Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)

 - Class of 1928

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1928 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 614 of the 1928 volume:

exniBKis ' ,(• -VJ PT ir 5, 19 8 RIC-JL- ' BRAC Lewis Milton Firey Walter Raper Beardsley Alexander Shaw Beekman Willian Aitken Bond Houser, Jr. . Charles Robert Morse Henry G. Lotspeich Chairman Business Manager Art Editor Circulation Manager Photographic Editor Assistant Art Editor Assistant Photographic Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Percy G. Hart, Jr. Robert F. Muhlhauser D. B. Lansden John H. Wallace, Jr. ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Frederick G. Matheson Irwin A. Powell Donald B. Kipp ' !S®©(S: Mr . mw3m mi m ■£S The 1918 KIC-JL- KAC WAS BUILT COMPLETE BY The Dubois Press Builders oj jHm Books and Gatalogues Rochester, N. Y. WE acknowledge with appreciation the cooperation OF the following Engravings by Scientific Engraving Co. binding by the J. F. Tapley Co. Drawings for Athletic Headers by Win J. Merriam Lewis M. Firey Editor W Loyal Cooperation by Walter R. Beardsley and Business Manager 1 t t u i :=srsr?5z y ir I i I ' ■ ibj ! A vi i I S r I I WA w Z Z ZZL 7 r P R I N C E T O N f The Wr3 ttt Ruminc 1928 - V B R I C I A I B R A C i ( i I li ■m y ON behalf of the Class of 192.8, this volume is reverently dedicated to the memory of those Princeton men v ho, one hundred and fifty years ago, offered their lives that future genera- tions might inherit the benefits of a greater freedom and a happier existence. ii i- I;. , St JL JJ Cf ir V?: ■®©©®®®sk. FO%EWO%D jNOTHER year has passed, leaving its manifold memories, its opportunities and successes, its pleasures and dis- appointments. It is the privilage of the 19x8 Bric-A-Brac to record the varied activities, giving rise to these phases, and to attempt to bring back to graduate and undergra- duate alike the thrill of another championship football season, of exa- mination and bicker week suspense, and of the gayety of the proms and house parties. To accomplish this purpose, we have tried, not to present a mere statistical record of events, but to place those events against a back- ground which will recall them to the fullest extent, and help to keep the memory of the closing year forever fresh to those who have par- ticipated in the making of this bit of history for old Nassau. i.t j jj w ir ■v? TABLE OP CONTENTS Views 13 Register .... 35 Faculty .... 41 Graduate School . . 55 The Classes . . . 6i Publications . . . 105 The Halls .... 12.1 Public Speaking . 133 Musical Clubs . 145 Dramatics .... i6i Athletics .... 175 Religious Organizations 311 Upper Class Clubs School Clubs . Sectional Clubs F.A.R.O.T.C. Miscellaneous Dances Retrospect Commencement Alumni Activities Directory . Index ... Advertisements Hi kJ I 1 1 II I I I I II I I I I 11 II II II u w 19281 An Early History of Princeton A STUDY of the history of Princeton shows it to be closely linked with the names of several great pres- idents, to whose ambition and ene rgy the Univer- sity ' s present position in the front ranks of American educational institutions is due. Princeton owes its origin to a movement set on foot by the Presbyterian Synod of Philadelphia in 1739 to estab- lish in the Middle Colonies a college to rank with Har- vard and Yale in New England and William and Mary in Virginia, which were too far away, in those days of slow travel, and too radical to suit pious Calvinists. Prior to 1746, the only in the Middle Colonies purporting to give a college education was the Log College, located on Neshaminy Creek, about twenty miles from Phila- delphia, which offered a very restricted curriculum. Religious dissension halted all progress in the direction of a new college until 1746, when several alumni of Log College united with the Presbyterian Synods of New Jersey and New York and under the leadership of Eben- czer Pemberton, a Harvard graduate, and Johnathan Edwards, a graduate of Yale, obtained a charter from Governor John Hamilton of New Jersey for a college to be erected in this State. With the grant of a more ade- quate charter by Governor Belcher the following year, college was opened at Elizabeth Town in the parsonage of the first president, the Rev. Johnathan Dickinson. His term of office was cut short by his untimely death a few months later, and the college removed to Newark, with the elder Aaron Burr as president. Here in 1748 the first commencement took place, six men graduating. With the enlargement of the scope of the curriculum and the size of the student body under President Burr, conditions in Newark became cramped and the question as to another and a permanent site for the college became pressing. After due consideration by the trustees, the choice devolved upon either New Brunswick or Prince- ton. More favorable inducements offered by the people of the latter town and a gift of a large plot of land meas- uring four and a half acres, by Nathaniel FitzRandolph, settled the choice upon Princeton. Accordingly, on July 19, 1754, ground was broken for the building which was afterward known as Nassau Hall. At its completion, it was the largest stone building of its kind in the col- onies, containing sixty separate apartments for recitation rooms, dining room, sleeping quarters, a hall, and a chapel. It was proposed at first to name the building after Governor Belcher, but he modestly declined the honor and suggested that it be called after King William the Third, of the House of Nassau. In 1756 President Burr and seventy students formally occupied Nassau Hall. Under the successive administrations of Presidents Burr, Edwards, Davies, and Finley the college steadily increased in numbers and influence until its development was suddenly halted by the outbreak of the Revolution. It was due to the foresight and determination of Presi- dent Witherspoon that the college was able to weather that war. Nassau Hall was captured by the British and Hessians and used as barracks; during the Battle of Princeton it changed hands three times in a single day, each time suffering considerable damage from bullets. College was practically disbanded during the first years of the war, but reopened in 1777. Sessions were held in the Presidents house, pending repairs on Nassau Hall. For several years the attendance was very small, not more than six or seven graduating each year. A disastrous fire in 1802. and the Riot of 1807, as a consequence of which 115 of the zoo students were expelled, featured the administration of President Smith. But the greatest disturbance was the Great Rebellion, 1817, when the undergraduates barricaded Nassau Hall, 11 I I ' M II II II n: rf ' I I 1 1 fT ' ' 1778 I II II I I I I II n J I II If II II II 1 1 J 7 1928 An Early History of Princeton — {Continued) imprisoning the tutors in their rooms, and for three days defied the authorities of the town and faculty, whiling away the hours in the interim by smashing windows and furniture. Under the presidencies of Dr. Green and Dr. Carnahan, a substantial endowment was secured, new life infused in the college, and a Department of Law added. This department had later to be abandoned be- cause of lack of funds. Fire in 1855 and the outbreak of the Civil War soon afterward united to hamper progress, reducing the number of students to a mere corporal ' s guard. The installation of Dr. James McCosh as presi- dent in 1868 was marked by the addition of many new buildings, the establishment of the schools of archi- tecture and civil engineering, and the introduction of the elective system. The enrollment of students and faculty was substantially increased, and upon his resig- nation in 1888, Princeton had passed through the transi- tion stage to a broader influence and rank among the foremost American colleges. This short resume of the history of Princeton from the early date of its conception is of peculiar interest to us now celebrating the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Princeton, which had such a direct bear- ing upon the ability of the colonists to secure their independence a century and a half ago. The Battle Mon- ument stands significant of that trying period following which the University rapidly rose to attain its present standing among the colleges of the country. 12 . 3S . CT y Old Time Princeton Views Reproduced by Courtesy of University Library ' ?SSfX ! m % - ■k Campus 1764 Witherspoon Street from Front Campus ' : l ' : ?r Switch At Princeton Junction «? - j fjj-c xv ' ; - ; , V Blair Hall and Old Station r ' ' ' i ' ' -MJ yvvrt-v . 1 lift Princeton Junction , . Canal Railroad Bridge • •V Battle of Princeton I 1 I I !M Ml M II n II II II 11 ! 1 I.J n M 1 Ej 1928 7 Battle of Princeton BETWEEN five and six thousand able-bodied patriots were gathered on Christmas day, 1776, around the headquarters of General Washington on the Penn- sylvania side of the Delaware River and southwest of Trenton. Envious American eyes were fixed on the force of Hessian soldiers, carousing in true holiday spirits in the New Jersey town. The German mercenaries were heedless of the silent, ragged force of men that later crossed the river a few miles north of their camp Christ- mas night, marched to the encampment, and fell upon the regiments quartered there. The surprised soldiers, or, rather, what remained of the British militaries, was scattered in the wilds of central New Jersey. JECOND POSITION During the ensuing week. Lord Howe in New York, appraised of the American victory, despatched General Cornwallis with eight thousand trim British regulars to western New Jersey. The continental regiments, jubilant in the time of victory, had encamped south of Assanpink Creek in Trenton after transporting the captured Hessian troops to the Pennsylvania bank and recrossing the Dela- ware ' s icy channel to their present position. Militia under Cadwalader, Ewing, and Mifflin joined Washing- ton ' s regiments of foot and artillery along the creek. As the British strength in Trenton was augmented by daily arrivals of fresh soldiers from New York, Wash- ington realized the danger to the American position and condition of the fighting revolutionists. He had lately been granted the supreme command of the army as military dictator. An engagement with the enemy appeared inevitable, and the American leader sought means of avoiding any encounter against superior num- bers. He was willing, however, to vie with isolated portions of the enemy ' s troops after the fashion of the ancient Roman general, Fabius. Necessity, dire neces- sity, he wrote, will, nay, must, justify an attack. The feasible alternative was to march northeast, out- flanking Cornwallis, and to sever the red coat line of communication at some point between Trenton, Maiden- head (now Lawrenceville), Princeton, and New Bruns- wick, but preferably at the college town, which lay due south of Morristown where the next largest continental army was encamped. Skirmishes in Trenton on January 1, 1777, strengthened this decision. The night of the second, the continental were at work, so the red coat imagined, in making campfires and erecting breastworks, but this noisy, flaming activity was a ruse to cloak the withdrawal of the Americans, men, cannon, and baggage. A starry sky, a cool wind, and frozen roads were providential blessings to the marshalling militia. By one o ' clock in the morning the column had stealthily departed on its circuitous route 27 ' II II 11 rr-rr 1778 I II M 11 II II M II II t I It ! 1 II T I • n ' 1 t II I I J 19281 7 Battle of Princeton — (Continued) to Princeton, twelve miles away. The moving mass wended its path over a recently constructed road, pitted with frozen quadmires and obstructed by newly hewn tree trunks, the only highway over the frozen country- side paralleling the English line of communication. Washington had flown. As the frosty dawn broke, the continental army crossed Stony Brook; brigades under Sherman, Sullivan, St. Clair, Mercer, Cadwalader, and Hitchcock traversed the stream in that order, and up the east side of the stream. Washington had been advised that the demolition of another bridge across Stony Brook and to the north would intercept the enemy line of communication and would hinder a possible attack by Cornwallis when the British found that the Americans had withdrawn. General Hugh Mercer and a small force was commissioned for this task, and the detail party branched from the main body and proceeded north through woods lining the east side of the stream. Three regiments of British regulars, commanded by Colonel Charles Mawhood, were quartered in Princeton during the night. Early on the dawn of January third, Colonel Mawhood departed to join Cornwallis in Tren- ton leaving one regiment, the 40th, in the village. The two regiments had crossed the bridge, which was Mer- cer ' s objective, when some members of the leading brigade, climbing from the stream bed to the top of the hill, sighted what later proved to be Washington ' s army passing over the back road to Princeton. Maw- hood ' s reasoning led him to believe the force was a small one because of dense woods and rough topography, and it seemed best to warn the regiment remaining in Prince- ton and to attack the Americans moving along the back road. At once reversing their column, the red coats recrossed the bridge and started toward town. Mercer ' s proximity was unknown to them. After retracing his route a short distance, Mawhood turned cast off the highway, sent one of his regiments to head off the Amer- ican leading brigade, and was then informed that a detachment of Americans (under Mercer) was south of the British. The American commander, although learning that a large enemy force had returned to his side of the Stony Brook, was ignorant of the British position and sought safety for his men by wheeling to the east and joining Washington ' s main guard. The focus at which Mawhood ' s own regiment surprised Mercer ' s men was an orchard on the Clark farm. Mercer wheeled to the north into line and drove the opposing detachment back until the main body of red coat regulars deployed and reinforced it. British cannister halted the militia, and American muskets had to yield to the charge of British bayonets. The continentals lost ground and were forced to flee. In the enemy charge. General Mercer was struck down by a gun butt, and his identity revealed. Red coat sol- diers, bayonetting him, left him terribly wounded. Mercer died in great agony on January twelfth in the farm house on the Clark estate. Meanwhile the harassed Americans had lost all their leading officers but one and were utterly routed. The division of the main army under Cadwalader had now hurried to the aid of the continentals and met the fleeing remnants of Mercer ' s detachment. Bewilderment was rife amog Cadwalader ' s unskilled militia, joined by fleeing soldiers and con- fronted by Mawhood ' s main force that had pursued their advantage ruthlessly. American artillery under Moulder flayed the enemy cavalry on the west and gave time for Washington to reform his battle line and to marshal the able veteran of the rear, commanded by Hitchcock. Supported by the veterans, creeping toward Mawhood ' s 28 The Battle of Princeton —{Continued) left flank, the American line advanced until the red coat ranks broke and scattered, leaving men and cannon on the field. During the engagement, the American first brigade under Sullivan parried every movement of the British 55th despatched against it by Colonel Mawhood. Both divisions were inactive in the first part of the affray. Once Mawhood was in precipitate retreat to the north and west, the 55th r egiment hastened to join the 40th regiment to stem further American advance. Sullivan ' s men and others from the main army closed with the foreign regulars in a ravine (now on the east side of the Graduate College hill) and brushed the opposition into the college town. Some members of the English soldiery barricaded themselves in Nassau Hall, but a few cannon balls from an American battery silenced resistance. One of the balls entered the Prayer Hall and punctured a portrait of George II. In the building, the continentals found imprisoned revolutionists and British wounded. Danger from attack was not vet dissipated. Washington had ordered a detachment of militia to destroy the bridge over Stony Brook which General Mercer had been unable to accomplish. As the men were completing the destruc- tion of the bridge, Cornwallis ' army, now fully cog- nizant of Washington ' s position, hove into sight. Rem- nants of Colonel Mawhood ' s scattered 17th had been absorbed by the main force of opposing British. By delaying the red coats ' progress at the stream and on the east side of the brook, Washington ' s army was enabled to leave the town. After following the English line of communication as far as Kingston, the continental army turned north to Rocky Hill and eventually to Morristown. Two nights and a day had told upon the vigor .of militia and veterans alike. Rich stores and supplies lay at New Brunswick, but the fatigued troops were in no condition to seize them or to wrestle with the fresh numbers of Cornwallis. The loss of Mercer was a blow to the revolutionists, but in numbers the enemy ' s casualties far exceeded the continentals. The Americans had defeated the flower of the British veterans. The dread of the Hessians had already been exploded. Pennsylvania and the larger part of New Jersey were free of red coats. Supporters of the revolutionary cause increased considerably, and hope and cheer for the future of the war swept through the people of the states. Victory was yet possible. 29t 11 11,11..! ' M ' 1 T7 t ! n .LL ' ' ' I I T TT M 11 II II M l ? 1928 Princeton and Its Contributions ALTHOUGH Princeton is fai- from being the old- l . est settlement in New Jersey, yet it has a history of more than two centuries, the first homestead having been established in i68x. It remained, however, for more than half a century a quiet and unimportant hamlet, with its few settlers devoting their time to the clearing of the forest and the tilling of the soil. And yet the roll call of the pioneers of Princeton reveals many names which are now synonymous with patriotism and famous in Ameri- can History: Stockton, Boudinot, Randolph, and others almost as renowned, — men who first showed their in- stinctive Americanism by protesting against the quarter- ing of British troops in their homes during the French and Indian war. In October, 1746, twelve years before that time, the College of New Jersey had been chartered. This college was opened in Elizabethtown the following year under President Dickinson. After his death, later in that year, the college was moved to Newark and put under the care of Aaron Burr. In September, 1847, a new charter was granted by the Governor, Jonathan Belcher, and a few years later the college was permanently located at Princeton. New buildings, including Nassau Hall, were completed, and the town and college of Princeton grew side by side from that time to the present. The College of New Jersey, however, was never a state affair either in interest or support, for even in these very earliest years of its history notable men from Philadelphia and New York were drawn to this new seat of learning, and territorial representation has continued to expand nearly every year of its growth. It was but a short time after the completion of Nassau Hall (in 1756) that such names as Burr, Edwards, With- er spoon, Livingston, Luther Martin and other men of eminence were written into the tradition and history of Princeton. Nassau Hall today is the great monument to the lasting historic and patriotic achievements of these men, and the many others who followed in their foot- steps. That building stood while the first seeds of rebel- lion against British dominion were sown; it witnessed the rise of antagonistic feeling to its apex, the Revolu- tion; it harbored the government of the United States in its critical moments and cradled the Constitution makers of this great nation. The man who presided over Nassau Hall at the time of these historic events was John Witherspoon, a Scotch- man, whom Princeton men will always revere and es- teem. He was president from 1768 to 1794, and under his guidance and tutelage the college began to prosper just as the clouds were darkening on the political sky. Every movement of those clouds was reflected on the campus. When the letter breaking the non-importation agreement passed through Princeton on its way to Philadelphia, the document was seized by the undergraduates and burned with great ceremony in front of Nassau Hall. James Madison, then a student at the College, has left a record of this incident in a letter to a friend. This was one of the first so-called undergraduate demonstra- tions that have persisted to the present day. It was soon followed by one of a more vigorous nature, which Charles Beatty has described in these words: Last week to show our patriotism, we gathered all the steward ' s winter store of tea, and having made a fire on the campus, we there burnt near a dozen pounds, tolled the bell, and made many spirited resolves. But this was not all. Poor Mr. Hutchinson ' s effigy shared the same 30 I 1 M I I I I n 1 1 1 1 i-r-rr- t ' ' ' ' 11 t ' j ' ? 1928 Princeton and Its Contributions — {Continued ' ) fate with the tea, having a tea canister tied about his neck. The Declaration of Independence itself, although indifferently received by the Continental army and the people in general, was given a different welcome by the undergraduates of Princeton. On the 9th of July, 1776, it was announced from the steps of Nassau Hall, which was grandly illuminated, and independency was pro- claimed under a triple volley of musketry, and with universal acclamation for the prosperity of the United States. Many undergraduate volunteers joined Wash- ington ' s army that summer. But things went from bad to worse with the patriot army. Princeton lay in the path of the victorious enemy and was fated to receive hard treatment at their hands. Accordingly, Dr. Witherspoon, one morning in November, called the student body to- gether and announced the temporary disbandment of the college. Nassau Hall thus changed from a center of scholastic life to a military barracks and hospital, occu- pied in turn by British and American troops. It continued m this use until the summer of 1778, when college was resumed in it. Such were the sentiments and troubles of the student body in the early years of Witherspoon ' s presidency. He himself was a statesman as well as an educator. In the convention which framed the constitution of New Jer- sey, his technical knowledge of administration amazed the delegates and led them in their constructive labors. He helped to overthrow the royal governor, was later elected to the Continental Congress, and did much to precipitate the signing and issuing of the Declaration of Independence. Finally, Witherspoon was one of the secret committee of Congress which provided the moral and financial support which was necessary to bring the war to a successful close. He was also a member of the boards of war and finance, wrote state papers on the currency, and framed many important bills passed by the Conti- nental Congress. So great was his influence and a ctivity that it was only natural that at the close of the war when Congress was driven from Philadelphia, it should seek refuge in John Witherspoon ' s college. Thus we see that Nassau Hall became a central power of patriotic feeling and action. From 1766 to 1776, two hundred and thirty young Americans were graduated. A fair estimate of their quality may be ascertained from the number of them who afterwards attained prominence in public life. Ephraim Brevard, Pierrepont Edwards, Churchill Houston, John Henry, John Beatty, James Linn, Frederick Frelinghuysen, Gunning Bedford, Hugh Brackinridge, Philip Freneau and James Madison; Aaron Burr, Henry Lee, Aaron Ogden, Brockholst Liv- ingston and William Richardson Davie. Those ten years produced twelve Princetonians who sat in the Continental Congress, six who sat in the Con- stitutional Convention, one President of the United States, one Vice-President, twenty-four members of Congress, three judges of the Supreme Court of the United States, one Secretary of the State, one Postmaster- General, three Attorney-Generals, and two foreign ministers. It is unnecessary to refer to the resulting influ- ence of such a body of distinguished men upon our subsequent history. It was in the summer of 1783, however, that we find Nassau Hall on the threshold of the supreme epoch in its history. At that time the Continental Congress was sitting at Philadelphia. The army, as a result of the peace declaration, had been granted furloughs, but the soldiers had not been reimbursed for their services. They de- manded their money from Congress, and, when it was not forthcoming, a mutiny arose. They surrounded the 31 i ' 1 1 1 ] 1 1 ti 1 1 1 1 n II [[ [ I t f T 1 I TTT 7 1928 Princeton and Its Contributions — Continued) state building where Congress was in session, but did no damage other than to thoroughly terrify the congressmen. Because of this. President Elias Boudinot was authorized to adjourn Congress either to Trenton or to Princeton. Why this man, a native of Princeton and a trustee of the college, chose the latter place to continue their session, we need not ask. Princeton ' s welcome to Congress was a warm one. Colonel George Morgan, who then lived at Prospect, a stone ' s throw from the college, offered his house to them. The Princeton faculty invited the fugitives to occupy Nassau Hall. The first three meetings of Congress were held in Prospect, but after that all meetings were held in the college building. Here the representatives of the na- tion played the part of the audience on July 4th, 1783, when Princeton celebrated the anniversary of the Inde- pendence of America. The Neiv Jersey Gazette of June 2.0 tells us that the celebration would consist of two ora- tions delivered by young gentlemen appointed for that purpose by the two literary societies established in the institution, in which they propose, not only to pay the tribute that is due to their country from youth engaged in the pursuit of science, but to emulate each other in the opinion of a polite assembly, for the honor of their respective societies. There is no record telling which of these societies was the victor. But it was on the 2.6th of August that the great unfor- gettable scene was enacted. Congress had summoned Washington to come to Princeton and, on that day, to appear before them. Just before noon a cavalcade came ricfing slowly into the town, — a familiar figure in buff and blue at its head. They rode directly to the campus gate, where Washington dismounted and, amid the cheers of the students, strode up the steps of Nassau Hall. At the stroke of twelve Washington, escorted by two members of Congress, entered the prayer room in that building. Congress was assembled there, and, when Washington was seated. President Boudinot read the formal address from Congress to him, congratulating him on the successful termination of the war, and thank- ing him in behalf of the nation for the great services he had rendered. Washington made a brief and modest acknowledgment, giving the credit to his soldiers; and, in that way, with neither pomp nor pageantry, the cere- mony ended. Another great occasion in the history of Princeton took place on the 31st day of that same month (August 1783). The Minister Plenipotentiary from the Nether- lands was to be received by Congress. In additon to that body of men, many notables were present, including Washington, Morris, the Superintendent of Finance, and Luzerne, the French envoy. The company had just assembled when news came that the treaty of peace had been signed at Versailles, and the delight and enthusiasm of all was unrestrained. This function was the most brilliant public one thus far held in the new Republic. A curious list could be made of the men who trod the corridors of Nassau Hall that summer of 1783. It would contain Italian counts, Polish and English noblemen, soldiers innumerable, inventors, and authors, besides nearly all the eminent men of the day, — men like Thomas Paine, Captain Paul Jones, Baron Steuben, Kosciusco, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and Thomas Jefferson. But the eighteenth century had closed and a quarter of the nineteenth had passed before the most romantic figure of the Revolution honored Princeton with his presence. In September, 18x4, Lafayette on his triumphal tour through America, visited Princeton. The flags of the United States and France were flying over Nassau Hall 32 i.il 11 II i II It IT M It ' M II M tl 1 It M ri 7 1928 Princeton and Its Contributions— Continued ' ) on that day. The son of Stockton, the Signer of the Declaration of Independence, delivered a speech of wel- come; and, when the visitor reached the temple, he was presented with a diploma signed by President Wither- spoon in 1790, conferring upon him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the College of New Jersey. From this survey, however brief and incomplete, of the part of Princeton and Princeton men in the Revolution, we can readily see the foundations of the patriotic spirit and honorable endeavor that have become parts of the tradition and code of this university. In Nassau Hall we may find solemn memorial of these early deeds of valor and devotion, and record that, from the time of the birth of our nation in the eighteenth century to the recent days of the Great War, that tradition has been carried on. 33 REGISTER University Calendar 1916 September i — Widntsday. Last date for requests for postponed examina- tions. September 10-14 — Monday to Firday. Entrance examinations held in Princeton only. September 10-15 — Monday to Saturday. Postponed examinations and exam- inations taken to complete summer reading courses. September 11 — Wednesday. Last date for necessary changes in First Term (1916-1917) electives. September 17 — Monday. x:oo p.m. McCosh 50. Meeting of Freshman Class and all other entering undergraduate students. Attendance compulsory. September 18 — Tuesday. } :oo p. m. Formal Opening Exercises. Alexander Hall. 9:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Aural Tests in Modern Languages for Freshmen offering French B, German B, or Spanish B at entrance. October i — Friday. Last day for enrollment of Graduate Students. October 14-16 — Thursday to Saturday inclusive. First Part of examination for Degree of Doctor of Philosophy. October 18 — Monday. Stated meeting of the Committee on the Course of Study for changes in Prospectus for Second Term (1916-1917). October 18 — Thursday. Fall Meeting of the Board of Trustees. November i — Monday. Last Meeting of Committee on Course of Study for changes in Prospectus for Second Term (1916-1917). November 15 — Thursday. Thanksgiving Day. Class exercises suspended. November 16 — Friday. 10:30 a. m. Class exercises resumed. December 14-18 — Tuesday to Saturday. Conferences with Advisers on Second Term (1916-1917) electives. (Continued on January 5, 1917.) December 18 — Saturday. 11:40 p. m. Christmas Recess begins. December 15 — Saturday. Christmas Day. 1918 January i — Saturday. New Year ' s Day. January 5 — Wednesday. 3:30 p. m. Christmas Recess ends. January 5-11 — Wednesday. Conferences with Advisers on Second Term (1916-1917) electives. (Continued from December 18.) January 6 — Thursday. 8:}o a. m. Class exercises resumed. January 13 — Thursday. Winter Meeting of the Board of Trustees. January 17 — Monday. Stated Meeting of the Committee on Course of Study for changes in Prospectus for First Term (1917-1918). January 11 — Friday. Last date for conferences with Advisers, and for filing Second Term (1916-1917) electives. February 4 — Friday. Mid-year Examinations begin. February 15 — Tuesday. Mid-year Examinations end. First Term Ends. February 16 — Wednesday. Second Term begins 8:30 a. m. Class exercises resumed. 36 February 11 — Monday. Last meeting of the Committee on the Course of Study for changes in Prospectus for First Term (1917-1918). February 11 — Tuesday. Washington ' s Birthday. Class exercises suspended. Alumni Day. Meeting of the National Alumni Association of Prince- ton University. March i — Tuesday. Final date for application for fellowships and grad- uate scholarships. March 1 — Tuesday. Final date for filing copy for Undergraduate An- nouncement for 1917-1918. April 6-7 — Wednesday to Thursday. Freshman Uniform Tests. April 14 — Thursday. Spring Meeting of the Board of Trustees. 3:30 p. m. Easter Recess begins. April 17 — Sunday. Easter Sunday. April 11 — Thursday. 3:30 p. m. Easter Recess ends. April 11 — Friday. 8:30 a. m. Class exercises resumed. April 15 — Monday. Conferences with Advisers on First Term (1917- 1918) electives begin. May 7 — Saturday. Last date for conferences with Advisers and for filing First Term (1917-1918) electives. May 16-18 — Thursday to Saturday. First Part of Examination for Degree of Doctor of Philosophy. May 18 — Saturday. Last date for application for Degree of Master of Arts. May 15 — Wednesday. Senior and Junior Final Examinations begin. June 1 — Thursday. Underclass Final Examinations begin. June 17 — Friday. Underclass Final Examinations end. June 19 — Sunday. Baccalaureate Sunday. Meeting of the National Alumni Association of Princeton University. June i.cr Monday. Class Day. Commencement Meeting of the Board of Trustees. June 11 — Tuesday. Commencement Day. Election of Alumni Trustees. July 6 — Wednesday. Final date for registration for summer session. July 7 — Thursday. 8:30 a. m. Summer session begins. July 15 — Friday. Final date for registration for summer reading courses. August 14 — Wednesday. Summer session ends. September 1 — Thursday. Final date for requests for postponed examina- tions. September 19-14 — Monday to Saturday. Postponed examinations of both terms and examinations in summer reading courses. September 17 — Tuesday. 3 :oo p. m. Formal Opening Exercises. Alexander Hall. November 14 — Thursday. Thanksgiving Day. Class exercises suspended. December 17 — Saturday. 11:30 p. m. Christmas Recess begins. 1919 January 5 — Thursday. 3 :3o p. m. Christmas Recess ends. Presidents of the College of New Jersey and Prineton University College Founded in 174 6 Became a University in 1896 Accessus Rev. Jonathan Dickinson Apr., 1747 Rev. Aaron Burr . . 1748 Rev. Jonathan Edwards . Jan., 1758 Rev. Samuel Davies . . 1758 Samuel Finley, D.D. . 1761 JoHN WiTHERSPOON, D.D., LL.D. 1766 S. Stanhope Smith, .DD., LL.D. 1795 AsHBEL Green, D.D., LL.D. 1811 |James Carnahan, D.D., LL.D. 1813 tJoHN MacLean, D.D., LL.D. 1854 tjAMEsMcCosH, D.D., LL.D., Litt.D 1868 fpRANcis L. Patton, D.D., LL.D. 1888 fWooDROw Wilson, Ph.D. Litt.D., LL.D. . igoz John G. Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D. i iz Exitns Oct., 1747 1757 Mar., 1758 1761 1766 1794 1812. 182.2. 1854 1868 1888 1901 1910 Deceased . f Resigned. 37 OHN G. HIBBEN. Ph.D., LL.D. TRUSTEES OF THE UNIVERSITY Top Row — Mr. D ' Olicr, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Renrschlcr, Mr. Pitney, Mr. McCormick, Mr. Garretl. Sicm i R0W — Mr. Osborn, Mr. Martio, Mr. Dufficid, Mr Scribacr, Mr. Cochrao, First Row — Mr. Brooks, Mr. Shea, Mr. FarraQd, Dr. Hibbco, Mr. Fleming, Dr. Stewart, Mr. Van Rensselaer. Trustees of the University The Governor of the State of New Jersey, Ex-officio President of the Board of Trustees. John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., Presinent of the University, and, in the absence of the Governor, President of the Board. CHARTER TRUSTEES HoN.JoHN Airman Stewart, LL.D Morristown, N.J Ettcttd April, iS6S. George B. Stewart, D.D. and LL.D Auburn, N. Y Ehclid Fthruary, 18S7. Cyrus McCormick, A.M Chicago, 111 E ectrd June, iSSg. John Dixon, D.D Trenton, N. J Elected June, 18 0. Melancthon W. Jacobus, D.D Hartford, Conn Elected November, iS o. HoN. Bayard Henry, A.M Philadelphia, Pa Elected February, i8i)6. Alexander VanRensselaer, A.M Philadelphia, Pa Elected June, 1 01. Robert Garrett, B.S Baltimore Co., Md Elected June, i oj. Henry B. Thompson, B.S Greenville, Del Elected June, 1 06. Joseph B. Shea, A.B Pittsburgh, Pa Elected June, j o6. Edward W. Sheldon, A.M., LL.B New York, N. Y Elected December, 1 06. Wilson Farrand, L.H.D Newark, N. J Elected June, ii)0 . Parker D. Handy, A.B New York, N. Y Elected April, i )io. John M. T. Finney, M.D Baltimore, Md Elected June, i()io. William Cooper Procter, B.S Cincinnati, O. Elected April, igiz. Charles Scribner , A.B Morristown, N.J Elected M.ay, 1 12. Matthew C. Fleming, A.M., LL.B New York, N. Y Elected June, 1 12. John O. H. Pitney, A.M. Morristown, N. J William C. Osborn, LL.D New York, N. Y Elected June, 1914. Died December 17, 1916. Died September 17, 1916. Edward D. Duffield, A.M., LL.B South Orange, N.J. Elected April, 1 20. Lewis B. Stillwell, D.Sc New York, N. Y. Elected April, 1 20. Wilson S. Arbuthnot, A.B Pittsburgh, Pa. Elected June, 1 20. Percy R. Pyne, ind, A.B Princeton, N.J. Elected January, 1 22. Henry J. Cochran, A.B Plainfield, N. J. Elected October, 1 22. John R. Hardin, A.M Newark, N. J. Elected April, 11)2). Walter E. Hope, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1 26. Gordon S. Rentschler, A.B New York, N. Y. Elected October, 11)26. Franklin D ' Olier, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Elected October, 1 26. ALUMNI TRUSTEES Edgar Allen Poe, LL.B Baltimore, Md. Term expires June, i 2j. William C. Motter, A.B St. Paul, Minn. Term expires June, i()2j. David Fentriss, LL.B Memphis, Tenn. Term expires June, 1 28. Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, LL.B New York, N. Y. Term expires June, 1 28. John H. Thacher, A.M Kansas City, Mo. Term expires June, 192Q. J. Curtis Sloane, A.B Pasadena, Cal. Term expires June, 192 . John H. Brooks, B.S Scranton, Pa. Term expires June, ig o. Paul C. Martin, A.B Springfield, O. Term expires June, igjo. TREASURER Henry Green Duffield, A.B. CLERK OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Wilson Farrand, L.H.D. 39 1 ] 11 1 ! ' ' It II 1 r M n II n n 1 1 it i i i i ij 19281 7 Committees of the Trustees Administrative Committee President Hibben, Chairman; Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Handy, Mr. Pitney, Dr. Finney, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Scribner, Mr. Osborn, (Mr. Smith, Secretary). Committee on Finance Mr. Pitney, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Smith, Mr. J. A. Stewart, Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Handy, Mr. Procter, Mr. Scirbner, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Osborn, Mr, Cochran, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Rentschler, (Mr. H. G. Duffield, Secretary). Committee on Grounds and Buildings Mr. Thompson, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Smith, Mr. Gar- rett, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hope, Mr. D ' Olier, (Mr. Wintringer, Secretary). Committee on the Curriculum Dr. Jacobus, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean West, Dean Fine, Dean Greene, Dean Eisenhart, Mr. Smith, Mr. Farrand, Secre- tary, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Cochran, Mr. D ' Olier. Committee on the Library Mr. Scribner, Chairman; President Hibben, (Mr. Gerould, Secre- tary), Mr. Smith, Mr. Van Rensselaer, Mr. Sbeldon, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hardin. Committee on Honorary Degrees President Hibben, Chairman; Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Farrand, Secre- tary, Mr. Handy, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Hope, Mr. Smith, Professors P. M. Brown, Osgood, Russell. Committee on the Graduate School Mr. Procter, Chairman; President Hibben, (Dean West, Secretary), Mr. Smith, Dr. G. B. Stewart, Mr. McCormick, Dr. Dixon, Mr. Shea, Mr. Farrand, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Poe. Committee on Undergraduate Life Mr. Duffield, Chairman; Dr. Jacobus, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Merle-Smith, Mr. Hope, Dean Gauss, Mr. Smith, (Mr. Colt, Secretary). Committee on Health and Athletics Dr. Finney, Chairman; Mr. Garrett, Mr. Shea, Mr. D ' Olier, Mr. Poe, Mr. Fentress, Mr. Brooks, Mr. Martin, Dean Gauss, Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Smith, Mr. Wintringer, Professor Raycroft. Committee on Sanitation (Advisory to Committee on Grounds and Buildings) Professor Raycroft, Chairman; Dr. Carnochan, Dr. Sinclair, Dr. Tooker, Dean Gauss, Dr. Rainey, (Mr. Wintringer, Secretary). Committee on Conference (with Committee on the Curriculum) Professors Jones, Kennedy, Marden, Priest, Root, Taylor. 40 I H. B. Fine, School of Science Christian Gauss, College UNIVERSITY DEANS Andrew Fleming West, Graduate School A. M. Green, School of Engineering L. P. Eisenharr, Faculty Radcliffe Heermancc, Freshman Officers of Administration John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D. Prtsident Nassau Hall I Andrew Fleming West, Ph.D., LL.D., Hon.D.Litt. (Oxon. ' ) 5 Nassau Hall Dfa of the Graduate School Henry Burchard Fine, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean of the Departments of Science Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc. Dean of the Faculty Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D. Dean of the College 73 Library Place 2.12. Nassau Hall 114 Nassau Hall Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., M.E., D.Sc, D.Eng. 2.11 School of Science Dean of the School of Engineering Henry Green Duffield, A.B. Treasurer Wilson Farrand, L.H.D. Clerk of the Board of Trustees Varnum Lansing Collins, A.M. Secretary George E. Wintringer, E.E. Controller H. Alexander Smith, A.B., LL.B. Executive Secretary Radcliffe Heermance, A.m. Director of Admission and Dean of Freshmen John Colt, A.M. Assistant to the Dean of Freshmen James Thayer Gerould, A.B. Librarian Charles William Kennedy, A.M., Ph.D. First National Bank Bldg. Chairman of the Board of Athletic Control Stanhope Hall Newark, N. J. 313 Nassau Hall Stanhope Hall Nassau Hall Nassau Hall 303 Nassau Hall University Library George Richards Murray General Athletic Treasurer Keene Fitzpatrick Adviser in Athletics John Saville Cosgrave Assistant to the Treasurer Wilbur Franklin Kerr Registrar Gordon Gowans Sikes, A.M. Assistant to the Secretary Fred R. Apgar Purchasing Agent Edward Allen MacMillan, C.E. Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings Alexander Leitch, A.B. Director of Public Relations Philip Brasher Director, Bureau of Personnel and Appointments Norvell Brockman Samuels, A.B. Manager, Department of Student Employment George Robert Meyers, C.E. Assistant to the Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings John McDowell Carnochan, M.D. University Physician Willard Greenberry Rainey, M.D. Assistant University Physician Helen Gross, R.N. Infirmarian Frank Hogarty Proctor First National Bank Bldg. Princeton and Aiken Avenues Stanhope Hall 2.13 Nassau Hall 314 Nassau Hall Stanhope Hall Stanhope Hall 2.07 Nassau Hall 309 Nassau Hall 7 Nassau Hall Stanhope Hall McCosh Infirmary McCosh Infirmary McCosh Infirmary 2. N. M. Reunion 43 ■i-u.,i,L fi 11 II iT.r. ' rTn M . ' U-H, ' ' ' ' ' 19281 ? Committees of the Faculty Committee on Committtts: The President, Chairman; Professors Eisenhart, Gauss and Osgood. Coursi of StuJy: The President, Chairman; Professors Carmichael, Conk- LiN, CoRWiN, Eisenhart (Secretary tx-officio}. Fetter, Fine, Ger- ouLD, A. M. Greene, Jr., R. B. C. Johnson, Jones, Morey, W. F. Magie, Phillips, Shipman, D. C. Stuart, West. Diiciflim: Dean Gauss, Chairman; Professors Brigham, Heermance, D. N. Stuart, Dr. Tooker. Admission: Dean Heermance, Director of Admission; Professors Col- lins, HuTSON, Parrott, Dean Greene. Library: Professors Adams, Armstrong, Fetter, C. R. Hall, Hendel, MuNRo, Osgood, Wedderburn. Non-Athletic Organisations: Professor D. C. Stuart, Chairman; Pro- fessors Collins, J. C. Green, Heermance, Raycroft, Weber (Secretary). Examinations and Standing: Dean Eisenhart, Chairman; Professors Carpenter, Heermance, A. C. Johnson, MacInnes, Phillips, Baldwin Smith. Graduate School: Dean West, Chairman; Professor Bender, Corwin, R. B. C.Johnson, Fetter, Langfeld, W. F. Magie, F. J. Mather, McClure, S. Morgan, Root, Smyth, Taylor, Veblen, Werten- BAKER, Wheeler. Public Lectures: Professor Dixon, Chairman; Professors Capps Conklin, Gerould, Hastings, Munroe, Scoon, Secretary, Mr. Tomlinson. Conference: Professors Jones, Kennedy, Harden, Priest, Root, Taylor. Sanitation (Advisory to the Trustees ' Committee on Grounds and Build- ings): Dr. Carnochan, Dean Gauss, Dr. Rainey, Dr. D. B. Sinclair, Dr. Tooker, Mr. Wintringer, Professor Raycroft. Honorary Degrees (Joint Committee with Trustees ' Committee): Pro- fessors P. M. Brown, Osgood, Russell. Schedule: Professors Fetter, A. M. Greene, Jr., Howard, MacInnes, Priest, Shipman, Mr. Kerr. Public Speaking and Debating: Professors Albion, Colt, T. M. Greene, Harper, W. W. Thorp, Voorhees, Whittlesey. Undergraduate Conference: Dean Gauss, Chairman; Professors Beggs, Colt; Secretary. Athletics: Professor Kennedy, Chairman; Professors Dougherty, Fine, Mr. Fitzpatrick, Professors Hutson, MacInnes, McClure, Raycroft, Dr. Tooker, Mr. Wintringer. Advisory Council of the Faculty: President Hibben, Chairman; Professors Conklin, Corwin, Dixon, Fine, Gauss, A. M. Greene, Jr., R. B. C. Johnson, Jones, W. F. Magie, Morey, Munro, Raycroft, Root, Russell, Scott, Wheeler, Warren. 