGEL page one hundred smmnly-cighl Capmin KELLY Caarlz DARLm' Manager FRi-zv Coach Darley lined up a strong aggregation, with Don Kelly and Nate Silverman at guards, Camitta at center, and Caleb Kelly and Artie Siegle as forwards. It was this combina- tion that appeared the most formidable ofthose possible with the material available, and that was sent against Temple University in the Jays opening tilt at Philadelphia. Less than ten days practice proved insufficient to coordinate the obvious power of the Jay line-up, and the Philadelphians defeated the Jays by a score of37-32. The game served its purpose, as do most openers, in indicating the errors to be corrected and the general weakness of play. On January 2, Hopkins fans were treated to a real thriller as a taste of what the home club could do. The Jays trounced Loyola 42-41 in one of the season's fastest games. The game, in part, made up for the two point defeat that the Evergreen tram meted out to the Hopkins team last year. Loyola sank a two pointer as the whistle blew, but the referee ruled the play no goal and the Jays chalked up their first win. A little later on, Hopkins made a disastrous trip to the North. On January 8, the Blue team came to grips with Long Island University. During the set-to, Camitta received a leg injury that was to prevent his appearing as a regular for the remainder of the season. The absence of the Freshman center was keenly felt by the Jays, and their hosts came from behind to eke out a 32-30 victory. The following day the Jays encountered the Cadets at West Point. The weakened Jays gave the future generals a real battle, with a revised line-up. Don Kelly went to center and 'i Ed Russell was paired with Nate Silverman at guard. Without the accurate shooting of Camitta, the Jay attack fell short of its usual quota of points, and the game ended with Army on the long end of a 35-27 count. The Blue staged a ucomeback in the second half which, however, failed to overcome the comfortable lead of the Cadets. Returning home, the Jays led by Don Kelly, swamped Washington College 32422. Kelly's work at center featured the fray as he accounted for 21 of his teanfs total points. Coach Darley's new line-up was beginning to click. The work of Russell and Silverman had he- come a treat for even the most critical fan. Russell was developing, with surprising rapidity, into a fine guard. The University of Maryland brought the Jays their first defeat on home grounds. The Terrapin attack was a little superior to that of the Jays and College Parkers made their seven page out hundred scmme-ninc point margin from seventeen free throws granted them on fouls. The Hoor work of Nate Silverman and his accurate shooting featured the Blue play. TTBozy Berger was, as usual, the big gun in the Terp,s attack and defense. With mid-years'passed tor otherwisei, Hopkins again broke into the win column with a decisive victory over Western Maryland. The Jays led throughout the tilt, and only during the last half did they show any concern over the outcome of the game. It was late in the second half that the attack of Hurley, Terror guard, caused the Jays to tighten their defense. The game ended with Hopkins rooters content with a 35-29 victory. Then came the Johnnie tilt. The Crabtowners were out for blood. Defeated in football, they had to redeem themselves. Every play of the game was close. Each team seemed afraid to take the necessary chances to win. Lotz, giant Johnnie guard, led his team during the first half, accounting for six points. At half time the Jays held a 12-10 advantage. Then began a nip and tuck struggle, with the Jays never headed but often tied. As the game drew to a close, a bargain game featuring an overtime period loomed up for the fans. Countless Jay shots ringed and rimmed the apparently charmed basket, in those last few minutes, with a score 18 all. Suddenly McCartee, Johnnie forward, seized a Heal .. Hopkins rebound and headed for his goal. Russell was on :3; him in a Hash and the two raced to the Johnnie basket. 3' . As they arrived, Russell's desperate attempt to prevent a g score, was called a foul. At the same moment the final E533. whistle blew. The rest is history. McCartee missed his 7 i first shot but the second dropped through without touching the rim. What a Game! The loss to St. John's was an ill omen. From that game to the close of the season, the Jays failed to gain another victory. It seemed that just as the Jays were overcoming the Jinx, that occasioned the loss of Camitta,, the Hoodo returned to bar Nate Silverman from play. P 33 The loss of the diminutive guard was :1 terrific blow to the Jay defense. On their next journey they were defeated by Washington College. The game was :1 ludicrous nFFair, with the two Kelly brothers sharing the two field goals that Hopkins made The Shoremen netted four field goals and an aggregate of 17 points to top the jays by four points. Hard luck con- tinued to hound the Jays, us they invaded Westminster. Don Kelly was claimed by sickness on the eve of the return tilt with Western Maryland. Captain Caleb Kelly and Artie Siegel were the remnants of the original Jay five, for whom the sezlsorfs prospects seemed so bright. The Terrors trounced the crippled Jays 25-19. Returning home the Jays were swamped by Loyola 37-24. The Jays were no match for the strong Greyhound aggregation, despite the gallant work of Fritz Stude, Brooke, and Cnmittzl, who took up the work of the absentetl regulars. Sentiment is rarely appropriate in sports accounts, but in the case of these men who stepped in to carry on for those who had to ulet go, their actions can only be described as gallant. Maryland scored am easy victory over the Jays, in their new basketball palace. The score stood 38e25 after forty minutes of none-too-interestingr basketball. The Jays closed their rather disastrous season by bowing again to St. Johns However, the rej uvenated Jays surprised the Johnnies by holding them to a 15 all tie at the end of the first half. Similarly the first part of the second half was a nip and tuck affair, but in the closing minutes of. play the frantic Crzlbtowners put on a new burst of speed and chalked three or four goals in quick succession to win by 21 score of 34ei3. Throughout a fruitless season, the Jays kept up :1 praiseworthy fighting spirit. In the face of unavoidable reverses they maintained that indomitable spitt that has characterized Hopkins through the years that have slipped by. page one hundred eiglzty-mte Lacrosse fiiv '. . I gm 4 . .e f rx 5:. . f : S ' 4 i a ,. W W , NESS n. .- 1x YEAKLEV TUENBULL I. .1 RI 2 Cap?- , ' . 47 . Q' WWEH'ZEL 373i 5512th f $ 4m .KNEJP . A 4 STONE w GUILD LANG page one hundred eighly-two Capmin TURNHULL Coarll VAN ORMAN Manager KAHI. In 1928 Johns Hopkins possessed the cream of lacrosse crops in this country. Con- sequently when the time came to select the representative in this sport for the International Olympics of that year, the Jay twelve was the logical choice. The team went to Amsterdam and performed admirably. The opponents which it encountered were far more experienced individually and had played together as a team longer than the average college team does. Nevertheless the Black and Blue twelve put up a brand of playing sufficiently strong to place the United States representatives in a triple tie with Canada and England. 1932 has rolled around and it is time for another Olympic contest. Again it seems in- evitable that the Olympic representative will come from this state. The reason for this is due to the fact that the Old Indian game has taken deeper root in this state than in any other section of the country. Consequently not only the colleges but the preparatory schools go in strong for lacrosse. Thus many state colleges are fortunate in obtaining well coached material. This year when Coach Van Orman issued the first call for candidates, he was greeted by a squad larger and perhaps more competent than any that has as yet turned out. In the first place the number of veterans returning from last years team was unusually large. Practi- cally all of the regulars of 1931 were still on hand. Among the missing were ex-captain Joe Bernard, Frank Cone, and Ned Dukehart. The latter, though eligible scholastically and still a student at the Hopkins, was unable to come out this year due to a fractured leg resulting from a severe accident. page one hundred cigth-lhrec Those on the attack who returned were uCabbage Darrell, Don and Caleb Kelly, Captain Jack Turnbull, Bill Triplett, bDoug Stone, Lorne Guild, uBill Sneeringer, Henny Beeler, George Packard, and Randy Cockey. On the defense the number on hand was almost as great. Among them were Millard Lang, Fritz Stude, Bill Weitzel, Moco Merriken, bSonny Kneip, Church Yearly, and Rowly Ness who had recovered from an injured knee suffered toward the end of last season. Yet with so much 01d material still available, the problem of selecting the best 1932 combination turned out to be more complex than would be expected under the existing conditions. Although the Jays had a brilliant season last year, the defensive part of the team was not as strong as the attack. Secondly, of all the new men on hand very few of them came out for defensive positions. Those who did, hardly proved worthy of much considera- tion and in no way equalled those of last seasons team. Thus it was necessary to make defensive men out of those on hand, be they former defense or attack men. The problem turned out to be a diHicuIt one. At the writing of this article, the solution to the most powerful defensive line-up has not been found. The first experiment found Ives and Grochmal, two new men, playing second defense and cover point respect- ively. Both of these men had been former attack men and consequently they found dimculty in acclimating them- selves. page one hundred eigth-four The coaches, however, did not believe that either man was sufficiently seasoned for a regular defensive post and they were accordingly replaced by two other men. In their place were sent Bill Weitzel and llMoco Mer- riken of last yearls team. Likewise Churchll Yearly, a sub last year, was temporarily placed at hrst defense in place of Rowly Ness. With all these changes taking place it is difficult to say at the time of this writing just what the real line-up is going to be. In the Swarthmore game uPete Reynolds started at cover point. This is the first year that Reynolds has ever played lacrosse and although he possesses a world of speed his stick-work up to date has not been very polished. Should he prove suHiciently competent to hold down a regular position the coaching still? will deserve praise for their find. The selection of our OHense has not been so com- plicated. Last seasonls crop was so competent that there seemed little need to look for better material. The coach- ing staff found it more advisable to allow last year's first offense, which included Captain Turnbull, Darrell, D. Kelly, Guild, Beeler, and Stone, to carry on. Thus this group was afforded the opportunity of developing one of the smoothest and best shooting combinations that has ever represented Hopkins. The Jays opened the season with the Varsity Club. Booking the hrst contest with this team is gradually becoming a traditional affair. The Club was formed by the members of the Hopkins twelve .of 1928. Even this year the team that took the field against the Hopkins page one hundred eighly-jive , am x twelve was practically the same one that had taken the field against Canada and England at Amsterdam in 1928. With opposition getting weaker as the battle raged on, the Hopkins 1932 team found little diHiculty in penetrating its opponenUs goal to win its first game of the season, 14-3. Despite the wide margin of victory, the game could not be considered :1 criterion tojudge Hopkins' ability. After the first fifteen minutes the Varsity Club showed signs of being in poor physical condition. Consequently about all the Jays had to do was to out run their opponents to score. Had it not been for the brilliant stops 0f goalie Kesmodel, of the Varsity Club, the score would have been much higher. With an easy decision in sight, Coach Van Orman constantly sent in replacements. Thus the spectators were agorded very little opportunity of seeing a regular Jay team. From the very start of the game the Jay defense functioned poorly and the attack itself did not show the speed and accuracy in shooting that it had showed last year. The first Hopkins goal of the season was made in a dramatic fashion. uJack Turnbull cut in front of the opponentls goal, received one of Guildls accurate passes and viciously heaved in a shot that stopped only when it struck the net. After this, practically every Jay regular attack man accounted for a goal before leaVing the game. The second contest of the season turned out to be a riotous affair. City College of New York presented a team that had nothing but brute strength. Despite the fact that the game took place in a raging downpour, the handful of spectators saw a Jay attack pile up a 14-1 victory. The page one hundred eighty-six Black and Blue defense spent most of the afternoon watch- ing their team-mates do the dirty work. With two easy contests to its credit the Hopkins stickmen figured on encountering a strong opponent in Swarthmore. However, the Maroons proved to be no match, with the result that another scalp was added by means of a 17-3 victory. The outstanding star of the contest was Lorne Guild. Of the four years that he has played on the team, he has devoted most of his efforts to feeding the ball and to backing up shots. In this duel he went on a shooting spree and within twenty-five minutes shot six goals. How- ever, he was ably assisted by the accurate passing from hJack Turnbull. The remainder of this seasonis contests have not been completed and we are necessarily unable to term this lacrosse season a success or a failure at the present moment. However, at the rate that the team has been piling up points, it is probable that it possesses another onense as strong as any in the country. Of the defense there is still some doubt as to its strength and possibilities. Due to the weak opposition encountered so far it has not had an opportunity to show its capabilities. On those few oc- casions in which it did have to function, the defense was very erratic. At times plays were bottled up nicely, while on other occasions were very poorly handled. Perhaps a few more contests will supply the tonic to remedy the Situation. Those graduating this year are Captain Jack Turnbull and Lorne Guild attack men; and Bill Weitze1, Rowly Ness, and Sonny'l Kneip, on the defense. page one hundred eighty-Seven a i 4. : i, . f; Track DOEMAN g M WILFSON page one hundred eigth-eighl Capmiaz JUNO Cami: HAMBI.ETON Manager GUTMAN Few coaches have faced an athletic season with less material than did Coach Waldo Hambleton, Hopkins track mentor, at the outset of the 1932 cinder season. Around a nucleus of only six lettermen, the thinclad team had to be built from meagre supply of apparently inexperienced men, who did not appear to be especially world beaters. Among the deep felt losses from the 1931 team were Lockard, 1931 captain, Linck, Coburn, Burk, Quirk, Verlin, Zepp, and Hancock all consistent point winners on the 1931 aggregation. Such was the condition with which Coach Hambleton had to cope, at the outset of the 1932 season. Ideal weather, occuring soon after the examinations, lured the aspirants to early practice in February. Green material was plentiful, but only five letter wearers reported at the initial practice. Captain Jung, Dorman, Caldwell, Chassin, and Perry represented the previous year's varsity. The fickleweather man could not long provide track weather in February, and cold and rainy days followed. Conditioning in such weather proved a diH-lcult task. Attendance at practices fell off miserably. Coach Hambletonls worries were aggrevated by the early Easter holidays that took a number of promising men home. At this time prospects bright- ened considerably when Wilfson, a veteran of three years, reported for practice. It began to be evident that the Freshmen were going to provide an unexpected source of strength for the Jay Tracksters. Willard Neu, Tome School star sprinter and jumper, began to show a great deal of promise both in the 100 and 220, as well as the broad jump. Bryan and Hopkins, hurdler and middle-distance men respectfully, from Poly showed promise, and page um: hundred uigth-nine , t' memsa . Holtzman, a cross-country man was proving a good run- ning mate for Lewis in the two mile. Bad weather continued to hamper work even to the eve of the opening meet with Swarthmore. The Pennsy- lvanians boasted a three year dominance over the Jays in track and with such a hard meet so early in the season, little hope of 21 Hopkins victory was entertained. I The Jays proved the better muddersi in the meet with the Garnet, nosing out the visitors by four points, with the most of Homewood Field under two inches of water. The final score was 65e61 in favor of the Black and Blue. Due to the adverse conditions of the ground the Blue team sustained two injuries. Chassin, in winning the ii 100 in the fine time of 10.2 seconds, pulled a muscle in his leg while Wil Neu received a bad bruise on his heel in taking first place in the broad jump by reason of his jumping 20 feet 6 inches. uBig Bill Dorman accounted