Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)
- Class of 1943
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Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 360 of the 1943 volume:
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The 1943 Epitome EDITION : 1000 COPIES Copyright, 1943, The 1943 Epitome Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Printed by Colyer Printing Company, Newark, Aeu Jersey 3T8 Q 343 DEC 8 1948 BRAPCL Published by the Senior class of LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Bethlehem, Pennsylvania EPITOME: Rear Row: Hucker, Schwarz, Sultzer, Paddock. Cox. Front Ron: Kost, Pugh, Parsons. 228134 PREFACE Ocheduled for distribution in May, the 1943 Epitome is approximately half a year late in making its campus appearance. The Epitome editor-in-chief ar- rived at a belated decision in August that he was finding it extremely difficult to complete the book; so the only partially finished yearbook was transferred to the cam- pus, where it was completed by Pi Delta Epsilon, jour- nalism fraternity. Pi Delta Epsilon takes no blame for any errors or shortcomings that the book might contain. It accepted the task of completing the book so that an obligation and a trust might be fulfilled towards the stu- dent body. to ti - HMB Bffftfi - TABLE OF CONTENTS History of the School Year 9 The Administration and Faculty 23 Who ' s Who at Lehigh University 116 The Classes 143 Organizations 147 Student Government — Dramatics and Music — Publications — Course Societies — Course Honoraries Living Groups 191 Dormitories — Fraternities — Town Sports 277 Appendix 303 Index Back of Book Packer Memorial Chapel ; ? i - J THE YEAR 1942-1943 The second year of America at War found Lehigh ' s student body slowly de- creasing in number, and the school itself undergoing many changes necessi- tated by the wartime requirements of all such institutions. The 1941-42 term was concluded, with Lehigh as yet showing few if any changes in the first six months after Pearl Harbor. The honorary fraternities held their annual elections and the seniors were graduated, the ROTC men being already in their officers ' uniforms. A few weeks after graduation though it was be- ginning to become apparent that things were different on the campus. Late in May, when the Lehigh student is usually just beginning a three-month vacation, classrooms were far from vacant. Lehigh had accelerated. For those who wished, since acceleration was not compulsory, the school was offering two eight-week semesters for the summer and planned to have three semesters per year in place of the usual two. Summer registration showed that 628 were in the new session — 104 artsmen, 128 business students, and 396 engineers. Tradition was violated here, too, in that coeds were permitted to enter Lehigh; several did choose to invade one of the male race ' s last strongholds by entering the masculinely-sacred classrooms. Thirteen freshmen also were among the male students and, of course, Cyanide took them into its protective custody by giving them a smoker. Early in June, the Alumni committee announced that George Hoban was to be the new fo otball coach, filling the vacancy left by Glen Harmenson. A Lehigh man, Hoban, ' 15, had a long, impressive record as a coach and as an official of the Eastern Football Association. The newcomer gave much optimism to the football team ' s outlook, since it had been in something of a rut for the past several years. While a student at Lehigh, Hoban had captained probably the best team ever to hit the local gridiron. In spite of the war, gas-rations, no days off, and a dozen other handicaps, alumni came back seven hundred strong to the 76th annual June Lehigh Alumni Reunion day. They paraded around the campus, displayed their class flags, dat- ing as far back as 1877, and sang the Alma Mater at the flag pole. Highlight of the weekend was a banquet at the Hotel Bethlehem, at which Donald M. Nelson, War Production Board chief, spoke from his desk in Washington over special wires to the hotel. Students were given an unofficial study vacation on the night of June 23, when Bethlehem had an all-night blackout, the first of the war. Observers from the Lookout noted, cynically, that the only lights visible in the Lehigh Valley were those from the tremendous five-mile glare from Bethlehem Steel ' s numerous plants and blast furnaces — the only bombing objective of note in the valley. Then, for one night at least, the war was forgotten, as a full moon smiled down at the 350 couples that danced to the music of Lou Breeze at the Sophomore Alumni Memorial Tower ' Saraband in Grace Hall. The housing of the girls in already-crowded Bethlehem was solved by the Dean ' s permission for the dates to sleep at the fraternities and dormitories for the big night. June 30 was an eventful and future-changing day for boys from 18 to 20, all over America, Lehigh in- cluded. On this day these youths were required to register for the draft and some 250 of the summer sessionists tramped down to the Bethlehem police station-market for the occasion. The campus took on a more war-like appearance as the ROTC basic and advanced men donned the Army sun-tans, in place of their blue lapeled uni- forms, for the hot summer drills. A Commando obstacle course was built up on old South Mountain, and students were conditioned by the strenuous run over narrow bridges, through barrels, over walls and across streams via a rope in Tarzan-fashion. Thirty men were sent to Lehigh by the Navy to take the CAA pre-flight training course at the Allen- town Airport and in the classrooms. They were housed originally in Price Hall, but were later moved to temporary barracks in Taylor Gym as their numbers increased. The Broun and White, one of the few activities of the summer session, was moved to the new Jour- nalism headquarters in Drown Hall, the entire base- ment, left empty by the removal of the commons to Lamberton Hall, being taken over for this purpose. The second eight-week term showed that 228 freshmen entered Lehigh for the last half of the summer. In fairness to the fraternities not operating over the summer, the Interfraternity council ruled that none of the newcomers would be allowed to pledge or live in a fraternity. Mustard and Cheese enlivened the summer term by presenting three plays in one night, written and produced by Lehigh men. The many students and play-goers who attended agreed that the boys gave a worthy performance. Next week was IF ball, giving the second break of the summer from the studving routine. Three Willi Hall 10 t% H tiki hundred and fifty couples danced to the music of Muggsy Spanier and orchestra, and girls were permitted to stay on campus for the second time during the summer. Then, to add to the confusion of an already bewildered student body, the faculty inaugurated a new cut system, which recognized no allowed cuts nor the unlimited absences previously given to honor students. Anyone so unfortu- nate as to miss more than twice as many classes as the course had hours was to be automatically dropped from the class, and had to petition for re-entrance — provided his cuts were due to illness. With this note ended the summer session and the weary students plodded home for a much-needed three-day vacation. Freshman week, cut this year to 6 days from the usual 11, ended in the pledg- ing of 291 men by the fraternities. Instead of the decrease in enrollment ex- pected, 1717 registered, including 648 frosh, the largest in the school ' s history. Of these 1717 men, 1100 were already in Army and Navy reserves, with the length of their stay at Lehigh still uncertain. The lowering of the draft age from 20 to 18 made the 600 uncommitted students even more doubtful of their future than those in the reserves. A big event in gridiron history was to be the Lehigh-Yale game at New Haven on Saturday, October 3 — the game to unveil Coach Hoban ' s new team. Remem- bering the new cut system, 940 students petitioned to have their Saturday classes cancelled so that they could make the trip with the team, only to have it flatly refused by the faculty, thinking of the defense-transportation needs. But even without the legal support of the Lehigh cheering section, the Brown and White team put on a good show, holding the Yale boys to a 6-6 tie for the first half, only to lose in the second — in a game destined to be one of their two losses of the season. The following Wednesday was Founder ' s Day. The annual ceremonies were held this year in Packer Chapel, with His Excellency, Alexander Louden, Neth- erlands Ambassador to the United States, being the guest speaker. Degrees were given and honors conferred as usual — and in the afternoon the Frosh beat the Sophomores in the sporting events, obtaining by this feat the privilege of re- moving their head wearing apparel on Sundays. Friday, to end the eventful week, Cornelia Otis Skinner appeared at the Student-Concert Lecture Series pro- gram in Brougal High School auditorium. A week and a half before fall houseparty the already war-conscious students crowded 1200 strong into Grace Hall for the Military assembly, the first of its kind in the University. Representatives of the Army, Army Air Corps, Navy and Marine Corps addressed the assembly, after which a question period was held. The visiting servicemen gave the various requirements of the services and indi- cated the students ' chances of being permitted to continue education at Lehigh. At the same time it was announced that the government had made $17,500 avail- able as loans to engineering and pre-medical students needing funds for tuition. After a hectic week of pre-valentine cramming, the students suddenly re- Grace Hall 13 laxed and cut loose for Fall houseparty, which fell, oddly enough, on Hallowe ' en. Friday afternoon 912 girls greeted their weekend dates, and started dressing for the informal dance at Grace Hall. Bobby Byrne and his orchestra kept the crowds dancing until two in the morning, after which organized entertainment ended until the kickoff Saturday afternoon. Hoban ' s gridiron boys put on quite a show for the gals by trouncing the Tigers from Hampton-Sydney, 51-6. After the game, the Maennerchor ' s floors sagged under the weight of some 500 couples at the traditional tea dance. After the Saturday-night, individual fraternity and dormitory parties, the girls reluctantly left South Mountain, leaving behind very sorrowful-faced Lehigh men. Then, to make the students ' sorrows greater, the school issued valentines on Monday — and then the fun was really over. The students entertained their fathers on the next weekend at the Father ' s Day battle between Lehigh and Muhlenberg, and again Lehigh was victorious, this time by a 22-6 count. The fathers went home quite a bit happier than the year before, when Lehigh was beaten. Now came the preparations for the alumni weekend, featuring the Lafayette- Lehigh game. Freshmen were busy making displays for their various living groups. After a tremendous rally and parade on Friday night, alumni and under- grads hit the roads over to Easton for the big game. Fifteen thousand jammed the stadium to see Lehigh stall the powerful Leopards to a 7-7 tie. The big event of the afternoon was the after-game riot between Lehigh and Lafayette students. The goal posts were taken by the Brown and White boys — as well as Lafayette ' s class flags and stadium equipment — against the powerful opposition of the police and Lafayette students. The riot finally ended with numerous stu- dents showing black eyes and bloody noses— much to the dismay of the faculty and administration of both schools. The following week, the first in December, the faculty rescinded their previous order, and Lehigh students were to be given New Year ' s day off — thus avoiding droopy eyelids in class on the first day of 1943. The second Wednesday in December the seniors heard Wentzel Brown, former Japanese prisoner, address their banquet on the horrors of his imprisonment. The next few weeks saw a frantic rush by students to enlist in the various serv- ices, spurred by President Roosevelt ' s announcement that enlistments would not be permitted after December 15, after which time drafting was to be the only method of joining the services. The rush was broken only by the Military Ball on the twelfth, at which Art Wendel ' s orchestra played for the students. And a week later the confused students plodded wearily homeward for a week and a half ' s vacation over Christmas. When the boys returned to their studies, many noticed new vacancies in their ranks. Over the holidays, the Marines had called out many reserves. All in all, 65 men had been taken from Lehigh in the last few months. Then out of a clear sky came the news that those who had so frantically enlisted in the Army- Drown Hall 14 . w V ' ■iC w« . ' . T!£, Ztf Mm : «.-3J _ £W£ , ' 4 •,. fe E ; - jhmS Enlisted Reserve Corps were not eligible automatically for commissions; in fact, it was said, their chances of staying in school were slim. Naturally this did not encourage heavy studying for finals — and many talked of not registering for the spring term, but the Dean ' s advice was to stay in school as long as possible, and this most students did. After finals had passed, and the usual fruitless talk about a 3-day pre-exam study period was to no avail, the first accelerated class of the war was graduated — the class of ' 43x. Joseph Grew, former United States Ambassador to Japan and author of the revealing, much-read book entitled Report from Tokio, was the speaker, warning the American public against underestimating the resourceful- ness of Japan. Dame Rumor then overtook the Lehigh campus, as she does in any nation at war. In fact, things got so far out of hand that Dean Congdon issued an official statement denying that ( 1 ) the University would be taken over, lock, stock, and barrel by any branch of the military service, and that (2) neither the arts nor business college would be discontinued. On February 2, all of Lehigh and, indeed, the whole football world was shocked by the sudden death of George W. Hoban, beloved coach of Lehigh championship team. Friends, students, townspeople, faculty and alumni paid tribute to him at impressive funeral services two days later in Packard Chapel. Coach Hoban died as a result of a heart-attack suffered while driving; his car home during his lunch hour. The Army finally came through as anticipated and the orders for 28 E.R.C. men to report for immediate active duty followed. No sooner had they been given a noisy sendoff at the station than orders for 95 more E.R.C. men to report were received. The orders for 11 of these were almost immediately rescinded, however, since they were advanced ROTC boys and senior engineers. The Air Corps then issued orders for 83 more of their reserves to report. In all, 240 stu- dents left the University for the armed services in February, and the enrollment dropped from 1430 to 1190. It was then announced by the Army that Lehigh had been selected to train Army Student Training Program (ASTP) men, starting sometime in the near future. To make matters more complicated, the Army, unlike the Navy, decided that its boys would not be allowed to participate in college athletics, thus throwing a shadow of doubt on Lehigh ' s future in the sport world, since Lehigh was to be an all Army college. In spite of the loss of several good men to the armed services, Lehigh ' s cham- pionship wrestling team went undefeated in this, the thirty-second year of the Billy Sheridan regime. The climax came when the Brown and White grapplers stopped the University of Pennsylvania ' s string of 22 consecutive victories by a 17-14 win. For the third straight time, the faculty reversed its war-policy and agreed to allow a spring houseparty — this one to be positively the last for the duration. Chemistry Building 17 Following this welcome news, was the annual Interfraternity Ball in Grace Hall. Johnny Warrington and Bobby Sherwood were the orchestras for the gala occa- sion, but a great change was evident in that the Office of Price Administration had ordered, a few days before, a ban on all pleasure driving; so the couples were forced to walk or to ride the trolley, but almost all took this without com- plaint. Some even enjoyed the novelty of being jostled on Lehigh Valley Transit Company ' s vehicles. Tradition was again violated as Arcadia decided to do away with the time- worn custom of the Freshmen wearing brow T n and white caps and oversized but- tons. The scarcity of materials was the reason for this change. Then came the biggest news of the year. On April 5 the Army was definitely going to send some 600 ASTP men to Lehigh to study as engineers. The dormi- tories w r ould have to be vacated almost immediately to make room for these boys — the now half-vacant fraternity houses taking up those forced to leave their rooms. With the arrival of these men, some 250 advance ROTC men, already in the E.R.C., would be activated and moved into the dormitories with the new- comers. But when the fateful April 5 came around no Army men were to be found and, indeed, none was even on the way; so things moved on as usual, the ROTC boys keeping out of uniform for a while longer. Nevertheless, Army officers toured the campus on an inspection of Lehigh ' s facilities, and it appeared that some day the soldiers would arrive en masse. In spite of the war and of the low r ered enrollment, it was announced that for the fall semester 200 students made the coveted Dean ' s list for superior scholar- ship, by proportion the highest number in the history of Lehigh. The faculty agreed that this was not a sign that Lehigh ' s standards were dropping, but that Lehigh men were taking their work much more seriously than in peace time, and that many of the poorer students had been called by their draft boards. Fifty-six faculty men were reported to have left the campus since Pearl Harbor, over half of whom were in the armed services, many of the remainder taking better posi- tions in other schools left vacant by men called to the colors, and in industrial work. The class of ' 44, consisting now of second-semester Juniors and first-semester Seniors, gave the next social event with a banquet at the Hotel Bethlehem, where an oft-decorated R.A.F. Wing Commander, Mi chael Judd, veteran of the North African campaign, was the guest speaker. His tales of the thrilling Eng- lish offense which drove Rommel ' s Nazi Army back across the Mediterranean stirred the 124 men present. In early April, two hundred and forty-four more men received notice, this time from the Navy, that they would be called at the end of the semester. The social fraternities at the same time received glad news that, unlike the last war, when all fraternities w T ere ordered inactive as being an unnecessary luxury, the service men, both Army and Navy, residing on the various campuses through- out the country would be permitted to pledge the houses of their choice. On April 16, just 10 days after the Army ' s never materializing arrival, Spring • 18 • Houseparty began, this one being absolutely the last, since the lack of students in the semesters to come would certainly mean a cessation of these events for the duration. The traditional Friday night dance was changed to Saturday, but it was well worth the wait, for Jimmy Lunceford, leader of one of the top-ranking negro dance bands in the country, put on one of the finest performances ever seen at a Lehigh Houseparty. The highlight of the evening was a half hour jam session immediately following the intermission, during which time Lunceford and his orchestra held even the most confirmed jive haters spellbound. The weekend went off smoothly, but the average student went out of his way to have a good time, since this would probably be his last houseparty for all times. Mustard and Cheese later in the month presented its spring production, this time a merry madness entitled Bottoms Up, a combination Hellzapoppin and musical comedy written, produced, and staged by all-male students cast. The next attraction on the campus was presented in a more military-like fashion, with the ROTC giving a field day and review at Taylor Stadium. An added attraction was a sham battle by advanced ROTC men, with blank-firing machine guns, bayonets and all the rest. At the same time the Army again promised to send the long-lost ASTP men, this time on June 5, and arrangements were again made for their arrival. A truly amazing event occurred next in the class elections late in April. Over 50 per cent of the students voted as against the usual 10 per cent of past years. The new system of balloting within the various living groups was given credit for the improvement in spirit. The semester closed with the honorary society elections and final examinations. One hundred and ninety-nine seniors, in the last normal graduation at Lehigh until three or four years after the present war, were graduated at com- mencement exercises — as compared to 335 the year before. Dr. Harold W. Dodds was the speaker for the occasion, and all of those receiving degrees agreed that they were fortunate indeed to have been permitted to conclude their studies before taking up arms for Uncle Sam. ' GH UNlVE. s ADMINISTRATION - ■.:h---r -m ■ADMINISTRATION Having supreme and final power over the actions and policies of Lehigh University, the Board of Trustees, with Dr. Eugene G. Grace at its head, consists of sixteen men, ten of whom are appointed for life, and six of whom must be alumni elected by alumni for six-year terms. In direct control of the Lniversity, however, is the President, Dr. Clement Clarence Williams, who came to Lehigh in 1935 after the retirement of Dr. Charles Russ Richards. Among Dr. illiams ' qualifications for his present position are degrees from Southern Illinois Normal School, the University of Illinois, and the University of Colorado, a varied experience as a civil engineer, and a term as Dean of Engineering at the University of Iowa. Next in command, so to speak, is Walter Raleigh Okeson, vice-president and treasurer of the University. Mr. Okeson is also secretary to the Board of Trustees and chairman of the National Football Rules Committee. The majority of the red tape necessary for the functioning of any educa- tional institution filters through the Registrar ' s office. Here, Mr. George Bartlett Curtis, Registrar and University Editor, and his staff issue averages, make up class schedules, report grades, record cuts, keep permanent records of every stu- dent at Lehigh, and edit the Catalogue, the papers of Institute of Research, and the Student Directory. Probably the hardest working man in the Alumni Building at the present time is E. Kenneth Smiley, Director of Admissions. His normal duties consist of select- ing the students who wish to enter Lehigh Lniversity by a process of interview- ing students, checking on their records and references, and acquainting them with the University. In addition to these duties, Mr. Smiley is now in charge of housing students in these war days and in preparing for the arrival of the ASTP cadets. When any student in the college comes in contact with the Administration, he usually encounters Dean Wray H. Congdon. Before coming to Lehigh, Dean Congdon went to Syracuse University and the University of Michigan for his education, held several teaching positions in China, and was professor of educa- tion at the University of Michigan. When Dean Charles Maxwell McConn left in 1938, Dr. Congdon took the post, after being Director of Admissions here for four years. Dean Congdon ' s duties include guiding students, issuing valentines , granting petitions for everything from fishing trips to proms, giving and refusing excuses, and even dropping students from the University. In handling these duties, Dean Congdon must display the correct amount of tact, firmness, sym- pathy, and understanding. Another headache which Dean Congdon has now is the problems arising from the Selective Service, the ill-fated Enlisted Reserve Corps, and the ASTP ' s coming to Lehigh. An important office to all seniors is the Placement Bureau, with E. Robins Dr. Clement C. Williams, Lehigh Lniversity President 23 Morgan and Miss Bernadine Stuber in charge. In these days, Mr. Morgan ' s function of obtaining jobs for Lehigh graduates is quite simple, since industry will take any graduate that the Armed Services reject. Mr. Frederick Ralph Ashbaugh, Bursar and Purchasing Agent for the Univer- sity, is the students ' most direct contact with the financial affairs of the college. It is here at his window in the Alumni Memorial Building that the students pay their fees, get receipts, and receive refunds. To keep the physical plant of the University in working order, Andrew Willard Litzenberger and his staff must check up on many thnigs. Under Mr. Litzen- berger ' s control come such things as lighting, heat, the lawns and shrubbery, repairs to buildings, and the timing of the bells for classes. In charge of the respective colleges of the University, the several deans of the University have under their control the administration of their academic divi- sions. Dean Tomlinson Fort of the Graduate School, head of the department of mathematics, is in charge of admitting, guiding, and giving degrees to students continuing their education. Assisting him in this work is Prof. Robert More, pro- fessor of German and Executive Secretary of the graduate Faculty. Heading the College of Engineering, with its many departments, is Dean A. Copeland Callen. Arts and Science come under the jurisdiction of Dean Philip M. Palmer, pro- fessor and head of the department of German. Famous for his radio speeches and opinions is Dean Neil Carothers, of the College of Business Administration. The Library is directed by Mr. Howard S. Leach. The job of keeping up to date, watching, repairing, and preserving 250,000 books is no child ' s play, so Mr. Leach is assisted by a group of clerks and cataloguers, who tend to the details of running the Library. There are three organizations which watch over the health of the students. The first and foremost of these is the Health Service, directed by Dr. Raymond C. Bull, who determines the general policy of the service. His chief assistant is Dr. Carl O. Keck, who listens to the stories of ills and ailments of the students and prescribes accordingly. The Department of Intercollegiate Athletics main- tains sports schedules in nine different sports and with many different schools. James A. Gordon, who in May entered the Navy, was the head of this depart- ment. Prof. Fay C. Bartlett, head of the department of physical education and intramural athletics, is in control of the physical development of the regular student. To that end, he maintains intramural schedules in many sports. In charge of University publicity is Melvin P. Moorhouse, instructor in jour- nalism and University News Bureau director. It is Mr. Moorhouse ' s job to see that Lehigh ' s intellectual life and activities are interpreted in the metropolitan press and that the activities of Lehigh students are made available in home- town papers. The Supply Bureau, student hangout and furnisher of the student ' s campus needs, is now under the supervision of Stan Heffner, for many years an assistant Dean of Undergraduates, Dr. Wray H. Congdon. 24 Hi d w ■to former Supply Bureau director, John W. Maxwell. Heading the military department and the ASTP unit on the campus is Col. Fay W. Brabson, who last year took over the duties of Col. Joseph S. Leonard. In addition to servicing regular Lehigh undergraduates in military training, the Military department now has the even larger duty of directly controlling the lives of over 700 ASTP cadets housed on the campus and enrolled in engineering and language courses. Administrative offices recorded several changes in personnel during the 1942- 1943 year. Robert E. Laramy, Lehigh graduate in 1896 and former superintend- ent of schools at Altoona, replaced Byron Hayes as associate to Kenneth Smiley, director of admissions. Mr. Hayes left Lehigh to become a lieutenant, junior grade, in the Navy. Melvin P. Moorhouse came to Lehigh from Ohio State as director of publicity to take up the news-disseminating duties formerly performed by John L. Kirk- patrick, assistant to the president, and Leonard Schick, Alumni Bulletin editor. E. Robins Morgan, Placement Bureau Director, was added to the mechanical engineering department teaching staff in the fall of 1942, to supplement Pro- fessor Larkin ' s teaching group. Mr. Morgan continued also in his capacity as placement director. In October, Miss Elsie Troeger resigned as Lamberton Hall director, to be replaced by Miss Elizabeth Raymann. In November, John L. Kirk- patrick, assistant to the president, left for the Navy to accept a commission as lieutenant, junior grade, and in February, John Maxwell, popular Supply Bureau manager, departed from the campus to become a first lieutenant in the War Department ' s Services of Supply division. Dean Wray H. Congdon ' s additional task for the year became one of interpret- ing the enlistment and induction policies of the armed services to the student body, amid much confusion of orders and counter-orders issued from govern- ment sources. The administration and faculty drew up new cut-rules during the year, featuring such changes as follows : students were to be responsible for work missed through absences, such work to be made up at the direction of the in- structor; students missing more than twice the number of classes as there were hours credit for a course were dropped from class unless granted permission to remain; a student ' s final grades were to take into consideration work missed by the student unless such work was made up. Dr. Raymond Bull, in making his annual health report to President Williams, pointed out that over 25,000 students, faculty members, and employees of the University had received advice or treatment during the year. Heaviest months for the Health service were February, March, and April, each with over 1,500 visits. Dean of Arts and Sciences, Philip M. Palmer, Page 26. Dean of the College of Business Administration, Dr. Neil Carothers, Page 26. Dean of The School of Engineering, A. Copeland Callen, Page 27. Dean of the Graduate School, Tomlinson Fort, Page 27. 28 ; 1 ■, „ y ••■% tj THE FACULTY THE year 1942-43 saw many changes take place in the Lehigh University faculty. Following Pearl Harbor and America ' s entrance into W orld W ar II, industry, research government bureaus in ashington, and the armed services began to draw heavily from the ranks of all universities in America, and cer- tainly heavily from Lehigh. Five members of the Physics department were lost by the opening of the summer semester in 1942: Dr. Frederick A. Scott, assistant professor of physics, left for M.I.T. to do research work for the government on ultra-high-frequencv: Dr. Austin R. Frey, assistant professor in Physics, and Dr. Charles R. Larkin, associate professor, left for Johns-Hopkins University to do research work: Dr. Charles E. Berger, assistant professor, resigned to take a position at Georgetown University, and Prof. Charles R. Larkin, associate professor, left for an assign- ment in the office of Scientific Research and Development, Johns-Hopkins. Prof. Henry C. Knutson, associate professor in Electrical Engineering and author on frequency-modulation in the radio field, left for W ashington to do work for the Navy, and Prof. Clarence H. Danhof, assistant professor of Eco- nomics, reported to the Transportation Equipment branch of the ar Produc- tion Board in Washington. Prof. W illiam A. Aiken, associate professor of history, left on a leave of absence, to become a first lieutenant in Military Intelligence Service. Prof. Raymond H. hite, assistant professor of Education, resigned his position to become Superintendent of Schools at Abington, Pennsylvania. To relieve the shortage of instructors in the Physics department, Prof. Harry G. Payrow, assistant professor of Sanitary Engineering, moved over to Dr. Bidwell ' s department in Physics for the summer. During the summer of 1942, the Chemistry department personnel was busy in industrial cooperation, as has long been the tradition at Lehigh. Prof. Darrel E. Mack was employed by the Carborundum Company: Robert H. Lafferty, chem- istry instructor, worked with the DuPont Film Company: Prof. Earl J. Serfass in- stalled a laboratory for the S. B. Foot Tanning Company, Red W ing. Minne- sota; Frank J. Fornoff, instructor, did research work in paints for the Pratt- FACULTY: Ashbaugh, Bull, Burkhardt, Dacey, Keck (Page 29) Laramy, Leach, Litzenberger, Morgan, Okeson Thomas, Hall Trembley, Parker Sell, Lee, Smith, Severs, Biggs Clifford. Riley, Christensen, Strauch. Brembeck CANDID: Colonel Bowel socializes. FACULTY: Jones, Kost, Moorhouse, Rights, How land I Page 30) Willard, Miller, Whitcomb, Stewart, Palmer More, Ettinger, Tremper, Crum Gipson, Godshall Wright. Fort, Smail, Lamson, Raynor Shook, Beale, Cutler, Latshaw, Van Arnam CANDID: Nerve-center of Business and English courses, Christmas-Saucon. 31 ' Au - _J — ' ■' «  . Whitney Aircraft Company; Prof. Edwin R. Theis made an investigation of plans taken over by the Alien Property Custodian: Prof. Alpha A. Diefen- derfer worked at the University analyzing bronze castings for the United States Navy; and Dr. Harvey A. Neville, chemistry department head, spent several weeks supervising the installation of a plant for the manufacture of synthetic paint brush bristles, which he had been instrumental in perfecting. Five members of the Metallurgy department spent part of the summer on a welding research project for the government ( Doan, Frye, Stout, DeLong, Trecoj, and in the Chemistry building, faculty members I Anderson, Petersen, Tucker, Nelson ) were busy doing war research on X-ray diffraction under the auspices of the National Defense Research committee. Prof. Nelson S. Hibshman, associate professor of electrical engineering, left the campus in August to take a position as head of the department of electri- cal engineering, New York University, and Dr. Cor- nelius G. Brennecke, former design engineer for R.C.A., was added to the Lehigh staff. Three more men were added to the University group in August: Dr. Charles E. Stoops, Jr., assistant professor of chemical engineering; Prof. Frederick P. Fischer, electrical engineering; and Dr. L. Tennent Lee, as- sistant professor of Education. Two new staff mem- bers were later added to the Physics department: Dr. Peter G. Bergmann, assistant professor, and Dr. Elliot W. Cheney, associate professor. In the first Brown and White of the fall semester, 1942-43, a list of new appointments, research fel- lows, graduate assistants and fellows, faculty-mem- FACULTY: Illich, Kogbetliam, Howell, Shields, Beardslee Becker, Lafferty, Graham, Barthold, McNierney Roberts, Soto Cowin, Allen Diamond. Knight. Bradford, Sutherland, S. A. Becker Eney, Fuller, Payrow, Ippen, Uhler CANDID: Science ' s glamour-spot at Lehigh, Packard Lab. 32 oers-on-leave, transfers and retirements included the following new appointments not already mentioned: Amos A. Ettinger, associate professor of history and government; Major Russell H. Johnson, assistant professor of military science; Gellert S. Alleman, instructor in English; Irwin R. Burkey, instructor in mechani- cal engineering; Paul Hessemer, instructor in civil engineering; Andre Weil, in- structor in mathematics; Gerhard Magnus, instructor in English: Melvin P. Moor- house, University news editor and instructor in journalism, and John R. Polinsky, assistant to the Registrar. On leave, not previously listed, were: Loyal V. Bewley, electrical engineering; Gordon H. Chalmers, athletics; Henry A. Kriebel, account- ing; Arthur E. Pitcher, mathematics; Maurice Ewing, physics; Paul Short, athlet- ics; Glenn Harmeson, athletics; Robert W. Mayer, finance; Adelbert Ford, psy- chology; Benjamin L. Snavely, physics; Cyril D. Jensen, civil engineering; Cledo Brunnetti, electrical engineering, and Bruce Johnston, civil engineering. Captain William M. Barrows, military science, was transferred, and the following received retirements: Howard Eckfeldt, mining engineering; Robert W. Hall, biology and Percy Hughes, philosophy. On the campus war-front, Dr. Stanley J. Thomas, biology department head, was named chief of Emergency Medical Services in Bethlehem, and Dr. Ray- mond C. Bull, Health Service head, initiated a series of twelve First Aid classes for students. Dr. Benjamin L. Miller busied himself working on a series of books on geology of Eastern Pennsylvania, as chairman of the Industrial Minerals divi- sion of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. Dr. Her- bert Diamond, economics and sociology department head, was named to head the Social Welfare division of the Council of Social Agencies in Bethlehem, and Dr. Duncan Stewart, Jr., assistant professor of Geology, studied Antarctica rocks from the first and second Byrd expeditions to determine if any mineral deposits could be found. Dean Philip M. Palmer reported that there was no drop in German department students in spite of the war. In November, the faculty relaxed from its teaching role to indulge in a Gay Nineties party, which featured old-fashioned oil lamps, gingham table-cloths, Lillian Russell gowns, sideburns, Diamond Jim Brady vests, square dancing, sing- ing, and Bowery type entertainment, all topped with a box-supper preceded by an auction of choice, beribboned parcels of food. In December, the Office for Scientific Research and Development, Washington, renewed its contract with Lehigh, to finance research in welding in the Metallur- gical department, under the direction of Professors John H. Fry, Jr., and Robert D. Stout. Dr. Thomas E. Shields, department of music head, celebrated his for- tieth vear of service as organist and choir master of the Pro-cathedral Church of FACULTY: Hessemer, Lotz, Sebastio, Mains, Neville Ullman. Theis, Anderson, Diefenderfer Ewing, Billinger Hazlehurst, Amstutz Beck, Fornoff Serfass, Smull, Stoops, Lafferty, Zettlemoyer 35 the Nativity. In the English department, Dr. J. Bnrke Severs ' s Quentin ' s Theory of Textual Criticism was published in the English Institute Annual for 1941 and in the department of history, Dr. Lawrence Gipson saw the fifth volume of his The British Empire Before the Revolution go to press. January, 1943, brought further faculty depletion when Professor Elmer C. Bratt left to become associated with the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com- merce, Washington, and Prof. Thomas F. Jones took up work in the office of the Quartermaster General of the United States Army. Both men were from the department of economics. First Lt. Joseph W. Foster arrived on the campus to replace Captain Charles E. Phillips. Richard M. Davis, instructor in economics, was inducted into the Army. Later in January, Dr. Harold P. Thomas, education department head, was commissioned a major in the Special Service division of the Army, and Dr. William L. Jenkins left the psychology department to take up duties in the United States Navy radio and sound laboratory at San Diego, Cal. On Tuesday, February 2, the campus was saddened by the sudden death of Coach George W. Hoban, stricken while driving his car. Prof. J. Calvin Callaghan, Eng- lish department, left at the end of the first semester to do graduate work at the University of Wisconsin, and backfield coach, George L. Ekaitis, accepted a com- mission as first lieutenant in the Army at Ft. Eustis, Virginia. Gerhard Magnus, English instructor, left the campus, an inductee in the Army, and Dr. L. Reed Tripp, instructor in economics, joined the Wage Stabilization division of the National War Labor Board in Philadelphia. The campus stepped up its help-win-the-war activities during the year with the addition of a Naval Ensigns ' diesel course and a basic aeronautics course for Naval Pre-Flight students, in addition to the X-ray, explosives research, and plastics-substitution developments in the chemistry laboratory. Fritz testing laboratory was put into use developing a revolutionary airplane fabrication de- sign, and the details of new metallurgical techniques were in the process of being worked out at Williams Hall. The Civil Engineering department began instruction for V ultee aircraft workers from Allentown. Following his taking a special government course in poison-gases, Dr. Harvey A. Neville, chemistry department head, conducted, with the aid of Prof. C. W. Simmons, a class in civilian defense against poison-gas. In the sports arena, Billy Sheridan took over the lacrosse coaching position, in addition to his wrestling and soccer duties. Another Army man, Capt. John F. Schwartz, left the campus to report to Camp Pickett, Virginia. In April, Dr. Neville, following the county poison-gas school conducted on the campus, set up plans for a three-day session of the State Gas specialist school, FACULTY: Greene, Heisey, Palmer, Phelps, Rhoda Walton, Beaver, Brennecke, Gruber, Larkin Butterfield, Klein Stuart, Bates Jackson, Eppes, Forstall, Dimmich, McGuiness Moog, Butts, Frye, Stout, Callen 36 April 15-17. to ne attended by civilian defense workers from seven eastern Penn- sylvania counties. Lt. Donald Small arrived on the campus to replace Captain Schwartz, assigned to a southern post. James V. D. Eppes, instructor in mechani- cal engineering, left the campus to take a teaching position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and James Gordon, director of athletics, accepted a lieu- tenancy in the Navy. Swimming Coach Dick Brown received national recognition with his under- water obstacle course designed to train service men in underwater maneuvers and escape from sinking ships. As the year closed, the faculty looked forward to a no-vacation summer in 1943. with civilian classes in full-schedule and with prospects of over 700 ASTP men arriving in Jul v. Gallagher. Bidwell. Carwile. Cheney. Agocs Buer-ehaper. Schwartz. Nelken. Brahson Bowen. Havarh. John.-on. Campbell Pierre. Foster Bartlett. Gordon Brown. Caraway. Mercur. Prendergast. Sheridan 30 ' H UN«VE SENIORS i Y WALTER LESESNE ANDERS Andy Arts {P re-Medicine) Town Group Football (1,2,3); Baseball (1,2); Rifle Club (1); Ice Hockey (2); R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society (1,2,3,4); Student Chemical Society (2,3); DeMolay Club (1,2,3,4), Chaplain (1,2), Vice-president (3), President (4); Section A, Town Council, President (3,4), Athletic Manager (3) ; Combined Councils (3). MAYNARD GOODWIN ARSOVE Moe Engineering Physics Taylor Hall, E Phi Beta Kappa; Band (1,2) ; Symphony Orchestra (1,2) ; Chess Club (1,2,3,4), President (4); Electrical Engineering Society (1,2); Physics Society (3,4), President (4); Newtonian Society (1,2), Vice-president (2); Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon, President (4); Wilbur Scholarship; Interdormi- tory wrestling (1,2,3,4). ELWOOD BRUCE BACKENSTO Woody Chemical Eng. Richards House, IV-B Track (1); Band (1,2,3); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Dormitory Sec- tion President (3,4); Interdormitory Council (3,4). ROBERT DUDLEY BAILEY Bugs Industrial Eng. Phi Gamma Delta Newtonian Society; Pi Tau Sigma; Basketball (1,2,3,4) ; Football (1,2) ; Track (1) ; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa. LYNN CONANT BARTLETT Linseed Arts (Journalism) Sigma Phi Epsilon Phi Eta Sigma, President (2); Phi Beta Kappa; Fencing (1,2,3); Brown and White (1,2,3,4) ; Editorial Council (2,3) ; Editorial Manager (3), Editor-in-chief (4) ; Freshman Handbook Editor (4) ; Epitome (2,3), Secretary (3) ; Dramatic Workshop (2) ; Debating (2,3) ; Student Concert Lecture Series Committee (4) ; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide; Phi Alpha Theta; Robert W. Blake Society, Vice-president (3,4); E. W. Brown Society, Secretary-treasurer (2); Cut and Thrust, Treasurer (2) ; Pi Delta Epsilon, Treasurer (4) . ARTHUR KIRKE BARTLEY Frosty Bus. Administration Theta Delta Chi Baseball (1) ; Football (1,4) ; Fraternity President (3) ; Interfraternity Council (2,3). BURTON EBERMAN BAUDER Burt Industrial Eng. Town Group Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). ROBERT KINGDON BECKWITH Booker Chemical Eng. Alpha Town House Phi Eta Sigma; Tone (1,2,3,4), President (3,4); Glee Club (1,2); Band (1,2); Debating (3); Student Chemical Society (2,3,4); Tau Beta Pi, Corresponding Secretary (4); Living Group Secretary (3), President (4). • 43 • WILLIAM EDWARDS BELLINGER Bill Bus. Administration Taylor Hall, B Alpha Phi Omega, Recording Secretary (4) ; Dormitory Section Athletic Man- ager (4). CHARLES SURFACE BENNETT Charlie Electrical Eng. Taylor Hall, E Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mn Epsilon, Treasurer (4) ; Student A.I.E.E.; Radio Club (1) ; Eta Kappa Nu, President (4) ; Tau Beta Pi, Treas- urer (4). RICHARD TURNEY BERG Dick Arts (Industrial Eng.) Delta Upsilon Soccer (1,3); Brown and White (1); Tone, Treasurer (2); Robert W. Blake Society; Fraternity Treasurer (4). CHARLES RICHARD BERGH Dick Bus. Administration Delta Phi Swimming (2) ; Cheerleader (2,3,4). RICHARD HENRY BERNASCO Dick Bus. Admin. Lambda Chi Alpha Swimming (1,2,3,4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Fraternity Treasurer (3,4). WILLIAM GOTTLOB BINDER, JR. Bill Bus. Admin. Delta Tau Delta Basketball (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Tennis (1); Track (1,3); Arcadia (4); Cyanide. TAYLOR ALBERT BIRCKHEAD Buster Electrical Eng. Delta Phi Newtonian Society; Wrestling (1,2,3) ; Soccer (3,4) ; Electrical Engineering So- ciety; Fraternity Vice-president (4). ROBERT LOUIS BIRD Birdie Arts {Finance) Alpha Tau Omega Wrestling (2,3,4); Football (3,4); Fraternity President (4); Interfraternity Council (3,4). 44 MORTIMER LAWRENCE BLANKET Mart Bus. Admin. Drinker House, II-A Dormitory Section Treasurer (3). ALEXANDER HAMILTON BOLYN Alex Bus. Admin. Taylor Hall, B Mustard and Cheese (3,4) ; Glee Club (1,2,3,4) ; Band (1,2). ROBERT CARLTON BOSTON Bob Chemical Eng. Phi Gamma Delta Football (3,4) ; Rifle (1,2,3) ; Student Chemical Society, Treasurer (3) ; Cyanide; Brown Key Society, President (3) ; Scabbard and Blade, First Lieutenant (4) ; Omicron Delta Kappa, Treasurer (4). FRANK HUGO BOWER Dagwood Electrical Eng. Delta Tau Delta Newtonian Society, President (2) ; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu; Soccer (3) ; Glee Club (2,3); Electrical Engineering Society (1,2,3,4), President (4); Tau Beta Pi, President (4) ; Class Banquet Chairman (3). EDWARD GEORGE BOYER, JR. Bud Mechanical Eng. Delta Upsilon Football ( 1 ) ; Fraternity Vice-president. GLENN WINFIELD BOYER Bugs Mechanical Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Basketball (1); Glee Club (2); Student A.S.M.E., Vice-chairman (4); Class Banquet Committee (2,3). THOMAS PAISLEY BRADFORD Tom Mining Engineering Theta Chi Rifle (1,3,4), Manager (4) ; Howard Eckfeldt Mining Society (2,3,4). EARL ALBERT BRAWN Industrial Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon Band (1,2,3,4) ; Fraternity Marshal (3). • 47 - RAY EDWIN BRAWN Ray Bus. Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon Band (1,2,3,4) ; Fraternity Historian (3). ANDREW HARRISON BRENNAN Schreeve Bus. Admin. Pi Kappa Alpha Hockey (1); Track (1); Fraternity Treasurer (3); Fraternity President (4); Interfraternity Council (3,4). SAMUEL BRESKMAN Smoky Chemical Eng. Sigma Alpha Mu Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3); Fraternity Alumni Re- corder (3). WILLIAM CONNER BROWER B ill Eng. Physics Alpha Lambda Omega Phi Eta Sigma, Secretary (2) ; Living Group Vice-president (3) ; Town Council (3). ROBERT KNOX BROWN Ritchie Chemical Eng. Richards House, III-A Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Dormitory Section Sophomore Representa- tive (2), Treasurer (4). JOHN HENRY BRUBAKER, JR. Jack Civil Engineering Town Group A.S.C.E. (1,2,3,4); Sportsman ' s Club (1). MYRON ISAAC BUCHMAN Mike Arts (Biology) Sigma Alpha Mu Phi Beta Kappa; Newtonian Society; Tennis (1,2,3) ; Brown and White (1,2,3,4), Photographic Editor (3,4) ; Bachelor Photographic Editor (3,4) ; Robert W. Hall Pre-medical Society; Alpha Epsilon Delta, Vice-president; Pi Delta Epsi- lon; Omicron Delta Kappa. THOMAS MATHIEU BUCK Tom Mechanical Engineering Kappa Sigma Football (1,2,3,4); Swimming (1); Lacrosse (1,2); Chairman Arcadia Hand- book Committee; Co-Business Manager of the 1946 Freshman Handbook; Pi Tau Sigma; Student A.S.M.E., Secretary-Treasurer; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi, Vice-president (4); Cyanide, Vice-pres ident (3); Arcadia, Vice-presi- dent (4) ; Interfraternity Council, President (4) ; Fraternity Vice-president (2), President (3) ; Interfraternity Council (2,3) ; Arcadia Alumni Contact Commit- tee (4) ; President, Lehigh-Bethlehem Post, Army Ordnance Association. • 48 • WILLIAM THOMAS BUHRIG Bill Arts (Chemistry) Theta Chi Band (1,2,3,4); Orchestra (1); Student Chemical Society (1,2,4); Sportsman ' s Club (1). HERBERT EDWARD BUNNING Herb Industrial Eng. Theta Kappa Phi Tennis (1,2,3,4); Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society; Stu- dent A.S.M.E.; Fraternity Auditor. GEORGE WARREN BURGERS Chemical Engineering Kappa Sigma Baseball (1) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Interfraternity Council (3,4) ; Fraternity Grand Master of Ceremonies (3), Vice-president (4). ROBERT FORREST BURROUGHS, JR. Bob Bus. Adm. Lambda Chi Alpha Interfraternity Council (3) ; Fraternity Vice-president (3). THOMAS LEE BUSHEY Tom Business Administration Theta Xi Swimming (1,2,3,4); Track (1,2,3,4); Interfraternity Council (3,4); Fraternity President (4). GEORGE JOHN BUSSMAN Bus Business Administration Psi Upsilon Football (1,3,4); Fraternity Vice-president (3), President (4). ARTHUR GEORGE BYRNE Art Arts (History) Chi Psi Wrestling (1,2) ; R. A. Lewis Wrestling Trophy. SOLOMON PUSEY CALDWELL Puse Industrial Eng. Alpha Town House Student A.S.M.E. (2,3) ; Photography Club (1) ; Sportsman ' s Club (1,2) ; Living •Group Treasurer (4). • 51 • STANLEY CAPLAN Stan Electrical Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon, Secretary (4) ; Eta Kappa Nu, Recording Secretary (4) ; Electrical Engineering Society (1,2,3,4) ; Chess Club (3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (4) . PAUL REVERE CARL, JR. Chemical Engineering Drinker House, II-A Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Dormitory Section Secretary-Treasurer (4). GERALD VINCENT CARROLL Jerry Arts (Geology) Taylor Hall, C Dormitory Section Secretary (3), Treasurer (4). WAYNE HANLEY CARTER, JR. Nick Arts (Geology) Sigma Nu Baseball (1,2,3,4). EDWARD JEROME CAVANAUGH Cav Mech. Eng. Theta Kappa Phi Football (1,2,3,4); Wrestling (1); Student A.S.M.E.; Arcadia Secretary (4); Interfraternity Council Treasurer (4) ; Fraternity President (4). FRANCIS ARNDT CHIDSEY Chid Business Administration Chi Phi Swimming (1,2,3) ; Track (1) ; Rifle (1). CHARLES BOWLES CHRISMAN Chuck Bus. Admin. Delta Tau Delta Band (3) ; Glee Club (4) ; Dormitory Section President (4). WILLIAM HENRY CLARK, JR. Bill Electrical Eng, Taylor Hall, D Newtonian Society; Eta Kappa Nu; Cross Country (2,3,4), Co-captain (4); Track (1,2,3) ; Electrical Engineering Society; Spiked Shoe Society, Vice- president (4). • 52 • • HARRY SAINT CLAIR CLARKE Business Administration Psi Upsilon Football (1,2,3,4) ; Baseball (1,3) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Fraternity Vice-president. ROBERT EDWARD COFFMAN Coffie Industrial Eng. Richards House, I Student A.S.M.E.; Sportsman ' s Club (3,4); Dormitory Section President (3,4). WARREN XAVIER COLLMANN Arts {Zoology) Theta Xi Band (1,2,3,4); Symphony Orchestra (3); R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (1,2,3,4), Vice-president (4) ; DeMolay Club (1). JOSEPH GORDON COMPTON Gordy Bus. Admin. Theta Kappa Phi Soccer (1,4) ; Fraternity Recorder (2), Executive Secretary (3). JON CONFORTE Big Jon Bus. Administration Taylor Hall, B Basketball (1,2,3); Tennis (1); Track (3); Brown and White (1); Alpha Phi Omega; Canterbury Club (3,4). EDGAR RUSSELL CONOVER, JR. Bud Mech.Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Baseball (1,3); Wrestling (1); Glee Club (1,2); Student A.S.M.E.; Interfrater- nity Council (3,4) ; Fraternity President (3). LEONARD ROBERT CONSTANT INE Connie Bus. Ad. Richards House, III-A Baseball (1); Hockey (1,2,3,4); Bachelor Advertising Manager (4); Mustard and Cheese Program Director (4) ; Industrial Engineering Society (1,2) ; Sports- man ' s Club (2,3,4) ; Class Banquet Committee (4). JOHN HUGHES CORSON Metallurgical Engineering Richards House, I Brown and White (1): Metallurgical Society (1,2,3,4), Vice-president (4); Sportsman ' s Club (1,2,3,4). 55 WILLIAM CLARK COSFORD Bill Bus. Administration Richards House, I Lambda Mu Sigma, Treasurer (4) ; Industrial Engineering Society (2) ; Sports- man ' s Club (2,3,4), Secretary (3) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3,4). ROY BURFORD COWIN, JR. Burf Arts (Geology) Sigma Chi Wrestling, Junior Manager (4) ; Howard Eckfeldt Mining Society (2,3,4) ; Alpha Phi Omega; Archery Club (1,2,3,4) ; Sportsman ' s Club (1). NIEL STAHLEY CULLINEY Arts (Economics) Theta Xi Tennis Manager (4); Cheerleader (2); R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (1,2); Brown Key Society. JOHN SEATON CURTIS Jackson Arts (Fine Arts) Theta Delta Chi Brown and White (1,2,3); Epitome (2); Student Chemical Society (1); Army Ordnance Association (3,4) ; Fraternity House Manager (3). CHARLES DWIGHT CURTISS, JR. Charlie Industrial Eng. Delta Upsilon Newtonian Society; Pi Tau Sigma; Track (1,2,3) ; Cross Country (1) ; Tau Beta Pi. EDWIN HAROLD D AFTER, JR. Daffy Chemical Eng. Lambda Chi Alpha Soccer, Junior Manager (3), Manager (4); Epitome Junior Editor (3), Senior Section Editor (4); Cyanide; Pi Delta Epsilon; Brown Key Society (3); Fra- ternity President (4). DONALD HENRY DAVIES Don Business Administration Allentown Rifle (1) ; Brown and White (2,3,4), Business Manager (4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Pi Delta Epsilon; Lehigh-Allentown Club Secretary (2). EDWARD STOWMAN DAVIS Ed Chemical Eng. Delta Sigma Phi Band (1,2,4); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Fraternity Steward (3). President (4). 56 SAMUEL JACKSON DAVY Scrubby Electrical Engineering Sigma Phi Eta Kappa Nu; Cross Country (1); Brown and White (1,2,3,4), News Editor (2), Makeup Editor (3), News Manager (3), Editor-in-chief (4); Epitome Junior Editor (3); Pi Delta Epsilon, Secretary (4); Student I.R.E.; Electrical Engineering Society; Board of Publications (4) ; Omicron Delta Kappa, Presi- dent (4) ; Tau Beta Pi, Secretary (4) ; Fraternity Treasurer (4). BERNARD WILLIAM DEEHAN Bern Football (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Track (1) Class Banquet Committee (3). Bus. Admin. Phi Gamma Delta Alpha Kappa Psi, President (4) ; JOHN GOODFELLOW DeGROUCHY Gooch Bus. Admin. Chi Phi Swimming (1,2,3); Alpha Kappa Psi, Secretary (4); Fraternity President (4). LOUIS FIELD DELLWIG Fuzzy Soccer (1,2) ; Scabbard and Blade. Arts (Geology) Richards House, II-B WILLIAM THOMAS DeLONG Bill Metallurgical Eng. Richards House, II-A Wrestling (3,4) ; Glee Club (1,2,3,4) ; Metallurgical Society (2,3,4). CHARLES JOSEPH DICK Dick Chemical Eng. Town Group Debating (2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Delta Omicron Theta. JAMES EDWARD DONOHUE Ted Business Administration Sigma Nu Ice Hockey (3,4) ; Lacrosse (3) ; Yachtsman ' s Club; Sportsman ' s Club. ROBERT WALPER DOSTER Baseball (1); Football (3). Pop Arts (Accounting) Town Group 59 ROY DRAGONE Dragon Civil Engineering Taylor Hall, C Lehigh Review ill: Bachelor (2,4) ; Student A.S.C.E. ROY LESLIE DUNCAN, JR Dune Arts I Actuarial Sci.) Richards House, I Sportsman ' s Club, Treasurer (4l: Interdormitory Council, Secretary (3); Dor- mitory Section Treasurer (2), President i 3.4 i . JAMES DUXWOODY. JR. Jim Bus. Administration Richards House, I Track Manager (1) ; Brown and bite ill: Sportsman ' s Club (1,2,3,4), Cor- responding Secretary (4). RICHARD KISTLER EBERTS Citizen Arts (Chemistry) Town Group Rifle i 1.2.3.4): Brown and White ill: Glee Club (2,3,4); Student Chemical Society i 3.4 i : Alpha Phi Omega: Sportsman ' s Club (1,2). EDWARD WALTER EDWARDS Walt Arts (Journalism i Sigma Phi Epsilon Rifle ' 1.2.3 i : Brown and White i 1.2.3,4 I , News Editor i 3 I , News Manager I 4 I : Epitome Business Staff 1 3 I : Interfraternity Handbook Editor l 3 I : Pi Delta Epsilon: Camera Club (1,2) ; Fraternity Secretary (4), Historian (4). WILLET ELLSWORTH EGGE, JR. Bill Chemistry Alpha Lambda Omega Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society 1 1.2.3,4) : Army Ordnance Society I 3.4 i . WILLIAM HARRISON EICHLIX, JR. Ike Mechanical Eng. Town Group Newtonian Society; Baseball Manager i4i : Shop Club (2l : Brown Kev Society (3). ROBERT DOUGLASS EYERETT Bob Chemistry Sigma Nn Band i 1.2.3.4 i : DeMolav Club. Secretary (2); Fraternity Commander (4). 61) £« fP S NORMAN JOSEPH FABER Bud Chemical Engineering Pi Lambda Phi International Relations Club (2,3,4) ; Fraternity Treasurer (3,4). CLARENCE FRANKLIN FEHNEL, JR. Bud Bus. Adm. Taylor Hall, E Glee Club (2,3,4); Alpha Phi Omega; Sportsman ' s Club (1); Ski Club (4); Dormitory Section Secretary (3,4). EDWARD ADAM FEHNEL Ed Chemistry Town Group Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; R. W. Blake Society (2,3,4). ROY NORMAN FIGUEROA Business Administration Phi Delta Theta Phi Beta Kappa; Newtonian Society; Eta Sigma Phi; Lambda Mu Sigma; Bas- ketball Manager (4) ; Fraternity Treasurer (3). CHESTER LEE FINCH Chet Industrial Engineering Chi Phi Fencing (1); Debating (4); Scabbard and Blade; Cut and Thrust (1,2,3,4); Army Ordnance Association (3,4) ; Fraternity Vice-president, Secretary. ROBERT JOSEPH FISHER Fish Civil Engineering Taylor Hall, C Student A.S.C.E., Secretary (3), Vice-president (4); Class Banquet Committee (1); Interdormitory Council, Secretary (4); Dormitory Section President (4). ROBERT HIGH FREEMAN Buck Mechanical Eng. Price Hall Student A.S.M.E. ; Army Ordnance Society. HUGH BARTLEY FREY Bart Electrical Eng. Richards House, II-B Band (1,2,3); Student Chemical Society (1); Electrical Enginering Society (2,3,4) ; Interdormitory Council, Treasurer (4) ; Dormitory Section President (4). ' • 63 • LEWIS FRIEDMAN Lew Arts (Chemistry) Tan Delta Phi Phi Beta Kappa; Mustard and Cheese (1,2,3,4); Student Chemical Society ( 1,2,3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4). ROBERT WATSON FULLER Baseball 1 1,2,3,4), Captain (4). Bob Industrial Eng. Lambda Chi Alpha JOSEPH CYRIL GABUZDA Joe Industrial Engineering Town Group Pi Tau Sigma (3,4), Secretary (4) ; Glee Club (2,3,4) ; Band (1,2,3,4), Assistant Leader (3), Leader (4); Class Banquet Committee (2); Living Group Vice- president (2), President (4). JAMES HENRY GALLI Jim Civil Engineering Student A. S.C.E. (1,2,3,4); Class Dance Committee (1). Richards House, IV-B HENRY WATTERSON GARVIN, JR. Hank Mech. Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Rifle (1) ; Student A.S.M.E.; Fraternity First Marshal. RANDALL CLINTON GIDDINGS Randy Arts (European Hist.) Leonard Hall Eta Sigma Phi, Vice-president (4); Mustard and Cheese (4); Glee Club (3); R. W. Blake Society (3,4); Canterbury Club (3,4); DeMolay Club (2,3,4), Secretary (3) ; Town Council (3,4), Vice-president (4). WHEELER GILMORE, JR. Mechanical Engineering Town Group Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Student A.S.M.E. (3) ; Dor- mitory Section Secretary (3). CHARLES ALBERT GINTER, JR. Chuck Metallurgical Eng. Phi Delta Theta Metallurgical Society (3,4) ; Interfraternity Council (3,4). 64 LUD WIG EDWARD GODYCKI, JR. Eddie Chemical Eng. Town Group Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society: Pi Mu Epsilon; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4). RICHARD FARRAND GOEBEL Dick Bus. Admin. Delta Upsilon Basketball, Manager (1); Tennis, Junior Manager (3); Brown and White (1,2,4), Circulation Manager (4) ; Fraternity President. THOMAS HERMAN GOLDEN Hap Bus. Admin. Phi Gamma Delta Football (2,3); Wrestling (1,2); Alpha Kappa Psi, Treasurer; Fraternity His- torian. JULES ARTHUR GOTTLIEB Julie Bus. Admin. Tau Delta Phi Newtonian Society; Fraternity Secretary (4). VINCENT FRANK GRASSO Jim Bus. Admin. Taylor Hall, B Scabbard and Blade. JOHN RAYMOND GRAY Jack Civil Engineering Theta Kappa P hi Tennis (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Student A.S.I. C. LEONARD ROBERT GREENE Butch Eng. Physics Tau Delta Phi Physics Society (2,3,4), Treasurer (3), Vice-president (4); Chess Club (1) ; Machine Shop Club (3) ; Interfraternity Council (4) ; Fraternity Treasurer (4). DAVID EVANS GREGORY Brain Bus. Administration Chi Phi Lehigh Review (1); Bachelor, Advertising Manager (2): Fraternity Secretary (2). 67 JOHN RICHARD GREENER Dick Mechanical Engineering Society (1,4). Mechanical Eng. Town Group PHILIP SCOTT GUCKES Scottie Bus. Administration Bachelor (4) ; Fraternity Vice-president (2), President (3). Phi Sigma Kappa ROBERT CHARLES HAAS Sparrow Arts (Chemistry) Student Chemical Society ( 1,2,3,4 ) ; Interfraternity Council Secretary (4). Alpha Chi Rho (4) ; Fraternity ALFRED LEWIS HAFT Al Bus. Administration Sigma Alpha Mu Williams First Prize for Debating (2); Baseball (1,3); Swimm ing, Manager (1,2) ; Tennis, Manager (2.) ; Brown and White (1,2). ROBERT EDWIN HARNISCH Bob Bus. Admin. Drinker House, III-B Baseball (1,3) ; Brown and White (1) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2). STEPHEN HART Reef Arts [Journalism) Pi Kappa Alpha Track 1 1) ; Brown and White (3,4) ; Foreign Policy Association I 3 ) ; Fraternity Secretary and Vice-president. GEORGE SOLOMON HARTMAN Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) Town Council ( 3,4) , Treasurer (3,4] Chemical Engineering Town Group Student Club Finances Committee (3,4); RICHARD MILTON HASLET Dick Electrical Eng. Town Group Track (1,2,3,4), Captain (1); Fencing (1,2,3,4); Glee Club (2,3); Student A.I.E.E. (1,2,3,4) ; Cut and Thrust (2,3,4) ; Alpha Phi Omega. 68 M k - ' ■' BURTON CLYDE HAWORTH Burt Metallurgical Eng. Metallurgical Society. Drinker House, IV-B WILLIAM DANIEL HAYES Bill Industrial Eng. Delta Upsilon Pi Tau Sigma; Football (1,2,3); Baseball (1,3,4); Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide, Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; Class Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; Interfraternity Council, Secretary (4) ; Fraternity President (4). BURT LEWIS HEIMER Business Administration Drinker House, II-B Lambda Mu Sigma; Cross Country (1) ; Swimming (1) ; Alpha Phi Omega. BARTON ROYAL HEINZ Pickles Bus. Administration Phi Gamma Delta Lambda Mu Sigma, Secretary (4) ; Football (1) ; Lacrosse (1,2,3,4) ; Swimming, Manager (3,4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Cyanide; Brown Key Society; Fraternity Treasurer (2,3,4). ALBERT WEIMER HEMPHILL, JR. Bert Mech.Eng. Drinker House, II-B Rifle (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Student A.S.M.E. (2,3,4), Treasurer (3), Chairman (4); Scabbard and Blade (3,4), Captain (4); Shop Club (2,3,4), President (3,4) ; Drinker House President (4) ; Dormitory Section Presid ent (4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4). HARRY ALBERT HEROLD, JR. Ray Industrial Eng. Lambda Chi Alpha Basketball (1,2,3); Soccer (1); Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society; Alpha Phi Omega; Interdormitory Council, Treasurer (3); Drinker House Vice-president (3); Dormitory Section President (3); Class Banquet Committee ( 3 ) . ROBERT LEON HILL Bob Electrical Engineering Alpha Chi Rho Newtonian Society; Soccer (1,2,3); Electrical Enginering Society (4); Frater- nity Steward and Treasurer (4). WILLIAM BUSHNELL HINMAN Brown and White (1); Band (1,2) (4). Bill Bus. Admin. Alpha Kappa Pi Fraternity Chaplain (3), Vice-president 71 ALAN DABNEY HINRICHS Al Industrial Engineering Sigma Chi Newtonian Society; Soccer (1,2,3); Swimming (1,2,4); Mustard and Cheese; Alpha Phi Omega; Interfraternity Council (3,4); Sportsman ' s Club (1) ; Fra- ternity Treasurer. R. WILLIAM HINTERLEITER Bill Chem. Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Brown and V. hite (2,3) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Alpha Phi Omega; Army Ordnance Association (4). WALTER RUSSEL HOERNER Russ Bus. Admin. Taylor Hall, C Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Chess Club (1) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer. WARREN EDWARD HOFFMAN Electrical Engineering Taylor Hall, D Electrical Engineering Society (1,2,3,4). WILLIAM BANE HOLBERTON Bill Bus. Admin. Delta Sigma Phi Alpha Kappa Psi; Fraternity Treasurer (2), Secretary (3), Steward (4). ROBERT HARRY HOLLAND Bob Mining Engineering Theta Chi Football (2); Geological Society, Vice-president (3), President (4); Living Group President (2). RICHARD CHARLES HOPKINS Hoppy Bus. Admin. Alpha Kappa Pi Basketball, Manager (1); Lehigh Review (1); Fraternity Sentinel (3), Presi- dent (4). FENWICK PECK HORN Fen Mechanical Eng. Taylor Hall, A Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Tau Sigma; Student A.S.M.E.; Dormitory Section President (4). • 72 • JOHN LEONARD HORN Horny Arts {Finance) Sigma Nu Baseball (1,2,3,4), Manager (2); Wrestling, Manager (1,2); Football (2); Brown and V. bite (1,2). JOHN HOUSEMAN Jack Civil Engineering Society (3,4). Civil Engineering Allentown GEORGE WILLIAM HOUSTON Mort Chemical Eng. Theta Chi Newtonian Society; Brown and White (1) ; Student Chemical Society (4). JOHN JOSEPH HUCKER Huck Chemical Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha Wrestling, Manager (1,4) ; Epitome, Financial Manager (4) ; Alphi Phi Omega, President (3,4) ; Student Chemical Society, Vice-president (4) ; Scabbard and Blade (3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4) ; Fraternity Sergeant-at-Arms (4). ISAAC MOYER HUNSBERGER Hunsy Chemistry Town Group Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society; Wilbur Freshman Prizes in English and Mathematics; William H. Chandler Sophomore Prize in Chemistry; William H. Chandler Junior Prize in Chemistry; Alumni Junior Engineering Prize; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4), Secretary (3). WILLIAM EDWARD IRVIN, JR. Bill Mechanical Eng. Theta Xi Football (1) ; Wrestling (2) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). ROBERT OTTO JENSEN Bob Arts (Geology) Taylor Hall, E International Relations Club (3,4), Secretary (4) ; Dormitory Section President (4). CHARLES ARMOND JOHNSON Swede Business Admin. Chi Psi Tennis, Manager (1,2); Wrestling (1,2); Brown and White (1,2,3); Mustard and Cheese (1,2,3,4). 75 DONALD SEIZ JOHNSON Don Mechanical Eng. Drinker House, IV-B Pi Tau Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4); Student A.S.M.E. (4); Tau Beta Pi; Interdormitory Council, President (4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3), President (4) ; Student S.A.E. (4). JOHN ATHAN KARAS Engineering Physics Drinker House, I Physics Society (2,3,4) ; Interdormitory Council (4) ; Dormitory Section Treas- urer (3), President (4). JOSEPH EDWIN KAREHA Pat Chemical Eng. Richards House, III-B Student Chemical Society (3,4) ; Lehigh Keystone Society, Treasurer (4) ; Dor- mitory Section Treasurer (4). THEODORE KELECHAVA Kelly Industrial Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Student A.S.M.E. JOSEPH FRANCIS KEMMER Joe Arts (Journalism) Lambda Chi Alpha Brown and White (1,2,3,4), Editorial Council (3), Editorial Manager (4); Epitome (3,4), Art Editor (4); Mustard and Cheese (3,4); Student Concerts- Lectures Series Committee (4) ; Pi Delta Epsilon; Fraternity President. LeROY ORDWAY KING, JR. Roy Bus. Administration Theta Chi Brown and White (2) ; Glee Club (1) ; Fraternity Treasurer (4). WILLIAM CASPAR KIRSCHNER IGrsch Chemistry Sigma Nu Swimming (1,4) ; Track, Manager (1,2) ; Mustard and Cheese (2,3,4), Secretary (3), President (4) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Student Activities Com- mittee (4); Arcadia, Secretary (4); Interfraternity Council (3,4); Senior Ball Committee (4); Fraternity House Manager (3), Vice-president (4). ROBERT CLAYTON KRAMER Bob Chemical Eng. Alpha Town House Orchestra (1,2); Band (1,2,3); Tone (3); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Arcadia (4); Town Council (3,4), President (4); Living Group President (3). • 76 • DONALD EUGENE KREBS Deacon Chemical Eng. Lambda Chi Alpha Fencing (1,2,3), Manager (3); Band (1,2,3,4); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Cut and Thrust; Fraternity Vice-president. CHARLES GIERMAN KUCHER Kuch Chemical Eng. Theta Xi Band (1,2,3,4), Drum Major (3,4); Glee Club 1 1,2,3); Collegians (3,4); Stu- dent Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Fraternity House Manager (3). WILLIAM ANTHONY KUHAR Bill Electrical Eng. Town Group Fencing, Assistant Manager (2); Fencing Service Award (3); Student A.I.E.E. (1,2,3,4) ; Cut and Thrust (2,3,4), Vice-president (4). JOSEPH JAMES KURTZ Joe Chemistry Town Group Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). ARTHUR LEWIS LANDESMAN Art Chemical Eng. Sigma Alpha Mu Newtonian Society; Fencing (1,2,3,4), Captain (1,4); Track (1,2); Brown and White (1,2,3); Student Chemical Society; Cut and Thrust (3,4), Secretary (3), President (4) ; Fraternity Secretary (2,3), Treasurer (3,4). ALFRED B. LAPONSKY Al Engineering Physics Towti Group Band (1,2,3,4) ; Orchestra (1) ; Physics Society (1,2,3,4). LEONARD DALE LARSON Swede Mechanical Engineering Theta Chi Astronomy Club (1); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Fraternity Secretary (3), Presi- dent (4). ANDREW FREDERICK LECKIE, JR. Buck Bus. Admin. Chi Psi Soccer (1); Swimming (1,2); Scabbard and Blade: Interfratemity Council (2,3) ; Chairman Class Banquet Committte (4) : Fraternity Secretary (2), Presi- dent (4). ARTHUR MORTON LEHRER Art Soccer (1) ; Fraternity President (4). Bus. Administration Tau Delta Phi LEONARD JACK LEIDIG Jack Bus. Adm. Living Group President (3) ; Town Council (3). Lambda Chi Alpha HOWARD CLIFFORD LEIFHEIT Howie Arts (Chemistry) Taylor Hall, E Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3), President (4). NATHAN GEORGE LESH Corky Electrical Engineering Price Hall Eta Kappa Nu; Student A.I.E.E. (1,2,4); Scabbard and Blade; Sportsman ' s Club (3). GUSTAV MARTIN LEVIN Gin Bus. Administration ' own Group CHARLES LOWELL LIEBAU Whitey Bus. Admin. Alpha Kappa Pi Lambda Mu Sigma; Tennis (1) ; Football (4) ; Cheerleader (1,2) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Fraternity Treasurer (3,4). THOMAS CRAWFORD MacALLISTER, JR. Mac. Elec. Eng. Price Hall Student A.I.E.E. (1,2,3,4); Alpha Phi Omega, Corresponding Secretary (3,4); Camera Club (3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (4) ; Dormitory Section Presi- dent (3,4). JOHN JOSEPH M ALONE Y, JR. Jack Mining Engineering Psi Upsilon Wrestling (1); Hockey, Manager (3,4); Brown and White (1); Howard Eck- feldt Mining Society; Interfraternity Council (3,4); Army Ordnance Associa- tion; Fraternity Secretary-Treasurer (4). 80 ARTHUR FORREST MANN Forry Arts I Biology) Town Group Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Epsilon Delta, Secretary (3), President i4i: Symphony Orchestra (1,2,3,4), Manager (3); Tone (1,2,3,4 1, Program Director (2,3); R. W. Hall Pre-medieal Society (1,2,3,4), Activities Chairman ( 3 I , President (4): R. W. Blake Society (3,4), Secretary-Treasurer (4). ROYDON SEYMOUR MARGOLIES Murph Arts (Mech.Eng.) Pi Lambda Phi Brown and White 1 1,2,4), News Editor ( 2 ) : International Relations Club ( 1,2) ; fraternity Secretary (3). WILLIAM BLAKE McCLENACHAN, III Cross Country (1,2,3) ; Track (1,2). Moe Arts (Fin.) Lamba Chi Alpha LEON JOSEPH McGEADY Mac Metallurgical Engineering Town Group Metallurgical Society; American Society for Metals. JOHN JOSEPH McGEE Mac Civil Engineering Alpha Lambda Omega Swimming I 3 I : Student A.S.C.E. ( 1,2,3,4), Treasurer (4) : Scabbard and Blade: Alpha Phi Omega. WILLIAM McGEE Willy Chemical Engineering Alpha Lambda Omega Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Scabbard and Blade; Army Ordnance Asso- ciation ( 3,4) . FRANCIS STEVENS McGUINESS Frank Mech.Eng. Richards House, II-A ROBERT MICHAEL McINERNEY Mac Arts (Geol.) Alpha Lambda Omega Howard Eckfeldt Mining Society; fraternity Treasurer (4). 83 WILLIAM CHARLES McJAMES Mike Chemical Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Football (2) ; Brown and White (1,2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). CHANDLER HAYES McKAIG Chan Chemical Eng. Phi Gamma Delta Basketball, Manager (1,2,3) ; Baseball (1) ; Swimming (3,4) ; Student Chemical Society; Scabbard and Blade, Secretary; Brown Key Society. JOHN JOSEPH MEEHAN Jack Arts (English) Town Group Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Williams Prize in English (2) ; Wilbur Prize in English (2); R. W. Blake Society (1,2,3,4), President (4); Scabbard and Blade. QUENTIN DEWEY MEHRKAM Q.D. Arts (M ' t ' Vgy) Alpha Lambda Omega Band (1) ; Glee Club (3) ; Metallurgical Society (1,2,3,4). JACK ROOS MERCER Mechanical Engineering Richards House, IV-A Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (4). PHILIP HORACE MILLER Flip Business Administration Tau Delta Phi Soccer (1) ; Archery (1,2,3) ; Fraternity Treasurer (4). RICHARD EARLE MILLER Student Chemical Society. Dick Chemistry Northampton GEORGE FRANCIS MINDE Arts (Zoology) R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society (3,4), Treasurer (4) Richards House, IV-B- 84 JACKSON FROELICHER MITCHELL Bus. Administration Psi UpsUon Lehigh acht Club, Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; Fraternity Secretary i 3.4 I . HARVEY DONALD MOLL Don Mechanical Engineering Taylor Hall. E Band (1,2,3) ; Glee Club (2,3,4) : Double Quartette (4); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). ROBERT CONDIT MOORE Moo Civil Engineering Kappa Alpha Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society: Band 1 1,2 ) : Student A.S.C.E.: Fraternity Secretary (3) , President 1 4 I . WARREN KING MORGAN, JR. Morg. Electrical Eng. Alpha Town House Glee Club (1,2): Alpha Phi Omega: Electrical Engineering Society 1 1,2.3.4 : Army Ordnance Association ( 4 i . FRANK LeCROW MORGAL Business Administration Phi Delta Theta Basketball (1): Alpha Kappa Psi: Class Dance Committee (3); Fraternity Treasurer (4) . EWEN MONTFORD MORTIMER Monty Chemical Engineering Town Group Basketball (1) ; Track 1 1,2,3,4 ) ; Student Chemical Society: Spiked Shoe Society. JAMES MAURY MORRIS, JR. Burly Metallurgical Eng. Delta Tau Delta Football 1 1 ) ; Track, Manager I 4 ) : Brown and hite (3) . JOHN HAINES MUELLER Mechanical Engineering Taylor Hall, B Phi Eta Sigma: Newtonian Society: Pi Tau Sigma, President i4i : Tau Beta Pi: Industrial Enginering-Mechanical Engineering Society I 2,3.4 i : Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Scabbard and Blade (4); Interdormitory Council. Vice-president (4); Dormitory Section Treasurer (3), President (4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3). • 87 • JAMES PAUL MULHERN Tobin Business Administration Theta Kappa Phi Band (1,2,3,4); Dance Orchestra (1,2,3,4), Leader (4); Fraternity Financial Secretary (2), President (3). RAFFAELE FRANCESCO MURACA Chemistry Town Group Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Engineer ' s Club, Vice-president (3). HAROLD RUSS NACE Rube Chemistry Drinker House, III-B Phi B eta Kappa; Track (1,2,4); Swimming (3); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). HARVEY HANS NELKEN Harvo Mechanical Eng. Sigma Alpha Mu Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Pi Tau Sigma; Swimming (1,2,3,4); Ski Team (3,4); Cosmopolitan Club (1,2,3,4). PAUL LAVERN NESTLEROTH Nesty Metallurg. Eng. Taylor Hall, C Soccer (1) ; Dormitory Section Secretary (4). CARL NEUENDORFFER Neuf Mechanical Engineering Taylor Hall, B Symphony Orchestra (1,2,3); Tone (1,2,3,4); Machine Shop Club (1,2,3,4); Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-president (4); Industrial Engineering-Mechanical En- gineering Society (2); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Dormitory Section Secretary (2), President (4). JAMES WALTER NIEMEYER Jim Chemical Engineering Phi Delta Theta Basketball, Manager (2,3,4); Bachelor, Music Editor (4); Student Chemical Society (3,4); Fraternity President (3,4). CHARLES McMILLAN NORLIN Chuck Metallurgical Eng. Sigma Chi Wrestling, Manager (1,2); Basketball, Manager (1); Baseball (1); Soccer (1,2,3); Fencing (1,2,3,4), Captain and Manager (1); Brown and White (2); Business Manager of Freshman Handbook (4) ; Bachelor, Financial Manager (3), Business Manager (4); Board of Publications (4); Metallurgical Society, Treasurer (3), President (4); Pi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Cut and Thrust (1,2,3,4); Arcadia, Vice-president (4); Fraternity Vice-president (3), President (4). 88 id r 1 KENNETH HAROLD NORRIS, JR. Ken Industrial Eng. Alpha Chi Rho Basketball, Manager (1) ; Fencing (1) ; Brown and White (1,2); Bachelor (3); Mustard and Cheese (4); Cheerleader (2,3,4), Head (4); Fraternity President (4). ZENON EDWIN NOWICKI Lambda Mu Sigma. Zeke Business Administration Town Group HARRY LESTER OLMSTEAD Hank Mechanical Eng. Phi Sigma Kappa Football (1); Review (1) ; Student A.S.M.E. (4); Army Ordnance Association (4); Fraternity Inductor (3). ARTHUR MEAD OVER Art Mechanical Engineering Delta Phi Soccer (1,2,3,4) ; Student A.S.M.E. (4) ; Army Ordnance Association (4) ; Inter- fraternity Council (3,4) ; Fraternity President (4). RALPH DOMINICK PALAZZO Shorty Civil Engineering Town Group Wrestling (1) ; Student A.S.C.E. (1,2,3,4) ; Camera Club (1,2,3). ELBRIDGE WILLIAM PALMER L.E. Bus. Administration Beta Theta Pi Track, Manager (1) ; Football, Manager (1,2,3,4) ; Brown Key Society; Interfra- ternity Council (3,4) ; Fraternity President (3). RICHARD BRADBURY PALMER Dick Arts (Geology) Theta Delta Chi Brown and White (1,2,3), Sports Editor (3), Makeup Editor (3); Glee Club (1,2) ; Howard Eckfeldt Mining Society (1,2,3,4), Treasurer (3), Secretary (4) ; Pi Delta Epsilon, President (4) ; Board of Publications; Fraternity Herald (1). DONALD BRUCE PARISH Corky Business Administration Theta Xi Newtonian Society; Tennis (1); Dormitory Section Secretary (2); Fraternity House Manager (4). 91 PRESTON PARR, JR. Ritchie Chemical Engineering Richards House, IH-A Phi Beta Kappa: Phi Eta Sigma; Glee Club (2,3) ; Tone (2,3,4) ; Delta Omicron Theta: Student Chemical Society ( 1,2,3,4) ; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Interdormitory Council, President (4) ; Arcadia, President (4) ; Dormitory Sec- tion President (4). ARTHUR BARRETTE PARSONS, JR. Art Bus. Administration Kappa Alpha Epitome, Business Manager (4) ; Brown and White (2) ; Sportsman ' s Club (3,4), Secretary (4) ; Pi Delta Epsilon; Interfraternity Council (3,4) ; Fraternity Vice- president (4) . MASON PRATT PEARSALL Mase Chemical Engineering Sigma Phi Cross Country (1,2,3) ; Track (1,2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Frater- nity President (4). WILLIAM JARVIS PECK Business Administration Delta Tau Delta Lambda Mu Sigma (3,4), Vice-president (4) ; Mustard and Cheese (2,3,4), Vice- president (4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Arcadia (4) ; Fraternity House Manager (3). ALFRED WINSLOW PEDRICK Al Business Administration Theta Xi Swimming (1); Band (1,2,3,4), Drum Major (2), Leader (3,4); Tone (2,3); Symphony Orchestra ( 1 ) ; Fraternity Treasurer (2,3,4). LEONARD FRANCIS PENITSCH Pennick Bus. Adm. Alpha Lambda Omega Football (1). ROBERT EDWARD POLLOCK Bob Bus. Adm. Richards House, I Lambda Mu Sigma; Mustard and Cheese (3,4), Secretary (3); Student Con- certs-Lectures Series Committee; Sportsman ' s Club (1,2,3,4), Publicity Director ( 3 ) , Vice-president ( 4 ) . KENNETH PORTER Business Administration Delta Upsilon Golf (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Newtonian Society; Alpha Kappa Psi, Vice-presi- dent (4). • 92 - w y - PHILIP HENRY POWERS, JR. Phil Mechanical Eng. Delta Tau Delta Pi Tau Sigma; Newtonian Society; Mustard and Cheese 2,3.4 i. Electrical Man- ager (3), Technical Director (4); Lehigh Review ill: Bachelor, Financial Manager I 2 ) , Advertising Manager l 3 ) : Student A.S.M.E. i 4 i : Pi Delta Epsilon: Cvanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Fraternity House Manager (3), Guide (4). ALAN EDWARD PRICE Al Arts (Social Institutions) Sigma Alpha Mu Football 1 1 ) ; Basketball (1) ; Interfraternity Council I 3,4 I : Fraternity Presi- dent (4). CLARENCE ORLAND PRINKEY Mechanical Engineering Theta Xi Newtonian Society; Track Manager ill; Industrial Enginering-Mechanical En- gineering Society (3,4). ROBERT WILLMAR PUGH Pug Chemistry Taylor Hall, D Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon: Newtonian Society; Cross Country 1 1,2.3 I : Track (1,2,3) ; Epitome, Photography Editor (3), Editor-in-Chief (4) : Pi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa: Tau Beta Pi: Interdormitory Council. Secretary (4) ; Class Banquet Committee I 3 ) : Dormitory Section President (4) ; Student Chemical Societv I 3,4). ARNOLD OSCAR PUTNAM Putt Industrial Eng. Alpha Town House Skiing I 3) ; Debating 1 1,2,3,4) ; Delta Omicron Theta, Secretary (3), Vice-presi- dent (4) ; Scabbard and Blade (4); Student A.S.M.E. i 3 i : Class Banquet Com- mittee (3) ; Arcadia (4); Town Council, President (4) ; Living Group Treasurer (2), Vice-president (4). ROBERT COLE RAMSDELL Robin Arts I Geology) Cosmopolitan Club Soccer (1,2,); Tone (3,4); Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer 14): Howard Eckfeldt Mining Society (1,2,3,4); Badminton Club: Canterbury Club 1 1.2.3.4 i, Secre- tarv-Treasurer (4) ; Town Council, Secretary (4 : Living Group President. HARRY ARCHIBALD REICHEXBACH, JR. Reichy Min. Eng. Town Group Howard Eckfeldt Mining Engineering Society I 2,3,4 I . WILLIAM K. REMSEN, JR. Bill Industrial Eng. Richards House, IV-B Track, Manager 1 1,2 ) ; Shop Club ( 2,3) ; Scabbard and Blade I 3.4 I . • 95 • HUGH WARREN RICHARDS Chemical Engineering Taylor Hall, D Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Tau Beta Pi; DeMolay Club (3,4) ; Class Dance Committee (4). GEORGE HORACE REID Padre Arts (Greek) Leonard Hall Phi Beta Kappa; Football (1); Glee Club (1); Faculty Chorus (1,2,3,4); Eta Sigma Phi, Vice-president (3), President (4); R. W. Blake Society, Secretary- Treasurer (3) ; Chapel Committee (3,4) ; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa, Vice- president (4) ; Badminton Team; Town Council (3) ; Living Group President (3,4) ; Class Banquet Committee (4). ARTHUR THOMAS ROBB, JR. A. T. Chemical Eng. Richards House, III-A Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3). FRANK FREDERICK ROBERTS Frankhouse Met. Eng. Beta Theta Pi Baseball (1,2,3) ; Metallurgical Society (1,2,3,4). ARTHUR ELFORD ROSLUND Buck Mechanical Eng. Taylor Hall, D Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Dormitory Section President (4); Student S.A.E. (4). RICHARD CHARLES ROTH Dick Industrial Engineering Theta Xi Pi Tau Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Tau Sigma; Freshman Prize in Industrial Engineering; Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society; Tau Beta Pi; Engineer ' s Ball Committee (4) ; Fraternity Vice-president (3,4). ROBERT WILSON ROUSE Bob Mechanical Engineering Town Group Band (2,3,4), Librarian (3,4); Symphony Orchestra (3,4), Librarian (3,4), Assistant Leader (3,4); Glee Club (3,4); Tone (2,3,4), President (4); Faculty Operetta Orchestra (3); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); DeMolay Club (2,3,4), Chap- lain ( 3 ), President (4). ROBERT SEYMOUR RUMSEY Arts (Economics) Delta Upsilon Track (1,2,3,4), Captain (4) ; Interfraternity Council (4). • 96 • JOHN DONALD RYAN J.D. Arts (Geology Delta Sigma Phi Swimming (1,2,3,4) ; Howard Eckfeldt Mining Engineering Society (3,4) ; Scab- bard and Blade (3,4); Interfraternity Council (3,4); Fraternity Treasurer (3), Vice-president (4). DONALD GEORGE SANDERS Don Mechanical Eng. Price Hall Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Sportsman ' s Club (3); DeMolay Club (1,2); Army Ordnance Association (4). ANTHONY JOSEPH SANT ANTONIO Tony Mechanical Eng. Price Hall Student A.S.M.E. (4) ; Shop Club (3,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4). RICHARD WINFIELD SAUER Dick Chemistry Taylor Hall, D Track (1,2,3); Wrestling (2,3,4); Band (1,2,3,4); Student Club Finances Com- mittee (4) ; Tau Beta Pi. ROBERT WEBSTER SAYLOR Bob Mechanical Eng. Alpha Town House Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Pi Tau Sigma; Pi Tau Sigma Freshman Prize in Mechanical Engineering; John R. Wagner Prize; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Glee Club (1,2) ; Living Group Secretary (3,4). WILLIAM DWIGHT SCHAEFFER Bill Chemistry Sigma Nu Soccer (1,2,3,4), Captain (1,4); Band (1,2,3 I: Symphony Orchestra (1,2); Stu- dent Activities Committee (4) ; Student Club Finances Committee (4) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa. ROBERT MACK SCHANTZ Sanchez Bus. Administration Phi Delta Theta Swimming (1) ; Brown and White (2,3,4), Business Manager (4) ; Pi Delta Epsi- lon. DAVID HENRY SCHAPER Gus Civil Engineering Phi Gamma Delta Swimming (1,2,3,4), Captain (1,4); Cyanide, President (3); Omicron Delta Kappa; Arcadia (3); Interfraternity Council, Vice-president (4); Fraternity President (4). • 99 • RICHARD GREY SCHENCK Dick Chemical Engineering Kappa Sigma Band (1,2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Fraternity Treasurer (3), Presi- dent (4). VICTOR EDWARD SCHERMERHORN, JR. Skimmer Bus. Adm. Theta Xi Lambda Mu Sigma (3,4), President (4) ; Skiing (3,4) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sports- man ' s Club (3,4) . GEORGE JOSEPH SCHNEIDER Jim Bus. Administration Phi Sigma Kappa Basketball (1,2) ; Lacrosse, Manager (1) ; Fraternity Treasurer (3,4). WILSON BOHNETT SCHRAMM Cap Mech. Eng. Richards House, IV-A Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4) ; Interdormitory Council, Treasurer (4). HERBERT OWEN SCHUTT Herb Mechanical Engineering Town Group Baseball (1) ; Shop Club (2) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). WARREN JOSHUA SCHWAB Chemistry Town Group RODNEY DANIEL SHAFFER Rock Chemical Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Band (1,2,3) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). CHARLES ELIAS SIEGER Eli Electrical Engineering Allentown Student Chemical Society (1) ; Scabbard and Blade. • 100 - ROBERT EDWIN SIEGFRIED Zeke Chemical Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Newtonian Society: Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Scabbard and Blade; Army Ordnance Association ( 3,4) . WALTER SINGLEVICH Doc Chemical Engineering Town Group International Relations Club (3,4), Vice-president (3), President (4); Student Chemical Society (3,4). JAMES SCHRIEVER SMITH Jim Industrial Engineering Town Group Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (4) ; Sportsman ' s Club (3). JOSEPH EARL SMITH, JR. Joe Mechanical Eng. Phi Sigma Kappa Lacrosse (1,2); Shop Club (1,2); Student A.S.M.E. (1,2,4); Fraternity Inductor (3). ROBERT CHADWICK SMITH Smitty Arts [Geology) Alpha Lambda Omega Football 11,2,3). JOHN ARCHIBALD SMYTHE Jack Arts (Geology) Kappa Alpha Track (1,2,3); Cross Country (4); Wrestling (3); Glee Club (4); Fraternity Secretary (4) . QUENTIN CLETUS SOPRANO Clete Mechanical Eng. Alpha Lambda Omega Pi Tau Sigma; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4) ; Scabbard and Blade (3,4) ; Army Ord- nance Association (3,4). CHARLES WESLEY STAHL Wes Chemical Eng. Delta Sigma Phi Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). • 103 • EDWARD WILLIAM STARKE, JR. Stookie Chemistry Delta Sigma Phi Student Chemical Society (2,3,4); Fraternity House Manager (3,4), Secretary (4). CLARENCE ARTHUR STEARNS, JR. Otto Arts (Psychology) Chi Phi Fencing (1); Yachting (1,2,3,4); Metallurgical Society; Cut and Thrust; Scab- hard and Blade; Fraternity Historian (2,3). HENRY CHARLES STIEGLITZ Hank Mech. Eng. Richards House, III-A Student A.S.M.E. (3,4) ; Shop Club (2,3,4) ; Sportsman ' s Club (3,4). JOHN MONTAGUE STOCKBRIDGE Stocky Industrial Eng. Chi Psi Wrestling (1,2,3,4), Captain (4); Lacrosse (1,2,3,4); Class Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; Arcadia, Treasurer (4) ; Class Dance Committee (4) ; Class Banquet Com- mittee (4); Cyanide; Fraternity Vice-president. GEORGE CHICKERING STONE Arts (Fine Arts) Chi Psi Soccer (1); Cross Country (3); Tone (1,2,3,4), Treasurer (4); Glee Club (2,3,4) ; Fraternity Secretary (4), Historian (4). CARL ARTHUR STREULI Art Chemistry Taylor Hall, D Bachelor (3) ; Student Chemical Society (1,3,4). WILLIAM MOSS STROUSE Engineering Physics Pi Lambda Phi Fencing (1); Physics Society (1,2,3,4); R. W. Blake Society (4); Fraternity Vice-president (3), Treasurer (4). WILLIAM LESTER STUMP Bill Chemical Engineering Town Group Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Army Ordnance Asso- ciation (4). 104 WILLIAM ROBB SULTZER Shultz Arts (Economics) Delta Sigma Phi Epitome, Sports Editor (3), Assistant Editor (4) ; Mustard and Cheese (1,2,3,4) ; Band (1,2,3,4). PHILIP ANTHONY SWEET, JR. Phil Mechanical Eng. Phi Delta Theta Glee Club (2,3,4) ; Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (2,3,4); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Canterbury Club (2,3,4), Secretary-Treasurer (3), President (4) ; Army Ordnance Association (4) ; Student S.A.E. (4). ROBERT STANLEY SWOYER Bob Chemistry Alpha Lambda Omega Band (1,2,) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). GEORGE CARL TABOR Chemical Engineering Drinker House, III- A Student Chemical Society (2,3,4) ; Interdormitory Council (4) ; Dormitory Sec- tion President (4) . WILLIAM ROBERTS TAYLOR Bill Arts {Accounting) Delta Tau Delta Basketball, Manager (2,3) ; Tennis (1,2,3,4) ; Cyanide; Fraternity Treasurer (3). JOSEPH PIDGEON THOMAS, JR. Joe Business Administration Theta Xi Scabbard and Blade, Treasurer; Fraternity Vice-president. PHILIP ADAMS THOMAS Phil Chemical Engineering Alpha Chi Rho Soccer, Manager (1,2,3,4); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Brown Key Society (1,2,3,4) ; Chess Club (2,4) ; Army Ordnance Association (3,4) ; Frater- nity Chaplain (3), Vice-president (4). CHARLES McDOWELL THOMPSON Industrial Engineering Kappa Sigma Bachelor (2,3,4), Art Editor (3,4); Fraternity Secretary (2), Vice-president (3,4). 107 JOHN RICHARD THOMPSON Dick Bus. Administration Town Group PAUL McNEEL THRASHER, JR. Electrical Engineering Taylor Hall, D Student A.I.E.E. (3,4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (4). JOHN ALEXANDER THURN Twitch Mech. Eng. Drinker House, II-A Pi Tau Sigma; Soccer (1,2,3); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4); Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Camera Club (1,2,3) ; Dormitory Section President (4). LESTER EDWIN TITLOW Les Civil Engineering Alpha Lambda Omega Student A.S.C.E., President (4). WALTER STOCKTON TITLOW, JR. Walt Elec. Eng. Richards House, IV-A Phi Eta Sigma, Treasurer (2) Newtonian Society, Secretary (2) ; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu, Secretary (3,4) ; Glee Club (1,3,4) ; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (2,3,4) ; Student A.I.E.E. (3,4) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3,4). WALTER SCOTT TOMKINSON Walt Bus. Administration Theta Xi Phi Beta Kappa; Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Lambda Mu Sigma; Dor- mitory Section, Treasurer (3). JOHN PLATT TOWNSEND Jack Mechanical Eng. Richards House, III-A Pi Tau Sigma, Corresponding Secretary (4) ; Newtonian Society; Basketball (1,2) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4) ; Scabbard and Blade (3,4) ; Shop Club (3). RICHARD MITCHELL TRECO Dick Metallurgical Eng. Town Group Sigma Xi; Metallurgical Society (1,2,3,4) ; DeMolay Club (2,3,4), Treasurer (3), Vice-president (4). 108 DAVID IRWIN TROXEL Dave Electrical Engineering Town Group Eta Kappa Nu; Newtonian Society; Band (1,2,3,4) ; Glee Club (3,4) ; Symphony Orchestra (3,4) ; Student Branch A.I.E.E. (2,3,4), Treasurer (4). ALBERT ROBERT TUCKER, JR. Chemical Engineering Sigma Chi Basketball (1) ; Lehigh Review (1) ; Bachelor (3,4), Distribution Manager (3), Assistant Circulation Manager (4); Glee Club (1,2,3); Double Quartette (3); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Fraternity President (3), Vice-president (4). PHILIP THOMAS VARRICCHIO Phil Bus. Adm. Alpha Lambda Omega Glee Club (3,4). HAROLD OTTO VOLLMER Otto Chemical Eng. Alpha Town House Football (2,4) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). ALBERT FRANCIS VonBLOCK Al Bus. Administration Theta Chi Lambda Mu Sigma; Brown and White (1,2); Mustard and Cheese (2,3,4); Alpha Kappa Psi; Interfraternity Council (3,4); Fraternity Vice-president (3,4). RICHARD ROLLAND WAER Dick Electrical Engineering Town Group Newtonian Society; Eta Kappa Nu, Treasurer (4); Pi Mu Epsilon; Glee Club (3,4) ; Student A.I.E.E. (1,2,3,4), Vice-president (4) ; Radio Club (1,2) ; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (4). WILLIAM COMSTOCK WALKER Bantam Chemical Eng. Chi Psi Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Cross Country (1,2,3,4), Co-captain (4); Track (1) ; Review (1) ; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Fraternity Treasurer. EDWARD LOUIS WALTER Ed Chemical Engineering Price Hall Badminton; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society, Vice-president (3), President (4) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4). • 77 • GLENN CREASY WANICH Chemical Engineering Town Group Newtonian Society; Band (1,2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Engineer ' s Club, Secretary-Treasurer (3). JOSEPH ANTHONY WANTUCK Joe Chemical Engineering Price Hall Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Chess Club (1). JAY LOUIS WEENING Jay Mechanical Engineering Pi Lambda Phi Track ( 2 ) ; Brown and White ( 3 ) ; Review ( 1 ) ; International Relations Club (4). ROBERT WELLER Bob Industrial Engineering Alpha Tau Omega Pi Tau Sigma; Lacrosse (1,2); Fraternity Secretary (3), Vice-president (4). WILLIAM TAYLOR WENCK Abe Business Administration Allentown Spanish Club (1,2,3). ROBERT PARSONS WHIPPLE Bob Chemistry Delta Tau Delta Basketball (1,2,3); Baseball (1,2,3); Brown and White (1); Student Chemical Society, President (4) ; Arcadia (2,3,4), President (4) ; Class President (2,3,4) ; Delta Omicron Theta; Interfraternity Council (3,4) ; Cyanide; Class Banquet Committee (1) ; Fraternity President (4). ARTHUR JOHN WHITE, JR. A. J. Industrial Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Pi Tau Sigma, Treasurer (4) ; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian So- ciety; Band (1,2); Orch estra (2,3); Lehigh Flute Quartette (4); Student A.S.M.E. (4) ; Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4) ; Sportsman ' s Club (3) ; Tau Beta Pi; Engineer ' s Ball Committee (4) ; Fraternity Vice-president (3) , Comptroller (3,4). JOHN MICHAEL WILLIAMS Willie Mechanical Eng. Kappa Sigma Football (1,2) ; Student A.S.M.E. (4) ; Fraternity House Manager (2), Treasurer (3), President (4). 112 WILLIAM ROBERT WILLIAMS Bill Arts (English Literature) Leonard Hall Phi Beta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi, Secretary (3,4) ; Combined Musical Clubs, President (4); Glee Club (1,2,3,4), Junior Manager (3); Double Quartette (2,3,4); Chapel Choir (3,4); Tone (3,4); R. W. Blake Society (3,4); Canter- bury Club (3,4); Student Activities Committee (4); Student Club Finances Committee, Chairman (4) ; Arcadia (4). NATHAN LELAND WILSON, JR. Doc Chemical Eng. Drinker House, III-B Band (1,2) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4) ; Interdormitory Council (3,4) ; Dormitory Section President (3,4). RALPH WITTMAN Wit Mechanical Engineering Richards House, IV-A Student A.S.M.E. (4); Dormitory Section Treasurer (3), President (4). ALLAN EHRMAN W OLF Memphis Mechanical Eng. Sigma Alpha Mu Wrestling (1,2) ; Army Ordnance Association. GEORGE WILLIAM WOLFSTEN, JR. Bill Arts (Eco.) Pi Lambda Phi Lacrosse, Manager (2,3,4); Swimming (1); Brown and White (1,2,3), News Editor (2), Editorial Council (3); Bachelor, Assistant Feature Editor (4); Mustard and Cheese (2,3,4), Secretary (4) ; International Relations Club (2,3,4), President (4); Brown Key Society (3); Pi Delta Epsilon, Vice-president (4); Cyanide; Interfraternity Council (3) ; Class Banquet Committee (4) ; Fraternity Marshal (3). JAMES WILLIAM WOODS Jim Chemistry Drinker House, II-A Glee Club (1,2,3,4), Double Quartette (1,2,3,4) ; Tone (1,2,3,4) ; Student Chemi- cal Society (1,2,3,4). GUY CRAWFORD WORRELL, JR. Mechanical Engineering Psi Upsilon Hockey (3,4) ; Golf (2,3,4) ; Student A.S.M.E. FRANKLIN HALDEMAN YOUNG Frank Bus. Adm. Sigma Phi Epsilon Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Band (1,2,3,4), Manager (4) ; Orchestra (2,3,4) ; Glee Club (2) ; Sportsman ' s Club (1) ; Fraternity Vice- president. SHELDON STANLEY ZALKIND Shel Arts (Psychology) Pi Lambda Phi Phi Beta Kappa; Mustard and Cheese (3,4); International Relations Club (2,3,4) ; R. W. Blake Society (3,4) ; R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society (1) ; Frater- nity Secretary (2), Treasurer (3), Vice-president (4). • 115 • THE collegiate Who ' s Who is published annually and contains 8363 students and represents 678 colleges and universities in this year ' s issue. The selec- tions are made, in most schools, with the collaboration of deans and presidents of the various institutions represented. The following Lehigh men were chosen with some of their more important activities. LYNN C. bartlett: Editor of Brown and White, Secretary if Epitome, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Alpha Theta, Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Delta Epsilon. Robert c. boston: President of Brown Key, O.D.K., Football Manager, Scabbard and Blade. THOMAS M. BUCK: President of Interfraternity Council, Vice-President of Arcadia, Tau Beta Pi, Cyanide, Kappa Sigma President, Varsity Football, O.D.K. edward cavanaugh: Secretary of Arcadia, President of Theta Kappa Phi, Var- sity Football, Interfraternity Council Treasurer. david cox: O.D.K., Cyanide, Circulation Manager of Epitome. Samuel J. davy: President of O.D.K. , Editor of Brown and White, Arcadia, Tau Beta Pi. blaine D. ferrell: O.D.K., Cyanide, Pi Mu Epsilon, Swimming, Baseball, Foot- ball. e. lyster frost: Arcadia, Cyanide, O.D.K., Tau Beta Pi, Football. William D. hayes: Football, President of Delta Upsilon, Pi Tau Sigma, O.D.K., Cyanide. William kirschner: Mustard and Cheese, Track Manager. CHARLES M. NORLIN : President of Sigma Chi, Arcadia, Business Manager Bachelor, Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsilon, Cut and Thrust. preston parr, jr.: Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma, Tone, Delta Omicron Theta, Tau Beta Pi, 0. D. K., Arcadia president. Theodore peters: President Sigma Phi, Editor Brown and White, Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsilon, Pi Mu Epsilon, O.D.K. and Tau Beta Pi. Robert pugh: Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Delta Epsilon, 0. D. K., Tau Beta Pi, Epitome Editor. william D. schaeffer: Soccer captain, Band, Symphony Orchestra, Cyanide, 0. D. K. david H. schaper: O.D.K., Swimming, Cyanide, President of Phi Gamma Delta. JOHN M. STOCKBRIDGE: Captain of Wrestling, Cyanide, Arcadia, Lacrosse. Kenneth G. swayne: Cyanide, Soccer, Wrestling, Baseball, O.D.K., Tau Beta Pi. earle w. wallick: President of Phi Sigma Kappa, O.D.K., Tau Beta Pi, Editor- in-Chief of the Bachelor, Acting Editor of the Epitome, Cyanide, Pi Delta Epsi- lon. ROBERT Whipple: Arcadia, President of Senior Class, Cyanide, O.D.K., Presi- dent of Delta Tau Delta. 776 ANDREW MURAD BARDAGJY Andy Bus. Adm. Richards House, II-B Brown and White (2,3,4), Photography Editor (4): Alpha Phi Omega, Presi- dent (3) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3). MYRON KNOX BARRETT, JR. Mike Bus. Administration Delta Tau Delta Baseball (1); Soccer (2); Mustard and Cheese (1,2,3); Alpha Phi Omega: Scabbard and Blade. KENNETH WHITEMORE BAUMANN Ken Bus. Adm. Kappa Sigma Alpha Kappa Psi, Treasurer (4); Fraternity Manager (2,3), President (4). MAX W 7 . BELLIS Sexy Electrical Engineering Taylor Hall, B Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; Dormitory Section Treasurer (3). PHILIP JAMES BERG Phil Mechanical Engineering Delta Upsilon Soccer (1,2,3); Wrestling (1,2,3); Epitome, Sports Editor (3); Cyanide; Fra- ternity President. NEAL GRUBE BERGSTRESSER Bergy Bus. Administration Town Group FRANK W. BERMAN Metallurgical Engineering Cosmopolitan Club Newtonian Society; Metallurgical Society I 3,4 ) ; Living Group, Treasurer (3). EDWARD LUDLAM BLOSSOM, JR. Ned Elec. Eng. Drinker House, II-B Electrical Engineering Society (3) . • 119 • MURRAY DATTNER BLUM Business Administration Pi Lambda Phi Football (1). JOSEPH FRANK BONIN Joe Business Administration Pi Kappa Alpha Baseball (2,3). ROBERT EMMETT BYRNE, JR. Bob Elec.Eng. Richards House, IV-B Newtonian Society; Baseball, Manager (2); Electrical Engineering Society (2,3,4) ; Brown and White (1). ROBERT LESLIE CAHOON Bob Metallurg. Eng. Phi Sigma Kappa Lacrosse (2,4); Bachelor (3); Metallurgical Society (2,3,4); Fraternity Secre- tary (3). FRANK VINCENT CAMARDA Chemical Engineering Drinker House, III-A Ice Hockey (2,3,4). JOEL GERHARD CLEMMER, JR. J Bus. Adm. Phi Sigma Kappa Lambda Mu Sigma, Secretary (3) ; Football, Manager (1) ; Swimming, Manager (2) ; Bachelor (2) ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Alpha Phi Omega; Fraternity Inductor. DUDLEY COLES Dud Civil Engineering Beta Theta Pi Football, Manager (1,2,3); Basketball (1); Student A.S.C.E.; Fraternity Steward. CHARLES RUSSELL CONKLIN, JR. Russ Chem. Eng. Alpha Tau Omega Lacrosse (1,2,4); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3); Glee Club (2); Fraternity Treasurer (3) . • 120 • ALFRED JOSEPH CORNELIUS Football (1,2,3). Corny Bus. Administration Delta Upsilon DAVID FREDERICK COX Dave Engineering Physics Sigma Chi Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma, Secretary 1 1 I ; Pi Mu Epsilon; E. P. Wilbur Prize in Mathematics (1); Wilbur Prize in Physics (2) ; Track (1,3,4) ; Basket- ball, Manager (1) ; Cross Country (2); Football (3) ; Wrestling, Manager (2); Rifle Team (2); Epitome, Living Groups Editor (2); Physics Society (2,3); Cvanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Fraternity Steward (3,4). WILLIAM JAMES CROWE Willie Chemical Engineering Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3) Theta Xi EDWARD TOWNSEND DARLOW Ed Bus. Administration Sigma Chi HENRY EDWARD deJONGH Hank Arts (Accounting) Town Group ROBERT FREDERICK DIETER Bob Chemical Eng. Alpha Town House Soccer (1,2,3); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4): Camera Club (1); Living Group, House Manager (4). WILLIAM WOLFE DONIGER Weelo Bus. Administration Pi Lambda Phi Basketball, Manager ( 1 ) : Brown and White (1,2,3), National Advertising Assist- ant (2), Copy Supervisor (3). BERNARD JOHN EGAN Bernie Metallurgical Engineering Sigma Chi Bachelor, Assistant Advertising Manager (3,4); Symphony Orchestra (1,2,3,4), Conductor (4); Band (1,2,3,4); Glee Club (2,3,4); Metallurgical Society (1,2,3,4) : Interdormitory Council (3,4), Vice-president (3) ; Arcadia (3) ; Class Dance Committee, Chairman (3) ; Dormitory Section Treasurer (1,2), President (3). 