Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 424

 

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 13, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collectionPage 17, 1942 Edition, Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 424 of the 1942 volume:

the 1942 epitome the i942 epitome PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Bethlehem Pennsylvania edition: 875 copies copyright, i942 the 1 942 epitome lehigh university, bethlehem, pennsylvania A. Bruce Brown, Editor-in-Chief PRINTED AT THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK history Seventy-five Years 3 This Year 25 personnel Administration 37 Faculty 53 College of Arts and Science — College of Business Administration — College of Engineering Students 77 Seniors — Juniors — Sophomores — Freshmen activities Organizations 93 Student Government — Dramatics and Music — Publications — Course Societies and Course Honoraries Sports . 143 living groups Dormitories 179 Fraternities 203 Town 263 seniors Biographies 271 appendix Directory 357 Student Organization 395 Sports 4°7 preface THE CLASS OF 1942 has almost come to the end of its four years at Lehigh, and it is natural that we should stop and look back before we step out into the next phase of our lives and see what the University has meant to us. We came to college for many reasons, of course : many came for purely technical training to enable them to earn more money after they leave college; others came for social position; still others came for the combination of sound technical knowl- edge and skill in human relations which make of a man a leader of men. But to us and to the classes following us, life has suddenly become a grimmer affair than we knew it could be. Leadership and engineering ability have become essential to the very life of our country; our personal desires have been made subordinate to the nation ' s need. The purpose of the 1 942 Epitome, then, can no longer be that of its predecessors; rather than pointing with pride to our achieve- ments, our summary of Lehigh must impartially display Lehigh ' s facilities for developing men sound in technical knowledge and broad of viewpoint, capable of leading the country to victory in war, and afterward to a lasting peace. 7 • LJslA lUL. lj L -UU% histo CHARTER, keys, trowel and pocket- watch— an odd assortment, yet each re- lated to the early history of Lehigh. The watch is Asa Packer ' s own, kept in the Lehigh Treasure Room in the Library. The keys are reputed to be the old keys to Packer Hall before the modern tumbler locks were put on the doors. The trowel laid the cornerstone to Mary Packer ' s chapel in 1887. On ordinary theme paper, the charter, hardly a pretentious-looking document, is the cornerstone of Lehigh. seventy-five years THOSE WHO complain of having to attend Saturday classes may not know that Lehigh started on a Saturday. It was on Saturday, September i, 1866, that six professors, two instructors, forty students, and one janitor gathered in Christmas Hall to open Lehigh Uni- versity, for which Asa Packer, also present, had obtained a charter the previous February. The type of school which the Lehigh Valley canal and railroad baron had just founded was a new idea in higher education. College learning based on scientific approaches and practical applications was just beginning to come into existence as a result of the rapid nation-wide expansion of industry and the increasing development of new and improved technological processes. A pioneer in such education, for instance, was Norwich University, which, under the auspices of Asa Packer, the Connecticut Yankee who came to the Lehigh Valley and built a canal, a rail- road, and a University. 13 the Association for the Promotion of Useful Education, had established an engi- neering curriculum in 1834. The Useful Education association had conceived of a type of college which would reduce the cost of education and would allow students to specialize in any of the arts or sciences. It also advocated the instruc- tion in the applications of science to the practical purposes of life. Land-grant colleges for education in the mechanical sciences and in agriculture were also being established by the middle of the nineteenth century. The public-spirited native of Connecticut who had come down to Pennsyl- vania to become the leading industrialist of the beautiful Lehigh Valley, having decided to found such a scientific and technical school and having at last resolved to locate his new polytechnic college on his land holdings on the north slope of South Mountain in South Bethlehem (then beginning to emerge as a small technical center), fortunately turned to William Bacon Stevens, bishop of the Pennsylvania Episcopal diocese, for advice on the establishment of a curriculum. Bishop Stevens, a much-traveled, scholarly man of broad outlook, humanized the plan of purely technical studies proposed by Packer. The establishment of a School of General Literature in addition to the technological schools was the result of Stevens ' concept of Lehigh as a University rather than as a mere poly- technic college. The School of General Literature has developed into the College of Arts and Science; the technical schools (soon organized into a School of Technology ) have become the College of Engineering; and the early studies in political science might be regarded as the beginnings of the present College of Business Administration. All students pursued the same general studies for the first two years; then the student selected a special school (equivalent to our modern curriculum ) for the last two years. The Special Schools were these: General Literature, Mechanical Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, and Ana- lytical Chemistry. The same system of orientation and foundation work followed by specialization is followed to this day at Lehigh. Lehigh ' s non-academic student life began almost as early as its academic life. It was as early as 1868 that the Junto, a literary society, was established. In 1875, the members of the Junto established the Epitome as a publication of the sophomore class. The paper-covered, somewhat naively written Epitome im- proved in quality as the years went by; in 1884 the junior class took it over; and in 1 93 1 it became a senior book. Except for a short-lived monthly Lehigh Journal, the next publication to appear on the campus was the Lehigh Burr, a college life magazine founded in 1881. With one seven-year suspension, the Burr con- tinued until 1935, when, because the faculty felt that it was getting a bit too risque, it was abolished. It is in one of the 1 884 issues of the Burr that one may find an account of the first touchdown ever made by Lehigh — Richard Harding Davis carried the ball l a across the line in a game against Lafayette, the second football game that Lehigh .A 1 It • ■ f- :•- , - ' V..- ' V J c ££$5 _ 4 rPk £- ' -■ £3? had ever played. Davis, the Gibson Boy, the Lehigh playboy who later became the famous journalist and short-story writer, has become a Lehigh legend — a legend of undergraduate life. It was Davis who founded Arcadia (which started as a sort of beer-and-pretzels club) ; it was Davis who founded Mustard and Cheese (which began its career in a saloon). But Davis never was graduated from Lehigh. He was expelled. The same year (i 884-1 885) that Davis founded Arcadia, Professor Edward Williams (after whom Williams Hall is named) founded Tau Beta Pi, which has become a national Phi Beta Kappa for engineers. And it was about two years later that the Lehigh chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was established. In the course-society field, the Chemical Society was the first, being founded in 1871. In 1887, the year that a four-year course in electrical engineering was established, the E.E. Society, rather naturally, was also founded. Other engineering societies have been organized until now nearly every curriculum has its own organization. By 1894, the year the Brown and White was first published, the University had become quite grown up — at least compared to the days when it had con- sisted of one building, forty students, six professors, and a hope in the heart of a Lehigh Valley industrial baron. As enrollment had steadily increased and as the University increased the scope of its activities, more buildings had been built. Although the University used only one building — Christmas Hall — for two years, in 1868 Packer Hall had been opened and the University had moved in. In 1872, Saucon Hall was completed and opened as a dormitory and dining room. The Library had been dedicated in 1878, the same year that Asa Packer died. That same year it had been announced that Lehigh would make provision for the awarding of the degrees of M.A., Ph.D., and Sc.D. The next year, the year of the first Founder ' s Day celebration, the athletic field was opened, and in 1883, Coppee Hall, the new gymnasium, had been completed. The opening of the Chem Lab and the first intercollegiate football game had marked the year 1885. Two years before the appearance of the first issue of the Brown and White, the Physics Building had been built and the Supply Bureau had been established. Yes, the polytechnic college on the northern side of South Mountain had just about reached the point where it needed an undergraduate newspaper. Lehigh started to move from its adolescence toward its maturity. By 1 9 1 1 Summer School, the College of Arts and Science, the Flagpole, and Fritz Lab were part of Lehigh. But times had not been too easy f or Lehigh. Only an appro- priation of $150,000 from the State of Pennsylvania and many financial dona- tions from alumni had enabled Lehigh to keep going. For Lehigh had had money difficulties. (Speaking of money, the students of Lehigh, for a period of twenty years, 1871-1891, enjoyed free tuition.) Before Lehigh ' s growth was somewhat arrested by World War I, it added a field house to its buildings, as well as a College Commons (known to present -j students as Lamberton Hall). Sayre Park and the Arboretum were added to the University grounds. The Band was established, the Alumni Bulletin was first issued, and Cyanide was founded. In 191 3 Taylor Gym and Field were completed and Coppee became a class building. Then came the war years, years strangely similar to those through which Lehigh is now passing. The pages of the Brown and White of that time certainly rese mble the 1941 and 1 942 issues. News stories told of the University ' s co-operation with the govern- ment, editorials stoutly asserted that the war effort needed technical and mana- gerial excellence just as much as proficiency in handling a gun. The University accelerated its academic program in 19 18 just as it is doing in 1942. By the elimination of holidays the second semester was shortened. Many Lehigh men went off to the war. The Students Army Training Corps, out of which grew the present ROTC, was organized. Every physically fit student over the age of 18 had to join the corps and had to submit to being housed in a dormitory or campus fraternity. The campus was turned into a quasi-military camp, with armed sentries demanding passes from everyone who stepped on the University grounds. A curriculum in marine engineering, which reminds one of our present Navy Diesel course, was established. But the University routine was disturbed for only a short time, for, by the end of January, 191 9, the SATC had been disbanded, the University no longer offered special technical courses to soldiers, and, in general, Lehigh was about ready to return to a normal status. Now began what might be called the Modern or Mature era of the University. In 1918, Lehigh was divided into the three colleges which are now so familiar to us : Arts and Science, Business Administration, and Engineering. In 1 9 1 9 the Interfraternity Council was organized. Charles Russ Richards became president of the University in 192 1, and Lehigh began to expand greatly. A Greater Lehigh Fund, built by alumni, friends, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Carnegie Foundation, came to total two million dollars. And the forty students, two instruc- tors, six professors, and one janitor who had gathered in Christmas Hall that September day in 1 866 when Asa Packer had opened his school would have been amazed and proud to have seen the tall and grand tower of the Alumni Memorial Building raise its head to gaze across the green lawns of the campus. Eighteen hundred Lehigh men had served in the World War. Forty-six had died. To those eighteen hundred and to those forty-six, the new administration building was a monument. Two years after President Richards came to Lehigh, Charles Maxwell McConn became Lehigh ' s first Dean. The Calculus Cremation went out. A Lehigh chapter of ODK came in. The military department established an ordnance unit in addi- tion to the infantry, and moved into the old Commons. (In 1941 the military j8 department moved out, and the Armory became a dining hall again.) Lehigh •J! began to get more culture. The Lehigh Review and the Department of Fine Arts were both established. We still have the Department of Fine Arts, but the Review, starting out as a literary and philosophical magazine for intelligent students, forgot its original policies, and, in 1940, went down the same road the Burr had traveled a few years earlier. The art gallery opened in 1930, three days before the James Ward Packard Laboratory of mechanical and electrical engineering was dedicated. About the same time, Lehigh received $100,000 from the estate of one of its former pro- fessors, L. C. Stewardson, for the establishment of a professorship in philosophy, and $50,000 from Mrs. A. N. Cleaver for the promotion of music at the University. The 1920 ' s seem also to have been the years in which the establishment of honorary societies flourished. Sigma Xi, Pi Tau Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, Pi Delta Epsilon, Delta Omicron Theta, Eta Sigma Phi, Eta Kappa Nu, and Alpha Kappa Psi are among those which date from that decade. As the Twenties went out and the Depression came in, the Library was re- modeled. And while the present undergraduates of Lehigh were getting well along in grade and junior high school, Lehigh was establishing a Department of Moral and Religious Philosophy, starting a placement bureau, and resurfacing its roads. The Interfraternity Ball, much wetter than wise and forward-looking Max McConn appreciated, started on its way to becoming a Lehigh tradition, and we sent our second and third Rhodes scholars across to a much older school on the Thames. (First Rhodes scholar from Lehigh was Max Goepp, ' 28.) Six years ago, President Richards retired, and Dr. Clement C. Williams, dean of engineering at the University of Iowa, became new president of the University. Dean McConn went to Washington Square College and Director of Admissions Congdon became the new dean of undergraduates. The year that the class of 1 942 entered the University Richards House was completed and the Interdormi- tory and Town Councils were organized. Last Fall, Lehigh ' s newest building, Grace Hall, given to the University by Eugene GifTord Grace, president of the Board of Trustees and one of Lehigh ' s more famous alumni, was dedicated. And hundreds of undergraduates sat and watched the University grant honorary degrees to its distinguished sons and others, as part of the Convocation celebrating the diamond jubilee of the school that Asa Packer founded. This year the Chi Psi and Phi Gamma Delta houses were gutted by fire ( as was the Physics Lab over forty years ago ) , the University ' s academic program was accelerated to three semesters a year, several faculty mem- bers have gone to serve the government, and the Navy has established a new V-i training course. The Brown and White urges that students be deferred from the draft until they complete their college careers. The catalogue of 1868 stated that the instruction in all parts of the Uni- 2 1 versity is principally, by textbooks, with supplementary lectures. That feature of the railroad magnate ' s polytechnic college certainly has not changed in 76 years. If Asa ' s spirit wanders along the ridge of South Mountain and looks down over the campus, it sees hundreds of students walking from Packer Hall down to Christmas and Saucon Halls (now joined by a Hyphen tower Asa never knew) carrying notebooks in which to record the wisdom, if any, gleaned from the supplementary lectures. But there are many things which have changed. No students stand at windows in Saucon Hall to shoot at passing goats, as the Burr reports they did back in the handle-bar days of Lehigh. Arcadia me ets regularly as it did in the day of Richard Harding Davis, but its members do not engage in boxing or philosophical conversation as did Davis ' Arcadia members. Students are now allowed to take books home from the Library, a privilege they lacked back in the ' 70 ' s, although few seem to avail themselves of the opportunity. The Supply Bureau has expanded from a one-counter affair into a small department store. Compulsory attendance at chapel, long a cause of much griping among Lehigh men, is no longer with us, and students may now sleep until 8 instead of having to get up at 7 ' .4.5. The class rivalries have disappeared; and freshmen wear brown crew hats instead of dinks. Students may no longer go boating on the Lehigh river, as they once could, but automobiles swarm over the campus. Students are now officially permitted to swear (as long as they act like gentlemen) , but intoxication is still officially frowned upon, as it was back in the days when all the campus roads and paths were mud. But no matter how student life has changed, no matter how the details have been altered, no matter how many buildings have been built or how much labora- tory equipment has been installed, the educational ideas of Mr. Packer and Bishop Stevens live on. A University on South Mountain by the Lehigh River, a school whose technological training is softened and broadened by its studies in and pro- motion of the humanities and social sciences, a polytechnic college, for the education of youth, of the name, style, and title of Lehigh University — the col- lege that began down there in Christmas Hall in 1 866, the college for which Asa Packer gave half a million dollars and 56 acres of land — Lehigh University is a grand old professor. When Asa ' s spirit sees the Alumni Memorial Building tower silhouetted against the sunset, he must feel very proud. 22 JaB ira this year A 75TH ANNIVERSARY celebration held in connection with the dedication of Grace Hall, the acceleration of the University ' s academic program and the problems that acceleration raised, the abolition of Spring Houseparty and the subsequent repeal of the abolition, and the destruction by fire of the Chi Psi and Phi Gamma Delta fraternity houses are events which have high-lighted a news- crammed year. The 1940-41 term ended quietly enough. Election-day maneuvering won the fraternities the class elections; ODK and Cyanide held their usual elections; the seniors got their diplomas; and the University settled down to an uneventful Summer Session, during which a Summer Institute of Politics was held and work on Grace Hall neared completion. Things started to happen, however, when school opened in September. An infantile paralysis epidemic broke out in various sections of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, thereby preventing 212 quarantined students from returning to Lehigh on time, and creating untold headaches for University authorities in charge of Freshman Week exercises and for rushing chairmen, who were quite 25 26 likely to find that their prospects were quarantined in Harrisburg or East Orange. The same week that the polio epidemic was causing so much trouble, the Uni- versity opened Lamberton Hall, its new dining hall, under the direction of Miss Elsie Troeger. The dining hall was the old Armory, transformed into a modern eating establishment by $55,000 worth of Alumni gifts. Freshman Week came and went; 255 freshmen were pledged to fraternities. After registration had been completed it was found that 1748 students had en- rolled, a decrease of one from the previous year; there were 384 freshman engi- neers, 1 1 1 in the M.E. curriculum. Then came what was probably the most notable week end the University has seen in many years — the 75th anniversary celebration. On the morning of Friday, October 3, a Founder ' s Day Convocation was held in the newly-completed Eugene Gifford Grace Hall, sports center and recreation building. Feature of the program, attended by 1400 undergraduate and graduate students who had marched in procession with the faculty up to the building, was an address by Dr. William Mather Lewis, president of Lafayette College. Dr. Lewis denounced the gloom with which some regard the future of private colleges and universities, and said, They are neither reactionary nor static, but forward-looking and mobile; that they answer the call as Lehigh did 75 years ago is the source of their strength. He called upon privately endowed institutions to put the interests of higher education above institutional prosperity. Following Dr. Lewis ' speech, eight honorary degrees and 35 course degrees were awarded. The next morning the three newest building projects of Lehigh University — Eugene Gifford Grace Hall, Robert A. Lamberton Hall, and the Samuel E. Berger Room (an addition to Taylor Gym) — were formally dedicated. The rest of the day was taken up with Alumni fora, the first football game of the season (Case), and an evening reception in Grace Hall. Later that night the Engineers ' Ball was held in Grace Hall, the first student social function to be held there. On Sunday morning the week-end celebration ended with a Convocation of Grati- tude and Thanksgiving in Packer Memorial Church. While the University was in the midst of the pomp and ceremony of the 75th anniversary doings, the Lehigh DeMolay Club was creating a minor advance in Lehigh ' s social life — a date bureau. Lehigh students and girls from Moravian, Cedar Crest, and St. Luke ' s Hospital filled out questionnaires about personality, interests, and date preferences and handed them in to the date bureau. On October 10, Paul Robeson, world-famous Negro baritone, opened the Student ABOVE: Drinker House cornerstone; Dedicating Grace Hall. CENTER : Talking it up to the frosh ; This is Grace Hall, also. BELOW: A renovation, not a new one — Lamberton Hall; Going into Grace Hall for the Founder ' s Day Convocation. Concerts-Lectures Series with a concert which was attended by 1,000 students, faculty, and townspeople, largest crowd in the history of the series. And next week was Houseparty. A highly successful Houseparty it was, too — nearly eight hundred girls were guests; two orchestras, Jan Savitt and Bunny Berigan, made the Senior Ball in the new Grace building something to be re- membered; the traditional Maennerchor tea dance was jammed, also tradi- tionally; thirty Saturday night living group dances preceded many a trip to the Lookout to watch the sun come up. On Sunday afternoon Houseparty was over, and Lehigh started to catch up on its sleep. Outside of the Arcadia action to sponsor Combined Council meetings again, the University kept on sleeping, figuratively speaking, until the afternoon of Mon- day, October 29. At about one-thirty that afternoon students started to rush up the hill toward the Chi Psi house, which was blazing furiously. All afternoon, students manned hoses and rushed in and out of the house trying to save furni- ture and personal property. When the flames were finally put out early in the evening, the Chi Psi house was completely wrecked — the roof was gone, the third floor was gone, the second floor was charred and heaped with ruins and wreck- age. Origin of the $38,000 fire was traced to the boiler room in the basement. The Chi Psi men, housed for a few days in other fraternities, rented a new home on West Broad Street and began to make plans for rebuilding their house. By this time the Lehigh football situation was even worse than usual. By November 14, when about half the student body overflowed Union Station to give the team a send-off to the Virginia game, the Engineers had lost to Case, Rutgers, Penn State, and Muhlenberg and had tied Ursinus and Buffalo. Lehigh lost the Virginia game, and at the end of the season, was defeated by Lafayette. But the night before the last and greatest game the traditional freshman pep rally was held in Grace Hall; the pajama parade and the serenading of Fem-Sem were held as they always have been. The boys sang We Pay No Toll Tonight as they tramped across the New Street Bridge, and Cyanide members stood guard at the doors and windows of the girls ' school to prevent over-zealous freshmen from breaking into the building. Saturday night after the game, the Interdormi- tory and the Town Councils combined to hold a dance in Grace Hall. Oddity in the sports news was the cancellation of a Lehigh-U. of Penn hockey game due to Pennsylvania Blue Laws. It was about this time that Lehigh lost its pub- licity director to Moravian College for Men, Professor Dale H. Gramley leaving to become assistant to the president of the latter institution. ABOVE: Students in Grace Hall bleachers at Founder ' s Day exercises. CENTER: The frosh have a long wait for tickets; And it ' s easier to draw lots the night before the Game. BELOW: On guard at Taylor House; Lehigh gives the team a send-off. 29 When December arrived, city and University authorities were still vainly trying to recover about $300 worth of fire-fighting clothing, including an assistant chief ' s shield, that the city claimed had been taken by the students at the Chi Psi fire. The equipment has not yet been returned. But such things mattered little after December 7, the day that Japanese bombers roared over Pearl Harbor. The war had come at last, and Lehigh was to be greatly changed by that war. President Williams, Dean Congdon, and Arcadia President McClave requested that Lehigh students remain calm and continue their studies so that they might be better pre- pared to serve the country when the call to arms or industrial service should come. A University Council of Defense was organized with committees on air raid warning, air raid protection, fire protection, first aid instruction, American unity, men in the service, and conservation of defense materials. And the week after students returned from a war-time Christmas vacation, the faculty had passed sweeping measures which added a sixteen-week summer term to the academic term, abolished examinations for the second semester of this year, cut out spring vacation, and, worst of all from the student point of view, abolished Spring Houseparty. The addition of the summer term was the mainspring of an accelera- tion process which would permit the Classes of 1943 and 1944 to graduate one and two semesters ahead of time, and all following classes to complete eight semesters of work in two and two-thirds calendar years. The regular four-year plan was continued as an option for the benefit of those who wished to attend only the fall and spring semesters. But the abolition of Spring Houseparty — no student could approve of that. University Authorities said that Houseparty would interfere with the speeded-up study program. But after the Brown and White had editorialized for the return of the social event and a student committee had submitted a plan for a less lavish affair, a special policy committee repealed the abolition clause. It was the Monday before IF Ball, early in the evening, that Lehigh students in every campus living building and all over Bethlehem saw flames on the campus. Another fraternity — Phi Gamma Delta — was burning to the ground. This fire was far worse than the Chi Psi blaze. Starting in the basement, where a chapter room was being remodeled as a memorial to a Phi Gam alumnus who had died, the fire spread rapidly upstairs. Bethlehem firemen, handicapped by freezing weather, low water pressure, a congested roadway, the bursting of a pumper cylinder head, and lack of manpower, fought until late at night. The roof caved in, the third floor collapsed. Dormitory beds fell through to the first floor. Damage was estimated at $60,000. Housed, like the Chi Psi ' s, in other fraternities for a 30 ABOVE : Lehigh ' s army does some drilling. CENTER: We always have the Pajama Parade; The Chapel is lit with a Christmas star. BELOW : We thought one fire was enough : But we had another. few days, the Phi Gams eventually moved into the Hotel Bethlehem, where they are living until the house is rebuilt. Then came Interfraternity Ball with 868 couples dancing to the music of Harry James ' and Will Bradley ' s orchestras. Tau Beta Pi invested $200 in defense bonds, a symbol of the war-consciousness that has taken hold of the campus. Toward the end of February the Navy announced that a new pre-induction naval training curriculum, V-i, had been added to the already existent pre-induction V-5 aviation cadet and V-7 naval reserve courses. A survey by the Brown and White on March 3 indicated that twenty-nine men had left school to enlist in the armed services. Description of war conditions in Germany was the topic of a talk by C. Brooks Peters, ' 34, until recently New York Times correspondent in Berlin, at the Junior Class banquet early in March. A few weeks previously the seniors had Dr. F. Alexander Magoun for their banquet, Dr. Magoun ' s topic, marriage and sex problems, being the same that had attracted them the year before. Kaleidoscope of other events this year : In addition to Robeson, the SCL com- mittee presented a Don Cossack chorus, the Hedgerow Theater players in The Emperor Jones, pianists Fray and Braggiotti, Jim Crowley and James Con zel- man in a debate, and Dorothy Crawford. Lehigh ' s wrestling team, usually one of the best in the East, went through a fairly unsuccessful (for them) season, Zackey and McKenna getting seconds in the E. I. W. A. meets, and Brenneman and Bannon thirds. ABOVE: After the blaze — Chi Psi (top) and Phi Gamma Delta (bottom) ; We finally got two lights on a Library reading table. BELOW: Combined Council big-wigs — Moss, McClave, and McMichael; Houseparty dates arrive in Bethlehem. 33 personnel THE HAT and mortarboard might stand for freshman and senior, but cou- pled with the doctor ' s hood they are symbolic of faculty and frosh, the two extremes of the University family. As the teachers are the heart of the institution, so are the students its life- blood, keeping it alive and vital in sev- eral senses , turning it from intellectual sterility to its main function of perpetuat- ing in our democracy a civilized and thinking people capable of dealing with either the machine or the word. o o t [WE 1 FOUNDED BY y . ( L f administration DR. CLEMENT CLARENCE WILLIAMS, whose long career as a civil engi- neer and as an educator well fitted him for his present office, has been Lehigh ' s head administrator since 1 935 when Dr. Charles Russ Richards retired from the presidency. From his spacious office on the second floor of the south wing of the Alumni Memorial building, Lehigh ' s seventh president directs the interesting and intricate workings of the University. Final responsibility not only for the carrying out of the educational activities of the University but also for the main- tenance of plant and personnel rests with Dr. Williams. Now the holder of a number of degrees, both earned and honorary, Dr. Wil- liams began his education at Southern Illinois Normal School, which awarded him a B.S. in 1900. Civil engineering degrees from the University of Illinois and from the University of Colorado (where he served on the faculty) followed. Lafayette, Northeastern, Bucknell, and Hahnemann Medical College have pre- sented him doctor ' s degrees in recent years. At the time that he was chosen presi- Dr. Clement C. Williams in his office in the Alumni Building. 37 dent of Lehigh, Dr. Williams was dean of engineering at the University of Iowa. He is the author of books and articles on education and on engineering. While President Williams administers the affairs of the University, primary authority is vested in the Board of Trustees, at the head of which is Dr. Eugene Gifford Grace, better known throughout the nation as president of the Bethlehem Steel Company. Dr. Grace, who has been a member of the board since 191 3, was graduated from Lehigh as an electrical engineer in 1899. Grace Hall, of course, is his gift to his Alma Mater. Another alumnus known to every Lehigh man is Walter Raleigh Okeson, vice- president and treasurer of the University and secretary to the Board of Trustees. Okey has been connected with the University in one official position after another ever since he graduated in 1 896 as an electrical engineer. His present job is the handling of the University ' s large endowment. His hobby is football; he is chairman of the National Football Rules Committee. The Vice-President ' s office is in the north wing of the Memorial Building. Dr. Tomlinson Fort, the tall, scholarly-looking man who is known to most undergraduates as the head of the mathematics department, is also dean of Lehigh ' s graduate school. He serves graduate students in about the same capacity that Deans Palmer, Carothers, and Callen serve undergraduates. Dean Fort, whose office is in the upper regions of Packer Hall, has been at Lehigh since 1927. Secretary of the graduate school is Robert Pattison More, another Lehigh alum- nus and associate professor of German. Secretary More shares Dean Palmer ' s office in Coppee Hall. A man who, like Dr. Fort, has to devote time both to teaching and to adminis- trative work, is Dr. Harold Prescott Thomas, professor of education and director of the Summer School for the past few years. (Professor Gramley had the job summer before last.) Formerly an engineer, a director of educational research, and a superintendent of public schools, Dr. Thomas, who has been at Lehigh since 1932, has had the job of directing the educational and social activities of a Summer Session attended by women as well as men. John Irvine Kirkpatrick, who worked as a salesman and as a bank examiner before he assumed his present office at his Alma Mater, is Assistant to the Presi- dent. Mr. Kirkpatrick, who was an athlete while an undergraduate, handles a number of administrative details, and, at the recent resignation of Professor Gram- ley, assumed the work of directing University publicity. This year he has been especially interested in the problem of student housing. 38 IN THE PICTURES: Vice-President Walter R. Okeson; Trustee President Eugene G. Grace; Dr. Tomlinson Fort, Dean of Graduates; Robert P. More, Executive Secretary of the Graduate Faculty; Dr. Harold P. Thomas, Director of the Summer Session, and John I. Kirkpatrick, Assistant to the President. . f Newest addition to Lehigh ' s administrative units is Lamberton Hall, the Uni- versity dining-hall which replaced the old Drown Hall basement cafeteria, and newest member of the administrative staff is Miss Elsie Troeger, administrator of the dining service. Miss Troeger, who had experience with the employee dining service of the Bell Telephone Company before coming to Lehigh at the end of last Summer, manages the buying, preparing, and serving of the food which several hundred students, predominantly dormitory men, eat three times a day in the large, beamed hall which up to this year had served as the indoor drill floor for the military department. Alumni gifts of $55,000 and the removal of the military department to the new Grace Hall made it possible to renovate the old Armory into a modern, efficient eating-hall. Cafeteria service at noon, and student waiters at night — individual tables and large tables — a faculty din- ing room and a private dining room for special dinners — the new eating hall is a definite improvement over the old cafeteria. Two men who do not mean very much to the Lehigh undergraduate right now, and yet who will be all-important links with his Alma Mater a few years from now are the President and the Secretary of the Lehigh Alumni Association — respectively Herbert Hartzog and Robert Ford Herrick. Mr. Hartzog, who be- came president of Lehigh ' s powerful alumni group in 1 94 1 , has the job of keeping alumni activities co-ordinated and integrated. Secretary Herrick handles alumni correspondence, attends meetings, raises funds, and, with the help of Managing Editor Leonard Hubert Schick, also a Lehigh man, puts out the Alumni Bulletin, the magazine which carries news of undergraduate and alumni Lehigh to old grads all over the world. Mr. Herrick ' s offices are in the Alumni Memorial Building. And now comes a man whom every senior knows, Elias Robins Morgan, Direc- tor of the Placement Bureau and the man who gets Lehigh men jobs after they have finished the four-year grind. A Lehigh graduate, Mr. Morgan has very little trouble nowadays placing men: defense industries need Lehigh ' s excellent engineers. The next administrator on the list is a man who has become an administrator at Moravian College for Men — Dale Hartzell Gramley, who taught journalism and directed University publicity up until the beginning of this semester. It was Professor Gramley ' s duty to see that Lehigh ' s accomplishments and its aims were kept before the public through means of the daily press. His publicity work is now handled largely by Mr. Kirkpatrick, Assistant to the President. Mention the word administration to the average student and the first person IN THE PICTURES: The well-appointed student dining room in Lamberton Hall; Robert F. Herrick, Alumni Bulletin Editor; Elsie M. Troeger, Directress of Dining Service; E. Robins Morgan, Director of Placement; and Dale H. Gramley, former University News Editor. 41 42 he will probably think of is Dr. Wray Hollowell Congdon, dean of under- graduates. Dean Congdon, who has the highly difficult and most delicate job of handling relations between the individual undergraduate or undergraduate or- ganization and the faculty and administrative hierarchy of the University, must be able to be firm, yet kindly; he must represent the dignity and power of the University, yet he must be able to be ready to deal at any time with the seemingly petty problems of an undergraduate. It is Dean Congdon ' s office which controls practically every extra-routine relation of the student with the University. To Dean Congdon ' s office in the Alumni Memorial Building come hundreds of undergraduates to talk their way into getting excuses or out of getting put on cut probation, to be reprimanded for infractions of University rules, to petition for dances and banquets, to obtain University auto license plates, to be guided in their study programs, to be advised in the solution of every sort of problem the undergraduate may have to face. It is Dean Congdon who has to listen to all the complaints that townspeople make about Lehigh students, and it is Dean Congdon who has to hear the alibis made by the same students. It is Dean Cong- don who has to send out valentines, and it is Dean Congdon who has the highly unpleasant duty of informing students when they have been dropped by the Uni- versity. The recent third draft registration will bring the Dean new headaches — and he has already had plenty in helping students with deferment problems and in writing letters of recommendation for those who wish to join special branches of the armed services. Dean Congdon, who is also listed in the University directory as Professor of Education, came to Lehigh in 1934 as Director of Admissions, and, in 1938, when Dean Charles Maxwell McConn resigned to become president of Wash- ington Square College in New York, he became Dean of Undergraduates. His previous educational career had well prepared him for the post. He had been Professor of Education at the University of Michigan, and had held various educational positions in China. His undergraduate days (yes, even deans have them) were spent at the University of Syracuse, which granted him a B.A. in 1 9 14 and an M.A. in 19 15. Michigan gave him another M.A. in 1922 and his Ph.D. in 1929. As Professor of Education, Dr. Congdon teaches graduate courses. To help him in his task of preventing students from going hay-wire are two secretaries — Miss Beatrice Flickinger and Miss Ruth Wallace. It is their job to write the letters, mail the cut notices, and prevent the five or ten students usually to be found in the office from all rushing in to see the Dean at once. For pure volume of student business, Messrs. Smiley, Curtis, Ashbaugh, and Maxwell take the prizes. These administrators are the men who handle the more Dr. Wray H. Congdon, Dean of Undergraduates, at his desk in the Alumni Building. [ 4W L detailed workings of the University machine. They do the fueling, the oiling, and the repairing. E. Kenneth Smiley, Director of Admissions, and his assistant, Byron Cromwell Hayes, for instance, make the original selection of those who are to become Lehigh men. For months before one enters Lehigh, Mr. Smiley, who had been at Lehigh in the Twenties and had left before returning in 1934 to become Assistant Director of Admissions and later Director, keeps in contact with school and candidate, checks and considers one ' s record before putting his O.K. on one ' s admission. It is his job to acquaint the prospective student with the University, and the University with the prospective student. Once the student is admitted, he is registered, in a highly efficient though seem- ingly confusing method, by George Bartlett Curtis, Registrar and University Editor. It is Mr. Curtis, lover of cryptog rams and Baconiana, who issues class schedules, lists averages, reports grades, records cuts, and keeps the permanent record of every student who ever matriculates here. Chief rank in Mr. Curtis ' staff is held by Miss Jeannette Ida Cleaveland, the Recorder. Mr. Curtis ' office is the point of deposition for countless petitions. One of his other numerous duties includes editing the Catalogue, the Student Directory, and the papers of the Lehigh Institute of Research. Undoubtedly the Registrar ' s Office handles more paper work than any other University office. After the student gets through Mr. Curtis ' registration line he goes down to pay Frederick Ralph Ashbaugh, the Bursar and Purchasing Agent. Mr. Ashbaugh has served the Administration since 1 896, when he became secretary to President Drown. He has been the collector of student monies since 1908. The Supply Bureau, in the administration building basement, is the store where you can buy everything from a coke to a Heat Engines text or a novel to a fraternity sports jacket. Manager of the store, and the man who built and has maintained its present high standards, is John Walter Maxwell, ' 26. The man who is in charge of keys to buildings, mowing lawns, the campus cops, construction of walks and drives, fences, shrubbery, lights, heat, and the bells that ring on the hour and at ten minutes after is Andrew Willard Litzen- berger, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. He has charge of the twenty- odd buildings of the University and all the grounds, from Packer Avenue to the Arboretum. He is the man who keeps the plant running, the campus tidy, and the school property safe. IN THE CANDIDS: E. Kenneth Smiley, Director of Admissions, and Assistant Byron; George B. Curtis, Registrar and University Editor with Miss Jeannette Cleaveland, Recorder; Frederick R. Ashbaugh, Bursar; John W. Maxwell, Supply Bureau Manager; Andrew W. Litzenberger, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY SCIENCE AND TACTICS: Rear Row: Sgt. W. E. Wocken- fuss, Lt. J. D. Campbell, Capt. S. Pierce, Tech. Sgt. T. H. Duby, Mr. Sgt. G. F. Gazda. Front Row: Capt. W. M. Barrows, Lt. Col. G. L. Febiger, Col. J. S. Leonard, Capt. J. F. Schwartz, Capt. C. E. Phillips. 45 46 This year one of the most important departments in the University is the de- partment of Military Science and Tactics, headed by Colonel Joseph Stephens Leonard up until this March and now by Colonel Fay W. Brabson, who took over when Col. Leonard was called to other duty. The Military Department instructors, regular army officers assigned to Lehigh, teach all freshmen and sophomores the rudiments of military knowledge — simple combat principles, close and extended order drill, map-reading, sanitation, military organization, rifle marksmanship, and military history. A limited group of upperclassmen — a group of increased size and significance this year — take two more years of work leading to a second lieutenant ' s commission at graduation. While pursuing the advanced courses, the juniors and seniors serve as cadet officers in the Uni- versity R.O.T.C. regiment. The Lehigh courses lead to two branches of service — the Infantry Officers Reserve Corps and the Ordnance Officers Reserve Corps. This year, of course, those seniors receiving commissions will enter active service immediately. The Military Department is housed in new and larger quarters this year : they have taken over most of the class-rooms and offices in Grace Hall. Up to this year they had occupied the building that is now Lamberton Hall. Most popular hang-out on the campus and certainly one of most interesting departments is the Health Service, headed by Dr. Raymond Cooley Bull, and staffed by Dr. Carl Otto Keck and Mrs. Jennie Vye Dacey, R.N. Dr. Bull is in charge of sanitation in all University buildings, administers the annual fall physi- cal examination required of all students, and, in general, oversees the physiological well-being of the University. Dr. Keck acts as consultant to ill and injured stu- dents, prescribes for them, and issues medical excuses for class absences. Mrs. Dacey, or Dace as she is known to the hundreds of students who drop in to listen to her wit and opinion, is the registered nurse who administers pills and acts as the doctors ' assistant. Back in the rear rooms of the Health Service, located in the east end of Christmas-Saucon Hall, is Billie Burkhardt, who has charge of the therapeutic lights. Besides running the physical examination assembly line and acting as medical godfather to the student body, the Health Service co-operates with the Depart- ment of Biology in giving a series of lectures on sex hygiene during freshmen week. All freshmen are required to take and to pass the hygiene course, either by examination during the freshman week, or failing that, during the second semester. The Health Service is where you go when you need medicine, advice, or genial companionship. Geographical and cultural center of the campus is the beautiful Lucy Packer IN THE PICTURES: Dr. Raymond C. Bull takes a vaccination reading; A student enjoys Lehigh sun-tan; Billie wraps the boy for diathermy; Dispensary cowboy gets a throat swabbing from Jennie Dacey; Dr. Carl Keck writes out a cure. Linderman Memorial Library, the original portion of which was built in 1877, a three-sided addition being added in 1928. Head Librarian is Howard Savoy Leach, who has to administer the buying, preserving, and use of 244,000 volumes. Of these about 44,000 circulate every year. When Mr. Leach took over his present job in 1924, the Library, now the second largest University library in Pennsyl- vania, had fewer than 1 60,000 volumes and circulated about one-tenth the num- ber of books it now distributes. The Collegiate Gothic addition gave the Library nearly five times its original floor space and made it one of the most dignified and beautiful buildings on the campus. A large paneled reading room with antique-looking windows; a comfortable Browsing Room where dozens of stu- dents read and drowse between classes; the Art Gallery, which features a new exhibition every few weeks; the Lehigh Room, where files of the Brown and White, the Review, the Burr, and all the other University publications and Lehigh-authored books are kept; the seminar rooms, occupied in the evening by advanced classes in the arts and humanities; and the Treasure room, repository of rare and most valuable book treasures which the Library has acquired — all these make up the Lehigh University Library. Mr. Leach, a graduate of Wesleyan and of Princeton, is assisted by a staff of circulation desk attendants, cataloguers, pages, and student clerks. The circula- tion staff, composed of Mrs. Myrtle Helms Easton, Miss Jean Riegel, and Miss Louise Watters, is the personnel unit with which students come into the most contact. The circulation staff signs books in and out, collects fines, and answers a thousand and one questions about what one can find in the Library and where one can find it. Less known are the cataloguers, headed by Miss Mary Wheatley. It is the cataloguers who keep track of every volume in the Library. They classify each book that is acquired and make a catalogue card for it. One of the cataloguing staff ' s biggest jobs is the classification of all the old volumes that belonged to the Library when it was first established — volumes that were never recorded properly back in those days. One of the Library ' s features this year was the glass-case exhibits in the lobby. A showing of the books of William Blake, and another of the works of Richard Harding Davis were among the exhibits. Incidentally, the Library is co-operating with the Pi Delta Epsilon campaign to make Lehigh the center of Richard Harding Davis lore. Devoted to producing the strong body which is to contain the strong mind IN THE PICTURES: Paneled elegance of the Reading Room of the Library; Librarian Howard S. Leach handles a rare volume in Lehigh ' s Treasure Room; the Loan Desk in the Library ' s foyer ; the extent of Lehigh ' s Library is shown in its card catalogues ; part of the Library is an art gallery. 49 are the Department of Physical Education and Intramural Athletics, headed by Professor Fay Conant Bartlett, and the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, headed by Football Coach Glen Walter Harmeson. The Physical Education Department promotes the bodily welfare of the great mass of students, and administers sports within the walls of the University. Bart, who runs intramural tournaments in every athletic activity from touch football and wrestling to fencing and badminton, believes that sport should not only serve to keep the student healthy and strong but provide him recreation during college and after he has been graduated. Each living group in the Uni- versity has its own athletic manager who helps the department arrange games and who sees that his fellow-students participate in the numerous athletic activi- ties offered by the department. In addition to administering intramurals and supervising the physical education requirements of each student, the department also runs classes in various physical skills — wrestling, for instance — and general physical fitness classes. This year the Department offered a new health course, the program of which includes mass drills, recreative games, and apparatus work. The courses P.E. 23 and P.E. 24 consist of work in the theory and practice of physical education. They are given the second semester and are taught as formal classes. Nine intercollegiate sports, the principals being football, wrestling, basketball, and baseball, are handled by the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. It is Harmie who supervises the business end of all intercollegiate activities and acts as head football coach as well. There are three groups of sports at Lehigh, each with different letter requirements. Such sports as fencing and hockey, for instance, which are not recognized by the University — that is, not supported by University funds — are called club sports. Probably the most popular sport at Lehigh, and certainly the one which has brought us the most athletic fame is wrestling — coached by Billy Sheridan, who ranks as one of the deans of American mat mentors. The activities of the Physical Education and Athletic Departments take place in Taylor Gym and Stadium, on the Lehigh Field on the North Side of Bethle- hem, and in the recently-constructed Grace Hall, which is used for basketball and wrestling. 50 IN THE CANDIDS: Fay C. Bartlett, Director of Physical Education; Glenn W. Harmeson, Director of Athletics; Jimmy and Mike in their usual haunt; The ideal Lehigh athlete lounges amid his bric-a-brac. DEPARTMENT: OF ATHLETICS: Rear Row: M. Cunningham, J. A. Gordon, G. H. Chalmers, P. E. Short, M. B. Westerman. Front Row: J. J. Mahoney, F. C. Bartlett, G. W. Harmeson, W. Sheridan, E. F. Caraway. r 7 jp m£$ 0zh ft j| f r WP NwvwOaA ej fe r faculty THE COLLEGE of Arts and Science has been with Lehigh from the very begin- ning. First as a course in General Literature, then as a separate school of the same name, and finally under the title it bears today, the College has served every class of Lehigh men and has prevented both in name and in deed the Uni- versity from retrogressing to a purely technical institution. Courses in twenty different fields are offered under the general direction of Dean Philip Mason Palmer, who has taught, advised and directed Lehigh stu- dents for four decades. He is, besides Dean, Professor of and Head of the Depart- ment of German, and official director of all curricula within the College. He discusses with equal facility the results of the Carnegie exam and someone ' s chances of getting off pro next semester; his office combines the functions of library, consulting room, operating table and production center. Dr. Philip M. Palmer, Dean of the College of Arts and Science, is seen here against Coppee Hall, where his offices are. 53 54 In the present ideological war the importance of the work of the English de- partment seems unquestionable. Both by the quiet example of the traditional scholarship peculiar to literary research and by the discipline for truth that a study of our mother tongue brings to the true student, English is doing its part, trite as it may seem, to help win the war. Robert Metcalf Smith, known for his scholarly Shakespearean researches, heads the English department, directing its destinies from a small, thesis-crammed room on the third floor of Christmas-Saucon Hall. Under his supervision the dif- ferentiation amongst freshmen has resulted in three fundamental English courses, dealing respectively with grammar, composition and literature. Specialization leads through survey courses in American and European drama and literature to such restricted subjects as Johnson (delighted in by Clifford) and Milton (relished by Riley ) . Because of the number of students it must serve, the English depart- ment is quite large, being second only to that of Mathematics. Dramatics, coached by Al Rights and organized into the Mustard and Cheese Club, and Debating, handled by Messrs. Brembeck and Callaghan, are further adjuncts to the English department. Other languages offered by the College of Arts and Science include Latin, Greek, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Arts distribution requirements wisely compel a certain amount of study in at least one of these languages, in order that the student may have a basis, so to speak, for his appreciation of his own tongue and the advantages and glories of others. Technical training in the languages of our enemies is increasing in importance, and it may well be that the instruction offered in German and Italian will become essential to the com- petent engineer who, after the war, assists in rehabilitation. Chemical German is considered so necessary that a separate course is given in it. Heads of the language departments are: Greek, Professor Crum; Latin, Pro- fessor Wright; German, Dean Palmer; and Romance Languages, Professor Barthold. Besides teaching in their respective fields, Wright and Crum also offer courses in Ancient History and Ancient Science, as well as instruction in Greek and Latin literature in English translation. Professor Barthold is faculty adviser to the Friends of the Richard Harding Davis Collection of Pi Delta Epsilon, and has been very active in furthering that movement. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH: Back Row: E. L. Jones, J. L. Clifford, J. K. Binder, J. T. Nardin, G. J. Christensen. Second Row: C. S. Brembeck, S. Paul, K. K. Kost, C. E. Strauch, A. A. Rights. Front Row: J. C. Callaghan, J. B. Severs, R. M. Smith, E. H. Riley, D. H. Gramley. IN THE CANDIDS: The mysteries of our language are explained by Instructor Brembeck, Language Department; Dr. Allen Barthold administering French without tears. LANGUAGE DEPARTMENTS: Back Row: R. P. More, G. D. Southard, R. F. McNerney, J. S. Tremper, W. A. McDonald, J. G. Roberts, G. D. Fame. Front Row: E. L. Crum, A. J. Barthold, P. M. Palmer, R. A. Soto. n n cs o s ft The department of Geology gives instruction in the constitution, appearance, construction and usefulness of the Earth. Headed by Bradford Willard, a strati- graphist, it is currently conducting research in petrography — Stewart being par- ticularly interested in Antarctic phenomena in this line — and in examination of the local geology of Pennsylvania. General and survey courses in the field are offered as well as specialized work for majors in the subject. The study of rocks, their formations and peculiarities, is fascinating; many students have prepared exhibits of their collections at one time or another, and some of these may be seen in Williams Hall. Biology, one of the three classic fundamental sciences, is well represented at Lehigh by a full staff and several specialists. Majors in the field are generally pre-medical students, and Lehigh ' s record among these is enviable. Francis Trembley, whom most students know for his intense interest in wild life, is at present conducting a hawk survey, while department head Stanley Thomas is devoting some of his time to a clearing up of the confusion that exists in the naming and defining of some classes of industrial fermenting organisms. Other interesting work is being done by Parker on the biology of the upper air, while Professor Hall specializes in histology sectioning. Slides and Garth Howland, head of the Fine Arts department, naturally go together; many a pleasant morning has been spent by Arts students in the dark- ened room on first floor Coppee soaking up the History of Architecture or delving into Medieval Art Forms. Howland is an accomplished sketcher and a prominent local artist, and has had his work displayed in many places. Packer Hall, the Lehigh building which has been used for everything from a dormitory to an assembly hall, houses the department of Psychology, with its laboratories in the basement and its lecture room a curious step-down affair near the back. Professor Jenkins is well known for his collecting of data on the thermal sensitivity of the skin, for which cause the Psychology i students endure hours of arm-jabbing and elbow-tickling each semester. Advanced courses in Abnormal and Business Psychology help round out the practical and theoretical education of students majoring in Journalism, Business and the like. Combined in the picture as they essentially are in function are the two depart- ments of Education and Philosophy. Lehigh is equipped to prepare students for DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY: Back Row: D. Stewart, R. D. Butler, L. Whitcomb. Front Row: B. L. Miller, B. Willard, A. H. Fretz. DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY: Back Row: R. M. Lewert, B. W. Parker, J. P. Sell, E. G. Smith, R. W. Hall, S. J. Thomas, F. J. Trembley. DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY: A. Ford, J. L. Graham, W. L. Jenkins. IN THE CANDIDS: Professor Howland with some of the sketch class; One-man Fine Arts Department — Garth Howland; Hayes, Bailey, and unidentified friend play at card punching in the Psych dungeon. 57 certificates in secondary school teaching, and indeed many of our graduate scholars are local teachers working for advanced degrees in that department. The Philosophy department sponsors the General Education program, designed to acquaint undergraduates with a field of their own choice by non-credit and extra-curricular reading, conferences and discussions. The Philosophy depart- ment also sponsors the R. W. Blake Honorary Philosophical Society. History is coming more into men ' s minds every day, as they try by parallel and contrast to integrate present world happenings into the fabric of man ' s past. The Department, headed by Dr. Gipson, offers courses in Government as well, and sponsors the honorary Hist©ry society Phi Alpha Theta. Preparation for government work is the chief object of History majors, the field leading to posi- tions in the foreign and diplomatic services. Dr. T. Edgar Shields, music mentor of both Lehigh and Moravian, not only teaches formal courses in music appreciation and harmony, but also has on his hands the directing of the Band, Glee Club and Symphony Orchestra. The Capehart in Packer Chapel is the University ' s musical pride; our collection of records is a large one. Moral and Religious Philosophy, a department existing at few Universities, is the province of Claude G. Beardslee, who not only teaches his subject to all fresh- men but also acts as faculty adviser for all the major student governing bodies. His earnest promotion of free discussion of problems among students has fur- thered their interest in many aspects of Lehigh University, and his championing of the student cause among the faculty deserves mention. The closing of the Arts and Science section with the Mathematics department is not accidental; Math might be practically termed a university department, since it serves all three colleges, and actually has more students from Engineer- ing than from Arts and Business combined. The department has added to its roster several defense courses in military mathematics, especially the redoubtable Exterior Ballistics. 58 DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION AND PHILOSOPHY: Back Row: R. H. White, T. T. Lafferty, R. E. Laramy. Front Row: H. P. Thomas, F. C. Becker. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT: Back Row: E. B. Schulz, W. A. Aiken, W. L. Godshall. Front Row: L. H. Gipson, G. D. Harmon. IN THE CANDIDS: Dr. T. Edgar Shields at the organ; Dr. Claude G. Beardslee, professor of Moral and Religious Philosophy. DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS: Back Row: J. L. Vanderslice, V. V. Latshaw, J. E. Illick, E. H. Cutler, W. R. Transue, F. S. Beale, R. N. VanArnam. Front Row: C. A. Shook, L. L. Smail, T. Fort, J. B. Reynolds, G. E. Raynor. f ) n if The College of Business Administration has been a separate College at Lehigh since the period immediately following World War I, when a Business College was organized from the department of Economics and History in the College of Arts and Science. Although the name has since changed, the general principles upon which this College was built were not altered: the emphasis has always been on generalized education rather than specialized training. Last year ' s Regis- ter sets the keynote when it declares that : It has been emphasized that training in fundamentals constitutes the major objective of the curriculum. Specialization in one field of business at the expense of general training is not possible, while purely vocational and wholly commercial aspects of business are excluded from the curriculum. But every student has oppor- tunity in the last two years, and especially in the senior year, to concentrate his work in some special field of business. The curriculum is so arranged that every student necessarily specializes in some degree, but these requirements give the student a wide choice of fields of work and combination of courses. Dean of the College of Business Administration is Neil Carothers, onetime Rhodes Scholar and now MacFarlane Professor of Economics in addition to his administrative duties. His headquarters are located to your right as you enter Christmas-Saucon Hall, but his jurisdictional tentacles reach all the way from Packer Laboratory, where he delivers his famed lectures in elementary economics, to the statistical laboratory on the upper floors of Hyphen Hall. In line with the policy stated above, Dean Carothers personally directs the choice of courses and lines of study of all his business students. Engineers and other men majoring in technical fields have a tendency to regard the business cur- riculum as a relative breeze, since it includes few reports and fewer laboratories. That this sort of reasoning is faulty is shown by the excellent record of many of Lehigh ' s Business Administration majors in the world of industry. Dean Carothers ' policy of generalized education, broad insight into many fields, and leaving the pursuit of special branches to the individual once he has graduated, is funda- mentally sound, being the same policy under which the more liberal sections of engineering operate. Dean Carothers has other duties besides his job at Lehigh, for he is a promi- nent figure in the canning industry, having conducted several researches in that line, and is well known for his radio lectures and magazine articles in opposition to the more rampant government spending projects. The College of Business Administration is subdivided into the three depart- ments of Accounting, Economics and Sociology, and Finance. Head of the first Dr. Neil Carothers, Dean of the Business College, in a montage with his headquarters, Christmas-Saucon Hall. 61 department is Roy B. Cowin, known for his bow-tie and his soft-spoken lectures, who came to Lehigh in 1924, the year after Dean Carothers assumed charge of the College. Courses in accounting are taken by those, besides business students, who wish to acquaint themselves with the modern intricate methods of dealing with money in its ceaseless flow from one part of industry to another; there is a recognized Arts major in the subject. Economics and Sociology is headed by Herbert M. Diamond, and Finance by Frederick A. Bradford — a strange department, for it contains no professors, in- structors or assistants, as one may discover by reading the Directory! Professor Diamond is known for his interest in marriage counseling and sociology. Funda- mental economics is taught in an unforgettable manner to all Lehigh under- graduates, usually in their sophomore year, by Dean Carothers in his two-a-week Packard Laboratory lectures. It is standard student practice to drop in on the Dean after an especially exciting national event or new government move, and get his reaction to it during his next class. Professor Bradford has written his own textbook, just as Elmer Bratt in Eco- nomic Statistics, dissatisfied with existing ones, wrote perhaps the best textbook extant today in Business Cycles. Features of the College of Business Administration that differentiate it from the other Colleges include the system of giving quizzes and marking. It is always difficult to give marks in lecture courses, but the Business College does its best to make things fair for everyone by sliding the marks instead of grading on an absolute basis. A familiar sight in Christmas-Saucon hall is the little crowd of students hopefully loitering about the Business bulletin board on grade days, comparing their seat numbers with those behind the glass case and turning away in triumph or disgust. Another mark of the Business student is his membership in the homey gathering just outside Hyphen Hall, where Nature provided for his kind by placing the rudiments of a cement ampitheather within which he can mill around between classes, and on the cement boundary of which he can idly sun himself in the Spring, all providing he is not downstairs in the Brown and White laboratory reading the morning papers. The College of Business Administration has matured since the 1 9 1 9 statement in the catalogue concerning the aims and purposes of the courses : As efficiency is the keynote of future prosperity in American industry, the course in Business Administration is designed to train men to cope ably with prob- 62 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: Back Row: T. F. Jones, L. R. Tripp, R. M. Davis, C. E. Allen, R. W. Mayer, E. L. Knight, C. H. Danhof, H. A. Kriebel. Front Row: E. C. Bratt, R. B. Cowin, N. Carothers, F. A. Bradford, H. M. Diamond. IN THE CANDIDS: The Dean telling the Eco. 4 boys how it ' s done; the Hyphen Hall boys on their usual perch; tell-tale bulletin board gets the once over. fii« t is UH lems of business life, and to inculcate into the minds of the coming industrial gen- eration the idea that it is only by efficiency that we can hope to maintain national supremacy. Nowadays it is no longer believed that efficiency is the panacea for all the ills of civilization ; it is realized instead that other factors may be even more important. The increasing tendency of the Business curriculum to include the humanities and the sciences shows that the beneficial effects of these studies on the college student ' s mind and personality is recognized. One cannot be a lawyer, an accountant, an executive alone. One must also be an actively functioning member of society, with an interest in government and foreign affa irs, with ac- quaintanceship with our cultural heritage, and with at least a smattering of knowl- edge of the science of our day, if one is to count the college years realized to their fullest extent. IN THE PICTURES: A more comprehensive view of the Hyphen Hall forum; Eco. 4 lends a rapt ear; Business and English students mingle in the Hyphen; Accounting class gets the dope from Professor Cowin; Hackman checks with the Dean on graduation credits. 65 America needs her engineers now, more than ever before. She needs them for the marvelous work they have been doing in a peacetime world, to create more and more goods from less and less materials, to perform the unsung but stu- pendous minor miracles with substitutes and synthetics which have placed America on top of the pile in production — and she needs them desperately in the gigantic armament race upon which our civilization and our very way of life depend. Thirty-five hundred years of culture now hang essentially on the rate at which the United States is able and will be able to turn our guns and tanks from its mines and factories and on the speed with which its products are bettered from month to month. The guiding hand, the practical brain behind production has always been the engineer. Today he is the sine qua non of civilized society. Lehigh has always prided herself on the quality of her engineering students. Since the founding of the University seventy-five years ago, they have come from all corners of the earth to receive training in the fundamentals of the profession, and have often returned to their homes bearing enthusiastic praise for their Alma Mater. The present curriculum includes nine branches of engineering: Civil, Mechanical, Industrial, Metallurgical, Mining, Electrical, Chemical, Engineer- ing Physics, and an enginee ring administered curriculum in Chemistry. Because of the interrelatedness of many of these subjects, Lehigh provides a uniform fresh- man year for all engineering students, during which time fundamental courses in mechanics, chemistry, physics and English are taken. From the sophomore year on up the various fields become more differentiated, although Industrial and Mechanical engineering have much in common, and many Physicists take courses identical with those of the Electricals. It has always been Lehigh ' s thesis that college is the place to learn the theory and fundamental practice of engineering, and that specialized techniques and laboratory skills will come later in that particular branch of the profession which the individual student follows. For that reason, visitors see no conventional machine shops, and students pursue science rather than technique. Lehigh is vastly more than a trade school. A University prepares its students for more than a job, and Lehigh is a University. To see that Lehigh loses none of the quality in engineering which has made her graduates so eagerly sought after by American industry, is the concern of Dean Alfred Copeland Callen of the College of Engineering. The complexities of the accelerated program have already made themselves felt in Dean Callen ' s onerous job, and his position will grow more difficult in the near future as fresh demands 66 Dean A. Copeland Callen, head of the College of Engineering, against engineers ' Mecca- James Ward Packard Laboratory. . i  , i«:- % ' ? r j fa . mH S n o O . m- p r • are made upon Lehigh and similar institutions by the Government and an already strained private industry. Largest department under Dean Callen is that of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry, headed by Dr. Harvey A. Neville. Chemistry, the science of the molecule, is preeminent in the present war: powders, plastics, food- and dye- stuffs, countless other items are either produced directly from raw materials by the chemist, or else guided through various processes by his results and experi- ence. Nearly one out of five students at Lehigh majors in either chemistry or chemical engineering, and spends a goodly portion of his upperclass days in the William H. Chandler Chemical Laboratory. Currently, Physical Chemistry Professor Ewing is doing research on detergents and wetting agents, while leather expert Theis continues his work in that field. Dr. Serfass is well known for the several electrically operated analytical instru- ments he has designed, while Dr. Amstutz, despite the disastrous fire in his office last March, continues his research in organic heterocyclic compounds. Dr. Neville has been instrumental in bringing to perfection a new process for the manu- facture of artificial bristles. Civil engineers are at a premium in these days of construction, and their relative scarcity has been reflected in a significant upswing in the number of undergradu- ates majoring in that subject. A civil engineer is to a building what a chemical engineer is to a process : he outlines, guides and tests until the work is free from flaws, and he maintains it in that state. Important research in the Civil Engineering department right now is centered about the bridge models of Professor Eney, which models have already been used in practice to check calculations on a TVA bridge. Although these models will never replace the gruelling calculations needful on each girder and truss on modern bridging, they are expected to simplify and supplement the figuring con- siderably. Hydraulics research is also going on in the Civil Engineering Depart- ment, and, with the recent improvements in Fritz Testing Laboratory, it is now equipped, as it was during the last war, to make tests on all sorts and kinds of steel and iron frames. Drawing-board experience, essential to the true engineer, DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY: Back Row: R. L. Stubbings, T. H. Hazlehurst, R. D. Billinger, George C. Beck, E. J. Serfass, D. E. Mack, R. H. Lafferty, E. D. Amstutz. Second Row: J. G. Smull, C. W. Simmons, W. W. Ewing, H. A. Neville, E. R. Theis, H. V. Anderson, A. A. Diefenderfer. Front Row: A. C. Zettlemoyer, T. F. Jacoby, R. N. Rhoda, R. K. Walton, F. J. Fornoff, H. G. Green, R. S. Hawley. IN THE CANDIDS: Basketball man Johnson tries his hand at lab work; C. E. drawing class builds some bridges — on paper. DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING: Back Row: H. G. Payrow, R. M. Mains, W. J. Eney, A. T. Ippen, B. G. Johnston. Front Row: E. H. Uhler, H. Sutherland, S. A. Becker. 