for eleven of the teams points and led the field in point gathering, by virtue of wins in the shotput and the discus throw, and a third place in the javelin throw. Captain Jung, Chassin and Perry each earned eight points towards the teamis aggregate. Neu, Hopkins, and Holtzman, Freshmen, won their first varsity competitions, much to the satisfaction of the Jay supporters. Favored to win handily from the Bullets, the Jays more than lived up to expectations in trouncing the Pennsylvanians 78w-47M in a one sided meet at Home- page one hundred m'mtly wood. Though the Jinx that kept Wilfson out of competi- tion with Swarthmore claimed three regulars for the Gettysburg meet, the remainder of the squad out-ran itself to swamp the invaders. Bittinger, Chassin, and Perry were out of the meet with pulled muscles. The Freshmen members of the squad figured strongly in the defeat of the Bullets. The yearlings took three firsts and as many second places. Coach Hambleton was more than pleased with this rather remarkable showing, and began to view the future with more optimism. Having displayed a wealth of power in winning its first two meets, the Blue track team was confident of continuing their success during the remainder of the season. As we go to press, Delaware University looms as a stumbling blotk to the Jaysl undefeated march. The next opponents boast one of the strongest teams in recent years. At the end of the season Captain Jung, Caldwell, Dorman, Wilfson, Bittinger, and Perry all veterans of three or more campaigns, will have run their last races for Hopkins. The loss of these men will be sorely felt, and it is only the obvious strength of the Freshman group that offers any consolation to Coach Hambleton. The apparent hopelessness of a successful season for the Jay thinclads in 1932 has disappeared and both veterans and newcomers look forward to the remainder of the season as an oppor- tunity for track, as a major sport, to stage a come-back. page one hundred niner-one i IJ I April 23 Delaware.......... vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvx Track Schedule April 9 Swarthmore.... April I6 Gettysburg April 29 Haverford April 30 Penn Relay: May 7 Maryland...... May 13 Middle States May 21 Catholic University ...................................... page one hundred ninety-I'wa Home Home Away I Home ' Away Away Away '. ............. Home r 3. '----------N xvvvvvaAA VAAAAAAAAA Minor Sports , ,mkm ,.W. m '0 ALSTETTER, MANAGER jUNG CONNING DAVIES HOLTZMAN HERMAN HAMBlJiTON, COACH CLARKE MELE HOPKINS ALPERT GLASS Cross Country Squad CHARLES JUNO Captain WILLIAM SNEERINGER Captain-elecl GEORGE ALS'I'E'I 1'ER Manager R. WALDO HAMHLE'I'ON Coach HOLTZMAN MILESTONE R. LEWIS S. HOPKINS T. MELE J. K. G. CONNINC J. CLARK 1931 SCHEDULE Opponents J. H. U. October 17 University of Virginia .................................... 15 40 October 24. Ursinus College .............................................. 19 36 November 7 Lehigh .............................................................. 28 27 November 11 Catholic University ........................................ 32 23 November14 Quadmngular Meet, Maryland 23; St. Johns 42; Johns Hopkins University 70 November 20 St. John's ........................................................ 27 28 November 29 Maryland ........................................................ 26 29 page one hundred ninely-four Cross Country This year Coach Hambleton expected to have a strong nucleus of men around which to form a Cross Country team. Glass, Packard, Sneeringer, and Jung were only some ofthe men left from last years squad. However, with Glass and Packard forced from competltion, the Coach had to depend on the new men to fill out the team. Darlng the season Hopkins won two out of six meets, and placed third in the Maryland Championships. In the first meet of the season the team ran against an All-Southern miler and an All- State two miler and five Virginia men crossed the line before the Black and Blue could score. The following week, Sutton of Ursinus, ran a good race to win first place with Sneeringer coming in second. The meet against Lehigh furnished a surprise as the Jays won by a single point. Whereas the Pennsylvanians had a strong team,.we were extremely shorthanded. Clark, one. of the six men making the trip, was injured, leavmg only the five men neeessary to compete in a meet. The home team took first place but Jung, Holtzman, and LeWIS finished in a tlead heat for second place. This, together with the conrpletion of the race by Mele and Mllestone, gave the team enough points to make it an excmng afternoon and score the seasons first Victory, 27-28. Against Catholic University, the Black and Blue chalked up its second consecutive win. Sneeringer was in form, and took first in 24: 46, one of best times made all season. Jung scored third, while H. Hopkins and Holtzman placed fifth and sixth respectively. This year for the first time a Quadrangular .Cross Country Meet was held between University of Maryland, St. John's, Catholic Unwersxty and Hopkins. Eventually it is intended to form a conference of teams in this part of the country. Cups were given this year to the first three men, and medals to the first ten finishers. Maryland had the outstanding team, placing first and third and having the greatest number of men in the first ten, as Shore nosed out Russell of St. Johns to win the race. Jung was the only Hopkins man to win a medal. In the meet with St. Johns our opponents were conceded a definite edge due to their showing in the Quadrangular State Championship. The Jays, however, provided a close finish, due partly to the good work of Holtzman, a Freshman of considerable promise. Russell and Barbovy scored first and second for St. Johns, while three Hopkins men finished in a dead heat for the second time during the season. This time it was Sneeringer, Jung and Holtzman. Lewis of Hopkins and Hancock fought it out for sixth place and the latter managed to win thus giving St. John's the meet. As usual the last opponent encountered was Maryland. Their team was known to be strong and Hopkins was not given a chance to win. But Shores couldn't run, and Sneeringer and Hopkins stood second and third places behind Cronin. The final score of 26-29 was a better result than expected. While the season did not come up to the standard of last year, several new men were dlscovered and the veterans got valuable experience. With a wealth of material available, followers of the sport at Hopkins may look forward to a successful season next year. page one hundred ninely-jive HERMAN K. GOLDBERG, Captain LINDSEY H. HELMHOLTZ LAWRENCE PALITZ WILLIAM DIETZ CLIFFORD SIVERD Date April 13 April 15 April 16 April 22 April 23 April 25 April 26 April 29 April 30 May 4 May 6 May 7 May 10 May 13 May 14 May 21 June 2 SILVERMAN ROSENBERG BAKER SIVERD DIETZ STEIN PALITZ GOLDBERG HELMHOLTZ The Tennis Team MEMBERS OF THE VARSITY TEAM 1932 SCHEDULE Opponent Place George Washington University ................................ Home Franklin and Marshall .............................................. Home Gettysburg College .................................................... Home New York University ............. Away U. S. Military Academyw ..... Away Manhattan College .................................................... Away Yale University .......................................................... Away William and Mary College ............ ....Home Haverford College .................. ....Home St. John's of Brooklyn... ............................. Home Swarthmore College ....... .................. Home Loyola College .......................... Home University of Maryland ......................................... Home Western Maryland College .............................. ....Home Gettysburg College ........................ Away Carnegie Tech .............. ....Home Intercollegiates .......................................................... Home flage one hundred niner-six T. RIDGELY BAKER CHARLES BROOKE, JR. Tennis The Tennis team at Hopkins has been undefeated by any state team during the last five yearsea record which is, indeed, enviable, and which means the Jay racqueteers have been State Champions for as many years. During the cold winter months oflast year, many of the members of the tennis team had the advantage of winter practice at the Fifth Regiment Armory. These men were entered in the Winter lndoor Tennis League and several of the Hopkins players fared very well in the matches. It was during this time that the work of a Freshman from Tome School, Ridgely Baker, brought itself forcibly to the attention of some of the older members of the team. Baker did well in the Fifth Regiment matches and showed up well in the spring practice at Homewood. Due to the return of practically every regular from last yearls team the tennis team found itselfin a very strong position when the spring season arrived and the players got OR- to a Hying start. ' In the first match with the Franklin and Marshall netmen the Jays smashed out a very easy victory, dropping only one of the nine matches played. Lindsey Helmholtz was the only Hopkins netman to go down in defeat; he lost to Kready of Lancaster, Pa., by a score of 0-6, 8-10. While some of the matches were closely contested, only one was forced into three sets. When the Jays met the netmen from Gettysburg College, they scored an easy victory over the Gettysburg players, winning all six of the singles matches, and all three of the doubles matches. This was the third straight defeat handed the Gettysburg team by the Black and Blue aggregation. The work of Helmholtz and Baker was outstanding. Each defeated his opponent in the singles match and then turned around and teamed with a second Hopkins player to take their doubles matches. A very auspicious schedule has been arranged by Manager Rosenberg and includes matches with seventeen colleges. Provided that the team shows an amount of aptability at the end of the year equal to the amount displayed by them at the outset of the season, there is no doubt that the Tennis team will chalk up one of the most successful seasons in its history. The team was very fortunate this year in having every man back from last year's team with one exception. Furthermore the ranks were bolstered by the arrival of several very promising Freshmen. The Tennis team can look forward with a great deal of expectation to the coming years. A very full schedule. for the Junior Varsity team has been arranged by the Manager, Harold Stein. The Junior Varsity includes N. Goldberg, D. Rains, H. MacGregor M. Kramer, A. Heller, and M. Ledinsky. , The Varsity team was represented on the courts by Captain Herman Goldberg, Lindsey gelmholtz, Lawrence Palitz, T. Ridgely Baker, Charles Brooke, Clifford Siverd, and William ietz. page one hundred ninely-xeven GUTMAN COACH HAMBLETON CAMISRA-PISON REID DENUES Swimming Team ERNEST HANHAR'I' I. CYRUS GUTMAN WALDO HAMBLETON HAHLKF. HANHART STERN LEVI ARMSTRONG MUIR Captain 1W 0 Im gar C 00611 Mum VAU'I'HIER CAMERA-PEON SAD'I'LER DOELIJak HANHART STERN HILL FREY MCCONNELL REID WHITE BOYCE, G. BAHLKE LEVI J. H. U. Opponents January 9 University of Delaware .................................. 28 31 January 15 Franklin and Marshall .................................... 23 36 February 5 Rider College ............................ 25 35 February 6 Manhattan College ................................ 3o 29 February 13 George Washington University...... ...... 2 26 February 19 University of Virginia ............................ I7 49 February 20 Washington and Lee University. ...... 25 41 February 22 William and Mary College .............................. 39 20 February 27 Lafayette College .............................................. 28 31 page one hundred nincly-cighl The Swimming Team This year was a fairly successful one for the Swimming team, considering the dis- advantages under which the Jay splashers were working. The main disadvantage was the diHiculty that was encountered in choosing a regular practice period due to the conflicting schedules of the swimmers. Added to this fact another obstacle was placed in the path of the team in that the squad was composed of many new men. In the last analysis though the team did exceptionally well, much credit is due Coach Hambleton for the time and unceasing eH'ort that he so willingly spent in rounding out his material into a well developed team. The Hrst two meets of the Jays were both away and also both were disastrous for the Black and Blue swimmers as they resulted in victories for their opponents. The first was at Newark, Delaware, where the Delaware swimmers won by a score of31 to 28. In this meet Ed Sadtler, breaststroke man for Hopkins, reduced the 200 yard pool record to 2:55, thereby taking 0H Five seconds from the previous record. The second meet was at Lancaster, Pa., where the Franklin and Marshall swimmers defeated the Jays 35-24. Two records were set in this meet. One was by Sadtler who lowered the pool record to 2:56. Chalmers set a new college record in the 100 yard free style, negotiating the distance in 56:85. The next meet terminated in the First victory ofthe Jays. They defeated the Y. M. H. A. splashers by a score of5I-24. Sadtler set a new pool record and a new Hopkins record at the same time in the 100 yard breast stroke by swimming the distance in I :15. The medlay team composed ofCamara-Peon, Sadtler and White also set a new Hopkins record. The following meet again spelled defeat for the Jays as they were defeated by Rider College 35-25. The 200 yard relay was a tie in 143-3:5 a new record for both colleges. The next two meets were victories for the Jays as they defeated Manhattan 30-29 and George Washington 32-26. The Hopkins 200 yard relay team again set a new record and lowered the time to 1:45. At the end of this meet Hopkins had won three meets and lost three. The following three meets were away, all being in difTerent parts of Virginia. The Virginia swimmers defeated the Hopkins Contingency as did the Washington and Lee swimmers. However, Hopkins won from William and Mary by a score of 31-28. In this meet lTTed Stern lowered the pool record for the 200 yard from 2:58 to 2:55. With a wealth of promising material returning to Hopkins next fall the prospects for a very successful swimming season is very bright. page om: hundred nincly-ninc JOHNSON JONES WRIGHT ME'VI'IiE SHREVE SNHERINGEK ENGLAND MARSHALL PHILLIPS HENDERSON CORCKRAN NICKEL TURNBULL MILLER COHEN Ice Hockey Previous to the Christmas holidays, Vernon Sheid applied for an obtained permission from the Hopkins Athletic Association Board, to have our University represented by an ice hockey team in the newly-formed local amateur hockey league. The team representing Hopkins was to be composed ofgraduate and undergraduate students and was to be the first that had ever represented the Black and Blue on the ice. Due to the novelty of the sport, Hopkins was not able to present an experienced and well- drilled team in the league. Added to this the Jays also lacked the services of a coach. As a result the team was not up among the league leaders at the end of the season. Great works could not be expected from a team that started out under such adverse conditions, and yet, due mainly to the concientious efforts on the part of this ambitious group, the team showed a constant improvement as the season wore on. One of the stellar members of the squad was Jimmy Miller. He played a wing posi- tion and was captain. During the season an all-star league team encountered the strong Swarthmore Club and Miller was selected as a member of the league team. The other members of the squad were Cohen, Turnbull, Sneeringer, Nickel, Corckran, Phillips, Mettee, Shreve, Henderson, Marshall, Wright, England and Jones. page two hundred JURAK HILL CHANCl-ZLI.OR STEGMAN HESSER PERKINS JOHNSON MURHACH GLASS Rifle Team With virtually the same squad as last year, the RiHe team has continued its activities upon a wider scope than ever before, and has attracted more attention on the campus than ever before. The RiHe team, under the Presidency ofThomas Perkins, includes about seventy men in its membership. Almost any time during the week a number of men may be seen in the loft ofGilman, practicing on the Range which is said to be one of the finest in the East. This year the team was coached by Captain Frank P. Coffin and Sergeant Ernest Perry and was led by A. Pemberton Johnson. Hill, Chancellor, Hesser, Perkins, and Stegman have been important factors in the large percentage of victories won by the team during the present season. Among the teams over which the Johns Hopkins RiHe team scored victories were George Washington University, Pennsylvania, M. I. T., in the first part of the season, and Washington University, Alabama Polytechnic, University of Maryland, Carnegie Tech, Cooper Union Tech, University of Wisconsin, and Ohio State. During the early part of the year the team shot against squads from various parts of the country in the Hearst Trophy; more recently Johns Hopkins University competed with Navy, Georgetown, George Washington University, V. P. 1., Western Maryland and the University of Maryland in the Middle Atlantic Division of the National RiHe Association Championships. The RiHe team, though not among the colorful activities at Hopkins, is growing in importance, and Its showing during the past season has demonstrated