44  m Faculty and Instructors Tht Faculty list is arranged in five groups: professors, associate professors, assistant professors, lecturers, and instructors. To this list is added that of the assistants in instruction. In each group the names occur in order of seniority of appointment. Absent on Leave, First term. Absent on Leave. Absent on Leave, Second term. Prospect Hamilton, Bermuda John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D. President Stuart Professor of Philosophy Francis Landey Patton, D.D. , LL.D. E.K-President Stuart Professor of Ethics and the Philosophy of Religion, Emeritus Charles McMillan, A.M., C.E. 40 Bayard Lane Professor of Civil Engineering, Emeritus Theodore Whitefield Hunt, Ph.D., L.H.D. 71 Library Place Professor of English, Emeritus William Libbey, A.M., D.Sc. Thanet Lodge Professor of Physical Geography, Efneritus Hermann Carl Otto Huss, Ph.D. Professor of Modern Languages and Literature, Emeritus Herbert Stearns Squier Smith, C.E. Stroudsburg, Pa. Professor of Civil Engineering, Emeritus Henry van Dyke, A.M., D.D., LL.D. (Geneva), Hon.D.C.L. (0.vo«.) 59 Bayard Lane Murray Professor of English Literature, Emeritus, and University Lecturer on English Poetry Walter Mead Rankin, A.M., M.S., Ph.D. 5 Evelyn Place Professor of Biology, Emeritus Frederick Newton Willson, A.M., C.E. P.O. Box 63, Princeton, N.J. Professor of Graphics, Emeritus John Howell Westcott, A.M., Ph.D. 100 Mercer Street Musgrave Professor of Latin and Tutor in Roman Law, Emeritus Ernest Cushing Richardson, A.M., Ph.D. 12.0 Mercer St. Honorary Director of the Library and Research Professor in Bibliography. Emeritus William Berryman Scott, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D. (Harv. et Oxon.) 7 Cleveland Lane Blair Professor of Geology. Andrew Fleming West, Ph.D., LL.D., Hon.D.Litt. (Oxonl) Wyman House, Graduate College Dean of the Graduate School, Giger.Professor of Latin Henry Burchard Fine, Ph.D., LL.D. 73 Library Place Dean of the Department of Science, Dod Professor of Mathematics William Francis Magie, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D. Henry Professor of Physics LeRoy Wiley McCay, A.M., D.Sc. Professor of Chemistry Henry Dallas Thompson, A.M., D.Sc, Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics George McLean Harper, A.M., Ph.D. Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature Paul VAN Dyke, A.M., D.D. i Pyne Professor of History Walter Butler Harris, C.E. Professor of Geodesy Elmer Howard Loomis, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. Professor of Physics Charles Freeman Williams McClure, A.M., D.Sc Class of iHjj Professor of Zoology Ho vARD Crosby Warren, A.M., Ph.D. Stuart Professor of Psychology Thomas Marc Parrott, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English Edmund Yard Robbins, A.M. Ewing Professor of Greek Language and Literature Alexander Hamilton Phillips, D.Sc. Professor of Mineralogy Fred Neher, A.M. Professor of Organic Chemistry Williamson Updike Vreeland, A.M., D.es L. Woodhull Professor of Romance Languages William Kelly Prentice, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Greek Charles Henry Smyth, Jr., Ph.D. Professor of Geology Augustus Trowbridge, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Physics DuANE Reed Stuart, Ph.D. Professor of Classics 118 Library Place 12. Morven St. i Morven St. 36 Mercer St. 54 Graduate College 5 Greenholm 301 Nassau St. I Battle Road 135 Library Place 44 Princeton Ave. 144 Library Place 54 Hodge Road 151 Library Place 180 Mercer St. li Nassau St. II Morven St. 60 Battle Road r I i 46 Mil m Faculty and Instructors — {Continued) Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D. Joseph Henry House, Campus Dtan of the Colttgt, Profissor of Modern Languages Edward Capps, Ph.D., LL.D. , Litt.D. , L.H.D. 150 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of Classics Edwin Grant Conklin, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. Professor of Biology Malcolm MacLaren, EE., A.M. Professor of Electrical Engineering Edwin Plimpton Adams, M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Physics Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D. The Dean ' s House, 7} Nassau St Dean of the Faculty Professor of Mathematics George Augustus Hulett, Ph.D. LL.D. 139 Broadmead 38 Washington Road II Nasau St. 44 Washington Road 41 Battle Road 12.9 Broadmead 3 Evelyn Place Professor of Physical Chemistry William Foster, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Roger Bruce Cash Johnson, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy FrankJewett Mather, Jr., Ph.D., L.H.D. Director of the Museum of Historic Art Marquand Professor of Art and Archaeology Oswald Veblen, Ph.D. 58 Battle Road Research Professor, Henry B. Fine Professor of Mathematics Edward Samuel Corwin, Ph.D., LL.D. 115 Prospect Ave. McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence Harry Franklin Covington, A.M. 53 Battle Road Professor of Public Speaking and Debate Ulric Dahloren, M.S. 7 Evelyn Place Professor of Biology Frank Albert Fetter, Ph.M., Ph.D., LL.D. iii Broadmead Professor of Political Economy William Gillespie, Ph.D. Pyne Tower, Graduate College Professor of Mathematics David Magie, A.M., Ph.D. ioi Library Place Professor of Classics Joseph Edward Raycroft, M.D. xgS Nassau St. Director of the Department of Physical Education Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Henry Norris Russell, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. 79 Alexander St. Director of the Observatory, Professor of Astronomy JoHN Duncan Spaeth, Ph.D., Litt.D. 31 Edgehill St. Professor of English LL.D. Ph.D., LL.D 47 Douglas Labaree Buffum, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Romanic Languages and Literature Varnum Lansing Collins, A.M. Secretary of the University . Clerk of the Faculty Professor of the French Language and Literature John Preston Hoskins, Ph.D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature George Madison Priest, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature Edwin Walter Kemmerer, Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Finance George Brinton McClellan, A.M., Professor of Economic History Charles Grosvenor Osgood, Ph.D. Professor of English Edward Gleason Spaulding, A.M., Professor of Philosophy Alan Wilfrid Cranbrook Menzies, M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Frank Henry Constant, C.E., D.Sc. Professor of Civil Engineering Dana Carleton Munro, A.M., L.H.D. Dodge Professor of Mediaeval History George Harrison Shull, Ph.D. Professor of Botany and Genetics Philip Marshall Brown, A.M., LL.D. Professor of International Law Warner Fite, Ph.D. Stuart Professor of Ethics Gordon Hall Gerould, B.Litt. (Oxon, Professor of English Robert Kilburn Root, Ph.D. Professor of English Charles Carroll Marden, Ph.D. Emory L. Ford Professor of Spanish Edward Cooke Armstrong, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of the French Language William Starr Myers, Ph.D. Professor of Politics Harold Herman Bender, Ph.D., Litt.D., Phil.L.D., (Kovno ' ) 110 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of Indo-Germanic Philology Charles Rufus Morey, A.M. 114 Broadmead Professor of Art and Archaeology 60 Hodge Road 114 Western Way 10 College Road 10 Nassau St. Nassau Club 9x Stockton St. 8 Edgehill St. 187 Prospect Ave. 57 Battle Road 119 Fitz Randolph Road 60 Jefferson Road 82. Library Place 5 College Road 10 Bayard Lane 138 Fitz Randolph Road Hi Mercer St. 16 Edgehill St. 104 Bayard Lane Faculty and Instructors— [Continued) David Aloysius McCabe, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Donald Clive Stuart, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Dramatic Literature Frank Haigh Dixon, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Economics Frederick Leroy Hutson, Ph.D. Professor of Classics Hereward Lester Cooke, M.A. Professor of Physics K arl Taylor Compton, M.S., Ph.D., D.Sc. Professor of Physics Edmund Newton Harvey, Ph.D. Professor of Physiology Robert William Rogers, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D., Hon.Litt.D. (Dublin), Hon.D.Litt. (Oxon. ' ) Visiting Professor of Ancient Literature on the William Paton Foundation Raymond Smith Dugan, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Astronomy Lauder William Jones, Ph.D. A. Barton Hepburn Professor of Organic Chemistry James Thayer Gerould, A.B. Librarian MoRRis William Croll, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English Charles William Kennedy, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., M.E., D.Sc, D.Eng. Fitz Randolph Road cor. Western Way Dean of the School of Engineerings Professor of Mechanical Engineering Hugh Stott Taylor, M.Sc, D.Sc. 115 Broadmcad Professor of Physical Chemistry Radcliffe Heermance, A.m. 198 Nassau St. Director of Admission, Dean of Freshmen Major Edwin Russell Van Deusen, Field Artillery 59 Murray Place Commandant F . A. K. 0. T. C, Professor of Military Science and Tactics Allan Chester Johnson, Ph.D. 3 College Road Professor of Classics Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Ph.D. Princeton Inn Director of the Psychological Laboratory, Professor of Psychology Arthur Leslie Wheeler, Ph.D. 138 Jefferson Road Professor of Latin 143 Cutler Hall 181 Western Way loi Broadmcad 41 Cleveland Lane Nassau Club 106 Fitz Randolph Road 1 College Road Madison, N. J. Paton 16 Prospect Ave. Nassau Club 55 Battle Road 31 Chambers St. 66 Battle Road Ph.D., Hon.D. (Padua ' ) Battle Road Kenneth McKenzie, A.M Professor of Italian Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker, A.M., Ph.D. Ill Fitz Randolph Road Edwards Professor of American History Earl Baldwin Smith, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Art and Archaeology Edwin Bissell Holt, A.M., Ph.D. Visiting Professor of Psychology Don Carlos Barrett, A.M., Ph.D. Visiting Professor of Economics Jesse Hickman Bond, A.M., Ph.D. Visiting Professor of Economics ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS Henry Robinson Shipman, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of History Charles Ranald MacInnes, M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of M athematics Horace Craig Lonowell, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy John William Basore, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Classics Francis Charles MacDonald, A.B. Associate Professor of English Harvey Waterman Hewett -Thayer, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Joseph Henry Maclagan Wedderburn, M.A Associate Professor of Mathematics George Erle Beggs, C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering George Wicker Elderkin, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Henry Clay McComas, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology Donald Pritchard Smith, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry George Tapley Whitney, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy Stanley Edwin Howard, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics Clifton Rumery Hall, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of History Walter Phelps Hall, Ph.D. Associate Professor of History II Cleveland Lane Princeton Inn Nassau Club 174 Prospect Ave. 17 Mercer St. 118 Broadmcad 91 Mercer St. loi Library Place 8 Dickinson St. 12. Nassau St. 134 Mercer St. 39 Park Place II Haslett Ave. 109 Broadmcad 90 Bayard Lane 33 Jefferson Road 7 College Road 151 Graduate College II Edgchill St. , D.Sc. 4S i I I I Faculty and Instructors — {Continued) Robert Scoont, B.A. (Oxm.}, Ph.D. 19 Cleveland Lane Associate Professor of Philosophy William John Sinjclair, Ph.D. 154 Prospect Ave. Curator of Vertebrate Palaeontology , Associate Professor of Geology Frank Lewis Eidmann, M.E. 188 Prospect Ave. Associate Professor of Machine Design and Industrial Practice Louis Cons, Lic.es L. 84 Alexander St. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Joseph Coy Green, A.M. 176 Western Way Associate Professor of History Norman Brown Tooker, M.D. 149 Hodge Road Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Carl Campbell Brigham, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology Sherley Warner Morgan, B.Arch. Associate Professor of Architecture Walter Scott Hastings, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Solomon Lefschetz, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics Ernest Theodore DeWald, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Frank Dunstone Graham, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics and Social Institutions Shirley Howard Weber, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Classics Charles William Hendel, Jr., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy Arthur Francis Buddington, M.S., Ph.D. Curator of Petrology, Associate Professor of Geology Benjamin Franklin Howell, A.M., Ph.D. Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology, Associate Professor of Geology and Palaeontology WiLLiAM Seal Carpenter, A.M., Ph.D. 16 Murray Place Associate Professor of Politics Frank Ahern Heacock, C.E. 78 Jefferson Road Associate Professor of Graphics and Engineering Drawing Richard Montgomery Field, A.M., Ph.D. 35 Edgehill St. Curator of Stratigraphy and Historical Geology, Associate Professor of Geology James Waddell Alexander, A.M., Ph.D. 19 Cleveland Lane Associate Professor of Mathematics Springdalc Road 171 Prospect Ave. 145 Hodge Road 168 Nassau St. 190 Prospect Ave. 15-A Graduate College 8 College Road 106 Broadmead 76 Murray Place 178 Prospect Ave. 12. College Road Harold Willis Dodds, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Politics ASSISTANT PROFESSORS Frank Linley Critchlow, A.M., Ph.D. 36 University Place Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages William Koren, A.M. 105 Fitz Randolph Road Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages Marcus Stults Farr, M.S., A.M., D.Sc. 2.0 Vandeventer Ave. Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Geology and Palaeontology Herbert Spencer Murch, A.M., Ph.D. 6-A Holder Hall Assistant Professor, Preceptor in English Chalfant Robinson, Ph.D. 11 Boudinot St. Curator of Mediaeval History Henry Bartlett Van Hoesen, A.M., Ph.D. 16 Linden Lane Assistant Librarian Lewis Robinson Cary, M.S., Ph.D. 48 Vandeventer Ave. Assistant Professor of Biology Nathaniel Howell Furman, A.M., Ph.D. 13 College Road Assistant Professor of Chemistry Percy Addison Chapman, A.M. 193 Nassau St. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Donald Bunker Sinclair, M.D. 140 Hodge Road Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education John Quincy Stewart, Ph.D. 100 Mercer St. Assistant Professor of Astronomical Physics Frederick Courtney Tarr, A.M., Ph.D. i College Road Assistant Professor of Spanish J. Dayton Voorhees, A.M. 30 Nassau St. Assistant Professor of Politics Captain Leslie Edwards Babcock, Field Artillery 2.5 Wilton St. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Sheldon Jenckes Howe, A.M. 4 College Road Assistant Professor of History Edward Peck Culver, B.S. in C.E. 8 Dickinson St. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering John Colt, A.M. 162. Mercer St. Assistant to the Dean of Freshmen, Assistant Professor of Politics Gregg Dougherty, A.M., Ph.D. 95 Library Place Assistant Professor of Chemistry Charles Phelps Smyth, A.M., Ph.D. 2.2. Morvcn St. Assistant Professor of Chemistry 49 Faculty and Instructors — {Continued) Edward Ayers Taylor, A.M., Ph.D. Nassau Club Assistant Professor of English Carl Einar Hille, Ph.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Walter Lincoln Whittle sey, A.B. Assistant Professor of Politics Robert Greenhalgh Albion, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Captain Zim E Lawhon, Field Artillery i Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Captain Fay Brink Prickett, Field Artillery Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Lawrence Francis Hawkins Lowe, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Albert Mathias Friend, Jr., A.M. Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology W. Frederick Stohlman, A.M., M.F.A. Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology Robert Ralston Cawley, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Theodore Meyer Greene, Ph.D. {Edin?) Assistant Professor of Philosophy Melvin Eugene Bassett, A.M., Dipl. et. Univ. {Bordeaux 115 Prospect Ave Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Henry DeWolf Smyth, A.M., Ph.D. (Cantah ' ) Assistant Professor of Physics George Rowley, M.F.A. Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology Alpheus Thomas Mason, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Politics K si. -n Goodrich Shenstone, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics Louis Alexander Turner, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics Charles Thomas Zahn, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics Edward Sampson, M.S., D.Sc. Curator Economic Geology Assistant Professor of Geology Raymond James Sontao, A.M., Ph.D. hi Pyne Hall Assistant Professor of History Captain Fred Heeler Inglis, Field Artillery K-i Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics 13 North Edwards Hall 69 Harrison St. 93 North Moore St. 40 Patton Ave. 104 Henry Hall 15-B Graduate College II Graduate College 12.4 Pyne Hall HI Jefferson Road rdeaux 115 Prospect Ave. 7-C Graduate College 15-A Graduate College 30 Nassau St. 30 Nassau St. 7-C Graduate College 43 Graduate College 106 Fitz Randolph Road Lieutenant Donald Sutter McConnaughy, Field Artillery 16 Wilton St. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Leonard Carmichael, Ph.D. 101 Graduate College Assistant Professor of Psychology Philip Kissam, C.E. 186 Prospect Ave. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Paul Robinson Coleman-Norton, A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon. ) 13 Dickinson St. Assistant Professor of Classics Henry Roy William Smith, M.A. (Oxon. Assistant Professor of Classics Philip Khuri Hitti, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Semitic Literature Allen Brown West, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Classics Tracy Yerkes Thomas, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Frederick D ' Amato, A.D.G.F. (Beaux Arts ' ) Assistant Professor of Architecture Paul Elmer More, A.M., Litt.D., LL.D. Lecturer in Classics Henry Lyttleton Savage, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Arthur Norton Cook, A.M. Assistant Professor of History Joseph Epes Brown, Jr., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Robert Norton Pease, Ph.D. ' Research Associate in Chemistry Clodius Harris Willis, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering Lieutenant Ernest Aaron Bixby, Field Artillery Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Henry Lane Eno, A.B., LL.B. Kesearch Associate in Psychology Alexander Russell, Mus. Doc, A.G.O. Hotel Webster, 40 W. 45th St., Director of Music and University Organist Henry Andrews Cotton, A.M., M.D. State Hospital, Trenton, N. Lecturer on Psychopathology Theodore Leslie Shear, A.M., Ph.D. 12. Battle Road Lecturer on Art and Archaeology i6 Westcott Road 14 Wilton St. 50 Patton Ave. 170 North Moore St. li Stockton St. 145 Nassau %x.. 131 Pyne Hall 177 North Moore St. 190 Mercer St. 15-E Graduate College 30 Edwards Place 155 Nassau St. New York City •J- 50 Faculty and Instructors — {Continued) Harris Elliott Kirk, D.D. 504 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. Lecturer on Historical Christianity Charles Henry Rogers, Litt.B. lo Haslett Ave. Curator of the Museum of Zoology INSTRUCTORS Albert Boersig Nies 41 Jefferson Road Instructor in Physical Education Kenneth Bonner, LL.B. Instructor in Politics Linn Rudolph Blanchard, B.L.S. ii College Road Head Cataloguer, University Library Lawrence Heyl 9 College Road Head of Acquisitions Department, University Library George Mann Peck, A.B. 56 Patton Ave. Curator of Specia l Collections, University Library James Douglas Brown, A.M. 3 College Road Director of Industrial Relations Section Instructor in Economics Sidney Lawrence Levenoood, Ph.D. Pyne Tower, Graduate College Instructor in French Chester Chisholm Connell, Ph.B. Instructor in Spanish Frank Cudworth Flint, B.A. (Oxon. Instructor in English Clarence Dietz Brenner, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Modern Languages Holmes Van Mater Dennis, 3RD, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Classics Loyle Alexander Morrison, M.A. Instructor in Economics Kenneth Porter Stevens, A.M. Instructor in Biology AuGusTO Centeno, Lie. EN FiL. Y Let. Instructor in Modern Languages Maurice Edgar Coindreau, Ag. de l ' Univ. Instructor in Modern Languages Robert Samuel Rogers, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Classics Bateman Edwards, Ph.D. Instructor in French Albert Rudolph Elsasser, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English 191 Nassau St. 301 Henry Hall 77 Jefferson Road 2.1 Alexander St. 16 Park Place 94 Graduate College 172. Nassau St. 341 Cuyler Hall 2.19 Nassau St. 14 Nassau St. 182. Prospect Ave. Stephen Joseph Herben, Jr., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English George Gillespie Fox, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English Leslie Thomas Fournier, M.A. Instructor in Economics Elmer Adolph Seller, A.M., D.Phil Instructor in History Gabriel Hippolytus Collignon, A.M., Instructor in Mathematics Malcolm Oakman Young, B.L.S. Reference Librarian LoRiNG Baker Walton, Lie. es L. Instructor in French Donald Wheeler, B.O., A.M. Instructor in Public Speaking William Vyne Sessions, M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry Francis Adams Comstock, M.F.A. Instructor in Architecture Hamilton Cottier, A.M. Instructor in English James Gerald Smith, A.M. Instructor in Economics Asher Estey Hinds, A.B. Instructor in English Rensselaer Wright Lee, Ph.D. Instructor in English Wilbur Schofield Hulin, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Psychology Georges Bally, Dipl. et Sup. Instructor in Modern Languages Philip Miller Kretschmann, A.M. Instructor in Philosophy Robert Wallace Elliott, Jr., Litt.B. Instructor in Modern Languages John Edwin Pomfret, A.M. Instructor in History Carl Kenty, M.Sc. Instructor in Physics David Causey, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Biology 106 Nassau St. 184 Prospect Ave. 53 Park Place (Oxon. 134 Pyne Hall , Ph.D. 8 Madison St. Z4 Dickinson St. 2.5 Jefferson Road n Alexander Hall, Seminary 105 Fitz Randolph Road 1 66 Nassau St. 12.8 Fitz Randolph Road 176 Prospect Ave. 101 Foulke Hall 36 Edwards Place 114 Graduate College 55 Battle Road 42. Mercer St. 7 West Brown Hall II Princeton Ave. 56 Patton Ave. 30 Olden Lane 51 X ' T i ri ' T r I! tr n r r- TT 7 7 .,, 11 i i ' ' m n m i| 1 1. M 1778 Faculty and Instructors — {Continued) Elmer Grimshaw Butler, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Biology Clarence Francis Foster Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Joseph Canon Boyce, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics Charles Rosenbury Erdman, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Politics Malcolm MacLaren, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Classics Albert Wilder Thompson, A.M. Instructor in French George Carr Wright, A.B. Instructor in Spanish Howard Bruce Vail, A.B. Instructor in Spanish William Hutchinson Shoemaker, A.B. Instructor in Spanish Willard Thorp, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English Richard Stillwell, M.F.A. Instructor in Art and Archaeology Archibald McDonald McIsaac, A.M. Instructor in Economics William Elmer Byrne, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics William Vann Parker, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics Joseph Chandler Morris, Jr., A.M Instructor in Physics Richard Swinnerton Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Earl Reinhold Carlson Guyot Hall Library Denver Lindley, A.B. Instructor in German Stuart Chapin, A.B. Instructor in English Gray Cowan Boyce, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in History Prentice Northup Dean, M.A. Instructor in Economics 14 Dickinson St. 3} Maple St. 30 Nassau St. lo Boudinot St. 38 Washington Rd. io6 Nassau St. 51 Gtaduate College 62. Wiggins St. 93 Alexander St. 84 Graduate College 14-A Graduate College 54 Graduate College 106 Broadmead i Dickinson St. Pyne Tower, Graduate College 57 Jefferson Road Nassau Inn 16 Edgehill St. 134 Little Hall 91 Graduate College Kenneth Dameron, A.M. Instructor in Economics Joseph Lyell Temby, A.B. Instructor in Economics Howard Samuel Piquet, A.M. Instructor in Economics Robert Spivey Ford, A.M. Instructor in Economics Edward Henry Wells, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics Janvier Mayhew Rice, E.E. Instructor in Mathematics Morris Samuel Knebelman, B.S. Instructor in Mathematics John Blanchard Miles, Jr., A.B. Instructor in Physics Thomas Jefferson Webb, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Physical Chemistry William Theodore Richards, Ph.D. Instructor in Chetnistry Erling Dorf, B.S. Instructor in Geology Louis Frank Rahm, B.S. in M.E. Instructor in Engineering Alfred Edward Sorenson, M.E. Instructor in Engineering Ezra Odley Goldstein, B.S. in E. Instructor in Engineering Harold Carl Blote, A.B. Instructor in Philosophy William Lester Stevens Instructor in Freehand Drawing Erik Achorn, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in History Francis Barretto Stewart, Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry ASSISTANTS IN INSTRUCTION Charles Leo Macy Assistant in Genetics Lionel Valdemar Silvester, A.B. Assistant in Biology Frank James Sullivan Assistant in Physical Education 14 Park Place 55 Battle Road 3 College Road 14 Park Place 132. Mercer St. 3 Hamilton Ave. 9 Aiken Ave. 64 Nassau St. Nassau Club i6 Alexander St. 4 College Road 14 Hawthorne Ave. 78 Jefferson Road 141 Little Hall 3-E Prospect Apartments 180 Alexander St. 54 Patton Ave. 10 Nassau St. Box 364 Mt. Lucas 44 JefTerson Road 52 Elwyn Lionel Perry, B.S. Assistant in Geology Rbinhardt Robert Herling, A.B. Assistant in Economics William Henry Jones, Jr., A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Samuel Biggs Schofield, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Charles Allen Sloat, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Burnham North Dell, A.M. Assistant in Economics James Jerome Gibson, A.M. Assistant in Psychology Edward William Engel, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Carl Lucarini, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Victor Clyde Rogers, M.S., A.M. Assistant in Chemistry William Whipple Bennett, A.M. Assistant in Economics Robert Wallace Bond, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Robert St. Clair Holmes, A.B. Assistant in Economics Acheson Johnston Duncan, B.S. Assistant in Economics Ernest Hawkins, A.M. Assistant in Mathematics Samuel Estes Hill, B.S Assistant in Biology George Marion De Young, A.B. Assistant in Biology Faculty and Instructors— [Continued] i6 Hawthorne Ave. 106 Nassau St. x-B Graduate College The Hun School 173 Nassau St. East Nassau St. i-A Graduate College 55 Aiken Ave. 7 Parle Place 7 Park Place io6 Nassau St. 31 Graduate College 14 Dickinson St. 91 Graduate College ii-A Graduate College 112. North Moore St. 44 Mercer St. Chahles Samuel Shoup, A.B. Assistant in Biology Chaeles Ivan Alexander, M.S. Assistant in Geology Basil Scott Whyte Buffam, M.S. Assistant in Geology Newton Feaser Gordon Davis, M.A. Assistant in Geology RicHAED Milton Fulle, B.S. Assistant in Geology Earle Buedette Gillandees, M.A. Assistant in Geology George William Hal Norman, B.A.Sc. Assistant in Geology Lawrence Whitcomb, Ph.B. Assistant in Geology Thueman Carlisle Scott, A.M. Assistant in Psychology William Cockeum Deaeino, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Francis Edmund Galline, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Anthony Howe Gleason, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry RoBEET Orrus Glenn, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Douglas Greenwood Hill, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry William Nelson Stoops, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Robert Moore Duncan, A.M. Reader in Politics II Alexander St. 35 William St. ii-B Graduate College 38 Jefferson Road i-M Prospect Apartments 40 Jefferson Road 40 Jefferson Road ID Hawthorne Ave. The Hun Scholl 18 Jefferson Road 5-B Graduate College II Vandeventer Ave. i8 Jefferson Road 93 Alexander St. 38 Moore St. Arbor Inn Club 53 LiL ' I r TT n II 1 1 ' ' ' ' II II II n 1 1 i 1928 Graduate Students 7 NAME ADDRESS Martin Ray Adams Bluff City, Tenn. Charles Ivan Alexander, Jr. 1076 Pashwood St., Ft. Worth, Texas Henry Macmillan Alexander care of Alexander Alexander, Attys., Jackson, Miss. Valentine Smith Alison 848 Myrtle Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Klair Long Armstrong Coatesville, Pa. Morley James Ayearst 490 Summerhill Ave., Toronto 5, Ont., Canada Kenneth Tompkins Bainbridge 813 Riverside Drive, New York City Robert Hamilton Ball. .351 W. xgth St., New York City Harold MacCoU Bannerman Barney ' s River, Picton County, N. S., Canada Thomas Clifford Barton Greenfield, Tenn. John Reginald Bates. . . .513 W. iiist St., New York City Harold Ashton Beatty. . Ashton Wood, Skaneateles,N.Y. Philip Mohr Benjamin. . .2.31 Oneida Ave., Warren, Pa. Ralph Decker Bennett Williamson, N. Y. William Whipple Bennett Crete, Nebraska John Clark Bole, Jr.. Delmar Apts., Germantown, Pa. Robert Wallace Bond 510 Grove Terrace, South Orange, N. J. Charles James Brasefield ii4 Lawrence Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Charles William Bray, II, 1510 5th Ave., Youngstown, O. Robert Bigham Brode Walla Walla, Wash. WickBroomall,Jr., 1719 Almeda Ave., Birmingham, Ala. Bailey LeFevre Brown . . . .8 Todd Ave., Jamestown, N.Y. Basil Scott Whyte Buffam Perth, Ont., Canada Earl Thomas Burns, 3918 Lafayette Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Herman Wynn Bussmann. . Wildacres, Pawling, N. Y. James Alister Cameron, 2.31 Market St., Amsterdam, N. Y. NAME ■ ADDRESS Albert Walter Campbell, 51 Linden Ave., Ossining,N. Y. Edward Capps, Jr Princeton, N. J. James Lea Cate. .ixio Tom Green St., Austin, Texas Martin Allen Charles. .1075 Calif. St., San Francisco, Cal. Ping-Tsang Chen care of Mr. Tan Siong-Chec, Amoz, China Paul Ridgely Chesebro Mystic, Conn. Alonzo Church, II. . . P. O. Box 498, Lynchburg, Va. James Mason Cline. .2.88 Division St., Amsterdam, N. Y. Robert Burns Coleman, Jr. 1050 Elder Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Howard Comfort. . . Haverford College, Haverford, Pa. Chester Chisholm Connell 17 Culter St., Stonington, Conn. Gladstone Paul Cooley Reliance, Va. William Steel Creighton. .162. Roper St., Mobile, Ala. James Russell Cutting, R.F.D. No. i, Morristown, N.J. Edward Rezin Davis, 141 E. Main St., Clarksburg, W.Va. Newton Eraser Gordon Davis 1956 15th St. W., Vancouver, B. C, Canada Philip Haldane Davis. . . .58 Mercer St., Princeton, N.J. William Cockrum Dearing Oakland City, Ind. De Vaux de Lancey Brandon, Vt. Burnh am North Dell . .Meadow Garden, Princeton, N. J. George Marion De Young Orange City, Iowa Thomas Sherman Dignan Yonkers, N. Y. Robert Clifton Dorn. .1141 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. Acheson Johnston Duncan 12.5 Crescent Ave., Leonia, N. J. Robert Moore Duncan, Cloverdale on Lake George, N.Y. Theodore Dunham, Jr New York City Elford Sturtevant Durgan West Boylston, Mass. Harvey Alexander Eagleson 56 m Graduate Students — {Continued) NAME ADDRESS NAME ADDRESS ly ix Jefferson St., Boise, Idaho Erich von Gcbauer-Fulnegg Ernest Penney Earnest Beabrixgasse 17, Vienna, Austria 3101 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. James Jerome Gibson .... 419 loth St., Wilmette, 111. Preston William Edsall Roxbury, N. Y. Earle Burdette Gillanders Herbert Joseph Edwards R.R.I. Chilliwack, B. C, Canada 1.6 E. Oakland Ave., Columbus, O. Anthony Howe Gleason Donald Drew Egbert. .77 Bowne Ave., Flushing, N. Y. 43 Clyde St., Newtonville, Mass. Calvert Nice Ellis. .1830 Mifflin St., Hu ntingdon, Pa. Robert Orrus Glenn Sugar Grove, N. C. Edward William Engel. .2.4 Bunn St., Amsterdam, N. Y. Francis Richard Borroum Godolphin Boyd Ross Ewing, Jr.. . P. O. Box 493, Bethlehem, Pa. 311 N. Grove Ave., Oak Park, 111. Rhea McCurdy Ewing, io Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. Cullen Bryant Gosnell Greenville, S. C. Arthur Samuel Fairley, 180 Cypress Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Richard Leighton Greene John Fauntleroy Fennelly Westfall Road, Rochester, N. Y. 1045 - 54 ' ' • ' Kansas City, Mo. Henry Alexander Grubbs, Jr Oakland, Md. Ernest Leon Fisher, 5 Guilden St., New Brunswick, N.J. Ronald Wilfrid Gurney Chettenham, Eng. Elmer Ellsworth Fleck. ... 1331 J St., Lincoln, Neb. John Harold Gwynne Carmichaels, Pa. William Welch Flexner, loi E. 74th St., New York City Noel Frederich Hall Earl William Flosdorf, 6iiElkins Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Scotton, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Eng. Edwin Henry Folk, Jr Edgefield, S. C. John Frederick Hamlin Lake Placid, N. Y. George Howard Forsyth Burlingame, Cal. Vernon Carney Hargraves Churchland, Va. Alfr ed Lucien Foulet, ii rue d ' Alena, Paris 14, France Gaylord Probasco Harnwell, Prospect Hall, Fredrick, Md. Frederick Curtis Fowler, II Marshall Cathcart Harrington 181.1. 3rd Ave. N., Seattle, Wash. 807 Edgewood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Norman Hoole France. Cuxwold Rectory, Linconl, Eng. Everett Falconer Harrison William Neil Franklin, 703 W. 3rd St., Morristown.Tenn. 6007 Enright Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Lindley Macnaghten Eraser Ernest Hawkins Brook Haven, N. Y. 19 Falkner Sq., Liverpool, Eng. William Christopher Hayes, Jr. David Friedman Washington, D. C. 34 Edwards PL, Princeton, N. J. Donald Graves Fudge, 300 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Roland Jesse Heathcote Shrewsbury, Pa. Richard Milton Fulle, 550 Park St., Montclair, N. J. Reinhardt Robert Herling Lisbon Falls, Me. Lawrence Herman Gahagan, 5506 Ross Ave., Dallas, Tex. James Herbert Hibben Princeton, N. J. Francis Edmund Galline, 86 Fuller St., Dorchester, Mass. Douglas Greenwood Hill, 66 Clinton PL, New York City Milan Wayne Garrett, 1107 N. Oregon St., El Paso, Tex. Samuel Estes Hill Route 5, Waco, Tex. Martin Arthur Gearhart Batavia, Iowa Robert St. Clair Holmes, 5 Whither PL, Swarthmore, Pa. 67 -Tin L 11 i I [ 1 I J, I, I ■ Ll [ ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 M t ' T ' rrj 19281 7 Graduate Students — {Continued) ADDRESS Albert William Holzmann ioo Ward St., New Brunswick, N.J. William Woodman Huse, Jr. 4650 Paulina St., Chicago, 111. Wilfrid James Jackson Westmount, N. S., Canada Edward Henry Jones, 12.61 W. 2.9th PI., Los Angeles, Cal. William Henry Jones, Jr. 1305 N. i8th St., Birmingham, Ala. William James Jones .. 106 Ontario St., Buffalo, N. Y. James Carl Kamplain, 63x5 Champlain Ave., Chicago, 111. Paul Recker Kelbaugh Thurmont, Md. Daniel Estabrook Kerr Grundy Center, la. Ralph William Key. . . .31 Stewart Ave., Greenville, Pa. Thomas Joseph Killian, 170 South St., Pittsfield, Mass. Leigh Wadsworth Kimball Hamilton Rd., New Brunswick, N. J. Edward Stauffer King 2.911 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Francis Kinsler 130 Spruce, Haddonfield, N. J. Rudolf Kirk Sandy Spring, Md. George Bogdan Kistiakowsky Kiev, Russia Naokichi Kitazawa Tokyo, Japan Bernard Osgood Koopman 74 Avon Hill St., Cambridge, Mass William Floyd Kuykendall Nunn, Colo Churchill Pierce Lathrop Prescott Ave., Montclair, N. J James Woodin Laurie Cedar Falls, la Edward Christian Alan Lesch 2.02. E. Daniel St., Champaign, 111 Cicero Hunt Lewis, II. . Peacock Inn, Princeton, N. J Richard Vliet Lindabury, Jr Bernardsville, N. J John Jacob Livingood. . .2.766 Baker PL, Cincinnati, O James Venable Logan, Jr. 116 Blackburn Rd., Louisville, Ky. Thomas McCall Lowry, Jr York, S. C. Carl Lucarini P. O. Box 168, Center Rutland, Vt. John Hess McComb, 1707 Troga St., Philadelphia, Pa. Paul Scofield McConnell, 2.53 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. Quincy Alonzo McDowell, R.F.D.N0.16, Grove City, Pa. Malcolm MacLaren, Jr. 38 Washington Rd., Princeton, N. J. Alexander Napier MacLoed 2.37 W. School Lane, Germantown, Pa. Henry Gordon MacMorran 1415 Military St., Port Huron, Mich. Allan Alexander MacRae 448 N. Ave. 56, Los Angeles, Cal. Albert Lacy Metzger 115 College Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Aristotle D. Michal, Rice Institute, Houston, Tex. Nicholas Athanasius Milas 314 ind Ave., Cedar Rapids, la. George Matthews Modlin Elizabeth City, N. C. Stanley Owen Morgan 1054 N. Dean St., Schenectady, N. Y. Joseph Scott Morledge 908 Ann St., Homestead, Pa. Hugh Sinclair Morrison 5739 Blackstone Ave., Chicago, 111. Philip McCord Morse, 12.40 Andrews Ave., Lakewood,0. Coleman Clarkson Moser 164 Strawberry Hill, Stamford, Conn. Wendell Sherman Niederhauser 1902. 4th St. S. E., Canton, O. George William Hal Norman 142. 19th St. E., North Vancouver, B. C, Canada 58 .. I 1778 I M I I I I M I I 1 1 I I I I I I I I 11 N M I I I I 113 19281 r Graduate Students — {Continued) NAME ADDRESS Whitney Jennings Oates ii5i Orrington Ave., Evanston, 111. Jonathan JozoOguri 485 Kongi, Tokyo, Japan William Russell Breese Osterholt 1059 Meadowbrook Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. William Vann Parker Monroe, N. C. Robert Norton Pease. . .308 Maple St., Burlington, Vt. Reginald Herbert Pegrum 1811 First St., Victoria, B. C, Canada Thomas Monroe Pitkin. 444 Sherman St., Akron, O. Alexander Gibson Porter 4x1 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md. Edward Rudolph Rein Jamestown, N. Y. Claude EveretteReitzel, 1105 Lindsay St., High Pt., N. C. Edwin Harold Rian 4818 Nicollet Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. Albert Starnes Richardson, 335 Beech Ave., Wyoming, O. Julius Fernand Abbott Rick li Royal Ave., Jamestown, N. Y. Charles Alexander Robinson, Jr Peekskill, N. Y. John Barney Rogers. .i66 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Victor Clyde Rogers, 1050E. 3rd St. S., Salt LakeCity, U. Clifford Rowe. . . . 1046 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Henry Rutgers Lynden, Wash. Albert James Sanders. . . i8oi Derry St., Harrisburg, Pa. Leo Donald Schimpff. .40 S. i6th St., Allentown, Pa. Harold Schlosberg. . .i4 ' i7 E. loth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ellwood Mearle Schofield 553 Chauncey St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Biggs Schofield Georgetown, Md. Thurman Carlisle Scott Fincastle, Va. Jonathan Burke Severs 501 Grand St., Trenton, N.J. William Frederick Shaffer Mercersburg, Pa. Edwin Morrill Shearer, 509 Ashbury St., San Fran., Cal. NAME ADDRESS William Hutchinson Shoemaker 904 De Kalk St., Morristown, Pa. Charles Samuel Shoup 819 Woodlawn, Mexico, Mo. James Singer 851 Suther Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles Allen Sloat Orrtanna, Pa. Alexander Coburn Soper, III Washington, D. C. Hollins McKim Steele, 130 Library Place, Princeton, N.J. Edward Steese 161 E. 79th St., New York City William Nelson Stoops.. 1508 Beall Ave., Wooster, O. Francis Henry Taylor, 18x5 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. George Libanus Todd, 1475 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Paul Atkins Underwood East Lansing, Mich. Ides van Waterschoot van der Gracht Marland Ref. Co., Ponca City, Okla. Cornelius Van Til Hammond, Ind. . . Howard Elmer Wahlert, 5409 Boulevard, N. Bergen, N.J. Sherman LeRoy Wallace 2.44 Centre St., Haddonfield, N. J. Edward Henry Wells, 155 W. Main St., North East, Pa. James Wellington Whaler 2.11. W. i8th St., Wilmington, Del. Lawrence Whitcomb. .94 Perry St., Brookline, Mass. Charles Raymond Whittlesey 4611 ixnd St., N.E., Seattle, Wash. Floyd Revell Williams, 37iiW. Broadway, Louisville, Ky. Linton Rayburn Wilson 516 N. Jefferson St., Kittanning, Pa. Frederic Turnbull Wood. . . .141 Merion Rd., Merion, Pa. Charles Jahleel Woodbridge Shanghai, China George Carr Wright Lincoln University, Pa. Walter Livingston Wright, Jr. . Lincoln University, Pa. Edward Gearhart Yoemans, 1948 N. Broad St.,Phila.,Pa. Habib Yusufji Nagderi St., Bombay, India Arnold John Zurcher, 1144 Lexington Ave., Lorain, O. 59 M ilemoriam l icijacb liunlop ?!i[rqui)art (£i)atlci @ami)rtl albtuin CJiarlcii J oboarlJ jFitjpatricfe William llittinBcr tKencljcr Horatio iiigelobi allarb ©apton Jfcntoick Hanbretb 1927 g eptcmt)er 22, 1904 — Jfcbcuarp 15, 1926 2rulp 13, 1905— ©ctober 29, 1926 1928 f ulp 14, 1904— iaugugt 6, 1926 aipril 9, 1906 — eptcmlier 18, 1926 august 9, 1906— iJlap 22, 1926 1929 april 8, 1907 — iWarcl) 25, 1926 lunc 10. 1907— func 12. 1926 i p Back Row — Pcabody, Howell, Bell. Stcond Kou) — Ewing, Chandler, Baldwin, Bartcll, LaBcaume, Beard, Collins Front Row — Howard, VanAIstync, Prcndergast, Davis, Slagle. M I I I I I I N II I I II II I r M I I I I II II II I CTT 7 1928 I 1926 Senior Council J. Prendergast Chairman S. EwiNG Secretary R. Baldwin W. R. Howell J. Slagle R. La Beaume C. Howard J. Davis W. M. Collins, Jr. W. B. VanAlstyne J. Chandler M. C. Beard F. Peabody H. Bell E. Bartell 63 Class Officers 1926-1927 192.7 Joseph Prendergast President Richard Baldwin Vice-President Hugo Langedon Bell . Secretary and Treasurer i FORMER OFFICERS FRESHMAN YEAR— FIRST TERM FRESHMAN YEAR— SECOND TERM J. Prendergast President S. E. Ewing, Jr President J. W. Slagle Vice-President Richard Baldwin .... Vice-President P.R.Sanson .... Secretary and Treasurer E.E.Alexander . Secretary and Treasure SOPHOMORE YEAR JUNIOR YEAR J. Prendergast President J. Prendergast President S. E. Ewing, Jr. Vice-President S. E. Ewing, Jr Vice-President E. C. Bartell .... Secretary and Treasurer W. M. Collins, Jr. . . Secretary and Treasurer 65 Class of 1927 NAME ADDRESS Douglas Geikic Adam i8i Main St., Great Barrington, Mass. Thomas Charles Adlcr 4051 Beechwood Ave., Cincmnati, O. Cornelius Rea Agnew, Jr 66 East 55th St., New York City Walter Volney Aldridge Weaver St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Edward Eugene Alexander 639 Benoni Ave., Fairmont, W. Va. Winthrop Allen 5 Nassau St., New York City Humphrey Edward Amb ler 7 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N.J. Thomas McDowell Anderson. . . .316 S. Division St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Henry Piper Andrews noi Continental Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Mark Edwin Andrews 6 Jansen Place, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Sloane Angell Stone Gables, Jennings Lodge, Ore. Henry Shepard Atkinson 9 Glenwood Ave., East Northfield, Mass. William Herbert Avery, Jr 4904 Blackstone Ave., Chicago, 111. Theodore Gustav Bachran, Jr 5149 N. Camac St., Philadelphia, Pa. Barclay Barton Baekey 65-67 Duane St., New York City Richard Baldwin i} Westmoreland Place, St. Louis, Mo. Charles Edward Balfour. Peacock Inn, 10 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N.J. Robert William Ballantine 360 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. William Fitr Randolph Ballard 62. Madison Ave., Morriston, N. J. John Goff Ballentine Sardis, Miss. Robert Taylor Ballentine Sardis, Miss. Francis Sydney Bancroft, Jr 340 Madison Ave., New York City David B. Bandler 39 W. 85th St., New York City Frank Gilbert Barber X49 E. Philadelphia St., York, Pa. Charles Walter Barclay 60 7 E. Gravus Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. William Cornelius Barnow 39 Claremont Ave., New York City Andrew Wilson Barr 845 Chalmers PI., Chicago, 111. Earnest Cosma Bartell 1013 Summit Ave., Tarentum, Pa. James Dixon Bartlett U. S. F. G. Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Robert Ross Bayes 40 Wall St., New York City William Lewis Bealc, Jr 1814 South St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Milton Courtright Beard 5043 Pulaski Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Randolph Henry Beardsley 137 W. 77th St., New York City George Avent Beesley Murfreesboro, Tenn. Christopher Abbott Beling. . . . 101 N. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Hugo Langedon Bell 587 Manor Lane, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Richard H. Bennett 11 Warrick Ave., Glassboro, N. J. Moncure Burke Berg 3009 W St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Roland Christian Bcrgh 31 West 71st St., New York City Thomas James Bernard Fountain Ave., Glendale, O. Joel Jenkins Bcrrall 1614 19th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. John Ripley Bigelow 11 Church St., Charleston, S. C. NAME ADDRESS John Manning Birdsall. . . .Box 406, Washington St., Toms River, N. J. Roger Antrim Black 30 Blymyer Ave., Mansfield, O. Herbert Lee Boatwright, Jr c o Dibrell Bros., Danville, Va. Lewis Hayden Bodman Eagle Road, Wayne, Pa. Vincent Virgin Ravi Booth . . . i Monument Ave., Old Bennington, Vt. Loeser Myer Boskey 115 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. Francis Kelvin Bottomley Amer. Factors, Ltd., Honolulu, T. H. Dudley Smith Bowman 1907 North Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind. Stephen Rowe Bradley, Jr N. Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. Harry Schiller Brandman. Emerson Shoe Mfr. Co., Rockland, Mass. William Constable Breed, Jr 32. Liberty St., New York City Burtis Burr Breese, Jr 560 Evanswood PI., Cincinnati, O. William Lewis Brewster, Jr 102.5 Gasco Bldg., Portland, Ore. Manson Milner Brien National Military Home, Dayton, O. Samuel Stewart Brooks 304 Willey St., Morgantown, W. Va. Addison Brown 819 N. Main St., Rockford, 111. Ernest Joseph Brown 12.8 Ingram St., Lake Providence, La. Joseph Bryan, III Monroe Terrace, Richmond, Va. Richard Park Buckholz Darby Road, Paoh, Pa. James Burnham 547 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, III. Robert Carter Burns 30 Lenox PI., St. Louis, Mo. Nelson Rollin Burr 36 Lexington Road, West Hartford, Conn. Frederick Donald Burrell 1409 Albermarle Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Edmund Walter Burroughs 713 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Henry Jocelyn Butler 5534 Bartmer Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Theron Hervey Butterworth 79 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Charles Lee Buxton 184 South Ave., New Canaan, Conn. John Crary Byxbee Meriden Trust Safe Deposit Co., Meriden, Conn. Bryon Franklin Hobart Cale. .5531 Chamberlain Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Bover Candler 400 Lakeland Ave., Groose Pointe, Mich. Richard Brooks Capps 12.15 E. 56th St., Chicago, III. Montgomery Browning Carrott Stern Bldg., Quincy, 111. Harold Hutson Carspecken x45 Grand St., Morgantown, W. Va. Samuel Carter, III 940 Woodland Ave., Plainfieid, N. J. Robert Hunt Casey 1500 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. Godwin Munn Castleman . . .Hotel Gregorian, 35th St., New York City Cuthbert Boyd Caton 517 Palisade Ave., Union City, N. J. Dan Piatt Caulkins Hendrie Lane, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Fielding Chandler 1180 East Broad St., Columbus, O. John Rust Chandler x6io Berkshire Road, Cleveland, O. Clifford Samuel Chapin,Jr 12. West Ave., Great Barrington, Mass. David Campbell Chaplin 2.45 Frederick Ave. , Sewickley, Pa. Charles Sterling Clark 417 Lawn Ridge Road, Orange, N.J. 66 Class of 19 27 —{Continued) Dean Alexander Clark 96 Virginia Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Howard Clark 31 Madison Ave., New York City John Francis Clunan 119 N. 19th St., East Orange, N. J. Louis Vanukem Cochran 40 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, III. Robert McNeely Cochran 1700 Ravine Road, Williamsport, Pa. Robert Webb Coghill }i8 West 46th St., New York City Peter Abraham Cohn 154 East 6}rd St., New York City Edward Elmore Colladay. .3734 Northampton St., Washington, D. C. John Stiles Collins 72.1 Chester Ave., Morrestown, N. J. Richard Colwell Collins, Wade Park Manor, E. 107th St., Cleveland, O. William Murphy Collins, Jr 3314 Sheridan Road, Chicago, III. Henry Perrine Colmore P. O. Box H15, San Juan, Porto Rico Beverly Crump Compton Light and Lee Sts., Baltimore, Md. Philip Hale Conklin 538 Monroe Ave., Scranton, Pa. Eli Taylor Conner, III iioi Union Nat ' l Bank Bldg., Scranton, Pa. Charles Brewster Conwell 17 Monmouth St., Somerville, Mass. Albert Halsey Cook 544 Elm St., Westficid, N. J. Richard Piatt Cooke 160 Franklin St., Bloomfield, N. J. Samuel Studdiford Cooley Titusville, N. J. Winston Albert Cordes 514 W. 114th St., New York City John Bliss Corser, Jr 1745 N. Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. Harden Lake Crawford, Jr 655 Park Ave., New York City Curtis Coe Crocker 161 Lafayette Circle, Clifton, Cincinnati, O. Talbot Curtin 341 Pelhamdale Ave., Pclham, N. Y. Morgan Cutts 554 Edgewood Ave., New Haven, Conn. John Potter Cuyler, Jr Princeton, N.J. John Edward Damerel, Jr 2.34 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Fowler Darby in E. Dudley Ave., Westfield, N. J. Austin David Scott Davis 141 Washington Ave., Albany, N. Y. John Whitten Davis, Jr 2.7 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Joseph Morgan Decker 3719 Amboy Road, Great Hills, Staten Island, New York City William Russell Deemer, Jr 331 Pine St., Williamsport, Pa. Alfred Peter Dcgenhardt 10 High St., Glen Ridge, N. J. John White Delafield 17 East 79th St., New York City George Clinton Denniston 134 W. School Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Edwin Jay Dikeman,Jr 148 W. Main St., Goshen, N. Y. Charles Fames Donaldson 63 Barker St., Buffalo, N. Y. Denis James Donegan Joseph Delos Dudley 610 Fidelity Bldg., Buffalo. N. Y. Francis Gardner Duehay..8i5 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Henry Edward Dunn, Jr 7 East 92.nd St., New York City Roswell Colt Dunn 3915 Canterbury Rd., Baltimore, Md. Edward Miall Durham, III 165 N. Union Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Edwin Breck Eckerson 140 E. Lincoln Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Thomas H. Eddy, Jr 1558 Ridge Ave., Evanston, III. Hubert Linn Edsall 409 College Ave., Oakmont, Pa. McKenny White Egerton 106 Elmhurst Road, Baltimore, Md. Joseph Denison Elder 1300 Pontiac St., Denver, Colo. John Wilson Ely 556 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Charles Cadwell Emmons Hotel Belvedere, Charles Chase Sts., Baltimore, Md. Richard W. A. English, Jr 71 Bentley Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Harold Randolph Erdman 1768 BeretaniaSt., Honolulu, Hawaii Donald Kirk Evans 1 Sherbrooke Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. John Ireland Evans 600 S. William St., Johnstown, N. Y. S. Blaine Ewing, Jr Wallar Heights, Elizabeth, Pa. Samuel Evans Ewing, Jr Montgomery Ave., Byrn Mawr, Pa. William Crawford Fairbanks 18 Summer St., Haverhill, Mass. George Patterson Faust 605 Oxford Road, Ann Arbor, Mich. Carl Frederick Fayen Montclair Hotel, Montclair, N. J. Julian William Feiss 12.600 Cedar Road, Cleveland, O. Warren George Findley 2.03 Highwood Ave., Leonia, N. J. Alfred Young Fisher 456 E. Adams St., Los Angeles, Cal. Chester Ballou Fisk 801 Hippodrome Bldg., Cleveland, O. William Cochran Fitts, Jr 456 West End Ave., New York City John Hall Forbes 1140 Fifth Ave., New York City Herbert Eugene Foster 50 Emerson Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Donald Churchill Eraser 2.0 S. Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Thomas Talmadge Kennedy Frelinghuysen 104 Library Place, Princeton, N. J. Francis Erwin Fritts 2.06 W. Elm St., Titusville, Pa. Louis Baumann Froelich 500 Eighth Ave., New York City Ernest Kettner Gadebusch 14 Badeau Ave., Summit, N. J. George Wright Gale 878 West End Ave., New York City John Foulke Gallagher Briabin St., Houtzdale, Pa. William Rainey Gallagher, Jr Houtzdale, Pa. Robert Woodward Gardner 66 Milford Ave., Newark, N. J. Christopher Browne Garnett, Jr., 1000 Vermont Ave., Washington, D. C. Walter Eaton Garrey, Vanderbilt Univ. Medical School, Nashville, Tenn. John Winter Gartner 330 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. Franklin Gary 1751 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. D. Christian Gauss Princeton, N. J. William Campbell Gay 440 East 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William D, George, Jr 307 4th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 67 Class of 1927— {Continued) Alfred Robert Gessinger 41 Temple Place, Passaic, N. J. Victor Solomon Gettner ixo West 86th St., New York City Harry Taylor Gherardi Milton, Mass. William Thomas Di.xon Gibbs Woodbrook, Md. Julian MacCartee Gibson Salem, N. Y. Roger Gilbert 911 West 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Robert Louis Glanz 400 Barry Ave., Chicago, 111. George Frantz Good Davenport Neck, New Rochelle, N. Y. Samuel Goodman, III 8840 Worth Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Eric Clifford Gordon 55 East 86th St., New York City Lewis Hall Gordon 808 East State St., Trenton, N. J. Sheldon Gordon 10} S. Dearborn St., Chicago, III. John W. Grange 1901 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Fisher Green 463 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. Benjamin Perry Griffith 968 Westchester Place, Los Angeles, Cal. John Steele Grover. .Forest Rochingstone Aves., Larchmont, N. Y. Robert Henry Haas 900 College Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Carl William Frederick Hahner. . . t Grumman Ave., Newark, N. J. Robert Walter Hale, Jr J. R. Hale Sons, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Hale, Jr 106 Locust Hill Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Isaac Davis Hall 158 Franklin Place, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. James Aldrich Hal! 535 Chesterfield St., Aiken, S. C. Butler Hallahan Laurier, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Walter Murphy Halle 1163 Harcourt Drive, Ambler Heights, Cleveland, O. Osborne Halsted, Jr iii6 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J John Cochran Hanna 1013 Fourth St., North Braddock, Pa Thomas Hannah, Jr 337 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Gordon Huntington Harper, 9 Somerset Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md Nelson Vance Harper Echo Point, Wheeling, W. Va Albert Hall Harris, II. . . .15 Rochester Savings Bank, Rochester, N. Y Stephen Fitch Harris Box 1697, Tampa, Fla Clinton Rudrauff Harrower 1164 Denmark Road, Plainfield, N. J Howard Edward Hebble....3i Vernon Terrace, East Orange, N. J Eric Heckscher 2.33 Broadway, New York City Daniel Van Brunt Hegeman 9486 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y Albert Marshall Helmrath 99 Woodland Ave., Summit, N.J Joseph Lewis Henderson 491 Staten Ave., Oakland, Cal Charles Lewis Henricks, Jr 119 Lafayette St., New York City George Hepburn 103c Fifth Ave., New York City Robert Ogden Hereford 40 Rector St., New York City Bernard Chapman Heyl Wynnewood, Pa. Samuel Bailey Hicks, Jr 416 Travis St., Shreveport, La. NAME ADDRESS Samuel H. High, Jr. Old York Road and Washington Lane, Jenkintown, Pa. Walter Heeley Hildick, Jr 61 Watson Ave., East Orange, N. J. Donald Herridge Hill 1034 East 83rd St., Cleveland, O. Willard Hill i,o8 Rodney St., Wilmington, Del. Henry Baker Hillman 159 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. George Lyon Hinman 93 Chestnut St., Binghamton, N. Y. William Jacob Hitschler, 37 W. Phila., Ellena St., Philadelphia, Pa. Frederick Porter Hitz 1901 N Street, Washington, D. C. William LanghorneHobson,Jr liioMadison Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Irvin Wiggins Hoff 154 Broadview Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. George Smith Hoffman 813 Dak Hill Ave., Hagerstown, Md. Vincent Foster Hopper 409 16th St., West New York, N. J. Charles Allen Howard, Jr 1101 N. Main St., Aberdeen, S. Dak. Charles Rellstab Howell R. F. D., No. 4, Trenton, N. J. Kenneth Tiemann Howell Custer Arms, Bronxville, N. Y. William Roberts Howell 608 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Pa. James Miles Hubball General Delivery, Los Angeles, Cal. Fred Krause Huber 11 Boulevarde West, Mountain Lakes, N. J. William Herbert Hudnut, Jr. . . .145 N. Heights Ave., Youngstown, O. Fred William Hudson Union Trust Co., Greensburg, Pa. Richard Kay Humphrey Kenthope, West Chester, Pa. Gustavus Aldridge Humphreys. . . .119 West 80th St., New York City Leonard Gardiner Hunt 116 Lowell St., Peabody, Mass. Paul Aldrich Huntsman 910 Cedar Brook Road, Plainfield, N. J. Victor Waldcmar Hurst, Jr 143 Andrews St., Rochester, N. Y. Paul Francis Husserl 777 Clinton Ave., Newark, N. J. Alan Richard Jackson 177 Park Ave., New York City Edward Hughes Jackson 2.63 Woodley Road, Merion, Pa. Charles Durand James c o Northwestern National Ins. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Henry Sulger Jeanes, Jr Devon, Pa. Thomas Auckland Jeffery 8871 Towanda St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Alexander Davis Jenney 5 Brattle Road, Syracuse, N. Y. Glenn Lowell Jepsen 311 Kansas City St., Rapid City, S. Dak. Arthur Charles Johnson, Jr 117 Preston Road, Columbus, O. Hallock S. Johnson Lincoln University, Pa. Cold well Sidney Johnston . . .i860 Columbia Road, Washington, D. C. Joseph Forney Johnston. . . .17J1 nth Ave. South, Birmingham, Ala. Richard Moffitt Johnston, . . .c o Johnston Paper Co., Harrisburg, Pa. Benjamin Rowland Jones, Jr., 195 E. Northampton St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Morton Venable Joyes, Jr 117 W. Ormsby Ave., Louisville, Ky. 68 I I I I I M I I I 1 1 1 1 I I I M I n I I I I M I I I I I I IXXLJ ■ 19281 7 Class of 1927— {Continued) NAMB ADDRESS Kenneth Stone Kassler 1411 Clayton St., Denver, Colo. James A. Kaufman 175 W. ymd St., New York City Edwin Ewing Keith ii Cummins Station, Nashville, Tenn. Chauncey A. Reynolds Keller 510 Monroe Ave., Scranton, Pa. John Glover Kellogg 54 West 5th St., Oswego, N. Y. James Walter Kelly 12.2.2. Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. Robert Penn Kemble Mount Carmel Item, Mount Carmel, Pa. William Kemble Pelham Manor, N. Y. Donald Lorenzo Kemmerer, c o American Legation, Quito, Ecuador George Howe Kennedy ii Austin Place, Bloomfield, N. J. Alvin Evans Kephart Ebensburg, Pa. Kenneth McLellan Kepler. Presbyterian Compound, Nanking, China Edgar Aldrich Kniffin 100 Wall St., New York City Milford Andrew Koehler 2.10 Winslow Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Wallace Brace Krag 172.5 S. University Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. Rcmbcrt Watson La Beaumc Chase Hotel, St. Louis, Mo. George Lee Lambert 1 Hortcnsc Place, St. Louis, Mo. Alfred Newbold Lawrence Lawrence, L. L, N. Y. Wilmot Brcreton Lee. . . .56 Columbia Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Fontaine Le Maistre Englewood, N. J. Alfred Burcham Lent 2.12. S. Bayview Ave., Freeport, N. Y. Henry Bradford Lewis, Jr 1515 Kanawha St., Charleston, W. Va. Winslow Lewis. .7904 Lincoln Drive, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. John Alden Lichty, Jr Clifton Springs, N. Y. Walter Henry Lielsman, Jr 36 W. 44th St., New York City Eustace Everett Lingle Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Alfred George Lockitt 581 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y, David Still Loudon 199 S. Union St., Burlington, Vt. Edward Hobbs Luckett 41 E. 4ind St., New York City Kraemer Luks 167 Wavcrly Place, New York City Frederick Thomas Lynch 574 West End Ave., New York City Samuel Maurice McAshan, Jr. .419 Levett Blvd., Houston, Texas James Donald McCabe 12.4 Irwin Ave., Benavon, Pa. Warren Finley McElroy, Jr x} Portland Place, St. Louis, Mo. Malcolm Fletcher Macfarlane Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Aims Chamberlain McGuinness Academy Ave., Chester, N. Y. John French MacKay 411 Grand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald Ross MacLaren 35 Boudinot St., Princeton, N. J. William Hoffman McLaughlin. .. .350 Terrace Ave., Cincinnati, O. David Edward McLean De Ridder, La. Lawrence Trenholme MacNamara. .601 West 174th St., New York City John Fred McRae 333 South West Ave., EI Dorado, Ark. Gordon Cameron MacWilliam 33 Reynolds St., Kingston, Pa. Chauncey Hunter Marsh, Jr 19 Sunset Park, Montclair, N. J. Robert Clegg Marsteller 2.49 Fairgreen Ave., Youngstown, O. Walter Winter Marring, Jr 1108 S. 6th St., Ironton, O. William Olmsted Master Glenthorne, Devon, Pa. William Leonard Matthews 516 Sumner Ave., Spokane, Wash. Henry Hamilton Mayer 350 W. loth St., Eric, Pa. Morris Augustus Mayers 175 W. 7ind St., New York City Richard Henry Means 95 Jewett Parkway, Buffalo, N. Y. Frank Carter Mebane, Jr 149 Broadway, New York City Harry Edward Meislahn, Jr 132.5 E. 2.7th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Robbins Milbank 113 E. 37th St., New York City Edward Charles Miller, Jr 536 Boggs Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Francis Fay Miller Russell House, Lexington, Mass. William Ralph Miller, British Foreign Bible Society, Seoul, Korea Donald Cornwell Mills 176 Westminster Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. John Walter Milton 564 Marshall Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Thomas Helm Minary, Jr 1416 Second St., Louisville, Ky. Henry Dustin Mirick 1809 19th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. David Tuite Monahan 764 Myrtle Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. David Park Monks 1910 S St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Donald Campbell Moore iii Roslyn Ave., Glcnside, Pa. William Barnes Morgan 317 W. 71st St., New York City Heber Smith Morris 602. Morris Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. John Trigg Moss, Jr 6017 Enright Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Frederick Dodge Mott 347 Madison Ave., New York City Robert Redman Munoz 2.2. Crestmont Road, Montclair, N. J. Adrian Massey Murphy 2.31 Nyac Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Donald Egbert Murphy 81 Watchung Ave., Montclair, N. J. Malvern Hill Murphy 2.30 Central Ave., East Orange, N. J. Alexander Kirkpatrick Nelson Guarantee Trust Bldg., Atlantic City, N. J Fredric Stark Newberry 68 Melrose Place, Montclair, N. J Robert O ' Connor Newell 1873 Cedar Ave., New York City Walter Scott Newhouse, Jr 84 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N. Y Barclay Moon Newman 5411 Corey St., Road, Richmond, Va Erikson Snowden Nichols Grace Church St., Rye, N. Y Rudge Nichols i6 Whittcmore St., West Roxbury, Mass Herman Boersig Nies 2.306 Frame Ave., Cleveland, O. Craig E. Nightingale, Jr 52. Broadway, R. 102.6, New York City Jonathan VanDyke Norman, Jr 1504 Third St., Louisville, Ky Roderic Collins Ott Miramichi, Hartland, Wis Harry Norman Packer 50 Church St., New York City Edward Locke Parker Lincoln Ave., Rye, N. Y. 69 Class of 1927— [Continued) Harold Mcrritt Parker 5x8 Kutsch Ave, Butler, Pa. Harry DeForcst Parsons 11 Tompkins St., Cortland, N. Y. Albion Wesley Patterson 1447 Fuller Ave., Los Angeles, Cal, Henry Alexander Sharpless Patterson 38 Lake View Park, Rochester, N. Y. Stuart Gardyne Pattulo 615 Paulsen Bldg., Spokane, Wash. Frank Peabody, Jr 116 High St., Montgomery, Ala. George Burbon Pearson, Jr Main St., Newark, Del. Karl Gustav Pearson 492. Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. Samuel C. Backus Peck 9 Union St., Schenectady, N. Y. James Cash Penney 330 W. 34th St., New York City Clement Wakefield Perkins 31 W. South St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Thomas Wright Pettus 33 Westmoreland Place, St. Louis, Mo. Robert Gordon Pierce 103 Park Ave., New York City Morey Conn Pires 4353 Gladys Ave., Chicago, 111. Paul Snowden Pitcher 816 14th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. John Richmond Pitman, Jr 611 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J. Marshall Lyne Posey 170 Irving Ave., South Orange, N. J. Joseph Prendergast 732. Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. John Shepard Prettyman iio S. Walnut St., Milford, Del. Theodore Hazeltine Price, Jr 960 Park Ave., New York City Henry Hamilton Putnam 410 Wisconsin Ave., Lake Forest, 111. Valentine C. Putz 136 Union Ave., Islip, N. Y. John Rathbone Ramsey, Jr 315 Union St., Hackensack, N.J. Samuel Jackson Randall, Jr. 8301 Shawnee St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Walter Chapin Read,Jr 3 Berkeley Heights Park, Bloomfteld, N.J. William Hewitt Read Commodore Hotel, St. Paul, Minn. Henry Smallwood Redmond 640 Park Ave., New York City John Smith Reese, 4th 1600 Brinckle Ave., Wilmington, Del. Thomas Gregg Reifsnydcr 5705 Elgin Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Reine R. F. D. No. x, Bothell, Wash. Harrison Liberton Reinke Lincoln University, Pa. Edwin Macdougall Rhea. . . .E. 400 loth Avenue N, St. Petersburg, Fla. William Jones Rhees. .. 1411 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D. C. Thomas Edwards Rhodes P. O. Box liii, Pittsburgh, Pa. Harold Coleman Riggs 30 Carroll St., Trenton, N. J. David Long Rike 403 W. First St., Dayton, O. William Chandler Riker Sea Bright, N. J. James Markoe Robbins Rose Lane, Haverford, Pa. O. Theodore Roberg, Jr 3812. N. Keeler Ave., Chicago, 111. Donald Henry Robinson 1632. N. Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. James Harriman Rogers 375 Chestnut St., Winneka, 111. Emilio Louis Roma 4501 N. Ubcr St., Philadelphia, Pa. Adolphe George Rosengarten, Jr. . .P. O. Box 1615, Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Jeffries Rosengarten. .. .2.58 S. list St., Philadelphia, Pa. David Nelson Rowe Academy St., Nanking, China Hubert Ashley Royster, Jr 808 Professional Bldg., Raleigh, N. C. William Livingston Ruigh 16 Higashi Yamate, Magasaki, Japan Herman Salinger 72.5 Skinker Road, St. Louis, Mo. Frank Herman Samson, Jr Middle Road, Nanticoke, Pa. Oliver Jackson Sands, Jr Westmoreland Place, Richmond, Va. Herbert Craig Sanford 1349 Montague St., Washington, D. C. William Ferdinand Scharnikow. . . .337 Highwood St., Teaneck, N. J. Grandin Ward Schenck 64 W. Front St., Red Bank, N. J. John Foran Schenk 194 Main St., Flemington, N. J. Morton Schiff, Jr 400 Belmont Ave., Newark, N. J. Heinrich Leslie Schlubach 2.4 Prospect Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Herbert Alfred Schoenfeld, Jr. . Standard Furniture Co., Seattle, Wash. MacAlister Avery Schultz 105 Lincoln St., New Britain, Conn. Lloyd S. Schwenger Buckingham Hall, Cedar Road atEnchal Heights Blvd., Cleveland, O. John Edwin Scott. , . .146 Norwood Ave., Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. Alexander Seidler, Jr 14 Fairview Ave., South Orange, N. J. Edwin VanDeusen Selden, Jr 408 West 2.nd St., Oil City, Pa. Elmer Porter Serena 1711 Coursin St., McKeesport, Pa. William Hunter Seyfert 12.8 W. Mr. Airy Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Ave ry Sherry 353 Hathaway Place, Milwaukee, Wis. Robinson Shillaber 575 3rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Anthony Morris Shober 311 S. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Roger Wallace Shugg 851 Great Plain Ave., Needham, Mass. Jacob WinebrennerSlagle, 407 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Baltimore.Md. R. Rutledge Slattery 151 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. David Bartlett Sloan R. D. No. 2., Princeton, N. J. Samuel Sloan 12.50 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Francis Emmet Sloat 2.41 Broadway, Monticello, N. Y. Furlong Thomas Smith 340 W. io6th St., New York City Gowans Smith 12.9 North St., Buffalo, N. Y. James Prall Smith 608 Third St., Belvidere, N. J. Richard Dickinson Smith University Club, New York City Richard Harrison Smith, Jr 164 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Roland Kidder Smith, Jr St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, La. George Grant Snowden, Jr Highland Hall, Rosemont, Pa. Harry Stearns Sommers 31 W. 8ind St., New York City William Mode Spackman, . , .1338 Lovering Ave., Wilmington, Del. Newton Phelps Stallknecht. .52. Montrose Ave., South Orange, N.J. 70 I Class of 1927- NAME ADDRESS Aaron Mark Stein 600 W. i}6th Sc, New York City Stuart Henry Steinbrink 115 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Stephen Constantine Stephana. .. .1014 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Irving Stevenson 17 Hudson Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. James Stillman 900 Park Ave., New York City Frank Garden Strachan, c o Strachan Shipping Co., Savannah, Ga. George Drayton Strayer, jr West 146th St., New York City Duane Reed Stuart 60 Battle Road, Princeton, N. J. Lionel Morgan Summers 18)5 S. St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Arthur Mesmer Suor, Jr. . . . .• 4435 Main St., Snyder, N. Y. Henderson Supplee, Jr. . . . Lancaster Pike, Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. Duncan Dunbar Sutphen 655 Park Ave., New York City Henry Bucher Swoope, Jr Merion, Pa. Frank Griswold Taster 176 Front St., New York City Henry Warren Taylor 105 Hudson St., Jersey City, N. J. Allen Trimble Tekirian Maplewood, N. J. George Tazewell Thomas lii W. Lanrah St., Baltimore, Md. Clifford Kimlock Thompson 2.75 E. Spring Ave., Ridegwood, N.J. John Silvey Thompson 171 Scheerer Ave., Newark, N. J. Philip Glenn Thompson Ripley, Tenn. Walfred Bernard Thutin ii Pine St., Belmont, Mass. James Todd, Jr Beaver Road, Sewickley, Pa. John Allen Townley 36}} Locust St., Kansas City, Mo. George Treat Trenholm 1568 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Henry Wilbur Trescott 313 Rutter Ave., Kingston, Pa. Laurence Davies Trevett Orchard Park, N. Y. Theodore Francis Trimble 8 W. Madison St., Baltimore, Md. Robinson Marshall Truitt, Jr. 738 Westview St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Jackson Hobart Tucker 903 5th Ave., Clinton, Iowa Robert Carroll Tyson Thurmont, Md. Simon Krebs Uhl Somerset, Pa. Chester Richard Vail Lapeer Mercantile Co., Lapeer, Mich. William Alexander Valentine iii Charles St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. William Beekman Van Alstyne, Jr Kinderhook, N. Y. An drew Bogert Vanderbeek i Ridge Terrace, Paterson, N. J. John Van Duyn 607 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. Robert Ditmars Van Siclen Hillcrest Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. James Edwin Vaughn 175 Indian Church Road, Buffalo, N. Y. Donald C. Vollrath, 158 Carpenter Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Alexis Volodimirov 136 W. 13th St., New York City -{Continued) Theodore Constant von Storch 17 Perry St., New York City Robert Willett Wales 480 Sheridan Road, Winnetka, 111. James Theodore Walker 5391 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Fred James Walters, Jr 94 Maiden Lane, New York City Leonard Selchow Walworth 3rColigni Ave., NewRochelle, N. Y. Frederick A. C. Wardenburg. . . .1406 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Arthur Whitman Warner 61 Broad St., Bridgeport, Conn. William Braham Washabaugh 2.53 West 8 St., Erie, Pa. Walter Critz Watkins 806 First Ave., Laurel, Miss. Sewell Stansburg Watts, Jr., Calvert and Redmond Sts., Baltimore, Md. Charles Mason Weeden 114 S. Angell St., Providence, R. I. Charles W. Weekes 4611 D St., Philadelphia, Pa. Bernard Albert Gerald Weisl 575 West End Ave., New York City Clement Jewett Welles 40 Heights Road, Ridgewood, N. J. John Caldwell WIewood, Jr 907 Fifth Ave., New York City Howard Lothair Werner 572. Madison Ave., New York City James Cummin Westfall 34 Woodland Ave., Columbus, O. Jere Hungerford Wheelwright, Jr 149 Broadway, New York City Joseph Aloysius Whelan. . . .850 Montpelir Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Albert Coudon Whitaker, Jr. . Wheeling Steel Corp., Wheeling, W, Va. William Kingsbury Wight 50 East Main St., Middletown, N. Y. Theodore R. Williams Shippan Point, Stanford, Conn. Harvey Francis Williamson 1400 E. ist St., Duluth, Minn. Lucius Wilmerding, Jr 12. East 89th St., New York City Robert Ory Wilson Univ. of Nanking, Nanking, China Thomas Strong Wilson 1157 Thurman St., Portland, Ore Austin Winsor Rosemont, Pa Aaron Shelby Winstead 114 Washington St., Henderson, Ky Herman Blanchard Winter 1030 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. J Gustav Adolf Wirbelauer 96 East 39th St., Paterson, N. J William Westerveld Withey University Ave., Bethlehem, Pa Wilfred Bonsiucr Wolcott, Jr. Moorestown-Riverton Road, Riverton, N. J Albert Lewis Wolfe 61 Gaston St., West Orange, N. J Thomas Edward Wood, Jr 1105 West Z4th St., Little Rock, Ark Willard Barton Wood, Jr 751 Irving Terrace, Orange, N. J John Phillips Wooldridgc 636 S. Linden Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Charles Horton Yocum None given Arthur Middleton Young Radnor, Pa Frederick Gipson Zander 618 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y 71 WM3 r Class Officers 1927-1928 1918 Waller Burns Evans William McCulley Hardt, II Robert Jemison, III President Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer U 8 FORMER OFFICERS FRESHMAN YEAR— FIRST TERM FRESHMAN YEAR— SECOND TERM C. A. Case President J. Langhorne Vice-President C. T. Elliott, Jr. ... Secretary and Treasurer J. Langhorne President T. A. Whelan, III ... . Vice-President W. B. Evans .... Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR J. Langhorne , President A. Z. F. Wood Vice-President W. B. Evans .... Secretary and Treasurer 73 Class of 1928 NAME ADDRESS John Kenworthy Acuff 441 Seville St., Roxborough, Pa. Joseph Miller Adams 2.353 B ' ' y Mawr Ave., Wynnefield, Pa. Donald Agnew 16 William St., New York City Beekman William Aitken 702. Madison Ave., New York City John William Aitken 134 E. 79th St., New York City Archibald Stevens Alexander 12.0 Broadway, New York City Frederick Beasley Alexander, Jr 116 E. 58th St., New York City Holmes Moss Alexander 106 Charlecote Rd., Baltimore, Md. W. Alanson Alexander, Jr 184 Belmont Ave., Jersey City, N. J. John Dawes Ames 2.05 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Walter Parvis Andrews Box 344, Chattanooga, Tenn. William McCarrell Angle 300 W. King St., Shippensburg, Pa. Edward Griffith Fleming Arnott 2.5 Glenwood Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Bernhardt Mases Atkins. .. .407 Farmington Ave., Hartford, Conn. Kenneth Biddle Atkinson. Box 16, Media, Pa. Fred Howard At wood 15 S. Moar, St. Louis, Mo. Nathan King Averill, Jr Lake Mahapac, N. Y. Burton Milton Babcock 17 Vincent St., Binghamton, N. Y. William Jackson Babcock 1004 2.0th St., Rock Island, 111. John Smith Bacheller 97 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. Edward Kelsey Bachman 1715 Windsor Ave., Bristol, Tenn. Frank Allen Baker, Jr 3740 Walnut St., Kansas City, Mo. Wilson Barkley Baldwin 2.565 Villa Lane, Cincinnati, O. Cable Gordon Ball 402. S. 9th St., Lafayette, Ind. David Boyce Bannerman, Jr 15 Scotland Road, Elizabeth, N. J. Authur Baptisti, Jr 12.08 Chestnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. Henry P. C. W. Barber 1116 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. William Stanton Barbour 869 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. William Halsey Barker io8 Stratford Rd., Baltimore, Md. Daniel Brooks Barlow. . . .146 W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Pa. William Wallace Barry 52. S. Lake Dr., Lakewood, N. J. James Bateman, Jr 2.2.06 De Lancey St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Ross Bates, Jr 406 Casino Ave., Crawford, N. J. Fred Cross Bauchens 4477 McPherson Ave., St. Louis, Mo. John Bayless 79 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. Gordon Taylor Beaham, Jr 102.5 ■ 54 ' ' ' St., Kansas City, Mo. Walter Raper Beardsley 2.16 E. Beardsley Ave., Elkhart, Ind. Sherburn Merrill Becker, Jr 139 E. 6ist St., New York City Todson Harvey Becker 339 15th Ave., Newark, N. J. Frank Albert Bedford, Jr 1346 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. Frank Garrettson Belcher 141 W. Kalmia St., San Diego, Cal. Kcndrick F. Bellows 145 Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass. NAME ADDRESS Walter William K. Bennett, II 2.08 Park PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Kerr Black 109 Lorraine Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. John William Blair 10 E. Schiller St., Chicago, III. Eugene Carson Blake 449 E. 55th St., Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Edward Blank 138 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Oscar E. Bloch 976 Cherokee Rd., Louisville, Ky. Henry Taylor Bodman. .lo McKinley PI., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Albert Bernard Boese, Jr 2.16 Littleton Ave., Newark, N. J. Robert Fulton Bole Delmar-Morris Apts., Chelton Ave., Germantown, Pa. Charles Ferdinand Bookwalter 30 Maryland Ave., Annapolis, Md. Sam Cooper Borton 3072. Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland O. Arthur John Bowron,Jr 381 9 Crescent Rd., Birmingham, Ala. William Leander Boyce, II in 7th St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. John Philip Boyd 515 Philadelphia Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. John Pomeroy Bradford 131 Cambridge Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Lawrence Butter Braman 40 W. 40th St., New York City James Robertson Bridges 709 Grayden Ave., Norfolk, Va. Robert Jackson Brigham. . . .82. Edgemont Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Marcus Marcellus Bright 2.901 Hemphice St., Ft. Worth, Texas David Clark Brodie 800 Frederica St., Owensboro, Ky. Adelbert Emmons Bronson, Jr... 1713 Lancashire Rd., Cleveland, O. Frederick William Brown Box 14, Princeton, N. J. Mallory Browne 405 Exchange Bldg., Memphis, Tenn. Robert Bruce 2.4 Fifth Ave., New York City Robert George Buchanan, Jr 1733 De KalbSt., Norristown, Pa. Julius Van Dyck Bucher Nassau PI., Peekskill, N. Y. Irving Bunnell, Jr 334 W. 86th St., New York City Edward Parris Burch, II 754 Linwood PI., St. Paul, Minn. William Lozier Munro Burke 349 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Russell Burrows, Jr 666 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. Robert Gray Bushnell 30 Elm St. , Morristown, N.J. James Baird Butchart Eureka, 111. Kevin Butler 1x2.9 ' 9 ' ' S ' - ' Washington, D. C. James Winchester Byron Mercersburg, Pa. Robert Donald Calder 410 8th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert W. D. Caldwell Wallingford, Pa. Frederic Edward Camp Ardmore, Pa. John Boylston Campbell 115 Park Ave., New York City Walter Weaver Candy 417 N. 7th St., St. Louis, Mo. Harry Beard Cannon R. D. No. 7, York, Pa. Walter CockriU Carroll, Jr 2.12. E. Delaware PI., Chicago.Ill. Calvin Anderson Case 45 Green Ave., Madison, N. J. I i I 74 Class of 1928— {Continued) Charles Mcrritt Case iii8 Pillsbury Ave., Minneapolis, Minn Charles Edward Caspari, Jr iio8 Locust St., St. Louis, Mo James Quarlcs Chambers 3614 Holmes St., Kansas City, Mo Charles Ward Chase Kingswood School, West Hartford, Conn Thomas Walker Childs .6000 The Paseo, Kansas City, Mo John K. D. Chivers }6i6 West End Ave., Nashville, Tenn Stewart Bcckwith Christian Maple St., Ramsey, N. J John Kelley Cillcy lio E. 34th St., New York City Harvey Rowland Clapp, Jr. .4401 Greenway, Guilford, Baltimore, Md Fred Maurice Cleaveland, Jr. ..158 E. Washington St., fonia, Mich Robert Morrison Clements 1114 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, Ariz Edward Lambert Clifford 3033 N. St. N.W., Washington, D. C Henry Robert dinger, Jr 500 N. Front St., Milton, Pa Ralph Edward Conant. .X75 Ascan Ave., Forest Hills, L. L, N. Y Richard Jerome Congleton 2.57 Rosevillc Ave., Newark, N. J John Cooper Cook 68 Chauncey St., Astoria, L. L, N. Y Howard Francis Corcoran i6 Sanford St., Pawtucket, R. I Leavitt Corning, Jr 89 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Minn Herbert Seward Coster 445 Lawn Ridge Rd., Orange, N. J Thomas Cover, III Garrison, Md William Rutledge Covington Summit, Miss Douglas Farley Cox, Jr Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J Hugh Preston Cox Washington, Ind William Wright Crandall.Jr 3504 West End Ave., Nashville, Tenn James Wilson Crawford 1711 Oliver Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa Benjamin Eaton Crispin 557 E. Trout St., Berwick, Pa Andre John Crotti 1591 E. Broad St., Columbus, O Francis Bosley Crowther, Jr.. .3509 Woodley Rd., Washington, D. C Willard Frederic Cummings 4911 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, 111 John Hargrave Cunningham Marshall, Va Calvin Wright Dail ii High St., Cambridge, Md Arthur Hazard Dakin, Jr 1 1 5 S. Pleasant St. , Amherst, Mass John lUingworth Dalrympic 319 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J William Aves Damerel 134 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y Marshall Bowman Davidson 313 E. 196th St., New York City Charles Edward Davis, Jr 1356 Monsey Ave., Scranton, Pa Lawrence Conant Davis 934 E. 45th St., Chicago, 111 Clarence Stephens Davison, Jr Hillside PI., Tarrytown, N. Y George Draper Dayton 13x1 Blaisdell Ave., Minneapolis, Minn Herbert Girton Deignan 46 S. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J Frederick Brockway Deknatel no S. Spring Ave., La Grange, III Oakley Ramshon DeLamater, Jr Eaton ' s Neck, Northport, N. Y Darragh de Lancey, Jr 51 Pine St., Waterbury, Conn Henry Scott Denniston 156 Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y Norman Vincent Deuel Kramer Block, Dansville, N. J Nelson Willard Deyo 79 Hawthorne PI., Montclair, N. J Robert Leonard Dikovics 113 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J Horace Cumberland Disston W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa Gilbert Willoughby Dixon The Chimneys, Jenkintown, Pa John Elbert Dolman, Jr 3018 Ashland Blvd., St. Joseph, Mo William Metcalf Doolittle iiS Quaker Rd., Sewickley, Pa Frederick Schulken Doscher 77 Broad St., New York City George Chester Doubleday 16 E. 73rd St., New York City George Francis Dougherty 17 Dougherty St., Manchester, Conn. Benjamin William Dudley, Jr Short Hills, N. J. Eugene Funston Durand Crow ' s Nest Woods, Bronxville, N. Y. George Bradford Dutton, II . .iii8 Blake Blvd., Cedar Rapids, la. William Wallace Dyer 111 W. Berkeley St., Uniontown, Pa. Dudley Tate Easby, Jr 112.1 Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Edward Eastman 680 North Ave., New Rochellc, N. Y. James Kay Ebbert 5440 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Trowbridge Elliman 15 E. 49th St., New York City Robert Hare Egerton Elliott, Jr 99 Jagger Ave., Flushing, N. Y. William Potter Elliott. 70 Pine-Land Bag Corp., Pascagonla, Miss. Alfred Elser 633 Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wis. Victor Elting, Jr 134 S. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. Robert Belleville Ely, III 131 Valley Rd., Merion, Pa. Robert Jay Ely ,. Argyle, N. Y. James William England, Jr St. Davids Ave., St. Davids, Pa. Edward Coe Embury 150 E. 6ist St., New York City Edward Thomas English 10 Blue Hills Parkway, Milton, Mass. Oliver Marshall Evans Essex Falls, N. J. Weller Burns Evans 187 N. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. James Donald Everitt 18 Market St., Lewisburg, Pa. Charles Winston Farnsworth 531 N. Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Michael AloysiusFeighan 17485 Lake Ave., Lakewood,0. John Cushier Ferenbach 108 Butter St., Kingston, Pa. Lewis Milton Firey 10 Bycrs Ave., Akron, O. Silas Buck Foot 1015 4th St., Red Wing, Minn. Emory Moran Ford 1611 Ford Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Jack McKay French 411 Linden PL, Elmira, N. Y. Manuel Stanley Friedman 6i Colonial Ave., Trenton, N. J. George McGaffey Frybcrger 113 S. Center St., Philipsburgh, Pa. Motohico Fujiyama Tokio, Japan 75 1 1 1 1 1 TTFTr r j 7 1928 Class of 1928— {Continued) I Joseph Norton GafFcny 15 Pine Ave., Kane, Pa. Lawrence Lee Gaillard, Jr 6 Beech Tree Terrace, Bronxville, N. Y. Willard Seldcn Gamble 530 Washington St., Watertown, Conn. Henry Deim Garrity Hartsdale Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Oliver Herman Gasch 1316 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. John Montgomery Gaston, Jr., 5554 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walter Bothwell George 55 Patton Ave., Princeton, N. J. Joseph Ruff Gibson 8 Bancroft Ave., Moylan, Pa. Ellsworth Giles 165 Irwin Ave., Ben Avon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Hyde Gillette 691 La Loma Rd., Pasadena, Cal. Gilbert Amsden Gooch 2.02.5 S. 15th St., Lincoln, Neb. Sidney Pullman Goodrich 911 Clinton St., Philadelphia, Pa. Sidney Smith Gorham, Jr. . . . lioi New York Life Bldg., Chicago, 111. Charles Brown Grace Bethlehem Steel Co., Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas Edmund Graccen, II 150 Nassau St., New York City Henry Alexander Greene Rose Lane, Havcrford, Pa. Albert Eugene Griffin, Jr 45 S. ist Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Alexander Brown Griswold, Linden Hill, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Harry Crockett Grumpelt Harrington Park, N. J. Edward William Gwinner, Jr 5061 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Alexander Gwynne 30 Broad St., New York City Clement Hackney 467 Wyoming PL, Milwaukee, Wis. Henry Ewing Hale, 111 Battlefield Farm, Princeton, N. J. Frank Hillman Hall, Jr 17 Battery PL, New York City George Emlen Hall 138 Franklin PL, Flushing, N. Y. Herbert Seymour Hall Morris Ave., Springfield, N. J. William Seward Hall 112. S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. John Church Ham 2.54 Hope St., Providence, R. I. Frederick Johnson Hamilton 830 Park Ave., New York City Howard Kinsley Hamm 5473 Cornell Ave., Chicago, 111. James Garland Hamner Box 106, Fairfield Ave., West Caldwell, N. J. Paul Hampden 1887 Broadway, New York City Elmore Harris Harbison Pine Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Henry Knowles Harding 77 Franklin St., Boston, Mass. William McCulley Hardt, II Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Stanton Montgomery Hardy 860 Park Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Percy Grier Hart, Jr 66 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J. Clement B. E. Harts Fort Amador, Canal Zone Theodore Foster Hasbrouk 2.5 Larchmont Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. William Nafew Haskell, III 935 Park Ave., New York City Clarence Augustus Hastings, Jr., 71 Evergreen PL, East Orange, N. J. Charles Alexander Hatfield, 8614 Montgomery Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. John Stuart Haven 14 Elm St., Morristown, N. J. Davis Knox Henderson Derrick Ave., Uniontown, Pa. Donald Newell Hcndey 15 Littlejohn PL, White Plains, N. Y. Paul Luther Hensel 2.59 Engle St., Tenafly, N. J. Winthrop Page Hersey 134 Abbott Rd., Wellcsley, Mass. Lewis McComb Herzog 390 West End Ave., New York City Carter Edmund Hewitt 72.7 Massachusetts Ave., Peoria, 111. Charles Lindsay Hewitt 58 E. 78th St., New York City Caleb Mershon Hill Lawrenceville, N. J. David Ballentine Hinchman . . . . 