Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 384
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 384 of the 1936 volume:
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kH n3t3 TECHNIQUE 19 3 6 VOLUME LI TECHNIQUE FOR NINETEEN THIRTY SIX VOL. LI PUBLISHED BY THE TECHNIQUE BOARD MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Copyright 1936 bv the TECHNIQUE BOARD JOHN THOMAS SMITH General Manager FORD MILLSPAUGH BOULW ARE Eciito ) ■- ill - Chief LEA HIBBARD SPRING Business Manager DEDICATION O For their maintenance of the traditions of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, we respectfully dedicate this fifty-first volume of Technique — to the Alumni. FOREWORD In presenting this volume, we have tried to catch the spirit of the engineer — scientist and man — strength, simpHcity, honesty; a suggestion of beauty. ONLY VICTORY REMAINS AND A FAME FOREVER SECURE In Memoriam Alfred Edgar Burton Firsf Dean of Students Professor Emeritus Died May 11, 1935 William Anderson Crosby Associate Professor of English Died February 19, 1936 David Myer Staller Student in Chemical Engineering Died July 16, 1935 Harry Cyrus Bradley Associate Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry Died March 7, 1936 John Andrew Gillig Student in Naval Architecture iiiid Marine Engineering Died October 29, 1935 TABLE OF CONTENTS Book One ADMINISTRATION 23 CURRICULA 31 CLASS OFFICERS, 1936 33 CLASS OFFICERS, 1937, 1938, 1939 138 DORMITORIES 141 GRADUATE HOUSE 145 Book Tivo ATHLETICS 151 PUBLICATIONS 175 ORGANIZATIONS 187 HONORARY SOCIETIES 203 FRATERNITIES 223 PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES 273 INFORMALS 282 Addenda FACULTY DIRECTORY 294 ALUMNI SUPPLEMENT 299 ADVERTISEMENTS 303 STUDENT DIRECTORY 331 ( Including page numbers of Senior and Graduate Biographies INDEX 366 « I I I i to 4 i 1 BOOK ONE CURRICULA , nii «« ' lll_. ;j! - ' -yrs- n r uiiit ' srifcM ««9« -ts . rs-vT ADMINISTRATION KARL TAYLOR COMPTON President of the Institute A Message From President Compton ' ' I HE first duty ot the scientist or the engineer is to assemble and record his data in systematic order. The prime objective of the architect is to design a useful structure in artistic form. Technique is a useful record of the year ' s student activities, artistically presented, and is therefore a natural cooperative creation by the student architects, engineers and scientists of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. Sentiment and utility combine to give Technique a unique position in the Institute. t Karl T. Compton President VANNEVAR BUSH Vke Presicleut Dean of Engineering Assistant Treasurer HORACE SAYFORD FORD Treasurer of the Corporation 26 HAROLD EDWARD LOBDELL Dejii of Students DELBERT LEON RHIND Bursar 27 SAMUEL GATE PRESCOTT Dciiii of Science HARRY MANLEY GOODWIN Dean of the Gradiidte School WILLIAM EMERSON Dean of Architecture Chairman of the Faculty JAMES LIBBY TRYON Director of Admissions 28 Officers of Administmtion President KARL TAYLOR COMPTON, D.Sc, D.Eng , Ph.D., LL.D. Vice-President Treasurer VANNEVAR BUSH, Eng.D., Sc.D. HORACE SAYFORD FORD ACADEMIC ADMINISTRATION , Sc.D. VANNEVAR BUSH. Eng.D. VILLL M EMERSON, A.B. SAMUEL GATE PRESCOTT, Sc.D. HARRY MANLEY GOODWIN, Ph.D. HAROLD EDWARD LOBDELL THOMAS PALM PITRE, B.A. JAMES LIDBY TRYON, LL B., Ph.D. CHARLES LADD NORTON, SB. JOHN MA]OR NALLE, S.M. JOSEPH CHRISMAN MACKINNON, SB WILLIAM NATHANAEL SEAVER, A.B. BERTHA PRESTON TRULL, A.B. CHARLES FRANCIS PARK, SB. GEORGE W. MORSE, M.D., F.A.C.S. LOUIS WARD CROKE, M.D. lOHN JAMES ROWLANDS . WALLACE MASON ROSS, B.S. Dean of Engineering Dean of Architecture Dean of Science Dean of the Graduate School Dean of Students Assistant Dean of Students Director of Admrssions; Lecturer on Vocational Education Director. Division of Industrial Cooperation Placement Officer Registrar Librarian Assistant Librarian Director of the Lowell Institute School Medical Director Assistant Medical Director . Director of News Service General Secretary, T.C.A. PENNELL NUTTING ' aBORN, A.B Employment Secretary, T. C. A. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DELBERT LEON RHIND • Bursar WOLCOTT ANDERS HOKANSON ARTHUR CLARKE MELCHER, SB. ALBERT VALENTINE SMITH JAMES WILLIAM FRASER MAC DONALD . LEICESTER FORSY ' TH HAMILTON, S.B. FREDERICK GILBERT HARTWELL AVERY ALLEN . SHDOWN, Ph.D. . ALBERT WILUAM BRIDGES Assistant Bursar Manager of Division of Laboratory Supplies Superintendent of Buildings and Power Assistant Superintendent of Buildings and Power Chairman of Dormitory Board Manager of Dormitories and Walker Memorial Master of the Graduate House Manager of Dining Service President Vice-President Dean of Engineering Dean of Architecture Dean of Science ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL Dean of Graduate Students Dean of Students Director of the Division of Industrial Co-operation Chairman of Faculty Bursar President of the Alumni Association HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS AND PROFESSIONAL COURSES SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Aeronautical Engineering , . JEROME CLARKE HUNSAKER, Sc.D. Building Engineering and Construction . ROSS FRANCIS TUCKER, S.B. Business and Engineering Administration ... ERWIN HASKELL SCHELL, S.B. Chemical Engineering WALTER GORDON WHITMAN, S.M. Civil and Sanitarv Engineering CHARLES BLANEY BREED, S.B. Electrical Engineering EDWARD LEYBURN MORELAND, A.B., S.M. Electrochemical Engineering . WILLIAM SPENCER HUTCHINSON, S.B. Mechanical Engineering . .... JERO.ME CLARKE HUNSAKER, Sc.D. Mining and Metallurgv WILLIAM SPENCER HUTCHINSON, S.B. Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering JAMES ROBERTSON JACK Naval Construction HENRY EASTON ROSSELL, S.M. SCHOOL OF SCIENCE Biologv and Public Health SAMUEL GATE PRESCOTT, Sc.D. Chemistry FREDERICK GEORGE KEYES, Ph.D. General Science, General Engineering RALPH GORTON HUDSON, S.B. Geology . . WARREN JUDSON MEAD, Ph.D. Mathematics HENRY BAYARD PHILLIPS, Ph.D. Physics JOHN CLARKE SLATER, Ph.D. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Architectural Engineering WILLIAM HENRY LAWRENCE, S.B. Architecture WILLIAM EMERSON. A.B. DIVISION OF HUMANITIES Economics RALPH EVANS FREEMAN, M.A., B.Litt. English and Historv HENRY GREENLEAF PEARSON, A.B. Military Science . ' SAMUEL CURTIS VESTAL, Colonel, U.S.A. Modern Languages ERNEST FELIX LANGLEY, Ph.D. FACULTY COUNCIL President Dean of Students Vice-President Director of Division of Industrial Co-operation Dean of Engineering Chairman of Faculty Dean of Architecture Secretary of Faculty Dean of Science Registrar Dean of Graduate Students Heads of Departments and Professional Courses 29 Members of the Corporation 1935- 1936 President Karl Tavlor Compton Secretary Walter Humphreys Vice-President Vannevar Bush Treasurer Horace Savford Ford Edwin Siblev Webster Gerard Swope EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President, Treasurer, Ex Officiis Redfield Proctor Francis Russell Hart Elihu Thomson Abbott Lawrence Lowell Elihu Thomson Charles Augustus Stone Francis Russell Hart William Cameron Forbes Albert Farwell Bemis Edwin Sibley Webster Pierre Samuel duPont Frank Arthur Vanderlip Charles Hayden Charles Thomas Main Harry Johan Carlson LIFE MEMBERS Gerard Swope Arthur Dehon Little Franklin Warren Hobbs William Howard Bovey William Robert Kales Joseph Wright Powell Henry Adams Morss Francis Wright Fabyan John Edward Aldred Frank William Lovejoy Walter Humphreys Victor Macomber Cutter Albert Henry Wiggin John Russell Macomber Alfred Lee Loomis John Jeremiah Pelley Harlow Shapley Alfred Pritchard Sloan, Jr. Charles Neave Franklin Atwood Park Lammot duPont Frank Baldwin Jewett Redfield Proctor Term expires June, 1936 Francis John Chesterman Thomas Charles Desmond Henrv Elwvne Worcester TERM MEMBERS Term expires June, 1938 Louis Shattuck Cates Harold Bours Richmond Hovev Thomas Freeman Term expires June, 1937 Martin Herbert Eisenhart Bradley Dewey Donald Goodrich Robbins Ter n expires June, 1939 James Madison Barker Willis Fleming Harrington W ' illiam Russell Hedge Term expires June, 1940 Arthur Calbraith Dorrance Charles Edward Smith Rufus Eicher Zimmerman REPRESENTATIVES OF THE COMMONWEALTH His Excellency, James Michael Curley, Governor Hon. Arthur Prentice Rugg, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Dr. Pavson Smith, Comnnssioner of Education 30 COURSES CIVIL ENGINEERING 35 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 41 MINING ENGINEERING AND METALLURGY 51 ARCHITECTURE 57 CHEMISTRY 63 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 69 BIOLOGY AND PUBLIC HEALTH 79 PHYSICS 83 GENERAL ENGINEERING 89 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 95 SANITARY ENGINEERING 35 GEOLOGY 105 NAVAL ARCHITECTURE AND MARINE ENGINEERING 109 ELECTROCHEMICAL ENGINEERING 51 BUSINESS AND ENGINEERING ADMINISTRATION 113 AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING 123 BUILDING ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION 129 MATHEMATICS 133 31 John Churchill Austin Class President Message of Senior Class President FOR the Senior, another period in his growth graduallv draws to a close. Our immediate goal — graduation — now in sight, we can well afford to pause and reflect — to take mven- tor % as it were, of our own stock, to appraise our past work and achievement, to eval- uate our new needs, and to attempt an appropriate budget for a future of success and happiness. Looking back over the past four years, we mav see chat a definite gulf has been bridged. From the Freshman who came to the Institute in September 1932 to the Alumnus who steps into the swift moving world of affairs in June 1936, the individual has undergone change; let us hope that such change has been in keeping with the spirit of progress. We came as a group of heterogeneous students with common interests; we have witnessed the growth of the Class through the interlocking of those interests; we have witnessed the growth of the Class through the growth of the individual. Self confidence, decision, maturity, have come as finishing touches; some have tasted the joys and sorrows of leadership and responsibilit} ' ; and withall, we mav step forth into tomorrow with a better set of tools with which to reach our objectives. After graduation — what? Some of us will continue institutional education, some will scatter to the four corners of the earth in the far outposts of industry, some will settle in the routine manner of living; a few will rise to new leadership, some will fall by the wayside, many will join the rank and tile. What lies ahead is exciting, promising, interesting — we must start anew and repeat the growth of the past four vears. If fortune has smiled on us in the past, we have few regrets; if we have been honest in our aspirations and efforts, the present is for the moment satisfactory; if we have an understanding of our own capacities and limitations, we need have no misgivings for the future. Let us look forward, then, to a new success; and, achieving, look backward only to recol- lect the pleasantness which we as the Class of 1936 have had living and learning together. 32 Schipper, HittI, Austin, Worden, Kuryla Class of 1936 OFFICERS President Vice-President John Churchill Austin James Howard Schipper Secretiiry-Treasiirer Robert Elliot Worden Institute Committee Anton Ernst Hittl Michael Alexis Kurvla 33 COURSES I and X I Civil Sugiueer ' mg Sanitary Sngineering THE TRIBOROUGH BRIDGE ONE of the most outstanding projects undertaken by civil engineers in recent years is the building of the Triborough Bridge leading into New York City. Allston Dana, a graduate of Course I in 1908, is the designing engineer on this bridge. In the picture is shown one of the main towers in the process of construction. The original four column plan has been changed to the moree conomical two column type and the work has been rapidly progressing towards its comple- tion, scheduled for 1936. The cost of the bridge ranks second only to the San Francisco Bay bridge, and in size it is exceeded only by the George Washing- ton Suspension Bridge. Connecting the Queens, Bronx and Manhattan, it is expected to become one of the most heavily used arteries into New York. This project is one of the foremost achievements of Civil Engineering, for upon the completion of the span and its roadway approaches, it will represent the largest unified bridge system in the world. COURSES I and XI J. B. Babcock Professor H. K. Barrows Professor T. R. Camp Assoc. Prof. R. W. Carlson Asst. Prof. Charles Blaxey Breed Professor In charge of Course W. M. Fife Assoc. Prof. G. GiLBOY Assoc. Prof. J. W. Howard Assoc. Prof. E. Mirabelli Asst. Prof. J. D. MiTSCH Asst. Prof. D. Peabodv, Jr. Assoc. Prof. 36 COURSES I and XI K. C. Rl-VXOLDS Asst. Prof. G. E. RussELi- Professor C. M. Spofford Professor J. B. Wilbur Asst. Prof. ALDO HECTOR BAGNULO, A ' 1 A Revere, Mass. Course XI Al ; Born April 5, 1914; Prepared at Re- vere High School; Chi Epsilcn (1); Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers (2); Sedge- wick Biological Society (2) Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. FRANK RAYMOND BERMAN Boston, Mass. Course I Born. November 19, 1914; Prepared at Bos- ton Latin School; American Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3, 4); American Society of Military Engineers (3, 4); Varsity Ride Team (4); Benchmark, Business Manager (3.), Menorah Society (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T. C; Entered Freshman Year. CLYDE FRASER CAMERON New Glasgow, Nova Scotia Graduate: Course I Royal Militarv College. JA.MES HENRY CARR, Whitinsville, Mass. Courte 1 JR. Jim ; Born December 25, 1914; Prepared at Northbridge High School; Dorclan (3, 4) . merican Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3), Secretary (4); Freshman Basketball Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Class Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4); Dormitory Com- mittee (2, 3, 4); Benchmark (2); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. ALBERT JOHN DEL FAVERO, IK Meriden, Conn. Course I Del ; Born January 20, 1914; Prepared ai Meridcp High School, American Society of Civil Engineers (1, 2, 3, 4); Catholic Club (2, 3, 4); Benchmark, Circulation Man.iger (3); Technique (2); Entered Sophomore Year. i VINCENT J. DOBROCHOWSKI Rochester, N. Y. Course I V ' ince ; Born September 11, 1913; Pre ired at Benjamin Franklin Junior-Senior High School; American Society of Civil Engineers (1, 3, 4); Society of . merican Military Engineers (3, 4); Freshman Bo. ing Team; Varsity Bo.v;ing Team (2, 4); ' arsity Ritlc Team (4); Benchmark, Photo- graphic Editor; Advanced R.O.T. C; En- tered Freshman Year. 37 COURSES I and XI BERNARD BENJAMIN GORDON Boston, Mass. Course I Bernie ; Born March 19, 1915; Prepared at Boston Latin School; Chi Epsilon (3, 4); American Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3), Treasurer (4); Commuter ' s Club (2); En- tered Freshman Year. GEORGE WILTON HINES Washington, D. C. Graduate; Course XI Father ; Prepared at Howard University; Civil Engineering; B.Sc. in C.E., Howard University; Kappa Mu, Beta Kappa Chi; National Technical Association; Kappa Alpha Psi. ANTON ERNST HITTL Melrose, Mass. Course I Tony ; Born October 8, 1914; Prepared at Melrose High School; Chi Epsilon (3, 4 :; Gridiron (2, 3, 4); Osiris (4); Tau Beta Pi (3), Secretary (4); American Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3, 4); Field Day Mar- shal (4); 3rd Marshall Senior Week; Insti- tute Committee, Executive Committee (4); Curriculum Committee (3, 4); Benchmark, General Manager (3); Tie Tech (1, 2, 3, 4) Managing Editor; Commuter ' s Club (1, 2, 3), Executive Committee (4); Entered Freshman Year. JEREMIAH E. B. JENNINGS Lady Grey, Cape Province, South Africa Graduate; Course I B.Sc, Rand University; South African Society of Engineers: South African Society of Civil Engineers. ANDRE L. JORISSEN Liege, Belgium Graduate; Course I C.E. ' 35, University of Liege, Belgium, Association des Ingenieurs de Liege FRANCIS HENRY LESSARD Brockton, Mass. Course I Frank ; Born April 6, 1914; Prepared at Brockton High School; Dorclan (3, 4 ' , American Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3. 4); Society of American Military Engineers (3, 4); Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); Class Baseball (1, 2, 3, 4); Dormitory Committer (4); Benchmark (2); Technology Christian Association (1, 2, 3); The Tech (1, 2, 3); Advanced R.O.T.C; Agenda (1, 2); En- tered Freshman Year. c-r; - r ., i4ld STANLEY NICHOL LEVITT, I A New York, N. Y. Course I Born December 24. 1914; Prepared at Uni- versity of North Carolina; American Society of Civil Engineers (4); Varsity Tennis Team (4); Entered Junior Year. WILLIAM JULIUS LINDSTROM Georgetown, Conn. Graduate; Course I M.E., Rensselaer Poly. Institute. HENRY CLAY MABIE Jamaica Plain, Mass. Course I Perhaps ; Born November 18, 1910; Pre- pared at Hyde Park High School; American Society of Civil Engineers (3, 4); Bench- mark, Art Editor (3); Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE D. MYLCHREEST, :SX Hartford, Conn. Course I Born May 24, 1912; Prepared at Wesleyan University; American Society of Civil Engineers (3, 4); Entered Junior Year. SETH C. NICKERSON, i MA Hyannis, Mass. Course I Nick ; Born August 16, 1912; Prepared at Barnstable High School; American Society of Civil Engineers (4); Entered Sophomore Year. CARL OLSON, BH Everett, Mass. Course I Born May 27, 1911; Prepared at Everett High School; American Society of Civil Engineers (3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. 38 COURSES I and XI JAMES E. O ' NEII.. JR., OAX laribaulc, Minn. Course I Jim ; Born October II, 1912; Prepared .it Shattuck Military . cadeniy; Gridiron (3, 4); Btnchmark, Circulation Manager (2), Technique (2), Publicity Man.iger (3); Entered Sophomore Year. WILLIAM WALLACE ORRISON San . ntonio, Te. a, ; GrjJuute; Course I B.S. in C.E. ' 34, Texas A. and M. College; Civil Engineering. GEORGE BURTON PAYNE Hamden, Conn. Course I Born April 27, 1914; Prepared at Yale University; Wirsity Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Field Day Tug-of-War (2); Dormitory Committee (4); Entered Sophomore Year. WILLIA.M PRUDENTE East Boston, Mass. Course I Bill ; Born December 28, 1913; Prepared at English High School; .advanced R.O. T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. PAUL HEBERT ROBBINS Gloversville, . . Y. Graduate; Course I B.S. in C.E. ' 35, Syracuse University; Tau Beta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi, Delta Sigma Rho, American Society of Civil Engineers. (;E0RGE ELLIOTT ROBINSON Brockton, Mass. Course I Elliott ; Born December 11, 1914; Pre- pared at Brockton High School; American Society of Civil Engineers (1, 2, 3, 4); Benchmark, Associate Editor (3) Com- muter ' s Club (1, 2j; Tech Union (4); En- tered Freshman Year. GEORGE McGLYNN RYAN Georgetown, Ontario, Canada Course I Glen ; Born November 17, 1914; Pre- pared at Loyola College; American Society of Civil Engineers (3); Enteredjunior Year. WILLIAM AUGUSTINE SHEA Brighton, Mass. Course I Born June 22, 1911; Prepared at Boston Latin School; American Society of Civil Engineers; Catholic Club; Varsity Hockey Team (4); Benchmark; Enteredjunior Year. ARIEL ALTON THOMAS Woonsocket, R. I. Course I . y ; Born June 20, 1914; Prepared at Woonsocket Senior High School; Chi Epsi- lon (3, 4] ; Dorclan Qij; American Society of Civil Engineers (2, 3), President (4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Fresh- man Boxing Team; Field Day Relay (1); . genda ' , 2j; Entered Freshman Year. IRFAN MEHMED TUMER .Ankara, Turkey Graduate: Course I B.S. ' 35, Robert College. HALSEY ANTHONY WEAVER Quincy, Mass. Course I Born August 24, 1913; Prepared at Quincy High School; . ' merican Society of Civil Engineers (3, 4); American Society of Mili- tary Engineers (4 ; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. KHAIRY SAID YAHYABEK Mosu, Irak Graduate; Course I U.S., Robert College. 39 COURSE II tJMechaiiical Sngineering THE COMET AN increasingly familiar sight is this streamlined train, the Comet. This train was built for the New Haven road by the Goodyear Tire and Rub- ber Company. Mr. C. E. Smith, 1900, I, is Vice-President of the New Haven, and Mr. P. W. Litchfield, ' 96, X, is President of Goodyear. Powered bv two four-hundred horsepower Diesels which weigh approxi- mately thirty pounds per horsepower and which drive electric generators, the train uses less than two gallons of oil per mile. It is completely enclosed in a shell of heavy gauge aluminum sheet and embodies many modern engineering innovations, among which are an improved braking system andadesign which, aerodynamically, closely approaches the ideal. By special construction the weight of the train has been considerably decreased and the center of gravity brought some twenty inches nearer the rails. The first light weight streamlined train to be used exxlusively for short distances, it is Httint ' that it should stand as an outstanding achievement in mechanical engineering. COURSE II C. W. Berry Professor E. Buckingham Professor I. H. COWDREY Assoc. Prof. A. . deForest Assoc. Prof. Jerome Clarke Hunsaker Professor hi charge of Course J. J. Eames Assoc. Prof. D. A. Fales Assoc. Prof. C. E. Fuller Professor G. B. Haven Professor A. F. Holmes Assoc. Prof. ]. Holt Asst. Prof. . H. James Assoc. Prof. W . H. Jones Assoc. Prof. 42 COURSE II J. H. Keen AN Assoc. Prof. J. C. Riley Professor E. R SCHWARZ Assoc. Prof. L. S. Smith Assoc Prof. T. Smith Assoc. Prof. C. L. SVENSON Asst. Prof. G. W. SWETT Professor T. H. Tait Assoc. Prof. C. F. Taylor Professor A. L. TOVVNSEND Asst. Prof. G. B. Wilkes Professor J. H. Zimmerman Asst. Prof. 43 COURSE I I RONALD EDWIN BECKMAN Swampscotr. Mass. ■Becky ; Born November 22, 1913; Pre- pared at Swampscott High School; Fresh- man Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3, 4); M.I.T.A.A. (1); Field Day Rela (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM FRED BODE Lawrence, Mass. Bill ; Born December 12, 1912; Prepared at Lawrence High School ;Dorclan (2, 3, 4); . merican Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Catholic Club (4); Freshman Basket- ball Team; Field Day Tug-of-War (2); Class Baseball (2, ' £.; Dormitory Commit- tee (4); Musical Clubs (2 ; Entered Fresh- man Year. JOHN UPHAM BETE Stoughton, Mass. Johnny ; Born November 25, 1914; Pre- pared at Stoughton High School; . merican Society of Mechanical Engineers (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CONST, NT LEO BOUCHA RD Topsfield, Mass. Connie ; Born April 28, 1913; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers (3); Automotive En- gineering Society (4); Catholic Club (2, 4); Class Baseball (1, 2, 3); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. EDW IN ARTHUR BOYAN. Ben Kingston, Pa. Ed ; Born February 17, 1914, Prepared at Wyoming Seminarv; Quadrangle Club (2); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (3); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Society of American Military Engineers (3); Fresh- man Wrestling Team; Varsity Wrestling Team (2, 4); Field Day Marshal; Tech- nology Christian Association (1, 2); Voa Dm (1); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Y ear. RICHARD UPHAM BRYANT Watertown, Mass. Dick ; Born November 13, 1914; Pre- pared at Boston Latin School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1) Automotive Engineering Society (1, 2, 3 4 ; Combined Professional Societies (3, 4) Freshman Track Team; ' arsitv Track Team (2 , Field Dav Tug-of-War (1, 2) Tech Show (3, 4 , Advanced R.O.T.C, Entered Freshman Year. CESAR AUGUSTO CALDERON Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico Born June 4, 1915; Prepared at University High School; American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers (4); Entered Sophomore Year. SIDNEY CORNELL Boston, Mass. Sid , Born September 25, 1914; Prepared at Thayer Academy; Aeronautical Engi- neering Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Swimming Team; arsitv Swimming Team (2); T. E. N., (2); Publicity Man- ager (3); Entered Freshman Year. NORMAN A. COPELAND, :SAE Findlay, Ohio Copey ; Born August 16, 1915; Prepared at Findlay High School; Aeronautical En- gineering Society (2, 3, 4); American Society of Testing Materials (4 ; Varsitv Golf team (3;; M.I.T.. .A. (1, Entered Sophomore Year. HOWARD MILTON COUSINS Eureka, Calif. Graduate . B. ' 33, Stanford University; Air Condi tioning. 44 COURSE II JAMES ROBERT CRAIG, Boll Whicc PLiins. N Y. Jimmie ; Born April 2, 1915: Prepared at White Plains High School, ' arsity Golf Team (4); Freshman Gym Team; Varsity Swimming Team (4 ; Freshman Wrestling Team: Varsitv Wrestling Team (2, 3); Field Dav Football CL 2). T.C.A. (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. HENRY MYERS DOANE Arlington, Mass. Born August 12, 1913; Prepared at . rling- ton High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Varsitv Ritlc Team (3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C., Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM A. CRESSWELL. JR., ■I ' M A Squantum, Mass. Bill , Born November 19, 1913; Prepared at Thayer Academy; Baton (3, 4); Auto- motive Engineering Society (4); Catholic Club (I, 2, 3. 4); Freshman Soccer Team; Freshman Wrestling Team; Musical Clubs Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4); Tech Show (3); En- tered Freshman Year. HARRY T. EASTON, JR., mm Bedford, Ind. T ' ; Born June 8, 1913; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Beaver Key Society (3); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4 ; .Automotive Engineering Society (3); ' arsitv Gym Team, Manager (3); Field Dav Usher (3); Tech Show, Advertising Manager (3), Business Manager (4); En- tered Freshman Year. DOUGLAS AL.MA ELKINS Salt Lake City, Utah Graduate B.S. ' 33, Universitv of Utah; Tau Beta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi; A.S.M.E. LUIS VICTOR EMILIO Salem, Mass. Bus , Born October 14, 1912; Prepared at Chauncv Hall; Automotive Engineering Society (3), Entered Freshman Year. SAMUEL GEORGE ESKIN Boston, Mass. Graduate S.B. ' 26, M.LT.; A.S.M.E. KOBERT STONE GILLETTE, AT Brookline. Mass. Bob ; Born July 7, 1913; Prepared at Albany Academy; Scabbard and Blade; .Automotive Engineering Society; Fresh- man Swimming Team; Field Dav Marshal (3): I.F.C. (3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. BRYANT FOWLER Br.iJford, Mass. Born July 30, 1915; Prepared at Haverhill High School; American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT BRUCE GORDON, HX Rochester, N. Y. Graduate B S. ' 35, University of Rochester, Phi Beta Kappa. 45 COURSE II JAMES WESLEY GRIFFIN Everett, Mass. Jim ; Born September 27, 1912, Prepared at Everett High School; American Societv of Mechanical Engineers (4); Varsity Cross Country (2); Entered Sophomore Year. HERBERT PRESTON HALEY, IIK Albany, Ga. Graduate B.S. ' 33 in Mechanical Engineering, Geor- gia Tech; S.M. ' 35, M.I.T.; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Tau Sigma; S.A.E.; A.S.M.E. DAVID LEE GUNDRY, :SX Rochester, N. Y. Graduate B.S. ' 35, University of Rochester; Phi Beta Kappa; S.A.E.; A.S.M.E. VAN BUREN N. HANSFORD, AKE Harrodsburg, Ky, Graduate S.B. ' 35, Virginia Military Institute; A I E.E. CHARLES NORTON HENSHAW Pittsburgh, N. Y. Graduate B.S. ' 20, University of Vermont; S.M. ' 29, M.I.T.; Phi Beta Kappa; A.S.M.E.; S.P E.E.; Arniv Ordnance Association. A LEO JUDSON KRAMER Boston, Mass. Lee ; Born March 16, 1914; Prepared at Roxhury Memorial High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Army Ordnance Association (3); Voo Don, Editor, Managing Board (1 3, 4); Entered Fresh- man Year. J ROGER EDWARD LeBLANC, i K Manchester, N. H. Beannie ; Born June 3, 1912; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; S.A.E. (4); Freshman Hockey Team, Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3); Entered Fresh- man Year. SHIH TSAN LIU Ning-Kiang-Chiao, Ningpo, China Graduate B.S. ' 33, Chiao-Tung University; M.S. ' 35, University of Michigan; S.A.E. MORRIS LEPES Fall River, Mass. Born July 12, 1914; Prepared at BMC. Dur- fee High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Commuter ' s Club (2. 4); Entered Freshman Year. CHESTER EDWARD MEYER West Med ford, Mass. Chet ; Born February 13, 1915, Prepared at Medford High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Freshman Hocke ' Team; ' arsitv Hockey Team 2, 3, 4}; Tech Show 3, 4}; Entered Freshman Year. 46 COURSE II HAMILTON MIGEL. AKK Pclham Manor, N. Y. ' Ham ; Born May 7, 1912, Prepared ai Colgate University; Americin Society of Mechanical Engineers; Entered junior Year. ALBERT MUSSCHOOT Taunton, Mass. AI ; Born March 29, 1914; Prepared at Taunton High School, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Army Ordnance Association (2, 3. 4), Secretary-Treasurer; Automotive Engineering Society (4); Com- bined Professional Societies (4); Field Dav Tug-of- Var (2;; Musical Clubs (3, 4); Tech Show (3;; Advanced R.O.T.C; En- tered Freshman Year. NORMAN C. MOORE. I ' .MA Springheld, Mass. Norm ; Born February 15, 1912; Prepared at Springfield Technical High School. Beaver Key Society; .Aeronautical Engin- eering Society; Freshman Gym Team; V ' arsity Gym Team (3, 4);T.C.A., Business Manager Hand Book; (3); Entered Fresh- man Year. WILLIAM ORVILLE NICHOLS New Rochelle, N. Y. Nick ; Born January 7, 1914; Prepared at New Rochelle High School; Baton (3, 4); Dorclan (3, 4;; Freshman 150-lb. Crew; Field Day Tug-of-W ' ar (2), Dormitory Com- mittee (4); Institute Committee (4); Musi- cal Clubs (2 Treasurer (3), General Manager (4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Agenda, Entered Freshman Year. HAROLD VINCENT NUTT Boone, Iowa Graduate B.S. ' 32, in Mechanical Engineering, Iowa State College, Phi Kappa Phi; A.S.M.E. M PHILIP LeROY OBER, AKK Brookline, Mass. Born .April 14, 1914, Prepared at Chauncy Hall, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (3), Secrerarv-Treasurer (4); Catholic Club; M.I.T-. .. ., Assistant Treasurer (3); Entered Freshman Year. WILBUR CARTER OLIVER B.iili, Maine Will ' , Bornjanuary II, 1913; Prepared at Chauncv Hall; Entered Freshman Year. JAMES FERGUS PATTERSON Sea CI iff, N. Y. Pat ; Born August 11, 1914; Prepared at Utica Free Academy; Dorclan (4); Tau Beta Pi; Tech Swim Club, Vice-president (3), President (4); Aeronautical Engineer- ing Society (3); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (3), Chairman (4), Combined Professional Societies, Secretary- Treasurer (4); Freshman Swimming Team; Varsity Swimming Team (2, 3 Captain (4), M.I.T.A.A. (4); Field Day Football (1); Class Baseball (3); Membcr-at-Largein Executive Committee of MIT .A . ; Field Dav Marshal (4); EntereJ Freshman Y ' ear. KENNETH ADKINS PACKARD Springfield, Mass. Ken ; Born February 20, 1911; Prepared at Springfield Technical High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Automotive Engineering Society (3); Corporation XV (2); Field Dav Tug-of- War (2): Musical Clubs (1, 2) ' ; Entered Freshman Year. ARTHUR RAY PEEL Quincy, Mass. Art ; Born March 15, 1914; Prepared at Quincy Senior High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (.4); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4 ; Freshman Swimming Team; Field Day Football (2); Technique (I. 2); Tech Show Chorus (3); .Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. 47 COURSE II FR. NCIS S. PETERSON, AKII Fond Du Lac, ft ' isc. Pete ; Born May 14, 1915; Prepared at Fond Du Lac Senior High School; Gridiron (3, 4); Agenda (2 ; Masque (3, 4); Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Automotive Engineering Society (4); Tech Show (2, 3), Chorus Manager (4); Thi Ttch (1, 2), Associate Editor (3); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. LADISLAW REDAY Rockport, Mass. Laddie ; Bora June 22, 1913; Prepared at Roclcport High School; Field Dav Tug-of- War ;i, Tech Show (3); Advanced R.O.- T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. FREDERICK A. PRAHL. JR., Ae New York. N Y Fred ; Born February 19, 1916; Prepared at Dwight School; Masque (3), President (_4); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Automotive Engineering Society (4); Freshman Gym Team; Insti- tute Committee (3); I.F.C. (3, 4); Tech Show Chorus (1, 2), General Manager (3), Cast (4); Entered Freshman Year. PAUL H. RICHARDSON, -tAe Newton, Mass. Born April 19, 1914; Prepared at Newton High School; American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers; Automotive Engineering Societv, Treasurer (4); Field Dav Football (2); tech Show (3); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT H. RITCHINGS, ex Chatham, N. J. GraJuare M.E. 35, Cornell University; A.S.M.E JOHN JAMES ROW AN Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Born November 4, 1912; Prepared at Ecole Polvtechnique; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers ( 4 ; Entered Senior Year. WINTHROP GLOVER SCOTT Belmont, Mass. Scotty ; Born December6, 1913 Prepared at Belmont High School; Automotive Engineering Society C ), Treasurer (3), Chairman (4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Field Day Tug-of-War (2); Tech Show Staff C4); Entered Freshman Year. NATVARLAL RE ' ADAS SHAH Bombay 2, India OraJuart Natvar ; Prepared at St. Xavier ' s; B.Sc, St. Xavier ' s; A.S.M.E. WALTER G. SELVESTROVICH Terry ville. Conn. Wally •; Born May 12, 1914; Prepared at Terry ville High School; Scabbard and Blade (i. 4); American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers (3, 4); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Catholic Club (1, 2, 3), President (4); Radio Societ) ' (2); Freshman Wrestling Team; Field Dav Tug-of-War (1, 2); T.C.A. (1); Commuters Club (3); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM HARRY ' SHEWBRIDGE Dorchester, Mass. Bill ; Born October 3, 1911; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; . merican Society of Mechanical Engineers ii, 4); Catholic Club (1, 2, 4, ; Commuter ' s Club (3); Entered Freshman Year. rx 48 I I COURSE II LEON SIMONS. TAu New York, N. Y. Born September 25. 1910, Prepared at New York University; American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Freshman Track Team; Freshman Wrestling Team; Entered Freshman Year. STANLEY BROOKS SMITH. JR. West Springlteld, Mass. Stan, Esbc ; Born January 4, 1916; Prepared at Springfield Technical High School; Baton (3), President (4); Beaver Key Society (3); Agenda (2); Dorclan (3, 4); Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); Automotive Engineering Society (4); Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); Dormitory Com- mittee (4); Field Day Usher (3 ; Musical Clubs (2), Business Manager (3 ; .Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. PAUL EDWIN SMITH Tucson, . riz. Born October 16, 1908, Prepared at Uni- versity of Ari?ona; Entered Sophomore Year. JAMES THAYER STEWART Roslindale, Mass. Stewey, Jimmie ' ; Born March 27, 1914; Prepared at Mechanic Arts High School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Society American Military Engineers (3, 4); Radio Society (4); Freshman Cross Country Team; Freshman Track Team; Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. KENNETH WARREN SWAIN Hampton Falls, N. H. Ken ; Born August 9, 1913; Prepared ar Chauncy Hall; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers (4); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS ANTHONY TESTA, K Lymansville, R. I. Champ ; Born September 30, 1912; Pre- pared at LaSalle Academy; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); American Societv of Mechanical Engineers (4); Catholic Club (3); Freshman Wrestling Team; Var- sity Wrestling Team (4); Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT PIERCE WILLARD. . T Maiden, Mass, Graduate University of Maine. ROBERT DENNY WATT, rjk Seattle, Wash. Graduate B.S. ' 3 , University of Washington; En- gineering Council; A.S.M.E. TAKEO YASUBA Uenocho Mieken, Japan Graduate Gr.iduate in 1932, Nagoya Institute of Technology. 49 eb-- i ? , .« •j« f ' giijPAMi COURSES III and XIV %J ihiiug 8ngineering and KSMetallnrgy Slectrochemkal Engineering PHELPS DODGE CORPORATION THE business of the Phelps Dodge Corporation, Louis S. Cates, ' 02, III, President, includes the mining, smelting, refining, fabricating, and mar- keting of copper. Some gold and silver are produced as by-products. A vast holding company, the corporation owns mines in Arizona, New Mexico, and Mexico. The illustration shows their Copper Queen mine at Bis- bee, Arizona. In 1908 Phelps Dodge and Company, founded around 1800 by Anson Phelps, one of the pioneering merchants of America, was reorganized to take over Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Company. Other properties have since been acquired, all of which, like the Copper Queen, are names famous in the turbulent historv of copper mining in the United States. With an annual production in normal times of around 100,000short tons of copper, Phelps Dodge ranks among the three largest copper producing com- panies in the world. COURSES III and X I V F. Bitter Assoc. Prof. E. E. BUGBEE Assoc. Prof. F. L. Foster Asst. Prof. C. R. Hayward Assoc. Prof. William Spencer Hutchinson Professor In charge of Course y . O. HoMERBERG Assoc. Prof. C. E. Locke Professor H. T. UxN- Assoc. Prof. F. H. Norton Asst. Prof. J. T. Norton Assoc. Prof. M. DeK. Thompson Professor 52 COIR S !•: S 111 and X I V G. B. Waterhouse Professor I. N. Zavarine Asst. Prof. R. S. Williams Professor FORD M. BOULWARE, i rA San Angelo, Texas Course III Tex, Lem ; Born March 18, 1913; Prepared at New Mexico Military Insti- tute; Beaver Club, Beaver Key Society, Gridiron, Grogo; Scabbard and Blade; Tau Beta Pi; Tech Boat Club; American Society of Military Engineers; Mining Engineering Society; Freshman Heavy Crew; Field Day Football (1, 2); Class Treasurer (1); Elections Committee (3), Chairman (4); Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee (4); Curriculum Committee, Technique (3), Editor-in-Chief (4;, Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. LEWIS GELBERT Boston, Mass. Course III Lew ; Born August 7, 1911; Prepared at Lowell Institute; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); Mining Engineering Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Boxing Team (2. 3, 4); Class Baseball (1. ' 2, 3, 4), Musical Clubs (1); Tech Show, Publicity Manager (3); Commuter ' s Club (4 ' ; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD ROSS CLARK, JR., 2;x Kingston, Pa. Grjduatt; Course III SB. 35, M.I.T.; A. I. ME. 53 COURSES III and XIV JOHN PAUL HAYES, ::. Toledo, Ohio Coursi III Yap ; Born October 24, 1913; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academv; Beaver Club; Beaver Kev Society; Quadrangle Club, Tech Boat Club; Mining Engineering Societv; Heavy Crew, Manager v3 ; MT. T.A.A. (2, 3), Vice-President (4) ' ; Field Day Football (2); Field Day Usher (3); Entered Freshman Year. STANLEY T. JOHNSON. AXA Newton Centre, Mass. Course III Stan ; Born August 7, 1914; Prepared at Newton High School; Beaver Club (3); Quadrangle Club (2}; ' arsitv Club (2. 3, 4): Track Club 3), President (4); Mining Engineering Society (4); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3), Captain (4); Wearer of the T ; MI.T.A.A. (4 . Field Day Relay (1, 2); All Tech Smoker, Elections Committee (2 ; Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4 ' ' :; Institute Com- mittee (1); t.E.N. (1): Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. FELIX STANLEY KLOCK Piedmont, Calif. Course III Born May 9, 1911: Prepared at Northern State Teachers College; Entered Freshman Year. MICHAEL ALEXIS KURYLA, t rA Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico Course III Mike ; Born March 24, 1915; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Beaver Club; Beaver Kev Society, Quadrangle Club, Secretary; Tech Boat Club; Mining Engin- eering Society, Secretary; Varsity Boxing Team (3); Freshman Heavy Crew; Field Day Crew (1); Field Day Tug-of-War, Cap- tain (2), Class President (3); Class Vice- President (2 ; Class Executive Committee (1, 4); Field Day Head Usher; Field Dav Marshal; institute Committee (3, 4); Junior Prom Committee, Chairman; Enter- ed Freshman Year. RICHARD O. LANE Columbus, Ohio Graduate; Course III Bachelor of Ceramics ' 30 Ohio State Uni- versity; American Ceramic Society; Cera- mics. WALTHER H. M. THESIUS, X Chicago, 111. Course III Wally ; Born January 20, 1914; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Beaver Club (3); Mining Engineering Society (4); Varsity Boxing Team (3, 4;; Freshman Tennis Team; ' ar- sity Tennis Team (4); Field Day Tug-of- War (1, 2), Field Day Marshal (4); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN NICHOLAS PAPPAS Lowell, Mass. Course III Charlie ; Born December 19, 1914, Pre- pared at Lowell High School; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN ALFRED PETROSKAS Dorchester, Mass. Course III Born November 26. 1910; Prepared at Mechanic Arts High School; . rmy Ord- nance Association; American Institute Mining and Metalurgical Engineers; Ad- vanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. 54 C OURS K S 11 I and X I V CHARLES F. B. PRICE, JR., OX Quantico, a. Course 111 Charlie ; Bornjune 13, 1914; Prepared at The Manlius School; Society of American Military Engineers (3, 4); Combined Pro- fessional Societies, Chairman (4); Mining Engineering Society (4); Freshman Rille Team; Varsity Rifle Team (2, 3 Captain (4); Field Day Football (1); Field Day- Marshal (4 ' ; Institute Committee (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. MILTON SIDNEY TARNOPOL Cambridge, Mass. GraJuutf; Course III B. Ch. E. ' 32, Northeastern University; American Ceramic Societv; Ceramics. HAROLD ARTHUR BROWN Hampton Falls, N. H. Course XIV Brownie ; Born July 31, 1913, Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Chemical Society (1, 4); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN PAUL HAMILTON Bridgeport, Conn. Course XIV Jack ; Born May 15, 1915; Prepared at Central High School, Dorclan (4); Tau Beta Pi (4y; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3); Fresh- man Soccer Team; Varsity Soccer Team (2, 3), Captain (4); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2); M.I.T.A.A. (4), Field Day Relay (2); Dormitory Committee (4); Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD BOURNE HITCHCOCK Belmont, Mass. Course XIV Dick ; Born June 19, 1915; Prepared at Belmont High School; Varsity Basketball Team (3); Freshman Cross Country, Var- sity Cross Country (2); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3, 4 ' Field Day Relay (1); Commuter ' s Club (1); Entered Freshman Year. MORTON HENRY KANNER, i.VM Lawrence, L. I., N. Y. Course XIV Born October 9, 1915; Prepared at Lawrence High School; Field Dav Football (1); I.F.C. (3, 4); Dramashop {!, ' , Program Manager (2); Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD SEWALL ROBINSON Gloucester, Mass. Course XIV Dick ; Born September 9, 1914; Prepared at Gloucester High School; Entered Fresh- m;in Year. ELLINGTON DIXON WADE, AKII Woonsocket, R 1. Course III Duke ; Born January 15, 1915; Prepared at Manchester High School; Chemical Society (1, 4 ' , Entered Freshman Year. 55 COURSE IV t rchitecture JOHN LAWRENCE MAURAN THE Federal Building in St. Louis is the work of the late John Lawrence Mauran, ' 89, IV, of the architectural firm of Mauran, Russel and Crowell of that citv. At the time of his death, Mr. Mauran was regarded by members of his profession as one of the nation ' s distinguished architects. He was a member of the National Commission of Fine Arts and Vice President of the St. Louis Public Library Board. He served with distinction as Director, then Treasurer, and finally as President of the American Institute of Architects. The chief problem involved in the design of the Federal Building was the successful solution of plans for a ten story structure which would resemble a finished product if onlv six stories were completed. Fortunately the ten stories were authorized before the general contract was let, but the set-back type was adhered to because it was well adapted to site and surroundings. COURSE l F. J. Adams Assr. Prof. L. B. Anderson Asst. Prof. H. L. Beckwith Asst. Prof. H. C. Bradley Assoc. Prof. William Emerson Professor In charge of Course S. A. Breed Assoc. Prof. W. V. Cash Asst. Prof. H. . Gardner Professor A. L. Goodrich Assoc. Prof. J. F. G. GUNTHER Asst. Prof W . H. Lawrence Professor C. H. R. Mabie Asst. Prof. 58 COURSE IV P . Norton Asst. Prof J. L, Ri.iD Asst. Prof. H. L. Seaver Professor E. F. W ATIS Asst. Prof. CHARLES L. AUSTIN, JR., -t K New York, N. Y. Chuck ; Born December 6, 1914; Prepared at Theodore Roosevelt High School Masque (5), President (4); IPC. (3, 4) Dramashop (4, 5); Tech Show 7, 3, 4, 5) Entered Freshman Year. JOHN P. ALLEN Newtonville, Mass. Johnny ; Born May 2, 1913; Prepared at Bellevue High School, Masque (4. 5); Dramashop (4, 5); T.E.N. (4, 5); Tech Show (3, 4, 5); Voo Doo (2, 3); Entered Sophomore Year. WALTER GELVIN BAIN, JR., Buii Sprnigheld, III. Graduate B.A. ' 32, University of Colorado; Sigm Pi Sigma; Alpha Nu. THOMAS L. BLAKEM. N, Al- Gloucester, ' a. Born December 24, 1909; Prepared at St. George ' s School; Freshman Boxing Team; Dramashop (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. H. NG TSUNG CHANG Shanghai, China Course IV Born February 28, 1913; Prepared at St. John Senior High School; Entered unior Year. THO. L S JOKON CHANG Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Grathate B.A. ' 34, B.Arch, ' 34, Universitv of Pennsvlvania. CLARENCE FREDERICK FUNK Brooklitie, M.iss. Clank ; Born December 30, 1913; Pre- pared at Brookline High School; Entered Freshman Year. 59 f COURSE IV BENJAMIN F. LIPPOLD, JR., AKE Middletown, N. Y. Ben ; Born August 25, 1912; Prepared at Middletown High School; Musical Clubs Glee Club (1 , 2, 3); Entered Freshman Year. FREDERICK D. MATHIAS, OH Westmounr, Quebec, Canada Dave ; Born March 2, 1913; Prepared at Ashbury College; Varsity Club (4), Fresh- man Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3), Captain (4); Freshman Lacrosse Team, Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Freshman Soccer Team; Wearer of the T ; LF.C. (4 ; Entered Freshman Year. WALTER F. NOYES, JR., AT J Colebrook, N. H. Fred ; Born September 25, 1912; Prepared at Colebrook Academy; Field Dav Crew (3); I-F.C. (4); T.E.N., Art Editor (4), Entered Sophomore Y ' ear. JAMES JUSTICE SOUDER, 2X Carlisle, Pa. Jim , Born November 26, 1911; Prepared at University of Texas; Archectural So- ciety, Vice-President (4); Combined Pro- fessional Societies (4), Dramashop (1, 2, 5), President (4); Entered Freshman Year. DONALDSON R. McMULLIN, rA Waban, Mass. Born February 16, 1911; Prepared at Uni- versity of V ' irginia, Dramashop (4, 5); Entered Sophomore Y ' ear. PHYLLIS MARIE NEEDHAM Wollaston, Mass. Phil ; Born May 19, 1915; Prepared at Girls ' Latin School; Dramashop (1, 2); Commuter ' s Club (1, 2); Entered Freshman Y ' ear. FRANKLIN P. PARKER, :SX Welleslev Hills, Mass. Frankie ; Born August 13, 1914; Prepared at Welleslev High School; Scabbard and Blade (4); American Society of Civil Engineers (4); Freshman Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3), Captain (4); M. I. T A. A., Treasurer (4); Field Day Relay (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Fresh- man Year. HOWARD ARTHUR TONSAGER Kewanee, 111. Born January 30, 1910; Prepared at Armour Institute; Entered Senior Year. 60 COURSE IV ETHELYN SYLVIA TRIM BEY Glens Falls, N. Y. Born April 17, 1911; Prepared at Glens Falls High School; Dramashop (1, 2, 3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. DEE MARRE VAN COTT, rx Salt Lake City, Utah Van ; Born May 28, 1912; Prepared at University of Utah; Entered Soph omore Year. OA ID ABNER WERBLIN Urooklvn, N. Y. Dave ; Born Ma ' 5, 1915; Prepared at Brooklyn Technical High School; Dorclan (3, 4); American Society of Civil Engineers (4); Freshman Gym Team; Varsity Gym Team (2, 3, 4); Dormitory Committee ( 4); Dramashop (3, 4); T.E.N., Arts Editor (4); Tech Show (3, 4); The Tech, Literary Staff (3, 4); Voo Doo (3), Arts Editor (4); Ad- vanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. KENNETH WESTON WINSOR Boston, Mass, Bud , Born September 22, 1914; Prepared at Huntington School; Beaver Club (3, 4 ; Quadrangle Club, Treasurer (2); Aeronauti- cal Engineering Society (2); Freshman Heavy Crew; Freshman Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3); Varsity Lacrosse Team (4), Field Day Crew (1); Field Day Football (1, 2) ' ; All Tech Smoker (3); Field Day Usher (3); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN ALBERT VALTZ Lynn, Mass, Metzger , Born April 6, 1911, Prepared at St. John ' s Preparatory School; Entered Freshman Year. JULIAN THOMAS C. WARAM, A Stonington, Conn. Tommy ; Born June 18, 1913; Prepared at La Chataigneraie; Gridiron (3); Freshman Soccer Team; Varsity Soccer Team (2, 3); Dramashop (4;; Tech Show (2); Voo Doo (1), Senior Ring Committee (3); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS BEMIS WETMORE Glens Falls, N. Y. Clovis ; Boin December 3, 1912; Pre- pared at Glens Falls High School; Entered Freshman Year. EDWIN B. WORTHEN, JR., MK Lexington, Mass. Ebie ; Born March 31, 1913; Prepared at Lexington High School; Dramashop (4, 5?, Entered Freshman Year. 61 COURSE V Chemistry CHEMILUMINESCENCE THE production of visible light by chemical reaction taking place at or- dinary temperature serves Technique this year as a symbol of chemistry. This picture was taken in an otherwise absolutely dark room by the light evolved from the reaction taking place in the glass jar. A very dilute ice water solution of an organic substance of definitely known structure (3-aminoph- thalhydrazide) is being oxidized by potassium ferricyanide and a trace of hydrogen peroxide. This reaction, although long known, has not hitherto been available to research workers because of the difficulties in obtaining the essential raw material. The substance has now, however, become easily avail- able under the name of Luminol through the work of E. H. Huntress, ' 20, v., L.N. Stanley, ' 32, V., and A. S. Parker, ' 33, X., and is serving as the basis for further research on a study of the mechanism of the reaction. The above picture represents one of the most beautiful and striking experiments known to chemistry and is so simple that it can easily be carried out by anyone. For further information, see Huntress, Stanley and Parker, The Oxidation of Luminol as a Lecture Demonstration of Chemiluminescence, Journal of Chemical Education 77, 142-145 (March 1934). COURSE A. A. Ash DOWN Asst. Prof. J. A. Beattie Assoc. Prof. A. A. Blanch ARD Professor A. R. Davis Asst. Prof. Frederick George Keyes Professor In charge of Course T. L. Davis Assoc. Prof. G. DlETRICHSON Asst. Prof. L. J. Gillespie Professor W. T. Hall Assoc. Prof. L. F. Hamilton Assoc. Prof. L. Harris Asst. Prof. R. C. Hockett Asst. Prof. E. H. Huntress Assoc. Prof. 64 COURSE V N. A. MiLAs Asst. Prof. E. B. Millard Professor A. A. Morton Assoc. Prof. J. F. NORRIS Professor G. ScATCHARD Assoc. Prof. W. C. SCHUMD Professor M. S. Sherrill Professor S. G. Simpson Asst. Prof. C. M. Wareham Asst. Prof. W . R. WUriNi-.v Professor A. G. Woodman Assoc. Prof. R. C. Young Asst. Prof. 65 COURSE V WILLIAM PARKER ANSLOW, JR. Arlington, Mass. Born September 9, 1912 Prepared at Arling- ton High School; T.C. A. .Junior Board (2); Entered Freshman Year. BENJAMIN B. DAYTON, AG Rochester, N. Y. Ben ; Born February 25. 1914. Prepared at West High School; Gridiron (3, 4); Chemical Society (4 , Musical Clubs fl. 2, 3); Tht Tech (1, 2);, Business Service Man- ager (3); Associate Business Manager C4); Entered Freshman Year. HENRY F. HERPERS, JR., ::N Short Hills. N.J. Baron ; Born January 3, 1915; Prepared at Newark Academy; Alpha Chi Sigma (3), Vice-President (4); Combined Profes- sional Societies (1); Mining Engineering Society (4); Voo Doo (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. FREDERICK HOWARD GARTEN Cambridge. Mass. Freddy ; Born July 22, 1913; Prepared at Rindge Technical High; Chemical Societv 1, 2, 3. 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. HARRY M. DONALDSON Cambridge. Mass. Born April 7, 1913; Prepared at Rindge Technical School; Chemical Society (2, 3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (1, 2. 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ALICE THURSTON HUNTER West Roxbury, Mass. Born October 21. 1914: Prepared at Girls ' Latin School; Chemical Society (1, 2, 3). Vice-President (4); Cleofan; Debating Team (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE WILLIAM COLEMAN Watertown, Mass. Gradnjtc B.S. in Chemistry ' 23, Tufts College; American Chemical Society; American Association for the Advancementof Science; American Societv for Metals. WILLIAM F. FALLWELL, JR., UKN Farmville, Va. Graduate B.S. ' 34, Hampden-Svdnev College; Chi Beta Phi. JOSEPH FRANCIS McCLEAN Goshen. N. Y. Born May 22, 1914; Prepared at Middle- town High School, Entered Freshman Year. 66 COURSE V CHARLES ROBERT MILONE. IIKA L ' hrn.lis ilic, Ohio Bud ; Born February 13, 1913; Prepared at Ohio University; Class Baseball (2, 3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. CHARLES L. RAYMOND, |.rA Schenectady, N. Y. Graduate B.S. ' 32, M.S. ' 33, Union College; Sigma Xi; American Chemical Society. CHARLES MARTIN SAFFER, JR. Salem, Mass. Charlie ; Born December 15, 1914; Pre- pared at Salem High School; Freshman Bo.vingTeam; Entered Freshman Year. ARiniR SEDOFF Winthrop, Mass. ■. rt ; Born January 24, 1914; P repared at . rlington High School; Freshman Ride Team, Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT .MOODY SHERNLW, S . Fitchburg, Mass. Bob ; Born May 8, 1914; Prepared at Fitchburg High School; Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4 ; Corporation XV fl); T.C.A. (4); Th, Tech (1); Tech Union (4); Entered Freshman Year. MITCHELL ANDREW SIEMINSKI e« Bedford, .Mass. Siemy ' ; Born January 22, 1914, Prepared at New Bedford High School; Alpha Chi Sigma (4); Catholic Club 3, 4,, Chemical Society (I, 2, 3. 4); Field Day Football (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS EDMUND STAHL Peabodv, .M.iss. Lou ; Born June 20, 1914; Prepared at Tufts College; Class Baseball (2); Menorah Society (3, 4}; Commuter ' s Club (3); En- tered Sophomore Year. DONALD CLARK THOMPSON Springfield, Mass. Don ; Born February 20, 1914; Prepared at Springfield Technical High School; En- tered Freshman Ye.ar. ROBERT VAN PATTEN -STEIGER OH . uburndale, Mass. Van ; Born May 25, 1913; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Varsity Hockey Team (3); Freshman Lacrosse Team, Fresh- man Soccer Team; Entered Freshman Year. 67 COURSE VI Slectrical Sngineer ' nig CONOWINGO DAM SHOWN in rhc illustration is the Conowingo Dam, situated on the Sus- quehanna river on route one, between Philadelphia and Baltimore. This dam was constructed by the Stone and Webster Engineering Corporation, of which Charles A. Stone, ' 88, is the Chairman, and Edwin S. Webster, ' 88, is the Vice-Chairman. They are both graduates of course six. The Conowingo Dam was developed principally to furnish power which will be transmitted over two two-hundred and twenty kv. circuits to the city of Philadelphia and outlying suburbs. The dam, itself, is forty-seven hundred feet long. This includes a spillway twenty-three hundred and sixty feet long, with tifty Stoney gates each of which is twenty-two and one half feet high by forty feet wide. The power plant consists of seven main water wheels. Each unit is con- nected to a three phase, vertical shaft, sixty cycle generator capable of devel- oping forty thousand kilo volt amperes. These generators, working under a rated head of 89 feet, revolve at a speed of 83 r.p.m. One of the most modern and powerful dams in the East, Conowingo is cap- able of developing two-hundred and lifty-two thousand k. w. with all seven water wheels in action. COURSE I T. C. Balsbaugh Assr. Prof. R. D. Bennett Assoc. Prof. Edward Leyburx Moreland Professor In charge oj Course E. L. Bowles Assoc. Prof. S. H. Caldwell Asst. Prof. O. G. C. Dahl Professor H. B. DWIGHT Professor H. E. Edgertox .isst. Prof. R. D. Fay Assoc. Prof. R. H. Frazier Asst. Prof. M. F. Gardner .isst. Prof. T. S. Gray Asst. Prof. E. a. Guillenuk Asst. Prof. 70 C () L R s !•: I H. L. Hazln Asst. Prof R. G. Hudson Professor C. E. Lansil Assoc. Prof. R. R. Lawrence Profasor mt W. y. Lyon Professor P. H. Moon Asst. Prof. W. H. TiNinir. Professor C. E. Tucker Assoc. Prof. R. V. Warner Professor K. L. Wildes Assoc. Prof. L. F. Woodruff Asst. Prof 71 COURSE VI LOUIS FRANCIS ADAMS Boston, Mass. Louie ; Born June 27, 1913; Prepared at Boston English High School; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN AVER, JR. West Medtord, Mass. jack ; Born October 6, 1912; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4}; Com- muter ' s Club (1, 2. 3, 4); Advanced R.O.- T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. MERTON OTTO BAKER Orange, Mass. Mert ; Born May 5, 1905, Prepared at Orange High School; Electrical Engineer- ing Society, Dramashop; Tech Show, Entered Freshman Y ' ear. OLIVER L. ANGEVINE, JR., AH Rochester, N. Y. OIlie ; Born April 28, 1914; Prepared at Monroe High School; Quadrangle Club; Electrical Engineering Society (1, 4); Freshman Soccer Team; Varsitv Soccer Team (2, 3, 4); I.F.C. (3, 4); T.E.N., As- sociate Advertising Manager (1, 2); En- tered Freshman Year. ARTHUR KAY BAKER Nucley, N.J. Art ; Born April 13, 1911; Prepared at Nutlev High School; Electrical Engineering Society (1, 2, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. RUSSELL W. BANDOMER, 2N Springfield, N. J. Russ ; Born May 15, 1914, Prepared at Westfteld High School, Freshman Basket- ball Team, Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. KENNETH L. BLAISDELL, .iT Goffstovvn, N. H. Gracliiiitc B.S. ' 35, University of New Hampshire; Phi Kappa Phi; PhiLambda Phi; A.I.E.E. THOMAS EVERETT BROWN Cohasset, Mass. Browney ; Born October 10, 1914; Pre- pared at Cohasset High School; Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3, 4); Field Dav Relay (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. JACK ALLAN CAMPBELL Fort William, Ontario, Canada Graduate B.A. Sc. ' 35, University of Toronto. LEONARD PEARSON BLAKELY Newburyport, Mass. Lenny ; Born January IS, 1912; Prepared at Newburyport High School; Entered Freshman Y ' ear. ROBERT J. CALDWELL, :iX Kansas Cit ' , Mo. Bob ; Born June 7, 1913; Prepared at Central High School; Electrical Engin- eering Society; Vl-A Nrwj; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Sophomore Year. DANIEL R. CARROLL, AT Dallas, Texas Reynolds ; Born July 24, 1915; Prepared at Sunset High School; Electrical Engineer- ing Society (4); Entered Sophomore Y ' ear. 72 COURSE VI ROBERT W. CLOUD Saugus, Mass. Bob ; Born December 4, 1913; Prepared at University of Denver; Entered Senior Year. BERNARD JOHNSON COSM.VN Nc bur pi)rt, M.iss. Bernie ; Born March 26. 1914; Prepared at Newburyport High School; Entered Freshman Year. ALFRED VANCLEVE DASBURG Taos, New Mexico Al ; Born May 8, 1911, Prepared . Pomona College; Entered Junior Year. JACKSON HANCOCK COOK Lexington, Mass. Born December 15, 1914; Prepared at Lexington High School; Electrical Engin- eering Society; Tht Tab (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. WARREN BAMEN DANNENBERG Somervillc, Mass. Dan ; Born January 10, 1915; Prepared at Revere High School; Electrical Engineer- ing Society (4 ; Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. OSWALD B. FALLS, JR., :;ae Naruna, Va. Obie ; Born April 28, 1913; Prepared at Universitv of Richmond; Entered Junior Year. DANIEL EDWARD FARMER New York-, N. Y. Dan ; Born October 9, 1915; Prepared at .Ml Hallows Preparatory School, Catholic Club (1, 4); Electrical Engineering Society (4); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN MAURICE FLUKE Tacoma, Wash. Graduate B.S. in Electrical Engineering, University of Washington; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E. IMIILH ' JIILIUS GILINSON, JR. Lowell, Mass. Gil : Horn July 28, 1914; Prepared at l.owcll High School, Entered Freshman Year WILLIAM FINGERLE, JR. Port Chester. N. Y. Bill ; Born April 9, 1914, Prepared at New York Military Academy; Pi Tau Pi Sigma (3, 4); Combined Professional So- cieties (4); Electrical Engineering Society (1, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Radio Society (1, 2), President (3, 4); Entered Fresh- man Year. HARRY RUFFIE FOSTER Reading, Mass. Born January 10, 1914; Prepared at Reading High School; ' arsity Fencing Team (2); Freshman Rifle Team; Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. MARTIN ALBERT (;IL L N Hartford, Conn. Gil ; Born March 15, 1915; Prepared at Hartford Public High School; Gridiron (3), Treasurer (4), Masque (3, 4); Pi Tau Pi Sigma, President (3, 4); Scroll 4), Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Electrical Engineering Society f3), Vice-Chairman C4); Freshman Track team; Field Day Marshal (4); T.E.N. (1), Editor (2, 3), Business Manager (4); Tech Show (1, 2, 4), Cast Rehearsals Manager (3); VI-A News, Associate Editor (3); Advanced R.O.T.C. ; Entered Freshman Year. 73 COURSE I GEORGE GR. NT, AH Saginaw, Mich. Chick ; Born November 11, 1914. Pre- pared at The Mohonk School; Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4 ; Freshman 150- Ib. Crew; Voo Doo (1); Entered Freshman Year. CARL ALBIN HEDBERG Denver, Colo. Born October 27, 1913; Prepared at Denver University; Entered Junior Year. CURTIS HILLYER, 2X San Diego, Calif. Curt ; Born August 10, 1912; Prepared at Pomona College; Entered Senior Year. EDWARD S. HALFM.WN New York, N. Y. Ed ; Born June 11, 1914; Prepared at Trinity School; Baton (3, 4); Electrical Engineering Societv (2, 3, 4); Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3), Leader (4 1; Tech Show Cl, 2); Vl-A Ntus (3), Editor (4); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN JOSEPH HIBBERT Medheld, Mass. Johnnv ; Born April 13, 1915; Prepared at Medlield High School; Catholic Club (2, 3, 4 ; Commuters Club (3: 4); Entered Fresh- man Y ' ear. CHARLES HOBSON, BE Richmond, a Charlie ; Born May 7, 1911; Entered lunior Year. IRA ISRAEL HOCHBERG Roxbury, Mass. Sunnv ; Born January 2, 1913; Prepared at Boston Latin; Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT McPHAIL HUNT Walhalla, S. C. Graduatt Bob ; Electrical Engineering. Clemson College ' 35; B.S. Clemson College; M.S. M.I.T.:TauBetaPi;A.I.E.E. DAVID E. KENYON, OX Smithtown Branch, L. I., N . . Graduate A.B. ' 35, Princeton University; A.E.S. TAICHIRO HORI Lodi, Calif. Graduate B.S. ' 35, Universitv of California; Sigma Xi. HENRY CLYDE JOHNSON, :i. E Niagara Falls, N. Y. Born June 18, 1914; Prepared at Niagara Falls High School; Hexalpha (3, 4 ; Pi Tau Pi Sigma (4); Electrical Engineering So- cietv (2, 3, 4); Wrestling, Manager (3); Ml ' .T.A.A. (3); Field Dav Tug-of-War (1, 2); Field Day Usher (3); LF.C. (3, 4); Vl-A Sews, Undergraduate News Editor (3}; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. EARLE AN DYKE KINSMAN Laconia. N. H. Kinsey ; Born March 1, 1914; Prepared at Laconia High School; Entered Freshman Year. 74 COURSE VI PAUL LEBENBAUM, JR. San Francisco, Cilif. Grjtiujtr A.B. ' 34, Scanford University; Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E RICHARD SCRIBNER MABEE, l-K Paterson, N. J. ■Dick ; Born April 16, 1914; Prepared at Central High School, Baton (4); Pi Tau Pi Sigma (3. 4 ; Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4 Musical Clubs (3, 4); T.C.A. (1, 2); ' Tech Show (2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. COPELAND C. MacALLISTER Arlington, Mass. Graduate A.I.E.E. NICHOLAS LEFTHES Salem, Mass. Nick ; Born December 15. 1912; Prepared ai Chauncy Hall; Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4}; Freshman Bo.ving Team; Varsitv Bo.xing Team (2, 4), Captain (3); M.I.TA.A. (3 ; Class Baseball (1); Com- muter ' s Club (4), Entere d Freshman Year. WALTER K. MAC ADAM, .iTA SeaCliir, N. Y. Walt ; Born November 16. 1913; Pre- pared at Chauncy Hall: Hexalpha, ' ice- President (4); Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Catholic Club (1, 4); Combined Professional So- cieties (4); Electrical Engineering Society (3), President (4); I.F.C. (4); T.E.K. Staff (1); Vl-A Nru ' s, Alumni News Editor (3); Associate Editor (3), Business Manager(4); Entered Freshman Year. JOSEPH FRANCIS McCLEAN Goshen, N. Y. Born May 22, 1914; Prepared at Middletown High School; Entered Freshman Year. s BORIS SEMION MAXIMOFF Chicago, III. Max ; Born February IS, 1913; Prepared at Crane Junior College; Electrical En- gineering Society (2); Radio Society (2); Dramashop (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; En- tered Sophomore Year. THEODORE N. MITROPOULOS Cambridge, Mass. Teddy, Met ; Born November 21, 1913; Prepared at Rindge Technical School; Entered Freshman Year. THOMAS PHILIP NORTON Salem, Mass Phil , Born July 2, 1915, Prep-ired at Salem Fligh School; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3 4 ; Electrical Engineering Society (4) arsity Boxing Team (2, 3). Captain (4) Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM HERBERT METTEN Boston, Mass. Born August 2, 1911, Prepared at Everett High School; Entered Freshman Year. HANNAH CHAPIN MOODEY Plainfield, N.J. Born August 6, 1906; Prepared at Smith College; Entered Junior Y ear. ROBERT MILLER OSBORN, MU Denver, Colo. Gratiitate B.S. ' 35, University of Colorado; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E.; Electrical Engineering So- ciety. 75 COURSE I MICHAEL PASKOWSKI Salem, Mass. ■•-Mike ; Born November 25, 1911; Pre- pared at Salem High School; Electrical Engineering Soaety i 4 ; Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. HARRY TOBIAS PEKIN Salem, Mass. Born November 20, 1910; Prepared at Lowell Institute ; Electrical Engineering Society (3); Entered Freshman Year. LAWRENCE GRAM PETERSON Boston. Mass. Pete ; Born October 24, 1914; Prepared at Boston English High School; Electrical Engineering Society C3, 4 ; Freshman Rifle Team; ' arsity Rifle Team 2, 3, 4); Field Dav Tug-of-War (1, 2 ; Commuter ' s Club 3, 4 ; Entered Freshman Year. RICH. RD K. P. TTERSON Oilman, t Born November 2. 1914; Prepared at Lan- caster Academy; Entered Senior Year. ARNOLD PERGUSTAF PETERSON Toledo, Ohio Graduate B. of Eng. ' 34, University of Toledo; Sigma Xi, Associate; A.I.E.E.; I.R.E FR. NK LINCOLN PHILLIPS, exx Springfield, N. J. Born February 12, 1915; Prepared at Sum- rait High School; Tau Beta Pi; Tech Boat Club 3, 4 ; Electrical Engineering Societ ' ; Freshman 150-lb- Crew; Varsitv 150-lb. Crew (3, 4); Field Dav Crew ' Xr, Field Dav Marshal (4); LF.C; T.C.A (1, 2, 3), Treasurer (4); Tech Show (1 , 2); VI- A Seus C3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CHARLES J. COB RIFE Lemoyne, Pa. Charlie ; Born March 14, 1914; Prepared at Lemoyne High School; Combined Pro- fessional Societies C4); Electrical Engineer- ing Societv (2, 3 , Treasurer (4); Th: Tech (2, 3); VI-A Nfui y. Editor C4); Entered Sophomore Year. MORGAN COFFIN RULON, AT Phoenixville, Pa. Beanie ; Born November 16, 1914; Pre- pared at William Penn Charter School; Electrical Engineering Society ' 4}; Fresh- man Squash Team; Varsitv Squash Team (3, 4 ; Field Day Tug-of-War (l); Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM ROBERT SAY ' LOR Newark , N . j . Bill ; Born November 2S, 1913; Prepared at South Side High School; Dorclan i y, Hexalpha ;3 ' , President C4}; Tau Beta Pi (4); Electrical Engineering Society (3 , Secretary (4}; Field Day Tug-of-War (1); Class Executive Committee (2 ; Dormitory Committee (4 ); Institute Committee (2); Musical Clubs (3); VIA Neus (3, 4); En- tered Freshman Year. LUIGI L. ROBIN ' ETT, JR., ZK Bayside, N. Y. Lu ; Born March 7, 1914; Prepared at Manhasset High School; Electrical Engin- eering Society; Varsity Lacrosse Team, Manager (3 ; Field Day Usher (3 ; Entered Freshman Year. MAX ROBERT SASLAW Boston. Mass. Sas ; Born January 23, 1915; Prepared at Maiden High School; Entered Freshman Year. HERM. N SCH. EVITZ, K A Camden, N. J. Graduate B.S. ' 35, Drexel Institute; A.I.E.E.; Insti- tute of Radio Engineers. 76 C O L R s i: I MORRIS SORKIN Chicigo, III. Born Niarch 5. 1911; Prepared at Crane Technical High School; Electrical Engin- eering Society; Radio Society; Entere l Junior Year. RAV.MONU CARL SVENSON Naugatuck, Conn. ' Sven ' , Born December 28, 1909, Prepared at Naugatuck High School; Dorclan (3, 4); Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team; Field Day Relay (2); Dormitory Committee, Secretary (4); Entered Fresh man Year. BENIGNO RAMON SOUZA Havana, Cuba Born August 21, 1913; Prepare! at Colegio de la Salle; Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD TARGONSKI Syracuse, N. Y. Ed ; Born December 22, 1912; Prepared at Syracuse Central High School; Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4); Advanced R O.T.C. Radio Society (4); Entered Sophomore Year. GEORGE HOWARD TEMPLE, JR. Amesbury, Mass. Deac ; Born November 23, 1913; Pre- pared at New Hampton; Electrical Engin- eering Society (1, 4): Entered Freshman Year. ROMAN IRODIAN ULANS, K Northampton, Pa. Bret ; Born April 21, 1914; Prepared at Wyoming Seminary; Catholic Club (1. 2, 4); Electrical Engineering Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; I.F.C. (3, 4); Voo Dpi (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C, En- tered Freshman Year. MI LNER WESTON WALLACE, rA Lafayette, Ind. Wally ; Born February 23, 1914; Pre- pared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Electri- cal Engineering Society (3. 4 ; Entered Freshman Year. PETER WHITE Highland Park, 111. Pete ; Born March 12, 1914; Prepared at Deerheld Shields High School; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3), Treasurer (4); Electrical Engineering Society (4); Freshman Swim- ming Team; Varsity Swimming Team (2, 3, 4); Tech Swim Club; VI-A Newr, Alumni Editor; Advanced R.O.T.C; En- tered Freshman Year. HENRY RICHARD WILSEY, AKII Upper Montclair, N.J. Dick ; Born October 26, 1914; Prepared at Montclair High School, Electrical Engineering Society (4); Radio Society (1); Field Day Football (2); Entered Freshman Year. THOMAS NORMAN WILLCOX Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Norm ; Born September 14, 1914; Pre pared at Hasbrouck Heights High School Hexalpha (4); Quadrangle Club (1, 2) Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Tech Boat Club (2, 3, 4) Electrical Engineering Society (3, 4) Freshman Heavy Crew; Field Day Crew (2) VI-A News, Circulation Manager, Specia News Editor (4); Entered Freshman Year. lEU-LIANG WU Shanghai, China Billy ; Born September, 1912; Prepared at St. John ' s Middle School; Dorclan (4); Tau Beta Pi (4); ' arsity Basketball Team (4); Varsity Soccer Team (4 ; Dormitorv Committee (4); Entered Junior Year. 77 COURSE VII Biology ' and Tublk Health RAT LABORATORY THE value of chlorophyll as an anemia preventive has recently been con- vincingly demonstrated by the research of Dr. Robert Harris, course VII, ' 28. The similarity between the nucleus of the green plant pigment, chloro- phyll, and the red animal pigment, hemoglobin, has long been noted, and the experimental application of this fact in the rat laboratory has led to many in- teresting conclusions. After pulverizing several hundred pounds of dried spinach, the chlor- ophyll was extracted by solvents and purified by selective adsorption and re- precipitation. A group of metal salts was then prepared. These salts, along with certain derivatives, were found to cure experimental anemia, even with- out the presence of iron which has heretofore been considered essential to a cure. Dr. Harris also has shown that the amount of iron needed in the accepted cure for anemia, which consists in the addition of iron and copper to the diet, can be considerably decreased by the addition of chlorophyll. This indicates that iron and chlorophyll are mutual catalysts and that nutritional anemia will probablv be cured or prevented, in the future, by a preparation containing both iron and chlorophyll which has been extracted from plant tissues. COURSE I I C. H. Blake Asst. Prof. J. W. M. Bunker Professor M. P. HORWOOD Assoc. Prof. Samuel Gate Prescott Professor hi charge of Course M. W. Jennison Asst. Prof. B. E. Proctor Asst. Prof. C. E. Turner Professor J. W. Williams Asst. Prof. JAMES LOUIS ABDOU Boston, Mass. Jimmy ; Born February 27, 1911; Sedge- wick Biological Society (2, 3), President (4); Entered Freshman Year. MELVIN WILLIAM FIRST Boston, Mass. Mel ; Born December 23, 1914; Prepared at Boston English High School; Sedgewick Biological Society 3 4 ; Freshman Wrestling Team; Entered Freshman Year. 80 COURSE I I STANLEY M. FREEDMAN, lAM Brooklinc, Mass. Stan ; Born July 5, 1914; Prepared at Chauncy Hall, Gridiron (2, 3, 43; Sedge- w ick Biological Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Fresh- man Boxing Team; ' arsitv Boxing Team 2, 3, 4 ; Field Dav Football (1, 2); Class Basebali (1, 2); Voo Doo (1, 2), Circulation Manager (3); Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM ANDREW HEALY Brookline, Mass. Bill ; Born December 1, 1912; Prepared at Chauncv Hall, Sedgewick Biological So- ciety (3); Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS JOSEPH PROULX, JR. Marblehead, Mass. Lou ; Born August 9, 1914: Prepared at Marblehead High School; Catholic Club (2); Combined Professional Societies (4); Sedgewick Biological Society (2, 3), Treasurer (4); Entered Freshman Year. STANLEY LEONARD ROBBINS Boston, Mass. Stan ; Born February 27, 1915; Prep.ired at Brookline High School; Sedgewick Biological Society (2, 3, 4); Freshman Squash Team; Entered Freshman Year. EDMUND CLARK KNIGHT New ' burvport, Mass. Ed ; Born Julv 23, 1914; Prepared at N ' ewburvport High School; Sedgewick Biological Society, Secretary (4); Class Baseball (4); Entered Freshman Year. NATHAN H. SANDERSON, JR. Waltham, Mass. Born November 3, 1899; Prepared at Wal- tham High School; Entered .Junior Year. RALPH M. NKOWICH Waltham, Mass. Born March 29, 1916; Prepared at Waltham High School; Sedgewick Biological So- ciety (2, 3, 4); Commuter ' s Club; Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD LOWELL PRATT, -t-BE Great Barrington, Mass. Ed ; Born December 19, 1913; Prepared at Peddie School; Tech Boat Club (3. 4); junior Varsity Crew (2, 3); Field Dav Crew (1); Dramashop, Treasurer, Business Manager (2, 3); The Tech (2); Entered Freshman Year. KATHLEEN VIRGINIA SHOTT Fall River, Mass. Kay ; Born January 27, 1916; Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School; Catholic Club (2, 3); Chemical Society (2, 3, 4); Sedgewick Biological Society (4); Drama- shop (2, 3, 4), Commuter ' s Club (2); En- tered Freshman Year. WILLIAM A. STEINHUR.ST Dorchester, Mass. Bill ; Born April 12, 1913; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; Masque (3, 4); Sedgewick Biological Society (3), Vice- President (4), Freshman I ' jO-lb. Crew; Tech Show (2, 3), Costume Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. LEONARD SYDNEY STOLOFF Dorchester, Mass. Lennie ; Born March 24, 1915; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; Sedgewick Biological Society (1, 3, 4); Freshman Hockey Team, Class Baseball (1, 2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. P J STANLEY BURR .STOLZ, luill New Rochelle, N. Y. Stan ; Born November 5, 1914; Prepared at New Rochelle High School; Sedgewick Biological Society (3); Benchmark, Editor- in-Chief (2); Entereti Sophomore Year. 81 I •.:; .:t i.:- COURSE VIII 1 B Tbysks WILLIAM DAVID COOLIDGE THE hrst experimental models of the hot-cathode, high vacuum X-ray tube were made late in 1912 and early in 1913, and the first public demon- stration took place in New York in December of 1913. In the illustration is shown one of the earlier forms of the type of tube invented by Dr. William D. Coolidge, ' 96, VI. The substitution of the new tube for the older cathode ray type was de- layed by the fact that its electrical characteristics were such as to necessitate changes in the high voltage generating equipment in use at the time. One of its first commercial applications was in a portable X-ray outfit used by the U. S. Medical Corps during the War. Operated with voltages ranging from a few thousand to a million volts, X-ray tubes are now to he found in a large variety of sizes and used for many different purposes. The onl v limiting factor there seems to be to the amount of energy capable of being produced in a tube of this type is the heat which it is possible to remove from the anode. One has only to think of the use made of the X-ray tube in the medical science alone to realize what a fundamental development it has been. COURSE I I I V. p. Allis Asst. Prof. J. C. BovcE Asst. Prof. R. D. Evans Assr. Prof. N. H. Frank Assr. Prof. John Clarke Slater Professor In charge of Course H. M. Goodwin Professor G. R. Harrison Professor A. C. Hardy Professor P. McC. Morse Assoc. Prof. H. Mueller Asst. Prof. C. L. Norton Professor 84 C O L R S F. I I I W . B. Nottingham Asst. Prof. N. C. Page Professor E. G. RUDBERG Asst. Prof. F. W. Sears Asst. Prof. D. C. Stockbarger Asst. Prof. J. A. Stratton Asst. Prof. M. S. Vallarta Assoc. Prof. R. J. ' an deGraai-f Assoc. Prof. v:i ' B. E. Warren Assoc. Prof. J. C. G. WULFF Asst. Prof. 85 COURSE VIII WILLIAM EDWARD ABBOTT, t rji Winchester, Mass. Bill ; Born January 18, 1915; Prepared at Winchester High School; Advanced R.O.- T.C.; Entered Sophomore Year. ARTHUR MORDECAI COHEN, B.i New Rochelle, N. Y. Art , Born September II, 1914; Prepared at New Rochelle High School, Physical Society (2, 3, 4); Radio Society (1, 2, 3); Entered Freshman Year. LEONARD PARKER COHEN Fall River, Mass. Born March 30. 