Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) - Class of 1939 Page 1 of 318
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w Through the trees peeks the lofty tower of the beautiful Packer chapel erected as a memorial to Asa Packer by his children. On its inner walls, metal tablets carry the names of every Lehigh graduate. PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF LEHIGH UNIVERSITY 9 3 9 04 GO ASA PACKER conceived the idea of a university in South Bethlehem in the Fall of 1 864 and a year later, on July 27, 1 865, he called the first meeting of the Board of Trustees at the Sun Inn, Bethlehem. Lehigh University became a definite project at that meeting when Asa Packer made the trustees a gift of $500,000 and 57 acres of land on South Mountain. On February 9, I 866, the Pennsylvania legislature incorporated the completed organization under the name of The Lehigh University. Forty men were admitted to the school on September 1 , 1866, with but a single building, Christmas Hall, and a faculty of five men. From this small group Lehigh has grown to an enrollment over 1800 and a faculty of 180 men. There are now 19 buildings, 180 acres of land and an endowment of $6,000,000. One has to sit back and wonder if Asa Packer ever dreamt that his idea would be fulfilled to the great extent that it has. AT BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA The 1939 Epitome is presented to the stu- dents of Lehigh University as the editors ' con- ception of a yearbook that will perpetuate their recollections of HAPPY DAYS AT LEHIGH. In compiling this Annual, we have aimed at the presentation of a volume dedicated to authentic and accurate portrayal of the pleas- ant and social side of our college life that has taught us the joys of good-fellowship. This volume will have failed in its aim if those present students who may scan its pages when another decade shall have passed, do not first smile — then grin — and finally burst out into hearty laughs as they review their Lehigh days in retrospect. Here ' s to HAPPY DAYS! DR. WRAY HOLLOWELL CONGDON came to Lehigh in 1934 after serving six years as an inspector of high schools for the University of Michigan. Before this he had spent 12 years in China teaching and acting as head of American Schools. From 1 934 to the Fall of 1938 he was Director of Admissions at Lehigh and during his term of office the enrollment increased over 500. With this broad background and his friendship, generosity, and good fellowship, Dr. Congdon in his first year as Dean of Undergraduates won for himself the admiration, respect and affection of all those connected with Lehigh. To him, this sixty-third volume of the Epitome is respectfully dedicated. CPITOfTK v ) GUG€N€ GRRtf ' 99, PR6SID6NT0F UnIV€RSITYTRU5T€€S, ADDS HIS TH6M6 •■- This then, was Lehigh. From the station all you could see was the chapel spire and beyond to the right, the tower of Packer hall. And it was raining that first day. That night, your first at school, you slept in your new bed and were a little afraid and a little anxious but quite happy for this was college and the new life. Then the next day, Freshman Week started. You were just one out of approximately 400 bewildered youths milling in the spotlight. All kinds of strangers told you all kinds of things that you listened to and promptly for- got in the whirl of fraternity rushing and new friends and a new town. But before you were quite ready, school started and you learned to divide twenty-four hours among classes and studies and fun and sleep and activi- ties and that was the Freshman year, ended almost before it began. ' — l _ U « T— T l I J- - m y m 1-1(1 i | « | i r qr ym i npi|n n.|v i ««. 1  VM ' ■ r ■ n n« y.-i-v;- H W i«. i i ■■ n rr- ' %■MORNING— Yawning Christmas-Saucon Hall swal- lows hundreds of scholars. J?c ,JL H J Q !■I v - jt 1 — - !  -• ' ■' ♦ AFTERNOON— 7 hese squirming undergraduates are definitely not At ease. When you came back the next year, you were a Sophomore, estab- lished in the university system, no longer afraid, no longer anxious. And that year you took it easier and remembered that it was true that studies are not everything. You had time to sit in the sun on the concrete bench here in front of Christmas-Saucon, and you were surprised at the childishness of the frosh, and you slept in chapel as you were required to do. That was the year of the Eco lectures and Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus , and that was the year we beat Lafayette at Easton, and the urchins tore down the goalposts for us before the game was over. That Spring there was the red flag scandal on May Day and on Field Day you marched and pivoted and slapped your rifle through the manual of arms for the last time. Then Sophomore year was over and you were an upper classman. Now you were a Junior. You started to take your place in the minor offices in the activities set-up, and began to collect belly-brass . That Fall they started to build the addition to the Chem Building, and you won- dered why you had not waited a year or two to take Chemistry. The Lafayette game was the heart-breaker when Ellstrom made the run for a sure touchdown only to be called back, and we were licked. But the band was good and played Bugle Call Rag at the Houseparty game. You noticed that year that the classes were getting smaller, and you re- membered how many of the men you had known in your first year had gone other ways. And that was the year of Heat Engines and Corp Fin, and after that year was over, you knew you were in the home stretch. When you came back last Fall, you were a Senior; and you could hardly believe it for you did not feel as old or as wise or as competent as seniors had always seemed to be. You took a big part in the clubs and the socie- ties and the publications and the games but you hit the books too, because there was always that little gnawing thought that at the end of this year you had to get a job. So you found out what the inside of the Library looked like and where they kept the books. At Easton that year it rained like mad and you got so soaked that you never thought you ' d get dry again. But you didn ' t mind that half as much as seeing Lafayette 6, Lehigh 0. And this Spring you started to look for a job and you got interviews and you worried a little when others got offers but when the right outfit came through and signed you up, everything looks swell again. But you have had a lot of fun in your Senior year, as much as you have ever had, and you know, as June comes closer, that you are about to leave a lot of friends and that even if it doesn ' t miss you, you are going to miss Lehigh, a lot. Left, EVENING— In the evening by the book shelves, the students sit and cram. FALL — Over 500 green, gullible freshmen eager for knowledge, pour into Lehigh for Freshman Week. Dry, admonitory lectures WINTER- n fraternities, such as Sigma Nu buried in the snow, the pledgees slumber, play, learn, and grov send them scurrying into the hands of awaiting fraternity rushers. Cream of the crop, so it is said, are the 200 odd pledged . Vf AM SPRING — Blossoms white signify to weary freshmen the end of the first long year and the glory of years to come. Lehigh ' s 130-piece band, the pride and joy of every Lehigh alumnus and undergraduate, has the reputation of being the finest marching and playing band in the East. Its formations at football games attract as many spectators as the games them- selves. Of these formations, the students ' favorite is the goblet with an L formed in the middle. As the formation is completed, the band strikes up the Old Silver Goblet and as the song nears its end, slowly the goblet tilts to the side and over its edge spills the L . While the band is making this maneuver the students are singing out — Get out the old silver goblet, With Lehigh upon it, And we ' ll open another keg of beer; For we all came to college, But we didn ' t come for knowledge, So we ' ll raise hell while we ' re here. The goblet formation (on the adjoining page) with the heart in the middle was formed last Fall houseparty, and the band struck up an old favorite How Would You Like to Love Me? The novelty made a big hit with the assembled crowd and the band thus started playing jazz for the first time. Besides offering entertainment to the football patrons, the band plays for all R. O. T. C. drills and is one of the main reasons Lehigh receives an A rating from the Army Department. The band is an old standby for graduation, playing for the procession while it marches to and from the exercises, and again at the flag pole when the graduating class sings the Alma Mater for the first time as alumni. One of the most impressive parts of the exercises is Taps. As one bugler plays at the foot of the flag pole, another echoes his call from South Mountain. All is well, safely rest, God is nigh. He ' s the leader of the band, Robert P. Carter. Old silver goblet with your heart upon it. THEORY— Is the stuff that students get from books and faculty lectures. When the Facu lty believes that a student has acquired enough theory, he is given a diploma and called an alumnus. Some will call this blasphemy, but it is not. Complete knowledge of theory in their fields has made Lehigh men famous. That is fact, not theory. ' ::- ' W I PRACTISE — Is needed so that students can apply the theories which they have learned and not become professors. To give students plenty of opportunity to practise the University has provided laboratories valued with equipment at over $4,000,000. In these expensive laboratories, students make trivial mistakes, are corrected, learn how to avoid making such mistakes in the future. This system has been very effective, especially in engi- neering fields, in preventing graduates from making expensive mistakes on trivial jobs. Practise makes perfect, the psychology department tells us, only when the practise is done correctly. This is assured at Lehigh where in all departments, professionally-trained faculty members closely supervise the laboratory work done on experiments planned in all cases by experts in their respective fields. ALMA MATER lAJhere the oLehiqk ' i rochu rapidi ruih from out the Weil. Il ida grove of ipreadinq cheilnuli, walli in ivu dreit, CJn the breait of old JZoutli II foun- tain, reared againit the S)L ' u. Standi our noble Jilma ll ater, ilandi our dear cLehiqh. lAJe will ever live to love her, live to praiie her name; cLive to mane our lives add luilre to her qloridui fame. cJ et the qlad news walie the echoei, joufullu we cru, Mail to thee, our Aflma 1 1 later! JJaif! -JttJJail! MiaU BOARD OFTRUST€€S EUGENE G. GRACE, President WALTER R. OKESON, Secretary and Treasurer CORPORATE MEMBERS CHARLES M. SCHWAB, Eng.D., LLD., D.C.S. SAMUEL DEXTER WARRINER, B.S., E.M., Eng.D. EUGENE GIFFORD GRACE, E.E., Eng.D. CHARLES DONNELL MARSHALL, C.E., Eng.D. WILLIAM CARTER DICKERMAN, M.E., Eng.D. FRANK R. COATES, B.S., E.M. FRANK WILLIAM STERRETT, A.B., B.D., D.D., LL.D. AUBREY WEYMOUTH, C.E., Eng.D. WILLIAM JAY TURNER, LL.B. EARLE FREDERICK JOHNSON, C.E. MEMBERS ELECTED BY ALUMNI Term Expires ALEXANDER POTTER, C.E., Eng.D. 1939 Class of 1890 ROBERT FARNHAM, C.E. 1940 Class of 1899 MORTON SULTZER, E.E., M.S. 1941 Class of 1912 FRANK BRECKENRIDGE BELL, M.E. 1942 Class of 1897 JOHN DANIEL BERG, M.E. 1943 Class of 1905 ANDREW EDWARD BUCHANAN, Ch.E 1944 Class of 1918 When Asa Packer founded Lehigh, he placed its destinies in the hands of a self-perpetuating board of ten corporate trustees. In time these ten called upon the alumni to elect six additional members so that today the board numbers sixteen. Lehigh ' s charter, as approved by Mr. Packer, gives them the extensive powers needed to insure the continuance of Lehigh as one of the nation ' s leading universities. Through the years, the high quality of Lehigh ' s trustees, their excellent judgment, their interest expressed in time and money have made possible our outstanding physical plant and enviable achievements in scholarship. With Asa Packer, we can say, they have kept faith. Walter Raleigh Okeson (left), C.E. ' 96, secretary of the Board of Trustees and treasurer of Lehigh University since 1923, was Lehigh ' s first full-time alumni secretary. An end on the football team for four years, he has retained his interest in the sport. He officiated for many years then as commissioner of Eastern football selected the officials. Now he is chairman of the rules committee. Eugene Gifford Grace (right), E.E. ' 99, president of the Board of Trustees since 1924, was valedictorian of his class. Joining the Bethlehem Steel Company, he rose rapidly to the presidency. In 1912 he was made an alumnus trustee and since 1913 has served as a corporate member. 27 f J r : Administration at a university the size of Lehigh offers a challenge to its execu- tives. The solution of the many, difficult problems which con- stantly arise is made even more difficult by the fact that the general public and alumni must be considered as well as the faculty and student body. Results must be secured, but in securing them the feelings of everyone must be spared. DR. CLEMENT C. WILLIAMS, President of the University. President Clement Clarence Williams began his career as an educator upon receiving his B. S. in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois in 1907, at which time he joined the faculty of the University of Colorado, in its civil engineering department. He served in successive posts in the Universities of Kansas and Illinois until 1926, when he was called to the University of Iowa to become Dean of the College of Engineering. He was inaugurated as Lehigh ' s seventh president on Founder ' s Day, October 2, 1935. Lehigh ' s executives have accepted the challenge. As educators and business men, they have kept Lehigh among the nation ' s foremost univer- sities. Through the long, finan- cial depression, they have increased Lehigh ' s endowment and improved its physical plant. We, the students, share in their glory. DR. WRAY H. CONGDON, Dean of Undergraduate School. DR. TOMLINSON FORT, Dean of the Graduate School. PHILIP PALMER, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences. NEIL CAROTHERS, Dean, College of Business Administration. BRADLEY STOUGHTON, Dean of College of Engineering. GEORGE B. CURTIS, Registrar, University Editor. EARL K. SMILEY, Director of Admissions. ANDREW LITZENBERGER, E. ROBINS MORGAN- Superintendent. Director of Placement. Twenty-eight Lehigh professors have been listed either in the 1939-40 edition or in a past issue of Who ' s Who in America , a book of biographical sketches of the nation ' s outstanding leaders. Faculty members whose pictures are missing below are: Vahan Babasinian, Frederick Bradford, Charles Fox, Charles Richards, Hale Sutherland, Charles Thornburg and Harry Ullmann. Palmer, Joseph B. Reynolds. Robert M. Smith, Bradley Stoughton, Stanley J. Thomas, Clement C. Williams. Here are the leaders in Who ' s Who, but do you know why who is who? H t A fjk r TOP ROW: Burnett, Cox, Hurst, Grant, Wells, THIRD ROW: Weeks, Gowdy, Moesel, Watkins, Yingling, SECOND ROW: Rabold, Hagerman, Luster, Elmer, Masem, BOTTOM ROW: Selser, Hughes, Matteson, Carrington, Grannatt. Twenty students were chosen to represent Lehigh in the 1939-40 edition of Who ' s Who among Students in American Universities and Colleges after tabulating the results of the voting by O. D. K., Senior honorary society; Cyanide, Junior honorary society; and Pi Delta Epsilon, honorary journalism society. The students in the order in which they were chosen are: Franc H. Burnett, Jr., ' 39, president of Arcadia; Alfred T. Cox, ' 40, president of Cyanide; George E. Hurst, Jr., ' 39, president of O. D. K.; Alan S. Grant, ' 39, president of the Senior class; Walter C. Wells, ' 39; captain of soccer; Willet Weeks, ' 39, editor of the Brown and White; Richard S. Gowdy, ' 40, art editor of the Lehigh Review; Charles F. Moesel, ' 39, president of Tone; Wallace P. Watkins, ' 40, secretary-treasurer of Cyanide; Robert G. Yingling, ' 39, chairman of the Senior Ball; Frank C. Rabold, ' 39, member of O. D. K.; Edward E. Hagerman, ' 39, captain of wrestling; Donald R. Luster, ' 40, mana- ger of Freshman soccer; Morgan C. Elmer, ' 40, captain-elect of cross country; Harold J. Masem, ' 40, eastern intercollegiate wrestling champion; Harold M. Selser, Jr., ' 39, editor of the Epitome; David C. Hughes, ' 39, musical composer for Night in Armor ; Joseph L. Matteson, ' 40, member of Cyanide; Malcolm Carrington, Jr., ' 39, president of Mustard and Cheese; and Milton H. Grannatt, Jr., ' 39, presi- dent of the Interfraternity Council. Organized in the 80 ' s by Richard Harding Davis, the Lehigh Arcadia student governing body was merged last year with the Lehigh Union in order to expedite and crystallize the will of Lehigh ' s undergraduates in a more effective manner. 13 men, chosen by virtue of their campus posi- tions, make up the new governing body. LEHIGH ' S FOUR DICTATORS Franc Burnett, President, reading a letter to his subordinates, Chick Grant, Eddie Hurst and Will Weeks. Dr. Beardslee, Faculty Advisor. A friend of every undergraduate. iv TOP ROW: Cox, Pattern, Carrington, Beardslee, Albrecht, Schoen, Decker. FRONT ROW: Prideaux, Grant, Burnett, Hurst, Heckman. Richard Harding Davis originally founded Arcadia as a club for pipes, books, beer, and gingeralia in order to show his scorn for the fraternities that made bids for his mem- bership. At this stage of the club ' s exist- ence it was purely a social organization, but one thing led to another and the members began +o dicker in politics. From then on Arcadia began to grow in power until it was recognized as the govern- ing body of the students. So grew Arcadia until 1922, when a joint vote of the students and faculty removed from Arcadia the power to be the tribunal of violators of the honor system, which existed at that time. Arcadia was then at a very low ebb; so at a suggestion of Dean Charles M. McConn, it was decided that the members of Arcadia should be leaders of the group they repre- sented. This act greatly enhanced the prestige of Arcadia and it once more began to function as a well-organized group of leaders. How- ever, this group proved to be too large while the smaller Lehigh Union lacked authority to carry on many of its activities. The result was a merger of the two bodies in the Spring of 1938. Although by popular vote the name Ar- cadia was selected, the present form is more nearly that of the former Lehigh Union. While Arcadia discusses problems com- mon to all Lehigh students, the Interfrater- nity and Interdormitory Councils have juris- diction over their respective groups, reports of their actions being presented to Arcadia. Prestidigitation at pep rally is prelude to annual pajama parade. Perennial peace pledged between Lata ette and Lehigh. It lasted two weeks. List ot members can be found on page 304. Bromo Selser, the Editor. K. K. Kost, the Advisor. George Ueberroth, the Business Manager. The history of the Epitome is as amazing as it is interesting. Few students realize that it is Lehigh ' s oldest existing undergraduate pub- lication. In 1875 the Sophomore class es- tablished the book as a means to advertise the University. But as Lehigh grew the Epitome became a record book. This change oc- curred in 1885 when the Junior class took over the publication. It was not until 1931 that the Senior class published the book as a Senior yearbook. The policy of the Epitome board electing the new officers was changed in the Spring of 1938, when, after agitation by Pi Delta Epsilon, the Board of Publications TOP ROW: Kost, Rabo!d, Grubmeyer; SECOND ROW: Good, Diehl, Leonard, Homil- ler, Lennox, Norvig; FRONT ROW: Watkins, Ueberroth, Selser, Lehrer, Parsons. re-wrote the charter of the Epitome to provide for open competition supervised by a faculty advisor. Under the new set-up, the faculty advisor gives a written examina- tion before presenting his slate of prospective officers to the Board of Publications. The editor-in-chief also presents a slate to the board which elects the officers. It is under the new charter that this Epitome has been published. Although the Epitome is considered a Senior record- book, the staff has attempted to make it a book for all undergraduates by having individual pictures of all fra- ternity and dormitory men. In changing the order of the pages, publications, organizations, and activities were put (in the editors ' minds) in their logical order. Page layouts were varied and color was used much more pro- fusely to add that punch lacking in former books. We have worked hard to give you a book that you want, and we hope that we have succeeded. So to Lehigh we present the 1939 Epitome, the book of Happy Memories. List of members can be found on page 302 The editor ' s headache. - ,v,- ' j r;iT Willet Weeks, Jr., Editor-in-Chief, making another date. This year the Brown and White celebrated its forty-fifth anniversary. The first issue, published January 16, 1894, was a four-page, four-column tabloid with small headlines and no pictures, a far cry from the present seven-column paper with its emphasis on photographic coverage of important news events. Through the years, the policies of the paper have been governed by its motto, All the Lehigh News First. Rus Stevens, Business Manager, shows George Rheinfrank, Fin- ancial Manager, the red ink. Ken Kosf, the stooge, teaching freshmen looking for easy hours the rudiments of Journalism. Brown and White staff. We can identify them, but we do not have enough room to do so. The Brown and White serves a two-fold pur- pose at Lehigh. Its first function is the dissemina- tion of news; its second is to serve as a laboratory for students seeking practical training in all phases of journalism. To carry out its first function, the Brown and White has a staff of over 70 men, equally divided between the Tuesday and Friday issues, who work in four departments: news, editorial, sports, and photography. The news is prepared for publica- tion in the news room in the basement of Christ- mas-Saucon Hall which is equipped with 27 type- writers, departmental and news desks, newspaper racks, and a library. Adjoining this room is the dark room where news pictures are prepared. An efficient business staff of 30 men secures nearly $4,000.00 in advertising each year and an equal amount in subscriptions to make possible -he publication of the paper. The Brown and White now has over 2,500 paid subscribers in 27 states, the District of Columbia, and England. The business office is in Drown Hall. To carry out its second function, the Brown and White has been organized into courses. Regular classes are conducted by the three faculty ad- visors, and each student who passes the course is given one-hour of college credit a semester. The Brown and White is a member of the Inter- collegiate Newspaper Association of the Middle Atlantic States and of the Associated Collegiate Press. Both groups conduct competitions for ex- cellence of news coverage, make-up, and edi- torials among their members. In the INA, the Brown and White has been awarded more prizes than any other paper, and ACP consistently rates the Lehigh publication as First Class. Free from censorship of any kind, the paper has been extremely successful in numerous editorial campaigns. It has fought for improvement in eat- ing and living conditions, for improved social and recreational facilities, and for educational courses and lectures desired by the students. At all times, the paper has tried to reflect the opinion of the majority of Lehigh men. Today the Brown and White is proud of its long service to Lehigh. While other colleges, many of larger enrollment, were publishing weekly papers or none at all, the Brown and White has been a semi-weekly since its founding. Only for a short period before the Armistice, in response to a plea by the government to conserve paper, was the Brown and White issued weekly. List of members can be found on page 304. Thrasher T. Gray, typical, cynical reporter, pounds out scoop of year. Don Schoen, lanky, learned news editor, reads the copy and adds headlines. Now in print, the story is ready to go its way to over 2,500 readers. Years in college are years spent in a principality with a culture and heritage of its own. The ebb and flow of time brings new faces, new per- sonalities and new tales to be told. The Review finds plentiful food for print in the wealth of material laid at its feet. Its editors have long made it a practice to ferret out the highlights of life on the campus and present them to the college audience. The Review does more than afford its readers with a vicarious experience; it takes a firm editorial stand on current issues arising in the University and has maintained a liberal and progressive policy throughout its existence. There are few extra-curricular activities that offer experiences more Lou Stoumen resigned as Editor. TOP ROW: Spilberg, Scott, Stoumen, Lewis, Bernard. SECOND ROW: Kemmer, Dennison, Watlcins, Tangel. BOTTOM ROW: Harchar, Gowdy, Boyle, Heckman, Norns. Eric Weiss ' article She Would n ' t Do It, has the reader ' s feet in the air. H. S. Heckman, Business Manager, and his stooges, Dennison, Ulmer, Wells, and Chase. Joe Boyle carried on where he left off. valuable than those to be gained by work on campus publications. This is particularly true of persons interested in literary work after graduation, but the generality is a valid one even when applied to individuals not falling into this category. A sincere interest in the Review is the only qualification necessary to gain the experience it offers. It is an opportune way to make your education pay dividends. The Review serves a unique purpose on the campus. It is a natural outlet for college men who have a desire to express them- selves. Authors, artists, photographers, businessmen all find in the Review a common ground for expression. There are many tasks to be done and willing hands to do them. Some are attracted to maga- zine work as a result of previous experience in high schools and prep-schools. Others, with no previous experience, find themselves welcome as contributors and potential editors. The Review solicits material for publication from the ranks of the student body, faculty and alumni. It presents the thoughts and sentiments of Lehigh men. List of members can be found on page 302. if HOUSE PARTY 1. 4 o ' clock, Friday. Dates arrive in every way, shape, and form. 2. 10 to 2. The Ball and Brawl. 3. 1:30 o ' clock, Saturday. The football game. 4. 4 to 7. The Maennerchor Tea Dance. 5. 10 to 2. The jitterbugs ' delight. The house dances. 6. 2 to ? Show me the way to go home — 7. 3 o ' clock, Sunday. And we just couldn ' t say ' Good-bye ' . Registration. Taking life easy on Christmas-Saucon steps. Marks are posted. Beatrice Flickinger, the dean ' s one and only. Jeanette Cleaveland, recorder, without her horse. Marleah Bowker, Dr. Beardslee ' s efficient secretary. Genevieve Giering, the placement bureau ' s feminine bliss. Mrs. Dacey and Billy. Harmie in a pensive mood. The Supply Bureau. Hendricks stepping out. Have you tried this famous tester? CAMPUS in the WINTER 1. Atop South Mountain on way to lookout. 2. View of Packard Lab. from Packer Hall. 3. View of Chapel from Memorial Building. 4. The Chi Phis and their new brother. 5. View of Packer Hall from the Chapel. 6. Steps leading from Packer Hall with President ' s house in background. 7. Campus scene with Memorial Building in background. 8. The President ' s backyard. 21 CAMPUS in the FALL and SPRING 1. View of the Armory from Drown Hall. 2. Steps leading from Library to Coppee. 3. View from Richards ' House window. 4. View from the lookout. 5. Campus view from Dean ' s office. 6. Northwest part of the campus. 7. Not lover ' s lane, but path from Phi Delt house to Drown Hal 8. View of campus on entering main gate. 9. View of campus from Packer Hall. ' ArchJohnston ' 89, PR€SlD€NTOF HIS CLRSS,SP6flKS FOR OLDSTERS. £  1 rip ® _ 1 The HONORARY MEMBER of the SENIOR CLASS, WRAY H. CONGDON. Like a lot of other seniors, Wray came to Lehigh in 1934. Since then he has been using his time to such good advantage that he has made his presence felt in athletics, dramatics, publications, and all other student activities. An O.D.K and DU, he is co-holder with Coach Paul Calvert of the Summer Session tennis doubles title. In the Spring of 1938, he sang in H. M. S. Pinafore when it was presented by the Faculty. A top-flight socialite, he seldom missed the Senior Ball or other important social events. Off icerd tlu of me aM o i Eddie Hurst, Secretary-Treasurer, listens while Chick Grant, Presi- dent, points out the names of former presidents on Senior Cane. The class of 1939 may or may not acquire a title as notorious as the War Class , Prosperity Class or the Depression Class , but even so it will not be without distinction. The most painful and therefore probably the longest lived recollection of our fame will be that of Hell Week . We have the distinction of being the last class to suffer the Thirteen Terrible Tortures , the long walks on Nat Whitman, President our freshman Year. Frank Rabold, President our Sophomore Year. Gene Caller, President our Junior Year. cold dark nights, and the unending swing of the paddle. It was Hell then, but we will be more than repaid for our suffering by the wild tales we will be able to tell our grandchildren. Another institution from which classes following us have been spared is Chapel. Not since we finished our two years of Chapel, has a class had to arise at the crack of dawn to sit, half awake, in the hardest seats in the university for fifteen minutes. College isn ' t the same as it was when we were young Along with the memories of the class as a group will go the memories of the class as individuals. Some of our classmates will be remembered for their achievements in athletics, some for their achievements in other extra-curricular activities, and others for outstanding scholarship. Then still another group which will be remembered even though their college histories are not recorded in black and white are the campus characters or cards , if you will. Their humanity and idiosyncrasies added much to our four years that all the scholars and athletes in the university could not supply. Ever since we donned the black tie and dink back in 1935 we have profited and suffered by the acts of fate and the other powers controlling this institution; and some of these trials and tribulations we will not soon forget. But the history of the Class of ' 39 has just begun; it will not end until the last surviving member has joined the angels. Coming from 24 states, the District of Columbia, Canada, and the Canal Zone, more than 450 girls and their Lehigh escorts attended the Senior Ball of the Class of 1 939 Friday night, October 28, 1938, and danced to the music of Bunny Berigan and Mai Hallett at the Hotel Bethlehem. Playing on a stand in front of a large Lehigh banner, Bunny Berigan accompanied his orchestra with a trumpet and was active despite a broken ankle which was still in a cast. Jean Dover and Dick Wharton sang with his band which was located in the Dining room. Mai Hallett ' s orchestra, playing in the Main Ballroom, featured many novelty num- bers by Buddy Welcome and Joe Cabonaro. Jerry Perkins was the vocalist. Between the numerous numbers for the jitterbugs and the other swing enthusiasts, the bands played My Reverie , Two Sleepy People , and others of that type for the more conservative dancers. Much of the time those attending the Ball did not dance, but crowded around the orchestras while the entertainers executed various antics or novelty numbers for the amusement of the guests. With this year ' s Senior Ball came the revival of the hoop skirt and the more general appearance of the strapless evening gown. Both caused the Lehigh students and faculty much worry and concern. The committee was composed of Robert G. Yingling, Chairman; John M. McNabb; Milton H. Grannatt, Jr.; and Raymond P. Laubenstein. The chaperones were Dean and Mrs. W. H. Congdon, Dr. and Mrs. C. G. Beardslee, and Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Curtis. Mai Hallett shaking hands with Bob Yingling, chair- man of dance committee. Bunny Berigan and his band entertaining the jitterbugs in the main dining room of the Hotel. Johnny McNabb, Chairman of Program Committee. Butch Laubenstein, Chair- man of Social Committee. Milt Grannatt, Chairman of Ticket Committee. Mai Hallett and his band blaring forth to the enjoy- ment of the assembled crowd in the ballroom. Chick Grant, c ass presi- dent, boss of the affair. CLASS GEORGE E. ADAM Winnie jheta Xi Chemical Engineering WEST CHESTER, PENNSYLVANIA AUGUSTA MILITARY ACADEMY Swimming (I. 2, 3. 4), Capiain (4). GEORGE A. ALBRECHT George Taylor Hall Business Administration BLOOMFIELD, NEW JERSEY BLOOMFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 3, 4); Treasurer, Living Group (3), Section Chief (4); Founder and Presi- dent, Interdormitory Council (4); Arcadia Cabinet (4); Glee Club (I. 2, 3, 4); Sports- man ' s Club (4). HERBERT P. ALDRICH Herb Leonard Hall ELMIRA, NEW YORK SOUTH SIDE HIGH SCHOOL International Relations Club (2, 3, 4), Secre tary (4) ; Eta Sigma Phi. Arts ROBERT G. ALLEMAN Butch Town Group Chemical Engineering WALLINGFORD, PENNSYLVANIA SWARTHMORE HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). JAMES E. ANTRIM Jim Theta Xi Industrial Engineering MERCHANTVILLE, NEW JERSEY MERCHANTVILLE HIGH SCHOOL NORMAN L AYER Norm Delta Upsilon Industrial Engineering PLAINFIELD, NEW JERSEY FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL ACADEMY Football (I, 2, 3. 4); Treasurer, Delta Upsi- lon (4); Industrial Engineering Society. RICHARD BACON Yunk Alpha Tau Omega Chemical Engineering RICHMOND, VIRGINIA PRINCETON PREPARATORY SCHOOL Basketball (I); Chemical Society (2). JOHN-KARL M. BAIZ J-K Leonard Hall Arts WILKES-BARRE. PENNSYLVANIA WYOMING SEMINARY Brown and White (2, 3); Secretary of Leo- nard Hall (3); Williams Junior English Com- position Prize; Eta Sigma Phi (2, 3, 4), Sec- retary (2), Secretary-Treasurer (3); Interna- tional Relations Club. 54 19 39 RALPH P. BAKER, Jr. Deac Delta Tau Delta Arts LANCASTER, PENNSYLVANIA LANCASTER BOYS ' HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 2, 4); Wrestling (3, 4); President, Delta Tau Delta (4). FORD BALLANTYNE, Jr. Fliv Chi Psi Business Administration GROSSE POINTE SHORES, MICHIGAN ASHEVILLE SCHOOL IMRE BARSY Bar Allentown Group Engineering Physics ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Tau Beta Pi; Physics Society. PAUL H. BARTHOLOMEW Bart Town Group Chemical Engineering PALMERTON, PENNSYLVANIA PALMERTON HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I, 3); Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Band [I, 2); Chemical Society. HERMAN J. BAUMANN Hermie Richards House Business Administration JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY DICKINSON HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White (I, 2, 3, 4). JOHN L. BECKER, Jr. Johnnie Theta Delta Chi Business Administration EAST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY PEDDIE SCHOOL Wrestling (I); Swimming (2); Soccer (I); President, Theta Delta Chi (4). HENRY L. BEEKMAN Hank Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration LARCHMONT, NEW YORK MAMARONECK HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I); Extramural Sports Manager (3, 4); Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Exchange Committee (4); President, Phi Sigma Kappa (4); Mustard and Cheese Productions. LOUIS BEER Brew Town Group Electrical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (2, 3, 4), Manager (4); Alpha Phi Omega; Cut and Thrust; E. W. Brown Astro- nomical Society; A. I. E. E. 55 NORMAN R. BELL Norm Allentown Group Electrical Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (2); Brown and White (I); Alpha Phi Omega; E. W. Brown Astronomical So- ciety, President (3); Photographic Society (4); Lehigh Allentown Club, Corresponding Secretary (3); A. I. E. E. ELMER E. BIRO Elmer Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). WILLIAM C. BERNASCO, Jr. Bernie Lambda Chi Alpha Business Administration TRENTON, NEW JERSEY TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Junior Manager, Swimming (3); Manager, Swimming (4); Brown Key Society: Alpha Kappa Psi. ARTHUR BLANCHARD, Jr. Art Lambda Chi Alpha BOONTON, NEW JERSEY BOONTON HIGH SCHOO L Brown and White; Band (I, 2, 3, 4). Arts L€H I G RICHARD W. BLANCHARD Dick Alpha Kappa Pi Business Administration PORT WASHINGTON. NEW YORK PORT WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Rifle Team (I, 2, 3, 4). ARNOLD M. BLOSS Arnold Price Hall Business Administration OUEENS VILLAGE, NEW YORK JAMAICA HIGH SCHOOL Rifle (I, 2, 3, 4); Vice-President, Rifle Club (4); Sportsman ' s Club. JOHN W. BLISS Admiral Town Group Mechanical Engineering MINOT, NORTH DAKOTA VALLEY CITY HIGH SCHOOL Pi Tau Sigma; A. S. M. E. RICHARD BLOUNT Rick Kappa Sigma Business Administration MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY MAPLEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Lacrosse Manager (2. 3}; Band (2, 3). MICHAEL BOCK, II Micky Pi Lambda Phi Metallurgical Engineering BUFFALO, NEW YORK LAFAYETTE HIGH SCHOOL Review, Managing Secretary (4), Editorial Staff (2, 3); Mustard and Cheese (3, 4); American Society of Metals; Metallurgical Society. ELMER C. BOHLEN Butch Phi Sigma Kappa Metallurgical Engineering TENAFLY, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Basketball (I, 2); Fresh- man Honors; Chemical Society (1,2); Metal- lurgical Society (3, 4). THOMAS E. BOGERT Tom Allentown Group Metallurgical Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL EDWARD J. BOOTH, II E. J. Sigma Phi Business Administration BURLINGTON, VERMONT BURLINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Hockey (2); Symphony Orchestra (I, 2). S€N IORS fh£ ROBERT W. BOWEN Bob Sigma Chi Business Administration MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY MONTCLAIR HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Manager, Freshman Swim- ming (4); Brown Key Society (3); Interfra- ternity Council (3, 4), Judicial Committee (4); President, Sigma Chi (4); Sportsman ' s Club (4). DONALD W. BRADER Don Town Group Electrical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (3); A. I. E. E. JOSEPH B. BOYLE Joe Lambda Chi Alpha Business Administration TEANECK, NEW JERSEY TEANECK HIGH SCHOOL Tennis ( I ) ; J. V. Football (4); Review, Asso- ciate Editor (4), Editorial Staff (3, 4); Alpha Kappa Psi; Photographic Society (3). HAROLD I. BREIDENBACH, Jr. Chick Alpha Kappa Pi Business Administration GREAT NECK, NEW YORK GREAT NECK HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Band (I, 2); Dance Orchestra (I, 2, 4); Combined Musical Club Orchestra (I, 2, 4); Fraternity Historian; Chemical Society ( 1 , 2). 57 CLASS JAMES R. BRIGHT Jim Chi Phi Industrial Engineering ST. DAVIDS, PENNSYLVANIA RADNOR HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (3); Rifle Team (I); Brown and White (1,2); Manager, Rifle (3, 4), Secretary-Treasurer (4); Treasurer, Chi Phi; President, Cut and Thrust; Fresh- man Honors; Newtonian Society; Pi Tau Sig- ma; Tau Beta Pi; Industrial Engineering So- ciety; A. S. M. E. JAMES W. BROADFOOT, Jr. Jim Pi Kappa Alpha Business Administration RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL CARL F. BROWN Brownie Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES D. BROWN, Jr. Jim Kappa Sigma Business Administration ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I); Track (I); Band (I, 2, 3). HARRY H. BROWN, Jr. Brunyatz Psi Upsilon Industrial Engineering SOUTHBURY, CONNECTICUT HOPKINS SCHOOL Band (I, 2, 3); Mustard and Cheese (I, 2, 3, 4), Costume Manager (4); Industrial Engi- neering Society (2, 3, 4). ROBERT K. BROWN Bob Beta Kappa Industrial Engineering MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA MOUNT JOY HIGH SCHOOL Band (2, 3, 4); Industrial Engineering So- ciety. HENRY J. BRUCKER, Jr. Brucky Delta Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I); Lacrosse (2); Outing Club (I, 2); Industrial Engineering Society (I, 2, 3, 4). WILLIAM E. BRUNING Bruno Sigma Nu Arts MUNSEY PARK, NEW YORK MANHASSET HIGH SCHOOL Secretary of Sigma Nu (4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4), Secretary (4); Alpha Epsilon Delta (4); Glee Club (I, 2. 3, 4); R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (I, 2. 3, 4). 58 19 39 FREDERICK H. BUEHL, Jr. Sandy Beta Kappa Metallurgical Engineering EAST AURORA, NEW YORK NICHOLS SCHOOL Secretary, Beta Kappa; Camera Club; Metal- lurgical Society. ALEXANDER L. BUPP Alex Pi Kappa Alpha Industrial Engineering YORK, PENNSYLVANIA WILLIAM PENN HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4); Lacrosse Club (3, 4); International Relations Club; Glee Club ' ; In- dustrial Engineering Society; Associate Mem- ber, A. S. M. E. FRANC H. BURNETT, Jr. Burnie Phi Gamma Delta Industrial Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA HILL SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); President, Arcadia; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi Tau Sigma Freshman Prize; Tau Beta Pi; Vice- President, Pi Tau Sigma; Omicron Delta Kap- pa; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society In- ternational Relations Club; Treasurer, Indus- trial Engineering Society; Phi Beta Kappa. SYLVAN G. BUSHEY Bush Theta Xi Business Administration HADDONFIELD, NEW JERSEY BLAIR ACADEMY Soccer (I 2, 3, 4); Basketball (I); Freshman Handbook, Business Board (2); Assistant Manager, Track (I, 2); Junior Intramural Athletic Manager; Senior Intramural Ath- letic Manager; Arcadia, Visitations Commit- tee (4); Cyanide (3); Interf raternity Coun- cil (3, 4). EUGENE B. CALLER Gene Kappa Alpha Industrial Engineering SCARSDALE, NEW YORK SCARSDALE HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2. 3); Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); President, Junior Class; Arcadia (3); Band (I); Mustard and Cheese, Program Com- mittee (2); Industrial Engineering Society A. S. M. E. y ' MATTHEW J. CAMPBELL Jimmie Town Group Chemical Engineering BELLEVILLE, NEW JERSEY BELLEVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4). COURTLAND F. CARRIER, III Court Psi Upsilon Industrial Engineering WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK ST. LOUIS COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Soccer (I, 2, 3); Epitome (2); Student Pub- lications Com. (4); Union (3); Cyanide; Pi Tau Sigma, Pres. (4); Scabbard and Blade, Treas. (4); Cadet Colonel, R. O. T. C; I. E. Society, Vice-Pres. (4); Freshman Honors; Floor Com., Senior Ball; Military Ball Com. (3, 4); Engineers ' Ball Com. (4); Arcadia Rally Com.; Mustard and Cheese; Rifle Club. JAMES R. CARRINGER, Jr. Jim Theta Delta Chi Business Administration ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY STAUNTON MILITARY ACADEMY Golf (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Interfraternity Council (3, 4). 59 MALCOLM CARRINGTON, Jr. Cab Kappa Alpha Business Administration RICHMOND, VIRGINIA MANLIUS MILITARY SCHOOL Manager, Freshman Football (I); Manager, Tennis (4); President, Kappa Alpha; Vice- President. Freshman Class; Arcadia (4); In- tertraternity Council (3), Vice-President (4); Cheerleader (3), Head Cheerleader (4); Alpha Kappa Psi, Vice-President (4); Scab- bard and Blade; Tone; Brown Key; O. D. K.; Mustard and Cheese, President (4). ARTHUR B. CHADWICK, Jr. Benjie Delta Tau Delta Chemical Engineering WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY TAFT SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Baseball (2); Vigilante Committee (2); Vice-President, Delta Tau Delta; Mustard and Cheese (1,2, 3), Vice- President (4). WILLIAM H. CASEY Bill Beta Kappa FREEPORT, NEW YORK FREEPORT HIGH SCHOOL Arts Basketball (I); Football (I, ternity Council (2). 2. 4); Interfr GORDON S. CHASE, III Gordy Delta Upsilon Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL L6HIGH PAUL W. CHEEVER Paul Delta Tau Delta Business Administration ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA STRONG VINCENT HIGH SCHOOL Lacrosse (3); Lehigh Sportsman ' s Club. FREDERICK H. CLYMER Fritz Town Group Metallurgical Engineering DOYLESTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA DOYLESTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Metallur- gical Society. ROBISON CLARK Robbie Beta Theta Pi Arts EAST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY NEWARK ACADEMY Baseball (I); Manager, Baseball (4); Brown Key. CHARLES F. CONNORS Fran Town Group Arts FITCHBURG, MASSACHUSETTS FITCHBURG HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Sophomore Honors; Robert W. Blake Society (3); Glee Club (I, 2, 3). 60 ARTHUR R. COOKE Art Lambda Chi Alpha Business Administration SUMMIT, NEW JERSEY SUMMIT HIGH SCHOOL Manager, Soccer (4); Lacrosse (2); Review, Editorial Staff (3); Brown Key. ALBERT J. CROSS Al Alpha Chi Rho SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA WYOMING SEMINARY Review ( 1 , 2 ) ■Glee Club (I); Arts Mustard and Cheese (I)- Robert W. Hall Society. DONALD W. COOPER Don Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering ENOLA, PENNSYLVANIA ENOLA HIGH SCHOOL Intramural Football; Bowling; Treasurer, Liv- ing Group (3); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Eta Kappa Nu, Corresponding Sec- retary (4); Tau Beta Pi, Treasurer (4); Alpha Phi Omega; Newtonian Society; Mustard and Cheese Play, Counselor-at-Law ; E. E. Society, Treasurer (4). RICHARD S. CUNLIFFE Dick Theta Xi Business Administration PELHAM, NEW YORK PELHAM HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4), Program Manager (3), Secretary (4); International Relations Club (I, 2, 3, 4), Pro- gram Manager (4) . S€N IORS DOMINICK E. DATTOLA Eddie Town Group Business Administration GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT GREENWICH HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (2. 4). MORTON DAVIS Morty Tau Delta Phi Industrial Engine. SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY WEEOUAHIC HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Freshman Manager, Swimming Football (I); President, Tau Delta Phi Interfraternity Council (3); Arcadia (3) dustrial Engineering Society. DONALD L. DAVIS Don wn Group Arts WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA ELMER L. MEYERS HIGH SCHOOL Eta Sigma Phi Prize; President (3, 4) ; Tone Eta Sigma Phi, Vice- WESLEY A. W. DAVIS, Jr. Wes jring Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration TENAFLY, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL (M; Track (1, 2). (4); ; In- 61 CLASS CLARENCE R. DE BOW, Jr. Spike Delta Tau Delta Chemical Engineering PENNS GROVE, NEW JERSEY PENNS GROVE HIGH SCHOOL Baseball (2, 3, 4), Freshman Manager (4); Brown and White (I, 2, 3), National Adver- tising Manager (3); Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Cyanide; Mustard and Cheese (3, 4), Stage Manager (4). WALTER A. DECKER Wally Allentown Group Civil Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Arcadia (4), Chairman Arcadia Dance Com- mittee, House Committee for Drown Hall; Student Member, Board of Publications (4); Lehigh Allentown Club, Secretary (3), Presi- dent (4); A. S. C. E., Secretary (3), Trea- surer (4). JOHN L DENT John Town Group Metallurgical Engineering INGOMAR, PENNSYLVANIA KISKI SCHOOL DONALD L DE VRIES Don Town Group Industrial Engineering BALTIMORE, MARYLAND BALTIMORE POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE Lacrosse (2, 3, 4); Wrestling (2, 3); Pi Tau Sigma; Industrial Engineering Society. CLIFFORD R. DIECKMAN Cliff Town Group Mechanical Engineering DEMAREST, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL Rifle Club; American Society Mechanical Engineers. HAROLD L. DIETRICHSON Harold Town Group Arts SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL HOLLAND H. DONALDSON, Jr. Dutch Price Hall Arts PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA PEABODY HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society (2, 3, 4). JOHN E. DORER El Sigma Phi Epsilon Mechanical Engineering EAST ORANGE. NEW JERSEY EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL American Society Mechanical Engineers. 62 19 39 SELDEN E. DOUGHTY Sel Theta Xi Metallurgical Engineering HADDONFIELD, NEW JERSEY HADDONFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (2); Rifle Club; Metallurgical So- ciety. CHARLES R. DRAKE, Jr. Dick Phi Gamma Delta Business Administration MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (2, 3, 4); Lacrosse Club (3, 4). ADDISON D. DRAPER Drape Theta Delta Chi Chemical Engineering WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I, 2, 3, 4); Wrestling (4); Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Senior Ball Com- mittee; Chemical Society. LEONARD H. DUDMAN Dud Sigma Phi Business Administration HARRISBURG. PENNSYLVANIA HARRISBURG ACADEMY Football (I); Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Spiked Shoe (2, 3, 4); Lehigh Review, Advisory Commit- tee (4); Secretary, Sigma Phi (4); Wilbur Junior-Senior Prize in Extempore Speaking (3); Alph Kappa Psi; Mustard and Cheese. ROBERT H. DUENNER, Jr. Bob Delta Phi Industrial Engineering WARRENTON, VIRGINIA WOODBERRY FOREST SCHOOL Basketball (I); Rifle Team (I, 4, 5); Cheer Leader (3, 4); Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Inter- fraternity Council (2, 3); Arcadia (4); I. E. Society. FREDERICK C. DURANT, III Fritz Delta Phi Chemical Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA HAVERFORD SCHOOL Soccer (I); Baseball (I); Fencing (3); Mus- tard and Cheese (4, 5); Thurber Society; Chemical Society. ROBERT M. EASTON Bob Pi Kappa Alpha Industrial Engineering RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (1,2,3,4); Interf raternity Council (3); Arcadia; President, Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Tau Sigma; Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-Presi- dent; Lehigh Outing Club, President; Indus- trial Engineering Society; A. S. M. E. ERNEST E. EDWARDS Ev Town Group Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Sophomore Honors; Tone (3, 4); Combined Musical Clubs (2, 3, 4); Band (2, 3, 4); Concert-Lecture Committee; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society; Phi Beta Kappa. 63 m m m i CHARLES L. EICHENBERG Charley Town Group Electrical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; President, Elec- trical Engineering Society. BROWER R. ELLIS Rapp Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering PHOENIXVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA PHOENIXVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Lehigh Eagle Scout Association; Alpha Phi Omega; Symphony Orchestra (I, 2, 3); A. I. E. E. (2, 3, 4); Electrical Engineering Society (1,2,3,4). WILLIAM H. ELLERS Shorty Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration BERGENFIELD, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White (3); Band (I, 2). LEONARD P. ELLY Len Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Secretary, Living Group; Electrical Engineer- ing Society. L€H I G H FRANK J. EPINGER Eppy Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Metallurgical Society. BRIAN D. EVANS Doug Town Group Industrial Engineering GLEN COVE, NEW YORK SEA CLIFF HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I); Lacrosse (3, 4); Pi Tau Sigma; Industrial Engineering Society, Secretary (3); A. S. M. E. ROBERT K. EUNSON Tiger Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering BLOOMSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA BLOOMSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). JOHN T. EVANS John Theta Xi Civil Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA KEYSTONE JUNIOR COLLEGE Baseball (4); A. S. C. E. (3, 4). 64 ROBERT B. EVANS Bauer Delta Sigma Phi Sanitary Engineering GLEN ROCK, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Honors; Civil Engineering Society (I. 2, 3, 4), President (4). RICHARD D. FABER Dick Theta Kappa Phi Metallurgical Engineering MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Manager, Track (4); Brown Key; Spiked Shoe; Chess Club ( I ) ; Metallurgical Society. ALFRED L. EVERETT Al Town Group Arts FREELAND, PENNSYLVANIA MINING AND MECHANICAL INSTITUTE Alpha Epsilon Delta; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society; Chemistry Society. ANTHONY J. FAMIGHETTI Tony Town Group Business Administration NEWARK, NEW JERSEY OAK RIDGE MILITARY ACADEMY Football (I, 2, 3,4); Track ( 1 , 2, 4) ; Lacrosse (4); Dramatic Workshop (2, 4). S€N IORS ROBERT T. FELD Bob Town Group Mechanical Engineering CALDWELL, NEW JERSEY GROVER CLEVELAND HIGH SCHOOL Mechanical Engineering Society. HOPE D. FERRIS Ferris Allentown Group Engineering Physics ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Physics Society. LOUIS M. FERENCZI Jeep Delta Sigma Phi Mechanical Engineering BAYONNE, NEW JERSEY BAYONNE HIGH SCHOOL De Molay Club; Outboard Club; Rifle Club; Chemical Society (I, 2); A. S. M. E. (3, 4)1 HUGH J. FERRY Hugh Town Group Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Chemical Society. 65 CLASS FRANCIS S. FILIPPONE Fran Theta Kappa Phi Industrial Engineering NEWARK, NEW JERSEY WEEQUAHIC HIGH SCHOOL Band (I, 2. 3. 4); Orchestra [I, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (I, 2); Industrial Engineering So- ciety (3, 4); A. S. M. E. (4). WILLIAM M. FINE, Jr. Bill Kappa Sigma Industrial Engineering SWARTHMORE, PENNSYLVANIA FRIENDS ' SELECT SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Baseball (I); Industrial Engineering Society; A. S. M. E. EDWIN A. FISHER, II Ned Beta Theta Pi Arts PLAINFIELD, NEW JERSEY LAWRENCEVILLE SCHOOL Soccer (I, 2, 3, 4); Baseball (I, 2); Scab- bard and Blade (3, 4); Interfraternity Coun cil (2). CHARLES FRANK Chas Sigma Alpha Mu Business Administration ALBANY, NEW YORK ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL Swimming ( 1 , 2, 3, 4). JOHN A. FREY Jack Phi Gamma Delta Arts GRAFTON, MASSACHUSETTS WILLISTON ACADEMY Soccer (I, 2); Lacrosse (3, 4); Review Board (2, 3); Radio Society (I, 2); Metallurgical Society. ROBERT A. FULTON, Jr. Bob Theta Xi Electrical Engineering NEW YORK, NEW YORK HUN SCHOOL Manager, Freshman Track (4); Spiked Shoe (4); Electrical Engineering Society (I, 2, 3. 4). LUIS G. GALINDO Louie Delta Sigma Phi Mechanical Engineering MEXICO, D. F. AMERICAN SCHOOL Fencing [I, 2, 3, 4); Cut and Thrust (3, 4); Cosmopolitan Club (4); A. S. M. E. (3, 4). ROBERT H. GALLAGHER Bob Town Group Business Administration PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA FRANKFORD HIGH SCHOOL Review, Business Staff (2); Band (I, 2, 3, 4), Sergeant (4). 66 19 39 JOHN S. GARDNER Johnny Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration RED BANK, NEW JERSEY RED BANK HIGH SCHOOL Cheerleader (3, 4); Brown and White (2); Freshman Handbook Committee (3); Scab- bard and Blade. EUGENE R. L GAUGHRAN Gene Allentown Group Arts ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; President, Alpha Epsilon Delta; President, R. W. Hali Pre-Medical Society; Chandler Chemical So- ciety; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society; Le- high-Allentown Club; Phi Beta Kappa. FRANK J. GIBBONS Gib Theta Kappa Phi Business Administration SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA SCRANTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL ROBERT M. GIRDLER Bob Beta Theta Pi Chemical Engineering MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN TABOR ACADEMY Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Astronomical Society; Aero Club; Radio Society; Chemical Society. y| 52% « k£4. STANLEY E. GIULIO Stan Town Group Mining Engineering ALDAN, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Trea surer, Mining Society. WILLIAM H. GLANDER Gabby Alpha Tau Omega Business Administration NEWARK, NEW JERSEY NEWARK ACADEMY Football (2); Scabbard and Blade; Floor Committee, Military Ball; Aero Club- Radio Club. LOUIS G. GLESMANN, Jr. Lew Delta Tau Delta Mechanical Engineering ROME, NEW YORK ROME FREE ACADEMY Soccer ( I ) ; Assistant Manager, Track (I, 2); Pi Tau Sigma; Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4), Property Manager (4); Mechanical Engineer- ing Society. JUSTIN GLIDE Jus Delta Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering PLAINFIELD, NEW JERSEY PLAINFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 3, 4j; Wrestling (I, 3, 4); Inter- fraternity Council (2, 3, 4); Industrial Engi- neering Society (2, 3, 4). 67 ALBERT GOEPPERT Al Town Group Arts BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK BINGHAMTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Metal- lurgical Society; American Society for Metals. WILLIAM M. GOODWIN, Jr. Bill Alpha Tau Omega Industrial Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Pi Tau Sigma; Industrial Engineering Society. ROBERT F. GOODWIN Bob Phi Sigma Kappa Industrial Engineering BLOOMFIELD, NEW JERSEY BLOOMFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Industrial Engineering Society (3, 4). RICHARD A. GORISSE Dick Phi Sigma Kappa Arts PAWLING, NEW YORK BLAIR ACADEMY Football (1,3); Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Scab- bard and Blade; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical So- ciety; Student Instructor, M. S. and T. L6HIGH MILTON H. GRANNATT, Jr. Milt Lambda Chi Alpha Business Administration RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY BLAIR ACADEMY Basketball (I, 2, 3); Tennis (I, 2, 3, 4]; Presi- dent, Intertraternity Council; Cyanide; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Alpha Kappa Psi. THRASHER T. GRAY T Psi Upsilon Arts RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY TABOR ACADEMY Brown and White, News Manager (4), Board (3); Intertraternity Council (3, 4); Pi Delta Epsilon. ALAN S. GRANT Chick Phi Gamma Delta Industrial Engineering PLANDOME. NEW YORK MANHASSET HIGH SCHOOL Lacrosse, Captain (3); Brown and White, Sports Editor (2); Manager, Frosh Wrestling; President, Senior Class; Vice-President, Ar- cadia; Intertraternity Council; Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, Pi Tau Sigma; Newtonian Society; Treasurer, O. D. K.; Pi Delta Epsilon; Scab- bard and Blade; Cyanide; President, I. E. Society. RICHARD H. GREENWELL Dick Chi Phi Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Union; Arcadia; Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society. 