Johns Hopkins University - Hullabaloo Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)
- Class of 1949
Page 1 of 204
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1949 volume:
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W - '-. .- W, ' W 'W--. , W .W ' - W , ll W W. W W.- V. - V W 1- . ' I W . -' V 3 . W' Wef- ' W ' ',, W . W '- .- - - . .W . W WW . W W W W W - - W W W J . . . . , . W W - W -W WW W W , WV W - WW- W W - V-VW . W . V W W ' '. . . W ' .- ' W .. . W W W , W , . W f - W- ' f .W W l' WW 'W W ' VV . VV V W. If W- Y - .W W, L H THE 1949 HULLABALOO Of T HE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Copyright 1949, I. 'Paxton Davis, Editor fwfr 237' ' 4-fl fi! ig N'YFlGivW-'P' . ir k .W . 8 ,maj -:Fin- ,pf lpn -'1' : V L :mv-,f . N . -f.1z.p,,J S. , - v'-fgbx '. A., 4' ,gs --H , -ew J , in ' .1 TE. o gli, 9? -M we -s-'xv zwgrmkx N P4 tv Jw f .- 'fgwggxg 5-Lt' 'A ' wi , ,. Fig! ,Q V' ' u- xg- K 5' : Uh- Q -: V .9 - S.. X 1' 4-'Q . I VN! F , - 1 Q-7, gat .. , '54-T' :.- . ,l -5 t sz N712 1 -'-NQ .. N .Y f -J, HQ.: r L, ' . - - ,, ' XJ, - ip.. ,sh fffi ' RFS' sn' , 'I-f' may qqgi' W 5 0 iff:-L ,Hi M-'ff Y 4 'fy A1551 V Ii, ',-,wq ,- hs 4 guna S , -ff, wx , V ', ,' '-4 . , 5.1. 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A. -1. 1 lid S 0 Q Q 0 Ozew-cute! or long-fnaiu ? . dvenguind or flaio 27 . . . ifooeieu or Kfzalzmind 17 . . caffeine or mofzplzine I7 . . . college or countzg-club ? he group of buildings, burnished- red and white, clusters around the bowl which rises out of the fan that Charles Street makes at 34th, circles back into the woods of Roland Park and out into the hinterlands of Univer- sity Parkway, rolls gently up to the grounds of Marine Hospital, or more picturesquely, dips and rises until it comes to rest at The Baltimore Museum of Art. A pretty place, strangers passing through Baltimore will say, a pretty place, but it comes on you so sud- denly. A pretty place, remote, isolated even in the heart of the city. Away from it all. Perhaps, too, in the irony which they have unconsciously attached to a casual description of Johns Hopkins, the stranger and the dis- interested spectator have seen Homewood in a Clearer light than it has any right to ask. F or even now, now in 1949, Hopkins is a place of paradox, a home for contradictions, a last resort-or maybe the Hrst, who knows?-for the harmony of dischord. In a year when American colleges feverishly replaced aging or tiring presidents with generals, bankers, or glorified Bremen, Hopkins calmly bucked the current by inaugurating as its president a man 7? whose fame, little outside his profession, lay in academic accomplishment and his slow, patient pursuit of the elusive in a world which demanded the tangible and the now. Surprise and ignorance sent vacationing undergraduates into Who's Who during the summer of '48, following the announcement of the Board of Trustees that a successor to Dr. Isaiah Bowman had been chosen. Gilman Hall rumors, hot scoops from Levering, inside tips from the sons of the fathers-pointing the positive finger at this soldier, at that states- man, at another prominent figure in public life-had to be swallowed, with the solemn admission of all concerned that, by Jingo, they'd done it again. There was no predicting what Hopkins was going to do next. ooking back, one had to admit that it'd always been like that, Hopkins the paradox, Hopkins the exception. Even in its genesis, there had been that elusive but deh- nite trend away from the way one did it. In the midst of clamors that the German model just wouldn't go, Daniel Gilman had fulfilled the dreams of a Baltimore merchant and set up the first really Hrst-rate graduate school in America. And its early years, spent in buildings which were deemed less important than the actiyities which were going on within them, seemed quietly contradictory to the reputation which was gathering about The johns Hopkins. . . . new boss atwork . .. Its growth, its transitions, its crises fol- lowed the same path-patternless except for their lack of pattern, unpredictable because they 'were setting their own tradition. VVhile the graduate school quietly gathered about it the great names of Remsen and Royce, while it continued to be the one great center of acl- -18 vanced learning in early twentieth-century America, while it poured out the great schol- ars and teachers of the future to the universi- ties the nation over which were learning to follow its example, its medical school, re- sounding With the names of Osler and VVelch, Halsted and Kelly, gained the fame which the public has ever since associated with Johns Hopkins. C You go to Johns Hopkins, the average Hopkins undergraduate is asked at least fifty times annually. Then Where do you expect to practice? D Actually, of course, . . . Miss Davis had registration problems too . . . the brilliant trail-blazing being publicized at the medical school and hospital was being quietly consolidated and strengthened with the more critically important research of the University. The glamour of the surface was being underwritten by the scholars. The foundations were being found secure. Even its fame as a graduate school eluded the traditional fulfillment. Scholars from abroad learned early in the century to rhapso- dize over the Hopkins, yet at home it con- tinued to be no more than a name, a place, a . . . Ilffeyer and Vandercook made some eyes widen . . . 915 medical school, a hospital. In Heidelburg, you heard of it, in Prague, at the Sorbonne, and how about Peiping?-but you were lucky if they even knew about the med school down the commercial trend was growing among American colleges-the insistence that the university was big business with a capital B, that its position as an influence in the twen- F Bowman and Shafer . . . new jobs all found . . . in East Podunk. Hopkins was still that sort of place. And still, grow and expand with the times as it could and did, it insisted on its unique place in American education. As the century grew older, and the country less the tiny, simple nation it had been a century earlier, tieth-century community was more to be determined by its corporate profits than its doctorate theses. A new kind of college presi- dent, attuned to the times, began to emerge: paunchy, jovial often, a man of kid-gloves and the right connections, a quick man with the checkbook and fountain pen-for all to see: . . . wheels at play . . . my 110 . . . frosh week wasn't all orientation . . . mind. Hopkins, one of the boats against the current, refused to sell out. VVhich brings it to 1949. And a new era. And a new mood. And a new president. 1949 meant Bronk. he man who had cost the tipsters money in the spring and summer of 1949, seemed himself another addition to the ever- Dean Cox ...two ojices now . . . education's new linger-man. Through it all, Hopkins kept its unruflied way, perhaps hectic beneath the surface, but firm in its insistence that the mind and its cultivation were neither the playthings of the stock exchange nor the products of dollars and cents. Goodenow, Ames, Bowman-names which reflected the light of professional and academic competency and accomplishment rather than political aflluencyg names which meant, whatever varying traits might char- acterize their owners, that the proper pursuit of the university founded by Johns Hopkins was, should, and would be the things of the 111 . . . Tom gives the 'word . . . ffl 'gy Dean Kowwenhoven . . . School of Engineering . . . changing Hopkins myth. What his eventual place in the history of the University would be was yet, in the spring of '49, a question only the Levering bums were willing to answer, but general consensus among undergraduates had already carried him far along the road to pop- ularity, a feat-which, in many students' eyes, meant the battle was half won. The hand- shake, the warm interest in the curious stu- dent's problems, the kind words which were made the more impressive by their obvious sincerity-all made Detlev Wtilf Bronk Four- O with traditionally indifferent Joe Colleges at an early date. In many ways, the history of Bronk's ca- reer led many to think of him as inevitably on the road to Hopkins. Born in New York in 1897, the son of a divinity student who was at the time of his son's birth working on his doc- torate, Bronk seemed from his childhood to have been cast in the mold associated with the graduate university. Schooled at Swarthmore and Michigan Cwhere he received his doctorate in 1926j, he had been an assistant power engi- neer even before receiving his bachelor's, had taught physics at Pennsylvania before begin- ning graduate studies. Every step listed in Who's Who seemed the tryout for a bigger job later on. An ensign in the Naval Air Corps in 1918, he was to become Coordinator of Air Research for the Air Surgeon's Office, Head- quarters A.A.F., in the second war. An under- graduate at Swarthmore, he was to return in 1926 as associate professor and later Dean of men. His days of instructing there behind him, he was to return to Pennsylvania in 1929 as Johnson Professor of Biophysics. QThe alert if occasionally incautious Hopkins News-Lek ter scooped the held in '48 by finding the short- est definition of Bronk's chief interest. Said Dean Cox in a News-Letter interview: Bio- physics is the description of biological phe- -112 nomena in terms of physical principles. It is using the methods of physics on the subject, biology. Long-winded pundits from the Sun and Board of Trustees gasped at that one.j It was in the field of Biophysics, of course, that Bronk attained his wide professional rep- utation. As professor at Pennsylvania, as director of the Eldridge Reeves Foundation for Medical Physics, and later on as professor of physiology at Cornell Med, his name had grown in affluence in this new field. But at the same time Cagain the paradoxb, Bronk was striving for a coordination of the sciences with one another, and attempting to find for his students a rapprochement between the spe- cialized fields of physical investigation and the broader, more parabolical implications of the liberal and classical arts. So great a reputation had he made for himself in the latter activity in fact, that newspapers and magazines singled out that particular facet of his educational philosophy for underlined comment at the time of his appointment as Hopkins' new president. The Evening Sun observed that, He thinks the University, with its emphasis 131 Dean Hawkins . . . School of Business . . . on graduate study, is the place for him to con- tinue his efforts to coordinate the sciences and link them with .the needs of the people. And Hopkins undergraduates, however, chilled by the importance attached by the new president to university work at the graduate level, could at least be assured that the notable advances made under Isaiah Bowman toward a broad- ening of the collegiate curriculum, whatever the field, would be continued. And in Bronk the biophysicist they would also find a man who, unlike most literature students, had also digested Coleridge's metaphysics, and who was as likely to discuss his college-editing days with Drew Pearson as the need for a new cyclotron. Zylzere wad a campud loo, if you ever noticed it . eanwhile, somewhere along the line that had led from Howard St. to Home- wood and from Gilman to Bronk, something had been changing at Hopkins. Where aca- demicians the World round had once raved about its leadership, Hopkins was now looked on as a school living on its laurels. Newspaper- men like john Gunther, once warmly partisan i er N f?Z'i-if fi?--e ei? to the Hopkins distinction, now referred to its graceful decline. And the word got around Cyou got it, too, if you ever left Baltimorel, that Hopkins was on the skids, that it no longer rated the accolades once so warmly accorded it. One of the reasons was, of course, that the isolation under which the Hopkins star had its inception had since been lost. Universities the country over, catching the Hopkins idea, had joined the movement it had initiated. Hop- kins Was no longer alone in its insistence on the value of graduate scholarship-and its distinction lost some of the clarity given by an isolated position. It wasn't, in fact, that Hopkins had declined-the others had come up to it. But there was something else. During the Hurry of the twentieth century, the fact was overlooked that, where Hopkins had once been the pole of a paradox, it had now become a 151 paradox within itself. An inner dialectic had replaced an outer, more easily defined position. And it Was this inner paradox that might easily prove the one great problem facing Hop- kins, and now in 1949, Bronk. For Hopkins, which had once scorned the non-scholarly, which might well have once said, Go anywhere you like and we'll respect you, but don't come here looking for anything but hard academic work, was now producing un-Faust as well as Faust, college-joes as well as spooks, lacrosse players as well as slide-rule mechanics. Wliat did it mean? For one thing, it meant that Hopkins was trying to make both scholars and well-balanced men. Like the state uni- versities, it took the extroverts and poured them into ready-made survey courses, upon emerging from which, one was Lol a Bachelor of Arts, a Deke, a clean-cut kid and a peachy dancer. But at the same time like the old Hopkins, it still gathered to itself the spooks and exceptions, tossed them into the stacks-and if they came out at the end of four years, told them to scurry back, that the world outside didn't need them quite yet, that if they just finished that thesis, all would yet be well. Unlike most modern universities, Hopkins in '49 was playing both ends against the middle. No longer choosing sides in the great collegiate game, it took both at once. he undergraduates which the new Hopkins was trying to turn out-or Which, at any rate, under Isaiah Bowman, it had at- tempted to harmonize-might, in '49, be well Worth more than President Bronk's passing glance. The paradox of Hopkins seemed con- centrated in the extremes they manifested. 116 To begin with-and one would have to end it there too-they defied classiheation. There were few Brooks Brothers suits Calas, New Havenb, precious few crew-Cuts Cthe Prince- ton tiger gives a clull roarj, and Hopkins men disappoint all Harvard lovers by not carrying their books in green bags. There just clicln't seem to be a Hopkins look. l 171' J 1 ifffgf -sam iwi.y,yjyo.li'l,,?ilil! iH'xx HMmmll5 ' si A ' ,Eg H mu E Nor would the formal reports of faculty committees aid Bronk in appraising the Joes of Homewood. Hopkins students, if you went by the exam periods, were serious students- but precious few made Phi Beta, and even then were only eligible during the last half of their senior years. Could you say they de-empha- sized sports, didn't go much for the big-time? You might, but you'd have to remember that they won the Mason-Dixon football cham- pionship in 1948, that they had been national intercollegiate lacrosse champions for so long most people had forgotten that the Indians had started the game. No school spirit, you say? O.K., but few Baltimoreans and fewer students at the University of Maryland will soon forget the night Hopkins got, defended, and kept the Terrapin. 5 - sw, ' gs hey were always adding another contradiction to the collection. For one thing, they never seemed to notice their campus. The engineers surveyed it, fall, winter and springg the arts students strolled on the terrace be- tween classesg and the business students coldly and calmly calculated its rising Worth in dol- lars and cents. But no one stopped to bask in the serenity of its Georgian or the symmetry of its ground-plan, they paid no heed to the flush on its face when the leaves turned in the fall. Never paid it heed-and yet the howl that went up when plans were announced for the erection of Shriver Hall at the head of the Bowl might have been heard in Penn- sylvania. Politics? The News-Letter guessed wrong on the '48 election Cwho didn't?j, but everyone turned out to hear Henry Wallace. W'omen? Maybe they didn't import the talent, maybe they were convenient for Goucherg but Esther Williams made a visit one night that still has them gasping. Liquor? Not a professional drinkers' school, perhaps, but the terrace after the annual moonlit hop was always Worth an appraising examination. In the end, try as they might, publication editors and View-book promoters coulcln't name the play. Hopkins was the place where admissions ofhce salesmen in gray tweeds Caided and abetted by public-relations hucks- ters who looked on Hopkins as something only a little short of four years on the Rivieraj 191 at ll W- I,-, f5,'sg1mrv1q ,, , ,- rf.-A-. -,f 4,--au...-,: 'r ls' 'ills X a ls LQ' '. .- l V. I as lured in bright-eyed hopefuls from the New England pre-schools-and the product, sub- jected for four years to an academic outlook that was anything but clubby, seemed subject to variations that made the solar spectrum look like a dot on the horizon. There was noth- ,j...--sv' .V P if '5 M551 ,Manx ,ul w H! 1' 'l ' , ,WH , .vv,, ., , A A V l ,. 4 -.rel . ing, in short, that you could say about Hop- kins men that wouldn't be true-but apply it to one of them, and 99 to 1, you'd be dead Wrong. The truth of the matter was, that in many minds, it was a paradox which took in both 120 extremes Cand still managed to get something over with bothj that gave the Hopkins under- graduate in 1949 his greatest distinction. And whatever pole of the collegiate dilemma Bronk might eventually embrace-and it seemed likely that, under him, Hopkins would again 211- become chiefly a graduate university-the undergraduates of 1949 deserved his scrutiny and attention. 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Uepicl iicketd Jllacnab . . . a primitive . procedure added an air of dignity and serious- ness to the student governing body of the Hop- kins and removed the former analogy to a Chinese schoolroom. VVith the enlarged Council of sixteen men, Doug Macnab was able to establish a workable system of standing and ad hoc committees- a feature needed for many years, Most of the detailed work of the Council Wascarriecl out Wolman ...cz primate . . . moke-filled rooms in the base- ment of Levering, cigarette butts smouldering in empty coke bottles, plump-bottomed junior politicians with feet propped on the lunch bag littered table: these Were not scenes from the annals of the 1948-49 Student Council, but harked from an earlier era which smacked of general inefficiency and apathy. The entire atmosphere changed with the advent of Presi- dent Doug Macnab and the constitutional re- visions of last spring. The use of the Board Room of Levering for its meetings and the in- troduction of modified rules of parliamentary Glenner ...apre-med. . . 124 by the committees which met twice monthly throughout the year. The 1948-49 Council established an impres- sive record compared to those of its predeces- sors. Early in the year the University admin- istration asked the Council to assist the Faculty Parking Committee in the solution of the campus parking problem. Many of the Coun- cil's suggestions were adopted by the Uni- versity, while publicity and enforcement of the new regulations were turned over to the Council's Parking Committee. Later the propaganda campaign initiated by the Coun- cil to tone down the general tenor of Hopkins dances met with considerable success. In November the suggestion box endorsed by the administration last year was finally in- stalled and a standing committee was estab- lished to classify and review suggestions. Although the number submitted was disap- pointing, the Council made an effort to investi- . . . sweating it out . . . gate every worthy idea and criticism in hopes that student confidence in this method of ex- pressing their opinions would be increased. The Council firmly believes that when the students realize that their suggestions and criticisms will be heeded, the suggestion box will become one of the strongest links in stu- dent-administration relations. STUDENT COUNCIL First row: Heisse, Seth, Macnab, Glass, Paulus. Second row: Carpenter, VVolman, Dickersin, Dangelmajer, Forman, Cvrotz, Clinger, NVatt Potts, Fewster, Blaine 1 1 251- H. . . What the hell- charge it to HULLABALOOH . . . For the second consecutive year the Council sponsored the X-ray program of the Public Health Department and the Maryland Tuber- culosis Society. Throughout the year the Council ratified, and in some cases proposed revisions of a number of student activity con- stitutions. For the first time in many years the Council avoided revising its own constitu- tion, a notable feat since it enabled the govern- ing body to devote all of its time to more constructive activities. Although it showed a traditionally rare enthusiasm for grappling with problems presented to it by students and administration alike, the Council itself lacked initiative and imagination-the major criti- cism leveled against the 1948-49 Student Council. Two significant changes in the student gov- ernment system were brought about by last spring's constitutional revisions. The Honor Commission was removed from the direct jurisdiction of the Student Council and the Student Activities Committee became an in- tegral standing committee of the Council. The revisions had the greatest influence on the Honor Commission. First, the Commission was denuded of its secrecy, and second, it was able to function entirely independent of the Council, although the Council maintained its - HONOR COMMISSION First row: Stokes, Glenner, Carey. Second row: Bass, NVolman, Gibson, Buxbaum, Crowder, Blaine -f26 voice in the selection of the Commission's members. The major achievements of the 1948-49 Honor Commission were in the held of pub- licity. George Glenner's nine-member Com- mission concentrated on giving both faculty and the students a better understanding of the workings of the Hopkins Honor Code. ln line with this policy, the Commission arranged a better presentation of the Honor system to the freshmen during Orientation Weekg and later in the term it conducted an investigation of the effectiveness of the system. Since this was the first year of the Commission's indepen- dence, the writing of a constitution occupied the attention of the members for most of the fall semester. Although the Student Activities Committee theoretically became a part of the Student Council, its status and function were not ac- tually altered. Under the guiding hand of its chairman, Reds Wolman, the S.A.C. con- . . . smoke-filled rooms . . . tinued to operate as an independent body. The most signiiicant effect of the constitutional change which subordinated the S.A.C. to the Student Council was to enhance the Council's prestige and to increase its power on paper. The members of the S.A.C. still