69 70 is provided by the elementary Civil Enginering courses, and at the same time the student gets experience in three-dimensional thinking. The most technical and most respected course, from point of view of work done, perhaps, is the curriculum in Electrical Engineering, headed by Loyal V. Bewley. Professor Bewley, since becoming head of the department in 1940, has made many changes in the courses of instruction, has dropped the business option, and has strengthened considerably the departmen t from the point of view of funda- mentals and their applications. Electrical engineers no longer, however, have many electives left; their time is devoted almost wholly to their own department. The James Ward Packard Laboratory of Electrical and Mechanical Engineer- ing houses them, together with the Mechanical Engineers (it also provides space for Dean Carothers ' Economics lectures and for sundry classes in English and other Arts subjects). The Electricals are concerned with the design, installation, operation and repair of all sorts of electrical machinery — dynamos, motors, gen- erators, and all types. The department now publishes a monthly mimeographed pamphlet, Zero Sequence, which presents the outstanding events in the field of sparks to its students. Many startling demonstrations are possible in electricity. One of the best is the man-made lightning familiar to electricals; it is heartening to see the extent of man ' s control over this element, just as it is awe-inspiring to witness even this small amount of energy rage for a second. Fred V. Larkin, professor of Mechanical Engineering and head of the depart- ment and director of the curricula in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering (longest title on the campus), is in charge of the department occupying the rest of Packard Laboratory. He is one of Lehigh ' s exponents of the non-specialized education, and has arranged schedules for his students to permit their taking of electives in many subjects which would not ordinarily be thought allowable for Mechanicals or Industrials. Students in these two branches of engineering enter many fields, Industrials having perhaps the broader background and being the less specialized. Drafting boards, executive positions, sales, maintenance and production all get their share of the M. E. ' s and the I. E. ' s. Some graduate work is also done in these fields, and DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING: Back Row: A. R. Miller, H. C. I. Knutson, N. S. Hibshman, D. E. Mode. Front Row: J. L. Beaver, L. V. Bewley, H. G. Gruber. IN THE CANDIDS: Simonsen and Foster fiddle with a resistance test; the popular Machine Disease class. DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL AND INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING: Back Row: R. C. Dimmich, J. R. Connelly, J. F. Bailey, J. V. Eppes, W. C. Roberts, L. T. Askren, A. C. Bates. Front Row: W. Forstall, A. W. Klein, F. V. Larkin, T. E. Butterfield, T. E. Jackson, C. F. Warner. flf w «r Jf Lehigh, as it does in many other departments, has industrial and endowed fel- lowships, scholarships and assistantships here for interested men. The basis of our civilization is metal, and has been for centuries. First, the his- torians say, was bronze; it was rather speedily supplanted by iron, the universal fabricant, the structural foundation of the Machine Age. Iron must be mined and refined. The two operations are so separate, and so distinctly important, that a curriculum has been built upon each, Mining Engineering for the removal of the ore from the earth (and, just as important, the abstraction of coal from its native haunts) and Metallurgical Engineering for subsequent handling of the material. Mining Engineers at Lehigh are fortunate in having the Eckley B. Coxe Mining Laboratory in which to work. There, under the guidance of Dean Callen and Pro- fessors Sinkinson and Eckfeldt (who retired this year), they can see almost all of the actual processes that make up the subject. Gilbert E. Doan, another believer in the liberalized engineering curriculum, heads the Metallurgy department. Bradley Stoughton, now professor of Metal- lurgy and former dean of Engineering, is actively connected with the department, in addition to directing work for the government. The formal distinction between Chemistry and Physics, a distinction now not so clear or so obvious as it once was, gave to the former the study of matter as molecules, to the latter its study as atoms. Some would now claim the distinction rests between matter and energy, but none will dispute the statement that the two fields often and beneficially overlap. Fundamental training in Physics, as in Chemistry, is provided by Lehigh for every engineer. The department, because of the loss of several teachers recently, has been overloaded during the past year, and student assistants have been used in the elementary laboratories to alleviate the strain. Dr. B. L. Snavely, to name one departed member, has gone to do research for the Navy. At present Buerschaper and Professor Larkin are studying the dielectric properties of oils with an ultra high speed centrifuge, while other members of the department are measuring magnetic susceptibility and thermal conductivity. Engineering Physicists vie with DEPARTMENT OF METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING: Back Row: P. G. DeHuff, J. W. Caum, J. H. Frye, R. D. Stout. Front Row: A. Butts, G. E. Doan, B. Stoughton. DEPARTMENT OF MINING ENGINEERING: Back: H. Eckfeldt. Front: A. G. Callen. IN THE CANDIDS: Freshmen try physics at first hand; Metallurgy furnace receives a judicious once-over. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS: Back Row: R. A. Buerschaper, M. Petersen, W. B. Agocs, A. W. Warner, F. A. Scott, H. W. Euker. Front Row: P. L. Bayley, A. R. Frey, C. C. Bidwell, C. E. Berger, P. B. Carwile. 73 Electrical Engineers in the roughness of their curriculum, and generally place the highest of any departmental group in prizes and honors. That completes a superficial examination of the various parts of the Engi- neering College ; what of the College as a unit? It is difficult, in the last analysis, to say what makes an engineer. It is not technical training, or mechanics would surpass all college graduates, and it is not wholly the theoretical background upon which Lehigh prides itself, or all the work could be done on paper, without benefit of ponderous, intricate and expensive training machinery. Engineering is primarily an attitude, a state of mind dis- tilled from college training and proportioned (as graduates invariably discover) with experience, not to be expressed in words but in actions. Recognize the engi- neer as the technical overseer of our civilization, the man who organizes and co- ordinates material, labor, capital, experience and learning to produce within the limits set by natural laws the improvements we have placed on the physical world, and you will have as true a picture of him as any. Packard Laboratory is Lehigh ' s symbol of the engineer, a living symbol, one that is working to produce a type of mind capable of dealing rationally and reasonably with the irrationalities and unreason of existence. Order out of chaos, or rather the discernment of order in apparent chaos, is the engineer ' s job. He does it well. IN THE PICTURES: Senior M.E. ' s and E.E. ' s shown in Packard cars ' prexy ' s building; The new Alumni wing of the Chem building houses freshmen chem labs; Packard Lab drawing 74 students TO DESCRIBE the relation of a student to his university is not easy. It might almost be compared with his relation to his work. Ignorant of the true significance of his field of study, the student gradually approaches, as he masters beyond reproach the fundamentals, the point where he can finally think past data and formula and textbook to a feeling for the subject, to relations. Lehigh is like that. The freshman comes with little comprehension of college, gains set attitudes early, and is the full four years in discarding them for a clear- eyed conception of Lehigh as a battleground and a mother, a laboratory and a tradition, a place wherein to study and an Alma Mater about which to sing, lastly both an impersonal Institution and a personal University. IN THE PICTURES: President Archie Tifft receives some advice from Dr. Beardslee. Secretary-treasurer F. S. McKenna; A. H. Rich and R. N. Gusdorf, first class officers; Fresh- man Week 1939; The class as sophomores. 77 seniors The seventy-third of Lehigh ' s entering Freshman groups, the class of ' 42, assembled for the first time in Packard Auditorium on a mid-September morning in 1938. It was then that the grim prophecy, Look at the man on your right, then look at the man on your left; one of you will not be at Lehigh four years from now, fell upon each individual ' s ears. And that prophecy has been proved true once again by the class of ' 42 for only some 350 students remain from more than 600 who started the journey. Freshman Week that year was much the same as it had been before and has been afterward. There were the brown socks, brown ties, dinks, rushing picnics and dances, high pressure salesmanship by the fraternities, nauseating hygiene lectures, and numerous placement exams. After the melee had quieted, some 200 members of the class pledged fraternities while the remaining men divided be- tween the town and the dormitories. After the pledging banquets were at an end, the entire student body succumbed to the routine of daily study and weekly football games. The first opportunity for the infant class to show its merit came on Founder ' s Day in the traditional Sophomore-Freshmen contests. But alas, the ' 42s went down in defeat when the sophs (with the aid of unscrupulous upper classmen) won three of the five battles. In October the Frosh received their first real taste of Lehigh social life at the fall houseparty. Many of the newcomers made their first acquaintances with Kin- ney ' s, the Maennerchor, and sunrise on South Mountain, acquaintances which were destined to be met many, many times again. Late in November, the next official gathering of the infant class was held at the Lafayette football rally which was followed by the traditional pajama parade. The spirit and frivolity of the ' 42s must have had an inspiring effect for Lehigh the next day had its best fortune in recent years, losing a close 6-0 game on a mud-splat- tered gridiron. The year 1939 brought with it the long awaited dread, exams. Some class- mates, who fared badly, received admonishing letters from the Dean which said, in effect, that too much play and not enough work was harmful to one ' s college career. Some took heed; those who didn ' t are not at Lehigh now. As if exams were not enough punishment for the Frosh, the fraternities in 78 SENIORS IN WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES: Top Row: Joseph N. Ambrogi Jr., Jesse F. Beers Jr., Richard J. Berg, A. Bruce Brown. Second Row: George E. Elliott Jr., James A. Gordon, Edwin H. Klein, William J. Meikle. Third Row: Richard E. Metius, Wilkes McClave II, John H. Milbank, Ralph F. Moss Jr. Bottom Row: John H. Norwood, Frank S. McKenna, Henry T. Reuwer, John M. Roach. February sponsored Greek Week, a custom remarkably similar to the old Hell Week. The ' 42s endured the pranks and the work and came up smiling with the feeling that they were at last college men. Also in February, Interfraternity Ball gave those Freshman who missed house- party another chance to view Lehigh at its height of gaiety. The rest of their second semester passed slowly. There was another houseparty in April to interrupt the monotony of study, and in May Sub-Freshman Day, ROTC Field Day, and Flag Pole Day, at which awards for the year were pre- sented, marked the end of the year ' s activities. About two weeks before the examinations, the class elected Robert N. GusdorfT as its leader for the following year and Arthur H. Rich as secretary-treasurer. After three months of vacation, the ' 42s returned as sophomores. They wit- nessed Freshman Week and rushing from the other side of the fence and attempted to uphold their honor once again on Founder ' s Day, but this time the Freshman won the contests, leaving the ' 42s defeated for the second year. They found on returning that a new course in flying had been inaugurated, sponsored by the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Immediately the sophomores took an active interest, some members of the class signing up for the course. Up until the night after the Lafayette game, the semester held nothing new for the ' 42s. On that night, however, the class revived a dormant custom, that of sponsoring a dance — the Sophcopation. It could well be termed a success for more than 300 couples attended the affair. The only thing dampening the spirit that night was the 29-13 loss to Lafayette. There came time in May for the class to choose its new officers and this time George A. Brenker became the new president and Robert N. GusdorfT, secretary- treasurer. The fourth semester for the class ended as usual with the trials of exams. The class came back in the fall ready to fulfill its role as Juniors. By this time Freshman Week, rushing, and the football season were considered a part of yearly routine. There was one innovation : the custom of holding Dad ' s Day at the time of the Muhlenberg game was started. More than 600 Dads and guests enjoyed a program planned by Arcadia. In December a new fraternity, Lambda Mu Sigma, honorary marketing, was founded at Lehigh. Several members of the class of ' 42 became charter members of the organization. In April of 1941 the ' 42s held their first class banquet. The committee, headed by James J. Donahue, secured a most popular speaker, Dr. F. Alexander Magoun, WHO ' S WHO: Robert N. Simonsen, Frank E. Smith Jr., Robert S. Struble, Archie D. Tifft. IN THE CANDIDS: Senior ball at fall houseparty; Senior class banquet. 8l who held forth in a bull session on marriage relations in Drown Hall until 2 : 00 the next morning. The Junior Prom that spring brought Larry Clinton ' s band and 850 dates to the Empire Ballroom. The committee for the affair was headed by Archie D. Tifft. The officers elected by the class in May were entirely new to the jobs. The presi- dent chosen was Archie D. TifTt, a man who had been active in student govern- ment and was an inspiring leader. The secretary-treasurer was Frank S. McKenna who had gained distinction for his work in wrestling, and his activity in pub- lications and student government. Returning to school in the fall, the new seniors found several changes on the campus. There was the new recreation building, Grace Hall. The old armory had been converted into a dining hall and renamed Lamberton Hall. At the Senior Ball in October, a committee headed by Frank E. Smith Jr., brought to Lehigh the bands of Jan Savitt and Bunny Berigan. The dance was the first held in Grace Hall and was the highlight of a successful houseparty. On December 7, 1941 the outbreak of war was an event which changed the lives of a few members of the class who were either drafted or who volunteered for active duty with the armed forces. The last class function was the Senior Banquet in February of this year. So popular had been Magoun that he was again invited to address the class by a committee of which Jim Donohue was again chairman. 82 IN THE PICTURES: Founder ' s day is held in Grace hall for the first time with the four clas ses of University attending in a body; Senior Class President Archie Tifft receives cup for the best football rally; Vice President of Lehigh, Walter Okeson does the presenting and the Senior Class the winning; mass calisthenics are done by an ROTC unit; Freshmen bonfire reaches fifty feet at the annual Lehigh-Lafayette rally; and Professor Alexander Magoun poses with his diagram of Dotty Desire and her enemy Connie Conscience at the Senior Banquet. junior s The Junior Class, the class of 1 943, has had an eventful three years at Lehigh. Entering the University in the fall of 1939, the members of the class almost im- mediately accustomed themselves to their environs. Showing their strength as Freshmen, they walloped the Sophomores in the traditional Founder ' s Day battles. Not only did they do well all the things expected of Freshmen, such as cheering at the football games, but they also took the initiative and started a precedent by holding Lehigh ' s first Freshman banquet in many years. The banquet, at which a cartoonist was guest speaker, was more successful than any other class banquet that year. In the spring of 1940, the class elected its first officers, Robert P. Whipple, president, and W. Harry Olinsky, secretary-treasurer, who were to guide it during its second year. As Sophomores the class again held a banquet at which an F.B.I. agent was the main attraction. Harry Olinsky was the chairman of the committee which planned the affair. The second election of class officers was held in May of 1941. Bob Whipple re- peated as president and William D. Hayes was chosen secretary-treasurer. Whipple, a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity, has played on Freshman and varsity basketball and baseball teams, has participate d in debating, and has served on Arcadia. Hayes, a member of Delta Upsilon, has also been outstanding in athletics, having played on varsity and Freshman football and baseball teams. He also holds the office of secretary of the Interfraternity Council and secretary- treasurer of Cyanide. Under the leadership of these two men the class has sponsored a class banquet and the Junior Prom. The speaker for the banquet was C. Brooks Peters, former Berlin correspondent of the New York Times. The committee in charge of the affair consisted of Frank H. Bower, chairman, Whipple, Arnold O. Putnam, Ber- nard W. Deehan, Hayes, Harry A. Herold, Glen W. Boyer, and Robert W. Pugh. The Junior Prom, which was the highlight of this year ' s spring houseparty, brought the band of Bob Chester to Grace Hall. The chairman of the dance was Charles M. (Tex) Rogers who, incidentally, was also chairman of the class ' s highly successful Freshman banquet. IN THE PICTURES: Junior class banquet; Banquet Committee; Speaker ' s table at the banquet; Robert P. Whipple, president; William D. Hayes, secretary- treasurer. 85 sophomores The Sophomore Class, the class of 1944, has marked the beginning of a new era in Lehigh ' s athletics as a result of the inauguration of the Alumni Grant Plan. Studded with fine athletes the class has shown a real spirit and much activity. Following the precedent set by the present Junior class, the class of 1944 held a Freshman banquet at which Lone Star Dietz, football coach of Albright Col- lege, was the speaker. Such was the enthusiasm of the class that the attendance record for Lehigh banquets was broken and a new high of 293 men established. E. Lyster Frost served as chairman of the banquet committee. The first officers elected by the class to lead it during its sophomore year were E. Lyster Frost, president, and Jerry N. Hendershot, secretary-treasurer. Frost has played varsity and Freshman football and varsity ice hockey. He was president of the Newtonian Society and is a member of Arcadia, the Student Athletic Com- mittee, and Sigma Phi fraternity. Hendershot is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and an outstanding athlete, having won the R. A. Lewis trophy for Freshman wrestling and having earned numerals in baseball. At the beginning of its sophomore year the class sponsored the season ' s first rally in Taylor Stadium during Freshman Week. At this rally the coaches of all Lehigh sports were introduced to the incoming Freshmen and demonstrations of wrestling and football formations and plays were given. The rally was arranged by a group headed by President Frost. Repeating the success of the previous year ' s banquet, the class again held a dinner. The feature of the gathering was a talk by R. W. Ransom, special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Co-chairmen of the banquet committee were Frost and Hendershot. The preponderance of athletes in the class of 1944 is evidenced by the facts that more than half the members of the starting football eleven were Sophomores, that four of the eight men on the varsity wrestling team were also members of the class of 1 944, and that two of the starting five in basketball were second year men. Similar exploits by members of the class were shown on other athletic teams. 86 IN THE PICTURES: Sophomore class banquet; E. Lyster Frost, president; Jerry N. Hender- shot, secretary-treasurer; Flag rush on Founder ' s Day (both pictures). ? t lilSiiii Jresh Freshman Week this past September marked the birth of a new class at Lehigh, the class of 1945. Arriving at the University, the men of the class saw many things which were new not only to them but also to the school. There was a new recreation hall and a new dining hall. Freshman Week, however, was very little different from any in the recent past. It was unfamiliar only to the Freshmen. With its close, the usual number, approximately 200, of men from the incoming class pledged fraternities. Having worn the customary brown socks, ties, and dinks for four weeks, the class was given its chance on Founder ' s Day to win the suspension of the regula- tions on Sundays by beating the Sophomores in the traditional games. The Fresh- men were decisively victorious. Another chance for the infant class to demonstrate its spirit came at the Lafayette football rally in November. Freshmen from more living groups than in any of the past few years presented the annual skits satirizing Lehigh ' s arch rival. Following the skits, the bonfire, built by the Freshmen, was ignited on the upper field. Since the fire reached the height of 50 feet as demanded by Cyanide, the class was freed for the remainder of the year from the burden of Freshmen regu- lations. Returning from Christmas vacations, the class was notified of a new plan adopted by the University which would affect most of the members. This was the accelerated program and the Freshmen realized that, strictly speaking, they were not really the class of 1945 since most of them would graduate in 1944. Greek Week was the next function held solely for the benefit of the Freshman class. Sophomores from both dormitories and fraternities joined in making life miserable for the Frosh but the Frosh took the torment as every class had before and began to look forward to their sophomore year. Deciding that they would like to follow the custom of holding a banquet, the Freshmen of each living group sent a representative to a meeting in Drown Hall. At the meeting a banquet committee was chosen with Charles B. Austin as chair- man. IN THE PICTURES: Freshman banquet committee: Rushing during Freshman Week; Skit at Lafayette Rally; Freshmen waiting to present their skits. 89 CONVENTIONAL, even inevitable is the representation of activities by belly brass, shingles and athletic letters. Laughed at by some students, activities — sports, dramatics, publications and the rest — nevertheless provide the necessary activities energy, for his executive ambitions and for his desire to distinguish himself. Some men really develop their several abilities ; all the keys belong to one student. outlet for the student ' s excess Y%t } Sf£ P f • • • organizations ONLY HALF of Lehigh ' s life breathes in her lecture rooms, her recitations and laboratories, her report folders, term papers and silent study rooms. The rest sounds with a noisier pulse in the Brown and White lab, the Tau Bete smoker, the Mustard and Cheese rehearsal and the other student gatherings of which these are only random samples; student organizations, societies and clubs con- tribute so much to the richness of college life that to class them as extra-curricular is only to make a formal distinction between them and textbook work. Student-run affairs are these, Arcadia, the living group councils, the course societies, the special-interest clubs and the honor groups — they provide not only relaxation and a welcome change from academic work which needs contrast to yield its best, but also means for the development of personality and character, which lacking, studies can never achieve their goal. Dr. Claude G. Beardslee, adviser to student government bodies. 93 arcadia ARCADIA is the student governing body of Lehigh, composed of the leaders of the most important campus organizations. Its purpose is to better conditions at Lehigh. In effect, it functions as a congress, obtaining student viewpoint through student representatives. Founded in the ' 8o ' s by Richard Harding Davis, its original purpose was to form an opposition to the Greek letter fraternities. From this beginning it in- creased in power and influence until in 1922 it became the student governing body of Lehigh. From this position it gradually declined until it fell into an in- significant place among other campus organizations. Amalgamating with the Lehigh Union, another student organization, in 1 938, in an effort to rebuild the influence of a student governing body, succeeded in establishing it in its present position. The organization was completely revised and the purposes and duties of the two original organizations were combined to form a better and stronger new Arcadia. The new Arcadia performs many functions of value to the Lehigh student body. Newly arrived freshmen contact the functioning of Arcadia during Fresh- man Week, for the special assemblies are planned and sponsored by the group. Throughout the year it continues its work of planning student functions, arrang- ing smokers and pep rallies, managing the Founder ' s Day sports, and assisting in handling Flag Pole Day activities. One of its problems of major importance has been that of revising the present system for election of class officers. One of the high points in Arcadia activities in the past year was the canvass of student opinion concerning the abolition of Spring Houseparty by the faculty. The unanimous decision reached, Arcadia moved through the faculty to obtain a reversal of the original decision and was given the responsibility of the conduct of the Houseparty. 94 ARCADIA: Back Row: W. J. Meikle, F. S. McKenna, R. N. Simonsen, R. P. Whipple, E. L. Frost, W. T. Bostock, A. D. Tifft, D. H. Schaper. Front Row: R. F. Moss, F. E. Smith, W. McClave, C. G. Beardslee, B. W. Logan. A complete list of the members of Arcadia will be found on page 395. IN THE CANDIDS: One of the milder scenes in the annual Arcadia-sponsored pre-Lafayette game rally. Frosh skits depicting ultimate demise of the Maroon held sway most of the evening. Mrs. Marleah Bowker, who represents all that Arcadia means to most students. Head man Wilkes McClave. The big twelve in session, unwinding a knotty problem. ! ' |S i i omicron delta kappa OMICRON DELTA KAPPA is the national honorary activities fraternity. Its membership is composed of fifteen seniors who have demonstrated leadership on campus, unusual moral character, and extraordinary participation in extra- curricular activities. ODK was founded at Washington and Lee University in 19 14, and has since spread to many leading colleges and universities of the nation. It has sponsored the ideals of character, recognition, opportunity, inspiration, and loyalty. As its project for this year ODK selected the study of student morale, as con- cerned with student-faculty relations, the emergency program and its effect on athletics, extracurricular activities, and toward the University as a whole. cyanide THE CYANIDE CLUB is the junior honorary activities society, composed of about twenty of the most active men in the Junior Class. The purposes of the society are three-fold: to recognize those Juniors out- standing in scholarship and extracurricular activities; to form a discussion group on the policies of the University; and to render useful service to the University as the club and faculty see fit. The project for the year was selected as The investigation of available athletic facilities at Lehigh for both varsity and intramural sports. The immediate emphasis was placed on the intramural question. Plans have been evolved for securing a field at the top of South Mountain where space is available and for tennis courts in front of Alpha Tau Omega which might be converted for winter skating. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA: Back Row: J. H. Norwood, E. K. Smiley, J. I. Kirkpatrick, A. B. Brown, W. J. Meikle. Second Row: C. K. Zug, G. E. Doan, W. H. Congdon, J. M. Roach, A. L. Thalhamer, J. F. Beers. Front Row: J. H. Milbank, F. E. Smith, R. E. Metius, F. S. McKenna, C. G. Beardslee, A. D. Tifft. A complete list of the members of Omicron Delta Kappa will be found on page 403. IN THE CANDIDS: ODK meets at the ill-fated Phi Gam house for dinner; Cyanide pledges new men. CYANIDE: Rack Row: J. M. Stockbridge, S. J. Davy, P. H. Powers, R. D. Bailey, B. R. Heinz, G. F. Melloy. Second Row: R. W. Pugh, W. G. Binder, W. R. Taylor, C. G. Beardslee, C. M. Norlin, L. C. Bartlett, W. C. Walker. Front Row: R. P. Whipple, W. D. Hayes, D. H. Schaper, T. M. Buck, R. C. Boston. A complete list of Cyanide members will be found on page 399. 97 student-faculty committees MUCH OF the University life is controlled by four committees on which mem- bership is held jointly by students and faculty. The general student body is often only vaguely aware of the existence of these groups, and is even less aware of their true function in the University scheme of things. Student membership on these committees which were once all faculty was made possible by constant campaigning on the part of Arcadia in years past. The first such committee is the Board of Publications, which is the final governor of the existence of all undergraduate publications. The Student Finances Committee checks the budgets and accounts of all undergraduate organizations. The Elections Committee chooses candidates for class office each spring. phi beta kappa 98 PHI BETA KAPPA is the oldest fraternity in America. It was first organized at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va., on Dec. 5, 1776. Its prominence as a society honoring scholastic excellence in the liberal arts did not develop until much later when the National Council was formed in 1883. Prior to this time the fraternity had many chapters throughout the East and South, and individual prominence depended much on local conditions. The Beta of Pennsylvania Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was established in April of 1887 through the efforts of four member Lehigh professors who had long felt the need for a chapter here. A council of faculty members selects each year the outstanding seniors in each of the three colleges who have shown scholastic excellence in non-technical sub- jects. The number chosen is usually about twenty. STUDENT FINANCES COMMITTEE: R. B. Cowin, W. J. Meikle, W. H. Congdon, R. H. White, F. E. Smith. BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS: Back Row: J. A. Gordon, W. J. Meikle, J. M. Roach, K. K. Kost. Front Row: W. H. Congdon, C. E. Allen, W. R. Biggs. ELECTIONS COMMITTEE : H. T. Reuwer, R. N. Simonsen, W. C. Kirschner. FRESHMAN DISCIPLINE COMMITTEE (CYANIDE): Back Row: W. G. Binder, C. M. Norlin. Front Row: P. H. Powers, L. C. Bartlett, R. P. Whipple. PHI BETA KAPPA: Back Row: L. R. White, R. M. Luckring, A. B. Brown, J. F. Clark, E. H. Klein. Second Row: R. M. Maiden, J. F. Beers, J. M. Roach, J. R. Polinsky, H. J. Friedman, A. L. Thalhamer, L. K. Oliphant. Front Row: F. S. Nolte, W. R. Bliss, W. J. Meikle, R. M. Palmer, P. G. Butts. firth Ji J£ 2iMr | j 1 1 = I J2 i mm i - tau beta pi TAU BETA PI is known to laymen as the Phi Beta Kappa of engineering. It is the goal of every aspiring engineering undergraduate and as such represents the criterion for achievement in undergraduate work. Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh University in June of 1 885 as a parallel in engineering to Phi Beta Kappa, which had just introduced its present restricted elections policy. The fraternity was conceived by Dr. E. H. Williams, then a Lehigh instructor, who privately formulated all of the beginnings of the society, before making them known to any one of his prospective charter members. The early groundwork was laid very carefully by Williams. He first notified all men previously graduated whose records made them eligible, and initiated them before he sought out the valedictorian of the Class of 1885, Irving A. Heikes, and privately initiated him. It was here, at the graduation time of 1885, tnat tne undergraduate work of Tau Beta Pi began. The next fall, the best men from the class of 1 886 were inducted, and the chap- ter became fully alive. Its functions were not many, however, but included spon- sorship of all-college lectures by prominent men of the day. Dr. Williams was for many years the corresponding secretary of Tau Beta Pi, since he desired to keep charge of records and archives. Only undergraduates and faculty members were active, although local alumni filled the executive offices. Later all the early records were lost and have never been recovered. For seven years the Alpha of Pennsylvania chapter stood alone, but in 1 892 a second chapter was founded at Michigan State in East Lansing, Mich., by L. E. Breckinridge, who had been a charter member at Lehigh prior to his transfer there. There- after the fraternity spread rapidly and at the present time there are seventy-two active undergraduate chapters. Today the fraternity elects men twice each year; the upper fifth of the Senior Class and the upper eighth of the Junior Class is eligible for membership. IN THE CANDIDS: Ed Bodine hangs up his bent; President Lutters and Secretary Jack Clark discuss society secrets; Thrill of a lifetime — Tau Bete pledges new men in semiannual ceremony at Williams Memorial stone. TAU BETA PI: Back Row: F. S. McKenna, A. Brkich, S. J. Davy, R. C. McMichael, A. Clark, R. M. Maiden, K. H. Weber, W. E. Gheen. Third Row: M. F. McConnell, J. H. Norwood, J. T. Ransom II, R. G. Taylor, R. N. Simonsen, R. J. McGregor, L. R. White. Second Row: A. L. Thalhamer, R. E. Ashley, F. H. Bower, R. M. Foster, E. F. Bodine, R. E. Metius, R. W. Clark, E. Gamble. Front Row: R. S. Struble, C. H. Schumacher, A. B. Brown, P. Lutters, F. S. Nolte, J. F. Clark. A complete list of Tau Beta Pi members will be found on paee 406. 101 ontj SO THAT all students with a deep interest in classical music might come together in a single body, Tone, honorary music society, was formed. Although a musical skill is desirable, the only real basis for membership is an interest in classical music. The group meets monthly at which time members of the society or guest speakers present talks on some topic of musical interest. Various composers, particular works, or entire historical movements in music are discussed. For the benefit of the entire student body, Tone presents a series of concerts at which members of the society or guest artists perform. Many notable artists such as the Haff Quartet and Madame Greta Birk, soprano, have been brought to the campus by Tone. Each year the group makes several trips. This year the society attended a con- cert given by the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. combined musical clubt THE COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS integrates into a single unit three of the University ' s musical organizations, the Glee Club, the Symphony Orchestra and the Lehigh Collegians. The organization functions as a distinct group sponsoring certain activities of its own, and also as a co-ordinating body for the activities of its member groups. The largest of the three groups is the Glee Club. The Glee Club has grown, since its formation in 1 9 1 o, into one of the leading groups of its kind in the East. It carries on an extensive program, presenting, during the year, a large number of home concerts and making several trips. One of the most impressive of the home concerts is the annual Christmas Carol service given in conjunction with TONE: Back Row: R. C. Ramsdell, W. R. Williams, C. R. Neuendorffer, A. B. Brown, R. W. Samer, K. H. Smith. Second Row: R. R. Williams, W. D. Henry, C. R. Brandt, R. C. Kramer, R. S. Yorgey, J. T. Jones. Front Row: A. Clark, R. L. Coutts, R. K. Beckwith, P. Parr, A. F. Mann. A complete list of the members of Tone will be found on page 406. IN THE CANDIDS: Bob Beckwith, Tone president, enjoys music from record collection in the Chapel; Bill Dawless, whose ride trumpet has led the Collegians through their most successful year; the full complement of the Collegians, which has become a favorite for the minor college dances. 102 •n (, ,i n n n r ft t •§ 1 1 • % ■ A 4 «• r  the Symphony Orchestra and the Moravian College for Women Glee Club. One concert a year is usually given over a leading radio station. The Glee Club and Symphony Orchestra frequently appear together in joint concerts. Like the Glee Club, however, the Symphony Orchestra presents a series of concerts of its own. The Symphony Orchestra was reorganized six years ago, and is under the direction of Dr. T. Edgar Shields, who also directs the Glee Club. The Lehigh Collegians have rapidly grown into one of the best college bands in the country. Although playing for all dances of the Combined Musical Clubs and for many University dances, they by no means confine themselves to Uni- versity activities. They are regularly employed by local and neighboring groups. William Dawless leads the Collegians. Although the organizations in the Combined Musical Clubs carry on a wide program of individual activities they join together to present a large series of joint activities. The Symphony Orchestra and Glee Club frequently appear to- gether; all three groups join in giving the Musical Clubs Concert-Dances. The leading programs which the combined groups sponsor are the annual fall and spring concert-dances and the spring musicale. The Combined Musical Clubs draws into its activities a large number of stu- dents, and plays an extremely important role in the extracurricular life of the University. In recognition of the importance of the Combined-Musical Clubs in Lehigh activity, its president each year is a member of Arcadia. The officers this year were Frank E. Smith Jr., president, and Robert J. McGregor, manager. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Back Row: R. S. Yorgey, C. R. Neuendorffer, E. R. Gerlach, H. B. McCurdy. Second Row: P. C. Andrews, M. Guidon, W. Young, W. R. Griffith, D. I. Troxell. Front Row: R. W. Rouse, J. H. Goth, T. E. Shields, A. F. Mann, B. J. Egan. A complete list of Symphony Orchestra members will be found on page 399. IN THE CANDIDS: The Chapel, haven of music at Lehigh ; Dr. T. E. Shields, director of all musical functions. THE GLEE CLUB: Back Row: D. B. Watters, C. Kucher, D. C. Shewman, J. T. Jones, R. A. Clayton, P. Parr, P. A. Sweet, Q. J. Schwarz, D. J. Sweet, R. J. Priestley, W. S. Titlow, E. W. Shipley. Fourth Row: G. T. Roberts, J. Gabuzda, O. Summers, R. Meckbach, E. D. Latimer, D. F. Gearhart, C. Miller, M. Guidon, R. T. Bartlett, J. Schumacher, R. W. Saylor. Third Row: E. F. Hussa, F. M. Taylor, J. W. Pharo, P. L. Reiber, B. J. Egan, W. G. Critchlow, P. Lutters, E. G. Graybill, W. E. Garland, Q. D. Merkham, J. C. Reischer, H. C. Farrand. Second Row: W. R. Williams, A. Little, P. S. Rust, J. E. Gehr, H. S. Strong, B. Burgy, R. K. Beckwith, F. X. Carlin, A. E. Hontz, P. T. Varrichio. Front Row: D. M. John, A. C. Mermann, R. W. Rouse, G. B. Smith, R. J. McGregor, T. E. Shields, F. E. Smith, G. C. Stone, G. Kreshka, J. W. Woods, B. Logan. A complete list of Glee Club members will be found on page 398. 105 band THE BAND is one of the largest student-managed organizations on the campus. Functioning for 34 years, the group gained particular prominence in 1926 when Dr. T. Edgar Shields, faculty adviser, secured uniforms and instru- ments from the disbanded Bethlehem Steel Company band. Last Fall a band of over 100 men played for all home football games and traveled to games at Penn State and Rutgers. Some highlights of the season were the presentation of unusual formations at the Case game, the houseparty game with Ursinus, the Dad ' s Day game with Muhlenberg, the traditional Lafayette game, and the Rutgers game. At the Case encounter, which came near the celebration of Lehigh ' s 75th anni- versary, the band formed a 75th before the game and played Happy Birth- day. At the houseparty game part of the band formed a large heart while another section formed in succession the words. Fri., Sat., Sun. Spectators at the Muhlenberg game saw the band form the word Daddy and heard played the hit of the same name. The combined Lehigh and Lafayette bands formed the symbolic V for victory, and the entire combination played selections under the separate direction of the Lehigh and Lafayette leaders. Lehigh Band com- memorated Rutgers ' 175th anniversary in a similar manner, and the two bands combined before the game for the playing of The Star Spangled Banner. In December the band provided music at the ceremony for the presentation of the Navy E for efficiency to the Bethlehem Steel Company and again in February when the E was awarded to the Bethlehem Foundry company. All R.O.T.C. outdoor drills in the Fall and Spring are supported by band music, and men who elect band are not required to take the course in military science and tactics which all other Sophomores and Freshmen find compulsory. The organization, whose purpose is also to foster school spirit, practices two or three times per week during football season and once a week for the remainder of the term. Each Spring a banquet is held at which time officers for the coming year are elected. Officers for the 1941-42 band are Alfred W. Pedrick, leader, Joseph C. Gabuzda, assistant leader, F. Emerson Ivey, business manager, Robert W. Rouse, librarian, and Charles G. Kucher, drum major. 106 IN THE PICTURES: The Band reproduces the Old Silver Goblet as it plays during the halves of an early season grid contest; Below: a V for Victory at the season ' s climax against Lafay- ette shows the Band at its natty best. mi t •fin I SMI I ' A student concerts-lectures series THE STUDENT CONCERTS-LECTURES SERIES was instituted in 1936 to provide for Lehigh students a definite program of cultural entertainment. The artists are selected by the committee and an advisory board of faculty mem- bers. This year the Series was run on an increased budget, a sum having been subscribed in the Activities fee of the students. A capacity audience of over 1070 people thronged the Broughal High School to hear Paul Robeson sing in the first presentation this fall. Robeson, with his marvelous baritone voice and dynamic personality, held his audience entranced. He set a new attendance high for the entire Series. A full-length play was offered as a part of the Series for the first time this year. The Hedgerow players, the only current repertory theater in America, presented The Emperor Jones, by Eugene O ' Neill. The Don Cossack all-male chorus was the third attraction to be presented. It sang the colorful songs of Russian folk from the steppes to Siberia, and one per- former gave a knife-dance. The piano duo Fray and Braggiotti was the fourth Series presentation. These artists, with their split-second timing and peculiar stamina, merited the applause of a spirited audience. In addition to classical numbers, they clowned with cari- catures of Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy, and Gershwin. The merits of professional football as opposed to the collegiate brand was debated by James Crowley, coach of the Fordham Rams, and Jimmy Conzel- man, coach of the Chicago Bears. In the final event of the Series, monologues by Dorothy Crawford were offered in April. Miss Crawford is noted for her excellent readings and pre- sented a program much on the same order as that of Cornelia Otis Skinner, who was on the Series two years ago. That the objective of the Concerts-Lectures Series program has been achieved is evident from the attendance at most of the offerings. The quality of the events has picked up noticeably due to the increased student subscription, and a more rounded selection of talent types has been available. STUDENT CONCERTS-LECTURES SERIES COMMITTEE: Back Row: A. B. Brown, W. McClave II, W. J. Meikle, C. A. Shook. Front Row: G. B. Curtis, G. K. Sebold, J. F. Beers, J. M. Roach. A complete list of the members of this committee will be found on page 405. IN THE CANDIDS: Four of the six Concerts-Lectures attractions offered this season: Dorothy Crawford, monologuist; Fray and Braggiotti, piano duo; Paul Robeson, negro baritone; the Don Cossack, all male Russian chorus. 109 mustard and cheestj MUSTARD AND CHEESE, the dramatic club of Lehigh, serves as an outlet for student talent and provides experience and training in all phases of dramatic production. It was founded in 1885 by Richard Harding Davis, who became the club ' s first president. Its name, according to tradition, was derived from the mustard and cheese sandwiches which were the bill of fare of the group of students who met in Charlie Rennig ' s saloon in the early days of the organization. Acquisition of faculty adviser Albert A. Rights in 1934 served to inspire the organization of a stronger club, shown by the increased success of later productions. The Dramatic Workshop was formed by Mr. Rights as an axuiliary organization for Mustard and Cheese to serve as a training medium for aspiring students in acting, directing, and play-writing. Mustard and Cheese has featured a variety of productions since its founding, including several musical comedies written by Lehigh undergraduates. For a time in the early 1920 ' s the club took its productions on the road during Christ- mas vacations, presenting them with notable success in various nearby cities. These were all of the musical comedy variety with all male casts. Following this epoch, the trend has been toward a more balanced series of productions. The program for this year featured three well-received plays. First of these was Out of the Frying Pan, a comedy by Francis Swann. The leads were played by Joseph Larkin as George Bodell, Conrad Kluger as Norman Reese, Kilbourne Gordon as Tony Dennison, Robert Gusdorff as Mr. Kenny, Margaret Moser as Dottie Coburn, Eleanor Lewis as Marge Ben- son, and Kathryn Wolbach as Kate Ault. Second play of the year presented by the club was the Dramatic Workshop production of Eugene O ' Neill ' s hit comedy, Ah, Wilderness! The cast was headed by Dwight Longley as Richard, and Tom C. Mekeel as Nat Miller. Final production was The Male Animal, by Elliott Nugent and James Thurber, well known Broadway hit of the last season. This year ' s productions are exemplary of the type of dramatic work that has become a criterion of Mustard and Cheese. MUSTARD AND CHEESE: Back Row: P. H. Powers, G. W. Wolfsten, D. W. Kurtz, E. F. Warner, P. J. Berg, C. E. Kluger, R. N. Gusdorff. Second Row: R. L. Coutts, E. A. Britton, W. J. Peck, S. A. Mark, C. A. Johnson, J. H. Heller, J. P. Larkin. Front Row: K. Gordon, O. W. Cooke, W. H. Barnard, W. McClave II, A. Rights, W. C. Kirschner, J. L. Loughran. A complete list of the members of Mustard and Cheese will be found on page 402. IN THE CANDIDS: Al Rights and Phil Powers discuss the electrical department ' s new switchboard; the club holds a formal meeting to discuss coming productions; Wilkes McClave, M C president; Club members and aspirants in rehearsal shortly before production of Ah Wilderness. I 10 - . c $ -m 1 ' ■- a p : SM ' IJ i Lb «► %-« , delta omicron theta DELTA OMICRON THETA is the honorary debating society, open to men participating in at least two varsity debates. From it are elected the officers of the Debating Society who, together with the intercollegiate coach, J. Calvin Callaghan, and the intramural coach, Cole Brembeck, form the Debating Coun- cil, the executive board of the Debating Society. The debating activity at Lehigh is divided into two sections, intercollegiate and intramural. The first semester program of the intercollegiate group consisted of regular debates with other schools, using both the Oregon and orthodox methods of debating. The topic for debate was Resolved: that the federal government should regulate by law all labor unions in the United States. The second semester, due to the fact that the declaration of war had made most debate topics unrealistic and uninteresting, it was decided to replace regular debates by symposium-discussions on the topic Post War Organization. This symposium method proved to be as interesting and as stimulating as regular debates. The program called for two speakers from each school. The first speaker presented the background of the question and its importance. The second speaker presented the first of three alternatives for world organization, the plan of con- federation. This plan would call for a league of sovereign nations, enforcing peace and discipline in the world order. The third speaker presented the second alternative, that of a world federation of all democratic nations, with admittance of other nations as soon as they qualify on the basis of democratic standards. The plan would require each nation to surrender a part of its sovereignty to a strong central world government, just as our states surrender a part of their sovereignty to our federal government. This central government would maintain the peace of the world. The fourth speaker presented the plan of world empire dominated benevolently by the United States. This plan attempted to prove that benevolent domination of the world by the United States would preserve peace and create an economically healthy world. VARSITY DEBATERS: Back Row: D. P. Scoblionko, R. P. Whipple, A. W. Foster, Sumner W. Reid, L. C. Bartlett. Front Row: H. Boyd, A. O. Putnam, J. C. Callaghan, W. F. Boore, H. V. Donohoe. A complete list of varsity debaters will be found on page 399. IN THE CANDID: Bill Boore and Howie Donohoe participate in a radio debate as Coach Callaghan looks on. INTRAMURAL DEBATERS: Back Row: S. C. Gordon, D. R. Diggs, J. A. Gardella, R. H. Mathes, R. K. Beckwith, D. C. Emery. Third Row: R. E. Penniman, W. T. Bachman, N. G. Bergstresser, C. S. Brembeck, R. D. Mussina, J. Y. Neff, R. B. Palmer. Second Row: E. C. Lehr, F. N. Leitner, K. G. Williams, A. I. Mishkin, L. A. James, F. W. Bloecher. Front Row: C. L. Finch, J. J. McCarthy. 113 pi delta epsiloru IN 1909 at Syracuse University Pi Delta Epsilon was founded as an honorary journalism society; the Society has fifty-three branches ranging from the Uni- versity of Florida to the University of Massachusetts and from the St. Lawrence University to the University of Southern California. The aim of the Society has been to stimulate an interest in college journalism and to elevate the standard thereof. Pi Delt has been influential in many of the publications here at Lehigh, among these being Brown and White and the late Review which has been replaced by the Bachelor. The Society was instrumental in establishing a chapter at Moravian College for Women. The requirements for the society limit it to juniors and seniors who are active in school publications. Elections are made on a point system. 114 bachelor THE BACHELOR — Lehigh ' s student-published magazine. It was organized last year as the successor to the old Lehigh Review for the purpose of providing an outlet for student talent and an interesting and entertaining periodical for the Lehigh student. Its organization is based on combining all of the best features of college maga- zines into one. It features articles of special interest by students and faculty members, fiction, art and humor. The Bachelor also has conducted studies of student problems, the sports program, and student relations. Articles and comments by student leaders are used to represent student feeling on chosen subjects. Surveys conducted by the staff have shown a substantial increase in the magazine ' s popularity since its first issue. PI DELTA EPSILON: Back Row: C. W. Baker, T. C. Mekeel, A. B. Brown, L. A. Croot, L. C. Bartlett, M. I. Buchman. Second Row: A. L. Thalhamer, S. J. Davy, K. K. Kost, E. M. Biggs, J. M. Roach, C. M. Norlin. Front Row: L. E. Klein, J. F. Beers, W. J. Meikle, J. A. Gordon, F. E. Smith. A complete list of members of Pi Delta Epsilon will be found on page 404. IN THE CANDIDS: Pi Delt pledges new men at the Semicircle of Christmas-Saucon; Editor-in-Chief Schumacher and Business Manager Klein discuss Bachelor problems. BACHELOR: Back Row: R. L. Smith, C. M. Thompson, M. I. Buchman, T. C. Mekeel, E. W. Wallick, J. M. Skilling, J. D. Smith. Front Row: P. H. Powers, E. H. Klein, F. V. Schumacher, C. M. Norlin. A complete list of the Bachelor staff will be found on page 395. brown and whittj THE BROWN AND WHITE, the University ' s semi- weekly newspaper, which has as its slogan All the Lehigh News First, boasts a circulation of nearly 2800 and a working staff of over 100 students. It is patterned, for the most part, after the typical metropolitan newspaper. Since it was founded in 1894, it has grown from a single sheet four columns wide and 1 8 inches high to a four-page newspaper of seven columns. On special occasions, such as houseparty and anniversary celebrations, the paper has six to eight pages. The celebration of Lehigh ' s 75th anniversary last Fall afforded the Brown and White opportunity to gather and publish feature material on the history of the University and many of its societies and activities. In addition to news and features, the paper publishes editorials, written with the best interests of the students in mind. This department has succeeded in pro- moting many changes for the benefit of the University and the students. A member of the Intercollegiate Newspaper Association of the Middle Atlantic states, the newspaper has won more awards than any other member of the asso- ciation. Last Fall the I. N. A. awarded the Brown and White two first place ties in advertising and in editorials. In addition, the paper won second place in news and in all-around excellence. The Lehigh paper is the only member of the association to gain permanent possession of any of these cups. The Brown and White is represented in Pi Delta Epsilon, national honorary journalism fraternity, and some of its members have won first and second places in nation-wide news writing contests sponsored by this fraternity. Students begin work on the Brown and White by registering for Journalism 1 in their freshman year. After a student has spent two semesters or more as a reporter, he may work on the copy desk or assume the duties of a news editor or sports editor. The latter offices as well as those of news manager, make-up editor, and editorial manager, are attainable through competition. Men for these offices are chosen on a semesterly or yearly basis. The office of editor-in-chief is awarded by the Board of Publications each spring. BROWN AND WHITE: The News desk in action on a busy Monday night; News Editor Peters busily coordinates the incoming news into readable copy. The Business Board: L. A. Croot, J. A. Gordon, K. K. Kost; Editor-in-Chief Jack Roach checks up on a hot lead via the reporter ' s salvation, the telephone. The Editorial Council: Back Row: D. P. Epstein, G. W. Wolfsten, J. F. Kemmer, T. C. Mekeel. Front Row: L. E. Klein, L. C. Bartlett, W. J. Meikle. A complete list of the members of the Brown and White staff will be found on page 396. 117 epitomtj THE EPITOME has had a long and varied history as Lehigh ' s oldest publica- tion. It was begun in 1875 by the Class of 1878, then sophomores, just ten years after the founding of the University. Its original purpose was to provide an adver- tising medium for Lehigh and its functions, and continued to be issued by each succeeding sophomore class until 1885 when the Class of 1887 published the book a second time as Juniors. It was not until 1931 that it fell under its present status of Senior yearbook, after forty-six years as a Junior publication. In the days before the turn of the century it was the Epitome which, after shedding much of its purely advertising quality, carried the campus wit and humor. This left the Burr to handle current student events of a newsy nature, which it did until the advent of the Brown and White in 1 896. By that time the Burr had encroached upon the field of college humor and the once-yearly Epitome had metamorphosed into the student record book that it now is. This alignment of the major Lehigh undergraduate publications has remained essen- tially unchanged since the early 1 goo ' s, except that the Burr has had two suc- cessors since its demise. Officers of the Epitome were originally determined by popular class election. Combines and cliques worked furiously near election times to gain possession of the book. This condition resulted quite often in the election of men not well suited for editorial and business posts of responsibility. Since the Senior Class took over the Epitome after its reorganization in 1 93 1 , membership to the Board and the selection of officers has been on a strictly competitive basis, which has resulted in a more efficient, experienced manage- ment. The ladder of advancement on the Epitome editorial staff begins with the sophomore competitor who endeavors to secure through effort and examination one of six Junior editorships on the following year ' s book. At the end of the year one of the Junior editors is named editor-in-chief and others are made assistant editor, senior section editor, and art editor for the succeeding year. 118 EPITOME: Junior Editors— Back Row: E. H. Dafter, W. R. Sultzer. Front Row: J. F. Kemmer, R. W. Pugh, S. J. Davy. Senior Editors — Back Row: F. S. McKenna, J. F. Beers. Front Row: A. B. Brown, W. J. Meikle. , _„„..., T Sophomore Competitors— Back Row: W. S. Woodside, A. J. White, D. P. Scobhonko, D. J. Carrigan, J. E. Doxsey, D. M. Lorimer. Front Row: I. H. Levy, B. F. Hoffacker, D. F. Cox, H. W. Shawhan, P. J. Berg. Business Staff— Back Row: J. J. Hucker, A. B. Parsons, E. W. Edwards. Front Row: K. K. Kost, T. G. Scott. Business Manager: K. K. Kost. A complete list of the members of the Epitome staff will be found on page 400. V ■■ ■■ alpha kappa psi THE CHARTER for the Alpha Sigma Chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi was granted in 1924 to a group that was then the Business Administration Club. The charter was gained with the aid of Dr. Neil Carothers and George B. Curtis, then Associate Professor of Economics. Since this time, these two men have served as deputy counselors to the chapter. The object of Alpha Kappa Psi is to foster high ideals and integrity among the student members by the intelligent discussion of current business topics. At the beginning of this year, the body made progress on a project for the increasing of the faculty of the School of Business Administration. However, because of the accelerated program which the University adopted, this project was dropped. Each year the program includes inspection trips to various companies. One of the outstanding trips this year was to the International Business Machines Company. lambda mu sigma LAMBDA MU SIGMA, honorary marketing fraternity, was founded at Lehigh November 5, 1940. The local chapter is attempting to expand the society into a national fraternity. The purpose of Lambda Mu Sigma is to promote interest in marketing and problems related to it. Various phases of marketing, sales, and advertising were discussed by the group ' s speakers this year. Mr. A. Forrest Walker of R. H. Macy and Company carried out a one-man debate on Fair Trade Laws. Talks were delivered on price control, commercial research, classified advertising and outdoor advertis- ing. The group made a trip to Philadelphia where they visited the Providence Mutual Life Insurance Company. The officers are John J. Nitti, president, Richard M. Palmer, vice-president, Normand J. Wilhelmy, secretary, and Robert S. Newcomb, treasurer. ALPHA KAPPA PSI: Back Row: R. Brown, W. B. Holberton, R. W. Mayer, K. Porter, B. A. Elmes, F. P. Morgal. Second Row: G. B. Robertson, R. H. Bernasco, R. B. Cowin, E. C. Bratt, R. M. Baker. Front Row: A. Tallaksen, A. H. Rich, J. H. Milbank, R. M. Palmer, P. Parvis. A complete list of Alpha Kappa Psi members will be found on page 395. IN THE CANDIDS: Alpha Kappa Psi pledges the cream of a new crop of business men into its fold; John J. Nitti, president of the relatively new Lambda Mu Sigma. LAMBDA MU SIGMA: Back Row: J. D. McClay, R. N. Gusdorff, W. R. Schmoll, H. M. Diamond, T. F. Jones, D. N. Bachman, R. T. Meckbach. Front Row: W. R. Kaempfe, R. S. Newcomb, J. J. Nitti, R. M. Palmer, W. G. Willmann. A complete list of Lambda Mu Sigma members will be found on page 402. 121 phi eta sigma THE RECOGNITION of scholastic achievement of freshmen, and the stimula- tion of a higher standard of academic activity by attempting to demonstrate to its members the great necessity for developing as fully as possible mind, body, and character, are the purposes of Phi Eta Sigma, national freshman scholastic honorary fraternity. Started at the University of Illinois in 1923, Phi Eta Sigma established a chapter at Lehigh in 1930. Invitation to membership is issued to students obtain- ing an average of 3.50 or better during their freshman year. The society holds monthly meetings at which a wide variety of subjects are discussed by guest speakers. Each fall Phi Eta Sigma awards a cup to the living group whose freshmen, not less than five, have made the highest scholastic record during the preceding year. scabbard and blad SCABBARD AND BLADE, national honorary military society, was founded in 1905 by five cadet officers in the University of Wisconsin Corps of Cadets. Its purpose is to raise the standards of military training in American colleges and universities, to unite in closer relationship their military departments, to encourage and foster essental qualities of good and efficient officers, and to pro- mote intimacy and good fellowship among cadet officers. The Lehigh company (Company H of the 3rd Regiment) was founded in 1922. An annual initiation banquet is held aside from regular monthly meetings. These meetings feature talks by men in the Lehigh military department as well as outside speakers. A Military Ball is held every Spring. At Field Day exercises in May, Scabbard and Blade presents awards to two outstanding seniors and juniors in Ordnance and Infantry departments. PHI ETA SIGMA: Back Row: D. P. Scoblionko, N. C. Applegate, E. L. Diehl, I. R. Collmann, L. H. Lempart. Second Row: C. R. Ingemanson, K. G. Swayne, H. V. Anderson, G. A. Murray, A. J. White, M. W. Bellis. Front Row: R. Wright, D. F. Cox, R. L. Smith, T. Peters, R. S. Miltenberger. A complete list of the members of Phi Eta Sigma will be found on page 403. IN THE CANDIDS: Bob Smith, president of Phi Eta Sigma; Company A special drill company and protege of Scabbard and Blade, struts its stuff with military precision. SCABBARD AND BLADE: Back Row: L. F. Dellwig, J. J. McGee, A. W. Hemphill, R. J. MacGregor, H. C. Farrand, J. P. Thomas, C. H. McKaig, R. C. Boston, H. A. Seebald. Third Row: C. A. Stearns, H. J. Olson, C. B. Dutton, W. G. Williams, A. B. Brown, W. K. Remsen, D. R. Smith. Second Row: A. Clark, H. W. Jones, E. F. Bodine, W. E. Gheen, R. R. Bright, A. H. Conklin, A. H. Zane, J. J. Meehan. Front Row: Col. J. S. Leonard, T. G. Scott, J. H. Dudley, J. A. Arnold, A. D. Tifft, Lt. S. Pierce. A complete list of the members of Scabbard and Blade will be found on page 405. 122 -. mMJ - • ' 1 • • • • • ' , • tr • - ' m pi mu epsilon-, PI MU EPSILON is the honorary mathematics fraternity. The Pennsylvania Gamma chapter was organized at Lehigh in 1929 when a charter was granted to the Lehigh Mathematics Club. Purpose of the organization is to honor men who excel in mathematics and to promote interest in mathematics among under- graduates. Men elegible are those who are honor math students for two or more years and who are inclined toward further study. Monthly meetings feature talks by both faculty and studen t members. The tendency this term has been for two students to talk, one on the biography of a great mathematician; the other on his theorems. Talks heard this year were on Blaise Pascal, and Charles Julien Brianchon, and others. In the spring of the year it is customary for the society to hold an open meet- ing at which time a talk by an eminent mathematician is heard. newtonian society NEWTONIAN SOCIETY is the freshman honorary mathematics group of Lehigh. Its purpose is to promote better relations among student and faculty members of the society, honor outstanding freshmen in the field of mathematics, and provide opportunity for intellectual activity outside the classroom. Faculty and student speakers are featured at monthly meetings. Topics of the practical and theoretical applications of mathematics and their relation to problems of special interest are discussed. As a project, the society has fostered and promoted a yearly mathematics con- test, and has offered awards to the winning freshmen. Begun last year, the contests have met with encouraging success. PI MU EPSILON: Back Row: J. L. Vanderslice, G. E. Raynor, J. S. Saylor, E. H. Cutler, W. R. Transue, T. Fort, J. E. Illick. Third Row: C. A. Shook, J. J. Somers, L. E. Sharpe, R. W. Pugh, H. W. Richards, H. J. Friedman, L. L. Smail, J. B. Reynolds. Second Row: A. Brkich, W. A. Eisele, A. B. Brown, R. M. Maiden, F. S. Nolte. Front Row: R. R. Waer, J. O. Betterton, C. S. Bennett, H. Nelken, M. G. Arsove, W. S. Titlow. A complete list of Pi Mu Epsilon members will be found on page 404. IN THE CANDIDS: Pi Mu Epsilon meets socially to discuss interesting phases of mathe- matics; President Lyster Frost, Newtonian society head. NEWTONIAN SOCIETY: Back Row: F. W. Berman, H. W. Courtney, R. W. Logan, R. K. Schmoyer, W. K. Zucker. Second Row: J. W. Parsons, W. J. Crowe, J. J. Buczynski, K. G. Swayne, T. Shintaku, B. D. Ferrell, J. A. Simpson. Front Row: N. C. Applegate, A. E. Pitcher, E. L. Frost, T. Peters, C. R. Ingemanson. A complete list of Newtonian Society members will be found on page 402. 125 canterbury club THE CANTERBURY CLUB, religious discussion group, was organized for the first time last Spring by about two dozen Lehigh students who, for the past three years, have been interested in starting a religious organization on the campus. Rev. Dean T. Stevenson of the Pro-Cathedral Church of the Nativity donated his time, study, and the secretarial services of his church to the planning of the club. Although most of the club ' s members are Episcopal, it does not limit member- ship to students of this denomination. The organizers thought the club should be Episcopalian because one of Lehigh ' s founders, Dr. William B. Stevens, was Episcopal Bishop of Pennsylvania. It was the purpose of these students, upon founding the club, to conduct services in Packer Memorial chapel and to hold discussion meetings. This year the club met on the last Sunday afternoon of each month. Its discussions and debates deal with the Church and its relation to every- day life. The club is a member of the national Canterbury clubs. de molay club 126 AS A RESULT of the desire of many students in De Molay to continue their activities in this organization after coming to college, the Lehigh De Molay Club was formed. Its most important function in connection with De Molay is the formation of installation teams. The club meets monthly and hears at its meetings talks on problems of prac- tical interest to the members. Such divergent topics as Keeping in Condition and The World Situation are discussed. The group likewise gathers for an informal dinner meeting once a month. A novel innovation this year was the establishment of a Date Bureau. The Dating Committee had access to the registers of Moravian College for Women, Cedar Crest, and the various Nurses ' Homes. Students desiring dates contacted the Bureau and it made all necessary arrangements. The results of this service as well as the other activities of the group were gathered together in an activities scrapbook. A complete list of the members of the Canterbury Club will be found on page 396. A complete list of the members of the De Molay Club will be found on page 400. mining and geological society IN 1905 the Mining and Geological Society was founded; in 1909 A. Copeland Callen was made president. He is now the dean of the College of Engineering. The Lehigh chapter of the society is one of the many branches of the student division of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. The purpose of the society is to give its members an insight into the mining industry and the fields open to geologists and mining engineers, also to bring the student engaged in studying either geology or mining into contact with men in this field of endeavor. For this purpose the society holds monthly meetings. At the first meeting of this year Professor Robert D. Butler, assistant professor of geology, spoke on his recent survey of gold mining in Colorado. The Professor had been examining the University ' s mine there. physics society THE PHYSICS SOCIETY is composed of students in Engineering Physics, any student of this curriculum being eligible for membership. A feature of the monthly meetings of the Society is a lecture given by a member of the faculty or some person outside the University. This year the society gave a Christmas party in conjunction with the Bi-Chem- Zo Society of Moravian College for Women. This party was the social high-point of the year. It was held at Moravian and the members of the Society engaged in games and danced. The annual picnic of the Physics Society is held in May. Last year the society initiated a program of student discussion for the meetings during the months of March and April. The seniors presented their projects in advanced laboratory to the group during these meetings. The discussions which followed evidenced such great interest in these meetings that they have become an integral part of the schedule of the society. A complete list of the members of the Mining and Geological Society will be found on page 402. A complete list of the members of the Physics Society will be found on page 404. 127 alpha epsilon delta ALPHA EPSILON DELTA, honorary pre-medical fraternity, was founded in 1926 at the University of Alabama. The fraternity is an associated society of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Pennsylvania Alpha chapter was founded at Lehigh University in 1935. Membership is based on scholarship, extracurricular activity, personality, and special interest in various pre-medical and medical subjects. Open meetings are held three times a month at which all interested students are invited to listen to and discuss papers presented by the various members on medical science topics. The American Association for the Advancement 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. robert w. hall pre-medical society THE ROBERT W. HALL PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY was founded at Le- high twenty-two years ago by Dr. Robert W. Hall, former head of the biology department. The organization was named the Pre-Medical Society of Lehigh and included men interested in natural history and medicine. By 1922 its mem- bership was limited to students in biology courses, and all activities followed their interests. Many of its alumni have established themselves as successful physi- cians. The aim of the group always has been to present its members with infor- mation directly or indirectly related to the field of medicine. Meetings are held every month. Banquets are given at Christmas and in the Spring. The Spring dinner is for the purpose of electing officers for the coming year. The group takes frequent inspection trips to out-of-town clinics and hos- pitals, and is considered one of the most active societies on the campus. 128 ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: Back Row: L. Mosier, A. F. Mann, M. I. Buchman, F. J. Trembley, F. Gress, G. R. L. Thompson. Front Row: S. J. Thomas, S. F. Balshi, S. B. Longley, R. W. Hall. A complete list of the members of Alpha Epsilon Delta will be found on page 395. IN THE CANDIDS: Eager pre-meds watch the progress of a dissection; the microscope in use, an invaluable aid to medical science. ROBERT W. HALL SOCIETY: Back Row: A. F. Mann, M. I. Buchman, S. B. Longley, A. F. Soto, F. J. Trembley. Second Row: L. Mosier, D. Harris, C. L. Lytle, R. Collmann, I. W. Gilmore, W. X. Collmann, G. R. L. Gaughran. Front Row: S. J. Thomas, S. F. Balshi, R. Rowand, F. Gress, R. W. Hall. A complete list of R. W. Hall members will be found on page 404. p m i i V robert w. blake society THE R. W. BLAKE SOCIETY was named in honor of a former head of the College of Arts and Science. This honorary philosophical society was founded in 1923 by seven Lehigh students and at present has a membership of 20, chosen with regard to high scholastic rating and an interest in philosophical or cultural subjects. The society holds monthly meetings, at which time an outstanding speaker is heard; after these meetings the members enter into a general discussion of the topics at hand. The society makes an annual pilgrimage visiting nearby eastern colleges and universities. A University lecture each year is sponsored by the society for the benefit of the student body. David E. Richards is the president of the society; Lynn C. Bartlett is vice- president; and George H. Ried is the secretary-treasurer. eta sigma phi THE ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER of Eta Sigma Phi, national honorary classical language society, was established at Lehigh University in 1928. Each year the society selects one definite subject for discussion. In the discus- sions all the members take a part, thus a whole-hearted interest in the topic is stimulated. Numismatics was the subject that was selected this year. The Society holds joint meetings with Muhlenberg and Cedar Crest. The first part of each meeting is taken up with the business matters of the Society, so that the latter half of the meeting is free for the informal discussions. New members were admitted to the Society at a banquet which was held early in the year. The practice of making the last meeting of the Society a picnic was continued this year. T he Society sent a member to attend the National Con- vention of Eta Sigma Phi, which was held at William and Mary College this year. ROBERT W. BLAKE SOCIETY: Back Row: D. P. Scoblionko, W. R. Williams, A. Clark, W. J. Meikle, J. R. Polinsky, A. B. Brown, J. M. Roach, I. R. Collmann, D. B. Sands, J. J. Somers, K. H. Weber, R. T. Berg. Front Row: T. T. Lafferty, P. Hughes, D. E. Richards, G. H. Ried, F. C. Becker. A complete list of the members of the R. W. Blake Society will be found on page 404. IN THE CANDIDS: Dave Richards, R. W. Blake Society head, and Bill Williams contemplate bust of Aristotle, sagest of them all; Welles Bliss and George Ried, leaders of Eta Sigma Phi. ETA SIGMA PHI: Back Row: R. C. Giddings, J. F. O ' Brien, R. N. Figueroa, W. A. Mc- Donald, A. C. Fortosis, R. C. Ramsdell, C. G. Konolige, J. R. Polinsky. Front Row: E. L. Cram, W. R. Williams, W. R. Bliss, G. H. Ried, H. W. Wright. A complete list of the members of Eta Sigma Phi will be found on page 401. 131 student chemical society 132 THE CHEMICAL SOCIETY ' S objective is to give the students of chemistry a close connection with newest developments in the field of chemistry. Since 1873, when the group was founded, it has held monthly meetings for the purpose of hearing prominent men in the field of science. Members get a well-rounded outlook on their field because these speakers represent industry, faculties of other colleges and universities, and graduate work in chemistry. Meetings are devoted to these talks, the discussion of business, and the show- ing of slides and movies on chemical subjects. Instead of the regular monthly meeting in December the society holds a Christ- mas banquet in Masonic Temple, and the main speech of the evening is presented by a man in a non-scientific field. Entertainment is provided by student members, and the event proves to be a highlight of the year ' s activities. american society of civil engineers THE LEHIGH CHAPTER of the American Society of Civil Engineers grew out of the Civil Engineering Society founded here in 1873. Reorganized in 190 1 and again in 1922, it became a chapter in the national society upon the second reorganization. It is one of 113 chapters in the country. Monthly meetings feature talks by men who present their particular interests in engineering, and such topics as railroads, bridges, hydraulics, and sanitary engineering are offered. This year, among other things, the society heard a talk on the Niagara River which dealt mainly with the famous Rainbow Bridge spanning it. Functions other than regular meetings include a Christmas banquet and a Spring picnic. The annual meeting of the Lehigh Valley and Philadelphia sec- tions of the society took place this April at Bucknell University. CHEMICAL SOCIETY: Back Row: H. W. Haines, W. W. Tolley, R. R. Macy, J. C. Lampert, H. V. Donohoe, F. A. Krone. Second Row: W. J. Meikle, H. W. Boynton, R. A. Hammond, R. K. Gailey, J. A. Arnold, W. R. Woodruff, W. T. Bostock, R. J. McGregor. Front Row: R. L. Kulp, D. W. Layton, L. E. Klein, J. F. Arbogast, R. M. Foster, H. L. Boyer. A complete list of the Chemical Society members will be found on page 396. IN THE CANDIDS: The Chemical Society partakes of an after-meeting snack; Professor Anderson lectures on chemical phenomena. THE CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: J. H. Dawson, A. E. Long, R. G. Carlson, C. N. Codding, D. Coles, A. N. Bug bee, R. J. Stickel, W. A. Brooks. Second Row: G. J. Bleul, N. C. Applegate, L. E. Titlow, J. L. McGonigle, R. R. Dragone, R. Palazzo, Toshiaki Shintaku, A. H. Todd. Front Row: H. Sutherland, S. B. Bowne, J. H. Boucher, R. J. Fisher, J. M. Adams. A complete list of the members of the Civil Engineering Society will be found on page 398. f ' f v a pi tau sigma PI TAU SIGMA is the honorary mechanical engineering society. Its purpose is to foster the high ideals of the engineering profession and to promote interest in departmental activities. The society was founded at the University of Illinois in 191 5 by Dr. Charles Russ Richards. The Theta Chapter at Lehigh was promoted and organized by Professor Alexander W. Luce in 1927, and was expanded in 1935 to admit students of Industrial Engineering. High points in the year ' s activities were the appointment of Professor Larkin as editor-in-chief of the Condenser, official publication of the society, at the Pittsburgh national convention, and combining with Eta Kappa Nu to present the Engineers ' Ball as a major social affair for the first time in its history. eta kappa nu ETA KAPPA NU, honorary electrical engineering society, was founded at the University of Illinois in 1904. Through the efforts of Professor Nelson S. Hibsh- man the Lehigh chapter was organized in 1926. The aim of the society is to offer a closer contact between the students and occurences in the electrical engineering field. Each year the Chi chapter honors six juniors by election to the Society; the qualifications are based upon character, achievement, and records received dur- ing underclass years. During the year frequent inspection trips are taken, and an award is pre- sented to the outstanding freshman in the electrical engineering school. The proceeds from the Engineers ' Ball, held jointly with Pi Tau Sigma, go toward paying for the engineers ' lounge. PI TAU SIGMA: Back Row: I. R. Burkey, D. L. Hume, S. W. Reid, W. D. Hayes, P. H. Powers, T. M. Buck, J. C. Gabuzda, J. F. Bailey, C. C. Ruffle. Fourth Row: R. R. Young, J. S. Stokes, F. S. Nolte, J. H. Mueller, R. W. Saylor, J. F. Pfeffer. Third Row: M. C. Stuart, P. W. Marshall, R. E. Gengenbach, J. D. Van Blarcom, J. A. Thurn, W. J. Skinner, R. H. Forsyth, A. W. Klein, J. V. Eppes, A. C. Callen. Second Row: W. E. Gheen, H. W. Jones, E. F. Bodine, R. W. Clark, R. S. Struble, C. H. Schumacher. Front Row: F. R. Thaeder, F. R. Cloud, R. G. Taylor, P. Lutters, J. W. Witherspoon IV, C. P. Davidson. A complete list of the members of Pi Tau Sigma will be found on page 404. IN THE CANDID: The Engineers ' Ball, first big dance of the school year, sponsored jointly by Pi Tau Sigma and Eta Kappa Nu. Sonny Dunham was the maestro. ETA KAPPA NU: Back Row: C. S. Bennett, J. L. Beaver, R. R. Waer, H. V. Gruber, S. Caplan, D. E. Mode, W. S. Titlow, N. S. Hibshman. Second Row: W. B. Bowers, G. K. Sebold, F. P. Librizzi, W. A. Eisele. Front Row: S. J. Davy, R. S. Willard, F. H. Bower. A complete list of the members of Eta Kappa Nu will be found on page 400. 