1914; Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School; Physical Society (2, 3, 4), Freshman Squash Team; Entered Freshman Year. MILTON BURNETT DOBRIN Pittsburgh, Pa. Born April 7, 1915; Prepared at Schenley High School; Chemical Society (1); Physi- cal Society (2, 3, 4); Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); Curriculum Committee (3, 4); Musi- cal Club (4); T.E.N. (2); Thi Tab (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CHARLES HUNTINGTON EVANS Haverhill, Mass, Charlie ; Born July 22, 1914, Prepared at Haverhill High School; Combined Profes- sional Societies (3, 4); Physical Society (2, 3), President (4); Freshman Rifle Team; Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. WAYNE ESKETT HAZEN Three Rivers, Mich. Born Februar y 8, 1914; Prepared at Three Rivers High School; Physical Society (3, 4); Freshman Track Team; Field Day Relay (1, 2); Musical Clubs (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CARLYLE WILLIAM JACOB Lynn, Mass. Carl ; Born February 10, 1915; Prepared at Classical High School; Physical Society (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. GRANDVILLE R. JONES, JR., AKE Mendon, Mass. Granny ; Born October 12, 1911; Pre- pared at Boston College; Catholic Club (3); Physical Society (3, 4); Entered Junior Year. 86 COURSE I I I BUSHNELL DARBY MERRILL P«cc- D.ilt. R, 1. Born IX-cembcr 15, 1913; Prepared at St. George ' s School; Physical Society; Society of American Military Engineers; Field Dav Football (1, 2}; Advanced R.O.T.C; En- tered Freshman Year. CARL G. SONTHEIMER, X.WI New York, N. Y. Born May 14, 1914; Prepared at Lycce Carrot, Paris; Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD FREEM.W MORTON RoslinJ.ile, .M.iss. ' Dick ; Born August S, 1914; Prepared at Roxbury Latin School; Physical Society (2, 3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Field Day Tug-of- War (2), Captain (1); Commuter ' s Club (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Fresh- man Year. SIDNEY SPEIL Roslindale. Mass. Sid ; Born February 21, 1917; Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin School, Com- bined Professional Societies (3, 4); Physical Society (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. HAROLD THOMAS S.MVTH Lisburn, Northern Ireland Graduate M.Sc, Queen ' s University, Belfast; Sigma Xi; American Physical Society. LEA HIBBARD SPRING, L ' X Crookston, Minn. Hibbie ; Born March 6, 1915; Prepared at Crookston Central High School; Grogo ' ' 3, 4); Physical Society (3, 4); Field Dav Football (l, 2); Field ' Day Marshal (4); Technique (2), Advertising Manager (3), Business Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. CH. RLES SAMUEL SUTTON Wilmington, Del. Graduate B.S. ' 35; Sigma Xi. CARL BENJAMIN WHITE Cambridge, Mass. Whitey ; Born June 29, 1914; Prepared at Tilton School; Physical Society (3, 4); Class Executive Committee (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CLINTON JONES T. YOUNG Lawrence, Kans. Graduate B.A. ' 32, University of Kansas. 87 COURSE IX Qeiieral engineering LENS GRINDING FOR 103 years the American Optical Company, of which Channing M. Wells, ' 92, IX is president, has engaged in the manufacture of devices to aid and preserve vision. The AO factories atSouthbridge, Massachusetts are the largest in the world devoted exclusivelv to the manufacture of ophthalmic instruments. Here, internationally known scientists, skilled optical craftsmen and technicians combine their talents to produce the instruments used to de- termine ocular defects, the lenses to correct these defects, the special machines to produce the lenses, and the frames and mountings to hold the lenses before the eves. The illustration shows a lens grinding and polishing machine of the kind used in making spectacle lenses. Rough lenses are ground on this mount with varying grades of emery until they reach the required thickness. They are then polished by a similar process with rouge. This is but one of the manv intricate steps through which optical glass must pass before it is transformed into an aid for better vision. COURSE IX Ralph Gortox Hudson Professor In charge of Course i.4tbi JOHN CHURCHILL AUSTIN, Ben Spokane, Wash. Jack ; Born October 19, 1914; Prepared at Lewis and Clark High School; Beaver Club C3, C; Gridiron 3 Vice-President (4); Grogo C3, 4 ; Masque C-. 3. 4 ; Osiris (4); Scabbard and Blade 3, 4 ; Tau Beta Pi (4); Freshman Gym Team; Field Day Tug-of- War (Jl; Class President C4); Class Execu- tive Committee (4 ; Field Dav Usher (3?; Field Day Marshal 4 ; Institute Commit- tee (2, 3), President 4 ; Junior Prom Com- mittee (3 ; Technique Staff 1, 2;, Circula- tion Manager (3); Tech Show Staff 1), Treasurer (2); Advanced R.O.T.C., Entered Freshman Year. EVERETT H. CARGEN. JR., ATA Belmont, Mass. Born July 12, 1915; Prepared at Belmont High School; Beaver Club 3); Gridiron ' 2, 3, 4 ; Osiris ;4, ; Corporation XV (2,3), Nlember Board of Directors; Freshman Swimming Team; All Tech Smokei 4); Field Day Usher (3}, Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee C4); Uoo Doa Staff (1, 2), Advertising Manager (3), General NIanager (4); Commuter ' s Club, Member Board of Directors (2); Advanced R.O.T.C. ; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM G. NNETT CR. GIN Hartford, Conn. Bill ; Born August 22, 1911; Prepared at Phillips E.xeter Academv; Corporation XV ;2, 3, 4); Til Tech C3); Uoo Doo (4); Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM B. BECKWITH, AT Guilford, Conn. Slim ; Born October 17, 1911; Prepared at ew Haven Preparatorv School; Baton 3, 4); Tech Boat Club 3. 4, ; Freshman 150-lb. Crew; Varsitv 150-lb. Crew 3, 4 ' ; Field Day Crew (2) ; Musical Clubs (2, 3, 4] Entered Freshman Year. HENRY CHRISTENSEN, JR., i;N Jersey City, N.J. Bom September 6, 1915; Prepared at Peddie School; Scabbard and Blade, Captain (3); ' arsity Soccer Team, Manager (3); Fresh- man Wrestling Team; M.I.T.. .. . (3); Field Dav Football (2); Musical Clubs C3, 4); Techxique (1); Entered Freshman Year. JACOB HIRSCH FLEDEL-BECK Rozwadow, Poland Bom January 9, 1907; Prepared at Tar- buth Gimnazium; Entered Freshman Year. 90 COURSE IX WILLARD P. GREENWOOD, ( X G. rJner, M.iss. ■Bill ; Born October 16, 1912, Prepared at Worcester Academy, Sedgewick Biological Society (3, 4); Glee Club (3, 4); Entered Junior Year. JAMES HENRY GROVE, X St. Louis, Mo. Jim ; Born December 27, 1913; Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School; Entered Freshman Year. LYMAN PROCTER HILL Ridgewood, N. J. Lem , Born November 15, 1914; Prepared at Ridgewood High School; Chemical Society ' 1. 4 ,; Field Day Football (1); Musical Clubs (1); T.E.N. (1); Entered Freshman Year. . L RSHALL M. HOLCO.MBE, AKE Chevy Chase, Md. Mai ; Born September 24, 1914; Prepared at St. Albans; American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers (3, 4); Varsity Fencing Team Manager (3); M.LT.A.A. (3 ); Field Day Usher (3); I.F.C. (2, 3, 4); Entered Fresh- man Year. HARLAN FLINT HUBB. RD Lebanon, N ' H Shorty ; Born February 16, 1913; Pre- pared at University of New Hampshire; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); Junior Varsity Crew (3j, Varsity Rifle Team (3); Field Day Crew (2 ; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. THONL .S LEE JOHNSON, JR., A Cambridge, Mass. Tommy ; Born March 2, 1914; Prepared at St. George ' s School; Beaver Club; Tech Boat Club; Freshman Heavy Crew; Junior Varsity Crew (2); Field Day Crew (1); .Ml Tech Smoker; Field Day Marshal; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIA.M HA.MILTON HOPE, JR. Weston, Mass. Bill ; Born March 3, 1914, Prepared at Weston High School; Tech Swim Club, Secretary i, 3). Treasurer (4); Freshman Swimming Team; Varsity Swimming Team (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. RUFUS PHILIP ISAACS New York, N. Y. Rufe ; Born June 11, 1914; Prepared at Franklin School; Gridiron; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Radio Society (1); Dramashop (3, 4); Tect Show, Author (4); Voo Doo Staff (2), Literary Editor (3, 4); Enter ed Freshman Year. SE.VION EMIL KNUDSEN, AT Detroit, Mich. Bunk , Born October 2, 1912; Prepared at Detroit Country Day School; .Automotive Engineering Society (3, 4); Entered Fresh- man Year. 91 COURSE IX ROGER ALL. N KREY Tuftonboro, N. H. Rog ; Born March 17. 1914; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Aodover; Entered Fresh- man Year. JACQUES K. LAFLAM.ME, i:x Montreal, Quebec, Canada Jakes ; Born January 26, 1912; Prepared Loyola College; Chemical Society (4); Entered Sophomore Year. JEAN LOUIS LE.MAN, er Montreal, Canada Born January IS, 1912; Prepared atChauncy Hall; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3, ; Fresh- man Lacrosse Team, Captain; Freshman Squash Team; ' arsity Squash Team (4}; Entered Freshman Year. SAMUEL JASPER LORING Cincinnati, Ohio Sam ; Born July 24, 1914; Prepared at Walnut Hills High School; .American Society of Civil Engineers (4 ' ; Freshman Cross Country Team; Voo Don (1 ; Tech Union (4); Entered Freshman Year. JOSEPH STEVENS LUKESH Garden City, X. Y. Joe ; Born January 10, 1915; Prepared at Lincoln High School; Entered Junior Year. SPENCER HOUGHTON MIER. S Detroit, Mich. Born June 1, 1915; Prepared at Cranbrook School; Entered Freshman Year. THOMAS PALL NELLIGAN. E Cambridge, Mass. Tom ; Born August 8, 1913; Prepared at Chauncv Hail; Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD LAURENCE ODIORNE Roslindale, Mass. Dick ; Born March S, 1914; Prepared at Boston Latin School; Beaver Key Society; Gridiron (3, 4 ; Osiris (4;; Tit Tick, re- porter Cl , Staff Assistant (2), Features Editor ,3 , Editor ' 4 ; Commuter ' s Club (3, 4}; Entered Freshman Year. 92 COURSE IX CHARLES WALTER PARCE, -IK Berkeley, Calif. Charlie ; Born October 24, 1912; Pre- pared at University of California; Drama- shop (3); Musical Clubs (3); Entered Junior Year. SCOTT C. RETHORST, OX Piedmont, Calif. Scotty ; Born October 18, 1Q14; Prepared at Rapid City High School; Beaver Club (3); Beaver Key Society (3}, President (4 ; Gridiron (2, 3. 4); Osiris (4}; Quadrangle Club (1, 2); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Chemical Engineering So(!iety (2, 3); Corporation XV (4); Freshman 150-lb. Crew; Varsity 150-lb. Crew (2); Freshman Swimming Team; Freshman Tennis Team ' arsltv Tennis Team [2 ' ' , Captain (3, 4) M.I.T:A.A. (3, 4); Field Day Crew (2) Field Day Tug-of-War (1); Class Executive Committee (1); Budget Committee (3); Field Dav Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); Freshman Rules Committee (4); I.F.C. (2, 3), Chairman (4); T.E.N. (1), Advertis- ing Manager (2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN CLEM ROWELL Mimico, Ontario Born September 30, 1913; Prepared at Mimico High School; Freshman Boxing Team; Freshman Hockey Team; Entered Freshman Year. EDGAR CARTER RUST. JR., A Chestnut Hill, .M.isi. Bud ; Born October 19, 1913, Prepared at Noble and Greenough School; Freshman Cross Country; Freshman Track Team; Field Day Relay (1); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN VOORHEES SHARP Morristown, N.J. J. v. ; Born September 25, 1913; Prepared at Morristown High School; Physical Society (3); Freshman Gvm Team; Field Dav Football (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 4); T.C.A. (1, 4); ni Tech (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. DONALD C. SPENCER, t rA Boulder, Colo. Spence ' ; Born April 25, 1912; Prepared at University of Colorado. Phi Beta Kappa; Aeronautical Engineering Society O); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Entered Junior Year. ELMER H. SUMMERSGILL, OX Garden City, N. V. Hib ; Born September 13, 1913, Prepared at Mount Hermon School; Gridiron (3, 4); Scroll (3, 4); Chemical Engineering Society (3 ; Mining Engineering Societv (4); Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); T.E.N. (1,2), . ' dvertising Manager (3); Entered Fresh- man Year. LEE PRESCOTT TOLMAN, IN Wollaston, M.iss. Lee ; Born June 7, 1914; Prepared at Kew Forest School; . dvancfd R.O.T.C; Ameri- can Society for Metals; Entered Freshman Year. 93 COURSE X Chemical Sugiueering PETROLEUM CRACKING UNIT THE world ' s largest cracking unit converts crude oil directly into finished gasoline, kerosene, and fuel oils. This night view shows the complete petroleum refinery of Pan American centered in a single efficient combination of furnaces, pumps and fractionat- ing towers. Located at Texas City, near Galveston, and close to important centers of crude oil production, it supplies five million barrels of gasoline an- nually for the American Oil Co. Institute men had a prominent part in this development— the list including P. C. Keith, ' 22, XIV, J. K. Roberts, ' 28, X, S. M., Walter G. Whitman, ' 17, X, and Robert E. Wilson, ' 16, X. The furnaces arc fired with gas resulting from the cracking operation and consume the equivalent of over four hundred tons of coal daily. This refinerv, finished in 1934, will shortly be doubled in capacity by the completion of a duplicate unit. COURSE X F. . Adams Asst. Prof. C. M. Cooper Asst. Prof. Walter Gordon Whitman Professor In chjrge of Course E. A. Hauser Assoc. Prof. R. L. Hershey Asst. Prof. H. C. HOTTEL Assoc. Prof. W. K. Lewis Professor W. H. McAd.vms Professor C. S. Robinson Assoc. Prof. T. K. Sherwood Assoc. Prof. H . C. Weber Assoc. Prof. 96 COURSE X M; JOHN MOORE ANDREAS West Englewood, N. J. GrjJuare B.S. ' 35, Princeton University; Phi Beta Kapp.i. HOWARD L. ANDERSON, JR., _ KK Gary, Ind. Andy ; Born September 17, 1914; Pre- pared at Phillips Academy, Andover; Entered Freshman Year. FREDERICK F. ASSMANN, OH Short Hills. N.J. Born October 16, 1915; Prepared at Mill- burn High School; Entered Freshman Year. JA.MES BURNELL ALLEN, 2;x Kansas City, Mo. Jim ; Born April 15, 1914; Prepared at Kansas City Junior College; Alpha Chi Sigma (2, 3, V; Beaver Key Society (3); Grogo C3), Chemical Society (4); I.F.C. (4); Technique (1, 2), Photograph Manager (3); Entered Freshman Year. JAMES GOLLADAY BAKER, Ki; Madisonville, Ky. Jim : Born January 4, 1914; Prepared at Vanderbilt University; Chemical Society (4), Varsity Lacrosse Team, Assistant Manager (2); Entered Sophomore Year. HERBERT .MOWRY BORDEN Taunton, Mass. Born November 20, 1914; Prepared at Taunton High School; Alpha Chi Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Armv Ordnance Association (2, 3), President C4); Chemical Societv (1, 2, 3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Freshman Heavy Crew; Field Dav Tug-of- Var (2j; Dormitory Commit- tee (4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. SIDNEY BAU.M Newark, N.J. Gradtiare B.S. in Chem. Engr. ' 35, New ark College of Engineering. . NDRE HUBERT BRISSE New Bedford. Mass. Andy ; Born December 10, 1913; Pre- pared at New Bedford High School; . lpha Chi Sigma (I); Chemical Society (2); Musical Clubs (1); Entered Freshman Year. 97 COURSE X JOHN RAILEY CALHOUN, ATA Melrose, Mass. Graduate B.S. ' 35, Tufts College American Chemical Society. DELVVIN M. CAMPBELL, JR., :1N Chicago, III. Del ' j Born January 10, 1914; Prepared at Kemper Military School, Alpha Chi Sigma (3, 4j; Scabbard and Blade (3), Treasurer (4); Varsity Golf Team (4); Varsity Ritle Team (3, 4); Technique (2); Voo Doo (3); Advanced R.O.T.C. ; Entered Sophomore Year. LEONARD B. CHANDLER ' inchester, Mass. Gus ; Born April 4, 1914, Prepared at Winchester High School, Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4), Commuter ' s Club (1, 2, 3. Vice-President (4); Entered Freshman Year. GERARD CHAPMAN Hinsdale, III. Jerry ; Born February 19, 1913; Prepared at Northwestern Military and Naval Academy; Chemical Society (3, 4); Musical Clubs (3, 4); Technique Staff (4); Tech Show Staff (3, 4); Entered Junior Year. NORMAN A. COCKE, JR., i BE Charlotte, N. C. Norm , Born May 8, 1914; Prepared at Episcopal High School; Beaver Club (3); Beaver Key Society (3 ; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Varsity Cross Country Team, Man- ager (3); M.LT.A.A. (3); Field Day Usher (3); Curriculum Committee (3, 4); Ad- vanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. WILLL M MURLIN CREASY, JR. Wilmington, N. C. Gradtdate B.S. ' 26, United States Military . cademy; American Chemical Society. ARTHUR HENRY CROWLEY Lowell, Mass. Gr idtuitc SB. 35, M. I. T., .Alpha Chi Sigma. GEORGE HERBERT CUM MINGS Cape May, .N. J. Graduatr; Course X Herb ; Prepared at Pennsylvania State College; Chemical Engineering; B.S., ' 35, Pennsylvania State College; Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Lambda Upsilon; American Chemical Society; Phi Kappa Sigma. THONET CHARLES DAUPHINE Faribault, Minn. Graduate B.S. ' 35, M. L T.; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma, Baton; Scabbard and Blade; Army Ordnance Society. JOHN JOSEPH DEMO North . danis, Mass. Graduate S.B. ' 35, M. I. T, Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Chi Sigma. RICHARD ARTHUR DENTON Wakefield, Mass. Dick ; Born September 6, 1914; Prepared at Wakefield High School; Chemical Society (3, 4); Corporation XV (2); Fresh- man Basketball Team; N ' arsity Basketball Team (2, 3, 4); Freshman Rifle Team; ' arsity Rifle Team (2, 3. 4}, Freshman Track Team; ' arsity Track Team (2); Field Day Football (1, 2}; Junior Prom Committee (3), Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD SEARS DeWOLFE Melrose, Mass. Dick , Born February 11, 1915, Prepared at Phillips .Academy, . ndover; Alpha Chi Sigma (2, 3, 4); Baton (3, 4); Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3); Musi- cal Clubs (1, 2, 3); Commuter ' s Club (1, 2, 3, 4}, Senior Dance Committee; Entered Freshman Year. 98 CO URSE X TOWERS DOGGETT Washington, D. C Born February 28, 1915, Prepared at Ameri- can University; Beaver Key Society (}), Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsit Hockey Team .Manager (3); M.I T. A A (3); Field Dav Usher ' 3 Entered Freshman Year. FREDERICK CLISE DRAEMEL Newport, R. I. Oradiiate B.S. 35, MIT WILLIAM BAYARD duPONT, HK Johnstown, Pa. Bill ; Born February 9, 1914, Prepared at Webb School of California, Beaver Club; Beaver Key Society; Gridiron (2, 3, 4); Osiris (4); Qu;idrangle Club; Freshman Basketball Team; arsity Squash Team (3, 4); Freshman Tennis Team, Field Day Football (2); Class Secretary (1, 2, 3); Class Treasurer (3); Class Executive Com- mittee (4); Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee (4); I.F.C. (2, 3, 4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Voo Doo (1, 2), Treasurer (3), Business Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. ORRINGTON EMBRY DWYER Dorchester, Mass. Graduatt B.S. ' 34, Northeastern University. ALBERT G. EMERSON, JR. Haverhill, .Mass. Ickky ; Born November 20, 1914; Pre- pared at Haverhill High School; Chemical Society (3, 4), Field Day Tug-of-War (1,2); Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD F. EVERETT, JR., 4K1 Brooklinc. Pa. Ed , Born August 12, 1914; Prepared at Haverford High School; Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Chemical Society (4), Freshman Basketball Team; N ' arsitv Golf Team (2, 3, 4); Fresh- man Tennis Team; Field Day Usher (3); Walker Memorial Committee (2, 3); Entered Freshman Year. REID EWING Merrill, Wis. Graduatt SB. ' 35, M. I. T.; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Chi Signia. WENDELL KEISTER FITCH Wellesley, Mass. Wen ; Born April 8, 1915; Prepared at Wilbraham . ' cademy; Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Cross Country Team; Varsity Cross Country Team (2, 3, 4); Freshman Hockey Team; Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2); Class Base- ball (1); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. BENJAMIN BAKER FOGLER, K2 Belmont, Mass. Ben ; Born March 23, 1914; Prepared at Belmont High School; Chemical Society (3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Musical Clubs (4); Commuter ' s Club (1 , 2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS EDWARD GARONO Buffalo, N. Y. Graditatf S.B. ' 35, M.I. T. FRANK SLEEPER GREGORY, JR. .Arlington, Mass. Born May 2, 1914; Prepared at .Arlington High School; Chemical Society (3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Advanced R O T.C, Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE MALCOLM HAIN Montclair. N. J. Born July 19, 1914; Prepared at Montclair High School; Freshman Cross Country Team; Freshman Track Team, Chairman of Senior Ring Committee; Entered Freshman COURSE X HAL PETTIT HEADLEY. KA Lexington, Ky. Graduate B.S. ' 35, University of Kentucky; American Chemical Society. FREDERIC A. L. HOLLOWAY, BGII Atlanta, Ga. B.S. in Chem. Engr. ' 35, Georgia School of Technology; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Alpha Chi Sigma; Pi Delta Epsilon; Scabbard and Blade. CHARLES R. HOLMAN Norwood, Mass. Born . ugust 5, 1915; Prepared at Norwood High School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Chem- ical Society (4}; Junior Prom Committee (3); Commuter ' s Club (3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. BENJAMLN .MERRILL HOLT Denver, Colo. Graduate A.B. ' 35, Stanford University; Alpha Chi Sigma; Sigma Chi. FREDERICK FEXNO HOUSE, AE Butlalo, N. Y. Fred ; Born October 24, 1913; Prepared at University of Buffalo; Entered Freshman Year. HENRY JOSEPH JANSON Philadelphia, Pa. Harry ; Born June 27, 1914; Prepared at St. Joseph ' s Preparatory School; Catholic Club (2, 3); Chemical Society (2, 3, 4 ; Entered Sophomore Year. WILBUR FRANK JORD. N Milton, Mass. Bill ; Born July 22, 1914; Prepared at Milton High School; Chemical Society (4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Fresh- man Hockey Team; ' arsity Hockey Team (2); Field Day Football (1, 2}; Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. DONALD WILLIMOTT KENNY .Milton, Mass. Don ; Born July 16, 1915, Prepared at Milton High School; Freshman Hockey Team; Varsitv Hockev Team (2, 3, 4); Field Day Football X; Class Baseball Cl, 2, 3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (2); Entered Freshman Year. ALBERT JOHN KLEMK. Billerica, Mass. . l ; Born May 5, 1914; Prepared at Howe High School; . rmy Ordnance -Association (3, 4y; Chemical Society (4 , Class Baseball (1); Commuter ' s Club CL 2, 3, 4); Ad- vanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. ELWOOD HENRY KOONTZ, Y New Rochelle, N. Y. El ; Born November 15, 1914; Prepared at Chauncv Hall; Beaver Club; Beaver Kev Society; Gridiron (4), ' ice-President (3); Osiris; Chemical Society; Freshman Fencing Team; Fiel d Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee C4 ; I.F.C. (3, 4}; The Tech Staff (1, 2}, Advertising Manager C3), General Manager (Ji); Senior Week Com- mittee (3); Entered Freshman Year. ARNOLD AUGUST KRUSE Kekaha, Kauai, Territory of Hawaii Graduate B.S. ' 34, University of Hawaii. MICHAEL JOSEPH EACH Dorchester, Mass. Mike ; Born February 7, 1915; Prepared at Boston English High School; Chemical Societ) ' i 4, Freshman Hockey Team; . dvanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. 100 COURSE X IIKNRY GEORGE McGRATH, JR. Lawrence, Mass. Born March 30, 1915; Prepared at Lawrence High School; Chemical Society (4); Com- muter ' s Club (2, 4); Entered Freshman Year. GERALD STROPLE .Mc. L HON Boston, Mass. Gerry , Mac ; Born August 23, 1913; Prepared at Boston English High School; Alpha Chi Sigma (3, 4); Chemical Society (2, 3, 4); Freshman Track Team; ' arsity Track Team (2, 3, 4); T.C.A. (4); Commut- er ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. CARL ANTHONY MAPES, i;. Baltimore, -Md. Tony ; Born July 29, 1915; Prepared at Sidwells ' Friends School; Chemical Societv (1, 2, 3); Varsity Basketball Team (2), Freshman Soccer Team; Freshman Squash Team; Field Dav Football (2); T.E.N. (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Fresh- man Year. ROBERT WEIDENTHAL NEWMAN Cleveland Heights, Ohio Bob , Bom May 14, 1914; Prepared at Case School of Applied Science; Chemical Society (3, 4); Combined Professional So- cieties (4); Entered Junior Year. EDWARD W. S. NICHOLSON, K Chicago, 111. GraJuare B.S. ' 34, University of Chicago. RO.VIAN LEO ORTY ' NSKY, K Olyphant, Pa. Ro ; Born March 23, 1913; Prepared at Wyoming Seminary; Alpha Chi Sigma (4); Catholic Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, 4); Musical Clubs (1, 2), Publicity Manager (3); Advanced R.O.- T.C; Entered Freshman Year. WALTER VERNON OSGOOD Maiden, Mass. ; Born February 27, 1914; Prepared at Maiden High School; Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Chemical Society (1); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3), Secretary (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. RUDOLPH JACOB OZOL Boston, Mass. ■Rudy ; Born April 9, 1914; Prepared at Mechanic Arts High School; Army Ord- nance Association (3), Vice-President (4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Freshman Fencing Team; Varsity Fencing Team (2, 3,), Captain (4); V ' arsitv Golf Team (2, 3), Captain (4); M.I.T.A.A. (4); Commuter ' s Club (2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. KANTILAL MULCHAND PAREKH Bhavnagar, India Graduate B.Sc. ' 34, Gujrat College, India. ASANTLAL D. PAREKH Bhavnagar, India Graduate B Sc. ' 34, Gujrat College, India; Member of SRC. GEORGE ADAMS PARKHURST Chelmsford, Mass. Born March 17, 1914; Prepared at Chelms- ford High School; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN BORNHAM ROBERTS, SAE Manchester, N. H. Graduate A B. ' 34, Dartmouth College; Phi Beta Kappa; .American Chemical Society. 101 COURSE X GEORGE REUBEN ROBINSON W ' akeheld, Mass. Robbv ; Born August 22, 1914; Prepared at Wakefield High School; Bacon (3. 4); Chemical Societv (3, 4); Corporation X ' (1, 2); Field Dav Relay (1); Field Dav Marshal (4 ; Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3, 4); Commuters Club (1, 2, 3), President (4); Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM CAUBU ROUSSEAU Graduate A.B. ' 34 Stanford University FRANCIS ROBINETT RUSSELL Cincinnati, Ohio Graduate A.B. ' 30, University of Cincinnati; M.S. in Chem. Engr. 32, M. I. T.; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. JAMES SETH Santa Fe, New Mexico Graduate Jim ; A.B. ' 34, Stanford University; Alpha Chi Sigma; American Chemical Societv. LOUIS C. SMITH, JR., GAX Harrisburg, Pa. Lou ; Born June 17, 1915; Prepared at Mamaroneck High School; Alpha Chi Sigma (3, 4); Gridiron (3, 4); Freshman Hea -y Crew; T.E.N. (3, 4), Assistant Edi- tor (i); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN LIRIGO SPEIRS New London, Conn. Chief ; Born April 28, 1915; Prepared at Bulkeley High School; Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. WALTER SQUIRES, JR. Richmond, Ind. Walt ; Born August 21, 1914; Prepared at Morton High School; Alpha Chi Sigma (4); Tau Beta Pi 4 ; Aeronautical Engineering Society ' 1 ; Chemical Society (4j; Fresh- man Track Team; Varsitv Track Team (2); T.f.X. (1); Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD EMIL STRITTER Nahant, Mass. Ed ; Born .August 9, 1914; Prepared at Lynn Classical High School; Chemical Society (2, 3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN EDWARD SULLIVAN Brighton, Mass. Jack ; Born February 10, 1910; Prepared at Berkeley Preparatory School; Chemical Society (4); .Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. THOMAS A. TERRY. JR., J Ae Washington, D. C. Tom ; Born October 27, 1913; Prepared at The Hotchkiss School; Alpha Chi Sigma (3.x Treasurer (4); Gridiron (3, 4); Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Basketball Team; Freshman Soccer Team; Varsity Soccer Team (3); Varsity Squash Team (3, 4); Freshman Tennis Team; Varsity Tennis Team (3, 4); Technique (1, 2); Tech Show Staff (2); . dvanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Ye.-ir. WILLIAM JOSEPH TIER Philadelphia, Pa. Bill ; Born January 12, 1915; Prepared at St. Joseph ' s Preparatory High School; Catholic Club (2, 3); Chemical Society (2, 3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. WILLIA.M PETER TOORKS Boston, .Mass. Bill ; Born October 22, 1914; Prepared at The Boston English High School; Chemical Society (3, 4 ; Freshman Fencing Team; Varsi ty Fencing Team (2,3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. 102 COURSE X WILLIAM HLRNS TUCKER, OX Richmond, Calit. Graiiujtt B.S. ' 33, Universitv of California; Sigma XijTau Beta Pi, Chi Epsilon; A.S.C.E. ALBERT JAMES ULL. L N CIcvc-land Heights, Ohio Jim ; Born December 19, 1913; Prepared at University School; Chemical Society (2, 3 , Secretary (4); Entered Freshman Year. ' JAMES LESLIE VAUGHAN Boston, Mass. Born August 7, 1914; Prepared at Mechanic Arts High School; Tau Beta Pi; .Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Class Base- ball (1, 2, 3, 4); Commuters Club (3, 4, Entered Freshman Year. PHILIP S.MITH VINCENT Boston, Mass. Phil ; Born July 24. 1913; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3. 4); Chemical Society (3, 4); Freshman Hockey Team; Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsitv Track Team Q! y, Field Day Relay (1); Class Baseball (1, 2, 3); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. JE. N IRWIN WAGNER Centerport, N Y. Born July 28, 1914; Prepared at Huntington High School; Army Ordnance Association (2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (1, 2, 3. 4}; Freshman Track Team; V ' arsity Track Team (2); Field Day Tug-of- Var (1); Dramashop (3); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. JA.VIES BUCHANAN WAGSTAFF Bath, England Graduate B.Sc. ' 35, University of Sheffield. GEORGE BARLOW WEBB Roslindale, Mass. Born February 21, 1914; Prepared at English High .xhool; Chemical Society (4); Fresh- man Ritle Team; Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. PETER CHARLES WEINERT Harrison, N. Y. Pete ; Born May 1, 1914; Prepared at Harrison High School; .-Mpha Chi Sigma C3, 4); Chemical Society (2, 3), President (4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. BENTON HARTUNG WILCOXON Alta, Calif. Graduate . .B. ' 34, Stanford University; Phi Lambda Upsilon. PYAM WINSOR WILLIAMS Dark Harbor, Maine ■Py ; Born June 22, 1913; Prepared at Hebron , cademy; Chemical Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Track Team; Field Day Relay (2); Entered Freshman Year. LOUIS CASS VOUNG, AT Pelham, N. Y. Lou ; Born August 2, 1915; Prepared at Phillips . cademv, Andover; Chemical Society C3, 4); The Tech (1, 2, 3), Editorial Board (4}; Entered Freshman Year. AARON LOUIS ZOLAN Bridgeport, Conn. Lou , Born November 3, 1914; Prepared at Bridgeport High School; Chemical Society 1 4;; Varsity Boxing Team (4); Varsity Wrestling Team (3); Menorah Society C3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. 103 COURSE XII geology STRATA ALONG NIAGARA GORGE DR. AMADEUS WILLIAM GRABAU, ' 96, XII, in his hook Niagara Falls and Vicinity descrihes the fossil plants and animals preserved for some 370 million years in the rocks shown in the picture, and enters with considerable detail into the discussion of the origin of the Falls and their his- tory to the present day. After graduation from Technology, Dr. Grabau continued his studies at Harvard where he received the degree of Doctor of Science in 1900. He was sub- sequentlv Professor of Paleontology at Columbia University and at the Na- tional University at Peiping, China. One of the most widely respected strati- graphical geologists of the world. Dr. Grabau is the author of a large number of publications dealing with almost every phase of the science, and is the most outstanding authority on the Geology of China. He is at present Chief Paleontologist of the Chinese Geological Survey, with which his world-wide fame is largely associated. COURSE XII Warren Judson Mead Professor In charge of Course M. J. Buerger Assoc. Prof. F. K. Morris Professor . H. Newhouse Assoc. Prof. H. V. Shimer Professor L. B. Slighter Professor 106 COURSE XII 1 s Pf Sfi ly i feldl KENNETH LEWIS DORMAN, AT Salem, Mass. Graduate ■■Ken ; B.S. in Chemistry ' 35, Bowdoin College; Chemical Society. ROBERT UGSTAD KING Old Tappan, N.J. Bob ; Born December 31, 1 912; Prepared at Dumont High School; American Society of Civil Engineers; Field Dav Tue-of-War (1); Class Baseball (3), T.C.A. (4), Cabot Medal; Entered Freshman Year. AURELIUS P. HORNOR, JR., A Glen Ridge, N. J. Re ; Born October 24, 1913; Prepared at Caldwell High School; Beaver Club (3, 4); Beaver Key Society (3); Mining Engineer- ing Society, Treasurer (4); Varsity Boxing Team, Manager (3); M.I.T.A.A. (3); Field Dav Tug-of-War (2), Coach (3); Field Day Usher (3); F ' ' - ' ' ' Day Marshal (4); Tht Tech (1); Entered Freshman Year. 107 COURSE XIII ' hiatal Architecture and JSiarine Eiig ' iiieering U. S. S. DEWEY A RECENT addition to our Navy is the United States destroyer Dewey, pictured here. She was designed and constructed in the yards of the Bath Iron Works of Bath, Maine, a hrm whose reputation for building fine ships is unexcelled, president of which is William S. Newell, ' 99, XIII. The keel was laid in December, 1932, and the ship was completed in October, 1934. Her overall length is 341 feet, her mean draft eight and a half feet, and with her 42,800 horsepower engines, she attains a speed of 37 knots. The Dewey ' s principal fighting equipment includes five five-inch guns and eight twenty-one inch torpedo tubes. In the struggle for supremacy of the seas naval science and engineering are certain to play an increasingly important role. COURSE XIII E. BuRTNER Assoc. Prof. L. B. Chapman Professor James Robertson Jack Professor In charge of Course G. Owen Professor H. E. ROSSELL Professor WILLIAM IRVING H. BUDD Boston, Mass. Bill ; Born August 23, 1914; Prepare d at English High School; Naval Architectural Society; Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD L. BREWSTER, Ai; Lake Forest, III. Ed ; Born August 14, 1910; Prepared at Yale University; Naval Architectural Society (4); Entered Sophomore Year. DAVID MEADE COOPER, Boil Terre Haute, Ind. Dave ; Born February 23, 1914; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Freshman Swimming Team; Varsity Swimming Team (2); Musical Clubs (1, 2); Tech Show (2); Entered Freshman Year. GORDON STUART DONNAN Wollaston, Mass. Born September 8, 1912, Prepared at Thayer Academy; Quadrangle Club (I, 2); Varsity Club; Navul Architectural Society (4); Freshman Track Team; Varsitv Track Team (2, 3, 4); M.I.T.A.A. (3); Field Day Relay (1, 2); Track Club; Entered Freshman Year. 110 COURSE XIII CARI. EN ' GSTROM West Sonic-rvillf, Mass. Scandy , Born April 12, 1914; Prepared at Somerville High School; Naval Architec- tural Society (3). Vice-President (4 ; Fresh- man Junior Varsity Crew; Field Day Tug- of-War (2); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN ROBEV GRAHAM, BOII Washington, O. C. ■Johnny ; Born March 25, 191}, PrepareJ atGfntral High School; Beaver Club (2, 3); Beaver Kev Societv (2, 3. 4 ; Quadrangle Club (1, 2); Scabbard and Bhide (2, 3, 4: , Freshman Tr.ack Team; arsity Track Team (2, 4); Wearer of the T ; Field Dav Football (1, 2); Field Dav Usher (3); Field Dav Marshal (4), I.F.C. (3); Musical Clubs (1, 2), Tech Show (2, 3); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ALW i BENNETT GRAY Winthrop, Mass. Al ; Born March 28, 1913; Prepared at Winthrop High School; Naval Architec- tural Society ( 1, 3. 4); Freshman Soccer Team, N ' arsity Soccer Team (2, 3, 4), Com- muter ' s Club (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. ALAN F. HARDMAN, -J-BK Clinton, Mass. Al , Born June 18, 1913; Prepared at Newburgh Academy; Naval Architectural Society (4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsitv Soccer Team, Manager (3); M.I.T.- A.A. (1); Field Day Usher (3); Entered Freshman Year. CLARENCE R. HORTON, JR., 1 Kr Lexington, Mass. Clancy ; Born January 21, 1914; Pre- pared at Lexington High School; Naval Architectural Society (2, 3, 4); Freshman Cross Country Team; Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2); Field Day Relay (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. CLARENCE A. NLWO, JR., Itdll Melrose, Mass. Art ; Born September 2, 1913, Prepared at Hebron .Academy, Naval .Architectural Society (3, 4), Freshman Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. CHARLES RUSSELL MILLER Norwood. Mass. Russ , Born January 22, 1915; Prepared at Norwood High School, Naval Architec- tural Society (4); Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. ► I JACK THEODORE OURK;, Ai:A Ridgewood, N.J. Gruiiiiate B.S. in Mech. Engr. ' 35, Clarkson College of Tcchnologv, A.S.N. A.; A.S.M.E.; SAME. WILLIAM FULLARTON RA.MSAY New York, N. Y. Graduate B.S. in Elec. Eng. ' 24, Penn State College; Scabbard and Blade; Naval Architectural Societv; A. I.E. E. EDWARD BENNETT ROWE, JR. Wcllesley Hills, Mass. Eddie ; Born May 29, 1914; Prepared at Wellesley High School; Naval Architec- tural Society (1, 2, 3, 4Ji, Freshman Hockey Team, Musical Clubs, Glee Club (3, 45; Commuter ' s Club (1, 2); Advanced R.O.- T.C; Technology Ski Club (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. WARREN SHERBURNE, JR., l ' Kr Lexington, Mass. Sherb ; Born April 5, 1914; Prepared at Lexington High School; Naval Architec- tural Society (4); Varsity Soccer Team (3, 4); Freshman Track Team; Field Day Relay (1); Thi Tich (1); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN CAUSE STAPLER Washington, D. C. Jack ; Born October 16, 1913; Prepared at St. George ' s School; Naval .Architectural Society (4); Society of American Military Engineers; .Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ARTHUR E. WELLS, JR., IlK East Orange, N.J. Art ; Born October 2, 1914; Prepared at Deerfield .Academy; Beaver Club (3); Quadrangle Club (2 ; Naval .Architectural Society, President (4 , Freshman 150-lb. Crew; Freshman Gym Team; ' arsity Gym Team J., 4 ' ; Freshman Swimming Team; Elections Committee (3, 4); LF.C (2, 3); Walker Memorial Committee (2); Drama- shop (3. 4); Tech Show (3, 4 ; Entered Freshman Year. HARRISON S. WOODMAN. -I HK inthrop. Maine Woody ; Born June 29, 1912; Prepared at The Hotchkiss School; Naval .Architec- tural Society (4); Walker Memorial Com- mittee (2); Dramashop, Treasurer (2), Stage Manager (3 General Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. Ill COURSE XV n usiiiess ctud Sngineering dminhtratio)L FREDERICK S. BLACKHALL, Jr. COURSE XV trains men in the fundamentals which underlie the adminis- tration of technical enterprises. The life of Frederick S. Blackhall, Jr., ' 22, XV, President of the Taft-Pierce Manufacturing Company of Woonsocket, R, I., one of the oldest machine and tool manufacturing companies in the United States, is a striking example of what Course XV graduates may ac- complish. He entered the employ of the company after graduation, in a period when industry was beginning to feel the after-effects of wartime expansion. Within two years, he had risen to the post of Assistant to the Vice-President. Mr. Blackhall had perceived the necessity for retrenchment in the company ' s per- sonnel and readjustment of production to meet existing market conditions, and in the following year, the Board of Directors approved his plan for reor- zation. The principles of management and operation which were put into effect at that time, many of them directly inspired by the work Mr. Blackhall had done in Course XV, stood the company in good stead through the boom days and the ensuing depression, from which it emerged uncommonly well. COURSE XV R. C. Eddy Assoc. Prof. R. F. Elder Assoc. Prof. Erwix Haskell Schell Professor hi charge of Course K. D. Fernstrom Assoc. Prof. W. P. FiSKE Assoc. Prof. C. H. Porter Professor F. E. Raymond Assoc. Prof. A. A. SCHAEFER Asst. Prof. 114 DEPARTMENT OV ECONOMICS ami SOCIAL SCIENCE Ralph Evans Freeman Projessor hi charge of Department F. E. Armstrong Professor E. S. BURDELL Assoc. Prof. C. . DOTEN Professor O. Inc-.rah ' m Asst. Prof. B. A. Thri;shi:r Asst. Prof. D S. TUCKUR Professor 115 COURSE X NATH. X CH- SE AVER, rA Bangor, Maine Nat ; Born July 10, 1913; Prepared at The Choate School; Entered Freshman Year. .VNTHONY ALBERT BELSER, JR. Plaintield, N ' .J. B.S. ' 35, Lehigh University; Business and Engineering Administration. D.WID A. BL.VNTON. JR.. X St. Louis. Mo. Dave ; Bom May 5, 1913; Prepared at St. Ixiuis 5untry Day School; Varsity Soccer Team (i); Entered Freshman Year. ALAN EDWIN BRIGH. M Ware, Mass. Bom September 25, l S; Prepared at Central High School; Corporation X 4 Entered Freshman Year. HAWTHORNE NEVIN BROWN Braintree, Mass. Brownie ; Bom September 6, 1914; Prepared at Thayer Academy; Enrt:.- Freshman Year. JOEL BURR BULKLEY Southporc, Conn. Buck ; Born October 1, 1914; Prepared at Worcester . cademy ; Dorclan (4 ; Corpora- tion XV 2, 3 ; ' arsiry Lacrosse Team (2, 3), Captain 4 ; Freshman Track Team; Field Day Relay Xi Class Baseball (1, 2, 3, 4); Dormitorv Committee 4 ; Field Dav Marshal C4v; Advanced R.O.T.C: Entered Freshman Year. NORMAN GEORGE BULL, Ben Washington, D. C. Born October 30, 1914; Prepared at Sid- wells ' Friends School; Beaver Key Societ) ' 3?; Gridiron (2, 3); Scroll (3, 4 ; Corpora- tion XV C4;; Field Day Usher C3 ; T.E.X. ,1, 2, 3}; Tht Ttch (2); Entered Freshman Year. JOSEPH ALOYSIUS BURNS Somerville, Mass. Joe ; Bora . ugust 27, 1912, Prepared at Mission High School; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3, 4 ; Corporation XV ' 1, 3 ' ; Commuter ' s Club 2, 3, ; Entered Freshman Year. CLAUDE DOUGLAS CAIRNS, 2:. E Boston. Mass. Doug ; Born June 1, 1914; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Corporation XV 2, 3); Freshman Swimming Team; Field Dav Football fll; I.F.C. (3 ; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM P. CANNING, Ki: Port Henry, N. Y. Bill ; Bom March 14. 1914; Prepared at Chauno ' Hall; . eronautical Engineering Society (2); Freshman Basketball Team; arsity Swimming S ]uad {2 ; Field Day Football (1 ; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN JA.MES CURRIER COFFI.N Salem, Mass. ■Jack ; Born April 20, 1914; Prepared at Phillips Exeter . cademy; Corporation XV ,2 ; Commuters Club 3. . Entered Fresh- man Year. BENJA- IIN COOPERSTEIN Ro.xbury, Mass. Coop ; Bom June 3, 1915; Prepared at Boston English High School; Chemical Society 2, 3, 4 ' ; Corporation XV (3); Freshman Boxing Team; Varsity Boxing Team (2}; Varsitv Wrestling Team (2, 3); Field Dav RelavCl ; Field Dav Football 2 ; Field Dav Usher X, Field Dav Mar- shal X; Tech Show (1, 2); Voo Doc X 3); Commuter ' s Club (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. 116 C O I ' R S E XV GEORGE FRANCIS CRUMMEY Albany, N. V. Born February 12, 1914; Prepared at Ports- mouth Priory School; Beaver Key Societv (3); Tau Beta Pi (4); Corporation XV (2, 3); Varsity Basketball Team, Manager (3); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsitv Lacrosse Team (2, 3); M.LT.A.A. (3); Field Day Usher (3); Field Dav Marshal (4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. PAUL WILLIAM DALEY Brighton, Mass. Born September 3, 1914; Prepared at Boston Latin School; Scabbard and Blade (4, 5); Tech Boat Club (2, 3, 4, 5 ; Catholic Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Corporation XV (2, 3, 4); Freshman Heavv Crew, junior Varsitv Crew (2, 3 ; Freshman Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3), Captain (4), Manager C5 ' ; M.I.T.A.A. (3 ; Field Dav Crew (1); Field Day Football (2); Field Day Marshal (3, 4); Junior Prom Commit- tee (3); Commuter ' s Club; Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. FR. XCIS J. DANFORTH, JR., S New York, X. V. Frank ; Born July 2, 1912; Prepared at Williams College; Corporation XV (3, 4 ; Entered Junior Year. DANA DEVEREUX, K New York, N. Y. Rip ; Born August 4, 1913; Prepared at Williston Academy; Aeronautical Engin- eering Society (0; ' arsity Basketball Team (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. WARREN R. DEVINE, .t.MA Lexington, Mass. Born August 12, 1913; Prepared at Wor cester Academy, Corporation XV (3, 4); Freshman Bo.xing Team; Field Day Foot- ball v l, 2); Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE EDWARD DONNELLY Welleslev, Mass. Bowe , Born February 22, 1914, Prepared at Wellesley High School; Aeronautical Engineering Society; Naval Architectural Society; Commuter ' s Club; Entered Fresh- man Year. JOHN ADLINGTON EASTON, JR. .Arlington, Mass. ■Red ; Born March 6, 1915, Prepared at Arlington High School; Pi Tau Pi Sigma (3, 4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Tau Beta Pi (4); Tech Boat Club (3, 4); Corporation V (2, 3); Junior Varsity Crew Ci) ' , Fresh- man 150-lb. Crew; Field Day Crew (2); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C. (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT GRAHAM EDWARDS Arlington, Mass. Bob ; Born October 27, 1915; Prepared at Arlington High School; Corporation XV (2, 3); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. HARRY E. ESSLEY, JR.. K2 Philadelphia, Pa. Harry ; Born July 20, 1914; Prepared at Lower Merion High School, Beaver Club (3); Beaver Kev Societv (3); Osiris (4); Quadrangle Club (1); tau Beta Pi (3). President (4); Varsitv Soccer Team (2, 3, 4); Field Day, Manager (3); M.I.T.A.A. (3), Secretarv r4); Field Dav Football (1); All Tecii Smoker (3, 4), Field Day Usher (3), Field Day Marshal (4); I.F.C., Secre- tary (4); Entered Freshman Year. VINCENT TAFT ESTABROOK Le.xington, Mass. Born August 4, 1914; Prepared at Newton High School; Corporation XV (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. Born July 12, 1914, Prepared at rmon School; Baton (3), Vice- RICHARD BARUCH FOX Boston, Mass. Dick Mt. Hermon School; Baton 3 President (4); Corporation XV (3, 4); Freshman Hockey Team; Varsity Hockey Team (2, 4); All Tech Smoker, Vice-Chair- man (4); Menorah Societv (2, 3 Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. JOHN DICK GARDINER, A Lunenburg, M.iss. Jack ; Born August 15, 1915; Prepared at Middlesex School; Beaver Club, President (3 ); Beaver Kev Societv (3 Osiris; Quad- rangle Club (2); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Corporation XV (2, 3); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 4); Freshman Squash Team; Varsitv Squash Team (2, 4); Field Day Football (2); Class E.xecutive Committee 4 ; All Tech Smoker, Chairman (4); Field Day Usher (3) Field Dav Marshal (4 ; Institute Com- mittee r4); Walker Memorial Committee (2. 3 Chairman (4); Tech Show (1); T i Tech (1); Voo Doo (2); Advanced R O T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. 117 COURSE XV WILLIAM WILLIS GARTH, K Huntsville, Ala. Bill ; Born May 14, 1915; Prepared at Lincoln School; Beaver Club (3); Quad- rangle Club (2 :; Tau Beta Pi (3, 4), Corpor- ation XV (2, 3, 4); Freshman Basketball Team; Varsity Basketball Team (2, 3), Captain (4 ); Freshman Track Team, M.IT.A.A. ' (l); Field Dav Relay (1); All Tech Smoker (3, 4), Field Day Marshal (4); I.F.C. (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. HERMAN GO.MBERG Boston, Mass. Stretch ; Born January 8, 1913, Prepared at Dorchester High School; Corporation XV (3); Entered Freshman Year. MARVINE GORHA.M, JR., At Buffalo, N. Y. Gus , Born January 13, 1913; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Beaver Club (3 . Beaver Key Society ' 3); Freshman Squash Team; Field Day Usher (3), Field D.n Marshal (4); Entered Freshman Year. CHARLES MALLORY GRAVES, HE Orange, N.J. Mai , Born December 31, 1912; Prepared at Orange High School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Corporation XV (3, 4 :, I.F.C. (2, 4); Tech Show (1); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT WENDELL HANNAM Lexington, Mass. Buck ; Born May 7, 1914; Prepared at Lexington High School; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4); Corporation XV (1, 2); Tech Union (4 ; Entered Freshman Year. HARRY B. HAZELTON, JR., X St. Louis, Mo. Hazy ; Born March 2, 1915; Prepared at St. Louis Countrv Day School; Voo Doo Business Associate (1, 2); Entered Fresh- man Year. FREDERICK W. HINTON, rA Bangor, Maine Graduate B S. ' 34, University of Maine; Track Club; A.I.E.E. STEFFEN HOL.MBLAD Odense, Denmark Graduate B.Sc. ' 32, Copenhagen; Danish Society of Civil Engineers. ALLEN W. HORTON, JR., X Superior, Wise. Al ; Born December 23, 1912; Prepared at Superior State Teachers College; Osiris; Tau Beta Pi; Corporation X ' ' J , 4); M.I.T.A.A. (2, 4), All Tech Smoker (4); Budget Committee (3), Chairman (4); Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee, Treasurer (4); Entered Sophomore Year. NEWTON HAVEN HOYT, JR., i-rA Bridgeport, Conn. Graduate A B. ' 35, Williams College; Phi Beta Kappa. ROGER HERSEY HUSTON, ARE Xeedham, Mass. ■Rog ; Born November 15, 1913; Prepared at Phillips . cademy, Andover; Entered Freshman Year. FRANK JENKS Brooklyn, N. Y. Graduate B.S. ' 34, Yale Universitv; A.S.M.E. 118 COURSE XV LAWRENCE KANTERS, i:AM Brookliiii. ' , M.iss. Larry,; Born January 25, 1915; Prepared at Saieni High School; Masque (3, 4); Tech Beat Club 2, 3, 4), Corporation XV (2, 3, 4); Freshman Heavy Crew; Varsity 150-lb. Crew (4); Freshman Wrestling Team; All Tech Smoker (4); Elections Com- mittee (3. 4), Menorah Society (1, 2, 4), Nice-President 3}, Tech Show (1, 2, 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. THOALV.S lA.MOTSU KATO New York, N, Y. Tom ; Born January 22, 1914, Prepared at Baldwin High School; Entered Freshman Year. WALTER JOHNSOxN LANE Boston, Mass. Born May 4, 1915; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; American Society of Civil Engineers ' 4); Corporation XV (2, 3); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. JAMES HOMER LEARY New Bedford, Mass. Jim , Born October 25, 1911; Prepared at New Bedford High School; Chemical Society (4, ; Corporation XV (2, 3), Freshman Basketball Team; Varsitv Bas- ketball Team (2, 3 ; Advanced R.O.T.C. Entered Freshman Year. HENRY F. LIPPITT, II, AT San Djego, Calif. Hank ; Born January 8, 1915; Prepared at Santa Barbara School; Corporation XV (3); Entered Sophomore Year. AARON ALCORN LOOM IS Needham, Mass. Born December 17, 1913, Prepared at Need- ham High School, Roxbury Latin School; Automotive Engineering Society (4); Corporation XV (3); Freshman Gvm Team; Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); Tech Union (4), Entered Freshman Year. BRENTON WEBBER LOWE Fitchburg, Mass. Brent ; Born January 20, 1914; Prepared at Fitchburg High School; Gridiron, Presi- dent (4); Scroll; Corporation XV, Treasurer (3 ; Electrical Engineering Society; Class ' ice-Presidenr 3 ; Dormitory Committee, Chairman (4); Field Day Usher (3;, Field Day Marshal (4); 1st Marshal Senior Week Institute Committee, Vice-President (4) T.E.N. Staff (1, 2), Associate Editor (3) Editor-in-Chief (4); Entered Freshman Year. ADRIAN A. VON MALTITZ Arnioedsdraai, Dewetsdorp, South Africa Graduate B.Sc. in Mining ' 33, University of the Witwaterstrand. CLAXTON MONRO, JR. Andover, Mass. Cla. ; Born May 7, 1914; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover; Tau Beta Pi, Corporation XV (2); Curriculum Commit- tee, Chairman (4), Tech Union (4); Entered Freshman Year. WALTER B. MOORE, iX Walla Walla, Wash. Graduate A.B. ' 35, Whitman College. PAUL S. MORGAN, X St. Louis, Mo. Born August 14, 1914; Prepared at St. Louis Countrv Day School, Freshman Basketball Team; Varsity Basketball Team 2, 3); Field Dav Football (1); Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE C. MOUSTAKIS Salem, Mass. Born . ugust 15, 1913; Prepared at Law- rence . cademy; Entered Freshman Year. 119 COURSE XV PAUL CORBETT MULKERN Dedh.im, Mass. Born February 25, 1915; Prepared at Ded- ham High School; Catholic Club (2 , Corporation XV (2, 3); Entered Freshman Year. IRVING LABEL NEWMAN Dorchester, Mass. Irv ; Born April 16, 1914; Prepared at Boston Latin School; Varsity Squash Team (2, 3, 4); Freshman Tennis Team; Varsity Tennis Team (2, 3, 4 ; Commuter ' s Club (4), Entered Freshman Year. CARL MARTIN PETERSON Wollaston, Mass. Pete ; Born May 5, 1914; Prepared at Quincy High School; Corporation XV (2, 3); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Fresh- man Year. WILLIAM W. PRICHARD, HAX Lvnn, Mass. Bill ; Born November 6, 1914; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover; Beaver Key Society; Gridiron (3, 4); Masque (3, 4); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Tech- nique, Publicity Manager (3); Tech Shou Staff (1, 2), Stage Manager (3); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. EMANUEL RAPOPORT Bronx, N. Y. Bornjuly 4, 1914; Corporation XV (1,2, 3 ' , The Tech, Editorial Board (4); Tech Union, Entered Freshman Year. JULIAN SEYMOUR RIFKIN Newton, Mass. Red ; Born May 26, 1915; Prepared at Brookline High School; Masque (3, 4), Corporation XV (2, 3, 4); Menorah So- ciety (2, 3, 4); Tech Show (2, 3), Advertis- ing Manager (4); Commuter ' s Club (2); Advanced R.O. ' T.C. ; Entered Freshman Year. JAMES HOWARD SCHIPPER, rA Lowell, Mass. ■Jim , Bish ; Born July 5, 1913; Pre- pared at Dartmouth College; Beaver Club; Beaver Key Society; Scabbard and Blade; Varsitv Hockev Team (3, 4); Class Vice- President (4); Field Day Usher (3); Field Dav Marshal (4); Institute Committee (4); T.C.A. (1, 2, 3), President (4); Advanced RO.T.C; Entered Freshman ' Year. GEORGE SCHMALZ, JR. Quincv, Mass. Born March 3, 1913, Prepared at Mechanic Arts High School; Freshman Hockey Team; Entered Freshman Year. BERNARD SIDNEY SCHULMAN Akron, Ohio Bernie ; Born February 18, 1914; Pre- pared at Mercersburg Academy; Chemical Engineering Society; Corporation XV; Entered Freshman Year. WALTER BENNETT SHARP, JR. Morristown, N. J. Ben ; Born August 13, 1911; Prepared at Morristown High School; Corporation XV (3 ; Freshman Swimming Team, Field Day Football (1, 2); Musical Clubs (3, 4); T.C.A. (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. HERBERT L. SHUTTLEWORTH, Amsterdam, N. Y. Gniduatt . .B. ' 35, Dartmouth College. JOHN THOMAS SMITH, BBIl Miltord, N. H. Tom ; Born June 6, 1914, Preparedjat Chauncv Hall; Gridiron (3, 4); Grogo (3, 4); Catholic Club (1, 2, 3); Chemical Society (2, 3); Corporation XV (3); Fresh- man Boxing Team; Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Commit- tee (3, 4); Technique (1, 2), Departments Editor (3), General Manager (4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. 120 COURSE XV EDSON BLY SNOW, AKK New York, N. Y. Ed ; Born November H, 1914; Prepared at Lincoln School of Teachers College; Pi Tail Pi Sigma (3, 4 ; Advanced R.O.T.C. , Entered Freshman Year. WINTHROP ALAN STILES, ATA Auburndalc, Mass. Win ; Born February 26, 1914; Prepared at Northeastern University; Varsity Hock- ey Team (3, 4); Veo Doa (2); Entered Sophomore Year. WILSON ALLEN TAYLOR, JR., X St. Louis, Mo. Born June 17, 1914; Prepared at St. Louis Gjuntry Day School; Voo Doo (1, 2); Entered Freshman Y ' ear. GORDON CASE THOMAS, rA Old Greenwich, Conn. Gordy , Born October 21, 1914; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Beaver Club; Beaver Key Society; Gridiron (3, 4); Scab- bard and Blade (3, 4); VVoop Garoo ' 3, 4); Corporation X ' (3, 4); Freshman I50-lb. Crew; Field Dav Crew (1, 2); All Tech Smoker (4); Field Dav Usher (3); Field Dav Marshal (4); Voo Doo (1, 2, 3), Sales Man- ager (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Y ' ear. FLETCHER P. THORNTON, JR., rA Summit, N. J. Fletch ; Born January 26, 1915; Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; Beaver Club Beaver Key Society; Quadrangle Club Tau Beta Pi (3, 4 ; Corporation XV (2, 3) Freshman Basketball Team, Captain Varsity Basketball Team (2); Varsity Track Team, Manager (3); M.I.T.A.A. (3), President (4); Class Executive Com- mittee (1, 2); Field Day Usher (3); Field Day Marshal (4); 2d Marshal Senior Week; Freshman Rules Committee ' 2); Institute Committee (4), I.F.C. (3, 4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Entered Freshman Year. JULIAN LAWRENCE TOBEY Winchester, Mass. Tobe ; Born November 18, 1913; Pre- pared at Winchester High School; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM W. TOWNER, AT!. ' Winchester, Mass. Bill : Born March 30, 1915; Prepared at Winchester High School; Masque (3, 4); Institute Committee (4); I.F.C. (4); Tech Show (1, 2, 3), General Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. RALPH WILLIAM V. N SAN I , JR. Davenport, Iowa Graduate B.A. ' 35, Muskingum College. DAVID EDWARDS VARNER, AKK Chicago, III. Davie ; Born November 23, 1913; Pre- pared at Phillips . cademv, . Vndover. Beaver Club C3;; ; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4) Aeronautical Engineering Societv (1), I.F.C. (3); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. MURRAY M. WAX.MAN, JR., Z S New York, N. Y. Waxy ; Born November 6, 1915; Pre- pared at Fieldston; Corporation XV (2, 3, 4); Varsity Soccer Team (3, 4); Musical Clubs (2, 3, 4); Entered Sophomore Year. WEBSTER HILL WILSON, AKK Natick, Mass. Web ; Born April 5, 1913, Prepared at Phillips Acidemy, Andover; Entered Fresh- man Year. ROBERT ELLIOT WORDEN C.iiiibnJge, Mass. Bob , Born Spetember 10, 1913; Prepared .It Cambridge Latin School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Automotive Engineering Society (2, 3); Corporation XV (2, 3); Class Secretarv-Treasurer (4. ; Dormitory Committee ' 4 ; Field Day Marshal (4); Freshman Rules Committee, Chairman (4); T.C.A.; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. 121 COURSE XVI Aeronautical Sngineering THE DOUGLAS SLEEPER AMONG the new developments resulting from the rapid advances in the science of aviation is the new Douglas DST. Designed and built by the Douglas Aircraft Company, of which Donald W. Douglas, ' 14, Course II, is President, it will provide two-hundred-mile-an-hour, overnight, transconti- nental service for American Airlines. It is powered by two engines which develop a total of 1860 horsepower and which will pull the plane with its gross load of 24,000 pounds off the ground after a run of only 910 feet. The fuselage and the ninety-five foot wing are constructed of high strength alummum alloy which has been coated with aluminum. In the interior, provisions have been made for sixteen berths each of which is equipped with windows, ventilators, and reading lights. Air ducts in each compartment will maintain a cabin temperature of 70 degrees Fahren- heit when the outside temperature is twenty degrees below zero. The largest and fastest commercial land plane in the world, and the first airliner to be designed and built initially as a sleeper, it represents the high standards maintained bv America in the field of commercial aviation. COURSE X I C. S. Draper Asst. Prof. O. C. KOPPENT Assoc. Prof. J. R. Markham Asst. Prof. J. S. Newell Assoc. Prof. Jerome Clarke Hunsaker Professor In charge of Course S. Ober Assoc. Prof. H. Peters Asst. Prof. M. Rauscher Asst. Prof. C. G. A . RossBY Professor R. H. Smith Professor E. S. Taylor Asst. Prof. H. C. WiLLETT Asst. Prof. 124 COURSE XVI W II. MAM M. BENSON, KK Brooklvn. N. Y. Bill ; Born August 16, 191 4, Pr ;p.ired ,it Adelphi Academy; Pi Tau Pi Sigma (3), X ' icc-President (,4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Aeronautical Engineering Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Gvm Team; Varsitv Gym Team (2, 3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C. ' ; Entered Freshman Year. WILLIAM IIOL ' Gll C:0()k, JR. San Antonio, Texas M.E. ' 34, Rensselaer Polvtechnic Institute; Sigma Xi; . eronautical Engineering So- ciety; A.S.M.E. JOHN LAWRENCE DREW Boston, Mass. Born December 30, 1915; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; Entered Fresh- man Year. J. CK CHAPPER Boston, M.iss Chappie ; Born April 22, 1915; Prepared at Dorchester High School; Freshman Swimming Team; Varsity Swimming Team (3); Entered Freshman Year. EDWARD LEO DASHEFSKY Dorchester, Mass. Dash ; Born November 5, 1914; Prepared at Dorchester High School for Boys, Scabbard and Blade ' 3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. CHARLES NICOL ENDWEISS, lAK Boston, Mass. Born November 29, 1913; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Pi Tau Pi Sigma (2, 3, 4); Scabbard and Blade ' 2, 3, 4), Freshman Ritle Team, Varsity Rifle Team (4), Man- ager (2, 3 , Varsitv Swimming Team (2), M.LT.A.A. (2, 3); Musical Clubs (4); Advanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. FRED HER.MAN FLINT West Somerville, Mass. Fritz ; Born July 10, 1914; Prepared at Somerville High School; Aeronautical Engineering Society (4); Entered Sopho- more Year. DAVID J. GILDEA, JR., ■tM.i Plaintield, N. j. Dave ; Born November 24, 1915; Pre- pared at Plaintield High School; Gridiron (2, 3, 4); Scroll (3. 4); Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); T.E.N. (1), Associate Editor (2), Managing Editor (3); . dvanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. JACK IRWIN HA.VIILTON, Ki ' Riverhcad, N. Y. Ham ; Born August 30, 1915; Prepared at Riverhead High School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); eronautical Engineering Society (2, 3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2); Freshman Swimming Team; Varsitv Swimming Team (2, 3, 4); Field Day Football (2)1 Class Treasurer (2 ); Field Dav Usher (3 ); Field Dav Marshal ' (4); Ttc T« j (1 , 2); Advanced R.O.T.C. (3, 4); Tech Swim Club (3. 4); Society of American Military Engineers (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. WEBSTER H. FRANCIS, JR., tKi; Baltimore. Md. Web ; Born September 2, 1914; Prepared at Monroe High School; Beaver Key Society; Varsitv Swimming Team, .Manager (3); Field Day ' Usher (3); Field Day Mar- shal (4); I.F.C. (3. 4); Entered Freshman Year. GEORGE GRIM.MINGER Washington, D. C. GratJtjiite , .B. ' 31 in Mathematics, George Washing- ton University; American Meteorology So- cietv. SHIGERU KAMIYA Tok -o, japan Graihtjte Graduate of the Tokvo Imperial Uni ersitv, ' 33. 125 COURSE XVI JOSEPH HEDGE KING, K2 Bradford, Pa. ■Jo ; Born November 28, 1913 Prepared at Muncie Central High School, Baton C3, 4); Aeronautical Engineering Society; Fresh- man Tennis Team; Musical Clubs Leader; Entered Freshman Year. LORETO LOMBARDI Brighton, Mass. ■Larry ; Born October 22, 1913; Prepared at Brighton High School; Aeronautical Engineering Society (2, 3); Catholic Cluh (4); Freshman Wrestling Team; Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2 Commuter ' s Club; Entered Freshman Year. HAROLD MILLER Brooklyn, N. V. Born October 14, 1914; Prepared at Brook- lyn Technical High School; Varsity Club O, 4); Freshman Gym Team; Varsity Gym Team (2, 3, 4), Wearer of the T ; Ad- vanced R.O.T.C; Entered Fre shman Year. RICHARD KORNAU KOEGLER Maplewood, N. J. Dick , Born January 6, 1914; Prepared at Columbia High School; Dorclan (4); Aeronautical Engineering Society (2), Vice-President (3 :, President (4); Com- bined Professional Societies (3, 4); Field Dav Football (1); Tech Show (1, 2); Agenda (2); Entered Freshman Year. ROBERT JACKSON Kansas City, Mo. Bob , Born March 3, Kemper Militarv School; Scabbard and Blade (2, 3 Engineering Society (4); Crew; Field Day Footbal 4); Technique, Assistant (2); Advanced R.O.T.C Year. LUTZ, 2N 1913, Prepared at Quadrangle Club; , 4}; .Aeronautical Freshman 150-lb. I (2); I.F.C. (2, 3, Managing Editor Enteted Freshman RICHARD BARZEN MURROW, 2X Independence, Kans. Dick ; Born December 18, 1912; Prepared at Kansas University; Aeronautical Engin- eering Societv (4); Entered Sophomore Year. JOHN ALDEN MYERS, -t-rA Akron, Ohio Born April 24, 1914; Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1, 2, 3, 4); Automotive Engineering So- ciety (2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. KRISTIAN AUGUST OSTBY Horton, Norway GmJuare Graduate of Royal Norwegian Naval Academy ' 23; Norwegian Naval Flying School ' ' 24. DANIEL CECIL PEARSON, JR. Rosuell, New Mexico Dan ; Born June 23, 1909; Prepared at New- Mexico Military Institute; Entered Sophomore Year. JAMES WILLIAM OSMUN East Boston, Mass. Gradiitite B.S. ' 33, Rutgers University. YUKIO OTSUKI Tokio, Japan Graduate B.S. ' 32, Tokio Imperial University. GEORGE DAWSON RAY Liberty ville. III Born August 26, 1914; Prepared at Deer- field-Schields High School, Aeronautical Engineering Society (2, 4), Secretary (3 ), Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3, 4 ' :, M.I.T.A.A.; Entered Freshman Year. ' 126 C () I R S E XVI EARL CORDON RII.EV. Il A Scvcrn.i P.irk, Mil. Pat . Bornjuly 8, 1910; Prepared at Balti- more Polytechnic Institute; Entered Junior Year, WILLIAM A. SANGSTER Perth. Scotland Gftiduatt B.S. ' 31, St. Andrew ' s University, Scotland. DORL N SHAININ, +MA Brooklyn, N. Y. Dor ; Born September 26, 1914; Prepared at Erasmus Hall High School; Gridiron (2, 3, 4); Scroll, President (3, 4); Tau Beta Pi (3), Treasurer (4 . eronautical Engin- eering Society (I, 2, 3,4); Freshman Wrest- lingTeam; Field Day ' Tug-of-War, Manager (2), Field Day Marshal (4); Institute Committee; T.£.N. (1, 2), Treasurer (3); General Manager (4); Entered Freshman Year. HENRY CHARLE.S RUNKEL EliMK-th, N. j. ■Runk ; Bornjuly 22, 1914; Prepared at Pingrv School; Dorclan (3, 4); Track Club C3, 4); Aeronautical Engineering Society (1, 2, 3, 4 i; Freshman Gym Team; Fresh- man Track Team; ' arsitv Track Team (2, 3, 4V Field Day Relay (1, 2); Class Executive Committee (2); Dormitory Com- mittee (4); Field Day Usher (3); Institute Committee (3 ; Entered Freshman Year. JULIUS B. SCHLIEMANN, Ki: East Orange, N.J. Bus ; Born May 14. 1915; Prepared at East Orange High School; Beaver Key Society, Secretary (4); Scabbard and Blade; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1, 2), President (3), V ' ice-President (4); Army Ordnance Association (3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (3, 4); Freshman Boxing Team; M.I.T.A.A. (2), Publicity Man,-iger (3); Field Dav Football (1); Field Dav Usher (3); Field Dav Marshal (4); I.F.C. (3, 4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. LAWRENCE W. SHARPE. lidll Hollywood, Calif. Larrv ; Born October 5, 1912, Prepared at Chauncy Hall; Beaver Club 3, 4,, Scab- bard and Blade (3), Captain (4y . Aeronauti- cal Engineering Society (4); Freshman Track ' Team; Varsity Track Team (2); M.I.T.A.A., Assistant Treasurer (2); Field Day Relay (1, 2); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. ALBERT K. SHOWALTER East Boston, Mass. Graduate A.B. ' 28, Columbia University; American Meteorological Society; Institute of Aero- nautical Sciences. MORRIL B. SPAULDING, JR., i;N New York, N. Y. Yank ; Bornjuly 12, 1914; Prenared at Haverford School; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Society of American Military En- gineers; Advanced R.O.T.C, Entered Sophomore Y ' ear. MARCUS FELD.MAN WAR.MUTIi Upper Montclair, N.J. Marc ; Born May 8, 1913; Prepared at Montclair High School; Aeronautical Engineering Society (1); Freshman Rille Team; Dorm Rumor (3); Advanced R.O.T. C; Entered Freshman Y ' ear. 127 CHARLES WENDELL SHUBART Kansas City, Mo. Born September 19. 1913; Prepared at Southwest High School; Entered Sopho- more Y ' ear. GEORGE S. TRIMBLE, JR., -tKl ' Narberth, Pa. Trim ; Born October 12, 191 ' ; Prepared at Lower Mcrion High School; Gridiron (2, 3, 4); Tau Beta Pi J):Voo Dooil l. ' i ' ), Managing Editor (,4); Woop Garoo (4); Entered Freshman Year. YOU-YUNG WU Wusih, Kiangsu, China B.S. of M.E., University of Nanking, CMna; Institute of Afniii.iiitii.il Science. :j[T|flP COURSE XVII building Snghieering and Qomtructio)! CHRISTIAN SCIENCE BUILDING C CREDIT for the construction of the immense Christian Science Publishing House in Boston should go to the Aberthaw Co. Builders and Engi- neers, of which Leonard Chase Wason, 1891, Course VI, is President. This building is best known as the home of The Christian Science Monitor, perhaps America ' s best newspaper, and certainly the most unbiased. The Monitor IS only one of the many publications, religious and secular, periodical and daily, which originate at the same place. Not only are these edited by some of America ' s most capable journalists, but their printing is a miracle of efficiency, combining the latest improvements in ink, paper, and stereotype research . Although the mam function of this institution is to produce the various Christian Science publications, it has many other interesting and educational features. School children from all over the nation come to see the Mapappa- rium, a glass globe of the world about three stories high, and so arranged that one can actually walk through it and observe the world from within. The Publishing House contains many other features of this type which are recommended to the attention of anyone willing to spare an hour or two of his time to get a backstage view of one of America ' s leading social forces. COURSE XVII w. c. ' oss Professor Ross Francis Tucker Professor 1)1 charge of Course CHARLES HENRY BETTS Belmont, Mass. Charlie ; Born May 13, 1913; Prepared at Belmont Senior High School; Chi Epsilon (3, 4); Associated General Contractors of America (3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. RICHARD EDGAR HICKMAN Brockton, M.iss. Dick ; Born February 21, 1914; Prepared at Brockton High School; Chi Epsilon; Associated General Contractors of America; Btiicbmark, Advertising Manager (3); Tech Show (3); Commuter ' s Club (2, 3); Ad- vanced R.O.T.C.; Entered Freshman Year. RATHUR ANDREW CAROTA Boston, Mass. Carrots ; Born May 29, 1914; Prepared at Boston English High School; Thi Tech, (1, 2); Entered Freshman Ye.ir. RICHARD HALLORAN Newton, Mass. Dick , Born February 5, 1914; Prepared at Newton High School; Associated Gen- eral Contractors of America (2, 3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team; Varsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Freshman Soccer Team; Entered Freshman Year. 130 COURSE XVII ROBERT H. LEVENTHAL Boston, Mass. Bob ; Born February 28, 1914; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; Associated General Contractors of America (3, 4); Freshman Lacrosse Team, X ' arsity Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Entered Freshman Year. SAUL LUKOFSKY Maiden, Mass. Luke , Born February 24, 1914. Prepared at Maiden High School; Associated General Contractors of America (4), Freshman Track Team; Entered Freshman Year. SEBASTIAN G. MAZZOTTA, K Middletown, Conn. Sebby ; Born February 22, 1911; Pre- pared at Niagara University; Associated General Contractors of America (3), Presi- dent (4); Combined Professional Societies (4); Varsity Basketball Team (4); Entered Sophomore Year. WILLIAM FRANCIS MULLEN Boston, Mass. Born June 11, 1913; Prepared at Boston Public Latin School; Association General Contractors of America (2, 3, 4); Musical Clubs, Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Entered Fresh- man Year. ROBKRT ELLIS SAWYER Boston, Mass. Boh ; Born September 7, 1915, Prepared at Thayer Academy; Chi Epsilon (3, 4); .American Society of Civil Engineers (4); Associated General Contractors of . merica (2, 3, 4); The Tech (3, 4); Commuter ' s Club (4); Entered Freshman Year. FRANK W. SCHOETTLER, 2AE Louisville, Ky. Born June 17, 1914; Prepared at duPont Manual Training High School; Associated General Contractors of America (2, 3, 4); Combined Professional Societies (3); Field Dav Tug-of-War (1, 2); Entered Freshman Year. ANGELO MICHEL TREMAGLIO Waterbury, Conn. Angy ; Born December 7, 1913; Prepared at Crosby High School; . ssociated General Contractors of America (2, 3, 4); Field Day Tug-of-War (2); Entered Freshman Year. JOHN DOMINIC VIOLA Boston, Mass. Born November 21, 1914; Prepared at Dor- chester High School for Boys, Associated General Contractors of America (2, 3, 4); Freshman Swimmmg Team; Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. NORMAN KENNETH WHITE Roxbury, Mass. N.K. ; Born November 27, 1914; Pre- pared at Roxbury Memorial High School; Associated General Contractors of . nierica (3, 4); American Society of Military En- gineers (4); Advanced R.O.T.C; Entered Freshman Year. 131 2 c yy v  , Ci-jux j- 71 6 ec -t c. . - - v -- ' -: — - i a __ v ll = - tlAC- J 2 (U . _ -. -t - J- -T-i o u- wt- t,i t .-, C r O i COURSE XVIII K Siathematics GEORGE ASHLEY CAMPBELL THE retirement last December of Dr. George Ashley Campbell, ' 91, I, from his position as a research engineer in the Bell Telephone Labora- tories marks the end of his active career as one of the pioneers in the develop- ment of telephonic communication. During his thirty-eight years as mathe- matical physicist and inventor with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, he made manv important contributions to the science of commun- ications, one of which is the theory of loaded lines, fundamental in telephone systems of today. An outgrowth of this work was the electrical wave filter, on which he obtained patents in 1917, a device which takes its place with the vacuum tube as an essential element in making possible telephone and radio systems of today. We quote Dr. F. B. Jcwett in his article in the October, 1935, Bell System Technical Journal: Doctor Campbell ' s achievements in this field entitle him beyond question to rank first among his generation of theoretical workers in electrical communication. In the illustration is shown a page from Dr. Campbell ' s original man- uscript on sifting lines written in 1909. COURSE XVIII J. Douglas Assoc. Prof. R. D. Douglass Assoc. Prof. Henry Bayard Phillips Professor In charge of Course P. Franklin Assoc. Prof. N. R. George, Jr. Assoc. Prof. F. L. Hitchcock Professor E. Hopi Asst. Prof. L. M. Passano Assoc. Prof. G. RUTLEDGE Professor D. J. Struik Assoc. Prof. N. Wiener Professor S. D. Zeldin Asst. Prof. 134 COURSE X V I 1 1 KENNETH JAMES ARNOLD Pawtuckec, R. 1. Ken ; Born August 20, 1914; Prepared .it Pawtucket High School; Physical Societv (1, 1 Freshman Wrestling Team; Field Day Tug-of-War (1, 2); T.C.A. (1. 2); Entered Freshman Year. HAROLD VILLL .M GEORGE Plains, Pa. Born December 6, 1914; Prepared at Wyo- ming Seminary; Freshman Wrestling Team; Varsity Wrestling Team (2); Entered Freshman Year. EDW. RD E. CHRLSTOPHER, JR. Cambridge, Mass. Chris ; Born June 17, 1912, Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin School; Chem- ical Society (2, 3); Commuter ' s Club; En- tered Freshman Year. PHILIP Di SALV. TORE Newark, N.J. Born October 19, 1915, Prepared at West Side High School; Musical Clubs (2, 3), Concert Master (4); Entered Sophomore Year. ELMER WILBUR L. DAVIS Newton Centre, Mass. Born June 23, 1914; Prepared at Newton High School; Advanced R.O.T.C; En- tered Freshman Year. DOUGLASS HAWKS, JR. Bennington, Vt. Nemo , Born November 10, 1914; Pre- pared at Bennington High School; Fresh- man Ritle Team; Varsity Ritlc Team (3 ; Freshman Swimming Team, Musical Clubs (2); Entered Freshman Year. ELI ABRAHAM GROSS.MAN, BA Mount Vernon, N. Y. Born March 18, 1914; Prepared at Mount Vernon High School; Physical Society C4); Freshman Track Team; ' arsitv Track Team (2); Field Day Relay (2), Field Day Tug-of- War (2); Member of Agenda; Entered Freshman Year. ALBERT HAROLD LESHANE Cambridge, Mass. Al ; Born September 21, 1914; Prepared at Cambridge Latin School; Freshman Basket- ball Team; Entered Freshman Year. BROCKWAY McMillan Hinsdale, III. Brock ; Born March 30, 1915; Prepared at Hinsdale High School; Physical Society (3 4); Radio Club (3, 4); Entered Junior Year. BREWSTER H. GERE, T S Tacuse, N. Y. Grtidiiiite B.A. ' 30, Yale Univeristy; M.A. ' 34, Syra- cuse University; Pi Mu Epsilon; Sigma Pi Sigma; Sigma Xi. 135 ACADEMIC H. G. Pearson Professor I I H. R. Bartlett Asst. Prof. C. Bridenbaugh Asst. Prof. M. R. COPITHORNE Asst. Prof. W . A. Crosby Assoc. Prof. F. G. Fassett, Jr. Asst. Prof. D. M. Fuller Asst. Prof. W. C. Greene, Jr. Asst. Prof. P. Roberts Assoc. Prof. A. T. Robinson Professor R. E. Rogers Assoc. Prof. 136 A C A D i: M I C F. A. Magoun Assoc. Prof. E. F. Langley Professor H. R KuRRELMEYER Professor S. C. ESTAL Professor G. A. BiCHER Asst. Prof. W . C. D. Bridges Asst. Prof. A. D. FiSKEN Assoc. Prof. O. J. Gatciii;ll Professor J. F. C. Hyde As.toc. Prof. T. J. Joil.NSION Asst Prof. C. RUDDELL Assoc. Prof. 137 Class of 1937 OFFICERS Presiiknt David Smith McLellan Vice President Gustav Richard Young Secretary-Treiisiirer Rinaldo ' incent Kron Institute Committee William Bernard Burnet Robert Young Jordan Jordan, Kron, McLellan, Young, Burnet 138 Class of 1938 President David Don.ild Weir OFFICERS Vice-President Frederick John Kolb Secretary - Treasurer Emmett Charles R der Richard Muther Institute Committee Frederick Elder Srrassner Strassncr, W ' cir, Ivolh Muther, Ryder 139 Arnold, Paige, Stewart Freshman Council INSTITUTE COMMITTEE REPRESENTATI TS First Term Stuart Paige Stuart Veeder Arnold Eugene Donald Thatcher Secretary-Treasurer Second Ten Stuart Paige Oswald Stewart, II William Fleming Wingard Thatcher, Paige, Wingard 140 UNDERGRADUATE HOUSES THIS, the 20rh year in the life of the Dormi- tories, is a high mark in their social activity. Traditional affairs as well as comparatively recent innovations have been enthusiastically sup- ported. Dormitories at Technology are far from being mere places of abode where students spend their entire time grinding at their books. Lasting friend- ships are made here through contact with the many men, while teas, dances, bull session dinners, ath- letics, and outbursts of the engineering mind all help to make dormitory life a pleasant one. These houses truly constitute the home of Tech- nologv students during a vital period of their lives. As such, a proper atmosphere and environment is essential and should be present. In the nor too distant past, the social and athletic programs now accepted as commonplace would have been considered an im- possibility and incongruous with the rugged life of the true engineer. The time has passed in which the administration considered it sufficient to outfit the rooms with heavy brown canvas curtains and ponder- ous cast iron ashtravs. Possiblv a new tvpe of student is coming to the Institute; or possibly, association with the gentler arts is recognized as not only de- sirable, hut as essential to the happiness and success of men after graduation. The development of a unity of spirit, congeniality, and a general enjoyment of student life is evident in every phase of the activities in the span of the last two or three ears. Excellent results have been at- tained in the attempt to discourage anv tendency toward individual isolation and to encourage the formation of wider contacts and more friendships. Teas are functions which are being continuallv supported with more and more enthusiasm. There are a number of these affairs arranged during the year. On these occasions members of the various classes mingle together and become acquainted with members of the faculty, who are invited to attend. Thus the student is introduced to the social life of the Institute and obtains a valuable part of his education. Some of the teas are run jointly by the Faculty Club and the Dormitories on the occasion of concerts given by the Musical Clubs. It is surprising how well the engineer adapts himself and enjovs this tvpe of affair, even though he has to temporarilv separate himself from his slide rule. Dormitory dances have become very widely known because of the novel ideas used. There is a series of formal and informal dances, noted not for their -IjuV. ,..: .! 