123 WILLIAM STANLEY EISNER Bill Chemical Engineering Kappa Alpha Football (1); Alpha Phi Omega, Treasurer (3); Arcadia; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Fraternity Vice-president (3). STUART MARSH ELLSWORTH, JR. Stu Chemistry Richards House, II-B Track (1); Student Chemical Society (1,2,3,4); Dormitory Section President (3). DANAL PAUL EPSTEIN Dan Bus. Administration Pi Lambda Phi Swimming, Manager (1,2,3,4); Brown and White (1,2,3,4), Editorial Council (3); Pi Delta Epsilon; Class Banquet Committee (1) ; Class Dance Committee (3); Interfraternity Ball Committee (3); Cyanide; Interfraternity Council (2,3,4) ; Fraternity Vice-president (2), President (3). BLAINE DONALD FERRELL Chemical Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Baseball (1,2,3) ; Swimming (1,2,3), Captain (1) ; Football (3) ; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Class Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; Interfraternity Council (1). WILLIAM H. FISHER Bill Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon Soccer (1) ; Fraternity Guard (3,4). JACK CLIFFORD FITCH Chemical Engineering Taylor Hall, D Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3) ; Dormitory Section Secre- tary (3). RALPH JOSEPH FITTIPALDI Chemical Engineering Beta Theta Pi Newtonian Society; Student Chemical Society (2,3); Fraternity Corresponding Secretary (3). DALE YOUNGMAN FREED Business Administration Sigma Nu Newtonian Society; Debating (1,2) ; Alpha Kappa Psi. • 124 ■EDWARD LYSTER FROST Lys Metallurgical Engineering Sigma Phi Newtonian Society, President; Football (1,2,3); Hockey (1,2,3); Metallurgical Society, Secretary; Cyanide; Arcadia; Class President (2); Class Banquet Chairman (1,2) ; Interfraternity Council; Fraternity Treasurer. ROBERT DEWEY FROST Frosty Business Administration Sigma Phi Hockey (2). ROBERT DALE GILMORE Genius Arts {English) Tavlor Hall, C Glee Club (1,2). JOHN LOUIS GRETZ Jack Metallurgical Eng. Sigma Phi Epsilon Soccer (1); Fencing (1); Glee Club (1); American Society for Metals (2,3); Interfraternity Council (3); Fraternity Vice-president (3). FRED GRUENWALD Chemical Engineering Tau Delta Phi Mustard and Cheese, Property Manager (2); Glee Club; Student Chemical Society (3) ; Fraternity Vice-counsel. ERNEST JOHN GSELL Ernie Arts (Government) Alpha Kappa Pi International Relations Club (1,2,3), Treasurer (3). STUART LINDSLEY HAMMOND Bus. Administration Alpha Tau Omega Soccer (1); Wrestling (2). WILLIAM HOWARD HEBRANK Hebe Mechanical Eng. Chi Psi Newtonian Society; Football (1,3) ; Soccer (2) ; Hockey (1,2,3) ; Lacrosse (2,3) ; Brown and White (1) ; Cyanide; Scabbard and Blade; Army Ordnance Associa- tion; Class Banquet Committee (1). • 127 - ROBERT ALLEN HEIRONIMUS Chief Mechanical Engineering Chi Psi Football (3,4); Wrestling (1,2,3,4); Cross Country (2); Swimming, Manager (1). RICHARD BALDWIN HENDRICK Dick Metallurg. Eng. Alpha Kappa Pi Newtonian Society; Metallurgical Society (2,3). CHARLES CARLSON HILTON Chuck Metallurg. Eng. Phi Gamma Delta Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Football (1) ; Hockey (1,2,3), Captain (3) ; Metallurgical Society; Cyanide; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa. WILLIAM CHARLES HITTINGER Bill Metallurg. Eng. Phi Gamma Delta Football (1,2,3) ; Baseball (1,2,3). BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HOFFACKER Benny Arts (Geology) Delta Upsilon Football (1,3) ; Wrestling (1) ; Cheerleader (2,3). JAMES ALLISON HOSFORD Hos Industrial Eng. Theta Delta Chi Brown and White (1) ; Bachelor, Art Editor (3), Exchange Editor (4) ; Sports- man ' s Club (2) ; Ski Club, Publicity Manager (3). ROBERT IRWIN JASLOW Doc Arts (P re-Medicine) Pi Lambda Phi R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (1,2,3,4), Treasurer (4) ; Alpha Epsilon Delta, Historian (3). GEORGE HENRY KOCYAN Mechanical Engineering Taylor Hall, B Student A.S.M.E. (4) ; Camera Club (4) ; Shop Club (2,3,4). • 128 - WILLIAM LOUIS KRONTHAL Bill Bus. Administration Tau Delta Phi Baseball (1). CLAUDE JENNINGS KURTZ C. J. Chemical Eng. Phi Delta Theta Football ( 1,2,3 ) ; Student Chemical Society, Secretary (3) ; Fraternity President (4) ; Interfraternity Council (4). STEPHEN KUTOSH Steve Chemical Engineering Town Group Fencing (1); Symphony Orchestra (1) ; Student Chemical Society (1,2,3); Cut and Thrust, Treasurer (2), Historian (3). ARNOLD LASSER Arnie Business Administration Sigma Alpha Mu Soccer (1) ; Basketball, Manager (1,2) ; Fraternity Secretary (3). RICHARD HENRY LEEDS Harwell Bus. Administration Sigma Alpha Mu Soccer, Manager (1,2) ; Fraternity Steward (2,3). ANDRE JEAN EMILE LEROUX Andy Arts (Chemistry) Cosmopolitan Club Student Chemical Society (2,3) ; Living Group Vice-president (2,3). GAYNOR O. H. LeROY Gay Bus. Administration Richards House, II-A Brown and White (1,2,3), Circulation Manager (3). JAMES S. LEVI Jim Business Administration Sigma Alpha Mu Swimming (1,2,3) ; Interfraternity Council (2,3). • 131 • I. HARRISON LEVY Harry Business Administration Pi Lambda Phi Lacrosse (2); Wrestling (2,4). ROBERT MARTIN LONG Bob Metallurgical Engineering Town Group Football (1,3) ; Baseball (1,4) ; Metallurgical Society (2,3,4). DONALD McFAUL LORIMER Don Metallurgical Eng. Taylor Hall, B Fencing (1); Epitome (2,3,4), Class Editor (3,4); Sportsman ' s Club (1,2); Ski Club (3,4) ; Canterbury Club (2,3,4) ; Metallurgical Society (2,3,4). JAMES SUTHERLAND MARSH Jim Industrial Engineering Sigma Chi Soccer (1,2); Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4); Fraternity House Manager (3), Treasurer (4). GEORGE WILLIAM McKNIGHT Mac Mechanical Eng. Town Group Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (2) ; Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). WILLIAM FOWLER METTEN Bill Bus. Administration Delta Tau Delta Basketball, Manager (2,3,4). GEORGE FREDERICK MILLER Fritz Chem. Eng. Alpha Town House Brown and White (1,2); Band (1,2,3,4); Student Chemical Society (2,3,4). KAY FELIX MISKINIS Electrical Engineering Town Group • 132 • ANDREW MITCHELL III Andy Chemical Engineering Kappa Sigma Band (1,2,3); Student Chemical Society; Fraternity Grand Master of Cere- monies (2). LAURANCE AUSTIN MOSIER Larry Arts (Pre-Medicine) Alpha Kappa Pi Rifle Team (1) ; Tennis (1) ; Symphony Orchestra (1,2) ; Alpha Epsilon Delta (2,3,4), Treasvirer (3), President (4) ; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society (1,2,3,4), Secretary (4) ; Fraternity House Manager (2), Historian (3), Secretary (3). GLENN ALLAN MURRAY Murph Mechanical Eng. Phi Delta Theta Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Pi Tau Sigma Freshman Prize in Mechanical Engineering; Football (1) Hockey (2) ; Class Dance Com- mittee (3) ; Fraternity Vice-president. ROBERT EUGENE NYLIN Bob Business Administration Theta Xi Alpha Phi Omega, Secretary (2) ; Sportsman ' s Club (1) ; Fraternity Correspond- ing Secretary (2,3). JOSEPH FRANCIS O ' BRIEN X Arts (Chemistry) Phi Sigma Kappa Eta Sigma Phi; Student Chemical Society (2,3,4) ; Fraternity Steward (2,3). JOHN JAMES O ' CONNELL Business Administration Taylor Hall, B HENRY CHRISTIAN OST, JR. Buck Bus. Adm. Sigma Phi Epsilon Glee Club (1) ; Fraternity President (3). THEODORE PETERS, JR. Ted Chemical Engineering Sigma Phi Phi Eta Sigma, Vice-president (2), Treasurer (2); Newtonian Society, Vice- president (2), Treasurer (2) ; Pi Mu Epsilon; Chandler Freshman and Sopho- more Chemistry Prizes; Wilbur Sophomore Mathematics Prize; Brown and White (1,2,3,4), News Editor (2), Makeup Editor (3), News Manager (4) ; Band (1,2,3,4); Symphony Orchestra (1); Sportsman ' s Club (1,2,3), Treasurer (2), President (3); Pi Delta Epsilon; Student Concerts-Lectures Series Committee (3,4) ; Board of Publications (3) ; Cyanide; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Fraternity President (4). • 135 • ROBERT ROLAND RESSLER Bob Chemistry Alpha Lambda Omega Chess Club (1,2,3), Vice-president (3). CHARLES FULP ROSENTHAL Chick Electrical Eng. Pi Lambda Phi Band (1,2,3,4); Student A.I.E.E. (2,3). JOHN ALEXANDER ROSS Chemical Engineering Taylor Hall, D Rifle Team (1,2,3,4) ; Freshman Rifle Team, Manager (3,4) ; Student Chemical Society (2,3,4). PAUL WILLIAM SANDERS Mechanical Engineering Alpha Chi Rho Football (1); Student A.S.M.E. (3,4). JOSEPH E. SCHMUK Joe Metallurgical Engineering Town Group Metallurgical Society (2, 3,4). QUIRIN JOHN SCHWARZ Jack Mechanical Engineering Chi Psi Soccer (1); Basketball (1); Track ( 1,2,3,4 ); Swimming, Manager (2,3,4); Freshman Handbook, Manager (4); Glee Club (1,2,3,4); Student A.S.M.E. (2,3,4) ; Spiked Shoe Society (2,3,4) ; Lehigh Yacht Club (2,3) ; Cyanide, Secre- tary-Treasurer (3) , President (3). CHARLES A. SCHWEITZER Charlie Mech.Eng. Richards House, III-B Student A.S.M.E. (3); Interdormitory Council (3); Dormitory Section Presi- dent (3). DAVID PHINEAS SCOBLIONKO Scobey Arts (Government) Town Group Phi Eta Sigma; Wilbur French Prize (1) ; Williams English Prize (2) ; Debating Council (2,3); International Relations Club (3); R. W. Blake Society; Delta Omicron Theta; Student Concerts-Lectures Series Committee. 136 HUBBARD WILLIAM SHAWHAN Bill Arts (Finance) Sigma Phi Baseball (1); Brown and White (1); Bachelor (2,3); Epitome, Organizations Editor (3) ; Class Banquet Committee (2). TOSHIAKI SHINTAKU Shin Civil Engineering Cosmopolitan Club Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Student A.S.C.E. (1,2,3,4); Living Group Secretary (2,3), Steward (2,3). JOHN D. SMITH Snuffy Business Administration Phi Sigma Kappa Track, Manager (1); Football, Manager (1); Bachelor, Circulation Manager (2), Managing Editor (3); Pi Delta Epsilon; Fraternity Secretary (2), Treas- urer (3,4). VIGOR CRANSTON SMITH Cranny Mechanical Engineering Sigma Chi Swimming (3,4) ; Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society (3,4). SAMUEL IDELL SNYDER Sam Mechanical Engineering Town Group Band (1,2,3); Student A.S.M.E. (3). DAVID TRUMAN STEELE Industrial Engineering Phi Gamma Delta Basketball, Manager (2) ; Lacrosse (1,2) ; Wrestling, Manager (1). WILLIAM CHARLES STOECKLE Bill Bus. Adm. Alpha Kappa Pi Track (2) ; Interfraternity Council (3) ; Fraternity Treasurer (2). EUGENE SEWELL STOWERS, JR. Gene Industrial Eng. Phi Delta Theta • 139 - KENNETH GILBERT SWAYNE Ken Mechanical Eng. Taylor Hall, B Pi Tau Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Football (1) ; Wrestling (1,2,3) ; Baseball (1,2,3) ; Soccer (2,3) ; Rifle Team (1) ; Student A.S.M.E. (31 ; Tau Beta Pi; Class President (3) ; Cyanide, Secretary (3) ; Omi- cron Delta Kappa: Student Activities Committee; Arcadia, Treasurer (3); Dor- mitory Section Secretary ( 3 ) . GUY WALTER TENCH Huck Business Administration Town Group BRUCE WILLIAM THAYER Business Administration Delta Tau Delta Cross Country (1,2,3) ; Track (1,2,3,4). NATHAN TOWNSEND THAYER, JR. Nate Bus. Adm. Theta Xi Football I 3 ) ; Fraternity House Manager (3). WILLIAM BEAUCHAMP TILGHMAN Industrial Eng. Theta Delta Chi Tennis (1) ; Swimming (1) ; Brown and White (1,2) ; DeMolay Club; Fraternity Secretary (3) . FRANK WARD YOELKER Pancho Arts (Spanish) Leonard Hall Spanish Club (3); International Relations Club (3); Canterbury Club (2); Living Group, Treasurer (3). EARLE WILBUR WALLICK Electrical Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa Newtonian Society; Eta Kappa Nu; Football ( 1) ; Track (1) ; Bachelor, Feature Editor (2), Editor-in-Chief (3); Student A.I.E.E. Society (1,2,3,4); Pi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Interfraternity Council (3) ; Frater- nity Yice-president ( 2) , President (3). STEPHEN CLARKE WOODRUFF Steve Metallurg. Eng. Pi Kappa Alpha Newtonian Society: Cross Country (1); Track (1); vrestling (2); Bach Choir (2,3) ; Metallurgical Society (2,3) ; American Society for Metals (2,3). JOHN C. YASTRZAB Yasty Metallurgical Eng. Drinker House, IH-B Metallurgical Society (3). • 140 • V THE CLASSES With the closing of the 1941-42 semesters, it became increasingly difficult to distinguish the various classes at Lehigh. There would now be eight classes where previously there had been four, the extras being those who had chosen to accelerate. The seniors would be 43 and 43x, the juniors 44 and 44x, and so forth. For as long as possible these classes would try to operate as a unit until it became too difficult to differentiate between them. The first function, held in June, was a Sophomore dance in Grace Hall. The Dean, mindful of previous financial flops, insisted that the dance be backed by a preliminary sale of tickets sufficient to carry the cost of the orchestra, Lou Breeze and his boys. The highlight of the evening, catching the war-mood, was a special blackout nuumber, for which the lights dimmed and the orchestra played softly for the romantic couples. The freshmen, at least for a while, were not to be neglected. Cyanide held smokers for the newcomers, and the handbook was published two months early. in order that the Frosh could become familiar with the customs and regulations of the Lehigh campus. The incoming class, ' 46, starting out by breaking records, since 291 of them pledged fraternities, a new all-time high for Lehigh. Cyanide issued its usual warning that the Frosh must obey all regulations, including wearing of the standard hat and button. And thus the semester started out as a very typical year, but there was already the feeling that few if any of those who started this year would see the finish at Lehigh. Early in October the Freshmen, in the usual Founders ' Day activities, gained a 4-0 victory over the sophomores in contests on the Upper Field, and in so doing the class of 1946 no longer had to wear the regulation attire on Sundays. On the ninth of October the Juniors staged a pre-Penn-game rally in Grace Hall with Coach Hoban and Sonny Edwards sharing the spotlight as speakers. The Collegians played for the occasion. Houseparty came with all its usual display, and the Senior Ball on Friday night stole the show as usual. Bobby Byrne and his trombone entertained from ten until two. The Seniors again took the spotlight by sponsoring the pre-Muhlenberg game rally, at which twelve girl cheerleaders from Cedar Crest and Moravian enter- tained the enthusiastic crowd with their charms and cheers. In a Lafayette Day rally, all freshman rules were suspended for the remain- der of the year, since the Frosh built one of the largest bonfires in recent years. At the December banquet of the Seniors in the Hotel Bethlehem, 5 enzell Brown, guest speaker, described the horrors of a Japanese prison. The speaker had first-hand information, having been recently released from a Hong Kong CANDIDS: Play rehearsal, The Moon Is Down . V-for- Victory haircut. Flag pole services. Men-in-uniform. 143 prison camp. The Sophomores had the next banquet: this time Major O. W. Lunde of the U. S. Army Air Corps spoke on his adventures in Bataan and An- tralia. The fall semester was ended in January by the graduation of about one-third of the senior class, classified as ' 43x. For the exercises held in Packer Chapel, former Ambassador to Japan, Joseph Grew, was the guest speaker. He warned of Japanese strength and of over-optimism by the American public. The start of the Spring semester was uneventful, but it wasn ' t long before it became apparent that things were going to happen. During the month of Febru- ary. 240 students were called into the armed services, the majority coming from the Freshman class. Spring Houseparty, the last for the duration of World War II, was a blazing success, due primarily to the Junior class ' s choice of orchestra for their Prom on the Saturday night of the weekend. Jimmy Lunceford ' s all-negro band held their audience spellbound, especially during the half-hour jamsession immediately following the intermission. With the closing of the semester, ODK and Tau Beta Pi chose members from the Junior class to replace those graduating. Class elections were held, this year under a revolutionary system. In place of the usual officers, student representa- tives were elected by the most representative poll held in recent years. The unaccelerated members of the class of ' 43 were graduated at exercises held in the Chapel, President H. W. Dodds of Princeton being the speaker. Afterwards came class dav exercises at the Flag Pole and a dance at the Hotel. CANDIDS: Mass ROTC calisthenics, Field Day. Joe hini elf. The Lookout. ASTP men ' toughen up. 144 y k$!t% ORGANIZATIONS il? ' ' ai u TAU BETA PI THE activities of Tau Beta Pi, known to laymen as The Engineer ' s Phi Beta Kappa, were curtailed this year because of the war. Chief among the year ' s activities was the consideration of plans to erect a monument to the society, commemorating its origin at Lehigh. The plans are, however, incomplete. Long the goal of every undergraduate in an engineering curriculum, Tau Bete serves as the criterion of achievement. The society this year pledged a total of forty-two men. Requirements of eligibility necessitate a man being in the upper fifth of his class if he is a senior, the upper eighth if he is a junior. Elections for membership are held twice each year, in the Fall and Spring. A total of twenty- two were selected last Fall, of which thirteen were seniors and nine were juniors. The Spring quota totalled twenty, of which eight were seniors, and five juniors. The remaining seven members pledged in the Spring were members of the accel- rated class of 1944X, for whom a special dispensation had been made to give them an equal chance with the other competitors. Unlike most scholastic hon- oraries, Tau Bete requires that a man not only be eligible by his scholastic record, but he must be elected to membership by the standing members of the active chapter. Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh University as an engineer ' s honorary, following the introduction of a strict elections policy by Phi Beta Kappa. It was the concep tion of Dr. E. H. Williams, who was an instructor at Lehigh at the time. He began the acivities of the society by initiating the valedictorian of the class of 1885. The society erected a memorial to Dr. Williams on the Lehigh campus following its national convention of 1930, in memory of his contribu- tions to the field of engineering. From its meager start in 1885 the society ' s progress was very slow for a time and the Lehigh chapter remained alone until 1892, when a Lehigh alumnus and member of the society founded another chapter at the University of Michigan. The fraternity has grown very rapidly since then and chapters are now found in seventy-five colleges and universities, including all the prominent engineering institutions of the nation. Because its original chapter was at Lehigh, it was recently decided that the national archives of Tau Beta Pi should be kept in the Lehigh library. TAU BETA PI: Rear Row: Mueller, Smith, Johnson, Caplan, Powers, Waer, Shafer. Third Row: Beaver, Sauer, Pugh, Richards, Arsove, Walker, Swayne, Ferrell. Second Row: Bennett, Buck, Bower, Davy, Curtiss. Front Roiv: Hilton, White, Bellis, Peters, Boyd. CANDIDS: Congratulations. Shopwork. 749 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA O micron Delta Kappa, the national honorary activities fraternity, holds high rank among campus honorary organizations. Membership in it shows that a man is one of the school ' s leaders. Its membership is limited to a small number of seniors who have demonstrated exceptional leadership on campus, unusual moral character, and extraordinary participation in campus activities. ODK this year functioned primarily as a discussion group, meeting at various fraternity houses and reviewing problems concerned with student life at Lehigh. Particularly important was the discussion of the effect of war on university academic standards and an extensive study was made of the p roblem. The group this year constantly tried to foster its ideals and keep morale high through its suggestions to the university administration and contact with the student body through the various campus publications. It fostered the belief that the student was doing his part for the war effort just as was any member of the armed forces so long as he made valid use of his time at college. It endorsed the motto of Hard work is patriotism to encourage the student in his work. CYANIDE ABOUT twenty of the most active members of the Junior Class make up the L Cyanide Club, the junior honorary activities society. The organization is a Lehigh society and has no national affiliation. This year the biggest project before the society was the question of a playing field on the campus. However, the action that was to take place was forestalled because of the war. The society also presented some recommendations regarding the eligibility of athletes for awards. Because of these recommendations a new system of awarding letters has now been established. Cyanide was active last summer, Q. J. Schwarz acting as president. A smoker was held for the Freshmen coming in for the eight-week summer semester. Simi- lar smokers were given by the society for Freshmen coming in in September and again in January. During the fall the society, acting under Hugh Boyd, punished all Freshmen who failed to wear their Freshman caps. The delinquents were made to parade in front of the grand-stands at football games while sporting bright red ties, garters and the like. Besides the usual monthly dinners, at which time discussions were held, the society sponsored a party for old members at popular and faithful Joe ' s. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA: Rear Row: Powers, Callen, Smiley, Peters, Zug. Second Row: Congdon, Swayne, Bartlett, Cox, Maxwell, Walker. Front Roiv: Beardslee, Ried, Davy, Boston, Buck, Parr. CYANIDE: Rear Roiv: Domeratzky, Link, Austin, Evans, Lowry, Amish. Third Roiv: Johnson, Beardslee, Smith, Wiley, Doxsey. Second Roiv: Frost, Hehrank, Ferrell, Peters, Brindle, Epstein. Front Row: Cox, Shafer, Berg, Boyd, Schwarz, Swayne. 150 ■' ' fBm? H mBtT ■i S L I ■V ' ' ' ■■• ' - ■i = LJ a M kl Irj ; ! . r i I MP ' ™ «l - ' I 1 I 1 ARCADIA Due to the complications and new problems which have been injected into student life during the past year by the war, Arcadia, the Lehigh student governing body, has had to materially increase its functions. In the past year this body undertook the sponsorship of the annual Dad ' s Day celebration, man- aged the Founder ' s Day activities, supervised the edition of the Freshman Hand- book and the special assemblies and other activities of Freshman eek. In addi- tion, it was instrumental in planning and arranging student functions, smokers and pep rallies throughout the year and assisted with the Flag Pole Day exer- cises. Arcadia also appoints the student members of most of the Student-Faculty committees. One of its chief activities in the past year w as that of handling the combined charities drive on the campus. This campus community chest collects funds from all campus contributors and apportions them among the various charities in pro- portion to Arcadia ' s evaluation of their worth. It was also necessary for this body to settle damages caused by an over-boisterous student body at the Lafayette game last fall. As evidence of its efforts to keep up with new demands on student governing bodies, it sent representatives to a conference of the Pennsylvania Intercollegiate Student Government Association at the University of Pennsylva- nia to discuss Student Government in Wartime with representatives of other Pennsylvania colleges. Arcadia was founded in the 80 ' s by Richard Harding Davis as an opposition to Greek letter fraternities. It became the student governing body in 1922 and was amalgamated in 1938 with the Lehigh Union in an effort to provide a united, more-powerful organization. It has since become the governing congress of stu- dent activities, obtaining student viewpoint through the student representatives of which the organization is composed. The past year was undoubtedly one of its greatest from the standpoint of services rendered to the student body. A problem of major importance for the past several years was apparently settled this Spring by Arcadia through its adoption of a new elections system for class officers. This new form adopts a five-man committee of Arcadia to supervise the functions of all classes, eliminating individual class officers. ARCADIA GROUP: Rear Ron: Boyd, Parr, Johnson, Brindle. Second Ron: Williams Norlin, Swayne, Kramer, Davy. Front Rou: Beardslee, Buck, Whipple, Kirschner, Stockhridge. CANDIDS: Mrs. Marleah Bowker who acts as secretary to Dr. Beardslee and incidentally to all student-organizations. Dr. Claude G. Beardslee, whose title, as head of the Department of Moral and Religious Philosophy and Chaplain, only hegins to cover the full extent of his duties on the campus. To this title might also be added champion of student government and adviser to students and organizations in general. BELOW: Flagpole Day Exercises, one of Lehigh ' s oldest and most persi.-tent traditions. 153 STUDENT CONCERTS-LECTURES COMMITTEE THE committee for the Student Concerts-Lectures series undertook in the past year the goal of providing the Lehigh student body with a well-rounded, entertaining and educational program in order to stimulate student cultural interests as well as to provide them with top-flight entertainment. This was ac- complished by securing well-known, popular figures from the concert and theatrical stage. First to appear before the student audience this year was Sascha Gorodnitzki, well-known concert pianist, who presented a program of classical and semi-classical music. His appearance was followed by perhaps the best- attended program of the year, featuring Cornelia Otis Skinner, world-famous actress, whose cl ever and amusing monologues were well received and applauded by the audience. The third attraction of the year was an experiment, the first opera ever to be presented at Lehigh, The Marriage of Figaro, enacted by the youthful Phila- delphia Opera Company. Anne Brown, soprano star of the New York hit presentation, Porgy and Bess, was the fourth presentation of the committee. Her spirited singing of well-known songs and Negro ballads merited the applause of a large audi- ence. Her several encores of the songs of Gershwin and other popular composers were particularly well received. John Brownlee, Australian baritone of the Metropolitan Opera Company, pre- sented the final event of the Series in April before an audience particularly appreciative of his renditions of folk songs and the popular song of the Aussie soldier, Waltzing Mathilda. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary pre-medical fraternity, was founded in 1926 Jr . at the University of Alabama. The fraternity is an associated society of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The Pennsylvania Alpha chapter was founded at Lehigh in 1935. Membership is based on a three-point system: scholarship, active membership in the R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society, and extracurricular activities. At the meetings of Alpha Epsilon Delta students present biographical and medical topics. After the students have presented their papers, the meetings are opened to discussion. During the year two surgical movies were shown. SCL COMMITTEE GROUP: Rear Row: Peters, Cowin. Front Row: Shook, Curtis, Shields. SCENE from Marriage of Figaro, one of the SCL numbers of the year. MEMBERS OF ALPHA EPSILON DELTA, PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY: Back Ron: Andrews, Tremhley, Hall, Thomas, Kleckner. Front Row: Miller, Collman, Mosier, Jaslow. 154 1 I ALPHA KAPPA PSI IN 1924 a group which was then known as the Business Administration Club was granted a charter for the Alpha Sigma Chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi. 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. Throughout the year regular meetings have been held. As is the yearly prac- tice, a field trip was held. This year the chapter inspected Neuweiler ' s Brewery in Allentown. A trip was also taken to the International Business Machines Com- pany. Mr. Melvin P. Moorhouse, publicity director at Lehigh, and a member of the Allentown C. P. A., were two of the speakers brought to address the members of 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. The chapter has, however, applied for a war status. This means that the fraternity will probably cease to function as a body until the war has ended. ALPHA PHI OMEGA Alpha Phi Omega, the national Boy Scout fraternity dedicated to service, first _rV organized an active chapter at Lehigh in 1936. At present Mr. Moorhouse is the faculty adviser for the chapter. This year Alpha Phi Omega got behind the war effort with two tremendous scrap drives, which were supported successfully by the living groups at the Uni- versity. This function proved to be one of the most successful movements the organization has ever attempted. Several social meetings have been held throughout the year. During the month of April fifteen new men were initiated. An initiation banquet was held at the Sun Inn. Alpha Phi Omega had hoped to hold a joint meeting with the organization at Lafayette College, but, because of the early graduation of the Lafayette men, plans were abandoned. ALPHA KAPPA PSI GROUP: Back Ron: Parish, Chrisman, Cowin, Holberton, Bernasco, Von Block, Liebau, Peck, Clarke, Belser, Freed, Baumann, Wiley, Elmes. Second Row: Heinz, Golden, Porter, Deehan, deGrouchy, Schermerhorn, F. Morgal. Front Row: Figueroa, Rugg, Clemmer, Schantz. CANDIDS: Dorm men talking things over. How ' d you do on the quiz? Business Administra- tion students ask. ALPHA PHI OMEGA: Back Row: Hinterleiter, Barrett, Haslet, Conforte, Eisner, McGee. Front Roic: Helthall, Scott, Bardagjy, Amish, Curtiss. 15: DEBATING COUNCIL THE Debating Council supervises Lehigh intercollegiate and intramural debat- ing activities. It is composed of officers of the Debating Society, the faculty intercollegiate coach, and debating adviser, J. Calvin Callaghan, and the intra- mural coach, Cole Brembeck. The Council held several meetings throughout the year. At these meetings new men were voted into the Council as student members. There was much discus- sion at these meetings concerning the trips to be taken by the debating society. It was decided to curtail trips to a bare minimum and visit only two other schools, Penn State and assar. The Council was able, however, to maintain the usual full schedule of intramural debates. ETA KAPPA NU Founded at the University of Illinois in 1904, Eta Kappa Nu, honorary elec- trical engineering society, established its Lehigh University chapter in 1926, largely through the efforts of Prof. Nelson S. Hibshman. Aim of the society is to offer a closer contact between students and to keep up with advances in the field of electrical engineering. Annually the Chi chapter at Lehigh elects six juniors to the society. Qualifica- tions are based upon character, achievement, and underclass-year records. Frequent inspection trips are taken during normal years, and an award is presented to the outstanding freshman in the electrical engineering school. Pro- ceeds from the Engineers ' Ball, held jointly with Pi Tau Sigma, help pay for the engineers ' lounge, used by both societies. INTRAMURAL DEBATERS, VARSITY DEBATERS GROUP: Diggs, Born, Penniman, Boyd, Scohlionko, Finch. ETA KAPPA NU GROUP: Rear Ron: Troxel. Wallick, Davy, Beaver, Clark, Mode, Ingeman- son. Front Ron : Le?h, Bower, Bennett, Waer, Titlow. 158 tt •w • • m. ETA SIGMA PHI The Alpha Epsilon chapter of Eta Sigma Phi, formerly called Collegium Romanum, was established in May, 1928, by Dr. Horace W. Wright and a group of students of the classes of 1929 and 1930. The national organization was founded in 1924 at the University of Chicago for the purpose of developing in- terest in classical study among students of colleges and universities, to promote closer fraternal relationship among students interested in classical lore, and to engage generally in an effort to stimulate interest in classical study and in the history, art, and literature of ancient Greece and Rome. Forty-four leading col- leges and universities of the United States now have chapters of Eta Sigma Phi on their campuses. The national organ of Eta Sigma Phi is the yuntius, a paper on which many Lehigh men have served. At the monthly meetings of the chapter, lectures are presented by faculty advisers or other men outstanding in classical fields. This year the society conducted a program in which various members dis- cussed the origin of Greek and Roman mythology. The societv plans to continue throughout the year if it is at all possible. LAMBDA MU SIGMA One of the most recently organized honorary fraternities on the campus is Lambda Mu Sigma, a local honorary marketing fraternity. Through the efforts of Allen M. Paget, made the president of the organization shortly after its founding in 1940, the fraternity was founded to give recognition to those stu- dents who have done creditable work in marketing subjects. The membership in the fraternity is limited to junior business men with a minimum of a 2.0 average for five semesters and a B grade in marketing subjects. Extra curricular activi- ties are also weighed heavily in considering selections. At present the fraternity is only a local one, but the expansion into a national organization may soon be realized since several other colleges have shown the desire to install other chap- ters of Lambda Mu Sigma. The fraternity has held several meetings with faculty members and outside guests as speakers. ETA SIGMA PHI: Back Ron: Walsh, Taylor, O ' Brien, Prentzel, Tatem. Middle Ron: Winters. Penniman, McDonald, Crum, Wright, R. William?. Ba tianelli. Front Ron: Ramsdell. W. Wil- liam-. Reid, Giddings, Fortosis. Absent: Figueroa. CANDIDS: Leaving Christmas Sancon. The famed Eco. 3 lectures. LAMBDA MU SIGMA: Back Row: Pollock. Liehau, Paddock, Jones. Middle Ron: Brown, Tomlinson, Cosford, Schermerhorn, Figueroa. Front Ron: Clemmer, Heimer, Heinz, on Block, Peck. 161 NEWTONIAN SOCIETY The Newtonian Society, the freshman honorary mathematical group, was founded at Lehigh in 1927, but has remained the only chapter in existence. As stated in the constitution, its purpose is to promote interest in mathematics among members of the freshman class, to give its members opportunity for in- tellectual activity outside the classroom, and to promote friendship among its student and faculty members. At its monthly meetings, guest speakers are present to discuss topics of prac- tical and theoretical interest, and sometimes some of the members present talks or read papers they have written themselves. New members are inducted into the society in the fall and again in February. This year, as has been the custom for about three years, the Newtonian Society sponsored a freshman mathematics contest and offered awards to the freshman who best solved the problems of the contest. Membership is conferred upon freshmen of high standing in mathematics at the end of either semester and extends to the middle of their sophomore year. PHI ETA SIGMA SINCE the granting of its charter in 1930, the Lehigh University chapter of Phi Eta Sigma has undertaken two functions: honoring freshmen with high scholarship, and stimulating scholastic activity on the campus. Begun at the University of Illinois in 1923, Phi Eta Sigma is the national freshman scholastic honorary fraternity. The Lehigh chapter was organized and chartered in 1930. Monthly meetings are held by the society at which faculty members are the guest speakers. At the beginning of each fall semester, leaflets are passed out by the organization explaining its principles and setting forth its requirements so that incoming freshmen may have an opportunity to become members. Each fall, in order to stimulate scholarship further and to create competition between living groups, the Phi Eta Sigma Cup is awarded to the living group whose freshmen, not less than five, have made the highest scholastic average for the year. 102 PI DELTA EPSILON Serving as a medium for group discussion of leaders in campus journalistic activities, Pi Delta Epsilon has this year featured a number of meetings and group discussions. These meetings featured speakers, movies and discussion of varied topics related to journalism. The methods of engraving, illustrated by colored movies, were explained to the group by an engraving expert last fall. Other successful talks of more recent meetings have taken up the topics of in- dustrial publications and wartime advertisements in business publications. Dr. Amos Ettinger of the Department of History discussed the differences between British and American journalism at the final meeting. Pi Delt was established at Syracuse University in 1909 and is the oldest inter- collegiate honorary journalism society in the country. The Lehigh chapter was established in 1920 and the society has since been influential in all campus pub- lications and journalistic activities. Its purposes are to recognize achievement in the field of journalism on the campus, promote unity of purpose and policy among the various publications and provide a medium of discussion for those interested in journalism as a future and in the improvement of collegiate jour- nalism as a whole. The Lehigh chapter was instrumental in establishing a chapter of the society at the Moravian College for Women and a joint party of the two chapters has been a highlight of the year ' s activities for the past three years. Membership in the society is restricted by society requirements to juniors and seniors. Elections are made on the basis of a point system. PI MU EPSILON THE Pennsylvania Gamma Chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon was inaugurated at Lehigh in 1929, replacing the Lehigh Mathematical Society. Since the grant- ing of its charter, the society has endeavored both to honor those men of high attainment in mathematics and to increase the men ' s interest in the science. This last purpose is effected by means of monthly meetings at which talks on mathe- matical subjects are presented by student members and members of the faculty. Students from all branches of the University are eligible so long as they have shown excellence in at least two years of mathematics and have also shown an inclination to further study in the field of mathematics. PI DELTA EPSILON GROUP: Rear Row: Schantz, Epstein, Bleul, Von Bergen, Schwarz, Davies, Peters, Skilling, Doxsey. Front Row: Pugh, Davy, Palmer, Wolfsten, Norlin. CANDIDS: Pi Delta Epsilon pledges in pressmen ' s hats. PI MU EPSILON GROUP: Rear Row: Amish, Logan, Wright, Mills, Miltenherger. Second Roiv: Evans, Keller, Cox, Ferrell, Swayne. Front Row: Waer, Caplan, Arsove, Link, Titlow. 765 PI TAU SIGMA Pi Tau Sigma, the honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, was founded in the year 1915 at the University of Illinois. A group of mechanical en- gineering students, inspired and guided by Dr. Charles Russ Richards, later president of Lehigh, formed the first chapter. It was organized to foster the high ideals of the engineering profession, to stimulate interest in the departmental activities, and to promote the welfare of its members. The Theta chapter at Lehigh received its charter in 1927, and in 1935 it ex- panded to include the Industrial engineering students, because these two cur- ricula are so closely associated. Professor Luce was very active in the organiza- tion of the local chapter, and John V. Marteuis, Lehigh ' 94, who was then the National Secretary, installed the chapter. At the present time there are sixteen active chapters in the leading engineer- ing schools of the country. R. W. HALL SOCIETY THE R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society has rapidly expanded since its founding in 1920 by Dr. Robert W. Hall, a former head of the Biology department. Until 1927, the name of the Club was The Lehigh Pre-Medical Society. The society aims to stimulate interest in medicine and to join together in common interest the pre-medical students at Lehigh. The society holds monthly meetings, two banquets a year, out-of-town inspec- tion trips, and visits weekly clinics at St. Luke ' s Hospital. This extensive schedule has been rather limited because of the war, but the society continues to visit the clinics at St. Luke ' s at all opportunities. An enviable record has been achieved by the R. W. Hall Society. Many alumni have successfully completed their medical education in the foremost medical schools of the country, and after graduation have continued to be successful and respected physicians. PI TAU SIGMA GROUP: Rear Row: Link, Bosserman, Wright, Johnson, Wittman, Mercer, Murray. Third Row: Williams, Dimmich, Jackson, Eppes, Soprano, Nelkin, Horn, Penrose, Larkin. Second Roiv: Buck, Curtiss, Gabuzda, Mueller, White, Townsend, Savior, Thurn. Front Roiv: Shafer, Reifsnyder, Boyd, Swayne. CANDIDS: Class in Machine Design. Getting on the inside of a fish story. 166 .]• $ t!t f W CHEMICAL SOCIETY Principal objective of the Chemical Society is to give students of chemistry an understanding of the newest developments in the chemical field. Over 70 years ago, in 1873, when the Chemical Society was founded, the prece- dent was started of holding monthly meetings for the purpose of hearing prom- inent men in the field of science. Members of the Chemical Society get a broad outlook on their field since their speakers represent many interests, such as in- dustry, faculty of other universities, and graduate research in chemistry. Meet- ings are devoted to talks, discussions, and the presentation of slides and movies on chemical subjects. In December, the s ociety holds a Christmas banquet, with the main speech given by a man in a non-technical field. The informal entertainment provided by student members makes this occasion one of the highlights 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 1901 and again in 1922, it became a chapter in the national society upon the second reor- ganization. At the monthly meetings talks are given by men who are active in civil en- gineering. Their topics include railroads, bridges, hydraulics, etc. This year a meeting was held in conjunction with the Lehigh Valley section of the American Society of Civil Engineers. At the meeting Captain Campbell talked on military insignia. Also heard at meetings this year were talks on aerial photography and surveying, and a discussion on the chemical changes of concrete. The annual banquet was held several weeks before Christmas. The society also had a picnic early in May. CHEM SOCIETY GROUP: Rear Row: Niemeyer, C. J. Kurtz, J. J. Kurtz, Dafter, Mortimer. Fourth Roiv: Kirschner, Pugh, Streuli, Stahl, Siegfried, Backensto, Richards, Kareha, Ressler. Third Roiv: McKaig, Davis, Tucker, Peters, Hunsberger, Nace, Wilson, Schaeffer, McGee, Conklin, Ferrell. Second Roiv: Walker, Egge, Fehnel, Sauer, Kutosh, Wanich, Schwab, Dieter. Front Row: Whipple, Eisner, Hinterleiter, Ross, Neville, Mitchell, Thomas, Kramer, Camarda, Dick. CANDIDS: Chem II lab. President Whipple. Now, this is the way it is. CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: Laurencot, Rutherford, Shintaku. Middle Row: Lotz, Coles, Pragone, Payrow. Front Ron : Palazzo, Fisher, Titlow, McGee, Ippen. 169 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY THE Electrical Engineering Society is an affiliate of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. The Lehigh branch of the society was established in 1902 by Professor Emeritus Charles F. Scott. His purpose in forming the society was to bring the men in the electrical industry and the college student closer together. This year the monthly meetings consisted of papers presented by the students, as well as lectures delivered by the students themselves. At one of the meetings an outside speaker from the Roller-Smith Company gave a talk on circuit breakers. Throughout the course of the year several movies were presented for the benefit of the students. One of the meetings was a combined meeting of the Physics Society and the Electrical Engineering Society. At this time a movie on the General Electrical Company was the outstanding feature. The success of the movement can readily be realized by the more than one hundred branches of the society which have been formed throughout the nation. Some talk has been raised at the Lehigh Society meetings of a joint session of the different branches. IE--ME SOCIETY IN the fall of 1940 the Industrial Engineering Society, which was organized about fourteen years ago, and the Lehigh Student branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, organized in 1911, merged their interests and combined to form a stronger organization. The name chosen for the newly formed organization was the Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering Society. The society was formed to combine more closely the two engineering curricula and to secure better speakers than the individual societies could get. The purpose of this society is to create and promote interest in industrial and mechanical engineering at Lehigh. Monthly meetings are held by the society, and at these meetings outside speakers discviss subjects of universal appeal. Each year a representative is sent to the convention of the Eastern Student grovip of the A. S. M. E. Here prizes are awarded for the best papers that are presented and, as a general rule, Lehigh wins one of these awards. The society holds a Christmas banquet and a spring farewell picnic for the seniors in the group. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: Ingemanson, Roberts, Green, Ray, Krat- zer, Ottens, Laird. Third Roiv: F. Hill, Thrasher, Clark, Amish, Gray, Blossom, Strang. Second Row: Early, Birckhead, Rosenthal, Hoffman, Morgan, Hill, MeCracken. Front Row: Caplan, Troxel, Bower, Bennett, Waer, Haslet. CANDIDS: Cheeking the voltage. Pondering some weighty problems. INDUSTRIAL-MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Back Row: Kocyan, Snyder, Schutt, Rouse, Seaton. Middle Row: Greiner, Smith, Jansen, De Paoli, Domeratzky, Corbett. Wiley, Wetzel, Soprano. Front Row: Sweet, Roslund, Johnson, Hemphill, Moll. 170 -4 —  J _ ia. METALLURGICAL SOCIETY TO provide first-hand information on the various topics of discussion taken up this year the Metallurgical Society secured several out-of-town speakers from Bethlehem Steel to present lectures and movies. First of the series was a lecture and presentation of colored movies on Methods of Arc Welding by an industrial expert. Other lectures were presented on Open Hearth Production of Steel and The Application and Production of Powder Metals in Industry. In the spring a joint meeting was held with the Physics Society, at which a student discussion of Spectrographic Analysis of Steel was presented. The highlights of the society ' s activities from the social aspect this year, as in years past, were the annual Christmas banquet and the Spring picnic. The ban- quet, which has become a traditional social function of the society, was held this year at Lamberton Hall. In addition to the exchange of gifts and other traditional activities, the banquet featured an address on Mob Psychology by Professor Jenkins of the University Psychology Department. The Spring picnic, which is also a traditional highlight of the year ' s activities, was held on the farm of Pro- fessor Doan, head of the Department of Metallurgical Engineering. One of the principal functions observed at the annual Spring picnic is the inauguration of new officers, who are elected a short time before. TONE TONE, the honorary music society, was formed in 1937 from an existing student concerts group. Its purpose is to stimulate interest in music at Lehigh through its regular monthly meetings, and through concerts. The group has two main purposes : first, to provide students interested in music a chance to hear both outside speakers and to take part in discussions on musical subjects; secondly, to present in the University Chapel regular Sunday afternoon concerts during the springtime with student, faculty, and guest performers. These recitals, consisting of various types of programs ranging from piano, organ, and other instrumental music, to vocal music, both solo and group, and to original student compositions, have become very popular with Lehigh students and friends. METALLURGICAL SOCIETY GROUP: First Row: Klopfer, Pruett, Yastrzab, Cahoon, Long, Gross, Egan, Bevan. Second Row: Mr. Sheska, Mr. Tor, Dr. Frye, Mr. Butts, Dr. Doan, Mr. Sun, Mr. McMahon, Mr. Stout. Third Row: Hursh, Dix, Lorimer, Frost, Treco, DeLong, Norlin, Corson, Mehrkam, Berman. Third Roiv: Brindle, Donohue, Hendrick, Nestleroth, Gover, McGeadie, Ginter, Callen. Fourth Row: Austin, Bechdolt, Hilton, Buczynski, Davis, Reiber, Megas. CANDIDS: Engineering accuracy. Good music. 173 THE LEHIGH BAND The Lehigh hand, for the last few years a matter of pride to the student body, this year continued its excellence of performance, adding much to the spiri t of football games and other occasions. One of the highlights of the year ' s activi- ties was the trip to New Haven for the Yale game, which opened the football season last fall. Seventy-two band members made the trip and it was a very suc- cessful undertaking. Before the game the band marched on the field in forma- tion and formed the message Hello for the spectators. Between the halves the band formed Eli and LU and played a Yale song. Other highlights of the year included playing at the Allentown-Bethlehem airport for the graduation exercises of a group of Naval aviation cadets and at the celebration at Bethlehem Steel when it was awarded the Army-Navy E. The band also played at a similar ceremony for the Bethlehem Foundry and Machine Company. One of the band ' s principal functions at Lehigh is to serve to stir up spirit and cheer at the pre-game football rallies. It also played this year at many of the home basketball games. One of its chief functions later in the year was to provide music for the R. 0. T. C. unit in its outdoor drills. The band also did much to add to the impressiveness of the annual Field Day ceremonies. In the last few years the band, under the direction of Dr. Shields, has spe- cialized in the presentation of colorful and unique formations in pre-game and between halves marching at football games. Particularly impressive this year were the formations presented at the Fall house party game and at the final game of the season with Lafayette. At the house party encounter the 96-piece band formed a large heart with a moving arrow piercing it and played The Pennsyl- vania Polka and Three Little Sisters. At the Lafayette game a large goblet was formed with an L upon it and the band played while the assembled stu- dents and alumni sang The Old Silver Goblet and the Alma Mater. The band is perhaps the largest student-managed organization on the campus. It had a total membership last Fall of one hundred to play for the home games against Penn State, Rutgers, Muhlenberg, Dickinson, and Hampden-Sydney. Each spring a banquet is held, at which time student officers for the coming year are elected. 174 !3 ,1 m : 4 i I H . fit « r AbteiA A §. 