that this sport is not without a future at Hopkins. page 1100 hundred one HOFFMAN SAVIN NI-Zl-ZDH-I HESSl-ZR WATERS MELF. JACOBSON I-ZNGHAM HERMAN HACHMAN CERES GAMSIi HAR'FMAN Wrestling Team During the past year Hopkins engaged in its first season of intercollegiate wrestling. The grapplers were organized into a club last year and some of the more experienced men undertook to teach all those interested in the ancient sport. Gus Van Sant and ulake Salzman made numerous visits to the first floor of the Old Barn which acted as the training quarters for the matmen. The team went through its first season of intercollegiate wrestling without the aid of a coach and in View of this fact the season may lie called a success in so far as some of the green material developed into good wrestlers through their diligence and the unfailing efforts of those who acted as coaches. The most prominent among those were Sears, Gamse, Mele, and lngham all of. whom were in varsity meets during the season. Captain Irvin Bachman was the most experienced man on the team and it was through his efforts that the squad was able to make the progress it did. Phil Hartman, Hopkins clever fly-weight, started off the bouts in every meet. Hartman was successful in out- pointing all the opponents in his weight in the Y. M. H. A. invitation meet in which Balti- more's best wrestlers were entered. Although it was his first year of wrestling, l'Ham Sears was able to outclass all opposition in the same meet. Myers, Hesser, and Herman showed up well in several of the varsity meets and the prospects for a very successful wrest- ling season next year appear to be very bright. llagtt lwo lmmln'd Iwo .6. - m wwwttnw. v t ADAMS HILL STRONG Cheer Leaders Though the results of cheering for Hopkins this year were most discouraging, still there is a brighter horizon showing. Last year saw the loss of the whole cheering squad. Two of the men McDonald and Parks were graduated and the third, Gilbert, was unable to return. So without :1 nucleus upon which to build, head cheer leader Gardner Hill and his assistants, Otis Adams and George Strong worked hard to engender a rooting spirit among the Hopkins meters in the stands. While at times their efTorts were rewarded by the arousing of a certain amount of enthusiasm, if it so happened that there was no good show in town and the Freshmen deigned to enter the cheering section, yet the life of such spirit was short lived. Still another force militated against them. They had to deal, perforce, with a group of Hagmntly ignorant Freshmen. For with the abolition of Frosh regulations the cheer leaders have been obliged to teach the sparse gathering of Freshmen in the cheering section cheers they should have known, with the result that the cheer leaders did all the cheering. There seems to be but one solution to this problem; that is the whole hearted support of the student body. The place of every Freshman 0n the campus is in the stands at Homewood, as it is also the place for every loyal son of Hopkins. page two hundred three But had this :tafble the magic f power Sad mem'ory: foam to frbeze-4 ' I Non-Athletic Activities Scholarship can not he considered as the only index of the true ability of a man, since scholastic standing often reflects only the number of hours used in study, but we must turn to other fields to receive a gaging that will reveal the ability and personality of the man. These are best reflected by his interest and work in extra curricular activities. Besides reflecting his personal inclinations, activities are valuable training grounds for the vocations that men choose. In the field of business administration, advertising, journal- ism, and oratory, non-currieular activities aH'ord valuable experience. They not only bring forth latent abilities of the student but they provide a means of spending profitable hours that the collegian would very probably, under other circumstances, let waste away. The pages that follow bear the names of the college men that were prominent in the activities of the campus and because the expression of these activities has been an outgrowth of the desires of the students, and because it has required initiative and ambition to handle them correctly, we can justly say that they indicate the innate qualities of their leaders. page two hundred xeven page two hundred eight The Student Council On March 16, 1912, a resolution was passed to adopt a constitution with provision for self-government under the supervision of a group of undergraduates to be elected annually by the student body of the University. The Council at its formation confined its activities to codification of regulations to govern Freshman and the solution of problems arising from inter-relationships of the Sophomore :md Freshman Classes. In 1913, with the inauguration of the Honor System came a radical step forward. This system recognized the rights of a student as a gentleman and is based upon the honor and cooperation of every Hopkins man. This function has become of prime importance among the activities engaged in by the council. The functions of the Council as now exercised are three-fold: to correlate the non- uthletic functions so as to bring about cooperation for the best interests of the University, to serve as a medium between the faculty and the students, and to uphold and promote the Honor System. The membership of the Council is made up of nine undergraduates. The president of the Council is elected at :1 general assembly held in the spring. He presides not only over the meetings of the Council but has full charge of the weekly assemblies that are held. The remaining members of the Council are as follows: the President of the Athletic Association, the President of the Senior Class, two students elected from the Senior Class, two students elected from the Junior Class, one student elected from the Sophomore Class and one elected from the Freshman Class. page two hundred nine GUTMAN GLASS MAT'NNGLY NESS DEAN MOUNT LEVY BROOKE GREENWALD LYON MILLER SULLIVAN KNEIP QUICK BERRY SHA RRE'F'FS MYERS FARINHOLT The Student Activities Council KENNETH SHARRETTS, Presidem ROWLAND MCD. NEss, Secretary Hullahzlao EDw. WIEGAND MAT'I'INGLY DANIEL MILLER Musical Club RONALD LEVY Y. M. C. d. WALTER GLASS REPRESENTATI VES N ewJ-Ltlter DAVID SYKES I. C. GUTMAN Cotillion Board ALFRED E. QUIC . W Debating Caumil JOHN MOUNT page 1100 hundn'd len JOHN T. MYERS, Treasurer Blade and Blue Jay RONALD B. BROOK HAROLD GREENWALD Barmlormem L. WHITING FARINHOLT WALTER F. KNEIP Band WILLIAM C. HUMPHREYS The Student Activities Council The Student Activities Council is composed of representatives of every activity on the campus and is the medium through which non-qthletic activities are directed by the students. All funds, awards and undergraduate publications are controlled by this body. The Council was organized in 1920 when the necessity of a student body with the functions outlined above became apparent. Since this time it has assumed a position ofprime importance in campus life and is the outstanding organization dealing with purely non- athletic activities. One of the important functions of the Council is the award of Varsity Seals. This token of activity is highly esteemed by every undergraduate and is awarded on the basis of merit and faithfulness in the activity concerned. The selection of sponsors for the social events is also accomplished through the Council. The Student Activities Council has correlated student amtirs and given organization to their functions. page two hundred eleven KAHI, KNIEII' IUMMICY MILLER PERRY LAMUN'I' MA'I'TING LY BA RRE'I'T QUICK FREY HORWIT'L ABRAHAMS DORMAN NESS MYERS MISCHLER THATCHER E. MA'r'rINCLY D. MILLER J. C. CORCKRAN R. MCD. NICSS R. B. LEVY R. B. BROOK R. B. LEVY K. SHARRE'I X'S L. Houwn'z J. CORCKRAN W. FARINHOIII' H. D. MILLER OSCARL.P1ELM HUGHES CORCKRAN MET GUTMAN PESSAGND DOIiLLEK 2E BROOK KROLL Varsity Seal Holders R. MCD. NIass L. KROLL D. SYKIES S. mew W. F. KNEH' H. GREENWALD W. A. ka' D. M. BARRETT S. SNYDER D. S. HERRERA E. T. REICH R. MCD. Nlass W. V. KNEII' D. HERRERA J. K. MOUNT WALTER F. KNEII' KENNETH SHARKETTS ROWLAND MCD. NESS HULLABAIDO W. SHUGERMAN E. PESSAGNQ NEWS-LETTER G. W. LA MONT R. B. BROOK I. C. GUTMAN l. C. GUTMAN N. HARRIS COTILIJON BOARD A. E. QUICK W. R. KAHL BLACK AND BLUE JAY I. C. GUTMAN MUSICAL CLUB W. I'. KNEIP T. M. BECK M. H. METTEE R. B. BROOK D. A. HUGHES BARNSTORMERS P. Wmsmcow N. HARRIS BAND J. EISENHARD'I' A. M. THATCHER M. REI'AHNS'PICIN E.A.W19LLI;R J. W. DORMAN, JR. W. A. Fklzv C. H. DOIaLLEK E. MAT'I'INGLY E. PESSAGNO R. B. B ROOK DHBATING SOCIETY R. B. BROOK L. Kumm H ELM 'l'UOH EY HARRIS GREENWAI.D LIiVY REIZENSTEIN D. MAC. LELLAN W. WEITZEI. M. PERRY M. PERRY J. F. TOOH IEY W. RJMMEV J. L. SULLIVAN W. G. SHUGERMAN R. N. TILLMAN S. M. DELI. I. C. GUTMAN - Pren'rlml Sludml Crmmil Chairman J1me Illeek Prexidml Simian! Atlx'vitiw Council Svcrcmry Sludmt Kltlivitie: Cammil page two hundred twelve The Varsity Seal The Varsity Seal is the highest award bestowed upon participants in non-athletic activities and is regarded among the undergraduates as comparable to a major H. Just as the varsity letter is given for excellence in athletics, the seal is awarded as a token ofmerit in non- tthletic endeavor. At the termination of either three or four years of conspicuous service in an activity, recommendation is made by the Student heads of the various activities and these nomina- tions are voted on by the student activities council. The Seal is :1 rectangular gold charm on which is mounted the University crest. If a man does conspicuous service in more than one activity he is honored with the engraving of a star on the seal for each activity in which he so distinguishes himself. The awards are made in February and May. A Varsity Seal is given for work on any of the following activities: the HULLABALOO, the NewJ-Lcttcr, the Black and Blue Jay, the Musical Club, the thrnstormers, the Band, the Debating Council and the Student Activities Council. pa ge two hundred thirteen EDWARD W. MA'I'TINGLY DANIEL MILLER Editar-in-Clzief Bruineu Manager The 1932 Hullabaloo BOARD OF CONTROL Editor-in-Cltief Bmineu Managtr EDw. WIEGAND MATTINGLY DANIEL MILLER Anociale Editor Managing Editor Photographic Editor EUGENE L. PESSAGNO RONALD B. BROOK CHAS. GORDON GREEN Assistant Bmirm: Manager Advertising Manager duixmm Busineu Manager PAULCOHURN I. CYRUS GUTMAN MAURICE CHASSIN EDITORIAL STAFF ROWLAND MCD. NESS JOHN C. CORCKRAN CHARLES H. Dounak SANFORD SARNEY LouIs Know. WILSON SHUGERMAN Murrow REIZENSTEIN S. Docmrsxv BERNARD M. VERIJN THEODORE STERN H. D. MACLEH.AN MARLOWE PERRY ALBERT HUNT CHARLES JUNG WILLIAM F. WEITZEL MARSHALL MCDORMAN DANIEL MCCABE JAMES EGERTON BUSINESS STAFF GEORGE MEIDLING NATHAN HARRIS JOHN Hrmnakson, III Rmma'r POWELL ADDISON CLARKE BLUMSTEIN JOSEPH BERNARD WILLIAM GEHR HAROLD GREENWAID JAMES WITHERILL CHARLES H. DAVIS SCHNHCK page two hundred fourlcen BLUMS'I'IEIN HARRIS GU'I'KIN DOELLER VHRIJN REIZENSTEIN jUNG WEITZEL GREEN GREIENWALD SCHNECK HENDERSON MEIDIJNG REICHEL DOCTOFSKEY MACI.EI.LAN HUNT SHUGERMAN GUTMAN CHASSIN BROOK MA'I'TINGLY MILLER MYERS NESS KROIJ. I'ESSAGNO The Hullabaloo The HULLABALOO is the oldest of the undergraduate publications. It appeared first under the name of the Debutante in 1889. Next year the editors decided to change the title of the book and it made its bow under the name Medley. There followed a scuHie over the title of the book and the final choice narrowed down to the IIHopkinsian and the HULLABALOO. In 1892 the present title was first used and in 1894 the HULLABALOO was Finally accepted as the title of the Hopkins' annual. The early editors were beset with the diHiculty of producing money for their publication and consequently the early editions were held down gIeatly in size. With the founding of the Student Activities Council 1n 1920 came :1 great step forward and it is from this point that we can date the present opulence of the HULLABALOO. The basic plan of the HULLABALOO, however, really dates from the edition of 1899 which was edited by John C. French the present librarian of the University. Though new features are being added and slight alterations are constantly being made, the fundamental idea of the book has remained unchanged. The art scheme has undergone considerable revision and the practice of the present editors is to have all of the cuts revolve around :1 central theme. The Senior receives his copy of the HULLABALOO of 1932 but it is not until the dim decades of the future that the true value of the HULLAnAmo will make itself evident. To enable you to turn these pages and say to your friends and childreneiithis is what I did, this 1s what I looked like, these were my comrades of college days '-that 18 the purpose of this book and it is with this end in view that the editors h11ve given their best to the 1932 HUI 1A11A100 fiagc two hundred fifteen ROLAND MOD. NEss Edilor-in Cllity' DAVID SYKES BItIiIMJJ M mmgcr The Johns Hopkins News-Letter EDITORIAL STAFF ROWLAND MCD. Nlcss, '32 SYLVAN Lonnw, '32 HVMAN LEVIN, '34. NORMAN I-II-tANI-zv, '34 NATHAN M. I'IARRIS, '32 MORDECAI EDELMAN, '34 MARLOWE PERRY, '32 BERNARD VERLIN, '33 STANLEY STILLMAN, '34 VVAL'I'l-ZR HAILE, '34. MARION GROVE. '33 SANFORD SARNHY, '33 JHROMF. BLUM, '34 DONALD PROC'I'OR, '33 JACK GREENHELD, '32 SAMUEL M. DUC'I'OFSKY, '34. BUSINESS STAFF DAVID Svm-zs, '32 IsAnmL C. GU'rMAN, '32 EDGAR BLUMS'I'EIN, '34 MAURICE R. CHASSIN, '33 . LEONARD HA mus, 34 CHARLES NEY, '33 W. N. MEYERS, '33 MORTON ROME, '33 BLUE IODI HID u n ., 7.5mm INC ' 1':... ME! mum EIilOl lAlL I HOPlIlG YMCKIEH TIM VIIIHEIAN. Bu! GHTVSIUI ILIIRED IAIlilEASllY SHUIDAV page two hundn'd xixlccn ErlilIIr-in-Cllizf lVla Magi 71g Edilm' xlxxixmnl Managing Edilor Xuisltml Managing Edilor xluorimz' Edilor MARTIN PERLMUTTER, '34 MILLARD LANGFEID, '34 SIDNEY J. BERKOWITZ, '33 ARTHUR E. GUTMAN, '35 SYLVAN D. SOLARZ, '35 Ellwmm R. HARRISON, '35 Bminmx Manager xlrl'va'riixing 19110111ch2 Cirrulalimz Mmmgm' Ofliw M mm gar AnRAM BURK, '34 GEORGE LAMONT, '31 E. III.UMSTF.IN B. VERHN j. CRHENFIELD S. j. lH-ZRKOWIT'A N. HARRIS S. DOCTOFSKV L. HARRIS PERLMlHTl-ZR M. ROME HAILI'Z A. 1-1. GUTMAN M. GROVE LAMON'I' CHASSIN ll. I'RAGER l. C. GU'I'MAN H. LEVIN .D' SYKES k. Nl-ZSS j. MYERS S. LEROW N. HI-ZANIiY The Johns Hopkins News-Letter The Ncm-Lcttcr was sanctioned by the Board ofTrustees 0f the University in 1897 after a petition by James M. Smith and Edgeworth Thompson, budding young journalists. The paper, during its first year of issue, appeared only sporadically and was primarily literary instead of journalistic in its function. Fiction, poetry, jokes, alumni notes and exchanges were printed in its columns. In its second year of life seventeen issues appeared and for twelve years thereafter it appeared in magazine form fortnightly. In 1909 the maga- zine become a weekly six-page issue and finally in 1916 the Ncwx-Lellcr began to appear twice each week. The News-Letter has filled the important position of being the organ of student expres- sion. From its incipiency its editorials have wielded powerful inHuences over the expression of campus opinion. Through the editorial columns are advocated important reforms in collegiate and University life which are intended to stimulate interest in the mass of the students so that these reforms may more easily be carried out. This year's paper was marked by a trend towards a journal with a primary news func- tion. Through the efforts of the editors, connections have been established with the leading Baltimore news papers and with the associated stafT. The staff has greatly increased in reportorial efficiency and the Newx-Lcllcr of 1932 was one of the most capable activities 011 the campus. Mgt- two hundred .u'vwlwn RONALD B. BROOK HAROLD GREENWAm Erlilar-in-Cllitf Businw: Manager The Black and Blue Jay BOAR D OF CONTROL Editar-in- Chief RONALD B. BROOK Bmimn Manager HAROLD GREENWAI. MILTON REIanSTEm, JR. rlxxariaie Editor MARGARET HOWSER Anatiale Edilor W lLLlAM RIMMEY Circulation Manager ISADOR GUTMAN ddverli5ing Manager JOHN MYERS Trtlllllrtf EDITORIAL STAFF A. THATCHER H. Kuswvrrz TOM BECK M. LANGFELD J. OWENS H. MILESTONE G, PESSAGNO G. FORREST B. VERIJN W. WISEMAN R. H. HAYWOOD S. BANK BUSINESS STAFF B. PRAGER R. JANDORF M. Doe'rorsm' T. STERN W. FREY I. MACGOWAN A. KATZ H. STEIN I. BACHMAN R. BAHLKE J. Wooonow G. 31003 D. DOLowx'r'I. G. MHIDHNG BLAEM Ammo BLUEJNW page 1100 hundred tighleen PESSAGNO WINTER WISEMAN VIERLIN MILESTONE DOC'I'OFSKY KATZ BAHLKF. BECK FREY STEIN MElDLlNG PRAGER THATCHER GUTMAN GREENWALD BROOK MYERS RIMMEY REIZENSTIHN The Black and Blue Jay When the Blade and Blue Jay was First founded in 1921, the policy of the founders was to make it at the same time literary and humorous. The years immediately following found the literary angle dropped and the importance of the humorous side stressed. That quality of the magazine was constantly improved by the ingenious editors and finally culminated in the famous TTCelebrity Number of 1926. In 1919 the reaction towards a literary policy occurred and the general tendency since then has been towards the literary side. The campus was at Hrst 0n the whole pleased with the new ideas and although the caliber of the humor was not superlative the reaction met with no general disagreement. However, the Jay was still to a large extent composed ofjokes and fictitious stories that you might not care to