141 splendor but for the good fellowship and for the genuine good time which everyone has. Once a year, the Campus Settlement ' presents an affair, The Dorm Dinner Dance. The bull session dinners are a recent addition to the extra curricular activity, with their purpose to create a better relationship between the Facult - and the student body. No speeches are made, hut small groups of men invite a professor to dine with them. The affairs are very informal, and are valuable as a means of getting the members of the classes to know each other and the Faculty. The Dorms are governed bv an undergraduate com- mittee. Technology has a high degree of student government. This is especially true in the Dormi- tories. ' ith the exception of the Dormitory Board, which acts in an advisory capacity, complete control is vested in the Dormitory Committee. This com- mittee is composed of 20 seniors, who represent the several individual halls. The functions which have been mentioned are guided by sub-committees. The Dormitorv Athletic Committee has charge of sports. At various times of the vear, tennis and squash tournaments are arranged. Intermural sports represent the greatest showing of spirit. In the spring and fall the men play baseball, and in the winter basketball and bowling. It is in these sports that manv of the friendships which make college life worthwhile are formed. In the field of sport, it is the rivalry and competi- tion among friends, as found in the intramural athletic program, which places its value above that found in intercollegiate competition. The absence of professionalism or a distorted conception of the honor and prestige to be gained by winning at any cost is very noticeable in these intramural activities. Although skill may not be alwavs present, the spirit behind the contests is the true motivating force. Instead of a few highly skilled, trained athletes, there is a multitude — less advanced — who secure in abundance the real advantages of sport. A Dorm man ' s davs and nights are comprised not of work alone, for it mav be said that in no one group of Tech students so large as that of the Dorm men is there a more concerted social activity. One of the big events of the year is the annual Field Day. The night preceding Field Day is one always to be remembered. Class rivalry is at its highest pitch and the class banners hastily improvised from convenient sheets and clothes fly from every point of vantage. Fresh- men and sophomores in their oldest clothes may be seen at anv time during the night striving to stand by their colors. Field Day itself is no less exciting and Dorm men alwavs take an active part in the contests. Manv are those who mav be seen running at top speed to their rooms to procure another pair of pants to replace those lost in the fray. Possibly due to the influence of the architects, each year finds a time when streams of tissue and other materials produce a pronounced Mardi Gras effect. Who can forget a room filled with good old granite paving blocks? Other rooms consist of stack- ed furniture, springless beds, and various high ten- sion electrical devices designed to make the intruder (too often the tenant) perk up. Few indeed are the pranks that are not taken good-naturedly. The con- clusion of such fun as a rule consists in everyone concerned heading for the Bean Wagon for hamburg- ers and coffee. Sometimes a good general sing follows — crooners not tolerated. 142 There is one personage who appears to be a permanent fixture of the Dorms. He is the right honorable street cleaner assigned to clean up after the fellows, who, much to his chagrin, insist on throwing papers on the street. It has long been common knowledge that this hard worker is very sensitive to the name of Bootlegger. Capricious youth always revels in this pastime; thus the street cleaner is always addressed as Bootlegger. His wrath at times is almost uncontrollable. Thus you have an account of the life of a Tech man in the Dorms. They are accurate in as far as words go. However, it would be impossible to know all by the mere reading; one must actually live there to understand its life. The Dormitorv Board, under whose direction the management of the Dorms has for so long been successful, consists of far-sighted, generous members of the Faculty. They have been always quick to act for the good of the Dorms and the Dorm men are kind and helpful in offering con- structive advice. In this group of men one, who by virtue of his untiring efforts in assisting the develop- ment of the large dormitory settlement, has made his name synonymous with the Dorms — Prof. L. F. Hamilton. Never considering that his work was done when the mere buildings were completed, he entered into the more difficult problem of helping the students run their Dorms. Long experience enables him to offer counsel in delicate problems where youth has nothing more to offer than enthusiasm. Not to be forgotten is the Dorm Rumor which carries the last minute flashes on all activities of the Dormitories. News, personal and general, is dis- patched with efficiency and the publication has been of great value to Dormitory residents in its six years of service. Great success was encountered this year in the handling of the freshman dinners. The purpose of these dinners is to acquaint the newcomers with the policies of the Dormitories, to have gatherings in which they can get together and meet one another outside of class, and to give them an opportunity to hear from some of the more prominent members of the Dormitories and members of the Facultv. Two such dinner meetings and a tea arc held at which at- tendance is compulsory. Agenda and Dorclan, the honorary societies spon- sored by the undergraduates arc an integral part of the new spirit in the houses. Agenda is the asso- ciation to which freshmen are elected who have been outstanding in Institute and house activities. They are active during their Sophomore vcar. Their purpose is to foster a friendly spirit of rivalry be- tween the freshmen and sophomore classes. Dorclan is fundamentally a society for the recognition of men who have been outstanding in activities and renders the service of backing the Dormitory Committee in respect to rules and the support of Dorm activities. Oneof the interesting features of the undergraduate houses, and one which the students have every reason to be proud of, is the student government. Technol- ogy is noted in the intercollegiate world for having the highest degree of student government of any institution in the country. This is especially so in the dormitories. With the exception of the dormitory board, which acts in an advisory capacity, complete control is vested in the Dormitory Committee. This committee is composed of twenty seniors, elected by their fellow students, who represent the several individual halls. Of course, the principal aim of undergraduate student housing is to provide an adequate place for complete concentration in solitude. The fact that the average rating of the men living on the campus is higher than the Institute average supports the results well. At present Technology has well equipped dormi- tories. In the past few years, many improvements have been accomplished in the houses. 143 Thomas, Borden, Payne, Worden Werblin, Smith, Nichols, Savior, Rahmel, Bulkley, Lessard Vu, Runkel, Hamilton, Lowe, Svenson, Vanderman, Carr Dormitory Committee Chairman Brenton ' ebber Lowe ' 36 Secretary Raymond Carl Svenson ' 36 Treasurer John Paul Hamilton ' 36 W ' alcott Ariel Alton Thomas ' 36 Bern is Francis Henrv Lessard ' 36 Athletic Joel Burr Bulkley ' 36 Freshmen James Henry Carr, Jr. 36 Dinner George Burton Payne ' 36 Brenton Webber Lowe ' 36 Henrv Charles Runkel ' 36 Hall Chairmen Goodale Ravmond Carl Svenson ' 36 Munroe David Abner Werblin ' 36 Committee Chairmen Dorm Rumor Edward Joseph Vanderman ' 37 Social William Robert Savior ' 36 Hayden William Orville Nichols ' 36 Wood Herbert Mowrv Borden ' 36 Publicity Stanlev Brooks Smith ' 36 Dance Harold Elliott Prouty ' 37 Burton Room and Librar - Robert Elliot ' orden ' 36 Memhers-at-Large John Paul Hamilton ' 36 leu-liang Wu ' 36 Graduate House Representative Henrv Arnold Rahmel Representatives of Dormitory Board Leicester Forsyth Hamilton Harold Edward Lohdell Horace Savford Ford Averv x llen Ashdown 144 I I .1 1 . Graduate House The most natiirnl cultural training comes from free sociiil intercourse bet wee i wen of differing interests but of equivalent outlook. DR. KARL T. COMPTON Graduate House AT Its inauguration three years ago, the Grad- uate House was heralded as the most sig- nitkant development in the plan of the In- stitute, and eversince then it has progressed steadily with new additions and facilities for its residents, who now number almost three times as many as were accommodated under the original plan. A vear ago the remaining three halls around the President ' s house were turned over to the exclusive use of the graduates, and new reception rooms were opened on the first floor of Ware, as well as a private dining room in the basement. At the commencement of its third vear of existence, the Graduate House has been provided with a new and larger game room in the basement, and a number of the larger suites have been subdivided in order to provide more single rooms. The success of these arrangements is well in- dicated bv the fact that all available accommoda- tions are now occupied bv the two hundred men liv- ing in the House. Among these residents are repre- sentatives from ninety-two different colleges and twelve different countries. One of the most important features of the Graduate House is the opportunit - which it offers for contact between men of equal intellectual development and widely varying interests. To promote this contact, the residents of the House meet each Wednesday evening for dinner in Walker Memorial. There are usualh- several members of the Facult - present as guests, and often some prominent business or pro- fessional man gives a short address immediately following the dinner. Of a more informal nature are the bi-weeklv gatherings on Tuesda - and Thursday evenings in the butter - of Crafts, where cocoa is enjoyed, and a discussion of popular topics prevails. The relations of the Graduate House with the other student groups arc of a most friendh- nature. Undergraduates and graduates join in dances, ath- letic competitions, and other social activities, all of which are carried along on a joint basis. This year has seen the dormitory basketball championship come to the Graduate House. The number of graduate students attending the dances has increased at least four times over what it has been in the previous years. Of especial interest to the Graduate House is the Crafts Library, which provides abundant recreational reading in technical as well as non-technical litera- ture. The librarv subscribes to a number of the lead- ing newspapers and magazines and contains a very fine collection of histories of science, engineering, and philosophy as well as a section devoted to biog- raphies of prominent scientists, engineers, and bus- iness men. Through the gifts of a number of anony- mous donors this collection of books is being in- creased gradually with a view to picking the best volumes rather than amassing a large collection. The Graduate House has again held four very suc- cessful Sunday afternoon teas during the academic year and these have received the whole hearted sup- port of the Faculty members and their wives, who have kindly assisted in the management of the tea tables and the entertainment of the students and their guests. Ware Reading Room 145 Sterner, Langsdorf, Lowe, Fallwell, Duntley, Mandelkorn, Anderson, Fidler Murray, Miller, Ashdown (Chairman), Rahmel, Brown The Graduate House A group serving as an executive committee for the Graduate House. HOUSE COMMITTEE Chiiiri hin Avery Allen Ashdown Secretary John Rowland Brown, Jr. Treasurer Merwin Miller HALL CHAIRMEN Ware William MacGregor Murray Kunkle Henrv Arnold Rahmel Nichols Harold Alvin Fidler Atkinson Alexander Suss Langsdorf, Jr. Holman John Rowland Brown, Jr. Crafts Merwin Miller DORMITORY COMMITTEE REPRESENTATIVE Brenton Webber Lowe Athletic Committee Chairman Arthur Roland Anderson COMMITTEES Librarian James Brown Fisk Social Committee Chairman John Sterner 146 BOOK TWO EXTRA CURRICULA - -i ATHLETICS PUBLICATIONS ORGANIZATIONS HONORARY SOCIETIES FRATERNITIES PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES DIRECTORY x li. 3 i T H LE TICS John A. Rockwell Chairman Advisory Council on Atliletics Mr. Joseph Louis Levis Dr. John Arnold Rockwell Chairman Mr. Ralph Theodore Jope Secretary Mr. Henr - Elwvnne Worcester Mr. Thomas Everett Sears Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. UNDERGRADUATES Harry Edward Esslev, Jr. Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. 152 Wearers of the T MEMBERS OF THE VARSITY CLUB Crew John Paul Hayes ' 36 Eugene Perrv Cooper ' 37 Albert Carl Faatz, Jr. ' 37 Stanley Theodore Johnson ' 36 Track David Smith McLellan ' 37 Nestor Albert Sabi ' 37 Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. ' 36 Swimming Cleon Carter Dodge ' 37 Bernard ' onnegut ' 36 Soccer Harry Edward Esslev, Jr. ' 36 Alwvn Bennett Grav ' 36 Cross Country Henr - Hinckle - Guerke ' 37 Gvm Harold Miller ' 36 Lacrosse Frederick David Marhias ' 36 Tennis Gilbert Agnew Hunt, Jr. ' 37 153 John Paul Hayes Vice President Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. President Harry Edward Essley, Jr. Secretary M. I. T. Athletic Association President Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. Vice President John Paul Hayes Treasurer Franklin Peabody Parker Chairman Budget Coimnittee Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. Secretary Harry Edward Essley, Jr. Publicity Manager Robert Dean Morton Aiemher-at-Large James Fergus Patterson Ikkm Franklin Peabody Parker Treasurer Robert Dean Morton Publicity Manager James Fergus Patterson Member-at-Larj e Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. Chairman Budget Committee 154 ' r.± Price, Pitkin, Johnson, Hamilton, Tompkins, Rethorst, Ferguson, Daley, Mason, Busch, Morton, Weppler, Keithley Parker, Horton, Hayes, Thornton, Patterson, Essley, Bulkley, Ozol, Garth Gidiey, Rockwell, Norton, Smedile, Goldsmith, NeeJham, GooJwin, Wojtczak SPORT Basketball Boxing Crew Cross Country Fencing Golf Gym Hockey Lacrosse Tennis and Squash Wrestling Track Suimming Rifle Soccer Equipment MANAGER Charles Richmond Gidle ' , Joseph Anthonv Smedile John Stevens Mason John Buxton Pitkin Matthew Latlin Rockwell Harold Elliott Proutv Norman Gilbert Tompkins Paul William Daley Robert Embree deRaismes Alfred Eugen Busch Goodwin deRaismes Walter Stanley Wojtczak Robert Herman Goldsmith Joseph Faber Keithle - George Robert Weppler Karl Perlev Goodwin CAPTAIN William Willis Garth Thomas Philip Norton John Robert Ferguson, Jr. Douglas Chalmers Rudolph Jacob Ozol Rudolph Jacob Ozol Ro?er Everett Needham Franklin Peabodv Parker Joel Burr Bulklev Scott Carson Rethorst Josiah Spaulding Heal Stanle - Theodore Johnson James Fergus Patterson Charles Frederick Price, Jr. John Paul Hamilton 155 VARSITY C REW Ferguson, Thorson, Birch, H.izeltine, Pierce, Beaman, Willcox, Kohl A S the first weeks of March rolled around this - vear a small rowboat, heavily manned, could be seen laboriously forcing its way through the ice around the boathouse float. The occupants of this cumbersome craft were crew men, men tired of the long months of work indoors on the rowing ma- chines, were itching to get their hands on a genuine twelve foot oar instead of the meaningless handle of the practice device. Their object was to break the ice on the river so that it would drift down stream and leave them a place to row. This little episode could be witnessed for several days, and finally, when the ice did clear away a little, the crews took to the river with great enthu- siasm. Since then thev have been on the river every day, either before breakfast or after five in the after- noon. Weather is no consideration to them. They row, rain or shine, snow or sleet. Frequently they come in after practice with ice on their oar blades. All of this typifies the spirit of the Crew men at Tech. It is hard to realize the handicaps they work under. Their classes do not permit them to practice until five o ' clock in the afternoon. If it is too dark to practice then they get up before breakfast to row. But in either case they never have much more than an hour or an hour and a half in which to practice each day. In addition to this, their studies do not allow them to get to bed earl v. With these things to consider, we cannot help ad- miring a Tech Crew man. Whatever the conditions. JUNIOR VARSITY CREW Easton, Pratt, O ' Connor, Freiberg, Lowenstein, Seeleman, Hubbard, Lawrence 156 VARSITY 1 50-LB. CREW Bcckwich, Uolk-ii, Hrauer, Grant, Jaeger, Phillips, Clifford, Haines Clark (Cox) he rows, and he rows to win. He is not always suc- cessful, but he does not give up when he loses. Win or lose, he is always a sportsman. The rowing season lasts throughout the entire school ear. The boats are on the river from the last of September till the middle of November, when the weather will no longer permit rowmg. Then the crews work out on the machines until early March when the ice breaks up and they can get on the river once more. Their first regatta is in the last part of April. Thev usually have four to five regattas, row- ing against such crews as Yale, Harvard, Princeton Navv, Penn, Cornell, Columbia, and Syracuse. This year there were four regattas, all resulting unfavor- ably for Tech. The leader of the spirit in this sport is the coach, William Haines. For many years he has been at the boathouse to instruct Tech ' s crews in the art of rowing, and everyone who has ever known him at all is loud in his praise of Bill as a leader, a sportsman, and a good fellow. Coach Haines is ably assisted by Bill Lumkin, who just came to us this ' ear to replace Al Dunning as Freshmen coach. FRESHMAN CREW Haggerty, Montgomery, Hoke, Glacken, Church, Chapin, Weir, Draper, Dunning Coach) Smith (Cox) 157 VARSITY TRACK Johnson (Trainer), Bowie (Coach), Hermann, Thomson, Ray, Crout, Kinraide, Jarrell, Guerke, Wojtczak, (Mgr.) Hedlund (Coach) Abel, Faatz, Talbert, Johnson, Donnan, Runkel, Blair. Stark Chalmers, Brown, T., Pulsifer, Cooper, Jenkins (Capt.), Nygaard, Brooks, McLellan, LeBlanc ' I HE Engineers opened their season on April 27 - at Harvard in the Greater Boston Intercol- legiates. Scoring 46 1-5 points, Technology took second place, being led onlv bv Harvard. The follow- ing Saturdav, Mav 4, before a large Open House crowd, Technolog} ' won over Bates College bv the score of 89 2-3 to 45 1-3- On May 11 the team trav- eled to Providence and swept through the Brown University team for an 84 1-2 to 50 1-2 victory. With two impressive victories and a line showing m the G.B.I.C. on record, hopes were high for a New Eng- land Championship. The showing of the Engineers in the N.E.I.C.A.A. meet was somewhat disappoint- ing. The team scored 13 1-4 points which gave it sixth place. In the I.e. A. A. A. A. Meet Technology took tenth place with 7 1-2 points. Throughout the outdoor season, the performances of Captain Mort Jenkins, Stan Johnson, and Jim Thomson were outstanding. Captam Jenkins, in ad- dition to his victories in dual meets, took first place in the 880 yard run, and third in the 1500 meter run in the G.B.I.C, and retained his N.E.I.C.A.A. 880 yard title. In ending an outstanding competitive sea- son, Johnson scored a third place in the broad jump in the I.C.A.A.A.A. meet with a leap of 24 feet 2 inches, a new Institute record. Thomson broke the Technology record in both the discus and high jump, a jump of 6 feet 3 inches giving him a tie for first in the I.C.A.A.A.A. FRESHMAN TRACK Johnson (Trainer), Bowie (Coach), Dobler, O ' Connell, Ryrholm, Allen, Shirlev, Des Jardins, Stearns, Gunkel, Hedlund (Coach) Bender, Kittel, Eddv, Worthen, Gordon, Steere, Black, Jelatis, Noves Strassner, Ryder, Craig, Scalingi, Wochos, Cude, Sieradzki, Hadley, French, Bergeson 158 VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY Hedlund i Qiach), Kittel, French, Pitkin (Mgr.), Chalmers (Capt.), Sabi, Johnson (Trainer) Oakes, Guerke, Fitch, Cooper, Matthews ' I HIS ear the ' arsitv Cross Counrrv Team en- - gained in three dual meets and in two intercol- legiate championship runs. The first dual meet with Tufts was lost by a score of 19-36. The following week the team journeved to Franklin Park where the ' lost to Massachusetts State by the score of 26-29. It was one of the most interesting Cross Countr ' meets run in many years. Despite new blood, it slipped back in the next meet and lost to Rhode Island State 24-35. The Technology runners did not do their best here, and most of the men crossed the finish line with plenty of energy to spare. In the N.E.I.C.A.A.A. Championships, the team placed ninth in a field of eleven. The day was exceptionally warm and all teams were at a disadvantage. In New York at the I. C. A. A. A. A. Championship run, the men set out to redeem themselves but unfortunately one of the best performers was injured. The per- formance of the team as a whole was much better at this meet than it had been all season. For the freshman team were scheduled two dual meets and two championship runs. The first dual meet was held with Andover and was lost bv a score of 15-48. The second dual meet, because of its prox- imity to Field Dav, had to be cancelled, and the freshmen next ran in the N.E.I.C.A.A.A. meet. Only one freshman was sent to the I.C.A.A.A.A. run, and he did verv creditably, butbecauseof thefact thatfive men were needed, the freshman team recei ved no score. FRESHMAN CROSS COUNTRY VTJ ¥ P MrAii Htdkind (Coach), Dana, Klicgord, Swan, Ross (Capt. ' , Fogliano, Peters, Johnson, (Trainer) 159 VARSITY BASKETBALL McCarthy Coach , Vu, Lippetc, Garth CCapt., Thornton, Bar a ossa, Oevereaux, Gidley MgrJ THE M.I.T. varsity basketball team has success- fullv completed its 1935-1936 season with three victories to its credit. Opening the schedule by losing a close game to Boston University by one point, the quintet retal- iated bv winning the next from Massachusetts State bv the same margin. Thev continued their victors ' by trimming the highlv favored Harvard outfit. The next two games were lost to the two strong Lowell and Tufts teams. The Tech five then showed its old form bv completelv vanquishing New Hampshire. The effects of the mid-vear exams manifested them- selves when the quintet lost nvo very close games to Clark and ' ermont and the following two to Brown and Pratt. The seniors who played their last game for Tech were Captain Garth, Vu, Thornton and Denton. At the banquet given at the end of the season. Captain Garth was awarded the varsir - award and Lippitt and Kangas were elected co-captains for the 1936- 1937 season. The prospects for next season look quite favorable, with manv good players left from this vear ' s squad. There are also a number of members of the Freshmen team with promising ability who, with more experience, are expected to contribute to next vear ' s team. FRESHMAX BASKETBALL 1 I Steele (Coach), Emerson, Fouhy, Hanke, Reed, Fife, Wignot, FitzGibbon (Mgr.) Bent, Love, Root, Howe, Schneider, French, Riley Landwehr, Mason, LawTence 160 VARSITY GYM Dreissigacker, AuW ' erter, Hhiriizy, Nccdhain, Wells, Kolb, Loder Morgan, Benson, Tompkins, Werblin, Kirloskar THIS year the Gvm Team takes to the road in an effort to defeat Temple, Navv, and Armv in their respective gymnasia. The team ' s chances are good because of the fine showing it has displayed in pre-season practice and exhibitions. Technologv plays host to Princeton, Springheld, and Dartmouth before journeying once more to Temple for the Inter- collegiate. W ' erblin, Miller, and Captain Needham, all letter- men from last year, form the nucleus about which Coach Forsell is rapidly building a team well equipped in all events. A large number of Sopho- mores and Juniors are striving for berths on the team. Coach Forsell was greeted bv twenty-three fresh- men, the largest turnout in manv vears, when he took over the coaching duties this fall. He lost no time in organizing competitive meets each week and is dehnitely making gratifying strides towards in- suring Technology of a good gym team for the next few years. As far as actually winning meets, the team was not successful, but nevertheless the team showed a marked improvement throughout the season. The lack of a strong delegation from last vear ' s team, which was very successful, seriously handicapped the coach in buildinff up this vear ' s team. FRESHMAN GYM Campbell, Sahuri, Lane, Gaines, Weathcrill, Kleiman, Murphy, Hall, Gilliss Littlejohn, Stanley, Kaufman, Mitchell, Cremer Stewart H., Grant, Hammond, Alexander, Stewart, O. 161 VARSITY RIFLE Hvde (Coach), Doane (CaptO. Myrick, Putt, Foote, Merrill, Macdonald (Coach) Clough, Whitaker, Keithley (Mgr), Price, Kinraide, Maak TWO new range records give ample proof of the excellent shooting done by the varsit - team this season. One, the two position team record of 914 made against the Arlington Rifle Club is fifteen points higher than the previous 899. The other rec- ord established was the three position individual with a score of 285, made by the star sophomore, David Whitaker. The total of seven wins and five losses thus far is a bit disappointing in comparison with previous sea- sons. The team, however, has been shooting as well as last year ' s championship group, but the schedule has included several excellent new civilian teams which enlarged the loss column by slender margins. In spite of the increased intercollegiate competi- tion the team has fared well, bowing only to the national champions. Navy, and New Hampshire. ' ictories were won over Lowell Textile, North- eastern, Harvard, Yale, and Bowdoin. The sophomores have been a material factor in the good shooting this season. Whitaker has been con- sistantlv high, with Maak close at his heels. Foote and Clough have both done much toward a success- ful team. Mvrick has made rapid progress during the year, and has been instrumental in the last few vic- tories. The two juniors Kinraide and Keithley, and Captain Doane and Denton have done their parts towards a good season. A very large part of the credit is due Major Hyde and Sergeant Macdonald for their strong support and superior coaching. FRESHMAN RIFLE Lt. Bridges (Coach), Myrick (Mgr.), Withington, Renshaw, Ohlson, Hilliker, Sgt. Fitzgerald (Asst. Coach) Harper, Pew, Wirsing, Knox, Heymann Thompson, Brown 162 o n Ti:% 4, it ' - ' i iW VARSITY WRESTLING dcRaismes, G. Mgr.), Takahashi, Testa, Cestoni, Cettei, Kanter, Jay Ricks v, Coach) Bartholomew, deRaismes, R. E., Torrance, Noodleman, Boyan THE All Tech Wrestling Tournament this year was held in the Hangar Gymnasium on De- cember 6th and 7th with extreme success. Over forty contestants participated in the matches, which re- sulted in two freshman victories in the 145 pound and 165 pound classes. Medals were presented to the win- ners at the annual wrestling banquet. Due to the graduation of several of the varsity members last June, the team this year has been severe- ly handicapped. Though the team has been unsuc- cessful in its dual meets with Harvard, Tufts, C.C. N. Y., Brown, and Springfield, the accomplishments of some of the individual members deserve com- mendation. Though unable to compete during the earl - part of the season Joe Heal demonstrated his strength and agility during the later meets. A. J. Powers per- formed very well throughout the season for the freshmen, winning all of his bouts. Both men are expected to be strong contenders for New England Championship positions. The New England Wrestling Championships at the time of this writing have not been held. The competing colleges will include Harvard, Brown, Yale, Springfield, Tufts, and M. I. T. Despite its dual meet records M. I. T. hopes to place high among the colleges, for there are several individuals whose performances the team is counting upon. (fV f o o FRESHMAN WRESTLING Ja Ritks (Coach), Wheless (Mgr.), Zeitlen, Powers, A., Green, Mullin, May, deRaismes, G. (Mgr.) Hobson, Herasimchuk, Treinblay, Harrison, Powers, E. Pastene, Welton, Laurent, Mulberry 163 VARSITY FENCING Rockwell (Mgr.), Roth (Coach), Bartlett, Graves, Clarens, Salny, Lous, Nickerson, Dantona, Rosenberg, Ozol (Capt.) FOR the past few years, the M.I.T. Fencing Team has shown itself to be dehnitelv a winning team, and the record of the 1936 season has been no excep- tion. With the 1936 season at an end, there has been made a record not easily passed over. The Olympic Trials opened the season and the four Varsity mem- bers and the two freshmen who entered did very creditably, considering the fact that the larger part of the competitors were the best fencers in the United States. Following the Olympics came meets with Norwich, Columbia, Harvard, Boston College, Brown, Princeton, Rutgers, the Providence Fencers ' Club, and St. Johns with M.LT. winning all but those meets with Brown, Columbia and Harvard. The IntercoUegiates finishing the season came late in March and showed the team to be especially strong in Foil and Sabre, although the final ratings placed M. I. T. in the lower half of the competing colleges. The ' arsitv is unfortunate to lose two such out- standing seniors as Captain Ozol and Toorks, but on the other hand, it is fortunate to retain so manv members of the current team. It is in the juniors that the team is best represented, with many men proficient with the Epee and Sabre. Little is said usually about a team ' s coach. Fencing at the Institute would be decidedly lacking without John Roth. His instruction, his encouragement and his ideals of sportsmanship make better men of all those he teaches. FRESHMAN FENCING Cooper, Malick, Zuckerman, True, DeKorp, Yetccr, Hedson. Davis, Knox Benecke, Taylor, Schlasinger, Osmun, Goodheim, Chestnut, Postman, Wieser 164 VARSITY SWIMMING Jarosh Coachy, Hope, Stevens, Fischcl, Gardner, Buchmann, Cioldsniitli i,Mgr. ; Agnew, Main, White, Dodge, Patterson (Capt.), Saunders EARLY in the fall it was expected that a well balanced swimming team would represent M.I.T. during the 1935-36 season. Unfortunately several of the men who had been considered excellent varsitv prospects failed to appear. So few of last year ' s freshmen returned that the new varsity coach, John J. Jarosh, was severely handicapped. Although every contest was lost, the Tech team maintained a fine spirit of enthusiasm and coopera- tion. The 300 yard medley relay ream consisting of Cleon Dodge, Barney ' onnegut, and Captain Patter- son set a new Institute record. ' onnegut should be commended for his excellent performance in the 200 ard breast stroke event and Dodge deserves similar praise for his outstanding work- in both the 150 yard hack stroke and 100 yard free style events. The schedule consisted of meets with Boston Uni- versity, Amherst College, Trinity College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Worcester Polytechnic Insti- tute, and Bowdoin College. In the New England Intercollegiate Championships Tech will be repre- sented by Dodge, X ' onnegut, Patterson, Small, Smith, and Main. The freshman team under the supervision of Coach William J. Champion has had a successful season in meets with preparatory schools and local organiza- tions. Although Hamilton, Hope, Patterson, Vonne- gut, and White, all of them seniors on the varsity, will graduate in June, it is hoped that their places will be filled by members of this year ' s freshman team. Of the first year men, Captain Chestnut, Paige, Hanson, Fabens, and Morrill have been outstanding. FRESHMAN SWIMMING Turner (Mgr.), Lucas, Cooke, Leonard, Beaujean, Greenhalgh, deCastro, Withington, Brewster, Fabens, Paige Sears, E. Chin-Park, Schroeder, MacKinnon, Willard, Squire, Hanson, Algor, Cushnie Martin, Pitt, Herman, Bernays, Wong, Kabacinski, Chestnut, Morrill, Chatten, Pope, Silber, Woolaver, Steele 165 VARSITY SQUASH Summers (Coach , Newman, Mason, Rulon, Terry, Hunt, Busch (Mgr.) Cocke, Greenberg, Stearns, Du Pont, Lopez (Capt.) THE varsit ' squash team pla -ed over a dozen matches in the past season. Among the oppon- ents were Harvard, Princeton, and Trinity. Two matches were plaved with Trinitv, our varsity win- ning the first at Hartford, 3-2, and the second at M.I.T., 5-0. Most of the remaining contests were with the Massachusetts SquashRacquets Association. These matches were plaved with Lincoln ' s Inn Club which was defeated 3-1, the University Club, the Union Boat Club, and other teams entered in the M.S.R.A. class B competition. The members of the team deserve the heartiest of congratulations for their fine spirit. Outstanding among these members is I. L. Newman, who plaved number one man. He won all of his matches this sea- son with the exception of the Harvard match. Because of the large number of freshmen out for squash, there were two freshman teams. Both the first and second teams were entered in the Class D competition of the Massachusetts Squash Racquets Association. The opponents of these teams were con- fined to other members of the Association. To Jack Summers, the coach, the squash teams are deeplv indebted for the excellent coaching and in- struction that he has given them and they are look- ing forward to his help in the future. FRESHMAN SQUASH Summers i Coach , Ellis, Estes, Graham, Lane, Ross, Robbins Mgr. Nicholson, Magruder, Beyer, Dow 166 VARSITY TENNIS Summers (Coach), Pettebone, Rethorst, Gay, Lvle, Sherman, Terrv THE 1933 tennis season was somewhat unsatis- factory as far as the match scores were con- cerned. The M.I.T. team started strongly, defeating Worcester Tech by the score of 5 to 1, but victory was not long-lived, because the Tech team was de- feated successively by Amherst (7-2), Williams (8-1), and Dartmouth (8-1). Bad weather caused matches with Brown and Tufts to be cancelled. The outlook for the 1936 season seems more opti- mistic. Captain Scott Rethorst and Gilbert Hunt will form an admirable foundation for the team, both being well-experienced and dependable players. The schedule, calling for eight matches in contrast to the four matches actuallv played last year, will offer fine opportunity for the team to try its strength against a great variety of opposition. FRESHMAN TENNIS U (T f f ! 1 Schwartz, Mendel, Koch, Oldfield (Cap:.), Stearns, Bender 167 VARSITY BOXING Smedile, old, Wallace, Thorson, W allacli, iMathesius, Lefthes, Rawson (Gjach) Gibbs, Chmielewski, Norton (CaptO, Gleason, Claffee ALTHOUGH the Beaver leather pushers failed to ring up a single victory during the 1935-36 season, the general trend of scores and the keenness of competition offered to the opponents more than counterbalanced this fact. On December 19th the boxers bowed to the power- ful Harvard team 8-0 in the openmg meet before a record crowd of 500 people in the Hangar Gym. On February 5th the mittmen held the undefeated Rut- gers team 4-4. Two days later, Tech was defeated 8-0 by the Intercollegiate Champions, Penn State. In a golden glove tournament open to all Tech men except letter men, the winners were: Dave Lichter, 115 pound; Tony Chmielewski, 125 pound; Bill Wold, 135 pound; Fred Claffee, 145 pound; Dick Belser, 145 pound; Bob W ' hunngham. 155 pound; Bob Thorson, 165 pound; and Ed Brittenham, heavy- weight. These men received golden gloves, while in addition, Tonv Chmielewski w ' as awarded the silver boxing trophy for his outstanding exhibition of box- ing skill and sportsmanship. The following week the boys lost to Yale 3 to 5, and on the following week were defeated 3 1-2 to 4 1-2 bv Springfield. The final dual meet was with the U. S. Coast Guard Academy, where again the boys came out on the short end, losing 1 1-2 to 4 1-2. In their first meet the Beaver freshmen held Shirley Industrial School 4-4, but lost the return match 3-5- The annual meet with Harvard was a close affair, but Tech lost, 5-3- Yale won the closing meet 7-1, Baldwin, Constance, and Whittingham did most of the Freshman honors for Tech, ably assisted by Rvan and Kettendorf. Beer (Mgr.), Whittingham, B.idenoch, Constance, Ranison Coach) Castleman, Merriman, Baldwin, Ryan, Lichter FRESHMAN BOXING 168 VARSITY GOLF Copeland, Everett, Ozol, Flood, Prouty, GooJuin, Morton THE varsitv golf team, under the leadership of CaptainRobert Flood, completed a season which was bv far the most successful that any golf team has had at Technology. The golf team was fortunate to procure the ser- vices of Mr. John Cowan, professional at the Oaklev Country Club, as coach. This was the first time that the golf team has had a coach since it was recognized as a varsitv sport. During the season, matches were played with the following colleges: Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Amherst, Bowdoin, Boston College, Colby, and Brown University. The team also entered five men in the New England Intercollegiate Golf Association tournament which was held at the Oakley Country Club in Belmont, Massachusetts. CAPTAINED by Frank Parker, and coached by George Owen, the 1936 Hockey team began the season by losing a close game with B.U. Harvard and Princeton, both very strong, beat Tech rather badly. After losing to Brown, the team won its first victory by winning over Northeastern 7-4. M. I. T. defeated Mass. State for a second victory by the score of 3-1. In the New Hampshire game the team lost a hard fought battle. After vacation. Technology met the Boston Col- lege sextet on home ice in a very close game in which B. C. scored the winning goal in the last ten seconds of play. The team then bowed in succession to B.U., Williams, and West Point by close scores in hard- fought games. Altogether, the team record was highly satisfying in view of the keen competition. VARSITY HOCKEY MutlKT. M.ivo, Minott, Cook, Anderson, Kennv, Shipper, Meyer Stiles, Acker, Eddy, Colicn.J., I ' .irkcr (Capt.), Goodman, Daley, Hcaly, ' an Patten-Steiger 169 VARSITY LACROSSE Alien, Brod, Coile, Waxman, Pavne, Burke, Hamilton, Tucker i Coach Zemansky, Halloran, Leventhal, G. deRaismes, Koch, Carr, Bulkley HANDICAPPED by the small number of men who reported for the sport this year, the var- sity lacrosse team had an unsuccessful season against a group of strong opponents. While the spirit and quality of those who took part in the sport this year was splendid, the lack of numbers brought defeat, sometimes onlv within the last period of the game. Under the coaching of Tommv Tucker and cap- taincy of Robert Foster, ' 35, the team gave their op- ponents a hard tight from the beginning to the final gun of each game, but failed to win a single contest. Steady improvement, however, was shown through- out the season, especially by some of the sophomores. Robert Foster, ' 35, and David Mathias, ' 36, were awarded straight T ' s for their persistent good work and spirit. THE varsity soccer team under the leadership of Coach Goldie and Captain Hamilton had a successful season with a schedule of eight games. The opening game against Brown was hard fought. Tech lost by the score of 1-0. In the second game Tech played the N.E.I.S.A.A. champions, Yale. Although the team put up a good fight, they lost, which was not to their discredit, for Yale was un- defeated all season. The game with Clark was a 0-0 tie, although two extra periods were played. Then the team, hitting its stride, decisively defeated Bridgewater 4-2. Continuing its good play, Tech next defeated Tufts 2-1 in a fast and hard fought con- test. However, in the last two games Tech suffered defeat at the hands of the Harvard team 2-0, and then at West Point 3-2. VARSITY SOCCER Terry, Gray, Mendel, Wojtczak, Goldie (Coach) Waxman, Essley, Wemple, Wepler, Lindsay, Dreselly, Arino Gilliss, Kron, Hamilton, Wu, Ceballos 170 SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL Rossano, Faelton, Kuhn, Shuctleworth, Kearny, Beer, Koch, Steele, McGill Muther, Vasilianskas, Burke, Black, Strom, Johnson, Holloway Gieradzki, Cook, Dobler, Hoke, Chmielewski, Thompson, Katz Field Day A LTHOUGH minor kidnapings and abductions - ■had raken place throughout the two weeks preceding Field Day, activities really began on the eve of that eventful day. The Sophomores had or- ganized in a manner unprecedented in the history of past Field Days. They took possession of ' Friend- ship Lodge at Lake Massopoag and transformed its sanctity into a chamber for the retention of violent prisoners. On the afternoon before Field Day the first Sophomores arrived at the camp with captured Freshmen. From that time on there was a stead - stream of prisoners into camp until nearly dawn. As the Frosh arrived, they were kept outside until everything was ready. Then, one by one, they were brought into the lodge and chained to the floor with tire-chains. The chains were wrapped once about their legs and padlocked. At the final count, there were more than fifty captives confined in the Lodge. Word finally got out as to where their brethren- in-arms were being held, and a few foolhardy Frosh decided to attack. Because the attempt proved un- successful, the poor yearlings sought the aid of po- SOPHOMORE CREW Guindon (Stroke), Ihmels, Pie), McKeag, Gjhen, . twater, Preston, Foote Biencardi (Cox) 171 SOPHOMORE RELAY ' wkLJUL Hadley, CoUe, Desjardins, Cude Torrans, Schmitt, Foote, Worthen, Eddy, Wochos Craig, Pulsifer, Solomon lice. The appearance of nvo state troopers brought the situation to a climax, and when the dust cleared, a number of Freshmen could be seen hurrying back to Cambridge in order to join their colleagues in the official events of Field Day. Activities began earlv in the morning with a crew race on the Charles. The Sophomores ' victory in this event was the first evidence of their superiority. Be- cause thev lacked experience in handling a shell the Freshmen lost by three lengths. Judging from the ' crabs thev were catching, the yearlings were evi- dentlv putting in a supply of ammunition for the glove fight. The first pull of the Tug-of-War began the activ- ities of the afternoon. The Freshmen won this event mainlv because of their superior teamwork. With somewhat enlivened hopes the football team opened the game with strong opposition to the more experi- enced Sophomores. The Sophomores were twice beaten back from the Freshmen ' s goal, and at the end of the first quarter both teams were about equal, the score remaining 0-0. The second quarter was in favor of the Sophomores. Their drive toward the Freshman goal resulted in a touchdown. With the score against them, the Freshmen unleashed an excellent aerial attack, several times threatening to even the score. «j ' zr¥ t 1 1 « t t SOPHOMORE TUG-OF-WAR Underwood, x)nibs, Burdit, Smith, L., Ellison, Chapin, Church, Summerheld. Fisher, Smith, H. Coach} Keyes, Knight, Sturgion, Phillips, Wardle, Putt, Brod, Judkins, . llen Bossange, Morrell, Kolb, Wallace, ludginsky. Carter, Stearns, Banzett. Leviclc 172 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL HfiHif: ' Chatten, Fife, Muckley, Cremer Broadbent, Whittingham, Chance, Kettendorf, Pollock, Christensen, Fouhy The second half snll showed themalittlehthind the second year men. About the middle of the third quarter their passing began to work successfullv, and they forced their way deep into the opponents ' ter- ritory. After the team had been forced back a short distance, Fouhy completed a twentv-vard pass, tying the score. With the game even, the spectators ' in- terest grew and the odds were changed in favor of the Freshmen. Seeing the success of the opponents ' passes, the Sophomores attempted similar tactics, climaxing the game with a touchdown in the last three minutes of play. Even though they had lost, no one doubted the lighting spirit that the Freshmen had acquired in the period of live crowded weeks. With the second Tug-of-War, the Freshmen again proved to be the better organized team and won their first victorv of the dav. The Relav Race was close, but here again the Sophomores were a slight bit in the lead. The Freshmen were a good quarter-lap ahead in the beginning, but as the faster men of the Sophomore team came along, the Freshmen fell back into second place. Cude of the Sophomore team de- cided the race by winning with a quarter-lap lead. The glove fight was one event that was decidedly in favor of the Freshmen. Although the throwing of over-ripe vegetables, eggs, and stale fish was lacking. FRESHMAN CREW l.cir, Slioum.uoli, H.unmell, Holbrook, Allen, Vint;ard, Boissevain ' yverberg (Cox) 173 FRESHMAN RELAY Gage vMgr), Peters, Wethersbee, Ryder, Landwehr, Walker, DeVoe, Spinner Fogliand, Arey, Carr, Laker, Carleton, Hyde, Spiller the glamour of the fight was still present in the Fresh- men ' s enthusiasm. Incensed by mass kidnaping the previous night, enough members of the class turned out to make the odds three to one over the Sopho- mores. There was no doubt as to the outcome of the battle at any point. Every Sophomore that ventured to the opposite side of the field was quickly and efficiently relieved of his glove by no less than fifteen Freshmen. This victory was not enough to win the dav, however, and the score totaled ten to five in favor of the Sophomore class when the final count was taken. The Field Day Program was brought to a close with the annual banquet, vhich saw the dropping of all hostilities. The cheery atmosphere quickly dis- pelled any possible vestige of animosity, and with a new feeling of camaraderie instilled in manv hearts, the 1936 Field Dav was drawn to a glorious finish. Thus was added one more to the record of classic davs in the school vear. 0 r f r FRESHMAN TUG-OF-WAR Jungbluth, Pancake, Fletcher, Badenoch, Vandenburg, Neuendorffer, Beaujeau, Lowry, Chandler, Ross Ferreira, Friedman, Kirshner, Rugo, Guy, Goddard, Merrill, Casey, Goldberg, Budka, Willard Hanau, Zimmerman, Cushnie, Chestnut, Paige, Gundlach, Seykota, Kuhrt 174 TUBLICATIONS THE TECH TECHNIQUE VOO DOO T. E. N. James Rhyne Killian, Jr. Chairman Advisory Council on Undergraduate Publications James Rhvne Killiaii, Jr. Chainihin Harold Edward Lolxltll Stanley Ga Hvdc Fitch Frederick Gardiner Fassetr, Jr. Harold Saxward Wonson 177 Ehvood H Koontz General Mjtlagir Anton E. Hittl Managing Editor Richard L. OJiorne Eilitor Ralph D. Morrison, Jr. Business Manager 4 -mi T , ' -4« IkTkA fA Benjamin B. Dayton Arthur M. York Leonard A. Seder John Iglauer Joseph A. Smedile Associate Business Manager Assignments Editor Features Editor Sports Editor Desk Editor Laurence R. Steinhardt Albert A. Woll Walter T. Blake James G. Loder Charles R. Kahn AUan L Roshkind Photographic Editor Personnel Manager Business Service Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Asso. Advertising Mgr. 178 Weiss, Gorman, Levy, Baral, Sumraerfield, Cook, Murphv, Chmieleuiki Strauss, Cohen, Kolb, Scanstield, Smith, V., Melville, Woollett, Krenn Dadakis, Chin-Park, Spiller, Rovno, Pitt, Bentley, Mautner, Meyer The Tech Emanuel Rapoport ' 36 Jackson Hancock Cook ' 36 EDITORIAL BOARD Herbert Klemm Weiss ' 37 Louis Cass Young ' 36 Victor Aaron Altman ' 38 Leon Baral ' 38 Joseph Baver ' 38 Alanson ViJliam Chandler Anthonv Chmielewski ' 38 Ralph Bralev Cobb ' 38 Douglas Gerhard Esperson Sevmour Gross ' 38 38 38 STAFF ASSISTANTS John Iglauer ' 38 Harold James ' 38 Harrv Chandler Kittredge, Jr. Frederick John Kolb ' 38 Joseph Robert Krenn ' 38 Dudley Allen Levick, Jr. ' 38 George Maurice Levy ' 37 James Cooper Longwell ' 38 Ruth Gertrude Rafterv ' 38 ' 38 Michael Edward Scalia ' 38 Allan Edwin Schorsch ' 38 Harold Heumann Strauss ' 38 John Robert Summcrheld ' 38 Edgar Breck Taft ' 38 Abner White ' 37 39 David Albert Bartlett ' 39 Edward Patterson Bentley Robert Harris Briggs ' 39 Walter Nicholas Brown, Jr. David Chin-Park ' 39 Edward Chin-Park ' 41) Samuel Leo Cohen ' 39 Georije Dadakis ' 39 Richard Grav Davis ' 39 Arnold Boris Epstein ' 39 Andrew Lawrie Fabens ' 39 Frank Barnstead Gorman ' 39 39 STAFF MEMBERS Ralph Lohr Hegner ' 39 Will Brown Jamison ' 39 David Kaufman ' 39 Peter Prokos Kutrubes ' 39 Leonard Frederick Luchner Leonard Mautner ' 39 Karl William Melville ' 39 William Alfred Merritt ' 39 Maurice Abraham Mever ' 39 Jeremiah Gerald N ' lurph - ' 39 Arthur Russell Olson ' 39 ' 39 ' 39 Burnett .Myron Pitt ' 39 David Rowlandson Preston Ida Rovno ' 39 Charles Tripp Rvder, Jr. ' 39 39 Paul Edwin SandoriT ' 39 Edwin Kinmonth Smith, Jr. Robert ' ail Smith ' 39 Reevan Spiller ' 39 Douglas Jennings Tavlor ' 39 Robert Charles Whittingham ' 39 Ralph Storer Woollett, ]r. ' 39 Joseph George Zeitlen ' 39 179 I k Ford M. Boulware Editor-hi-Chief John T. Smith General Manager Lea H. Spring Business Manager Edwin L. Hobsoii William M. Harcum Harvey F. Phipard.Jr. Charles A. lilessiag Departmrnts Editor Circulation Manager Atlvirtisin Manager Associate Art Editor Ira H. Lohman, Jr. Albert I. Blank Rolf E. Schneider John B. Corbett Gerai 3 Chapman Associate fentiiris Editor Associate ManagiiigEditor Publicity Manager Treasurer Associate Departments Editor 180 n ' JL ' ( Kettering, Steere, Scott, Triller, Wenzel, Levis, H.irtman, Lyon Wheless, Days. Cherry, Foote, Shirley, Chapman, Park, Morgenthaler, Zeldin, Gamble Gundlach, Mitchell, Hammond, Grant, AuWerter, Forman, Mazur, Estes, Herasimchuk Technique 1 Francis Jack Bictel Adam Christian Gambel Gordon Lee Foote Fred Paton Forman Assistant CircuLitioii Managers Assistant Department Editors Assistant Photographic Managers Assistant Advertising Managers Newton LeRoy Hammond, Jr. Samuel Adams Steere, Jr. Daniel Sinclair Scott James Herman Kettering Assistant Art Editor William Edward Hartmann Assistant Publicity Manager Richard Karl Koch Assistant Treasurer Fred Warren Morgenthaler Assistant Managing Editors Philip Ellsworth Sellers Jay Pearce AuWerter William Souther Erewster Arthur Clayton Cook Stephen Aloysius Days, Jr. George Lawton Estes, Jr. Frederick Bourne Grant Theodore Julius Guiidlatli Michael Vasil Herasimchuk Robert Harrv Levis Emt)r ' Ta lor L -on Joseph Gersen Mazur George Redmond Mitchell Robert Heming va - Park Gordon Arthur Pope Paul Howard Schneider David Peter Trillcr Earl Brown ilkinson William Fleming W ' ingard Camillc Arthur Zeldin 181 E. Henrv Cargen Gcrural Manager George S. Trimble, Jr. Managing Editor William B. du Pont Businiss Manager Gordon C. Thomas Salts Manager Horace F. Homan Editor Rufus P. Isaacs Literar) Editor David A. Werblin An Editor Given A. Brewer Mst. Art Editor Leo J. Kramer Exchange Editor John B. McCrery Philip H. Peters Harry B. Hollander R. Vincent Kror • Publisity Manager drcularion Manager Advertising Manager Treasurer 182 Stein, Klaber, Weathersbae, Pulver, K. Craig Benecke, Werblin, Reuter, Kron, Homan, Griffin, Patashinsky Irving, Cines, Hadiey, Cargen, Noyes, Isaacs Voo Doo Douglas Chalmers Martin Richard Cines Norris Fitz Dow Alvin Josiah Garber LITERARY ASSOCIATES George Austin Heinemann Joseph Henry Klaber Edwin Harrison Olmstead Francis Sidney Stein Warren Emerson Thomson Leo Kirshner John Noyes, Jr. ART ASSOCIATES William Harison Phinizy Ichiro Jacob Takahashi BUSINESS ASSOCIATES Norman Anton Birch Robert John Brauer Delwin Morton Campbell John Henry Craig Gus Mitchell Griffin George Edwin Hadiey Millard Benjamin Hodgson, Jr. David Edwin Irving Leo Narciss Kabacinski John Walter Krey James Cooper Livengood Abraham Mever Patashinsky William Frederick Pulver Frederic William Reuter, Jr. 183 1 • ' ' . ' - Brenton W. Lowe Editor-hi-Chief Dorian Shainin General Manager Martin Oilman Business Aiaii.iger 4 iwHk John Jacobs Matia in Editor Jervis C. Webb Associate Editor John C. Robbius, Jr. Circulation Manager Herbert A. Ziinnierman Adverttsing Manager Francis Burfington Treasurer 184 Sensiper, Donovan, Leghorn, Kaufman, Hess Christenson, White, Hayward, Novak, Speas, Peskoe Ballard, Owens, Johnson, Morgan, Haworch, Vogeley, Cutler, Thatcher Tech Engineering News BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Murray Howland HavwarJ ' 38, Asshnnit Treasurer Norman Ballou Robbins ' 37, Publicity Manager Dempster Christenson ' 38, Assistant Advertising Manager Robert L. Johnson ' 38, Assistant Circulation Manager John Carlson White ' 38, Assistant Circulatim Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Louis Christian Smith, Jr. ' 36, Contributing Editor Harry O den Saunders ' 38, Assistant Editor Dale Francis Morgan ' 38, Assistant Managing Editor Frank Burrill Kemp ' 38, Assistant Managing Editor Frank Streeter Gardner ' 38, Assistant Editor Arch Hope Copeland, Jr. ' 38, Assistant Editor James Brown Hess ' 38, Assistant F,ditor Marshall Merritt Algor ' 39 John Pitkin Allen ' 36 James Alden Arnold ' 39 Louis Samuel Castleman ' 39 Harold Chestnut ' 39 Monarch Littman Cutler ' 39 William Edward Davies ' 39 Elmer Francis De Tiere, Jr. ' 39 Augustus Appleby DeX ' oe ' 39 Joseph Jerome Donovan ' 39 Paul Beardsley Farwell ' 39 Robert Gordon Fife ' 39 Jerome Bernard Green ' 39 John Eric Greenhalgh ' 39 STAFF Theodore Robert Harris, Jr. ' 39 Ro ' Daniel Haworth, Jr. ' 39 Albert Herzberg, Jr. ' 39 Se ' mour Edward Hermann ' 39 Robert Iredell ' 38 Leonard David Jafte ' 39 Walter Frederick Kaufman ' 38 Kelvin Hazlitt Kiely ' 39 Robert Gardner Larkin ' 39 George Jules Laurent ' 39 Richard Sullv Leghorn ' 39 Charles Moss Mathis ' 39 Richard August Novak ' 38 James Hamilton Owens ' 37 Albert Samuel Roberts, Jr. ' 39 Sidnev Rosenberg ' 39 Samuel Sensiper ' 39 Amos Johnson Shalcr ' 39 James Arthur Smith ' 39 Robert Dixon Speas ' 39 Franklin Maine Spooner ' 39 W ' lnthrop Mandell Steele ' 39 Eugene Donald Thatcher ' 39 Arthur William X ' ogelcy ' 39 Theodore Allen Welton ' 39 Byron Weslev Wheeler, Jr. ' 39 John Francis Wholey, Jr. ' 39 Joseph Zallen ' 39 185 INSTITUTE COMMITTEE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE INSTITUTE COMMITTEE BUDGET COMMITTEE WALKER MEMORIAL COMMITTEE TECH SHOW COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE T. C. A. 5:15 CLUB MENORAH SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS Nichols, Paige, Muther, Gardiner, Weir, Strassner, Towner Stewart, Arnold, Kurvla, Boulware, Thornton, Jordan, Burnet, Schipper Robinson, Price, Horton, Lowe, Austin, du Pont, Shainin, Koontz Institute Committee Everett Henry Cargen, Jr., Voo Doo Harrv Bovden Hazelton, Jr., Interfraternity Conference William Bavard du Font, Interfraternity Conference John Dick Gardiner, Walker Memorial Committee Allen Woodward Horton, Jr., Budget Committee Ford Millspaugh Boulware, Elections Committee Elwood Henrv Koontz, The Tech Brenton Webber Lowe, Dormitory Committee William Orville Nichols, Musical Clubs Charles Frederick Berthold Price, Jr., Combined Professional Societies George Reuben Robinson, Commuters Committee James Howard Schipper, Technology Christian Association Dorian Shainin, Tech Engineering News John Thomas Smith, Jr., Technique Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr., M.I.T. Athletic Association William W arner Towner, Tech Show John Churchill Austin 36 Anton Ernst Hittl ' 36 Michael Alexis Kuryla ' 36 David Smith McLellan ' 37 William Bernard Burnet ' 37 Robert Young Jordan ' 37 David Donald Weir ' 38 Richard Muther ' 38 Frederick Elder Strassner ' 38 Stuart Veeder Arnold ' 39 Stuart Paige ' 39 Oswald Stewart, II ' 39 188 Horton, Gardiner, Lowe Hitd, Austin, du Pont Executive Committee of the Institute Committee President John Churchill Austin Vice-President Brenron M ' ebber Lowe Secretary William Bavard du Pont Treijsurer Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. Walker Aleniorial Committee John Dick Gardiner Mei iber-at-Large Anton Ernst Hittl THE Massachusetts Institute of Technology is unique in its position of giving widespread responsibility to the undergraduates for self- government. This power is vested in the Institute Committee, an organization composed of represen- tatives of the classes and of the leading student ac- tivities. The Committee is controlled by the under- graduates, and exercises general and specific powers of supervision over all individual activities insofar as they affect the student body as a whole. However, the numerous and unrelated matters, which come before the Committee, cannot always be adequatelv handled b - so large a group. Consequently, the Ex- ecutive Committee of the Institute Committee is assigned those questions which demand derailed con- sideration. The Executive Coinmirtee, which is in effect the nucleus of the student government, is composed of the following six members: the president, vice-presi- dent, secretary of the Institute Committee, chairman of the Budget Committee, chairman of the Walker Memorial Committee, and a member-at-large from the Institute Committee. The Executive Committee has at its disposal the records of previous commit- tees, and the budgets and personnel lists of the va- rious student activities. It discusses matters of stu- dent policy and practice, and refers its recommenda- tions to the Institute Committee. Meetings of the Institute Committee are held on each alternate Thursday throughout the school year. The Executive Committee meets directly before each Institute Committee meeting to organize the business to be presented for action bv the Institute Com- mittee. 189 McCune. Horton, Parker, Jordan Budget Committee Franklin Peabodv Parker Allen Woodward Horton, Jr., Chairman William James McCune, Jr. Robert Young Jordan REGULATING the disbursement of funds ob- tained from a portion of each man ' s tuition, the Budget Committee of the Institute Com- mittee performs an extremely important function. The chairman, who is also the treasurer ex-officio of the Institute Committee, the treasurer of the Ath- letic Association, together with the junior members chosen bv the Executive Committee of the Institute Committee, comprise the men who handle the de- tailed work of disbursing undergraduate funds. Used for athletics and for the expenses of the Institute Committee and its subcommittees, these funds are transferred upon request of the treasurer of the Insti- tute Committee bv the Bursar of the Institute. The proportion of the undergraduate dues al- lotted proportionally to each class and to the Insti- tute Committee are the onlv funds directly adminis- tered by the Budget Committee. Athletic expendi- tures are planned b - detailed budgets for each sport and approved bv the Budget Committee Chairman. He also checks on the budgets presented bv the Ath- letic Association, the Institute Committee and its subcommittees, the Walker Memorial, Elections, and the All-Technologv Smoker. Budget changes throughout the year go through the Budget Com- mittee, along with disbursements and the compila- tion of a report on the finances of all organized activ- ities for each year ' s operation. Since the Institute Committee is responsible for all recognized activities, even those unsupported by the student tax, the Budget Committee is empowered to supervise the financial affairs of anv organization which mav be in difficulties. Likewise, all disburse- ments of an undergraduate organization receiving money from the undergraduate dues are under the supervision of the Budget Committee. ISO Cilley, FitzCWbbon, Kearny, Shuttleworth Wemple, Gardiner, Harris Walker Memorial Committee SENIORS John Dick Gardiner, Ch.iirman JUNIORS Rutherford Harris George Barr Wemple SOPHOMORES ' esley Adams Cillev Francis James Kearnv Herbert Stewart FitzGibbon, Ir. William Forbes Shuttleworth THE Walker Memorial building is the center of the M.I. T. student ' s recreational and extra- curricular life. It contains the dining halls, a gymnasium, the club-rooms, and the offices of most of the activities. The Walker Memorial Committee, whose oHice is located on the basement floor of this building, has charge of assigning the various rooms for dances, meetings and other events, arranging these events so that thev do not conflict with one another. The Hangar Gymnasium, and the publicitv campaigns held on the Institute ' s grounds are also under the supervision of this committee. Still another impor- tant function is that of regulating the point system, which was devised to insure that no one person may hold too manv positions in the various undergrad- uate activities, thus allowing a maximum number of students to participate. The committee consists of four Sophomores, chosen after a three weeks competition; two Juniors, selected at the end ot their Sophomore year; and a Senior chairman, chosen from the two Junior mem- bers of the previous year. 191 Fred Adolph Prahljr. General ALinager Business Manager H;irrv Thomas Easton Treasurer Lawrence Kanters Publicity Manager lulian Sexmour Rifkin Tech Show MANAGING BOARD General Manager Fred Adolph Prahl, Jr. Traduction Manager Robert James Moffett Advertising Manager Richard Upham Bryant Music Director Harrv Mohr W ' eese Cast Manager Philip Harrv Dreissigacker, Jr. Chorus Manager Francis Sherman Peterson Lights George Robert eppler Stage Manager Norman Ballou Robbins Scenery John Pitkin Allen Costumes William Arnold Steinhurst Cornelius Kingsland Coombs Balilla Delia Joseph Wilev Harrison Chester Lawrence Cooper James Reid Cruciger Alfred Emil Hale Cast Coach William Greene CHORUS Men Benjamin William Irvin, Jr. Henry Richard Landw-ehr Edward Mosehauer, Jr. Women Chester Edward Meyer Albert Musschoot Thomas Barrott Oakes Francis Sherman Peterson Fred Adolph Prahl, Jr. Fred Russell Sheldon Earl Brown ilkinson Wenzel Mathias Wochos, Jr. Robertson Youngquist Chorus Coach Langdon Mathews Isaacs, Bryanc, Weese, Steinhurst, Peterson, Dreissigacker, Kites, Robbins, Shulman Rifkin, Kanters, Easton, Towner, Moffett, Allen, Werblin 192 Gerard Chapman Robert Clifton Eddy Luther W illiam Kites STAFF W inthrop Glover Scott Albert Harold Shuhii.in Irving W illiams Tourtellot Harry Thomas Easton, Jr. Business Manager Charles Lewis Austin, Jr. John Sevmour Cleworrh CAST Charles Hubbard Little Augustin Jav Powers Knight Dexter Robinson Edward Keene True David Ahner W ' erblm William Allen Camp, Jr. Robert Stillson Childs David Fulton ORCHESTRA Ravmond Herbert McFee Robert Hemingway Park John Jackson Perkins Emmett Charles Rvder Harrv Mohr Weese John Albert West, Jr. Meyer, Harrison, Delia, Gjombs, Sheldon, Landwchr, Irvin, Mosehauer, True, Austin, Little Cruciger, Wilkinson, Wochos, Youngquist, Werblin, Cleworth, Oakcs, Cooper, Thompson, Hale, Robinson 193 William O. Nichols General Manager William A. Cresswell, Jr. Concert Manager Combined Musical Clubs THE Combined Musical Clubs of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology opened the fifty-second year of their existence with excel- lent prospects for a very successful season. The Clubs were very fortunate this year in having an abundance of material, including many veterans who formed the nucleus of the various organizations, to draw from. The student leaders of the individual Clubs for this year were as follows: of the Glee Club, Edward C. Peterson; of the Orchestra, George R. Robinson; of the Banjo Club, Edward S. Halfmann; of the Tech- tonians, Harry Weese. Besides these leaders, the Clubs were very fortunate in having such capable men as William E. Weston for coach of the Glee Club and Malcolm Holmes for coach of the Orchestra . In 1883, as the result of a Minstrel Show, which had been successfully held the preceding year, a group of enterprising students, interested in music, organized the Glee Club. Previouslv, Technologv had lacked any facilities for the promotion of musical culture. On December 28, 1883, the Glee Club pre- sented its first recital before a large and appreciative audience. On the 20th of October, 1884, a meeting was held during the course of which a Banjo and Guitar Club of twenty-five members was organized. At this time, however, the Glee Club and the Banjo Club were under separate managements. In 1888, because of lack of support from the student body, the Banjo Club was forced to disband. After two years of inac- tivity, the Banjo Club was re-organized, and, at the same time, the Mandolin Club was formed. Soon afterwards, the three Clubs joined together under one management, although each Club retained its own student leader. Since then, each year has added to the prestige and success of the organization. In 1914, an honorary societv, called Baton, was founded to give recogni- Pliilip H. Dreissigacker, jr. Charles M. Antoni Biistmss Matiagtr Treasurer EJuin T. Herbig, Jr. Pffs ' tluc! Ma ij er Oscar W. Muckenhirn Puhhcity M.atjager John H. Gander Stage Manager 194 French, Greenwood, Dockendorff ' , Burleson, Argersinger, Dobrin, Magriidcr, Lewis, Guy, Westgate, Alexander, King, Rosenberg Wochos, Torrans, Jordan, Anderson, Beckwith. Dodge, Shuttleworth, Park, Bsaman, Chapman, LaForge, Wilson, Heintzelman, Rav Akin, Marshall, Coleman, Kahn, Orrell, Peterson (Leader), Fox, King, Strauss, Endweiss, Rowe, Rugo, Bennison tion to members of the Cluhs who exhibited an out- standing interest in music. The members of Baton have helped in many ways to improve the standing of the Combined Musical Clubs. In 1921, the Mandolin and the Guitar Clubs com- bined to form the Instrumental Club. This new or- ganization was founded with the intent of presenting classical music. Two vears later, in 1923, the Tech- tonians, a dance orchestra, was added to the roster. This year has seen another great advancement in the Combined Musical Clubs. With the aid of the Institute Committee, the management has been able to procure room 2-390 for musical purposes. This room was given to the Clubs for their own use, but thev have decided to leave it open so that all people in the Institute who are interested in music may have access to its musical equipment. At present the man- agement is still trying to complete the furnishing of the room. Mrs. Townsend, a friend and patron, has verv kindh- donated a piano. Before long, the Clubs RafFerty, Cherry, Perrv, McFee, Spooner, Hazen, Beckwith, Lawry, Weese, Rote, Kalitgord, Carter. . kin, Pepperberg, Stewart, Heal Hopgood, Neuendorffer, Lcvine, Peterson, Dowding, Fogler, Robinson, DiSalvatore, Reinhardt, Kuban, Buckle, Shinier, Schmucker 195 Mabee, Rodama, Bnsse, Gould, Giilman, Whoiey Jahnig, Fish, Halfmann, Gjnn, Leghorn expect to obtain a victrola with a library of classical records for the room from the Carnegie Foundation. Negotiations have been carried on with the Founda- tion for some time, and there is every reason to be- lieve that the result will be favorable. Instead of starting the season with the customary- concert at the Franklin Square House, this year ' s activities were formallv begun by a concert on No- vember 22, 1935 at the Winthrop Women ' s Club. All four organizations of the Combined Musical Clubs participated in this concert which was a huge success. .After the concert itself was completed, a dance was held at which the Techtonians furnished the music. On the following Sunday, the Clubs, in cotmection with the ' ellesley Choir, presented a concert in Walker Memorial. In this presentation, however, onlv the Tech Glee Club and the Wellesley Choir participated. The main event of the afternoon was a piano recital by Felix Fox, the guest soloist. The concert was followed by an afternoon tea. Another important event was the Christmas Con- cert and Dance. This dance was held in Walker Me- morial under the auspices of the managing board of the Clubs. For the Christmas Concert and Dance, the Main Hall of Walker was decorated in the true Christmas spirit with reindeer, sleighs, and a Christmas tree, all of which helped to make the dance a big success. The Interfraternitv Sing which was held for the tirst time last vear attracted much attention. The feature of the Sing is a singing contest among the fraternities on the campus. The cup wnll be the per- manent possession of the fraternity which wins three times. So far this vear, eight houses have entered quartettes in the contest. As an added attraction. Professor Rogers is going to act as the Master of Ceremonies. Among the concerts scheduled for the future are the Bouve Concert Dance, the Franklin Square House Concert Dance, Sargent Concert Dance, and the Colbv Junior College Concert and Dinner Dance. For the past several vears, the concert at Colby Junior College has been the most popular event of the sea- son among the members of the Clubs. The policv of the Combined Musical Clubs is to provide suitable facilities for musical culture at Technologv. Its aim is to furnish the proper amount of good musical performance and entertainment and also to increase Tech ' s prestige. Combined concerts with other schools are held several times during the course of the school vear. Since the Instrumental Club plavs classical numbers, and since the Tech- tonians play the popular numbers of the day, the Clubs are able to present varied and entertaining pro- grams. 196 Prouty, Young, Simpson, Burnet, Wemple McLellan Junior Prom Committee David Smith McLellan, Chairman lUiam Bernard Burnet Harold Elliott Proutv John Maxwell Simpson, Jr. George Barr Wemple Gustav Richard Young THE outstanding social event of the school vear was the Junior Prom given hv the class of 1937 on the night of March 6, 1936. The Imperial Ballroom of the Hotel Statler was selected as the location for the festivities. The dance was given cabaret style, with music b)- Joe Haymes and his orchestra. The choice of the orchestra was ex- cellent and all agreed that it was a real Prom Band. The ballroom was decorated with potted palms, flowers, and sprigs of evergreen which contributed toward the delightful atmosphere. A large Tech- nologv Seal and a 1937 class banner were hung over the stage from which the orchestra played. There was a large bouquet on each table. Novel favors and programs were distributed to the guests. Dancing, starting at ten in the evening was brought to a climax at midnight with the Grand March. Then an excellent meal was ser ' ed after which program dancing continued until four. The Prom Committee which planned, prepared, and carried out the dance, consisted of David S. Mc- Lellan, President of the Junior Class, as chairman, William B. Burnet, Harold E. Proutv, Jack M. Simpson, George B. Wemple, and G. Richard Young. Tickets for the Prom were sold out a week in ad- vance, showing the enthusiasm the Juniors and other members of the student bodv had for the dance. Financialh ' , the Prom vas an overwhelming success which in itself made it distinctive over most other Promenades. The guests for the evening were President and Mrs. Karl T. Compton, Dr. and Mrs. ' annevar Bush, Dean Harold E. Lobdell, Mr. and Mrs. Horace S. Ford, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert L. Rhind, Prof, and Mrs. Leicester F. Hamilton, and Prof, and Mrs. James R. Jack. 197 Technology Christian Association i I Ml James Howard Schipper Pnsidmt An Organization serving the needs of the students at Technology. Frank Lincoln Phillips Treasurer Pennell Nutting Aborn Ernp oj  etir Secretary Wallace Mason Ross General Secretary 198 Aborn, Gould, Kuhn, W ' righr, Bell, Cook, Barr, Ross Goldsmith , Burnet, Phillips, Schipper, Siegslman, Heal Technology Christian Association Dr. John W inslow Chamberlain ' 28 Prof. Leicester Forsvth Hamilton ' 14 allace Mason Ross, General Secretary ADMSORY BO.A.RD Prof. Carle Reed Hayvvard ' 04 Mr. W ' olcott Anders Hokanson Dr. Egon Emil Kattwinkel ' 23 Pennel Nutting Aborn, Employment Secretary Prof. William HenrvTimbie Mr. Percy Roife Ziegler ' 00 JUNIOR BOARD William Bernard Burnet, A ana! er Division 1 Robert Herman Goldsmith, Manager Division 3 Josiah Spaulding Heal, Manager Division 4 George Albert Siegelman, Manager Division 2 SOPHOMORE BOARD Norris Gard Barr, Division I Chauncey Frederick Bell, Jr., Division 4 John Ransom Cook, Division 2 David Atwood Wright, Division 3 Arthur Freeman Gould, Division 4 Edward Joseph Kuhn, Division 5 Ernst Gustav Stolper, Division 2 Riley Edward Anthony John Alden Beaujean Peter Michael Bernays Mvron Abbott Cantor Nicholas Elkinton Carr, Jr. William Alexander Davis Elmer Francis De Tiere, Jr. Bascom Charles Emerson FRESHMAN CABINET John Warren Evans Fred Wellington French Warren Blake Goddard Everett Emil Hanke Michael ' asil Herasimchuk August Bvron Hunicke, Jr. Wilson Bucklin Keene Paul X ' incent Kellman Burkhart . ' dolph Kleinhofer Norman Macbeth, Jr. Maurice Abraham Me er George Redmond Mitchell Morris Emmons Nicholson Guillermo . rturo Reina John Frederick Stiff Robert Butler Wooster DIVISION 1 Freshman Camp Boys ' Work Conferences Deputations and Meetings DIX ' ISION 2 Handbook Foreign Students Ticket Service Information and Social Work DIVISION 3 Blotter Freshman Advisors Church Relations Book Exchange DIVISION 4 Office Tech Cabin Assistant Treasurer Advisory Board 199 De Wolfe, Osgood Gordon, Chandler, Robinson, Hiitl 5:15 Club Vice-President Leonard Blanchard Chandler President George Reuben Robinson Secretary Walter Vernon Oseood Treasurer Robert Salawav Gordon Members-at-Large Richard Sears DeWolfe Anton Ernst Hittl THE 5.15 Club organized in 1933, has devel- oped so rapidly that now, with a membership of nearly four hundred, it has become one of the major activities of the Institute ' s commuting students. The club has brought them into closer so- cial and fraternal contact with each other and has increased their participation in all undergraduate affairs. Membership in the club is open to all students not residing in either fraternity houses or dormitories. The cities and towns from which the students com- mute are divided into twelve districts, each of which has a representative on the board of directors, the governing and policy forming body of the club. The executive committee of the club is composed of the president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and two members at large. The club has a large room in Walker Memorial which serves as a lunch, study, reading, and social room. Cards, checkers, and magazines are available in the room for the use of members. Victrola dances, free to members, are held here frequently on Saturday nights. The club has held several very successful dances during the past year, the most important of which were the Spring Fever Dance, admission to which was determined by the preciso-thermo-calorimeter, the post-examination moonlight sail held aboard the S. S. Steel Pier on May 29, the free Thanksgiving dance, and the annual New Year ' s Eve party. Other annual events are smokers, a fathers ' and sons ' ban- quet, a bridge tournament and several athletic tournaments. 