68 JOHN G. GREENWOOD Jack Delta Tau Delta Industrial Engineering WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT WILLIAM H. HALL HIGH SCHOOL Industrial Engineering Society. STANFORD I. GUGGENHEIM S+an Pi Lambda Phi Chemical Engineering ELKINS PARK, PENNSYLVANIA CHELTENHAM HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (2, 3, 4); Tennis (2, 3, 4); Lehigh Review, Editorial Staff (I, 2, 3, 4), Art Edi- tor (3), Photographic Editor (4); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). ROBERT S. GRUBMEYER Grube Sigma Chi Electrical Engineering HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA HARRISBURG ACADEMY Epitome, Sports Editor (3), Senior Section (4); Scholastic Honors (I, 2); President, Eta Kappa Nu; Newtonian Society; Scabbard and Blade. EMMANUEL H. GUILLIS Gill Town Group Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society. A Jm4 v t S€N IORS ALFRED B. GUNTHEL, Jr. Bub Town Group Che emical Engineering SEA CLIFF, NEW YORK TILTON SCHOOL Band (I, 2); Chemical Society. LEONARD W. HAESELER Len Town Group Electrical Engineering LINCOLN PARK, PENNSYLVANIA READING HIGH SCHOOL Radio Club (I, 2, 3), President (3); Elec- trical Engineering Society (I, 2, 3, 4), Sec- retary (4). THOMAS HABICHT Tom Phi Gamma Delta Business Administration SNYDER, NEW YORK AMHERST CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I); Baseball (I, 2); Alpha Kappa EDWARD E. HAGERMAN Gus Delta Upsilon Industrial Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Inter- collegiate Wrestling Champion (3); Pi Tau Sigma; Industrial Engineering Society. 69 CLASS RICHARD D. HALLIGAN Red Taylor Hall Chemistry WEST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY WEST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Symphony Orchestra (2, 3, 4); Alpha Phi Omega (3, 4). THOMAS M. HAMILL T Chi Phi Mechanical Engineering WEST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY WEST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (I, 2, 3, 4); Cut and Thrust, Trea surer (3), Vice-President (4); Pi Tau Sigma; Band (I ; A. S. M. E. JOHN L. HANKINS Jake Town Group Electrical Engineering MERCHANTVILLE, NEW JERSEY MERCHANTVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4). WILSON C. HANLINE Wilson Town Group Business Administration GERMANTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA GERMANTOWN ACADEMY Intramural Debating (3); Phi Beta Kappa. HARRY A. HARCHAR Harry Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4); Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Brown and White, Photo Editor (4), Photo Staff (I, 2, 3, 4); Review, Editorial Board (3, 4); Lehigh Blotter (2, 3), Manager (3); Freshman Handbook, Alternate Editor (4); Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Phi Omega, President (4). EMANUEL O. HARRA Oats Pi Lambda Phi Business Administration NEW YORK, NEW YORK COLUMBIA SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Union; In- terfraternity Council; President, Pi Lambda Phi; Chemical Society. CHARLES W. HART Chic Richards House Chemical Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Section Chief, MB, Richards House (4); Se- nior Athletic Manager, Richards House (4); Interdormitory Council (4); Chemical So- ciety (I, 2, 3, 4). NEVIN C. HARTMAN Bud Richards House Business Administration LYNNPORT, PENNSYLVANIA SLATINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Section Chief, HA, Richards House; Inter- dormitory Council; Sophomore Honors; Band (I, 2, 3, 4); Phi Beta Kappa. 70 19 39 JAMES W. HARTZELL Jim Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White (3, 4). WALTER C. HAULENBEEK Walt Chi Psi Business Administration SOMERVILLE, NEW JERSEY BOUND BROOK HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Football (1,2); Manager, Freshman Football (4). KARL F. HAUPT Karl Town Group Metallurgical Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA SCRANTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Track (I); Metallurgical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). ROBERT H. HEBARD Hebbie Sigma Phi Epsilon Civil Engineering MOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL American Society Civil Engineering. HENRY T. S. HECKMAN Hank Town Group Arts CHAGRIN FALLS, OHIO READING SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL Rifle ( I ) ; Review, Business Manager (4) Ad- vertising Manager (3), Board (2); B ' rown and White, Editorial Council (4), Make-up Editor 3 , Board (2); Freshman Handbook Ed.tor (3); Arcadia (4); Chairman, Hand- book Committee (4); Board of Publications 1 4 ; Pi Delta Epsilon, Vice-President (4)- Delta Omicron Theta. EARL HEINS Father ' neta Xl Chemical Engineering LAMBERTVILLE, NEW JERSEY LAMBERTVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Newtonian Society; Tau Beta Pi, Vice-President; Band (I, 2); Chem ical Society. CLARENCE A. HELLER Jake Town Group Industrial Engineering WIND GAP, PENNSYLVANIA PEN ARGYL HIGH SCHOOL Band (2, 3, 4); Glee Club (3, 4); Industrial Engineering Society (I, 2, 3, 4). JOHN H. HELLER Jack Ta V lor H aH Electrical Engineering LANSFORD, PENNSYLVANIA LANSFORD HIGH SCHOOL Section Chief (4); Interdormitory Council (4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Electrical Engineering Society (I, 2, 3, 4). 71 REA C. HELM, Jr. Rea Beta Kappa Electrical Engineering CLEVELAND, OHIO TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Newtonian Society; Alpha Phi Omega; Cam- era Club (3, 4); Electrical Engineering So- ciety (I, 2, 3, 4). ALLAN W. HENDRICKS Al Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering SELLERSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA SELLERSVILLE-PERKASIE HIGH SCHOOL Band (I, 2, 3); Electrical Engineering Society (3,4); A. I. E. E. (4). RALPH W. HELWIS Ralph Price Hall Chemical Engineering MILLERSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA MILLERSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Secretary-Treasurer, Price Hall (4); Fresh- man Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society. BRUCE R. HENKY Bruce Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration BROOKLYN, NEW YORK JAMES MADISON HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Football ( I ) ; Young Men ' s Republican Club, Treasurer (2); Cam- era Club. L€H I G WALTON M. HENRY Walt Town Group Business Administration PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA FRANKFORD HIGH SCHOOL Band (I, 2, 3); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Mus- tard and Cheese (2). KENNETH I. HERMAN Butch Sigma Alpha Mu Arts BROOKLYN, NEW YORK ABRAHAM LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I, 2, 3, 4); Tennis Squad (2); Soph- omore Honors; Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN F. HERR, Jr. LEO W. HESSELMAN, Jr. Johnny Hess Town Group Chemical Engineering PARLIN, NEW JERSEY SOUTH RIVER HIGH SCHOOL Theta Delta Chi Business Administration GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK PEEKSKILL MILITARY ACADEMY J. V. Football (4); Newtonian Society; De- bating (1). Newtonian Society; Alpha Kappa Psi. ffs !fk 72 WILLARD G. HISTAND Will ALLAN V. HOFFMAN Hoff Delta Upsilon Mechanical Engineering Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering DOYLESTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA FRANKLIN, PENNSYLVANIA DOYLESTOWN HIGH SCHOOL FRANKLIN HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (1, 4); Rifle (1); Track (4); La- crosse (3); Manager, Cross Country (4); Assistant Manager, Track (1); Review (3); Student Concert-Lecture Committee; Brown Chemical Society. and White, Assistant Sports Editor (4); Pi Tau Sigma, Secretary (4); Cyanide; Aero Club (3, 4); Glee Club (I, 2, 3); Brown Key; Spiked Shoe; A. S. M. E. JAMES F. HOLLISTER, Jr. Jim Town Group Mechanical Engineering SEA CLIFF, NEW YORK SEA CLIFF HIGH SCHOOL Sophomore Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; A. S. M. E. DAVID L. HOLMES Dave Delta Phi Metallurgical Engineering HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, NEW YORK HASTINGS HIGH SCHOOL Cheerleader (3); Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Metallurgical Society (2, 3, 4). kTk TA S€N IORS RICHARD W. HUBSCHMITT Hubby Delta Tau Delta Mechanical Engineering MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY BLAIR ACADEMY Golf (3, 4) ; Mustard and Cheese; A. S. M. E. EDWARD HURST, Jr. Ed Phi Delta Theta Business Administration FLUSHING, NEW YORK FLUSHING HIGH SCHOOL Baseball; Track; Cross Country, Capt. (4); Chr., Frosh Handbook; Treas., Arcadia (4); Chr., Freshman Ball; Alpha Kappa Psi Medal- lion (4); Alumni Jr. Award; Frosh and Soph. Honors; Rhodes Scholarship Cand.; Pres., O. D. K.; Sec. -Treas., Cyanide; Vice-Pres., Spiked Shoe; Pi Delta Epsilon; Treas., Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Beta Kappa; Union (I). 73 DAVID C. HUGHES Dave Lambda Chi Alpha Chemistry TELFORD, PENNSYLVANIA SOUDERTON HIGH SCHOOL Review, Staff (3, 4); Brov, Column (4); Tone (3, 4); Cheese (3, 4). i and White, Mustard and JOHN Y. HUTCHISON, III Hutch Beta Theta Pi Chemical Engineering NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE DUNCAN PREPARATORY SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Lacrosse (3); Manager, Lacrosse (4); Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (2, 3, 4). CLASS LLEWELLYN L. IOBST, Jr. Lew Delta Upsilon Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL WILLIAM IRWIN Bill Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY MILLBURN HIGH SCHOOL Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4); Chairman, Engineers ' Ball (4); International Relations Club (3, 4); Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Scabbard and Blade Sabre Award (3); Scabbard and Blade (4). FRANK L JACKSON Jack Alpha Kappa Pi Chemical Engineering CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND BETHESDA CHEVY CHASE HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Numerals; Freshman Union; Junior Prom Committee; Sophomore Honors; New- tonian Society; Tau Beta Pi; President, Alpha Kappa Pi (4); Historian, Alpha Kappa Pi (3}; Chemical Society. JOHN A. JACKSON J. A. Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering SCARSDALE, NEW YORK SCARSDALE HIGH SCHOOL Electrical Engineering Society. ROBERT H. JAUCK Bob Taylor Hall Mechanical Engineering WOODHAVEN, NEW YORK RICHMOND HILL HIGH SCHOOL Intramural Football and Wrestling; A. S. M. E LOWELL F. JETT Lou Chi Phi Industrial Engineering PORTLAND, OREGON SEVERN SCHOOL Lacrosse (3, 4); International Relations Club, Industrial Engineering Society. ALLEN F. JONES A. F. Town Group Mechanical Engineering SOMERVILLE, NEW JERSEY SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Prize for Highest M. E. Freshman; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Mustard and Cheese (2); A. S. M. E. HOWARD J. JONES, Jr. Jonesy Delta Tau Delta Business Administration ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA VINCENT HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Football; Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4). 74 19 39 ROBERT R. JONES Bob Town Group Metallurgical Engineering SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS CLASSICAL HIGH SCHOOL Metallurgical Society. EMIL KARPOWICH Karpy Allentown Group Civil Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Newtonian Society; Vice-President, Civil En- gineering Society. GEORGE E. KELLEY Kel Pri :e Hall Chemical Engine! DREXEL HILL, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Freshman Basketball President, Price Hall (4); Interdorm Council, Treasurer (4); Glee Club (I, 2, Band (I, 2); Chemical Society (I 2 President (4). ring tory 4); 3), FRANK N. KEMMER Frank Lambda Chi Alpha Chemical Engineering LARCHMONT, NEW YORK MAMARONECK HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 4); Brown and White (I), Board (2), Editorial Council (3, 4); Lehigh Review, Board (3, 4); Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Newtonian Society; Pi Delta Epsilon; Mustard and Cheese; Chemical Society; Thurber Society. HARRY W. B. KIPE Harry Town Group Metallurgical Engineering LLANERCH, PENNSYLVANIA HAVERFORD HIGH SCHOOL Baseball (I, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4); Alpha Phi Omego, Secretary (4); Metallurgi- cal Society. EUGENE KIRKPATRICK Kirk Allentown Group Industrial Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Industrial Engineering Society. EDMUND H. KNIGHT Ed Chi Phi Business Administration AKRON, OHIO LAWRENCEVILLE SCHOOL President, Chi Phi; Arcadia; Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4), Costume Manager and Technical Director. DANIEL P. KNOWLAND, Jr. Dan Theta Delta Chi Business Administration SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4), Co-Captain (I); Football (I, 2). 75 ERNEST G. KOEGEL, Jr. Ernie Phi Sigma Kappa Arts LEHIGHTON, PENNSYLVANIA LEHIGHTON HIGH SCHOOL ELMER F. G. KRIZIN Gabe Town Group Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White (I, 2), Board (2); Debat- ing Society (I); Eta Sigma Phi. WALTER C. KRESGE Walt Town Group Industrial Engineering LAKE ARIEL, PENNSYLVANIA LAKE ARIEL HIGH SCHOOL Industrial Engineering Society. JACK W. KROMER Jake Sigma Phi Epsilon Business Administration BALBOA HEIGHTS, CANAL ZONE BALBOA HIGH SCHOOL Baseball (3); Football (4); Band (2); Alpha Kappa Psi. L6HIGH THOMAS S. KROMER Tom Sigma Phi Epsilon Industrial Engineering BALBOA HEIGHTS, CANAL ZONE BALBOA HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (4); President, Sigma Phi Epsilon: Industrial Engineering Society. ROBERT B. KURTZ Bob Taylor Hal 1 Electrical Engineering RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Section Head; Interdormitory Council; Elec- trical Engineering Society (I, 4). ROBERT F. KUHNS Bob Allentown Group Business Administration ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Symphony Orchestra (4]; E. W. Brown As- tronomical Society (4); Sportsman ' s Club (4). EDWARD A. LAMBERT Ted Town Group Electrical Engineering CARBONDALE, PENNSYLVANIA CARBONDALE HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Prize in Mathematics; Phi Eta Sigma; New- tonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; E. E. Society. 76 HARRY W. LA ROSE, Jr. Bill Town Group Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society. CHARLES S. LAYMAN Jerry Town Group Mechanical Engineering RED BANK, NEW JERSEY RED BANK HIGH SCHOOL Track ( 1 , 4) ; Junior Varsity Wrestling (3. 4) J Arcadia (3); Freshman Honors; Henry H. Haines Scholarship; Corresponding Secre- tary, Tau Beta Pi; Delta Omicron Theta; Pi Tau Sigma; Newtonian Society; Glee Club: Debating Team (I, 2); Mechanical Engineer- ing Society. RAYMOND P. LAUBENSTEIN Butch Sigma Nu Industrial Engineering ASHLAND, PENNSYLVANIA ASHLAND HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I); Manager, Wrestling (4), As- sistant Manager, Wrestling (2, 3); Com- mander, Sigma Nu; Cyanide; Senior Ball Committee; Interfraternity Council; Scab- bard and Blade; International Relations Club; Mechanical Engineering Society (I, 2, 3); Industrial Engineering Society (4). JOHN F. LEHRER Jack Delta Upsilon Industrial Engineering UPPER MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY MONTCLAIR HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Epitome, Class Editor (3). Senior Sections Committee (4); Brown Key, President (3); Freshman Manager, Tennis (4); Pi Tau Sigma; Cyanide; I. E. Society. S€N IORS IRVING E. LEMPERT Irv Taylor Hall Electrical Engineering UPPER MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY MONTCLAIR HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Eta Kappa Nu Prize; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Sophomore Prize in Mathematics; Wilbur Scholarship; Presi- dent, Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, Eta Kappa Nu; Newtonian Society; Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM H. LESSER, Jr. Bill Richards House Industrial Engineering CLARKS GREEN, PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I); Debating (I); Interdormitory Council (4); Dormitory Section Chief (4)- Tone (2, 3, 4); A. S. M. E.; Industrial En- gineering Society. ALBERT T. LEONHARD Al Town Group Business Administrate PASSAIC, NEW JERSEY PASSAIC HIGH SCHOOL Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4). JEROME B. LEVY Jerry Pi Lambda Phi Business Administration NEW YORK, NEW YORK McBURNEY PREPARATORY SCHOOL Sophomore Honors; Second Prize, Williams ' Sophomore Writing Contest; Delta Omicron Theta; Phi Beta Kappa. 77 CLASS NELSON W. LEWIS Lewis Town Group Chemical Engineering TRUCKSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA WYOMING SEMINARY Review, Advisory Board (4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society. STUART N. LEWIS Stu Theta Delta Chi Mechanical Engineering STONY CREEK MILLS, PENNSYLVANIA READING HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Elections Committee, Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4); International Relations Club (3, 4); Scabbard and Blade (4); Me- chanical Engineering Society, Vice-President ( 3 ) , Treasurer (4). WILLIAM E. LIESMAN Bill Phi Delta Theta Metallurgical Engineering READING, PENNSYLVANIA READING HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (I, 2); Fresh- man Union, Executive Committee; Cyanide; Metallurgical Society. FRANK W. LOZAW Wally Alpha Chi Rho Business Administration MIDDLETOWN, NEW YORK MIDDLETOWN HIGH SCHOOL EDWARD E. LUKENS Ed Town Group Metallurgical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Newtonian Society; Ernest W. Brown Astro- nomical Society; Metallurgical Society. LESLIE P. MAHONY, Jr. Les Psi Upsilon Business Administration WILMINGTON. DELAWARE TOWER HILL SCHOOL Tennis (2, 3, 4); Scabbard and Blade. STEELE MALKIN Smoky Chi Phi Chemical Engineering NORWALK, CONNECTICUT NORWALK HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (3); Baseball (I); Newtonian So- ciety; Chemical Society. VERNON B. MANCKE Manky Town Group Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (3); Band (I. 2, 3, 4). 78 19 39 EDWARD V. MANNING Ed Alpha Chi Rho Mechanical Engineering IRVINGTON, NEW JER SEY IRVINSTON HIGH SCHOOL Rifle Team ( I, 2, 3, 4); Brown and White, Na- tional Advertising Manager (4), Copy Super- visor (3), Board (2, 3, 4), Business Staff (I, 2); Review, Board (3), Business Staff (2, 3); Pi Delta Epsilon; A. S. M. E. ANDREW R. MARTIN Andy Theta Delta Chi Business Administration SPRING LAKE, NEW JERSEY NEWARK ACADEMY Soccer (I); Track (4); Manager, Golf (4). JOSEPH B. MATTHEWS, Jr. Joe Town Group Engineering Physics WASHINGTON, NEW JERSEY BIRCH WATHEN Brown and White, Reporter (3); Radio Club (4); E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (4); Physics Society, Secretary-Treasurer (3), President (4). HENRY W. McCARD Card Delta Sigma Phi Mining Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA OLNEY HIGH SCHOOL Delta Sigma Phi, Secretary (3), President (4); Mining Society, Vice-President (4): A. I.M.E. SAMUEL A. McCAULLEY, Jr. Sam Sigma Chi Business Administration PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA FRANKFORD HIGH SCHOOL Sportsman ' s Club (4); Band (I, 2, 3); Brown and White (2). ROBERT J. McCURDY, III Mac Taylor Hall Engineering Physics PORT KENNEDY, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER MERION HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Band (I, 2); President, Radio Society (4); Vice- President, Physics Society (4). EDWARD V. McDONOUGH Mac Town Group Business Administration GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT GREENWICH HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Basketball (I); Baseball (I, 2. 3, 4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Beta Kappa. FRANCIS H. McGUIGAN Frank Sigma Phi Civil Engineering MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY GEORGE SCHOOL Football ( I ) ; Civil Engineering Society (1,2, 3,4). 79 DONALD H. McKENZIE Mac Town Group Mechanical Engineering FOREST HILLS, NEW YORK McBURNEY PREPARATORY SCHOOL Football (I); Newtonian Society; A. S. M. E., President (4), Secretary (3). JOHN M. McNABB Johnny Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering GROSSE ILE, MICHIGAN NEWMAN SCHOOL Tennis (I, 2, 4); Senior Ball Committee; Ar- cadia; President, Sigma Phi; Pi Tau Sigma; International Relations Club (2, 3, 4), Vice- President (4); Scabbard and Blade; Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4), Ticket Manager (3), Business Manager (4); A. S. M. E.; Industrial Engineering Society. gibson e. McMillan Mac Lambda Chi Alpha Industrial Engineering SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (2, 3, 4) ; Manager, Lacrosse (3, 4); Alpha Phi Omega (3, 4); Industrial En- gineering Society (2, 3). ROBERT P. McQUAIL The Colonel Lambda Chi Alpha Business Administration BLUEFIELD, WEST VIRGINIA HAVERFORD SCHOOL President, Lambda Chi Alpha; President, Alpha Kappa Psi; Scabbard and Blade; Lieu- tenant Colonel, R. O.T. C; Phi Beta Kappa. L€H I G WILTON F. MELHORN Mel Town Group Metallurgical Engineering YORK, PENNSYLVANIA YORK HIGH SCHOOL Me ' .allurgical Society, Secretary-Treasurer (3), President (4). CHRISTIAN R. E. MERKLE, Jr. Merk Lambda Chi Alpha Chemistry DREXEL HILL, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (1,2); Alpha Phi Omega (2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). GEORGE W. MENGELSON Mengy Town Group Civil Engineering CATASAUOUA, PENNSYLVANIA CATASAUOUA HIGH SCHOOL Track (4); Civil Engineering Society (2. 3, 4). DAVID H. MILLER Dave Taylor Hall Arts MAUCH CHUNK, PENNSYLVANIA MAUCH CHUNK HIGH SCHOOL Mining and Geological Society. 80 SHELDON M. MILLER Shelly Tail Delta Phi Mechanical Engineering RAHWAY, NEW JERSEY RAHWAY HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Track (I); Treasurer, Tau Delta Phi (4); Interfraternity Council (2, 3); Mechanical Engineering Society. VINCENT J. MONTE-SANO Monte Theta Kappa Phi Arts LARCHMONT, NEW YORK NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL Football (I); International Relations Club. FREDERICK C. MOESEL Charlie Chi Psi Chemical Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA SCRANTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Tau Beta Pi Prize; Chandler Prizes (I, 3) Alumni Jr. Prize; Rhodes Scholarship Cand. Pres., Phi Eta Sigma; Treas., Newtonian So ciety; Sec, Pi Mu Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega R. W. Blake Society; Band, Drum-Major (2) Symphony Orchestra, Student Leader; Pres. Tone; Student Concert-Lecture Com.; O. D K.; Cyanide; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa HAROLD E. MOOSMANN Moose Town Group Electrical Engineering ROCHELLE PARK, NEW JERSEY HACKENSACK HIGH SCHOOL Electrical Engineering Society. S€N IORS STANLEY C. MORFORD Stan Town Group Mechanical Engineering DETROIT, MICHIGAN HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL Track (4); Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; A. S. M. E. THOMAS V. MURTO, Jr. Tom Theta Kappa Phi Mechanical Engineering MIDDLETOWN. PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLETOWN HIGH SCHOOL Interfraternity Council (2, 3); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; Newtonian Society; A. S. M. E. JOSEPH C. MORRIS Joe Theta Delta Chi Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA MORAVIAN PREPARATORY SCHOOL CLARK A. NEAL Wimpy Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration LARCHMONT, NEW YORK MAMARONECK HIGH SCHOOL CLASS PAYSON K. NICHOLAS Nick Delta Upsilon Business Administration TRENTON, NEW JERSEY TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Baseball ( 1 , 2, 3, 4) , Captain (4) ; Basketball (I); Cyanide; Alpha Kappa Psi; Glee Club (2.3). WILLIAM F. NILAN Bill Sigma Nu BERGENFIELD, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (1,2); Golf (I, 2, 3,4). Arts FRANKLIN R. NORTON Frank Psi Upsilon Chemical Engineering DREXEL HILL, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Baseball (1,2); Scabbard and Blade; Mustard and Cheese; Chemical Society, Secretary (3). JOSEPH A. OLESS Joe Theta Kappa Phi Metallurgical Engineering SHAMOKIN, PENNSYLVANIA SHAMOKIN HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Brown and White, Re- porting Staff (2); Metallurgical Society. WAYNE F. O ' NEILL Wayne Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA CARLISLE HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White, Photographic Staff (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Honors; Alpha Phi Omega (2, 3, 4); Band (I, 2, 3); Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Photographic Society (2); Mining and Geo- logical Society (4). WILLIAM M. ORR, Jr. Bill Delta Sigma Phi Mechanical Engineering EAST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY BLAIR ACADEMY Band ( I, 2, 3, 4) ; Mechanical Engineering So- ciety; A. S. M. E. FRANK G. ORT Gray Sigma Chi Arts CUMBERLAND, MARYLAND SAINT JAMES SCHOOL Freshman Tennis; Tennis Squad (2, 3, 4); Floor Committee, Junior Prom; Chemical Society. DONALD C. OSKIN Don Chi Phi Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL 82 19 39 WILLIAM H. OTTO Bill Taylor Hall Industrial Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA VALLEY FORGE MILITARY ACADEMY Industrial Engineering Society; A, S. M. E. ROBERT C. PARSONS Bob Sigma Phi Epsilon Metallurgical Engineering LANSDOWNE, PENNSYLVANIA LANSDOWNE HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I); Track (I, 2, 3); Cross Country (2, 4); Epitome, Photographic Editor (3), Senior Section Chairman (4); Intertraternity Council; Student Activities Committee; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Tau Beta Pi; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Metallurgical Society. JAMES E. PATTON Pat Alpha Tau Omega Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi, President; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian So- ciety; Band (I, 2); Arcadia; Chairman, Stu- dent Activities Committee; Chemical Society, Vice-President. WILLIAM W. PEDRICK, III Bill Theta Xi Business Administration MILLVILLE, NEW JERSEY VINELAND HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (2, 3, 4); Band (I, 2). EDWIN C. PERKINS Ted Chi Psi Chemical Engineering JAMAICA, NEW YORK PENN CHARTER Fencing (I, 2, 4); Tau Beta Pi; Chemical So- ciety. Arts Assist- Student WILSON R. PIERPONT Wils Leonard Hall WARE. MASSACHUSETTS WARE HIGH SCHOOL Combined Musical Clubs (I, 2, 3, 4), ant Manager (3), Manager (4); S._. Leader, Glee Club (4); Double Quartette ) ' ■. 2 ' 3 ' 4 )i T ° e (2. 3, 4), Vice-President (4); Secretary-Treasurer, Junior Class; Rob- ert W. Blake Philosophical Society (3, 4). ROBERT H. POPPER Pop Tau Delta Phi Metallurgical Engineering ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Metallurgical Society (I, 2, 3, 4); Interfra- ternity Council (3). DOUGLAS H. PRIDEAUX Doug Theta Xi Arts VALHALLA, NEW YORK PLEASANTVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Rifle Team (I, 2, 3, 4); Soccer (3, 4); Band (I, 2, 3, 4), Manager (4); Arcadia (4); E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (2, 3); Tone, Treasurer (3, 4); Combined Musical Clubs! Assistant Manager (3), President (4); Mus- tard and Cheese; Vice-President, Theta Xi. 83 FRANK C. RABOLD, Jr. King Delta Upsilon Electrical Engineering DENVILLE, NEW JERSEY MONTCLAIR HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Wrestling (I, 2, 3, 4); Epitome (3, 4); Presi- dent, Sophomore Class; President and Stew, ard, Delta Upsilon (4); Freshman Honors; O. D. K.; Vice-President, Cyanide; President, Newtonian Society; Secretary, Eta Kappa Nu; Secretary-Treasurer, Spiked Shoe; Inter- fraternity Council; E. E. Society. FRANK B. RALSTON Philbert Phi Gamma Delta Industrial Engineering PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA PEABODY HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 3, 4); Swimming (3, 4); Scabbard and Blade; Glee Club (I, 2, 3); Industrial Engineering Society. ALBERT S. Al RAFF Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, NEW JERSEY HASBROUCK HEIGHTS HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Newton- ian Society; Band (I, 2); Chemical Society (1.2,3,4). HARRY B. RATH Joe Phi Sigma Kappa Electrical Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA OLNEY HIGH SCHOOL Radio Society (I, 2, 3, 4), President (3); Electrical Engineering Society (I, 2, 3, 4). L€H I G JOHN C. REBERT Johnny Theta Xi Industrial Engineering YORK, PENNSYLVANIA YORK COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE Soccer (I); Rifle Club; Industrial Engineer- ing Society. WILLIAM H. REIDELBACH Bill Town Group Civil Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Civil Engineering Society. RUSSELL H. REHM Russ Alpha Chi Rho Chemical Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA CHELTENHAM HIGH SCHOOL Track (1,2, 3, 4); Cross Country (I ); Chem- ical Society. GLENN M. REINSMITH Reine Allentown Group Electrical Engineering ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi Mu Ep- silon; Eta Kappa Nu; Band (I, 2, 3, 4); Le- high Collegians Dance Orchestra (2, 3); Electrical Engineering Society. 84 GEORGE B. RHEINFRANK, Jr. George Phi Gamma Delta Industrial Engineering PERRYSBURG, OHIO ANDOVER ACADEMY Brown and White, Business Manager (4), Financial Manager (4), Advertising Manager (3); Review, Business Manager (3), Adver- tising Manager (2); Arcadia (3); Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4); Cyanide; Pi Delta Ep- silon (2, 3, 4 ); Scabbard and Blade; I. E. Society (I, 2, 3, 4). DANIEL A. ROBLIN, Jr. Dan Pi Lambda Phi Metallurgical Engineering BUFFALO, NEW YORK NICHOLS SCHOOL Football (3, 4); Basketball (3); Interfrater- nity Council (3, 4); Metallurgical Society (2, 3, 4); A. S. M. (3,4). ROBERT W. RICHARDS Whip Pi Kappa Alpha Chemical Engineering HO-HO-KUS, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Track (2, 3, 4); Spiked Shoe Society; Dr. Earl Buller Athletic Award ( I ) ; Alpha Phi Omega (2, 3, 4), Treasurer (4); Outing Club (2); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). ROBERT J. ROSE Bob Phi Delta Theta Business Administration GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK FLUSHING HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4); Tennis (I, 2, 3, 4); Assistant Manager, Football (2, 3); Mana- ger, Football (4); Interfraternity Council (3, 4), Chairman, Judicial Committee (4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi, Secretary (4); Brown Key Society. S€N IORS RAYMOND M. ROSENSTEIN Mike Sigma Alpha Mu Arts LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA WEEOUAHIC HIGH SCHOOL Dramatics (3, 4); Review (4); Track (I, 4). ASHER G. RUCH, Jr. Ash Allentown Group Mechanical Engineering SCHNECKSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA SLATINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Mechanical Engineering Society. ARTHUR K. ROTHSCHILD Baron Sigma Alpha Mu Arts HIGHTSTOWN, NEW JERSEY PEDDIE PREPARATORY SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4); President, Sigma Alpha Mu; Newtonian Society; Glee Club (1,2. 3); Band (1,2,3). JOHN B. SABOL Johnny Town Group Arts FREELAND, PENNSYLVANIA FREELAND M. AND M. INSTITUTE Boxing (I, 2, 4); Alpha Epsilon Delta (3, 4), Vice-President (4); R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (I, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (4); Robert W. Blake Society (I, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (2); Mustard and Cheese (3); Dramatic Work- shop, Assistant Publicity Manager (3) ; Chem- ical Society (4). 85 CLASS DONALD SANTMYERS Don Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering UPPER DARBY, PENNSYLVANIA UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Track (I. 2, 3, 4); Section Chief, A, Taylor Hall: Chemical Society. JOHN D. SAUSSAMAN Johnny Taylor Hall Metallurgical Engineering HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA JOHN HARRIS HIGH SCHOOL Section Chief; Secretary, Interdormitory Council; Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Metallurgical Society. ANDREW F. SAYKO Andy Taylor Hall Chemistry ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Society. CHARLES J. SCHAEFER, Jr. Chase Theta Xi Chemical Engineering JENKINTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA GERMANTOWN ACADEMY Brown and White (4); Assistant Manager, Track (I, 2, 3]; Band (I, 2, 3, 4]; Chemical Society. m A FRANKLYN F. SCHAFER, Jr. Schaf Phi Delta Theta Business Administration SNYDER, NEW YORK AMHERST CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Handbook, Business Manager (3); Alpha Kappa Psi; Pi Delta Epsilon; President, Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT F. SCHALL Bob Allentown Group Electrical Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA SOUTH WHITEHALL HIGH SCHOOL A. I. E. E. KARL W. SCHANTZ, Jr. Karl Alpha Chi Rho Mechanical Engineering NEWARK, NEW YORK NICHOLS SCHOOL Football (I); Lacrosse (3, 4, 5); Arcadia (4); A. S. M. E. WALTER B. SCHIEBEL, Jr. Walt Allentown Group Electrical Engineering ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Lehigh Allentown Club, Corresponding Sec- retary (4); A. I.E. E. 86 19 39 RUDOLPH F. SCHLITTLER Andy Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration TENAFLY, NEW JERSEY TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Baseball (I, 2, 3, 4). WILLIAM H. SCHNABEL Bill Allentown Group Chemical Engineering ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Lehigh Club; Chemical Society. CHARLES R. SCHUBERT Bob Phi Delta Theta Industrial Engineering DOUGLASTON. NEW YORK STAUNTON MILITARY ACADEMY Wrestling (2, 3,4); Fencing (I); Junior Manager, Soccer (3); Chemical Society (I, 2); Industrial Engineering Society (3 4)- A S. M. E. (4). ' ' HENRY W. SCHWAB, III Chappie Town Group Chemistry FREEMANSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (2, 3, 4); Track (2, 3); Chemical Society. WILLIAM E. SCHWANDA Bull Taylor Ha Industrial Engineering JACKSON HEIGHTS, NEW YORK NEWTON HIGH SCHOOL Secretary-Treasurer, Section B, Taylor Hall; Industrial Engineering Society. Arts RAPHAEL G. SCOBLIONKO Scobey Town Group BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Delta Omicron Theta, President; Robert W. Blake Society, President; International Rela- tions Club; Lehigh Forum; Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT E. SEABROOK Rabbit Cni Pni Electrical Engineering MERCHANTVILLE, NEW JERSEY MOORESTOWN FRIENDS ' SCHOOL Review, Business Board (2, 3), Circulation Manager (3); Pi Delta Epsilon (3, 4); Elec- trical Engineering Society. JOSEPH R. SEEDS, Jr. Seedy Kappa Alpha Business Administration PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA HUN SCHOOL Intercollegiate Sailing. 87 J -= m l s ' LINTON M. SEIFERT Lint Kappa Sigma Metallurgical Engineering TRENTON, NEW JERSEY TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I); Treasurer, Kappa Sigma (3, 4); Interfraternity Council (4); Band (I, 2, 3); Metallurgical Society. HAROLD M. SELSER, Jr. Bromo Delta Upsilon Electrical Engineering JENKINTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA JENKINTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I, 2); Baseball (I); Epitome, Editor-in-Chief (4), Organizations Editor (3); Lehigh Calendar, Editor-in-Chief (3); Coach and Manager, Freshman Soccer (4); Presi- dent, Delta Upsilon (4); Floor Committee, Senior Ball; Maennerchor Student Commit- tee (3), Chairman (4); Brown Key; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Delta Epsilon; E. E. Society. EUGENE D. SEITER Gene Town Group Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA EASTON HIGH SCHOOL Delta Omicron Theta (2); Band (I, 2); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). JAMES L. SHEARER Jimmy Town Group Arts SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA SCRANTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Manager, Debating (4) ; Vice-President, Delta Omicron Theta (4); Vice-President, Cosmo- politan Club (3, 4); Phi Beta Kappa. L6HIG CHARLES W. SHELDRAKE Will Theta Xi Chemical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Cheerleader (3, 4); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3,4). JAMES A. SHIELDS Jim Beta Kappa Arts NEW KENSINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA NEW KENSINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Interfraternity Council (2, 3, 4); President, Beta Kappa; Mining Society (I, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (4). DANIEL L SHIELDS Dan Town Group Industrial Engineering SEWICKLEY, PENNSYLVANIA MERCERSBURG ACADEMY KENNETH H. SIMPSON Ken Sigma Phi Epsilon Arts MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Baseball (I); Interfraternity Council (2); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3). GORDON H. SINCLAIR Gordy Chi Psi Business Administration SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA UNIVERSITY HIGH SCHOOL JAMES A. SMITH, Jr. Jim Chi Psi Civil Engineering NEWBURGH, NEW YORK NEWBURGH ACADEMY Freshman Numerals; Civil Engineering So- ciety; Aero Club, Secretary (4). ELMER G. SMITH Smitty Town Group Arts SHORT HILLS, NEW JERSEY MILLBURN HIGH SCHOOL NELSON R. SMITH Nels Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering KULPMONT, PENNSYLVANIA KULPMONT HIGH SCHOOL Scabbard and Blade; Glee Club (I); Chem- ical Society. S€ N I ORS PHILIP H. SMITH Phil Sigma Phi Business Administration DETROIT, MICHIGAN NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL Track; Chairman, Junior Prom Committee; Radio Club (I, 2, 3); Interfraternity Coun- cil (3, 4), Judicial Committee. FRANK B. SNYDER, Jr. Moose Phi Gamma Delta Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Football (I, 2, 3, 4); Wrestling (I, 2, 4), Captain (I); Track (I, 2, 4); Secretary, Phi Gamma Delta; Mining Society. WAYNE SNODGRASS Wayne Delta Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA OLNEY HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 3, 4); Industrial Engineering So- ciety. HARRY A. SNYDER Snitz Sigma Nu Chemical Engineering VENTNOR CITY, NEW JERSEY ATLANTIC CITY HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I, 2, 3, 4); Brown and White, Sports Staff, Board (I, 2, 3, 4); Cyanide; Scab- bard and Blade, First Lieutenant (3, 4); In- ternational Relations Club (3, 4); Svmphony Orchestra (I, 2); Student Concert-Lecture Series (I, 2); Tone (3, 4); Mustard and Cheese (I, 2, 3, 4); Chemical Society. 89 CLASS WALTER G. SPEYER Wally Alpha Chi Rho Metallurgical Engineering ROSELLE PARK, NEW JERSEY ROSELLE PARK HIGH SCHOOL Football (I); Review, Business Board (2); Metallurgical Society (3, 4). MILTON SPILBERS Mickey Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Review, Editorial Staff (3, 4); Brown and White, Board (2), News Editor (3), Make-up Editor (4); Pi Delta Epsilon; Lehigh Discus- sion Forum (2); Chemical Society (2). ANDREW J. STANCHICK Stan Price Hall Business Administration MINERSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA MINERSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3); Track (I). WILLIAM A. STAUTH Bill Allentown Group Arts COLOGNE, GERMANY UNIVERSITY Z URICH (1913-1915) Activities at Zurich: Mountain Climbing; Rowing; Instructor and Guide, Skiing; Activ- ities at Lehigh: Mining and Geological Society. Sl k WILLIAM A. STAVERS Bill Town Group Chemical Engineering MOYLAN, PENNSYLVANIA SWARTHMORE HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I); Chemical Society. MARIUS X. STAVROS Stavie Town Group Electrical Engineering ' XssSJmL WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL -£3 4? Assistant Manager, Basketball ( 1 ) ; Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu; Electrical Engineering Society (2, 3,4); A. I. E. E. GRANT B. STETSON Steh Phi Gamma Delta Business Administration RYE, NEW YORK RYE HIGH SCHOOL Tennis (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (1,4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4), Captain (4). ROBERT H. STETTLER Reds Town Group Mechanical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Baseball (I); Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Pi Tau Sigma; A. S. M, E. 90 19 39 RUSSELL E. STEVENS, Jr. Russ Alpha Chi Rho Chemical Engineering GREAT NOTCH, NEW JERSEY NEW YORK MILITARY ACADEMY Brown and White, Local Advertising Mana- ger (3), Financial Manager (3), Business Manager (4); Review, Assistant Circulation Manager (3), Circulation Manager (4); Var- sity and Freshman, Basketball Manager (4); Treasurer, Pi Delta Epsilon; Brown Key So- ciety; Cyanide. ROGER M. STEWART Stew Cni Phi Business Administration IRVINGTON. NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 4); Lehigh Union (2). JOHN R. STOKES Bob Kappa Sigma Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Football (2, 3, 4). EARLE STONE, Jr. Stoney Delta Tau Delta Business Administration PELHAM, NEW YORK PELHAM HIGH SCHOOL LOUIS C. STOUMEN Lou Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White (I, 2, 3, 4), Editorial Board U), Photographic Advisor (3, 4); Review (I 2 3, 4), Assistant Editor (3), Editor-in-Chief (4); Freshman Oral Composition, Second Prize; Discussion Forum, Secretary (2)- Rob ert W. Blake Society, Vice-President (4) HERMAN P. STRICKLER Herm Theta Xi Industrial Engineering PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA OLNEY HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I); Baseball (I); Industrial Engl- neering Society. HAROLD A. STROHMAN Chink Lambda Chi Alpha Mechanical Engineering LEBANON, PENNSYLVANIA MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Football (I, 3, 4); Freshman Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; A. S. M. E. JOHN E. SUTCLIFFE Jack Leonard Hall rts MARGATE CITY, NEW JERSEY WYOMING SEMINARY Review, Advisory Board (4); Brown and White (2); Sophomore Honors; Williams Junior Prize in English Composition First Prize (3); Eta Sigma Phi (2, 3, 4), President (3); Robert W. Blake Society (4); Interna- tional Relations Club (I, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (3), President (4); Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN E. SWEET, Jr. John Lambda Chi Alpha Metallurgical Engineering MONTROSE, PENNSYLVANIA HAVERFORD SCHOOL R. O. T. O; Metallurgical Society. HARRY TANCZYN Harry Price Hall Metallurgical Engineering SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2. 3, 4); Track (I); Baseball (3); Tau Beta Pi; Sophomore Honors; Metallurgi- cal Society; American Society for Metals. PAUL M. TANIS PETER TELFAIR Paul Pete Pi Kappa Alpha Chemical Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon Mining Engineering HALEDON, NEW JERSEY BRONXVILLE, NEW YORK CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL HORACE MANN SCHOOL Soccer (I); Freshman Numerals; Interfra- ternity Council (3, 4); Band (I, 2, 3, 4); Photographic Club (2); Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Mining and Geo- logical Society; A. I. M. E. L€H I G THEODORE R. THIERRY, Jr. Ted Alpha Kappa Pi Chemical Engineering BROOKLYN, NEW YORK BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Baseball ( I ); Football (3 ); Chemical Society. OTIS C. THOMPSON Oats Alpha Tau Omega Business Administration BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN CRANBROOK SCHOOL Hockey Club (3, 4); President, Alpha Tau Omega (4). CRAIG S. THOMAS Tommy Taylor Hall Chemical Engineering MOUNT CARMEL, PENNSYLVANIA MOUNT CARMEL HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4); Football (I); Glee Club (I); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4). ROBERT W. THOMPSON Bob Delta Sigma Phi Chemical Engineering WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Track (I, 2); Band (I, 2); Chemical Society II, 2, 3, 4). 92 RICHARD T. TIEBOUT Dick Beta Theta Pi Industrial Engineering BROOKLYN, NEW YORK BROOKLYN POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL Lacrosse (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Football (I); President, Beta Theta Pi (3, 41; Arcadia (3); Industrial Engineering Society, Secre- tary (4). JOHN U. TRUSLOW John Sigma Phi Industrial Engineering CHESTERTOWN, MARYLAND CHESTERTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Fencing (I, 2); Soccer ( I, 2); Pi Tau Sigma; A. S. M. E.; Industrial Engineering Society (1,2,3,4). MORAN V. TREXLER Trexie Town Group Chemical Engineering TOPTON, PENNSYLVANIA KUTZTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Athletic Manager, Trends; Newtonian So- ciety; Tau Beta Pi; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Chemical Society. CORNELIUS B. TYSON, Jr. Neal Town Group Chemical Engineering POTTSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA POTTSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Photographic Society (3, 4); Chemical So- ciety. S€N IORS LEO L. TZESES Leo Sigma Alpha Mu Business Administration NEWARK, NEW JERSEY WEEQUAHIC HIGH SCHOOL Band (31. ARTHUR G. UEBERROTH, Jr. Uby Kappa Alpha Business Administration BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Epitome, Business Manager (4), Staff (2, 3); Pi Delta Epsilon (3, 4); Tone (3, 4), Secre- tary (4); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Band (I, 2, 3, 4), Sergeant (4]; Double Quartet (I, 2, 3, 4); Symphony Orchestra (3); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3). LEO W. UHL Bill WALTER M. UHLER Walt Town Group Industrial Engineering Town Group Arts BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Mustard and Cheese (3). Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Alpha Ep- silon Delta, Secretary; R. W. Hall Pre-Medi- cal Society, Vice-President; Phi Beta Kappa. 93 CLASS RODMAN F. VAN WYE Rod Town Group BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Arts EMERY J. VARGA, Jr Em Taylor Hall TRENTON, NEW JERSEY TRENTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Epsilon Delta. Arts ANIELLO VICEDOMINI Lou Town Group Chemical Engineering BAYONNE, NEW JERSEY BAYONNE HIGH SCHOOL Handball Club; Chemical Society. JOSEPH A. WALDSCHMITT Joe Town Group Electrical Engineering BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL WILLIAM F. WALTER, Jr. Bill Town Group Metallurgical Engineering CLARK ' S SUMMIT, PENNSYLVANIA KEYSTONE JUNIOR COLLEGE Activities at Keystone: Tennis (I, 2, 3); Wrestling (3); Chess Club, President (1,2); Mathematic and Science Society, Secretary (I); Graduated, Cum Laude. Activities at Lehigh: Metallurgical Society. FRANK J. WASHABAUGH, Jr. Wash Theta Kappa Phi Metallurgical Engineering CRISTOBAL, CANAL ZONE CRISTOBAL HIGH SCHOOL Swimming (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (I); Band (I, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (I); Orchestra (2, 3,4). JOSEPH M. WEAVER Joe Alpha Kappa Pi Metallurgical Engineering IRWIN, PENNSYLVANIA NORWIN HIGH SCHOOL Baseball (I, 2, 3, 4); Soccer (3); Cross Country (2); Basketball (I); Wrestling (2); Freshman Union (I); Rifle Club; Chemical Society; Metallurgical Society. CHARLES A. WEED Charlie Beta Theta Pi Business Administration WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling (I) ; Tennis (I); Alpha Kappa Psi (3, 4); Treasurer, Beta Theta Pi (3, 4). 94 19 39 WILLET WEEKS, Jr. Bill Chi Psi Arts RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White, Editor-in-Chief (4), News Manager (3), News Editor (3), News Staff (I, 2); Assistant Manager, Soccer (I, 2); Arcadia, Secretary (4); Interfraternity Coun- cil (3); Student Concert-Lecture Series Com- mittee, Chairman (4); Williams Sophomore Composition Prize (2); President, Pi Delta Epsilon (4). EDWARD P. Ed WEIS Alpha Kappa Pi Electrical Engineering MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN MILWAUKEE COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Assistant Manager, Baseball (I, 2] E. (I, 2, 3,4). A. I. E. ERIC WEISS Eric Price Hall Electrical Engineering JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL Brown and White, Editorial Mgr. (4), News Editor (2), Board (2, 3, 4); Review, Asst. Editor (4), Board (2, 3, 4); Frosh and Soph. Honors; 2nd Frosh Math Prize; Soph. English Prize; Williams 1st Prize in Extempore Speak- ing; O. D. K.; Tau Beta Pi; Sec, Eta Kappa Nu; Sec, Phi Eta Sigma; Sec, Pi Delta Epsilon; V.-P., E. E. Society; Phi Beta Kappa. WALTER C. WELLS Walt Chi Phi Business Administration AMITYVILLE. NEW YORK McDONOGH SCHOOL Football (I); Soccer (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Wrestling (I, 2, 4); Swimming (I, 3, 4); Track (I, 2, 3, 4); Spiked Shoe; Interfra- ternity Council; Newtonian Society; Cyanide, President; Omicron Delta Kappa, Vice-Presi- dent; Alpha Kappa Psi; International Rela- tions Club. JOHN I. WELSH Jack Town Group SHAMOKIN, PENNSYLVANIA PEDDIE SCHOOL Arts MARCUS E. WERTZ, Jr. Mark Beta Theta Pi Business Administration BELLEVILLE, NEW JERSEY BELLEVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Football (I, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Lehigh Union (3). VINCENT M. WHITE Mac Taylor Hall Mechanical Engineering LEWISTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA DEVITT PREPARATORY SCHOOL Boxing (I); Wrestling (3); Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; Tau Beta Pi; Band (I, 2); A. S. M. E. DONALD S. WILKINSON Don Easton Group Arts EASTON, PENNSYLVANIA MOUNT HERMON SCHOOL 95 CLASS LOUIS F. WITTMAN Chick Sigma Chi Business Administration GERMANTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA PENN CHARTER SCHOOL MARTIN E. WITTSTEIN Marty Sigma Alpha Mu Arts FAR ROCKAWAY, NEW YORK FAR ROCKAWAY HIGH SCHOOL Wrestling ( I ) ; Brown and White ( I ) ; Lehigh Dance Orchestra (I. 2, 3, 4), Leader (4); President, Sigma Alpha Mu (3); Floor Com- mittee, Junior Prom; Mustard and Cheese Club; Combined Musical Clubs. ASHLEY C. WORSLEY Ash Town Group Chemical Engineering WEST COLLINGSWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLLINGSWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Freshman Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Chemical Society. ROBERT G. YINGLING Chink Chi Psi Industrial Engineering NEWTON, NEW JERSEY RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Soccer (I, 2, 3, 4); Epitome, Fraternity Edi- tor (3), Senior Section (4); Chairman, Se- nior Ball Committee; Interf raternity Council (2, 3, 4); Arcadia (3); Pi Tau Sigma; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Pi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Aero Club, President (3); I. E. Society; A. S. M. E. WILBUR E. YOUNG Bill Phi Sigma Kappa Business Administration SAINT ALBANS, NEW YORK MAROUANO SCHOOL Brown and White (2, 3), Board (3). MITCHELL ZAWISZA Star Town Group Chemical Engineering CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY CAMDEN HIGH SCHOOL Basketball (I); Baseball (I, 2, 4); Football (3|; Arcadia (I); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Mustard and Cheese; Chemical Society. 96 19 39 HENRY P. CHAPMAN, JR. Chappie Phi Gamma Delta Business Administration MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Junior Manager, Track; Brown Key. He is our friend who loves us more than admires us, and would aid us in our great work — and so it was with Chappie . His sudden death, due to a rare cause, was a great shock to his many friends. He graduated from Columbia High School, Maplewood, New Jer- sey, with an enviable athletic record but was unable to pursue athletics at Lehigh because of a perman- ent injury suffered in high school competition. He was sincere in everything he did and had a wonderful capacity for work — not always his own, for he was always willing to lend a helping hand to a schoolmate or fraternity brother. Cutting short such a life was a loss to Lehigh, for here was one of Lehigh ' s staunchest supporters. 97 Lehigh bets back bwan rollers G Annual ] Full S eers I igh rori pre Sw Beta gVi d z a a u a v don Clarke r.nt Syi ■Lehigh SSR£ Lehigh Hockey! Lehigh Wins on Mat hrc Tank Victory Over Dek imore 4J-JD, First in 23 5tar1 fen Big Su™ bv Lehiqh 25- ill Houseparty ' os ¥ h Re g u ' a ' ions Reinstated: ig As Lehi JrJf 1 U ,. Flag P ° le Ua cor. 646 Girls B. a fe 8 Dis cusses r Ps LafevSt c ss Boston 6-6«™fe2„i° ccer t5 ' Engineers fe T, aK es Ne _ x , Birt - e h v „ u.« f,; C,a sses, Labs I £? ' ° £ . 935 Valentine AS Uver lS. ' JO B,, . ' ' v a . M Fraternities fe ' I -Col. «,, n ' P e2 06 if ym 25 Years Old 9 ,, feigns Co-C d i-oofb M ' 9 ? ? qUef W ' e de v umaii I oaWok a ;ii d a i TL r esGoodSeason W ' . ' ! B A ' n Dyratuo vm versify lb to are Comes to Lehigh -39- 36 Wh f 1 :.« - . ' 1MK H .. On fne breast of old South Mountain, reared against the Sky. Stands our noble Alma Mater, stands our dear Lehigh. Al Cox, President OFFICERS OF THE CLASS OF Three down, one to go — the Roaring 40 ' s have already made an indelible impression on the pages of Lehigh history. In scholarship, athletics, journal- ism, music, debating or dramatics — we ' ve fur- nished leaders and ability to all fields of collegiate endeavor. So let ' s keep rolling in high, Gang, and Hal Masem, Sec.-Treas. hit our final year even harder than we did the first three. And when next June closes the pages of our college lives, Lehigh will proudly send forth a class which will long be remembered as one of the best — the Roaring 40 ' s. JUNIOR PROM Spring Houseparty opened with a bang when the Roaring 40 ' s put on the best Junior Prom Lehigh has seen in ma ny a year. Benny Goodman, the King of Swing, and his orchestra played to a packed house at Dorney Park, on Friday, April 2 I , and in his first appearance at Lehigh, Goodman left little or no doubt in the minds of the undergraduates and their guests that he is still the leader of Swing. With his clarinet blaring forth the hot notes and his band accompanying him it was an evening of jitterbugs ' delight. ' At the dance, we were in a trance — ' Herbie Feucht, star football and basketball player. At the Sportsman ' s Club Outing, Stoudt and Dennis. Jack Colbaugh demonstrating the Chi Psis new studying poise. Gordy Brandt fills the shoes of Local Boy Makes Good. A three letterman and good student. How some of the Juniors get good marks, Cramming. 102 FOR GUESTS OF INN ONLY Top: Nicol demonstrates the way Juniors like to study. Upper right: Al Cox, the pride and joy of the Junior Class. Class president, 3 letterman, honor student, and great socialite. Captain-elect of football. Right: Charlie Griffiths, Captain-elect of basketball and another 3 letter- man. Alpha Kappa Psi member. Lower right: Harold Masem, Captain-elect of wrestling. Eastern Intercollegi- ate wrestling champ for 2 years and also holder of Metropolitan Cup for best wrestler in meet. Bottom: Members of Cyanide, Junior honorary activity society. O ' Meara, Martin, Brown, Griffiths, Marshall, Uhl, and Harbaugh. KT VR ft n Schoen, President Gus Riemondy, Sec. -Treat OFFICERS OF THE CLASS OF A great deal has happened since we of the Class of 1941 were initiated into college in Sep- tember, 1937. Looking back on our first two years ' history, we see that we are probably the last class ever to wear the time-honored frosh dink; the last class to elect a Freshmen Union president; the last class to enter here under the guidance of former Dean McConn. In our two years here we have lost some of our classmates along the way; most of us, how- ever, have achieved much in studies, activities, and sports. We are the ones to make ' 41 outstanding. SOPHS DEFEAT FROSH In the traditional Founder ' s Day Sopho- more-Freshmen tussle for supremacy, the Sophomore upheld the honor of their class by sinking the class of ' 42 in three of the five contests. The Sophs won the football game 6-0, but it must be said their team was the J. V. squad and was composed of several upperclassmen. However, in winning the pants tearing contest and the mile relay the Sophs needed no outside help to overcome the neophytes. The Frosh were able to win only the tug- of-war and push ball. Sophs winning pants tearing contest. 1. Bill Simpson, let+erman in football and swimming. 2. Steve Smoke, Lehigh ' s best punter in a year of Sundays. 3. Bill Scott, swimmer and track man, spends a nite looking at the stars in Lehigh ' s Observatory. 4. The way the Sophs like to study. 5. A Soph trying out the techniques he learned his Freshman year. 6 and 7. Sophomore year seems like al work and no play. 8. Action shot of Sophs ' triumph over Frosh. A new dean, a new dormitory, a new chem build- ing annex, a new student governing body — all of these greeted the class of ' 42 as we entered Lehigh. More important to us than any of these changes, though, was the innovation in Freshmen regulations. Gone for us were the dink, the black socks and tie; gone were all the regulations which had been the bane of pre- vious Freshmen classes. We were not, of course, the first of Lehigh ' s 73 entering Freshmen groups to be told: You ' re the best bunch we ' ve even seen here, but by 1942 we intend to prove that we are. PAJAMA PARADE Another of Lehigh ' s old traditions is the annual Smoker the evening before the Lafay- ette game, followed by the Freshman Pajama Parade through the streets of Bethlehem. The affair was more elaborate this year in that Arcadia sponsored a contest for the most original and unique Freshman living group makeup. This added much spirit to the affair and Bucky Buchanan ' s slight-of- hand magical effects had the crowd roaring. The pajama parade starts at the gym with the band leading it. South and East Bethle- hem traffic is always at a standstill while the frivolous Frosh carry on in good, clean fun. Freshmen hailing the Virgin Marys from across the river. I. Frosh winning the tug-of-war contest. 