have your children hear so it was decided that a further conservative step was necessary. Thus the Jay of 1932 had its feathers plucked and emerged no longer a jaunty, cocksure little bird but a modest, blushing avian. The policy of the present maga- zine is best illustrated by the heading of one of its chief features- Puritan Puns. From another standpoint the Jay has become a potent factor in campus life. Through the medium of the editorial column the editor is enabled to comment on important and pertinent phases ofcampus activity. With the change in character of the paper the editorials hold a prominent place in determination of campus policy. page two hundred nineteen The Musical Club Impetus was first given to the organi7ation which has since emerged as the Musical Club, back 111 1883 when Woodrow Wilson, then a student 1n Political Science, together with Newton D. Baker and several other now famous men, combined to form the Johns Hopkins Glee Club. From this small but ambitious group of men have descended the many units which today form the Musical Club. Coincident with the growth of the student body, the organization has expanded until it now boasts of approximately eighty members who com- prise the following sections: the Glee Club, the Banjo Club, the Hawaiian Troupe, the Blue Jay Orchestra, the Quartet, and several soloists. Originally the schedule was rather short, consisting ofonly a few local concerts; however, of recent years, the program has been extended through a period of four months, with a schedule of about a dozen concerts being given in Baltimore and in nearby cities and states. The formality and smoothness with which the Musical Clubis presentations are given mark this activity as being gratifyingly different from the usual run of college activities. The intrinsic value of this organization is great. Men who are interested in music are given the opportunity to give expression to their feeling. Then too,pr11ctical experience for those who intend to follow music as their profession, is obtained through the agency of the Club. By their many trips out of the city, the Musical Club has played no small part in spread- ing favorably the name of the Hopkins. The notable founders of a noteworthy organization may be justly proud to have perpetrated this group that has carried out excellently the tradition of its origin and of its position as the oldest and one of the most laudable of the campus activities. page two hundred twenty RONALD B LEVY, Prtxidvm Blur Jay Ortlmxtm REIT'L FENS'I'ICRWALD ASHLEY HERERRA RANNl-ZY NEUMAN SULLIVAN BARGER MILIIURN KAL'I'RIilDl-ZR LYON GORE IENSON MARSHALL FAMMF. Quark! STEINWAID ADAMS BROOK SMITH Ii V 12 KTON Banjo Club R. TILLMAN' DASHIELI.S LO GRIPPO SHANKS CLARKE LYON GIBSON Glililil ilN L. TILLMAN EVERTON DOELLI-ZR HOLMES HARPER MCKERRICKICR MISHIJZR GORE LEVHNSUN REICII MILBURN page two lmmln'd lwcnly-one The Season 1932 has undoubtedly added more to the prestige of the Musical Club than has any previous season. Its presentations have been marked by a vitality and finesse usually found only in professional troupes of the highest order, and have resulted in reflecting great credit upon the University as a whole. Coaching and directorship par excellence have been sup- plied in the capable persons ofOsmar P. Steinwald and Conrad Gebelein. To the usual round of church concerts which opens every seasonw-at Pro-Cathedral, Forest Park Presbyterian, and Mt. Vernon Place Methodist Episcopal-was added the per- formance at the Fifth Regiment Armory, where the Club was invited to give a short program upon the occasion of the Unemployment Benefit. The boys were thus unexpectedly thrown into charity work, and earned the right to have their names handed down to posterity along with those of Broadus Mitchell, Herbert Hoover, and other potential prosperity-restorers. Tome School, the First of the Clubls two out-of-town trips of the year, was, as usual, the scene of a very gratifying appearance, the audience registering its approval with stormy applause. Feeling that it pays to go where one is appreciated, the boys would have made a trip up to Cumberland or Hagerstown, but apparently neither of those towns had quite recuperated from the visitation of the Club in the preceding year, and consequently no arrangements were made. The concert at the University Club, along with that given over Station WFBR, was one of the high-lights 0f the year. The musicians were royally received and bountifully fed at the ample buffet supper given after the program was completed. The broadcast was featured by the first appearance of the quartet, which acquitted itself very creditably, and the entire affair occasioned high commendation from listeners-in. One of the largest audiences ever to attend a Home Concert awaited the opening of the program this year with hopeful anticipation. Those who have been going to this annual affair for years and years were hearty in their praise of the presentation, asserting that it far eclipsed all previous ones. An especially approving reception was accorded the Blue Jays, the quartet, with its comic numbers, and the Banjo Duet, given by Reich and Gore. Donald Proctor, the Clubls soloist for the season, sang De Glory Road amid much applause. Departing from the usual procedure, three appearances were scheduled for dates follow- ing the Home Concert, which generally concludes the season. Since it haan been filled before, one of these engagements had to be at the Maryland College for Women, and needless to say, all the boys were there and stayed to the dance which followed. St. John,s Church was the second of these post-season programs. The Atlantic City trip was a fitting climax to an already successful year. The touching ballads, Johnnie Schmoker and Frankie and Jolmm'c, were revived, and were received with great enthusiasm by the guests of the Hotel Chalfonte-Haddon Hall. An enjoyable week- end at the World's Playground topped off the affair. Mge two hundred lwenly-two DONALD Pkuc-mR, Salon! Hawaiian 'I'mupt DASHHILLS I-ZVl-ZR'I'ON GEIHiIJ-ZIN MISHLER LYON RISICH DIJELLIER SHANKS HOLMES GORE lfzmju DWI RI'ZICH GORE GIN Clul; SULLIVAN HUGHES ADAMS SHARKP IS TABLHR LEVY RIDOUT IHIRTUN H I-ZlNI-ZRl-Z l-ZDIELMAN Mvclm Hl' LVIEY FINK L. TILLMAN R. TILLMAN KNl-le' BROOK HAR'I'IJS'VF DOl-ZLL RI FE COLI R DASHIELDS Hl-ZNDIERSON HUNT SA'I'IRON DORMAN STl-ZINWALD SAD'I'LI-ZR G. FRl-IY HOIUVI'FZ J. 'I'ILLMAN PERRY KEMI' DELL WILLIAMS MI'Z'I I'F.F. GI-ZH R KUPHR CURCKRAN COCKIiY KERN HOLMES Glil'LH-llJ-ZK DORFMAN WHlSlJiA ROSSHIERGHR HIGENHRODE liVliRTON SHUGARMAN SMITH FISHER KENNEDY l'RIlC'I'OR VIiIiKS IHCCK V. FRI'ZV page two Immlrnl Iwcnly-lemr WRITING FA RJNHOLT Presidem DANIEL MILLER Business Manager The Barnstormers Club WRITING FARINHOLT DANIEL MILLER LESTER HAAS PETER WEISENGOFF EUGENE PESSAGNO EDW. W. MAT'I'INGI.Y J. ROYALTIPPE'I F, JR. WALTER KNEIP CHARLES SQUIRE WAL'I'ER GLASS SAMUEL SELSKY JACK HENDERSON, III DENWOOD KELLY JOHN WELLENSIEK GARDINER HILL GAILLARD FREY GORDON GREEN CHARLES DAVIS A page two hundred twenly-faur President Business Manager Produtlion Manager S etretary ROWLAND NESS NATHAN HARRIS TALBOTT BANKS BERT NYE ROBERT MITCHELL HAROLD LEVI ANTHONY HARDING ALLAN ERSKINE MYRON HERMAN ALBERT UI.1.MAN ALBERT HENDIJZR GEORGE MOTRY GEORGE ARMSTRONG ROBERT FISHER HARRIS 'I'll'PE'I I' HARDING NIESS MAT'I'INGIA' 'lt. BAN KS PESSAGNO WEISIENGOFF MILLER W. BANKS FAIHNHOIII' CAPIAN HAAS The Barnstormers In most instances, it has been deemed necessary that, in order to succeed, a college activity must owe its origin to some event or occasion to which a lackadaisical tradition can be attached. However, in spite of itself, which is to say in spite of its rather prosaic origin, the Barnstormers has succeeded in becoming one of the most sought after activities in the University. In 1919, the johns Hopkins Dramatic Club was avowedly organized to present serious drama and to perpetuate an interest in the more worthwhile plays. Almost from its incep- tion, it was apparant that the organization was not meeting with favor. In 1922, Mr. Walter B. Swindell, jia, ,01, was appointed director and coach; immediately, the Club entered upon hits golden age. Starting with that year, the Dramatic Club presented plays of a more or less comic nature. In 1924, the present name was adopted as being more in keeping with the rejuvenated spirit and purpose of the organization. From the time that uPops Swindell took over the leadership of the Barnstotmers, the organization expanded and reached heights that were thought unattainable. During the trying times of the struggle For favor in the eyes of the Hopkins students, ll Pops played a part that will ever he remembered. He imbued the 'stormets with his own genial personality to such a degree that his name has become a tradition to inspire the members to outdo them- selves to win his acclaim. It has been repeatedly reiterated by all connected with the Barn- stormers that the phenomenal rise was due in no small way to llPops. With the regretted retirement of Pops from active service at the close of the 1929-1930 season, the directorship was taken over by William B. Banks and Howard M. Caplan, both members of the Class of ,29 and old lstormers. Under these new heads, several radical changes were wrought. Showing a fine disregard for tradition, the organization, for the First time in its history, used CO-eds in their play. However, women are still ineligible for member- ship in the Barnstormers Club. Of recent years, the trend has been approaching the ideals of the old Dramatic Club in that plays of a more serious nature are being presented. In acknowledgment of this growing frame of mind, this year the Barnstormers gave a creditable performance ofWilliam Gillette's play of the Civil War period, Secret Service. page two hundred lwvnly-Mw page two hundred twcnly-six June Week Our college years are to most of us the happiest of our lifeethey represent the period of carefree merriment and enduring friendships and it is therefore fitting that these memories be climaxed by zi tribute to the Alma Mater we are so soon to leave. The celebration of June Week arose ten years ago when a Senior class about to graduate felt that to close the most pleasurable period of their lives by merely wrapping up their diplomas was a sad culmination and decided to celebrate with fitting ceremony their de- parture from their beloved Johnny Hopkins. Every year the committee appointed for the occasion attempts to outdo in splendor and in gayety the previous June Weeks. Months of careful planning are required for plans which reach their culmination in :1 few moments. Underneath the atmosphere of revelry and celebration there exists a certain feeling of dismay at the thought of departure from friends that we shall very likely never see again and the vision of the tower of GiLman Hull fading in the distance. Once again this year when the campus is uglow with lights and the melodies sweetly resound over the hushed tones of dancing sweethearts we know that although we shall soon be gone we shall all be united by a common bondethe memory of our years at Hopkins. page two hundred twcmy-swcn KAHI. POWELL TOOHEY HENDERSON QUICK LEVY KNEIP The Cotillion Board The Cotillion Board of the Johns Hopkins University is a purely undergraduate organiza- tion with the arrangement of undergraduate dances as its sole function. The predecessor of the Board was the Cotillion Club. This latter organization was abolished by the Student Council in 1927 because of the fact that it was rapidly gaining the aspect of a fraternal organization rather than a University activity. The old Club was com- posed of a representative from each fraternity 0n the campus, and one representative of the non-fraternity men. Since the establishment of the Board, all positions on it have been com- petitive and open to all undergraduates. Three Freshmen are elected to the Cotillion Board annually, and they hold their positions throughout their undergraduate life at the University. Since its reformation, the Cotillion Board has become very eFFlcient and successful. Its position is almost unique in American colleges and universities. In addition to the regular Saturday night dances, which are held in Levering Hall, and the tea dances following im- portant Football and lacrosse games, the Cotillion Board sponsors three Cotillions during the year. .The first Cotillion this year was held just before the Thanksgiving holidays; the second took place immediately following the mid-year examinations; and the last Cotillion was in- cluded as part of the June Week Program. In accordance with the custom of the last several years, nationally prominent orchestras were brought here for each of the Cotillions. By its ever increasing worth, as well as by the good fellowship that it has gained on the campus, the Cotillion Board has evidenced the fact that it merits the appreciation of every Hopkins man. page two hundred lwcnly-eighl RONALD B. BROOK LOUIS J; Know, President Vire-Prwidem The Debating Council RONALD Bowen BROOK Praxidenl LOUIS JOSEPH KROLL . Vice-Prexident The Debating Council of1932 enjoyed the most successful year ofits existence. Though the Council existed, it was active merely in social functions and the actual work of running the debates was left in the hands of the president and vice-president of the Council. With the bad name oflast year to live down, the two managers of debate planned a care- ful but ambitious schedule for the group of men that were to foster intellectual relations between Hopkins and other colleges. The position of debating at Hopkins was accorded international scope when the Fmest student debating team of England was brought to Baltimore to meet a team representing Hopkins. The Great Hall of Levering was thronged with an audience that included many notables gathered to hear the discussion of capitalism. r A fine debating team representing the University of California was brought to Hopkins to debate the same subject. With this splendid start to their schedule, the debating team met Fordham, Rutgers, Harvard, Florida, and virtually all of the colleges in Maryland. The 1932 debating team was one of the finest to represent Hopkins and under the management of eHEcient hands concluded the most successful season in its history. gage two hundred IwenIy-ninc THE LOBBY Tm: MUSIC ROOM LEVERING HALL The Johns Hopkins Y. M. C. A. Perhaps at no other university in the country has the Young Menls Christian Association filled such an important position in the intellectual and social life of the campus as has the branch at the Johns Hopkins. Immediately coincident with the completion of the new Levering Hall five years ago, the lTY arranged a larger and more extensive program than ever before. The idea in mind was to have Levering Hall be not only the center for Y activities, but also the meeting place for all undergraduate activities and campus life. That this aim has been realized is evidenced by the ever increasing part that the organization plays in the school day. Recognizing that a man is not completely educated without possessing a broad and tolerant point of view, the Y. M. C. A. has endeavored to provide such an horizon for every Hopkins man. The medium by which this is accomplished is the University Supper Club. Outstanding leaders in religious and social thought throughout the country address the meetings of this group. To further aid this same cause, several discussion groups are spon- sored by the Y. Freshmen are helped immeasurably in their orientation process by several bf activi- ties. Each year, prior to the opening of the University, a Freshman Camp is held, at which men, influential in all phases of college life, address the yearlings and give them some idea of what is in store for them. The annual Freshman Reception has taken on a traditional aspect. Another material aid sponsored by the Y is the Handaook which contains information useful to upper classmen as well as to neophytes. Among other things, the Y. M. C. A. publishes the le Nam; maintains a speakerls bureau; a friendly relations bureau which has internationalism as its underlying theory; and a library in which exceptional books are placed. Annually, the value of the Johns Hopkins Y. M. C. A. has increased until today it is esteemed thruout the university. It is an essential part in the life of every Hopkins man. page Iwo hundred Ihirly GROVE HILL BARGICR CONNING COLLHNIHERG JONES TVAUNER l'FIi'I'ZlNG MA'I'TINGLY PACKARD ROLL MULHA USI'ZK MELE JOHNSON KELLY MITCHELL Y M C A C b ' . . . . a met W A LTE R A. Glliass Prexidvnt ALBERT P. JOHNSON Vicc-Prwident- CA LEI; KELLY Secrelmy CA R0 L H U CH ES 'l'rmmr tr A fact that is readily apparent to the newcomer at Hopkins is the almost total lack of school spirit. The serious nature of the institution has resulted in :1 feeling of individualism rather than the feelingol'ucoordinated group working harmoniously together. This condition would be much more pronounced it'it were not for the work of the Y. M. C. A. The primary function of. that institution throughout the world is one of service. Here that service consists of. an attempt at unification. Their building at Levering Hall has become :1 common center, out of which radiates :1 large portion ofstuclent activity. Its pro. gram is both extensive and comprehensive. It takes the Freshman under its guidance almost from the moment he enters college. The