200 Woll, Hermann, Short, Levine, Baral, Str.iuss McCrenskv, Zeitien, Sagah ' n, Lief, Kovitz, Qiiinc, Levv, C. Mendel, Levy, G., Seder, Penn, Brettman Intercollegiate Menorah Society President Leonard Arthur Seder Trdisi rer William Bernard Penn OFFICERS Corresponding Secretary George Maurice Levy EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Albert Abraham Well, Chairman Vice President Justin Joel Shapiro Recording Secretary Ralph Mendel Hvman Brettman Ira Leonard Mever Justin Joel Shapiro Hyman Brettman Martin Deutsch Esther Beatrice Garber Hyman Herman Gillman George Maurice Levy Mi Iron Lief Victor Aaron Altman Leon Baral Louis Maurice Gerson Gcrson Hermann Marvin Kahn Julius Kovitz Bernard Samuel Lement Louis Samuel Castlcman Arnold Boris Epstein Mclvin Milron Fallcof Jerome Gross Arthur Samuel Grossman Robert Grossman Harold Hershlicld GRADUATE MEMBERS SENIORS Louis Edmund Stahl JUNIORS Sidnev Mank William Bernard Penn Louis Ehrlich Pepperberg Ezriel Postofsky Leo Rosen Leon Baral Sarah Ruth Millman Aaron Louis Zolan Irwin Sagalvn Leonard Arthur Seder Philip Short Fred W ' asserman Samuel Eli White Albert Abraham Woll SOPHOMORES Norman Bernard Leventhal Abraham Bernard Levine Will Lyons Harold McCrenskv Sidney Foler Mack Ralph Mendel FRESHMEN Albert Herzberg, Jr. David Kaufman Leo Kirshner Charles Nathaniel Levy Mortimer Irving Metzger Arthur Sumner Quint 201 Isadore Irving Rosenthal Pearl June Rubenstein Samuel Rudginskv Leonard Stearns Seymour Stearns Harold Heumann Strauss Milton Irving Wallace Paul Walter SokoloH Norman Spector Reevan Spiller Aaron Mever White Joseph Zallen Joseph George Zeitien Bernard Zuckerman SIGMA XI TAU BETA PI CHI EPSILON ALPHA CHI SIGMA HEXALPHA SCABBARD AND BLADE OSIRIS BEAVER CLUB QUADRANGLE CLUB GRIDIRON GROGO SCROLL TECH BOAT CLUB TECH SWIM CLUB BEAVER KEY SOCIETY BATON DORCLAN HONORARY SOCIETIES Sigma Xi The Society for the Promotion of Research Founded at Cornell University 1886 William Phelps Allis Isadore Amdur Robert Thexton Armstrong Averv Allen Ashdown Javson Clair Balsbaugh George Ernest Barker Wilmer Lanier Barrow Neil Stewart Beaton James Alexander Beattie Ralph Decker Bennett Baalis Edwin Blaisdell Charles Henry Blake Arthur Alphonzo Blanchard Alexander Jamieson Bone Edward Lindley Bowles Charles Blaney Breed Earle Buckingham Martin Julian Buerger Edward Everett Bughee John W ' ymond Miller Bunker Vannevar Bush Robert Dexter Butler Samuel Hawks Caldwell Thomas Ringgold Camp Daniel Brennan Clapp Morris Cohen Samuel Cornette Collins Karl Taylor Compton Prescott Durand Crout Otto Gustav Colbiornsen Dahl Clarence Daniel Davis Tenney Lombard Davis Alfred Mctor de Forest MEMBERS Gerhard Dietrichson Raymond Donald Douglass Charles Stark Draper Herbert Bristol Dwight John Ernst Eberhardt Harold Eugene Edgerton Daniel Leonard Edlund Richard Edgar Evans Richard Dudley Fay James Brown Fisk Arthur Eugene Fitzgerald Nathaniel Herman Frank Philip Franklin Richard Henrv Frazier George Mitchell Furnival Edmund Lee Gamble Harold Tirrell Gerrv Glennon Gilboy Edward Smith Gilhllan, Jr. Augustus Herman Gill Louis John Gillespie Edwin Richard Gilliland Newell Shiffer Gingrich Harry Manley Goodwin Bernard Sidney Gould Truman Stretcher Gray Ernst Adolph Guillemin Robert Charles Gunness William Mott Hall William Thomas Hall Arthur Cobb Hardv Louis Harris Robert Samuel Harris George Russell Harrison Carle Reed Havward Harold Locke Hazen Robert Landis Hershev John Frederick Gross Hicks, Jr. Frank Lauren Hitchcock Victor Oliver Homerberg Eberhard Hopf Joseph Warren Horton Hoyt Clarke Hottel Henry Garrett Houghton, Jr. Jerome Clarke Hunsaker Ernest Hamlin Huntress William Spencer Hutchinson Ralph llsley James Robertson Jack Dugald Caleb Jackson Samuel Jacobson Marshall Walker Jennison Albert Louis Kave Joseph Henrv Keenan Frederick George Keves Henrv Francis King Charles Kingslev, Jr. Edward Stonestreet Lamar Warren Kendall Lewis Waldemar Lindgren Dean Aplin Lvon Warren Judson Mead Nicholas Athensius Milas Earl Bowman Millard Jacob Millman Lawrence Alexander Monroe 204 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chapter — Established 1934 Parry Moon Frederick Kuhne Morris Philip McCord Morse Avery Adrian Morton Hans Mueller David Lewis MacAdam William Henry McAdams Joseph Shiplcv Newell alter Harr - Ncwhousc Gilbert Wright Noble James Flack Norris Frederick Harwood Norton Wayne Buckles Nottingham Robert Nutting Shatswell Ober Heinrich Peters Henr ' Bavard Phillips Charles Huntington Porter Samuel Gate Prescott Brvce Prindle Bernard Emerson Proctor Henrv Arnold Rahmel MEMBERS Kenneth Cass Reynolds Carl Gustaf Arvid Rossby Erik Gustaf Rudberg Arthur Claude Rugc George Rutledge George Scatchard Walter Cecil Schumb Edward Robinson Schwarz Miles Standish Sherrill Thomas Kilgore Sherwood HervcN ' Woodburn Shimer Stephen Gershon Simpson Donald Bellamy Sinclair John Clarke Slater Louis Burne Slichter Eastman Smith Leigh ton Bruerron Smith Richard Harbert Smith Charles Milton SpofFord Lombard Squires Donald Charles Stockbarger Julius Adams Stratton Dirk Jan Struik Charles Fayette Taylor Edward Story Taylor Elihu Thomson Gilbert Coult Toone John George Trump William Donald Urry Manuel Sandoval Vallarta Robert Jemison Van de Graaff Robert Weston V ' ose Walter Charles Voss Bertram Eugene Warren George Booker Watcrhouse Harold Christian Weber Walter Gordon Whitman John Benson Wilbur Hurd Curtis W ' illett Robert Seaton Williams Henry Allen Wood Louis Frank Woodruff John Carl Gaude Wulff William Ellwood Yelland Ralph Chillingworth Young Karl Howard Achterkirchen Harriet Whit ney Allen Edward Redmond Atkinson George Walter Bartlett William Walker Bartlett George Samuel Bays, Jr. Arthur Everett Bearse John Goffe Benson George Patterson Bentley Joseph Bicknell Gordon Stanle ' Brown illiam Weber Buechner Gordon Kendrick Burns Harrison Cornforth Carlson Tsung-shan Chen John Penney Cogan Joseph Thomas Cook Horace Irving Crane Cecil Gordon Dunn Percy Ehrlich Robert Medill Elliott Hsii yiin Fan Charles Francis Feuchter Harold Alvin Fidler Maurice Julius Fish Bernard Friedman ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Walter Perrv Green, Jr. Herbert Earle Grier Reuben Matter Haines Robert Heggie Robert Adolf Andrew Hentschel Paul George Herkart George Burnham Hoadley Alvin Harold Howell John Withers Irvine, Jr. Jacob Joseph Jaeger Ralph Poole Johnson Joseph Kaminsky Carolyn Horvey Klein Stanley Storer Knight Norman Solomon Kornetz Alexandre Henriques Leal Leonard Norman Leum Paul Levatinsky Warren Kendall Lewis, Jr. Isra el Li ben Millard Fuller Manning George Glover Marvin Arthur Miller Henry Clay Miller, Jr. William Franklin Milliken, Jr. ' icror George Mooradian John Oliver McLean Carl Neitzert Henry John Ogorzaly Bruce Scott Old Paul Konstantin Panagiotakos Frederick William Paul Arnold Per Gustaf Peterson Elliot Pitman Rexford Randal McGavock Robertson Edward Jay Schremp William Shocklev Harold Thomas Smyth Walter Walery Soroka Athelstan Frederick Spilhaus Howard Raymond Staley William Lawrence Sullivan Charles Samuel Sutton Donald Wood Taylor David Dill Terwilliger Warren Ladd Towle Harry Mercer Tracy Howard Sinclair Turner Gordon Theodore ' aala William Leo Walsh Frederick Kingsbury Watson Walter Wri£;le ' 205 Tau Beta Pi Honorary Engineering Fraternity Founded in 1895 at Lehigh University Beta of Massachusetts — Established 1922 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Lawrence Bernhardt Anderson Javson Clair Balshaugh William Crawford Denniston Bridges Vannevar Bush Karl Taylor Compton Franklin Leroy Foster Richard Henry Frazier Murray Frank Gardner Glennon Gilhoy Augustus Herman Gill Truman Stretcher Gray Ernst Adolph Guillemin Harold Locke Hazen Robert Landis Hershey William Hovgaard John Anchon - Hrones Walter Charles ' oss William Spencer Hutchinson Dugald Caleb Jackson Joseph Henry Keenan Frederick George Keyes Charles Kingsley, Jr. Charles Justus Koch Warren Kendall Lewis Horace Tharp Mann Parry Moon Carl Neitzert John Lyon Reid Kenneth Cass Reynolds Louis Bvrne Slichter Charles Milton Spofford Julius Adams Stratton Robert Jemison ' an de Graaff FRATRES John Churchill Austin Ford Millspaugh Boulware George Francis Crummey John Adlington Easton, Jr. Harry Edward Essley, Jr. Edward Fisk Everett, Jr. William Willis Garth David Jerome Gildea, Jr. Martin Albert Gilman John Paul Hamilton Allen ' oorhees Hazel tine Harry Boyden Hazelton, Jr. Anton Ernst Hittl Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. leu Liang u 206 Edwin Allan Kass Walter Kavanagh MacAdam Claxton Monro, Jr. James Fergus Patterson Frank Lincoln Phillips Emanuel Rapoport William Robert Saylor Dorian Shainin Walter Squires, Jr. Thomas Alexander Terry, Jr. Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. George Simpson Trimble, Jr. James Leslie Vaughan George Barr Wemple Chi Epsilon Honorary Civil Engineering Fraternity Founded in 1922 at the Universitv of Illinois M.I.T. Chapter— Established 1928 NATIONAL HONORARY MEMBERS John Brazer Babcock, III Charles Dlanev Breed HONORARY MEMBERS Harold Kilhirth Barrows Walter Maxwell Fife Glennon Gilbov Frederick Kuhne Morris Charles Milton Spofford Ross Francis Tucker Walter Charles Voss ACTH ' E MEMBERS James Carson Agnew Charles Michael Antoni Aldo Hector Bagnulo Charles Henry Berts Bernard Benjamin Gordon Richard Edgar Hickma n Anton Ernst HittI Edwin Allan Kass Eric Oakman Moorehead Robert Ellis Sawyer Joseph Anthony Smedile Ariel Alton Thomas Robert Henry Thorson Walter Stanlcv Wojtczak 207 Alpha Chi Sigma Professional Chemical Fraternity Founded in 1902 at the University of Wisconsin Alpha Zeta Chapter — Established 1919 HONORARY MEMBER James Flack Norris Avery Allen Ashdown James Alexander Beattie Arthur Alphonzo Blanchard John W ' vmond Miller Bunker Charles Milton Cooper Tenney Lombard Davis Gerhard Dietrichson Harold Tirrell Gerry Augustus Herman Gill Louis John Gillespie Mortimer Duffield Abbott James Burnell Allen Edward Redmond Atkinson George Samuel Bays, Jr. Herbert Mowry Borden Andre Hubert Brisse Delwin Morton Campbell Jonathan Billings Cobb W ' inthrop Delano Comley Horace Irving Crane Arthur Henrv Crowlev Thonet Charles Dauphme John Joseph Demo Richard Sears DeW ' olfe FACULTY MEMBERS Leicester Forsvth Hamilton Robert Landis Hershev Hoyt Clarke Hottel Ernest Hamlin Huntress Thomas Joseph Johnston Frederick George Keyes Warren Kendall Lewis William Henry McAdams Earl Bowman Millard MEMBERS Louis Frederic DuBois John Potter Eames Reid Ewing Wendell Keister Fitch David Fulton Henry Ferdmand Herpers Francis Donald Houghton John Hancock Howell, Jr. James William Libbv, Jr. Gerald Strople McMahon Willard Marcy Charles Robert Milone Henry John Ogorzaly Roman Leo Ortvnskv James Wishart Pearce Avery Adrian Morton Samuel Cate Prescott Clark Shove Robinson George Scatchard Walter Cecil Schumb Miles Standish Sherrill Thomas Kilgore Sherwood Leighton Bruerton Smith Donald Charles Stockbarger Ralph Chillingworth Young George Albert Randal Rolf Ernest Schneider Harry Scowcroft Mitchell Andrew Sieminski Louis Christian Smith, Jr. Walter Squires, Jr. Thomas Alexander Terry, Jr. Walter Ullrich Paul Andrew ' ogel Bernard N ' onnegut James ' arburton, Jr. Peter Cha rles Weinert Roy Powell Whitney William Ellwood Yelland 208 Hexalpha An Honorary Society Serving as an Executive Committee for the Undergraduate Activities of Course VI- A ' HONORARY MEMBERS Edna Blanchard Lucia Ma - Hunt Edward Leyburn Moreland William Henr ' Timbie Karl Leland Wildes GRADUATE MEMBERS Robert James Caldwell Charles Hobson James DeBlois Parker Charles Jacob Rife Perrv Heath Ware Otto Ernst Zwanzig SENIORS Henry Clyde Johnson Walter Kavanagh Mac Adam William Robert Savior Thomas Norman Willcox JUNIORS Philip Homer Peters Alfred Christian Schroeder 209 Scabbard and Blade National Military Fraternity MEMBERS John Churchill Austin William Melville Benson Herbert Mowrv Borden Ford Millspaugh Boulware Edwin Arthur Bovan John Richard Brookes Delwin Morton Campbell Henry Christensen, Jr. Norman Atwater Cocke, Jr. Arthur Henrv Crowlev Paul William Dalev Edward Leo Dashefskv John Adlington Easton, Jr. Charles Nicol Endweiss John Dick Gardiner Robert Stone Gillette John Robe - Graham Charles Mallorv Graves Jack Irwin Hamilton Charles Richardson Holinan Robert Jackson Lutz Roger Everett Needham Franklin Peabod)- Parker James Howard Schipper Julius Boone Schliemann W alter George Selvestrovich Lawrence Wilson Sharpe Morril Boughton Spaulding, Jr. James Thaver Stewart Gordon Case Thomas David Edwards Varner Robert Elliot Worden 210 Osiris Senior Honowiry Society HONORARY MEMBERS Henry Smith Pritchect Alfred Edgar Burton James Phinnev Munroe Isaac White Litchtield Frank Henry Rand Arthur Amos Moves Frank Russell Hart Richard Cockburn iMacLaurin Davis Rich Dewey George W ' igglesworth Everett Morss Ho vard Lincoln Coburn Albert Farvvell Bemis Frank Harrison Briggs Horace Sayford Ford Henry Greenleaf Pearson Walter Humphrevs •Deceased Delbert Leon Rhind AlIan Winter Rowe Henrv Adams Morss Charles Milton Spofford Henry Paul Talbot Samuel Weslev Stratton William Emerson Alexander Macomber Warren Kendall Lewis Samuel Gate Prescott Charles Ladd Norton Joseph Warren Phelan Harry Johan Carlson Karl Taylor Compton Leicester Fors -th Hamilton ' annevar Bush Julius Adams Stratton John James Rowlands ACTIVE MEMBERS John Churchill Austin Everett Henrv Cargen, Jr. William Ba ard duPont Harry Edward Essley John Dick Gardiner Anton Ernst Hittl Allen Woodward Horton, Jr. El wood Henrv Koontz Brenton Webber Lowe Richard Laurence Odiorne Charles Frederick Berthold Price, Jr. Scott Carson Rethorst George Reuben Robinson Fletcher Parrott Thornton 211 Beaver Club Jiniior Honorary Society Carl Bridenbaugh FACULTY MEMBERS Albert Arnold Lawrence MEMBERS Philip Gardner Briggs William Bernard Burnet Alfred Eugen Busch Pedro Luis Lopez de Ceballos Peter dePlorez John Robert Ferguson, Jr. Henry Dawson Furniss William Marvin Harcum Rutherford Harris Josiah Spaulding Heal Edwin Lafavette Hobson, III Arthur Rc)wland Hunt Gustav Richard Young Rinaldo ' incent Kron William James McCune,Jr. David Smith McLellan John Stevens Mason Robert Dean Morton Philip Homer Peters John Clinton Robbins.Jr. August Hamilton Schilling John Maxwell Simpson, Jr. Robert Henrv Thorson Jervis Campbell Webb George Barr Wemple 212 Quadrangle Club Sophomore Honorary Society MEMBERS 1938 John Ransom Cook Arch Hope Copeland, Jr. Harry Engman Draper James Emerv Herbert Stewart FitzGibbon, Jr. Fred Paron Forman John Allen Hilcken Francis James Kearn - Dudley Allen Levick, Jr. John Lindsav Howard Ernst Milius Fred Warren Morgen thaler Daniel Neall PhiHips William Harison Phinizy William Forbes Shuttleworth David Donald Weir Nicholas Hobson Wheless, Jr. Chester Arthur Williams, Jr. Allen James Wilson, Jr. Richard Bradford Young 1939 Roger Barrett Bross Albert Heath Chestnut Harold Chestnut Perry Orson Crawford Maynard Kane Drury Forrest Thurston Ellis Frederick Bourne Grant Charles Foster Hobson, Jr. Millard Benjamin Hodgson, Jr. Richard Sullv Leghorn Robert Wallace Pastene Augustin Jay Powers William Frederick Pulver Paul Howard Schneider Harold Rudolf Seykota Oswald Stewart, II Eugene Donald Thatcher Philip Hollis Weatherill William Fleming Wingard Robert Butler Wooster 213 G Gridiron Honorary Society of Publications MEMBERS Paul Wheeler Allen John Churchill Austin Walter True Blake Albert Irving Blank Ford Millspaugh Boulware Francis Stephan Buffington Norman George Bull Everett Henrv Cargen, Jr. John Bangs Corbett Benjamin Bonnev Davton William Bavard du Pont Douglas Gerhard Esperson Gordon Lee Foote Stanley Milton Freedman Adam Christian Gambel Frank Streeter Gardiner David Jerome Gildea, Jr. Martin Albert Gilman George Edwin Hadlev Newton LeRov Hammond, Jr. William Marvin Harcum Murray Howland Havward Anton Ernst Hittl Edwin Lafavette Hohson, III Harry Ben Hollander Horace Frank Homan David Edwin Irving Rufus Philip Isaacs Robert Loring Johnson Frank BurriU Kemp El wood Henrv Koontz Rinaldo Vincent Kron Dudley Allen Levick, Jr. James Gardner Loder Brenton Webber Lowe Richard August Novak Richard Laurence Odiorne James Edward O ' Neil, Jr. Philip Homer Peters Francis Sherman Peterson Harvey Fisk Phipard, Jr. William Warren Prichard Scott Carson Rethorst Frederic William Reuter, Jr. John Clinton Robbins, Jr. Robert Henry Roethlisberger Allan Ir vin Roshkind Harry Ogden Saunders Rolf Ernest Schneider Dorian Shainin Joseph Anthonv Smedile John Thomas Smith Louis Christian Smith, Jr. Samuel Adams Steere, Jr. Francis Sidney Stein Elmer Hibbard Summersgill Thomas Alexander Terrv, Jr. Gordon Case Thomas George Simpson Trimble, Jr. Jervis Campbell Webb John Carlson White Herbert Arthur Zimmerman 214 y r%.. Grogo Hoiiovary Society of Technique Albert Irving Blank Charles Alexander Blessing Ford Millspaugh BouKvare John Bangs Corbett William Marvin Harcum Edv ' in Lafayette Hobson, III Lawrence Edwards Hough Ira Henry Lohman, Jr. Harvey Fisk Phipard, Jr. Rolf Ernest Schneider John Thomas Smith Lea Hibbard Spring 215 Scroll Honorary Society of T. E. N. HONORARY MEMBERS Harold Edward Lobdell Frederick Kuhne Morris Frederick Gardiner Fassett, Albert George Dietz Herman Gustav Protze, Jr. Marshall Walker Jennison Jr. ACTI ' E MEMBERS Norman George Bull David Jerome Gildea, Jr. Martin Albert Gilman Brenton Webber Lowe Dorian Shainin Elmer Hibbard Summersgill 216 The Tech Boat Club Honorary Crew Society MEMBERS William Bovnton Beckwith William Benjamin Bergen Norman Anton Birch Ford Millspau h Boulware Robert John Brauer Philip Gardner Briggs Edward Ross Clark, Jr. James Mooar Clifford Paul William Daley Arthur Joseph Dolben John Adlington Easton, Jr. John Robert Ferguson, Jr. John Paul Hayes Arthur Rowland Hunt Thomas Lee Johnson, Jr. Lawrence Kanters Harry William Kohl Michael Alexis Kuryla Chester Campbell Lawrence John Stevens Mason James Arthur Newman, Jr. Daniel Joseph O ' Conor, Jr. William James Pattison Frank Lincoln Phillips Wavne Morris Pierce Edward Lowell Pratt Robert Henry Thorson James Warburton, Jr. Thomas Norman Willcox Gustav Richard Young 217 The Tech Swim Chib William Champion John Joseph Jarosh HONOR. RY MEMBERS Ralph Theodore Jope Maximilian Untersee ACTI E MEMBERS James Carson Agnew Cleon Carter Dodge Joseph Robert Fischel Webster Huntington Francis, Jr. Frank Streeter Gardner Robert Herman Goldsmith Jack Irwin Hamilton William Hamilton Hope, Jr. Archibald Macnicol Main, Jr. James Fergus Patterson Russell Spencer Rutherford Harrv Ogden Saunders Charles Drysdale Small Irving New ton Smith Paul Wellman Stevens Bernard ' onnegut Peter White 218 Beaver Key Society MEMBERS Walter True Blake William Bernard Burnet Alfred Eugen Busch John Bangs Corbett Cleon Carter Dodge Philip Harry Dreissigacker, Jr. George William Ewald John Robert Ferguson, Jr. Webster Huntington Francis, Jr. Charles Richmond Gidley, Jr. Robert Herman Goldsmith William Marvin Harcum Rutherford Harris Baird William Hodgkinson John Iglauer Robert Young Jordan Rinaldo Vincent Kron William James McCune, Jr. David Smith McLellan John Stevens Mason Robert Dean Morton Oscar William Muckenhirn James Arthur Newman, Jr. Edgar Rice Pettebone, II Harold Elliott Prouty Scott Carson Rethorst John Clinton Robhins, Jr. Matthew Laflin Rockwell Julius Boone Schliemann John Maxwell Simpson, Jr. Joseph Anthonv Smedile Robert Henry Thorson Jervis Campbell Webb George Barr Wemple George Robert Weppler Gordon Borthwick Wilkes, Jr. Walter Stanley Wojtczak Gustav Richard Young 219 Baton Honorary Societies of the Combined Musical Clubs Karl Tavlor Compton William Thomas Hall HONORARY MEMBERS F. Alexander Magoun William Ellis Weston ACT1 ' E MEMBERS Charles Michael Antoni William Bovnton Beckwirh Wells Coleman William Andrew Cressvvell, Jr. Richard Sears DeWolfe Philip Harrv Dreissigacker, Jr. Richard Baruch Fox John Moreland Gould Edward Schroeder Halfmann Robert Samuel Harris Robert Young Jordan Charles Reginald Kahn, Jr. Joseph Hedge King Raymond Herbert McFee William Orville Nichols Edward Carl Peterson George Reuben Robinson William Forbes Shuttleworth Stanley Brooks Smith, Jr. 220 Dorclan Honorary Dormitory Society MEMBERS Joel Burr Bulkley James Henry Carr, Jr. Farmer Lee Current John Paul Hamilton Richard Kornau Koegler Francis Henry Lessard David Smith McLellan William Orville Nichols James Fergus Patterson Harold Elliott Proutv Walter Hall Pulsifer, Jr. Henry Charles Runkel Nestor Albert Sabi William Robert Saylor Stanley Brooks Smith, Jr. Raymond Carl Svenson Ariel Alton Thomas Edward Joseph ' anderman David Abner Werblin leu Liang Wu 221 Simpson, Allen, Wcmple, Francis, Busch, jnwr Essley, du Pont, Rethorsi, Hazelton Interfraternity Conference Scott Carson Rethorst Chairmen William Bavard du Pont Ehvood Henrv Koontz Institute Committee Represeiitatiies illiam Bavard du Pont Harry Bo den Hazelton, Jr. Secretary Harrv Edward Essley, Jr. Dance Cammtttee Chairman David Edwards Varner Basketball Committee Chairman John Maxwell Simpson, Jr. Bridge Tournament Chairman James Burnell Allen Treasurer George Barr W ' emple Squash Committee Chairman Alfred Eugen Busch House Management Policies Chairman Webster Huntington Francis, Jr. Relay Race Chairman Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. Alpha Tau Omega Beta Theta Pi Chi Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Kappa Sigma MEMBER FRATERNITIES Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Beta Delta Phi Beta Epsilon Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Mu Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi Theta Xi ■}- ! FRATERNITIES Mass. Beta Gamma Chapter Faculty Members Jayson Clair Balsbaugh James Ross McKeever ' annevar Bush Charles Francis Park Karl Taylor Compton George Edmond Russell Graduate Members Walter Rider Hedeman, Jr. Walter Frederick Noyes, Jr. Seniors William Warner Towner Robert Pierce Willard Louis Cass Young Juniors Alanson William Chandler Philip Harry Dreissigacker, Jr. Sophomores Thomas Br ' ant Akin Francis Taber Akin John Seymour Cleworth Ralph Braley Cobb Robert ' avne Haddock Wendell Francis Jacques Richard August Novak Harrv Ogden Saunders Charles Drysdale Small Irving Powers ' atson Freshmen David Albert Bartlett Benjamin Thomas Howes Austin Burton Croshere, Jr. John Thomas Kirk, Jr. Amos Johnson Shaler Akin, FT., Bartlett, Hanke, Haddock, Homes, Shaler, Novak, Kirk Jacques, Akin, T., Chandler, Cleworth, Willard, Small, Croshere, Young Noyes, Cobb, Dreissigacker, Towner, Hedeman, Watson, Saunders 224 Alpha Tau Omega Beta Gamma Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega was founded at Technology in the year 1885 as the first chapter of the National Fraternit ' in New Eng- land. An office in down-town Boston served as a hrst meeting place for the five charter members, hut the desire to expand led them to rent a suite of rooms on W ' estland Avenue, Boston. It was not long before they were able to rent an entire house on Newbury Street, and in this atmosphere the chap- ter grew and strengthened. When Technology was transferred to Cambridge in 1916 it became de- sirable to change Beta Gamma ' s location, and in the following year the chapter purchased a house at 37 Bay State Road, Boston, situated just across the river from the Institute. This house was used as a military hospital dur- ing the war. . Boston Alumni Association, composed of alumni from this and many other chapters, takes an active interest in the house and continuallv demon- strates the true fraternity spirit which prevails. Beta Gamma is represented in the faculty by Professors G. E. Russell and C. F. Park. Emerson H. Packard ' 07 has been president of the National Fraternity, and Alexander Macomber ' 07 has been its treasurer for many years. Mr. Macomber has served as a member of the Institute Corporation and was at one time president of the Technology Alumni Association. 225 Beta Upsilon Chapter Faculty Member Major Archibald D. Fisken Seniors Jo hn Churchill Austin Edwin Arthur Bovan Norman George Bull David Meade Cooper James Robert Craig Harry Thomas Easton John Robev Graham Clarence Arthur Mayo, Jr. Lawrence Wilson Sharpe John Thomas Smith Stanley Burr Stolz Juniors John Bangs Corbett Robert Young Jordan Lawrence Edwards Hough Joseph Faher Keithley Norman Gilbert Tompkins Sophomores George William Beer Robert Clifton Eddy Adam Christian Gambel Frank Streeter Gardner James Melville Gilliss Newton LeRoy Hammond, Jr. Robert Dawes Harvey Francis James Kearny Ira Henry Lohman, Jr. Dale Francis Morgan Richard Muther John Heckman Phillippi David Donald Weir Freshmen Albert Heath Chestnut Theodore Julius Gundlach Richards Llewellvn Loesch Emor - Tavlor Lvon Oswald Stewart, II Hammond, Corbett, Eddy, Smith, Easton, Muther, Sharpe, Harvey Austin, Bull, Hough, Gardner, Graham, Beer, Gilliss, Boyan, Lohman Gambel, Craig, Keithley, Stolz, Cooper, Mayo, Kearney, Jordan, Tompkins, Morgan Weir, Cook, Lvon, Chestnut, Stewart, Roberg, Loesch, Phillippi, Gundlach ft « n ,. t t, t. t.;l,Jtf, fc t f f f t f t f 226 Beta Theta Pi V- B0n Bkta Theta Pi was founded at Miami Universitv, Oxford, Ohio, in the summer of 1S39. The Beta Upsilon chapter, which was known before its installation as the local fraternity. Kappa Theta, is one of the eight --seven chapters of Beta Theta Pi located at institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada. The chapter has occupied several residences, hut since 1924 it has owned a house at 241 Kent Street, Brookline, in the heart of a pleasant residential district. Other New England chapters of Beta Theta Pi are locate d at Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown, Dartmouth, Maine, W ' esleyan, Williams, and Yale, and many visitors are received from them each vear. A genuine spirit of good- fellowship prevails among the New England chapters, affording unlimited opportunit - for forming many lasting friendships. The chapter maintains an active membership of about thirtv-five students who have consistently distinguished themselves m scholarship and extra- curricular activities. In this respect, the members have met the high stand- ards set b - the national fraternity. Among the chapter ' s prominent alumni are Orville B. Obie ) Denison ' 11, and Isaac W. Litchfield, ' 85, writer of Take Me Back to Tech . 227 Beta Chapter Faculty Members Edward Storv Ta lor Ross Francis Tucker Seniors David Anderson Blanton, Jr. James Henry Grove Harry Boyden Hazelton, Jr. Allen Woodward Horron, Jr. ' alther Herman Mathesius Paul Stockstrom Morgan Wilson Allen Tavlor, Jr. Ralph Baldwin Chapin Charles Chenev Chase Juniors Eric Oakman Moorehead John Asa Sawyer Sophomores Thomas Armat Jay Pearce AuW ' erter Chauncey Frederick Bell, Jr. Frank William Brown, III Charles Barrett Campbell Harold Eugene Cude, Jr. James Emery Kenneth Marvin Gunkel Daniel Sinclair Scott Welles Worthen Hans Bebie Andrew Lawrie Fabens Roscoe Barrv Graham Freshmen Frederick Bourne Grant George Redmond Mitchel Robert William Spinner Grant, AuWerter, Moorehead, Sawver, Fabens, West, Bell, Armat, Spinner, Grove Morgan, Mitchell, Scott, Taylor, Grahain, Campbell, Cude, Gunkel, Emery Brown, Worthen, Horton, Hazelton, Mathesius, Chase, Blanton 228 Chi Phi The Chi Phi fraternity, founded in 1824 at The College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, in 1873 established at Technologv a chapter then known as Tau. This chapter was reorganized in 1890 largely through the efforts of Professor Ross F. Tucker, head of the Department of Building Construction, and has since maintained a continuous and prosperous exist- tence as the Beta Chapter of Chi Phi. The chapter house has been located on The Fenwav in Boston for thirty years, first at Number 44 and later at Number 22. Returning alumni are al- ways pleased to be greeted by the House ' s faithful butler, Rastus, whose most remarkable accomplishment is his infallible knowledge of the career of each and everv alumnus. Rastus is now in his forty-second year of service at the House. The most anticipated event of Beta ' s social season is the traditional Bohemian Masquerade, attended each spring not only by guests from among the students at Technology, but by many Chi Phis from other New England chapters. The chapter endeavors to assist its initiates to attain and maintain a balance between social, extra-curricular and scholastic activities which will yield the greatest benefits both to the individual and the fraternity. 229 Sigma Tau Chapter William Emerson Richard Edgar Evans Dean Abner Pales Walter Humphreys Faculty Members Jerome Clark Hunsaker Wallace Mason Ross Maurice deKay Thompson Robert ' an de Graaff Carroll Louis Wilson Graduate Members ' an Buren Nelson Hansford Seniors Howard Lee Anderson, Jr. William Melville Benson Herbert Franklin Goodwin Marshall Maynard Holcombe Grandville Revnard Jones, Jr. Hamilton Migel Benjamin Franklin Lippold, Jr. Philip Le Rov Ober William James Pattison Edson Bly Snow David Edwards ' arner Webster Hill Wilson Juniors Philip Gardner Briggs Alfred Eugen Busch Goodwin deRaismes Robert Embree deRaismes Karl Perley Goodwin Charles Clifton Wetmore Sophomores Matthvs Gideon Jan Boissevain Robert Hemingway Park Edwin Lafavette Hobson, Edward Mosehauer, Jr. Francis Emmet Neagle, Jr. Gustav Adolph Stein, Jr. George Barr Wemple III Edward Potter Bowen Roscoe James Cooper John Randal Diver Robert Flanagan Ward James Rafferty Wilbur Currier Rice Abner Alexander Towers Allan James Wilson, Jr. Richard Bradford Young Freshmen Ames Bliss Richard ' enable Gaines Dudley Howard Campbell Norman Macbeth, Jr. Stephen Aloysius Days, Jr. Nicholas Pickard Augustinjay Powers, Jr. Pickard, deRaismes G., Boissevain, Park, Bowen, Hansford, Gaines, Wilson A., Towers Cooper, Neagle, Raffercy, Hobson, Macbeth, Flanagan, Rice, Campbell, Jones, Stein Anderson, Snow, ' arner, Holcombe, Benson, Pattison, Ober, Wilson, W. Powers, Days, Young, Bliss, Busch, Wetmore 230 Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Kappa Epsilon was founded in 1844 at Yale where it still stands, the oldest House on the campus. During the years since its founding the Fraternity has grown steadily until, at the present time, it has chapters at fortv-seven of the leading colleges and universities in the United States and Canada. The fraternity as a whole endeavors to maintain a high scholastic and social standing among its members and at the same time to keep to the fore in college activities. Each chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon endeavors to maintain a position of influence and respect in the college or university at which it is located. The success of the individual chapters may be judged bv the high national standing of the fraternity. The Chapter at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was granted a charter November 15, 1890, through the efforts of several students under the guidance of General Francis Amasa Walker, a graduate of the Amherst Chapter, and Professor Charles Livermore, a Hamilton Deke. The House has always had an active membership, both undergraduate and alumni, and these two groups working together have done a great deal to maintain the reputation which Delta Kappa Epsilon has throughout this country and Canada. 231 Number Six Club Faculty Members Alfred ' ictor deForesc Fairfield Eager Raymond Joseph Talmadge W ' oodrutT Graduate Member Henrv Adams Morss, Jr. Seniors Thomas Ledyard Blakeman Francis Jenkins Danforth, Jr. John Dick Gardiner Marvine Gorham, Jr. Aurelius Pointer Hornor, Jr. Thomas Lee Johnson, Jr. Frank Jewett Mather, III Edgar Carter Rust, Jr. Julian Thomas Cole W ' aram Juniors Peter deFlorez Christian Carson Febiger Conover Fitch Henrv Dawson Furniss Gray Jensvold August Hamilton Schilling Sophomores Edouard RajTnond Bossange, Jr. Brainard Tucker Macomber Harrv Engman Draper William Wickliffe Preston David Edwin Irving Cornelius Van Schaak Roosevelt Dudley Allen Levick, Jr. Hans Frederick Schaefer, Jr. John Warren Whittaker Freshmen Mavnard Kane Drury Gus Mitchell Griffin Llovd Burns Magruder, Jr. Fred Russell Sheldon Edwin Kinmonth Smith, Jr. Roosevelt, Whittaker, Martin, Griffin, Smith, Sheldon, Magruder, Preston, Drury, Irving Fitch, Macomber, Febiger, Schilling, Levick, Bossange, Schaefer, Draper, deFlorez, Jensvold Rust. Hornor, Furniss, Gardiner, Gorham, Johnson, Waram, Danforth .■A J r ? f O m f Mint If ? ft? t % ' ' 3i« ' 232 Delta Psi The Delta Psi Fraternicv was founded in 1847 at Columbia and New York- Universities. The Tau Chapter was established at Technology on April 6, 1889. The nucleus of the chapter was a societv of students, known as The Club, which had been in existence two or three years, holding regular meetings in a fifth-storv room on Tremont Street, Boston. The new Chapter acquired a house at Number Six Louisburg Square and made its home there for manv vears. Although the Fraternity is known at other colleges as St. Anthony Hall, the Tau Chapter became known as the Number Six Club, as a consequence of its early location and its history. ' hen the organization moved across the river to Cambridge in 1914 the name was kept, by unanimous vote of the members, as a part of a cherished tra- dition. 233 Beta Nu Chapter Faculty Members John W ymond Miller Bunker Raymond Donald Douglass Seniors Walter Kavanagh MacAdam W ' inthrop Alan Stiles Juniors William Benjamin Bergen John Robert Ferguson Paul Wellman Stevens Sophomores Ralph Guv x dams, Jr. George Edwin Hadley Francis Armington Fisher John Robert Summerheld David Arvvood Wright Freshmen Benjamin Wilson Badenoch John Alden Beaujean Richard Thomas Cella Bascom Charles Emerson Alexander Robert Girardi Basil Parkhurst Grav Wilbert Carl Gumprich John Walter Krey William Minos Lvnch Robert Arthur Stone Robert Butler Wooster Jungbluth, Beaujean, Gumprich, Badenoch, Olmstead, Wright, Wooster, Girardi Gray, Emerson, Lynch, Hadley, Cella, Stone, Krey Fisher, Stevens, Ferguson, MacAdam, Bergen, Clifford, Summerheld a o gi - ]pi 4 Vi 1 ♦ t f f t |?1 § 3m 234 Delta Tau Delta ATA Delta Tau Delta was founded .u Berhain- College, West ' irginia, in the Spring of 1858. There are seventv-tive undergraduate chapters of the fraternit - in thirty-six states, and Ontario, Canada. The fraternity ' s sixty- two alumni chapters are located in the principal cities and towns throughout the United States and Canada. There are 27,000 Delta Tau Delta alumni. The M. I. T. chapter obtained its charter in 1889, thus becoming the fifth national fraternity to be organized at the Institute. ' The chapter struggled through long hardships, and finally in 1904, through the elforts of Frank Elliott, the organization emerged as one of Technology ' s outstanding fraternities. Since then the Delts, both locally and nationally, have been among the leaders, not onh- in scholarship, but also in extra-curricular actiyities and in fraternit - reform. This has been done in order to further its objectiye, which is, as officially stated, to educate, contributing to the young men within its sphere of influence a moral, spir- itual, and social deyelopment commensurate with the intellectual training supplied by the colleges and uniyersities. Delta Tau Delta was the first fraternity to place on the governing board an officer charged solely with the fostering of good scholarship. 235 Technology Chapter Faculty Members Arthur Randall Davis Herman Paul Meissner Robert Medill Elliott Paul Willard Norton Ralph Evans Freeman Thomas Palm Pure William Spencer Hutchinson John Clarke Slater Theodore Smith Seniors William Bovnton Beckwith Daniel Reynolds Carroll Robert Stone Gillette Semon Emil Knudsen Henry Frederick Lippitt, II Morgan Coffin Rulon Juniors Willard Roger Beye Edward Arthur Brittenham, Jr. Charles Hickman Eager Albert Adams Haskell, Jr. David Cushing Hill Melville Edward Hitchcock Robert Searle Reichart Mathew Laflin Rockwell John Wells Sage Jervis Campbell ' ebb Sophomores David ' ebster Beaman, Jr. William Allen Camp, Jr. Arch Hope Copeland, Jr. Harold Alfred Herre Howard Ernst Milius Daniel Eric Surer John Alfred Dodge Forrest Thurston Ellis James Henry Ferry, Jr. Freshmen Henry Knippenberg, III David Nathaniel Lindberg George Austin Schroeder Knippenberg, Hitchcock, Rulon, Carroll, Beam.in, Beckwith, Dodge, Sage, Ferry Lindberg, Surer, Hill, Lippitt, Camp, Schroeder, Copeland, Beye Fager, Ellis, Reichart, Webb, Rockwell, Herre, Milius I 236 Delta Upsilon Delta Upsilon was founded in 1834 at Williams College, as an anti- secret organization. It grew steadily in size until finally it was incorporated in 1909 as a non-secret fraternity. The Technology Chapter started as a non- secret society, called Nu Chi, in 1891. Almost immediately they strove to make their society a member of the national fraternity, Delta Upsilon. The Nu Chis maintained a close relationship with Delta Upsilon, and tinallv, about a vear later, their opportunity came when Delta Upsilon held its national convention in Boston. FrankVogel was elected torepresent NuChi at the convention, and to present its petition for membership to the national organization. Probablv every chapter in the country was represented there that day. After the petition was read the discussion started. Most delegates claimed that Nu Chi was new and weak and that its merits, if there be any, were as yet unknown to other chapters, Then Frank ' ogel launched an idea that was not short of spectacular; he invited the entire convention to visit their meeting rooms and to meet the members of the society. The delegates of the convention agreed to this and flocked down to the rooms in the Tech- nology Chambers at Back Bay. They apparently were favorably impressed, for immediately afterward Nu Chi was made a member of Delta Upsilon. Thus the chapter had become a member of the national fraternity in a little over a vear after the date of its founding. 237 Gamma Pi Chapter Faculty Members Howard Russell Bartlett Oscar James Gatchell James Brown Fisk Robert Charles Gunness Edmund Lee Gamble Marshall Walker Jennison William Henrv McAdams Douglas Chalmers William Prendergast Canning Dana Devereaux Benjamin Baker Fogler William Willis Garth Graduate Members William Redington Hewlett William Marion Snyder, Jr. Seniors Jack Irwin Hamilton Joseph Hedge King Julius Boone Schliemann Bernard ' onnegut Leo Charles Avondoglio Cleon Carter Dodge James Marvin Ewell Loring Chapman Far vell Norris Gard Barr Juniors Carl Arne Olsson Carl Alfred Pearson John Clinton Robbins, Jr. John Maxwell Simpson, Jr. George Robert Weppier Sophomores Herbert Stewart FitzGibbon, Jr. Edmond Robertson Nalle Freshmen Antonio Arias John Norman Hobstetter Franklin Newall Bent William Calhoon Love John Cornelius Chatten Manning Cutter Morrill Perry Orson Crawford John Edmund Riley Robert James Davidson Eugene Donald Thatcher John Leslie Tudbury 4 Snvder, Tudburv, Bent, Pearson, Dodge, Morrill, Ewell, Crawford, Fogler, Hobstetter, Barr, Arias Riley, Hewlett, Thatcher, Chatten, Love, Weppier, Robbins, King, Farwell, Davidson, Nalle Canning, Simpson, Avondoglio, Garth, Schliemann, Hamilton, Vonnegut, Devereaux, Chalmers 238 I Kappa Sigma A LOCAL fracernity, founded in 1913 b W. R. Mattson, C. . Brett, and J. J. Stracken applied for membership to Kappa Sigma, and in August, 1914, became the Gamma Pi Chapter of Kappa Sigma. The official installation of the Technology chapter took place at the Gamma Eta house, Harvard, on September 14, 1919, when twenty-eight men were dulv initiated. On the following day, the ceremony was concluded at Blackwell ' s Hall in Boston, under the general direction of T. Everett Hicks. At the conclusion of the ceremonies the members of the new group, along with brothers from many other chapters, organized a snake dance which paraded through the streets of Back Bay to the chapter house, then located at 251 Newbury Street. When it became certain that the Institute would move to its present location in Cambridge, the chapter moved to 33 Bay State Road, Boston, across the river from the Institute, which lo- cation it still occupies. The fraternity holds a national conclave every two years which is at- tended by delegates from all the chapters. The chapter has been fortunate in having its founders take a lively interest it its activities. They have cooper- ated in keeping the house in excellent condition and have provided for the active members a congenial, homelike atmosphere. With a chapter located in every state of the union except Connecticut, it off ' ers to its members a bridge of acquaintanceships from coast to coast. 239 Lambda Zeta Chapter Faculty Members Prescort Durand Croui: Samuel Gate Prescott I Graduate Members Willard Rav Crout Warren Ladd Towle Senior Earl Donald Fraser Juniors Abbott Bvheld Thomas Reed Kinraide James Gardner Loder Sophomores Michael Samuel Cettei Casper John Stacey John Field Michel Richard Herman Frederick Stresau, Jr. Balilla Delia Freshmen Walter Max May Ernest Norman Peter Stacey, Loder, P. Crout, Barton, Stresau, W. Crout Hale. Kinraide, Prof. Howard, Fraser, Towle 140 Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Cm Alpha, founded in 1909 at Boston University, has in the twenty-six years of its existence established eighty-five chapters in the United States and one in Canada, showing an enviable record in fraternit - historv. Early in 1912, the national president of Lambda Chi Alpha invited Zenas Crocivcr, Jr., to organize a chapter of the fratcrnitv at Technology. On December 30, 1912 a charter was granted to eight men, including Zenas Crocker, Jr., Robert D. Bonnev, George A. Richter, Maurice W. Salamonson, W ' llliamJ. Mooney, Henr - H. Thompson, Lucien W. Burnham and Allen F. Brewer; and Lambda Zeta started activities in a rented house at 353 Newburv Street, Boston. Three more rented houses were occupied before the present house, 441 Beacon Street, was bought. Lambda Zeta boasts an enviable military record. Colonel Edward T. Cole, former instructor in the Military Science and Tactics Department, served in two wars, and Frank E. Parsons was decorated for conspicuous braverv during the second battle of the Marne. Two members were killed in combat during the war. George N. Althouse, a lieutenant, died from wounds received in battle. Dinsmore Ely was one of the first to enter the call to arms. He was killed in action near ' illacaublay on April 21, 1918. A quotation from his last letter to his family used in a United States liberty bond issue, has become a fraternity tradition; It is an investment, not a loss, when a man dies for his countrv. 241 Theta Chapter Graduate Members Barclay Howard Bloomgarden Fred Mandlebaum Kraus Norman Bernard Krim Seniors Arthur Mordecai Cohen Eli Abraham Grossman Edwin Allan Kass Juniors Charles Reginald Kahn, Jr. Allan Irwin Roshkind Jack Ostrer Jerome Elias Salny Harry Stanley Stern, Jr. Sophomores Louis Bachmann, Jr. Irwin George Freydberg Robert Arthur Englander Theodor Herzl Halpern Raymond Epstein Harold James Allan Edwm Schorsch Freshmen Peter Michael Bernays Sevmour Stanton Block Mvron Abbott Cantor Richard Phillips Fevnman Leonard Mautner Maurice Abraham Mever Bernard Zuckerman Bernavs, Fevnman, Finkelstein, Mautner, Cantor, Zuckerman, Mever, Block Schorsch, Epstein, Freydberg, Salny, Englander, Halpern, James, Bachmann Ostrer, Roshkind, Grossman, Alexander, Kass, Cohen, Stern, Kahn 242 Phi Beta Delta This year the Technolog - chapter of Phi Beta Delta moveJ into a new chapter house at Number 71 Bav State Road. This house is undoubtedlv the finest in the history of the chapter, and ranks high among the other frater- nity houses on the campus. It is situated in the heart of Back Bay, overlook- ing the Charles, with the Technology buildmgs in the distance. Phi Beta Delta fraternity was founded at Columbia Universit ' on April 4, 1912. It expanded rapidly but conservatively, until at present there are thirtv-rwo chapters as well as ten alumni clubs extending from coast to coast; from Massachusetts to Florida. Theta Chapter was founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology in 1920, bv a Phi Beta Deltan who had transferred from the College of the City of New York. Appreciating the value of extra-curricular activities, members of Theta chapter are prominent in Institute activities and at the same time, however, the social side of college life is bv no means forgotten. The facilities of Tech Cabin are utilized once each year, and frequent dances relieve the tedium of the year ' s work. The Phi Beta Delta Graduate Club of Boston is both socialh ' and frater- nally active with the chapter. 243 Local at Technology George Owen Faculty Members Gordon Ball Wilkes Graduate Member John Townsend Bunvell, Jr. Seniors Norman Atwater Cocke, Jr. Alan Frederick Hardman William Bayard du Pont Edgar Rice Pettebone, II Harrison Spring Woodman Juniors Charles Hobson John Stevens Mason Gordon Borthwick Wilkes, Jr. Sophomores John Henry Craig Frederic William Reuter, Jr. John Lindsav Robert Morris Robbins James Cooper Longwell Kenneth DeWitt Roberts Edgar Breck Taft Freshmen Robert Thompson Gage Donald Wilbur Waterman Will Brown Jamison Rodney Douglas James Weathersbee Robert Dixon Speas William Fleming Wingard Roberts, Speas, Jamison, Weathersbee, Wingard, Longwell Waterman, Gage, Wilkes, Mason, Taft. Reuter, Robbins, Craig Driscoll, Pettebone, Cocke, du Pont, Pratt, Hardman, Woodman 244 Phi Beta Epsilon The SIXTH frarernitv to be established at Tech was organized on the first of April, 1890. At that time eight men, H. L. Brand, H. A. Fiske, L. G. French, C. W. Aiken, F. A. Cole, ' . E. Hopton, j. G. Thompson and ' . C. Thalheimer, met in a room at the Hotel Edinburgh, on the corner of Colum- bus Avenue and Buckingham Street, all imbued with the idea that a union of congenial spirits for mutual benefit should be formed to offset the decided lack of non-scientific interests at Tech at that time. With true farsightedness they realized that this plan must be permanent in order to be successful. Hence a constitution was drawn up and a definite policy adopted. It was the original intention of the founders to become a chapter of a national frater- nity, but the fraternity in question was opposed to having chapters at purely scientific colleges. After a few years and some effort this original plan was abandoned, and as the local chapter, which now called itself Phi Beta Epsilon, grew and became recognized as one of the strong fraternities at Tech, its enthusiasm to join a national fraternity waned. Later, when several offers of charters from other fraternities were received they were declined. The present home of the fraternitv is at 400 Memorial Drive. This house built from a fund given bv the alumni, was completed in war time, when the government was allowed to use it as a temporary hospital. 245 Mass. Gamma Chapter Faculty Members Carroll Warren Doten Frederick Gardiner Fassett, Jr. Lombard Squires Seniors Alden Henry Anderson Oliver Lawrence Angevine, Jr. George Grant, III Frederick Adolph Prahl, Jr. Paul Holman Richardson Thomas Alexander Terrv, Jr. Juniors Robert Stillson Childs William Edward Hartmann Rinaldo ' incent Kron Thomas Barroct Oakes David Allen Richardson Harrv Mohr Weese Richard Milton Westfall Sophomores Edward Joseph Kuhn Charles Hubbard Little Abbott Sherwood Maeder John Jackson Perkins David James Torrans Wenzel Mathias Wochos, Jr. Freshmen Granville Elbridge Carleton Richard Gray Davis Elmer Francis De Tiere, Jr. Joseph W ' ilev Harrison Henrv Richard Landwehr Edison Powers Samuel Scott Earl Brown Wilkinson Cirleton, Powers, Little, Harrison, L.ind vehr, Weese, Wilkinson, De Tiere, Davis Westfall, Oakes, Wochos, Torrans, Kron, Childs, Kuhn, Richardson, D. A., Maeder, Hartmann Perkins, Richardson, P. H., Terry, Anderson, Prahl, Grant, Angevine, Dayton 246 Phi Delta Theta Piii Delta Theta, founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio in 1848, has become one of the largest and foremost fraternities in the country. There are at present one hundred and six chapters distributed throughout the United States and Canada at the better known universities and colleges. Massachusetts Gamma received its charter in 1932 upon recognition by the convention of the frarernitv as a strong local worthy of membership in Phi Delta Theta. Psi Delta, the former local fraternity, was founded May 13, 1922 by six Technology students desiring the companionship of fraternity life. Shortly after its founding, the activities of the fraternity and its mem- bers gained for Psi Delta a place of prominence on the campus and admission into the Inter-Fraternity Conference. During Massachusetts Gamma ' s re- lativelv short existence at Technology its members have held many positions both in athletics and extra-curricular activities while maintaining a high scholastic standing. At present the chapter enjoys a strong alumni association which main- tains active relations with the undergraduate chapter. Each year we re- ceive many visitors from other New England chapters at Colby, Dartmouth, University of Vermont, Amherst, Brown, and Williams. The close relations among the New England chapters encourage man y pleasant hours and lasting friendships. 247 Iota Mu Chapter Faculty Members Robert Dexter Butler Seniors Nathan Chase Aver Ford Millspaugh Boulware John Richard Brookes Elwood Henry Koontz Michael Alexis Kurvla Juniors Quentin Berg Walter True Blake William Bernard Burnet Harry Brimhall Goodwin Rutherford Harris Sophomores Lloyd Bergeson John Ransom Cook Douglas Gerhard Esperson Gordon Lee Foote Samuel Adams Steere Freshmen Stuart ' eeder Arnold George Brandon, Jr. Robert Crozer Casselman George Dorland Cremer Augustus Appleby De ' oe George Lawton Estes, Jr. Charles Kingsley, Jr. John Alden Myers James Howard Schipper Gordon Case Thomas Fletcher Parrott Thornton, Jr. Milner Weston Wallace Edwin Turner Herbig, Jr. Baird William Hodgkinson James Davis McLean Robert Dean Morton James i rthur Newman, Jr. Harrv Ben Hollander Robert Loring Johnson William Harison Phinizy Paul John Shirlev, Jr. Jr. Fred Wellington French James Ellison Hawkes Millard Benjamin Hodgson, Jr. George Thompson Pew Philip Hollis WeatheriU Joseph FitzRandolph Weston Robertson Youngquist Blake, Newman, Harris, Foote, Shirley, Hodgkinson, Herbig, Goodwin, Morton, Hawkes Brandon, Johnson, WeatheriU, Weston, Steere, Hollander. Bergeson, Phinizy, Burnet, Esperson, Berg Wallace, Kurvla, Boulware, Thornton, Koontz, .• yer, Thomas, Myers Hodgson, De Voe, Youngquist, Arnold, Estes, Pew, French, Cremer, Casselman r f c rs f ■fit ' 248 Phi Gamma Delta ▼ At the time of its inception in 1889 the Iota Mu Chapter of Phi Gamma Delta consisted of eight men, six of whom had formed, in 1888, a local frater- nity, Alpha Delta Chi, and had petitioned the national fraternity for a char- ter. Two members had been added to the original six, making the complete list of charter members as follows: Harry C. Parks ' 91, Robert W. Bissell ' 92, Elmer P. Kraft ' 92, Albert L. Goetzmann ' 92, William F. Keen ' 91, Clement March ' 91, Elisha Lee ' 91, and Robert H. Paul ' 92. Originally located at the Berkeley Hotel, the chapter house was moved several times until in 1921, the alumni made possible the purchase of the present house at 28 the Fenway. The chapter is proud of this house, its interior decorations, and, particu- larly, of the Louis Xl ' ballroom which has contributed so much to the success of its social functions. At present, as it has for the last decade, the chapter roll numbers around forty men who have distinguished themselves in Institute and extra-curric- ular activities. The war period found Iota Mu with reduced numbers but undaunted spirit in a new house at 491 Commonwealth Avenue; of the num- ber of members of the chapter who served, one lost his life, Malcolm Cotton Brown 15- 249 Eta Chapter Faculty Members Henry Patrick McCarthy John Donald Mitsch Graduate Member Francis Bernard Sellew Seniors Albert John Del Favero Roger Edward LeBlanc Sebastian George Mazzotta Roman Leo Ortvnsky Louis Anthonv Testa Roman Irodian Ulans Juniors Louis Henrv LaForge, Jr. Alfredo Llantada Sophomores Robert Denis Henry Dunn Oscar William Muckenhirn William Sullivan Quigley Freshmen Pedro Alberto deCastro Leo Narciss Kabacinski Andrew Augustus Fogliano John Aloysius Ryan, Jr. deCastro, Quigley, Kabacinski, Ryan Fogliano, Llantada, Sellew, Muckenhirn, Dunn, Mazzotta Ortvnskv, Del F.ivero. Ulans, LeBlanc, Testa 250 Phi K;i ppa On April 3, 1918, twelve voung men of Technology founded a local fraternity which they named Alpha Epsilon. It was their purpose in found- ing Alpha Epsilon to increase the social status of Catholics at the Massa- chusetts Institute ot Technology. Their first meeting was held at the In- stitute Dormitories in Room 303 Holman, during which the following offi- cers were elected: president, Richard Rimbach; secretary, Alfted T. Glassett; and treasurer, Lawrence C. McCloskey. The principal discussion during the first few meetings was the question of joining Phi Kappa. As a result of this discussion there was sent to Phi Kappa a petition, which was accepted, and on May 16, 1918, Alpha Epsilon became the Eta Chapter of Phi Kappa. The chapter was being rapidly and efficiently organized. The brothers in it were seriously considering moving from the dormitories into a house, but on November 21, 1918, because of the World War, the proceedings of the chapter were temporarily discontinued. A great many of the brothers entered into active service. Of them John W. Friery, First Lieutenant in the United States Engineers, lost his life. On October 11, 1919, upon the close of the World War the chapter was reoiiened, and after a brief period of reorganization its headquarters were moved to Newburv Street. A few years later a better house was obtained at 349 Commonwealth Avenue. The chapter remained at this residence until the fall of 1927 when it moved into the hous: it now occupies at 278 Commonwealth Avenue. 251 Alpha Mu Chapter Paul Conant Eaton Faculty Members Harold Edward Lobdell Graduate Member James DeBlois Parker Seniors James Golladav Baker Harrv Edward Essley, Jr. Edward Fisk Everett, Jr. Webster Huntington Francis, Jr. Clarence Reuben Horton, Jr. Samuel Norton Miner Charles Walter Parce Warren Sherburne, Jr. George Simpson Trimble, Jr. John Henrv Gander Austin Carr Loomis John Barclay McCrery Juniors William James McCune, Jr. Joseph Hibbert Stone David Robinson Wadleigh Sophomores Robert Tillinghast Church Stephen DuPont Richard Herbert Kaulback Archibald Macnicol Main, Jr. John Noves, Jr. Daniel Xeall Phillips Robert Clavton Smith Freshmen Wiley Franklin Corl, Jr. Forrest Palmer Gates, Jr. Leigh Spaulding Hail, Jr. John West Jackson William Frederick Pulver Robert Antoine Schmucker, Jr. Robert Eugene Touzalin Llo d Bowers Welch DuPont, Gander, Main, Phillips, Stone, Wadleigh, McCrery, Noyes Loomis, Hall, Welch, Jackson, Touzalin, Gates, Schmucker, Puher, Corl Smith, Everett. Horron. Baker. Francis. Trimble. Esslev, Parce. McCune 252 Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Sigma, the onlv fraternity founded at the University of Pennsylvannia, was instituted there on the nineteenth day of October, 1850. Its founders were Samuel Brown W ' ylie Mitchell, James Bavard Hodge, Alfred Mctor du Pont, Charles Hare Hutchinson, John Thorn Stone, Deane Williams, and Andrew Adams Ripka. Meeting in the home of James Hodge, at the northwest corner of Ninth and Walnut Street, in Philadelphia, these seven men brought the fraternity formally into existence. After establishing itself there, the organization expanded until it now has thirtx-eight chap- ters, distributed all over the country. On October 16, 1903, about a year after the first petitions were made for the establishment of a chapter at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Alpha Mu was founded here. The institution of the hve charter members was conducted by Frank B. Bower and Boyd Lee Spahr of the executive committee, assisted bv W. H. Walker and F. T. Hvde. In the fall of 1904 the few remaining members, meeting in their rooms, began a campaign for new members. For the next two or three years, although hampered by a rather unsettled existence, the chapter gained in strength and strove to become thoroughly established. By 1906 the chapter had gained a permanent position at the Institute. From then on it continued to gain its reputation for social and financial responsibility, both in the school and the national chapter. During this time it occupied several residences; in 1922 it purchased and occupied its present house, at 530 Beacon Street. 253 Nu Delta Chapter Faculty Member William Anderson Crosby Graduate Member Henr - John Ogorzalv Seniors William Andrew Cresswell, Jr. W arren Ravmond Devine David Jerome Gildea, Jr. Dorian Shainin Norman Cummings Moore Seth Connor Xickerson Robert Henry Roethlisberger Juniors Francis Stephan Buffington Allen ' oorhees Hazeltine Josiah Spaulding Heal Rolf Ernest Schneider Theodore Ruggles Timbie Ralph Patterson Webster Sophomores Francis Jack Bittel William Franklin Burditt Harold William Butler Dempster Christenson Ralph Jefferv Slutz James Leo ' iles John Frederick Allen Norris Fitz Dow Wilson Bucklin Keene Paul X ' lncent Kellman Freshmen Robert Gardner Larkin Paul Howard Schneider George Otto Schneller John Francis Wholev, Jr. Dow, Keene, . llen. Schneider, P., Schneller, Burditt, Slutz, Cresswell Moore, Larkin, Butler, Wholev, Kellman, Webster, Viles, Christenson Nickerson, Roethlisberger, Shainin, Gildea, Devine, Schneider, R., Buffington, Heal 254 Phi Mu Delta During the troubled vears of 1916-18 the Phi Mu Delta fraternity was organized, the original chapters being at Connecticut State College, the University of ' ermont, and the University of New Hampshire. Sinc e that time the fraternity has grown steadily, spreading throughout the nation. In 1919 the Adelphi Club was formed at Technology for the purpose of making possible the benefits of living together and of perpetuating the ties of friendship started at the Institute. Two years later the members petitioned the Phi Mu Delta fraternity for admission and were accepted. Thus the Adelphi Club became Nu Delta, the fourth chipter to be established in Phi Mu Delta. The original house was at 398 Marlborough Street, but since then its location has been changed several times. At present Nu Delta occupies the house at 330 Bav State Road, directly opposite the M I. T. Boat Club. Nu Delta has aimed at providing a suitable social and cultural back- ground for the school life of its members, at the same time encouraging them scholasticalh ' . The brothers are urged to participate in activities, and as a result Phi Mu Delts hold prominent positions on the campus. With the counsel and scholastic help of the upperclassmen, freshmen are guided in en- tering properly into the spirit of Technology. 255 Omicron Chapter Faculty Members Charles Blaney Breed Frederick George Keyes Robert Smith W ' oodburv Graduate Member Morris Elliott Ruckman Seniors Charles Lewis Austin, Jr. Luigi Lomia Robinett, Jr. William Hume Brockett George Nelson Tower, Jr. Richard Scribner Mabee Arthur Edward Wells, Jr. Edwin Burrough W ' orthen, Jr. Juniors Frederick Peters Baggerman Archibald Robertson Graustein, Jr. Francis Arthur Peters Edward Louis ' ollmer James W ' arburton, Jr. Reland Briggs W estgate Sophomores David Chambers W ' hiraker William Moonev Woodward Freshmen James Reid Cruciger Edwards Russell Fish, Jr. Charles Frederick Freytogle, Jr. Robert George Marchisio George Richard Marsh Charles Moss Mathis W illiam Gordon Tuller Theodore Allen Welton Cruciger, Mathis, W ' escgate, Tuller, Graustein, Warburton, Mabee Freyfogle, Welton, Marchisio, Christenson, Worthen, Peters, Baggerman, Marsh Fish, Brockett, Wells, Whitaker, Austin, Tower, Woodward, Robinett, Vollmer o tt n f 1 1 t f f f 256 Phi Sigma Kappa Phi SiOMA Kappa was founded at Massachusetts State College in 1873- It began to expand in 1888, and is now a national fraternity with forty- eight active chapters located throughout the country. The Omicron Chapter had its inception on Mav 24, 1902, when a charter was granted to a group of thirteen Technologv men. Five of these were from the class of 1904, five from the class of 1905, and three were alumni. Since its founding, the chapter has grown from an original member- ship of thirteen to a total membership to date of two hundred eighty-one, not including affiliates and honorary members. During this time the Chap- ter has had seven homes. The first was in Brighton and, as larger houses came to be required, the remaining ones have been located in various parts of the Back Bay. For the past few vears, the Chapter has been living in a house which is exceptionallv well adapted to fraternity life. The building at 487 Common- wealth Avenue overlooks Kenmore Square, and lies within easy walking distance of the Institute. 257 Mass. Iota Tau Chapter Faculty Members ilmer Lanier Barrow Arthur Chace W arson William Thomas Hall Frederick Kingsbury Watson Karl Leland Wildes Seniors Claude Douglas Cairns Norman Arland Copeland Charles Nicol Endweiss Oswald Benjamin Falls, Jr. Frederick Fenno House Henry Clyde Johnson Thomas Paul Nelligan Frank William Schoettler Juniors John Rudolph Pellam Jack Willhott Roe Thomas Curtiss Torrance Walter Stanlev W ' ojtczak Sophomores Arthur Henrv Christgau Ernest Paul Neumann Malcolm William Ellison William Forbes Shuttleworth Nicholas Hobson W ' heless, Jr. Freshmen Charles Tandy Conrad Robert William Pratt Henr ' Atkinson Rowe John Cornelius Vyverberg, Jr. Christgau, Cairns, Neuman, Falls Pratt, Pellam, Ellison, Shuttleworth, Conrad, Nelligan, Vyverberg Copeland, Wheless, Schoettler, Torrance, Johnson, Endweiss, House, Wojtczak 258 Sigma Alpha Epsilon The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternitv was founded in 1856 at the Uni- versity of Alabama, and bv the time of the Civil War rose to a position of prominence and influence among the universities of the South. Today, with 110 chapters throughout the United States, it enjoys a nation-wide pres- tige. Many men of prominence in everv walk of life are affiliated with this national fraternity. The M. I, T. chapter was founded Thanksgiving Dav, 1892. The chapter holds the distinction of being the second oldest of the New England chap- ters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and has played an important part in the estab- lishment of chapters at many of the universities and colleges in New Eng- land. As a new chapter it maintained rooms for social purposes only, but expansion was rapid and the necessity for more elaborate quarters became apparent. Despite difficulties, the enthusiasm and support of active and al- umni members carried the chapter to its present academic and social position. The chapter has become well established scholastically, socially, and financially, and is well able to provide for the comfort and happiness of its members. 259 Xi Chapter Faculty Members Nathaniel Herman Frank Harold Arthur Freeman Seniors Robert Alvin Bluestein Stanley Milton Freedman Morton Henrv Kanner Lawrence Kanters Carl Goodman Sontheimer Murray Mark Waxman, Jr. Juniors Richard Freeman Cohen John Keller Jacobs Maurice Bernard Gordon Maxwell Emanuel Jacobs Phineas Richard Rosenberg Sophomores Burton David Aaronson Lester Kornblith, Jr. Bernard Brod Alvin Milton Mendle Benjamin Morton Siegel Freshmen Lawrence Allan Berenson Richmond Hirsch Kauffman Monarch Littman Cutler Irving Peskoe Robert Benton Sackheim Brod, Sontheimer, Kauffman, Aaronson Kornblith, Mendle, Peskoe, Jacobs, Giegel, Sackheim, Cutler Gordon, Freedman, Bluestein, Waxman, Cohen, Kanner, Rosenberg 260 Sigma Alpha Mu The Xi Chapter of Sigma Alpha Mu was founded at M. I. T nineteen years ago on February 11, 1917, with Bernard L. Cohen, Irving Fineman, George Kohn, Samuel Mann, and David Rubin, live outstanding voung men of the Institute, as charter members. In May of that year, this group was recognized bv the facultv of the Institute, but not until 1929 did the chapter become a member of the Inter- Fraternity Conference. Since its establishment at Tech the fraternit - has maintained and oper- ated three separate chapter houses, the first at 197 Bav State Road, given up when the second was bought in 1928 at 338 Bav State Road, which was in turn vacated upon the purchase of their latest house at 83 Egmont Street, Brookline, in 1933- Among the more noted of the chapter ' s alumni are Will I. Lew ' 22, of Lehman Bros.; Dr. N. H. Frank ' 23, associate professor of physics at the In- stitute; S. Segal ' 23, assistant manager of William Filene ' s Sons Company; E. R. Lerov ' 24, inventor of the new high speed stock ticker; and L. C. Peskin, of the Department of Building Construction. 261 Alpha Theta Chapter Faculty Members Edwin Sharp Burdell Brainerd Alden Thresher George Proctor ' adsworth Graduate Members Edward Ross Clark, Jr. James Burnell Allen John Paul Haves Jacques Kemner Laflamme Carl Anthony Mapes Richard Barzen Murrow Seniors Walter Baker Moore Philip Edmund Newman Franklin Peahodv Parker James Justice Souder Lea Hibbard Spring Dee Marre ' an Cott Juniors Howard Berkey Bishop Curtis Hillver Daniel Joseph O ' Conor, Jr. Edward Carl Peterson Louis Leo Touton, Jr. Sophomores Allen Reed Cherry Blaine Truby Fairless Robert Iredell, III James Herman Kettering Harry Chandler Kittredge, Jr. Richard Karl Koch George Allen Moore Homer Ray Oldlield, Jr. Albert Amos Sargent, Jr. Irving Newton Smith Frederick Elder Strassner Freshmen Nicholas Elkinton Carr, Jr. Orville Redmon Dunn August Byron Hunicke, Jr. Richard Sullv Leffhorn Robert Harry Levis Jeremiah Gerald Murphy Robert ' ail Smith David Peter Triller Kettering, Haves, Mapes, Peterson, Spring, Parker, Dunn, Fairless, Sargent Chevy, Iredell, Laflamme, Strassner, Smith, R. V., Koch, Oldfield, Hillyer Bishop, Clark, VanCott, Souder, Allen, Moore, V., Murrow, O ' Conor Murphy, J. G., Leghorn, Hunicke, Carr, Triller, Levis 262 Sigma Chi Sigma Chi Fraternity, celebrating it ' s eightieth anniversary this year, was the first national fraternal organization to establish a chapter at the Institute. On March 22, 1882, the charter of Alpha Theta Chapter was granted to nine jietitioners, W ' inthrop Alexander, Henry F. Baldwin, Her- bert T. Bardwell, Daniel A. Campbell, Thomas C. duPont, Frederick O. Harriman, Edgar C. Hillyer, Frank F. Johnson, and Robert B. Moore. They first became interested in the Fraternity during the Christmas vacation of 1881 when some members of the group met several Sigma Chis who were members of the Northwestern University debating team. Upon their return to Boston, thev took up the matter of forming a band of petition- ers to Sigma Chi, and on February 17, 1832, a petition was forwarded to the parent chapter of the fraternity. The reply was prompt and favorable. For some time after installation, meetings were held in the hotel rooms, but in 1886 a suite of roDms was leased as the first permanent headquarters. During the years that ensued, the chapter occupied several houses in suc- cession, moving into its present home, 532 Beacon Street, Boston, on Janu- ary 1, 1919. Some of the more prominent alumni of this chapter are the late Alfred I. du Pont, James Reed, chief engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge, and Clarence McDonough, chief engineer of the P. W. A. 263 Epsilon Theta Chapter Faculty Member Karl Howard Achcerkirchen Graduate Members Francis Stapleton Chambers, Jr. Bruce Scott Old John Withers Irvine, Jr. Laxton Montgomery Smith Russell William Bandomer Delwin Morton Campbell Henrv Christensen, Jr. Seniors Henry Ferdinand Herpers Robert Jackson Lutz Morril Boughton Spaulding, Jr. Juniors James Carson Agnew William Cameron Mitchell Arthur Joseph Dolben Philip Homer Peters Arthur Rowland Hunt Gilbert Williams Winslow Gustav Richard Young Sophomores William Graham Chester James Cooper Livengood Fred Warren Morgenthaler Freshmen Walter Nicholas Brown, Jr. James Francis Fouhy George ' illiam Krebs Benjamin Bradford Rice Frederick Emil Scheldt Arthur William ' ogeley Charles Parker Washburn, Jr. Howard Merritt Woodward Hunt, Chester, Young, Livengood, V ' ogeley, Fouhv, Scheidi, Brown . chterkirchen. Rice, Woodward, Mitchell, Morgenthaler, Washburn, Krehs Campbell, Spaulding, Agnew, Bandomer, Lutz, Winslow, Christensen, Herpers 264 Sigma Nu Sigma Nu was founded ar the N ' irginia Militar - Inscitute, Lexington, X ' irginia, on January 1, 1869 by three survivors of the Civil War, James F. Hopkins, Greenfield Quarles, James F. Rilev. Fraternitv spirit prevailed at V. M. I. to such a degree that chapters immediately sprang up in the South, and within fifty years 110 chapters spread through 46 of the 48 states, as well as Washington, D. C. Epsilon Theta Chapter, No. 100 of the Sigma Nu Fraternitv, was in- stalled February 25, 1922. Sigma Nu entered M. I. T. through an organi- zation known as the Sigma Nu Club. Initial steps leading to the formation of the Sigma Nu Club were taken during the vear 1920 bv Robert M. Little- field, Delta Mu, Maine, and William W. Quarles, Beta Theta, Alabama Polvtechnic, the latter becoming the first Commander. Sixteen chapters of Sigma Nu were represented at Tech at the time of the birth of Epsilon Theta Chapter. At first the members were dispersed through the dorms, but thev soon succeeded in living together at 621 Commonwealth Avenue. In 1924, through the active efforts of the alumni and members, the present home was pur- chased at 259 St. Paul Street, Brookline. Prominent living alumni among the 36,000 wearers of the White Star of Sigma Nu are Governors Talmadge of Georgia, Martin of Washington, novelist Zane Grev, and netman Ellsworth ines. 265 Beta Chapter Faculty Members Robert Adolph Andrew Hentschel James Francis Clark Hyde Robert Landis Hershey James Robertson Jack Henry Eastin Rossell Graduat e Members David Ecclestone Kenyon William Burns Tucker Seniors Charles Frederick Berthold Price, Jr. Scott Carson Rethorst Elmer Hibbard SummersgiU George William Ewald Albert Carl Faatz, Jr. Kenneth Brooks Gair Dexter Weld Gaston William Marvin Harcum Juniors Francis Donald Houghton Harvey Fisk Phipard, Jr. Willard Roper Horace Bishop ' an Dorn, 111 Herbert Arthur Zimmerman Sophomores Wesley Adams CiUey Robert Rorbach Fisk Fred Paton Forman Richard Henry Ihmels Frank Burrill Kemp Edward Keene True Freshmen Lawrence William Carter John Clifford Hodges Lee, Jr. Theodore Robert Harris, Jr. Gordon Arthur Pope Robert Stuart Laird Richard Kenneth Walker Harcum, Fisk, Ihmels, Faarz, Gaston, Laird, Ewald, Lee, Carter, Harris Cilley, Forman, Pope, Kemp, True, Walker, Tucker, Kenyon Van Dorn, SummersgiU, Prof- Jack, Rethorst, Price. Zimmerman, Phipard 266 Theta Chi The Chapter which made Thera Chi Fraternitv a national fraternitv in 1902, Beta Chapter, has continually strived to carrv out the policy of that national fraternity of Alma Mater first and Theta Chi for Alma Ma- ter. Beta men have come from near and far seeking the facilities for edu- cation which only M. I. T. can offer, and have subsequently returned, after graduation, to carry out the tradition of the Institute and the spirit of Theta Chi. The man responsible for the inception of Beta Chapter was Park alen- tine Perkins, a transfer from Nor vich Universit -, where the fraternity was founded in 1856. Like most fraternity chapters. Beta Chapter started with few men and no house and has steadily worked its way forward, in tangible witness whereof: The present house at 528 Beacon Street. Beta ' s Alumni organization known as The Ox Club, consists of a- bout fifty of the Beta Chapter alumni in and around Boston. Meetings are held at the chapter house once a month. In addition to their progress as a chapter, the accomplishments of mem- bers of Theta Chi in extra-curricular activities have earned for the fraternity a position meriting the respect of faculty and undergraduates alike. fi m 161 Theta Deuteron Charge Faculty Members Frederick Johnstone Adams Karl Dickson Fernstrom Nathan Richard George John Major Nalle Envin Haskell Schell Seniors James Edward O ' Neil, Jr. Frank Lincoln Phillips William ' arren Prichard Louis Christian Smith, Jr. Joseph Robert Fischel inthrop Asa Johns Juniors Norman Ballou Robhins Irving Williams Tourtellot Sophomores James Keith Gilmore Philip Ellsworth Sellers Arthur Freeman Gould Harlan Turner, Jr. Jonathan Russell Roehrig John Guthrie Wheale Freshmen John Dav . lexander Rudolph Robert Bever William Souther Brewster Theron Smith Curtis, Jr. Morris Emmons Nicholson Stuart Paige Byron Wesley Wheeler, Jr. William Ralph Willard Holden hite ithington Alexander, Tourtellot, Wheale, Turner, Brewster, Paige, Withington, Curtis, Gilmore Roehrig, Wheeler, Wilson, Sellers, Beyer, Willard, Nicholson, Gould Johns, O ' Neil, Smith, Phillips, Prichard, Fischel, Robbins 268 Theta Delta Chi Ideals of friendship held by six undergraduates of Union College, Schenectady, New York, namely: Abel Beach, Theodore B. Brown, Andrew H. Green, William Hyslop, William Akin, and Samuel F. Wile, all of the class of ' 49, crystallized into the Theta Delta Chi fraternity on October 31, 1847- This date is annually commemorated by the members of Theta Delta Chi the world over. This fraternity was the eleventh to be founded and sixth organized at Union College. A conservative policy in regard to ex- pansion has always been maintained and charges have only been established at colleges which were most conducive to the fraternity spirit. Theta Delta Chi now has twenty-eight active charges. In 1903 a number of Tech students organized a local fraternity, Alpha Epsilon, with the specific purpose of re-establishing Theta Deuteron. Living quarters were first obtained on Gloucester Street and later at 262 Newbury Street. Being firmly oriented, the society petitioned for re-admission into the national organization. A charter was granted in June 1906 and the mem- bers of Alpha Epsilon were initiated into Theta Delta Chi. The fraternity moved to 80 Bay State Road in 1910 and from there to 334 Harvard Street in Cambridge in 1916. The latter abode proved to be very pleasant, but by 1925 the house was seen to be inadequate and plans were made to secure a new one more convenient to the Institute. These plans matured in 1930 when the charge moved to its present location at 314 Mem- orial Drive. 269 Delta Chapter Faculty Members Henry Greenleaf Pearson John Carl Gaude ultr Graduate Members Frederick David Mathias Seniors Frederick Fera Assmann Jean Louis Leman Charles Mallory Graves Warren Burroughs Schott Robert ' an Patten-Steiger Juniors Robert Jackson Kingsbury Russell Spencer Rutherford vSophomores Albert W ' ashburne Gabriel, Jr. Wadsworth Longfellow Hinds George Austin Heinemann David Lawrence Sargent Freshmen Gordon Ellis Holbrook Andre Frederic Leman Edward William Yetter Heinemann, Mathias, Yetter, Gabriel Schott, Iceman, A., Holbrook, Van Patten-Steiger, Hinds, Sargent Kingsbury, Leman, J., Graves, Rutherford, Assmann 270 Theta Xi Tiii; Delta Chapter of Theta Xi was established at Technology in 1885, twenty-one years after the founding of the Fraternity at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The founders, J. L. Shortall, L. FarrcU, T. W. Sprague, W. B. Douglas, G. O. Draper, and P. Thompson, petitioned the national Fraternity for membership without haying existed as a local fraternity, and upon re- ceiying their charter became the fourth national chapter of Theta Xi. Since its inception the chapter has furnished the Institute with nearly four hun- dred alumni, among who are Alfred Bemis, Charles Havden, Professor Harry G. Pearson, and Dr. John Rockwell. Until comparatively recently the Fraternity charters were granted only at scientific and technical institutions but in 1926 it changed its purposes to those of a social nature, and now has chapters at the principal colleges of the country. Now there are thirty-fiye chapters of Theta Xi, located at the country ' s most prominent universities and colleges. Ten thou- sand college men have worn the pearl-studded badge. Financially, the Frat- ernity is on a solid basis, most of the chapters owning their fine homes. Up- holding the best traditions of the fraternity, Theta Xi undergraduates are scholastically prominent and well-known in campus affairs. 