800 Marquette Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Mallory Hinman loi Union Ave., Cranford, N. J. Edward Blanchard Hodge, Jr xoig Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Nicholas Roosevelt Hoff 68 E. 86th St., New York City Bernard Shea Home, Jr Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Arthur Trowbridge Horton 149 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. Jonathan Lewis Hough, III 12.41 W. 4th St., Williamsport, Pa. Bond Houser, Jr 334 Market St. , Troy, O. Franklin Douglas Houser 334 Market St., Troy, O. Arthur Lucius Hubbard, Jr 117 E. Madison St., South Bend, Ind. Richard Springer Huckin iio E. Hudson Ave., Englewood, N. J. Edmund Newett Huff, Jr 97 Engle St. , Englewood, N.J. Andrew Hunter McNeal Hughes Edgewater Park, N. J. Thomas Candy Hughes Edgewater Park, N. J. Jaquelin Holliday Hume 500 Columbia St. S., Pasadena, Cal. Robert Gwynne Humphrey Kcnthopc, West Chester, Pa. William Armstrong Humphreys, Jr. 1306 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Chicago, 111. Charles Hunsickcr, Jr Chermside Farms, Whitemarsh, Pa. Robert Sildcn Huse, Jr 2.8 Washington Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Charles Lukens Huston, Jr 64 S. ist Ave., Coatsville, Pa. Joseph Chappell Hutchinson, III. 500 Lovctt Blvd., Houston, Tex. Werner Herbert Hutz 130 Hamilton Ave., Englewood, N. J. Frederick Lewis Hyer 2.2.2. Elm Ave., Rahway, N. J. Gilbert Pierce Inglis 393 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. Thomas Randall Ivins Ivins-Jameson, Lebanon, O. Leander Stockwell Jadwin 11 Vestry St., New York City Tracy Hugo Jaeckel 546 5th Ave., New York City Robert Jemison, III 4301 Altamont Rd., Birmingham, Ala. John Robert Jenkins Pleasant St., Mt. Pleasant, Tenn. Roswell Park Johnson Lincoln University, Pa. Artimus Whitaker Jones 151 W. 92.nd St., New York City Gordon Hyde Jones Lakewood, N.J. Joseph Homer Jordon, Jr First Nat ' l Bank, Shreveport, La. 76 Class of 19 28— {Continued) 1 Howard Carter Judd 710 Pomcroy St., Kenosha, Wis. Frank Snowden Katzenbach 504 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Albert Keep 1516 N. State Parkway, Chicago, 111. George Mollis Kelley 145 Chestnut St., Pottstown, Pa. Thomas Parsons Kellogg 59 Willow St., Waterbury, Conn. John Mathias Kennedy, III 370 Humbolt St., Denver, Colo. Richard Lea Kennedy, Jr 550 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. George William Kepler, Jr 582.0 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Elbert Kimball 61 Lexington St., New Britain, Conn. Roger Nelson Kimball, Jr 56oDurkee Ave., Kenosha, Wis. Harold Kinder 107 City Ace., Bala, Pa. George Broome King 1615 Pendleton Ave., Columbia, S. C. Willard Van Ceuren King Convent, N. J. Sinclair Hatch Kingsley 1417 Soo Line Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. Donald Bogart Kipp 188 Lafayette Ave., Passaic, N. J. Richard Erwin Kleinhans 584 Parker St., Newark, N. J. Arthur Knapp, Jr 1858 Johfts Ave., Bayside, N. Y. Edward Spring Knapp, Jr 158 E. 64th St., New York City Horace Adelbert Knowlton, Jr 1869 Irard Ave., Little Rock, Ark. Serge Alexander Korff 1308 California St., Washington, D. C. Richard Kaye Korn 150 W. 57th St., New York City James Frank Krewson 301 Central Ave., Cheltenham, Pa. William Gatewood Lackey, Jr 2.12.1 S. Owasso Ave., Tulsa, Okla. Joseph Scott Laffcrty Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, D. C. Lawrence Julien Lafleur 750 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Frederick Lang 111 Lawrence St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. David Van der Burgh Lansden . .614 Commercial Ave., Cairo, 111. William Sauter LaPorte Cambridge Aprs., Baltimore, Md. Henry Whelen Large Broad St. Station, Philadelphia, Pa. James Mifflin Large Broad St. Station, Philadelphia, Pa. Clifford Rushing Lawrence Lawrenceville Road, Princeton, N. J. Robert Reese Layton, Jr Bridgeville, Del. James Wideman Lea, II 4E. 66th St., New York City John Dwight Leggett, Jr. 148 Arnold St., New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y Austin Porter Leiand 18 Windermere PI., St. Louis, Mo Winthrop Carver Lenz 6ii Clifton Ave., Newark, N.J Henry Joseph Lerch, Jr 3 S. 14th St., Allentown, Pa Norman Arnold Levy 66 Baldwin Ave., Newark, N. J Cicero Hunt Lewis 408 Lewis Bldg., Portland, Ore John Walker Lewis, Jr 315 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, Conn Donald Macy Liddell, Jr. Crown Cork Seal Co., Guilford Ave., Baltimore, Md Richard Wingate Lloyd Coopcrtown Rd., Haverford, Pa. Henry Gibbons Lotspeich 416 Resor Ave., Cincinnati, O. Cornelius Vanderveer Lovett Little Silver, N. J. William Ebbets Lowe 67 Wall St., New York City Harry William Lunger E. Broadway, Milton, Pa. Henry Sharpe Lynn 49 9 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Gordon McAllen 374 South Ave., Glencoe, 111. Harris McAshan, South Texas Commercial Natl Bank, Houston, Tex. Andrew Francis McBride 655 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. Spencer Baird McCaleb 430 Lancaster Ave., St. Davids, Pa. Franklin Hope McConnell, Jr., Richbottom Farm, Havre de Grace, Md. James Miller McCready Oliver Rd., Edgeworth, Pa. John McCullough, V Keystone Trust Co., Harrisburg, Pa. Charles James McDermott, Jr 2.95 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hugh Campbell McDiarmid 608 Traction Bldg., Cincinnati, O. Richard Stockton McFarland 304 Beacon Lane, Merion, Pa. Robert Winters MacGregor, Jr iii N. Jefferson St., Dayton, O. Joseph Ruman Mcintosh Rogers Forge P. O., Baltimore Co.,Md. Robert Neale McKenna no 6th St., Hinsdale, III. Wislar Hodge MacLaren 38 Washington Rd., Princeton, N. J. John Stiles McMartin 315 Ellis Bldg., Phoenix, Ariz. William McMillan Charlecote PL, Guilford, Baltimore, Md. Francis Howey MacMillen 68 William St., New York City William Rowland MacNamee. . . .31 Vandeventcr St., Princeton, N. J. Gordon Palmer McNeer Lake Alfred, Fla. Donald Paxton McPherson, Jr 150 Carlisle St., Gettysburg, Pa. William Winters McQuilken 67 Cleveland Ave., Orange, N. J. Edward Winton McVitty Salem, Va. Richard Dean Magee San Mateo, Cal. Albert Raymond Mangold .541 E. Pittsburgh St., Greensburg, Pa. Orville Hungcrford Mann. .2.7 Tallman Ave., Nyack-on-Hudson, N. Y. Thomas Browning Mann... 2.18 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, III. Joseph Wesley Mapletoft 362. Clinton Ave., Newark, N. J. Herbert Alfred Marchant 39 Ivy Ave., Englewood, N. J. John Curtis Marshall. . . .2.15 W. 52.nd St., Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Elder Marshall 361 W. ist St., Dayton, O. Robert Norris Martin 91 N. Lexington Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Frederick Graham Matheson ... 700 Montgomery Ave. , Bryn Mawr, Pa. Carl Richard May 12.40 W. ' Market St., York, Pa. James Jennings Mead 916 i6th St., Washington, D. C. John J. Studwell Mead Lake Waccabuc, N. Y. Edward McMillan Mebane Oak Crest, Great Falls, S. C. Chester Brownell Meneely 2.2. River St., Troy, N. Y. 77 Class of 1928— {Continued) Frederick Thayer Merrill c o Lamson Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Howard Richmond Merriman 16 S. Cooke St., Providence, R. I. Ernest Warren Merson 306 Linwood Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Joseph Frank Miller 140 W. 79th St., New York City Robert Carter Miller Lawrenceville Road, Princeton, N. J. William Trigg Miller 1133 Magnolia Ave., Knoxville, Tenn. Paul Douglas Millholiand. .1306 California St., Washington, D. C. Edward Kirkpatrick Mills, Jr 36 Miller Rd., Morristown, N. J. Bancroft Mitchell Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. James Fernandis Mitchell, Jr 1344 19th St., Washington, D, C. Charles Rawe Moeser 2.753 Johnstone PI., Cincinnati, O. Frank Chandler Moffat no William St., New York City John Jordan Moffit, Jr loo Pine St., Harrisburg, Pa. Gairdner Bostwick Moment. . . ,92. S. Fulleton Ave., Montclair, N. J. Newcomb Thompson Montgomery. .6806 Greene St., Philadelphia, Pa. M. De Witt Moore 637 Glennew Ave., Highland Park, III. Charles Moran, Jr 56 E. 8ist St., New York City S. Rowland Morgan, Jr.. .431 E. Willow Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Charles Robert Morse 1450 Summerdale Ave., Chicago, 111. Samuel Boyd Morse 58 Delancey Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Craig Wright Muckle Coopertown Rd., Haverford, Pa. Robert Frederick Muhlhauscr 140 Wentworth Ave., Cincinnati, O. Welles Murphy 5 Nassau St., New York City Francis B. Murray Vanderbilt Hotel, New York City John Raymond Murray Tenafly Trust Co., Tenafly, N. J. John Robert Murray. . . .1600 Railway Exchange Bldg., Chicago, 111. John McNaughton Myers Mercersburg, Pa. Edward Julien Nally El-ar-cn Farm, New Hamburgh, N. Y. Douglas Thomas Neale 6506 Ventnor Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Alexander Meldrum Neilson, 11 Caldonia Ave., Babylon, L. I., N. Y. Wenley Dodds Nelson 7516 Tuscaroroa St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Motier Nes, Jr 100 Springettysburg Ave., York, Pa. Richard Ely Nevius College Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. Donald Noble Newhall 1518 W. 2.6th St., Minneapolis, Minn. Norman Maximilian Newmark, 4361 Victoria Park Dr., Los Angeles,Cal. Richard Neermans Newnham 7314 Boyer St., Philadelphia, Pa. Benjamin White Norris 165 E. 60th St., New York City Robert Fogg Norris 57 Market St., Salem, N. J. James C. Norton 136 W. 44th St., New York City Louis Ottenheimer i6ii Peabody St., Memphis, Tenn. Percy Owen, Jr 1072. Seminole Ave., Detroit, Mich. George Randolph Packard, Jr Villa Nova, Pa. John E. Packard 41 Hampden St., Springfield, Mass. John Ransom Palmer 102.4 Fairfield Ave., Shreveport, La. Nicholas Fletcher Palmer i8 E. 63rd St., New York City Carlisle Sewell Pangman 5654 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo Gordon Edward Pape 2.861 Harrison Ave., Cincinnati, O James Perrault Pappas 15 Pomona Ave., Newark, N.J Fred Ward Pardee, Jr 38 Cottage PI., Ridgewood, N. J John White Parker Douglas Blvd., Louisville, Ky Marselis Clark Parsons, Jr no E. 42.nd St., New York City Arthur Wellesley Patterson, III 2.19 E. 5th Ave., Roselle, N. J Samuel Burton Payne 12. Grinnell St., Greenfield, Mass Henry Hildreth Pease, Jr 1307 Delancey St., Philadelphia, Pa, Francis Livingston Pell, Jr 151 E. 53rd St., New York City Lawrence Perin Colorado Springs, Colo, William Thomas Perkerson, Jr 651 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga James Croswell Perkins 90 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. J John Windsor Persse, Jr 633 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn Daniel Peterkin 717 Railway Exchange Bldg., Chicago, 111 Carl Rudolph Peterson. . . .12.0 Fernwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J Barton Tufts Pevear 103 Ocean St., Lynn, Mass Robert Oscar Pieper 72.8 Shepard Ave., Milwaukee, Wis James Forgie Pitcairn 6415 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa John Scott Plumb 100 E. 4rnd St., New York City Davenport Plumer Twin-Pike Farm, Ambler, Pa Robert Cox Post, Jr loi Park Ave., New York City James Gryor Potter loix 7th Ave., W., Lafayette, Ind William RockhiU Potts Hohokus St., Hohokus, N. J Irwin Augustus Powell 10 E. 96th St., New York City Roger Van Nest Powelson 555 Park Ave., New York City James Owen Price Knollwood Farm, Port Chester, N. Y. Howard Anderson Prior 919 Oak Hill Ave., Hagerstown, Md. Harrington Putnam, Jr 404 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Louis Edward Rampona 533 Lexington Ave., Youngstown.O. Francis Kemper Rankin S. Charles ton, O. Robert Sturm Rau 15 E. 2.6th St., New York City David Webb Raudenbush 791 Linwood PI., St. Paul, Minn. John Harleston Read Conshohocken, Pa. William Lewis Read 500 Bankers Trust Bldg., Des Moines, la. Daniel Charles Rebhun. . . .333 Lafayette Ave., Clifton, Cincinnati, O, Stuart Gerard Redington 73 James St., Kingston, Pa, David Paul Reed 170 Oak St., Ridgewood, N. J. Morgan Stephens Reichner. . . , 1709 Ribbenhouse St., Philadelphia, Pa. Clarence Eugene Reid 538 Lenox Ave., Westfield, N. J. Henry Clay Remick 302.4 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 78 • Class of 7 928 -{Continued) John William Rcnchard 105 N. Gouvcrncur Ave., Trenton, N.J William Shryock Renchard. . .103 N. Gouverneur Ave., Trenton, N. J Joseph Clifford Rennard 1150 5th Ave., New York City William EwingReyburn 6310 Wyndown Blvd., St. Louis, Mo Morgan Ayers Reynolds, c o Southern Cotton Oil Co., Charlotte, N. C Sheldon Sickels Reynolds. .. .3111 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, O Jack Angell Rice 31 Washington Sq. W., New York City John Stirling Richardson Woodland Rd., Sewickley, Pa Russell Richardson, Jr 32.0 S. i6th St., Philadelphia, Pa Wallace Caldwell Richardson, Jr., 655 N. Church St., Bound Brook, N.J Grey Duval Richman 310 W. 86th St., New York City Donald Hirsh Ridgway no Hilton Ave., Hempstead, N. Y Thomas McNair Righter, Jr., Borad and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa Hugh McDiarmid Ritchey 563 Evanswood PI., Cincinnati, O, Joseph Baxter Roberts Nyack, N. Y Hamilton Alexander Robinson 6941 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Stephen Roby Ambassador Hotel, Chicago, 111 Edward Barron Rockwell 19 Quince St., Chicago, 111 William Morrow Roosevelt 1016 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa Horace Chapmen Rose 190 S. Drexel Ave., Columbus, O, Donald Stirling Ross 1300 Morris Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa Robert Easton Royes 18 Lawrence Ave., W. Orange, N. J Richard Wright Rubidge 85 Hanover Rd., Mt. Lakes, N.J Herold Allison Rue Windsor, N. J Charles Copeland Russell 500 Terrace Ave., Milwaukee, Wis John Alden Russell 500 Terrace Ave., Milwaukee, Wis Winthrop Rutherfurd Allamuchy, N. J Clendenin James Ryan, Jr 635 Park Ave., New York City A. Dickerson Salmon Main St., Stanhope, N. J Stephen Jennings Sanford Redding Ridge, Conn Walter Charles Sauer 106 Front St., Dunellen, N. J William George Scarlett, Jr 4101 Greenway, Baltimore, Md Robert BogardusSchall 1x8 Audubon Ave., Wayne, Pa Robert Churchill Schaub 748 W. North St., Decatur, 111 Colon Schott, Jr ii6 Grcendale Ave., Cincinnati, O William JaffraySchukraft 631 Linden Ave., Oak Park, 111 Carl William Schuiz 6106 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, 111 Henry Gerard Schwartz 141-145 ■ 3 ' St., New York City William Lincoln Seibert i Rector St., New York City Arthur G. Sharp, Jr 1600 N. Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Ralph John Sharp 114 High St., Perth Amboy, N. J. Alexander Shaw 10 South St., Baltimore, Md. John Knox Shaw 10 South St., Baltimore, Md. ' ADDRESS Donald Depcw Shay 510 E. 5th St., East Liverpool, O. William Wilson Sheely, Jr 171 Benita Ave., Youngstown, O. Stephen Rice Sheldon 14 Kingsbury PL, St. Louis, Mo. Emmett Albin Shepherd 1103 Mutual Bldg., Richmond, Va. Frank Ritter Shumway 2.70 Park Ave., New York City Laird Cornish Simons 160 W. Washington Lane, Germantown, Pa. James Joseph Brown Simpson 51 Hamilton PI., New York City Norris Phillips Skinner 1 Highland Ave., Madison, N. J. William Bonner Sladc 449 Park Ave., New York City Roger Caldwell Slaughter 810 W. Waldo St., Independence, Mo. Burwell Bassett Smith c o S. Morgan Smith Co., York, Pa. David DcGarmo Smith 83 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Patrick Bernard C. Smith No. 40 Highland Plaza Apts., Birmingham, Ala. Robert Russel Smith, Jr 705 S. Blvd., Huntington, W. Va. Stanley Buyers Smith 608 3rd St., Belvidere, N. J. Samuel Callaway Smith 55 E. 7ind St., New York City Peter Andrew Snell i Highland Heights, Rochester, N. Y. Robley Dunglison Snively, Jr.. .1709 W. Tioga St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Glassell Somerville, III, 644 Belvedere Blvd., Memphis, Tenn. Donald Livingston Speer 56x4 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Corbit Spruance xiio Gilpur St., Wilmington, Del. Charles Chase Squires 17a Nanking Rd., Shanghai, China Leiand Phelps Stallknecht 51 Montrose Ave., S. Orange, N. J. Charles Henry Stallman 17 W. Clark Ave., York, Pa. Fred Clevcrley Stein 146 Park Ave., E. Orange, N. J. James Ullnian Steinfirst 33 Sherman St., Hartford, Conn. Theodore Eugene Stern 310 W. 86th St., New York City Robert Livingston Stevens Bernardsville, N. J. Edward Sheldon Stewart 45 Wall St., New York City Redmond Congynham Stewart, Jr. . .Eccleston Stqtion, Baltimore, Md. William Adams W. Stewart, Jr 45 Wall St., New York City Brevoort Stout Short Hills, N. J. James Howell Stout, Jr 35 Glcnwood Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Joseph Suydam Stout 149 E. 73rd St., New York City Herbert Ridley Stratford 2.3 E. Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. Burton Mahler Strauss Wade Pk. Manor, Cleveland, O. Herman Henry Studh.Jr 62.1 Madison Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Masury Sturges 8 E. 83rd St., New York City Alan Rutherford Stuyvesant Allamuchy, N. J. Richard Weeks Summey 168 Buckingham St., Waterbury, Conn. William Ellery Sv ' eet, Jr.. .605 U. S. Nat ' l. Bank Bldg., Denver, Colo. Warren William Sweet P. O. Box 68, Balboa, Canal Zone 79 Class of 1928—QContinued) John Linsley Tappin, c o J. M. Armory, 5z Broadway, New York City Henry Forrester Taylor, Jr 34 Madison Ave., Morristown, N. J. John Colville Taylor 3183 Hardisty Ave., Cincinnati, O. Jaquelin Erasmus Taylor 1315 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va. Warner Gibson Taylor, Jr Netcong, N. J. Wilham Robinson Taylor 34 Cliff St., New York City John Pembcrton Thatcher Newland Heights, Reno, Nev. Lyle Thoburn 86 Tyler Ave., Highland Pk., Detroit, Mich. William Richards Thomas, III 501 Pine St., Catasauqua, Pa. Irwin William Thompson 91 Jewett Pkway, Buffalo, N. Y. James Harrison Wilson Thompson 32.0 Broadway, New York City John Wallace Thompson, Jr 14 Fisher PI., Trenton, N. J. Gerrish Thurber 48 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N. J. Charles Humbert Tinsman ist Nat ' l. Bank, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Whitman Tobin lyz W. State St., Trenton, N.J. James Huntington Tomlinson Woodbury, Conn. John Moore Trout 51 Court St., New Bedford, Mass. William Fowler VanDeventer r38 Ayerigg Ave., Passaic, N. J. Edward Bogart Vandyck 3 Boyd Ave., Jersey City, N. J. John William Van Ryn 174 N. Munn Ave., E. Orange, N. J. Henry O. Von Deilen 168 South St., Morristown, N. J. Louis Bradford Von Weise, Jr 8 Lenox PI., St. Louis, Mo. Jack Landon Voss 837 S. nth St., Newark, N. J. Robert Ehlers Waite 154 Clay Ave., Rosette Pk., N. J. Henry Mecklenburg Walker, Jr. . .Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago, 111. William Murphy Walker, Jr 113 S. Water Market, Chicago, 111. Charlton Wallace, Jr 112.3 Luray Ave., W.H., Cincinnati, O. John H. Wallace, Jr 1904 Virginia Ave., Louisville, Ky. Thomas Cushing Wallace 1406 Pennsylvania Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas Ward, II Colonel, loth F.A., Camp Lewis, Wash. Walter Edwards Warner, Jr i Rector St., New York City Shadford Waterhouse P. O. Box 146, Honolulu, Hawaii Henry Scott Waters Swaton, China George Clarke Watson 614 W. 19th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. William Reuben Webster, Jr.. .2.08 Brooklawn Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Paul Charles Weed, Jr Dispatch Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. NAME ADDRESS Frederic G. Weir Hiland Ave., Allison Park, Pa. Richard Rush Weir, Jr 361 Dawson St., Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Smythe Welch 547 Riverside Dr., New York City Edward Randolph Welles 104 Woodside Ave., Trenton, N. J. John Westwood 507 W. iiith St., New York City Thomas Augustine Whelan, III 5 Norwood PI., Baltimore, Md. Washington Stanley Whitaker 1175 Park Ave., New York City Robert White, Jr 160 N. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. Ralph Crawford Whitsett 830 Oakwood Ave., Wilmette, 111. Whiting Willauer 35 W. 96th St., New York City Charles Turner Williams, Jr 102.9 f- P ul St., Baltimore, Md. Francis Randolph Williams Stevenson, Md. John Townsend Williams 484 Lake Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Lewis Whatley Williams 171 W. i2.th St., New York City Raymond Smith Willis, Jr 52.6 Park Ave., E. Orange, N. J. John P. Wilson, Jr 1605 Marquette Bldg., Chicago, 111. John Watt Wilson 345 S. Aiken Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph Marx Wineman,Shorcland Hotel, 5454 S. Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Edward Burdick Wisely 1184 Richmond Terrace, Port Richmond, Staten Island, N. Y. Charles Horner Wisner 19 Badean Ave., Summit, N. J. William Wallace Witherspoon, II, 1114 S.Rock wood St., Spokane, Wash. H. Preston Wolfe Wolfe Bros. Shoe Co., Columbus, O. Albert Zabriskic Foster Wood... 805 S. 6th St., Terre Haute, Ind. William W. Woodward, III 2.8 Linwood Ave., Newton, N. J. Charles Ashley Wright 148 Bartlett Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. John Patterson Wright 12.7 School St., Keene, N. H. Thomas Willbraham Wright, Jr. . . . no Fayette St., Bridgeton, N. Y. Stratton Wynkoop 88 Willett St., Albany, N. Y. Charles Woodruff Yost 511 Washington St., Watertown, N. Y. Andrew Brodbeck Young. . .1838-40 N. 19th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Percy Sacret Young, Jr 830 Lake St., Newark, N. J. Wilberforce Hurlbut Young, Jr.. . .6 Highland Ave., Montclair, N. J. William Paul Youngs 456 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Raymond Zellcr Glen Byron Ave., S., Nyack, N. Y. 80 f I I ' I I I I I I I ' I I I I ' II I I I I I I I I M I I i 1 I I II M I 19281 ■l i 1778 1, 1 i .1 I . ' ' t ' ' I M It t r II [ ' I II M I ! II It I 1 [ J 1928 r m Class Officers 1926-1927 1919 Joseph Very Quarles, Jr President James Carey Vice-President Latimer Small Stewart . Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Lawrence Foster Davis President William Watts Cochran .... Vice-President Joseph Very Quarles, Jr. . . Secretary-Treasurer I 83 Class of 1929 NAME ADDRESS John Milton Adams La Moure County, La Moure, N. Dak. Paul R. Adams 17 South Catherine Ave., La Grange, 111. Charles Klemm Agle 806 N. Main St., Bloomington, 111. Alexander John Alexander, Jr Spring Station, Ky. Henry Bruce Alexander 184 Hamilton Ave., Jersey City, N. J. William Fontaine Alexander 1175 Park Ave., New York City Jefferson Alison, Jr Abeles Apts., Little Rock, Ark. Frederick Simeon Allen 4 West Street, Fair Haven, Vt. Nicholas Eugene Allen iiS Fairview Ave., Decatur, Ga. John Lamont Alley 2.61 Broadway, New York City Jacob Sotter Ancona 175 N. Hanover St., Pottstown, Pa. John Angus, Jr 5318 Kimbark Ave., Chicago, 111. Kenneth Brooks Appel 16 Roosevelt Ave., East Orange, N. J. Thomas Watson Armitage 987 Madison Ave., New York City John Eldred Armstrong. .1119 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Ind. Charles Emile Arnt 1305 Washington St., Michigan City, Ind. William Park Armstrong 74 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. Edwin Maurice Ashcraft, III....1144 Asbury Ave., Evanston, 111. Frank Melville Ashley 1119 Pennsylvania St., Denver, Colo. David Wilson Auld 1403 31st St., Washington, D. C. George Sammis Babcock 1004 10th St., Rock Island, 111. Allen Earnshaw Bachman 135 E. Houstanic St., Pittsfield, Mass. Francis Foulke Bacon 6705 Springbank Lane, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Theodore Charles Baer 504 Roxbury Drive, Beverly Hills, Cal. George O ' Bryan Bailey... U. S. Court House, Washington, D. C. William Hogg Baker, Jr Acme Cement Co., Catskill, N. Y. Truman Harris Baldwin 191 DePew Ave., Nyack, N. Y. Frederick William Ball, Jr 548 Parker St., Newark, N. J. John Boyd Ballantine 360 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N J. William Sylverter Ballenger, Jr 914 Church St., Flint, Mich. Clinton Chesterman Balmer. . . .Monmouth Hills Club, Highlands, N.J. Homes Bannard 150 East 7ind St., New York City Robert Phelps Barden 430 W. ii6th St., New York City George Barker, Jr 565 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Vail Guthrie Barnes 115 Stuyvesant Place, New Brighton, Long Island, N. Y. Lincoln Kinnear Barnett 800 Riverside Drive, New York City Erik Barnouw 39 Clarcmont Ave. , New York City Ralph Detnick Bartlett Short Hills, N. J. Frederic Fox La Costc Bartrop 199 Broadway, New York City Earle Eugene Baruch 519 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. George Pomeroy Bassett, III Oliver Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Norrie Philip Bastedo 33 East 68th St., New York City Chester Baylis,Jr WhiteMeadow Ave., Rockaway, N. J John Ferguson Beaird 916 East Main, Olney, 111 Jacob Dyneley Beam 51 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J Warren Franklin Beasley Kenvil, N. J Rosslyn Thomas Beatty 2.60 Ravine Drive, Highland Park, N.J Norman John Beaudrias 313 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y John Austin Becker, Jr 340 State St., Albany, N. Y William C. Beddoe Old Lancaster Road, Devon, Pa Edward Albert Bellingrath 1305 State St., Little Rock, Ark Cooper Procter Benedict Pleasant Ridge, Cincinnati, O, James Steele Benn, Jr 1503 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa Robert Wilson Bennett z68 Highland Ave., Orange, N. J Richard Bernheim Ferry St. and Willow Ave., Hoboken, N.J William Emile Bessire 1564 Cherokee Road, Louisville, Ky Blair Birdsall 74 S. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J Edward Gustave Bischoff z Forest Ridge, St. Louis, Mo Henry Elwell Bixler Ponte Nova, Bahia, Brazi Benson Blake, III 301 EdgevaleRd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md Gerald Geoffrey Blanchard 416 W. liznd St., New York City Joseph Edwin Blanton 185 1 Irving St., N.W., Washington, D. C Thomas Moffat Block Pleasant Valley, Wheeling, W. Va Peter Roseberry Blynn Ambler, Pa Warren HoUis Bodman Eagle Road, Wayne, Pa Arthur Bradley Borden 90 Worth St., New York City Otis Boehmer Bosworth 766 Gaylord St., Denver, Colo Clagett Bowie 1733 Church St., Washington, D. C Ingram Fletcher Boyd, Jr 6565 EUenwood Ave., St. Louis, Mo William Rufus Boyd, III 150 Park Ave., New York City Frank Hixon Bradbury. .. .141 Pennsylvania Ave., Louisville, Ky. Grenville Davies Braman, Jr. Harvard Club, 17 W. 44th St., New York City Henry Keasbey Bramhall 61 Worth St., New York City John George Breck 116 So. Parsons Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Carl Breuer Locust Valley, Long Island, N. Y. William Laurence Broad 815 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Charles Dingman Broadhead 134 Maple Ave., Kingston, Pa. Charles Sawyer Bromley, Jr. 615 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Martin George Bross 15 Maples Place, Newark, N. J. Alexander Shute Brown 347 Madison Ave. , New York City Eli Huston Brown, III... 1418 Saint James Court, Louisville, Ky. George Edward Buckbee, Jr. . .1941 Grand Concourse, New York City 84 I Class of 1929— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Henry Thomas Bunn.Jr 1301 Madison Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Francis Scverson Burgess 149 Broadway, New York City David Burnham 536 Roslyn Road, Kennilworth, 111. John Humbird Burr 943 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Noel Fairchild Busch iii East 71st St., New York City Charles Edgar Buschmann 1317 Central Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Charles Edward Butterfield 14 Conewangs Place, Warren, Pa. Russel Von Lehn Buxton Elizabeth Buxton Hospital, Newport News, Va. Dever Spencer Byard 11 East 68th St., New York City Elliot Cage, Jr 3716 Montrose Blvd., Houston, Tex. Joseph Meek Caldwell 701 Bibb Bldg., Macon, Ga. William Durant Campbell The Plaza, New York City James Carey Short Hills, N. J. James Worthington Carrott 1449 Maine St., Quincy, 111. James Herbert Case, Jr 1331 Evergreen Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Oscar David Cass, III 715 E. 8th Ave., Denver, Colo. William Edward Caveny, Jr 2.08 So. lith St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Scott Chalmers 3400 Drcxel Drive, Dallas, Tex. John Law Chamberlain 47 South Prospect St., Verona, N.J. Edwin Jameson Chambers iii William St., New York City Revcll Mills Chapman 150 Ridge Ave., Winnetka, 111. John Jameson Chickering, Jr 61 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Wilbur James Christenson 9 Mountain Road, Verona, N.J. John Fraser Claggett Knoxville, Md. George Evans Clark 1118 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Charles Cushing Clarke Columbia Hotel, Portland. Me. Alexander Hamilton Cline, III. . . .5117 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Orris Weston Clinger Tidioute, Pa. William Freethy Coan Avenel, N. J. William Earle Cobey 60 West Union St., Frostburg, Md. Homer Pierce Cochran 1341 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N. J. James Blair Cochran 1341 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N.J. William Francis Cochran Woodbrook, Baltimore, Md. William Watts Cochran 38 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. David Clement Colladay. . . .710 Union Trust Bldg., Washington, D. C. Mincurn Post Collins, Jr 16 East 75th St., New York City Franklin Conklin, III 767 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. John Gilbert Copley Lowman, N. Y. Joseph Thomas Cosby Bccchmont Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. Donald Quested Coster 151 West 71st St., New York City Perry Blythe Cott 30 North Ardmore Road, Bexley, O. William Deshler Cox 1519 Astor St., Chicago, III. NAME ADDRESS Walter Henry Cox, Jr 19 Maple Ave., Sharon Hill, Pa. John Swift Coxe, Jr 630 Idlewild Park, Birmingham, Ala. Ernest Chester Crabb 38 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Hardin Craig, Jr 1015 Woodlawn, Iowa City, la. Alfred Cramer iii North 5th St., Camden, N. J. William Barron Crawford,Jr 1608 Atlantic Ave., Savannah, Ga. Carson Osborne Crocker. .. .12. E. imd St., Whitestone, L. I., N. Y. William Elroy Curtis 4 Halsey Place, South Orange, N. J. John McGlincey Dalenz 300 West End Road, South Orange, N. J. John Alden Register Dalley Haverford, Pa. Carl Longstreet Darnell 131 Highbrook Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Lawrence Foster Davis 117 N. Clinton St., Olcan, N. Y. Price Monroe Day 6119 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, III. John Alden Degen, Jr 77 Waban Hill Road, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Henry Leon de Give, Jr 68 Peachtree Circle, Atlanta, Ga. John English Deitrick 41 Main St., Watsontown, Pa. William Ferguson Deknatel 110 So. Spring Ave., La Grange, 111. Roger Barton Derby 1015 Carrollton Ave., New Orleans, La. Robert Morgan Deuel. . . 15 Mountain Ave., Maplcwood, N. J. Albert Richard Diebold 2.47 Park Ave., New York City Isaac Henry Dixon Cliffhurst, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. George Whitfield Dodge Napoleonville, La. Isaac Doughten, III 2.40 West Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Alexis Felix duPont, Jr P. O. Box 31, Wilmington, Del. Edward duPont P. O. Box 683, Wilmington, Del. William Mairs Duryea 15 E. 58th St., New York City Gordon Bisland Duval 52.5 Arlington Place, Chicago, 111. William Van Gelder Eakins 38 Oakwood Ave., Arlington, N. J. Charles Henry Ebbets, Jr 2.49 Sterling St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Theodore Engle Eckfeldt 8011 St. Martin ' s Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Curtis Amerman Edwards, c o First National Bank, Nogales, Ariz. David Farragut Edwards, Jr i Exchange Place, Jersey City, N. J. Frederick Harold Edwards 19 Mill St., Binghamton, N. Y. Robert Howard Eisenbrey, Jr College Ave., Haverford, Pa. Joseph Parker Ekings, Jr 16 Center St., Chatham, N. J. Louis Peale Elliott 2JD3 South I2.th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Fred Charles Ellis 693 Marutla Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. William Elmer, Jr., 7835 Winston Road, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Winston Elting 134 South La Salle St., Chicago, III. Frank Fairman Embick 162.0 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. James Thomas Emert 552.1 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 85 Class of 1929— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Edward Wilder Emery 184 Kenilworth Ave., Elmhurst, 111. Stephen Emery 301 Meadow Lane, Sewickley, Pa. Samuel Emlen, III. . . ,94} E. Haines St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Oscar Erlandsen, Jr 175-19 Devonshire Road, Jamaica, N. Y. Daniel Evans, Jr 60 Pleasant Ave., Montclair, N. J. Henry Brown Falke 1762.7 Hilliard Road, Lakewood, O. John Richardson Fanshawe Cooperstown, N. Y. Mortimer Feldman Kingston, N. J. Elmer Jarvis Finley 50 Exeter St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Frederick Schilling Fisher, Jr }i Nassau St., New York City Howard Slueve Fisher, Jr i}6 Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. John Milligan Fisher 4 Colonial Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. George A. Flanagan, Jr 75 Renshaw Ave., East Orange, N. J. Norman Farrand Flowers xii Dwight Bldg., Jackson, Mich. Carleton Ross Ford Dupont Hotel, Wilmington, Del. William Holmes Forsyth, Jr 942. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. John Leo Fortune, Jr 1451 Astor St., Chicago, 111. Calvin Pardee Foulke Whitemarsh, Pa. John Jacob Foulkrod, III Lapsley Road, Merion, Pa. Tilbury Ogers Freeman 960 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Leland Frederick Frost 468 Ashland Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Edward Laton Fuller 640 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. John Crawford Fullmer 10 East 32.nd St., New York City Charles Jacob Gable, Jr., ixio Melrose Ave., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. George Gallowhur Scarsdale, N. Y. Robert Lee Garland Bay Ave., Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. Frank Lawrence Garrett Nantungchow, China Hiram Burton Gay, Jr 116 Valley Road, Ardmore, Pa. Robert Logan Gee 1345 Logan St., Denver, Colo. Frederick William George 2.578 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Edward Gerber Route 6, Box 533, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Gibbon 1608 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Donald Ralston Gibbons 1002. River Ave., Belmor, N. J. Edward Trenholm Gieske Paradise, Catonsville, Md. John Orr Giles 4001 Linden Hills Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. George Elliott Gillespie, Jr 79 Cypress St., Brookline, Mass. Charles Hubbard Githler 2.8 East ist St., Coming, N. Y. Philip Henry Glatfelter 831 Walnut St., Columbia, Pa. John Hill Gleason 60 Ramsey Park, Rochester, N. Y. Royal Putnam Goldsbury 808 Park Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Malcolm Goodridge, Jr 34 East 63rd St., New York City McVeigh Goodson 5132. Westminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. Phillips MacEwan Goodwin, Bryant andTooker Ave., Springfield, N.J. John Edward Gore 141 Circuit Road, Winthrop, Mass. Winston Malcolm Gottschalk, 1948 Calvert St., N.W., Washington, D.C. John William Graham, Jr 162.1 Race St., Denver, Colo. William Axcr Graham 4310 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Dalton Knight Gray c o George P. Ide Co., Inc., 5th Ave. and 2.0th St., New York City Bernard de la Gautraie Greeff 2.5 West 90th St., New York City Theron Rhodes Green 6103 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Albert Nicholas Grimingcr, Jr. 15 Governors Road, Sagamore Park, Bronxville, N. Y. Arthur Cragin Gurpure, Jr 30 Broad St., New York City Marc Haas Chatham Hotel, New York City Edward Theodore Haase 3447 Longfellow PI., St. Louis, Mo William Bayley Hackenberg 509 Owen Road, Wynnewood, Pa, Henry Harrison Hadley, Jr 437 Allen St., Syracuse, N. Y Harry Stewart Hadsall iixi E. 49th St., Chicago, 111 John Mclntyre Hadsall iiii E. 49th St., Chicago, 111 Winston Henry Hagen 142. East 68th St., New York City Joseph Thomas Hague, Jr 1163 Clinton PI., Elizabeth, N. J Frecierick Taylor Haines 2.32.2. Ashmead PI., Washington, D. C, John Wilson Haines 132.2. Ashmead PI., Washington, D. C. Charles Carpender Hall 4 Dunstable Road, Cambridge, Mass Edmund Tryon Halsey 12.2.4 Garvin PI., Louisville, Ky Richard Gilmore Hanna. City National Bank Trust Co., Miami, Fla William Henry Hanna, Jr Gillespie Ave., Fair Haven, N. J Harry Hansen 2.55 Garfield Ave., Plainfield, N. J Andrew Bennett Harper, Jr 1 130 Parker Ave. , Detroit, Mich John Herman Hartman L. B. No. 574, Mt. Pleasant, Pa William Wright Harts, Jr Madison, Conn Donald Moore Hazeltine 4935 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, 111 Courtland Hastings 35 Reid Ave., Passaic, N. J Calvin Sutliff Hathaway 2.34 So. list St., Philadelphia, Pa James I. Hauck 2.1 Eastwood St., East Orange, N. J Albert Whitfield Hawkes . . . . 142.1 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa William Thomas Hcaley 2.0 Andrews Drive, Atlanta, Ga Raymond John Healy, Jr Belmont Hotel, Chicago, 111 Philip Hetter 414 Fifth Ave., Belmar, N. J Thomas Waterman Hellyer 42.5 West Ontario St., Chicago, 111 John Brush Hempstead 375 Park Ave., New York City Edward Augustus Henry 740 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Herman August Heydt, Jr i Rector St., New York City Evans Hicks 14 Clifton Ave., Toms River, N. J. 86 I L 1 1 I I I I 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 II M 1 1 II M rr 1778 Class of 1929— (Continued) I NAME ADDRESS Drew Whitalser Hiestand 131} Delancy PI., Philadelphia, Pa. Carl Rogge Hilgenberg li Bishops Road, Baltimore, Md. John Rowland Hill 2.801 Wisconsin Ave., Washington, D. C. Henry Mosser Hippie 101 E. Water St., Lock Haven, Pa. Curtiss Summers Hitchcock Woodbury, Conn. Edward Berry Hocker 39 Portland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Curtis G. Hogan 784 Park Ave., New York City Kenneth Ward Hooker 15 Pine St., New York City Clement Remington Hoopes O. P. Box 831, Wilmington, Del. Charles Harry Howe College Hill, Beaver Falls, Pa. John Joseph Howley 2.41 4th St., Jersey City, N. J. James William Huff 3000 Blaine Ave., Detroit, Mich. Wilmcr Reed HufF 97 Engle St., Englewood, N. J. Bradford Howard Hutchins Essex Road, Waterville, Me. Vernon Kremer Irvine, Jr 439 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa. Albert George Isaacs, Jr 317 Clay Ave., Scranton, Pa. Burton Hart Jackson Round Hill Road, Greenwich, Conn. Wendell Ford Jackson 16 Westcott Road, Princeton, N. J. Richard Voorhees Jacobs 109 Midwood St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Melancthon Williams Jacobus, Jr.. .39 Woodland St., Hartford, Conn. Douglas James 2.03 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Carson Fanning Jamieson. . . .1807 Dupont South, Minneapolis, Minn. Stuart Symington Janney,Jr Garrison P. O., Md. Edwin Seton Jarrett, Jr 342. Madison Ave., New York City Edward Leonard Jasper 2.2. DeWitt Road, Elizabeth, N. J. Alfred Jones Jefferis 1603 W. i6th St., Wilmington, Del. Hugh Lea Jenkins 404 So. Crest Road, Chattanooga, Tenn. Richard Stotesbury Jessup 2.7 Cedar St., New York City John Berlin Johnson 334 W. 34th St., New York City Wilson Tompkins Johnston. . . .169 Prospect Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Vanderburgh Johnstone. .. .703 S. Pasadena Ave., Pasadena, Cal. Alexander Murdock Jones 5519 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Graham Jones 998 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn. John George Jones 2.16 East 37th St., New York City Elisha Havens Kahlo .2.14 Board of Trade Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. Joseph Kahrs, Jr 810 Broad St., Newark, N. J. George Gibbs Kane, Jr 11 Charles St., New York City Kennard Garton Keen,Jr 12.5 Thompson Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Bruce Kelham 98 Sea ClifF Ave., San Francisco, Cal, William CroU Keller 2.2.2.5 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Franklin Burton Kellogg Summit, N. J. Louis Franklin Kemp 89 Station Road, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. David O ' D. Kennedy 2.50 West 57th St., New York City Francis Patrick Kennedy 464 Hudson Ave., Newark, N. J. William Harrison Kennedy. . . .3841 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind. Richard Barrelle Kenyon Smithtown Branch, L. I., N. Y. John BrinckerofT Kerr 5 Nassau St., New York City Thomas Bakewell Kerr 41 Broadway, New York City Edwin Otto Kindler 66 East 190th St., New York City Frederick Hutchinson Kingsbury, Jr. . .80 Plymouth St., Montclair, N.J Ransford Edgar Kirk, Jr 65 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J Robert Willstetter Kirkman 176 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J William Jefferson Kitchell . . x Grace Court, Brooklyn Heights, N. Y Herbert Francis Kleinhans 582. Parker St., Newark, N. J Alfred George Kling 192.0 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, III Howard Summers Kniffin, Jr The Mall, Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y Henry Koch 2.85 Central Park West, New York City James Brainerd Kremer, III 18 Plymouth St., Montclair, N. J Walter Gabriel Kuser Fernbrook, Bordentown, N. J Alan Weaver Laidlaw 490 West End Ave., New York City Alvah Howard Lance Glen Gardner, N. J Garland Miller Lasatcr Falfurrias, Texas Fred Lavis 44 Greenacres Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y Thomas Newman Lawler, .z8o Van Cortland Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y James Freeman Lawrence 13 14 Denmark Road, Plainfield, N. J Thomas Davis Lee Graceland, Elkins, W. Va Thomas James Lee, Jr 317 South Center St., Philipsburg, Pa Vernon Arthur Lee 52. Oakland Road, Maplewood, N. J John Everett Lerch 1017 Grand View Blvd., Sioux City, la John Kenneth Leslie 514 Gardner Ave., Trenton, N. J Cyril Edward Levinstein 119 Tremont Ave., Greensburg, Pa Arthur Blanchard Lewis 311 Rutter Ave., Kingston, Pa David Frazer Lewis 1365 North Ave., Elizabeth, N. J Joseph Stoner Lichty The Sanitarium, Clifton Springs, N. Y Frederick John Lind 2.847 Webb Ave., New York City William Becker Lippmon. . . .14 Hollywood Ave., East Orange, N. J John Griswold Livingston, Jr Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y Charles Lockhart 5601 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa, Justice Lockwood 147 Summit Ave., Buffalo, N. Y, Henry Alfred Loeb 61 Broadway, New York City Tracy Harrison Logan Huchow, Chekiang, China John Edward Long 1009 Park Ave., New York City Silvis Henry Lopez Apartado 56, Delicias, Oriente, Cuba Harry Louderbough Old Smith Road, Tenally, N. J. Paul Van Derveer Love 51 Second Ave., Little Falls, N. J. Thomas Sherick Lovering 12.2.1 Lincoln Ave., Toledo, O. 87 Class of 1929— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Meritt Bu rnham Low 46 Park St., Bordentown, N. J. John B. Lucke 845 West End Ave, New York City William Guillaudeu Luqueer Short Hills, N. J. Irving Willits McCaskey, Duquesne Way and Sixth St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Kendall McConnell. . . .8410 iiith St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Robert Joseph McDonald 2.44 Austin St., West Newton, Mass. Christopher Bouton McDougal. . . .4804 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. Charles Lee Mcllvaine 191 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Nilson Wright MacKie 511 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Walter Field McLallen, Jr 939 Sheridan Road, Evanston, 111. Marshall Mead MacLeod Old Bennington, Vt. John Sullivan McMillan 4614 Maryland Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Samuel Sterling McMillan 1061 East 96th St. , Cleveland, O. Robert Charles McNamura, Jr 6135 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. John Cloud McPherson Short Hills, N. J. Francis Smiley McQuilkin 416 Washington Ave., Carnegie, Pa. Colin MacRoe 75 South 3rd St., Wilmington, N. C. Charles David McWilliams Dwight, 111. Udolpho Snead Macdonald 15 Highland Ave., Montclair, N. J. Arthur Joseph Mackey 491 East 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Bruce Weston Macomber Harry William Maescher 4 Jordan Lane, Cincinnati, O. Frederick Rogers Mangold 610 Vine St., Denver, Colo. Vernon Kenneth Mangold 54 ' E. Pittsburgh St., Greensburg, Pa. Donald Archibald Manly-Power 157 Carpenter Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Gordon Parker Manning 431 N. Linden Ave., Highland Park, 111. Charles Francis Mapes loo Grand St., Newburgh, N. Y. Clifford Herbert Marcus 15 Stanley St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Spencer Scott Marsh, Jr Midwood Terrace, Madison, N. J. William Frayer Paul Marshall, III Park Drive North, Westchester Biltmore, Rye, N. Y. Oscar Thaddeus Martin 1115 East High St., Springfield, O. Thomas Anderson Matthews. .. .709 East High St., Springfield, O. Brantz Mayor 2.80 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Horace Gilman Meeker 117 Clark St., Glen Ridge, N. J. Robert Mellis 341 Washington Ave., Belleville, N. J. Francis Patrick Mellon N. American Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Deane Whitney Merrill 9 Hawthorne Ave. , East Orange, N. J. James Joseph Miksak iioi Lafleir St., Chicago, 111. Oliver Earl Miles 440 35th St., Bellairc, O. Arthur Middleton Miller Winthrop, la. Donald Hope Miller 347 Massachusetts Ave., Lexington, Mass. NAME ADDRESS John Clark Miller 106 Avon Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. McKnight Miller 6 Ormsby Place, Louisville, Ky. Walter Henry Miller, Jr Fountain Ave. , Glendale, O. William Peoples Miller 43 Beard Ave., Buffalo, N Y. William Starr Mitchell, Jr 1404 Scott St., Little Rock, Ark. James Andrew Moffett 131 East 71st St., New York City Harvey Edward Niole, Jr Rowan Road, Summit, N. J. J. Raburn Monroe 1414 Louisiana Ave., New Orleans, La. Robert Shaw Montgomery 385 Madison Ave., New York City Hubert Moore, Jr 630 Grove St., Sewickley, Pa. John James Moore 156 Lincoln Drive, Glencoe, 111. Evans Gates Morgan 31 High St. , Mystic, Conn. Logan Muldrup Morrill 914 Provident Bank Bldg., Cincinnati, O. Willard Frank Morris. . . .1416 N. Commonwealth Ave., Columbus, O. Dudley Butler Morrison 1330 Virginia St., Charleston, W. Va. Maxey Neal Morrison 501 Grove, Jenkintown, Pa. William Dudley Foulke Morrison. .1431 N. State Parkway, Chicago, III. Ralph Norman Mould 304 Peebles St., Sewickley, Pa. John Mulford 41 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. Judson Carpenter Murphy 1199 Hillcrest Ave., Pasadena, Cal. William Kmg Murray 5 South 15th St., Flushing, N. Y. J. Edward Studley Myers. . . .House K, U.S. Navy Yard, Brooklyn, N. Y. Royal Elting Mygatt 74 Broadway, New York City Graham Nash Westport, Essex Co., N. Y. Philip Wallace Nash 6i2. West 8th St., Plainfield, N. J. Charles Robert Neidlinger, Jr Alpine, N. J. Abram Nesbitt, II 182. N. Maple Ave., Kingston, Pa. M. Edgerton Newcomb, Jr 530 Elm St., Westfield, N. J. Warden John Newell P. O. Box 1103, Fort Pierce, Fla. George Andrew Newton, Jr. . .313 N. Audubon Road, Indianapolis, Ind. Edward Mithoff Nicholas 10 East Broad St., Columbus, O. Newton Smith Noble, Jr 1314 Medina Road, Akron, ' O. John Cecil Norman 1504 Third St., Louisville, Ky. Frank Callan Norris 5181 Westminster Place, St. Louis, Mo. Daniel O ' Day Sunset Lane, Rye, N. Y. Benjamin Barker Odell 2.91 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y. Mahlon Dickerson Ogden, Jr 1000 Main St., Little Rock, Ark. Richardson Brognard Okie 586 Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Philip John O ' Neil 3548 Franklin Blvd., Chicago, 111. Aimer Hamilton Orr, Jr 5708 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Norman Harlow Ott 52.3 Wahl Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Benjamin Page, Jr 3 Colonial Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. Francis Morgan Palmer King St., Port Chester, N. Y. 88 Class of 1929— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS James Margerum Pardoe P. O. Box 184, Lawrenccvillc, N. J. Hall Clarke Park 72.3 Ridgcway Ave., Cincinnati, O. William Reed Parker, Jr xoo Merion Ave., Narberth, Pa. James Scott Parrish, Jr. . .815 Amer. Nat ' l Bank BIdg., Richmond, Va. John Ennals Parrott Dixon Ave., Dayton, O. Benjamin Charles Patt 309 E. Washington St., Goshen, Ind. William Allen Patty 403 W. Fourth St., Greenville, O. Kendall Saxman Paul 480 Walnut St., Elizabeth, N.J. Robert Copcland Paul Watertown, Fla. Alan Horstmann Pendlebury i8 Franklin Place, Kearny, N. J. Samuel Wesley Perry, Jr 117 E. North St., New Castle, Pa. Edward Vanderlin Peters 109 W. Second St., Oil City, Pa. Roy Gerald Peterson 3416 Fillmore St., Denver, Colo. Paul Harrison Pierce California Road, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Courtnay Hamilton Pitt. 156 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. Frederick Rhodes Pleasants 483 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. Victor Henry Polachek.Jr 334 West End Ave., New York City William Raddin Pond, Jr 139 Grove St., Rutland, Vt. Bcvle Emmett Poste Seneca Hotel, Columbus, O. Horace G. Powell Box 141, Wyncote, Pa, Seymour Stotler Preston, Jr 193 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Frederick Walker Prichard ,. . . 