Freshman Camp has become an established mezms For the granting ofun opportunity liorrmuking associations. There is also an annual-Freshman Reception, and, later in the year, :1 Freshman cabihet 1s ol'gunizecl.. The Untversity Supper Club offers the student the chance to hear outstanding lenders ofsocml and religious thought. Other activities include the publication of. :1 newspaper and handbook, the holding of con- ferences and discussion groups, and the possession of. :1 small but rather unusual library. We are not attempting to glorify the Y. M. C. A. Perhaps all its principles and activi- ties do not meet with your favor. Yet we should remember that it is :1 student supported organization working for the good of the students tllehiselvestund, therefore, it behooves every one of us to give it our support and to partake of its benefits. page 1100 lmmln'd lhirly-mzr ; RANNEY LANGFELD ABRAHAMS ROM. RAUM FINK GEBELEIN HUMPHRIES PESSAGNO BAKER DAUM S'I'EFFEY MARSHALL EIGENBRODF. BUTCHER SCHEN'I'HAL DASHIEI.LS LYON MILLER FENSTERWALD SEARS REITZ LOVING BARGER L. MILLER KEMP The Band In 1921, through the initiative of five Hopkins undergraduates, a move was put forth to form a band with the primary purpose of enlivening the athletic contests held by the Uni- versity. It was a long hard road at first but, once on its way, the real worth of a band was made evident. The R. O. T. C. being badly in need of music to aid their marching ePr'orts the band was made a part of this unit. It has fulfilled this dual role of Student Band and Military Unit ever since. Conspicuous service in the band is rewarded with the award of a varsity seal. The band's greatest thrill was the trip to Columbia in 1929 and it is the ambition ofevery member of the band to take a similar trip. This year an experienced director was employed chiefly through the agencies of the Stu- dent Activities Council and the Omicron Delta Kappa honorary fraternity. page two hundred thirly-lwo e FOX lll-INSI'ZR BEHTHAM DA U I! WI EH Ii KIiMI'IiR RlilNHARD'r HOPKINS Ul-ZHR RISICH RI'IITZF. UROVF. FINK DASHIIELLS IHH'LAND MCKHRICHICR RICHARDSON jACOllSON BROOK The Johns Hopkins Chapter of the De Malay OFFICERS R. MCKERICHER Pracidcnt W. GEHR Vicc-Prcxz'dml S jAconsON Secretary-Trmmrtr P. JAHNs Clwplan MASTER MASON E. RICHARDSON Advimr The Hopkins Chapter of the De Moluy, the must recent addition to the campus activities, was founded in 1931 by a group of men who sought to further the purposes of the De Moluy by establishing themselves at the University. Since its initiation, thirty-one men have become members of this chapter. This group has served vnluuhly in bringing De Molzlys from other cities and now resident at the University into contact with the three chapters of the De Molay active in Baltimore. lts organization has served us :1 host to the De Malays of other branches and since its incep- tion it has become recognized as :1 valuable addition to the Order ofJuniot Masons. The Club meets the second and fourth Friday of the month at Levering Hull where the problems relative to their organization are discussed. This meeting, at which dinner is served, has become :1 tradition to the Hopkins men of the order and has served to bring them into closer contact With one another. In December, the Hopkins Chapter gave :1 dance at Levering Hall, to which all local De Molays Were invited. This affair was one of the best of the school season and was ex- tremely well attended. page two humlml lhirIy-Ihrcz: UNKNOWN CAMERRA-I'EON ULRICH WHHLAN SHEA JUAN JULIA FISHER BLAIR HERBERT HERZFIELD INSPEIJJ'I'TERI DiAlJiLIO CHANIS CORDI LO GRII'PO FRIEL The Charles Carrol Club OFFICERS JOSEPH CORDI Prwidmt ROWLAND CHANIS Viz'e-Prmidmt GERALD LOGRIPPO Treamrer D. H. FISCHER E. A. Final. Stcrclariex DOM. ADRIAN WELD-BI.UNDELL Chaplain DR. F. 0. RICE, DR. K. F. HERZFELD Family Aldviwr: The Charles Carrol Club of the johns Hopkins University is an organization of the Catholic students and alumni of the Hopkins. It was founded in 1928 by Dom. Gregory Schramm, 3.13., who was then a graduate student at the University. The Club is a member of the Federation ofNewman Clubs which has branches on almost all American collegecampuses. The founders of the Club had 21 three-fold object; religious, scientific, and social. This object intended to enable the student to coordinate his scientific pursuits with his religious convictions and to impart an insight into the position of the Catholic Church on important modern questions. This is accomplished in two ways; through the bi-weekly meetings when lectures are given on :1 wide variety of subjects and through the weekly discussion groups. During the past year :1 series of ten lectures has been given. His Excellency, Michael J. Curley, Archbishop of Baltimore was the most noteworthy speaker. There have also been lectures in various branches of scientific endeavor. Both Hopkins graduates and men and women from other universities have delivered these lectures. The purely religious activity of the Club is the annual Communion at the Cathedral. The social activities of this year have taken the form of a dance and a jaunt to the na- tion,s capital. This organization fills the needs ofsome students in :1 way peculiar to itself. For not only does it help to orient the student in the whirl of scientific activity into which he is thrown upon entrance to the University, but it furnishes a social contact with several members of the faculty who have interested themselves in its development. page Iwo hundred Ihirly-four DIl-ZTZ 'l'URNBUIJ. 1100117. FOX MACLHI.I.AN RIZTI I'ALIA'I'A SCHWARTZ BERGER MCDORMAN TRIBUI.L WACH'H'IR jACOBSON SEXTON ELLSWOR'I'H GLADDING GARRETT BANDEI. TOOHEY HANHAR'F JOHNSON PROFESSOR CHRISTIE BISKSINSKI HELI'I'Z STANTON WIEITZEL REYNOLDS GOEI.LER SKLARHVSKI lll-ZRKOWI'I'Z DI GENNARO GAJDIS KIDD MELE MATTINGLY American Society of Mechanical Engineers A. PEMBERTON JOHNSON R. E. REYNOLDS ALFRED BEKSINSKI Prwidcnl Vicc-Prwidcm Secretary E. HA N H A RT Trmmrer In Ige the Hopkins branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was organized. The purpose of the organization was two-fold. First, t0 promote it fraternal spirit among those studying mechanical engineering and second, to give those students a Closer contact With the men already in that Field. This contact all students have felt to be of great importance. In engineering colleges throughout the country the work of this organization is recognized as of value to the student body. The technical activities of the group find expression in several ways. This year several illustrated lectures have been given at the meetings by well known engineers. The society has had the pleasure of entertaining Mr. Wright, President of the national organization of A. S. M. F. The group has made several trips of inspection to industrial plants in the vicinity, notably t0 the American Sugar ReFmery and to the Locke Insulator companies. Under the direc- tion of the National Advisory Committee of Aviation, of which Dr. Ames is the chairman, the society has made a trip to inspect Langley Hying Field. The social activities of the year have included the Engineers, Dance which was given in union with the other engineering societies on the campus. With this eminently successful season the group looks forward to an even more gratifying one next year. page 1700 hundred Ihirly-Mu: WELLER BARKER RENOFI REIZI'ZNSTHIN SCHRHIBER JURAK GRIKI'I' ALSTETTER KEANE SMALL BECKER COCKHY REID JUNG GUILD FOWBLE KAHI.EK MAURI'I'Z FUNK MURBACH MILLMAN STRONG BACK IEISHNHARDT HIAI.OSKORSKI HUGHES CHINN S'I'I'ZCMAN RIMMEY WHI'I'BY MILLER JONES CHERTKOF RAUM KOPI'ER El ' I Cl b ectrlca u OFFICERS DAVID HUGHES President A; R. BMLOSKORSKI Vice-Prwidml LEROY STEGMAN Secretary GEORGE I. CHINN Trmmrcr Activity and interest in the Electrical Club have run apace this year evincing con- siderably activity on the part of the members. Through the cooperation of the Juniors and Seniors who alone compose the ranks of this organization the Club has become an important part of the Electrical School. The chief function of the Club is to provide at the hi-weekly meetings an opportunity for each member to read a paper on some technical problem which interests him. Since the field of interest is wide and of diverse scope, members may acquire :1 knowledge of topics which otherwise might have remained unknown to them. That this organization is of great usefulness is attested to by the fact that the faculty have designated it as a required course in the Electrical School curriculum although it is :1 student organization. Aside from their technical activities the Club has sponsored this year two important social activities. They were the Engineers' Dance, given in con- junction with the other engineering societies and a banquet for their members and alumni. With the success of this year in mind the Club looks forward to the bright horizon of 33. page two hundred Ilzirly-xix WOOD CRANE NEUMAN KAHI. OHMAN MR. HUBBARD MR. COMUER MR. MEDAUGH DASHHZLLS IIAKER BURGER WALKER COUGHIJN JENKINS HERMAN HUGHES WILLARD FEHRER MUELLER MYERS PIKE IIORTNER MEIDIJNG HOBBS PROFESSOR THOMPSON HOPKINS POOR FELLOWS 'l'AYMAN SCHUCKER VIZRHEI.ST MOTRY American Society oF Civil Engineers OFFICERS ROBERT O. BORTNER Prarident WM. N. MYERS Vice-Prcsz'dcm GEORGE A. MEIDLING Secretary RICHARD I. PIKE Treasurer Through the efforts of Professor John H. Gregory those working at the Hopkins for a Civil Engineering degree were banded together by the chartering in 1921 of the Johns Hopkins chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers. The affiliation of this Chapter with the American Society of Civil Engineers, together with the group of men already working in civil engineering, aH'brds the Juniors and Seniors who form its personnel the privileges of that organization. Among the benefits derived by the undergraduates is the fraternal spirit engendered by working for a common goal. Moreover, at the bi-weekly meetings the members have the opportunity to meet men emi- nent in civil engineering. During the past year the chapter has had the pleasure of entertaining President Stuart and Secretary Seabury, officers OFthe national organization ofA. S. C. E. These benefits all accrue to giving the student while in college a closer connection with the group with which he will be connected after being graduated. Last year saw the inauguration of the Engineers' Dance. The success warranted its repetition this year. This first venture into social activities has proven well founded since it provides a com- mon meeting ground where the engineers of the various depart- ments can assemble. page two hundred lhirly-swcn ROBEY GLASS COOK DR. LOGAN PFETZING HEINEKE SCHARF BARRETT PENNY WATTS BROOK HITTINGER ARMSTRONG PERRY Gas Engineers Association OFFICERS RONALD BOWER BROOK President DAVID S. BITTINGER Vice-Presz'dent WILLIAM ROBEY Secretary-Trmmrer In 1927, when the gas engineering students of the University banded together, Johns Hopkins University was distinguished by having the first undergraduate group of gas engineers ever to he formed. The scope of the activities of the student group upon becoming aHiliuted with the American Gas Association, the organization of those already in this field of engineering, will be greatly increased. In the present state of development its activities are planned mainly for the benefit of the undergraduate. The meetings of the society have been marked by talks delivered by men well known in their field. The Association has two objectives, namely: to promote :1 fraternal spirit among the undergraduates studying gas engineering, to further the education of men in the University, and the public, in matters peculiar to gas engineering. Unlike all Other engineering associations the Gas Engineers admits Sophomores to its assemblage each year at the mid-year. This plan enables the men to work together in their studies and in their social activities for :1 longer period, thus creating :1 strong feeling of fraternity among the members. page lwo hundred Ihirly-cighl JENKINS DAVIS MCCABF. LEE Rll'l'El. ECERTON YARDIJSY NIELSON EARICKSON I'ENROSE SHREVE HAMMOND DUKEHART STORRS LILLY MILLER TIPPETT The Cane Club An organization for ole time gentlemen, the Came Club enjoys a unique position on the campus. Conceived in a spirit of geniality many years ago, the Club has attempted to con- vey an atmosphere of the gentility 0f bygone days and in keeping with this the members to some extent at least participate in the gentlemanly indulgence of forbidden beverages. Their reputation in this direction is not inconsequential since it has been rumored that Kappa Beta Phi, which is the national organization for those clubs which imbibe, has bid them for a chapter. This offer was turned down for the Cane Club must preserve its traditional in- dividuality. The initiation which takes place twice :1 year is a very colorful affair. At the ceremony the initiates line up in the quadrangle Facing Gilman Hall where they are solemnly tapped 0n the shoulder by the president of the organization. At the conclusion of this ceremony they receive the yellow canes and white curnations symbolic of g'ood fellowship. The old members then board their ancient thlly-ho and with the neophytes walking along the side, the strange procession wends its way down Charles Street. The Cane Club still stands as the symbol of the good old dayswof college life and is pointed out fondly by those good fellows who lament the passing of tradition at Hopkins. page two hundred Ihirly-nine HPVlzen Might in Heaven a friendly star appearing, Gave light llzat guided to a port of next. Honorary Fraternities Phi Beta Kappa ALPHA CHAPTER 0F MARYLAND OFFICERS, 1931-1932 DR. WILLIAM H. WILMER Pretident DR. JOHN C. FRENCH Viw-Prexident DR. JOHANNES MATTERN Secretary DR. GEORGE H. EVANS Treasurer The Phi Beta Kappa Society, the parent of American Greek letter fraternities, was organized at the College of William and Mary in 1776, the year of the founding of our country. It is the oldest, most distinctive and best known of American honor societies. Starting as a secret organization of a few men, for social purposes, it has gradually lost most ofits secrecy and social aims and evolved to a society of men who have attained scholas- tic distinction. The fraternity has expanded until it is now represented by chapters in every college of note in America. The requirements are high scholarship and good character. At Hopkins :1 limited number of keys are awarded to undergraduates in the academic school. Members of the graduate and medical schools and new plan students are also eligible for election. General- ly Phi Beta Kappa is open to women as well as men, although only men are entered from the Johns Hopkins Chapter. The Maryland Alpha Chapter, founded at Hopkins in 1895, has long maintained a standard of excellency in the scholastic achievements of its members, and election to this Chapter is conceded to be a double honor. page two hundred forly-four page two hundred forIy-mm Tau Beta Pi Tau Beta Pi is to men of the engineering school what Phi Beta Kappa is to men of the academic school. In 1885 Professor Williams at Lehigh University attempted to bring a chapter Phi Beta Kappa to that campus. While the national oFFicers of the grandfather of fraternities were deliberating on the advisability of granting charters to engineering and technical schools, the petitioning group at Lehigh enlarged the scope of their ambitions and determined to found a distinctive engineering fraternity. Election to Tau Beta Pi was to mean recognition of outstanding work of the man such as to bring credit to his Alma Mater after graduation. The founders of Tau Beta Pi, realizing that scholarship alone is a poor criterion for selection of any organized group, decided to require more from its prospective members. For this reason, a candidates character, congeniality, and interest in campus affairs are consi- dered in addition to his achievement in scholarship. The parent chapter existed alone at Lehigh until 1892, when the Alpha Chapter of Michigan was founded. Since theh Tau Beta Pi has grown rapidly until now there are fifty- eight chapters which have initiated fifteen thousand members. The Alpha Chapter of Maryland, due to Professor ChristieTs efforts, was installed at Johns Hopkins University in 199.1. Since its founding on the campus, the standard maintained by the original group has been adhered to at all times, so that it can be said that the Hopkins chapter is among those of the highest calibre. page two hundred forIy-six AAAAAAAAA page two hundred fotly-swen Omicron Delta Kappa In 1914 a group of student leaders at Washington and Lee University decided that they should form some kind of organized society. They drew up plans and became charter mem- bers of the fraternity which they called Omicron Delta Kappa. Since the idea was so new the founders hesitated to give to the college world their plan; but after a yearis testing of the fraternity for its real value, they suggested to the leaders of the undergraduate school of Johns Hopkins University that they start the Beta Circle and thus become the second campus to have the honor fraternity. Realizing the value ofsuch a fraternity, the students accepted the suggestion and started the Beta Circle in 1916. The purpose of Omicron Delta Kappa is twofold: to accord honor to the men who have distinguished themselves