271 COMBINED PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS CHEMICAL SOCIETY NAVAL ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY ARMY ORDNANCE ASSOCIATION AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS TROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES Combined Professional Societies President Charles Frederick Price, Jr. James Louis Adou ' illiam Henrv- Austin Leo Charles Avondoglio Charles Huntington Evans Aeronautical Engineering Society Richard Kornau Koegler Julius Boone Schliemann American Institute of Alining and Aletallurgkal Engineers — Student Chapter Charles Frederick Price, Jr. Thomas Reed Kinraide American Society of Civil Engineers James Henry Carr, Jr. Ariel Alton Thomas American Society of Alechanical Engineers James Fergus Patterson William Henrv Austin Army Ordnance Association Herbert Mowry Borden Albert Musschoot Associated General Contractors of America Sebastian George Mazzotta Sidney Mank OPEN HOUSE COMMITTEE Sebastian George Mazzotta Albert Musschoot James Fergus Patterson Secretary-Treasurer James Fergus Patterson Charles Frederick Price, Jr. Julius Boone Schliemann Peter Charles Weinert Duane Oren Wood SOCIETIES Chemical Society Peter Charles Weinert Edward Emil Stritter Electrical Engineering Society Walter Kavanagh MacAdam Charles Jacob Rife M.l.T. Radio Society Russell eleven Coile William Fingerle, Jr. Physical Society Wayne Eskett Hazen Charles Huntmgton Evans Sedgewick Biological Society James Louis Abdou William Arnold Steinhurst Society of American Aiilitary Engineers Herbert Arthur Zimmerman Charles Frederick Price, Jr. Society of Automotive Engineers Winthrop Glover Scott Richard Upham Brvant Musschoot, Brvant, Weinert, Stritter, Steinhurst, Kinniide, Borden, Hazen, Evans Acker, Fingerle, Scott, Austin, Thomas, Mank, Macadam, Rife Abdou, Koegler, Schliemann, Patterson, Price, Zimmerman, Mazzotta, Carr 274 Sensiper, Brown, Wliite, Hibbert, Phillips, W.illace, Alder, Walter, Slutz, Hobson, Wilsey Reitz, Sousa, Rosen, Ulans, Caldwell, Johnson, Falls, Sashiw, Fingerle, Stromberi;, Cook Paulsen, Cettci, Mabee, Halfmann, Rife, MacAdam, Savior, Gilman, Lamphere, .judkins Noodleman, Maida, Tuller, Brown, White, A. D., Andrias, MacAliister, Lewis, Sorkin Storaasli, Lefthes, Osborn, LaForge, Wiggen, Wood, Summerfield, Applegarth Electrical Engineering Society OFFICERS Walter K. MacAdam, Chainnan Charles J. Rife, Treasurer Martin A. Oilman, Vice Chairman William R. Savior, Secretary Prof. William H. Timbie, Counsellor Alexander R. Applegarth, Jr. Robert J. Caldwell OliserL. Angevine, Jr. Merton O. Baker Thomas E. Brown Jackson H. Cook Warren B. Dannenberg Leo H. Dee Oswald B. Falls, Jr. W lUiam . . Hagen, Jr. Arthur ' . Hughes Louis H. LaForge, Jr. Richard Lamphere Frank D. Lewis Marrhew C. Abbott Robert L. Alder Donald R. E. Barnaby Michael S. Cettei John H. Craig Robert M. Alexander John F. Allen Keiiialdo P. Alvarez James Andrias ' alter N. Brown, Jr. GRADUATE Edward S. Halfmann Charles Hobson MEMBERS Copeland C. MacAliister Robert M. Osborn SENIORS W illiam Fingerle, Jr. Martin A. Gilman John Joseph Hibbert Henrv C. Johnson Nicholas Lefthes Walter K. MacAdam Richard S. Mabee Frank L. Phillips Luigi L. Robinett, Jr. Morgan Coffin Rulon Max R. Saslaw William R. Savior Morris Sorkin Benigno R. Sousa JUNIORS George A. Lewis Lewis P. Reitz, Jr. Arthur L. MacDonald Frederic N. Rolf Francis X. Maida Leo Rosen Samuel Noodleman Irving X. Sager SOPHOMORES William G. Guindon Forrest H. Judkins Frank B. Kemp Joseph R. Krenn Malcolm F. McKeag Abbott S. Maeder Wilbur C. Rice Shepard Roberts FRESHMEN David S. Frankel Leonard D. .)alfe Henr - C. Littlejohn George G. Paulsen Samuel Sensiper Herbert F. Stewart William G. TuUcr Charles Wang Arnold P. G. Peterson Charles J. Rife Tage ' . Stromberg Ravmond C. Svenson Edward Targonski George H. Temple, Jr. Roman I. Ulans Milner W. Wallace Peter White Henrv R. Wilsev Lawrence R. Steinhardt Bardolf Storaasli David N. Summerfield Joseph F. Wiggin Duane O. Wood Ralph J. Slutz James M. Topalian Stanley T. Walter John C. White Wallace P. Warner Allan D. White Charles R. Wieser Edward W. Yetter 275 American Society of Civil Engineers Honorary President Charles Spofford Vice-President Daniel William Burns OFFICERS Secretary James Henrv Carr, Jr. President Ariel Alton Thomas Treasurer Bernard Benjamin Gordon Clyde Eraser Cameron John Philbin Conway GRADUATES Jeremiah Edmund Bowden Jennings Ben Louie Aldo Hector Bagnulo Daniel ' illiam Burns James Henrv Carr, Jr. Albert John Del Favero Vincent Joseph Dobrochowski Bernard Benjamin Gordon illiam Andrew Healev Anton Ernst Hittl Walter Johnson Lane 1936 Francis Henrv Lessard Stanley MichoU Levitt Samuel Jasper Loring Henry Clav Mabie George Dudley Mylchreest Seth Connor Nickerson Carl Olson Franklin Peabody Parker George Burton Pavne Louis Joseph Proulx, Jr. George Elliot Robinson George McGlen Ryan Robert Ellis Sawver William Augustine Shea Stanley Burr Stolz Ariel Alton Thomas Halsey Anthony Weaver David Abner Werblin James Carson Agnew Roger Clayton Albiston Charles Michael Antoni Joaquin Albert Caputo John Harrv Fellouris Robert Herman Goldsmith 1937 Pedro Luis Lopez de Ceballos Walter Joseph Maguire Howard Marshak Jean Rov Portelance Ezriel Postofsky John Asa Shimer Joseph Anthony Smedile Edgar Field Smith Robert Henry Thorson Thomas Curtiss Torrance Ralph Patterson Webster Gilbert Williams Winslow Nicholas Leonard Barbarossa Russell Ha ' vard Brown i ngel Fernando Clarens Cornelius Kingsland Coombs 1938 Oscar Sebastian Dobler James Emery Newton LeRov Hammond, Jr. 1939 Rosweil Lagar Finlay William Louis Heckmer Edward Peter Martin Bernard Loren Rice Livingston Shattuck Salisbur}- Smith 276 Associated General Contractors of America SENIORS Charles Henrv Betts Arthur Andrew Carota Richard Halloran Richard Edgar Hickman Robert Herbert Leventhal Saul Lukofskv Sebastian George Mazzotta William Francis Mullen Robert Ellis Sawyer Frank William Schoettler Angelo Michel Tremaglio John Dominic V ' iola Norman Kenneth White Richard Bailey Collins Harrv Corman JUNIORS Albert St. Clair Wynot Lincoln Joseph Herzeca Sidney Mank SOPHOMORES Frank Dickason Paul Burns Rafik Ghattas Ghattas Sevmour Gross Norman Bernard Leventhal Severino John Rugo Isadore Schwartz 277 Vice-President Alice T. Hunter Wagner, Borden, DuBois, Stntter Cobb, Gordon, Weinert, Houghton Chemical Society OFFICERS President Peter C. Weinert Secretary Albert J. UUman SENIORS James B. Allen James G. Baker Herbert M. Borden Andre H. Brisse Harold A. Brown Frederick H. Garten Leonard B. Chandler Gerard Chapman Benjamin B. Dayton Richard A. Denton Richard S. DeWolfe Towers Doggett Harrv M. Donaldson Albert G. Emerson, Jr. Edward F. Everett, Jr. Wendell K. Fitch Benjamin B. Fogler Frank S. Gregory, Jr. Alice T. Htmter Henrv J. Janson Albert J. Klemka Michael J. Lach Jacques K. Laflamme Henry G. McGrath, Jr. Gerald S. McMahon Robert W. Newman Roman L. Ortvnsky George R. Robinson Bernard S. Schulman Robert M. Sherman Mitchell A. Sieminski John L. Speirs Walter Squires, Jr. Edward E. Stritter John E. Sullivan Thomas A. Terry, Jr. William J. Tier William P. Toorks Albert J. Ullman Philips S. ' incent Ellington D. Wade Jean 1. Wagner George B. Webb Peter C. Weinert P am W. Williams Louis C. Young Aaron L. Zolan JUNIORS Mortimer D. Abbott Karekin G. Arabian Samuel A. Bjorkman Robert J. Brauer Dominic J. Cestoni Jonathan B. Cobb ' inthrop D. Comley Louis F. DuBois Esther B. Garber Maurice B. Gordon Melville E. Hitchcock Francis D. Houghton Andre N. Laus )ames W. Pearce ' William B. Penn Nestor A. Sabi Jerome E. Salny Philip R. Scarito Edward C. Walsh Lester M. White, Jr. SOPHOMORES Leon Baral Charles R. Barrels Francis J. Bittel Peer J. Cody Paul R. Des Jardins Bertram F. Grosselfinger Joseph L. Hewes Lewis W. Hull Jeanne ' . Kitenplon Joseph H. Klaber Richard H. Koehrmann, Jr. Frederick J. Kolb Julius Kovitz Dudley A. Levick, Jr. Abraham B. Levine Leo C. McEvov, }r. lohnj. Phillips Ruth G. Rafterv Earle N. Revnolds Howard 1. Schlansker Sevmour Stearns James ' iles Treasurer Edward E. Stritter FRESHMEN James A. Arnold Mosha Cornfeld James R. Cruciger John B. Darrow Ronald C. Deering Phillip R. Fresia Robert Grossman Ralph L. Hegner Albert Herzberg, Jr. Harold Hindman Leonard D. JalFe Peter K. Jungbluth Richmond H. Kauffma n Wilson B. Keene Robert G. Larkin Richard D. Martin Leonard A. Merrill, Jr. Thurston S. Merriman Yonco Nakayama Abraham M. Patashinsky Irving Peskoe Edison Powers Harold R. Seykota Harold F. Snow Ferdinand G. Strokalitis Douglas J. Tavlor Isaac B. ' enable Joseph R. Weeks Louis R. Wenzel Byron W. Wheeler, Jr. Edward Wirsing, Jr. 278 Swenson, Stapler, Cooper, Graham, Anderson, Obng, Ramsay, Sherburne Powell, Gidley, Calkins, Mather, Miller, Biidd, Crapon, Westgate, Rnndlet Black, Turner, Brewster, Engstrom, Wells, Mayo, Gray, Horton, Rowe Naval Architectural Society FACULTY MEMBERS Evers Burtner Lawrence Boylston Chapman James Robertson Jack- George Owen GRADUATE MEMBER Jack Theodore Ohrig President Arthur Edward Wells, Jr. OFFICERS Vice-President Carl Engstrom Secretary-Treasurer Clarence Arthur Mayo, Jr. Bernard Berens Birdsall Edward Lancaster Brewster William Irving Hanson Budd David Meade Cooper Carl Engstrom John Robev Graham Ross Elliot Black, Jr. Harry Dawley Crapon, Jr. Charles Richmond Gidlev, Jr. ' endcll Harner Calkins George Foster C ' arv, II SENIORS Alwyn Bennett Gray Alan Frederick Hardman Clarence Reuben Horton, Jr. Frank Jewett Mather, III Clarence Arthur Mavo, Jr. Charles Russell Miller JUNIORS Wilder MofFatt Francis Emmet Ncagle, Jr. SOPHOMORES Francis Willard Hagerry William Fallarton Ramsay Edward Bennett Rowe, Jr. Warren Sherburne, Jr. John Gause Stapler Arthur Edward Wells, Jr. Harrison Spring Woodman Shannon Curtis Powell George Taylor Rundlet Roy Weare Smith John Aldridge Johnson Harlan Turner, Jr. 279 Gallagher, Schliemann, Rice, Gould, Phillips, King, Wlutmort:, Cleveland, Kaufman Benson, Frost, Finn, Birch, Austin, Lytle, Gander, Matthews Peel, Weppler, Dodge, Flanagan, Robbins, Goodwin, Peterson, Prichard, Boyan Carten, Osgood, O20I, Borden, Col. Fuller, Col. Gatchell, Musschoot, Wagner Selvestrovich, Berg, Johns, Fischer Army Ordnance Society GRADUATE Sung-Wav Chu Herbert Mowry Borden Edwin Arthur Boyan Frederick Howard Carten Charles Richardson Holman Albert John Klemka William Henry Austin Robert Elliott Benson Quentin Berg Norman Anton Birch Howard Berkey Bishop, Jr. Walter True Blake Goodwin deRaismes Robert Embree deRaismes 1936 Albert Musschoot Walter ' ernon Osgood Rudolph Jacob Ozol Arthur Rav Peel 1937 Cleon Carter Dodge Albert X ' lncent Finn Edward Michael Fischer James Marion Freiberg Verne Clayton Frost John Martin Gallagher, Jr. John Henrv Gander Harr - Brimhall Goodwin William Warren Prichard Julius Boone Schliemann Walter George Selvestrovich Jean Irwin Wagner Peter Charles Weinert Winthrop Asa Johns Norman Adams Matthews Edward Carl Peterson John Clinton Robbins, Jr. Edward Joseph ' anderman Ehrler Wagner George Barr Wemple George Robert W eppler Dean Chandler Cleveland Robert Flanagan Arthur Freeman Gould 1938 Alfred Preston Heintz Demetrius George Jelatis Walter Frederick Kaufman Charles Cleveland King William Francis Whitmore John Joseph Phillips Wilbur Currier Rice Ravmond Sanford Turner 280 Vasilianskas, Cook, Gunkel, Burns, Myers, Neumann, Peterson, Maguire, Packard, Musschooc Sarvis, Selvestrovich, Hannam, Peel, Lepes, Olmstead, Kramer, Reinliardt, Thatcher Smith, Nugent. Kahn, Iredell, Doane, Rowan, Kaufman, Swain, Kuhan, Case Isaacs, Migel, Shah, Prof. Holt, Austin, Patterson, Ober, Shewbridge, Swain Stewart, Mott, Dierksmier, Griffin American Society of Mechanical Engineers OFFICERS Chairman James Fergus Patterson Secret iiry-Treasi rer Philip Le Roy Ober Sung-W ' av Chu Charles Edwin Crede Cesar Augusto Caideron Henry Myers Doane Harry Thomas Easton Robert Wendell Hannam Rufus Philip Isaacs Leojud son Kramer Morris Lepes Hamilton Migel William Edwin Burns William Erwin Case Wells Coleman Charles Moreau Dierksmier Cleon Carter Dodge Philip Harry Dreissigacker, Jr. Francis Taber Akin Howard B.anzett Bernard Brod John Ransom Cook Gilford Griffin Andrew Lawrie Fabens GRADUATES David Lee Gundrv Herbert Preston Haley 1936 Ernest Paul Neumann Philip Le Roy Ober Kenneth . dkins Packard James Fergus Patterson Arthur Ray Peel Francis Sherman Peterson Fred Adolph Prahl,Jr. Paul Holman Richardson Louis Anthonv Testa 1937 Ferdinand Francis Ferrary Thomas Lewis Hallenbeck Charles Reginald Kahn. Jr. Ciilbert Culver Mott Leonard Frederick Myers John Berchmans Nugent 1938 Kenneth Marvin Gunkel Robert Iredell Walter Frederick Kaufman James Maguire 1939 Oswald Stewart, II Llovd Bowers Welch V ice-Chairman illiam Henrv Austin Honorary Chairman Professor James Holt John Anthonv Hrones Natvarlal Revadas Shah John James Rowan Arthur Louis Sarvis Walter George Selvestrovich William Harry Shewbridge Leon Simons Donald Clayton Spencer James Tha ' er Stewart Kenneth W.irren Swain Edward Carl Peterson Melvin Albert Prohl Albrecht Edward Reinhardt Hugh Taylor Smith, Jr. Harold Dudley Swain Ehrler Wagner Edwin Harrison Olmsce.-id Carl Kenneth Olson Samuel Rudginskv John Robert Summerfield Bronald lohn Vasilianskas Eugene Donald Thatcher 281 I TWt J X jmJ t i FACULTY DIRECTORY ALUMNI SUPPLEMENT STUDENT DIRECTORY ATHLETIC STATISTICS INDEXES T) I RECTO RY Faculty ADAMS, FREDERICK JOHNSTONE, B.Arch. Columbia Uni- versity ' 28 Assistant Professor of Town Planning ADAMS, FREDERICK WILDES, S.D. ' ll, S.M. 72, Sc.D. ' 28 Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Director of the Boston Station of the School of Chemical En- gineering Practice ALLIS, WILLIAM PHELPS, S.B., S.M. ' 23, Sc.D. University of Nancy ' 25 Assistant Professor of Physics ANDERSON, LAWRENCE BERNHARDT, M.Arch. Assistant Professor of Architectural Design t BK; TBII ARMSTRONG, FLOYD ELMER, A.B. ' 14, A.M. ' 16, Univer- sit ' of Michigan Professor of Political Economy ASHDOWN, AVERY ALLEN, A.B. ' 14, A.M. T6, University of Rochester; Ph.D. ' 24 Assistant Professor of Chemistry; Department of Chemistry A. i:;i;H BABCOCK, JOHN BRAZER, III, SB. ' 10 Professor of Railway Engineering XE BAILEY, FREDERICK HAROLD, A.B. ' 87, A.M. ' 89 Harvard University Professor of Mathematics frBK BALSBAUGH, JAYSON CLAIR, B.S. Pennsylvania State Col- lege ' 21; S.M. ' 24 Assistant Professor of Electric Power Production and Distribu- tion ATli; Tmi; J K ' ; HKN BARROWS, HAROLD KILBRITH, S.B. ' 95 Professor of Hydraulic Engineering XE BARTLETT, HOWARD RUSSELL, B.S. A.M. ' 23 Dartmouth; ' 28 Harvard Assistant Professor of English and History BEATTIE, JAMES ALEXANDER, S.B. ' 17, S.M. ' IS, Ph.D. ' 20 Associate Professor of Phvsico-Chemical Research AXr BECKWITH, HERBERT LYNES, M.Arch. ' 27 Assistant Professor of Architecture BENNETT, RALPH DECKER, B.S. ' 21, M.S. ' 23, Union Col- lege, Ph.D. University of Chicago ' 25 Associate Professor of Electrical Measurements BERRY, CHARLES WILLIAM, SB. ' 95 Professor of Heat Engineering BICHER, GEORGE ANTHONY, Graduate United States Mili- tary Academy ' 24 Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics In charge of Signal Corps Unit, D.O.L. BITTER, FRANCIS, B.A. ' 24, Ph.D. ' 28 Columbia University, Associate Professor of Mining and Metallurgy i;H; l BK BLAKE, CHARLES HENRY, S.B. •25, Ph.D. ' 29 Assistant Professor in Biologv and Public Health BLANCHARD, ARTHUR ALPHONZO, S.B. ' 98, Ph.D. Uni- versity ' of Leipzig ' 02 Professor of Inorganic Chemistry AXi: BOWLES, EDWARD LINDLEY, B.S. Washington University ' 20; S.M. ' 22 Associate Professor of Electrical Communications In charge of Communications Division and Round Hill Reser- vation BOYCE, JOSEPH CANON, A.M. ' 23 Princeton University, Ph.D. ' 26 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Physics BRADLEY, HARRY CYRUS, SB. ' 91 Associate Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry BREED, CHARLES BLANEY. S.B. ' 97 Professor of Railway and Highway Transportation Head of Department of Civil and Sanitary Engineering i ' i;K, XE, i; : BREED, STEPHEN ALEC, S.B. ' 94 Associate Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry BRIDENBAUGH, CARL, B.S. Dartmouth College ' 25; A.M. Harvard University ' 29 Assistant Professor of English and History AXP BRIDGES, WILLIAM CRAWFORD DENNISTON, B.S. ' 26 Oregon Agricultural College Assistant Professor of Military Science TBll BUCKINGHAM, EARLE Professor of Engineering Standards and Measurement BUERGER, MARTIN JULIAN, S.B. ' 25, S.M. ' 27, Ph.D. ' 29 Associate Professor of Mineralogy and Petrography BUGBEE, EDWARD EN ' ERETT, SB. ' 00 Associate Professor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy Btni; ::h BUNKER, JOHN WYMOND MILLER, A B. ' 09, A.M. ' 11, Ph.D. ' 12; Brown University Professor of Biochemistry and Physiology ATA; i:Z; . XZ;; A 2 BURDELL, EDWIN SHARP, M.A. ' 20 Ohio State University, Ph.D. ' 34 Associate Professor of Economics and Social Science 2X BURTNER, EVERS, SB. ' 15 Associate Professor of Naval Architecture and Marine Engi- neering CALDWELL, SAMUEL HAWKS, S.B. ' 25, S.M. ' 26, Sc.D. ' 33 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering vir CAMP, THOMAS RINGGOLD, B.S. Agricultural and Mechan- ical College of Te.xas ' 16; S.M. ' 25 Associate Professor of Sanitary Engineering CARLSON, ROY W., A.B. ' 22 University of Redlands; M.S. ' 33 University of California Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 2H CASH, WILLIAM VAUGHAN, S.B. ' 25, M.Arch. ' 25 Assistant Professor of Architecture CHAPMAN, LAWRENCE BOYLSTON, S.B. ' 10 Professor of Ship Operation and Marine Engineering COOPER, CHARLES MILTON, SB. ' 25 Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Director of Bangor Station, School of Chemical Engineering Practice AX2 COPITHORNE, MATTHEW RICHARD, A.B. Harvard Uni- versity ' 12 Assistant Professor of English COWDREY, IRVING HENRY, SB. ' 05 .Associate Professor of Testing Materials CROSBY, WILLIAM ANDERSON, A.B. Williams College ' 14; A.M. Harvard Unn ' ersity ' 16 Associate Professor of English MA DAHL, OTTO GUSTAV COLBIORNSEN, Graduate, Norwe- gian Naval Academy ' 15, S.B. ' 21, S.M. ' 23 Professor of Electric Power Transmission DA TS, ARTHUR RANDALL, A.B. ' 15 Weslevan University; A.M. ' 25, Ph.D. ' 30 Harvard University Assistant Professor of Chemistry A T; AXS DAVIS, TENNEY LOMBARD, S.B. ' 13, A.M. ' 15, Ph.D. ' 17 Harvard University Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry AXZ; AT DE FOREST, ALFRED VICTOR, B.S. ' 12 Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering DIETRICHSON, GERHARD, B.A. ' 09, B.S. ' 10 University of Minnesota; Ph.D. University of Wisconsin ' 14 Assistant Professor and Research Associate of Physical Chem- istry i:H; AX2; FA; AT DOTEN, CARROLL WARREN, Ph.B. ' 95, A.M. ' 99 University of Vermont; A.M. Harvard University ' 02 Professor of Political Economy J AO; BK DOUGLAS, JESSE, B.S. College of the City of New York ' 16; Ph.D. Columbia University ' 20 Associate Professor of Mathematics I 294 Faculty DOUGLASS, RAYMOND DONALD, B.A. 15, MA. 16 Uni- versity of Maine; Ph.D. ' 31 Associ.ite Professor of Mathematics XVA -t-BK DRAPER, CHARLES STARK, A.B. ' 22 Stanford University; SB. 26, S.M. 28 Assistant Professor of Aeronautical Engineering lAK; i:X DWIGHT, HERBERT BRISTOL, B.Sc. 09, D.Sc. 74 McGill University Professor of Electrical Machinery EAMES, JESSE JENNINGS, S.B. ' 02 Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering EDDY, ROBERT COLLINS, Graduate United States Military Academy 05; Army War College ' 25 Associate Professor of Business and Engineering Administra- tion EDGERTON, HAROLD EUGENE, B.Sc. University of Nebras- ka ' 25,5 1. V.Sc.D. ■31 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering ELDER, ROBERT FAIRCHILD, A.B. Harvard University ' 22 Associate Professor of Marketing EMERSON, WILLIAM, A B. ' 95 Harvard University Dean of Architecture Professor of Architecture. In charge of Department of Architecture AKE, BK EVANS, ROBLEY DUNGLISON, B.S. ' 28, M.S. 29, Ph.D. 32 California Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Phvsics I ' H, TBII; IlKA; Kl ' FALLS, DEAN ABNER, SB. 15 Associate Professor of Automotive Engineering AKE FASSETT, FREDERICK GARDINER, Jr., A.B. ' 23, A.M. 77 Colby College, A.M. University of Maine ' 30 Assistant Professor of English and History ♦AB; t BK FAY, RICHARD DLTDLEY, A.B. Harvard University ■13;S.B. ' 17 Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering FERNSTROM, KARL DICKSON, SB. 10 Associate Professor of Business Management BAX FIFE, WALTER MAXWELL, B.Sc. University of Alberta ' 13; S.M. 72 . s50ciate Professor of Civil Engineering XK FISKE, WYMAN PARKHURST, A.B. 70, M.B.A. 73 H.irvard University; LL.B. Suffolk Law School 77 Associate Professor of Accounting FISKEN, ARCHIBALD DONALD, A.B. 15 Yale University Associate Professor of Military Science and Tactics Depart- ment Bon FOSTER, FRANKLIN LEROY, SB. 75, S.M. ' 30 Assistant Professor of Mining TBII FRANK, NATHANIEL HERMAN, SB. 73, Sc.D. 76 Assistant Professor of Physics i;AM FRANKLIN, PHIUP, B.S. College of the City of Ne v York ' 18; M.A. 70; Ph.D. 71 Princeton University Associate Professor of Mathematics I liK FRAZIER, RICHARD HENRY, SB. 73, S.M. 32 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering TBII; i;Z FREEMAN, RALPH EVANS, B.A. ' 14, M.A. 15 McMaster University; B.Litt. Balliol College, Oxford 71 Professor of Economics In Charge of Department AT FULLER, CHARLES EDWARD, SB. ' 92 Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics FULLER, DEAN M. TTISON, A.B. Hamilton College 70 . ssistant Professor of English Coach of Dramatics T GARDNER, HARRY WENTW ORTH, SB. 94 Professor of Architectural Design GARDNER, MURRAY FRANK, B.S. University of Michigan 70; S.M. 24 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering AA I ' ; TBII GATCHELL, OSCAR JAMES, Graduate, United States Military Academy ' 12 Professor of Military Science Lieutenant Colonel Ordnance Department GEORGE, NATHAN RICHARD, Jr., A.B. ' 90, A.M. ' 91 Har- vard University Associate Professor of Mathematics eAX; I)BK GILBOY, GLENNON, S.B. ' 25, S.M. ' 27, Sc.D. ' 28 Associate Professor of Soil Mechanics TBII; i;H; XE; A. A. A. S. GILLESPIE, LOUIS JOHN, Ph.D. ' 08, A.M., P.D. ' 11, Brown University Professor of Physico-Cheniical Research IH; AXi; GOODRICH, ARTHUR LINDSAY, SB. ' 98 Associate Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry GRAY, TRUMAN STRETCHER, B.S. ' 26, B. A. ' 27, Universitv of Texas; S.M. ' 29, Sc.D. ' 30. Assistant Professor of EUctrical Engineering OKA; 1 MA; ' t BK; TBII; ZS. GREENE, WILLIAM CHACE, Jr., Ph.B. Brown University ' 22; M.A. Oxford University ' 29 Assistant Professor of English AA , -tBK GUILLEMIN, ERNST ADOLPH, B.S. University of Wisconsin ' 22; S.M. 74; Ph.D. University of Munich ' 26 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering TBO; HKN GUNTHER, JOHN F. G. Assistant Professor of Architecture HALL, WILLIAM THOMAS, SB. ' 95 Associate Professor of Analytical Chemistry SAE HAMILTON, LEICESTER FORSYTH, SB. ' 14 Associate Professor of Analytical Chemistry Chairman of Dormitory Board AX2 HARDY, ARTHUR COBB, A B. 17, M.A. 19 University of California Professor of Optics and Photography HARRIS, LOUIS, Ph.D. ' 24 Assistant Professor of Chemistry HARRISON, GEORGE RUSSELL, A.B. 19. A.M. ' 20, Ph.D. ' 22 Stanford University Professor of Physics Director of Research Laboratory of Experimental Physics 2H HAUSER, ERNST A., Ph.D. ' 21 University of Vienna Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering AX2 HAVEN, GEORGE BARTHOLOMEW, SB. ' 94 Professor of .Advanced Machine Design In charge of Textile Research HAYWARD, CARLE REED, SB. ' 04 Associate Professor of Metallurgy HAZEN, HAROLD LOCKE, SB. 24, S.M. ' 29, Sc.D. ' 31 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering TBII, I ' H HERSHEY, ROBERT LANDIS, S.B. ' 23, S.M. ' 24, Sc.D. ' 35 Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Director Buffalo Station, School of Chemical Engineering Practice ()X; TBII; AXi:; i;H HITCHCOCK, FRANK LAUREN, A B 96, Ph D. 10 Harv.ard University Professor of Mathematics HOCKETT, ROBERT CASAD, B.A. 25, M.A. 28, Ph.D. ' 29 Ohio State University Assistant Professor of Chemistry MA; ' I ' AT; :;H; -M iK HOLMES, ADDISON FRANCIS, SB. 04 . ssociate Professor of Applied Mechanics HOLT, JAMES, SB. 18 Assistant Professor of Heat Engineering 295 Faculty HOMERBERG, VICTOR OLIVER, SB H, Sc.D. 27 Associate Professor of Physical Metallurgy HOPF, EBERHARD, Ph.D. University of Berlin Assistant Professor of Mathematics HORWOOD, MURRAY PHILIP, B.S., College of the Citv of New York 13; S.M. ' le, Ph.D. ' 21 Associate Professor of Biology and Public Health Mi HOTTEL, HOYT CLARKE, A.B. Indiana University ' 22; S.M. ■24 Associate Professor of Fuel Engineering Assistant Director of the Division of Industrial Co-operation rA; BK; AXZ HOWARD, JOHN WARDWELL, SB. ' 03 Associate Professor of Topographical Engineering AXA HUNSAKER, JEROME CLARKE, Graduate U. S. Naval Academy ' 08; S.M. ' 12; Sc.D. ' 23 Professor of Mechanical Engineering. In charge of Department of Mechanical Engineering In Charge of Department of Aeronautical Engineering. AKE;2H HUNTRESS, ERNEST HAMLIN, S.B. ' 20, Ph.D. ' 27 Associate Professor of Chemistry AX2; 2H HUTCHINSON, WILLIAM SPENCER, S.B. ' 92 Professor of Mining In charge of the Department of Mining and Metallurgy AT; TBn,SH HY ' DE, JAMES F. C, B.S. Colorado College ' 16 Associate Professor of Military Science and Tactics Major, Corps of Engineers, D.O.L. In Charge of Engineer Unit ex INGRAHAM, OLIN, Ph.B. Wesleyan University ' 04; A.M. Columbia University ' 05 Assistant Professor of Economics •tMH; -tEK JACK, JAMES ROBERTSON, ' 94 Glasgow University Professor of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. In charge of Department of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering Director of Nautical Museum Dean of Navy Students eX; 2H JAMES, WALTER HERMAN, S.B. ' 96 Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering Drawing JENNISON, MARSHALL WALKER, S.B. ' 27, Ph.D. ' 32 Assistant Professor of Sanitary Biology JOHNSTON, THOMAS JOSEPH Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Major, Chemical Warfare Service, D.O.L. In charge of Chemical Warfare Unit JONES, RAY CHILDS, B S. ' 08, M.S. ' 14 University of Pennsyl- vania Exchange Professor in Architecture KA JONES, WILLIAM HENRY, SB. ' 09 Associate Professor of Heat Engineering KEEN. N, JOSEPH HENRY, B.S. ' 22 Associare Professor of Mechanical Engineering TBII KEITH, HENRY HIRAM WHEATON, S.B. ' 05 Professor of Naval Architecture KEY ' ES, FREDERICK GEORGE, B.S. ' 06 Rhode Island State College;Sc.M. ' 07; Ph.D. ' 09 Brown University Professor of Physico-Chemical Research Director of Research Laboratory of Physical Chemistry In charge of Department of Chemistry 2H; AX2 KOPPEN, OTTO CARL, SB. ' 24 Associate Professor of Aeronautical Engineering KURRELMEY ' ER, HERMAN RUDOLPH, A.B. ' 99, Ph.D. ' 02 Johns Hopkins University Professor of German t.BK LANGLEY, ERNEST FELIX, B.A. University of Toronto ' 94; A.M. ' 00, Ph.D. ' 09 Harvard University Professor of French In Charge of Department of Modern Languages LANSIL, CUFFORD EARL, S.B. 17 Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering LAWRENCE, RALPH RESTIEAUX, S.B. ' 95 Professor of Electrical Machinery LAWRENCE. WILLIAM HENRY, SB. ' 91 Professor of . rchitectural Engineering In Charge of Division of Drawing In Charge of Course IV-A LEWIS. WARREN KENDALL, SB. ' 05; Ph.D. University of Breslau ' 08 Professor of Chemical Engineering TBII; AX2 LOCKE, CHARLES E., S.B. ' 96 Professor of Mining Engineering and Ore Dressing .Mumni Secretary LY ' ON, WALDO VINTON, SB. 05 Professor of Electrical Machinery MABIE, CHARLES HILL ROE, Normal Art School ' 08; Royal Col lege of . rt, London ' 11 Assistant Professor of Descriptive Geometry and Machine Drawing M- cKINNON,JOSEPHCHRISMAN,S.B. ' 13 Registrar Lecturer in Statistics MAGOUN, F. ALEXANDER, SB. ' 18, S.M. ' 23; SB. Harvard University ' 18 Associare Professor of Humanics MANN, HOR. CETHARP, B.S. ' 08, M.S. ' 09,E.M. ' lOMissouri School of Mines; Sc.D. ' 25 Associate Professor of Petroleum Engineering IIKA; TBII MARKHAM, JOHN RAYMOND, ' 18 Assistant Professor of Aeronautical Engineering Mc. DAMS, WILLIAM HENRY, B.S. ' 13, M.S. 14 State Uni- versiry of Kentucky; S.M. ' 17 Professor of Chemical Engineering KZ; BK; AX2 MEAD, WARREN JUDSON, B.S. ' 06; M.A. ' 08, Ph. D. ' 26 University of Wisconsin; Professor of Geology In charge of Department of Geology ZN; ZH MILAS, NICHOLAS A., B.S. ' 22 Coe College; M.S. ' 23, Ph.D. ' 26 University of Chicago Research Associate 1928 Assistant Professor in Chemistry 1935 PA; ZK Fellow American . cademy of Arts and Sciences MILLARD, EARL BOWMAN, B.A. University of Colorado ' 10; M.A. University of Wisconsin ' 11; Ph.D. University of Illinois ' 14 Professor of Theoretical Chemistry Assistant Director, Division of Industrial Co-operation BK; ZZ; A Z MlRABELLl, EUGENE, S.B. ' 19 Assistant Professor of Structural Design A A MITSCH, JOHN DONALD, S.B. ' 20 Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering K MOON, PARRY H., B.S. University of Wisconsin ' 22; S.M. ' 27 Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering TBn MORELAND, EDWARD LEYBURN, A.B. ' 05 Johns Hopkins University; S.M. ' 08 Head of Department of Electrical Engineering rA MORRIS, FREDERICK KUHNE, B.S. College of the City of New Y ' ork ' 04; M.A. Columbia University ' 10 Professor of Geology t BE; ZE; XE MORSE, GEORGE W., A.B. ' 04; M.D. ' 08 Harvard Univer- sity Professor of Hygiene Head of Department of Hygiene Medical Director MORSE, PHILIP .McCORD, B.S. Case School of Applied Science ' 26; M.A. ' 27, Ph.D. ' 29 Princeton University .Associare Professor of Physics MORTON, AVERY ADRI. N, A.B. Corner College ' 13; Ph.D. ' 24 Associate Professor of Organic Chemical Research Ax:: 296 Faculty MUELLER. HANS, Dipl. Eng. 73, D.Sc. 27 Technischc Hoch- schulc. Zurich Assistant Professor of Phvsics NEWELL, JOSEPH SHIPLEY, SB. ' 19 Associate Protessor ot Aeronautical Structural Engineering NEWHOUSE, WALTER HARRY, B.S. Pennsylvania State College 21; Ph.D. 76 Associate Professor of Economic Geologv NORRIS, JAMES FLACK, A.B. 92, Ph.D. ' 95, Johns Hopkins Universitv; D.Sc. Bowdoin College ' 30 Profe,ssor of Organic Chemistry In Charge of Graduate Students in Chemistry Director of the Research Laboratory of Organic Chemistry 4 BK; AXr NORTON, CHARLES LADD, SB. 93 Professor of Industrial Physics Director of the Research Laboratory of Applied Physics Director of the Division of Industrial Co-operation NORTON, FREDERICK HARWOOD, S.B. 18 Assistant Professor of Ceramics NORTON, JOHN TORREY, SB. 18 Associate Professor of Physics of Metals NORTON, PAUL WILLARD, A.B. Amherst College ' OSjS.B. ' 08 Assistant Professor of . rchitecture AT; t HK NOTTINGHAM, WAYNE BUCKLES, B.S. Purdue University 70, M.A. 75, PhD. 79 Princeton University Assistant Professor of Phvsics 7:Z; HKN OBER, SH. TSWELL, S.B. ' 16 . ssociate Professor of Aeronautical Engineering OWEN, GEORGE, SB. 94 Professor of Naval Architecture t BE PAGE, NEWELL CALDWELL, S.B. ' 02 Protessor of Electricity PASSANO, LEONARD MAGRUDER, A.B.Johns Hopkins Uni- versity ' 89 . ssociate Professor of Mathematics PEABODY, DEAN, Jr., S.B. ' 10 . ssociate Professor of Applied Mechanics PEARSON, HENRY GREENLEAF, A.B. Harvard University ' 93 Professor of English In Charge of Department BH; 1 BK PETERS, HEINRICH, Dipl. Eng. ' 25 Technische Hochschule, Darmstadt; Dr. Eng. ' 30 Technische Hochschule, Munich .Assistant Professor PHILLIPS, HENRY BAYARD, Ph.D. 05 Johns Hopkins Uni- versity Professor of Mathematics Head of Department of Mathematics BK; i:Z PORTER, CHARLES HUNTINGTON, A.B. Brown Universitv ' 00, S.B. ' 03 Professor of Accounting I BK; i;H PRESCOTT, SAMUEL CATE, S.B. ' 94 Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Sc.D. ' 23 Bates College Professor of Industrial Biology In charge of Department of Biology and Public Health Dean of Science AXA, AXi. ; Ml, i:H PROCTOR, BERNARD EMERSON, S.B. ' 23; PhD ' 27 Assistant Professor of Biologv Al. RAUSCHER, MANFRED, SB., S.M. ' 27 Assistant Professor of Aeronautical Engineering RAYMOND, FAIRFIELD EAGER, A.B. Harvard University ' 18; S.B. ' 21 Associate Professor of Industrial Research A REID, JOHN LY ' ON, A.B. ' 29, MA. ' 29 University of Califor- nia; M. Arch. ' 31 Assistant Professor of Architecture Ai;X: BK; TBH; T A REY ' NOLDS. KENNETH CASS, B.S. Tufts College ' 19; S.M. ' 25 Assistant Professor of Hydraulics TBn;2H RILEY, JOSEPH CAINS, S.B. ' 98 Professor of Heat Engineering ROBERTS, PENFIELD, A.B. 16, A.M. ' 17 Harvard University Associate Professor of English ROBINSON, ARCHER TYLER, A.B. ' 96, A.M. 15 Harvard University Professor of English In Charge of the Course in History I BK ROBINSON, CLARK SHOVE, SB. ' 09, S.M 15 Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering AXr ROGERS, ROBERT EMMONS, A.B., A.M. 09 Harvard Uni- v ersity Associate Professor of English ♦BK ROSSBY, CARL-GUSTAV ARVID, S.B. ' 18 S.M. ' 25 University of Stockholm Professor of Meteorology ROSSELL, HENRY EAStiN, Graduate, United States Naval Academy ' 10; S.M. ' 15 Commander (C.C.) United States Navy Professor of Naval Construction ex RUDBERG. ERIK GUSTAF, Ph.D. University of Stockholm ' 30 Assistant Professor of Phvsics RUDDELL, JAMES CORNELIUS, Graduate, United States Military Academy ' 16; M.S. ' 23 M.I.T. Associate Professor of Military Science and Tactics In Charge of Coast Artillery Unit RUSSELL, GEORGE EDMOND, SB. ' 00; Cornell Universitv ' 04 Professor of Hydraulics ATU RUTLEDGE, GEORGE, A.B. 10, Ph D. 15 University of Illi- nois Professor of Mathematics SCATCHARD, GEORGE, A.B. Amherst College ' 13; Ph.D. Columbia University ' 17 Associate Professor of Physical Chemistry t rA; BK; iZ; AXZ; ' tAT SCHAEFER, ALBERT ADAMS, A.B. ' 06, LL.B. ' 09 Harvard University Assistant Professor of Business Law SCHELL, ERWIN HASKELL, S.B. ' 12 Professor of Business Management In charge of Department Business and Engineering Adminis- tration OAX SCHUMB, WALTER CECIL, Ph.D. Harvard University ' 18; 0. ford University ' 14 Professor of Inorganic Chemistry Director of the Research Laboratory of Inorganic Chemistry i BK;AX2 SCHWARZ, EDWARD ROBINSON, SB. ' 23 Associate Professor of Te.xtile Technology SEARS, FRANCIS WESTON, S.B. ' 21, S.M. ' 24 Assistant Professor of Physics SEAVER, HENRY LATIMER, A.B. ' 00, A.M. ' 14 Harvard University Professor of English BK SEAVER, WILLIAM NATHANAEL, A.B. ' 00 Harvard Univer- sity Librarian (Assistant Professor) AT SHERRILL, MILES STANDISH, SB. ' 99; Ph.D. University of Breslau ' 03 Professor of Theoretical Chemistry AX2 SHERWOOD, THOMAS KILGORE, B.Sc. McGill Universitv ' 23; S.M. ' 24, Sc.D. ' 29 Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering Z; AXi: SHIMER, HERVEY WOODBURN, A.B. Lafayette College ' 99; A.M. ' 01; Ph.D. Columbia University ' 04; Hon. Sc.D. Gettysburg College ' 16 Professor of Paleon tology SIMPSON, STEPHEN GERSHOM, S.B. 16, S.M. ' 31 Assistant Professor of Chemistry 297 Faculty SLATER, JOHN CLARKE, A.B. ' 20 University of Rochester; A.M. ' 22; Ph.D. ' 23 Harvard University Professor of Physics In charge of Department of Physics Director of the Institute of Theoretical Phvsics BK; ZZ SLIGHTER, LOUIS BYRNE, B.A. ' 17, Ph.D. ' 22 University of Wisconsin Professor of Geophvsics X ; BK; TBD; IH SMITH, LAWRENCE SOUTH WICK, S.B. ' 00 Associate Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics SMITH, RICHARD HERBERT, B.S. Moores Hill College ' 15; S.B. ' 18, MA. 78, Ph.D. ' 29 Johns Hopkins University Professor of Aeronautical Engineering SMITH, THOMAS, B.S. ' 94, M.E. ' 95 University of Pennsyl- vania Associate Professor of Mechanism SPOFFORD, CHARLES MILTON, SB. ' 93 Havward Professor of Civil Engineering AXP; TBII XE, SH STOCKBARGER, DONALD CHARLES, SB. 19, Sc.D. ' 26 Assistant Professor of Phvsics Ae; AXS STRATTON, JULIUS ADAMS, S.B. ' 23, S.M. ' 25; D.Sc. Tech- nische Hochschule, Zurich ' 27 Assistant Professor of Phvsics Z ; TBn STRUIK, DIRK JAN, Ph.D. University of Leiden ' 22 Associate Professor of Mathematics SVENSON, CARL LOUIS, S.B. ' IS, S.M. ' 33, S.B. Harvard Uni- versity ' 19 Assistant Professor of Heat Engineering SWETT, GEORGE WRIGHT, S.B. ' 03 Professor of Machine Design SZASZ, OTTO, Ph.D. Budapest University ' 11 Visiting Professor TAFT, THEODORE HOWARD, S.B. ' 02 Associate Professor of Heat Engineering TAYLOR, CHARLES FAYETTE, Ph.B. Sheffield Scientific School ' fi, M.E. Yale University ' 20 Professor of Aeronautical Engineering TAYLOR, EDWARD STORY, S.B. ' 24 Assistant Professor of Aeronautics THOMPSON, MAURICE DE KAY, S.B. ' 98, Ph.D. University of Basel ' 03 Professor of Electrochemistrv AKE THRESHER, BRAINERD ALDEN, S.B. ' 20; A.M. Harvard University ' 28 Assistant Professor of Economics i;x TIMBIE, WILLIAM HENRY, A.B. Williams College ' 01 Professor of Electrical Engineering and Industrial Practice KIIK, ' 1 BK; IIFN TOWNSEND, ARTHUR LAWRENCE, S.B. ' 13 Assistant Professor of Machine Design TRYON, JAMES LIBBY, A.B. Harvard University ' 94; B.D. Episcopal Theological School ' 97; LL.B. ' 09, Ph.D. ' 10 Bos- con Uni ersit ' Director of Admissions Secretary of the Committee on the Graduate School Lecturer in Vocational Education TUCKER, CARLTON E ERETT, S.B. ' 18 Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering TUCKER, DONALD SKEELE, B.A. Colorado College ' 06; M. A. Williams College 12; PhD Columbia Universiry ' 22 Professor of Political Economy TUCKER, ROSS FRANCIS, S.B. ' 92 Professor of Building Construction In charge of Department TURNER, CLAIR ELSMERE, A.B. Bates College ' 12; M.A. Harvard University ' 13;Dr.P.H. ' 28 Professor of Biology and Public Healtii l BK;A .i VALLARTA, MANUEL SANDOVAL, SB. ' 21, Sc.D. ' 24 Associate Professor of Physics VAN DE GRAAFF, ROBERT JEMISON, B.S. University of Alabama ' 22; Ph.D. Oxford University ' 28 Associate Professor of Phvsics AKK;TBn;HT ' ESTAL, SAMUEL CURTIS, Graduate United States Naval Academy ' 95 Colonel, Coast Artillery Corps, D.O.L. Professor of Military Science and Tactics In Charge of the Department VOSS, WALTER CHARLES, B.S. University of Illinois ' 12, S.M. ' 32 Professor of Building Construction TBII;i;H; XE WAREHAM, CHARLES MONTGOMERY, SB. ' 16 Assistant Professor of Chemistry WARNER, ROBERT W., A.B, Washburn College; B.S. ' IS, E.E. ' 28, University of Kansas Exchange Professor of Electrical Engineering i;H; TBII WARREN, BERTRAM EUGENE, S.B. ' 24, S.M. ' 25, Sc.D. ' 28 .Associate Professor of Phvsics WATERHOUSE, GEORGE BOOKER, B.Met. University of Sheffield 01; Ph.D. Columbia University ' 07 Professor of Metallurgy vr WATTS, EARLE FRANCIS, S.B. ' 20 Assistant Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry WEBER, HAROLD CHRISTIAN, SB. ' 18 Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering WHITMAN, WALTER GORDON, S.B. ' 17; S.M. ' 20 Professor of Chemical Engineering. Head of Department of Chemical Engineering i;H; AX2 WHITNEY, WILLIS RODNEY, SB. ' 90, Ph.D. University of Leipzig ' 96 Non-resident Professor Chemical Research wTeNER, NORBERT, A.B. Tufts College 09; A.M. ' U, Ph.D. Harvard University ' 13 Professor of Mathematics WILBUR, JOHN BENSON, S.B. 76, S.M. ' 28, Sc.D. 33 Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering wfLDES, KARL LELAND, B.S. University of New Hampshire ' 20; S.M. ' 22 Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering riAE WILKES. GORDON BALL, SB. ' 11 Professor of Industfial Physics BE WILLETT, HURD CURTIS, B.S. Princeton University ' 24; Ph.D. George Washington University ' 29 Assistant Professor of Meteorology i 2:k, bk WILLIAMS, JOHN WEBSTER, B.S. University of Wisconsin 18; M.D. Washington University ' 20 Assistant Professor of Public Health Laboratory Methods TKE; Mi WILLIAMS. ROBERT SEATON, S.B. ' 02; Ph.D. University of Gottingen ' 07 Professor of Physical Metallurgy AXS WOODMAN, ALPHEUS GRANT, S.B. ' 97 Associate Professor, Chemistry of Foods WOODRUFF, LOUIS FRANK, SB. ' IS, S.M. ' 22; SB. Harvard University ' 21 Assistant Professor of Electric Power Transmission WULFF, JOHN CARL GAUDE, M.S. Yale University ' 26; Dr. Sc. Tuginben University ' 29 Assistant Professor of Department of Phvsics YOUNG, RALPH CHILLINGWORTH, A.M. University of Syracuse ' 13,Ph.D ' 29 Assistant Professor of Chemistry K2 3H; AXi; ZAVARINE, IGOR NICHOLAS. S M. ' 20 Assistant Professor of Physical Metallurgy ZELDIN, SAMUEL DEMITRY. Ph.D. Clark University 17 . ssistant Professor of Mathematics ZIMMER.MAN. JOHN HARVEY, SB ' 23, S.M. ' 26 .Assistant Professor of Materials of Engineering A.i l 298 ALUMNI SUPPLEMENT 1936 TECHNIQUE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY CAMBRl DGK, MASSACHUSETTS THE MASSACHVSETTS INSTITVTE OF TECHNOLOGY - ' ' -iifev ' THE TREND TOWARD FLEXIBILITY By X ' annevar Bush Dean of Engineering I HERE has been a marked trend at the Institute in -■■recent years toward greater flexihilit - in the curricu- lum, and more individual treatment of students. This re- sults from a developing policy on the part of the facultv of making it possible for each member of the student bodv to follow the line of his special interests, with ample opportunity to work closely with members of the staff, but with no lessening of the emphasis which the Institute has long placed on the fundamental sciences as a basis for advanced science or engineering. For manv vears M. I. T. has been notable for the large amount of study of the humanities which is included in its regular curricula, much more than in most schools of engineering. There has also been a wholesome regard for those extra-curricular activities which tend to broaden a man ' s outlook, and these ha e had the cordial support of faculty and administration. The number of courses and options has been increased, until there are over forty regular courses of studv, ar- ranged to meet the needs of students of diverse interests. Moreover, the authority to make substitutions, which resides in the department heads and the petitions com- mittee, renders it possible to alter any one of these to suit special cases. In addition there is the possibility, in Course IX, of arranging wholly new schedules at will for those who arc pursuing unusual objectives. Recently the faculty adopted a report looking toward the reduction of the number of simultaneous subjects or branches of study, and the decrease in class hours in the upper years; and curricula are now being revised to meet the new requirements. The time thus freed for the stu- dents will make it possible for them to participate more freely in various non-scheduled academic activities, to become better acquainted with the Institute ' s compre- hensive research programs, and take part in all sorts of affairs calculated to render them more broadlv educated. There has been an increase in the use of honors groups, seminar methods of instruction, coUoquia, and individual conferences. All this makes the Institute a place where a man may study, in the true atmosphere of a professional school, those aspects of science, architecture, or engineering which most appeal to him; with increased opportunity to map out his own path with the aid and counsel of the staff. PROFESSIONAL PROGRESS IN THE SCHOOL OF SCIENCE By Samuel C. Prescott Dean of Science AS the name implies, this administrative division of the Institute includes the four natural science de- partments, Phvsics, Chemistrv, Biologv and Geology, and also the departments of Mathematics, Economics and Social Science, English and History and Modern Lan- guages. Each is consistenth- developing in a manner to meet the changing needs of the times, and to give breadth of view as well as sound technical training in specialized fields. A notable feature in the departments leading to degrees is the increasing demand for graduate work, and the correspondingly growing amount of research that is carried out. One of the most significant developments of the past r vo or three years is the organized cooperation between departments for the prosecution of problems which lie in the border land between them. This t pe of joint cflort is seen in the work in geo-physics and in biophysics and biochemistr -, and also in those applications of electrical engineering principles to problems in the medical held. Furthermore, such important practical problems as cor- rosion, heat transfer, acoustics and air conditioning are being studied b ' committees composed of staff membe rs from both engineering and science departments. A few of the newer lines of instruction and research in the individual departments may be of interest to alumni of earlier days. A recent development in the Physics Department is the establishment of an industrial option or program leading to the Bachelor ' s degree in which emphasis is especially given to those branches of Physics such as spectroscopy, x-rays and electronics which are rapidly finding new and important applications industrially. In the research field investigations in atomic physics, in radiations and in spectroscopy are of especial interest, and the develop- ment of new methods of studying the effect of radiations on cells and living cellular structures may lead to a new method of attack on the cancer problem. Here is an ex- cellent example of the way in which cooperation is tak- ing place between departments formerh- regarded as dis- tinct and widely separated. In fact, a new, but as vet unofficial program for the student wishing to prepare himself for investigation in the border field of Biophysics has been worked out jointly by the Departments of Biology and Physics. In Biology, the work in Food Technology is keeping pace with the rapid develop- ments in the industry, especially those resulting from [Continued on page 302) 301 PROFESSIONAL PROGRESS IN THE SCHOOL OF SCIENCE {Continued from page 301) new methods of applving low temperatures to food con- servation, and in the use of new types of packaging ma- terials. The new option in Public Health Engineering with its combination of sanitary science and fundamental engineering subjects provides a professional training in a field which has a broad outlook for future usefulness. Of the research work of the department, the splendid work in Biochemistry and Biophysics which has gone far toward solving the problem of prevention and cure of rickets is outstanding. So also is the work in Health Education which has had world wide recognition. In Chemistrv the undergraduate course is particularly strong in those aspects of physical chemistry which bear on modern industrial processes, and in the work in or- ganic chemistrv. The graduate work and the research laboratories of Physical and Organic and Inorganic Chemistr}- are attracting students of very high ability. The research work in cryogenics is especially noteworthy, as is the w ork on carcinogenic substances. Economic Geology has always had a high place at the Institute. The Geological Department has no superior in this field. It also is outstanding in the new realm of Geophysics which is closely related to seismolog ' and vulcanology, and also in a broad way to meteorologv. The research work on structure of crystals as shown bv x-rays is a notable example of the use of the tools of one science in the studv of another. The Mathematics department is one of the strongest in America. A four-year course leading to the S.B. degree is a recent development. The former department of Economics has become the Department of Economics and Social Sciences in recogni- tion of the demand that engineers and scientists should have a broader appreciation of social problems and social implications in the industrial and business world. Courses in these aspects of human relations are now made available to all students as general studies and will prob- ably be a part of each departmental curriculum at an early time. The excellence of the instruction in English and His- tory and in modern languages should be a matter of pride to graduate and undergraduate alike. BEGINNING AT THE BEGINNING By illiam Emersox Dean of Architecture ARCHITECTURE, from the practical standpoint, starts when a piece of property has been bought on which a building mav be erected. Actually there is an immense amount of preparatory work before the plans and specifications from which the house is to be built are readv for the contractor. Instruction that acquaints the student of architecture with all these different prepara- tory steps is an old story, but Professor H ' . Gardner had the entirelv new idea of teaching the student how to build a real rather than a hypothetical house, and further- more of having this the initial experience of the fresh- man. Thus, hand in hand with the theory and principles that naturally fill his early years, he has this unique op- portunirv to meet the realities of his profession at the verv threshold of his student life. In successive steps the student learns mechanical draw- ing, lettering, indication of materials, etc. The process of selecting and buying a lot then follows in due course. The student visits a number of lots and aids in selecting the most desirable from the jx)int of view of environment, accessibilitv, cost, etc., and then proceeds to survey it. At this stage he receives a letter from a presumed client outlining the nature and extent of his needs and how much he has to spend. In conformity with these require- ments, each student then designs a house which in his opinion is best suited to the lot and its orientation: — this, of course, includes the placing of the house on the lot. Four or five of the best designs are then selected by a jur of practicing architects, the author of each being constituted head of a group of five who then proceed to develop the earlier designs into formal plans and eleva- tions, on which approximate estimates may be based. Selection of the best one of these sets of drawings is then made bv a jury who weigh carefully the practical possi- bilities, the probable cost, and the suitability of the de- sign for its location. This final selection having been made, working draw- ings are then made of the chosen design — the work being divided among the different members of the class — who, meanwhile, are learning about - 4 drawings, full size details, specifications, contracts, etc., and are seeing car- penters actuallv erect the essential framework in reduced dimensions of a house from sill to roof upon which is later applied the inner and outer finish. Upon the letting of the contract, stated periods are set aside weekly for visits of inspection and supervision in connection with which careful report sheets are required from the stu- dents. Attention will also be given to color schemes within the house and landscaping without. House and lot are to sell for 810,000 of which approximately SI, 500 pays for the lot. Architects, contractors, and material men have all alike shown the most interested cooperation in making this experiment a success. The idea is based on designing and selling one such house vearlv- inquiries have already been received for the first one. I 302 1, Midi; roin OF THOMAS a. edison . w KST oi; (; V. . J. SIRROINDED BY ACRES OF MODERN FACTORY STRUCTURES. THIS DIGNIFIED EDIFICE, SITE OF THE GREAT INVENTORS GREATEST L.A.BORS, STANDS AS A MONUMENT TO AMERICA ' S INDUSTRIAL ACHIEVEMENT . . . THE PL. CE WHERE ORGANIZED RESEARCH WAS FIRST CONCEIVED, FIRST CARRIED FORWARD. THOMAS A. EDISON-S contribu- tions to the comfort and safety of modern life were many. In all, he controlled about 1150 patents, evidence of his unus- ual genius for transforming hu- manity ' s idealistic needs into prac- tical realities. Deeply and patiently he probed the inner realm of nature and discoyered her secrets. Emanating from his genius are the products of the Thomas A. Edison Industries today. Edison Batteries are used where electricity must not fail. Edison Portland Cement was used in the New Jersey anchorage of the (Jeorge ashington Hridge. the Yankee Stadium and the 18-mile Shandaken Tunnel. The modern Pro-technic Ediphone makes pos- sible the business w riting principle expressed by Edison when he w rote, Think once . . . irri7e once . . . at once. Edison excellence is also apparent in other products of the Thomas A. Edison Industries. Their price- less heritage is Edison genius, organized research and thorough method. Products made by the Thomas A. Edison Industries are identified by the founder ' s signature and characterized by his insistence on ({iiality. EDISON PRODUCTS OF TODAY SERVE YOU AND INDUSTRY Eilivion Slorafio Batteries KiliMMi Dry Cells Kili «oii Niirserv l- ' iiriiitiire Ktli oii Spark l liiy« Ellison Splildorf Nlagnelos E(li oii Primary Halleries EiliMtii (l nrllaiwl) !eiiu ' iit Eili| li iie . . lor (lii ' talion I!! I 7 Edison Eniark Batteries I ' ilisoii Kleelrii ' al Controis K-k Meilieal Gas K lison I ;nili n Coils Edison Splildort ' (generators 1931 303 BERKELEY PREPARATORY SCHOOL Established 1907 • Day and Evening Sessions. SUMMER SESSION OPENS JULY 6th • Preparation for all Colleges by College Board Certificate or Exam- ination. • Small classes with individual at- tention and constantly supervised study. Send for Catalogue • Tel. COM. 9262 HARRY F. CADE, JR., (M.I.T. ' 28) Principal 1089 Boy ston Street • Boston THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY By Harry Dean of the I HE Graduate School which includes all graduate - ' - work carried on in the Schools of Architecture, Science, and Engineering, was organized in 1932. At that time the number of students pursuing courses lead- ing to higher degrees was 551 or over one-sixth of the total enrollment at the Institute. In 1931 the registration reached its maximum of 578 but at no time during the depression years has it fallen below 500. Concurrently with the establishment of the Graduate School the East- man Research Laboratories, with their unsurpassed facil- ities for research in Physics and Chemistry, were inaug- urated, with the immediate result of a greatly increased enrollment in these departments. Students are now carry- ing on post-graduate work in every department of the Institute which offers higher degrees, the largest number being enrolled in the Departments of Phvsics, Chemistrv, Electrical Engineering, and Chemical Engineering. As it is the policy of the school to admit onlv students with superior records and no more than can be provided with adequate laboratory facilities for research, a limitation of numbers in some departments may soon be necessary. The geographical distribution of students entering the M. Goodwin Graduate School Graduate School is interesting. Last year the school in- cluded graduates from 132 American universities and 35 foreign countries. Sixty-five per cent of the students had received their Bachelor ' s degree from other universities, colleges, or technical schools, before matriculating at the Institute. The school is thus not only national but inter- national in character. It is also of interest to note that about thirty-eight per cent of the students are pursuing courses leading to the doctorate. Of great importance to the social life of the school was the action taken in 1933 by the Corporation in as- signing one-half of the original dormitory group east of the President ' s house exclusively to graduate students. This was the beginning of Graduate House. So successful was this venture from the start that the following year the complete dormitory group was given over to grad- uate students. The dormitories were completely reno- vated and refurnished and provide not only living quar- ters for 206 students but also three very attractive lounge rooms, a librarv, a small private dining room, and but- ter -, all intended to promote the social life of the stu- [Contiiitied on page 306) 304 i Wot IJ ' i ' Stii ciiird o j Ace ur bS SHft??l 5r66wS| BS MACHINE TOOLS Milling Mac hincs — Grinding Machines — Screw Mach Gear Cutting and n(il l)in ' Machines ines MACHINISTS ' TOOLS Micionu tcTs — Gages — Indicators — Calipers — X ' orniers Testing T(jols CUTTERS and HOBS Milling Gutters — Kntl Mills — Slitting Saws — Gear Cutters Worm and Spur Gear Hol)s ARBORS, COLLETS and ADAPTERS SCREW MACHINE TOOLS MISCELLANEOUS SHOP EQUIPMENT Brown Sharpe Mfg. Co. Providence, R. I. C.P. NITRIC ACID C.P. GLACIAL ACETIC C.P. SULPHURIC ACID C.P. HYDROCHLORIC ACID C.P. AMMONIUM HYDROXIDE THE GRASSELLI CHEMICAL CO., iNC Founded 1839 CLEVELAND, OHIO 305 V. ' f W , mi ' n THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY [Continued from pag 304) dents in pleasant surroundings. Of the 206 students in Graduate House last vear, 138 held degrees from colleges other than Technologv and represented 92 different col- leges and 10 foreign countries. The value of social con- tacts for such a cosmopolitan group cannot be overesti- mated. Dr. Averv Ashdown of the Department of Chem- istrv is resident House Master and with a student com- mittee runs the activities of Graduate House. Weekly dinners are held at which men eminent in the fields of science, engineering, finance, and admmistration, are guest speakers. These gatherings bring the students to- gether in an informal wav. A number of Sunday after- noon teas are also held during the winter at which stu- dents and their friends have an opportunitv to meet mem- bersof the instructing staff and theirwives. So popularhas the Graduate House become that there is usually a wait- ing list of students desirous of obtaining accommodations. The outlook for graduate work at the Institute is bright. The registration of the school will probably always remain relativelv small compared with that of the undergraduate student bodv. The success and reputa- tion of the school is to be measured not by numbers but rather by the quality of the men it turns out. At the present time the demand for graduates with Doctors ' and Masters ' degrees is an indication that for superior stu- dents, the time, hard work, and expense involved in post- graduate studv are well worth while. To assist students in financing their period of graduate work the Institute offers a number of teaching fellow- ships, assistantships, fellowships, and graduate scholar- ships. The Technology Loan Fund is also a great aid in making it possible for students to return for post-graduate studv. (At present about 55 7 of the students pursuing graduate work receive some financial aid.) One of the most pressing needs of the Graduate School is a number of endowed fellowships carrying stipends of about SIOOO each open to students of outstanding ability who are working for the Doctor ' s degree. As it takes in general three or more vears of graduate studv to attain this degree after receiving the Bachelor ' s degree, scholarship aid is essential in most cases and at present endowed scholar- ship funds are available for the most part for tuition only. THE UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOL By Harolx) E. Lobdell Dean of Students WHAT are some of the advantages, other than im- provements in classroom and laboratory instruc- tion, from which students today benefit compared with those who this vear are celebrating their tenth Alumni Reunion? Putting it another way, what is the basis for thinking that the Institute has moved forward this past decade in its extra-curricular aspects to an extent com- mensurate with its academic advances? Additions to the physical plant for such purposes as housing or athletic recreation give at least a partial answer. Ten vears ago, for example, but 275 men could be accommodated in the Dormitories; now- their capacity is 640, of whom over 200 live in a Graduate House. The Barbour Field House, designed and engineered bv members of our own staff; the Squash Court Building; and the leveling of much of the land west of Massachu- setts Avenue to provide additional athletic practice fields are chief among the extension of our facilities for athletic recreation. It should be noted that each of the foregoing has been provided as much on behalf of the student in- terested merely in obtaining healthv exercise and play, as for the varsity athlete. Increased opportunities for partic- ipation in sports not only builds the health of students but their morale as well. This idea is also behind the new Nautical Association with its sailing dinghies and pavil- ion, from which students are to derive even further bene- fit from the Institute ' s admirable location on the Charles River Basin. In a verv real sense these extra facilities have influenced fundamental changes in the students ' social system. To have nearly a quarter of the student body residing on the campus makes for a solidarity of community interest hitherto lacking among members of a student body drawn from nearly every state in the Union and from abroad. As a bv-product of the solidaritv of spirit devel- oped in the Dormitories there has come about during the last few- vears an organization of commuting students permitting them to participate more fuUv in extra-cur- ricular life. Equallv far reaching, and during these past few years of utmost importance to nearlv half the student body, has been the marked increase in the facilities for financial aid to students. Ten vears ago the Institute was able to award approximately S60,000 of undergraduate scholarships and $38,000 of graduate scholarships annually; during the current vear funds available for undergraduate scholar- ships exceed $73,000 and for graduate scholarships exceed 582,000. The present-dav student, however, may also benefit from the Technologv Loan Fund, which began in 1930 and bv another vear will have loaned over §1,000- 000. Thus it is in size already, w-ith two or three excep- tions, the largest college loan fund in the United States. Here it is also pertinent to note that, despite the condi- tions which have confronted the young graduates these past few vears, bv the coming sumitier over a quarter of a million will have been repaid to the Loan Fund. 306 NORTON ABRASIVES for ( rinding • Sharpening • Polishing Now vital to countless industries— NORTON ABRASI TS— tor (grinding, polishing, tool sharpening, pressure blasting. More than two hundred grinding operations in an automobile plant — the grinding wheel machines steel, steel alloys, iron and cemented tungsten carbides — grinds brass, bronze, aluminum, glass, pearl, granite, and marble. The handling of superheat is controlled with Norton Refractories — Norton Porous Plates and Tubes meet the requirements of the acti- vated sludge sewage disposal plant — Norton Abrasives make Norton floors non-slip — Norton Pulpstones have revolutionized the methods of producing woodpulp for newsprint — paper and cloth (called sandpapier) coated with Norton Abrasives serve craftsmen in every industry. The Norton line of abrasive products is complete. NORTON COMPANY Worcester, IVIass, Yiirk Chiras Hamilton. Out. r , lri it Phil t del pHia PittsSiirsh IIjrlf  rd Clovelaiul Lonilun Paris Wesi elin2, ippi ianv - rsica. Italy itrhr-Maniiitis Division. Troy. . . . Starrett Tools, Dial Indicators, Tapes and Hacksaws are stand- ard equipment wherever sure accuracy and dependability count. Write for copies of the complete Starrett Catalog No. 25 and the Special Dial Indica- tor Catalog. THE L. S. STAKKETT CO. IF or f ' .x iirvntvst ' t ' tn httaU Ts Mfiriiifacturrrs « f Unrh aits lnvxrvUv i Stt ' fl Ta tfs — StandartI ft r .■iccttracy Aihol, Mas.s.. U.S.A. 307 The HUNTINGTON SCHOOL far BOYS FOR MANY YEARS THE HI XTIXGTOX SCHOOL HAS PREPARED BOYS FOR SUCCESS IX THE : IASSACHI - SETTS IXSTITUTE OF TECHXOLOGY— HI ' XTIX(;T0X IS X( rr A TLTORIXG SCHOOL— OUR AOI IS TO GIVE A BOY A ELL-ROUXDED PREPARATIOX. THROUGH VARIOIS ACTIVITIES, FOR HIS COLLEGE WORK. Huntington Is Fully Accredited For catalofj or informatiou address C. H. SAMPSON, Headmaster Telephone KENmore 1800 . ' 520 l{iintin ton Ave Bo stoii. Mass. PROFESSOR WILLIAM SPENCER HUTCHINSON Department of AUuhig WHEN ' illiam Spencer Hutchinson was appointed Professor of Mining at the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, in 1923, it came as a fitting climax to a lifetime full of interesting and exciting adventure. Ship-wrecked off the rockv shores of New Caledonia, working under the blistering ravs of an African sun, as- cending the Andes in South America, and laboring under- ground as a miner. Professor Hutchinson has received an extensive practical training in the mining practices of many countries and climates. These experiences have enabled him to direct experth the course of instruction given to mining engineers at the Institute Professor Hutchinson, a native of Boston, graduated from the Institute in 1892 with Tau Beta Pi honors. In 1893 he was made curator of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Exhibit at the Chicago World ' s Fair. Pro- fessor of Mining since 1923, he has been head of the Mining and Metallurg ' department since 1927. However, the mining profession has the whole world for a field. Naturally enough, therefore. Professor Hutch- inson ' s work has taken him to manv strange parts of the globe, as well as over a great deal of North America. Most of Professor Hutchinson ' s trips have been made for private clients, and not for governmental purposes. but his reports on certain war minerals in 1917 were of great value to governmental research. On one of these trip s, incidentallv, he discovered a new vanadium min- eral melanovanadite and located specimens of hither- to unexamined sincosite. Much of Professor Hutchinson ' s mining experience has been obtained on our own continent, in all parts of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Starting as a miner in the Lake SuperiorOre Companv, he soon traveled through California, Idaho, and Missouri. During these trips he had an opportunit - to learn not onh ' the finer points of his profession, but he also received his first real taste of responsibilitv, an invaluable asset to his future career. Professor Hutchinson, the son of William and Hannah Amanda Hutchinson, was born in Boston, Massachu- setts. In 1898 he was married to Elizabeth E. Baker of Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson have three daughters and one son. With the exception of his several trips abroad. Profes- sor Hutchinson has been occupied for the past eight years in teaching and the administration of his department, to the exclusion of personal researches. His purpose is, Not to learn new things to teach but how to teach the things I alread - know. 308 STANDARD M.I.T. RING Here is a rin : hich stands out as an example ot fine craftsmanship distinc- tive ot vour xA.lnia Mater. Adopted in 19. 0 by Insti- tute Committee. wsfcWS Ruggedly built tor lite- long service. Now worn by 1300 Seniors and Alumni. Made in heavvand medium men ' s sizes, also miniature for ladies or men. DESIGN PATENTED 14K GOLD— Military, Rose or Green lOK GOLD- Military, Rose or Green STLRLING SILVER Lar e $24.00 18.00 7.00 Medium Size $20.00 16.00 6.50 Miiiititure $14.00 10.50 6.00 LarUe size for classes previous to I ' l.tO add 50 cents to above prices. Medium size for classes previous to 19. 2 add 50 cents to above prices. Miniature size for classes previous to I9M add 50 cents to above prices. IXITI. LS EXCiK.U i;i) WITHOUT CHARGE— FULL LAST NAME, 25 CENTS EXTRA Jiiy tinier accepled with S5.00 deposi: and lizf, year and engrating instructions. Postage Prepaid in U.S.A. Foreign 50 cents extra. Write us regarding club pins — medals charms or favors and college Jewelry. Standard Ring Manufactured Exclusively by BATES KLINKE, INC. ATTLEBORO, MASS. COOP MEMBERSHIPS can be renewed each year, although you are no longer a student. THE PRICE OF BOOKS is established by the publishers and is the same throughout the United States. THE COOP PAYS POSTAGE on book orders to any place in the United States. TECHNOLOGY BRANCH HARVARD COOPERATIVE SOCIETY, Inc. MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, OPPOSITE M. I. T., CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 309 GROWING TRANSPARENCY AFTER several years of patient research. Professor Donald C. Stockbarger of the Department of Physics has succeeded in growing large and optically per- fect crystals of lithium fluoride, the most transparent material known to science. The ability of lithium fluoride crystals to transmit light far exceeds the range of natural quartz crystals, fused quartz, and rock salt crystals, all ot which fail to trans- mit any but the longer waves in the ultra-violet region of the spectrum. Lithium fluoride is transparent to radiation from high in the infra-red region through the visible band and deeper into the ultra-violet range than any known substance, including fluorite, the extremely rare natural cr stal of calcium fluoride which is seldom found in a size or of an optical quality suitable for research. Apart from the application of this new tool of science in the increasingly important field of spectroscopy, lith- ium fluoride refracts the different colors of the visible spectrum far more nearly equally than does any other known substance. For this reason, lenses of the material are less subject to chromatic aberration which, with glass or quartz, makes necessary the use of compound lenses in order that the optical images of an object in one light may not be blurred, while those in another colored light are sharp. The success of Professor Stockbarger ' s method lies in the synthesis of lithium fluoride in its purest form, and the growth of the crystals in an electric furnace of special design and capable of precise temperature control. PROFESSOR SAMUEL GATE PRESGOTT Dean of Science and Head oj the Department of Biology and Public Health TO man - of us, food is either a necessity for existence or a source of enjoyment, but to Professor Samuel Gate Prescott, food has been, in addition, a subject for years of fruitful research in biology and bacteriology. From studying banana diseases in Costa Rica, and large scale preservation of food supplies for our army in the World War, to undertaking the preparation of a perfect cup of coffee, Dr. Prescott has utilized engineering prin- ciples to improve the quality of man ' s most important necessity of life. Food study, however, has been but one phase of Dr. Prescott ' s activity. His work in establishing the first Industrial Biology course in the United States at M.I.T., {Continued on page }12) HAYDEN, STONE CO. Investment Securities Member of Xew York Stock Exchange Member of Boston Stock Exchange New Y ork Boston 310 THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CAMBRIIKiK, MASSACHUSETTS THK MAsSACmsKTTS IXSTITl TK OF TECHNOI.CGV offers Courses in the following fields of study: SCHOOL OF iu:inTK rri ' KK Vr liil - -liir( Vr«-litl(-4-ttiriil Kn iii4- -rinu ( il riaiiiiiiiL: SCHOOL OF scik (:k |{ii ltiK anil I ' tiblir ll -;illli 4 JicmiNtry OptiutiM: Hiitlo y CJriitTuI Science Kiolouy and I ' uhlii- llfiiltli Geology IiKluMlrial ltioliiu Mullieniatics Public Heiilth Kii iiieeriiiK PhyiikirK SCHOOL OK KNGINKKKINC Vt-r« n:iiilli:il Kii ziiiccriiii: Kli-clrical KiiKinct-rinir .Miniiiji; KiiKini-crini and MdalliirKx Uiiililinu l-iiuinccrinu and lon-l riitt ion 4 ' inn iiiunicali nin Optionn: Melallnruy ltii iMi«.! and Knuinccriim dinini .t rat i4 n Coiipcralivc Mining Kncinccrini; Option! : (licniical Knt;iiiccrinK KIc Ir Mlicinical Knuinc4-rinc I ' ctrolcuni l ri duclion .i%d I tit:iin-crinf£ (icncral Kn«inccrin« rh Hi(al Vldallnro Industrial I ' racti - Mcclianical l-liiKiin-crinK Na al rchilc4turc ami Marine Knciin ' criiiK Mfflimiiral HnKimMrinie Oplionn: Vnt itnoti « Knuinccriii{£ Sliip Operation i Jicniical Knuim-crina ieni-ra! Suiiitury EnginecrinK 4!licini -al F.nuinccrinK I ' ruclicc Power l-i il Kii iiic4-rint: l r«MliicI ion Opttonct: ;i ncral HcfVit:cral iini Mr 1 ' iiiulit ii nin;: F«Midi ' sy and S -i niolo; y ' Textile H drocicetric .Militar KuKincering ' l ' ranM|K rlation Graduates of colleges or of scientific schools of collegiate grade, and in general all applicants presenting satisfactory cerli- ticates showing work done at another college corresponding approximatt-ly to at least one year ' s work at the Ins titute, are admitted to such advanced standing as is warranted by their previous training, and are given credit for our recjuired subjects. including the entrance requirements, so far as the ' have been satisfactorily completed. The Summer Session extending from June lo September includes most of the subjects given during the academic year. For information about the methotls of admission from secondary schools, communicate with the Director of Admissions. Any of the following publications will be sent free upon request: Catalogue for the academic year Summer Session Catalogue Architectural Education — Undergraduate and Graduate Educational Opportunities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ' The Oaduate Schools of Science and Engineering Correspondence should be addressed to the Director of Admissions. Chauncy Hall School FOUNDED 1828 The School that confines itself exclusively to the preparation of students for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 553 BOVLSTON STREET FRANKLLN T. KURT BOSTON, MASS. Principal 311 PROFESSOR SAMUEL GATE PRESCOTT {Continutd from page 310) his contribution to the application of enzymes to indus- try, his research in industrial hygiene, his organization of the Boston Bio-chemical Laboratory have all placed him foremost in the field of practical and applied biology. Dr. Prescott ' s interest in M.LT. began when he was an undergraduate at its old location on Boylston Street in Boston. After receiving his S.B. in chemistry there in 1894 he began his career of research at Worcester, where he was emploved as an assistant chemist. He was ap- pointed an assistant on the Institute staff in 1895 and was made an instructor in 1896. He then progressed through a series of positions until, in 1914, he was offered a full pro- fessorship in the department of Biologv and Public Health. Professor Prescott ' s first experimental activities in Costa Rica were sponsored hv the United Fruit Company in an attempt to discover the nature and cure of diseases spreading through their banana plantations. This suc- cessful venture, however, was terminated by the en- Trance of the United States into the World War. He was commissioned as a major in the Food Division of the Army ' s Sanitary Corps, and given supervision of inspec- tion and research. This led him to the field of dehydra- tion, in which he performed much research even after the war had ended. One of Professor Prescott ' s best known activities was in connection with the S3O,O03 cup of coffee. In 1920, at the request of the Joint Coffee Research Committee, he organized an elaborate investigation of the physiological effects of coJee on the human body. This was followed up with an extensive study of coffee cultivation in general, which caused much public interest and comment. At present. Professor Prescott is at the head of the de- partment of Biology and Public Health at the Institute and is also Dean of Science. He divides his time between his duties as administrator of the science courses, and his activities both as a research worker and a teacher in the biology department. Doctor Prescott was born at South Hampton, New Hampshire, on April 5, 1872. He is married and has three children; Eleanor, Robert Sedgwick (M.LT. ' 32 and now a graduate student in Phvsics), and Samuel Chase ' M.LT. ■33). DR. JEROME CLARK HUNSAKER Dep.irtments of Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering TWENTY-FR ' E vears ago, when aviation was in its infancy and aeronautical design was little more than a hit-or-miss proposition, Jerome Clark Hunsaker, a graduate of the United States Naval Academy, was sent to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to carry on advanced research in this new science. His enthusiasm and natural aptitude soon caused him to be recognized as one of America ' s most promising aeronautical experts. Since that time. Professor Hunsaker has followed the course of aviation, step by step, until, now, he is regarded as one of the leading authorities on aircraft design of all kinds. hen Dr. Hunsaker began his advanced studies at the Institute, airplane design as an engineering art did not exist. The scientific foundation had yet to be laid, for while the airplane was an American invention, its en- gineering development in 1912 was left almost entirely to Europeans. Dr. Hunsaker, aided bv his wife, translated and published the pioneer work of Eiffel on wind tunnel testing of airplane models. This led to an invitation by Eiffel to visit his laboratory in Paris. In 1913, Doctor Hunsaker made a tour of Europe where he became acquainted with the most modern develop- ments in aerodynamic and structural research. He also assisted such pioneers as Teddington and Eiffel in much of their experimental work. Returning to America in 1914, Dr. Hunsaker im- mediately went to work to develop aeronautical engin- eering in this country. At. M I. T. he set up a wind tun- nel duplicating the one at the National Physical Labora- tory in England. For the next three vears, Hunsaker em- ployed this tunnel for fundamental research in aircraft design. As a result of this work, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science and had the further satisfac- tion of seeing his work used as a basis for a graduate course in this new field. During the war Dr. Hunsaker was recalled to the Navy Department where he did some of his most important research work. His developments are too numerous to mention here, but they resulted in his receiving the Navy Cross for outstanding engineering work. After the war. Dr. Hunsaker returned to the Institute where he continued his work. During these later years he has designed many types of aircraft, both lighter and heavier than air. He also has contributed much toward the development of accurate meteorological work and efficient radio telephone transmission for airplanes. At present. Doctor Hunsaker is head of both the Aeronautical Engineering Course and the Mechanical Engineering Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is a member of the American Society of Naval Architects and Marine Designers; a Fellow of the American Physical Society; an Honorary Fellow of the Roval Aeronautical Society of Great Britain; and President of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. 312 Telephones: Kenmore 4500 and Long wood 2040 RHODES BROS. COMPANY Groceries and Provisions WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 170 Massachusetts Aven ' ue BOSTON, MASS. Macalaster Bicknell Co. Scientific and Experiinenlal Glass Blowing PYREX GLASS APPARATUS FUSED QUARTZ APPAR.-XTUS LABORATORY SUPPLIES CALIBRATING AND ENGRAVING Washington and Moore Streets CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Cortlandt 7-067 ' ) LYMAN E . DODGE M. i T. 1 1)01 . ttorni;v and CorNSKl.I,OK-AT-I.. V PATENTS AND TRADEMARKS .so CIILRCH .STREET NEW YORK CITY Thai there is a big difference in the goods and services ren Jered by AUTO SI PPLY A.ND SERMCE STORES Vt E ' RE PREPARED TO PRO E A Purliul f.istiii ' i of our Jdiilities for Service • 1 IRESTONK TIRFS Tl BES • BRAKE WORK— TESriN ; FREE • FIRESTONE .SPECIAIJZEI) I.IBRICATIGN • KiNFllO.N SERVICE • ; AS Texaco I ' ydol ;nlf • OIE Ihoolim — Veidol -(;iilflube Quaker Slate • MOTOR TIMN ; • 2000 AITO SI IMM.V FIE.MS • FIRESIONE B ITERIES. Vl V Strviir jiiiy iiiak.- • AITO RMMOS Sl «ail Warner • HOME R IMOS RCA • MOIMRAIE Cll VR ;ES CONSISIENT WITH BEST WORK SERVICE . sk aliimt our s|)rcial plan for hilliiif; you oji a I! inoiitlis l asis. A popular plan willi many of our regular customers. FIRESTONE , KENDALL Sgi ARE .AMRRID(;E, M. SS Al ' TO SUPPI.V X STORES 313 SENIORS . . . UNDERCLASSMEN . . . NOW is the logical time to insure the the earning power the education you have received will make possible. Get your policy from UFE msuRANCB BENJAMIN FORD Representing, NEW YORK LIFE INS. CO. 60 STATE ST. Hub. 4900 Life insurance is REQUIRED as security for undergraduate loans. LIFE ANNUITIES BOSTON, MASS. WALTER W. FIELD SON, INC. KENDALL SQUARE, CAMBRIDGE MACHINISTS • RENTAL COMPRESSOR SERVICE Sales Agents for Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation JACKSON MORELAND ENGINEERS PUBLIC UTILITIES— INDUSTRIALS RAILROAD ELECTRIFICATION DESIGN SUPERVISION— VALUATIONS ECONOMIC OPERATING REPORTS BOSTON NEW YORK CAPE COD CANAL RESEARCH T T ITH enlargement of the Cape Cod Canal in progress, ' ' research engineers of the Institute are making an advance studv of the tidal currents that mav be expected when the project is completed. This investigation is be- ing carried on in a huge scale model of the canal and its approaches, which provides for studies of the canal in its present form and as it will appear when widened to seven hundred feet on the surface and dredged to a depth of fortv feet. The complex nature of the investigation is indicated bv the fact that the average rise and fall of the tide in Cape Cod Bay is five feet greater than in Buzzards Bay, a distance of thirteen miles through the canal. There is also a time difference of three hours between the bavs. The result is that the tide in Buzzards Bav is rising while the sea is still tailing in Cape Cod Bav. This difference in level sets up currents through the canal, reversing direc- tion ever - six hours, whose average velocitv is in excess of three miles per hour. The model is built to a scale of approximateh- nine feet to the mile, and is constructed of concrete and sand to form a channel accuratelv reproducing the curving path of the canal across Cape Cod. Scientific devices cause the ebb and flow ot the miniature tides, and sensitive instru- ments arranged along the canal record the effects of cur- rent and wave motion. Time as well as physical propor- tions is reduced in these expertments, making it possible to produce the complete c ' cle of the tide, which in nature requires some twelve hours, within a few minutes. I A MEASURE OF PUBLIC TASTE ' I 0 determine the preferences of the nation ' s radio -■- audience, Professors Robert F. Elder and L. P. Woodruff have developed a device which thev call the audimeter. This appliance, when attached to a home radio set, automatically records on paper the date and time when the radio is turned on and the stations to which it is tuned. One hundred of these meters have been placed in homes since Christmas, the researchers placing five in homes of the wealthy, twenty in homes of the upper middle class, forty-five among small merchants and skilled mechanics, and thirty in families on relief earning low wages. This was done in order to get a good cross- section of the entire population. From the standpoint of the advertiser or sponsor of radio programs it is most desirable to know the size of the audience listening. The audimeter is the only device able to give such data at present. Other methods are largely indirect, such as fan mail, increase in use of advertised products, and observations of load curves at sectional electric power houses. Conclusions based on such figures are, of their verv nature, speculative and hence unreliable. 