4 5 1 ! t fjLt M W COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS Three of the University ' s musical organizations, the Glee Club, the Symphony Orchestra, and the Lehigh Collegians, are integrated to form the Combined Musical Clubs. The organization coordinates the activity of its member groups and has its own functions as a distinct group. Also included within the scope of the organization is the Octet, which is denned as a distinct group, although its members are also members of the Glee Club. The Glee Club is the largest of the combined clubs, although its membership was sharply cut because of men leaving for the service. This group, which is one of the finest of its kind in the East, gave two concerts this year. Largest and most impressive of these was the annual Christmas Carol service, which was given in conjunction with the Symphony Orchestra and the Glee Club of the Moravian College for Women. Another home concert was given in March at Drown Hall, also with the Moravian Glee Club. The usual extensive program carried out by the Glee Club, including several trips, was necessarily curtailed this year by the exigencies of war. The only trip undertaken this year was to Beaver College, where a concert was presented in March. The Octet appeared in concerts at Cedar Crest College and before the Bethlehem Rotary Club. The Symphony Orchestra, besides its combined concerts with the Glee Club, also presents a series of concerts of its own. Its activities were also curtailed this year and its membership cut by the war. The Symphony Orchestra has been in- creasingly prominent and has received just acclaim for its work since its reor- ganization seven years ago under the direction of T. E. Shields, who also directs the Glee Club and the Octet. The Lehigh Collegians, which had come to be known as one of the finest college dance bands in the country, were very active last fall, but the induction of several of its members into the armed forces caused its disbanding for the re- mainder of the year. Among its many activities at university affairs was playing for pep rallies and other student gatherings and for many fraternity, dormitory and town dances. Its work was not, however, limited to University activities, and they were regularly employed for local dances and similar affairs. THE LEHIGH COLLEGIANS. CANDIDS: Dr. Thomas E. Shields leads the Lehigh Symphony Orchestra. GLEE CLUB GROUP: Back Rotv. Woelfel, Moll, Lamhert, Trozell, Woods, Tucker, Fehnel, Shewman, Rick. Third Ron: Burgy, Willis, Nino, Mooney, Pharo, Adams, Sweet, Barrichio. Second Row: James, Neal, Rust, Griffis, Priestley, Davis, Piaski, Youtz. First Rote: Titlow, Winters, Rouse, Goth, Shields, Williams, Coutts, Skilton, Long. 177 MUSTARD AND CHEESE MUSTARD AND Cheese, the dramatic club of Lehigh, serves to provide an out- let for student talent and to give training and experience in all phases of dramatic production. In keeping with the policy fostered by the club, the productions presented this year were of a varied, well-balanced nature. First presentation of the year was the highly dramatic play, The Moon Is Down, by John Steinbeck. The play was a difficult one to produce effectively because of the subtleties in the natures of the characters and the serious portent of the plot. It featured an excellently done stage set and difficult off-stage sound effects. The production was enacted by a large cast, which featured Lowell Judis, D wight Longley, Randall C. Giddings, and John Bartlett in the main parts. The second production offered this year was the presentation of Bottoms Up. This offering was entirely written and produced by students under the direction of Albert A. Rights and was unique in being the first musical comedy presented by Mustard and Cheese for a number of years. For a time in the early 1920 ' s the club achieved notable success with this type of production and con- siderable notoriety in nearby cities when the cast took them on the road during vacations. These, however, passed by the boards and the organization devoted itself to the purely dramatic type of show. The success of this return to student- produced musical comedies and the acclaim of the student body may mark a tendency toward more productions of this type in the future. The all-male cast of Bottoms Up featured William Wolfsten, Lowell Judis, and Ensign Lee Cooke in the leads, and a large chorus. The script was written by Earle Wallick and Ellsworth Stockbower and most of the tunes and lyrics were contributed by Royal Peterson. Mustard and Cheese was founded in 1885 by Richard Harding Davis, who was the club ' s first president. The bill of fare served the members at their meetings in Charlie Rennig ' s saloon is traditionally the origin of the name of the organi- zation. The direction of Albert A. Rights must be credited for a large measure of the marked success of the club ' s productions in recent years. Since his arrival in 1934, Mr. Rights has required a high standard of performance in all presentations and has insisted on a varied program, which has met with the acclaim of the student body. MUSTARD AND CHEESE GROUP: Rear Row: Coutts, Norris, Judis, Lytic, Franz, Longley, Page. Third Row: Johnson, Long, Amish, Deffaa, McCauley, Constantine, Pollock. Second Row: VonBlock, Zalkind, Vachon, Barrett, Kingman, Belser. Front Roiv: Rights, Schwah, Wolfsten, Kirschner, Peck, Tattershall, Powers. MUSTARD AND CHEESE PRODUCTION: Director Al Rights and Phil Powers regulate the lights. 178 IF% 1 :. rvi BROWN AND WHITE THE Broun and White underwent its first change in format in five years, and indeed its first radical change in over ten years, this fall, when it reduced publication to tabloid size and inaugurated the first departmentalized college newspaper in the nation. The recipient of wide attention among collegiate news- paper circles over this journalistic experiment, the Broun and White has adopted departmentalized organization as its standard, due to the increased efficiency with which the staff operates. First begun in 1894 as a single, four-column weekly, 18 inches in length, it grew steadily through the years until, during the last decade, it functioned very much as a metropolitan paper, appearing twice weekly in a seven-column, four- page edition carrying features and editorials of both general and specialized interest. The tabloid departmentalized format adopted this year has been styled largely from Time magazine. Revisions in editorial responsibilities occur principally in the lower positions, where editors are set up over each department, and where the news editor I city editor) gathers copy from all departments of the paper. The paper appears at noon on Tuesdays and Fridays. The dissemination of war information and its relation to immediate student life has been the characteristic most generally noticed in the Broun and White this year. It has been the avowed purpose of the Broun and White to allay as much as possible the student unrest that the uncertainties of war have brought to the campus. Editorial policy has been guided by the desire to present accurate information and opinion in an effort to get the pertinent information before the students concerned. No intercollegiate competition has been carried on this year, due to the inac- tivity of the Intercollegiate Newspaper Association. The Broun and White has representatives in Pi Delta Epsilon, honorary journalism fraternity, which awards points toward membership to holders of B. W. offices. Lehigh editorial writers have won national recognition in annual Pi Delt competition, however. As has occurred several times in the past decade, the editorship has been a split one this year, divided between Lynn C. Bartlett in the first semester and Samuel J. Davy in the second. The business managership has been a cooperative one between Robert M. Schantz and Donald Davies. These offices are awarded each spring by the Board of Publications. CANDIDS: Mr. Robert Laramy, on original Brown and White staff, presents staff picture to Pi Delta Epsilon president, Richard Palmer. Brown and White editor, Samuel Davy. Bethlehem Boys ' club members collect Brown and White cuts in salvage drive. Departmental editors: Margolies, Antonides, Frankley, Bartlett, Edwards, Riddle, Epstein. 181 LEHIGH BACHELOR THE Lehigh Bachelor, monthly magazine of humor and campus interpreta- tion, closed its third year as a publication this spring, with the probable decision to suspend publication for the duration , because of a depleted staff and predictable financial uncertainties. Edited by Earle Wallick, EE, ' 44x, this year ' s Bachelor featured a new mast- head and a new cover design created by Charles Thompson, with two and three- color patterns. Cover cartoons were done by Thompson and by James A. Hosford, IE, ' 44x. Although moving more towards the humor magazine type, the Bachelor still devoted considerable space to interpretation of the campus as well as to short stories, poetry, and articles of general interest. A thirty-page publication, the Bachelor carried an eight-page College Victory Campaign insert, in order to aid in the national morale-building program. Highlights of the Bachelor year were the unusually good covers, the special New Yorker takeoff, and the status of not reaping a faculty ban during its final year of publication before becoming a war casualty . SCABBARD AND BLADE Scabbard AND Blade, the national honorary military society, was founded in 1904 at the University of Wisconsin in order to unite in closer relationship the military departments of American universities and colleges, to preserve and develop the essential qualities of good and efficient officers, to prepare men to take an active part and to have an influence in the military affairs of the country, and to spread intelligent information concerning the military requirements of the government. Seventy-five active companies in forty-eight states and a total membership of approximately thirty thousand men now constitute the membership in the society. The major activity of the year is the annual Military ball, which is held in March. Scabbard and Blade holds monthly meetings at which outside speakers frequently address the members. Each spring the members of Scabbard and Blade take an active part in the Field Day exercises. LEHIGH BACHELOR: Leonard Constantine, Chuck Norlin, and Bernie Egan, all of the Bachelor business staff, talk things over. ROTC: Company A in review. SCABBARD AND BLADE GROUP: Rear Roiv: Seigle, Ryan, Finch, Bonin, Croake, Hittinger, Hursh, Hehrank, Diefenderfer, Stowers. Fourth Row. Link, Applegate, Stump, Tucker, Mueller, Siegfried, Ost, Stearns. Third Row. Dove, Dellwig, Grasso, Palmer, Stoeckle, Putnam, Lesh, Meehan, Leckie. Second Row: Ried, McGee, Johnson, Boston, Hemphill, McKaig, Thomas, Pierce. Front Roiv: Barrett, Abeel, Townsend, Williams, Soprano, Highfield, Godycki. 182 NX n ■ri ■i 4n .:sv, .. Hr «■' v ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA Alpha Lambda Omega, local fraternity composed of students from Allentown and the vicinity, was officially recognized on the campus April 9, 1942. The fraternity originated as the Lehigh Allentown Club in 1935 and was rec- ognized by the Student Activities Committee in 1938. In February of 1942, the Allentown Club took the name of Alpha Lambda Chi, but the Student Activities Committee refused to recognize the group for want of a constitution. In April, however, a constitution was drawn up and the group took the name Alpha Lambda Omega. While the fraternity chooses its members on a selective basis, theoretically all students who reside in communities west of Bethlehem and Fountain Hill are eligible. Not owning a house, the fraternity usually holds its meetings in churches, Drown Hall or the Y.M.C.A. CANTERBURY CLUB THE Canterbury Club was formed at Lehigh two years ago by a group of stu- dents who were interested in starting a religious group on the campus. By noting the records of the Club, it can be seen that it was one of the most active organizations on the campus. The Canterbury Club has converted the north transept of Packer Memorial Chapel into a meeting room where meetings are held every second and third Sunday of every month. The Club supplied its own equipment. The University donated a platform and has supplied the members with badges. This year the Canterbury Club, a member of the National Canterbury Club, had two Episcopal Bishops as speakers and leaders of discussions. The drop in membership has necessitated joint meetings with the Moravian College for Women ' s Canterbury Club. This year the outstanding discussion was that of Union of the Presbyterian and Episcopal Churches. The outcome of the dis- cussions showed that the union was favorable to the students. The activities of the club were ended with a very enjoyable picnic at the end of the spring semester. 184 CUT AND THRUST Cut and Thrust, the club for the club sport of fencing, admits to mem- bership those students who have shown an active interest in the sport of fencing, and who can demonstrate satisfactorily their proficiency in fencing. A demonstration of the candidate ' s proficiency includes an exhibition of his fencing ability before the members of the club. The candidate must also show that he is capable of using the technical terms of fencing, and that he can solve theoretical fencing problems presented by the club members. This year the fencing club played host to several college teams, winning all these meets, as well as proving its ability on foreign soil by winning all away meets. Thus, Lehigh ' s fencing club won six and lost none. Cut and Thrust usually sponsors a trip to the intercollegiate fencing meet, but this year, due to transportation conditions, Lehigh was not represented. DeMOLAY CLUB The DeMolay Club at Lehigh was organized as a result of the efforts of many students to continue in this organization after coming to college. The club holds monthly dinners at Lamberton Hall. Monthly meetings are held at which timely talks are given on problems of practical interest to the members. Last year the club established a date bureau, the committee having access to the students at Moravian College, Cedar Crest, and the various Nurses ' Homes, and contacts for date for Lehigh men were arranged through the organization. This year the DeMolay Club sponsored a trip to the Poconos. Several members of the club took advantage of the opportunity given them. It is hoped that a banquet, inaugurated this year, will become an annual function of the group. The DeMolay Club was one of the hardest hit organizations when war and its inevitable consequences came to Lehigh. It has already lost a large proportion of its members to the armed forces. Suspension of the club seems imminent, as an even greater loss of membership is expected at the close of the semester in May. 185 PHI ALPHA THETA First conceived by Dr. Andrew R. Cleven, who sought a means of honoring college men achieving distinction in history, Phi Alpha Theta was established at the University of Arkansas, March 14, 1921. In May, 1940, the Alpha Alpha chapter was founded at Lehigh University by a small group of faculty and students, and in two years the organization has grown and matured. Annually a topic for discussion has been chosen by the group, which meets twice monthly to ex amine some particular phase of the question. Official publication of the fraternity ' s national headquarters is The Historian, which is well-known among historical publications. The national society meets every two years at the same time and place as the American Historical Association. Faculty adviser of the group is Dr. George D. Harmon, professor of American history. PHYSICS SOCIETY ANY student in Engineering Physics is eligible for membership in the Physics Society. Feature of the monthly meetings of the group is a lecture given by a member of the faculty or by an expert outside the University. Traditional activities of the organization include a Christmas party in con- junction with the Bi-Chem-Zo Society of Moravian College for Women and the annual picnic of the society in May. The joint party with Fem-Sem co-eds is the social high-point of the year. The society normally holds a program of student discussions during March and April, at which time the seniors present their projects in advanced labora- tory. These discussions have met with so much approval that they have become a regular part of the schedule of the society. One of the features of the society is the bringing to the campus of moving pictures on various technical subjects of interest to physics students. 186 RIFLE TEAM LOSS of last year ' s mainstays of the rifle team, Olympic team member Dave I Smith, national champion H. J. Olsen, and Eastern champion J. A. Kim- berley, and several other crack varsity shots, was a serious blow to this year ' s team. Captain Bert Hemphill and Bob Boston were the only holdovers from the team of last year, which placed second in the nation in intercollegiate competi- tion. First match of this year was against West Point, which later became the na- tional championship team. This match was a hard-fought one, Lehigh ending up on the short end of a close score. Later in the season the team also lost a match to the other service school, Annapolis. Returning in good style from these de- feats, the team won an easy victory against Drexel. inner for the last two years in the Middle Three Title match, the rifle squad this year beat Lafayette by a good margin, but bowed to Rutgers in the final out- come. The squad placed third in the Third Corps Area in the Hearst trophy shoot, winning the bronze plaque. A traditional highlight of every year ' s activities of the club is the annual Spring banquet. It was held this year on May 10, at the Elk ' s Club. At this time awards of military ribbons and medals were made to the members. ROBERT W. BLAKE SOCIETY THE Robert . Blake Society is Lehigh ' s honorary philosophical society. It was named in honor of a former head of the College of Arts and Science and is now limited to a membership of twenty men. It was founded in 1923 by seven Lehigh students for the purpose of promoting closer acquaintance with the lead- ing thought in the fields of philosophy, psychology, education, religion, and ethics; of fostering thought and discussion in these fields; and of providing for- mal self-expression on the part of each member. The twenty men in the society are chosen on the basis of high scholarship and interest in the purpose of the organization. Regular meetings are held on the first Friday of each month with lectures by speakers from on and off the campus. Student discussions follow each of these lectures. Each year the society sponsors a University lecture. Such men as John Dewey and T. V. Smith have been brought to Lehigh by the club. The last meeting of each year is devoted to a pilgrimage to another leading college in the East. 187 . ■!■— ■LIVING GROUPS i III III Hi i a ■III ■HI m V H . hi H NBK THE DORMITORIES WHEN Lehigh was founded more than 75 years ago a small dormitory was the first living group in existence. Since that time, many changes and impor- tant additions have been produced on the Lehigh campus. After some years a plan for organized building of dormitories was evolved. The plan was to have approximately seven dormitories built in a quadrangle group about a grassy court. Trees were to have surrounded the group and many paths were to have run across the court connecting the various dormitories. Richards house was the first dormitory built according to plan; however, there was so much doubt that the original idea could ever be carried out that Richards was built one and a half times larger than the original group had specified. In 1940, Drinker House, like Richards, was built to follow the dorm group plan of a Greater Lehigh. Recause of the fact that both Drinker and Richards were built larger than Dr. Richards ' original plan had specified, it is doubtful that it will ever be possible to complete the original plan. Two other dormitories now are in existence on the Lehigh campus, Taylor Hall and Price House, both built before the dormitory plan had evolved. INTERDORMITORY COUNCIL To satisfy a need for organization among dormitory men the INTERDORMI - TORY COUNCIL was formed in 1938. This council, which was first organ- ized by George Albrecht, ' 39, is composed of one member from each section of the four dormitories. Members are elected to represent their sections. Purpose of the Council as stated in the constitution is: 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. To further much needed student unity and to promote another social function open to all Lehigh men, the Council sponsored a small dance during the sum- mer term. According to Bernard J. Eagan, chairman of the dance committee, the dance was given without charge to couples in the hope that a precedent could be set whereby several dances could be given each year at small expense. High scholastic records and winners of interdorm athletic competition are awarded cups and trophies. In addition, the council has worked with other DORMITORY LIFE: Burning the midnight oil. INTERDORMITORY COUNCIL GROUP: Rear Row: Wittman, Hemphill, Ettinger, Townsend. Second Row: Beardslee, Coffman, Walsh, McCauley, Courtney. Front Row: Ponisi, Frey, John- son, Pugh, Leifheit. TAYLOR HALL: Lehigh ' s oldest and most venerable dormitory. 797 organizations in the University in order to solve housing problems created by the war. Rules for governing dormitory freshmen are also established by the Council. Because of the uncertain future of the dormitories due to the war emergency and because it is expected that army men will move to the dorms during the summer, the Interdormitory Council in its last meeting disbanded for the dura- tion. In order to carry on its much needed d uties after the war, the Council voted to turn over to its advisor, Dr. C. G. Beardslee, its records and constitu- tion. This action was taken in order that Dr. Beardslee could be instrumental in reforming this organization later. DRINKER 1 This year Drinker 1 lost Gandy to the Marines, Peabody to the draft, Bixler to the E. R. C, and Dubin to the Air Corps. Peterson entered V-7, McCauley joined the E. R. C. and Karas and Van Inwegen the Air Corps Reserve. Miles made his patriotic contribution by submitting to a V for Victory headshaving. Helstrom made Phi Eta Sigma and was also elected treasurer of the Physics Society. Perley was initiated into Pi Mu Epsilon and McCauley made Mustard and Cheese. Orth was a gorgeous blonde in Bottoms Up , while Peterson did the lyrics and choral direction. Karas, as usual, did all the signs and the program cover design. DRINKER 2A AFTER grabbing the dorm softball championship last year, Drinker 2A set a record in the other direction this year by failing to win a single athletic contest and thus giving all members a permanent blush. The year was far from a wash-out, however, as Blanket batted out a four-point average and made Phi Beta Kappa and Thurn was elected to ODK. After gaining entrance to Mustard and Cheese, Tattershall acted as stage manager for the never-to-be-forgotten pro- duction of Bottoms Up . Mayer toiled as a departmental editor on the Brown and White. Davies was a good cadet and got a medal on Field Day, when Ecob took second place in the manual of arms contest. Some of the boys didn ' t limit their military activity to R.O.T.C., however, as Brennan and West entered the Army meteorological program and Brenner went the way of all frosh in the ERC. Walton is now at Colgate in the V-5 program and Black, Reusch and Schneider joined V-l, with Walsh choosing the Marine Corps Reserve. DRINKER I GROUP: Rear Row: Miller, Peabody, Schmoyer, Stiles, Peterson, Rixler, Perley. Second Row: Rust, Peters, Richards, Karas, Jerman, Orth, McCauley, Miles. Front Row: Nace, Van Inwegen, Hamme, Helstrom. CANDIDS: Checking the mail. Got a date? DRINKER II-A GROUP: Rear Row: Rlanket, Davies, Zuckerman, Reusch, Brenner, Black, Funk, Kern, Brennen, Mayer. Front Row: Walton, Tattershall, Woods, Thurn, Walsh, Carl, West, Schneider. 192 DRINKER 2B Section 2B Drinker was hit hard by the war, five men having to leave for the Services at the end of the first semester. However, the section men managed to repeat their previous record by winning the all-dorm bowling championship for the second year straight. The activities of the section were of a wide variety and the tennis, fencing, and rifle teams all claimed a member of 2B. Three men were members of Scabbard and Blade. Some other activities were Newtonian Society, Band, Camera Club, Lambda Mu Sigma, and Pi Tau Sigma. Section 2B also claimed the president of Drinker House and the president of Scabbard and Blade for the second vear in a row. DRINKER 3A Beginning the spring semester with a total of twenty-one active members, Section 3A Drinker is now represented by twelve members. The service — Enlisted Reserve Corps and Air Corps — has caused most of the vacancies, with only two having dropped out for other reasons. The spirit of 3A was evidenced in the athletic fields. The Drinker House League football championship cup is now in the possession of Drinker 3A. Basketball, bowling, wrestling, and softball were also enthusiastically supported. V. ith its 1.7 average, 3A Drinker has members representing the honor frater- nities and societies, Phi Eta Sigma, Tau Beta Pi and Newtonian Society. And so to all of Lehigh ' s social affairs, such as I. F. Ball and Houseparty, Drinker 3A has figured prominently with a generally good turnout. DRINKER II-B GROUP: Rear Rou: Dougherty, Blossom, Schram, Jones, McGrath, Werley, Evans, Horn. Second Ron: Forsythe, Dove, Andrews, Heimer, Hemphill, Seifert, DeHuff, Williams. Front Ron: Mayer, Weaver, Black, Smith. CANDIDS: Studying. A little explanation goes a long ways. DRINKER III- A GROUP: Rear Ron: Hold, Havekotte, DeBerardinis, Peters, Piazza, Fritz. Second Roic: Sollenberger, Bachman, Camarda, Street, Tahor, Rhodes, Grell, Keese. Front Roiv: Smith, Reehl, Buttery. 195 DRINKER 3B Here is the way a 3-B Drinker man puts it : If you come to 3B looking for mental giants we ' ll show you our Phi Bete, who is also a member of Tau Beta Pi. As for the rest of us, we feel pretty good about being able to go out every night in the week and still keep above the University average. On the nights we stay in it is only to play pinochle. Since the beginning of the school year seven of our boys have gone into the service and only one of us can be reasonably certain of coming back for the next semester. During this spring semester we have had three ensigns of the Naval Reserve living with us. DRINKER 4A DRINKER 4A had a good year scholastically and athletically at least, winning the Interdormitory Council scholarship cup for the past year and, teaming with 4B, won the Drinker House basketball and softball championships. Edward Diehl was a 4-point man during the fall semester, and George Bleul was makeup editor on the Brown and White and also junior manager of the track team. Harry Ponisi, Drinker House president-elect, was on the track team; Peter Kitson was in JV football, and Fred Spencer played in the band. Fred Wiley, cross-country captain-elect, won the Johnny Maxwell award as the outstanding senior on the cross-country team. W. Bradford and Bill Beck were ROTC award- winners. At one time, Drinker 4A had eight men in Advanced Mil. DRINKER III-B GROUP: Rear Row: Foust, Schillat, Shorten, Nate, Derewinka, Yastrzab. Second Row: Laube, McElroy, Hantz, Wilson, Winco, Kangis. Front Row: Limbach, Tearse, Wiegand. CANDIDS: Overtime on ROTC. Funny? Can ' t be a textbook. DRINKER IV-A GROUP: Rear Rotv. Wiley, Bleul, Lebovitz, Swartz, Kitson, Beck, Pelzel. Front Ron: Coeyman, Spencer, Hanger, Ponisi, Bradford, Diehl. 196 DRINKER 4B SECTION 4B was well represented in all fields of activity during the past Year. In conjunction with Section 4 A, it won the Drinker House Basketball and Baseball championships and was runner-up for the football title. In addition, one member of the section was the 165-lb. intramural boxing champion of the University; two were on the Varsity Basketball squad, and one was on the Varsity Baseball squad. The Section President for the spring semester was the President of Interdormitory Council: and among the men was a member each in Tau Beta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, and Pi Tau Sigma. The section was also repre- sented on the advertising staff of the Bachelor. The scholastic rating of Section 4B for the Fall semester was very creditable, eleventh in rank among the living groups in the University. Only one man was lost to the service during the course of the year. PRICE HOUSE Since its construction in 1855 as a brewery, the present Price House has had a long and interesting history. After serving its original purpose for a number of years, the building was converted into a small hotel with a bar on the first floor. In 1916 it was first used as a dormitory under the name of Die Alte Brauerei, but afterwards was known as Price Hall in tribute to Henry R. Price, ' 70. In 1940 the name of the dorm was officially changed to Price House. The present occupants of Price House have much to be proud of in reviewing the year ' s record. Last year the class of 1945 won the Phi Eta Sigma freshman scholarship trophy, thus preserving the house ' s high academic standing. Mem- bers showed their athletic prowess by winning the touch football championship of the Price-Taylor League this fall. Movies which were taken at several of the games provided much entertainment for members of the t eam and their sideline supporters. Although Price House is too small to be divided into sections like the other dorms, a friendly rivalry grew up this year between members of the Army re- serves and Navy reserves, culminating in a challenge from the Navy for a miniature Army-Navy football game. As evidence that there is really great spirit of unity among them, the men of Price House held their own banquet at the Sun Inn in December, and every man was present. DRINKER IV-B GROUP: Rear Ron: Stout, Woelfel, Willis, Clement,, Kordiin, Mooney, Buehler. Front Ron: Wise, Hayworth, Johnson, Egan, Megas. CANDIDS: Old Maid. Die Alte Brauerei. PRICE HALL GROUP: Rear Ron: Ingemanson, Reid, Sanantonio. Cuhherly. Mill-. Colman, Sanders. Third Ron: Milch, Freeman, J. Snyder. Risch, Maxwell. Oyhr. Second Ron: Clark, Early, Price, Cerstvik, McClure, Swartz, Skilton. Front Ron: R. Snyder, Gehr, Le:-h. McAllister, Wantuck, Matthews. 199 RICHARDS HOUSE High up on Old South Mountain stands a beautiful building styled in colle- giate gothic. This stately structure, high above the broad Lehigh Valley, is Richards House — the first indication of the fulfillment of one of Lehigh ' s great- est dreams. Richards represents the result of Lehigh ' s growing interest in the students ' welfare. Richards House is named after Charles Russ Richards, sixth president of Lehigh. During his years of service from 1922 to 1935, Dr. Richards helped to make the goal Greater Lehigh a reality. Tremendous improvements were made on the buildings and on the campus, and an organized group of alumni backed the progressive ventures which were initiated during this period of expansion One of Dr. Richards ' greatest plans, however, was that of constructing a new series of dormitories, to be graded up the mountain to the Lookout. But Dr. Richards was not destined to see the accomplishment of such a project during his stay at Lehigh because of the lack of funds necessary to start such a gigantic building program. In 1935 he fell ill and was forced to resign. Lehigh continued to expand, and the prestige and fame of the University continued to grow at the same time. Two years after the retirement of Dr. Richards, President Clement C. Williams suggested that some of the school ' s uninvested money be used to construct the first of the proposed dormitories. The Board of Trustees gave its sanction to the proposal, and the ground for Richards House was accord- ingly broken in 1937. This new dormitory, the nucleus of a great system of modern living quarters, was ready for occupancy in the fall of 1938. The first year, Richards was filled largely from the two lower classes, since dormitory upperclassmen in Price and Taylor Halls were unwilling to sever their associations in those dormitories. Within the past five years, however, Richards has risen to take its rightful position in every sort of campus activity. Besides living quarters, Richards contains a comfortable and spacious lounge, a game room, two visiting rooms, and a soundproofed room suitable for any display of musical talent. The rooms are singles and doubles ( one of the dis- tinctive features of the newer dormitories ) . The older houses have only suite- rooms suitable for sessions, but with special rooms provided for this purpose at Richards, more separate rooms could be constructed. RICHARDS I GROUP: Rear Ron: Klostermann, Greenbaum, Porgus, Brown, Martin, Beilman, Fromuth. Second Ron: Pollock, Dumvoody, Layton, Duncan, Coffman, Corson. Front Ron: Del Vecchio, Deal, Moore, Reese, Rick, Geiger. CANDIDS: On the Phone. Richards House. RICHARDS II-A GROUP: Rear Ron: DeWan, Priestley, Gallagher, Helms, Loch, Mayer, Walling, Walter. McGuiness, Marx, Dayton. Second Ron: Waters, LeRoy, Courtney, Hillegass, Matthews, Klein. Front Ron : Laird, Wolf, Frischkorn, Van Eerde, Vogel. 200 DORMITORIES AT LEHIGH Christmas Hall, half of the present Christmas-Saucon Hall, was Lehigh ' s first dormitory; it was joined to Saucon Hall in 1872. Christmas Hall served as Lehigh ' s only dormitory until the opening of Taylor House in the fall of 1908, which, strangely enough, did not meet with as much enthusiasm as the later Richards and Drinker Houses. The 1909 Epitome ' s comment on the newly con- structed Taylor Hall was that upon returning to college last September, we found presented to us a new set of opportunities and of problems — those con- nected with Taylor Hall and the Commons. In the early years when Price House and Taylor House were the only dormi- tories, the fagging of freshmen was excessive, not outdone even by fraternity groups. The cellar of Taylor House was the scene of much of this collegiate bullying. Dormitory tradition was strong on the campus when Taylor and Price were Lehigh ' s only housing units. Each year over the Lehigh-Lafayette weekend, a banner was hung in the Taylor quadrangle and guarded carefully by dorm freshmen; at Price House, a similar symbol was hung up and protected from the Maroon marauders. The guarding the banner tradition, however, was scrapped after the house-wrecking riot of 1933, which one Epitome describes as bodies being thrown around like balloons. Lehigh ' s new dormitories, Drinker and Richards, were constructed in colle- giate Gothic design, in order to conform to the new library, Packard laboratory, and the Alumni building. Featured in the new housing units at the time of their construction were beautiful and comfortable lounges, game rooms, visiting rooms, and in Richards, a sound-proof room for musicians. Plans to build Richards House were announced first in the October 8, 1937, Brown and White. As planned, the dormitory was to house 138 students and several tutorial fellows who would serve as proctors. Native limestone was to be used on the new English Collegiate Gothic structure, 236 feet long and 42 feet deep. The first floor was to house 18 students, with 40 on each of the other three floors. The first-floor lounge, 14 by 55 feet, called for New England style pine pan- elling with a large stone fireplace at one end. Richards House was to be the first of four proposed units, which would form a quadrangle on South Mountain. October 23, 1937, President C. C. Williams turned the first spade of earth and ground was broken for the Greater Lehigh ' s RICHARDS II-B: Back Row: Dellwig, Murray, Harnish, Rice, Plunkett, Goodwin. Busch. Middle Row: Tilley, Bardagjy, Frey, Ellsworth, Kirk, Huddle-ton. Front Ron: McHugh, Stevens, Geyer, Craft, Pierce. CANDIDS: News from home. Seegars! RICHARDS III-A GROUP: Rear Ron: Troy, Gray, Boll, Summers, Gerhart, Hallock, Weigel, Stieglitz, Shively. Second Row: Roherts, Brown, Parr, Constantine, Rohb. Myers, Tuwnsend. Front Rote: Flower, Loehman, Johnson, Nichols, Atwood. 203 Dormitory System, with over 800 houseparty guests as spectators. This is a significant event in the history of Lehigh, President Williams said, at the ground-breaking exercises, because it marks the initial step in improving living conditions of Lehigh students. College education pertains to a mode of living as well as a mode of thinking. This dormitory has been designed educa- tionally as well as architecturally, to the end that students residing there will derive a maximum of pleasure and benefit from their mutual association. Location of the new dormitory was in what was known as Crystal Spring Ravine, which had long been regarded as one of the beauty spots on the campus, with an excellent view of the surrounding countryside towards Bath and Nazareth. Not until December of 1937 did the new dormitory receive its official name — Richards House, in honor of Dr. Charles Russ Richards, who resigned his Lehigh presidency in 1935 because of ill health. It was President Richards who first con- ceived the idea of the Lehigh-quadrangle of dormitories. At this time, it was decided to designate all dormitories as houses to distinguish them from halls, classroom buildings. ith the building of Richards House, all dormitory-rentals were increased by approximately 15 per cent for students, with top prices of $200 a year at Richards and $140 yearly at Taylor. W hen the Richards House cornerstone was laid in February of 1938, contem- porary records sealed in a metal box were buried for posterity. Into the corner- stone went copies of the Brown and V. bite, a Lehigh catalogue, a copy of the I Diversity Charter and Regulations, and a faculty-student directory. A Brown and bite columnist and wag, making a tour of Richards House in September of 1938, noted, among other things about the new dormitory: pic- tures must be hung from the moulding; there is a room for band practice on the fourth floor: there is no basement: the heating system is on the first floor; two guys with names like Henley and Ruskin from Xorristown have a sign on their door with two names on it like Henley and Ruskin, saying that they are both from Norristown. DRINKER HOUSE Drinker House is the latest addition to the Greater Lehigh which Dr. Charles Russ Richards, sixth president of Lehigh, envisioned many years ago. Drinker House, with its mate Richards, forms what is hoped to be only a RICHARDS III-B GROUP: Rear Ron: Perona, Estrup, Smith, Marini. Gri e. Richard. , Hill, Long, Fetterolf. Second Ron: Villa, Meury, Kareha, C. Schweitzer, Hird, Little. Front Ron: Hanford. Iacocca, E. Schweitzer, Phillips, Fair. CANDIDS: What ' , on at the movie? Check! RICHARDS IV- A GROUP: Rear Ron: Whipple, Abell, Corbett, Green, Jordan, Long, Dart, Sechrist. Second Ron: Mercer, Titlow, Wittman, Schramm, Carlin, Wetzel. Front Ron: Schu- bert, W. E. Yieira. R. J. Vieira. Kuhns, Foltz. 204 1fc nucleus of a projected quadrangle dormitory plan which will furnish to Lehigh students the most comfortable living accommodations possible. Two years after Richards House was open for occupancy, Drinker opened its doors for the first time to Lehigh students. Now, after three years of activity, Drinker has assumed its rightful position among the groups of older houses. Drinker House was named for one of Lehigh ' s most illustrious alumni, Henry Sturges Drinker. Dr. Drinker, after graduating from Lehigh in 1871, started to work for the Lehigh Valley Railroad. In what spare time he had he, studied law, and in 1882 he was made attorney for the company. In the depression of 1893-97, Dr. Drinker performed his first great service for the University by saving it from complete financial collapse. If it had not been for his untiring efforts to obtain a land grant from the State of Pennsylvania, there might not be a Lehigh Uni- versity as we know it today. It was shortly after this episode that Dr. Drinker laid plans for the alumni endowment fund, which was to put Lehigh on a firm financial footing. When Dr. Drown died in 1904, Lehigh men looked to Dr. Drinker as the logical man to guide the fate of the new and struggling university. Dr. Drinker ' s policy was to have a centralized campus life. Devotion was the keynote to Dr. Drinker ' s seventy-year association with the University. It was during his sixteen years in office that the Business Administration College was created and the Engineering Colleges so extensively enlarged. Endowment was trebled, and a three-quarter million dollar debt was paid. Even after his retirement in 1921 Dr. Drinker remained active in his associa- tions with the University until his death in 1927. It was appropriate, therefore, that a dormitory be named for a man who had given so many years of faithful service to the university he loved, and whose purpose it was to promote college feeling and loyalty by bringing our men together. With the building of Drinker House, a new era began in the lives of dormitory men. New opportunities to obtain a broader, more general education were now offered, and the many varied activities of the students who live in Drinker House stand as evidence to show how the dormitory students are taking full advantage of new horizons offered. Chief difference in plan of Lehigh ' s various dormitories is in the suite-and- room layouts. While Taylor and Price have suite-rooms, Richards and Drinker have first-floor lounges. The suite-rooms of Taylor and Price feature a lounging room flanked by several individual study-and-sleeping rooms, as different from the single-rooms and main lounge of Richards and Drinker. RICHARDS IV-B GROUP: Rear Row: Deveraux, Ashworth, Wagner, Mulligan, Helm, Werner, Curtiss, Handwerk, Baldelli. Front Row: Minde, Galli, Backensto, Remsen, Schiavone, Ettinger. CANDIDS: Disc data. Pin-up girls. TAYLOR A GROUP: Rear Roiv: Leschak, Torango, Stratton, Timmerman, Rogers, Bennett, Maelnness. Second Row: Bevan, Powell, Johnson, Wiegand, Kladivko, Raffetto, O ' Shea. Front Roiv: Holbrook, Ferrel, Soule, Horn, Oekelnian, Lytle, Arant. 207 TAYLOR HALL Taylor Hall is a monument to two great Americans — C. F. Taylor, ' 76, and Andrew Carnegie. Mr. Taylor, who was a trustee of the University at the time of the donation, had been talking to Andrew Carnegie concerning the necessity of providing rooming facilities for Lehigh students. Carnegie felt that by donating funds for the purpose of building a dormitory he could fulfill a twofold purpose: to do Lehigh University a great service and, by naming the structure for C. F. Taylor, to give recognition to a friend and associate. Mr. Taylor, much against his wishes to have his name excluded from mention, agreed to the proposal, and plans were made immediately to provide a dormi- tory of sturdy and lasting construction. Taylor Hall was one of the first concrete buildings to be constructed in this section of the country, and the original plans were very much modified during the process of building, to the extent that the Hall now faces down the hill instead of toward the mountain, as had been originally planned. Outside con- tractors who had had experience with concrete construction were called in, and soon the difficulties were overcome. In 1934 the partitions between sections were removed, and the bitter rivalry of sections was destroyed. The move to make the Hall a single unit met with the disapproval of the upperclassmen, but Taylor Hall subsequently became unified in spirit, and congeniality now exists among the sections. Today there is a friendly rivalry among the five sections of the Hall, and each section has its full quota of significant campus men. The unified spirit of Lehigh dormitories is still preserved by the advisory body composed of the section presidents. Many of the men who live here would not consider living in the newer dormi- tories. Men of Taylor Hall prefer the comfortable grouping of rooms to the long halls and the symmetrical pattern of the rooms in the newer dormitories. The architects for Taylor House were Whitfield and King, nationally-famous men, who did all of the work on Carnegie ' s many libraries. Worst year for Taylor House was back in 1933 when over 200 Lafayette men swarmed up over the bank and invaded the dormitory. Taylor was soon flooded with water from various fire hoses, most of the movable furniture was broken, and clothes scattered all over the dormitory quadrangle. Much of the spirit and oneness initiated by fraternities is present in the vari- TAYLOR HALL B GROUP: Rear Row: Nonemaker, Kocyan, R. C. Buckwalter, Pisciteflo, Ros- pond, Mackey. Third Ron : Bellis, Solly, Rutherford, Adams, Pappas, Zirnite, Raring. Second Roiv: Swayne, Lorimer, Gilmore, Cumming, R. H. Buckwalter, Mullen, Maragakes, Whitehead. Front Row: Dieffenbach, Neuendorffer, Conforte, Mueller, Boleyn, O ' Connell. CANDIDS: Waxing up the skiis. Kenny Swayne relaxes. TAYLOR HALL C GROUP: Rear Ron: Kendziora, Rice, Streck, Strang, Gould, McCracken. Third Ron: Humm, Kirkham, Alhing, Yaple. Second Ron: Artim, Bradford, Gilmore, Vitelli, Knight, Litrides, Simpson. Front Row: Plonko, Morgan, Carroll, Fisher, Dragone, Nestleroth. 208 fw, FT ff •- % -f — - ' 29 [ r 1 T I E - . ■r -J lJ ' j 1fe £ ous dormitory sections, which take as much pride in a football numeral or a Brown and White editorship as any fraternity. In the dormitories, freshmen act as fags to upper classmen in somewhat the same way as fraternity yearlings. They run mail duty, mail laundry cases, answer the telephone, post the local theatre attractions, and furnish entertainment at section banquets. As one dormitory man has aptly put the matter: I like the dormitories be- cause I can live in a congenial group without having to feel that I have to become a close friend of each member. I can remain more independent, choose my friends without coercion, and yet feel a group pride in the fact that a fellow in my section is a Phi Beta Kappa or has just been named basketball captain. The chief weakness in dorms, as I see it, is that they don ' t drive their men into activi- ties with the same ardor that fraternities do. The dorm sections at Lehigh function with the same cooperativeness and social consciousness generally, as do fraternities. The dormitories ' social season opens with fall houseparty and closes with spring houseparty. Most of the sections par- ticipate in houseparty by clearing members from a portion of the section where dates will live over the week-end with the chaperons. Richards and Drinker use an entire section for their dates. Dormitory men at Lehigh have proved themselves worthy of the University ' s interest. The various houses have been organized into sections and the Interdor- mitory Council has been formed to act as a governing body for these men. Main purpose of the Council has been to develop a more cohesive and cooperative relationship among dormitory men. TAYLOR HALL D GROUP: Rear Row: Yazujian, Peterson, Reher, Treser, Heyl, Loomis, Werley, Pittala, Munford, Gotwalt. Third Ron: Moore, Sehank, Whitney, Amish, Scott, Rush, Thomson, Williams. Second Row: Fitch, Ross, Heath, Hogg, Klapper, Gray, Hartman. Front Row: Streuli, Sauer, Richards, Pugh, Roslnnd, Clark, Thrasher. CANDIDS: What ' s the story? Well, how ' s ahout it? Dorm confah. TAYLOR E GROUP: Back Roiv: Shewmon, Martin, Harmon, Mclnerney, Test, Malone, Werme. Third Row: Mueller, Foster, R. Wright, Dicke, Smith, Keller. Second Row: Krenitski, Oherndorfer, Wiegand, Piaski, Ferguson, Miller. Front Row: Rennett, Moll, Leifheit, Chrisman, Fehnel, Arsove. 211 THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL THE Interfraternity Council was formed in the spring of 1919 when the frater- nities felt the need for a united organization and loose governing body. Its constitution states the purpose of this council as follows: . . . 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 University functions, and to attempt to further promote the welfare of the University in general. As has been its custom in the past, the Council awards cups and prizes as a means of promoting interest in interfraternity athletics. Acceleration and the war have caused unprecedented problems which the Council has had to solve. It was decided by the Council, which has the power to establish and enforce rules for rushing, to postpone until September the pledging of freshmen enter- ing Lehigh in June. Also because of the war, it was decided that the annual Interfraternity Ball would be informal. This year the Council has cooperated with the University on several prob- lems. A problem of securing adequate housing w T as caused by the enrollment of an abnormally large freshman class and by the fact that there were less town accommodations available. In addition, the matters of student discipline, dis- ciplinary regulations, and treatment of pledges were discussed. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL GROUP. CANDIDS: Give, boys, give! Jam se? ion. 213 ALPHA CHI RHO Alpha Chi Rho was founded on June 4, 1895, at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. Although it expanded cautiously, there are now 18 active chapters with over 5,000 alumni members. The Phi Mu chapter of Alpha Chi Rho was originally a local fraternity known as Theta Delta Psi. In 1918 the national fraternity accepted the petition of the local for admittance to Alpha Chi Rho. The present location of the Crow House at Market and Linden Streets is the fourth site of this organization ' s home. The fraternity has a distinctive nomenclature. Great emphasis is laid upon a platform of principles called the landmarks, which are stated to be: (1) membership from among professing Christians only, (2) insistence upon a high and clean moral standard, (3) brotherly love, (4) intrinsic worth as the sole guide in the selection of new members. Each chapter is called a Phi; under- graduate members are called residents; others are called graduates. This year the fraternity continued its custom of giving a Christmas party for the underprivileged children of Bethlehem, an occasion out of which the mem- bers get as much enjoyment as the children. Movies and games were the high- lights of this evening, and each youngster went home with a present and stories of Santa ' s visit. Other social activities included a Christmas banquet and an ex- change dance with the Phi Phi chapter of the University of Pennsylvania. Alpha Chi Rho participates in all the interfraternity athletic contests. At the end of the school year the Phi Mu chapter publishes a pamphlet, Musings, containing alumni news, home chapter news, and pictures and descriptions of the graduating seniors. Members of the football, swimming, soccer, and baseball teams are found among the Crows. Other members represent the fraternity in the Sportsman ' s Club, the Glee Club, and Scabbard and Blade; one member took part in the Mustard and Cheese production of The Moon Is Down. Alpha Chi Rhos were members of various engineering societies, and one member was head cheer leader. ALPHA CHI RHO: Rear Row: Miller, Hartung, Ericksen, Warren, Bierman, Norton, Clifford, Byrn. Third Row: Grim, Burdirk, Sexton, Williams, Helthall, Webster, Ralph. Second Row: Sanders, Moore, Hill, Norris, Haas, Thomas, Maack. Front Row: Johnson, Bellanti, Smith. CANDIDS: Ping pong. Mail from home. The house. 