during their undergraduate careers, and to form an organization of college leaders that will 'work for the good of the student body and of the University. To quote from the constitution of the fraternity: Character shall be the primal consideration for members. In addition to this requisite, a man must gain distinction in two or more of the following branches of college activity: scholarship, athletics, publications, social leader- ship tincluding conspicuous service to the Universityi, and other non- tthletic activities. Only three percent of undergraduate enrollment is eligible for election to the fraternity during the collegiate year. It is impossible to state the achievements of Omicron Delta Kappa in this article. SuH-ice it to say, it has been called upon by the trustees, faculty, and undergraduate organiza- tions on many occasions to render an opinion. Its decrees carry with them weight and authority; its recommendations are never scorned; membership therein is the greatest honor that an undergraduate may have accorded to him. page Iwo hundred forly-eighl page two hundred forty-m'ne Pi Delta Epsilon Pi Delta Epsilon is a national honor fraternity, whose purpose is to honor journalistic ability. At the present time, there are chapters in more than forty leading colleges in the United States. Pi Delta Epsilon was originally installed at the Johns Hopkins University in 1922. For four years this chapter exerted considerable influence over the student publications at Hop- kins until it was disbanded in 1926. Due to its inHuence the standard of these publications was raised to a higher level than had ever before been attained. In the Spring of1931, the chapter was reorganized with seven chapter members. These members are the leaders of the three student publications at Hopkins, the HULLABALOO, the Black and Blue Jay, and the NewJ-Lctter. The chief purpose of the fraternity is to recognize journalistic ability and to form an organization ofjournulistic leaders who can do much toward bettering the organs of student thought in the various colleges where chapters are installed. Many members of Pi Delta Epsilon have gained the pinnacle of fame in the world of letters and journalism. Among these were Warren G. Harding, late President of the United States, and Irving S. Cobb, noted author of today. They are only two of a large number of former members of the fraternity who have done equally well in the field ofwriting. Page two hundred ,fifl y MW 'u E 93?. LLAB LOO VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV page two hundred Jifty-one .5... i WlilSHNGOl-T jOHNSON HILL GUILD Tll'l'ET'I' DOELLICR STEGMAN COX Nl-ZSS Wl'l'H I-ZIU-ZI.L SHARRI'Z'I IS BROOK Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Blade, the national honorary military society, is to he found at all leading colleges and universities where there are units of the Reserve OHicers Training Corps. This honor society was organized in I905 at the University OfWiSCOHSih with the purpose ofudvancing the standard of military training in the American colleges, to promote comrade- ship among cadet oHicers and to encourage those qualities essential to good eHicient oHicers. The Reserve OH'icers Training Corps came to Hopkins in 1916 and four years later, April 8, 1920, Company ii I 0f the Scabbard and Blade was installed here. Since then, over one hundred men have been initiated to the group which is composed of several thousand men from sixty-nine companies throughout the country. This is not only an undergraduate society, for there are now twelve 01' more alumni posts, around which graduate work is centered. In undergraduate schools, the companies are grouped into seven regiments. These regiments combined with the alumni organization have done much toward furtheringr the aims of the army units in the colleges. Page two Inmdrt'd jifIy-Iwo Social Fraternities VVVVYVVVVVVVVVVVXTHE 193 HULLABALOO Fraternities at Johns Hopkins Dale of I mmlled Founding at Hopkins BETA THETA P1 ............................................................................................ 1839 1877 P111 KAPPA P51......4 ........................................................................................ 1852 1879 DELTA P111 ...................................................................................................... 1857 1885 ALPHA DELTA PHI ........................................................................................ 1852 1885 PHI GAMMA DELTA ...................................................................................... 1848 1891 KAFPA ALPHA 1Southern1 ............................................................................ 1865 1891 KAPPA SIGMA ................................................................................................ 1867 1920 ALPHA TAU OMEGA......... 1866 1920 DELTA UPSILON...V.1...... 1834 1928 SIGMA PHI EPSILON ...................................................................................... 1901 1929 OMICRON KAPPA OMICRON ...................... 1919 1919 SIGMA TAU DELTA ........................................................................................ 1921 1921 TAU ALPHA PHI ............................................................................................ 1926 1926 ALPHA Mu TAU ............................................................................................ 1927 1927 PHI ALPHA ..................................................................... 1914 1919 PHI EPSILON P1 ............................................................................. 1901 1920 PHI SIGMA DELTA ...................................... 1910 1923 P1 LAMBDA P111 .............................................................................................. 1895 1925 DELTA SIGMA CH1 ........................................................................................ 1907 1926 MEDICAL FRATERNITIES PITHOTOMY CLUB ........................................................................................ 1896 1896 PHI CH1 .......................................................................................................... 1910 1910 NU SIGMA Nu ........ 1905 , 1905 PHI BETA P1 ............................................................................................... 1891 1913 ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA .................................................................................. 1888 1917 523E? WAMM page two hundred Mty-four COCKEY WALTER F. KNEW, President xllplm Dtlm Phi JOSEPH ENGLAND JULIAN S. PENROSE Alplm IVIu Trm HAROLD B. SCHARF JAMES PENNY lepha Tan Omcga ALFRED H. QUICK GARDNER HILL Rm; Them Pi GEORGE ARMSTRONG FRITZ R. STUDI'Z Della Plzi AUSTIN Luw LINDSEY PASSANO Dclm Upsilon MARLOWE PERRY JOHN HOLMES Kappa dlplm RUFUS ROLL CURTIS JEFFERSON GLASS ENGLAND RIFE MILLER H. STUDE PERRY HILL ROLL F. STUDE BROOK WATTS KNEII' LYON QUICK Interfraternity Board OFFICERS ROBERT VVATTS, Strrtmry Kappa S igmrz WALTER GLASS HHLMUTH S'ruma Omicron Kappa Omin'ml C. ALB 121w KUPER, JR. C. EDMUND RUSSELL Plzi Gamma Dclm WALTER F. KNl-z1P,JR. GEORGE W. Rum Plli Kappa PIi JAMES MILLER ROBERT Ii. WATTS Sigma Plli Epu'lmz EUGENE D. LYON RICHARD B. BARGER S igma Tau Della WILLIAM N. Cox PAUL M. INGHAM Trm zflplm Plli RONALD B. BROOK WILLIAM CORCKRAN page two hundred jifly-jive Beta Theta Pi Class of 1932 GEORGE ARMSTRONG, JR. ROBERT MILLER, JR. CHARLES CARTER RICHARD TILLMAN THOMAS HOGSHEAD JAMES WITHEREI.L Class of 1933 RONALD BAKER CLARENCE JOHNSTON ADDISON CLARK ANDREW SNIVELY ROBERT COOK FRITZ S'I'UDE Class of 1934 HENRY CHITWOOD WALTER LUNDBL'RG SAMUEL HOPKINS GEORGE RIPPEI. LEE TILLMAN Clan of 1935 JOHN BARTLETT THOMAS GREEN STANLEY CLARKE WILLIAM HOLLAND JAMES TILLMAN page two hundred jifly-six Beta Theta Pi FRA'I'ERNH'Y FOUNDED Miami Univvrsily, 1839 CHAPTER HOUSE 2721 Nortlz Charles Street ALPHA CHI CHAPTER Foundcd, 1877 FRATERNITY FLOWER FRATERNITY COLORS Pink and Blue Rose j. TILLMAN GRHHN SNIVIELY RIPPIEI. L. 'l'ILLMAN BAKER HOPKINS HAR'FLE'I ? HOLLAND LUNDIHERG COOK ANDERSON JOHNSTON CHJTWUOD CARTER A RMS'I'RONG MILLER WITHI-ZRIEIJ. STUDE HOGSHl-ZAD R. TILLMAN jOHNSTON pugs lwu hundred jifIy-scvcn Clan of 1932 CHARLES WEBBER CORNWEI,L EDWARD COMEGYS DUKEHAR'I' ALBERT BARKER KUMP WILLIAM ROE KAHI. EDWARD WIEGAND MA'I'TINGLY Class of 1933 CHARLES HORACE DAVIS SAMUEL JAMES ECER'I'ON JAMES GORDON MCCABE MARSHALL DUER MCDORMAN Clam of 193.; DORMAN ONE CHANCELI.OR HENRY BEIJINGER LEE, III DANIEL BROWNING MCCABE Clan of 1935 FREDERIC WILLIAM FOLLMER, JR. CORNELIUS CALVERT McCAnF. Phi Kappa Psi desk? 174 1 gtwimvgn RICHARD WAMPI,ER SAWERTHWAI'I'E W1 LSON GRUBB SHUGERMAN JAMES ROYAL TIPPETT, JR. JOHN ICLEHAR'r TURNBULL ROBERT EARLF. WATTS JAMES ROWLAND MILLER WILLIAM HARRISON TRIPLETT WILLIAM RANDOLPH TUCKER ALLAN MONTGOMERY ERSKINF. JOHN MAT'I'HAI SCOTT WILLIAM JAMES SNEERINGER, III FRANCIS HARLOW WELLER HENRY MASON 1VIORFIT FRANCIS HAMILTON O,DUNNE GORDON DONNE LLY SMITH page two hundred JifIy-eighl Phi Kappa Psi CHAPTER HOUSE FRATERNITY FOUNDED 2644 Norm Charla Street Washington and Jqffersan College, 1852 MARYLAND ALPHA CHAP'I'ER Founded, 1879 FRATERNI'I'Y COLORS FRATERNITY FLOWER Red and Green Jack Rom LEE MORFIT SMITH MCDORMAN DAVIS WELLER TRIPLE 'l' TUCKER D. MCCAIH-Z MILLER KAHI. FOLLMIZR 0,DUNNE C. MCCAHE ERSKINE j. MCCABF. SCOTT CHANCELLOR SNISERINGER SHUCERMAN TURNIIUH. WATTS 'I'II'PETT DUKEHART KUMI' CORNWEM. MATTINGLY IiGIiRTON page two hundred fifIy-nine Delta Phi Clan of 1932 SAMUEL DELL AUSTIN LILLY, JR. Clan of 193.; PIERPON'I' ADAMS SAMUEL JOHNSTON CAVANDISH DARRELL JAMES PASSANO HARRISON DAVIES HARRY WARREN Clan of 1935 SAMUEL FLEMING JOSEPH JACKSON THEODORE WIEKE page two hundred xixly Delta Phi CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'I'ERNITY FOUNDED 3033 St. Paul Street Union College, 1827 XI CHAPTER Founded, 1921 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRA'I'ERNITY FLOWER Blue and While Row FLEMING WIEKE WARREN JOHNSTON JACKSON DAVIS DARRELL LILLY PASSANO ADAMS page two hundrcd sixly-onc VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVX1 Alpha Delta Phi 1:25? Class of 19 32 JOSEPH ENGLAND GALE SHREVE Clam of 1933 WILLIAM EARECKSON WILLIAM NEILSON Clam of 19 34 ALEXANDER Boom: JAMES MACGILL GILLETTE BOYCE JULIAN PENROSE TURNER CARROLL . WILLIAM YARDLEY CHURCH YEARLEY Class of 1935 GEORGE Boom: MACCOLLOUGH BROGDEN STANSBURY BRADY 1 STRATFORD MCKENRICK ' GEORGE POWELL yAAAAAAAAA page two hundred sixty-two CHAPTER HOUSE 3004 Norllz Calvert Street FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS Emerald Cram and White BRADY PENROSE NEILSON Alpha Delta Phi FRA'rERNI'rv FOUNDED Hamilton College, 1832 JOHNS HOPKINS CHAPTER Founded, 1889 FRA'IVERNYFY FLOWER Lily-of-tizc- V alley y 3: 5w! MCKENRICK BROGDEN G. BOONE POWELL A. HOONE BOYCE YEARLEY MACGII.L YARDLEY ENGLAND S'FORRS SHREVl-I EARECKSON page two hundred sixly-llirce Phi Gamma Delta Clan of 19 32 THOMAS MCADAM BECK WALTER FRANCIS KNEIP, JR. WILLIAM HUGHES CALDWELL, II MILTON HOWARD METTEE, III JOHN CLENDENIN CORCKRAN KENNETH CAMPBELL SHARRETTS ROBERT SHEFFER FISHER ROBERT GUNTHER SHIRLEY WALTER ALBERT FREY, JR. HOWARD GRAHAM WOOD Class of 1933 JOSEPH GAILLARD FREY JOHN MARSHALL CALEB REDGRAVE KELLY JAMES MERRIKEN DOUGLAS HOFFMAN STONE Clan of 1934 CHARLES FISKE BAHI,KF. ROBERT FRANKLIN POWELL ALBERT REINHom HUNT GEORGE WILLIAM RIFE, III DONALDSON NAYLOR KELLY THOMAS HARRISON KRUMM RUSSELL EDWARD HILL SAD'H,ER Clan of 1935 THOMAS ROGERS BARTLETT JAMES WILCOX IVES ARTHUR EUGENE CLARK, JR. THOMAS MARSHALL, JR. STEWAR'FNEAI, COLLENBERG BENJAMIN IRVIN MCGOWAN, JR. NORMAN EWING FRYER, JR. CHARLES EDWARD OR'rH, JR. THOMAS BAYARD WILLIAMS, JR. page two hundred sixly-four ATERNITIES Phi Gamma Delta CHAP'I'ER Housn IVRA'I'ERNI'I'Y FOUNDED 3,039 N,- Paid Sliwl szfvrxrm Collage, 18$? BETA MU CHAPTER l'hmlrllrd, 1891 IVRA'I'E RNI'I'Y C0 LORS lhuwn R N ITY FLOW 1:. R Ruyal I Mrplt' Pllrplv Clrmrzlix MICRRIKICN MLVUUWAN FlH'l-IR CLARK CULIJiNHl-ZRG OR'I'H HARTLl-Z'I'T T.MARSHALI. WILLIAMS STONE ILIFF. J- mARSHAIJ. RI'SSl-ZIJA HAHLKF. PUWl-ZLI. ll. KELLY HUNT SAD'I'IAIik FRIiY C. KELLY CALDWELL mam; MIC' 'al-t SHAKRIC'PI'S woon KNIaw CURCKRAN FIH-ZY snuuuv lrugt' lu'o humlrc'd sixly-jiw VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVX1 Kappa Alpha Class of 1932 JAMES B. HOFFMAN EDGAR M. SKINNER Clam qf' 1933 BE LIN V. Bonn: JOHN B. HEINEKE GEORGE F. PACKARD Class of 1934 JOSEPH H. BAILEY EDWARD B. COLLETT LAWRENCE E. CRANE MILLARD T. LANG ARTHUR J. PHILLIPS Clam of 1935 JOHN A.' GRUBB page Iwo hundred sixly-six CURTIS B. JEFFERSON JOHN J. JENKINS T. BENJAMIN JONES RUFUS M. ROLL WARREN S. SEIPP ARTHUR TAYMAN PETER W. REYNOLDS JOHN T. WHITTAKER Kappa Alpha CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'rERNI'rY FOUNDED 2642 Noth Clmrlw Street W axlzz'ngton and Lee, 1865 ALPHA LAMBDA CHAPTER Founded, 1891 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRNFERNITY FLOWER Crimson and Gold Magnolia and Rm' Row BODIl-Z REYNOLDS SI-ZWARD jliNKINS Slill'l' HEINEKF. C. HOFFMAN SKINNHR PENDLETON IERSKINF. COLLETT PACKARD JEFFERSON j. HOFFMAN ROLL JONES pagc 11m lmndrrd xixly-xcven EARL CARPENTER ALFRED GUNDRY, JR. FRED OWINGS, JR. WALTER GLASS LEE DOTY, JR. EMMERT DOUB THOMAS 'CARTER BENJAMIN EARNSHAW CHAPIN S'I'IRES VVVVVVYVWVVVVV Kappa Sigma Chm of 19 32 ROBERTS UMBERGER, JR. Class of 1933 ALBERT PFETZING Class 4 1934 W. HERBS'r Clrm of 1935 4b w :Elgp JOHN RITZ HENRY SCHMIDT HELMU'rH S'PUDE KIRKLAND MCMULLEN FRANK HORNIG, JR. EARL RICHARDSON EDWIN FINK CLAUDE MERRILL JACK OBRECHT i yAAAAAAAAA page new hundred siny-eighl Kappa Sigma CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'rERNl'rY FOUNDED 2821 St. Paul Strccl University of Virginia, 1869 ALPHA ALPHA CHAPTER Founded, 1920 FRA'I'ERNI'H' COLORS FRATERNITY FLOWER Scarlet, W lzile and Green Lilynybt-Vallqy STIRES PINK DOUB OllRl-ZCH'P MERRILL EARNSHAW CARTIER RICHARDSON I'FE'I'ZING OikoURKF. STUDE HERBST LA COM! 2 HORNIG SCHMIDT CARPENTER RITZ OWINGS GUNDRY MCMULLHN GLASS DOTY UMBERGER pagz lwo hundred sixly-nine DAVID MOORE BARRETT JOHN WILLIAM DORMAN, JR. GEORGE WILLIAM LAMONT DENWOOD NORRIS KELLY, JR. ROBERT LEVIS MITCHELL, JR. TALBOT WINCHESTER BANKS RICHA RD HA 1.1. JOH NS'J'ON RICHARD GEORGE FEISE HARLAN PURNEH, BURBAGE JOHN KEITH GARDNER CONNING BENNETT WHITELOCK MUIR JOHN NICOLAS CAMARA-PEON BENJAMIN HOWARD STANSBURY CHARLES WARREN COLGAN JOHN BURLING DEHOFF TEVIS RIDGELY BAKER Alpha Tau Omega C1115: Qf 1932 Class of 1933 Claw ref 1934 ROWLAND MCDOWELL NESS CHARLES HENRY WHITBY, III ALFRED EDWARD QUICK WILLIAM NELSON MYERS WILLIAM HOFFMAN WARD, JR. JAY FERDINAND TOWNER, III THOMAS GARDNER HILL JAMES DAVID MCNEAL Chm of 1935 HAMILTON GORDON WALKER WILLIAM ARTHUR BAILEY, JR. JAMES HANS SCHULER, JR. WILLARD HENRY NEU JOSEPH ALBERT BLAIR JAMES ALEXANDER BUTCHER, JR. RICHARD WILLIAM HASTEDT, JR. JAMES SHERIDAN MCCLEES, JR. PHILIP SYLVESTER CRIBLET LELLAND JOSEPH RA'I'H ER page 1100 hundred seventy Alpha Tau Omega CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y FOUNDED 3000 North Clmrles Street Univerxity of Richmond MARYLAND PSI CHAPTER Founded, 1920 FRATERNITY COLORS FRA'rERNI'rY FLOWER Sky Blue and Old Gold White Tm Rose NICU MUIR STANSHURV BAKER CAMARA-PIEON Hll.l. CUNNING CIUIHJ-Z'F Flilsli DEHO FF MA RSHA LI. HASTl-ZD'I' RATH 1i IL TOWN 1-: R llAlHiY MYERS MCClJ-Zl-ZS SCHU LER 0VAI.KF.K COLGAN WHITHY H I.AI R MCNEAL BU'I'CH IER BU RHAGl-Z LAMONT BANKS BARRETT NESS QUICK JOHNSTON DORMAN MITCHELL D. Kl-ZLLY page two hundred .mvnnly-mtc Delta Upsilon Clan of 1932 'LORNE GUILD PAUL COBURN RONALD LEVY DONALD BITTINGER Class of 1933 JAMES BENDER RANDOLPH COCKEY FRANK KAL'J'REIDER Class of 1934 HUGH CUR'FWRIGHT JOHN BRYSON WILLIAM GEHR WILLIAM REID JOHN WEE KS JOHN Ho LMES C1115: of 1935 WILLIAM KEMP GEORGE CHINSLEY CARSON FRAILEY OREM BILLINGSLEA V BERNARD MERSON page two hundred scuenIy-two DANIEL MILLER THOMAS PERKINS MARLOW PERRY Ml LTON SMITH FREDERICK DOU'rY FREDERICK HESSER HENRY BEEHLER DONALD RICHARDSON WILLIAM MCCONNELL ALFRED DAVIS HOLLIS HOPKINS KARL KIRKMAN KARI. GIEGI.E JOHN ULRICH ROLAND MERSON Delta Upsilon CHAPTER HOUSE 3100 North Calverl Slrccl JOHNS HOPKINS CHAPTER Founded, 1928 FRATERNITY COLORS Sapphire, Bim- and Old Gold MIZRSON MCCONNEI.L ILLINGSLEA REID RICHARDSON MERSON CHlNSMiY KIRKMAN cocxm' mucus HENDER IIRYSON BEELER HESSER DAVIS GISHR nourv HOLMES PERKINS COHURN GUILD PERRY LEVY MILLER page two hmulrnd xmrcnly-Ihrcc FRATERNI'I'Y FOUNDED Williamx College, 1834 FRA'I'ERN ITY FLOWE R Tm Row KEMP HOPKINS WEEKS CURTWRIGHT BI'I'PINGER SMITH Sigma Phi Epsilon Class of 19 32 ADAM BIAI.OSKORSKI WILLIAM COOPER LEONARD EAGAN OSCAR HELM JOHN SULLIVAN Chm of 1933 PETER COLE ROBERT ELLSWOR'I'H JEROME TOOHEY Clay: of 1934 RICHARD BARGER HORACE DOOH'1 H.E Clam Of 1935 HARRY BECK WILLIAM BOYLAND JACK HAZZARD ROBERT MCKERICHER WILLIAM OGLETREE llage two hundred xcvcnly-fnur ALBERT JOHNSON CHARLES JUNG GEORGE MEIDLING HENRY NEWMAN WILLIAM WEI'I'ZEL GEORGE FORREST EUGENE LYONS JAMES GOSLEE, JR. EDWARD HEALEY, JR. JOHN REDDICK JOHN RILEY EVERETT SCOTT SAMUEL SPROL THOMAS STROHM X x ' x,. I x xx l Sigma Phi Epsilon CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'I'ERNITY FOUNDED 3025 St. Paul Street Universily of Richmond, 1901 MARYLAND ALPHA CHAPTER Founded, 1929 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRATERNITY FLOWER Blood Red and Royal Purple dmerimn Beauty Ron: RISDDICK HAZZARD OGLETRISIC STRONG SCOTT BOYLAND RILEY MCKERICHRR SI'ROIJ, HHAlJ-ZY UOSIJiH DOULITTLIC ELIASWOR'I'H