pulled the purse strings at their own discretion. S.A.C.'s Heisse, Potts, Wolman L 9 L r w 271'- Qaidbgii glzodi . . . Saroyanli Jluufow . . . frinierii pixied . . . .llrong in print couple of painters came into the News-Letter office during the early days of the first semester, erased the scribbling from the walls and gave the traditionally sloppy office a new look. Jayzwlkev' arrived, hobbled and creeped for awhile and finally after its second issue grew bold enough to chase the HULLA- BALOO out of its cave. The old sign I-IULLA- BALOO better than ever was replaced by the incoherent notice, fa,ywaZke1'.' Editors out- be back later. - An Orientation Week News-Letter was pub- lished before the upperclassmen returned. As a result of its popular reception the issue was used as an introductory offer for potential subscribers. HULLABALOO business manager Efrem Potts apologized for no Orientation Weel: HULI,ABALOO,', but the rivalry between the two organizations stopped there. The News-Letter couldn't pay for its page in HUL- LABALOO and yearbook editor Pax Davis' omni-present talent was lending itself to a . . . -whose baby? . . . . . the hucksters . . . regular column in the campus weekly. Pa- tronage replaced receipts and the two publi- cations maintained uninterrupted harmony. Following Grientation Week the HULLABA- L00 settled to a program of compromising its subscription ambitions while the News-Letter editors attempted a program designed to squeeze every corpuscle of imagination into copy for the weekly editions. Managing Edi- tor VVilliam Hevell was responsible for the mechanics of the paper and Business Manager Fred Lang balanced the impossible books. Sidney Offit, a young Saroyan now relieved of the primary headaches of the publication's chief, brought forth a series of issues which give indifferent News-Letter readers a new slant on the way things were-or weren't- going at Hopkins. By the time December had arrived Oflit's editorials had called the cam- pus poll favoring Dewey for the presidency, Echoes of empty barrels, and warned stu- 428 HULLABALOO Chief Davis . . . All The Sad Young .Men . . . dents that lt's time we crawled out of our parents pocketbooksf' Un December 17 the staff published its most ambitious edition, a sixteen-page issue featur- ing a survey of the growth of the University during the thirteen years of Dr. Bowman, a prospectus of Dr. Bronk, a critical review of Russian science and an eye-witness story of the Nuremberg VVar Trials. The success of the issue was hailed by veterans of the faculty as the most brilliant journalism accomplish- ment in the history of the publication. The second semester of the News-Lezfzfei' sur- passed even the outstanding success of the first. Helmut Sonnenfeldt, the feature editor, and Ben Sankey, assistant managing editor, organized a group of news and feature writers B i that included the top journalistic and aca- demic minds on the campus. Outstanding contributors to News-Letter columns were: Lex Crane, William VVinstanley, Norman Su- botnik, Richard Sonnenfeldt, John Balder, William Romeike, Ben Herman and Clarence Seaton. Special assignments throughout the year were capably handled by M. Gordon VVolman, Burt Drexler, VVarren Glick, jeff Miller, Nick Longo, VVilliam Zartman, Will- iam Evans and Morton Blaustein. Copy desk Qlate Wediiesday night when all but the faith- ful few had desertedj was the forte of such veteran newshawks as news editor Bill Clinger, assistant feature editor Harry Debelius, copy 291- H ULLABALoo's Zadek Abrams Potts editor Al Trucker and associate editor Jack lVIarck. Edwin Seeger did a masterful job with the editorial management of the sports staff. He was assisted by several outstanding contribu- tors: Richard Smith, Walter Herman, William Trombley and Benson Ofiit. Many were the students who came and at last departed from the business staff during the year. lVIorton Madden, Leo Gugerty, Carl Hecht and Rod Carlson were the most capable among a fluc- tuating group. This year's News-Letter carried the largest staff, 55 members, and published the most pages of any News-Letter since the paper News-Letter Chief Ojit . . . The Time Of YourL1,fe. . . created a policy of weekly rather than bi- weekly issues. For the HULLABALOO editors, writers and hucksters there was no Weekly product, no superlative raving and encouragement. While Davis re-read The Great Gatsby for the four hundred and fifth time, associate editor Bob Zadek battled with excuses for late copy. However when Davis finally emerged from two love affairs and the management of an incredible number of activities a dummy for the '49 yearbook was revealed. Warren Ded- erick took.time off from News-Letter cartoon- ing and lent his talents to the annual. John Ritterhoff took complete charge of the pho- tography as the editors sighed relief. Davis gathered a small but effective staff and cli- rectly supervised all copy for the yearbook while Potts supervised the business staff. John Seth, George Glenner, Dan McNulty, News-Letler's 1 1 Hevell Clingef Lang - -Iso Bill Clinger, Benson Offit and managing editor Sam Abrams were the expendable who chased the elusive advertisers and hacked out the final copy when the deadline was one week forgotten. HULLABiXLOO First row: Scheer, Potts, Davis, Glenner. Second raw: Zavadil, Forman, Dees. Third row: Car- son, Hempel, Peinardo When finally the '49 HULLABALOO was com- plete there was nothing more for the tired staff to do but await publication, fix next year's election and pray for a minimum of mis- placed photographs. NEWS-LETTER First row: Seeger, Herman, Offit, Sonnenfeldt, Clinger. Second row: Goldberger, Jones, Hevell, Smith, Sankey. Third row: Dederick, Winstanley, Lang, Davis. Fourth row: Evans, Offit, Glenner, Brown 311- if ii if lgroccofii on a Alzingle? Jffooperb for Iwi-caked .I ife in the dormitory still goes on at its customarily uneven pace but tradition didn't apply this year to the D.S.R.C., the government set up by the dorm students. 1948-49 was a year where action rather than inaction was the keynote. Committees were formed that accomplished something, attendance at the meetings increased and With the election of four capable leaders in the persons of Art Lachenbruch, Frank Leake, Dan McNulty, and Bill Hostnik, the dorm government came this year into a maturity which had been deemed necessary for its sur- vival as an active campus organization. Lachenbruch Leake there was definitely a new spirit around the dorm. Through its social committee, the D.S.R.C. put on several good dances during the year, letic inter-entry competition among its othei Hostnik McNulty l 132 established a newspaper and promoted ath- activities. The D.S.R.C. is made up of four officers and six entry representatives, whose function it is to listen to all gripes and difficulties of the studentsg in the event of violation of D.S.R.C. rules, the council acts as judge and jury. . . . it wasn't all organization . But everything was not organization at the dorm. Snow balling, water-fighting and gen- eral horseplay will always continue as long as there is a Hopkins. Despite its comparative anonymity, the dorm remains one of the cogs in the Wheel of Hopkins activity. V , ,.. ,,.-.,.... Nl .HJ .HQPOBJ Ol' cHunChbaCkJ ? n keeping with the Hopkins tradi- tion, the spirit of its athletes has not been limited to the gridiron, the baseball diamond or the lacrosse held, but is a spirit spread throughout the Whole Hopkins athletic out- look. With its aim the promotion of both taking have been many details Which, although overlooked, have done much to dignify Hop- kins athletics. Furnishing the cheerleaders with uniforms, helping pay for the expenses of the lacrosse All-Americans for their annual trip to New York and at all times cordially school spirit and athletics at J.H.U., the H-Club, its membership limited to Winners of the H, has rapidly gained a reputation as one of the more active campus organi- zations. Its accomplishments make an enviable rec- ord of achievement. What could have been a better sight than the H-Club Caravan to Western Maryland with the Band blaring away at its head? Along with this under- extending the hand of friendship to visiting teams-these highlighted the year. Another tradition which seems destined to stay at j.H.U. for many years to come is the commemoration of the Robert T. Layiield Memorial during the football season in honor of a Hopkins player killed while performing for J.H.U. This year the ceremony was held between halves of the I.H.U.-Dickinson game. One of the more successful dances of the 434 Mullinix Gibson fall was the Pigskin Hop, a dance marked by an orderliness that was well received by all. Another distinct feature was the unique deco- ration Which did much to brighten the atmos- phere. A dance in honor of the lacrosse team was held late in the spring with dancing on Gilman Terrace as its feature attraction. One of the feature accomplishments of the ,if ff? H-Club has been an increased attendance by its members. The Club meets on every Tues- day from 12:30-12:50. Officers at the helm of this year's Club Were: President, George Mullinixg Vice-president, Harry Marcopulosg secretary, Stew Friantg treasurer, Bayne Gibson. P f 351 Kackatage to grant fage etermined to produce a better play with each new production, the campus dramatic society, known more familiarly as the Barnstormers, has continually brought to Hopkins a delightful mixture of comedy and drama for many years. Chief among the desires of the Barnstormers has been the need for a permanent theater in which to house their productions. Although plans are still in U Drexler . . . casting was a snap . . . their infancy, all indications point to the use of the R.O.T.C. building as definitely a thing of the future. Selecting two Broadway hits of seasons back as their attractions, the 'Stormers turned in unusually professional performances in The Hasty Heart, and repeated in The Front Page. VVith Carl Anderson, Al Pearson, and john Dower in the leads as Lachie, Yank, and Tommy respectively, the warmth, humor and sadness reflected by the former play were l Firs! row: Ives, Pearson, Tanen- baum, Drexler, Bozarth, Atkins. Second raw: Cox, Faughnan, Klein, Zadek, McCarter, Mors- berger l 136 . . . maybe too hasty . . . capably portrayed by the whole cast. Taking for its theme the cynical attitude of a man about to die and the manner in which his whole outlook on life is changed, this John Patrick play delighted all those who .saw it. Credit must also be given to the managing of Dan McCarter and the expert direction of Manuel Silverman, a graduate student in the Hopkins VVriting Department. The Hecht-lVIacArthur comedy The Front Page hit the boards around April. A unique feature of this performance was the direction by Barnstormer's president, Burt Drexler. A 1928 comedy about newspaper days in pro- hibition Chicago, this comedy has always con- my tributed a good share of laughs. Stage management was in charge of Al Pearson. . . ring down that curtain! . . . ontinuing its policy of presenting the best dance at the right time and right place, the Cotillion Board shifted into high gear as it rolled on to another successful sea- son. Led by capable Bill Lauterbach, the glze gamut: from aacazar io fceiilz Q Roof tions requiring financial assistance in the accomplishment of their desired social program. Starting off with the Freshman Mixer in the fall, the Board proved itself with the board tried to equate its mansize job of keep- ing track of all Hopkins activities with the task of keeping friends in the process. The Cotillion Board was set up with a two- fold purpose in mind: The coordination of social activities open to the entire student body and attempted assistance to all organiza- Lauterbach Tanembaum T Autumn Cotillion which was closely followed by the Victory Dance. Highlighting the winter were the Freshman-Sophomore Prom with Frankie Carle and his Orchestra at the Alcazar, and the junior Prom with old reliable Johnny Long at a place new to Hopkins gath- erings-Keith's Roof. In the spring, with VVarmer E..-Q' .ag Q 138 lacrosse activities at their peak, the Cotillion ment during a dance has been the employment Board presented a Homecoming dance fol- of professional groups as intermission relief. lowing the Hopkins-Princeton lacrosse game. Oiling up the gears of its machinery in the One of the new twists provided by the Board form of constitutional revision was also an to keep a continuous program of entertain- accomplishment. First row: Buxbaum, Tanen- baum, Lauterbach, Ewing. Sec- ond row: Beeson, Koerber, Sny- der, Langstaff, Henderson .- - - -,H . V K v -0 4 391- 11 .1 X, ,I V V j Els W- P I4 A' 1 1 I 41. wg ' 'L' -.-... ,- , '1fV- - Q 5 ' Vg, --3:55 A 51 A 'f:ffQ?5214,m, nm A A . 1 1- '.E4'?'y ' 2. X- an 5 . 5' 'f':.-1 'N - B' 'L-5 M' ' Y ' '1 '.4,,,X.f-4l,..fr , -'Y ' JH -' 'Q w- SHP Qgny.-:V :Q-' . , ' 7- V. .ir 'if W I f ff Ei! 'Vif BH! 21, 154 ,Luv H .Xi A ' W1f'57'H' -n ' W' ' A X Y. X f' . 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Baker, later Secretary of War in the Wilson cabinet, the Johns Hopkins University Musical Club is the oldest campus activity. VVith the growth of the under- graduate body, the Musical Club has ex- panded to its present membership of over 100 men, including the Glee Club and Blue Jay Orchestra. The Glee Club, under the director of Osmar P. Steinwald and Emil Serposs, formerly with the Fred Waring Glee Club, is now a select group of ninety male voices. This past year, in addition to the annual carol sing on Gilman Terrace, the Christmas Day radio piogram, the Commemoration Day concert, and the concert in Atlantic City, the Glee Club per- formed at many neighboring Women's col- Rhodes . . . sotto voce . . leges and nurses' homes. Extra attractions were performances by soloists Tom Williams and Lester Grotz, and the quartet of President Gordon Rhodes, Alan Keimig, Lester Grotz and Tom Hubbard. The arrangements of Director Sam Jones increased the popularity and demand of the Blue Jays. In addition to accompanying the Glee Club at many concerts, they performed at the Victory Dance, Freshman Mixer, sev- eral outside dances, and also supplied the music for the Home Concert and Dance, late in May. 442 Bozarth . . . diminished ninths . . . ith emphasis placed upon bringing greater enjoyment to students, the Johns Hopkins Orchestra made great strides in their second post-War year of activity toward bringing classical music on campus. The Director is popular Mr. Wermei' Fries, a member of the Hopkins German Department now working for his lVIaster's degree at the oand, Doned . . . and Mound Peabody Institute. Under his direction, the thirty-piece orchestra increased its repertoire by many short pieces and several long scores. Performances at the Christmas assembly, the Commemoration Day exercises, the Home Concert and Dance and at Maryland College, the College of Notre Dame and the Johns Hopkins Nurses Home, were features of the years schedule. One highlight of the season was the presentation from L'Arlesienne Suite by George Bizet at the Commemoration Day exercise. This program included a flute solo by Neal Bozarth, orchestra president. An- other highlight was the Home Concert and Dance, at which the orchestra supplied music. ! 4315 5:-aaa-bamla and gold-Judi t pep rallies, student assemblies and most football, basketball and lacrosse games, these men in blue uniforms and white crossbelts announced the presence of the Hopkins Black and Blue. Led by Director Conrad Gebelein and Drum Major Stan Melville, their hours of tedious practice were Well spent. The result was pro- fessional precision in marching formations and music. r r S Deuber - . . . majorettes? . . . ' i 1 4. i. ii- ' Trips to West Point and VVestern Maryland highlighted their year and gained added pres- tige for themselves and the University. But, wherever they strayed, they were important to the New Look in Hopkins spirit. And with many members returning, we can count on another big season next year. I 144 he amusing but not surprising increase in R.O.T.C. enrollment this year has delighted Col. Delphin E. Thebaud, senior officer of the Johns Hopkins Unit, and Major Jack Gaygon who represents the Air Force. To keep abreast of modern techniques the R.O.T.C. curriculum has constantly changed since its institution at Hopkins in 1920. Stu- dents enrolled in the four-year courses which offer commissions in the Army and Air Force receive two years of basic training and two of advanced instruction in whatever branch they are to be commissioned. Attendance is also required at a six-week summer camp Where valuable practical experience is gained with Infantry, Corps of Engineers or Air Forces active units. Bradd-lm id and Qofcfbricfcd The R.O.T.C. also coaches the Varsity and R.O.T.C. riiie teams, and sponsors the Mili- tary Ball. 451 Mark and alugudiine . . . Jllariiain and alquinad s an organization which has for its purpose the encouragement of religious life on the campus and the development of fellow- ship among Catholic students, the Newman Club at johns Hopkins plays an important role in University life. Under the guidance of Reverend X!X78.lt61' Gouch, C.S.P., and President John Dower, the Club presented a varied program, both cultural and social. A series of lectures center- ing on the theme The Catholic in the Modern World was offered. The series contained several phases which were presided over by prominent speakers in fields such as psy- chology, politics, medicine and philosophy. In addition a daily rosary was conducted in the Levering Hall Chapel every noon. This sb- -'H' as t t Z Dower practice supported a program of religious activity which was climaxecl by the annual Lenten Communion Breakfast. Social entertainment was furnished by a number of tea dances and gatherings which were arranged with local girls' schools. T ll TT' .- 1? 55 is . iT? ,A ' l si, l l l l l 446 .luludiond . . . leludiond . . . Solutiond . . . Mi S.- Schraml ...policy . .. n an era of international tensions and a cold war, the campus chapter of the International Relations Club offered the Hop- kins students the why's of War and peace. A series of programs arranged by Roger Dal- sheimer and Helmut Sonnenfeldt brought to the campus discussions of controversial and significant issues. The organizations which is open to all members of the undergraduate student body had the distinction this year of including in its membership several mature as Well as enthusiastic globe trotters. Richard Schraml, the club's president, managed to maneuver the SAC into position and jockeyed Sonnenfeldt and Dalsheimer into planning stimulating programs. The club's adviser, Dr. Malcolm Moos, informed all the members of his ofhce number, kept the door open and then dodged issues with his characteristic charm. .Without achiev- ing a solution for World peace the Club left to its successors and the United Nations the problems of peace in our time. First row: Porter, Killer, Scliraml, Sonnenfeldt, Albright. Second row: Osborne, Betz, Ramirez, Kimble, Rieberman, Chase, Reid, Prochasker 471 H. . . Bird thou never wer! W Q Q Q nd so, with Volume I, No. 1, the Jaywalker comes to life, and if he has anything to say about it he's going to be around for a long time. So ran the editorial of the first issue of the Jaywalker. This November issue culminated two months of carnival bal- layhoo and gaudy publicity that left us all a little breathless. Nobody knew quite what to expect, and there were many who thought the Jayfwalkevf was some new type of candy bar or lawn mower-anything but a humor maga- zine at Hopkins. For five months the Jaywalker had been nothing but a dream in the minds of a handful of frustrated Joe Colleges. The obstacles to such a venture seemed almost unsurmount- able and more than once the idea was almost abandoned. But somehow, some way, the obstacles were overcome, subscriptions were sold, advertising was begged, and material was gathered. Finally, in November, the groundwork was complete and the Jaywalkeff came to life. 77 I . . . the buildup . . . Now, six months later, the new magazine has weathered four issues and, from all appear- ances, is very much alive. Despite the skep- tics and detractors who said a college magazine at Hopkins would be a iiasco, the Jaywalker, while still in its infancy, appears resolved to stay around for a long time. Dederick, Gimbel, Tolley, Manweiler, Blaine, Clinger -Us H. . . and never lifted up a s the last proponent of the lost art of tea-drinking and irrelevant conversa- tion, Gilman Hall's cloistered Tudor and Stuart Club continued during '48 and '49 to gather into its bosom the lost, the frantic, and the aging. Founded by Sir VVilliam Osler in memory of his son, Revere, the Club provides for its members a retreat from the snares of Gilman and the fury of Levering in the only private clubrooms on campus, an opportunity for the study of Tudor and Stuart literature through the private library, and monthly smokers where members hear speakers whose subjects range from the restoration of German art to the Perils of Pauline. Restricting its undergraduate membership to men of the two upper classes in literature or related fields, the Club is led by a Board of Governors made up of Faculty, Graduate, and Undergraduate Q 77 Jungle Alone . . . I Dams ig -.H I . -Q. - - .,. , . risen 2:2-W1 ' g--Q '-L+.-F -'fi-511 5 'g..w ' 1 .., :fe . sam:-1 l' 'lf' zz: , li :ai 3- X f iw.-'-:rv .. ,-f . ff..-L-QQ' ' - ' E..fQi'--N1 .f- . viii ff' - ' f4f..l Fi . 77 5251 V ' ' :::'.': fir .Y v .,, f ff 1l.,i S representatives. Dr. Adolph Schultz of the Medical School was this year's president, while Dr. john B. McDiarmid and Paxton Davis filled the positions of vice-president and secretary-treasurer. in First row: Bigelow, Berlind, Ro- lolf, Hinman, Wasserman. Sec- ond row: Davis, Romeike, Griswold, Worden, Appelgate, Ridgeley, Anderson, Davidson, Ofiit Lebullkefrl . . . QLOOCIIBPJ . . . his year, with President Gilbert Lessenco, Business Manager Herbert Ascher, Corresponding Secretary John Balder and Re- cording Secretary Hugh Andrews, the Debat- ing Council completed a tightly filled schedule of discussions. New York, Atlanta, Georgia, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Washington were only a few parts of the country to which the debaters traveled. There were twenty-five debates that saw the men leaving Homewood to meet their rivals. Forty-eight debates in the second semester alone kept the Club busily occupied. Duke, Harvard, M.I.T., Rutgers, Columbia, West Point and the Naval Academy were some of the Schools which listened to the voices of the Hopkins on the subject Federal Aid Education. ,beba ierd This year a Freshman Team was originated with over twenty members. These men had debates with local high schools and freshman debaters from other colleges. also Baby-Jitterd . . . fydtanvferd . . rah-rah . . . he Boosters Club, organized in the fall of 1947 by a few members of the classes of 1950 and 1951, gained recognition by the University this year when its constitution was accepted by the S.A.C. Officially a part of the . . . 