135 industrial-mechanical engineering society IN THE FALL of 1940, the Industrial Engineering Society and the Lehigh student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers merged into a single group, forming the I.E.-M.E. Society. Serving as a supplement to the scholastic work of the students in these engineer- ing fields, the society brings to its monthly meetings speakers who can present to the members the practical side of their particular field. Such topics as Tech- nical Sales, The Status of Aviation During Periods of National Emergency, and Engineer Placement were among those presented this year. Each year the society sends a representative to the convention of the Eastern Student Group of the A.S.M.E. Lehigh students have been frequent recipients of prizes awarded for papers submitted to this convention. electrical engineering society 136 THE FIRST student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers 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 student into closer contact with each other. In a meeting held each month these men and the students present papers and give lectures on topics in the electrical engineering field. The success of the movement can well be seen by the 120-odd branches throughout the nation ' s universities. A movement to have the societies of the school hold a joint meeting and discuss papers written by students, and to award a prize has been discussed by the society. The functions of the society in addition to its monthly lectures consist mainly of a Christmas banquet and a picnic in the spring. INDUSTRIAL-MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: C. A. Patten, J. R. Connelly, J. F. Bailey, W. Forstall. Fifth Row: J. S. Stokes, A. W. Klein, J. E. Gabuzda, T. E. Butterfield, R. C. Dimmich, L. T. Askren. Fourth Row: E. J. Coffey, E. F. Bodine, F. V. Larkin, S. W. Reid, L. O. Southgate, A. W. Hemphill. Third Row: R. W. Saylor, J. H. Mueller, P. Lutters, W. A. Fetske, S. P. Caldwell, H. E. Bunning, G. D. Gaus, A. W. Clokey. Second Row: H. D. Moll, L. C. Schwab, C. Neuendorffer, R. A. Bennett, C. H. Schumacher, F. S. Nolte, A. O. Putnam, R. E. Chamberlain, W. C. Van Blarcom, R. H. Cliff. Front Row: I. R. Burkey, W. J. Young, M. J. Eways, E. L. Weaver, T. E. Jackson, M. C. Stuart, J. A. Kimberley, M. Guidon, W. G. Bourne, J. M. Sexton, M. W. Sears. A complete list of the members of the I.E.-M.E. Society will be found on page 401. IN THE CANDID: Fagade of James Ward Packard laboratory, one of the nation ' s most modern in mechanical and electrical engineering. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: R. D. Munnikhuysen, S. Caplan, J. A. Krawchuck, F. P. Librizzi, R. R. Waer, D. I. Troxell. Second Row: J. F. Urschitz, J. S. Macdonald, J. Burgio, J. L. Beaver, J. F. Clark, G. K. Sebold, G. N. DeCowsky. Front Row: L. Haney, R. S. Willard, W. A. Eisele, W. B. Bowers, K. H. Smith. A complete list of the members of the Electrical Engineering Society will be found on page 400. wmmm Am % frV ■■•■ ' •: - ' -i ' - ■■: ' ■■ j Jr 1 HETiiHE f ? lf Bff S e i Mk L - m wmml wm K ' flv flW S S i 5 !Wi ■ sportsman ' s club AT THE BEGINNING of the 1938 school year, the Lehigh Sportsman ' s Club was formed to fill a need for an organization to bring together students and faculty members who are interested in outdoor sports not sponsored by the University. Some of the activities sponsored by the club are hunting, fishing, hiking, trap and target shooting, archery, skating, skiing, and conservation. In October a successful barn dance was held at Flickinger ' s Barn, and a ban- quet was given in January. Competitive trap shoots have been held this year, and skating parties are scheduled. The club will close its season with a spring picnic. In addition, the Sportsman ' s club formed its first skiing team this year and will represent Lehigh in intercollegiate meets. metallurgical society THE METALLURGICAL SOCIETY is composed of nearly all students en- rolled in the curriculum of metallurgical engineering. Its purpose is to provide a means whereby men may meet socially with their fellow students and learn of the more interesting sidelights in the processes of metal working from men in the industry. The social highlight of the year was a date dance, open to the entire student body and held November 8 in Drown Hall. The dance was hailed as a success by its chairman, Charles M. Norlin, after 60 couples attended. It was unique to Lehigh because the members of the Metallurgical Society offered to secure blind dates from a nearby women ' s college for any dateless men who cared to attend. A majority of the couples who attended were paired in this manner. SPORTSMAN ' S CLUB: Back Row: G. Potter, D. F. Foster, C. L. Sturges, J. Dunwoody, J. E. Davis, J. H. Corson, L. Constantine. Third Row: A. G. Tromer, A. Cox, F. C. Bartlett, W. H. Congdon, R. C. Gordon, J. B. Rader, W. B. Bowers. Second Row: T. Peters, J. Kimberley, W. P. Varner, W. C. Cosford, J. Bruen. Front Row: C. B. Austin, J. H. Boucher, R. L. Duncan, H. C. Steiglitz, R. E. Coffman, R. Meckbach. A complete list of the members of the Sportsman ' s Club will be found on page 405. IN THE CANDIDS: The Met Society parades a sign before football crowds advertising its first annual Date Dance ; Professor Beale may often be seen on campus feeding the squirrels that live there. METALLURGICAL SOCIETY: Back Row: J. B. Price, T. G. Scott, F. S. McKenna, S. H. Finkle, C. P. Sun. Fourth Row: E. L. Frost, K. H. Rahn, J. H. Frye, W. T. Mainwaring, G. G. Zipf, J. H. Corson, W. F. Boore. Third Row: V. J. Vitelli, J. O. Betterton, S. W. Caum, R. D. Stout, T. G. Megas, R. E. Metius, F. C. Tillberg, J. E. Chafey. Second Row: A. Butts, G. E. Doan, R. C. McMichael, D. H. Kleppinger, J. L. Peterson, C. M. Norlin. Front Row: S. H. Endicott, J. P. Arbizzani, E. D. Spengler, D. L. Kistler, H. A. Grubb, C. H. Savage, B. J. Egan. A complete list of the members of the Metallurgical Society will be found on page 402. 139 phi alpha theta PHI ALPHA THETA was first conceived at Arkansas University on March 14, 192 1, by Dr. Andrew R. Cleven, who sought a means to honor college men who had achieved distinction in the study of history. He endeavored to do this through the founding of a society for the consideration of historical problems in a stimulating, cultural atmosphere. The Alpha Alpha chapter was founded at Lehigh University in May, 1940, by a small group of interested students and faculty. In the two full years of existence since its inception Alpha Alpha has gained considerable strength and has matured greatly. Each year a topic for discussion has been chosen by the group which meets twice a month to examine a particular phase of the ques- tion. The official publication of the fraternity ' s national office, The Historian, holds a prominent position among historical magazines. The national society meets biennially at the same time and place as the Ameri- can Historical Association. cut and thrust 140 CUT AND THRUST, honorary fencing society, is made up of those men who have shown an interest in fencing and who are able to meet the necessary require- ments set up by the society. These requirements include the demonstration of fencing technique before the members of the group, and ability to answer ques- tions on technical terms and theoretical problems in fencing. The club attempts to aid the fencing team in every way possible. It helps act as host to visiting teams. It helps provide transportation for the Lehigh team. It takes care of equipment, helps replace it when necessary. Although the president of the club is automatically captain of the fencing team there is no essential connection between membership in the club and member- ship on the team. Members may belong to one without belonging to the other. A complete list of the members of Phi Alpha Theta will be found on page 403. A complete list of the members of Cut and Thrust will be found on page 399. { Wj i MtSr 4 1 1 a m B % % GH sports LEHIGH BELIEVES in intercollegiate contact sports, but it also places con- siderable emphasis on the physical development of the average student through the intramural sports program. The Department of Physical Education has, therefore, the two divisions of Intercollegiate Athletics, headed by Glen Harme- son (also head of the Department), and Intramural Athletics, administered by Fay Bartlett. All the major college sports, and most of the minor ones, are offered by the Intercollegiate division. Divided into three groups, the most important of these sports (Group One) are football, basketball, and wrestling; next comes the Group Two class, with soccer, track, tennis, swimming, and baseball. Such sports as fencing, rifle, hockey, golf and lacrosse are listed with others in Group Three. The Intramural Division offers the varied facilities of a gym filled with in- tricate apparatus and capable of Bart ' s amazingly varied program of contests to the normally non-athletic student, together with daily classes in various kinds of physical education — and, of course, the swimming pool, table tennis, golf, badminton, and several other games. Living group intramural contests form a large part of the program in this division; they range from bowling to wrestling. jaq football ALTHOUGH the 1941 football season looked rather bright after three weeks ' extensive training and practice under the guiding eye of Glen Harmeson, head coach, Lehigh ' s football eleven didn ' t fare too well throughout the regular season. This year ' s squad saw a predominance of sophomore material, and, along with that, several changes were made. Brownlee and Ramsden, who played on the Frosh line the year before, were moved to backfield positions, and Ambrogi and White, who had played wingback and center respectively on the 1940 varsity, were given the end berths. The Brown and White aggregation opened its season on September 27. Dickin- son was originally scheduled for the opener, but infantile paralysis caused the game to be cancelled and in its place a game with Hartwick College from Oneonta, New York, was arranged. The Blue and White eleven, rated far below its actual abilities, held the Engineers of Lehigh to a 13-13 tie. Hartwick scored within the first three minutes of play, and the second period saw the Brown and White team put a score across — the first of the season. Using power plays, the Engineers marched down the field, and on a beautiful end-around play, Captain Henry Reuwer caught the opposition flatfooted and scored standing up. Stan Szymakowski converted. A poor kick from our own ten yard stripe enabled the visitors to get in scoring position again, and a beautiful pass to the one followed by a line buck put the Oneonta lads back in the lead. Lehigh came back in the third period and Brownlee carried the ball for a touchdown, tying the score at 13 all. The following Saturday, Lehigh again played at home, and, in a free scoring battle, lost to a powerful Case team, 33-26. Passing was the dominant feature of the game and each team used this method of attack to its own advantage. The Rough Riders put a score across in the first period, and Lehigh opened its scoring in the second. Joe Ambrogi, on a seventy-five yard run, and a few plays later, on a pass from Szymakowski, put the Engineers out in front, 13-7. However, Case capitalized on errors, and at the half the score read Case 26 — Lehigh 13. 144 SQUAD: Back Row: Coach Caraway, G. Ramsden, E. L. Frost, C. A. Elmes, R. C. Klein- knecht, A. J. Cornelius, S. C. Szvmakowski, C. J. Kurtz, W. C. Hittinger, Coach Westerman. Third Roil: T. G. Heck, R. R. Johnson, R. C. Stoehr, T. M. Buck, W. H. Lindsay, Mgr.; Coach Harmeson, B. A. Elmes, A. L. Rosener, E. J. Cavanaugh, B. W. Deehan. Second Row. C. M. Rogers, H. C. Clarke, R. C. Smith, J. A. Gordon, J. C. Lampert, H. T. Reuwer, J. N. Ambrogi, E. T. White, J. F. Pfeffer, J. A. Hunt. Front Row: R. M. Long, W. D. Hayes, R. L. Bird, J. G. Bussmann, W. L. Anders, R. T. Rospond, R. C. Shafer, J. F. Donahue. 1 %% Ambrogi scored his third touchdown of the afternoon on a pass from Szyma- kowski, and in the fourth period, Hayes, who had dropped back to kick, found himself trapped but outran the opposition for another tally. Case ' s first half advantage was too much to overcome, however, and the Rough Riders went on to win. Traveling to New Brunswick on October 1 1 , the Engineers next tangled with the Scarlet of Rutgers in the first game for the Middle Three Championship and the right to the coveted little brass cannon. Rutgers, paced by Jones and Utz, trampled the Brown and White squad by a 16-6 count. Beautiful kicking by Szymakowski turned back many a Rutgers thrust. Lehigh ' s lone score was set up in the third period on a kick by Szymakowski, which went out on the Rutgers ' four. A poor return punt, followed by successful running plays, ended with Stoehr catching a touchdown pass, giving Lehigh its only tally for the afternoon. Scoring on a safety and a touchdown run by Jones in the final period, Rutgers proved too much for our boys and the Scarlet went on to win. Next weekend found the gridders on home grounds again, and under typical houseparty skies, the Engineers were held to a scoreless tie by the Ursinus Bears. Although there were 795 feminine voices to urge the boys on, they just didn ' t have that scoring punch. Lehigh and Penn State met for the twenty-second time the following Saturday and when the smoke of battle had cleared away, the series stood at fifteen victories for the Nittany Lions, while Lehigh had six to its credit — Penn State having won the game, 40-6. Our opponent ' s sensational field running and blocking were too much for our boys to cope with. However, Lehigh managed to score in the third period when Don Brownlee crashed into pay dirt after receiving a pass from Stoehr. Definite lack of downfield blocking and tackl ing on the part of the Lehigh squad spelled certain defeat. Playing at the University of Buffalo in the rain on November 1, Lehigh was held to another scoreless tie — the second of the season. Again the gridders had the opportunity to score, but they lacked that necessary final drive. The following Saturday brought both the Mules from Allentown and Dad ' s Day to Taylor Stadium. In a closely fought contest, Muhlenberg went on to victory, even though the teams were fairly even on all accounts. In the middle of the first quarter, the Mules scored, and the conversion was good to give them seven points. After a long kick by Szymakowski in the second period, which put the opposition back on IN THE CANDIDS: Harmy lectures while the boys take it easy; Captain Reuwer talks it over with Harmy; The coaching staff examines a new play. IN THE PICTURES: Half-time at the Case game; Before the game huddle and pep-talk; Hayes starts scoring run in Hartwick game; The big four; Head cheerleader McKenna. 147 148 their own nine, Clarke broke through to block a Muhlenberg punt, giving the Engineers two points for a safety. The home rooter ' s hopes were raised quite high in the final frame, when Deehan, on a basketball pass by Szymakowski, ran 74 yards to the Mules ' two yard line where he was finally tackled. A fumble on the next play put an end to the Brown and White threat and our neighbors from Allentown went home with the victory. Traveling to Charlottesville, Virginia, the gridders next faced the Cavaliers of the University of Virginia, for the second time in the history of the schools. Before 10,000 fans, Bill Dudley, who, by the way, later made All- American, proved to be too slippery for the visitors and went on to score twenty-two of the thirty-four points which Virginia scored to Lehigh ' s o. A vain attempt to score was made in the third period, but the fine Cavalier line held and turned back the Engineers ' bid for a marker. Paced by Zirinsky and McKnight, Lafayette, our traditional rivals, went on to win the last game of the season, 47-7. Although the Brown and White eleven held remarkably well in the first half, the Maroon ' s running and passing attack caught on in the second stanza and they rolled up a tremendous advantage. Two passes set up the loser ' s lone touchdown and Szyma- kowski plunged over for the score — Ambrogi making the conversion. The Frosh, under coach Paul Short, after losing their first two games to Blair Academy and the Rutgers Frosh, finally defeated the weak Ursinus yearlings, 20-6, and tied Lafayette, 13-13 — Shoehner and Arant standing out for the Brown and White combination. The spectacular Lehigh band stood out at the home games again this year as it had done in the past. The amazing formations held the spectators ' keenest attention all through the half time and they certainly added to the excitement and enjoyment derived from the Saturday afternoon frays. Credit should also be given to the undying efforts of the cheerleaders, who, under Frank McKenna, kept the students ' spirits high even when defeat was inevitable. Interesting sidelines were many: in the opening game with Hartwick, Lehigh introduced a new system of numbering players so the fans could identify them and the position they played immediately upon seeing the numbers; the Lehigh- Lafayette series continued to be the longest unbroken traditional rivalry in the country; and it was the second time in the history of Lehigh University that the team had not won at least one game during the season. No w that the team has lost its sophomoritis and has had a taste of college football, we look forward to a more successful and promising season in 1942. IN THE PICTURES: The Bench; Dehan picking up some yardage; View of the Lehigh Stands. 3 ' . Wt - hi £i! V ' -Yi x ,v? ' ■ • - UK J ft III basketball WITH TWO games remaining to be played, the basketball team has compiled a fair record so far this season. Coach Marty Westerman, in an effort to stimulate the boys to play a smarter and better game, offered a gold basketball to the member on the squad having the best foul shot average for the year. In previous seasons, this lack of scoring punch was the cause of many a loss for the Engineers. Westerman also suggested using tall men in the key positions to offset the opposi- tion ' s chances of scoring. In the first athletic contest to be held in Lehigh ' s new Grace Hall, the Brown and White combination met Princeton and lost by a 53-44 count. The Orange and Black, using a man-to-man defense, stopped the home team during the first half. This deficit was too much to overcome and the boys from Princeton went home with the victory — their first of the year. Led by Bill Binder, who scored 18 points, the team won its second game by beating the Ursinus Bears in a decisive victory by a 53-37 score. Much improvement was shown, especially in under the basket play, both Johnson and Bailey doing effec- tive retrieving on shots off the backboard. Lehigh led all the way and was never in any danger from the opposition. Playing at Temple, the Brown and White aggregation was swamped by the Owls, 60-38. The height advantage held by the home team proved too much for our boys. However, Rahn and Binder each turned in a comparatively good score, with 1 6 and 1 1 points respectively. In an exciting game on the home court, the Scarlet of Rutgers University downed the Engineers, 54-46. Binder, with 22 points to his credit, starred on the offense while Dick Johnson played magnifi- cently on the defense. Smooth pass work and a speedy combination were too much for our team to overcome, and the Scarlet went home victorious. Travel- ing to meet Dickinson and Gettysburg, the squad came home with a victory and a defeat. Led by Dick Rahn, who netted 29 points, the team beat Dickinson in the first encounter of the series, 65-61. The Red Devils led at the first quarter 20-19, but in the remaining stanzas our defense tightened, and that along with the accurate shooting of Rahn soon put us in the lead which we held until the final whistle. The next night told a different story. The Engineers, although lead- ing at the end of the first quarter, lost to Gettysburg by a 50-37 score. SQUAD: Back Row: Coach Westerman, T. G. Megas, J. Conforte, R. P. Whipple, D. H. Brownlee, D. F. Gearhart, R. E. Chamberlain, R. D. Mussina, Manager W. A. Brooks. Front Row: W. G. Binder, R. D. Bailey, J. N. Ambrogi, J. E. Lane, A. N. Smith, R. L. Rahn, R. R. Johnson. IN THE CANDIDS: Bailey ready to shoot a foul; Rahn scoring two points; Action under the basket. 151 152 Playing at University Heights in New York City on January 31, Lehigh next met the Violet squad of New York University. Although Bill Binder was high scorer of the game with seventeen points, the rest of the team was held down and N.Y.U. went on to a 67-40 victory. The New Yorkers lead at the half 33-2 1 and were never in danger throughout the game. Playing Muhlenberg at the Grace Hall court the following Wednesday, the Engineers lost another tough game, 47-46. The Mules, although behind during the last period put on a final spurt and went on to win in the closing minutes of play. Villanova next on Lehigh ' s schedule, went down before the Engineers 45-42. Behind Binder once more, the team seemed improved and smoother play dominated the game. Binder walked off with the scoring honors, netting a total of 22 points for the evening, while Rahn made 12 points. The Brown and White lost to Muhlenberg once mor e in a return contest on the latter ' s floor. The Drexel Dragons next met defeat at the hands of the superior forces of Lehigh. Both Rahn and Binder starred, getting 21 and 18 points respectively. This brilliant offense surge along with good defensive play by Johnson and Lane was sufficient for the 55-37 victory. Another close game followed this one and the Brown and White squad lost in an overtime period to Scranton. Although we were ahead at the half 10 points, sharp shooting on the part of the Wildcats gave the visitors sight of a victory; until Binder and Rahn went out on fouls, we were holding a small lead, how- ever. This seemed to be quite a blow to the home team and the Wildcats went on to win, 70-65. The next game, which was a return contest with Rutgers, was also an extra-period affair. However, this time it was a different story an d Cap- tain Lane clinched the victor) ' by sinking a field goal in the last minute of the extra period. This game was won for the Brown and White on the squad ' s ability to make the foul shots afforded them. The score was 53-51. This evened the series with Rutgers and since the Engineers beat the Leopards of Lafayette in the following scheduled encounters, the Middle Three Crown is Lehigh ' s for the year. The Lehigh yearlings, too, have been having quite a successful season. They have only lost three games, two to the Rutgers ' Frosh, while they have split two games with the Muhlenberg Frosh, beating Perkiomen Prep and the Drexel Yearlings. Schoener and Werner have been outstanding in the contests played, but in a recent contest with Rutgers, Captain Werner injured his foot and will be out for the remainder of the current schedule. The Frosh have two games left to play as this goes to press, both these being with the Lafayette Frosh. IN THE PICTURES: Binder starts a dribble; Jack Lane goes up for the basket; Watching the game; In! - 1 a: igm- jES F ™m V jffl -Ik :« , • ' ' KljW r mmmm •-  wrestling THE 1942 EDITION of the Lehigh wrestling team completed its season with a record of five wins, four defeats, and one tie. Faced with the task of replacing men in all but two weights with men who had never wrestled varsity before, Coach Billy Sheridan whipped a better than average team into condition half- way through the season and finished fourth in the Eastern Intercollegiate Wres- tling Association meet, held this year at Penn State. The home team won the championship. The team lost their first bout of the season to Kansas State by a score of 1 7-1 1 . Only Harry Boyer of last year ' s team grappled as Captain Dick Brenneman was still on the sidelines due to a tonsil operation. The rest of the team was made up mostly of sophomores. Boyer, Frank McKenna, who wrestled junior varsity last year, and Whit Snyder, sophomore heavy won their bouts. After the first semester was over, the Engineers met Yale in the second match to be held in the new Grace Hall. The Brown and White lost this one by a total of 19— 11. Captain Brenneman pinned his man and Snyder won his second straight victory. Steve Finkle, junior 121 man, won his match by a 7-1 margin. In a weekend tour of upper New York, the Sheridan men beat Syracuse and tied a highly favored Cornell team at 14-all in a major upset. However, the tie was a costly one as both Boyer and Finkle were lost to the team for the rest of the season due to injuries. Boyer fractured his thumb and Finkle turned his knee and was unable to continue wrestling. In the Syracuse bouts, Lehigh won by a score of 22-6 as only Bannon in the 121 class and Snyder were defeated. Boyer and McKenna pinned their men and Zackey, Bird, Stockbridge, and Brenneman won referee ' s decisions. The following night in Ithaca, Zackey, McKenna, Stock- bridge, and Brenneman won their bouts to account for Lehigh ' s points. Brenne- man pinned Schaeffer with a double armlock during the third period. After these bouts, Sheridan switched his lineup to include Bannon at 1 2 1 and Swayne at 136 pounds. In addition to the other regulars this was the regular team for the completion of the season. On February 14 a huge crowd packed Grace Hall to watch the vaunted Uni- versity of Pennsylvania grapplers in action. True to advance predictions, Lehigh IN THE PICTURES: View of the Kansas State match; Finkle winning in the Yale meet; Sheridan on the bench; Training room shot during practice. 155 went down to defeat by a 22-3 score. Although each individual bout was closely contested, the Penn men seemed too experienced for their opponents and won every match except for the 136 pound bout. Swayne, wrestling varsity for the first time, gained a decision over Jones. In one of the best bouts of the evening, Dick DiBattista, who has never been defeated in a bout, won the 175 event by beating Brenneman by a 7-3 score. The Penn strongman, very fast and aggres- sive, was able to take Brenneman down but Brenneman escaped each time. The grapplers swung back into the victory column next week by defeating the V. M. I. team by a 15-9 score. After Bannon lost a one-point decision, Zackey, Swayne, and Bird took the following bouts to put the Engineers in the lead. Then the Cadets rallied to win the 155 and 165 bouts to tie the score. Brenneman won an 8-1 decision and Lehigh led by a 12-9 score going into the last bout. Snyder clinched the meet by whipping Demmler by a 10-3 count. Rutgers ' wrestlers fell before the improved Lehigh team in the next bout by an 18-6 total. Bannon, Zackey, and Bird won their bouts by decisive scores, Bird lost a close decision, and then McKenna, Stockbridge, and Brenneman won the next three classes to clinch the meet. Snyder proved too light for the Rutgers heavy and he lost on a decision. Penn State ' s powerhouse had a close call in the last home meet of the season as they barely squeezed out a 17-13 victory. After the first four bouts, Penn State led 12-0. Then Lehigh took over and on the strength of pins by Stockbridge and Brenneman and a decision by McKenna, led 13-12 with but one bout left. Jack Kerns, veteran Nittany Lion heavy, then pinned the much lighter Snyder to win the bout for Penn State. Brenneman pinned his man in two minutes of the first period and Stocky won in the second period. Lehigh kept their unblemished record against Lafayette intact as they swamped the Marquis 30-0. A Lehigh wrestling team under the direction of Sheridan has never lost to a Lafayette team. Lafayette forfeited the 136 pound class, but in the other weights the Brown and White men scored easy victories. Stockbridge and McKenna won their bouts by falls. In their last dual match of the season, Lehigh surprised the experts by taking Princeton ' s defending Eastern Champs by a 16-14 score. Bannon and Zackey took the first two bouts as they beat men who were supposed to be leading con- 156 IN THE CANDIDS: Freshmen and J.V. bench during the Penn meet; DiBattista again; Seals working hard in the Yale match. VARSITY: Thomas S. Bannan, Roy T. Zackey, Kenneth G. Swayne, Robert L. Bird, Frank S. McKenna, John M. Stockbridge, Richard H. Brenneman, George W. Snyder. fT l r W 4 $% fl 1 I- V ' A ■ ' -■ ' - ' :■■, f ' r TlpSlli JSfijS R T t ' fl fiR -: :: V . K -• -«3 ' c ' .2aKS2« - H L JB tenders for Eastern titles. Zackey pinned Captain Griffin and Bannon whipped Van Sant Brewer. Taylor, last year ' s 136 champ, outpointed Swayne in the next bout and Bird also lost by a decision. In the 155 class, McKenna fell into a pin- ning hold in the final seconds of the bout and was pinned. Lehigh rallied in the 165 and 175 classes to lead 16- 11 going into the heavyweight bout. Robins of Princeton won a close 4-2 decision over Snyder to add three points to the Tigers ' total. Lehigh finished fourth in the 38th Eastern championships with ten points to its credit. Princeton also finished with ten points and the two schools divided fourth and fifth place honors. This was only the second year in over twenty that Lehigh has been without an Eastern Champ. Bannon and McKenna took second places and Zackey and Brenneman took third places to account for Lehigh ' s points. Brenneman would probably have finished second if he had not injured his knee in his final bout with DiBattista. This match will be long remembered at Penn State as Brenneman called time four times to put his injured knee in place and then continue to wrestle. Bannon took second by virtue of victories over Brewer and Sparke. He lost only to Ridenour, 1 2 1 champ for the second year and named the outstanding grappler in the 1942 championships. McKenna beat Pellecci and Turnbull of Princeton to win his place. Captain of the team for the 1 943 season will be Johnny Stockbridge, regular 1 65 pound grappler. The class of 1945 grapplers finished their five meet season with a record of three victories, a defeat, and one tie. The team lost to Penn, tied Princeton, and defeated Penn State, Lafayette, and Wyoming Seminary. Frank Winter, sensa- tional heavyweight, was awarded the R. A. Lewis trophy given annually to the outstanding wrestler. He pinned four of his opponents and won the fifth by for- feit. Bill Henry finished the season with a record of four victories and one defeat, that in the Wyoming match. In their only bouts of the year, the junior varsity kept intact their perfect record by defeating the Montclair State Teachers, the Penn J.V. ' s, and the Princeton junior varsity. This squad was the only team to defeat Penn on their visit to Lehigh. The Teachers lost a 19-16 battle, while the Penn men were swamped by a 24-6 total. J. V. SQUAD: Back Row: A. H. Rich, J. S. Cooke, T. A. Birckhead, T. G. Heck. Front Row: W. T. DeLong, M. L. Morrison, E. M. Biggs, W. B. Hursh. IN THE CANDID: The J.V. ' s at the Penn meet. FRESHMAN SQUAD: H. G. Wylie, R. A. DeLong, L. S. Herbert, W. M. Henry, F. W. Shirey, F. K. Christ, W. Bernard, F. Winter. 159 track 1 60 LEHIGH ' S 1 94 1 track team, paced by Captain J. Dukes Wooters, won two of their five dual matches and won a second leg on the MASCAA mile relay trophy in Coach Morris Kanaly ' s last year as the Brown and White track mentor. In the opening meet of the season, the Engineers trounced Swarthmore by a score of 79-47. Wooters won the 440 yard dash in 51 seconds, while other firsts were won by Elliott in both the 120 high and the 220 low hurdle events. Lehigh ' s entrants swept all three places in the shotput event. Because Krimmel of the Mules ' track team threw the discus one and one-half inches farther than Lehigh ' s Gus Riemondy, the Brown and White lost to Muhlenberg by the narrow margin of four points. Up until the discus throw the Engineers had been leading, but lost the meet as Krimmel threw the discus 1 10 feet, 5 inches. Wooters continued his string of victories in the 440 yard event by winning in the time of 51.3 seconds. By winning the Penn mile relay for the second time, Wooters, Joe Ambrogi, Mason Pearsall, and Herb Elliott gave Lehigh a second leg on the trophy awarded to the college that first wins the event three times. The team won the event in 3:27.4. The afternoon after the relay team won its event, the team defeated the Mainliners of Haverford in convincing manner, 70 2 to 55 J 2 • Wooters estab- lished a meet record for the quarter mile when he covered the distance in 49.8 seconds. George Elliott also broke a meet record when he ran the 1 1 o yard high hurdles in 15.9 seconds. Even though Wooters broke another meet record in the 440 against Rutgers, the Scarlet beat the Engineers by 68-58. In the MASCAA track and field championships Lehigh finished fifth as Lafayette won the event. The only men to win points for the Brown and White were Wooters, who won the quarter mile, George Elliott, who ran first in the 120 yard high hurdles, and Herb Elliott, John Beriont, and Ken Bauder, who placed in the half mile and quarter, the pole vault, and the high hurdles, respectively. In the final event of the season, Lafayette beat the Lehigh runners by a score of 74-52. Wooters finished his senior year unbeaten in the quarter mile, while George Elliott again won the 120 yard hurdle event. The freshmen track squad won their three meets by decisive scores, beating the Swarthmore, Lafayette and Rutgers frosh. SQUAD: Back Row: Manager J. L. Sipp, E. M. Mortimer, R. W. Pugh, W. A. Clark, J. A. Smythe, Coach Morris E. Kanaly, T. L. Bushey, K. H. Rahn, C. D. Curtiss, R. E. Chamber- lain, Freshman Manager R. M. Ulmer. Front Row: D. L. Hume, R. E. Metius, R. S. Rumsey, G. E. Elliott, W. F. Boyer, Captain J. D. Wooters, A. A. Riemondy, J. N. Ambrogi, K. C. Bauder, M. P. Pearsall, J. Conforte. IN THE CANDIDS: The Relay team (Ambrogi, Pearsall, Wooters, and Marshall); Coach Kanaly; Wooters running the quarter; Captain Wooters. — V _« r  tennis LED BY Captain Marvin Kantrowitz, Lehigh ' s tennis team this past year com- pleted its schedule with the best winning average in the history of Lehigh tennis. The Brown and White netmen opened their season with a tour through the South. Although lack of practice caused many to be skeptical about the outcome, Lehigh swept the Southern matches, beating Wake Forest, Guilford, Washing- ton and Lee, Virginia Military Institute, and the University of Virginia. Return- ing home, this victorious team rolled on to further success in defeating a weak Albright combination, 9-0. Muhlenberg next felt the power of the strong aggrega- tion. Both teams had a record of fifteen straight wins before this eventful meet- ing, and, for the second year in a row, the Brown and White netmen put an end to the Mule ' s streak. The outstanding match was between Kantrowitz and Moates, but it was up to Bunning and Gray, winning in the final round, to cop the match, 5-4. Gettysburg next fell before our racquet wielders by a score of 8-1. The match with Penn State, which followed, drew great interest in that Bunning and Gray, two of Lehigh ' s mainstays, could not play because of illness. However, Lehigh came through on top, winning three of the single and all of the double matches. Manhattan was downed next before a rampant Lehigh squad, 6-3. Lehigh then faced the University of Pennsylvania in the outstanding match of the season, both teams having been undefeated previous to this contest. Kan- trowitz and Scott, the latter upsetting Bloom, the Philadelphia Indoor Champion, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2, won the only single matches, while Kantrowitz and Reber teamed up to beat Kilgus and Bloom in the only double ' s match Lehigh won. A strong Penn team, winning the remaining single and double matches, downed the fight- ing Engineers, 6-3, ending our winning streak at nineteen straight. After this match, Lehigh again picked up where they left off, Swarthmore, Rutgers, and Temple bowing to a vastly superior Brown and White team. In the last match of the season, our traditional rival, Lafayette, forfeited the game, Lehigh winning, 9-0. When the season had ended, Lehigh had won 14 meets, losing only one, for a fine average of .933. Captain Kantrowitz, with his con- spicuous and shining play all season, had stretched his streak to 28 consecutive wins. SQUAD: Back Row: F. E. Weise, H. E. Bunning, J. R. Gray, J. H. Norwood, Coach Fred- eric Mercur. Front Row: J. A. Marvin, Captain M. D. Kantrowitz, J. D. Scott, R. C. Reber. IN THE CANDIDS: Intramural Tennis matches at Steel Field; Coach Mercur; Captain Kantrowitz. 163 baseball LEHIGH ' S baseball team, under the leadership of Coach Paul Calvert and Captain Bill Loomis, started the 1941 season at Princeton. The Tigers won the opener, 6-1. Coming back to Bethlehem, the Brown and White batters were nosed out by Union, 5-4. The game was marred by two errors by the Lehigh infield. The Villanova Wildcats went on a five run spree in the top of the ninth and walked off the field ahead, 8-2. Carter and Stoehr were ineffective on the hill for the Lehigh nine. Manhattan was too powerful, winning 8-2 despite Goodman ' s fine relief pitching. Errors again paved the way for defeat. With Bill Loomis tak- ing over the pitching duties, Swarthmore was beaten for our first victory, 9-2. Against Temple, Lehigh went down to its fifth defeat in six starts. Carter again was no puzzle to the opposition and they pounded him from the mound with a 9-1 win. Ed Kister led the way for Lehigh with two hits out of four trips. Against Rutgers, the Calvertmen outhit their opponents by a 9-7 count but ended up on the short end of a 1 1-4 score. Errors proved the margin of victory. Muhlenberg got six unearned runs, and despite six Lehigh runs in the ninth, we were unable to tie the score, losing 1 1-10. At Dickinson we lost, 7-2, and at Ursinus, errors in the top of ninth gave the Collegeville batters a 10-9 victory. In this game, Bill Loomis hit his first home run of the year. The second win of the season came at the expense of Gettysburg. Carter, after a dismal year, finally found himself in this game and pitched the Lehigh nine to a 6-3 victory. The Brown and White team made it two in a row by beating the highly regarded Rutgers team 3-1 on Sub-freshman Day. Lafayette won 13-4 in the first of the three game series between the two teams. In the second game, Young blanked the Lehigh team on four hits, 5-0. Carter started the Muhlenberg game but was knocked out early. Whipple and Loomis finished with the latter getting credit for the win. The score was 7-6. Lafayette, with Young pitching, again shut out our team, 8-0, in the season finale. The freshmen, paced by Hendershot, Swayne, and Gold, had a fairly success- ful season with a record of 4 wins and 5 losses. 164 SQUAD: Back Row: Coach Paul Calvert, W. H. Carter, J. H. Milbank, R. E. Goodman, J. J. Duane, R. H. Forster, J. T. Smith, E. A. Kister, R. P. Whipple, Manager L. F. Dieringer. Front Row: R. C. Stoehr, C. E. Boyer, F. F. Roberts, Captain W. E. Loomis, H. H. Werft, R. W. Fuller, K. H. Silfies, D. W. Robinson. IN THE CANDIDS: Sacrifice! Coach Calvert; The bench. m 1 m0 1 1 w ,. ' , BRM M« J- M ■wi !2 ■  a  i ■lZ ' soccer THE 1 94 1 Brown and White soccer team under the coaching of Billy Sheridan opened its season against the Army at West Point. Art Over scored Lehigh ' s only goal in the second period. The two teams went into the final quarter tied at i-i, but in the final stanza Koslowski and Reddinger scored for the cadets and they emerged victorious by a 3-1 count. The next game was against Stevens at Steel Field and once more the opponents were the winners, this time by a 4—0 score. The work of Taverna, Stevens ' goalie, was particularly impressive. The Pennsylvania soccer team, in their game with the Brown and White booters, went off the field at half-time behind by the score of one to nothing; however, they won the game 7-1 with the total collapse of the Lehigh team in the last half. The team won its first game of the season at the expense of Rutgers in an overtime game by the score of 3-2. Art Over ' s second goal of the day broke the 2-2 tie and assured the Brown and White men their victory. In what proved to be one of the roughest games of the year, Lehigh lost to Cornell. One of the Cornell men was ordered off the field in the last minute of play for roughing Seigle in the Lehigh goal. The men from Ithaca won the game 2-0. The Haverford booters proved much too strong as they beat Billy Sheridan ' s boys by a 5-2 count. Art Over prevented the shutout with two goals in the final stanza. Against Swarthmore the Lehigh soc- cermen scored their second victory of the season. The game was a nip and tuck affair throughout and it was only in the closing minutes of the last quarter that Johnny Thurn, the Brown and White outside left, beat the Swarthmore goalie with a savage boot from in close. Princeton, last year ' s eastern champions, beat the Lehigh team by a 3-0 count. On two different occasions kicks by Brown and White hit the Princeton goalposts and bounced back onto the field of play. In the next to the last game of the year at Annapolis Navy won 4-0. In this game the referee lost his control of the game and the rough play of the midshipmen was a mar to the game. At one point Coach Sheridan went on the field in protest over the obvious dirty tactics of the opposition. Captain Anderson was injured early in the game in one of these melees. Lafayette copped the middle three champion- ship by eking out a 1-0 win in the last game of the year. Seigle was outstanding in the Lehigh goal ; many times he was left unprotected making sensational saves of hard drives. SQUAD: Back Row: Coach W. Sheridan, P. J. Berg, R. W. Link, H. J. Seigle, R. J. Berg, R. E. Hohman, J. S. Saylor. Second Row: R. B. Steele, J. D. Scott, J. O. Phillips, R. B. Ander- son, T. A. Birckhead, A. M. Over. Front Row: T. G. Summers, K. G. Swayne, J. A. Thurn, F. J. Dun igan, J. E. Donohue. IN THE CANDIDS: Two scenes of the Soccer team in action; Over scores for Lehigh. 167 swimming THE LEHIGH Athletic Department acquired the services of Gordon Chalmers, the swimming coach at Lafayette during 1940-41, to lead the Brown and White swimmers this year. The team opened its season against a strong Pennsylvania University aggregation. Dave Schaper was the only Lehigh swimmer to get a first, winning the hundred-yard free style in 56.5. The Penn team had too much strength and although Lehigh was able to take many seconds and thirds, Penn won the meet, 51-24. Against Temple, the Brown and White swimmers copped five first places and won the meet, 44-3 1 . We won the three-hundred yard relay, the 50 yard free style, the 100 yard free style, the 200 yard breast-stroke, and the 400 yard relay. Captain Moss and Schaper were high scorers. In the next meet against Fordham, Lehigh was nosed out, 39-36. Coach Chalmers ' men won five first places but could only garner three seconds. Moss and Schaper again led the Lehigh scorers. McKaig was particularly impressive in winning the dive which may prove very helpful in the Lafayette meet since Chalmers has been having trouble in that department. Travelling to Gettysburg, the Lehigh swimmers met a very weak Gettysburg team and romped off with a 50-2 1 victory. Lehigh won all but four races. In the 1 60 yard back stroke, Tom Ryan of the Bullets nipped Lehigh ' s Don Ryan by 5 10 seconds. The two boys are brothers. Swarthmore brought their swimming team to Taylor Gym Pool, and the Brown and White mermen emerged victorious a 44-43 score. The victory was somewhat greater than the score shows, with the Lehigh swimmers taking six firsts and using their second string men in the 400 yard relay. In the 220 yard free style event, Lehigh ' s sensational junior, Dave Schaper, set a new pool record in the good time of 2:29.5. This was the only pool record set so far this year. The team has yet to meet a strong Rutgers team, paced by Jerry Levin in the free style. The final dual meet of the season will pit Don Chalmers ' Lafayette aggregation against Gordon Chalmers ' Brown and White swimmers. The Lehigh Freshmen team has not had a very successful season from a won- and-lost standpoint, but there have been some good times; and a number of the freshmen show much promise for next year ' s varsity. 168 SQUAD: Back Row: Coach Chalmers, T. A. Lawson, E. K. Mulhausen, R. F. Moss, D. H. Schaper, J. D. Ryan, J. S. Levy, R. E. Metius. Front Row: C. H. McKaig, J. G. deGrouchy, B. D. Ferrell, H. H. Nelkin, F. H. Chidsey, J. B. O ' Hara, R. H. Marshall, T. L. Bushey. IN THE CANDIDS: McKaig goes off the board; Captain Moss and Coach Chalmers; Start of the race. -T $m $j% % yP% 1 : J L : . ' .mi ' I j ... -k :-4 wji ' T IF __ 7 « • m k ffi W w W V v jHBp rf ' ■jflpr ifc . . I la crosses THE LEHIGH lacrosse team under the coaching of Jim Meade, former Ail- American at Maryland, got its season under way against Lafayette. The Maroon were victorious on their own field by a 15-10 score. Lehigh traveled to Rutgers and the boys from the Raritan swamped the Brown and White, 12-1. Goalie Stockbridge did a fine job in spite of the score by handling seventy chances. Lynn prevented a shutout. The next match against Swarthmore, the Middle Atlantic champions, went badly for Lehigh; the Garnet won 1 1-1 with Lynn again pre- venting a whitewash. At Penn State, the team did better but could not break into the win column and went down to defeat, 12-5. Stevens also was too formidable and romped home with a 1 2-4 victory. The William L. Estes, Jr., Lacrosse trophy went to Lafayette when they eked out a 7-6 victory at Steel Field in the final game of the season. Lynn was prominent in the game by scoring four goals. golf club THE LEHIGH Golf Club opened its 1941 season against Swarthmore, and Coach Hutchinson ' s boys came home in front by a 9-0 score. The team travelled to Williams, and on a wind-swept course, the Little Three Champions beat Lehigh, yi 2 —iy 2 . In the opening match of the Middle Three championship against Rutgers, Lehigh emerged victorious with a decisive 7—2 win. Facing Wesleyan at Saucon Valley, the visitors won a closely fought match, 5-4. Once more the Brown and White team came home in front when they trounced Franklin and Marshall, 6 2-2 2. Lehigh took the Middle Three title by defeating Lafayette, 9-0. Even without Carpenter, who was confined with the measles, Lehigh was able to beat the Leopards severely. The team closed the season with a 6-3 vic- tory over Haverford. Haverford had only four men, and the score of the match was set at 3-3 by gentleman ' s agreement. LACROSSE SQUAD: Back Row: P. A. Rodgers, J. L. Loughran, W. B. Farrell, R. L. Murray, D. F. Gearhart, J. M. Stockbridge, P. J. Whalen, D. T. Steele, Coach Meade, Junior Manager G. W. Wolfsten. Second Row: W. H. Lindsay, B. R. Heinz, J. Adrian, R. B. Steele, R. W. Reese, I. L. Fisher, V. M. Anido. Front Row: W. A. Ernest, H. W. Lynn, F. N. Leitner, C. R. Conklin, R. E. Hohman, W. G. Bourne. IN THE CANDIDS: Captain Steele; Captain Ryan. GOLF SQUAD: D. W. Burke, P. Carpenter, R. F. Ryan, R. F. Sotzing, A. E. Jenkin, W. McClave. 171 cross country UNDER THE new coach, James Gordon, the cross country team this past year completed the season with one of the best records ever made by a harrier squad at Lehigh. The Brown and White aggregation opened its season with an away meet at Rutgers. Lehigh won, 25-30. Swarthmore was scheduled next, but a polio epidemic caused the meet to be cancelled and in its place an invitation to run in a double meet with West Chester State Teachers College and Temple was ac- cepted. The Engineers took second place in this meet, losing to the Teachers, 24-31, but beating Temple, 20-44. n a me t run at Muhlenberg, the harrier squad, taking second to eighth places, downed the Mules, 25-30. Haverford next fell victim to a strong Lehigh team, 20—37, an d by taking the first ten places in a dual meet with Lafayette, the Engineers downed the Maroon and White, 15-40. The season was brought to a close with the Middle Atlantic Conference Meet. Lehigh took second place, losing to Muhlenberg, and winning over Lafayette and Swarthmore. rijltj 172 THE PROSPECTS for the success of the rifle team this year are as good as those of last, when the Brown and White riflemen were Eastern Title holders and when four of the Engineers placed on the All-American Rifle Team — Dave Smith mak- ing the first team for his second year in a row, and three other men getting berths on the second team. Led by Smith and Kimberly, the squad so iar this year has lost only one match, that being to the United States Military Academy, by five points — the score being 1 389-1 384 in favor of the West Pointers. The Engi- neers took the Middle Three Title for the second consecutive year by defeating Rutgers and Lafayette, the teams having 1398, 1326, and 1259 scores respec- tively. Matches are still to be shot against Drexel, the University of Maryland, and the Naval Academy. On March 28, at Annapolis, under the direction of the American Rifle Association, the Lehigh sharpshooters will fire for the National Trophy. CROSS-COUNTRY SQUAD: Back Row: Coach J. A. Gordon, G. C. Stone, Manager R. H. Marshall, W. C. Walker, W. B. McClenachan. Second Row: R. W. Pugh, L. A. Schneider, H. L. Boyer, W. A. Clark, F. E. Smith. Front Row: Junior Manager J. M. Stockbridge, E. L. Diehl, O. E. Fox, C. N. Codding, R. D. Mussina. IN THE CANDIDS : The Cross-country team in action. RIFLE SQUAD: Back Row: J. B. Rader, E. W. Edwards, J. J. Deach, J. A. Ross, A. H. Morse, R. C. Jordan, R. E. Muery, L. A. Mosier, R. K. Eberts. Second Row: E. R. Vilie, W. G. Rankin, W. P. Varner, Captain C. E. Phillips, Colonel J. S. Leonard, Master Sergeant G. F. Gazda (coach), H. J. Olsen, J. F. Belcher. Front Row: T. P. Bradford, R. C. Boston, T. G. Scott, D. R. Smith (captain), J. A. Kimberley, A. W. Hemphill, F. A. Chidsey. s % 3% plllfy O A Ss n E Mi. |A- nlntt. 7 L ' ' -n 1 Vw hockey THE 1941-42 team opened the season against Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and was victim of two Penn goals within a minute in the second period. Penn won two to nothing. The second game of the season against St. Joseph found Lehigh on the long end of a 2-1 count. Joe Scott was credited with both goals. The team next travelled to Lake Placid to enter the annual winter sports tournament. In the first game, Williams beat the Brown and White Pucksters, 3-0 ; Union was beaten 4-1 ; and in a consolation round, M.I.T. vanquished Lehigh, 5-0. Hamilton College was played at Clinton, New York, as part of their Annual Winter Car- nival. Hamilton proved much too strong, winning 9-2. Returning to the Phila- delphia rink, Alex Wiggin scored two goals to defeat Drexel in an overtime, 2-1. The team next took a trip to Washington to play Georgetown. The Hoyas won, 3-1. LaSalle was beaten, 7-1. The team will complete its schedule against Penn State and F. M. fencing THE LEHIGH fencing team under the tutelage of Coach Marcel Cabijos opened its season against Drew University on February 7, winning 10-7. Captain Bright won four out of five while Georgopulo was sweeping his three matches with the foils. In the second match of the season, Lehigh beat St. Joseph College of Phila- delphia by an 1 1-6 score. St. Joseph brought only half of their usual team be- cause a number of their men had been called into the draft in recent weeks. Against the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, Lehigh emerged victorious, 14-13. Garrabrandt won all of his matches with the foils as did Bright with the saber. Haverford was the next opponent and handed Lehigh its defeat, 15-12, in a closely contested duel. Garrabrandt was again outstanding for Brown and White swordsmen. The team hopes to compete in the Eastern Intercollegiate Fencing Tournament to be held late in March. HOCKEY SQUAD: Back Row: B. V. Lawshe, W. D. Riddle, S. M. Brown, J. Johnson, R. C. Paul, Coach Simmons, C. C. Hilton, W. H. Hebrank, F. B. Kelley, H. C. Judd. Front Row: F. V. Camarda, J. E. Donohue, H. D. Sherwood, E. L. Frost, A. K. Wiggin, T. Q. Raney, R. L. Smith, G. Y. Murray. IN THE CANDIDS: Captain Wiggin; Coach Cabeljos and Captain Bright. FENCING SQUAD: Back Row: P. B. Georgopulo, Coach Cabijos, R. R. Bright, Professor Bartlett, R. A. Nicrosini, L. C. Bartlett, Manager D. E. Krebs. Front Row: A. E. Hartung, F. J. McGrath, W. A. Kuhar, A. E. Landesman, F. H. Rockett. 175 living groups THE THREE most important recepta- cles of Lehigh life are here shown: the beer mug not so much as an actuality as a symbol of college social life, which in- cludes much more than beer mugs; the scholarship cup representing both the concrete achievement, the prize won and the grade attained, and the ultimate shaping of the intellect which really constitutes education; and finally the death ' s-head as a reminder that, no matter how the student frater- nizes, he must finally depend upon him- self alone. 1 T —i fc • r i . : .: : ;:. : dormitories FROM THE very top of South Mountain to a point four miles out on the Bath pike the Lehigh living groups spread themselves among the city of Bethlehem. A modest dormitory was the first living group when the University was founded a little more than 75 years ago. Since that time the first dormitory has been changed to a class building, and four new dormitories, 29 fraternities, three living clubs, and a town group now accommodate the 1700 Lehigh students. Within the past year two campus fraternity houses burned, leaving eight which are now operating on the University grounds. The dormitories, however, are having new life with the recent construction of the first two of a series of seven. Of the other two dormitories, one was originally a brewery while Taylor House was the gift of Andrew Carnegie. The Town Group consists of all those students who are not members of fraternities or who do not live in the dormitories. The fraternities have the largest membership of the three groups and the dormitories the least. Although anticipated, it is doubtful whether a complete campus dormitory and fraternity set-up will be realized in the near future. 179 interdormitory council 1 80 THE INTERDORMITORY COUNCIL was formed in 1938. When Richards House went up that year, it became apparent that a governing body for the dormitories would be essential. George Albrecht, ' 39, representative of the dormi- tories in Arcadia, the student governing body, organized the first Interdormitory Council. One member from each section of the different dormitories is elected to a position on the Council to be the official representative of his living group. The purposes of the Interdormitory Council are: to provide a higher tribunal in which dormitory matters may be discussed, to carry on and develop more fully dormitory social 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 encourages high scholastic records by presenting to the dormitory section with the highest scholastic average a scholarship cup. Intramural trophies are given to the sections which excel in the various athletic contests. Trophies are given in football, baseball, basketball, wrestling, and bowling, as well as in many others. The champions of the dormitories play the winners in the Fraternity Leagues to determine the championship of the University. At the Fall and Spring Houseparties the Interdormitory Council sponsors a dance which is open to all students of the university. Although the Interdormitory Council is only four years old, it has made great progress in consolidating the formerly disunited dormitories. The council has set up a disciplinary committee, which is an organization sorely needed in the dormi- tories. At the beginning of the year the council drew up plans for the housing situation at Lehigh, but because of the war the plan was shelved for the duration, as the program could not be adapted to the accelerated course. As the semesters have been shortened the council has had considerable discussion on a room rent refund, and along with other student bodies has fought for more student repre- sentation. The officers of the council are: R. C. McMichael, president; W. T. Bostock, vice president; W. M. Spears, Jr., secretary; J. D. Van Blarcom, treasurer. INTERDORMITORY COUNCIL: Back Row: H. J. Olson, W. P. Varner, W. R. Kampfe, C. C. Ruffle, T. C. MacAllister. Third Row: H. T. Kalinoski, H. E. Foster, E. R. Springer, W. S. Dawless, L. O. Southgate, E. G. Evans. Second Row: Dr. C. G. Beardslee, W. M. Spears, R. C. McMichael, W. T. Bostock, J. D. Van Blarcom. Front Row: R. D. Munnikhuysen, C. H. Schumacher, R. N. Gusdorff, W. F. Peterson. IN THE CANDIDS: The Executive Committee; Interdormitory Council returns fraternity hospitality by giving a dance at Fall Houseparty. A W -« drinker houses DRINKER HOUSE, the newest dormitory to be added to the Greater Lehigh system, was opened to Lehigh students in the fall of 1940. The namesake of this house was Henry Sturges Drinker who was one of Lehigh ' s most illustrious sons. It has been said of the late Dr. Drinker in connection with his seventy year asso- ciation with the University that his life was Lehigh History in itself. Dr. Drinker, after graduating from Lehigh in 1871, started to work for the Lehigh Valley Railroad. In what little spare time he had, he studied law and, in 1882, he was made attorney for that company. In the depression of 1895-97, Dr. Drinker performed his first great service for the University by saving it from a complete collapse. If it had not been for his untiring efforts to obtain a land grant from the State of Pennsylvania, there would be no Lehigh University as we know it today. It was shortly after this episode that he laid plans for the alumni en- dowment fund which has put Lehigh on a firm financial footing. When Dr. Drown died in 1904, Dr. Drinker became the one logical man for the position of presi- dent of the new, struggling university. His policy and main aim was to have a centralized campus life. This feeling of his can be summed up by this statement he once made: What can possibly be better for our students than . . . to pro- mote college feeling and loyalty by bringing our men together. During his six- teen years in office, the Business College was created, the Arts and Engineering Colleges were enlarged, the endowment was trebled, and a three quarter million dollar debt was paid off. His associations with the University did not cease with his retirement in 1 92 1 . He was quite active and assisted the late Dr. Richards in many ways until his death in 1927. It was appropriate, therefore, that a dormitory be named after a man who had done as much for Lehigh and who believed, as Dr. Drinker did, that the way to promote college feeling and loyalty was to centralize the men on the campus. The seven sections into which the men of this dormitory are divided are as dis- DRINKER HOUSE I: Back Row: E. A. Orth Jr., ' 45; A. P. McCauley Jr., ' 45; R. H. Miller, ' 45; D. L. Jerman, ' 45; T. K. Begg, ' 45; J. H. Coleman, ' 45; R. W. Bradshaw, ' 45; A. F. Dubin, ' 45. Second Row: J. L. Miller, ' 44; A. L. Zanoni, ' 42; L. O. Southgate Jr., ' 42; J. A. Karas, ' 43; R. V. Firth Jr., ' 44; O. J. Laurenzi, ' 45. Front Row: E. R. Dawson, ' 45; N. L. Ross, ' 45; P. S. Rust, ' 45; L. M. Richards, ' 45; R. A. Bixler Jr., ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The Freshman loses his hair; the cleaner man comes ' round. DRINKER HOUSE II-A: Back Row: A. E. Zuckerman, ' 45; M. L. Blanket, ' 43; C. J. Herzer, ' 44; J. W. Woods, ' 43; H. A. Herold, ' 43; W. P. Telep, ' 43; H. B. Walton, ' 44. Second Row: P. R. Carl, ' 43; E. A. Hanudel, ' 42; H. J. Olson, ' 42; J. L. Reiley, ' 42; C. H. Savage, ' 43; R. M. Seward, ' 42. First Row: J. H. Thurn, ' 43; R. M. Coeyman, ' 45; G. E. Walsh, ' 44; W. J. Reusch, ' 45; W. J. Crowe, ' 44. 183 184 tinct and characteristic as any fraternity house. Each section has its own section president and, in general, the men of each section are drawn closer together by their mutual interests. For example, the men of Section IV-B are quite musically minded. Members of this group were in the Band, Orchestra, Glee Club, and the Collegians. Their section president, Bill Dawless, is the head of the Collegians. Their activities were not limited to the music world, however. Other men of this section have competed for the varsity basketball and baseball teams, while their freshmen have won numerals in basketball and baseball. The activities of the men of Section III-B were of a wide variety. Almost half of these men were competing for either the freshman or varsity track team. Other spring sports that claimed the services of these men were tennis and baseball. During the other seasons, Section III-B men represented Lehigh on the basketball, fencing, and freshman football teams. Other activities of the men were Mustard and Cheese, Newtonian Society, R. W. Hall Society, Phi Eta Sigma, Collegians, and R. W. Blake Society. Tau Beta Pi and Eta Kappa Nu rightfully occupied first place on the list of activities for Section III-A. Some men of this section were also in Alpha Phi Omega and Scabbard and Blade. Others were competing for positions on the Glee Club and the hockey and badminton teams. A varsity letterman in soccer was a member of Section 1 1- A while other members competed for the rifle, basket- ball, baseball, and tennis teams. This year, there were two Section II-A men in Scabbard and Blade, one in Pi Tau Sigma, and another on the Brown and White. As a result of the present crisis, several men left school to join various branches of the service. One of the outstanding achievements of the men of Section IV-A as a group during the past year, was their scholastic record. They were the fifth ranking living group out of the fifty-four groups at Lehigh. These men, however, found time for many extracurricular activities, their specialty being track. In this sec- tion, three men are on the varsity track squad, two men are on the freshman track team, another member is the varsity track manager, and still another man DRINKER HOUSE II-B: Back Row: R. S. Willard, ' 42; R. O. Williams, ' 44; B. L. Heimer, ' 43; R. M. Leiter, ' 43; B. W. Heerdt, ' 44; E. L. Blossom, ' 44; I. H. Schram, ' 44. Second Row: J. H. Dudley, ' 42; A. W. Clokey, ' 42; E. G. Evans, ' 42; H. W. Haines, ' 42; D. B. Sands, ' 42; J. E. Davis, ' 42. Front Row: J. R. Dove, ' 45; W. H. Cleaver, ' 45; P. C. Andrews, ' 45; H. B. Seifert, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Yay, eats man! Getting ready for a night on the books. DRINKER HOUSE III-A: Back Row: J. A. Gardella, ' 45; R. O. Havekotte, ' 45; R. C. Hayman, ' 45; R. G. Eitner, ' 42; L. F. Page, ' 44; A. R. Johansen, ' 44; F. H. Krause, ' 45; R. E. Street, ' 44. Second Row: F. P. Librizzi, ' 42; J. F. Arbogast, ' 42; W. M. Spears, ' 42; R. J. McGregor, ' 42; J. W. Needles, ' 42; J. A. Arnold, ' 42. Front Row: J. D. Deisler, ' 45; F. V. Camarda, ' 44; W. T. Bachman, ' 45; J. L. Piazza, ' 44; G. C. Tabor, ' 43. ivLf £, c$ m%. is on the cross country team. Section IV-A is also represented on the Brown and White and Epitome and in Newtonian Society. Two Section I men are in the Newtonian Society and others are very active in the local chapter of De Molay. In the short two year history of Drinker House, Section II-B has been out- standing in intramural sports. As a result of their enthusiasm along this line, Section II-B men have won their league championships in touch football, wres- tling, softbal l, and bowling. Last year, they won the all-dorm bowling cham- pionship. Individual honors of the men in this section included President of Scabbard and Blade and membership in Eta Kappa Nu. As last year was the first year that men had lived in Drinker, little was done toward organization of the house. However, this year great strides were taken to organize the dormitory in a systematic fashion. The unit of this structure is the section. The men of each section elect a section president who automatically becomes their representative on the Interdormitory Council. These seven presi- dents constitute the Drinker House Council, which acts as the governing body of the whole dormitory. This council is headed by a president who is elected from their number by the seven members of the council. This year the council president was Bill Spears. The affairs that are discussed and decided upon by this group are matters that concern the house as a whole, such as the running of house parties and various discipilinary actions. Of course, this body does not destroy or impair the individuality of the sections. Matters concerning the indi- vidual sections, such as the section budget and section social functions, are decided upon by the members of the section. Under this present set-up, Drinker House has a centralized and democratic governing board which operates smoothly and efficiently. With the building of Drinker House, a new era began in the lives of the dormitory men. The days of inadequate living facilities, unequal opportunities, and limited associations are gone. In their place, new opportunities to obtain a broader, more general education have been made available to the dormitory men. The many varied activities of the Drinker House men stand as evidence to DRINKER HOUSE III-B: Back Row: J. H. Wagner Jr., ' 45; C. G. Roth, ' 45; D. E. Wagner, ' 45; S. B. McElroy, ' 45; T. R. Winco, ' 44; I. R. Collmann, ' 44; F. W. Helms Jr., ' 45; T. C. Laube, ' 44; R. Laurencot, ' 46. Second Row: N. L. Wilson Jr., ' 43; R. E. Goodman, ' 42; R. D. Munnikhuysen, ' 42; R. J. Berg, ' 42; J. E. Donohue, ' 43; C. E. Bosserman, ' 44. Front Row: W. A. Mcintosh, ' 44; F. J. McGrath, ' 44; R. A. Friend, ' 45; B. W. Moore Jr., ' 45; J. H. Steinbuch, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The latest fad — outdoor showers! Shining the shoes and dreaming of the girl. DRINKER HOUSE IV-A: Back Row: E. L. Diehl, ' 44; H. P. Ponisi, ' 44; W. C. Beck III, ' 45; M. H. Schwartz Jr., ' 44; R. T. Hanger, ' 44; F. E. Wiley Jr., ' 45. Front Row: W. H. Bradford, ' 44; J. E. Kareha, ' 43; E. R. Springer, ' 42; L. M. Domeratzky, ' 45; G. J. Bleul, ' 44. 187 show just how these men are taking full advantage of the new horizons offered to them. Drinker House and its men are truly a great tribute to the late Dr. Henry Sturges Drinker. price houses PRICE HOUSE was the fourth dormitory to be opened on the Lehigh campus; but since two of the others, Christmas and Saucon Halls, have been turned over into classrooms it is the oldest building and has the most interesting history of any of the present dorms. The building was erected in 1855 and was intended for a brewery. After serving in this capacity for several years, it was converted into a hotel with a bar on the first floor. When, in 1915, it was made a school dormitory, it made no news at all. The Epitome of that year did not even mention the addition of another dormitory. In the first year of its existence as school property it was known under the name of Die Alte Brauerei. Then in 191 7 Die Alte Brauerei was changed in name to Price Hall in tribute to Henry R. Price, ' 70. But Price Hall ' s name was not yet settled. Last year in order to conform with the names of the new dorms it was changed again to Price House. In early days Price House men seemed addicted to luxurious surroundings. Early Epitome pictures show thick carpets, school pennants and cushions strewn with profusion throughout the rooms. However, men of Price House were not as soft as their surroundings indicated for they wasted no time in settling down to the serious matter of freshman hazing. Hazing in the dorms took on a color all of its own. Lehigh-Lafayette weekend took on added color, for each year the dorms have hung banners to the front of the house depicting in words and drawings of no uncertain meaning exactly what they think of Lafayette. Every year a heavy freshman guard is on duty around the banners, for Lafayette seems to deem this an insult above all others and every so often does its best to destroy the evidence. 188 DRINKER HOUSE IV-B: Back Row: J. H. Schmitt, ' 45; D. S. Johnson, ' 44; L. S. Willis, ' 45; T. C. Megas, ' 45; R. E. Harnisch, ' 44. Front Row: B. J. Egan, ' 44; G. M. Clark, ' 42; W. S. Dawless, ' 42; J. Schneider, ' 42- H. W. Korshin, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Discussing that problem on page squeegee; studying puts Price where it is. PRICE HOUSE: Back Row: E. P. Ernst, ' 45; E. A. Smith Jr., ' 45; J. H. Clark III, ' 45; L. H. Lempert, ' 44; A. H. Morse Jr., ' 44; R. J. Gill, ' 44; R- G. Tragus, ' 45. Second Row: R. B. Synder, ' 45; R. E. Gehr, ' 44; J. W. Matthews, ' 45; R. J. Skilton, ' 45; L. A. James, ' 45; F. W. Armstrong, ' 45; D. D. Smith, ' 46; S. W. Cunningham, ' 44. Front Row: E. L. Walter, ' 43; D. G. Sanders, ' 43; T. C. MacAllister Jr., ' 43; W. Gilmore Jr., ' 43; A. J. Santantonio, ' 43; C. R. Ingemanson, ' 44. Ml ja r_ i I i ■ ' ' M • T kVs 1 t.-. P Wm i 11 p t tE - -V ' ' ;; r i Jt. tz r - i if „ richards houses HIGH UP on the Lehigh campus stand today the first fruits of a great dream for the University. Richards and Drinker Houses, now alone but the nucleus of a projected quadrangle dormitory plan, reflect the growing interest of the Uni- versity in the partially non-academic life of its students, and its determination to provide them with a healthful and homogeneous background against which to mature. Richards House is named after Charles Russ Richards, sixth president of Lehigh. Dr. Richards was president from 1922 until 1935; under his direction the term Greater Lehigh grew from a goal to an adequate description of many phases of the institution. Tremendous improvements were made on the buildings and campus during Dr. Richards ' administration, and a solid Alumni support was organized for many academic a nd financial ventures. The greatest of Dr. Richards ' plans, however, was that for a new system of dormitories, seven in all, to be graded up South Mountain to the Lookout from approximately where Richards and Drinker Houses now stand. A complete three-dimensional scale model was made of the project and placed in a case in the Alumni Memorial building; but Dr. Richards during his stay at Lehigh saw no beginning of the plan. The money was not available, and in 1935 he fell ill and was forced to resign. Lehigh was still growing. Two years after president-emeritus Richards retired, President Williams suggested that some of the school ' s uninvested money be used in building the first of the proposed dormitories. The idea was approved by the Board of Trustees, and, after a re- consideration of the entire project in terms of long-range and slow building, it was decided to start on the dormitory which forms, in the plan, the north wing of the entire unit. Ground for Richards House was broken in 1937, and the dormitory was finished and ready for student occupancy in the fall of 1938. It cost three hundred thousand dollars. RICHARDS HOUSE I: Back Row: J. S. Smith, ' 43; R. L. Duncan, ' 43; J. Dunwoody, ' 43; R. E. Pollock, ' 43; W. C. Cosford, ' 43; J. H. Corson, ' 43; R. E. Coffman, ' 44. Third Row: R. C. Gordon, ' 42; L. E. Klein, ' 42. Second Row: D. C. Osborn, ' 42; W. B. Bowers, ' 42; W. P. Varner, ' 42; T. C. Mekeel, ' 42; D. Halbedl, ' 42. Front Row: L. A. Greenbaum, ' 45; J. B. Nicholson, ' 45; J. C. Beilman, ' 45; H. G. Harnish, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The eternal bull! Playing cards in the lounge. RICHARDS HOUSE II-A: Back Row: J. F. Duelly, ' 44; H. N. Reifsnyder, ' 44; G. Gaynor, ' 44; B. H. Mayer, ' 45; R. Walling, ' 43; W. E. Garland, ' 44; J. W. Caum, Grad.; E. P. Marx, ' 45. Third Row: H. W. Courtney, ' 44; F. S. J. McGuiness, ' 43; J. A. Krawchuck, ' 42. Second Row: W. A. Eisele, ' 42; R. L. Haney, ' 42; R. N. Gusdorf, ' 42; T. Saulnier, ' 42 ; F. R. Cloud, ' 42. Front Row: C. J. DeWan, ' 45; L. R. Gulick, ' 45; R. A. Little, ' 45; F. C. Hendrickson, ' 45. 191 The new dormitory was filled largely from the lower two classes, since dormi- tory juniors and seniors in Price and Taylor Halls were reluctant to sever their associations in those dormitories. Despite the comparative lack of tradition caused by this circumstance of population, Richards House has come in four years to fit well into the University scheme of things, and has come to take an active part in school and campus life. A great change in dormitory attitude was brought about by Richards House. With its completion, dormitory men realized that, for the first time at Lehigh, they would be in a position to compete reasonably successfully in school affairs with the fraternities. The Interdormitory Council was the official outcome of this feeling; the election of a Sophomore president from Richards House for the class of 1942, one of the many unofficial results. A feeling of solidity has been growing among dormitory men, and more and more of them have been en- couraged by increasingly strong sectional spirit and fellowship to participate in extracurricular activities, until now one finds dormitory men carrying their share of the leadership burden at Lehigh. Richards House, considered as a physical plant, is one of the finest dormitories in the East (as is its mate, Drinker House). Its construction is modern, and its style the pleasant and blending College Gothic. In this it matches Drinker House, the Library, and Packard Laboratory. Four stories high, Richards House con- tains besides living quarters a comfortable and spacious lounge (where inhabi- tants can often be seen following Culbertson far into the night), a game room, two visiting rooms and a soundproofed room for local musical talent. The rooms are singles and doubles, thus differing from the older Taylor and Price Houses, where suites predominate and where there are no common gathering places other than the suite rooms. A few ' apartments ' at either end of the building, how- ever, contain rooms similar to suite rooms. The eternal batting of the breeze, which seems as indispensable a part of Lehigh education as laboratories and sophomore comprehensives, takes place in Richards House in the double rooms; 192 RICHARDS HOUSE II-B: Back Row: H. W. Tilly, ' 44; H. B. Frey, ' 43; W. H. Plunkett, ' 45; H. C. Rice, ' 45; S. P. Goodwin, ' 45; H. F. Busch, ' 45. Second Row: H. O. Schroeder, ' 42; R. R. Macy, ' 42; J. L. Peterson, ' 42; J. C. Lampert, ' 42; J. O. Betterton, ' 42. Front Row: A. M. Miller, ' 42; A. M. Bardajgy, ' 44; R. P. Lampert, ' 45; R. J. Fittipaldi, ' 44; S. M. Ellsworth, ' 44; W. R. Wirths, ' 42. IN THE CANDIDS: The boys hash over the institution of marriage; someone ' s calling his dream girl. RICHARDS HOUSE III-A: Back Row: O. D. Summers, ' 44; R. K. Brown, ' 43; G. T. Roberts, ' 44; R. L. Gerhart, ' 44; J. P. Townsend, ' 43; L. W. Constantine, ' 43; P. Parr, ' 43; R. W. Halleck, ' 45. Second Row: H. C. Stieglitz, ' 43; J. H. Meyers, ' 45; R. H. Boll, ' 45. Front Row: R. R. Young, ' 42; C. L. Sturgis, ' 42; W. T. Bostock, ' 42; P. W. Saitta, ' 42; J. H. Bruen, ' 42. the sociological implications of the differences in structure between the old and the new dormitories have not yet fully been explored. The main social events of the Interdormitory Council follow the pattern set up by the Interfraternity Council : a ' house dance ' sponsored jointly with the Town Council is held each Houseparty, and an Interdormitory dance once a year, in the past two years also held in conjunction with the Town Council. Come House- party, the whole of Section I of Richards House is swept clean of its regular resi- dents, the section garnished to spotless perfection, and the Richards House dates given the rooms for the weekend. The boys, of course, sponge off the upper sec- tions, who in turn get their share of the rooms. This past year several informal dances have been held in the lounge, these events corresponding to the house dances of the fraternities. The organization of Richards House is similar to that of the other Lehigh dormitories. The 144 members are organized into seven sections, there being one on the first floor and two on each of the other three. Each section has a presi- dent, usually a senior now that Richards House has matured with the class of 1942; a secretary, a treasurer, an athletic representative, and a sophomore rep- resentative, who is responsible for the handling and care of the freshmen. The president is the section ' s representative to the Interdormitory Council. Although Richards House, because of its youth perhaps, has not stood so high scholastically as Taylor and Price Houses, its record is neither low nor depressing : the average of the whole dormitory has always been well above that of the Uni- versity, and individual sections have already ranked in the upper ten. Section I is well represented in University activities, having members in the Sportsmen ' s Club, Mustard and Cheese, Pi Delta Epsilon, the second-semester president of the Chemical Society and the manager of the Ski Club, and men working on the Brown and White and the Bachelor, the fiction editor of the latter being a Richards I man. Section II-A has for its president the Sophomore president of the Senior class, RICHARDS HOUSE III-B: Back Row: R. A. Wiley, ' 44; F. L. Villa, ' 44; J. W. Marini, ' 45; K. H. Rahn, ' 42; H. R. Neureuter, ' 45; A. T. Robb, ' 43; C. A. Schweitzer, ' 44; R. E. Meury, ' 44. Third Row: L. R. Little, ' 45; S. R. Rochester, ' 45. Second Row: G. K. Sebold, ' 42; J. D. McClay, ' 42; W. R. Kampfe, ' 42; F. H. Rockett, ' 42; R. W. Samer, ' 42. Front Row: J. L. Richards, ' 45; A. G. Grise, ' 45; F. von Bergen, ' 45; C. B. Austin, ' 45; D. D. Smith, ' 46. IN THE CANDIDS: Eating together; just sitting around. RICHARDS HOUSE IV-A: Back Row: G. P. Haven, ' 43; D. W. Green, ' 44; C. M. Wetzel, ' 43; W. S. Titlow, ' 43; A. D. Corbett, ' 44; B. C. Wilcox, ' 45. Third Row: W. B. Schramm, ' 43; R. C. Jordan, ' 44. Second Row: J. R. Mercer, ' 43; R. C. Gebert, ' 42; R. C. McMichael, ' 42; R. Wittman, ' 43; R. E. Rowand, ' 42. Front Row: F. X. Carlin, ' 45; D. Burdick, ' 46; L. Long, ' 46; E. Abell, ' 45. 