HA RGl-ZR LYON 'I'OOHHY COLE EAGAN JOHNSON SULLIVAN VEI'I ZEL JUNH MlilIlIJNG COOPER HELM pugs lu'o hundred scwnly-Mm WALTER BELITZ CHARLES DOELLER LOUIS ARMSTRONG GORDON BIGGS GORDON GREEN WILLIAM DEWOLF JOSEPH FARRELL Omicron Kappa Omicron Class of 1932 Class of 1933 ALBERT KUPER Clan of 19 34 HOWARD SMITH Clam qf 193 5 WILLIAM RYSANEK page 1100 hundred seuenIy-six DONALD MACLELMN JACK RE'r'rALIA'rA MERRYMAN GLADDING ERNEST HANHAR'I' BRUCE HERMAN EDMUND RUSSELL MORRISON HIHN Omicron Kappa Omicron CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'rERNI'rY FOUNDED 2902 Guilford 10mm Johns Hopkins Univerxity ALPHA CHAPTER F ounded, 1919 FRATERNI'I'Y COLORS FRA'FERNI'I'Y FLOWER Green and Silver Wizzle Rose FARRELL BELITZ RYSANEK HERMAN HIHN GLADDING MACLELLAN KUI'ER DOELLER RETTALIATA ARMSTRONG GREEN HANHART page two hundred scvenIy-scvcn VVVVVVVVVVVVVVYVX9 Sigma Tau Delta Class of 1932 WILLIAM Cox EUGENE PESSAGNO, JR BENJAMIN DABRASKOWSKI MICHAEL SCROFANI LEROY STEGMAN Class qf 1933 JOSEPH GORE DONALD HERRERA EDWARD GUZIELEK PRESTON TITUS Clan of 1934 PAUL INGHAM STEPHEN MAGNESS JOHN MULHAUSER Clan of 1935 WILLIAM BISHOP CHARLES PORTER EDWARD RYAN - j VAAAAAAAAA page two hundred sevenly-u'ght F Sigma Tau Delta CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'I'ERNITY FOUNDED Jqfermm'an xlpartmemx Jalms Hopkim Univerxity, 1921 ALPHA CHAPTER Founded, 1921 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRA'rERNI'rY FLOWER Purple and Silver Orchid MAGNESS GUZIELEK RYAN DABRASKOWSKI HERRERA MULHAUSER TITUS STEGMAN PESSAGNO COX GORE page two hundred xcvenly-ninc RONALD BROOK DAVID HUGHES EDGAR EVE RTON MARION GROVE WILLIAM CORKRAN GEORGE JENKINS WILBUR KERN PALMER HAGER ALLAN KEMP HERBERT MITCHELL Tau Alpha Phi Clan of 1932 Class of 1933 DONALD PENNINGTON Clan of 1934 C1115: of 193 5 yage two hundred eighty WILLIAM RIMMEY LLEWELLYN STANTON CHARLES HAGER GORDINIER HARPER COBURN KINGSBURY DAVID LAMAR HOWARD MCGREGOR JOHN MIRCHELL, JR. DAVID RAINS GAIL WISE Tau Alpha Phi CHAPTER HOUSE FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y FOUNDED 3213 SI. Paul Street Jalzm Hopkim Urlivtrxily, 1926 ALPHA CHAPTER Founded, 1926 FRA'rERNl'rY COLORS FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y FLOWER Black and While Viola! RAINS KEMP WISH MITCHELL jliNKlNS PENNINGTON HAGER KERN HARPER CORCKRAN EVERTON STANTON BROOK KINGSHURY GROVE HUGHES page two hundred cighty-onu vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvun-ua. Alpha Mu Tau Clam of 1932 F. MILLER J. W. PENNEY Class of 1933 J. O. BAKER E. A. COUGHLIN Class of 1934 R. F. AKEHURST J. L. DASHIELLS D. H. FISHER J. B. LAUGERMAN page two hundred eighly-t-wo J. F. MURBACH G. W. MO'J'RY H. B. SCHARF J. O. GARDNER W. F. JOHNS T. KUHN Alpha Mu Tau CHI'ATER HOUSE Muvrmwrrv FOUNDED 2719 Oak Street Jolms Hopkim Um'vcrxily, 1927 A I.I'HA CHAPTER lv'mmn'm', 1927 FRATERNI'IT COLORS FRA'I'ERNI'H' FLOWER Blark and Blue Red Roxy GARDNER HUBBARD KAUFMAN JOHNS CARTIER MUTRY SCHARF BAKER DASHII-ZLLS PICNNEY LAUGERMAN pa gc two hundred righty-thrcc Ismou GUTMAN SIDNEY BERKOWI'I'Z MAURICE CHASSIN DAVID DOLOWI'rz HARRY GOODMAN EDGAR BLUMS'rEIN MORTON Doe'rors KY IRVING BLUM ARTHUR FINK RAYMOND GOLDBERG BERTRAM GORDON Phi Alpha Claw of 1932 LEONARD MILLMAN Class of 1933 I Class of 1934 Clan cf 1935 ABNER WILLEN page two hundred eighly-four NATHAN HARRIS MORTON GUTKIN EPHRAIM LISANSKY HERMAN SCHNECK BERNARD SMALL LEROY GOLDMAN LEONARD HARRIS DAVID GORDON HAROLD KAN'rRow HARVEY LESSELBAUM BERT PRAGER Phi Alpha CHAP'I'ER HOUSE FRATERNITY FOUNDED 3020 Norllz Calvert Street George Waxhinglon University, 191,: ETA CHAPTER Founded, 1919 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRA'rERNI'n' FLOWER Red mid Blue Tm R050 N. l. GOLDBERG RACER LESSEIJXAUM GORDON BLUM DOCTOFSKY PINK HARRIS SCHNECK BERKOWITZ LISANSKY WILLIiN DOLOWITZ KAN'I'ROW GULUNIAN BLUMSTEIN CUTKIN CHASSIN GUTNIAN GOODMAN page two hundred cighly-jix'c Phi Epsilon Pi Class of 19 32 LEONARD COHEN RICHARD HAHN Class of 1933 MORTON ROME Clam qf 19 34 SAUL DORFMAN ARNOLD FIELD ROBERT FLEISHER Class of 1935 ALVIN KATZENS'I'EIN Graduates SAMUEL GOLDHEIM LOUIS HAMBURGER MORTON HAMBURGER Mae two hundred eighty-six DAVID SYKES DANIEL WILFSON MILTON KRONHEIM LEWIS MEYERS, III THEODORE STERN JAMES WEINBERG DANIEL SONDHEIMER PAUL SPEAR JOSEPH ULLMAN Phi Epsilon Pi FRATERNITY FOUNDED ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER City College of New York, 1901 Founded, 1920 FRA'rERNI'rY COLORS FRATERNITY FLOWER Purple and Gold Orchid KATZENSTISIN MEYERS KRONHEIM WEINEK WI'ZINBERG FIELDS ROME HAHN SYKES WILFSON COHEN page two hundred eigth-sevm Phi Sigma Delta Clan of 1932 MARVIN FRIEDMAN MYRON HERMAN CHARLES YAVELOW Class of 1933 JACK WOODROW Class of 1934 MORDECAI EDELMAN ALFRED GREENHOOD CHARLES MEYER LEON MILLER Class of 1935 JACK DAUM ALVIN S. HARTZ page two hundred eighty-eighl Muxrorq KRONSBERG IRVIN SAUBER ROBERT SONNEBORN EDWARD MOVSH ROBERT RAPPORT IRVING SHLIVEK STANLEY WAGNER LESTER SCHWARTZ SYLVAN SOLARY Phi Sigma Delta CHAPTER HOUSE FRATERNITY FOUNDED 3208 North Vzlwrt Street Columha Univcrxity, I909 RHO CHA P'I'ER Founded, 1923 FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y COLORS FRA'I'ERNWV FLOWER Purple mid W bile W lzilc Row MILLER SOLARY WAGNER MOVSH SHILVEK SCHWARTZ DAUM RAPPORT EDISI.MAN YAVEIMW CRICENHOOD MEYER HERMAN SAUBER KRONSIHCRG page two hundred cighly-ninc Pi Lambda Phi Chm of 1932 RALPH ABRAHAMS HERMAN GOLDBERG HENRY GOLDBERG Clan of 193 3 HAROLD ABRAMSON MAYNARD BADANES JACK GREENFIEID LESTER HAAS Clan of 1934 HERBERT CAMITTA MYRON COHEN, JR. MONROE GU'I'NER ALFRED ULLMAN, JR. Clan qf 1935 BERNARD NEEDLE SAUL MEYERS HAROLD STEIN 21?? page two hundred ninety SYLVAN LEBow SIDNEY LEICHTER ARTHUR SIEGEL DAVID JU'FKOWITZ HAROLD LEVI, JR. NORMAN MICHEL MILTON ROSENBERG HENRY GOODMAN ALBERT HENDIJER MAXWELL LEWITUS PHILLIP SCHWARTZ DANIEL ROSEN'I'HAI. Pi Lambda Phi CHAPTER HOUSE FRATERNI'W FOUNDED 3103 SI. Paul Sireet Yale Univerxily, 1895 JOHNS HOPKINS CHAPTER Founded, 1925 FRA'I'ERNITY COLORS FRA'rEkNI'rY FLOWER Purple and Gold Libi-qf-tlze-Valley LEVI N ERDLF. SCHWARTZ l'ALlT'I. CAMITTA U LMAN STEIN LEBOW HAAS MYERS ROSEN'I'HAL GREENFIIEI.D GOODMAN GUTNI-ZR BADANHS HI-lNDIJ-ZR LHWH'US ROSl-ZN IH-IRG GOLDBERG LliICHTIiR SI 1mm. ABRAHAMS pug: two hundred niner-one Delta Sigma Pi ACTIVE WILSON BUTLER ARCHER MAURICE L. BORDERS CHARLES HURLEY Cox GEORGE DUNKES DOMINIC FEKFI'I'TA CHARLES F. GEISZ JOHN H. GILLIECE JAMES H. GORSUCH HERBERT HAHN FRED C. HAMMEL J. EARLY HARDESTY S. ALOYSIUS HARDES'I'Y HAROLD E. HOUSE EDWIN G. LAGES JOHN LOUIS LAGNA HONORARY LESLIE W. BAKER MAYNARD A. CLEMENS HERBERT M. DIAMOND FREDERICK JUCHHOFF page two hundred niner-l-wo J. ERNEST MCCANN JAMES H. MEIKLE R. NELSON MITCHELL CHARLES NICHOLS FRANK NICHOLS, JR. WALTER L. ORAM JOSEPH R. PROU'F HOWARD A. READ EUGENE I. RINN, JR. T. DONNELL SCHILDWACH'I'ER FRANK A. SMITH W. SIDNEY SPRUILL CHARLES STEINBOCK J. HUGH TAYLOR HOWARD E. WINS'I'ANLEY BROADUS MITCHELL ALLIE RICHESON EDWARD J. S'I'EGMAN WILLIAM O. WEYFOR'rH Delta Sigma Pi CH1 CHAPTER F014 mini, 1922 FRATERNITY FOUNDED New York Univerxily, 1907 FRA'rERNI'rY COLORS FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y FLOWER Old Gold and Royal Purple Red Row ,1. Q Ix; 1'5 x Y vngj .. 21'- FER'I'I'I FA SCHI LDWACHTHK J. HA ltDl-ZS'H' C. NICHOLS S'l'lilNllOCK Ml'l'CH ICLI. TAYLOR READ GORSUCH MCCAHAN GILLIHCE BORDERS COX WlNSTANlJ-ZY LAGNA SI'RUIH. MISIKLH LAGES S. HARDESTY ARCHER NICHOLS page two hundred ninely-Illrcc Under the .rlmde of melan- choly bouglu, Lose and neglect the creeping hours qf time. AAAAAAA IEATURES Hopkins Day by Day lose yet. College. UP D. D. MILLER SEPTEM B F. R QseFather Schaal takes his group of wondering Freshmen t0 the Y Camp. Rushing season starts with a bang. A. T. 038 star in round-up. 29-Opening day of the year with upwards of three hundred new faces, the majority of whom are bound towards an AB. degree. 30eProspects for a presentable football team seem to be quite good this yearwwe havenit had :1 chance to OCTOB ER 3eThe baptism of the football team is not over- brilliante-as we eke out a 6-0 victory over hVashington 4el3reshmen reception-Interfraternity Rushing PartyeA. T. 035 once more on top-stage big round- 6wThe initial number of the Ncwx-Lellcr prints its annual piece of advice to Freshmeneand acknow- ledge the depression by using cheaper paper. 7eJrhe Barnstormers Rallye-Cider and dough- nuts are featured to say nothing of the fair sex. 8r--Bmadus Mitchell has a new Ford-ehividently Economist has nothing to do with al i Ii hconomy. geThe Jay announces its 1931-32 policy it he readable. h Decent and SmartbeAll we ask is that lOWHUPkinS continues its strange new habit-and beats Lehigh in football. Iz-Pi Delta Epsilon initiates eight men into its honorable fold. Congratulations. zoeJlihe traHic police select Hopkins as the site For their animal examination of cars. They,ll soon be using the campus for driving tests. 22!The customary hostilities precede the St. John's game and Annapolis lodges :1 few of our men in its jail. 23eAnother tradition goes by the boards as the De Tocqueville Speaking Cup is withdrawn from com- petition. 24e'lihe football season progresses nicely as we trim St. Johnk and celebrate that night at the Belve- dere. . 25r-Oxford debaters humble our team on the question of the dole. It looks as if the depression hadn,t taught us much about that form of relief. gi-The harriers, as the energetic athletes are called, win a clear sweep of their meet with Haverford. page two hundred niner-scimn stW tv: CHUCK WHI'rnY, TBII Pose NOVEMBER 3-Towhin, Hughes, Brook and Beck apply for the Rhodes Scholarship-there is nothing like trying, you know. 4eVVeitzel is elected President of the Senior Class with Dukehzlrt us the honorary President. GeY. M. C. A. Finance campaign Closes$but Cafeteria prices stay on the same level. HeThe Student Body extends sympathy to President Ames upon the death of his wife. 13eVVestem Maryland shows the Jays how :1 foot- ball game should be played. A 40-0 defeat and a dampening of enthusiasm over the teszs record. Ig-Dan Miller, Sharretts, Helm, Turnbull and Stone are elected to O. D. K.ethe usual criticisms ensue. 25-Dr. Ames sails for Europe-for much-needed rest. tSh-shesome one said he,s going to PariSethe truth is outi. 26-Mnryland wins the Thanksgiving track mee-I beg your pardonefootbull game. And all Baltimore, it seemed, helped celebrate that night at the First Cotillion. The Cele- brity Number ofthe Jay appears. Even Ness, in the Ncm-Letler, admits that it is not bad. LORN lav GUILD DEC EM B ER 7 4-5-e-The Barnstormers present hSecret Service, with considerable success. For the second consecutive year the female parts are ably portrayed. 1m: MILITARY BALI. page two hundred nime-eigltl Jo;-T:1u Beta Pi, after looking around carefully, picks five men to he honored with :1 key. Ithopkins succumbs to the onslaught of ice hockey this year in Baltimore and joins the city league. IghThe swimming team starts practice with prospects for :1 bright season ahead of them. l4-Brook has date with Margie hprospects for jay next year become more feminine. . i . AN UNUSUAL SCl-ZNl-Z ISh-iiingmeers have 11 dnncci Red Schaul punctures his tires on hroken glass the following morning. zthhristmzis holidays begin. I'll start studying for Mid-yeurs over vacation. .IANUARY iiHopkins mourns one of. its most distinguished men as Dr. Ilutune passes away. ZiThe basketball team starts what proves to he a mediocre season by nosing out Loyola 42-41. 4hFirst day after vacation-nnd EXAMS only three weeks away. SVA disastrous athletic weck-end us the jays lose two huskethall games and one swmimmg contest. MiG. D. K. sets hund-shnking record, Drs. Boas, Miles and Mitchell initiated as honorary members of the fraternity. B 1:. RT LOWN-SHCOND Cn'ri LLmN pant mm hundred rzim'Iy-ninc u . u. . : . I6eDrtLaempe breaks up .55 . 3v .1 V ' I . w 1 bridge game in Engineers, Hall- i t' i objects to cultural effect of Levering Hall. 18-JFhe De Moluy Club holds the largest dance held in Levering Hall-more finances for the Budget. zzels the Honor System a success? The Faculty maintains v -- . . , . that the students are too apathe- BANQUET Smsou tie to know what it's all about. FEBR UARY 3el3ert Lown and his orchestra pays us a visit. A great occasion, needless to say. SwFirst day of the rushing sensoneA. T. 033 have pins on a dozen men already. geJust another upset! St. Johifs noses out our basketball team Hrl8. 13$The swimming team beats George Washington while Temple defeats our newly formed wrestling team. IgePledge Dayefor most fraternities. The A. T. O.'s corner :1 few more men and call it :1 day with 19 213 the final count. 16eThe New Plan is announced. Looks as if. we would have to get busy and decide what we came to college for. ISe-A. T. O.'s announce purchase of Fifth Regiment Armory for future dances. 19-New Student Activities cards are being issued. Perhaps the Council wusn,t making enough profit the other way? azeCommemordtion Day falls on :1 Monday, thus providing us with :1 real week-end. 27wTw0 basketball defeats by major opponents in a week. Thank goodness the season is almost over. MARCH leeThe Chemical Engineering course is to be abandoned. Maybe the lower Hours of Remsen Hall will be more bearable From now on. 4e-The Musical Club gives one of the best Home Concerts heard in recent years with 21 pleasant dance afterwards. 5-At last the truth is out! With their meager profits the Cotillion Board is donut- ing a scholarship. 7eThe Liberal Club conducts :1 poll upon Disarmament; the ballot boxes were stutted in accordance with the best modern traditions. II-Gherhardt Hauptmann is entertained at :1 luncheon in Levering Hall. I5-L:1te comers to Dr. Mitchell's class are now to be fined. Can it be that the new car is in need of repairs? pagn three hundred IgeFilections held for popular under classmeneCorckrun taken I6 Phi Gum pictures. ISw-The lnterfruternity Bull with an imported orchestruN-ruther a rarity last year? Ig-The Musical Cluh leaves for Atlantic City-i-Gin hits :1 new high level. zlghiight men are named to the Senior Hall of Fame. The lucky meIerr clever politicians, call them what you will, are Brook, Dukehczirt, Helm, Kneip, Levy, Mattingly, Miller, and Turnhull. ZiMaHleetitms also held for those who have gotten most out of thc Universityiamong the numerous are our own iiDun Miller, Lorney Guild, iiSunny Kneip, W'Viggy Mattingly, and iiRon Brook. azalcvin and Chussin ChOSCH to run the Ncwx-Lvtlvr next year. Hard work is repaid us Phi Beta Kappa honors Seniors and Graduate Students. 23-u-H0pkins gets discussed in the papers as Marge Howser slips into the Editor's chair for next year. It's a pity they didn't let the Debuting Cluh decide this point of heated discussion. APRIL zWThe Jays swing into their campaign for their second consecutive Olympic title against the Olympic Team of '28 and win a sloppy I471; victory. 4w-Possihilities for a good track season loom up :is the Suphs win the lntercluss Meet. giCumpus politicians start working on HULLABALUU election. 8;i'il'l.LAllAl.00 CiCCtiOIIS held eNo luck. 9 4111c lacrosse team walks over :1 hefty C. C. N. Y. team to the tune of I44, while our track team wins :1 close decision from Swarthnmre. Tul Henry helps the junior Prom to he ll very enjoyzihle :lHilir, socially hut not financially. Il-VBeginning 0f the Banquet Season; the Sophs lose their President and :1 few others as well. Freshmen lose their entertainment. HULLABAIDO goes to press. 'WViggy Mut- tingly starts sleeping regularly. Igg'lihe tennis team scores twu victories in :1 row. HULLABALOO elections again held certain politicians much relieved. ibewA truck victory against Gettysburg and another lacrosse wzllkovcr against Swarthmore. 23 vrPrinceton Tiger greeted, 11ml Cotillion Board salaries go up. MAY reSome Senior pays his dues. 6-tr-hRed Schnal still trying to collect pledges. IoiaM. 1C. Senior room gets cleaned up. ISiJUHC Week plans sound promising. IGrglJlSt copy for the HULLAnAmn goes to the printer. 