500.4 ierd campus activity group, the members turned to carrying out the purposes and functions for which the Club was organized. The founding men had a common interest in the extracurricular activities of the school, but they felt that there was a group needed to create and establish more individual in- terest in the doings of the groups. The Boosters thought more spirit could be aroused by acquainting entering freshmen with the purposes and functions of all campus activi- ties, and to promote those worthy of wider recognition. Accomplishments for the past year included a drive for the improvement of cheers and cheerleading. To achieve this, the group presented a cup to the outstanding cheer- leader of the year. In another field, Boosters did much of the publicity work for the Lever- ing membership campaign. First row: Mikovich, Hill, Beggs, Cornish. Second row: Goodrich, Crowder, Heathcote, VVrigl1t, Brown, Yoder, Langstaff, Henderson, Becker, Schisler, Messer l l 1 l 1 L,,, my .fuixerd or Jlinord . . . Moral! for .xlloclernd ith Len Detweiler as its Exec- utive Secretary, the Hopkins Y has again proved itself one of the largest and most active organizations on campus. Cooperating with the University, the Y held its annual orientation of freshmen, re-establishing the pre-War Freshman Camp, when the frosh were treated to a week end at Camp Letts, An- napolis, and a visit to the Naval Academy. Activities this year kept the Y and its staff continually on the go. Some of the more inter- Cosmopolitan-s kept things movmg . . . E esting activities were the annual marriage lec- ture series, Weekly chapel services, discussions on Beyond Science, promotion of World Student Service Fund, and presentation of a number of lectures by outstanding men and Women in fields connected with Y Work. The Y-sponsored Cosmopolitan Club, seeking closer relationship between students of all nationali- ties, races and religious beliefs, was again host to a large number of members. Y Porter Harber Foster 452 Brownie for Bodine . . . afrgud for Jmateurd ith complete reorganization and the drafting of a new constitution, the camera-clickers were off on a very successful year. Membership is open to all and the Club's growth over the past year is proof that it is a worthwhile organization. Each member Qmembership now totals 201 is responsible for conducting at least one weekly meeting, during which lectures are given on some phase of photography. Meet- ings were highlighted with discussions led by well-known men of this held. ' darkrooms, bright ideas ss In .y4.QSfJl.8. he Student Branch of The Amer- ican Society of Mechanical Engineers is a representative association of mechanical engi- neering students throughout the country. The Johns Hopkins chapter was organized in 1917 to promote a fraternal spirit among the Latest developments in the engineering world are made available to the students in Ille- chcmical Engineers, the official publication of the society. Membership in the society, which this year reached 75, is open to all students of the students of mechanical enineering and to acquaint these students with some of the prac- tical problems confronting the profession. This society furnishes means through which students can make personal contacts with practicing engineers in their chosen profession. mechanical engineering school. Under the guidance of Mr. James F. Kincaid, the society has enjoyed a varied program, and has enter- tained many noted speakers in the engineering profession, besides having interesting films during their weekly meetings. 154 .,4..m. he Student Chapter of the Amer- ican Institute of Electrical Engineers is one of the many active organizations found in the Engineering School of The johns Hopkins University. The membership of this Club draws its numbers from the juniors and seniors Pfarr, jr., vice-chairman in charge of pro- grams, Isadore Moskowitz, head of the Pub- licity Committeeg and James F. O'Neill, head of the News Committee. During the past year, the Club enjoyed a wide variety of activities on a program which working for their Bachelor's degree in Elec- trical Engineering. i Dr. T. Benjamin Jones, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, is the Chapter's faculty advisor and liaison officer between the Baltimore Division of A.l.E.E. and the Stu- dent Chapter. The executive board for the year 1948-1949 included F. Gordon Barry, ipresidentg Wilmot C. Ball, Jr., secretary, .Howard E. Scheidle, treasurer, W'alter L. 551- included student talks on technical topics of their interests, outstanding speakers from In- dustrial Organizations such as the Bell Tele- phone System, the Gas and Electric Company, local radio broadcasting stations, and othersg inspection tours of the Western Electric plants of Baltimoreg joint meetings with the A.I.E.E. Club of Baltimore, and an excursion trip to New York. 04.5.08 ollowing the precedent established in former years, the Johns Hopkins University Student Chapter of the A.S.C.E. presented an extensive program with an activity scheduled every two Weeks. These activities, designed to meet varied interests, were received with enthusiasm by student, graduate, and faculty members of the A.S.C.E. as evidenced by the sizable attendances maintained throughout the year. Considerable interest was also shown in some of its activities by members of other engineering societies. In keeping abreast with modern engineering trends, which require that the engineer be better acquainted with non-technical studies, the chapter presented a series of cultural elc- tures initiated by Dean Shaffer's excellent presentation of The Psychology of Humor. Elaborate preparations were made in the spring when The Johns Hopkins University Student Chapter of the A.S.C.E. was host to the eighth annual meeting of the Maryland- District of Columbia Regional Conference. Informal social functions rounded out the year. 456 04J.Cli.8. he Johns Hopkins Student Chap- ter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers has as its purpose the furthering of the interests of students in Chemical Engi- neering at the University by giving them the opportunity of meeting together and making available to them information not usually in- cluded in the curriculum by means of talks, movies, and visits to nearby chemical in- dustries. At Wednesday noon meetings, members of the faculty of the Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Departments, representatives of local industries, and members of the student chapter related their own experiences with chemical processes and developments. One aS'.a4Jt. he Johns Hopkins University Stu- dent Chapter of The Society for the Advance- ment of Management received its charter in April of 1948 and so is in its first full year of existence at Hopkins. The Chapter was organized as a result of the feeling among the greatly increasing num- ber of industrial engineering students that a professional organization was needed through which they could work toward furthering their practical knowledge of problems of industry and management. Under the capable leadership of VVillard R. Bonwit, the organization leader and first presi- dent of the Chapter, and with the encourage- ment of Professor Robert H. Roy, Professor of Industrial Engineering and Faculty Advisor 571i of the most interesting topics was discussed by Dr. Patrick of the Chemistry Department, who described the development and applica- tions of silica gel. A program was initiated this year to locate summer job opportunities for the benefit of the undergraduate students, and it is expected that this will become one of the leading ad- vantages of association with the Chapter. l of the Chapter, the Society grew in size and stature during the spring of 1948. Programs were of a varied nature, including topics of both general and special technical interest in all fields of engineering. Valuable assistance was given in programing by Mr. William H. Kirby, vice-president of the Balti- more Chapter of S.A.lVI. and instructor at the University. gra ierniiied III . I I 2' wiiiwg I, .V 2 'K 'I A 3. H 'K I -I .,,m E I I I ALGII V r ,Lf Isviii 'gk I? bn- my ,- I Im -0' - V 'V ff? ,ff .f - ' Q ., , . ' , f af Vu- 'rw 'H' 'Hs in L 4552 d 'jaw f' ' ' eff T I 72 'VW' . V ' . I ' '? fQ-1 ff I7,feV'-V5.1 41 if..-' ' V 15- -'ah f - . I A 0, Vi V, ' V. .Q ' 'B 'Q-'Qi .VgiiQi3, , ' , -f .7 I , I v' I grgripff, VVVV F-if 5.3311 IV?ff'Qfi:fH Vg' ,ggggggg I T , ' JVVZI I 1 M3w,g , qwwyhgwyew .QgEV1Ig--V Q ' ' wtQQm I 'V V' 1 ', V I . .,..g3gI,,, R EI ' I 5 I: 'pigs SI- -.AL hi VM gh, Is it V-.gf ' I:'qL.NIV,.-II V id, I I I In . If wg -Lf. ' I .lt T: ftginfx -:gm : 1 qv? f 'xx 'W ' Vif sm-. ' '..'?i55 ?-ah, Q. 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Vg-.,. -' T1I1,V,,m5 ...If I.I .x 'IIv....I-, ,. .1,,,. 51 I I ,fp V- 9- ',.,I,I.Vv,-4, ,If Q ,I--'?x,' .V .. T' -. + f . ' .-vxffvnr V' vi ..,..1- 1 1. ' , s V-,1-1..V. 'N V -....' ,:'..,u4A.,,.J pvc. . . 1V-3f,.n. :.,,,,-H -1-1, L' ,-.211 ..l1..4V..T.-.--:LLLQ :QA-:L-l'Ji1,..1f --L..L ,fx No Urojan .Horde for .Nopkind greek! . . . he job of- consolidating campus fraternities is the prime function of the Inter- fraternity Board. The Board is an important factor in the student government at The Hopkins and the key factor in fraternity cooperation. It is also responsible, in a large degree, for directing the energies of the Greeks toward campus activities. Freshman Orientation VVeek included for the first time a program of fraternity indoc- trination which was handled by the Board. It secured a prominent speaker to address the freshman on the general subject of fraternities and then conducted an informal discussion session on the subject. Plans were made to further improve the newly included fraternity program for the next Freshman Week. Book- lets which include national and local rules and schedule will be distributed next year. In an effort to promote both scholarship and athletics, the Board awards trophies w e X. annually to the fraternity excelling in each. A cup will again be presented, for the first time since the war, for the fraternity with the highest scholastic average, while the coveted Wittich Trophy, last won by Beta Theta Pi, will recognize the outstanding group in inter- fraternity sports. During March, representatives were sent to Gettysburg College, the purpose of which was to promote better fraternity relations and to study the Interfraternity Council rules. In the past the annual Interfraternity Ball has been so successful that two such dances were planned for this year. Both dances were formal and proved to be outstanding affairs, thoroughly enjoyed by all. On both occasions the men danced to the music of Dick Depkin at the Emerson Hotel. The rushing regulations were again revised but this time with an eye toward a permanent set of rules. With the aim of producing a -160 Lang Mahr Reid ,:f5g?,iU. Kg, more durable agreement the Board devoted Behind the scenes of a quick moving fra- considerable time in correcting the weak ternity life, these men, under the leadership points of previous years and at last emerged of Fred Lang, gather to offer constructive with what seems a lasting and satisfactory advice toward the formulations of a practical plan. interfraternity policy. ' First row: Schisler, Schreiber, Lang, Heathcote, Montgomery. Second row: Burgan, Schmidt, Zink, Reid, Mahr, Goldstein. T11-ird row: Lessenco, Kelly, Andrew, Yoder, McCarter 611- ouplza :bella lpha Delta Phi was founded by Samuel Eels at Hamilton College in 1832. The johns Hopkins Chapter received its charter in 1889, becoming the nineteenth chapter of the fraternity which now has twenty-seven active chapters in the United States and Canada. Throughout the years Alpha Delts such as Daniel C. Gilman, Joseph S. Ames, Ira Remsen, Wardlaw Miles, and Carlyle Barton have taken a prominent place in the life of the University. Continuing in the fine tradition set by these and other distinguished men, the present chapter has amassed an enviable record of participation in extracurricular activities. The brothers are active in many of the literary, musical. military, and professional societies which do so much to supplement the academic 162 First row: Adams, Andrew, Bacot, Baldwin, Bond, Coulbourn, Diggs. Second row: Griswold, Hale, Hall, Macsherry, Miller, Naeny, Pels. Third raw: Rich, Schisler, Thomas, Tittsworth, Trombley program, and they are very well represented on University teams. . During the past year, a great deal of work was done to improve and redecorate the chapter house. A new bar was installed, and after spending the better part of a year sitting in relative obscurity on a table, the television set was finally elevated to its position of proper importance by being set into the wall at eye level. A 631 Highspots in the social season were the summer parties at Gibson Island and private homes, the New Year's Eve party and several parties which climaxed a rush season adding thirteen freshmen to the ranks. With the addition of these brothers the chapter reached a new high of forty members and is confident that there are many happy years ahead on the campus for the Alpha Delta Phi. a4lplza gpdilon i i Chapter-Alpha Epsilon Pi's representative on the johns Hopkins campus -completed another eventful fraternity and academic year that was highlighted by suc- cessful fall, winter and spring social seasons. The usual pre-return-to-school renovations in the chapter house occupied the brothers' attention in September. The construction of a powder room on the first floor, papering, painting and recarpeting helped the horne- away-from-home achieve the new look. A house warming stag provided the opportunity to celebrate the return to school and the renewal of fraternal activity. Rushing activity was the focus for business and pleasure during October and November. Featured were two rush dances at the chapter house, an afternoon rush stag, and the pledge dinner. The format for October thirtieth was Halloween, while the setting for the November thirteenth affair included candlelight and soft music in a Bohemian atmosphere. December was an eventful month too. Out of the Parents' Day affair at the chapter house developed the formation of a chapter mothers' club. The pledge group of the chapter spon- sored a dance at the chapter house with the annual pledge show a masculine version of the 464 V ,H F1il'StT0'l.U.' Beisinger, Brodsky, Chasson, Dembo, DuGolT, Galler, Golden. Second row: Goldstein, Greenspan, Hoffman, Rodbell, Seliger, Shear, NVeiner Folies Bergeref' 1949 was ushered in with a gala New Year's Eve party at the chapter house. The new year also marked an intensiiication of social activity. The two Interfraternity Board Formal dances, the Installation Dance at Levering I-Iall honor- ing the newly inducted brothers, and the Middle Atlantic Regional Conclave of A.E.Pi in Washington, D.C., drew the interest and participation of the brothers. ' The climax of the social season came early in May when Psi celebrated its thirteenth anniversary with three days of revelry marked by a formal dinner-dance at the Hotel Emer- son, a yachting party, and an open house. In conjunction with the anniversary celebration my was the publication of a chapter yearbook outlining the activities and achievements of the fraternity and its members over the years. This year also marked the founding of the Psi-clops, weekly newsletter of the Chapter and the resumption of publication of the Psi-Klone, quarterly Chapter magazine. In athletics A.E.Pi participated in the interfraternity football, basketball, and vol- leyball competition, and at the present writing awaits eagerly the start of the I.F.B. softball league, determined to add a fourth title to the three consecutively gained championships in this sport. Glu Ulllegdr ush Week nets twenty pledges . . . club cellar gets painted and new ceiling . . . Tiny Hill, aviator and head Bartender . . . Phil Andrews debates Writing thesis, finally suc- cumbs . . . Christmas Party for the Orphan's Home . . . Carlson loses car in Nebraska snow- drift . . . Dinsmore looking for Ruth . . . the Jim's Smith, big and little . . . the love quad- rangle, Lyons and his women . . . I.F.B. President Lang vetoes move for temperance at Interfraternity Ball, he's true blue . . . - installation of new chapter at University of Delaware . . . conclave of six other chapters here in Baltimore, Gugerty faced with prob- lem of finding 250 blind dates . . . initiation- Simpson makes good at Tropical Park and pays debt, 2545 cans of National . . . Ives reduces as his dining room loses money . . . Syphard and Kinsey, athletes of the year . . . Miriam calls the cops and Dr. Shaffer . . . Founders' Day Banquet . . . another I.F.B. Ball, also wet . . . SPRING, meaning love, books, parties, books, the Alcazar, books, finals, and june Week . . . Party, party!! The Maryland Psi Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega, running under a full head of steam originally fired up by the six men of the rolls in '46, saw this year one of the most successful seasons in the memories of the brethren. Ex- panding from a comfortable roster of 32 to an unprecedented 52, they found themselves able to assert themselves in more campus activities and yet not lose the real fraternal spirit characteristic of the smaller group. Representatives of A.T.O. were to be found liberally sprinkled in almost every organiza- tion and activity on campus. 166 QU? Qw 5' -sa First row: Anderson, Bartusek, Carson, Conner, Cooper, Depkin, Dickersin. Second row: Dinsmore, Duquette, Galloway, Gugerty Hobelman, Houston, Ives. Third row: Johns, Keegan, Kimble, Kinsey, Landon, Lang, Magness. Fourth row: McGin1:y, McHenry Merritt, Moore, Norris, Quish, Robinson. Fifth row: Schauble, Siegfried, Smith, Spartan, Syphard, Thomas, Wernecke. Sixth row Weston, VVhite, VVright, Yoder my feta Elzefa fi ALL . . . and Beta's return to its Charles Street residence. Some old faces missing but the same congenial atmosphere prevails. The Wittich Trophy, hung in its place of honor, declares us sports champions of the fraternity row. Rush season saw Bill Slasman running the show-at the same time football season saw Hansen, Nicaise and Blazek running wild. Early parties reveal new talent. Bob Wroblewski on the piano- shades of Billy Davis. Leo and his Down- town Poker Club. New voices singing old favorites . . . Body and Soul. Bar and base- ment echoes with golden voices . . . Ohm Pass the Loving Cup Around or Beta Sweet- heart . . . Grad Students lend an air of culture to the back basement . . . and Ben's Bar thrives. Goucher gals steal Frank's car on Halloween-his gain was their loss. Little men running everywhere . . . anyone seen Dan Cornish? WINTER . . . concentrated activities in- doors. House repairs . . . Pecorella's new room including goldfish adds charm to the house. Kerwin's paint schemes irnitate Mary Fisher's -Great Scott!! Awaited day arrives for twenty-two pledges . . . formal initiation and banquet . . . impressive ceremony and equally impressive talk by Seth Brooks. Once con- solidated as Brothers, young and old let down their hair at the Masquerade Party. Stew Gordon still having trouble with his women -does fine with anyone else's. Hansen, Col- lins and Pohlhaus promising parties-Cresap promising to bring a date. Huiskamp and Oden entertain with their mountain music . . . Johnny Messer takes that Model A through 1200 miles of snow-that's true love. SPRING . . . brings Betas to their feet cheering . . . Beer Baseball is in season again. The greatest game ever invented. Parisette unpacks his white knickers, Hansen and Pohl- 468 l First row: Blazek, Breslin, Butler, Collins, Evans, Dangelmajer, Douthett. Second row: Freeland, D. Fritz, I. Fritz, Gilmore, Gordon, Hackett, Hansen. Third row: Heiser, Hill, Hooper, Huislcanip, jeager, LeBrou, Lewis. Fourth row: Likiak, Lowe, Mandler, Markus, McNulty, Messer, Mikovich. Fifth row: Mitchell, Montgomery, Nicaise, O'Connor, Oden, Pitkin, Reymond. Sixth row: Sieniinski, Sullivan, W'elsh, VVilson, Wood, Zavell haus their Lacrosse sticks and the rest of the and more Party. Behind all this Johnny brothers their bathing suits. Picnics and roasts Breslin-an outstanding chapter president- after Lacrosse games . . . ,Coady's wagon. guiding the fraternity to new heights and Time out . . . inals . . . then, June Week achievements. 