2. Typical view in fraternity houses before Houseparty — Waxing floors. 3. Class of 42 scholarship winners. 4. Rushing. 5. A. K. Pi Freshmen with their prize winning display at Lafay- ette smoker. 6. Freshmen football team. 7. Typical Freshmen pose in Fa Floyd Prrsons ' o?, Alumni Association PR€SIDeMT,R€CflLLS ,VCRY a HflPPYDflYd iWjl f ( ■i ■Women, politics, religion, or athletics? The Chi Phis indulge in serious session. Milton H. Grannatt, Jr., President of the Interfra- ternity Council and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. T On investigation in 1919, it was found that Lehigh was far behind other universities in organizing fraternities. Thus on May 21, 1919, the presidents of the various fraternities met to organize a council. A com- mittee of five (J. M. Howard, R. Honeyman, R. Bellman, M. Tate, and J. J. Shipherd as chairman) was appointed to draft a constitution for this coun- cil. At the second meeting on May 28, 1919, the constitution was pre- sented to the council and adopted. TOP ROW: Matteson, Kremer Rabold, Shields, Homiller FOURTH ROW: Jeffery Beardslee, Lane, Seifert, Dia mond, Conneen, Heisler THIRD ROW: Holmes, Craig O ' Meara, McO u i in, Russell Tanis, Danshaw; SECOND ROW: Kromer, Carringer, Gin- der, Glide, Roblin, Beekman, Yingling; BOTTOM ROW: Rothschild, Laubenstein, Car- rington, Grannatt, Roper, Rob- erts, McCaulley. INT€R D ' Arcy W. Roper, II, Secretary of the Interfra- ternity Council and a member of Beta theta Pi fraternity. Samuel R. Cox, Treasurer of the Interfraternity Council and a member of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity. To this day the constitution is still in its original form. As stated there, the purposes ot the Interfraternity Council are to promote a more intimate friendship between the fratermt.es and the student body genera lly, to develop a closer relationship among the tratern.ties at Lehigh by means of interfraternity athletics and affairs, to lend a wider support to all university activities, and to promote the welfare of the university in general. 7 Two representatives (with one vote only) from each fraternity comprise the member- ship of the council. The Lehigh University Interfraternity Council is a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. The council approves the dates of house parties and sponsors one of the leading social functions of the school year, the Interfraternity Ball. It encourages interfraternity competition in touch football, wrestling, swimming, table tennis, basketball, and bowling and by this competition fosters better relationship among the fraternities. Cups, donated by the council, are prizes for these athletic contests which are in charge of a manager appointed annually from fraternity candidates. The council establishes and enforces rules tor fraternity rushing during Freshman Week. This year the council plans to eliminate a few grievances. In conjunction with Andrew A L.tzenberger, superintendent of buildings and grounds, it has put into operation a plan to license all salesmen who visit the fraternities. It also plans to publish a guide including vital information pertaining to each fraternity. List of members can be found on page 304. 15 ALPHA CHI Alpha Chi Rho was founded on June 4, 1895, at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, by the Rev. Paul Ziegler, H. T. Sherriff, C. G. Ziegler, W. H. Rouse, and William A. Eardeley. At present it has eighteen active chapters and over 5,000 members. The Phi Mu Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho grew out of a local fraternity, Theta Delta Psi, which was ad- mitted into the national organization in 1918. It, like all other chapters of Alpha Chi Rho, boasts of a dis- tinctive alumni organization in which the graduates are linked together in an alumni chapter. This chap- ter, governed by a committee, acts as an advisor to the active members. The present chapter house is located at Market and Linden Streets. Alpha Chi Rho is very active in the field of publications. Russ Stevens is the business manager, Ed Manning, the national advertising manager, and Bob Muir, news editor of the Brown and White. On the Lehigh Re- view, Frank Norris is an assistant edi- tor, Dick Gowdy, the art editor, and Bob Muir, a member of the board. Athletics are also popular with the Alpha Chi Rhos. Dick Gowdy is a varsity football player and Joe Scott, one of Lehigh ' s top-ranking tennis players, is a letterman in soccer. Russ Stevens is manager of the varsity bas- ketball team. Alpha Chi Rho is represented in such honorary societies as Cyanide, Alpha Kappa Psi, Scabbard and Blade, Brown Key, and Pi Delt. 18 SfucK B G e owd 3 , 9: ' 40?M r - ' ' - ° V Sh ■uctor, ;«i Sowdy, 40: Mathewson, ' 40; Muir, ' 40; Norris, ' 40; Slingerland, ' 40; SECOND ROW- Wood de ' 40- Atherholf ' 4 l-B-d-Tr V R peyer, ' 39; Stevens, ' 39; Ache, ett, ' 40; ' 41; ' 42; PHI MU CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Harry B. Osborn, Stanley J. Thomas IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS JUNIORS F aTc. Wo A od h s!de H Jr 3 BeUC ' er ' S ° Wdy ' K M ° - erf C. Muir, Jr., Frank Norris, Robert C. Slingerland, SOPHOMORES i w B . ' SLJt Jr 1 Edward s - Hamil,on ' • ' ■Albert w ' Heii ' Ra m ° d c H ' °°- • f - FRESHMEN Clif r t a o C n e W. ' SW ' A ' ber+ F ° Sfer ' DOU9 ' aS M HaIr6 ' Jam6S G - Hamilf ° n ' R ° berf L Hil1 ' E - ' - 9 Shuttleworth, Richard P. S. Smith, I 19 KAPPA PI Alpha Kappa Pi was founded at Newark College of Engineering on January I, 1921. The fraternity was then a local group known as Phi Delta Zeta. In the Fall of 1925, representatives from Phi Delta Zeta and Alpha Kappa Pi, a local fraternity at Wag- ner College, Staten Island, New York, met for the purpose of organizing a national fraternity. The new organization, completed in March of 1926, with the Alpha Chapter at Newark and the Beta Chapter at Wagner, has grown to twenty-six chapters. The Nu Chapter at Lehigh, originally known as Howard Hall, was formed in 1927. It was installed as the Nu Chapter of Alpha Kappa Pi in February, 1930, and moved to 514 Delaware Avenue in 1933. In recognition of the prime pur- pose of a college education, Alpha Kappa Pi has maintained her position near the top in scholastic rating. Four of the brothers, Dick Shepherd, Swish Myers, Bob Marsden, and Jack Jackson, were elected to four honoraries respectively: Newtonian, Pi Tau Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, and Tau Beta Pi. Interfraternity sports yielded a sil- ver trophy for football and a cup for a Freshman display. Four of the freshmen won their numerals on the Freshman football team. Loring Lane and Dick Blanchard won varsity let- ters in riflery and Swish Myers won his in track. Music, dramatics, mili- tary science, and journalism are a few other interests of the brothers. 120 TOP ROW: Blanchard, ' 39; Breidenbach, ' 39; Jackson ' 39- Thierrv ' 39- Wp vsr ' }o. THIRn «nw u • ™ d i- , ..„ Marsden. ' 40; SECOND ROW: Myers, ' 40; Beh, ' 41; Donohoe hHoo ' d 41 I Shepherd 41 ° ■■' l en ' . «• ?• . i Harhell. ' 40; Lane, ' 40; Murphy, ' 42; Stowbridge, ' 42; White, ' 42. ' - - - ■' --i ■« ■wut.3, -rw, i 101 lien, tu; Lane, tu; II; Wilson, 41; BOTTOM ROW: Ambrogi, ' 42; Barrett, ' 42; Boyer, ' 42; NU CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Robert F. Herriclc IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Richard W. Blanchard, Harold I. Breidenbach, Jr., Frank L. Jackson, Theodore R. Thierry, Jr., Joseph M. Weaver, Edward P Weis JUNIORS Frank L. Benedict, Philip W. Davis, Jacob S. Hartzell, Loring Lane, Robert D. Marsden, Charles G. Myers. SOPHOMORES John D. Beh, Howard V. Donohoe, John M. Hood, Richard M. Shepherd, Robert M. Wilson. FRESHMEN T°White N J 091 ' Jf Barre++ ' Harry L B ° yer ' Jr Cal6b L Mur P h V ' Jr - Robert W - Stowbridge, III, John O. Turner, Emmet 121 ALPHA TAU OMEGA HA 1 The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity was the first American fraternity to be founded after the Civil War. Its inception was on September II, 1865, when three cadets established the Alpha Chapter at the Virginia Military Institute. Virginia Beta Chap- ter was founded during the same year at Washing- ton and Lee University. The fraternity has grown rapidly, and the present ninety-four chapters, dis- tributed among the leading colleges and universities of the country, have initiated 36,000 men. In 1882 the Alpha Rho Chapter was established at Lehigh as the second fraternity in the University. The present chapter house, located in Sayre Park, was built in 1916. The A. T. O. ' s have furnished many leaders on the Lehigh campus. Jim Patton is president of Tau Beta Pi, vice-president of the Chemical Engi- neering Society, member of Pi Mu Epsilon, Arcadia, and chairman of the Student Activities Committee. Shamrock O ' Meara wears an L for swimming and track and is a mem- ber of Cyanide. Bob Craig made three numerals last year and is the third A. T. O. to win the R. A. Lewis cup. Bob, Jim Hendry, and Tommy King, who was a finalist in the American Olympic tryouts, will represent the fraternity on the Lehigh wrestling team. Other sports and activities participated in by A. T. O. ' s are: golf, soccer, football, and baseball. 122 - ' ,. ■- - ! L«3 JuTw rjr : t J TOP ROW: Ma Richardson, ' 40; BOTTOM ROW hla, G Seiler, Bake Slander, ' 39; Goodwin, ' 39, l(ing 3?; Pafton, ' 39; Thompson, ' 39; THIRD ROW: Flail, ' 40; Ke ' ;mberg, ' 40; Burke, ' 41 iggin, ' 42; Woodroofe, ' 42. ' 40, Trageser ' 40; Valentine, ' 40; SECOND ROW: ' War., ' 40; Wintemberg ' 40; Burke, ' 41; Craig ' 41 • Hendry ' ' - ' 42; Havenstem, ' 42; Milbank, ' 42; Paul, ' 42; Ryan, ' 42; W ey, ' 40 iegele, O ' Meara, ' 40; 41 ; Stacom, ' 41 ; ALPHA RHO CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Howard Eckfeldt, Judson G. Smull IN UNIVERSITATE Graduate Student— Elbert M. Mahla SENIORS Richard Bacon, William H. Glander, William M. Goodwin, Thompson King, Jr., James E. Patton, Otis C Tl JUNIORS SEl N D. Ware.°H e o P !;a!d XS ™ ' ' • A William Valentine, Jr., SOPHOMORES David W. Burke, Jr., Robert Craig, James R. Hendry, William A. Siegele, Matthew J. Stacom Jr FRESHMEN Robert M. Baker, Paul L Havenstein, John H. Milbank, Richard C. Paul, Robert F. Ryan, Alexander K. Wiggin, Philip B. Woodroofe. lompson. 123 Beta Kappa originated in October, 1 90 1 , at Ham- line University, St. Paul, Minnesota. Expansion pro- gressed throughout the West, coming East in 1925. In the interim of thirty-seven years, Beta Kappa has grown to be a national fraternity with a total of forty-eight chapters. In the Spring of 1932 a group of Lehigh students founded the Omega Phi Sigma fraternity, and a house on Montclair Avenue was obtained the next Fall. Realizing that stronger backing was needed for continued success, Omega Phi Sigma petitioned Beta Kappa fraternity, and, on May 19, 1934, it was installed as Alpha Sigma of Beta Kappa at Lehigh. The activities of Beta Kappa are many and varied, a? evidenced by the Review ' s selecting one of the brother ' s houseparty date as the ideal houseparty guest, and by the scholastic honors gained through the election of members to Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, and Phi Eta Sigma. The chapter also is active in other honorary and course societies, having members in Alpha Phi Omega, Scabbard and Blade, Delta Omicron Theta, Glee Club, Review, Brown and White, and the debating team. Though participation in sports is not stressed, Beta Kappa is repre- sented by strong intra-mural teams in both bowling and basketball, and has men in football, wrestling, track, bas- ketball, and on the tennis team. 124 k 3 TOP Bley, Fulle r, 42; Hill, ' 42; Musante, ' 42. • ells, ' 40; Wetherell, ' 40; Bixby ' 41- geny, 41; Kendall, ' 41; Kirk, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Pfaff, ' 41; Smyth, ' 41; Cooke, ' 42 1 ALPHA SIGMA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Max Petersen IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Robert K. Brown, Frederick H. Buehl, Jr., William H. Casey, Casper R. Musselman, Rea C. Helm, Jr., James A Shields JUNIORS John Beriont, Royal V. Mackey, Jr., Bernard A. Smith, Edward W. Stoehr, Troward G. Wells, Walter J. Wetherell SOPHOMORES S CiS P S:rw w:-s tl: s-sm Wil,ard w - D — J ' - M - H - H — ■w  c - FRESHMEN Oakley W. Cooke, Jr., Robert L. Fuller, John B. Hill, Jr., Joseph F. Musante. 125 Beta Theta Pi was founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, on August 8, 1839. At the time secret organizations were banned by the University, and, consequently, they had to meet at such times and places as to allow themselves to be undetected by the University faculty. John R. Knox and Sam- uel T. Marshall were two leaders in the establish- ment of the fraternity. The Lehigh chapter, Beta Chi of Beta Theta Pi, came into the national fraternity on October I, 1891. In 1889 a group of Lehigh students built up a society with the idea of petitioning a national fraternity for a charter. This was done and the char- ter was granted at the convention of 1890. Many and varied are the activities in which Beta Theta Pi has been rep- resented by participants during the current year. In athletics we were particularly strong having had mem- bers in almost every sport, such as football where we had the year ' s honorary captain, wrestling where we had a 1938 Eastern Intercollegiate champion, swimming, track, tennis, cross-country, soccer, and baseball. We also had the manager of base- ball, the junior manager of wrestling, and the captain of lacrosse. In honoraries and organizations the Betas are well represented in Cya- nide, Scabbard and Blade, Newton- ian Society, Brown and White, and Alpha Kappa Psi. The secretary of the Interfraternity Council is a Beta. 126 4 J £nim M « i f n , r ' j jf TOP ROW: R. Clark, ' 39; Fisher, ' 39; R. Girdler ' 40; Palmer, ' 40; Roper, ' 40; Chri Brenneman, ' 42; Brune, ' 42; Chip Struble, ' 42; Thornburgh, ' 42. rlrfh. ' . ' 4? P ' l ii I £°!!i 39 . : J ' e c? 39; Weed ' ' 39: Wertz ' ' 39 i Baker ' ' 4 °: TH IRD ROW: Delany, ' 40- r,st.ne 41, Franks 41; L. Girder, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Hartnett, ' 41; Houston, ' 41; McConnell ' 41- Scot man, 42; N. Clark, 42; BOTTOM ROW: Forshay, ' 42; Gorman, ' 42; Kelley, ' 42; Kuhn, ' 42; Larki ' 42 Lindsay Juer, ' 40; Masem, ' 41; Wood, ' 41; ' 42; Roberts, ' 42; BETA CHI CHAPTER IN FACULTATE John H. Ogburn, Paul E. Short, E. Kenneth Smiley, Charles L. Thornburgh IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS M uTE eZ ' i 96 ' K ' John Y Hu ' chison ' Richard L Tieb ° Ch A. Weed, JUNIORS William Baker, Ambrose G. Delany, Frederick Juer, Harold J. Masem, Robert B. Palmer, D ' Arcy W. Roper, II. SOPHOMORES S r?de?cfR n W J o°od: j£ L Gird ' er ' Wl iam R Char,es A H ° US+ ° n ' Wllliam B M ,e II, Jr., William E. FRESHMEN 127 As early as the thirteenth century there are records of a society of scholars in Bavaria, called Chi Phi. These same groups have left traces also in England and America. The actual constitution, dated I 824 at Princeton University, still exists. Was it mere coincidence, then, that in I 860 three different societies at Princeton, North Carolina, and Hobart should be calling themselves Chi Phi; or that upon investigation, their ritual, ideals, and secrets should be strangely similar? These three societies banded to form an entity in I 872. In this same year a group of students, who called themselves the Calumet Club, organized the first fraternity at Lehigh University — Chi Phi. Outstanding Chi Phis in activities are Walt Wells and Skeets Russell, who both played on the varsity soc- cer team this year — the former, as captain and the latter, as co-captain elect. On the gridiron, Frank Elliott and Bill Fredrick, captain for the Penn game, played regularly for the junior varsity. Walt Wells, Joe Conneen, and Jim Harris are three Chi Phi grapplers on the wrestling team. Tom Hamill, Frank Slate, and Jim Bright, last year ' s captain, greatly strengthened the Le- high fencing squad. In the way of honoraries, Dick Sreenwell and Jim Bright were elected to Tau Beta Pi, while Walt Wells, vice-president of O. D. K., was elected to Alpha Kappa Psi. 128 m ji 1 m W U R : R Bri9ht, « 3 ' in S p « C .L ' 39 C ; r 6 ! 1 ; ' l 9 JilT5 B i? i JeH ' ' 39; K ight ' ' 39; Malkin ' ' 39: THIRD ROW: ° skl . ' 39: Seabrcok, ' 39; Stewart 39- 1 BOTTOM ROW ' RHh- ' 4. k Tc !?° D ROW i Harris ' ' «°: Le — d . ' «; Russell, ' 40; Conneen, ' 41; Frederick, ' 41; Manley, HI; Matheson 41, BOTTOM ROW: Ritchie, 41; Schwarz, 41; Seltzer, ' 41; Slate, ' 41; Corwin, 42; Hartman, ' 42; Heyniger, ' 42; Kasson, ' 42. PSI CHAPTER IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS T m iL r - i9h n G uT £ ' Ue D ck ; RiC r ar r 1 S ' eenwe  . Thomas M - Hamill, ©eorge T. Hewlett, Lowell F. Jett, Edmund H. Knight, E. Meele Malkin, Donald C. Oskin, Robert E. Seabrook, Roger M. Stewart, Walter C. Wells. JUNIORS David Barnecott, Frank B. Elliott, Frank P. Glueck, James R. Harris, Warren G. Leonard, Walter S. Russell. SOPHOMORES Joseph L. Conneen William R. Frederick Robert S. Kampmann, H. DaHaven Manley, William A. Matheson, George M. Ritchie, Jr. Louis K. bchwarz, Richard C. Seltzer, Frank T. Slate. ' ' FRESHMEN Richard R. Bright, Henry H. Corwin, Steward H. Hartman, Richard L. Heyniger, John M. Kasson. 129 CHI PSI The Chi Psi fraternity was founded at Union Col- lege in 1841. Adhering to a conservative policy in growth, Chi Psi has today twenty-five closely knit chapters throughout the country. Three bonds which keep the fraternity a nationally united organization are the alumni associations which exist in all the larger cities, a central office through which a quar- terly magazine is sent to every living Chi Psi, and a fraternity visitor who keeps a direct contact be- tween the various chapters. Alpha Beta Delta of Chi Psi was founded at Lehigh in 1894. The fraternity moved into its pres- ent lodge in Sayre Park in 1915 and has ranked high on the campus since that time. This year Chi Psi had the single honor of providing five of the twenty Lehigh students in Who ' s Who in American Colleges; namely Bob Yingling, Bill Weeks, Wally Watkins, Donald Luster, and Charlie Moesel who was also one of Lehigh ' s two can- didates for a 1938 Rhodes Scholar- ship. Chi Psis hold many positions on the campus such as: editor and advertis- ing manager of the Brown and White; presidents of Tone, Brown Key, Pi Delta Epsilon, and Aero Club; mana- gers of swimming, soccer, and hockey; and secretaries of Arcadia, Cyanide, Aero Club, and Pi Mu Epsi- lon. We have members in Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Mustard and Cheese, and Alpha Kappa Psi. 130 4-fc w £ r km Aim m m jt C% %, C% A A m I KU .1 I ' TOP ROW: Colbaugh, Voclcel, ' 41 Ballantyne, ' 39; Barnum, ' 39; Fletcher, ' 39; Haulenbeek, ' 39; Moesel, ' 39; Perkins, ' 39; Sinclair. ' 39; THIRD ROW: J Smith ' 39- Weeks ' 39- Yinqiinq ' 39- 40; Harding, ' 40; Honce, ' 40; Luster, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Turner, ' 40; Walker, ' 40; Watkins, ' 40; Carpenter, ' 41- Chandler ' 41- Scherratt ' 41 : Whitesell, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Anderson, ' 42; Fischer, ' 42; Louden, ' 42; Mayer, ' 42; Penn, ' 42; Schneider, ' 42; Shuttlewortii, ' 42; F. Smith ' , ' 42. ' ALPHA BETA DELTA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Major Carter Collins, E. Robins Morgan IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Ford Ballantyne, Jr., Starr H. Barnum, III, Bertram Van W. Fletcher, Walter C. Haulenbeek, F. Charles Moesel, Edwin C. Perkins, Gordon H. Sinclair, Charles F. Small, James A. Smith, Jr., Willet Weeks, Jr., Robert G. Yingling. JUNIORS John H. Colbaugh, Albert B. Harding, Charles R. Honce, Donald R. Luster, W. Rodman Turner, John C. Walker, Wallace P. Watkins. SOPHOMORES Peter Carpenter, Henry D. Chandler, William F. Scherratt, Richard L. Vockel, J. Robert Whitesell. FRESHMEN Raymond B. Anderson, Jr., Arthur L. Fischer, Clarence E. Louden, Franklin B. Mayer, John R. Penn, III, Leonard A. Schneider William S Shuttleworth, Frank E. Smith. 131 ELTA PHI The Delta Phi fraternity was founded at Union College on November 17, 1827, and was the third American college fraternity to be established. Delta Phi has strictly adhered to its aims and purposes. It has been traditionally conservative in founding new chapters and has remained an eastern fraternity. Even in the East it has been conservative in expansion, having only fourteen active chapters in leading colleges and universities. Nu Chapter of Delta Phi, the fourth fraternity to be established at Lehigh, was founded in 1884 by six boys who believed that they might benefit by the fraternity ' s ideals of a small membership, thus effecting a more congenial and restricted group. In all its activities and functions, Delta Phi has kept its membership small in order to effect a congenial group, working and thinking as one unit rather than as separate units. The success of this policy is apparent. Delta Phis have always been active in campus activities: social, scholas- tic, and athletic. During the past year we have had men with the Glee Club, Mustard and Cheese, and Brown and White. There have been Delta Phis on the rifle, tennis, and soccer teams, and in various of the honorary so- cieties. The Nu Chapter at Lehigh has con- formed to the aims of the national fraternity and has exemplified the fondest ideal of the founders of the society — Brotherhood. 132 fc s 4 4 iKc C « C-se, „; P; s H er , „ ; Jo hn S on, „; De twi , er , ' 42; NU CHAPTER IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Robert H. Duenner, Jr., Frederick C. Durant, III, David L ' H. Holmes. JUNIORS Harry W. Lynch, Jr., Joseph L. Serrill, Jr., Mills G. Sturtevant, Jr. SOPHOMORES Charles L. Crouse, Jr., Alexander L. Darby, Jr., John C. Fisher, Ralph B. Johnson. FRESHMEN Ward A. Detwiler, II, John Griffen, Jr., James H. Kidder, Stephen B. Longley, Robert McQueeney, Arthur M. Over, John O. P ips. 133 The Delta Sigma Phi fraternity was founded at the College of the City of New York on December 10, 1899. The mother chapter was first called Insula, but was later known as Alpha. The three original chapters at the College of the City of New York, Columbia University, and New York Univer- sity formed a strong basis for expansion to the fifty chapters throughout the United States and Canada. Beta Theta Chapter originated from a society of engineers known at one time as Sigma lota and later as Phi Delta Pi. In 1929, a house on Delaware Ave- nue was obtained, and, after petitioning to Delta Sigma Phi, a charter was granted in 1 93 I . The pres- ent house on Packer Avenue was acquired in 1937. While Delta Sigma Phi has been at Lehigh for on!y a short time, it has played an important part in support- ing the University ' s athletics and so- cieties. We are proud to have out- standing players on the varsity foot- ball, basketball, baseball, and soccer teams, and on the Freshman soccer and basketball teams. A definite in- terest is taken by Delta Sigs in inter- fraternity sports, the house always turning out strong teams. The honor of being elected to membersip in such honorary societies as Phi Eta Sigma, Cyanide, Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, and Phi Beta Kappa has come to several members of Delta Sigma Phi. We also have the student director and many members of the University Band. 134 TOP ROW: Bruclor, ' 39; Evans, ' 39; Ferencz!, ' 39; Salindo, ' 39; Glide ' 39- THIRD ROW- McC fl rd ' 39- D,r ] 1Q- Jn,,,, - o TU ' ™ r- ..„ r ArHTe St A ' 4 ° ; W - ' 4 ° : T °— - - Pe on 39 4 , BO OM 3 R ? 0 ° i 4I: SFw15i£ BETA THETA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Robert P. More, Edwin R. Theis IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Henry J Brucker Robert B. Evans, Louis M. Ferenczi, Luis G. Galindo, Justin Glide, Henry W. McCard, William M. Orr, Wayne Snod- grass, Robert W. Thompson. ' JUNIORS Alfred T. Cox, Gene F. Mascuch, Arthur A. McCambridge, Ralph E. Martin, Warren E. Sawyer, John R. Torrens. SOPHOMORES George G. Andrews, Richard Mascuch, George W. Peterson, Robert Stubbings, Hastings W. Watkins. FRESHMEN John Burgio, Thomas S. C. Holberton, Albert B. Holzl, Richard H. Pertrick, Eugene L. Pinto. 135 Delta Tau Delta was founded at Bethany College, West Virginia, in the Spring of 1858, but it was not until the following Spring that an efficient organiza- tion was effected. In 1886 the Rainbow Society of the W. W. W. fraternity combined with Delta Tau Delta. The official organ of the fraternity is called The Rainbow in honor of this society. At present there are seventy-four active under- graduate chapters, with a membership of over 3,000 and an alumni membership of over 30,000. Beta Lambda Chapter was founded at Lehigh University in 1874. In 1914, after two residences in town, it moved into its present home, the second fraternity house to have been built on the campus. At present, Delta Tau Delta is very active in every phase of student life. It has Ben Chadwick and Charlie Grif- fiths playing varsity football, and Whitey Elmer is captain-elect of the cross-country team. The membership of Cyanide in- cludes four Delts: Brown, Elmer, Grif- fiths, and Heisler, the last two being members of Alpha Kappa Psi also. Louis Glesmann is a member of Pi Tau Sigma. Chadwick is vice-president of Mus- tard and Cheese, and Elmer, Gles- mann, Hubschmidt, and De Bow are members. Strayer is vice-president of the Lehigh Sportsman ' s Club, and Ulmer is national advertising manager of the Review. Vogelsberg is a mem- ber of the Review board. 136 ' ■+ «v 1 2 . f ? «pw , v|  «s iTtikfarf afi± C: r TOP ROW: Baker, ' 39; Chadwick, ' 39; Cheever, ' 39; DeBow, ' 39; Glesmann, ' 39; Greenwood, ' 39; Hubschmidt, ' 39; Jones ' 39- THIRD ROW- Matheny ' 39- Stone, ' 39; Brown, ' 40; Elmer, ' 40; Griffiths, ' 40; Heisler, ' 40; Johnson, ' 40; Motheral, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Shields, ' 40; Gunnison ' 41 • MacNamee ' 41- Straver ' 41- Strode, ' 41; Ulmer, ' 41; Vogelsberg, ' 41; Weigel, ' 41; Wooters, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Britton, ' 42; Cox, ' 42; Croot, ' 42; Downing, ' 42; Freemann, ' ' 42- ' Mangan 42 Marshall, ' 42; McClave, ' 42; Wolff, ' 42. BETA LAMBDA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Howard J. Godfrey IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Ralph P. Baker, Arthur B. Chadwick, Paul W. Cheever, Clarence R. DeBow, Jr., Louis G. Glesmann, John G. Greenwood, Richard W. Hub- schmidt, Howard J. Jones, Jr., Richard D. Matheny, Earle Stone, Jr. JUNIORS William W. Brown, Morgan C. Elmer, Charles R. Griffiths, Clifford B. Heisler, Richard L. Johnson, George B. Motheral, William D. Shields, Jr. SOPHOMORES R. Harry Gunnison, Stanley G. MacNamee, Hamilton W. Strayer, Richard B. Strode, Robert B. Ulmer, Walter H. Vogelsberg Albert W Weigel, J. Dukes Wooters, Jr. FRESHMEN Everett A. Britton, James L. Cox, Lloyd A. Croot, Harold S. Downing, Richard Z. Freemann, John L. Mangan, Robert H. Marshall Wilkes McClave, II, Ahlert D. Wolff. 137 DELTA UPSILON Delta Upsilon, the only non-secret Greek letter society in the country, was founded from an anti- secret organization known as the Social Fraternity, which was originally formed at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1834. In 1885, the Lehigh chapter of Delta Upsilon was installed by Charles Evans Hughes, Brown ' 81, now Chief Justice of the United States. The present house has the distinction of being the first fraternity house to have been built on the campus. The national fraternity now comprises sixty-one active chapters throughout the United States and Canada. The membership list of the Delta Upsilon fraternity totals over 30,000 members. Because of the well-rounded inter- ests of its members, the Lehigh chap- ter of Delta Upsilon has always suc- ceeded in fulfilling its slogan of Delta Upsilon in everything and every D. U. in something. This year among the D. U. ' s are the captains of wrestling and baseball, four football lettermen, the manager of cross-country and the junior mana- gers of baseball and soccer, editor of the Epitome, president of the Sopho- more class, two members of O. D. K. and three in each of the follow- ing organizations: Cyanide, Pi Tau Sigma, and the Glee Club. There are two D. U. ' s in the Spiked Shoe So- ciety and seven on the Brown and White. Also we have members in Alpha Kappa Psi and Pi Mu Epsilon. 138 4 : a et a © e ft C| a TOP ROW: Ayer, ' 39; Chase, ' 39; Hagerman, ' 39; Histand, ' 39; lobst, ' 39; Lehrer, ' 39; Nicholas, ' 39; Rabold ' 39- FOURTH ROW Dent, ' 40; Good, ' 40; Johnson, ' 40; Kelley, ' 40; Lennox, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Matteson. ' 40; Rahn, ' 40; Walton ' 40- Whitmore Conchar, ' 41; Edwards, ' 41; SECOND ROW: English, ' 41; Garstin, ' 41; Kister, ' 41 ; Schoen, ' 41 ; Stives, ' 41 ; Wise ' 41 • Applegate ' Duval, ' 42; Heumann, ' 42; R. lobst, ' 42; McConnell, ' 42; Norwood, ' 42; Payrow, 42; Ouincy ' 42- Williams ' 42 ' : Selser, ' 39; Brand ' 40; Beauchamp, 42; Campbell, ' 42 t, ' 40; Coyne, ' 40; 41; Caverly, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: LEHIGH CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Wray H. Congdon, Gilbert E. Doan, John I. Kirkpatrick IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Norman L Ayer, Gordon S. Chase III, Edward E. Hagerman, Willard G. Histand, Llewellyn L. lobst, John F. Lehrer, Payson K. Nicholas, Frank C. Rabold, Jr., Harold M. Selser, Jr. JUNIORS Gordon L. Brandt Joseph C Coyne Charles C. Dent, Robert C. Good, Jr., R. Grant Johnson, Jr., Richard C. Kelley, Jr., George C. Len- nox, II, Joseph L. Matteson, Leonard B. Rahn, James M. Walton, Edgar F. Whitmore, Jr. SOPHOMORES James M. Beauchamp, Robert J. Caverly, Barton Conchar, Charles T. Edwards, John G. English, Charles B. Garstin, Edwin A. Kister, Donald K. bchoen, John H. Stives, William J. Wise. FRESHMEN Kenneth P Applegate, Harold A Campbell, Robert E. Duval, Chapin Heumann, Robert M. lobst, Malcolm F. McConnell, John H. Nor- wood, M. toordon Payrow, Jr., John A. Ouincy, Howard M. Williams. 139 Over a century ago nine students at Union Col- lege, realizing the need for an organization to pro- mote closer friendships and brotherhood, founded the Kappa Alpha Society, the first secret fraternity to be founded in an American college. Since that time the society has grown to include eight chapters. The Lehigh Chapter was formed, mainly through the efforts of James E. Brooks, Henry E. Kipp, and Charles F. Maurice, in 1894. After almost a year of hard struggling, six members were initiated at the Masonic Temple in New York City. The fraternity, having occupied several different homes, moved into its present lodge at the corner of Fourth and Seneca Streets in 1916. The present chapter of Kappa Al- pha is very active in every phase of student life. It has the vice-presidents of Alpha Kappa Psi and Interfrater- nity Council, business manager of the Epitome, financial manager of the Re- view, president of Mustard and Cheese, secretaries of Tone and Brown Key, and the head cheerleader and a junior cheerleader. In athletics we have members of the football, wrestling, and track squads, and manager and junior man- ager of tennis. In organizations we have members in O. D. K., Arcadia, Pi Delta Epsi- lon, Scabbard and Blade, Band, Sportsman ' s Club, and the Glee Club. In intermural sports the house has been a keen participant. 140 a7M a dii rgs: ■? a?, ' , sss s rs i si ijz: . - Symmes, ' 42. Javis, ' 42; J. Diamond, ' 42; Gordon, ' 42- S cott, ' 42; ALPHA CHAPTER OF PENNSYLVANIA IN FACULTATE Charles W. Simmons IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Eugene B. Caller, Malcolm Carrington, Jr., Joseph R. Seeds, Jr., A. George Ueberroth Jr JUNIORS Maynard L. Diamond, Otto V. Norvig, Philip R. Van Duyne, Jr., Richard N. Watts. SOPHOMORES fij L £ W ' K Chambe ' ' -. Hazen P. Chase, Alexander M. Craig, Jr., J. Arthur Marvin, Jr., Joseph L Schroeder, Jr.. FRESHMEN William S. Butler, Robert N. Davis, John L Diamond, Kilbourn Gordon, Jr., Theodore G. Scott, Jr., Roderick O. Symmes. 141 The Kappa Sigma fraternity was first established at the University of Virginia on December 1 0, I 869. Five men, who have since been called the five friends and brothers, refused chances to join other societies and founded an organization of their own in order to further their friendship as a group. The national organization is now one of the largest fraternities, having over one hundred chapters. The Lehigh chapter, Beta lota, was installed in Bethlehem on November 19, 1900. The first chapter house was located on Delaware Avenue. After mov- ing to several different locations in Bethlehem, the Beta lota Chapter settled in the present house, which is located at 24 East Church Street. The scholastic attainments of the chapter have been continuously in- creasing, with the members pointing toward the ideal mixture of studies and activities. In the line of sports, the chapter has been very successful. It won all but one of its numerous games in interfraternity football. Kappa Sigma is well represented on several of the varsity and Fresh- man athletic teams, and also in dra- matics and journalistic activities. Some members have been competing for their numerals and varsity letters on the football, swimming, wrestling, and soccer teams. Other members have found enjoyment in being en- gaged in the activities of the several societies, one Kappa Sig having be- come vice-president of the A.S.M.E. 142 Balough, ' 42; D.Hon, ' 42; s ' aedfb, 42 ELS 42; Stupp ' ' 4? ' ' ' ' ' ' ' M °° 9 ' ' 4 ell, ' 40; Deming, ' 40 I; BOTTOM ROW: Fetzer, ' 40; Thomas, ' 41; BETA IOTA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Robert B. Adams, Harold V. Anderson, Neil Carothers, Albert A. Rights, Ernst B. Schulz IN UNIVERSITATE ' illiam M. Fine, Jr., Herbert L. King, Jr., Linton M. Seifert, John R. Stoke SENIORS Richard Blount, Charles D. Brown, Willi JUNIORS Jo ' BrTen J ° h R °° H °™ Carles H. Fet Z er, John F. McQuillin, Charles F. Monard, William SOPHOMORES Robert S. Beers, Robert N. Brown, John D. Leighton, Arthur E. Moog, Alvah H. Thomas FRESHMEN Charles Balough, Charles B. Dutton, Walter H. Saedcke, Jack K. Lehman, John P. Stupp. 143 The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity was founded at Boston University, growing out of the Cosmopolitan Law Club, which had organized in 1905. On Novem- ber 2, 1909, the first chapter, Alpha, was estab- lished and now over ninety chapters exist through- out the country. Delta Theta, a local fraternity, was founded at Lehigh University in 1922. This society formally pe- titioned the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity in 1925, and the petition was accepted the following Spring. On November 13, 1926, thirty men were initiated at Lehigh, thus establishing Gamma Psi Zeta Chap- ter of Lambda Chi Alpha. In 1927, the chapter moved to 5 I 5 Delaware Avenue. The personnel of Lambda Chi Alpha has shown prominence in activ- ities and honorary societies. Milt Grannatt as president of Interfra- ternity Council, member of Arcadia, Cyanide, and Alpha Kappa Psi, and as a letterman in tennis and basket- ball. Bill Bernasco is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi and manager of the swimming team. Art Cooke is mana- ger of soccer. Frank Kemmer is a member of Tau Beta Pi, on the Review board, editor- ial staff of the Brown and White, and in Mustard and Cheese Club. Dave Hughes has written the songs for the musical shows. The varsity football team has Joe Kaszycki as Lambda Chi ' s representative, and Hal Stroh- man is on the junior varsity. 144 TOP ROW: McOuail, ' 39 Kaszycki, ' 40; Archbold, ' 42 lergen, P. G.; Bernasco, Merkle, ' 39; Strohman, Morgan, ' 40; SECOND E. Bodine, ' 42; W. Boyh r42,MUrr42:H U rt.%:£ % fa .£$£.£ Ke da ' 4, = ■—■' filler, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW GAMMA PSI ZETA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Merton O. Fuller, Fred V. Larkin IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Graduate Student: James T. Bergen William C. Bernasco, Jr., Arthur Blanchard, Jr., Joseph B. Boyle Arthur R CooItb M;l+™ H r u. n -j r i_i i mer, Gibson E. McMillan, Robert P. McQuail, C. Robert E. Me le Ha A .It ohma jfh™ Sweet ' ' JUNIORS v £££tS ?Sl% SM££ %■Jr Joim G - H 9 Rob  rt H - el d - R  h - d • J ■« k=™, j,, SOPHOMORES Norman M. Barber, John H. Bryan, Harry E. Case, William L. Clark, Aldrich F. Kendall, A. Philetus Luse, Warren H. Miller. FRESHMEN G Edward Archbold, Edward F. Bodine, William B. Boyle, James B. Felker, John A. Hunt, Ross W. Leaver, Robert S. Newcomb, John S. 145 The Phi Delta Theta fraternity was founded in 1848 at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. The Bond of Phi Delta Theta contains the basic objects of the fraternity, which include friendship and the attain- ment of high moral and mental standards. During the Civil War the development of the fraternity slackened; however, today, Phi Delta Theta is proud of the fact that it has a total of one hundred and seven chapters in the United States and Canada. Pennsylvania Eta of Phi Delta Theta was founded on April 15, 1887, and initiated into the national fraternity by the Lafayette chapter. The present chapter house is located on the University campus, and was built by the alumni in 1917. The members of Phi Delta Theta are well known on the campus for their activities in athletics and their memberships in honorary societies. The chapter is well represented athletically by having its members in sports and managerships during the school year. Many Phi Delts are ac- tive in intra-mural sports, and the teams have succeeded very well. The football team won the championship of the University this past Fall. The fraternity is also well repre- sented in honorary societies, having such officers as: president of O. D. K., treasurer of Arcadia, secretary and treasurer of Alpha Kappa Psi, and chairman of the Junior prom commit- tee. We also have men in Pi Delta Epsilon, Spiked Shoe, and Cyanide. 146 TOP ROW: E Powers, ' 40; B ' 41 ; Young, ' 4 I: Green, ,2; BOTTOM ROW: fc lo to T Jr ; H X ■P t ■a WS ' 40; ng, PENNSYLVANIA ETA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE George Beck, Glen W. Harmeson, Carl Heldt IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Cary G. Evans, George E. Hurst, Jr., William E. Liesman, James R. Park, Robert J. Rose, Franklin F. Schafer, Jr. Charles R Schubert JUNIORS Elmer P. Bachtell, Jr., Albert J. Collins, Jack S. Croft, William M. Harbaugh, Jr., Stuart B. Powers. SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN FlJul dd W Y . WhtS a Greene ' Ar+hUr B - J ° hnS+0n ' J ° hn F Kizer ' Jr - Jack E - Lane ' He -V B- Metcalf, Richard M. Palmer, Edgar 147 PHI In 1865 Major Frank Keck of the Columbia chap- ter conceived the idea of a Phi Gamma Delta chap- ter at Lehigh. The national fraternity, founded in 1848 at Jefferson College, had just begun a move- ment of expansion among the better American uni- versities. Major Keck communicated with William Pierce, Chas. Butler, Manual Domenech, and Walter McFarland, who were students at Lehigh. On the morning of January 15, 1886, Major Keck and some other Fijis installed the chapter at Lehigh. Beta Chi ' s first house was on Market Street, but rapid growth of the chapter made it necessary to move to larger quarters on Cherokee Street. In 1922 the present home was built on the campus. Phi Gamma Delta lettermen in football were Steve Smoke, George Melloy, Bill Simpson, Bill Hauserman, and Moose Synder. Dick Drake fin- ished his third year of varsity basket- ball, and Franc Burnett is a varsity wrestler. Grant Stetson is captain of tennis, and Philbert Ralston won his letter in track. Franc Burnett is president of Arcadia, and Chick Grant is presi- dent of the Senior class. Fijis are active in O. D. K., Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, Pi Delta Epsilon, Cyanide, Tau Beta Pi, and Scabbard and Blade. George Rheinfrank was business manager of the Brown and White. Harry Leidich is chairman of the Freshman Handbook. 148 -:i 4r £k fh £ f t jT T tfl . TOP ROW : Ahl, ' 39; Burnett, ' 39 Drake ' 39; l Frey, ' 39; Grant, ' 39; Habicht, ' 39; Ralston, ' 39; Rheinfrank, ' 39; THIRD ROW- Snyder ' 39- Steele ' 39- Ste nn ■« Craumer, 40; Gmder, 40; Le,d,ch, ' 40; Leschen, ' 40; Lincoln, ' 40; SECOND ROW- Paul ' 40- Schiff ' 40 Tavlor ' 40 W, I. C V IT.I, t ' u Me,son ' , 39; McAfee, 4 4, ; S.oke, ' 4, ; Si.pson, ' 4, ; BOTTOM ROW: S my th, ' 4, ; J. Tifft, ' 4, ; L Cu ' 42 ■' Hon, Mfc £; tSSfb. TE Sj BETA CHI CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Robert D. Butler, James L. Clifford, A. Henry Frefz, Nelson A. Kellogg, Robert M. Smith IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Snk le Frank A B hl, S F nX WM W ? D e -i l° A ' Fre Y. Alan S. Grant, Thomas Habicht, Frank B. Ralston, George B. Rhein- TranK, r-rank B. bnyder, William W. Steele, Jr., Grant B. Stetson. JUNIORS JrRlbMrri P 1 - G L ndSr w Ha , rry A - Uidlch ' Jr - Harry J LeSchen ' Jr - Clifford F - Lincoln . Jr - Douglas C. Paul, Terry Schiff Jr., Kobert b. laylor, R. Alexander Wrigley. y SOPHOMORES S H mob% dt l TmU W Jot F !ff jr an ' DanIe ' B - McAf6e ' Ge ° rge F - Meli ° y ' EdmUnd °- ° 5b0Urne ' Wi iam B ' Sim P S ° n ' S+e P he D - FRESHMEN Robert W. Beck, Robert E. Cullen, James W. Hanson, III, Richard E. Metius, J. Richard Muehlberg, Preston W. Parvis, Jr., Archie DeW. 149 PHI SIGMA K The Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity was founded at Massachusetts State College on March 15, 1873. The organization soon became one of the nationally organized fraternities in the country. In 1900, after overcoming previous difficulties of their first few years in existence, there were twelve strongly organized chapters. The fraternity has de- veloped, from these twelve, into forty-six chapters, giving Phi Sigma Kappa prestige among the estab- lished national fraternities. The Nu Chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa was founded at Lehigh thirty-eight years ago, and its career has been one of constant advancement in many lines. The chapter house is located on Delaware Avenue. The Phi Sigs have been very active in varsity and intra-mural sports. For years there have been Phi Sig soccer players, and this year Gus Riemondy on the varsity and Ralph Moss and Hal Grubb on the Freshman team have done their bit. Interfraternity wrestling has been continually popu- lar with Willy Danshaw and Dick Go- risse winning titles in their classes for the past two years. Danshaw also made a splendid showing on the Le- high varsity football team. The Phi Sigs are helping to push lacrosse at Lehigh, Ted Stankiewicz as a coach, and Beef Rodgers and Art Joecks as members of the squad. The team managerial staffs include Matt Sellers a nd Bob Taylor in soccer, and Love Loveland in football. 150 ffl G O, fli TOP ROW: Beekman, ' 39; Bohlen, ' 39; Davis, ' 39; Gardner, ' 39; Goodwin, ' 39; Gorisse ' 39- Henkv ' 39- THIRD ROW- k „ = l ' 50 M -, K , , ,,„ Roth, ' 39; Schlittler, ' 39; Young, ' 39; Danshaw, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Duyekinek, ' 40; E erf ' ' 40 Jo ' eck ' 40 Loveland 40 Rodoer ' 40 Ro 7 4n R t ' -IV Miller, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Riemondy, ' 41; Sellers, ' 41; Clark, ' 42; Forsyth 42; Grubb, ' 42; Klein ' 42 ScLrnacher ' 42 TaJ ' r, 42. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' NU CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Sylvanus A. Becker, Thomas E. Jackson IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Henry L. Beekman Elmer C. Bohlen Wesley AW. Davis John S. Gardner, Robert F. Goodwin, Richard A. Gorisse, Bruce R. Henky, Ernest G. Koegel, Ralph H. Morgan, Clark A. Neal, Harry B. Roth, Rudolph F. Schlittler, Wilbur E. Young. JUNIORS William Danshaw, Paul R. Duyekinek, William H. Biers, Arthur H. Joecks, Gordon D. Loveland, Philip A. Rodgers, Clifford D. Root. SOPHOMORES Craig W. Baker, William R. Miller, Jr., Augustus A. Riemondy, Matthew B. Sellers. FRESHMEN William L Clark, Robert H. Forsyth, Harold A. Grubb, Edwin H. Klein, Forrest V. Schumacher, Robert G. Taylor. 151 Pi Kappa Alpha was founded in 1868 at the Uni- versity of Virginia. The convention of 1889, when only four chapters were represented, is generally known as the second founding and marked the be- ginning of the era of prosperity and growth of Pi K. A. Although dedicated to remain Southern, Pi Kappa Alpha increased its scope in 1909 with the result that new chapters were soon established in all parts of the United States. A group of students at Lehigh, dissatisfied with dormitory life, formed the Seal Club, later changing the name to the Lehigh Ivy Club. Several members of this club formed Zeta Chi, which was accepted in 1929 as Gamma Lambda of Pi Kappa Alpha. The Engineer ' s basketball team had the valuable assistance of Alex Bupp, who also captained the house touch- football team to victory in our league. Bob Easton, the house president, is a member of Pi Tau Sigma and vice- president of Alpha Phi Omega. He founded the Lehigh Outing Club and was on the wrestling squad. Richards was a consistent winner for the track team. How Conner was a member of Pi Delta Epsilon and news editor of the Brown and White. Bob Felch was on the rifle and cross-country teams, and Ace Paget, a wrestling manager. Pi Kappa Alpha also has represen- tatives in the Band, Glee Club, Sym- phony Orchestra, Sportsman ' s Club, and Mustard and Cheese. 152 TOP ROW: Derr, G Hummel, ' 40; Salath Paget, ' 41; Plate, ' 4 S.; Hochgesang GS.; Thomas, G. S ; Broadfoot, ' 39; Bupp, ' 39; Easton, ' 39; Tanis, ' 39; Conner, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Curtiss, ' 40- Harper ' 40- ?• ' .ntt ' nw X? t t ' t ' 4 °;, A n nett ' ' 4 ' : SECOND ROW: Du ' ' til Engle, ' 41; Felch, ' 41; Fry, ' 41; Harding, ' 41; Mostyn, ' 4li I; BOTTOM ROW: Stoneback, 41; Wells, ' 41; Davey, ' 42; Freed, ' 42; Ganzer, ' 42; Jones, ' 42; Muhlhausen ' 42- Walling ' 42 GAMMA LAMBDA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE George D. Harmon, Bradley Stoughton IN UNIVERSITATE Graduate Students— George F. Derr, Frank P. Hochgesang, M. Thomas. SENIORS James W. Broadfoot, Jr., Alexander L. Bupp, Robert M. Easton, Paul M. Tanis. JUNIORS i w T ' Gi ' ber+ L Cur+iS5 ' Frank E Har P er ' Jr - Benjamin L Hummel. George F. Salathe, John W. Temple, Herbert Vonhof Kobert J. Wright, Jr, SOPHOMORES Edward B. Annett Jr.. Frank R Dunn. Robert C Engle. Robert I. Felch, William E. Fry, Gordon E. Guy, Charles H. Harding, Jr., Thomas A. Mostyn, Allen M. Paget, Charles F. Plate, Ralph D. Stoneback, R. Carter Wells. FRESHMEN William L Davey, C. William Freed, Jr., Robert H. Ganzer, Harry W. Jones, Jr., Edgar K. Muhlhausen, Richard R. Walling. 153 Pi Lambda Phi was founded at Yale University in I 895 by a group of undergraduates of various faiths for the main purpose of eliminating what they con- sidered to be undue prejudice and sectarianism in American universities. The early growth of the fra- ternity was rapid, inasmuch as students in other colleges welcomed a non-sectarian fraternity. In 1915, a group of Lehigh men, who had formed the Pioneer Club, petitioned Pi Lambda Phi for membership. The petition was granted in the same year, and the Lambda Chapter became a part of Lehigh University. The chapter has grown steadily since 1915, until at the present time it ranks among the largest fraternities in the University. Pi Lambda Phi has always been very active on the Lehigh campus. The brothers were honored during the year by membership in Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Rob- ert W. Blake Society, and similar hon- orary societies. When it comes to athletics, both intercollegiate and intermural, Lambda finds its best rep- resentation having had men on the varsity football, wrestling, and tennis teams during the past year. The chapter has been a consistent winner in interfraternity swimming and wres- tling, as well as in football and base- ball. On the activities side, Pi Lams have membership in Mustard and Cheese, Delta Omicron Theta, and the Lehigh Review. 154 ,f ) p% f ) 4fc 4 o. c C f liltatfi TOP ROW Bock 39; Guggenheim, 39; Harra 39; Levy, ' 39; Roblin, ' 39; Buchsbaum, ' 40; Comando, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Gilinsky ' 40- Lewis ' 40- Rosenfeld ' 40- A S.mon, 40; S. S,mon, 40; Sterner, ' 40; Steinhardt, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Bobbe, ' 41; Grossman ' 41 • Lichtenstein ' 41 ■Marool s ' 41 Sondh m ' 41 T ■!, Weinrib, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Wolf, ' 41; Dorkin, ' 42; Hollander, ' 42; Kluger, ' 42; Propper. ' 42; Rich, ' 42; tZglld, 42. 9 Sondhcm, 41; Tnvers, 41; LAMBDA CHAPTER IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Michael Bock, II, Stanford I. Guggenheim, E. Otis Harra, Jerome B. Levy, Daniel A. Roblin, Jr. JUNIORS Ralph Buchsbaum Edward N Comando, Stanley E. Gilinsky, Howard J. Lewis, Lester R. Rosenfeld, Alfred L. Simon, Samuel R. Simon Charles bteiner, Ralph G. Steinhardt. SOPHOMORES Richard A- Bobbe, Stanley Grossman, Valentine Lichtenstein, Jr., Seymour Margolis, Henry L. Sondheim, Leon Trivers, Stephen Weinrib, ii win —} , vv o it, Jr. FRESHMEN Jerome R. Dorkin, S. Lawrence Hollander, Conrad E. Kluger, Theodore D. Propper, Frank H. Rich, Kingdon H. Sterngold. 155 Psi Upsilon was founded in November, 1833, at Union College, Schenectady, New York, by seven undergraduates who had resolved to counteract the tendencies of secret fraternities by a more liberal organization. The growth of the fraternity has been restricted to twenty-seven chapters now active in the United States and in Canada. Psi Upsilon ' s history at Lehigh started when two faculty members of the fraternity interested several undergraduates to petition for a chapter in 1880. They formed a local Eta of Phi Theta Psi, which was installed as an active chapter of Psi Upsilon in 1884. The fraternity house, formerly located on Market Street, now borders the campus. The most prominent activities of Psi Upsilon this year have been Mus- tard and Cheese, which includes Harry Brown, Court Carrier, Frank Norton, and Ed Hine; and Scabbard and Blade, in which Norton, Les Ma- hony, Carrier, and Bob Coleman are active members. Court Carrier is Cadet Colonel of the R. O. T. C. regiment and presi- dent of Pi Tau Sigma. Norton and Carrier were both on the Military Ball Committee, the latter being chair- man. T Grey is news manager of the Brown and White and in Pi Delt. In athletics Monk Matthes, George Woelfel, and Bob Davies have been on the wrestling, swimming, and soc- cer teams respectively. Bill Hitchcock was on the Freshman football team. 156 KL1? . B Srj . j, C 2 ' ' ' ■« ■39: Mahony, ' 39; Norton. ' 39; W Matthes, ' 40; Miller. ' 40; SECOND ROW M chell ' 40 Prudden 40 i I Tn ' J ' : ,r ID , ROW; Cole ™ . ' 4 ' Hitchcock, ' 42; Littleiohn. ' 42: M,M;lle„ A, w ! :-L 40 ;, Prudden ' 40 ' B °V er . 41; Dav.es, 41; Jenkins, ' 41; Malloy, ' 41; Hitchcock, ' 42; Littleiohn, ' 42; McMillen. ' 42; Wetrich, ' 42. am n ' ? ' ; J ? D L ?° : , C °}T ' ' 40 i Hearse V ' ' 4 0: Hine, ' 40; Jenkins, ' 40 oy, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Woelfel, ' 41; Davis, ' 42| ETA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE William A. Cornelius, Charles S. Fox IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Harry H. Brown, Jr., Courtland F. Carrier, ,11, Thrasher T. Grey, Leslie P. Mahony, Jr., Franklin R. Norton, F. Hewlett Williams JUNIORS K£r F pSd£ Jr. 165 K HearSey ' EdWin W - Hin6 ' Jr - DaWd Jenki - '  « B - thes, WiHiam A. Miller, Jr., Charles F. Mitchell SOPHOMORES William W. Boyer, Robert O. Davies, Austin E. Jenkin, Edwin S. Malloy, George W Woelfel FRESHMEN Edward Davis, Jr., William P. Hitchcock, Harry F. Littlejohn, Jr., James H. McMillen, II, Jeffry S. Wetrich. 157 ALPHA MU In the Spring of 1923, a local fraternity called Eta Alpha Phi was installed as the Sigma Kappa Chapter of Sigma Alpha Mu at Lehigh University. Up until the present time the chapter has occupied four different houses. The first one was located on Cherokee Street. Next, the home of Sigma Alpha Mu was established at the corner of Broadway and Seminole Street. Then a move was made to a new house on Wyandotte Street in 1925. In 1926, under the leadership of Czar Nehmiah, the undergrad- uates purchased the present home at 506 West Third Street with the support of the alumni. Clement Shifreen was the first Prior of the chapter, and Robert Lewis is the present chapter advisor. . . Outstanding among Lehigh ' s ath- letes this year were three Sigma Al- pha Mu men: Marvin Kantrowitz, na- tional junior doubles tennis champion; Kenny Herman, chosen by Coach Carpenter for his all-conference soc- cer team; and Elliott Small, veteran guard on Lehigh ' s football team for three years, Freshman line coach. During the past year Sigma Alpha Mu has been well represented in vari- ous campus activities. Two men were elected to Mustard and Cheese while others were working in dramatic pro- ductions. The Lehigh Collegians were led by a Sigma Alpha Mu man, and we also had men in the Band. Scho- lastically the Sigma Alpha Mu frater- nity has not ranked below fourth on the scholarship list for many years. 158 TOP ROW: Frank, ' 39; Herman, ' 39; Rosenstein, ' 39; Rothschild, ' 39; Small, ' 39; Tzeses, ' 39- THIRD ROW- Wittstein ' 39- Bristpr ' 4(1- Fin„ r ' 4n. rv L ' in i irR: 42 s D r ' -r ' « 0: Scheelinei ,40: ste - ,40: -■™ ' •• j . s SIGMA KAPPA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Robert Lindner IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Charles Frank, Kenneth I. Herman, Raymond M. Rosenstein, Arthur Rothschild, Elliot Small, Leo L Tzeses, Martin E. Wittstein JUNIORS ? SW J ' BriSbr ' Aar ° n Finger ' N ° rman °- Glickman ' EllioH K - Goodman, Jack Guttag, Norman Hammer, Isiah Scheeline, Jr., Robert SOPHOMORES Norman Hackman, Marvin D. Kantrowitz, Raymond C. Miller. FRESHMEN Richard J. Berg, Gilbert S. Gold, Robert E. Goodman, Joseph E. Gross, Eugene L Kline, Monroe Levy. 159 Established on June 28, 1855, at Miami Univer- sity, Oxford, Ohio, Sigma Chi has grown to a total of ninety-eight chapters. On June 6, 1887, Alpha Rho was installed as the fifty-eighth chapter. Unique in the history of the fraternity history was the founding of the Constantine Chapter during the Civil War. This society, composed of seven Sigs , lasted throughout the War. In 1886 seven Lehigh students joined the Crimson Halberd Society which, in 1887, petitioned Sigma Chi for entrance and was immediately accepted. In 1890 the chapter languished, but was reinstalled in 1893. Since 1904 the house has been located at 240 East Broad Street. The activities of Alpha Rho mem- bers include representation in Eta Kappa Nu, Tone, Delta Omicron Theta, and Scabbard and Blade. Other interests reveal members in the Band, Combined Musical Clubs, Brown and White, and Epitome. As for sports, Sigma Chi has men out for basketball, baseball, swim- ming, track, wrestling, fencing, foot- ball, and the rifle team. The chapter has always achieved merit in inter- fraternity football. This year we won in our league and were defeated in the semi-finals for the school title. We won the title the past two years. Members of last year ' s teams and societies show promise to help dis- tinguish Alpha Rho of Sigma Chi in her activities again next year. 160 TOP ROW: I Bowen ' 39; Srubmeyer , ' 39; Herre, ' 39; McCaulley, ' 39; Ort, ' 39; Wittman, ' 39; THIRD ROW Burg;. 41 Dav,s 41 SECOND ROW: Hunt, ' 41; Jacoby, ' 41; Stoudt, ' 41; Taylor, ' 41; Wigg, ' 41; Abbo Reuwer, 42; Rhoads, 42; Tucker, ' 42; Wood, ' 42. David, ' 40; Die gg, ' 41; Abbott, ' 42; BOTTOM hi, ' 40; ROW: Roberts, Gailey, ' 40; Walther, ' 40; 42; McKelvy, ' 42; ALPHA RHO CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Raymond C. Bull, George B. Curtis, Howard S. Leach, Martin E. Westerman IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Robert W. Bowen, Robert S. Grubmeyer, Edward A. Herre, Jr., Samuel A. McCaulley, Jr., Frank G. Ort, Louis F. Wittman. JUNIORS O. Merrill David, Leonard H. Diehl, Jr., John C. Remington, III, Kenneth R. Remington, James M. Roberts, Jr., H. Edgar Walther, Jr. SOPHOMORES M. Dayton Burgy, William B. Campbell, Richard S. Davis, Jr., Thomas R. Hunt, Joseph H. Jacoby, Robert P. Stoudt, John P. Taylor, James FRESHMEN Echa y rd L F A Wo od J K ' McKdVy ' Henry L ReUWef ' Wi iam P Rh ° ads ' Harr V M SmIfh ' Jr - A Roberf Tuc r, 161 The Legion of Honor was organized in I 868 at the Virginia Military Institute by three cadets in order to combat the unrivaled control by other secret societies on the campus. On January I, 1869, this society received its Greek name, Sigma Nu, and adopted, at the same time, all the characteristics of a college Greek letter fraternity. Sigma Nu expanded in the South only until 1885 when the Pi Chapter, the fifteenth, was founded at Lehigh. For ten years, with the exception of a short lived chapter at Yale, Pi Chapter stood alone in the East. The present house at Lehigh, almost entirely rebuilt in 1938, has the distinction of being one of the first fraternity houses on campus. Sigma Nu is represented on almost every athletic team and in almost every society or activity at Lehigh. Included in the members of Pi Chap- ter are the manager of wrestling and letter winners in five sports, track, baseball, football, soccer, and swim- ming. Sigma Nu freshmen were in football, wrestling, and track. Included in the house are the ser- geant, first lieutenant, and three members of Scabbard and Blade, four men in the Glee Club, Interna- tional Relations Club, and Newtonian Society, two members of Tone, one member of Mustard and Cheese, Epitome, and Phi Eta Sigma, and five men on the Brown and White, includ- ing a news-editor. All the pledges were initiated in February. 