214 ALPHA KAPPA PI Alpha Kappa Pi was founded in March, 1926, by the union of two local fra- ternities — Phi Delta Zeta, located at the Newark College of Engineering, Newark, New Jersey, and Alpha Kappa Pi, of Wagner College, Staten Island, New York. The chapter at Newark became the Alpha Chapter as a compromise for using the name of Alpha Kappa Pi for the national fraternity. Dr. A. H. Wilson of New York City, who had been instrumental in bringing the two groups together, was elected the Faculty Advisor, a position which he still capably fulfills. The new fraternity quickly gathered supporters and began its rapid expansion, existing today with a roll call of thirty-one chapters. Howard Hall, a living group organized by Howard Oppelt in 1926 and named in honor of him, petitioned for entrance to the ranks of Alpha Kappa Pi in 1929, and on February 1, 1930, Nu chapter was installed at Lehigh. This group continued to live in their house at 511 Seneca Street until 1933, when Alpha Kappa Pi moved to its present home at 514 Delaware Avenue. Throughout its history at Lehigh, Nu chapter has been active in all social activities, sports, and has stood high scholastically. The past year has found representatives on the teams and squads of junior varsity football, wrestling, rifle, fencing, swimming, track, and tennis. Alpha Kappa Pi has also been active in the numerous intramural programs of the Athletic Department. In addition, members are numbered among those of Scabbard and Blade, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Alpha Kappa Psi, Alpha Phi Omega, and the International Relations Club. The group living at the chapter house during the past summer spent much of their spare time in painting the exterior of the house and redecorating the interior. At the time of this writing the Armed Services have greatly depleted the number of brothers and pledges while many more expect to be called soon, but Alpha Kappa Pi is planning to keep on functioning as a group whose aims and desires are those of continued brotherhood. ALPHA KAPPA PI: Back Row: Kurz, Huth, Shepherd, Garrabrants, Waltman, Raffetto, Lubbers, Gsell, Hendrick, Graham, Holyoke. Middle Row: Mosier, Moyer, Liebau, Hopkins, Hinman, O ' Neill, Stoeckle. Front Row: Lloyd, Starr, Topliss, Biegler, Wittmann, Mountsier. CANDIDS: Magazine-minded. Home work. The house. 277 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Alpha Tau Omega, the first American fraternity to be founded after the Civil War, was founded at Virginia Military Institute, in L exington, on Sep- tember 11, 1865, and was incorporated as a recognized body four years later. In the beginning primarily a Southern fraternity, the organization spread north- ward in the 1880 ' s with the founding of a chapter at the University of Penn- sylvania, and the institution of the Pennsylvania Alpha Rho chapter at Lehigh, in 1882, the second chapter north of the Mason-Dixon line. Surprisingly coin- cidental is the fact that Alpha Tau Omega was the second national fraternity to have a chapter at Lehigh. The government of the fraternity is vested in three departments: legislative, executive, and judicial. The legislative department consists of a Congress of delegates from the various chapters and alumni associations which convenes bi- ennially. In the interim the High Council I five members elected biennially by the Congress ) exercises general legislative and advisory powers and functions. The executive department consists of five grand officers, elected by the Con- gress, and a corps of province chiefs, appointed by the highest executive officer, who have general supervision over the fraternity. In 1916 the Pennsylvania Alpha Rho organization received sufficient Alumni support to have constructed on the campus the present chapter house. Before this time, however, permanent residence was not achieved 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. A. T. O. ' s have always shown a special interest in sports and are represented on many of Lehigh ' s athletic teams. This year ' s A. T. O. ' s are on the squads and teams of rifle, lacrosse, wrestling, soccer, and football. In addition to these athletic activities, members of Alpha Tau Omega have actively participated in all forms of interfraternitv athletics and contests. ALPHA TAU OMEGA: Back Ron: Bernard, Marsden, Davidson, Judd, Clinkunbroonier, Berges, Haslam, Potter, Custer, Lawshe, Deffaa, Tomlinson, Moore. Middle Ron: Hammond, Conklin, Dix, Bird, Weller, Trappe. Front Ron: Felderman, Barkhorn, Saxman, Burke. CANDIDS: Hometown paper. Four spades doubled. The house. 218 f M- V V: xf Hi 1 Jy -■; Iv rl • K I jSjhirf i|Sm lliiltri aMBM ■M I £% w ' 6 S i -v.. BETA THETA PI Beta Theta Pi was established at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in 1839 by John Reilly Knox and seven other undergraduates. It was the sixth social fraternity in the order of founding, and it was the first fraternity organ- ized west of the Alleghenies. In thirty-two instances Beta Theta Pi entered a college with the first chapter of any fraternity to be represented on that par- ticular campus and in seven other instances it was the second chapter on the campus. It was the first of the Miami Triad to be formed. It is now one of the largest fraternities, having ninety chapters. Twice during the lifetime of the fraternity a union has been effected with other fraternities — with Alpha Sigma Chi in 1879, and with the Mystical Seven in 1889. In each case the alumni of the uniting society have been received into full fellowship. The entire membership is kept constantly informed by publi- cations of the official actions of the fraternity. At Lehigh the Beta Chi chapter was founded in 1891 when three Beta trans- fers sought and obtained the charter. The first house was on West Fourth Street, but in 1902 it was moved to Wyandotte Street. It was later changed to Church Street and in 1926 the present house was constructed in Sayre Park. Each year Beta Theta Pi, along with two other fraternities, holds the Miami Triad dance, which is one of the outstanding social events of the spring semester. The chapter presents each year the Beta Theta Pi Cup to the member of the Senior Class of Lehigh University who has shown the outstanding qualities of leadership and achievement. The house is active in sports and other extra-curricular activities. Second place was garnered last year in the Interfraternity Singing Contest, and first place was taken in the Interfraternity Wrestling Meet. BETA THETA PI GROUP: Rear Row: Bosserman, Bitting, Winter, Lotz, Pockman, Williams, Packard. Third Row: Lampert, Meyer, J. Given, Coles, Wiss, Downing, Snyder, Davis. Second Row: Fittipaldi, Mermann, Peacock, Roberts, Palmer, Reiber, Pruett, Deacb, Jones. Front Row: Clark, P. Given, Chandlee, Keesling, Niewenhaus, McWilliams, Stokes, Fulton. CANDIDS: Looking over the trophies. Taking it easy. The house. 227 CHI PHI Chi Phi was originally founded at the College of New Jersey in 1824. The Civil War caused its separation into northern and southern orders. At the close of the war, the two groups recombined and added two other societies to form the present Chi Phi. Lehigh ' s Psi chapter, the first fraternity to be formed at this university, was installed in 1872, and held its exclusive position for two years. Its first location was at Second and New Streets, but many homes were occupied before the present on-campus house was erected in 1923. Buildings which are now Bethlehem landmarks sheltered the chapter in its earlier days, among them the Moravian Book Shop, the Washington Republican Club, the Post Office, and the Union Bank and Trust Company. Lehigh ' s Chi Phis are particularly active in athletics. The chapter numbers members of the varsity football and swimming teams, and a marksman on the ever-famous rifle squad. Other activities show Psi chapter participation in Mustard and Cheese productions (both as members of the cast and as technical aides), varsity debating, Scabbard and Blade, and other campus honoraries. CHI PHI GROUP: Rear Row: McCorkle, Spratley, Rasberry, Trimble, Rile, Porter, Callahan. Fourth Row: D. deGrouchy, deLaittre, Ferguson, Neill, Rullock, Nicolaides. Third Row: Kelly, Carlson, Penniman, Cather, Lehr, Troebel, Lynn, Hannon. Second Row: Corwin, Gregory, Chidsey, J. deGrouchy, Stearns, Finch, Bugbee. Front Row: Reed, Ryon, Barnecott, Shearer, Pope, Meserve. CANDIDS: Around the piano. Eight ball. The house. 222 DELTA PHI The Delta Phi Fraternity, founded at Union College in 1827, is the third col- lege social fraternity founded in America. The objects set forth by its nine founders were the maintenance of high stand- ings as gentlemen and students, and the consolidation of the students ' interests with the aim in mind of fostering fraternal and cordial relations. To carry out these aims Delta Phi has remained conservative in its policy of expansion, feeling that, with all its chapters in a close proximity to each other, more friendly and lasting relations might be had. Those chapters now active are within easy reach of one another, and the fraternity is unusually homogeneous in consequence. The executive powers of the fraternity are vested in a Board of Governors, all members of which are elected at each annual convention by the delegates repre- senting the active chapters. The Nu chapters of Delta Phi, the fourth national fraternity to appear at Lehigh, was founded in 1884. The chapter membership has always been small, since its brothers believe that the principles set down by the founders may most readily be followed if the house has relatively few members. The Nu chapter has placed high in all intramural competition during the past year. It won its league trophy in baseball in Spring, 1942, and last fall added the off-campus baseball trophy to its collection. In extra-curricular activities, Nu chapter has given L ehigh the assistant cheerleader and a fresh- man cheerleader, two brothers who received letters for varsity soccer, and brothers on the rifle and swimming teams. Delta Phi is also represented in the Mustard and Cheese Society, in the Glee Club, and in various honorary and course societies. DELTA PHI GROUP: Rear Row: George, Wolfe, Young, Perry, Goulding, Hayes. Second Row: Ball, Turkington, Moore, Wemple, Smith. Front Row: Bruns, Bergh, Over, Birckhead, Longley. CANDIDS: A cozy corner. Horizontal relaxation. The house. 225 DELTA SIGMA PHI Delta Sigma Phi, now in its forty-fourth year, was founded at the College of the City of New York on December 10, 1899. This first chapter was known as Insula, but upon the founding of two new chapters at Columbia and New York University, it was designated as the Alpha chapter. Today, Delta Sigma Phi is an international fraternity, having forty-three chapters through- out the United States and Canada. The government of the fraternity is vested in the Executive Council, which is elected at the annual convention. The journal of the fraternity is a quar- terly, called the Carnation. Beta Theta, the Lehigh chapter, originated as a society of senior engineers, who named their group Sigma Iota. Later this name was changed to Phi Delta Pi, and the rapidly expanding society moved to a house on Delaware Avenue. In the fall of 1931 the society was granted a charter from the Delta Sigma Phi International Fraternity and in the following year was installed as the Beta Theta Chapter of Delta Sigma Phi. Doctor Ralph B. Hess of Bethlehem and Doctor Robert P. More of Lehigh University ' s language department were highly instrumental in bringing about the transition of the fraternity from local to national. The names of these two men, who still are furnishing Beta Theta with valuable assistance and advice, have been placed upon a special service plaque, in rightful appreciation of their contributions to this chapter. The first presi- dent of the chapter was Henry Kriebel, former instructor of accounting in the Business College at Lehigh. The chapter house is now located on Packer Avenue. Members of the fraternity are active in all phases of interfraternity athletics. In addition men represent Lehigh on the varsity soccer, swimming, and track teams. DELTA SIGMA PHI GROUP: Rear Row: Ainley, J. Zimmerman, Vallario, Henry, Apple, Barenborg, Wheeler. Third Ron: Strehle, Velie, Greybill, Charest, Goth, Seigle, Treiehler. Second Row: Torrens, Ryan, Stahl, Davis, Starke, Sultzer, Holberton. Front Roic: C. Zimmer- man, Long, Hildenbrandt, Ross, Shaner. CANDIDS: Harmony? Accounting. The house. 226 % - 3k 4fcai£39l -•a S 5 1 ' m fim, DELTA TAU DELTA Delta Tau Delta was founded at Bethany College, Bethany, est irginia, in 1858, but the final adoption of a motto, badge, and consitution did not occur until 1859. Union with the Rainbow Society of the W. . W. faternity in 1866 began the expansion that has resulted in a total organization of seventy- four chapters and an alumni membership of over 30,000. Beta Lambda chapter was founded at Lehigh in 1874. The house occupied two residences in town until 1914, when it moved to its present home, which was the second fraternity house constructed on the campus. The most important of the fraternity publications is its journal. This was commenced as a monthly in September, 1877, and was called the Crescent, from one of the fraternity ' s prominent emblems. In 1886, when the Delta Tau Delta fraternity merged with the Rainbow fraternity, the name of the publication was changed to the Rainbow. The badge of the fraternity is a nearly square shield with concave sides, dis- playing the gold letters A T A on black enamel. Above is an eye, below a cres- cent, and in each corner a star. Delta Tau Delta added largely to its list of accomplishments this year. Its dis- play for the Lafayette game won first prize. The Delt freshman skit was one of the five chosen for the Lafayette pep rally. Awards were granted the chapter for intramural activities. Delta Tau Delta held several dances during the year. This year, as in the past, Delta Tau Delta is proud of its brothers and their activities. There are Delts in Cyanide, including the president; the president of Arcadia is a Delt. Delts have received letters in football, basketball, track, and cross country. Delta Tau Delta has men in two of the three university publica- tions and boasts members in Mustard and Cheese. Part of Delta Tau Delta ' s social program is the annual Christmas party. In addition the house holds ex- change dinners with the Delt chapter at Lafayette. DELTA TAU DELTA GROUP: Rear Row. Diggs, Hayworth, Thayer, Trany, Henzelman, Elliott, Kingman. Fourth Row: Day, Metten, F. Taylor, Jensen, Attaway, Kitzmiller. Third Row. Raney, Boyd, Belser, Mussina, West, Barrett, Pfisterer. Second Roic: Binder, Bower. Peck, Whipple, Morris, Coutts, Powers, W. Taylor. Front Row. Dunning, Luckenhach, Welch, Dough- erty, Shipherd, Orth, Kerr. CANDIDS: Checkmate. Extracurricular reading. The house. 229 DELTA UPSILON Delta Upsilon was the sixth fraternity to be established at Lehigh and the first to build its house on the campus. It is one of the oldest nationally, hav- ing been founded at Williams in 1834 as an anti-secret society called the Social Fraternity. When the Lehigh chapter was founded in 1885 by a committee headed by Charles Evans Hughes, Brown ' 81, Delta Upsilon was already a lead- ing fraternity in Eastern universities and colleges. It was about this time that a policy of non-secrecy was adopted. The features of this non-secrecy may be summed up as follows: it has no grip or passwords; its constitution is public; and the records of its conventions are printed and may be read by anyone interested. Strangers are not usually admitted to chapter meetings, and there is no reason for their admission. In short, the privacy of most business and social organizations is observed, but it is without the usual paraphernalia of a secret society. The Lehigh chapter is now entering its fifty-eighth year and still remains one of the most active fraternities in the university. As always, members of the house have engaged whole-heartedly in university activities, social and athletic. Nearly every varsity sport has a D. U. brother on the team and such societies as Alpha Kappa Psi, Cyanide, Pi Tau Sigma, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Tau Beta Pi include D. U. ' s in their membership. The annual conference of the Third Province of Delta Upsilon was held at Lehigh early in December. Meetings were held for two days with representatives from ten other colleges and universities attending. DELTA UPSILON GROUP: Rear Ron: Frank, Adams, Doster, Siefert, Salmond, Bassett, Zie- bold. Fourth Row. Wiley, Croll, Tavenor, Ely, Kauffman. Third Row: Herbert, Bearon, Haga- dorn, Ingram, Townsend. Second Ron: Romberger, Semmel, Ramsden, P. Berg, Hoffacker, Cornelius. Front Rou: Boyer, Boebel, R. Berg, Hayes, Porter, Rumsey, Curtiss. CANDIDS: The boys. Returning alumnus. The house. 230 ,w| p t ' F C- t.wK[ Mt H |P • ' 1 w SrfB I I - KT « ; r ■• Hi m ftj JX- jfiflk T- £ SB§£ a s 4 p I £ T T. M |g • - - ja . r ri l 13 tJS i 1 ■t Sk -lt ift ] ItI ifc; r KAPPA ALPHA Kappa Alpha, the first college social fraternity, was founded over a century ago in 1825 by a group of nine students at Union College. A special interest attaches to the circumstances of its founding. For some years previous to 1825 there had existed at Union College an organized company of students for pur- poses of outdoor exercise and military drill. Interest began to lag in this organi- zation, and the time was ripe for a new departure. Several members of the class of 1826 conceived the idea of a new secret society of a literary and social order. These men initiated several classmates and founded the fraternity. The founders possessed an aptitude for their work amounting to genius, and but slight addi- tions have been made to the ceremonial features of the order in over a hundred years. In spite of the opposition of the college authorities, the fraternity mate- rialized rapidly and grew, following a policy of restricted expansion, until it consisted of eight chapters. In 1893 three Lehigh students petitioned for a charter for their organization which was to become the Alpha chapter of Pennsylvania of the Kappa Alpha Society. The first meetings were held in a rented room, but rapid growth necessitated the procurement of a house. After occupying several houses, the society moved, in 1916, to its present location on Seneca Street. Distinctive chapter activities include the Union Triad Dance, the annual Christmas party, and a trip to the annual reunion and banquet of the Kappa Alpha Society in New York. Frequent visits to various other chapters maintain close relationships within the society. Twice a year the chapter publishes a paper called the News Letter. K. A. ' s have been active in many phases of college life, participating in varsity athletics, student government, and various social societies. KAPPA ALPHA: Back Ron: Honeyman, Van Allen, Meyers, Post, Shaw, Wehner, Noble, Fos- ter, Anderson, Davis. Middle Row: Hemming, Gaus, Parsons, Moore, Eisner, Smythe, Paddock. Front Row: Turner, Campbell, Johnson, Defenderfer, Taylor, Meissner. CANDIDS: After dinner. The Old Silver Goblet. The house. 233 KAPPA SIGMA THE Kappa Sigma Fraternity was first established in the United States on December 10, 1869, at the University of irginia. The fraternity originally existed during the 15th century in Europe at the University of Bologna. It was founded in America by five men who did not wish to join any of the then exist- ing fraternities. They have since been known as ' the five friends and brothers. ' ' ' This spirit has spread throughout the chapters all over the country. The executive power of the fraternity is delegated to a committee of five, called the supreme executive committee, which governs the fraternity between sessions of the grand conclave. The grand conclaves are the regular conventions of the fraternity and are held every two years, in midsummer. In 1900 ten Lehigh students petitioned for entrance into Kappa Sigma. They were accepted, and the Beta Iota chapter was installed in Bethlehem on Novem- ber 19, 1900. Beta Iota has had five different chapter houses within the city. The present house, which has been occupied since 1926, is located at 24 East Church Street in the former home of Archibald Johnston. The national fraternity is one of the largest in the country, with over one hundred active undergraduate chapters. There are also alumni chapters in all of the principal cities. The chapters are grouped into twenty-three districts with a district grandmaster at the head of each. The Beta Iota chapter is located in District 5, which is made up of chapters from Lehigh, Pennsylvania, Bucknell, Franklin and Marshall, Dickinson, Lafayette, and Swarthmore. Each year a Kappa Sigma Man of the Year is chosen by all of the chapters. One of the most recent choices was Edward R. Murrow, noted author and war correspondent. KAPPA SIGMA: Back Ron: Wynne, Welsh, Waltz, Suman, Edwards, Snyder, Fickes. Third Ron: Hooke, Mengel, Jansen, Darlow, Seouller, St. Clair, Neureuter, De Paoli. Second Ron: Buck, Mitchell. Burger . illiams, Schenck, Thompson, Bauinann. Front Row: Van Nort, Land- street, Stotz, Lodge, Werner, Woodson. CANDIDS: A hit of swing. Hell Week. The black ' s move. The house. 234 1 PI LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Lambda Chi Alpha was founded November 2, 1909, by three law students at | Boston University. Now, with its 107 active undergraduate chapters or Zetas, and over 30,000 alumni, it is one of the largest social fraternities. Its rapid growth was accelerated two years ago by a merger with Theta Kappa Nu. Dominated by the spirit of youthfulness, Lambda Chi Alpha built a strong foundation for its development by careful, progressive expansion. A strong na- tional organization, with a full-time Administrative Secretary and three full- time salaried traveling secretaries, insures a closely-knit fraternity. The importance of scholarship is recognized in the proctor and senior-adviser system to aid freshmen in their studies. Study hours with absolute quiet are enforced five nights a week. Each year an award is given to the outstanding fresh- man in scholarship. Upperclassmen, more experienced in university life, are always willing to tutor the younger men in studies which give them difficulty. Contacts with other fraternity men on the campus are encouraged, and ex- change dinners with various houses are held during the year. Faculty members are invited to dinners, and the student has an opportunity to meet his teachers in a more informal, social atmosphere. Alumni homecoming in the fall, Parents ' Day in the spring, and visits from parents and alumni all afford opportunities for making new friends and acquaintances. The house is particularly active in intramural sports, and members also take part in varsity football, wrestling, and baseball. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: Back Row: R. Laurencot, S. Bannan, Kelley, Bartlett, Miller, Hayman, De Cicco, Goodale, Evans. Fourth Row: Krebs, Bernasco, Leidig, Burroughs, Kemmer, Dafter, Herold, McClenachan. Third Row: Moravec, Kraus, Christian, Roth, Andrews, Searfass, Smith, Conwell, Henry. Second Row: McCormick, Dietche, McMullen, Neal, Campbell, Smith, Harris, Broten. Front Roiv: Clark, G. Smith, Herrick, Koehler, Hauck, Somers, Bullock. CANDIDS: Lounge-readers. Are you sure? The Lambda Chi house. 237 PHI DELTA THETA Phi Delta Theta was founded almost a century ago in a modest dormitory room at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Fulfilling a desire to bind more strongly the deep friendship and mutual interest that existed between them, the six founders met secretly to organize on the day after Christmas of 1848. Young men of high caliber, these undergraduates were able to found their society on remarkably sound principles. To this day, the aims of Phi Delta Theta as orig- inally set forth in The Bond of the Phi Delta Theta remain unchanged. At present there are one hundred and seven chapters in the United States and Canada. Pennsylvania Eta of Phi Delta Theta was the first permanent member of the Miami Triad at Lehigh. The local chapter was founded in 1887 and was located on Broad Street, Wyandotte Street, and finally, on the campus in 1917. Besides participating in the regular school functions, Phi Delta Theta, in con- junction with Sigma Chi and Beta Theta Pi, presents annually the Miami Triad Dance. In order to keep in touch with Phi alumni, the active chapter each year publishes the South Mountain Howl to inform the alumni of present activities at the Phi Delt house. In the past year Phi Delts have been members of Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Eta Sigma Phi, Alpha Kappa Psi, Phi Eta Sigma, Scabbard and Blade, New- tonian Society, and other societies. The cross-country, track, soccer, baseball, basketball, football, swimming, wrestling, lacrosse, tennis, and golf teams are all represented, including two captains and a manager in the three major sports. PHI DELTA THETA GROUP: Rear Roiv. Shaffer, Hunt, Kurtz, Gawthrop, Kovaka, Leiter, Sotzing, Fuller, McGrath. Third Roiv: Fox, Hicks, Reifsnyder, Hursh, Abeel, Little, O ' Keefe, Carr, Oskin, Messinger. Second Row: Shafer, Szymakowski, Morgal, Ginter, Niemeyer, Sweet, Figueroa, Murray, Stowers. Front Roiv: Weston, Roetz, Berta, Flippen, Ryan, Snyder, Oechsle, Pierce, Woodring. CANDIDS: What, no letter! The latest joke. The house. 238 r v t 111 . . TV UIMIIKIillit iri!HUllili(nfl • t HE II - ' - — • i£. IN! PHI GAMMA DELTA Phi Gamma Delta owes its founding to a group of loyal friends who held the first meeting at old Jefferson College (now a part of Washington and Jeffer- son) on May 1, 1848. Since then the fraternity has increased in size until it now embraces seventy-three chapters in this country and Canada. In addition, there have been established 110 graduate groups in cities all over this country. The Beta Chi chapter at Lehigh was founded on December 10, 1885. Interest- ing four Lehigh undergraduates, Major Frank Keck and J. W. French of Colum- bia University petitioned for a chapter and initiated the charter members in the old Sun Inn. It was here that the first chapter meetings were held. Then the members rented two rooms on the third floor of the old Post Office building at Main and Market Streets. Two years later the first chapter house was rented; as Beta Chi grew in size, other houses were possessed, until in 1922 its first house on the campus was built. This house was destroyed by fire on February 9, 1942. Reconstruction was begun almost immediately, and largely through the efforts of Dr. Loyal A. Shoudy and George R. Brothers the new house was completed. The members, who had lived in the Hotel Bethlehem during the remainder of the Spring term, were able to move back into the house in September. For years members of Phi Gamma Delta have been active in interfraternity, honorary, and athletic activities about the campus. Since 1936 Beta Chi has been host at an interfraternity dinner, to which have been invited representatives from the twenty-nine Lehigh fraternities to discuss common fraternity problems, and last year over seventy-five men attended the affair, held May 1 at the Hotel Bethlehem. PHI GAMMA DELTA GROUP: Rear Row: Whigham, Mclntyre, Brindle, Petty, Jones, Glad- d en, Ralston. Third Row: Hoffman, G. Walsh, McLaurin, Dow, Gearhart, Brownlee, Elmes, Todd, Brown, Rheinhold. Second Row: Hittinger, Steele, McKaig, Boston, Deehan, Schaper, Heinz, Golden, Bailey, Hilton. Front Roiv: Langstroth, Brothers, Jacohy, Bast, Landon, Cullen, Hardy, Cooke, D. Walsh. CANDIDS: Resting after a tough afternoon on the field. A Canadian looks at Lehigh humor— and keeps a straight face. The house. 241 PHI SIGMA KAPPA Phi Sigma Kappa, originally known as the Three T ' s, was founded at the Massachusetts Agricultural College in Amherst on March 15, 1873. Fifteen years later, in 1888, a second chapter was established at the Albany Medical Col- lege. From these humble beginnings the fraternity continued to develop and expand until the present day, when the fraternity numbers over fifty chapters. In 1901, after having been granted a petition, the Nu chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa was founded at Lehigh. The present house, which is located at 406 Delaware Avenue, is the fourth to be occupied by the fraternity. In addition to curricular and organizational activities, Phi Sigma Kappa mem- bers hold several social functions during the college year. A pledge dance, fall tea dance, and the annual Thanksgiving and Christmas parties round out the first semester. The highlight of the second semester activities is the Phi Sigma Kappa Founder ' s Day alumni banquet. Phi Sigs have been very active in all phases of extra-curricular activities. They have representatives on the football, swimming, and baseball teams. Intramural sports are also of importance to the Phi Sigs, who participate in bowling, basket- ball, baseball, football, and wrestling. This fraternity has always been active in publications, and the present editor of the Bachelor is a Phi Sig. Several men of Phi Sigma Kappa are included in the memberships of various honorary societies; two are in Omicron Delta Kappa, and one in Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and Pi Delta Epsilon. PHI SIGMA KAPPA GROUP: Rear Row: Haldeman, O ' Brien, Whitten, Staples, Stockbower, Snyder, Johnston, J. E. Smith, Olmstead, Ferrell. Second Row: Schneider, Guckes, Wallick, Schumacher, J. D. Smith, Clemmer. Front Row: Glenn, Shearer, Taylor, Jackson, Schmidt, Billiar. CANDIDS: Everv man for himself. Here ' s a hot number. The house. 242  « ... . . psiwm - - • ' -. • -■- ' - ' S ' :.i « ,- - PI KAPPA ALPHA In October, 1929, when Zeta Chi, a local fraternity, received its charter and became the Gamma Lambda chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha, there was initiated into Lehigh a branch of an organization which had grown out of a fellowship of six Confederate soldiers. A comradeship cemented by the rigors of war brought strength and encouragement to the founders in its earliest days, and this com- radeship is still characteristic of the order. The University of Virginia was the site of the first chapter, but membership soon spread throughout the South and Southwest. Only recently has Pi K. A. reached the Northern colleges because of a ban, lifted in 1909, which limited the fraternity to colleges and universities in the South and Southwest. The local group had its origin in a club known as the Seal Club and later as the Lehigh Ivy Club, seven of whose members in 1926 founded the local Zeta Chi Fraternity. So well established is the Lehigh chapter that three times has it been the re- cipient of the Robert A. Smythe Efficiency Award. These awards have made Gamma Lambda of Pi Kappa Alpha envied by the oldest chapters. The Smythe Award came to the chapter last during the past year, primarily as a result of its excellent financial condition. Pi Kappa Alpha has always been active in many campus activities. The presi- dent of Alpha Phi Omega is a Pi K. A., as is the president of the Newtonian Society. Senior, junior, and sophomore wrestling managers are Pi K. A. ' s. The financial manager of the Epitome and a makeup editor of the Brown and White are also members of the fraternity. Members are also active in the band and glee club. PI KAPPA ALPHA: Back Roiv: Woodruff, Vetrosky, Davis, Corbett, Strobino, Shiffer, Hunter, Oldroyd. Third Row: Gottschall, Applegate, Wiedenman, Funk, Motter, Jones, Hewitt, Lau. Second Row: Hucker, Doney, Price, Brennan, Hart, Bonin. Front Row: Strasburg, MacFadyen, MacLaughlin, Christie, Conger. 245 PI LAMBDA PHI PI Lambda Phi was founded at Yale University on March 4, 1895, for the pur- pose of eliminating sectarianism among college fraternities. As a result of a merger in 1940 with Pi Beta Delta, there are now thirty-three active chapters and two pledge chapters. The Lambda chapter at Lehigh University was chartered in 1915. The Lehigh chapter began as the Pioneer Club when six men, unsatisfied with the living conditions in Bethlehem, organized the Club. From 1915 until 1931 the chapter house was located at Market and Center Streets. In 1931 the location was changed to Bishopthorpe Street. The fraternity acquired its present house on East Market Street last year. Pi Lambda Phi has always rated high in scholarship. One of the members was recently elected to Phi Beta Kappa and others have had freshman and sopho- more honors. The chapter has won the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity scholarship cup more than any other fraternity. Pi Lambda Phi is also active in athletics, both intramural and intercollegiate, and also in all extra-curricular activities. There have been men on the football, swimming, track, and lacrosse teams in the past year. There are also men repre- senting the house on the Broun and White, Epitome, Bachelor, Mustard and Cheese, Band, and other clubs and honorarv organizations. PI LAMBDA PHI GROUP: Rear Roiv: Gross, D. Levy, Lazarus, Franklin, Stettner, Hoffberg, Bick, Neff, Bernstein. Third Ron: Klopfer, Morrison, I. Levy, Rosenthal, A. Rosener, Doniger, Jaslow, Blum, Lawson, Feinberg. Second Roiv: Faber, Weening, Strouse, Epstein, Zalkind, Wolfsten, Margolies. Front Ron: R. Rosener, Alperin, Levin, Judis, Kestenbaum, Furstman. CANDIDS: Around the piano. Uncle Danal. The house. 246 Sr I ' r tesf ' ■; 1: ' S ' -: sM $L : -- f ( k p, r. O ™— ' - ■ ■■iiniii (III IIB IE! M PSI UPSILON Psi Upsilon was founded by seven undergraduates in November, 1833, at Union College, to be more liberal in its constitution and action than existing societies. National growth, which has been slow, is regulated so as to give even growth across the nation; chapters are established only at the leading colleges of each section. There are now twenty-seven chapters of the fraternity in the United States and Canada. The badge of the fraternity is a lozenge, displaying across its shorter diagonal the emblem of the clasped hands, with the 1 3r above and the U below. A monogram of the letters is sometimes worn as a graduate symbol. In 1881 the combined efforts of two faculty members who were Psi U ' s and several students interested Psi Upsilon in Lehigh. However, following its con- servative policy, the fraternity investigated and pondered the proposition until February, 1884, before installing the Eta chapter here in Bethlehem. During this period of delay the students organized a local, Phi Theta Psi, which pur- chased and furnished the original chapter house on Market Street. After suc- cessful growth at Lehigh, the Eta chapter built and occupied in 1909 its present home on the campus. The brothers are active in campus affairs, being well represented in major sports, clubs, and honoraries. Football, baseball, soccer, wrestling, track, tennis, and golf know the Psi U men. The brothers also participate in the activities of the various course societies, music clubs, Brown and White, Newtonian Society, Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, Scabbard and Blade, and Cyanide. Parallel to their campus activities the brothers keep an active place in the general college social life and in intramural sports. PSI UPSILON: Back Row: Smith, Fries, Gott, Link, Helmuth, Juhell, Kohl, R. Maloney, Tenney, Crowther, Snyder, Wetrich. Middle Row: Detweiler, J. Maloney, Mitchell, Bussman, Clarke, Worrell, Corsa. Front Row: Butzman, Reese, Barnes, Baird, Williams. (Willkie, the dog.) CANDIDS: Grand slam. Check and double-check. The house. 249 SIGMA ALPHA MU Sigma Alpha Mu was founded at the College of the City of New York on November 26, 1909. In the spring of 1923, the fraternity was established at Lehigh when a local fraternity called Eta Alpha Phi was installed as the Sigma Kappa chapter. The fraternity, which has now become a national organization of thirty-five chapters, has as its basic principle: to foster and maintain among their 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. The first chapter house was located at Broadway and Seminole Street; a move was made in 1925 to a new house on Wyandotte Street. This was the home of Sigma Alpha Mu until 1926 when the undergraduates, with the support of their alumni, purchased the present home at 506 West Third Street. Sigma Alpha Mu, which has always been high in scholarship, has won several times the scholarship cup awarded by the Interfraternity Council to the member standing highest on the list of house averages. Members of Sigma Alpha Mu rep- resent Lehigh in basketball, football, soccer, baseball, and swimming. There are also men in Mustard and Cheese and the band, and on the Brown and White staff. In this fraternity are found members of several campus honorary societies, including Newtonian Society, Pi Mu Epsilon, R. W. Hall pre-medical society, and Pi Delta Epsilon. Members also compete extensively in interfraternity athletics. SIGMA ALPHA MU GROUP: Rear Row: Titelman, Gilbert, Zuckerman, Brustein, Lindner, Schuchar, Mazur. Third Roiv: Blanc, Adler, Nelken, Meyerhoff, Linker, Leeds, Levi. Second Roiv: Haft, Buchman, Landesman, Price, Lasser, Breskman, Wolf. Front Row: Shapiro, Zane, Godchaux, Hirschman, Miller, Sigal. CANDIDS: In the side-pocket. Records. The house. 250 ' M M ' 4 SIGMA CHI Sigma Chi was founded on June 28, 1855, at Miami University by seven men, six of whom had withdrawn from Delta Kappa Epsilon and formed a new fraternity named Sigma Phi until it learned of the presence of another fraternity bv that name. In the eighty-seven years since its founding, Sigma Chi has grown to be one of the largest fraternities in this country and Canada, having at present 104 active chapters. Perhaps one of the most inspiring chapters of fraternity his- tory is the Constantine Chapter of Sigma Chi. This group consisted of seven Sigs who served in the Confederate Army, and the chapter continued active all through the trying days of the Civil War, thus perpetuating Sigma Chi in the South regardless of the outcome of the war. Perhaps Sigma Chi ' s greatest claim to fame is her famous song, The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi, although the Magazine of Sigma Chi is one of the top fraternity publications and deserves mention. An award unique in the fraternity field is the Balfour Award, given each year to the most outstanding graduating Sig in the country. On June 6, 1887, an organization known as the Crimson Halberd Society was initiated into Sigma Chi as the Alpha Rho Chapter, and this date marks the beginning of Sigma Chi at Lehigh. The first meeting place of the Alpha Rho chapter was in the First National Bank Building: in 1915 the chapter moved into its present quarters on Broad Street. The Sigs, especially active in publications, are represented on the Bachelor staff by the business, circulation, financial, and advertising managers and by the makeup editor: on the Epitome by two junior editors; and on the Broun and White by a news editor. The Sigs are represented in honoraries by two members in the collegiate Who ' s Who, three in O.D.K., six in Cyanide, two in Tau Beta Pi, one in Arcadia, five in Pi Delta Epsilon, and two in Phi Alpha Theta. In sports the Sigs are represented in cross-country, wrestling, track, and lacrosse by both active participants and managers. SIGMA CHI GROUP: Rear Rou: Diehl, Burgy, Kleckner, Moore. Domeratzky, Strong, von Bergen. Fourth Ron: Cuyler, Hoerner, Day, Jewett, Kehoe. Third Rou: Darlow, Kelley, Cona- way, Rochester, Scarff. James, Cox. Second Rou: Mar-h. Skilling. Hinrichs, Norlin, Tucker, Cowin, V. Smith. Front Rou: Ward, Austin, Lyons, Ross, R. Smith. CANDIDS: Bull session. Now the wav we won this one was . . . The house. 253 SIGMA NU SIGMA Nu was formed from a nucleus known as the Legion of Honor, a secret society which originated at the Virginia Military Institute at Lexington in 1868. The Legion of Honor was formed by three cadets who opposed the exten- sive control which another secret society exercised. The actual founding of Sigma Nu, however, is generally accepted as heing in 1869 when the present Greek letters were officially designated and the other characteristics of a social fraternitv were formally adopted. The expansion of the fraternity to the North and East resulted in the founding of the Pi chapter at Lehigh in 1885. The Pi chapter originally had its home on High Street hut moved to the campus in 1915. The present location is at the entrance to Sayre Park. Each vear the house publishes the Pi-eve magazine to inform alumni of the chapter ' s activities during the preceding year. The chapter also acts as host to the annual Spring convention of the fraternity and is the nucleus of the assembly of all the district chapters. In order to maintain the closest relationship between parents and students, the house has provided for the Parents ' eekend, a yearly Spring function. On this occasion the parents have an opportunity to acquaint themselves with the University as a whole and meet other parents. This year Sigma Nu contributed three star football players to Lehigh ' s revived football squad, and the chapter is represented in many of the Lniversity ' s most important activities. Last semester the soccer captain was a Sigma Nu, and other brothers take an active part in basketball, lacrosse, and baseball. The present membership includes men on both the Dean ' s list and the Honors list. One brother is president of Mustard and Cheese, dramatic club of Lehigh, and the present group of men includes representatives in most of the honorary frater- nities in the Lniversity. Sigma Nu has the distinction of being among the first fraternities to have its house on the campus. The alumni of Pi chapter have aided greatly and directly in the expansion of Sigma Nu fraternity throughout the East, as they are directly responsible for the establishment of chapters at the Lniversity of Pennsylvania in 1894, at the Lniversity of Vermont in 1898, and at Lafayette College in 1900. SIGMA NU GROUP: Rear Ron: Forbes, Shoener, Johnson. Jorgenson, ellens, Bitler, Inglis. Third Ron: Shoener. Hohman, Leitner. Inderrieden, Kervirk, Farrell. Cooper, Freed. Second Row: Donahue. Horn. Carter. Everett, Kirschner, Srhaeffer, Rugg. Front Ron : Fonda, McDowell, Shertz. Luttenberger. Robinson. CANDIDS: Girls! More girl-!! The house. 254 fcfcl ■m 41 «.. ' f V , 1 jti yhrTnir wM ifal • ;■.y :ffiay 8ftMI ;. ' .:.i;t- SIGMA PHI Sigma Phi was the second secret social society to be formed in an American college, being founded at Union College in 1827, two years after the incep- tion of Kappa Alpha. Sigma Phi claims the title of the oldest national fraternity, for it expanded to Hamilton College in 1831. The houses of its ten chapters extend throughout the country. Through its 116 years Sigma Phi has favored about twenty colleges as the ideal sites for fraternity chapters. 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 dissatisfaction with conditions there. In 1887, the club was granted a charter and became the Alpha chapter of Pennsylvania of Sigma Phi Society, the ninth national fraternity to be founded 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 Lehigh fraternity. It was remodeled in 1925. A social highlight of the year is the Union Triad Dance, given jointly by Sigma Phi, Kappa Alpha, and Delta Phi. Prominent stag affairs include the Christmas party and the farewell party given to the Senior class. A faculty tea, traditionally well received, is given in the Spring. Of the many activities and societies supported by Sigma Phi, the Brown and White has been perhaps the most prominent. This year the three highest posi- tions, editor-in-chief, news manager, and editorial manager, were hald by Sigma Phi ' s. Members were also active on the Junior Prom and Banquet committees and Arcadia. Sigma Phi was the only fraternity to have three men picked for the Collegiate Who ' s Who. The president of Omicron Delta Kappa is a Sigma Phi, as are several officers of Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu, and Pi Delta Epsilon. The fraternity is also represented in Cyanide, Pi Mu Epsilon, and the Newtonian Society. Last year the house won the baseball league championship, and it has won the school badminton championship for the past five years. SIGMA PHI GROUP: Rear Row: Frost, Davy, Kern, Pearsall, Peters, Shawhan, R. Frost. Second Row: Carrigan, Probst, Compton, Weiler, Wilson, Leeming, McNabb. Front Row: Archibald, Lynch, Welch, Burton, Gilroy, Sidebotham, Williams. CANDIDS: Jam session. A joke, no doubt. The house. 257 SIGMA PHI EPSILON IN 1901 at Richmond College in Richmond, Virginia (now the University of Richmond), six men banded together to form the Saturday Night Club. The Sacred Hearts, as they were called because of their heart-shaped badge, admitted six more men before the end of the year, and on November 1, 1901, they strengthened their standing at Richmond by founding a Greek-letter fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon. Now in its forty-second year, Sigma Phi Epsilon has sixty-eight active chapters and almost 24,000 members. Although a comparatively young fraternity, Sig Ep has been a pioneer in fraternity economics since its organization. The Sigma Phi Epsilon Plan of Finance as developed at Purdue during World War I has been adopted letter for letter by more than fifteen national fraternities. Practically all fraternities operate on its fundamental principles. Over forty fraternities have adopted the Life Membership Plan formulated by Sigma Phi Epsilon. In 1906, sixteen members of Omega Pi Alpha, a local fraternity at Lehigh at that time, petitioned for membership in Sigma Phi Epsilon. The request was granted in 1907, and the Pennsylvania Epsilon chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded. The first home of the Lehigh Sig Eps was on West Fourth Street. Later they moved to the corner of Fourth and Wyandotte, and in 1923 the chapter acquired its present home on West Market Street, which was at one time occupied by Psi Upsilon. Twice a year Sigma Phi Epsilon publishes the Sig Ep Revieic, which contains news of local chapter events. It is mailed to all alumni and to all other chapters and serves to keep the alumi in closer touch with the fraternity. In addition to house party, in past years the Sig Eps have held a Spring For- mal in the Hotel Bethlehem, often in conjunction with another fraternity. In- formal house dances or loopers are held at frequent intervals throughout the year. SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Back Ron: R. Merkert, E. Cummings, R. Hamilton, J. Evans, D. Emery, E. Ernst, L. Matamoros, F. Christ, H. Robeson. Third Row: J. Rader, H. Garvin, W. Fisher, J. Gretz, H. Sherwood, R. Brodt, D. Poole, R. Zarkey, J. Mere, R. Gammaehe. Second Roiv: . Mr James, R. Brawn, E. Brawn, G. Boyer, H. Ost, F. Young:, E. Conover, L. Bartlett. Front Row: E. Holben, J. Christie, B. Bartlett, G. Nordenholt, F. Lauten, J. Beers, R. Gretz, G. Hooper. CANDIDS: Reading between the lines, Brawn and Morrison. An orchestra in the making. The house. 258 3  I $ ,1 ■M ? • I ill ■! - HH Tr ' ' ■; , .., , •■■|i •xf t «p ■Bn Mip mwp L pff . TAU DELTA PHI Tau Delta Phi was founded at the City College of New York in 1910, and since that time has followed a policy of conservative expansion. A group of un- dergraduates, motivated by the closer bonds of friendship and harmony which a fraternity embodies, joined themselves in a brotherhood. The original plan had been to restrict the fraternity to City College, but in 1914 a chapter was estab- lished at New York University; two years later the two chapters decided to in- crease cautiously the size of the new brotherhood. Omicron Alpha Tau, another prominent national fraternity, petitioned Tau Delta Phi for admission early in 1933, but only five of the O. A. T. chapters were accepted. After thirty-one years of fraternal activity, Tau Delta Phi is now rep- resented throughout the United States and Canada by a compact and unified group of twenty-five chapters. Tau chapter was established at Lehigh in 1926 by a group of nine under- graduates who were dissatisfied with the fraternity conditions prevailing in the University at the time. This local group, which was called Upsilon Kappa, devel- oped so favorably that in 1927 it was granted a charter by Tau Delta Phi. After occupying several other houses in the district, the chapter moved to its present location on West Third Street in 1938. During the past year the brothers have continued the high standards of the chapter at Lehigh. Tau Delt has been particularly active in ping pong throughout the past semester and has represent- atives in basketball, baseball, Mustard and Cheese, and Phi Beta Kappa. Tau Delt brothers are found in many of the campus clubs and activities and have made their mark in the Universitv. TAU DELTA PHI GROUP: Rear Row: Lauterbach, L. Schwab, A. Schwab, Lucks, Stein, Born, Schwarz, Pines. Second Row: Kronthal, Gottlieb, Gruenwald, Lehrer, Miller, Greene, Friedman. Front Row-. Lasko, Schwarzberg, Sail, Kline, Gordon. CANDIDS: Kibitzing. Catching up on the sleep. The house. 267 THETA CHI Theta Chi was founded among the rugged hills of Vermont at Norwich Uni- versity in 1856. During the next decade Theta Chi, despite a number of ex- tremely serious drawbacks, such as the Civil War and the burning of the Univer- sity ' s buildings, showed marked progress. The initial expansion of the fraternity from a local society to a national organization was effected in 1902. Today there are seventy-two chapters and more than 23,000 alumni members. Theta Chi ' s history at Lehigh began in 1927 as a local fraternity called Omega Phi Sigma. One of its primary aims was scholarship, in which it was successful since it ranked first in scholarship in five out of the eleven semesters of its his- tory as a local. In 1934, it became the Alpha Sigma chapter of Beta Kappa. How- ever, in the Spring of 1942, the entire Beta Kappa National merged with the Theta Chi fraternity. The Lehigh chapter was the first Beta Kappa chapter to be installed in Theta Chi when it became the Beta Sigma chapter last May. An alumni chapter of the local fraternity acts as an advisory council for the under- graduates. The Beta Sigma chapter publishes a monthly news letter, devoted at present to alumni in the armed services. Important dates on the Theta Chi social calen- dar are the annual Christmas dance, the Spring formal at one of the country clubs, and numerous record dances during the course of the year. Theta Chi ' s are in varsity football and baseball. Members are represented on the rifle team and in Phi Eta Sigma, Newtonian Society, Alpha Phi Omega, Alpha Kappa Psi, Lambda Mu Sigma, Band, and Mustard and Cheese. THETA CHI: Back Ron: Ballenberger, Saunders, McKay, Morse, Miller, White, Miller. Third Rote: Bluerher, Page, Garland, Wiley, Tomaselli, Diekel, Cordrey, Brown. Second Row: Brad- ford, Stoehr, King, Larson, Von Block, Houston, Reichard. Front Rotv: Nicholasen, Bitz, Funk, Huston, Savage. CANDIDS: Studying via radio. Sure that ' s the right number? The house. 