195 who is also in Mustard and Cheese and Lambda Mu Sigma; other men have been active in football and fencing, on the Brown and White, and in Tau Beta Pi. Section II-B has a representative on the Junior Prom committee, and men in the various course societies, the DeMolay Club, and other organizations. A presi- dent of Phi Eta Sigma lives in Richards III-A, and the section boasts 5 members in the Sportsmen ' s Club besides men in Lambda Mu Sigma, Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, Tone, the Glee Club, and the Newtonian Society. The Camera Club, Canterbury Club and E. W. Brown Astronomical Society all have their presidents (in the same man!) in Richards I II-B, where also live the chairman of the S.C.L. Series Committee and members of Mustard and Cheese, Scabbard and Blade, Newtonian Society, Glee Club, Yachting Club, Ski Club and the swimming team. In Richards IV-A a man is president of the Metallurgical Society, the Interdormitory Council and vice-president of Arcadia, while another man is president of the R. W. Hall Society. Richards IV-B has members of the staff of the Epitome and of the varsity fencing team, Cut and Thrust, and the manager of varsity basketball. taylor houstj TAYLOR HOUSE is Andrew Carnegie ' s gift to Lehigh University. Charles L. Taylor, ' 76, a loyal alumnus of Lehigh, was instrumental in securing the money for the new dormitory when he discussed with Carnegie the lack of adequate living quarters here at school. So, when Andrew Carnegie donated the money, he accomplished a two-fold service. He did Lehigh a great service and also satisfied his desire to have Lehigh give some recognition to his friend and former business partner, Charles Taylor, by naming the new dormitory Taylor Hall. 196 RICHARDS HOUSE IV-B: Back Row: R. E. Byrne, ' 44; W. A. Brooks, ' 42; D. N. Curtiss, ' 45; W. G. Rankin, ' 44; J. G. Cella, ' 44; E. B. Backensto, ' 43; R. H. Bartholomew, ' 42; T. R. Pope, ' 45; J. Getlinger, ' 45. Second Row: C. Creidenberg, ' 42; R. A. Nicrosini, ' 42. Front Row: R. Metzner, ' 42; G. F. Minde, ' 42; H. E. Foster, ' 42; E. McC. Biggs, ' 42. R. C. Pope, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Getting ready for the evening; President Nitti discusses affairs or . . . TAYLOR HOUSE: Back Row: O. C. Holbrook, ' 45; C. L. Lytle, ' 43; H. Stokes, ' 45; T. L. Webster, ' 45; J. C. Bennett, ' 45; W. W. Albert, ' 45; J. R. Beven, ' 44. Second Row: R. M. Leitner, ' 44; D. Y. Freed, ' 44; R. G. Dittig, ' 45; G. H. Binns, ' 45; F. S. Vondersmith, ' 45; A. L. Ferrel, ' 45; M. J. Mezzulo, ' 45. Front Row: H. F. Soule, ' 44; C. V. Davis Jr., ' 44; J. J. Nitti, ' 42; P. A. Sweet, ' 43; H. H. Ockleman, ' 44. c c s. ■ !■ Taylor Hall was originally designed to face up the hill from the campus, but these plans were modified, probably because of construction difficulties, so that the building would face downhill. The building itself is unique in the fact that it was one of the first all concrete constructions to be put up in this section of the country. So much difficulty was encountered that outside contractors with experience in concrete were called in. The building was finally completed suc- cessfully, and today, after more than thirty years of hard usage, it still stands as a memorial to Andrew Carnegie and Charles Taylor. Taylor House, as it is now named, has been changed very little since the time of its construction. However, one of the few changes made met with some disap- proval by Taylor inmates. In 1934 the partitions between the sections were re- moved, causing the destruction of several suites on each floor and the creation of many new single rooms. The upperclassmen were heartily disgusted with this move, since it made the dormitory a single unit instead of five separate, warring factions. It is now considered to have been a very wise move because of the feeling of unity created by the change. Today, Taylor House, which houses about 135 students, is still divided into five distinct living groups. Each of these sections elects a president, secretary- treasurer, and athletic representative as prescribed by the Interdormitory Coun- cil. Each group has a membership in the Interdormitory Council, and this membership enables each section to have its say in matters concerning dormitory problems. This year, for the first time, Taylor has an advisory body composed of the presidents of the dormitory sections. These men meet to discuss affairs that are of importance in the running of the dormitory. Life at Taylor is, in a large part, similar to fraternity life. The freshmen are TAYLOR HOUSE B: Back Row: J. B. Solly, ' 45; M. W. Bellis, ' 44; W. E. Bellinger, ' 43; F. T. Brundage, ' 42; P. Lutters, ' 42; C. T. Beardsley, ' 42; J. B. Rutherford, ' 45. Fourth Row: C. Neuendorffer, ' 43; K. C. Bauder, ' 42; R. M. Luckring, ' 42; W. J. Meikle, ' 42; L. W. Dieffen- bach, ' 43; W. E. Gheen, ' 42; L. H. Neill, ' 45. Third Row: R. T. Rospond, ' 44; J. M. Roach, ' 42; V. F. Grasso, ' 43; I. W. Gilmore, ' 44; D. M. Lorimer, ' 44; K. G. Swayne, ' 44; S. H. Vogt, ' 42; R. M. Maiden, ' 42. Second Row: I. B. Remsen, ' 42; J. H. Mueller, ' 43; C. H. Schumacher, ' 42; R. E. Gengenbach, ' 42; A. B. Brown, ' 42; J. P. Allen, ' 42. Front Row: E. K. Cumming, ' 45; R. K. Keyser, ' 45; G. H. Kocyan, ' 44; J. M. Shaffer, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Section B enjoys a song-fest; the eats concession is a good place to talk. TAYLOR HOUSE C: Back Row: W. C. Knight, ' 44; R. R. Dragone, ' 44; G. V. Carroll, ' 43; W. T. Buhrig, ' 43; C. A. Kendziora, Jr., ' 44; R. D. Gilmore, ' 44. Third Row: J. A. Kimberley, ' 42; B. C. Le Blanc, Jr., ' 43; H. Nestleroth, ' 43; J. F. Lucker, ' 44; R. J. Fisher, ' 43; J. A. Simpson, ' 44; W. R. Hoerner, ' 43. Second Row: A..L. Thalhamer, ' 42; D. A. Harris, ' 42; J. D. Van Blarcom, ' 42; J. B. Loucks, ' 42; J. H. Boucher, ' 42. Front Row: V. T. Vitelli, ' 45; W. A. Bradford, ' 45; E. Artim, ' 45; W. E. Gould, ' 45. 199 there to run your errands, mail your letters, and answer the phone. They provide entertainment at the section banquets; they have an initiation period to go through much like the one fraternity freshmen suffer. Men at Taylor enjoy the advantages of impersonality, the joys of almost perfect freedom; for in the dormitory thirty men do not constitute a special group. There is more mingling among the different dormitories than there is among the different fraternities, for the average dormitory man has many friends in each of the four dorms. Taylor House men are justly proud of the general scholastic average of their house, for it has always been extremely high. In fact, several times individual sections have led the university in scholastic rating. Taylor men are listed among the members of Tau Beta Pi and Phi Betta Kappa. Proud indeed is Taylor House of its men in campus activities, for the members of this dormitory have been constantly active in extracurricular fields, including publications, music, and other organizations. Intramural sports have built up great rivalry between the sections in the dorm. The Interfraternity Council has helped out this dormitory spirit by donating trophies for the winners of intramural sports. Taylor House has many men participating in freshmen and varsity sports, too. This, then, is a picture of Taylor House, a typical Lehigh dormitory. Things have changed since its beginning days, for no longer is the dormitory boy the school ' s forgotten man. The days are gone forever when he was set away in a little niche of limited activities and societies. Today his dorm is a member of a powerful alliance, the Interdormitory Council, so that he is now on equal footing with the once all-powerful fraternity man. TAYLOR HOUSE D: Back Row: J. M. Gladden, ' 45; K. A. Scott, ' 45; S. W. Reid, ' 42; E. D. Latimer, ' 42; W. H. Clark, Jr., ' 43; V. E. Schermerhorn, Jr., ' 43. Fourth Row: P. M. Thrasher, Jr., ' 43; K. W. Amish, ' 45; J. Kellett, ' 42; A. E. Roslund, ' 44; A. H. Thomson, ' 44; R. B. Williams, ' 45. Third Row: D. B. Parish, ' 43; J. C. Fitch, ' 44; R. W. Sauer, ' 43; J. A. Ross, ' 44; H. W. Richards, ' 43; W. S. Tomkinson, ' 43; W. F. Hoffman, ' 45. Second Row: F. S. Notlte, ' 42; J. Adrian, Jr., ' 42; N. J. Wilhelmy, ' 42; H. T. Kalinowski, ' 42; H. Rasmussen, ' 45; W. R. Woodruff, ' 42. Front Row: H. Klapper, Jr., ' 45; C. H. Peterson, ' 45; W. E. Hoffman, ' 45 ; V. R. Pittala, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Who holds the winning hand? Eating supper at Lamberton Hall. TAYLOR HOUSE E: Back Row: R. E. Hohman, ' 44 H. D. Moll, ' 43; W. E. Miller, ' 44; J. H. Mueller, ' 43; D. J. Carrigan, ' 44; C. Christman, ' 44. Third Row: M. G. Arsove, ' 43; C. S. Bennett, ' 43; C. F. Fehnel, Jr., ' 43; F. Bauer, ' 43; R. Wright, Jr., ' 44; R. O. Jensen, ' 43; H. C. Leifheit, ' 43; H. H. Otto, Jr., ' 43. Second Row: J. J. Matzko, ' 42; J. S. Nolf, ' 43; D. W. Kurtz, ' 42; C. C. Ruffle, ' 42; G. V. Holby, ' 42; A. H. Conklin, ' 42. Front Row: C. H. Foster, Jr., ' 44; H. B. McCurdy, ' 45; D. C. Shewmon, ' 45; G. F. Keller, ' 44. 200 1, .1 v _ ■ s P WW .--le-nA gsHpMfl |H K f ; i 1 i i ' m§ ' J8P . W P ' fraternities THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL was formed in the spring of 191 9. As stated in the constitution the purposes of the Interfraternity Council are to promote a more intimate friendship between the various fraternities and the student body, to develop closer relationships among the fraternities at Lehigh by means of interfraternity athletics and affairs, to lend a wider support to all fraternity functions, and to attempt further to promote the welfare of the University in general. In carrying out these purposes the Interfraternity Council sponsors one of the leading social events of the year, The Interfraternity Ball, which this year featured the orchestra of Harry James; it also approves the date of houseparties. The Council encourages interfraternity athletics and awards many cups and trophies as prizes. One of the most important duties of the council is to establish and enforce rules for rushing during the period allotted for that purpose. For identification of picture see page 401. 203 alpha chi rho ALPHA CHI RHO was founded at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, on June 4, 1895. Although a cautious policy has dictated its expansion, it now comprises 18 active chapters and more than 5,000 alumni members. The Lehigh chapter, Phi Mu of Alpha Chi Rho, was originally a local fraternity by the name of Theta Delta Psi; it was founded prior to 1895. Petitioning for admit- tance to the national organization, the local was admitted to the national fraternity in 1918. Phi Mu has occupied four houses since its reorganization; the present house is at the corner of Market and Linden streets. It possesses a spacious porch with Doric columns. Two years ago the custom of giving a Christmas dinner and party for the benefit of the underprivileged children of Bethlehem was started by Alpha Chi Rho. Since its inception, this custom has been adopted by several other Lehigh fraternities. The Phi Mu chapter publishes at the end of the school year a pamphlet, Musings, containing alumni news, home chapter news, and pic- tures and descriptions of the graduating seniors. An important date on the Alpha Chi Rho social calendar is the annual exchange dance with the Phi Phi chapter at Philadelphia ' s University of Pennsylvania. The Lehigh chapter also holds a Christmas dance each year, as well as a house banquet. Members of Alpha Chi Rho represent the chapter and the University on the soccer, swimming, rifle and freshman football teams. The manager of the latter sport, as well at the junior manager of the soccer team, is a Phi Mu. Representatives of the fraternity are found in the Sportsman ' s club, Scabbard and Blade — honorary advanced R. O. T. C. society — and in many course societies. The house participates in the regular intramural programs. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. S. Helthall, ' 45; R. W. Sexton, ' 45; J. D. Williams, ' 45; H. R. Maack, ' 44; P. C. Smith, ' 43; P. A. Thomas, ' 43; A. J. Smith, ' 45; R. L. Walker, ' 43. Second Row: K. I. Day, ' 45; C. F. Moore, ' 44; K. H. Norris, Jr., ' 43; R. C. Haas, ' 45; R. L. Hill, ' 45; R. J. Pritchard, ' 45; P. W. Sanders, ' 44; W. W. Wiley, ' 44; T. K. Begg, ' 45. Front Row: J. H. Burrus, II, ' 44; D. M. Haire, ' 42; D. R. Smith, ' 42; A. W. Foster, ' 42; H. W. Boynton, ' 42; J. D. Scott, ' 42; E. I. Shuttle- worth, ' 43. IN THE CANDIDS: Ping-pong in the basement; three men on a magazine. 204 I MM ' IP™ alpha kappa pi ALPHA KAPPA PI was founded as a local fraternity, Phi Delta Zeta, at the Newark College of Engineering in Newark, N. J., on January i, 1921. Four years later Phi Delta Zeta met with another local fraternity, Alpha Kappa Pi, of Wagner College, Staten Island, N. Y., with the purpose of joining the two locals together to make a national fraternity. The new fraternity received the name held by the Wagner College local, and rapidly expanded, having now twenty-eight chapters. The Nu chapter of Alpha Kappa Pi originated in 1927 as Howard Hall. Two years later the local group, finding their aims similar to those of the national fraternity, petitioned for membership, and on the following February 1, Nu chapter was installed at Lehigh. Alpha Kappa Pi men at Lehigh have a distinguished record of participation in athletics and other fields of extra-curricular activity. Men of this house rep- resent the University in several sports: three members of the football team, a varsity wrestler, and lettermen in cross country, basketball, and track are brothers. Capable musically as well as in athletics, members of the fraternity are included in the Glee Club and in the Symphony Orchestra. Other campus activities in which the Alpha Kappa Pi ' s are participating include debating, the International Relations Club, and the Newtonian Society. Alpha Kappa Pi members are taking part in the service program of Alpha Phi Omega. Members of the fraternity have displayed leadership in the capacities of the presidencies of the Army Ordnance Association and of the Debating So- ciety. A. K. Pi ' s have been active in many phases of the Lehigh intramural sports program. Among other social activities may be listed the chapter ' s annual formal dance. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: W. C. Stoeckle, ' 44; E. J. Gsell, ' 44; R. B. Hendrick, ' 44; J. E. Devitt, ' 43; R. D. Moyer, ' 44; C. L. Liebau, ' 43; F. R. O ' Neill, ' 44; W. B. Hinman, ' 43; L. A. Mosier, ' 44; R. C. Hopkins, ' 43. Second Row: L. H. Miller, ' 42; C. W. Holyoke, ' 42; J. N. Ambrogi, ' 42; E. T. White, ' 42; H. L. Boyer, ' 42; H. V. Donohoe, ' 42; J. F. Pfeffer, ' 42. Front Row: W. C. Waltman, ' 45; J. P. Holyoke, ' 45; H. C. Rafetto, ' 45; W. S. Graham, ' 45; E. L. Garrabrandts, ' 45; F. R. Huth, ' 45; R. R. Shepherd, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Call it a bull-session candid; A. K. Pi ' s enjoying their dinner. 207 alpha tau omega ALPHA TAU OMEGA, which now claims ninety-four active chapters in col- leges and universities in the United States, was founded at Virginia Military Institute, in Lexington, on September u, 1865, and was incorporated as a recognized body four years later. At first primarily a southern fraternity, the organization branched northward in the 1880 ' s with the founding of a chapter at the University of Pennsylvania, and, in 1882, the institution of the Penn- sylvania Alpha Rho chapter at Lehigh, the second chapter of the fraternity north of the Mason-Dixon line. Strangely enough, the Pennsylvania Alpha Rho chapter of Alpha Tau Omega was also the second national fraternity to have a chapter at Lehigh. Permanent residence was not achieved at first by Alpha Tau Omega, the members moving from house to house in town in an effort to find some place suitable for the nature and activities of the chapter. Alumni support was forth- coming, however, and in 191 6 the Pennsylvania Alpha Rho organization re- ceived sufficient aid for them to have constructed on the campus the chapter house now used. A. T. O. ' s have always has especial interest in sports, and are well represented on Lehigh ' s athletic teams. The captain and the manager of the hockey team are members of this fraternity, as is the manager of the golf team. Other A. T. O. ' s are on the squads and teams of lacrosse, soccer, wrestling, rifle and football. Pennsylvania Alpha Rho has men who are members of Omicron Delta Kappa, honorary leadership society; Newtonian Society; the University Glee Club, and Scabbard and Blade. The president of Alpha Kappa Psi, honorary business fraternity, and the secretary of the Interfraternity Council are both A. T. O. ' s. The various members of the house actively participate in intramural athletics. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: P. B. Marsden, Jr., ' 45; W. Bernard, ' 45; D. F. Davidson, ' 45; R. K. Bleser, ' 44; H. C. Judd, ' 45; L. P. Deffaa, ' 45. Third Row: S. L. Hammond, ' 44 ; B. V. Lawshe, ' 44; G. Y. Custer, ' 44; J. K. Cochran, ' 44; W. R. Dix, ' 44; W. Trappe, Jr., ' 44; C. R. Conklin, Jr., ' 44. Second Row: R. L. Bird, ' 43; A. K. Wiggin, ' 42; R. C. Paul, ' 42; R. F. Ryan, ' 42; J. H. Milbank, ' 42; R. M. Baker, ' 42; R. Weller, ' 43. Front Row: J. H. Moore, ' 45; D. R. Mearns, ' 45; H. J. Haslam, ' 45; H. E. Tomlinson, Jr., ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: These things are popular in the clubs; Wiggin and Paul caught by the camera. 208 R ?. : e£ in IM  . ' Fffl Fff. ' I 3 1 P v ' « n J  v beta kappa BETA KAPPA fraternity, after its founding at Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota, in October, 1901, expanded to western and mid-western colleges and universities. It began an eastward expansion in 1925 and now is composed of over twenty-five active and ten alumni chapters. Beta Kappa ' s history at Lehigh began in the fall of 1927 when an organization of undergraduates was formed by a group who did not wish to have fraternity activity interfere with their studies. The next spring the organization was made a local fraternity. It was called Omega Phi Sigma, and the following fall it obtained a house on Montclair avenue. The original purposes proved successful, for it ranked first in scholarship in five out of the eleven semesters as the only local at Lehigh. The continued success of the local chapter was sufficient to cause a petition to Beta Kappa to be granted in 1934. On May 19 of that year Omega Phi Sigma was made the Alpha Sigma chapter. The same year the house moved to 821 Delaware Avenue, but rapid growth forced them to move to 805 Delaware Avenue, the present location of the fraternity. Beta Kappa ' s are in varsity football, baseball, and track. The fraternity also has men on the rifle team, freshman track, and freshman basketball. Members are represented on the Brown and White, Newtonian Society, Alpha Phi Omega, Band, and Sportsman ' s Club. The business manager of Mustard and Cheese, a member of the Interfraternity Ball committee, and the chairman of the University Rushing Committee are also members of the Alpha Sigma chapter. An alumni chapter of the local fraternity, binding together all graduates, acts as an advisory council for the undergraduates. During the past year the Lehigh chapter strength- ened itself by the purchase of the chapter house, thus enjoying security which few off-campus houses possess. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. C. Slutzker, ' 45; R. B. Morison, ' 45; R. H. Miller, ' 45; L. F. Page, ' 44; V. R. Tomaselli, ' 45; F. W. Bloecher, ' 45; R. F. Watson, ' 45; E. R. White, ' 45. Second Row: S. A. Bacskay, ' 44; J. M. Cordrey, ' 44; W. T. Buhrig, ' 43; L. O. King, ' 43; R. C. Stoehr, ' 42; T. F. Humphrey, ' 45; T. P. Bradford, ' 43; E. R. Velie, ' 45. Front Row: L. D. Larson, ' 43; A. F. VonBlock, ' 43; J. F. Musante, ' 42; J. B. Hill, ' 42; O. W. Cooke, ' 42; G. W. Houston, ' 43; D. W. Robinson, ' 43. IN THE CANDIDS: Advertisement for Rum-Maple: Two Beta Kaps in candid pose. 211 beta tbeta pi BETA THETA PI was the first of the triad formed at Miami University, Ox- ford, Ohio. Founded in 1837 by John Reilly Knox and seven other undergradu- ates, it was the first fraternity to be organized west of the Alleghenies. Although secret societies were banned at Miami, Beta Theta Pi grew until it now has over eighty active chapters, under the authority of a board of directors. The Lehigh chapter was begun through the influence of a transfer student from the Randolph-Macon chapter. With two other transfers from Dickinson and Bethany Colleges he built up a local organization and petitioned the national Beta Theta Pi. The petition was granted, and in 1891 the Beta Chi chapter was installed at Lehigh. A small house on West Fourth street served as the first chapter home. In 1902 the rapid enlargement of the chapter made it necessary to purchase a more suitable house. This house, located on Wyandotte street, was occupied by the fraternity for the next sixteen years. After another move, this time to East Church street, the fraternity built a house in Sayre Park, completing it in 1926. Beta Theta Pi men have been particularly prominent in athletics, especially in wrestling. Both the captain and the manager of this year ' s wrestling team are members of Beta Theta Pi. The varsity and junior managerships of football are held by Beta Theta Pi ' s. Members of the chapter are on the tra ck, soccer, and baseball teams. But the Beta ' s do not concentrate on sports to the exclusion of other activities. There are members in several campus honoraries, including Omicron Delta Kappa, Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, and Alpha Kappa Psi. Other members, on the staff of the Brown and White and in Mustard and Cheese, round out the Beta list of activities. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: F. Winter, ' 45; E. R. Dawson, ' 45; D. R. Lowrey, ' 44; S. C. Pruett, Jr., ' 44; A. C. Mermann, ' 44; H. H. Stirling, Jr., ' 45; B. M. Peacock, ' 44; J. J. Deach, Jr., ' 44. Third Row: J. J. Lotz, ' 45; W. P. Snyder, ' 44; P. L. Reiber, ' 44; E. Jones, ' 44; D. Coles, ' 44; F. F. Roberts, ' 42; W. H. Lindsay, Jr., ' 42; R. H. Brenneman, ' 42; E. W. Palmer, ' 42. Second Row: W. D. Gorman, ' 43; R. Brune, ' 42; N. R. Clark, ' 42; R. S. Struble, ' 42; J. P. Larkin, III, ' 42; R. F. Forshay, ' 42; C. G. Thorn- burg, Jr., ' 42; J. C. Lampert, ' 42. Front Row: F. W. Williams, Jr., ' 45; K. B. Wiss, ' 45; R. J. Given, ' 45; E. J. Downing, ' 45; G. W. Meyer, ' 45; R. P. Lampert, ' 45; J. A. Davis, Jr., ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Quarantine keeps the Betas near home; Clark plays some record rhythms. 212 nrnr WW IH $sm$f- L. Bf hi phi c THE PRESENT Chi Phi fraternity was founded fifty years after the founding of the society from which it takes its name. The latter was begun in 1824 at the College of New Jersey, which later became Princeton University. This order split up during the Civil War into northern and southern groups and later re- formed, merging with two other orders to produce the present Chi Phi fraternity. Chi Phi has the distinction of being the first Lehigh fraternity. Prior to its affiliation with the national fraternity the group was known as the Calumet Club, a dinner club consisting of men with similar interests. The Lehigh, or Psi, chapter was installed in 1872 in the fraternity rooms at Second and New streets. For two years Chi Phi was the only fraternity existing at Lehigh. After a con- tinual search for a suitable location the fraternity established its present home on the campus in 1923. Many well-known sites in Bethlehem were once locations of the fraternity. The Moravian Book Shop, the Washington Republican Club, the Post Office, and the Union Bank and Trust Company were all at one time occupied by Chi Phi. In athletics the Chi Phi ' s main interest is fencing. Three team members, including the captain, are Chi Phi ' s. Cut and Thrust has three Chi Phi ' s, and the president of the society is a Chi Phi. The Psi chapter also has men on the varsity wrestling, baseball, rifle, hockey, and swimming teams. The swimming team and the freshman football team have Chi Phi managers. Chi Phi members are also active in freshman football, Mustard and Cheese, and Brown and White. In honoraries Chi Phi is represented by two men in both Scabbard and Blade, and Alpha Kappa Psi. This year the house began the custom of recognizing achieve- ment among its members by a senior plaque honoring the man in the outgoing class who has done the most for the chapter. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. G. de Grouchy, ' 45; H. M. Lattre, ' 45; R. R. Ferguson, ' 45; E. L. Leet, ' 44; J. R. Bullock, ' 45; J. D. Nicolaides, ' 45; J. F. Hannon, ' 45. Third Row: H. W. Lynn, ' 44; C. E. Lehr, ' 44; F. A. Chidsey, Jr., ' 43; A. N. Bugby, Jr., ' 44; V. E. Smith, ' 42; J. H. Callahan, ' 44; H. K. Wrench, ' 44; G. H. Froebel, ' 44. Second Row: J. G. de Grouchy, ' 43 ; D. E. Gregory, ' 43 ; C. A. Stearns, Jr., ' 43 ; R. L. Heyinger, ' 42 ; R. R. Bright, ' 43; H. H. Corwin, ' 43; C. L. Finch, ' 43. Front Row: R. E. Penni- man, ' 45; R. Carlson, ' 45; R. L. Owens, ' 45; T. J. Porter, ' 45 ; W. A. Cather, ' 45; F. B. Kelly, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Chi Phi ' s have a record player too; also some trophies. 215 chi psi CHI PSI fraternity was founded at Union College in 1 84 1 . Two years later the group acquired the nickname of Pirates through the execution for mutiny of one of its members. The fraternity has grown so that it now has twenty-five chapters in the United States. The nucleus of the present Lehigh chapter was a group of nine undergraduates who held meetings dealing with literary work in the rooms of its members. The Alpha Beta Delta chapter was formed in 1 894, and moved into a house on Seneca street. The first Chi Psi lodge was built in Sayre Park in 191 5. Last fall the lodge was partly destroyed by fire, with damages of almost $40,000. Plans were immediately made for the reconstruction of the house, the University offering to begin the job with its workmen. Tem- porary headquarters were established at the Hotel Bethlehem; shortly afterward the chapter obtained a residence on West Broad street, where they intend to remain until the original lodge is rebuilt. The Lehigh chapter has been prominent in campus leadership, with a man in Omicron Delta Kappa, one in Tau Beta Pi, two in Cyanide, and a member, the treasurer, in Pi Delta Epsilon. Chi Psi ' s are on both the news and business staffs of the Brown and White, in Mustard and Cheese, Scabbard and Blade, and Phi Alpha Theta. The captain of the soccer team, four men on the cross- country team, and lettermen in football, wrestling, swimming, lacrosse, and hockey are Chi Psi members. The manager of the freshman swimming team and the junior manager of the cross-country team are Chi Psi men. The national fraternity claims the distinction of creating the system of fra- ternity visitors whereby all active chapters are kept in contact with the national office. Alumni associations are active in principal cities throughout the United States. 216 IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: T. B. Delchamps, ' 45; R. S. Clarkson, ' 45; W. H. Hebrank, ' 44; Q. J. Schwarz, ' 44; J. H. Riehl, ' 44; T. W. Williams, ' 44; J. F. Donahue, ' 44; F. E. Felt, ' 44; R. A. Heironimus, ' 44. Third Row: H. B. Shuttleworth, ' 45; E. W. Shipley, ' 45; C. A. Johnson, ' 43; G. C. Stone, ' 43 ; A. F. Leckie, ' 43 ; A. G. Byrne, ' 43 ; W. C. Walker, ' 43 ; J. A. Cable, ' 45. Second Row: J. M. Stockbridge, ' 43; R. B. Anderson, ' 42; J. R. Penn, ' 42; F. B. Mayer, ' 42 ; A. L. Fischer, ' 42 ; F. E. Smith, ' 42 ; L. A. Schneider, ' 42 ; W. S. Shuttleworth, ' 42. First Row: R. T. Brandfass, ' 45; A. G. Redmond, ' 45; W. A. Clark, ' 45; C. J. Sullivan, ' 45; J. B. Adams, ' 45; W. F. Giles, ' 45. Absent: Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ashley. IN THE CANDIDS: Ray dolefully removes Chi Psi ; new home of fire orphans. mm r m r M  rrr f! — .W X E i n ' , Mi II ! •i 1! tl tw §9£ : ?, ■v f : ■«« us !!!? delta phi DELTA PHI is the third oldest social fraternity in the United States. Founded at Union College on November 17, 1827, Delta Phi is a member of the Union triad, the league established by the three original fraternities. A believer in con- servative expansion, Delta Phi has limited its membership to chapters in the eastern states and now has fourteen chapters located in the leading colleges and universities in that area. The Nu chapter of Delta Phi, fourth fraternity established at Lehigh, was founded in 1884 by six men who believed that they benefit by the fraternity ' s ideals of co-operative living, close and lasting personal friendship, guiding and helping relations, and by its strictly limited membership. The present chapter house, originally a double house and built on English country lines, has been occupied by Delta Phi for twenty-two years and is situated on Warren Square. Soccer has been the Delta Phi forte this past year, the house having had three varsity lettermen and the captain of that sport as brothers. The same number — three — of Delta P hi ' s has been on both the rifle and the wrestling squads. Giving support to the University in both hockey and swimming, Delta Phi has also backed up Lehigh ' s teams by having one of its members a Junior cheerleader. The house has been active in intramural athletics, winning the league cham- pionship last year in softball, and competing in several other fields for place. The president of Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary pre-medical society; two members of the R. W. Hall pre-medical society; two members of Newtonian, honorary mathematical society, and two singers in the University Glee club are Delta Phi ' s. The fraternity believes in close. and lasting friendship, and in the benefits to be derived from mutual associations. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: D. E. Wemple, ' 45; W. R. Moore, ' 45; J. H. Redden, ' 45; R. O. Shealor, ' 45. Second Row: Q. P. Turkington, ' 45; C. R. Bruns, ' 44; C. R. Bergh, ' 43; T. A. Birckhead, ' 43; D. F. Longley, ' 44. Front Row: F. W. Wright, ' 42; S. B. Longley, ' 42; J. H. Kidder, ' 42; A. M. Over, ' 42; J. L. Phillips, ' 42. IN THE CANDIDS: Meal time at Delta Phi; Delta Phi ' s digest dinner. 219 delta sicjma phi DELTA SIGMA PHI fraternity was founded at the City College of New York on December 10, 1899. Shortly afterwards, chapters were installed at Columbia University and at New York University. Further expansion has continued steadily, until today there are forty-three active chapters, located throughout the United States and Canada. The local chapter originated about fifteen years ago as a society of senior engineering students, known then as Sigma Iota and later, after it had grown, as Phi Delta Pi. A house on Delaware avenue was obtained to house the rapidly expanding society, and a petition was sent to Delta Sigma Phi for a charter. The charter was granted in 193 1 , and the fall of the following year saw the installation of Beta Theta chapter. Continued expansion of the fra- ternity made necessary a move to a larger house on Packer avenue. This year Beta Theta chapter has been especially active in honorary societies; brothers are members of Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Kappa Psi, Phi Eta Sigma, the R. W. Hall Society, Scabbard and Blade, and Alpha Phi Omega. Delta Sigma Phi is represented this year on the athletic field by lettermen in soccer, swimming, track, baseball, and cross country. Delta Sigs are coming into prominence in publications. One brother is on the photography staff of the Brown and White, while another fills the post of sports editor of the Epitome. The Delta Sigma Phi ' s have always been especially active in Lehigh ' s intramural sports program; they won the championship of their league in touch football last fall, and in the spring were very near top ranking in their softball league. They also placed well in bowling and swimming. Ardent bridge fans, Delta Sigs can generally be found at their favorite sport after dinner in the club room. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: J. F. Bailey, Faculty; A. B. Ainley, ' 45; C. N. Charest, ' 44; E. S. Davis, ' 43; N. Johanson, ' 45; W. O. Gold, ' 44; E. R. Theis, ' 45; M. E. Apple, ' 45; W. B. Reukauf, ' 45; H. J. Seigle, ' 44. Second Row: E. T. Finnerty, ' 44; R. Mascuch, ' 42; J. Zimmerman, 45; E. W. Starke, ' 43; K. C. Torrens, ' 45; C. W. Stahl, ' 43; J. D. Ryan, ' 43; F. S. J. McGuinness, ' 43; H. E. Dejongh, ' 44. Front Row: T. S. C. Hol- berton, ' 42; J. Burgio, ' 42; R. P. Hazard, ' 42; E. Gamble, ' 42; P. G. Butts, ' 42 ; W. R. Sultzer, ' 43 ; W. B. Holberton, ' 43 ; J. Campbell, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The freshmen get some Chem pointers; The musical Delta Sigs. 220 $ ■ Hn H fwf Tfr35jff O QjJjS-ilN. H n yiw|) If jl S3 ' 5 1 ■ irK KfB ' IOI ■■ i ml   1 irl ' at mX - m, ' 1 Wt ' 1 ft 1 J II II fl Q a ft ik W  ' im -it ' l - ' ML delta tau delta DELTA TAU DELTA was founded in the spring of 1858 at Bethany College, in West Virginia. The motto, badge, and constitution were finally adopted the following year. Union with the Rainbow Society of the W.W.W. fraternity in 1866 began the expansion that has resulted in a total organization of seventy- four active chapters and an alumni membership of over 30,000. The Lehigh chapter, Beta Lambda, was founded in 1874. For forty years it occupied houses in town, but in 19 14 it established a house on the campus, the second fraternity to do so. Of the campus activities, Mustard and Cheese is one of the most popular with the Delts. At the present time members hold the offices of president, stage manager, electrical manager, and technical manager. The copy supervisor and the circulation manager of the Brown and White are Delts, as is the advertising manager of the Bachelor. Members of Delta Tau Delta have been elected to several honoraries, being members of Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, New- tonian Society, and Cyanide. The president of Arcadia, the president of the Junior Class, and a member of Omicron Delta Kappa are members. Football, track, baseball, and cross country have awarded letters to Delts during the past year. A Delt is vice president of Pi Delta Epsilon, and another member of the chapter is a member of the intercollegiate debating team. The house has also received awards in intramural sports. Part of Delta Tau Delta ' s social program is the annual Christmas party. In addition, the house holds exchange dinners with the Delta Tau Delta chapter at Lafayette. The chapter, with about forty members, is one of the largest fraternities at Lehigh. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: W. E. Belser, ' 44 ; M. K. Barrett, Jr., ' 44; D. R. Diggs, ' 45; B. W. Thayer, ' 44; R. D. Mussina, ' 44; H. Boyd, ' 44; W. J. Peck, ' 43; H. H. Kingman, ' 44. Fourth Row: F. J. Attaway, ' 45; R. W. Jensen, ' 44; F. M. Taylor, ' 44; J. M. Morris, Jr., ' 43; S. H. Shaw, ' 45; D. C. Smith, ' 44; J. L. S. Joralemon, ' 44. Third Row: W. S. Fisher ' 45- W. F. Metten, ' 44; R. P. Wipple, ' 43; W. G. Binder, ' 43; W. R. Taylor ' 43 ' • P. H. Powers, Jr., ' 43. Second Row: R. H. Marshall, ' 42; A. D. Wolff ' ' 42 ' J. L. Loughran, ' 42 ; W. McClave, ' 42 ; L. A. Croot, ' 42 ; J. A. Gordon ' ' 42 ■ E. A. Bntton, ' 42. Front Row: W. J. Day, ' 45; P. J. Franz, Jr., ' 45: T o ' Raney, ' 45; C. F. Henzelman, ' 45; E. O. Heyworth, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: That foursome with the cards again; the DTD ' s are musical too, if numbers count. 223 delta upsilon DELTA UPSILON was founded at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1834. It originated from an anti-secret society known as the Social Fraternity, and today it is the only non-secret national fraternity in the United States. The fra- ternity has grown to include sixty-one chapters in the leading colleges and universities of the United States and Canada. The Lehigh chapter was installed in 1885 by Charles Evans Hughes, Brown ' 81. Delta Upsilon was the first fraternity to build a chapter house on the Lehigh campus. In September of this year the Lehigh chapter played host to the other sixty chapters of Delta Upsilon when it held the one hundred seventh convention of the fraternity. This year ten D. U. ' s have won letters in varsity sports; they are members of the football, wrestling, basketball, track, golf, and tennis teams. The captain of the tennis team, freshman manager of baseball, and the junior and the varsity managers of the tennis team are also D. U. ' s. In publications, the senior section editor of the Epitome and the financial manager of the Brown and White are brothers of the local chapter. Members of Delta Upsilon have been well represented in honorary societies. D. U. ' s are members of Pi Delta Epsilon, Pi Tau Sigma, and Alpha Kappa Psi. The president of Omicron Delta Kappa, and two other members, and the secre- tary of Cyanide are also members of D. U. Another boast of the chapter is three members of Tau Beta Pi. Other positions held by members include : member-at- large of Arcadia, secretary-treasurers of the Junior and Senior Classes, and the head cheerleader. In the intramural competition in the past year, the house won its league championship in Softball. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: G. F. Thomas, ' 45; H. J. Wylie, II, ' 45; R. L. Hagadorn, ' 45; J. D. Ingram, ' 45. Fourth Row: W. S. Townsend, ' 45; A. D. Beeken, III, ' 45; S. W. Croll, ' 45; G. Ramsden, ' 44; N. Sceva, ' 45; S. J. Wilson, ' 45. Third Row: A. J. Cornelius, ' 44; R. L. Rahn, ' 44; P. J. Berg, ' 44; B. F. Hoffacker, Jr., ' 44; G. D. Romberger, ' 44; E. G. Boyer, ' 43. Second Row: R. L. Green, ' 43; K. Porter, Jr., ' 43; R. T. Berg, ' 43; R. L. Lyons, ' 43; R. F. Goebel, ' 43; R. S. Rumsey, ' 43; C. D. Curtiss, Jr., ' 43; W. D. Hayes, ' 43. Front Row: D. M. Middleton, ' 42; J. H. Norwood, ' 42; H. M. Williams, ' 42; J. A. Quincy, ' 42; F. S. McKenna, ' 42; M. F. McCon- nell, ' 42; R. M. Iobst, ' 42. IN THE CANDIDS: Phil Berg, the Sewickly kid; D. U. ' s study. 224 SI ssrmMmW •BO kappa alpha A LITERARY and social order at Union College was the beginning of Kappa Alpha. It was founded in 1825 D Y nule men after the break-up of a society for drill and exercise. It is now generally considered the first secret organization formed at an American university or college. Despite the opposition of college authorities it grew until eight chapters were added. Policy prevents the addition of more chapters. In 1 893 three members of the class of 1 895 presented a petition to Kappa Alpha, and in January of the next year the Alpha chapter of Penn- sylvania was founded. The first meetings were held in a rented room for lack of a chapter house. The year following its formal organization, however, a small home on Cherokee street was obtained. Enlargement of the fraternity necessi- tated moves to a house on Seneca street, to a house on Broadway, and finally in the summer of 1922 to the present home at the corner of Seneca and Fourth streets. Activities participated in by K. A. ' s during the past year include Mustard and Cheese, the Band, Tone, and the Glee Club, in the fields of dramatics and music. Members are also in the International Relations Club, the Rifle Club, and the Intercollegiate Sailing Association. A Kappa Alpha is business manager of the Epitome, vice president of Scabbard and Blade, president of the Rifle Club, secretary of the Ail-American Rifle team, and a member of Pi Delta Epsilon. The Alpha chapter is also represented in Phi Eta Sigma, the Newtonian Society, and Alpha Phi Omega. In sports, Kappa Alpha ' s are members of the wrestling, lacrosse, hockey, swimming, basketball, golf, and track teams. One of the sophomore managers of the soccer team is a member of Kappa Alpha. House activities this year included the Union Triad dance and a trip by two members to the McGill chapter. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: G. D. Gaus, ' 44; F. P. McKay, ' 43; W. G. Bourne, ' 44; R. C. Moore, ' 43; P. C. Whiting, ' 43; G. A. Holderer, ' 44; R. Paddock, ' 44; J. A. Smyth, ' 43; W. S. Eisner, ' 43. Second Row: A. B. Parsons, ' 43; E. J. Stone, ' 42; J. L. Diamond, ' 42; J. I. Brower, ' 42; K. Gordon, ' 42; T. G. Scott, ' 42; W. O. Graham, ' 42. Front Row: F. J. Flem- ing, ' 45; L. S. Scofield, ' 45; R. H. Shaw, ' 45; R. I. Meyers, ' 45; E. C. Andersen, ' 45; H. C. Noble, ' 45; R. S. Honeyman, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: A K.A. quartette in conversation; Gordon and Parsons read their mail. 227 kappa sicjma KAPPA SIGMA social fraternity was established on December i o, 1 869, at the University of Virginia, in Richmond. The five students who formed the secret organization have since become known in chapter circles as the Five Friends and Brothers. The fraternity gradually expanded until now it has over one hundred active chapters and thousands of alumni. The Lehigh chapter of Kappa Sigma was founded in 1900 when a group of eleven Lehigh students petitioned to be allowed entrance into the national organization. Their petition was ac- cepted the same year, and on November 19, 1900, the Beta Iota chapter of Kappa Sigma was formally installed at Bethlehem. First located on Delaware avenue, the Kappa Sigs moved to their present home on East Church street in 1926. The fraternity believes in the true bonds of brotherhood and friendship which can be fostered by bringing together men who believe in the spirit of comradeship and who can be educated to a sense of responsibility not only by formal schooling but also by living together in harmony and concord. Four times a year the Iotian is published by the Beta Iota chapter; this publication keeps the alumni and friends of the organization well informed of its activities and doings. Among other social events, noteworthy is the picnic in the spring, which is followed by a house dance. Kappa Sigma is active in intramural athletics, particularly so in baseball, having last year won the baseball league championship for the second straight time. The house has men representing it on the University football and lacrosse teams. Among honorary societies, Cyanide, Tau Beta Pi — national honorary engineering fraternity — , Pi Tau Sigma, and Scabbard and Blade claim members of the chapter. The art editor of the Bachelor and the secretary of the Industrial and Metallurgical Engineering society are also Kappa Sigs. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: D. H. Welsh, ' 45; R. P. Suman, ' 45; E. J Kehl, ' 45; J. A. Green, ' 45; F. L. P. Edwards, ' 45. Third Row: J. F. Mengel ' 45; W. H. St. Clair, ' 44; R. L. Dodson, Jr., ' 45; K. W. Baumann, ' 44; R. J Boaks, ' 44; A. Mitchell, ' 44. Second Row: J. M. Williams, ' 44; C. M Thompson, ' 43; J. P. Stupp, ' 43; C. B. Dutton, ' 42; T. M. Buck, ' 43; R. G Schenck, ' 43; G. W. Burgers, ' 43. Front Row: A. W. Darlow, ' 45; B. De- Paoli, Jr., ' 45; F. S. Hooke, ' 45; A. G. Fromuth, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: This one is really candid; Chuck Thompson took this picture — lovely, isn ' t she? 228 -. ' --- . 5 A I mm j SK . ' -r  -« ' , r ?-, W mti lambda chi alpha FOUNDED AS a professional law fraternity at Boston University, November 2, 1909, Lambda Chi Alpha soon developed as a social fraternity with the ad- mission of three chapters in 191 2. These chapters, known as Zetas, were at Massachusetts State, University of Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania State College. Its rapid growth was accelerated two years ago by a merger with Theta Kappa Nu, another national fraternity, so that at the present time there are one hundred eight chapters in the United States and Canada. The Lehigh chapter, Gamma Psi Zeta, is this year celebrating its fifteenth anniversary. It received its charter in 1926 through the efforts of three members of a local fraternity, Delta Theta. The house is now at 515 Delaware Avenue. The house is particularly active in intramural sports, having won both the off-campus baseball and foot- ball championships the past year. It also placed as runner-up in the last interfra- ternity wrestling meet. Lambda Chi ' s are represented in varsity sports on the football, cross country, wrestling, track, and baseball teams. Senior managerships of soccer and fencing, and junior managerships of soccer and swimming are held by members of Lambda Chi. In campus activities Lambda Chi is best represented by honorary societies. Members are in Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, Lambda Mu Sigma, Cyanide, and Scabbard and Blade. Publications have five Lambda Chi ' s, including two junior editors of the Epitome. Another mem- ber of Lambda Chi Alpha is the secretary of Alpha Kappa Psi and a member of the Senior Ball committee. The fraternity also has members of the Band, the Debating Society, the International Relations Club, Brown Key, and Cut and Thrust. Each year the freshman in the local chapter with the highest scholarship, best house interest, and most activities is awarded the Freshman Cup. The King and Queen award is similarly given to the two seniors excelling in scholarship and activities. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: E. F. Bodine, ' 42; J. A. Hunt, ' 42; G. E. Archbold, ' 42; R. W. Leaver, ' 42; C. T. Loveless, ' 42; R. S. Newcomb, ' 42; J. S. Saylor, ' 42; G. G. Zipf, ' 42. Third Row: W. F. Burroughs, ' 43; D. E. Krebs, ' 43; W. B. Mc Clenachan, ' 43; E. H. Dafter, ' 43; J. F. Kemmer, ' 43; R. H. Bernasco, ' 43. Second Row: G. N. Codding, ' 44; C. R. Beddows, ' 44; K. T. Franck, ' 44; T. S. Bannon, ' 44; J. E. Kelly, ' 44; W. L. Clark, ' 41; J. N. Hendershot, ' 44; J. X. Miller, ' 45. Front Row: F. W. Shirey, ' 45; L. K. Larkin, ' 45; G. W. Smith, ' 45; W. H. Searfoss, ' 45; R. C. Krause, ' 45; W. M. Henry, ' 34; A. A. Cook, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Some deep discussing going on; cue kids take a shot. 231 phi delta theta PHI DELTA THETA was founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in 1 848, and is one of the Miami triad. The principles on which the fraternity was founded, friendship among the members and the individual acquirement of a high plane of mental and moral culture, have never been altered. It was hindered during its early existence by anti-fraternity regulations, and expansion was slow until after the Civil War. At that time southern and eastern chapters were in- stalled, and today there are one hundred seven chapters in the United States and Canada. It is the fourth largest fraternity in the country. In 1882 a group of Lehigh students petitioned for a charter, and were initiated by the Princeton chapter. The original chapter lasted only four years, but it was revived in 1887 and was the first permanent member of the triad at Lehigh. The second initiation of Pennsylvania Eta was performed by the chapter of Lafayette College. The first chapter house was located on Broad street, but growth of the chapter made necessary a change to what is now the Elks ' home on Wyandotte street. In 191 7, after a drive to build fraternity houses on the campus was begun, the Phi Delt ' s with the aid of the alumni built their present home on the campus. Like the University buildings, the Phi Delta Theta house is constructed entirely of stone from South Mountain. Members of the Lehigh chapter are active on the varsity football, basketball, and swimming teams, and the hockey, cross-country, wrestling, and golf squads. Phi Delt ' s are also out for freshman football, swimming, lacrosse, tennis, and basketball. Members have been chosen for five honoraries: Alpha Kappa Psi, Lambda Mu Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, Eta Sigma Phi, and Newtonian Society. In addition, Phi Delt ' s are basketball managers and Band members. Phi Delta Theta won several interfraternity sports championships during the year. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: S. Van Vliet, Jr., ' 45; J. E. Messinger, ' 45; A. T. Hunt, Jr., ' 45; C. R. Busby, ' 45. Third Row: R. G. Schafer, ' 45; R. N. Figueroa, ' 44; W. L. Croft, ' 45; O. E. Fox, ' 44; E. S. Stowers, ' 44; W. B. Hursh, ' 44; R. S. Brown, ' 44; G. A. Murry, ' 44; R. H. Hicks, Jr., ' 44. Second Row: J. W. Niemeyer, ' 43; F. L. Morgal, ' 43; T. R. Hunt, ' 42; J. F. Kiser, Jr., ' 43; J. E. Lane, ' 43; R. M. Palmer, ' 42; J. T. Green, ' 42; C. A. Ginter, Jr., ' 43; J. L. MacMinn, ' 44. Front Row: J. J. O ' Keefe, ' 45; R. H. Sotzing, ' 45; C. H. Oskin, ' 45; P. R. Taylor, Jr., ' 45; R. M. Leiter, ' 45; R. G. Fuller, Jr., ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: An ideal picture of fraternity life; this was probably posed too. 232 r Ml- mi in ■ 3?sp •  f««ip iiiy ' !■■ lift ill ■ If ! , .• ■dMK „■■ — 1 5 3«sV L §«! ! PS£7 r « c55£ -- ' ja HB phi gamma delta PHI GAMMA DELTA was founded as a secret social fraternity in 1848 at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. The society expanded, and in 1865 Major Frank Keck, a member of the chapter at Columbia University, conceived the idea of founding a chapter of the fraternity at Lehigh. Communi- cating with Lehigh students, he matured his plans and, in 1867 the Beta Chi chapter was formally created at Lehigh when the first members were initiated in the old Sun Inn. Beta Chi ' s first house was on Market street, but inorder to obtain larger quarters a move was made to Cherokee street. 1922 saw the building of the present campus house. Phi Gam publishes a tri-annual pamphlet, The Lehigh Fiji, which con- tains chapter news and information concerning the fraternity ' s activities, and which is sent to all the alumni of the Beta Chi chapter. A Pig Dinner is held every spring; the Christmas party just precedes that vacation. Men of Beta Chi captain the swimming and golf teams, while other brothers are on the football, soccer, basketball, baseball, hockey and lacrosse teams. Their managers include those of football and swimming; Phi Gams are junior man- agers in these sports as well. Phi Gamma Delta is unusually well represented in campus governing and honorary groups. The presidents of the Senior class, the Interfraternity council, Cyanide — junior honorary activities society — , and the Brown Key society are all Phi Gams, and the house is represented in Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and Scabbard and Blade. A Beta Chi is on Arcadia, Lehigh ' s student governing body. Three members of the Lehigh group honored with membership in the annual Who ' s Who in American Universities and Colleges are Phi Gams. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: J. H. Brindle, ' 45; S. R. Mclntyre, ' 45; A. H. Todd, ' 44; C. C. Hilton, ' 44; W. C. Hittenger, ' 44; D. F. Gearhart, ' 44; C. A. Elmes, ' 44; H. G. Dow, ' 45; J. S. Petty, ' 45. Third Row: D. H. Brownlee, ' 44; R. L. Murray, ' 44; D. T. Steele, ' 44; B. W. Deehan, ' 43; R. D. Bailey, ' 43; C. H. McKaig, ' 43; T. H. Golden, ' 43; F. J. Dunigan, ' 44; A. L. Baker, ' 44. Second Row: D. A. Elmes, ' 43; R. E. Metius, ' 42; R. W. Beck, ' 42 ; R. F. Moss, ' 42 ; D. B. McAfee, ' 42 ; B. R. Heinz, ' 43 ; A. D. Tiff t, ' 42; D. H. Schaper, ' 43; R. C. Boston, ' 43. First Row: J. Johnson, ' 45; K. H. McLaurin, ' 45; G. F. Walsh, ' 45; W. Whigham, ' 45; S. M. Brown, ' 45; R. H. Ralston, ' 45; C. Eisen, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: These boys were burned out too: Phi Gams on their porch, and in front of the fire. 235 phi sicjma kappa PHI SIGMA KAPPA was founded at the Massachusetts Agricultural College in Amherst on March 15, 1873. The fraternity remained local for fifteen years, until a second chapter was established at the Albany Medical College. The fraternity adopted a policy of admitting only strong chapters, but by 1940 fifty- four chapters had been installed. In 1 90 1 the Nu chapter at Lehigh was granted a petition, and started its life in a house at 5 1 1 Seneca street. The present house, made necessary by the steady expansion of the chapter, is the fourth to be occupied by the fraternity, and is located at 406 Delaware avenue. Aside from curricular and organizational activities, Phi Sigma Kappa has many social functions during the college year. A pledge dance, fall tea dance, and Thanksgiving and Christmas parties round out the first semester. Second semester activities are highlighted by a Phi Sigma Kappa Founders ' Day alumni banquet. More serious activities are also popular among Phi Sigs. The editor and the business manager of the Bachelor and the business manager of the Brown and White are members of this house. Campus honoraries include several Phi Sigma Kappa men in their membership — there are two men in Omicron Delta Kappa, one in Tau Beta Pi, two in Pi Tau Sigma, three in Pi Delta Epsilon, and three in the Newtonian Society. The national treasurer of I. D. R. Council is a member of the fraternity. Books claim their share of the Phi Sigs ' attention: the chapter ranks second scholastically among Lehigh fraternities. Intramural sports play their share in the life at the Phi Sigma Kappa house, too, for they participate in bowling, basketball, baseball, football, wrestling, and the various other offerings of the program. 236 IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. L. Mount, ' 45; J. G. Clemmer, ' 44; B. D. Ferrell, ' 44; J. E. Smith, ' 43; R. L. Cahoon, ' 44; J. F. X. O ' Brien, ' 44; E. W. Wallick, ' 44; W. L. Henry, ' 44. Second Row: R. G. Taylor, ' 42; R. H. Forsyth, ' 42 ; P. S. Guckes, ' 43 ; F. V. Schumacher, ' 42 ; H. A. Grubb, ' 42; J. D. Smith, ' 44; H. L. Olmstead, ' 43. Front Row: T. Johnston, ' 45; E. A. Stockbower, ' 45; G. B. Staples, ' 45; R. N. Ford, ' 45; J. H. Haldeman, ' 45; D. R. Whitten, ' 45; J. E. Schumacher, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Intramural sport of the indoor type; Schumacher and Clark seem to be going somewhere. w r. : m . T i r fM ' ' iti ' $% £ N y fgT. v pi kappa alpha A FELLOWSHIP of six Confederate soldiers who had fought together through the Civil War was the incentive that produced Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. The first chapter was founded at the University of Virginia in 1868. Unsettled con- ditions in the South after the war hindered the existence of the fraternity, but a convention of three of the four chapters at Hampden-Sydney in 1889 insured continued development as a national fraternity. Until 1909 membership was limited to colleges and universities in the South and Southwest. At that time the ban was lifted, and today there are eighty active undergraduate chapters in the United States. The Lehigh group that was the beginning of the Pi Kappa Alpha chapter was the Seal Club, formed in 1924 by a group of students dis- satisfied with dormitory life. The original clubhouse had accommodations for only three men, but after changing the name to the Lehigh Ivy Club, the group moved into quarters accommodating twelve men. In 1926 seven members of this club founded the Zeta Chi fraternity. The society had repeatedly to move to provide room for its rapidly growing membership. In 1929 a petition to Pi Kappa Alpha was granted, and the group was installed as the Gamma Lambda chapter. Two years later the chapter moved to its present home on Wyandotte street. Pi Kappa Alpha is well represented in campus honoraries, having members in Pi Tau Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, and the Newtonian Society. The president of Alpha Phi Omega is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha. Members are in the Glee Club, Mustard and Cheese, and on the staffs of the Brown and White and the Epitome. In athletics Pi K. A. ' s are found on the football, wrestling, swimming, tennis, track, and hockey teams. The house has the drum major of the band, and one of the wrestling managers. For several years it has been the winner of the living group singing contest. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: C. W. Corbett, ' 45; F. L. Strobino, ' 45; I. H. Geiger, ' 45; R. C. Gottschall, ' 44; J. W. Motter, ' 44; A. F. Jones, ' 44; R. L. Lashley, ' 45; R. R. Lau, ' 44. Third Row: R. E. Roberson, ' 44; J. C. Reischer, ' 44; S. C. Woodruff, ' 44; R. J. Weidenman, ' 44; N. C. Applegate, ' 44; G. E. Funk, ' 44; G. F. Hewitt, ' 44; J. F. Bonin, ' 44. Second Row: R. H. Doney, ' 43; S. Hart, ' 43; J. B. Price, ' 43; H. W. Jones, ' 42; C. W. Freed, ' 42; E. K. Muhlhausen, ' 42; A. H. Brennan, ' 43; J. J. Hucker, ' 43. Front Row: R. S. DeHoff, ' 45; R. W. Davis, ' 45; H. J. Corson, ' 45; L. H. Tanner, ' 45; E. W. Bowden, ' 45; S. T. Sniffer, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Pi K.A. ' s sit down to cards; or adjourn to the living room. 239 pi lambda phi PI LAMBDA PHI fraternity was established at Yale University in 1895 for the purpose of eliminating sectarianism in American colleges. The Lehigh chap- ter began as the Pioneer Club when six men, dissatisfied with the living condi- tions in Bethlehem, organized to maintain their college friendships. In 191 5, when Pi Lambda Phi had expanded and become well known, the Pioneer Club petitioned for admission and became the Lambda chapter, the ninth to be admitted. As the result of a merger in 1940 with Pi Beta Delta, the national fraternity now consists of thirty-three chapters. The chapter ' s first house, where it remained until 1931, was located at the corner of Market and Center streets. From then until last fall, the house was on Bishopthorpe street. This year the fraternity acquired a new home on East Market street. Pi Lambda Phi ' s forte is scholarship. Freshman and sophomore honors have been won during the past year by members of the fraternity, and one member had the distinction of being elected to Phi Beta Kappa. These honors are not exceptional for Pi Lambda Phi men, for the chapter has won the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity scholarship cup more than any other fraternity. The chapter has not confined its attention to studies, but has contributed to the life of the University in many ways. Pi Lam ' s represent their house on the Epitome, the Brown and White, and the Bachelor staffs. The Lambda chapter has men in varsity football, swimming, fencing, and wrestling. Other activities in which Pi Lambda Phi members have shown leadership include Cyanide, the Newtonian Society, Mustard and Cheese, the Band, and the International Re- lations Club. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. I. Jaslow, ' 44; D. P. Epstein, ' 44; W. W. Doniger, ' 44; J. L. Weening, ' 43; N. A. Horowitz, ' 45. Third Row: T. A. Lawson, ' 44; A. L. Rosener, ' 44; C. F. Rosenthal, ' 44; M. D. Blum, ' 44; M. L. Morrison, ' 44; N. J. Faber, ' 43. Second Row: W. M. Strouse, ' 43; G. W. Wolfsten, ' 43; C. E. Kluger, ' 42; F. R. Rich, ' 42; S. L. Hollander, ' 42; R. S. Margolies, ' 43; S. S. Zalkind, ' 43. Front Row: J. Y. Neff, ' 45; A. I. Mishkin, ' 45; R. Bernstein, ' 45; W. J. Hoffberg, ' 45; E. L. Klopfer, ' 45; H. E. Gross, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: One sweet letter from you ; fraternities ' favorite pastime. 24O 1 1 , .. v ' - v iVS I Mk ■ L Mm Mii«Y fh !-- Ill ml nniui.i(.ui mumumm % 1 psi upsiloru PSI UPSILON social fraternity was founded at Union College in November, J 833, by seven undergraduates who wished to create an organization on more liberal principles than those professed by the secret societies in existence at that time. Until 1920, when limitations necessitated by its growth and ideals were im- posed on its membership, Psi Upsilon grew steadily, due to its ideals of a broader and more liberal outlook on life. At present there are 27 chapters of the fraternity in the United States and Canada. Two Lehigh faculty members of the 1880 ' s were Psi U ' s, and it was due to their interest in the society that, in 1883 several undergraduates applied to the national organization for permission to form a chapter here. The charter was granted; the following year delegates installed the Eta chapter at Lehigh. The Psi Upsilon fraternity house was originally located on Market street. After moving to its present position on Brodhead avenue, where it overlooks the campus, the brothers enlarged the house in 1931 by the addition of a new wing and the making of substantial improvements. In January of last year the Eta chapter, by a special arrangement with the University authorities, became the eleventh fraternity to receive the designation on-campus. The Psi U ' s have had men this past year on six University sports teams — foot- ball, basketball, wrestling, hockey, soccer and golf. Psi Upsilon men are also members of Newtonian, — honorary mathematical society — , and Phi Eta Sigma — national honorary freshman scholastic honorary society. The 1940 award to the fraternity having the best house display during Lehigh-Lafayette weekend was won by Psi U. The house has shown an active interest in intramural football, basketball, wrestling, and other sports. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: G. H. Kohl, ' 45; J. J. Maloney, ' 43; G. C. Worrell, ' 43. Fourth Row: E. S. Fries, ' 45; F. Sturges, III, ' 45; S. E. Osborn, ' 44; G. W. Snyder, ' 44; P. M. Corsa, ' 44; J. A. Jubell, ' 45; H. S. Clarke, ' 43. Third Row: D. G. Tenney, ' 45; R. W. Link, ' 44; G. B. Smith, ' 44; J. F. Mitchell, ' 43; H. McDonnell, ' 43; T. D. Wetrich, ' 44; W. A. Mackey, ' 44. Second Row: G. J. Bussman, ' 44; W. A. Detwiler, ' 42; A. E. Jenkin, ' 42; W. P. Hitchcock, ' 42; J. S. Wetrich, ' 42; W. E. Howard, III, ' 42. Front Row: R. K. Murry, Jr., ' 45; D. P. Sheldon, ' 45; R. E. Maloney, ' 45; T. N. Hellmuth, ' 45; E. C. Gott, III, ' 45; M. P. Crowther, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Psi U ' s present fraternity life in two scenes: cards and bull session. 243 sigma alpha mu SIGMA ALPHA MU was founded at the College of the City of New York on November 26, 1909. The fraternity, which has since grown to national organiza- tion with 35 chapters, holds the basic principles to foster among its sons a spirit of loyalty and devotion for Alma Mater and to form a close social and fraternal union of the Jewish students in the various universities, colleges and professional schools in America. Eta Alpha Phi, a local social fraternity, petitioned the national organization of Sigma Alpha Mu for a charter, and was granted one in the spring of 1923, be- coming the Sigma Kappa chapter of the society. Located on Cherokee street at the time of its inception into the national organization, Sigma Kappa moved successively to the corner of Broadway and Seminole streets, to Wyandotte street and, finally, to the present site in 1926. Always high up in scholastic ranking, Sigma Alpha Mu won last year the scholarship cup offered by the Interfraternity council to its member standing highest on the list of house averages. The fraternity has men representing it on the swimming, wrestling, fencing, ice hockey, soccer, tennis, baseball, and debat- ing teams. A member of the class of 1941, Marvin Kantrowitz, won several, national collegiate tennis titles while a student at Lehigh. Last year the S. A. M. house carried off high honors in the Interfraternity bridge tournament. The photographic editor of the Bachelor, also a photographic editor of the Brown and White, is a Sigma Alpha Mu; members of the house are in the New- tonian society, Pi Mu Epsilon, Cut and Thrust, R. W. Hall pre-medical society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Pi Delta Epsilon — national honorary journalism society — and Mustard and Cheese. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: A. L. Haft, ' 43; R. E. Meyerhoff, ' 42; F. R. Linker, ' 44; R. H. Leeds, ' 44; J. S. Levi, ' 44; M. Brustein, ' 45. Third Row: A. Lasser, ' 44; S. Breskman, ' 43; H. Nelken, ' 43; A. W. Wolf, ' 43; A. A. Adler, ' 44. Second Row: W. M. Benesch, ' 42; A. E. Price, ' 43; A. L. Landesman, ' 43 ; N. Hackman, ' 42 ; M. Levy, ' 42 ; E. L. Kline, ' 42 ; M. I. Buchman, ' 43. Front Row: E. R. Titelman, ' 45; L. D. Mazur, ' 45; J. R. Lasser, ' 45 ; L. J. Alpert, ' 45 ; N. M. Blanc, ' 45 ; R. R. Kuehn, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: SAM ' S pose the favorite fireplace tableau; here ' s a smooth one. 244 r _ Ubi   L M jf ,.-1 K B ■■■ 1. - a in r i, i sigma cbi SIGMA CHI was founded on June 28, 1855 at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, when six of the charter members withdrew from Delta Kappa Epsilon to form their own fraternity. The fraternity has grown until there are now ninety- eight active chapters. During the Civil War, when many of the southern uni- versities were closing, the Constantine chapter was formed in the South to keep Sigma Chi alive in that part of the country. In 1887 seven Lehigh students, who had formed the Crimson Halberd Society, petitioned Sigma Chi and were admitted as the Alpha Rho chapter on June 6 of that year. The local chapter was disbanded in 1890, but was reinstated three years later. In 1904 the fra- ternity moved to its present location on East Broad street. Every year the chapter has a Hallowe ' en party for Bethlehem children. The house publishes a chapter paper, The Alpha-Rhovian, three times a year , to keep the alumni informed of the activities of the undergraduates. Last year the house added to its social program by giving a tea for the faculty. Its success may make it a yearly occurrence. The chapter ' s most important social event is the Miami Triad dance given annually by the local chapters of Sigma Chi, Beta Theta Pi, and Phi Delta Theta, the three original fraternities of Miami University. Sigma Chi is represented in athletics on the football, track, soccer, hockey, fencing, and swimming teams. Sophomore managers of football and soccer teams, a junior manager of the wrestling team, and a Senior cheerleader are Sig ' s. Publication offices filled by Sigma Chi ' s include a sophomore competitor of the Epitome, the news managership of the Brown and White, and the position of managing secretary of the Bachelor. Sigma Chi ' s also belong to Cyanide, Phi Eta Sigma, Delta Omicron Theta, Arcadia, and Cut and Thrust. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: J. S. Marsh, ' 44; R. L. Smith, ' 44; D. F. Cox, ' 44; J. M. Skilling, ' 44; J. L. Troy, ' 45; V. C. Smith, ' 44; H. B. Fuller, ' 45. Third Row: C. M. Norlin, ' 43; A. D. Hinrichs, ' 43; W. W. Fuller, ' 43; R. B. Cowin, Jr., ' 43; J. E. Doxsey, ' 44; W. R. Robinson, Jr., ' 44; D. R. Helm, ' 45; R. W. Mason, ' 43; R. F. Wood, Jr., ' 42. Second Row: J. A. Read, ' 42 ; R. K. Gailey, ' 42 ; W. F. Boore, Jr., ' 42 ; A. R. Tucker, Jr., ' 43; H. T. Reuwer, ' 42; H. L. Abbott, ' 42; S. R. Bowen, Jr., ' 42. Front Row: E. T. Darlow, ' 44; B. A. Burgy, ' 45; R. M. Kelly, ' 45; H. S. Strong, ' 45; K. A. Lambert, Jr., ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Record playing — another popular vice; and still another — pool. 247 sicjma nu SIGMA NU had its beginning in the Legion of Honor, a secret society origi- nated in 1868 at the Virginia Military Institute at Lexington by three cadets who wished to oppose control held by another secret society. The actual found- ing of Sigma Nu, however, dates from 1869 when the Greek letter designation and other social fraternity characteristics were formally adopted. The founding of the Pi chapter at Lehigh, occurring in 1885, marked the fraternity ' s expansion to the north and east. The Pi chapter originally had its home on High street, but moved to the campus in 191 5. The present house flanks the entrance to Sayre Park, and is situated directly across the road from Taylor House. Every year the house publishes the Pi-eye magazine, containing a summary of the house news of the year and a statement of the chapter ' s activities, and sends it to Alumni. In the spring of each year Sigma Nu acts as host to the annual district convention of the fraternity. Close contact between parents and students is maintained by Parents ' Week-end, also held in the spring, when all parents are invited to refamiliarize themselves with Lehigh, and to meet other parents. Men on the soccer, swimming, baseball and lacrosse teams are Sigma Nu ' s. Members of Pi chapter have been elected to Cyanide and Tau Beta Pi; other brothers hold the positions of vice-presidency of the student branch of the Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers, the vice-presidency of Pi Tau Sigma, and the secretaryship of Mustard and Cheese. Charles Kalmbach, a member of the class of 1 94 1 and a Sigma Nu, distinguished himself and Lehigh when he won the Tau Beta Pi fellowship after standing first in his class for seven semesters. The present membership includes men on both the Dean ' s list and the Honors list. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: C. A. Rugg, ' 44; T. G. Summers, ' 44; J. R. Lees, ' 44; H. E. Bitler, ' 45; W. B. Farrell, ' 44; A. J. Inderrieden, ' 44; R. L. Cooper, ' 44. Third Row: W. H. Carter, ' 43; J. L. Horn, ' 43; G. A. Logan, ' 42; P. J. Whalen, ' 42; W. P. C. Kirschner, ' 43; S. B. Bowne, Jr., ' 42; W. D. Schaeffer, ' 43; R. D. Everett, ' 43. Second Row: R. B. Steele, ' 42; W. W. Gleadall, ' 42; D. L. Hume, ' 42; R. W. Clark, ' 42; G. E. Elliott, ' 42; F. R. Thaeder, ' 42; W. T. Mainwaring, ' 42. Front Row: W. R. Meigs, ' 45; G. R. Forbes, Jr., ' 45; C. M. Wellons, ' 45; W. H. Inglis, ' 45; R. N. Jorgenson, ' 45; L. W. Guernsey, III, ' 45; J. A. Johnson, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Some ideal winter sports — bridge again and ever- present pool. 248 I | ■ ■ ■ «v T ii r. I .fTT TI  ? is 1 m mm mm mm 1 1: E EB r 1 1943 1 J •x ' w ;4 fc gilW AH Wjmm mM if I P jPA l f A a a flL - J ' H ll w %s - - r j L M i ' J T? ilil ' M Jp  i-. r M 3 . 3 r J - J rt sicjma phi SIGMA PHI society was the second secret society to be formed in an American col- lege, being founded at Union College in 1827, two years after the establishment of Kappa Alpha. These two fraternities and Delta Phi are known as the Union triad. Sigma Phi claims the title of the oldest national fraternity, for it expanded to Hamilton College in 1831. The houses of Sigma Phi ' s ten chapters now extend throughout the country, with societies in the Mid-west and West. The beginning of Sigma Phi at Lehigh was a group known as the Beta Beta Club, which was made up of men who resigned from another Lehigh fraternity through dissatis- faction with the conditions there. In 1887 the club was granted a charter and became the Alpha chapter of Pennsylvania of the Sigma Phi society, the ninth national fraternity to be established at Lehigh. A year after the formation of the chapter, the group built a house on Delaware avenue, the first to be built by any fraternity at Lehigh. It was renovated and modernized in 1925. The Sigma Phi ' s hold several posts of leadership on the campus. Included among the members of Sigma Phi are members of the Senior Ball and Junior Prom committees, the president of the Sophomore Class, the make-up editor of the Brown and White, and an Arcadia representative. The fraternity is repre- sented in several honorary societies, including Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Kappa Psi, Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsilon, Eta Kappa Nu, and the Newtonian Society. Sigma Phi ' s are members of the Sportsman ' s Club, the staff of the Bachelor, and Mus- tard and Cheese. The organizations editor of the Epitome and the president of the Badminton Club are also Sigma Phi ' s. The fraternity has also been active in sports, members being included on the varsity football, hockey, wrestling, basket- ball, and swimming teams. The highlight of the social program is the annual Union Triad Dance, given jointly by the three fraternities of the triad. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: C. M. Rogers, ' 43; A. H. Rich, ' 42; E. F. Warner, ' 42 ; L. J. Caulk, ' 42 ; L. D. Van der Veer, ' 42 ; R. M. Lynch, ' 42 ; S. J. Daw, ' 43. Second Row: F. B. Kern, ' 43; C. L. Pelzel, ' 45; W. H. Shawhan, ' 44; T. Peters, ' 44; E. L. Frost, ' 44; D. M. Congelton, ' 44; M. P. Pearsall, ' 43. Front Row: R. D. Frost, ' 44; A. D. Beattie, ' 45; R. S. Comp- ton, ' 45 j R. C. Weiler, ' 45; C. T. Wilson, ' 45; J. J. Probst, ' 44. IN THE CANDIDS: Originality is rampant with Sigma Phi ' s — airplane- making! Sigma Phi ' s may start a new trend with this game. _ 251 sicjma phi epsilon THE SIGMA PHI EPSILON fraternity was founded in 1901 at the University of Richmond. One of the ten largest national social fraternities, Sigma Phi Epsilon now claims more than seventy active chapters in the United States. The chapter at Lehigh, Pennsylvania Epsilon, originated in 1 907 when sixteen mem- bers of a local fraternity, Omicron Pi Alpha, petitioned for and obtained a charter from the national S. P. E. organization. The present house, on West Market street, was obtained in 1923. Earlier homes of the Pennsylvania Epsilon chapter were situated on West Fourth street — the original house was there — and at the corner of Fourth and Wyandotte streets. The Sig Eps organized this past year an active alumni group, which keeps in close touch with house activities; preceding the formation of this group was the quarterly house organ, The Sig Ep Review, which started last year to inform alumni of present doings at the S. P. E. place. Last year saw another innovation — an annual Christmas banquet for Bethlehem ' s underprivileged children, an event which is to be continued every year. Informal Loopers or house dances are held every month with the assistance of the house phonograph. Sigma Phi Epsilon has men on the varsity track, soccer and hockey squads. Its organizational representation includes Omicron Delta Kappa, Cyanide, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and Phi Eta Sigma. Other members of the chapter serve the student body as president of the student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, the art editor and the secretary of the Epitome, a news editor and the editorial manager of the Brown and White. 252 IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: G. W. Boyer, ' 43; H. D. Sherwood, ' 44; R. E. Brodt, ' 45; H. C. Ost, Jr., ' 44; J. L. Gretz, ' 44; P. V. Thevenet, ' 44; R. E. Brawn, ' 44; D. T. Poole, Jr., ' 45; R. T. Zackey, ' 44. Third Row: W. S. Woodside, Jr., ' 44; A. J. White, ' 43; E. A. Brawn, ' 44; S. I. Cory, Jr., ' 42; C. D. Barlett, Jr., ' 42; R. M. Bowman, ' 42; T. A. Wallace, Jr., ' 42; F. H. Young, Jr., ' 43; E. R. Conover, Jr., ' 43; W. H. Fisher, ' 44; E. W. Edwards, ' 43. Second Row: J. F. Clark, ' 42; W. W. Tolley, ' 42; C. M. Sanderson, Jr., ' 42; R. N. Simonsen, ' 42; J. W. Witherspoon, IV, ' 42; C. P. Davidson, III, ' 42; W. C. Mcjames, ' 43; J. F. Beers, Jr., ' 42. Front Row: L. M. Matamoros, ' 45; H. R. Dunn, ' 45; J. D. Evans, ' 45; J. K. Maus, ' 45; E. H. Cummings, ' 45 ; R. H. Hamilton, ' 45 ; R. F. Merkert, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Round-table discussion — subject: food; Petey Mc- james tries dialing. aV — - ± II V ' ll ■P ' j WMB m_LJL2zJEsj U. ■ fl ' I p mm— ' III  w 7?s i ' r. '  ji JB ,£.■ • •- ■ ' - ■ 1. ; : ;« . - •-• -. ' tau delta pbi TAU DELTA PHI was founded at the City College of New York in 1910, and since then has expanded conservatively. A group of undergraduates, moti- vated by the closer bonds of friendship and harmony which a fraternity embodies, joined themselves together into a brotherhood. The fraternity was first designed to be a local organization; however, in 19 14 a chapter was established at New York University, and two years later the two chapters decided to adopt a policy of cautious expansion. In 1933 Omicron Alpha Tau, another prominent national fraternity, peti- tioned Tau Delta Phi for admission. Only five of the O. A. T. chapters were accepted. However, after thirty-one years Tau Delta Phi is now represented throughout the United States and Canada by twenty-five active organizations. Tau chapter was established at Lehigh in 1926 by a group of nine under- graduates who were dissatisfied with the fraternity conditions prevailing here at that time. This local group, which was called Upsilon Kappa, prospered so well that in 1927 they were granted a charter for membership in Tau Delta Phi. After occupying other houses, the chapter moved to its present home on West Third street in 1938. Continuing the interests of previous years, Tau Delta Phi men have shown prominence in the fields of debating and dramatics throughout the past year. This year, as in other years, Tau Delta Phi ' s have taken part in the plays presented by Mustard and Cheese. They have also been included in the membership of the International Relations Club and the Glee Club. They have participated in the service work of Alpha Phi Omega. Continuing the creditable scholarship record they have made, Tau Delta Phi members last year achieved the sixth highest scholastic average made by a Lehigh fraternity. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: J. A. Gottlieb, 43; W. L. Kronthal, ' 44; L. C. Schwab, ' 44; L. R. Greene, ' 43; L. S. Friedman, ' 43; F. S. Gruenwald, ' 44. Second Row: P. H. Miller, ' 43; A. M. Lehrer, ' 43; W. H. Riemer, ' 42; A. S. Samuels, ' 42. Front Row: H. C. Lucks, ' 45; I. B. Born, ' 45; J. S. Schwab, ' 45; L. H. Stein, ' 45. IN THE CANDID: The familiar fireplace pose on a big scale. 