314 CRAIG-HAPGOOD CO., iNC Distributors of WAD LEYS ••w EXTRA SELECT POULTRY AND EGGS 39-40 SOUTH MARKET STREET MODERN CAMERAS and PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT for all purposes IW ' if Eiiahind ' .s largest Exclusive Photo Supply Dealers sin CO IVflll RALPH HARRIS CO. 47 BROMFIELD ST. . BOSTON Kst. ISdii HAN. U.-)+.) M. STOLL CO. WHOLESALE GROCERS Distributors of CARVER BRAND Canned Fruits and Vegetables 53 CARVER STREET BOSTON, MASS. ARTHUR C. HARVEY CO. STEEL OF EVERY DESCRIPTION NEW ENGLAND DISTRIBUTORS OF ELECTRUNITE ELECTRIC RESISTANCE WELDED BOILER TUBES 60 Everett Street, Allston District Boston, Mass. STA dium 5000 PRINTING Most of the student activities and fraternities come to us for their pubHcations, programs, posters, announcements, tickets, etc. Our prices are reasonable, we do good work, we are just around the corner and we are al- ways at your service. THE HAMPSHIRE PRESS, INC. 28 Carleton Street On tlie wa to Kendiill Square Tel. KIRkland 0194 CHOSEN BY M.I.T. AS THE DORMITORY LAUNDRY 14 Years Continuous Service FRATERNITY SERVICE A SPECIALTY Guaranteed purity, cleanliness, softness at moderate cost. Insure long life for your linens by telephoning TRO. 2830 today. We operate New England ' s Newest and most sanitary plant. B S LAUNDRY 45-55 CARLETON ST. Serving Metropolitan Boston CAMBRIDGE, MASS. U5 COURSE II THE revision of the Mechanical Engineering curric- ulum, which has just been completed, is the result of an extensive study which has been carried on bv the Department staff during the past two years. The prin- cipal changes are the introduction of a course in Fluid Mechanics in the third year, and the division of the fourth year curriculum into five separate options entitled General, Automotive, Refrigeration and Air Condition- ing, Production and Textile. In addition to these changes, a considerable revision and rearrangement of the subject- matter of the fundamental courses in Applied Mechanics and Thermodynamics has been made, and new courses in Foundry Practice, Mechanical Processes and Machine Tool Practice have been developed. The aim has been to improve the coordination between the fundamental courses in theorv, laboratory practice, and machine de- sign with the more strictly professional subjects of the upper classes. Special mention should be made of Course II-A. the new cooperative course with the General Electric Com- pany established a year ago along lines similar to Course T-A. In this course a selected group of students at the end of the sophomore vear enters into a program of study extending over three additional years in which alternate terms, including summer sessions, are spent in the em- ploy of the Company, up to the last rwo terms of the fifth vear which are devoted entirely to graduate study at the Institute. On completion of this course, the grad- uates receive both the Bachelor of Science and the Master of Science degrees in Mechanical Engineering. COURSE XVI AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING, after twelve ears as a graduate course onlv, appeared as a regular four-year undergraduate course, numbered XVI, in the fall of 1926. In June 1927 a modest, comparati velv obscure pilot named Lindbergh flew a flimsv monoplane alone from New York to Paris, and the romantic era of aviation dawned. So the infant course become overnight the ob- jective of one-sixth of the entering freshmen. Increase in facilities became imperative. Funds were provided bv the Daniel Guggenheim Fund for the Pro- motion of Aeronautics tor the construction of a building to contain wind tunnels, research rooms, library, and class and office rooms. This building was named the Daniel Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory, dedi- cated in June 1928, and used for regular classes during the first term of 1928-29. It was already apparent that even this increase in facilities could not match the rising tide of students. It also seemed that the rate of expansion of the industrv was not sufficient to take an unlimited output. Therefore, commencing with the fall of 1928 the sophomore, junior and senior classes have been limited to 30 men each. The wisdom of this limitation has been amplv demonstrated during the depression era. The bursting of the aeronauti- cal boom in 1929-30 ruined the manufacturing industrv. Employment difhculties were reflected in a reduction in number of freshmen desiring course XVI, but a substan- tial number are still barred. Graduate students number about 30 each year. The seven and one-half foot wind tunnel, built in 1922, journeyed across the vard from the old quarters in- to the new Guggenheim Laboratorv in Fehruarv 1928. It was used successively for researches of considerable length on propellers, boundarv layer measurements on a large wing, and airship form tests. In the fall of 1934 it was reconditioned and made available for industrial cooperative studies. Several interesting design projects have been studied. This work is still in progress. To provide additional facilities for student use and for smaller research projects, in 1929 the 5 foot wind tunnel was built. From this have come interesting results on airplane design problems, notably in regard to the cool- ing and cowling of radial engines. Present aerodvnamic research includes a project for the measurement and study of boundary layer phenomena on a large scale for the case of flow along a curved surface. This is under the direction of Professor Peters. A new experimental method of studving stability near the stall is being developed bv Professor Koppen. A graduate student has designed and built an electrical analogue for solving the longitudinal stabilitv biquadratic. In the past three vears instruction and research in the field of aeronautical instruments has been greatly en- larged. This work has been done by Professor Draper. At present the investigations are concentrated on instrument, propeller, and engine vibration problems, and the devel- opment of portable recording apparatus for vibration studies. Instruction and research work on internal combustion engines was transferred to the Department of Mechanical Engineering in 1934. Since its establishment, the heads of the course have been successivelv Professor arner. Prof. C. F. Taylor, and, since 1932, Dr. Hunsaker. Aeronautical Engineering is a separate course but is now administered with the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Important staff changes since 1929 include the return of Rauscher as a professor, the addition of Smith, Peters and Draper, the replacement of Chatfield by Koppen. Present arrangement of professional instruction is: Aerodvnamics and Hvdrodvnamics — Smith, Rauscher, Peters. Applied Aerodynamics and Airplane Design — Koppen, Ober. Aeronautical Laboratorv — Ober, Markham. Airplane Design and Aeronautic Structures — Newell. Aeronautic Instruments — Draper. Aeronautic Engines (M.E. Dept.) — C.F. E.S. Taylor. Airship Theorv and Structures Smith. Propellers — Ober. I 316 Complimeiitt of x lIstou A. Stillman Co. Collee and Tea Importers ■l-.U MII.K ST. HANcoik 17«() OSCAR F. HEDLUND l.ll-E INSUR. NCE COUNSELLOR l ' fr|)etualor of Class Gifts to Technology for the years 1934—1935—1936 MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO. to STATR STREKT BOSTON, MASS. Jenkins VALVES Since 1864 JENKINS BROS. PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO BOSTON NEW YORK BRIDGEPORT Travel by sea— — For a convenient trip home — or a summer vacation cruise ' ()U will enjoy life aboard large, luxuri- ous shi|is. Good meals and comforlaMe berth are included in the low fares. Auto- mobiles carried at slight additional cost. Through fares via ship and rail to all points. Regular Sailings Boston to Philadelphia - Baltimore - Norfolk Savannah - Jacksonville - Miami For detailed information, write or ' plionc . . J. Doyle, General Agent — 7 Little Building, 80 Boyl.ston St., or Pier 2, Nortliem Ave., Boston (Tel. Liberty 1160) — or your local Tourist Agent Merchants Miners Line COMPLIMENTS OF John Iafolla construction co. DEDHAM, MASS. Thresher Kelley POULTRY BEEF, PORK AND LAMB PRO ISIONS OF . LL KINDS 73-79 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. C 4920 Telephoxes, C. Piroi. jJJ J [ 4935 317 COURSE III COURSE III is still honored by the presence of Pro- fessor Emeritus Robert H. Richards, who was 91 years of age on the 26th of August, 1935- He is still active and lives in the same place at 32 Elliott Street, Jamaica Plain, which former students will recall as the scene of manv pleasant student parties and of exhibitions of glass blowing. In recent vears under the leadership of Professor Hutchinson, the Department of Mining and Metallurgy has been expanded until it now has divisions of petro- leum, ceramics, x-rav, metallography, physical metal- lurgy, and heat treatment. Course XI ' , electro chem- istry, also is administered now hv the head of the Mining Department. With the increased diversitication in the mining de- partment has come an enlarged staff. Doctor W illiams now has full charge of physical metallurgy, being assisted by Professor Homerberg who is working in the ferrous held and specializing in nitriding and bv Professor J. T. orton who is handling the x-ray work. Iron and steel metallurgy still is under the direction of Doctor Water- house and the non-ferrous metallurgy under Professor j Hayward with Professors Bugbee and Reed in charge of gold milling and hre assaying. As of old, the stamp mill thunders in the laboratories one day every year on the occasion of the annual stamp mill run of the ore dressing class, and fire, smoke and tume also prevail one day a year in the fire metal- lurgical laboratory under the direction of Professor Hay ward. COURSE X COURSE X has as its head now Professor Walter G. Whitman, ' 17, who is directing the Practice School and also carrying out a research program on corrosion. This year, over one hundred graduate students from all parts of the world are registered in Course X, a fact which is indicative of the increasing prestige of the De- partment. To Professor Warren K. Lewis this winter went the Perkin Medal for his brilliant work in the field of high pressure synthesis. He and Professor McAdams are pre- paring a revised edition of their Principles of Chemical Engineering, long recognized as the standard text on the subject. Returning last year from sabbatical leave at Zurich, where he received his doctorate for a dissertation on the Characteristics and Preparation of Boron Trichloride, Professor W ' eber is now collaborating with Professor Lewis in writing a book on industrial chemistry. Doctor Ernst A. Hauser, internationally known colloid chemist, has recently joined the Department and has undertaken an extensive research program. Professor Robinson, who is a Lieutenant Colonel in the Ordnance Reserve Corps, has recently published a book entitled Theory of Interior Ballistics. The Fuel Engineering Laboratory is now under the direction of Professor Hottel who has published numerous papers on thermal radiation and furnace design. The Practice School is now in operation with Messrs. Hershev, Adams, and Cooper as directors at the Buffalo, Boston, and Bangor stations respectively. COURSE V GRADUATES of Course ' are cordialh- invited to visit the Chemistry Department or correspond with its members at any time. Those who return for Alumni Day, who have not visited the Institute in recent years, will find man ' changes. Course ' is still fundamentally a chemical course ren- dering service during the first three years to all those courses where Inorganic, Analytical, Organic and Ph si- cal Chemistry are a requirement. It still gives instruction to all the Freshmen, half the Sophomores, and one-third of the Juniors. The curriculum of the course has been changed to stimulate the research attitude on the part of the student. Recent changes involve a sxstem of progres- sive electives whereby ample time is offered in the third and fourth year for students to extend their knowledge in subjects of special interest to them. Planned electives for the four consecutive terms of the third and fourth years are available in Inorganic, Organic, and Physical Chemistry, ceramics, textiles, economics, metallography. mineralogy and geology, biochemistry, industrial chem- istry, food and water chemistry, mining and metallurgy, whereby undergraduate students may major in Chemistry and minor in an elective of their choice. Thesis has been extended to 450 hours in the senior year, and the time allotted is sufficient for the solution of a verv substantial problem. Those visiting the Institute will enjov a trip through the Eastman Laboratories, occupying half of this entire building. There are, at present, 60 graduate students studying for the degree of Doctor of Philosoph - in all branches of chemical science. The demand for Doctor ' s candidates capable of outstanding research far exceeds the supply at the present time, and industrial leaders are visiting the Institute six and seven months in advance to secure the men of their choice. Research problems in the Graduate School cover a variety of problems in pure science. The Department is especially well-equipped and the staff enthusiastic. 318 r or those who apjireci- ale superior |iiality, extra riehness and (h ' li- eate flavors .... ESTABLISHED IS ' ie HOOD ' S ICE CREAM J. B. Hunter Company Distributorsof genuine Yale Locks and Hardware for all l |ic of huildinn construction. Hartlware specifications ami quotations gladly made. 50 -SUMMER ST. BOSTON The StudenCs Friend ( inilily Wdtk Only Brighton Laundry STADIUM 55 20 Carbic Color Chemical Company, Inc. A Ml. INK COLORS • DVESTUFFS • CHEMICALS Indiffosols-Pharmasols o RcK, f. S. I ' al. im. 4. ' )1 -453 WASHINGTON STREET NEW YORK CITY Branch Offices: Philadelphia. Providence, Boston. Charlotte, N. C. Hamilton, Ont, SOLE AGENTS FOR DURAND HUGUENIN S. A.. B. SLE. SWITZERLAND 1 FAY, SPOFFORD THORNDIKE CONSULTING ENGINEERS FREDERIC H. V.W i CHARLES M. SPOFFORU ■' ).( JOHN .A.VER ' OS BION A. BOWMAN ' 09 CARROLL A. FARWELL 06 RALPH W. HORNE. ' 10 44 SCHOOL STREET, BOSTON, MASS. Bridges Water Supply and Sewerage Port and Terminal Works Industrial Buildings Fire Prevention Investigations Designs Supervision of Construction OR eighty-five years Singer Sew- ing Machines have been standard the world over. Singer Service has brought everywhere a guarantee of convenience and satisfaction in their use. For Singer is more than a manufac- turer of fine sewing machines, equip- ment and supplies. It is a world-wide organization of service to women who sew at home and to factories which have various stitching operations to perform. Every one of its 10,000 Shops, scat- tered throughout the six continents, is a local sewing headquarters for the women of that community. In all princi- pal cities arc located branches of the Manufacturing Trade Department, for service to the manufacturers of the myriad of industries in which sewing equipment is used. SINGER SEWING MACHINE COMPANY 319 PROFESSOR GEORGE OWEN Department of Naval Architecture ROUNDING out an active life as a shipbuilder and designer. Professor George Owen has been a mem- ber of the Naval x rchitecture Department of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology since 1915. In addition to his teaching, however, he has long been associated with the design of all kinds of vessels, from racing yachts to passenger steamers. For about r vo years after his graduation from Tech- nologv in 1894, as a mechanical engmeer, he worked as a mill engineer at Pacific Mills. Later he was an inspector of ordnance at Providence, Rhode Island, and, after this, became connected with the Herreshoff Manufacturing Company in Bristol. In 1901, while employed as engineer for a steel plant in Hamilton, Ontario, Professor Owen first found the opportunity to give practical expression to his boating desires. In passing, it is interesting to notice that there is one of Professor Owen ' s vessels, the passenger steamer, Dalhousie City, built in 1911, still in active service on Lake Ontario. In 1907, Professor Owen began an independent career in connection with boats. This continued until 1915, when he was persuaded to return to Technology as an assistant professor. He did, however, make the provision that he be allowed to continue his independent practice, and for the past few years has been associated with Francis Minor in the firm of Owen and Minor. George Owen is yer - well known to the yachting world because of his many successful endeavors in the building and racing of yachts. His first boat was the Whirl , with which he won the championship of Lake Onta rio in the twenty-foot class, for two years in suc- cession. Since then, he has designed and sailed many championship yachts, such as the Dorello , Timan- dra , Amoret , Britomart , and Patricia , all well known to yacht racing fans. Professor Chven also de- signed the ketch-rigged Atlantis , now engaged in deep sea exploration. He has recently been engaged in the design of a fleet of dinghies for the newly formed Nau- tical Association of MT.T. The formation of this new activity has been materially aided by Prof. Owen ' s en- thusiasm, and should prove to be one of the Institute ' s most popular sports. George Owen was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the eleventh of May, 1871. He attended a private academy at Providence known as the English and Classi- cal High School. Six years after his graduation from the Institute he married Florence Wood of Providence. The Owens live in Newton Center, Massachusetts, and have two children, George Jr., and Florence. Professor Owen, a past master of Masons, is a member of the following organizations: The University Club of Boston, the Royal Canadian Yacht Club, Norumbega Lodge of New- ton, and the Richard C. Maclaurin Lodge of Technology. COURSE VI PROFESSOR E. L. MORELAND, who last July suc- ceeded Dr. D. C. Jackson as head of the department, is vigorously pushing for vard the educational policies and activities inaugurated and maintained bv Dr. Jackson. The dominating educational policy of the department is to bring out the inherent ability and natural bent of each student. To this end each student ' s program is in- dividualized so that he may prepare himself for the field in which he is particularly interested. Even in the sophomore laboratory there are no set experiments. Each student selects a project, or series of projects, lays them out in consultation with his instructor, and goes to work on them. The research activities of the staff are being carried on as rigorously as ever. Dr. Hazen recently received a medal from the Franklin Institute for the development of the Servo mechanism. Dr. Bush has just been awarded the A.I.E.E. Lamme Medal for the development of the Difl - erential Analvzer, which he started when he was a mem- ber of the departmental staff. He is now at work on an improvement of the present model, which will greatly increase its speed and precision. There is space for men- tion only of Dr. Trump ' s high-voltage D. C. investiga- tion; Mr. Horton ' s Impedance Comparator, which is applying electrical engineering to problems in the med- ical profession; Dr. Balsbaugh ' s study of the electrical characteristics of oil; Professor Edgerton ' s high-speed photography, and the new course in Illuminating En- gineering started this year under the direction of Pro- fessor Moon. The Cooperative Course, which was started by the department seventeen years ago, has successfully met the hazards of plant strikes, boom times and long business depression, and is now firmly established as a superior educational method. It differs in so many important re- spects from the cooperative schemes of other colleges that it is now generally known as the M.I.T. Coopierative Plan. 320 McMahon Diirward HARDWARi:. I ' Al.MS am Oll.s I ' l.LMBINC;. LOCK and KLKCnRK. WORK KirCHKN FURXISHIN-QS 242 Massachusetts Avenue BOSTON, MASS. Telephone KENmore 5080 MISS RITA ULLVEN Smart lidllroitin Diitiritiii liulividuality • Style • fthvthm Private Lessunti Daily 10 A.M. 10 I ' .M. Open Ml Suiiiiiier TiOr Trial Lf soii oOr 29.1 Hiinliii ' ' t(m Vv« Wvu. m96 CIRcle T5:!0 KENmore 9690 Motor Service Garage, inc. Complete Automotive Service L. CLIFFORD CONLEY M AN Al.KR 677 BEACON STREET (AT KEN ' MORE SO.) BOSTON, MASS. Al Downing Says: We supply hotels, restaurants, schools and col- leges with the finest blends of Fancy Coflees that can be found in the United States. A trial will convince you that we have the best there is. Also Canned Fruits, Vegetables, Frost Sealed Peas, Lima Beans, Strawberries, Raspberries, Cherries and . pples. RIVAL FOODS, Inc. C ambridge, New Bedford Fitchburg, Porlsmoulh, N. H. Tel. Trowbridge 2400 UFKIN TAPE5-RULE5-PRECISIQN TOOLS iio t Widely and Xn favorably I nown The finest and most complete line for all general measuring requirements. Kngineering Surveying (construction Mine Highway Railroad Forestry nr precise shop work. Send for Catalog ' -?:.:.JW: ni E fuFK M Pule t7o SAGINAW, MICHIGAN, U. S. A. IValJ er Memorial Dining Service Meals served during the Academic Year for any type of Tecbnolog y Alumni Gathering CLASS DINNERS GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION Tlie Recreational facilities can he made available if desired MENUS SUBMITTED UPON REQUEST Address A. W. BRIDGES, Walker Memorial M.I.T., CAMnRiDGE, Mass. 321 COURSE XIII IN Course XIII there have been no changes of impor- tance during the last ten years other than those to do with keeping in touch with latest developments in the theorv and practice both at home and abroad. In Course XIII-A, Professor Hovgaard,underwhomthe course was originated, having retired. Commander Ros- sell, U.S.N, was selected as his successor and fortunately it was possible for him to establish an overlap of two vears with his predecessor which enabled the course to be carried on without any break. An important change was made in the time available at the Institute. Previously the students selected for the Construction Corps were given one vear of postgraduate work at . nnapolis and were sent to the Institute for two years to get their pro- fessional work. This now has been changed, the post- graduate work at Annapolis having been abolished and the students coming to the Institute for three years which enables us to give a very much better course, especiallv in dealing with the important design problems. Course XIII-C, the course in Ship Operation, has prac- ticalh- come into being during this period. Progress has been slow owing to the difficulty in getting the industry to appreciate the importance of the work done and the value to them of properly trained men, but by persistent hammering at the subject we have prospects of consider- able success in the future, especially as a number of men who have graduated from this course are now in the industrv and making a ver - good impression. The Nautical Museum has received a considerable number of contributions during the last ten years, and is being more frequently consulted by people doing serious work. The present allocation of space is proving to be somewhat inadequate and provision for expansion will have to be made when the financial needs of the more important parts of our work have been adequately met. EARTHQUAKES IN MINIATURE AN important contribution to the science of applied seismology is the shaking table designed by Arthur C. Ruge of the Department of Civil Engineering, in col- laboration with Dr. ' annevar Bush, ' ice-President and Dean of Engineering. This extremely ingenious device permits the laboratorv duplication of destructive earth- quake motions direct from seismograph records, and will be used to study the effects of earthquakes on buildings and other structures by means of scale models. Though complex in its details, the general principles of the machine are relatively simple, and its control is scarcelv more difficult than the operation of a radio re- ceiving set. The seismogram is cut along the wavy line which represents the wave-motion of the quake to form a shadowgraph which acts as a sort of optical cam. The shadowgraph is then passed before a photo-elec- tric cell, the electric eye of the machine. An analysing device, coupled to the eve performs the functions of a brain and controls the machine in such a way that it is forced to follow the wavy line as the shadowgraph moves on. Thus the motion of any recorded earthquake may be duplicated bv placing a shadowgraph record in the machine. The primarv driving power of the earthquake ma- chine is obtained from oil under pressure working against a piston connected to a platform which is free to move in anv direction. The electric analyzing device controls a valve which feeds the oil into the piston chamber. This valve is moved in a manner quite analogous to the dia- phragm of a dvnamic loudspeaker in a radio receiver. In accuracv and flexibility, the new shaking table is greatlv superior to former machines, which were driven bv a cumbersome svstem of mechanical cams, and were capable onlv of simple back-and-forth movements. In contrast, this machine has no limitations as to the irreg- ularitv of earthquakes reproduced. DINGHIES DESIGNED bv Professor George Owen of the Naval Architecture Department of M.I. T. and constructed bv the Herreschoff plant in Bristol, R. I., the Technology fleet of dinghies should add a great deal of color and nautical atmosphere to the Charles River Basin. These boats, a distinct innovation to Institute life, were made possible largely through the efforts of Prof. Erwin H. Schell and through contributions from alumni and friends of the school. President Karl T. Compton donated the first boat, and, since then, enough contributions have poured in to raise the total to forty dinghies, at least thirtv-four of which will be available to Technology undergraduates. The promise of these boats has led to the organization of the Nautical Association of M. I. T., the first recog- nized undergraduate activitv of its kind in this country. So far, over four hundred students have shown an active interest in this sport, and many others are to be expected when the season gets in full swing. The dinghies are rwelve and a half feet long by five feet wide. They have two mast steps, providing for rig- ging either as catboats or sloops. Their ample breadth makes for stability, invaluable to safe handling by nov- ices, but, at the same time, their lightness and ease of operation should make them excellent racing boats. The M.I.T. vachting assemblage will be made com- plete bv the construction of a spacious and complete vacht house, expected to be finished on June 8, in time for the all-Tech reunion. This house, also, has been provided for by funds from the alumni and, as pro|ected. will be a beautiful addition to the Institute surroundings. 322 THE MILK and CREAM SUKVtlJ IN IllK WALKER DINING ROOM 1-- FRDM Till-. I NITFD FARMF.RS ' Co-operative Creamery Association, Inc. Charlestown, Massachusetts From Filmier to Consumer UPTOWN SCHOOL OF MODERN DANCING 15 I ' riiiilf Lpxsoiis $5.00 ( iitlfr prrstnittl tiirt ' rtion of .Miss Sliirlrv Htiycs Soriul ilaiiriiiy niglilli from ' .) P.M. to 12 P.M . fealurhiij -l i.v.v Harriet Carrnll ' s .i ' young laily iunlrurlnr.i IIOI RS: 10 .4.M.—I2 P.M. :t:m Mass. ivc Tel. CIR- ' HIHf, EAT? OF COURSE vol ' DO. THEN EAT THE BEST FOR THE LEAST AT THE GRILL DINER () WILL FIND us AT THE CORNER OF AMES AND MAIN STREETS BEHIND THE DORMS. E. D. ABBOTT CO. INC. Printers 181 Massachusetts Avenue Boston, Mass. Ken more 4051 — 3277 Fraternity Work a Specialty Flowers Telegrapher to All Parts of the World The Florists ■Special Discount Rales to . I. I. T. .Students 118 Massachusetts Ave. Tel. Kenmore 6829 BOSTON, MASS. S Ml. ' EL Holmes J. Frederick Holmes Frank V. Holmes Samuel Holmes, Inc. Wholesale and Retail POULTRY AND GAME STALLS 17-19-21-25-25 FANEUIL HALL MARKET Basemevt 3 South Side Te . Capitol 0708-0709-0710 BOSTON, MASS. Compliments o f a Friend Once ag ain .Molloy-Macle |iKilit and workmanship scores as the 1936 Teclin que is cased in J Molloy-Made cover 1 roiii THE DAVID J. MOLLOY PLANT _ ' cS,i7 NOR Til WKSIKKN AXKNTl-: CHIC GO ILLINOIS 323 DO YOU KNOW . THAT the architect for the Institute ' s plant in Cam- bridge was Welles Bosworth, class of 1889? . The construction was done by Stone and Webster, Inc., the heads of which, Charles A. Stone and Edwin S. Web- ster, were members of the class of 1889 . . . That the Institute stands on made land which was once covered bv the Tidal Basin of the Charles River? . The full width of the main buildings from east to west is 790 feet and the depth is 675 feet. The distance across the great court is 365 feet. The buildings composing the main educational group are underlaid by 25,000 piles and have approximatelv three miles of corridors, leading to 1000 classrooms . That the Institute ' s telephone system includes a switch board large enough to serve a good sized town, with 550 separate telephones? . . . The bill for telephone service totals more than 31,000 per month . . . That, in 1934-35, the Institute balanced its budget of approximately 52,695.000 by a margin of S238.73? , . . That the Institute had graduate students last year from 167 colleges and universities, of which 35 were foreign institutions? That this vear marks the sevenr -hfth anniversary of the granting of Technology ' s charter? That Electrical Engineering has the largest number of students of anv course at the Institute with Chemical Engineering second? . . . This course has produced 105 corporation presidents, 67 vice-presidents, 27 chief en- gineers, 26 consulting engineers, 16 full professors of electrical engineering, 10 general managers, 9 heads of electrical engineering departments, 8 deans of engineer- ing, besides directors of research, general superinten- dents, and various others holding posts of responsi- bility- . . . That the Technology alumni body now totals 35,000, of which approximately 31,000 are living? . . . Last vear 106,000 pieces of mail matter were sent to these alumni by the Institute and the Alumni Association . . . That ever - vessel now in the United States fleet was designed and built under the supervision of holders of the M.I.T. degree? . . . That during the years 1868-1934, the Institute awarded 18,776 degrees in the various branches of science and ar- chitecture? . . . COURSE VIII GRADUATES of Course ' III from a few years back would hardlv know the course any more. With the coming of President Compton to the Institute, a new im- petus was given to research in pure physics. Good work had been done in this held previously in the department, as those who know Vallarta, Mueller, arren, Stock- barger, and a number of others ver}- well realize. But a number of new staff members were added, and many new fields of research are being actively carried on. The new George Eastman Laboratory- has helped mightily in this development, providing tine laboratorv space as a sub- stitute for the cramped quarters in the basement of Build- ings 4 and 8. Along with the development of staff and facilities has come a great increase in numbers in Course Xlll, in both undergraduate and graduate years. The Institute is now one of the most sought-after centers in the countrv for graduate and advanced work in physics. At the same time, enthusiasm for advanced research in pure physics has not produced any lack of interest in undergraduate work, or in the more practical and applied side of phvsics. The undergraduate curriculum has been largelv revised and strengthened, and next year a new option in Applied Physics will be offered for the first time in recent years. This option, combining fundamental phvsics with thorough work in chemistry, electrical engineering, metallurgy, as well as mathematics, will provide the ideal training for men going into the more scientific side of industry-. Many contacts are being made between the department and industrial concerns, indus- trial leaders have expressed the wish for men with just the sort of training the new option will yield, and there is everv indication that many more men could be placed than the department is likely to have available. Work in Applied Phvsics in the graduate school and in research is also being actively carried on, and many recent recipients of advanced degrees have secured excellent positions. The old idea that physics led onlv to academic positions is being rapidly overcome. 324 • SKXIORS AND MI:MI5KRS OV TH1-: FACILTV WHOSE PHOTOGRAPHS APPEAR IX THIS BOOK ARE URCED TO ORDER ADDITIONAL APEDA PORTRAITS IMMEDIATELY, SINCE WE FLXD I l ' NECESSARY TO DISCARD THESE NEGATIVES PERIODICALLY. • WHILE THE NEGATIVES REMAIN IN OCR FILES, THESE PORTR.AITS WILL BE A ' AILABLE, BEArTIFULLY FINISHED IN FIVE MOUNTS, AT OCR SPECIAL SCHOOL RATES. May we suggest: Six 8x10 Portraits in our heaiititul I -or - finish for Si 2.00. Please send a deposit of S5.00 with your order. The portraits will be mailed C.O.D. for the balance. Other styles and sizes are available at the special rates of from eight to thirt - dollars a dozen. APEDA STUDIO, INC. 212 West 48th St. Xcw ■)I-k City Tel.: Chickrrinu 4-3960 325 PROFESSOR HARRY WENTWORTH GARDNER Department of Architecture A FONDNESS for drawing influenced Professor Harry VVentworth Gardner to turn to architecture at the end of his freshman year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and it was in this field that he received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1894, although he had entered the Institute in 1890 with the intention of becoming a mechanical engineer. Immediately upon graduation he was appointed to the teaching staff of the Architectural School of the Institute. Since then he has held a succession of posts, culminating in his appointment, in 1920, as Professor of Architectural Design. When Professor Gardner chose teaching as a life-work he injected in it the full force of his personality and im- agination. One of his most successful innovations was to introduce modeling into the architectural course in order to give the students a three-dimensional view of their projects. This, along with many other improvements, has served to make him one of the most valuable men of the Rogers staff. In addition to his teaching. Professor Gardner has done a great deal of independent design work for the Institute. His best known design is the Silver Room in the Walker Memorial. This room is a triumph of mod- ernistic design, featuring a cleverly-arranged indirect lighting system which plays on silvered walls, bordered with jet-black for contrast. Besides this beautiful apart- ment. Professor Gardner designed the Faculty Dining Room in Walker Memorial and the Speaker ' s stand at President Compton ' s Inauguration. Professor Gardner ' s favorite hobby is sketching, with both water colors and pastels. Several of these sketches, made, as he says, solely for my own amazement and amusement, have been exhibited at the Architectural School along with those by other artistic members of the faculty. Professor Gardner spends his summers in New Hamp- shire, the state of his birth. He was born at Dover on June 8, 1873, but was taken to Boston at the age of five, where he attended grammar and high school. Eleven vears after his graduation from the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, on June 6, 1906, Mr. Gardner was married to Celia M. Brophv. One of his sons attended business school and the other graduated from the Institute after taking the course in Biology and Public Health. COURSE XV IN keeping with its object of giving students a thor- ough grounding in the fundamentals of business and economics as well as in the basic engineering sciences, the Department of Business and Engineering Administration is continually introducing new methods of advanced instruction. A case in point is the Honorary Sponsorship plan of graduate training whereby engineering graduates of other departments are invited to undertake an intensive year in the study of business administration under the guidance of the department and the tutelage of twenty- five industrialists of the rank of president, vice-president or board chairman. A comprehensive examination is given in the form of a Senior course, in which a dozen business men assume the roles of examiners and weigh the ability of the student to deal with a maior problem from their own industry. Twenty-five upperclassmen each summer make an in- dustrial tour of France, Switzerland, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Scotland and England in specially designed buses provided bv the Thorne-Loomis Foundation. In all subjects, increased attention is given to the writing and speaking of correct English, and greater emphasis is being placed upon thesis research. The in- creasing number of graduate students clearly indicates that the advantages of specialized study of an advanced nature in this field are being more and more keenly real- ized. Numerous changes have been made in the personnel but the familiar faces of Professor Doten, Armstrong, Tucker, and Fernstrom are still here. Dr. Dewey also continues to hold sway at his editorial desk on the second floor. Among the new additions to the staff are Albert A. Schaefer who is presenting the courses in law and politi- cal institutions, Ronald H. Robnett and Herman P. Meissner who are assisting in accounting and marketing, and Herbert T. Smith who is handling the newer tech- niques of motion study and work simplification in the recently organized management laboratory. 326 JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 617 Welt Waihinston Blvd.. - Chicago, Illinois In ihe foreground - Ft. Dearborn re-erccied in Grant Park on Chicago ' s lake front. Illustration by Jahn 6- Oilier Art Studios; 327 Good Yearbooks DonH Just Happen ' 1 IIEY may vary tremendously in size, design, and cost, but all successful yearbooks have one thing in common . . . they represent hours of careful planning and painstaking workmanship. The I9.3h Terliiii(iiie is no exception. The staff has worketl long and tliligently in order to make it an interesting and a«Turate record of ihc college year. It has been our privilege to assist in the pub- lication of ibi ' book, working in close association with the members of the board. We wish to take this opportunity to thank them for their co-operation and to congratulate them on the results of ihcir labors. THE AND OVER PRESS A N D () E K !M A S S A C II I S E T T S 329 Editors ' Note This year Technique has made the alumnus the dom- inating motif throughout the book, has dedicated the volume to him, and has pictured some of his achieve- ments. In accordance with this plan there is being offered the Alumni Supplement intended to give the graduate a brief contemporary picture of the Institute of which he was once a part. We wish to express our appreciation to Mr. James Rhyne Killian, Jr., for his assistance in editing the Supplement, and to the contributors, particularly the deans, for their part in the preparation of this section. Editors Jacques K. Laflamme Lea H. Spring Assistant Editors Jay p. AuWerter Homer R. Oldfield 330 Directory of Students Aaronson, Burton David, i ' AM Abbott, M.itthcvv Cochrane Abbott, Mortimer DuiritlJ Abbott, William Edward Abdou, James Louis . . Achtcrkirchen, Karl Howard, S.B. Acker, Alden Ernest Acker, David EIric Acker, Harold Gordon Ackerman, Joseph, Jr. Adams, Joseph Cockrell, US Adams, Louis Francis Adams, Ralph Guy, Jr., ATA . dams, Richard Carleton . gnew, James Carson, «N Ahmad|ian, Archver Nicholas Akin, Francis Tabcr, AT1 Akin, George Alfred. B.S. . kiii. Thomas Bryant, ATS. ' . ksoniitas. William Hdw.ird Albagli, Reina, BA., M.A. lbee. Burton Hathaway .Mbision, Roger Clayton . , ldcr, Robert Lee . . .Mdrich, John Winthrop . .Mexander, . rthur Henry Ale. ander, John Dav, HAX Alexander, Robert Mathen . lgor, Marshall Merritt . Alien, Harriet Whitnev, B.A., S.B. Allen, Hubert Werts, B.S., M.S. . llen, James Burnell, i;. .Mien, John Frederick, 1 MA .Mien, John Pitkin .Mien, Lewis Hunter Allen, Paul Wheeler . , , Allen, William Boyd, S.B. . .Mtman, Frederick Jerome .Mtman, ' ictor . aron , lvarez, Reinaldo Ponce . mes,, James Bradford .■nderson, .Mden Henry, PA( . nderson, . rthur Roland, SB . nderson, Herbert Hale, A.B. . nderson, Howard Lee, Jr., AKE Anderson, Lars James .Anderson, Richard Kerfoot, B.S Andreas, John Moore, B.S. . Andrew, Gordon Wirth Andrews, Cornelius Richard Andrias, James .... . ngevine, Oliver Lawrence, Jr., .Anslow, William P.irker, Jr. .■nthony, Riley Edward . ntoni, Charles Michael . .• ntonio, Adolph Louis, SB. . pplegarth, -■Mexander Rufus, Jr . rabian, Karekin Gaspar . rgcrsinger, John Irvin Arias, . ntonio, K . rino, .Augusto Clemeiue Armat, Thomas, B.S., X ■Arnold, James Alden .Arnold, Kenneth James .Arnold, Robert Lencve .Arnold, Stuart X ' eeder, ' PVA Arnold, William Otto Arthur, Paul, Jr., B.S. . . . Assmann, Frederick Fera, Oi .Atkinson, Edward Redmond, S.B Atvvater, Franklin Simpson . .Auerb,ich, Henry Austin, Charles Lewis, Jr, ZK Austin, John Churchill, BOlI .Austin, John Frazar Austin, William Henry .AuWerter, Jay Pearce, X l .Avondoglio, Leo Charles, Ki; Aver, John, Jr Ayer, Nathan Chase, FA Paf,i 86 80 72 S.M. AH 97 59 97 97 72 66 135 97 59 90 72 116 Class Course ■s xv„. Vl-B 57 X 36 Mil 36 Ui Gr..d. XVI ■37 xv,„ ■38 X ■38 XIII ■36 Gr.ad. Sp. VI ■36 1-C ■38 I-A ■39 XIV ■37 I •37 XVib •38 II Grad. X ■39 IV ■37 II Gr-id. Vlll ■39 X ■37 I ■38 VI ■37 II ■38 IV ■39 XVI ■39 ' I-A ■39 VI-A Grad . VIII Grad. VIII •36 X ■39 VI-A 36 IV 38 XVI ■37 III, Grad. I --A ■37 VI-A ■38 XIV •39 IX-B •37 V •36 XIII-C Grad. I Grad. V ■36 X •36 XV2 Grad. XIII-A Gr.id. X ■39 VI ■39 II ■39 VI ■36 VI-C ■36 Y ■39 VI-A ■37 I Grad. X Grad. VI-A •37 X ■38 II ■39 II •38 II ■38 XV,„ ■39 X ■36 Sp. XVIII ■39 I ■39 11I3 ■37 VI-A Gr.id. V ■36 X Grad . x •38 XV,e ■39 VI •36 IV-B ■36 IX-B •38 Unc. •38 Ill ■38 XVI ■37 III2 ■36 VI-C •36 XV2 Home AclJress 39 Fuller St., Brookline, Mass. •1589 Roval St , Montreal, Quebec 55 West St., Glassboro, N.J. 18 Stowell Road, Winchester, Mass. 275 Shawmut Ave., Boston, Mass. 1607 V.irnum St. N.W., Washington, D. C. 162 Prospect .Ave., Revere, Mass. Box 62, Warren Road, Seckonk, Mass. 51 Aniesbury St., North Quincy, Mass. Littleton Common, M.ass. 3800 Hawthorne Ave., Richmond, Va. 33 Laurie .Ave , West Roxbury, Mass. 27 Grant St., Needham, M.iss. Washington St., Holliston, Mass. 844 South El Molino .Ave., Pasadena, Calif. H Elm St., Whitinsville, Mass. 15 Anthony St., New Bedford, Mass. 508 Washington St., Princeton, Ky. 15 .Anthony St., New Bedford, M.ass. 15 Capitol Ave., Hartford, Conn. 1 North York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 17 Richwood St., West Roxbury, Mass. 641 East .Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. 3859 Piatt Ave., Fresno, Calif. 21 Dixwell Ave., Quincy. Mass. 2 ) Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. 43 Orchard St., Greenfield, Mass. 1821 Cumberland St., Rockford, 111. 120 Willow St., Fair Haven, N. J. Durham, New Hampshire Russell, Iowa 7 East 62nd Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. 266 Highland .Ave., West Newton, Mass. 94 Berkshire Road, Newtonville, M.ass. 452 Girard Ave., East Aurora, N. Y. 7200 McCallum St., Philadelphia, Pa. 17 Farwell Place, Cambridge, Mass. 542 East 79th St., New York, N. Y. 2264 Grand Ave., New York, N. Y. Cid No. 139, Cienfuegos, Cuba 149 Rotch St., New Bedford, Mass. 23 Wyman Road, Marhlchcad, Mass. 517 North 1st St., Tacoma, Wash. 1932 Commonwealth Ave., Auburndale, Mass. 1601 West 5th .Ave., Garv, Ind. 190 Phillips Ave., BeachBluff, Mass. 38 Mentelle Park, Lexington, Ky. 1436 River Ro.id, West Englewood, N. J. Main St., West Boxford, M.ass. 26 Cedar St., Charlestown, Mass. 93 Burrill St., Swampscott, Mass. 507 Laurelton Road, Rochester, N. Y. 8 Berkelev St., Arlington, Mass. 2923 North 61st St., Omaha, Nebr. R.F.D. 5, Ridgefield, Conn. 310 New Castle St., Minersville, Pa. 86 South Long Beach .Ave., Freeport, N. Y. 230 South Huntington Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 133 Collins Road, W.aban, M.iss. Box 2070, Guantanamo, Cuba Parada 53 North Nerridas, San Juan, Porto Rico ■■Greystone, ' Klingle Road, Washington, D. C. 8220 Austin St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. 327 Middle St., Pawtucket, R. I. 77 South Munn .Ave., East Orange, N.J. 48 Vine Road, Larchmont, N. Y. 4196 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 2048 Home Ave., Chicago, III. 24 Haddonlield Road, Short Hills, N.J. 35 Hawthorne Road, Brookline, Mass. 109 Elbridge Road, New Britain, Conn. 67 • ' C St., Lowell, Mass. 87 Strong St., New York, N. Y. 1512 South Division St., Spokane, Wash. Cedar Lane, Cohasset, Mass. 45 Child St., Hyde Park, Mass. 2711 Colchester Ro.id, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 45-15 42nd St., New York, N. Y. 22 ernon St., West Medford, Mass. 75 Ohio St., Bangor, Me. 331 Directory of Students Same Babcock, Willard Farrington, BOn Bachniann, Louis, Jr., tBA Badenoch. Benjamin Wilson, ATS Baer, Maurice Bagg, Alfred Guy, B.A. . . Baggerman, Frederick Peters, P K Bagnulo, Aldo Hector Bain, Walter Gelvin, Jr., A.B. Bakarian, Puzant William Baker, Arthur Kay Baker, Frank Baker, Henry Francis . Baker, James Golladay, I Ki: Baker, John Frederick Baker, Merton Otto Baker, Solomon Baldwin, Woodson William, Jr. Baldyga, Walter Vincent Joseph Ballard, Walter Paige Bandomer, Russell William, 2N ' Banos, Alfredo, Jr., B.E. Banzett, Howard Baral, Leon, KME Barbarossa. Nicholas Leonard Barbera, Raymond Thomas . Barclay, John Archibald, Jr., B.S. Barnahy. Donald Robert Earl Baron, Sidney Moses Barr, Norris Gard, KZ Barrett, Frank Joseph Barry, Arthur Watson, B.Eng. Barstow, Frederick Edward, A.B Barstow, Ormond, S.B. Barrels, Charles Richard . Bartholomew, Edward Langdon Bartlett, David Albert, ATS Bartlett, David Bradt ... Bartlett, William Walker, S.B., S.M. Bartol, Louis Cabot Barton, James Winter Bates, Alexander Peck, Jr. Bates, Paul Baum, Sidney, B.S. Bayer, Joseph Bays, George Samuel, Jr., B.S., S.M. Beaman, David Webster, Jr., AT Bearse, Arthur Everett, B.S. Beaujean. John Alden, ATA Bebie, Hans .... Beckman, Ronald Edwin Beckw ith, William Boynton, AT Bedford, Norman Clark . . Beebe, Royden Eugene, B.A. Beer, George William, BHn Beesley, George Behrsing, Carl Robert Belknap, Phoenix, A.B., M.Arch. Bell, Chauncey Frederick, Jr., 4 Belser, Anthony Albert, Jr., B.S. Belser, Richard Charles ... Bemis, Alan Cogswell, A.B., S.M. Bender, Welcome William, Jr. Benecke, Richard Erwin . Benenson, Lawrence Allan, DAM Bennison, Bertrand Earl .... Benson, John Albert Benson, John Goffe. SB. Benson, Robert Elliott Benson, William Melville, AKE Bent, Franklin Newall, Ki; . Bentley, Edward Patterson Bentley, George Patterson, SB, SM. Berg, Quentin, t rA Bergen, William Benjamin, ATA Bergeson, Lloyd, J rA Bergman, John Walter Berman, Frank Raymond Bernays, Peter Michael, J BA Bete, John Upham ... ?agi C ass Course ■39 I •38 XV.c ■39 XVI ■37 X ■37 VI-A ■37 11 37 ■36 XI 59 •36 IX-B ■37 XI ' 72 •36 VI ■39 II •39 X 97 •36 X •39 V 72 •36 VI •39 X •39 XV,. •38 X ■37 I 72 •36 I-A Grad. VIII •38 II •38 X •38 I •39 XVI Grad. II Armv Ord. ■3s VI ' •38 X ■38 T-A •37 IV Grad. X Grad. vm Grad, VIII 38 X •37 II •39 UIo ■37 I Grad. vm ■37 u ■39 XVI ■38 xin ■39 Sp. IV 97 Grad. X ■38 X Grad. X •38 II Grad. V •39 X •39 m. 44 •36 u, 90 •36 IX-B •38 XV, b Grad. XVI ■38 XVib ■39 X ■37 T-A •39 Sp. IV •38 XVI 116 Grad. XV ■39 XVI Grad. XVI •38 XVI ■39 X ■40 IV ■37 VII, ■37 II-A Grad. II ■37 II 25 ■36 XVI •39 X •39 XVI Grad. XVI ■37 II ■37 XVI ■38 XUI ■39 XVI 37 ■36 I. •39 V 44 ■36 n. Home Address 21 Orient Ave., Newton Centre, Mass. 995 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. 193 Fuller St., West Newton, Mass. 5626 Connecticut Ave., W ashington, D. C. 318 Summit Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 731 Radcliffe Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 44 Vane St., Revere, Mass. c-o Dr. Bain, St. Johns Hospital, Springfield, 111. 109 Cushing Ave., Belmont, Mass. 238 Rutgers Place, Nutley, N. J. 271 Crescent St., Brockton, Mass. 147 Erie St., Cambridge, Mass. 304 South Main St., Madisonville, Ky. 124 West Colorado St., Grand Junction, Col. 52 Putnam St., Orange, Mass. 73 Fayston St., Roxbury, Mass. 1463 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 37 Bullard St., Dorchester, Mass. 15 Liberty Parkway, Dunalk, Md. Springfield Ave., Springfield, N.J. 24 Chauncv St., Cambridge, Mass. 92 Belknap St., Dover, N. H. 1803 College St., Cedar Falls, Iowa 8 Green St., Watertown, Mass. 14 Eaton St., Boston, Mass. Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass. 59 Cheever St., Milton, Mass. 1414 .Albanv Ave., Hartford, Conn. 6 Odell Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 71 Fayerweather St., Cambridge, Mass. 4215 Dorchester St. W., Montreal, Que. 802 West Main St., Midland, Mich. 802 West Main St., Midland, Mich. 57 Taylor Place, South Orange, N. J. 35 Clifton Ave., Marblehead, Mass. 613 Third St., Marietta, Ohio 17 Newton St., Belmont, Mass. 49 Bicknell St., Quincy, Mass. 1514 Canton Ave., Milton, Mass. 49 Park St., Newport, N. H. 11 Warren .Ave., Oaklawn, R. I. 4 Otis Place, Boston, Mass. 677 South 18th St., Newark, N. J. 149 Shore Drive, Winthrop, Mass. 1934 South Evanston St., Tulsa, Okla. 8 Anthony St., New Bedford, Mass. 8 South Pleasant St., Sharon, Mass. Melbourne Beach, Florida 4207 Magnolia St., St. Louis, Mo. 65 Andrew Road, Swampscott, Mass. Petticoat Lane, Guilford, Conn. 238 Everett St., Wollaston, Mass. 16 John St., Providence, R. I. 3287 Berkeley Ave., Cleveland Heights, Ohio 424 Springfield St., Chicopee, Mass. 453 Winter St., Walpole, Mass. 88 Chestnut St., Boston, Mass. P.O. Box 310, Greeley. Col. 983 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. 983 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Cochituate Road, Wavland, Mass. 699 Newark Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. 67 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. 262 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. 54 Marion St., Brookline, Mass. 20 Barrows St., Dedham, Mass. Heron Lake, Minnesota 158 Lincoln Road, Brooklvn, N. Y. 158 Lincoln Road, Brooklvn, N. Y. Holly Oak, Del. 20 Exeter St., Quincy, Mass. 20 Exeter St., Quincy, Mass. 222 Derrom Ave., Paterson, N. J. 187 Cleveland Ave.. Mineola, N. Y. 885 Beacon St., Newton Centre, Mass. 55 Pine St., Stoneham, Mass. 1715 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. 1 Wall St., New York, N. Y. 419 Washington St., Stoughtpn, Mass. 332 Directory of Students Bethea, James Stephen, B.S. Bethel, John Soiithworth, Jr. Belts, Ch.irles Henry Beve, Willard Roger, AT Bever, RuJolph Robert, OAX Biancardi, Michael Francis Bickncll, Joseph, S.B. Bigelow, Julian Himely Binder, William Van Landingham Birch, Norman , nton Birdsall, Bernard Berens Bishop, Charles Kay, BOIl Bishop, Howard Berkey, Jr., X Bittel, Francis Jack, I .MA Bittenhender, Robert Austin Bixby. Willard Frederick, SB. Biorkman, Samuel . lbert B|orkman, Thomas . ndrew Black, Francis Loudon, B.S. Black, Paul Bravden . . Black, Ross Elliot, Jr. Blackburn, Gerald Allen, B.E. . Blackwood, Frances Christine Blaisdell, Kenneth Lucas, B.S., AT Blake, George Rich.ird Blake, Walter True, J-rA Blakely, Ale.xander Muller, Jr., S.B., S.M. Blakcly, Leonard Pearson . . Blakeman, Thomas Ledyard, A Blakistone, James Thomas Blank, . lbert Irving . Blank, Wilhelm . Blanton, David Anderson, Jr., X ' l Blessing, Charles Alexander, B.S., ATA Bliss, Ames, AKE ... Bliss, Philip Block, Seymour Stanton, J BA Bloom, Louis David ... Bloomgarden, Barclay Howard, t BA Blue, Emanuel Morse, B.S. . Bluestein, Robert Alvin, i:AM Blunt, Robert Matteson . Bode, William Fred Boissevain, Mathys Gideon Jan, AKE Boland, Frederick Edward Boland, William .Arnold, B.S. Bond, Chester Edward Bone, Alexander Jamieson, S.B. Bonzagn:, Francis Anthony, B.S. Booth, Lance Ernest, Jr., B.S. Booton, John Griffeth, Jr. Borden, Herbert Mowry Borg, Milton Harold . Bossange, Edouard Raymond, Jr., A Bosworth, Lawrence Arthur, B.S. . Bouchard, Constant Leo . Boulware, Ford Millspaugh, ' M ' A Bowditch, Mary Childers Bowen, Edward Potter, AKE Bowen, Harold Gardner, Jr., B.S. Bowser, Alden Patterson . Boyan, Edwin Arthur, BOII Boytano, Carl Renfrew- Bracken, Frank Loron, B.S. Branca, Joseph Thomas, B.S. Brandon, George Elmer, Jr., J rA Brauer, Robert John Breed, Helen Louise, A.B. Bretiman, Hyman Brewer, Given Ankeney Brewster, Edward Lancaster, . .B. Brewster, William Souther, 8AX Breyer, Julius, Jr Briggs, Philip Gardner, AKE Briggs, Robert Harris Brigham, .Man Edwin Brisse. . ndre Hubert Briitenham, Edward Arthur. Jr, AT Britton, Ho v,ird Elmer . Pifge Class Course ■37 XIU-A •3S XI 130 ' 36 XVII ■37 u •39 X ■38 II Grad. XVI Grad. VI-A ■38 X •37 II13 36 XIII •39 X ■37 X ' . ■38 X ■39 I Grad . X-A ■37 X ■38 xv,„ Grad. XVI ■38 VI-B ■37 XIII Grad. Sp. II •37 V 72 Grad. VI ■39 VI •37 XVib Grad. III (Cer.) 72 ' 36 VI-C 59 ' 36 IV-B •38 XV, b •37 XIV Grad. XVI 116 ' 36 XV,. ■37 IV ■39 VI •37 VI-C •39 VI ■37 X •36 VII, Grad. X-A ■36 IX-B ■38 VIII 44 36 II« ■39 II ■38 VII2 Grad. XVI ' 38 XV, Grad. I Grad. V Grad. V •37 XVj 97 ' 36 X •38 VI-B ■38 XV,e Grad. II Armv Ord. 44 •36 II2 53 36 III. ■40 Sp. IV •39 IIIi ■37 XIII-A ■39 VIA 44 36 II. ' , Gr.ad. VI-A Grad. I •36 Sp. ' •39 X ■37 X Grad. VII ■37 VI-A ■3S VI 110 36 XIII •39 II ■38 VI-A •37 XIII-C •39 II 116 36 XV, 1, 97 36 X-B •37 n •38 VI-A Home Aiidrtss 105 Murphy Drive, Prescott, Ariz. 55 West Boylston St., Watertown, Mass. 165 Slade St., Belmont. Mass. 69 Peck St., Rochester, N. Y. 148 P,irksidc Ave , Brooklyn, N. Y. 311 Kenrick St., Newton, Mass. 295 Front St., Weymouth, Mass. 5 Baltimore St., Millis, Mass. 1615 Queens Road, Charlotte, N. C. 63 Stimson St., West Roxbury, Mass. 1 Woodleigh Ro.id, Dedham, Mass. Washougal Woolen Mills, Washougal, Wash. 33 Prospect Hill Ave., Summit, N. J. 7343 Const.ance Ave., Chicago, III. 55 Bowen St., Newton Centre, Mass. 32 Grand Ave., Baldwin, N. Y ' . 201 Tremont .■ve., Orange, N. J. 201 Tremont Ave., Orange, N. J. 7 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. 50 Willow St., Wollaston, Mass. 345 Montauk Ave., New London, Conn. Main St., . ylesford, N. S. 885 Mass.achusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 31 North Mast St., GolTstown, N. H. 85 Vernon St., Waltham, M.iss. 1235 Norwood Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mt. Pleasant St., North Billerica, Mass. 7 Central Place, Newburyport, Mass. North Truro, .Mass. 526 Jackson St., Seattle, Wash. 18 Pine St., . ttleboro, Mass. 23 Koburgerstrasse, Bonn, Germany 4936 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. ' 1060 12th St., Boulder, Col. Hawthorne Lane, Flossmoor, 111. 18 .Allen St., Newburyport, Mass. 299 Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. 1000 East Rittenhouse St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1191 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 253 Buena Vista, San Francisco, Calif. 46 Willow Road, Woodmere, N. Y. 1019 Downing St., Denver, Col. 220 Carleton St., Lawrence, Mass. 321 Keizersgracht St., Amsterdam, Holland 2 Bayou St., Winthrop, Mass. 39 Hawthorne Road, Milton, Mass. 7 Orchard St., Everett, Mass. 11 Bn-idlield Ave., Roslindale, Mass. 460 Pleasant St., Winthrop, Mass. 254 East 2nd Ave., Roselle, N. J. 1332 31st St., Washington, D. C. 566 Cohannet St., Taunton, M.1SS. 45 Garden St., . ttleboro, Mass. 525 West 238th St., Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y . 9 Fairview Ave., Watertown, M.ass. 6 Park St., Topsfield, M.ass. 230 West Twohig St., San Angelo, Texas 20 Louisburg Square, Boston, Mass. 5815 Buffalo Ave., Ni.igara Falls, N. Y. 2819 Woodley Road N.W., W.ashington, D. C. 358 Pleasant St., Brockton, M.iss. 113 Butler St., Kingston, Pa. 274 Parkway, Chelsea, M.ass. 150 Blair St., Westmont, Johnstown, Pa. 86 Greenbrier St., Dorchester, Mass. Bellefonte St., . shland, Ky. 89 Durnell , ve., Roslindale, Mass. 19 Orchard Road, Swampscott, Mass. 394 Quincy St., Dorchester, Mass. 33 Maple Ave., New Bedford, Mass. 15 Linnaean St., Cambridge, Mass. Wiirren Ave., Plymouth, Mass. 2134 Acklen . e., Nashville, Tenn. Rehoboth, Mass. Coeymans, N. Y. 31 Pleasant St., Ware, M.iss. 388 County St., New Bedford, Mass. 606 South Michigan St., Chicago, III. 145 Nichols St., Norwood, Mass. 333 Directory of Students Name Pa e Class Course Home Address Broadbent, Wilfrid Cole ' 39 Vila 31 Talbot Manor, Edgewood, R. I. Brockett, William Hume, I i;K ' 36 XVj 3303 Highland Place, Washington, D. C. Brod, Bernard, ZAM ' 38 II 135 West 27th St., New York, N. Y. Brookes, John Richard, i rji ' 37 IV Box 150, Bradley Blvd., Bethesda, Md. Bross, Roger Barrett ' 39 VI 266 Avalon Drive, Brighton, Mass. Brothen, Frank Juel ' 38 II 46 Lowell Road, Concord, Mass. Broiight ' on, Geoffrey, B.Sc, M.Sc Grad. X 1 Camforth Ave, Rochdale, Lancashire, England Brovvn, Chester Her ' vev, Jr. ... . ' 36 IV-A 78 Plymouth Road, Maiden, Mass. Brown, ' Edwin Miles ' ' 39 X 17 Cottage St., Norwood, Mass. Brown, Frank William, III, X ' 38 VIII 1104 North George St., Rome, N. Y. Brown, Gordon Stanley, S.B., S.M Grad. VI Canberra, New South Wales, Australia Brown, Harold Arthur 55 ' 36 XIV Hampton Falls, N. H. Brown, Hawthorne Nevin . . .116 ' 36 XVib 116 Adams St., Bramtree, Mass. Brown, John Rowland, Jr., A. B., M. A Grad. X 3095 Lincoln Blvd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Brown, Russell Hayward ' 38 I 223 Temple St., West Ro.xbury, Mass. Brown, Samuel Preston ' 36 XV,,, 47 North Fullerton Ave, Montclair, N. J. Brown, Thomas Everett 72 ' 36 VI-C Elm Court, Cohasset, Mass. Brown, Walter Nicholas, Jr., SN ' 39 VI 15 Pembroke St., Garrett Park, Md. Bruijines, Hendrik ' 39 VIII South Barry Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Bruneau.Armand Louis, Jr ' 38 X 2 Stratford Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bryan, Joseph Gerard ' 37 IX-A 97 Green St., Melrose, Mass. Bryant, Richard Upham 44 ' 36 II2 47 Carver Road, Watertown, Mass. Buckle, George Augustus, Jr ' 37 IX-A 1 Hillside Ave., Wakefield, Mass. Budd, William Irving Hanson HO ' 36 XIII The Tudor, Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Budka, Metchie Joseph ' 39 VIIi 12 Ord St., Salem, Mass. Buechner, William Weber, S.B Grad. VIII 4275 Kendall St., Pacific Beach, Calif. Buerger, Newton Weber, S.B., S.M Grad. XI[ 52 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. BuHingt ' on, Francis Stephan, -tMA ' 37 IX-B 512 West Sullivan St., Olean, N, Y. Bulfum, William Wallace, Jr ' 38 II 153 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, N. J. Bulkley, Joel Burr 116 ' 36 XVib Bulkley Ave., Southport, Conn. Bull, Norman George, BBII 116 ' 36 XVi 3709 Northampton St., Washington, D. C. Burchard, Charles Henry ' 40 IV 32-46 48th St., Astoria, L. I., N. Y. Burditt, William Franklin, MA ' 38 XIV 85 North Main St., Rutland, Vt. Burke, John Garrett ' 38 III4 530 Weld St., West Roxbury, Mass. Burke, Theodore Emerv ' 38 III3 120 Shoshone St., Buffalo, N. Y. Burleson, David Pomeroy ' 38 XIII 203 White Park Road, Ithaca, N. Y. Burnet, William Bernard, rA . ' 37 II 2601 Euclid Place, Minneapolis, Minn. Burns, Daniel William . ' 36 I2 31 Reservoir Ave., Revere, Mass. Burns, Frank Dickason Paul ' 38 XVII 165 Court Road, Winthrop, Mass. Burns, John Robert, B.S Grad. Sp. X 5101 5th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Burns, Joseph Aloysius 116 ' 36 XVj 17 Perry St., Somerville, Mass. Burns, William Edwin ' 37 II-A 283 Oriole Parkway, Toronto, Ont. Burnside, Harvey Edgar Wayne, B.S Grad. X 612 Highland Ave., Bellevue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Burrall, William Fairfax . ... ' 38 VI 420 East Ridge St., Marquette, Mich. Burwell, ]ohn Townsend, Jr., SB., 1 BE . . Grad. VIII Millwood, Virginia Busch, Alfred Eugen, AKE ' 37 XVib 805 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, N. J. Butler, Gurdon Montague, Jr., B.S., M.S. Grad. Ill (Met.) 434 E. First St., Tucson, Ariz. Butler, Harold Hampton ' 38 V 697 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Butler, Harold William, ! MA ' 38 X 1115 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Butler, Robert Dexter, S.B Grad. XII 234 West 62nd St., Kansas City, Mo. Bviield, Abbott, AXA ' 38 X 843 South Linden Ave., Highland Park, III. Byron, William Henry ' 38 VII2 15 Felton St., Woburn, Mass. Cady, Robert Spaulding ' 39 XVic 15 Chester St., Groton, Conn. Cairns, Claude Douglas, SAE 116 ' 36 XVib 484 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Calderon, Cesar Augusto 44 ' 36 II3 Box 362, Rio Piedras, Porto Rico Caldwell, Robert James 72 Grad. VI-A Leeds Station, Kansas City, Mo. Calhoun, ' john Railey, B.S 98 Grad. X 68 Nowell Road, Melrose, Mass. Calkins, Wendell Harner ' 38 XIII 1177 South Windsor Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. Call, William Alden, B.S Grad. II Army Ord. Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass. Cameron, Clyde Eraser 37 Grad. I 239 Washington St., New Glasgow, N. S. Cameron, James Kenneth ' 38 VII2 43 Parker St., Cambridge, Mass. Camp, William Allen, Jr., AT ' 38 XVi 243 Plymouth Road, Newton Highlands, Mass. Campbell, Charles Barrett, X ' 38 X 27 Lochmoor Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Campbell, Delwin Morton, 2N 98 ' 36 X 1959 East 72nd Place, Chicago, III. Campbell, Dudley Howard, AKE ' 39 VI Glenville Road, Greenwich, Conn. Campbell, Jack Allan, B, A 72 Grad. VI 323 South Syndicate Ave., Fort William, Ont. Campbell! Robert Van Duyne ' 38 VIII 14529 Terrace Road, East Cleveland, Ohio Canning, William Prendergast, Ki; 116 ' 36 XVib 42 Broad St., Port Henry, N. Y. Cantor, Myron Abbott, BA . ' 39 XVI 84 Belvedere Drive, Yonkers, N. Y. Cao-Garcia, Jose, B.S ■' 39 II Castillo Luary — Santiago de Cuba Capen, Harold Norman , , . ' 39 VI 22 Morse Ave., Norwood, Mass. Caputo, Joaquin Albert ' 37 I 1661 Commonwealth . ' ye., Brighton, Mass. Cardani, Charles Peter ' 37 VI 65 Oak St., Hyde Park, Mass. Cargen, Everett Henry, Jr. 90 ' 36 IX-B 59 Fairmonr St., Belmont, Mass. Carleton, Granville Elbndge, tAO ' 39 II Union St., Camden, Me. Carlisle, Robert Lee, B.S. ... Grad. V 1007 South State St., Tacoma, Wash. Carlson! G unnard William, B.S. - . Grad. I 6 Wiley Road, Belmont, Mass. Carota, Arthur Andrew 130 ' 36 XVII 39 Malta St., Mattapan, Mass. 334 Directory of Students S me Carr, James Henry, Jr. Carr, Nicholas Elkinton, Jr., i;. Carroll, Daniel Reynolds, ST Careen, Frederick Howaril Carter, Douglas Martin Carter, John Coolidge Carter, Lawrence William, H. Carter, Marshall Sylvester, B.S. Cary, George Foster, II, . .B Case, William Erwin Casey, John Joseph Casselman, Robert Crozer, M ' A Castleman, Louis Samuel Cayford, James Merritt, B.Eng., M.Sc. Ceballos, Carlos Ernesto .... Cella, Richard Thomas, ATA Ccstoni, Dominic John Cettei, Michael Samuel, AXA Chadwick, Robert Billings Chalmers, Douglas, Kl . Chambers, Francis Stapleton, Jr., SB., S.M Chan, Kwok-Chue, B.S. Chance, William Moores, Jr. Chandler, Alaiison William, ATSi Chandler, Harry Stuart, Jr. . Chandler, Leonard Blanchard Chang, Hang Tsung ... Chang, Thomas Jokon, B Arch. Chang, Tsun-tsing, B.S., S.M. Chapin, John Franklin Chapin, Ralph Baldwin, X t Chapman, Gerard Chapper. Jack Chase, Charles Cheney, X Chase, Norman Charles Chatien, John Cornelius, Ki; Chen, Tsung shan, B.S., M.S., S.M. Cheng, Chao Chien Cheng, Kuo Yu Cherry, Allen Reed, i;X . Chester, William Graham, i; Chestnut, Albert Heath, BHII Chestnut, Harold . . Childs, Robert Stillson, -tAB Chin, jin Foo Chin-Park, David Chin-Park, Edward Chiswell, Edgar Burns, Jr., S.B., S.M Chiu, Yau Luk Chmielewski, Anthony Chodorow, Marvin Isidor, B.A. Christensen, Henry, Jr., L ' N Christensen, William Christenson, Dempster, 1 MA Christgau, . ' Krthur Henry, LWE Christie, Richard East Christopher, Edward Ernest, Jr. Chu, Lan-Jen, B.S., S.M. Chu, Sung-Way, B.S. . Church, Robert Tillinghast, ' K Cicalese, Michael Joseph, B.S. Cilley, Wesley Adams, eX . Cines, Martin Richard Clairee, Frederick Regan Clapp, Philip Fanshawe, B.A. Clarens, Angel Fernando . Clark, Edward Ross, Jr., SB., rx Clarke, Robert Goodhand, SB. Clement, Ian Duncan . Cleveland, Dean Chandler Cleworth, John Seymour, ATI; Clifford, James Mooar Clogston, Albert McCavour Cloud, Robert William, B.S. Clough, Francis Teiiney Cloutier, Armand Louis Cobb, Jonathan Billings Cobb, Ralph Bralev. AT ' J Coberly, Charles Wheeler, A.B. N Pai C JSS Course 37 •36 h •39 X 72 ■36 VI 66 36 V •37 XV, b •38 V •39 X Gr.id. I ' 38 XIII •37 II •39 X II ■39 X •39 VI Gr.id. III •38 III, 39 XVI ■37 X ■38 VI •39 XV, ■36 XV, Grad. X Grad. I ■39 I ■38 II •39 II 98 ■36 X-B 59 ■37 IV Grad. IV 59 Grad. VI ■38 X ■37 XVib 98 ■36 X 125 ■36 XVI ■37 XV2 ■39 II •39 X Grad. VI •3S Unc. •36 VI ■38 XV, ■38 II ■39 XVII •39 X ■37 VI-A ■39 V ■39 X ■40 IV Grad. X ■37 XIII ■38 XVie Grad. VIII 90 ■36 IX-B ■39 I ■38 VI-A ■38 X ■39 XVI 135 ■36 XVIII Gr.ad. VI Grad. II ■38 XIII-C Grad. X-A ■38 XV,e ■38 X ■37 x .. Grad. XVI ■38 I 53 Grad. III (Min Gr.id. III (Min •39 X ■38 VII ■38 VI ■37 XVI ■38 ' III 73 ■36 T-A ■38 II ■36 I ■37 ' ■38 l Grad. X-A Home Aii rtis 36 Spring St., Whitinsville, Mass. 57 Fosdyke St., Providence, R. I. 639 Turner St., Dallas, Texas 657 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 281 West Chestnut St., Kingston, N. Y ' . 18 Ionia St., Auburndale, Mass. 115 East 53rd St., New York, N. Y. West Point, N. Y. 389 Courtland Ave., Glenbrook, Conn. 20 South Franklin Ave., Valley Stream, N. Y ' . 34 Bartlett Ave., Arlington, Mass. 506 Roslyn Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. 133 Garland St., Everett, Mass. 1317 Ridge Ave., Steubenvillc, Ohio Villa Maria, Cordoba, Argentina 144 East 45th St., New York, N. Y. 10 Rocky Nook Terr.ice, Jamaica Plain, Mass. 320 Stevens St., Camden, N.J. 19 Davis St., Wollaston, Mass. Melbourne, Florida Elizabethtown, Pa. 7 Pottinger St., Hongkong, China 8 Swan Ave., South Weymouth, Mass. 1924 South Florence St., Tulsa, Okla. 60 Baby Point Crescent, Toronto, Ont. 8 Webster St., Winchester, Mass. 539 Taku Road, Shanghai, China 466 Pender St., E. Vancouver, B. C. Shanghai, China 122 High St., Reading, Mass. 37 Ellicott Ave., Batavia, N. Y. 126 East Fourth St., Hinsdale, III. 37 Duke St., Mattapan, Mass. 2691 St. James Parkway, Cleveland Heig hts, Ohio 21 Brookledge St., Roxbury, Mass. 1625 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. Ting Hsien, Hopei, China 400 Ave. Haig, Shanghai, China Kedoe, J.iva, Dutch East Indies 17894 Lake Road, Lakewood, Ohio 55 East 53rd Terrace, Kansas Citv, Mo. 783 Forest Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 2547 ' an Vranken Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 90 Spring Lane, Canton, Mass. 86 Harrison Ave., Boston, Mass. 7 Norfolk Road, Hong-Kong, China 7 Norfolk Road, Hong-Kong, China 4311 Argyle Terrace, Washington, D. C. 188 Reclamation St., Hong-Kong, China 41 Crescent St., Cambridge, Mass. 618 Sherman St., Buffalo, N. Y. 31 Reservoir Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Main St., Succasunna, N. J. 131 West 18th St., Sioux Falls, S. D. 555 Lexington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y ' . Box 235, Bridgeport, Conn. 100 Hampshire St., Cambridge, Mass. 11 Woo-Fong Lee Ave. Joffre, Shanghai, China Chekiang, China 4 Humboldt St., Cambridge, Mass. 3454 70th St., Jackson Heights, L. I., N. Y. 116 Chestnut St., Andover, Mass. 290 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 14 Trowbridge St., Newton Center, Mass. 20 BelleN ' ue A ' e., Cambridge, Mass. 43 Wilson Ave., Vedado, Havana, Cuba ) 579 Charles St.. Kingston, Pa. ) 158 Thorndike St., Cambridge, Mass. 190 Woodland Road, Woonsocket, R. I. 73 Hancock St., Boston, Mass. 36 Pilgrim Road, Melrose, Mass. 52 Milton Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 139 Greenwood St., Wakefield, Mass. 5 Hillcrest St., Saugus, Mass. 97 Perkins St., Melrose, Mass. 14 1 2th St., Attleboro, Mass. 167 Court St., Dedham, Mass. 79 Allen Ave., Portland, Me. 2115 South Hobart Blvd , Los Angeles, Calif. 335 Directory of Students Name Cocke, Norman Atuater, Jr., J BE Cody, Peer John Coffin, John James Currier . . Cogan, John Penney, A. B., S.M. Cohen, Arthur Mordecai, ifrBA Cohen, Edward Louis Cohen, Irving . Cohen, Jacob B. Cohen, Leonard Parker Cohen, Morris, S.B. Cohen, Richard Freeman, 2AM Cohen, Samuel Leo Coile, Russell Cleven . Cole, Peter Aldrich, A. B. Coleman, George William, B.S. Coleman, Wells .... Collins, Edward Joseph, S.B. Collins, Richard Bailey, B.S. Comley, Winthrop Delano Connolly, Donald Hilary, Jr. Conrad, Charles Tandy, liAE Constance, Philip Wendell Conway, John Philhin, Ph. B. Cook, Arthur Clayton Cook, Arthur Hall Cook, Edward Latham, S.B. Cook, Jackson Hancock Cook, John Ransom, J rA Cook, William Hough, Jr., M.E. Coombs, Cornelius Kingsland Cooney,John Russell, B.A. Cooper, Chester Lawrence Cooper, David Meade, BGII Cooper, Eugene Perry Cooper, Franklin Seaney, B.S. Cooper, Roscoe James, AKE Cooperstein, Ben|amin Copeland, Arch Hope, Jr., AT Copeland, Norman Arland, SAE Copeland, Warren Turner Corbett, John Bangs, B9II Corbino, Mario Corea, Edward Victor Corl, Wiley Franklin, Jr., K Corman, Harr ' Cornell, Sidney Cornfeld, Mosha Cosman, Bernard Johnson Costello, John Joseph, Jr. Cousins, Howard Milton, A.B. . Cox, John Tatum, Jr., B.S., M.S., BH Cragin. William Gannet . . . , Craig, James Robert, BBIl Craig, John Henry, t BE Crane, Horace Irving, SB. Crapon, Harry Dawley, Jr. Crawford, Perry Orson, Jr., K2 Creasy, William Murlin, Jr., B.S. Crede, Charles Edwin, B.S. . Cremer, George Dorland, itTA Cresswell, William Andrew, Jr., PMA Crocker, Frederic Payne Crockett, Flora Bartlett Croshere, Austin Burton, Jr., ATS2 Cross, Howard Page, B.A. Crout, Willard Ray, S.B., AXA Crowley, Arthur Henry, S.B. Cruciger, James Reid, 1 2K Crummey, George Francis Cude, Harold Eugene, Jr., X 1 Cummings, George Herbert, B.S. Cunliffe, Richard King Cunningham, John Dodge, Jr. Current, Farmer Lee Currier, Norman Lunt Curtis, Arthur Windbergh Curtis, Theron Smith, Jr., 6AX Curtze, Charles August, B.S. Cushing, Albert Melvin . Page a.iis Course . 98 ■36 X •38 X . 116 •36 XVib Grad. X . 86 ■36 VIII ■38 II ' 39 X ' 37 nil . 86 ■36 VIII Grad. III (Met •38 X 39 II ■38 VI-A Grad. VIII . 66 Grad. V ' 37 II-A Grad. IV-B ■36 Sp. XVII ■37 X •38 V ■39 XV, •39 XVI Grad. I •39 VI •39 IV Grad. II . 73 •36 VI-C •38 II . 125 Grad. XVI ■38 I ■38 II ■39 XV2 . no •36 XIII ■37 VIII Grad. VIII ■38 XVi . 116 •36 XV, ■38 Unc. ■36 II ■37 X ■37 XVib . 44 ' 38 II ■37 VI-C ■39 VI ■37 XVII . 44 ' 36 II2 ■39 X . 73 ■36 VI-A •37 I 44 Grad. Sp. II Grad. X 90 •36 IX-B . 45 •36 lis ■38 VI-A Grad, V ■37 XIII ■39 XVib . 98 Grad. X-A Grad. II ■39 II 45 ■36 II2 ' 38 VI •37 IV-B ■39 XVI •36 Sp. IV Grad. VIII . 98 Grad. X-A ■39 X . 117 ■36 XVi, ■38 IX-A - 98 Grad. X-A ■38 III4 •38 XVie •37 III, •37 II •39 V •39 XVI •37 XIII-A ■38 VI-C Home Address 816 Harvard Place, Charlotte, N. C. 38 Rockview St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 21 Flint St., Salem, Mass. 1716 North Nevada Ave., Colorado Springs, Col. 10 Brewster Terrace, New Rochelle, N. Y. 110 Chester St., Chelsea, Mass. 22 Alton Court, Brookline, Mass. 4 Parkvale Ave., Allston, Mass. 83 Barnaby St., Fall River, Mass. ) 78 Orange St., Chelsea, Mass. 1630 West 26th St., Minneapolis, Minn. 972 County St., New Bedford, Mass. Fort Monroe, Virginia Albion, N. Y. 28 Green St., Watertovvn, Mass. Kingston, R. I. 11 Rockville Park, Roxbury, Mass. Tuskegee Institute, Alabama 508 Merrimac St., Newburvport, Mass. 517 Cherry St., Winnetka, III. 808 Washington St., East Walpole, Mass. 6 Blackwood St., Boston, Mass. 45 Dixon St., Bridgeport, Conn. 110 Woodstock Ave., Rutland, Vt. 93 Maple Ave., Norwood, Mass. 68 Holten St., Danvers, Mass. 16 Belfry Terrace, Lexington, Mass. 146 South Irving St., Ridgewood, N. J. 28 Melrose Place, Montclair, N. J. Old Chester Road, Essex Fells, N. J. 1301 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 40 Schuyler St., Roxbury, Mass. 608 Putnam Ave., Terre Haute, Ind. 34 Myrtle Terrace, Winchester, Mass. 416 ' 2 West Capitol Ave., Springfield, III. 210 Hart St., Beverly Farms, Mass. 109 Vernon St., Roxbury, Mass. 54 Hoodridge Drive, Pittsburgh, Pa. 326 Defiance Ave., Findlay, Ohio 19 Ocean Terrace, Lynn, Mass. 17 University Road, Brookline, Mass. 58 Bruce Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 24 Atherton Ave., Roslindale, Mass. Box 571, Villanova, Pa. 27 Ormond St., Mattapan, Mass. 127 Mvrtle St., Boston, Mass. 5472 Berks St., Philadelphia, Pa. 16 Collins St., Newburyport, Mass. 31 South Union St., Rockland, Mass. 2423 D ' St., Eureka, Calif. 1623 7th St., New Orleans, La. 1414 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. 79 Robertson Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 335 Mountain Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. I Braebourne Road, East Milton, Mass. 22 Svcamore St., Somerville, Mass. 640 Hill Road, Winnetka, III. 805 Ann St., Wilmington, N. C. 577 South Braddock Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. II Hillcrest Drive, Pelham Manor, N. Y. 19 Gladstone St., Squantum, Mass. 32 Webster Place, Brookline, M ass. 236 Bay State Road, Boston, M.ass. 50 Tremont St., New Bedford, Mass. 22 East 47th St., New York, N. Y. 831 North 23rd St., Milwaukee, Wis. 83 Durant St., Lowell, Mass. 4307 Bigelow Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 22 South Main Ave., Albany, N. Y. 141 Pitkin St., Manchester, Conn. 302 Broadwav, Cape Mav, N. J. 155 East 44th St., New York, N. Y. 3 Beauport Ave., Gloucester, Mass. 1700 Fernwood Ave., Louisville, Ky. 446 Groveland St., Haverhill, Mass. 24 Mechanic St., Bellingham, Mass. 73 High St., North . ttleboro, Mass. 135 East Seventh St., Erie, Pa. 11 Groom St., Dorchester, Mass. 336 Directory of Students Nami Cushnie, John Lansing Cuthbcrt, Stuart Verne, Jr. Cutler, Monarch Littman, i:AM Cyr, Lawrence George DaJakis, George Dakin, Carl Frederic Dalai, Rustom Hornuis|i, B.Sc. Daley, Paul William Dana, Joseph Keith Danenberg, Eli Mercer Danforth, Francis Jenkins, Jr., A.B., A D ' . ngelo, Joseph Edward Dannenberg, Warren Banien Dantona, Leo Robert Darby, Jeb Stuart, Jr., B.S. Darrow, John Burgess Dasburg, . lfred van Cleve, . .]i. Dashefsky, Edward Leo . Dauphine, Thonet Charles, SB. Davidson, Robert James, Ki, Davies, William Edward . Davis, Elmer Wilbur Laurence Davis, Richard Gray, AO Davis, William Alexander Davisson, Frederick .Augustus, B.S. Days, Stephen Aloysius, Jr., AKK Davfon, Benjamin Bonne} ' de .Aragon. Orlando Carlos De. rment, George Stuart deCastro, Pedro .Alberto, } K Dee, Leo Henr Deering, Ronald Christv Decring, William Henrv DeFelice, Frank de Florez, Peter, A4 ' De Korp, Harold Edward, A B Delano, Charles Stephens Del Favero, Albert John, I K Delia, Balilla, AXA Demo, John Joseph, SB. Denton, Richard Arthur de Raismes, Goodwin, AKE de Raismes, Robert Embree, Jr., AKK de St. Malo, Alberto, S.B. . . De Tiere, Elmer Francis, Jr., t A0 DeSimone, Benjamin John Desjardins, Paul Rousseau Deutsch, Martin De ' eber, Leverett Howard Devereaux, Dana, K Devine, Warren Raymond, tMA DeVoe, Augustus Applebv, t VA DeWolf, Barbara Evans, A.B. DeWolfe, Richard Sears Dierksmier, Charles Moreau Dietz, Albert George, A.B,, SB. Di Salvatore, Philip Diver, John Randal, AKE Doane, Henrv M ' ers Dobbins, William Earl, S.B., S.M. Dobler, Oscar Sebastian Dobrin, Milton Burnett Dobrochowski, Vincent Joseph Dobrolet, Michael ... Dockendorff, Ralph Lloyd, B.S. Dodge, Charles Willis Dodge, Cleon Carter, K — Dodge, John Alfred, AT . Doggett, Towers Dolben, Arthur Joseph, 2;N Donahue, Edward William Donaldson, Harry Matherson Donatello, Dominic George Donlan, Charles Joseph Donrian, Gordon Stuart Donnelly, George Edward Donohoe, Richard Jenkins Donovan, Joseph Jerome p- ' i Class Course ' 39 X ■37 III. ■39 VIII ■37 IV •39 VI ■37 XV, b Grad. X-A 117 36 XVj ■39 XV, ■39 X 117 36 XV.b ■38 X . 7} ■36 VI ■37 XV, b Grad. VI ■39 X 73 •36 VI-C 125 36 XVI . 98 Grad. X-A •39 XV, ■39 XII, 135 ■36 XVIIl ■39 II1 ■39 X Grad. XVI ■39 XVI 66 ■36 V ■39 XIV •37 XVib ■40 IV ■36 vr ■39 ' •39 x in ' 38 VIl, ■37 XVI ■39 X ■38 II . 37 ' 36 I2 ■39 I 98 Grad. X-A . 98 ■36 X ■37 XVie ■37 xv,„ Grad. I ■39 XV, ■39 XVI •38 X ■37 I11 ■39 XVI 117 36 XVib 117 ' 36 XVie ■39 X ■39 Sp. IV . 98 36 X ■37 II Gr.id. I 135 ■36 XVIII ■39 X l . 45 36 il, Grad. XI ■38 1 86 36 Mil 37 ■36 I2 ■39 VI Grad. X ■37 XVI ■37 11 ■39 X l 99 ■36 X ■37 XVib ■37 Sp. II 66 ■36 V ■39 X ■38 XVI 110 ■36 XIII 117 ■36 XVie ■39 XV., ■39 V Home Address 829 Lerav St., Watertown, N. . 