162 JtodMA d 4i 0B | fax fas ) r TOP ROW: Bruning, ' 39; Laubenstein ,39; Milan ' 39; Snyder 39; Bayles, ' 40; Bin gaman. ' 40; Gregg, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Haffenreffer, ' 40; Marshall, ' 40; Pearce ' 40- mT l B0TT0M°R0W : F H % r t ' £ S E, R °W: .Loom is, ' 41; Reese, ' 41 ; Zachary. ' 41; Bosak, ' 42; Bowser, ' 42; Clark, ' 42; Demberg ' 42 Elliott, 42; BOTTOM ROW: Everett, 42; Gleadall, 42; Hume, ' 42; Lees, ' 42; Lord, ' 42; Mainwaring, ' 42; Steele, ' 42; Thaeder, ' 42. PI CHAPTER IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS William E. Bruning, Raymond P. Laubenstein, William F. Nilan, H. Alan Snyder. JUNIORS Charles B. Bayles, John R. Bingaman, Jr., John C. Gregg, Adolf F. Haffenreffer, Jr., Preston F. Marshall, Robert J. Pearce. SOPHOMORES Oscar E. Anderson, Jr., John C. Attwood, Sidney B. Bowne, Jr., Charles F. Kalmbach, Emery W. Loomis, Jr., Robert W. Reese Roy S .acnary. ' ' FRESHMEN Michael J Bosak, Jr., Barnet P. Bowser, Robert W. Clark, Robert C. Demberg, George E. Elliott, Jr., Robert D. Everett, Walter W. Gleadall Jr., O. Lindsay Hume, John R. Lees, Robert O. Lord, Jr., William T. Mainwaring, Robert B. Steele, Jr., Frank R. Thaeder. 163 The Sigma Phi society, founded at Union College in 1827, is the second oldest social fraternity. It claims distinction for being the oldest national fra- ternity, having expanded to Hamilton in 1831. Conservative by nature, the society has limited its expansion to ten chapters founded consecutively at Union, Hamilton, Williams, Hobart, Vermont, Michigan, Lehigh, Cornell, Wisconsin, and Cali- fornia. The 26 members of Beta Beta, a local fraternity, were installed as the Alpha of Pennsylvania of Sigma Phi in 1887, and formed the ninth chapter of a na- tional fraternity at Lehigh. The present chapter house on Delaware Avenue was erected in 1888. Sigma Phi has retained its usual prominence in campus activities this year. It has members out for varsity and Freshman sports, as well as such extra-curricular activities as the Re- view, Mustard and Cheese, Alpha Kappa Psi, Scabbard and Blade, and Pi Tau Sigma. Among prominent Sigma Phis are the business manager and ticket manager of Mustard and Cheese and advertising manager of the Lehigh Review. A Sigma Phi was chairman of the Engineer ' s Ball and Union Triad Dance Committees, and the fraternity was also represented on the Senior Ball Committee. Of importance among Sigma Phi ' s activities was the victory over the Kappa Alphas in football. 164 J k£ TOP ROW: Clark, G. S.; Booth, ' 39; Dudman, ' 39; Irwin, ' 39; McGuigan, ' 39; McNabb, ' 39; THIRD ROW: Smith, ' 39; Truslow, ' 39- Baldwin ' 40- Darby ' 40 • Dennison, ' 40; Guilford , ' 40; SECOND ROW: Marks, ' 40; Rush, ' 40; H. Vander Veer, ' 40; Beal, ' 41; Bricker, ' 41; Critchlow, ' 41; Hanks ' 41 • ' BOTTOM ROW- Stockton, ' 41; Caulk, ' 42; Henderson, ' 42; Rich, ' 42; Spooner, ' 42; L. Vander Veer, ' 42; Warner, ' 42. ALPHA CHAPTER OF PENNSYLVANIA IN FACULTATE Frederic Mercer IN UNIVERSITATE Graduate Student— William B. Clark SENIORS Edward J. Booth, L. Henderson Dudman, William Irwin, Frank H. McGuigan, John M. McNabb, Phillip H. Smith, John U. Truslow. JUNIORS Chester C. Baldwin, Charles W. Darby, Donald G. Dennison, Charles F. Guilford, Lewis T. Marks, John B. Rush, Hugh G. Vander Veer. SOPHOMORES John P. Beal, James H. Bricker, John N. Critchlow, Fletcher Hanks, Samuel W. Stockton. FRESHMEN Lewis J. Caulk, Charles E. Henderson, John A. Pooley, Arthur H. Rich, John C. Spooner, Lindsley D. Vander Veer, Everett F. Warner. 165 SIGMA PHI EPSILON Sigma Phi Epsilon, one of the ten largest national fraternities, was founded at the University of Rich- mond in 1901. The heart-shaped badge formerly caused the members to be called Sacred Hearts , but today they are popularly known as Sig Eps . In 1907 sixteen members of a local society, Omega Pi Alpha, obtained a charter and became the Pennsylvania Chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon. It was the seventeenth of the eventual seventy chapters. The first Lehigh chapter house was located on West Fourth Street, but was later moved to the cor- ner of Fourth and Wyandotte Streets. In 1923 the present house on West Market Street was taken. Every year Sig Eps are influential in the University activities and are above the average in scholastic stand- ing. They have held offices on the Brown and White, Lehigh Review, Epitome, and in Mustard and Cheese. The athletes are on the football, base- ball, wrestling, soccer, track, and cross-country squads. O. D. K., Al- pha Kappa Psi, Pi Delta Epsilon, Scab- bard and Blade, and Tau Beta Pi are honorary societies which have Sigma Phi Epsilon men among their members. The spirit of internal friendship, continually evident in Sig Eps, is con- sidered even more valuable than the high standard which the fraternity maintains at Lehigh. Among its mem- bers there is a common understand- ing, Once a Sig Ep always a Sig Ep . bb i r% f f% - '  - ya ■- i TOP ROW: Dorer, ' 39; J. Kroner, ' 39; T. Kromer, ' 39; Hebard. ' 39; Parsons, ' 39; Simpson, ' 39; Beers, ' 40; Bothe, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Catching, ' 40; Homiller, ' 40; Merkert, ' 40; Nordt, ' 40; Phillips, ' 40; Sletten, ' 40; Bosse, ' 41; Bowman, ' 41; Butler, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Coleman, ' 41; Elliott, ' 41; Finn ' 41- Gray ' 41 ■Hackney, ' 41; Ives, ' 41; Lehr, ' 41; Wallace, ' 41; Bartlett, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Bedell, ' 42; Clark, ' 42; Cory, ' 42; Mason, ' 42; Regan, ' 42- Sanderson ' 42- Simonsen ' ' 42; Tolley, ' 42; Witherspoon, ' 42. PENNSYLVANIA EPSILON CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Fay C. Bartlett, Eric S. Sinkinson IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS John E. Dorer, Jack W. Kromer, Thomas S. Kromer, Robert H. Hebard, Robert C. Parsons, Kenneth H. Simpson. JUNIORS S. Demarest Beers, Robert S. Bothe, Walter R. Catching, Richard P. Homiller, Clifton S. Merkert, Robert A. Nordt, Edward P. Phillips, Gardner Sletten. SOPHOMORES Robert R. Bosse, Robert M. Bowman, Frederick C. Butler, S. Owen Coleman, Herbert P. Elliott, Robert E. Finn, Richardson Gray, Clarence W. Hackney, Alver H. Ives, Jr., William H. Lehr, Thomas A. Wallace. FRESHMEN Charles D. Bartlett, Jr., George A. Bedell, John F. Clark, Jr., Samuel I. Cory, Jr., Robert J. Mason, Martin J. Regan, Jr., Clarence M. Sanderson, Jr., Robert N. Simonsen, William W. Tolley, James W. Witherspoon. 167 Tau Delta Phi was founded at the College of the City of New York in 1910 and was designed to be a local organization. However, in 1914a chapter was established in New York University and in 1916 the two chapters decided to adopt a policy of cautious expansion. In 1926 a group of Lehigh undergraduates organ- ized a local group called Upsilon Kappa. The group prospered so in 1927 it petitioned the Tau Delta Phi fraternity for membership and the charter was granted the same year. In 1935 Omicron Alpha Tau, a national fraternity, merged with the Tau Delts and now there are twenty active chapters throughout United States. In the past few years there have been representatives of Tau Delta Phi in nearly every activity on the cam- pus. The group has seen two changes occur within its bounds: the trend towards Business and Arts has moved to Engineering, and the former power in athletics has moved to honorary societies. There have been men in O. D. K., Tau Beta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, Scabbard and Blade, and Phi Eta Sigma. There have been editors of all three publications, and members of every athletic team. Among la st year ' s activities was the presidency of Phi Eta Sigma. The Phi Sigma Kappa cup for the highest scholastic fraternity of the University was awarded to Tau Delta Phi. At present the fraternity national cup is ours. 168 4 f •Ti k M 4 Mdii r i ■TOP ROW: Davis, ' 39; Miller, ' 39; Popper, ' 39; Weiner, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Blank, ' 41; Dietz, ' 41; Kaplon. ' 41; Kemper ' 41- Kott ' 41- BOTTOM ROW- Segal, 41; Weil, 41; Mark, ' 42; Riemer, ' 42; Samuels, ' 42. TAU CHAPTER IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Morton Davis, Sheldon M. Miller, Robert H. Popper. JUNIORS Robert Siegel, Harold Weiner. SOPHOMORES Raymond E. Blank, Richard M. Dietz, Morton F. Kaplon, David Kemper, II, Seymour H. Kott, Jacques Segal, II, Martin A. Weil. FRESHMEN Carl Creidenberg, Sandor A. Mark, Howard W. Riemer, Abram Samuels, II. 169 A DELTA CHI Theta Delta Chi was founded on October 31, 1847 at Union College, and was the twelfth national fraternity to be established. The fraternity consists of twenty-eight active charges throughout the United States and Canada. Limited membership has always been the policy of the fraternity. Theta Delta Chi, becoming leaders in the fraternity world, was the first to originate pledge buttons, the fra- ternity flag and magazine, and the present grand lodge form of national fraternity government. Nu Deuteron Charge was the fifth national fra- ternity established at Lehigh, having been founded in 1884. The present house, located on South Moun- tain, was built in 1919 and enlarged in 1937. Interest in extra-curricular activi- ties was shown by Theta Delta Chi as various athletics and honorary so- cieties were well represented. Jim Carringer captained the golf team and Andy Martin was manager. Leo Hesselman was a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, and Dan Knowland was active on the varsity swimming team. Other active members were: Charlie Cole, Brown and White; Ed Dannemiller, Scabbard and Blade; Rudy Kremer, track team; Ed Brindle, junior varsity football; and Bob Lea- vens and Matt Morris were out for intra-mural debating. Stuart Lewis was secretary of Pi Tau Sigma, mem- ber of the International Relations Club and Scabbard and Blade. 170 ._ .IT I f3 f 3 TOP ROW: Becker, ' 39; Carringer, ' 39; Draper, ' 39; Hesselman, ' 39; Knowland, ' 39; Lewis, ' 39; Martin, ' 39; THIRD ROW: J. Morris, ' 39; M. Morris, ' 39; Baggot, ' 40; Brindle, ' 40; Dannemiller, ' 40; Fischel, ' 40; Hand, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Hewitt, ' 40; Kremer, ' 40; Leavens, ' 40; West, ' 40; Andrae, ' 41; Bensen ' , ' 41; Cole, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Curran, ' 41; Lippe, ' 41; Adams, ' 42; Bown, ' 42; Brough, ' 42; Donahue, ' 42; Hird, ' 42; Parsons, ' 42. NU DEUTERON CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Walter R. Okeson, Philip M. Palmer, Harry M. Ullmann IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS John L. Becker, Jr., James R. Carringer, Jr., Addison D. Draper, Leo W. Hesselman, Jr., Daniel P. Knowland, Jr., Stuart N. Lewis, Andrew R. Martin, Joseph C. Morris, Matthew K. Morris. JUNIORS Richard C. Baggot, Edward H. Brindle, Edward F. Dannemiller, John J. Fischel, Thomas B. Hand, Frank H. Hewitt, Jr., Rudolf H Kremer Robert W. Leavens, William W. West, Jr. SOPHOMORES Robert W. Andrae, Frederic E. Bensen, II, Charles B. Cole, John P. Curran, Douglas H. Lippe. FRESHMEN Vernon H. Adams, Ralph Bown, Jr., Samuel R. Brough, James J. Donahue, Jr., Ralph C. Hird, George E. Parsons, Jr. 171 THETA KAPP B During the year 1916 a group of Lehigh students found themselves frequently together and certain of them, recognizing the mutual congeniality of the group, started a movement to bring about a binding organization. Just what form the group was to take was never known, for it was disbanded by the war. Shortly after the war, the organization was taken up again by the men who had returned to finish their courses, and on October 1 , 1919, Theta Kappa Phi was founded. Amalgamation with a prominent local fraternity at Penn State College was accomplished in 1922, thus beginning the expansion of Theta Kappa Phi to thirteen active chapters and ten active alumni clubs. The Alpha Chapter of Theta Kappa Phi does not push men into activities. Nevertheless, individual members are active in extra-curricular activities, including publications, dramatics, and various athletics. As for athletics, the fraternity is represented by men on the tennis, swimming, wrestling, and football teams. One member is manager of track and others are competing for the managerships of wrestling, foot- ball, and track. The Alpha Chapter has also participated in intra-mural sports, winning honors in football and softball. Several of the members are high in scholarship, and have received scholastic honors as well as member- ship in various honorary societies. 172 t tas f% ex f% - - ' A - ' .-M TOP How Man an d W 4n C0 M aZZi ' n ; M b C 6r 39; F i ' i ' and, 40; Merz, 40; McFadd on, ' 41 ; Schineiler, McFadden, ' 40; Smith ' 40- Stee ' 40-T fl „„ l ' ' in ' SSun ' SW 1 ' 3 , 9; Hory ' ' 4 ° : ™ IRD ROW: Grafton, ' 40; Hammond, ' 40; 41; Sipp, ' 4,; BOTTOM Ro ' w! I H;, VkS. ' Ko ' do d ' «■Mahoney, ' 42; McElroy, ' 42; Sexton, ' 42. : ilippone, Frank J. Gibbons, Thomas V. Murto, Joseph A. Oless, Frank J. Washabauqh. ALPHA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Morris E. Kanaly IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS Joseph J. Comazzi, Richard D. Faber, Francis S Fili JUNIORS ' ' ' ' JOie P n M - ( - ess - l ranlt -J- Washabaugh J F :rl1te? g : y j u |;r E el Ta n ge 1. raft0n ' J ° Seph L Hamm ° nd ' Ge ° e W ' H - Ia d . Herman E. Merz, John J. McFadden, Daniel E. Smith, SOPHOMORES L WtoAT JmE R Mi b « ' C ' • ■ward W. K rau , Ke,o„ M. M„ io , M J. Sc „ in e„e, John FRESHMEN WiHiam J. K.ehnle, Thomas D. Lloyd, John S. Macdonald, Harold E. Mahoney, WiHiam P. McElroy, Joseph M. Sexton, Orville J. Stephen, 173 THETA The Theta Xi fraternity was founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute on April 29, 1864. It was the result of two dissenting factions within the then existing Sigma Delta fraternity, a local organization at Rensselaer. Eight of these dissenters withdrew from Sigma Delta and founded a new society, with the intention of making it national in scope. After a long period of conservative growth, it now has thirty-six active chapters in leading colleges. Fourteen charter members were initiated on De- cember 3, 1903, and since that time more than 300 men have received initiation into the Eta Chapter. After various chapter houses, the present one at 407 Delaware Ave., was obtained in September, 1928. Theta Xi fraternity this year, as usual, produced its share of outstand- ing men in campus activities. Al- though we were an active social fra- ternity — not specializing in sports — we were well represented in this field. Collectively we produced high ranking intra-mural teams in football, basketball, bowling, and baseball. In- dividually we well represented Theta Xi in many sports, especially swim- ming, football, and baseball. The interests of the members are many and varied. We have our share of sport managers. National and lo- cal honoraries are also well repre- sented. There are Theta Xis in such musical organizations as the Band, Orchestra, and Glee Club. 174 ni f i r TOP ROW: Adam, Rebert, ' 39; Schaefe ' 40; Robinson, ' 40; Luley, ' 41; Randall, Seltzer, ' 40; Simmons, ' 40- SECOND ROW Co n hh 4 C J n l ! Ham , ,lton ; 40 : Klemschmidt. ' 40; Kohring, ' 40; McGinn „; BOTTOM ROW: Sneib,e y , Sf! ' C t J ' T trSr t S 5 ETA CHAPTER IN FACULTATE Jacob L. Beaver, William H. Formhals, Donald M. Fraser, Alexander W. Luce, John C. Mertz IN UNIVERSITATE SENIORS se sate fttastis: steM a ffi ii fe - H JUNIORS SOPHOMORES iui; Descheemaebr, John V. Downs, William E. Good, Willard . Luiey, Lewis r. Kandall, Jr., John W. She.bley, Kenneth W. Trone, Frederic W. Wilson, Jr. FRESHMEN wSms 65 • C ° nrad ' Vem0n Ev3nS ' Jr Ge ° e P ' M — ■ber t F. Turnauer, H. Alton Vaughn, Jr., Donald Von der Hyde, Kingsley G. 175 George A. Albrecht, President of the Interdor- mitory Council and Sec- tion-chief, Taylor Hall, D. CN The enlargement of the dormitory system at Lehigh made apparent the need for an organized dormitory governing body. This need has been met by the creation of the Interdormitory Council which was organized in 1938 by George Albrecht, representative of the dormitories in Arcadia of Lehigh University, the student governing body. The purposes of the Council are: to provide a higher tribunal in which dormitory matters ay be discussed, to carry on and develop more fully dormitory social m TOP ROW: Kurtz, Lesser, Beardslee, Tilton; SECOND ROW: Heller, Santmyers, Hart, Cardwell, Stopp; BOTTOM ROW: Hartma n, Saussaman, Albrecht, Kelley, Re d. John D. Saussaman, Sec- retary of the Interdormi- tory Council and Section- chief of Taylor Hall, E. George E. Kelley, Treas- urer of the Interdormitory Council and Head of Price Hall. and intramural functions, to work for a more cohesive and cooperative relationship among dormitory men, and to serve as a coordinating body between the dormitories and the University. The Council is composed of elected leaders who are the official representatives of their living groups. A cooperative relationship is maintained with the student governing body of the University since the constitution of the Interdormitory Council provides that the Council president is also dormitory representative on the Arcadia Cabinet. The Interdormitory Council provides an incentive for higher dormitory scholastic achievement by presenting a scholarship cup to the dormitory section which attains the highest living group average. Intramural trophies are awarded to those dormitory living groups which excel in the various intramural sports. Champion of the dormitory league plays the winner of the fraternity league to decide the school championship. At the Fall and Spring houseparties, the Council sponsors an Interdormitory dance which is open to all students of the University. Through the medium of a Public Relations Committee, the Council is able to develop rnore adequate public recognition of dormitory functions and achievements. Through the Council dormitory men have successfully developed the esprit de corps and coop- eration so essential in every well organized living group. In its first year of organization the Council has proved its worth by getting the dormitory sections, who here-to-fore acted as individual groups, to unite as a single body. List of members can be found on page 302. 177 Spring makes one want to be out of doors. Taylor Hall Richards House Price Hall Leonard Hall TOP ROW: Aldrich, ' 39; Baiz, ' 39; Pierpont, ' 39; Sutcliffe, ' 39; SECOND ROW: Moreau, ' 40; Richardson, ' 40; Tucker, ' 40; Hamblin, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: King, ' 41; Plante, ' 41; Bliss, ' 42; Richards, ' 42. SENIORS Herbert P. Aldrich, John K. Baiz, Wilson W. Pierpont, John E. Sutcliffe, Jr. JUNIORS Jules L. Moreau, Carl H. Richardson, Randall B. Tucker. SOPHOMORES John F. Harnblin, Harold King, Jr., Leon H. Plante. FRESHMEN Welles R. Bliss, David E. Richards. Leonard Hall was founded in 1908 by the Right Reverend Ethelbert Talbot, Bishop of Bethlehem and a Lehigh trustee, to assist worthy Lehigh men to prepare for the ministry of the Episcopal Church. Mr. Eckley B. Coxe, a member of the family which gave the Coxe Mining Laboratory to Lehigh, provided the funds to erect the building and also an endowment. Former Leonard Hall members are now distinctive in the Episcopal Church. 180 o a fa c ci f : C CI (ffl fil O ■ . Q ,f-- J - ■ ' Jr « ' • T5 ft c fgl v h C) a t a a . t? a. k k t XV, 1 CS fAV ' y? ' .- TOP ROW: Bloss, 39; Donaldson, ' 39; Helwig, ' 39; Kelley, ' 39; Stanchick, ' 39; Tanczyn, ' 39; Weiss, ' 39; Branch, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Clock ' 40- Rttkau 40; Koemg, 40; Kowalyshyn, ' 40; Partrick, ' 40; Schrader, ' 40; Smith, ' 40; Spilman, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Tait, ' 40; Chase ' 41- Eadie ' 41- Gilchrist ' 41; G.tzendanner, 41; Huntoon, ' 41; Lewis, ' 41; Messinger, ' 41; Mowen, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Phelan, ' 41; Schaffer, ' 41; Schork ' 41 ■Atkins ' 42 : Bright, ' 42; Rathbun, ' 42; Scott, ' 42; Vollherbst, ' 42; Weber. ' 42. GRADUATE STUDENT Nelson P. Yeardley. SENIORS Arnold M. Bloss, Holland H. Donaldson, Jr., Ralph W. Helwig, George E. Kelley, Andrew J. Stanchick, Harry Tanczyn, Eric Weiss. JUNIORS John Branch, Richard F. Clock, Carl R. Fittkau, Robert F. Koenig, Russell Kowalyshyn, Arthur D. Partrick Charles T Schrader Raymond M. Smith, Robert B. Spilman, Gordon E. Tait, Robert F. Wolfe. SOPHOMORES Wilbur Chase, Jr., Donald Eadie, Claude D. Gilchrist, Edward M. Gilmore, Louis G. Gitzendanner, Raymond C Huntoon Thomas J. Lewis, Jr., George F. Messinger, John H. Mowen, James M. Phelan, Robert L. Schaffer, Leonard E. Schork. FRESHMEN Harry M. Atkins, Richard R. Bright, Leon H. Rathbun, Jr., Nicholas T. Scott, Edward P. Vollherbst, Jr., Kurt H. Weber. Price Hall has served the University as a dormitory since the World War. It was named in honor of Dr. Henry R. Price, former president of the Board of Trustees. The building was erected as a brewery in the late I800 ' s and was known as Die Brauerei. Lehigh students of former years regarded their relationship with Die Brauerei as an indispensable extra- curricular activity. Die Brauerei to Price Hall— production to consump- tion — the history of a dormitory. 181 High above the Armory it stands, a sprawl- ing mass of stone formed by collegiate gothic architecture into Richards House. The unsul- lied walls and smell of fresh paint proclaim its newness and tell the world it has no traditions to revere. But Richards House needs no tradition. It is not of the past but of the present and the future. It is not the ending but the beginning of a plan to bring Lehigh men together on the campus. It is the solidified dream of a stern, little man who wanted the many students spurned each year by the fraternities to have a better, more attractive place to live. Charles Russ Richards is a stranger to pres- ent Lehigh men. He left before the class of 1939 arrived. But Dr. Richards, who now lives in Minneapolis, built the present day Greater Lehigh in his 13 years as president. And to him a Greater Lehigh always included a new dormitory, not one dormitory but seven grouped together on the hill below the Lookout. To promote his idea he had a model of this project placed in Memorial hall of the Alumni building. Then he waited with the hope that sometime, from somewhere, he could get the money that would make his dreams come true. But Dr. Richards waited in vain. His health failed him and he resigned. Two years later, Lehigh was still growing, and the trustees had money — money which they could not invest advantageously. Then President C. C. Williams suggested erection of the first dormitory unit on a plan that would assure the University a satisfactory return on its money. Soon Richards House was underway. Soon it was completed and furnished at a cost of nearly $300,000. Into the new dormitory last Fall came 144 students. Within a month they were organized into seven sections. It was not long before the dormitories realized that now they were strong enough to battle the fraternities for control of campus offices and organizations. Representa- tives of Taylor Hall and Price Hall joined with representatives from Richards House, and the result was the Interdormitory Council. Since most of the students at Richards House were underclassmen, few were able to achieve great prominence in undergraduate extra-cur- ricular activities. But residents of the house could be found in every activity. They are beginning a tradition which the students who come after them will be glad to carry on — a tradition that will lead each resident into some activity where he can better himself. DR. CHARLES RUSS RICHARDS, sixth president, is known as the creator of Greater Lehigh. He came here in 1922 and left in 1935 worn out by his labors. During his administration, Packard laboratory and the new Library were erected, every building was renovated, and the campus roads were paved. He created the office of dean and established the Students Health Service, the admissions office, and the placement bureau. He added many new depart- ments and reorganized Lehigh ' s three colleges. A courageous liberal, he made his presence felt every- where, and everywhere was bettered by his presence. I T 4 ROT OM Tnw ' t Heim , b t aC , h ; , ' 4 r ; R f che ' 40 ' , W ° K ' ' 4 ° ; i B f il 7 ' ' 4h SECOND ROW: Ber 9 er ' ' ' ! De nis ' ' 4I : K ° 4 i Adrian, ' 42; Bower,, ' 42; Duncan, 42; BOTTOM ROW: Epprecht, 42; Gordon, 42; Klein, 42; Melceel, 42; Osborn, ' 42; Rowe, ' 42. SENIOR William H. Lesser, Jr. JUNIORS William W. Heimbach, Harold E. Recher, Irwin D. Wolf, Jr. SOPHOMORES Frank H. Bailey, Fred W. Berger, Harry G. Dennis, Edward H. Kotz, Jr. FRESHMEN LaiL r Jr r alt |f r | B n B °T£ ol 1 j J o hn E E PP recht ' Richard C. Gordon, Donald Halbedl, Louis E. Klein, Donald W. Layton, Ihomas C. Mekeel, David C. Osborn, Gordon Rowe, John T. Ransom, II. Section Kyne Selection Jwo 4 SENIOR Nevin C. Har+man. SOPHOMORES Boris Baiko, Philip G. Foust, Jr., Jerry C. Hubeny, Richard B. Johnson, George H. M. LeRoy, William S. McConnor, John Ryle, Jr. FRESHMEN: Nelson R. Clark, Jr., Fenton R. Cloud, Ward A. Detwiler, II, William A. Eisele, Joseph B. Evaul, James Gore, III, Joseph A. Gould, Robert N. Gusdorff, Ralph L. Haney, Paul T. Helm, Arthur B. Johnston, Norman L. Maguire, Robert F. Pegg, Theophile Saulnier, Jr., Ouintus P. Witte, Jr. TOP ROW: Hartman, ' 39; Baiko, ' 41; Foust, ' 41; LeRoy, ' 41; McConnor, ' 41; Ryle, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Clark, ' 42; Cloud, ' 42; Detwiler, ' 42; Eisele, ' 42; Evaul, ' 42; Gore, ' 42; Gould, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Gusdorff, Haney, ' 42; Johnston, ' 42; Maguire, ' 42; Pegg, ' 42; Saulnier, ' 42; Witte, ' 42. S ection Jwo vL5 SENIORS Herman J. Baumann, Charles W. Hart, III. JUNIOR Robert A. Cary. SOPHOMORES Edward D. Heins, John A. Kauffmann, Edwin M. Markel, Edwin A. McKanna, Philip B. Robeson, Frank A. Zimmermann. FRESHMEN Jesse O. Betterton, Jr., Alfred E. Horka, Harry W. Jones, Jr., John C. Lampert, John S. Macdonald, Robert R. Macy, Albert Miller, Basil Odell, Jr., John L. Peterson, Robert W. Rosenquest, Howard O. Schroeder, Wallace R. Wirths. TOP ROW: Baumann, ' 39; Hart, ' 39; Cary, ' 40; Heins, ' 41; Kauffmann. ' 41; Markel, ' 41; McKanna, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Robeson, ' 41; Zimmermann, ' 41; Betterton, ' 42; Horka, ' 42; Jones, ' 42; Lampert, ' 42; Macdonald, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Macy, ' 42; Miller, ' 42; Odell, ' 42; Peterson, ' 42; Rosenquest, ' 42; Schroeder, ' 42; Wirths, ' 42. 184 - '  5? O ' j  - i k «3fc i Mid .. j Mi cs ff zs r f$. di A 7 ■Section Jkree At JUNIORS Herbert F. Engelman, James F. Goodwin, Howard J. Lewis, Richard F. Pearce. SOPHOMORES John C. Barr, Harry F. Jones, Jacques J. Leroux, Henry L. Sondheim, Joseph E. Stopp. FRESHMEN Robert S. IBarker, William T. Bostocl Jr., James H. Buss, James H. Galli, Panos B. Georqopulo p W. Saitta, Jr., ig. j . ' T ' • , « ' i Jr - James n - D «, James M. toalli, Kanos B. Georqopulo, James F Goodwin, Charles J Little, Raymond LMeckbach, Philip W. Saitta, Jr., William J. Skinner, Henry C. Stieglitz ' John P. Troy, Frederick W. Wright, Jr., Robert R. Young. X ' egiirz, Z iS$S ri2 M3FJS£ ttJSKCR S: Ks a Section Jhree (Jj$ JUNIORS Leonard D. Morrison, John J. Nicol, Arthur Wetherbee, Jr. SOPHOMORES Robert D. Board, Charles E. Clain. FRESHMEN tber+ F ' G Bel Eftne; V £ l n i „ a, G F - + BOOre r l BrU6 ' Jr ' Uonard R Constants, William S. Dawless, d j iVw c ' 2 fantner, George W. Hanson, Gene Marusi, James W. Needles Harrv W P,„„ Rudolf W. Samer, Grendon K. Sebold, Frederick L. Villa, Raymond S. Willard, Jr Joseph A Wybr. ' Samer, ' 42; Sebold, ' 42; Villa, ' 42; Wiilard ' 42; Wyler. ? 42 ' ' ' ' B ° TT ° M R ° W: Needles ' ' A2 ' Pa V ' «! 187 S )ectL m jrovir 4 GRADUATE STUDENT Charles M. Antoni. JUNIORS Samuel S. Cross, Jr., William C. McJames, Elwood Webster. SOPHOMORE Robert L. Tilton. FRESHMEN Franklin D. Bush, William H. Corddry, John R. Dodge, Henry W. Eckel, William P. Eckel, Russell C. Gebert, Jr., Gilbert P. Haven, Leslie I. Kerr, Edwin H. Klein, William B. McClenachan, John C. McClure, Robert C. McMichaels, Donald M. Middleton, David R. Smith. TOP ROW- Antoni, G. S.; McJames, ' 40; Webster, ' 40; Tilton, ' 41; Bush, ' 42; Corddry, ' 42; SECOND ROW: Dodge, ' 42; H. Eckel, ' 42; W. Eckel, ' 42; Gebert, ' 42; Haven, ' 42; Kerr, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Klein, ' 42; McClenachan, ' 42; McClure, ' 42; McMichaels, ' 42; Middleton, ' 42; Smith, ' 42. J )ecti m yovir d5 JUNIOR Gilbert P. Cardwell. SOPHOMORES Walter P. Blamire, George S. Cooper, Frank J. Harrold, Albert E. Lee, Jr., Francis J. Panzarello, John W. Prinkey, Jr. FRESHMEN George B. Benedict, Edward M. Biggs, Jr., William A. Brooks, Charles P. Davidson, Frank R. Dirkes, Jr., Harold E. Foster, Robert J. McGreger, Robert Metzner, George F. Minde, Robert A. Nicrosini. TOP ROW: Cardwell, ' 40; Blamire, ' 41; Cooper, ' 41; Harrold, ' 41; Lee, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Panzarello, ' 41; Prinkey, ' 41; Benedict, ' 42; Biggs, ' 42; Brooks, ' 42; Davidson, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Dirkes, ' 42; Foster, 42; McGreger, ' 42; Metzner, ' 42; Minde, ' 42; Nicrosini, ' 42. 188 Taylor Hall is the gift of Andrew Carnegie to Lehigh University. In presenting this dormi- tory to the University, Mr. Carnegie accom- plished a two-fold purpose: first, he helped to fill a long felt need for better living conditions among the undergraduates; and second, he honored his former business partner, Charles L. Taylor, 76, a former University trustee, by naming the dormitory Taylor Hall. Taylor Hall is unique in the fact in that it was one of the first all concrete buildings to be erected in this section of the country. Although much difficulty was encountered in its con- struction, Taylor Hall has stood the test of time, and today, after thirty years of ade- quately housing many Lehigh men, it stands as a fitting memorial to Andrew Carnegie and Charles Taylor. Taylor Hall, which houses one hundred and thirty-five students, is divided into five distinct living groups. Each of these groups has its own separate governing organization, headed by a section-chief who is assisted by other neces- sary officers. All of the dormitory sections have a membership in the Interdormitory Council and this membership enables each section to have a voice in the matters common to dormi- tory men. Great rivalry has been built up among the sections in the Hall through the various intra- mural sports. This rivalry has been further increased in the past year through the donation of intramural trophies by the Interdormitory Council. A considerable number of Taylor Hall members actively participate in varsity and Freshmen sports. The members of Taylor Hall ' s five living groups are very proud of their enviable scho- lastic record, for the general average has always been extremely high, and individual sec- tions, at several times, have led the University in scholarship rating. Further proof of our high scholarship is the fact that Phi Beta Kappa and Tau Beta Pi tap men annually from the Hall. The members of this dormitory have been active constantly in the field of extra-curricular activities, including: music, publications, and organizations. CHARLES LEWIS TAYLOR, E.M. ' 76, loyal son of Lehigh, belonged to the Lehigh of the past, but his memory belongs to Lehigh men of all time. Charlie, he would like us to call him that, believed in Lehigh. No matter where he worked, no matter how successful he became, he always found time to devote to aiding Lehigh. In 1906 he secured from Andrew Carnegie, with whom he had been associated in business, the money for a new dormitory. It was the generous Scot who stipulated that it be named Taylor Hall. Taylor, himself, donated the gymnasium and field house. He died on February 3, 1922 while convalescing in California. S7° p W; 40 :tt:; d ; : S C ECON 9 D f6W:if ' ! , H« J ,3 !ir ' 5i. ' 3 R ' ' l ' W Cr ° ' ' 4 ° : Ga ' braith ' ' 6 ™V McGee, ' 42; Nitti, ' 42; O ' Hara, ' 42; Sebald, ' 42. ' ' R L °° Se ' 4I; Mohr ' 4I ' R!tchie . l; BOTTOM ROW: Schaeffer, ' 41; Stickel, ' 41 GRADUATE STUDENTS Paul M. Brubalcer, George B. Cushing. SENIORS Robert H. Jauck, Donald Santmyers, Vincent M. White. r , , . „ JUNIORS Charles F. Barton, Jr., Bertram J. Cross, Fred E. Galbraith, Jr., Vernon S. Gray, Jr., John J. McClusby, Bernard E. Tripp, J, Wll- u n SOPHOMORES H. sSd TltbS J?St :° Wn ' N ° rman ' • HaSS ' J ° hn R L ° OSe ' R ° bert J - L — ' A. Mohr, George M. Ritchie, Jr., George FRESHMEN James McGee, John J. Nitti, John B. O ' Hara, Leslie E. Sebald. 2)e ti eciion 4 Section d5 SENIORS John A. Jackson, Robert B. Kirtz, David H. Miller, Paul Munoz, Jr., Andrew F. Sayko, William E. Schwanda. JUNIORS Charles H. Bro+herton, Roy H. Fredrickson, Paul Karlik, Jr., William C. Lewis, Anders F. Myhr, James L. Oberg, Maynard H. Patterson, George F. Shenton, Henry Van Reed, Robert G. Waite, Charles E. West. SOPHOMORES Alfons A. Duffek, Frederick S. Klopp, Benjamin Ojserkis, David M. Parke, Henry Strenkofsky, Jr. FRESHMEN John P. Allen, Frank T. Brundage, William E. Gheen, William W. Goshorn, Charles E. Kroupa, John D. McClay, Edward H. McClister, Victor E. Smith, Stuart H. Vogt, LeRoy A. Wiley. TOP ROW- Jackson, ' 39; Kurtz, ' 39; Miller, ' 39; Sayko, ' 39; Schwanda, ' 39; Fredrickson, ' 40; SECOND ROW: Karlik, ' 40; Myhr, ' 40; Oberg, ' 40; Klopp, ' 41; Ojserkis, ' 41; Strenkofsky, ' 41; Allen, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Brundage. ' 42; Gheen, ' 42; Goshorn, ' 42; Kroupa, ' 42; Smith, ' 42; Vogt, ' 42; Wiley, ' 42. Section O GRADUATE STUDENT Kenneth R. Cox. SENIORS Robert K. Eunson, John H. Heller, Emery J. Varga. JUNIORS William R. Clark, Carlton E. Creitz, Michael R. Durochik, William D. Green, Ernest F. Johnson, William N. Mills, Robert K. Potter, Robert B. Rauer. SOPHOMORES Jack R. Dennis, Raymond R. Myers, Charles R. Rogers, Richard E. Slee, Eduardo B. Valdes, William H. Van Der Beck. FRESHMEN James H. Boucher, Richard W. Fidler, Rudd M. Gutshall, Richard P. Hazard, George H. Leach, Jesse B. Loucks, William J. Meikle, John D. Van Blarcom. TOP ROW- Eunson ' 39- Heller, ' 39; Varga, ' 39; Clark, ' 40; Creitz, ' 40; Durochik, ' 40; THIRD ROW: Green, ' 40; Johnson, ' 40; Mills ' 40- Potter, ' 40; Rauer, ' 40; Dennis, ' 41; SECOND ROW: Myers, ' 41; Rogers, ' 41; Slee, ' 41; Valdes, ' 4l ; Van Der Beck, ' 4 1; Boucher, ' 42; BOTTOM ROW: Gutshall, ' 42; Hazard, ' 42; Leach, ' 42; Loucks, ' 42; Meikle, ' 42; Van Blarcom, ' 42. 192 u - , mlim  f If. ■HT ' 1 llilij iMk A w l Akl io  M M ( ) n n c. i o o r r . cS QiC C . Cs, J p - H% S • s f p j 15 !_ 4 2, S ■f? aur m I i41l ftk Section =Jj GRADUATE STUDENTS Edward H. Mount, Charles H. Titus. SENIORS George A. Albrecht, Brower R. Ellis, Richard D. Halligan, Irving E. Lempert, Albert S. Raff. JUNIORS Lester R. Bittel, James C. Feldmann, Sterling C. Lippincott, Herbert E. Rasmussen, Harold P. Wilson Brooks Woods SOPHOMORES Merrill Bernard, Jr., William J. Feigley, William S. Fiske, Frederick R. Gilmore. Robert R. Halligan, Carl Martdegen III. Henry T. Kalinoski, Stephen T. Lowry, Theodore M. Mantis, Ellsworth L. Sentz, Edgar C Slack bdward F. Williams. FRESHMEN J D e ? e F te ' Ja n m f, H - B| eiler, Paul W. Marshall, Richard Munnikhuysen, Frederick S. Nolte, Richard G. Petersen, William R. Woodruff. TOP ROW: Mount, G. S.; T.tus, G. S.; Albrecht, ' 39; Ellis, ' 39; R. D. Halligan. ' 39; Lempert, ' 39; Raff, ' 39; THIRD ROW: Bittel ' 41 Feldmann, 40; Lippincott. 40; Rasmussen, 40; Bernard, ' 41; Feigley, ' 41; Gilmore, ' 41; SECOND ROW: R. R. Halligan ' ' 4 ™7R, 4 ; Kalinoski, 41; Lowry 4 ; Mantis, 41; Sentz, ' 41; Slack, ' 41; BOTTOM ROW: Williams, ' 41; Beers ' 42 ' Bleiler ' ' 4 Marshall, ' 42; Munnikhuysen, ' 42; Nolte, ' 42; Petersen, ' 42; Woodruff, ' 42 e ti ecuon € am SENIORS Donald W Cooper, Leonard P. Elly, Allan W. Hendricks, Allan Hoffman, Robert J. McCurdy, III, Willi H. Utto, John C. Saussaman, Nelson R. Smith, Craig S. Thomas. JUNIORS Bernard Altshuler, Bernard Berkowitz, George E. Lien, Donald W. MacFeeters, Eldon M. Roemmele. SOPHOMORES Donald A. Bender, George Holby, Covel T. Jerauld, Brook J. March, John D. Mettler, Jr., Joseph W. Schall Allen H. Zane. r FRESHMEN Alan H. Conklin, Milton A. Davis, Donald W. Kurtz, Clyde C. Ruffle. Smfth ' T T ' ' ■„ il l V ' i V e nd r k 3 !i ° ffman ' 39: McCurd V. ' 3?; Otto, ' 39; THIRD ROW: Saussaman, ' 39; Smth. 39 Thomas, 39; Altshuler 40; Berkow t . Li ' 4Q; SECOND ROW: MacFeeters, ' 40; Roemmele, ' 40; Bender ' 41 Holby, 41 ; Jerauld, 41 ; March, 41 ; BOTTOM ROW: Mettler, ' 41 ; Schall, ' 41 ; Zane, ' 41 ; Conklin, ' 42; Davis, ' 42; Kurtz, ' 42; Ruffle! 195 Dean Wray H. Congdon greets Thomas Fleischer, one of the ten regional scholarsh ip winners. TOP ROW: Scoblionko, Uhler, Sutcliffe, Gaughran, Rife, Hartman; SECOND ROW: Shearer, McDon- ough, Lempert, Levy, McQuail, Herman; BOTTOM ROW: Schafer. Edwards, Hanline, Hurst, Moesel, Burnett. PHI BETA KAPPA icer ALBERT HARING President TOMUNSON FORT Vice-President PHILIP M. PALMER.... Secretary ROY B. COWIN Treasurer Phi Beta Kappa, the nation ' s oldest frater- nity, was organized on December 5, 1776, at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. However, its prominence as a national honor- ary for scholastic excellence in literae human- iores did not spread until after 1883 when the first national council was organized. Before this Phi Beta Kappa could be found at many col- leges throughout the South and East, but the recognition accorded each chapter depended more or less upon local conditions. In March, 1886, there were on the faculty of Lehigh four members of Phi Beta Kappa. These four along with the Right Reverend Mark A. DeWolfe Howe, bishop of the Bethle- hem diocese of the Episcopal church and presi- dent of the Board of Trustees of Lehigh Uni- versity, petitioned the National Council to charter a chapter at Lehigh. After an investi- gation, the charter was granted, and on April 15, 1887, the Lehigh chapter was formally in- stalled as Beta of Pennsylvania. At the same meeting at which the Lehigh chapter was granted a charter, the Dickinson College chap- ter was approved as Alpha of Pennsylvania. Today, the names of those five charter mem- bers with but one exception, mean little to Lehigh men. The exception is Dr. Edward Hig- ginson Williams who in 1885 organized at Le- high, Tau Beta Pi, the Phi Beta Kappa of engineering. A council of faculty members selects each year the seniors in Lehigh ' s three colleges who have shown scholastic excellence in non-tech- nical subjects. Including the class of 1939, 385 seniors have been initiated; but one man is known to have turned down an invitation to join. At one time a Phi Beta Kappa lecture was given on the evening before Commencement, but since 1920 the lecture has been given in connection with a joint meeting with the Lafay- ette chapter and is held early in May. 198 L embers FACULTY Gellert S. Alleman Frank C. Becker William H. Bohning Frederick A. Bradford Sydney M. Brown Stanley C. Bunce J. Calvin Callaghan Neil Carothers Preston B. Carwile Roy B. Cowin George B. Curtis Edward H. Cutler Herbert M. Diamond Adelbert Ford Tomlinson Fort Fred H. Gertz Lawrence H. Gipson Clarence C. Green Albert Haring George D. Harmon Garth A. Howland John I. Kirkpatrick Kenneth K. Kost Charles R. Larkin Voris V. Latshaw William C. McDermott John C. Mertz Robert P. More Edward H. Mount Harvey A. Neville John T. O ' Neil Philip M. Palmer Arthur E. Pitcher George E. Raynor Joseph B. Reynolds Edgar H. Riley James P. Sell J. Burke Severs Lloyd L. Smail Benjamin L. Snavely William R. Transue Francis J. Trembley John S. Tremper George P. Winship STUDENT Carl F. Brown Franc H. Burnett Ernest E. Edwards Eugene R. L. Gaughran Wilson C. Hanline Nevin C. Hartman Kenneth I. Herman George E. Hurst Irving E. Lempert Jerome B. Levy Edward V. McDonough Robert P. McQuail Frederick C. Moesel Charles J. Rife Franklyn F. Schafer Raphael G. Scoblionko James L. Shearer John E. Sutcliffe Walter M. Uhler Eric Weiss COUNCIL Frank C. Becker Roy B. Cowin Tomlinson Fort Rt. Rev. J. T. Hamilton Albert Haring Garth A. Howland Robert P. More Philip M. Palmer ALBERT HARING, president of the Beta Chapter of Pennsylvania of Phi Beta Kappa, is an associate professor of economics. 199 TOP ROW: Perkins, Osborn, Beaver, Morgan, Billinger; THIRD ROW: Worsley, Saussaman, Eichen- berg, Lambert, Greenwell, Helwig, Morford, Moesel; SECOND ROW: Kemmer, Cooper, Grant, Bright, Cox, Trexler, Burnett, Tanczyn; BOTTOM ROW: Lewis, Layman, Helns, Patton, Jones, White, Barsy, Parsons. TAU BETA PI Jfhcer$ JAMES E. PATTON President EARL HEINS Vice-President ALLEN F. JONES Recording Secretary CHARLES S. LAYMAN Corresponding Secretary DONALD W. COOPER Treasurer VINCENT M. WHITE Cataloguer Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh in 1885 by Professor Edward H. Williams, then head of the mining department of Lehigh. Dr. Williams saw the necessity for a national engineering society whose objects, a? expressed by the con- stitution, are to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and exem- plary character as undergraduates or by their attainments as alumni, and to foster a spirit of liberal culture in the engineering schools of America. Dr. Williams ' prime motive for founding the society was to establish a firmer tie between the progressive students and the members of the faculty. Filling a place previously vacant in the scho- lastic world, the growth of Tau Beta Pi was only a question of time. The parent chapter existed alone until I 892, when a chapter at the Univer- sity of Michigan was founded. Tau Beta Pi has grown steadily until there are now 70 active chapters which have initiated over 30,000 mem- bers. The association is now recognized as one of the vital factors in the life of the engineering schools of America. Tau Beta Pi is proud to have among its mem- bers many leaders in all the phases of campus life. The society ' s activities are broad. The society fosters high scholarship among the un- dergraduates of the university by presenting prizes to outstanding students on Founder ' s Day. To be eligible for membership a senior must have a 2.5 average, a junior a 3 average. In the Spring there is a committee of Tau Beta Pi and Phi Beta Kappa members formed for the purpose of discussing and presenting to the faculty any student problems that may have arisen. All phases of campus activity are discussed, and in this manner Tau Beta Pi exerts an influence toward correction of any weakness that may exist in the operation of Lehigh. 200 STUDENTS L embers Bernard Altshuler Irnre Barsy James R. Bright Franc H. Burnett, Jr. Courtland F. Carrier, III Robert P. Carter Richard F. Clock Donald W. Cooper Alfred T. Cox William R. Csellak Charles L. Eichenberg Wellington B. Eler Stanley E. Siulio Robert C. Good, Jr. Alan S. Grant Richard H. Greenwell Earl Heins Ralph W. Helwig Frank L. Jackson Ernest F. Johnson, Jr. Allen F. Jones Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Frank N. Kemmer Edward A. Lambert Charles G. Layman Theodore L. Leininger Irving E. Lempert Nelson W. Lewis Donald R. Luster Donald W. MacFeeters Robert D. Marsden Arthur S. Mickley Frederick C. Moesel Stanley C. Morford Norman L. Morse Joseph A. Oless Robert C. Parsons James E. Patton Edwin C. Perkins William B. Pohlman Albert S. Raff Herbert E. Rasmussen John D. Saussaman Edward M. Sharp Harry Tanczyn Peter Telfair Moran V. Trexler Eric Weiss Vincent M. White Ashley C. Worsley FACULTY Vahan S. Babasinian Frank S. Beale Jacob L. Beaver Sylvanus A. Becker Robert D. Billinger Alpha A. Diefenderfer Howard Eckfeldt William H. Formhals Nelson S. Hibshman Cyril D. Jensen Arthur W. Klein Fred V. Larkin Alexander W. Luce John C. Mertz FACULTY Benjamin L. Miller Elias R. Morgan Harvey A. Neville Harry B. Osborn Ernest B. Schulz Stanley S. Seyfert Charles W. Simmons Bradley Stoughton Milton C. Stuart Hale Sutherland Edwin R. Theis Charles L. Thornburg Harry M. Ullman Clement C. Williams EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, founder of Tau Beta Pi in 1885 at Lehigh, was former head of the mining department. 20 1 TOP ROW: Mayer, Wells, Grannatt, J. Kromer, Hesselman; THIRD ROW: Cowin, Carothers, Bratt, Bishop, W. Thomas, Heisler; SECOND ROW: Griffiths, Gowdy, Bernasco, Collins, Schafer, Habicht; BOTTOM ROW: Weed, Rose, Carrington, McO ail, Hurst, Dudman, Nicholas. ALPHA KAPPA PSI In 1924 the Alpha Sigma Chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi was formed from the Business Ad- ministration Club. George B. Curtis, then Associate Professor of Economics, and Dr. Neil Carothers helped the local chapter to obtain a charter from the national fraternity. These two men have served since as deputy counselors. The object of Alp ha Kappa Psi is to foster high ideals and integrity among the student members by intelligently discussing current business topics. As a basis for these discus- sions, prominent guest speakers present their opinions on present business conditions at the bimonthly meetings. Twice a year men are elected from the two upper classes who are high in scholarship and extracurricular activities. Ward L. Bishop Elmer C. Bratt Neil Carothers embers FACULTY Robert W, Roy B. Cowin George B. Curtis Albert Haring Mayer STUDENT William C. Bernasco Joseph B. Boyle Malcolm Carrington, Jr. Albert J. Collins Leonard H. Dudman Richard S. Gowdy Milton H. Grannatt Charles R. Griffiths Thomas Habicht Clifford B. Heisler Walter Leo W. Hesselman George E. Hurst, Jr. Jack W. Kromer Robert P. McQuail Payson K. Nicholas Robert J. Rose Franklyn F. Schafer Willard J. Thomas Wallace P. Watkins Charles A. Weed Wells icers ROBERT P. McQUAIL President MALCOLM CARRINGTON, JR. Vice-President ROBERT J. ROSE Secretary GEORGE E. HURST, JR. Treasurer 202 ETA KAPPA NU ill III III 119 III III mm HI III I rff — |P. lif ji . II ; Ik s- . TOP ROW: Hixson, McGuire, Mickley; SECOND ROW: Seyfert, Hibshman, Lempert, Rabold, Beaver BOTTOM ROW: Eichenberg, Stavros, Reinsmith, Grubmeyer, Godard, Fredrickson. The charter for the Chi Chapter of Eta Kappa Nu at Lehigh was granted in 1926 to the petitioning body of seven seniors and three juniors who were then leaders in the Electrical Engineering curriculum. Remembering the purpose of the society as presented in the preamble of its constitution, . . . that those men in the profession of elec- trical engineering who, by their attainments in college or in practice, have manifested a deep interest and marked ability in their chosen life work, may be brought into closer union whereby mutual benefit may be derived, the Chi Chapter each year honors twelve students with membership and actively engages itself in undergraduate functions. icers ROBERT S. GRUBMEYER President EDWARD A. LAMBERT Vice-President IRVING E. LEMPERT Treasurer DONALD W. COOPER Corresponding Secretary FRANK C. RABOLD, JR. Recording Secretary ERIC WEISS Bridge Correspondent JACOB L. BEAVER Faculty Advisor L ewioers FACULTY Jacob L. Beaver Cledo Brunetti William H. Formhals Howard D. Gruber Nelson S. Hibshman Stanley S. Seyfert STUDENT Donald W. Cooper Charles L. Eichenberg Roy H. Fredrickson Robert R. Godard Robert S. Grubmeyer Harold C. Hixson Edward A. Lambert Irving E. Lempert John V. McGuire Arthur S. Mickley Frank C. Rabold, Jr. Glenn M. Reinsmith Marius X. Stavros Eric Weiss 203 PI TAU SIGMA TOP ROW: Hamill, Strohman, Bliss, Eler, Easton, Larlcin, Keller, Connelly; THIRD ROW: DeVries, Hagerman, W. Goodwin, Clock, B. Evans, Luster, MacFeeters, Myers; SECOND ROW: Layman, Hol- lister, A. Jones, Irwin, Truslow, Baldwin; BOTTOM ROW: Glesmann, Histand, Grant, Carrier, S. Lewis. Lehrer, McNabb. Pi Tau Sigma, the honorary mechanical en- gineering fraternity, was founded in 1915 at the University of Illinois by a group of students inspired and guided by Dr. Charles Russ Richards, later president of Lehigh. The organ- ization was founded to foster the ideals of the engineering profession, to stimulate interest in coordinate departmental activities, and to pro- mote the welfare of its members. The Theta Chapter at Lehigh received its charter in 1927, and in 1935 it expanded to in- clude the Industrial engineering students, be- cause these two curricula are so closely asso- ciated. It is one of the sixteen active chapters located at the leading engineering schools throughout the United States. embers FACULTY Joel F. Bailey Thomas E. Butterfield John R. Connelly Thomas E. Jackson Burgess H. Jennings Fred V. Larkin Alexander W. Luce Milton C. Stuart icer$ COURTLAND F. CARRIER, III President FRANC H. BURNETT, JR. Vice-President WILLARD G. HISTAND Recording Secretary STUART N. LEWIS Corresponding Secretary ALAN S. GRANT Treasurer STUDENT Chester C. Baldwin John W. Bliss James R. Bright Franc H. Burnett, Jr. Courtland F. Carrier, I Richard F. Clock Donald L. DeVries Robert M. Easton Wellington B. Eler Brian D. Evans Louis G. Glesmann William M. Goodwin, Alan S. Grant Edward E. Hagerman Thomas M. Hamill Willard G. Histand James F. Hollister William Irwin Allen F. Jones Gilbert M. Keller Charles G. Layman John F. Lehrer Stuart N. Lewis Donald R. Luster Donald W. MacFeeters John M. McNabb Thomas V. Murto Charles G. Myers Robert H. Stettler Harold A. Strohman John U. Truslow Robert G. Yingling 204 PI MU EPSILON TOP ROW: Shook, llliclc, Raynor, Reyno:ds, Sharp- THIRD ROW- Cn+lor F„. El k j The Pennsylvania Gamma Chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon was inaugurated ai Lehigh in Spring of 1929 when a charter was awarded to the Lehigh University Mathematics Club. The fra- ternity honors the men who are proficient in mathematics and aims to stimulate and to encourage the interest in mathematics among the undergraduates. So that this interest may be developed both students and faculty members speak on various mathematical subjects at monthly meetings. It is customary for Pi Mu Epsilon to bring a distinguished mathematician to Lehigh each year for a public lecture. The simplicity of the topics assures a large audience from the stu- dent body and the faculty. icers CLARENCE A. SHOOK IRVING E. LEMPERT FREDERICK C. MOESEL EDWARD A. LAMBERT Director Vice-Director Secretary Treasurer L embers FACULTY Edward H. Cutler William H. Formhals Tomlinson Fort Joseph E. Illick, Jr. Burgess H. Jennings Kenneth W. Lamson STUDENT Bernard Altshuler Robert A. Buerschaper Franc H. Burnett, Jr. Francis E. Carner William F. Carson, Jr. Richard N. Cobb Alfred T. Cox Wellington B. Eler Robert C. Good, Jr. Aelfric James, Jr. Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Edward S. Kennedy Robert F. Koenig Edward A. Lambert Irving E. Lempert Robert D. Marsden John C. Mertz George E. Raynor Joseph B. Reynolds Clarence A. Shook Lloyd L. Smail John L. Vanderslice F. Charles Moesel Norman L. Morse Edward H. Mount James E. Patton William B. Pohlman Charles F. Rehman Glenn M. Reinsmith Thomas E. Ricketb James F. Ryan, Jr. Edward M. Sharp Marius X. Stavros William R. Transue Edward G. Uhl Milton B. Vordahl Eric Weiss Vincent M. White 205 TOP ROW- Bodine, Beers, Bliss, Dorkin, Krone; THIRD ROW: Maiden, Reed, McKinley, Nolte, Dietz; SECOND ROW: Simonsen, Schall. Thalhamer, Shoemaker, Lee, Clark; BOTTOM ROW: Sharpe, Clark, Riley, Friedman, Mannion, Cross, Parvis. PHI ETA SIGMA Since the granting of its charter in 1930, the Lehigh University chapter of Phi Eta Sigma has undertaken two functions: honoring Freshmen with high scholarship, and stimulating scholastic activity on the campus. At the regular meetings of the society, mem- bers of the faculty are invited to address the group on topics of their own choice. The result has been an interesting and varied set of meet- ings. The topics presented this year were Hazards of Scholarship, Fraudulent Drug Claims, and Life and a Sense of Humor. Two social events each year, the annual initi- ation banquet and the outing at Professor Harold V. Anderson ' s farm, serve to promote the interest of the members. L ember 5 FACULTY Harold V. Anderson Wray H. Congdon STUDENT Jesse F. Beers, Jr. Welles R. Bliss Edward F. Bodine Alfred V. Brown Edwin A. Brown Richard A. Buser Wilbur Chase, Jr. John F. Clark, Jr. Samuel S. Cross, Jr. August Descheemaeker Richard M. Dietz Jerome P. Dorkin Philip G. Foust, Jr. Harry J. Friedman Frederick R. Gilmore Arnold H. E. Grandage Edward D. Heins Charles F. Kalmbach Stephen Kowalyshyn, Jr. Frederick A. Krone Albert E. Lee, Jr. Robert M. Maiden James W. Mannion, Jr. Leonard J. McKinley John D. Mettler, Jr. Robert Metzner Raymond R. Myers Fredric S. Nclte John H. Ncrwood John T. Ransom, II John T. Riley George M. Ritchie, Jr. Clarence M. Sander.on, Josef W. Schall Donald R. Schoen Grendon K. Sebold Louis E. Sharpe Robert N. Simonsen Carl C. Stotz Bernard Stuber Michael Temoshok Albert L. Thalhamer Kurt H. Weber Lee R. White Jr. Offic icerd RICHARD M. DIETZ CHARLES F. KALMBACH JOHN T. RILEY JAMES W. MANNION, JR. President Vice-Pres. and Treas. Secretary Historian 206 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA TOP ROW: Okeson, Grannatt Moesel, Rabold. Yingling; SECOND ROW: Stoughton Beardsle Congdon, Re.ter, Larkin, Carothers; BOTTOM ROW: Carrington, Wells, Hurst, Grant, Se ' lser Omicron Delta Kappa is a national honorary activities fraternity for men. It was founded in 1914 at Washington and Lee University. Lehigh ' s Xi Circle was installed in 1925. The five indispensable qualifications for membership are: integrity, fellowship, humility, courage, consecration to a great purpose. The purposes of the fraternity are: to honor the students who have shown sound moral char- acter and the most effective leadership in student activities; to unite some students and members of the faculty and administration in working for the development of a greater Le- high; and to inspire other students to try unsel- fishly, for the University ' s sake, to achieve the ideal of moral and executive manhood. yfncer$ GEORGE E. HURST, JR. President WALTER C. WELLS ...Vice-President ALAN S. GRANT.. Treasurer CLAUDE G. BEARDSLEE Secretary and Advisor L embers THE ACTIVE CIRCLE STUDENT Franc H. Burnett, Jr. Malcolm Carrington, Jr. Alfred T. Cox Milton H. Grannatt, Jr. Alan S. Grant George E. Hurst, Jr. Frederick C. Moesel ALUMNI Walter R. Okeson FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE Robert C. Parsons Frank C. Rabold, Jr. Harold M. Selser, Jr. Wallace P. Watkins Eric Weiss Walter C. Wells Robert G. Yingling Claude G. Beardslee Fred V. Larkin Gilbert E. Doan Philip M. Palmer THE INACTIVE CIRCLE RESIDENT FORMER UNDERGRADUATE Donald C. Barnum John W. Maxwell John K. Conneen Howell A. Scobey Jr Warren P. Fairbanks Charles K. Zug FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE Neil Carothers John Kirkpatrick Wray H. Congdon Howard R. Reiter Howard Eckfeldt Charles A. Seidle Augustus H. Fretz Bradley Stoughton Clement C. Williams 207 ETA SIGMA PHI TOP ROW: Richardson, Pierce, Moreau, McDermott, Keith; SECOND ROW: Smith, Aldrich, Riley, Miller; BOTTOM ROW: Baiz, Tucker, Palmer, Sutcliffe, King. Eta Sigma Phi, the national honorary classical language society which was formed to promote the study of Greek and Latin in American uni- versities, was founded at the University of Chi- cago in 1924. Four years later the Alpha Epsi- lon Chapter of Pennsylvania was founded at Lehigh. This society absorbed the old Col- legium Romanum . The Lehigh chapter, the second formed in Pennsylvania, was one of the first of the forty chapters now in existence. The first president of the Lehigh chapter was Alvin Lewis ' 29. Since that time this chap- ter has had a national president and treasurer. Edwin H. Miller ' 40, is the present national trea- surer. The national organ of Eta Sigma Phi is the Nuntius . L embers HONORARY Earl L. Crum Edgar H. Riley William C. McDermott Robert M. Smith Horace W. Wright icer5 ROBERT B. PALMER President DONALD L DAVIS OUENTIN R. G. KEITH EDWIN H. MILLER FREDERICK D. PIERCE JOHN E. SUTCLIFFE Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms ASSOCIATE William H. Bohning William C. Hallow STUDENT Herbert P. Aldrich John-Karl M. Baiz Donald L. Davis Ouentin R. G. Keith Harold King Carl G. Konolige Randal Edwin H. Miller Jules L. Moreau Robert B. Palmer Frederick D. Pierce Carl H. Richardson John E. Sutcliffe B. Tucker C8 PI DELTA EPSILON P U L. 56 ' !! 