262 7 •, -■■} i 1 nen i THETA DELTA CHI Theta Delta Chi was the twelfth national social fraternity to come into exist- ence. The fraternity was founded at Union College in 1847 by a group of six members of the class of 1849 who felt the need of an organization to bind them together in the closer bonds of brotherhood in order to share their common interests and abilities. In the founding of the fraternity the stipulation was made that Theta Delta Chi, in keeping with a policy of conservatism and for the pur- pose of promoting friendships which would be more intimate and lasting, should 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 Delt was the first social fraternity to provide for a centralized form of government. This centralization gradually evolved to the grand lodge form which is now used by nearly all national fraternities. Theta Delta Chi is the only known fraternity which celebrates the date of its founding yearly. The fraternitv was also the originator of many of the customs of all modern national fraternities, such as the use of a pledge pin, the adoption of a distinctive fraternity flag or banner, and the publication and distribution to all active and alumni brothers of a monthly fraternity magazine. The Nn Deuteron charge was installed at Lehigh in 1884, and was the fifth national social fraternity to be established at the University. Permanent resi- dence was provided for in 1919. when the present charge house was built near the crest of Old South Mountain, and in 1938 a program of house improvement resulted in the construction of a new wing and extensive remodeling. These additions were dedicated to the late John Van R. Greene, ' 37, who during his four years of active service to the fraternity had fought and pleaded for the new wings. Beautifully furnished and exceptionally light, they add much to the charge house. The brothers of Theta Delta Chi have continued their interest in extra- curricular activities during the past year. The house is represented in some way in almost every University athletic program, including j. v. football, basketball, baseball, and both the junior and sophomore managerships of the baseball team. The house is also represented in Broun and White, Newtonian Society, Bachelor, and Phi Alpha Theta. The House . . . top of South Mountain. 265 THETA XI Theta Xi was founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in April, 1864, as a result of disagreement between two factions of the local Sigma Delta frater- nity. The eight dissenters withdrew from Sigma Delta and founded Theta Xi, intending to make it national. The Beta chapter was installed in 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. Orig- inally an engineering fraternity, it was ruled in 1895 that men from other cur- ricula were eligible for membership. A local society known as the Lehigh Herman club for three years, was granted a Theta Xi charter in 1903. There are now thirty-six active chapters, the Eta chapter at Lehigh being the seventh formed. The present house, sixth to be occupied by the fraternity, is located on the Bath Pike. The Eta News, published twice yearly by the chapter, helps to maintain contacts between alumni and active members. Besides the dances held at the house during the Spring and Fall house parties, there is also a pledge dance, and a Christmas dance at which the Lehigh Col- legians entertained this year. The Theta Xi ' s take an active part in both intramural and intercollegiate sports. Theta Xi is also well represented in the honorary societies, including Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon, Pi Tau Sigma, Lambda Mu Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Scabbard and Blade, and others. A good portion of the house belongs to musical organizations such as the Glee Club and the Band, the leader and drum major of which are Theta Xi ' s. Theta Xi Group. Country road leading to Theta Xi House. The House. 266 M kJl B l 1 a ? p n Mi! ' k W $ir Fn  - (n o ,i fi -. -r CHI PSI Over a centurv ago, in 1841, ten students at Union College banded together and founded the Chi Psi fraternity. Adhering to a policy of extreme con- servatism in growth, Chi Psi today has twenty-five closely linked chapters estab- lished in the larger universities and colleges from coast to coast. Each individual chapter pursues a policv of quality rather than quantity. Alpha Beta Delta was founded at Lehigh in 1894 by nine undergraduates. Alumni erected a lodge in Savre Park in 1915. After a disastrous fire which gutted the building, the lodge was rebuilt in 1942. Everv university publication has a member of Chi Psi on its- staff; many athletic teams have representatives, too. THETA KAPPA PHI Theta Kappa Phi fraternity was founded at Lehigh in 1919 by a group of stu- dents who banded together after their return from the World War. The expansion into a national fraternity began in 1922, when the group amalgamated with another local fraternity at Penn State. This expansion has continued until at the present time there are thirteen active chapters and ten alumni clubs. The chapter house is located at 618 Delaware Avenue. Last year the house sponsored a trophv for intramural bridge, and this trophy will continually be competed foi until one of the living groups finally retires it. Although the fraternity places special emphasis on intramural sports, there are members represented on many varsity sports, including football, cross country, swimming, and track. CHI PSI GROUP: Rear Ron: Giles, Clark, Cable, Shuttleworth, Schneider, Adams, Shepley Brandfass. Third Ron: Sullivan, W. Hebrank, Heironimus, Felt, Schwarz, Donahue, Riehl Second Ron: A. Byrne, Walker, Stockbridge, Leckie, G. Stone, C. A. Johnson. Front Row C. Stone, E. Byrne, Ballantyne, C. H. Johnson, J. Hebrank, Wiseman, Fine. CANDIDS: A bunch of the boys at the Chi Psi house. You could have made it if . Theta Kappa Phi group. 269 ■K a IXXXXXX TOWN COUNCIL THE object of the Town Council, organization set up in 1939, was to provide a means of unifying and expressing the opinions of town men, to promote participation in campus activities by town men, and in general to take any steps which were for the benefit of the town group as a whole. Each year, the Town Group sponsors intramural leagues in various sports, and urges town group students not only to participate on these teams, but also to interest themselves in dramatics, varsity athletics, journalism, and all of the various societies which are part of Lehigh. The Town Council, after conducting a poll, decided to sell membership cards at fifty cents a semester. This a mount covers charity contributions as well as the dues to the organization and helps finance occasional dances. The Town Group was originally organized to eliminate the relative inactivity of town men in University life outside of the classroom. It was decided that groups of town men, comparable in size to social fraternities, should be organ- ized and unified by a Town Council. Such groups, it was felt, would facilitate participation and assure fair treatment of Town group students in extra- curricular activities, intramural athletics, social activities, and student govern- ment. To make easier the organization of Town groups, Bethlehem was divided into sections of approximately 50 students each, with the assumption that it was improbable that more than fifty per cent would become active immediately. The arbitrary division resulted in twelve sections, A to L, in addition to the Alpha Town House, Leonard Hall, the Cosmopolitan Club, and the Allentown Club — all affiliated with the Town Council group. Alpha Lambda Omega, Alpha Town House, and the Cosmopolitan Club were all voted in during the past three years. During 1942-1943, Town Council keys were distributed to members; the group bought a trophy case for intramural trophies: a banquet was held in Lamberton Hall; and a dance was held during houseparty weekend, in addition to other activities. The general program of the Town group during the year normally includes the following: a series of dances, trophy awards to winning teams of the Town intramural league, a scholarship cup award to the section having the highest scholarship average, and contributions on behalf of the group to the Community Chest, Red Cross, refugee students, and other charities. Dues are set at one dollar a vear. 277 ALPHA TOWN HOUSE Alpha Town House was organized in September, 1940, when several town students formed a semi-cooperative living group, leased a house, borrowed money to buy furniture, hired a cook, and started operations. Alpha Town House was subsequently recognized by the University and became a member of the Town Council group. The Alpha Town group house at 308 Packer Avenue during the past year housed approximately 20 members. The group emphasizes living costs at a lower rate than average town costs ; encourages self-discipline, cooperation, social and athletic activities, friendship, and college spirit; and offers to its members opportunities in management, crea- tive activities, and practical experience. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB THE Cosmopolitan Club was organized in 1938 under the leadership of George Tabet, of Cairo, Egypt, and James L. Shirer, for the purpose of helping the foreign student accustom himself to his new environment. The club was organized in February of that year by 13 foreign students and 5 American students who wanted to discuss the culture and ideas of the various countries represented. The faculty adviser was William H. Bohning, assistant to the Registrar at that time. In May, 1938, the University recognized the new club, and by June, 1939, the University had purchased and remodeled a house on West Packer Avenue for the organization. Lecture meetings open to the public are held by the club twice each month, at which time the members and visitors give talks. Members are found in many of the campus functions. ALPHA TOWN HOUSE: Back Row: R. Dieter, R. Kramer, R. Logan, N. Seward, R. Asson. Front Row: C. Hoffman, P. Caldwell, W. Morgan. CANDIDS: The members. Letter from home. International session. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: Back Row: Tilley, Pinoda, Cordero, Glaser, Gluck, Rodriguez, Herazo, Potter, Green. Middle Row: Weber, Consolmagno, Ramsdell, Lewert. Front Row: Berman, Leroux, Ristorcelli, Frankley, Shintaku. 272 ... . . . BSSEwtsnsicraWB r 1 1 • v ij 11 ■;« ' ' bh univ£ ATHLETICS ■- j t ■11 FOOTBALL THE 1942 gridiron edition of the Engineers, aided by a renewed student back- ing and led by a new coaching staff, erased the bitter memories of the 1941 eleven by compiling a season ' s record of five wins, two losses, and a tie with Lafayette. By defeating Rutgers, as did Lafayette, the Brown and bite team tied for the Middle Three title. Formerly a Lehigh football star, then a coach and football official of good repute, George Hoban fashioned a hard-charging, alert team that lost games only to Yale and Penn State. Assisting Hoban were Leo Prendergast and George Ekaitis, line and backfield coaches, respectively. After about two weeks of practice, the squad, along with some 60 members of the band and 500 students, traveled to New Haven to meet the Yale eleven. At the end of the first half, the score was tied at 6 all, but in the second half the Eli ' s superior condition won out and their experienced reserve strength was too much for the Brown and like. ale came out on the long end of a 33-6 score. The Yale men had been practicing much of the summer and thus were far more prepared for their first game of the season than the Engineers. Russ Jones, sophomore tackle, blocked a ale punt, and Herb Shoener plunged over for the sole Lehigh tally. The following week the Nittany Lions of Penn State came to Taylor Stadium for the first home game of the season. Eight thousand people watched one of the best Penn State teams in years put down a hard-fighting Hoban eleven by a 19-3 score. The Engineers scored first, as Stan Szymakowski booted a field goal from 30 yards out. Penn State scored one of its touchdowns in the first half on a line- plunge and then tallied two more on another line plunge and a brilliant runback of a punt by Larry Joe. Several times during the game the Engineers made brilliant goal-line stands to turn aside the State college eleven. Deciding factor in the game was the superior passing and running attack that the Lions uncov- ered in the second half. After losing their first two games to powerful clubs, the Engineers swung into the victory column for the first time in the season as they defeated Pennsyl- vania Military College by a 13-0 score. This was the first Lehigh gridiron victory in 13 starts; the game was played in a rainstorm that kept both the scoring and the crowd down. The team was paced by Captain Bernie Deehan, who scored both of the touchdowns. The first score came in the opening quarter. After Yince Moravec had recov- ered a Red and Yellow fumble, Deehan took the ball on an end run and went from the Lehigh 30 to score. Good downfield blocking by Herb Shoener made the run possible. The try for extra point was no good as Shoener missed on a plunge. Deehan scored next on another end-run from the P.M.C. eight. This time Shoener plunged the pigskin across for the point. The rest of the game was Taylor Gymnasium, home of Brown and White sports, varsity and intramural. 277 devoted to a punting duel, with both teams waiting for opportunities that never came. Sparked by the brilliant performance of its rugged fullback, Stan Szymakow- ski, the Engineers defeated the Rutgers eleven for the first time since 1936 by a score of 28-10. Six thousand spectators watched the Brown and White team gain its first leg on the Middle Three title. Szymakowski, who was awarded the Max- well cup the following week, kicked three field goals, scored a touchdown and kicked an extra point to double the score of the entire Rutgers team. The Scarlet scored first on a field goal by Rieger, but Stan kicked two field goals in quick succession to put the home team in the lead for good. The kicks were made from the 17 and the 31. The first touchdown of the afternoon was made by Harry Arant as he plunged over from inside the ten. Stan converted for the point and the half ended with Lehigh 10 points ahead. The second half opened with Lehigh pushing again towards the Rutgers goal. However, the Engineers ' ground attack was stopped, so Szymakowski calmly booted his third field goal from the 28. Hal Shoener then blocked a Rutgers punt and when Lehigh recovered on the next play, Szymakowski plunged over for the touchdown from the two-yard line. The lone Rutgers touchdown was made on a 70-yard pass play, Dennis to Forbes. After Stan tried unsuccessfully for his fourth field goal of the afternoon, Bernie Deehan made the final tally of the game on a 50-yard runback of a punt. The statistics clearly show the Engineers ' margin of superiority. Net rushing gains for Lehigh were 174 yards, while Rutgers was able to advance the ball for a net of only 4 yards. Stan thus became the first Lehigh man to be honored by the Maxwell club. This Philadelphia organization, during the football season, names the local player who was the most outstanding during the week. The award was made in the Hotel Warwick on the second of November. Faced with the necessity of pleasing some 900 houseparty dates, the eleven did just that and a little more by routing Hampden-Sydney on October 31. After the final calculations had been made, it was found that the scrappy Southerners had gone down by a 51-6 tally. This was the highest score that an Engineer eleven had made since 1928. Szymakowski and Moravec scored twice; other touch- downs were made by Arant, Fred Attaway, Mai Crowther, and Herb Shoener. The lone Virginian score came in the first period when Hampden-Syd ney scored on a long pass-lateral play. But after this, the Brown and White team pulled out all the stops and there was no doubt as to the outcome. Sweet revenge came to the followers of the Brown and White eleven on VARSITY FOOTBALL: First Row: Hittinger, Szymakowski, Bussman, Clark, Deehan, Buck, Kurtz, Bird, Johnson. Second Roic: Frost, Cornelius, Shafer, Donahue, Jones, Jorgenson, Herb Shoener, Maack, Dickel, Burton. Third Row: Bitler, Brown, Meserve, Arant, Attaway, Petty, Shipley, Crowther, Cott, Moffa. Top Row: Hal Shoener, Williams, Cavanaugh, Moravec, Sear- man, Gagas, Semmel, Pockman, Morano, Emerick. CANDIDS: Brown and White hacks in action. 278 J8l2 a ' ' « f ssailflS! November 7, when the Engineers rolled to a 22-6 victory over the Muhlenberg squad. This was the first Lehigh victory over the Mules in six years and a throng of about 12,000, including some 300 Dads, watched the proceedings with glee. The first Engineer score came in the opening period when Shoener crashed over from the one, culminating a drive that started on the Mules ' 40. Szymakow- ski ' s kick for extra point was good. At the end of the first period the Brown and White was on the three, and with the beginning of the second period Bernie Deehan skirted right end for the second score. The Mules scored their only touchdown on a pass from Bossick to Bibighaus shortly after Deehan ' s score. In the fourth period Herb Shoener went over from the two, and Szymakowski converted for the third Lehigh touchdown. Bossick was nailed in the end zone by Harry Arant for a safety, completing the scoring for the game. Stars of the game were Dick Shafer, Lehigh ' s stella r center, who intercepted two passes to end scoring threats, and Pete Bossick, whose passes kept the Mules in the game until the fourth quarter. Again Lehigh ' s hard-charging line proved too much for the opposition; the Allentown team lost a net of two yards by rushing. In the Engineers ' last home game of the season, the Red Devils of Dickinson finally went down to defeat by a 7-0 tally. The only touchdown of the game came with 26 seconds in the fourth quarter remaining. Deehan passed to Moravec in the end zone for the score, and Szymakowski converted. Throughout the game, the Lehigh offensive stalled when deep in Dickinson territory. The Red Devils took over with minutes to go and started a passing attack of their own that backfired when Deehan intercepted a pass in midfield. With the aid of pass- interference arid a pretty run by Deehan to the Red Devil nine, the Engineers finally scored and kept intact their record of wins, which reached a record of five straight. In a fitting climax to a successful season, the Engineers held the powerful Maroon of Lafayette to a 7-7 tie before 18,000 excited spectators in Fisher Stadium on November 21. Though its scoring punch seemed to be lost for the game, the entire team and especially the line held the powerful Leopard offen- sive in check and both scores of the game came on beautiful pass plays. Late in the first quarter the Maroon moved into scoring territory and with a first down on the five-yard line, a score seemed inevitable. However, three power- plays through the line netted the Maroon nothing. Then on the fourth down Captain Nagle passed to Ciemniecki, and McKnight converted to put the Lafayette team in the lead. After this, Lehigh started marching towards a score, but lost the ball on downs on the Marquis ' 10. The advance was featured by four successive passes from Herb Shoener to his brother Hal. Lehigh ' s score came in the third period. Szymakowski returned a punt to the Maroon 45 and then the Brown and White made successive first downs on the 17 and the 6. After two running plays and a pass had failed, Captain Deehan called on the brother combination, and Herb Shoener passed diagonally across the field to his twin Hal, who stepped across the line untouched. Szymakowski converted as the Lehigh stands stood silent and tense. After this, both teams tried des- 281 perately to break the deadlock. Lehigh ' s Jorgenson recovered a Lafayette fumble on the Leopards ' 20, but four passes went bad and Lehigh ' s final threat died. Then, with minutes to go, Lafayette opened up with a passing attack that was featured by a long pass from Nagle to McKnight, who was nabbed on the Brown and White three. After one pass had been batted down in the end zone, another, Nagle to Mc- Knight, was completed to the one. Here the game ended, but there was a ques- tion as to whether or not Lafayette had called time out or not before the final whistle blew. After several minutes of rather tense discussion, the teams were waved off the field. This was the signal for many of the Lehigh supporters to take the field and attempt to remove the goal posts. A general free-for-all threat- ened, but was averted after one of the Lafayette goal posts had been torn down and distributed among overjoyed Lehigh fans. At the end of the season, Szymakowski was chosen on the all-Pennsylvania eleven, Hal Shoener on the second team, Harry Clarke on the third, and Deehan, Shafer, and Claude Kurtz were given honorable mention. Szymakowski was elected captain for the 1943 season. However, tragedy followed the fortunes of the Lehigh football eleven, when, on February 2, Coach Hoban died as the result of a heart attack which occurred as he was driving his car home. Lehigh lost a loyal alumnus and a successful coach. In comparison with teams of the past, the 1942 Engineer eleven will go down as one of the best. The combination of a successful coaching staff and much returning veteran material aided immensely. One of the outstanding features of the team was the aggressiveness of the line. In two of the games, the opposing teams lost ground. Several times the line made brilliant goal-line stands, and on the offense, the hard-charging forward wall opened good holes for the runners. In the field of pass interceptions, the Brown and White backfield men were far superior to their opponents. Generally speaking, the entire defensive play of the team was a distinct improvement over that of previous years. Both tackling and blocking looked sharper and harder, and the team ' s scoring ability was helped by the Shoener brother pass combination and Szymakowski ' s ability to boot field goals. CANDIDS: The Yale weekend petition — much-ado for nothing. Down go the Lafayette goal posts. 282 1 C; 1 H + Ill MM H III M I J ' -  BASKETBALL More than any other Lehigh team, the basketball team felt the call to arms and as a result, were only able to win five of their fifteen games. Of the 18 men who started the season, 11 were called by the army or had to stop playing because of scholastic difficulties. Of last year ' s starting lineup, only one man graduated, and at the beginning of the season the outlook was bright. However, Captain Bill Binder graduated after playing only three games, Dick Rahn en- tered the Naval Academy, and Dick Johnson was left as the only man who had varsity experience of any consequence. In their first game, with P. M. C, the team won by a 65-39 tally. Individual stars were Binder, who scored 16, and Ben Shaner, a freshman, who copped scoring honors by netting 20 points. The team started slowly, but the Engineers hit their pace in the second quarter and were never headed. Although Lehigh lost to a strong Temple outfit by a 69-59 count, Bill Binder again proved the star of the evening as he racked up 32 points to set a new rec- ord for Grace Hall and for Lehigh. The game was close until the fourth quarter, when the Owls pulled away. The Engineers swamped Upsala in their next en- counter by a 73-47 count. Between halves, the University, the basketball team, and Delta Tau Delta fraternity honored Binder with gifts in appreciation of his four years ' record as perhaps the outstanding Lehigh basketball player of all time. During his 42 games for the Engineers, Binder scored a total of 699 points for an average of 16.7 points a game. Bill was responsible for 23 points in his farewell performance. During the mid-semester vacation the Engineers split in four games, beating Stevens 48-46 and Brooklyn 41-38. The squad then dropped games to Rutgers and Swarthmore by 60-47 and 44-33 counts. In the first game of the spring semester, the cagers lost to a strong Lebanon alley team, 60-41, as two freshmen, Jim Case and Ed Hoch, showed promise of helping the depleted team. The Engineers ' inability to hit the bucket on foul shots was the cause of the victory scored by Muhlenberg. The Engineers tallied only 2 out of 17 tries, while the Mules hit 16 of their 17 tries from the foul line. The score of the game was 48-34. In their next encounter with the Mules, the Brown and bite team went down to a 58-37 score as the experience and supe- rior shooting ability of the Allentown men made their mark. Dick Johnson shared scoring honors with Crampsey of Muhlenberg by netting 13 points. The cagers lost their fourth straight when a smooth passing Drexel team BASKETBALL SQUAD: Rear Row Frank (Assistant Manager), Zucker (Assistant Manager), Walsh i Assistant Manager), Niemeyer (Manager). Neill (Assistant Manager), Wehner I Assist- ant Manager). Woodring (Assistant Manager). Fourth Row. Cerstvik, Seward, Goetz, Mclnerney, Sermon. Johnson. Walsh. Middle Row. Phelps (Assistant Coach), Tomaselli, Moravec, Johnson, Gordon ( Coach). First Row. Wilson, Megas, Shaner, Case, Pop e, Kitzmiller. CANDIDS: Bill Binder receives Baskethall Award from Dean Congdon on Bill Binder night. It ' s a goal for the Engineers! • 285 jumped to a 27-7 half-time lead and stayed ahead for the rest of the game. Again, the accuracy of the Engineers was poor and they were not able to hit the basket, while the Dragons were pouring in shots from all angles. The Engineers picked up the pace in the second half, but were unable to overcome the 20-point lead of the Drexel cagers. N. Y. U. ' s crack team of cagers set a new Grace Hall record when they swamped the Brown and White by a 77-36 score. After Lehigh held the Violet men to a tie in the first period, the superior shooting and passing play of the visitors became evident and they swept to a 38-16 lead at half time. As in the past, the Lehigh men took enough shots at the basket, but their accuracy was poor, while the N. Y. U. men had no trouble at all working the ball under the basket and hitting the nets with regularity. Captain for the game was Russ Jones, who left later in the week for the Air Corps. High scorer for the Engineers was Jim Case, who dropped in five field goals. Sam Mele was high man for the eve- ning with 18 points. Perhaps the outstanding man on the floor was Al Grenert, whose brilliant floor-play set up many of the iolets ' scores. The Lehigh cagers lost their sixth in a row when the Rutgers men scored a 56-33 victory. Although Lehigh managed to break up the fast-breaking offense occasionally, they were never able to halt it completely and Rutgers led from the beginning. In the fourth quarter the Engineers reached a new low for scor- ing when they were able to sink only two foul shots. Time and again their shots would hit the rim and then drop away, while the Rutgers men had no trouble putting them in. High scorer for the Lehigh men was ince Tomaselli with 9 counters. In one of the upsets of the season, the cagers gained some measure of glory by defeating the highly-favored Lafayette team in a 49-47 thriller. In a rough and tumble game the desperate Engineers finally broke their losing streak. The game was close throughout and at the end of the first period the score was 16-14, favoring the Leopards. With Dick Johnson leading, the Engineers battled their way to a 29-25 advantage at half-time. During the third period the lead changed hands several times and finally the Engineers came into a 40-35 edge with but one period to go. The Lehigh cagers held onto their precious lead and when Dick Johnson left the game on personal fouls, the Engineers held a six point margin. With their main offensive threat gone, the Brown and White froze the ball and the Leopards were able to pick up only four points. The second game of the series with Lafayette was a different story, and the Maroon ran wild to capture a 49-28 triumph in which the Engineers never had a chance. The Junior Varsity compiled a record of three victories and four defeats, winning from Swarthmore, Muhlenberg, and Drexel, and losing to Rutgers twice, Perkiomen, and to Muhlenberg. The team never stayed the same, as men were constantly called from it to replace men who had left the varsity. Through- out the season, Bob Whipple and Jake Earley were the stars of the JV team. 286 ■m - - L - 5 - WRESTLING Lehigh ' s well-balanced wrestling team completed an undefeated dual-meet j season in 1942, as they swept through eight straight bouts to rank with Navy as the only undefeated wrestling teams in the East. Billy Sheridan ' s men finished fourth in the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling championships, topped by Navy, Penn, and Penn State. Four men whom Sheridan claimed could have made any team in the country were unable to wrestle at all during the season, but the team was bell-balanced and powerful, boasting many veterans of previous seasons. The lack of an indi- vidual star accounts for the fact that Navy, also undefeated, took the Easterns instead of Lehigh. The first match of the season was with Syracuse, which the Orange dropped by a 27-3 decision to the Engineers. Captain Norman Weidersun of Syracuse provided his team ' s only victory, in the 145-lb. class, taking a close decision from Ken Swayne. Falls were made by Bob DeLong at 128, Captain John Stockbridge at 165, and Frank Winters in the heavyweight class. In the next meet with Cornell, the Brown and White grapplers took the Big Red by a 23-3 count. Again Ken Swayne dropped his match to Jim Miller, most polished of the Cornell wrestlers. High spot of the evening was the heavyweight match, in which Winters, last year ' s freshman sensation, pinned Gordon Steele, Cornell man who had been defeated only twice in two years of dual competition. Captain Stockbridge scored the only fall of the evening by pinning Carl Almquist. On February 12 and 13 the Brown and hite grapplers attempted an iron man stunt and defeated Indiana at home Friday night and then swamped Yale at New Haven the following night. The match with Indiana was witnessed by a large crowd, who cheered the wrestlers on to a 24-6 victory. Sheridan Bannon and Whit Snyder, 121 and 175 respectively, lost their matches, while Bob DeLong, Bob Bird, and Frank Winters won their matches by falls. The Winters bout was one of the best seen on home mats in years. His opponent, Bochnicka, is the Big Ten boxing and wrestling champion and weighed 25 pounds more than Winters. After three fast periods, the score was tied and after a minute in the first overtime period, Winters threw his man with a half-nelson. The score of the Yale match was 22-5. Winters, in his final collegiate appear- ance before entering the Air Corps, lost to Bob Pickett, and Bob Bird tied his man. Ken Swayne scored the only fall of the evening, in the 145-lb. class. Traveling to Philadelphia the next weekend, the Brown and White team WRESTLING SQUAD: Front Ron-. Bannan, R. DeLong, Zarkey, Swayne. Back Row: Sheridan (Coach), Fulton, Snyder, Stoekhridge (Captain), Bird, Hucker. CANDIDS: Billy shows Brown and White wrestlers some fine points of both intercollegiate and judo wrestling. 289 snapped the Penn streak of 22 straight victories by taking a hair-raising 17-14 decision that was decided by the heavyweight bout, in which Reed Fulton pinned his man to clinch the victory. Other Lehigh points were scored by Bob DeLong, who tied, and pins by Ken Swayne and Bob Bird at 145 and 155. The team preserved its unbeaten record, avenging a defeat last year at the hands of Penn State by defeating the Nittany Lions by a 18-11 score as Reed Fulton again insured victory by pinning his man. Other victories were scored by Snyder, Christ, and Bannon , while Stockbridge and his opponent wrestled to a draw. In both the Penn and the Penn State matches Fulton had to come out from under to pin his man, and in each case the victory of the team depended upon his either winning or pinning his man. Lafayette ' s inexperienced grapplers fell to Sheridan ' s men in their next bout; the first six matches were won by falls. The score of the match was 28-8 as Bob and Bill DeLong, Roy Zackey, Bob Bird, and Phil Berg pinned their men; Stockbridge won a decision, and Ken Swayne and Forrest Bast dropped their matches. In an appropriate end to a thrilling season, the Engineers defeated the Prince- ton Tigers by a 14-12 count on the evening of the Interfraternity Ball. Victories scored for the Brown and White were by Bob DeLong, Swayne, Bannon, and Stockbridge. The margin of victory was the fall produced by DeLong, who pinned his man in the first period. The Navy grapplers completely dominated the scene of the Easterns when they took five individual titles and racked up a total of 29 points. Lehigh ' s seven points were scored by two men: Captain Stockbridge, who finished second at 165, and Zackey, 1943 captain, who ended in third place at 128. After 11 consecutive years of victories, the IV team lost its first match to Princeton. The Engineers scored successive wins over Blair Academy, 18-16; Washington High School, 25-8; Wyoming Seminary, to the tune of 24-6; and then won over Penn ' s Jayvees, by a 25-3 count. Before losing to Princeton, they also defeated Muhlenberg, 25-13. Their loss was the first the IV team has suf- fered since its inception in 1931. Although plans for the 1943 wrestling season are still obscure, Coach Sheridan has expressed himself to the effect that as long as there are civilian undergradu- ates who want wrestling, he will coach the team. Since most of last year ' s varsity have been called to the armed services, the 1943 team will be made up of men who have had no college wrestling experience. CANDIDS: DeLong brothers. Captain Stockbridge. Zackey and Penn Stater. Whit Snyder and Cornell wrestler. 290 s® ®%k €r i TRACK THE 1942 track team compiled a record of three wins and two losses in dual meets, winning the Middle Three championship and finishing seventh in the MASCAA. The team was strong in the field events, but rather weak in the run- ning division. In the first meet of the season, Swarthmore was beaten, although the Engineers won first in only six o f the 14 events. Lehigh swept the field events with the exception of the pole vault and a tie for the high jump. In their first loss of the season, the Brown and White thinclads lost to Muhlen- berg by a 66-60 score in a meet that was decided in the last event. Again Lehigh won a minority of the events, but the seconds and thirds mounted up to make the meet very close. In their other meets, the Engineers defeated Lafayette 64-62, lost to Haverford 75 Yz ' Vzi an d then upset the favored Rutgers team by a 65-61 score, winning the Middle Three crown. Lehigh finished seventh in the Middle Atlantics. The 1943 track team came very close to going through an undefeated season for both dual meets and larger meets, as Lehigh tied one of its dual meets and lost the Middle Atlantics by l 1 points. The Engineers swamped Swarthmore in the first match of the season by a tremendous 101-25 score. The Garnet won only three events, and in seven the Brown and White took all the points. The Engineers tied the Muhlenberg track team at 63 points, as they proved their superiority in field competition but were unable to win many points in the run- ning events. In a triangular meet with Lafayette and Rutgers, the thinclads crushed their opponents by taking 11 of the 15 events and amassing 91 points. After the new track had been dedicated, Lehigh lost the Middle Atlantics to Muhlenberg by the heartbreaking margin of l l points. CROSS COUNTRY Picking up where they left off last year, Coach Jim Gordon ' s cross country team won three straight dual meets, a triangular meet, and finished a close second in the Middle Atlantic championships. In the opening meet with Muhlen- berg, the Engineers won by a 25-30 score as Fred Wiley ran the four and a tenth mile course in 22 minutes flat. A series of personal duels between the men made the meet an extremely close one. The harriers won their sixth straight match by swamping the Swarthmore thinclads in a driving rainstorm. The meet was held October 16 at Swarthmore. Score of the match was 15-40, as the twelve Lehigh runners finished before any TRACK SQUAD: Top Row: Evans (Manager), Mortimer, Hooper, Niewenhaus, Brownlee, Bast, Rumsey (Captain), Messinger, Lauten (Assistant Manager), Gordon (Coach). Second Row: Wellenkamp, Cornelius, Seigle, Schwarz, Clark, Oechsle, Elmes. Front Row: Jones, Miller, Schumacher, Kirkham, Hardy, Bevan, Whipple. CANDIDS: Highlights of Middle Three meet— Seigle and Schwarz. 293 of the Garnet. Fred Wiley again paced the meet. This is believed to be one of the few times when a cross country team completely whitewashed its opponent. The Engineers won the Middle Three title for the third consecutive year when they beat the Rutgers runners by a 25-30 count. Lehigh took five out of the first seven places. Bill Hardy and Fred Wiley, both of Lehigh, finished the course together in a dead heat in the time of 22:34. The harriers won their fourth meet of the season by defeating the strong West Chester Teachers and Temple in a triangular meet. The Engineers scored 36 points, the Teachers 41, and Temple 49. For the first time in the season, Fred Wiley was defeated when Pernsley of West Chester ran the course six seconds faster than the Lehigh man. Bill Hardy finished fourth in the meet. In the final contest of the season, Franklin and Marshall won the Middle Atlantics as their men finished one-two while setting a new course record. Lou Domeratzky paced the team by finishing fourth, while other Lehigh men eighth, tenth, and eleventh. Hardy, a freshman, led the Lehigh entrants in the I. C. 4 A. meet. SWIMMING Coach Dick Brown ' s swimming squad wound up the 1943 season with a rec- ord of three victories out of six dual meets. In the first meet of the year, the Temple swimmers won a 41-32 meet on the virtue of a victory in the 400- yard freestyle relay, the last event of the meet. Captain Dick Schaper won two firsts, in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle events, and McKaig and Weller won the diving and 200-yard breaststroke, respectively. Winning six of the eight events, the strong Rutgers team next defeated the Engineers by a 41-34 score. The team won its first match of the season by defeating the Swarthmore tankers, 45-29. Schaper maintained his unbeaten record in the 50 and 100-yard events; the team took five of the nine events, four seconds, and five thirds. For the first time in four years, the Brown and White swimmers defeated Penn, hanging up a 41-34 score. Schaper lost the 50, but remained undefeated at 100 yards, as the Engineers counted five first places. The meet was held at Penn. Winning only two out of the nine events, the Fordham Rams never had a chance as the Lehigh swimmers easily won their third match of the year by a 55-20 score. Schaper continued his streak as the Engineers won both relays, and CROSS COUNTRY SQUAD: Rear Row: Mussina (Manager), Wiley, Smyth, Williams, Van Allen, Gordon (Coach), Kovaka, Berk, Wallenkamp, Domeratzky, Burroughs. Second Row: Diggs (Assistant Manager), Bradford, Fox, Clark (Co-Captain), Simpson, Walker (Co-Cap- tain), Evans, Thayer. Front Row: Welch (Assistant Manager), Herrick, Hardy, Whipple, Ross, Gray, Bassett, Hoerner (Assistant Manager), Little (Assistant Manager). CANDIDS: Brownie tells the hoys how it ' s done. Fox, Paramount and International camera- men film Lehigh ' s underwater ohstacle course. SWIMMING SQUAD: Top Row: Heinz (Manager), Lawson, O ' Shea, Brown (Coach), Jacohy, Duhin, Bernasco (Manager). First Row: deGrouchy, Ryan, McKaig, Schaper (Captain), Fer- rell, Trimhle, Keenan. 294 % | £ ® V £Hto .Sfe iVEH A ■■■V: 3fi  If took the diving event as well as the backstroke and the 220-yard freestyle con- tests. Lafayette ' s experienced natators won the final dual match of the season by outclassing the Brown and White by a 52-23 count. The Maroon won every event but the two dashes, and Captain Schaper compiled a record of 11 wins and only one loss for the six meets. This closed the dual match season, but on March 13 Schaper won the 50-yard dash in the Eastern swimming championships, while Wayne Trimble and Chan McKaig took fourths in the 400-yard freestyle event and the diving finals, respectively. BASEBALL Lehigh ' s 1942 baseball team seemed unable to hit the right combination and j wound up with a season ' s record of three victories and ten defeats. The squad lost their first eight games before they were able to crack through with a win. Only victories scored were over Muhlenberg, Rutgers, and Fort Monmouth. The Engineers opened the season against Lafayette and went down by a 12-3 score. The team next lost games to Vermont, Manhattan, and Temple before they came close to racking up their first win. In their first encounter with Muhlen- berg, Wayne Carter pitched four-hit ball and the Engineers had things under control until the ninth, when the Mules pushed across two runs to win, 2-1. The team then slipped badly in their next two games and were swamped by Fort Monmouth and Gettysburg, as their defense collapsed. In their return en- counter with Muhlenberg, the Brown and White nine finally broke into the win column with a 5-3 victory. Wayne Carter pitched the team to the victory as the Engineers scored four runs in the eighth to clinch the victory. With Grant Custer pitching his first full game, the Lehigh nine next defeated Rutgers in a ninth-inning rally. The game was close throughout, but Forster tallied the deciding run in the ninth on an infield error. Gaining revenge for a defeat earlier in the season, the Engineers made it three straight by beating the soldiers of Fort Monmouth, 4-2. Custer, diminutive Lehigh hurler, got credit for the victory. The Brown and White scored all their runs in the first inning, when Foster knocked out a homer that accounted for three of the runs. After that, the Brown and White nine got only one hit, but steady hurling by Custer prevented the soldiers from getting in the lead. After their mid-season spurt of three straight victories, the Engineers lost the touch and dropped the last two games of the season to Lafayette and Drexel. Meanwhile, the freshman baseball team won four games and dropped three, Vince Moravec being the pitching mainstay of the team. BASEBALL SQUAD: Top Row: Sigal (Assistant Manager), Shafer, Wilson, Moffa, Serman, Caraway (Coach), Moravec, Winco, Heath, Lindhohn, Eichlin (Manager). First Row: Swayne, Carter, Geiger, Ferrell, Fuller (Captain), Somers, Swartz. CANDIDS: Wilson, pitcher. Out! A homer. 297 FENCING BY winning all five of their bouts, the Lehigh fencing team completed an undefeated season for the first time in several years. The team al so won the Middle Three title by whipping Lafayette twice, since Rutgers did not have a fencing team. In the first meet of the 1943 season, the fencers won all three divisions, as they beat Lafayette by a l Yz Vz count. Ciaffardini was Lehigh ' s only undefeated man in the meet. Drew University fell next by a i0y 2 -6 1 z count; Landesman, Engineer captain, was undefeated. The Philadelphia College of Pharmacy swordsmen never had a chance as the Engineers conquered them on February 20. Al Hartung, who left for the Army after the meet, and Landesman won their matches. The team kept its victorious streak going, next defeating Lafayette by a 14-13 count. After losing in the foil division, the team picked up enough points in the epee and sabre to eke out the win. The team wound up the season with a 15 to 12 victory over the Temple fencers. Victory was not assured until the next to the last bout. Although splitting in the foil and epee divisions, the Engineers ' strength in the sabre fencing provided the margin of victory. SOCCER Billy Sheridan ' s 1942 soccer team compiled a record of three victories, four losses, and a tie. Built around six returning lettermen, the team lost its first game of the season to Penn by a 4-1 count, after the score had been tied until the beginning of the fourth quarter. As the squad began to improve through practice, they beat the Rutgers booters the following week by a 3-1 tally, but lost to the strong Haverford team by 6-1. The team bounced back into the winning column again by defeating the Cornell team after two extra periods, as Over and Hoffman scored goals for Lehigh. In Lehigh ' s next game, with Stevens, the match also went into overtime periods, but the score remained a tie after ten minutes of extra play. Hoffman scored the Brown and White goal during the fourth quarter. On November 14 the Engineers lost a hard-fought battle to the Swarthmore booters by a 3-1 count. Art Over scored the only Lehigh goal. Both teams were hindered by the bitterly cold weather that hampered passing and dribbling. The Engineers wound up the season by defeating the Lafayette soccer team to cop the Middle Three title. The score of the game was 3-0. Hoffman scored two of the goals and Ken Swayne tallied the other. At the end of the season Phil Berg was elected captain of the team to replace Bill Shaeffer. 298 .. - 5. 1 a r ■LACROSSE The 1942 lacrosse team, coached by Albert Iorio, compiled a record of two victories and four losses, defeating Lafayette and Stevens and losing to Swarthmore, Loyola, Rutgers, and Drexel. The Engineers came into permanent possession of the Estes trophy when the second game with Lafayette was called off. In the Stevens game, Lynn scored six goals for the Brown and White as Dona- hue ' s last minute goal clinched the victory. In the Lehigh victory over Lafayette, Bob Cahoon and Harry Lynn led the victors with three goals apiece. Harry Lynn was elected captain for the 1943 season. The 1943 stickmen fared slightly worse; they were able to win only one game, against Pennsylvania. The team lost to Drexel, twice to Stevens, Swarth- more, and Rutgers. Highlight of the season was the vicious Penn game, played before a houseparty crowd. The Engineers won the game by a tremendous 19-7 tally, as Lynn scored 7 goals in the first half and was well on his way to a scoring record before he was forced out of the game with injuries. The intercollegiate record is 11 goals. Scores of the other games were: Drexel, 9-4; Stevens, 9-3 in both games; Swarthmore, 8-7, and Rutgers, 8-3. Bob Cahoon was elected captain for the next season after the final game with Rutgers. TENNIS The 1942 tennis team was able to play only 6 games, as bad weather in the spring cancelled several games and made practice difficult. The squad won four matches and lost meets to Bucknell and N. Y. U. in the first meets of the season. Then the squad defeated Lafayette and Manhattan by 7-2 scores, Gettys- burg, 9-0, and Swarthmore by a 5-4 total. In the Bucknell match, the Engineers won four of the six singles, but were unable to win anything else, losing 5-4. Against Gettysburg, each match went only two sets, as Lehigh won all singles and doubles matches. Against N. Y. U., the team won only one singles match and one of the doubles encounters. TENNIS SQUAD: Back Roiv: Culliney (Manager), Mosier, Williams, Mayer, De Huff, Mercur (Coach). Front Ron: Johnson, Croake, Gray (Captain) Bunning. SOCCER SQUAD: Back Ron: Dafter (Manager), Bast, Link, Hoffman, Sheridan (Coach), Seigle, Ingram, Smith, Clark, Kelly (Manager). Middle Row: Swayne, Dieter, Over, W. Schaef- fer, Birckhead, Berg. Front Row. Ely, Kegerise, Bastianelli, Byrne, Shnttleworth. 301 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. Copelaxd Callex, Dean of the College of Engineering. Tomlixsox Fort, Dean of the Graduate School. Eugene G. Grace, President of the Board of Trustees. Trustees: Johx D. Berg (alumnus); Alfred V. Bodixe (alumnus); Andrew E. Buchaxax (alumnus) ; Joseph S. Cort (alumnus) ; William C. Dickermax; Alan C. Dodsox; Thomas S. Gates; Earle F. Johnson; Walter S. Laxdis (alumnus); Charles D. Marshall; Robert E. McMath; Fraxk A. Merrick (alumnus) ; Fraxk W. Sterrett; William J. Turxer; Albert N. Williams. Frederick R. Ashbaugh, Bursar and Purchasing Agent; Raymond C. Bull, Director, Students ' ' Health Service; William A. Corxelius, Archivist of Alumni Records; George B. Curtis, Registrar and University Editor; Jenny V. Dacey, Nurse in Charge; Edna V. Dean, Secretary to the Treasurer; Leanor R. Gilbert, Recorder; Robert F. Herrick, Executive Secretary of the Lehigh Alumni Asso- ciation; Edward A. Hower, Manager of Realty, Brodhead Estate; Carl O. Keck, Assistant Director of Students ' Health Service; Robert E. Laramy, Associate Director of Admissions; Howard S. Leach, Librarian; Andrew W. Litzexberger, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds; John W. Maxwell, Manager of the Supply Bureau; Melvix P. Moorhouse, University News Editor; Robert P. More, Executive Secretary of the Graduate Faculty; Elias R. Morgax, Director of Placement; Walter R. Okeson, Vice-President of the University, Secretary and Treasurer of the Board of Trustees; John R. Polixsky, Assistant to the Registrar; Elizabeth Raymaxx, Acting Director of Dining Service; Helex G. Ryax, Secretary to the President; Leoxard H. Schick, Editor of Alumni Bulle- tin; Melvix Schissler, University Auditor; E. Kenneth Smiley, Director of Admissions; Robert S. Taylor, Legal Counsel; Harold P. Thomas, Director of the Summer Session and General College Division. Lecturers: Charles A. Buck, Nicholas H. Heck, Hexry I. Klopp, Roy A. Lewis, Edwin J. Prixdle. Library Staff: Myrtle H. Eastox, Jeanne R. Forstall, Muriel L. Kemp, Mrs. William Urban, 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 Emeritus: Robert W. Hall. Associate Professor: Francis J. Trembley. Assistant Professor: Basil W. Parker. Instructor: James P. Sell. Assistant Instructor: Robert M. Lewert. Fellous: George R. L. Gaughram; Dale A. Harris (Swimming Pool Assistant). • 304 - FACULTY Department of Education. Harold P. Thomas, Professor of and Head of the Department of Education. Associate Professor: Theodore T. Lafferty. Assistant Professor: Lucien T. Lee. Department of English. Robert M. Smith, Professor of and Head of the Department of English. Professor: Jonathan B. Severs. Associate Professors: Wallace R. Biggs; James L. Clifford; Edgar H. Riley. Assistant Professors: Joseph C. Callaghan (Director of Debating) ; Glenn J. Christensen; Carl F. Strauch. Instructors: Cole S. Brembeck; Everett L. Jones; Kenneth K. Kost; Gerhard Magnus; Melvin P. Moorhouse; Albert A. Rights. 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 Professor: Lawrence hitcomb. Assistant Professor: Duncan Stewart, Jr. Department of German. Philip M. Palmer, Professor of and Head of the Department of German. 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 History and Head of the Department of History and Government. Professor: George D. Harmon. Associate Professors: Amos A. Ettinger; Wilson L. Godshall; Ernst B. Schulz. Department of Latin. Horace W. Wright, Professor of and Head of the Department of Latin. Assistant Professor: William A. McDonald. • 305 • FACULTY Department of Mathematics and Astronomy. Tomlinson Fort, Professor of Mathematics and Head of the Department of Mathematics and Astronomy. Professors Emeritus: John H. Ogburn; Charles L. Thornburg. Professors: Joseph B. Reynolds; Lloyd A. Smail. Associate Professors: Kenneth W. Lamson; George E. Raynor; Clarence A. Shook. Assistant Professors: Frank S. Beale; Edward H. Cutler; Voris V. Latshaw; Ralph N. Van Arnam; Andre Weil. Instructors: Joseph E. Illick; Ervand Kogbetliantz. Graduate Assistants: Samuel S. Ensor; Christian C. Miesse. Assistant: James L. Howell. Department of Music. T. Edgar Shields, Director 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, Chaplain. Department of Philosophy. Frank C. Becker, Assistant Professor and Chairman of the Department of Philosophy. Professor Emeritus : Percy Hughes. Associate Professor: Theodore T. Lafferty (Self ridge Associate Professor of Philosophy). Department of Psychology. James L. Graham, Associate Professor of and Acting Head of the Department of Psychology. 