108 Produce Exchange Bldg., New York, N. Y. 70 Winchester St., Drooklinc, Mass. 83 Brookfield St., Lawrence, Mass. 644 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 11 Ardmore Road, West Roxbury, Mass. 7A Spencer Road, Bangalore, South India 75 Wallingford Road, Brighton, Mass. 11 Thorndike St., Beverly, Mass. 211 Wavne St., Bridgeport, Conn. 240 East 68th St., New York, N. Y. 58 Cottage St., Watertown, Mass. 59 Governor Winthrop Road, Somerville, Mass. 131 Havre St., East Boston, Mass. Plaquemnie, La. 880 Hereford Drive, Akron, Ohio Taos, New Mexico 34 Wentworth Terrace, Dorchester, Mass. 612 Tatepaha Blvd., Faribault, Minn. 3223 West Highland Blvd., Milwaukee, Wis. 538 North Maple Ave., East Orange, N.J. 51 Crescent Ave., Newton Center, Mass. 3 Hartshorn .-Vve., Worcester, Mass. 232 North Blakely St., Dunmore, Pa. P.O Drawer C , Harlem, Ga. Monument Beach, Mass. 381 Rugby Ave., Rochester, N. Y . 64 Mt. Vernon St., Cambridge, Mass. 387 Sherman St., Meadville, Pa. Box 3305, Santuce, Puerto Rico 94 South Highland Ave., Ossining, N. Y. 12 South Genesee St., Revere, Mass. 7801 82nd St., Glendale, L. I., N. Y. 319 Washington St., Dedham, Mass. Pomfret, Conn. 110 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. 44 Gorham Road, Belmont, Mass. 39 Hemlock Road, Menden, Conn. Paris Compton Roads, New Hartford, N. Y. 3 W hitelev .■Vve., North Adams, Mass. 39 Fairmount Ave., Wakefield, Mass. 64 Montclair Ave., Montclair, N. J. 64 Montclair Ave., Montclair, N. J. Box 515, Panama City, Panama 3 Colonial Ave., Albany, N. Y. 29 Harvard Road, Belmont, Mass. 843 Oakwood Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 33 Wollver 13 St., Vienna, Austria 10 Barton St., Newburvport, Mass. 65 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 19 Slocum Road, Lexington, Mass. Spotswood, N. J. 285 Summer St., Maiden, Mass. 76 Vonton St., Melrose, Mass. Manomet Road, Manomet, Mass. 1040 10th St., Lorain, Ohio 652 South 18th St., New.ark, N.J. 260 Stanley St., Waukegan, 111. 29Cli(TSt., .■rlington, .Mass. 177 Burlington, Woburn, Mass. 4765 58th Lane, Woodside, L. 1., N. Y. 5645 Hempstead Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. 21 Walbar St., Rochester, N. Y. 31 Darrow St., Pawtucket, R. I. 17 Essex St., Saugus, Mass. 6 P leasant St., Groton, Mass. 146 Henry St., Hasbrouck Heights, N.J. 43 Summer St., Wevmouth, Mass. 1529 34th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. 55 Ossipee Road, Somerville, Mass. 6 Cedar Cliff Terrace, Medford, Mass. 47 Crescent St., Cambridge, Mass. 70 Cottage St., East Boston, Mass. 273 Massachusetts Ave., North Andover, Mass. 117 Willow St., WoUaston, Mass. 21 Hampden St., Welleslev, Mass. 5831 Chevy Chase Parkway N.W., Washington, D. C. 84 Prescott St., Cambridge, Mass. 3 37 Directory of Students Name Pag, Class Course Dopp, James Wellington •39 X Doppel, Leonard John •38 U Dorman, Kenneth Lewis, B.S., T 107 •36 Unc. Doten, Charles Walter •39 XVi Douglass, Arthur Sylvester, Jr. ■39 IV Dovo, Humberto Leonardo •38 w Dow, Norris Fitz, 4 M . •39 XVI Dowding, Leonard Frank •38 X Downing, John Francis •38 X Draemel, Frederick Clise, S.B. . 99 Grad. X-A Draper, Charles Stark, A.B., SB., S.M. Grad. VIII Draper, Harry Engman, ' J ' •38 XVi Dreissigacker, Philip Harry, Jr., AT12 ■37 u Dreselly, Raymond Andrew ■37 X Dress, Vern Elliot . ■37 XUo Drew, John Lawrence 125 •36 x a Drever, Christian Frederick, B.S. Grad. I Drury, Maynard Kane, A ' i! ■39 XV. DuBois, Louis Frederic ■37 X Dufourd, Andrew James .... •38 VI-A Duncan, Robert Stanwood, E.E., S.M. Grad. VI Dunlap, Eldon North, B.S. . . . Grad. m CMin Dun lop, Dudley Marvin •38 XV,e Dunn, Orville Redmon, I ' X ■39 XVI Dunn, Robert Denis, K •38 VI Dunning, Joseph Samuel . . •37 XVI Duntley, Seibert Quimby, S.B., M.S. Grad. VIII DuPont, Stephen, ■tKS •38 IX-B du Pont, William Bayard, BE 99 •36 X Dwyer, Orrington Embry, B.S. . 99 Grad. X Fames, John Potter, A. B., S.M. Grad. X Easton, Harry Thomas, BOIl 45 •36 11. Easton,John Adlington, Jr. 117 •36 xv„ Eaton, Barbara Wade . •38 IV Eaton. William Edward, Jr. ■38 1 Eddy, Robert Clifton, BHH •38 XIII Edwards, Evan Albert •37 VI-A Edwards, Robert Graham 117 36 XV, b Ehrlich, Percy, S.B. Grad. V Einis, Nathan . •37 X Elkin, Bernard Phillip •38 I Elkins, Douglas . lma, B.S. 45 Grad. II Elliott, Robert Medill, SB. Grad. VIII Ellis, Forrest Thurston, AT . •39 IX-B Ellison, Malcolm William, 2AE ■38 XV„ Emerson, Albert Gardner, Jr. 99 ' 36 X Emerson, Bascom Charles, ATA •39 XV.b Emerson, William Stevenson, A.B. Grad. V Emery, James, X •38 I Emilio, Luis N ' lctor 45 36 III Endweiss, Charles Nicol, 2AE 125 •36 XVI Engel, Joseph Myrton •38 II Englander, Robert Arthur, BA •38 XV, Engstrom, Carl ... HI •36 XIII Epitano, Caniillo Philip •39 X 1I Epstein, Arnold Boris •39 VI Epstein, Benjamin •38 XVUI Epstein, Raymond, BA •38 I Erickson, Arioch Wentworth, Jr., SB., S.M. Grad. I Eskin, Samuel George, S.B. . 45 Grad. II Esperson, Douglas Gerhard, } rA •38 X Essley, Harrv Edward, Jr., -tKi: 117 •36 xv„ Estabrook, Vincent Taft . 117 •36 XV., Estes, George Lawton, Jr., l rA •39 XVI Etchells, Horace Irvin, Jr., SB. Grad. X Evans, Charles Huntington 86 ■36 TII Evans, James Edward, B.S. Grad. X-A Evans, John Warren ■39 XVIl Evans, Robert Lloyd, SB. ■36 XIII-A Evans, Thomas ... ■38 I Everett, Edward Fisk, Jr., ( Ki: 99 ■36 X Everett, John Leo ... ■37 vni Ewald, George William, eX •37 XV,e Ewell, James Marvin, Ki; •37 X Ewert, Richard Huckeby, A.B. •37 II-A Ewing, Llovd Roland •38 xv. Ewing, Reid, SB. ... 99 Grad. X-A Home Address 23 Blaine St., Hudson, Mass. 61-45 62nd . ve., Maspeth, L. I., N. Y. 202 North St., Salem, Mass. 32 Commonwealth Park, Newton Center, Mass. 690 Burlingame . ve., Detroit, Mich. 8 Ave. del Rio, h. Almendares, Marianao, Cuba 17 Lincoln St., Exeter, N. H. 10 Wadsworth St., .Atlantic, Mass. 1 Maple Road, E., Natick, Mass. 8 Cottage St., Newport, R. I. 731 University . ve., Palo Alto, Calif. 301 Berkeley St., Boston, Mass. 1421 James St., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 15 Goodwin Road, Lexington, Mass. 4302 North 33rd St., Omaha. Nebr. 1081 Bovlston St., Boston, Mass. R.F.D. 2, Freehold, N.J. 885 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 3506 Hawthorne Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 53 Grampian Wav, Boston, Mass. 35 Murrav , ve., Ridgewood, N. J. .) 4108 Ave. G, Austin, Texas 15 Summit Ave., Spring Valley, N. Y. 417 Geddes St., Wilmington, Del. 476 Prospect St., Torrington, Conn. 80 Audubon Road, Milton, Mass. 604 Beverly . e., Macomb, 111. Montchanin, Del. Westmont, Johnstown, Pa. 2062 Dorchester . ve., Dorchester, Mass. 7 Whitnev St., Northboro, Mass. 1317 U ' St., Bedford, Ind. 17 Marion Road, . rlington, Mass. 205 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. U. S. Hospital, Newport, R. I. 380 Florence St., Houghton, Mich. 1863 Charles Road, East Cleveland, Ohio 67 Trowbridge St., Arlington, Mass. 241 Shirley St., Winthrop, Mass. 3 Baird St., Dorchester, Mass. 3973 64th St., Woodside, L. I, N. Y. 1875 East 21st St., South, Salt Lake City, Utah 6837 South Union e., Chicago, III. 19332 Berkely Road, Detroit, Mich. 410 Common St., Belmont, Mass. 362 North Broadw ay, Haverhill, Mass. 156 Hutchinson Blvd., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 17 North Balch St., Hanover, N. H. 305 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. 7 Winter St., Salem, Mass. 50 . nderson St., Hackensack, N. J. 202 Blaine St., Buffalo, N. Y. 50 West 96th St., New York, N. Y. 38 Spencer . ve , West Somerville, Mass. 16 Vallev Road, Bridgeport, Conn. 1501 Boston Road. New York, N. Y. 16-18 North Russell St., Boston, Mass. 3547 West . dams St., Chicago, 111. 15 Hardy Road. Swampscott, Mass. 90S Beacon St.. Boston, Mass. 217 East 35th St., New York, N. Y. % V. D. Sutliff, 213 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 14 Robbins Road, Le.xington, Mass. 287 St. George St., St. Augustine, Fla. 2309 West St., Wilmington, Del. 24 . rlington St.. Haverhill, Mass. 1742 Oliver St., Whiting, Ind. 74 Fremont . ve., Everett, Mass. 18 West 28th St., Spokane, Wash. 10 Grant Place, Quincy, Mass. 219 Kenmore Road, Brookline, Pa. 7 Cottage St., Natick, Mass. 345 Wyoming Ave., South Orange, N. J. 212 Cary Ave., Ravinia, III. 31 Mavwood Drive, Danville, 111. 701 West Main St., Merrill, Wis. 701 West Main St., Merrill, Wis. 338 Directory of Students Name F.iatz, Albert Carl. Jr., OX Fahtns, Andre Lawrie, X• Faelten, Edgar Reinhold . Fagcr, Charles Hickman, T Fajrbairn, Robert Austin 1 airless, Blaine Trubv, i ' X Falkof, Mclvin Milton Falls, Oswald Ben|amin, Jr., B.S., SAE Falhvell, William Franklin, Jr., B.S. 1 an, Hsu Yun, E.E., S.M. Farmer, Daniel Edward ... Farmer, Richard Harrington, B.Sc. Farquhar, Norman Glennie Farr, H.arold Kinsman, SB. Farwell, Loring Chapman, Ki; Farwell, Paul Beardslev Febiger, Christian Carson, A Feclev, William John , Feins, Melvin George Feiss, Carl Lehman, B.F.A. Fellouris, John Harry Fellows, John Albert, A.B., S.M. Fenton, George Donald Ferguson, John Jennings, . .B., frK + Ferguson, John Robert, Jr, ATA Ferrar) ' , Ferdinand Francis Ferreira, Nicholaas Ferris, Ernest Albert Ferris, John Alexander Ferry, James Henry, Jr., AT Fevnman, Richard Phillips, t BA Fidler, Harold Alvin, B.S., S.M. Fite, Robert Gordon . Finenian, Abraham Fingerle, William, Jr, Finkelstein, Irving Finla ' . Roswell Lagar Finn, Albert Vincent Finstein, Edward, Ph.G. Fireman, Louis Leo First, Melvin William Fischel , Joseph Robert, OAX Fischer, Edward Michael .... Fischer, Frederic Philip, B.Sc, M.Sc. . Fish, Edwards Russell, Jr., ' tSK Fisher, Elliott Cornell Fisher, Francis Armington, ATA Fisher, Hillary Joel, B A. Fisk, James Brown, S.B. . Fisk, Robert Rorbach, HX Fitch, Conover, A Fitch, W ' endell Keister . Fitz, Howard Irving, SB., S.M., LL.B. Fitzgerald, .Arthur Eugene, E.E., S.M. FitzGibbon, Herbert Stewart, Jr., K Fitz-Hugh, John Rose, B.S. Fitz Patrick, John Patrick, SB. Flanagan, Robert, AKE Fledel-Beck, Jacob Hirsh Fletcher, Hew itt Grenville, Jr. Flint, Fred Herman Fluke, John Maurice, B.S. Flynn, Joseph Edward, B.S. Flynn, Robert Daniel Fober, Henry Lawrence Fogler, Benjamin Baker, Ki) Fogliano, Andrew Augustus, i ' K Foote, Gordon Lee, tFA Forbes, Waldo, A.B. Ford, John James Forde, Irving Walker Forman, Fred Paton, HX Foss, Paul Birney Foster, Harry Ruffie Fouhy, James Francis, 2N Fowler, Brvant Fowler, Richard Crosman Fox, Richard Baruch . Francis, John Tablas . Faff Chss Course •37 X •39 II ■3H XIII ■37 IX-B 39 VIII 38 XV, 39 XV. 73 •36 VI-A 66 Grad. ' Gr.id. VI 73 36 VI-C Grad. X 39 X Gr.id. VIII ■37 X ■39 X •37 IX-B ■37 XV, b ' 38 XV,,, Grad. IV-B ■37 I Grad. III (Met ■37 VI-B ■37 II-A •37 XV., ■37 11 ■39 11 ■37 VIII •39 XV„ ■39 VI ■39 XVlll Grad. I ■39 XV. ■38 VIII 73 •36 VI-C ■39 IX-B •39 1 •37 HI, ■36 Sp. V ' 38 I - 80 ■36 Vllia ■37 XVI ■37 111;, Grad. VI •39 XV, b ■39 I ■38 XV, Grad. XV Grad. VIII •38 XV,e •38 IV 99 ■36 X-B Grad. - Grad. VI •39 XV,b Grad. X-A Grad. X-A ■38 IX-B 90 ■36 IX-B ■39 ' 125 ■36 XVI 73 Grad. VI ■36 XIII-A ■38 X ■39 X 99 36 X ■39 XVI ' 38 V Grad. Sp. XV ■38 XVI ■38 II ■38 1 •38 IV 73 ■36 ■39 ' I-C I 45 36 11, ■37 VI 117 ■36 XV, ■37 VI-A Home AiUress 22 Midland Blvd., Maplewood, N.J. 129 West Henrietta St., Wooster, Ohio 79 High St., South Hanson, Mass. 2417 North Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. 18 Upland Road, Wellesley, Mass. Schenley Apts., Pittsburgh, Pa. 957 Morton St., Mattapan, Mass. Naruna, Va. 405 Buffalo St., Farmville, Va. 658 Race Course Road, Tientsin, China 1352 University Ave., New York, N. Y. Blairmore, Alberta, Can.ida 51 Fairbanks St., Brighton, Mass. 110 Pennsylvania Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. 1124 Merrill St., Winnetka, III. 312 High St., West Medford, Mass. 88 Milton St., Milton, Mass. 45 Palmyra St., Winthrop, Mass. 80 White St., East Boston, Mass. 12600 Cedar Road, Cleveland, Ohio 17 Holly St., New Bedford, Mass. ) 36 Anderson St., Boston, Mass. 33 Romevn Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. 120 South Ave., Van Wert, Ohio Fairway Ave., Rve, N. Y. 3910 Avenue D, IJrooklyn, N. Y. Box 25, Ladybrand, South Africa 5169 Washington St., West Roxbury, Mass. 210 Kent Road, Waban, Mass. 480 South . ve., Glencoe, 111. 1502 Mott Ave., Far Rockaway, N. Y. 5842 Sansom St., Philadelphia, Pa. 124 P.-iyson Road, Belmont, Mass. 97 Chester Ave., Chelsea, Mass. 32 Indian Road, Port Chester, N. Y. 15 Wilcock St., Dorchester, Mass. 43 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 28 Acorn St., Lynn, Mass. 220 Webster Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 93 Bridge St., Salem, Mass. 24 Colborne Road, Boston, Mass. 103 Main St., Hellertown, Pa. 306 Nash Road, New Bedford, Mass. Milford, Pa. 30 Laurel Ave., Windsor, Conn. 74 Jenny Lind St., New Bedford, Mass. Center St., Dover, Mass. 3322 Montana St., El Paso, Texas 15 Sisson St., Pavvtucket, R. I. 51 Berwick St., Belmont, Mass. Jerusalem Road, Cohasset, Mass. 27 Summit Road, Wellesley, Mass. 37 Rockland St., Melrose Highlands, Mass. James St., Rosendale, N. Y. 68 Main Ave., Sea Cliff, N. Y. 1322 Chambers St., Vicksburg, Miss. 3421 Parnell Ave., Chicago, III. 310 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Rozwadow, Poland 30 Stoneleigh Circle, Watertown, Mass. 44 Josephine Ave., West Somerville, Mass. 3948 North 31st St., Tacoma, Wash. 29 Little Neck Road, Douglaston, L. I., N. Y ' . 19 Moultrie St., Dorchester, Mass. 60 Richardson St., Wakefield, Mass. 106 Orchard St., Belmont, M.ass. 23 Boutwell St., Pawtucket, R. I. 1048 Forest Ave,, Evanston, 111. 228 Hillside St., Milton, Mass. 101 Harvard St., Brockton, Mass. 83 Granite Place, E,ist Milton, Mass. 471 Heights Road, Ridgewood, N.J. 39 Beltran St., Maiden, Mass. 48 Highland St., Reading, Mass. 1018 47th .St., Brooklyn, N. Y. R.F.D. 5, Bradford, Mass. 37 ' ick Park Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 403 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. 716 Rockdale Ave., New Bedford, Mass. 339 Directory of Students Francis, Justin Joseph Francis, Webster Huntington, Jr., KZ Frankel, David Samuel Fransson, Karl Elof Fraser, Earl Donald, AXA Freedman, Robert Wagner Freedman, Stanley Milton, AM Freedson, Milton Freehafer, John Edwin, B.S., M.S. Freiberg, James Marion Freire, Jose . ntonio French, Fred Wellington, 4 rA French, Rolland Sydney Fresia, Phillip Raymond Freydberg, Irwin George, 1 BA Freyfogle, Charles Frederick, Jr., i K Friedlaender, Hermann, B.S. Friedman, Bernard, B.Sc, S.M. Friedman, Charles Frost, Verne Clayton Fulton, David Funk, Clarence Frederick Furniss, Henrv Dawson, A Fussell, Lewis, Jr., B.S, S.M. Gabriel, Albert Washburne, Jr., OH Gadd, Charles Winford ... Gadwa, Truman Allen, B.S., M.S. Gage, Robert Thompson. iJ BE Gaines, Richard Venable, AKE Gair, Kenneth Brooks, OX Gallagher, John Martin, Jr. Gallagher, Robert .-Vnthony, B.S. Galstaun, Lionel Samuel, B.S., S.M. Gambel, Adam Christian, BOII Gander, John Henry, 1 K— Garber, Aivinjosiah . Gather, Esther Beatrice Garber, Thomas Gardiner, John Dick, A Gardner, Frank Streeter, BOII Garono, Louis Edward, S.B. Garrels, Robert Ernest, B.S. Garth, William Willis, Iv Gaston, Dexter Weld, OX Gates, Clayton Samuel, B.S. Gates, Forrest Palmer, Jr., t Ki; Gay, Godwin Robert Fuller Ge lbert, Lewis Gelpke, Karl .Adelbert George, Harold William Gere, Brewster Huntington, B.. ., M.A. Gerson, Louis Maurice Gerson, Max Gesmer, Sydney Solomon Ghattas, Rafik Ghattas Gibbs, Henry Theodore Gibbs, John Coe . . Gidley, Charles Richmond, Jr. Gilbertson, Victor Curtis, B.. rch. Gildea, David Jerome, Jr., 4 M A Gilinson, Philip . . Gillette, Robert Stone, AT Gilliss, James Melville, BOn Gillman, Hyman Herman Gilman, Martin -Albert Gilmore, James Keith, OAX Gimenez, Figueroa Manuel Ernesto Ginsburg, Stanley Marcy Ginzberg, Sophie, B.. . Girardi, Alexander Robert, ATA Glacken, John Francis Glancy, Robert Clifford, Jr. Gleason, Donald George Goddard, Frank Eber, Jr. Goddard, Warren Blake . Goheen, John Lawrence, Jr., . .B. Gold, Arthur Benjamin Goldberg, .Arnold Pag, Class Course 37 I 125 ■36 XVI ■39 VI ■38 II •37 IV-B ' 39 X SI ■36 ' U, ■37 x -c Grad. VIII ■37 II-A 39 VI ■39 XVi ■38 U 39 X ■38 XV„ 39 xv„ Grad. I Grad. X III 39 X UI ■37 X T •37 X 59 ■36 IV •37 XIII-C Grad. VI •3s XUI •37 II Grad. X •39 X •39 lUi ■37 XVib ■37 TII •37 XIII-A Grad. V •38 X -2 •37 XVib •37 VI-A ■37 V •38 IV-A 117 •36 xv„ •38 in 99 Grad. X-A •37 XIII-A . lis •36 XVo •37 XV,b Grad. I ■39 XV, •37 VI-A 53 •36 UI4 •36 n. 135 •36 XVIII 135 Grad. XVIII ■38 nil •37 II •39 TII •37 I •36 T-A •37 VI-A •37 XIU Grad. IV - 125 ■36 XVI 73 36 I 45 ■36 II- •38 XIII •37 X 73 •36 VI A ■38 XVlll •38 Sp. XIII ■38 XV, Grad. vn. ■39 X •38 I ■37 VI-A •37 VI ■37 XVI ■39 II Grad. III (Met ■38 T-A •39 U Home AJdrtss 19 Bradford St., Everett, Mass. 807 Northway Apts., Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 216 Ingleside . ve., Worcester, Mass. 2815 South Marvine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 441 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1561 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 724 Washington St., IJrookline, Mass. 488 Blue Hill Ave., Boston, Mass. 1424 Spruce St., Reading, Pa. 774 Greenwood Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 94 C. Duany AJta, Santiago, Cuba 125 Woodside .Ave., Waterbury, Conn. 118 Randlett Park, West Kewton, Mass. 769 East St., Pittsfield, Mass. 50 Esplanade, Mt. Vernoc, N. Y. 2 Huason Ave., Haverstraw, N. Y. 223 Maiden Lane, Seattle, Wash. 274 Newport St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 244 West Randall . ve., Freeport, N. Y. 420 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. Beechwood St., Cohasset, Mass. 210 Mason Terrace, Brookline, Mass. 6 Henderson Place, New York, N. Y. 451 Riverview Road, Swarthmore, Pa. 5931 Pulaski Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Parkwater St., Spokane, Wash. 215 South Bush St., Pendleton, Ore. 247 South St., Pittsfield, Mass. 106 East S5th St., New York, N. Y. 81 Codman Hill Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 1002 Boylston St., Newton Highlands, Mass. 151 Philadelphia Ave., West Pittston, Pa. 3476 21st St., San Francisco, Calif. 6803 West End Blvd., New Orleans, La. 9250 21s St., Queens Village, L. I., N. Y. 404 Sigourney St., Hartford, Conn. 182 Washington St., Dorchester, Mass. 152 Washington St., Dorchester, Mass. Fairview Road, Lunenburg, Mass. 59 -Alton Place, Brookline, Mass. 112 Depew .Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 1428 Oxford St., Berkeley, Calif. Sebasco Estates, Maine 41 South St., Brighton, Mass. 51 Winslow Road, Belmont, Mass. 100 Second . ve., Johnstown, N. Y. St. John ' s Rectory, Cornwall, N. Y. 101 Willowwood St., Dorchester, Mass. 432 Pleasant St., Canton, Mass. 77 MaffetSt., Plains. Pa. 1022 Westcott St., SvTacuse, N. Y. 17 Mascot St., Dorchester, Mass. Chestnut St., Lynnfield, Mass. 14 Cleaves St., Roxbury, Mass. Sidon, Syria 20 Charles -Ave., Revere, Mass. Livonia, N. Y. 286 Maple St., New Bedford, Mass. Towner, N. D. 1053 Myrile Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 365 Pine St., Lowell, Mass. 131 Freeman St., Brookline, Mass. Solomon ' s Island, Md. 13 Garfield . ve., Chelsea, Mass. 58 Sisson -Ave., Hartford, Conn. 12 South St., Wrentham, Mass. 1141 Montevideo St., Buenos .Aires 299 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. 508 West 114th St.. New York, N. Y. 9016 14Sth St., Jamaica, L. I., N. Y. 27 Park - ve., Cambridge, Mass. 333 Brookline Blvd., Upper Darby, Pa. 84 ' ) Essex St., Beverly, Mass. 1 Ellis St., -Attleboro, Mass. 114 West St., Elmwood, Mass. ) Sangli, S.M.C., India 35 Commercial St., L -nn, Mass. 196 South Main St., Fall River, Mass. 340 Directory of Students Same Goldberg, Myron Norman Goldberg, Paul Lincoln, SB. Goldfuss, John Gerard Goldsmith, Robert Herman Goldstein, Samuel, SB., S.M. Goldwater, Mary Margaret Gombcrg, Herman Gomez, Arnaldo Francisco Goodheim, Harold Goodman, Joseph Joe Goodman, Robert Fridolin, S.B. Goodwin, Harry Brinihall, t PA Goodwin, Herbert Franklin, AKE Goodwin, Karl Perley, AKE Gordon, Bernard Ben)amin Gordon, Haskell Robert . Gordon, Maurice Bernard, i)AM Gordon, Robert Bruce, B.S. Gordon, Robert Salaway Gorham, Marvine, Jr., A Gorman, Frank Barnstead Gould, Arthur Freeman, OAX Gould, John Moreland GraiF, Richard Langnian GralFeo, Alphonse Joseph Graham, John Robcy, BOIl Graham, Roscoe Barry, X t Gramse, Theodore John Grant, Frederick Bourne, X 1 Grant, George, III, tAO ... Graustein, Archibald Robertson, Jr., ' I ' ISK Graves, Charles Mallory, BIE Graves, Harold Clifford Gray, Ahvyn Bennett Gr.iy, Basil Parkhurst, ATA Gray, Charles Hildreth Gray, Wilbur Howard Green, Jerome Bernard Greenberg, Benjamin . Greenhalgh, John Eric Greenwood, Willard Priest Gregor , Frank Sleeper, Jr. . Grieshaher, Hugo Eugene, Jr., B.F.A. Griffin, Gilford Griffin, Gus Mitchell, A Griffin, James Wesley Gnffin, Thomas Francis, Jr. GrigoriefT, Vladimir Jacob Grimniinger, George, A.B Gross, Jerome Gross, Seymour Grosselfinger, Bertram Frederick Grossman, Arthur Samuel Grossman, Eli Abraham, I BA Grossman, Robert .... Grove, James Henrv, X l Grzybowski, John Marion, E.E. Guerke, Henry Hinckley . Guindon, William Gartland .... Gumprich, Wilbert Carl, ATA Gundlach, Theodore Julius, Jr., BOII Gundry, David Lee, B.S., L ' X Gunkel, Kenneth Marvin, X ! ' Gusdanovic, Herbert Paul . . Gussow, William Carruthers. B.Sc M.Sc. Guttcl.John Guy, Charles William Haddock, Robert Wayne, AT Hadlcy, George Edwin, ATA Hadley, Robert Eaton Haensel, Vladimir, B.S. Hagen, William Andrew, Jr. Hagerty, Francis Willard Hain, George Malcolm Haines, Herbert William Hale, Alfred Emil . Halev, Charles Pearson Haley, Herbert Preston, B.S., S.M. Page Oajs Course ■39 X Grad. ' •37 l ■37 1 Gr.ad. VIli •36 IV-B 118 36 XV, b ■37 XVI •39 X ■39 Vl-A Grad. XVI •37 III., •36 XV, „ •37 XV,„ 38 •36 I.: •38 X ' I •37 X 45 Grad. II •37 XVs lis •36 XV,b •39 XVI •38 XV, •37 ' •39 X ■39 II . HI •36 XIII •39 xv. •37 Unc. •39 XV- 74 •36 VI •37 xv„. US •36 XV,,, •38 X 111 •36 XIII •39 X •36 IV •39 XVI •39 X •37 VIII •39 X ' j 91 •36 IX-A 99 •36 X ■36 Sp. XIII-C •38 II ■39 X 46 •36 II, •38 VI-A •38 II 125 Grad. XVI (Met •39 XIV •38 XVII •3s X •39 VII, 135 •36 XVIII •39 X 91 36 IX-B Grad. VI ■37 III, •38 -l-A •39 II ■39 XVI 46 Grad. II ■38 11 ■37 11- A Grad. XII ■38 VI-A ■39 XVI ' 38 1 ■38 II ■38 XVo Grad. X ■37 Vl-C ■38 XIII 99 ■36 X ■39 XV,b •37 XVI •37 IX-B 46 Grad. II Home AilJress 14 Dolphin Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 7 Beals St., Brookline, Mass. 620 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 35 West 81st St., New York, N. Y. 62 Pleasant St., Brookline, Mass. 320 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. 5 Stow Road, Mattapan, Mass. 282 Paso St., Buenos Aires, Argentina 41 North Park Drive, Gloversville, N. Y. 411 Church St., Jessup, Pa. 5115 90th St., Elmhurst, N. Y. HI Dickinson St., Springfield, Mass. 130 Warwick Road, Melrose, Mass. 26 . berdeen St., Newton Highlands, Mass. 4 Park Vale Ave., AUston, Mass. 115 Boylston St., Maiden, Mass. 1614 Virginia St., Charleston, W. Va. 63 RadclifTe Road, Rochester, N. Y. 100 Nottinghill Road, Brighton, Mass. 133 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 15 Floyd St., Wmthrop, Mass. 6 Stephen St., Lynn, Mass. 134 River Road, Winthrop, Mass. 242 High St., Mount Holly, N. J. 20 College Ave., Medford, Mass. 7114 ALaska Ave., Washington, D. C. 106 Warren Road, Toronto, Ont. 61 Westford Circle, Springfield, Mass. Oakdene, ' Bernardsville, N.J. 320 North Washington A e., Saginaw, Mich. Salem End Road, Framingham, Mass. 453 Tremont Place, Orange, N. J. 2 Westland Ave., Boston, Mass. 26 Floyd St., Winthrop, Mass. 35 Laudholm Road, Newton, Mass. Petersham, Mass. 71 Wallace St., West Somerville, Mass. 2425 Kings Highway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 128 Capen St., Dorchester, Mass. 19 Robertson Road, Framingham, Mass. 14 Kendall St., Gardner, Mass. 176 Mt. Vernon St., Arlington, Mass. 583 Ocean Ave., New London, Conn. High St., Woods Hole, Mass. 720 Frederica St., Owensboro, Ky. 29 Foster St., Everett, Mass. Main St., Southboro, Mass. 26 Linden St., Brookline, Mass. ) 115 Peterboro St., Boston, Mass. 211 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. 90 Grovers Ave., Winthrop. Mass. 2473 Elm Place, Bronx, N. Y. 37 Putnam St., Somerville, Mass. 26 California Road, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 298 Middlesex Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 1108 Hillside Drive, St. Louis, Mo. Riverbank Court Hotel, Cambridge, Mass. 79 Flint St., Somerville, Mass. 15 Wilcox Road, Ashmont, Mass. 1 Zane Road, Binghamton, N. Y. 77 Fordham Drive, Buffalo, N. Y. 200 Irvington Road, Rochester, N. Y. 180 Mountain Way, Rutherford, N. J. 829 East 185th St. ' , Cleveland, Ohio ' •Sevenoaks, Ottawa, Ont. 141 Chelsea St., East Boston, Mass. 412 Reading Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 315 South Fifth St., Escanaba, Mich. 30 Wolcott Ave., .■Kndover, Mass. Lowell St., West Peabody, Mass. 724 Simpson St., E anston, 111. 1255 Palmer Ave., Muskegon, Mich. 115 Melville Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 121 Park St., Montclair, N.J. 21 Falmouth St., Belmont, Mass. 360 West Main St , Rockawav, N. J. 292 Wibird St., Portsmouth, N. H. 5O6 North Jefferson St., .Mbany, Ga. 341 Directory of Students Niirm Past Clasi Course Home Address Halfmann, Edward Schroeder 74 Grad. VI-A 44 West 94th St., New York, N. Y. Hall, Leigh Spaulding, Jr., 4 KS 39 XV, b 16 South St., Concord, N. H. Hall, Virgil Gridlcy . . ■37 XIII Box 829, Carlsbad, New Mexico Hallenbeck, Thomas Lewis ' 37 II 2702 Parkwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Halloran, Richard 130 ■36 XVII 95 Dedham St., Newton Highlands, Mass. Halpern, Theodor Herzl, 4 BA ' 38 XIV 212 Carol Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Hainerstrom, Davis, ATA •37 IV 5 La Grange St., Winchester, Mass. Hamilton, Charles Watson ■39 XVI Ill Douglas Road, Rochester, N. Y. Hamilton, Jack Irwin, KS 125 •36 XVI Colonial Arm Apts., Riverhead, N. Y. Hamilton, John Paul . 55 •36 XIV 35 Dixon St., Bridgeport, Conn. Hamilton, John Stephenson . ■39 X 48 Tilton Ave., Brockton, Mass. Hammell, David Kinney, Jr. ■39 XIII 213 Wheaton Place, Rutherford, N.J. Hammerstrom, Richard Jewell ■39 VII, 816 Pershing St., Lvnchburg, Va. Hammond, Bradford Champion •39 I 45 West 35th St., New York, N. Y. Hammond, Newton LeRoy, Jr., Boil •38 I Ware Road, Enfield, Mass. Hanau, Richard •39 IX-A 11 East 30th St., New York, N. Y. Hanke, Everett Emil, ATS ■39 XVI 8011 Uth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hanlon, Daniel Joseph, Jr. ■37 X 67 Melville Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Hanlon, John Joseph ■37 II 16 Chelmsford St., Dorchester, Mass. Hannam, Robert U ' endell lis 36 XVi, 23 Lincoln St., Lexington, Mass. Hansford, Van Buren Nelson, B.S,, AKE 46 Grad. II 328 College St., Harrodsburg, Ky. Hanson, Herman Hugo ■39 XV.. 25 Lake ' iew . ve., Newtonville, Mass. Haponik, John Szymon •38 XIII 15 Bradford St., Taunton, Mass. Harcum, William Marvin, HX ' 37 VIII Harcum School, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Hardman, Alan Frederic, tt BE ill ■36 XIII-C 256 Chestnut St., Clinton, Mass. Hargreaves, Walter August . ■39 VIII 27 Massasoit St., Mattapan, Mass. Hang, William, Jr. ,S.B. Grad. XV 2702 Johnstone Place, Cincinnati, Ohio Harmantas, Christos, S.B., S.M. Grad. XVI 288 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. Harper, Bertram Robert . ■39 X 105 Prospect St , Braintree, Mass. Harrington, Charles James, B.S. Grad. X 16th and Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del. Harris, Rutherford, t rA •37 xv„ 2331 Dahlia St., Denver, Colo. Harris, Samuel Jay, B.S., TE , Grad. VI 901 Congress BIdg., Miami, Fla. Harris, Theodore Robert, Jr., OX •39 X 224-04 Merrick Road, Laurelton, L. I., N. Y. Harrison, Joseph Wiley, tAO •39 II 307 Abbotsford Road, Kenilworth, III. Hartman, Warden Nathan, Jr., 4 K- •38 VIA 4220 Chamberlayne St., Richmond, Va. Hartmann, William Edward, ■I ' AH ■38 IV 265 Altamont Place, Somerville, N.J. Harvev, Robert Dawes, BHII ■38 nil 18 Orchard Road, Brookline, Mass. ' Haseltine, William Reed, SB. Grad. VIII 537 Watson St., Ripon, Wis. Haskell, Albert Adams, Jr., AT ■37 III3 7 Prospect St., Winchester, Mass. Haskins, Elizabeth Morgan, S.B, Grad. XVIII 27 Vernon St., Worcester, Mass. Hastings, Jane Lois, A. B. Grad. Sp. V 152 Aspinwal! Ave., Brookline, Mass. Hatcher, Robert Stetinius, B.S., S.M. Grad. XVI 2 Lantern Lane, Winchester, Mass. Hawkes, James Ellison, l rA ■39 X T South Main St., Andover, Mass. Hawks, Douglass, Jr. , 135 •36 XVIII Silver St., Bennington, Vt. Hawle ' , William James ■38 VI-A Suburban Park, L nionville, Conn. Haworth, Roy Daniel, Jr. ■39 III, 7926 Westview Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. Hawthorne, William Rede, B.A Grad. X 14 Mount Park Road, London, England Hayes, John P.iu!,i:X 54 ■36 in. 503 Edison Bldg., Toledo, Ohio Haynes, Wilberforce Winfield ■38 X 356-A Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. Hayward, Murray Howland ■38 XVu. 233 Presidents Lane, Quincy, Mass. Haywood, Joseph, B.S. •37 I.X-B 5 Lindenwold Terrace, Ambler, Pa. Hazeltine, Allen ' oorhees, tMA •37 T-A 325 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N. J. Hazelton, Harry Boyden,Jr., X4 118 •36 XV, 5379 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Hazen, Wayne Eskett 86 ■36 VIII 404 East Hoffman St., Three Rivers, Mich. Heacock, Roy Channing •39 II R.F.D. Box 26, Uniontown, Ala. 1 Head, Ellsworth Putnam, S.B. •37 XI North Falmouth, Mass. Headley, Hal Pettit, B.S., KA 100 Grad. X 628 Elsmere Park, Lexington, Ky. Heal,Josiah Spaulding, tMA ■37 xv„ 649 Main St., South Hingham, Mass. Healey, Charles Frederick •37 XIV 35 Putnam St., Somerville, Mass. Healey, William Harding •37 XV, 17 Bodwell St., Dorchester, Mass. Healy, William Andrew . . 81 •36 VII3 630 Hammond St., Brookline, Mass. Hechenbleikner, Ingenuin Alvan, B.S. Grad. V Carmel Road, Charlotte, N. C. Hecker, Har ' ard Kaufmann •38 II 31 Brentmoor Park, St. Louis, Mo. Heckmer, William Louis 38 I 828 Madison St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Hedberg, Carl Albin, B.S. 74 •36 -i-c 835 South Sherman St., Denver, Colo. Hedeman, Walter Rider, Jr., AT ' .. ' Grad. VI 3315 Echodale Ave., Baltimore, Md. Heggie, Robert, SB. Grad. V 12 Prince St., Cambridge, Mass. Hegner, Ralph Lohr •39 X 271 Corev St., West Roxburv, Mass. Heinemann, George Austin, BH •38 XVi, 2328 Isabella St., Evanston, III. Heintz, Alfred Preston ' 38 VIII 22 Surrev Road, Newton, Mass. Heintzelman, John Cranston •39 IV 16 East 57th St., New York, N. Y. Henderson, Richard ■38 VIIi 78 Chestnut St., Weston, Mass. Henes, Charles . •38 II 1641 North Shore Road, Revere, Mass. Hennessy, Thomas Francis ■38 Sp. IV 69 Linden St., Brookline, Mass. Henshaw, Charles Norton, B.S., S.M. 46 Grad. II 20 Wells St., Plattsburgh, N. Y. Hentschel, Robert Adolf Andrew, S.B. Grad. III (Met ) 9 ' 2 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. Hentz, Clifford Eugene . . ■36 Sp. VI 30 High Haith Road, Arlington, Mass. Herasimchuk, Michael Vasil •39 III, 349 Walnut St., Pottstown, Pa. Herb, Edward George, B.S. , Grad. I 1949 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. 342 Directory of Students Namr Pjgt Herbig, Edwin Turner, |r , t r Herlihy, John htrs Herman, Alva Lewis Hermann, Gcrson Herpers, Henrv Ferdinand, i;N 66 Hcrre, Harold Alfred, T Herrera, Rodolfo Eduardo Hershev, Auguste Cazalet, B S Hershfield, Harold Herzberg, Albert, Jr. Herzeca, Lincoln Joseph Hess, James Brown Hew es. Joseph I eander Hewlett, William Redington, A B , K- Heymann, Sevmour Edward Hibbert, John Joseph 73 Hickman, Richard Edgar 130 Higgins, Arthur Thomas Hilcken, John Allen Hill, Coiirtland Craig Carv Hill, David Qishmg, AT Hill, Lvman Procter . 91 Hill, Philip . . Hilliard, Robert Charles Hilliker, Clinton Roscoe Hillyer, Curtis, A B, iW 74 Hindman, Harold Hinds, Wadsworth Longfellow, OH Hincs, George Wilton, B.Sc. 38 Hinton, Frederick Weeks, B.S., I ' l ' 118 Hirshon, Sidnev Hitchcock, Melville Edward, AT Hitchcock, Richard Bourne 55 HittI, Anton Ernst 38 Hoadley, George Burnham, B.Sc, S.M. Hoberman, Joel Bernard ... Hobson, Charles 74 Hobson, Charles Foster, Jr., I ' BE Hobson, Edwin Lafayette, III, AKE Hobstetter, John Norman, K— Hochberg, Ira Israel . . 74 Hochman, Eugene Hockberger, William George, B.S. . . Hodgkinson, Baird William, J rA . Hodgson, Millard Benjamin, Jr., l rA Hoke, John Irving Holbrook, Gordon Ellis, OH Holcombe, Marshall Maynard, AKE 91 Hollander, Harry Benjamin, I rA Holley, Myle Joseph, Jr Holloway, Donald Francis Holloway, Frederic Ancrum Lord, B.S 100 Holly, Norman Joseph, Ph. B Holman, Charles Richardson 100 Holmblad, Steffen, B.Sc. . . 118 Holt, Benjamin Merrill, B.A 100 Holtzworth, Ernest Charles, B.S Holzman, Bernard Homan, Horace Frank Homer, Horace Horalan Homeyer, Henry Nicholas, Jr. Hoover, Paul Cornman, B.S. Hope, William Hamilton, Jr. 91 Hopgood, Roy Caldwell, Jr. Hopkins, Robert Earl Hon, Taichiro, B.S 74 Horn, Harrv WalKice, A.B., B.S Hornor, Aurelius Pointer, Jr., A 107 Horton, Allen Woodward, Jr., X 118 Horton, Clarence Reuben, Jr., t Ki: HI Horton, George Frederick, Jr., B.S. Horton, Joseph W.irren, SB. Horvitz, David, S. B. Hough, Lawrence Edwards, BOIl Houghton, Francis Donald, OX Hourihan, John Timothy House, Frederick Fenno, SAE . 100 Howard, John Tasker, B.F.A , B.Arch. Howard, Junior H, B.S Clasj Course ' 37 VI-A •39 xv„ •39 VIII •38 V •36 V 38 XI •38 V Grad. X-A 39 VII, •39 X •37 XVII •38 VIII •38 X Grad. VI •39 XV, „ •36 VI-C •36 XVII •39 VI •38 VIII •40 IV ■37 XVI ■37 IX-B •37 X •39 VIII •39 II •37 VI-A •39 V •38 X Grad. I Grad. XV •37 X •37 X ■36 XIV •36 II Grad. VI •39 VII, Grad. VI-A •39 XV,b •37 X •39 X ■36 VI •38 II Grad. X-A ■37 IX-V ■39 VIII •38 II •39 II •36 IX-B •38 - •39 I •38 V Grad. X Grad. Sp. VII •36 X Grad. Sp. XV Grad. X-A Grad. XIII-A •39 V •38 X •38 X •38 X Grad. Sp. VIII •36 IX-B •38 II •37 IX-B Grad. VI Grad. VI •36 XII2 •36 XV,e ■36 XIII Grad. X-A Grad. VI Grad. ' •37 II-A •37 V •39 II •36 X-B Grad. IV-B Grad. VI Home AJtireis 160 Central Park South, New York, N. Y. 588 Riverside Ave., Medford, Mass. 1255 Cook Ave., Lakewood, Ohio 24 18th St., West New York, N.J. 21 Coniston Road, Short Hills, N. ]. 3008 North 3rd St., Harrisburg, Pa. 18 7th South Ave., Guatemala, C. A. 314 West Adams St., Taylorville, 111. 151 East Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. 1373 Peabody Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Westhampton, L. I, N. Y. 248 Iron St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 117 Babcock St., Brookline, Mass. 3880 Washington St., San Francisco, Calif. 4628 West Lake Harriet Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. Box 132, Harding, Mass. 39 Prospect St., Brockton, Mass. 24 Greenough Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 43-38 47th St., Long ' island City, N. Y. 215 East Eleventh Ave., Denver, Colo. 31 Wildwood St., Winchester, Mass. 29 Richmond Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. 12 Shirley Ave., Revere, Mass. 8 Kensington Road, Arlington, Mass. 26 Gage St., East Lvnn, Mass. 1800 Upas St., San Diego, Calif. 1132 Chelmsford St., Chelmsford, Mass. 27 Chadwick St., Portland, Me. 119 West St., N.W., Washington, D. C. 75 Cedar St., Bangor, Me. 414 Norfolk St., Dorchester, Mass. 2903 Altura Blvd., El Paso, Texas 111 Pine St ., Belmont, Mass. 23 Sewall St., Melrose, Mass. 49 Benjamin Road, Belmont, Mass. 115 Salem St., Maiden, Mass. 415 Mutual BIdg., Richmond, Va. 115 Butman Road, Lowell, Mass. 12 Ridgewood Terrace, Maplewood, N. J. 317 Northview Road, Dayton, Ohio 24 Elmore St., Ro.xbury, Mass. 286 Chestnut St., Chelsea, Mass. 5424 Madison St., Chicago, III. 15 Windsor Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. 1044 University Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Tomkins Cove, N. Y. 9 Beach St., Maplewood, N. J. 8 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md. The Essex House, 59th St., New York, N. Y ' . 612 Nelson Ave., Peekskill, N. Y. 176 Chiswick Road, Brighton, Mass. 2855 Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga. 93 High St., Portland, Me. Belmont St., Norwood, Mass. 198 Laessoegade St., Odense, Denmark Park Lane . pts., Denver, Colo. 31 Clarendon Road, Belmont, Mass. 106 Grove St., Chelsea, Mass. Cononio Drive, South Essex, Mass. 25 .Addison St., Arlington, M.iss. 35 Fay wood Ave., East Boston, Mass. 345 Manor Ave., Millersville, Pa. 61 Silver Hill Road, Weston, Mass. 304 Washington Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. 140 Heights St., Hillsboro, Knoxville, ' Tenn. Box 214-A, Lodi, Calif. 339 Belmont Place, Wichita, Kans. 363 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. 1628 Hughitt Ave., Superior, Wis. 4 Coolidge Ave., Lexington, Mass. 3208 . ustin St., Houston, Texas Candlewood Road, Ipswich, Mass. 127 Gallatin St., Providence, R. I. 18 Rose Ave., Patchoguc, N. Y. 22 Central St., Auburndale, M.iss. 12 Jacobs St., Peabodv, Mass. 760 Auburn Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 45 Garden St., Boston, Mass. 501 North York St., Oberlin, Kans. 343 Directory of Students Same Pagt Class Course Howard, Stanley Bailey . . Grad. ' I-A Howe, Richard Herrick •38 11 Howell, Alvin Harold, fl.S., M.S. Grad. VI Howell, John Hancock, Jr., S.B. Grad. X-A Howes, Benjamin Thomas, AT 39 II Howes, John Tyler, B.S. Grad. VI Hoyo, Hector Portirio •38 I-A Hoyt, Newton Haven, Jr., .■V.B., (frl ' A lis Grad. Sp. XV Hrones, John . nthonv, S.B. Gr.ad. II Hsu, Chih Lun, B.S. ' . Grad. I Hubbard, Harlan Flint 91 •36 IX-B Hubbell, Harry Hopkins, Jr., B.A. Grad. TII Hudson, Walter Davidson ■39 XVI Hughes, Arthur Vincent , ' 37 T-A Hughes, Walter Lee, Jr. •37 V Hull, Lewis Woodruff •38 X Humphries, Ferdinand Marion, B.S. Grad. II Army Ord Hunicke, August Byron, Jr., 2;X ■39 X % Hunt, Arthur Rowland, i; ■37 IX-B Hunt, Gilbert Agnew, Jr. ■37 VIII Hunt, Gordon Willis . 38 II Hunt, Robert McPhail, B.S. 74 Grad. I-A Hunter, Alice Thurston 66 ■36 - Hunter, George Bowditch, Jr. ■37 VIH Hurley, Frederick Joseph ■38 ' ir. Huston, Roger Hersey . 118 36 XV2 Hutchinson, Lero ' Charles ■37 XVUI Hutchinson, Margaret Hortense, S.B., Ch.E. . Grad. X Hutchinson, Richard Charles ■37 x Hutchison, Alexander McCall . ■36 Vl-A Hwoschinsky, Vladimir ■39 x Hyde, John Francis ■39 II Iglauer, John ■38 XV,, Ihmels, Richard Henry, BX ■38 VI-A Ingraham, John Norris, B. S. Grad. - Innamoravi, Anthonv Walter 38 I -A Iredell, Robert, :;X ' . . ■38 II Irvin, Benjamin William, Jr., BOn •38 IV Irvine, John Withers, Jr., B.A., SN Grad. ' Irving, David Edwin, A ■38 X I Irwin, Philip Patterson •39 xv. Isaacs, Rufus Philip . 91 ■36 IX-B hvatsu, Peter Okawa . ■38 III. Jackson, Frank Howard ■38 VI Jackson, John West, Ki; ■39 XVI Jacob, Carlvie William 86 •36 Mil Jacobs,John Keller, 2. M •37 X Jacobs, Maxwell Emanuel, 2AM ■37 II Jacobs, Philip Chauncev, Jr. ■37 VI Jacobson, Robert Dale, ' B.Sc., Bi; Grad. X-A Jacques, Wendell Francis, AT . ■39 IV Jaeger, Jacob Joseph, B.S., S.M. Grad. VI Jaffe, Herbert ■39 V Jaffe, Leonard David . ■39 XIV Jahnig, Charles Edward ■38 X James, Harold, BA . 38 XIV Jamison, Will Brown, t BE •39 VIII Jansen, Johannes Jan . •38 VI-A Janson, Henry Joseph . 100 •36 X Jeang, Bao-tzeng, SB. Grad. VI Jelatis, Demetrius George •38 VIII Jenks, Frank, B.S. 118 Grad. XV Jenks, Frederic Augustus ■38 XVI Jennings, Albert Thomas •39 II Jennings, Jeremiah Edmund Bowden, B.Sc. 38 Grad. 1 Jenny, Francis Joseph, B.S., S.M. Grad. X Jenrick, William Frederick, Jr. . •39 XVI Jensvold, Gray, A . . ■37 IX-B Johns, Winthrop Asa, OAX •37 II Johnson, Charles Montague •38 Sp. II Johnson, Frank Semrow •39 II Johnson, Henry Clyde, ZiAE 74 36 ' I-A Johnson, John Aldridge ■38 XIII Johnson, Malcolm Edward •39 - Johnson, Ralph Poole. B.A , MA Grad. VIII Johnson, Robert Franklin •36 XIII Johnson, Robert Loring, t rA •38 XV,b Home Address 9 Lovell St., West Somerville, Mass. Central St., Georgetown, Mass. 609 Willow St., Ottawa, Kans. 169 North . rlington . ve.. East Orange, N. J. 1749 Corcoran St., Washington, D. C. 400 North Uth St., Clinton, Iowa 250 ' F St., Havana, Cuba. 2Jackman . ' ve., Bridgeport, Conn. 47 Chilton Road, West Roxbury, Mass. 6 Pa Fu Tang, Nanking, China 131 Mascoma St , Lebanon, N. H. 14308 Superior Road, Cleveland, Heights, Ohio 2150 Gaylord St., Denver, Colo. 81 Joy St., Boston, Mass. 25 Wall St., Foxboro, Mass. Waverly, Pa. Hawesville, Ky. 6 Buckingham Parkway, Maplewood, N. J. 217 Westtield Ave., Ansonia, Conn. 452 New Jersey Ave., S.E., Washington, D. C. Mountain Road, Burlington, Mass. 102 North Tugaloo St., Walhalla, S. C. 41 Wren St., West Roxbury, Mass. 5801 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, 111. 7 Madison Ave., Wakefield, Mass. 100 Warren St., Needhara, Mass. 169 Wilson Ave., Wollaston, Mass. 2702 Smith St., Houston, Texas 134 School St., Franklin, Mass. 4294 Montrose Ave., Montreal, Que. Stanwich Road, Greenwich, Conn. 1 Holly St., Salem, Mass. 4045 Rose Hill Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 383 Fairmount Ave, Jersev Citv, N. J. 183 Irving Place, Rutherford, N. J. 135 Clark St., Clinton, Mass. 720 Delaware Ave., Akron, Ohio Big Run, Pa. 750 Eastwood St., Marshall, Mo. Lapidea Manor, Chester, Pa. 323 Thompson Ave., East Liverpool, Ohio 365 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 2273 Pine St., San Francisco, Calif. 3824 Rosemont Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. East Road, Cheshire, M.iss. 50 Bassett St., Lynn, Mass. 24 Woodmere Blvd., Woodmere, N. Y ' . 37 Dover St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 41 Pearl St., Newton, Mass. 1233 12th St., Rock Island, 111. 73 Bromfield St., Wollaston, Mass. 4514 Benner St., Philadelphia, Pa. 100 Kilsvth Road, Brighton, Mass. 1129 East 22nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 14 Lafavette St., Springfield, Mass. 185 Brookdale Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Rose Fountain Farm, Greensburg, Pa. West St., Wrentham, Mass. 238 Rector St., Philadelphia, Pa. I Yuan Dah Chieh St., Yang Chow , China 60 Clarendon Ave., West Somerville, Mass. 1465 Dean St., Brooklvn, N. Y. 40 Hastings St., West Roxburv, Mass. 208 South St., Fulton, N. Y. ' Ladv Grev, Cape Province, South Africa mi Orchard St., Utica, N. Y. 69 Moffat Road, Waban, Mass. • ' Towns End, Mystic, Conn. 58 St. James St., Mansfield, Pa. 19 Shepard St., Cambridge, Mass. 739 42nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 557 Eleventh St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. 4726 Haskell St., La Canada, Calif. 87 Barnard Ave., Watertown, Mass. St. Pauls, N. C. II Story St., Rockport, Mass. 219 Pine St., Freeport, N. Y. 344 Directory of Students Johnson, Stanley Clarenctr Johnson, Stanltv Theodore Johnson, Thomas Lee, Jr., A Johnson, ' ahe, Ph.B Johnson, Walter Allan Johnston, Robert Kendall Jones, David Warren Jones, Florence Martha, A B. Jones, Grandvillc Reynard, Jr., B.S., AKK Jones, Robert Ames Jordan, Robert Young, BOIl Jordan, Wilbur Frank Jorisscn, . ndre Laurent, C.E. Judkins, Forrest Hamilton Jungbluth, Peter Knute Kab.-icniski, Leo Narciss, 1 K Kahn, Charles Reginald, Jr., t HA Kahn, Marvin Kalin, Sumner H.irold Kaminsky, Joseph, SB. Kamiya, Shigeru Kane, Francis Borgia . Kangas, Oliver John Kanner, Morton Henry, i;AM Kanters, Lawrence, ZJA.M Kapchus, John Francis Karafotias, Milton Karaian, Lcojohn, SB. Karch, Richard Granger Karofsky, Sydney Bernard Kashdan, William Hyman Kass, Edwin Allan, J BA Kaswell, Ernest Ralph Kato, Thomas . Katz, Hymen Kauffman, Richmond Hirsch, i;AM Kaufman, Albert Rudolph, B.S. Kaufman, David .... Kaufman, Solomon Kaufman, Walter Fredrick Kaulakis, Arnold Francis Kaulback, Richard Herbert, Ki; Ke.arny, Francis James, B l n Keene, Wilson Bucklin, tMA Keily, Deibar Pouleur, S.B. Keithley, Joseph Faber, BOIT Kellman, Paul Vincent, J MA Kelly, Harry Ch.irles, B.S., M.S. Kemp, Frank Burrill, HX Kempton, William Burton Kendrick, James Benjamin, S.B. Kendzur, Max Simon . Kennedy, William Patton, B.S. . Kenngott, Robert Louis, SB. Kenny, Donald Willimot Kenyon, David Ecclestone, A.B., OX Kerkian, Aram Kern, . lexander Burelle Kerr, Donald Edwin Kessler, Myer ... Kettendorf, Henry Augustus Kettering, James Herman, 1 X Keyes, Kenneth Eugene Kieley, Thomas Joseph Kiely, Kelvin Hazlitt Kierstead, Fred David Kiley, Leo Austin Kilgour, Alfred Edmison, ATSJ . Kimbark, Edward Wilson, B.S., E.E., S.M. King, Charles Cleveland King, Joseph Hedge, K— King, Paul Joseph King, Robert Ugstad . King, William Herbert Kingsbury, Joe Waldo, B.S. Kingsbury, Robert Jackson, OH Kinraide, Thomas Reed, AXA Kinsman, Earle Van Dyke P ' ' i ' Chis Course ■J9 xv„ 54 ' 36 III. 91 ' 36 IX-A ■38 Sp. VI 38 II 39 1 •39 VI Grad. Sp. VII S6 •36 VIII 38 XV.i, •37 VI 100 •36 X 38 Grad. I •38 VI ■39 X •39 VI •37 II ■38 VIII ■38 III, Grad. 125 Grad. Sp. XVI •37 Sp. VI-C •38 X 55 ■36 XIV 119 ■36 XV, •39 XIII •37 XIII Grad. V •37 II •37 IV ■38 VIII ' 36 XI •39 X 119 •36 XV.b •38 XVI •39 X Grad. III (Met •39 IV-A ■38 IV-A •38 II •38 X •38 III3 •38 II •39 X Grad. XVI •37 VI-A •39 VI Grad. VIII •38 VI-A ■39 X Grad. XVI ■37 XV, b Grad. XVI Grad. Sp. VIII 100 ■36 X 74 Grad. Sp. VI ■37 X •38 IX-B •37 T-C ■39 VII ■39 XIII-C ■38 XV2 ■38 VIII •37 xv,„ •39 XV2 •37 VI-C •39 I •37 I-A Grad. l •38 X 126 •36 XVI •38 XV, 107 •36 XII, •39 XVI Grad. l •38 l ■37 III. 74 •36 Vl-C Hami Adilrtss 52 Marlboro St., Belmont, Mass. 167 Morton St., Newton Center, Mass. 420 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. 166 E.istwood Ave., Providence, R. I. 92 Pine Grove Ave., Lynn, Mass. 6 Alton Road, Yardley, Pa. 211 North Victor St., Christopher, III. 7 Cleveland St., Cambridge, Mass. North Ave., Mendon, Mass. 19 Chapman St., Canton, Mass. 625 Cornelia Ave., Chicago, III. 25 Concord Ave., Milton, Mass. 12b Place des Nations, Liege, Belgium 117 Grandview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 1126 South Iowa Ave., W.-ishington, Iowa 905 South Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. 118 Wood Lane, Woodmere, L. I., N. Y. 121 BainbridgeSt., Brooklyn, N. Y. 209 Belmont St., Everett, Mass. 33 Quincy St., Roxbury, Mass. Tokyo. Japan 410 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. 10 Arthur St., Quincy, Mass. 657 Broadway, Lawrence, N. Y. 26 Egmont St., Brookline, Mass. 35 M,igee St., Cambridge, Mass. 194 Washington St., Dcdham, Mass. 195 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. 129 Haverhill St., Andover, Mass. 119 Winthrop Road, Brookline, Mass. 27 Grover St., Walpole, Mass. 666 West End Ave., New Y ' ork, N. Y. 30 Eddy St., W.-iltham, Mass. 390 Wadsworth Ave., New York, N. Y. 39 Shepard St., Lynn, Mass. 2019 Oakwood Ave., Venice, Calif. ) 8210 High School Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. 16 Boston St., Maiden, Mass. 101 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass. 520 Park Drive, Boston, Mass. 17 Neil St., Marlboro, Mass. 31 Grace St., Maiden, Mass. 1530 Third St., New Orleans, La. 26 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. J. 736 Palisado Ave., Windsor, Conn. 1601 Knoxville Ave., Peoria, 111. 6933 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 41 Prospect St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 1606 East 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 144 Lowell St., Arlington, Mass. 574 Lee St., Glen Ellyn, III. 104 North Whitnev St., Hartford, Conn. 2724 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. 51 Otis St., Newtonville, Mass. 9 Pilgrim Road, East Milton, Mass. ■■Oakside, ' Smithtown, L. I., N. Y. 6 Market St., Newburvport, Mass. 310 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 607 East 64th St. Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. 90 Marlboro St., Chelsea, Mass. 25 Cohasset St., Roslindale, Mass. 401 North Eighth St., Lebanon, Pa. 311 Arsenal St., Watertown, Mass. Great Road, Bedford, Mass. 563 Fellswav East, Maiden, M.iss. 11 Norfolk Road, Holbrook, Mass. 41 Holborn St., Roxburv, Mass. 3810 Carter St., Detroit, Mich. 926 Michigan Ave., Evanston, III. 139 Fayette St., Wollaston, Mass. 156 Congress St., Bradford, Pa. 7 William St., Shawsheen Village, Andover, Mass. Old Tappan, N.J. 139 Fayette St., Wollaston, Mass. 252 Canyon Road, Salt Lake City, Utah 1049 Lexington Ave., Schenect.idy, N. Y ' . Box 502, Sandwich, Mass. 304 Pleasant St., Laconia, N. H, 343 Directory of Students Name Kirk, John Thomas, Jr., ATS2 Kirloskar, Ravindra Lakshman Kirshner, Leo • Kitenplon, Jeanne Virginia Kites, Luther William . . Kittel, Jerome Charles Kittredge, Harry Chandler, Jr., —X Klaber, Joseph Henry Klanderman, Russell Roland, B.S Klashman, Lester Mathew ... Kleiman, Joseph Klein, Carolyn Horvey, S.B., S.M. Kleinhofer, Burkhart Adolph Klemka, Albert John 100 Klitgord, Howard Dencker Klock, Feli.x Stanley 54 Klock, Nancy Overton Knapp, George Owen, B.A. Knight, Edmund Clark 81 Knight, Frank Amos Knippenberg, Henry, III, AT Knox, John David Knudsen, Semon Emil, AT 91 Koch, Richard Karl, i:X Kodama, Sidney Philip Koegler, Richard Kornau 126 Koehrmann, Richard Henry, Jr Kohl, Harry William Kolb, Frederick John Kolupaev, Peter George, B.S Koontz, Ehvood Henry, rA ... 100 Kornblith, Lester, Jr., SAM Kostick, John Alfred Kovitz, Julius Kozak, Walter Frederic Kramer, Leo Judson 46 Kraus, Fred Mandelbaum, S.fl., 4 BA Krebs, George William, SN Krenn, Joseph Robert Krev, John Walter, ATA Kre ' y, Roger Allan 92 Kron, Rinaldo Vincent, ! AO Kruse, Arnold August, B.S. . . . , . . 100 Ku, Kuang Fu, B.S. . - Kuban, Martin Maxmilhan, Jr. . . .... Kubicek, Naci Frank, B.S. ... Kubota, Robert Akira, B.S. ■Kuhn, Edward Joseph, ' J ' AO Kuhrt, Wesley Amos Kulbersh, Nathan Kuryla, Michael Alexis, rA 54 Kutrubes, Peter Prokos Kyger, Jack Adolphus, B.S Kyle, Peter Edward, M.E Lach, Michael Joseph 100 Lacock, Daniel Pratt, A.B Lacy, Julius Kahn, B.S. . . Laflamme, Jacques Kemner, B.A. , -X 92 La Forge, Louis Henry, Jr., S K Laird, Robert Stuart, OX Laker, Alex Robert Lamb, Fred Lee Lamphere, Richard Lancor, Joseph Henry, Jr Landa ' , Robert Bruce Landrigan, Richard Boyle ... ... . Landwehr, Henry Richard, I Ay . Lane, John Charles, Jr Lane, Richard Oscar, B.Cer 54 Lane, Walter Johnson 119 Lang, Hans Joachim, M.E Langs, Thomas Erland Langsdorf, Alexander Suss, Jr., A.B Langton, Bernard Bishop Lappin, Paul William ... Larkin, Robert Gardner, t.MA Larson, Earl Edwin Latham, Allen, Jr., S.B Pa c Class Course ' 39 a •38 VI ' 39 XVI •38 V ■38 XVI •38 VIII •38 XV,b ■38 V Grad. II Armv Ord. ■37 VII3 ■39 XVI Grad. V ■39 VX ■36 X •39 X ■36 III3 ■37 XVI Grad. XV ■36 VII, ■38 X •39 II ■39 XVI •36 IX-B •38 II ■38 XIV •36 XVI ■38 X ■37 XVI ■38 X Grad. X-A ■36 X •38 VI •38 X •38 V •37 XIV ■36 II4 Grad. X-A ■39 XVI •38 VI-A •40 IV ■36 IX-B •37 U Grad. Sp. X Grad. XVI ■37 II Grad. X-A ■36 VI ■38 XIII-C ■39 XVI ■39 XVI •36 III. •39 V Grad. V Grad. II •36 X ■37 VI Grad. XVI (Met ■36 IX-B •37 VI-C •39 VI-A ■39 I ■38 VI •37 VI ■36 VI-C ■38 VI ■37 X ■39 X ■39 XVI Grad. III (Cer. ■36 XV„ Grad. 11 ■39 II Grad. VIII ■38 XI •38 VIII •39 V •39 II Grad. XV Home AJiiress 109 Bedford St., New Bedford, Mass. Kirloskarwadi (S. M. C), India 16 Elizabeth St., Mattapan, Mass. 303 Lawndale St., Aurora, 111. 52 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 130 Winthrop Place, Englewood, N. j. lOI . lliance Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 5002 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. i . diutant General, Washington, D. C. 10 Turnpike St., Canton, Mass. 47 Hamilton . ve., Lynn, Mass. 18 Eastbourne St., Roslindale, Mass. Forest Inn Restaurant, . mbler. Pa. Whipple Road, East Billerica, Mass. Lima, N. Y. 220 Hillside Ave., Pied mont, Calif. 220 Hillside Ave., Piedmont, Calif. Polly Park Road, Rye, N. Y. 31 Marlboro St., Newburyport, Mass. 100 Salem St., Reading, Mass. 1207 Greenleaf St., Evanston, 111. 514 Chauncy Circle, McKeesport, Pa. 1301 Balmoral Drive, Detroit, Mich. 125 South Kingman Road, South Orange, N. J. Box 145, Shrewsbury, N. J. 13 Sunset Terrace, Maplewood, N. J. 98 Fletcher St., Roslindale, Mass. 605 South Sixth Ave.. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 108 Wvndham Road, Rochester, N. Y ' . 4024 North Eighth St., Philadelphia, Pa. 157 Bonair Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 1163 Scott Ave., Winnetka, 111. 44 Dwight St., Boston, Mass. 58 . uburn St., Auburndale, Mass. 13s Wyman St., Lynn, Mass. 56 Columbia Road, Dorchester, Mass. 44 Butler Place, Brooklvn, N. Y. 1260 West 59th St., Kansas City, Mo. 55 Kelsey St., New Britain, Conn. Glen St., Natick, Mass. Glen St., Natick, Mass. 178 Melrose St., Rochester, N. Y. Kekaha, Kawai, Hawaii Kao Hung Village, Shanghai, China East Longmeadow, Mass. 4312 Kirkland St., San Francisco, Calif. 944 East 20th St., Los .Angeles, Calif. 20 Church St., Highland Falls, N. Y. 16 Longview Drive, Longmeadow, Mass. 155 Ruthven St., Roxbury, Mass. Las Cajas, Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico 17 Tremont St., Peabody, Mass. 567 Westminster Road, Brooklvn, N. Y ' . 25 School St., Lakeport, N. H. 35 Mt. Vernon St., Dorchester, Mass. 2727 3rd Ave., Huntington, W. Va. .) 15 Egmont St., Brookline, Mass. 4043 Dorchester St. West, Montreal, Que. 4006 Agnes Ave., Kansas City, Mo. 490 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N. J. 50 Mount Prospect St., Bridgewater, Mass. 46 Pine Ridge Road, Waban, Mass. 3 Clarendon . ve.. West Rutland, Vt. 75 Bartlett Ave., Edgewood, R. I. 233 South Main St., Albany, N. Y. 30 Park Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 6 Cohawney Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. 311 Park St., West Roxbury, Mass. ) 367 Chittenden Ave., Columbus, Ohio 10 Kenmore St., Boston, M.ass. 358 Main St., Ridgeheld Park, N. J. 21 Main St., East, Hamilton, Ont. 5187 Cabanne Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Meadow Cartwav, Millis, Mass. 62 Johnston Road, Dorchester, Mass. 334 Windsor Road, Englewood, N.J. 82 Mt. Vernon St., Lawrence, Mass. 150 Freeman St., Brookline, Mass. 346 Directory of Students Nrf wf Ltiurent, George Jules L;ius, Andre Nichol Lawrence, Chester Campbell Lawrence, Howard Corey, Jr. Lawrence, William Kenneth Lawry, Clinton Chamberlain, Jr. Leary, James Homer Lebenbaiim, Paul, Jr., A.B. LeBlanc, Roi er Edward, 1 K U-Bow, Ralph Harold . . Lee, John Clifford Hodges, Jr., ( X Leeder, Jacob, SB. Lefthes, Nicholas . Leghorn, Richard Sully, iW Leigh ton, Cecil Violet Leman, . ndre Frederic, OE Leman, Jean Louis, OH Lenient, Bernard Samuel l nk. Carl Cieorge Lenoir, Walter Frank, Jr., B.S. Leonard, Charles Leo Lepes, Morris LeShane, Albert Harold Leslie, Harding Bruce Lessard, Francis Henr Leum, Leonard Norman, BA. Leventhal, Norman Bernard Leventhal, Robert Herbert Leverett, Miles Corrington, B.S., M.S.E. Levick, Dudlev Allen.Jr, A Levine. Abraham Bernard Levine, . rnold Jack Levinson, Lawrence Mvron Levis, Robert Hairy, XX I.evitt, Stanley Micholl, tA Levy, Charles Nathaniel . Levy, George Maurice Lewis, Clay, A.B. , Lewis, Frank David, A.B. Lewis, George Albert, B.A. . Lewis, Ir ' ing Rupert .... I wis, Warren Kendall, Jr., B.S., S.M, Lewis, William Francis, B.S., M.S. Li, Norman Fook Cheung Li, Teh-Ching Li.idy, Fred Gardner, Jr., B.S.E. Libbv, lames William, [r,, SB. . Liben, isr.iel, S B., S.M. . Lichter, David Haskell Lief, Milton Lin, Shih Nge, B.S. . Lin, Tung Hua, B.S. . Lindbcrg, David Nathaniel, A Lindsa ' , John, i BE . . Lindsay, Robert Wilcox, B.S., S.M. Lindsey, Wilton Joseph, S.B. Linds trom, William Julius, M.E., t M Lipnick, Paul Lippitt, Henry Frederick, II, AT Lippitt, Vernon Garvey Lippold, Benjamin Franklin, AKK Little, Charles Hubbard, tAO Little|ohn, Henry Cowles Littler, Frank Hudson, B.Arch. Lm, ShihTsan. B.S., M.S. . . Livengood, James Cooper, i;N Llantada, Alfredo, I K Locke, David Dyer, B.S Lockhart, Ernest Earl, S.B., S.M. Loder, James Gardner, AXA . Loesch, Richards Llewellyn, Bdll Lof, George Oscar Gage, B.S. Logan, Albert Victor, A.B,, S.M. Lohman, Ira Henry, Jr., BKIl l.ombardi, Loreto .... Longwell, James Cooper, t BE Loomis, Aaron Alcorn Looniis, Austin Carr, l Ki; . Lopez, Victor Manuel, B.Sc, EM. Lopez de Ceballos, Pedro Luis P i. Class Coursi •39 VI-A ■37 V •37 IV-A •38 VI •39 VI-A ■39 XV, 119 36 XV, 73 Grad. 1 46 ■36 11. ■38 I ■39 1 Grad. Mil 75 ■36 1 ■39 Mil •39 ■40 IV 92 •36 IX-B ■38 VI-A ■39 X Grad . X-A ■39 11 46 ■36 11, 135 36 XVIII ■38 II 38 36 h Grad. V ■38 XVII 131 •36 XVII Grad. X ■38 XV, ■38 V ■39 V •39 VI ■39 X 38 ■36 I. •39 XVI ■37 X Grad. X ■37 VI-C ■37 Sp. VI-C ■37 XV, b Grad. X Grad. X •38 VI •37 VI-A Grad. Sp. II Grad. - Grad. VIII •39 Vl-A •37 XVI Grad. XVI Grad. XVI ■39 VI-A •39 IV Grad. III (Met Grad. II 38 Grad. I •37 XV„, •36 XV,, 119 ■38 VI-A 60 ■36 IV ■38 II ■39 ' I-A Grad. IV-B 46 Gr.id. 11 ■38 X •37 II Grad. X-A Grad. Vll, •37 XV,,, •39 XVI Grad. X Grad. ' •38 VI 126 •36 XVI ' 38 VI 119 •36 XVi„ ■37 XV,b Grad. XII ■37 I Home Aildrtis 106 South 16th St., PhiLidelphia, Pa. 68 North Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 181 Taylor St., Wollaston, M.ass. 381 Highland . ve., L ' p|vr Montclair, N.J. 443 Fairview St., Devon, Conn. 370 Mt. ' ernon St., Dedhani, Mass. 119 St. Botolph St , Boston, Mass. 9 Palm . ve., San Francisco, Calif. 313 Ash St., M,inchester, N. H. 72 Walnut Park, Roxbury, Mass. 25 Llanberris Road, Cynwyd, Pa. 183 Centre St., Brockton, Mass. II Ward St., Salem, Mass. 42 Wedgemere Ave., Winchester, M.ass. 4 St. Paul St., Cambridge, Mass. 597 St. Catherine Road, Montreal, Can. 597 St. Catherine Road, Montreal, Can. 611 Beach St., Revere, Mass. 123 Elm Ave., Rahway, N.J. 1111 Lovett Blvd., Houston, Texas 6 Grandview Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 474 Osborn St., Fall River, Mass. 248 Walden St., Cambridge, Mass. 33 Dearborn St., Salem, Mass. 17 Wyman St., Brockton, Mass. Westby, Wis. 18 Wolcott St., Dorchester, Mass. 18 Wolcott St., Dorchester, Mass. 1437. Johnstone St., Bartlesville, Okla. 117 Township Line, Jenkintown, Pa. 388 Geneva Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 146 Stanwood St., Roxburv, Mass. 69-29 Failing St., Arverne, ' N. Y. 401 George St., Alton, III. 845 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 2110 Universitv Place, Davton, Ohio 40 Blake Road ' , Brookline! Mass. 85 Lombard St., Newton, Mass. 2925 Victor St., Kansas City, Mo. 66 Terrace Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. 102 Gordon Road, Wab.an, Mass. 85 Lombard St., Newton, Mass. 5448 Washington, Blvd., Chicago, III. 9 Seymour Road, Hongkong, China 63 4 Avenue Haig, Shanghai, China 702 Ridge St., Charlottesville, Va. 56 Rockland St.. Swampscott, Mass. 129 Ormond St., Mattap. n, Mass. 52 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. 42 Howland St., Roxbury, Mass. 290 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Nanking, China 154 Manor Place, Decatur, III. 600 Park Ave,, Rochester, N. Y. ) 7 Ely Road, Dorchester, Mass. 950 Englewood Ave., Kenmore, N. Y. Box 83, Georgetown, Conn. 349 Blue Hill Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 4481 Hortensia St., San L ' )iego, Calif. 65 Elm St., Westwood, N. J. 21 Linden Place, Middletown, N. Y. 2507 Stratford Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 30 State St., New Britain, Conn. 662 Mount Royal, Marble Arch, London, England Ning-kiang-chao. Ningpo, China 35 Prospect St., Berea, Ky. 190 Avenida Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico North Armour St,, Bellefonte, Pa. 49 Rut ' led Road, Mattapan, Mass. 50 Avon Road, New Rochell e, N. Y. Montrose, Colo, 1226 Clayton St., Denver, Colo. 47 Centre St., Milton, Mass. 1209 Moreau Drive, Jefferson Citv, Mo. 4 Academy Hill Road, Brighton, Mass. 330 Second . ve., .|ohnstown, Pa. 815 Webster St., Needhani, Mass. 14 Riverview Terrace, Springfield, Mass. 601 West 156th St., New York, N. Y. 23 Este 1, Car.acas, Venezuela, S. A. 347 Dir ect ory of Stuc ents Namt P i ' CLiss Course Home Address Lord, Clifford Symington, B. A., M. A. Grad. XII 82 First St., New Westminster, B. C. Lord, Francis Jordan, B.S. Grad. XV 238 Main St., Old Town, Me. Loring, Blake Marshall ' 37 nil 49 Old Morton St., Mattanan, Mass. 1278 Michigan Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Loring, Samuel Jasper 92 ■36 IX-B ' Lou, Vvan .... ■37 XIII 215 South El Dorado St., Stockton, Calif. Louie, Alfred Chun Wah •38 VI 1 Bowk) Bldg, Fly-dragon Terrace, Hongkong China Louie, Ben, B.S. Grad. I 116 Produce Row, San . ntonio, Texas Love, William Calhoon, Ki) ■39 XVi Twickenham Hotel, Huntsville, Ala. Lovejoy, William Luzerne •37 VIII 21 Walden St., Cambridge, Mass. Lovering, Earle Ward ■38 III, Farwell Road, Tyngsborough, Mass. Lowe, Brenton Webber 119 ■36 XV, b 93 Atlantic Ave., Fitchburg, Mass. Lowry, David Francis •39 X 61 Tower St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Lucas, Philip . ■39 V 129 Mvrtle St., Boston, Mass. Luce, Stanley Faunce ■39 XIII-C 137 Brovvnell St., New Bedford, Mass. Luchner, Leonard Frederick ■39 II 88 Fairmont St., Maiden, Mass. Lukens, Alan Robert, Ch.E. Grad. Sp. III (Cer.) 206 Concord Ave., Belmont, Mass. Lukes, Robert Vincent, B.S, Grad. X 5327 West 23rd St., Cicero, 111. Lukesh, Joseph Stevens 92 36 IX-A 67 Hilton Ave., Garden City, N. Y. Lukofsky, Saul 131 ■36 XVII 8 Grape St., Maiden, Mass. Lutz, Robert Jackson, 2N 126 ■36 XVI 41 1 West 46th Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Lykos, George Nestor Grad. IV 121 Metropolitan Ave., Boston, Mass. Lynch, William Minos, ATA •39 X 617 Harmon Parkway, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Lvnn, John Edward •37 X 1066 Bennington St., East Boston, Mass. Lyon, Dean Aplin, E.E. ... Grad. VI 54 Cottage St., Leominster, Mass. Lyon, Emory Taylor, Jr., BHU ■39 II 14 Dorchester Road, Buffalo, N. Y. Lyons, Will ' . , . •38 XVi, 1551 80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. j Lytle, Clifford Allen . •37 XVib 8 Anson St., Stratford, Conn. 1 Ma, Chuk Ching, B.Sc. Grad. Sp. X Tai-Hon Road, Canton, China Maak, Charles Henry . ■38 nil 390 New Brunswick Ave., Fords, N. J. Maass, Gusta ' Rosenheim ■37 XVib 5605 Greenspring Ave., Baltimore, Md. Mabee, Richard Scribner, l i;K .... 75 ■36 VI-A 83 Lincoln Ave., Paterson, N. J. Mabie, Henry Clay 38 ■36 h 70 Southbourne Road, Jamaica Plain, Mass. MacAdam, David Lew is, B.S. Grad. VIII 246 Highland Ave., Upper Darbv, Pa. MacAdam, Walter Kavanagh, ATA 75 ■36 VI-A 386 Littleworth Lane, Sea Cliff, N. Y. MacAllister, Copeland Charles . 75 Gr.ad. VI-A 211 Forest St., Arlington, Mass. MacArthur, Charles Allison . ■39 VI 115 Sackett St., Providence, R. I. Macbeth, Norman, Jr., AKE ■39 VI 221 Nvac Ave., Pelham, N. Y. McCauUey, George Reeves, S.B. Grad. IV-A 2547 East Archer St., Tulsa, Okla. McClean, Joseph Francis 75 ' 36 VI-C Goshen, N. Y. McClenahan, William St. Clair, B.A Grad. V Brainerd, Minn. McConica, Thomas Henry, B.Sc. Gr.ad. X 2678 Robinson St., Regina, Sask. McCrensky, Harold .... 38 XVie 55 Wildvvood St., Mattapan, Mass. McCrerv, |ohn Barclay, J Ki; •37 II 53 Wynnedale Road, Narberth, Pa. McCulla, William Lewis, B.S Grad. II Army Ord 609 Euclid Ave., Cherokee, Iowa McCune, William James, Jr., |)Kw ■37 XV,b 4 Kensington Road, Glens Falls, N. Y. MacDonald, Arthur Lamond, B.Sc. ■37 VI 8 Fletcher St., Glace Bay, N. S. Macdonald, Donald Stone ■38 V 118 Highland St., HydePark, Mass. Macdonald, Norman Macleod ■39 I 38 Monponset St., Mattapan, Mass. Macdonald, Stephen L. ■39 IV 217 South 12th East, Salt Lake City, Utah McEvoy, Leo Carle, Jr. ■38 X Coron.ado Hotel, St. Louis, Mo. McFee, Raymond Herbert ■37 VIII 14 Halcyon Road, Newton Center, Mass. McGill, Edward Knight, 111 ■38 XV, 324 Highland Ave., Leonia, N. J. McGill, William Harland •39 IV 21 Oxford St., Winchester, Mass. McGinniss, Joseph Alovsius ■40 IV 20 Howe St., Wellesley, Mass. McGrath, Henry George, Jr. 101 ■36 X 473 Andover St., Lawrence, Mass. McGrath, Raymund ' incent, B.S. Grad. I 422 ' ., West Crockett St., Seattle, Wash. McGregor, John Edward ■37 II 85 Highland St., Milton, Mass. Mack, Sidney Foler ■38 VI 24 St. Lawrence St., Portland, Maine McKeag, Malcolm Francis ' 38 VI 162 Broad St., Norwich, Conn. ! McKeever, James Ross, B.Arch., ATL ' Giad. IV-B 437 Rebecca Ave., Wilkinsburg. Pa. McKenney, Leo Foster, A.B. Grad. ' 136 Highland Ave., Athol, Mass. MacKenzie, Ian Murdoch ■38 X 428 79th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mackenzie, Kenneth Rov, B.A. , ■38 Sp. XVII 36 Ingraham Road, Wellesley, Mass. McKeown, Bernard William, Jr. •39 XVI 21 Landholm Road., Newton, Mass. M.ickesey, Thomas William, B.Arch. . Grad. IV-B 120 Woodlawn St., Lvnn, Mass. MacKinnon, Charles Edward ■39 XIV 72 E ergreen vAve., Westport, Conn. 1755 Stratford Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. M.ickro, August Victor ' 37 VIII McLean, James Davis, J rA ■37 VI-A 88 Lincoln St., Framingham, M.ass. McLean, John Oliver, S.B. 66 Grad - V HalTs Grounds, North .-Vdams, Mass. McLellan, David Smith ■37 XIV 33 Collins Road, Waban, Mass. MacLeod, David Earle •38 IX-B 41 Warren Ave., Weston, Mass. McLeod, Milton Kenneth, SB. Grad . II 30 Stockton St., Dorchester, Mass. MacLeod, Russell Allen •39 XII2 34 FlettSt., Belmont, Mass. McMahon, Gerald Stropic 101 ■36 X 42 Presentation Road, Brighton, Mass. McMahon, Thomas Michael ■3s X 524 West 173rd St., New York, N. Y. McMillan. Brockway 135 •36 XVIII 36 Washington Circle. Hinsdale, III. MacMillan, Latimer Whittle, Jr. •39 VI-A 8 Irving St., Newton Center, Mass. McMullin, Donaldson Ray ... 60 ■36 IV 215 Windsor Road, Waban, Mass. McMurry, Howard Vernon, B.S., M.. . Gr.id. XII RED. 1, Westwood, N.J. 348 Directory of Students Same Pai Class Ciurse Homt AMirtss MacNeille, Stephen Mjnn, A B Grad. VHI Bailey Island, Maine Macomber, Brainard Tucker, A ■38 XVI 54 Cole Ave., Providence, R. I. Maconiber, Frank Foster . ' 39 X 17 Forest St., Cambridge, Mass. Madden, Robert Bowman, B.S. . ■37 XIII-A 128 Washington St., Sharon, Pa. Maeder, Abbott Sherwood, l AO ' 38 I 12 Homestead Ave., Scarsdale, N. V. i Magnuson, Mark Graham •39 VII, 120 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 1 Mapruder, Lloyd Burns, Jr., A ■39 X Fort Hancock, N. J. Maguire, James ... •38 II 372 Moraine St., Brockton, Mass. Maguire, Walter Joseph ■37 I ' -A 157 Chapin Ave., Providence, R. I. Mahoney, John Francis •38 ' 40 Beacon Hill Ave., Lvnn, Mass. Maida, Francis Xavier •37 VI-A R.F.D. 1, Long Branch; N.J. Main, Archibald Macnicol, Jr., tKi: . •38 XIII 909 Middle St., Bath, Me. Malick, Emil Avimalg ... ■39 X 64 West Elm St., Chicago, III. Mandelkorn, Richard Shai, SB. •36 XIII-A 705 Fifth Ave., Peoria, III. Mank, Sidney ... ■37 XVII 22 Bonnefoy St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Mankowich, Ralph 81 •36 VII, 21 Winthrop St., Waltham, Mass. .Mann, Cecil Eldon, SB. Gr.id. II 84 Barnard . ve., Watertown, Mass. Mannos. Murray •37 XVIII 77 Kirkland St., Cambridge, Mass. Mapes, Ctrl . nthony, IW 101 •36 X 8 Wendover Road, Baltimore, Md. March, Robert Kellogg, B.A. ■38 11 Hangchow College, Zakow, China Marchisio, Robert George, i:K •39 X Palisade Ave., Englewood Cliffs, N.J. Marcy, Willard •37 X 112 Melrose Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Mari, Pedrojulio ■37 Vt-C 554 Cumberland Ave., Teaneck, N. J. Marin, Antonio ■3s Sp. XIII 2464 O ' Higgins St., Buenos Aires, Argentina Maroney, Walier Leo ■37 X 57 Bellevue Ave., Haverhill, Mass. Marsh, George Richard, f) K •39 X 66 Mansion St., Coxsackie, N. Y. Marsh, Jean Elizabeth ■36 Sp. XVI 61 Norfolk Road, Arlington, Mass. Marshak, Howard ■37 I S Whitnev Ave., Beverlv, M.iss. Marshall, Alfred James •39 V 349 Park St., Dorchester, Mass. Marshall, Howard Dudlev ■39 XIII 13 Eagle St., Newburyport, Mass. Marsren, Lewis Alfred •37 Sp. III. 2870 Broadway, San Francisco, Calif. Marston, Ahvyn Franklin ■38 I 145 Grandview , ve., Wollaston, Mass. Martin, Edward Peter ■38 I 17 Green St., Everett, Mass. Martin, Richard Drake ■39 X 34 Laurence St., Haverhill, Mass. Marvin, George Glover, S.B., S.M. Grad. ' 10 Seneca Road, Winchester, Mass. Marx. Joseph Benjamin, B.A. Grad. X-A 1184 South Main St., Carthage, Mo. Mason, Harry Jemison ■39 VI-A 123 North Martindale Ave., Ventnor City, N. J. Mason, Howard Stanley, S.B. Grad. ' 60 Parkman St., Brookline, Mass. Mason, John Stevens, BE •37 II 1738 M St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Matchett, William Herbert . Grad. VI-A 51 Eaton Place, East Orange, N. J. Mather, Frank Jewett, 3d, A.B., A •36 Sp. XIII Washington Crossing, Pa. Mathesius, Walther Herman, X t 54 ■36 III, 7227 Luella Ave., Chicago, III. Mathias, Frederick David, OH . 60 ■36 IV 21 Gordon Crescent, Westmount, Que. .Mathis, Charles Moss, l Ki; ■39 ' l Tuckerton, N.J. Matthews, Frank Benjamin ■36 I. 258 Smith K -e., Kingston, N. Y. Matthews, Norman Adams •37 Ill, 192 Lincoln Ave., Rutland, Vt. Matulis, Augustine John . ■39 II.. 46 Summer St., Bridgewater, Mass. Mautner, Leonard, l)BA . ■39 I 2244 New Haven Ave., F.ir Rockawav, N. Y. MaximolT, Boris Semion . 75 ' 36 VI-A 1708 West Chicago Ave., Chicago, III. May, Walter Max, AXA •39 II 665 Wolfs Lane, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Mayo, Clarence Arthur, Jr., BHll 111 ■36 XIII 35 North Ave., Melrose Highlands, Mass. Mazur, Joseph Gersen ... ■39 VI-A 152 South Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. Mazrotta, Sebastian George, B.S., 4 K 131 36 XVII 10 Mazzotta Place, Middletown, Conn. Meadow, Henry Coe . . ■38 VI-A Ill Van Buren St., Passaic, N. J. .Meeks, John Abner, B.S. Grad. II Armv Ord % Adjutant General, Washington, D. C. .Megcrian, George Krikor ■37 XV, 2 Houston St., Lynn, Mass. Megtiuier, Carl Edgecomb, AKK ■38 XIII-C 100 Madison . ve., Newtonville, Mass. j Mehren, Bernard Walsh ■38 X 33 West Grand . ve., Chicago, III. Melville, Karl William ■39 XVI 3 Harriet Ave., Belmont, Mass. Mencher, Ely, B.S. Grad. XII 803 West 180th St., New York, N. Y. Mendel, Ralph ■38 V 82 Almyr Ave., Deal, N.J. Mendelsohn, Lewis, B.Eng., S.M. Grad. VI 2086 Tuppcr St., Montreal, Canada 6465 Wvdown St., Clavton, Mo. .Mendle, Alvin Milton, i:AM ■38 II Merrill, Bushnel! Darby 87 ■36 VIII The Lodge, Peace Dale, R. I. Merrill, Leonard Abbott, Jr. ■39 XV2 Orchard Hill Farm, Peterboro, N. H. Merriman, Thurston Sihley ■39 X 20 First Ave., Seymour, Conn. Merritt, William Alfred , ■39 X 60 Jamaica Way, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Mersereau, Clayton Davis ■38 III. 16 Walnut Road, Somerville, Mass. Metcalf, Mary Curtis , ■37 XVI 362 . dams St., Milton, Mass. Metten, William Herbert 75 ■36 VI-C 25 Walnut Park, Roxburv, M.ass. Metz, Harry Edward ■37 III. 8701 Shore Road, Brooklvn, N. Y. Metzger, Mortimer frving ■39 X I 83-19 Beverlv Road, Kew Gardens, N. Y. Mever, Chester Edward ■36 Ilr, 110 Allston St., West Medford, Mass. Meyer, Fred William, B.S. GraJ. X-A 81 Carl St., San Francisco, Calif. Meyer, Georgette Louise ■39 XVI 2406 East Shorewood Blvd., Milwaukee, Wis. Meyer, Ira Leonard, B.S., K+A 46 Gr.ad. II 2335 Germantown . ve., Philadelphia, Pa. Mever, Maurice Abraham, ' t BA ■39 T-A 2869 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. Michel, John Field, AXA ■38 XIV 49 Nameang Ave., New London, Conn. Miehle, William ■38 VIII 183 West Spiirks St., Phikidelphia, Pa. 349 Directory of Students Name Mieras, Spencer Houghton . . Migel, Hamilton, A.B., AKE Milius, Howard Ernst, AT Miller, Arthur, S.B. , Miller, Arthur Joel, S.B., S.M. Miller, Charles Russell Miller, Harold . . Miller, Merwin, B.S. Miller, William Reynolds, B.S. Millman, Sarah Ruth, B.A. . Mills, Charles Robert, Jr. Milone, Charles Robert Miner, Samuel Norton, I Ki; Minott, Albert Wainvvnght Mitchell, Donald Oilman Mitchell, Elmo Clark, B.S Mitchell, George Redmond, Jr., X Mitchell, William Cameron, B.S., i;N Mitropoulos, Theodore Nickolas Moffatt, Wilder . , . Moffett, Robert James Mohammad, AH Haj Moller, Jost Wilson Monderer, Bernard Allen Monro, Claxton, Jr. . . Montgomery, James Arthur Montgomery, James William, B.Sc. Montgomery, Mary Jean Montgomery, Raymond Braislin, A.B., S.M. Moodey, Hannah Chapin, A.B., M.Sc. Mooney, David Alfred, SB. Mooney, Vincent John Moore, Frank Lawrence, Jr. Moore, George Allen, X Moore, Herbert Carlton, S.B., S.M. Moore, James Allen Moore, Leo Benjamin Moore, Norman Cummmgs, 4 MA Moore, Walter Baker, A.B., iX Moorehead, Eric Oakman, X 1 Morabito, Sylvester Morel, George Henry Morelli, Michael . Morgan, Dale Francis, BHIl Morgan, Joseph, A.B,, MA. Morgan, Paul Stockstrom, X t Morgan, Philip Clark, Jr. Morgan, Walter Hamel Morgenthaler, Fred Warren, i;N • Morin, Edward Grange, A.B. Moriya, Koyu, B.M.E. Morrell, George Arthur, Jr. Morrill, Manning Cutter, Ki; Morrison, Ralph David, Jr. Morrison, Reeves, B.A., ' I ' T Morse, David Leopold Morss, Henry Adams, Jr., A.B., W Morton, George Wilson . Morton, Richard Freeman Morton, Robert Dean, i rA Mosehauer, Edward, Jr., AKE Moss, William Porte Mott, Gilbert Culver . . Moustakis, George Constantine Moy, Frank Ni Wing Mrose, Stanley Walter Muckenhirn, Oscar William, J ' K Muckley, Harold Jacob Mudd, Henry Thomas, A.B. Muehlemeyer, Carl Henry, B.S. Mueller, Charles William, B.S. Mueller, Richard Albert . Muench, Frank Joseph, Jr. Mulberry, Frederick Leslie Mulkern, Paul Corbett Mullen, William Francis Mullin, David William Muratzade, Enver . Murillo, Augustus Page 92 47 111 126 67 75 119 75 47 119 119 87 119 120 131 Class ' 36 ' 36 ' 38 Grad. Grad. ■36 ■36 Grad. ■36 Grad. ' 38 ■36 ' 36 ■38 ■38 Grad. ■39 ■37 ■36 ■37 ■37 ' 38 ' 39 ' 38 ' 36 ' 38 Grad. ■37 Grad. ■36 Grad. Grad. •37 ■39 Grad. ■37 ■37 •36 Grad. ■37 •39 ■38 ' 39 ' 38 Grad. ■36 ' 39 •39 ' 38 Grad. Grad. ' 39 ■39 ' 37 ' 39 ' 38 Grad. ■39 ■36 ■37 ' 37 ' 39 ■37 ■36 ' 38 ' 39 ' 37 ' 39 Grad. Grad. Grad. ' 38 ■39 ' 39 ' 36 ' 36 ■39 ' 38 ' 39 Course Home Aildress IX-B 39 Edmund Place, Detroit, Mich. IL 622 Pelhamdale Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. X 230 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. ' I 131 Walnut St., Chelsea, Mass. V 21 Edith St., Everett, Mass. XIIl-C 235 Vernon St., Norwood, Mass. XVI 1855 82nd St., Brooklvn, N. Y. XV Sunset Garage, Tillamook, Ore. XIII-A 406 Hawthorn Road, Baltimore, Md. V 714 Bristol St., Brooklvn, N. Y. VI-A Box 37, Southville, Mass. V 828 North Dawson St., Uhrichsville, Ohio IV Lakeville, Conn. XVi 52 Henrv Ave., Melrose, Mass. X 206 Oak St., Wakefield, Mass. 11 Armv Ord. Watertown . rsenal, Watertown, Mass. X ' 2950 Wevbridge Road, Cleveland, Ohio IX-B 3015 Andrews Drive, Atlanta, Ga. VI-C 24 Fisk Place, Cambridge, Mass. XIII 565 N. E. 69th St., Miami, Fla. XV, 102-09 217th St., Queens Village, L. 1., VI 1413 Hammam St., Shatra, Iraq Urc. 18 F.lston Road, Upper Montclair, N. J VI 1337 Fargo Ave, Chicago, III. XVib 105 Chestnut St., Andover, Mass. I 31 Maple Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Ill (Min.) Box 377, Wetaskiwm, Alberta, Can. Sp. N. Y. , Tenn. Mellen Road, KnoxviL Woods Hole, Mass. 603 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 109 Irving St., Fall River, Mass. 76 Grozier Road, Cambridge, Mass. II N ' ista Terrace, New Haven, Conn. 15 Arguello Blvd., San Francisco, Calif. 145 Beaumont Ave., NewtonviUe, Mass. 319 South Walter St., Albuquerque, New Mexico 40 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. 126 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass. 4 North Division St., Walla Walla, Wash. 2635 Dwight Way, Berkeley, Calif. 427 Chestnut Ave., Trenton, N. J. 21 Royal St., Lawrence, Mass. 61 Plymouth St., Quincy, Mass. 6 Avon Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. 2423 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa. 8 Wvdown Terrace, St. Louis, Mo. R.F.D. 1, Lynnhaven, Va. 491 Beale St., Quincv, Mass. 75 70th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1043 Washington St., Bath, Me. 78 Motovamacho St., Kumamoto, 13442 Parkway Drive, Lakewood, 59 Grove Ave., Leominster, Mass. 133 Peterborough St., Boston, Mass. Groton, Conn. 128 Sewall Ave,, Brookline, Mass. 24 Charlesgate East, Boston, Mass. 42-40 Judge St., Elmhurst, N. Y. 72 Aldrich St., Roslindale, Mass. 2125 Overbrook Road, Lakewood, Ohio 122 Christopher St., Montclair, N, J. 583 Cottage Road, Portland, Me. III Gem Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 11 Winter St., Salem, Mass. 11 Oxford Place, Boston, Mass. 42 Prosper St., Maiden, Mass. 329 20th Ave. West, Calgarv, Alberta 1725 Lake Ave., Pueblo, Colo. Ill (Min.) 1240 Benedict Drive, Beverlv Hills, Calif. Ill (Met.) 1838 Rural St., Rockford, III. IV XVI VI-C II VI-A XIII I ' II X XVa II5 XV I I II VI-A X VIII xv, X XVo VI-A X-A II XV, II XVib II IV VIII I VIII XVib Unc. XV, II XV,b XV, I VI-A III3 Japan Ohio VI 208 South Benton St., New Athens, 111. VI-A 94 Randolph Ave., Waterbury, Conn. II 599 Sanford Ave., Newark, N. J. VI-A 3516 Pershing Drive, El Paso, Texas XV,b 12 Worthington St., Dedham, Mass. XVII 1092 Bennington St., East Boston, Mass. V 70 Park Ave Madison, N. J. I 1336 P. K. St., Istanbul, Turkey I Apartado 396, Bogota, Colombia, S. A. 350 Directory o f Stu dents X.iwf p- ' i ' Class Cotirsi Home Address MurlLV, John Albert . ■37 X 107 North William St., Fairhaven, Mass. Murphy, George Joseph ' 36 II 102 Walnut St., Braintree, Mass. Murphy, Jeremiah Gerald, i;X ■39 II 171 West 179th St., New York. N. Y. Murphv, John Thomas ■36 Sp. IV 3210 Washington St., Kansas City, Mo. Murphy. Richard Daniel. A.B. Gr.id. VIII Notre Dame, Ind. Murphv, William Amos. Jr. . ■39 II 160 Washington St., Gloucester, Mass. Murra ' , Gardner Andrew ... ' 36 l ' 18 Prospect St., Gloversville, N. Y. Murr.iy, William MacGregor, B.Eng., S.M Grad. II 1 509 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal, Can. Murrow, Richard Barzen, 2X . . .126 ■36 XVI 201 South Tenth St., Independence, Kans. Musschoot, Albert .... 47 •36 II-, 26 Pleasant St., Taunton, Mass. Mustoe, Anthonv Quintus, B.S. Grad. XVI Hot Springs, Va. Muiher, Richard. BOII . ' 38 Sp. XV, 180 Elgin St., Newton Center, Mass. Myers, John .Mden, l rA 126 ■36 XVI 971 Mernman Road, Akron, Ohio Myers, Leonard Frederick ■37 II 317 Andrews St., Rochester, N. Y. Myers, Richard Herman ■39 VI 103 Glenwood Ave., Leonia. N. j. Myerson, Martin. . B. Grad. Sp. in (Cer.) 83 Beals St., Brookline, Mass. || Mykytow, Walter Joseph ■39 XVI 17 Parkman St., Boston, Mass. .Mylchreest, George Dudley, B.A. 38 ■36 h 238 Palm St., Hartford, Conn. Myrick, Edward Bartlctt ■38 XVI 34 Otis St., Newtonville, M.ass. Nakayama, Yonco ■39 X 472 Manor Lane, Pelham, N. Y. Nallc, Edmond Robertson, Ki; ■38 X 803 Main St., McCook, Ncbr. Neagle, Francis Emmet, Jr., AKK Needham, Phyllis Marie . ■37 XIII 82 Millard Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. 