1105 Quarrier St., Charleston, W. Va. William Turk Priestley, Jr 740 Riverside Drive, New York City Harold Richard Prowell 417 S. Front St., Steelton, Pa. Joseph Very Quarles, Jr 490 Broadway, Milwaukee, Wis. Marion Hardie Raney 114 South 62.nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Hurst Rankin 607 West End Ave., New York City Clifton Rodes Read Commodore Hotel, St. Paul, Minn. Donald Nearing Read 4015 1,57th St., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. George Paul Reichel, Jr 3415 Coleman Road, Kansas City, Mo. Carl Frederick Reidemeister Woodland St., Englewood, N. J. Joseph Donald Reifsnyder 601 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa, Dermot Cox Reilly 55 North Pine Ave,, Albany, N, Y. Howard Burt Reitcr Sayre Park, Bethlehem, Pa, John Meeth Requardt, Jr 3507 N, Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Edwin Sanderson Reynolds 519 E, Walnut St,, Springfield, Mo, Welden Owen Reynolds 308 N, Michigan Ave,, Chicago, III. John Rial 52.8 Hqrrison Ave., Greensburg, Pa, Edward Winstow Rice, . ,141 N, Mountain Ave,, Upper Montclair, N.J, John MacLaren Richardson 1016 Norman St., Bridgeport, Conn. James Theodore Rickard Andover, Mass. William C. Ridgway, Jr.. Hotel Earle, Waverly PL, New York City Howard Radclyffe Roberts, Jr Villa Nova, Pa. Laurance Page Roberts. .. Belmont Ave, and City Line, Bala, Pa. Douglas Martin Robertson Palisade Ave,, Dobbs Ferry, N, Y, Francis Waring Robinson Hotchkiss School, Lakeville, Conn, Robert Emmett Robinson, Jr 15 Park Ave,, New York City William Emmett Robinson 6446 Sherwood Road, Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa, John Davison Rockefeller, III 10 West 54th St., New York City Talbot Mercer Rogers Buck Lane, Haverford, Pa John Eraser Roos 491 Hawthorne Lane, Winnetka, III John Evans Rose Bank St., Sewickley, Pa Thomas Ryder Rudel 137 McGill St., Montreal, Can Raymond Arnold Ruge Lake Mahopac, N. Y George Francis Ryan 635 Park Ave., New York City Edward Laurence Sawyer 33 Russell St., Milton, Mass Robert Franklin Schermerhorn 1701 Mt. Curve Ave., Minneapolis, Minn Annold Leopold Scheuer, Jr i East 80th St., New York City Carl Higbee Schlapp, Jr 16 Algonquin Lane, Webster Groves, Mo George August Schmidt, Jr 2.80 Riverside Drive, New York City George Henry Schulz 6106 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, III Frederick Weeks Schumann. . . .2.6 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N. J Bailey Bartlett Scott 42.0 Hillside Place, South Orange, N. J Corwin Spencer Scott 1136 Denmark Road, Plainfteld, N. J Walter Reisinger Scott 5409 Harrison St., Kansas City, Mo John William Scribner 82. Ward St., Paterson, N. J Herbert Hedrick Scay 6190 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo Lawrence Sutton Semans 2.9 W. Berkeley St., Uniontown, Pa, Anthony Joseph Sessa 8501 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn, N. Y Herbert Bradley Sexton, Jr 119 Union St., Montcliar, N. J Augustus T. Seymour, II 141 Parkwood Ave., Columbus, O, Francis Guernsey Shepard. . . .}i Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass Charles Wilkinson Sheppard 177 Park Ave., New York City John Rutherford Sheppard, Jr 155 Riverside Drive, New York City Benjamin Howe Shoemaker Route No. 9, Bridgeton, N. J Arthur Mitchell Shumate 502.6 Cedar Ave., Philadelphia, Pa Roger Day Sidford 17 Roosevelt Road, Maplewood, N. J John A, Bell Simpson 518 Jenkins Bldg,, Pittsburgh, Pa James William Simpson 518 Jenkins Arcade, Pittsburgh, Pa John DeWinne Singley, Jr 812. N, Hiland Ave,, Pittsburgh, Pa William Bouet Sloan Province Line Rd., Princeton, N, J William Milligan Sloane, III. .335 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, Cal Leslie Winfield Sloat 2.41 Broadway, Monticello, N. Y Chester Pope Smith 115 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y II I I I I II II III 19281 7 Class of 1929— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Datus C. Smith, Jr 487 W. California St., Pasadena, Cal. Fred Louis Smith, Jr 3451 Iroquois Ave., Detroit, Mich. Rufus Gaylord Smith Puliis Ave., Bayside, L. I., N. Y. Lolbert C. Smith 8io Penn St., Ft. Worth, Tex. George Marion Snellings, Jr roc De Siard St., Monroe, La. James McCl elland Snowden Rosemont, Pa. Hugh MacLellan Southgate, Jr. 5800 Connecticut Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. Harold Love Springer, Jr 1013 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. William Daniel Staples ... Amer. Nat ' l Bank Bldg., Roanoke, Va. Christo George Starche 149 Broadway, New York City Theodore Ducoing Starr, Jr. 313 Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.. John Henry Stauffer 406 Clay Ave., Jeannette, Pa. Sherwood Reed Steadman 1117 Iglehart Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Charles Durels Stengel 758 Parker St., Newark, N. J. John Stevens 30 Colony St., Meriden, Conn. John Booth Stevens 564 W. Monroe St., Chicago, III. John Henry Stevens 1411 Astor St., Chicago, III. John Richard Steves 31 Doremns Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. John Stewardson 1013 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Gilbert Stewart Shore Road, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Latimer Small Stewart Eccleston Station, Baltimore Co., Md. John Wight Stinson 2.14 Wendover Rd., Baltimore, Md. John Andrew Stobbc 654 East z}rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frederick Lacey Stout, Jr 601 Union Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Hans Adrian Strasser 115 Beech St., Arlington, N. J. Harry Anton Strauss Box 37, Crewe, Va. Frederick Goodrich Street, Jr. . .50 Carnegie Ave., East Orange, N. J. Carleton Morse Strouss 107 W. 3rd St., Mt. Carmel, Pa. Philip Henry Strubing, II 81 15 St. Martins Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Deford Swann 908 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. James Marvin Swartz Brule, Wis. Thomas Henry Swift i Park Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. David Watson Taylor, Jr. . .1813 19th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. George Krementz Taylor 64 Wall St., New York City Reginald Lapham Taylor. . . .509 State Mutual Bldg., Worcester, Mass. John Edgar Thiele 48 Burnet St., Maplewood, N. J. John Samuel Thomas 41 Morton Place, East Orange, N. J. Charles Lewis Thompson 4947 McPherson Ave., St. Louis, Mo. James MacNaughton Thompson iir Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y. Leopold Edward Thron 19 Berkeley Place, Bloomfield, N. J. Roger Bliss Thurber Quarters ' M, ' Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. NAME ADDRESS John Lackey Tincher, III First National Bank, Danville, III. Grant Titsworth 667 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Samuel Stokes Truitt 738 Westview St., Gcnnantown, Pa. Horace Hatch Tucker 9 Prospect Terrace, Montclair, N. J. Albert William Turnbull 914 Colonial Ave., Norfolk, Va. John Poe Tyler Panama City, Fla. Talbot Uehlinger 615 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. James Ramsey Oilman 115 West 76th St., New York City Furman Titus Updike Quaker Road, Princeton, N. J. Jack Urquhart 1317 N. Franklin St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Gerhard Peter Van Arkel 17 Grove St., Haddonfield, N. J. Andrew Van Blarcom, Jr 530 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. Eugene Vanderpool 86 Miller Road, Morriston, N. J. Joseph Henry Van Dyke i. Palisade Blvd., Palisades Park, N. J. Charles Pool Van Gelder 1403 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. John Stuart Vhay Box 318, Santa Barbara, Cal. Joseph Keeves Wainwright Chest Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Ross Frazer Wall 467 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa. Freeman Faulds Wallin 162. Locust Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Josiah Kendall Wallis. . . . Annandale, King Rd., Malvern, Pa. John Hugh Wanner Fleetwood, Pa. Ernest Leslie Ward, Jr 11 Chestnut St., East Orange, N. J. Paul Lessig Wardenburg 2.406 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Donald Preater Warrin...ii Duryea Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. John Dorrance Warriner 2.50 S. i8th St., Philadelphia, Pa. John T. Waterhouse . . . 1944 Keeanmoku St., Honolulu, Hawaii David Guerin Watkins, II 12.1 E. Bertsch St., Lansford, Pa. Charles Gordon Weatherley. . . 17 Winchester St., Brookline, Mass. Dudley Edson Webster i Park Ave., New York City James Carson Webster Greene Co., Clifton, O. Goodwin Gabriel Weinberg 152.4 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold Bertrand Wells, Jr loi Farnsworth Ave., Bordentown, N. J. Theodore Arthur Wells 52.4 Omaha Nat ' l Bank, Omaha, Nebr. John Albert Welsh 350 Manhattan, New York City David Edward Wesselmann 3708 Carson Ave., Cincinnati, O. William Ireland Wcstcott 18 Fithian Ave.. Merchantville, N.J. Jewett White 46 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Clarence Asa Whitehouse, Jr 1400 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Donald Newton Wilber 39 South La Salle St., Chicago, III. Charles Townsend Wilder 42-3 N- Weber, Colorado Springs, Colo. Walter Beebe Wilder 11 Beechwood Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Thomas Warren Willard 410 Riverside Drive, New York City 90 i Class of 1929— (Continued) KAMB ADDKBSS Arthur Osborne Willauer Box 119, Vineyard Haven, Mass Joseph Currier Willey 6516 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa Charles Henry Williams, Jr 945 Berkeley Ave., Trenton, N. J John Frederick Williams 169 Clinton Ave., Jerxey City, N. J Robert Dwight Williams Ridge Road, Ridgewood, N. J Robert Martin Williams, Jr 1019 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa MerriltNoxon Willits, III. .12.1 W. Phila.-Ellena St., Philadelphia, Pa Bruce F. Wilson i}53 4th Ave., Louisville, Ky Gaines Roberts Wilson 481 N. E. 30th Terrace, Miami, Fla Williamson Wilson 186 Hey wood Ave., Orange, N. J Bretaigne Windust 1115 Madison Ave., New York City James Davis Winsor, III Wendover Ave., Rosemont, Pa Richard H. Wise 418 Washington St., Watertown, N. Y John Witherspoon 61 Chestnut St., Englcwood, N. J Edward Ogden Wittmer Bohack Co., Southampton, L. I., N. Y George Torrey Wofford, Jr Wofford Bros., Johnson City, Tenn Charles Francis Wood, Jr 1453 3rd Ave., Louisville, Ky Robert Latheson Wood 119 E. 71st St., New York City John Augustus Woolley 1309 Rodney St., Wilmington, Del. Edward Wright Wortton 319 Lexington Ave., New York City Richard Edward Wormser 514 West End Ave., New York City William Booker Worthen 704 West ind St., Little Rock, Ark. Fulton Watkins Wright 3518 Hill Road, Little Rock, Ark. Rodney Stuart Young 786 Broad St., Newark, N. J. Rolt Zimmermann 38 Schcerer Ave., Newark, N. J. 91 r ' . wrssiac ' ■ ' ■■ i I I N I I I I 1 1 I I 1 1 11 1 I 1 1 I I 1 I I I I I r cj 7 1928 i Class of 1930 OFFICERS, 1916-19x7 The Class of 1930 did not elect officers for the first term of Freshman year. The Senior Council, feeling that more time should be given the men to get acquainted, followed the plan of last year and appointed a committee to oversee the class until the second term, when regular elections will be held. This committee consists of: Richard Baldwin, ' zy, Chairman; Rembert Watson LaBeaume, ' 17; William Roberts Howell, ' 2.7. i 93 I [ I I 1 1 II n n II M 1 1 I I I I : 7 1928 Class of 19 SO NAME ADDRESS Edwin Griggs Adams, Jr 410 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N.J. Warren Sanford Adams 13 Rogers St., Newton, Mass. Bradbury Cilley Alder. .. .1304 Aldrich Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. George Donald Aldrich 171 N. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. Archibald Gillespie Alexander. . . i West 7id St., New York, N. Y. Charles Butler Alexander, Jr 106 Charlecote Rd., Baltimore, Md. Maitland Alexander, Jr 910 Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. James Moorehead Alison 131 West 8th St., Bayonne, N. Y. Thomas Price Alsop Peacock Inn, Princeton, N. J. Sterling Horn Anders 1411 Euclid Ave., Philadelphia, Penna. Ralph Waldo Applegate x54o Quincey St., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Willard Atherton 315 Colfax Ave., Scranton, Penna. Gordon Atkins 1414 Caton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. George Austen, Jr Rugby Rd., University, Virginia John Delong Austin 110 Glen St., Glens Falls, N. Y. Gordon Henry Babcock 6673 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, CaJ. Clyde Tunnell Bailey, Jr 1019 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago, 111. Frank Disston Bain 42.2. W. Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill, Penna. Charles Norwood Baker Lowendesville, S. C. John William Bambey 41 Bedford Park Blvd., New York, N. Y. William Denham Barfield 154 S. Seminole Rd., Jacksonville, Fla. William Allmond Barr 1412. Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. Leonard Rutledge Barrett 377Tillon Rd., South Orange, N.J. Charles Marshall Barton, Jr 107 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Charles Bickley Baton 3I6 S. Graham St., Pittsburgh, Penna. William Callanan Battin 116 E. First St., Corning, N. Y. John Leopold Jurgens Bauer. . .984 Bushwick Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Norman Frederick Beach.... 165 Speedwell Ave., Morristown, N. J. Thomas Graham Beaham .... 102.5 West 54th St., Kansas City, Mo. Richard Scott Bear 301 S. Fifth St., Miamisburg, O. Franklin Beardsley 100 State St., Albany, N. Y. Erwin Russell Bock 139 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. George Halsey Beddoe Old Lancaster Rd., Devon, Penna. John Alexander Begg 45 Hastings St., W. Roxbury, Mass. Abraham Merklee Beitler, 2.nd. .6357 Sherwood Rd., Overbrook, Penna. Edwin Willingham Bell, Jr Vernon View, Savannah, Ga. Robert Wheeler Bell 92.9 Sunset St., Scranton, Penna. John Reinhart Bennett 109 Barclay St., Flushing, N. Y. John Connable Bennett 12.0 Broadway, New York, N. Y. George Matthews Benson Wood Path, Highland Park, 111. Russell Weller Benton 175 Woodward Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Edward Julius Berwind, 2.nd, 2.112. Walnut St., Philadelphia, Penna. Bernard William Biedenharn 2.006 Riverside Drive, Monroe, La. NAME ADDRESS Jerome Young Biggs 816 S. Travis St., Sherman, Tex, William Henry i3inns, xnd 47 Charles St., Uniontown, Penna Ginnell Hazard Booth 553 Prospect St., Westfield, N. Y, Robert Wells Bowen 104 S. Oxford St., Atlantic City, N. J, John Mason Bradbury 141 Pennsylvania Ave., Louisville, Ky, Frederick Pomeroy Bradford. .618 Capital Bank Bldg., St. Paul, Minn George Floing Bradshaw 931 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Penna Denny Brereton, Jr Diamond Point, Lake George, N. Y Edgar Brick Crosswick, N. J Scott Robison Bridge no Drury Lane, Troy, O William Theodore Brigham Greenport, Suffolk Co., N. Y Hobart Louis Brinsmadc care of Irving Bank, Woolworth Bldg., New York, N. Y Norris Bartlett Brisco 404 Orchard St., Cranford, N. J Louis Roome Brock 49 Midland Ave., Arlington, N.J Curtis Bush Brooks 100 Government St., Mobile, Ala, John Hubert Brooks, Jr 414 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Penna Edward John Brown 37 Kingsley St., W. Orange, N.J Hiram Staunton Brown, Jr S. Drive, Baltimore, Rye, N. Y Raymond Farrar Brown, Jr., 16 Oakley PI., New Dorp., Staten Is., N. Y Robert Montgomery Brown, 6ii W. Hortler St., Germantown, Penna, Harold George Browne 117 Fenimore St., Brooklyn, N. Y Philip Parker Brownrigg 85 Midland Ave., East Orange, N. J Richard Henry Bruning X33 Stiles St., Elizabeth, N. J Paul Tulane Bruyere, Jr 5459 Cornell Ave., Chicago, 111 William Robert Bryant 135 Arden Park, I3etroit, Mich Walter White Burgess 33 Melrose Place, Montclair, N.J Wallace Martin Burgoyne 579 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J Cornelius Kouwenhaven Buys, Wallace Lodge, Park Hill, Yonkers, N. Y William Cooke Byron 15 Lake View Ave., Newtonville, Mass William Grant Caldwell 650 Main St., New Rochelle, N. Y Bradford Darrach Campbell 567 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N.J Norman Drummond Campbell . . 510 Grove Terrace, South Orange, N. J William Russell Campbell 546 Madison Ave., Elizabeth, N. J William Sprague Candee 1306 Broome St., Wilmington, Del William Ernest Candy 417N. 7th St. , St. Louis, Mo Richard Alden Carey 47 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J Reginald Shober Carey 509 Cathedral St., Baltimore. Md George Guyton Carkener 3677 Belleview Ave., Kansas City, Mo James Carnwath, Jr 8117 Cedar Rd., Elkins Park, Penna Philip R. Carson 3904 Brandt St., Houston, Tex Hugh William Carter x Bridge St., Somerville, N. J Russell Carter, Jr 87 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J I 94 II II 11 I I I I M II iT-n- M C J 7 Class of 1930— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Thomas Thedford Carter Briarcliff Rd., Scarborough, N. Y. James Walker Carty 117 Rockwell Terrace. Frederick, Md. William Galbraith Chaffee 94 rue St. Lazare, Paris, France Douglas Chamberlain Chattanooga, Tenn. Lytle Graeff Chambers. . .188 East 75th St., New York City, N. Y. Wight Nelson Chapin 11 West Ave., Gt. Harrington, Mass. Lindsay Harding Christie 1608 Denniston St., Pittsburgh, Penna. Robert Lang Churchill Ravencroft, Phillipsburg, N. J. Rene Ellison Clark ij6 Highland Terrace, Pitman, N. J. Richard Sherman Clark 2.46 West 5th St., Erie, Penna. William Campbell Clark 1550 East 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Ernst Clemson 6609 Kinsmen Rd., Pittsburgh, Penna. Joseph Edward Coachman, Large da Canoca 9, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil William Charles Colbron East Ave., New Canaan, Conn. Douglas Ford Collins 5 Hortense PI., St. Louis, Mo. Joseph Abilgaard Conklin 117 Park Ave., East Orange, N.J. Bernard Chamberlin Connelly Safety Bldg., Rock Island, III. William Leigh Cook, Jr 544 Elm St., Westfield, N. J. James Welch Cooke Lewis Lane, Ambler, Penna. John Marcy Coon 41 James St., Kingston, Penna. Oakley Stuart Cooper 130 Market St., Amsterdam, N. Y. Robert Corn well i66 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. Henry Andrews Cotton, Jr Station A, Trenton, N. J. John Head Coulter Harrison City Rd., Greensburg, Penna. Albert Covolo 711 Jackson St., West New York, N. J. James Rice Cowden 572.0 State Line, Kansas City, Mo. Elliot Rogers Coyle 6317 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Penna. Frederick Eberhardt Craig.... 50 Olcott Ave., Bernardsville, N. J. Malcolm Ferguson Cravens care of Cravens, Dargan Co., Houston, Tex. Clement Clay Crawford Sea Bright, N. J. Frederick Eaton Crispin 537 E. Front St., Berwick, Penna. John Franklin Critchlow 440 East St., Salt Lake City, Utah William Ellsworth Crouch, Jr 712. 10th Ave., Munhall, Penna. Gerald Malcolm Crowley 51 Lake St., Jersey City, N. J. Albin Pilkington Crutchfield Beaver Rd., Sewickly, Penna. Tilden Cummings 4911 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, 111. John Davidson Curran 1531 State St., Santa Barbara, Calif. Burton Lee Curry 81 Ridgedale Ave., Madison, N.J. Henry Lewis Custer 643 Locust St., Coshocton, O. Gordon Cuyler Princeton, N. J. Edgar Warren Dakin loii Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Winthrop Saltonstall Dakin.. 115 S. Pleasant St., Amherst, Mass. William Fegely Danehower 70th and Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Penna. Albert Harding Davis . .17 East i8th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. James Mercer Davis, Jr 49 Garden St., Mt. Holly, N.J. Shelby Cullom Davis 52.7 Moss Ave., Peoria, III. Richard Delafield 17 East 79th St., New York, N. Y. Sidney Lennon Dewey 1400 Lawndale Rd., Elkhart, Ind. Henry Street Dickerman 1606 Leiand Ave., Springfield, 111. John Stiles Dickerson, Jr Grange Ave., Redbank, N.J. Ernest Rudolph Dikovics . 12.3 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Douglas Eugene Dismukes, Jr., 1006 Clinton St., Philadelphia, Penna. Donald Melick Ditmars 651 Rutherford St., Trenton, N. J. Donald Dodge 42.5 Clapier St., Germantown, Penna. Marcellus Hartley Dodge Madison Ave., Madison, N. J. Brooks Dolan, II Villa Nova, Penna. Lawrence Gerber Dorety 737 Osceola St., St. Paul, Minn. Dallas Webb Dort 102.5 E. Kearsley St., Flint, Mich. James Moffitt Doubleday 2.6 East 73d St., New York, N. Y. Harper Roome Dowell 56 i8th Ave., Paterson, N. J. Andrew Jackson Duncan, III ioi8 East 88th St., Cleveland, O. Harris Ashton Dunn, Jr 138 East 79th St., New York, N. Y. Alfred Rhett duPont Box 683, Wilmington, Del. John Scott Easton, Jr 12.92. Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. Charles Brown Eddy, Jr 765 West 8th St., Plainfield, N. J. Jonathan Edwards 803 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J. John Henry Eisenhart, Jr 2.9 East 33d St., Bayonne, N. J. William Coulter Elliot 317 South 17th St., Philadelphia, Penna. Charles Grant Ellis, Jr 18 Wurts St., Kingston, N. Y. Charles Heywood Ellis 416 Humboldt Pkwy., Buffalo, N. Y. Howard Elting, Jr Ambassador Hotel, N. State St., Chicago, III. VanHorn Ely, Jr Grays Lane, Haverford, Penna. Robert Edwin English 375 Hawtfiornc Lane, Winnetka, 111. Harold Enoch Ensley 112. West 104th St. . New York, N. Y. Chalmers Loucks D. Ensminger 409 W. Market St., York, Penna. Rowland Erving Oak Hill, Amberson Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. Robert Fulton Euwer 12.4 North 2.d St., Jeannette, Penna. Raymond Flaccus Evans, 112.9 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Penna. Reginald Orvis Evans 849 W. Galena St., Butte, Mon. Herbert Henry Faber 2.843 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Endsly Perrine Fairman 501 W. Chelton Ave., Germantown, Pa. Charles Alexander Faris 1611 Twelfth St., Altoona, Penna. Sidney French Farmer 843 4th St., Louisville, Ky. Jack Thcophile Feid....ii Columbia Terrace, Wcchawken, N. J. 95 1T78 n M II II M M II II II II I I I I I I I I I I I I II M II I I II P ■ ' ' ' I ' ' ' I ' 7 1928 Class of 1930— (Continued J NAME ADDRESS Dexter Ferry care of D. M. Ferry Co., Detroit, Mich. Edward Pearsall Field, Jr Chestnut PI., Short Hills, N. J. Eugene Elbridge Fike Confluence, Penna. George Junkin Finney zii Woodland Rd., Roland Pk, Md. David Nichols Fisher 136 Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. William Calden wood Fisher }ii West nth St., Tyrone, Penna. Gilbert Wright Fitzhugh 55 Union St., Ridgewood, N. J. Freeman Footc Old Lyme, Conn. John Forney 616 East }d St., Tucson, Ariz. Russell Howard Fowler 90 Salisbury St., Hartford, Conn. Charles Smith Fox 6351 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Douglas HanleyFoxall z Greenfield Lane, Rochester, N.Y. George Alonzo Foye xi Duncan Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Thomas EUwood Frame, Jr Lindsley Lane, Rydal, Penna. Lloyd Arthur Free 3609 34th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. John Hains Livingston French 1914 W. Beach, Biloxi, Miss. Frederick George Frost, Jr 115 Beechmont Dr., NewRochelle, N. Y. Nelson Barnes Fry 35 Valley Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. James Noel Furness 170 West 74th St., New York, N. Y. Henry Erben Gaillard 75 Maiden Lane, New York, N. Y. Stanley Thomas Gather Oak Ave., Glendale, O. O. Fletcher Gardner Leavenworth, Wash. Donald Edward Garnar 337 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Ruel Rushforth Garside 115 Loring Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Gordon Styles Gavan 47 Union St., Montclair, N. J. Gerald Geraghty 36 West 59th St., New York, N. Y. Maurice Jean Geraghty 36 West 59th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Cassell Gibson 4748 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, III. James Andrus Giddings, Jr 4x6 Hill St., Reynoldsville, Penna. Robert Henry Gies 609 West 115th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Lee Gill, Jr lox Club Rd., Roland Pk, Md. Elwyn Douglas Gillis 61 Pelham Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Allston Stone Goff 1430 Tracy Place, Washington, D. C. Robert Myar Goldenson. . . . 1130 Squirrel Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. Frederick Norman Goodrich 180 Park PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edward Leavitt Goodwin Ramapo, N. Y. David Cleaveland Gordon Box 477, Lake Wales, Fla. Walter Lyle Gordon 415 Tacoma Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. John Marshall Gorman 11 Argyle Pk., Buffalo, N. Y. Henry Kendall Gosch x94Goundry St., N. Tonawanda, N. Y. Raymond Francis Gould... 163 Shonnard Terrace, Yonkcrs, N. Y. Donald Lennen Graham lox Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. Frederick Wyatt Graves, Jr 155 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Charles Roland GrifFen 31 Kenmore PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Talcott Griswold 985 Hill Rd., Winnetka, IlL Harry Connelley Groome, Jr Warrentown, Va. Francis Olmstead Grubbs, Walnut and 4th Ave., Waterford, Penna. Louis Gutmann loxi Redway Ave., Cincinnati, O. Stephen Tallman Hagerman 89 Durand Rd,. Maplewood, N. J. James Barr Haines, IV 141 1 Beaver Rd., Sewickly, Penna. Edward John Hall 111 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. Philip Martin Ham 154 Hope St., Providence, R. I. Carl Ampt Hamann 1036 East 89th St., Cleveland, O. Jabez Dean Hammond New Rochelle, N.Y. John Edwin Hamm 1314 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. John Bancroft Hammond .606 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III. Charles Milton Hanna 1013 Fourth St., Braddock, Penna. A. Douglas Hannah 337Moorewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. John Hamilton Happoldt, Jr 44 Fancvil PI., New Rochelle, N. Y. William Hard, Jr 1607 18th St., Washington, D. C. Raymond Waite Hardenbergh, Jr Governors Island, N. Y. Ernest Reginald Harding. .. .Hammond River, New Brunswick, Can. Finis Hunt Haskins Pawling, N. Y. Hollis Hauschild 4101 Fremont Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. Scott Pope Hawkins 117 E. McCarty St., Jefferson, Mo. John Habberton Hawley, Jr.. . .183 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N. J. John Campbell Hawthorne z8o West 4th St., New York, N. Y. William Wallace Haynes R.F.D. No. i, Bristol, Tenn. Bradley Heald 400 Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Benjamin vanDoun Hedges, Jr. . . 1115 Watching Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Casper Forman Hegner 1518 Steele St., Denver, Colo. Richard Stephen Hendey 15 Little John PI., White Plains, N. Y. Clement Sulivane Henry, Jr i4East 6och St., New York, N.Y. Ryder Henry, II 14 East 60th St., New York, N. Y. Francis Prescott Hersey...i34 Abbott Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Charles Schaeffer Hertz 115 North 8th St., Allentown, Penna. Edwin Donald Hewitt, Jr z6o Convent Ave., New York, N. Y. Samuel Ashton Higginbottom Allahabad, India Russell Dwen Higgins 838 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Leroy Hilton, Jr 331 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. John Marshall Hinchman 1030 Van Dyke Ave , Detroit, Mich. Walter Robbins Hine, Jr Short Hills, N. J. Frank Hitchcock Westbury, N. Y. Thomas Barclay Hitchman Eagle St., Mt. Pleasant, Penna. Charles duBois Hodges 15 Sherman PI., Ridgewood, N. J. Edgar Holden, III 617 Mt. Prospect, Newark, N. J. 96 II II II II I I I I n M II II [i II II II 1778 Class of 1930— (Continued) William Butler Hornblowcr, II. . . .755 Park Ave, New York, N. Y. Jack Kenneth Howe 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. John Lewis Howell 608 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Penna. Wallace Howland 1701 Locust St., Philadelphia, Penna. David Abraham Hubcr 544 Main St., Pennsburg, Penna. Karl Patterson Hughes 55 East 5th St., Bloomsburg, Penna. George Barker Hulett 44 Washington Rd., Princeton, N. J. John Jones Hurst, Jr Sudbrook Park, Pikesvillc, Md. Bradford Howard Hutchins Essex Rd., Waterville, Me. George Immcrwahr 62.0 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. Erling Mauritz Indahl 148 E. Johnson St., Germantown, Penna. Alvin Mann Irvine 52.5 S. Julian St., Bedford, Penna. James Martin Irving 335 East 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Bruen Overton Jackson, Jr 1101 Arch St., Little Rock, Ark. Jervis Spencer Janney Garrison, Md. Alfred Van Horn Jennings. .. .in Market St., Harrisburg, Penna. Talbot Johns 383 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Frank Harris Johnson 132. S. Boylan Ave., Raleigh, N. C. Oscar Doyle Johnson 60 Ben Lomond St., Uniontown, Penna. William Louis Johnston 1619 Lenox Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. Harold Massie Jones Red Star, W. Va. Herbert Pendleton Jordon J857 Overton Pk. Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Paul Gustave Juergcns Bclden Hotel, Chicago, 111. Harten Hunt Kasab Stoneleigh, Bronxville, N. Y. Worthington Whittredge Katzenbach New Canaan, Conn. Henry Austin Kayc 1050 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Richard Marion Kecch, Jr. Baltimore, Pike and Cedar Lane, Swarthmore, Penna. Roy Dee Keehn, Jr 1418 Otis Bldg., Chicago, 111. Richard Abram Kcery Custer City, Penna. Elbridge Keith 310 Warwick Rd., Kenilworth, 111. William Carroll Keith, Jr iiio Colder Ave., Beaumont, Tex. Edward Isett Kelly i6o8 loth St., Altoona, Penna. Norman Kelsey Kimball Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Nathaniel Taylor Kenncy 1017 Munsey Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Frank Richardson Kent, Jr Lombardy Apts., Baltimore, Md. Carl Francis Keppler 87 Renner Ave., Newark, N. J. John Harlan Kerr 1905 East 87th St., Cleveland, O. Donald Alexander Kilburn 171 Kilburn Place., S. Orange, N. J. Edward Somerville Kip 815 Williams St., New London, Conn. Henry Martin Kirk 735 N. Sixth Ave., Steubenville, O. Hugh Russell Kirkpatrick 6301 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Edward Goodridge Kirtland 19 Elm St., Exeter, N. H. NAME • ADDRESS Herbert Donald Kistler 901 W. Silver St., Butte, Mon. Louis Thorntin Klauder 435 Camden Ave., Moorestown, N. J. William White Knapp, Jr.. . .2.09 Lincoln Pk. Drive, Syracuse, N. Y. Herbert Knight 161 Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. Arthur Knox, Jr 105 East 58th St., New York, N. Y. Herbert Waldemar Koehn, Jr Orchard Way, Rosemont, Penna. Edward Christian Kohlsaat, Jr 777 Bryant Ave., Winnctka, 111. James Philip Koontz Clendening, W. Va. William Koren, Jr 105 Fitz Randolph Rd., Princeton, N. J. Alan Marcus Kridel loio 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. A. Jerrold Krimsky 1 5 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Thomas Cary Kuhn looo Orchard Ave., Homestead, Penna. Benjamin Labaree Lincoln University, Penna. Charles Elliott Lane, Jr i66 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. James Taliaferro Lane 833 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. William Lewis Lasher Round Hill, Fairfield, Conn. Frederick Theodore Lawrence, Jr 31 Badeau Ave., Summit, N.J. Arthur Jost Lawson 40 Broad St., Boston, Mass. Caleb Rodney Layton Bedford Ave., Georgetown, Del. Norman J. Lebhar, Jr 32.5 West 87th St. , New York City Henry Geiger Lee Burlingame, Calif. Robert Collet LeFort 5 Governor Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Henry Priestley Lcverich 154 Orange Rd., Montclair, N.J. Samuel Horace Levine 357 Ambey St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jack Russell Lewis 955 Park Ave., New York City Edwin Allen Lightner, Jr Mountain Lakes, N. J. John Ware Lincoln 1309 Irving Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. Charles Halsey Lindsley 141 Hearne Ave., Cincinnati, O. Clarence Edwin Linville 408 Chilton St., Elizabeth, N. J. Stacy Bancroft Lloyd, Jr Ardmore, Penna. Samuel Joseph Lloyd 17 S. South Carolina Ave., Atlantic City William Munroc Lobcnstine 164 East 7id St., New York City John Evans Love Ft. Stanwix Hotel, Johnstown, Penna. David Auld Lowry 1876 Weybridge Rd., Cleveland, O. Jay wood Lukens 2.0 Grove Rd., S. Orange, N.J. Donald MacAlister 333 Van Houten St., Paterson, N. J. Joseph Gardiner McAnerney 139 North St., Greenwich, Conn. Robert Copland McCabe,Jr 96 i8th St., Jackson Hts.,N.Y. Fraser Winfield McCann 4 East 80th St. , New York City Elmanson Avery McCarthy, Jr., 457 So. Morton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. William Samuel McChesncy. . . .5619 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Hardy Lee McConahy, Jr 2.8 Bank St., Princeton, N. J. James Sebastian McCormick, Jr. . . . 14th and Buckhill St., Easton, Penna. 97 Hi I I ' 1 1 I I w I I 1 1 It n t ' ' ' ' ' ■! I II 113 7 19281 f Class of 19 SO— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Alan Mitchell MacCracken 114 West 70th St., New York City Marshall Lockhart McCunc. . .5th and College Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. Walsh McDermott 1334 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. James McDonough 3438 McClure Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. David Brown McElroy 2.3 Portland Rd., St. Louis, Mo. George Henry McFaddcn Villa Nova, Penna. John Hunt Mcllvain iii So. i6th St., Philadelphia, Penna. Robert Kaighn Mclnnes 1808 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Penna. James Francis McKernon, Jr 636 Fifth Ave., New York City William McKinley, Jr 40 Melrose PI., Montclair, N. J. Robert Donald MacKinnon 17 Avon Rd., Narberth, Penna. Edwards Chapin McLean 846 S. George St., York, Penna. Gale McLean iizi Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. David McMullin, III 310 Bethlehem Ave., Ambler, Penna. David Breakenridge MacNeil, IV ... 47 N. Walnut St. , East Orange, N.J. Albert Elliot McVitty, Jr Bryn Mawr, Penna. ames Wilson Mack, jr 131 North 6th St., Indiana, Penna. Clarence Mangan Malone, Jr 30 Fifth Ave., New York City Paul Maloney iii N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Penna. James Maltman, Jr 835 Castlewood Terrace, Chicago, 111. DeWitt Morgan Manning 2.2.5 - MiUvale Ave. , Pittsburgh, Penna. James Hilton Maroney 102.0 Orchard St., Cranford, N. J. Robert Nelson Marshall 53 Paak Hek Tung, Canton, China Leonard Austin Martin Davenport Neck, NewRochelle, N. Y. Henry Mosler Marx 2.5 Broad St., New York City James Munroe Mason, Jr 1510 Niazuma St., Birmingham, Ala. Charles Frederick Matelage 3903 Prospect Ave., Douglaston, N. Y. Frank Joseph Mayer 1040 Park Ave., New York City Francis Alexander Meade 517 Roland Ave. , Roland Park, Md. Paul Mulford Mecray, Jr 54 E. Oak Ave., Moorestown, N. J. Clinton Meneely 9 Washington Rd. , Troy, N. Y. John Alfred Metz, Jr 2.800 Espey Ave., Dormont, Penna. Frank Straus Meyer Hotel Riviera, Newark, N. J. George Milburn 532. N. Broadway, Seattle, Wash. George Cable Miles Miles City, Mon. Irving Long Miles, Louisville Taxi Transfer Co., Louisville, Ky. Thomas Ward Miles ,■ 57 Atlantic St., Carteret, N. J. Austin Leonard Miller 547 Lake Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Chandler Starr Miller 1636 National Ave., Rockford, 111. Allen Paine Mills 2.34 Granite Bldg., Rochester, N. Y. John Sutcliffe Milton 1145 Poplar St., Memphis, Tenn. Charles Howard Miner, Jr loii N. Front St., Harrisburg, Penna. Jose Miguel Miyar i6SagarraAlta, Santiago, Cuba NAME ADDRESS Arthur M. Mizener 163 W. Sixth St., Erie, Penna. Harry Lawson Moore, Jr 335 Grant St., Sewickley, Penna. Thomas Huston Moore, Jr 2.304 Newkirk Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Adair Moore looi W. Newton St., Tulsa, Okla. Gerald Demuth Morgan 32. Liberty St., New York City Charles D. Morganthau. .1735 N. Hampshire Ave., Washington, D. C. William Townsend Moses Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N. Y. John Green Mulock in Moss Ave., Detroit, Mich. Chauncey Hulbert Murphey,Jr Bay Ave., Douglaston, L. I. Joseph Townsend Murtagh 310N. High St., West Chester, Penn. Jack Christian Myers 30 S. Stenton PI., Atlantic City, N. J. Robert Paul Myers 3041 Observatory Ave., Cincinnati, O. John Oliver Nelson 75i6Tuscarora St., Pittsburgh, Penna. Charles Frederick Ncsslage, Jr., 511 Gregory Ave., Weehawken, N. J. Donald Lee Newbdrg 30 West 59th St., New York City George Edward Nichols 60 Beaver St., New York City Alfred Slayman Nicholson i8 Ardmore Ave., Ardmore, Penna. Edward Bonnell Nisbet Ardslay, N. Y. Theophilus Noel, II 406 Linden Ave., Oak Pk,, 111. Walter Alexander Payne Nones Irmaggio, WescPort, Conn. Edward Ailing Noyes 10 Belden Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. George Washington Oakes, Jr Hotel Ansonia, New York City Charles William Henry Oechler. . .4085 Ferriss St., Woodhaven, N. Y. John Franklin Ohl 85 E. Harris Ave., La Grange, 111. George Stickle Oram Rockaway, N. J. John Henry O ' Toole 90 Kendall St., Framingham, Mass. G. Edwin Owen 387 N. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. Leigh Palmer Owen 387 N. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. Joseph French Page, III 663 Walden Rd., Winnetka, 111. William Pendleton Palmer, Jr. .. ,1331 Overlook Rd., Cleveland, O. Richard Bartlett Park 713 Ridgeway Ave., Cincinnati, O. William McCready Parker, Jr 516 West Third St., Oil City, Penna. Joseph Lester Parsons, Jr 88 High St. , Montclair, N.J. Harry Clay Patterson 1431 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Penna. George Morton Payne, Jr 845 W. 57th St., Kansas City, Mo. John Bevan Pearson 2.7 S. Front St., Harrisburg, Penna. Joseph Peavoy, Jr 82. Goodwin Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. James Irving Pedly 355 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Frederick Pels, Jr 416 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Henry Sutton Pennypacker 665 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Irving Van Gilder Perine, Jr 84 N. Arlington Ave., Orange, N.J. Neils Mortensen Perkins 48 13th Ave., Columbus, O. Thomas Peircc Perkins, Jr 3401 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. Class of 1930— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Frederick Darby Petrie 52.6 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Nicholas. Alfred Pctry, Jr.. . .495} McKcan Ave., Germantown, Penna. Henry Lowrey Pierson jo Church St. , New York City Reuben Field Pieters 601} Winthrop Ave., Chicago, III. Richard Sawyer Pieters 601) Winthrop Ave., Chicago, III. William Andrew Pollard, Jr Country Club Estates, Fla. John Lawrence Pool, Jr E 9 Produce Exchange, New York City Richard Pitts Powell, Jr i6i South 5xd St., Philadelphia, Penna. Alonzo Joseph Powers, II 5048 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna. Fletcher Preston 1868 Columbia Rd., Washington, D. C. Herbert Rush Preston, Jr Paradise Ave., Catonsville, Md. Richard Francis Puffet 176 Buckingham Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Lyttleton Bowen Purnell, III. ...Poplar Hill Rd., Roland Pk., Md. Nicholas Herkimer Putnam 51 West 94th St., New York City Frederick Haines Ramsey 62.2. Elm St., Portland, Ore. Langdon Gilbert Rankin 114 Warwick Ave., So. Orange, N.J. Dillman Atkinson Rash 12.44 54th St., Louisville, Ky. Henry Sutherland Reeder 465 Park Ave., New York City David Meredith Reese 1600 Brinkle Ave., Wilmington, Del. Richard Early Reeves, Jr Hobart Ave., Summit, N. J. Walter Jewell Reeves 931 5th Ave., Columbus, Ind. Desmond Francis Reilly 55 N. Pine Ave., Albany, N. Y. Benjamin Reynolds Reiter Sayre Park, Bethlehem, Penna. George Wilmont Renchard, Jr 300 Arden Pk., Detroit, Mich. William Lawson Reno, Jr xoi East 3d St., Owensboro, Ky. William Robbins Ridington 613 Seitz Ave., Easton, Penna. Richard Cromwell Riggs 606 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. Norman Bridge Roberg 3812. N. Keller Ave., Chicago, 111. William Caldwell Roberts 2.10 Windermere Ave., Wayne, Penna. Archibald Rowan Robinson, Jr 6100 Bryant St., Pittsburgh, Penna. Donald Hannibal Robinson 697 S. Center St., Orange, N.J. Hamilton Robinson 12. Boudinot St., Princeton, N. J. Harlan Baird Robinson X42. Lincoln St., Englewood, N. J. Harry Leigh Robinson, Jr mi Blaisdell Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. John Dobbin Rode 18 Bridge St., New York City Edward Congdon Rogers 52.14 Cass St., Omaha, Neb. Simeon Harrison Rollinson, Jr.. .93 Northfield Rd., W. Orange, N. J. Hallock Lovejoy Rose 130 North 39th St., Omaha, Neb. Jonathon Dixon Ross.. 2.00 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Leland Hamilton Ross, Jr 2.77 Washington St., Jersey City, N. J. Pierre Sanford Ross, III. . . . 