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; John G. Roberts; Rafael A. Soto. Instructor: David G. Scott. 306 FACULTY COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Department of Accounting. Roy B. Co win, Professor of and Head of the Department of Accounting. Associate Professor: Carl E. Allen. Department of Economics and Sociology. Herbert M. Diamond, Professor of and Head of the Department of Economics and Sociology. Professors: Elmer C. Bratt; Neil Carothers (MacFarlane Professor of Eco- nomics ) . Assistant Professors: Thomas F. Jones; Earl L. Knight. Instructor: Lonis R. Tripp. Department of Finance. Frederick A. Bradford, Professor of Economics and Head of the Department of Finance. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Department of Civil Engineering. Hale Sutherland, Professor and Head of the Department of Civil Engineering. Associate Professors: Sylvanus A. Becker; William J. Eney; Merton O. Fuller; Harry G. Payrow. Assistant Professors: Arthur T. Ippen; Eugene H. Uhler. Instructors: Paul Hessemer; William F. Lotz; Leonard B. Sevastio. Fellows: Joseph L. Brandes; 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. Ullman. Professors: Harold V. Anderson; Alpha A. Diefenderfer; Warren W. Ewing; Charles W. Simmons; Edwin R. Theis. Associate Professors: Robert D. Billinger; Thomas H. Hazlehurst. Assistant Professors: Edward D. Amstutz; George C. Beck; Frank J. Fornoff ; Earl J. Serf ass; Judson G. Smull; Charles E. Stoops. Instructors: Robert Lafferty; Albert C. Zettlemoyer. Graduate Assistants: Henry C. Green; Willis A. Heisey; Joseph Parmet; Moul- ton D. Phelps; Richard N. Rhoda; Richard K. Walton. Fellows: John R. Cann; Thomas G. Harris; Raymond C. Hess; Thomas F. Jacoby; George D. Nelson; Clifton R. Neumoyer; Charles W. Tucker; Earl A. Zettlemoyer. • 307 • FACULTY Department of Electrical Engineering. J. Lynford Beaver, Professor and Acting Head of the Department of Electrical Engineering. Associate Professors: Cornelius G. Brennecke; Archie R. Miller. Assistant Professors: Frederic P. Fischer; Howard D. Gruber; Douglas E. Mode. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering. Fred V. Larkin, Professor of and Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Professors: Thomas E. Butterfield; Arthur W. Klein; Milton C. Stuart. Assistant Professors: Arthur C. Bates; Thomas E. Jackson. Instructors: Lee T. Askren; Irwin R. Burkey; James V. Eppes; Walton Forstall. Fellow: Bela K. Erdoss. Department of Metallurgical Engineering. Gilbert E. Doan, Professor of and Head of the Department of Metallurgical Engineering. Professors: Allison Butts; Bradley Stoughton. Assistant Professor: John H. Frye. Instructor : Robert D. Stout. Department of Mining Engineering. A. Copeland Callen, Professor of and Head of the Department of Mining Engineering. Professor Emeritus: Howard Eckfeldt. Assistant Professor: Robert T. Gallagher. Department of Physics. Charles C. Bidwell, Professor of and Head of the Department of Physics. Professors: Paul L. Bayley; Max Peterson. Associate Professors: Preston B. Carwile; Elliot W. Cheney; Eric S. Sinkinson. Assistant Professor: Peter G. Bergmann. Instructors: William B. Agocs; Robert A. Buerschaper. Graduate Assistant: Kurt H. Weber. • 308 • FACULTY UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENTS Department of Military Science and Tactics. Fay W. Brabson, Professor of and Head of the Department of Military Science and Tactics. Assistant Professors: Arthur F. Bowen; James D. Campbell; Russell H. John- son; Charles E. Phillips: Samuel Pierce, Jr.; John F. Schwartz. Assistants: George F. Gasda (Coach of Rifle Team) ; Oatha R. Linkous. Department of Physical Education. Fay C. Bartlett, Director of Physical Education. Professor Emeritus: Howard R. Reiter. Trainer: Emil Havach. Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. James A. Gordon, Acting Director of Athletics, Coach of Basketball, Cross- country, and Track. Coaches: Richard L. Brown, (Swimming); Elbert F. Caraway (Baseball); George L. Ekaitis (Assistant Football, Assistant Basketball) ; George W. Hoban (Football); Frederic Mercur (Tennis); Leo F. Prendergast (Assistant Foot- ball) ; William Sheridan (W restling). Business Manager of Athletics: Elbert F. Caraway. Trainer: Richard L. Brown. Superintendent of Taylor Field: Peter J. Boquel. 309 CLASS OF 1943 Walter Lesesne Anders Maynard Goodwin Arsove Elwood Bruce Backensto Rorert Dudley Bailey Lynn Conant Bartlett Arthur Kirke Bartley t Burton Eberman Balder Robert Kingdon Beckwith William Edwards Bellinger Charles Surface Bennett Richard Turney Berg Charles Richard Bergh Richard Henry Bernasco William Gottlob Binder Taylor Albert Birckhead [Mortimer Lawrence Blanket Alexander Hamilton Bolyn Robert Carlton Boston Frank Hugo Bower Edward George Boyer, Jr. Glenn Winfield Boyer Thomas Paisley Bradford Earl Albert Brawn Ray Edwin Brawn Andrew Harrison Brennan Samuel Breskman William Conner Brower Robert Knox Brown John Henry Brubaker, Jr. Myron Isaac Buchmajn Thomas Mathieu Buck William Thomas Buhrig Herbert Edward Bunntng George Warren Burgers Robert Forrest Burroughs Thomas Lee Bushey George John Bussmajn Arthur George Byrne Solomon Pusey Caldwell Stanley Caplan Paul Revere Carl, Jr. Gerald Vincent Carroll Wayne Haxley Carter, Jr. Edward Jerome Cayanaugh Francis Arndt Chidsey, Jr. Charles Bowles Chrisman William Henry Clark, Jr. Henry St. Clair Clarke U Robert Edward Coffman Warren Xayier Collmann 4703 Jr. S.N 730 Cherokee Street, Bethlehem 50 W inton Road South, Rochester, N. Y. 213 N. Third Street, Emmaus 96 Larned Road, Summit, N. J. 222 Warren Square, Bethlehem 75-43 Kessel Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. 1106 Main Street, Bethlehem 163 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 19 Clinton Avenue, Fort Plain, N. Y. Fairview at Chestnut, Nazareth R. D. 1, Coraopolis Elknud Lane, Westmont, Johnstown 356 Hillcrest Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 330 Spruce Street, Steelton 529 Dunkirk Road, Baltimore, Md. Hotel Dauphin, New York, N. Y. 21 Second Street, Drifton 401 Lea Boulevard, Wilmington, Del. 375 Lincoln Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. 215 West Fornance Street, Norristown 135 West Caracas Avenue, Hershey Stamm ' s Lane, Wheeling, W. Va. 41 Ridgeview Avenue, West Orange, N. J . 41 Ridgeview Avenue, West Orange, N. J. 60 Boyle Avenue, Paterson, N. J. 4950 North Broad Street, Philadelphia 230 S. St. Cloud Street, Allentown 511 West 24th Street, Chester 1321 Liberty Street, Easton Beach 47th Street, Sea Gate, New York, N. Y. Rice Mill and Deaver Roads, Wyncote 40 Mercereau Avenue, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 25 Sagamore Road, Bronxville, N. Y. 221 Edgewater Road, Grantwood, N. J. 408 Burd Street, Pennington, N. J. 347 Hickory Lane, Haddonfield, N. J. 404 Ellsworth Avenue, New Haven, Conn. 42 Elm Street, Great Neck, N. Y. 231 West Evergreen Street, West Grove 1106 Hamilton Street, Allentown 580 Delaware Street, Paulsboro, N. J. Undercliff, Meriden, Conn. 735 Huntington Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. 77 Yates Street, Forty Fort 308 Harbison Road, Wayne Pikeville, Ky. 303 Mountain Way, Rutherford, N. J. aval Operating Base, Argentia, Newfoundland 5312 Tuckahoe Avenue, Richmond, Va. 387 North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre 310 CLASS OF 1943 Joseph Gordon Compton Jon Conforte Edgar Russell Conover, Jr. Leonard Robert Constantine John Hughes Corson William Clark Cosford Roy Burford Cowin, Jr. Niel Stahley Culliney John Seaton Curtis Charles Dwight Curtiss, Jr. Donald Henry Dames Edward Stowman Dams Samuel Jackson Davy Louis Rudolph Daze Bernard William Deehan John Goodfellow deGrouchy Louis Field Dellwig William Thomas DeLong Ward Arnold Detwiler, II Charles Joseph Dick Leo Worth Dieffenbach Robert Henry Doney James Edward Donohue Robert Walper Doster Rosario Roy Dragone Roy Leslie Duncan, Jr. James Dunwoody, Jr. Richard Kistler Eberts Edward Walter Edwards Willet Ellsworth Egge, Jr. William Harrison Eichlin Robert Douglass Everett musa joseh eways Norman Joseph Faber Clarence Franklin Fehnel, J Edward Adam Fehnel Roy Norman Figueroa Chester Lee Finch, Jr. Robert Joseph Fisher Robert High Freeman Hugh Bartley Frey, Jr. Lewis Friedman Robert Watson Fuller Joseph Cyril Gabuzda James Henry Galli Henry Watterson Garvin, Jr Randall Clinton Giddings Wheeler Gilmore, Jr. Judwig Edward Godycki, Jr. Richard Farrand Goebel Thomas Herman Golden, III 45-24 171st Street, Flushing, N. Y. Maple Avenue, Stony Brook, L. I., N. Y. Summit Avenue, Fort Washington 9 Hillside Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. 825 Eleventh Street, Oakmont 3489 Atwater Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 1124 North New Street, Bethlehem 820 North Bishopthorpe Street, Bethlehem 275 Redonda Street, Youngstown, Ohio 10 Virginia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 1015 North 21st Street, Allentown 1060 Wakeling Street, Philadelphia 611 North Cedar Street, New Castle 2 Lefferts Street, Carteret, N. J. 19 Belmohr Street, Belleville, N. J. 5022 Schuyler Street, Germantown 15 Wetherill Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. 2546 Easton Avenue, Bethlehem 1009 Three Mile Drive, Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. 609 Carlton Avenue, Bethlehem R. D. 1, Lopez 11 Plainfield Avenue, Pen Argyl 16 Knollwood Avenue, Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. 632 Eighth Avenue, Bethlehem 222 Spencer Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 23 Burr Street, West Hartford, Conn. 729 Park Avenue South, Erie 1723 Elm Street, Bethlehem 404 West German Street, Herkimer, N. Y. 517 North 21st Street, Allentown 1025 Northampton Street, Easton 1102 McClearv Street, McKeesport 126 North Fifth Street, Reading 106 Buckingham Avenue, Trenton, N. J. r. 224 Belvidere Street, Nazareth 1118 Main Street, Bethlehem 22 Roxbury Road, Garden City, L. I., N. Y. 3602 Morrison Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. 125 Lafayette Avenue, Oreland 419 Carsonia Avenue, Reading 336 Second Street, Dunellen, N. J. 606 Ninth Avenue, Belmar, N. J. 1340 Madison Avenue, Bethlehem 941 Center Street, Freeland 377 Stevens Avenue, Portland, Me. 20 Reynolds Street, Gettysburg Uniondale Broadway Avenue, Secane 1149 First Avenue, Hellertown 44 Sage Terrace, Scarsdale, N. Y. 632 Edwards Avenue, Pottsville 311 CLASS OF 1943 Jules Arthur Gottlieb Vincent Frank Grasso John Raymond Gray Leonard Robert Greene David Evans Gregory John Richard Greiner Philip Scott Guckes Robert Charles Haas Alfred Lewis Haft Robert Edwin Harmsch Stephen Hart George Solomon Hartman Richard Milton Haslet Burton Clyde Haworth William Daniel Hayes Burt Lewis Heimer 48 Hudson Place, Weehawken, N. J. 41 Park Place, Kingston 73-20 Austin Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. 659 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 226 Main Street, Norwalk, Conn. 68 East Broad Street, Bethlehem 8134 High School Road, Elkins Park 1239 Springfield Avenue, Irvington, N. J. 21 West 86th Street, New York, N. Y. 55 Yale Street, Maplewood, N. J. 1005 Pelhamdale Avenue, Pelham Manor, N. Y. 2268 Eaton Avenue, Bethlehem 35 North Ninth Street, Easton 549 West Washington Boulevard, Chicago, 111. Box 555, Windber R. D. 4, Binghamton, N. Y. 100 Nelson Place, Westfield, N. J. Barton Royal Heinz Albert Weimer Hemphill, Jr. 243 North Mountain Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J Harry Albert Herold, Jr. Robert Leon Hill William Bushnell Hinman Alan Dabney Hinrichs Raymond William Hinterleiter Walter Russel Hoerner Warren Edward Hoffman William Bane Holberton Robert Harry Holland Richard Charles Hopkins Fexwick Peck Horn John Leonard Horn John Houseman George William Houston John Joseph Hucker Isaac Mover Hunsberger William Edward Irvin, Jr. Robert Otto Jensen Charles Armond Johnson Donald Seiz Johnson John Athan Karas Joseph Edwin Kareha Theodore Kelechava LeRoy Ordway King, Jr. William Caspar Kirschner Robert Clayton Kramer Donald Eugene Krebs Charles Gierman Kucher William Anthony Kuhar Arthur Lewis Landesman Alfred Baer Laponsky Leonard Dale Larson 31 Tulip Street, Bristol, Conn. 923 Green Ridge Street, Scranton 60 South Maple Avenue, East Orange, N. J. 130 Meadow Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. 217 South 17th Street, Allentown 3159 Brookwood Street, Harrisburg 1030 Adams Avenue, Union, N. J. 273 Clinton Place, Hackensack, N. J. 807 Linden Street, Bethlehem 104 Shirley Circle, Narberth 285 North Lansdowne Avenue, Lansdowne 496 Mayhew Court, South Orange, N. J. 118 South Leh Street, Allentown 48 Davis Road, Port Washington, N. Y. 108 West Roberts Street, Norristown 125 South Third Street, Quakertown 2337 Commonwealth Avenue, Chicago, 111. 12 Lessing Place, Freeport, N. Y. 19 Plymouth Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 44 Sixth Avenue, Collegeville 225 North Eighth Street, Lebanon 618 River Street, Peckville 625 North Seventh Avenue, Allentown 3114 N Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. 154-38 28th Avenue, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. 412 Hill Street, Duryea Marietta 9 Beaumont Place, Irvington, N. J. 513 Ontario Street, Bethlehem 11 Mayfair Road, Morris Plains, N. J. 618 Front Street, Brownsville 23835 Lyman Circle, Shaker Heights, Ohio 312 CLASS OF 1943 Don ' ald William Layton Andrew Frederick Leckie, Jr. Arthur Morton Lehrer Leonard Jack Leidig Howard Clifford Leifheit Nathan George Lesh Gustav Martin Levin Charles Lowell Liebau, Jr. Thomas Crawford MacAllister John Joseph M al one y, Jr. Arthur Forrest Mann Roydon Seymour Margolies Leon Joseph McGeady John Joseph McGee William McGee Francis Stevens McGuiness Robert Michael McInerney William Charles McJames Chandler Hayes McKaig John Joseph Meehan Quentin Dewey Mehrkam Jack Roos Mercer Philip Horace Miller Richard Earle Miller Jackson Froelicher Mitchell Harvey Donald Moll Robert Condit ' Moore Franklin Lecron Morgal Warren King Morgan, Jr. James .Maury Morris, Jr. John Haines Mueller James Paul Mulhern Raffaele Francisco Muraca Harold Russ Nace Harvey Hans Nelken Paul Lavern Mestleroth Carl Neuendorffer James Walter Niemeyer Charles MacMillan Norun Kenneth Harold Norris, Jr. Zenon Edwin Nowicki Harry Lester Olmstead Arthur Mead Over Ralph Domlmck Palazzo Elbridge William Palmer Richard Bradbury Palmer Donald Bruce Parish Preston Parr, Jr. Arthur Barrette Parsons, Jr Mason Pratt Pearsall William J arms Peck 16 East 88th Street, New York, N. Y. 124 Ashbourne Road, Columbus, Ohio 1543 East 22nd Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 660 East Market Street, York 220-24 101st Avenue, Queens Village, N. Y. Lehigh Avenue, Wind Gap 455 Montclair Avenue, Bethlehem 422 Franklin Avenue, Nutley, N. J. Jr. 890 Bridgeport Avenue, Milford, Conn. 46 eager Avenue, Forty Fort 146 West Broad Street, Bethlehem 557 West Market Street, Long Beach, N. Y. 523 Main Street, Freemansburg 840 North Sixth Street, Allentown 1813 Pennsylvania Street, Allentown 416 North Chester Road, Swarthmore 310 North Second Street, Allentown 159 Seton Place, South Orange, N. J. 2442 West 18th Street, Wilmington, Del. 712 Front Street, Freeland 737 Liberty Street, Allentown 85 Robertson Road. Lynbrook, L. I., N. Y. 1160 New Brunswick Avenue, Rahway, N. J. 2104 V ashington Avenue, Northampton 125-A Larchmont Acres, Larchmont, N. Y. 103 East Third Street, Lansdale 84 Mountain Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 515 Devon Road, Camp Hill 55 Franklin Place, Morris Plains, N T . J. 113 Bayard Place. Pittsburgh 738 South Queen Street, York 294 New Hancock Street, Wilkes-Barre 6566 Hartley Avenue, Easton 139 Wavne Avenue, Haddonfield, N. J. 43-05 Forlev Street, Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y. Elm 34 Harwood Avenue, North Tarrytown, N. Y. 124 South Blakely Street, Dunmore 16718 Kenyon Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 12 Edgewood Place, Maplewood, N. J. 518 Hayes Street, Bethlehem 450 Kissel Avenue, Staten Island, N. Y. 5036 Amberson Place, Pittsburgh Corner Dover and Hazel Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 1244 V. atanga Street, Kingsport, Tenn. Lehigh University Campus, Bethlehem 15 Maple Street, Portville, N. Y. 108 Clift Terrace, Wyncotte 52 Edgewood Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. 18 Green Avenue, New Canaan, Conn. Lockwood Road, Riverside, Conn. 313 CLASS OF 1943 Alfred Winslow Pedrick Leonard Francis Penitsch Robert Edward Pollock Kenneth Porter, Jr. 63 Philip Henry Powers, Jr. Alan Edward Price James Bruce Price, Jr. Clarence Orland Prinkey Robert Willmar Pugh Arnold Oscar Putnam Robert Cole Ramsdell John Samuel Reichard Harry Archibald Reichenbach William Kouwenhoven Remsen 77 Hugh Warren Richards George Horace Ried Arthur Thomas Robb Frank Frederick Roberts Arthur Roslund Richard Charles Roth Robert Wilson Rouse Robert Seymour Rumsey John Donald Ryan Donald George Sanders Anthony Joseph Sanantonia Richard Winfield Sauer Robert Webster Saylor W ILLIAM DwiGHT ScHAEFFER Robert Mack Schantz David Henry Schaper Richard Grey Schenck Victor Edward Schermerhorn George Joseph Schneider Wilson Bohnett Schramm Herbert Owen Schutt Warren Joshua Schwab Rodney Daniel Shaffer Charles Elias Sieger Robert Edwin Siegfried Walter Singlevich James Schriever Smith Joseph Earle Smith, Jr. Robert Chadwick Smith John Archibald Smythe quentin cletus soprano Charles Wesley Stahl Edward William Starke, Jr. Clarence A. Stearns, Jr. Henry Charles Stieglitz John Montague Stockbridge Main Road, Millville, N. J. R. D. 60, Allentown 1548 West Water Street, Elmira, N. Y. Bedford Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y. 5808 Northumberland Street, Pittsburgh 1270 Bellerock Street, Pittsburgh 123 East Market Street, Bethlehem 43 Caryl Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Jacobus Avenue, Great Notch, N. J. 1 La France, Springfield, Vt. 829 Stuyvesant Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 640 South Pike Avenue, Allentown 643 Highland Avenue, Bethlehem 2 Bard Avenue, West New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Elmira, N. Y. Roscoe, N. Y. 30 Wallace Street, Rockville Centre, N. Y. 259 Ninth Avenue, Bethlehem 146 High Street, Berlin, N. H. 77 Tuscarora Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. 119 East Madison Street, Colorado Springs, Col. 209 Ashland Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. 1624 Powell Street, Norristown 472 Broadway, Passaic, N. J. 446 East Main Street, Pen Argyl 3 Twelfth Avenue, Haddon Heights, N. J. 2712 Reel Street, Harrisburg 806 Elizabeth Avenue, Laureldale 2424 Allen Street, Allentown 538 Mohawk Drive, Erie 169 Fairview Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. 240 Jackson Avenue, Bradford Old Countv Road, Demarest, N. J. 221-14 39th Avenue, Bayside, L. I., N. Y. 2251 Fairview Avenue, Easton 460 New Street, Freemansburg 932 2 Tilghman Street, Allentown 1629 Linden Street, Allentown 212 Hamilton Street, Allentown 1613 East Eighth Street, Bethlehem 318 North Irving Avenue, Scranton 129 West Queen Lane, Philadelphia 2114 Glendale Avenue, Bethlehem 6530 Rogers Avenue, Merchantville, N. J. 1038 Green Street, Allentown 1859 Arlington Street, Bethlehem 331 Gilbert Street, Ridgewood, N. J. 2467 78th Avenue, Philadelphia 173-53 Croydon Road, Jamaica, N. Y. 507 Woodside Road, Baltimore, Md. 314 CLASS OF 1943 George Chickering Stone, Jr. Carl Arthur Streuli William Moss Strouse William Lester Stump William Robb Sultzer Philip Anthony Sweet, Jr. Robert Stanley Swoyer George Carl Tabor William Roberts Taylor Joseph Pidgeon Thomas, Jr. Philip Adams Thomas Charles McDowell Thompson John Richard Thompson Paul McNeel Thrasher, Jr. John Alexander Thurn Lester Edwin Titlow Walter Stockton Titlow, Jr. Walter Scott Tomkinson John Platt Townsend Richard Mitchell Treco David Irvin Troxel Albert Robert Tucker, Jr. Philip Thomas Varrichio Harold Otto Yollmer Albert Francis Von Block Richard Rolland Waer William Comstock Walker Edward Louis Walter Joseph Anthony Wantuck Jay Louis Weening Peter John Weigel Robert Weller William Taylor Wenck Robert Parson Whipple Arthur John White, Jr. Theodore Wielkopolski John Michael Williams William Robert Williams Nathan Leland Wilson, Jr. Ralph Wittman Allan Ehrman Wolf George William Wolfsten, Jr. James William Woods Guy Crawford Worrell. Jr. Franklin Haldeman Young Sheldon Stanley Zalkind Fairydale. Pawling, N. 1 . 26 Hollvwood Avenue, Tuckahoe. N. 1 . 2127 Green Street. Harrisburg 608 Fourth Avenue, Bethlehem 530 East Lincoln Avenue. Mt. Vernon. N. 1. 817 Pine Street. Scranton 920 Liberty Street. Allentown 19 West Second Street, Boyertown 805 Beverly Avenue, Bethlehem 132 Rhoads Avenue. Haddonfield. N. J. 1714 Marion Street. Scranton 328 Cornwall Road, Rocky River, Ohio 410 South Frazier Street, State College Porter Military Academy. Charleston. S. . 1327 Spruce Street. Philadelphia 1424 Gordon Street. Allentown 120 Lincoln Terrace. Norristown 215 East Oakdale Avenue. Glenside 63 Hillside Avenue. Glen Ridge, N. J. 75 Atlantic Street. North Quincy. Mass. 706 Juniper Street, Quakertown 905 Augusta Road. W ilmington. Del. 227 North 4th Street. Allentown 343 Washington Avenue. Roosevelt. L. I.. N. 1. Raritan Road. Plainfield. N. J. R. D. 1, Easton 2623 North Terrace Avenue. Milwaukee. is. 2077 Jones Road. Fort Lee. N. J. 562 Johnstone Street, Perth Amboy. N. J. 171 West 79th Street, New York. N. Y. 630 Belvidere Avenue. Plainfield. N. J. 98 Durand Road. Maplewood. N. J. 220 South 16th Street, Allentown 924 West First Street. Oil City 10 Drew Street. Valley Stream, N. Y. 758 Elm Street. Arlington. N. J. 118 Midland Boulevard. Maplewood. N. J. 322 Madison Avenue. Scranton 107 West Lancaster Avenue. Downingtown 5743 Lansdowne Avenue. Philadelphia 257 Hawthorne Street. Memphis. Tenn. 1204 Melrose Avenue. Melrose Park 1184 Tower Road. Winnetka. 111. 2 Pleasant Street, Westfield. Mass. 756 Starr Street. Phoenixville 2109 Broadwav. New York. N. Y. 315 CLASS OF 1944 Alfred Aron Adler, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Norman Clarke Applegate, Jr., C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Thomas Sheridan Bannan, Arts, Town Group Kenneth Whitmore Baumann, Bus., Kappa Sigma William Robert Bechdolt, Met.E., Town Group William Edward Belser, Bus., Delta Tau Delta George John Bleul, C.E., Drinker House 4-A Charles Emmett Bosserman, Jr., I.E., Beta Theta Pi Hugh Boyd, III, M.E., Delta Tau Delta Warren Henry Bradford, Ch.E., Drinker House 4-A George Harvey Brower, Eng. Phys., Town Group Donald Henry Brownlee, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta George Buckner, II, Bus., Town Group Alvin Newton Bugbee, Jr., C.E., Chi Phi James Holmes Callahan, Ch.E., Chi Phi David Joseph Carrigan, Arts, Sigma Phi Richard Edward Castiello, M.E., Town Group Charles Norman Charest, E.M., Delta Sigma Phi Irving Reid Collmann, Arts, Theta Xi Ronald Loyal Cooper, Bus., Sigma Nu James Milbourne Cordrey, Ch.E., Theta Chi Abner Smalley Coriell, Jr., Eng. Phys., Taylor House B Pinckney Morrison Corsa, I.E., Psi Upsilon Henry Hobart Corwin, Bus., Chi Phi Howard Wright Courtney, Jr., Richards House 2-A Robert Lloyd Coutts, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Thomas James Croake, Ch.E., Theta Kappa Phi David Keene Darcy, Jr., Bus., Theta Kappa Phi John Joseph Deach, Jr., E.E., Beta Theta Pi Robert Carl Deckard, Ch.E., Theta Xi John Paul Delich, Arts, Town Group Carson Freyman Diefenderfer, C.E., Town Group Edward Lewis Diehl, C.E., Drinker House 4-A Warren Richard Dix, Met.E., Alpha Tau Omega John Francis Donohue, Met.E., Chi Psi Robert Henry Doney, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Carl Albright Elmes, Bus., Phi Gamma Delta William Allen Ernest, E.E., Taylor House C William Bartholomew Farrell, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Frank Edward Felt, Bus., Chi Psi Ray Albert Forner, Ch.E., Town Group Anthony Constantine Fortosis, Bus., Town Group Charles Huff Foster, Jr., Bus., Taylor House E Oscar Edwin Fox, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta Hugh Bartley Frey, Jr., E.E., Richards House 2-B George Ehrenfeld Funk, C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha George Gawthrop, Jr., Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta John Edwin Gehr, Bus., Price House Richard Lee Gerhart, C.E., Richards House 3-A Robert Joseph Gill, Arts, Price House Philadelphia Riegelsville Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Bethlehem Plainfield, N. J. Northport, L. I., N. Y. Newport Doylestown Mansfield, Ohio Allentown Washington, D. C. Bethlehem Catasauqua Media Lansdale Bethlehem Hazleton Wilkes-Barre Little Neck, N. Y. Salisbury, Md. Elizabeth, N. J. Philadelphia New London, Conn. Westfield, N. J. Morristown, N. J. South Orange, N. J. Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y. Pottsville Marysville Palmerton Fullerton York Little Falls, N. J. Garden City, N. Y. Pen Argyl Ridley Park East Orange, N. J. Great Neck, N. Y. Jamestown, N. Y. Catasauqua Bethlehem Cheltenham Reading Dunellen, N. J. Hollidaysburg Philadelphia Binghamton, N. Y. Ephrata Philadelphia 316 CLASS OF 1944 Joseph Herman Goth, Jr., Arts, Town Group David Wagner Green, E.E., Richards House 4-A Hibbard Gustave Gumpert, Jr., Arts, Leonard Hall Ryland Truscott Hanger, E.E., Drinker House 4-A Albert Edward Hartung, Arts, Town Group Theodore Guy Heck, Arts, Town Group Edgar William Hess, Arts, Town Group Frederick George Hess, Arts, Town Group George Franklin Hewitt, M.E., Pi Kappa Alpha David Nelson Hillegass, Bus., Richards House 2-A James Allison Hosford, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Douglas Hammond Humm, Bus., Taylor House C William Boyd Hursh, Met.E., Town Group Alfred John Inderrieden, Ch.E., Sigma Nu Ralph Richard Johnson, Arts, Town Group Russell Cornelius Jordan, I.E., Richards House 4-A George Freeman Keller, Arts, Taylor House E Carl August Kendziora, Jr., Arts, Taylor House C Alton Hayward Kingman, Jr., I.E., Delta Tau Delta Carl Theodore Kleppinger, Chem., Town Group William Charles Knight, E.E., Taylor House C Kenneth Robert Knoll, Bus., Theta Xi William Donald Kopenhaver, M.E., Town Group Frederick David Kurz, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Arnold Lasser, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Ralph Rupp Lau, E.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Theodore Charles Laube, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-B Herbert George Lauterbach, Ch.E., Tau Delta Phi Bernard Vogler Lawshe, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Thomas Allan Lawson, Ch.E., Pi Lambda Phi Richard Henry Leeds, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Charles Ellis Lehr, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Frank Nicholas Leitner, Bus., Sigma Nu Leonard Harvey Lempert, Bus., Price House James Sigmund Levi, Bus., Sig ma Alpha Mu Roderick Wylie Link, M.E., Psi Upsilon Frederick Robert Linker, Arts, Sigma Alpha Mu Dwight Francis Longley, Bus., Delta Phi Harry Wasdell Lynn, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Robert Harris Mathes, E.E., Theta Xi Theodore George Megas, Met.E., Drinker House 4-A Claude Orison Messinger, I.E., Town Group Robert Edward Meury, Bus., Richards House 3-B Robert Elliott Meyerhoff, C.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Jack Leslie Miller, Arts, Theta Chi Walter Ernest Miller, Ch.E., Taylor House E Courter Dickinson Mills, Arts, Price House John Wesley Motter, C.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Ralph David Moyer, Jr., Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Herbert Matthew Muller, Ch.E., Taylor House E John Robert Munford, Arts, Taylor House D Bethlehem Easton Sharon Hill Haddonfield, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Catasauqua Catasauqua Harrisburg Quakertown Maplewood, N. J. Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Bethlehem Tulsa, Okla. Bethlehem Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Elizabeth, N. J. Harrison, N. Y. West Orange, N. J. Allentown Westfield, N. J. Crestwood, N. Y. Hershey Nutley, N. J. New Rochelle, N. Y. Harrisburg East Orange, N. J. Tel-Aviv, Palestine Waterbury, Conn. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Montclair, N. J. New Rochelle, N. Y. Glen Rock, N. J. New York, N. Y. Maplewood, N. J. Floral Park, L. I., N. Y. Maplewood, N. J. Mauch Chunk Bethlehem Rutherford, N. J. Baltimore, Md. Clifton, N. J. Elizabeth, N. J. New Castle Towson, Md. Bogota, N. J. Bergenfield, N. J. Hartford, Conn. 317 CLASS OF 1944 Robert Dexter Mussina, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Howard Raymond Neureuter, Bus., Kappa Sigma Gale Clinton Oberndorfer, M.E., Taylor House E Howard Henry Ockelmann, Ch.E., Taylor House A John James O ' Connell, Bus., Taylor House B Frank Robert O ' Neill, M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Robert Martin Paddock, Bus., Kappa Alpha Lewis Franklin Page, E.E., Theta Chi Bruce McKenzie Peacock, Arts, Town Group Charles Lehmann Pelzel, Bus., Drinker House 4-A Royal Emerson Peterson, II, Arts, Drinker House 1 Robert John Pfisterer, Met.E., Delta Tau Delta Harry Paul Ponisi, Ch.E., Drinker House 4-A Georges Richard Potter, E.E., Cosmopolitan Club Robert Joseph Priestley, Ch.E., Richards House 2-A Jack Burdell Rader, I.E., Town Group Robert Cole Ramsdell, Arts, Town Group Paul Leslie Reiber, Met.E., Beta Theta Pi H. Nelson Reifsnyder, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta Wayne Dixon Riddle, Arts, Town Group James Hamilton Riehl, Bus., Chi Psi Robert Samuel Rippey, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi Charles Martin Ritter, Jr., Bus., Town Group Lewis Alvin Robinson, Ch.E., Town Group Charles Montgomery Rogers, Bus., Town Group Alfred Lincoln Rosener, Jr., Ch.E., Pi Lambda Phi Robert Thaddeus Rospond, Met.E., Taylor House B Robert Wilson Rouse, M.E., Town Group Clayton Anthony Rugg, Jr., Bus., Sigma Nu Robert Kistler Schmoyer, Ch.E., Drinker House 1 Richard Luther Schoch, Bus., Town Group Irwin Herbert Schram, Jr., Arts, Drinker House 2-B Carl Maxwell Schwab, Arts, Town Group Leonard Charles Schwab, I.E., Tau Delta Phi Mark Herman Schwarz, Jr., Bus., Drinker House 4-A David Phineas Scoblionko, Arts, Town Group Peter Charles Seaton, M.E., Town Group Harold Joseph Seigle, Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Thomas Henry Semmel, Arts, Delta Upsilon Richard Charles Shafer, M.E., Phi Delta Theta John Arol Simpson, Eng. Phys., Taylor House C John Morrison Skilling, Jr., Arts, Sigma Chi Nicolas Norman Smeloff, E.E., Town Group Robert Louis Smith, C.E., Sigma Chi Wilson Pershing Snyder, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Thomas Loughridge Solt, Jr., Arts, Town Group Harvey Francis Soule, Ch.E., Taylor House A William Harold St. Clair, M.E., Kappa Sigma Roland Clifford Stoehr, Arts, Theta Chi Stanley Chester Szymakowski, Town Group Frank Martin Taylor, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Williamsport Eggertsville, N. Y. New Brighton Union City, N. J. Hamden, Conn. Drexel Hill Wolcott, N. Y. Pelham, N. Y. Bethlehem Charlestown, W. Va. Greenwich, Conn. Dunkirk, N. Y. Somerville, N. J. Larchmont, N. Y. Neptune, N. J. Bethlehem Trenton, N. J. Pittsburgh Norristown Bethlehem Fredonia, N. Y. Norwood, N. J. Allentown Williamsport Dallas, Tex. Deal, N. J. Irvington, N. J. Colorado Springs, Col. Lakewood, N. Y. Schnecksville Allentown Glen Rock, N. J. Allentown Cumberland, Md. Lake Hopatcong, N. J. Bethlehem Allentown Philadelphia Slatington Allentown Stratford, Conn. Wilmington, Del. Allentown Charleston, W. Va. Minersville Bethlehem Albany, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Bayside, N. Y. Greenfield, Mass. Wilmington, Del. 318 CLASS OF 1944 Guy Walter Tench, Bus., Theta Chi Willis Grant Thomas, Jr., Arts, Town Group Albert Harvey Thomson, Bus., Taylor House D Harold Widdall Tilley, Bus., Richards House 2-B Alfred Howe Todd, C.E., Phi Gamma Delta Joseph Newkirk Tomlinson, Ch.E., Theta Xi John Parker Troy, E.E., Richards House 3-A Albert Eugene Vetrosky, Arts, Town Group Gerald Edward Walsh, Jr., C.E., Drinker House 2-A Richard Paul West, M.E., Delta Tau Delta Thomas Donald Wetrich, Bus., Psi Upsilon Theodore Wielkopolski, M.E., Town Group Thomas Robert Winco, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-B Robert Wright, Jr., I.E., Taylor House E Roy Tyson Zackey, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon William Ken ward Zucker, Jr., Bus., Theta Delta Chi West Pittston Allentown Dallas City Avoca Richmond, V a. Bridgeton, N. J. Schenectady, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Roselle, N. J. Asbury Park, N. J. Hempstead, L. I., N. Y. Arlington, N. J. Philadelphia Haddonfield, N. J. Roslyn Mt. Vernon, N. Y. CLASS OF 1944X Andrew Murad Bardagjy, Bus., Richards House 2-B Myron Knox Barrett, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Kenneth Whitemore Baumann, Bus., Kappa Sigma Max W. Bellis, E.E., Taylor House B Philip James Berg, M.E., Delta Upsilon Neal Grube Bergstresser, Bus., 43 West Depot St. Frank W. Berman, Met.E., Cosmopolitan Club Edward Ludlam Blossom, Jr., E.E., Drinker House 2-B Murray Dattner Blum, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Joseph Frank Bonin, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Robert Emmett Byrne, Jr., E.E., Richards House 4-B Robert Leslie Cahoon, Met.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Frank Vincent Camarda, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-A Joel Gerhard Clemmer, Jr., Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Dudley Coles, C.E., Beta Theta Pi Charles Russell Conklin, Jr., Ch.E., Alpha Tau Omega Alfred Joseph Cornelius, Bus., Delta Upsilon David Frederick Cox, Eng. Phys., Sigma Chi William James Crowe, Ch.E., Theta Xi Edward Townsend Darlow, Bus., Sigma Chi Henry Edward de Jongh, Arts, 210 Warren Square Robert Frederick Dieter, Ch.E., Alpha Town House William Wolfe Dontger, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Bernard John Egan, Met.E., Drinker House 4-A Jersey City, X. J. Xewark, N. J. Chevy Chase, N. J. Rochester, N. Y. Coraopolis Hellertown Cresskill, X. J. Baltimore, Md. Scranton Scranton New York City Norway, Me. Plainfield ' , N. J. Glenside Newark, N. J. Catonsville, Md. New Rochelle, N. Y. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Haworth, N. J. Rochester, N. Y. Bethlehem Port Washington, N. Y. Cedarhurst, X T . Y. Emporium William Stanley Eisner, Ch.E., Kappa Alpha South Orange, N. J. Stuart Marsh Ellsworth, Jr., Arts, Richards House 2-B Central Village, Conn. Danal Paul Epstein, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi New York City Blaine Donald Ferrell, Ch.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Roslyn William H. Fisher, Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Philadelphia 319 CLASS OF 1944X Jack Clifford Fitch, Ch.E., Taylor House D Ralph Joseph Tiffipaldi, Ch.E., Beta Theta Pi Dale Youngman Freed, Bus., Sigma Nu Edward Lyster Frost, Met.E., Sigma Phi Robert Dewey Frost, Bus., Sigma Phi Robert Dale Gilmore, Arts, Taylor House C John Louis Gretz, Met.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Fred Gruenwald, Ch.E., Tau Delta Phi Ernest John Bell, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Stuart Lindsley Hammond, Bus., Alpha Tau Omega William Howard Hebrank, M.E., Chi Psi Robert Allen Heironimus, M.E., Chi Psi Richard Baldwin Hendrick, Met.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Charles Carlson Hilton, Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta William Charles Hittinger, Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta Benjamin Franklin Hoffacker, Arts, Delta Upsilon James Allison Hosford, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Robert Irwin Jaslow, Arts, 817 Pemi Street George Henry Kocyan, M.E., Taylor House B William Louis Kronthal, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Claude Jennings Kurtz, Ch.E., 221 East Tenth Street Stephen Kutosh, Ch.E., 620 South Bergen Street Arnold Lasser, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Richard Henry Leeds, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Andre Jean Emile Leroux, Arts, Cosmopolitan Club Gaynor O. H. Leroy, Bus., Richards House 2- A James S. Levi, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu I. Harrison Levy, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Robert Martin Long, Met.E., 428 Fifth Avenue Donald McFaul Lorimer, Met.E., Taylor House B James Sutherland Marsh, I.E., Sigma Chi George William McKnight, M.E., 153 Green Street William Fowler Metten, Bus., Delta Tau Delta George Frederick Miller, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Kay Felix Misklms, E.E., 1440 Washington Street Andrew Mitchell, 3rd, Ch.E., Kappa Sigma Laurance Austin Mosier, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Glenn Allan Murray, M.E., Phi Delta Theta Robert Eugene Nylin, Bus., Theta Xi Joseph Francis O ' Brien, Arts, Phi Sigma Kappa John James O ' Connell, Bus., Taylor House B Henry Christian Ost, Jr., Bus., Sigma Phi Epsilon Theodore Peters, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi Robert Roland Ressler, Chem., 512 North New Street Charles Fuld Rosenthal, E.E., Pi Lambda Phi John Alexander Ross, Ch.E., Taylor House D Paul William Sanders, M.E., Alpha Chi Rho Joseph E. Schmuk, Met.E., 310 Monroe Street Quirin John Schwarz, M.E., Chi Psi Charles Augustus Schweitzer, M.E., Richards House 3-B David Phineas Scoblionko, Arts, 1038 Delaware Avenue Scranton Carlstadt, N. J. Williamsport Kenmore, N. Y. Kenmore, N. Y. Harrisburg Wayne New York City East Orange, N. J. Maplewood, N. J. Baltimore, Md. Maplewood, N .J. East Orange, N. J. Hamilton, Ont., Canada Bethlehem Pittsburgh Maplewood, N. J. Reading Kingston New York City Berwick Bethlehem New Rochelle, N. Y. New York City Philadelphia Newburgh, N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Y. Pittsburgh Bethlehem Douglaston, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Freemansburg Wilmington, Del. West Reading Easton Philadelphia Chevy Chase, Md. Larchmont, N. Y. Rockville Centre, L. L, N. Y. Jersey City, N. J. Hamden, Conn. Pottsville Chambersburg Allentown New York City Williamsport Maplewood, N. J. Easton Rutherford, N. J. Bloomfield, N. J. Bethlehem 320 William Hubbard Shawhan, Arts, Sigma Phi Toshiaki Shintaku, C.E., Cosmopolitan Club John D. Smith, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Vigor Cranston Smith, M.E., Sig ma Chi Samuel Idell Snyder, M.E., 1703 Jennings St. David Truman Steele, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Eugene Sewell Stowers, Jr., I.E., Phi Delta Theta William Charles Stoeckle, Bus., Alpha Kappa Pi Kenneth Gilbert Swayne, M.E., Taylor House B Guy Walter Tench, Bus., Theta Chi Bruce William Thayer, Bus., Delta Tan Delta Nathan Beauchamp Tilghman, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Nathan Townsend Thayer, Jr., Bus., Theta Xi William Beauchamp Tilghman, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Frank Ward Voelcker, Arts, Leonard Hall Earle Wilbur Wallick, E.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Stephen Clarke Woodruff, Met.E., Pi Kappa Alpha John C. Yastrzab, Met.E., Drinker House 3-B CLASS OF 1944X Moultrieville, S. C. Pahala, Kau, Hawaii Garden City, L. L, N. Y. Wynnewood Windber Plandome, L. I., N. Y. Bluefield, W. Va. Drexel Hill George School West Pittston Evanston, 111. Salisbury, Md. Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Salisbury, Md. Philadelphia Washington, D. C. Westfield, N. J. Northampton T2I CLASS OF 1945 Alan Chichester Abeel, Jr., Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta Ernest George Abell, E.E., Richards House 4-A Joseph Benjamin Adams, Jr., M.E., Chi Psi Allan Brooke Ainley, Jr., E.E., Delta Sigma Phi Richard Carl Aldinger, Arts, Town Group Keith Warren Amish, E.E., Taylor House D Earle C. Anderson, Ch.E., Kappa Alpha John Clenmore Andrews, Arts, Town Group Paul Chapman Andrews, M.E., Drinker House 2-B Lloyd Earl Antonides, E.M., Cosmopolitan Club Miles Edward Apple, Jr., M.E., Town Group Harry Edward Arrant, M.E., Taylor House A Edward Artim, Ch.E., Taylor House C Larchmont, N. Y. Philadelphia Baltimore, Md. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Bethlehem Webster, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bethlehem Trenton, N. J. Bergenfield, N. J. Bethlehem Kulpmont Clifton, N. J. Everett Merritt Ashworth, M.E., Richards House 4-B Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Robert Bernard Asson, Bus., Alpha Hown House Fred Jones Attaway, Jr., Ch.E., Delta Tau Delta Charles Baldrey Austin, Met.E., Sigma Chi William Thomas Bachmann, Bus., Drinker House 3-A John Willard Bader, E.M., Town Group Walter Bernard Ballenberger, E.E., Theta Chi Gilbert Justin Barenborg, Jr., Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Ralph Theodore Bartlett, Ch.E., Lambda Chi Alpha Curtis Leroy Baskin, Ch.E., Town Group Carl Paul Bauer, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-A Albert Bazarian, Jr., Met.E., Alpha Chi Rho William Christian Beck, III, E.E., Drinker House 4-A Alfred DePierre Beeken, III, Bus., Delta Upsilon John Cyril Beilman, Bus., Richards House 1 Kenneth Francis Bender, M.E., Town Group Albert Emilio Berizzi, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi William Bernard, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Robert Bernstein, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Frank Rhodes Berry, Jr., M.E., Town Group John Richard Bevan, Met.E., Taylor House A George Hindle Binns, Ch.E., Town Group Hower Ellsworth Bitler, Jr., M.E., Sigma Nu Robert Alan Bixler, Jr., Bus., Drinker House 1 Norman Maurice Blanc, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Frederick William Bloecher, Jr., E.M., Theta Chi Richard Henry Boll, Ch.E., Richards House 3-A Ira Brahm Born, Eng. Phys., Tau Delta Phi Jeddo Charleston, S. C. Upper Darby White Plains, N. Y. Rochester, N. Y. Baldwin, N. Y. Bloomfield, N. J. Lyndhurst, N. J. Freeland Irvington, N. J. Summit, N. J. Washington, D. C. Beaver Hazleton Bethlehem New York, N. Y. Summit, N. J. Harrisburg Clarks Green Pottsville Upper Montclair, N. J. Mt. Carmel Stroudsburg Larchmont, N. Y. Wharton, N. J. Wharton, N. J. Bethlehem Edmund Warren Bowden, Jr., Eng. Phys., Pi Kappa Alpha Westfield, N. J. 322 CLASS OF 1915 William Russel Bowen, I.E., Theta Delta Chi Ward Allen Bradford, Met.E., Taylor House C Richard Warren Bradshaw, M.E., Theta Delta Chi Robert Taylor Brandfass, Met.E., Chi Psi Carl Raymond Brandt, Jr., M.E., Alpha Town House William Charles Breidincer, Ch.E., Town Group John Harry Brindle, Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta Lawrence Joseph Briody, Bus., Town Group Robert Eugene Brodt, Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Martin Werner Brossman, Jr., M.E., Town Group Edwin Charles Brown, Jr., I.E., Richards House 1 Stanley Morton Brown, Jr., E.E., Phi Gamma Delta Martin Brustein, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Richard William Buck, I.E., Town Group David Carleton Burdick, I.E., Alpha Chi Rho Bruce Aye Burgy, Bus., Sigma Chi Harry Fort Busch, E.E., Richards House 2-B John Arthur Cable, I.E., Chi Psi Alfred Copeland Callen, Jr., Met.E., Town Group Edward Duncan Cameron, Jr., Bus., Town Group Francis Xavier Carlin, Chem., Richards House 4-A Ray Gordon Carlson, C.E., Chi Phi Francis Thomas Carr, Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta William Andrews Cather, Bus., Chi Phi Robert Williamson Cawley, M.E., Theta Delta Chi Franklin Joseph Chiles, Arts, Town Group Frederick Carl Christ, Arts, Sigma Phi Epsilon John Henry Clark, Bus., Price House William Allison Clark, M.E., Chi Psi Robert Alexander Clayton, Bus., Town Group Sydney Morris Cohen, M.E., Town Group Robert Sayre Compton, Arts, Sigma Phi John Frank Conwell, Jr., Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Alfred Serles Cook, Arts, Town Group Clifton Winchell Corbett, E.E., Pi Kappa Alpha William George Critchlow, Jr., Ch.E., Theta Xi Willard Long Croft, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Samuel Wilbur Croll, I.E., Delta Upsilon Malcolm Page Crowther, M.E., Psi Lpsilon Edward Knapp Cumming, Jr., M.E., Taylor House B Edwin Hulley Cummings, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Donald Nathaniel Curtiss, M.E., Richards House 4-B George Joseph DAngelo, Arts, Town Group Waterbury, Conn. Trenton, X. J. Wilmington, Del. Wheeling, W. Va. Glenside Xazareth Xorth Braddock Bethlehem Bangor Allentown Coopersburg Marblehead, Mass. Xew York, X. Y. Xazareth Cleveland Heights, Ohio Peoria, 111. V, yomissing Canton, Ohio Bethlehem Allentown Atlantic City, X. J. Clifton, X.J. Pottsville Maplewood, X. J. Upper Montclair, X. J. Bethlehem Union, X. J. ayne West Orange, X. J. Bethlehem Allentown Dover, Del. Lincolndale, X. . Princeton, X. J. Westfield, X. J. Elizabeth, X. J. Trenton, X. J. Ridgewood, X. J. Toledo, Ohio Union, X. J. Philadelphia Clifton, X. J. Bethlehem 323 CLASS OF 1945 Alfred Wilson Darlow, I.E., Kappa Sig ma David Francis Davidson, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega John Alexander Davis, Jr., Met.E., Beta Theta Pi Richard William Davis, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha William James Day, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Dante De Berardints, M.E., Drinker House 3-A Lolls Philip Deffaa, I.E., Alpha Tau Omega Richard George de Grouchy, Bus., Chi Phi John Andrews De Huff, Met.E., Drinker House 2-B John Daniel Deisler, M.E., Theta Kappa Phi Howard .Malcolm De Laittre, E.E., Chi Phi Thomas Brown Delchamps, M.E., Chi Psi Robert Alan De Long, Bus., Town Group Joseph Donahey Denntson, Met.E., Town Group Bruno De Paoli, Jr., I.E., Kappa Sigma Harold Daniel Deveraux, Ch.E., Richards House 4-B Charles Joseph De Wan, Arts, Richards House 2-A Donald Roger Diggs, I.E., Delta Tau Delta Roger George Dittig, Jr., C.E., Taylor House A Louis Martin Domeratzky, M.E., Sigma Chi Frank Thomas Donato, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi John Reese Dove, Ch.E., Drinker House 2-B Edward Jacques Downing, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Harry Richard Dunn, I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon David Cole Emery, E.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Arnold Samuel Epstein, E.E., Town Group Edwin Paul Ernst, M.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Jacob Milton Ettinger, I.E., Richards House 4-B John Douglas Evans, Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon John Jacob Evans, Arts, Town Group Ralph Aiken Evans, Eng. Phys., Town Group Peter Pasquale Facchiano, C.E., Town Group Donald Malcolm Feigley, Arts, Taylor House D Robert Richmond Ferguson, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi Allan Lawrence Ferrel, M.E., Taylor House A Wilmer L. Fisher, C.E., Taylor House D Frederick John Flemming, Jr., M.E., Kappa Alpha Richard Xickerson Ford, Ch.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Edgar Allan Frankley, E.E., Cosmopolitan Club Paul Justus Franz, Jr., Bus., Delta Tau Delta Richard Albert Friend, Ch.E., Theta Xi Guenther Hilmer Froebel, Jr., Bus., Chi Phi August George Fromuth, Bus., Richards House 1 Rochester, N. Y. Albany, X. Y. Glassport Maplewood, X. J. South Orange, X. J. Pen Argyl Larchmont, X. Y. Germantown Lebanon Rumson, X. J. Minneapolis, Minn. Mountain Lakes, X. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Palisade, X. J. Shamokin Sayre Evanston, 111. Port Washington, X. Y. McLean, Va. Dunmore Pottsville Jersey City, X. J. Pittsburgh Aurora, Ohio Bethlehem Philadelphia Xorristown Glen Cove, X. Y. Nesquehoning East Orange, X. J. Bethlehem Quakertown Washington, D. C. Carbondale Hamburg Pelham, N. Y. Coronado, Cal. Forest Hills, X. Y. Elkins Park Elmira, X. Y. Swarthmore Philadelphia 324 CLASS OF 1945 Richard Guerard Fuller, Jr., M.E., Phi Delta Theta Philip James Gahagan, Arts, Town Group John Anthony Gardella, Bus., Theta Kappa Phi Edson Leonard Garrabrants, I.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Ernest Richard Gerlach, Ch.E., Town Group William Francis Giles, Ch.E., Chi Psi Irvin Willets Gilmore, Arts, Taylor House B John Robert Given, I.E., Beta Theta Pi Joseph Malcolm Gladden, Arts, Phi Gamma Delta Paul Stefan Glaser, Arts, Cosmopolitan Club MlHAlL J. GLUCK, Ch.E., Cosmopolitan Club Gene Hewitt Gockley, M.E., Town Group James Eagen Golden, E.M., Town Group John Henry Goodale, Ch.E., Town Group Richard Gosztonyi, Met.E., Town Group Eugene Cissell Gott, III, Arts, Psi Upsilon Richard Carl Gottschall, Bus., Pi Kappa Alpha Wesley Edward Gould, Jr., Arts, Taylor House C William Scott Graham, Jr., M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Harry Joshua Gray, Jr., E.E., Richards House 3-A Edward George Graybill, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group Lee Alfred Greenbaum, Jr., Chem., Richards House 1 Jack Edward Griffis, E.E., Town Group William Robert Griffith, Arts, Town Group Henry Edward Gross, Arts, Pi Lambda Phi Thomas John Gulya, Arts, Town Group Michael Gurak, Ch.E., Town Group Carl Edgar Ellis Haas, Ch.E., Town Group Claude Joseph Hafner, Bus., Town Group Richard Le Roy Hagadorn, Bus., Delta Upsilon John Stanley Haldeman, E.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Robert Winfield Hallock, M.E., Richards House 3-A Ralph Hall Hamilton, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon John Francis Hannan, Ch.E., Chi Phi Harry Gerald Harms h, M.E., Richards House 2-B Herbert John Haslam, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega Robert Oscar Havekotte, M.E., Drinker House 3-A Robert Charles Hayman, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Leonard Harold Heath, Arts, Taylor House D George Walley Heck, Jr., Met.E., Town Group William Adam Heck, Arts, Town Group William Heller, I.E., Drinker House 2- A Theodore Noel Hellmuth, Ch.E., Psi Upsilon Reading Bethlehem Rumson, N. J. Short Hills, X. J. Bethlehem Claymont, Del. Hughesville Glen Ridge, N. J. McDonald New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Allentown West Pittston Memphis. Tenn. Bethlehem Chevy Chase, Md. Baltimore. Md. Fair Lawn. N. J. Chevy Chase, Md. est Hartford. Conn. Bethlehem New l ork, N. l . Bethlehem Bethlehem Elkins Park Bethlehem Scranton Allentown Bethlehem Elizabeth, N. J. Doylestown Upper Darby Douglassville Manhasset. N. 1 . Willow Street Westfield. N. J. Pittsburgh Rockville Centre. N. Y. Bayonne. N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Newark. N. J. St. Louis. Mo. 325 CLASS OF 1945 Robert Stuart Helthall, C.E., Alpha Chi Rho Maplewood, N. J. Frank Caldwell Hendrickson, Jr., LE., Drinker House 3-A Valley Stream, L. L, N. Y. Holland Steelton South Norwalk, Conn. Merion Baltimore, Md. Bethlehem Bethlehem Easton New York, N. Y. Palmerton Cranbury, N. J. Orange, N. J. Irvington, N. J. Naugatuck, Conn. Milwaukee, Wis. San Dimas, Cal. Lehigh ton Trenton, N. J. Allentown Brooklyn, N. Y. Allentown Bethlehem Summit, N. J. Allentown Westfield, N. J. Canton, Ohio Montclair, N. J. Snyder, N. Y. Sewickly Philadelphia Kenmore, N. Y. Jamestown, N. Y. Allentown Philadelphia Clairton W eissport Lakewood, N. Y. Shaker Heights, Ohio Philadelphia Allentown George Washington Henry, III, Arts, Town Group Carl Franklin Henzelman, Bus., Theta Delta Chi Pedro Nel Herazo, Ch.E., Town Group Leon Slminate Herbert, Jr., Arts, Delta Upsilon Charles Peter Herold, E.E., Town Group William Henry Highfield, Ch.E., Town Group Vincent Joseph Hilaire, M.E., Town Group Frank Avery Hill, E.E., Town Group Walter Jules Hoffberg, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Clair Adam Hoffman, Ch.E., Alpha Town House William Frederick Hoffman, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Ralph Everett Hohman, M.E., Sigma Nu Orrin Clifford Holbrook, Ch.E., Taylor House A Albert William Holmberg, Jr., Bus., Theta Delta Chi James Peck Holyoke, E.