255 theta delta chi THETA DELTA CHI, twelfth on the list of national social fraternities in the order of their founding, came into existence in 1 847 at Union College when six members of the class of 1849 felt the need of a new social organization to bind themselves to one another more closely. They stipulated in the founding that Theta Delta Chi should, in keeping with an essentially conservative policy and a desire to promote more than ordinary friendship, limit the number of its charges or chapters. Twenty-eight such charges now exist, located in all parts of the United States and Canada. Theta Delta Chi was the first social fraternity to build a centralized govern- ment. The grand lodge form which it finally evolved is now used by nearly all the national fraternities. It is believed that Theta Delta Chi is the only fraternity today practicing the custom of celebrating its birthday annually. The fraternity was also a leader in other things, instituting the use of pledge pins, the adoption of a distinctive fraternity flag or banner, and the publication and distribution to all active and alumni members of a monthly fraternity magazine. Installed in 1884, the Nu Deuteron charge was the fifth national social fra- ternity to be established at Lehigh. The brothers took up permanent residence in 1 9 1 9 when the present charge house was built in Sayre Park, and improved their house in 1938 with the addition of a new wing, extensive remodeling, and a general modernization of the building. Theta Delt ' s play their part in the University ' s athletics by participating on the soccer, hockey, fencing, basketball, and baseball teams. Other members are in Alpha Kappa Psi and Eta Sigma Phi; one is make-up editor of the Brown and White. There are representatives in Mustard and Cheese, and on the Senior Banquet committee. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: W. K. Zucker, ' 44; M. S. Johnson, ' 44; J. S. Cook, ' 44; H. J. Buncke, ' 44; W. B. Tilghman, ' 44; J. A. Hosford, ' 44; G. T. McKinley, ' 44; R. W. Appleton, ' 43; A. K. Bartley, ' 43; J. S. Curtis, ' 43. Second Row: R. C. Hird, ' 42; S. R. Brough, ' 42; V. H. Adams, ' 42; G. E. Parson, ' 42; J. J. Donahue, ' 42; J. T. Smith, ' 42; R. Bown, ' 42. Front Row: R. A. McKinley, ' 45; A. W. Holmberg, ' 45; H. E. Fletcher, ' 45; W. R. Bowen, ' 45; R. W. Bradshaw, ' 45; W. D. Miller, ' 45; C. S. Wastcoat, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The house on the hill— interior; he also puts the cat out. 256 fc If £ r ' - - :■ d ft t! v HP ? WsEsi? 1 iti n 1 •  M . ■ ' ka i ■ ■ — ' - rv „ ' ■■■■■l ' ■ -©gv , m T- ft-:- . ' ; ' ' j • TA ■ rt i I sir ■ sf- 1 tbeta kappa phi DURING THE YEAR 191 6 a group of Lehigh students found themselves frequently together, and decided to bring about a binding organization. The war interrupted their efforts, but a few of the men who returned to finish their courses carried on and on October 1, 191 9, Theta Kappa Phi was founded. In 1922 the group coupled with a local fraternity at Penn State and the expansion into a national fraternity was begun. To date there are thirteen active chapters and ten alumni chapters. The chapter house is located at 6 1 8 Delaware Avenue. The fraternity places special emphasis on intramural sports, and they have won numerous trophies to show their achievements. However, the house is also well represented in varsity sports, and other extra-curricular activities. There are Theta Kappa Phi members on the football and baseball teams. Other men are out for cross country, swimming, wrestling, tennis, basketball, and freshman soccer teams. The fraternity has members who are in Newtonian Society and Eta Kappa Nu, among other societies. The house s ponsored the trophy for intra- mural bridge last year, and this trophy will continue to be passed on until one of the living groups finally retires it. At that time the fraternity plans to sponsor another cup for the same tournament. Besides the usual Fall and Spring House- parties the chapter holds a dance each Spring. This dance is usually held in con- junction with another fraternity at the Hotel Bethlehem. IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: J. A. Gardella, ' 45; J. D. Deisler, ' 45; J. W. Meacham, ' 44; D. K. Darcy, ' 44; M. J. Redington, ' 44; T. J. Croake, ' 44; R. C. Kleinknecht, ' 44; F. T. Donato, ' 44. Third Row: B. W. Powers, ' 45; C. K. Giles, ' 44; W. C. Galton, ' 44; E. J. Cavanaugh, ' 43; H. E. Bun- ning, ' 43; J. G. Compton, ' 43; W. F. Heley, ' 43; J. P. Mulhern, ' 43; J. R. Gray, ' 43. Second Row: J. S. MacDonald, ' 4 2; T. W. Marshall, ' 42; R. H. Coleman, ' 42; J. M. Sexton, ' 42; D. F. Wells, ' 42; C. E. McGrath, ' 42; H. E. Mahoney, ' 42. Front Row: B. J. Mulhern, ' 45; J. H. Trask, ' 45; W. J. Reusch, ' 45; W. Heller, ' 45; S. C. Gordon, ' 45; A. E. Berizzi, ' 45; R. J. Schwartz, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: Theta Kaps ' music room; the boys in the back room. 259 tbeta xi THETA XI fraternity was founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in April, 1864, as the result of disagreement between two factions of the local Sigma Delta fraternity. The eight dissenters withdrew from Sigma Delta and founded Theta Xi, intending to make it national. The Beta chapter was installed at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University less than a year after the founding of the fraternity. It was the only fraternity to be founded during the Civil War. Origi- nally an engineering fraternity, it ruled in 1895 that men from other curricula were eligible for membership. There are now thirty-six active Theta Xi chapters. The Eta chapter, the seventh to be formed, was founded at Lehigh in December, 1903, when fourteen members were initiated. Their new house, occupied this fall, is the chapter ' s sixth, and is located on the Bath pike. Twice each year the chapter puts out a publication, The Eta News, which contains articles of interest to the alumni, keeping them in touch with the activities of the undergraduate members. In sports, members appear on the lacrosse, swimming, and baseball teams. The house takes an active part in all intra-mural sports and activities. One Theta Xi is a member of Tau Beta Pi. The leader and drum major of Lehigh ' s Band are Theta Xi ' s, while many members of Tone, the Glee Club, and the Band are also boys of the chapter. Some Theta Xi ' s are active in the Sportsman ' s Club and in DeMolay. The vice president of the Civil Engineering Society and the vice president of the Physics Society both belong to this living group. In other hon- orary societies, Theta Xi is represented in Newtonian Society, Pi Tau Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, and Pi Mu Epsilon. 260 IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: N. T. Thayer, ' 44; D. A. Hoffman, ' 44; I. R. Collmann, ' 44; T. E. Moyer, ' 45; C. W. Fisher, ' 44; A. A. Lomar, ' 44; R. B. Mathes, ' 44; C. G. Kucher, ' 43; E. R. Hughes, ' 45; J. F. Thomlinson, ' 44. Third Row: R. B. Rippey, ' 44; J. T. Jones, ' 43; R. R. Nylin, ' 44; K. R. Knoll, ' 44; C. O. Prinkey, ' 43; T. L. Bushey, ' 43; R. C. Deckard, ' 44; W. B. Irvin, ' 43; J. W. Gallager, ' 43; N. S. Culliney, ' 43. Second Row: K. G. Williams, ' 42 ; H. G. Luley, ' 42 ; J. P. Thomas, ' 43 ; J. O. Downs, ' 42 ; A. W. Pedrick, ' 43; V. M. Evans, ' 42; J. T. Ransom, ' 42. Front Row: R. C. Roth, ' 43; W. G. Critchlow, Jr., ' 45; R. R. Wylie, ' 45; L. R. Snowden, ' 45; E. F. Hussa, Jr., ' 45; T. E. Skilling, ' 45; C. L. Robinson, ' 45. IN THE CANDIDS: The luxury boys on their spacious balcony; but they hit the books too. • m I mi ! town council ORGANIZATION of the Town Council came in 1939 after a need was felt for greater co-operation among the non-fraternity, non-dormitory students and a strong voice in student administration was desired. One of the most important problems which the Town Council has attempted to solve is that of housing. To gather facts on lodging and to improve conditions, the Council this year sent to each member two form sheets to discover the wishes of the off-campus, non- fraternity men. A comparative student housing survey was circulated to discover if there is a need for semi-co-operative living groups such as the Alpha Town house. For identification of picture see page 406. 263 alpha town houstj The Alpha Town House was founded in the Spring of 1942 by three Lehigh students. The House is in the nature of a semi-co-operative local fraternity and was founded for the purpose of giving the non-fraternity, non-dormitory students the advantages of fraternal life. In June, 1941 the house moved to their present quarters at 308 West Packer Avenue. As a general rule, membership in the Alpha Town House is offered to freshmen in the spring. The general adviser to the House is Dr. C. G. Beardslee, and the financial adviser is A. W. Litzenberger. This group enjoys the honor of having had the second highest average among the living groups for the spring semester of 1 94 1 . As a result, the House is repre- sented in quite a number of the honorary fraternities including Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Mu Epsilon, Pi Tau Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, and Newtonian. The Treasurer of the Debating Society is a member as is the Vice-President of the Town Council. cosmopolitan club 264 FORMED to help the foreign student accustom himself to his new environ- ment, the Cosmopolitan club has, in less than three years, increased its member- ship from 15 to 30 undergraduates and graduates. The beginning of the basic idea of the Cosmopolitan club was in 1938 when two Lehigh students, George E. Tabet and James L. Shirer, and one faculty member, William H. Bohning, collaborated to form a group which would help foreign students at Lehigh and produce a mutual co-operation of ideas. Lecture meetings open to the public are held by the club twice every month. Members of the club and others speak at these meetings and contribute their knowledge of the country with which they have been associated. One of the highlights of the club ' s activities was a dinner given for Archduke Otto of Austria. Among the activities of the members are Tau Beta Pi, Mustard and Cheese, Cut and Thrust, and Tone. ALPHA TOWN HOUSE: Back Row: R. B. Asson, ' 45; C. A. Hoffman, ' 44; R. C. Kramer, ' 43; G. F. Miller, ' 44; A. O. Putnam, ' 43; W. W. Treichler, ' 45; S. P. Caldwell, ' 43; A. G. Ferdinand, ' 43; R. W. Saylor, ' 43; W. K. Morgan, ' 43. Front Row: R. K. Beckwith, ' 43; L. K. Oliphant, ' 42; P. B. Fitzell, ' 42; F. C. Tillberg, ' 42; G. H. Brown, ' 42. Also: C. S. Steiner, ' 42. IN THE CANDIDS: Dinner is served at the Alpha Town House; The Cosmopolitan Club gathers for the same purpose. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: Back Row: G. R. Potter, ' 44; T. Fleischer, ' 42; W. B. White, Graduate; E. A. Frankley, ' 45; I. R. Benavides, ' 45; R. D. Spradling, ' 45; C. T. Robertson, ' 42. Third Row: S. Tor, Graduate; R. C. Ramsdell, ' 43; W. F. Gross, Graduate; H. C. Green, Graduate; F. F. Berman, ' 43; L. B. Sargent, Graduate; C. A. Fernandez, ' 45. Second Row: L. E. Sharpe, ' 42; T. Shintaku, ' 44; A. J. E. Leroux, ' 44; J. R. Ristorcelli, ' 44; F. W. Berman, ' 44; K. H. Weber, ' 42. Front Row: L. E. Antonides, ' 45; P. B. Georgopulo, ' 42; M. J. Eways, ' 42; A. H. Okamoto, ' 42; R. M. Lewert, Graduate. v • ' m B % £ V m -m engineers ' club SHORTLY after the beginning of the fall semester, 1941 , two Lehigh students, James Chafey and Michael Gurak, became interested in forming an organization run on a co-operative basis. Six other men joined their ranks, Dr. F. J. Farnoff was obtained as faculty adviser, a petition was presented to, and accepted by, Dean Congdon, and the lease for their present home at 32 1 West Fourth Street was signed on October 7, 1941. This house was ren ted and furnished by the members on a strictly cash basis and there are no unpaid bills on their books. Thus, with a clean slate, these eight men started in to operate their organization on a one hundred per cent co-operative basis. All the work such as cooking, repairs, and cleaning is done by the members. As the name implies, membership is offered to men in the engineering curriculum only. lehicjh-allentown club OF THE 120 Lehigh students living in Allentown and environs, more than half are members of the Lehigh- Allentown club. Organized in 1934 with the purpose of unifying Allentown students attending Lehigh and for the promotion of schol- arship and participation in extra-curricular activities of those students, the club this year made plans for the reorganization into the form of a fraternity. With the approval of its reorganization the fraternity will continue with its present membership, while future students will be selected rather than accepted as mem- bers. It is believed that under the new set-up the fraternity will be stronger in form and in spirit. The past year has seen the Lehilgh-Allentown club, under the leadership of Henry A. Seebald, complete its reorganization plans. Monthly meetings have included a Dads ' day program, a barn dance, a play, a Freshman introduction, and a banquet. At tie-in with University activities has been stressed at each meeting, and frequent talks by faculty members have been presented before the club. ENGINEERS ' CLUB: Back Row: J. E. Chafey, ' 42; G. C. Wanich, ' 43; M. Gurak, ' 44; R. F. Muraca, ' 43. Front Row: R. H. Cliff, Jr., ' 42; R. W. Rouse, ' 43. 267 MOST SYMBOLIC, perhaps, of the senior class is its publication, the year- book, which strives to justify its name and to be truly an epitome of the class, the university, and the four years of col- lege life. Seniors are widely divergent, C P V OY representing all kinds and both extremes in any given characteris- tic; the yearbook tries to bring unity, to fuse together and to integrate. It is there- fore the best senior representative, and can legitimately act as that divider. tltlf! ATT •• SN ' ••. N •• seniors IN COMPARISON of undergraduate days, the class of 1942 has markedly resembled the classes which have preceded it. It has had its share of great ath- letes, brilliant students, and personable leaders, as well as men who have been less conspicuous. The class has also enjoyed a typical four years, mixing studies and good times. But this is where the similarity ends, for where the men of preced- ing classes were graduated into a peaceful world to fill vacancies in engineering, business, and the professions, the men of the class of 1942 are being graduated into a world of war ready to take arms in either a battle of production or a battle of men. The immediate future is not bright, but when the war is over the country will recover and the college men of today will be tomorrow ' s leaders. Although faced with a more difficult task than their predecessors, the men of the class of 1942 will become successes and more names will be added to the continually growing list of famous Lehigh alumni. The men who will thumb the pages of this Epitome thirty years from now will have had to fight hard to reach the top, making them all the more proud that they are the men of Lehigh ' s class of 1942. 271 HENRY LAWRENCE ABBOTT electrical engineering sigma chi Larry is a member of the Electrical Engineering Society, the Army Ordnance Associa- tion, and the Sportsman ' s Club, of which he is corresponding secretary. In his sopho- more year he was a cheerleader and rushing chairman of his fraternity. He held wrestling managerships in his freshman and sophomore years. JOHN MARION ADAMS civil engineering allentown Johnny is treasurer of the Lehigh student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers. He has done research work in hydraulics and would like to enter the field of traffic engineering. An advanced military student, he may be called this summer for service in the Corps of Engineers. VERNON HOWARD ADAMS industrial engineering theta delta chi Sparky came to Lehigh from Hempstead High School, Long Island. He received numerals in baseball and soccer and won a letter in the latter sport. Sparky helped organize several intramural sports activities ; he is a numismatist and a philatelist, and is one of the better bridge players in his house as well. JOHN ADRIAN, JR. business taylor house d Johnny came to Lehigh from Stamford High School in Connecticut. While at Lehigh he played varsity lacrosse and captained the team in his senior year. For his perform- ance in this sport he was awarded the Ernesta Drinker Lacrosse Cup in his junior year. Bud was a member of the University Band for two years. JOHN PURDON ALLEN chemical engineering taylor house b Kriss entered Lehigh from Montclair High School, Montclair, N. J. He was an active member of the Chemical Society and the Sportsman ' s Club. He was interested in sports and competed in intramural sports and track. During his summer vacations he furthered his hobby of collecting and experimenting with rifles. JOSEPH NARCISO AMBROGI, JR. electrical engineering alpha kappa pi Joe ' s athletic record shows letters and numerals in football, basketball, and track. Who ' s Who in American Universities and Colleges, Cyanide, and the Spiked Shoe Society include him in their membership. Joe is also vice-president of Alpha Kappa Pi. RAYMOND BURR ANDERSON, JR. mechanical engineering chi psi Ray prepared for college at Worcester Academy. He was captain of the varsity soccer team and a star of the hockey team. In his freshman year he was secretary of the Newtonian Society and is a member of the A.S.M.E. He was interested in flying and completed the primary C.A.A. course. CHARLES JOHN APOLENIS engineering physics allentown The summer before Appie came to Lehigh he spent in making water analyses for the Allentown municipal laboratory. He became a member of the Physics Society early in his college career. Appie ' s chief interest is in the study of communications systems, in which work he is specializing. JOHN PETER ARBIZANNI metallurgical engineering town group John graduated from Liberty High School before coming to Lehigh. He played in the Symphony Orchestra in his junior year and all through Lehigh has pursued his hobby of photography. For three summers he worked at the Bethlehem Steel Company ; this 272 year he has held a part-time job there besides attending school. } r a 4K «fi 1 JOSEPH FREDERICK ARBOGAST chem. eng. drinker house iha Joe is active in intramural sports and is athletic manager of his living group. He is a member of the badminton team. Other activities of his are membership in the Chem- ical Society and the DeMolay Club. Joe is building an absorption column for chemical- research work. He is interested in stamp collecting. GEORGE EDWARD ARCHBOLD business lambda chi alpha Hawker concentrated his interests on athletics, winning numerals in football and basketball. He played three years on the varsity basketball squad and belonged to championship intramural football and baseball teams. He is secretary of his fraternity and enjoys fishing in his spare time. JOSEPH ANDREW ARNOLD chemical engineering drinker house iiia Joe ' s interest in things military was shown by his position of first sergeant of Scabbard and Blade, his membership in the Army Ordnance Association and the Reserve Offi- cers Association, and his activity on the rifle team. He was also treasurer of Alpha Phi Omega in his junior year. ROBERT EDWARD ASHLEY civil engineering chi psi Before coming to Lehigh Midge went to Muskegon, Mich., High School. He earned freshman honors and won the Pi Tau Sigma handbook for the highest-ranking freshman in Industrial Engineering. He was a member of Tau Beta Pi and Scabbard and Blade, and was secretary of his fraternity. HARRY MONTGOMERY ATKINS arts (hist, and govern.) price house Hap hails from Kittanning, where he went to high school; he has made his impress on Lehigh by his debating skill, his aptitude for golf, and his consuming interest in photography. He has been called by the army, and after his service is up he hopes to enter the Civil Service. DONALD NOYES BACHMAN business allentown Don comes from Allentown, where he went to high school. In his freshman year he made the Newtonian Society. He also was elected to Lambda Mu Sigma, honorary marketing fraternity and joined the Camera Club. He has taken advanced R.O.T.C., so after graduation his first job will be with the United States Army. ROBERT MARTIN BAKER business alpha tau omega Moon took part in intramural sports, including bowling, and was manager of the badminton team in his junior year. Attaining membership in Alpha Kappa Psi, he held the position of program chairman for one term. He was connected with the business staff of the Brown and White. Bridge is one of his pastimes. STEPHEN FRANCIS BALSHI arts (biology) town group Stephen played in intramural sports and is a member of the Sportsman ' s Club. He was vice-president of Alpha Epsilon Delta and treasurer of the R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society. Upon graduation he expects to enter medical school. His hobbies are photog- raphy and animal study. WILLIAM HOWARD BARNARD electrical engineering town group Bill is a well-qualified member of Delta Omicron T heta, having won the Williams prizes in intramural debating and extempore speaking. He is technical adviser and vice-president of Mustard and Cheese, treasurer of the Town Council, president of his living group, and a member of the Electrical Engineering Society. 275 ROBERT HOPKINS BARTHOLOMEW chem. eng. richards house iva Bob, who attended Palmerton High School in Pennsylvania, is very interested in music, as is shown by his activities in the Glee Club, Band, Symphony Orchestra, and the Allentown Band. A member of the Student Chemical Society, Bob worked last summer in the Chemical Research Division of the New Jersey Zinc Company. CHARLES DRUMMOND BARTLETT, JR. business sigma phi epsilon Bubs prepared for Lehigh at Deerfield Academy. He earned his freshman numerals in track and also received his varsity letter. Bubs was elected to the position of treasurer of the Spiked Shoe Society. He has been active in fraternity affairs and has held several offices in his house. KENNETH CASWELL BAUDER arts (finance) taylor house b A finance major, Ken expects to go into an investment house after graduation. He was active in track, winning his freshman numerals and varsity letter in this sport. He was also secretary of the Spiked Shoe Society. Ken ' s chief hobbies are photography, bird study, and music. ROBERT WILLIAM BECK, JR. industrial engineering phi gamma delta Graduating from Blair Academy, Bob won his numerals in basketball during his fresh- man year and continued in basketball on the varsity. Bob ' s other activities include the Brown Key Society, the Brown and White, and the Glee Club. In his fraternity he held the office of historian. JESSE FRANKLIN BEERS, JR. arts (english) sigma phi epsilon Confining his activities to journalism, Jess has been living-group editor and art editor of the Epitome, besides serving on the Brown and White Editorial Council and desk. Who ' s Who in American Colleges man, Beers is a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Pi Delta Epsilon, and Phi Eta Sigma honorary societies. JOHN FULLAM BELCHER arts (sociology) drinker house ivb Jackson, whose chief hobby is music, has played with the Lehigh Collegians for four years, was their manager for two years, and was a member of the Combined Musical Clubs. He was also a member of the rifle team and the Reserve Officers Asso- ciation. His other hobby is fishing. GEORGE BEVERLY BENEDICT arts (german) town group George, after attending Albany High School, came to Lehigh, to attain freshman and sophomore honors. He has also been on the Dean ' s list for the last three semesters and is a member of Eta Sigma Phi. George has worked in the summer as an engineer ' s helper with the New York State Department of Public Works. WILLIAM MILTON BENESCH arts (physics) sigma alpha mu Hoppy entered Lehigh as a sophomore, having graduated from Baltimore Poly- technic Institute. By this means he was able to achieve the peculiar distinction of earning both freshman numerals and sophomore scholastic honors in the same year. Bridge is his avocational forte, and he is deservedly the Culbertson of the house. ROBERT ALLAN BENNETT mechanical engineering Northampton Bob commutes from his home in Northampton. He has been a member of the Uni- versity Band and has played with the Lehigh Collegians, as well as with other dance bands. Bob has done combustion research in the Mechanical Engineering Department 276 and has worked part of his summers. His hobby is gasoline-model-airplane building. RICHARD JOSEPH BERG arts (english) sigma alpha mu Dick has been prominent for four years in the production of Mustard and Cheese and has been the secretary of the club. President of his fraternity, he was also a member of the staffs of the Brown and White and the Lehigh Review. He has won the Wil- liams prizes for speaking and composition and is listed in the college Who ' s Who. JESSE OATMAN BETTERTON mettallurgical eng. Richards house iib Jess gained freshman and sophomore honors and became a member of Pi Mu Epsilon and the Newtonian Society. In addition, he participated in varsity wrestling and J.V. football. He is a student member of the ASM and has spent his summers in research work for steel and refining companies. EDWARD MacCLELLAN BIGGS electrical eng. richards house ivb Mac has served as financial manager of the Epitome and sports editor of the Brown and White. He is a member of Pi Delta Epsilon, and was section chief during his junior year. Mac has competed for position on both the freshman and varsity wrestling teams and helped start Zero Sequence, the E.E.s ' publication. WELLES ROYCE BLISS arts (latin) Leonard hall Welles won freshman and sophomore honors and the Eta Sigma Phi Latin prize. He is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Eta Sigma Phi, and the Band. He is president of IRC and secretary of Leonard Hall. His chief hobby is classical music. After graduation Welles plans to enter the Episcopal ministry. EDWARD FULPER BODINE mechanical engineering lambda chi alpha Ed ' s combined scholastic and leadership abilities merited the presidencies of Pi Tau Sigma and the Newtonian Society and membership in Tau Beta Pi and Phi Eta Sigma. He also held the offices of vice-president of the I.E.-M.E. Society and rushing chair- man of Lambda Chi Alpha. WILLIAM FILSON BOORE metallurgical engineering sigma chi As circulation manager and managing editor of the Bachelor, Bill earned membership in Pi Delta Epsilon. He is a member of the Newtonian Society, vice-president of Delta Omicron Theta, a senior cheerleader, and secretary of his fraternity. Bill won the Williams Prize in debating as a sophomore. WILLIAM THOMAS BOSTOCK, JR. chem. eng. richards house niA Bill has been president of his dormitory section for the past two years, treasurer of the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for two years, and vice-president of the Interdormitory Council his senior year. He has been on foot- ball, softball, and basketball intramural teams. JAMES HENRY BOUCHER civil engineering taylor house c Jim started his college career by winning freshman honors. Since then he has become secretary and president of the student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engi- neers. Interested in sports, he is a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and of his section ' s bowling team. SIDNEY ROYAL BOWEN electrical engineering sigma chi Journalism was Sid ' s main interest at Grinnell College, which he attended before transferring to Lehigh. Here he gained membership in the Newtonian Society. He was basketball manager in his sophomore year and is now social chairman of his fraternity. His chief pastime is flying. 279 WALTER BERTOLET BOWERS electrical engineering richards house i Bert is a member of Eta Kappa Nu, for which he has been the correspondent for Bridge. He was secretary of the Lehigh branch of A.I.E.E., a member of the chess team, a photographer for the Brown and White, and an intramural debater. Study of television and intramural athletics are also among his extra-curricular activities. ROBERT McCLEARY BOWMAN industrial eng. sigma phi epsilon Buck prepared for Lehigh at the Perkiomen School in Pennsburg. He has served as both pledge trainer and rushing chairman of his fraternity and has represented it in numerous interfraternity athletic contests. His ambition is to become a salesman as an industrial engineer. RALPH BOWN, JR. business theta delta chi Ralph has been financial manager of the Brown and White and the recipient of many scholastic honors in his college. Not confining all his time to studies, Ralph took part in freshman baseball and became treasurer and steward of Theta Delta Chi. One of his best-developed hobbies is aeronautics. SIDNEY BREESE BOWNE, JR. civil engineering sigma nu Hoping to enter construction engineering after graduation from Lehigh, Sid has spent his summers as an apprentice engineer and as the head of a pipe-line crew. Secretary and vice-president of the A.S.C.E., he has found time to develop his hobbies of photography and sailing and holds a C.A.A. license. HARRY LESTER BOYER, JR. chemical engineering alpha kappa pi At Lehigh, Harry has made quite a name for himself in sports. In his freshman year he won the R. A. Lewis wrestling cup as the outstanding freshman wrestler. Since then Harry has earned varsity letters in both cross country and wrestling. He was a member of Cyanide and historian of his fraternity. HORACE WILLIAM BOYNTON chemical engineering alpha chi rho Bud was both rushing chairman and steward of his fraternity his senior year. His other activities included managership of freshman football and two years ' competition on the Brown and White business staff. Upon graduation Bud will receive two degrees, B.A. and B.S. in Chemical Engineering. RICHARD HENRY BRENNEMAN mining engineering beta theta pi Dick is a graduate of Glammard High School in Pottsville. Although Juice is presi- dent of the Mining and Geological Society, a member of Cyanide and the Inter- fraternity Council, and a three-letter man in track, his outstanding success is in wrestling, of which he was captain his senior year. RICHARD RIESER BRIGHT industrial engineering chi pi Downwind has for four years been on Lehigh ' s fencing team and this year is cap- tain of the squad. He has been president of Cut and Thrust, a freshman and sopho- more football manager, and a Scabbard and Blade member. Downwind is a mem- ber of the A.S.M.E. and the Army Ordnance Association. EVERETT ALLAN BRITTON business delta tau delta Al, a graduate of P.S. duPont High School in Wilmington, is a devotee of flying and hopes some day to be an instructor. He secured his license through the C.A.A. Brit ' s other activities include freshman swimming, technical directorship of Mustard and 280 Cheese, intramural sports, and Brown and White. w« ALEXANDER BRKICH mechanical engineering town group Alex worked for Underwood Elliot Fischer and Remington Arms for two years each before he entered Lehigh in ' 39. He has completed his course in three years, won scholastic honors and the Haines Scholarship, and become a member of Pi Mu Epsilon and Tau Beta Pi. Alex married Miss Catherine Harris last year. WILLIAM ALEXANDER BROOKS civil engineering richards house ivb Bill earned numerals in track and as manager of football. His other athletic attain- ments were manager of varsity basketball and three years on the track squad. He was also secretary-treasurer of his dormitory section for two years and a member of the Civil Engineering Society for four years. SAMUEL RITCHIE BROUGH, JR. industrial eng. theta delta chi Dick comes to Lehigh from the great Southwest. Dick ' s main interest here has been athletics. He was a member of the freshman wrestling squad and has been on the varsity track team since his sophomore year. Dick is a student of advanced military science and will enter the Army after graduation. JOHN IRVING BRO WER, JR. industrial engineering kappa alpha Johnny transferred to Lehigh from Union Junior College at the end of his freshman year. In addition to participating in J.V. football, he has been a wrestling candidate for three years and president of his fraternity. Johnny furthered his hobby of sailing by becoming a member of the Yacht Club. ALFRED BRUCE BROWN engineering physics taylor house b Bruce has been editor-in-chief of the Epitome, vice-president of Tau Beta Pi, and a member of O.D.K., Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsilon, S.C.L. Committee, Newtonian Society, and Scabbard and Blade. He has been president of Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, and the Physics Society. He was on the track and cross-country squads. GEORGE HONGENAE BROWN business alpha town house Shorty has been quite active in intramural football, baseball, and wrestling. He was on the freshman wrestling squad and went out for varsity track in his sophomore year. He was one of the original members of the Alpha Town House. Shorty came to Lehigh from Lawrenceville Preparatory School in New Jersey. JAMES HARVEY BRUEN, JR. business richards house iia Jim belonged to the Glee Club and the Sportsman ' s Club, his favorite diversions from study, besides singing, being hunting, boating, and woodworking. He served his dormitory section as treasurer and as a member of its athletic teams. He has spent his summers doing municipal accounting and auditing work. FRANK TAYLOR BRUNDAGE, JR. mechanical eng. taylor house b Coming to Lehigh from Peekskill Military Academy, Frank ' s activities have been closely connected with the profession he plans to follow. He was a member of both the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the M.E.-I.E. Society. He has worked as an office boy and a machinist during the summers. ROBERT BRUNE business beta theta pi Robin has been active in sports while at Lehigh. He was athletic manager of his fraternity, a member of the wrestling team for four years, and of the golf team for two years. Robin has spent most of his summers working and expects to enter the Army after graduation. 203 JOHN BURGIO ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING DELTA SIGMA PHI Johnny ' s fondness for football is shown by his winning of numerals, his year of varsity competition, and his outstanding play on his fraternity ' s team. His hobby of amateur radio is furthered by his work in the Radio Club, of which he is secretary. He is a member of the E.E. Society and vice-president of his fraternity. IRWIN RUSSELL BURKEY industrial engineering town group Russ won the Alumni Junior Engineering Prize and is a member of Pi Tau Sigma. He played in the University Band, won sophomore honors, and was on the Dean ' s list. A member of the student branch of the A.S.M.E. and of the I.E.-M.E. Society, Russ has also participated in intramural sports. PHILIP GUERNSEY BUTTS arts (chemistry) delta sigma phi Phil received his secondary schooling at the George School near Philadelphia. His scholastic ability netted him both freshman and sophomore honors. He served his fraternity as Interfraternity Council representative and played on its intramural sport teams. He earned spending money by working in the library ' s catalogue department. LEWIS JONES CAULK business sigma phi Lew came to Lehigh from the South Pasadena, Calif., High School and has demon- strated his skill in tennis and badminton. He won freshman numerals in the former and founded a badminton club last year. He was a member of Mustard and Cheese, Newtonian Society, Interfraternity Council, and was president of his fraternity. JAMES EDWARD CHAFEY metallurgical engineering engineers ' club Jim transferred to Lehigh from the Wyomissing Polytechnic Institute as a junior. He is a charter member of the new Engineers ' Club. Jim has been conducting research work in heat treatment in metallurgy this year, intending to prepare himself for a position with the American Steel and Crane Corp. upon graduation. ROBERT ELMER CHAMBERLAIN mechanical engineering town group Vice-president and athletic manager of his town section, Neville has participated in freshman and varsity track, and last year was on the varsity baseball squad. He captained section teams in intramural athletics and was a student member of the A.S.M.E. and a member of the Epworth League at Fritz Methodist Episcopal Church. ALBERT CLARK, JR. chemistry town group President of his town group, Al is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Scabbard and Blade, the R. W. Blake Society, Tone, the Rifle Club, and the E. W. Brown Society. He won freshman honors and has participated in intramural debating and the General Educa- tion program. Al ' s hobby is philately, and he hopes to do graduate work. GORDON MANSON CLARK business beta kappa Gordon comes from New Haven, Conn. He prepared at Wilbraham Academy before entering Lehigh. He has been a member of the Camera Club and the Mechanical Engineering Society. Gordon has been on several intramural sports teams. After graduating he would like to sell road-construction equipment. JOHN FULMER CLARK, JR. electrical engineering sigma phi epsilon Jack ' s major interest is radio. He has his own radio station and is a police operator and broadcast announcer. Jack has also done research work in radio and is secretary- treasurer of the Radio Club. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, New- 284 tonian Society, and Pi Mu Epsilon. He earned swimming numerals. NELSON RAYMOND CLARK, JR. industrial engineering beta theta pi One of Bud ' s foremost interests is sports. Manager and member of all the intramural teams of his house, he was a member of the freshman and J.V. football teams. Bud was active in the summer theater and the A.S.M.E., organized the Young Repub- licans Club of the Lehigh Valley, and was fraternity house manager. ROBERT WESLEY CLARK industrial engineering sigma nu A conscientious engineer, Clarkie is vice-president of both Pi Tau Sigma and the I.E.-M.E. Society and was elected to Tau Beta Pi. An honor student, Bob is president of Sigma Nu and a member of the Glee Club. He is well known at Lehigh for his good disposition and his boogie-woogie piano playing. WILLIAM LEE CLARK business phi sigma kappa Bill came to us from Garden City, N. Y., High School. Injury excluded him from his favorite sport, lacrosse, but he developed his interests along other channels, flying in particular. He has served as social chairman and as inductor of his fraternity and is planning to enter the field of sales promotion after graduation. WILLARD STANLEY CLEWELL chemistry town group Bill is particularly well known for his ardent love of chemistry and all things con- nected with it. A member of the Student Chemical Society and a licensed pilot under the C.A.A. course, Bill is an Odd Fellow and a Mason as well. He is interested in music and philately and has done research in several chemical fields. RICHARD HENRY CLIFF, JR. mechanical engineering engineers ' club Dick is a graduate of the class of ' 39 from Wyomissing, whence he came to Lehigh after working for a year in Reading. He helped organize the Engineers ' Club, a newly formed living group, and was president this year. His hobby is model railroads, and he is a member of the A.S.M.E. Dick intends to enter industry. ALLISON WALTER CLOKEY industrial engineering drinker house iib Al became the treasurer of his dormitory section. He is also a member of the Lehigh Band, the Archery Club, the Shop Club, and a student member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Al is interested in machine-shop work, having a shop in his home, and music. FENTON RULON CLOUD industrial engineering richards house ha Rudy ' s athletic activities as a member of the varsity tennis team for three years, as captain and referee of intramural football, basketball, and softball, and as an ardent enthusiast of bowling and golf indicate his nature. In addition, his scholastic record has earned him membership in Pi Tau Sigma. EDWARD JOHN COFFEY, JR. mechanical engineering town group Ed has been president of his town group, Town Council secretary, vice-president of the Machine Shop Club, and a member of the student chapter of the A.S.M.E. He has worked three summers for Bethlehem Steel and plans to take their loop course upon graduation. Ed has played in intramural sports. ROBERT HENRY COLEMAN business theta kappa phi Bob finished his secondary schooling at Bayside High School in New York. During his college career he participated in intramural sports, was a varsity swimmer for three years, and was auditor of his fraternity. One of his well-developed hobbies is bridge. He has an interest in statistics as well as in sports. 287 ALAN HOLDING CONKLIN arts (geology) taylor house e Al, who came from Montclair High School in New Jersey, played on several intra- mural teams and held the office of treasurer of his dormitory section. He belonged to both Scabbard and Blade and the Glee Club. Al, hoping to become a member of the Air Corps, enjoys making scale models of airplanes. OAKLEY WATTS COOKE business beta kappa Oak ' s interests have been divided among the activities of the Sportsman ' s Club, the Glee Club, and Mustard and Cheese, of which he was business manager. He was also vice-president and rushing chairman of his fraternity, vice-president of the Inter- fraternity Council, and a member of the Interfraternity Ball Committee. THEODORE ROBERT CORTRIGHT electrical engineering town group Ted received his secondary education at Berwick High School before entering Lehigh. He has been a member of the Electrical Engineering Society for four years and has photography as a hobby, with special emphasis on still shots and portraits. Ted intends to enter industry unless he joins the Army. SAMUEL ISAAC CORY chemistry sigma phi epsilon Sam prepared for Lehigh at Montclair Academy in New Jersey. Because of his wide participation in intramural sports and activities, he was elected athletic manager and then house manager of his fraternity. Sam is also a member of the Lehigh Glee Club. His hobby is color photography. CARL CREIDENBERG arts (journalism) Richards house rra Dwight School in New York City prepared Carl for Lehigh. While here he has added practical experience to his curriculum of journalism by two years on the Brown and White staff. One of the best pinochle players in his section, Carl also represented it on the intramural gridirons and wrestling mats. LLOYD ALEXANDER CROOT business delta tau delta Baldy is a graduate of Kiski Preparatory School. He has participated in interfrater- nity athletics, ice hockey, and lacrosse. His work for the Brown and White as circula- tion manager won him membership in Pi Delta Epsilon. Baldy ' s principal enjoy- ments are ice skating and traveling. FRANK PETER CZIGUTH business allentown Frank prepared for Lehigh at the Central Catholic High School ; his academic ability has been demonstrated by his place on the Dean ' s list in his junior and senior years. He clerked at his family store during the school year and worked with the Bethlehem Steel Company in the summers. His hobby is photography. CHARLES PARKER DAVIDSON industrial engineering sigma phi epsilon Sparky has participated in a number of activities, including Pi Tau Sigma and the student A.S.M.E. He has been active in sports as a candidate for freshman foot- ball, wrestling, and rifle, receiving numerals in the latter sport, and was marshal of his fraternity. JAMES EDWARD DAVIS business drinker house iib Jim is a transfer student from Scranton Keystone Junior College, where he was vice- president of the Business Club and a member of the Dramatics Club. At Lehigh he played intramural sports and was an active member of the DeMolay Club and the 288 Sportsman ' s Club. Jim worked one summer for the Johns-Manville Corporation. WILLIAM SAMPSON DAWLESS business drinker house ivb Bill ' s interest in music caused him to join the Lehigh Collegians, of which he became manager and leader. He also played trumpet in the Band and was a member of the Combined Musical Clubs. He held the office of president of his dormitory section and was a representative on the Interdormitory Council. GEORGE NESTOR DeCOWSKY electrical engineering taylor house a Coming from Pennsburg High School, Baron has shown a distinct interest in sports. He was a physical-education leader in the gym, athletic manager for his dormitory section, and played all intramural sports. George was also a member of the Lehigh branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. WARD ARNOLD DETWILER II business psi upsilon Wad concentrated on sports, winning numerals in both soccer and baseball and later earning two letters in soccer. Det also was both corresponding secretary and rushing chairman of his fraternity. His hobby being sailboat racing, he has spent his summers yachting at his summer home at Cape Cod. JOHN LAKE DIAMOND arts (english) kappa alpha Jack attended both St. Andrews School and Moravian Prep. He won a Williams Prize in English composition his sophomore year and as an upperclassman was on the Dean ' s list three semesters. He is a member of Tone, the International Relations Club, and the Robert W. Blake Society. JAMES JOSEPH DONAHUE, JR. business theta delta chi Talkative Jim came to Bethlehem from Garden City, N. Y. He won his varsity letter in soccer and was mainly responsible, as head of the Senior Banquet Committee for turning the discussion of the banquet to marital problems. Jim would like to enter personal-relations work after graduation. HOWARD VANE DONOHOE chemical engineering alpha kappa pi Don has been vice-president of Alpha Kappa Pi; his interest centers in debating, for he has been president both of the Debating Council and of Delta Omicron Theta. A member of the Chemical Society and Interfraternity Council, Don has also been president of the Army Ordnance Association. He expects to enter the Army. JOHN VANCE DOWNS business theta xi Johnny has been president of his fraternity; he went out for football for two years, winning his numerals, and received a varsity letter in lacrosse during his three-year participation in that sport. Bub has been an Atlantic City life guard for three summers. He enjoys model racing cars as a hobby. JOHN HERREN DUDLEY mechanical engineering drinker house hb In addition to being president of his dormitory section, Dud has headed the Lehigh branch of A.S.M.E. and the I.E.-M.E. Society and was captain of Scabbard and Blade. In his junior year he was a member of the Interdormitory Council and secre- tary of A.S.M.E. and the I.E.-M.E. Society. He was also in the Archery Club. KENNETH D WIGHT DUGGAN arts (finance) theta delta chi Ken transferred to Lehigh in 1939 from Amherst, where he was on the freshman basketball squad. He has been on the track squad, the Brown and White, and the Band. Ken ' s hobby of traveling has carried him to Cuba, where he worked for two summers, and to the West Coast. 29 1 CHARLES BOCKOVEN DUTTON industrial engineering kappa sigma In his fraternity Chuck has served as vice-president and president. He completed the C.A.A. flight-theory course and belonged to Scabbard and Blade, the Sportsman ' s Club, the Industrial Engineering Society, and the student branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. WILLIAM ADOLPH EISELE electrical engineering richards house iia Willie ' s scholastic achievements include freshman honors, the Newtonian Society, Pi Mu Epsilon, and Eta Kappa Nu, of which he is vice-president. He was also chair- man of the student branch of the A.I.E.E. and a member of the archery team. His future plans include graduate work at Stanford University. ROBERT GAYLORD EITNER business drinker house iiia Eike was one of the 1940 winners of the Williams Prize in intramural debating. An able pianist and a member of the Glee Club, Bob finds one of his chief interests in music. He has taken the primary and advanced C.A.A. courses. John plans going into building contracting after graduation. GEORGE EARL ELLIOTT, JR. chemical engineering sigma nu After preparing for Lehigh at Mercersburg Academy, George has made quite a name for himself. A three-letter man and captain of the track team, George holds the Middle Atlantic States record in both the high and low hurdles. He was president of the Spiked Shoe Society and the Chemical Society and a member of Cyanide. EDWARD GORDON EVANS industrial engineering drinker house iib Ted transferred from Scranton Junior College, where he was a member of the Keys Honorary Society. An outstanding athlete at Keystone, Ted captained the basketball team and also won his varsity letter in baseball. In his senior year at Lehigh he was president of his living group and a member of the Interdormitory Council. HENRY CARROLL FARRAND business richards house iiib Cadaver ' s athletic record includes competition in freshman wrestling, J.V. football, and track, besides all intramural events. A student of advanced military science, Carroll was elected to Scabbard and Blade. He has furthered his interest in music by singing in the Glee Club. CLEMENT ROGER FERLAND arts (hist, and gov.) town group Clem, who came to Lehigh from Middlebury High School in Vermont, has worked his way through college by waiting tables and by working summers at the steel com- pany. He reported on the Brown and White for a year and has taken the C.A.A. flying course, gaining a pilot ' s license. Clem ' s principal hobby is music. WILLIAM AUGUST FETSKE business richards house iiia Bill ' s big hobby is sailboats and motorboats. One of his accomplishments is the devel- opment of a rod rigging for sailboats. In the winter he foregoes the pleasures of boating for those of skiing. With two summers as a machinist in a boat yard to his credit, he plans to enter the ship industry. ARTHUR LOUIS FISCHER arts (metallurgy) chi psi Art attended the Perkiomen School and lives in Plainfield, N.J. He held the offices of president and treasurer of Chi Psi and was a mainstay on the house intramural teams. He went out for wrestling and hockey manager; also he was in advanced 292 R.O.T.C., which was his main interest. f -- 1 PAUL BORIS FITZELL business alpha town house Fitz came to Lehigh from the Taft School in Connecticut. He is president of his living group and has participated in intramural wrestling and football. Fitz is a member of the Sportsman ' s Club. He has spent most of his summers working and includes among his hobbies photography, golf, and fishing. THOMAS FLEISCHER mechanical engineering cosmopolitan club Tom attended the Shortridge High School in Indianapolis. His first year he belonged to the Brown and White staff and the Band. The second year he was again a member of the Band, and as a junior he rejoined the Brown and White. As a senior he was secretary of his living group and a track competitor. HARRY WILLIAM FLUESO business a ' llentown Harry has commuted to Lehigh for four years. His freshman year he was on the baseball squad ; he worked the first two summers and attended summer school during the last one. Harry ' s interests lie in the field of accounting, and he hopes to be a C.P.A. after graduation from Lehigh. ROBERT FIELD FORSHAY business beta theta pi Sports have been Forsh ' s main interest at Lehigh, for he has participated in wrest- ling for four years, tennis for three years, and soccer during his junior year. Other activities include Alpha Kappa Psi and Brown and White. Bob was vice-president of his fraternity. He prepared at Peddie School. ROBERT HENRY FORSTER business town group Bob won his numerals in both baseball and football and has been a varsity baseball player the last two years. He is a member of the Newtonian Society and of Alpha Kappa Psi, plays in the University Band, and made the Dean ' s list his freshman year. He has worked N.Y.A. and waited tables and hopes to be a C.P.A. ROBERT HENRY FORSYTH industrial engineering phi sigma kappa Knobby came to Lehigh from Red Bank, N. J., High School. He has been steward of his fraternity, feature editor of the Bachelor, and was elected to Pi Tau Sigma. One of his vacations was spent in waiting on tables and another in R.O.T.C. summer camp. His favorite diversion from studies is photography. ALBERT WOOD FOSTER business alpha chi rho An alumnus of the Taft School in Connecticut, Al has been interested mainly in public speaking and was a competitor in intramural debating. He was president of Alpha Chi Rho the past year and was manager of the tennis team his junior year. Al also played in several interfraternity sports. DONALD THOMPSON FOSTER business town group In his junior year Don transferred from Scranton-Keystone Junior College, where he was business manager of the newspaper and manager of the yearbook. At Lehigh he became a charter member of Lambda Mu Sigma and has been active in the DeMolay Club and the Sportsman ' s Club. HAROLD EARL FOSTER business richards house ivb Henny was graduated by Frankford High School in Philadelphia. His senior year he was president of his dormitory section and a Brown and White reporter. He has played intramural sports for four years. One vacation he spent working as a clerk in his father ' s business and another on an auto trip through the South. 295 RICHARD MacDONALD FOSTER chemical engineering town group Dick ' s home town is Bethlehem, where he has worked during the school terms as well as in the summer. He won scholastic honors and made the Newtonian Society his freshman year and is also a member of Tau Beta Pi. Dick has played intramural football with his town section. JOHN ADAM FREDERICK, JR. business town group John came to Lehigh from Mercersburg Academy. He was manager of the varsity baseball team and was active in the town-group sports program. He also took part in the intramural debating league. John ' s chief hobby is photography. Last summer he worked for the American Steel and Wire Company. CHARLES WILLIAM FREED, JR. arts (government) phi kappa alpha Bill, whose hobby is music, was instrumental in leading Pi Kappa Alpha to victory in the living-group singing contests. In his senior year he was vice-president of his fraternity, secretary of Phi Alpha Theta, and a member of the International Relations Club and the Foreign Policy Association. HARRY JEROME FRIEDMAN chemical engineering town group Harry is decidedly a good student. Here at Lehigh he made the Newtonian Society, Pi Mu Epsilon, and Phi Beta Kappa. His activities include the Student Chemical Society and the property managership of Mustard and Cheese. After graduation he hopes to do work in organic-chemical engineering. ROBERT KING GAILEY chemical engineering sigma chi Duke played freshman and junior varsity football and earned a J.V. letter. His activities include membership in the Chemical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. He has served as vice-president and editor of his fraternity. Duke ' s hobby is sailing. ERNEST GAMBLE, JR. chemical engineering delta sigma phi Although Gumbo did not seem to work very hard at Lehigh, he managed to come through with Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, Newtonian Society, Alpha Phi Omega, and freshman and sophomore honors. He played in intramural sports and served as presi- dent of his fraternity. GEORGE RICHARD LAWRENCE GAUGHRAN arts (biol.) allentown Geo, who has specialized in mammalogy, is the author of two papers on wild life and a member of the American Society of Mammalogists. He belongs to the R. W. Hall Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, and won a medal last year for intramural boxing. Geo has worked N.Y.A. for four years and worked during the summers as a house painter. RUSSELL CHARLES GEBERT, JR. industrial eng. richards house iva Russ attended Cheltenham High School. While at Lehigh, he has participated in dramatics and intramural debating, and earned his numerals in freshman soccer. He has spent all of his summer vacations gaining experience in the textile industry, to which he will return following graduation. ROBERT EDWIN GENGENBACH mechanical eng. taylor house b Bob attended Bristol, Conn., High School before studying at Lehigh. He is a member of Pi Tau Sigma, the archery team, the Band, and secretary of his dormitory section. Bob has spent profitable summers at work as a machinist. He has a well-developed 296 hobby of photography. WILLIAM EVANS GHEEN mechanical engineering taylor house b Bill has been a member of Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Scabbard and Blade, the Glee Club, and Alpha Phi Omega. He has been both treasurer and secretary of his dormi- tory section and has played intramural football and bowling. Bill is interested in sales engineering and has been an advanced R.O.T.G. student. WALTER WILLIAM GLEADALL arts (chemistry) sigma nu Although quite proficient as an intramural boxer, Bud ' s athletic career was ended by an injury sustained in junior varsity football. However, Bud has been active in the Glee Club, the Chemical Society, and his fraternity since then. He has spent his summers as a chemical analyst and as a dyehouse assistant. SANFORD DAVID GOLDSTEIN business allentown David has shown his talents by some of his activities here at Lehigh. In his freshman year he received his numerals in basketball and joined the program for General Education. Later he joined A. P.O. and the International Relations Club. When he graduates he hopes to go into war production. ROBERT EDWARD GOODMAN arts ( English) sigma alpha mu Bob has shown his active interest in sports by participating in all forms of inter- fraternity athletics. He was especially active in baseball and hockey. His scholastic achievements earned him a place on the Dean ' s list for three years. He also won second prize in the Williams Junior Essay Contest. JAMES ALLISON GORDON business delta tau delta Jim ' s notable achievements, vice-president of Pi Delta Epsilon, manager of track, publicity director of Mustard and Cheese, and financial manager of the Brown and White, have earned a place for him in college Who ' s Who. Waxy is also in Cyanide, is on the Board of Publications, and has played three years of football. KILBOURN GORDON, JR. business kappa alpha Kibby, whose hobby is traveling, has toured Europe, the United States, and Canada and has lived in France. In his fraternity he has been at various times social chairman, vice-president, and Interfraternity Council representative. He is also vice-president of Mustard and Cheese. RICHARD CAMERON GORDON, JR. business richards i ' Shorty won numerals in baseball and was a competitor for the varsity team. He was a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and served as athletic manager of his dormi- tory section. He was married in September, 1941, to Miss M. Marie Diliert of Bethle- hem. He plans to become an accountant. JAMES GORE, III chemical engineering town group Jim is a graduate of the Coraopolis, Pa., High School. For four years he played in the Symphony Orchestra and belonged to the Student Chemical Society. The past summer he worked in the research laboratory of the Pittsburgh Coke and Iron Com- pany. His spare time enjoyments are bridge and bowling. WILLIAM DEAN GORMAN arts (social institutions) beta theta pi Duke played varsity soccer and lacrosse, gaining his letter in lacrosse. He was house manager of his fraternity and worked with Mustard and Cheese. His chief hobbies are golf and swimming. Duke was delegate to the national convention of Beta Theta Pi one summer and worked the other two. 299 GREGORY GOULD industrial engineering town group Greg comes from North Tarrytown, N. Y. Before coming to Lehigh he attended Washington Irving High School. Greg has been a member of the Glee Club for two years and the Camera Club. His hobbies are automobiles and radio. His summers have been spent in surveying and drafting work. WALTER OWEN GRAHAM mechanical engineering kappa alpha Among Oggie ' s athletic interests are intramural sports and varsity lacrosse. He took part in the latter in his sophomore and junior years. In his first two years at Lehigh he played in the Band. He is vice-president of his fraternity, and his chief hobby is sailing. JOHN THOMAS GREEN business phi delta theta Jack entered Lehigh after attending Allentown High School and the Tome School. He was a manager of the freshman basketball team and has worked on the business staffs of the Brown and White and Mustard and Cheese. Jack has worked at Bethle- hem Steel in the summer. He served as vice-president of his fraternity this year. FRANK JOSEPH GRESS arts (biology) bethlehem Frank is a transfer student from Bloomsburg State Teachers ' College, where he played in the band and orchestra. He is a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta and was this year ' s vice-president of the R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society. He plans to enter medical school and has worked as an assistant in the Bloomsburg Hospital. HAROLD ALEXANDER GRUBB metallurgical eng. phi sigma kappa Grubby came to Lehigh from Abington High School. His home town is North Hills. He has been out for soccer for three years and is something of a scholar. Grubby has been a member of the Newtonian Society and has been steward of his fraternity. He is a member of the Metallurgical Society and the A.S.M. MICHAEL GUIDON, III mechanical engineering freeman sburg A commuter to Lehigh, Mike has specialized in music, having been associated with the University Band, the Orchestra, and the Glee Club. He is a member of the Machine Shop Club and the A.S.M.E. student chapter. Mike has done Boys ' Club work and during the summers has worked for Bethlehem Steel. ROBERT NEUMAN GUSDORFF business richards house iia Besides being president of his dormitory section, Gus was president of his class in his sophomore year and secretary-treasurer his junior year. Since he is interested in dramatics he became a member of Mustard and Cheese and has acted in several plays. He was also active on many committees and in Lambda Mu Sigma. NORMAN HACKMAN business sigma alpha mu Hackenbush ' s activities have been mainly in the sports and social fields. In his freshman year he earned his numerals in soccer and tennis and later received a letter in soccer. During his junior year he was house manager of his fraternity and, in his senior year, house president. HAROLD WOODBURY HAINES chemical engineering drinker house iib Scholastic honors of Wiz ' s include Pi Mu Epsilon and Newtonian Society. In his dormitory section he has been athletic manager and has participated in intramural sports. Wiz has also been on the Brown and White and in intramural debating. 300 His special interests are piano and bridge. fe £ DOUGLAS MATHISON HAIRE business alpha chi rho Doug was graduated from Columbia High School in New Jersey. He has played all interfraternity sports and was on the freshman football squad. Doug represented his fraternity for two years in the Interfraternity Council, and also served his living group as treasurer and secretary. DONALD HALBEDL business richards house i Tiny, who has been a chief petty officer in the Naval Marine Reserve, is an alumnus of Boys ' High School in Brooklyn. He was on the track team his junior year. His pastimes are varied; among them he includes football, coin collecting, and philately. In connection with his studies he did psychology work at Rittersville Hospital. ROBERT ARRISON HAMMOND chemical engineering allentown Bob, who takes an active interest in outdoor life, is an Eagle Scout and has spent two summers as a naturalist and unit director in a Boy Scout camp. He received fresh- man honors and is a member of the Newtonian Society, the Chess Club, and the American Chemical Society. Bob will work for DuPont; his chief hobby is oil painting. RALPH LEIGHTON HANEY, JR. electrical engineering richards iia Leight prepared for college at the Peddie School, Hightstown, N. J. He participated in, and also refereed, intramural contests. At the last summer session he won the tennis trophy and the bridge tournament. He spends spare moments fishing, working with radios, or collecting records. GEORGE WARREN HANSON business richards house mB George served as sophomore representative of his dormitory section and was elected its treasurer this year. He is a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and participated in intramural baseball. Majoring in accounting, he completed his business-administration course in three and one half years. EDWARD ALFRED HANUDEL chemical engineering drinker house iia Ed is a transfer student from Union Junior College, where he was a member of the Phi Delta Phi Engineering Fraternity. At Lehigh he was a member of the Student Chemical Society and the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. He was also athletic manager of his dormitory section. MILTON WILLIN HARPER chemical engineering town group Milt ' s interest in scouting is attested by his membership in Alpha Phi Omega, national honorary scouting fraternity. He is also a member of the Student Chemical Society and worked as reporter on the Brown and White his freshman and sophomore years. Milt prepared for Lehigh at the Federalsburg High School in Maryland. DALE ACKLEY HARRIS arts (bacteriology) taylor house c Mike ' s special province is in wrestling; he won numerals and wrestled on the J.V. team for two years. In his sophomore year he won intramural wrestling and boxing championships. A member of the Chess Club and Alpha Phi Omega, Mike likes to be outdoors and has as hobbies riding and training horses. RICHARD PARSE HAZARD arts (chemistry) delta sigma phi According to his fraternity brothers, Hap fairly lives at the piano, specializing in everything from classical music to swing. After tooting the bass horn in the Band for two years, he gave it up and turned to the more gentle sport of composing. He is a graduate of Falls Township High School. 3°3 JOSEPH HUMMEL HELLER, JR. business bethlehem Hoze came to Lehigh from Bethlehem High School. He showed his great interest in athletics by participating in intramural tennis and football. He also did much to develop and further his dramatic interests by becoming a member of Mustard and Cheese. His hobby is collecting autographs. RICHARD LAMBERT HEYNIGER business chi phi Dick plans to study at Harvard after graduation from Lehigh. He has served as president and vice-president of his fraternity. He received his numerals in freshman basketball and has been a member of Alpha Kappa Psi. He has represented Chi Phi on the Interfraternity Council. JOHN BALMAIN HILL, JR. mechanical engineering beta kappa Jody ' s hobbies have been along mechanical lines. He has at times played around with radio, model airplanes, and photography. John joined the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the Radio Club and was secretary and president of his fraternity. He worked for the Bethlehem Steel Company for two summers. LOUIS JOSEPH HILLENBRAND, JR. chemical engineering allentown Louie ' s hobby, apart from his work, is classical music; that he is interested in his chosen field is shown by his membership in the American Chemical Society and the A.I.Ch.E. as well as by the research he did last summer for Congoleum. He is a member of the Lehigh Allentown Club. Louie ' s other interests include fencing. WARREN ALFRED HIMMEL WRIGHT chemical engineering bethlehem Bud won freshman honors and is a member of the Student Chemical Society and of the Army Ordnance Association. He spent his last two summers working. On July 30 of last year he married Miss Eleanor Manners. Bud hopes to get into chemical- engineering production work. He prepared for Lehigh at Liberty High School. RALPH CRAVEN HIRD, JR. chemistry theta delta chi Ralph was prepared at the Lincoln School in New York City. At Lehigh, Spring- foot has participated in varsity swimming, the Band, and intramural football and baseball. Two of his hobbies, music and flying, are developed with the aid of his own Steinway and Beechcraft. WILLIAM PAIGE HITCHCOCK arts (mechanical eng.) psi upsilon Bilge entered Lehigh after graduating from Syracuse, N. Y., High School. At Lehigh he won awards in freshman, J.V., and varsity wrestling and freshman foot- ball. Bill served as president of Psi Upsilon for two terms and was a member of the Interfraternity Council. His hobbies are designing and bridge. HOWARD ADDISON HOCH, JR. business town group Hochie, as athletic manager of his town section, has played intramural football, basketball, and baseball. He was treasurer and president of the DeMolay Club and manager of the club ' s date bureau which was organized this year. Interested in music, he was a member of both the Band and Glee Club. CHESTER ADAM HOFFMAN chemical engineering allentown Chet is a member of the Lehigh Allentown Club and the student branches of the American Chemical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. He has developed a new method of qualitative analysis and a method for reducing nitro 304 compounds. He has been organist and choirmaster of his church. BERNARD EARL HOFFNER chemical engineering town group Bernie lives in Bethlehem and came to Lehigh from Allentown Preparatory School. He is a member of the student branch of the American Society of Chemical Engineers and the Student Chemical Society. Bernie has been on the intramural sports teams of his town section. His hobby is art. THOMAS SEIR CUMMINGS HOLBERTON, JR. chem. delta sigma phi Tom, a graduate of the Hackensack, N. J., High School, has devoted much of his time to biochemistry, particularly to leather tanning, and to his pastimes of photogra- phy and bridge. At different times he held the offices of steward, social chairman, and sergeant-at-arms of his fraternity. GEORGE VERNON HOLBY chemical engineering taylor house e Sleepy prepared for college at Greenwich High School in Connecticut. After two years on the rifle team he became its vice-president his senior year. George has also participated in intramural football, fencing, and wrestling. During the summer he sails his own schooner and pursues his hobby of collecting firearms. SEYMOUR LAWRENCE HOLLANDER chemistry pi lambda phi Dutch, who came from Millburn High School in New Jersey, has held the offices of scribe, pledge master, and president of his fraternity. He participated in intra- mural debating in his sophomore year and again as a senior. A member of the student Chemical Society, Dutch is primarily interested in research. CALEB WILLIAM HOLYOKE mechanical engineering alpha kappa pi Cale is one of the Regional Scholarship winners in the Class of 1942. During his first year he was awarded freshman honors. He was a member of the Glee Club and of Nativity Pro-cathedral Choir. Cale was an active participant in many of Alpha Kappa Pi ' s intramural teams and a member of the A.S.M.E. ALFRED EDWARD HORKA chemical engineering Richards house iib A.E., a charter member of the DeMolay Club, has served as its secretary, treasurer, and president. He has played on championship football and baseball intramural teams and was a member of the Hockey Club for two years. He was also treasurer and sophomore representative of his dormitory section. WILLIAM EDWARD HOWARD, III business psi upsilon Ned, who came to Lehigh from the Peddie School, has participated in freshman basketball and track and interfraternity sports. Since learning to fly in the C.A.A. flying course his ambition has been to become an army instructor. Ned ' s summers have been spent skiing, mining gold, and rounding the Horn in a sixty-foot schooner. DONALD CLINTON HOWE mining engineering allentown Allentown High School prepared Don for Lehigh. Here Don became a member of the Mining and Geological Society and did N.Y.A. work. He spent one summer in sur- veying camp and two in the training program of the Pittsburgh Coal Company. He hopes to become a mine inspector after graduation. JERRY CHARLES HUBENY industrial engineering town group Jerry prepared for Lehigh at Thomas Jefferson High School in Elizabeth, N.J. He played freshman football and continued with varsity football in his sophomore year. When not occupied with his studies, Jerry spent his time playing bridge or tossing a football. 307 DAVID LINDSAY HUME industrial engineering sigma nu Hailing from Tulsa, Okla., Lin takes great pride in his native state. At Lehigh he has participated in intramural athletics and varsity track. Lin is also a member of Pi Tau Sigma and the Army Ordnance Association, and has served as house manager and vice-president of Sigma Nu. JOHN ASHBERRY HUNT arts (finance) lambda chi alpha Three months before graduation John was called by the Army. He had been slated to become sports editor of the Brown and White, on which he had worked for two years. Mike was a member of the football squad for four years and won his letter his senior year. His engagement to Miss Myrtle Freeman was announced this year. THOMAS REED HUNT business town group Preparing for Lehigh at Baltimore City College and Dickinson University, Tom has prominently displayed his ability in golf, swimming, and football, winning his nu- merals in the latter sport. Other avocations include the vice-presidency of Theta Delta Chi and a hobby of model railroading. ROBERT MARVIN IOBST business delta upsilon A Bethlehem boy, Bob prepared for Lehigh at Franklin and Marshall Academy. In his sophomore year he was a competitor for the Epitome staff, and he has represented the D.U.s for four years in intramural wrestling. Although Bob has spent his summers with the Bethlehem Steel Company, he expects to enter the Naval Air Corps. FLOYD EMERSON IVEY, JR. chemical engineering town group Bud, who is still active in scout work, is a member of Alpha Phi Omega. His other hobby, music, led him to become a member of the Glee Club and the Band, of which he became manager. He won freshman scholastic honors and for four years has been a member of the Student Chemical Society. AUSTEN ERWIN JENKIN business psi upsilon A graduate of St. Paul ' s School in Garden City, N.Y., Austie has been a letter man in golf for two years and a competitor in basketball. His favorite pastimes are playing interfraternity sports and singing. He has had practical experience working in an insurance-brokerage office during vacations. HARRY WITMER JONES, JR. industrial engineering pi kappa alpha Jonesy, a graduate of Mercersburg Academy, earned scholastic honors in his first year at Lehigh. As a senior, he was active as president of both his fraternity and Alpha Phi Omega, and as secretary of Pi Tau Sigma. In the interim, he assisted in managing the varsity wrestling team and was a member of Scabbard and Blade. HENRY THOMAS KALINOSKI business taylor house d Hank has been treasurer and president of his dormitory section and a member of the Interdormitory Council. A member of the Lehigh Symphony Orchestra, one of his chief interests is music. Hank has worked at Lehigh for two summers and worked at Lamberton Hall during the school year. WILLIAM RICHARD KAMPFE business richards house iiib Bill transferred to Lehigh from Newark University in 1938. In addition to being on the freshman baseball squad and intramural baseball and basketball teams, he was a member of Lambda Mu Sigma and president of his dormitory section. Aside from his 308 activities at school, Bill was a member of the Morris County Young Republican Club. 1 :. 9%; mp JOHN KELLETT, III chemical engineering taylor house d Johnny attended the Springfield High School before entering Lehigh. He has attained the Dean ' s list since he has been in school and has been active in intramural basket- ball, baseball, and football. His favorite hobby is tennis, and he has found time to participate in school tennis tournaments. JAMES HENRY KIDDER arts (geology) delta phi Jim came to Lehigh to continue his study of geology, in which he became interested at Germantown Friends School. He ha s served his fraternity as representative on the Interfraternity Council and in three different house offices, secretary, vice-president, and president. He is a member of the Mining and Geological Society. JOHN ARTHUR KIMBERLEY mechanical engineering taylor house c Jack ' s main interest at Lehigh has been rifle. He earned his numerals and his varsity letter and was elected to the All- American Rifle Team. Vice-president of the Rifle Club, he is also secretary of the Sportsman ' s Club. He was intramural wrestling champion in his junior year. EDWIN HOWARD KLEIN arts (journalism) phi sigma kappa Ed ' s major and hobby is journalism; he is remembered as a co-founder of the Bachelor, of which he was editor and later business manager, and a columnist for the Brown and White. Among honoraries Ed lists Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsilon, and O.D.K., and he also lays claim to both freshman and sophomore scholastic honors. LOUIS EDWARD KLEIN chemical engineering richards house i Active in publications, Ned worked eight semesters on the Brown and White and became news editor and a board member. Pledged to the journalism honorary, Pi Delta Epsilon, he was elected historian. Ned was also vice-president of the Chemical Society. He enjoys playing the piano and photography. DONALD HENRY KLEPPINGER metallurgical engineering town group Don entered Lehigh after graduating from Liberty High School. He has maintained a high scholastic average, twice attained the Dean ' s list. He was also a member of the Camera Club and was vice-president of the Metallurgical Society. He has worked at Bethlehem Steel in the summer, finding time for his hobby, photography. EUGENE LEONARD KLINE arts (accounting) sigma alpha mu Euch was a veritable Poo-Bah of his fraternity, being at different times house manager, alumni recorder, historian, recorder, and assistant treasurer. In stray hours he enjoys his hobbies of stamp collecting and photography. Euch ' s major study is accounting. CONRAD ERWIN KLUGER arts (economics) pi lambda phi Connie is interested in theatrical work and is an active member of Mustard and Cheese. He has not only acted professionally during the summers but has tried his hand at writing and directing. He has played in intramural sports and has fenced on the freshman squad. His study achievements merited sophomore honors. CARL GEORGE KONOLIGE arts (accounting) town group Carl was a member of Eta Sigma Phi, honorary classical literary society, becoming treasurer of the society in his senior year. A graduate of Bethlehem High School, Carl spends much of his spare time reading. His summers were spent at a boy ' s camp, where he was a counselor. 