12.5 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. Richard Henry Rubenstein P. O. Box 336, Woodmerc, L. I. George Wallace Ruckert 151 Seneca Ave., Westfield, N. J. Franklin Parkhurst Russell, II 33 Vassar Ave., Newark, N. J Archibald Hamilton Rutledge, Jr Mercersburg, Penna Samuel D. S. Sadtler 2. Hillside Rd., Baltimore, Md Joseph Sailer, Jr 1718 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Penna, Joseph Neal Sawyer 837 West 62.d St., Kansas City, Mo Joseph Hugh Scales, Jr iii E. Main St., Louisville, Ky William Dorman Gill Scarlett, . . .2.18 Woodlawn Rd., Roland Pk., Md Robert May Schafer 970 Park Ave., New York City Frederick Herrick Schauffler, Jr 349 Madison Ave., New York City Alan Edgar Schmicz 415 Belt Ave., St. Louis, Mo Hubert August Schneider 741 Parker St., Newark, N. J Jacob Frederick Schoellkopf, Jr 3905 Beverly Dr., Dallas, Tex Clement Ettinger Schotland 2.39 Meeker Ave., Newark, N.J Eustace Wilbert Schuler 603 South nth St.. Gadsden, Ala Walter Marshall Schwartz, Jr. 52.2. .Mien Lane, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Penna Hunter Lockwood Scott 514 South 52.d St., Omaha, Neb Thomas Preston Scott 44 Afterglow Way, Montclair, N. J George Paul Seabrease izio Packard Bldg., Philadelphia, Penna Harry Lauderdale Seay, Jr Southland Life Bldg., Dallas, Tex Monroe Seiberling 1517 Burns Ave., Detroit, Mich Robert Seth Shaw R.F.D. No. i, Princeton, N. J Frank Hartley Shearer 445 Park Ave., New York City William Joseph Sheldrick 491 West 130th St., New York City Allen Kirkpatrick Shenk, . . .5305 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna Charles Chalfont Shenk 5305 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna Merrill Davis Sheppard 2.59 Main St., So. Amboy, N. J, Charles Taney Silverson. .2.655 Lake of Isles Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn John Nichols Simonson 316 Yankee Rd., Middletown, O Jaryl Deverell Siner X92.5 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia, Penna Thomas Langdon Sisserson 18 Rearney St., Newark, N. J Alexander Quarrier Smith South Side, Charleston, W. Va Edgar Byam Smith 90 West St., New York City Eugene Dana Smith care of Kanawha Banking Trust Co., Charleston, W. Va. Edwin Joseph Smith, Jr 42.5 Riverside Dr., New York City Frank Edward Smith, Jr 2.04 West 55th St., New York City Frederick Hoffman Smith 361 Scotland Rd., S. Orange, N. J. George Benson Smith 69 Lena Ave., Freeport, N. Y. Lewis P. Smith, Jr 1601 James St. , Syracuse, N. Y. Lester Wickham Smith 1335 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Day Smith 152.0 Central St., Memphis, Tenn. Walter Lane Smith, Jr 152.0 Central St., Memphis, Tenn. 99 Class of 1930— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS George Elton Snyder, Jr 109 Edgehill Rd., Bala, Penna. Roy Hammond Snyder, Jr Port Deposit, Md. William Kenneth Snyder 610 East 47th St., Kansas City, Mo. George Bernard Sour ii West 88th St., New York City Paul Ernest Spaeth 31 Edgehill St., Princeton, N. J. Leonard Augustine Spalding, Jr loi Elmhurst St., Baltimore, Md. Heinz Specht ' . . .32. Yates St., Schenectady, N. Y. Ridgway Spencer Lawrence Pike W., Bronxville, N. Y. Frederick Donald Sperry 14 Huntingdon St., New Haven, Conn. Marshall Sprague 15 North I St., Newark, O. George Lincoln Stallman, Jr 17 W. Clark Ave., York, Penna. Stephen Clifton Stanton 161 Valley Rd., Montclair, N. J. William Hunter Stearns 2.16 Stuart Ave., Kalamazoo, Mich. Edmund Augustus Steimle 174 West 93d St., New York City Philip Humason Steinmetz 7809 York Rd., Elkins Pk., Penna. Kenneth Alexander Stevens 100 Stockton St., Princeton, N. J. Sydney Gilman Stevens, Jr 300 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N.J. Charles Summers Stevenson care of Torsch-Summers Co., Russell and Worchester Sts., Baltimore, Md. Donald Alexander Stirling 656 West iothSt.,Erie, Penna. Aylward Howard Stockwell. . . .119 E. Maple Ave., Moorestown, N. J. Warren Sanford Stone, II 781 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edward Fouke Story 175 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Robert Gwynne Stout xi4 Glen Rd., Ardmore, Penna. Russell Wellesley Stovel, Jr 48 Watchung Ave., Montclair, N. J. Frank Chester Stover 1183 Tower Rd., Hubbard Woods, 111. John Strawbridge Cheltenham Rd., Chestnut Hill, Penna. Jacob Herbert Stumpf ii New Lawn Ave., Arlington, N. J. Edmond Mortimer Sullivan 373° Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Frank Louis Sullivan 79 Harmon Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Robert Guy Swede 31 W. Main St., Norristown, Penna. William Henry Swift, III... 11 N. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. James Andrews Sykes. . .1318 W. Allegheny Ave., Philadelphia, Penna. Earl Stough Taylor 90 Morningside Dr., New York City Mathew Taylor 669 Lake Ave., Kenosha, Wis. Robert George Taylor 1311 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Penna. Robert Hill Taylor 57 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Thomas Harwood Taylor 132. Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. Floyd Sutherland Teachout 1519 Terrace Rd. , East Cleveland, O. John Hamilton Thacher, Jr 3434 Main St., Kansas City, Mo. John Gerard Theban, Jr 13 Clark St. , Pleasantville, N. Y. Tyler Thompson 178 State St., Elmira, N. Y. George Gray Thoiu-on 13 17 Market St., Wilmington, Del. NAME ADDRESS Alan Silvers Tomlinson 12.0 Maple Ave., Trenton, N. J. Joseph Lawrence Tonetti 135 E. 40th St., New York City Kyle Harzell Totten i2.z Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. William Cattell Trimble 8 W. Madison St., Baltimore, Md. Howard Trivers 801 Broadway, New York City J. Milton Trompen 456 79th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Ashton Turnbull 1x5 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J. William Turnbull, II 49 Broad St., New York City James Flynn Turner, Jr. Greenspring Ave., Mt. Washington, Baltimore, Md John Stebbins Turner 18 Warren PL, Montclair, N. J, Albert Jacob Ulman Brooklandville, Baltimore Co., Md, Alfred James Valk 160 Summit Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J, Manuel Miguel Valle 1075 Park Ave., New York City Schuyler Van Duyne 790 Broad St., Newark, N. J Charles Stinchfield Van Dyke Beverly, Grosse Pt. Farms, Mich Harold Campbell Vaughan 375 Park Ave., New York City George Haskell Venard 1039 Rush St., Chicago, 111 David Vhay P. O. Box iS, Santa Barbara, Calif. Richard Leonard Vogt 154 Villa Ave., Buffalo, N. Y Garret Coerte Voorhees Kent, Conn Bernardus Hendrik Vos 52. Mercer St., Princeton, N. J Alfred Munroe Wade Oenoke, New Canaan, Conn, Nelson Whitaker Wagner. .. .Leather wood Lane, Wheeling, W. Va William Augustus Walker. . . .2.738 Highland Ave., Birmingham, Ala Electus Backus Ward 6937 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna Daniel Edward Wardell 2.14 Renner Ave., Newark, N. J James Edmund Warfield Wolcott Hall, 31st St. and 5th Ave., New York City Richard Webster Warfield 3 Somerset Rd., Baltimore, Md. Robert Warren 2.73 Lake Shore Rd., Grosse Pt., Mich. Herbert Sherwood Warwick, Jr 706 Cherry St., Erie, Penna. Charles Douglas Webb 12. Irving PL, Summit, N. J. John Baker Welborn 8xo Boston Bldg., Denver, Colo. Daniel Lennox Wells 1057 Parker Ave., Detroit, Mich. William Robert Wheat, III 331 Frederick Ave., Sewickley, Penna. Edgar Warren Wherry 73 Wilson Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Benjamin V. White, Jr 35 Ox-Bon Lane, Summit, N.J. Roger Curtis Whitman 314 Nassau Blvd., Garden City, N. Y. Donald Howard Whitney 448 Riverside Dr., New York City John Reed Whyte, Jr 2.8 Chambers St., Princeton, N. J. Frederick William Wile, Jr 3313 i6th St., Washington, D. C. Ransom Miller Wilkison 3073 Fairfax Rd., Cleveland, O. 100 Class of 1930— (Continued) John Somervell Williams, Jr. . iii W. University Pkwy, Baltimore, Md Orlando Blake Willcox Forest Rd., Englewood, N. J Burton Thomas Wilson 481 N. East 30 Terrace, Miami, Fla Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr., zog Van Courtland Pk. Ave., Yonkers, N. Y Franklin Herkimer Wilson Nanking, China Kenneth Wilson 704 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Penna Waldo Wilson 1195 Calder Ave., Beaumont, Tex Thomas Felten Wimberly, Jr 1011 First Ave., Birmingham, Ala Charles Curtis Winston 14 Overlook Ave., W. Orange, N. J Frank Footc Winters, Jr. First Ave. and Vallamont Dr., Williamsport, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Bliss Frank Wolcott 359 Hillside Ave., Jamaica, N. Y- Albert Elmer Wood Cape May, N.J. Richard Harvey Wood, Hartford Theological Seminary, Hartford, Conn. Daniel Ellis Woodhull, Jr 950 Park Ave., New York City Richard Albert Woods . . 102.1 Calcalmano, Buenos Aires, Argentine Walter Vincent Woodworth 318 West 84th St., New York City Joseph Henry Wright 306 West 80th St. , New York City John Evans Yost 98 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. J. Walter Aldrich Young 15 Princeton PI., Upper Montclair, N.J. William Francis Young 11 Codwin Ave., Ridgcwood, N. J. 101 ' ' M ' I I 1 - 1 1 1 r T 1 M I t TT 1778 I Partial Students NAME HOME ADDRESS Philip Austin Greenville, Pa. Loraine Bocttner Rock Port, Mo. J. Y. Crothers Andong, Korea Whitman Hamilton Fuller Bryan, Tex. Eugene Winfred Lee Northfield, Minn. Christopher D. G. Nicholson London, England Theodore Dwight Stevenson Princeton, N. J. Louis Hollenback Twyeffort New York City Patrick W. Murray-Threipland Foxburgh, Scotland 102 t t T T T I r t r r m r t ' tt i 1T78 General Summary OFFICERS Trustees .... Faculty and Instructors Assistants in Instruction Officers of Administration GRADUATE SCHOOL Fellows .... Graduate Scholars . Students on Full-Time Students on Part-Time . Incidental Students . 36 163 36 30 •36s 66 9 38 31 Graduate Students in Engineeriog UNDERGRADUATES Smior Clasj A. B B. S B. S. in Eag ■ III 6 3 17 A. B. . . B. S. . . B. S. in Eng. Sfipbtnurt CUtJ A. B. . . B. S. . . B. S. in Eng. Frttbmttn CUts A. B B. S B. S. in Eng Pattial Students .... Total for the year 1916-1917 3 S3 198 H 361 194 54 369 .98 46 6.5 9 1516 Geographical Summary New York 38 New Jersey ij Pennsylvania 17 Illinois 7 Ohio 9 Maryland 7 Missouri 4 Connecticut 4 Massachusetts 6 Dist. of Columbia 1 Minnesota i California 7 Michigan 1 Tennessee 3 Delaware i Kentucky 1 Texas 7 Vir tinia 4 Indiana 1 West Virginia 1 Colorado i Florida Wisconsin Alabama 3 Washington 4 Iowa 5 Louisiana Arkansas Georgia i Nebraska 1 North Carolina 4 South Carolina 3 Vermont 3 Eng. 3 Sr. 136 80 85 19 15 15 ' 5 15 5 6 7 6 4 113 7 103 53 iS II  9 13 147 118 103 4 11 M ' S II 15 9 9 7 6 4 9 9 5 5 7 5 8 5 4 141 119 5 18 10 IS ' 5 15 9 Pjr. Tolal I 590 Mississippi I 471 Oregon I 434 Rhode Island 118 Hawaii 101 Oklahoma 81 Arizona I 69 Maine 53 Montana 51 New Hampshire 44 Utah I 36 South Dakota 31 Idaho 3 1 Nevada 19 North Dakota i6 Porto Rico 15 Canada 9 I 14 China 1 zi England 4 17 Japan i 17 Korea 16 Brazil 15 Canal Zone 15 Cuba 14 France 1 II India J II Russia 1 II Austria i 10 Buenos Aires 9 Ecuador 8 Peru 8 Scotland Ettf . Sr. 3 3 Par. Totji 6 6 6 III 6 joi 375 610 613 9 1516 103 I I I I I I I I I I II I I n II I i I I 1 I M II I I M I I M TT- T 19281 ? i I % % %. % % % % i PUBLICATIONS 0flf jJi, .Sh Jk, jtt mI J l Jk Jr. mL jn. fit, Jtt mI, jto. Jk, jT mI ' jit Atr jn. AI, jt SJfl, Jft st, JR. 5h. jt en. jt iW DAILY PRINCETONIAN BOARD, 1916-1917 Tcp Row— Burn ham, Case, Busch, Morrison, Keep, Wcstwood, Byard, Keen, Fortune, Beam, Rockefeller. SicondRew—Huff, Reed, McDougal, Agncw, Jenkins, Hoff, McMartin, Bcnnetc, Stevens, Hcydt, Brodic, Kingslcy, Mills. Third Row— Roberts, Ryan, Wright, Norris, Posey, Delafield, MacLarcn, DeGive, Smith, Nicholas, Broad, Crowther, Windsor. Fourth Raw— Peterson, Ambler, Durham, Miibank, Bancroft, Rose, Lcc, Bachelor, LaPortc, Buxton, Scott, Sloanc. fifth Rotv—DcLznccy. Burns, Carter, Bell, Pcabody, Hinman, Harper, Cuylcr, Conner. T 1778 II I ' M II M II II II II II III n ' ' ' ' I 1 I I II 1 1 I I I I I I I I 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 M I 1 I 19281 r r PR VP The Daily Princetonian J ' Miy « Frank Peabody, Jr Chairman P x k Cy Samuel T. Carter, III Managing Editor i ' VVl —1 Gordon H. Harper Pictorial Chairman 1 T I J ' 4 2 ■ John P. Cuyler, Jr Assignment Editor m fi l J George L. Hinman ... ... . Editorial Editor Samuel R. Milbank Photographic Manager H. Langedon Bell Business Manager Gustav a. Wirbelauer Advertising Manager Eli Taylor Conner, III Circulation Manager EDITORS H. E. Ambler, ' 2.7 C. Winsor, ' 2.7 B. W. Norris, ' 18 N. F. Busch, ' 19 F. S. Bancroft, ' 2.7 D. C. Brodie, ' 2.8 C. R. Peterson, ' 2.8 J. H. Case, Jr., ' 19 J. Bryan, III, ' 17 S. H. Kingsley, ' i8 H. C. Rose, ' 2.8 C. B. McDougal, ' 19 R. C. Burns, ' 2.7 W. H. MacLaren, ' 18 J. D. Bean, ' 2.9 L. P. Roberts, ' 2.9 C. L. Buxton, ' 2.7 J. S. McMartin, ' i8 W. L. Broad, ' 2.9 J. Stevens, ' 2.9 S. F. Harris, ' tj PHOTOGRAPHIC STAFF R. C. Dunn, ' 17 N. R. Hoff, ' z8 C.J. Ryan, Jr., ' 2.8 W. Forsyth, ' 2.9 M. L. Posey, ' 17 A. Keep, ' iS J. Westwood, ' 2.8 K. G. Keen, Jr., ' 2.9 W. W. K. Bennett, ' zS G. H. Osgood, ' zS D. S. Byard, ' 19 BUSINESS STAFF C. R. Agnew, ' z7 J. D. Ames, ' z8 J. R.Jenkins, ' z8 W. A. Graham, ' Z9 J. W. Delafield, ' z7 J. S. Bachellor, ' z8 W. S. LaPorte, ' z8 H. A. Heydt, ' Z9 E. M. Durham, III, ' 17 M. Fujiyama, ' z8 J. W. Lee, zS J. D. Rockefeller, III, ' zg 107 THE TIGER BOARD, 1916-1917 Top Row — Norton, C. L. Hewitt, Palmer, D. Burnham, Rickard, Page, Derby. Third Row — Gillette, Montgomery, Corser, Agncw, Hutne, Flanagan, Coster, Hopper. Second Row— Sh v , Lcland, Keanedy, Day, Norris, Bcnn, Schumann, Shumate. First Row — Buchbolz, Williamson, Avery, Bryan, English, Murphy, Moss. The Tiger Joseph Bryan, III Chairman LITERARY DEPARTMENT Winston Albert Cordes R. R. Bayes, ' 17 J. BURNHAM, ' 17 F. D. BuRRELL, ' 2.7 J. B. CoRSER, Jr., ' i-j W. H. McLaughlin, ' 2-7 J. T. Moss, ' 2.7 A. M. Murphy, ' 17 E. V. Selden, ' 17 W. D. Stockley, ' 17 Carter Hewitt, ' 18 R. L. Kennedy, ' i Art Editor A. P. Leland, ' 2.8 J. B. MiLLIKEN, ' 2.8 J. R. Palmer, ' 2.8 A. Shaw, ' 2.8 P. M. Day, ' 2.9 J. W. Ely, ' 2.7 W. C. Gay, ' 2.7 D. Agnew, ' 2.7 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT William H. Avery, Jr Business Manager H. F. Williamson Circulation Manager Richard W. A. English, Jr. ... Advertising Manager Richard P. Bucholz Service Manager N. T. Montgomery ..... Publicity Manager H. Gillette, ' i8 G. P. Manning, ' 15 C. Hewitt, ' x8 B. Page, Jr., ' 2.9 J. H. Hume, ' z8 D. Q. Coster, ' 2.9 W. F. Alexander, ' 19 R. B. Derby, ' 2.9 F. W. Schumann, ' 2.9 109 1918 BRIC-A-BRAC Top Row — Powell, Kipp. Stcond Row — Hart, Mathcson, Laosdcn, Lotspckh, Miilhauscr, Morse. Sitting — Shaw, Beardslcy, Firey, Aitken, Houser. 1778 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I [ I I I I I I M 1 I I I I I J 1928 7 1928 Bric-a-Brac Lewis Milton Firey Walter Raper Beardsley Alexander Shaw . Beekman William Aitken Bond Houser, Jr. . Charles Robert Morse . Chairman Business lAanager Art Editor Circulation Manager Photographic Editor Assistant Art Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Percy G. Hart, Jr. D. B. Lansden Henry G. Lotspeich Robert F. Muhlhauser JohnH. Wallace, Jr. ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Frederick G. Matheson Irwin A. Powell Donald B. Kipp 111 The Bric-a Brae VOLUME XLXI Class of Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy-Seven THE BOARD Jonathan VAN Dyke Norman, Jr., Kentucky Chairman Cornelius Rea Agnew, Jr., New York Business Manager John T. Moss, Jr., Missouri Art Editor Julian MacCartee Gibson, New York Circulation Manager Robert R. MuNoz, New Jersey Photographic Editor Winston A. Cordes, New York Assistant Art Editor Edgar A. Kniffin, New York . . . . • . Assistant Business Manager Edward H. Luckett, New York .... Assistant Business Manager Manson M. Brien, Ohio Associate Editor Ernest J. Brown, Louisiana Associate Editor Henry E. Dunn, Jr., New York Associate Editor Chester R. Vail, Michigan Associate Editor 112 Former Bric-a-Brac Officers Yur 1876 1876-77 1877-78 1878-79 1879-80 1880-81 1881-81 1881-83 i88)-84 1884-85 1885-86 1886-87 1887-88 1888-89 1889-90 1890-91 1891-91 1891-9) 1895-94 1894-95 1895-96 1896-97 1897-98 1898-99 1899-00 1900-01 1901-01 1901-0 J 1903-04 1904-05 1905-06 1906-07 1907-08 1908-09 1909-10 1910-11 1911-11 1911-13 1913-14 1914-15 1915-16 1916-17 1917-18 1918-19 1919-10 1910-11 1911-11 1911-13 1913-14 1914-15 1915-16 13 ■4 ■S 16 17 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 3° 3 31 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 4 ' 4=- 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 5° 5 Chairman A. B. Turnurc, 76 P. R. Pync, 78 C. Talcott, ' 79 D. M. Massic, ' 80 F. G. Landgon, ' 81 E. B. Critchlow, ' 81 O. H. Grouse, ' 83 C. T. McMullin, ' 84 J. K, Muraford, ' 85 M. Halstead, ' 86 J. W. Elder, -87 J. H. Pershing, ' 88 R. E. Spccr, ' 89 J. M. Ycakle, ' 90 C. F. Howell, ' 91 V, L, Collins, ' 91 H. R. Daniels, ' 93 M. H. Sicard, ' 94 T. S. Huntington, ' 95 C. B. Bostwick, ' 96 W. S. Harris, ' 97 R. D. Dripps, ' 98 George K. Reed, ' 99 Charles Yeoman, oo Walter E. Hope, ' oi Otto T. Mallery, ' 01 F. L. Wright, ' 03 E, McP. Armstrong, ' 04 Kenneth S. Clarke, ' 05 S. Hinman Bird, ' c€ C. T. Larzelere, 07 R. C. Clothier, ' 08 E, T. Holsapple, 09 James S. Dennis, lo Ira F. Bennett, ' 11 George W. Bunn, ' 11 Earle L. Douglas, ' 13 John M. Colt, ' 14 Donald Myrick, 15 J. R. Stockton, ' 16 Henry T. Dunn, ' 17 R, M. Griffith, ' 18 H. P. Van Dusen, ' 19 W. H. Downs, ' lo D. R. Butcrbaugh, ' 11 H. Cunningham, ' 11 H. G. UGyd,Jr., -13 Harlow B. Lester, ' 14 Paul S. Havens, ' 15 Sargent Dumper, ' 16 J. Van Dyke Norman BujiniJJ Managtr =•7 John L. Rogers Charles A. Case Frank H. Little Harold C. Smith Henry Swan Paul S. Seely N. W. Mclntyre Thomas Taliaferro Herbert A. Boas W. H. Flammer Louis Stewart, Jr. Cart W. Jones Samuel D. Bell John H. O ' Neill James F. Adams J. M. Raymond, Jr. T. H. Miles, Jr. H. R. Chambers Samuel N. Comly H. S. Firestone D. B. Foresman R. G. Scarlett H. E. Anderson, Jr. Edward R. Buell Morris B. Miller Thomas R. Rhodes Cornelius R. Agnew, Jr. H. O. Milliken K. S. Goodman R. S. Barbec Lawrence Thompson John I. Scull James Boyd, Jr. Theodore S. Paul Jacob Riegel, Jr. Warren R. Smith A. C. M. Azoy, Jr. R. H. Scannell Henry B. Gilland W. M. Boadway D. R. Shotwell Robert F. Bamett Erdman Harris Edward R. Perry Edward S. King C. W. Webster John M. Miller Richard A. Blow Ewart W. Newsom John T. Moss, Jr. 113 NASSAU LIT Top Row — Morgan, Hitschlcr, Griswold, Marsh Sitting — Alexander, Robinson, Ncwhouse, Ambler, Bryao. Nassau Literary Magazine EDITORIAL BOARD Herman Salinger, ' 17 Archibald S. Alexander, ' z Humphrey E. Ambler, ' 17 Joseph Bryan, III, ' 17 Alexander B. Griswold, ' i8 Stephen F. Harris, ' xj Chairman JoHN B. Milliken, ' 18 James C. Norton, Jr., ' 2.7 Robert H. Pitney, iS Donald H. Robinson, ' 2.7 Walter C. Watkins, ' 2.7 BUSINESS BOARD Walter Scott Newhouse, Jr., ' 17 . . Business Manager Chauncey H. Marsh, Jr., ' i7 . Circulation Manager ToDsoN H. Becker, ' iS William B. Morgan, ' 2.7 Howard L. Werner, ' 2.7 William J. Hitschler, ' 17 Seymour S. Preston, Jr., ' 19 Not returned. 115 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS CLUB, 1916-1917 Top Kow—Stoui, Bcaird, Pitr, Scott. Stcond Row — Ritchcy, Raudenbush, Martin, Pierce, P., Wright. Third Row — Osborne, Bodman, Pierce, R., Leitch, Reed. Princeton University Press Club OFFICERS Robert G. Pierce, ' 2.7 Lewis H. Bodman, ' 2.7 D. Paul Reed, ' 2.8 . Alexander Leitch, ' 2.4 Frederick Osborne, ' 14 President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Advisor Assistant Advisor The Princeton University Press Club was organized in 1910 by Dean Christian Gauss for the purpose of truthfully representing Princeton to the outside world through the newspapers. The Press Club is the official news agency of the University, and its members, acting as Princeton Correspondents for the leading newspapers and news syndicates in the East, are directly responsible for the greater part of the news dispatches from Princeton appearing daily in the newspapers throughout the country. Lewis H. Bodman MEMBERS, 19x7 Robert G. Pierce William K. Wight MEMBERS, 1918 R. NoRRis Martin David W. Raudenbush D. Paul Reed H. McDiARMID Ritchey Brevoort Stout John F. Beaird MEMBERS, 1919 Paul H. Pierce Walter R. Scott CouRTNAY H. Pitt Newspapers for which the Press Club corresponds: New York Niws Boston Globe Philadilphia Ltdgtr Boston Post Philadelphia Inquirer Boston Herald Philadelphia Record Boston Transcript Philadelphia Bulletin Baltimore American Boston American Baltimore Sun Associated Press New York American New York Herald-Tribune New York Times New York World New York Sun New York Evening Post Newark News Newark Star-Eagle Newark Sunday Call Trenton State Gazette Trenton Times New Brunswick Home Netvs Christian Science Monitor Pittsburgh Gazette-Times Brooklyn Daily Eagle St. Paul Pioneer Press United Press International News Service Standard News 117 I 1 1 I I I I I I ' N I I H n II II IL-LL Li ' .i 1 i 1, ' ' ' ' J 7 The Princeton University Press The Princeton University Press was organized in 1905. Since that time it has had a steady and constant growth. The buildings containing the offices and shop, were erected in 1911, the gift of Mr. Charles Scribner, ' 75. The Press was incorporated, not as a commercial enterprise, but in the interests of the University. A staff of over sixty persons is employed. It publishes a number of periodicals and magazines, chief among which is The Princeton Alumni Weekly which it owns. In the neighborhood of two hundred books have also been published. OFFICERS Charles Scribner, ' 75 President Andrew F. West, ' 74 Vice-President Clarence B. Mitchell, ' 89 Treasurer Whitney Darrow, ' 03 Secretary Paul G. Tomlinson, ' 09 Manager George A. Armour, Robert Bridges, ' 79 Struthers Burt, ' 04 ' 77 Edward Capps Whitney Darrow, ' 03 Parker D. Handy, ' 79 COUNCIL John G. Hibben, ' 82. William F. Magie, ' 79 Clarence B. Mitchell, Arthur H. Scribner, ' 81 Charles Scribner, ' 75 CharlesScribner.Jr., ' 1} Andrew F. West, ' 74 George Wintringer, ' 94 Paul van Dyke, ' 81 Edward Capps Whitney Darrow, 0} Cha TRUSTEES i Sr ARLES 5RIBNER, 75 George Wintringer, ' 94 Paul VAN Dyke, ' 81 118 TpOI I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I [ I I I M S. lj|||J|J N I I 11 I I I I I I I I I I u I -1-1-4 The Princeton Alumni Weekly FOUNDED 1900 Published by The Princeton University Press Princeton, N. J. Edited by Asa S. Bushnell, ' 2.1 Athletics Hugh McNair Kahler, ' 04 The Undergraduate Week Edgar E. Kniffin, ' 17 Business Manager Advertising Manager Paul G. Tomlinson, ' 09 Stephen K. Little, ' 14 BOARD OF DIRECTION Andrew C. Imbrie, ' 95, Chairman Whitney Darrow, ' 03 Robert Cresswell, III, ' 19 Charles Scribner, ' 75 Henry G. Leach, ' 03 119 n T H E HALLS o j j j j j j j • • e o a o o o r 9 vJWwVw J 4Wb AAfe The Halls F)UNDED in 1765 and 1769 respectively, the Cliosophic Society and the American Wig Society are the two oldest literary societies in America. Their main purpose is still to foster public speaking, debate, and parliamentary procedure among the undergraduates. The Halls exercise final control over all the campus forensic activities and have been the training ground for men who have become famous in all walks of life. Although Whig and Clio have always interested themselves in political affairs on the campus and in the nation as a whole, yet they have widened their scope this year by taking over the activities of the Law, Polity, and Arts Clubs. Another innovation this year was the restricting of the Freshman sections to approximately 75 men each. At the preliminary meeting in October, the Freshmen merely indicated their wish to become members and were then evenly divided between the two Halls, except in the cases of those who had family or other affiliations with either Hall. Beginning the present Freshman Class, an extremely small number will be admitted in upperclass years, and then only upon the most definite proof of interest in the work of the Societies. Representatives from the Law, Polity, and Arts Clubs appear on the Executive Committees of the Halls, and only by becoming members of the Societies can undergraduates participate in the activities either of the Halls themselves or of the former Law, Polity, and Arts Clubs. The councils of Wig and Clio, working together, have drawn up plans which assign one week each month to a smoker for the Clubs in turn, the remaining weeks to be devoted to Hall activities. 122 T. w. W H J. W. Basorc H. H. Bender D. L. Buffum V. L. Collins K. T. Compton E. G. Conklin F. H. Constant F. G. Barber R. R. Bayes L. H. Bodman S. S. Brooks C. B. Caton D. A. Clark S. S. Cooley A. S. Alexander W. A. Alexander Ir. K. B. Atkinson W. J. Babcock E. Bachman C. G. Ball D. B. Bannerman , Ir. W. H. Barker J. Baylcss W. R. Beardsley O. E. Bloch J. P. Boyd L. B. Bra man Cliosophic Society FOUNDED 1765 OFFICERS, 1915-19x6 R. W. Shugg, ' 17 President A. Z. F. Wood, ' i8 Vice-President T. W. Armitage, ' ip Secretary D. Plumer, Jr., ' 2.8 Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Armitage, ' xg D. Plumer, Jr., ' 18 R. W. Shugg, ' 17 Barker, ' xS V. V. Ravi-Booth, ' X7 A. Z. F. Wood, xS FACULTY MEMBERS H. L. Cooke W.B.Harris H. C. McComas E.C.Richardson H.D.Thompson E. S. Corwin J. P. Hoskins C. R. Maclnnes E. Y. Robbins H. Van Dyke H. F. Covington G. A. Hulctt M. MacLaren R. M. Scoon O. Veblen U. Dahlgren T. W. Hunt D. Magie H. R. Shipman H. C. Warren G. W. Elderkin A. C. Johnson W. S. Myers G. H. Shull S. H. Webber H. B. Fine E. W. Kemmerer F. Neher E. B. Smith R. J. Wertenbaker C. Gauss W. Koren C, G. Osgood J. D. Spaeth A. F. West W. Gillespie E. H. Loomis W. K. Prentice D. R. Stuart MEMBERS, 19x7 M. Cutts W. J. Hitschler A. G. Lockitt J. V. Norman, Jr. J. M. Robbins R. F. Darby C. R. Howell J. F. MacKay H. D. Parsons R. W. Shugg C. B. Fisk W. R. Howell W. L. Matthews K. G. Pearson J. Stillman G. W. Gale P. F. Husserl D. T. Monahan T. H. Price, Jr. J.S.Thompson W. E. Garrcy M. V. Joyes, Jr. H.S.Morris V.V.Ravi-Booth W. C. Watkins C. W. F. Hahner E. A. Kniffen R. O. Newell W. H. Read J. W. R. Zisgen P. Hamilton, Jr. M. A. Koehler W. S. Ncwhouse, Jr. H. L. Rcinke MEMBERS, 19x8 R.Bruce C. J. Follmer F. S. Katzenbach, III R. M. Newnham S.B.Smith J. Chambers, Jr. F. R. Fort G. H. Kelley J.W.Parker D. L. Speer J. K. D. Chivers H. Gillette J. S. Kafferty A. W. Patterson, III C. C. Squires S.B.Christian S.P.Goodrich D. M. Liddell, Jr. D. Plumer, Jr. C. H. Stallman C, W. Chase E. S. Hanny R. W. Lloyd D. W. Raudenbush R. L. Stevens J. K. Cilley D. N. Hendey H. G. Lotspeich W. L. Read W. R. Taylor R. E. Conant R. S. Huckin F. H. MacMillen R. W. Rubidge C. H. Tinsman J. I. Dalrymple C. Hunsicker, Jr. O.H.Mann R. B. Schall E. B. Van Dyke, Jr. C. E. Davis, Jr. F. L. Hyer F. G. Matheson L. C. Simons W. B. Van Lennep R.B.Ely, III J.R.Jenkins J.J. Moffit.Jr. R.Sims J. H. Wallace, Jr. J. D. Evereitt R.P.Johnson S. R. Morgan, Jr. R. C. Slaughter S. Waterhousc L. M. Fircy A. W. Jones R. E. Nevins P. B. C. Smith W. Willauer A. Z. F. Wood 124 I I 1 M M I I ' II I I I I n M I I TT- 1 1 ' I 1 1 ' t ' ' 7 1928 Cliosoph ic Society — ( Continued ) MEMBERS, 1919 J. M. Adams H, B. Alexander W. F. Alexander, Jr. J. L. Alley T. W. Armitage T. H. Baldwin C. C. Balmer J. D. Beam W. S. Beasley P. R. Blynn C. E. Buschmann O. D. Carr J. M. Alison C. N. Baker W. D. Barfield A. M. Beitler, II G. M. Benson R. W. Benton H. L. Brinsmadc N. B. Briscoe C. B. Brooks W. B. Bryant W. G. Chaffee L. H. Christie R. S. Clark O. D. Cass A. Cramer C. L, Darnell J. A. Degen, Jr. R. B. Derby R. B. Dulley E. Dyer R. H. Eisenbrey, Jr. D. Evans, Jr. H. S. Fisher, Jr. N. F. Flowers R. E. Clemson A. Covolo F. E. Craig M. F. Cravens B. L. Curry W. F. Danehowcr D. W. Dort H. A. Dunn J. H. Eisenhart, Jr. D. N. Fisher C. S. Fox G. A. Foye H. B. Gay, Jr. R. Gibbon G. E. Gillespie H, L. deGive J. H. Gleason C. C. Hall W. H. Hanna J. S. Hauck H. A. Hcydt.Jr. M. W. Jacobus, Jr. C. F. Jamieson E. H. Kahio J. Kahrs.Jr. D. Kennedy D. F. Landreth W. B. Lippman R. K. McConnell N. W. MacKenzie M. Miller R. N. Mould J. Mulford W. K. Murray MEMBERS, 1930 T. E. Frame, Jr. J. A. Giddings R. F. Gould T. Griswold S. P. Hawkins B. V. Hedges, Jr. D. A. Huber W. L. Johnson H. L. Kasab A. J. Krimsky S. B. Lloyd, Jr. F. W. McCann P. M. McCray, Jr. M. L. McCune D. B. McElroy P. Maloney J. Maltmann, Jr. R. N. Marshall H. M. Marx J. M. Mason, Jr. J. A. Metz C. S. Miller A. P. Mills G. W. Oakes, Jr. G. A. Newton, Jr. R. B. Okie J. M. Pardoe W. A. Pattv H. R. Pro Well C. R. Read F. Reynolds E. L. Sawyer G. A. Schmidt A.J. Sessa C. W. Sheppard C. W. H. Oechler H. L. Pierson J. L. Pool, Jr. A. J. Powers, II D. A. Rash R. E. Reeves G. W. Renchard W. L. Reno, Jr. W. C. Roberts A. E. Schmitz C. E. Schotland F. H. Shearer T. D. Starr, Jr. J. H. Stauffcr S. R. Steadman J. Stewardson R. B. Thurber C. P. Van Gelder F. F. Wallin J. C. Webster B. F. Wilson C. F. Wood, Jr. R. M. Wood R. S. Young L. W. Smith P. E. Spaeth L. A. Spalding, Jr. G. L. Stallman A. H. Stockwell R. H. Taylor R. Warren H. S. Warwick F. H. Wilson A. E. Wood D. E. Woodhull,Jr. W. A. Young 125 I 11 II 1 1 1 1 II II II II M M 1 1 I [ 1 1 II If M n 1 1 M 1778 ' il American Whig Society FOUNDED 1769 OFFICERS, 192.6-1917 E. P. Serena, ' 17 President D. P. McPherson, ' x8 ■ Treasurer H. C. Rose, ' i8. Secretary E. P. Serena, ' 2.7 H. C. Rose, ' 18 WHIG HALL COUNCIL D. P. McPherson, ' 2.8 G. P. Van Arkel, ' 19 Law Club Rtpreseittatives — W. C. Fitts, Jr., ' 17, W. L. Broad, ' 2.9 Polity Club Representatives — E. M. Rhea, ' 17, W. H. Hudnut, ' 17 Arts Club Representatives — A. S. Alexander, ' i8, D. P. McPherson, •i8 W. L. Broad, ' 19 FACULTY MEMBERS John Gricr Hibbcn R. S. Dugan E. N. Harvey R. M. McElroy P. Reeves C. H. Smyth E. P. Adams L. P. Eiscnhart F. L. Hutson C. McMillan A. S. Richardson E. G. Spalding W. M. Adriance M. S. Farr C. W. Kennedy A. W. C. Menzics C. Robinson D. C. Stuart W. M. Alexander, II F. A. Fetter F. L. MacDonald C. R. Morey P. E. Robinson A. Trowbridge P. Boutroux C. L. Fleece M. MacLaren H. S. Murch R. K. Root J. S. VanNest P. M. Brown W. Foster F. J. Matlier P. R. Norton W. B. Scort J. H. N. Wedderburn E. Capps J. M. Colt G. H. Gerould D. A. McCabe T. M. Parrot C. F. Sylvester J. H. Westcott N. E. Griffen L. W. McCay A. H. Phillips W.J.Sinclair G. W. T. Whitney F. L. Critchlow G. M. Harper C. F. McClure G. M. Priest N. K. Smith F. N. Wilson M. W. Croll MEMBERS, 1917 W. H. Avery, Jr. B. Ewing, Jr. F. P. Hitz W. W. Marring, Jr. D. N. Rowe S. C. Stephano F. K. Bottomley C. F. Fayen G. S. Hoffman W. F. McElroy, Jr. W. L. Ruigh,Jr. G. D. Strayer, Jr. D. S. Bowman W. G. Findley V. F. Hopper E. C. Miller, Jr. F. H. Samson, Jr. D. E. Sullivan, Jr. B. B. Breese, Jr. W. C. Fitts, Jr. C. A. Howard, Jr. T. H. Minary, Jr. W. F. Scharnikovv A. M. Suor, Jr. E. W. Burroughs E, K. Gadebusch F. K. Huber A. K. Nelson M. Schiff.Jr. J. Thompson T. H. Butterworth J. F. Gallagher W. H. Hudnut, Jr. B. M. Newman H. L. Schlubach H. W. Trescott R. B. Capps A. R. Gessinger R. K. Humphrey E. L. Parker M. A. Schultz R. C. Tyson H. Clark V. S. Gettner H. S. Jeanes, Jr. H. A. Patterson L. Schwenger J. H. Tucker R. C. Collins E. C. Gordon A. C. Johnson, Jr. S. C. B. Peck E. P. Serena W. A. Valentine W. M. Collins, Jr. C. R. Harrower B. R.Jones, Jr. C. W. Perkins J. W. Slagle W. B.Van Alstyne.Jr. E. T. Conner, III D. V. Hegeman R. P. Kemble R. G. Pierce S. Sloan B. A. Weisl J. B. Corser, Jr. C. L. Hendricks, Jr. A. E. Kephart J. Prendergast J. P. Smith J. H.Wheelwright,Jr. H. L. Crawford, Jr. S. H. High.Jr. E. H. Luckett T. G. Reifsnvder H. S. Sommcrs W. K. Wight J. D. Dudley W. Hill C. H. Marsh, Jr. E. M. Rhea S. H. Steinbrink R. 0. Wilson H. R. Erdman G. L. Hinman R. C. Marsteller D, L. Rike F. G. Strachan G. A. Wirbclauer J. W. Feiss A. L. Wolfe 127 I II n II II II II II II u II I . I . 1 . . J 19281 r American Whig ' Society— Continued) MEMBERS, 1918 D. Agnew A.J. Crotti G. A. Gooch D. V. Lansden L. Ottenheimer P. A. Snell H. M. Alexander F. B. Crowther H. E. Hale, Jr. H.J. Lerch.Jr. C. R. Peterson B. M. Strauss B. M. Babcock G. D. Dayton F. J. Hamilton J. W. Lee, II W. R. Potts J. W. Thompson, Jr H. P. Barber D. DeLancey J. G. Hamner R. W. MacGregor J. G. Potter C. W. Tobin G. Bcaham N. V. Deuel P. Hampden W. R. MacNamee J. W. Renchard J. H. Tomlinson R. K. Black G. W. Dixon D. K. Henderson F. H. McConnell, Jr. J. S. Richardson J. M. Trout A. B. Boese.Jr. G. F. Dougherty C. M. Hill D. P. McPherson, Jr. H. C. Rose T. A. Whelan, III J. P. Bradford E. duPont N. R. Hoff J.J. Mead, Jr. R. E. Royes J. P. Wilson, Jr. F. W. Brown W. W. Dyer A. H. Hughes G. B. Moment H. A. Rue J. M. Wineman J. V. Bucher A. U. Elser G. P. Inglis S. B. Morse W. C. Sauer W. W. Witherspoon J. B. Campbell M. A. Fcighan A. Keep C. W. Muckle W. J. Schukraft P. Wolfe T. Cover, III E. M. Ford R. K. Korn D. T. Neale C. W. Shcultz C. A. Wright H. P. Cox G. W. Gallowhur S. A. Korff C. M. Nes.Jr. R.J. Sharp W. B. Slade C. W. Yost W. W. Crandall.Jr. O. Gasch J. F. Krewson D. N. Newhall A. B. Young J. W. Crawford P. S. Young, Jr. MEMBERS. 192.9 J. Angus, Jr. O. B. Bosworth W. J. Christenson W. M. Duryea C. P. Foulke C. Hastings C. E. Arnt,Jr. C. Bowie G. E. Clark W. V. Eakins P. H. Gladfelder N. Henry W. S. Ballenger, Jr. I. F. Boyd, Jr. 0. W. dinger J. P. Ekings.Jr. M. Goodson E. Hicks L. K. Barnett W. L. Broad W. F. Coan F. C. Ellis W. M. Gottschalk C. S. Hitchcock E. Barnouw C. D. Brodhcad W. E. Cobey W. Elmer, Jr. W. A. Graham E. B. Hocker G. P. Basset, III M. G. Bross J. G. Copley F. F. Embick M. Haas C. R. Hoopes, II N. P. Bastedo H. T. Dunn, Jr. P. B. Cott 0. Erlandsen, Jr. J. T.Hague, Jr. B. H. Hutchins C. P. Benedict J. H. Case, Jr. H. Craig, Jr. H. B. Falke R. G. Hanna W. F. Jackson J. S. Benn,Jr. E. J. Chambers A. F. duPont, Jr. W. H. Forsyth, Jr. H. Hansen S. S. Janney, Jr. B. Blake. Ill 128 Whig ' Hall— (Continued) MEMBERS, 1919 R. S. Jessup A. M. Jones F. H. Kingsbury, Jr. H. Koch D. F. Lewis J. G. Livingston, Jr. C. Lockhart H. A. Loeb J. E. Long S. H. Lopez H. Louderbough P. V. Love M. B. Low J. B. Luckc C. L. Mcllvaine, Jr. S. S. McMillan J. C. McPherson F. S. McQuilkin C, MacRae C. H. Marcus B. Mayor R. Mcllis A. M. Miller W. P. Miller J. A. Moffett R. S. Montgomery J. B. More G. Nash A. Nesbitt, II E. M, Nicholas, Jr. F. C. Norris B.Page, Jr. E. V. Peters R. G. Peterson C. H. Pitt F. R. Pleasants B. E. Poste H. G. Powell J. V. Quarles, Jr. G. P. Reichel.Jr. J. D. Reifsnydcr E. S. Reynolds E. W. Rice J. M. Richardson J. T. Rickard F. W. Robinson J. D. Rockefeller, III J. F. Rocs R. F. Schermerhorn A. L. Schcuer, Jr. C. H. Schlapp, Jr. A. M. Schmitz W. R. Scott A. T. Seymour, Jr. A. M. Shumate W. M. Sloane, III D. C. Smith, Jr. R. D. Smith G. M. Sncllings,Jr. C. D. Stengel J. Stevens J. A. Stobbe H. A. Strauss J. E. Thiele C. L. Thompson J. M. Thompson J. P. Tyler J. R. Oilman F. T. Updike G. P. Van Arkel A. Van Blarcom.Jr. J. H. B. Van Dyke F. B. Ward D. P. Warrin G. G. Weinberg H. B. Wells, Jr. J. A. Welsh D. E. Wesselmann J. F. Williams H. B. Wolcott E. W. Wootton MEMBERS, 1930 M. Alexander, Jr. L. R. Barrett J- Y. Biggs G. H. Booth F. P. Bradford W. Burgoyne B. D. Campbell L. Chambers J. A. Conklin J. M. Coon G. M. Crowley J. M. Davis, Jr. B. Dolan, II L. G. Dorety R. E, English E. E. Fike F. Foote E. D. Gillis F. W. Graves J. H. Hawley,Jr. B. Heald C. F. Hegncr C. D. Hodges K. P. Hughes J. M. Irving J. S. Janney A. Knox, Jr. J. P. Koontz W. Koren, Jr. J. T. Lane J. W. Lincoln C. E. Lingle W. M. Lobenstein W. S. McChesney J. McDonough C. F. Matelage F. A. Meade T. W. Miles A. L. Miller A. Mizener H. L. Moore, Jr. D. L. Newborg G. E. Nichols T. Noel, II J. F. Page, III J. L. Parsons, Jr. J. Peavoy.Jr. N. M. Pe rkins A. J. Powers, II Hamilton Robinson H. L. Robinson E. C. Rogers R. M. Schafer H. L. Scott C. F. Silverson E.J. Smith, Jr. L. P. Smith, Jr. G. E. Snyder, Jr. L. A. Spalding, Jr. P. H. Steinmetz M. Taylor F. S. Teachout J. G. Theban, Jr. G. G. Thouron K. H. Totten H. Trivers J. S. Turner C. S. Van Dyke G. C. Voorhees A. M. Wade D. Warden E. B. Wilson, Jr. Waldo Wilson W. F. Young 129 Tef Rcw — Clark, Daycs, Darby, Booth, Ely. First Rcw Kn ffm, Shu j;, Hohncr Clio Hall Executive Committee IV hi Hall Council Back Row — Broad, Van Arklc, Alexander, Rlica. first Reif— Fitts, Rose, Serena, McPhcrson, Hudnut. 130 I 11 II II II II i 1778 ' •r r— n T T IT ' ' 1 } } II n m , ' t The 125th Annual Junior Oratorical Contest ALEXANDER HALL, JUNE 19, 1916 The Junior Oratorical Contest is between four representatives of each of the two Halls. These contests have been held uninterruptedly since 1801. First Prize — Vincent V. Ravi-Booth (Clio) Third Prize — Roger Wallace Dhugg (Clio) Second Prize — Elmer Porter Serena (Whig) Fourth Prize — Karl Gustav Pearson (Clio) At the conclusion of the contest the announcement was made that Roger Wallace Shugg (Clio) had been awarded the prize for the best written essay between the two Halls. JUNIOR ORATORICAL CONTEST SUBJECTS A. Y. Fisher — Shelley — A Brief Appreciation. C. W. F. Habner — Education. W. C. FiTTs, Jr. — The Eighteenth Amendment. K. G. Pearson — Honor and the Law. C. R. Harrower — Economics for Undergraduates. V. V. Ravi-Booth — Is Princeton Really Working in the Nation ' s Service? E. P. Serena — Selective Immigration. R. W. Shugg — The Danger in Prosperity Worship. PRESIDING OFFICER Dr. Theodore W. Hunt, ' 65 The Hon. Alfred P. Dennis, ' 91 THE JUDGES Mr. William Arthur Babson, ' 01 Mr. Henry L. Savage, ' 15 131 SPEAKER ' S COUNCIL StaHdingStTiuss, Moment, Pearson, Howard, Wood, Ely, Thieic, Rhea, Jones. StattJ—Fitts, Shugg, Serena, Booth, Kcphart. Princeton Speakers ' Council OFFICERS Elmer Porter Serena, ' zj President Roger W. Shugg, ' 2.7 Secretary-Treasurer FACULTY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SPEAKING Dayton Voorhees Chairman R. G. Albion G. M. Harper T. M. Greene John Colt W. L. Whittlesey V. C. FiTTs, Jr. C. A. Howard MEMBERS, 1917 B. R. Jones K. G. Pearson V. V. R. Booth E. M. Rhea E. P. Serena R. W. Shugg W. W. Crandall, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 C. E. Hewitt G. B. Moment D. Plumer A. Z. F. Wood C. W. Yost Last year the former Speakers ' Association was merged into the Princeton Speakers ' Council, which now performs the functions which formerly were performed by the two separate bodies. The officers of the Speakers ' Council consist of the President of Whig and Clio Halls, a representative elected by the house of each Hall, and one man elected by these four. The Members of the Council consist of an honorary panel of speakers elected by the Houses of the two Halls from such of their members as have attained the requisite qualification and distinction. The Princeton Speakers ' Council is a supreme executive body in forensic matters. In cooperation with the Faculty Committee on Public Speaking, and subject to the advice of the Houses of the two Halls, it controls all public speaking in Princeton. It provides a means of recognition of ability in the effective expression of an intelligent interest in public affairs, partially through the channel of Hall work, debating, and other forensic activities. By reason of this function, a reservoir of trained talent, capable of manning the public speaking affairs of the University, is provided for and maintained. 135 Back Row — Fitis, Ravi-Boorh. front KmSbugg, Serena, Kephart. The Princeton Speakers ' Council Cabinet E. P. Serena, ' 17 President R. W. Shugg, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer W. C. FiTTs, Jr., ' t-J Chairman of Debating V. V. R. Booth, ' 17 Chairman of Open Forum A. E. Kephart, ' 17 .... Chairman of the Speakers ' Bureau The Princeton Speakers ' Council Cabinet is the chief executive body controlling the public speaking matters of the University in cooperation with the Faculty Committee on Public Speaking. The five members of the Cabinet elect a President from among them, who presides at the meetings and exercises a general supervision of the work of the Cabinet and of its sub-chairmen. The Secretary-Treasurer of the Cabinet keeps all records and handle the financial affairs. Each chairman is responsible to the Cabinet for the functions of his department, and through it to the Houses of Whig and Clio Halls. X37 INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATERS S$andinj — Shugg, Thiclc, Fitts, Moment, Pearson, Strauss. Statid — Ely, Wood, Howard, Serena, Booth. Princeton- Dartmouth Debate AT HANOVER, JANUARY i6, 192.6 I AFFIRMATIVE H. Gillette, ' 18 — Princeton J. KoEHLER, ' 2.6 — Frinctton NEGATIVE D. K. Mackay, ' x6 — Dartmouth D. F. Rawson, ' x6 — Dartmouth M. P. Pruess, ' vj — Dartmouth (alternate) Question — Resolved, That this House deplores the condition of intercollegiate athletics in the colleges of the East. Result — The Judges returned a decision of two votes to one in favor of the negative. Princeton-Williams Debate JANUARY 16, 192.6 affirmative A. Van Beuren, ' 2.7 — Williams H. Hall, ' 17 — Williams negative L. T. Merchant, ' i6 — Princeton A. Z. F. Wood, ' 2.8 — Princeton Question — Kisolved, That this House deplores the condition of intercollegiate athletics in the colleges of the East. Judges — Dr. Mather A. Abbott, of Lawrenceville; Col. D. M. Flynn, of Princeton; Professor F. L. Hutson, of Princeton. Result — The Judges returned a decision of two votes to one in favor of the affirmative. Princeton- Amherst Debate m MARCH I, 1916 AFFIRMATIVE P. C. RouNDY — Amherst C. Cole — Amherst NEGATIVE E. p. Serena — Princeton D. Plumer — Princeton Question — Resolved, That the Volstead Act amended to allow the sale of light wines and beer would be preferable to the Act in its present form. Result — Princeton, representing the negative, won unanimously by decision of the Judges. 139 Princeton- Br own Debate AT PROVIDENCE, MARCH i, 1916 AFFIRMATIVE L. Fox, ' i6 — Princeton D. Plumer, ' 18 — Princeton NEGATIVE — Browr, -Brown QvEsmoN— Resolved, That the Volstead Act amended to allow the sale of light wines and heer would he preferable to the Act in its present form. Result — The Princeton Affirmative team was defeated unanimously by the Brown negative team. Intercollegiate Triangular Debate APRIL 10, 1916 DEBATERS AGAINST HARVARD NEGATIVE R. Ely, III, ' 18 B. M. Strauss, ' x8 C. A. Howard, ' 17 E. P. Serena, ' 17 (Alternate) Question — Reiohed, That education is the curse of the present age. Result — The Princeton Negative team was defeated by Harvard by a two to one decision, and the Princeton Affirmative team lost to Yale DEBATERS AGAINST YALE — AFFIRMATIVE E. DuMBAULD, ' 2.6 C. Pearson, ' 17 B. Dunham, ' z6 H. C. Rose, ' 1.8 (Alternate) Princeton-Chicago Debate AT CHICAGO, APRIL 17, 1916 In this debate, the split-team system was employed. E. P. Serena, ' 17, and G. B. Moment, ' 2.8, together with one representative from Chicago, upheld the affirmative of the Question, while D. Plumer, ' i8, together with two representatives from Chicago, defended the negative. Question — Resolved, That Compulsory military training in American colleges is inimical to the promotion of education and peace. Result — A rising vote of the House favored the affirmative by a margin of 144 to 78. 