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Robert Stewart Honeyman, Eng. Phys., Kappa Alpha Arthur Clark Hontz, Chem., Theta Xi James Weldon Hooper, E.M., Town Group Richard Dennecker Horlacher, C.E., Town Group Nathaniel Aaron Horowitz, M.E., Pi Lambda Phi Joseph Francis Horvath, Bus., Town Group Austin Thomas Hunt, Jr., M.E., Town Group Edwin Frederic Hussa, Jr., M.E., Theta Xi Louis Inglese, M.E., Town Group William Hamilton Inglis, Arts, Sigma Nu John Douglas Ingram, Arts, Delta Upsilon Lewis Abbott James, E.E., Price House Howard John Jansen, M.E., Kappa Sigma Daniel Lee Jerman, C.E., Drinker House 1 Norman Johansen, Arts, Delta Sigma Phi David Marlette John, Arts, Leonard House John Arthur Johnson, I.E., Sigma Nu Kenneth Christian Johnson, I.E., Town Group Alan Francis Jones, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha Evan Jones, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Russell Richard Jones, Ch.E., Phi Gamma Delta Richard Nels Jorgenson, I.E., Sigma Nu John Anderson Jubell, Bus., Psi Upsilon Henry Clarence Judd, Arts, Alpha Tau Omega Martin Jerome Kaplan, Ch.E., Town Group 326 CLASS OF 1945 Richard Peter Kassabian, Ch.E., Town Group John Howard Keenan, M.E., Town Group David Leslie Keese, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-A John Edwin Kelly, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Robert Mulkey Kelly, C.E., Sigma Chi David Clark Kirk, Jr., Ch.E., Richards House 2-B Richard Martin Kitzmiller, Bus., Delta Tau Delta Harry Klapper, Jr., Ch.E., Taylor House D James Franklin Kleckner, Arts, Sigma Chi Edward Leroy Klopfer, Met.E., Pi Lambda Phi George Harry Kohl, Bus., Psi Upsilon George Alexander Kovaka, Ch.E., Phi Delta Theta Frederick Henry Kraus, Bus., Lambda Chi Alpha Owen William Krause, I.E., Town Group George Thomas Kushner, Jr., E.E., Town Group Kenneth Alfred Lambert, Jr., E.M., Sigma Chi Robert Paul Lampert, I.E., Beta Theta Pi Robert LeRoy Lashley, Arts, Pi Kappa Alpha Joseph Robert Lasser, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu Jay Richard Lee, Ch.E., Town Group Eldredge Humphrey Leeming, Bus., Sigma Phi Richard Maxwell Leiter, Arts, Phi Delta Theta Norman Julian Lindner, M.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Stephen James Litrides, E.E., Taylor House C Leslie Ralph Little, Ch.E., Richards House 3-B Robert Andrew Little, Bus., Phi Delta Theta Luther Daniel Loch, Ch.E., Town Group Robert Westfall Logan, Ch.E., Town Group Lawrence Hampton Long, M.E., Richards House 4-A John Jacob Lotz, C.E., Beta Theta Pi Lawrence Lubbers, Jr., E.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Harvey Chester Lucks, M.E., Tau Delta Phi Creighton Lamar Lytle, Arts, Taylor House A Robert Escher Maloney, Bus., Psi Upsilon Edward George Manning, E.E., Town Group Fairview, N. J. Allentown Scranton Rio Grande, N. J. Fort Sill, Okla. Kearny, N. J. Steelton White Plains, N. Y. Gary, Ind. Buffalo, N. Y. Williamsville, N. Y. St. Louis, Mo. Glen Ridge, N. J. Allentown Freeland Kingston Carlstadt, X. J. Cumberland, Md. New Rochelle, N. Y. Bethlehem Fall River, Mass. Hagerstown, Md. Jersey City, N. J. Springfield, Mass. New Brighton Little Falls, N. Y. Allentown Coatesville Brooklyn, N. Y. Philadelphia Baltimore, Md. Jamaica, N. Y. Minersville Forty Fort Buffalo. ' N. Y. West Pittston Passaic, N. J. Walter Edward Margie, Jr., Ch.E., Town Group John William Marint, Eng. Phys., Richards House 3-B Mortimer Joseph Sullivan Marks, Arts, Town Group Queens Village, L. I., N. Y. Phillips Brooks Marsden, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega Maplewood, N. J. John Withrow Martin, M.E., Richards House 1 Sadsburyville Edwin Philipp Marx, Ch.E., Richards House 2-A River Edge, N. J. John William Matthews, Chem., Price House Scranton 327 CLASS OF 1945 Donald Owen Maxwell, Ch.E., Price House Bruce Hepner Mayer, Ch.E., Richards House 2-A Lester David Mazur, Bus., Sigma Alpha Mu James John McCarthy, Met.E., Town Group Albert Pryibil McCauley, Jr., M.E., Drinker House 1 Stephen Bowne McElroy, Bus., Drinker House 3-B Stuart Ridgeway McIntyre, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta Robert Albert McKinley, Arts, Theta Delta Chi King Harrison McLaurin, Jr., Met.E., Phi Gamma Delta Durand Richards Mearns, I.E., Alpha Tau Omega John Franklin Mengel, M.E., Town Group Rodney Francis Merkert, Met.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon W alter Frank Meserye, Arts, Town Group John Edward Messinger, Bus., Phi Delta Theta George Wallace Meyer, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Richard Irving Meyers, I.E., Kappa Alpha Charles Earl Miller, Arts, Town Group Raymond Hershey Miller, Jr., M.E., Theta Chi William Brunner Miller, Ch.E., Town Group William Dewey Miller, Jr., C.E., Theta Delta Chi Alvin Irving Mishkin, Bus., Town Group Emil Francis Mitman, E.E., Town Group Bernard Jackson Mizel, M.E., Theta Xi Raymond Thomas Mohrey, Ch.E., Town Group John Harlan Moore, M.E., Alpha Tau Omega William Robert Moore, I.E., Delta Phi Vincent Paul Moravec, Met.E., Town Group Robert Lloyd Mount, Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Gilman Yost Murray, Ch.E., Richards House 2-B Joseph Hooker Myers, Chem., Richards House 3-A Jerome Yale Neff, Bus., Pi Lambda Phi Leslie Hunter Neill, Bus., Chi Phi John Dudley Nicolaides, Arts, Chi Phi Howard Clinton Noble, I.E., Kappa Alpha Joseph John O ' Keefe, I.E., Town Group Edward Alan Orth, Jr., Met.E., Drinker House 1 Clyde Holden Oskin, Jr., Bus., Town Group Robert Lee Oyler, Ch.E., Price House Michael James Pappas, Bus., Taylor House B Ralph Bruce Parklnson, M.E., Town Group James Clifton Paul, Bus., Town Group Richard Edgar Penniman, Arts, Town Group Albert Slocomb Perley, M.E., Drinker House 1 East Orange, N. J. Allentown White Plains, N. Y. Bethlehem Philadelphia Westfield, N. J. Beaver Palmerton Duquesne Maplewood, N. J. Bethlehem Queens Village, N. Y. Lynn, Mass. Palmerton W. Forest Hills, N. Y. Sea Girt, N. J. Bethlehem Clearspring, Md. Bethlehem Maplewood, N. J. Allentown Bethlehem Kingston, N. Y. Bethlehem Ben Avon, Pittsburgh Elkins Park West Bridgewater Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y. Pittsburgh Kingston Allentown Upper Montclair, N. J. Washington, D. C. E. Hartford, Conn. Allentown Chicago, 111. Bethlehem Mercersburg Elizabeth, N. J. Glenside Allentown Bethlehem Black Mountain, N. C. 328 CLASS OF 1945 Edwin Clement Perona, Bus., Richards House 3-B Wilbur Ralph Peters, Jr., E.E., Drinker House 1 Carl Howard Peterson, Ch.E., Taylor House D John Stewart Petty, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta John William Pharo, E.E., Town Group William John Pillar, Met.E., Town Group Francis Domimck Piscitello, Bus., Taylor House B Vincent Richard Pittala, Bus., Taylor House D Davis Thomas Poole, Jr., I.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Robert Charles Pope, Arts, Richards House 4-B Thomas Johnstone Porter, E.E., Chi Phi Arthur W. Dennis Porzuc, Arts, Richards House 1 John Joseph Probst, Arts, Sigma Phi South Herbert Charles Rafetto, Jr., I.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Robert Hunter Ralston, M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Thornton Qltn Raney, Ch.E., Delta Tau Delta Albert Gilbert Redmond, M.E., Chi Psi William Downing Reppert, Ch.E., Town Group William Joseph Reusch, M.E., Drinker House 2-A John Lawrey Richards, Arts, Richards House 3-B Louis Moosbrugger Richards, Arts, Drinker House 1 Frank Butler Roberts, E.E., Town Group Gordon Thomas Roberts, E.E., Richards House 3-A Charles Leigh Robinson, M.E., Theta Xi Stephen Ratcliffe Rochester, M.E., Sigma Chi Gilbert Daniel Romberger, Bus., Delta Upsilon Joseph Lewis Ross, Arts, Town Group Christian George Roth, M.E., Drinker House 3-B Richard James Andrew Rowe, Bus., Richards House 3-A Philip Schuyler Rust, Eng. Phys., Drinker House 1 John Brisbin Rutherford, C.E., Taylor House B Richard Mitman Ruthhart, Chem., Town Group Frederick Carl Salber, Jr., Arts, Town Group John William Sanders, Bus., Town Group Spofford Walling Schanck, C.E., Taylor House D John Earl Schumacher, Jr., Bus., Phi Sigma Kappa Arthur James Schwab, Bus., Tau Delta Phi Kenneth Aikman Scott, Ch.E., Taylor House D John Donald Scouller, Arts, Kappa Sigma William Harry Searfoss, Arts, Lambda Chi Alpha Nym Kenneth Seward, Ch.E., Alpha Town House Dunstan Pennell Sheldon, I.E., Psi Upsilon George Joseph Shelly, Jr., Arts, Town Group Weehawken, N. J. Camden, N. J. Kearny, N. J. Bethlehem Bethlehem Bethlehem Jersey City, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Cranford, N. J. Rose Valley, Moylan Trenton, N. J. Woodhaven, L. I., N. Y. Nazareth Pittsburgh Skytop Cincinnati, Ohio Bethlehem Hollis, N. Y. Lehighton Somerville, N. J. Emmaus New York City Penns Grove, N. J. Eden, N. Y. Allentown Allentown Dunellen, N. J. Rockville Centre, N. Y. New Brunswick, N. J. Harrisburg Bethlehem Bethlehem Allentown Matawan, N. J. Pottsville Allentown Upper Montclair, N. J. Philadelphia Trenton, N. J. Luzerne Youngstown, Ohio Quakertown 329 CLASS OF 1945 Robert Regester Shepherd, Arts, Alpha Kappa Pi Thomas Lincoln Sherer, II, E.E., Town Group Daniel Center Shewmon, E.M., Taylor House E Steward Thomas Shiffer, I.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Edward Woodruff Shipley, I.E., Chi Psi Harry Benson Shuttleworth, Bus., Chi Psi Thomas Ethelbert Skilling, I.E., Theta Xi Ronald James Skilton, M.E., Price House George Wilmer Smith, I.E., Lambda Chi Alpha James Edgar Smith, Arts, Town Group Herman George Peter Snyder, M.E., Kappa Sigma Roy Blauvelt Snyder, Met.E., Price House Samuel F. Snyder, Jr., Ch.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Charles Leroy Sollenberger, Ch.E., Drinker House 3-A Joseph Birchall Solly, M.E., Taylor House B Howard Victor Soltis, Arts, Town Group Richard Henry Sotzing, Bus., Town Group James Tredway Spratley, M.E., Chi Phi Benedict Francis Staffieri, M.E., Town Group Kermit Bernard Stahler, M.E., Town Group George Bruce Staples, Jr., M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Louis Henry Stein, Arts, Tau Delta Phi Charles James Sterner, Ch.E., Town Group Norman Wallace Stirling, Bus., Town Group Ellsworth Albert Stockbower, Ch.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Rodman Egbert Street, Arts, Drinker House 3-A Frank Eberly Strehle, E.E., Delta Sigma Phi Frank Leo Strobino, I.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Cornelius Jay Sullivan, Bus., Chi Psi Robert Parker Suman, Chem., Kappa Sigma David James Elwood Sweet, Arts, Leonard Hall Edward Sawyer Tattershall, M.E., Drinker House 2-A Francis Charles Taylor, Arts, Leonard Hall Dwight Goodwin Tenney, Bus., Psi Upsilon William Frank Thompson, Jr., M.E., Town Group Edward Robert Titelman, I.E., Sigma Alpha Mu Vincent Raymond Tomaselli, Ch.E., Theta Chi Howard Earle Tomlinson, Jr., Met.E., Alpha Tau Omega Kenneth Coulter Torrens, M.E., Delta Sigma Phi Wallace Sharpe Townsend, Bus., Delta Upsilon Walter Trappe, Jr., Bus., Alpha Tau Omega James Henry Trask, Ch.E., Theta Kappa Phi Walter Wesley Treichler, M.E., Alpha Town House St. Davids Allentown Plainfield, N. J. Stroudsburg Harbor Beach, Mich. Scarsdale, N. Y. New Kensington Carbondale Lisbon, Ohio Riegelsville Slatington Hawthorne, N. J. Gettysburg Carlisle Harrisburg Freeland Bethlehem Hopewell, Va. Hellertown Allentown Philadelphia White Plains, N. Y. Bethlehem Jersey City, N. J. North Hills York Philadelphia Haledon, N. J. New York City Plainfield, N. J. Scranton Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Verona, N. J. Bethlehem Altoona Grant wood, N. J. Rosemont West Trenton, N. J. Old Greenwich, Conn. Glen Ridge, N. J. Upper Darby Elizabethtown 330 CLASS OF 1945 James Barkhurst Trimble, M.E., Richards House 1 Salvatore Triolo, M.E., Town Group Quin Phillips Turkington, Ch.E., Delta Phi Jesse Robert Tyson, M.E., Town Group Domimck Michael Vallario, Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi Frank Gerald Vargo, Jr., C.E., Town Group Vito Joseph Vitelli, Met.E., Taylor House C Fritz von Bergen, Ch.E., Sigma Chi Fletcher Stulen Vondersmith, Ch.E., Taylor House A Gregory Fortune Walsh, Jr., M.E., Phi Gamma Delta Jack Charles Walter, Arts, Richards House 2-A Donald Bryce Walters, Ch.E., Town Group William Chevallier Waltman, M.E., Alpha Kappa Pi Harry Beames Walton, Jr., Ch.E., Drinker House 2-A Theodore Lycurgus Webster, M.E., Alpha Chi Rho William Frederick Weigel, Ch.E., Richards House 3-A Richard Clarence Weiler, I.E., Sigma Phi David Paul Wellenkamp, Met.E., Town Group Charles McCartney Wellons, M.E., Sigma Nu David Harrison Welsh, Arts, Kappa Sigma Robert Earl Weltz, Ch.E., Town Group Delmont Eugene Wemple, Ch.E., Delta Phi Robert Edward Werner, Ch.E., Richards House 4-B George Charles Wheeler, Jr., Ch.E., Delta Sigma Phi William Whigham, III, I.E., Phi Gamma Delta David Rex Whitten, M.E., Phi Sigma Kappa Robert Jay Wiedenman, Ch.E., Pi Kappa Alpha Frederick Evans Wiley, Jr., M.E., Drinker House 4-A John Dinsdale Williams, I.E., Alpha Chi Rho Richard Rhys Williams, Arts, Leonard Hall Leland Stanford Willis, Jr., Met.E., Drinker House 4-B Charles Townsend Wilson, III, I.E., Sigma Phi James Francis Wilson, M.E., Town Group Samuel James Wilson, Arts, Delta Upsilon Frank Winter, Arts, Beta Theta Pi Kenneth Bertrand Wiss, Bus., Beta Theta Pi Edward Stephen Wolosin, Ch.E., Town Group Herbert George Wylie, II, Bus., Delta Upsilon Robert Ren wick Wylie, I.E., Theta Xi Richard Sheldon Yorgey, Arts, Town Group John Zimmermann, M.E., Delta Sigma Phi Arthur Edward Zuckerman, Bus., Drinker House 2-A Wayne Passaic, N. J. Mountain Lake, N. J. Bethlehem Newark, N. J. Allentown Trenton, N. J. Clifton, N. J. Bryn Mawr Arlington, N. J. Gates Mills, Ohio Bethlehem Upper Darby Asbury Park, N. J. Haddon Heights, N. J. Plainfield, N. J. Buffalo, N. Y. Bound Brook, N. J. Bellevue, Pittsburgh Hackettstown, N. J. Swarthmore Schenectady, N. Y. Palmerton West Englewood, N. J. Pittsburgh Glenside Harrisburg Chester Summit, N. J. Bethlehem Upper Darby Buffalo, N. Y. Catasauqua Pittsburgh Bellmore, N. Y. Short Hills, N. J. Kingston Providence, R. I. New Kensington Birdsboro Melrose Park Maplewood, N. J. 331 STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS ALPHA EPSILON DELTA President : A. Forrest Mann Vice-President and Secretary: Myron I. Buchman Treasurer: L. Austin Mosier ALPHA KAPPA PSI President: Bernard Deehan Vice-President: Kenneth Porter Treasurer: Thomas Golden Secretary: John deGrouchy ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA President: Willi am C. Brower Vice-President : Franklin Bhodes Succeeded by George H. Brower Secretary : James A. Schwab Succeeded by Richard L. Schock Treasurer: Robert Mclnerney Members: George H. Brower, Wil- liam C. Brower, James R. Burke, Eu- gene Baer, John C. Black, Sydney Cohen, Richard T. Davies, William J. Duffy, Willet E. Egge, Stanley E. Eisenhard, Frank A. Fratzinger, Roy A. Forner, Gene H. Gockley, Carl E. Haas, Frederick G. Hess, Richard Horlacher, R. William Hinterleiter, Joseph Horvath, Lido A. Iacocca, Louis G. Inglese, Kenneth Johnson, Theodore Kleppinger, Theodore Ke- lechava, John Kratzer, Quentin Mehr- kam, William McGee, John J. McGee, Robert Mclnerney, Frank H. Marsh, Kenneth L. Moses, Leon G. Reimer, William F. Reiteman, Joseph S. Ren- gert, Peter C. Seaton, Donald Schmoyer, Richard L. Schock, Robert Swoyer, John W. Sanders, Kermit Stabler, Thomas L. Sherer, Lester Tit- low, Willet Thomas, Phillip Varri- chio, Merlin P. Walters, James F. Wilson, Richard A. Wirth. ARCADIA President : Robert P. Whipple Vice-President: Thomas M. Buck Secretary : William C. Kirschner Treasurer: John M. Stockbridge Faculty Adviser: C. G. Beardslee Members: Hugh Boyd, III, J. Harry Brindle, Thomas M. Buck, Samuel J. Davy, Robert C. Kramer, William C. Kirschner, Charles M. Norlin, Pres- ton Parr, Jr., John M. Stockbridge, Kenneth G. Swayne, Robert P. Whip- ple, William R. Williams. LEHIGH BACHELOR Editor-in-chief : Earle W. Wallick Business Manager: Robert L. Smith Managing Editor: John D. Smith Makeup Editor: Jack Doxsey Editorial Staff: Ellsworth A. Stock- bower, Feature Editor; G. William Wolfsten, Jr., Assistant Feature Edi- tor; James Hosford, Exchange Edi- tor; James Niemeyer, Music Editor; Jack Kennedy, Fiction Editor; Charles Thompson and James Hos- ford, Art Editors. Business Staff: Hal Korshin, Adver- tising; Lou Domeratzky, Financial; John Skilling, Circulation; Robert Kelley, Distribution. Editorial Contributing Staff: Max Bellis, Hibbard Gumpert, Joseph O ' Brien, William Shawhan, Ralph Moyer, P. Scott Guckes, R. L. Cahoon, Roy Dragone, Ted Heck, Wayne Riddle, Danal Epstein, Robert Wal- lick. Faculty Adviser: Wallace Biggs. 332 ORGANIZATIONS BAND Student Director: A. W. Pedrick Assistant Director: J. C. Gabuzda Business Manager: F. H. Young Librarian : R. W. Rouse Drum Major: C. G. Kucher Members: Ernest G. Abell, Paul J. Alexy, Paul G. Andrews, Donald G. Atwood, Curtis L. Baskin, Lee R. Bergstrerres, Frank R. Berry, Jr., Richard H. Boll, Earl A. Brawn, Ray E. Brawn, William T. Buhrig, Harry F. Busch, David J. Carrigan, Spencer H. Collmann, I. Reid Collmann, ar- ren X. Collmann, Clifford W. Cor- bett, Robert L. Coutts, Calvin P. Cubberley, David K. Davies, E. I. Davies, Dante DeBeradinis, H. C. De- dell, Leonard M. Del Vecchio, John R. Dove, Russell C. Downes, Bernard J. Egan, David C. Emery, Robert D. Everett, William G. Everett, Ralph E. Evans, Frederick J. Flemming, Rich- ard A. Friend, George E. Funk, Roger S. Funk, Joseph C. Gabuzda, Charles S. Geiger, Ernest R. Gerlach, Joseph F. Gilley, John G. Glenn, Frank P. Goodwin, Joseph H. Goth, illiam R. Griffith, Robert W. Hallock, Al- bert E. Hartung, Arthur C. Hontz, Richard D. Horlacher, Robert E. Jones, George W. Kahler, David C. Kirk, Leonard C. Kline, Donald E. Krebs, Charles G. Kucher, H. Merrill Lynch, Creighton L. Lytle, Joseph M. S. Marks, John W. Martin, John W. Matthews, William T. Mclnerney, George F. Miller, John X. Miller, Andrew Mitchell, Jackson F. Mitchell, John W. Morrison, Robert L. Mount, James P. Mulhern, Leon L. Nonne- maker, Alfred W. Pedrick, Theodore Peters, Jr., Seemon H. Pines, Robert G. Pope, John F. Powell, Leon G. Reimer, Robert C. Renick, Charles L. Robinson, Charles F. Rosenthal, Rob- ert . Raus, Harris S. Rush, Richard W. Sauer, David C. Schubert, Harry S. Sechrist, Henry B. Seifert, George J. Shelly, Samuel I. Snyder, Richard H. Sotzing, Frederick X. Spencer, illiam R. Sultzer, Oscar D. Sum- mers, Joseph H. Tomlinson, David I. Troxell, Donald E. an Inwegen, Frederick S. ondersmith, George H. agner, Albert 0. Weasner, Robert J. eiss, Charles M. Wetzel, Edward R. bite, August F. Wiegand, Glenn H. illiams, Richard R. Williams, Earl V. Wise, Robert 0. Wright, Frank H. Young, John A. Youtz. BROWN AND WHITE Staff: First Semester: Lynn Bartlett, Editor-in-Chief; E. Walter Edwards, A eus-manager : Joseph Kemmer, Edi- torial Manager; Ted Peters, Jr., Makeup Editor; Albert Vetrosky and George Bleul, Xeics Editors; Mark Schwarz, Photographic Editor. Busi- ness Department: Robert Schantz and Donald Davies, Co-Business Mana- gers; Anthony Fortosis, Local Adver- tising Manager. Second Semester: Samuel J. Davy. Editor-in-Chief: Ted Peters, Jr., News Manager: David J. Carrigan, Editorial Manager; George Bleul and Al etrosky. Makeup Editors: Lee Greenbaum and James Schwab, News Editors; Andrew Bardagjy, Photo- graphic Editor. Departmental Edi- tors: Roy Margolies, Lloyd Antoni- des, ayne Riddle, Robert Mayer, Danal Epstein, Walter Sail, Charles Frank, William Highfield. Business Department: Robert Schantz and Donald Davies, Co-Business Mana- gers; Anthony Fortosis, Local Adver- tising Manager; Jay Sullivan, Circu- lation Manager. Board Members: Paul Franz, Dun- stan Sheldon. John Jubell, Ted Heck, 333 Peter Weigel, Fritz Von Bergen, Howard J arisen, Aklo Ciaffardini, Edgar Frankley. Staff: John Earley, James McCar- thy, Richard Mooney, Ralph Woelfel, John Werme, Robert Coey man, Aus- tin Hunt, Douglas Potts, J. W. Morri- son, John Christie, George Heck, See- man Pines, Jack Shipherd, Robert Treser, Stephen Hart, Paul Scarff, Carston Driver, George Hewitt, James Palmer, Fred Salber, William Sal- mond, Leo Diffenbach, Charles Bos- serman, George Brothers, Stephen Hirschman. Faculty Advisers: Wallace R. Biggs, Kenneth K. Kost, Melvin P. Moor- house. CANTERBURY CLUB President : P. A. Sweet Secretary-Treasurer: R. C. Ramsdell Activities Chairman: E. S. Tattershall Members: Donald Lorimer, Ran- dall Giddings, Francis Taylor, Rhys Williams, George Ried, Francis Ta- tem, Charles Winters, Edward Wood- ring, John Conforte, Allen Reese, Louis Lange, John Wynne, Robert Curtis, Browning Herrick, Fairfax Landstreet, Harris Rush, George Brothers, William Colman, Sanford Wilson, Joseph Oechsle, Bryn Waters. ORGANIZATIONS AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS (Lehigh University Chapter) President: Lester E. Titlow Vice-President: Robert J. Fisher Secretary: A. Newton Bugbee Treasurer: John J. McGee Members: N. C. Applegate, G. J. Bluel, J. L. Brandes, A. Brodsky, J. H. Brubaker, R. C. Buckwalter, D. Coles, W. A. Detwiler, C. F. Die- fenderfer, R. G. Dittig, R. R. Dra- gone, W. L. Fisher, J. H. Galli, J. R. Gray, J. Houseman, R. M. Kelly, R. E. Laurencot, J. J. Lotz, R. E. Meyer- hoff, R. C. Moore, R. D. Palazzo, J. B. Rutherford, D. H. Schaper, T. Shintaku. COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS President: W. R. Williams Manager: G. C. Stone Faculty Director: T. E. Shields GLEE CLUB President: W. Williams Manager: G. Stone Assistant Managers: 0. D. Summers, J. H. Goth CHEMICAL SOCIETY President: R. P. Whipple Vice-President: J. J. Hucker Secretary: J. J. Kurtz Treasurer: R. J. Priestley CUT AND THRUST President: A. L. Landesman Vice-President: W. A. Kuhar Secretary-Treasurer: A. E. Hartung Manager: F. J. McGrath 334 CYANIDE ORGANIZATIONS DE MOLAY CLUB President: Hugh Boyd, III Vice-President: Harold J. Seigle Secretary and Treasurer: Q. John Schwarz Members-at -large: Richard C. Shafer, Kenneth G. Swayne Faculty Adviser: Claude G. Beardslee Members: Keith W. Amish, Charles B. Austin, Hugh Boyd, III, J. Harry Brindle, David F. Cox, John E. Dox- sey, Louis M. Domeratzky, Danal P. Epstein, Ralph A. Evans, Blaine D. Ferrell, E. Lyster Frost, Charles C. Hilton, Ralph R. Johnson, Donald R. Lowry, Jr., Theodore Peters, Jr., Richard C. Shafer, Q. John Schwarz, Harold J. Seigle, Robert L. Smith, Kenneth G. Swavne, Fred E. S ilev. DELTA OMICRON THETA President: H. Boyd Vice-President: A. Putnam Secretary-Treasurer: D. Scoblionko Members: Hugh Boyd, Arnold Put- nam, David Scoblionko, Robert Beek- with, Donald Diggs, Chester Finch, Ira Born, Leonard Schwab, Preston Parr, Richard Penniman, Ellis Lehr, David Emery. INTRAMURAL DEBATING Members: Ralph Dougherty, John Dunning, Warren Milch, Milan Cerst- vik, George Wagner, Jackson Snyder, Robert Mathes, Gaston Driver. President: Robert W. Rouse J ice-President: Richard Treco Secretary : William Highfield Treasurer : Robert Griffeth Members: James McMahon. Robert W. Rouse, Richard Treco, Randall Giddiiif£s. Richard Gottschall. Robert Griffeth, William Highfield. Wilbur Peters, John Pharo. Charles Sterner. Edward Tattershall. Faculty Advisors: Prof. William J. Eney, Dr. Carl 0. Keck. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY Members: David Troxel, alter Titlow, illiam Clark, Paul Thrasher. Frank Bower, John S. Haldeman. Richard aer, Stanley Caplan. ar- ren Morgan, Robert Bvrne. Max Bel- lis, D. E. Mode, Richard Haslet, H. B. Frey, Keith Amish. Stephen Litrides. illiam Kuhar, Charles Rosenthal. John Troy, arren Hoffman, David Green, Charles Bennett. Edward Blos- som, Earl Wallick, J. L. Beaver. Frank Hill, Paul Ray, Stuart Yogt, Carl Ingemanson, A. R. Miller, Frank Roberts, A. S. Epstein, Gilbert Rosen- berg, H. J. Gray, Oscar Sommers, Robert Hill, Robert Ottens. Gordon Roberts, John Kratzer. Taylor Birck- head, H. D. Gruber, Ryland Hanger. Edgar Frankley, G. R. Potter. Wal- lace Driver, John Yogel, Albert Weas- ner, Robert Black, Jack Earley, Wal- ter Rieker, Marvin Forsythe. Richard Jenkins. Donald Strang, Allan Laird. N. Derewianka, L. L. Nonemaker. Leslie G. McCracken, Stanley Eisen- hard, John erme, Coleman Clark. Raymond Yierira, H. S. Sechrist. Robert Clark Renick. 335 ORGANIZATIONS EPITOME Editor-in-Chief: Robert W. Pugh (Yearbook completed by Pi Delta Epsilon fraternity after Mr. Pugh re- linquished his editorship in August, 1943) Assistant Editor: William R. Sultzer Art Editor: Joseph F. Keramer Senior Section Chief: Edwin H. Dafter Photography Editor: Mark H. Schwarz Sports Editor: John E. Doxsey Living Groups Editor: David F. Cox Class Editor: Donald M. Lorimer Organizations Editor: H. William Shawhan Business Manager: Arthur B. Parsons Financial Manager: John J. Hucker E. W. BROWN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY President: E. L. Walter Vice-President: A. S. Coriell Secretary-Treasurer: W. S. Titlow Members, Faculty: Ralph N. Van Arnam, Paid Hessemer. Students: R. R. Waer, F. A. Hill, I. B. Born, R. J. Mikovsky, A. B. Sporleder. ETA KAPPA NU Members: Max William Bellis, Charles Surface Bennett, Frank Hugo Bower, Stanley Caplan, William Henry Clark, Samuel Jackson Davy, Carl Richard Ingemanson, Nathan George Lesh, Walter Stockton Titlow, David Irvin Troxel, Richard Rolland Waer, Earle Wilbur Wallick. ETA SIGMA PHI President: George H. Ried Vice-President : Randall C. Giddings Secretary: William R. Williams Treasurer: Robert C. Ramsdell Sergeant -at -arms: Anthony C. Fortosis Members: R. Rhys Williams, Jo- seph F. O ' Brien, Howard M. Prentzel, Francis C. Tatem, Francis C. Taylor, David M. John, David J. E. Sweet, Charles L. Winters. David H. Welsh, Robert A. McKinley, E. Jacques Downing, Roy N. Figueroa, Richard E. Penniman, Albert E. Hartung. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING- MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY President: A. W. Hemphill Vice-President : G. W. Boyer Secretary-Treasurer: T. M. Buck INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL President: Thomas M. Buck Vice-President : David H. Schaper Secretary: William D. Hayes Treasurer: Edward J. Cavanaugh Faculty Adviser: Claude G. Beardslee 336 .Members: Alpha Chi Rho, Robert C. Haas, Frederick Moore; Alpha Kappa Pi, William B. Hinman; Alpha Tau Omega, John Felder- mann; Beta Theta Pi, Paul L. Reiber, Jr.; Chi Phi, J. deGrouchy, A. M. Bugbee; Chi Psi, A. Leckie, Frank Felt; Delta Phi, Robert Bruns, Rob- ert Moore; Delta Sigma Phi, Donald Ryan, Harold Seigle; Delta Tau Delta, Robert Whipple, Hugh Boyd, III; Delta Upsilon, Robert Rumsey, Phillip Berg; Kappa Alpha, Arthui Parsons, Robert Honeyman; Kappa Sigma, Thomas M. Buck; Lambda Chi Alpha, Joseph Kemmer; Phi Delta Theta, C. A. Ginter, G. A. Mur- ray; Phi Gamma Delta, John S. Petty; Phi Sigma Kappa, Earle W. Wallick, John E. Schumacher; Pi Kappa Alpha, A. H. Brennan, R. C. Gottschall; Pi Lambda Phi, Danal P. Epstein, G. William Wolfsten, Jr.; Psi Upsilon, J. J. Maloney, Jr., G. Whitney Snyder; Sigma Alpha Mu, Alan E. Price, Robert E. Meyerhoff; Sigma Chi, Alan Hinrichs, Robert Smith; Sigma A u, William Kirschner, William Farrell; Sigma Phi, M. P. Pearsall, E. L. Frost; Sigma Phi Epsi- lon, E. R. Conover, Jr., J. L. Gretz; Theta Chi, A. F. VonBlock, LeRoy D. King; Tau Delta Phi, Leonard Greene, Leonard C. Schwab; Theta Delta Chi, A. K. Bartley, H. J. Buncke, Jr.; Theta Kappa Phi, David K. Darcy, Stuart Gordon: Theta Xi, Thomas Bushey, Robert Rippey. LAMBDA MU SIGMA President: V. Schermerhorn Vice-President: W. Peck Treasurer: W. Cosford Secretary: B. Heinz ORGANIZATIONS METALLURGICAL SOCIETY President: C. Norlin Vice-President : J. A. Corson Treasurer: W. Dix Secretary: E. L. Frost MINING AND GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY Vice-President: R. H. Holland Secretary: R. Palmer Treasurer: H. A. Reichenbach MUSTARD AND CHEESE President: Keith Amish Vice-President : Myron K. Barrett Business Manager: William E. Belser Publicity Manager: Harve Lucks Program Manager: Paul J. Franz Technical Manager: Lou Page Ticket Manager: Albert McCauley Stage Manager: Edward Tattershall Property Manager: Fred Gruenwald Costume Manager: Larry Long Electrical Manager: Budd Defaa Script Manager: Russ Jordan Members: Bob Coutts, Phil Powers. Bob Mussina, Bill Wolfsten, Al Yon Block, Bill Kirschner, Swede John- son, Jack Kennedy, Al Heinrichs, Bill Lytle, Ken Norris, Lowell Judis. Hon- orary Members: Anna Marie Rohs, Joyce Heller, Eleanor Lewis, Kathryn Wolbach, Gabriel Kurth, Helen Brembeck. Crew and Business Com- petitors: Leonard Kline, Burt Lasko, Arnold Schwartzberg. 337 NEWTONIAN SOCIETY President: F. H. Marsh Vice-President-Treasurer : E. T. Pieski Secretary: W. P. Colman Faculty Adviser: C. A. Shook Members: M. Bick, R. B. Curtis, S. E. Eisenhard, C. W. Helstrom, P. J. Kitson, F. H. Marsh, V. W. Milch, R. B. Miles, E. T. Pieski, S. H. Pines, D. F. Ressler, G. Risch, R. B. Rosener, W. G. Sail, N. C. Sidebo- tham, G. H. Wagner, R. C. Ward, R. N. Zirnite. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA President: Samuel J. Davy Vice-President: George H. Ried Secretary: Claude G. Beardslee Treasurer: Robert C. Boston Faculty Adviser: E. Kenneth Smiley Members: Robert D. Bailey, Lynn C. Bartlett, Philip J. Berg, Robert C. Boston, Myron I. Buchman, Thomas M. Buck, David F. Cox, Samuel J. Davy, Blaine D. Ferrell, E. Lyster Frost, William D. Hayes, Roderick W. Link, Preston Parr, Jr., Theodore Peters, Jr., Philip H. Powers, Robert W. Pugh, George H. Ried, Harold J. Seigle, William D. Schaeffer, Richard C. Shafer, David H. Schaper, Robert L. Smith, Kenneth G. Swayne, John A. Thurn, William C. Walker, Earle W. Wallick, Jr. PHI ALPHA THETA President: F. Himmelberger ORGANIZATIONS PHI BETA KAPPA President: Robert E. Laramy Vice-President: Herbert M. Diamond Secretary: Philip M. Palmer Treasurer: Roy B. Cowin Council: 1940-43, R. E. Laramy, R. P. More; 1941-44, H. M. Diamond, A. Ford; 1942-43, E. H. Riley, W. N. Schwarze. Members: Arts and Science, Lynn Bartlett, Myron Buchman, Lewis Friedman, Arthur Mann, William Williams, Sheldon Zalking, John Meehan, George Ried. Business Ad- ministration, Mortimer Blanket, Wal- ter Hoerner, Walter Tomkinson, Roy Figueroa, Franklin Young. Engineer- ing, Preston Parr, Jr., Robert Saylor. Chemistry, Edward Fehnel, Isaac Hunsberger, Harold Nace. Engineer- ing Physics, Maynard Arsove. En- gineering, Stanley Caplan, Donald Johnson. PHI ETA SIGMA President: John W. Matthews Vice-President: Leslie Little Secretary: Stephen J. Litrides Historian: Frederick Bloecher Members: George J. Shelly, Harry J. Gray, Frederick Bloecher, Stephen Litrides, Edwin P. Marx, David C. Kirk, Jr., Robert R. Ferguson, Jr. PHYSICS SOCIETY President: M. G. Arsove Vice-President: L. R. Greene Secretary: R. E. Roberson Treasurer: I. B. Born 338 Members: Martin Abramson, ' 46: Charles John Apolenis, 43x: Maynard Goodwin Arsove, ' 43 ; Eugene al- ther Baer, III, 46R: Ira Brahm Born, ' 45: Edmund barren Bowden, Jr., 45X: George Harvey Brower, 44: William Conner Brower. 43: Also Nicholas Ciaffardini, ' 44X: Abner Smalley Coriell, Jr., 44: David Fred- erick Cox, ' 44X: Ralph Aiken Evans, 45X: Leonard Robert Greene, 43X: Carl Wilhelm Helstrom, 46: Robert Stewart Honey man, ' 45X: John Athan Karas, ' 43: Ulysses Frederick Kleck- ner, ' 43: Read McFall Kimes, 46: Ward Townsend Langstroth, 46: Al- fred Baer Laponsky, ' 43X: John V. il- liam Marini, ' 45X: John Courtland Palmer, ' 46: Donald Frev Ressler, ' 46R: Philip Schuyler Rust. 45X: John Arol Simpson, 44: William Moss Strouse. 43: Rov Clemson Ward, ' 46. PI DELTA EPSILOX President: Richard B. Palmer J ice-President: William olfsten Treasurer: Lynn Bartlett Secretary: Samuel J. Davy Members: Philip H. Powers. E. Walter Edwards, Joseph F. Kemmer, Myron Buchman. Charles M. Xorlin. Earle Wallick, Robert Pugh. Arthur B. Parsons, Jr., Donald H. Davies. Robert M. Schantz. Theodore Peters. Mark Schwarz, Andrew Bardagjy. George Bleul, Danal Epstein. John M. Skilling, Jr., C. Jay Sullivan, Albert Yetrosky, Peter Weigel. John E. Dox- sey, Roy Margolies. Honorary and Faculty Members: Allen J. Barthold. Robert Herrick, John Maxwell, Leon- ard Schick, Kenneth Kost, V. allace Biggs, Robert Laramy, Melvin Moor- house, John Tremper. ORGANIZATIONS PI ML EPSILOX President: M. G. Arsove Secretary: S. Caplan Treasurer: C. S. Bennett PI TAU SIGMA President: J. Mueller J ice-President: C. Curtis Recording Secretary: J. Gabuzda Corresponding Secretary: J. Townsend Treasurer: A. J. like. Jr. Members: Donald S. Johnson. Jack Mercer. Ralph Wittman, Roderick Link. Kenneth Swayne, Glenn Mur- ray, Franklin Rhodes, Hugh Boyd, Richard Shafer, H. Xelson Reifsny- der. Charles Bosserman, Robert Wright. R. W. BLAKE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY President: J. Meehan J ice-President: L. C. Bartlett Secretary-Treasurer: A. F. Mann Members: L. C. Bartlett, I. R. Coll- mann. R. J. Giddings. G. H. Henrv. A. F. Mann. J. J. Meehan. G. T. Mc- Kinlev. G. H. Ried. D. P. Scoblionko. W. M. Strouse, W. R. Williams, S. S. Zalkind. R. W. HALL PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY President: I. Reid Collmann J ice-President : Alan Mermann Secretary: Laurence Mosier Treasurer: Robert Jaslow 339 Members: C. Miller, R. Levin, D. Welsh, A. Cook, L. Stein, R. Dough- erty, J. Evans, C. DeWan, R. Sigal, C. Lyttle, G. D ' Angelo, D. Feigley, J. Andrews, W. R. Griffith, J. Kleckner, C. Richards, J. Knowles, L. Del Vecchio, S. Collmann. SCABBARD AND BLADE Captain: A. W. Hemphill First Lieutenant: R. C. Boston Second Lieutenant: J. P. Thomas First Sergeant: C. H. McKaig Members: John H. Mueller, Wil- liam L. Stump, Ludwig Godycki, Vin- cent Grasso, Elbridge Palmer, George H. Ried, Robert E. Siegfried, Roder- ick W. Link, William C. Hittinger, Myron K. Barrett, N. Clark Apple- gate, Joseph F. Bonin, Eugene S. Stowers, Henry C. Ost, Richard 0. Williams, William H. Hebrank, Wil- liam C. Stoeckle, William B. Hursh, Harold J. Seigle, Charles E. Bosser- man, Thomas J. Croake, Carson Die- fenderfer, William Highfield, John R. Dove, Alan C. Abeel, Clair Hoffman, Glenn Murray, Hugh Boyd, Oscar E. Fox, Jr. SPORTSMAN ' S CLUB President: Theodore Peters, Jr. Vice-President: Robert C. Pollock Treasurer: Roy C. Duncan Corresponding Secretary : John A. Kimberley Recording Secretary: Arthur B. Parsons ORGANIZATIONS STUDENT CONCERTS-LECTURES COMMITTEE Lynn Bartlett (Chairman) , Roy Cowin, Joseph Kemmer, Robert Pol- lock, David Scoblionko, Theodore Peters, Jr., Registrar; George B. Cur- tis, Dr. Clarence A. Shook, and Dr. T. Edgar Shields. TAU BETA PI President: F. H. Bower Vice-President : T. Buck Corresponding Secretary : R. Beckwith Recording Secretary: S. J. Davy Treasurer: C. Bennett Members: Maynard G. Arsove, Frank H. Bower, Thomas M. Buck, Robert K. Beckwith, Samuel J. Davy, Charles J. Bennett, Charles D. Cur- tiss, Jr., John H. Mueller, Preston Parr, Jr., Hugh W. Richards, John A. Thurn, Arthur J. White, Jr., Donald S. Johnson, Robert W. Saylor, Lud- wig E. Godycki, Richard C. Roth, William C. Walker, George S. Hart- man, Stanley Caplan, Richard R. Waer, Robert C. Moore, Wheeler Gilmore, Jr., Robert W. Pugh, Richard W. Sauer, Philip H. Pow- ers, Jr., Theodore Peters, Jr., David F. Cox, Kenneth G. Swayne, Blaine D. Ferrell, Max W. Bellis, Charles C. Hilton, Robert L. Smith, Hugh Boyd, Richcard C. Shafer, Rob- ert D. Bailey, Edward A. Fehnel, William D. Hayes, Nathan G. Lesh, Harold R. Nace, Robert E. Siegfried, Bernard J. Egan, E. Lyster Frost, John L. Gretz, Claude J. Kurtz, Ste- phen Kutosh, Glenn A. Murray, Earle W. Wallick, Edward L. Diehl, Carl R. Ingemanson, Roderick W. Link, Robert S. Miltenberger, Harold R. 340 ORGANIZATIONS Siegle, Robert M. Long, Joseph Schmuk, Warren R. Dix, Philip J. Berg, Leslie R. Little, F. William Bloecher, Joseph J. Buczynski, Jr., Robert L. Cahoon. TONE First Semester: President: Robert T. Beckwith Vice-President : George Stone Secretary: Richard S. Yorgey Second Semester: President: Robert W. Rouse Vice-President : Raymond Brandt Secretary : Richard S. Yorgey Members: Robert T. Beckwith, Richard T. Berg, Robert Coutts, George Henry, Ed Hughes, Robert Kramer, Forrest Mann, Carl Neuen- dorfer, Preston Parr, Alfred W. Pe- drick, Frank Rockett, Robert W. Rouse, George Stone, Francis Taylor, William Williams, Richard S. Yor- gey, Robert Ramsdell, Raymond Brandt. Provisional Members: Paul Alexy, Frank Berman, Bernard Egan, Joseph C. Gabuzda, Ernest Gerlach, Joseph Gilley, David Kirk, Robert Weiss. Faculty Members: Robert M. Mains, Capt. Samuel Pierce, Jr. Faculty Ad visors: Dr. Claude G. Beardslee, Dr. Max Peterson, Dr. T. Edgar Shields. TOWN COUNCIL President: Robert C. Kramer Vice-President: Randall C. Giddings Secretary: Robert C. Ramsdell Treasurer: Ralph A. Evans Faculty Adviser: Claude G. Beardslee Members: Section A, Walter L. An- ders; Section B, Ralph A. Evans; Section C, Robert C. Ramsdell; Sec- tion D, William C. Breidinger; Sec- tion E, Ross P. Vachon; Section F, Frank R. Berry, Jr.; Section G, Jo- seph S. Gabuzda; Section H, Anthony C. Fortosis; Section J, George S. Hart- man; Section K, Theodore G. Heck; Alpha Town House, Arnold 0. Put- nam; Leonard Hall, Randall C. Gid- dings; Alpha Lambda Omega, George H. Brower. PI MU EPSILON Members: Maynard G. Arsove, Charles S. Bennett, Stanley Caplan, Isaac M. Hunsberger, Robert W. Pugh, Hugh W Richards, Wheeler Gilmore, Jr., W. S. Titlow, Hans Nel- ken, Edward A. Fehnel, Richard R. Waer, William C. Walker, Roderick W. Link, Walter S. Tompkinson, Theodore Peters, Jr., Robert S. Mil- tenberger, David Cox, Franklin J. Rhodes, Robert Wright, Jr., Leonard H. Lempert, Robert L. Smith, Ken- neth G. Swayne, Blaine D. Ferrell, Arthur J. White, George F. Keller, Toshiaki Shintaku, Carl R. Ingeman- son, Glenn A. Murray, Alfred L. Ro- sener, Robert W. Logan, William J. Crowe, Courter D. Mills, Stephen J. Litrides, Keith W. Amish, Richard H. Boll, Ralph A. Evans. COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS President: William R. Williams Glee Club Manager: George C. Stone Glee Club Assistant Manager: Oscar D. Summers First Tenors: Robert Tucker, Wil- liam R. Williams, Clarence Fehnel, John Gehr, George Henry, Edward Pieski. Second Tenors: Oscar Sum- 341 mers, Philip Sweet, Raymond Brandt, William Critchlow, Bernard Egan, Albert Hontz, Edwin Hussa, Charles Miller, Philip Rust, Gordon Roberts, David Troxell, Philip Varrichio, Richard Williams, Rhys Williams, Dickinson Mills. First Basses: Joseph Goth, Kenneth Lambert, Lewis James, Quentin Merkham, Paul Reiber, Wal- ter Titlow, William Delony, Sheldon Strong, Richard Gerhardt, William Garland, Robert Priestly, GeoVge Stone, Edward Deal, Robert Cuyler. Second Basses: James Woods, Robert Rouse, Stanford Willis, Bruce Burgy, Robert Coutts, Donald Curtiss, John Schumaker, Francis Carlin, Robert Clayton, Clemson Ward. ORGANIZATIONS land, Ernest Gerlach, Joseph Goth, William Griffith, Lawrence Mosier, Carl Neuendorfer, David Troxell, Stephen Kutosh, Richard Yorgey, Harry Gray, Donald Bulloch. LEHIGH COLLEGIANS Leader and Manager: James Mulhern Members: James Mulhern, Richard Satzing, William Ernest, Philip Mars- den, Saxophone and Clarinet; Reid Collman and Charles Kucher, Trom- bones; Spencer Collman and Robert Jones, Trumpets; Stephen Litrides, Piano. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Student Conductor: Bernard J. Egan Librarian: Robert Bouse Members: Paul Andrews, Earl Wise, Bernard Egan, William Gar- YACHT CLUB Commodore: C. A. Stearns Vice-Commander : J. E. Donahue Secretary-Treasurer : J. E. Mitchell Rear-Commodore: W. A. Clark M2 SPORTS RECORDS BASEBALL 1943 1 Boys Club 1 VARSITY: : Carter, Ferrell, Fuller (Capt.), 7 Abruzzese 1 Geiger, Heath, Moffa, Moravec. Se rman, Sha- 11 Boys Club 6 fer, Somers, Swayne, Wilson. MANAGER: 1 St. Peter and St. Paul 4 Eichlin. 7 Wagnersville 14 LEHIGH OPPONENT 12 Miller Heights 5 8 West Chester 7 4 Wagnersville 3 3 Muhlenberg 2 4 Hungarian Catholic Club 3 1 Temple 10 4 Abruzzese Lafayette 9 2 Swarthmore 1 3 Rutgers 4 1 Hecktown 6 Muhlenberg 9 1 St. Peter and St. Paul 2 5 Muhlenberg 4 2 Hungarian Catholic Club 1 5 Rutgers 9 3 Swarthmore 1 13 West Chester 5 4 Hecktown 3 6 Lafayette 2 Riegelsville 7 4 Muhlenberg 6 1 Princeton 3 3 Villanova 5 Hellertown 4 7 Lafayette 8 7 Hellertown 1 Won 5, lost 8 6 4 5 Princeton Hungarian Catholic Club Wagnersville 2 2 5 BASEBALL, 1942 2 Hecktown 4 LEHIGH OPPONENT 5 Abruzzese 4 3 Lafayette 12 4 Catholic All-Stars 7 10 Vermont 15 Won 17, lost 11, tied 2 4 Manhattan 6 Temple 5 BASKETBALL, 1942-1943 1 Muhlenberg 2 VARSITY: Hock, Johnson, Kitzmillei •, Mo- 5 Ft. Monmouth 11 ravec , Pope, Shaner, Binder. MANAGER: Gettysburg 11 Niemeyer. 2 Rutgers 12 JUNIOR VARSITY: Case, Earley, Goetz, 5 Muhlenberg 3 Holb, en, Johnson, Mclnerney, Megas, , Ser- 5 Rutgers 4 man, Wilson, Whipple, Tomaselli. MANA- 4 Ft. Monmouth 2 GER : Metten. 4 Lafayette 15 FRESHMAN MANAGERS: Woodring, Weh- Drexel 1 ner, Zucker. SOPHOMORE MANAGERS: BASEBALL, SUMMER, 1942 LEHICH OPPONENT 5 St. Peter and St. Paul 4 4 Miller Heights 2 3 St. Peter and St. Paul 4 Hungarian Catholic Club 4 3 Belmont A. C. 6 Neill, Walsh. JUNIOR MANAGERS: Fi- gueroa, Metten. VARSITY LEHIGH OPPONENT 65 P. M. C. 39 59 Temple 69 73 Upsala 47 48 Stevens 46 32 Swarthmore 44 343 SPORTS RECORDS 47 Rutgers 60 41 Brooklyn 38 41 Lebanon Valley 59 34 Muhlenberg 48 37 Muhlenberg 58 33 Drexel 43 36 New York University 77 33 Rutgers 56 49 Lafayette 47 28 Lafayette 49 Won 5, lost 10 JUNIOR VARSITY LEHIGH OPPONENT 38 Swarthmore 21 24 Rutgers 28 37 Muhlenberg 38 56 Muhlenberg 44 62 Drexel 27 43 Rutgers 51 36 Perkiomen 42 Won 3, lost 4 CROSS COUNTRY, 1942 VARSITY: Bradford, Clark (Co-Captain), Domeratzky, Evans, Hardy, Smyth, Wiley. MANAGER: Mussina. VARSITY LEHIGH OPPONENT 26 Muhlenberg 30 15 Swarthmore 40 25 Rutgers 30 36 Temple 49 36 West Chester MASCAA 41 Franklin and Marshall 48 Lehi gh 5 7 Rutgers 63 Muhlenberg 83 Alfred 100 Swarthmore 157 FENCING, 1943 Captain: A. L. Landesman. Manager: F. J. McGrath. Assistant Manager: R. O. Williams. Freshman Manager: Frank Winters. Coach: M. Cabijos. Director: William Kuhar. Members: Charles Winters, Aldo Ciaffar- dini, Richard Haslet, Charles Norlin, Al Hartung, Charles Jones, Richard Haslet, Arthur Landesniati. LEHIGH ioy 2 16V2 14 15 14 Phil; Lafayette Drew University Haverford Lafayette Temple . College of Pharmacy Won 6, lost OPPONENT 9 J 2 FENCING, 1942-1943 LEHIGH Lafayette College, Jan. 30, Home. Epee 5 V2 Saber 5 Foil 7 Drew U., Feb. 6, Madison, N. J. Epee IV2 Saber 2 Foil 7 Haverford College, Feb. 13, Home. Epee 4 1 2 Saber 4 Foil 8 Phila. College of Pharmacy and Science, Feb. 20, Home. Epee 2 Saber 4 Foil 8 Lafayette College, March 6, Easton. Epee 5 Saber 6 Foil 3 Temple U., March 20, Home. Epee 5 Saber 6 Foil 4 6V 2 ioy 2 13 12 3 3y 2 4 2 2y 2 2 2 4y 2 5 1 344 FOOTBALL, 1942 VARSITY: Arant, Attaway, Brownlee, Buck, Cavanaugh, Clarke, Cornelius, Deehan (Capt.), Dickel, Donahue, Frost, Gott, Jones, Jorgenson, Kurtz, Meserve, Moffa, Moravec, Semmel, Shafer, H. P. Shoener, H. G. Shoe- ner, Szymakowski. MANAGERS: Boston, Palmer. JUNIOR VARSITY: Butzman, Cox, Farrell, Gretz, Hebrank, Heironimus, Heinz, Hof- facker, Hohman, Keenan, Long, Peterson, Rasbury, Strasburg, Torrens, Walker, Walsh, Walter, Waltz, Wilson, Wiseman. MANA- GER: Coles. LEHICH 6 3 13 28 51 22 7 7 LEHIGH 12 2 6 VARSITY Yale Penn State P. M. C. Rutgers Hampden-Sydney Muhlenberg Dickinson Lafayette Won 5, tied 1, lost 2 JUNIOR VARSITY Wyoming Seminary Rutgers Hill School Muhlenberg Muhlenberg Won 3, lost 2 OPPONENT 33 19 10 6 6 7 OPPONENT 21 13 LACROSSE, 1943 LETTERMEN: Bassett, Cahoon, Conklin, de- Grouchy, John Donahue, Joseph Donahue, Fulton, Gilbert, Hebrank, Heinz, Lawson, Leitner, Lynn, Meyerhoff, Sullivan, Steele. CO-MANAGERS: Downing, Moore. FRESH- MAN MANAGER: Welch. LEHIGH 4 3 19 7 3 3 Drexel Stevens Pennsylvania Swarthmore Stevens Rutgers Won 1, lost 5 OPPONENT 9 9 7 8 9 8 SPORTS RECORDS RIFLE, 1942-1943 LETTERMEN: Bradford, Deach, Ross, Plun- kett, Hemphill, Boston, Jordon, Rader, Griffis. VARSITY DUAL SHOULDER MATCHES LEHIGH OPPONENT 1321 Rutgers 1338 1321 Lafayette 1271 1349 Navy 1365 1371 Army 1389 1360 Drexel 1295 W on 2, lost 3 VARSITY POSTAL MATCHES LEHIGH OPPONENT 1360 Massachusetts State 1396 1370 University of Maryland 1366 1370 Rensselaer Polytechnic 1255 1370 Oregon State 1409 1386 Cornell 1360 1386 Columbia 1369 Pittsburgh 1336 1365 U. S. Coast Guard Academy 1374 1365 Carnegie Tech 1372 1379 New York University 1379 Penn State Forfeited. Won 7, lost 4 SOCCER, 1942 VARSITY: Bast, Berg, Birckhead, Byrne, Hoffman, Kegerise, Over, Schaeffer (Capt.), Seigle, Smith, Swayne. MANAGERS: Dafter, Thomas. VARSITY LEHIGH OPPONENT 1 Pennsylvania 4 3 Rutgers 1 1 Haverford 6 2 Cornell 1 1 Stevens 1 Princeton 9 1 Swarthmore 3 3 Lafayette Won 3, lost 4, tied 1 SWIMMING, 1942-1943 LETTERMEN: deGrouchy, Ferrell, Hill, Lawson, McKaig, O ' Shea, Schaper (Capt.), Trimble. MANAGERS: Heinz, Bernasco. 345 LEHIGH 32 34 45 41 55 23 VARSITY Temple Rutgers Swarthmore Pennsylvania Fordham Lafayette Won 3, lost 3 TENNIS, 1942 OPPONENT 43 41 29 34 20 52 4 Bucknell 3 Penn State 9 Gettysburg 2 New York University 7 Lafayette 5 Rugers 7 Manhattan 5 Swarthmore 1 Muhlenberg University of Pennsylvania OPPONENT 5 6 TENNIS, 1943 VARSITY: Bunning, Croake, DeHuff, Gray (Capt. ), Johnson, Maver, Mosier. William. MANAGER: Culliney. SPORTS RECORDS TRACK, 1943 VARSITY: Austin, Bast, Brownlee, Clark, Elmes, Given, Hardy, Messinger, Mortimer, Niewenhous, Ponisi, Ramsey, Simpson, Sei- gle, Schwarz, Schumacher, Wiley. MANA- GER: Evans. LEHIGH 101 63 Swarthmore Muhlenberg MIDDLE THREE: OPPONENT 25 63 Lehigh 91 Rutgers 61 Lafayette IOV2 MASCAA. Won by Muhlenberg, Lehigh sec- ond. Held at Lehigh Saturday, May 8, with 13 teams entered. WRESTLING, 1942-1943 VARSITY: Bannan, Bird, R. DeLong, Sny- der, Stockbridge (Capt. ), Swavne, Winter, Zackey, Fulton. MANAGER: Hucker (V.), Co win (J.V.). JUNIOR VARSITY: Bast, Bastianelli, Ber- nard, Christ. W. DeLong. Donahue, Heironi- mus, Levy, Morrison. MANAGERS: Clark, Scarff, Strang. LEHIGH OPPONENT VARSITY Pennsylvania LEHIGH OPPONENT Swarthmore 9 27 Syracuse 3 1 American University 8 23 Cornell 3 Colgate 24 Indiana 6 7 New York University 2 22 Yale 5 6 Haverford 3 17 Pennsylvania 14 10 Muhlenberg 18 Penn State 11 10 West Chester 1 28 Lafayette 8 9 Muhlenberg 14 Princeton 12 6 West Chester 1 Cancelled. Won 6, lost 2 JUNIOR VARSITY LEHIGH OPPONENT TRACK, 1942 18 Blair 16 24% Washington H. S. 7% LEHIGH OPPONENT 24 Syoming Seminary 6 79% Swarthmore 46% 28 Muhlenberg 8 60 Muhlenberg 66 29 Pennsylvania 3 64 Lafayette 62 25 Muhlenberg 13 5oy 2 Haverford 75% 11 Princeton 15 65 Rutgers 61 Won 8, lost none 346 INDEX Administration 23, 24, 28 Alpha Chi Rho 214-215 Alpha Kappa Pi 216-217 Alumni Memorial Building (picture) 8 Alpha Epsilon Delta - 154-155 Alpha Kappa Psi 156-157 Alpha Lambda Omega 184 Alpha Phi Omega 156-157 Alpha Tau Omega 218-219 Alpha Town House 2 72-2 73 Appendix 303 Arcadia 152-153 Bachelor 182-183 Band - _ 174 Baseball Squad (picture ) 296 Basketball Squad ( picture ) 284 Basketball ( candid pictures ) 287 Beta Theta Pi - 220-221 Brown and White 180-181 Callen, Dean A. Copeland (picture) 27 Campus ( picture ) 16 Canterbury Club - 184 Carothers, Dean Neil (picture) -.26 Chemical Society 168-169 Chi Phi 222-223 Chi Psi 268-269 Civil Engineering Society 168-169 Class ( candid pictures) _ 142-145 Class Writeups of Year 143-144 Combined Music Clubs _ 176-177 Congdon, Dean Wray H. (picture) ...25 Copyright 1 Cosmopolitan Club 2 72-2 73 Cross Country Squad (picture) 295 Cut and Thrust _ 185 Cyanide _ . 150-151 Debating Council 158-159 Delta Phi 224-225 Delta Sigma Phi _ 226-22 7 Delta Tau Delta 228-229 Delta Upsilon _ _ ...230-231 DeMolay Club 185 Drinker House 192-199 Drown Hall ( picture ) _ 15 Electrical Engineering Society... 171-172 Epitome Staff _ _ _ 4 Eta Kappa Nu _ 158-159 Eta Sigma Phi— 160-161 E. W. Brown Astronomical Society Appendix Faculty (individual pictures) 29, 30, 33, 34, 37, 38 Faculty, Review of Year 31-32, 35, 36, 39 Fencing Squad l picture ) 299 Football 2 7 7 Football Squad (picture) 279 Football Candids _ 280-283 Fort, Dean Tomlinson (picture) -.27 Glee Club 176-177 Grace Hall (picture ) 12 Industrial Engineering-Mechanical Engineering _ 170-1 71 Interfraternity Council 212-213 Kappa Alpha —232-233 Kappa Sigma _ 234-235 Lacrosse Appendix Lambda Chi Alpha 236-237 Lambda Mu Sigma 160-161 Lehigh Collegians 177 Metallurgical Society -172-173 Mustard and Cheese _ 178-179 Newtonian Society 162-163 Omicron Delta Kappa 150 Packer Chapel (picture) 6 Palmer, Dean Philip M. (picture) _ 26 Phi Alpha Theta - 186 Phi Beta Kappa Appendix Phi Delta Theta 238-239 Phi Eta Sigma ...._ 162-163 Phi Gamma Delta ...240-241 Phi Sigma Kappa 242-243 Physics Society 186 Pi Delta Epsilon -.164-165 Pi Kappa Alpha 244-245 Pi Lambda Phi 246-247 Pi Mu Epsilon 164-165 Pi Tau Sigma... 166-167 Preface 5 Price House 199 Psi Upsilon 249 Richards House .— 200-207 Rifle Team 187 Robert T. Blake Society. 187 347 INDEX R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society 166-167 Scabbard and Blade _ 182-183 Senior Writeups and Pictures 118-141 Sigma Alpha Mu — 250-251 Sigma Chi - 252-253 Sigma Nu - - - 254-255 Sigma Phi - - 256-257 Sigma Phi Epsilon 258-259 Soccer Squad ( picture ) 300 Sportsman ' s Club Appendix Student Concerts-Lectures Series 154-155 Swimming Squad ( picture ) 295 Symphony Orchestra - - 176-1 . 7 Table of Contents _ - Tau Beta Pi - - - 148-149 Tau Delta Phi _ - 260-261 Tavlor Hall - 190, 208 Taylor Gymnasium _ 276 Tennis Squad (picture ) .300 Theta Chi - 262-263 Theta Delta Chi 264-265 Theta Kappa Phi _ -.269 Theta Xi 266-267 Title Page - 3 Tone _ 172-173 Town Council _ 2 70-271 Track Squad I picture) .292 Who ' s Who I picture) 117 Who ' s Who Writeups 116 Williams, Dr. Clement C. (picture) 22 Williams Hall I picture). - - 12 Wrestling Squad ( picture) 288 Wrestling I candid pictures) 291 348 ACKNOWLEDGMENT The 1943 Epitome, in spite of its undue tardiness in appearance, wishes to acknowledge indebtedness to those who served zealously to aid in its completion after it was returned to the campus in mid- summer in a decided state of incompleteness. For the excellent pen and ink sketches throughout the book, the Epitome is indebted to John L. Gretz, 44X. For timely pinch-hitting in engraving and printing, the Epitome extends sincere appreciation to Joe Conroy of Horan Engraving Company and to Nick Ickes, Jr., of Colyer Printing Company. Thanks to Miss Rosemary McCaa of McCaa studio, Bethlehem, for photographs rushed through when badly needed. Gratitude is due Pi Delta Epsilon at Lehigh, especially Earle Wallich and John Doxsey, who accepted the responsibility of complet- ing the yearbook; and to Professor Wallace R. Biggs for coordinating the final editing. Appreciation is also due to those of the editorial and business staff of the 1943 Epitome who faithfully performed the tasks assigned them; and to many other unnamed and sometimes unknown people who do their share in the rounding out of such a publication as this. 349
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