60 ■36 IV-A 85 Kempier St., Wollaston, M.iss. Needham, Roger Everett . ■36 XV, „ Princeton, Mass. Neilv, Joseph Whitman, E.E. Grad. VI 56 Oak Hill Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Ncllig.in, Thomas Paul, rAE 92 36 IX-B 2336 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Nelson, Clifford Vincent . ■38 VI-A 22 ' ernon Road, Waverley, Mass. Nelson, Milton Eric . ■36 Sp. IV 21 Manning St., Pawtucket, R. I. Nelson, Richard Burton, B.S. Grad. VIII Powell, Wyo. Nelson, William John ■38 XVI 37 Indian Point St., Newport, Vt. Ness, Howard Charles ■38 XV,„ 1065 Walnut St., Newton Highlands, Mass. Neu, Raymond Milton, Jr. ■39 II 90 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Neuendorffer, Joseph Alfred . ■39 VIII 34 Harwood Ave., North Tarrytown, N. Y. Neumann, Ernest Paul, L ' AE ■38 11 Crownpoint, New Mexico Newman, Irving Label 120 ■36 XVj 12 Wildvvood St., Dorchester, Mass. Newman, James Arthur, Jr., P ' S ■37 V 292 West St., Leominster, Mass. Newman, Philip Edmund, liX ■36 XV, h 212 Church St., Smethport, Pa. Newman, Robert Wiedenthal 101 ■36 X Cleveland Heights, Ohio Nichols, William Orville .... 47 36 II3 157 Coligni Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Nicholson, Edward Wheelock Steele, B.S. 101 Grad. X-A 2231 East 67th St., Chicago, III. Nicholson, Morris Emmons, SS . ■39 III3 2591 Colchester Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio Nickerson, John Theodore Roosevelt, S.B., S.M. Grad. VIL. 13 Walnut St., Watertown, Mass. Nickerson, Mortimer Henderson ■37 V 52 Winthrop St., Winthrop, Mass. Nickerson, Philip Thomas ■38 XVI 19 Liberty St., East Braintree, Mass. Nickerson, Seth Connor, tMA 38 ■36 I. 43 Lewis Bay Road, Hyannis. Mass. Nie, Chester Kyih-z, B.S. ■37 VI 275 Yu Yuen Ro.id, Shanghai, China Nietsch, Herman Erich ■38 XVI 163 Cottage St., New Bedford, Mass. Noble, Gilbert Wright, A.B., S.B., S.M. Grad. III(M n.) 6917 Princeton .■Vve., St. Louis, Mo. Nolan, Edward Joseph, S.B., S.M. . Grad. V 25 Cobden St., Boston, Mass. Nolan, Walter Henry . - ■37 Sp. VII, 63 Old Harbor St., South Boston, Mass. Noodleman, Samuel ' 37 VI 39DyerSt,,Saco, Me. Noonan, John James •38 IV 160 Savin Hill e., Dorchester, Mass. Nordling, Carl Ciustaf . llan •38 XVIII 14 Third St., Brockton, Mass. Norman, Daniel, B.S., M.A. Grad. Sp. VIII 120 Salem St., Maiden, Mass. Norman, Haskell Field, A.B. . . . •36 Sp. III 28 Gleason St., Dorchester, Mass. Norris, Charles Hea d, Jr., B.S., S.M. . Grad. I 11 Ware St., Cambridge, Mass. Norton, Thomas Philip 75 ■36 VI-C 3 Bradford St., Salem, Mass. Nottingham, Frank Oliver, Jr., E.E. Grad . VI 1201 East Brush Creek Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. Novak, Richard August, ATfi . ■38 XV, 801 North Patterson Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. Noyes, Fred Leigh •38 XVI 71 Bromrteld St., Newburyport, Mass. Noyes, John Jr., J K:; ■38 11 167 Linden St., Clayton, Mo. Noyes, Walter Frederick, ATSJ 60 •36 I ' Parsons St., Colebrook, N. H. Nugent, John Berchmans ■37 II 11 Bartlett Parkwav, Winthrop, Mass. Nutt, Harold incent, B.S. 47 ■36 Sp. IIl. 329 Park St., Boston, Mass. Nygaard, Walter Oscar ■37 II 55 Jasper St., Saugus, Mass. Nyquist, Arthur Stanley, B.S. Grad. ' 12 Reynolds St., North Easton, Mass. Oakes, Thomas Barrott, tAO ■38 l ' 34 Burnham St., Belmont, Mass. Ober, Philip LeRoy, AKE 47 36 III 41 Taylor Crossway, Brookline, Mass. Obert, Francis Aubrey ■39 XVI 605 River St., Matiapan, Mass. (TBnen, Eben John •38 X 99 Spruce St., Watertown, Mass. O ' Brien, Thomas Alexander . •38 IX-A 1086 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Mass. Ohrig, Jack Theodore, B.S., AXA Ml Grad. XIII 208 Lincoln Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. OConnell, Paul ■38 XVI 28 Grove St., West Ouincv, Mass. O ' Connor, Jeremiah Patrick, B.S. Grad. III (Met.) 35 Post Ave., Rochc ' ster, N. Y. || O ' Connor, Reine Henry . ■39 X 40 Pond View Road, . rlington, Mass. O ' Conor, Daniel Joseph, Jr., SX ■37 I 3 Pinehurst Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio O ' Conor. John Stanislaus, . .B , M..A. Grad lll Woodstock College, Woodstock, Md. 351 Directory of Students Name O ' Day, Charles John Odiorne, Richard Laurence Ogorzaly, Henrvjohn, SB., ' VS A Ohlson, ]olin Leonard Okasaki ' , Harold Horao, B.S. Old, Bruce Scott, B S,, i;N Oldheld, Homer Ray, jr., rx Oliver, Wilbur Carter Olmstead, Edwin Harrison, B.S. Olson, Arthur Russell Olson, Carl Olson, Carl Kenneth Olson, Creighton Brewer O ' Neil, .lames Edward, Jr., OAX Ordas, Arthur Frank, B.Sc. Orrell, Frank Lewis, Jr. . Orrison, William Wallace, B.S. . Ortvnskv, Roman Leo, J K Osborn, Robert Miller, B S. Osgood, Walter Vernon Osmun, James William W., B.S. Osmun, William Gilbert, AX Ostby, Kristian August Ostrer, jack, 1 BA Otsuki. ' Ukio, B.S. Ou Yang, Chi Owens, James Hamilton, Jr., A Ozol, Rudolph Jacob .... Pacini, Umberto Peter Packard, Kenneth Adkins Paige, Stuart, OAX Palmer, Charles Joseph, SB. Palmer, Harold Bradford Palmer, Rufus Nelson, S.B. Pancake, Robert Evan Pappas, John Nicholas Parce, Charles Walter, Ki; Parekh, Kanuilal Mulchand, B.Sc. Parekh, Vasantlal Devchand, B.Sc. Park, Robert Hemingway, AKE Parker, Basil Waldo, S.B., M.A. Parker, Charles Stephen Parker, Franklin Peahody, ZX Parker, George Albert Parker, James DeBlois. PKZ Parker, Robert Gerard, B.S. Parkhurst, George Adams Parrish, William, SB. , Paskowski, Michael Pastene, Robert Wallace . Patashinsky, Abraham Meyer Patterson, James Fergus Patterson, John Stuart, B.A., S.M. Patterson, Richard Kingsbury Pattison, William James, AKE Paul, Frederick William, B.A. Paull. Jacob Paulsen, George Gordon Payne, George Burton Pe, loeh-ming ... Peabody, Dean, SB. Pearce, James Wishart Pearl. Eliot Nathaniel Pearlman, Harry, B.A. Pearson, Carl Alfred, Ki Pearson, Daniel Cecil, Jr. Peck, Donald Berdette Peel, Arthur Ray . Peers, Randolph Adams . Pekin, Harry Tobias ... Pellam, .[ohn Rudolph, I;AM Penn, William Bernard Pepperberg, Louis Ehrlich . . . . Perkins, Grafton Brookhouse, Jr., B.S. Perkins, John Jackson, tA6 Perry, Joseph Earl, Jr. Person, Anne Alice Peskoe, Irving, SAM . Page C .f,f Course ■39 V , 92 ■36 IX-B Grad. X-A ■39 V Grad. VI Grad. III (Met ■38 XVI . 48 ■36 II. ■38 II ■39 V 38 ■36 II ■38 II ■39 XIII 39 ■36 II Grad. Vl-A •39 X . 39 Grad. I 101 ■36 X , 73 Grad. VI . 101 ■36 X . 126 Gr.id. XVI ■39 nil . ' 126 ' 36 XVI ■37 VII, . 126 Grad. XVI ■37 Unc. ■37 Unc. . 101 ■36 X ■39 VI . 47 ■36 11.1 ■39 XVo ' 36 XIII-A •39 II Gr.id. III (Cer ■39 nil . 54 ■36 III, . 93 ■36 IX-B 101 Grad. X-A 101 Grad. X-A ■38 X Gr,ad. VII ■39 XVII . 60 ■36 IV-A ■37 VI-A Grad. VI-A Grad. V . 101 ■36 X Grad. XII ' . 76 •36 VI •39 X ■39 X - 47 ■36 II. Grad. X 76 ■36 VI ■37 XIII Grad. VIII ■38 Unc. ■39 VI . 39 ■36 I2 ■40 IV Grad. II ■37 X ■39 VII, Grad. V ■37 VI-A 126 ■36 XVI ■38 X . 47 ■36 II, ■37 X ' 76 •36 VI-C ■37 VIII ■37 X ■37 VI-C Grad. XV •38 XIII ■39 I X-A •38 IV •39 V Hoffie Aihiress Lake St., Bellingham, Mass. 52 Augustus Ave., Roslindale, Mass. 128 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 550 Liberty St., South Braintree, Mass. 719 ' •) North Alameda St., Los Angeles, Calif. ,)U. S. ' Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. Fort MacArthur, Calif. 39 Union St., Bath, Me. 334 Baynes St., Buffalo. N. Y. 403 Main St., North Andover, Mass. 207 Shute St., Everett, Mass. 14 Temple St., Brockton, Mass. 62 Richmond Road, Belmont, Mass. 452 Third St. South, Faribault. Minn. 1457 North Lotus Ave., Chicago, III. 212 Westford St., Lowell, Mass. 1522 Texas Ave., San Antonio, Texas 135 River St., Olyphant, Pa. 314 Lafayette St., Denver, Colo. 41 Webster St., Maiden, Mass. 118 London St., East Boston, Mass. 1300 Cincinnati St., El Paso, Texas 9 Hiortsgate St., Horben, Norway 294 Kent St., Brookline, Mass. 30 Tovamacho, Ushigome, Tokio, Japan Hunan, China Ruxwood Ave., Riderwood, Md. 75 Fores: Hills St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 909 Rutger St., Utica, N. Y. 78 Caseland St., Springfield, Mass. 160 Henrv St., BrooklVn, N. Y. North Salem, N. H. 58 Trafalgar St., Rochester, N. Y. ) 50 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 140 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 175 Cross St., Lowell, Mass. 2715 Woolsey St., Berkeley, Calif. Bharnagar, Kathiaw-ar, India Bharnagar, Kathiawar, India 141 Woodworth Blvd., Port Arthur, Texas 427 Huron Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 350 High St., Newburvport, Mass. 115 Woodlawn Ave,, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Rangeway Road, North Billerica, Mass. 8 Jefferson St., Marblehead, Mass. 121 Traincroft St., Medford, Mass. 15 Acton Road, Chelmsford, Mass. 2414 West 76th Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 9 Aborn Court, Salem, Mass. 817 South Gore Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. 2484 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Masonic Home, Utica, N. Y. 51 Holly Road, Waban, Mass. Gilman, Vt. 419 Belmont Ave., Chicago, III. 106 Imperial Arms, Portland, Ore. 23 Trident Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 1865 Hyde Park Ave., Boston, Mass. 86 Circular Ave., Hamden, Conn. 983-21 Yu Yuen Road, Shanghai, China 362 Clyde St., Brookline, Mass. 248 Woolper Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 686 Blue Hill Ave., Dorchester. Mass. 21 Amsterdam Place, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 24 Falmouth St., Belmont, Mass. New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, N. M. 677 Broadview Terrace, Hartford, Conn. 21 Norton Road, Quincy, Mass. 6 Frost St., Cambridge, Mass. 19 Willow Ave., Salem, Mass. 127 Wilson St., Newark, N. Y. 9 Logan St., Lawrence, Mass. 2374 Euclid Heights Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio 37 Faverweather St., Cambridge, Mass. 437 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. 18 Holt St., Belmont, Mass. 1014 Myrtle St., El Paso, Texas 545 Bath Ave., Long Branch, N.J. 35: Directory of Students Namt Peter. Ernest Norman. AXA Peters. Francis Arthur, t i;K Peters, Philip Homer, I ' N Peters, W ' illi.ini Hart, B.S. Peterson, Arnold Per Gustaf, B.Eng. Peters on, Carl Martin Peterson, Edward Carl, i;X Peterson, Francis Sherman Peterson, Lawrence Gram Petrouskas, John Alfred Pettehone. Edgar Rice. II, 1 HK Pew, George Thompson, M ' A Ptingstag, Paul William, B.S. PhiUippi, John Heckman, HOU Phillips, Daniel Neail, l ' Kr Phillips, Frank Lincoln, OAX Phillips, John Joseph Phillips, William Hewitt Phinizy, William Harison, t| rA Phinnev, John Arthur Phip.ard, Harvev Fisk, Jr., OX Pickard. Nicholas, AKE Piel, Elmar Viking Pierce, Ransom Allan, B.S. . Pierce, Rohert Gage, B.S., S.M Pierce, Wavne Morris Pike, Charles Olson . Pike, Frederick Philips, B.S. Pilistine, Daniel Piper, Charles Austin Piper, Dean Ailing, B.S. Pitkin, John Buxton Pitt, Burnett Mvron ... Plass, Martha Eldora Hathaway, B.A. Plunkett, Rohert Poehler, Robert Stuart Pokrass, Sol J Pollack, Dale, A.B., B.S., E.E. Pollock, James Percy, 4 A() Poon, Yuk Pui . . Pope, Gordon Arthur, BX Pope, Harold Stanton Popkin, Jerome Raymond Portelance, Jean Roy . Postman, William Morris Postofsky, Ezriel Powell, Shannon Curtis Powers, Augustin Jay. AKE Powers, Edison, J AO Prahl, Fred Adolph, Jr., t ie Pratt, Edward Lowell Pratt, Rohert William, X E Precce, William Hamilton Smith Prcscott, John Guthrie Foster, B.S. Preston, David Rowlandson, IIKA Preston. William W ' ickliffe, A Price. Charles Frederick Berthold, Jr., OX Price, Rohert Wunner, B.A., S.M. . Prichard, William Warren, OAX Pnttakis, John Lewis Princi, Mark Anthony, B.S. Prohl, Melvin Albert Proul-x, Louis Joseph, Jr. Prouty, Harold Elliott Prudentc, William Puffer, Joseph Meigs Pulsifer, Earle Walter, B.S. Pulsifer. Walter Hall, Jr. . . Pulver, William Frederick, ' 1 K2 Purcell, William Frederick Hertzog. B.A. Putnam, (jeorge Charles, B.S. Putnam, Henr ' Ware . Putnev, Roger Larrv, SB Putt. GLadyn Hollis . Quigley, William Sullivan, 4 K Quint. Arthur Sumner Raddin. Harry Albert, B.S. Rafferty. Ward James, AKK P i ' Chss Course ■39 111, •37 X ■37 Vl-A Grad. 11 76 Grad. VI 120 ■36 xv„. 4S 37 II 36 11= 76 36 VI-A 54 36 III. •36 X-B ■39 11 36 Xlll-A ■38 I 38 11 76 ■36 ' 38 Vl-A X ■39 XVI ■38 IX-B ■38 X •37 IX-B ■39 XVI ■38 y Grad. XIU-A Gr.id. XV ■37 X l ■37 X Grad. X-A ■37 VI Grad. Vl-A Grad. I ■37 XVI ■39 - Grad. XVIll ■39 1 ■38 IV ■39 1 Grad. VI ■39 X112 ■38 Unc. ■39 XV, ■39 XVI ■38 VI ■37 I ■39 X ■37 1 ■37 XllI ■39 X ■39 X . 48 ■36 II-, . 81 ■36 Vll, ■39 XVI ■38 XV, Grad. XIll-A •39 VI ■38 XV, 55 ■36 nil Grad. V . 120 ■36 xv„ ■37 X Grad. VI ■37 11- A 81 ■36 Vila ■37 XV,b 39 ■36 II ■37 IV ■38 Xlll ■38 IV ■39 XVI ■38 IV Grad. X-A ■39 Sp. IV Gr.id. 11 ■38 XVI ■38 XV„ ■39 X Grad. X-A 38 X Hmic Addreii 35 West 11th St., New York, N. Y. 6814 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 5817 North Artesian Ave., Chicago, III. Girard, Pa. 3744 Elmhurst Road, Toledo, Ohio 16 .Anderson Road, Wollaston, Mass. 538 North 25th St., Reading, Pa. 75 East Division St., Fond du Lac, Wis. 43 Montclair Ave., Roslindale, Mass. 9 Kenberma Road. Dorchester. Mass. 46 East Vaughn St., Kingston, Pa. Grays Lane, . rdmore. Pa. Box 210, Hudson, Ind. Park Lane Apts., Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 211 Lenox Ave., South Orange, N.J. 82 Battlehill Ave.. Springfield, N. J. Colby Lake Lodge, Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1 Spinnev Terrace, Belmont, Mass. 1006 Milledge Road, Augusta, Ga. 146 Thorndike St., Brookline, Mass. Airmount . ve., Ramsey, N.J. 83 Whitford Ave., Nutley, N. J. 128 Woodlane North, Woodmere, L. I., N. Y. Marked Tree, Ark. 753 Steele St., Denver, Colo. 7 Cedar St., Clinton, Mass. 36 Kent St., Newburvport, Mass. 1823 19th St. N.W., Washington, D. C. 117 Intervale St., Roxbury, Mass. 114 Washington St., Medford, Mass. 805 1st Ave., S.E., Minor, N. D. 33 North Ferry St., Schenectady, N. Y. 7 Kingsdale St., Dorchester, Mass. 164 Valley Road, Montclair, N. J. 309 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 2500 Garfield .Ave. South, Minneapolis, Minn. 2136 North 55th St., Milwaukee, Wis. 622 West 114th St., New York, N. Y. 1415 North State Sl., Chicago, III. lOSJervois St., Honkgong, China 7 Leonard St., Riverside, Conn. 51 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. 62 Moraine St., Brockton, Mass. 3901 St. Hubert St., Montreal, Que. 119 East State St., Gloversville, N. Y. 80 Van Courtlandt Park South, New York, N. Y. 12 Colson St., North Billerica, Mass. 205 West 39th St., New York, N. Y. 702 Reeves Drive, Grand Forks, N. D. 175 West 93rd St., New York, N. Y. Knob Hill, Great Barrington, Mass. 133 Fifth St., Stamford, Conn. 310 Park St., New Bedford, Mass. 203 C Holden Green, Cambridge, Mass. R.F.D. 2, Westport, Conn. 1611 Richmond Road, Lexington, Ky. Quantico, Va. 707 9th St., Albion, Nebr. 27 Deer Cove, Lynn, Mass. 96 Blossom St., Lynn, Mass. 5 Taylor St., Boston, Mass. 65 Pearl St., Melrose, Mass. 38 Devereux St., Marblehead, Mass. Mellenville, N. Y. 348 Saratoga St., East Boston, Mass. 9 Hatch Road. Medford. Mass. 26 Park . ve.. Whitman, Mass. 26 Park . ve.. Whitman, Mass. Sharon Road, Millerton, N. Y. ■■Dauphine, Main Road, Wynberg, South Africa 64 Woodside Ave., Waterhury, Conn. 295 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 38 Tower . ve.. South Weymouth, M.iss. 501 South N.iches Ave., Yakima, Wash, 4 Monument Square, Charlestown, Mass. 55 Lee St., Cambridge, Mass. 20 Smith Ro.ad, Saugus, Mass. Bellevue Ave., Rve, N. Y. 333 Directory of Students Same Raftery, Ruth Gertrude Rahmel, Henry Arnold, SB., S.M. Rakhchani, Mahmoud Mirza, Ch.E. Ramirrz, Raul Ramsay, William Fullarton, B.S. Rand, Willard Doane, Jr. Randal, George Albert Rapoport, Emanuel Rapport, - rthur, B.S. Ray. Frederick Elos Rav, George Dawson Raymond, Charles Lawrence, B.S., MS Raymond, Lester William Read, Walter Frank, S.B- Rebori, Andrew- Prendergast Recka, Francis Anthony Redav, Ladislaw Reedj Charles Eli, B.S Reed, Harlow John . . Reed, Richard Ellsworth, B.S. Reed, Robert Hayden Reed, Winthrop Blackstone Regnerv, Walter ... Reichart, Robert Searle, AT . Reid, Edwin Kirkpatrick, B.. ., B.S. Reid, James Halleck Reid, Lee . nthony, Jr. Reilly, Thomas Edward, B.S., K Reina, Guillermo Arturo Reinhardt, Albrecht Edward Reitz, Lewis Philip, Jr., KA Rence, William George Renshaw, John Paine Rethorst, Scott Carson, OX Reuter, Frederic William, Jr., I BE Rex, Daniel Ferrell Revnolds, Earie Newell Rice, Benjamin Bradford, SN Rice, Bernard Loren, BFA Rice, Wilbur Currier, AKE Rich, Charles Lothrop, A.B Richards, Henry Edward, SB. Richardson, David, Ch.E. Richardson, David Allen, 4 A0 Richardson, Paul Holman, i AB Richardson, Philip Morrison, B.S. Richmond, William Osborn, B.A. Sc., MS Riddell, Bernard Camie, Z.KK Rieser, William Haynes Rife, Charles Jacob Rifkin, Julian Sevmour Rightmire, Brandon Garner, A.B., M.A., B.M.E. Riley, Earl Gordon Riley, John Edmund, K Riley, William Harold . . Ritchings, Robert Hemsworth, M.E. Ritter, Robbins Horton . RIttner, Edmund Sidney . Robbins, John Clinton, Jr., KZ Robbins, John Rickson Robbins, LeRoy Virgil, Jr., B.S., BE Robbins, Norman Ballou, 6AX Robbins, Paul Hebert, B.S. Robbins, Richard Davis Robbins, Robert Morris, 4 BE Robbins, Stanlev Leonard Roberg, Bernard Bissell, BOII Roberts, Albert Samuel, Jr. Roberts, John Burnham, A.B. Roberts, Kenneth DeWitt, BE Roberts, Shepard Robertson, Randal McGavock, M.A. Robey, Norman Talbert, B.S. Robinett, Luigi Lomia, Jr., K Robinson, Clark Shove, Jr. Robinson, George Elliott Robinson, George Reuben Robinson, Knight Dexter, - B. Robinson, Malcolm Terrill Paic Clau Course ■38 X Grad. VI Grad. X-A ' 39 XV„ HI ' 36 xni 37 IV ' 37 X 120 36 XV,b Grad. VIIi ' 38 X 126 ' 36 XVI . 67 Grad. V Grad. Sp. XVI Grad. X-A 39 IV-A 39 VI •36 n4 Grad. X 39 VI Grad. V ■37 XV.b •39 X ■37 m, •37 XV,b Grad. X •39 IX-B 36 Ii Grad. Sp. XV ■39 I •37 u ■37 VI-C ■38 VII, ■39 VI 93 •36 IX-B ■38 vm ■39 VI-A •38 X •39 XVI 38 I •38 IX-B ■37 XV, b Grad. VI Grad. TII •37 X l . 48 •36 II2 Grad. VII Grad. u 38 X •39 XVI . 76 Grad. VI-A . 120 36 XV.b Grad. u ' 127 36 XVI •39 X •39 Xl . 48 Grad. II ■36 Sp. VI •39 V •37 XV. 38 X Grad. X ■37 XVI 39 Grad. I •39 IV-A 38 XVI 81 36 VII, •38 II •39 XV, b . 101 Grad. X-A ■38 X 38 VI Grad. VIII Grad. X-A 76 36 Vl-A ■3s VIII 39 36 I. 102 ■36 X ■39 IV 39 w Home Address 819 East Broadwav, South Boston, Mass. 2837 Lowell Ave., ' Chicago, III. 28 Ained-dovieh, Tehran, Iran 208 Avenida Este 4, Caracas, N ' enezuela 457 West 57th St., New York, N. Y. 45 Oak St., Manchester, N. H. 10 Mvrtle Ave., Newburvport, Mass. 760 Brady Ave., Bronx, N. Y. 1665 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 78 Hancock St., Maiden, Mass. 411 West Park Ave., Libertyville, 111. 1024 Lexington Ave., Schenectadv, N. Y. 57 71st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Evergreen Hall, Woodbury, N. J. 850 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, III. 254 Linden St., Waltham, Mass. 54 Beach St., Rockport, Mass. 919 North Main St., Findlay, Ohio 5404 Washington St., Downers Grove, 111. 92 South St., Bridgewater, Mass. 12 Court Road, Winthrop, Mass. 3 Hidden Road, Andover, Mass. 7 West Ayres Ave., Hinsdale, III. 164 Albemarle St., Rochester, N. Y. 4418 Svcamore St., Dallas, Texas 663 Allwood Road. Clifton, N. J. 5 Lake St., White Plains, N. Y. 3134 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Santa Rosa de Copan, Honduras, C. . . 11 Judson St., Dorchester, Mass. 7 Madison St., Buckhannon, W. Va. 217 South 21st Ave., Mavwood, 111. Hollister, Calif. 160 Nova Drive, Piedmont, Calif. 309 York Ave., Towanda, Pa. 310 East Elm St., Wichita, Kans. 50 Prospect St., Marblehead, Mass. 50 Rankin St., Worcester, Mass. 306 Huron . ve., Cambridge, Mass. 3 Lowell Road, Schenectady, N. Y. 67 Beech St., Norwood, Mass. 171 First St., Melrose, Mass. 20 Elm St., Northampton, Mass. 132 Harvard St., Newtonville, Mass. 132 Harvard St., Newtonville, Mass. 35 Tudor St.. Lvnn, Mass. Chilliwack. B. C. 635 South Whitcomb St.. Fort Collins, Colo. 55 Longwood Ave., Holyoke, Mass. 839 Market St., Lemoyne, Pa. 62 Clements Road, Newton, Mass. Ohio State Universitv, Columbus, Ohio R.F.D. 1, Severna Park, Md. R.F.D. 1, Wilmington, Del. 33 James St., Attleboro, Mass. Long H ' ll Road, Chatham, N. J. 1588 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. S Carlos St., Dorchester, Mass. 116 Crescent Ave., Babylon, N. Y. 200 Columbia Ave., Pitman, N.J. 718 Camelia Ave., Baton Rouge, La. 473 Washington St., . bington, Mass. IS Franklin St., Gloversville, N. Y. 19 Howe Road, Newton Center, Mass. 229 Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 1711 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. Bantam, Conn. Longwcxxl Hall, Cedarhurst. L. I., N. Y. 88 West Webster St., Manchester, N. H. Diamond Glen Road, Farmington, Conn. 528 Munro Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 225 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Sesser, III. 2935 214th Place, Bayside, N. Y. 393 North Main St., Reading, Mass. 281 Pleasant St., Brockton, Mass. 5 Crescent St., Wakefield, Mass. 44 Alumni Ave., Providence, R. I. 50 Belcher Circle, East Milton, Mass. 354 Directory of Students Njme Robinson, Richard Sewall Rockwell, M.uthew Latlin, AT Rocque, Arrhur Joseph, Jr. . Roddy, Gilbert Morgan, SB., S M., -MA Rodgers, John Ashniead, A.B. Roc, J.iclc Willhotc. B.S., i:AK Rochrig, Jonathan Russell, OAX Rotthlisberger, Robert Henry, I .MA Rogers, Robert Cirrol I Rolf, Frederic Noble, B.S. Romberg, Albert Kenneth, B.S. Roosevelt, Cornelius Van Schaak, A+ Root, Kenneth Weeks Rosen, George . Rosen, Leo Rosen, Melvin Herbert Rosenberg, Jack Rosenberg, Jack Paul Rosenberg, Phineas Richard, I ' AM Rosenberg, Sidne) ' Rosenfeld, George Rosenthal, Harold Rosenthal, Isadore Irving Roshkind, Allan Irwin, t BA Ross, Bernard Ross, Chester Washington Ross, Curtis Budge Rossano, August Thomas Rossnian, Raymond Paul, B.S. Rote, John Griffin . . Rous.seau, William Caubu, A.B. Rove, Ol.if Norberg, B.S., MS, Rovno, Ida .... Rowan, John James, B.Sc. Rowe, Edward Bennett, Jr. Rowe, Henry . tkinson Rowell, John Clem Rowley, Arthur Carroll Rowley, Leonard Wales, Jr. Rubenstein, Pearl June Ruckman, Norris Elliott, SB., t i:K Rudginsky, Samuel Rudnick, Burton Dexter Rudy, Robert Paul Ruge, Arthur Claude, B.S., S.M. Rugo, . lbcrt Charles . . Rugo, Henry John Rugo, Severmojohn Rulon, Morgan Coffin, AT Rumble, Henry Peterson, B.S. Rundlet, George Taylor Rundlett, Walter Abbot . Runkel, Henry Charles Russell, Francis Robinett, A.B., S.M. Russoniello, Louis Vincent Rust, Edgar Carter, Jr., A Rutherford, Russell Spencer, HH Ryan, Charles Eugene, . .B. Ryan, George McGlen, B.A. Ryan, John Aloysius, Jr., J K Ryder, Charles Tripp, Jr., tPA Ryder, Emmctt Charles . Ryrholm, Arthur Richard Sabi, Nestor Albert Sachs, Frederick Herman Sackheim, Robert Benton, 2;A.M Saffer, Ctiarles Martin, Jr. Sagalvn, Irwin Sage, John Wells, AT Sager, Irving Xavier, B.A. Sahuri, Carlos Abraham Salmon, James Cartwright Salny, Jerome Elias, I BA Samaras, Harry Samuel, Richard Munroe Sanchez-Casanuva, Rafael Alberto Sanderson, Nathan Herbert, Jr. Sandorff, Paul Edwin Pjl t Class Course 55 36 XIV •38 IV 37 VI Grad. Sp. X •36 VI-C •37 XIII-A •38 I-A 37 VI ' 38 XV, •37 VI-C Grad. XIII-A ■38 HI, •39 11 ' 37 XVI •37 VI-C 39 XVI ■38 XVIII ■38 IX-B ■37 II •39 VI ■39 VII, ■38 VII,. ■38 VI-A •37 XVI •37 VII, ■39 VIII •39 VI-A •38 I Grad. V ■38 X 102 Grad. X-A Grad. XII •39 VII. 48 ' 36 II, HI ■36 XIII ■39 XVI 93 ■36 IX-B ■38 X ■39 XV, ■38 VIII Grad. X-A ■38 II ■39 XVII ■37 XV.. Grad. I ■39 I ■37 VII.. •38 XVII 76 ■36 VI-C ■37 XIII-A ■37 XIII ■38 XV, 127 ■36 XVI 102 Grad. X ■40 IV 93 ■36 IX-B ■37 Unc. ■37 VI-C 39 ■36 I,. ■39 VI-A ■39 I ■38 XV, 1, ■38 X ■37 X ■38 X ■39 XV., 67 36 V ■37 X ■37 VlII ■37 VI-C ■39 IX-B ■39 X ■37 ' ■39 X I ■39 IV ■38 l 81 ■36 V112 ■39 XVI Hofrjf Address 6 Abbott Road, Gloucester, Mass. 860 Roslyn Circle, Highland Park, 111. 71 Grant St., Lexington, Mass. 201 Ralph Ave., Bellevue, Pa. Mendota Ave., Rye, N. Y. 402 High Ave. East, Oskaloosa, Iowa 32 Fern St., Auburndale, Mass. 110 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 37 Clark St., Somerville, Mass. 133 North Oraton Parkwav, East Orange, N. J. 900 Hammond St., Red 0.ik, Iowa Oyster Bay, N. Y. 8 Susquehanna St., Cooperstown, N. Y. 50 Walnut Park, Roxbury, Mass. Box 227, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. 9 Warner St., Gloucester, Mass. 67 Welton St., New Brunswick, N. J. 416 Cadieux St., Grosse Pointe, Mich. 388 Kenridge Road, Lawrence, L. I., N. Y. 21 Corona St., Dorchester, Mass. 136 Harrishof St., Roxbury, Mass. 239 Harvard Ave., Allston, Mass. 72 Central St., Somerville, Mass. 279 Montgomerv St., Brooklvn, N. Y. 825 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 324 North Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 56 Upper Bellevue Ave., Westmount, Canada 321 East 116th St., New York, N. Y. 223 North Spring Ave., Sioux Falls, S. D. 59 Adams Ave., Watertown, Mass. 2870 Filbert St., San Francisco, Calif. Franklin, N. J. 50 Lawrence St., Fitchburg, Mass. 162 Friel St , Ottawa, Ont. 11 Cushing Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. 15 Woodward Court, Charleston, W. ' a. 6 Lake Crescent, Mimico, Ont. 201 Oakland Ave., Methuen, Mass. 18 Loring St., Newton Center, Mass. 4 Dennison St., Roxbury, Mass. 304 West Thornapple St., Chevy Chase, Md. 160 Grover Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 104 Babcock St., Brookline, Mass. 15 Graylynn Road, Newton Center, Mass. 352 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. 149 Pleasant St., Dorchester, Mass. 321 Norfolk Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 149 Pleasant St., Dorchester, Mass. 501 Gay St., Phoenixville, Pa. 35 Tuscan Road, Maplewood, N. J. 66 Maple Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 146 Trapelo Road, Belmont, Mass. 10 Beechwood Place, Elizabeth, N.J. 6207 Roe St., Cincinnati, Ohio 417 North 9th Ave., Scranton, Pa. 22 Reservoir Ave., Chestnut Hill, Mass. Hillside Home, Clark s Summit, Pa. 77 Hillcrest Road, Belmont, Mass. 43 Rua Humavta, Rio de [aneiro, Brazil 259 84th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1626 Wood Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. 938 West Mountain Ave., Fort Collins, Colo. 125 Overlook Road, Arlington, Mass. 17 no. 9, Vedado, Havana, Cuba Rockwood Road, Norfolk, Mass. 2972Torrington Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, O. 163 Boston St., Salem, Mass. 1 Florentine Gardens, Springfield, Mass. Williamstown, N. Y. 275 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Santa Barbara, Honduras 96 Avenida Quintana, Buenos Aires, Argentina Egbert Hill, Morristown, N.J. 740 Mt, .Auburn St., Watertown, Mass. 95 Cotton St., Newton, Mass. 35 Lugareno St., Camaguey, Cuba 131 Lincoln St., Waltham, Mass. 1840 Michigan Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. 355 Directory of Students Same Sangster, William Alex, B.Sc Santoro, Saverio Sapp, Alva Charles, B.S. Sargent, Albert Amos, Jr., X Sargent, David Lawrence, 6H Sargent, Warren Gooch Sarvis, Arthur Louis Saslaw, Max Robert Sauer, Enno Thieme, B.S. Saunders, Harry Ogden, ATS2 Saunders, Robert John Sawyer, John Asa, X Sawyer, Robert Ellis Savior, William Robert Scalia, Michael Edward Scalingi, Giro Raymond Scarito, Philip Raymond Schaefer, H.ins Frederick, Jr., A Schaeffer, . lbert Charles, B.S. Schaevitr, Herman, B.S., K tA Schaller, Frederick Francis Schecter, Harry, B.A., MA. Scheeline, Harold Wendel, B.. . Scheldt, Frederick Emil, SN Schiff, Leonard Isaac, B.E., M.Sc. Schiffmann, Russell Allen Schilling, August Hamilton, A Schipper, James Howard, l rA Schivek, Anne Irene Schlansker, Howard Irving Schlesinger, Murray Harold Schliemann, Julius Boone, KZ Schliestett, George Van, B.S., M.S. Schmalz, George, Jr Schmidt, Waldemar Adrian, B.S., S.M. Schmitt, Frederick Gordan, Jr. . Schmucker, Robert Antoine. Jr., 4 K- Schneider, Paul Howard, j)MA Schneider, Rolf Ernest, MA Schneller, George Otto, t MA Schoettler, Frank William, ZAE Schorsch, Allan Edw in, J BA Schott, Warren Burroughs, HE Schreiber, Alan Parker Schremp, Edward Jay. SB. Schroeaer, Alfred Christian Schroeder, George Austin, AT Schuhmann, Reinhardt, Jr.. B.S., M.S. Schulman, Bernard Sidnev Schultz, Floyd Bernard, B.S. Schultz, Mortimer Arvurm Schutz, Lonng William Schwartz, Isadore . Scott, Daniel Sinclair, X Scott, Samuel, 1 A0 Scott, Winthrop Glover Scully, Donald Waldo Sears, Richard Irving . Seavey, Gordon Crowe! I Seder, Leonard Arthur Sedoff, Arthur Sedwitz, Ira Maurice Seebold, James Edward, B.S., M.S. Segel, Frances Elizabeth .... Seikel, Margaret Kingman, A.B., A.M. Seiwell, Harrv Richard, Sc.B. Sellers, Philip Ellsworth, GAX Sellew, Francis Bernard, B.Arch., Selvestrovich, Walter George Sensiper, Samuel Sessler, Robert Edwin Seth, James, . .B. . Severance. Donald Porter Seykota, Harold Rudolph Seymour, Malcolm, S.B. . Shah, Natvarlal Revadas, B.S. Shainin, Dorian, 4 MA Shaler, Amos Johnson, ATJJ Shamban, William Samuel 76 120 127 120 . 4 K Page Class Course Home AtlJress 127 Grad. Sp. XVI West Cultmalundie St., Tibbermere, Perth, Scotland ' 38 Sp. IV 83 West Boylston St., Watertown, Mass. Grad. V Freedom Road, Ravenna, Ohio ' 38 XVj Main St., Hingham. Mass. ' 38 XVi 22 Crocker . ve.. Turners Falls, Mass. ' 39 XVI 43 Green St., Newburvport, Mass. ' 36 IIo 1631 Lvons St., Flint, ' Mich. 76 ' 36 VI 55 Phillips St., Boston, Mass. Grad. X-A 1827 West Grace St., Richmond, Va. ' 38 1-A 2435 Jackson Ave., Evanston, 111. ' 39 I 326 Clinton St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 38 XVi 102 Lenox St., West Newton, Mass. 131 ' 36 XVII 24 Clearwav St., Boston, Mass. 76 ' 36 VI-A 311 Chadwick Ave., Newark, N.J. ' 38 IX-B 36 Georgia St., Ro.xbury, Mass. ' 38 II 38 Morrison Ave., Somerville, Mass. ' 37 V 95 Summer St., Lawrence, Mass. ' 38 XVI 2145 Luray .Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Grad. XVIII 106 Electric . ve.. West Somerville, Mass. Grad. VI 1135 Haddon . ve., Camden, N. J. ' 39 VI 2704 13th St., N.E., Washington, D. C. Grad. VIII 6434 North Smedley St., Philadelphia, Pa. Grad. X-. 3553 Clay St., San Francisco, Calif. ' 39 I Quincy Ave., Bayville, N. Y. Grad. VIII 66 Hoffman Ave., Columbus, Ohio ' 37 VI 1698 Centre St., West Roxburv, Mass. ' 37 IX-B Quail Hill, Woodside, San Mateo, Calif. ' 36 XVib 658 . ndover St., Lowell, Mass. ' 38 V 10 Homestead St., Roxburv. Mass. 38 X 508 Summit Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. ' 39 X 16 Wellington Hill St., Mattapan, Mass. 36 XVI 2 Davis Place, East Orange, N.J. Grad. XVI 105 Gordon St., Cedartown, Ga. ' 36 XV, 22 Hovev St., Qumcv, .Mass. Grad. X 2247 N. E. 10th Ave., Portland, Ore. ' 38 X 21-54 46th St., Long Island Citv,N. Y. ' 39 X 545 Union St., Hudson, N. Y. ' 39 V 42 Donaldson Ave., Rutherford, N. J. ' 37 X 42 Donaldson . ve., Rutherford. N. J. ' 39 X Kenya Park, Romsey, Hampshire, England ' 36 XVII 1264 Eastern Parkwav, Louisville, Kv. ' 38 X 124 West 79th St., New York, N. Y. ' ' 36 IIo 74 Midland . ve., . rlington, N. J. ' 39 X 57 Winn St., Belmont, Mass. Grad. VIII 1450 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. ' 37 VI-A 155 West Dudlev Ave., Westfield, N. J. ' 39 X 13 Webster Park, Needham, Mass. Grad. Ill (Met.) Gunnison, Colo. ' 36 XVo 196 Casterton Ave, Akron, Ohio 36 XIII-A 609 South Wenona . ve., Bav Citv, Mich. ' 39 VI 89 Morning St., Portland, Me. ' 38 XIII 82 Svcamore St., Roslindale, Mass. ' 38 XVII 80 Freedom St., Fall River, Mass. 38 III3 1141 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. ' 40 IV 22 Brewster Road, North Weymouth, Mass. ' 36 II2 72 Marlboro St., Belmont, Mass. ' 39 I 105 Winthrop St., Framingham, Mass. ' 39 XVI 246 Waltham St., West Newton, Mass. ' 38 II 187 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. ' 37 X 161 Warren St., Allston, Mass. ■36 V 10 Nevada St.. Winthrop, Mass. 38 VIII 124 West 79th St., New Y ' ork,N. Y. Grad. X Versailles, Ky. ' 38 Sp. V ' lli 42 Georgia St., Roxbury, Mass. Grad. V 38 Clark Lane, Waltham, M.iss. Grad, XVI Box K, Woods Hole, Mass. ' 38 XIV 555 0cean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Grad. IV 42 Worcester St., Natick, Mass. ' 36 lis 16 Chestnut St., Terryville, Conn. ■39 VI-A 58 Washington St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y ' . ' 38 U 52 Fountain Road, Arlington, Mass. Giad. X-A 121 East De Vargas St., Santa Fe, New Mexico ' 38 VI-B 44 Phillips St., Greenfield, Mass. ' 39 X 114 East Blvd., Gloversville, N. Y. Grad. XV 20 Fairfield St., Boston, Mass. Grad. II Bullion E.xchange Hall, Bombav, India ' 36 XVI 141 East 21st St., Brooklyn, N. ' Y. ' 39 VIII 54 Avenue de !a Floride, Brussels, Belgium ' 39 X 28 Miller St., Auburn, Me. 131 120 48 67 48 102 48 127 356 Directory of Students Same Shanks, Edward Thomas Shapiro, Justin Joel Sharp, John ' oorha.-s Sharp, Walter Bennett. Jr. Sharpe, Lawrence Wilson, BOll Shea, George Edward Shea, William Augustine Sheinkopf, Seymour Joel Sheldon, Fred Russell, A+ Shen, Yuin Chien Sheo, Loh, B.S Sherburne, Warren, Jr. t Kl Sheridan. Edward Walter Sherman, Robert Moody, Jr. Sherry, Walter Harry Shewbridge. William Harry Shiah, Chyn-duog, B.S. Shimer.John Asa, SB. Shirlev. Paul John, Ir., l rA Shockley, William. ' fl.Sc. Short, Philip ... Short, Kathleen Virginia Shoumatolf, Nicholas Showalter, Albert Kenneth, A B. Shubart, Charles Wemdell Shubart, Harry Samuel Shufrin, Leo .... Shulman, . lbert Harold Shulman, Carl Isaac Shuniovsky, Stanislav Anton, S.B. . Shuttleworth, Herbert Lewis, A.B., Z Shuttleworth, William Forbes, 2AE Siegel, Benjamin Morton, AM Siegelman, George Albert Sieminski, Mitchell . ndrew Sieradzki, Henry Joseph . Silber, Sidney Sim.ird, Gerald Lionel, B.S. Simons, Leon, B.S. Simpson, John Maxwell, Jr., Ki; Sistare, George Henrv, SB., S.M. Skidmore, Wilbur Manly, B.S., B.S. Skralskis, Edward Pete r . Sloan, Royal Daniel, B.S. Sluder, John Cochran, A.B. Slutz, Ralph Jefferv, MA Small, Charles Drvsdale, AT Small, Herbert, S.B. . . , Smedile, Joseph Anthony Smith, Charles William, S.B. Smith, Chester Warren, A.B., S.B., S.M. Smith, Edgar Field Smith, Edwin Kinmonth, Jr., AM ' Smith, Francis Bradford, B.S. Smith, Gerardo Smith, Hugh Taylor, Jr. . Smith, Irving Newton, SX . Smith, James Arthur . Smith, John Thomas, BOH .... Smith, Laxton Montgomery, B.S., 2N Smith, Livingston Shattuck Salisbury . Smith, Louis Christian, Jr., 6AX . Smith, Maynard Elliott . Smith, Paul Edwin, B.S. Smith, Robert Clayton, PKX Smith, Robert Vail, SX . Smith, Ronaldson . Smith, Roy Weare Smith, Stanley Brooks, Jr. Smith, William Algy Smyth, Harold Thomas, B.Sc, M.Sc. Snow, Edson Bly, ARE Snow, Harold Forest . Snow, Theodore Peck Snyder, John Martin Snvder, William Marion, Jr., B.S. Soash, EUwood Glenn, B.M.E., ME. Sobhit, Momhuang Sokoloff, Paul Walter P ' ' i ' 93 120 127 39 111 67 48 81 127 127 120 67 49 120 102 49 49 87 121 • Oan Count 39 II •36 VIli 36 IX-A •36 XV, „ 36 XVI 38 V! •36 L •39 X 39 X •37 XVI Gr.ad . X-A •36 XIII 39 XVI •36 V •37 XVu, 36 Ih Grad. X-A •37 I 38 X Grad. VIII •37 X 36 VII, •39 XV, Gr.id. XVI 36 XVI •39 XV.; •39 XV.. ■37 x -.. ■38 VI-A Grad. XVI Grad. XV •39 IV •38 ' •37 X 36 V •38 XVI ■39 II Grad. ' 36 II,-, •37 XV.u Grad. III CMet Grad. II (A.O •39 I Grad. VI Grad. VIIo ■38 T-A ■38 XVI Grad. VI ■37 I Grad. X-A Grad. II •37 I ■39 II Grad. VIII ■37 X ■37 II ' 38 X ■39 XVI •36 XV,, Grad. X •38 I ■35 X •39 ' ■36 11, •38 XV, ■39 II ■39 VI •37 XIII ■36 h ■39 VI-A Grad. VIII •36 XV, b •39 V •39 XVI •38 II Grad. VI Grad. XV •38 1 ' •39 VI Home AJiirtss 645 Kcmpton St., New Bedford, Mass. 707 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. 115 Early St., Morristown, N.J. 115 Early St., Morristown, N. J. 1231 North Orange Grove Ave., Hollywood, Calif. 8 Hamlin St., South Boston, Mass. 18 Fairbanks St., Brighton, Mass. 1 Duke St., Mattapan, Mass. 123 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 34 Route Dollfus, Shanghai, China 1334 Wayside Road, Shanghai, China 34 Hancock St., Lexington, Mass. 12 Wyoming Place, Maiden, Mass. 114 Summer St., Fitchburg, Mass. 106 . uburn St., Cambridge, Mass. 8 Maple Park, Dorchester, Mass. 8 An-Foo Hutung St., Peiping, China 42 Cottage St., Hingham, Mass. 12 Strathmore Road, Brookline, Mass. 1168 North Edgemont St., Los . ngeles, Calif. 39 Colonial Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 613 Durfee St., Fall River, Mass. Locust Valley, L. 1., N. Y. 118 London St., East Boston, Mass. 18 West 58th St., Kansas City, Mo. 18 West 58th St., Kansas City, Mo. 38 Greendale Road, Mattapan, Mass. 91 Warienton .Ave., Hartford, Conn. 1680 North Shore Road, Revere, Mass. Moscow, U.S.S.R. 317 Guy Park Ave., .Amsterdam, N. Y. 371 Main St., Burlington, Vt. 1905 John . ve., Superior, Wis. 2405 Baldwin Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 420 Sawyer St., New Bedford, Mass. 17 Linden Court, Jersey City, N. J. 1725 North Monroe St., Baltimore, Md. 186 Bartlett St., Lewiston, Me. 50 East 191st St., New York, N. Y. 112 North Vine St., Muncie, Ind. ) 474 Park St., New Bedford, Mass. .) 136 East Main St., Buckhannon, W. Va. Old Furnace Road, Hardwick, Mass. 2003 Indiana St., Pullman, Wash. 4935 Maryland . ve., St. Louis, Mo. 251 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood. N. J. 152 . spinwall Ave., Brookline, Mass. Kerhonkson, N. Y. 43 Maple St., Waverley, Mass. 676 Washington St., Abington, Mass. 2 Rogers Ave., Lvnn, Mass. Southold, L. I., N. Y. 230 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. 5 High St., Waterville, Me. I3S-I4O Consulado St., Havana, Cuba 147 Montgomery Ma., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. 151 Warwick Road, Melrose, Mass. 78 Bay State .Ave., Sonierville, Mass. 22 Union Square, Milford, N. H. 212 Island Home Blvd., Knoxville, Tenn. 165 Cole Ave., Providence, R. I. 28 Rockland Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 81 Washington St., East Milton, Mass. 76 Hyde Ave., Newton, Mass. 72 Yeager e., Fortv-Fort, Pa. 14 Pellett St., Norwich, N. Y. 15 Colony Place, Meriden, Conn. 52 Monroe St., Amesbury, Mass. 235 Rogers Ave., West Springfield, Mass. Woodland . ve., Bloomfield, Conn. 25 Seymour St., Lisburn, Ireland 780 Riverside Drive, New Y ' ork, N. Y. Pine Point, Maine Washington, Conn. 37 Temple St., Winthrop, Mass. Winnsboro, La. 407 Beauregard St., Charleston, W. Va. 417 . Banglampoobon, Bangkok, Siam 1040 . struria Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. 357 Directory of Stu dents Namf Page Class Course Home AtUnss Sokolosky, Henry Joseph 37 VI 14 Capen Place, Canton, Mass. Solomon, Robert Douglas •38 Vlh 5000 Cornell Ave., Chicago, III. Sommer, Harry Junius 37 X 871 South 11th St., Newark, N.J. Sontheimer, Carl Goodman, 2AM S7 ' 36 ' in 243 West 70th St., New York, N. Y. Sorkin, Morris 77 36 VIC 2649 North Troy St., Chicago, III. Soroka, Walter Walery, SB., S.M. Grad. u 22 Bovnton St., Lvnn, Mass. Souder, James Justice, 2X 60 •36 IV Carlisle Barracks, Carlisle, Pa. Sousa, Joseph James 77 •37 VI 45 Denison . ve.. New London, Conn. Souza, Benigno Ramon •36 VI 317 Malecon St., Havana, Cuba Sparks, Norman Ellsworth 39 n 207 Glenwood . ve.. New London, Conn. Spartales, James John ■38 V112 190 Washington St., Brighton, Mass. Spaulding, Moml Boughton. Jr.. .N 127 36 XVI 108 East 81st St., New York, N. Y. Speas, Robert Dixon, BE ■39 XVI 702 Stratford Road, Winston-Salem, N. C. Spector, Norman . •39 X 131 Second St., Chelsea, Mass. Speh, Herman , nthony, Jr. •37 II-A 13 Miuray St., Binghamton, N. Y . Spell, Sidney ... 87 ■36 ' m 30 Amherst St., Roslindale, Mass. Speirs, John Lirigo 102 ■36 X-B 52 Vauxhall St., New London, Conn. Speller, Jack Blakefield . . ■39 VI 154 Greenridge Ave., White Plains, N. Y ' . Spencer, Donald Clayton, A.B. 93 •36 IX-B 427 Pine St.. Bou lder, Colo. Sperduto, Anthony •37 ' m 44 Merriam St., Somerville, Mass. Spiller, Reevan ■39 II 31 Summit Ave., Winthrop, Mass. Spinner, Robert William, X ■39 u 29 Beverly Road, Lockport, N. Y. Spooner, Franklin Maine ■39 X 15 Hawthorne Ave., Cranston, R. I. Spring, Lea Hibbard, ZX 87 •36 TU 114 Washington Ave., Crookston, Minn. S juire, Alexander . •39 XIV 7 Sunset Hill Road, Roslindale, Mass. Squires, Walter, Jr., 102 •36 X Box 472, Richmond, Ind. Stacev, Casper John, AXA . •38 u 7 Walter St., Albany, N. Y. Staff, ' Edgar Jonathan, Ph.B., A.M., Sc.M., Grad. vu, 395 River . ve.. Providence, R. I. Stahl, Louis Edmund 67 •36 V 8 Sutton St., Peabody, Mass. Staley, Howard Raymond, SB. Grad. I 214 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. Stamatos, Paul Nicholas . ■39 X I 1677 Washington St., Boston, Mass. Stanley, Robert Charles ■39 XVI 9 Farquhar St., Roslindale, Mass. Stansheld, George James •38 Unc. Riverbank Court Hotel, Cambridge, Mass. Stapler, John Gause 111 36 XUI-C 2020 Hillver Place, Washington, D. C. Starr, Neil Jerome •38 XV„ 79 Buzzeli St., Manchester, N. H. Stearns, Leonard •37 V 284 Ferrv St., Maiden, Mass. Steams, Seymour •38 X 284 Ferry St., Maiden, Mass. Stearns, Stuart Gillard •38 V 340 Wolcott St., Auburndale, Mass. Steele, Winthrop Mandeil •39 I 15 Walnut Place, Brookline, Mass. Steere, Samuel Adams, Jr., !t rA •38 X 190 Casterton Ave., Akron, Ohio Stein, Francis Sidney •38 X 12 Forest Park Ave., Adams, Mass. Stein, Gustav Adolph, Jr., AKE •37 X 420 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. Steinhardt, Lawrence Ralph •37 VI-A 75 Phillips Ave., Deal, N.J. Steinhurst, William Arnold . 81 •36 TI. 90 Greenwood St., Dorchester, Mass. Stephens, Allen Carroll, B.S. Grad. Sp. VI 1714 Summit Place, Washington, D. C. Stephens, Frederick Leonard, B.S Grad. X-A Coushatta, La. Stergion, Andrew Peter •38 X III 37 Central St., Nashua, N. H. Stern, Harry Stanley, Jr., 1 BA •37 XV„ 315 South Lincoln Ave., Elberon, N. J. Sterner, John, SB. Grad. VTII 541 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Stevens, Paul Wellman, ATA •37 vm 45 Highland . ve., Lexington, Mass. Stevenson, William Bridge, SB., B.A. Grad. Sp. X-A 95 Dorset Road, Waban, Mass. Stewart, Herbert Frenz •39 I-A 1214 Evergreen . ve-, New Y ' ork, N. V . Stewart, Ian McColl, B.E. Grad. X ' ictoria Ave., Brisbane, Australia Stewart, James Thayer 49 36 U; 21 Walter St., Roslindale, Mass. Stewart, Norman William •38 II 11 Fossdale Road, Dorchester, Mass. Stewart, Oswald, 2nd, BGH •39 u 75 Milton Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. Stiefel, Karl Johann, E.E. Grad. VI 20 Geibelstr, Zurich, Switzerland Stiff, John Frederick . •39 V 15 Delmont St., Dorchester, Mass. Stiles, Winthrop Alan, Jr., ATA 121 36 XV,b 11 Braeburn Road, Auburndale, Mass. Stoloff, Leonard Sydney SI 36 VII. 143 Fairmount St.. Dorchester, Mass. Stolper, Ernst Gustav •38 I-A 15 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Stolz, Stanley Burr, BGII SI •36 VII3 193 Clove Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. Stone, Albert Mordecai, A.B. Grad. vm 800 Blue Hill . ve., Boston, Mass. Stone, Joseph Hibbert, t K2 •37 XV, b 26 0akside .■ve., Brockton, Mass. Stone, Robert -Arthur. ATA •39 XVI 267 Carnation Ave., Floral Park, N. Y. Storaasli, Bardolf A., A.B. •37 VI Emmons, Minn. Strassner, Frederick Elder, ZX •38 IX-B 48 Burnett Terrace, Maple wood, N. J. Strauss, Harold Heumann ■38 11 29 Ease Ave., Mt. Carmel, Pa. Stresau, Richard Herman Frederick. Jr., .VXA 38 IX-B 7112 Hillcrest Drive, Wauwatosa, Wis. Stritter. Edward Emil 102 36 X 18 Locust Way, Nahant, Mass. Strokalitis, Ferdinand George •39 XV; 1154 Bank St.. Waterbury, Conn. Strom, Atmore Gustav •33 u 44 Pacific St., New London, Conn. Stromberg, Tage Valter, E.E. Gra.1. VI Barkaro, X ' asteras, Sweden Strout, Raymond Dresser •39 IX-B 69 Richfield Road, . rlington, Mass. Sturgis, Bernard Miller, A.B Grad. ' West Oak St., Butler, Ind. Su, Gouq-Jen. B.S. Grad. X Peiping. China Suen, Tzeng Jiueq, B.S. Grad. X-A 84 Lin Shih How, Hangchow, China Sullivan, John Edward 102 36 X 21 Glenmont Road. Brighton, Mass. Sullivan, Paul Joseph 38 1-A 54 Samoset -■Vve., Quin cy, Mass. • 358 Directory of Students Same Sullivan, Stephen Francis Summerlield, David Norman Summcrlield, John Robert, ATA Summersgili, Elmer Hibbard, OX Sun, Wellington I-tsung . Sundsirom, Warren Eric, SB. Surbeck, Richard UnderwooJ Sussman, Sidne ' , B.S. Suter, Daniel Eric, AX Sutton, Charles Samuel, SB. Svenson. Raymond Carl . Swain, Harold Dudlev Swain, Kenneth Warren Sw-an, Gail Homer Swanson, Carl Kenneth Swasey, Samuel Elliot Sweeney, .Mfred, Jr. . Sw-eeney, James Augustus, S.B. . Sweetser, Sumner Durlingame, B.S., S.M. Swenson, Eric Daniel Swift, Allan Michael ... Swift, George Parsons, S.B., S.M. Sylvester, John .... Szunski, John Peter Taft, Edgar Breck, i BE . Takahashi, Ichiro Jacob Tannenbaum, Harold Samuel, B.S. . Tarasov, Leo Peter, B S. Targonski, Edward Tarnopol, Milton Sidney, B.Ch.E. . Tatel, Howard Edwin, SB. . Tatman, Edwin Minor Taylor, Clark Edward Taylor, Donald Wood, B.S. Taylor, Douglas Jennings Taylor, Lucius Pierce Tavlor, Richard, SB. Taylor, Thomas Russell, B.S. Tavlor, Wilson Allen, Jr., X Teel, Ross Bernard Temple, George Howard, Jr. Terrv, Thomas Alexander, Jr., t AO Terwilliger, David Dill, SB., S.M. Testa, Louis . nthony, 4 K Thatcher, Eugene Donald, Kn; . Thomas, Ariel Alton . Thomas, George Joseph . . Thomas, George Woodford, iK Thomas, Gordon Case, l rA Thompson, . rcher Stanley Thompson, Donald Clark Thompson, Donald Mcintosh Thompson, George Louis, B.Arch. Thompson, Lillian Polly Povey, A.B Thompson, Merrill Gene Thompson, Robert Howker Thompson, William Irvin, SB. Thomson, John Patton Thomson, Warren Emerson Thornton, Fletcher Parrott, Jr., ' J ' TA Thorpe, John Thorson, Robert Henry Thurber, Juanita Edry Tibbets, Edward Francis Tier, William Joseph Ti lesion, Webster . Timbie, Donald Nute Timbie, Theodore Ruggles, MA Tobey, Julian Lawrence . Tolman, Lee Prcscott Tompkins, Norman Gilbert, BHII Tonsager, Howard Arthur, B S Toon, Melville Spalding Toorks, William Peter Topalian, James Malcolm Toppin, Robert Martin Torrance, Thomas Curtiss, ilAK Torrans, David James, I AO . • i ' Class Course •39 I •37 VI 9} 38 11 •36 IX-B •38 Unc. Grad. X-A •37 XVI Grad. V ■38 XV, 87 Gr.id. VIII 77 •36 VI-C ' 37 XIII 49 •36 11. •39 XVI •39 XVII •38 XIII ' 39 IV Grad. XIII Grad. ' ■37 XIII-C ■37 VI-A Grad. III (Met. Gr.id. II (T. D ■39 VIIi ' 38 V •37 XVI Grad. VII, Grad. VIII 77 ■36 VI 55 Gr.id. III (Cer.: Grad. VIII ■39 XV, •39 V Grad. I •39 X •39 VI Grad. VI Grad. X 121 •36 XV, b •38 xv. 77 ■36 VI 102 •36 X Grad. VI 49 •36 II; •39 II 39 ■36 I, •39 I •38 II 120 •36 XV, ■38 I 67 ■36 ■39 XVI Grad. IV ■37 IV ■39 XIII •39 X Grad. X •39 VIII ■38 VIII 121 •36 x . Gr.id. VI-A •37 I ■39 I •37 III. 102 ■36 X •39 VI-A ■39 I-A ■37 VI-A 121 ■36 xv„, 93 •36 IX-B •37 v 60 ■36 IV ■39 XIII-C 102 ■36 X •38 l •39 IX-li •37 1 •38 X Home Address 33 Hazel St. East Milton, Mass. 1493 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 1493 Summit . ve., St. Paul, Minn. 24 Roxbury Road, Garden City, N. Y. 240 Singapore Road, Tientsin, China 28 Dysart St., Quincy, Mass. 89 Sargent St., Melrose, Mass. 546 Tenth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 160 Albemarle St., Rochester, N. Y. 1511 Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. 116 Walnut St., Naugatuck, Conn. 96 Minor Ave., Stratford, Conn. Hampton Falls, N. H, 9 West Sixth St., Aspinwall, Pa. Grant Road, Marblehead, Mass. 83 Green St., Marblehead, Mass. 15 Beacon Ave., . uburn, Me. 858 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass. 37 Shaffner St., Worcester, Mass. 118 Bartlett Road, Winthrop, Mass. 7 Westville Road, Dorchester, Mass. ) 22 Beacon St., Woburn, Mass. .) Navy Dept., Washington, D. C. 7 Curtis St., Salem, Mass. 247 West Rock Ave., New Haven, Conn. 133 Taira Machi St., Tokio, Japan 568 Warren St., Roxbury, Mass. 1818 Hastings Ave., East Cleveland, Ohio 1402 East W.ishington St., Syracuse, N. Y. ) 11 Mifflin Place, Cambridge, Mass. 34 Wolcott Ro.id, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Beech Knoll, Connersville, Ind. 20 Mt. ' ernon St., Brighton, Mass. 1 Crawford St., Cambridge, Mass. 110- South Quinsig Ave., Shrewsbury, Mass. 798Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 10 Clover Drive, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. 411 Merrimon . ve., Asheville, N. C. 6214 Forsythe Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 54 Irving St., Arlington, Mass. 58 Prospect St., Amesbury, Mass. War Department, Washington, D. C. 14514 Ardenall Ave,, East Cleveland, Ohio 264 Woonasquatucket . ve., Lvmansville, R. I. R.R S, Rushville, Ind. 35 Union St., Woonsockct, R. I. 418 Rivet St., New Bedford, Mass. 31 South Cass.idy Road, Columbus, Ohio 398 Sound Beach Ave., Old Greenwich, Conn. 100 Oak St., Gardner, Mass. Box 385, Palatka, Fla. 617 North Kenilworth Ave., Oak Park, 111. 2545 Garfield Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Portland, Ore. 77 Beach St., Wollaston, Mass. 10 Locust Road, Methuen, Mass. 3 Crescent Road, Winchester, Mass. 450 William St., East Orange, N. J. 37 Allen St., New Bedford, Mass. 80 Mountain Ave., Summit, N. J. 78 Rosemary St., Needham, Mass. 15 . bbott St., Mcdford, Mass. 1655 Newton St., Washington, D. C. 56 Albion Ro.id, Wollaston, Mass. 2004 East Chelten . ve., Philadelphia, Pa. 45 Williams St., North Quincy, Mass. 44 Vernon St., Springfield, M.iss. 295 Highland Ave., West Newton, Mass. 5 Francis Circuit, Winchester, M.ass. 14 Florence St., Wollaston, Mass. Shepard Pl.ice, Nashville, Tenn. 504 Roosevelt Ave., Kewanee, III. 79 Sagamore . ve.. West Medford, Mass. 18 Highland Park Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 154 Metropolitan Ave., Roslindale, Mass. 1249 Boulevard St., West Hartford, Conn. Norfolk, Conn. 165-16 Chapin Parkway, Jamaica, N. Y. 359 Directory of Students . . S.M. Nam€ Tourtellor, Irving V. ' illiams, OAX Touton. Louis Leo, Jr., SX Touzalin, Robert Eugene, I K2 Tower, Alden Edwards Tower, George Nelson, Jr., I ;;k Towers, Abner Alexander, AKE Towle, Warren Ladd, S.B., S.NL. Towner, William Warner, ATf! Tracy, Lyndon Sanford, Jr., B.S. Treat, Robert, Jr Tremaglio, Angelo Michel Tremblay, Bernard George Trescott, Charles Edward Triller, David Peter, SX Trimbey, Ethelyn Sylvia, B.. ., TZE Trimble, George Simpson, Jr., 4 K— Tripp, Robert Campbell, B.S. True, Edward Keene, QX True, Frank Eaton . Tsapatsaris, William Demetnos Tsien, Hsue-shen, B.S. Tucker, Ralph William, Jr. Tucker, William Burns, B.S., OX Tudbury, John Leslie, KX TuUer, William Gordon, tSK Turner, Irfan Mehmed, B.S. Turnbull, James Coryell Turner, Harlan, Jr., 6AX Turner, Howard Sinclair, A.B. Turner, Raymond Sanford Turtle, David Fears, Jr., B.A. Udin, Harry .... Uhrich, Henry Wilhelm . Ulans, Roman Irodian, I K Ullman, Albert James . . Ullrich, Walter, A.B., B.S., M.S Underbill, Irving Sears, Jr Underwood, Ernest ... Usher, Edward Miller ... Uyeminami, Frederick ICikutoshi, B.S. Vaaia, Gordon Theodore, B.A. . Vahlberg, Robert William, B.. rch., B.S., KA Valentine, Richard Hajek, S.B Valtz, John .Mbert ... Van Cott, Dee Marre, B.S., ZX Van Denburg, Carroll Henry, Jr. Vanderhoef, Dean Titus Vanderman, Edward Joseph . Van Dorn, Horace Bishop, III, GX Van Nice, Robert Lawrence, B.A., B.. rch. Van Patten-Steiger, Robert, 62 Van Sant, Ralph William, Jr., B.A. Van Stratum, Gretchen Ruih Varner, David Edwards, AKE Varrieur, Albert Lugi Vasilianskas, Brona!d John Vaughan, James Leslie Vaughan, Virginius Nelson, Jr. Vazquez, Eulogio Veasey, Alexander Craig, B - Vega-Llaca, Jose de la Velho, Allen Gonsalves Vellardita, Matthew Joseph Venable, Isaac Budd ... VerPlanck, William Everett, Jr. Viles, Fred James Viles, James, I-MA Villaftor, Gregory Paul Vincent, Philip Smith Viola, John Dominic Vogel, Paul Andrew ' ogel, Paul William . Vogeler. Robert Alexander Vogeley, . rthur William, :;N ' ollmer, Edward Louis. l i;K von Maltitz, Adrian j rdh!bald, B.Sc. Vonnegut, Bernard, KS Pai,, Class Course 37 I •37 ' I-B ' 39 11 36 XIII ■36 XV„ 38 X Grad. X 121 ■36 XV.b Grad. X ■3S X IJl 36 XVII 39 VI Grad. XIII-A 39 II 61 ■36 IV 127 ■36 XVI Grad. I •3S IV-A 39 XVI ■39 XIV Grad. XVI 39 II 103 Grad. X 39 XV-: ■39 VI-A 39 Grad. I ■37 XVUI ■38 XIII Grad. V ■38 II ■37 VI-A ■37 XIV •37 T-A 77 ■36 VI 103 ■36 X Grad. X ■38 XVi ■38 u ■38 w Grad. Sp. w Grad. Grad. IV Grad. XVIII 61 ■36 IV 61 ■36 IV •39 VI-A •38 lUi ■37 III, •37 IX-B Grad. IV 67 ■36 V 121 Grad. XV ■40 IV 121 ■36 xv„ ■37 XM 38 II 103 ■36 X ■37 VI-A Grad. Sp. XVI Grad. XIII-A ■37 VI-C ■39 VI ■39 l ■39 X ■39 I •38 V ■38 V •37 VII5 103 36 X 131 ■36 XVII ■37 xv. ■37 XI ■37 Unc. ■39 XVI ■37 X 119 Grad. XV ■36 V Home Address 411 . rlington . ve., Greenville, S. C. 435 West 62nd Terrace, Kansas Citv, Mo. 337 7th Ave., LaGrange, III. 16 Harrison St., Quincy, Mass. 4 Butler Place, Garden City, N. Y. 404 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 4657 Adams Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 16 Everell Road, Winchester, Mass. 12 Brattle Road, Syracuse, N. Y. 1556 Wendell . ve., Schenectady, N. Y. 45 Alder St., Waterbury, Conn. 35 Hancock St., Salem, Mass. 33 Clarendon Road, Belmont. Mass. 27 East 33rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. 25 Notre Dame St., Glens Falls, N. Y. 1216 Montgomery Ave., Narbeth, Pa, 116 Holden Green, Cambridge, Mass. 10 Wood St., Concord, Mass. Box 126, Littleton, Colo. 260 . dams St., Lowell, Mass. Medhurst Road, Shanghai, China Burton Road, Beacon Falls, Conn. 473 Carlston St., Richmond, Calif 11 Hemenway Road, Salem, Mass. 44 Dame! . e., Rutherford, N.J. .Ankara, Turkey Box 502, Middletown, Conn. 4 Woodmont St., Portland, Me. 801 Harvard Ave., Swarthraore, Pa. 138 Ashuelot St., Dalton, Mass. 66 Milton Road, Rye, N. Y. 61 Wildwood Ave., NewtonviMe, Mass. 332 2Sth . ve. North, Seattle, Wash. 1343 Newport . ve., Northampton, Pa. 2673 Euclid Heights Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio New Baden, Texas 368 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 34 Longfellow St. N.E., Washington, D. C. 124 Elm St., Montclair, N. J. 4922 43rd .Ave. South, Seattle, Wash. Milan, Minn. 325 East 16th St., Oklahoma Citv, Okla. 140 Beach 127 St., Belle Harbor, ' L. I., N. Y. 114 Essex St., Lynn, Mass. 1512 9th East St., Salt Lake City, Utah 117 Circle Road, Syracuse, N. Y. 625 Reeves Drive, Grand Forks, N. D. 104 Grove St., Rockville, Conn. 6 Yale St., Maplewood, N.J. 2143 N.E. Broadway, Portland, Ore. 11 Virginia Road, Auburndale, Mass. 1117 East 29th St., Davenport, Iowa 233 West . yer St., Ironwood, Mich. 7400 Crandon e , Chicago, III. 296 South Main St., . ttleboro, Mass. 1136 Washington St., Norwood, Mass. 50 Houghton St., Dorchester, Mass. . shland, Va. Colegio de Belen, Havana, Cuba 28 Clarendon Road, Belmont, Mass. 83 Chihuahua St., Mexico City, Mexico 17 Ricketson St., New- Bedford, Mass. 85 ' 2 Elm St., Lawrence, Mass. 67 Grand Ave., Poughkeepsie, B. Y. 21 Chestnut St., Salem, Mass. 2S Mendelssohn St., Roslindale, Mass. Hotel . mbassador East, Chicago, 111. 222 Parker Hill Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 63 Union .■Vve. , Jamaica Plain, Mass. 320 Norfolk Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 1821 Lenox Road, Schenectady, N. Y. 117 Pincknev St., Boston, Mass. 35-15 7Sth St., Jackson Heights, L. I., N. Y. 8719 134th St., Richmond Hill, L. I., N. Y. 6942 Waterman . ve.. University City, Mo. Dewetsdorp, South Africa 4365 North Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind. 360 Directory of Students Vosc, Rohtrt Weston, SB X ' vvc-rbcrg, John Cornelius, Jr., i ' .VE Wilde, Ellington Dixon Wadleigh, D.ivid Robinson, ■I ' Ki: Wagner, Ehrler Wagner. Gordon Dexter W ' aencr, Jean Irwin Wagstair, James Bucaanan, B.Sc. Walker, John Stem, B.S. Walker, Joseph Franklin, B.S. Walker, Richard Kenneth, OX Wallace, John Jatfray Wallace, Milner Weston, l I i WalLace, Milton Irving Walloch, Samuel Walsh, Edward Clark Walsh, William Leo, A.B., S.M. Walter, John Frederick, B.S. Walter, Stanley Thomas . Wang, Charles ... Waram, Julian Thomas Cole, A 1 ' Warburton, James, Jr., t i;K Wardle, Meredith CLirence Ware, Perry Heath Warmuth, Marcus Feldman Warner, Wallace Passon . Washburn, Charles Parker, Jr., i;N Wa ssernian, Fred ... Waterman, Donald Wilbur, I HE Waters, Albert Ch.arles, Jr. Watson, Frederick Kingsbury, A.B., A.M. Watson, Irving Powers, ATS! . Watt, Robert Denny, B S. Waxman, Mark Murrav,Jr., i;AM. Weatherill, Philip Hollis, t ' VS Weathersbee, Rodney Douglas James, 1 BE Weaver, Halsev Anthony Webb, George Barlow Webb, Jervis Campbell, SX Webster, Ralph Patterson, ' 1 . 1A Weeks, Joseph Robert Weese, Harry Mohr, tAO Wegner, William Gerhard W ' einert, Peter Charles Weintraub, William Weir, David Donald, BOII Weiss, Herbert Klemm Weiss, Irwin Koehler Weiss, Leo Abraham Welch, Lloyd Bowers, Ki: Wells, .Arthur Edward, Jr., l ' i;K Wells, William Leonidas, SB. Welton, Theodore Allen, j ;;;K Wemple, George Barr, AKE Wentworth, Chandler Wenzel, Louis Rudolph Weppler, George Robert, KS Wcrblin, David Abner Weschler, Charles John, B.S. West, John Albert, Jr., X Westermann, Albert Guy Westfall, Richard Milton, t Ai) Westgate, Reland Briggs, t i;K Weston, Joseph Fitz Randolph, t rA Wetmore, Charles Clifton, AKK Wetmore, Louis Bemis Wetterer, Charles Stanley Wharton, Robert Arthur, Jr. Wheale, John Guthrie, OAX Wheeler, Byron Wesley, Jr., OAX Wheless, Nicholas Hobson, Jr., i;AE Whitaker, David Chambers, ' l ' i;K . Whitaker, David Spier Whitcher, Stanley Lawrence, S.B. Whitcomb, .Mbert Earl Whitcomb, Margaret White, . aron Meyer White, Abner P ' ' i C ass Coiine Gr.id. II •39 X 55 36 XIV •37 XIII-C •37 II ■37 Mil 103 36 X 105 Grad. X Cirad. IWArmvOrd Grad. r •39 XVI •38 XVI 77 ■36 VI-A •38 XI •38 vn., •37 X Gr.id. V Grad. X-A •38 VI •39 VI 61 •36 IV-B •37 X ■38 XVI Grad. VI-A 127 ■36 XVI ■39 VI •39 VI •37 VII3 •39 II •39 XVT Grad. V ■38 II 49 Grad. II 121 •36 XV,h •39 XIV •39 XV, 39 •36 I, 103 ■36 X •37 XVu. ■37 I ' 39 X ■37 IV •38 XV, 103 •36 X-B •37 VII, ' 38 XV, ■37 XVI •39 II •39 XVI •39 II 111 •36 XIII-C Grad. I •39 VIII •37 XVo •36 VI-C ■39 X ■37 xv„, 61 ' 36 IV-A •36 XIII-A •39 III, ' 38 Unc. •37 X ■37 XIII •39 II •37 xv,„ 61 ■36 IV-B •38 XV, •38 XV, •38 XV, •39 X ■38 X ■38 II ■37 IV-A Grad. V •36 VI-A •39 VIII •39 III, •37 X Home AdJrtjs 25 Sunnyside St., Hyde Park, Mass. 99 Garson Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 76 Hamlet Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. 70 Flower Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. 29 Washington Highway, Snvder, N. Y. Shelburne, Nova Scotia Box 134, Centerport, NY Fieldways, Claverton Down, bath, England i Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass. 180 Edgecombe Ave., New York, N. Y. 451 Prospect St., South Orange, N. J. 248 Clinton Ave., Oak Park, 111. 522 South 7th St., Lafayette, Ind. 68 Locust St., Winthrop, Mass. 506 40th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 202 Mason Terrace, Drookline, Mass. 486 Medford St., Somerville, Mass. 401 West Third St., Mansfield, Ohio 82 Washington Place, New York, N. Y. 3 Chao Ton Tze, Peiping, China 15 Omega St., Stonington, Conn. 311 Bank St., Fall River, Mass. 15th St., Huntington, L. I., N. Y. 7 Chestnut St., Medford, Mass. 11 Alvin Place, Upper Montclair, N.J. 4 Moulton St., Georgetown, Mass. 15 Bourne St., Middleboro, Mass. 126 Manet Road, Chestnut Hill, Mass. 79 Inwood Road, Bridgeport, Conn. Main St., Boxford, Mass. 92 Court St., Keene, N. H. Park St., Lvndonville, Vt. 1306 Madison St., Seattle, Wash. 420 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 35 Temple St., Arlington, Mass. Stoke Poges Lane, Buckingham, Engl.and 26 Channing St., Wollaston, Mass. 30 Rexhame St., Roslindale, M.ass. 1624 Woodsboro St., Royal Oak, Mich. 99 Meriam St., Lexington, M.ass. 25 East 52nd St., Siivannah, Ga. 141 Kenilworth Ave., Kenilworth, 111. New Britain Ave., Plainville, Conn. 363 Harrison Ave., Harrison, N. Y. 134 High St., Newburyport, Mass. 121 Linden Ave., Clayton, Mo. 452 Hampshire St., Lawrence, Mass. 130 East St., Methuen, Mass. 1124 51st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 361 Wellington Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 212 William St., East Orange, N. J. 1415 Baum St., Vicksburg, Miss. 11 Sew.ird St., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 5102 Hyde Park Blvd., Chicago, 111. Atkinson Depot, N. H. 1075 Overlook Terr,ice, Union, N. J. 28 Kendall Ave., Maplewood, N. ]. 1721 Avenue O, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 4625 Highview Blvd., Erie, Pa. Elks Club Hotel, East Chicago, Ind. 2 Fichtegasse St., Vienna, . ustria 232 Elm St., Findlay, Ohio 50 Ingell St., Taunton, Mass. 81 Griggs Road, Brookline, Mass. 230 Mt. Vernon St., West Newton, Mass. 5 Sherman St., Glens Falls, N. Y. 64 Prospect St., Melrose, Mass. 112 Prospect St., Gloucester, Mass. 22 Beardsley Park Terrace, Bridgeport, Conn. 262 Elizabeth Si., Derby, Conn. 948 Trabue St., Shreveport, La. 3224 Grand Concourse, New York, N Y 1810 Albion St., Denver, Colo. 98 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 6 Essex St , Somerville, M.iss. 7 Temple St., Cambridge, Mass. 49 Wentworth St., Dorchester, Mass. 231 Cook Ave., Meriden, Conn. 361 Directory of Students Name White, Allan Douglas .... White, Carl Benjamin White, John Carlson White, Lester M.irius, Jr. White, Maurice Donald . White, Norman Kenneth White, Peter ... White, Samuel Eli Whiteside, William Smith Whitmore, William Francis Whitnev, Rov Powell, S.B. Whittaicer, Harry, B.S. . , Whittaker, John Warren, A ' l ' Whittingham, Robert Charles Wholey, John Francis, Jr., t).MA Widlansky, William ... Wieser, Charles Robert Wiggin, Joseph Furnald Wignot, Jackson E erett Wilber, Jack Taylor . Wilcoxon, Benton Hartung, B.A. Wilev, Herbert Alan, Jr Wilkes, Gordon Borthwick, Jr., BE Wilkins, Herbert Lauress, A.B. Wilkinson, Earl Brown, l AO Willard, Robert Pierce, AT Willard, William Ralph, OAX WiUcox, Thomas Norman Williams, Dudley Aldrich Williams, Edward Butler, Jr. Williams, Pyam Winsor Williams, Robert Downes, A.B. Williamson, Nicholas Wilsev, Henrv Richard Wilson, Albert Olof, Jr. . Wilson, Allen James, Jr., AKE Wilson, John Arthur, Jr. Wilson, Webster Hill, AKE . Wingard, William Fleming, ' J ' BE Winn, ' ernon Chester Winslow, Gilbert Williams. 2N Winsor, Kenneth Weston Wirsing, Edward, jr. . Wise, Dominic Paul . . Witherstine, John Leiand, B.S. Withington, Holden White, OAX Wochos, Wenzel Mathias, Jr., OAX Woertz, Bvron Baker, B.S. . Wo jtczak, ' Walter Stanley, SAE Wold, Torgils Grimkel, B.S. Wold, William Clifford . Woll, Albert Abraham . Wollinger, George Frederick, Jr. Wong, Chung Chee . Woo, Ji-Dah Woo, Wenfoo George Wood, Duane Oren Wood, Flovd Bernard. B.A. . . . Woodman, Harrison Spring, I BE Woodrow, Raymond Jay, B.A. . Woodruff, Benjamin Thomas, B.S. . Woods, Wallace Kelly, A.B. Woodward, Howard Merritt, Z;X Woodward, Robert Burns Woodward, William Mooney, i i;K Woolaver, Lawrence Brenton Woolford, Durbin Acker Woollett, Ralph Storer, Jr. Wooster, Robert Butler, ATA Worden, Robert Elliot Worthen, Edwin Burrough, Jr., S-K Worthen, Welles, X .... Wright, David Atwood, ATA Wrigley, Dwight Alfred, B.S. Wroblewski, Theodore Wu, leu-Liang ... Wu, You Yung, B.S. . Wulbern, William Carsten, B.. . Wuosmaa. Lennart Page Class Course ■39 VI . 87 ■36 VIII •38 VI •37 X •38 XVI 131 •36 XVII 77 •36 VI-A •37 VIII Grad. II (T.D ' 38 IX-B Grad. X-A Grad. III (Cer •38 XV, •39 XV, •39 X ■39 X •39 VI •37 VI-C •39 I •38 X 103 Grad. X-A •38 11 •37 III, Grad. VIII •39 II - 49 36 II. ■39 XVII . 77 ' 36 VI-A •36 ' •39 X 103 •36 X-B Grad. III (Me •39 X . 77 ■36 VI-C •38 xv. •38 II •38 I 121 •36 XV,c •39 I •38 VI •37 I . 61 ■37 IV ■39 X ' 36 IX-B Grad. XVI •39 XVI •38 II Grad. X ■37 I Grad. XVI •37 XVI ■37 XVo •37 XV,b •39 II •39 IV-A •38 VI •36 VI-C Grad. XVI 111 •36 XIII-C ' 36 VI-A Grad. X-A Grad. X-A •39 XIII •37 V •38 VIII ■39 X •39 XV,,, •39 IX-A ■39 X 121 •36 XV, b 61 •36 IV •38 XIII •38 XIII-C Grad. XVI •39 VI 77 •36 VI-C 127 Grad. XVI •37 IV ■36 VI-A Home Address 11 Rowe St., Auburndale, Mass. 881 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. North East, Md. 4520 Lewiston Road, Niagara Falls, N. Y. 102 Irene St., Lawrence, Mass. 148 Ruthven St., Roxbury, Mass. 420 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. 98 Fairmont St., Maiden, Mass. .) Navy Department, Washington, D. C. 383 Main St., Hingham Center, Mass. 53 West Main St., Milo, Me. ) Churchville, Pa. 9421 Meadowbrook Lane, Chestnut Hill, Pa. 63 Temple .Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 14 East 90th St., New York, N. Y. 115 Ormond St., Mattapan, Mass. 14 Willis St., New Haven, Conn. 17 School Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. 61 Summer St., Natick, Mass. 31 Fuller St., Waltham, Mass. Alta, Calif. 173 Bellevue Road, Watertown, Mass. 51 Everett St., Newton Center, Mass. 124 Townsend St., Boston, Mass. 907 Lathrop St., River Forest, III. 81 Hawthorne St., Maiden. M.ass. 384 Prospect St., WiUimantic, Conn. 84 Burton . ve., Hasbrouck Heights, N.J. 517 Angell St., Providence, R. L 67 Chatham Road, Everett, Mass. Dark Harbor, Me. Ill (Met.) 35 Jackson Road, Belmont, Mass. 151 Longwood .Ave., Brookline, Mass. 48 Carolin Road, Upper Montclair, N. J. 23 Yale St , Winchester. Mass. 805 Commonwealth .Ave.. Newton Center, Mass. 236 Islington Road, . uburndale, Mass. 131 Bacon St., Natick, Mass. 220 Wendover Road, Baltimore, Md. Box 342, Franklin, N. H. Padelford St., Myricks, Mass. 148 Grove St., West Medford, Mass. 656 Lotus Ave., Oradell, N. J. Route 1, Fountain City, Wis. 214 Eighth Ave. South, Grand Forks, N. D. 187 Main St., Westport, Conn. 822 Center St., Kewaunee, Wis. 1816 West Market St., Louisville, Ky. 990 Hudson Ave., Rochester, N. Y ' . 8015 Colonial Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. 9 Lancaster St., Cambridge, Mass. 94 Rosseter St., Dorchester, Mass. 102 Fair Oaks Park, Needham, Mass. 61 Robinson Road, Hongkong, China 107Jessfield Road, Shanghai, China 20 Hudson St., Boston, Mass. 837 Lafayette St., Denver, Colo. • War Department, Washington, D. C. Winthrop, Me. 8038 Harbor ' iew Terrace, Brooklyn, N. Y. 7826 South Peoria St., Chicago, III. 1007 West 69th Terrace, K.insas City, Mo. 160 Wayne Ave., H.addonheld, N. j ' . 170 Hoibrook Road, North Quincv, Mass. 15 Clark St., Brooklvn, N. Y. .- ndover Road, Billerica, Mass. 4 North Dudley Ave., Ventnor, N. J. 480 Pleasant St., Winthrop, Mass. 84 Edgemont Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. 133 Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, Mass. 5 Winthrop Road, Lexington, Mass. 56 Alden Ave., New Haven, Conn. Wilson Park, Tarrvtown, N. Y. 115 Fountain St., Haverhill, Mass. 192 West Sixth St., Lowell, Mass. 464 .Avenue Haig, Shanghai, China 1 Sindo Bridge, Kiangsu, China 164 Wentworth St., Charleston, S. C. 30 Austin St., Hvde Park, Mass. 362 Directory of Students Same Wvlic, Robert Russell Wvnoc. Albert St. Clair Yahvabelc. Khairv Said, B S. Yasuba, Takeo ... Yec. Wee Kwock Ycttcr. Edward William, OH York, . rthur Morgan York. Robert, Jr., B.S.. M.S. Young, Clinton Jones Tilden, B.. . Young, Gustav Richard, i. N Y ' oung, Louis Cass, AT!. ' Y ' oung, Richard Br.idford, .iKE Youngquist, Robertson. M ' ,i Yurgelun, Hdniund Constantine Y ' urkanis, Paul John . Zailen, Joseph . Zambell, Harold George Zarach, Edward Joseph Zee, Chen Fong, B.S., S.M. Zeitlen, Joseph George Zeldin, Camille Arthur Zemansky, Stanley Donald Zietlow.John Forrest, Jr., B Zimmer, Abraham Isaac Zimmerman. Herbert Arthur Zinchuck. Michael Zolan, Aaron Louis Zuckerman, Bernard. t K,i Zurita, Hector Manuel Zwanzig, Otto Ernst . HX P f. ' Clan Course •37 Unc. 37 XVII 9 Grad. I 49 Grad. Sp. 11 39 X •39 Vl-A •37 IX-B Grad. X 87 Grad. VIII ■37 xv„ 103 •36 X •38 II ■39 VI •39 XV, •37 Unc. •39 X ■37 VI-A •38 VII, Grad. VI •39 XV, •39 III, •37 XVI Grad. Sp. VI •39 II •37 II •37 VIII 103 •36 X •39 XV, ■38 VI Grad. VI-A Home AtUress 47 Stetson St., Bridgewater, Mass. 24 Monadnock St., Dorchester, Mass. 249 Bah-U-kish, Mosul, Irak Micken, Japan 65 Leonard St., Belmont, Mass. 1538 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, Pa. 95 West Main St., Dover-Foxcroft, Me. 3693 Norriswood St., Memphis, Tenn. 1346 Louisiana St., Lawrence, Kans. 551 East 23rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 228 Highbrook Ave., Pelham, N. Y. 8 Fort St., Fairhaven, Mass. 1809 Fremont St. South, Minneapolis, Minn. 544 North Main St., Brockton, Mass. 1654 Columbia Road, South Boston, M.iss. 7 Melton Road, Brighton, Mass. 1011 Weschler Ave., Erie, Pa. 52 Pine St., Milford, Mass. Ya Jo Lane, Shanghai, China 32 Wendell St., Cambridge, Mass. 2103 Davidson Ave., New York, N. Y. Masonic Home, Utica, N. Y. 1307 North Main St., Aberdeen, S. D. 217 Laurel Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 175 North St., Buffalo, N. Y. 25 Lowe St., Quincy, Mass. 766 Capitol Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 1950 Andrews Ave., New York, N. Y. 13 Lafragua St., Mexico City, Mexico 642 Boulevard East, Weehawken, N. J. 363 Athletic Statistics earers of the Institute Insignia F. P. Baggerman 37 D. J. Cestoni ' 37 J. S. Heal ' 37 H. W. George ' 36 J. C. Webb 37 J. B. Bulkley ' 36 J. H. Carr ' 36 G. F. Crummey ' 36 R. DeW ' olf ' e ' 36 lTt J. H. Fellouris ' 37 J. D. Gardiner ' 36 C. R. Gidley ' 37 R. Halloran ' 36 R. H. Leventhal ' 36 F. D. Mathias ' 36 R. F. Morton ' 36 S. D. Zemanskv ' 37 W. M. Benson ' 36 P. H. Dreissigacker, Jr. ' 37 H. Miller ' 36 A. E. Wells, Jr. ' 36 D. Werblin ' 36 P. W. Alle n ' 37 O. L. Angevine, Jr. ' 36 A. C. Arino ' 38 D. A. Blanton, Jr. ' 36 E. A. Brittenham ' 37 C. E. Ceballos ' 38 R. A. Dresellv ' 37 . Tf H. E. Essley, Jr. ' 36 J. M. Gilliss ' 38 A. B. Gray ' 36 J. P. Hamilton ' 36 R. V. Kron ' 37 J. Lindsay ' 39 R. A. Sanchez ' 37 . Sherburne, Jr. ' 36 T. A. Terry, Jr. ' 36 J. T. C. Waram ' 36 M. M. Waxman, Jr. ' 36 G. B. Wemple ' 37 W. S. Wojtczak ' 37 I. L. Wu ' 36 E. F. Gaughan ' 36 D. G. Gleason ' 37 bTt N. Lefthes ' 36 W. Mathesius ' 36 T. P. Norton ' 36 D. B. Bartlett ' 37 L. R. Dantona 37 fTt M. M, Holcombe ' 36 A. N. Laus ' 37 R. T. Ozol ' 36 P. R. Rosenberg ' 37 W. P. Toorks ' 36 E. P. Cooper ' 37 W. K. Fitch ' 36 cTc H. H. Guerke ' 37 T. B. Oakes 38 N. A. Sabi ' 37 R. A. Denton ' 36 T crossed rifles T. R. Kinraide ' 37 C. F. B. Price, Jr. ' 36 R. A. Denton ' 36 C. N. Endweiss ' 36 rTi D. Hawks, Jr. ' 36 J. F. Keithley ' 37 T. R. Kinraide ' 37 L. G. Peterson ' 36 C. F. B. Price, Jr. ' 36 364 Athletic Statistics Wearers of the Institute Insignia C. C. Dodge 37 W. H. Francis,. Ir. 36 J. P. Hamilton ' 36 sTt V. H. Hoix:,Jr. ' 36 j. F. Patterson ' 36 E. R. Pettebone, II ' 36 B. Vonnegut ' 36 P. White 36 G. A. Hunt,. jr. ' 37 iTr C. A. Lytic ' 37 S. C. Rethorst ' 36 T. A. Terry, Jr. ' 36 N. A. Copeland ' 36 E. F. Everett, Jr. ' 36 ;Tt H. F. Goodwin ' 36 R.J. Ozol ' 36 H. E. Proutv ' 37 J. B. Cohen ' 37 T. Doggett ' 36 H. F. Goodwin ' 36 W hTt A. Healey J. L. Leman ' 36 F. D. Mathias ' 36 F. P. Parker ' 36 J. H. Schipper ' 36 W. A. Stiles, Jr. ' 36 W. B. Beckwith ' 36 N. A. Birch ' 37 R.J. Brauer ' 37 J. M. Clifford ' 37 P. W. Daley ' 36 A.J. Dolhen ' 37 T crossed oars J. A. Easton, Jr. ' 36 J. R. Ferguson, Jr. ' 37 J. P. Haves ' 36 A. ' . Hazeltine ' 37 H. F. Hubbard ' 36 A. R. Hunt ' 37 T. L. Johnson, Jr. ' 36 C. C. Lawrence ' 37 D.J.O ' Conor,Jr. ' 37 F. L. Phillips ' 36 E. L. Pratt ' 36 R. H. Thorson ' 37 R. E. Beckman ' 36 J. Breyer.Jr. ' 38 T. E. Brown ' 36 E. P. Cooper ' 37 G. S. Donnan 36 A. C. Faatz, Jr. ' 37 J. R. Graham ' 36 aTa H. H. Guerke ' 37 G. E. Hadley ' 38 S. T. Johnson ' 36 T. R. Kinraide ' 37 L. W. Kites ' 38 R. E. LeBlanc ' 36 D. S. McLellan 37 W.H. Pulsifer,Jr. ' 38 G. D. Ray ' 36 H. C. Runkel ' 36 N. A. Sabi ' 37 S. Stearns 38 F. P. Thornton, Jr. ' 36 G. F. Crummey ' 36 R. A. Denton ' 36 W. W. Garth ' 36 bTb O.J. Kangas 38 ' . G. Lippitr ' 38 P. S. Morgan ' 36 F.P.Thornton, Jr. L L. Wu ' 36 ' 36 365 Index Acknowledgments 369 Administration Officers of . . Advertising Index Advisory Council on Athletics Publications. . Alpha Chi Sigma , Alpha Tau Omega Alumni Supplement American Society Mechanical Engineers. Armv Ordnance 280 Associated General Contractors 277 Athletics 153 Athletic Statistics 364 23 29 368 152 177 208 224 299 281 Banjo Club Basketball, ' arsity Basketball, Freshman Baton Beaver Club Beaver Key Society Beta Theta Pi Book I Book II Book Index . Boxing, Varsity and Freshman 196 160 160 220 212 219 226 19 147 356 168 Budget Committee 190 Chemical Society Chi Epsilon Chi Phi Civil Engineering Society Class of 1936 Officers .... Class of 1937. Class of 1938 . Class of 1939. . 278 207 228 276 32 33 138 139 140 Combined Musical Clubs 194 Combined Professional Societies 274 Compton, Karl Taylor 24 Corporation, Members of the 30 Course 1 35 Course 2 . Course 3 Course 4 . Course 5 Course 6 Course 7 . 41 51 57 63 69 79 Course 8 Course 9 Course 10. Course 11 Course 12 Course 13 Course 14 Course 15 Course 16. . Course 17. . Course 18 Academic Crew ' arsity Junior Varsity. 150-lb Freshman Cross Country Varsity Freshman Deans and Bursar Dedication Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon . . Directory Dorclan Dormitories Dormitory Committee Informals Electrical Engineering Society Executive Committee Faculty List Fencing Varsity . Freshman Field Day 1938 Crew 1939 Crew. . . 1938 Football 1939 Football. 1938 Relay Team 1939 Relay Team. 1938 Tug-of- Var 1939Tug-of-War. PAGE 83 89 95 35 105 109 51 113 123 129 133 135 156 156 157 157 159 159 26 V 230 232 234 236 331 221 141 144 282 275 189 . 294 164 164 171 173 171 173 172 174 172 174 366 PAGi; I ' Ar.r Five Fifteen Club 200 Quadrangle Club 213 Foreword ' I Fraternities . 223 Rifle ' Varsity. . 162 Glee Club 195 Freshman 162 Golf 169 Graduate House . . 145 Scabbard and Blade 210 Graduate House Committee 146 Scroll 216 Gridiron 214 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Mu 258 260 Grogo . 215 G m Sigma Chi 262 X ' arsitv 161 Sigma Nu . . 264 Freshman 161 Sigma Xi . 204 Soccer, ' arsit - 170 Hexalpha . 209 Squash Hockey Honorary Societies 169 203 ' arsitv 166 166 Freshman Swimming In Memoriam 1 Varsity 165 Institute Committee 188 Freshman . 165 Iiiterfraternitv Conference 222 Table of Contents 2 1 Junior Prom Committee 197 Tau Beta Pi 206 Tech, The 178 Kappa Sigma 238 Tech Boat Club 217 Tech Swim Club 218 Lacrosse 170 Tech Engineering News 184 Lambda Chi Alpha 240 Technique 180 Technology Christian Association. . 198 Menorah Societ - . . M.I.T.A.A.... ' 201 154 Tech Show 192 Tennis ' ' arsitv. . 167 ' Naval Architectural Society 279 Freshman . 167 1 266 ' Theta Chi Orchestra 195 Theta Delta Chi 268 Organizations. . 187 Theta Xi 270 i Osiris 211 Track ' arsity 158 Phi Beta Delta. 242 Freshman . 158 Phi Beta Epsilon 244 Phi Delta Theta 246 ' iews 3 Phi Gamma Delta .... 248 ' oo Doo. . 182 Phi Kappa 250 j Phi Kappa Sigma 252 Walker Memorial Committee. . 191 ' Phi Mu Delta. . . . 254 Wearers of the T 153 Phi Sigma Kappa . . 256 Wrestling Professional Societies. . 273 ' ' arsity 163 Publications 175 Freshman 163 367 Advertisers ' Index 1 PAGE PAGE Abbott, E. D. Co. Inc. . 323 Hunter, J. B., Co 319 An dover Press 329 Huntington Avenue School . 308 Apeda Studio, Inc. 325 lafolla Construction Co., John 317 August, The Florists 323 Bates Klinke, Inc. . , . 309 Jackson Moreland 314 Berkeley Preparatory School . 304 Jahn Oilier Engraving Co. Jenkins Brothers . 327 317 B. S. Laundry 315 Brighton Laundry - 319 Lufkin Rule Co. 321 Browne Sharpe Mfg. Co. 305 Macalaster Bicknell Co. . 313 Carbic Color Chemical Co. 319 Mass. Inst, of Tech 311 Chauncy Hall School 311 McMahon c ' Durward . 321 Craig Hapgood Co., Inc. 315 Merchants Miners Line 317 Dodge, Lyman E 313 Molloy, David J., Co Motor Service Garage, Inc 323 321 Edison, Thomas A., Inc . 303 Norton Co. .. 307 Fay Spofford Thorndike 319 Field, Walter Son, Inc. 314 Rhodes Bros. Co 313 Firestone Service Service Stores 313 Rival Foods, Inc. 321 Ford, Benjamin - 314 Singer Sewing Machine Co . . 319 Grasselli Chemical Co., Inc. . 305 Starrett, L. S. Co . 307 Grill Diner 323 Stillman, Allston A., Co. , 317 Hampshire Press, Inc. . 315 Stoll, M. Co . 315 Harris, Ralph Co 315 Thresher Kelle , . . . 317 Harvard Cooperative Society, Inc. . 309 Harvev, Arthur C, Co 315 Ullven, Miss Rita 321 Havdcn, Stone Co. 310 United Farmers . . 323 Hedlund, Oscar F. . 317 Uptown School 323 Holmes, Samuel, In 323 Hood, H. P. Sons . 319 Walker Memorial Dining Service, • .. 321 368 Acknowledgments To the following individuals and groups who have contributed time and effort to the creation of the 1936 Technique, we, the Senior Board, wish to express our thanks and appreciation: Dr. Karl T. Conipton, President of the Institute Mr. J. Rhvne Killian, Chairman of the Advisory Council on Pub- lications James B. Allen, for taking charge of the photography of the book Alice L. Smith and Dorothy Dunham, Secretaries Miss Mary F. Hewins, Dean ' s Office Miss Isabelle I. Irwin, Bursar ' s Office Professors in charge of departments Sketches and Designs: Mr. R. M. Christenson and Mr. C. A. Bles- sing of our staff and Mr. J. R. Brookes, and Mr. D. A. Werblin of the Architectural School Prof. J. L. Reid of the Architectural School and Mr. N. H. Carter of the Department of Chemical Engineering for assistance with the cover. The following firms and representatives, with whom we have dealt in producing Volume LI, merit commendation: Engraving Service: Mr. Peter S. Gurwit of the Jahn and Oilier Engraving Co. Layout Suggestions: Mr. Brightman and Mr. Gurwnt of the Jahn and Oilier Engraving Co. and Mr. Valz of the Andover Press Composition and Printing: Mr. D. G. Valz of the Andover Press Photographic Service: Mr. Gustav Golding of the Apeda Studio and Mr. Conant of The Technology Photo Service Cover: Mr. A. A. Luberskv of the S. K. Smith Co. 369 ' j-m .J AVJ .!:Vi:v:?s t - $ :-i ■;■« • ?:l ' ,i)i j! ' 7- S : ' ,i
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