140 1928 r Delta Sigma Rho NATIONAL HONORARY DEBATING FRATERNITY, PRINCETON CHAPTER OFFICERS C. A. Howard, Jr., ' 17 . President E. P. Serena, ' 17 . . . . . Secretary Back Ro -Momcnr, Ravi-Booth, Pearson, trent Ron; — Shugg, Serena, Howard, Ely, Strauss. FACULTY MEMBERS J. M. Colt E. S. Corwin H. F. Covington F. A. Fetter D. A. McCabb MEMBERS, 192.7 K. G. Pearson E. P. Serena R. W. Shugg C. A. Howard, Jr. R. B. Ely, III MEMBERS, 192.8 G. B. Moment D. Plumer, Jr. B. M. Strauss 141 i II II II I I II II I I I II II II I M II I I I 19281 r Class of ' 76 Prize Debate FEBRUARY zz, 1916 Dean Luther P. Eisenhart .... Presiding Officer AFFIRMATIVE _ NEGATIVE T. W. Armitage, ' 2.5 B. R. Jones, ' 17 A. Z. F. Wood, ' z8 W. H. Vodrey, III, ' x6 JUDGES Professor Philip Marshall Brown Hon. Burdette Lewis Professor Dayton Voorhees Question: Resolved, That Congress should pass a law enabling the President to mediate in case of an impending strike and, in the event that a strike occurs, to take action. The prize was awarded to W. H. Vodrey, III, ' 2.6. T ' he Annual Interclass Oratorical Contest For the Speakers ' Association Medal FEBRUARY zz, 192.6 Richard Sater, ' 2.6 Presiding Officer SPEAKERS E. DuMBAULD, ' x6 — Satura H. C. Rose, ' 2.8 — From Republic to Democracy ' C. A. Howard, ' 17 — At the Foot of the Cross R. D. Williams, ' 19 — The Day Has Changed JUDGES Professor Philip Marshall Brown Hon. Burdette Lewis Professor Dayton Voorhees The Medal was awarded to H. C. Rose, ' iS. 142 The Board of Supervisors of Extra-Curriculum Non- Athletic Activities FACULTY MEMBERS Donald Clive Stuart Chairman Shirley Howard Weber Secretary Varnum Lansing Collins Radcliffe Heermance Joseph Coy Green Joseph Edward Raycroft . GRADUATE MEMBER B. Franklin Bunn, ' 07 Financial Adviser UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS C. A. Howard, Jr., ' zj Chairman M. C. Beard F. Peabody, Jr. J. Prendergast W. B. Van Alstyne 143 : Ii S MUSICAL CLUBS I ¥ ¥ ¥ fe 1 1T78 ' I ' I I ' ' ' ' ' 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 II II II 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 7 1928 MUSICAL CLUB OFFICERS To; V ovi — Kemball, Coraing, Butler. Sislii — SurphcQ, Kellogg, Milton. I I II I I I J II llll I I ' I I I M I I II II I I 7 1928 Princeton University Musical Clubs 1915-1916 Dr. Alexander Russell returned in the Fall to resume his position as Director of Music, taking charge of the Glee Club, while the Banjo Club was under the instruction of Mr. Richard L. Weaver. Under these very competent directors, the clubs enjoyed another successful season, making several trips and giving a large number of concerts. The Banjo Club, under the leadership of Donald C. Mills, ' 17, developed into quite a capable organization. The Glee Club, Luther M. Strayer, ' i6, acting as leader, equalled its performance of the preceding year by winning second place in the Intercollegiate Glee Club Contest held in Carnegie Hall, New York City. Last year was one of the most satisfactory seasons in the history of the Musical Clubs. The ten-day trip to Bermuda during the Christmas Vacation was again the outstanding feature on the schedule. The voyage was made on the S.S. Fort St. George of the Furness Bermuda Line, concerts being given both on board the ship and on the island. This year, instead of a voyage to Bermuda at Christmas time, a trip to Hot Springs and White Sulphur Springs will be substituted during the Easter Holidays. In addition to the Intercollegiate Glee Club Contest in New York and the Bermuda trip there were on the schedule the usual concerts with the Yale and Harvard Musical Clubs. MUSICAL CLUBS, Dr. Alexander Russell Director of Musk Richard L. Weaver .... Director of Instrumental Clubs B. F. BuNN, ' 07 Graduate Treasurer John G. Kellogg, 17 .... President of Musical Clubs James Todd, Jr., ' 2.7 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Robert P. Kemble, ' 17 Duncan D. Sutphen, Jr., ' 17 John W. Milton, ' 2.7 Kevin Butler, ' i8 . Publicity Manager Glee Club Leader Banjo Club Leader Manager Assistant Manager Nov. 6 — Dual Concert with Harvard Clubs Princeton, N. J. Nov. 1} — Dual Concert with Yale Clubs . New Haven, Conn. Nov. 16 — Women ' s Club Glenridge, N. J. Dec. 1} — Concert aboard the S.S. Fort Victoria Dec. 13-31 — Bermuda Trip Bermuda Dec. 2.5 — Hotel Bermudiana Bermuda Dec. 16 — Opera House Bermuda Dec. 2.8 — Mechanics Hall Bermuda Dec. 30 — Concert aboard the S.S. Fort St. George Jan. 13 — Stacy Trent Hotel Trenton, N. J. SCHEDULE OF CONCERTS 16 Feb. 16 — Women ' s Club .... Feb. 2.7 — Academy of Music Mar. 6 — Intercollegiate Glee Club Concert Mar. 15 — Southside High School Mar. 2.5 — Harcum School .... Mar. 2.5 — Dual Concert with Havcrford Clubs Mar. 2.7 — Summit High School ... Apr. ID — St. Cecelia ' s Auditorium Apr. iz — Hotel Plaza .... East Orange, N.J Brooklyn, N. Y New ' York Citv Newark, N. J, Philadelphia, Pa Philadelphia, Pa Summit, N. J Englewood, N. J New York City 147 si GLEE CLUB Top Row — Humphreys, Buxton, Crawford, Fulmcr, Hedges, Miller, Buys, Mctz, Peterson, Schneider, Shoemaker, Bernhcim. Fifth Raw — Crocker, Reynolds, Knox, Layton, Darnell, H. A. Dunn, Joycs Childs, Raudenbush, Damerel, Weir, Sykes, Kepler, Eiscnbrey. Fourth Roa — Wanner, Irving, Dismukcs, Brigham, Hutchins, Goodridge, Elting, Murphy, Bedford, Mann, Thompson, Wallis, J. S. Lichty, Ott. Third Row — Wardenburg, Maplctoft, J. A. Lichty, Serena, Hudnut, Borden, Sommers, Doublcday, Bodman, Murray, Springer, Arnt. Second Row — Lee, Hopper, H. E. Dunn, Buchholz, Kcmblc (Leader), Kellogg (President), Trcnholm, Anderson, Ewing, Schcnck, Newton. First Rak ' — Hastings, MacRae, Thompson, Bcddoc, Freeman, Ford, Carspcckcn, Huston, Gibson. i II II H M II N II I I M II I I II M II II II II II IJJ 19281 7 Glee Club Robert P. Kemble, ' 2.7 J. A. Sykes, 30 . W. C. Beddoe, ' 19 H. L, BoATWRiGHT, Jr., ' 17 R. J. Brigham, ' 2.8 C. C. Crawford, ' 30 H, A. Dunn, Jr., ' 30 C. R. Ford, ' 2.9 HRST TENORS J. A. GiDDINGS, ' 30 B . G. Greeff, 19 B. V. Hedges, Jr., ' 30 V. F. Hopper, ' 17 A. Knox, Jr., ' 30 R. R. Layton, Jr., ' i8 Leader Accompanist J. A. LicHTY, Jr., ' 17 J. W. Mapletoft, ' 2.8 F. B. Murray, ' i8 V. C. PuTZ, ' 17 P. L. Wardenburg, ' i9 A. Z. F. Wood, ' zS T. M. Anderson, ' 17 F. A. Bedford, Jr., ' 2.8 R. Bernheim, ' 2.9 R. W. D. Caldwell, ' 18 H. H. Carspecken, ' 17 T. W. Armitage, ' 19 F. A. Baker, Jr., ' i8 C. E. Butterfield, ' 29 C. L. Buxton, 17 W. W. Crandall, ' i8 F. C. Ellis, ' 19 C. E. Arnt, ' 19 H. T. BODMAN, ' i8 R. P. BucHHOLZ, ' 2.7 C. K. Buys, ' 30 A. B. Borden, 19 J. H. Case, Jr., 29 T. W. Childs, II, ' 28 R. C. Collins, ' 27 H. F. Corcoran, 28 J. S. CoxE, Jr., ' 29 J. W. Crawford, ' 27 W. Elting, ' 29 S. B. Ewing, Jr., ' 27 J. C. Fullmer, ' 29 C. E. Hewitt, ' 28 F. L. Hilton, Jr., ' 30 J. K. D. Chivers, ' 28 W. A. Damerel, ' 28 C. L. Darnell, ' 29 N. V. Deuel, ' 18 N. W. Deyo, ' 28 R. H. Eisenbrey, ' 19 SECOND TENORS D. E, DisMUKEs, Jr., ' 30 G. C. DoUBLEDAY, iS H. E. Dunn, ' 27 A. U. Elser, ' 28 C. B. FisK, ' 17 T. O. Freeman, 29 FIRST BASSES J. M. Kennedy, 3HD, ' 28 H. Kinder, ' 28 J. S. LicHTY, ' 29 C. MacRae, ' 19 O. H. Mann, ' 28 SECOND BASSES M. GooDRiDGE, Jr., ' 29 W. H. HuDNUT, ' 27 G. A. Humphreys, ' 27 C. L. Huston, Jr., ' 27 B. H. HuTCHiNS, ' 29 M. V. JoYES, ' 27 J. M. Gibson, ' 27 B. C. Hastings, ' 29 N. H. Ott, ' 29 W. D. Reynolds, ' 29 H. L. Springer, Jr., ' 29 I. W. Thompson, ' 28 J. A. Metz, Jr., ' 30 D. H. Miller, ' 29 D. E. Murphy, ' 27 R. C. Ott, ' 27 W. P. Palmer, Jr., ' 30 J. G. Kellogg, ' 17 K. M. Kepler, ' 27 T. J. Lee, ' 29 G. A. Newton, ' 29 W. P. Palmer, ' 30 M. C. PiREs, ' 17 C. L. Thompson, ' 29 G. T. Trenholm, ' 27 J. K. Wallis, ' 29 F. G. Weir, 28 J. H. Wanner, 19 R. G. Peterson, ' 29 H. A. Schneider, ' 30 B. H. Shoemaker, ' 29 H. S. SoMMERS, ' 27 J. W. Wilson, ' 28 D. W. Raudenbush, ' 28 W. R. Scott, ' 29 E. P. Serena, ' 27 L. Thoburn, ' 28 E. L. Ward, ' 29 149 f [ I BANJO CLUB Top Rtftt ' — Lcvcnstcin, Martin, Woods, Easron, Cravens, Rollinson, Haines. StconJ R « r-Shumate, Davis, Wright, Schultz, Ward, Rcid, Swann. TlirJ R«c— Merrill, Hill, Cox, Sutphca, Finlcy, Frovvcll, PowclUoo. j-L. i i iL N II 11 ' 11 tf M t r-TT Ti: ■ I ' II ' I J p 1928 C. E. Balfour, ' xy R. R. Bayes, ' xj C. E. BUTTERFIELD, 2.9 W. J. Christenson, ' 2.9 H. R. ClappJr., 18 D. F. Cox, ' 18 M. F. Cravens, ' }o A. H. Davis, ' 3c Princeton University Musical Clubs OFFICERS J. G. Kellogg, ' 17 President J. W. Milton, ' xj Manager K. Butler, ' 2.8 Assistant Manager J. Todd, Jr., ' zy Publicity Manager R. P. Kemble, ' 2.7 Glee Club Leader D. D. SuTPHEN, Jr., ' irj Banjo Club Leader BANJO CLUB BANJOS G. S. Gavan, ' }o J. B. Haines, ' 30 J. R. Hill, ' 2.9 C. E. Levinstein, ' 2.9 0. T. Martin, ' 19 D. W. Merrill, ' 2.9 B. Mitchell, ' i8 1. A. Powell, ' 2.8 R. V. PoWELSON, ' 2.8 H. R, Prowell, ' 2.9 S. H. ROLLINSON, ' 30 C. C. Russell, ' 2.8 J. A. Russell, ' i8 A. M. Shumate, ' 19 C. P. Smith, ' 19 F. H. Smith, ' 30 J. H. Stumpf, ' 30 J. W. Thompson, Jr E. B. Ward, ' 30 R. S. Willis, • 8 G. A. WiRBELAUER, R. A. Woods, ' 30 J. P. WoOLDRIDGE, ' 2.J C. A. Wright, ' 2.8 •i8 2-7 E. J. FiNLEY, ' 2.9 VIOLINS J. M. Pardoe, ' 2.9 D. P. Reed, ' 2.8 G. Schmidt, ' 2.9 G. B. Duval, 19 SAXOPHONES J. S. Easton, ' 30 W. F. McLallen, ' 2.9 P. Nash, ' 19 PIANO D. SwANN, ' 2.9 DRUMS J. McC. Snowden, ' i9 BASS W. R. Boyd, III, ' 19 151 Top Rote — Morrison, Nelson, Vrj R« — Wright, McGuioness, Bocsc. ■ II II II II II ' I II II II H M II II 11 II II 1778 M ' Tini ' N I ' 1 ' II n irif ' ii n ii ii ii i; ii r i j 19281 r The University Orchestra 1925-1926 Appearing in concerts both in Princeton and out-of-town, the Princeton University Orchestra had an unusually successful season. The Conductor was Reed Hartel, ' 16, who had just returned from France, where he studied under Andre Bloch at Fontainebleau. The season opened with a concert at Wool- sey Hall, in New Haven, the night before the Yale game. After Christmas a series of three concerts was given in Princeton. The first took place on January 16th. On this occasion Oliver Edel, ' cellist, was the soloist. The rendition of selections from Leoncavallo ' s Pagliacci was very well received. Schubert ' s Rosamunde Overture also was played with success. At the second, on March 19th, Miss Rosemary Street, violinist, appeared as the assist- ing artist. With Miss Street, the Orchestra played DeBeriot ' s Scene de Ballet. This selection was repeated on the Easter trip with F. Stark Newberry as the violin soloist. The third concert of the series was given on April 17th. In the Easter ' Vacation the Orchestra filled engagements at Hot Springs, White Sulphur Springs, Charlottesville, Stanton, and Baltimore. This was the outstanding trip of the year. Upon its return after Easter, the Orchestra appeared in a concert at Vassar. The success of the season was due not only to the large number of men on the organization but also to the type of compositions played. However, this success would have been quite impossible without the able coaching of Mr, Richard L. Weaver. This year the Orchestra ' s schedule includes the Easter trip to Hot Springs and the series of three concerts in Princeton. 153 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA Top Row— G la tfcldcr, Nash, Vhay, Finlcy, Thron, Withcrspoon, Korn, Lincoln, Pardoc. Third R«ff— Nichols, J. Nelson, Friedman, Marcus, Hansen. Hawthorne, Hutchins, Washabaugh. S$cond RflU ' — Newell, Prowcll, Labarcc, Benson, Muloch, Bellows, Reed, Lee, Bapdsii. First Row — Clark, Boesc, W. Nelson, McGuinness, Newberry, Wood, Daracrcl. 1 ' II II I I II II 11 II I I I M If M 1 I 11 M 1778 II I ! II 11 1 I II I ' i 1 ' I ' ' ( I J ' 7 1928 Princeton University Orchestra F. Stark Newberry, ' zj . . . • . . . . Conductor Aims C. McGuiness, ' tjj President Wenley Nelson, ' i8 Secretary Mr. R. L. Weaver . . Director A. C.Johnson, ' xj Manager J. P. Wright, ' i8 . . . .... Assistant Manager B. Franklin Bunn, ' 07 Graduate Treasurer PERSONNEL VIOLINS Charles Agle K. F. Bellows R. H. Brunino Jack Chamberlain C. S. Chapin E. J. FlNLEY M. S. Friedman E. T. Haase J. C. Hawthorn A. B. Lewis C. H. Marcus Brantz Mayor R. C. Miller Graham Nash G. A. Newton J. M. Pardoe D. P. Reed L. E. Thron J. S. Vhay W. B. Washabaugh W. A. Young W. P. Youngs CELLOS J. D. Curran T. C. Kuhn B. Labaree N. F. Beach J. E. Damerel S. S. Marsh, Jr. Wenley Nelson J. L. VoEs TRUMPETS H. K. Hamm B. H. HuTciiiNS VIOLAS W. D. F. Morrison J. O. Nelson SAXOPHONES Gordon Duval J. S. Easton P. A. Snell CLARINETS Philip Glatfelter J. LUKENS C. P. Van Gelder John Witherspoon T. E. Wood A. C. McGuiness TROMBONES Harry Hansen G. E. Immerwahr R. G. Mc Allen J. G. MULOCK j BATTERY PIANOS FLUTES R. H. E. Elliott J. H. Rogers J. Giddings A. H. Pendlebury A. V. Jennings J. W. Lincoln I.J.Pedly R. a. Rugs H. M. Ritchey H. R. Prowell BASSES A. B. Boese, Jr. OBOES FRENCH HORNS R. K. KoRN Vernon Lee R. Nichols James McDonough W. L. Newell BASSOON T. I. Stevenson TYMPANI A. Baptisti,Jr. 155 PRINChTON UNIVERSITY BAND, 1916-17 Top RoM Hubcr, Birdsail, Pcnnypackcr. Kane, Lichty. Davis, Burroughs, Ncwcomb, Stuart, Gavan, Burgess. Stcmd Riw— Stovcl, Fisher, Muloclc, Inmcrwahr, Newell, Christian, Wright, Damerel, Woodward, Baptisti, Smith, Lincoln. Third R w— Hansen, Ivins, Ottenhcimcr, Young, Hopper, Banncrman, McDonougH, Sloac, Low, Hutchios, Wilbur, Hanna. Fourth Rfftt-— Wilson, Gould, Mills, Gladfclicr, Titsworth, Korn, Arnt, Prowell, Lukcns, Clark, Story. Ftfth Roic— Damercl, Fuller, Elliott, Johnston, McGuinncss, Williamson, Rudel, Parsons, II II M II II II II II II II II II II II II II I I J ' 7 1928 Princeton University Band OFFICERS Aims C. McGuinnes, ' 2.7 Concert Master Richard M. Johnston, ' 17 Drum Major H. F. Williamson, ' 17 Manager R. H. E. Elliot, ' 2.8 Assistant Manager R. L. Weaver Instructor J. M. BiRDSALL, 17 H. Hanson, ' 2.9 D. A. HuBER, ' 30 W. R. Boyd, III, ' 2.9 T. H. BUTTERWORTH, ' 2.7 TROMBONES G. E. Immerwahr, ' 30 R. G. McAllen, ' i8 J. G. MuLocK, ' 30 PICCOLOS J. Lincoln, ' 30 F. B. Strachan, ' 2.7 BASS RDUM T. R. RuDEL, ' 2.9 M. E. Newcomb, Jr. J. P. Smith, ' 2.7 C. A. Wright, ' x% 19 DRUMS A. Baptisti,Jr., ' 2.8 R. H. E. Elliot, ' 2.8 E. L. Fuller, 2-9 D. E. Woodhull, Jr., ' 30 G. S. Gavan, ' 30 H. Kinder, ' 2.8 M. C. Parsons, Jr., ' 18 FLUTES D. A. Clark, ' 2.7 A. V. Jennings, ' 30 D. B. Bannerman, Jr., ' 2.8 J. E. Damerel, Jr., ' 17 W. A. Damerel, ' 2.8 J. W. Delafield, ' 17 V. F. Hopper, ' 2.7 B. F. HuTCHiNs, ' 2.9 T. R. IVINS, ' 2.8 M. B. Low, ' 19 J. McDoNouGH, ' 30 BARITONES H. K. Hamm, ' 18 A. D. ViERNEs, Theo. Sem. TRUMPETS N. H. Ott, ' 2.9 L. Ottenheimer, ' 2.8 W. J. Newell, ' 2.9 F. E. Sloat, ' 2.7 L. W. Sloat, ' 2.9 D. N. Wilder, ' 2.9 R. O. Wilson ' 17 G. Young, Grad. Student J. M. Davis, Jr. F. C. Eiiis, ' 19 W. Burgess, ' 30 E. W. Burroughs, ' 2.7 S. B. Christian, ' 2.8 R. Delafield, ' 30 D. N. Fisher, ' 30 C. H. GiTHLER, ' 2.9 C. N. Hanna, ' 30 G. G. Kane, ' 2.9 C. E. Arnt, ' 2.9 J. R. Bates, ' 2.9 P. H. Gladfelder, ' 2.9 R. F. Gould, ' 30 R. K. KORNN 18 J. B. Kremer, ' 19 CYMBALS D. R. Stuart, Jr., ' 2.7 BASSES ' 30 J. S. LiCHTY, ' 2.9 T. I. Stevenson, ' 2.7 157 SAXOPHONES R. W. Kirkman, ' 19 H. S. Pennypacker, ' 30 G. B. Sour, ' 30 C. Stengel, ' 2.9 E. F. Story, ' 30 R. W. Stovel, Jr., ' 30 A. M. Kridel, ' 30 CLARINETS J. Lukens, ' 30 A. P. Mills, ' 30 H. R. Prowell, ' 2.9 G. D. Strayer, ' 17 G. TiTSWORTH, ' 2.9 C. p. Van Gelder, ' zg ALTO W. W. Woodward, ■2.8 Bsck Rw— Sommcrs, Humphries, Damercl. Serena, Campbell. Trompcn. Stcmd Rm—Trcaholm, Mapcltoft. Crawford, Childs, Barrett. Ball, Alexander, Cramer. Fnmt R«p— Lichty. Hopper, Hudout. Kemble, Anderson, Carspecken, Gibson. ' ' ' I ' ' ' II I ? It It II II n 1 1 1 1 M II II 11 J ' 19281 f s H. L. Sprelor, ' 2.9 G. Trenhmino, ' 2.9 J. K. Wallis, 17 J. M. Trompbn, ' 30 Alexander Russell P. S. McCoNNELL R. Brigham, ' 2.8 J. W. Mapletoft, 18 J. A. LiCHTY, ' 17 A. Z. F. Wood, ' 18 Chapel Choir FIRST TENORS H. L. BOATWRIGHT, ' 17 T. W. Childs, ' xS J. A. GiDDINGS, ' 30 V. F. Hopper, ' i8 Choirmaster Organist R. R. LAYTbN, ' 18 A. Dunn, ' 30 G. C, Wright, G. S. C. B. Fine, ' 2.7 W. W. Cochrane, J. F. Turner, ' 30 2-9 SECOND TENORS J. M. Gibson, ' ■l-j T. W. Crawford, ' z8 N. C. Collins, ' 17 R. D, Caldwell, ' i8 H. H. Carspecken, ' 2.7 V. C. PuTZ, ' 2.7 W, W. Woodward, ' 2.8 W. U. Elser, ' 2.8 J. M. Richardson, ' 2.9 D. H. Miller, ' 19 J. C. Fullmer, ' 2.9 J. S. LiCHTY, ' 19 P. H, Gladfelder, 19 T. W. Wilson. ' 2.8 C, G. Ball, ' i8 T. M. Anderson, ' 2.7 D. E. Murphy, ' 17 C. L. Buxton, ' 17 FIRST BASSES H. S. SOMMERS, ' 2.7 A. Cramer, ' 2.9 J. B. Campbell, ' x8 W. P. Palmer, ' 30 J. W. Thompson, ' 2.8 A.J. Alexander, ' 19 R. G. Peterson, 19 R. P. Kemble, ' 2.7 J. H. Wanner, ' 19 C. E. Butterfield, ' 2.9 R. C. Ott, ' 2.7 M. V. JOYES, ' X7 W. E. Newcomb, ' 2.9 G. H. Kennedy, ' 17 L. Thoburn, ' 2.8 2-7 G. W. SCHEND, S. Emery, ' 2.9 W. McLaren, ' Proftssor SECOND BASSES E. P. Serena, ' 2.7 G. A. Humphreys, M. C. Pires, ' 2.7 17 H. W. Deyo, ' z8 W. A. Damerel, ' i8 W. H. Hudnut.Jr., ' 2.7 G. A. Newton, ' 19 G. P. Van Arkel, ' 2.9 E. L. Ward, ' 2.9 169 Princeton Music Committees UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE Mrs. H. B. Fine Mrs. W. U. Vreeland Miss J. P. Frothingham Mrs. J. G. Hibben Mrs. W. F. Magie Mrs. K. W. Prentice Chairman Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. M. T. Pyne STUDENT COMMITTEE Herbert C. Sanford, ' irj Chairman George Lea Lambert, ' isj Vice-Chairman Samuel Carter, III, ' isj Henry S. Redmond, ' 17 O. J. Sands, ' 17 A. R. Jackson, ' 17 Winthrop Rutherford, ' 18 Avery Sherry, ' 2.7 J. G. Kellogg, ' 17 A. R. Stuyvesant, ' i8 1916 MUSICAL PROGRAM FOR 1916-1917 CONCERTS Nov. 16 — Albert Spalding, Violin Recital Dec. 12. — New York Philharmonic Society 19x7 Jan. 16 — Pablo Casals, Cello; OssipGabrilowitsch, Piano Feb. 13 — Flonzaley Quartet Mar. 17 — English Singers Apr. 5 — Philadelphia Orchestra 160 DRAMATICS ¥ ¥ ¥ TRIANGLE CLUB Top Row — Thompson, Candler, Snowdcn, Trimble, Jenkins, Penney, Slaglc. Third Row — Kassler, Redmond, Carter, Damerel, Breed, Wood, Gary, Harrison. Stcond Row — Sloan, Jackson, Clark, Mc- Guinness, Bell. Rhea, Hitschler, Andrews, Bartlert. Pint R«c— Roystcr, Moss, Sherry, Sanford, Hall, Brenion, Lc Maistre. I I I I I I I I II N II M II I I II II I I II II I I I I I I I I r 1928T 7 Trianfrle Club Members J. D. Bartleti H. L. Bell L. B. Braman VV. C. Breed W. Brenton W. L. Brewster B. Candler S. T. Carter D. A. Clark MEMBERS, 1917 J. E. Damerel F. Gary I. L. D. Hall W. J. HiTSCHLER K. S. Kassler E. A. Kniffin F. LeMaistre M. F. MacFarlane S. M. McAshan A. C. McGuiNNESS J. T. Moss J. C. Penny E. M. Rhea H. A. ROYSTER A. Sherry J. W. Slagle I. W. Thompson C.J. Welles T. E. Wood J. H. Berkshire J. C. Taylor Not returned. MEMBERS, 1918 E. S. Hanny E. H. Harbison J. Langhorne 163 Fortuno Fortuno SELDOM before has the Triangle Club staged a production as generally satisfactory from the standpoint of staging, scenic effects, music, dancing, humor, and acting as the comic opera Fortuno, which met with nation-wide ac- claim in the eighteen cities visited on the annual trip. From the opening night in Trenton on December sixteenth until the final performance at Commencement the Club enjoyed a well deserved success. The Venetian background gave unlimited opportunity for scenic and costume effects which were amply carried out. The music was exceptionally tuneful, and for such melodies as Twilight, Pretty Please, Romance for Two, Where Love is King, and Masquerading Eyes the composers merit a world of praise. As for the dancing, far and away the biggest hit of the show was the work of the specialty clogging chorus which from time to time threatened to stop the show by the applause and calls for encores. Humor, admittedly the hardest element of staging for an amateur organization to handle, was carried out with almost professional smoothness by Irwin Thompson, ' 17, and Franklin Gary, ' 17, in the roles of gondoliers. The feminine parts were cleverly and poisefully taken care of by John Taylor, ' xS, in the role of Olivia and Avery Sherry, ' 2.7, as Razet- ta, the handmaid. Similar credit should be accorded Waller Booth, ' 2.6, in the name part of Fortuno and John Lang- home as the scheming Cordiani. Singular mention should be made of the singing of Beppo, the lamplighter, in the person of Arthur Shannon, ' 2.6. With these as the outstanding performances of the production, the entire supporting cast should share in the general plaudits for the backing they gave was a most important part of the necessary smoothness of the play. The story opened in the royal suite of the ducal palace, where Duke Roderigo, who is on the verge of financial ruin, makes known his plan for the marriage of his daughter Olivia to a certain Cordiani, a man of great wealth and political power. Olivia ' s lover, Fortuno, plans an immediate elopement and sends a well-meaning gondolier, Pietro, to make arrangements with her. Pietro, on entering the palace, is taken for Nisnardi, the dictator of Italy, and his attempts to live up to his mistaken identity lead to further complication. A comic state of confusion ensues, and love scenes on moon- lit balconies are intermingled with the flash of rapiers in fierce duels. The story finally ends as Fortuno, enamored of Olivia takes her as his wife, but not until he has spent a harrowing session in the dungeon of the Doges. Trenton December 16-18 Washington December 19 Baltimore December 11 New York December ii Pittsburgh December 13 Indianapolis December 14 St. Louis December 2.5 Kansas City December 16 Omaha December 2.8 Minneapolis December 19 St. Paul December 30 Milwaukee December 31 Chicago January i Cleveland January 1 Rochester January 4 New York January 5 Plaintield February 19 Newark February 10 Philadelphia .... February 16-17 165 Triangle Show Fortuno Produced under the direction of Donald Clive Stuart Book and Dialogue by Irwin Thompson, ' 2.7 and Samuel Carter, III, ' 17 Music by Herbert C. Sanford, ' zj Lyrics by Irwin Thompson, ' 17, and Samuel Carter, III, ' 17 Additional Music by William E. Green, ' 2.6, E. Harris Harbison, ' tS Henry S. Redmond, ' 17, Franklin W. Orvis, ' i6, Winthrop M. Otis, ' x6 Additional Lyrics by Gil Flues, ' 16, Henry S. Redmond, ' tj Dances staged by Ned Wayburn The scenery was designed by W. W. Crandall, ' 2.8, and the construction and painting by V. E. Tobin, 6 Working plans for the scenery executed by V. E. Tobin, ' 16, and W. L. Brewster, ' 2.7 The costumes were designed by J. C. Bole, Jr., ' i6, and J. T. Moss, Jr., ' zj Color scheme was devised by J. T. Moss, Jr., ' 2.7 D. W. Rauscher, ' z6, devised the electrical effects Orchestrations by Robert M. Crawford, ' 2.5 CAST OUvin, Daughter of the Duke of Venice . John Taylor, ' r8 Fortuno, Her Lover Fernando, Secretary to the Duke Roderigo, Duke of Venice Cordiani, Dictator of Venice Waller Booth, ' zG William Green, ' i6 William Brenton, ' 2.7 John Langhorne, ' i8 Leanado, another Minstrel Razetta, Handmaid to Olivia . . Avery Sherry, Pietro, a Gondolier Irwin Thompson, Ccruti, Another Gondolier . . . Franklin Gary, Beppo, a Lamplighter . . Arthur Shannon, Benvenuto, a Strolling Minstrel Edwin Ashcraft,III, . Franklin Orvis, ' i6 2-7 2-7 2-7 i6 9 LACKEYS Cuyler Stevens, ' z6 Samuel Carter, III, ' zy f 166 Ensemble Chorus Girls — ,J. C. Bole, Jr., ' i6; B. Candler, ' 17; G. O. Dove, Jr., ' 16; G. W. Fisher, ' r6; L. Goff, Jr., ' i6; J. M. McDonough, ' x6; F. T. Merrill, ' i8; D. L. Monroe, ' 2.6; L. Orton, ' 2.6; H. A. Royster, Jr., ' 2.7; R. A. Sterrett, ' 16; W. W. Townley, ' 2.7. Men — C. H. Crimwell, Jr., ' i6; M. D. Hardin, Jr., ' 2.6; A. R. Jackson, ' 2.7; F. LeMaistre, ' 2.7; H. N. Love, ' 16; M. T. Milburn, ' 17; R. I. Robinson, ' x€; A. W. Schmidt, ' 2.6; J. W. Slagle, ' 17; G. G. Snowden, ' 17; C. S. Stock, ' z6. Specialty Clogging Chorus — W. B. Booth, Jr., ' 2.G; C. H. Cromwell, Jr., ' i6; W. H. Forrest, ' 2.6; M. D. Hardin, Jr., ' xe; H. A. Royster, Jr., ' 17; J. W. Slagle, ' 2.7; A. V. Shannon, ' 16; J. J. Steinmetz, ' t-j; T. F. Trim- ble, ' 16; J. VanDuyn, ' 2.7; F. G. Strachan, ' 17. (Quartette — W. H. Forrest, ' i6 (First Tenor); R. C. Stevens, Jr., ' 2.6 (Second Tenor); A. V. Shannon, ' 16 (First Base); H. L. Bell, ' 17 (Second Base). Alternates— 1 . L. Bailey, ' i6; J. D. Bartlett, ' 17; R. F. Bole, ' zS; S. R. Bradley, ' 17; J. K. Cilley, ' 2.8; J. B. Kerr, ' 19; L. Perin, ' 18; D. D. Sutphen, Jr., ' 2.7; R. D. Williams, ' 2.9. Orchestra Instrumental Director . . . Richard L. Weaver Conductor H. C. Sanford, ' xj Assistant Conductor ... R. F. Hartel, ' 2.6 Violins — F. E. Camp, ' i8; K. S. Kassler, ' 17; F. S. Reitzel,Jr., ' 2.7; W. B. Washabaugh.Jr., ' 2.7. Viola — R. F. Hartel, ' i6. Cello— . D. Nelson, ' 2.8. Bass — A. B. BoESE, Jr., ' 2.8. Trumpets — F. W. Orvis, ' 2.6; C. J. Welles, ' 2.7. Flute — D. A. Clark, ' 2.7. Clarinets — C. P. Van Gelder, ' 2.3; T. E. Wood, Jr., ' vj. Piano — H. S. Redmond, ' 17. Saxophones — J. H. Berkshire, ' i8; R. F. Hall, ' 2.8. Trombone — D. L. Coddington, ' 2.6. Drums — W. K. Gilmore, ' 2.6. Bells — A. P. Leland, ' z8. AUGMENTED Violins — C. K. Agle, ' 19; W. D. F. Morrisson, ' 19; F. S. Newberry, ' 17; W. P. Youngs, ' 2.8. Flute — G. M. Ritchey, ' 2.8. Trumpets — J. W. Delafield, ' 2.7; T. R. Ivins, ' z8; E. M. Rhea, ' 17. 167 Preparing Samarkand Triangle Staff STAFF H. P. Andrews, ' 17 . A. Knapp, Jr., ' 18 J. C. Penny, 2.7 M. C. Parsons, Jr., 18 W, D. Brewster, ' 17 P. B. C. Smith, ' 18 . Publicity Manager Assistant Publicity Manager . Program Manager Assistant Program Manager Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager W. C. Breed, ' 17 Electrician C. S. Pangman, ' 18 Assistant Electrician M. F. Macfarlane, ' 17 Property Manager P. Owen, Jr., ' x8 Assistant Property Manager W. J. HiTsCHLER, ' 17 Costumer F. G. Matheson, ' i8 Assistant Costumer Scenery designed by J. T. Moss, ' 17 Costumes designed by J. T. Moss, ' 17 Costumes executed by Eaves Costume Co., New York Program cover design by J. T. Moss, ' 2.7 Poster by J. T. Moss, ' 17 Musical Score published by The John Church Co., New York Electrical Effects by W. C. Breed, ' 17 SCHEDULE OF ENTERTAINMENTS, 1916-1917 SAMARKAND December 15 December 16 December 17 December 18 December 10 December 11 December 19 December }o December ji January i Trenton Trenton Trenton Washington Baltimore New York St. Louis Chicago Indianapolis Cleveland December 11 December 13 December 14 December 15 December 17 December 18 Pittsburgh Cincinnati Nashville Birmingham Memphis Little Rock January 3 Syracuse January 4 . New York February 15 Philadelphia February 16 Philadelphia 169 I I I I 1 1 1 1 II I I I I II I II II II II 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 19281 7 Press Comments on Fortuno Washtnhton Tost — Sparkling comedy, delightful humor and occasional shafts of wit, make of the Princeton players ' contribution a relief from the ordinary run of amateur productions. Baltimore Nrws — The comedy was delicious and spread just thick enough and the settings and costumes were far ahead of those of any amateur performance we have seen before. Niui York Timis — Clever dancing marked this season ' s offering of the Club; the music was lively and tuneful, although most of the musi- cal numbers were bacarolles, serenades, and dreamy waltzes in keeping with this ' Venetian Venture in two acts. ' Niw York Sun — The chorus was the best of the show — and here is meant no disparagement of the principals. It was trained to amazing contortions. There was never, at least since the last university show came to town, such dancing — nor such knees. Indianapolis News — Fortuno, a tuneful, musical comedy, outstanding because of its gorgeous costumes and agile dancing, was presented by the Triangle Club of Princeton University. St. Louis Star — Romance and intrigue, enhanced by rich comedy and tuneful melodies abounded throughout the two act piece. Kansas City Star — The costumes and scenery were rich enough to be adequate representations of the brilliance of fifteenth century Venice and the lines had the sparkle to do justice to the twentieth century college youth. Omaha Herald ' ' The dialogue was clever and the excellent stage lighting helped make the scenes effective. Minneapolis Journal — Fortuno takes itself seriously only in its scenic investitude. Otherwise, it is as prankful a little piece as has ever come out of Princeton. Milwaukee Sentinel — There was a constant succession of witty lines, and the entire piece was up to the minute. Chicago Herald — The music was dreamy and full of waltz tunes, in keeping with the scenes in Venice. ' Gondola Maid ' and ' The Lamplighter ' s Song, ' with the moonlit canals as a background, proved among the most popular numbers. Rochester Herald— The great hit of the evening was made by the young ' ladies ' and gentlemen of the chorus. Philadelphia Rrrari — Lighting effects of novelty and beauty have been introduced into the comic opera ' Fortuno. ' J7U t M II II M I I M II M II II II II II n II II I 1 :31 1778 Dr. Faustus, Presented hy The Theatre Intime Back Row — Hooker, Robinson, Scciii, BUntharJ, Huii, Hague. Stcond Rou — Fritcz, Branian, Mebane, Sthall, Liddcll, Arnt, U ' indust, Hopper, row Rau — Jcifer), Breiuon, twing, Gary, Wilbon, Thompson, Bradford. i Theatre Intime EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Franklin Gary, ' 17 President Blaine EwiNG, Jr., ' 2.7 Vice-President John P. Wilson, Jr., ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer William C. Breed, Jr., ' 17 .... Technical Director Humphrey E. Ambler, ' i G. G. Blanchard, 19 John P. Bradford, ' 18 William Brenton, ' 2.7 Thomas B. Jeffery, ' 2.7 Irwin W. Thompson, ' i8 J. HoBART Tucker, ' 2.7 MEMBERS OF THE COMPANY W. Allen, ' 17 V. F. Hopper, j H, E, Ambler, ' 2.7 E. N. Huff, ' 2.7 W. C. Breed, Jr., ' 2.7 T. B. Jeffery, ' 2.7 W. Brenton, ' 2.7 F. C. Mebane, Jr., j D. K. Evans, ' 2.7 H. A. S. Patterson, ' 17 B. EwiNG, Jr., ' 2.7 J. D. Reifsnyder, 2.7 F. E. Frittz, ' 2.7 H. S. Sommers, ' tj F. Gary, ' 17 A. W. Stein, ' 2.7 H. J. Tucker, ' 2.7 W. C. Watkins, ' 17 B. M. Babcock, ' 2.8 J. P. Bradford, ' 2.8 W. W. Crandall, ' 2.8 C. W. DoiL, 2.8 H. Gillette, ' 2.8 D. B. Lansden, ' 2.8 D. M. Liddell, Jr., ' 2.8 C. R. Morse, ' 2.8 S. ROBY, ' 2.8 R. B. ScHALL, ' 2.8 S. C. Smith, ' 2.8 I. W. Thompson, R. R. Weir, 2.8 J. P. Wilson, Jr., C. E. Arnt, ' 2.9 E. Barnow, ' 2.9 18 •2.8 G. G. Blanchard, ' 2.9 G. D. Braman, Jr., ' 2.9 J. T. Hague, ' 2.9 K. W. Hooker, ' 2.9 D. F. Lewis, ' 2.9 R. E. Mygatt, ' 2.9 B. WlNDUST, ' 2.9 F. W. Robinson, ' 2.9 Miss Geraldyn True Miss Grace Lowe GUEST PERFORMERS Miss Emily Anderson Miss Houston Scott Mrs. McKim Scott During the year the Theatre Intime presented four bills, ranging from one to three acts, written by eminent dramatists. They were as follows: October II, 2.2., 2.3, 14, Where the Cross is Made, by Eugene O ' Neil; Wurzel-Flummery, by A. A. Milne; and The Proposal, by Aubon Checkhov. January 14, 15, 16, Two Crooks and a Lady, by Eugene Pillot; A Good Woman, by Arnold Bennett; and Augustus Does His Bit, by Bernard Shaw. March 16, 17, 18, 19, 2.0, Candida, by Bernard Shaw. April 2.8, 2.9, 30, and May i, The Dover Road, by A. A. Milne. Candida and The Dover Road received much favorable co mment and were, perhaps, the outstanding work of the most successful season that the Intime has en- joyed. The musical program was in the hands of J. Kirkpatrick, Jr., ' 17. 173 Il . ATHLETICS Sf ¥ ¥ UNDERGRADUATE A. A. Top Kow—hz Bcaumc, Davis, Reynolds, Kipp. StcondKew — Milholland, Colladay, Alexander, Clark, Bradley, Carrott. Siltini — Davis, Morgan, MacAshan, Coll ins, Jcnney. Undergraduate Athletic Committee S. M. McAsHAN, ' z7 S. R. Morgan, ' i8 Chairman Secretary FOOTBALL W. M. Collins, Jr., ' 2.7 J. W. Davis, ' 17 P. D. MiLLHOLLAND, ' ITJ BASEBALL R. W. LaBeaume, ' i7 M. B. Carrott, ' 2.7 S. R. Morgan, Jr., ' i8 TRACK S. R. Bradley, ' 2.7 S. M. McAshan, ' z7 L Bunnell, Jr., ' 2.8 CREW H. Clark, ' 2.7 A. D. Jenney, ' 17 D. B. Kipp, ' 18 HOCKEY A. S. Davis, ' 17 E. E. Colladay, ' 2.7 S. S. Reynolds, ' z8 MINOR SPORTS G. L. Lambert, ' 2.7 E. E. Alexander, ' 17 H. B. SwooPE, ' 7 177 I Board of Athletic Control Dr. Charles V. Kennedy Chairman TRUSTEE MEMBERS President John Grier Hibben, ' 8i Dr. J. M. T. Finney, ' 84 Franklin D ' Olier, ' 98 Gordon Rentschler, ' 07 W. E. Green, ' 02. ALUMNI MEMBERS Walter E. Hope, ' 01 A. A. GuLicK, ' 97 FACULTY MEMBERS Dean Henry B. Fine Dr. Joseph E. Raycroft Dr. Charles W. Kennedy UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS W. M. Collins, Jr. S. M. McAshan P. D. Millholland 178 CHEER LEADERS Bigclow, Lc Maistrc, Beard, Alexander, Piiman If Major Sport Captains T ( OOTBAI - • JIW FOOTBALL TEAM, 1916 Top R a-— Rcquardt, Howe, Willaucr, Lawlcr, Mcislahn, Miles, Stinson, Baruch, Bridges. Stcead Kew — Collins (Mgr.). Chandler, French, Roscngartcn, Ewing, Prcndcrgast, Williams, Keith, Fitz- parrick. Third Row — Baldwin, Darby, Mocscr, Davis (Capt.). Slaglc, Caulkins, Bartcll. Football OFFICERS, 1916 J. W. Davis, ' 17 Captain W. M. Collins, Jr., ' 17 Manager P. D. MiLLHOLLAND, ' i8 Assistant Managtr W. W. Roper, ' oi. Htad Coach OFFICERS, 1917 C. R. MoESER, ' 18 Captain P. D. MiLLHOLLAND, ' 18 ManagiT D. O ' Dav, ' 19 Assistant Managir W. W, Roper, ' 02. Head Coach TEAM SUBSTITUTES PLAYER CLASS AGE HT. WT. POSITION C. R. MoESER 192.8 2.1 5. II 180 Right end T. J. ROSENGARTEN 192.7 2.1 6.1 188 Right tackle J. W. Davis . 192.7 2.1 6.1 197 Right guard E. C. Bartell 1917 2- 5 9 181 Center R. Baldwin . 192.7 2.x 6,0 190 Left guard R. F. Darby . 15X7 10 aV?. 197 Left tackle T. N. Lawler 192.9 18 6.1 185 Left end D. P. Caulkins 192-7 2.} 5.10 163 Quarterback J. W. Slagle 19X7 2-3 5-9 168 Left halfback J. R. Bridges 192.8 10 5 9 162. Right halfback 0. E. Miles . 1919 ' 9 6.1 186 Fullback J. W. Stinson J. M. French H. E. Meislahn E. E. Keith C. H. Howe . E. E. Baruch J. R. Chandler S. E. EwiNG J. Prendergast J, M. Requardt T. R. Williams W. WiLLAUER class age 19 2.1 2.1 2-3 2.0 lO 2-3 192-9 192.8 192.7 192.7 192.9 192.9 192-7 192-7 192-7 192.9 192.7 192.8 i2. 2-3 19 II 4 11 9 8M 9 166 190 193 187 186 .65 161 165 164 159 158 166 End Tackle Tackle Guard Center Halfback Haflback Halfback Halfback Halfback Quarterback Fullback Oct. 2., Princeton Oct. 9, Princeton Oct. 16, Princeton SEASONS RECORD 14 Amherst 7 Washington and Lee 13 Navy Nov. 13, Princeton 7 7 2-7 Oct. Oct. , Nov. Yale Princeton Princeton Princeton 7 Lehigh 6 17 Swarthmore o . 12. Harvard o 183 11 I I M I I I I I I M II I I I I n M II I I I I I I M M T 1928 W Pliuto by Underwood . Underwood Harvard Game, French is tackled Football — Review of the 1926 Season THE 1 916 football team was able to follow the example of its immed- iate predecessor and maintain the position as champion of the Big Three in spite of the fact that the year witnessed the decline and fall of champions in almost all other forms of sport. This record is without parallel in the records of football at Princeton, for never before has the championship tarried here for more than a year. Since athletic relations with Harvard have been severed for a few years at least, it is a source of satisfaction that Captain Davis and his team won this last Big Three title for Princeton. The season was one of contrasts; hopes were bright, early performance poor, finally, success. In the first games the team was handicapped by injuries and by a feeling of over-confidence — an after- math of 192.5. The results of these two factors were narrow margins of victory over weak teams, a tie with Washington and Lee, and a decisive defeat at the hands of a Navy eleven which was ultimately to be rated at least the equal of any team in the country. Coach Roper had a large squad of men taking part in the prc-season practice, and the prospects appeared excellent — on paper. From the 1915 team some twelve letter men mcluding many of the outstanding players returned. Bridges, Caulkins, Disston, Ewing, Prendergast, and Slagle were among the backs, and Baldwin, Bartell, Darby, Captain Davis, Moeser, Rosengarten had played in the line. But in spite of this array close followers of Princeton football shook their heads and predicted a mediocre season, all because the prospects were too good. This paradox was based on the firm belief that it takes a poor season at Prince- ton before a championship one can be made; but the work of Coach Roper and his men have proven its falsity effectually. The feature of the early weeks of practice was the development of more than a complete set of good backfield men from the previous Freshman team. These men played prominent parts in the earlier games, but their services will more greatly be valued in the approaching years. The opening game of the season was played against Amherst on Octo- ber md, resulting in a 14 to 7 victory for the Tigers. The Princeton line lacked the services of Captain Davis, whose injury was to keep him on the sidelines for several weeks. In his absence, Baldwin acted as Captain. The forward wall played well on the defensive, Amherst failing to earn a single first down; but it was unable to open the necessary holes for offensive play. Amherst was distinctly outplayed, but offered stubborn resistance and the ability to make the most of breaks. Both Princeton touchdowns came as the result of the work of Slagle and Prendergast, the latter carrying the ball over in both cases. In the second period Parker of the visitors intercepted one of Slagle ' s passes and raced eighty yards for a score. Against Washington and Lee Princeton was fortunate to secure a 7 to 7 tie score. The line appeared demoralized and interference to guard the backs was conspicuously absent. The hard plunging of Raubcr, visiting Captain and fullback, tore big gaps in the center of the Princeton line. Just before the end of the first haa, Williams broke away from the visit- or ' s defense and with excellent open field running carried the ball 53 yards to a touchdown. In the second half the Generals scored on a re- coveredTigerfumble. They maderepeated threats to add a winning score with passes and drop-kicks that were unsuccessful. In the final minute a Washmgton and Lee end gathered in another fumble and started for the goal; but was stopped only after a long chase on the 7-yard line by Prendergast, thus averting defeat. In this particular game, the morale of the Princeton team reached a very low ebb. After a week of strenuous practice, a Navy team came to Princeton that was able to score three touchdowns and two field goals to win, 17 to 13. The unusually strong running attack, of Navy, supplemented by good line work, brought the Tigers their only defeat of the season. The Princeton forward wall found itself in a serious situation, — it was un- able to open holes on the offense or close them on the defense. In the last few minutes of the first half, Princeton displayed a flash of brilliance that brought two touchdowns in quick succession. Uncovering a passing attack that caught the visitors off their guard, and with Baruch hurling passes into the arms of the receivers, two successful marches down the field were made in a very few minutes, to make the score 13 to 10 at the half. In the last two periods the Navy backs made repeated long gains through the line to increase their total score to twenty-seven. On October 2.3rd Lehigh was met and conquered by the very small margin of 7 to 6. Princeton ' s general play showed slight improvement, especially in the line. This was largely due no doubt to the fact that Captain Davis was for the first time able to resume his position at guard. The chief fault seemed to be in a lack of scoring punch. Three times out of four when Princeton touchdowns seemed certain, Lehigh held for downs. The backfield lacked Caulkins, Slagle, and Williams, who were included in the injured list. Swarthmore, as has been the case for several years, opposed the Tigers in the last game preceding the Big Three Series. At last the long awaited signs of Princeton cooperation and drive began to make themselves evident in the 2.7 to o victory that resulted at the expense of the Garnet. Prendergast again proved his ability by carrying the ball 35 yards to a touchdown in eight consecutive plunges. Prior to this game chances for a championship team had declined in the opinion of critics from excel- lent to almost nil. Against Swarthmore, however, Roper ' s men dis- played the first step in an up-hill struggle that triumphed over both Harvard and Yale on successive Saturdays. Harvard ' s stronghold was invaded on November 6th by a rejuvenated Princeton football team. Going into the game with the odds against 185 Photo by Underwood Underwood Yale Game, Baruch Passes Football — Review of the 1926 Season {Continued) them the Nassau warriors outfought their opponents and administered to the Crimson a 12. to o defeat. For the third time in as many years Har- vard has been unable to score, while the Tigers have found ways and means to account for 82. points. The new Horween coaching regime at Cambridge produced a more even battle than on the two preceeding vears, one touchdown, a safety, and a field goal provided the margin of victory. The Princeton line showed a wealth of unsuspected power; and Slagle featured the game with an exhibition of what a backfield man should be. The earlier part of the game was marred by costly Princeton errors; but, which Harvard was unable to take full advantage of. But in the second period the Tigers were not to be denied. Lawler scooped up a fumble on Harvard ' s ii-yard line, and two plunges by Prendergast followed by a triple pass to Caulkins produced a touchdown. A few minutes afterwards. Harvard was attempting a punt from behind her goal line, but a poor pass from center allowed Moeser time to tackle the kicker before he could get the punt off, thus adding two more points to the score. Slagle brought the final result to 12. to o by a drop-kick from the 2.3-yard line. As Princeton subsequently broke off football relations with Harvard, this will probably be the last meeting of the two rivals for a period of several years. A Yale team with a none too impressive record behind it came to Princeton for the final and most crucial contest of the season. As always when Yale and Princeton meet, past records were no longer valid; and one of the most exciting games seen in Palmer Stadium in recent years resulted. At the final whistle, the Tigers were in the lead 10 to 7; but only after repeated waves of nerve wracking tension had swept the Nas- sau stands. The victory is due to a great extent to the aerial attack which Coach Roper had perfected, featuring the accurate passing of Baruch. The game was a very spectacular one, both teams taking advantage of the numerous breaks. A feeling of sportsmanship and a friendly spirit was very much in evidence, calling forth from metropolitan sport writers the term love fest. During the period between the halves a short but impressive ceremony was held in memory of Walter Camp, dean of American football. In the first period Yale enjoyed a distinct advantage, but was unable to turn her opportunity into a score. A blocked punt on the Princeton lo-yard line gave Yale the ball. Since attempts to pierce the Tiger defense were unavailing, Captain Bunnell tried a drop-kick which went far wide of the mark. In the second period Princeton began an offense which with the aid of forward passes brought the ball to the Yale 13-yard line. Three assaults on the line gained nine yards; and with one more yard to gain for first down, Caulkins outwitted the Yale defense by calling for a pass, Baruch to Caulkins, which produced the first score. A second drive on the Blue goal line was halted on the 2.0-yard line; but Baruch ' s drop- kick was successful and the Tigers enjoyed a 10 to o lead at the half. In the second half Hoben of Yale intercepted a Princeton forward pass and carried the ball to the Tiger 3-yard mark before he was finally brough to earth. For three downs Princeton ' s line held fast, but on the fourth play Goodwine went over for a touchdown on an end run. Yale lost an excellent opportunity to score a little later through a misunderstanding of signals when the ball was within four yards of the goal. The ball was allowed to roll unmolested back to the 15-yard line where Lawler recov- ered for Princeton. Numerous long passes on the part of Yale in the last few minutes kept the outcome in suspense until the final whistle brought to a close a highly successful season. 187 Lehigh Game 1 1T78 1 I I r I I TT II II II I I II M I I I I I I M I I I I I I 11 1 1 I I I I I I M 1 I I I I 1 I 1 I I IXJ 19281 7 Princeton vs. Harvard princeton Lawler . Darby Davis Howe Baldwin Rosengarten positions HARVARD PRINCETON POSITIONS HARVARD Left mil . . . Meadows MOESER Right end Strong Lift tackle Pratt Caulkins Quarterback Putnam Left guard SiMONDS Slagle . Left halfback . . Guarnaccia Center Gamache Bridges . . Right halfback . Sayles Right guard . KiLGOUR Miles . Fullback . . Miller Right tackle . COADY SCORE BY PERIODS Princeton o 9 o 3—11 Harvard o o o o — o Touchdown — Caulkins. Points after touchdown — Slagle. Safety — Coady. Substitutions — Princeton: Bartell for Howe, Prendergast for Bridges, Bridges for Prendergast, Stinson for Moeser, Williams for Bridges, Prendergast for Williams, French for Rosengarten, Baruch for Slagle. Harvard: French for Guarnaccia, Stewart for Simonds, Goodwin for Kilgour, Saltonstall for Strong, Strafford for Putnam, Clark for French, Guarnaccia for French, Simonds for Stewart, Kilgour for Goodwin, Putnam for Strafford, French for Clark, Stewart for Kilgour, Goodwin for Simonds, Lindner for Coady, Chauncey for French, Bell for Gamache, Strafford for Putnam, Strong for Mead- ows, Zarakov for Sayles. Referee — W. G. Crowell, Swarthmorc. Umpire — F. W. Murphy, Brown. Field Judge — W. M. Hollenback, Penn. Linesman — W. R. Okeson, Lehigh. Princeton vs. Yale princeton Lawler Darby Baldwin Bartell Davis Rosengarten Left end Left tackle Left guard Center Right guard Right tackle Princeton Yale FiSHWICK quarrier Sturhahn Look Webster Benton Princeton positions Moeser Right end Caulkins .... Quarterback Baruch Left halfback . Bridges Right halfback Miles Fullback SCORE BY PERIODS o — lO o— 7 YALE Scott Bunnell Failing Holabird Cox Touchdowns— Caulkins, Goodwind. Points after touchdown— Baruch, Sturhahn. Field goal— Baruch. Substitutions— Princeton; Ewing for Baruch, Williams for Ewing, Requardt for Bridges, French for Rosengarten, Bridges for Williams, Stinson for Moeser, Prendergast for Bridges, Willauer for Miles, Mcislahn for French. Yale: Goodwin for Holabird, Hoben for Failing, Harvey for Look, Brand- enburg for Hoben, Kline for Cox, Failing for Brandenburg, Noble for Goodwin, Wadsworth for Kline. Referee— V. A. Schwartz, Brown. Umpire— W. R. Okeson, Lehigh. Linesman— D. L. Fultz, Brown. Field Judgc—F. W. Murphy, Brown. 