69k sbefia eptember of '48 found Delta Phi at last installed in its new house at 200 East University Parkway. With the completion of the new bar, club cellar, and chapter room, the house is in top shape, and under the able leadership of President Kennedy the Delts are stronger than ever before. Thanks to Brother Gillet, who served as rushing chairman, St. Elmo pledged fourteen new men, thereby increasing its membership to forty-three, by far the greatest number in the history of Xi Chapter. The new pledges were welcomed into the house by a joint pledge-alumni party which was termed a great success by all participants. Later the pledges reciprocated by giving the brothers a party before the Interfraternity Ball. 170 First row: Baker, Bean, Carey, Cole, Ditch, Gillet, Howell. Second row: Kennedy, Lee, McNeely, E. Morgan, I. Morgan, Pennington, Primrose. Third row: Ridgely, Stokes, Tweedy, Ward, Williams, Bishop On the activities front Brother Al Ward was elected to head the R.O.T.C. honor society, Scabbard and Blade. Brothers Westerlund, McNeely, Ehrlich, Cole and Gamble were active in promoting Jaywalker sales, and Brother Cole was on the first string Freshman Football team. my In a meeting held in December the- Delt alumni association, whose support has been indispensable, gave a vote of thanks to retiring President Fred Wehr and elected Messrs. George Brady, Sifford Pearre, and Robert Maslin to fill the positions of president and first and second vice-presidents respectively. llefia updilon fter recovering for two weeks from the rigors of the 114th Annual Conven- tion of Delta Upsilon, the D.U.'s surged back to the Hopkins to complete one of the most interesting and most active years since the Chapter became affiliated with the National Fraternity in 1928. The convention, the first ever to be staged in Baltimore by the D.U.'s, proved to be a tremendous success much to the satisfaction of all the members of the Chapter who had Worked for ten months pre- paring to play host to several hundred D.U.'s from all parts of the United States and Canada. It was largely due to the Convention that the year 1948 will always be remembered by the Hopkins Chapter. In preparing for the Convention, many needed house repairs were made and a super bar was installed in the club cellar. Shortly after school began, the Chapter purchased a television set with the proiits from the undertaking. The Conven- tion served to knit a closer relationship be- tween the actives and the alumni, it stimu- lated fraternity spirit and put the Chapter in excellent condition for the rushing season. ln short, the Convention was the focal point of the year's activities. After six hectic weeks of rushing, a time during which everyone managed to get about six weeks behind in their studies, the D.U.'s emerged with a fine pledge class of seven Sophomores and thirteen Freshmen. These men were initiated on February 11th prior to the Winter Banquet and Formal held at the Lord Baltimore Hotel. The new .additions raised the number of active members to fifty- seven. Perhaps the most enjoyable projects carried out during the year were the Christmas and 4172 First row: Bachmann, Blaine, Clayton, Cummins, Davis, Geist, Frankwich. Second row: Goodrich, Greenwood, Heathcote, Henderson, Herbert, Hornick, Holmes. Third row: Hudson, Hughes, Irwin. Kent, Koerber, Maloney, Miller. Fourth foul: Miller, Moersdorf, Mudge, A Pearse, E. Pohl, R. Pohl, Seth. Fifth row: Sheridan, Shipley, Summers, Woolley Easter parties for crippled and underprivileged children. Originally, the Chapter had planned to stage only one such party at Christmas, but due to the great success of this undertaking, it was decided to hold another one at Easter. It is hoped that these two parties will become a yearly tradition with the Hopkins Chapter of Delta Upsilon, To a great extent the high standard of 73f- achievement which was attained by the Chap- ter in 1948-49 may be attributed to Chuck Miller, one of the best presidents the Chapter had had in recent years. Through his leader- ship and organizing ability, the structure of the Chapter was reorganized to meet many of the problems which face fraternities at the present time. Kappa allplza ince 1891 the University has ob- served a Confederate flag flying over the fraternity house of that Order of Southern Gentlemen, Kappa Alpha Order. This year there was some discussion about moving the Mason-Dixon line north to include Pennsyl- vania, New York and New jersey, since two- thirds of the members come from these states. However when the true Rebels threatened another war the idea was abolished and the only battle between Southerners and South- erners is waged over who can consume the most mint juleps at one sitting. This season has seen the K.A. regaining some of its pre-war strength and prestige. While still in the market for a permanent home, we temporarily set up quarters at 3039 St. Paul Street. Then under the leadership of Howard Kelley, the number one man, john Glass and Dick Hughes, the task of remodel- ing the Chapter was begun. The house was first fixed to accommodate thirteen men with both room and board. Next an elaborate pledge program was outlined and the members informed of their particular duties. The rushing plans in conjunction with this were not without success, since Pledge Sunday brought us twenty-four outstanding boys. They entered our program with the same zeal with which we had formulated it and after a 174 First row: Bednarek, Clinger, Collins, Coursey, A. Doyle, Kelley, Mitros. Second row: Parry, Sankey, Sheridan, Sutton, Watson period of training elected their own officers: Copey Schmidt, president, Taft Phoelus, vice-president, Ray Benton, secretaryg Dick Evander, treasurer. Socially, Kappa Alpha continued in the same tradition which previous members had so well established. Brother John Emory and his social committee never let things get dull. At the beginning of the year several successful rush parties dominated the scene, after which activities slowed down to only informal gath- terings. But with such members as Dick Hughes, Joe Feldmann, Doc Benton, Dick Evander, Paul McCullough and our two fore- most lovers, John Renshaw and John Emory continually present, these parties were any- thing-but uneventful. With the advent of spring we again became more formal and the Dixie Ball at this time proved to be the high- light of the year. With all the color and cus- 751 tom of the old South, this affair rivals the Lee Day Banquet for number one spot on the K.A. social calendar. And how could anyone forget the traditional stag banquet with which we honor our graduating members? Although not the champs, K.A. sports teams have been the usual strong contenders. We lost out on the football championship by a tie. Basketball season saw theuveteran five, Feldmann, Kelley, Renshaw, Doyle, and Petrich playing good, rugged ball but losing to the younger and faster quints. We are hoping to once again be the chief contender for the softball championships since we still have the services' of the finest pitcher in the league, Paul Mitros. Although we do not have the Wittich Trophy, we have fighting teams who are always out there on the field putting up a good fight. fini cgpdilon fi e got a house! . . . lights out, neighbor's calls and rooms to rent .... Abra- ham Grant and Sinsheimer inspire Pepi Hold- ing Company and we have a rushing point . . . Klein runs meetings and makes final plunges for med school-Bull-dog, bull-dog, bow wow, wow . . .. Mahr has mysterious associations, freshmen whisper operator, sophomores ex- plain, lover, juniors explain outlet, sen- iors understand friend . . . Hess back from Miami, southern exposure brings new fra- ternity, trends . . . Schreiber's schedule reads like university catalogue plus extra little things like marking papers, romancing and captaining tennis team . . . Pent controls treasury . . . Broder finds hometown girl with points of interest . . . Glenner completes in- credible record with O.D.K., admission to j.H.U. med school, and a little outside project blonde and beautiful . . . Jolson packs the stands with girl friends and leads the varsity basketball team while Margolies leads the girl friends and packs the baskets . . . Major, alias the Doctor, has female patients of vary- ing interests . . . Johnny Balder contributes to the News-Letter and argues for debating teams-brothers can't quite understand what all the big words are about but nod ap- provingly, certain it all occurs in History B and we absolved that . . . jerry Rubin eats, sleeps, and sits comfortably through the chaos, certain someday his turn will come . . . Elliot Nelson has car in town but no operators license, still good old El, V team quarter- back . . . Norm Levy starts car, lamp post interrupts plans-that's O.K., he got an A in 176 First raw: Abrahams, Balder, Berkman, Broder, Frankfurt, Glenner, Grant. Second raw: Gutman, Kahn, Mahr, Major, Margolis, Miller, Nelson. Third row: Oftit, Pent, Rubin, Scheer, Schreiber, Sinsheimer, Wagner English- writing . . . Micky Miller and Harry Adler, popular pledges on garbage-can detail, valuable training if the R.O.T.C. doesn't work . Stan Berkman, hottest freshman star in recent years for basketball team, hot- test freshman star in recent years for chug-a- lug team . . . Jay Kaestner and Gil Snyder give group leadership-shuffle tickets for next years frat election . . . Ken Kahn jangles high school keys and college grades while waiting for med school returns . . . Arnie Gutman and Len Harber come out of retirement, descend the long stairway from heaven, and pass on the divine Words to the fraters-in-town boys' dues raised .... Len Scheer endures trials of mi track star with helpless foot, but is comforted by lovers who quietly stand and wait . . . Bernie Levy drops in on the house long enough to get acquainted and not too long to disrupt academic ambitions . . . Sid Ofht lost in T 81 S club with starry eyes, copy of romantic son- nets and a volume of old News-Letters-you remember him, he was your pledge brother . . . Jerry Straus makes point for frat team, miracles never cease -point that is, not Straus . . . Herb Wagner finds Hopkins no more difficult than B.C.C., continues raking up those early letters . . .WE got a house! . . . rooms to rent, neighbors calls and lights out. fini gamma .Ibelta he old Phi Gam house on St. Paul Street is no more, but just try and find the Fiji that is unhappy about the whole thing. Last summer when President Ford and his charges packed their beer mugs and moved to the new location at 2921 Calvert Street, skeptics shook their heads. After all, the new house had no club cellar, showers, meeting room, and lacked countless other necessities. But when the brother who had been away during the summer months re- turned it was a different story. A dingy base- ment had been converted into a pine-paneled club cellar resplendent with a brick linoleum floor. The living room had been redecorated, there were showers, a powder-room, and the house was quite ready for the year's activities. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this transformation lies not in the result itself, but the manner in which it was accomplished. For a handful of actives who were in Balti- more during the summer did the majority of the work themselves, an achievement of which the entire fraternity is proud. 4 However, once the school term began, the fraternity did not limit its operations to con- struction work. The rushing season was con- ducted efficiently, and with corresponding results. The Fijis feel that the year's pledge class was one of the most promising in the chapter's history, for some of the outstanding members of the Freshman Class saw the light and were welcomed into the fold. Early in the school year an aggressive magazine-selling campaign was started to pro- vide the club cellar with television. Every active and pledge contributed his share, and today the Phi Gams can show a beautiful radio-phonograph-television set to prove it. A successful salesmanship contest with the A.T.O.'s, plus prizes awarded to brothers, stimulated the proceedings. Brothers james and Coblentz headed the social committee, and despite the added ex- penses of the new house, their program was attractive. The annual Pig Dinner, the Christmas and Spring Formal, along with many house parties were the results of their 178 'JR Tzrsf row Aburn Amaral Bayer Beeson Beggs Benson Brown Second row Coblenti Cornett Cox Ford Foster Gniiith Grlber Tlnrd row Herman Iloltzworth Howell VV james T James Klem Kressler Fourth row Langstaff Lapwxng Macaulay MacClea McChesne5 Mullmlx Norton Fffthrow Pardew D Pfarr VV Pfam Reld Shore Stokes Summers Smith row Tindowsky Thomas Thompson XN1lll lI11S R Yeager D Yeager mcessant warfa1e agamst Treasu1er Wally my budget s weak Swank The lughhght of the soc1al season was an 1mpress1ve banquet arranged for the pledges at the concluslon of 79 1nfo1 mal 1n1t1at1on Brother Jones engaged an unusually competent chef f01 the occaslon, and the accla1m he recelved from the pledge class was heartwarmmg 1 - , , ., .1 ' 1 11' 1 111 11 1. , 1: , 111 .1 X37 E XX ,X X V. Xi: V ,X XX i - Xi. X. ,, .. , -X . X .. 1 1 X X , F 1 I-X ,. XX 11, M1-. Xi 1 . 1 fx. f. 1 ' ' 121 'H 111. -X 111 - 1. 'J -, , ' 17 1 X ' 1 1, E: E 1 111- Y 1, 'I . , 111. . ,, 111- - XXXXX V .. . X. 1 , 1 111 ' ' ' . 1 1 , . 11 1 1 - . - 3 : 1111 1 , 1 Y 1 ,. Xi XXX 1. A 111 3 , ig ' 11 1, , - l ' ' . . 1:2 X 1 111 f 111 : 11, 111 U2 : L 1 ' X . 11X , , ' 1 1 ,, - ' 'fa , 1- f ' 11 J, ' -, X. 1, 1 -,, 1- . X ,X . .X , 5 1 ' guna , , '. . . . . ' ' - ' - 1 1 1 1 1 1 - ' 11 1 1 1 1 1 - ' . - ' 1 - ' ' 1 1 1 ' C 1 ' 1 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 . . . I D . 1 Q .X . lv 1 - L ' - 1 - 1 - 1 1 1 1 - ' ' C 1 1 . , 1: , . , . . . . . . . . X . . - l X ll 1 11 - - I ' . . . . . . . . fini Sigma ,bella rriving at school immediately after Phi Sigma Delta's National Convention, the brothers were stimulated by a Hood of new ideas and imbued with a spirit that made the rushing period a success resulting in the initia- tion of ten new men into the fraternity. There were many early arrivals at the Can- terbury address, and with the aid of the fratres from Baltimore, a complete renovation of the house was realized by the time school opened. The house was also refurnished with the aid of the Mothers' Club, new rugs were laid to muffie the sounds and curtains were hung to baffie the eyes of curious neighbors. During the early stages of our twenty-fifth year of existence, Master Prater Marty Rod- bell and Rushing Chairman Burt Drexler, their skulls badly bruised, came out of con- ference with the rushing policy in their hands. Simultaneously, Social Chairman Ed Goldstein arrived on the scene with a social schedule that brought joy to many a frater who had previously feared his year would be spent at the library. After these preliminary arrange- ments, Belaga went to bed, Monk Landau retired to his monastery, the 'fGhosts to their cells, and the Hutters, Doren and Stabinsky dropped over to N ate's. The raucus that followed is now history. The rushing affairs kept the house packed. also First row: Belaga, Boschwitz, Doren, Folkoff, Glass, Goldstein, H. Hutt. Secoml row: S. Hutt, Landau, Lessenco, Levin, Levitin, Rodbell, Schuster. Third row: Stabinsky, Subotnik, Sussman, Tanenbaum The Phi Sigheld Follies, written by Norm Subotnik, was the big event of the rushing period and was quoted to be for the sole purpose of impressing freshmen. Such stars as Ed Goldstein, playing Phi Sigiieldg Mike Belaga, her reluctant loverg H176-keys Lon- dong Durante Levitin, Al Roclbell Jolsong and many others made this party the attraction that has charterized all Phi Sig affairs through- out the year. While all this went on, many of the Canter- bury Pilgrims were in the dark cellar of Lever- ing Hall' planning school functions. In one room, Herb Ascher, vice-president and man- 3121 ager of the Debating Team, and Gil Lessenco, president of this Forensic Society, try to out- shout Burt Drexler, president of the Barn- stormers, ambitiously practicing his part in a new melodrama he has just written. The adjacent room is occupied by Morry Tanen- baum, vice-president of the Cotillion Board, thinking of Charlotte and the next Cotillion Board danceg in the other corner, Coach Folkoff derives a new play, by accounting methods, that will send our boys, the Bullets, to new heights. So another year goes by as we Phi Sigs go upward still and onward. Sigma cgpdilon he Maryland Alpha Chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon enjoyed its most successful year of the decade during the '48-'49 school year. Getting off to. a fine start during the rushing season, they came up with a class of twenty-five eager and talented freshmen. Socially, the chapter held its traditional Winter Banquet and Dance and Spring For- mal with all the success of former years. The Winter Formal was held at the Stafford Hotel. Bill Maisel provided the music for both affairs, but not a small portion of the entertainment was offered by a reluctant group of pledges. On a springlike Saturday afternoon the in- formal initiation got underway after weeks of joking about what it's going to be like. Unfortunately for the pledge class, it turned out that the brothers weren't all joking. But then came March and the formal initiation and the long awaited release from servitude G11 the more serious side, the Sig Eps main- tained a high scholastic standing and found one member-Glee Club President Gordon Rhodes-in the pages of Wh0's Wlzo in Amer- 182 First row: Allebach, Andrews, Aitkens, Atkinson, Crawford, Crum, Davis. Second row: Dewberry, Doeller, Edmonston, Gough, Green, Heese, Hevell. Third row: Holland, Jones, Jameson, LaBrec, Lapinski, Lamon, Mclntire, Miller. Fourth row: Morrison, Prado, Rhodes, Robbins, Starkweather, Traugott, Zink, Ernest icon Colleges. Bill Hevell served as managing editor of the News-Letter and was initiated into Pi Delta Epsilon, national honorary journal- istic fraternity. On the athletic front, Bill Nichols, Don Service, and Franny Dewberry performed in a staunch forward wall which helped lead the Jays to a Mason-Dixon football champion- ship. VValt Lapinski was a regular member of Coach George lfVackenhut's wrestlers. ' On the intramural ledger, the Chapter ssl- turned out its usual crop of local stars, too numerous to be mentioned. Finishing second in the basketball league was a noteworthy achievement, but at the time of writing the brothers were looking forward to the softball wars with higher ambitions. The fraternity officers for '48-'49 Were: President, Dick Aldrich, Vice-President, Hank Kuehnle, Comptroller, Walt Doellerg His- torian, George Guido, and Secretary, Bill I-Ievell. .Hon oraried L , W Y, F1 1: -,...pfK nm fur' ..,.. ff.. .. mls.. Yr -' ' L,,,g1J...1....m---- W . -.., WN ,,-2-. -. -.., . 7' ,A 'H 2 '11 4,5 V a...::,-L .fx lf- ., 'va-..,, l I hx ,A ,ff-M... ,K fm ,. W .. -.. ...LBA LTI. I.. A5 SEL- , ' ..-.. H. , - ...:: my . ' , .-1-.. .gm 1 ', fi? ...gr I ' I-E. .1124 .,..... ... . , ' .:':.'- ru- ' - 52..',' .::.:.': 1 54... . 3-7 .. - Jr?-37' aryl: 4 4 H ' .....:.-' zu.. 1 v W , .- im: . .. ' nad-Ln C 1 ktqlafgk' ggi. . , , . . .-, . .U .. -. VIH Q W L.J LJ2., 2? H1 V I . .,.,.,.:L -M '- H' ' .a 3 . fL Q.u 'B - , I 1. ' ' 'T--U' . .,,. .'.,. . 1 fi 5. .W ,Ugg-,Ml '.i.-.Q F-.1.1r..:5nmm7.u-m-., AA, ug- ,fy V 'j-W .11 ' ' - .. ,.1z,..r.' I Qi , .- -.-,Q ,. I 'f 1, - Y. - , . V V! , Nu- a. , 1 . we .N f.. 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M ,W ,H,,.--. -. . , . ,--,JJ n..,,w,'.,-,, ,....,,.,,. , 4- -il -. . in QA. X . nf 1 1.-7-.. , f ' .4 . x , I, r. . - '-LA. mf.- 1 .. ' 1 ,5- f,, U .1 ,.. .., .,. w X 'iv J, ' w . 4 I - Seth ampus wheels continue to aspire for the sacred circle with the five significant stars, and O.D.K. remains the highest recog- nition that can be obtained by a campus leader. The key represents a token of achieve- ment respected for its tradition if not for its utility. This year, under the director of President John Seth, the group attempted a successful flaqued and flafifucled . . . if unambitious program. It elected to mem- bership a composite of student leaders, ath- letes, and scholars who satisfied its require- ments and purpose: to bring together the men outstanding in all phases of collegiate life and thus help to mold the sentiments of Hopkins on questions of local and inter- collegiate interest. Dr. Isaiah Bowman, Hopkins' retiring presi- dent, was awarded a gift of appreciation from the chapter in recognition of his service to the University, While the new President, Dr. Detlev Bronk, was assured of the group's complete cooperation by a pledge of loyalty at Commemoration Day exercises. The group presented a plaque to be inscribed with the name of the top Hopkins' lacrosse player late in the year. Davis, Glenner, Koerber, Langstaff, Lauterbach, Macnab, Offit, Stokes, Vkfolman, Porter, Glass -rfdyi 186 :wild an 04-dgombd . . . ff the road to Levering, Mary- land, Latrobe and Rowland have their heroes, no less profound than Gilman. Tau Beta Pi, the Phi Beta Kappa of engineers, continued to make an outstanding contribution to the active life of the University. VVhile fellow honoraries tapped and relaxed, the Tau Beta group conducted an active program. A group of students representing the finest traditions of the Hopkins engineer were in- ducted to membership in recognition of aca- Schmidt demic excellence in the school's curriculum. In addition to academic achievement the fraternity considered balanced personality as a qualification for membership. - Bailey, Ball, Caprarola, DeLeonardis, Frankie, Frey, Frisco, Hagner, Hessemer, Holecheck, Huffington, Karabaich, Mesmeringer, Rask, Reisz, Siegel, Smith, Sonnenfeldt, Stokes, Stoudenmire, Stull, Upton, lNareheim, Neu, Mathews 8712 l Davis electing members and ordering keys were the primary activities for the year of Pi Delta Epsilon, honorary journalism fraternity. Although not conducting an active program, the group sought to recognize achieve- ments in journalism and inspire the ideals of higher journalistic endeavor. By electing to membership those students whose contribu- tions to the campus publications had been ficad and a Ulzedaurud . . characteristic of the basic tenets-service, integrity, and accuracy-they achieved this aim. The group this year started with a nucleus of the two campus publication editors, an ex-editor, a semi-retired sports editor, and a has-been college journalist turned professional. As a result, all were too busy journalizing to remind each other of an active program. During the year, however, the group elected to membership a member of the faculty and a group of outstanding campus scribes. The climax of the group's inactivity came at the fraternity's annual banquet. Everyone managed to enjoy a stimulating and relaxing evening without being reminded of deadlines, elusive printers, and obstinate reporters. Seth, Offit, Lang, Hevell, Zadek, Smith, M. Subotnik, N. Subotnik, Kennedy, Potts, Dederick xv ' iss dgeakefd and ll Jflamllwok . . hi Lambda Upsilon, a national honorary chemical society, elects to member- ship only those men in chemistry and chemical engineering who by their scholarship and character have shown themselves potentially capable of scholarly achievement in the chem- ical sciences and of contribution to the ad- vancement of science in general, During the half-century since its founding at the University of Illinois in 1899, Phi Lambda Upsilon has shown phenomenal growth and vigor, Alpha Eta Chapter at the Hopkins l l r i Ttmenbaum being one of forty in colleges and univer- sities all over this country. After a period of dormancy during the War, last year, Alpha Eta Chapter was reactivated and fifteen members chosen from the upper classes were duly elected and initiated. First row: Metcalf, Deleonardis, Tanembaum, Austin, Meginnis, Schmidt. Second row: Melville, Satterfield, Knock, Cooperstein, Hand. Third row: Lutz, Fracalosi, Salemi N 891 Sporfd ...ff...... ,,,..,,.... 1 A .1,,,,..,,11, ,ww-,f 1 3 V1-' ,.n,, N' W ' -wc' ...f 60 YR is Q M w mm S w ,. ff is 1 gg Q :V mf f L, .1,,,- w f,-, , v - K '- wt- ,- ,', 1, 1 . s sk 5.5 V S- 13, Hf':5fi:.f'- f J w 4 5 51, . Y 455: M, 1 'wil-1 . 'f -,-fats. . 1 df W :wh Wk w f E5 5, f, xg: zz M ,, LW Zim ms 1:52 5, ,, fm, : 3 ' 7'fi'f:,': - T 7336- T fi Lf-- . , I . WW, ' M531 ' , V, 5,,,g3zmf igufigw, if -41 ymizafzfmg - Q -aim L Y fin K N S Q, gg, 1 f :,,:,,, , M- ,.. '- : w W -mneez' H: ,'f.Q.,m , ' 3 :N V - , 1: .f E ' x ,-Llfgz hx, .4 - 1 H 557135335 W' 5 1 ag H f. 552 f 5, ' Q1 Y gs: Spf' Vg, q , as A Ag,-T5 -Wifi f ,PQEZQQQ ' ,Lffxxx Q35 W if figgfig f fiflisaie Elf ' M a gsm ' E , , ., , ,N , 225915 1: ' . 2 vii? ni? vm iT.f'f,'y4, , H..- , maj ..x:sg'?fVeE Q wa, ' mifzr- N .