3 1 JOHN ALFRED KRAWCHUK electrical engineering richards house iia As a freshman Jack won numerals in football. He continued his competition in the game and won letters the last two seasons, besides participating intramurally in other sports. His other interests are radio and woodworking, which he has developed into worth-while hobbies. Jack is a member of the Electrical Engineering Society. FREDERICK ALBERT KRONE chemical engineering town group Fred prepared for Lehigh at the Mining and Mechanical Institute in Freeland. He won freshman and sophomore honors, having made the Dean ' s list. He became a member of Phi Eta Sigma and played in the University Band for two years. In addition, Fred is a member of the Chemical Society. RICHARD LINCOLN KULP chemical engineering town group Dutch is an alumnus of Liberty High School. He is president of his town section and is a member of the Student Chemical Society and the American Society of Chemical Engineers. He has spent all of his summer vacations working in the coke plant of the Bethlehem Steel Company. DONALD WAYNE KURTZ electrical engineering taylor house e Don was graduated by the Phoenixville High School. He has gained practical experi- ence by being an electrician for Mustard and Cheese performances of the last three years. Don has participated in intramural football and baseball and was a member of the Band and Alpha Phi Omega. JOHN CxARL LAMPERT chemical engineering richards house iia Johnny received his secondary-school preparation at East Rutherford High School in Carlstadt, N. J. A letter man in football at Lehigh, he was also a member of the Rugby Club and of the Student Chemical Society. He belongs to Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Johnny hopes eventually to enter production in chemical engineering. JOHN EMMET LANE industrial engineering phi delta theta Varsity basketball captain and three-year letter man, Jack also captained the fresh- man basketball team and won his numerals in baseball. He has been president of his fraternity. Jack helped construct a time-motion study apparatus for research purposes. He has also worked as a draftsman. JOSEPH PETER LARKIN, III business beta theta pi During his last year Joe has served as president of his fraternity. He is a member of the Mustard and Cheese Club and has taken leading roles in many stage productions. Joe was a member of the lacrosse team and also served as the Betas ' Interfraternity Council representative. ELWOOD DELBERT LATIMER, JR. chemical engineering taylor house d Duke, known as such for his regal behavior, came to Lehigh from Scranton High School. His scholastic abilities rated him freshman honors, and since then he has made the Dean ' s list. Duke is a member of the Student Chemical Society and has sung in the Glee Club for two years. ROSS WILBURTON LEAVER chemical engineering lambda chi alpha Ross was president of his fraternity and a representative on the Interfraternity Council. He played lacrosse his freshman year and was a regular on all of Lambda Chi ' s football and baseball teams. With the outbreak of war he was appointed to the 312 University ' s Committee on Defense. g« MONROE LEVY arts (accounting) sigma alpha mu Monie prepared for Lehigh at Trenton High School in New Jersey. Besides being treasurer and steward of his fraternity, he played on all of its intramural teams and was on the freshman tennis squad. All three of his summer vacations have been spent working as an inheritance-tax clerk for his home state. FRANK PAUL LIBRIZZI electrical engineering drinker house iiia Pi Mu Epsilon, the Newtonian Society, and Eta Kappa Nu are honoraries in which Frank holds membership. As president of Eta Kappa Nu he helped organize Zero Sequence, a departmental publication. Frank played intramural football, baseball, and basketball, and in his spare time enjoyed making model airplanes. WILLIAM HENRY LINDSAY, JR. civil engineering beta theta pi Bill, a graduate of Haddonfield, N. J., Memorial High School, has served as the secretary of his fraternity. He played three years of lacrosse, earned his numerals as freshman basketball manager, and this year was varsity football manager. He is a member of the Brown Key and Civil Engineering Societies. GEORGE ALEXANDER LOGAN arts (journalism) sigma nu George is a comparative newcomer to Lehigh, having transferred from Cornell University for his last two years. His command of the English language is a con- tinued source of amazement to the engineers, and his interest in his major is evidenced by his work on the staff of the Brown and White. WILLIAM BENNETT LOGAN industrial engineering town group Bill was elected to the offices of vice-president and president of the Town Council and president of his town section. He is a member of Arcadia, the Sportsman ' s Club, the Glee Club, the Student Housing Committee, and the Student Personnel Com- mittee. Bill played freshman and junior varsity football. STEPHEN BROOKS LONGLEY arts (pre-medical) delta phi Brooks, who will pursue a medical career, was activities chairman of the R. W. Hall Society and secretary and president of Alpha Epsilon Delta. His pastime being music of any kind, he plays four musical instruments and sings in the Glee Club and double quartet. He has been vice-president of Delta Phi. JESS BRODBECK LOUCKS chemical engineering taylor house c Jess came from William Penn High School in York. He was a member of the Student Chemical Society and was active in intramural bowling and wrestling. His principal hobbies are music and table tennis. He worked last summer at the York Ice and Machinery and has accepted a job with Hercules Powder for after graduation. JOHN LOUIS LOUGHRAN business delta tau delta Shamrock ' s love of sailing and flying is shown by his activities as vice-commodore of the Yacht Club and by his earning of a pilot ' s license through the C.A.A. Other offices which Johnny holds are vice-presidency of his fraternity, stage managership of Mustard and Cheese, and managership of lacrosse. CHARLES TWEEDDALE LOVELESS industrial eng. lambda chi alpha Chuck transferred from Kent State University in 1938. In his sophomore year he was assistant circulation manager of the Brown and White, and in his senior year he belonged to the International Relations Club and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He spent two summers working at Bethlehem Steel. 3 5 RICHARD MICHAEL LUCKRING chemical engineering taylor house b Dick graduated from Heidelberg College before coming to Lehigh as a junior. He is a member of the Chemical Society and an honor student. He has spent the last two summers working in the steel mills in Canton, Ohio. Dick ' s hobby is playing the piano, and he accompanies the dormitory-section singing group. HOWARD GEORGE LULEY civil engineering theta xi Bottle won his numerals as assistant track manager and played for three years in the Lehigh University Band. He has been steward of his fraternity and is a member of the student chapter of the A.S.C.E., having been vice-president last year. His hobby is photography, especially colored movies. PHILIP LUTTERS mechanical engineering taylor house b Phil ' s scholastic record at Lehigh has been an excellent one. His first two years he received freshman and sophomore honors and was pledged to Newtonian Society. He later became a member of Pi Tau Sigma and president of Tau Beta Pi. Phil was likewise active in intramural sports, the Glee Club, and Alpha Phi Omega. ROBERT MERRILL LYNCH arts (economics) sigma phi Murph spent a year at the University of Arizona before coming to Lehigh in 1939. He has been a reporter on the Brown and White and has competed for the swimming team. His principal interest being sailing, he has worked on boats for the past eight years and plans to work for a steamship line after graduation. JOHN STANLEY MacDONALD electrical engineering theta kappa phi Stan, an alumnus of Mercersburg Academy, has served his fraternity as vice-president and steward. He played junior varsity football and his hobbies are riding, swimming, and golf. Stan also belongs to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Sons of the American Revolution. ROBERT RUSSELL MACY chemical engineering richards house iib Russ, an alumnus of Roosevelt High School in Washington, D. C, was active in intramural basketball, football, baseball, and bowling. He won numerals in track and is a member of the Rifle Club. His other interests are bridge, golf, stamp collect- ing, and classical music. HAROLD EDWARD MAHONEY business theta kappa phi Harold came to Lehigh from Pawtucket, R. I., by way of Peddie School, Hights- town, N. J. In his fraternity he held, at various times, the offices of assistant steward, executive secretary, and historian. Intramural sports at Lehigh and sailing at his summer home in Cape Cod are among his hobbies. ROBERT MERCIER MAIDEN engineering physics taylor house b Bob achieved an excellent record at Lehigh, being a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi, and the Newtonian Society. He earned his numerals in freshman swimming. During his senior year Bob acted as a laboratory assistant in physics. Ballistics or radio is his vocational ambition. WILLIAM THOMAS MAINWARING metallurgical engineering sigma nu Willy has n ot taken no for an answer in the way of athletics, having taken successive cracks at track, wrestling, and basketball. Ever ready for a social event, Bill has made all social occasions at the Sigma Nu house a success in his capacity as social chairman. 316 He will receive his commission in Ordnance. rvtfr j DONALD ALTON MARCKS business taylor house b Don, interested in sports, was a member of the intramural softball championship team in his junior year. Adept with the bow and arrow, he was also a member of the Sportsman ' s Club. Facing draft before he could finish his college course, Don enlisted in the Army Air Corps last December. SANDOR MARK civil engineering tau delta phi Sandy came to Lehigh after graduating from Pelham Manor High School in New York. He was treasurer of his fraternity during his junior year and sang in the Glee Club that same year. Sandy was married during his sophomore year. He hopes to enter the business or sales end of civil engineering. PAUL WILLIAM MARSHALL chemical engineering theta kappa phi Bill was elected to the Newtonian Society and Pi Tau Sigma and received sophomore honors. He wrestled in his freshman year; was a member of the Band, the Glee Club, and the A.S.M.E. He was treasurer of his fraternity in his senior year. He came to Lehigh from Pottstown High School. ROBERT HENRY MARSHALL industrial engineering delta tau delta George School, near Newtown, prepared Bob for Lehigh. He has won two varsity letters as a member of the swimming team and as manager of cross-country. Bob was active in interfraternity sports and in idle hours he enjoyed swimming, tennis, and bridge. JOHN JOSEPH MATZKO arts (geology) taylor house e Four years at Saint Clair High School and two years at Schuylkill Undergraduate Center prepared Johnny for his entrance to Lehigh. Johnny has competed in intramural sports, including baseball, football, and basketball. Johnny has two interesting hobbies in stamp collecting and chemistry. FRANKLIN BLISS MAYER arts (history) chi psi Slim attended the Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts by way of preparation for Lehigh. He was captain of the freshman swimming team and earned his varsity letter in swimming. Other activities included the Interfraternity Council, Phi Alpha Theta, and elementary and advanced C.A.A. DANIEL BOSWORTH McAFEE business phi gamma delta Upon graduating from the Roxbury School, Mac came to Lehigh to study and play football. In his senior year he was president of his fraternity and captain of the golf team. During summer vacations he worked for the Mack Truck Company and the New York World-Telegram. WILKES McCLAVE, II business delta tau delta Wilkie ' s leadership ability has merited the presidencies of Delta Tau Delta, Arcadia, and Mustard and Cheese, and has gained him recognition in college Who ' s Who. He has participated in track, golf, and intramural sports and was a member of the Student Concerts-Lectures Series Committee, as well as other committees. JOHN DONALD McCLAY business righards house iiib Don received his secondary schooling at Tenafly High School in New Jersey. Besides participating in intramural sports such as football and baseball, he played in the Band. Don also belonged to the Camera Club and Lambda Mu Sigma. He has spent all three of his summer vacations working. 3 1 9 MALCOLM FINDLEY McCONNELL, JR. mechanical eng. delta upsilon Mac, as a member of advanced R.O.T.C., will probably continue with Army work. He made freshman and sophomore ho nors, Newtonian Society, Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, and Cyanide. Mac won his numerals in swimming and has been a member of the varsity squad for two years. He was a Brown and White member. - JOHN LEO McGONIGLE, JR. civil engineering allentown Johnny ' s secondary-school preparation was received at the Allentown Catholic High School. He has commuted to school for all of his four years. He made the Dean ' s list in his junior year and is a member of the Civil Engineering Society. Johnny ' s hobbies include fishing and bridge. CHARLES EDWARD McGRATH business theta kappa phi Chick completed his preparation for college at St. Paul ' s High School in Scranton. While at Lehigh he represented his fraternity in the intramural sports field and on the Interfraternity Council. His favorite pastimes are fishing, boating, swimming, and golfing. He plans to enter the field of selling. ROBERT JOHN McGREGOR chemical engineering drinker house iiia Scotty was a member of the Glee Club for four years and manager of the Com- bined Musical Clubs in his senior year. He received freshman honors and was elected to membership in Tau Beta Pi. In addition Scotty was a member of the Chemical Society, Scabbard and Blade, Alpha Phi Omega, and a sophomore basketball manager. FRANK SHIRLEY McKENNA metallurgical engineering delta upsilon While at Lehigh Getch has combined scholarship, activities, and athletics. Head cheerleader and varsity wrestler, Frank is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon, and Cyanide. He is also president of Omicron Delta Kappa, Arcadia member-at- large, secretary-treasurer of the Senior Class, and senior section editor of the Epitome. ROBERT CHARLES McMICHAEL met. e. richards house iva Bob, a graduate of Chester High School, has taken part in student government, acquiring the offices of president of the Interdormitory Council and vice-president of Arcadia. He was also president of the Metallurgical Society, and has been honored by membership in Tau Beta Pi. RAYMOND THEODORE MECKBACH business richards house iiia Besides taking part in several intramural sports, Ray was athletic manager of his living group for two years. He was a member of Lambda Mu Sigma, the Glee Club, and the Sportsman ' s Club. Stamp collecting affords him a chance to forget his studies. Ray leaves Lehigh with a commission in the Reserve Officers Corps. WILLIAM JACKSON MEIKLE arts (chemistry) taylor house b Bill won freshman and sophomore honors, three scholastic prizes, and made the junior and senior Dean ' s lists. He was editorial manager of the Brown and White, Review feature editor, Epitome assistant editor, president of Pi Delt, and a member of O.D.K., R. W. Blake Society, DeMolay Club, and Arcadia; he was in college Who ' s Who. TOM CHARLES MEKEEL arts (journalism) richards house i Journalistic activities have dominated Tom ' s Lehigh career. The Toreador has also been news editor and board and editorial council member of the Brown and White staff. Added to the fiction editorship of the Bachelor, these posts earned him member- 320 ship in Pi Delta Epsilon. Roles in three Mustard and Cheese plays have been Tom ' s. RICHARD EDWARD METIUS metallurgical engineering phi gamma delta Dick ' s activities extend to athletics and honoraries. He has been treasurer of O.D.K., secretary-treasurer of Brown Key, a member of Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, Cyanide, and Newtonian Society. Dick was a member of the varsity track squad for two years, manager of cross-country, and varsity manager of swimming. ROBERT METZNER business richards house ivb Bob, a graduate of the Albany, N. Y., High School, has done well scholastically while at Lehigh. Bob received freshman and sophomore honors and was consistently on the Dean ' s list. He played on intramural teams and was elected to Phi Eta Sigma. Bob spent summers working for a garage. DONALD MAYO MIDDLETON business delta upsilon Don won his numerals in baseball and later became manager of freshman ball; he was in the cast of Brother Rat, holds membership in the Brown Key Society, and was rushing chairman and senior president of Delta Upsilon. Don has worked with rail- way express and an insurance company during the summer. JOHN HENRY MILBANK business alpha tau omega Mildew ' s philosophy is that there is more in Lehigh than books. A good athlete, he played baseball and football and earned his letter in soccer. He was elected presi- dent of Alpha Kappa Psi and secretary of the Interfraternity Council, and was a member of Omicron Delta Kappa. ALBERT MARSHALL MILLER metallurgical eng. richards house hb Bert, a graduate of St. Petersburg, Fla., High School, played intramural basketball, football, baseball, wrestling, and J. V. football. Further evidence of athletic ability is his membership in the Sportsman ' s Club, where he practiced his hobbies of skiing and golf. LEONARD HANMER MILLER industrial engineering alpha kappa pi Len ' s extra-curricular interests are widely varied. In the field of athletics he was active as an intramural wrestler and boxer. He is a member of Alpha Phi Omega, and has served on the business board of the Lehigh Review. In addition, he was elected to the Newtonian Society in his freshman year. ROBERT BRUCE MILLER mechanical engineering town group Liberty High School graduated Bob before he came to Lehigh. He has participated in intramural sports and has spent two summers working for Bethlehem Steel, one at the Saucon plant and one at the Lehigh plant. Bob plans to enter naval aviation upon graduation; in his spare time his chief hobby is bridge. RALPH FRANKLIN MOSS, JR. business phi gamma delta Included in Ralph ' s activities are his presidency of the Interfraternity Council, cap- taincy of the swimming team, second lieutenancy in the Reserve Officers Training Corps, and membership in Arcadia and Cyanide. Moses is listed in Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities and is also fraternity secretary. EDGAR KIRTON MULHAUSEN crviL engineering pi kappa alpha While at Lehigh, Kirt expressed an interest in out-of-door activities, being a member of the Sportsman ' s Club, Alpha Phi Omega, and a Civil Aeronautics student. In his junior year he earned a pilot ' s license and a letter in swimming. Kirt, in his senior year, was vice-president of his fraternity. 3 3 RICHARD DALLAM MUNNIKHUYSEN electrical eng. drinker house iiib Dick was a member of the A.I.E.E., the Newtonian Society, and was president of his dormitory section. He won his freshman numerals in track and made the varsity in the following year. Dick was on the Interdormitory Council and hopes that his ad- vanced R.O.T.C. and flying ability will place him in the Army Air Corps. JOSEPH FITZROY MUSANTE mechanical engineering beta kappa Before coming to Lehigh, Joe attended West Harding High School in Bridgeport, Conn., and finished his secondary-school education at Grail Prep. He was active in his fraternity, where he served on several committees and became treasurer as a junior. Joe is an ardent bridge fiend and enjoys poker as well. JAMES WARDEN NEEDLES chemical engineering drinker house niA Ward ' s chief interest at Lehigh has been the rifle team ; he has won numerals in the sport and been on the team for four years. He was secretary-treasurer of his dormitory section and played all intramural sports. He enjoyed the outdoor sports of fishing, golf, and hunting, and the less strenuous game of bridge. ROBERT SHAW NEWCOMB business lambda chi alpha In fair weather Newc usually pursues his favorite sport, golf. At other times during his four years he has been occupied with his jobs as treasurer of Lambda Mu Sigma and pledge trainer for his fraternity. He competed on the Brown and White business staff and was a swimming manager in his first two years. CYRIL ANTHONY NEYHART industrial engineering allentown Tony graduated from Allentown High School before entering Lehigh. He is a member of the Lehigh Allentown Club, went out for track in his freshman year, and played for the Band in his freshman and sophomore years. Tony ' s hobbies include bridge and bowling; he hopes some day to become a consulting engineer in the industrial field. DAVID KIERSTEAD NICHOLS industrial engineering town group Dave, who plans to marry right after graduation, completed his courses in February. He has worked summers for the New Jersey Highway Engineering Department and for Manhattan Rubber. Dave was a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and of the student branch of the A.S.M.E. His hobbies include hunting and fishing. ROBERT ALEXANDER NICROSINI arts (fine arts) richards house ivb Nick has shown exceptional ability in tennis, badminton, and fencing, as evidenced by two years on the varsity tennis team, three years on the fencing team, and his being co-champ in badminton doubles at the University of Pennsylvania Intercollegiate Tournament. He is vice-president of Cut and Thrust. JOHN JAMES NITTI business taylor house a Johnny was a charter member of Lambda Mu Sigma and later was elected president. He became president of his living group last December and served for the remainder of the term. His hobbies are art, including sculpture, free-hand drawing, and photog- raphy. He did art work for the Lehigh Review and the Camera Club. FREDERIC STUART NOLTE mechanical engineering taylor house d Stu is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Eta Sigma, and the student chapter of A.S.M.E. He won engineering awards in his freshman, sopho- more, and junior years and was one of the founders of the Canterbury Club. Stu was 324 secretary of his living group and played intramural sports. mP JOHN HUGH NORWOOD metallurgical engineering delta upsilon Johnny ' s achievements have gained him recognition in the college students ' Who ' s Who. He is captain of the tennis team and has played both freshman and varsity basketball. The honoraries of which he is a member are Tau Beta Pi, Cyanide, New- tonian Society, and Omicron Delta Kappa. JOHN BRANGS O ' HARA business taylor house a John was a member of the swimming team for four years. He was sports editor of the Brown and White, president of his dormitory section, and a member of the Interdor- mitory Council. John has worked in banking during his summer vacations and hopes to go into industrial accounting after graduation. ALLEN HISAYOSHI OKAMOTO chemical engineering cosmopolitan club After transferring from the University of Pennsylvania, where he obtained his numer- als in wrestling, Okie joined the Lehigh squad. He also joined the DeMolay Society and was taken into Newtonian Society. Okie has been the vice-president and stew- ard and the social chairman of his living group. LOWELL KENNETH OLIPHANT business alpha town house Ollie, in his sophomore year, was an organizer of the Alpha Town House and became president and house manager in his junior and senior years. He received freshman and sophomore honors and was elected to the Newtonian Society and Pi Mu Epsilon. In addition, Ollie played on the chess team and was president of the Chess Club. HENRY JACOB OLSON, JR. civil engineering drinker house iia Hank ' s principal achievement was the winning of the Eastern Intercollegiate Rifle Championship. Prior to his appointment as a cadet major, he received the R.O.T.C. advanced infantry leadership saber and was chosen for Scabbard and Blade. He was also president of his living group and manager of the rifle team. DAVID CHITTENDEN OSBORN chemical engineering richards house i Organizer and manager of Lehigh ' s first ski team, Dave has been active in the Sports- man ' s Club. He was out for freshman track, played in Dead End, was a member of the Chemical Society and the Newtonian Society. He will probably enter the Army upon graduation. His hobbies are skiing and badminton. RICHARD MERCER PALMER business phi delta theta Dick has been president and treasurer of his fraternity. He won freshman honors and has been on the Dean ' s list for five semesters. He is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi and Lambda Mu Sigma and was chairman of the Freshman Handbook. Dick has been on the varsity basketball and golf and the freshman basketball and baseball teams. GEORGE EARL PARSONS, JR. electrical engineering theta delta chi Chief entered Lehigh from Riverside Military Academy. Taking part in freshman football and baseball, he also turned his attention to his fraternity, which he served as both treasurer and president. A member of the Army Ordnance Association, George will join the armed forces after graduating. PRESTON WILSON PARVIS, JR. business phi gamma delta During his four years at Lehigh, Pres has been secretary of Alpha Kappa Psi, a mem- ber of the Newtonian Society, the Symphony Orchestra, and the golf team. In his fraternity Deac was historian, and was one of the better bridge players the house has seen. Upon graduating, he hopes to do accounting work. 327 CHARLES ANTHONY PATTEN mechanical engineering allentown Charley came to Lehigh from Allentown High School. He became a member of the Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society and a member of the student branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Charley joined the Lehigh Allentown Club and was chairman of the Transportation Committee. RICHARD CHAD WICK PAUL arts (pre-medical) alpha tau omega Zeke is a pre-medical student and a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta. He wants to become a country doctor. His chief extra-curricular interest is hockey, and he is man- ager of the team. He organized the Pennsylvania Intercollegiate Hockey Association and was elected secretary. JOHN ROBY PENN, III business chi psi Coming from Fort Worth, Tex attended Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, Mass., be- fore entering Lehigh. He won numerals as freshman swimming manager, was on the varsity debating team, the Maennerchor Student Committee, and the Senior Rally Committee. He competed for the business staff of the Epitome in his junior year. RICHARD GRAY PETERSEN arts (geology) town group Dick, who plans to enter the petroleum field of geology upon graduation, correlates his hobby with his intended vocation by collecting minerals and fossils in his spare time. A graduate of Percy High School in Pittsburgh, Dick has participated in in- tramural softball and football. He has earned part of his expenses as a waiter. JOHN LOUIS PETERSON metallurgical engineering richards house iib Pete attended St. Mary ' s High School in Rutherford, N. J. He was president of his dormitory section and was also athletic manager and captain of its intramural teams. In his senior year he was elected secretary of the Metallurgical Society. Photography and golf are hobbies to which he has devoted some time. JAMES FISHER PFEFFER, JR. mechanical engineering alpha kappa pi Jim played varsity and freshman football, receiving his numerals and varsity letter. He has been an active member of Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Phi Omega, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the Army Ordnance Association. In his fraternity he held the offices of historian and secretary. JOHN ORMSBY PHILLIPS business delta phi The Duke ' s athletic prowess is verified by his being captain of freshman soccer and a letter man in this sport for three years, besides competing in freshman baseball and basketball and varsity baseball. Orms was also a reporter on the Brown and White and treasurer of his fraternity. JOHN RICHARD POLINSKY arts (english) town group During his stay at Lehigh, Johnny has won freshman and sophomore honors as well as the Williams Sophomore and Junior Prizes. He has been president of Phi Alpha Theta, treasure r of Eta Sigma Phi, and a member of the Robert W. Blake Society. John plans to teach school after graduation. PHILIP JOHN PRANG, JR. chemistry easton Graduating from Easton High School, Phil came to Lehigh. He has been active in intramural debating, the Chemical Society, and the Camera Club. At school here Phil has held an N.Y.A. job in the Chemistry Department. He is going to work at 328 chemistry for the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Company. JOHN ADAMS QUINCY electrical engineering delta upsilon A member of Alpha Phi Omega, the Newtonian Society, and the Electrical Engineer- ing Society, Quince was a manager of the basketball team during his freshman and sophomore years, and a member of the varsity swimming team. He has held several offices in his fraternity, including chapter president. KENNETH HAUSER RAHN metallurgical eng. Richards house iiib Ken was a member of the track team and athletic manager of his dormitory section; he played intramural football and baseball. His interest in music caused him to be- come a member of the Band, Symphony Orchestra, and Glee Club. He was also a member of the Metallurgical Society. JOHN THOMPSON RANSOM, II engineering physics theta xi Jack made honors in his first two years and the Dean ' s list in his last two. He belongs to Newtonian, Phi Eta Sigma, and the Physics Society, and was elected to Tau Beta Pi. Jack won his numerals for being assistant manager of swimming; he has played in- tramural sports, worked all three summers, and hopes to do graduate work. JOHN ARNOLD READ mechanical engineering sigma chi Johnny prepared for Lehigh at the Montclair, N. J., High School. He belongs to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the Newtonian Society and was sopho- more intramural manager. He is interested in design and maintenance work in the railroad industry. THEODORE HOSMER REDMAN engineering physics town group Ted is a transfer from Oberlin College, where he was president of his living group and was on the swimming and fencing teams for two years. Ted has earned expenses by working for the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Ted ' s most important avocation is his hobby of photography. SUMNER WILLARD REID mechanical engineering taylor house d Sum came to Lehigh from Wyomissing High School, where he developed an interest in scouting. While in college he furthered this interest as a member of Alpha Phi Omega. He took part in intercollegiate debating and was a member of A.S.M.E. and Pi Tau Sigma. His chief hobby is woodworking. JAMES LOWTHER REILEY business drinker house iia Esky comes from Clearfield. During his junior year he was distribution manager of the Lehigh Bachelor and athletic manager of his dormitory section. He has taken part in intramural football, softball, and badminton. Esky ' s vocational interests are in industrial management and labor relations. IRVING BAKER REMSEN, JR. chemical engineering taylor house b Bud was particularly active in musical activities at Lehigh. He was a member of the Glee Club, the Band, and Tone. Besides these, he was active in the Newtonian Society, the Chemical Society, the Canterbury Club, and the DeMolay Club. As a special re- search project, Bud prepared an exhibit on colloids and liquid air. DONALD JOHN RENTZ business town group After two years at Wyomissing Polytechnic Institute, Johnny transferred to Lehigh. At Lehigh his bent for music has definitely shown itself by the celerity he showed in be- coming a member of the Glee Club and the Symphony Orchestra. During the sum- mers he has worked in the Berkshire Knitting Mills. 33 l HENRY THOMAS REUWER business sigma chi Hank has played football for four years at Lehigh and was captain and end for this year ' s team. He has served as treasurer of the Interfraternity Council and a member of the Arcadia Elections Committee, and is listed in Who ' s Who in American Univer- sities and Colleges. JOSEPH BENSON REYNOLDS, JR. engineering physics town group Joe plans to continue his studies after graduation and eventually to earn his doctor ' s degree. His main interests have been the automotive industry and photography. Dur- ing the summers he has worked in the Pyrometer Department of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Joe has been a member of the Physics Society for three years. ARTHUR HERBERT RICH business sigma phi In his freshman year Art won numerals in football and wrestling. The following year he was elected secretary-treasurer of his class and served on the sophomore dance committee. In his third year he was admitted to membership in Alpha Kappa Psi and Cyanide. Herbie has also represented his fraternity on the Interfraternity Council. FRANK HART RICH business pi lambda phi Publications have been Frank ' s main interest for four years. He has been a member of the staffs of the Brown and White, Review, and Bachelor. Frank was president of his fraternity in his senior year, member of the Interfraternity Council for four years, member of the International Relations Club, and house athletic manager. DAVID EMRYS RICHARDS arts (philosophy) Leonard hall Dave spends much of his time on his hobby, music. He has been a member of the Band and the Symphony Orchestra, and was Tone ' s president in his junior year. He was also president of the R. W. Blake Society. After graduation Dave expects to enter the Episcopal ministry. WILLIAM HOWARD RIEMER business tau delta phi Howie has the distinction of having served two full years as his fraternity ' s president and one year as house manager. His scholastic work merited freshman honors and membership in the Newtonian Society and Lambda Mu Sigma. In the field of sports he played freshman soccer and hockey in his junior year. JOHN MARVIL ROACH arts (journalism) taylor house b Jack has been Brown and White editor, Intercollegiate Newspaper Association presi- dent, in Pi Delta Epsilon and on the Board of Publications, and has edited the Fresh- man Handbook, along with winning honors and achieving college Who ' s Who. He is in O.D.K., Cyanide, Phi Eta Sigma, and has been a sports publicity assistant. CHARLES THOMPSON ROBERTSON business cosmopolitan club Tommy has been employed full time at the Bethlehem Steel for three summer vaca- tions and his senior year at school. In his junior year he was vice-president and steward of the Cosmopolitan Club. Before that Tommy had belonged to the Lehigh Yacht Club and the Sportsman ' s Club and had worked for the Bachelor and the Brown and White. GORDON BROWN ROBERTSON business lambda chi alpha Before joining a fraternity Gordy was president of his town group. In his senior year he worked part time at Bethlehem Steel and was elected to Alpha Kappa Psi. Flash already had belonged to the Newtonian Society and the Sportsman ' s Club. In his 332 freshman and sophomore years he received scholastic honors. — ' FRANCIS HAYNES ROCKETT, JR. electrical eng. richards house iiib Frank is a member of Tone and won his freshman numerals in fencing. He is also president of the Camera Club, president of the E. W. Brown Astronomical Society, and a charter member and president of the Canterbury Club. As shown by his activi- ties, Frank ' s hobbies are photography, astronomy, and radio work. DOUGLAS HILL RODGERS civil engineering town group Doug went to Port Washington High School, Port Washington, L. I. At Lehigh he was in the orchestra for a year and joined the Civil Engineering Society. During his off hours Doug is usually involved in one of his hobbies, photography or the violin. He hopes to be commissioned in the Naval Reserve. ROBERT ELL WOOD ROW AND arts (pre-medical) richards house iva At the end of his sophomore year Bob transferred to Lehigh from Swarthmore Col- lege to continue his preparation for a medical career. A member of Lambda Chi Alpha, he has been both activities chairman and president of the R. W. Hall Society. He plans to enter Jefferson Medical College after graduation. AUSTIN WILLIAM RUCH chemistry town group A commuter for three years, Ruchie traveled forty miles each day. His hobbies, ice skating, swimming, tennis, and fly-fishing, have led him to the out of doors. He is a member of the Student Chemical Society, and upon graduation he plans to work for either an oil or a steel company. CLYDE CHARLES RUFFLE industrial engineering taylor house e Clyde holds a diploma from Hempstead High School on Long Island. He has held the offices of president and secretary of his dormitory section and secretary of the International Relations Club. He is a member of Pi Tau Sigma and the business staff of the Bachelor. He won numerals in tennis. ROBERT FRANCIS RYAN business alpha tau omega Fog is quite active in the social life of the University. His friends consider him a witty conversationalist and a driver of hard bargains. He is a natural leader, and while at Lehigh he captained the golf team and was president of his fraternity. En- gaging in bull sessions is one of his favorite pastimes. PHILIP WALES SAITTA, JR. business richards house iiia Phil entered Lehigh after graduating from Blair Academy. A member of the Sports- Tnan ' s Club, he took part in many outdoor activities, ranging from skiing to intra- mural sports. One summer he worked in the ore mines at Cornwall. Phil leaves Lehigh with a commission in the Army Air Corps. RUDOLF WILLIAM SAMER engineering physics richards house iiib Rudy ' s interest is in music. He was in the Band and the Symphony Orchestra for four years, in which he played the cornet and violin. He was also on the Brown and White photography staff and belonged to the Camera Club. Rudy was athletic manager of his dorm section. ABRAM SAMUELS III business tau delta phi Abe to ok part in the Glee Club, Mustard and Cheese productions, Interfraternity Council, and the International Relations Club. He won the Tau Delta Phi award for his efficiency as secretary, then became vice-president of his chapter. His interest in composing has led to his writing of several songs. 335 CLARENCE MARCELLUS SANDERSON, JR. elec. eng. sigma phi epsilon Receiving freshman honors, Sandy was elected to membership in Phi Eta Sigma. Dur- ing his junior year he took part in the tennis tournaments and was the winner in the 1 940 interf raternity wrestling tournament in his weight. He is a member of Eta Kappa Nu, and secretary of his chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon. DONALD BELSHAW SANDS arts (english) drinker house hb Sandy, a major in English Literature, plans to teach after graduation. Besides being the winner of the Williams Sophomore Prize, Don was elected to the R. W. Blake Philosophical Society in his senior year. His hobbies include reading and pistol shoot- ing, and he has spent his summers in traveling and working. THEOPHILE SAULNIER, JR. business Richards house iia Ted was graduated from Swarthmore High School. Showing a keen interest in ath- letics, he won numerals in track, played on intramural baseball, basketball, and foot- ball teams and refereed the latter. He also held the office of secretary-treasurer of his dormitory section, and is a member of Lambda Mu Sigma. CHARLES HENRY SAVAGE metallurgical eng. drinker house iia Chuck came to Lehigh from Morristown High, Morristown, N. J. He showed his in- terest in fencing by becoming a member of the fencing team and of Cut and Thrust. He was also a member of the Metallurgical Society. Chuck competed in all forms of intramural athletics. In addition, he was on the Dean ' s list. JOHN SELTZER SAYLOR, JR. chemical engineering lambda chi alpha John was treasurer of both his fraternity and the Student Chemical Society. His scho- lastic work gained for him membership in the Newtonian Society and freshman honors. This past year John managed the soccer team and was active in the Interna- tional Relations Club. His spare time enjoyments are philately and chemistry. JOHN SCHNEIDER III business drinker house ivb Padre, an advanced military student, is a member of the Reserve Officers ' Associa- tion. He played intramural soft ball and basketball. Having taken the primary and secondary C.A.A. courses, his hobby is flying. He hopes to get an instructor ' s rating in the Army Air Corps. LEONARD ADOLPH SCHNEIDER arts (bacteriology) chi psi Len went to Clifton High School before entering Lehigh. In his senior year he was captain of cross-country and vice-president of the Spiked Shoe Society, and on the varsity track team. He is interested in photography and swimming as hobbies, and intends to enter chemical research. HOWARD OSCAR SCHROEDER mechanical eng. richards house iib Intramural football, baseball, and bowling are among Howie ' s athletic interests. He is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Industrial Engineer- ing and Mechanical Engineering Society, the Band, and the Foreign Policy Associa- tion. He was elected president of his living group. CHARLES HENRY SCHUMACHER industrial engineering taylor house b Chuck attended Newton High School in New York. The several offices he has filled at Lehigh are president of his dormitory section, treasurer of Tau Beta Pi, correspond- ing secretary of Pi Tau Sigma, and vice-president of Alpha Phi Omega. He has been 336 a waiter for four years and chief clerk at the Health Bureau for one year. J f ' ' 1 ) FORREST VEIL SCHUMACHER arts (biology) phi sigma kappa Versatility has been a keynote of Fordy ' s ; he won his freshman numerals in baseball, became editor of the Bachelor, held membership in Alpha Epsilon Delta, O.D.K., Pi Delta Epsilon, and was president of Phi Sigma Kappa in his senior year; he will enter the University of Pennsylvania ' s Medical School upon graduation. JOSEPH DOTY SCOTT electrical engineering alpha chi rho Joe ' s interests at Lehigh were dominated by sports and flying. In sports Scotty was a three-letter man: soccer, tennis, and ice hockey. 1941 saw Joe as president and cap- tain of the Lehigh Hockey Club. During his last two years he earned his flying license through the Civil Aeronautics Authority. THEODORE GOURDIN SCOTT, JR. metallurgical eng. kappa alpha Ted shot his way to the ail-American rifle team last year, has won two letters in the sport, and is president of the Rifle Club this year. He is Epitome business manager, Scabbard and Blade vice-president, two-year house manager, and a member of Pi Delt. Ted started the Lehigh news agency, worked N.Y.A., and waited tables. MURL WOLFE SEARS mechanical engineering town group Wolfy went to Cortland, N. Y., High School, though his home town is Woodlawn, Md. He has been active in intramural sports and joined his course societies, the I. E.- M. E. Society and the A.S.M.E. On graduation he intends to do design work for Western Electric. GRENDON KENNETH SEBOLD electrical eng. richards house ihb Gren was originator and editor of Zero Sequence and a member of the Brown and White photography staff. He has been chairman of the Student Concerts-Lectures Series Committee, secretary of Eta Kappa Nu and Phi Eta Sigma, and belonged to the Newtonian Society, the Radio Club, and the Camera Club. HENRY ALBERT SEEBALD arts (mathematics) allentown Hank played freshman football and received his letter for junior varsity football. He is a member of Pi Mu Epsilon and the Newtonian Society. Hank was both president and treasurer of the Lehigh Allentown Club. Besides being a member of the Rifle Club, he was a member of Scabbard and Blade. RUSSELL MELVIN SEWARD, JR. arts (geology) drinker house iia A member of the Black Horse Troop of Culver Military Academy, Russ has main- tained his hobby of horseback riding while in college. Activities in intramural sports and in the Mining and Geological Society have been mingled with his duties. Before moving to the dorm Russ was secretary of his town group. JOSEPH MATTHEW SEXTON arts (indus. eng.) theta kappa phi Joe came to Lehigh from St. Benedict ' s Preparatory School in New Jersey. His frater- nity chose him as financial secretary in his junior year and as president this past year. The drive to collect technical books for China was sponsored by Joe, his chief hobby being Chinese history. He earned numerals as manager of track. LOUIS EVERETT SHARPE engineering physics cosmopolitan club Lou has been a member of the Orchestra for three years and Band for two years. He was a member of both Phi Eta Sigma and Newtonian Society, won the Chandler Chemistry Prize, and obtained freshman and sophomore honors. Lou is a member of Pi Mu Epsilon and has been secretary of his living group. 339 WILLIAM SYDNEY SHUTTLEWORTH business chi psi Shuttle prepared for Lehigh at Bronxville High School. In his junior year he was on the varsity soccer team and played on all the Chi Psi athletic teams. He developed an interest in flying, taking both the primary and secondary C.A.A. courses, and in- tends to enter aviation as a profession. ROBERT NIEL SIMONSEN chemical engineering sigma phi epsilon Si prepped for Lehigh at Western Reserve Academy in Ohio. As president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, member of Tau Beta Pi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Arcadia, Phi Eta Sigma, and Cyanide, Si won a place in Who ' s Who in American Colleges. A varsity soccer letter and an Epitome editorship round out his activities. WILLIAM JAMES SKINNER mechanical engineering richards house iiia Jim won freshman and sophomore honors and has been a member of the Newtonian Society, Pi Tau Sigma, and A.S.M.E. He played the trumpet for four years in the Band and in spare moments worked at his hobby of photography. His ambition is to teach mechanical engineering in college. Jim married Gertrude McAllister in 1941. AUGUSTINE NICHOLAS SMITH chemistry town group Gus graduated from Mahoney City High School before coming to Lehigh. He has been active in freshman and varsity football and was formerly athletic manager of his town group. Gus helped pay his college expenses by waiting on tables while at school; among his hobbies are tennis and bridge. DAVID RAHM SMITH electrical engineering alpha chi rho Dave was a member of the ail-American rifle team in his last two years and was National Intercollegiate Rifle Champion. Here at Lehigh Dave joined the Electrical Engineering Society and Scabbard and Blade. His hobbies are trout fishing and deer hunting. After graduation he hopes to work for an electric company. EUGENE MONROE SMITH metallurgical engineering town group A native of Philadelphia, Eugene attended preparatory school before coming to Beth- lehem. He was assistant manager of freshman football, despite his earning of his en- tire college expenses by working at the Supply Bureau and at the Steel. Married in 1 94 1, Eugene plans to work in the aluminum industry. FRANK EDGAR SMITH, JR. chemical engineering chi psi Frank, a man of varied activities, was on the varsity cross-country team, in Cyanide, O.D.K., and Arcadia. Chairman of the Senior Ball Committee, president of Com- bined Musical Clubs, treasurer of Pi Delta Epsilon, and vice-president of Chi Psi, he is listed in Who ' s Who in American Universities and Colleges. JESSE TAVENOR SMITH industrial engineering theta delta chi Tav came to Lehigh in ' 36, transferred to the Naval Academy in ' 37, where he played plebe baseball and varsity football, and then came back to South Mountain in ' 39. He has been a letter man in baseball here and president of his fraternity. He will take up his commission in the Navy after graduating. KENNETH HERBERT SMITH electrical engineering town group While at Lehigh, Ken ' s chief interest has been in music. He is the tenor soloist of the Glee Club and a member of Tone. In addition, Ken played the bass fiddle and was vocalist in a dance band. He was also active in the Municipal Opera Company of 340 Allentown. Ken took the C.A.A. course in flying. m  VICTOR EUGENE SMITH business chi phi Vic ' s main interests at Lehigh have been music and photography. He has been a mem- ber of the Band for three years and has played saxophone for the Collegians for four years. He has also served on the photographic staff of the Brown and White and has been vice-president of the Camera Club. JOHN JOSEPH SOMERS chemical engineering allentown Jack has been a high-ranking student throughout his four years. He received freshman and sophomore honors, was a member of the Newtonian Society, Pi Mu Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi, the Chemical Society, and the R. W. Blake Society. Jack is a major-league baseball fan and is fond of dancing. RALPH FRANKLIN SOTZING business phi delta theta Gaucho is a graduate of Liberty High School. He won numerals in swimming, was on the golf team for four years, and has played interf rater nity sports. He has com- pleted both the primary and secondary courses of the C.A.A. and hopes to be an in- structor in the Air Corps. He is vice-president of his fraternity. LESLIE ORMAN SOUTHGATE mechanical engineering drinker house i Les attended the Peddie School before coming to Lehigh. He is president of his living group. Last year he was athletic manager, and he has taken part in intramural sports. His big interests are in flying and in motion-picture photography. For a career Les intends to go into the field of automotive testing. WILLIAM McINDOE SPEARS, JR. arts (government) drinker house iiia Bill came to Lehigh from Shaker Heights High School in Cleveland. He was active in dormitory affairs, as is shown by his being section chief, president of Drinker House, and secretary of the Interdormitory Council. During the last two summers Bill has worked on a railroad labor gang. EMERSON DANIEL SPENGLER metallurgical engineering town group Ed is from Northampton and went to high school there. While at Lehigh he has played with the University Band and is a member of the Metallurgical Society and of A.S.M.E. Outside of his school work, Ed has been associated with several church organizations. He enjoys playing the trombone. EUGENE ROY SPRINGER mechanical engineering drinker house iva Gene, who is known as Chief in Drinker House, having held the office of president of his dormitory section for two years, hails from Texas. A member of the student A.S.M.E., the Aero Club, and Shop Club, Gene ' s chief interest lies in the aeronauti- cal-engineering field, which he plans to enter. ROBERT BRECKINRIDGE STEELE, JR. metallurgical eng. sigma nu Bob has made an all-around success of his four years at Lehigh. Captain of the varsity lacrosse team in his junior year, he was selected on the All-State Team. Bob is a mem- ber of Cyanide, Interfraternity Council, and has been secretary of his fraternity. He prepared for Lehigh at Friends ' Academy in New York. CHARLES STANLEY STEINER chemical engineering alpha town house Chuck has been a member of the Newtonian Society, the student branch of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, and the Chemical Society. He has been on the Dean ' s list and has been a member of intramural football and baseball teams. Chuck ' s past three summers were spent with Bethlehem Steel. 343 ORVILLE JAMES STEPHENS business theta kappa phi While in school Steve has participated in intramural sports and has represented his fraternity in various other fields of endeavor. He has spent his summers in traveling and working. His hobbies include hockey, dancing, playing bridge, boating, and swim- ming. Upon graduating from Lehigh Steve plans to become a statistician. ROBERT JOHN STICKEL civil engineering taylor house a Bob is a transfer from Grove City College. He was very active in the interdormitory athletic league, representing his section in intramural swimming and playing intra- mural football, basketball, and baseball. Bob was a member of the Lehigh student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers. JOHN STOGDELL STOKES, JR. industrial engineering town group John transferred from Harvard to Lehigh in 1940. While in Boston he helped organ- ize and participated in social-service work. John won sophomore honors here and became a member of the I.E.-M.E. Society. He includes model aircraft and photogra- phy among his hobbies and hopes for a position in industrial engineering. ROBERT WALTER STOWBRIDGE arts (economics) price house Bob comes from Roselle Park, N. J., where he attended the Roselle Park High School. Football was his main activity at Lehigh, where he won freshman numerals. He gained experience in his major field working for the Ipana Tooth Paste Company in the summer. He has been drafted into the Army. ROBERT SAMUEL STRUBLE mechanical engineering beta theta pi Bob, who came to Lehigh from the Peddie School, earned scholastic honors in both his freshman and sophomore years. He won numerals in soccer and a varsity letter as manager of the wrestling team. Bob is the treasurer of Pi Tau Sigma as well as of his living group and is a member of Omicron Delta Kappa and Tau Beta Pi. JOHN PHELPS STUPP business kappa sigma Jacks on prepared for Lehigh at the John Burroughs School in St. Louis. He won numerals in soccer and played varsity for two years, was vice-president of the Sports- man ' s Club and played intramural sports. Jack was treasurer and vice-president of his fraternity. He plans to be commissioned in the Army upon graduation. CARL LINDSLEY STURGIS business richards house itia Stu ' s home town is Morristown, N. J. He is a member of the University Band and belongs to the Sportsman ' s Club. Music and hunting are among Stu ' s hobbies. Stu has also been a member of intramural sports teams. After graduation he plans to enter the accounting profession. ARTHUR TALLAKSEN business lambda chi alpha After serving as both secretary and president of the Town Council, Art joined a fra- ternity during his senior year. He has acted on several committees, including the Senior Ball, Junior Prom, and Student Personnel. Art has been a member of Arcadia and Alpha Kappa Psi and won his numerals in basketball. RAY ORME TAYLOR business town group Ray, who graduated last February, attended Ashland High School previous to his college education. He has lessened his college expenses by waiting on tables during the school term and during one summer; last summer he worked for Bethlehem Steel. Ray 344 plans to enter personnel work. His hobbies deal with stamps and cameras. i HBHBHHM - J: ROBERT GORMAN TAYLOR mechanical engineering phi sigma kappa Among the honors Bob has achieved are Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, and the Dean ' s list. He won his numerals and was a sophomore manager in soccer, has been the in- ductor and secretary of his fraternity, and was secretary of the Army Ordnance Asso- ciation. Bob obtained a pilot ' s license with the C.A.A. FRANK RAYMOND THAEDER industrial engineering sigma nu Thates was freshman track manager in his first year and has played two years of junior- varsity football. He is a member of Pi Tau Sigma. In the Sigma Nu house Thates is known for his naivete, his unfailing sense of humor, and the good work he did as rushing chairman for two successive years. ALBERT LEO THALHAMER engineering physics taylor house c Bert ' s scholastic honors include membership in Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, the New- tonian Society, and freshman and sophomore honors. He has held three offices on the Brown and White: news manager, news editor, and make-up editor; and was sec- retary of his living group. He was also a member of Omicron Delta Kappa. JOSEPH SIMON THOMAS arts (zoology) taylor house a Biff, who was a member of both Alpha Epsilon Delta and the Robert W. Hall Society, plans to become a doctor. He was elected to the offices of secretary of his dormitory section and secretary of the Lehigh Yacht Club. Joe also belonged to the Chess Club and the Student Chemical Society. CHARLES GARLAND THORNBURGH arts (civil eng.) beta theta pi Sedge came to Lehigh from Mercersburg Academy. His interests have been cen- tered around sports and music, as shown by participation in track, wrestling, and in- tramural sports, and also being a member in the University Glee Club. Thornburgh plans to become associated with a construction company upon graduation. ARCHIE DeWITT TIFFT business phi gamma delta President of the senior class, Cyanide, and Brown Key, Arch has been included in the American college Who ' s Who. Other positions include treasurer of Arcadia, Junior Prom chairman, business manager of the Freshman Handbook, 2nd lieutenant of Scabbard and Blade, and corresponding secretary of his fraternity. FREDERICK CARL TILLBERG, JR. metallurgical eng. alpha town house Derfy has been vice-president of both the Alpha Town House and Town Council. He is a member of the American Institute of Metallurgical Engineers and the Metal- lurgical Society. In his intramural league he played football, baseball, and wrestled. His hobbies are golfing and fishing. FLORENT JOSEPH TOKARCZYK mining engineering town group Turk took part in freshman wrestling, played junior-varsity football, intramural football and basketball, and won the town-group wrestling championship. He played in the Band and the Symphony Orchestra, and he is a student associate of the Ameri- can Institute of Mining Engineers. His hobby is music. WILLIAM WOOSTER TOLLEY chemical engineering sigma phi epsilon Bill graduated from Richmond Hill High School in New York. He was out for lacrosse in his sophomore year, and has been comptroller and house manager of his fraternity. During summers he pushed wheel chairs at the World ' s Fair, worked in a general store, and studied. He plans to enter the aluminum industry. 347 ALBERT GEORGE TROMER business town group Al comes from Staten Island where he attended Staten Island Academy. He has been president of his town section for two semesters. Al served on his class banquet com- mittee in his junior year and again in his senior year. He has been a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and worked as a handy man for two summers. JOHN FRANK URSCHITZ electrical engineering price house Johnny, having held a full-time job at the Bethlehem Steel Company since 1934, has earned all of his college expenses. He was graduated from high school in 1934 and before he entered Lehigh in 1938 completed a course in the Penn State Extension School. His hobbies are playing the saxophone and piano. JOHN DAVIS VANBLARCOM mechanical engineering taylor house c Van ' s interest in sports led him to play on the tennis team for two years and to wrestle on the JV. team for three years. Section treasurer and president, he is treasurer of the Interdormitory Council. Van has also been a member of the A.S.M.E. and vice- president of the Army Ordnance Post. LINDSLEY DODD VAN DER VEER industrial engineering sigma phi In his capacity as interfraternity sports director, Lin has been in charge of all fra- ternity intramurals during the past year. In addition, he was manager of freshman tennis and treasurer of his fraternity. He won his numerals in tennis, and is a mem- ber of the Industrial Engineering Society. WILLIAM PAUL VARNER business richards house i Outdoor-man Bill from Central High in Scranton has headed the Sportsman ' s Club for the past two years. President of his dormitory section, he served on the Inter- dormitory Council. He is a local authority on guns and was on the rifle team. Bill played trombone in the Band. He intends to go into sales and marketing. STUART HENRY VOGT electrical engineering taylor house b Stu came to Lehigh from Tenafly High School in New Jersey. Working his way through Lehigh, Stu spent his summers in a machine shop and earned his meals work- ing in Alex ' s diner. Athletic manager of his living group, he was a member of the Camera Club and the E.E. Society. EVERETT FRAZAR WARNER arts (industrial engineering) sigma phi Ev came to Lehigh from Millburn High School in New Jersey. A member of Mus- tard and Cheese, he produced sound and electrical effects, for which his hobby, ama- teur radio, prepared him. Ev participated in freshman fencing as well as in inter- fraternity sports. Upon graduation he plans for a commission in the Signal Corps. EARL LEWIS WEAVER, JR. mechanical engineering allentown Shorty received his preparatory education at Mercersburg Academy before coming to Lehigh. He played in the Band for six semesters. He is a member of the Lehigh Allentown Club. His off-campus activities include membership in the Y.M.C.A., Hi-Y, and the Boy Scouts. He likes to play tennis and to build model airplanes. KURT HEINZ WEBER engineering physics cosmopolitan club Kurt ' s scholastic honors include Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, Newtonian Society, Robert W. Blake Society, Wilbur English Prize, and freshman and sophomore honors. Woppebopper was a member of the freshman and varsity fencing teams, Cut and 348 Thrust, and was secretary and treasurer of his living group. } ib «S J 1 - DAVID FRANCIS WELLS chemical engineering theta kappa phi Dave was pledge trainer and rushing chairman of his fraternity during his senior year and represented it in the Interfraternity Council in his sophomore year. At other times he has been a cheerleader, a competitor in cross-country and track, and circu- lation manager of the defunct Review. JEFFRY STEVEN WETRICH business psi upsilon Jeepers entered Lehigh from Hempstead High on Long Island. He has been a member of the Lehigh Band for four years and was on the Brown and White staff for two years. Jeff served as secretary and treasurer of his fraternity. His outside interests include drawing and bridge playing. POWELL JOSEPH WHALEN mining engineering sigma nu Spanky has been persistent in his quest for knowledge, for he graduated from the University of Vermont before coming to Lehigh. During his two-year stay at Lehigh he has played on the varsity lacrosse team and been a regular on the Sigma Nu foot- ball team. Spanky expects to enter engineering construction work. EMMET TALMADGE WHITE business alpha kappa pi Em, who came from Hillside High School in New Jersey, was elected president of Alpha Kappa Pi his junior year and was a representative on the Interfraternity Council. For three years he was a player on the varsity football squad, and he has played all other sports on his fraternity ' s intramural teams. LEE ROBERT WHITE engineering physics town group Bob ' s scholastic attainments include freshman and sophomore honors and member- ship in Phi Eta Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, and Pi Mu Epsilon. He was the winner of the freshman and sophomore E.E. Prize. Bob is also a member of the Physics Society and is president of his town section. ALEXANDER KING WIGGIN industrial engineering alpha tau omega Alex came to Lehigh from Blair Academy. His hobbies are sailing and playing hockey, and he has devoted many summers and winters to them. He is commodore of the Yacht Club and captain of the hockey team. Last year he was elected vice-president of his fraternity. He is enrolled in the C.A.A. course. NORMAND JOSEPH WILHELMY business taylor house d Will came to Lehigh from Marlboro High School in Massachusetts. He was active in intramural football, baseball, basketball, and wrestling. He was athletic manager of his living group in his senior year. Will is a charter member of Lambda Mu Sigma, and he served as secretary in his senior year. RAYMOND SENTMAN WILLARD, JR. electrical eng. drinker house iib Coming from Coatesville High School, Ray has supplemented a scholarship with N.Y.A. work and an eats concession. He is treasurer of the A.I. E.E. and correspond- ing secretary of Eta Kappa Nu. Ray is also secretary of the Interdormitory Council. His hobbies are sailing, photography, and radio. HOWARD MISSON WILLIAMS business delta upsilon Howdy was a freshman tennis manager, whence he rose to the position of varsity tennis manager. He also became a member of Pi Delta Epsilon and the Brown Key Society. He served as vice-president of his fraternity and was a member of the Inter- fraternity Council. Howdy was on the staff of the Brown and White. 35 KINGSLEY GRANT WILLIAMS chemistry theta xi King ' s interests, aside from chemistry, lie in music, for he has played steadily in the Band, sung in the Glee Club, and belongs to Tone. He is an Interfraternity Council member, an intramural debater, and a member of the Sportsman ' s Club and the Chemical Society. King enjoys music and boating for hobbies. WILLIAM GODFREY WILLMANN chemistry town group Bill, who attended Suffern High School in New York, is now a resident of Bethlehem. He is a member of Scabbard and Blade Society and the Student Chemical Society. In his senior year he was elected secretary-treasurer of his town section. Bill was a fencing competitor for one year. WALLACE RICHARD WIRTHS business richards house iib Wally is secretary of the Middle Atlantic Conference of the International Relations Club and vice-president of the Lehigh chapter. He helped to organize the Bethle- hem branch of the Foreign Policy Association, is a member of the Sportsman ' s Club, and has worked on the editorial and news staffs of the Brown and White. JAMES WILLIAM WITHERSPOON mechanical eng. sigma phi epsilon Vice-president and rushing chairman of his fraternity, Whip is also a member of Pi Tau Sigma and the A.S.M.E. Bill was active in J.V. football for two years and in freshman swimming, and has been one of the mainstays of the house athletic teams. His intended field is aeronautical engineering. QUINTUS PETER WITTE, JR. arts (economics) town group Quint came to Lehigh from Long Island, where he received secondary-school prepa- ration at Newtown High School. He has been active in several intramural sports, and has for hobbies the recreations of bridge and bowling. Quint spent one summer as a tobacco salesman. ELWYN WOLFE electrical engineering easton Coming from Easton, where he went to high school, El has been fairly active at Lehigh. He was in intramural debating, joined the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, the Sportsman ' s Club, and was elected to the Town Council. Upon gradu- ating he is going to work for Allis-Chalmers. AHLERT DIEDRICH WOLFF business delta tau delta Al won his numerals in tennis, played intramural football and baseball, and bowled in the interfraternity league. During his freshman year he was a member of the Brown and White staff. Aside from tennis, Al ' s chief hobby is reading. He hopes to enter graduate school after graduation. RICHARD FRANCIS WOOD, JR. arts (economics) sigma chi Woodie prepared to enter college at the Scarborough, N. Y., school. At Lehigh he has been a member of the Band and of the Sportsman ' s Club, and has held the posi- tion of steward of his fraternity. He is also interested in amateur photography and sailing as hobbies. WILLIAM RUSSELL WOODRUFF chemical engineering taylor house d Bill is an alumnus of Teaneck, N. J., High School. While he worked to earn a part of his expenses the first three years, he was also active in his church ' s Student Fellow- ship and the Chemical Society. For the University he served as chairman of the Build- 352 ing and Grounds Committee. He spent his summers at work. V ■? ifcii jJia IM V •Vi , ' t ' • . ■■ f sC -  i FREDERICK WALLIS WRIGHT, JR. arts (geology) delta phi Fred attended Boonton High School in New Jersey. At various times he has been sec- retary, vice-president, and rushing chairman of his fraternity. His hobbies being mineralogy and photography, Freddy became a member of the Mining and Geo- logical Society and the Camera Club. ROBERT ROCHESTER YOUNG mechanical eng. Richards house iiia Bob is a Philadelphia boy who was graduated from Olney High School. He belonged to the Sportsman ' s Club and played intramural sports. Membership in the New- tonian Society and Pi Tau Sigma is 1 ' proof of his scholastic ability. Bob, following his hobby of model-airplane building, hopes to get a job in aeronautics. WHITNEY JAMES YOUNG mechanical engineering town group Whit has been active in the University Band and the Symphony Orchestra and is a member of the student branch of the A.S.M.E. and of the Machine Shop Club. He belongs to his church ' s Youth Fellowship Group and sings in the choir. His summers were spent in playing for a dance band, painting dormitory rooms, and working at the Steel. RICHARD JOHN YURKANIN electrical engineering town group A member of the Electrical Engineering Society, Dick has gone out for wrestling and has joined the Chess Club and shot for the rifle team. He spent his summer vacations working for Bethlehem Steel. Dick has no definite vocational plans. He was active in several intramural sports. ALFRED LEWIS ZANONI industrial engineering drinker house i Al took part in all intramural sports and assisted Professor Bartlett in the gym. His extra-curricular activities include the Sportsman ' s Club, the Aero Club, and the Machine Shop Club. He has a lot of interest in aviation, and it led him to choose the Army Air Corps as a career. He has a commission. GEORGE GLENN ZIPF metallurgical engineering lambda chi alpha Zipper, who has been heading for the steel industry ever since he came to Lehigh, spent two summers and all of his junior year working for the Bethlehem Steel Com- pany. Active in sports, he won numerals in basketball and was freshman soccer man- ager. He collects books and minerals. 355 appendix ADMINISTRATION Clement C. Williams, President of the University. Wray H. Congdon, Dean of undergraduates. Philip M. Palmer, Dean of the College of Arts and Science. Neil Carothers, Dean of the College of Business Administration. A. Copeland Callen, Dean of the College of Engineering. Tomlinson Fort, Dean of the Graduate School. Eugene G. Grace, President of the Board of Trustees. Trustees: Frank B. Bell (alumnus) ; John D. Berg (alumnus) ; Alfred V. Bodine (alumnus); Andrew E. Buchanan (alumnus); William C. Dickerman; Alan C. Dodson; Thomas S. Gates, Jr.; Earle F. Johnson; Walter S. Landis (alumnus) ; Charles D. Marshall; Frank A. Merrick (alumnus) ; Frank W. Sterrett; William J. Turner; Samuel D. Warriner; Albert N. Willlvms. Frederick R. Ashbaugh, Bursar and Purchasing Agent; Raymond C. Bull, Director, Student Health Service; James L. Burley, Consulting Architect; Jean- ette I. Cleaveland, Recorder; William A. Cornelius, Archivist of Alumni Records; George B. Curtis, Registrar and University Editor; Jennie V. Dacey, Nurse in Charge; Edna V. Dean, Secretary to the Treasurer; Byron C. Hayes, Assistant Director of Admissions ; Robert F. Herrick, Executive Secretary of the Lehigh Alumni Association and Editor of the Alumni Bulletin; Edward A. Hower, Manager of Realty, Brodhead Estate; Carl O. Keck, Assistant Director of Student Health Service; John I. Kirkpatrick, Assistant to the President; Howard S. Leach, Librarian; Andrew W. Litzenberger, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds; John W. Maxwell, Manager of the Supply Bureau; Robert P. More, Executive Secretary of the Graduate Faculty; E. Robins Morgan, Director of Place- ment; Walter R. Okeson, Vice-President of the University; Helen G. Ryan, Secretary to the President; Leonard H. Schick, Managing Editor of the Alumni Bulletin; Melvin Schissler, University Auditor; E. Kenneth Smiley, Director of Admissions ; Robert S. Taylor, Legal Counsel; Elsie M. Troeger, Directress of Dining Service. Lecturers: Charles A. Buck, Nicholas H. Heck, Harry F. Hoffman, Henry I. Klopp, Robert E. Laramy, Roy A. Lewis, Edwin J. Prindle. Library Staff: Myrtle H. Easton, Ruth L. Hall, Muriel L. Kemp, Jean E. Riegel, Mary E. Wheatley. COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Department of Biology. Stanley J. Thomas, Professor of Bacteriology and Head of the Department of Biology. Professor: Robert W. Hall. Assistant Professor: Francis J. Trembley. Instructors: Basil W. Parker; James P. Sell. Fellows: William J. Kuhns; Robert M. Lewert; Elmer G. Smith. 357 Department of Education. Harold P. Thomas, Professor of and Head of the Department of Education. Associate Professor: Theodore T. Lafferty. Assistant Professor: Raymond H. White. Fellow: Harry A. Strauss. Department of English. Robert M. Smith, Professor of and Head of the Department of English. Professor: Jonathan B. Severs. Associate Professors: Wallace R. Biggs (Journalism, second semester) ; Dale H. Gramley (Journalism, first semester) ; Edgar H. Riley. Assistant Professors: J. Calvin Callaghan; James L. Clifford; Carl F. Strauch. Instructors: Cole S. Brembeck; Glenn J. Christensen; Everett L. Jones; Kenneth K. Kost (Journalism) ; Albert A. Rights. Assistant: Sherman Paul. Graduate Assistants: James K. Binder; James T. Nardin. Department of Fine Arts. Garth A. Howland, Associate Professor of and Head of the Department of Fine Arts. Department of Geology. Bradford Willard, Professor of and Head of the Department of Geology. Professor: Benjamin L. Miller. Associate Professors: Augustus H. Fretz; Lawrence Whitcomb. Assistant Professors: Robert D. Butler; Duncan Stewart, Jr. Department of German. Philip M. Palmer, Professor of and Head of the Department of German. Associate Professor: Robert P. More. Assistant Professor: John S. Tremper. Department of Greek. Earl L. Crum, Professor of and Head of the Department of Greek. Department of History and Government. Lawrence H. Gipson, Professor of and Head of the Department of History and Government. Associate Professors: Wilson L. Godshall (International Relations) ; George D. Harmon (American History) ; Ernst B. Schulz (Political Science). Assistant Professor: William A. Aiken. Department of Latin. Horace W. Wright, Professor of and Head of the Department of Latin. Instructor: William A. McDonald. Department of Mathematics and Astronomy. Tomlinson Fort, Professor of and Head of the Department of Mathematics and Astronomy. Professors Emeritus: John H. Ogburn; Charles L. Thornburg. Professors: Joseph B. Reynolds (Mathematics and Theoretical Mechanics) ; Lloyd 358 L. Smail. Associate Professors: Kenneth W. Lamson; George E. Raynor; Clarence A. Shook. Assistant Professors: Frank S. Beale; Edward H. Cutler; Voris V. Latshaw; Malcolm F. Smiley; Arthur E. Pitcher. Instructors: Joseph E. Illick; Ralph N. Van Arnam (Mathematics and Astron- omy) ; John L. Vanderslice. Assistant: William R. Transue. Graduate Assistants: Leonard P. Burton; John A. Pond. Lecture Assistant: Peter E. Rodgers (Astronomy). Department of Music. T. Edgar Shields, Director of and Professor of Music. Department of Moral and Religious Philosophy. Claude G. Beardslee, Professor of and Head of the Department of Moral and Religious Philosophy. Department of Philosophy. Frank C. Becker, Assistant Professor of and Chairman of the Department of Philosophy. Professors: Percy Hughes (Clara H. Stewardson Professor of Philosophy) ; Theo- dore T. Lafferty (Self ridge Professor of Philosophy). Department of Psychology. Adelbert Ford, Professor of and Head of the Department of Psychology. Associate Professor: James L. Graham. Assistant Professor: William L. Jenkins. Department of Romance Languages. Allen J. Barthold, Professor of and Head of the Department of Romance Languages. Assistant Professors: Robert F. McNerney, Jr.; John G. Roberts; Rafael A. Soto. Instructors: George D. Fame; David G. Scott; Gordon D. Southard. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Department of Accounting. Roy B. Cowin, Professor of and Head of the Department of Accounting. Associate Professor: Carl E. Allen. Instructor: Henry A. Kriebel. Department of Economics and Sociology. Herbert M. Diamond, Professor of and Head of the Department of Economics and Sociology. Professors: Frederick A. Bradford; Elmer C. Bratt; Neil Carothers (MacFarlane Professor of Economics) . Assistant Professors: Clarence H. Danhof; Thomas F. Jones; Earl L. Knight; Robert W. Mayer. Instructors: Richard M. Davis; L. Reed Tripp. Department of Finance. Frederick A. Bradford, Head of the Department of Finance. 359 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Department of Civil Engineering. Hale Sutherland, Professor of and Head of the Department of Civil Engineering. Associate Professors: Sylvanus A. Becker; John R. Connelly (Industrial Engineer- ing) ; William J. Eney; Merton O. Fuller; Cyril D. Jensen; Bruce G. Johnston. Assistant Professors: Arthur T. Ippen; Harry G. Payrow (Sanitary Engineering) ; Eugene H. Uhler (Industrial Engineering). Fellow: Andrew Brodsky. Superintendent of the Power House: John D. Hartigan. Engineer of Tests: Robert M. Mains. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering. Harvey A. Neville, Professor of Chemistry and Head of the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering. Professor Emeritus: Harry M. Ullmann. Professors: Harold V. Anderson (Inorganic Chemistry) ; Alpha A. Diefenderfer (Quantitative Analysis and Assaying) ; Warren W. Ewing (Physical Chemistry) ; Charles W. Simmons (Chemical Engineering) ; Edwin R. Theis (Chemical Engi- neering) . Associate Professors: Robert D. Billinger; Thomas H. Hazlehurst. Assistant Professors: Edward D. Amstutz (Organic Chemistry) ; George C. Beck (Quantitative Analysis) ; Darrel E. Mack (Chemical Engineering) ; Earl J. Serfass (Analytical Chemistry) ; Judson G. Smull. Instructors: Frank J. Fornoff; Robert H. Lafferty, Jr.; Albert C. Zettlemoyer. Graduate Assistants: Henry C. Green; Roger S. Hawley; Thomas F. Jacoby; Richard N. Rhoda; Robert L. Stubbings; Richard K. Walton. Fellows: William A. Blum; Albert E. Fulton; Thomas G. Harris; Raymond C. Hess; George W. Lower; William K. Meerbott; Moulton D. Phelps; Herbert E. Ras- mussen; Lowrie B. Sargeant, Jr.; Charles W. Tucker; Earl A. Zettlemoyer. Department of Electrical Engineering. Loyal V. Bewley, Professor of and Head of the Department of Electrical Engi- neering. Professor: J. Lynford Beaver. Associate Professors: Nelson S. Hibshman; Henry C. I. Knutson; Archie R. Miller. Assistant Professors: Cledo Brunetti; Howard D. Gruber. Instructor: Douglas E. Mode. Fellows: Maurice L. Greenough; Gerald G. Murphy. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering. Fred V. Larkin, Professor of and Head of the Department of Mechanical Engi- neering. Professors: Thomas E. Butterfield (Heat Power Engineering) ; Arthur W. Klein; Milton C. Stuart. Assistant Professor: Arthur C. Bates. Instructors: Lee T. Askren; Joel F. Bailey; Robert C. Dimmich; James V. Eppes; Walton Forstall, Jr.; Thomas E. Jackson; Webster C. Roberts; Cecil F. Warner. Fellow: Frank P. Thomas. Department of Metallurgy. 360 Gilbert E. Doan, Professor of and Head of the Department of Metallurgy. Professors: Allison Butts (Electrometallurgy) ; Bradley Stoughton. Assistant Professor: John H. Frye, Jr. Instructor: Robert D. Stout. Fellows: Joseph L. Brandes; Jesse W. Caum; Philip G. DeHuff; Harold W. Euker. Department of Mining Engineering. A. Copeland Callen, Professor of and Head of the Department of Mining Engi- neering. Professor: Howard Eckfeldt. Associate Professor: Eric S. Sinkinson (Ore Dressing and Fuel Technology). Department of Physics. Charles C. Bidwell, Professor of and Head of the Department of Physics. Professors: Paul L. Bayley; Maurice Ewing; Max Petersen. Associate Professors: Preston B. Carwile; Charles R. Larkin. Assistant Professors: Charles E. Berger; Austin R. Frey; Frederick A. Scott; Ben- jamin L. Snavely. Instructor: Robert A. Buerschaper. Graduate Assistants: William B. Agocs; Robert H. Mellen; Arthur W. Warner, Jr. UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENTS Department of Military Science and Tactics. Joseph S. Leonard, Professor of and Head of the Department of Military Science and Tactics. Assistant Professors: William M. Barrows, Jr.; George L. Febiger; Charles E. Phillips; Samuel Pierce, Jr.; John F. Schwartz. Instructors: John F. Beck; James D. Campbell; Walter E. Wockenfuss. Assistants: Thomas H. Duby; George F. Gasda (Coach of Rifle Team). Department of Physical Education. Fay C. Bartlett, Director of Physical Education. Professor Emeritus: Howard R. Reiter. Assistant: James J. Mahoney (Swimming). Trainer: Emil A. Havach. Division of Intercollegiate Athletics. Glen W. Harmeson, Director of Athletics and Head Football Coach. Paul E. Short, Assistant Director of Athletics. Coaches: Elbert F. Caraway (Assistant Football and Head Baseball) ; Gordon H. Chalmers (Swimming and Assistant Track) ; James A. Gordon (Cross-Country, Track and Freshman Basketball) ; Frederic Mercur (Tennis) ; Leo F. Prendergast (Freshman Football Line) ; William Sheridan (Wrestling and Soccer) ; Paul E. Short (Freshman Football) ; Martin B. Westerman (Assistant Football, Basketball, Freshman Baseball). Head Trainer: Gordon H. Chalmers. Superintendent of Taylor Field: Peter J. Boquel. 361 CLASS OF 1942 Henry Lawrence Abbott John Marion Adams Vernon Howard Adams John Adrian, Jr. John Purdon Allen Joseph Narciso Ambrogi, Jr. Ray B. Anderson, Jr. Charles John Apolenis John Peter Arbizzani Joseph Frederick Arbogast George Edward Archbold Joseph Andrew Arnold Robert Edward Ashley Harry Montgomery Atkins Donald No yes Bach man Boris Baiko Craig Warren Baker Robert Martin Baker Stephen Francis Balshi William Howard Barnard Robert Hopkins Bartholomew Charles Drummond Bartlett, Jr. James Henry Bashford Kenneth Caswell Bauder Conrad TenEyck Beardsley Robert William Beck Jesse Franklin Beers, Jr. John Fullam Belcher George Beverly Benedict William Milton Benesch Robert Allan Bennett Richard Joseph Berg Milton Louis Berman Jesse Oatman Betterton, Jr. Edward MacClellan Biggs, Jr. Welles Royce Bliss Edward Fulper Bodine William Filson Boore, Jr. William Thomas Bostock, Jr. James Henry Boucher Sidney Royal Bowen, Jr. 103 Walter Bertolet Bowers Robert McCleary Bowman Ralph Bown, Jr. Sidney Breese Bowne, Jr. Harry Lester Boyer, Jr. Horace William Boynton Richard Henry Brenneman Richard Rieser Bright Everett Allan Britton Alexander Brkich 362 William Alexander Brooks 827 Benoni Avenue, Fairmont, W. Va. 133 North Eighth Street, Allentown 83 Warner Avenue, Hempstead, N. Y. 42 Glenn Terrace, Glenbrook, Conn. 18 Princeton Place, Upper Montclair, N. J. 324 Lincoln Avenue, Lansdowne 71 Brantwood Road, Eggertsville, N. Y. 763 Lawrence Street, Allentown 760 Dellwood Street, Bethlehem 1529 State Street, Harrisburg 450 Knollwood Road, Ridgewood, N. J. 1 2 1 1 Park Avenue, Meadville 1658 Sanford Street, Muskegon, Mich. 325 Arch Street, Kittanning 1030 Walnut Street, Allentown Box 134, Commack, N. Y. 13 Tillinghost Avenue, Albany, N. Y. 721 Madison Avenue, York 720 East Fifth Street, Bethlehem Schuyler Avenue, North Arlington, N. J. 522 Columbia Avenue, Palmerton 62 Fourth Street, Bangor, Me. Aronimink Arms Apartments, Drexel Hill 104 Lansdowne Court, Lansdowne Westfield Road, Scotch Plains, N. J. 200 King Street, Johnstown Box 596, Mahwah, N. J. 50 Vernon Parkway, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 72 Tremont Street, Albany, N. Y. 100 West Tuscany Road, Baltimore, Md. 1750 Lincoln Avenue, Northampton Lyons Plain Road, Weston, Conn. 1827 Hamilton Street, Allentown 2403 French Street, Santa Ana, Cal. 350 Stewart Avenue, Garden City, N. Y. 46 Essex Avenue, Glen Ridge, N. J. 396 Meadowbrook Road, Fairfield, Conn. 495 Standish Road, Teaneck, N. J. 40 East Webster Avenue, Roselle Park, N. J. 500 American Street, Catasauqua South Connecticut Avenue, Mason City, Iowa 416 North Fifth Street, Reading 333 Hewitt Road, Wyncote 85 Pine Street, Maplewood, N. J. 33 Oak Lane, Glen Cove, N. Y. 3410 Marshall Road, Drexel Hill 224 Poplar Street, Roselle, N. J. 1 1 1 North George Street, Pottsville 16 Glyn Lane, St. Davids 2002 Monroe Place, Wilmington, Del. 416 Bostwick Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. 50 Renner Avenue, Newark, N. J. Samuel Ritchie Brough John I. Brower, Jr. Alfred Bruce Brown George Hogenae Brown James Harvey Bruen, Jr. Frank Taylor Brundage, Jr. Robert Brune John Burgio Irwin Russell Burkey Philip Guernsey Butts Lewis Jones Caulk James Edward Chafey Robert Elmer Chamberlain Albert Clark, Jr. Gordon Manson Clark John Fulmer Clark, Jr. Nelson Raymond Clark, Jr. Robert Wesley Clark William Lawrence Clark William Lee Clark Willard Stanley Clewell, Jr. Richard Henry Cliff, Jr. Allison Walter Clokey Fenton Rulon Cloud Edward John Coffey, Jr. Robert Henry Coleman Alan Holding Conklin Oakley Watts Cooke, Jr. Theodore Robert Cortright Samuel Isaac Cory Carl Creidenberg Lloyd Alexander Croot Frank Peter Cziguth Charles Parker Davidson, III James Edward Davis William Sampson Dawless George Nestor DeCowsky Ward Arnold Detwiler, II John Lake Diamond James Joseph Donahue, Jr. Howard Vane Donohoe Robert Walper Doster John Vance Downs John Herren Dudley Kenneth Dwight Duggan Charles Bockoven Dutton William Adolph Eisele Robert Gaylord Eitner George Earl Elliott, Jr. Edward Gordon Evans Thomas Ray Evans Henry Carroll Farrand Francis Harvey Ferguson Clement Roger Ferland 210 North Broadway, Lexington, Ky 724 Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, N. J 256 Roseland Avenue, Essex Fells, N. J 120 Cabrini Boulevard, New York,.N. Y 50 Morris Avenue, Morristown, N. J 15 Bettswood Road, Norwalk, Conn 1 1 1 2 Albermarle Road, Brooklyn, N. Y 62 Park Avenue, Caldwell, N. J 140 North Fifth Street, Hamburg 1343 Montrose Avenue, Bethlehem 1385 Lombardy Road, Pasadena, Cal. Aura Road, Clayton, N. J. 264 Oriental Place, Lyndhurst, N. J. 313 East Spring Street, Nanticoke 80 Underhill Road, Hamden, Conn. 924 Wayne Avenue, Wyomissing 320 South Waiola Avenue, LaGrange, 111. 2 Vista Way, Lakewood, N. Y. 7 Larchdell Way, Mountain Lakes, N. J. 175 Brompton Road, Garden City, N. Y. 419 Cherokee Street, Bethlehem 4321 Tenth Avenue, South Temple 27 Sunderland Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. 1845 West Marshall Street, Norristown 1 130 North New Street, Bethlehem 169-48 Twenty-third Avenue, Flushing, N. Y. 114 Summit Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J. The Cedars, Caldwell, N. J. 605 East Third Street, Berwick Pinebrook Road, Towaco, N. J. 839 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 26 Eagle Street, North East 827 North Fifth Street, Allentown Clarks Green 407 Cooper Street, Taylor 1 155 Ridge Road, Hamden, Conn. R. D. 1, Pennsburg 1009 Three Mile Drive, Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. 801 West Broad Street, Bethlehem 37 Clinton Road, Garden City, N. Y. 737 Edmonds Avenue, Drexel Hill 632 Eighth Avenue, Bethlehem 6490 Morris Park Road, Philadelphia 2020 Bridge Street, McKeesport 47 Clinton Avenue, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. 91 Western Avenue, Morristown, N. J. 5 Claremont Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 82 Blackburn Road, Summit, N. J. 705 Noel Drive, Longview, Texas 722 North Lincoln Avenue, Scranton 2612 Liberty Street, Easton 68 Williamson Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. The Wellington, Philadelphia 44 North Pleasant Street, Middlebury, Vt. 363 William August Fetske Arthur Louis Fischer Paul Boris Fitzell Harry William Flueso Robert Field Forshay Robert Henry Forster Robert Henry Forsyth Albert Wood Foster Donald Thompson Foster Harold Earl Foster Richard MacDonald Foster John Adam Frederick, Jr. Charles William Freed, Jr. Harry Jerome Friedman Robert King Gailey Ernest Gamble, Jr. George Richard Lawrence Gaughran Russell Charles Gebert, Jr. Robert Edwin Gengenbach William Evans Gheen Walter William Gleadall Sanford David Goldstein Robert Edward Goodman James Allison Gordon Kilbourn Gordon, Jr. Richard Cameron Gordon James Gore, III William Dean Gorman Rudolph Edward Gosztonyi, Jr. Gregory Gould Walter Owen Graham 364 Arnold Herbert Edward Grandage John Thomas Green Frank Joseph Gress Harold Alexander Grubb Michael Guidon, III Robert Neuman Gusdorff Norman Hackman Harold Woodbury H aines Douglas Matheson Haire Donald Halbedl Robert Arrison Hammond Ralph Leighton Haney, Jr. George Warren Hanson Edward Alfred Hanudel Milton William Harper Dale Ackley Harris Richard Parse Hazard Joseph Hummel Heller, Jr. Richard Lambert Heyniger John Balmain Hill, Jr. Louis Joseph Hillenbrand, Jr. Warren Alfred Himmelwright Ralph Craven Hird 10 West End Place, Elizabeth, N. J. 686 West Eighth Street, Plainfield, N. J. 467 Bobbins Avenue, New Britain, Conn. 709 North Sixth Street, Allentown 21 Park Place, Hempstead, N. Y. 138 Smith Street, Elizabeth, N. J. 48 South Street, Red Bank, N. J. 6903 Lincoln Drive, Philadelphia 510 East Market Street, Scranton Welsh Road, Bustleton, Philadelphia 327 East Broad Street, Bethlehem 739 Second Street, Catasauqua Eighth and Broad Streets, Quakertown 535 North Street, Throop 930 Harrison Avenue, Niagara Falls, N. Y. 202 West Richardson Avenue, Langhorne 442 North Fifth Street, Allentown 315 South Sterling Road, Elkins Park 382 Farmington Avenue, Bristol, Conn. 327 South Main Street, Jersey Shore 2640 Ninety-first Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. 27 South Fourteenth Street, Allentown 47 Lyncroft Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. Short Hills, N. J. 17 Beachtree Lane, Bronxville, N. Y. 460 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 1222 McCabe Avenue, Coraopolis 342 Princeton Avenue, Swarthmore 818 Broadway, Bethlehem 251 Farrington Avenue, North Tarrytown, N. Y. 491 Highland Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J. 631 Grove Street, Montclair, N. J 128 2 South St. Cloud Street, Allentown 1332 Stanley Avenue, Bethlehem 228 Cricket Avenue, North Hills 753 Kossuth Street, Freemansburg 318 Walter Avenue, Hasbrouck Heights, N. J 86 Paine Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y Crescent Place, Short Hills, N. J 25 North Terrace, Maplewood, N. J 720 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y 903 South Poplar Street, Allentown 1 64 1 Williams Way, Norristown Pinewood Gardens, Hartsdale, N. Y. 116 West Eighth Avenue, Roselle, N. J. R. D. 1, Seaford, Del. 339 Beachwood Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 300 West Trenton Avenue, Morrisville 517 Eleventh Avenue, Bethlehem 65 Pine Street, Waterbury, Conn. 231 Highland Avenue, Hamburg, N. Y. 1036 North Nineteenth Street, Allentown 539 Broadway, Bethlehem 191 Woodland Street, Englewood, N. J. William Paige Hitchcock Howard Addison Hoch, Jr. Chester Adam Hoffman Bernard Earl Hoffner 6ii Thomas Seir Cummings Holberton, Jr. George Vernon Holby Seymour Lawrence Hollander Caleb William Holyoke Alfred Edward Horka William Edward Howard, III Donald Clinton Howe Jerry Charles Hubeny David Lindsay Hume John Ashberry Hunt Thomas Reed Hunt Robert Marvin Iobst Floyd Emerson Ivey Austen Erwin Jenkin Harry Witmer Jones, Jr. Henry Thomas Kalinoski William Richard Kampfe Joseph Francis Keating John Kellett, III James Henry Kidder John Arthur Kimberley Edwin Howard Klein Louis Edward Klein Donald Henry Kleppinger Eugene Leonard Kline Russell Francis Klinger Conrad Erwin Kluger Carl George Konolige John Alfred Krawchuk Max Krissiep, Jr. Frederick Albert Krone Stephen John Kucey Richard Lincoln Kulp Donald Wayne Kurtz John Carl Lam pert Jack Emmett Lane Joseph Peter Larkin, III Elwood D. Latimer, Jr. ross wllberton leaver Benjamin Joseph Lehman Monroe Levy Frank Paul Librizzi William Henry Lindsay, Jr. George Alexander Logan William Bennett Logan Stephen Brooks Longley Jess Brodbeck Loucks John Louis Loughran Charles Tweeddale Loveless Richard Michael Luckring 135 DeWitt Street, Syracuse, N. Y. 1435 Sioux Street, Bethlehem 220 East Hamilton Street, Allentown South Bishopthorpe Street, Bethlehem 273 Clinton Place, Hackensack, N. J. Elbow Beach Hotel, Bermuda 29 Colgate Road, Maplewood, N. J. 2968 North Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. 78 Park Avenue, Passaic, N. J. Mount Royal Hotel, Montreal, Canada 1950 Highland Street, Allentown 833 Van Buren Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. 1 20 1 North Denver Avenue, Tulsa, Okla. 133 Fairview Avenue, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. 258 East Market Street, Bethlehem 533 Fourth Avenue, Bethlehem 315 East Garrison Street, Bethlehem 54 Huron Road, Bellerose, L. I., N. Y. St. Davids 1919 Cedar Avenue, Scranton 49 Morris Avenue, Morristown, N. J. ,701 Wyandotte Street, Bethlehem 139 Broadview Road, Springfield 5530 Greene Street, Germantown, Philadelphia 15 Maple Street, Dal ton, Mass. 345 Billings Avenue, Paulsboro, N. J. 221 North Fourteenth Street, Easton 518 Fifth Avenue, Bethlehem 30 Bryn Mawr Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 701 East Broad Street, Louisville, Ohio 134 East Thirtieth Street, Paterson, N. J. 121 East North Street, Bethlehem 818 Ford Street, Bridgeport 938 Franklin Street, Wyomissing 1 04 1 Birkbeck Street, Freeland 634 William Street, Bethlehem 532 Twelfth Avenue, Bethlehem 425 Gay Street, Phoenixville 426 Broad Street, Carlstadt, N. J. 120 Cochran Road, Mt. Lebanon 51 Highland Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 532 North Irving Avenue, Scranton North Street, Brookside, N. J. 141 8 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 655 Edgewood Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 469 Fifteenth Avenue, Newark, N. J. 322 Springfield Terrace, Haddonfield, N. J. 6 Girard Place, Maplewood, N. J. 1 61 8 East Third Street, Bethlehem 415 Wyoming Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 738 Florida Avenue, York 438 East Sedgewick Avenue, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia West Farmington, Ohio 310 Clarendon Avenue, N.-W., Canton, Ohio 3 5 Howard George Luley Philip Lutters Robert Merrill Lynch John Stanley Macdonald Robert Russell Macy Harold Edward Mahoney Robert Mercier Maiden William Thomas Mainwaring Donald Alton Marcks Sandor Mark Paul William Marshall Robert Henry Marshall William Angus Matheson, Jr. John Joseph Matzko Franklin Bliss Mayer Daniel Bosworth McAfee Wilkes McClave, II John Donald McClay Malcolm Findley McConnell, Jr John Leo McGonigle, Jr. Charles Edward McGrath Robert John McGregor Frank Shirley McKenna Robert Charles McMichael Raymond Theodore Meckbach William Jackson Meikle Tom Charles Mekeel Richard Edward Metius Robert Metzner Donald Mayo Middleton John Henry Milbank Albert Marshall Miller Leonard Hanmer Miller Richard Earle Miller Robert Bruce Miller George Francis Minde John Francis Miraglia Ralph Franklin Moss, Jr. Edgar Kirton Muhlhausen Richard Dallam Munnikhuysen Joseph Fitzroy Musante James Warden Needles Robert Shaw Newcomb Cyril Anthony Neyhart David Kierstead Nichols Robert Alexander Nicrosini John James Nitti Frederic Stuart Nolte John Hugh Norwood John Brangs O ' Hara Allen Hisayoshi Okamoto Lowell Kenneth Oliphant Henry Jacob Olson, Jr. 366 David Chittenden Osborn 471 Riverside Drive, New Kensington 1 7 Fairfield Avenue, Shelton, Conn. Greenwich Lodge, Greenwich, Conn. 456 Kings Highway, West, Haddonfield, N. J. 26 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md. 134 Walcott Street, Pawtucket, R. I. 1 1 2 Parker Place, Trenton, N. J. 6477 Stanton Avenue, Pittsburgh 366 Belvidere Street, Nazareth 1 75 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 536 North Charlotte Street, Pottstown 201 Sickles Street, Kennett Square 410 East Washington Street, Bloomington, 111. no North Nichols Street, Saint Clair Erie Trust Building, Erie Griswold Road, Rye, N. Y. 488 Ridgewood Road, Maplewood, N. J. Hudson Avenue, Tenafly, N. J. 1060 Morewood Avenue, Pittsburgh 522 Tilghman Street, Allentown 1504 Adams Avenue, Scranton 2006 Delaware Street, Dunmore 85 Belvidere Street, Crafton 149 East Twenty- third Street, Chester 229 Maplewood Avenue, Bogota, N. J. 2514 North Fifth Street, Harrisburg 129 East Market Street, York 408 Anthwyn Road, Merion 186 South Manning Boulevard, Albany, N. Y. 3885 Beechwood Boulevard, Pittsburgh 407 Berkeley Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. 2332 Lakeview Avenue, St. Petersburg, Fla. 292 South Burnett Street, East Orange, N. J. 2104 Washington Avenue, Northampton 1325 Montrose Avenue, Bethlehem 36 Mountain Avenue, Summit, N. J. 220 Chestnut Street, Port Chester, N. Y. 401 Merion Road, Merion 661 East Eighteenth Street, Brooklyn 147 Gordon Street, Bel Air, Md 40 Edna Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn Cape May, N. J 414 Lenox Place, South Orange, N. J 621 Tilghman Street, Allentown 622 Prospect Street, Nutley, N. J 424-26 209th Street, Bayside, N. Y 715 Fifty-sixth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y 175 Lawton Road, Riverside, 111 92 Union Street, Hamburg, N. Y 387 Fourth Avenue, Newark, N. J 1 24 Grove Avenue, Willow Grove 1 715 Bryn Mawr Avenue, East Cleveland, Ohio 1 15 Burtis Avenue, Oyster Bay, N. Y. 3 1 1 1 Warrington Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio Richard Mercer Palmer George Earl Parsons, Jr. Preston Wilson Parvis, Jr. Charles Anthony Patten Richard Chadwick Paul John Roby Penn, III Richard Gray Petersen John Louis Peterson Walker Fairfield Peterson, Jr. James Fisher Pfeffer, Jr. John Ormsby Phillips John Richard Polinsky Philip John Prang, Jr. John Adams Quincy Kenneth Hauser Rahn John Thompson Ransom, II John Arnold Read Theodore Hosmer Redman Sumner Willard Reid Janes Lowther Reiley Irving Baker Rem sen, Jr. Donald John Rentz Henry Thomas Reuwer Joseph Benson Reynolds Arthur Herbert Rich Frank Hart Rich David Emrys Richards William Howard Riemer John Marvil Roach i 41 5 Alsace Road, Reading Marion Station, Md. 708 Greenhill Avenue, Wilmington, Del. 135 South West Street, Allentown Pinehill, R. D. 6, York 4936 Crestline Road, Fort Worth, Texas 44 Tretow Street, Pittsburgh 344 Marlboro Road, Wood-Ridge, N. J. 210 Ridgewood Road, Baltimore, Md. 23 Kathmere Road, Brookline, Upper Darby 5604 Howe Street, Pittsburgh 308 Simson Street, Swoyerville 123 South Eleventh Street, Easton Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. 376 Columbia Avenue, Palmerton 268 Hawthorne Avenue, Haddonfield, N. J. 129 Summit Avenue, Montclair, N. J. 1 o 1 7 Oriole Court, Louisville, Ky. 61 Wyomissing Hills Boulevard, West Lawn 8 Turnpike Avenue, Clearfield 2512 Liberty Street, Trenton, N. J. 25 1 1 Penn A venue, West Lawn 808 North Seventeenth Street, Harrisburg 721 West Broad Street, Bethlehem 229 Pendleton Avenue, Palm Beach, Fla. 1526 Buchanan Street, N.-W., Washington, D. C. 1032 Fisk Street, Scranton Cedar Avenue, Manasquan, N. J. 6710 Marion Avenue, Merchantville, N. J. Charles Thompson Robertson, III 59°9 Thompson Street, Philadelphia Gordon Brown Robertson, 3316 East Scarborough Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio Francis Haynes Rockett, Jr., 132 Harvard Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y. Douglas Hill Rodgers Robert Ellwood Rowand Austin William Ruch Clyde Charles Ruffle Robert Francis Ryan Philip Wales Saitta, Jr. Rudolph William Samer Abram Samuels, III 24 Summit Road, Port Washington, N. Y. 732 Yale Avenue, Swarthmore Franklin Company, South Mountain 9310 Springfield Boulevard, Queens Village, N. Y 910 Woodland Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y 422 South Fifteenth Street, Lebanon 655 Adams Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J 2315 Union Street, Allentown Charles Marcellus Sanderson, Jr., 324 Meadowbrook Lane, South Orange, N. J Donald Belshaw Sands South Street, Middlebury, Conn Theophile Saulnier, Jr. 330 North Princeton Avenue, Swarthmore Charles Henry Savage 25 Harding Road, Morristown, N. J John Seltzer Saylor, Jr. . 738 North Third Street, Reading John Schneider, III Little Eldon, Cambridge, Md Leonard Adolph Schneider, 18 Pershing Rd. and Van Houton Ave. Clifton, N. J Howard Oscar Schroeder 8 Aldon Terrace, Bloomfield, N. J Charles Henry Schumacher 3513 Seventy-sixth Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y 303 Laurel Avenue, Bellevue Farley Road, Millburn, N. J Orange, Va Johnny Cake Road, Woodlawn, Md 34 Palisade Road, Elizabeth, N. J Forrest Veil Schumacher Joseph Doty Scott Theodore Gourdin Scott, Jr Murl Wolfe Sears Grendon Kenneth Sebold 367 Henry Albert Seebald i75° 2 Union Street, Allentown Russell Melvin Seward, Jr. 107 Logan Boulevard, Altoona Joseph Matthew Sexton 108 Renner Avenue, Newark, N. J. Louis Everett Sharpe 122 C Palmer House, Larchmont Acres, Larchmont, N. Y. William Sydney Shuttleworth 67 Wallbrooke Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. Robert Neil Simonsen William James Skinner Stanley Edward Sliwka Augustine Nicholas Smith David Rahm Smith, Jr. Eugene Monroe Smith Frank Edgar Smith, Jr. Jesse Tavenor Smith Kenneth Herbert Smith Victor Eugene Smith John Joseph Somers Ralph Franklin Sotzing Leslie Orman Southgate, Jr. 324 McCully Street, Mt. Lebanon 5 Highland Avenue, Madison, N. J. 90-A West Twenty-seventh Street, Bayonne, N. J. 38 West Center Street, Mahanoy City 363 York Avenue, Towanda 16 West Fourth Street, Bethlehem 40 Clinton Avenue, Clifton, N. J. 3053 Warrington Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 625 West Broad Street, Bethlehem Highbrook Road, Norwalk, Conn. 551 West Louden Street, Philadelphia 1804 Sycamore Street, Bethlehem Railroad Avenue, Jamesburg, N. J. William McIndoe Spears, Jr., 3270 Norwood Rd., Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Emerson Daniel Spengler Eugene Roy Springer Robert Breckinridge Steele, Jr. Charles Stanley Steiner Orville James Stephens Robert John Stickel John Stogdell Stokes, Jr. Edward James Stone Robert Walter Stowbridge Robert Samuel Struble John Phelps Stupp Carl Lindsley Sturgis Gordon Edward Tait Arthur Tallaksen Ray Orme Taylor Robert Gorman Taylor Frank Raymond Thaeder Albert Leo Thalhamer Joseph Simon Thomas Charles Garland Thornburgh, Jr Archie DeWitt Tifft Frederick Carl Tillberg, Jr. Florent Joseph Tokarczyk William Wooster Tolley John Henry Transue Albert George Tromer John Frank Urschitz John Davis VanBlarcom Lindsley Dodd Van der Veer William Paul Varner Stuart Henry Vogt R. D. 1, Northampton 5000 Montrose Boulevard, Houston, Texas 3 Weybridge Road, Great Neck, L. L, N. Y. 712 North Glover Street, Baltimore, Md. 36 Hillcrest Avenue, Cranford, N. J. 5 Lawrence Avenue, West Orange, N. J. Spring Valley Farm, Huntingdon Valley Kappa Alpha, 404 Seneca Street, Bethlehem 725 Hemlock Street, Roselle Park, N. J. 7006 Flaccus Road, Ben Avon 510 South Price Road, Clayton, Mo. 137 Western Avenue, Morristown, N. J. 283 Hillcrest Avenue, Wood-Ridge, N. J. 517 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, N. J. 235 Chestnut Street, Ashland 318 Tennis Avenue, North Hills 37 Strathmore Road, Manhasset, N. Y. 30 Mountain Park Road, Clifton, N. J. 143-50 Roosevelt Avenue, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Kings Highway, Carnegie Medford Lakes, N. J. 1048 Bridge Street, Philadelphia 119 East High Street, Coaldale 8526 1 20th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Portland 2 Driprock Street, West Brighton, S. L, N. Y. R. D. 3, Easton 104 William Street, Aliquippa 67 North Bridge Street, Somerville, N. J. 915 Prescott Avenue, Scranton 122 Chatterton Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. 368 Thomas Alexander Wallace, Jr. 1 12-08 Park Lane, South, Kew Gardens, L. I., N. Y. Everett Frazar Warner Chestnut Place, Short Hills, N. J. Earl Lewis Weaver, Jr. Kurt Heinz Weber David Francis Wells Jeffry Steven Wetrich Powell Joseph Whalen Emmet Talmadge White, Jr. Lee Robert White Alexander King Wiggin Normand Joseph Wilhelmy Raymond Sentman Willard, Jr. Howard Mission Williams Kingsley Grant Williams William Godfrey Willmann Wallace Richard Wirths James William Witherspoon, IV Quintus Peter Witte, Jr. Elwyn Wolfe Ahlert Diedrich Wolff Richard Francis Wood, Jr. William Russell Woodruff Frederick Wallis Wright, Jr. Robert Rochester Young Whitney James Young Richard John Yurkanin Alfred Lewis Zanoni George Glenn Zipf i 68 1825 Greenleaf Street, Allentown West Clinton Avenue, Tenafly, N. J. 8 Rugh Road, Rockville Centre, N. Y. 26 VanCott Avenue, Hempstead, L. I., N. Y. 394 Pearl Street, Burlington, Vt. 14 Looker Street, Hillside, N. J. 130 North Union Street, Middletown 517 Springdale Avenue, East Orange, N. J. 45 Harrison Place, Marlboro, Mass. West Chester Road, Coatesville 118 South Sixteenth Street, Allentown 464 Cooper Street, Woodbury, N. J. 531 West Third Street, Bethlehem 302 Lafayette Avenue, Grantwood, N. J. 8 Verdi Avenue, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Quaker Ridge Road, Manhasset, L. I., N. Y. 681 Pearl Street, Easton 835 Paxinosa Avenue, Easton 100 Barberry Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. 312 Beech Street, Teaneck, N. J. 401 Forbush Street, Boonton, N. J. 71 18 Ogontz Avenue, Philadelphia 471 Martel Street, Bethlehem 15 Warren Street, Bethlehem 62 Somerset Street, Raritan, N. J. 135 Bryn Mawr Avenue, Bryn Mawr CLASS OF 1943 Walter Lesesne Anders, Arts, Town Group Robert Wylie Appleton, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Maynard Goodwin Arsove, Eng.Phys., Taylor House E Theodore Beresford Austin, Arts, Town Group Elwood Bruce Backensto, Ch.E., Richards House IV-B Robert Dudley Bailey, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Lynn Con ant Bartlett, Arts, Sigma Phi Epsilon Burton Eberman Bauder, I.E., Town Group Robert Kingdon Beckwith, Ch.E., Alpha Town House William Edwards Bellinger, Bus., Taylor House B Charles Surface Bennett, E.E., Taylor House E Richard Turney Berg, Arts, Delta Upsilon Charles Richard Bergh, Bus., Delta Phi Bruce Atkisson Berlin, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Richard Henry Bernasco, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha William Gottlob Binder, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Robert Louis Bird, Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Mortimer Lawrence Blanket, Bus., Drinker House II-A Alexander Hamilton Bolyn, Bus., Town Group Robert Carlton Boston, Ch.E., Phi Gamma Delta Frank Hugo Bower, E.E., Taylor House E Bethlehem Upper Montclair, N. J. Rochester, N. Y. Media Emmaus Summit, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Brooklyn, N. Y. Fort Plain, N. Y. Nazareth Sewickley Ebensburg Lansdowne Trenton, N. J. Steelton Bloomfield Hills, Mich. New York, N. Y. Freeland Wilmington, Del. Rutherford, N. J. 369 370 Edward George Boyer, Jr., M.E., Delta Upsilon Glenn Winfield Boyer, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Thomas Paisley Bradford, E.M., Beta Kappa Andrew Harrison Brennan, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha William Conner Brower, Eng.Phys., Town Group Robert Knox Brown, Ch.E., Richards House III-A John Henry Brubaker, Jr., C.E., Town Group Myron Isaac Buchman, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Thomas Mathieu Buck, M.E., Kappa Sigma William Thomas Buhrig, Arts, Taylor House C Herbert Edward Bunning, I.E., Theta Kappa Phi George Warren Burgers, Ch.E., Kappa Sigma Robert Forrest Burroughs, Jr., Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Thomas Lee Bushey, Bus., Theta Xi George John Bussmann, Bus., Psi Upsilon Arthur George Byrne, Arts, Chi Psi Solomon Pusey Caldwell, I.E., Alpha Town House Stanley Caplan, E.E., Town Group Paul Revere Carl, Jr., Ch.E., Drinker House II-A Gerald Vincent Carroll, Arts, Taylor House C Wayne Hanley Carter, Jr., Arts, Sigma Nu Edward Jerome Cavanaugh, M.E., Theta Kappa Phi Charles Bowles Chrisman, I.E., Taylor House E William Henry Clark, Jr., E.E., Taylor House D Harry St. Clair Clarke, Bus., Psi Upsilon Warren Xavier Collmann, Arts, Richards House IV-A Joseph Gordon Compton, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Jon Conforte, Bus., Town Group Edgar Russell Conover, Jr., M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Leonard Robert Constantine, Bus., Richards House III-A John Hughes Corson, Met.E., Richards House I Henry Hobart Corwin, Bus., Chi Phi William Clark Cosford, Bus., Richards House I Roy Burford Cowin, Jr., Arts, Sigma Chi Niel Stahley Culliney, Arts, Theta Xi Charles Dwight Curtiss, Jr., C.E., Delta Upsilon Edwin Harold Dafter, Jr., Ch.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Donald Henry Davies, Bus., Town Group Edward Stowman Davis, Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Samuel Jackson Davy, E.E., Sigma Phi Bernard William Deehan, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta John Goodfellow deGrouchy, Bus., Chi Phi Louis Field Dellwig, Arts, Richards House II-B William Thomas DeLong, Met.E., Town Group John Edmund Devitt, I.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Charles Joseph Dick, Ch.E., Town Group Leo Worth Dieffenbach, Bus., Taylor House B James Edward Donohue, Bus., Price House Roy Leslie Duncan, Arts, Richards House I James Dunwoody, Jr., Bus., Richards House I Richard Kistler Eberts, Arts, Town Group Edward Walter Edwards, Arts, Sigma Phi Epsilon Willet Ellesworth Egge, Jr., Chem., Town Group William Harrison Eichlin, M.E., Town Group Norristown Hershey Wheeling, W. Va. Paterson, N. J. Allentown Chester Easton New York, N. Y. Philadelphia Mount Vernon, N. Y Bronxville, N. Y Cliffside, N. J Pennington, N. J Haddonfield, N. J New Haven, Conn Great Neck, N. Y West Grove Allentown Paulsboro, N. J. Meriden Plainfield, N. J. Forty Fort Pikeville, Ky. Rutherford, N. J. Argentia, Newfoundland Wilkes-Barre Flushing, N. Y. Stony Brook, N. Y. Fort Washington Pelham, N. Y. Oakmont New London, Conn. Montreal, Quebec Bethlehem Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Overbrook Hills Allentpwn Philadelphia New Castle Belleville, N. J. Upper Darby Westmoreland Hills, Md. Bethlehem Mountain Top Bethlehem Lopaz Douglaston, N. Y. West Hartford, Conn. Erie Bethlehem Herkimer, N. Y. Allentown Easton Badgely Allen Elmes, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Somers Harrison Endigott, Jr., Met. E., Town Group Vernon Evans, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi Robert Douglass Everett, Chem., Sigma Nu Musa Joseph Eways, M.E., Town Group Buchanan, Ewing, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Norman Joseph Faber, Ch.E., Pi Lambda Phi Clarence Franklin Fehnel, Jr., Bus., Taylor House E Edward Adam Fehnel, Chem., Town Group Charles William Finady, Met.E., Town Group Chester Lee Finch, Jr., I.E., Chi Phi Stephen Hopkins Finkle, Met.E., Town Group Robert Joseph Fisher, C.E., Taylor House C Robert High Freeman, M.E., Price House Hugh Bartley Frey, Jr., E.E., Richards House II-B Lewis Friedman, Arts, Town Group Robert Watson Fuller, I.E., Lambda Chi Alpha William Whitslar Fuller, I.E., Sigma Chi Joseph Cyril Gabuzda, I.E., Town Group Henry Watterson Garvin, Jr., M.E., Town Group Michael Louis Geiger, Bus., Town Group Panos Basil Georgopulo, Bus., Cosmopolitan Club Randall Clinton Giddings, Arts, Leonard Hall Wheeler Gilmore, Jr., M.E., Price House Charles Albert Ginter, Jr., Met.E., Phi Delta Theta Ludwig Edward Godycki, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group Richard Farrand Goebel, Bus., Delta Upsilon Thomas Herman Golden, III, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Jules Arthur Gottlieb, Bus., Tau Delta Phi James Frederick Gover, Met.E., Taylor House C Vincent Frank Grasso, Bus., Taylor House B John Raymond Gray, C.E., Theta Kappa Phi Robert Lee Green, M.E., Delta Upsilon Leonard Robert Greene, Eng.Phys., Tau Delta Phi David Evans Gregory, Bus., Chi Phi John Richard Greiner, M.E., Town Group Carl Henry Grund, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group Robert Charles Haas, Arts, Alpha Chi Rho Alfred Lewis Haft, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Stephen Hart, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha George Solomon Hartman, Ch. E., Town Group Richard Milton Haslet, E.E., Town Group Gilbert Pond Haven, Bus., Richards House IV-A Burton Clyde Haworth, Met.E., Town Group William Dandzl Hayes, I.E., Delta Upsilon Burt Lewis Heimer, Bus., Drinker House II-B Barton Royal Heinz, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Walton Francis Heley, Jr., Arts, Theta Kappa Phi Albert Weimer Hemphill, Jr., M.E., Drinker House II-B John Eugene Hendricks, M.E., Town Group Harry Albert Herold, Jr., I.E., Drinker House II-A Robert Leon Hill, E.E., Alpha Chi Rho Franklin Himmelberger, Arts, Town Group William Bushnell Hinman, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Ridley Park Pleasantville, N. J. Fort Benning, Ga. McKeesport Reading Trenton, N. J. Trenton, N. J. Nazareth Bethlehem Coopersburg Washington, D. C. Bethlehem Oreland Reading Dunellen, N. J. Belmar, N. J. Bethlehem Cleveland Heights, Ohio Freeland Gettysburg Bethlehem New York, N. Y. Uniondale Secane Wenonah, N. J. Hellertown Scarsdale, N. Y. Pottsville Weehawken, N. J. Stroudsburg Kingston Ozone Park, N. Y. Titusville, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Norwalk, Conn. Bethlehem Ithaca, N. Y. Irvington, N. J. New York, N. Y. Pelham Manor, N. Y. Bethlehem Easton Cleveland Heights, Ohio Chicago, 111. Windber Binghamton, N. Y. Westfield, N. J. West Hartford, Conn. Upper Montclair, N. J. Wyomissing Bristol, Conn. Scranton Coopersburg East Orange, N. J. 371 372 Alan Dabney Hinrichs, I.E., Sigma Chi Raymond William Hinterleiter, Ch.E., Town Group James Jonathan Hoch, Arts, Town Group Walter Russel Hoerner, Bus., Taylor House C Warren Edward Hoffman, E.E., Taylor House D John Joseph Hugker, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Frank Addison Hunold, M.E., Town Group Isaac Moyer Hunsberger, Chem., Town Group Edwin Joseph Hutchinson, Bus., Town Group Albert Yeisley Hyndshaw, Ch.E., Town Group William Edward Irvin, Jr., M.E., Theta Xi Gregory Albert Jahn, Arts, Town Group William Donald Jardine, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Robert Otto Jensen, Taylor House E Jackson Tipton Jones, Arts, Theta Xi Robert Edward Joslin, Bus., Drinker House I John Athan Karas, Eng.Phys., Drinker House I Joseph Edwin Kareha, Ch.E., Drinker House IV-A Theodore Kelecheva, I.E., Town Group Joseph Francis Kemmer, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha LeRoy Ordway King, Jr., Bus., Beta Kappa William Caspar Kirschner, Chem., Sigma Nu David Lyle Kistler, Met.E., Town Group John Floyd Kizer, Jr., Arts, Phi Delta Theta Robert Clayton Kramer, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Donald Eugene Krebs, Ch.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Charles Gierman Kucher, Ch.E., Theta Xi William Anthony Kuhar, E.E., Town Group Arthur Lewis Landesman, Ch.E., Sigma Alpha Mu John Prince Landis, M.E., Town Group Alfred Baer Laponsky, Eng.Phys., Town Group Leonard Dale Larson, M.E., Beta Kappa Donald William Layton, Ch.E., Richards House I Benjamin Clark LeBlanc, Jr., Arts, Taylor House C Andrew Frederick Leckie, Jr., Bus., Chi Psi Arthur Morton Lehrer, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Leonard Jack Leidig, Bus., Town Group Howard Clifford Leifheit, Arts, Taylor House E Nathan George Lesh, E.E., Town Group Gustav Marten Levin, Bus., Town Group Charles Lowell Liebau, Jr., Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Robert James Lyons, I.E., Delta Upsilon Thomas Crawford MacAllister, Jr., E.E., Price House Wallace Ward Malley, Jr., Bus., Drinker House IV-B Arthur Forrest Mann, Arts, Town Group Creatore Albert Marchetto, Bus., Town Group Vincent John Margiotti, Arts, Taylor House C Roydon Seymour Margolies, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Richard Mascuch, I.E., Delta Sigma Phi Richard Withington Mason, Bus., Sigma Chi Kay Felix Miskinis, E.E., Town Group Harvey Donald Moll, M.E., Taylor House E Robert Condit Moore, C.E., Kappa Alpha Franklin Lecron Morgal, Bus., Phi Delta Theta New Rochelle, N. Y. Allentown Allentown Harrisburg Union, N. J. Norristown Port Washington, N. Y. Quakertown Allentown Phillipsburg, N. J. Chicago, 111. Clifton, N. J. Buffalo, N. Y. Freeport, N. Y. Sweetwater, Tenn. Greenville, Del. Lebanon Peckville Allentown Larchmont, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Flushing, N. Y. Hamburg Towanda Duryea Marietta Irvington, N. J. Bethlehem Morris Plains, N. J. Greenwich, Conn. Brownsville Shaker Heights, Ohio Brooklyn, N. Y. Troy, N. Y. Columbus, Ohio Brooklyn, N. Y. York Queens Village, N. Y. Wind Gap Bethlehem Nutley, N. J. Steubenville, Ohio Milford, Conn. Hamden, Conn. Bethlehem Allentown Newburgh, N. Y. Long Beach, N. Y. South Orange, N. J. Foxboro, Mass. Bethlehem Lansdale Maplewood, N. J. Harrisburg Warren King Morgan, Jr., E.E., Alpha Town House James Maury Morris, Jr., Met.E., Delta Tau Delta John Haines Mueller, M.E., Taylor House B James Paul Mulhern, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Raffaele Francisco Muraca, Chem., Engineers ' Club Harold Russ Nace, Chem., Drinker House III-B Harvey Hans Nelken, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu James Walter Niemeyer, Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta Jacob Sebastian Nolf, I.E., Taylor House E Charles MacMillan Norlin, Met.E., Sigma Chi Zenon Edwin Nowicki, Bus., Town Group Harry Lester Olmstead, M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Henry Habel Otto, Jr., Arts, Taylor House E Arthur Mead Over, M.E., Delta Phi Elbridge William Palmer, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Richard Bradbury Palmer, Arts, Theta Delta Chi Donald Bruce Parish, Bus., Taylor House D Preston Parr, Jr., Ch.E., Richards House III-A Arthur Barrette Parsons, Jr., Bus., Kappa Alpha Mason Pratt Pearsall, Ch.E., Sigma Phi William Jarvis Peck, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Alfred Win slow Pedrick, Bus., Theta Xi Leonard Francis Penitsch, Bus., Town Group John Roby Penn, III, Bus., Chi Psi Robert Edward Pollock, Bus., Richards House I Kenneth Porter, Jr., Bus., Delta Upsilon Philip Henry Powers, Jr., M.E., Delta Tau Delta James Bruce Price, Jr., Met.E., Town Group Clarence Orland Prinkey, M.E., Theta Xi Robert Willmar Pugh, Chem., Taylor House D Arnold Oscar Putnam, I.E., Alpha Town House Kenneth Hauser Rahn, Met.E., Richards House III-B Robert Cole Ramsdell, Arts, Town Group John Samuel Reichard, Bus., Town Group William Kouenhover Remsen, I.E., Town Group Hugh Warren Richards, Ch.E., Taylor House D George Horace Ried, Arts, Leonard Hall Arthur Thomas Robb, Ch.E., Richards House III-B Donald Worthington Robinson, M.E., Beta Kappa Frank Frederick Roberts, Met.E., Town Group Richard Charles Roth, I.E., Theta Xi Robert Wilson Rouse, M.E., Engineers ' Club Robert Seymour Rumsey, Arts, Delta Upsilon John Donald Ryan, Arts, Delta Sigma Phi Robert Francis Ryan, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Donald George Sanders, M.E., Price House Anthony Joseph Santantonio, M.E., Price House Richard Winfield Sauer, Chem., Taylor House D Robert Webster Saylor, M.E., Alpha Town House Enrico Leonard Scapellati, Bus., Town Group William Dwight Schaeffer, Chem., Sigma Nu Robert Lynd Schaffer, Bus., Price House Robert Mack Schantz, Bus., Town Group David Henry Schaper, C.E., Phi Gamma Delta Morris Plains, N. J. Pittsburgh York Wilkes-Barre Easton Haddonfield, N. J. Elmhurst, N. Y. Dunmore Nazareth Shaker Heights, Ohio Bethlehem Staten Island, N. Y. Scranton Pittsburgh Kingsport, Tenn. Bethlehem Portville, N. Y. Wyncotte Scarsdale, N. Y. New Canaan, Conn. Riverside, Conn. Millville, N. J. Allentown Fort Worth, Texas Elmira, N. Y. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Pittsburgh Bethlehem Yonkers, N. Y. Great Notch, N. J. North Springfield, Vt. Palmerton Trenton, N. J. Allentown West New Brighton, N. Y. Union, N. J. Bronx, N. Y. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. Bethlehem Buffalo, N. Y. Colorado Springs, Colo. Bloomfield, N. J. Norristown Schenectady, N. Y. Passaic, N. J. Pen Argyl Haddon Heights, N. J. Harrisburg Bangor Laureldale Ambler Allentown Erie 373 374 Richard Grey Schenk, Gh.E., Kappa Sigma Victor Edward Schermerhorn, Jr., Bus., Taylor House D William Rudolph Schmoll, C.E., Town Group George Joseph Schneider, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa WmsoN Bohnett Schramm, M.E., Richards House IV-A Herbert Owen Schutt, M.E., Town Group Warren Joshua Schwab, Chem., Town Group James Alan Shafer, Arts, Town Group Robert Franklin Shimer, Bus., Town Group Robert Rex Shively, Arts, Richards House II-B Edwin Irving Shuttleworth, Ch.E., Alpha Chi Rho Carl Edward Siebecker, Jr., Bus., Town Group Charles Elias Sieger, E.E., Town Group Robert Edwin Siegfried, Ch.E., Town Group Kerwin Howard Silfies, Bus., Town Group Walter Singlevich, Ch.E., Town Group James Schriever Smith, I.E., Richards House I Joseph Earl Smith, Jr., M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Peter Carlton Smith, Arts, Alpha Chi Rho Robert Chadwick Smith, Arts, Town Group John Archibald Smyth, Arts, Taylor House C Quentin Cletus Soprano, M.E., Town Group Alfonso Francisco Soto, Arts, Town Group John Francis Spirk, Met.E., Town Group Charles Wesley Stahl, Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Edward William Starke, Jr., Chem., Delta Sigma Phi Clarence Arthur Stearns, Jr., Arts, Chi Phi Henry Charles Stieglitz, M.E., Richards House III-A John Montague Stockbridge, M.E., Chi Psi John Arthur Stoddard, Bus., Price House George Chickering Stone, Jr., Arts, Chi Psi Carl Arthur Streuli, Chem., Taylor House D William Moss Strouse, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi William Lester Stump, Ch.E., Town Group William Robb Sultzer, Arts, Delta Sigma Phi Philip Anthony Sweet, Jr., M.E., Taylor House A Robert Stanley Swoyer, Arts, Town Group George Carl Tabor, Ch.E., Drinker House III-A William Roberts Taylor, Arts, Town Group Walter Paul Telep, M.E., Drinker House II-A Joseph Pidgeon Thomas, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi Philip Adams Thomas, Ch.E., Alpha Chi Rho Charles McDowell Thompson, I.E., Kappa Sigma Paul McNeel Thrasher, Jr., M.E., Taylor House D John Alexander Thurn, M.E., Drinker House II-A Walter Stockton Titlow, Jr., E.E., Richards House IV-A Walter Scott Tom kin son, Bus., Taylor House D John Platt Townsend, M.E., Richards House III-A Richard Mitchell Treco, Met.E., Town Group David Irvin Troxel, E.E., Town Group Albert Robert Tucker, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Chi Ross Peter Vachon, Bus., Town Group Philip Thomas Varrichio, Bus., Town Group Harold Otto Volmer, Ch.E., Town Group Rutherford, N. J. Bradford Bethlehem Demarest, N. J. Bayside, N. Y. Easton Freemansburg Easton Allentown Washington Philadelphia Bethlehem Allentown Allentown Bethlehem Bethlehem Scranton Philadelphia Severna Park, Md. Allentown Merchantville, N. J. Allentown Mayaguez, Puerto Rico Bethlehem Bethlehem Ridgewood, N. J. Philadelphia Jamaica, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Hamden, Conn. Pawling, N. Y. Tuckahoe, N. Y. Harrisburg Bethlehem Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Scranton Allentown Boyertown Bethlehem Jermyn Haddonfield, N. J. Scranton Rocky River, Ohio Charleston, S.C. Philadelphia Norristown Glenside Glen Ridge, N. J. North Quincy, Mass. Quakertown Wilmington, Del. New York, N. Y. Allentown Roosevelt, N. Y. Albert Francis Von Block, Bus., Beta Kappa Richard Rolland Waer, E.E., Town Group Robert Louis Walker, I.E., Alpha Chi Rho William Com stock Walker, Ch.E., Chi Psi Edward Louis Walter, Ch.E., Price House Glenn Creasy Wanich, Ch.E., Engineers ' Club Joseph Anthony Wantuck, Ch.E., Price House Jay Louis Weening, M.E., Pi Lambda Phi Robert Weller, I.E., Alpha Tau Omega William Taylor Wenck, Bus., Town Group Jeffry Steven Wetrich, Bus., Psi Upsilon Robert Parson Whipple, Chem., Delta Tau Delta Arthur John White, I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Theodore Wielkopolski, M.E., Town Group William Robert Williams, Arts, Leonard Hall Nathan Leland Wilson, Jr., Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Ralph Wittman, M.E., Richards House IV-A Allan Ehrman Wolf, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu George William Wolfsten, Jr., Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Philip Benson Woodroofe, Bus., Town Group West James William Woods, Chem., Drinker House II-A Guy Crawford Worrell, Jr., M.E., Psi Upsilon Franklin Haldeman Young, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Sheldon Stanley Zalkind, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Plainfield, N. J. Easton East Orange, N. J. Milwaukee, Wis. Fort Lee, N. J. Bloomsburg Perth Amboy, N. J. New York, N. Y. Maplewood, N. J. Allentown Hempstead, N. Y. Oil City Valley Stream, N. Y. Arlington, N. J. Scranton Downington Philadelphia Memphis, Tenn. Melrose Park Hampton Beach, N. Y. Winnetka, 111. Westfield, Mass. Phoenixville New York, N. Y. CLASS OF 1944 Francis Hermann Achard, Jr., Arts, Drinker House II-B Alfred Aron Adler, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Richard Carl Aldinger, Bus., Town Group David Beresford Anderson, Arts, Drinker House II-A Harry Wallis Anderson, Jr., Bus., Town Group Edward Hermann Andrejeske, Bus., Town Group Norman Clarke Applegate, Jr., C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Stephen Alexander Bacskay, Bus., Beta Kappa Thomas Sheridan Bannan, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Andrew Murad Bardagjy, Bus., Richards House II-B Myron Knox Barrett, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Arthur Kirke Bartley, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Lester Ray Bartron, Ch.E., Town Group Kenneth Whitmore Baumann, Bus., Kappa Sigma William Robert Bechdolt, Met.E., Town Group Max William Bellis, E.E., Taylor House B William Edward Belser, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Philip James Berg, M.E., Delta Upsilon Neal Grube Bergstresser, Bus., Town Group Frank Wolfgang Berman, Met.E., Cosmopolitan Club John Richard Bevan, Met.E., Taylor House A John Charles Black, I.E., Town Group John Harvey Blake, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Howard Allen Blank, Met.E., Town Group Westfield, N. J. Philadelphia Bethlehem Larchmont, N. Y. Harrisburg Bethlehem Riegelsville Fords, N. J. Clearfield Jersey City, N. J. Newark, N. J. Forest Hills, N. Y. Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Bethlehem Rochester, N. Y. Plainfield, N. J. Sewickley Hellertown Cresskill, N. J. Pottsville Allentown Garden City, N. Y. Lehighton 375 376 George John Bleul, C.E., Drinker House IV-A Edward Ludlam Blossom, Jr., Arts, Drinker House II-B Murray Dattner Blum, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Raymond John Boaks, Arts, Kappa Sigma Joseph Frank Bonin, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Charles Emmett Bosserman, I.E., Drinker House III-B William George Bourne, III, M.E., Kappa Alpha Hugh Boyd, M.E., Delta Tau Delta Warren Henry Bradford, Ch.E., Drinker House IV-A Earl Albert Brawn, I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon George Harvey Brower, Eng.Phys., Town Group George Hafer Brown, Bus., Town Group Rex Selden Brown, I.E., Phi Delta Theta Donald Henry Brownlee, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Joseph John Buczynski, Jr., Met.E., Town Group Alvin Newton Bugbee, Jr., C.E., Chi Phi Harry Jacob Buncke, Jr., I.E., Theta Delta Chi John Henry Burrus, II, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Robert Emmett Byrne, Jr., E.E., Richards House IV-B James Holmes Callahan, Ch.E., Chi Phi Frank Vincent Camarda, Ch.E., Drinker House III-A David Joseph Carrigan, Arts, Taylor House E John Langland Carroll, M.E., Taylor House C Richard Edward Castiello, M.E., Town Group John George Cella, Ch.E., Richards House IV-B Charles Norman Charest, E.M., Delta Sigma Phi Francis Arndt Chidsey, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Aldo Nicholas Ciaffardini, Eng.Phys., Town Group Richard Senft Clarkson, Bus., Delta Upsilon Joel Gerhard Clemmer, Jr., Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Charles Nelson Codding, III, C.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Robert Edward Coffman, I.E., Richards House I Dudley Coles, C.E., Beta Theta Pi Irving Reid Collmann, Arts, Drinker House III-B Douglas Metcalf Congelton, Bus., Sigma Phi Charles Russell Conklin, Jr., Ch.E., Alpha Tau Omega John Stairs Cooke, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Ronald Loyal Cooper, Bus., Sigma Nu Albert Dimery Corbett, Jr., M.E., Richards House IV-A James Milbourne Cordrey, Ch.E., Beta Kappa Abner Smalley Coriell, Jr., Eng.Phys., Price House Alfred Joseph Cornelius, Bus., Delta Upsilon Pinckney Morrison Corsa, I.E., Psi Upsilon Howard Wright Courtney, Jr., Bus., Richards House II-A Robert Lloyd Coutts, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta David Frederick Cox, Eng.Phys., Sigma Chi Thomas James Croake, Ch.E., Theta Kappa Phi William James Crowe, Ch.E., Drinker House II-A Harold Arlington Cunningham, C.E., Town Group Streit Wakefield Cunningham, C.E., Price House John Seaton Curtis, Arts, Theta Delta Chi Granville Yocum Custer, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega David Keene Darcy, Jr., Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Northport, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Scranton Plymouth, Mich. Scranton Newport White Plains, N. Y. Doylestown Mansfield, Ohio West Orange, N. J. Allentown Bethlehem Cleveland Heights, Ohio New York, N. Y. Exeter Catasauqua Rumford, Me. Scranton New York, N. Y. Media Plainfield, N. J. Lansdale Meriden, Conn. Bethlehem Baldwin, N. Y. Hazleton Wayne Bethlehem Drexel Hill Glenside Beverly, N. J Richmond, Va Newark, N. J Wilkes-Barre New York, N. Y Catonsville, Md Short Hills, N. J Little Neck, N. Y Bloomfield, N. J Salisbury, Md Elizabeth, N. J New Rochelle, N. Y Narberth Westfield, N. J Morristown, N. J Cleveland Heights, Ohio South Orange, N. J Haworth, N. J Trenton, N. J Washington, D. C Youngstown, Ohio Chevy Chase, Md Rockville Centre, N. Y Edward Town send Darlow, Bus., Sigma Chi Courtland VanHorn Davis, Jr., Ch.E., Taylor House A Elwood Charles Davis, Met.E., Town Group Louis Rudolph Daze, Bus., Town Group John Joseph Deach, Jr., E.E., Beta Theta Pi Robert Carl Deckard, Ch.E., Theta Xi Henry Edward deJongh, Arts, Town Group Carson Freyman Diefenderfer, C.E., Town Group Edward Lewis Diehl, C.E., Drinker House IV-A Robert Frederick Deeter, Ch.E., Town Group Ray Robert Dimmick, Arts, Town Group Warren Richard Drx, Met.E., Alpha Tau Omega John Francis Donahue, Met.E., Chi Psi Robert Henry Doney, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha William Wolfe Doniger, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi John Evans Doxsey, I.E., Sigma Chi Rosario Roy Dragone, C.E., Taylor House C Jack Franklin Duelly, E.E., Richards House II-A Francis Joseph Dunigan, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Bernard John Egan, Met.E., Drinker House IV-A William Stanley Eisner, Ch.E., Kappa Alpha Stuart Marsh Ellsworth, Jr., Arts, Richards House II-B Carl Albright Elmes, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Danal Paul Epstein, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi William Allen Ernest, E.E., Alpha Tau Omega William Bartholomew Farrell, Bus., Sigma Nu Donald Malcolm Feigley, Arts, Taylor House D Frank Edward Felt, Bus., Chi Psi Richard Kocher Fenstermacher, Chem., Town Group Albert Guy Ferdinand, Arts, Town Group Blaine Donald Ferrell, Ch.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Roy Norman Figueroa, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Edward Thomas Finnerty, Arts, Delta Sigma Phi Rowland VanDyke Firth, Jr., M.E., Drinker House I William Henry Fisher, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Jack Clifford Fitch, Ch.E., Taylor House D Ralph Joseph Fittipaldi, Ch.E., Richards House II-B Ray Henry Forner, Ch.E., Town Group Anthony Constantine Fortosis, Bus., Town Group Charles Huff Foster, Jr., Ch.E., Taylor House E Oscar Edwin Fox, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta Kay Teddy Franck, I.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Dale Youngman Freed, Bus., Taylor House A Guenther Hilmer Froebel, Jr., I.E., Chi Phi Edward Lyster Frost, Met.E., Sigma Phi Robert Dewey Frost, Bus., Sigma Phi George Ehrenfeld Funk, C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha John Wilson Gallagher, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi William Charles Galton, Chem., Theta Kappa Phi William Eugene Garland, M.E., Richards House II-A Gilbert Deniston Gaus, M.E., Kappa Alpha David Franklin Gearhart, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta John Edwin Gehr, Bus., Price House Rochester, N. Y. Plainfield, N. J. New Haven, Conn. Carteret, N. J. Pottsville Marysville Bethlehem Fullerton York Washington, N. Y. Hellertown Little Falls, N. J. Garden City, N. Y. Pen Argyl Cedarhurst, N. Y. Shaker Heights, Ohio Brooklyn, N. Y. East Orange, N. J. Harrisburg Emporium South Orange, N. J. Central Village, Conn. Ridley Park New York, N. Y. East Orange, N. J. Great Neck, N. Y. Quakertown Jamestown, N. Y. Allentown Freeland Roslyn Garden City, N. Y. Millville, N. J. North Plainfield, N. J. Philadelphia Scranton Carlstadt, N. J. Catasauqua Bethlehem Cheltenham Reading Hackensack, N. J. Williamsport Swarthmore Kenmore, N. Y Kenmore, N. Y Port of Spain, B. W. I Brooklyn, N. Y Madison, N. J New Haven, Conn South Orange, N. J Palmerton Binghamton, N. Y. 377 378 Richard Lee Gerhart, C.E., Richards House III-A Saul Gerson, Arts, Drinker House I Charles Kenneth Giles, Ch.E., Theta Kappa Phi Robert Joseph Gill, Arts, Price House Robert Dale Gilmore, Arts, Taylor House C William Oliver Gold, Arts, Town Group Joseph Herman Goth, Jr., Arts, Town Group David Wagener Green, E.E., Richards House IV-A Carl Lehnert Greener, Arts, Town Group John Louis Gretz, Met.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Fred Gruenwald, Ch.E., Tau Delta Phi Ernest John Gsell, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Philip Scott Guckes, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Hibbard Gustave Gumpert, Arts, Leonard Hall Michael Gurak, Ch.E., Engineers ' Club Charles Donald Hagey, Arts, Town Group Stuart Lindsley Hammond, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Ryland Truscott Hanger, E.E., Drinker House IV-A Robert Edwin Harnisch, Bus., Drinker House IV-A Albert Edward Hartung, Arts, Town Group William Howard Hebrank, M.E., Chi Psi Theodore Guy Heck, Arts, Town Group Bruce White Heerdt, Bus., Drinker House II-B Robert Allen Heironimus, M.E., Chi Psi Richard Baldwin Hendrick, Met.E., Alpha Kappa Pi John Howard Henry, I.E., Price House Wilbur Edwin Henry, Jr., Arts, Phi Sigma Kappa Frank Lewis Herceg, Met.E., Town Group Charles John Herzer, Arts, Drinker House II-A Edgar William Hess, Arts, Town Group George Frank Hewitt, M.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Robert Holliday Hicks, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta Lewis Warner Hill, M.E., Town Group David Nelson Hillegass, Bus., Town Group Charles Carlson Hilton, Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta Arthur Douglas Hird, I.E., Theta Delta Chi William Charles Hittenger, Met.E., Town Group Clair Adam Hoffman, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Duyane Allen Hoffman, Bus., Theta Xi Ralph Everett Hohman, M.E., Taylor House E George Morris Holderer, Bus., Kappa Alpha James Allison Hosford, I.E., Theta Delta Chi William Osborne Houston, I.E., Delta Phi William Boyd Hursh, Met.E., Town Group Alfred John Inderrieden, Ch.E., Sigma Nu Carl Richard Ingemanson, E.E., Price House Robert Irwin Jaslow, Arts, Town Group Robert William Jensen, M.E., Delta Tau Delta Alfred Pitt Johansen, I.E., Drinker House III-A Charles Armond Johnson, Bus., Chi Psi Donald Seiz Johnson, M.E., Drinker House IV-B Malcolm Stanley Johnson, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Evan Jones, Met.E., Beta Theta Pi Ephrata Great Neck, N. Y. Lowell, Mass. Philadelphia Harrisburg Bethlehem Bethlehem Easton Allentown Wayne New York, N. Y. East Orange, N. J. Elkins Park Sharon Hill Scranton Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Haddonfield, N. J. Maplewood, N. J. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. Bethlehem Stamford, Conn. Maplewood, N. J. East Orange, N. J. East Orange, N. J. Glen Cove, N. Y. Bethlehem Quarry Heights, Canal Zone Catasauqua Harrisburg Baltimore, Md. Bethlehem Quakertown Hamilton, Ontario Englewood, N. J. Bethlehem Palmerton Plainfield, N. J Orange, N. J Scarsdale, N. Y Maplewood, N. J Old Greenwich, Conn Bethlehem Tulsa, Okla Succasunna, N. J Reading Springdale, Conn Hasbrouck Heights, N. J Maplewood, N. J Collegeville Luzerne Clairton John Ladell Joralemon, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Russell Cornelius Jordan, I.E., Richards House IV-A Robert Edward Keenan, Bus., Town Group Richard John Kellar, M.E., Town Group George Freeman Keller, Arts, Taylor House E Carl August Kendziora, Jr., Arts, Taylor House C John Marius Kennedy, E.E., Town Group Rudolph Kerghmar, E.E., Town Group Franklin Brooks Kern, I.E., Sigma Phi Alton Hayward Kingman, Jr., I.E., Delta Tau Delta Robert Charles Kleinknecht, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Carl Theodore Kleppinger, Chem., Town Group William Charles Knight, E.E., Taylor House C Kenneth Robert Knoll, Bus., Theta Xi George Henry Kocyan, Jr., M.E., Taylor House B William Louis Kronthal, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Claude Jennings Kurtz, Ch.E., Town Group Joseph James Kurtz, Chem., Town Group Stephen Kutosh, Ch.E., Town Group Arnold Lasser, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Ralph Rupp Lau, E.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Theodore Charles Laube, Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Thomas Allan Lawson, Ch.E., Pi Lambda Phi Richard Henry Leeds, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu John Robert Lees, I.E., Sigma Nu Edwin Leslie Leet, M.E., Chi Phi Charles Ellis Lehr, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Frank Nicholas Leitner, Bus., Taylor House A Leonard Harvey, Bus., Price House Andre Jean Leroux, Arts, Cosmopolitan Club Gaynor Otto LeRoy, Bus., Richards House II- A James Sigmund Levi, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Isaac Harrison Levy, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Roderick Wylie Link, M.E., Psi Upsilon Frederick Robert Linker, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Robert Westfall Logan, Ch.E., Town Group Robert Martin Long, Met.E., Town Group Dwight Francis Longley, Bus., Delta Phi Donald McFaul Lorimer, Met.E., Taylor House B Donald Randolf Lowry, Jr., M.E., Beta Theta Pi James Frederick Lucker, I.E., Taylor House C Harry Wasdell Lynn, Jr., Bus., Chi Psi Creighton Lamar Lytle, Arts, Taylor House A Herman Ralph Maack, Ch.E., Alpha Chi Rho John Linnaeus MacMinn, Bus., Phi Delta Theta John Joseph Maloney, Jr., E.M., Psi Upsilon James Sutherland Marsh, I.E., Sigma Chi John Withrow Martin, M.E., Richards House I Robert Harris Mathes, E.E., Theta Xi James John McCarthy, Bus., Town Group Hubert McDonnell, Jr., I.E., Psi Upsilon John Edmund McGinness, Arts, Delta Sigma Phi Frank Joseph McGrath, Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Robert Michael McInerney, Arts, Town Group South Orange, N. J. Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Allentown Allentown Elizabeth, N. J. Harrison, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Bethlehem Cleveland, Ohio West Orange, N. J. Grantwood, N. J. Allentown Westfield, N. J. Crestwood, N. Y. Kingston New York, N. Y. Berwick Northampton Bethlehem New Rochelle, N. Y. Harrisburg East Orange, N. J New York, N. Y Larchmont, N. Y Haddonfield, N. J Westfield, N. J Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J Montclair, N. J Philadelphia Newburgh, N. Y New Rochelle, N. Y Pittsburgh Glen Rock, N. J New York, N. Y Coatesville Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Douglaston, N. Y. Great Neck, N. Y. Lansdowne Floral Park, N. Y. Minersville Pottstown Williamsport Forty Fort Washington, D. C. Sadsburyville Maplewood, N. J. Bethlehem Greenwich, Conn. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Yonkers, N. Y. Allentown 379 3 8o William Austin McIntosh, M.E., Drinker House III-B Freeman Parke McKay, Jr., Bus., Kappa Alpha George Thomas McKinley, Arts, Theta Delta Chi George William McKnight, M.E., Town Group George Florian Melloy, Met. E., Town Group Alan Cameron Merman n, Arts, Beta Theta Pi William Fowler Metten, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Robert Edward Meury, Bus., Richards House III-B Robert Elliott Meyerhoff, C.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Edgar Hanmer Miller, Bus., Richards House III-B George Frederick Miller, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Jack Leslie Miller, Arts, Drinker House I Walter Ernest Miller, Ch.E., Taylor House E Courter Dickenson Mills, Arts, Price House Robert Stanley Miltenberger, Met.E., Town Group Andrew Mitchell, Ch.E., Kappa Sigma Jackson Froelicher Mitchell, Bus., Psi Upsilon Charles Frederick Moore, Arts, Alpha Chi Rho Marcy Lee Morrison, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Bertram Howard Morrow, Bus., Town Group Ewen Montford Mortimer, Ch.E., Town Group Laurance Austin Mosdzr, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi John Wesley Motter, C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Ralph David Moyer, Jr., Ch.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Herbert Matthew Muller, Ch.E., Taylor House E Glenn Allan Murray, I.E., Phi Delta Theta Richard Livingstone Murray, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Robert Dexter Mussina, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Howard Raymond Neureuter, Bus., Richards House III-B James Barrett Nutting, Arts, Theta Delta Chi Robert Eugene Nylin, Bus., Theta Xi Joseph Francis O ' Brien, Arts, Phi Sigma Kappa Howard Henry Ockelmann, Ch.E., Taylor House A John Bernard O ' Keefe, E.E., Town Group Frank Robert O ' Neill, M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Stanley Edbrooke Osborn, Arts, Psi Upsilon Henry Christian Ost, Jr., Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Joseph Howard Oswald, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Robert Constantine Ottens, E.E., Town Group Robert Martin Paddock, Bus., Kappa Alpha Lewis Franklin Page, E.E., Drinker House III-A Ralph Dominick Palazzo, C.E., Town Group John William Parsons, E.E., Engineers ' Club Bruce McKenzie Peacock, M.E., Beta Theta Pi William Cecil Pearson, Bus., Town Group John Joseph Perrell, Jr., M.E., Town Group Theodore Peters, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi George Wesley Phillips, E.M., Delta Phi William John Pillar, Met.E., Town Group Harry Paul Ponisi, Ch.E., Drinker House IV-A Georges Richard Potter, Arts, Cosmopolitan Club Alan Edward Price, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Robert Joseph Priestley, Ch.E., Town Group James Flory Pritchard, Arts, Drinker House I New York, N. Y. Somerville, N. J. Palmerton Freemansburg Bethlehem Baldwin, N. Y. Wilmington, Del. Rutherford, N. J. Baltimore, Md. East Orange, N. J. West Reading Clifton, N. J. Elizabeth, N. J. New Castle Easton Philadelphia Larchmont, N. Y. Claymont, Del. Buffalo, N. Y. Easton Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Towson, Md. Bogota, N. J. Bergenfield, N. J. Larchmont, N. Y. Westfield, N. J. Williamsport Buffalo, N. Y. West Roxbury, Mass. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Jersey City, N. J. Union City, N. J. Allentown Drexel Hill Easton Pottsville Nutley, N. J. Allentown Wolcott, N. Y. Pelham, N. Y. Trenton, N. J. Palmyra, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Garden City, N. Y. Chambersburg Sewickley Bethlehem Somersville, N. J. Larchmont, N. Y. Pittsburgh Neptune, N. J. Bangor Samuel Clifton Pruett, Jr., Met.E., Beta Theta Pi Jack Burdell Rader, I.E., Town Group Richard Levan Rahn, M.E., Delta Upsilon George Ramsden, Arts, Delta Upsilon William Graham Rankin, Bus., Richards House IV-B Paul Leslie Reiber, Jr., Met.E., Beta Theta Pi Harry Archibald Reichenbach, E.M., Town Group H. Nelson Reifsnyder, I.E., Richards House II-A James Clyde Reischner, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Robert Roland Ressler, Chem., Town Group Ralph Henry Rhoads, I.E., Town Group Robert Thaddeus Rospond, Met.E., Taylor House B Franklin Jackson Rhodes, I.E., Drinker House III-A Wayne Dlxon Riddle, Arts, Town Group James Hamilton Riehl, Bus., Chi Psi Robert Samuel Rippey, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi Charles Martin Ritter, Jr., Bus., Town Group Robert Errol Roberson, Eng.Phys., Pi Kappa Alpha Walter Rossiter Robinson, Jr., Bus., Sigma Chi Charles Montgomery Rogers, Bus., Sigma Chi Alfred Lincoln Rosener, Ch.E., Pi Lambda Phi Charles Field Rosenthal, E.E., Pi Lambda Phi Arthur Elfred Roslund, M.E., Taylor House D John Alexander Ross, Ch.E., Taylor House D Clayton Anthony Rugg, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Paul William Sanders, M.E., Alpha Chi Rho Robert Kistler Schmoyer, Ch.E., Town Group Joseph Schmuk, Met.E., Town Group Richard Luther Schoch, Bus., Town Group Carl Maxwell Schwab, Ch.E., Town Group Leonard Charles Schwab, I.E., Tau Delta Phi James Sechler Schwartz, M.E., Richards House III-A Mark Herman Schwarz, Jr., Bus., Drinker House IV-A Quirin John Schwarz, M.E., Chi Psi Charles Augustus Schweitzer, M.E., Richards House III- David Phineas Scoblionko, Arts, Town Group Peter Charles Seaton, M.E., Town Group Harold Joseph Seigle, Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Thomas Henry Semmel, Bus., Town Group Nym Kenneth Seward, Ch.E., Town Group Richard Charles Shafer, M.E., Phi Delta Theta Rodney Daniel Shaffer, Ch.E., Town Group Stanford Henry Shaw, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Hubbard William Shawhan, Arts, Sigma Phi Harold DeWitt Sherwood, Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Toshiaki Shintaku, C.E., Cosmopolitan Club Joseph Benjamin Sickler, Arts, Price House John Arol Simpson, Ch.E., Taylor House C John Morrison Skilling, Jr., Arts, Sigma Chi Douglas Carleton Smith, M.E., Delta Tau Delta Gilman Brayton Smith, III, Arts, Psi Upsilon John David Smith, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Robert Lee Smith, E.E., Town Group Teaneck, N. J. Bethlehem Allentown West Orange, N. J. Jamaica, N. Y. Pittsburgh Bethlehem Norristown Chester Allentown Allentown Irvington, N. J. Bloomfield, N. J. Bethlehem Fredonia, N. Y. West Norwood, N. J. Allentown Butler Wilmington, Del. Dallas, Texas Deal, N. J. New York, N. Y. Flushing, N. Y. Williamsport Lakewood Maplewood, N. J. Schnecksville Easton Allentown Allentown Cumberland, Md. Hazleton Lake Hopatcong, N. J. Rutherford, N. J. B Bloomfield, N. J. Bethlehem Allentown Philadelphia Slatington Luzerne Allentown Allentown South Orange, N. J Charleston, W. Va Englewood, N. J Pahala, Hawaii Fair Haven, N. J Stratford, Conn Wilmington, Del Glen Ridge, N. J Montclair, N. J Garden City, N. Y Frederick, Md 3 8l 382 Robert Louis Smith, C.E., Sigma Chi Vigor Cranston Smith, M.E., Sigma Chi George Whitney Snyder, Arts, Psi Upsilon Samuel Idell Snyder, M.E., Town Group Wilson Pershing Snyder, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Thomas Loughridge Solt, Arts, Town Group Harvey Francis Soule, Ch.E., Taylor House A Sherman Stair, Bus., Town Group William Harold St. Clair, M.E., Kappa Sigma David Truman Steele, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta William Charles Stoeckle, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Roland Clifford Stoehr, Bus., Beta Kappa Eugene Sewell Stowers, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta Rodman Egbert Street, Ch.E., Drinker House III-A Oscar Davis Summers, E.E., Richards House III-A Thomas Gilmer Summers, Bus., Sigma Nu Henry Carpenter Swartz, Jr., M.E., Price House Kenneth Gilbert Swayne, M.E., Taylor House Stanley Chester Szymakowski, Bus., Town Group Frank Martin Taylor, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Bruce William Thayer, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Nathan Town send Thayer, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi Paul Vernor Thevenet, I.E., Town Group Willis Grant Thomas, Jr., Arts, Town Group Albert Harvey Thomson, Bus., Taylor House D William Beauchamp Tilghman, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Harold Widdall Tilley, Bus., Richards House II-B Lester Edwin Titlow, C.E., Town Group Alfred Howe Todd, C.E., Phi Gamma Delta Joseph Newkirk Tomlinson, Ch.E., Theta Xi Paul Stephen Tremel, Arts, Town Group John Parker Troy, E.E., Richards House III-A Albert Eugene Vetrosky, Arts, Town Group Frederick Lincoln Villa, Arts, Richards House III-B Frank Ward Voelcker, Arts, Leonard Hall Earle Wilbur Wallick, E.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Gerald Edward Walsh, Jr., C.E., Drinker House II-A Merlin Paul Walters, M.E., Town Group Harry Beames Walton, Ch.E., Drinker House II-A Peter John Weigel, Arts, Richards House III-A William Ransom Weiland, Ch.E., Sigma Nu Robert Earl Weltz, Ch.E., Chi Phi Charles Mark Wetzel, II, I.E., Richards House IV- A Philip Charles Whiting, Jr., Bus., Kappa Alpha Robert Arthur Wiley, Bus., Richards House III-B John Michael Williams, M.E., Kappa Sigma Richard Owen Williams, Met.E., Drinker House II-B Thomas Wright Williams, Bus., Chi Psi Thomas Robert Winco, Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Stephen Clark Woodruff, Met.E., Pi Kappa Alpha William Stewart Woodside, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Harry Kirke Wrench, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Robert Wright, Jr., I.E., Taylor House E Charleston, W. Va. Wynnewood Sewickley Heights Windber Minersville Bethlehem Albany, N. Y. Rosemont Baltimore, Md. Plandome, N. Y. Drexel Hill Bayside, N. Y. Bluefield, W. Va. York Oyster Bay, N. Y. Warren, Ohio Gwynedd Valley George School Greenfield, Mass. Wilmington, Del. Evanston, 111. Flushing, N. Y. Bethlehem Allentown Dallas City Salisbury, Md. Avoca Allentown Richmond, Va. Bridgeton, N. J. Bethlehem Schenectady, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Philadelphia Washington, D. C. Roselle, N. J. Fullerton Asbury Park, N. J. Plainfield, N. J. Westfield, N. J. Swarthmore Wayne Holyoke, Mass. Ridgewood, N. J. Maplewood, N. J. Birmingham, Mich. Orange, N. J. Philadelphia Westfield, N. J. Baltimore, Md. Minneapolis, Minn. Haddonfield, N. J. Roy Tyson Zackey, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon William Kenward Zucker, Jr., Bus., Theta Delta Chi Roslyn Mt. Vernon, N. Y. CLASS OF 1945 Alan Chichester Abeel, Jr., Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta Ernest George Abell, E.E., Richards House IV-A Joseph Benjamin Adams, Jr., M.E., Chi Psi Allan Brooke Ainley, Jr., M.E., Delta Sigma Phi William Westermayr Albert, Ch.E., Taylor House A Leonard Jerome Alpert, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Keith Warren Amish, E.E., Taylor House D Christian Andrew Andersen, Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Conway Montgomery Andersen, C.E., Town Group Earle Charles Anderson, Ch.E., Kappa Alpha John Clenmore Andrews, Arts, Town Group Paul Chapman Andrews, M.E., Drinker House II-B Lloyd Earl Antonides, E.M., Taylor House C Miles Edward Apple, Jr., I.E., Town Group Harry Edward Arant, M.E., Town Group Franklin Wyllis Armstrong, M.E., Price House Edward Artim, Ch.E., Taylor House C Everett Merritt Ashworth, M.E., Town Group Robert Bernard Asson, Bus., Alpha Town House Fred Jones Attaway, Jr., Ch.E., Delta Tau Delta Charles Baldrey Austin, Met.E., Richards House III-B William Thomas Bachmann, Bus., Drinker House III-A Eugene Walther Baer, III, Eng.Phys., Town Group Albert Lundy Baker, Jr., Ch.E., Phi Gamma Delta Walter Bernard Ballenberger, E.E., Taylor House B Gilbert Justin Barenborg, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group Robert John Barr, Bus., Drinker House III-B Thomas Roberts Barry, E.E., Town Group Ralph Theodore Bartlett, Ch.E., Taylor House A Curtis Leroy Baskin, Ch.E., Town Group Carl Paul Bauer, Ch.E., Town Group Alexander Dawes Beattie, M.E., Sigma Phi William Christian Beck, III, M.E., Drinker House IV-A Charles Roland Beddows, Jr., Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Alfred DePierre Beeken, III, Met.E., Delta Upsilon Thomas Kirk Begg, Ch.E., Alpha Chi Rho John Cyril Beilman, Bus., Richards House I Isidoro Ramon Benavides, E.E., Cosmopolitan Club Kenneth Francis Bender, M.E., Town Group Robert Daniel Benjamin, M.E., Town Group John Cyril Bennett, Ch.E., Taylor House A Albert Emilio Berizzi, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi William Bernard, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Rorert Bernstein, M.E., Pi Lambda Phi Frank Rhodes Berry, Jr., E.E., Town Group George Hindle Binns, Ch.E., Taylor House A Larchmont, N. Y. Philadelphia Baltimore, Md. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Trenton, N. J. New York, N. Y. Webster, N. Y. Perth Amboy, N. J. Allentown Brooklyn, N. Y. Bethlehem Trenton, N. J. Bergenfield, N. J. Bethlehem Kulpmont Floral Park, N. Y. Clifton, N. J. Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Jeddo Charleston, S. C. Upper Darby White Plains, N. Y. Allentown Summit, N. J. Baldwin, N. Y. Bloomfield, N. J. Yonkers, N. Y. Lambertville, N. J. Lyndhurst, N. J. Freeland Irvington, N. J. Chambersburg Washington, D. C. Westfield, N. J. Beaver Bridgeport, Conn. Hazleton Havana, Cuba Bethlehem Athens West Brighton, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Summit, N. J. Harrisburg C larks Green Upper Montclair, N. J. 383 384 Hower Ellsworth Bitler, M.E., Sigma Nu Robert Alan Bixler, Jr., I.E., Drinker House I Norman Maurice Blanc, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Richard Killington Bleser, Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Frederick William Bloecher, Jr., E.M., Beta Kappa Richard Henry Boll, Ch.E., Richards House III-A Ira Brahm Born, Eng.Phys., Tau Delta Phi Edmund Warren Bowden, Jr., Eng.Phys., Pi Kappa Alpha William Russell Bowen, I.E., Price House Ward Allen Bradford, Met.E., Taylor House C Richard Warren Bradshaw, M.E., Drinker House I Robert Taylor Brandfass, Met.E., Chi Psi Carl Raymond Brandt, M.E., Town Group William Charles Breidinger, Ch.E., Town Group John Harry Brindle, M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Robert Eugene Brodt, Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Harold William Brong, Ch.E., Town Group Martin Werner Brossman, Jr., M.E., Town Group Edwin Charles Brown, Jr., I.E., Town Group Stanley Morton Brown, Jr., C.E., Phi Gamma Delta Carl Robert Bruns, Bus., Delta Phi Martin Brustein, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Richard William Buck, Arts, Town Group John Robert Bullock, Ch.E., Chi Phi Bruce Ave Burgy, I.E., Sigma Chi Charles Raymond Busby, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Harry Fort Busch, E.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon John Arthur Cable, I.E., Chi Psi Alfred Copeland Callen, Jr., Met.E., Town Group Garrett Wright Cantwell, Ch.E., Town Group Francis Xavier Carlin, Chem., Richards House IV-A Ray Gordon Carlson, C.E., Chi Phi Francis Thomas Carr, Ch.E., Town Group William Andrews Cather, Bus., Chi Phi Robert Williamson Cawley, M.E., Theta Delta Chi Franklin Joseph Chiles, Arts, Town Group Frederick Karl Christ, Arts, Town Group John Christian, E.E., Engineers ' Club Peter Cicila, Chem., Town Group John Henry Clark, III, Bus., Price House William Allison Clark, M.E., Chi Psi Robert Alexander Clayton, Bus., Town Group William Henry Cleaver, M.E., Drinker House II-B Robert Strohmeier Cliff, E.E., Town Group John Kerr Cochran, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Robert Muir Coeyman, E.E., Drinker House II-A Sydney Morris Cohen, M.E., Town Group James Harvey Coleman, Bus., Drinker House I Robert Sayre Compton, Met.E., Sigma Phi William Martin Conway, Bus., Town Group Alfred Searles Cook, Jr., Ch.