1 ' McCluske Y ' Stoumen, Herrick, Manning; SECOND ROW- Grav t) r I bra.th, Watk,n S , Y,n g l,n g , Moravec; BOTTOM ROW: Ke mm e r , 9 RheinW H Z J ' s t Pi Delta Epsilon is a national honorary colle- giate fraternity devoted to bettering campus publications and was organized to provide op- portunities to undergraduates interested in this field of activity. Meetings are held where mem- bers discuss publication problems and their solutions. The national fraternity has been promoting a vigorous reorganization program through its many chapters. The Lehigh group has taken an active part in this re-vitalization plan. Recently the society has been responsible for the organization of the Brown and White and a complete revision of the Review and the Epitome. In December 1938, the chapter spon- sored a National Convention at Lehigh. icers WILLET WEEKS, JR. President HENRY T. S. HECKMAN Vice-President RUSSELL E. STEVENS, JR. Treasurer ERIC WEISS Secretary GEORGE B. RHEINFRANK Historian Dale H. Gramley Robert F. Herrick Kenneth K. Kost L emt?er5 FACULTY John W. Maxwell Charles J. Moravec Harry B. Osborn STUDENT Howard M. Conner Fred E. Galbraith, Jr. Alan S. Grant Thrasher T. Gray Henry T. S. Heckman George E. Hurst, Jr. Frank N. Kemmer Edward V. Manning John J. McCluskey George B. Rheinfrank Robert G. Franklin F. Schafer Robert E. Seabrook Harold M. Selser, Jr. Milton Spilberg Russell E. Stevens, Jr. Louis C. Stoumen A. George Ueberroth, Jr. Wallace P. Watkins Willet Weeks, Jr. Eric Weiss Yingling 209 TOP ROW- Matteson, O ' Meara. Osborn, Whitcomb, Short, Marshall; SECOND ROW: Griffiths, Brown, Martin, Lincoln, Good, Luster, Harbaugh; BOTTOM ROW: Gowdy, Watkins, Cox, Elmer, Kelley, Ginder. CYANIDE The Cyanide Club is the junior honorary ac- tivities society at Lehigh. The purpose of the club is three fold: first, to recognize those students of the Junior class who have been the most outstanding in scholastic and extra-curri- cular activities; second, to form a discussion group on the policies of the university; and third, to render services to the university which are deemed advisable by the faculty and by the club. This year the Cyanide Club revised its con- stitution with an installation of an initiation ceremony and a provision for a faculty circle. This circle consists of three faculty members and one faculty advisor who are elected at the first meeting of each school year. L embers FACULTY CIRCLE Harry B. Osborn, Jr. Pad E. Short Earl K. Smiley Lawrence Whitcomb LJfncerd ALFRED T. COX President MORGAN C. ELMER Vice-President WALLACE P. WATKINS Secretary-Treasurer STUDENT John R. Bingaman, Jr. William W. Brown Alfred T. Cox Morgan C. Elmer David R. Ginder Robert C. Good, Jr. Richard S. Gowdy Charles R. Griffiths William M. Harbaugh, Jr. Clifford B. Heisler Wallace P Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Clifford F. Lincoln, Jr. Donald R. Luster Preston F. Marshall Ralph E. Martin Harold J. Masem Josep ' i L. Matteson John R. O ' Meara Robert B. Palmer Edward G. Uhl Watkins 210 TONE TOP ROW: Burgy, Beardslee, Albrecht, Schoen, R. Beers; THIRD ROW- Richard K.lmU. U r nngon Lesser Randall VogeUberg, Diamond; SECOND ROW: Mye dhr t T«mS Ed ds ' Prided Kety. G ' ,m ° re: BOTTOM ROW Johnson, Todd, Ueberroih, Moe ' el. Pie S Tone, the honorary musical society, was founded in the Spring of 1937 from the Lehigh Student Concerts Group, started a year earlier. The society has two main purposes: first, to provide students interested in music a chance to listen to outside speakers and to take part in discussions on musical subjects at regular monthly meetings; second, to present regular Sunday afternoon concerts in the University Chapel. These concerts are given by student, faculty, and occasional guest performers. With a limited membership of thirty-eight men, Tone is now firmly established to forward musical activity and to offer opportunity for student appreciation, interpretation, and com- position of music. icers FREDERICK C. MOESEL President win ?™ R - PIERPONT Vice-President WILLARD A. LITZENBERGER Second Vice-President DONALD R. SCHOEN Concert Director a ™n SNYDER Publlcit y Director A. GEORGE UEBERROTH Secretary and Historian DOUGLAS H. PRIDEAUX Y Trelsu er T. EDGAR SHIELDS Faculty Advisor L ewibers FACULTY Claude G. Beardslee Clement C. Williams STUDENT George A. Albrecht William L. Archer Robert G. Beers Bernard Berkowitz Marion C. Burgy Malcolm Carrington, J William C. Christine Donald L. Davis John L. Diamond Robert H. Duenner, Jr. Ernest E. Edwards Mervin J. Fry Frederick R. Gilmore David C. Hughes Ernest F. Johnson, Jr. Charles F. Kalmbach Quentin R. G. Keith Richard C. Kellev, Jr. Thomas J. Kochuba William H. Lesser, Jr. Willard A. Litzenberger Elbert M. Mahla Frederick C. Moesel Ra ymond R. Myers Parker Palmer Wilson R. Pierpont Douglas H. Prideaux Lewis P. Randall, Jr. David E. Richards Donald R. Schoen Francis G. Shenton Frank E. Smith, Jr. H. Alan Snyder William B. Todd Alfred L. Trumpler A. George Ueberroth, Jr. Walter H. Vogelsberg Roy S. Zachary TOP ROW: Hall, Thomas; THIRD ROW: Rit+er, Gilmore, Sell, Kiefer, Tice, Gabuzda, Trembley; SECOND ROW: Litzenberger, Hertzog, Smith, Karlik, Rife, Ginder, Yankevitch; BOTTOM ROW: Varga, Uhler, Everett, Gaughran, Sabol, Beers. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA The Pennsylvania Alpha Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Delta, an associated society of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, was founded in 1935 as an honorary pre-medical society. Membership is based on scholarship, extra- curricular activity, personality, and special in- terest in various medical sciences, but weekly meetings are open to any Lehigh student inter- ested in papers presented by the various mem- bers on medical science topics. The American Association for the Advance- ment of Science was conceived in 1926 and has filled the need for a meeting ground for those interested in new and novel applications of nature ' s laws uncovered by advanced scholars. L embers icerS Sydney C. Bausor Raymond C. Bull Robert W. Hall FACULTY James P. Sell Stanley J. Thomas Francis J. Trembley EUGENE R.L. GAUGHRAN President JOHN B. SABOL ..Vice-President WALTER M. UHLER Secretary ALFRED L EVERETT Treasurer STANLEY J. THOMAS Faculty Advisor STUDENT Sylvester D. Beers William E. Bruning Alfred L. Everett George J. Gabuzda Eugene R. L. Gaughran Frederick R. Gilmore David R. Ginder Frank V. Hertzog Paul Karlik, Jr. John J. Yankevitch, Jr. Charles R. Kiefer, Jr. Willard A. Litzenberger Charles J. Rife Thomas J. Ritter John B. Sabol Elmer G. Smith George H. Tice Walter M. Uhler Emery J. Varga, Jr. 212 DELTA OMICRON THETA TOP ROW: White, Fittkau, Callaghan; THIRD ROW: Penn, Meyer, Bahnson, Kiefer, Rathbun Ache Shuttleworth; SECOND ROW: Ponter, Sharp, Dudman. McGuire, Benedict, Morse, Altshuler- BOTTOM ROW: Breidenbach, Feldmann, Morris, Scoblionko, Heckman, Kowalyshyn. Delta Omicron Theta, honorary debating so- ciety, sponsored an extensive forensic program this year. The intercollegiate group of 19 men participated in 14 events, including four radio debates, a direct-clash debate, two parliamen- tary discussions, and a forum. The intramural group of 36 men participated in 23 cross-exam- ination debates, with Williams prizes awarded to the winning teams. The intramural program was popularized by holding informal debates in the home-like Browsing room of the Library. The organization was founded by the mem- bers of the class of 1928 to fill the need of an honorary society to recognize those who parti- cipate in varsity debating. icers RAPHAEL G. SCOBLIONKO President JAMES L. SHEARER. Intercollegiate Manager CARL R. FITTKAU Secretary-Treasurer J. CALVIN CALLAGHAN Director of Debating L embers FACULTY J. Calvin Callaghan STUDENT Warren W. Ache Bernard Altshuler Frederic N. Bahnson William H. Barnard Carl R. Fittkau Henry T. S. Heckman Edward A. Herre, Jr. William E. Keiser Robert F. Koenig Russell Kowalyshyn Stephen Kowalyshyn, Jr. Charles G. Layman Jerome B. Levy Stephen T. Lowry Seymour Margolis Daniel Q. Marshall Charles A. Richard E. Metzger Edwin H. Miller Frank Novitski Frederick D. Pierce William Priestley, Jr. John T. Riley Warren E. Sawyer, III Donald R. Schoen Raphael G. Scoblionko Eugene D. Seiter James L. Shearer Daniel L. Shields Bernard A. Smith Robert G. Stern Chester A. VanBrunt Stephen Weinrib Wolbach, Jr. 213 NEWTONIAN SOCIETY TOP ROW: McKinley, J. Read, Riley, Hill, Sebold; FOURTH ROW: Holyolce, Brown, Meikle, Myers, Buser, Ransom; THIRD ROW: Saylor, Parvis, L. Miller, Nolte, Elliott, Maiden, White; SECOND ROW: Thalhamer, Buser, W. Clark, F. Smith, Schumaker, Stuber, Latshaw; BOTTOM ROW: Simonsen, Fried- man, Anderson, Bodine, Cullen, Quincy, Clark. The Newtonian Society, the freshman honor- ary mathematical group, was founded at Lehigh in 1927 but has remained the only chapter in existence. Its purpose, as stated in the con- stitution, is To promote interest in mathema- tics among members of the Freshman class, to give its members opportunity for intellectual activity outside the classroom, and to pro- mote friendship among its student and faculty members. Membership is conferred upon freshmen of high standing in mathematics at the end of either semester and extends to the middle of their sophomore year. Meetings are held monthly and talks are based upon subjects of general mathematical interest. L embers STUDENT Frederic N. Bahnson Donald W. Bedell German Borbolla James H. Bricker Robert N. Brown Richard A. Buser Harry E. Case Henry D. Chandler Barton Conchar George S. Coopey Samuel S. Cross, Jr. Hugh R. Davidson Philip G. DeHuff, Jr. August Descheemaeker Alton P. Dieffenbach Donald Eadie Albert C. Foss, Jr. Philip G. Foust, Jr. C. Denis Gilchrist Arnold H. E. Grandage Henry J. Griesemer Fletcher Hanks, Jr. Edward D. Heins Claude E. Hensinger Frederick H. Housel Charles A. Houston Bernard H. Charles F. Kalmbach Morton F. Kaplon Stephen Kowalyshyn, Jr. Albert E. Lee, Jr. Theodore L. Leininger Keron M. Manion James W. Mannion, Jr. Leonard J. McKinley George F. Messinger John D. Mettler, Jr. William H. Morse Raymond R. Myers Frederick W. Nadig Frank Novitski Patrick W. O ' Brien Benjamin Ojserkis Clarence G. Reber John T. Riley George M. Ritchie, Jr. Josef W. Schall Donald R. Schoen Lemuel E. Sentz Carl C. Stotz Bernard Stuber Michael Temoshok Walter H. Vogelsberg Zane icers ALBERT E. LEE, JR. President GEORGE M. RITCHIE, JR. Vice-President-Treasurer C. DENIS GILCHRIST Secretary VORIS V. LATSHAW Faculty Advisor 214 SCABBARD AND BLADE TOP ROW: Marshall, Heisler, J. Leonard, Collins, Coleman, Diamond, Schiff, Gowdy; FOURTH ROW: Gardner, Rheinfrank, Grant, Glueck, Delany, W. Leonard, Lincoln, McCluskey, Dannemiller; THIRD ROW: Loveland, Ralston, Irwin; SECOND ROW: Heller, Worsley, Harchar, Smith, Haffenreffer, Norvig, Masem, Paul; BOTTOM ROW: Laubenstein, Mahony, Bruning, Snyder, Stetson, Carrier, Nor- ton, Juer, Fisher. The national society of Scabbard and Blade was founded in the Fall of 1904 at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin. The national society now consists of 83 active companies with a total membership of 25,000 men. Scabbard and Blade is the only honorary military society on the campus and the only society to sponsor one of the four main dances of the year, the Military Ball. The purpose of the society is to promote interest in the R. O. T. C, to defend American ideals and traditions, to develop and preserve the essential qualities of good and efficient officers, and to spread intelligent information concerning the military requirements of our country. icers GRANT B. STETSON ..Captain H. ALAN SNYDER .First Lieutenant COURTLAND F. CARRIER, III Second Lieutenant WILLIAM E. BRUNING First Sergeant L embers STUDENT John Beriont William E. Bruning Courtland F. Carrier, III Malcolm Carrington, Jr. Robert F. Coleman Alfred T. Cox Edward F. Dannemiller Ambrose G. Delany Maynard L. Diamond Edwin A. Fisher, II John S. Gardner George F. Glueck Richard A. Gorisse Richard 5. Gowdy Alan S. Grant Adolf F. Haffenreffer, Jr. Harry A. Harchar Clifford B. Heisler John H. Heller William Irwin Frederick Juer Joseph B. Kelley jj. Raymond P. Laubenstein Warren G. Leonard Stuart N. Lewis Clifford F. Lincoln, Jr. Gordon G. Loveland Henry J. Mack Leslie P. Mahony, Jr. Preston F. Marshall Harold J. Masem John J. McCluskey John M. McNabb Robert P. McQuail Franklin R. Norton Otto V. Norvig Douglas C. Paul Frank B. Ralston George B. Rheinfrank Terry Schiff Nelson R. Smith H. Alan Snyder Grant B. Stetson Ashley C. Worsley ASSOCIATE Major Frederick W. Adams Major Carter Collins Major Reginald R. Bacon Major Theodore C. Gerber Lt. Colonel Joseph S. Leonard 215 ROBERT W. HALL PRE -MEDICAL SOCIETY TOP ROW: Ritter, Thomas, Hall, Uhler; THIRD ROW: Gabuzda, Gilmore, Briody, Kiefer, Glnder, Bausor; SECOND ROW: Karlik, Tice, Hertzog, Kotanchik, Dorkin; BOTTOM ROW: Brandt, Gaughran, Sabol, Trembley, Everett, Biro. The Robert W. Hall Pre-Medical Society was organized 19 years ago by Dr. Robert W. Hall, a former head of the biology depart- ment. Since organization, the society has had an enviable record with respect to the many alumni that successfully completed their medi- cal education in the foremost medical schools, and who, after graduation, have become suc- cessful and respected physicians. The society holds monthly meetings, two banquets a year, out of town inspection trips, and visits clinics at the local hospitals. The annual Christmas banquet is an informal occa- sion, while the Spring banquet is the formal occasion when new officers for the coming year are introduced to their new positions. L embers FACULTY Sydney C. Bausor Robert W. Hall Frar James P. Sell Stanley J. Thomas Trembley STUDENT Sylvester D. Beers Elmer E. Biro John P. Brandt Bernard A. Briody Edward N. Comando Albert J. Cross Jerome R. Dorkin Alfred L. Everett George J. Gabuzda Eugene R. Gaughran Frederick R. Gilmore David R. Ginder Frank V. Hertzog Paul Karlik Charles R. Kiefer, Jr. Metro J. Kotanchik Charles J. Rife Thomas J. Ritter John B. Sabol Elmer G. Smith Charles S. Steiner George A. Tice Walter M. Uhler John J. Yankevitch, Jr. icers EUGENE R. GAUGHRAN President WALTER M. UHLER Vice-President JOHN B. SABOL Secretary SYLVESTER D. BEERS Treasurer SYLVESTER D. BEERS Chairman of Activities, First Semester DAVID R. GINDER Chairman of Activities, Second Semester 216 ALPHA PHI OMEGA TOP ROW: Moesel, Morrison, Beardslee, Ware, Clark, Beer; THIRD ROW: Lien, Brown, Bell Bartlett- SECOND ROW: Lewis, Liebig. Shepherd. Kipe, Salathe, Temple; BOTTOM ROW: Helm, Wetherell! Harchar, Easton, Myers, Kelley, Felch. Alpha Phi Omega, national honorary service fraternity, is composed of men who previously were active boy scouts. Their services to differ- ent groups around the campus have increased each year. Last Spring the members were hosts to several visiting troops of boy scouts. Plans have been completed to assist the Bethlehem Boys ' Club and scout troop as big brothers. A fireplace project was completed last Win- ter and dedicated by the National Field Repre- sentative of Alpha Phi Omega. Besides its service activities, the fraternity has sponsored hikes and other outdoor pro- grams. The chapter is now enlarging its mem- bership and planning extensive programs for the continuance of its services in the future. icers HARRY A. HARCHAR President ROBERT M. EASTON Vice-President CHARLES G. MYERS Secretary GEORGE F.SALATHE Treasurer NE o F -P ' NEILL Hist ° r ' an RICHARD C. KELLEY, JR. Corresponding Secretary BROWER R. ELLIS Alumni Secretary L ewiberi FACULTY Fay C. Bartlett Claude G. Beardslee Paul Calvert STUDENT Louis Beer Norman R. Bell John P. Brandt Robert W. Brown William R. Clark Robe rt M. Easton Brower R. Ellis Robert I. Felch Harry A. Harchar Rea C. Helm, Jr. Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Harry W. B. Kipe Vincent M. Thomas J. Lewis, Jr. John O. Liebig, Jr. George E. Lien Frederick C. Moesel Leonard D. Morrison Charles G. Myers Wayne F. O ' Neill George F. Salathe Richard M. Shepherd John W. Temple Richard A. Ware Walter J. Wetherell White 217 m  i K i BK3 KU ifi V H i ' Mi it 41  : W J ir j ■■I j |Q - Ifcl i BiiJ L jbw fa V 40flk ' - m ■1 |V1 ! ••- 9 B R. W. BLAKE SOCIETY TOP ROW: Lafferty, Hughes, Becker; THIRD ROW: Altshuler, Steiner, Berkowitz, Mickley; SECOND ROW: Hertzog, King, Tucker, Miller; BOTTOM ROW: Moreau, Palmer. Scoblionko, Richardson, Sutcliffe. The Robert W. Blake Society, named in honor of a former head of the College of Arts and Science, is Lehigh ' s honorary philosophical so- ciety. Founded in 1923 by seven Lehigh stu- dents, the society is limited to a membership of twenty men who have a high scholastic rating and are interested in philosophic or cultural subjects. Society meetings are held on the first Friday of each month. The lectures by undergradu- ates are supplemented by student discussions. Topics for discussion this year were Plato ' s Phaedo, the future of nationalism, and the democracy in our education. This year the society visited Swarthmore College on their annual pilgrimage. L embers FACULTY Frank C. Becker Percy Hughes Theodore T. Lafferty icevs RAPHAEL G. SCOBLIONKO President LOUIS C. STOUMEN Vice-President CARL H. RICHARDSON Secretary-Treasurer PERCY HUGHES Faculty Advisor STUDENT Bernard Altshuler Bernard Berkowitz Edward N. Comando Frank V. Hertzog Harold King Russell Kowalyshyn Arthur S. Mickley Edwin H. Miller Frederick C. Moesel Jules L. Moreau Robert B. Palmer Wilson R. Pierpont Carl H. Richardson Donald R. Schoen Raphael G. Scoblionko Charles Steiner Louis C. Stoumen John E. Sutcliffe Randall B. Tucker 218 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB TOP ROW: Plante, White, Irwin, Roberts, Hamblin; THIRD ROW: Darby, Scoblionko King Stone- back; SECOND ROW: Baiz, Baldwin, Schiff, Walther, Frederick, Watkins; BOTTOM ROW- Richardson Aldrich, Sutcliffe, McNabb, Cunliffe. The purpose of the Lehigh chapter of the International Relations Club is to stimulate interest in and to promote the study of inter- national problems and politics without favorit- ism. At the monthly meetings a series of speak- ers, both student and faculty members, have presented various phases of world affairs for discussion. The club sponsored an open lecture by a man prominent in international affairs. This year the chapter has sent a delegation to the Model Assembly of the League of Nations at Bucknell College and to the Interna- tional Relations Conference at Swarthmore College. The membership is continually grow- ing and the prospect for the coming year prom- ises to be an even greater success. icer$ JOHN E. SUTCLIFFE President JOHN M. McNABB Vice-President HERBERT P. ALDRICH Secretary CARL H. RICHARDSON Treasurer L embers FACULTY Sydney M. Brown Lawrence H. Sipson Amos A. Ettinger George D. Harmon Ernst B. Schulz HONORARY Major Carter Collins Earl L. Crum Friedrich O. Kegel Lt. Com. George Linke STUDENT Herbert P. Aldrich Oscar E. Anderson, Jr. John-Karl M. Baiz Chester C. Baldwin Richard S. Cunliffe Charles W. Darby John A. Frederick, Jr. John F. Hamblin William Irwin Lowell F. Jett Harold King Raymond P. Laubenstein Stuart N. Lewis William A. Matheson, Jr. Roy S. John M. McNabb Leon H. Plante Vincent J. Monte-Sano Carl H. Richardson James M. Roberts, Jr. John B. Rush Terry Schiff Raphael G. Scoblionko Ralph D. Stoneback Robert P. M. Stoudt John E. Sutcliffe Heinz E. Walther Wallace P. Watkins Raymond R. White Zachary 219 Minnie Mouse Works on Brother Rat RALPH E. MARTIN, Student Director. OFFICERS Ralph E. Martin Student Director Robert P. Carter Drum Major Douglas H. Prideaux Manager Clarence A. Heller Librarian T. Edgar Shields Faculty Director Organized in 1908, the Lehigh Band has gradually grown into one of the largest and best collegiate bands in the East. Dr. T. Edgar Shields has made possible a steady increase in membership and instrumentation of the band. The instruments formerly used by the Bethlehem Steel Company band became part of the general equipment of the Lehigh Band in 1926. The band performs an essential function in all R. O. T. C. drills, and plays at all football games, basketball games, commencement, and other university exercises. The band has added much co ' or to the football games by providing parades consisting of many unique formations. This year a special part of the band consisting of sixty pieces is being prepared for a public concert by Dr. Shields. MEMBERS CORNETS: Willard P. Bear, Robert W. Beck, Robert A. Bennett, Harry R. Beucler, Arthur Blanchard, George H. Brown, Gilbert P. Cardwell, Harry E. Case, Carlton E. Creitz, William S. Dawless, Jack R. Dennis, William S. Fiske, Thomas Fleischer, Richard Z. Freemann, Michael C. Gallo, Edwin W. Hine, Henry J. Horn, Alfred L. Hughes, Floyd E. Ivey, Leslie I. Kerr, Frederick A. Krone, Howard G. Luley, Hayden R. Maginnis, Jacob S. Nolf, John R. O ' Meara, Lewis P. Randall, Herbert E. Rasmussen, Robert R. Rigg ' e, Rudolf W. Samer, Joseph S. Schlegel, Howard O. Schroeder, Louis E. Sharpe, James C. Stephens, Paul M. Tanis, Alfred L. Trumpler, Robert G. Waite, Leroy A. Wiley, Donald C. Young, William J. Skinner, A. George Ueberroth. CLARINETS: Frank L. Benedict, Fred W. Berger, James H. Bleiler, Harry L. Boyer, Robert K. Brown, Marion C. Burgy, Irwin R. Burkey, Ernest R. Buss, Frederick C. Butler, Harvey H. Chamberlain, Robert D. Everett, Robert H. Gallagher, Elliott K. Goodman, Walter O. Graham, Richardson Gray, Clifford N. Greene, Michael Guidon, James G. Hamilton, Carl Hartdegen, Jacob S. Hartzell, Edward D. Heins, Paul T. Helm, Richard C. Hess, Charles R. Kiefer, James F. Lobach, Vernon B. Mancke, William A. Matheson, Richard E. Metius, Raymond R. Myers, William M. Orr, Douglas H. Pridcaux, Thomas E. Ricketts, Francis G. Shenton, Victor E. Smith, Florent J. Tokarczyk, John H. Transue, Earl L. Weaver, Kingsley G Williams, Charles A. Wolbach, Whitney J. Young. TROMBONES: Edward B. Annett, Robert G. Beers, Warren F. Boyer, Warren E. Deifer, Ernest E. Edwards, Rolla H. Gunnison, Ralph C. Hird, Francis W. Kopyta, Andrew P. Luse, Kenneth H. Rahn, Leon H. Rathbun, Leon G. Reimer, Glenn M. Reinsmith, Emerson D. Spengler, William P. Varner. FLUTES: Frederic N. Bahnson, Robert H. Bartholomew, Nevin C. Hartman, Richard O. Marsten, Thomas W. Millet. FRENCH HORNS: Edward M. Biggs Welles R. Bliss, Charles E. Boyer, James J. Donahue, Mervin J. Fry, Clarence A. Heller, Robert A. Hofstetter, Warren E. Sawyer. SAXOPHONES: Harold L. Baty, Richard A. Buser, John F. Clark, Robert E. Crist, Walter H. Gaedcke, Benjamin Haytock, Howard A. Hoch, Robert B. Maclndoe, Lemuel E. Sentz, Richard F. Wood. DRUMS: John Adrian, Richard J. Berg, Robert N. Brown, Peter Carpenter, Hugh R. Davidson, James B. Felker, Robert E. Gengenbach, Donald W. Kurtz, Charles P. Pulsford, Irving B. Rem- sen, John T. Riley, Carl L. Sturgis, Robert F. Turnauer. BARITONE HORNS: Frederick R. Gilmore, Robert H. Ireland, Preston F. Marshall, Frederick C. Moesel, David E. Richards, Charles F. Small, Kenneth C. Wotring, George G. Zipf. BASS HORNS: Alvin L. Breen, Francis S. Filippone, Richard P. Hazard, Matthew K. Thomas. GLOCKENSPIEL: Donald R. Schoen, Irving Baker Remsen. Combined ' cat vtSica K lVibi TOP: DOUGLAS H. PRIDEAUX. President. BOTTOM: WILSON R. PIERPONT, Manager. OFFICERS DOUGLAS H. PRIDEAUX President WILSON R. PIERPONT Manager CARL H. RICHARDSON Assistant Manager RICHARD C. KELLEY, JR. Assistant Manager Jjoiiblc (oJuartet The original Chapel Choir that functioned prior to 1885 was divided into the Glee Club and Mandolin Society but were recombined in 1910 and now are recognized as the Combined Musical Clubs. It consists of the Glee Club, the Symphony Orchestra and a dance orchestra. Concerts given during the 1938-39 school year included: the Annual Winter Concert and Dance, a combined concert with the Moravian College for Women, Cedar Crest, and Lafay- ette Glee Clubs, and one at the Harcum Junior College in Bryn Mawr. Broadcasts over national networks completed the year. S um phon 14 vJrch luinpnon ij It lesira SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA GLEE CLUB PIANO Robert E. Crist John L. Diamond Robert F. Kuhns Donald R. Schoen VIOLIN Albert E. Allgrunn Donald A. Bender Albert Clark, Jr. Alton P. Dieffenbach Francis S. Filippone George J. Gabuzda, Jr. John Giacobbe James Gore, III Richard D. Halligan Henry T. Kalinoski Thomas J. Kochuba Joseph L. Lehet Preston W. Parvis, Jr. Douglas H. Prideaux Charles P. Pulsford Douglas H. Rodgers Alfred L. Trumpler VIOLA Frederick C. Moesel CELLO David E. Richards Edward A. Sutherland FLUTE Frederic N. Bahnson Robert H. Bartholomew Richard O. Marsten OBOE Marion C. Burgy CLARINET William R. Clark Robert J. McCurdy, III Raymond R. Myers Francis G. Shenton Harlow E. Ward, Jr. BASS CLARINET Charles R. Kiefer, Jr. FRENCH HORN Charles E. Boyer Mervin J. Fry TRUMPET Lewis P. Randall, Jr. Louis E. Sharpe Donald C. Young TROMBONE Edward B. Annett, Jr. Leon G. Reimer EUPHONIUM Robert H. Ireland STRING BASS Richard S. Button TYMPANI H. Roswell Davidson STUDENT CONDUCTOR Frederick C. Moesel DANCE ORCHESTRA Harry R. Beucler William S. Dawless Edward S. Hamilton, Jacob S. Hartzell Earl Heins Ralph F. Moss, Jr. Edgar C. Slack Martin E. Wittstein Roy S. Zachary FIRST TENORS Robert S. Barker Robert H. Bartholomew Alexander L. Bupp Robert W. Clark Edward S. Hamilton, Jr. Harry F. Jones Thomas J. Kochuba Elwood D. Latimer, Jr. James M. Phelan Frank E. Smith, Jr. William B. Todd Albert R. Tucker Randall B. Tucker A. George Ueberroth, Jr. SECOND TENORS Edward B. Annett Charles F. Barton, Jr. Barnett P. Bowser Alvin L. Breen William E. Bruning Carlton E. Creitz Philip G. Foust, Jr. Albert Goeppert Charles H. Hearsey Walton M. Henry Alfred L. Hughes Arnold B. Irvine Anthony M. Karwacki Charles G. Layman George E. Lien Charles J. Little Douglas H. Prideaux James M. Roberts, Jr. Abram Samuels James E. Wigg Mitchell Zawisza FIRST BASSES Robert W. Beck Marion C. Burgy Ernest E. Edwards Lester C. Erich Robert I. Felch James B. Felker Frederick R. Gilmore Walter W. Gleadall, Jr. Gregory Gould Charles H. Harding, Jr. Robert H. Ireland Howard J. Jones, Jr. Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Thomas S. Kromer George H. Leach Albert T. Leonard Philip Lutters Robert J. McGregor Wayne F. O ' Neill Robert B. Palmer Wilson R. Pierpont Charles F. Rehman Carl H. Richardson Donald R. Schoen Richard E. Slee Alfred L. Trumpler John R. Whitesell SECOND BASSES George A. Albrecht Thomas R. Bell Edward Billstein, Jr. Welles R. Bliss Warren F. Boyer Donald H. Briner Oakley W. Cooke, Jr. Samuel I. Cory, Jr. Robert G. Eitner Robert C. Engle William I. Freeman Clarence A. Heller Ouentin R. G. Keith Willard A. Litzenberger Richard O. Marsten Robert R. Riggle Glenn B. Swope Walter H. Vogelsberg Herbert Vonhof Roy E. Woodling, Jr. Frank A. Zimmermann George G. Zipf Lflee L iub r r r f M =• Tl an j eeie Mustard and Cheese, the dramatic club of the University, was founded in 1885 by Richard H. Davis. Since the inception of the club some fifty- four years ago, Mustard and Cheese has presented practically every type of production, including a number of musical comedies written entirely by members of the undergraduate body. Fifty-four years ago a few students frequently met in the parlor of Charlie Rennig ' s saloon. These men would drink beer and eat cheese sandwiches spread with mustard. The group conceived the idea of organizing a dramatic club. The idea became a reality almost immediately, and a dramatic society was formed with Richard H. Davis at the helm. The club has been progressing ever since. Five years ago, with the advent of Albert A. Rights upon the scene, Mustard and Cheese took on new pro- portions. A Dramatic Workshop was formed to train aspiring undergraduates in acting, staging, and writing. Under the guiding hand of Mr. Rights, three pro- ductions were given during the past year. For the first time since 1935, the club did not present a musical comedy. In the Fall at Liberty High School the club presented the famous Broadway comedy hit, Brother Rat , by John Monks, Jr. and Freddie Finklehoffe, starring L. Henderson Dudman and Wil- liam H. Barnard. Excellent performances were also turned in by the supporting leads, Robert N. Gus- dorff and R. Harry Gunnison. In March, the Dramatic Workshop gave its annual play at Drown Hall. The drama, Winterset, by Maxwell Anderson, was one of the finest and best acted plays done by the group in years. Among the leads were Raymond M. Rosenstein, Edwin H. Miller, and Nathaniel Brisker. For the Spring show the club gave another Broad- way success, the drama Petrified Forest, by Rob- ert Sherwood. The play was extremely well suited for the club because of the large number of male parts, fifteen in all. This year the club has adopted a new constitution which the members believe will greatly enhance the position of dramatics at Lehigh. Competitors are given specific information regarding membership in the club. The future of the club is bright. Since the Fall of 1937 the club has presented its larger shows in town. More interest has been shown this year in dramatics than ever before. BACK ROW: Rita Gi Brother Rats take time off to entertain the ladies. igan, Robert N. Gusdorff; FRONT ROW: William Barnard. Virginia Edwards, Leila Stojghton, Henderson Dudman. TOP ROW: Brisker, Hutchison; THIRD ROW: Hine, Dudman, Durant, Hubschmitt, Rheinfrank: SECOND ROW: H.Brown Norton DeBow Watkin Elmer, Pndeaux; BOTTOM ROW: Glesmann, Cunliffe, Chadwick, Carrington, McNabb, Carrier, Wittstein. Watkms OFFICERS MALCOLM CARRINGTON, JR. n President BENJAMIN CHADWICK „. „ . Vice-President JOHN M. McNABB „ . business Manager RICHARD S. CUNLIFFE c Secretary FRANK N. KEMMER D ... . ., Publicity Manager EDMUND H. KNIGHT T , . , technical Director CLARENCE R. DeBOW, JR. c ., Stage Manager LOUIS G. GLESMANN D A , Property Manager HARRY H. BROWN, JR. n k . Costume Manager WALLACE P. WATKINS D .. Program Manager CHESTER C. BALDWIN T . , ., ticket Manager MEMBERS Chester C. Baldwin, Michael Bock, Nathaniel J. Brisker, Harry H. Brown, Jr., Courtland F. Carrier, III, Malcolm Carring- ton, Jr., A. Benjamin Chadwick, Richard S. Cunliffe, Clarence R. DeBow, Jr., Donald G. Denison, L Henderson Dudman, Frederick C. Durant, III, Morgan C. Elmer, Louis G. Glesmann, Samuel M. Grafton, Edwin W. Hine, II, Richard W. Hub- schmift, David C. Hughes, John Y. Hutchison, III, Frank N. Kemmer, Edmund H. Knight, John M. McNabb, Franklin R. Norton, Douglas H. Prideaux, George B. Rheinfrank, Joseph L Serrill, Jr., H. Alan Snyder, Wallace P. Watkins, Martin E. Wittstein, Frank C. Woodside, Jr. 227 Heckman, Haring, Gramley, Kost, Congdon, Luster, Weeks, Carrier. (JjSoaifd of j vtbll Guardian angel of Lehigh ' s three student publications is the Board of Publications consisting of three faculty and three student members. Its original purpose to insure the solvency of all publications is still reflected by its activity in examining budgets, signing contracts, auditing books, establishing sinking and equipment funds, and in authorizing the distribu- tion of profits or payment of honoraria. Equally important today is its duty to see that each publication has a capable staff selected in such a way that each competitor has an equal opportunity. To insure this the Board requires each publication to draw up an approved constitution and to abide by it. The Board ' s success is shown by the excellence of the publications. WRAY H. CONGDON Chairman DALE H. GRAMLEY, ALBERT HARING Faculty Representatives COURTLAND F. CARRIER, III, HENRY T. S. HECKMAN, DONALD R. LUSTER Student Representatives WILLET WEEKS, JR. Pi Delta Epsilon Representative KENNETH K. KOST Secretary to the Board tit icalions 228 Hurst, Stoumen, Moesel, Curtis, Weeks, Histand, Edwards, Mc oncer t-c Le ■t ecivare Se ene6 The Student Concert-Lecture Series was instituted three years ago to provide for Lehigh students a definite program of cultural entertainment. Artists are selected and bookings arranged by a committee of six students and five faculty members. Student members of the committee are chosen by those who served before them. Written competitive examinations and each applicant ' s campus activities are taken into consideration. The 1 938-39 series was drawn up with the guidance of a poll on student taste which was taken the previous year. With one exception, each of the six events stood highest in the field it represented. This policy resul ted in large attendances throughout the year. WILLET WEEKS, JR. r , . Chairman WILLIAM H. BOHNING, CHARLES J. MORAVEC, T. EDGAR SHIELDS CLARENCE A. SHOOK Faculfy Representatives ERNEST E. EDWARDS, WILLARD G. HISTAND, G. EDWARD HURST JR FREDERICK C. MOESEL, LOUIS C. STOUMEN Student Representatives GEORGE B. CURTIS r u a j ■faculty Advisor 229 TOP ROW: Slingerland, Bayles, Carter, Martin; SECOND ROW: Ginder, Whitmore, Lincoln, Luster, Kornet; BOTTOM ROW: Leschen, Loveland, Johnson, Watlcins, Watts. YOWVl The Brown Key Society is composed of the junior managers of the vari- ous major sports at Lehigh. The purposes of this society are to extend hospitality to the members of visiting teams, to promote a friendly spirit among its members, to discuss questions pertaining to the athletic policy of the University in so far as this policy concerns the management of the various teams, and to present its opinion to the Director of Athletics on special occasions. The Brown Key Society meets three times a year at the call of the presi- dent. New members are installed and sports directors are appointed for each of the three seasons: Fall, Winter, and Spring. J eu J ociet 9 OFFICERS WALLACE P. WATKINS RICHARD N. WATTS President Secretary SPORTS MANAGERS: Ralph G. Johnson, Jr., Fall; Donald R. Luster, Winter; Edgar F. Whitmore, Jr., Spring. MEMBERS STUDENT: Charles B. Bayles, Robert P. Carter, Joseph C. Coyne, Ambrose G. Delany, David R. Ginder, Ralph G. Johnson, Jr., Joseph B. Kelley, Fred Kornet, Jr., Harry J. Leschen, Jr., Clifford F. Lincoln, Jr., Gordon G. Loveland, Donald R. Luster, Ralph E. Martin, Robert C. Slingerland, Wallace P. Watkins, Richard N. Watts, Edgar F. Whitmore, Jr. 230 TOP ROW: Giacobbe, Tillman, Rockett, Clark, Kleckner; SECOND ROW: Sebold, Gauqhran Va Arnam, Edwards; BOTTOM ROW: Ache, Breen, Carson, Bell, Kuhns. €. A leu Town y i$uroviowiicai loaeiu The Ernest W. Brown Astronomical Society was reorganized in the Fall of 1934, with Mr. Ralph N. VanArnam as its faculty advisor and Charles Hoffman as its president. The purpose of the society is to foster an interest in astronomy on the campus. Meetings are held monthly and feature a student speaker. Once each year Mr. VanArnam entertains the society. An occasional outside speaker completes the club ' s program. The Club maintains Sayre Observatory and conducts open nights every Fall and Spring. At these functions the public inspects equipment used in an astronomical observatory. Members of the society demonstrate the equipment and help the visitors to study the skies. OFFICERS WILLIAM F. CARSON, JR. D ., President GEORGE H. REUSSNER, JR. v . D . , Vice-rresident GIAMBATISTA GIACOBBE c t Secretary- treasurer RALPH N. VANARNAM r i, a . ■faculty Advisor MEMBERS STUDENT: Warren W. Ache, Norman R. Bell, Alvln L. Breen, William F. Carson Jr., William R. Clark, Ernest E. Edwards, Eugene R. L. Gaughran, Giambatista Gia- cobbe, Ulysses F. Kleckner, Robert F. Kuhns, George H. Reussner, Jr., Francis H. Rockett, Jr., Grendon K. Sebold, John H. Tillman. 231 ft ' « TOP ROW: Matthews, Girdler; THIRD ROW: Burgio, Berger, Sebold, Lempert Hill; SECOND ROW: Stota, Bailee, Allgrunn, Rockett, Halligan, Clark; BOTTOM ROW: Sebald, Housel, McCurdy. Leichliter, Foss, Cardwell, Innes. In 1923 the Lehigh Radio Club was organized. At first the members met in a little room on the top floor of the Physics building which then housed the Electrical Engineering Department. The Radio Club moved into the present clubroom in the Packard Laboratory in 1933. A new transmitter of high power and modern design was built by club members and faculty advisors. Since then the club has made numerous changes to keep in step with engineering progress. In emergencies the Radio Club has aided in estab- lishing contact with the danger zones. Inspection trips taken to commer- cial radio stations have been well attended and more are planned. Many of the members now have short wave stations of their own. OFFICERS ROBERT J. McCURDY President FRED H. HOUSEL Vice-President ALBERT C. FOSS Secretary-Treasurer HENRY I. C. KNUTSON Faculty Advisor MEMBERS STUDENT: Albert E. Allgrunn; Boris Baiko, Fred W. Berger, W8MFU; John Burgio, W2JRP- Gilbert P. Cardwell, W3FIJ; Harvey H. Chamberlain, W2FLM; John F. Clark Jr W3GYH; Alfons A. Duffek; Albert C. Foss, Jr., W2JSC; Robert M. Girdler, W3HVM : Robert R. Godard, W8KUZ; Robert R. Halligan, W2IXA; Charles W. Har- rison, W90WT; John B. Hill, Jr.; Fred H. Housel, W3GJL; William H. Innes; Robert F Koenig W2GMI; Otto G. Leichliter; Irving E. Lempert, W2HEI; Joseph B. Mat- thews Jr. ' ; Robert J. McCurdy, III, W3FLP; John J. Perrell; Francis H. Rockett, Jr.; LeslieE. Sebald, W2JLV; Grendon K. Sebold; Joseph D. Sofsky; Carl C. Stotz, W3EPJ; Eduardo B. Valdes. 232 TOP ROW: Bartlett. Beardslee; SECOND ROW: Beer, Maclndoe, Ives, Brown; BOTTOM ROW: Clark, Oalindo, Hamill, Slate, Bright. and Jhrvi 6t Cut and Thrust, Lehigh ' s honorary fencing society, is one of the newest and most active honorary societies on the campus. In the Spring of 1938, the Fencing Club reorganized in order to serve a more useful purpose. The new society was founded by James R. Bright, Robert W. Brown, and Thomas M. Hamill and was called, Cut and Thrust. This honorary society runs the fencing team and promotes fencing at Lehigh. The goal of Cut and Thrust is to see Lehigh ' s fencing team recog- nized and respected by both its own Alma Mater and by other colleges as well. Membership to the society is based on interest in fencing, character, and ability in both the theoretical and practical sides of fencing. OFFICERS THOMAS M. HAMILL President WILLIAM CLARK Secretary FRANCIS T. SLATE Tree-surer MEMBERS FACULTY: Fay C. Bartlett, Claude G. Beardslee. STUDENT: Louis Beer, James R. Bright, Robert Brown, Charles R. Bushwaller, Wil- liam Clark, Luis G. Galendo, George V. Griffiths, Harvey C. Griffiths, Thomas M. Hamill, Carl Hartdegen, Robert B. Maclndoe, Jr., Alver H. Ives, Jr., Francis T. Slate, Richard E. Slee, George A. H. Tice. 233 TOP ROW: Galindo, Barber, Leroux, Bendig. Borbolla; SECOND ROW: Bohning, Eways, Weber, Rush, Duffek, Macia; BOTTOM ROW: Pierce, Bendig, Tabet, Shearer, Diehl. oimoDotilavi ip Since its inception in February 1938, the Cosmopolitan Club has been one of the most active organizations on the campus. The organization held regular meetings for a full semester before seeking recognition from the university. This year, aided by Dr. Claude G. Beardslee and William H. Bohning, the club has gained full recognition. The purpose of the Cosmopolitan Club is to bring together the back- grounds and ideas of the countries represented by the students attending Lehigh and to help introduce the new exchange students to the life on this campus. At the regular meetings twice a month the members voluntarily speak on topics of general international interest. OFFICERS GEORGE E. TABET President JAMES L SHEARER ...Vice-President ROBERT H. BENDIG Secretary WILLIAM H. BOHNING Faculty Advisor MEMBERS FACULTY: Howard W. Alexander, Claude G. Beardslee, William H. Bohning, Arthur T. Ippen, Eric S. Sinkinson, Rafael A. Soto. STUDENT: Lawrence C. Barber, United States; Robert H. Bendig, United States; German Borbolla, Mexico; David E. Cooper, United States; LaRue G. Diehl, United States; Alfons A. Duffek, United States; Paul P. Estrada, Cuba; Musa J. Eways, United States; Luis G. Galindo, Mexico; Jerome Ganz, United States; Harry B. Home, United States; Russell Kowalyshyn, United States; Jacques J. Leroux, United States; Guillermo V. Macia, Cuba; Paul Munoz, Jr., Chile; Otakar Ondra, United States; Maynard H. Patterson, United States; Frederick D. Pierce, United States; John B. Rush, United States; James L. Shearer, United States; George E. Tabet, Egypt; Eduardo Valdes, Cuba; Kurt H. Weber, United States. 234 TOP ROW: Harper, Keller, Truslow; SECOND ROW: Van Blarcom, Skinner, Schaffer, Nicol; BOTTOM ROW: Eadie, Reussner, Grafton, McGuire. awiera Since the introduction of the first crude box camera there has been a strong interest by the student body towards photography. It was not until March, 1937 that an undergraduate Camera Club was founded at Lehigh to satisfy this desire of the students. The original membership was twenty- five students, and now there are forty-five members. With the help of Dr. Claude G. Beardslee and Mr. Andrew W. Litzen- berger the club obtained a darkroom in Drown Hall. There the members may develop, enlarge, and print any photographs they have taken. The photo-exhibit that the club sponsored was the second largest exhibition held this year on the campus. OFFICERS SAMUEL M. GRAFTON President EDWARD P. PHILLIPS ... Vice-President GEORGE H. REUSSNER, JR. Secretary JOHN V. McGUIRE... Treasurer RALPH N. VANARNAM Faculty Advisor MEMBERS STUDENT: Albert E. Allgrunn, Donald N. Bachman, Norman R. Bell, James H. Boucher, Robert Caemmerer, Alfons A. Duffek, Donald Eadie, Somers H. Endicott, Maskell Ewing, Robert T. Feld, Kenneth L. Fielder, Robert E. Gengenbach, Gregory Gould, Samuel M. Grafton, Adolf F. Haffenreffer, Jr., Frank E. Harper, Jr., Benjamin Haytock, III, Rea C. Helm, Jr., Bruce R. Henky, Albert E. Hunt, Donald W. Keller, Ulysses F. Kleckner, Donald H. Kleppinger, John Leyenberger, Royal V. Mackey, Jr., Keron M. Manion, John V. McGuire, Albert M. Miller, John J. Nicol, Edward P. Phil- lips, Robert B. Rauer, George H. Reussner, Jr., Francis H. Rockett, Jr., Rudolf W. Samer, Wilbur F. Schaffer, Jr., Grendon K. Sebold, William J. Skinner, William W. Smyth, Harold F. J. Truchsess, John D. VanBlarcom, Raymond S. Willard, Jr., Frederick W. Wright, Jr. 235 TOP ROW: Matteson, Snyder, Kremer, Constantine; SECOND ROW: Wooters, Fulton, Ralston, Faber; BOTTOM ROW: Kanaly, Hurst, Evans, Scott. Rabold. ked S koe J octet The Spiked Shoe Society is composed of the varsity letter winners in track and cross-country and the varsity managers of these two sports. The Spiked Shoe Society members campaigned actively during the past year for the long needed improvements to the Lehigh track, which was probably the worst in the Middle Atlantic States Association. Spiked Shoe was founded at Columbia University in 1923 to foster better track and field relationships among the schools and to form a closer- knit organization of track men in general. OFFICERS CARY G. EVANS President GEORGE E. HURST, JR. Vice-President FRANK C. RABOLD Secretary-Treasurer MORRIS E. KANALY Faculty Advisor MEMBERS STUDENT: William B. Clark, James Constantine, Jr., Wesley A. W. Davis, Jr., Leonard H. Dudman, Morgan C. Elmer, Cary G. Evans, Richard D. Faber, Robert A. Fulton, Jr., Willard G. Histand, George E. Hurst, Jr., Rudolf Kremer, Preston F. Mar- shall, Joseph L. Matteson, Robert C. Parsons, Frank C. Rabold, Frank B. Ralston, Donald Santmyers, William E. Scott, Frank B. Snyder, Jr., Walter C. Wells, Edgar F. Whitmore, Jr., John D. Wooters, Jr. y .M6 TOP ROW: Biggs, Harding, Walling, Lippincott, Strayer- SECOND ROW- Tr.mkU, R i a ll Beardslee. Congdon, Bartlett; BOTTOkTrOW: Dieh cLev StofeLh sld?, ' aLTk ' . isi iponswian $ At the beginning of the 1938 school year, the Lehigh Sportsman ' s Uub was formed from the old Outing Club by Robert Stoudt and Ham- .Iton Strayer who thought that Lehigh needed an organization to bring together students and faculty members who are interested in outdoor sports not sponsored by the University. The club has proved its popu- larity by its membership of forty students and thirteen faculty members who are interested in one or more activities sponsored by the club. Some of the activities are hunting, fishing, hiking, trap and target shooting archery, skating, skiing and conservation. The outstanding event of the year was a venison dinner which promises to become an annual affair. ROBERT P. STOUDT HAMILTON W. STRAYER JOSEPH H. JACOBY RICHARD S. DAVIS OFFICERS President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary MEMBERS FACULTY: Major Frederick W. Adams, Frederick R. A Bacon, Fay C. Bartlett, Claude G. Beardslee, Major Adria Bull, Robert D. Butler, Nell Carothers, Wray H. Congdon More, Francis J. Trembley, Lawrence Whitcomb HONORARY: William A. Stau th, James Varner. STUDENT: H. Lawrence Abbott, John P. Allen, W... Campbell, Richard S. Davis, Harry G. Dennis, Leonard H Di H. Ganzer, Charles H. Harding, Jr., Edward Herre, Jr., J Keenan, Robert F. Kuhns, John Leyenberger, Sterling C Bnggs, Vernon B. Marcke, Donald A. Marcks, Wilkes McCI Albert M. Miller, Edgar K. Muhlhausen, Robert A. Nicros T Reuwer, Joseph S. Schlegel, Ralph D. Stoneback, Robert btrayer, Frank A. Szabo, H. Gaston VanderVeer, William P Wallace R. Wirths, Richard F. Wood, Jr., Joseph A. Wyler shbaugh, Major Reginald R. n R. Brian, Dr. Raymond C. , Albert Haring, Robert P. iam W. Brown, William B. ehl, Richard C. Fries, Robert oseph H. Jacoby, John M. . Lippincott, Edward Mac- lave, II, Edward S. McKelvy, ini, John T. Ransom, Henry P. M. Stoudt, Hamilton W. Varner, Richard R. Walling, 237 emica OFFICERS GEORGE E. KELLEY President JAMES E. PATTON Vice-President WILLIAM O. SELTZER Treasurer ANDREW S. MORROW, JR. Secretary ALPHA A. DIEFENDERFER Faculty Advisor In its early life the Chemical Society pursued policies that do not quite harmonize with the modern conception of an undergraduate society. Members were elected by ballot from all departments, and business was I S ociet v conducted under a cloak of secrecy. In 1873 letters were mailed to a group of eminent scientists inviting them to honorary membership. One hundred acceptances and almost as many photographs reached the secre- tary ' s office from all parts of the United States, and from England, France, Germany, Switzerland, Russia, and Ireland. Its announced object was to give students practice in discussing matters of technical importance. This modest project was soon expanded into activities of a wider scope, and in 1875 the name of the organization was changed to The Chemical and Natural History Society. The society sponsored a series of scientific lectures, some of which were later published in technical periodicals. It financed three expeditions to Texas and Brazil for the collection of zoological specimens, which arrived in a procession so long and impressive that the authorities were compelled to house the treasures in the auditorium on the third floor of Packer Hall. At the next annual election the control of every office fell into the lap of a conniving but unnamed fraternity. Dissention, resignations, and a ruinous trend in scholastic standards forced the society into complete obscurity. By the irony of fate this lowest ebb of the society coincides with the erection of the present Chemistry Building. With renewed interest the foundation of the present student chemical society was then laid. Today the zoological cabinet is but a hazy memory, and of the former illustrious members not one is living. In its stead there reigns an organiza- tion composed of over one-sixth of the student body. Speakers who are prominent in the field of chemistry address the society at the regular monthly meetings. The society sponsors a Christmas Banquet for mem- bers and invited guests. The Harry Maas Ullmann Memorial Fellowship is awarded by the Chemical Society and is financed by contributions of its members. Although there is little evidence, one might believe that the old traditions are at the helm steering the affairs of the modern Student Chemical Society. 238 The first student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers was established at Lehigh in 1902 by Professor-Emeritus Charles F. Scott, who attempted to bring the men in the electrical industry and the college students closer together. Pr ofessor Scott reasoned correctly that it would be to the embryo engineer ' s advantage to know some of the men connected with industry in order that he might pattern his career after theirs. The Lehigh Branch of the A.I.E.E. holds an open meeting on the third Thursday of every month, with the possible exception of January. At these meetings technical and semi-technical talks are given by men from their respective fields of electrical engineering. Sometimes the program is supplemented by a student paper taken from the Senior seminar classes. In addition to these monthly meetings one University lecture is generally sponsored each year. As with the other engineering societies, a Christmas party and formal refreshments have become traditional customs. C le •t ecinca I C n naineenn % OFFICERS CHARLES L EICHENBERG ERIC WEISS President Vice-President LEONARD W. HAESELER We , ory DONALD W. COOPER 7reasorcr WILLIAM H. FORMHALS Facuhy Adyiso , ] oaei MEMBERS FACULTY: J- Lynford Beaver, Paul M. Brubaker, Cledo Brunetti, William H. Form- hals. Howard D. Gruber, Charles W. Harrison, Nelson S. Hibshman, Henry C. I. Knut- son, Archie R. Miller, Stanley S. Seyfert, Edward S. Tinley, Charles H. Titus. STUDENT: Henry L. Abbott, Warren H. Beaumont, Louis Beer, Robert G. Beers, Norman R. Bell, Donald W. Brader, Gilbert P. Cardwell, John F. Clark, Jr., Donald W. Cooper, Theodore R. Cortright, George B. Cushing, Milton A. Davis, John R. Dennis, Alton P. Dieffenbach, Charles L. Eichenberg, Brower R. Ellis, Leonard P. Elly, Louis H. A. Feher, Albert C. Foss, Jr., Roy H. Fredrickson, Robert A. Fulton, Jr., Louis G. Gitzen- danner, Robert R. Godard, William D. Green, Robert S. Grubmeyer, Leonard W. Haeseler, Robert R. Halligan, John H. Heller, Rea C. Helm, Jr., Allan W. Hendricks, Paul C. Henninger, Frederick H. Housel, John A. Jackson, Joseph Kaszycki, Donald W. Kurtz, Robert B. Kurtz, Edward A. Lambert, Irving E. Lempert, Frank P. Librizzi, John C. McClure, John V. McGuire, Arthur S. Mickley, Harold E. Moosman, Ralph H. Morgan, Richard D. Munnikhuysen, Walter A. Nichols, George E. Parsons, Jr., Henry C. Postel, Frank C. Rabold, Leonard B. Rahn, Harry B. Rath, Glenn M. ' Re ' insmith, Henry T. Reuwer, Robert F. Schall, Walter M. Schweder, Robert E. Seabrook, Leslie E. Sebald, Grendon K. Sebold, Joseph L Serrill, Jr., Robert J. Seugling, Willard M. Shelly, David R. Smith, Jr., Joseph D. Sofsky, Marius X. Stavros, Frank G. Steinbrucker, Carl C Stotz, Hulme W. Thomas, John P. Troy, John F. Urschitz, Eduardo B. Valdes Walter H Vogelsberg, Stuart H. Vogt, Joseph A. Waldschmitt, Richard R. Walling ' Edward P Weis, Eric Weiss, Lee R. White, Elwyn Wolfe. 239 As the Industrial Engine ering Society was created for Industrial Engi- neering students, the society should include primarily among its activities and discussions, topics and speakers that deal not only with the engineering aspects of the industrial world, but also with problems of economics, financ- ing, management and intelligent forecasting of economic developments. The society has met this challenge adequately by careful selection of speakers from the largest industries in many of the different fields of production. Approximately I I years ago, the Industrial Engineering Society was started for the purpose of giving students in this curriculum a chance to gain firsthand knowledge of the concurrent problems in plant layout, pro- duction control, maintenance, and the general engineering ability needed to solve these problems. The society now occupies a prominent niche in the row of campus and curriculum societies. rvidiAstrial C n naivteenvt f 9 Sc ocie t v OFFICERS ALAN S. GRANT COURTLAND F. CARRIER, RICHARD T. TIEBOUT FRANC H. BURNETT, JR. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer PRESTON F. MARSHALL Junior Representative FRED V. LARKIN Honorary Chairman MEMBERS FACULTY: John R. Connelly, Fred V. Larkin. STUDENT: Norman L Ayer, Chester C. Baldwin, Charles Balough, Jr., Frank G. Binger Alfred V. Bodine, Jr., Aaron H. Brennesholtz, James R. Bright Harry H. Brown Jr., Robert K. Brown, John H. Bryan, Jr., Louis J. G. Buehler, Alexander L. Bupp Franc H. Burnett, Jr., Eugene B. Caller, Courtland F. Carrier, III Joseph J. Comani. William C. Cosford, Joseph C. Coyne, Morton Dav.s Donald G. Denison Jr., Donald L. DeVries, Robert M. Easton, Leonard H. Edwards Wellington B Eler Brian D. Evans, Robert I. Felch, James C. Feldmann, Francs S. Filippone William M. Fine, Jr., Justin Glide, George F. Glueck, Robert F Goodwin Samuel M. Grafton, Alan S. Grant, Edward E. Hagerman, Charles A. Hamilton, Joseph I. Hammond, William M. Harbaugh, Jr., Clarence A. Heller, Jerry C Hubeny, William Irwin, Lowell F. Jett, Eugene Kirkpatrick, Walter C. Kresge Thomas S. Kromer, Raymond P. Laubenstein, John F. Lehrer, George C. Lennox, W,l ham H. Lesser, Jr., Donald W. MacFeeters, Preston F. Marshall George P. Mason, John M. McNabb, Leonard H. Miller, Leonard D. Morrison, John R. Muehlberg, Otto I. Norviq William H. Otto, Herbert J. Packer, Frank B. Ralston, Eldon M. Roemmele, Howard E. Schaffer, William E. Schwanda, Edwin H. Scott, Joseph M. Sexton, Harrison N. Siebold, Leon Silbermann, Vernon N. Simmons Wayne Snodgrass, Roland C. Stoehr, Herman P. Strickler, Richard T. Tiebout John U. Truslow, Waldso R. Turner, Leo W. Uhl, Hugh G. VanderVeer, James M. Walton, Malcolm D. Ware, Robert G. Yingling. 2 0 The Lehigh Student branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was organized in 1911. Through this organization the Mechanical Engineering undergraduates are affiliated with I 16 similar groups in the leading technical schools of the country. After graduation the student members become eligible for junior membership in the parent society, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The speakers of the monthly meetings, with their subjects chosen from items of universal appeal, interest men from the engineering and sales departments of the local and national concerns. However, during the year the program is interrupted twice: in December for the annual Christmas party of the society, and in May for the senior farewell picnic. The bright light of this year ' s meetings was undoubtedly the techni- color sound film, Steel-Man ' s Servant, produced and loaned to the society by the United States Steel Corporation that was shown to the entire student body at the February meeting. mechanical C nalneenn OFFICERS DONALD McKENZIE.. President JOHN F. McOUILLIN Vice-President ROBERT A. ACKERMAN Secretary STUART N. LEWIS ..Treasurer 9 ocleti MEMBERS FACULTY: Thomas E. Butterfield, John R. Connelly, Thomas T. Holme, Thomas E. Jackson, Burgess H. Jennings, Arthur W. Klein, Fred V. Larkin, Alexander W. Luce, Milton C. Stuart. STUDENT: Robert A. Ackerman, Robert C. Albert, Boris Baiko, James H. Bleiler, John W. Bliss, Richard E. Brown, Robert Caemmerer, Charles V. Clarke, Clifford R. Dieckman, John E. Dorer, John H. Dudley, Roy L. Duncan, Robert T. Feld, Vincent A. Frantz, Luis G. Galindo, Louis J. Slesmann, Henry J. Griesemer, Michael Guidon, III, Dale A. Harris, Frank L. Herceg, Willard G. Histand, James F. Hollister, Albert B. Holzl, John M. Hood, Richard W. Hubschmidt, Robert H. Jauck, Covel T. Jerald, Allen F. Jones, Gilbert M. Keller, Lee H. Kestenbaum, Francis A. Kotulak, William J. Kuehnle. Quintin A. Lerch, John Leyenberger, Harold Z. Llewellyn, Stuart N. Lewis, Valentine Lichtenstein, Jr., Robert E. Lyon, Edward V. Manning, Hayden R. Maginnis, Robert J. Mason, James McGee, Donald McKenzie John F. McOuillin, George Messinger, Charles F. Meyer, Sheldon M. Miller, William R. Miller, William H. Morse, Joseph F. Musante, Charles G. Myers, David K. Nichols, William M. Orr, Francis J. Panzarello. Harry V. Paynter, James F. Pfeffer, Robert K. Poetter, Sumner W. Reid, John T. Riley, ' Alfred W. Rowley, Asher G. Ruch, Charles H. Schumacker, Mural W. Sears, Joseph M. Sexton, Francis S. Shenton, William W. Smyth, Ellis R. Snovel, Eugene R. Springer, Robert H. Stettler, Harold A. Strohman, Edward A. Sutherland, Gordon E. Tait, Robert G. Taylor, John H. Tillman, Alfred L. Trumpler, Arthur F. Tozer, Alexander K. Wiggin, Richard W. Willis, Robert A. Wilson, Reuben L Wimmer, Vincent M. White, Allan H. Woodward, Frederick W. Wright, Robert R. Young, Whitney J. Young. 241 OFFICERS ROBERT B. EVANS EMIL KARPOWICH WALTER A. DECKER JAMES G. McGINNIS FACULTY: Harry G. Payrow. President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary MEMBERS L iuil C r nameenvta Sc octe ' et v STUDENT: Andrew B. Baker, James H. Boucher, Sidney B. Bowne, Jr., Walter R. Catching, William R. Clark, Alfred T. Cox, Walter A. Decker, John T. Evans, Robert B. Evans, James H. Galli, George V. Griffith, Frank E. Harper, Jr., Emil Karpowich, John O. Liebig, Jr., Howard G. Luley, Robert C. Lynch, James G. McGinnis, Frank H. McGuigan, George W. Mengelson, Vivian G. Paul, Jr., Robert A. Ritchings, Nor- man C. Scarpulla, James A. Smith, Jr., Robert J. Stickel. The society was founded in 1873, and at that time was called the Civil Engineering Society. The society was reorganized in 1901, and again in 1922 when it became a student branch of the American Society of Civil Engineers. At present there are I I 3 chapters. The object of the society is to bring the students into closer contact with professional engineers and to create interest in civil engineering. This is accomplished by presenting guest speakers at the monthly meetings. OFFICERS JOSEPH B. MATTHEWS, JR. President ROBERT J. McCURDY, III Vice-President JOHN L. WORZEL Secretary EDWARD G. UHL Treasurer AUSTIN R. FREY Faculty Advisor lAsici S ociet y MEMBERS FACULTY: P au ' L. Bayley, Charles E. Berger, Charles C. Bidwell, Preston B. Carwile, Maurice Ewing, Austin R. Frey, William S. Lanterman, Charles R. Larkin, Max Petersen, Frederic A. Scott, Kenneth B. Shiffert, Benjamin L. Snavely, Rollaston G. Stiles, Allyn C. Vine. STUDENT: Bernard Altshuler, Charles J. Apolenis, Eugene C. Avery, Frederic N. Bahnson, Imre Barsy, George B. Benedict, Alfred B. Brown, Robert A. Buerschaper, Ralph Cheli, Hugh R. Davidson, Herbert F. Engleman, Hope D. Ferris, Robert C. Good, Jr., Aelfric James, Jr., Ulysses F. Kleckner, Robert M. Maiden, Robert D. Marsden, Paul W. Marshall, Joseph B. Matthews, Jr., Robert J. McCurdy, III, William F. Mor- gan, David M. Parke, William B. Pohlman, John T. Ransom, II, Rudolf W. Samer, Wil- liam D. Shields, Jr., Robert G. Stern, Albert L. Thalhamer, Edward G. Uhl, John L. Worzel, William B. Wrigley. OFFICERS WILTON F. MELHORN p . . President WARREN W. ACHE Vice-President CLIFFORD F. LINCOLN, JR. Secretary, Wure, FACULTY: Allison Butts, Gilbert E. Doan, George L. Kehl, Bradley Stoughton. inma an 9 d jeolo oaica % ociei STUDENT: Warren W. Ache, Ralston G. Adamson, Charles E. Ahl, Jr., Elmer S. Barnes, Michael Bock, Thomas E. Bogert, Elmer C. Bohlen, Edward H. Brindle Robert N. Brown R. Harrison Browne, Frederick H. Buehl, Jr., Richard A. Buser William B CampbeN, Robert A. Cary, William L. Clark, Frederick H. Clymer, John F. Conwell Seorge S Coopey, Samuel S. Cross, Jr., John F. Croushore, Charles W. Darby Philip n J t £? ' i r L ? enf ' ChaHeS H - Dorse y ' Jr Selden E - Doughty, Alfons A. Duffek, Charles T. Edwards, Richard D. Faber, Charles H. Fetzer, Stephen H Finkle Vernon S Gray Jr., Gordon E. Guy, Karl F. Haupt, Albert W. Hess, Richard C. Hess ' David L H. Hohnes, John J. Hursh, Jr., Robert R. Jones, David F. Keiper, David Kem- per, Wallace C. Kendall, Fred W. Kern, Harry W. B. Kipe, John H. Koch, Robert F Koemg Otto G. Leichliter, William E. Liesman, Clifford F. Lincoln, Jr.. James F. Lobach, Jr., Edward E. Lukens, Stephen G. Maco, Robert E. Malinowski, J. Arthur i ' ' a ViV ' 1 , R , Melhorn ' German E. Merz, William N. Mills, James Mitchell Luther A. Mohr, Charles F. Monard, Laurence R. Naegely, James L. Oberg Joseph oi lP dl £?