-JQWIQ f :Q A55 , 'ss ' fc-1 52' Ass N' 352 'M .im ,rl i N750--, iii? 2 V L, K f K., W dw X may cglnplzadid on ,be-emplzaaid . . n November 20 a highly-spirited Hopkins grid eleven whipped Westerii Mary- land. Along with the victory went the Mason- Dixon championship, bringing to a close the greatest football season the school had ever had. Wo1'd soon came out of Orlando, Florida, that the Jays were invited to play in the Tangerine Bowl Game on New Year's Day. The negative Hopkins reply closed the matter. Reason? Simple--it wasn't in conformity with the policy of the Hopkins athletic system. The cost for such a trip could be met only if the team would accept its part of the gate receipts, which would mean abandoning the non-commercial athletic program that had been successful at Hopkins for many years. Sacrifice of policy for prominence was not to be made. In a national-wide coverage several days later Grantland Rice congratulated Hop- kins on its decision. The system that had been fl E 1 i Logan followed for so many years at Hopkins was nationally respected. The attitude of the players themselves throughout the season served as an outstand- ing tribute to the policy. 'When it became evident that only through their own efforts could they raise the necessary money for a pre-season training camp, the squad organized a plan to publish a football program. In addition to its regular game sales the team supported an advertising campaign to increase revenues from the programs. Apparently the spirit of the endeavor was impressiveg the sales more than satisfied the anticipated re- sults. -f92 M allonee First year men at the Hopkins were exposed to the efficiency of the athletic department in their compulsory gym program. Under the direction of Marsh Turner, the system offered a constructive, thorough coverage of athletics for freshmen. Active participation in such individual sports as tennis, handball, and bad- minton were required of everyone. A basic program consisting of gymnastics, wrestling, and boxing was presented. Freshman intramural leagues in football, basketball, and softball were formed and regu- lated by Clyde Heuther. The enthusiasm of all participants testified to its successful organiza- tion. Along with the freshman intramurals, 931- interfraternity teams and pick-up squads were also formed into well-knit leagues. For the first time in University history first-year men were limited to freshman team participation. In every sport in which Hop- kins fielded a Varsity squad, a freshman team was also trained. By contributing to the individual develop- ment of students rather -than the athletic glory of the University, the Hopkins athletic system has succeeded in winning for sports a place of significance in the educational pro- gram of the University. Seerld for the Zangerine foul . . . igskin laurels? The Blue Jays machine scampered off with all in sight. Proud possessor of the Mason-Dixon Cham- pionship, a bid to the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Florida, and four out of live vic- tories in rugged Middle Atlantic States com- petition, the Jay-bird screamed triumphantly. The cause? The mentors Myers and Czekaj-a spirited line-a shifty backfield- a system-and an inspired captain. Attempt to praise individuals, however, and you reach an impasse. It was not a one or two star team, but a unit organism, a machineg and as a machine it swept through an eight game competition with but one defeat. Spirit, determination, plain guts-and the enthusiasm of a young fieshman class, cheer- ing in adolescent oblivion to academic pres- l Myers sures-the spirit was contagious, sweeping the football field and penetrating the locker room. It has been almost beyond memory when Hopkins' seniors wept unashamedly after their last game in a Black and Blue helmet. What do the season's records say? Franklin and Marshall, the conquerors of Lehigh, fell prey to the Blue jay onslaughtg an eleven year jinx ended when Swarthmore was crushed 19-75 and Western Maryland, the scourge of the Mason-Dixon Conference, collapsed on the end of a 7-6 score. Koerber The triple-threat sophomore, Eddie Miller, kicked and ran his way to a thirty-three point season total, while Leo Nicaise folded in the passes for four jaunts to touchdown territory. One hundred and thirty-five points to their opponents forty-three-and twice the toe of Eddie Miller was the difference between vic- tory and defeat. Lou Koerber, two-time captain of the Black and Blue-something unheard of since the days of Gardner Mallonee -with a last minute, dead-run catch of a desperation pass, rang a thrill-packed curtain down on his football career and on the cham- pionship hopes of the VVestminster Green Terrors. Adams, Hansen, and Langstaff at the endsg Nichols and Blazek at tackleg Rice, Lauterbach, and Bunting at guards, Dew- berry at centerg Kalus and Schwartz at half- backg and Brown and Hornick at fullback rounded out the devastating blitzkrieg. VVith only Koerber, Lauterbach, and Rice donning graduation robes the football future for the Blue Jay looks bright indeed-almost glimmering. 4 First row: Service, Hornick, Dewberry, Hansen, Koerber, Nicaise, Gaudreau, Kalus, Brown. Second row: Jenkins, Gibson, Mitchell, Trumbo, Nichols, Kishbach, McChesney, Karman. Tlz-ird row: Lauterbach, Miller, Tierney, Reel, Brown, Adams, Bunting, Rice. Fourth row: Schwartz, Crane, O'Connor, Blazek, Foster, Gough, Langstaff, Paulus. Fifth raw: Myers, Czekaj Kafifing footer! fall . . ith a second place rating in both the Mason-Dixon and Middle Atlantic Conferences, the Hopkins Booters, although lacking in general scoring ability, produced a spirit that compensated for its mechanical failings. Hard fought victories over Washington College, Western Maryland, Gettysburg, Tow- son Teachers, and Delaware were the high- lighted contests of the seasonin which individual performances turned the tide for the Blue Jays. Bill Kinling, Bob Lang, Rudy Behounek, Harry Tighe, and Mahmut Tulezoglu carried the burden for the Black and Blue by con- sistently producing when the chips were down and the tension highest. In a bitter match with Loyola for the Mason-Dixon title, the Jays went down to defeat 3-2, despite two early goals by Tulezoglu which gave Hopkins the lead. However, in the last period an inspired Loyola squad whip- ped together its offense to score the deciding goal. During the last three years the Wackenhut Booters have been in three title play-oils, winning one and placing second in the two others-mute testimony to the inspiration of a team and its coach. First row: Mikovich, Tighe, Bruning, Lang, Tulezogy, Kinling, Ortel. Second row: Behounek, Parisette, Hackett, Smyrlc, Morgan, Baake, Wichart, Morgan, Carrico, Wackenhut l 196 rinning grapplerd groan eaturing five Mason-Dixon grap- pling champions in Tighe, Phillips, Leipold, Brown, and Smith, Coach George 'Waclcenhut enters another wrestling season with two con- secutive District diadems to defend and a wealth of material that makes possession of the third crown almost inevitable. Haverford, Loyola, Gettysburg, and Swarth- more met the Jay mat team and brought home only bruises to show for the encounter. The University of Maryland was the only squad to take the measure of the Black and Blue grapplers. The individual honors as given out by the Boosters' Club to the outstanding wrestler of the meet fell to 121-lb. Charles Brunsman for his performance in the Loyola meet, to 136-lb. Harry Tighe, figure-four artist of the Haverford match, to 145-lb. Ernie Leipold, undefeated grappler who shone in the Delaware meet, and to Howard Good- rich and Fred Smith, co-holders of the wres- tler-of-the-meet title in the Gettysburg scrap. After one-sided victories over Middle-Ab lantic States Conference members, it seemed probable that the Jay grapplers would be dual champions of Mason-Dixon and Middle At- lantic States competition. 971 S Oniond in the Safac! Jfow nother basketball season, and the orphan of the Myers' system plodded its hectic way-stuck between a furious football and lacrosse schedule, it received as much enthusiastic backing as woolen underwear. An abysmal season, showing four games won out of seventeen on the record books, gave little evidence of the potential heights the Hopkins quintet could reach-if and when. However, when the heights were reached, they were reached on most auspicious occasions. The Black and Blue caught Gettys- burg, conquerors of Lehigh, unaware and sent them to an unexpected loss 54-53. Delaware and Franklin and Marshall joined the small list of astonished losers as the Blue Jays played their erratic game of ball. The nadir of the season was met when Towson Teachers plodded to victory through a totally be- I... bewildered Blue Jay squad-sweet revenge against the Teachers brought the Jays their only win in the Mason-Dixon Conference. Needless to say, the Jays never entered the Mason-Dixon playoffs. It was difficult to find an excuse for the very poor showing unless failure be laid to lack of inspiration. That the team had poten- tial strength was shown in its victories. There were few better offensive players in the league than co-captain Dick Jolson, and few taller pivot men than George Mitchell. Billy Crock- ett and Corky Shepard supplied a wealth of fight and aggressiveness, while jim Adams and Newt Margolis combined shooting ability and ball-handling. Apparently the right combina- tion just wasn't there at the right time, somewhere there was confidence lacking. lf for no other reason than their foul- First row: Crockett, Mitros, Iolson, Mitchell, Mullinix, Shepard. Second row: Forbush, Margolis, Adams, Amaral, Sauter, Q'Connor, Thomas, Kinsey jolson shooting ability-a twenty-five percentage average-the Blue Jays were destined to lose many games, and the missed fouls might easily have been the difference between a lost and won game. Pacing the Blue Jays in the scoring depart- Hall, Molandei, McDonald Mitchell ment was George Mitchell with a total of 165 points, closely followed by Dick Iolson and Billy Crockett. And it was the redoubtable Iolson who set the one-game standard with a twenty-two point scoring spree against Loyola. l i I fungled anal avemenld . . group of Varsity lettermen, a handful of yearlings, and a new head coach appeared on the Homewood cross-country course late in September. Their schedule included four dual meet competitions, a tri- angular meet engagement, and the Mason- Dixon championships. The initial victory of the season was gained from Catholic U, the final tally reading 23-32. Captain Bob Portmess and teammate Grimm tied for Hrst place, while Len Scheer finished fourth. Other point getters for the winners were John Ritterhoff and A1 Doyle. Entering the championships with but a slim hope for team honors, the Jays nevertheless turned in their best times of the year. Their . . . on your mark . .. final fifth place finish in a field of ten testified to the strength of the league. Portmess and Grimm once again paced the Jay representa- tives, finishing 13 and 14. Ritterhoff, Scheer, and Doyle finished among the top 40. The Hopkins total was 131, 94 points off the victorious Roanoke squad. First row: Samet, Sieminski, Spivis, Ritterhoff, Portmess, Grimm, Wright, Doyle. Second row: lVlcCubbin, Hollis, Spovis, Phoebus, Spuvis, Malonee af 100 fter a lapse of two years, the Hopkins rifle team has returned to the Held of competition. VV ith a brand new small-bore range in the R.O.T.C. building, the team had excellent opportunities. MfSgt. Tittle, vet- eran coach of many school teams, skillfully worked his material into a team of great potentiality. , The new range containing eight firing points is one of the Finest ranges in the vicinity. The Buffy-eyed and Crodd-eyed . . lighting is excellent and match Springhelds are used in practice firing. Opening the season, the rifle squad partici- pated in the Hearst Trophy Match with ap- proximately 1100 other teams. Also scheduled were postal matches with Clemson College, Iowa State, Utah State, Xavier, U. of XN7yom- ing, Duquesne, Penn State, Presbyterian College, U. of Penn., U. of Toledo, Gannon College, and V.P.I. Out of these twelve postal matches, Hopkins won four, and lost others by only a few points. Also on the books were two shoulder-to-shoulder matches with VVestern Md. College. In the first match, held in VVest- minster, the Blue Jays lost by eleven points, while in the second match at home, a highly contested battle ended in the Black and Blue losing by only two points. l 101 f Clauea 4 A ' ... V pw-vrv In PW' .I l,.,1f' .V .1--1. V Wu... :' I'LifLj'?'H,--' .x ', HZ r 'f'9- I gn, . A 1 A-. ' 'cs 2:2691- -,.,,.,... 'f ,:g, 4 v 4ul 'm ' Q I W Jr- rf A 1 ','.. ' n Nl . qzif ,!L. i iii-:1iU'.- 1 W. U ,,-11 .. wi ,A ww. ,Jqruh ' wr: MA I IJ, -1, ' Q' - '.,.',rl4ff' if - ,,.. 4 ,NF g r ,w .- Q- r ' JI ,- ' ,f A 1 ,U tw: ,gg I4 wr 'L' ' QM.. gfudive Valued and Uraoliiion . . . he incredible if not impossible characteristic, the all-around man, was everywhere to be sensed if not recognized in this year's Freshman Class. He was here, and as he paraded along the walks of Gilman's lawns for the first time, he must have re- minded the ancient scholarly spirit that he was here to stay, if only to survive on scattered D's and consistent C's. The Class of '52 belongs to the new Hopkins character. Among its members are those more stirred by the notes of the campus Ode than a Beethoven symphony, those who study be- tween backfield drills and lacrosse scrimmages, those more concerned with News-Letter dead- lines than the English theme two weeks over- due. At the opposite extreme are those who who create the popular notion of the Hopkins student: the chemistry major reviewing the charts that adorn his walls even on Saturday nights. Upperclassmen viewing the new class for the first time were convinced that the activi- ties would suffer no neglect. Their activity cards were crowded with the ambitions of the Snyder l . . . class unity . . . optimistic though verdant frosh. By the time February had rolled around and the slush between Gilman Hall and Levering had made walking over the shortcut to the Levering basement impossible, the academic shortcut also had been discarded. Oxford Reviews and college outlines were poor substitutes for text books, notes, and outside reading. It was apparent that the all-around freshman, like his scholarly classmates, could not substitute energy for the grind that is Hopkins' academic forte. The all-around man survived the semester exams, though it took more labor than did keeping in step to Frankie Carle's Frosh-Soph Prom tunes. But the Class of '52 satisfied the confidence of the admissions office and survived even the most intense Hopkins aca- demic standards. JI 104 FG . 5: - johnson Spitz Chemtob cm, an Q ':. ,. i -as ati? lf' Vg. fug- W! Not all freshmen were to be swept away with the collegiate ambition of beer parties and big times: in an era of elusive values a handful were true to the tradition of school enthusiasts. Class President Gil Snyder had a few ideas of his own on class social activities and the Sadie Hawkins Day mixer-dance was 'N 'W H 1 El 1 l W 5 ,1 l .VH vsfi , Lg i r' s if ill, - ' r u .G I. -: fi':f. .:faf-. -1 . lEE:E?5'E2L-' i:5F-YLLQQ, y. eifgff-1'-f'fff'i1? - ei' . 1 vdg-f': E: Qi .ni,:j'5,:iTfT3'4.LQ Y: . 3 1: .QE ' 'Nfwfmli L: '1i'1FQ,f!ia-fil5 35,2 ?1IfT'7 . -.,, - . nfl --.sk ,Lx .Z .1 11-1 .3321-.-l 45.22-Cfffz, one of the few dry dances to succeed. Sam Johnson, Al Spitz, and Ed Chemtoh assisted the class president in providing the young class with a combination of mature and youthful interests. Even class unity, the by- word at class elections, seemed to be within the grasp of the Class of '52. 105 ln C74 .Little .fight wad Ulzere . . 00 Q Q Q f we all work together, this can be the best Sophomore Class yet. Witli the words of President jim Henderson ringing in their ears, the Sophs, still dripping with starry-eyed visions and naivete, set out to fulfill their destiny. The long grind from Sep- tember to June may have disillusioned them: some of the casual gripes became pet hates, a few of the boys decided to give the whole thing up as a bad job and took leave of the hal- lowed ivy walls. Like other classes, we had our share of frantic party boys-the ones who spent their nights drinking innumerable beers and singing innumerable songs, all off key. But for the most part, the Sophs had stopped re- sisting knowledge: biology and accounting got more than just a hurried glance, pre- occupation with Goucher and chug-a-lugging, while still an integral part of the routine, became secondary to the disturbing and still unborn pangs of responsibility. Moving in his quiet and intensely efficient manner, President Jim Henderson managed to get behind the scenes and keep the sophomores from being trampled on. The dirt was there and the deals were made but through it all, the K,.T.-- . . ,,-..- l 1 Henderson A . . . no party boys . left? . . . president succeeded in maintaining his com- posure and in getting the important things done. George jenkins as vice-president, Smil- ing George lVlcNeeley, The people's cherce, as secretary, and Don Heathcote, through hell, high water and the S.A.C. managed to keep the class solvent. Dee Blaine, Bill Clinger and Les Grotz iilled out the bandwagon as student council representatives. The de-emphasized athletes took to their fields, tracks and courts and did or died for the glory and the team. Brown, Hornick, Miller, Reel, Crane, Dewberry and jenkins memo- rized plays and sweated out drills for Howdy and Big Ed. Margolis, Kinsey, Amaral, O'Connor, Sauter and Forbush majored in set shots and lay-ups during the winter months. In the springtime, Forbush, Sellers, Crane, Primrose and Gary paid homage at the altar 1 106 McNeely Heathcote of the Great God, Lacrosse. Sophomores also filled berths on the Soccer, Wrestling, Cross- Country, Baseball, Fencing and Chess teams. They may not have been expendable but they were there. The writers went on being methodically in- spired by the News-Letter, the HULLABALOO and the Jaywczlker, while the esthetes pre- sumably had revelations and submitted them to the Review. The extroverts found their fl 55 outlet in the Barnstormers or by donning Wallace buttons. The rest of us went on brooding over our hackneyed cups of coffee in Levering, griping about the weather, and pulling down our gentlemen's C's. All in all, it wasn't a bad year, not bad at all. We were still suffering from growing pains, but somewhere in the distance a little light was beginning to glimmer. Nobody knew what it meant yet, but it was there. 107 li 4241! Ulzingd Condiclerecf . . limaxing a brilliant social season, the Junior Class presented the intoxicating music of johnny Long and his orchestra to a giddy throng of undergraduates at Keith's roof . The revelers sipped their cokes enthusi- astically and marvelled at the inexpensiveness of such a festive gathering. Mr. Keith was seen flitting about suspiciously patting guests! bulging pockets Qmuch to the embarrassment of several young ladiesl in search of hip flasks. These heirlooms, donated by obliging parents, brought tears to the eyes of attending faculty members, who reminisced in little groups of unforgettable Prohibition days. The year also saw other sparkling activi- ties, for the juniors shared the spirit of jolly good sportsmanship and good fellowship. Of equal significance were the elections of class officers. The Hopkins Fraternal Orders, living up to their policy of doing what is best for the campus, lent a helping hand to the little group of leaders which has been the guiding light of its class these past three years. Once again the juniors feel secure and well cared for under the wing of these youthful party leaders. Perennial class mentor Langstaff, with his Langslcqgf . . . perennial . . . , nose to the grindstone and his ear to the door of the Carroll mansion, sporadically lashed his live-wire social committee into furies of activity. Resulting gems included a swim- ming party or something, maybe a closed old clothes dance, and wouldn't it be nice for somebody to get up a class directory? These propositions were met with riotous acclaim by the mass of partisan third-year men packed within their meeting halls at regularly sched- uled class meetings. A class banner appeared mysteriously around mid-year. It was in excellent taste, colorful and original. However, its appearance was surprisingly well disguised. The majority of the class was pleasantly astonished to see the large, yellow, black and blue rectangle backing up the orchestra at the Junior Prom. Com- q 108 H ill Brown K Foster ' ments of where did that come from? and, wasn't it nice of Johnny Long to supply that? could be heard everywhere. Extensive investigation proved that sometime in 1947 a contest was held to provide the design and an appropriation made to procure the banner. All things considered the Junior Class owes the success of this year's entire activity to the endeavor of its own little group of bureaucrats. 10912- . . . 901' the ,Cami ime. . . istory is a cheap group photo- graph where each recorded face must be num- bered briefly for the mind. XV hen we read out pictures from an album such as this, with smiles frozen into one stiff, eternal pose, it is not easy to remember the dimensions of flesh which swell beneath flat pages. Look not upon faces, but instead on signs, and recall them. Here is the cult of the slide- rule phallus: its symbols are held aloft mili- tantly, constant in erectness. The long days of wrath have released Dionysus, et cum sanctis Tuis laudemus Te. VVhat could be more convenient? The slide-rule, Within one compact carrying case, is both rude thrust and receptacle, generator and generatrix, bear- ing the mathematical heredity of sky, building and street. In the center of our photograph is the right- ful place of proper, double-breasted suits, and jovial bodies. These know sure things: the lineage of money and the heraldry of blooded bonds. Learning and the getting knowledge, the terrible Veil of Maya, do not charm them, for they have supply graphs and a job. The body, sir, can go its distance securely in a limousine, but oh tell me how do souls travel? Beeson . . . let's in- vestigate . . , VVill ever in your dreams the line of money graphs on the ledger plate shake like a row of cabbages bursting with frost? But any university still clings to ceremonial tags and the memory of old rituals which were once primitive functions of joy. So, in the far background, purposeful as a woman unbidden to Love, stare out the Arts men. Hopkins, proud of its heresies, has given them a full comfort and the memory of teachers, goodly men rich in humanness, to pilgrimage their days. Each of these students has written a paper Cnot longj on a poem. Some have dreamed upon Kapellmeister Bach, who, knowing noth- ing of slide-rules, once climbed a choir loft to meet a woman, begat twenty children and his own eternity. Others have construed the fragments of Sappho and Alcman in their bel- lies. Perhaps these men will always live in rented houses, but the stones and timbers of -I 110 Stokes M filler their life will not cry out blood. The last identity is simple. VVho can mis- take the flask and retort which invades all dreamsg and behind which lurks the mushroom- shaped ghost of all our sins? e Here then stands one university class, pos- ing conglomerate as damp lettuce upon a plate. Possibly its importance is as a vanishing microcosm. For the young boys are absent for the last time this yearg and the blasphe- mous and uneasy interregnum of education as more than the tense and urgent exercise of puberty is ending. Many students in that period were fathersg some were baldg and most could laugh at the old hokum of graduation speakers and commencement exercises. 