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Clifton Winchell Corbett, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha dePaul John Corkill, Met.E., Town Group Jarland Jerry Corson, Jr., Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Milton Stroudsburg Larchmont, N. Y. Lynbrook, N. Y. Wharton, N. J. Dover, N. J. Bethlehem Westfield, N. J. Waterbury, Conn. Trenton, N. J. Richmond, Va. Wheeling, W. Va. Glenside Nazareth North Braddock Bangor Bethlehem Allentown Coopersburg Marblehead, Mass. New Rochelle, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Bethlehem Ardmore Peoria, 111. Allentown Wyomissing Canton, Ohio Bethlehem Louisville, Ky. Atlantic City, N. J. Clifton, N. J. Schuylkill Haven Maplewood, N. J. Upper Montclair, N. J. Bethlehem Union, N. J. Philadelphia Linden, N. J. Wayne West Orange, N. J. Bethlehem Audubon, N. J. Coopersburg South Orange, N. J. Newark, N. J. Allentown Pittsburgh Dover, Del. Rutland, Vt. Princeton, N. J. Westfield, N. J. Allentown Mexico City, Mexico William George Critchlow, Jr., Ch.E., Theta Xi Willard Long Croft, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Samuel Wilbur Croll, Ch.E., Delta Upsilon Malcolm Page Crowther, C.E., Psi Upsilon Edward Knapp Cumming, M.E., Taylor House B Edwin Hulley Cummings, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Donald Nathaniel Curtiss, M.E., Richards House IV-B Alfred Wilson Darlow, Chem., Kappa Sigma David Frances Davidson, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Myrddin Lloyd Davies, M.E., Drinker House IV-B John Alexander Davis, Jr., Met.E., Beta Theta Pi Joseph Wales Davis, Jr., Bus., Town Group Richard William Davis, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Edmund Russell Dawson, M.E., Beta Theta Pi John Montgomery Dawson, Bus., Town Group Joseph Houston Day, Bus., Town Group Kenneth Irving Day, E.E., Alpha Chi Rho Dante DeBerardinis, M.E., Town Group Louis Philip Deffaa, I.E., Alpha Tau Omega Richard George deGrouchy, Bus., Chi Phi Richard Samuel DeHoff, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha John Andrews DeHuff, Met.E., Town Group John Daniel Deisler, Drinker House III-A Howard Malcolm DeLaittre, E.E., Chi Phi Thomas Brown Delchamps, M.E., Chi Psi Robert Alan DeLong, Bus., Town Group Joseph Donahey Dennison, C.E., Town Group Bruno DePaoli, Jr., Ch.E., Kappa Sigma Paul Alton Deschler, Jr., Arts, Town Group Charles Joseph Dewan, Arts, Richards House II-A Frank William Dickel, E.M., Town Group Donald Roger Diggs, I.E., Delta Tau Delta Roger George Dittig, Jr., C.E., Taylor House A Robert Lester Dodson, Jr., Bus., Kappa Sigma Louis Martin Domeratzky, M.E., Drinker House IV-A Frank Thomas Donato, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi John Reese Dove, Ch.E., Drinker House II-B Harry Gilman Down, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Edward Jacques Downing, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Alan Frederick Dubin, Chem., Pi Lambda Phi Harry Richard Dunn, I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Frank Pinkham Edwards, C.E., Kappa Sigma Carl Eisen, Jr., Bus., Phi Gamma Delta Wilmer Carl Eisen hard, Ch.E., Town Group David Cole Emery, E.E., Town Group Arnold Samuel Epstein, E.E., Town Group Edwin Paul Ernst, M.E., Price House Jacob Milton Ettinger, I.E., Richards House IV-B John Douglas Evans, Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon John Jacob Evans, E.E., Town Group Louis LeRoy Evans, Ch.E., Town Group Ralph Aiken Evans, Eng.Phys., Town Group Peter Pasquale Facchiano, C.E., Town Group Robert Richmond Ferguson, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Elizabeth, N. J. Trenton, N. J. Ridgewood, N. J. Toledo, Ohio Union, N. J. Philadelphia Clifton, N. J. Rochester, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Wilkes-Barre Glassport Wilmington, Del. Maplewood, N. J. Lake Forest, 111. Norristown Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Pen Argyl Larchmont, N. Y. Upper Darby Flemington, N. J. Lebanon Rumson, N. J. Minneapolis, Minn. Mountain Lakes, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Palisade, N. J. Bethlehem Sayre Philadelphia Evanston, 111. Port Washington, N. Y. Rutherford, N. J. McLean, Va. Dunmore Pottsville Garden City, N. Y. Jersey City, N. J. New Rochelle, N. Y. Pittsburgh Library Montclair, N. J. Northampton Aurora, Ohio Bethlehem Philadelphia Norristown Glen Cove, N. Y. Nesquehoning Allentown East Orange, N. J. Bethlehem Washington, D. C. 385 3 86 Allan Lawrence Ferrel, C.E., Taylor House A Frank John Firtko, Chem., Town Group Charles William Fisher, M.E., Theta Xi Winfield Stitt Fisher, I.E., Delta Tau Delta Frederick John Flemming, Jr., M.E., Kappa Alpha Herbert Ellery Fletcher, C.E., Theta Delta Chi George Richard Forbes, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Richard Nickerson Ford, Ch.E., Town Group Charles Hatherly Foster, Bus., Sigma Nu Edgar Allan Frankley, E.E., Cosmopolitan Club Paul Justus Franz, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Jorge Frelxas, Arts, Cosmopolitan Club Richard Albert Friend, Ch.E., Drinker House IH-B Edward Scott Fries, Bus., Psi Upsilon Paul Warren Fritsch, E.E., Town Group August George Fromuth, C.E., Kappa Sigma Henry Brainard Fuller, Jr., Bus., Sigma Chi Richard Guerard Fuller, Jr., M.E., Phi Delta Theta Philip James Gahagan, Arts, Town Group James John Gallagher, Ch.E., Town Group John Anthony Gardella, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Edson Leonard Garrabrants, M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Irvin Hughes Geiger, Jr., I.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Willard Eugene Geiger, M.E., Town Group Ernest Richard Gerlach, Ch.E., Town Group William Francis Giles, Ch.E., Chi Psi Irvin Willets Gilmore, Arts, Taylor House B John Robert Given, M.E., Beta Theta Pi Joseph Malcolm Gladden, Met.E., Taylor House D James Eagen Golden, E.E., Town Group Frank Philip Goodwin, Arts, Richards House II-B Stuart Charles Gordon, Arts, Theta Kappa Phi Richard Gosztonyi, Ch.E., Town Group Eugene Cissell Gott, III, Arts, Psi Upsilon Richard Carl Gottschall, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Wesley Edward Gould, Ch.E., Taylor House C William Scott Graham, Jr., M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Harry Joshua Gray, E.E., Town Group Richard Alvin Gray, Met.E., Town Group Edward George Graybill, Ch.E., Town Group John Alden Green, E.E., Kappa Sigma Lee Alfred Greenbaum, Chem., Richards House I William Kirker Gregg, Met.E., Town Group Jack Edward Griffis, C.E., Town Group William Robert Griffith, Arts, Town Group Alfred George Grise, I.E., Sigma Nu Henry Edward Gross, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Lucius Warren Guernsey, III, Ch.E., Sigma Nu Laurence Raymond Gulick, M.E., Richards House II-A Thomas John Gulya, Arts, Town Group Carl Ellis Haas, Ch.E., Town Group Claude Joseph Hafner, Bus., Town Group Richard Leroy Hagadorn, Bus., Delta Upsilon John Stanley Haldeman, E.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Carbondale Pittsburgh Hammonton, N. J Evanston, 111 Pelham, N. Y Lowell, Mass South Orange, N. J Bethlehem Shaker Heights, Ohio Forest Hills, N. Y. Elkins Park Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico Elmira, N. Y. Garden City, N. Y. Allentown Philadelphia Cleveland Heights, Ohio Reading Bethlehem Caldwell, N. J. Rumson, N. J. East Orange, N. J. Harrisburg Bethlehem Bethlehem Claymont, Del. Hughesville Glen Ridge, N. J. McDonald West Pittston Hamden, Conn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Reading Fairlawn, N. J. Chevy Chase, Md. West Hartford, Conn. Wilkinsburg Bethlehem Fanwood, N. J. New York, N. Y. Hackensack, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Springfield, Mass. Elkins Park Canton, Ohio Philadelphia Bethlehem Allentown Bethlehem Elizabeth, N. J. Doylestown Upper Darby Douglassville Philadelphia Manhasset, N. Y. Willow Street Harrisburg Lebanon Westfield, N. J. Pittsburgh Rockville Centre, N. Y. Bayonne, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem St. Louis, Mo. Lancaster Summit, N. Maplewood, N. Newton, N. Robert Winfield Hallock, Ch.E., Richards House III-A Ralph Hall Hamilton, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Johnson Rooney Hammond, Ch.E., Town Group John Francis Hannan, Ch.E., Chi Phi Harry Gerald Harnish, M.E., Richards House I Theodore William Harnsberger, Jr., M.E., Town Group Thomas Leo Hartman, M.E., Town Group Herbert John Haslam, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Robert Oscar Havekotte, M.E., Drinker House III-A Robert Charles Hayman, Bus., Drinker House III-A Leonard Harold Heath, Arts, Town Group George Walley Jeck, Jr., Met.E., Town Group William Adam Heck, Arts, Town Group Theodore Noel Hellmuth, Ch.E., Psi Upsilon Donald Raub Helm, Bus., Sigma Chi Franklin Wallace Helms, Jr., Ch.E., Drinker House III-B Robert Stuart Helthall, C.E., Alpha Chi Rho Jerry Michael Hendershot, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Frank Caldwell Hendrickson, Jr., Ch.E., Richards House II-A Valley Stream, N. George Washington Henry, III, Arts, Town Group William Matthew Henry, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Willis Donald Henry, E.M., Town Group Carl Franklin Henzelman, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Pedro Nel Herazo, Ch.E., Town Group Leon Suminate Herbert, Jr., Arts, Delta Upsilon Charles Peter Herold, E.E., Town Group Emerson Ormerod Heyworkth, Jr., M.E., Delta Tau Delta William Henry Highfield, Ch.E., Town Group Vincent Joseph Hilaire, M.E., Town Group Frank Avery Hill, E.E., Town Group Benjamin Franklin Hoffacker, Jr., E.M., Delta Upsilon Walter Jules Hoffberg, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi William Frederick Hoffman, I.E., Taylor House D Orrin Clifford Holbrook, Ch.E., Taylor House A Albert William Holmberg, Jr., Arts, Theta Delta Chi James Peck Holyoke, E.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Robert Steward Honeyman, Eng.Phys., Kappa Alpha Arthur Clark Hontz, Chem., Town Group Foster Schuyler Hooke, Ch.E., Kappa Sigma James Weldon Hooper, E.M., Town Group Richard Dannecker Horlacher, C.E., Town Group Nathaniel Aaron Horowitz, M.E., Pi Lambda Phi Joseph Francis Horvath, Bus., Town Group Edward Royal Hughes, Met.E., Theta Xi Theodore Oren Hulse, Arts, Town Group Thomas Frederick Humphrey, Arts, Beta Kappa Austin Thomas Hunt, Jr., I.E., Town Group Edwin Frederic Hussa, Jr., M.E., Theta Xi Frank Robert Huth, Ch.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Louis Inglese, M.E., Town Group William Hamilton Inglis, Ch.E., Sigma Nu John Douglas Ingram, Arts, Delta Upsilon Lewis Abbott James, Ch.E., Price House Y. Holland Point Pleasant, N. J. Macungie Steelton South Norwalk, Conn. Merion Baltimore, Md. Mamaroneck, N. Y. Bethlehem Bethlehem Easton Pittsburgh New York, N. Y. Cranbury, N. J. Irvington, N. J. Naugatuck, Conn. Milwaukee, Wis. Pasadena, Cal. Lehighton Rome, N. Y. Trinidad, B. W. I. Allentown Brooklyn, N. Y. Allentown Morristown, N. J. Westhampton Beach, N. Y. Woodridge, N. J. Bethlehem Summit, N. J. Nazareth Allentown Westfield, N. J. Canton, Ohio Montclair, N. J. 387 3 88 Robert James, Bus., Town Group Howard John Jansen, M.E., Town Group Daniel Lee Jerman, C.E., Town Group Norman Johansen, Bus., Delta Sigma Phi David Marlette John, Arts, Leonard Hall John Arthur Johnson, M.E., Sigma Nu Joseph Johnson, Jr., M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Kenneth Christian Johnson, I.E., Town Group Thomas Johnston, M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Alan Francis Jones, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha Russell Richard Jones, Ch.E., Town Group Richard Nels Jorgenson, I.E., Sigma Nu John Anderson Jubell, Bus., Psi Upsilon Henry Clarence Judd, Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Robert Leon Kanaley, Arts, Town Group Daniel Karpowich, C.E., Town Group Richard Peter Kassabian, Ch.E., Town Group William Michael Kaszyski, Bus., Town Group John Howard Keenan, M.E., Town Group David Leslie Keese, Ch.E., Price House Edwin John Kehal, I.E., Kappa Sigma Frank Brackett Kelley, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi John Edwin Kelly, M.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Robert Mulkey Kelly, C.E., Sigma Chi Julian Kennedy, III, E.M., Town Group Ralph Kulp Keyser, I.E., Taylor House B David Clark Kirk, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group Richard Martin Kitzmiller, Bus., Town Group Harry Klapper, Jr., Ch.E., Taylor House D James Franklin Kleckner, Arts, Taylor House B Edward Leroy Klopfer, Met.E., Pi Lambda Phi George Harry Kohl, Bus., Psi Upsilon Harold William Korshin, M.E., Drinker House IV-B Joseph Kovach, Jr., Met.E., Town Group George Alexander Kovaka, Ch.E., Drinker House I John Lewis Kratzer, E.E., Town Group Frederick Henry Kraus, Bus., Drinker House III-A Owen William Krause, I.E., Town Group Richard Krause, Met.E., Lambda Chi Alpha George Kreshka, Arts, Town Group Keith Kuchar, E.M., Town Group Rudolph Leonard Kuehn, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu George Thomas Kushner, Jr., E.E., Town Group John Lally, Bus., Town Group Kenneth Alfred Lambert, Jr., E.M., Sigma Chi Robert Paul Lampert, Arts, Richards House II-B Howard Wentworth Lancaster, Arts, Town Group Robert Douglas Lane, M.E., Town Group Lawrence Kirkman Larkin, M.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Robert LeRoy Lashley, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Joseph Robert Lasser, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Orville Joseph Laurenzi, M.E., Drinker House I Jay Richard Lee, Ch.E., Town Group Richard Maxwell Leiter, Arts, Drinker House II-B Easton Kenmore, N. Y. Sewickley Philadelphia Kenmore, N. Y. Jamestown, N. Y. Brookline, Mass. Allentown Rockville Centre, N. Y. Philadelphia Weissport Jamestown, N. Y. Cleveland, Ohio Philadelphia Binghamton, N. Y. Allentown Fairview, N. J. Northampton Allentown Scranton Forest Hills, N. Y. Winchester, Mass. Rio Grande, N. J. Wilmington, Del. Sewickley Kulpsville Kearny, N. J. Steelton White Plains, N. Y. Pittsburgh Buffalo, N. Y. Williamsville, N. Y. Lynbrook, N. Y. Bethlehem St. Louis, Mo. East Fogelsville Glen Ridge, N. J. Allentown Philadelphia Bethlehem Montvale, N. J. Leonia, N. J. Freeland Bethlehem Kingston Carlstadt, N. J Fair Haven, N. J Brookline, Mass Washington, D. C Cumberland, Md New Rochelle, N. Y Bogota, N. J Bethlehem Hagerstown, Md. Lowell Sherry Letourneau, E.E., Town Group Stephen James Litrides, E.E., Taylor House C Leslie Ralph Little, Ch.E., Richards House III-B Robert Andrew Little, Bus., Richards House II-A Luther Daniel Loch, Ch.E., Town Group Alfred Arthur Lomar, E.E., Theta Xi John Jacob Lotz, C.E., Beta Theta Pi Harvey Chester Lucks, M.E., Tau Delta Phi Charles Julian Lutkins, Bus., Delta Phi Walter Augustus Mackey, E.M., Psi Upsilon Francis Joseph MacLean, Jr., E.M., Town Group Edward John Madden, Bus., Town Group Warren Maenak, Jr., Bus., Chi Psi Robert Escher Maloney, Bus., Psi Upsilon Edward George Manning, E.E., Town Group Walter Edward Margie, Jr., Chem., Town Group John William Marini, Eng.Phys., Richards House III-B Mortimer Joseph Marks, Arts, Town Group Phillips Brooks Marsden, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Edwin Philipp Marx, Chem., Richards House II-A Luis Maria Matamoros, C.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon John William Matthews, Chem., Price House John Kelsey Maus, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Donald Owen Maxwell, Ch.E., Price House Bruce Hepner Mayer, Ch.E., Chi Psi Lester David Mazur, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Albert Pryibil McCauley, Jr., M.E., Drinker House I Harry Baldwin McCurdy, Chem., Taylor House E Stephen Bowne McElroy, Bus., Drinker House III-B Stuart Ridgeway McIntyre, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Robert Albert McKinley, Arts, Theta Delta Chi King Harrison McLaurin, Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta John Warren Meacham, E.E., Theta Kappa Phi Durand Richards Mearns, I.E., Alpha Tau Omega Theodore George Megas, Met.E., Drinker House IV-A William Russ Meigs, Bus., Sigma Nu John Franklin Mengel, M.E., Town Group Jerome Newhard Merkel, C.E., Town Group Rodney Francis Merkert, E.M., Sigma Phi Epsilon Walter Frank Meserve, Arts, Town Group John Edward Messinger, Bus., Phi Delta Theta George Wallace Meyer, M.E., Beta Theta Pi Richard Irving Meyers, Bus., Kappa Alpha Marcello Joseph Mezzullo, Jr., Ch.E., Taylor House A Charles Earl Miller, Arts, Town Group John Xavier Miller, M.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Raymond Hershey Miller, M.E., Drinker House I William Brunner Miller, Engr., Town Group William Dewey Miller, C.E., Theta Delta Chi Alvin Irving Mishkin, Bus., Town Group Emil Francis Mitman, E.E., Town Group Bernard Jackson Mizel, M.E., Town Group Raymond Thomas Mohrey, Ch.E., Town Group Ben William Moore, Jr., C.E., Drinker House III-B St. Johnsburg, Vt. Springfield, Mass. New Brighton Little Falls, N. Y. Allentown Ridgewood, N. J. Philadelphia Jamaica, N. Y. Germantown Milburn, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Woodbury, N. J. Forty Fort Buffalo, N. Y. West Pittston Passaic, N. J. Queens Village, N. Y. Maplewood, N. J. River Edge, N. J. San Jose, Costa Rica Scranton Philadelphia East Orange, N. J. Allentown White Plains, N. Y. Philadelphia Port Kennedy Westfield, N. J. Beaver Palmerton Duquesne Trucksville Maplewood, N. J. Mauch Chunk Manopla, Cuba Bethlehem Fullerton Queens Village, N. Y. Lynn, Mass. Palmerton Forest Hills, N. Y. Sea Girt, N. J. Port Chester, N. Y. Bethlehem Harrisburg Clearspring, Md. Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Allentown Bethlehem Kingston, N. Y. Bethlehem Charleston, W. Va. 389 390 John Harlan Moore, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Samuel Kenneth Moore, Met.E., Taylor House D William Robert Moore, I.E., Delta Phi Vincent Paul Moravec, Met. E., Town Group Anthony Ettore Morfy, E.E., Town Group Robert Brown Morison, Arts, Beta Kappa Clinton Hugh Morse, Ch.E., Chi Psi Robert Lloyd Mount, I.E., Phi Sigma Kappa James English ' Moyer, Arts, Theta Xi Bernard James Mulhern, I.E., Theta Kappa Phi Robert James Murphy, Met.E., Drinker House IV-A Gilman Yost Murray, Ch.E., Town Group Robert Knox Murray, Jr., Arts, Psi Upsilon John Alfred Must, M.E., Town Group Joseph Hooker Myers, Chem., Richards House III-A Russell Elwood Neal, C.E., Town Group Jerome Yale Neff, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Leslie Hunter Neill, Bus., Taylor House B John Billington Nicholson, Jr., Bus., Richards House I John Dudley Nicolaides, Arts, Chi Phi Howard Clinton Noble, I.E., Kappa Alpha Joseph John O ' Keefe, Engr., Town Group Edward Alan Orth, Jr., Met.E., Drinker House I Clyde Holden Oskin, Jr., Bus., Town Group Robert Lewis Owens, E.E., Chi Phi Carl Oxholm, Jr., I.E., Town Group Michael James Pappas, Bus., Town Group James Clifton Paul, Bus., Town Group Charles Pearson, III, M.E., Chi Psi Charles Lehmann Pelzel. M.E., Drinker House IV-A Richard Edgar Penniman, Arts, Town Group Albert Slocomb Perley, C.E., Town Group Edwin Clement Perona, Bus., Town Group Wilbur Ralph Peters, Jr., E.E., Town Group Miska Fuller Petersham, M.E., Town Group Carl Howard Peterson, Ch.E., Taylor House D John Steward Petty, E.E., Town Group John William Pharo, E.E., Town Group Joseph Leonard Piazza, E.E., Drinker House III-A Vincent Richard Pittala, Bus., Taylor House D William Howard Plunkett, M.E., Richards House II-B Davis Thomas Poole, Jr., I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Robert Charles Pope, Arts, Richards House IV-B Theodore Robert Pope, Arts, Town Group Thomas Johnstone Porter, E.E., Chi Phi Benjamin William Powers, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Ross Joseph Pritchard, Arts, Alpha Chi Rho John Joseph Probst, I.E., Sigma Phi John Stephen Racosky, M.E., Town Group Herbert Charles Rafetto, Jr., I.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Clifford Thomas Raidline, Bus., Town Group Robert Hunter Ralston, M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Thornton Quin Raney, Ch.E., Delta Tau Delta Theodore Alvin Rassler, Ch.E., Town Group Pittsburgh Pelham Manor, N. Y. Elkins Park West Bridgewater Tamaqua Salisbury, Md. Tunkhannock Rockville Centre, N. Y. Glenside Wilkes-Barre West Hartford, Conn. Pittsburgh Syracuse, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. Kingston Doylestown Allentown Upper Montclair, N. J. Scarsdale, N. Y. Washington, D. C. East Hartford, Conn. Allentown Grosse Pointe, Mich. Bethlehem Stroudsburg Dongan Hills, N. Y. Elizabeth, N. J. Allentown Buffalo, N. Y. Charleston, W. Va. Bethlehem Black Mountain, N. C. Weehawken, N. J. Camden, N. J. Woodstock, N. Y. Kearny, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Great Neck, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Titusville, N. J. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Cranford, N. J. Kensington Gardens, N. Y. Moylan West New York, N. J. Paterson, N. J. Woodhaven, N. Y. Bethlehem Nazareth Bethlehem Pittsburgh Skytop Allentown Paul James Ray, M.E., Town Group Harvey George Redden, Jr., M.E., Delta Phi Malachi Joseph Redington, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Albert John Redmond, M.E., Chi Psi William Downing Reppert, Chem., Town Group George Michael Resetco, Bus., Town Group William Brinkworth Reukauf, I.E., Delta Sigma Phi William Joseph Reusch, Jr., M.E., Drinker House II Harry Charles Rice, Jr., I.E., Richards House I John Patrick Rice, C.E., Town Group John Lawrey Richards, Arts, Richards House III-B Louis Moosbrugger Richards, Arts, Drinker House I Joseph Raymond Ristorcelli, I.E., Cosmopolitan Club Frank Butler Roberts, E.E., Town Group Gordon Thomas Roberts, E.E., Richards House III-A Charles Leigh Robinson, M.E., Theta Xi Robert Dean Robinson, C.E., Town Group Stephen Ratcliffe Rochester, M.E., Town Group Lester Leroy Rollins, Ch.E., Town Group Gilbert Daniel Romberger, Bus., Delta Upsilon Pasquale Ronca, Bus., Town Group Gilbert Morris Rosenberg, E.E., Town Group Joseph Lewis Ross, Arts, Town Group Neil Logan Ross, Arts, Drinker Hous e I Christian George Roth, M.E., Town Group Philip Schuyler Rust, Ch.E., Drinker House I Richard Mitman Ruthart, Chem., Town Group John Brisbin Rutherford, C.E., Taylor House B Arthur Justin Sabatino, Ch.E., Richards House II-B Frederick Carl Salber, Jr., Arts, Town Group John William Sanders, Bus., Town Group Robert Lewis Sanders, I.E., Town Group Nathaniel Sceva, E.M., Delta Upsilon Robert George Schafer, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Joseph Herman Schmitt, Bus., Drinker House IV-B Donald Walter Schmoyer, Bus., Town Group Irwin Herbert Schram, Jr., Ch.E., Drinker House II-B John Earl Schumacher, Jr., Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa James Schwab, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Roland Joseph Schwartz, M.E., Theta Kappa Phi Lawrence Stranahan Scofield, Jr., M.E., Kappa Alpha Kenneth Aikman Scott, Ch.E., Taylor House D Richard Bell Seals, Arts, Beta Theta Pi William Harry Searfoss, Chem., Lambda Chi Alpha Louis Anthony Sefranek, Met.E., Town Group Henry Burtis Seifert, Ch.E., Drinker House II-B Robert Wray Sexton, C.E., Alpha Chi Rho John Maurice Shaffer, M.E., Taylor House B Robert Holcomb Shaw, I.E., Kappa Alpha Robert Orton Shealer, M.E., Delta Phi Dunstan Pennell Sheldon, I.E., Psi Upsilon George Joseph Shelly, Jr., Arts, Town Group Robert Regester Shepherd, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Thomas Lincoln Sherer, E.E., Town Group Bethlehem Peconic, N. Y. Wilkes-Barre Cincinnati, Ohio Bethlehem Bethlehem Elkins Park Hollis, N. Y. Hazleton Allentown Lehighton Somerville, N. J. Venezuela, S. A. Emmaus New York, N. Y. Pennsgrove, N. J. Minersville Eden, N. Y. Whitinsville, Mass. Allentown Bethlehem Bethlehem Allentown Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Bound Brook, N. J. New Brunswick, N. J. Bethlehem Harrisburg Elizabeth, N. J. Bethlehem Allentown New Cumberland Steelton, N. J. Snyder, N. Y. Rumson, N. J. Allentown Glen Rock, N. J. Pottsville Allentown Union City, N. J Larchmont, N. Y White Plains, N. Y Newton, N. J Trenton, N. J Bethlehem Trenton, N. J Maplewood, N. J Hughesville Springfield, Mass Old Greenwich, Conn Kinsman, Ohio Quakertown Wayne Allentown 39 1 392 Daniel Center Shewmon, E.M., Taylor House E Steward Thomas Shiffer, I.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Robert Kenneth Shimer, M.E., Drinker House II-A Edward Woodruff Shipley, Ch.E., Chi Psi Frank Ward Shirey, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Francis Jacob Shoemaker, M.E., Town Group Harold Philip Shoener, Bus., Richards House IV-A Herbert George Shoener, Bus., Richards House IV- Harry Benson Shuttleworth, Bus., Chi Psi Thomas Ethelbert Skilling, I.E., Theta Xi Ronald James Skilton, M.E., Price House Robert Crane Slutzker, Bus., Beta Kappa Albert Joseph Smith, I.E., Alpha Chi Rho Ethan Allen Smith, Jr., Ch.E., Price House Frederic Burton Smith, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group George Wilmer Smith, M.E., Lambda Chi Alpha James Edgar Smith, Arts, Town Group Laird Reese Snowden, M.E., Theta Xi Herman George Snyder, M.E., Kappa Sigma Roy Blauvelt Snyder, Met.E., Price House Charles Leroy Sollenberger, Ch.E., Town Group Joseph Birchall Solly, M.E., Taylor House B Howard Victor Soltis, Arts, Town Group Richard Henry Sotzing, Bus., Town Group Richard DeWitt Sprading, I.E., Town Group Kermit Bernard Stahler, M.E., Town Group George Bruce Staples, Jr., M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Carlton Hugh Stauffer, C.E., Town Group Louis Henry Stein, Eng.Phys., Tau Delta Phi John Herbert Steinbuch, M.E., Drinker House III- Charles James Sterner, Eng.Phys., Town Group Glen Julian Stine, E.E., Town Group Harold Hartley Stirling, Jr., C.E., Beta Theta Pi Norman Wallace Stirling, Arts, Town Group Ellsworth Albert Stockbower, Chem., Phi Sigma Frank Eberly Strehle, M.E., Cosmopolitan Club Frank Leo Strobino, C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha George Wilson Strohl, E.E., Town Group Hugh Sheldon Strong, I.E., Sigma Chi Frank Sturges, III, I.E., Richards House II-A Cornelius Jay Sullivan, Bus., Chi Psi Robert Parker Suman, Chem., Kappa Sigma David James Sweet, Arts, Leonard Hall Lewis Hayward Tanner, I.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Edward Sawyer Tattershall, M.E., Town Group Francis Charles Taylor, Arts, Leonard Hall Perry Root Taylor, Jr., Arts, Town Group Dwight Goodwin Tenney, Bus., Psi Upsilon Edwin Raymond Theis, Jr., Bus., Delta Sigma Phi George Franklin Thomas, Arts, Delta Upsilon Warren Harding Thomas, Bus., Town Group William Frank Thompson, Jr., I.E., Town Group Edward Robert Titelman, I.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Robert Dryden Titus, M.E., Richards House Plainfield, N. J. Stroudsburg Carbondale Harbor Beach, Mich. Clearfield West Catasauqua Charleston, W. Va. A Charleston, W. Va. Scarsdale, N. Y. New Kensington Carbondale Altoona Mineola, N. Y. Shillington Cedarhurst, N. Y. Lisbon, Ohio Riegelsville Paoli Slatington Hawthorne, N. J. Carlisle Harrisburg Freeland Bethlehem Buenos Aires, Argentina Allentown Philadelphia West Pittston White Plains, N. Y. B Rockville Centre, N. Y. Bethlehem Bethlehem Drexel Hill Jersey City, N. J. Kappa North Hills Philadelphia Haledon, N. J. Bethlehem Grosse Pointe, Mich. Elmhurst, 111. New York, N. Y. Plainfield, N. J. Scranton Caldwell, N. J. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Bryn Mawr Montclair, N. J. Bethlehem Sunbury Bethlehem Bethlehem Altoona Philadelphia Edward John Toggart, I.E., Town Group Vincent Raymond Tomaselli, Ch.E., Kappa Sigma Howard Earle Tomlinson, Jr., Met.E., Alpha Tau Omega Kenneth Coulter Torrens, M.E., Delta Sigma Phi Wallace Sharpe Townsend, I.E., Delta Upsilon Robert George Tragus, M.E., Price House James Henry Trask, Ch.E., Theta Kappa Phi Walter Wesley Treichler, M.E., Town Group Salvatore Triolo, C.E., Town Group James Luke Troy, Bus., Sigma Chi Quin Phillips Turkington, Chem., Delta Phi Jesse Robert Tyson, M.E., Town Group Maurice Shiffert Tyson, I.E., Town Group Dominick Michael Vallario, Ch.E., Town Group Stewart VanVliet, Jr., Bus., Phi Delta Theta Frank Gerald Vargo, Jr., C.E., Town Group Earl Robert Velie, E.M., Beta Kappa Stephen Thomas Vetrosky, Bus., Town Group Vito Joseph Vitelli, Met.E., Taylor House C Fritz vonBergen, Ch.E., Richards House III-B Fletcher Stulen Vondersmith, Ch.E., Taylor House A Donald Edward Wagner, C.E., Drinker House III-B Richard Long Waidelich, Ch.E., Town Group William Higham Walker, II, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Gregory Fortune Walsh, M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Jack Charles Walter, Met.E., Richards House II-A Donald Bryce Walters, Ch.E., Town Group William Chevallier Waltman, M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Carleton Seymour Wastcoat, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Roy Fletcher Watson, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Theodore Lycurgers Webster, M.E., Taylor House A Charles John Weidknecht, E.E., Town Group Richard Clarence Weiler, Eng ' r., Sigma Phi David Paul Wellenkamp, Met.E., Town Group Charles McCarthy Wellons, M.E., Sigma Nu David Harrison Welsh, Arts, Kappa Sigma Delmont Eugene Wemple, Ch.E., Delta Phi Robert Edward Werner, Ch.E., Richards House IV-B Thomas Donald Wetrich, Bus., Psi Upsilon George Charles Wheeler, Ch.E., Richards House IV-A William Whigham, III, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Edward Riall White, III, E.E., Beta Kappa William Hibler White, Arts, Town Group David Rex Whitten, M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Robert Jay Wiedenman, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Burr Curtis Wilcox, M.E., Richards House IV-A Frederick Evans Wiley, Jr., M.E., Drinker House IV-A William Wallace Wiley, Bus., Alpha Chi Rho Fred William Williams, Jr., M.E., Beta Theta Pi John Dinsdale Williams, I.E., Alpha Chi Rho Richard Rhys Williams, Arts, Leonard Hall Robert Brian Williams, Bus., Taylor House D Leland Stanford Willis, Jr., Met.E., Drinker House IV-B Charles Dengler Wilson, Met.E., Town Group Bethlehem Grantwood, N. J. Rosemont West Trenton, N. J. Old Greenwich, Conn. Ledgedale Upper Darby Elizabethtown Passaic, N. J. Washington, D. C. Mountain Lakes, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Newark, N. J. Shrewsbury, N. J. Allentown Painted Post, N. Y. Bethlehem Trenton, N. J. Clifton, N. J. Bryn Mawr West Orange, N. J. Allentown Riverside, N. J. Arlington, N. J. Gates Mills, Ohio Bethlehem Upper Darby Ridgewood, N. J Baldwin, N. Y Haddon Heights, N. J Easton Buffalo, N. Y Bound Brook, N. J Pittsburgh Hackettstown, N. J Schenectady, N. Y Palmerton Hempstead, N. Y West Englewood, N. J Pittsburgh Salisbury, Md. Bethlehem Glenside Harrisburg La Grange, 111. Chester Plainfield, N. J. Lynbrook, N. Y. Summit, N. J. Bethlehem Bradford Upper Darby Bethlehem 393 James Francis Wilson, M.E., Town Group Catasauqua Robert Henry Wilson, Bus., Town Group Jenkintown Samuel James Wilson, Arts, Delta Upsilon Ben Avon Townsend Charles Wilson, I.E., Sigma Phi Buffalo, N. Y. Frank Winter, Ch.E., Beta Theta Pi Bellmore, N. Y. Kenneth Bertrand Wiss, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Short Hills, N. J. Edward Stephen Wolosin, Ch.E., Town Group Kingston Herbert George Wylie, II, I.E., Delta Upsilon Providence, R. I. Robert Renwick Wylie, I.E., Theta Xi New Kensington Richard Sheldon Yorgey, Ch.E., Town Group Reading John Zimmermann, M.E., Delta Sigma Phi Melrose Park Arthur Edward Zuckerman, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Maplewood, N. J. 394 student organizations ALPHA EPSILON DELTA President: S. Brooks Longley Vice-President: Stephen F. Balshi Secretary: A. Forrest Mann Treasurer: George R. L. Gaughran Members: Forrest V. Schumacher, Joseph S. Thomas, Richard C. Paul, Frank J. Gress, Myron I. Buchman, Lawrence Mosier, S. Brooks Longley, Stephen F. Balshi, A. Forrest Mann, George R. L. Gaughran. ALPHA KAPPA PSI President: John H. Milbank Vice-President: Richard M. Palmer Secretary: Arthur Tallaksen Treasurer: Arthur H. Rich Members: Preston W. Parvis, Arthur H. Rich, John H. Milbank, Richard M. Palmer, Gordon B. Robertson, Ralph Bowne, Richard H. Bernasco, Bernard W. Deehan, John G. deGrouchy, Badgely A. Elmes, Thomas H. Golden, III, William B. Holberton, Franklin P. Morgal, Kenneth Porter, Jr., Arthur Tallaksen. ARCADIA President: Wilkes McClave, II Vice-President: Robert C. McMichael Secretary: Ralph F. Moss Treasurer: Robert N. Simonsen Members: Frank E. Smith, Jr., William B. Logan, E. Lyster Frost, Robert P. Whipple, William J. Meikle, Archie D. Tifft, David H. Schaper, Frank S. McKenna, Wilkes McClave, II, Robert C. McMichael, Ralph F. Moss, Robert N. Simonsen. LEHIGH BACHELOR Editor-in-Chief: Forrest V. Schumacher Business Manager: Edwin H. Klein Managing Secretary: William F. Boore Staff: Tom C. Mekeel, Fiction; Robert H. Forsyth, Feature; Charles M. Thompson, Art; Myron I. Buch- man, Photographic; Philip H. Powers, Advertising; Charles M. Norlin, Fi- nancial; Robert L. Smith, Circulation; John D. Smith, Assistant Circulation; Albert R. Tucker, Distribution. BAND Director: Dr. T. E. Shields Student Director: Alfred W. Pedrick Assistant to the Student Director: Joseph C. Gabuzda Student Manager: F. Emerson Ivey Librarian: Robert W. Rouse Head Drum Major: Charles G. Kucher Assistant Drum Major: John R. Dove Assistant Drum Major: Alan F. Jones Members: Ernest G. Abell, Paul C. Andrews, Elwood B. Backensto, Curtis L. Baskin, Frank R. Berry, Richard H. Boll, Earl A. Brawn, Ray E. Brawn, William T. Buhrig, Harry F. Busch, David J. Carrigan, Charles B. Chris- man, John F. Clark, Allison W. Clokey, I. Reid Collman, Warren X. Collman, Clifton W. Corbett, James M. Cordrey, Abner S. Coriell, Jr., Robert L. Coutts, Dante De Bernadinis, Ray R. Dimmick, Robert H. Doney, Bernard J. Egan, David C. Emery, Robert D. Everett, Edward T. Finnerty, Fred J. Flemming, Hugh B. Frey, Richard A. Friend, George E. Funk, Ernest R. Gerlach, Frank P. Goodwin, Joseph H. Goth, William R. Griffith, Michael Guidon, Hibbard G. Gumpert, Robert W. Hal- lock, Albert E. Hartung, George W. Henry, Howard A. Hoch, Arthur C. Hontz, Richard D. Horlacher, Malcolm S. Johnson, David C. Kirk, Robert C. Kramer, Donald E. Krebs, Frederick A. Krone, Alfred B. Laponsky, Creigh- ton L. Lytle, Mortimer J. Marks, John W. Martin, John W. Matthews, Harry B. McCurdy, George F. Miller, John 395 X. Miller, Courter D. Mills, Andrew Mitchell, Neil S. Moreton, H. Donald Moll, James P. Mulhern, Jacob S. Nolf, Theodore Peters, Robert C. Pope, James F. Pritchard, Irving B. Remsen, C. Leigh Robinson, Charles F. Rosen- thal, Rudolf W. Samer, Richard W. Sauer, William D. Schaeffer, James S. Schwartz, Richard B. Seals, Henry B. Seifert, Rodney D. Shaffer, George J. Shelly, William J. Skinner, Robert C. Slutzker, Frank E. Smith, Samuel I. Snyder, Richard H. Sotzing, Emerson D. Spengler, Carlton H. Stauffer, Carl L. Sturgis, William R. Sultzer, Oscar D. Summers, Robert D. Titus, Joseph N. Tomlinson, Donald I. Troxel, Wil- liam P. Varner, Fletcher S. Vonder- smith, Jeffry S. Wetrich, Charles M. Wetzel, Edward R. White, Kingsley G. Williams, R. Rhys Williams, Richard F. Wood, Richard S. Yorgey, Frank H. Young, Whitney J. Young. THE BROWN AND WHITE Editor-in-Chief: John M. Roach News Manager, First Semester: Albert L. Thalhamer News Manager, Second Semester: Samuel J. Davy Editorial Manager, First Semester: William J. Meikle Editorial Manager, Second Semester: Lynn C. Bartlett Business Manager, First Semester: Craig W. Baker Business Manager, Second Semester: James A. Gordon Make-up Editor: Richard B. Palmer; News Editors, First Semester: E. Walter Edwards and G. William Wolfsten; Second Semester: Theodore Peters, Jr. and David J. Carrigan; Photographic Editor, First Semester: Myron I. Buch- man; Second Semester: Mark H. Schwarz; Sports Editor: John E. Dox- sey; Circulation Manager: Lloyd A. Croot; Local Advertising Assistant: Ralph Bown, Jr.; National Advertising Assistant: Musa J. Eways; Editorial Council: Joseph F. Kemmer, L. Ed- 396 ward Klein, Tom C. Mekeel. Members of the Board: Robert M. Baker, John S. Curtis, William B. Tilgh- man, Anthony C. Fortosis, Robert M. Schantz, Donald H. Davies, Albert E. Vetrosky, William E. Henry, Stephen Hart, Wallace R. Wirths, George J. Bleul, Peter J. Weigel, Carl Creiden- berg, George A. Logan, Hugh Boyd, K. Ted Frank, Grendon K. Sebold, James F. Lucker, Charles N. Charest, Aldo N. Ciaffardini, Frank H. Rich, William D. Riddle, Gaynor O. H. Le- Roy, Danal P. Epstein, Edwin H. Klein. First Year Men: John J. Evans, Fritz von Bergen, Alan C. Abeel, William H. Highfield, David P. Wellenkamp, E. Warren Bowden, William Whigham, Wilbur R. Peters, Gilbert J. Barenborg, James Schwab, John H. Brindle, Clay- ton A. Rugg, Lloyd E. Antonides, Ells- worth A. Stockbower, Lee A. Green- baum, Howard J. Jansen, Charles B. Austin, Andrew M. Bardagjy, Frank H. Rockett, Ralph T. Bartlett, Dunstan P. Sheldon, Stuart L. Hammond, John A. Jubell, Gregory F. Walsh, C. Jay Sul- livan, John F. Hannan, Edgar A. Frankley. CANTERBURY CLUB President: Frank H. Rockett Vice-President: F. Stuart Nolte Secretary-Treasurer: Philip A. Sweet Members: Philip A. Sweet, Donald M. Lorimer, Irving B. Remsen, Robert C. Ramsdell, A. Bruce Brown, F. Stuart Nolte, Frank H. Rockett, Randall C. Giddings, Edward S. Tattershall, Wil- liam E. Garland, David E. Richards, Jon Conforte. CHEMICAL SOCIETY President: George E. Elliott Vice-President: L. Edward Klein Secretary: Isaac M. Hunsberger Treasurer: Robert C. Boston Members: Alan C. Abeel, William W. Albert, Christian A. Anderson, Joseph F. Arbogast, Joseph A. Arnold, Edward Artim, Fred J. Attaway, Albert L. Baker, Gilbert J. Barenborg, Robert H. Bartholomew, Ralph T. Bartlett, Lester R. Bartron, Carl P. Bauer, Robert K. Beckwith, Thomas K. Begg, John C. Bennett, George H. Binns, Richard H. Boll, William T. Bostock, Robert C. Boston, Harry L. Boyer, Horace W. Boynton, Warren H. Bradford, William C. Breidinger, Samuel Breskman, Rob- ert E. Brodt, Harold W. Brong, Robert K. Brown, John R. Bullock, George W. Burgers, James H. Calla- han, Frank V. Camarda, Garret W. Cantwell, Paul R. Carl, Francis X. Carlin, Francis T. Carr, John J. Cella, Peter Cicila, Albert Clark, Jr., Willard S. Clewell, Charles R. Conklin, Alfred S. Cook, James M. Cordrey, Samuel I. Cory, William G. Critchlow, Thomas J. Croake, Samuel W. Croll, William J. Crow, Edwin H. Dafter, Alfred W. Darlow, Courtland V. Davis, Richard W. Davis, Robert C. Deckard, Richard S. DeHoff, Bruno DePaoli, Charles J. Dick, Robert F. Dieter, Howard V. Donohoe, Alan F. Dubin, Wilmer C. Eisenhard, William S. Eisner, George E. Elliott, John D. Evans, Robert D. Everett, Norman J. Faber, Edward A. Fehnel, Blaine D. Ferrell, Jack C. Fitch, Ralph J. Fittipaldi, Richard N. Ford, Ray H. Forner, Charles H. Fos- ter, Richard M. Foster, Harry J. Fried- man, Lewis Friedman, Richard A. Friend, Robert K. Gailey, James J. Gallagher, William C. Galton, Ernest Gamble, George Gawthrop, Ernest R. Gerlach, Charles K. Giles, William F. Giles, Ludwig E. Godycki, James Gore, III, Richard Gostonyi, Wesley E. Gould, Edward G. Graybill, Fred Gruenwold, Carl H. Grund, Lucius W. Guernsey, Michael Gurak, Carl E. E. Haas, Harold W. Haines, Robert W. Hallock, Ralph H. Hamilton, Johnson R. Hammond, Robert A. Hammond, John F. Hannan, Edward A. Hanudel, Milton W. Harper, Theodore N. Hell- muth, Franklin W. Helms, Frank C. Hendrickson, Pedro N. Herazo, Wil- liam H. Highfield, Louis J. Hillen- brand, Raymond W. Hinterleiter, Ralph C. Hird, Chester A. Hoffman, Clair A. Hoffman, Bernard E. Hoffner, Thomas S. C. Holberton, Orrin C. Hol- brook, S. Lawrence Hollander, Arthur C. Hontz, Foster S. Hooke, Alfred E. Horka, George W. Houston, John J. Hucker, Isaac M. Hunsberger, Frank R. Huth, Albert Y. Hyndshaw, Alfred J. Inderreiden, William H. Inglis, Floyd E. Ivey, Lewis A. James, Wil- liam D. Jardine, Russell R. Jones, Joseph E. Kareha, Richard E. Kasza- bian, David L. Keese, John Kellett, III, David C. Kirk, Harry Klapper, Jr., Carl T. Kleppinger, George A. Kovaka, Robert C. Kramer, Donald E. Krebs, Frederick A. Krone, Charles G. Kucher, Richard L. Kulp, Claude J. Kurtz, Joseph J. Kurtz, Stephen Kutosh, John C. Lampert, Arthur L. Landesman, Robert L. Lashley, Elwood D. Latimer, Theodore C. Laube, Thomas A. Law- son, Donald W. Layton, Ross W. Leaver, Jay R. Lee, Leslie R. Little, Luther D. Loch, Robert W. Logan, Jess B. Loucks, Richard M. Luckring, Herman R. Maack, Robert R. Macy, Walter E. Margie, Edwin P. Marx, Donald O. Maxwell, Bruce H. Mayer, Harry B. McCurdy, William McGee, Frank J. McGrath, Robert J. Mc- Gregor, William C. Mc James, Chandler H. McKaig, Marcello J. Mezzullo, George F. Miller, Walter E. Miller, Andrew Mitchell, Raymond T. Mohrey, William J. Meikle, Clinton H. Morse, E. Montford Mortimer, Ralph D. Moyer, Herbert M. Muller, Raffaele F. Muraca, Gilman Y. Murray, Joseph H. Myers, Harold R. Nace, James W. Needles, James W. Niemeyer, Howard H. Ockelman, Allen H. Okamoto, David C. Osborn, Preston Parr, Mason P. Pearsall, Theodore Peters, Jr., Carl H. Peterson, Harry P. Ponisi, Philip J. Prang, Robert W. Pugh, Thornton Q. Raney, Theodore A. Rassler, Irving B. Remsen, William D. Reppert, Robert R. Ressler, Hugh W. Richards, Lester R. Rollins, Alfred L. Rosener, John A. Ross, Austin W. Ruch, Philip S. Rust, Richard M. Ruthart, Arthur J. Saba- tino, John S. Saylor, Richard G. Schenk, Robert K. Schmoyer, Irwin H. Schram, Carl M. Schwab, Warren J. 397 Schwab, Kenneth A. Scott, William H. Searfoss, Henry B. Seifert, Harold J. Seigle, Nym K. Seward, Rodney D. Shaffer, Harold D. Sherwood, Edward W. Shipley, Edwin I. Shuttleworth, Robert E. Siegfried, Robert N. Simon- sen, John A. Simpson, Walter Singe- vitch, Augustine N. Smith, Ethan A. Smith, Frank E. Smith, Frederic B. Smith, John J. Somers, Harvey F. Soule, Charles W. Stahl, Charles S. Steiner, Rodman E. Street, Carl A. Streuli, William L. Stump, Robert P. Suman, George C. Tabor, Philip A. Thomas, William W. Tolley, Vincent R. Tomaselli, Joseph N. Tomlinson, James H. Trask, Albert R. Tucker, Quin P. Turkington, Dominick M. Val- lario, Harold O. Vollmer, Fritz von Bergen, Fletcher S. Vondersmith, Don- ald E. Wagner, Richard L. Waidelich, William C. Walker, Thomas A. Wal- lace, Edward L. Walter, Donald B. Walters, Glenn C. Wanich, Joseph A. Wantuck, David F. Wells, Robert E. Weltz, Donald E. Wemple, Robert E. Werner, Robert P. Whipple, Robert J. Wiedenman, Kingsley G. Williams, William G. Willmann, Nathan L. Wil- son, Edward S. Wolosin, William R. Woodruff, James W. Woods, Richard S. Yorgey. CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY President: James H. Boucher Vice-President: Sidney B. Bowne Secretary: Robert J. Fisher Treasurer: John M. Adams Members: Robert J. Stickel, James H. Boucher, John M. Adams, John J. McGee, Ralph Talazco, Lester E. Tit- low, Robert E. Ashley, John House- man, Douglas H. Rodgers, Sandor Mark, John L. McGonigle, Daniel Karpowich, Howard G. Luley, William A. Brooks, John B. Rutherford, John W. Motter, Norman C. Applegate, Car- son F. Diefenderfer, George J. Bleul, Richard L. Gerhart, George E. Fink, Roger G. Dittig, A. Newton Bugbee, Edward L. Diehl, Frank G. Vargo, Sid- ney B. Bowne, Roy Dragone, Henry J. 398 Olson. COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS President of Combined Musical Clubs: Frank E. Smith, Jr. Glee Club Glee Club Manager: Robert J. McGregor Assistant Managers: William R. Williams George C. Stone Accompanist: Frank Taylor First Tenors: Clarence F. Fehnel, John E. Gehr, George W. Henry, James Davis, Elwood D. Latimer, Jackson T. Jones, Andrew W. Little, Sandor Mark, A. Robert Tucker, William R. Wil- liams, Frank E. Smith, Jr. Second Tenors: John Gabuzda, Charles G. Kucher, Alan C. Mermann, Q. John Schwarz, Oscar D. Summers, Philip A. Sweet, Kingsley G. Williams, C. Raymond Brandt, William G. Critchlow, Bernard J. Egan, Albert Hontz, Edwin F. Hussa, Charles E. Miller, James C. Reischer, Philip S. Rust, Gordon T. Roberts, David I. Troxell, Philip T. Varrichio, Richard O. Williams, R. Rhys Williams, Ray- mond T. Meckbach, Edward G. Gray- bill. First Basses: Frank H. Bower, John K. Cochran, Richard K. Eberts, Robert D. Gilmore, Philip Lutters, Preston Parr, Robert K. Beckwith, David J Sweet, Charles R. Conklin, Paul J Franz, Joseph H. Goth, George Kreshka Kenneth A. Lambert, Quentin D Mehrkam, James W. Niemeyer, Vin cent R. Pittala, John W. Pharo, Paul L. Rieber, Edward W. Shipley, Richard R. Waer, Donald B. Walters, Charles J. Weidknecht, Walter S. Titlow, H. Sheldon Strong, William T. DeLong, Michael Guidon, III, Richard L. Ger- hart, William E. Gheen, William Gar- land, Robert J. Priestley, Norman M. Blanc, George C. Stone, Jr., Robert J. McGregor. Second Basses: William B. Logan, Kenneth H. Rahn, Gilman B. Smith, James W. Woods, Robert L. Coutts, Henry C. Farrand, S. Brooks Longley, Alexander H. Bolyn, Bruce A. Burgy, Donald N. Curtiss, L. Stanley Willis, John E. Schumacher, Francis X. Car- lin, Robert W. Rouse, Robert A. Clay- ton, Randall G. Giddings, James H. Bruen, Rudolph L. Kuehn, George H. Kohl, Theodore N. Hellmuth. Symphony Orchestra Manager: A. Forrest Mann Librarian: Robert W. Rouse Members: Paul C. Andrews, Robert H. Bartholomew, Harry F. Busch, Ber- nard J. Egan, William E. Garland, Ernest R. Gerlach, Joseph H. Goth, Harry J. Gray, William R. Griffith, Michael Guidon, Rudolph L. Kuehn, Philip B. Marsden, Harry B. McCurdy, Lawrence A. Mosier, Carl Neuendorf- fer, Donald J. Rentz, Richard W. Sauer, Fletcher S. Vondersmith, Charles M. Wetzel, Arthur J. White, Richard S. Yorgey, Frank H. Young, Whitney J. Young. Lehigh Collegians Leader: William S. Dawless Manager: John F. Belcher Members: I. Reid Collmann, Wil- liam A. Earnest, Frederick A. Krone, Charles G. Kucher, Stephen J. Litrides, James P. Mulhern, Jacob S. Nolf, Ken- neth H. Smith, Victor E. Smith, Rich- ard H. Sotzing. CUT AND THRUST President: Richard R. Bright Vice-President: Robert A. Nicrosini Secretary: Arthur L. Landesman Treasurer: Stephen Kutosh Members: Arthur L. Landesman, Lynn C. Bartlett, Richard R. Bright, Aldo N. Ciaffardini, Chester L. Finch, Panos B. Georgopulo, John L. Gretz, Richard M. Haslet, William A. Kuhar, Stephen Kutosh, Donald E. Krebs, Charles E. McGrath, Robert A. Nicro- sini, Charles M. Norlin, Frank H. Rockett, Charles H. Savage, Clarence A. Stearns, Merlin P. Walters, Kurt H. Weber. CYANIDE President: David H. Schaper Vice-President: Thomas M. Buck Secretary-Treasurer: William D. Hayes Members: Charles M. Norlin, Lynn C. Bartlett, Robert D. Bailey, Robert P. Whipple, William D. Hayes, Robert C. Boston, Thomas M. Buck, George F. Melloy, Robert W. Pugh, Samuel J. Davy, William C. Walker, William D. Schaeffer, William G. Binder, David H. Schaper, Philip H. Powers, George H. Ried, Barton R. Heinz, G. William Wolfsten, Edwin H. Dafter, William R. Taylor, John M. Stockbridge. DELTA OMICRON THETA President: Howard V. Donohoe Vice-President: William F. Boore Secretary-Treasurer: Arnold O. Putnam Members: William F. Boore, How- ard V. Donohoe, Albert W. Foster, Arnold O. Putnam, Robert P. Whipple, John R. Penn, Sumner W. Reid, David P. Scoblionko, Hugh Boyd. Intra-mural Debaters John U. Gardella, W. Thomas Bach- mann, Robert D. Mussina, Donald R. Diggs, Frank H. Rockett, F. Robert Huth, F. William Bloecher, Harold W. Hains, Sandor Mark, Leonard C. Schwab, Neal G. Bergstresser, Stuart C. Gordon, John P. Rice, David C. Emery, Ira B. Born, Lewis A. James, John S. Cooke, G. Thomas McKinley, Richard E. Penniman, Chester L. Finch, Kings- ley G. Williams, Robert H. Mathes, James J. Donohue, Richard Palmer, Alvin A. Mishkin, Jerome Y. NefT, Robert K. Beck with, Philip J. Prang, Elwyn Wolfe, Thomas H. Lawson, S. Lawrence Hollander, Lewis W. Hill, James J. McCarthy, Charles E. Lehr, Rank N. Leitner, Dale Y. Freed, C. Parker Davidson. 399 DE MOLAY CLUB President: Howard A. Hoch Vice-President: Walter L. Anders Secretary: Randall C. Giddings Treasurer: Richard M. Treco Members: Allen H. Okamoto, Al- fred E. Horka, Walter E. Anders, Wil- liam R. Schmoll, Joseph F. Arbogast, Somers H. Endicott, Wilbur Peters, Richard M. Treco, Howard A. Hoch, Edward S. Tattershall, Robert D. Wil- liams, Albert H. Thompson, Richard C. Gottschall, Randall C. Giddings, Anthony C. Fortosis, Howard H. Ockel- man, Jack C. Walter, Robert W. Rouse, Donald T. Foster, Bernard J. Mizel, William J. Meikle, James E. Davis, Wil- liam H. Highfield, John W. Pharo, Wil- liam R. Griffith, Charles S. Steiner. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY President: William A. Eisele Vice-President: Clarence M. Sanderson Secretary: W. Bertolet Bowers Treasurer: Raymond S. Willard Members: Henry L. Abbott, Ernest G. Abell, Keith W. Amish, William H. Barnard, J. Lynford Beaver, Charles S. Bennett, Loyal V. Bewley, Sidney R. Bowen, Frank H. Bower, W. Bertolet Bowers, Robert E. Byrne, Stanley Cap- Ian, John Christian, ' John F. Clark, William H. Clark, Clifton W. Corbett, Theodore R. Cortright, William A. Eisele, Howard D. Gruber, Ryland T. Hanger, Richard M. Haslet, Charles P. Herold, Frank A. Hill, Robert L. Hill, Warren E. Hoffman, Carl R. Inge- manson, John M. Kennedy, Henry C. I. Knutson, John A. Krawchuk, Donald W. Kurtz, Ralph R. Lau, Frank P. Librizzi, Stephen J. Litrides, Thomas C. MacAllister, John S. Mac- Donald, Archie R. Miller, Kay F. Miskinis, Emil F. Mitman, Douglas E. Mode, Richard D. Munnikhuysen, Lewis F. Page, George E. Parsons, John W. Parsons, Wilbur R. Peters, John W. Pharo, John A. Quincy, Charles F. 400 Rosenthal, Grendon K. Sebold, David R. Smith, Kenneth H. Smith, George W. Strohl, Walter S. Titlow, John S. Urschitz, Stuart H. Vogt, Richard R. Waer, Earle W. Wallick, Edward R. White, Raymond S. Willard, Elwyn Wolfe, Richard J. Yurkanin. THE 1942 EPITOME Editor-in-Chief: A. Bruce Brown Assistant Editor: William J. Meikle Art Editor: Jesse F. Beers Senior Section Chief: Frank S. McKenna Living Group Editor: Joseph F. Kemmer Organizations Editor: Samuel J. Davy Sports Editor: William R. Sultzer Class Editor: Edwin H. Dafter Photography Editor: Robert W. Pugh Secretary: Lynn C. Bartlett Business Manager: Theodore G. Scott Financial Manager: Edward M. Biggs Faculty Adviser: Kenneth K. Kost Sophomore Competitors: Q. John Schwarz, William H. Hebrank, Frank E. Felt, I. Harrison Levy, David P. Scoblionko, Danal P. Epstein, Albert E. Vetrosky, David J. Carrigan, H. Wil- liam Shawhan, Benjamin F. Hoffacker, Philip J. Berg, K. Ted Franck, William S. Woodside, Arthur J. White, Edwin L. Leet, John E. Doxsey, Frank W. Ber- man, Mark H. Schwarz, Donald M. Lorimer, David F. Cox. ETA KAPPA NU President: Frank P. Librizzi Vice-President: William A. Eisele Corresponding Secretary: Raymond S. Willard Recording Secretary: Grendon K. Sebold Treasurer: Clarence M. Sanderson Members: W. Bertolet Bowers, Frank H. Bower, Samuel J. Davy, Charles S. Bennett, Richard R. Waer, Walter S. Titlow, Stanley Caplan, Grendon K. Sebold, Clarence M. Sanderson, Frank P. Librizzi, William A. Eisele, Raymond S. Willard. ETA SIGMA PHI Prytanis: Welles R. Bliss Hyparchos: George H. Ried Grammateus: William R. Williams Epistolographus: Robert Ramsdell Chrysophylax: John J. Polinsky Pyloros: Carl Konolige Members: Welles R. Bliss, George H. Ried, William R. Williams, Robert C. Ramsdell, John R. Polinsky, Carl C. Konolige, Roy N. Figueroa, Joseph F. O ' Brien, Randall C. Giddings, G. Thomas McKinley, George B. Bene- dict, Anthony R. Fortosis. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY President: John H. Dudley Vice-Presidents: Robert W. Clark (I.E.) Edward F. Bodine (M. E.) Secretary: Thomas M. Buck Treasurer: Albert W. Hemphill Members: Burton E. Bauder, Robert A. Bennett, Edward F. Bodine, Charles E. Bosserman, William G. Bourne, Wil- liam R. Bowen, Glenn W. Boyer, Rich- ard R. Bright, Edwin C. Brown, Donald H. Brownlee, Frank T. Brun- dage, Thomas M. Buck, I. Russell Burkey, Solomon P. Caldwell, Robert E. Chamberlain, Robert W. Clark, Richard H. Cliff, Allison W. Clokey, Edward J. Coffey, Albert D. Corbett, Pinkney M. Corsa, Edwin H. Cum- mings, C. Parker Davidson, John H. Dudley, Francis J. Dunigan, Charles B. Dutton, Musa J. Eways, William A. Fetske, Thomas Fleischer, Robert H. Freeman, Henry W. Garvin, Gilbert D. Gaus, Russell C. Gebert, Robert E. Gengenbach, William E. Gheen, Wheeler Gilmore, John R. Given, Michael Guidon, Albert W. Hemphill, Robert H. Hicks, John B. Hill, Caleb W. Holyoke, William E. Irvin, Donald S. Johnson, John A. Kimberley, John P. Landis, Jack E. Lane, Leonard D. Larson, John R. Lees, Roderick W. Link, Philip Lutters, Roydon S. Mar- golies, P. William Marshall, Robert H. Marshall, George M. McKnight, John F. Mengel, Robert B. Miller, Jack R. Mercer, H. Donald Moll, John H. Mueller, Carl Neuendorffer ? David K. Nichols, Jacob S. Nolf, F. Stuart Nolte, Charles A. Patten, James F. Pfeffer, Clarence O. Prinkey, Arnold O. Put- nam, Paul J. Ray, John A. Read, Sum- ner W. Reid, Webster C. Roberts, Arthur E. Roslund, Richard C. Roth, Robert W. Rouse, William H. St. Clair, Robert W. Saylor, Murl W. Sears, Wil- son B. Schramm, Howard O. Schroeder, Charles H. Schumacher, Herbert O. Schutt, Leonard C. Schwab, James S. Schwartz, John M. Sexton, William J. Skinner, Quentin C. Soprano, Leslie O. Southgate, Henry C. Stieglitz, John M. Stockbridge, John S. Stokes, Edward J. Stone, Philip A. Sweet, Robert G. Tay- lor, Frank R. Thaeder, Frank P. Thomas, John A. Thurn, John P. Townsend, John D. Van Blarcom, Earl L. Weaver, James W. Witherspoon, Robert R. Young, Whitney J. Young, Allen H. Zane, Alfred L. Zanoni. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL President: Ralph F. Moss Vice-President: Oakley W. Cooke Secretary: John H. Milbank Treasurer: Henry T. Reuwer IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: H. W. Jones, T. M. Buck, D. P. Ep- stein, J. N. DeGrouchy, M. P. Pearsall, J. P. Larkin, D. M. Haire, J. F. Kem- mer. Third .Row: R. M. Palmer, R. P. Whipple, D. H. Schaper, C. F. Moore, C. E. McGrath, R. N. Simon- sen, N. Hackman, A. B. Parsons, G. W. Wolfsten. Second Row: J. D. Ryan, P. G. Butts, J. H. Kidder, C. A. John- son, W. C. Walker, K. G. Williams, W. McClave, A. D. Hinrichs, Dr. C. G. Beardslee. Front Row: G. E. Parsons, E. T. White, O. W. Cooke, J. H. Mil- bank, R. F. Moss, H. T. Reuwer, J. P. Stupp, J. J. Maloney, E. J. Cava- naugh. 4 01 IN THE CANDIDS: President Moss talks it over with Will Bradley and Harry James at the I. F. Ball; Chaper- ones at the Ball; and the students and dates enjoy the music. Endicott, Jr., Paul L. Rieber, Robert M. Long, Charles H. Savage, Paul L. Nestleroth, William K. Gregg, Chen Pao Sun, Charles B. Austin, Theodore G. Scott, Donald H. Kleppinger. LAMBDA MU SIGMA President: John J. Nitti Vice-President: Richard M. Palmer Secretary: Normand J. Wilhelmy Treasurer: Robert S. Newcomb Members: Robert N. Gusdorff, Wil- liam R. Kampfe, John D. McClay, Ray- mond T. Meckbach, John J. Nitti, Richard M. Palmer, Normand J. Wil- helmy, Robert S. Newcomb, Howard W. Riemer, Donald T. Foster, The- ophile Saulnier, Donald N. Bachman. METALLURGICAL SOCIETY President: Robert C. McMichael Vice-President: Donald H. Kleppinger Secretary: John L. Peterson Treasurer: Charles M. Norlin Members: William T. DeLong, John H. Corson, James F. Gover, Frank L. Herceg, Leon J. McGeady, Quentin D. Mehrkam, Charles M. Norlin, Burton C. Haworth, John P. Arbizanni, Rich- ard M. Treco, Charles A. Ginter, Rob- ert C. McMichael, Albert M. Miller, John L. Peterson, Jesse O. Betterton, Stephen C. Woodruff, Stephen H. Finkle, James E. Chafey, Emerson D. Spengler, Eugene M. Smith, C. Wil- liam Finnady, C. Arthur Stearns, Jr., Vito J. Vitelli, Fred J. Tillberg, Ber- nard J. Egan, Theodore G. Megas, Harold A. Grubb, David L. Kistler, Frank W. Berman, Ward A. Bradford, James B. Price, Donald M. Lorimer, J. Richard Bevan, William C. Hittinger, Richard B. Hendrick, Samuel C. Pruett, George C. Ziegenfuss, Joseph J. Buc- zynski, Frank S. McKenna, Kenneth H. Rahn, Richard E. Metius, Arthur L. Fisher, George W. Heck, John H. Gross, Evan Jones, William R. Bechdolt, Joseph Schmuk, E. Lyster Frost, Robert T. Rospond, Robert L. 402 Cahoon, George G. Zipf, Somers H. MINING AND GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY President: Richard H. Brenneman Program Chairman: Robert H. Holland Secretary: Richard B. Palmer Treasurer: Harry A. Reichenbach Members: Roy B. Cowin, Joseph H. Goth, Richard H. Brenneman, Willis D. Henry, George W. Snyder, Jack A. Smythe, Powell J. Whalen, Richard B. Palmer, Harry A. Reichenbach, Robert H. Holland, Robert M. Mclnerny, Thomas P. Bradford, John D. Ryan, William O. Gold, Robert D. Robinson, Russell M. Seward. MUSTARD AND CHEESE President: Wilkes McClave, II Vice-President: William H. Barnard Secretary: William C. Kirschner Treasurer: Oakley W. Cooke Members: Philip H. Powers, William J. Peck, John L. Loughran, Lewis J. Caulk, Arthur H. Rich, Everett F. Warner, Harry J. Friedman, Lewis Friedman, Sandor Mark, James A. Gor- don, Kilbourn Gordon, Everett A. Brit- ton, Conrad E. Kluger, Richard J. Berg, Robert N. Gusdorff, William H. Barnard, Oakley W. Cooke, Donald W. Kurtz, William C. Kirschner, Charles A. Johnson, Joseph P. Larkin, G. William Wolfsten, Robert L. Coutts, Joseph H. Heller, Wilkes McClave, II, Ross P. Vachon, William R. Sultzer, Lewis F. Page, Sheldon S. Zalkind, Joseph F. Kemmer, Alan D. Hinrichs. NEWTONIAN SOCIETY President: E. Lyster Frost Secretary: N. Clark Applegate Treasurer: Theodore Peters, Jr. Members : Carl R. Ingemanson, Courter D. Mills, Richard C. Shafer, Roy N. Figueroa, John M. Kennedy, Blaine D. Ferrel, Leonard H. Lempert, John A. Simpson, William J. Crowe, Warren R. Dix, Stephen C. Woodruff, Hugh Boyd, Jr., Howard W. Courtney, Carl A. Kendziora, Richard J. Kellar, George F. Keller, William K. Zucker, Jr., N. Clark Applegate, Harvey F. Soule, Robert Wright, Jr., Robert E. Roberson, Arthur J. White, E. Lyster Frost, Theodore Peters, Jr., Roderick W. Link, David F. Cox, Richard B. Hend- rick, Kenneth G. Swayne, John W. Par- sons, George F. Hewitt, Robert W. Lo- gan, William H. Hebrank, Toshiaki Shitaku, Frank W. Berman, William E. Belser, Abner S. Coriell, Earl W. Wallick, John E. Gehr, Robert K. Smoyer, Joseph J. Buczyski, Dale Y. Freed, Alfred L. Rosener, Robert E. Byrne. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA President: Frank S. McKenna Vice-President: Robert N. Simonsen Secretary: Claude G. Beardslee Treasurer: Richard E. Metius. Members: Frank E. Smith, Robert N. Simonsen, Richard E. Metius, A. Bruce Brown, William J. Meikle, John M. Roach, Frank S. McKenna, Jesse F. Beers, Robert S. Struble, Archie D. Tifft, John H. Norwood, Albert L. Thalhamer, Edwin H. Klein, Forrest V. Schumacher, John H. Milbank, Samuel J. Davy, Lynn C. Bartlett, Thomas M. Buck. PHI ALPHA THETA President: John R. Polinsky Vice-President: Walter Daney Secretary-Treasurer: C. William Freed Faculty Members: George B. Curtis, George D. Harmon, Lawrence H. Gip- son, William A. Aiken. Graduate Members: Paul R. Schlen- ker, Walter Daney. Student Members: John R. Polinsky, C. William Freed, Franklin B. Mayer, Franklin Himmelberger. PHI BETA KAPPA President: Jonathan B. Severs Vice-President: Robert E. Laramy Secretary: Philip M. Palmer Treasurer: Roy B. Cowin Members: William A. Aiken, Frank C. Becker, Jesse F. Beers, George B. Benedict, Welles R. Bliss, Frederick A. Bradford, A. Bruce Brown, Robert A. Buerschaper, Leonard P. Burton, Philip G. Butts, J. Calvin Callaghan, Neil Carothers, Preston B. Carwile, Glenn J. Christensen, John F. Clark, Roy B. Cowin, George B. Curtis, Edward H. Cutler, Richard M. Davis, Herbert M. Diamond, John L. Diamond, Maurice Ewing, Adelbert Ford, Walton Forstall, Jr., Tomlinson Fort, Frank J. Fornoff, Harry J. Freidman, Lawrence H. Gip- son, George D. Harmon, Garth A. Howland, John I. Kirkpatrick, Edwin H. Klein, Kenneth K. Kost, Robert E. Laramy, Robert H. Lafferty, Charles R. Larkin, Voris V. Latshaw, Robert M. Maiden, William J. Meikle, Robert Metzner, Harvey A. Neville, F. Stuart Nolte, Lowell K. Oliphant, Philip M. Palmer, Richard M. Palmer, Sherman Paul, John R. Polinsky, Arthur E. Pitcher, George E. Raynor, Joseph B. Reynolds, Edgar H. Riley, John M. Roach, James P. Sell, Jonathan B. Severs, Lloyd L. Smail, Benjamin L. Snavely, Gordon D. Southard, Albert L. Thalhamer, William R. Transue, Francis J. Trembley, John S. Tremper, Louis R. Tripp, L. Robert White. PHI ETA SIGMA President: Robert L. Smith Vice-President and Treasurer: Theodore Peters, Jr. Secretary: David F. Cox Historian: Robert S. Miltenberger Members: Roderick W. Link, Theo- dore Peters, Jr., Robert L. Smith, David F. Cox, Irving R. Collmann, John E. Gehr, David P. Scoblionko, Glenn A. Murray, Robert S. Miltenberger, Ken- neth G. Swayne, Leonard H. Lempert, Carl R. Ingemanson, Max W. Bellis, Frank J. Rhodes, N. Clark Applegate, 403 404 Robert Wright, Jr., Blaine D. Ferrel, Arthur J. White, Edward L. Diehl, Charles C. Hilton. PHYSICS SOCIETY President: A. Bruce Brown Vice-President: John T. Ransom Secretary: Maynard G. Arsove Treasurer: Leonard R. Greene Members: Charles J. Apolenis, May- nard G. Arsove, Ira B. Born, George H. Brower, William C. Brower, A. Bruce Brown, Ralph A. Evans, Leonard R. Greene, Robert S. Honeyman, John A. Karas, Alfred B. Laponsky, Robert M. Maiden, John T. Ransom, Joseph B. Reynolds, Rudolf W. Samer, Louis E. Sharpe, Albert L. Thalhamer, Kurt H. Weber, L. Robert White. PI DELTA EPSILON President: William J. Meikle Vice-President: James A. Gordon Secretary: Jesse F. Beers Treasurer: Frank E. Smith, Jr. Historian: L. Edward Klein Members: Craig W. Baker, Lynn C. Bartlett, Jesse F. Beers, Jr., Edward M. Biggs, jr., William F. Boore, Jr., A. Bruce Brown, Myron I. Buchman, Lloyd A. Croot, Samuel J. Davy, James A. Gordon, L. Edward Klein, Edwin H. Klein, William J. Meikle, Tom C. Mekeel, Charles M. Norlin, Theodore G. Scott, Forrest V. Schumacher, Frank E. Smith, Jr., Albert L. Thalhamer, Howard M. Williams, John M. Roach. PI MU EPSILON President: A. Bruce Brown Secretary: William A. Eisele Treasurer: Robert M. Maiden Members: Jesse O. Betterton, John F. Clark, Harry J. Friedman, Harold W. Haines, Frank P. Librizzi, Frank S. McKenna, Lowell K. Oliphant, Henry A. Seebald, Louis E. Sharpe, Robert N. Simonsen, John J. Somers, L. Robert White, Maynard G. Arsove, Charles S. Bennett, Stanley Caplan, Ludwig E. Godycki, Isaac M. Huns- berger, Robert W. Pugh, Hugh W. Richards, Wheeler Gilmore, Walter S. Titlow, Hans Nelken, Robert W. Saylor, Edward A. Fehnel, Richard R. Waer, William C. Walker, W. Russel Hoer- ner, Alexander Brkich, F. Stuart Nolte. PI TAU SIGMA President: Edward F. Bodine Vice-President: Robert W. Clark Corresponding Secretary: Charles H. Schumacher Recording Secretary: Harry W. Jones Treasurer: Robert S. Struble Members: Charles H. Schumacher, I. Russell Burkey, Robert W. Clark, Philip Lutters, Malcolm F. McConnell, F. Stuart Nolte, Robert S. Struble, Edward F. Bodine, C. Parker Davidson, William E. Gheen, Harry W. Jones, James F. Pfeffer, P. William Marshall, William J. Skinner, Robert G. Taylor, Frank R. Thaeder, John D. Van Blar- com, Robert R. Young, Clyde C. Ruffle, John S. Stokes, Joseph C. Gabuzda, Sumner W. Reid, Fenton R. Cloud, Philip H. Powers, John H. Mueller, Robert W. Saylor, William D. Hayes, David L. Hume, Robert E. Gengen- bach, Robert H. Forsyth, John A. Thurn, James W. Witherspoon, Thomas M. Buck. ROBERT W. BLAKE SOCIETY President: David E. Richards Vice-President: Lynn C. Bartlett Secretary-Treasurer: George H. Ried Members: Lynn C. Bartlett, A. Bruce Brown, Albert Clark, John L. Diamond, John J. Meehan, David E. Richards, George H. Ried, Jesse F. Beers, Rich- ard T. Berg, I. Reid Collmann, Ed- ward A. Fehnel, A. Forrest Mann, William J. Meikle, John R. Polinsky, David P. Scoblionko, John J. Somers, John M. Roach, Donald B. Sands, Kurt H. Weber, William R. Williams. R. W. HALL SOCIETY President: Robert E. Rowand Treasurer: Stephen F. Balshi Secretary: I. Reid Collmann Members: Walter L. Anders, John C. Andrews, Stephen F. Balshi, Frank- lin J. Chiles, I. Reid Collmann, War- ren X. Collmann, Charles J. DeWan, Donald M. Feigley, Albert G. Ferdi- nand, Lewis Friedman, George R. Gaughran, Irvin W. Gilmore, Edward F. Finnerty, Frank P. Goodwin, Ru- dolph E. Gosztonyi, Eugene C. Gott, Frank J. Gress, Dale A. Harris, Robert I. Jaslow, Henry C. Judd, James F. Kleckner, S. Brooks Longley, Creighton L. Lytle, A. Forrest Mann, Robert A. McKinley, Alan C. Mermann, Walter S. Meserve, Charles E. Miller, George F. Minde, Lawrence A. Mosier, Rich- ard C. Paul, John L. Richards, Robert E. Rowand, Forrest V. Schumacher, James A. Shafer, George J. Shelley, James E. Smith, Howard V. Soltis, Alfonso F. Soto, Joseph Thomas, David H. Welsh, William R. Griffith. SCABBARD AND BLADE Captain: John H. Dudley First Lieutenant: Theodore G. Scott, Jr. Second Lieutenant: Joseph A. Arnold First Sergeant: Archie D. Tifft Members: David R. Smith, John H. Dudley, Harry W. Jones, Theodore G. Scott, Joseph A. Arnold, Henry C. Farrand, Edward F. Bodine, Richard R. Bright, Albert Clark, Jr., A. Bruce Brown, William G. Willmann, William E. Gheen, Henry J. Olson, Alan H. Conklin, Charles B. Dutton, Archie D. Tifft, Andrew F. Leckie, William K. Remsen, Clarence A. Stearns, Chandler H. McKaig, John J. Meehan, Joseph P. Thomas, Louis F. Dellwig, Albert W. Hemphill, Robert C. Boston, Wil- liam McGee. SPORTSMAN ' S CLUB President: William P. Varner Vice-President: John P. Stupp Recording Secretary: John A. Kimberley Corresponding Secretary: William C. Cosford Treasurer: Theodore Peters, Jr. Publicity Director: Robert E. Pollock Ski Team Manager: David C. Osborn Members: William P. Varner, John P. Stupp, John A. Kimberley, William C. Cosford, Theodore Peters, Jr., Robert E. Pollock, David C. Osborn, Robert M. Kelley, Frank P. Goodwin, Robert L. Owens, Roy L. Duncan, John H. Corson, James Dunwoody, Jr., Georges R. Potter, Charles A. Austin, James E. Smith, Maurice S. Tyson, Richard S. DeHoff, Arthur B. Parsons, Robert M. Paddock, Paul J. Ray, John F. Mengil, David L. Kistler, Stephen F. Balshi, Donald T. Foster, Elwyn Wolfe, W. Bertolet Bowers, Robert Tragus, James S. Smith, L. Edward Klein, Harry G. Harnish, Carl L. Sturgis, James H. Bruen, James Meckbach, Donald W. Layton, Robert J. Murphy, Frank H. Hill, Keith Kuchar, F. Butler Roberts, Carl P. Bauer, Jack B. Rader, Robert M. Long, Arthur J. White, Stephen R. Rochester, William F. Hoffman, Don- ald M. Lorimer, John F. Donahue, Robert S. Helthall, Theodore L. Web- ster, Nathan G. Lesh, John H. Clark III, Solomon P. Caldwell, Robert E. Coffman, Kenneth A. Scott, Rudolph Kerchmar, Donald G. Sanders, Joseph M. Gladden, Robert R. Young, James F. Pritchard, Richard C. Gordon, Orrin C. Holbrook, James E. Davis, Henry C. Stieglitz, Leonard R. Constantine, Kenneth Moore, Philip G. Saitta, Lee Greenbaum, Richard Woods, Kingsley G. Williams, James H. Boucher, Wil- liam H. Barnard, Albert G. Tromer, James A. Hosford, Hubert McDonnell, William D. Miller, William E. Garland, S. Thomas Shiffer, Robert L. Lashley. STUDENT CONCERTS- LECTURES SERIES Chairman: Grendon K. Sebold Student Members: Jesse F. Beers, Wilkes McClave II, A. Bruce Brown, William J. Meikle, John M. Roach, Grendon K. Sebold. Faculty Members: George B. Curtis, T. Edgar Shields, Clarence A. Shook. 405 TA U BETA PI President: Philip Lutters Vice-President: A. Bruce Brown Corresponding Secretary: F. Stuart Nolte Recording Secretary: John F. Clark Treasurer: Charles H. Schumacher Cataloguer: Robert S. Struble Members: Edward F. Bodine, Richard M. Foster, Robert M. Maiden, Philip Lutters, Richard E. Metius, A. Bruce Brown, John T. Ransom, Clarence M. Sanderson, F. Stuart Nolte, Grendon K. Sebold, Robert S. Struble, John F. Clark, Albert L. Thalhamer, L. Robert White, Charles H. Schumacher, Mal- colm F. McConnell, Frank S. Mc- Kenna, John H. Norwood, Alexander Brkich, John J. Somers, William A. Eisele, Samuel J. Davy, Frank H. Bower, Thomas M. Buck, Kurt H. Weber, Robert E. Ashley, Robert G. Taylor, Robert J. McGregor, Robert C. McMichael, William E. Gheen, Ernest Gamble, Robert W. Clark, Albert Clark, Jr., Richard M. Luckring, John S. Stokes, I. Russell Burkey, Jesse O. Betterton, Louis E. Sharpe, Frank E. Smith, James F. Pfeffer, El wood D. Latimer, Maynard G. Arsove, Charles S. Bennett, Hugh W. Richards, John H. Mueller, Charles D. Curtis, Arthur J. White, Preston Parr, Robert K. Beckwith, John A. Thurn. TONE President: Robert K. Beckwith Treasurer: Robert L. Coutts Members: Robert K. Beckwith, Richard T. Berg, A. Bruce Brown, Fred F. Berman, Albert Clark, Jr., Robert L. Coutts, John L. Diamond, A. Forrest Mann, Carl Neuendorffer, Preston Parr, Alfred W. Pedrick, Irving B. Remsen, David E. Richards, Frank H. Rockett, Robert W. Rouse, Frank E. Smith, Kenneth H. Smith, George C. Stone, Kingsley G. Williams, Wil- liam R. Williams, James W. Woods, Jackson T. Jones, Edward R. Hughes, Robert C. Ramsdell, Robert C. Kramer, Richard S. Yorgey, Carl R. Brandt, Francis C. Taylor, George W. Henry III, Rudolf W. Samer. TOWN COUNCIL President: William B. Logan Treasurer: William H. Barnard Secretary: Edward J. Coffey IN THE PICTURE: Back Row: R. L. Kulp, W. L. Anders, L. R. White, W. C. Brower. Second Row: R. C. Kramer, W. H. White, C. G. Beardslee, L. J. Leidig, A. G. Tromer. Front Row: E. J. Coffey, W. B. Logan, F. C. Tillberg, W. H. Barnard. IN THE CANDIDS: The Executive Committee; Town Council Dance. 406 SPORTS FOOTBALL LEHIGH OPPONENT LEHIGH OPPONENT 37 Gettysburg 50 13 Hartwick 13 40 New York University 67 26 Case 33 46 Muhlenberg 47 6 Rutgers 16 45 Villanova 42 O Ursinus O 37 Muhlenberg 55 6 Penn State 40 55 Drexel 37 Buffalo 65 Scranton 70 2 Muhlenberg 7 53 Rutgers 5i Virginia 34 41 Lafayette 35 7 Lafayette 47 55 Lafayette 35 lettermen : Joseph Ambrogi, ' 42 ; Rob- ert L. Bird, ' 43 ; Donald Brownlee, ' 43 ; Ed- ward J. Cavanaugh, ' 43; Harry S. Clarke, ' 43 ; Bernard Deehan, ' 43 ; Thomas H. Golden, ' 43 ; William D. Hayes, ' 43 ; Thomas Buck, ' 43; William C. Hittinger, ' 44; R. Richard Johnson, ' 44; Claude J. Kurtz, ' 44; John C. Lampert, ' 42 ; Henry Reuwer, ' 42 ; Richard C. Schafer, ' 44; Roland D. Stoehr, ' 44; Stanley Szymakowski, ' 44; Emmet T. White, ' 42. service letters: John A. Hunt, ' 42; James F. Pfeffer, ' 42. coach, Glen Harmeson; captain, Henry Reuwer; captain-elect, Bernard Deehan; manager, William Lindsay; junior man- agers, Robert Boston, William Palmer; freshman manager, Bud Boynton. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL LEHIGH 9 20 13 Blair Rutgers Ursinus Muhlenberg Lafayette opponent 28 21 6 o 13 Numerals: Harry E. Arant; Fred J. At- taway; Hower E. Bitler; Frank W. Dickel; Winfield S. Fisher; Eugene C. Gott; Wil- liam A. Heck; Russell R. Jones; Walter F. Meserve ; Vincent P. Moravec ; John A. Must; Harold P. Shoener; Herbert G. Shoener; Harold H. Stirling; Donald E. Wagner; John D. Williams. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL LEHIGH opponent 22 Rutgers 27 38 Muhlenberg 28 58 Perkiomen 25 37 Muhlenberg 45 37 Drexel 36 34 Rutgers 5i 28 Lafayette 33 43 Lafayette 22 WRESTLING LEHIGH I I I I 22 14 3 15 18 13 30 16 opponent Kansas State 17 Yale 19 Syracuse 6 Cornell 14 Pennsylvania 23 V.M.I. 9 Rutgers 6 Penn State ' 7 Lafayette Princeton 14 JUNIOR VARSITY WRESTLING LEHIGH O PPONENT 19 Montclair Teachers 16 24 Pennsylvania 6 23 Princeton 9 BASKETBALL FRESHMAN WRESTLING LEHIGH OPPONENT LEHIGH OPPONENT 44 Princeton 53 IO Pennsylvania 22 53 Ursinus 37 16 Wyoming 14 38 Temple 60 14 Penn State 12 46 Rutgers 54 24 Lafayette 8 65 Dickinson 61 14 Princeton 14 407 LEHIGH 79 6l 70 2 58 21 52 TRACK Swarthmore Muhlenberg Haverford Ruteers OPPONENT 47 64 55 2 68 MASCAA tied for fifth with Gettysburg Lafayette 74 FRESHMAN TRACK LEHIGH OPPONENT 89 Swarthmore 27 85 Rutgers 3i 65 Lafayette 5i lettermen: Joseph Ambrogi, ' 42; Charles Bartlett, Jr., ' 42 ; Kenneth Bauder, ' 42 ; John Beriont, ' 41 ; George Elliott, Jr., ' 42; Herbert Elliott, Jr., ' 41 ; Ewen Mortimer, ' 43; Augus- tus Riemondy, ' 41; Robert Rumsey, ' 43; Edward Stone, ' 41; J. Dukes Wooters, ' 41. service letter: Warren Boyer, ' 41. numerals: Stephen A. Backsay; Donald H. Brownlee; David F. Cox; John M. Daw- son; Edward L. Diehl; Carl A. Elmes: Kay T. Franck; Harry P. Ponisi; Richard L. Rahn; Franklin J. Rhodes; Quirin J. Schwarz; Harold J. Seigle; John A. Simp- son; Stephen C. Woodruff. coach, Morris Kanaly; captain, J. Dukes Wooters; captain-elect, George Elliott, Jr.; managers, John Sipp, Robert Ulmer. TENNIS LEHIGH 6 4 8 7 6 9 5 8 6 6 3 6 6 8 9 Wake Forest Guilford Washington and Lee Virginia Military Institute University of Virginia Albright Muhlenberg Gettysburg Penn State Manhattan University of Pennsylvania Swarthmore Rutgers Temple Lafavette OPPONENT 3 3 3 2 3 o 4 1 3 3 6 3 3 FRESHMAN TENNIS 408 Hill School Blair Wyoming OPPONENT 7 5 1 LETTERMEN John H. Norw ' 41 ; Joseph D. ' 41 ; Herbert E. A3- numerals: Croake; Alan Robert Hicks, Tilley. OPPONENT Pennsylvania 8 Moravian O Rutgers 3 Muhlenberg 7 Marvin D. Kantrowitz, ' 41 ; ood, ' 42 ; Robert C. Reber, Scott, ' 42 ; J. Arthur Marvin, Bunning, ' 43 ; John R. Gray, Charles Bosserman; Thomas Dubin; Joseph Goth, Jr.; Jr. ; Ralph Lau ; Harold coach, Frederic Mercur; captain, Mar- vin D. Kantrowitz; manager, Frank E. Wiese; captain-elect, John H. Norwood. LEHIGH I 4 2 2 9 1 4 10 2 9 6 3 4 o 7 o FRESHMAN BASEBALL 3ASEBALL OPPONENT Princeton 6 Union 5 Villanova 8 Manhattan 8 Swarthmore 2 Temple 9 Rutgers 1 1 Muhlenberg 1 1 Dickinson 7 Ursinus 10 Gettysburg 3 Rutgers 1 Lafayette 13 Lafayette 5 Muhlenberg 6 Lafayette 8 LEHIGH 2 4 10 7 13 Wyoming Rutgers Blair Bordentown Perkiomen Rutgers Pennington Lafayette Lafayette OPPONENT 7 15 9 2 3 10 5 5 10 lettermen: Wayne H. Carter, ' 43; John H. Milbank, ' 42; Robert E. Goodman, ' 42; James J. Duane ' 42; Robert H. Forster, ' 42; Jesse T. Smith, ' 42; Edward A. Kister, ' 41; Robert P. Whipple, ' 43; Roland C. Stoehr, ' 43; Charles E. Boyer, ' 42; Frank F. Roberts, ' 42; William E. Loomis, ' 41; Harold H. Werft, ' 41; Robert W. Fuller, ' 43; Kerwin H. Silfi.es, ' 43. numerals: Richard Shafer; Kenneth Swayne; Harold Sherwood; Jerry Hender- shot; Blaine Ferrell; William Gold; Richard Bleser; Carson Diefenderfer; William Kron- thal; William Hittinger. coach, Paul Calvert; captain, William E. Loomis; captain-elect, Charles E. Boyer; manager, Laurence F. Dieringer. SOCCER LEHIGH OPPONENT I Army 3 O Stevens 4 I Pennsylvania 7 2 Rutgers 3 Cornell 2 2 Haverford 5 2 Swarthmore i O Princeton 3 Navy 4 Lafayette i LACROSSE LEHIGH OPPONENT 10 Lafayette 15 I Rutgers 12 I Swarthmore I I 5 Penn State 12 4 Stevens 12 6 Lafayette 7 lettermen (Club L) : Robert B. Steele, ' 42 ; John Adrian, Jr., ' 42 ; Victor M. Anido, Jr., ' 43 ; John V. Downs, ' 42 ; Ira L. Fisher, ' 43; Barton R. Heinz, ' 43; William H. Lind- say, Jr., ' 42; Robert W. Reese, ' 41 ; John M. Stockbridge, ' 43; Powell J. Whalen, ' 41; William R. Woodruff, ' 42. numerals: Ralph E. Hohman; David F. Gearhart; George M. Holderer; Malcolm S. Johnson; Harry W. Lynn, Jr.; Stanford H. Shaw; Willard L. Croft. coach, Jim Meade; captain, Robert B. Steele; captain-elect, John Adrian; man- ager, R. Harry Gunnison. FRESHMAN SOCCER OPPONENT I O Lafayette Springfield Springfield 1 Lafayette o William Bowen; John Cable; LEHIGH 7 12 2 7 numerals: Richard deGrouchy; John Ingram; Harvey Redden; Harry Shuttleworth ; Cornelius Sul- livan; Charles Wilson; Herbert Wylie; Stew- art Mclntyre; Warran Hoffman. SWIMMING FRESHMAN SWIMMING LEHIGH OPPONENT 15 Blair 42 23 Wyoming 43 20 Rutgers 45 2 1 Lafayette 36 numerals: Perry Taylor; John Keenan; William Moore; Stephen Rochester. GOLF LEHIGH OPPONENT 9 Swarthmore o 1 2 Williams 7 2 7 Rutgers 2 4 Wesleyan 5 6 J 2 Franklin and Marshall 2J 2 9 Lafayette o 3 Haverford 3 lettermen : Peter Carpenter, ' 42 ; Austen Jenkin, ' 42 ; Daniel B. McAfee, ' 42 ; Robert F. Ryan, ' 42. coach, Ralph Hutchinson; captain, Rob- ert F. Ryan; captain-elect, Daniel B. Mc- Afee; manager, David W. Burke. LEHIGH OPPONENT 24 Pennsylvania 51 44 Temple 31 36 Fordham 39 LEHIGH 50 Gettysburg 21 25 44 Swarthmore 33 CROSS COUNTRY Rutgers Swarthmore Cancelled 25 Muhlenberg 20 Haverford 1 5 Lafayette Four College Meet — Muhlenberg 33 Lehigh 35 Swarthmore 65 Lafayette 1 00 Three College Meet — Westchester 24 Lehigh 3 1 Lehigh 20 Temple 41 OPPONENT 30 30 37 45 409 FRESHMAN CROSS COUNTRY HOCKEY Lehigh 21 Lafayette 34 lettermen: Harry Boyer, Jr., ' 42; Wil- liam Clark, ' 42; Oscar Fox, ' 44; Robert Pugh, ' 43; George Stone, ' 43; William Walker, ' 43. service letter: Leonard Schnieder, ' 42. numerals: Ward A. Bradford; Ralph A. Evans; Wesley E. Gould; Richard A. Gray; Frederick E. Wiley. coach, James Gordon; captain, Leonard Schnieder (honorary) ; managers, Robert Marshall, D. R. Diggs. LEHIGH OPPONENT o Pennsylvania 2 2 St. Joseph 1 o Williams 3 4 Union 1 M.I.T. 5 2 Hamilton 9 2 Drexel 1 1 Georgetown 3 7 LaSalle 1 To be played: Penn State Franklin and Marshall LEHIGH 1384 1398 1398 1387 1389 RIFLE Army Lafayette Rutgers Drexel Maryland Navy FENCING LEHIGH OPPONENT opponent 10 Drew 7 1 389 1 1 St. Joseph 6 1259 14 Philadelphia College of Pharmacy 13 1326 12 Haverford 15 8 Temple 9 1387 12 Penn State 15 1379 17 Lafayette 10 410 THE 1942 EPITOME was designed by john peter and jack sherman, line drawings contributed by Gordon brown, and production management controlled by charles c. John- son, and EDWARD a. reisman. The coated stock is cantine ' s ashokan, natural; the text is printed on oxford antique, natural. The type employed is eleven-point baskerville, with weiss display lines. It is bound in Bancroft buckram with genuine leather label and is stamped in gold. Photography by the mccaa studios of Bethlehem, Penn- sylvania. View photography by Joseph stefel of the apeda studios, New York City. All engravings were supplied by the horan engraving company, New York City. The book was completely printed and bound at the country life press corporation, Garden City, New York, in the spring of 1942. 412


Suggestions in the Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) collection:

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945


Searching for more yearbooks in Pennsylvania?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Pennsylvania yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.