17ehWho's going swimming ? pagr' three 1m mlrnl one T Aree AMO U5 T RAINS Now FROM END TO END T is :1 broad spam from the crude travel methods of colonial days to the comforts and conveniences of modern day trans- portation. Many have been the improvements and refine- The CAPITOL Limited Between CHICAGO - NEW YORK The NATIONAL Limited ments in the pnssenger-cnrrying facilities of the American railroad through the past hundred years. Step by step, the comfort and Between ST' LOUIS ' NEW YORK security of the train traveler has been promoted and entered to. The Baltimore 8V Ohio, the pioneer American railroad, has T h e C O L U M B I A N been foremost in many Fields Of improved transportation en- B W t deuvor, notably in being the first railroad to utilize successfully etween ASHINGION ' th YORK steam locomotive power; the first to cross the Allegheny Moun- tains; the first to issue a time-tnble; and the hrst to employ electricity as a means of communication and as :1 motive power. B. 8i 0. achievements of more recent origin are the individual seat coach, rubber insulating of car wheel trucks, the pre-cooling of sleeping cars and the reclining seat coach. The application ofsteam heating, the invention of the air-bruke, the instal- lation of the electric light and the invention of the sleeping car all marked dis- tinct periods in the development of railway travel. Now comes the science of air- conditioning of passenger trains us a further and great step forward. Almost no other improvement is comparable to it, so greatly does it enhance the pleasure of rail travel. In 1930, the Baltimore 81 Ohio first adapted the air-conditioning principle to one of its colonial dining carSethe Martha Washington. The success of this experiment prompted the railroad to place in service last summer the worlds first completely equipped air-conditioned trainMThe COLUMBIAN, between T W. WWWWWWWW Mi W M ' MMIIV H F ULLY AIR- CONDITIONED :kCOOL . . . . CLEAN . . . ..AND QUIET New York and Washington. Now, two of Americzfs great trains between the East and West-the NATIONAL LIMITED and the CAPITOL LIMITED of the B. N Genre uir-conditioned from end to end. No matter how hot it is outsideeor dustyeor humideevery passenger on these trains enjoys the supreme comfort of cool, clean fresh airein every car. Air from which impurities have been removed; humidity just rightw-neither too moist 1101' too dry; and above all, air that is pleasantly cool. Air from the outside 13 filtered and cooled before it passes into the cut and because windows are kept closed these trains are quiet Inslde. The CAPITOL LIMITED between New York and Chicago; and the NATIONAL LIMITED between New York, Cincinnati and St. Louis 111: the only completely ai1 -c011ditioned trains in service between these points. Thus the B. 8z 0. now offers the traveler the greatest Heet of completely air-conditiohed mains, their daily runs totalling nearly 5,000 miles. 7 The handsome appointments of these trains will appeal to the experi- enced traveler, too. The NATIONAL LIMITED and the CAPITOL LIMITED are alI-Pullman west of Washington, carrying the latest type of equipment. Also train secretary, maid-manicure and barber-valet. Coaches are added between Washington and New York. The COLUMBIAN is another feature train with sun-room observation parlor and club-lounge cars, colonial diners and individual seat coaches between New York and Washington. You are invited to test this advanced form of modern travel comfort on your trips this summer between Chicago or St. Louis and the East, as well as between Washington and New York. No Extra Fare on Any Train BALTIMORE 8: OHIO Joseph Evans Sperry Architect Consolidated Engineering Co. Builders Joseph Evans Sperry Architect Consolidated Engineering Co. Builders Wyatt 8: Nolting Architects Consolidated Engineering Co. Builders THE LORD BALTIMORE BALTIMORE AND HANOVER STREETS Offers Every modern innovation for the comfort of its guests . . . . . . . Four Distinctive Restaurants Main Dining Room Fountain Room Cafeteria Cpoe Shop Luxurious appointments and excellent service make the Lord Baltimore the ideal place for all social gatherings. Headquarters for Johns Hopkins University Parker. Thomas and Rita. Arclzilccls GILMAN HALL. JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY uHomewood Colonialn face bricks were selected for the en- tire Johns Hopkins University group because they matched harmoniously the bricks in the original Carroll Mansion at Homewood. Rich, warm color tones predominate and the group is one of the finest examples of artistic expression in brickwork. BALTIMORE BRICK COMPANY 708-09-10 Maryland Trust Bldg. Baltimore, Maryland Telephone Plaza 6900 $ERVICE ,9 w' GILLCH'E Numerical Mathematical Analysis By JAMES B. SCARBOROUGH There are four main respects in which this work will appeal to prospective buyers: tll it covers the ground without demanding an inordinately lngh K standard of mathematical attainment; tZl at every stage it is illustrated by fully worked-out examples; CD especial attention is given to the question of the degree of accuracy attainable by the methods described; and Ml it deals fully with the troublesome subject of the numerical solution of diHerentiul equations.-Jmtmal of the Royal Statistical Society. 430 pages, $5.50 fapants jurisdiction and International Legal Position m Manchumz By C. WALTER YOUNG These timely and important volumes constitute the most detailed study of the legal aspects of the Manchurian situation that has yet appeared. They should be read by every student of international relationseThe New Republic. Published in three volumes at $7.50 for the set. Japanls Special Position 'in Jllanchuria, 446 pages, $3.00. The International Legal Status of the Kwantzmg Leased Territory, 279 pages, $2.25. Japanese Jurisdiction in the South Manchuria Railway Areas, 367 pages, $3.00. johns Hopkins: A Silhouette By HELEN HOPKINS THOM Written with great sympathy and understanding, this biography of the Balti- more financier who made possible the renowned hospital and university which now hear his name, gives to the world a new hero. I-leretofore the name Johns Hopkins has signified to most, not a man, but a famous institution. Now, however, it is possible for one to know the man behind the institution. -The Missourian Magazine. 132 pages, $2.75 Among the Eskimos of Wales, Alaska By HARRISON ROBERTSON THORNTON. Edited and Annotated by Neda S. Thornton and William M. Thornton, Jr. It is-an intimate story of a race of people who to us mpst always be thoroughly exotlc. lt touches upon all of the many phases of Esklmo life and society, even down to their table manners, if any. 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Union Trust Company OF MARYLAND Baltimore and Saint Paul Streets Mellinis Food M rule from wheat flour, whcntbmn. malted barley and bicarbonate o! ' potassium - conslstlng essentially M e l l l n , S F O 0 d i. AMEEIIIANt of mnltose dcxtrlus, proteins and KMEQ'stfL i mineral suits. . o i J A M zlk Modifier o, 'e Mcllile Food occupies an unique position in regard to the long period of its existence and the unequalled opportunity thus afforded for critical examination of all claims made relative to its emeicncy as a means to assist physicians in the modification of milk for infant feeding. MellitVs Food is also distinctive as the first preparation of maltose and dexlrins ofi'ercd to physicians in serviceable form, and the fact that maltose and dextrins are widely employed in infant feeding shows the stability of Mellin,s Food and again emphasizes its distinction. Mellilfs Food is not in the experimental stage for it is a product with a long record of successful use supported by the real evidence of actual experience and upon this solid foundation- Mellinas F 00d Sustains its Reputation as a Modifier of Milk Worthy of Your Trust We urge your selection of Mellinis Food as your first choice. If samples are helpful we will be glad to send a supply upon request together with formulas and other literature arranged for your convenience. Mellin,s Food Company - - - Boston, Mass. 9 1.63 .; . 8N mishler' . quhef The Arundel Corporation BALTIMORE, MARYLAND '3 CONTRACTORS AND ENGINEERS AND DISTRIBUTORS 0F SAND AND GRAVEL Be Particular About Your Personal Appearance! Garments renovated by Regal Zoric System of Dry Cleaning, retain their form and look of newness, and stay clean longer. NO ODORS N0 GREASY FEEL REGAL kZORIC, QOEIGEM DRY CLEANERS Division of Regal Tgiimm Laundry Personal Supervision of Owners Assures Quality Work and Service Established 1862 1 Incorporated 1900 JORDAN STABLER COMPANY IMPORTERS, JOBBERS AND RETAILERS STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES 701, 703, 705 Madison Avenue Suburban Branch 4804-4806 Roland Avenue ROLAND PARK BALTIMORE, MD. STUDENTS1 BOOK STORE BRANCH Murray-Baumgartner Surgical Instrument Co. 1818 East Monument Street 0Opposite Johns Hopkins Hospital Dispensarw Medical Books Clinical Instruments Stationery Laboratory Supplies OLES ENVELOPE CORPORATION MANUFACTURERS OF NEW GLUE-LOCKED ENVELOPES PLAIN AND PRINTED Montebello Avenue near 25th Street, BALTIMORE, MD. Buy from the Makers Phones Chesapeake 1520-1 Vernon 7235 NATIONAL ENGINEERING CO. POWER PLANT EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES STEAM, HOT WATER AND VAPOR HEATING 1826 GREENMOUNT AVENUE ujack Wnrd turnbull mek. o Inarryll Iqory N u gimhel Cooper JWVM7e60 w The EMERSON BALTIMORE Cuisine and Furnishings Unexcelled Private Rooms and Banquet Halls for all occasions with SUNDAY DANCING Say It With Flowers Everything that is Artistic and Beautiful in Cut Flowersand Plants 3 . Isaac H. Moss, Inc. 531 5 York Road Baltimore, Md. Compliments 0f The Alcazar 3:. JJmilf reizensfein Elmer Sfude. JpafBullinn J L3 BROADCLOTH SHIRTS In White and in Me New Color: TRUMPat$L95 PADDOCK at $2.50 Boll; xfrrow Sanforz'zed Shrunk Stop guessing what size your shirt may shrink to. These famous broadcloth shirts bring you style. And besides, they oHEr you permanent Ht or money back. McPhersods Shirt Makers 11 E. BALTIMORE ST. BALTIMORE PLaza 0735 Sea U5 for M0! '1'le Sizirl, Collar and 'l'icfor June Weak. Buy Your Bottles from BALTIMORE MANUFACTURERS Carr-Lowrey Glass Company Compliments of Quinby Inn Costumes Theatrical Bal-Masque Paul Edel 213 West Center Street Baltimore, Md. Phone, Belmont 7908 Birelyk Pharmacy ST. PAUL at 33rd STREET Your Neighborhood Drug Store PRESCRIPTIONS School Supplies, Candy, Cigars Unexcelled Fountain Service Make Our Store Your Store Compliments of Carroll Independent Coal Co. SOUTHERN HOTEL Baltimore's Foremost s; .A Aimmmnnnnmn JBQREQQEE-am, nLann-nnnn Hotel of Atmosphere and Environment EV. BAN KS anBl DDL I L Silversmi . E BA Jewelers ths Stancnem Q One Hundred Years 1832 Continuously 0n Chestnut Street 1932 l218-22 Chestnut Street Philadelphia SCHOOL RINGS, EMBLEMS, CHARMS AND TROPHIES Of The Better Kind THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK Mailed Upon Request Illustrates and Prices Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver, China, Glass, Leather and Novelties from which may be selected distinctive Wedding, Birthday, Graduation and other Gifts. Phone VErnon 0890 Hynson, Westcott 8z Dunning, Inc. Pharmaceutical Chemists Medical Supplies, Surgical Appliances Prescriptions, Family Medicine Sick Room Requisites CHARLES and CHASE STS. Baltimore, Md. First National Bank of Baltimore Total Resources - $85,000,000 This institution offers the advantages of large resources and the advice 0f oHicers having an intimate knowledge of business conditions. 4 PER CENT INTEREST ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ALBERT D. GRAHAM, Chairman ofllm Board MORTON MJPRENTIS, Prexz'denl Samuel Kirk 8z Son, Inc. Jewelers Stationers Silversmiths 421 North Charles Street Diamonds Gold J ewelry Wrist Watches Fine Stationery Founded 1815 H. C. McComas Coal Co. Established 1871 Ojfice Key Highway at Light St. A Quality Delicacy- Jersey Ice Cream The rich, creamy tastiness 0f itwamd the unquestionable purity of its ingredients-huve made it the popular choice of the hundreds of students who frequent Levering Hall Cafeteria Where it is sold exclusively Brzllimort'x Largest I ndcpmdcnt Ire Cream Mmugfatturer Jersey Meadow Gold ICE CREAM J. H. Furst Company Printers and Publishers Have large facilities for print- ing of every description. A specialty made of Students, Theses, University Pamphlet Work, Binding, etc. Careful attention given to Composition, Proof Reading and Press Work, and all details attending the production of first-Class work. 12-20 HOPKINS PLACE BALTIMORE Plaza 0064 HAROLD F. MANN The 1932 HULLABALOO StaH: wishes to take this oppor- tunity to thank Mr. Mann for his constructive aid this year. The art work and special pages were made possible by his timely suggestions and aid. This book is cased in :m S. K. SMITH COVER3u cover that is guaranteed to be satisfactory and is created and SMITHCRAFTED by an organization ofcruftsmen specializing in the creation and production of good covers. What. ever your cover requirements may be, this organization can satisfy them. Semi for Informalion and Price: la: The S. K. Smith Company 213 INSTITUTE PLACE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS The haunt of those gastronomists seeking to flatter their appetites 3 Oriole Cafeterias 22 Light Street 308 N. Howard Street Music at Howard Street Cafeteria by Jack Lederer's Concert Orchestra The New FORD V-8 -The perfect graduation present The Backus Motor Co. 10-20 E. NORTH AVENUE Baltimore0s Largest Ford Dealer KODAKS SUPPLIES PICTURE FRAMING Zepp Photo Service Established 1900 3044 GREENMOUNT AVE. Phone: Bel. 8640 GOOD FILM DEVELOPING Service in 8 hours COPYING ENLARGING Miller-Baker Chemical Company, Inc. THAMES AND CAROLINE STREETS BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Lawmtory and 17251115172221 Clzemz'mly I 116M! and jlkalz'ej For Better Work Call J acob F ried Tazlor WE CALL AND DELIVER Special Attention Given Hopkins Students Belmont 5501 McLaughlin Bros. Photographers 122 W. F RAN KLIN STREET BALTIMORE, MD. Free! Our Inventory Record Booklet shows you how to list and value entire contents of each room in your home. Provides an invaluable record. Helps determine adequate insurance protection. Ask for it today. Absolutely no obligation involved. '3 Central Fire Insurance Co. 0F BALTIMORE Holliday and Fayette Streets PLAZA 4415 Guaranteed Typewriters Be sure to see our complete stock of New and Used Portable type- writers, also Standards before purchasingr elsewhere. All Makes Sold, Rented, Repaired and Exchanged Typewriter Sales 8; Service Co. 13 W. Redwood St. Plaza 4318 A. J acobs 8: Sons TAILORS Established 1891 Uniforms and Equipment 128 W. FAYETTE STREET BALTIMORE William Graham 8: C0. Pure and Denatured Alcohol Completely and all Special Formulae LINSEED 01L, TURPENTINE, ROSIN Baltimore, Md. Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of Henryhs Sandwich Shop, Inc. 22nd and Charles Streets Harry R. Webster Anthracite COAL Bituminous 11 W. Fayette Street Plaza 3351 Patrom'ze Our Advertisers We earnestly request that you cooperate with those whose names appear on these pages. They have made the 1932 HULLABALOO a reality. NOTHER RTHUR STUDIO NNUAL The Arthur Studios, Inc, considers it a privilege to have been connected with the staHr 0f the HULLA- BALOO in the construction of this beautiful volume, and to thank Mr. E. W. Mattingly, Editor-in- Chief, and Mr. H. Daniel Miller, Business Mana- ger, for their cooperation, which insured the success of this work. 031M317 082104.00, cZun NEW YORK CITY 2b J , V 7 Jahn 01km Again WE are Americafs largest school annual designers and engravers because we render satisfaction on more than 400 books each year. Intelligent co-operation, highest quality workmanship and on-time deliveries created our reputation for dependability. JAHN 8: OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. ?botogmpbers, Artists and Makers of Fine Printing Platesfor Black or Colors. 817 W. Washington Boulevard . Chicago Telephone MONROE 7080 Originaiity 0f leeme T is not one whit too soon to be thinking about the book you are to get out next Springeits theme-its cost, and how it will perpetuate your story down through the years. Basiness Managers and Editors will hnd here a hearty, helpful cooperation that will minimize their work greatly. Horn'Shafer have been producing college annuals of an unique and better type for over twentyzseven years at very modere ate prices. Our best references are Business Manar gers and Editors whom we have served in the past. T e l e p h o n e Plaza 7077-7078 or Write THE HORN-SHAFER COMPANY Advertising Advisors Printing - Planning - Merchandising 3 53 5 E. Redwood Street BALTIMORE. MD. Acknowledgment The brilliant accomplishments of the stars of the opera are applauded to the skies, while the patient work of those laborers behind the stage which guarantees the success of the show, often goes unnoticed and unsung. The true value and importance of the work done by certain individuals not included in the staffs of the HULLA- nALoo is understood and sincerely appreciated by us all. Because their earnest and enthusiastic efforts have made pos- sible the successful completion of the 1932 HULLABALOO, the Editorial and Business Staffs combine in thanking most heartily for their assistance this year: To Miss Leila McCabe for her help in the typing of the copy for this book. To Miss Ann Corckran of Goucher College whose unfailing aid made the writing and composing of this annual a pleasurable task; and for her cooperation in the tedious vigil of proofreading. Messrs. Karl and Wm. G. Horn, of the Horn-Shafer Company for their cooperation and assistance in the printing of this book. Mrs. Paula Lacques and Mr. Leonard Reed of Arthur's studio for their assistance in the photography of our Annual. Mr. Harold Mann and Mr. A. E. Gage, Jr. of the Jahn and Ollier Company for their advice and help pertaining to the layout of this 1932 HULLABALOO. When the Editor Slips When the plumber makes a mistake, he charges twice for it. When a lawyer makes a mistake, it is just what he wanted because he has a chance to try the case all over again. When a carptenter makes a mistake, it's just what he expected. When a politician makes a mistake it becomes the law of the land. When a preacher makes a mistake, nobody knows the difference. When the doctor makes a mistake the under- taker makes some money. When an electrician makes a mistake, he blames it on the induction: nobody knows what that mezms. But when an editor makes :1 mistakee-GOOD NIGHT! . K?, 3': r I r f ..; W Kl.


Suggestions in the Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) collection:

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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