1111- ' une week S ' W X N 1 1 5 v- n. 5.9 .Av 'if' -. LF' ' 4 ws. X Y- .. ,',Qf15w.E1f aff ' ,.. ,,, 4. ffagfk-1 qbfil. gf. ,- -zg. ' il .f J U . .., . . , ' , ' - 4..!g.'5.Q: ' L:-. Si' Arr ul QI . I'-,' ..- Q' ,fi . ' N, .Q gy. 1 . .ff i , i' . I 4 . 1 .. Y. 1 v . ... ' I... xl . ' JY. . F - fu Eff? A . 1 I ., f ff' , ' ur..--1f f'1' 4. . ?J'.' , .. ,. ,Q ,L 5 1: A it Q K 15-ti .'1x :el ' K'. ...X 1 . ....- A-. A , V.. . 1, , t X , .jp 93.11 ! .f9P9..fg. ,7fiiF R':ff' fx! fs?-' . 1 7.3 ,',i.,h. ...,..5. 2, 1 , .v 1, . 'J ' x . . ,. . , - 11... if-fda .xg-1 .R-'fi' Eb, .1 ., n 1 -'.3.?.p-ge - fly ,w a . fs. , -A . .. , W f ii. . M 1 .,gsg-95,12 ga. 1' w,ifM,-will ,. .jk Q... J... QXQH .4 . A, M, V. , it . Hur 1 ,B irq ,ii Aa.. 4 1 1, I M.-R, , A I une week xams came in their usual way, blew all of us away for two weeks, and left us hulking masses of simple blubber before they were through. The inevitable C's were posted in Gilman and Mergenthaler, the last cups of coffee went down the hatch in Levering, and the heartier repaired to Holly's and points south for more serious drinking. Meanwhile, as we all plodded along through that final few months of spring, a group of silent workers struggled behind the scenes to put up a June Week that would please every- body. CThey could have learned from the HULLABALOO that you can't please every- body-or even anybodyj Charlie Higdon, Chuck Miller, Jim Walsh, and Don Paulus were the cogs who saw the bands contracted, the locales set, tickets designed, printed, sold. And while the rest of us were watching lacrosse games and going on those long, involved springtime parties, they were hard at it with June Week plans. ' The result? The biggest June Week ever- the least expensive June Week ever. A difficult combination, to be sure, but one that the record- expenses covered two weeks before festivities started -proved to be true. It was hard to account for, and harder still to imagine at Hopkins, but somehow it was true. Record crowd expected at '49 June Week! It all started Tuesday night, June 7. By back roads and side roads, i11 new Packards and battered A-models, the crowd descended on Gwynn Oak Park. The occasion? Sport dance. The Music? Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. The result? Social success, financial success. Hundreds of couples swayed the night away to dance music that was as good as many could recall at a Hopkins dance. Wednesday: a matter to be passed over quickly. There was some mention of a lacrosse game with Mt. Washington, but the score- board told the result, and most of us spent the evening trying to forget it had ever happened. Whether the jinx could ever be broken was a 1114 ,vl , . question no one seemed willing to answer that night. Thursday: Senior Prom at the 'Alcazar. Charlie Barnet provided the music, and an immense crowd had the fun and kept the peace. And through it all, the saturnine figure of Bill Lauterbach, presiding genius of much of june Week's planning, kept solitary Watch from the Blue Room of the Alcazar. Friday night marked the first departure from June VVeek tradition. Under the aegis of a june VVeek committee with original ideas, the tried and true beach party was scrapped for a river cruise. Somewhere along the line, a renegade senior named Dick Tolley dreamed up a College Burlesque -and Charlie Bauer got in the last word on the subject of That Book. 1151 But Saturday night was the night no senior would ever forget. Senior Banquet-with Reds Wolman presiding, Dr. Abel Wolman the main speaker. A Wolinaiu night from top to bottom, and no one unhappy over the results. In the middle of it all, Reds Wolnian and Lou Koerber found out they were to share the Barton Cup, and the the roof went off the Emerson with the cheering. Senior Ball-beyond question the finest dance at Hopkins any senior could remember. Formals, Dick Depkin's band, and the last nostalgic pandering to all the memories of good old days at Hopkins. And so it all came to a close. The only thing left was that Tuesday morning walk up that aisle. Vannevar Bush gave all of us plenty to think about, and the deans dronecl out the long, last list of those who'd somehow accumulated the necessary 124. And Bache- lors of Arts, Bachelors of Science, Bachelors of Engineering-we all moved away into the sun- light of responsibility. But there was that one last look back at Homewood, the Hopkins statue and Gilman Tower. And we wondered if it would ever again be quite the same. ll - ' 1 c si i 7 ii'.L.,,i fig' .3 L.-4-, 1 116 LV W---.,..,, 'ifflx FX ' 7'f Ii gf . M1 f QV -'5 V iff.-I -QL. f5:ff1vL2ffflg, . ' Lg1',H'T'... 3- 4, M ,.'. J ., ,I . if ' 1 W. N 7'L X, ,,,.-.m...f..,.A.,.Amlnw- ' . . ., : ,,,,-.,,,,,,,. .-A--------M AW. vp 'Q' --Z5 . v - , nr- ' ' 1,1 X 1 ...- I -..,... V I X wr.. -Aj' : v 4 ww .1 - H Rf,- 'H if .- - -,J 7 X' :PLE :V july Mu J , , :xi if--1. V ?ALEu.-,MI g ,,. 1 154,15-g. ,, 1 ' RUE-fi-F-B4 n-55 ' ' ' 7ffQ: ,,':f ' .iii : :, 'F ,421 ' 'M 'ff-'?jj':gfl.',,, , .,. . .. .,A L , A . Nflfv ' 'af 5 ' . Q!-uf' w - X Q' 1 Ls:-,1 ' 4F'0q 'H 5 Ig ., ffm -,T ,. Li.. 6lCl'0JJe uglzere wad many a tear in Mudville for mighty Cadey had Jtrucfc out U t was truly a championship team, some said the best in Hopkins lacrosse history, that saw its hopes for immortality shattered as the National Open diadem slipped from its fingers. Struck out, out-manned, out-maneu- vered, out-spirited-and yet at times the Blue Jays played a brand of ball that almost belied the outcome, a brand of lacrosse that sent the Qld Men of the Mount scurrying from blazing balls and prodding sticks. But the quality and experience of years told on the Blue-clad up- starts as Mt. VVashington pulled away with the game and the title in a last half flurry. In collegiate circles, however the Jays ruled the roost: averaging over seventeen points a game, the Black and Blue romped through an eight game schedule without a defeat, out- scoring its, opponents 132-39, upending an v Wfolman Army team that had tied the Mount, and slicing a path to the Swarthmore net with 24 goals. It was apparent in every game that the Jays were an intricate working unit playing as a team and scoring in the precision fashion of a pitching machine. Wlien Army fell, it was to a mobile organism with well-oiled parts-from the goal to the attack the ball Hew its assisted way along a route of decep- tion-from Sollers to Bunting, from Bunting 1118 to Wolinan, from VVolman to FO1'l3l,lSl'1 and goal. Past the Black Knights of the Hudson the Jays skipped and tallied, but not nearly as playfully as against Loyola. With a reputa- tion for being a last period team, Hopkins took a long sight on the net and proceeded to pour in eleven goals in the closing period of play to clinch the mythical high-scoring title. It was team spirit and co-ordination that carried the day: little joe Sollers bounding L ' Q. like a rabbit from his position at goal to clear the ballg the big sticks of Bunting, Bishop, Kalus, and Gough imposing an impressive defense. From mid-field to attack was felt the power and deception of Smith, Sandell, and Forbushg the wily assists of Wolmang and the final scoring thrust of Shepard and Adams. And as Casey fell, so fell the Blue Jays: bowing out unforgetably-defeated, but still a champion. i Q. H iw 1, ii H H ii , w V ll 1 ' z 1191- I Jfaaeball nwilling to damage the Hopkins baseball tradition in any shape or form, the Blue Jays continued their nigh-near winless ball-playing into the 1949 campaign with amazing consistency. Witli a two-win, eleven-defeat season to look back upon, Coach Ed Czekaj might easily come to the conclusion that some Hopkins traditions are insurmountable. Top man on the list of team batting averages was Bud Wiener with an unspectacular .313 for the season. In the pitching department Eddie Miller was credited with the only two wins of the schedule against three defeats, probably the best pitching record at Hopkins in half a decade. However, statistics are at times disrespect- ful, and there were moments, though rare, when the Blue Jay swatters deserved respect. Bernie Baake's hitting against the Quantico Marines was nothing short of spectacular while the startling play of the Jays against Maryland, if devoid of the usually buttered ball handling, might have presented a different picture, for Hopkins was at long last hitting. Perhaps some Freshman recruits from the lirst Hopkins baseball team since 1941 with a better than fifty percent win average may change the rather miserable into a soothing if not ecstatic tale in 1950. 1 120 5l'6lCk t takes more than four star per- formers to win a championship as Coach George Waclcenhut sorrowfully discovered this year. Plagued by lack of depth in every department, the jay thinclads were barely able to annex a third place spot in the Mason- Dixon Championships. There were compensations, however, and the brightest star in the diminutive Hopkins galaxy, Leon Schwartz, supplied many a sparkling moment to offset the paucity of track and Held manpower. Schwartz was the prominent factor in splintering two school records-the first in the 440-yard dash with a whirl-wind performance of 49.9 and the second in collaboration with Thompson, Messers, and Grimm with a rousing 3:25.9 clocking in the mile relay. ' The only defeat of a dual-meet season came at the hands of a Washington College team, while Catholic University, Delaware, Loyola, Dickinson, and Gettysburg fell prey to the Blue jay onslaught. In the field events Charles Andrae and Ed Lassahn outheaved the multitude in the shot-put and javelin while Weighart in the high-jump and pole vault captured much needed points. Con- sistent winner in the track events other than Schwartz was Earle Grimm, a fast stepping Sophomore half-miler and miler who should be heard from in the Hopkins record annals of the future. H, , Q as ,ai , v k in ii ii i ww ii wi ii - 12112- Zennid ed by Captain Gene Schreiber the Jay tennis team completed a better than aver- age season with an aggregate of four wins to seven defeats on the record books. With Schreiber, josh Greenspon, and Brock Ely playing the top ladder positions and Chuck Thompson, Kelvin Thomas, and Stu Baldwin negotiating the remaining single slots the Jays stepped over Towson Teachers both in the initial and return matches and went on to conquer Washington College and Western Maryland. In the doubles matches the Black and Blue team fared better as Schreiber and Greenspon, Thomas and Fred Lang, and Baldwin and Thompson double-teamed to pull many a lost match into the win column. Although the dual match season was only mediocre, the Jays gathered enough strength to place third in the Mason-Dixon Championships and thereby re- gain much of their lost prestige. With a once defeated Freshman team filling in the weak links in the Hopkins net game the prospects for a potent 1950 varsity appear lightened as lVlac Gillette and Henry Flick- inger move up to letter competition with an impressive individual one-defeat season to their records. l -1 122 QU!! C lthough inconsistent throughout the season, the Hopkins golfers finally Hashed a spark of skill that culminated in a burning path to the Mason-Dixon Golf Championship Title. By firing par shots through the second round, Dave Kinsey, Hopkins' number one player, blasted his way past Cronin, the Maryland Collegiate Title holder from Loyola, with a sizzling 72 to even up the match. At this point Captain Jack Hassler picked up a point as did Newt Margolis with scores quite above past performances. Bob Patterson clinched the title as he powered through the last eighteen holes in 76. In upsetting the favored Loyola team, win- ner for three consecutive years, Hopkins scored its first Mason-Dixon triumph in league history. The season dual-match schedule found the Black and Blue divot diggers on the credit side of the ledger in only two of their nine exchanges. The most lop-sided victory for the Blue Jays occurred in the Western M aryland engagement in which Hopkins drilled through to a sparkling 7-2 triumph. The last on the rather meager list of victims was Juniata College which succumbed to the Hopkins onslaught SM-336 in a meet that was prophetic of the Mason-Dixon Champion- ships. 1231- Swimming ith the record-shattering per- formance of Bill Marriott paving the way, the Blue Jays' tank team pulled into a third place position in the spirited competition of the Mason-Dixon Championships. In lVlarriott's record-making time of 2:29.8 in the 220-yard freestyle and his second place spot in the 100-yard freestyle the Blue Jays gained an early advantage. Frank Pardew in the high-diving competition took a hard earned second place as the 440 free-style relay com- bination of Charles Trumbo, Harry Kosky, Bill Crane, and Marriott splashed to a run- ner-up position and clinched third place honors for the aquatic Blue Jays. A two win dual-meet season that found the Jays roaring over Gettysburg College and Catholic University by the scores of 52-23 and 45-30 compensated for three losses encoun- tered against the Mason-Dixon Championship teams of Loyola and American University The early season loss of Charlie Wanner pro duced a vacancy in the Jays manpower that was diicult to overcome, and, although the Black and Blue fielded many veteran per formers, the lack of depth in all events re vented the production of a more powerful squad T if 1 124 Harry E. Appleby S20 N. Curley St. Baltimore, Md. Business Bernhard H. Baake, III 2922 Chenoak Ave. Parkville, Md. A.S.C.E.gA.S.M.E. 9 Base- ball, Captain: Football Soccer, I-I-Club, A.Ai Lawrence LaVerne Ballard 31 18 Clearview Ave. Baltimore, Md. A.S.C.E,g Newman Club enior Stephen H. Bartlett 502 E. 41st Street Baltimore, Md. A.I.E.E. Claw of 1949 Charles N. Bauer 1427 Ellamont St. Baltimore, Md. A.S.M.E.g S.A.M., Treas- UYC1' Board Henry D. Cassard, Jr. 600 Homestead St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A. I. E.E. John F. Clough 10 E. 22nd St. Baltimore, Md. Political Science H-Clubg Barnstormers, Associate Member, La- crosse, Mgr. John Thomas Eagan 2014 N. Wolfe St. Baltimore, Md. Biology H. B. Esecover 406 Stone Ave. Brooklyn, N.Y. Biology AEII Biology Clubg Orchestra 170a I' Joel Garbus Emanuel S. Andrew H. 2367 Washington Blvd. Glasser Greuer Baltimore, Md. 2511 Garrison Blvd. 1518 Bolton St. Chemistry Arts and Sciences Frank E. Hutchinson 12 Heath St. Baltimore, Md. Arts and Sciences Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering Arnold A. Gutman 2601 Parkway Philadelphia, Pa. Biology 'IJEH Debating, Glee Clubg Y.M.C.A.g Biology Club, Chemistry Club, Soccerg Wrestling, Lacrosse, Mgr. Charles AR. Higdon, Jr. 2503 Christian St. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.Q.C.g New- man Club, Sec'yg Scab- bard and Blade, Senior Robert Whorton Ireland 6311 Sherwood Rd. Baltimore, Md. Biology Chemistry Club: Biology Club enior Clam! of 1949 Frank M. Krantz 412 Mt. Holly St. Baltimore, Md. M echanical Engineering A.S.M.E.g Chess Club Class, Treasurer Warren J. Kwedar 824 Northern Pkwy. Baltimore, Md. Business 1 11ob Harold Landau 262 Wright St. Kingston, Pa. Biology Erven L. Lambert 3701 Manchester Ave. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering Charles H. Latrobe, III 911 Poplar Hill Rd. Baltimore, Md. enior Clan of 1949 I nrluslrial Engineering Benjamin B. Lee Ephraim 1538 W. Lanvale st. Lieberman Biolo 4124 Norfolk Ave. gy Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A.S.C.E.g A.S.M.E. Girard R. Lowrey, Jr. Box 167 Fairfax, Va. Arts and Sciences BAE Donald M. Melvin 606 Wyanoke Ave. . Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A. LE. E. Lester Matz 3301 Edgewood St. Baltimore, Md. Baseball: Basketball, Cap- taing A.S.C.E.g H-Club A.I.Ch.E.g Lacrosse JV George C. Mullinix 3706 Springdale A-ve. Baltimore, Md. Writing, Speech, and Drama OAK, fIJY'A H-Clubg Footballg Basket- ball 170c I- John T. Murphy 107 st. Johns Rd. Baltimore Md. S.A.M. Wllson R Tolson 6 Longwood Rd Baltlmore Md Juhus H Taylor 3246 Pelham Ave. Baltimore Md. Business Business KDTA Student Councrl Senior Cfadd o 1949 Albert H Rac1t1 Earl L RICE, J 3821 Lewin Ave. 1904 W, Mulberry St Baltimore Md. Baltimore Md Mechanical Engineering Bernard J Sevel 3400 Avondale Ave Baltxmore Md AEII Fencmg Captam ASME HClub Robert A Turner 3214 St Paul St Baltimore Md Industrial Engineering A S M E S A M SAME George Henry Stlegler, Jr 4206 Roland Ave Baltlmore Md Mechaviical Engweermg TBH Glee Club A S M E Vxce Chairman Thomas P Wllhams 303 Water St Newburgh N Y Psychology CIDTA Glee Club Vxce Pres1dent .1 170d K .yr '9 -1 QT V. 1 'efl 21 ,Q - L .3 'f B4 . ' ' . ' r. . tj' ' . lvl l . . , , , . , . I . . Business AAfIJ Industrial Engineering Business Administration ' ' W ' ' ' Q. ' , ' : l...g....g ' ...ilu bv 3.5 I . I I . , . i 1 v 1 1 - 1 1 n ' AY ir. . 1 ' ' M W P K ll Sal 14? fag, Q JJ n' X 0 w M ' W M134 'x', 'Ng up -kibifi. Z' if -5'-'.1:1' M-- , - .EQ-ligg1.,4 Q, ' pi' 1'7 1,, b39 f'i ,+4g .. Elin fb fil 4. 3 '. ilL,.i'., q .M , ,yigm ' FF , 45 'x ' m I H v ,I w,f?1 ' ' A 1.35 - qw.. - ' J-,' 'grl' X I 4, x 'f ,111-:Fr rf 'W E' '- 'I fha ' f ' Q, . . V A ' 5 P 7 . gi: tv . 5' 417' Lili ' ' w .J 1 M5115 -IW sf l A' 'v 'tony A ff' J. . F323 ,I L 'iizw G L f . A M Q: v 3 773: 'Wu J y F' c 99 ,M M w L eu P' w TF ' . .H HI IT. Q 'JA N 14 HL, .r :Ln ui, I Yu V .y H K .?',,m Hn l ., , Y Q ,., If a I W W' ir, I J uf' X fx A N - , W , M f fb up + f V' .f I w w ..., Q ' . ., A f-f '.,-.vi avgf I , . 5 f x f I I' N - X X Q ' 11 4 f W N UNIV ' 3 xv , pl, , , 11 ,,., , ., W 'M - xM4dA44wHH w M Y'1'.1M., ' PH. ' will!! lf? lv Sup gig. Y 'fr' . H. l James F. Abbott Joel I. Abrams Charles A. Albert, Jr. Achille R. Albouze, Jr. 904 Cator Ave. 2632 Quantico Ave. 6906 N. Point Rd. 1523 47th St. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Sparrows Point, Md. Sacramento, Calif. Electrical Engineering Civil Engineering TBTI Civil Engineering KA Biology A.S.C.E. ' A.S.C.E. Biology Clubg Newman Club Anthony Alcamo R. C.,A1drich Wayne P. Amato Samuel Anselevitch 1527 Gorsuch Ave. 16 D Maple Dr. 2309 Lyndhurst Ave. 1645 Ruxton Ave. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering EIDE l Electrical Engineering Education A.I.E.E. I.Z.F.A. Senior Claw of 1949 126 William A. Arrington, Jr. 3623 Sussex Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business S.A.M . Alton P. Balder 7218 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. History 1IDE1'I News-Leltcrg I.R.C.g Frosh Soccer enior Claw of 1949 Flavius L. Austin, Jr. Vernon C. Bachmann Roswell, N.M. S923 Oxford St. Chemistry KIJAT Chemistry Clubg Biology Club Louis Balducci 615 S. Newkirk St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E.g Camera Club Philadelphia, Pa. Biology AY Wilmot C. Ball, Jr. 221 Kemah Rd. Ridgewood, N.-I. Electrical En gineerin g TBH Glee Clubg Ping-Pong Club, A.I.E.E.g Vector John R. Bailey 1102 Dukeland St. Baltimore, Md. Mechaiiical Engineering TBH A.S.M.E. I William B. Barget 1632 East 31st St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I 127 1 F. Gordon Barry 1631 Gorsuch Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E., Vice-Chairman, Chairman, Newman Club Carl W. Bergstrom 6903 Dunmanway Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g Vector enior Clad Charles N. Bauer 1427 Ellamont St. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.M.E. Joseph M. Berkow 3321 Forest Park Ave. Baltimore, Md. Richard C. Beeson 1401 Burlington Dr. Muncie, Ind. Biology KIIFA D.S.R.C., Treasurer, Sopho- more, Sergeant-at-Armsg Cheerleader, Captaing Biology Club, Treasurerg Cotillion Board, Senior, President, H- Club Melvin F. Berngartt 3706 Fairview Ave. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering EAP Accounting S.A.M. 4 of 1949 James M. Bell 909 Wildwood Pkwy Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering GX James F. Berry 144 Bennett St. Williamsport, Pa. Chemistry Glee Clubg Cheerleader: Chem- istry Clubg H'Clubg A.I.Ch.E. 1 128 Karl F. Biener Joseph J. Blimline, Jr. 2424 E, Fayette St. Baltimore, Md. Biology Theodore H. Bouchelle 121 Bow St. Elkton, Md. Spawish H boolcg Y Cabinetg Dorm Social Committeeg Glee Club: Representative to the North American Student Conference on Christian Frontiers 2659 Harlem Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology Charles G. Bowers 621 Cator Ave. Baltimore, Md. Political Science Q enior Jordan S. Bloom 6114 Biltmore Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology John A. Breslin NVil1iston Park, N.Y. BGH Tudor and Stuart Club Clam of 1949 Marvin R. Blumberg 4029 Fairfax Rd. Baltimore, Md. Economics Tennis Charles E. Bristor 5506 Craig Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business I 129 ls Francis L. Brown 800 Cathedral St. Baltimore, Md. Allen Brodsky 3905 Garrison Blvd. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering AEl'I Business H-Club H-Clubg Wrestling, Captain, A.A. Board Leonard D. Burgess, Jr. 1110 Sterrett St. Baltimore, Md. Leonard R. Buckheit 6811 Campfield Rd. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering HIDE A.I.Ch.E,g H-Club Senior Claw of 1949 Frederick W. Brown 2944 Winchester St. Baltimore, Md. .Mechanical Engineering A.S.M . E. Herman JE. Burns 2723 N. Howard St. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A. I . Ch .E. John T. Brown, Jr. 6012 Pinehurst Rd. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering Walter H. Byerly 2511 Allendale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Biology Biology Club el 130 Policarpo Callejas Tegucigalpa, Honduras, C.A. Psychology I.R.C.g Cosmopolitan Club William D. Clayton, Jr. 1907 East 29th St. Baltimore, Md. Marcus N. Carroll, Jr. Box 175 Ormond! Beach, Fla. Biology Newman Club: Biology Clubg Chemistry Cluhg Y.M.C.A. George W. Collins Rhodesdale, Md. enior Clad! of 1949 Richard K. Chapman, III 3757 Beech Ave. Baltimore, Md. I nduslrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.Q.C. ' Robert M. Coulbourn, III 208 Lon wood Rd. Electrical Engineering KA 1 S Bu-gzugss A'I.E'E. BHIt1IHOfe, Industrial Engineering A4115 S.A.M., Secretary Franklin D. Christhilf 1611 St. Stephen St. Baltimore, Md. M eclzanical Engineering A.S.M.E.g Soccerg Intramural Footballg Lacrosse John D. Coursey Grasonville, Md. Civil Engineering KA A.S.C.E. 131 In A ,EEC bi 1 1 Winton G. Covey, Jr. 926 Montpelier St. Baltimore, Md. Roger M. Dalsheimer Box 312 Pikesville, Md. Geography Political Science News-Letter, Debate Council I.R.C., Program Chairman Freshman Orientation Alfonso J. Deleonardis Allan C. Dell 2014 W. Indiana Ave. Philadelphia, Pa. Chemical Engineering TBIT, KIJAT Newman ClubgA.I.Ch.E., Vice- President ' 215 VVitherspoon Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business enior Clad! of 1949 William M. Darragh J. Paxton Davis 317 Yale Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A . I . E . E . Robert G. Dilly 180 Oaklee Village Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering A.S. M .E. 707 Oaklawn Ave. Winston-Salem, N.C. English OAK, UAE HULLABALO0, Associate Editor, Editor-in-Chiefg News-Letter, Tudor and Stuart Club, Secre- tary, Jaywalkerg Tennis, Hop- kins Film Society, Secretary- Treasurer Harry D. Dobe 1507 N. Ellwood Ave. Baltimore, Md. - Civil Engineering' A.S.C.E.g S.A.M.E. -1 132 Thomas E. Donnelly 4218 Frederick Ave. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering TBH Louis F. H. Dubbert 1822 Fairbank Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business KA H-Club, Presidentg Lacrosse, Class Day Committee, Fresh- man Orientation Committee John H. Dotter, Jr. 2528 Yorkway Dundalk, Md. Mechanical Engineering A.S. M .E. Dietrich H. Edel, Jr. 816 Unetta Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering AT A.S.M.E. enior Malcolm B. Drexler 188 Crown St. Brooklyn, N.Y. Writing, Speech, and Drama QDEA Barnstorrners, President g News- Letter, Copy Editor, Playshop Charles R. Elgert 1014 Haverhill Rd. Baltimore, Md. History Glee Club Clam of 1949 George R. Dryden 215 Eastern Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E.g Radio Club James R. English 1647 Chilton St. Baltimore, Md. Political Science AXA Baseball Team, Captain 133 li John W. Ernest 711 Brinkwood Rd. Baltimore, Md. Nicholas K. Eoannou I 2037 E. Lanvale St. Baltimore, Md. J osephG. Fay Earl B. Ferguson, Jr. 3416 Holmes Ave. Baltimore, Md. 306 S. Payson St. Baltimore, Md. Business Administration Accounting 211115 Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering A.I.E.E.g S.A.M.E. S.A.M. Arthur R. Folkoii Belvedere and Greenspring Ave. William H. Fleischman 523 S. Lakewood Ave. Baltimore, Md. Charles J. Frank 2813 Echodale Ave. Baltimore, Md. Lewis H. Ford 2501 Pickwick Rd. Baltimore, Md. I Mechanical Engineering Baltimore' Md' Physics fIJ1 A Civil Engineering ZH9 A.S.M.E. Business KIJEA ASIC-E. Barnstormers enior Clada of 1949 1 134 Harry G. Frankfurt 3611 Hicks Ave. Baltimore, Md. Jerome M. Fr-ankle 5104 Belle Ave. Baltimore, Md. Philosophy QDETI Mechanical Engineering Soccerg Y Cabinetg Lil William Friedlander 2623 Rosewood Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business , AEH, TQBII A.S.M.E.g Lacrosse, Manager, Soccer, Manager Walter A. Friend, Jr. 6218 Lincoln Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mecliaizical Engineering AKD enior Sumner L. Freeman 117 Brockton Ave. Haverhill, Mass. Clay of 1949 George W. Frey, Jr. 2709 Baker St. Baltimore, Md. Psychology AETI Electrical Engineering TBU Biology Clubg Chemistry Club: Barnstormersg Senior Class Publicity Committre Louis J . Frisco 19 Gerard St. Patchogue, N.Y. Electrical Engineering TBI'I A. I .E. E. A.I.E.E. Jack S. Gans 3 Schuyler St. Roxbury, Mass. ' Biology Biological Science Club, Presi- dentg Chemistry Clubg Glee Clubg Freshman Football, Managerg june Week Com- mittee 135 1- John J. Garvey 5310 Brabant Rd. Baltimore, Md. Writing Newman Club, Y.M.C.A. Nelson L. Gillispie Route No. 1 Frostburg, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I Julian L. Gelwasser 406 Aisquith St. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics GHEA Rifle Team, S.A.M. Coy M. Glass 7301 Dunbrook Courts Dundalk, Md. Chemical Engineering enior Clay of 1949 Claude Gerard Robert A. Gerster Apartment 17C, Byway South 40 Locust Ave. Baltimore, Md. Rye, N.Y. Writing Chemical Engineering Leonard M. Glass 4001 Cedardale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Ci-wil Engineer-ing A.S.C.E. A.I.Ch.E.g Freshman Class, President George G. Glenner 115 E. Lancaster Ave. Downingtown, Pa. Biology KIDEH, OAK Honor Commission, Chairman: HULLABALOO, Sports Editorg News-Letter, Track: Soccer -1 136 Warren J. Gore 3707 Vlloodbine Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mecha.-nical Engineering A.S.M .E. Clement J . Gresock 221 Spicer St. ' Akron, Ohio Biology Camera Club, Vice-President, Newman Club, Biological Sciences Club Robert E. Greenlee, Jr. Peabody Apts. Baltimore, Md. Writing, Speech and Drama J. Robert Gutberlet 2703 Cheswolde Rd. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering A.S. M .E. enior Clark! of 1949 Joshua E. Greenspon Claude W. Gregory, Jr. 2321 Whittier Ave. 3510 Buena Vista Ave. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. .Mechanical Engineering AEH Civil Engineering A.S.M.E. A.S.C.E., President Donald R. Hagner Arthur H. Hand 4505 Post Rd. 2108 Allendale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBH Chemical Engineering Footballg H-Club, Glee Club, A.I.Ch.E. Chess Club, A.I.E.E. 137 1- George M. Hansen 1646 N. Alexandria Ave. Hollywood, Calif. Electrical Engineering A. I Calvert K. Hartle 25 E. Church St. Frederick, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E.g Camera Club Joseph J. Hanzook 100 West 3rd Ave. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.Q.C. Edmund K. Hartley, Jr. 3111 N. Calvert St. Baltimore, Md. Business Administration H-Clnbg Lacrosseg j.V. Foot- ballg W restling, Manager Senior Cfadd of 1949 Charles A. Harper, Jr. Flintstone, Md. Chemical Engineering Y.M.C.A.g A.I.Ch.E.g Vectorg Hearst Oratory Contest Richard L. Harvey, Jr. 4600 Ridge Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business John T. Harper 4804 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering Camera Club, A.I.E.E. Carl E. Hecht, Jr. Riviera Apts. Lake Dr. Baltimore, Md. Business Administration News-Letter, Assistant Adver tising Manager if 138 George W. Heck, Jr 3117 Berkshire Rd. Baltimore, Md. History Charles L. Hock 13 Elmwood Rd. Baltimore, Md. John W. Heisse, Jr. 220 Goodale Rd. Baltimore, Md. M athemalics S.A.C., Secretary-Treasurer, Co-Chairmang Student Coun- cil, Radio Club: Lacrosse William R. Hodges 3203 N. Charles St. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering AY' I ndnslrial Engineering A.I.Ch.E. A.S.M.E. enior Jacques W. Helland Jefferson Apts. 4 East 32nd St. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics Newman Club Henry C. Hoffman 1916 Old Frederick Rd. Catonsville, Md. Electrical Engineering A. I . E .E . Clan of 1949 Paul B. Hessemer 606 Evesham Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBH A.I.E.E.3 Orchestra Allen Hoifstein 2157 Ocean Ave. Brooklyn, N.Y. Biology ' 1 139 If 'Kiln Francis G. Holecheck 1600 Gail Rd. Essex, Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering TBH A.S.M.E. Kenneth D. Hudson Harvey W. Honick 2239 Eutaw Place Baltimore, Md. Romance Languages Norris J. Huffington, Jr. if Federal St. SHOW Hill, Md- 3200 Hamilton Ave. Chemical Engineering AT Baltimore, Md- A.I.Ch.E': Glee Club Mechanical Engineering TBH A.S.M.E. enior clade of 1949 James D. Howell VVar, W.Va. M echanical Engineering A.S.M,E.g Y.M.C.A. Tobias Hymer 1127 E. Lombard St. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics Elliott R. Hudgins 329 Rossiter Ave. Baltimore, Md. .Mechanical Engineering A.S. M .E. Mark L. Isaacs 1827 E. Baltimore St. Baltimore, Md. Biology JI 140 Edwin R. Jacobson 2414 Liberty Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. ' Economics I.Z.F.A.g Debating Council Richard A. J olson 1110 Cleveland Ave. Covington, Ky. Biology CIJETI Basketball, H.-Club, Biology Club: Honor Commissiong Stu- dent Councilg Chemistry Clubg Soccer, Class Sergeant-at Arms enior Cladd of 1949 Thomas D. James Tyler J anney William N. Johnston 10 Ridge Rd. Briarview Manor Apts. 3814 Overlea Ave. Catonsville, Md. White Plains, N.Y. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics KDFA Industrial Engineering KA Americaiz Civilization S.A.M. Program Manager, Lacrosse and Football Charles E. Jones Kenneth A. Kahn Joseph Kain 2050 E. Belvedere Ave. Box 409 3514 Lucille Ave. Baltimore, Md. Boulder, Colo. Baltimore, Md. Business Biology TEH I nduslrial Engineering HULLABALOOQ Debate Councilg S.A.M. Biology Clubg Chemistry Club 141 1? George A. Fred C. Karabaich Hayden G. Keech, Jr. Robert E. Kegan Kammefefv JT- 4040 Washington st. 181 Lincoln st. 618 East 41st St. 3602 Howard park Ave. Holliday's Cove, W.Va. York, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md- Electrical Engineering TBH Biology AY Chemical Engineering Psychology A.I.E.E. A.I.Ch.E. I.R.C.g Golfg Baseball, Tennis Ji. Robert Kenealy Francis E. Kennedy Donald C. Kephart Stuart R. Keyes, Jr. 605 Nottingham Rd. A Garrison Rd. 610 Fourth St. 2111 W. Baltimore St. Baltimore, Md. Owings Mills, Md. New Cumberland, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Accounting XKIJE History ACID, UAE Electrical Engineering TBH Industrial Engineering 'Tudor and Stuart Club: News- A.I.E.E. S.A.M. Letter, Editorg Glee Club, As- sistant Business Manager enior Clam! of 1949 -l 142 Harry W. Klasmeier 3702 Chatham Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business Frank W. Krebs, Jr. 2111 Belair Rd. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineer-ing A.S.C.E. Werner Kloetzli, Jr 2533 Cedar Dr. Baltimore, Md. Civ-il Engineering A.S.C.E.g S.A.M.E. Arnold H. Krone 6600 Windsor Mill Rd. Baltimore, Md. Political Economy enior Cfadd of 1949 Harry G. Kosky 4803 Pennington Ave. Baltimore, Md. Henry L. Knock, Jr. 104 Montrose Ave. Catonsville, Md. Chemistry QIPAT' Electrical Engineering Glee Club Swimming Team, A.I.E.E. Harrison M. Langrall, Jr. 5305 Gwynn Oak Ave. Baltimore, Md. Frederick C. Lang, Jr. S402 108th 511. Richmond Hill, N.Y. Business ATQ, UAE Interfraternity Board, Presi- Biology PBX dentg News-Letter, Business Managerg Barnstormers, Busi- ness Managerg Glee Club 143 11 Rino R. Lasorsa Barre, Vt. Chemical Engineering Bandg Blue Jays, A.I.Ch.E.3 Orchestra Robert I. Levy 2439 Callow Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology Biology Club, I.R.C. Edward D. Lassahn 3118 Chesley Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering Spike Shoe Society, Vice-Presb clentg A.S.M.E.g Track Joseph E. Lidiak 298 Highland Ave. Lansdonne, Pa. Electrical Engineering B911 A.I.E.E.Q Newman Clubg Freshman Commission enior clade! of 1949 William R. Lauterbach Robert H. Leahy 616 East 3rd St. Redwood Falls, Minn. 114 Hillside Rd. Elizabeth, NJ. Chemistry D OAK Biology Cotillion Board President Footballg Newinan Club? Chemistry Club Alvin B. London 1916 Ruxton Ave. Baltimore, Md. President, Chemistry Club: Vice-President, Newman Clubg Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, Biology Clubg Glee Club William G. Longest 2422 W. Lafayette Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology QPEA Electrical Engineering Freshman Soccer A.1.E.E. 1 144 Charles E. Lotz 733 ,Edgewood St. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering ECDE A.S.M.E. Douglas Macnab 5505 Wayne Ave. Baltimore, Md. Political Science OAK President, Student Council: H-Clubg Soccerg Y Cabinet Norman Lowe ' 814 Mandana Blvd. Oakland, Calif. Biology B911 H-Club, Chemistry Club Charles K. MacSherry, Jr. 6 Merryman Court Baltimore, Md. I nd-ustrial Engineering Newman Club, S.A.M., Treas- UFCI' enior Henry M. Lummis, III 806 Overbrook Rd. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering B611 A.S.C.E. Francis G. Malone 2715 N. Howard St. Baltimore, Md. Business Clam of 1949 Albert W. Lutz B 420 N. Curley St. Baltimore, Md. Chemistry Chemistry Club James W. Mannion, Jr. 3911 Northampton St., N.W. Washington, D.C. Chemical Engineering TBl'I, TIME, IIJHE A.I.Ch.E. 145 1 Harry B. Marcoplos ' 5322 Cordelia Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biological Sciences H-Club, Vice-President, Secre- taryg Lacrosse I 1 . .xi W' vs 1 - Calvin M. Menzie 2904 Auchentoroly Terrace Baltimore, Md. Clzeinislry b EAP Raymond L. Meckel 3110 E. Federal St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. John C. Mesmeringer, Jr. 4029 Belle Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBTI Newman Club, A.I.E.E. enior Clay of 1949 George S. Melville, Jr. Bradford Apts., 33rd and St. Paul Sts. Baltimore, Md. Chemislry 'IJAY' Canterbury Club, Vice-Presi- dent, Musical Club, Business Managerp Blue Jays, Business Manager: Band, Drum Major and Business Manager Charles D. Miller 524 High St. Salem, Va. Biology AY Secretary of Senior Classy Sec- retary of Junior Class, I-I-Club: Football l Louis J. Menin 259 Baltimore Ave. Dundalk, Md. .Mechanical Engineering A.S.M.E. Joseph B. Miller, Jr. 716 Sixth St. Yazoo City, Miss. Biology EAE, IIPHE Biology Club Q1 146 Thomas H. Miller 2501 N. Calvert St. Baltimore, Md. 'Electrical E11 gflneerin g A. I . E. E . Isadore Moskowitz 1519 E. Baltimore St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Euginaerin g A.I.E.E.g Veterans' Club, Pub- licity Director Carl Thomas Moore 313 Suliolk Rd. Baltimore, Md. Geology fb FA Morton P. Moyle 716 Pines on Severn Arnold, Md. Chemical Engineering A.I.Ch.E., Secretaryg A.S.T.M enior Cfadd of 1949 William F. Morrison V 2304 Beechridge Rd. Raleigh, N.C. Biology EIDE Harry M. Moses 4156 Huntington Blvd. Fresno, Calif. Civil Engineering AX Track Team, Musical Club, Footballgl-I-Club Business Managerg Biology Club, Chemistry Club Charles B. Mudd 207 Alleghany Avef Towson, Md. Civil E11gi11ee1'i1zg A.S.C.E., Publicity Chairman, Treasurer Andrew M. Nemeth 101 Hill St. Highland Park, NJ. Biology Barnstormersg Debating Coun- cilg I.R.C.g Biology Club, Chemistry Club 147 ls John C. Neu 2034 East 30th St. ' Baltimore, Md. Mecha-nical Engineering TBYI A.S.M.E., Secretary, S.A.M.E. Milford M. Parry 5521 Norwood Ave. Baltimore, Md. Clayton Norton 121 N. Tillotson Ave. Muncie, Ind. Biology QFA Biology Club, Vice-President James D. Paulus 2409 E. Hoffman St. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering KA Mechanical Engineering A.l.E.E. A.S.M.E.g H-Clubg Footballg Baseballg Student Council enior Cfadd of 1949 v Anthony Over 957 Stoll St. Baltimore, Md. H. Clifton Osborn, Jr. Old Hanover Rd. Boring, Md. Meclzaoiical Engineering A.S. M .E. History Tudor and Stuart Clubg I.R.C. Harry J. Peyton, Jr. Barry J. Plunkett, Jr. 248 S. Highland Ave. Baltimore, Md. Rock Spring Rd. Forest Hill, Md. Civil Engineering KA Biology A.S.C.E. Camera Clubg Chemistry Clubg Chess Club 1 148 Charles R. Pohl, Jr. 1514 Lochwood Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics AT Y.M.C.A.g H-Club, Glee Club, Canterbury Club, Student Council, Sophomore and Junior Years, Football, Wrestling, Lacrosseg Rifle Teamg Seab- bard and Blade Olaf N. Rask 1924 Mount Royal Terrace Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBH James R. Powder Lutherville, Md. Biology Charles B. Rawlins 13 'Franklin St. Annapolis, Md. Mechanical Engineering A.I.E.E. Camera Club, A.S.M.E. enior clade of 1949 Jose Ramirez-Rivera 166 E. Betances St. Mayagiiez, P.R. Biology Symphony Orchestrag Cosmo- politan Clubg Newman Clubg I.R.C. George L. Regester 82 N. Prospect Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A.I.Ch.E. William A. Ranck, Jr. 5319 Wendley Rd. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical En g-ineerin g A.S.M.E.g Glee Club John C. Reier 618 Anneslie Rd. Baltimore, Md. Bffechanical Engineer-ing A.S.M.E., Treasurer 1 149 1 Albert Reisz 2637 Guilford Ave. Baltimore, Md. Charles W. Reinhardt, II 815 Scott St. Baltimore, Md- Electrical Engineering TBTI Education A. I Jack M. Robbins Race Street Ext. Cambridge, Md. John B. Rice 854 Stewart St. Morgantown, W.Va. History Footballg H-Club, Y Cabinet, H-Club, A.S.M.E., Glee Club Chairman of Religious Com- mittee enior Claim of 1949 C Gordon E. Rhodes 2705 Roslyn Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering EQIPE Musical Club, President Donald S. Rodbell 3407 Holmes Ave. Baltimore, Md. Byron E. Rice, Jr. 4502 Rokeby Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics Martin Rodbell 3000 Arunah Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering ZQE Electrical Engineering AEH Biology IDEA A.I.E.E. if 150 Preston C. Rogers, Jr. 613 Dorsey Ave. i Baltimore, Md. Biology Howard E. Scheidle 4208 Hickory Rd. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E., Treasurer Leonard G. Rutkowski 224 S. Patterson Park Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering Walter D. Schmidt 112 Williams Ave. Dundalk, Md. Chemical Engineering TBII, fI1AT A.I.Ch.E., President, Vector, Editor enior Charles C. Rutter 1093 Fourth St. Perry Point, Md. Business Howard A. Schnepfe, Jr. 302 Thornhill Rd. Baltimore, Md. I ndnslrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S,M.E.g Lacrosse Claw of 1949 Walter R. Satterfield 632 N. Augusta Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemistry CIDAT Y.M.C.A.g Chess Club Richard Schraml 434 Loretto St. Tottenville, S.l., N.Y. Political Science I.R.C., Program Director, President 151 1 Stanley J. Schapiro 2415 Eutaw Place Baltimore, Md. Biology Freshman Lacrosse: Biology Club, News-Letter, HULLABA- Loo Charles K. Sergeant Corpus Christi, Tex. Biology KEN Chemistry Club, Biology Club Walter E. Scribner, Jr. 2420 W. Lafayette Ave. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering A.S.C.E., Chairman Program Committee John H. Seth 710 E. 33rd St. Baltimore, Md. Political Science AT, OAK, IIAE N ews-Letler, Editor-in-Chief, Student Council, Vice-Presi- dent, Rifle Team, Captain, I'lULLABALOO1 S.A.M.g Musi- cal Clubg AA Board enior Claeu of 1949 Clarence H. C. Seaton 509 Reisterstown Rd. Pikesville, Md. Writing, Speech and Drama Tudor and Stuart Clubg Seab- bard and Blade, News-Letter Jerome E. Shapiro 3400 Carlisle Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology John Sellors, Jr. 3609 Landbeck Rd. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A.I.Ch.E.g Radio Club, Sec retary, Treasurer Charles W. Shaw 4443 Clifton Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business 1 152 .Daniel H. Shear 3622 Glen Ave. Baltimore, Md. Psychology AEH Biology Clubg American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science William M. Sinton 2102 Carterdale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Physics Radio Club, President, Vice- President Thorne Shipley 87 Bedford St. New York, N.Y. Psychology Biology Clubg Cosmopolitan Club Edgar J. Smith, Jr. 5415 Highview Rd. Baltimore, Md. Writing enior Theodore H. Siegel 1709 N. Collington Ave. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering TBTI A.S.C.E.g S.A.M.E. Leroy H. Smith, Jr. 2925 Baker St. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering TBYI A.S.M.E. Claw of 1949 Joseph G. Sinsheimer 6303 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering CIJEH A.I.Ch.E. Richard W. Smith 522 Old Home Rd. Baltimore, Md. Writing HAE l-I-Club: News-Letter, Sports Editorg Basketball Managerg Lacrosse Manager 153 li l l Richard W. Sonnenfeldt 2708 Hollins Ferry Rd. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering '1'Bl'I Cosmopolitan Club, Presidentg Y Cabinet, A.I.E.E.g U.W.F., Chairmang News-Leller Louis D. Starr 1523 Ellamont St. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A.I.Ch.E.g Newman Club Marvin M. Specter 2314 Whittier Ave. Baltimore, Md. Civil En gineer-in g A.S.C,E.g S.A.M.E.g Rifle Team Martin H. Stephan 131 Palormo Ave. Baltimore, Md. In duszrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.M.E.g A.S.Q.C. enior Clay of 1949 Reginald K. Squires 22 Pearsall Ave. Freeport, L.I., N.Y. Physics EQIE Mark M. Stokes Club Lane Towson, Md. Industrial Engineering QJFA, TBH, OAK Junior and Senior Class Vice- Presidentg S.A.M., Program Committee Chairmang Honor Commission: H-Clubg Foot- ballg Basketball, Lacrosse John E. Stallknecht 217 N. Milton Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A. I .E. E. Jay H. Stoudenmire 1513 Ralworth Rd. Baltimore, Md. A.I.E.E. if 154 Keefer S. Stull, Jr. 132 W. Second St. Frederick, Md. Electrical Engineering TBH A.I.E.E. Robert L. Thall 82-28 Surrey Pl. jamaica, N.Y. Biology Myron Subotnik 3411 Ellamont Rd. Baltimore, Md. W ritring UAE Tudor and Stuart Club Paul B. Thomas, Jr. 221 Goodale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Meelzaiiical Engineering AACIJ H-Club, S.A.M. Senior Clark! of 1949 Jerome A. Svec 430 Elrino St. Baltimore, Md. Norman Subotnik 2529 Loyola Northway Baltimore, Md. Wr-iling CIJEA, UAE Electrical Engineering News-Lellerg HULLABALOO A.S.M.E.g A.I.E.E. Stephen C. Traugott William M. Tucker 220 Stoney Ford Rd. 4903 Crowson Ave. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Meclianical Engineering ECIJE Electrical Engineering Glee Club, A.S.M.E.g B A.l.E.E. Lacrosse P 155 lb William K. Upton Edward A. Valiant Michael Vassallo 704 N. Milton Ave. 2812 Harview Ave. 521 Riverside Dr. Baltimore, Md. i Baltimore, Md. Fairfield, Conn. Civil Engineering TBII Industrial Engineering Biology A.S.C.E. S.A.M. James W. Walsh Wyndham Hills Joseph L. Vigliato 1546 N. Gay St. Baltimore, Md. York, Pa. French Industrial Engineering enior Cladd of 1949 Myer Waranch 2808 Norfolk Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. Grant C. Vietsch 1006 Cathedral St. Baltimore, Md. Political Science Assistant Director of Schedul- ing, Swimming E. Nelson Wareheim, Jr. 509 Chateau Ave. Baltimore, Md. llflechanical Engineering TBH A.S.M.E. if 156 C. M. Weant 1017 VV. Washington St. Hagerstown, Md. Mechanical E11 gineerin g Camera Clubg Fencingg A.S.M.E. David C. Wood 98 College Ave. Annapolis, Md. John B. Whitla 787 Chestnut St. Arlington, NJ. Chemistry Franz P. Young Lake Zurich. Ill. I miuslrial Engivzeering Electrical Engineering TBTI S A M A.I.E.E. enior Max N. Wiener 127 S. Catherine St. Baltimore, Md. Civil E11 gineeriiz g A.S.C.E.g S.A.M.E. Raymond E. Young 933 Madison Ave. Reading, Pa. Business Claim of 1949 Maurice L. Wolpert 1806 Linden Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology I.R.C.g Chemistry Club: U.NV.F. George P. Yucius Route No. 3, Box 432 Orlando, Fla. Electrical Engineering A. I .E.E. 1 l J l 1 1571- Alan H. Anthony Centreville, Md. Business Economics H-Club Charles Benesch 2224 E. Biddle St. Baltimore, Md. Political Science Herbert Ascher, Jr. 2599 Sedgwick Ave. Bronx, N.Y. Political Science IDEA I.F.B.g Debate Council, Busi- ness Managerg I.R.C. James R. Benner sfo L. WV. Pilcher McArthur, Ohio Mechanical En gineeri n g AXA, A 2 I-I A.S.M.E. enior Cladd of 1949 Bruce C. Barger 4309 Norwood Rd. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering GIFA, TBH George M. Biddison 24 Benkert Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering H. Stanley Barr 3629 Columbus Dr. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering AEH S.A.M. George M. Black, Jr. 6103 Maylane Dr. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics SAE Lacrosse 1 158 1 1 1 I I l l J . Richard Boylan Apartment 1-A, Seville Court Cynwyd, Pa. History ATQ. Tudor and Stuart Clubg News- Letterg HULLABALOOQ Track: Freshman Basketball Harold C. Burgan 4148 Pimlico Rd. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering AEH A.S.M.E., Chairman Max Bodenheimer 5709 NVinner Ave. Baltimore, Md. German I.Z.F.A.g Cosmopolitan Club Leroy J. Caprarola 2821 E. Chase St. Baltimore, Md. M echanical Engineering TBH A.S.M.E. enior Hubert M. Brown Fort Logan Denver, Colo. Claw of 1949 Stuart L. Brown, Jr. Danville, Va. Chemical Engineering AAG, Biology A.I.Ch.E. Glee Club: Treasurer, D.S.R.C Edwin B. Carton 205 Mill St. Cambridge, Md. Chemistry AEH Chemistry Club: Cotillion Board Morris S. Chester 3809 Granada Ave. Baltimore, Md. Physics W 15911- Robert L. Cobb 808 Cathedral St. Baltimore, Md. Business Economics Charles W. Donald 1021 Bristol Pl. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.3 A.S.Q.C. Gerald H. Cooper 2910 Reisterstown Rd. Baltimore, Md. History OAK Y Cabinetg I-I-Club, Vice- Presidentg A.A. Boardg Bas- ketball, Soccer: Baseballg La- crosse, B Squad: Cotillion Board, Secretary, Treasurer Leroy L. Draper, Jr. 1923 E. Belvedere Ave. Baltimore, Md. Irving L. Cooperstein 2515 Keyworth Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemistry IIJAT J. W. Drenning Woodsboro, Md. Electrical Engineering EGHE C e 'iS 9' AT Glee Clubg A.1.E.E. 'Newman Clubg Chemistry Club enior Clark! of 1949 Joseph E. Dickerson 3015 Royston Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering ZHGJ Robert H. Eckert, Jr. 1435 Homestead St. Baltimore, Md. History 1 160 Stanley B. Goldberg 3414 Woodbrook Ave. Baltimore, Md. Biology AETI Eleclrical Engineering Chemistry Clubg Biology Clubg I'IULLABALO0 Carroll G. Heck 4409 Groveland Ave. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.Q.C. enior Calvin J. Grochmal 225 Westowne Rd. Baltimore, Md. Seymour Goodman 3508 Virginia Ave. Baltimore, Md. - Industrial Engineering 5.A.M. A.I.E.E. William P. Hill 1305 Evans St. Greenville, N.C. Arthur C. Hildebrand 96 Dundalk Ave. Dundalk, Md. Chemical Engineering KA Psychology A.I.Ch.E.g Vector -7, 16111 ummm Claim of I9 9 Raymond S. Hackett, Jr. Chase, Md. Illechanical Engineering B911 H-Clubg Soccer Russell T. Hollingsworth 3910 Woodridge Rd. Baltimore, Md. Zlflechanical Engineering S.A.M.E.g A.S.M.E. w in John A. Hoover 1205 Urban Way Baltimore, Md. Harry L. Holman Friendsville, Md. Chemical Engineering A.I.Ch'E. Industrial Engineering S.A.M. William W. Kirk 3028 Poplar Terrace Baltimore, Md. Donald C. Kephart 610 Fourth St. New Cumberland, Pa. Electrical Engineering TBH Physical Education enior Cladd of 1949 James A. Houston 3000 Manhattan Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBH Glee Club, A.l.E.E. Donald F. Klein 515 Avenue I Brooklyn, N.Y. Biology QEH Playshopg Glee Clubg News- Lellerg H ULLABALOO John E. Houtz 2628 Brannon Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering Louis V. Koerber 718 E. Belvedere Ave. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering AT, OAK Vice-President, Freshman Classg President, Sophomore, Junior Classg Honor Commis- sion: Cotillion Boardg H-Clubg S.A.M.g A.A. Boardg Football, Captaing Baseball, Captaing Basketball if 162 Kung Ching-Wen 125 East 65th St. New York, N.Y. Chemistry Biology Club William Marriott, III 4415 Wickford Rd. Baltimore, Md. Life Science aim, rms Swimming Edward T. Kusterer 3628 Oakmont Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering TBII A.S.M . E. L. Brent Mathews 5 Overbrook Rd. Catonsville, Md. Mechanical Engineering AT, TBII Glee Clubg A.S.M.E. enior Edward B. Lauer 5301 Edmondson Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business Newman Club, Vice-President, President Charles 0. McKenzie 3045 Moreland Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering A. I .C h .E. clan of1949 Morton H. Madden 2300 Ocala Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business News-Letter, Circulation Man- ager Charles E. Meginnis 1930 Linden Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering TBII, IIJAT A.I.Ch.E. l 163 1 I l Norve11E. Miller, III 1012 St. Paul St. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering AACD H-Club: S.A.M.g I.F.B. George C. Pecorella Hasbrouck Heights, N.j. Biology B911 Soccerg Basketballg Cotillion Board, B Lacrosse John G. Moner, Jr. 718 Avenue A Bayonne, NJ. Biology Cosmopolitan Clubg Biologi- cal Sciences Club Charles W. Pekar 613 N. Rose St. Baltimore, Md. Business enior Cladd of 1949 Frank P. Montgomery, Jr. 2444 N. Calvert St. Baltimore, Md. Business Walter W. Pleines 3210 Hamilton Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering TBII A. I Robert A. Pearce 3403 Cedardale Rd. Baltimore, Md. Chemical Engineering AT Baseball, A.I.Ch.E. Robert W. Porter Porterhaven, Salisbury, Md. History OAK Y.M.C.A., President: Cheer- leader, I.R.C., Secretary, Pro- gram Directorg Band: Blue Jaysg Orchestra: News-Letter: D.S.R.C., Vice-Presidentg U.l1V.F.3 Cosmopolitan Club rl 164 Efrem M. Potts 3500 Bancroft Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business UAE I-IULLABALOO, Assistant Busi- ness Manager, Business Man- agerg S.A.C., Secretary-Treas UFCI' Donald P. Roseman 3609 Fairview Ave. Baltimore, Md. Mechanical Engineering A.S.M .E. Thomas P. Reid 334 New Haven Ave. Milford, Conn. Political Science KIJFA I.R.C.g I.F.B., Vice-President, Wrestling: Lacrosse J ohn C. Ruxton 812 Evesham Ave. Baltimore, Md. :Senior Robert F. Riley 31 Belgrove Rd. Catonsville, Md. Electrical Engineering A. l .E .E. Robert M. Salemi 3526 Cardenas Ave. Baltimore, Md. Philosophy AT Chemical Engineering IIJAT, TB1'I A.l.Ch.E. Clan of 1949 Louis Robinson, Jr. 2223 Eutaw Place Baltimore, Md. I nduslrial Engineering S.A.M.g A.S.M.E. L. Kirwin Schneider 4705 Kenwood Ave. Baltimore, Md. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E.g S.A.M.E. l w 165 li Joel R. Siegel 5621 Greenspring Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chemistry Morris Tanenbaum 2429 Callow Ave. ' Baltimore, Md. Chemistry QJEA, KIDAY Cotillion Board, Business Man- ager, Vice-President: Barn- stormers, Business Managerg Glee Clubg I.R.C.g J.V. Basket- ballg Fencingg Freshman and Sophomore Class Secretary Larry M. Silverman 3821 Callaway Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business James P. Thompson Hurlock, Md. James F. Smith, Jr. Liberty Rd. Sykesville, Md. Electrical Engineering ATQ A.I.E.E.g Scabbard and Blade Donald W. Tucker 405 Alleghany Ave. Cain Engineering KA Towson' Md- A.S.C.E. enior Clay of 1949 Civil Engineering S.A.M.E.g A.S.C.E. Thaddeus W. Swank 3506 Grantley Rd. Baltimore, Md. Business KIJFA Scabbard and Blade, Barn- stormers, Production Manager Norman E. Tyson Gardners, Pa. Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. 1 166 Lewis Volpe 40 A St. Wilmerding, Pa. Political Science Co-founder, Litg Debating So- cietyg Newman Club M. Gordon Wolman 3213 N. Charles St. Baltimore, Md. Geology OAK S.A.C., Co-Chairmang Student Councilg Lacrosse, Captain, Honor Commissiong News- Lellerg A.A. Board, President Howard Waugh, Jr. 2842 N. Calvert St. Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering A.S.C.E.g S.A.M.E. Carl J. Zink 121 Hawthorne Rd. Baltimore, Md. enior Israel H. Weiner 2611 Keyworth Ave. Baltimore, Md. Clam of 1949 Walter E. Wilhelm 1417 W. 37th St. Baltimore, Md. Psychology AEII Electrical Engineering Arthur J . Zoebelein 115-41 203rd St. St. Albans, L.I., N.Y. Mechanical Engineering DIPE Biology l.F.B.g A.S.M.E. Newman Clubg Biology Club A.I.E.E.g S.A.M.E. A Michael K. Eoannou 2037 E. Lanvale St. Baltimore, Md. M echanical Engineering Orchestrag Bandg A.S.M.E. 1671- Fred Bernhardt Ralph A. Brunn 3712 Columbus Dr. 3417 Glen Ave. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Business AEII Chemistry Chemistry Club Joel Garbus John S. Glass 2367 Washington Blvd. Baltimore, Md. Peabody Apts. Calvert and 30th Sts. Chemistry Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering KA, OAK Student Councilg S.A.M., enior Cfadd of 1949 William D. Campbell 1411 Curie Way Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering S.A.M.g H-Clubg Cross- Country Warren J. Kwedar 824 Northern Pkwy Baltimore, Md. Business Sigmund R. Eckhaus 3804 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. Chem-ical Engineering A.I.Ch.E.g Freshman Basket- ballg Tennisg Intramural Foot- ball and Softball Charles H. Latrobe, III 911 Poplar Hill Rd. Baltimore, Md. Industrial Engineering EAE 1 168 Harry .J . Pistel 2503 Harlem Ave. Baltimore, Md. Meelzavzical Evzgineering Intramural Football, Softball, Lacrosse William H. Slasman 400 Hollen Rd. l Baltimore, Md. Biology BGTI H-Club, Baseball, Soccer Kenneth Schlerf 2217 W. Lexington St. Baltimore, Md. Jllechanical Evigineeriing A.S.M.E.g H-Club, Baseball Knut Sorteberg Aal, Hallingdal Norway Civil Engivzeering A.S.T.M.g E.S.C.E. enior Nathan Schloss 7211 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. Business News-Letter James F. White, Jr. Kingsville, Md. Biology Clam of 1949 Walter D. Schmidt 112 Williams Ave. Dundalk, Md. Chemical Engineering TBTI, CIDAT A.I.Ch.E., Presidentg Vector, U.W.F.S. Emanuel L. Wilder 2910 Garrison Blvd. Baltimore, Md. Business 169 If Robert E. Buckley Beach Rd., Wanakah Hamburg, N.Y. Chemistry Debatingg Glee Clubg Chem istry Club: HULLABALOO, Soc cerg Orchestrag Ha1idbook,' 1.R.C.g Cosmopolitan Club Newman Club John E. Feathers 4812 Arabia Ave. Baltimore, Md. Plistory Robert T. Frost 416 Regester Ave. Baltimore, Md. John Mehegan 110 Voorhees St. Fulton, N.Y. Physics AT' Mathematics Radio Club, President HULLABALOO William A. Gresham 157 N. Charles St. Baltimore, Md. lfVriLi1zg IIAE News-Leiier, Feature Editor enior Cfadd of 1949 Leonard C. Harber 164 Monroe Blvd. Long Beach, N.Y. Biology IIPETI Debating Council, Presidentg Y.M.C.A., Vice-President: Y Cabinet, Biology Club, Secre- tary, News-Letter, Business Managerg Freshman Commis- sion, Vice-President: Football: Chemistry Club, Social Di- rector l Martin Rubenstein 205 E. 23rd St. Baltimore, Md. Chemistry AEII Chemistry'CIubg Biology Club David Levy 3434 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. Writing News-Letter, Feature editor: Handbook, Co-editorg W'Vjl-l, Sec'y. 1170 ff ' ' ' VFR' Tf?f' WA' Y .7 Q A 3, ,fl gif ' Jim ' iv X - W ' ' - V fu www M 1' ,lv iii' ,,,. X' - X' , ' R V 'Fifi' V 'A 5 -Ee, ' X , VV. 1 - XIX MAX ,. X, X XH XX HXXX X Ay DX X V 1, . 197- if 3153 V '73 ' V -an f yw+V-Paw Mggwu,QgVf jf - UF ,zV 1yVv,:1fQ1 'Viwijfefwf Q w, XX X. N 1 ,X V X Mx- XXX, ,X - LJX I X X1 XVX , V: V. f ' K'-.51 fiJ7XfX2iVN , . jf? X I VN. '1 . . -V -V ,, ,. ' fi' fn A Y Vi'-H,f:f , LV iw X XX XX Xp. 4 XX 4,015 r X X, S I, . XX .qg,.i?,.:XXXVnw A . 3 X A V 'Q ' - li f . X v ,, , 3, , . X ' V fm ', - ef. V' ' 'A, 'Q 255, ' X V X xg. : X . 4-X fig fe fVf QV xg! V ?f4 1 X .X ' ' . 1 - V 5 . ' P ' wwf. I A , .4 1' ,jg I K V' - ' 'Eu H . ' . w .1 ' 1 'H ' V ,V 4'- 13 2' . 1 V V f pf, 7 EE?adgiN X, . V'-A 'n' XX Mmww 6,4 My X K. 'N . A 5sK....+f 'V H' -nu . -. XXX 6 'llt s ik 1 F W' .ILLQVVIVL .gy 61? 1 , ri Til EV .v X .Xi XX . -1-fwm-X - . Q.: Lf ,ua ilslul . '- ' 'fu u Il u , J-L J? ,X ,. 1 w Ae. 0 4 . V 1.2. wa f- ' V , , . V W? ,l Q if ' .V1-NV1 ,X V, 4 . , V V ' Vf' ,few- V If PXnwXXV.v vi , , ,, '- X V V Ulla?- 1 .. 1 Q -itz tj. 5EQ4 X , ' :X w w V,. 7 . if fi ' ,iVQw2!w XX . ' A f,- X 'XXX Ta- Xi . U V 'E.gf .i'7i i!' V' J, , , 'Q-f'1VV-W ' -' . 'V E 1035: A ' ffQiLj9V?'fi ff? 5' I-V LK? 'Irv' ' ' fx. ' : 1 L. XX , Fi ,H H .-:X X .X X ,X AX X., I .. X X i .X ,.,V -I Xxx., 'v- , ,, X , X Xzhq, X- A Xmlifik 'V A' XX gh .,,,,.,'X X Q. 12 bf. :Y ,XX', P' . ' VX- V. ' ' 5 X ' X- +21 hu ,-1,1-,.X- X, X,uV , 1 X- V JN L '-nit. 5 5 - ' - 7, , .V -- ' XA' - g ' ' ' ' V 'X , - 4:: :,klj,x rug! 5 - f ,UQ X , . . X X. QV , X J- 1 ,VVVV Vi, gV V UNL' V,-GM' ' ' ' , 1 , 'XX ,7, Xu, XX1X fri -u.,L?f. '-152. 'V , V 5 V- HV is 'V'V.'1?V q , 'Q-Tu A , ' Asif, ' fi :gi ,g:S3V1.,V' 159 4 fig. . Nl-V+ 1X,fgVqVVVsv Qld 'Qi , X ' V 1 '23-VIN lX L5,,g f'3:e, 'keg . . V X . X M y :52':g,,qXf3,.2::.-V, V V. VVx ,V.yf,,WQw, , ' A V a iwWRwMWmWFV 5 , , VV, ,, 'fi -Y - - fV.,J'4UmLwf,..'- . .. ' ' . ,V ' r X151-, ,QV ff'-',igVL55!X A ' ' X A +aa,,':V V 'sf 3-1 ,.X X V .V , 'J 5' V .Vf , :'QM:2?54'f?'isEW'HJ' ' ' , ' My ' QV qi? 0 fl n ruff' - r X I - XJLXQQ X ,,4u1XX.,?y? X . .. W.: . V if, X , Xa, F K yy .V vi if ,. me 45. H' 1 2- HEX fm V V. , ximzuv ' K - 1 i- V J' .'5,,iS4 X A , L 2 , I ,., ' 'Y N- , U 1- ii ,,, 134, . ,l,,...-,-+, gv, Hullabaloo Q 59-fined . . f it reflects anything more than a last minute compilation of miscellaneous senti- ment culled from available seniors and fresh-- men with typewriters, a yearbook represents its editor's tastes, his preferences, and the compromises into which he's been enticed, f ' GLENNER forced, or betrayed. The 1949 I-IULLABALOO, it should be added, has been no exception to that rule. But aside from the necessities which he imposed on his own hook, this year's editor has been particularly fortunate in the asso- ciates who aided and advised him, and, in the cold nights of February, managed to keep him MC NULTY alive. Their part in the HULLABALOO,S pro- duction is responsible for whatever success it may ind with its readers, and no final word would be Htting which failed to acknowledge their help. A debt too large to acknowledge in words is attested on the HULLABALOO page. Bob Zadek, Efrem Potts, and Sam Abrams have all been through the inevitably ulcer-making RQ N 6 x 'RLTTE ' not-2? process of pushing the book through its iinancial and journalistic paces-and their thanks, we hope, will come from their readers. To George Glenner and Dan McNulty, the editor owes much for time spent under heavy academic schedules in gathering material used in the sports and fraternities sections. To john Ritterhoff, as to the Board of Con- trol, no thanks are adequate. But the pictures which fill this annual are, we hope, partial testimony to a time and energy-consuming job. For his unfailing good will and coopera- tion, we owe him a great deal. is-Q 5-f To John Seth and Sid Gfht, the editor's personal thanks for their gift of taste and 1 172 journalistic experience-and finally, for their many nickels spent in Levering on coHee which cooled under discussions of student government, headlines and features. To Benson Offit and to a trio of neighboring sophomores, jim VVarren, Frank Strieby, and i f c,4,mJCaER Phil Spartan, we are indebted for many and many a weary trip to the photographers-and to all go overdue thanks for stories which helped fill out the activities section. Q 'SN xii N W-I 300922 To Bill Romeike and Bill Clinger, our grati- tude for some outstanding copy. Articles which would be a study as well as a record were partial goals of this year's book, and to E7 G25 F f jj f I 'X so-seen these two go our thanks for making a pipe- dream a reality. To Paul Carson, whose speed still amazes, 1731 and to Don Hempel and Bob Forman, a Word of thanks for the dirtiest job in the lot- typing up the copy. . To John Dower and Len Scheer, a friendly nod and a word of thanks for re-write jobs on some of the less inspiring copy, and for some leg work that no one else seemed willing to tackle. To Walt VVoodford, some special sort of praise is due for the unusual shots of Gilman, Levering, and the Hopkins statue, all appear- LDDODFORD ing as division pages in the first part of the book. To Carroll Hutton, of the Thomsen-Ellis Hutton Company, again our thanks for an association that has always been pleasant and unfailingly helpful. 'D ' EEICK A frolicsome kick in the pants is due VVarren Dederick, Whose cartoons were too tempting to be left out-and to whose provocations we finally had to succumb. Last but not least, to Charles R. Anderson and Earl R. Wasserinan of the English de- partment, we offer a grateful nod for their part in keeping the journalistic and academic poles of the undergraduate dialectic apart. Hopkins i'Hit Porodei' f J ww :im 1 . 'X u K E N '-Nix, F ' .4 :A-nl. .EE IHU , --Mil sv, 'LJ I i i l i V 1Y i.uu,,.iW i ri , Miki: ii,-'wif , 14.31, A X Vg fu 5 W gl l J ,A ,i ' V1 mil: 1-A Dear old Johnny Hopkins Cn the Line Weil Give Cl Roh! To Win! To Win! Everybody Bets on Johnny Hopkins on The Block ond Blue Hopkins to Victory C om pli-ments 0 f the Ovsxusnook CORPORATION Makers of the Fu-mom Overbrook Eg Leveling I-IoH me lafaygrolfancf of THE JUHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY cafeferia Hopkins Handbook ping-pong room Great Hall club meeting room MJLJZI' czcwloicea of Me Y, M, cl A, If f 03555, wishes all the graduates of the Class of 1949 the best of good fortune. . . . and when you get 11za1'1'ierl be sure to have your wife listen to Sing 'vz' Wi1z.', ISAAC POTTS C077Z17li71Z61ZfS of the Iohns Hopkins University Book Store b I N LH db U JY 114 S Hpk R CONGRATULATIONS to the Class of 1949 94 PERSONNEL SERVICE COMPANY 22 Light Street Baltimore 2, Md. Congrafufafiond ana! Comlahmenfd Edt IIXIAKSAQ6 of fo Me CAM 0f1949 SHERWWID FEED MILLS, INC. 501 President St. Baltimore 23 Md. BROOKS 81 ZIMMERIVIAN Baltimore 2, Md. Oliicial Outfitters to JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY National SPORTING GOODS CO., INC. George A. Bmtt, jr., Pres. Distributors Rawlings Athletic Equipment Guns Ammunition Fishing Tackle Tennis ' Golf, etc. 310 E. Baltimore St. Baltimo reZ Best Wishes to the Class of 1949 e Maven., Congratulations to the Graduates of 1949 ,Hoffman ii Redfautant 3107 ST. PAUL STREET Congratulations to the Graduating Class E, The Store of Specialty Shops Comfiliments of GREENWAY PHARMACY lr has been indeed a pleasure to have the Johns Hopkins student body as our guest this past year. To the Seniors wlio are graduating we offer our best wishes for success in the years to comeg to the undergraduates we extend an invitation to visit us again, next year. if The flicagzar ALMA MATER IN DIXIE LAND Come stand to'geth'er, We'll raise a cheer and Wave the Black and Blue. We pledge our faith as loyfal sons to Hopfkins We'll he true, We love our col'lege in Dixfie land, our U'ni' ver-si-ty, We shout her praise as we march a'long, so one, two, three. CHORUS Hurrah! . . . Hurray! . . . A rous'ing Hulflafhafloo. fRah! D Our Al'ma Mafter in Dix-ie land, Hurrah! for Black and Blue. Hurrah! . . . Hurray! . . . A rousfing Hul'la'lJa'loo. fRah! D Our Al'ma Mzrter in Dixfie land, Hurrah! for Black and Blue. THE BLACK AND BLUE Come Seniors Wise and learn'ecl, Come juniors raise a cheer, Come Sophries bold and crurel, Come Fresh' men, have no fear, Come all ye col'lege class'es, Come join with voicfes true, Sing praise to dear Old Hopfkins, Hurrah, for Black and Blue! The four bright years of col'lege, The shortrest years of life, The years so full of gladfness, The years with pleasfure rife Are glidfing swiftfly by, boys, Our work will soon he through 5 The oft we will refcall boys, The years ,neath Black and Blue. CHORUS Rah, for the Black, boys, Rah, for the Blue, boys, Rah for John'ny I-Iop'kins, Rah! Weyll pour forth our praise to dear old Johns Hop'kins, Rah for johnmy I-Iop'kins, Rah! X15 Comp! imcnts of TUTIE FRUITY ICE CREAM CO. THE ARUN DEL CORPORATION BALTIMORE 2, MARYLAND Dredging Construction Engineering AND DISTRIBUTORS OF Sand Gravel Stone AND Commercial Slag J. H. FURST COMPANY Printerx of Scientifc Publimtiom Have large facilities for printing of every description. A specialty made of Students' Theses, University Pamphlet Work, Binding, etc. Careful attention given to Composition, Proofreading and Press Work, and all details attending the production of first-class work. 20 HOPKINS PLACE BALTIMORE 1, MD. PLazaOO64 Samuel Kirk Sc Son, Inc. 421 N. CHARLES STREET Baltfimords Oldest Jewelers Diamond Rings Wrist VVatches Gold Jewelry Gifts In Silverware Established 1815 Biology Chemistry Physics Mathematics 'I' I I . . Geology Psychology 47716 leadersw Political Science Political Economy History English Philosophy Compliments of NOIKRIS M P Welcome: Bio-physics Department Dr. Detlev W. Bronk Dr. Halclan K. Hartline Dr. lohn P. Hervey Dr. Martin C. Larrabee Dr. Frank Brink, Ir. Dr. Philip W. Davies Compliments of JACK 85 JILL ICE C C G U O D W Il S H E S R. B. WHITE, Prcxident BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD HENKEL sz HORSMAN, INC. Buz'la'z'ng Contractors 2111 NOIQTH ROLLING ROAD BALTIMORE 7 C I' amp unents of PHARMACIST Bernard Appel, Inc. 33rd and St. Paul Streets Roofmg Contractors BEST WISHES 5910 SEFTON AVENUE TQ THE CLASS OF ,49 Hamilton 4933 fRED fOOs CANDY CO. THE MOTTO Veritas vos liberabitf' The truth shall- make you frzc. -St. John 8:32. THE ODE Truth guide our University, And from all error keep her freeg Let Wisdom yield her choicest treasure And Freedom reach her fullest measure Oh, let her watchword ever be The truth of God will make you free, Will make you free! 1-I Fil ,-f, l 1 ill e -.,.g.,L...--.., Y- QC in ':'1 1- ?-. g:v.i,,1 'iii-n-nu- eiG'5u ' ,:,,.: 0 555 -1 A suse-rnxcai. 'IUI IHI I l -i- i, . -nk: Y '1' l - -J as l i 1 V527 t W. ' l 5 J I Let knowledge grow from more to more, Ancl scholars versed in deepest lore, Their souls for light forever burning, Send forth their fire, unlock their learning, And let their faithful teachuig be The truth alone can make us free, Can make us free! kk Aff ' ii 1 T ,, 1-il 6 mnlulWUA4i'A-vw IA mm 1 n L X 4' ' 55 9' . v I -J ' I . 1 - e 5. 4, li, ,I ..,.' ' V yr V, . . k. y I' - I , NH.. N , ........... . ,,,,, M .-'-.. il , T - T ' U 2 J - ' ,VI PW S 3' , , . -I 'I 7 - 1 . - ,, -J fi hy. x . ' ri The truth shall crown her sons with fame, Their lives inspire with nobler aim, Their names made known throughout our borders As learning's guide and Wisdom's Warders, And let their watchword ever be, The truth for aye shall keep us free, Shall keep us free! Cuntrilmtcci by KOONTZ CREAMERY M E M B E R O F The College Annual Producers Association of the United States IHEIMSINQIIIHSQHUIIUN EU COLLEGE ANNUALS VIEW BOOKS ' CATALOGS ADVERTISING LITERATURE SWE gaihldpzg THOMSEN ' ELLIS ' HUITONCQ lllllllll guridemark Qress 'IILQII' W pambw af Me 1949 HULLABALOO BALTIMORE2. NEW YORK? 6 4' cn I' wi l l -f 4 9 1 9 '.!LllIIIIllHll lg O qw me Q33 Q The 1949 HULLABALOO Staff wishes to thank its many advertisers, without whom the publication of this book would have been impossible. We hope that our readers will patronize those who have so generously contributed. Jg5n.v-ofg4-Ls-f-4-,gi-:5,g4.-11-as,--,Q w-L,..-,1rw:kQfAl:zI2:Q's1-2-'nrm-':1L1- fi -gf Lg.. 5Q-.Q-A-4-sv-:kt-f:rA-'-'11-J'-5-.1 ,sgfgfnrffeVg,-N,.,-A-gf-fi.-ngixm.
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