„ ° s+heimer ' Robert C - Parsons, Maynard H. Patterson, Joseph E Pfaff, Robert H. Popper, John H. Priestley, Louis A. Priolo, Charles P. Pulsford, Robert B. Rauer Warren H. Richards, James B. Ricks, Daniel A. Roblin, Jr., John D. Saussa- man, Fred J Schineller, Joseph B. Schrader, Linton M. Seifert, John W. Sheibley Carl F. S.ebert, Andrew P. Smith, Stephen D. Smoke, Walter G. Speyer, Elmer M. Stefko John it Sweet Jr., Harry Tanczyn, Alvah H. Thomas, Frederick C. Tilberg, Jr., Robert f; w a ' W ' ' m r F ; Wa er ' H - Ed ar Walther, Frank J. Washabaugh, Jr., Joseph M. Weaver, Frank E. Weise, Jr. OFFICERS PAUL MUNOZ D . , HENRY W. McCARD v p d , enf STANLEY E. GIULIO V,ce-Pre « enf JAMES A. SHIELDS Treasurer Secretary MEMBERS FACULTY: Robert D. Butler, Howard Eckfeldt, Donald M. Fraser, Augustus H. Fretz, Benjamin L. Miller, Eric S. Sinkinson, Lawrence Whitcomb. STUDENT: Harry L. Boyer, Jr., Arthur S. Briggs, Edwin A. Brown, David E. Cooper, LaRue G Diehl, Kenneth E. Fiedler, John J. Fischel, Edwin A. Fisher, II, William R. Frednck, Stanley E. Giulio, George L Griffith, Jr., Rudd M. Guttshall, James G. Ham- 1 u-l u c Ha , r+de 9 en '  ' . Donald C. Howe, Richard B. Jeffery, Richard L. Johnson, Archibald S Johnston, Russell R. Klinger, William C. Lewis, Robert O. Lord Jr Don GLovett R,chard O. Marsten, Henry W. McCard, David H. Miller, Paul Munoz Jr. o ou-lh Mu , r P h y ' Jr D ' Patric , k W - ° ' Brie . Wayne F. O ' Neill, Leonard F. Penitsch, John O. Philips, John E Poeter John A. Pooley, Harold Recher, Clayton L Roloson, Joseph D. Scott James A. Shields, William A. Stauth, Everett C. Strickland, Roderick O. Symmes, Peter Telfair, John H. Weitz, Harold H. Werft, Roy E. Woodling Jr r v letatlvimicai 5 octet t A UhighY RLL-HM€RICRN PflT PflZZ6TTl ' l5 HAILS FRI6NDLY TCflMWORK. ■V A I Looking at Football. epanmen t STANDING: McCaa, Mahoney Mercur, Carpenter, Short, Calvert, Westerman, Harmeson; SITTING: Cunningham Bartlett Sheridan, Kellogg, Kanaly, Morrissey, Reiter. ' m ' uarTien, The Division of Athletics and Physical Education was created by the Board of Trustees in the Fall of 1932 to take over the activities formerly carried on by the Department of Physical Education and the Board in Control of Athletics. The Division is divided into two departments: the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, and the Department of Physical Education and Intramural Athletics. The Department of Intercollegiate Athletics has control, as the name indicates, of all intercollegiate sports. The Department of Physical Education and Intra- mural Athletics carries on the required physical education work and administers a program in com- petitive intramural athletics. Nelson A. Kellogg is in charge of the entire divi- sion and of the Department of Intercollegiate Ath- letics. Howard R. Bosey Reiter is in charge of the other department. NELSON AUSTIN KELLOGG, who has been the head of KA D,vnion of Athletics and Physical Education since May 1, 1933, was forced to resign in February because of impaired health. During his term of office the athletic department was brought from a small unorganized body to one that is recognized all over the East. Best of luck, Colonel, and a quick recovery. BOSEY REITER, PAUL SHORT, Professor of Physical Education. Assistant Director of Athletic COLONEL KELLOGG, Director of Athletics. TOP ROW: Morrissey, Grossman, Good, Walker, Hauserman, McAfee, Conchar, Hubeny, Kaszycki, Rabold; THIRD ROW: Heldt, Tanczyn, Campbell, Chadwick, Kirkpatrick, Harmeson, Thomas, Griffiths, Rosenfeld, Danshaw, Kromer, Westerman; SECOND ROW: Smoke, Downs, Gowdy, Kotulak, Prelle, Heins, Shireman, Cox, Walton; FRONT ROW: Famighetti, Feucht, Wertz, Beriont, Ayer, Duyckinck, Loomis, Melloy, Simpson. GLEN W. HARMESON Head Coach MARTIN B. WESTERMAN I Assistant Loaches CARL D. HELDT ...) MARCUS E. WERTZ, JR. Captain ALFRED T. COX Captain-elect ROBERT J. ROSE Manager HARRY J. LESCHEN, JR. {Assistant GORDON G. LOVELAND J Managers 1938 SEASON RESULTS LETTERMEN Lehigh 16 P. M.C 13 Lehigh 6 Boston Univ. 6 Lehigh Case Perm State 59 Lehigh 6 Lehigh 32 Delaware Rutgers 13 Lehigh . N. Y. U. 45 Lehigh Muhlenberg 20 Lehigh Lafayette 6 Lehigh Norman L. Ayer, ' 39 Gordon L. Brandt, ' 40 M.J.Campbell, ' 39 A. B. Chadwick, ' 39 Alfred T. Cox, ' 40 William Danshaw, ' 41 Paul R. Duyckinck, ' 40 A.J. Famighetti, ' 39 Richard S. Gowdy, ' 40 Francis A. Kotulak, ' 41 JackW. Kromer, ' 39 Emery W. Loomis, ' 41 George F. Melloy, ' 41 Walter V. Prelle, ' 41 Frank C. Rabold, ' 39 D. A. Roblin, Jr., ' 39 William B. Simpson, ' 41 Stephen D. Smoke, ' 41 Charles R. Griffiths, ' 41 Frank B. Snyder, ' 39 Stanley Grossman, ' 41 H. A. Strohman, ' 39 Wm. F. Hauserman, ' 4 1 Hulme W. Thomas, ' 40 Earl Heins, ' 39 Samuel R. Walker, ' 41 Eugene Kirkpatrick, ' 39 James M. Walton, ' 40 M. E. Wertz, Jr., ' 39 250 Pass protection for Wertz. The Lehigh football team opened the 1938 Fall sports season in an auspicious manner by defeating the Pennsylvania Military College team, 16-13. The Cadets scored in the first quarter and in the final minutes of the final period. Two touchdowns, both from the two yard line, scored by Feucht and Gowdy, coupled with Duyckinck ' s field goal gave Lehigh its margin of victory. The next Saturday, in what was probably the most thrilling game of the season, the Engineers fought the Boston University squad to a 6-6 standstill. The Terriers scored in the first quarter and led until the final two minutes, when Lehigh finally connected on a pass, Cox to Gowdy, to tie the score. The varsity traveled to Cleveland the next weekend and once again at the end of 60 minutes of gruelling football the score was knotted; this time 0-0. Both Lehigh and Case had two scoring opportunities but fumbles canceled these chances. The next weekend, before a home-coming yards to a touchdown crowd of 10,000, the Engineers lost to Penn State, 59-6. It was the old story of The king can do no wrong. Everything State tried worked to her advantage and she was helped materially by Harry Harrison, one of the best Lehigh ' s famous blocking. backs ever seen on Taylor Field. Returning to normal the following week- end, Lehigh trounced the Delaware team, 32-0. Evident in this contest, even though it was a victory, and in the following game, which was lost to Rutgers, 13-0, was L ehigh ' s heel of Achilles; poor tackling and faulty blocking. The following weekend Lehigh met a superior team in N. Y. U. and, as in the State game, lost by a large margin, 45-0. Running into Muhlenberg next, the Lehigh gridders again lost, 20-0, although if they had had their share of the breaks the score might have been different. Seven days later, playing in a sea of mud and a driving rain, Lehigh lost to its tradi- tional rival Lafayette, 6-0. Scoring on a reverse in the first quarter, the Maroon team was content to play a defensive game and emerged on the long end of the score. It was all in vain, Lehigh TOP ROW: Smoke, Fincke, Caller, Girdler, Rabold, Lehr, Hitchcock, Berger, Hagerman, Matthes, King, Short; THIRD ROW: Sheridan, Sorisse, Brenneman, Danshaw, Bartlett, Finn, Oless, Guggenheim, Juer, Schrader, Haffenreffer, Masem, Laub- enstein, Lincoln; SECOND ROW: Wolbach, Motheral, Ward, Tokarczyk, Davidson, Farrand, McKenna, Chase, Breidenbach, Billstein. Ashman, Brown, Harris; BOTTOM ROW: lobst, Jeffery, Hendry, Creidenberg, Tilberg, Hamilton, Boyer, Bailey, Marshall. WILLIAM SHERIDAN EDWARD E. HAGERMAN HAROLD J. MASEM RAYMOND P. LAUBENSTEIN CLIFFORD F. LINCOLN ) AMBROSE G. DELANY ( Coach Captain Captain-elect Manager Assistant Managers LETTERMEN Franc H. Burnett, ' 39 Henry B. Matthes, ' 40 Robert Craig, ' 41 Joseph A. Oless, ' 39 Edward E. Hagerman, ' 39 Frank C. Rabold, ' 39 Thompson King, ' 40 Joseph B. Schrader, ' 40 Harold J. Masem, ' 40 Henry W. Schwab, ' 39 Walter C. Wells, ' 39 939 SEASON RESULTS Nine wins, no defeats Lehigh 22 Nebraska 10 Lehigh 29 Cornell ' 5 Lehigh l7i 2 Navy l2 ' 2 Lehigh 25 Penn State 3 Lehigh 17 Yale 1 1 Lehigh 26 Syracuse 10 Lehigh 26 Princeton 6 Lehigh 21 Lafayette 16 Lehigh 26 V. M. 1. 8 Lehigh annexed the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling championship with 29 points. 252 Coach Billy Sheridan ' s varsity wrestling team opened another of its undefeated seasons when it came from behind to win, 22-10, from the Uni- versity of Nebraska. After Burnett, 121 pounder, had won on a referee ' s decision, Oless and Walker lost by falls to account for all of the Cornhuskers ' points. Starting with the 145 pound class the var- sity worked its way through the rest of the bouts without losing, collecting, on the way, falls by Captain Hagerman and by Rabold. Right on the heels of their initial victory the Lehigh grunt and groan men defeated the Cor- nell team, 29-5. The Engineers scored on four falls and three decisions, while the Big Red team counted on a fall. The four 5-pointers taken by Lehigh were scored by Craig, Masem, Hager- man and Wells; the others by Burnett, Lehr and Schrader. The Engineers scored their third successive victory when they defeated the Navy matmen, l7l 2 -l2 ' 2 . Matthes and King made their 1939 debut in this match, Monk scoring a fall with Tommy receiving the referee ' s decision. The rest of the Brown and White points were made by Burnett, referee ' s decision; Masem, on a fall, and Hagerman in a draw. The Lehigh matmen next traveled to State and handed the Nittany Lions the worst defeat any State team has ever suffered in the Lehigh-State wrestling series. Scoring points on falls by Craig and Rabold, and on five decisions, the varsity turned in its fourth victory by a score of 25-3. Meeting the biggest obstacle in the path to an undefeated season at New Haven, the Lehigh wrestlers climbed all over the obstacle and the Yale wrestlers to win, 17-1 I. Matthes turned in the only Lehigh fall, the other 12 points being scored by Craig, Masem, King, and Hagerman. Scoring 26 points on falls by Craig, King, Hager- man, and Matthes, and on decisions by Burnett and Masem, the Lehigh varsity outpointed Syra- cuse 26-10, to score its sixth consecutive victory. Lehigh fans received a hazy vision of what was to happen on the second weekend of March when TOP: Our four Eastern Intercollegiate Wrest- ling champs and the man responsible for their success. Masem, King, Matthes, Sheridan, Hag- erman. BOTTOM: Lehigh ' s Eastern Intercol- legiate Wrestling team champions. STANDING: Sheridan, Craig, Schrader, Wells, Rabold, Mat- thes, King, Laubenstein; SITTING: Burnett, Oless, Hagerman, Masem, Schwab. the varsity overwhelmed Princeton, 26-6. This vision became relatively clear-cut when following the triumph over the Tigers, the Lehigh matmen defeated their traditional rival, Lafayette, 21-16. With a 26-8 victory over V. M. I., the var- sity wrestlers completed their dual meet season undefeated The Lehigh varsity wrestlers climaxed their 1939 season by retaining the Eastern Intercolle- giate Wrestling Association championship with a total of 29 points. Captain Hagerman, Matthes, Masem and King claimed individual titles, while Craig took a second and Oless a third. PAUL R. CALVERT Coach JOHN L HANKINS Captain CHARLES R. GRIFFITHS Captain-elect RUSSELL E. STEVENS Manager ROBERT P. CARTER | DAVID R. GINDER (Assistant Manager; LETTERMEN Gordon L. Brandt, ' 40 Herbert F. Feucht, ' 40 Bernard A. Briody, ' 41 Charles R. Griffiths, ' 40 Alexander L. Bupp, ' 39 John L. Hankins, ' 39 Alfred T. Cox, ' 40 Harry W. B. Kipe, ' 39 C. Richard Drake, ' 39 William W. Pedrick, ' 39 Craig S. Thomas, ' 39 1938-39 BASKETBALL SEASON Lehigh 52 Upsala 51 Lehigh 43 Stevens 19 Lehigh 50 Wittenberg 40 Lehigh 36 Alfred 26 Lehigh 46 Muhlenberg 28 Gettysburg 44 Lehigh 30 Lehigh 60 Haverford 27 Lehigh 43 Swarthmore 35 Lehigh 58 Bucknell 22 Villanova 31 Lehigh 29 Muhlenberg 48 Lehigh 45 Rutgers 46 Lehigh 38 Lehigh 44 Lafayette 29 Lehigh 37 Rutgers 2? Lafayette 38 Lehigh 31 BACK ROW: Calvert. Thomas, Briody. Pedrick, Barber, Feucht, Drake. Stevens; FRONT ROW: Cox, Griffiths, Bupp, Hankins, Rie- mondy, Kipe, Brandt. -V . ' : : The Lehigh basketball team opened its 1938-39 season by defeating Upsala. Behind at the half, the Engi- neers forged into the lead eight minutes before the final whistle and won, 52-51. After coming from be- hind in its first game, the varsity took the lead early against Stevens and kept it all the way to win easily, 43- 1 9. Twelve men saw action in this game with Captain Hankins making 10 points to take the scoring honors. The next Lehigh victim was a strong Wittenberg five which, after a hard fight, lost 50-40. Lehigh won its fourth straight game when it defeated Alfred 36-26. This victory proved to be costly as Drake received a leg injury which kept him on the bench the remainder of the season. However, Briody took Drake ' s place and played an excellent brand of ball in his first year of varsity competition. With this new team starting for the first time Lehigh beat Muhlenberg, 46-28. The five game winning streak was broken by Gettys- burg, 44-30. The Bullets, a team of long-shot artists, completely domi- nated the play, the Engineers leading only once, early in the first half. The varsity then returned to form at the expense of the Haverford team, win- ning 60-27. Four days later Swarthmore came to Lehigh with a winning streak of 2 I games. A few hours later the Garnet team ' s ledger was changed to read, 21 wins and I loss, by virtue of a 43-35 Lehigh victory. Next, the Brown and White defeated Bucknell, Action! Camera! Briody scor- ing 2 points for the Brown and White. 58-22; Griffiths leading the scorers with 14 points. In their first away game Lehigh lost a heart-breaker to Villanova, 31-29, the winning basket being made with three seconds to play. In a return game with Muhlenberg, which was marked by a fight and near-riot, the Engineers lost by a score of 48-45. Lehigh opened its quest for the Middle Three title at Rutgers, but lost, 46-38. The varsity then defeated Lafayette, 44-29, and Rutgers, 37-29; both in Taylor gymnasium. However, the Maroon defeated Lehigh in Easton, 38-31, to throw the title race into a triple tie. ROBERT B. ADAMS Coach 1938 SEASON RESULTS HARRY C. MILBANK Captain PAYSON K. NICHOLAS Captain-elect Lehigh 4 Swarthmore ALBERT S. AYERS Manager Rutgers 8 Lehigh 4 ROBISON CLARK CLARENCE R. DeBOW, , R | Assistant Managers Fordham Haverford 10 7 Lehigh Lehigh 2 Ursinus 9 Lehigh 3 Muhlenberg 12 Lehigh 1 1 LETTERMEN Muhlenberg 12 Lehigh 1 1 John H. Barry, ' 38 Harry W. B. Kipe, ' 39 Delaware 9 Lehigh 5 Alfred T. Cox, ' 40 Jack W. Kromer, ' 39 Villanova 13 Lehigh 2 John F. Eagan, ' 41 Frank A. Lucard, ' 38 Upsala 7 Lehigh 5 Robert T. Forrest, ' 38 Harry C. Milbank, ' 38 Dickinson 12 Lehigh 4 Charles R. Griffiths, ' 40 Payson K. Nicholas, ' 39 Lehigh 5 Rutgers 4 Robert V. Henning, ' 38 Herbert R. Imbt, ' 38 Lafayette 3 Lehigh 1 Charles R. Honce, ' 40 William D. Scott, ' 38 Lafayette 10 Lehigh 4 BACK ROW: Heisler, Forrest, Henning, Griffiths, McDonough, Imbt, Adams; FRONT ROW: Eagan, Lucard, Milbank, Kipe, Barry, Nicholas. Paul Robert Calvert, Lehigh ' s new baseball coach, but an old figure on the campus, came to assist in the coaching program of the Engineers when Nelson A. Kellogg was made director of athletics in 1933. Graduating from Purdue University in 1932 Paul spent one year as assistant foot- ball coach at the University of Missouri and then he began his career at Lehigh. He coached the Freshmen football, basketball and baseball teams for four years and then he replaced Glenn Harmeson as varsity basketball coach. This past spring he replaced Bob Adams as varsity baseball coach. When are you going to become varsity foot- ball coach, Paul? Snowed out in its first game, with Princeton, the Lehigh baseball team opened its season at Swarthmore and returned to the campus with a 4-0 shut-out tucked beneath its belt. Le- high should have taken a good look at that victory because the wins were few and far between for the rest of the season. In fact there were exactly ten defeats sandwiched between this first victory and the next win. The luckless Lehigh nine consist- ently outhit and outpitched the op- posing teams, but Dame Fortune refused to smile on the Engineers. An infield which seemed to go to pieces at the very times when it should have been the tightest was one of the most important factors in the downfall of the Brown and White team. After its first victory the Lehigh diamonders lost in quick succession to Rutgers, Fordham, Haverford, Ursinus, Muhlenberg twice, Delaware, Villanova, Upsala and Dickinson. By all rights Lehigh should have won at least five of these ten games; but v hatever gods keep watch over base- ball teams were frowning instead of smiling, and games which should have gone into the win column went into the lost column. The Engineers snapped their losing streak at ten when they nosed-out the Rutgers squad, 5-4. Following this triumph the varsity lost two games to Lafayette, closing the season with a record of two wins and twelve losses. PAYSON K. NICHOLAS, co P - tain 1939 baseball team. Nick has been Lehigh ' s reliable left fielder for the past two seasons and his timely hitting has won many a ball game for the Brown andWhite. MORRIS E. KANALY WILLIAM B. CLARK CARY G. EVANS VICTOR A. BARNHART RICHARD D. FABER Coach Captain Captain-elect Manager Assistant Manager 1938 SEASON RESULTS Lehigh 74 Swarthmore 52 Rutgers 93 Lehigh . 33 Haverford . 72 Lehigh 54 Lehigh . 64 Lafayette 61 Colgate 88 Lehigh 38 LETTERMEN John Beriont, ' 40 Preston F. Marshall, ' 0 Marvin W. Brandt, ' 39 Joseph L. Matteson, ' 40 William B. Clark, ' 38 Frank C. Rabold, ' 39 James Constantine, Jr., ' 40 Frank B. Ralston, ' 39 Morgan C. Elmer, ' 40 Robert W. Richards, ' 39 Cary G. Evans, ' 39 Walter A. Ruschmeyer, ' 38 Nathan H. Gowing, ' 38 Ewing M. Shoemaker, ' 38 Rudolf Kremer, ' 40 Luke O. Travis, ' 38 Walter C. Wells, ' 39 Lehigh placed fourth in the Middle Atlantic States Collegiate Athletic Association championships. BJSMSS £= X£ Jtt ft Stis s. ND D = fts Baft Kanaly, Wells, Travis, Ruschmeyer, Evans, Gowing. FRANK C. RABOLD broke an existing Lehigh record in the Swarthmore meet when he threw the discus a distance of 1 30 feet, 8 inches. Besides being a letterman in track, Frank also has won letters in wrestling and football. The Lehigh track team, captained by Bill Clark, opened its season by scoring a decisive 74-52 win over Swarthmore. The Engineers ' score was bolstered by firsts taken in the 1 20-yard high hurdles, pole vault, broad jump, 220-yard low hurdles, discus throw, high jump and javelin. Moving to Rutgers the following weekend, the Brown and White team was taken into camp to the tune of 93-33. Four days later the Lehigh squad traveled to Haverford and made a gallant attempt to snap the Main Liner ' s winning streak which had reached seventeen successive meets. Victory, however, went to Haverford and Lehigh suffered its second loss of the season, by a score of 72-54. It has been said that any Lehigh season is a success if Lafayette is beaten. If such is the case, the track team ' s season could be termed suc- cessful because the Maroon squad was beaten, 64-6 1. In the end it was the Engineers ' ability to make a clean sweep of four events that turned the tide in their favor. In the final meet of the season the Lehigh squad was unable to stay abreast of a fast Colgate team and went down in defeat, 88-38. Frank Rabold broke an existing Lehigh re- cord in this meet when he put the shot a distance of 42 feet and I inch. Entered in the M. A. S. C. A. A. championships, the Lehigh team made 28 points to finish fourth. J. HARRY CARPENTER WALTER C. WELLS WALTER S. RUSSELL | EDWARD P. PHILLIPS f ARTHUR R. COOKE JOSEPH C. COYNE | DONALD R. LUSTER I Coach Captain Co-Captains-elect Manager Assistant Managers LETTERMEN Sylvan G. Bushey, ' 39 Robert Craig, ' 41 Robert O. Davies, ' 41 Kenneth I. Herman, ' 39 Thomas S. Kromer, ' 39 Edward P. Phillips, ' 40 Aug. A. Riomondy, ' 41 Walter S. Russell, ' 40 Joseph D. Scott, ' 41 H. Alan Snyder, ' 39 Gordon E. Tait, ' 40 W. Rodman Turner, ' 40 Walter C. Wells, ' 39 Robert G. Yingling, ' 39 RESULTS OF THE 1938 SOCCER SEASON Army 3 Lehigh 1 Princeton 3 Lehigh Swarthmore 4 Lehigh 1 Lehigh 2 Syracuse 2 Pennsylvania 2 Lehigh Lehigh 1 Navy Haverford 3 Lehigh Lehigh 1 Cornell Stevens 2 Lehigh Lehigh 2 Lafayette Lehigh finished sixth in the Middle Atlantic Inter- Collegiate Soccer League. BACK ROW: Carpenter, Bushey, Scott, Yingling, Turner, Davies, Craig, Riemondy, Cooke; FRONT ROW: Phillips, Kromer, Snyder, Wells, Herman, Tait, Russell. The Lehigh soccer team opened its 1938 season at West Point and returned to Bethlehem without the bacon. The more experienced Army team scored once In the first period and twice in the third, while Craig tallied Lehigh ' s only point in the third quarter, making the final score read, 3-1. Still looking for the bacon which, incidentally, was not found until the last game of the season, the varsity traveled to Prin ceton where the Engineers retired from the field on the short end of a 3-0 score. The booters next took a trip to Swarth- more and an undefeated Garnet team outscored Lehigh, 4-1. Making their first home appear- ance the Engineers left the negative side of the tally sheet, but only climbed as far as the neutral area by virtue of a 2-2 tie with Syracuse. The tie was questionable as, in the last period, Kromer scored a goal which was not allowed. Following this near- victory the varsity suffered a relapse and lost to Penn, 2-0; a tight Red and Blue defense blocking all of Lehigh ' s scoring attempts. Four days later Lehigh ' s attack began to work and in so doing earned a I -I tie with Navy, Scott scoring in the final quarter. Featuring a seasoned forward line, Haverford next turned the tables on Lehigh and scored a 3-1 victory. A week later the varsity took the field against Cornell and after 88 minutes of fast soccer the Engineers had their Lehigh ' s soccer team is known as the scoreless wonders. In this picture it looks as though they might score. I wonder if they did? Your guess is as good as ours, but we say, NO! third tie of the season, I -I. The Stevens team then invaded Lehigh, and like Caesar, it came, it saw, and it conquered; by a score of 2-1. For over a month the varsity booters were hunting for a slice of bacon and finally, while playing Lafayette, they found it and brought it home with a 2-1 victory. CROSSCOUNTRY morris e. kanaly Coach 1938 SEASON RESULTS GEORGE E. HURST Captain |g Lehigh 40 MORGAN C. ELMER Captain-elect Ruigeri 2Q LeMgh 35 WILLARD G. HISTAND Manager Lehigh 18 Johns Hopkins 37 EDGAR F. WHITMORE Assistant Manager Lafayette 27 Lehigh 28 (Low score wins) LETTERMEN Morgan C. Elmer, ' 40 Robert C. Parsons, ' 39 George E. Hurst, ' 39 William E. Scott, ' 4 1 JohnD. Wooters, ' 41 BACK ROW: Whiting, Histand, Kanaly, Whitmore, Caverly; FRONT ROW: Wooters, Scott, Hurst, Elmer, Parsons, Lennox r Running its first meet, against Penn State, the Lehigh cross-country team was swamped by the perfect score of 1 5-40. The following weekend the Brown and White colors were again lowered when the Rutgers squad scored a 20- 35 victory. The winning of first place by Elmer served to lessen the bitter- ness of the defeat handed out by the Scarlet runners. Hurst was the next Lehigh man to finish, placing seventh. Two weeks later, splashing their way through a steady rain, the Le- high hill and dalers defeated the Johns Hopkins team 18-37. Running over a four mile course, Elmer led the field home. Hurst nosed out the Medicos ' captain to take second place by eight seconds. Scott, Woo- fers and Parsons finished fourth, fifth and sixth respectively to make a Lehigh victory certain. In the final meet of the season Lafayette eked out a 27-28 victory over the Lehigh team. Elmer again finished first to post the best time, 26:44 minutes, ever recorded by a Lehigh man over the Saucon Valley course. Scott, Hurst and Parsons came in third, fifth and ninth to do the bulk of the rest of the scoring for the Engineers. MORGAN WHITEY ELMER, captain- elect of the cross country team, has been Lehigh ' s only hope in cross country for the past decade. Placing fourth in the Fresh- man I. C. 4 A. meet his first year, Whitey has continued to show his heels to all comers. If Lehigh had six Elmers it would be the best team in the country. IF! |l|s w . PETER J. MORRISSEY Coach GEORGE E. ADAM ...Captain JOHN R. O ' MEARA .. Captain-elect WILLIAM C. BERNASCO. Manager FRED KORNET - r uMTi mr .Assistant Managers WALLACE P. WATKINS ) LETTERMEN George E. Adam, ' 39 Daniel P. Knowland, ' 39 Matthew J. Campbell, ' 39 Robert E. Malinowski, ' 41 H. H. Chamberlain, ' 41 John R. O ' Meara, ' 40 1939 SEASON RESULTS Nathan T. Folwell, ' 41 John C. Gregg, ' 40 Harry A. Harchar, ' 39 Emanuel O. Harra, ' 39 Albert W. Hess, ' 41 George W. Woelful, ' 41 Robert J. Rose, ' 39 William E. Scott, ' 41 Willard M. Shelly, ' 40 William B. Simpson, ' 41 Walter C. Wells, ' 39 Princeton 64 Lehigh 1 1 Pennsylvania 60 Lehigh 15 Rutgers . 40 Lehigh 30 Lehigh 39 Delaware 36 Lehigh 59 Johns Hopkins 16 Lehigh 45 Lafayette 30 Lehigh 55 Swarthmore 20 Lehigh finished fifth in the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming Association with a total of 14 points. TOP ROW- Harra Wright, Gregg, Butler; THIRD ROW: Kornet, Campbell, Hood Morrissey, Chamberlain Fowell Berna.co; SECOND ROW : Hess, Q ? Meara. Simpson, Adam. Palmer, Wells, Malinowski; BOTTOM ROW: Evans, Woelful. Scott, Knowland, Shelly. The Lehigh swimming team, coached by Pete Morrissey, opened its 1939 season at Princeton with a strong Tiger team walking away with the meet by a score of 64-1 I . The New Jersey squad won 8 of the 9 events and took 9 seconds and I third. Captain Adam, a consistent winner all season, took Lehigh ' s only first when he splashed his way to victory in the 50-yard free style event. The next week-end the varsity lost to Penn, 60-15, the Quakers taking every event. The Lehigh tankers lost for the third and last time when they were defeated by Rutgers, 40-30. Adam, however, set a new Eastern Intercollegiate record for the 50- yard free style with a time of 24 seconds. The swimmers then started a four meet win- ning streak by defeating Delaware, 39-36. Outstanding in this, the first victory of the season, were Adam, Simpson and Wells. Continuing in the victory column the varsity splashers defeated the Johns Hop- kins team, 59-16. Adam was high scorer with 10 points, winning first place in the 50 and 100-yard free style events. Other winners for the Brown and White were Scott, Shelly, Folwell and Woelful. Five days later the Engineers defeated their Easton foe, Lafay- ette, 45-30. Adam again scored in both of the sprints, with Woelful, Wells and Cham- berlain also taking firsts. The varsity closed the dual meet season at Swarthmore with its fourth consecutive vic- tory, 55-20. Lehigh came in fifth in the Eastern Inter- collegiates, although Adam tied for first in the 50-yard and took second in the 100-yard free style events. It is a dive so good and true, there is nothing for the scorers, but 10 points for you. FREDERIC MERCUR Coach HERBERT HILTON Captain GRANT B. STETSON Captain-elect CHARLES D. COUCH Manager MALCOLM CARRINGTON, JR. | Assistant JOHN F. LEHRER Managers 1938 SEASON RESULTS LETTERMEN Paul H. Bartholomew, ' 38 Herbert Hilton, ' 38 William P. Gottlieb, ' 38 Grant B. Stetson, ' 39 Milton H. Grannatt, ' 39 Charles F. Zell, ' 38 Lehigh 8 Albright I Lehigh . 7 Princeton 9 Lehigh Lehigh Lehigh . Dartmouth No. Carolina Lehigh Lehigh Lehigh Penn ..... Lehigh 6 5 6 8 8 5 9 8 6 7 Haverford Lehigh Penn State Duke 2 3 4 Rutgers 3 Lehigh Lehigh . Swarthmore Muhlenberg Gettysburg Lehigh Lafayette I I 4 I 3 2 BACK ROW: Couch, Bartholomew, Grannatt, Creitz, Mercur; FRONT ROW: Gottlieb, Zell, Hilton, Stetson. The Lehigh tennis team, coached by Fritz Mercur and captained by Herb Hilton, opened its 1938 season by defeating the Albright netters, 8 — I . Right on the heels of this victory the Brown and White scored an- other over the Haverford courtmen, 7 — 2. The feature of this contest was a 30 game set which was finally won by Charles Zell. Striving for its third win, the varsity trav- eled to Princeton. However, Lehigh was un- able to keep the pace set by the Tiger team, and lost 9 — 0. Rebounding from this defeat, the Engineers beat Penn State, 6 — 3, and then continued in the victory parade by win- ning from Duke, 5 — 4. Lehigh ' s next oppo- nent, Rutgers, also went down in defeat, 6 — 3. With a record of five wins and only one loss, the courtmen must have become a trifle over-confident, as they lost their next two tilts. Dartmouth and North Carolina each scored victories by the identical tally of 8— I. The following week Lehigh got back m win- ning stride by beating Swarthmore, 5 — 4, and practically blasting Muhlenberg off the courts with a resounding 9 — victory. In its next contest the Brown and White de- feated Gettysburg, 8 — I. Here the courtmen were defeated as they tried to score a fourth successive victory. Dartmouth had ended a winning streak in the early part of the season, and the Penn team turned the tables this time, scoring a 6 — 3 victory. Bringing their very successful season to a fitting climax against the Lafayette team, the Engineers trounced the Maroon, 7 — 2. This victory gave the tennis team a record of nine victories and only four losses. GRANT B. STETSON, captain 1939 tennis team, about to put the ball away.  . ■« . v y ■mm. 4B| - ■BACK ROW: Hartdegen, Ives, Hamill, Beer, Clark; FRONT ROW: Griffith, J. Bright, R. Bright, Maclndoe, Georgopulo. Greatly handicapped by the lack of a coach, the Brown and White fencing team had a hard struggle last year to maintain a successful season. Nevertheless, they crashed through with second place in the Eastern Intercollegiates. In spite of last year ' s victories, the team remains unsupported by the school in their efforts to obtain a coach. Realizing the futil- ity of entering the Intercollegiates unpre- pared, the team obtained the services of Valentino Argento, an Olympic champion, at their own expense. We believe this noted coach should develop the large squad of interested fencers into a first class team. The loss of the leadership of Bob Brown, this year ' s captain, was a serious setback to the fencers. However, with the election of Tom Hamill as the new captain, the team hopes to repeat last year ' s success. VALENTINO ARGENTO THOMAS M. HAMILL LOUIS BEER TEAM Coach Captain Manager James R. Bright, ' 39 Robert Brown, ' 40 William L. Clark, ' 42 Luis G. Galindo, ' 39 Harvey C. Griffith, ' 41 Thomas M. Hamill, ' 39 Carl Hartdegen, ' 4 1 Alver H. Ives, ' 41 Robert Maclndoe, ' 42 1939 SEASON RESULTS Haverford Rutgers Princeton Penn State Lehigh Seton Hall Wm. and Mary I I Team took fifth out of fifteen in Eastern Intercol legiates. Sabers took second out of fifteen. 14 Lehigh 13 1 1 Lehigh 6 14 Lehigh 13 18 Lehigh 7 21 Swarthmore 6 14 Lehigh 6 1 1 Lehigh 6 268 GEORGE O. ELLSTROM JAMES R. CARRINGER, JR. WALTER C. WEST ANDREW R. MARTIN Captain Captain-elect Manager Assistant Manager LETTERMEN James R. Carringer, Jr., ' 39 George O. Ellstrom, ' 38 Clarence W. Hackney, Jr., ' 41 John S. Hoppock, ' 38 Richard W. Hubschmitt, ' 39 Malcolm C. Reed, ' 38 1938 SEASON RESULTS Lehigh 51 2 F. M. 3i 2 Lehigh 3 N. Y. U. 3 Wesleyan 5 Lehigh 4 Lehigh 6 Delaware Penn 7 Lehigh 2 Williams 8 1 2 Lehigh | 2 Lehigh . 5 N. J. S. Teach. I Lehigh 10 Lehigh C. C. 2 Lehigh 6 Swarthmore 3 Lehigh 8 Lafayette I Lehigh 9 Dickinson Despite the early Spring rains Lehigh opened its season with a 5 ' 2-3 ' 2 victory over F. M. The linksmen then tied N. Y. U., 3-3. In the second match of the weekend, Lehigh lost a hard fought match to Wes- leyan, 5-4. Back on home fairways Lehigh defeated Delaware, 6-0, and then lost the next two matches, 7-2 to Penn, and Wfa-Vi to Williams. The golfing season ended in a blaze of glory, however, when Lehigh took the re- maining five matches. N. J. State Teachers ' were defeated, 5-1, and then the local ex- perts from the Lehigh Country Club were swamped, 10-2. Swarthmore went down under the swinging drivers, 6-3, and then the divot makers from Lafayette were defeated, 8-1. The final match ended in a 9-0 rout of Dickinson, thus completing the most success- ful season in many years. BACK ROW: Hubschmitt, Schwarz, Carringer, Hackney, Martin; FRONT ROW: Carpenter, Oslcin. With two years of experience behind it 1 939 marks the first year that the Ice Hockey Club has gained sufficient recognition to appear in the Epitome. The schedule has expanded from a single game with Lafayette in 1936 to four games this year. Lacking in practice the team lost its first game to Penn State 7-1. The next game was lost in an overtime period to a Princeton team 3-2. Lehigh came through against Lafayette, winning 4-2 at the Skytop Club, Skytop, Pa. The remaining game is to be played with the Philadelphia Phillies. At the suggestion of the Hershey Sports Arena manager the club is taking part in the organization of an Eastern Pennsylvania Hockey League consisting of Lafayette, Penn State, University of Pennsylvania and Lehigh. With the continued aid of Coach F. Smith and the enthusiasm and financial support of the members, the prospects for Lehigh ' s suc- cess in this league are very good. WARREN E. SAWYER President W. RODMAN TURNER Manager STARR H. BARNUM, III Secretary FREDERICK H. SMITH .... Coach MEMBERS James Anderson, ' 41 Gilbert P. Haven, ' ±2 Ray B. Anderson, Jr., ' 42 Clark Neal, ' 39 Robert Caemmerer, ' 41 Douglas C. Paul, ' 40 William L. Clark, ' 42 Eugene L. Pinto, ' 2 Lenard R. Constantine, ' 42 Phillip Rodgers, ' 41 Selden E. Doughty, ' 39 Joseph L. Schroeder, ' 42 AlanS. Grant, ' 39 Edwin H. Scott, ' 40 Thomas Habicht, ' 39 Joseph D. Scott, ' 42 Alex K. Wiggin, ' 42 939 SEASON RESULTS Penn State Princeton Lehigh 7 Lehigh 3 Lehigh 4 Lafayette BACK ROW: Barnum, Paul. S. Anderson, Haven, Doughty, Grant, Schroeder, Turner; FRONT ROW: E. Scott, J. Scott, R. Anderson, Sawyer, Wiggin, Constantine, Clark. BACK ROW: Stankiewicz Drake, Slueck. Frey, Evans, Croft, Haffenreffer, Jett, Hutchison; FRONT ROW: Archer, Schantz DeVrie l lebout, Uelany, btrayer, Grant. ACROSSE TED STANKIEWICZ Coach ALAN S. GRANT Captain JOHN Y. HUTCHISON Manager MEMBERS Donald Crary, ' 38 A. Graham Delany, ' 41 George Dorin, ' 38 Richard Drake, ' 39 Henry Gardner, ' 38 Franklin Glueck, ' 40 Alan S. Grant, ' 39 Ivan Kuryla, ' 38 David Jones, ' 38 Karl Schantz, ' 39 Alan Smith, ' 38 Richard Tiebout, ' 39 1938 SEASON RESULTS Wash. Lee 9 Lafayette 8 Swarthmore J.V. 5 Lehigh 9 Lehigh 6 Lehigh 5 Lehigh 4 W. Chester Tea. 2 Lacrosse has been dormant at Lehigh since 1934. In 1938, through the efforts of Chick Grant a schedule was arranged and the club began its season under the guidance of Major Barndollar; and later it was coached by our present coach, Mr. Ted Stankiewicz, of St. John ' s and Navy. The club journeyed to Lexington, Va., to open its season against a well balanced Washington and Lee team and under un- favorable weather conditions suffered a 9 to 6 defeat. The second contest was played at Easton where the Engineers suffered an- other 8 to 5 setback at the hands of Lafay- ette. In a hotly fought contest, the Swarth- more J. V. nosed out a 5 to 4 win in the last minute of the second overtime period. The team finally hit its stride and won easily over West Chester Teachers in the final game of the season 271 1939 RIFLE CLUB OFFICIALS CARL L. STIEG President and Captain JAMES R. BRIGHT Secretary and Manager MAJOR THEODORE C. GERBER, U.S.A. Coach MAJOR FREDERICK ADAMS, U.S.A. ) Assistant SGT. GEORGE F. GASDA, U.S.A. iCooc ies VARSITY SQUAD Richard W. Blanchard, ' 39 George V. Holby, ' 41 Arnold M. Bloss, ' 39 James R. Bright, ' 39 Charles H. Carter, ' 41 John A. Dallen, ' 40 Charles W. Darby, ' 40 Loring Lane, ' 40 Douglas H. Prideaux, ' 39 William A. Siegele, ' 41 Carl L. Stieg, ' 39 Edward G. Uhl, ' 40 1939 SEASON RESULTS Lehigh 1374 Phila. Marines 1314 Lehigh . 1378 Phila. Marines 1370 Lehigh 1349 Fordham 1307 Navy 1389 Lehigh 1352 Lehigh 1361 Drexel 1342 Lehigh 1387 Lafayette 1291 Lehigh 1382 Rutgers 1337 Maryland 1385 Lehigh 1374 The Brown and White marksmen opened their season with a 1374-1314 victory over the Philadelphia Marines. In a return match Lehigh was again victorious, this time 1378- 1370. The Engineers then went to Fordham and won the match with their low score of the season, 1349-1307. The first defeat of the season was at the hands of a strong Navy team, the Middies shooting a very creditable 1389 to top Le- high ' s 1352. For their fourth win of the season the Engineers went to Drexel and came out on top, 1361-1342. The riflemen maintained their record of never having lost to Lafayette by downing the Leopards with their highest score of the year, 1387-1291. Rutgers was the next vic- tim, 1382-1337. Maryland then handed the marksmen their second defeat in the final match of the year, 1385-1374. BACK ROW: Prideaux, Bright, Gerber, Gasda, Darby, Blanchard; FRONT ROW: Lane, Siegele, Stieg, Carter, Holby, Uhl. few anaaerS teer a TOP ROW: Grant, Selser, Cooke, Haulenbeek, Bowen; SECOND ROW: Hutchison, Turner, Histand, Lehrer, Cox, Martin; BOTTOM ROW: Fulton, Laubenstein, Rose, Bernasco, Clark. TOP ROW: Kleinschmidt, Diamond, Walther, Stieg, Richardson; BOTTOM ROW: Gardner, Carrington, Sheldrake. MANAGERS Fall Sports Winter Sports Spring Sports FOOTBALL WRESTLING BASEBALL Vanity— R. J. Rose Freshman — W. C. Haulenbi =ek Varsity — R. P. Laubenstein Freshman — A. S. Grant Varsity— R. Clark Freshman — C. R. DeBow, Jr, SOCCER A. R. Cooke H. M. Selser, Jr. BASKETBALL R. E. Stevens, Jr. SWIMMING W. C. Bernasco, Jr. TENNIS J. F. Lehrer S. R. Cox TRACK R. D. Faber R. A. Fulton, Jr. CROSS COUNTRY R. W. Bowen W. G. Hlstand HOCKEY GOLF FENCING L. Beer W. R. Turner RIFLE J. R. Bright CHEERLEADERS A. R. Martin LACROSSE J. Y. Hutchison, III M. Carrington, ' 39 (Head) R. F. Kleinschmidt, ' 40 C. W. Sheldrake, ' 39 M. L. Diamond, ' 40 J. S. Gardner, ' 39 C. H. Richardson, ' 40 C. L. Stieg, ' 40 A. E. Walther, ' 40 yn acultat ate CLEMENT CLARENCE WILLIAMS. B.S., B.S. in C.E., C.E., LL.D., Eng.D. President CHARLES RUSS RICHARDS, M.M.E., Eng.D., LL.D. President Emeritus WRAY HOLLOWELL CONGDON, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Dean of Undergraduates Professor of Education TOMLINSON FORT, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School Head of the Department of Mathematics and Astronomy Professor of Mathematics GEORGE BARTLETT CURTIS, A.B., A.M. Registrar and University Editor CHARLES SHATTUCK FOX, A.B., A.M., LL.B., Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Romance Languages CHARLES LEWIS THORNBURG, C.E., Ph.D., LL.D. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics HARRY M. ULLMANN, A.B., Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering PROFESSORS VAHAN SIMON BABASINIAN, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry PAUL LEVERNE BAYLEY, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Physics CLAUDE GILLETTE BEARDSLEE, B.A., B.D., M.A., S.T.M., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Moral and Religious Philosophy JACOB LYNFORD BEAVER, E.E., M.S., Sc.D. Professor of Electrical Engineering CHARLES CLARENCE BIDWELL, A.B., Ph.D. Head of Department of Physics Professor of Physics FREDERICK ALDEN BRADFORD, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Finance Professor of Economics SYDNEY MacGILLVARY BROWN, B.A., M.A., (Oxon.) Professor of European History RAYMOND COOLEY BULL, B.S., A.B., M.D. Director of Students ' Health Service THOMAS EDWARD BUTTERFIELD, M.E., C.E. Professor of Heat Power Engineering ALLISON BUTTS, A.B., S.B. Professor of Metallurgy NEIL CAROTHERS, B.A., Ph.D. Dean of the College of Business Administration MacFarlane Professor of E conomics ROY BURFORD COWIN, A.B., M.A. Head of the Department of Accounting Professor of Accounting HERBERT MAYNARD DIAMOND, B.A.. Ph.D. Head of the Department of Economics and Sociology Professor in Economics ALPHA ALBERT DIEFENDERFER, B.S. in Chem., M.S. Professor of Assaying and Quantitative Analysis GILBERT EVERETT DOAN, Ch.E., Ph.D. Professor of Physical Metallurgy HOWARD ECKFELDT, B.S., E.M. Head of the Department of Mining Engineering Professor of Mining Engineering BATEMAN EDWARDS, Ph.D. Head of the Department of Romance Languages Professor of Romance Languages WARREN WALTER EWING, B.S., M.,S., Ph.D. Professor of Physical Chemistry ADELBERT FORD, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Psychology Professor of Psychology LAWRENCE HENRY GIPSON. A.B., B.A. (Oxon.), Ph.D., F.R.Hist.S. Head of the Department of History and Government Professor of History and Government ROBERT WILLIAM HALL, Ph.B., B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Biology PERCY HUGHES, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Clara H. Stewardson Professor of Philosophy NELSON AUSTIN KELLOGG, A.B. Director of the Division of Athletics and Physical Education ARTHUR WARNER KLEIN, M.E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering FRED VIALL LARKIN, B.S., M.E. Head of the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Professor of Mechanical Engineering HOWARD SEAVOY LEACH, A.B., M.A. Librarian JOSEPH STEPHENS LEONARD, B.S., Lt.Col., U.S.A. Head of the Department of Military Science and Tactics Professor of Military Science and Tactics BENJAMIN LeROY MILLER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Geology Professor of Geology HARVEY ALEXANDER NEVILLE, A.B., A.M.. Ph.D. Head of the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering JOHN HUTCHESON OGBURN, C.E. Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy PHILIP MASON PALMER, A.B. Dean of the College of Arts and Science Head of the Department of German Professor of German HOWARD ROLAND REITER, B.A., M.A. Professor of Physical Education JOSEPH BENSON REYNOLDS, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics and Theoretical Mechanics STANLEY SYLVESTER SEYFERT, E.E., M.S., Sc.D. Head of the Department of Electrical Engineering Professor of Electrical Engineering THOMAS EDGAR SHIELDS, Mus.D., A.A.G.O. Head of the Department of Music Professor of Music LLOYD LeROY SMAIL, A.B., A.M.. Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics EARL KENNETH SMILEY, A.B., M.A. Director of Admissions ROBERT METCALF SMITH, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Head of the Department of English Professor of English MILTON CALEB STUART, B.S. in M.E., M.E. Professor of Experimental Mechanical Engineering BRADLEY STOUGHTON. Ph.D., B.S. Dean of the College of Engineering Head of the Department of Metallurgy Professor of Metallurgy HALE SUTHERLAND, A.B., S.B. Head of the Department of Civil Engineering Professor of Civil Engineering Director of Fritz Laboratory EDWIN RAYMOND THEIS, Ch.E., Ph.D. Professor of Chemical Engineering HAROLD PRESCOTT THOMAS, B.S., Ed.M., Ed.D. Head of the Department of Education Professor of Education STANLEY JUDSON THOMAS, B.S.. M.S., M.A., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Biology HORACE WETHERILL WRIGHT, A.B., Ph.D. Head of the Department of Latin Professor of Latin 276 M cknowiedqm e n t 9 6 We, the 1939 Epitome staff, wish to express our appreciation and thanks to the following for their untiring efforts in making this book a reality: Mr. Charles C. Johnson of the Horan Engraving Company. Mr. David McCaa of the McCaa Photographic Studio. Mr. Norman W. Allis of the David J. Molloy Plant. Mr. Nicholas A. Ickes, Jr., of the Colyer Printing Company. Mr. Kenneth K. Kost, faculty advisor of the 1 939 Epitome. Mr. Edward Decker for the art work contained herein. Mr. Eugene M. Ettenberg for the typographic assistance. Mr. Jack Sherman for the page layout assistance. Mr. John Stegmayer for the page layout assistance. Mr. Eugene G. Grace for his Happy Days letter. Mr. Floyd W. Parsons for his Happy Days letter. Mr. Archibald Johnston for his Happy Days letter. Mr. Vincent J. Pazzetti for his Happy Days letter. 277 IN FACULTATE (Continued) ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS HAROLD VICTOR ANDERSON, B.Ch.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Chemistry SYLVANUS A. BECKER, C.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering WARD LESLIE BISHOP, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics ELMER CLARK BRATT, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics PRESTON BANKS CARWILE, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics JOHN ROBERT CONNELLY, B.S. in M.E., M.S., M.A. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering EARL LeVERNE CRUM, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Acting Head of the Department of Greek Associate Professor of Classical Languages AMOS ASCHBACH ETTINGER, A.B., A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon.), Litt.D. Associate Professor of History AUGUSTUS HENRY FRETZ, Ph.D., C.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Geology MERTON OTIS FULLER, C.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering JAMES LARMOUR GRAHAM, B.A., B.D., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology DALE HARTZLER GRAMLEY, A.B., M.S. Associate Professor of Journalism University News Editor ALBERT HARING, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics GEORGE DEWEY HARMON, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of American History NELSON SHERK HIBSHMAN, B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering GARTH AHYMAN HOWLAND, B.A., M.A. Head of the Department of Fine Arts Associate Professor of the Fine Arts BURGESS HILL JENNINGS, B.Eng., M.S., M.A. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering CYRIL DEWEY JENSEN, B.S. in C.E., M.S., C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering THEODORE THOMAS LAFFERTY, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. MacFarlane Associate Professor of Philosophy Associate Professor of Education KENNETH WORCESTER LAMSON, A.B., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics CHARLES ROZIER LARKIN, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics ALEXANDER WALKER LUCE, B.S., M.E. Associate Professor of Machine Design ARCHIE ROSCOE MILLER, B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering ROBERT PATTISON MORE, B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of German Executive Secretary of the Graduate Faculty MAX PETERSEN, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics GEORGE EMIL RAYNOR, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics EDGAR HEISLER RILEY, A.B., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English ERNST BERNHARD SCHULZ, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Government JONATHAN BURKE SEVERS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English CLARENCE ALBERT SHOOK, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics CHARLES WELLINGTON SIMMONS. B.Sc, M.S. Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering ERIC SPENCER SINKINSON, B.Sc, D.I.C., F.C.S. Associate Professor of Ore Dressing and Fuel Technology ASSISTANT PROFESSORS FREDERICK WILLIAM ADAMS, C.E., Major, Inf., U.S.A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics CARL ELMER ALLEN, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Accounting REGINALD REUBEN BACON, B.S., Major, Inf., U.S.A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics FAY CONANT BARTLETT Assistant Professor of Physical Education Director of Intramural Sports FRANK SWAN BEALE, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics GEORGE CARLTON BECK, A.C. Assistant Professor of Quantitative Analysis FRANK CHESTER BECKER, A.B. Chairman of the Department of Philosophy Assistant Professor of Philosophy CHARLES EDWARD BERGER, B.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics ROBERT DOMINICK BILLINGER, Ch.E., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry ADRIAN ROBERT BRIAN, B.A., Major, U.S.A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics CARTER COLLINS, A.B., Major, Inf., U.S.A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics WILLIAM JOSEPH ENEY, B.S. in C.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering MAURICE EWING, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics WILLIAM HARRY FORMHALS, B.S. in E.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering DONALD McCOY FRASER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Geology AUSTIN ROGERS FREY, S.B., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics THEODORE CHRISTIAN GERBER, B.S. in C.E., Major, Ord., U.S.A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics HOWARD DIETRICH GRUBER, E.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering EARL ROSCOE HALL, B.S., M.A. Assistant Professor of Education GLEN WALTER HARMESON, B.S. Assistant Professor of Physical Education THOMAS HUGER HAZLEHURST, A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry BRUCE GILBERT JOHNSTON, B.S. in C.E., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Assistant Director of Fritz Laboratory FRIEDRICH OTTO KEGEL, A.M. Assistant Professor of German HENRY CARL IVAR KNUTSON, E.E., M.E.E. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering VORIS V. LATSHAW, B.A., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics DERRICK HENRY LEHMER, A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics ROBERT WALLACE MAYER, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics WILLIAM COFFMAN McDERMOTT, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Latin HARRY GORDON PAYROW, B.S. in C.E. Assistant Professor of Sanitary Engineering CHARLES AUGUSTUS SEIDLE, B.A., M.A. Assistant Director of Admissions EUGENE HULSE SLOANE, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English JUDSON GRAY SMULL, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Chemistry BENJAMIN LICHTY SNAVELY, B.S. in Eng. Phys., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics RAFAEL ARCANGEL SOTO, B.S., B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages EUGENE HENRY UHLER, C.E. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering LAWRENCE WHITCOMB, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Geology RAYMOND HARRY WHITE, B.S. in Ed., A.M., Ed.D. Assistant Professor of Education 278 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Lehigh University is non-sectarian and has adhered to high standards in the education of youth rrom the beginning. Its alumni have been markedly successful in nearly all walks oi lite, and particularly in the industrial and professional world. Lehigh is fortunate in the picturesque beauty of its situation on the breast of old South Mountain and in its central k cat on with respect to centers of population (50 miles from Philadelphia, 90 miles from JNew York) and of industry (steel, cement, coal, silk and manufactures). Its graduates therefore, are advantageously circumstanced in finding positions. Living expenses at Lehigh are reasonable, and with two other colleges in the city, Bethlehem affords a good educational environment. COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE The College of Arts and Science, while maintaining courses in languages and the humanities which constitute the traditional cultural arts college, at the same time, offers optional group- ings which lead to professional and graduate schools and to vocations, such as Actuarra ' Practice Government Service Bacteriological Investigations and Controls Journalism Economic Geology Optics Education Personnel Psychology Graduates have achieved distinction in the country ' s leading schools of Law, Dentistry and Medicine. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION The developments of the past century have made the business organization and the economic structures of the country of paramount importance. The College of Business Administration at Lehigh has attained wide recognition for its teachings and writings in this field The under- graduate courses offered in this college lead to careers in such fields as Mercantile Establishments Public Utilities B« k ' Business Statistics Investment Banking investment Houses Accounting Marketing COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING The laboratories and other facilities for engineering education provide for thoroughly scien- tific professional training in the various branches of engineering and technology. Separate curricula are offered in Chemistry Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Civil Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mining Engineering Physics and Engineering Physics GRADUATE SCHOOL Graduate studv leading to the master ' s degree is offered in most departments of the University, and for the Ph.D. in chemistry, geology, history, mathematics, mechanical engineering, metallurgical engineering, physics, and structural engineering. For information write E. KENNETH SMILEY, Director of Admissions 279 Mennegraving for Your Announcements Professional and Social Stationery MENNE PRINTERY Letterheads and Envelopes a Specialty Phone 3431 207 W. FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. WILLIAM F. RUHE SCO. INSURANCE Dial 2-3 341 5 34 HAMILTON STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. EARL H. GIER JEWELER 129 WEST FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Next to Post Office IN FACULTATE (Continued) INSTRUCTORS HOWARD WRIGHT ALEXANDER, B.A., M.A. Instructor in Mathematics GELLERT SPENCER ALLEMAN, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English EDWARD DELBERT AMSTUTZ, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry SYDNEY CHARLES BAUSOR, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Biology CLEDO BRUNETTI, B.E.E., Ph.D. Instructor in Electrical Engineering ROBERT DEXTER BUTLER, S.B.. Ph.D. Instructor in Geology JOSEPH CALVIN CALLAGHAN, A.B., M.A. Instructor in English PAUL ROBERT CALVERT. B.P.E. Instructor in Physical Education JAMES LOWRY CLIFFORD, A.B., B.S., M.A. Instructor in English EDWARD HUTCHINS CUTLER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics CLARENCE DANHOF, A.B., M.A. Instructor in Economics GEORGE DORMER FARNE, A.B., M.A. Instructor in Romance Languages HOWARD JOHNSON GODFREY, B.S., M.S. Instructor in Civil Engineering Engineer of Tests CLARENCE CORLEON GREEN, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in English THOMAS TIMINGS HOLME, B.S. in M.E. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering JOSEPH EDWARD ILLICK, B.S., M.S. Instructor in Mathematics ARTHUR THOMAS IPPEN, Dipl. Ing., M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Civil Engineering THOMAS EDGAR JACKSON, B.S. in M.E., M.S. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering WILLIAM LEROY JENKINS, B.S. in Chem., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Psychology MORRIS EUGENE KANALY Instructor in Physical Education GEORGE LOUIS KEHL, B.S. in Ch.E., M.S. in Met.E., Ph.D. Instructor in Metallurgy KENNETH KARL KOST, B.A. Instructor in Jou na.ism JAMES PEYTON McREYNOLDS. A.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry JOHN CLEWELL MERTZ, B.S. in Ch.E., M.S.. Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry JOHN TETTEMER O ' NEIL, B.S. in Com., M.B.A. Instructor in Economics HARRY BROOKS OSBORN, B.S. in Ch.E., M.S. lnstru:tor in Chemical Engineering JAMES ALEXANDER PEOPLES, Jr., B.A., M.S., Ph.D. Instructo- in Physics ARTHUR EVERETT PITCHER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics ALBERT AUGUSTUS RIGHTS, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English JOHN GRIFFITH ROBERTS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Romance Languages RAYMOND FREDERICK SCHULTZ, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry DAVID GALLUP SCOTT, B.A., M.A. Instructor in Romance Languages FREDERIC ALLEN SCOTT, B.A., M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics JAMES PLATTENBERGER SELL, B.A., M.S. Instructor in Eio ' ogy WILLIAM SHERIDAN Instructor in Physical Education PAUL EDWARD SHORT, B.S. in Buc.Ad. Assistant Director of Athletics 280 IN FACULTATE (Continued) MALCOLM FINLAY SMILEY, S.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics HILTON ALBERT SMITH, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry RALPH NEWCOMB VanARNAM. E.E.. M.S. Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy JOHN LIVEZEY VANDERSLICE, B.S. in E.E., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics MARTIN BRUCE WESTERMAN Instructor in Physical Education CHARLES BURTON WOODS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English ASSISTANTS WILLIAM LAFAYETTE ALBERT, Sergeant, U. S. A. Assistant in Military Science and Tactics JOEL FURNESS BAILEY, B.S. in M.E. Graduate Assistant in Mechanical Engineering WILLIAM HARVEY BOHNING, B.A., M.A. Assistant to the Registrar Assistant in Romance Languages JOHN HARRY CARPENTER Assistant in Physical Education ALLEN RICHARD DESCHERE, B.S. in M.E. Graduate Assistant in Mechanical Engineering THEODORE SCOTT DuBOSE, B.S. in M.E. Graduate Assistant in Mechanical Engineering THOMAS HENRY DUBY, Sergeant, U. S. A. Assistant in Military Science and Tactics GEORGE FRANCIS GASDA, Sergeant, U. S. A. Assistant in Military Science and Tactics CHARLES ADAM HEIBERGER, M.S. Assistant in Chemistry CARL DIEDERICH HELDT, B.S. Assistant in Physical Education KENNETH BAKER HORNING, B.S. Graduate Assistant in English WILLIAM STANLEY LANTERMAN. B.S., M.S. Graduate Assistant in Physics HAROLD SAMUEL LEVENSON, B.S. in Ch.E. Assis ' ant in Chemistry JAMES JOHN MAHONEY Assistant in Swimming WILLIAM DONALD McCAA, B.S. in Bus.Ad. Assistant Football Coach FREDERIC MERCUR Assistant in Physical Education CHARLES JOHN MORAVEC, B.S. Assistant in Journalism Assistant University News Editor PETER JOHN MORRISSEY Assistant in Physical Education LOUIS RALPH PENNAUCKI, B.S. in Met.E. Assistant Football Coach KENNETH BERLIN SHIFFERT, B.S., M.S. Graduate Assistant in Physics CHARLES FREDERICK SMULLIN, B.S. in Ch.E. Graduate Assistant in Chemistry ROLLASTON GEORGE STILES, B.S. in E.E., M.S. Graduate Assistant in Physics NORMAN WILLIAM TAYLOR, B.S. in Ch.E. Graduate Assistant in Chemistry EDWARD SNYDER TINLEY, B.S. in E.E., M.S. Graduate Assistant in Electrical Engineering WILLIAM REAGLE TRANSUE. B.S. G-aduate Assistant in Mathematics ALLYN COLLINS VINE, B.A. Graduate Assistant in Physics NORMAN HARVEY WEBSTER, B.S. in Ch.E. Graduate Assistant in Physics NELSON PAUL YEARDLEY, A.B., M. S. Graduate Assistant in Mathematics FURNITURE HALL Furniture of Distinction 43 8-44 Main Street Bethlehem, Pa. COLEMAN ' S Bethlehem ' s Oldest Furniture Store 321-27 E. Third Street Bethlehem, Pa. Joe Coleman, ' 22 BRICKER ' S BREAD BETHLEHEM BAKING CO. J3J SECOND AVENUE BETHLEHEM, PA. HAFNER MEAT CO. AND FIVE POINTS FRUIT MARKET Phones 1869 — 2710 5 Points 3 5 3 Broadway BETHLEHEM, PA. 281 REBER KORN CO, General Electric Oil Furnaces Heating Engineers and Contractors Link Belt — Coal Stokers 817-19 CUMBERLAND STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. CLs of ] 1940 Warren Woodrow Ache, Met. E., Town Group Hellertown, Pa. Robert Albert Aclcerman, II. M. E., Town Group Westfield, N. J. Charles Emmerling Ahl, Jr., Met. E., Phi Gamma Delta.... Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Clyde Albert, M. E., Town Group Trenton, N. J. Bernard Altshuler, Phys. Taylor Hall.... Newark, N. J. Oscar Carl Ashman, Bus., Town Group — Bethlehem, Pa. Elmer Percy Bachtell, Jr., I. E., Phi Delta Theta Hagerstown, Md. Richard Charlesworth Baggot, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Stroudsburg, Pa. Andrew Breese Baker, C. E., Alpha Chi Rho Wingate, Pa. Chester Case Baldwin, I. E., Sigma Phi Baltimore, Md. Reginald Marsh Banks, Jr., Bus., Town Group Woodmere, N. Y. Elmer Smith Barnes, Met. E., Town Group Plantsville, Conn. Starr Hickok Barnum, III, Bus., Chi Psi New Haven, Conn. Charles Frederich Barton, Jr., Bus., Taylor Hall .Montclair, N. J. Charles Barnett Bayles, M. E., Sigma Nu Port Jefferson, N. Y. Sylvester Demarest Beers, Arts, Sigma Phi Epsilon ...Baltimore, Md. Frank Lee Benedict, Jr., Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Drexel Hill, Pa. John Beriont, Ch. E., Beta Kappa Linden, N. J. Bernard Berkowitz, Arts, Taylor Hall Elizabeth, N. J. Merrill Bernad, Jr., Arts, Taylor Hall. ... Silver Spring, Md. Harry Radford Beucler, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Bergenfield, N. J. William W. Beveridge, Jr., Arts. Beta Theta Pi Asbury Park. N. J. Edward Billstein, Jr., Bus., Town Group Claymont, Del. John Ralston Bingaman, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu. West Reading, Pa. Frank George Binger, I. E., Kappa Sigma Elizabeth, N. J. Lester Robert Bittel, I. E., Taylor Hall East Orange, N. J. William Adrian Blum, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Alfred VanSant Bodine, Jr., I. E., Lambda Chi Alpha .. Fairfield, Conn. Robert Steven Bothe, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon . Oreland, Pa. John Branch, Ch. E., Price Hall Nesquehoning, Pa. Gordon Lewis Brandt, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Philip Brandt, Chem., Town Group Newport, Pa. Marvin Woodbridge Brandt, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Arron House Brennesholtz, I. E., Town Group East Orange, N. J. Edward Hileman Brindle, Met. E., Theta Delta Chi. North Braddock, Pa. Nathaniel Jules Brisker, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Harris Brotherton, Bus., Taylor Hall Dover, N. J. Richard Edwin Brown, Jr., M. E., Kappa Sigma Detroit, Mich. Robert Westley Brown, Bus., Town Group New York, N. Y. William Walter Brown, Ch. E., Delta Tau Delta Ilion, N. Y. Ralph Buchsbaum, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi. Philadelphia, Pa. Louis J. G. Buehler, I. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. John Laidlow Burgher, Bus., Town Group Montclair, N. J. Ernest Reginald Buss, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Gilbert Paine Cardwell, E. E., Richards House Parkesburg, Pa. William Franklin Carson, Jr., Ch. E., Theta Xi Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Prentiss Carter, Ch. E., Town Group ...New Hope, Pa. Robert Alexander Cary, Met. E., Richards House North Tonawanda, N. Y. Walter Randall Catching, C. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Mountain Lakes, N.J. William Rowe Clark, C. E., Taylor Hall Mifflintown, Pa. Richard Frank Cock, M. E., Price Hall .. Kenmore, N. Y. John Cochran, Ch. E., Town Group Suffield, Conn. Robert Fulton Coleman, Bus., Psi Upsilon Brooklyn, U. Y. Albert James Collins, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Norman Comando, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Newark, N. J. Joseph John Comazzi, I. E., Theta Kappa Phi Mountain Home, Pa. Howard Michael Conner, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha Paterson, N. J. James Constantine, Jr., Arts, Town Group Hollis, N. Y. Wenceslao Jose Contreras, E. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa ' . John Francis Conwell, Met. E., Kappa Sigma Meriden, Conn. Alfred Thomas Cox, C. E., Delta Sigma Phi New York, N. Y. Samuel Robert Cox, Ch. E., Alpha Chi Rho .... Lancaster, Pa. Joseph Chrisman Coyne, I. E., Allentown Group. Allentown, Pa. Henry Smith Craumer, E. E., Phi Gamma Delta Wyomissing, Pa. Carlton Elmer Creitz, Arts, Taylor Hall Pen Argyl, Pa. Jack Sparmaker Croft, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Trenton, N. J. Bertram Jay Cross, M. E., Taylor Hall Grand View, N. Y. William Robert Csellak, Ch. E„ Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Edward Francis Dannemiller, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Garden City, N. Y. Charles Wesley Darby, Met. E.. Sigma Phi Somerville, N. J. Olin Merrill David, Bus., Sigma Chi Philadelphia, Pa. Philip Winfred Davis, I. E., Alpha Kappa Pi ...Reading, Mass. John Erich Decher, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group . Staten Island, N. Y. Philip Greenawalt DeHuff, Jr., Met. E., Town Group Lebanon, Pa. John Howard Deming, I. E.. Kappa Sigma Meadowbrook, Pa. Drink Delicious and Refreshing 282 Going Places? Save at Sears on Quality TIRES . . OIL . . BATTERIES AND AUTO ACCESSORIES We test and recharge all makes of batteries. Free tire mounting anc! service by experts. Try our 5 -minute oil changing service. SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. DRIVE RIGHT INTO OUR SERVICE STATION Near Third and Adams Streets BETHLEHEM CLASS OF 1940 (Continued) Donald Goodrich Denison, Jr., I. E., Sigma Phi Grand Rapids, Mich. Charles Courtland Dent, I. E., Delta Upsilon Allentown, Pa. Maynard Lake Diamond, Arts, Kappa Alpha Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Hastings Die hi , Ch. E., Sigma Chi Harrisburg, Pa. Charles Harrison Dorsey, Jr., Met. E., Lambda Chi Alpha Washington, Pa. John Joseph Dudowicz, Ch. E., Town Group Bayonne, N. J. John Henry Joseph Duffin, Ch. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Michael Raymond Durochik, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Uniontown, Pa. Raul Royal Duychinck, Bus., Town Group Roselle Park, N. J. Wellington Ballard Eler, I. E., Theta Xi Trenton, N. J. Frank Bower Elliott, Ch. E., Chi Phi Riverton, N. J. Morgan Campbell Elmer, Arts, Delta Tau Delta Rutherford, N. J. Herbert Frederick Engleman, Eng. Phys., Town Group Wilmington, Del. James Adrian Erdle, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Lester Charles Erich, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Cary Grayson Evans, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Louis Heinrich Alois Feher, E. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. James Cole Feldmann, I. E., Taylor Hall Kingston, Pa. Charles Harrison Fetzer, Met. E., Kappa Sigma Rutherford, Pa. Herbert Frederick Feucht, Bus., Town Group Hewlett, L, I., N. Y. Richard Fred Fincke, Bus., Town Group New York, N. Y. Aaron Finger, Ch. E.. Sigma Alpha Mu North Bergen, N. J. John Jacob Fischel, Arts, Theta Delta Chi. Hellertown, Pa. William Sherman Fiske, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Palmerton, Pa. Car! Richard Fittkau, Arts, Price Hall Irvington, N. J. Bertram VanWie Fletcher, Bus., Chi Psi Brooklyn, N. Y. Roy Howard Frederickson, E. E., Taylor Hall Hillside, N. J. William Irwin Freeman, Arts, Town Group Lansdale, Pa. Fred Earley Galbraith, Jr., Ch. E., Taylor Hall Rutherford, N. J. Richard Charles Gangwer, Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Richard Gerlitz, E. E., Town Group Philadelphia, Pa. Giambatis+a Giacobbe, Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Stanley Ellis Gilinsky, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Trenton, N. J. David Richards Ginder, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta ..Palmerton, Pa. Norman David Glickman, Bus., Town Group South Orange, N. J. Franklin Pratt Glueck, I. E., Chi Phi Philadelphia, Pa. George Frank Glueck, I. E., Chi Phi Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Ray Godard, E. E., Taylor Ha ' l . Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Charles Good, J;., Eng. Phys., Delta Upsilon Pittsburgh, Pa. Elliott Kleiner Goodman, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu New Rochelle, N. Y. James Francis Goodwin, Bus., Richards House Hamden, Conn. Richard Spencer Gowdy, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho West Hartford, Conn. Vernon Stevenson Gray, Jr., Met. E., Taylor Hall Birmingham, Ala. William Delaplaine Green, E. E., Taylor Hall Chester, Pa. John Clark Gregg, C. E., Sigma Nu _ Flushing, N. Y. Paul Radcliffe Gregory, Ch. E., Town Group Chapman Quarries, Pa. George Vintin Griffith, C. E., Theta Xi Pittsburgh, Pa. Spencer Ritner Griffith, M. E., Town Group. _ Lancaster, Pa. Charles Franklin Guiford, Bus., Sigma Phi...... Detroit, Mich. Jack Guttag, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu New Rochelle, N. Y. Walter Grady Guy, Jr., Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Wilmington, Del. Adolf Frederick Haffenreffer, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Fall R ' ver, Mass. Charles Atwood Hamilton, I. E., Theta Xi Winnelka, III. Norman Hammer, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Brooklyn, N. Y. Joseph Irish Hammond, I. E., Theta Kappa Phi Richmond Hill, N. Y. Thomas Bonney Hand, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Paterson, N. J. William Milton Harbaugh, Jr., I. E., Phi Delta Theta.. Allentown, Pa. Albert Beilows Harding, Bus., Chi Psi ... Ridgewood, N. J. Frank Edwin Harper, Jr., C. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Coraopolis, Pa. James Rogers Harris, Ch. E., Chi Phi Glen Ridge, N. J. Jacob Shaffer Hartzell, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Nazareth, Pa. Charles Hookway Hearsey, Bus., Town Group . ..East Orange, N. J. Wil ' iam Webster Heimbach, Bus., Richards House ... Kane, Pa. Clifford Budd Heisler, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Pemberton, N. J. Edward Albert Herre, Jr., Ch. E., Sigma Chi._ Harrisburg, Pa. Edward Lelth Hess, E. E., Town Group. Hellertown, Pa. Richard Christian Hess, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Frank Howard Hewitt, Jr., Bus., Theta Delta Chi Maplewood, N. J. George Tyler Hewlett, Bus., Chi Phi Bridgeport, Conn. Harold Clifford Hixson, E. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Geo-g? Holmes, Jr., Chem., Town Group Bloomfield, N. J. Richard Paul Homiller, Ch. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Lansdowne, Pa. Charles Reed Honce, Jr., Bus., Chi Psi Nutley, N. J. Harry Branham Home, Ch. E-, Town Group Silver Spring, Md. John Glenn Hughes, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Wi ' kes-Barre, Pa. Benjamin Logan Hummel, M. E., Pi Kappa Alpha York, Pa. Paul Artman Hunter, C. E., Town Group _ Williamsport, Pa. John Jacob Hu sh, Jr., Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. FENCES - RAILINGS FIRE ESCAPES WELDING Andrew B. Panick Bethlehem Iron Works 111-119 columbia street bethlehem, pa. STEEL STAIRS MACHINE WORK WIRE WORK Frederick S. Dornblatt, ' 37 283 CLASS OF 1940 (Continued) Robert Henry Ireland, M. E., Lambda Chi Alpha Lambertville, N. J. Aelfric James, Jr., Eng. Phys., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Edward Cecil James, E. E., Town Group Huntington, W. Va. Arthur Henry Joecks, Ch. E., Phi Sigma Kappa Bergenfield, N. J. Ernest Frederic Johnson, Jr., Ch. E., Taylor Hall Cheltenham, Pa. Ralph Grant Johnson, Jr., C. E., Delta Upsilon Washington, Pa. Richard Leon Johnson, E. M., Delta Tau Delta Woodstown, N. J. Frederick Juer, Ch. E., Beta Theta Pi Hopewell, Va. Paul Karlik, Jr., Arts, Taylor Hall Hazleton, Pa. David Frederick Keiper, Met. E., Town Group Hellertown, Pa. Quentin R. Gangewere Keith, Arts, Town Group Montclair, N. J. Joseph Boyd Keliey, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Larksville, Pa. Richa-d Carlyle Keliey, Jr., Ch. E., Delta Upsilon Elkins Park, Pa. Fred Wagner Kern, Met. E., Town Group Norristown, Pa. Herbert Lewis King, Jr., Bus., Kappa Sigma Hackettstown, N. J. Thomson King, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Baltimore, Md. Ulysses Frederick Kleckner, Eng. Phys., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Roger Frederick Kleinschmidt, Ch. E., Theta Xi Manhasset, N. Y. Donald John Kline, Arts, Town Group Cementon, Pa. Robert Farrar Koenig, Met. E., Price Hall Brooklyn, N. Y. William Henry Kohring, Bus., Theta Xi Crestwood, N. Y. Fred Kornet, Jr., Ch. E., Lambda Chi Alpha Wortendyke, N. J. Russell Kowalyshyn, Arts, Price Hall Northampton, Pa. John William Kreidler, Ch. E., Town Group Reading, Pa. Rudolf Kremer, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Paterson, N. J. Loring Lane, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Brooklyn, N. Y. Harry Andrew Leidich, Jr., Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Pottsville, Pa. Theodore Leinbach Leininger, Ch. E., Town Group Pottsville, Pa. George Carson Lennox, I. E., Delta Upsilon. Pittsfield, Mass. Warren Grant Leonard, I. E., Chi Phi New York, N. Y. Howard John Lewis, Arts, Richards House Ouakertown, Pa. John Orth Liebig, Jr., C. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. George Eric Lien, M. E., Taylor Hall Washington, N. Y. Clifford Franklin Linco ' n, Jr., Met. E., Phi Gamma Delta Philadelphia, Pa. Sterling Calhoun Lippincott, Chem., Taylor Hall Plainfield, N. J. James Franklin Lobach, Jr., Met. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Gordon George Loveland, Ch. E., Phi Sigma Kappa Babylon, N. Y. George Elmer Lowe, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group Kingston, N. Y. William Taylor Luce, Bus., Town Group Westfield, N. J. Donald Raymond Luster, M. E., Chi Psi East Orange, N. J. Robert Co-nelius Lynch, C. E., Town Group. .. Bellaire, N. Y. Robert Edward Lyon, M. E., Town Group Norwich, N. Y. Donald Wright MacFeeters, I. E., Taylor Hall G!en Ridge, N. J. Royal Vincent Mackey, Jr., Ch. E., Beta Kappa. . Summit, N. J. Edward Burrows Maddock, Chem., Taylor Hall . Palmerton, Pa. George Pershing Maginness, Bus., Town Group Belleville, N. J. Anthony Nello Manone, Arts, Town Group Hellertown, Pa. Lewis Tho-nton Marks, Jr., Ch. E., Sigma Phi Westfie!d, N. J. Robert Dearborn Marsden, Eng. Phys., Alpha Kappa Pi Chevy Chase, Md. Preston Fairfax Marshal 1 , I. E., Sigma Nu Canton, Pa. Ralph Edward Martin, Ch. E., Delta Sigma Phi Westfie ' d, N. J. Victor William Martin, Arts, Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Haro ' d Joseph Masem, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Da ' e Matheny, Bus., Delta Tau Delta. Pittsbu-gS, Pa. Joseph Leonard Matteson, Bus., Delta Upsilon Cranfo-d, N. J. Hen-y Brown Matthes, Bus., Psi Upsilon Shaker Heights, Ohio Arthur Alexander McCambridge, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi Ridgewood, N. J. John Joseph McCluskey, Bus., Taylor Hall Stroudsburg, Pa. John Joseph McFadden, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Vincent McGuire, E. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. John Francis McOuil ' in, M. E., Kappa Sigma Pittsburgh, Pa. Clifton StaaS Merkert, Met. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Queens Village, N. Y. Robert Russell Merwin, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Herman Edward Merz, Met. E., Theta Kappa Phi Maplewood, N. J. Arthur Samuel Mickley, E. E„ Town Group West New Brighton, N. Y. Edwin Haviland Miller, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Howard Mi ' ler, Arts, Town G-oup Reading, Pa. William Alexander Miller, Jr., Bus., Psi Upsi ' on South Orange, N. J. Thomas William Millet, III, Bus., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. Charles Froelicher Mitchell, C. E., Psi Upsi ' on Bronxville, N. Y. Charles Ferdinand Monard, Met. E., Kappa Sigma Trenton, N. J. Jules Lawrence Moreau, Arts, Leonard Hall East Orange, N. J. William Francis Morgan, Eng. Phys., Town Group Ridgewood, N. J. Matthew Krause Morris, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Dalton Morrison, I. E., Richards House Great Neck, N. Y. Andrew Stanley Morrow, Jr., Ch. E., Richards House Easton, Pa. Norman Lester Morse, Ch. E., Town Group Carlisle, Pa. George Brinton Motheral, II, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Condit Muir, Jr., Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Greenwich, Conn. Paul Munoz, Jr., Arts, Taylor Hall La Serena, Chile Charles Gutilius Myers, M. E., Alpha Kappa Pi Washington, D. C. Anders Finch Myhr, Bus., Taylor Hall Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Andrew Nordt, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon . East Orange, N. J. Otto Verner Norvig, I. E., Kappa Alpha Easton, Pa. James Leslie Oberg, Met. E., Taylor Hall North Warren, Pa. John Robert O ' Meara, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Glen Ridge, N. J. Herbert James Packer, Jr., I. E., Town Group East Orange, N. J. Robert Bauer Palmer, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. James Rutherford Park, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Rahway, N. J. Arthur Decker Partrick, Bus., Price Hall Ridgewood, N. J. Maynard Harold Patterson, Met. E., Taylor Hall Morristown, N. J. Douglas Campbell Paul, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Bethlehem, Pa. Vivian Gaines Paul, Jr., C. E., Town Group Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Frederic Pearce, Bus., Town Group Wilmington, Del. Edward P. Phillips. M. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Berlin, Md. Frederick David Pierce, Bus., Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. William Bernard Pohlman, Eng. Phys., Town Group Little Falls, N. J. Albert Edward Ponter, Jr., Bus., Town Group Bogota, N. J. Steward Broadus Powers, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Red Bank, N. J. Charles Percy Pu ' sford, Met. E., Town Group Birdsboro, Pa. Leonard Bower Rahn, E. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Harry Mathew Randel, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Herbert Emil Rasmussen, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Freehold, N. J. Charles Frederick Rehman, Arts, Town Group Valley Stream, L. I., N. Y. Robert Joseph Reid, Arts, Richards House . Clark ' s Summit, Pa. George Henry Reussner, Jr., Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Warren Hancock Richards, Met. E., Town Group Trenton, N. J. Carl Hazard Richardson, Arts, Leonard Hall Newport, R. I. Thomas Emory Ricketts, Ch. E., Town Group Plainfield, N. J. Charles Jacob Rife, Arts, Town Group . Greencastle, Pa. Harold Harvey Rinker, E. E., Allentown Group Northampton, Pa. James Milnor Roberts, Jr., Arts, Sigma Chi Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Harlan Robinson, Bus., Theta Xi Dividing Creek, N. J. Eldon Martin Roemmele, !. E ., Taylor Hall Newark, N. J. Clifford Donald Root, Arts, Town Group New York, N. Y. D ' Arcy Wentworth Roper, II, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Petersburg, Va. Lester Roland Rosenfeld, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Brooklyn, N. Y. Alfred Williams Rowley, M. E., Town Group Cobleskill, N. Y. John Bradley Rush, Bus., Sigma Phi Princeton, N. J. James Francis Ryan, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group West Hartford, Conn. George Frederick Salathe, Ch. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Leonia, N. J. Warren Everett Sawyer, III, Ch. E., Delta Sigma Phi Primos, Pa. Norman Charles Scarpulla, C. E., Kappa Sigma Flushing, N. Y. Howard Elias Schaffer, I. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Wi.bu- Francis Schaffer, Jr., Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Isaiah Scheeline, Jr., Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Hollidaysburg, Pa. Terry Schiff, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Erich Stephen Schifter, Ch. E., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. Charles Taylor Schrader, Eus., Price Hall Ward, De ' aware County, Pa. Joseph Bennevill Schrader, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Walter Morrison Schweder, E. E., Town Group ...Trenton, N. J. Edwin Haro ' d Scott, I. E., Town Group Elizabeth, N. J. Paul Waldo Seiler, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Farmington, Mich. William Osborne Seltzer, Ch. E., Theta Xi Ardmore, Pa. Robert John Seugling, E. E., Town Group Little Fal ' s, N. J. No man Abraham Shane, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Edward Miles Sharp, Ch. E., Town Group Freeland, Pa. Willard Miller Shelly, E. E., Allentown Group . Allentown, Pa. Francis George Shenton, M. E., Taylor Hall Waynesboro, Pa. William Dickinson Shields, Jr., Eng. Phys., Delia Tau Delta Sewickley, Pa. Carl Frederick Siebert, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Harrison Niles Siebo ' d, I. E., Allentown Group Carbondale, Pa. Robert Brooks Siege!, Bus., Tau Delta Phi New Yo-k, N. Y. Leon Silbermann, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Vernon Nelson Simmons, I. E., Theta Xi Hagerstown, Md. Alfred Louis Simon, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Paterson, N. J. Samuel Robert Simon, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Paterson, N. J. Ga-dner Sletten, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Elmhurst, N. Y. Robert Christie Slingerland, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Millburn, N. J. Charles Fremont Small, Met. E., Chi Psi Hatboro, Pa. Bernard Alois Smith, Bus., Beta Kappa Forest Hills, N. Y. Daniel Endy Smith, Ch. E., Theta Kappa Phi Harrisburg, Pa. Raymond Miller Smith, Bus., Price Hall Stamford, Conn. Lester Landis Spengler, C. E., Town Group Bath, Pa. Robert Bruce Spilman, Arts, Price Hall Washington, D. C. George Sidney Sprague, Chem., Town Group White Plains, N. Y. 284 Jhe L kapet LjoopS 285 HARTERS FOODS Institutions, Clubs, Hotels, etc., Supplied Phones 2707-2708 Say It With Flowers . . . D. M. GOLDBERG Florist Flowers for Every Occasion We Telegraph Floivers 17 WEST BROAD STREET PHONE 2054-J LEHIGH VALLEY Golden Glow Coa A premium coal at the price of ordinary coal CALYPSO COAL ICE CO. Incorporated STANLEY K. WEAVER Secretary-Treasurer Phone 1670 CLASS OF 1940 (Continued) Fred Edwin Stanley, Ch. E., Town Group Broolyn, N. Y. William Wallace Steele, Jr., I. E., Phi Gamma Delta North Canton, Ohio Elmer Michael Steflto, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Sterner, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Newark, N, J. Ralph Gustave Steinhardt, Chem., Pi Lambda Phi East Orange, N. J. Robert Gottlieb Stern, Eng. Phys., Sigma Alpha Mu Mt. Carmel, Pa. Carl Longenberger Stieg, I. E., Town Group New York, N. Y. Edward Woodworth Stoehr, I. E., Beta Kappa Bayside, N. Y. Gordon Edward Tait, M. E., Price Hall Wood-Ridge, N. J. Robert Stanley Taylor, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Drexel Hill, Pa. John Worrall Temple, Ch. E., Pi Kappa Alpha .. Pittsfield, Mass. Hulme Willard Thomas, E. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Willard Johnson Thomas, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Shimer Thompson, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. George Arthur Heckrotte Tice, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Burton Todd, Arts, Town Group Freedom, Me. Charles Arthur Trageser, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Bernard Elroy Tripp, Jr., I. E., Taylor Hall Rutherford, N. J. Harold Francis Joseph Truchsess, Ch. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Alfred Ludwig Trumpler, M. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Randall Benton Tucker, Arts, Leonard Hall New York, N. Y. Wa!dso Rodman Turner, I. E., Chi Psi Detroit, Mich. William DeGarmo Turner, Jr., Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha New York, N. Y. Edward George Uhl, Eng. Phys., Town Group. Elizabeth, N. J. William Valentin3, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega New York, N. Y. Hugh Gaston VanderVeer, I. E., Sigma Phi Somerville, N. J. Philip Ricord VanDuyne, Jr., E. E., Kappa Alpha Newark, N. J. Herbert Vonhof, I. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert George Waite, Met. E., Taylor Hall Hazleton, Pa. John Carlisle Walker, Arts, Chi Psi Brooklyn, N. Y. Heinz Edgar Walther, Met. E., Sigma Chi Philadelphia. Pa. James M-Cullough Walton, I. E., Delta Upsilon ... Pittsburgh, Pa. Wallace Pattee Watkins, Bus., Chi Psi Glen Ridge, N. J. Richard Nichols Watts, Ch. E., Kappa Alpha Brielle, N. J. Elwood Webster, Bus., Town Group Downingtown, Pa. Harold Weinsr, Bus., Tau Delta Phi _ ...Paterson, N. J. Troward Greig Wells, Arts, Beta Kappa Brooklyn, N. Y. Harry Joseph Wenck, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Charles Ernest West, M. E., Taylor Hall .... Nanticoke, Pa. Arthur Everett Wetherbee, Jr., M. E., Richards House White Plains, N. Y. Walter Joseph Wetherell, Bus., Beta Kappa Brooklyn, N. Y. Raymond Robert White, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Edgar Francis Whitmore, Jr., Ch. E., Delta Upsilon Freeport, N. Y. Frank Howlett Williams, I. E., Psi Upsilon Ridgewood, N. J. Harold Paul Wilson, Ch. E., Taylor Hall. ... Newark, N. J. Peter Zouck Wi ' son, Ch. E., Town Group Huntington, W. Va. John Robert Witmeyer, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Albert Wolbach, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group Rumson, N. J. Robert Fairchild Wolfe, M. E-, Price Hall Catonsville, Md. Clinton Hull Woodruff, Bus., Town Group Washington Depot, Conn. Frank Chester Woodside, Jr., Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Caldwell, N. J. John Lamar Worzel, Eng. Phys., Town Group West New Brighton, N. Y. Robert John Wright, Jr., M. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Hawthorne, N. J. Robert Alexander Wrigley, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Mahaffey, Pa. William Byron Wrigley, Eng. Phys., Town Group Germantown, Pa. Donald Clinton Young, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN COUNCIL Just before the Epitome went to press, the eff-campus, non-fraternity men were successful in an endeavor that previ- ously had met with innumerable failures — the organization of a governing body comparable to the interfraternity and interdormitory councils. The new organization was named the Town Council and its first officers were: Henry T. Shick Heckman, President; Milton Spilberg, Vice-President; Norman I.. Morse, Secretary; and Thomas E. Ricketts, Treasurer. 286 CLii of i 941 Ralston Gladstone Adamson, Met. E., Town Group Coatesville, Pa. Albert Edwards Allgrunn, Ch. E., Town Group Miiford, Pa. James Lee Anderson. Bus., Town Group Larchmont, N. Y. Robert William Andrae, Bus., Theta Delta Chi East Orange, N. J. George Gordon Andrews, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi Plainfield, N. J. Joseph Elliot Andrews, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group . Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Berdette Annett, Jr., E. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Maplewood, N. J. William Lippiatt Archer, Bus., Kappa Alpha Truro, Mass. John Charles Attwood, Arts, Sigma Nu. ...Lakewood, N. Y. Kern Churchill Badger, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho.. Ridgewood, N. J. Frederic Newhall Bahnson, Eng. Phys., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Boris Baiko, M. E., Town Group ..Commack, L. I., N. Y. Frank Harvey Bailey, Ch. E., Town Group West Hartford, Conn. Craig Warren Baker, Bus., Town Group Albany, N. Y. Norman Miller Barber, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha New Rochelle, N. Y. William Howard Barnard, E. E., Taylor Hall North Arlington, N. J. David Barnecott, Bus., Chi Phi New York, N. Y. John Chester Barr, Bus., Richards House Jamaica, N. Y. William Henry Barthold, Jr., I. E., Delta Upsi!on New York, N. Y. Kenneth Robert Bartholomew, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Phillips Beal, Jr., Ch. E., Sigma Phi Montclair, N. J. Willard Paul Bear, E. E., Town Group Slatington, Pa. James Mercer Beauchamp, Jr., I. E., Delta Upsilon Staten Island, N. Y. Donald Warner Bedell, Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Robert George Beers, E. E-, Richards House Bloomsburg, Pa. Thomas Robert Bell, III, Ch. E., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. Donald Austin Bender, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Queens Village, N. Y. Robert Henry Bendig, M. E., Town Group ...Woodhaven, N. Y. Fred Willard Berger, E. E., Town Group Matamoras, Pa. John Drew Betz, Ch. E., Alpha Kappa Pi . ..Meadowbrook, Pa. James Kauffman Binder, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Edwin Samuel Bishop, M. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Carl Lyndon Bixby, Jr., Ch. E„ Beta Kappa Plandome, L. I., N. Y. Walter Peyton Blamire, Jr., M. E., Richards House Washington, D. C. Raymond Edwin Blank, Arts, Tau Delta Phi Bridgeport, Conn. William Charles Bley, Bus., Beta Kappa Hamburg, N. Y. Robert David Board, I. E., Richards House. Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Arthur Bobbe, I. E., Pi Lambda Phi . ..Woodmere, N. Y. George William Bond, I. E., Town Group ... New York, N. Y. John Bontya, M. E., Town Group ... Trenton, N. J. Robert McClarey Bowman, M. E., Town Group . Glenside, Pa. Sidney Breese Bowne, Jr., C. E., Sigma Nu Glen Cove, N. Y. Warren Franklin Boyer, Ch. E., Town Group Bowmanstown, Pa. Alvin Leonard Breen, Ch. E., Town Group ...Portland, Pa. James Harman Bricker, Bus., Sigma Phi Westfield, N. J. Donald Heilman Briner, Ch. E., Town Group Drexel Hill, Pa. Bernard Aloysius Briody, Jr., Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Douglas MacGillvray Brown, Arts, Town Group. Bethlehem, Pa. Edwin Augustus Brown, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Herbert Albert Brown, I. E., Taylor Hall.. .. Stratford, Conn. Robert Nash Brown, Met. E., Kappa Sigma... ...Elizabeth, N. J. John Harvey Bryan, Jr., I. E., Lambda Chi Alpha Westfield, N. J. Marion Clayton Burgy, Ch. E., Sigma Chi Peoria, III. David Warden Burke, Jr., Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Pleasant Ridge, Mich. Richard Alvin Buser, Met. E., Town Group McKeesport, Pa. Charles Robert Bushwaller, Bus., Town Group Honesdale, Pa. Frederick Cadwell Butler, I. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Honesdale, Pa. Paul Harold Butler, Jr., M. E., Beta Kappa Chevy Chase, Md. Robert Caemmerer, M. E., Town Group Westwood, N. J. William Baker Campbell, Met. E., Sigma Chi Richmond, Va. Anthony Ralph Carcione, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Henry Carter, Jr., Chem., Town Group Tamaqua, Pa. Harry Edward Case, M. E., Lambda Chi Alpha. Trenton, N. J. Robert James Caverly, Bus., Delta Upsilon South Orange, N. J. Harvey Hine Chamberlain, E. E., Kappa Alpha Maplewood, N. J. Henry Deshons Chandler, Bus., Chi Psi Brooklyn, N. Y. John Alfred Chapman, Ch. E., Theta Xi Montclair, N. J. Hazen Park Chase, Bus., Kappa Alpha Holyoke, Mass. Wilbur Chase, Jr., Bus., Price Hall Chatham, N. Y. Ralph Cheli, Eng. Phys., Town Group.. New York, N. Y. William Creveling Christine, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Stroudsburg, Pa. Charles Edward Clain, M. E., Richards House Ridgewood, N. J. William Lawrence Clark, Met.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Mountain Lakes, N. J. MORRIS BLACK Builders ' Supplies and Machinery Paints 2 1 S Vineyard Street Bethlehem, Pa. Phone 2746 Third and Union Streets Allentown, Pa. Phone 7201 Frederic Mercur INSURANCE A. HARCHAR The Ever Dependable Tailo r 3 1 8 WEST 4TH STREET Phone 2 188- J BETHLEHEM, PA. Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Altering and Restyling of You r Clothes R. O. T. C. Work a Specialty 287 CLASS OF 1941 (Continued) Charles Victor Cla.ke, M. E., Town Group Siaten Island, N. Y. Edward Whittaker Claussen, I. E., Taylor Hall Stratford, Conn. Clarence Merrill Clegg, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Ashland, N. J. John Harry Colbaugh, Arts, Chi Psi Wi.kinsbu.-g, Pa. Charles Benjamin Cole, Ch. E., Theta Delta Chi Union, N. J. Samuel Owen Coleman, Jr., Cus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Caltimore, Md. Lawrence Hamlin Compton, M. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Barton Conchar, I. E., Delta Upsilon Millburn, N. J. Joseph Lawrence Conneen, Arts, Chi Phi South Orange, N. J. Charles Henry Conover, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Mt. Lebanon, Pa. David Earnshaw Cooper, E. M., Town Group Harrington Park, N. J. George Semmer Coopey, Met. E., Richards House Nanticoke, Pa. Arthur John Cornish, Ch. E-, Theta Xi Ardmore, Pa. Maxwell Michaux Corpening, Jr., E. E., Theta Xi Chicago, III. Martin Harrison Cortright, Bus., Town Group Meshappen, Pa. Alexander Mahon Craig, Jr., M. E., Kappa Alpha South Orange, N. J. Robert Craig, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Samuel Stephen Cross, Jr., Met. E., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. Charles Leslie Crouse, Jr., Bus., Delta Phi ... Johnstown, Pa. John Frederick Croushore, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Edgar Culliney, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas Patrick Cunningham, C. E., Theta Kappa Phi Richmond Hill, N. Y. Karl Ludwig Dahl, E. E., Town Group Harrisburg, Pa. John Anthony Dallen, I. E., Town Group ... ...Scranton, Pa. William Danshaw, E. E., Phi Sigma Kappa Tamaqua, Pa. Hugh Roswell Davidson, Eng. Phys., Town Group Winchester, Va. Robert Oliver Davies, Ch. E., Psi Upsilon Jenkintown, Pa. Richard Stoliker Davis, Jr., Bus., Sigma Chi Palisade, N. J. David George de Beauchamp, Arts, Beta Kappa Freeport, N. Y. Robert Wagner Dech, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Warren Edwin Deifer, M. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Ambrose Graham Delany, C. E., Beta Theta Pi Brooklyn, N. Y. Harry Grover Dennis, Bus., Richards House Southbury, Conn. Jack Redding Dennis, E. E., Taylor Hall Pen Argyl, Pa. August Descheemaeker, Ch. E., Theta Xi Hanover, Pa. Alton Paige Dieffenbach, E. E., Town Group Duryea, Pa. lawren-e Fred Dieringor, Ch. E., Town Group Cumont, N. J. Richard Milton Dietz, M. E., Tau Delta Phi Newark, N. J. George Lewis Diggles, M. E-, Town Group F.ushing, N. Y. Robert Carl Dimmich, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Albert Domlesky, C. E., Town Group Minersville, Pa . Howard Vane Donohoe, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Drexel Hill, Pa. John Vance Downs, Arts, Theta Xi Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Grebe Drustrup, Ch. E., Town Group Upper Clack Eddy, Pa. James Joseph Duane, Jr., Cus., Theta Kappa Phi F ushing, N. Y. Alfons Anthony Duffek, Met. E., Taylor Hal; Now York, N. Y. Willard Wilson Dunham, Jr., Ch. E., Beta Kappa Fords, N. J. Frank Rothwell Dunn, Jr., Ch. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Philadelphia, Pa. Dona ' d Eadie, E. E., Price Hall Morristown, N. J. John Francis Eagan, Jr., Bus., Beta Theta Pi Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald Eggleston Eastlake, Jr., Bus., Phi Delta Theta Ridley Park, Pa. Charles Taylor Edwards, Met. E., Delta Upsilon Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Harden Edwards, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Herbert Paul E liott, Jr., Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Pelham Manor, N. Y. Robert Cassel Engle, M. E., Town Group Trenton, N. J. S tevenson Monroe Enterline, M. E., Town Group Ashland, Pa. Paul Pugh Estrada, Bus., Town Group Havana, Cuba William Johnson Feigley, Ch. E., Taylor Hall u «l ertown . Pa- Robert Irving Felch, I. E., Pi Kappa Alpha West Concord, Mass. Kenneth Lewis Fielder, Ch. E., Town Group New York, N. Y. Stephen Hopkins Finkle, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Ernest Finn, I. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Wyncote, Pa. John Charles Fisher, Bus., Delta Phi Hammond, Ind. Martin Louis Flahart, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Edward Newcomb Flail, M. E., Alpha Tau Omega Drexel Hill, Pa. William Francis Foley, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Bridgeport, Conn. Nathan Thomas Folwell, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Albert Canute Foss, Jr., E. E., Town Group Ramsey, N. J. Philip Gray Foust, Jr., Ch. E., Richards House Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Vincent Alan Frantz, M. E., Town Group Pleasant Valley, Pa. Richard Charles Fries, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Mervin James Fry, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Earl Fry, M. E., Town Group Danville, Pa. George Joseph Gabuzda, Jr., Arts, Town Group Freeland, Pa. 288 CLASS OF 1940 (Continued) Michael Carmine Gallo, Jr., C. E., Theta Kappa Phi Netcong, N. J. Richard Angle Garling, Ch. E., Town Group Shippensburg, Pa. Charles Bertram Garstin, Arts, Delta Upsilon Rockville, Md. Charles Allan Gibson, M. E., Phi Delta Theta Jackson Heights, N. Y. Claude Denis Gilchrist, I. E., Town Group .. Maplewood, N. J. Edward Michael Gilmore, Ch. E., Price Hall ... Altoona, Pa. Frederick Richard Gilmore, Arts, Taylor Hall Bloomsburg, Pa. Louis George Gitzendanner, E. E., Price Hall Richmond Hill, N. Y. Arnold Lettele Godlove, C. E., Town Group h ' agerstown, Md. William Eckert Good, M. E., Theta Xi ... Riverton, N. J. Gregory Gould, Arts, Town Group North Ta.-rytown, N. Y. Samuel Meeker Gafton, I. E., Theta Kappa Phi .. Brooklyn, N. Y. Arnold Herbert Edward Grandage, Ch. E., Price Hall Montclair, N. J. Angelo G.-asso, C. E., Town Group Kingston, Pa. Richa-dson Gray, M. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Clifford Nathan Greene, M. E., Town Group ... Plainfield, N. J. Hen-y Jacob Griesemer, M. E., Allenlown Group Allentown, Pa. Geo.-ge Leslie Griffith, Jr., E. M., Town Group Cranford, N. J. Harvey Conrad Griffith, Jr., E. E., Phi Gamma Delta Wayne, Pa. Charles Rupert Griffiths, Bus., Town Group .... Metuchen, N. J. William Vincent Groeger, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Stanley Grossman, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Providence, R. I. William Dietrich Gruber, I. E., Town Group . Bethlehem, Pa. Rolla Harry Gunnison, Arts, Delta Tau Delia Girard, Pa. Gordon Eldridge Guy, Met. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Fort Wayne, Ind. Norman Jo-dan Haas, Bus., Taylor Hall Belmont, Mass. Clarence Winton Hackney, Jr., M. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Pleasantville, N.J. John Ho va:d Hageny, Arts, Beta Kappa .. Jersey City, N. J. Robert Rawson Halligan, E. E., Taylor Hall .. West Orange, N. J. Jo ' in Frederic Hamblin, Arts, Leonard Hall Newark, N. J. Edward Showell Hamilton, Jr., Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Williamson, W. Va. Fletcher Hanks, Jr., Bus., Sigma Phi Oxford, Md. Charles Harold Harding, Jr., Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Rahway, N. J. Frank James Harrold, Jr., Ch. E., Richards House Atlantic City, N. J. Carl Hartdegen, III, E. M., Taylor Hall Maplewood, N. J. William Francis Hartnett, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Akron, Ohio Donald Smith Hartwell, Arts, Town Group ....Oalcville, Conn. William Foley Hauserman, I. E., PhiGamma Delta Cleveland Heights, Ohio Benjamin Haytock, III, Bus., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Edward Daniel Heins, M. E., Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Hummel Heller, Bus., Town Group .... Bethlehem, Pa. James Ra ' ston Hendry, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega East Orange, N. J. Claude Elias Hensinger, M. E„ Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Edgar Herbert, Jr., C. E., Allentown Group Orefield, Pa. F.ank Ver Nooy Hertzog, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Albert Wesley Hess, Met. E., Alpha Chi Rho Scranton, ' Pa. Charles Wesley Hevnsr, Bus., Town Group Media, Pa. Edwin Warren Hine, II, E. E., Psi Upsilon Short Hills, N. J. William Kenneth Hodson, I. E., Town Group New York, N. Y. Robert August Hofstetter, M. E., Taylor Hall.. Westfield, N. J. John Merrill Hood, M. E., Alpha Kappa Pi Washington, D. C. Henry Joseph Horn, E. E., Town Group Ashland, Pa. Philip Roberts Hornbrook, Jr., I. E., Phi Delta Theta Allentown, Pa. George Houck, Jr., Arts, Town Group Scranton, Pa. F ederick Henry Housel, E. E., Town Group .. Audubon, N. J. Cl-arles Alexander Houston, I. E., Beta Theta Pi Tu ' sa, Oka. George William Howland, Jr., C. E., Theta Kappa Phi Little Silver, N. J. Jerry Charles Hubeny, I. E., Richards House ... . E izabeth, N. J. Alfred Lloyd Hughes, Arts, Town Group Belvidere, N. J. Thomas Reed Hunt, Arts, Sigma Chi Wilmington, Del. Raymond Chester Huntoon, Ch. E., Price Hall Scranton, Pa. Arnold Blair Irvine, Ch. E., Theta Xi East Orange, N. J. Alver Holmes Ives, Jr., M. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon New York, N. Y. Richard Bennett Jeffery, E. M., Lambda Chi Alpha Einghamton, N. Y. Austen Erwin Jenkin, Bus., Psi Upsilon Bellerose, L. I., N. Y. David Jenkins, Bus., Psi Upsilon Philadelphia, Pa. Covel Thurber Jerauld, M. E., Taylor Hall ... Pawtucket, R. I. Richa-d Barney Johnson, Arts, Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. Archibald Stephens Johnston, E. M., Kappa Alpha Bethlehem, Pa. Ralph Carkley Johnston, Ch. E„ Delta Phi Wilmington, Del. Asa Packer mural by George Grav in the Pkneer Tap Room Asa Packer, founder of Lehigh University and transportation pioneer, is depicted in the above mural visualizing the growth of Lehigh University which today stands as a monument to the ideals of a one time lowly breakerboy and canal boatma . Hotel Bethlehem Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 289 CLASS OF 1941 (Continued) Harry Furlong Jones, Bus., Town Group Scranton, Pa. Robert Henry Jones, Bus., Town Group Bath, Pa. Charles Frederic Kalmbach, M. E., Sigma Nu Lansdowne, Pa. Marvin Daniel Kantrowiti, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu New York, N. Y. Morton Fischel Kaplon, Chem., Tau Delta Phi Brunswick, Md. Anthony Michael Karwacki, E. M., Town Group Chester, Pa. Joseph Kaszycki, E. E., Town Group Pe Ell, Wash. John Augustus Kauffmann, Arts, Richards House Wyomissing, Pa. Joseph Francis Keating, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Edwin Keiser, Ch. E., Allentown Group Lyon Station, Pa. Aldrich Frederick Kendall, I. E., Town Group Millburn, N. J. Wallace Crane Kendall, Met. E., Beta Kappa Summit, N. J. Lee H. Kestenbaum, M. E., Town Group ..Pittston, Pa. Charles Raymond Kiefer, Jr., Arts, Town Group Easton, Pa. Harold King, Arts, Leonard Hall Morristown, N. J. Richard Leslie Kirk, Ch. E., Town Group Harrisburg, Pa. Edward Arthur Kister, C. E., Delta Upsilon Brooklyn, N. Y. Frederick Schlosman Klopp, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Shcllington, Pa. John Harry Koch, Met. E., Town Group Johnstown, Pa. Thomas Joseph Kochuba, Ch. E., Town Group Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Arnold Jerome Koller, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Carl George Konolige, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Francis Winton Kopyta, M. E., Town Group Somerville, N. J. Metro Joseph Kotanchik, Arts, Town Group Ranshaw, Pa. Seymour Herman Kott, Arts, Tau Delta Phi New York, N. Y. Francis Andrew Kotulak, M. E., Town Group Nanticoke, Pa. Stephen Kowalyshyn, Jr., E. E., Town Group Northampton, Pa. Frederick Franklin Kramer, III, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Edward William Kraus, I. E., Theta Kappa Phi . .Maplewood, N. J. John Joseph Kuciynski, Bus., Town Group Albany, N. Y. John Emanuel Lagouros, Arts, Town Group.., Bethlehem, Pa. Vallory Harry Laughner, M. E., Town Group Williamsport, Pa. Robert Willis Leavens, I. E., Theta Delta Chi Rochester, N. Y. Albert Everett Lee, Jr., Ch. E., Richards House Moorestown, N. J. William Haller Lehr, I. E., Town Group Elkins Park, Pa. Otto Gay Leichliter, Met. E., Town Group Pittsburgh, Pa. Jacques Jules Leroux, Ch. E., Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. George H. M. LeRoy, Bus., Town Group Newburgh, N. Y. Harry John Leschen, Jr., Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Webster Groves, Mo. Thomas Jenkins Lewis, Jr., Bus., Price Hall McKeesport, Pa. William Charles Lewis, E. M., Taylor Hall Pittston, Pa. Valentine Lichtenstein, Jr., M. E., Pi Lambda Phi Jersey City, N. J. Douglas Harry Lippe, Bus., Theta Delta Chi South Orange, N. J. Willard Andrew Litienberger, Arts, Theta Xi Bethlehem, Pa. Harold Zelophehad Llewellyn, I. E., Town Group Summit Hill, Pa. Emery Wight Loomis, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Lansdowne, Pa. John Freeman Loose, I. E., Taylor Hall West Orange, N. J. Robert Jacob Loose, I. E., Taylor Hall West Orange, N. J. Stephen Tener Lowry, C. E., Taylor Hall East Cleveland, Ohio Howard George Luley, C. E., Theta Xi New Kensington, Pa. Andrew Philetus Luse, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Newton, N. J. Robert Charles Lux, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Stoneman Lyhne, Jr., I. E., Town Group Bridgeport, Conn. Harry Wolfe Lynch, Jr., Ch. E., Delta Phi Wilmington, Del. Stanley Gulick MacNamee, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Princeton, N. J. Stephen Gabriel Maco, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Eugene Malinowski, Met. E., Town Group . Hellertown, Pa. Edwin Sitgreaves Malloy, M. E., Easton Group Phillipsburg, N. J. Keron Martin Manion, Ch. E., Theta Kappa Phi Clifton, N. J. Henry DeHaven Manley, Bus., Chi Phi York, Pa. James William Mannion, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group Washington, D. C. Theodore Miller Mantis, M. E., Taylor Hall Reading, Pa. Brookman Jack March, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Shillington, Pa. Donald Alton Marcks, Bus., Town Group Nazareth, Pa. Seymour Margolis, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Atlantic Beach, L. I., N .Y. Edwin Moser Markel, Bus., Richards House Conshohocken, Pa. Sales and Sen ice THE ELECTRIC FURNACE-MAN (Automatic Coal Stoker) CAMPUS INSTALLATIONS: Delta Tau Delta Fraternity Delta Upsilon Fraternity Taylor Hall Richards House Lehigh Field House Prof. Robt. M. Smith Exclusive Dealers in Old Company ' s Lehigh Anthracite Coal Furnished to L. U. since 1908 by KING COAL CO. THE HORSTMANN UNIFORM COMPANY PHILADELPHIA ARMY OFFICERS Uniforms and Equipment of Superior Quality Philadelphia SIXTH AND CHERRY STREETS Annapolis, Md. 74 MARYLAND AVENUE 290 if (id a Cffoue of Spreading ( kestnuL 291 CHAS H. GEHRING Electrical Contractors LAMPS— FIXTURES APPLIANCES— RADIOS 32 EAST FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Thanks 1939 Good Luck JOE KINNEY CLASS OF 1941 (Continued) Richard Oliver Marsten, E. M., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. James Arthur Marvin, Jr., Met. E., Kappa Alpha Scarsdale, N. Y. Gene Ferdinand Mascuch, I. E., Delta Sigma Phi South Orange, N.J. William Angus Matheson, Jr., I, E., Chi Phi Larchmont, N. Y. John Hards Mathewson, Ch. E., Alpha Chi Rho Elkins Parle, Pa. William Sandborn McConnor, I. E., Richards House Pittsburgh, Pa. James Gates McGinnis, S. E., Theta Xi Bridgeton, N. J. Edwin Alex McKanna, Arts, Richards House South Pasadena, Cal. Leonard John McKinley, Ch. E., Town Group Mount Vernon, N. Y. Roger James McNamara, I. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Arthur Runyon Melick, I. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. George Franklin Messinger, M. E., Price Hall ...Tatamy, Pa. John Daniel Mettler, Jr., Ch. E., Taylor Hall. Crowl, Pa. Raymond Chester Miller, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu New York, N. Y. Robert Donald Miller, Ch. E., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. Warren Hasbrouck Miller, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Bogota, N. J. William Robert Miller, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa North Bergen, N. J. William Norman Mills, Met. E., Taylor Hall Wyoming, Pa. Robert Francis Mincemoyer, Arts, Town Group South Williamsport, Pa. Kay Felix Miskinis, E. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. James Mitchell, Met. E., Town Group... Brooklyn, N. Y. Luther Albert Mohr, Met. E., Taylor Hall Wyomissing, Pa. Arthur Edward Moog, M. E., Kappa Sigma.- Summit, N. J. William Howard Morse, M. E., Town Group Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas Albert Mostyn, I. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Hamilton Square, N. J. John Henry Mowen, Bus., Price Hall Chatham, N. J. Richard William Mueller, Jr., M. E., Phi Delta The+a Pittsburgh, Pa. Richard Thomas Musselman, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Behl Musselman, Arts, Town Group. Bethlehem, Pa. Raymond Reever Myers, Arts, Taylor Hall New Oxford, Pa. Frederick Walter Nadig, Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Laurence Ray Naegely, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Raymond Amandus Newhard, Bus., Town Group Northampton, Pa. David Kierstead Nichols, M. E., Town Group Nutley, N. J. John James Nicol, Bus., Richards House Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Norris, C. E., Alpha Chi Rho Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Novitski, Ch. E., Town Group New York, N. Y. Ernest Rudolf Oberholzer, Ch. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Patrick William O ' Brien, E. M., Town Group. Old Westbury, N. Y. William Justus O ' Brien, Bus., Kappa Sigma South Orange, N. J. Benjamin Ojserkis, I. E., Taylor Hall Atlantic City, N. J. Edmund Donnan Osbourne, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Richard Ostheimer, Met. E., Town Group. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Allen Maxwell Paget, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Harrisburg, Pa. Francis John Panzarello, M. E., Richards House Wilkes-Barre, Pa. David Maxwell Parke, Eng. Phys., Taylor Hall West Pittston, Pa. Robert James Pearce, Bus., Sigma Nu . Marquette, Mich. John Joseph Perrell, M. E., Town Group Garden City, N. Y. George Welch Peterson, Jr., Bus., Delta Sigma Phi Ridgewood, N. J. John Sandt Pettibone, Ch. E., Town Group Brant Beach, N. J. Joseph Edgar Pfaff, Met. E., Beta Kappa Cleveland, Ohio James Mitchell Phelan, Ch. E., Price Hall St. Davids, Pa. Leon Henry Plante, Arts, Leonard Hall Fitchburg, Mass. Charles Francis Plate, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Mount Vernon, N. Y. Julius Plucker, III, Ch. E., Town Group Belvidere, N. J. John Edward Poeter, E. M., Alpha Chi Rho Irvington, N. J. Robert Kingman Poetter, M. E., Taylor Hall Glen Rock, N. J. John Ward Prinkey, Jr., I. E., Richards House Yonkers, N. Y. Louis Anthony Priolo, Met. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Peter Prudden, Jr., Bus., Psi Upsilon Palm Beach, Fla. Joseph Henry Quinn, Bus., Town Group Baltimore, Md. Lewis Parker Randall, Jr., E. E., Theta Xi. Trenton, N. J. Richard George Rasmussen, Bus., Town Group Garden City, N. Y. Robert Bertram Rauer, Met. E., Taylor Hall Poughkeepsle, N. Y. Clarence George Reber, M. E., Town Group Reading, Pa. Harold Recher, E. M., Richards House Leacock, Pa. John Clement Remington, C. E., Sigma Chi ..Haddonfield, N. J. Kenneth Rowe Remington, C. E., Sigma Chi Haddonfield, N. J. Rudolph Louis Renker, Bus., Allentown Group Totowa Boro, N. J. James Gilbert Richardson, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Fall River, Mass. 292 SANITARY FRUIT MARKET Early and Late Vegetables and Fruits ORANGES Phone 2 978 LEMONS - NUTS Terms Cash We Deliver 5 5 8 BROADWAY BETHLEHEM, PA Howard R. Laufer Hardware, Glass Stoves, Furnaces Roofing, etc. Paints, Oils Vamisbes 411 WYANDOTTE STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. KEYS CUT Bell Phone 990 CLASS OF 1941 (Continued) James Benaimin Ricks, Met. E., Town Group .. Plandome, L. I., N. Y. Augustus Anthony Riemondy, Ch. E., Phi Sigma Kappa Fleetwood, Pa. John Traver Riley, Bus., Town Group ... Bethlehem, Pa. Joseph Tulley Riley, M. E., Town Group ... Bethlehem ' , Pa. George Moland Ritchie, Jr., M. E., Chi Phi Abington, Pa. Robert Arthur Ritchings, C. E., Town Group Overbrook Hills, Pa. Thomas James Ritter, Arts, Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Philip Baker Robeson, I. E., Richards House Merchantville, N. J. Philip Austin Rodgers, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa... Chester, Pa. Charles Robert Rogers, Ch. E., Taylor Hall. McKeesport, Pa. Clayton Lyman Roloson, Arts, Town Group Atlantic High ' ands, N. J, John Ramsey Romig, I. E., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Walter Stokes Russell, Ch. E., Chi Phi Moorestown, N. J. John Ryle, Jr., Bus., Richards House .. Paterson, N. J. John Bell Sanborn, Ch. E., Town Group .. Bethlehem, Pa. George Henry Schaeffer, Jr., E. E., Taylor Hall Reading, Pa. Josef William Schall, Ch. E., Taylor Hall ... Sellersville, Pa. Fred John Schineller, Met. E., Theta Kappa Phi Bergenfield, N. J. Joseph Stephen Schlegel, Ch. E., Town Group Nazareth, Pa. John Schneider, III, Bus., Town Group. . Cambridge, Md. William Rodman Schnell, M. E., Town Group Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Donald Robert Schoen, Arts, Delta Upsilon Mount Vernon N. Y TWENTY-THREE— 30646— LEHIGH YEAR BOOK Leonard Ernest Schork, Ch. E., Price Hall. ... Maplewood, N. J. Louis Kosuth Schwarz, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Newark, N. J. William Elliot S:ott, Bus., Beta Theta Pi . . Westfield, ' N. J. Jacquss Segal, II, Eng., Town Group ...Flushing, N. Y. Charles Bach Seib, Jr., Arts, Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Matthew Bacon Sellers, Ch. E., Phi Sigma Kappa Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Richard Creighton Seltzer, Bus., Chi Phi Overbrook, Pa. Lemuel Ellsworth Sentz, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Me ' ton! Pa. Joseph Lewis Serrill, Jr., E. E., Delta Phi..... ...Newtown Square! Pa. John William Sheibley, Met. E., Theta Xi Harrisburg, Pa. Richard Montgomery Shepherd, Ch. E., Alpha Kappa Pi. St. Davids, Pa. Samuel Foster Shireman, C. E., Town Group .. Allenwood, Pa. William Augustus Siegele, Ch. E., Alpha Tau Omega Caldwell, N. J. Jonas Silverberg, Bus., Town Group .. Bethlehem, Pa. William Brown Simpson, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Elizabeth, N. J. John Louis Francis Sipp, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Staten Island, N. Y. Edgar Chester Slack, Arts, Taylor Hall.. . . Toms River, N. J. Francis Taylor Slate, Bus., Chi Phi Norwalk, Conn. Richard Edmund Slee, Arts, Taylor Hall. .. Stroudsburg, Pa. Stanley Edward Sliwka, Arts, Town Group .... .. Bayonne, N. J. Cephas Cornelius Smith, Jr., Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Baltimore, Md. Stephen David Smoke, Met. E., Phi Gamma Delta..... McKeesport, Pa. Burd Edwards Smyth, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta . Pottsville, Pa. William Woods Smyth, M. E., Beta Kappa. ... Washington, D. C. Ellis Raymond Snovel, Jr., M. E., Richards House Easton, Pa. Joseph Daniel Sofsky, E. E., Allentown Group .... Coaldale, Pa. Henry Leon Sondheim, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi ... Melrose Park, Pa. Matthew John Stacom, Jr., Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Flushing, N. Y. James Richard Steeg, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Bellaire, N. Y. Frank George Sreinbrucker, E. E., Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. James Clayton Stephens, Bus., Town Group .. ..Hamden, Conn. Robert John Stickel, C. E., Town Group West Orange, N. J. John Henry Stives, I. E., Delta Upsilon Princeton, N. J. Samuel Welch Stockton, Bus., Sigma Phi San Mateo, Cal. Edward James Stone, I. E., Kappa Alpha. ... New York, N. Y. Ra ' ph Daniel Stoneback, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Quakertown, Pa. Joseph Edward Stopp, Arts, Richards House. Philadelphia, Pa. Carl Clemens Stotz, E. E., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Robert Paul Mader Stoudt, Bus., Sigma Chi Riegelsville, Pa. William Thomas Straehle, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Lansdowne, Pa. Henry Joseph Strenkofsky, Bus., Taylor Hall Frackville, Pa. Everett Carlton Strickland, E. E., Price Hall Cranbury, N. J. Richard Brinton Strode, Ch. E., Delta Tau Delta West Chester, Pa. Robert Lamb Stubbings, Ch. E., Delta Sigma Phi ..Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Bernard Stuber, M. E., Town Group Buffalo, N. Y. Mills Gove Sturtevant, Jr., Arts, Delta Phi ... New York, N. Y. Edward Anderson Sutherland, M. E., Town Group White Plains, N. Y. Glenn Bucher Swope, E. E., Town Group Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank Anthony Szabo, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. 293 Ml llJUJ!l | III! |0 D ;-!! J | Thanks. ' 39 You helped us have four of the best years of our history. Be sure to drop in whenever you ' re back on the campus. The Supply Bureau PURITY FOOD MARKET 2 5 -2 7 E. FOURTH STREET Best of Meats Special Prices to Fraternities Here Since 1867 WM. H. TAYLOR COMPANY, INC. Distributors of MILL SUPPLIES INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT ELECTRICAL MACHINERY REFRACTORIES G. F. R. BAHNSON, ' 10 250-256 Hamilton St Vice-Pres. Mgr. ALLENTOWN, PA. CLASS OF 1941 (Continued) Julius Edward Tangel, E. E, Theta Kappa Phi Cranford, N.J. John Peyton Taylor, Bus., Sigma Chi Wilmington Del. Ray Orme Taylor, Bus., Town Group Ashland, Pa. Michael Temosholc, E. E., Town Group Northampton, Pa. Kenneth Roderick Templeton, Bus., Easton Group ' j, , Alvah Hummer Thomas, Met. E., Kappa Sigma Hackettstown, N. J. Graham Fellows Thompson, Jr., Bus., Town Group New Haven, Conn. John Alden Tifft, Jr., Ch. E., Phi Gamma Delta Morion, Pa. Robert Lansing Tilton, Ch. E., Richards House. Toms Riv er N.J. Florent Joseph Tokarczyk, I. E., Town Group Coaldale Pa John Michael Tomkovich, Ch. E., Town Group South River, N. J. William Joseph Toohey, Jr., Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Randall Torrens, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi New York, N. Y. Leon Trivers, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi New York, N. Y Robert Mason Ulmer, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Gibbstown, N. J Chester Arthur VanBrunt, Bus., Town Group Rumson, N. J. William Henry VanDerBeck, Bus., Taylor Hall East Orange, N. J. William Albert VanderClock, Bus., Town Group Ridgewood, N. J. Henry VanReed, Bus., Taylor Hall Reading, Pa. Richard Landis Vockel, I. E., Chi Psi Pittsburgh Pa. Fred Henry Vogel, Ch. E., Town Group Hoboken, N. J. Walter Herbert Vogelsberg, E. E., Delta Tau Delta ...Newark, N J James William Walker, Ch. E., Town Group Mornstown, N J. Thomas Alexander Wallace, Ch. E., Sigma Phi Epsilon.Kew Gardens NX Har low Elwood Ward, Jr., I. E., Town Group Carbondale, Pa. Malcolm Dutcher Ware, I. E., Alpha Tau Omega Millburn, N. J. Richard Anderson Ware, Arts, Town Group Stapleton, NY. Hastings Wetmore Watkins, I. E., Delta Sigma Phi Dominican Republic Martin Avran Weil, Arts, Tau Delta Phi - -New York, N. Y. Stephen Weinrib, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi New York, N. Y. Frank Earl Weise, Jr., Met. E., Phi Delta Theta Bridgeville, Pa. Francis Bernhardt Weiskopf, Ch. E., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Richard Carter Wells, I. E., Pi Kappa Alpha Baltimore, Md. Harold Hoover Werft, E. M., Town Group Altoona, Pa. William Wescott West, Jr., Arts, Theta Delta Chi. Closter, N. J. George Ruch Whitenight, Bus., Richards House Nanticoke, Pa. John Robert Whitesell, M. E., Chi Psi Norristown, Pa. John White Whiting, Jr., Bus., Phi Delta Theta Williamsport, Pa. James Ellsworth Wigg, Bus., Sigma Chi Upper Montclair, N.J. Eudore Joseph Wilhelmy, Bus., Town Group. New York, N. Y. Fred Thomas Willenbecher, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Edward Franklin Williams, Ch. E., Taylor Hall Ashland, Pa. Roger Williams, Jr., Bus., Town Group ...Bogota, N. J. Richard William Willis, M. E., Town Group Scranton, Pa Fredric Woodbridge Wilson, Jr., I. E., Theta Xi West Point Pleasant, N. J. Robert Alexander Wilson, M. E., Alpha Kappa Pi Williamsport, Pa. Howard Del Wintemberg, Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Drexel Hill, Pa. William James Wise, Bus., Delta Upsilon Pittsburgh, Pa. George Wilmot Woelfel, C. E., Psi Upsilon... Hazleton, Pa. Irwin Damascus Wolf, Jr., Bus., Richards House Aspinwall, Pa. Frederick Raymond Wood, Jr., Bus., Beta Theta Pi Easton, Pa. Roy Edgar Woodling, Jr., E. M., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas Brooks Woods, E. E., Taylor Hall Manhasset, N. Y. John Dukes Wooters, Jr., Bus., Richards House Larchmont, N. Y. Kenneth Clinton Wotring, I. E., Town Group Catasauqua, Pa. John James Yankevitch, Jr., Arts, Town Group Freeland, Pa. Jacob Forney Young, Jr., I. E., Phi Delta Theta Hagerstown, Md Roy Shackleford Zachary, Arts, Sigma Nu ....South Orange, N. J. Bernard Hysler Zane, M. E., Theta Kappa Phi East Orange, N. J. Frank Andrew Zimmermann, Bus., Town Group Baltimore, Md. VARSITY FOOTBALL 1939 Sept. 30 Alfred Home Oct. 7 Case Home Oct. 14 Penn State Away Oct. 21 Buffalo Home Oct. 28 Rutgers Away Nov. 4 Haverford Away Nov. 1 1 Muhlenberg Home Nov. 18 Delaware Home Nov. 25 Lafayette Home 294 Class of 1942 Henry Lawrence Abbott, Eng., Sigma Chi Fairmont. W. Va John Marion Adams, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Vernon Howard Adams, Eng., Theta Delta Chi Hempstead N Y John Adrian, Jr., Bus., Richards House Stamford, Conn ' John Purdon Allen, Eng., Town Group Upper Montclair, N J Joseph Nareisco Ambrogi, Jr., Eng., Alpha Kappa Pi Lansdowne Pa Oscar Elof Anderson, Jr., Arts, Sigma Nu .. Jamestown N Y Raymond Burr Anderson, Jr., Eng., Chi Psi West Newton, Mass. Charles John Apolenis, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown Pa Kenneth Pomeroy Applegate, Jr., Arts, Delta Upsilon Hartford Conn Joseph Frederick Arbogast, Eng., Town Group..., Harrisburg Pa George Edward Archbold, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Ridgewood N J Willard Palmer Arentzen, Eng., Taylor Hall... Stratford, ' H J Joseph Andrew Arnold, Eng., Town Group Meadville Pa Robert Edward Ashley, Eng., Kappa Sigma Muskegon, Mich ' John Bush Atherholt, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho . Glenside Pa Harry Montgomery Atkins, Arts, Price Hall Kittanning ' Pa ' Eugene Cone Avery, Eng., Town Group . Riegelsville, ' Pa. ' Walter Hamilton Ayers, Eng., Town Group. Indiana, Pa. Donald Noyes Bachman, Bus., Allentown Group ...Allentown ' , Pa. George Alan Baer, Eng., Town Group York ' Pa ' Robert Martin Baker, Eng.. Alpha Tau Omega York Pa Charles Balough, Jr., Eng., Kappa Sigma Canton Ohio Stephen Fra ncis Balshi, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Lawrence Corbin Barber, Bus., Town Group, Jackson Heights LINY Robert Scott Barker, Bus., Town Group Montclair ' N j ' Frank Barrett. Jr., Eng., Alpha Kappa Pi p orr Washington N Y Robert Hopkms Bartholomew, Eng., Town Group Palmerton Pa Charles Drummond Bartlett, Jr., Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Bangor Me James Henry Bashford, Eng., Phi Delta Theta . Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Lloyd Baty, Eng., Easton Group . Phillipsburg N J Kenneth Caswell Bauder, Arts, Town Group . Lansdowne Pa ' Warren Harding Beaumont, Eng., Town Group Summit N J Robert William Beck, Eng., Phi Gamma Delta . Johnstown, Pa. ' John Joseph Becker, Eng., Town Group . ...Aspinwall, Pa. George Allen Bedell, Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon ... Richmond Hill N Y Jesse Franklin Beers, Jr., Arts, Taylor Hall.. ... Baltimore, Md John Fullam Belcher, Bus., Richards House ... Mount Vernon N Y George Beverly Benedict, Eng., Richards House Albany N Y James Williams Bennett, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Indiana Pa Robert Allan Bennett, Eng., Town Group Northampton ' Pa ' Fredric Emerson Bensen, II, Bus., Theta Delta Chi..... Paterson N J Richard Joseph Berg, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu New Rochelle, ' N. ' Y Robert Thomas Best, Eng., Richards House Elmhurst N Y Jesse Oatman Betterton, Jr.. Eng., Richards House . Metuchen N j ' Edward MacClellan Biggs, Jr., Eng., Richards House Garden City ' N Y Raymond Stanley Birch, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi Jackson Heights ' Ny ' James Harry Bleiler, Eng., Taylor Hall ... Palmerton, Va! Welles Royce Bliss, Arts, Leonard Hall Glen Ridge N J Edward Fulper Bodine, Eng., Lambda Chi Alpha Fairfield, Conn. Charles William Boig, Eng., Town Group . Jersey City, N J. Alexander Hamilton Bolyn, Eng., Town Group Freeland Pa William Filson Boore, Jr., Eng., Richards House . Teaneck, N. J. German Borbolla, Eng. , Town Group Mexico, D. F., Mexico Michael Joseph Bosak, Eng., Sigma Nu .. Scranton, Pa. Robert Richard Bosse, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Pelham N Y William Thomas Bostock, Jr., Eng., Richards House Roselle Park ' n ' J James Henry Boucher, Eng., Tavlor Hall Catasauqua Pa Walter Bertolet Bowers, Eng., Richards House Reading Pa Ralph Bown, Jr., Eng., Theta Delta Chi Maplewood, N. j ' Barnett Picking Bowser, Bus., Sigma Nu Johnstown Pa Charles Edwin Boyer, Bus., Town Group ...Bowmanstown ' Pa ' Harry Lester Boyer, Jr., Eng., Alpha Kappa Pi . Drexel Hill Pa Wilham Woodrow Boyer, Bus., Psi Upsilon Phi ' adelphia Pa W.lham Bruse Boyle, Eng., Lambda Chi Alpha ..Teaneck N J Horace William Boynton, Arts, Alpha Chi Rho Roselle, N. J. Ralph Anthony Bozza, Eng., Town Group Newark N J George Alden Brenker, Bus., Town Group R e( j g an | ( ' N ' j ' Richard Henry Brenneman, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Pottsvilie Pa ' Richard Rieser Bright, Arts, Chi Phi St Davids Pa Everett Allan Britton, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Wilmington. Del! William Alexander Brooks, Eng., Richards House . Newark N j ' Samuel Ritchie Brough, Eng., Theta Delta Chi . Greenwich, Conn. STUPP BROS. BRIDGE IRON CO. Fabricators of Structural Steel Established IS 54 Incorporated 1890 ST. LOUIS, MO. GENERAL ELECTRIC Oil Furnace and Air Conditioner now Sold Exclusively in This Territory brown borhek COMPANY BETHLEHEM Golden Guernsey Milk for Adults MOWRER ' S DAIRY Golden ' ' Grade A Milk for Babies Phone 4-236 295 CLASS OF 1942 (Continued) Alfred Bruce Brown, Eng., Town Group Essex Fells, N. J. George Hongenae Brown, Arts, Town Group New York, N. Y. Russell Harrison Browne, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. James Harvey Bruen, Jr., Bus., Town Group Morristown, N. J. Frank Taylor Brundage, Eng., Taylor Hall Norwalk, Conn. Robert Brune, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Brooklyn, N. Y. John Burgio, Eng., Delta Sigma Phi Caldwell, N. J. Irwin Russell Burkey, Eng., Town Group .. Hamburg, Pa. Franklin Davis Bush, Bus., Richards House Maplewood, N. J. James Harvey Buss, Eng., Richards House Elmhurst, N. Y. William Shepard Butler, Eng., Kappa Alpha Niagara Falls, N. Y. Richard Shaw Button, Bus., Richards House Hubbard, Ohio Philip Guernsey Butts, Arts, Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Harold Andrew Campbell, Eng., Delta Upsilon Plainfield, N. J. Harold Caplan, Arts, Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Peter Carpenter, Bus., Chi Psi Corning, N. Y. Joseph Frederic Cassano, Eng., Town Group Nazareth, Pa. Lewis Jones Caulk, Bus., Sigma Phi Pasadena, Cal. Boyd Daryl Chamberlain, Eng., Town Group Shamokin, Pa. Robert Elmer Chamberlain, Eng., Town Group Lyndhurst, N. J. Charles Chipman, Jr., Bus., Beta Theta Pi Easton, Pa. Robert Hanson Christy, Eng., Town Group Philadelphia, Pa. Albert Clark, Jr., Eng., Town Group ....Nanticoke, Pa. Gordon Manson Clark, Eng., Richards House Hamden, Conn. John Fulmer Clark, Jr., Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon Wyomissing, Pa. Nelson Raymond Clark, Jr., Eng., Beta Theta Pi La Grange, III. Robert Wesley Clark, Eng., Sigma Nu Lakewood, N. Y. William Lee Clark, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa... Garden City, N. Y. Willard Stanley Clewell, Jr., Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. James Stevenson Clinch, Bus., Town Group Chisholm, Minn. Fenton Rulon Cloud, Eng., Richards House .... Norristown, Pa. Edward John Coffey, Jr., Eng., Town Group..... Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Henry Coleman, Eng., Town Group. ... Flushing, N. Y. Philip Collins Cone, Eng., Town Group . . .Little Fa ' ls, N. Y. Alan Holding Conklin, Bus., Taylor Hall Upper Montclair, N. J. Charles Middleton Conrad, II, Bus., Theta Xi Barnegat, N. J. Leonard Robert Constantine, Eng., Richards House New York, N. Y. Oakley Watts Cooke, Jr., Bus., Beta Kappa. . Caldwell, N. J. William Harris Corddry, Eng., Richards House Snow Hill, Md. Theodore Robert Cortright, Eng., Town Group Berwick, Pa. Henry Hobart Corwin, Eng., Chi Phi Bridgeport, Conn. Samuel Isaac Cory, Jr., Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon .. Towaco, N. J. William Clark Cosford, Eng., Town Group, Westmount, O ebec, Canada James Loren Cox, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Memphis, Tenn. Carl Creidenberg, Arts, Tau Delta Phi ...New York, N. Y. Robert Ellsworth Crist, Eng., Town Group Progress, Pa. Lloyd Alexander Croot, Eng., Delta Tau Delta North East, Pa. Robert Emmet Cullen, Jr., Eng., Phi Gamma Delta Kennett Square, Pa. John Philip Curran, Arts, Theta Delta Chi Bridgeport, Conn. Frank Peter Cziguth, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Alexander Lowe Darby, Bus., Delta Phi Averill Park, N. Y. William Leonard Davey, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha Concord, N. C. Charles Parker Davidson, III, Eng., Richards House Clarks Green, Pa. Edward Charles Davis, Jr., Eng., Psi Upsilon Wilmington, De!. Elwood Charles Davis, Eng., Town Group Springfield, Mass. Milton Amor Davis, Eng., Taylor Hall Baltimore, Md. Robert Nation Davis, Eng., Kappa Alpha Scarsdale, N. Y. William Sampson Dawless, Bus., Town Group Hamden, Conn. George Nestor DeCowsky, Eng., Town Group Pennsburg, Pa. Gene Michael DeGiacomo, Eng., Town Group Port Chester, N. Y. Robert Charles Demberg, Eng., Sigma Nu Atlantic City, N. J. Paul Alton Deschler, Jr., Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Ward Arnold Detwiler, II, Bus., Delta Phi . Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. William Deutsch, Eng., Town Group . Weissport, Pa. John Lake Diamond, Arts, Kappa Alpha Bethlehem, Pa. Kenneth Kingsbury Dillenbeck, Bus, Richards House Manhasset, N. Y. Frank Rodney Dirkes, Jr., Eng., Richards House Lynbrook, N. Y. John Rawson Dodge, Arts, Richards House Lake Mahopac, N. Y. James Joseph Donahue, Jr., Eng., Theta Delta Chi Garden City, N. Y. Jerome Richard Dorkin, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Camden, N. J. Robert Walper Doster, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Harold Sears Downing, Jr., Eng., Delta Tau Delta Pittsburgh, Pa. John Herren Dudley, Eng., Town Group McKeesport, Pa. Roy Leslie Duncan, Eng., Richards House West Hartford, Conn. James Dunwoody, Jr., Eng., Town Group Erie, Pa. Charles Bockoven Dutton, Eng., Kappa Sigma Morristown, N. J. Robert Edward Duval, Eng., Delta Upsilon Jenkintown Pa. Albert Mitchell Eastwood, Bus., Town Group Providence, R. . Henry Warren Eckel, Eng., Richards House ... Washington, N. J. William Peter Eckel, Eng., Richards House Washington, N.J. William Adolph Eisele, Eng., Richards House Mount Vernon, N Y. Robert Gaylord Eitner, Eng., Richards House Summit, N. J. George Earl Elliott, Jr., Eng., Sigma Nu Washington, DC. Ralph Lee Emerson, Eng., Town G roup Bethlehem, Pa. Victor Frederick Emerson, Jr., Eng., Richards House Villanova, Pa. Somers H. Endicott, Eng., Town Group Pleasantville, N. J. John Greer English, Bus., Delta Upsilon Belleville, N. J. John Ernest Epprecht, Eng., Richards House Port Washington, NY. Edwin Burk Estabrook, Jr., Eng., Town Group Germantown, Pa. Vernon Evans, Jr., Eng., Theta Xi F° ' t Benning Ga. Joseph Baker Evaul, Eng., Richards House Woodbury Heights, N J. Robert Douglass Everett, Eng., Sigma Nu McKeesport, Pa. Musa Joseph Eways, Eng., Town Group Reading Pa. Buchanan Ewing, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Trenton, N. J. Ellery Holliday Farnam, Eng., Town Group Minneapolis, Minn Henry Carroll Farrand, Bus., Town Group Bloomfield, N. J. James Barnet Felker, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Bethlehem, Pa. Clement Roger Ferland, Arts, Town Group.. Middlebury Vt. William August Fetske, Eng., Richards House Elizabeth N. J. Edmond Crawford Fetter, Eng., Town Group Media, Pa. Richard Waid Fidler, Eng., Taylor Hall Shillington, Pa. Kenneth Edward Fiedler, Eng., Phi Delta Theta Garden Oty, N. Y. Charles Robert Finley, Jr., Arts, Town Group Fort Totten, N. Y. Arthur Louis Fischer, Eng., Chi Psi Plainfield N. J. Paul Boris Fitzell, Eng., Town Group - New Britain, Conn. Thomas Fleischer, Eng., Town Group Indianapolis, Ind. Harry William Flueso, Bus., Allentown Group ...Allentown, Pa. Robert Field Forshey, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Hempstead, N. Y. Robert Henry Forster, Bus., Town Group Elizabeth N. J. Robert Henry Forsyth, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa Red Bank, N. J. Albert Wood Foster, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Philadelphia, Pa. Harold E. Foster, Eng., Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. Richard MacDonald Foster, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. George Stidworthy Fox, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Adam Frederick, Jr., Bus., Town Group Catasauqua, Pa. William Rue Fredrick, Eng., Chi Phi Cranford, N. J. Charles William Freed, Jr., Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Quakertown, Pa. Richard Zern Freemann, Eng., Delta Tau Delta Narberth, Pa. Harry Jerome Friedman, Eng., Town Group Throop, Pa. Oliver Filmore Frye, Bus., Town Group Tower City, Pa. Robert Walter Fuldner, Bus., Town Group Hempstead, N. Y. Robert Lawrence Fuller, Bus., Beta Kappa Cleveland, Ohio Walter Herman Gaedcke, Bus., Kappa Sigma Roselle Park, N. J. Robert King Gailey, Eng., Sigma Chi Niagara Falls, N. Y. James Henry Galli, Eng., Richards House Portland, Me. Ernest Gamble, Jr., Eng., Town Group Langhorne, Pa. John Gantner, Bus., Richards House Nutley, N. J. Robert Harwood Ganzer, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha. Duluth, Minn. Ouentin George Gasda, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. George R. Lawrence Gaughran. Arts, Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Russell Charles Gebert, Jr., Eng., Richards House Elkins Park, Pa. Robert Edwin Gengenbach, Eng., Town Group Bristol, Conn. Panos Basil Georgopulo, Eng., Town Group New York, N. Y. William Evans Gheen, Eng., Taylor Hall Jersey Shore. Pa. John Charles Gilbert, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Walter William Gleadall, Jr., Eng., Sigma Nu Jackson Heights, N. Y. Gilbert Samuel Gold, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Trenton, N. J. Sanford David Goldstein, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Gordon Bennett Goodman, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Edward Goodman, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu New Rochelle, N. Y. James Allison Gordon, Bus., Town Group Short Hills, N. J. Kilbourn Gordon, Jr.. Bus., Kappa Alpha Bronxville, N. Y. Richard Cameron Gordon, Bus., Richards House... New York, N. Y. James Gore, III, Eng., Richards House Coraopolis, Pa. William Dean Gorman, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Swarthmore, Pa. William Webster Goshorn, Eng., Taylor Hall Malvern, Pa. Rudolph Edward Gosztonyi, Jr., Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Joseph Albert Gould, Eng., Richards House Watertown, N. Y. Walter Owen Graham, Eng., Town Group Montclair, N. J. John Thomas Green, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Allentown, Pa. Raymond Boyce Greene, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Plainfield, N. J. John Richard Greiner, Jr., Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Griffen, Jr., Eng., Delta Phi ... Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Kennard Gross, Eng., Town Group Montclair, N. J. 296 BETHLEHEM STEEL COMPANY Steel and Manufacturing Plants BETHLEHEM PLANT Bethlehem, Pa. CAMBRIA PLANT . . Johnstown, Pa. COATESVILLE PLANT Coatesville, Pa. HARLAN PLANT Wilmington, Del. LACKAWANNA PLANT Lackawanna, N. Y. LEBANON PLANT Lebanon, Pa. LOS ANGELES PLANT Vernon, Los Angeles, Cal. MARYLAND PLANT Sparrows Point, Md. SEATTLE PLANT Seattle, Wash. SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO PLANT So. San Francisco, Cal, STEELTON PLANT Steelton, Pa. Fabricating Works ALAMEDA WORKS . . . Alameda, Cal. BETHLEHEM WORKS Bethlehem, Pa. BUFFALO WORKS Buffalo, N. Y. CARNEGIE WORKS Carnegie, Pa. CHICAGO AND KENWOOD WORKS Chicago, 111. GARRIGUES WORKS Dunellen, N. J. HAY WORKS Newark, N. J. LEETSDALE WORKS Leetsdale, Pa. LOS ANGELES WORKS Los Angeles, Cal. POTTSTOWN WORKS Pottstown, Pa. RANKIN WORKS Braddock, Pa. STEELTON WORKS Steelton, Pa. BETHLEHEM STEEL 297 CLASS OF 1942 (Continued) Joseph Eugene Gross, Eng., Sigma Alpha Mu Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Alexander Grubb, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa North Hills, Pa. Michael Guidon, III, Eng., Town Group Freemansburg, Pa. Robert N. Gusdorff, Bus., Richards House Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Rudd Moyer Guttshall, Eng., Taylor Hall Mount Union, Pa. Norman Hackman, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu.. New Rochelle, N. Y. Harold Woodbury Haines, Arts, Town Group Short Hills, N. J. Douglas Mathison Haire, Eng., Alpha Chi R ho ..Maplewood, N. J. Donald Halbedl, Eng., Richards House New York, N. Y. James Gray Hamilton, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho Duluth, Minn. Robert Mohr Hammer, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Robert Arrison Hammond, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Ralph Leighton Haney, Eng., Richards House Norristown, Pa. George Warren Hanson, Bus., Richards House Scarsdale, N. Y. James William Hanson, Eng., Phi Gamma Delta ...Wilmington, Del. Milton Willin Harper, Eng., Town Group Seaford, Del. Dale Ackley Harris, Eng., Town Group - Trenton, N. J. Steward Harding Hartman, Eng., Chi Phi .. Mechanicsburg, Pa. John Benjamin Haus, Eng., Town Group Nanticoke, Pa. Gilbert Pond Haven, Eng., Richards House Cleveland Heights, Ohio Paul Lieder Havenstein, Eng., Alpha Tau Omega Wellesley Hills, Mass. Richard Parse Hazard, Eng., Taylor Hall Morrisville. Pa. Paul Tillott Helm, Bus., Richards House Peekskill, N. Y. Charles English Henderson, Eng., Sigma Phi... Baltimore, Md. Paul Clayton Henninger, Eng., Town Group Shamokin, Pa. Frank Lewis Herceg, Eng., Town Group Freemansburg, Pa. Edward John Hershock, Eng., Town Group Freeland, Pa. Chapin Heumann, Eng., Delta Upsilon Sewickley, Pa. Richard Lambert Heyniger, Bus., Chi Phi Waterbury, Conn. John Balmain Hill, Jr., Eng., Beta Kappa Hamburg, N. Y. Robert Leon Hill, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho Scranton, Pa. Louis Joseph Hillenbrand, Jr., Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Warren Alfred Himmelwright, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Ralph Craven Hird, Eng., Theta Delta Chi Englewood, N. J. William Paige Hitchcock, Arts, Psi Upsilon Syracuse, N. Y. Howard Addison Hoch, Jr., Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Chester Adam Hoffman, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Bernard Earl Hoffner, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas Sier C. Holberton, Jr., Eng., Delta Sigma Phi Hackensack, N. J. George Vernon Holby, Eng., Taylor Hall... Riverside, Conn. Seymour Lawrence Hollander, Eng., Pi Lambda Phi Maplewood, N. J. Caleb William Holyoke, Eng., Town Group Milwaukee, Wis. Albert Balthazar Holzl, Eng., Delta Sigma Phi Maplewood, N. J. Alfred Edward Horka, Eng., Town Group. Passaic, N. J. William Edward Howard, III, Bus., Town Group Island Park, L. I., N. Y. Donald Clinton Howe, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. David Lindsay Hume, Eng., Sigma Nu Tulsa, Okla. Douglass Hammond Humm, Bus., Town Group ..Flushing, N. Y. Albert Edward Hunt, Eng., Town Group Sewickley, Pa. John Ashberry Hunt, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Charles Barron Innes, Jr., Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Marvin lobst, Eng., Delta Upsilon Bethlehem, Pa. Floyd Emerson Ivey, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Wilfred George Jabara, Arts, Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. Jacob Thorsten Jacobsen, Eng., Town Group Camden, N. J. Joseph Harry Jacoby, Bus., Sigma Chi . Harrisburg, Pa. Gregory Albert Jahn, Eng., Town Group Clifton, N. J. Charles James, Bus., Easton Group Easton, Pa. William Donald Jardine, Eng., Town Group Buffalo, N. Y. Arthur Bowen Johnston, Eng., Phi Delta Theta ..Ulster, Pa. Edward Flower Jones, Eng., Town Group Jenkintown, Pa. Harry Witmer Jones, Jr., Eng., Pi Kappa Alpha Harrisburg, Pa. Henry Thomas Kalinoski, Eng., Taylor Hall Scranton, Pa. William Richard Kampfe, Bus., Town Group Morristown, N. J. Robert Simpson Kampmann, Arts, Chi Phi Overbrook, Pa. John Martin Kasson, Eng., Chi Phi Gloversville, N. Y. John MacDonough Keenan, Bus., Town Group Doylestown, Pa. Donald Wright Keller, Eng., Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. John Kellett, III, Eng., Town Group . Springfield, Pa. John Sterrett Kelley, Eng., Beta Theta Pi Mercersburg, Pa. Edward James Kelly, Eng., Richards House Middletown, N. Y. David Kemper, Eng., Tau Delta Phi Baltimore, Md. Leslie Irwin Kerr, Eng., Richards House... Philadelphia, Pa. James Henry Kidder, Arts, Delta Phi Germantown, Pa. John Arthur Kimberley, Eng., Town Group Dalton, Mass. David Lyle Kistler, Eng., Town Group Hamburg, Pa. John Floyd Kiier, Jr., Arts, Phi Delta Theta Towanda, Pa. Edwin Howard Klein, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa Paulsboro, N. J. Louis Edward Klein, Eng., Richards House Easton, Pa. Donald Henry Kleppinger, Eng., Town Group.. Bethlehem, Pa. Eugene Leonard Kline, Eng., Sigma Alpha Mu Trenton, N. J. Russell Francis Klinger, Eng., Town Group Louisville, Ohio Conrad Erwin Kluger, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Paterson, N. J. Peter Koromitz, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Edward Henry Kotz, Jr., Eng., Richards House Trenton, N. J. Harold Kough, Eng., Town Group Pompton Plains, N. J. John Alfred Krawchuk, Eng., Town Group Bridgeport, Pa. Frederick Albert Krone, Eng., Town Group ...Freeland, Pa. Charles Emil Kroupa, Eng., Taylor Hall Woodside, N. Y. Stephen John Kucey, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Joseph Kuehnle, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi Elizabeth, N. J. Robert Eugene Kuhn, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Passaic, N. J. Richard Lincoln Kulp, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Donald Wayne Kurtz, Eng., Taylor Hall Phoenixville, Pa. Herbert Theodore Kurz, Eng., Town Group North Caldwell, N. J. John Carl Lampert, Eng., Richards House Carlstadt, N. J. Jack Emmett Lane, Eng., Phi Delta Theta.. Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Joseph Peter Larkin, III, Eng., Beta Theta Pi Jersey City, N. J. Elwood D. Latimer, Jr., Eng., Town Group Scranton, Pa. Donald W. Layton, Eng., Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. George Harold Leach, Arts, Taylor Hall Roselle, N. J. Ross Wilburton Leaver, Eng., Lambda Chi Alpha Westfield, N. J. John Robert Lees, Eng., Sigma Nu Haddonfield, N. J. Joseph Luther Lehet, Eng., Town Group Nanticoke, Pa. Jack Kiehl Lehman, Bus., Kappa Sigma Port Huron, Mich. John Donald Leighton, Eng., Kappa Sigma Port Huron, Mich. Ouintin Adam Lerch, Jr., Eng., Town Group Port Jefferson ,N. Y. Monroe Levy, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Trenton, N. J. John Leyenberger, Eng., Town Group ..Newark, N. J. Frank Paul Librizzi, Eng., Town Group Newark, N. J. William Henry Lindsay, Jr., Eng., Beta Theta Pi Haddonfield, N. J. Charles James Little, Eng., Richards House ...Youngstown, Ohio Harry Fendley Littlejohn, Jr., Eng., Psi Upsilon New York, N. Y. Thomas Devereux Lloyd, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Carteret, N. J. Basil William Logechnik, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Stephen Brooks Longley, Arts, Delta Phi Maplewood, N. J. Robert Owen Lord, Jr., Eng., Sigma Nu New York, N. Y. Jess Brodbeck Loucks, Eng., Taylor Hall York, Pa. Clarence Earl Louden, Eng., Chi Psi — .Kittanning, Pa. Henry Cameron Louden, Eng., Town Group Nutley, N. J. John Louis Loughran, Eng., Town Group .. Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Tweedale Loveless, Arts, Town Group West Farmington, Ohio Philip Lutters, Eng., Town Group Shelton, Conn. Robert James Lyons, Eng., Town Group ...Steubensville, Ohio John Stanley MacDonald, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi Haddonfield, N. J. Guillermo Vinent Macia, Bus., Town Group Habana, Cuba Robert Bruce Maclndoe, Jr., Eng., Town Group Shamokin, Pa. Robert Russell Macy, Eng., Richards House Kensington, Md. Hayden Robert Maginnis, Eng., Town Group Bangor, Pa. Norman Lunny Maguire, Eng., Town Group Stamford, Conn. Harold Edward Mahoney, Arts, Theta Kappa Phi Pawtucket, R. I. Robert Mercier Maiden, Eng., Town Group Trenton, N. J. William Thomas Mainwaring, Eng., Sigma Nu Pittsburgh, Pa. John Leo Mangan, Eng., Delta Tau Delta Erie, Pa. Creatore Albert Marchetto, Bus., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Sandor Mark, Eng., Tau Delta Phi Pelham, N. Y. Paul William Marshall, Eng., Taylor Hall Pottstown, Pa. Robert Henry Marshall, Eng., Delta Tau Delta Kennett Square, Pa. Gene A. Marusi, Eng., Ri chards House New York, N. Y. Richard Mascuch, Eng., Delta Sigma Phi South Orange, N. J. George Park Mason, Eng., Theta Xi Glen Rock, N. J. Robert James Mason, Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon Maplewood, N. J. Franklin Bliss Mayer, Arts, Chi Psi ... Erie, Pa. Daniel Bosworth McAfee, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta --Rye, N. Y. William Bright McArthur, Bus., Town Group West Haven, Conn. Ralph William McCabe, Eng., Town Group Bound Brook, N. J. Richard George McCarthy, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Wilkes McClave, II, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Maplewood, N. J. John Donald McClay, Bus., Town Group Tenafly, N. J. William Blake McClenachan, III, Arts, Richards House Chester, Pa. Edward Heilman McClister, Arts, Taylor Hall .....Kittanning, Pa. John Casper McClure, Eng., Richards House Rockford, III. Malcolm Findlay McConnell, Jr., Eng., Delta Upsilon ...Munhall, Pa. William Bruce McConnel, Jr., Bus., Beta Theta Pi Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Walter Daugherty McCord, Jr., Eng., Richards House Bordentown, N. J. William Pershing McElroy, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi Bridgehampton, N. Y. 298 LEHIGH SUMMER SESSIOH The Lehigh University Summer Session, which was inaugurated 40 years ago with a handful of students and a small faculty, is expected to attract more than 600 students in 1939. A faculty of 50 will offer 88 courses in the three colleges and in the Graduate School of the University. The Summer Session is a part of the regular edu- cational program of the University and is designed to serve six groups; (I) Matriculated students who desire to make up deficiencies or to secure ad- vanced credit; (2) Engineering students who must pursue certain courses that are not available during the regular term; (3) Students of other colleges who wish to secure credits; (4) High school graduates who are qualified to matriculate; (5) Teachers who wish to obtain advanced degrees or to take special- ized work; (6) Adults who are not candidates for degrees but who wish to take certain courses. The Summer Session courses in recent years have been increased in number and broadened in content to meet the needs of teachers. All courses except the one in land and topo- graphic surveying, which is given during June at Canadensis in the Poconos, are given on the cam- pus. Women students are admitted for both under- graduate and graduate work. One of the men ' s fraternity houses on the campus is made available as living quarters for the women. Men live in the dormitories. To take the place of the broad program of extra- curricular activities which the University sponsors during the regular term, a program of recreation and activities has been arranged for the summer. Included are plays by the Top o ' the Mountain Theatre group, a weekly tabloid student newspaper, a dance, a bridge tournament, Sunday afternoon music vespers, evening lectures, golf and tennis tournaments, a water carnival, a picnic for gradu- ate students, hikes and inspection trips. The swim- ming pool in Taylor gymnasium, the University ten- ins courts and other exercise facilities are available. BETWEEN CLASSES IN FRONT OF CHRISTMAS-SXUCON HALI THE WEEKLY SUMMER SESSION BROWN AND WHITE IS THE THINS OF INTEREST ABOVE- A CLASS IN GERMAN TAKES TAKES TO THE OUTDOORS ON A HOT MORNING. BELOW: A GROUP OF GRADUATE STUDENTS, WITH A PROFESSOR AT EACH END, COOLS OFF AT THE AN- NUAL PICNIC itsytei LiUfc LEHIGH ALLENTOWN CLUB The Lehigh Allentown Club, organized in 1935, is composed of students living in Allentown and vicin- ity. Monthly meetings are held during the school year. The main purpose of the club is to overcome the difficulties of the commuting student. Through this organization, the Allentown group is unified; the Lehigh spirit, developed; interest in college activi- ties, promoted; and campus representation, secured. CLASS OF 1942 (Continued) James McGee, Eng., Taylor Hall Plain-Held, N. J. John Leo McGonigle, Jr., Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Charles Edward McGrath, Eng., Town Group Scranton, Pa. Robert John McGregor, Eng., Richards House Dunmore, Pa. William Charles McJames, Eng., Town Group South Orange, N. J. Edward Stroud McKelvy, Eng., Sigma Chi ..Wilkinsburg, Pa. Frank Shirley McKenna, Eng., Town Group Crafton, Pa. Robert Charles McMichael, Eng., Richards House Chester, Pa. James Hyatt McMillen, II, Bus., Psi Upsilon South Orange, N. J. Robert Lee McQueeney, Arts, Delta Phi Bridgeport, Conn. Raymond Theodor Meckbach, Bus., Richards House Bogota, N. J. William Jackson Meikle, Arts, Taylor Hall. .. Harrisburg, Pa. Tom Charles Mekeel, Arts, Richards House Reading, Pa. George Flonan Melloy, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta Bethlehem, Pa. Henry Blackstone Metcalf, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Water Valley, Miss. Richard Edward Metius, Eng., Phi Gamma Delta Narberth, Pa. Richard Edward Metzger, Eng., Town Group Turtle Creek, Pa. Robert Metzner, Bus., Richards House... Albany, N. Y. Charles Franklin Meyer, Eng., Town Group Doylestown, Pa. Donald Mayo Middleton, Eng., Delta Tau Delta ...Pittsburgh, Pa. John Henry Milbank, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega..- ...Bloomfield, N. J. Albert Marshall Miller, Eng., Town Group .St. Petersburg, Fla. Leonard Hanmer Miller, Eng., Town Group East Orange, N. J. Richard Earle Miller, Eng., Town Group Northampton, Pa. Robert Bruce Miller, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. William Russell Miller, Eng., Town Group Wyoming, Pa. George Frank Minde, Arts, Richards House.. Summit, N, J. John Francis Miraglia, Arts , Town Group... Port Chester, N. Y. Walter Dalby Moore, Arts, Town Group.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Ralph Franklin Moss, Jr., Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Merion, Pa. Harold Weaver Mowery, Jr., Arts, Town Group Mahwah, N. J. John Richard Muehlberg, Eng., Phi Gamma Delta Montclair, N. J. Edgar Kirton Muhlhausen, Eng., Pi Kappa Alpha Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Dallen Munnikhuysen, Eng., Taylor Hall... Belair, Md. Stewart Walrath Munroe, Jr., Bus., Town Group ..Grosse Pointe, Mich. Caleb Temple Murphy, Jr., Eng., Alpha Kappa Pi Balboa Island, Cal. Joseph Fitzroy Musante, Eng., Beta Kappa Bridgeport, Conn. James Warden Needles, Eng., Richards House... .Cape May, N. J. Alexander Bold Neill, Jr., Eng., Town Group Upper Montclair, N. J. Paul Lavern Nestleroth, Eng., Town Group.. Elm, Pa. Robert Shaw Newcomb, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha South Orange, N. J. Walter Alden Nichols, Eng., Town Group Upper Montclair, N. J. Robert Alexander Nicrosini, Arts, Richards House Bayside, N. Y. John James Nitti, Bus., Taylor Hall ...Brooklyn, N. Y. Jacob Sebastian Nolf, Eng., Town Group.. Nazareth, Pa. Frederic Stuart Nolte, Eng., Taylor Hall Park Ridge, 111. John Hugh Norwood, Eng., Delta Upsilon Hamburg, N. Y. Zenon Edwin Nowicki, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Basil Odell, Jr., Bus., Richards House Haskell, N. J. John Brangs O ' Hara, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi.. Newark, N. J. Lowell Kenneth Oliphant, Eng., Town Group East Cleveland, Ohio Henry Jacob Olson, Eng., Town Group _._ Oyster Bay, N. Y. John Arthur Olson, Jr., Bus., Town Group Glenbrook, Conn. Charles Bernard O ' Mara, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Fairfield, Conn. David Chittenden Osborn, Eng., Town Group Shaker Heights, Ohio Arthur Mead Over, Eng., Delta Phi Pittsburgh, Pa. Richard Mercer Palmer, Bus., Phi Delta Theta. Reading, Pa. Joseph John Papovlch, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. George Lawrence Parmentier, Eng., Town Group Lakewood, N. J. George Earl Parsons, Jr., Eng., Theta Delta Chi Marion, Md. Richard Harding Partrick, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi Ridgewood, N. J. Preston Wilson Parvis, Jr., Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Wilmington, Del. Charles Anthony Patten, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. George Morse Patterson, Eng., Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Chadwick Paul, Eng., Alpha Tau Omega York, Pa. Harry Vaughan Paynter, Eng., Richard? House Philadelphia, Pa. Harry Gordon Payrow, Jr., Bus., Delta Upsilon Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Frank Pegg, Eng., Richards House __ Coraopolis, Pa. Leonard Francis Penitsch, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. John Roby Penn, III, Bus., Chi Psi Fort Worth, Texas Richard Charles Pennington, Bus., Town Group _ . Trenton, N. J. James Lauren Perrott, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho Beaver Falls, Pa. William Fredrick Peter, Bus., Town Group Grantwood, N. J. Richard Gray Petersen, Eng., Taylor Hall Pittsburgh, Pa. John Louis Peterson, Eng., Richards House Wood-Ridge, N. J. James Fisher Pfeffer, Jr., Eng., Town Group Upper Darby, Pa. John Ormsby Phillips, Eng., Delta Phi Pittsburgh, Pa. Eugene LeRoy Pinto, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi... New Rochelle, N. Y. Daniel John Podskoch, Eng., Town Group Swoyerville, Pa. John Richard Polinsky, Arts, Town Group Mildred, Pa. John Adams Pooley, Eng., Sigma Phi Buffalo, N. Y. Henry Christian Postel, Eng., Town Group Brooklyn, N. Y. Philip John Prang, Jr., Eng., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Walter Valentine Prelle, Bus., Town Group Old Greenwich, Conn. John Harry Priestley, Eng., Town Group Neptune, N. J. Theodore David Propper, Eng., Pi Lambda Phi ...Woodmere, N. Y. Stuart Elnathan Prutzman, III, Bus., Town Group East Mauch Chunk, Pa. John Adams Quincy, Eng., Delta Upsilon Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. Kenneth Hauser Rahn, Eng., Town Group Palmerton, Pa. John Thompson Ransom, II, Eng., Richards House Haddonfield, N. J. Carl Alfred Rassler, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Leon Herbert Rathbun, Jr., Eng., Price Hall East Aurora, N. Y. John Earl Rau, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. John Arnold Read, Eng., Town Group . Montclair, N. J. Michael B. Rebert, Bus., Town Group ..Hanover, Pa. Martin Joseph Regan, Jr., Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon Old Greenwich, Conn. Sumner Willard Reid, Eng., Town Group West Lawn, Pa. James Lowther Reiley, Eng., Town Group Clearfield, Pa. Leon George Reimer, Eng., Town Group Bath, Pa. Irving Baker Remsen, Eng., Town Group Trenton, N. J. Henry Thomas Reuwer, Eng., Sigma Chi Harrisburg, Pa. Joseph Benson Reynolds, Eng., Town Group _ Bethlehem, Pa. William Painter Rhoads, Eng., Sigma Chi Harrisburg, Pa. Arthur Herbert Rich, Bus., Sigma Phi Buffalo. N. Y. Frank Hart Rich, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Washington, D. C. David Emrys Richards, Arts, Leonard Hall Scranton, Pa. Howard William Riemer, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Maplewood, N. J. Robert Reid Riggle, Bus., Town Group Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. John Marvil Roach, Arts, Town Group Merchantville, N. J. Frank Frederick Roberts, Eng., Beta Theta Pi ... Bethlehem, Pa. Gordon Brown Robertson, Bus., Town Group Cleveland Heights, Ohio Francis Haynes Rockett, Jr., Eng., Town Group Rockville Center, N. Y. Douglas Hill Rodgers, Eng., Town Group Port Washington, N. Y. Benjamin Franklin Rosenberry, Jr., Bus., Town Group Palmerton, Pa. Robert William Rosenquest, Bus., Richards House Essex Fells, N. J. Gordon Rowe, Bus., Richards House Mamaroneck, N. Y. Austin William Ruch, Eng., Town Group __ Schnecksville, Pa. Clyde Charles Ruffle, Eng., Taylor Hall . ... New York, N. Y. Robert Francis Ryan, Eng., Alpha Tau Omega Schnectady, N. Y. Philip Wales Saitta, Jr., Bus., Richards House Lebanon, Pa. Rudolf William Samer, Eng., Richards House Elizabeth, N. J. Abram Samuels, Bus., Tau Delta Phi __ Allentown, Pa. Clarence M. Sanderson, Jr., Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon South Orange, N. J. Donald Belshaw Sands, Arts, Town Group. ...Middlebury, Conn. Theophile Saulnier, Jr., Bus., Richards House Swarthmore, Pa. Charles Henry Savage, Eng., Town Group Morristown, N. J. John Seltzer Saylor, Jr., Eng., Lambda Chi Alpha Reading, Pa. Robert Lynd Schaffer, Bus., Price Hall Jenkintown, Pa. Raymond Vernon Schilt, Bus., Town Group Lynbrook, N. Y. Leonard Adolph Schneider, Eng., Chi Psi Clifton, N. J. John Peter Scholl, Eng., Taylor Hall Reading, Pa. Howard Oscar Schroeder, Eng., Richards House Bloomfield, N. J. 300 CLASS OF 1942 (Continued) Joseph Louis Schroeder, Jr., Bus., Kappa Alpha Scarsdale, N. Y. Charles Henry Schumacher, Eng., Town Group Jackson Heights, N. Y. Forrest Veil Schumacher, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa Bellevue, Pa. Joseph Doty Scott, Eng., Town Group Millburn, N. J. Nicholas Thomas Scott, Eng., Price Hall Jackson Heights, N. Y. Theodore Gourdin Scott, Jr., Eng., Kappa Alpha Orange, Va. Mural Wolfe Sears, Eng., Town Group Cortland, N. Y. Leslie Earl Sebald, Eng., Taylor Hall Ridgewood, N. J. Grendon Kenneth Sebold, Eng., Richards House Elizabeth, N. J. Henry Albert Seebald, Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. John Clark Sellers, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Russell Melvin Seward, Jr., Eng., Town Group Altoona, Pa. Joseph Matthew Sexton, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi. .. ...Newark, N. J. Louis Everett Sharpe, Eng., Town Group White Plains, N. Y. Richard Mingay Sheperdson, Arts, Town Group Bronxville, N. Y. William Forrester Sherratt, Bus., Chi Psi Pittsburgh, Pa. Edwin Irving Shuttleworth, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho Philadelphia, Pa. William Sydney Shuttleworth, Bus., Chi Psi ... Scarsdale, N. Y. Joseph Benjamin Sickler, Arts, Town Group Fair Haven, N. J. Robert Neil Simonsen, Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon Pittsburgh, Pa. William James Skinner, Eng., Richards House Madison, N. J. Andrew Peter Smith, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Augustine Nicholas Smith, Jr., Arts, Town Group Mahanoy City, Pa. David Rahn Smith, Jr., Eng., Richards House Towanda, Pa. Eugene Monroe Smith, Eng., Town Group Philadelphia, Pa. Frank Edgar Smith, Jr., Eng., Chi Psi... Clifton, N. J. Harry Morefield Smith, Jr., Bus., Sigma Chi .. Paterson, N. J. Richard Phillip Steere Smith, Eng., Alpha Chi Rho Philadelphia, Pa. Victor Eugene Smith, Bus., Taylor Hall Norwalk, Conn. John Joseph Somers, Eng., Allentown Group Philadelphia, Pa. Ralph Franklin Sotzing, Bus., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Leslie Orman Southgate, Jr., Eng., Town Group . Jamesburg, N. J. William Mclndoe Spears, Jr., Arts, Richards House Shaker Heights, Ohio Emerson Daniel Spengler, Eng., Town Group . Northampton, Pa. John Francis Spirk, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. John Case Spooner, Eng., Sigma Phi ...East Au;o-a, N. Y. Eugene Roy Springer, Eng., Town Group Larchmont, N. Y. Harry Gordon Spritzler, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Breckinridge Steele, Jr., Eng., Eigma Nu Great Neck, N. Y. Charles Stanley Steiner, Eng., Town Group Baltimore, Md. Orville James Stephens, Eng., Town Group Cranford, N. J. Kingdon Henry Sterngold, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Lawrence, L. I., N. Y. Henry Charles Stieglitz, Eng., Richards House Jamaica, N. Y. Roland Clifford Stoehr, Bus., Beta Kappa ... Bayside, N. Y. Robert Walter Stowbridge, III, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Roselle Park, N. J. Hamilton Werren Strayer, Bus., Delta Tau Delta. . ... Erie, Pa. Robert Samuel Struble, Eng., Beta Theta Pi Bellevue, Pa. Clifton William Strunk, Eng., Richards House Royersford, Pa. Edgar Francis Stultz, Eng., Phi Delta Theta Hagerstown, Md. John Phelps Stupp, Eng., Kappa Sigma ... Clayton, Mo. Carl Lindsley Sturgis, Bus., Richards House Morristown, N. J. Roderick Ormsby Symmes, Eng., Kappa Alpha . Niagara Falls, N. Y. Arthur Tallaksen, Bus., Town Group West Orange, N. J. Robert Gorman Taylor, Eng., Phi Sigma Kappa .. North Hills, Pa. Frank Raymond Thaeder, Eng., Sigma Nu Manhasset, N. Y. Albert Leo Thalhamer, Eng., Town Group... ... Clifton, N. J. Joseph Simon Thomas, Eng., Town Group Flushing, N. Y. Charles Garland Thornburgh, Jr., Eng., Beta Theta Pi Carnegie, Pa. Archie DeWitt Tifft, Eng., Phi Gamma Delta.. Merion, ' Pa. Frederick Carl Tilberg, Jr., Eng., Town Group. . Philadelphia, Pa. John Henry Tillman, Eng., Town Group Queens Village, N. Y. William Wooster Tolley, Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon Richmond Hill, N. Y. Arthur Frank Tozer, Eng., Town Group Springfield, Pa. John Henry Transue, Eng., Town Group Portland, Pa. Albert George Tromer, Bus., Town Group New York, N. Y. Kenneth William Trone, Eng., Theta Xi York, Pa. John Parker Troy, Eng., Richards House ..Schenectady, N. Y. Albert Robert Tucker, Eng., Sigma Chi Wilmington, Del. Robert Franklin Turnauer, Bus, Theta Xi Allentown, Pa. John Orman Turner, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Danbury, Conn. Eduardo Benavides Valdes, Eng., Taylor Hall Ciego de Avila, Cuba John Davis VanBlarcom, Eng., Taylor Hall Aliquippa, Pa. David Chesterman VanBrunt, Bus., Richards House New York, N. Y. Lindsley Dodd VanderVeer, Eng., Sigma Phi Somerviile, N. J. William Paul Varner, Bus., Town Group Scranton, Pa. Howard Alton Vaughn, Jr., Eng., Theta Xi ... ... Hammonton, N. J. Reynold Vincent Vedovato, Eng., Richards House Tuckahoe, N. Y. Frederick Lincoln Villa, Arts, Town Group .....Mount Vernon, N. Y. Stuart Henry Vogt, Eng., Taylor Hall... Alpine, N. J. Edward Paul Vollherbst, Jr., Eng., Price Hall Union, N. J. Don Sheeder Vonder Heyde, Eng., Theta Xi... Altoona, Pa. George Adam Wagner, Jr., Eng., Town Group Philadelphia, Pa. Samuel Robert Walker, Bus., Town Group Riverside, N. J. Richard Raymond Walling, Eng., Pi Kappa Alpha. East Cleve ' and, Ohio Everett Frazsr Warner, Arts, Sigma Phi Short Hills, N. J. Earl Lewis Weaver, Jr., Eng., Allentown Group Allentown, Pa. Kurt Heinz Weber, Eng., Price Hall. Tenafly, N. J. David Francis Wells, Eng., Theta Kappa Phi ... Rockville Centre, N. Y. Jeffry Steven Wetrich, Bus., Psi Upsilon Hempstead, L. I., N. Y. Emmet Talmage White, Jr., Eng., Alpha Kappa Pi Hillside, N. J. Lee Robert White, Eng., Town Group . Middletown, Pa. Donald Warren Whiting, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Downingtown, Pa. Alexander King Wiggin, Eng., Alpha Tau Omega East Orange, N. J. LeRoy Ashton Wiley, Eng., Taylor Hall .. ...Morrisville, Pa. Normand Joseph Wilhelmy, Bus., Town Group ..New York, N. Y. Raymond Sentman Willard, Jr., Eng., Richards House ..Coatesville, Pa. Howard Misson Williams, Bus., Delta Upsilon Allentown, Pa. John Ross Williams, Eng., Town Group Nanticoke, Pa. Kingsley Grant Williams, Eng., Theta Xi Woodbury, N. J. William Godfrey Willmann, Eng., Town Group... ...Suffern, N. Y. Walter Warren Wilson, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Reuben Lee Wimmer, Eng., Town Group Riegelsville, Pa. Wallace Richard Wirths, Bus., Richards House Grantwood, N. J. James William Witherspoon, Eng., Sigma Phi Epsilon ...Tuckahoe, N. Y. Quintus Peter Witte, Jr., Eng., Richards House Jackson Heights, N. Y. Elwyn Wolfs, Eng., Easton Group Easton, Pa. Ahlert Diedrich Wolff, Eng., Delta Tau Delta Easton, Pa. Richard Francis Wood, Jr., Arts, Sigma Chi New Rochelle, N. Y. Philip Benson Woodroofe, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Albany, N. Y. William Russell Woodruff, Eng., Richards House Teaneck, N. J. Allan Harvey Woodward, Jr., Eng., Kappa Alpha Birmingham, Ala. David Storm Worman, Eng., Town Group Nazareth, Pa. Fredrick Wallis Wright, Jr., Eng., Richards House Bo onton, N. J. Joseph Anthony Wyler, Arts, Richards House Allentown, Pa. Ralph McCormick Yearick, Arts, Town Group Wilkinsburg, Pa. Robert Rochester Young, Eng., Richards House Philadelphia, Pa. Whitney James Young, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Richard John Yurkanin, Eng., Town Group Bethlehem, Pa. Allen Herbert Zane, Jr., Eng., Taylor Hall... ...Long Island City, N. Y. Alfred Lewis Zanoni, Eng., Town Group.. Raritan, N. J. George Glenn Zipf, Eng., Town Group.. Bryn Mawr, Pa,. DE MOLAY CLUB The DeMolay Club, which is open to all past or present members of DeMolay, was founded on November 3, 1938 to bring together brothers from different chapters to exchange ideas of a fraternal nature in order to get a better understanding of the principles upon which DeMolay was founded, to maintain an interest in the order, to participate in activities of DeMolay, and to form a social body compo:ed of a se ' ect group. There is an active installation team which has made visitations to vari- ou3 chapters in this section to install their officers. For the future, plans have been made to form a complete degree team with which the club wishes to make their own interpretations of DeMolay work. 301 THE 1939 EPITOME ficerJ HAROLD M. SELSER, JR. ..Editor-in-Chief HENRY T. S. HECKMAN Editorial Board A. GEORGE UEBERROTH, JR. Business Manager KENNETH K. KOST Faculty Advisor Senior Section Frank C. Rabold, Jr. Robert G. Yingling George C. Lennox Wallace P. Watkins Robert S. Grubmeyer John F. Lehrer Robert C. Parsons, Chairman junior traitors Leonard H. Diehl Robert C. Good, Jr. Richard P. Homiller Warren G. Leonard (j2 ii$ineS5 ( J ocira S opliomore ompclilorS Oscar E. Anderson, Jr. William L. Archer James M. Beauchamp, Jr. Anthony R. Carcione Henry D. Chandler Joseph L. Cowneen Herbert P. Elliott, Jr. Ellery H. Farnam Richardson Gray Frank V. Hertzog Charles F. Kalmbach Allan M. Paget Donald R. Schoen Otto V. Norvig Richard L. Vockel Walter H. Vogelsberg John R. Whitesell John W. Whiting, Jr. James E. Wigg George W. Woelfel THE LEHIGH REVIEW (L.aitorial t -5oara JOSEPH B. BOYLE Editor-in-Chief LOUIS C. STOUMEN . Associate Editcr HARRY HARCHAR Photography Editor ERIC WEISS Associate Editor MICHAEL BOCK Managing Secretary HOWARD J. LEWIS Assistant Editcr RICHARD GOWDY Art Editor FRANK NORRIS Assistant Editor MERRILL BERNARD, JR. Art Editor ( business (Jsfoarci HENRY T. S. HECKMAN Business Manager DONALD DENISON Advertising Manager RICHARD WELLS Circulation Manager ROBERT ULMER National Advertising Manager J. DUKES WOOTERS, JR. Assistant HAZEN CHASE... . Financial Manager FRANK SMITH Assistant (JSusineSS taU Gene Marusi Leonard Miller Robert Tucker Jonas Silverberg INTERDORMITORY COUNCIL Off f-icerS GEORGE A. ALBRECHT President JOHN D. SAUSSAMAN Secretory GEORGE E. KELLEY... Treasurer WUl embers George A. Albrecht John H. Heller Donald Santmyers Gilbert P. Cardwell George E. Kelley John D. Saussaman Charles W. Hart Robert B. Kurtz J. Edward Stopp Nevin C. Hartman William H. Lesser, Jr. Robert L. Tilton Robert J. Reid EPITOME Photographs By McCAA STUDIO 113 West Fourth Street Bethlehem, Pa. Jur 38tk l lear ad the C plt _JfHciat J hotoarapheri ilome 5 303 ARCADIA FRANC H. BURNETT, JR. President ALAN S. GRANT Vice-President WILLET WEEKS, JR. Secretary G. EDWARD HURST, JR. Treasurer CLAUDE G. BEARDSLEE Faculty Advisor I embers George A. Albrecht Walter A. Decker Franc H. Burnett, Jr. Milton H. Grannatt, Jr. Malcolm Carrington, Jr. Alan S. Grant Alfred T. Cox Henry T. S. Heckman G. Edward Hurst, Jr. James E. Patton Douglas H. Prideaux Donald R. Schoen Willet Weeks, Jr. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL MILTON H. GRANNATT, JR. President MALCOLM CARRINGTON, JR. Vice-President D ' ARCY W. ROPER, II... Secretary SAMUEL R. COX Treasurer em L Samuel R. Cox Robert C. Slingerland Frank L. Jackson Loring Lane Joseph B. Kelley Robert Craig James A. Shields Bernard A. Smith D ' Arcy W. Roper, II Ambrose G. Delany Walter C. Wells Walter S. Russell Robert G. Y ingling Donald R. Luster David L. Holmes Harry W. Lynch, Jr. Justin Glide Alfred T. Cox Clarence R. DeBow, Jr. Clifford B. Heisler Frank C. Rabold, Jr. Joseph L. Matteson Malcolm Carrington, Ji Maynard L. Diamond Richard Blount John F. McOuillin Milton H. Grannatt, Jr Richard B. Jeffery er$ Robert J. Rose Albert J. Collins Alan S. Grant David R. Ginder Henry L. Beekman William Danshaw Paul M. Tanis Frank E. Harper, Jr. Daniel A. Roblin, Jr. Ralph Buchsbaum Thrasher T. Gray David Jenkins Arthur Rothschild Norman Hammer Robert W. Bowen James M. Roberts, Jr. Raymond P. Laubenstein John R. Bingaman, Jr. Philip H. Smith Chester C. Baldwin Robert C. Parsons Robert A. Nordt Robert B. Siegel David Kemper James R. Carringer, Jr. Rudolf Kremer Samuel M. Grafton John L. F. Sipp Sylvan G. Bushey William F. Carson, Jr. BROWN AND WHITE WILLET WEEKS, JR. Editor-in-Chief FREDERICK JUER Photography Editor, First Semeste r RUSSELL E. STEVENS, JR. HARRY A. HARCHAR Business Manager, First Semeste Photography Editor, Second Semester GEORGE B. RHEINFRANK, JR. GEORGE B. RHEINFRANK, JR. Business Manager, Second Semester Financial Manager, First Semester ERIC WEISS Editorial Manager, First Semester WALLACE P. WATKINS FRED E. GALBRAITH, JR. Financial Manager, Second Semester Editorial Manager, Second Semester HAROLD WEINER Copy Supervisor, First Semester THRASHER T. GRAY News Manager, First Semester GEORGE B. MOTHERAL, II HOWARD M. CONNER Copy Supervisor, Second Semester News Manager, Second Semester WALLACE P. WATKINS MILTON SPILBERG Makeup Editor, First Semester Local Advertising Assistant, First Semester CARL R. FITTKAU Makeup Editor, Second Semester JOHN H. MATHEWSON JOHN J. McCLUSKEY Sports Editor, First Semester Local Advertising Assistant, Second Semester WILLARD G. HISTAND Sports Editor, Second Semester EDWARD V. MANNING HOWARD M. CONNER National Advertising Assistant, First Semester Tuesday News Editor, First Semester HAROLD WEINER DONALD R. SCHOEN National Advertising Assistant, Second Semester Tuesday News Editor, Second Semester WILLIAM W. BROWN Circulation Manager ROBERT C. MUIR, JR. WALLACE C. KENDALL Assistant Circulation Manager Friday News Editor, First Semester DALE H. GRAMLEY Faculty Advisor CHARLES F. KALMBACH KENNETH K. KOST Faculty Advisor Friday NewsEditor, Second Semester CHARLES J. MORAVEC Faculty Advisor D D 1 J UL Distinctive printing, like all other processes of distinction, requires a coordination of skills, artistry, and business service. Complete modern equipment, trained craftsmen, and creative planning have placed Colyer Printing Company in the front rank for maintaining the best printing services in fine typog- raphy, artistic layout, perfect reproduction, accurate color work and dependable produc- tion and delivery schedules. II- 11 ■« -J SOU ; INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Bethlehem Baking Co. 201 Bethlehem Iron Works 283 Bethlehem Steel Co. 297 Black, Builders ' Supplies 287 Brown, Borhek Co. 295 Calypso Coal Ice Co. 28j Coca-Cola 282 Colyer Printing Co. 305 Furniture Hall 281 Gehring, Electricians 292 Gier, Jewelers . 280 Goldberg, Florist 286 HafnerMeatCo. 281 Harchar, Tailor 287 Harter ' s Food Market ..... 286 Horan Engraving Co. 307 Horstmann Uniform Co. 290 Hotel Bethlehem 289 King Coal Co.. 290 Kinney, Joe 292 Laufer, Hardware ... 293 Lohigh Summer Session 299 Lehigh University 279 McCaa Studios 303 Menne Printery 28 0 Mercur, Incurance 287 tvlowrer ' s Dairy 295 Purity Food Market 294 Reber-Korn Co., Heating 282 Ruhe, Insurance 280 Sanitary Fruit Market 293 Sears Roebuck Co. .... 283 Stupp Bro:. Bridge Iron Co. 295 Supply Bureau 294 Wm. H. Taylor Co. 294 30S
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