189 1 1 i I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I i ' ' ■■ i ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 I I 1928 7 Washington and Lee Game A Summary of Princeton ' s Complete Football Record 1869 to 1926 VICTORIES Amherst o Army o Brown o Bucknell o Carlisle o Chicago A. C o Chicago University i Colgate z Columbia Law School o Columbia University . i Cornell 3 Crescent A. C o Dartmouth 3 Dickinson o Elizabeth A. C. ... o Fordham o F. and M o Gettysburg .... o Georgetown .... o Holy Cross o Harvard 9 Lafayette i Lawrenceville .... o Lehigh o Johns Hopkins o Maryland A. C. ... o Maryland University . o Manhattan A. C. . o VICTORIES TIES Princeton . 13 Princeton . 5 3 Princeton . S Princeton . 7 Princeton . 6 Princeton . I Princeton . I Princeton . Princeton . I Princeton . 11 Princeton . 13 Princeton . 5 Princeton . 9 I Princeton . 3 Princeton . 1 Princeton . Princeton . s Princeton . I Princeton . 3 Princeton . 4 Princeton . 18 3 Princeton . iZ z Princeton . 3 Princeton . x6 z Princeton . ) Princeton . 2. Princeton . z Princeton . z VICTORIES Michigan o Princeton Navy 3 Princeton N. Y. A. C o Princeton N. Y. University . . o Princeton North Carolina ... o Princeton Notre Dame .... z Princeton Orange A. C o Princeton Pennsylvania .... z Princeton Pennsylvania State o Princeton Rochester o Princeton Rutgers i Princeton Stevens o Princeton Swarthmore .... o Princeton Syracuse o Princeton Trinity o Princeton Tufts o Princeton Villa Nova o Princeton Virginia Poly. ... o Princeton Virginia o Princeton W. and J o Princeton W. and L o Princeton Wesleyan o Princeton West Virginia ... i Princeton Williams o Princeton Yale z6 Princeton o 5 o VICTORIES TIES 1 ID I 3 z o 7 30 5 I 19 2-3 9 5 I I 9 3 7 6 z 13 I o 16 Totals 55 367 Z9 Princeton: 367 Victories, 55 Defeats, Z9 Ties. 191 I-OOTBALL COACHES, 1916 Back Rtfuf— Wittmcr, Keck. Fnttt Rw— Poc, Fitzpatrick, Roper, Winn. BASEBALL TEAM, 1916 Ttp R w— Murphy, French, Hardt. Sicend Ron— Carrott (Asst. Mgr.), Coombs (Asst. Coach), White, Clarke (Coach), Rankin, Connor, Monroe, Childress (Mgr.)- TUri Ron;— Rhees, Richards, Lewis, Dignan (Capt.), Schamikow, Fowler, Lackey. Fourlh Rem — Flues, Beard, Slagic, Swoope, Wilson, La Bcaume. Baseball OFFICERS, 1915-192.6 T. S. DiGNAN, ' 2.6 Captain W. T. Childress, ' 16 Manager M. B. Carrott, ' xj . . Assistant Manager W.J. Clarke Coach OFFICERS, 192.6-1917 R. W. LaBeaume, ' 17 M. B. Carrott, ' 17 S. R. Morgan, Jr., ' i8 W. J. Clarke J. W. Coombs J. G. Kellogg, ' 2.7 F. B. GOELTZ, ' 2.6 . D. N. Hendey, ' i8 F. K. Rankin, ' i8 . V. Lewis, ' 2.7 . H. W. Lackey, ' 2.6 R. W. LaBeaume, ' 2.7 J. McK. French, ' 2.8 TEAM Pitcher T. S. Dignan, ' i6 Pitcher W. F. Scharnikow, ' 17 Pitcher W. B. Richards, ' 2.6 Pitcher T. S. Wilson, ' vj Catcher J. W. Slagle, ' 2.7 Catcher W. J. Rhees, ' 17 First Base W. B. Hardt, ' 2.6 First Base J. McF. Fowler, ' 16 REVIEW OF THE 1916 SEASON Captain Manager Assistant Manager Coach Associate Coach Second Base Third Base Shortstop Shortstop Left Field Center Field Left Field Right Field Princeton got off to an early start by defeating Bowdoin 8-5 in the opening game of the season on University Field. The game was loosely played as initial contests usually are. The Tigers showed a marked improvement while on the Easter southern trip, winning four out of the five contests played, tasting defeat only in the hands of Georgetown to the count of 5-1. In the second home game of the season, the Tigers conquered Vermont by a 7-6 score. The Green Mountain team was out-hit two to one but Princeton had difficulty in turning their hits to runs. Princeton suffered its second defeat in the hands of Villanova on the home field, 4-7, in the ninth tilt of the season. In the Fordham game, the Orange and Black played excellent ball but were nosed out by the strong New York nine, 6-4. Princeton came from behind twice in the Amherst contest finally to win one of the weirdest exhibitions of baseball seen in Princeton. When the Tigers came to bat in the ninth they were trailing by five runs. A rally put the Tigers ahead only to be passed by the Purple again. The game was finally won by Princeton 13-11 in twelve innings. Pounding their way to victory through three Crimson twirlers, the Tigers won the first game easily from Harvard, 16-6. It was a vastly improved Harvard baseball team which defeated Princeton in the second game of the series through the masterful pitching by Barbee, who shut out the Tigers 5-0 to tie the series. Barbee again pitched the Crimson to victory in the final game when he allowed Princeton only eight scattered hits which netted but one run, while his teammates piled up ten runs out of thirteen hits. This definitely put the Orange and Black out of the Big Three Championship race. Ineffective hitting and poor pitching cost Princeton its initial defeat by Yale, 8-6. In the Commencement game, a two run rally after two were out in the ninth brought the Elis from behind to give them an 8-7 triumph over Princeton. It was the first time in three years that the Tigers had dropped the Commencement game with Yale. The Princeton baseball season was on the whole successful, the Tigers winning eighteen of their twenty-eight contests. 195 1928 7 I I ' ' ' ' I M M rn TT ' THT n t! 1778 1 II II I ' ' ' ' I II If n i f n n 1 1 t ' 1 ' I ' ' m j 19281 P Princeton vs. Harvard — First Game CAMBRIDGE, MAY ii. 1916 PrtiKttom Dignan, ib. . Richards, ss. . Rhecs, cf. LaBcaumc, ib. Staglc, If. Fowler, rf, Schamikow, )b. Lewis, c. Kellogg, p. . Totals 37 Harvard AB Bums, rf. 5 Jones, cf 5 Zarakov, 3b. 4 Todd, If 4 Tobin, lb 3 Chaunccy.c 5 Ullman, ib o Chase, lb z Sullivan, ss. 3 Barbce, p . . i Puffer, p o Cutis, p. 1 Totals 34 Score by Innings: Princtton Harvard -16 - 6 Two base hits — Burns. Three base hits — LaBcaume (i). Home runs — Burns, Slagle. Sacrilices — Richards, Todd. Stolen bases — Fowlct, LaBcaumc, Rhecs, Scharnikow. Left on bases — Princeton 9, Harvard 8. Bases on balls— Off Cutts 5, off Kellogg 4, off Puffer), off Barbec 1. Struck our, by Kellogg 5, by Cutts 3. Hits— Off Barbce, 5 in 1 and i ) innings; off Cutts 3 in 5 and 1 3 innings, off Puffer, 4 in i and 1 3 innings. Hit by pitched ball— By Kellogg (Chase, T(xid, Ullman), by Barbec (Fowler, Schamikow, Slaglc), by Cutts (Schamikow). Passed ball — Chaunccy. Wild pitch — Barbce (i). Balk— Cutts. Double play— LaBcaume. Losing pitcher— Barbec. Umpires— O ' Sullivan and Freeman. Time of game 1:49. Princeton vs. Harvard — Second Game PRINCETON. N.J. Harvard Bums, cf. Jones, rf. Zarakov, )b. Todd, If. Tobin, lb. DcRham, c. Ullman. ib. Sullivan, ss. Barbce, p. Totals ■ }6 PritKtton AB Dignan, ib 4 Richards, ss 4 Rhecs, cf. 4 LaBcaume, ib 4 Slaglc, If 4 Fowler, rf 4 Schamikow, 3b 4 Lewis, c 3 Gocltz, p 1 •French i Kellogg, p o PO 3 Score by Innings: Totals . . . . •Batted for Gocltz in seventh. 34 Harvard Princtren ' —5 o — o Two basehits — Rhecs, Tobin, Todd. Home run— DeRham. Stolen bases— Rhecs, Todd, Sullivan. Sacrifices— Zarakov, Left on bases— Harvard, it. Princeton, 7. Bases on balls — Off Gocltz 3, Barbce i, Kellogg 1. Struck out — By Barbec i, Gocltz 1. Hits — Off Gocltz 8 in seven innings; Kellogg, none in 1 innings. Double play— Schamikow and La Beaumc. Hit by pitched ball— By Gocltz (Barbce), Kellogg (Barbce) Losing pitcher — Gocltz. Umpires — Freeman and O ' Sullivan. Time of game 1:05. 197 Mi ll II II II II M II M II II II I I II I I II I 1778 Harvard Burns, cf. Jones, rf. Zaralcov, 3b. Todd. rf. Tobin, lb. Dcrhara, c. , Ullmaa, ib. . SallivAD, ss. Barbce, p. Princeton vs. Harvard — Third Game Bartcd for Gocltz in ninth. Score by Innings: Harvard Princeton PO I 3 o 7 JUNE 9, 1916 Princtttm A B Dignan, ib 5 Richards, ss 1 Rhce.cf I Hardt, rf. . . . . i Slagic, If 4 LaBcaumc, ib 5 Scharnikow, 3b a Lewis, c 4 Hcndcy, p ■ . . o Gocltz, p I Kellogg, p o Rankin, p o H. Lackey, c i •Wilson I Totals 33 011050 1— 10 H PO A 3 I 7 1 3 3 I 13 I 5 3 1 Two base hits— Zarakov, Dipnan, DcRham. Three base hits — DcRham, Sullivan. Stolen bases— Zarakov, Rhccs. Sacrifices — Zarakov, Todd. Left on bases — Harvard 7, Princeton 10. Base on balls— Off Barbce, Hcndcy 1, off Goeltz, off Kellogg o, off Rankin o. Struck out— By Barbce 5, by Hendcy o, by Gocltz 1, by Kellogg i, by Rankin i. Hits — Off Barbec 8 in 9 innings, off Hcndey o in o innings, off Gocltz 5 in 5 innings; off Kellogg 6 in 3 innings, off Rankin 1 in 1 inning. Hit by pitched ball— By Barbce, Richards 1, Hardt, Fowler. Ixjsing pitcher— Gocltz. Umpires— Pfirmao and Cramer. Time of game 1:10. 198 ■ 1 11 II II II II ' I ' I II M II II II II II II II ITTT 1778 Princeton vs. Yale — First Game PrhKtttn AB Dignan, ib 4 Richar b, ss 6 Rhees, cf. 3 LaBeaume, ib 4 Slaglc. If. 1 Fowler, rf 5 Schamikow, 3b 1 Lewis, c 4 Kellogg, p I Goeltz, p o Heodey, p o •French i ••Hardt o X Connor o XX Wilson I JUNE, 5, 1916 E YaU McCIclIan, cf. Lindlcy, If. . Noble, rf. Kline, lb. Caldwell, lb. . Jones, 3b. Vaughn, ss. Barclay, c. Holabird, p. . Scott, p. . Totals Totals Score by Innings: i Battcd for Kellogg in seventh. •Batted for Goeltz in eighth. xRan for Hardt in eighth. XX Batted for Hcndey in ninth. PritKtten YaU 3 0—6 0—8 Home runs— Lindley (i)- Sacrifices— Fowler, Lewis, Rhees, Scharnikow. Stolen bases— Caldwell, Kline. Bases on balls— Off Holabird, 9, Kellogg 7, Goeltz 3, Hendey 1, Scott i. Hits— Off Hola- bird, 5 in 7 and 1 3 innings; Scott, 4 in 1 and 1 3 innings; Kellogg, 6 in 5 innings; Goeltz, 1 in 1 innings; Hendey none in one. Struck out— By Holabird 6, Scott 1, Kellogg 1, Goeltz i. Hit by pitched ball— By Kellogg (Kline), Holabird (Fowler, Scharnikow). Double plays— Scharnikow, Dignan and LaBcaumc; Dignan and LaBcaumc. Passed ball— Barclay. Left on bases— Yale 11, Princeton 10. Winning pitcher — Holabird. Losing pitcher — Kellogg. Umpires — McLaughlin and O ' Sullivan. Time of game 1:41. Princeton vs. Yale — Second Game JUNE 19, 1916 PritKtton AB Dignan, zb 4 Rhees, cf 4 Richards, ss 4 LaBcaumc, ib 3 Slagle. If 4 Fowler, rf. 5 Schamikow, jb 5 Lewis, c. 4 Kellogg, p 1 H. Uckcy I Totals 36 •Batted for Kellogg in ninth. ••Batted for Barclay in ninth. X Ran for Walker in ninth. Score by Innings: PrinctteH YaU YaU A McCIclIan. cf 5 Lindley, If. 5 Noble, rf 3 Kline, lb I Schmidt, lb 1 Caldwell, ib 4 Jones, 3b 3 Vaughn, ss 3 Barclay, c 4 Footc, c o Holabird, p 4 Shoop, p. o ••Walker i X Hammerslcy o Totals 35 H PO 5 6 3 1 1 I S J Two-base hiLs— Barclay, Dignan. Thrcc-hasc hits— Richards, Slaglc. Sacrifices— Noble, Schmi.It, Vaughn, Dignan, LaBcaumc (1), Rhees, Richards, Slagle. Stolen bases- Jones, Lindley, Slavic Left on bases— Yale 10. Princeton 13. Bases on balls— Off Kellogg 8, Holabird j, Shoop i. Hits— Off Holabird, 15 in 8 innings; Shoop, none in one. Hit by pitched ball— By Holabird (Richards) Wild pitch — Holabird. Winning pitcher — Holabird. Losingpitcher — Kellogg. Umpires — FinncI land Devron. Time of game i i. 199 Princeton s 1926 Baseball Record May March 30, April i, 3. 5. 6, 7. 10, M. 17. ii) M 2.8, I, 4. 6, 8, 15. 19. 12., 2.6, 2-9. 1, 5. 9. 16, 19. June SCORE Princeton 8 Princeton 10 Princeton i Princeton 9 Princeton 15 Princeton ....... 6 Princeton 7 Princeton 3 Princeton 4 Princeton 10 Princeton 13 Princeton 6 Princeton 4 Princeton i Princeton 4 Princeton 13 Princeton 15 Princeton 4 Princeton i Princeton 16 Princeton 8 Princeton 4 Princeton o Princeton 6 Princeton 4 Princeton 3 Princeton 15 Princeton 7 OPPONENTS SCORE AT Bowdoin 5 . . . Princeton Lehigh 4 Washington Georgetown 5 Washington William and Mary 8 Williamsburg Randolph Macon . Ashland University of Richmond 3 Richmond Vermont 6 Princeton Lafayette i Princeton Villa Nova . 7 Princeton Columbia 7 Princeton Cornell 8 Princeton Dartmouth . 3 • Princeton Holy Cross . 5 Worcester Rutgers 10 Princeton Fordham 16 Princeton Amherst iz Princeton New York University 8 Princeton Williams I Princeton Penn State . Princeton Harvard 6 Cambridge Swarthmore 4 Princeton Harvard 10 Princeton Colgate I Princeton Yale .... 7 New Haven Harvard 10 Princeton Pennsylvania 7 Philadelphia New York A. C. 5 Princeton Yale .... 8 Princeton 200 Princeton s Oppo- Princc- Name ncnt ton Tics Victories Acme o i o Active I o o A. and M. (Va.) . . . o i o Alaska 3 5 o Albright o i o Alert o 1 o Allegheny i o o Amherst 8 15 i Andovcr i 6 o Army i o o Athletics (Phila.) . . 18 9 o Atlantics 6 i o Auburn o i o Baltimore (A. L.) . , i o o Boston College .... 3 o o Boston (N. L.) .... 8 o o Bordentown o i o Bowdoin z 7 o Brooklyn (N. L.) . . . 6 2. o Brown 17 40 I Bucknell o 4 o Buffalo I o o Burlington 1 i o California o i o Carlisle o i o Catholic Univ i o o Centennials i o o Chelsea 2. 4 o Cleveland i o o C. C. N. Y o I o Colgate 4 3 o Columbia A. C. . . . o i o Columbia Lavtr . . . . o i o Complete Baseball Reco First Oppo- Prince- First Game Name ncnt ton Ties Game Victories 1894 Columbia Univ. . . . 1 xr o 1868 1883 Cornell 11 33 i 1880 1908 Crescent A. C i 3 o 1910 1876 Cuban Giants . . . . i i i 1888 1909 Dartmouth 4 13 o 1880 1884 Defiance o i o 1879 1884 Detroit 1 o o 1881 1875 Dickinson o 6 o 1896 1889 Dolly Varden . . . . o i o 1877 1911 Domestic i i i 1883 1863 Easton i o o 1874 1863 Eckfords i o o 1871 1883 Edgehill o i o 1896 191 1 Elizabeth o i o 1897 1911 Englewood F. C. . . . o r o 1890 1876 Enterprise o i o 1877 1889 Eureka , i o o 1864 1908 Exeter o 5 o 1903 1878 Flyaways • o 1. o 1874 1870 Fordham 9 18 o 1877 1902. F. and M o 3 o 1895 1885 Georgia o i o 1914 1866 Georgetown 13 X9 i 1893 1910 Germantown . . . . o 3 o 1874 1901 Gettysburg o 3 o 1904 1914 Harvard 3 55 ii( % 1875 Haverford o i o 19M 1873 Holy Cross 6 8 o 1900 1883 Holyoke i o o 1879 1900 Illinois I o o 1902. 1914 Indianapolis i o o 1877 1897 Jersey City 5 i o 1879 1893 Johns Hopkins . . . . o 7 o 1887 201 rd, 1860-1926 Oppo- Prince- nent ton Ties Victories Keystone o Klientz o Lafayette 5 Lawrenceville . . . . o Lehigh o Long Island . . . . o Louisville i Manchester 2. Manhattan o Maryland A. C. . . . i Meiji Univ. (Japan) o Mercersburg i Metropolitans ... 5 Michigan o Montclair o Montgomery A. C. . . o Monumcntals (Bait.) . o Murray Hill A. C. . . o Nameless o Navy I Neptune o Newark 3 Newark 3 New Bedford .... i New Haven i New York (N. L.) . . 18 New York (A. L.) . . i New York A. C. . . . o New York Univ. . . . i North Carolina . . . o Notre Dame o Olympics o Orange i I I 38 2-3 2-5 First Game 1873 1886 1876 1879 192.4 1906 1881 1882. 1889 1895 1884 1894 1874 1906 1870 1870 1883 1878 1875 1881 1911 192.6 1899 1912. 1914 1863 1873 Princeton s Complete Baseball Record, 1860- Oppo- Princc- ncnt ton Victories Orange A.C i Pclham Bay Sta. . . . o Penn State 9 Philadelphia .... 9 Pittsburg (N. L.) . . . i Pittsburg o Providence i Quaker City 3 Rahway o Randolph Macon . . o Resolutes 1 Richmond i Rose Hill o Rutgers i Second Naval Dist. . . i South Orange . . . . o Tics First Game Name Oppo- Princc- ncnt tan Victories Ties First Game 189I Southwarlc I 1880 1918 S. I. c. c 3 5 I 1874 1895 Stars (Brooklyn) . . . 1 1863 1874 Stars (N. Brunswick) . 1 1861 1897 Stars (Syracuse) . . . 2. 1876 1914 1881 1885 Stevens Swarthmore I 1 4 1913 1919 n 189I Syracuse I 6 1904 1916 Trenton 6 8 1871 I 1873 Tri-Mountain . . . . 1 1870 I 1896 Trinity 6 1903 1870 Tufts 5 1900 1866 Union (N. Brunswick) I I 1879 1918 Union College .... 1 1895 I910 Univ. of Penn lo 31 1 1879 1926— {.Continued) Oppo- Prince- c . KT T ' First Name ncnt ton Tics Victories Univ. of Richmond .0 i o 192.6 Ursinus i 9 o 1905 Utica o I o 1879 Vanderbilt o i o 19H Vermont i 7 o 1897 Villa Nova i 10 o 1910 Virginia 10 2.9 o 1886 Washington 3 3 o i88i W. andj o 2. o 1904 W. and L o i o 1896 Weslcyan i 9 o 1892. West Virginia . . . . o 4 o 189 9 W. andM o 2. o 1907 Williams 4 18 o 1864 Worcester i o o 1879 Yale 84 59 o 1868 Princeton; 783 Victories, 431 Defeats, 13 Ties. 202 rrt v-v— - ; JlDACKU — TRACK TEAM, 1916 Tep Rew— Hodgman, Rca, Ritchcy, Mirick, Buchholz, MacNamara, Gibson, Wilson, Faust. Stcond Row — Sladc, Baker, Reynolds, Grumpcit, McAshan (Asst. Mgr), Van Alstync, Simpson, Huckin, Barry. Third Ron ' — Raylor (Mgr.), Scuddcr, Jadwjn, Dalcni, Thompson, Welles, Rockwell, Moescr, Fircy, Hahn (Asst. Coach), lift j Rtfic— Howell, Lawrence, Fitzpairick (Coach), Gates (Capt.), Dikeman, Weekes, Bradley. Track OFFICERS, 192.5-152.6 C. F. Gates, ' 2.6 Captain G. C. Taylor, ' z6 Manager S. M. McAsHAN, ' 2.7 . . . Assistant Manager Keene FiTZPATRicK Coacl) OFFICERS, 192.6-1917 S. R. Bradley, Jr., ' 2.7 Captain S. M. McAshan, ' vj Manager I. Bunnell, Jr., ' 2.8 .... Assistant Manager Keene Fitzpatrick Coach S. R. Bradley, ' 2.7 J. M. Dalenz, ' i8 E.J. DikemaNjJr., 17 G. P. Faust, ' 2.7 L. M. FiREY, ' i8 C. F. Gates, ' 2.6 TEAM R. M. Gibson, 16 H. C. Grumpelt, ' 18 W. R. Howell, ' 17 L. S. Jadwin, ' 2.8 A. N. Lawrence, ' 17 T. L. Leeming, ' 2.6 C. R. MoESER, ' i8 E. B. Rockwell, ' 2.8 L. R. Scudder, 18 J. W. Thompson, Jr., ' 2.8 W. B. Van Alstine, Jr., ' 17 C. W. Weekes, ' 2.7 E. R. Welles, ' 2.8 Review of the 1926 Season This year did not bring many honors to the Track Team. The three dual meets were lost to Harvard, Yale, and California. Princeton took fifth place in the Indoor I. C. A. A. A. A. events and eleventh in the Spring IntercoUegiatcs. Only three places were awarded to the Tiger athletes in the Penn Relays. The first official appearance of the 192.6 team was at the indoor Intercollegiates held in New York on March 6; Princeton ' s score totaled 14 points, which gave the team fifth place behind Harvard, Georgetown, Penn, and Penn State. Gates and Bradley were first in the weight-throw and pole vault respectively, while Scudder was second in the broad jump. Bradley was the only Princeton man to take a first place at the Penn Relays. He tied with Harrington of Notre Dame in the pole vault by a leap of II ft., 6 in. The first dual meet was with Harvard on May 8. The Crimson team won by a scant margin of less than four points. Harvard excelled in the running events, but Princeton won most of the field events. Yale was decidedly victorious the following week with 793- points to Princeton ' s 55)4. Two intercollegiate records were broken when Carr of Yale leaped 13 ft., x in, in the pole vault and Gibson hurled the javelin 199 ft., ii g in. Gates was the highest individual scorer, making eleven points by placing second in the hammer-throw and shot-put. The University of California visited Palmer Stadium the week before the Intercollegiates and took ten out of fourteen first places. Welles, Lawrence, and Gibson starred for Princeton, Dikeman broke the Princeton record for the broad jump, but was beaten by Bondshu of California, who bettered the margin by an inch and a half. Eight points were made in the Intercollegiates by the Princeton team. Dikeman placed third in the broad jump, Gibson placed third in the javelin throw, and Bradley tied with Clark of Harvard and Durfee of Yale for third place in the pole vault. The third international meet was held in England on July 10. The Oxford-Cambridge contingent downed the Princeton-Cornell combination by a score of seven to five. Only first places counted in the scoring. Dikeman was first in the broad jump, with Scudder a close second. Bradley tied with Bontecou of Cornell for honors in the pole vault. The half-mile was the final and deciding event with the Britons leading six to five. Gibson made a good showing, but crossed the tape three yards behind Fryer of Cambridge. 205 Miller Wins Hundred, Harvard Meet I I I I I I I 11 I I I I II II I I I I I I I M _j_i_i_Lj 19281 7 Harvard-Princeton Track Meet PRINCETON. MAY 8, 1916 BVKNT loo-yard Dash iio-yard Dash 440-yard Run Half Mile Run Mile Run Two Mile Run 110-yard High Hurdles 110-yard Low Hurdles High Jump . Pole Vault Broad Jump . Shot Put . Jaselin Throw Hammer Throw Discus Throw FIRST Miller (H) . Miller (H) Kane (H) . Wattcrs (H) Tibbetts (H) Tibbetts (H) Howell (P) . Kane (H) . Thompson (P) Bradley (P) Dikeman (P) Pratt (H) . Pratt (H) . Gates (P) . Gates (P) . TIME, HEIGHT, POINTS POINTS SECOND THIRD OR DISTANCE PRINCETON YALE . . . Weekes (P) . . . Lundell (H) . 10 sec. 3 6 Rockwell (P) . . Weekes (P) . . 11 7 10 sec. . 4 5 Van Alstyne (P) . Broome (H) . 50 i io sec. . 3 6 Leeming (P) Haggerty(H) . I min., 59} sec. 3 6 O ' Neil (H) . . . Waiters (H) . 4 min., }i 3 10 sec. 9 Haggerty(H) . . Welles (P) . . 10 min,, 1 1 5 sec. I 8 Clark (H) . . . Jadwin (P) . . 16 i io sec. . 6 3 Lawrence (P) . Clark (H) . . 15 i io sec. . 3 6 Firey(P) . . . Grumpclt(P), Jones (H) 6 ft., I 1 8 in. . 7K2 iH Coombs (H), Clark (H) Faust (P) . . 11 ft., 4 3 8 in. . 6 3 Scudder (P) . . Firey (P) . . 2-3 ft., 4 3 4 in. . 9 Gibson (P) . . . Gates (P) . . 43 ft-. 10 3 4 in- 4 5 Dorman (H) Gibson (P) . . 171 ft., I 1 4 in. I 8 Berglund (H) . . Dalenz (P) 150 ft., 9 7 8 in. 6 3 Moeser (P) . . Pratt (H) . . 133 ft., 8 1 4 in. 8 I Ncw Dual Meet Record. Tied Dual Meet Record. 65 J Yale-Princeton Track Meet EVENT loo-yard Dash iio-yard Dash 440-yard Run Half Mile Run Mile Run Two Mile Run fiio-yard High Hurdles iio-yard Low Hurdles High Jump . . . . tfPolc Vault . . . Broad Jump .... Shot Put ttjavelin Throw Hammer Throw fDiscus Throw . PIRST Norton (Y) Clark (Y) , Paulsen (Y) Hogan(Y) . Welles (P) . Smith (Y) . Edwards (Y) Lawrence (P) Thompson (P) Carr (Y) . Dikeman (P) Brown (Y) . Gibson (P) . Marring (Y) Gates (P) . NEW HAVEN, MAY 15, 1916 SECOND Rockwell (P) . Arneill (Y) . . Ross (Y) . . Gault (Y) . . Berger (Y) Briggs (Y) . Cambell (Y) Cole (Y) . . Firey (P) . . Larsen (Y)— Tied Bradley (P) . for Scudder (P) Gates (P) . Davison (Y) Gates (P) . Moeser (P) . fNew Intercollegiate Record. Ties Dual Meet Record. tJNew Dual Meet Record. Ties Intercollegiate Record. 207 55J 69 14 TIME, HEIGHT POINTS POINTS THIRD OR DISTANCE PRINCETON YALE . Arneill (Y) . . . . Rockwell (P) . . 10 sec. 7 6 ■ 11 1 5 sec. . . I 8 . Clark (Y) . . . ■ 49 1 5 sec. 9 Leeming (P) . Evans (Y) . . . I mm. 58 sec. . I 8 4 mm. 31 xk sec. 43 4 5 sec. 5 4 . Ingham (Y) . . 9 mm. 9 . Jadwin (P) . . . 15 i 5 sec. . . I 8 Bullard(Y) . . • M 1 5 sec. . . 5 4 Grumpelt (P) . . 5 ft., iiYi in. 7 1 md Deacon (Y) . Faust (P) . . . . 13 ft., 3 in. . . • lYi 5H Durfee (Y) . Norton (Y) . . . 13 ft., 4 in. . . . 8 I . Gibson (P) . . . 41 ft.. 10 in. . 4 5 . Allen (Y) . . . ■ 199 ft. , II 3 8 in. 5 4 . Dalenz (P) . . 148 ft. . 4 5 . Graff (Y) . . . 136 ft. 73 in. . . 8 I 79M I II II II II n II II II II II II ' I II M 1778 I I 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 II I I 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I lU 1928 r Annual Indoor Championship, I. C. A. A. A, A, loiND ENGINEERS REGIMENT ARMORY, NEW YORK CITY, MARCH 6, 1916 Places won by Princeton men: 3 5-lb. Weight Throw ist, Gates, ' 16 Pole Vault ist, Bradley, ' 17 Broad Jump md, Scudder, ' 2.8 Distance, 47 ft., 9 ' in. Height, II ft., 7 in. Distance, li ft., 5 5 8 in. POINT SCORE « Harvard . Georgetown . Pennsylvania Penn State . . i8 ■ ■ -iVi ■ ■ 15 Dartmouth . Yale . . . Colby . . . Columbia . ■ • 14 ■ • 634 ■ ■ 5 • ■ 5 Princeton Cornell Boston College . Syracuse • 14 ■ ii ' A ■ 9 • 7 Holy Cross . Bowdoin M. I. T. Swarthmore . • • 5 . . iH I I UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA RELAYS APRIL 2.3, 14, 1916 Princeton men placed in the following events: Pole Vault WINNERS I. Bates (Penn State) . Broad Jump ] 1. Dowding (Georgetown) 3. Scudder (Princeton) 4. Delhanty (Manhattan) and El liot (Bethany) time, height, or distance I. Bradley (Princeton) and Harrington (Notre Dame) 3. Northrup (Michigan) 12. ft., 6 in. winners time, height, or distance I. Leyden (Maine) . . . 195 ft., 7J4 in. 2.. Kreuz (Wisconsin) Javelin Throw 3. Northrup (Michigan) 4. Gibson (Princeton) 5. Plansky (Georgetown) I. Hawkins (Michigan) 2.. Taylor (Penn.) Hammer Throw 3. Biggs (Syracuse) 4. McManus (Boston College) 5. Gates (Princeton) 151 ft., 3 5-16 in. 208 II II II I I II II II ii-n- II II II II II II II 1928 K 7 Annual Meet, I. C. A. A. A. A. Evmt loo-Yard Duh 11.0-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880- Yard Run One Mile Run Two Mile Run 110- Yard Hurdles CAMBRIDGE, MASS., MAY 18 AND 19, 1916 Winntrs Tim , Htight tr Distanct Evtnt I. Russell (Cornell) 9 7 10 sec. 110- Yard Hurdles 1. Norton (Yale) }. Miller (Harvard) 4. Hussey (Boston College) Charles (Colgare) I. Russell (Cornell) 11 sec. Broad Jump . . X. Clark (Yale) J. Norton (Yale) 4. Charles (Colgate) 5. Barber (California) I. Cooke (Syracuse) 488 iosec. High Jump 1. Burgess (Georgciowo 3. Proudlock (Syracuse) 4. Paulsen (Yale) 5. Bums (Holy Cross) Shot Put . . . 1. Waiters (Harvard) i min., 55 8 10 sec. 1. McCloskey (Boston College) 3. Sober (C. C. N. Y.) 4. Leness (M. I. T.) 5. Richardson (Stanford) Javelin Throw I. Haggcrty (Harvard) 4 rain, 14 sec. 1, Schwobcda (California) 3. Theobald (California) 4. Stewart (Pcnn State) 5. Fouracc(PcnnState) Pole Vault . . I. Tibbctts (Harvard) 9 ' ■■ 7 8 10 sec. 1. Loucks (Syracuse) 3. Schmid (Columbia) 4. Payne (Pennsylvania) 5. Smith (Yale) Discus Throw I. Dye (Southern California) 14 7 10 sec. r. West (Stanford) 5. Moore (Pcnn State) 4. Reynolds (Southern California) 5. Murphy (Boston College) (A f«  Jt iO WtttfUTj Tsntt, Htight or Diitanc Grumbles (Southern California) 13 4 iosec. Wolf (Pennsylvania) Steinbrenner (M. I. T.) West (Stanford) Moore (Pcnn State) Dowding ((Georgetown) 13 ft., 1 1 1 in. Mathias (Pcnn State) Dikcman (Princeton) Reynolds (Southern California) Bates (Pcnn State) King (Stanford) 6 ft., 5 3 410. Work (Stanford), Coggcshall (California) — Tit Hampton (California Wright (Columbia), Norton (Georgetown), Larsen (Yale) — Tit . Houser (Southern California) 49 ft., 11 3 410. Gcrkcn (California) Hoffman (Stanford) Alcski (Southern California) Norton (Georgetown) Harlow (Stanford) 155 ft., 3 in, . Davison (Yale) , Gibson (Princeton) Cook (Southern California) Covert (Dartmouth) . Carr(Yale) 13 ft., 1 in. Barnes (Southern California) Clark (Harvard) 1 , Durfee(Yalc) Tit Bradley (Princeton) ) . Houser (Southern California) .... 151 ft., 3 3 8 in. Gcrkcn (California) , Baker (Swarthmore) . Hoffman (Stanford) . Bates (Pcnn State) Hammer Throw I. Biggs (Syracuse) 1. Taylor (Pennsylvania) 3. Ide (Pcnn State) 4. Wenzel (Cornell) 5. GIantsbcrg(M. I. T.) 147 ft., I 1 4 in. Southern California 35  Stanford 15 Yale M  } Harvard 10 California 18 Syracuse 17 Pcnn State 16 Cornell II Georgetown 10 PeaosylvaoU 10 STANDING Princeton 8 MIT 6 Boston College 6 1 3 Columbia ) } Swarthmore 3 C. C. N. Y 3 Colgate J Holy Cross i Dartmouth i 209 Princeton Track Records EVENT loo-yard Dash zio-yard Dash 440-yard Dash 880-yard Run One-mile Run Two-mile Run 12.0-yard Hurdles lio-yard Hurdles High Jump . Broad Jump . Pole Vault Indoor Pole Vault Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Throw Javeli n Throw RECORD 9 4 5 sec. 2-1 3 5 48 3 5 I min. 4 min. 9 min. 2-3 3 5 6 ft., 3 13 ft., II ft., lift., 49 ft-. 168 ft. 133 ft. 199 ft. sec. sec. 53 5 s=c ii 3 5 sec , 30 sec. sec. sec. 1 8 in. 7 5 8 in- 9 in. . 7 in. . 9 5 8 in- , 7 in. . , 8 1 4 in. , II 3 8 in. HOLDER YEAK J. W. Rush, ' 98 1898 W. L. Dawburn, ' 09 909 C. R. McKiM, ' 14 1913 W. B. Moore, 17 1916 W. E. Stevenson, ' 2.2. 192.1 C. H. KiLPATRicK, 99 899 I. D. Mackenzie, ' 15 1915 A. Swede, ' ii 1910 S. H. Thompson, ' 2.3 9 3 J. C. Taylor, ' 13 ■ 1913 G. Blake, ' 2.7 ' 92-5 E.J. Dikeman, Jr., ' 2.7 1916 S. R. Bradley, ' 2.7 1915 S. R. Bradley, ' i7 1916 R. G. Hills, ' 2.5 1915 J. R. DeWitt, ' 04 1903 C. F. Gates, ' 2.6 1916 R. M. Gibson, ' i6 192.6 1 . . - i. . . rd. . .jnL , . r£ . TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS loo-yard Dash 3.io-yard Dash 440-yard Run Half Mile Run One Mile Run Two Mile Run lio-yard Hurdles 2.xo-yard Hurdles Broad Jump . High Jump . Shot Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault . Javelin Throw Discus 9 7 10 sec. . 2.1 sec. 47 2. 5 sec. . I min., 53 sec. 4 min., 14 1 5 sec 9 min., 2.1 1 5 sec 14 1 5 sec. Z3 3 10 sec. . 14 ft., 8 in. . 6 ft., 5 1 4 in. 49 ft., II 3 4 in. 181 ft., 6J.- in. 13 ft., 1. in. . 199 ft., I in. 151 ft., 3 3 8 in. LeConey, Lafayette May zy, 19ZZ Russell, Cornell May Z9, 19Z6 Meredith, Pennsylvania Mayzy, 1916 Meredith, Pennsylvania May zy, 1916 Jones, Cornell May 31,1913 Dresser, Cornell May 31, 1919 Thompson, Dartmouth May Z9, 19Z0 Grumbles, Southern California .... May Z9, 19Z6 CoMiNS, Yale May 31, 19Z4 King, Stanford May Z9, igzg HousER, Southern California .... May Z9, 19Z6 TooTELL, Bowdoin May z6, 19Z3 Carr, Yale . . May Z9, 19Z6 Storrs, Yale May z6, 19Z3 HousER, Southern California .... May z6, 1916 210 I I I I I I I I I I N I I I I II I I M II I I II 1 I I I I I I I IXJ 1928 ? CREW, 1916 Stratford Goodman Platz Ballard Hclmratb Wood Clark Langhornc Kennedy Crew A. Kennedy, Jr., ' i6 J. F. KOEHLER, ' 2.6 C. Logo OFFICERS, 1915-1916 Captain A. D. Jenney, ' 17 . Manager H. E. Dunn, Jr., ' 17 Coach Assistant Manager I J 0-pound Manager H. Clark, ' 17 A. D. Jenney, ' 17 C. Logo OFFICERS, 1916-1917 Captain D. B. Kipp, ' 18 Manager R. F. Muhlhauser, ' 18 Coach Assistant Manager ISO-pound Manager REVIEW OF THE 1916 SEASON On May 8 the Princeton crews rowed their first races with Harvard and M.I.T. on Lake Carnegie. In the Varsity race Princeton looked like a sure winner with an open water lead at the mile mark, but evidently had rowed too high a stroke and allowed Harvard to cross the finish line a quarter of a length in the lead. The Princeton Junior Varsity eight completely outclassed their opponents and swept across the finish two and a half lengths ahead of the Crimson shell. In the 150-lb. event the Princeton combination suffered its only defeat by the season by trailing the powerful M.I.T. crew down the entire Henley distance, however, Princeton managed to cut down the lead to one length at the finish. On the following Saturday the 150-lb. crew staged a comeback by defeating both Yale and Harvard over the Henley course at Cambridge. The Tigers rowed a smooth, steady, and wisely-planned race, exhibiting a style of oarsmanship of which Princeton has been lacking in the last few years. The Princeton Varsity, Junior Varsity, and Freshman crews journeyed to Ithaca for the Carnegie Cup Race on May Xi. Miserable weather conditions prevented the Varsity and Junior Varsity events. The Freshman race which was started contrary to the approval of the coaches who considered Lake Cayuga in too dangerous a mood to risk a race proved to be a battle with the elements rather than a crew race. The Tiger yearlings maintained a sub- stantial lead until at the quarter mark the shell filled and almost sank. Yale took the opportunity and overcame the Tiger lead to win by a scant half length with Cornell a poor third. At the finish the Tiger shell swamped, but luckily the shore provided a safe landing for men and boat. The powerful Pennsylvania Varsity crew defeated both Princeton and Columbia in the Childs Cup Race on Lake Carnegie on May 2.9. The Red and Blue shell maintained a safe lead up the entire course and crossed the finish three lengths ahead of Princeton and six lengths ahead of Columbia. The most , exciting race of the season was the Freshman race between Pennsylvania, Columbia, and Princeton that preceded the Varsity event. The Orange and Black yearlings got off to a poor start, but in a cleverly-rowed race succeeded in passing the Pennsylvania crew and pushed up even with the Columbia crew in the last quarter, only to lose by a split second at the finish. The climax of the 1916 crew season was reached on May 31st, when the Princeton 150-lb. crew won the American Henley Regatta at Philadelphia. The Princeton crew exhibited a superb form of rowing, defeating Pennsylvania, Navy, Yale, Columbia, and Harvard, in the order named. In the Junior Varsity event which followed Princeton finished two lengths behind the winning Syracuse crew, which although representing a junior varsity crew was composed of varsity oarsmen. Pennsylvania, Harvard, and Columbia finished third, fourth, and fifth respectively. In a post-season race the Varsity and Junior Varsity crews were completely outclassed by the Washington crews which a week later won the Pough- keepsie Regatta. 213 i | II I I I I II i II m 1778 19281 r The Crews VARSITY JUNIOR VARSITY Strolic, J. Langhorne, ' i8 7- H. Clark, ' 2.7 6. A. Z. F. Wood, ' 2.8 . 5. A. M. Helmrath, ' 17 4. W. F. Ballard, ' 17 . 3. T. A. Platz, ' 2.6 1. S. Goodman, III, ' 17 Bow, H. R. Stratford, 18 Cox, a. Kennedy, ' 2.6 . age height weight years 2.0 6.00 178 First 2.1 6.oo 180 Second XI 6.04 183 First 2.1 6.02. i8. Second 11 6,oi 180 First 12. 6.02. ' 74 First 2.0 6.00 170 Second ZO 6.02. 170 First ■LI. 5,08 12.0 Second Stroke, S. M. Becker, Jr., 7. A. S. Alexander, ' 2.8 6. H. W. Large, ' 2.8 . 5. R. E. Cook, ' 2.6 4. T. F. Trimble, ' 2.7 3. R. H. Beardsley, ' 17 2.. H. SuPPLEE, ' 2.7 Bow, R. M. Metcalfe, ' i6 Cox, a. H. Cook, ' 2.7 . 2.8 AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT YBASS 19 6. CI 179 First 19 6.03 ' 75 First 2.0 6.03 J 186 First 12. 6.o}H 183 First 11 6.01 17} Second 11 6.00 173 Second 11 6 00 167 First H 6.01 169 First 10 5.06 5 First 150 POUND VARSITY VARSITY RACES Stroke, G. F. Hawkins, Jr., ' 16 7. C. H. Cromwell, Jr., ' 16 6. W. B. Krag, 17 5, B. W. Read, ' 16 4. H. F. Whiton, ' 16 . 3. J. H. W. Thompson, ' 18 1. S. S. COOLEY, ' 17 Bow, A. Zinsser, Jr., ' 16 Cox, D. J. Barry, Jr., 16 AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT YEARS 10 5. II IS8 Third 13 5.10 i i6 Third 11 6.00 154 Second 15 11 5 H e.ooj 155 157 Second Third 19 10 M 11 5.10 5.09 509M 5°7 149 140 116 First First First Second distance won by 3 4 miles 34 length date FIRST second THIRD May 8 Harvard Princeton May 11 No Race (Yale, Cornell, Princeton) May 19 Pennsylvania Princeton Columbia i 3 4 miles 3 lengths June 18 Washington Princeton 13 4 miles 6 lengths 215 ♦ Varsity Crew Races May 8, 192.6 — at Princeton First — Harvard Second — Princeton Distance, i 3 4 miles Won by 1 length May il, 19x6 AT ITHACA Carnegie Cup race between Cornell, Princeton, and Yale cancelled because of rough water. June 18, 192.6 AT PRINCETON First — University of Washington Second — Princeton Distance, i 3 4 miles Won by 6 lengths May 2.9, 192.6 AT PHILADELPHIA Childs Cup Race First — Penn Second — Princeton Third — Columbia Distance, 2. miles Won by 3 lengths Junior Varsity Races DATE May 8 May 2:2. May 31 June 18 FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH Princeton Harvard No Race (Yale, Cornell, Princeton) Syracuse Princeton Pennsylvania Harvard Washington Princeton Columbia I 3 4 miles ± 2 lengths I 5 16 miles 13 4 miles 9 lengths 9 lengths 150 POUND VARSITY RACES DATE FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH FIFTH May 8 M. I. T. Princeton May 15 Princeton Yale Harvard May 31 Princeton Pennsylvania Navy Yale Columbia SIXTH DISTANCE WON BY I 5 16 miles I length I 5 16 miles I length Harvard i 5 16 miles i} lengths 216 MocKpi HOCKEY Standing — Colladay (Mgr.), Casey, Dclaraatcr, Grange, Richmond, Colcbrook, Hobson. Siatid—Pittmn, Davis, Wilkinson (Capt.), Hallock, Harding. Hockey OFFICERS, 1915-1916 B. F. Wilkinson, ' 16 Captain R. I. HoBsoN, ' z6 Manager E. E. CoLLADAY, ' 17 Assistant Manager B. Ramsay Coach OFFICERS, 1916-1917 A. D. S. Davis, ' 17 Captain E. E. CoLLADAY, ' 17 Manager S. S. Reynolds, ' 18 Assistant Manager TEAM M. A. COLEBROOK, ' 16 B. F. Wilkinson, ' 16; G. D. Richman, ' 18 G. Hallock, ' 16 H. K. Harding, ' 18; C. H. Delamater, Jr., ' 17 J. Pitman, ' 17;,}. W. Grange, ' 17 . A. D. S. Davis, 17; J- Casey, ' 17 . . , REVIEW OF THE SEASON Goal Left Defense Kight Defense Center Left Wing . Kight Wing The 1915-1916 Hockey Team suffered from early season defeats received, for the most part, during the Christmas recess. After the first few games, a marlced improvement of team-play enabled the Tiger stickmen to come from behind to win half of their games. Although the Tiger sextet bowed to both Harvard and Dartmouth, it succeeded in defeating Yale, Williams and Cornell. In the first match with Yale at New York, the University team exhibited a style of hockey which will long be remembered by all those who witnessed the thrilling match. Captain Wilkinson played a consistently spectacular game for the greater part of the season. GAMES DATE SCORE OPPONENTS SCORE AT DATE SCORE OPPONENTS SCORE AT Dec. 11, 1915, Princeton . 2. St. Nicholas 3 New York Jan. 30, 192.6, Princeton • 3 Harvard 4 Boston Jan. 1, 1916, Princeton . ■ 5 Sons of Ireland 9 Quebec Feb. 3, 192.6, Princeton . 2. Dartmouth . II Princeton Jan. 6, 1916, Princeton . . Queens College 4 New York Feb. 17, 192.6, Princeton . 2. Cornell . . I Ithaca Jan. 9, 1916, Princeton . • 3 Harvard 4 Princeton Feb. 18, 192.6, Princeton . i Hamilton Clinton Jan. 16, 192.6, Princeton ■ 4 Yale . . . i New York Feb. 12., 1916, Princeton . . X Yale . . . I Princeton Jan. 2.3, 192.6, Princeton . • 4 St. Nicholas 3 Princeton Feb. 2.4, 192.6, Princeton . ■ 3 Williams . 2. Princeton 219 Football Captains 1869-1917 69 W. S. GuMMERIE 84— C. W. Bird 99 — W. H. Edwards 70 — A. Van Rensselaer 85— C. M. DeCamp 00— H. W. Pell 71 — A. Johnson 86 — H. S. Savage 01— H. W. Pell 72.— D. T. Marvel 87 — E. 0. Wagenhurst 01 — R. T. Davis 7} — C. 0. Dershimer 88— H. W. Cowan 03— J. R. DeWitt 74 1. H. LlONBERGER 89— E. A, PoE 04 W. L. FOULKE 75 — C. Denney 90 — E. A. Foe 05 — J. L. CoONEY 76 — A. J. McCosH 91— R. H. Warren 06 — H. L. Dilon 77— W. E. Dodge 91 — P. King 07 — J. B. McCormick 78— B. Ballard 93 — T. G. Trenchard 08 — E. A. Dillon 79 — B. Ballard 94 — T. G. Trenchard 09 R. C. SlEGLINO 80 — F. LoNEY 95 — L. Lea 10 — E. J. Hart 81— P. T. Bryan 96 — G. Cochran 11 — E. J. Hart 81— E. C. Peace 97 — G. Cochran 11 — T. T. Pendleton 83 — A. Moffat 98 — A. R. T. Hildebrand 13— H. A. H. Baker Informal team in 1918 composed of members of the S.A.T.C. and Naval Units. Baseball Captains ' 14 — H. R. Ballin ' 15 — F. Glick ' 16 — F. T. HoGO ' 17 — (No Team) ' 18 — H. A. Callahan 19 — C. W. McGraw ' ic — H. A. Callahan ' ii — J. S. Keck ' xz — M. P. Dickenson ' 2.3 — A. B. Snively, Jr. ' 14 — E, C. Stout, Jr. ' 15 — E. L. McMillan •2.6— J. W. Davis, Jr. ' x7 — C. R. Moeser -192.7 •60— L. W. Mudge 77 — L. Laughlin 94 — C. S. Mackenzie 61— L. W. Mudge 78 E. FuRMAN 95 — J. H. Brooks 6i— L. W. Mudge 79 — C. B. Wigton 96— J. Bradley ■65 — H. C. Milspaugh 80— W. S. Horton 97— W. W. Wilson ' 64 — H. C. Milspaugh 81 — A. M. McCune 98— F. W. Kafer ' 65 — E. P. Rankin 82. — 0. Rafferty 99— F. W. Kafer ■66— W. H. WiCKHAM 83— J. M. Harlan 00 — A. R. T. Hildebrand 67 — R. F. Little 84 — J. M. Harlan 01 — W. E. Green ' 68- E. A. Van Wagenen 85 — D. Edwards 07. — W. J. Steinwender ' 69 — E. P. Rankin 86— J. P. Shaw 03 — F. G. Pearsons •70— W. H. Buck 87 — A. H. Larkin 04 — C. G. Stevens ■71 — A. Van Rensseler 88— E. 0. Wagenhurst 05 — G. T. Wells 72. — T. K. Bradford 89— W. H. King 06— S. R. Reid, Jr. ' 73— A. Pell 90 — C. C. Dana 07— J. L. Coon BY 74 — D. Patten 91 — C. C. Dana 08— E. H. W. Harland ' 75— J. M. Woods 92. — L. a. Young 09 — W. R. Sides 76— J. M. Wood 93— P. King 10 — F. T. Dawson — S. B. White — C. H. Sterrett 13 F.D. WoRTHINGTON 14 — B. K. Rhoads 15 — Q. S. Greene 16 — B. S. Law 17 — E. H. Driggs 18— W. H. Madden 19— W. H. Bade 2.0 — R. M. Trimble XI — J. Fisher, Jr. 2.2. — W. S. MacPHEE 2.3 — J. H. Jefperies 14 — P. EuWER 2.5 — J. M. BOOHECKER 2.6 T. S. DlGNAN 17 — R. W. La Beaumb 221 M I I I I I I I I II I I I I II I I I II I I 1 I I I I I II 7 1928 Princeton Track Captains 1873-1916 From 1873 ' o ' 7 ' he present day captain of the Track Team was known as the President of the Athletic Association, The President of the first Track Team was Jacob H. Van Deventer in 1873. The first Captain was Thomas B. Hamilton in 1888. Jacob H. Van Deventer, ' 74 18 73-1874 Frank Dunning, ' 76 1875 John A. Campbell, ' 77 1876-1877 Henry Marquand, ' 78 1878 Cleveland H. Doixje, ' 79 1879 Henry M. Cutts, ' 80 1880 Francis G. Landon, ' 81 1881 George Westervelt, ' 82. William Church Osborn, ' 83 Alexander G. Fell, ' 84 J. Borden Harriman, ' 85 George B. McClellan, ' 86 William M. Spalding, ' 87 Ferris S. Thompson, ' 88 (Captain) ♦Thomas B. Hamilton, ' 88 Hugh H. Janeway, ' 90 Walter C. Dohm, ' 90 Joseph S. Roddy, ' 91 Peter Vredenburgh, ' 91 WlLLIAM B. WoODBRIDGE, George R. Swain, ' 94 Darwin R. James, ' 95 Robert Garrett, ' 97 Diciased. 93 1896- 1881 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 888 889 890 891 892. 893 894 895 897 Harry C. Potter, ' 98 John F. Cregan, ' 99 Alexander W. Coleman, ' oz .... Daniel S. Horton, ' 03 Lynn M. Adsit, ' 04 Robert E. Williams, ' 05 William M. Armstrong, ' 07 i John C. Atlee, ' 07 Ralph A. Gamble, ' 09 James T. Moore, ' 10 Maitland Dwight, ' ii Howard M. Sawyer, ' 12. Rupert B. Thomas, Jr., ' 13 Torrance Fiske, ' 14 Ian D. Mackenzie, ' 15 William B. Moore, ' 17 i John H. Barrett, ' 18 Charles E. Erdman, Jr., ' 19 Robert M. McCulloch, ' h William E. Stevenson, ' 2.2. S. Harrison Thomson, ' 12. Harvey C. Emery, ' 2.4 Ralph G. Hills, ' 2.5 Caleb F. Gates, Jr., ' 16 Stephen R. Bradley, ' 2.7 899-1900 901-1901 1903 1904 1905 906-1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1911 1913 1914 1915 916-1917 1918 919-192.0 191.1 19U. 19x3 1914 1915 192.6 192.7 222 Crew Captains II 12. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 XO ■LI 7.1. 2-3 M 2-5 i6 2-7 I9V R. T. Roche S. J. Ranch S. J. Ranch T. C Briggs O. S. Putnam R. A. Cochran R. A. Cochran H. S. Roche W. M. Paxton, III R. S. Lamont H. C. Creswell S. W. Milne J. T. Pirie, II C. L. Austin W. G. Dyer A. Kennedy, Jr. H. Clark Hockey Major Sport Captains ' 2JS . : . . B. F. Wilkinson ' zj . . . .A. D. Davis 223 MAJOR SPORT MANAGERS Carrot I McAihao Jcnncy Colladay Major Sport Coaches Photo by Underwood and Underwood Yale Game Shumate Bsck Raw — Kinder (Mgr.). Whitsctt, Footc, Hccrkks, Wittmer (Coach) Front Row — McCabc, Alexander, Loch (Capt.), Bryant, Evans. J. W. Eben, ' i6 C. M. LoEB, 16 E. E. Alexander, ' 17 W. B. Evans, ' 18 J. D, McCabe, ' 17 J. W. Gartner, ' 17 E. C. Bartell, ' 17 J. A. Kaufman, ' 17 R. O. PlEPER, 18 D. L. Thoburn, ' i8 Basketball OFFICERS, 1915-1916 Captain A. Wittmer,Jr. Acting Captain Ralph Kinder TEAM Guard S. B. Foote, ' 18 Forward J. A. Bryant, ' i6 Forward C. M. Loeb, ' 2.6 SUBSTITUTES J. W Forward Guard Guard Guard Forward Eben, ' i6 W. P. Elliot, ' 18 , D. M. Hendey, ' i8 J. V. McCuLLOUGH, W. J. Rhees, 17 R. C. Whitsett, ' 18 Guard 2.8 Coach Manager Center Center Guard . Guard Center Forward Center Forward RECORD, 1915-1916 date Dec. 16, Dec. II, Dec. }o. an. an. an. X, 4. 6, 9. an. 15, an. 16, an. lo, an. 13, Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton :ORE OPPONENTS 2.5 Lehigh ii Newark A. C. i8 Rochester 17 Syracuse 2.5 Ohio State . 1} Buffalo 36 George Washington 13 Columbia 2.3 Pennsylvania 30 Yale . . 32. Haverford 18 Cornell 33 2-5 2.0 3i 36 2-5 17 41 2.0 14 z6 2-5 DATE Jan. 17, Feb. I, Feb. 18, Feb. 19, Feb. 2.0, Feb. li, Feb. 2.6, Mar. I, Mar. ID, Mar. 13, Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Totals SCORE 52- 18 2.6 2-5 35 31 19 16 2-7 34 584 OPPONENTS P. M. C. . Dartmouth Maryland Catholic U. Dartmouth Yale . . Cornell Dickinson . Columbia . Pennsylvania TEAM Columbia . Dartmouth Princeton . INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING, 192.5-192.6 WON LOST P.C. TEAM 9 I .900 Cornell 17 J-3 V- 37 2.6 2-9 i6 2.8 46 32- (sia 5 .600 .500 Pennsylvania Yale . WON LOST P.C. 5 5 -joo 5 5 -5°° o 10 .000 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The 192.5-192.6 Basketball season was not an entire success, the team losing twelve of its twenty-two scheduled games. The team was handicapped, however, by the graduation of most of the letter men and the loss of Captain Eben due to an injury early in the season. Princeton tied for third place with Cornell and Penn in the Intercollegiate League, winning both contests from Yale, one from Dartmouth, and two from Penn. 229 f B p Hb - | B Bk 91 1 1 W 1 H I H 1 ■ 2 MrV Wl I In ■ m 5 f 11 1 H B XS ' B ' ■ 1 P B ' ' PHI L s SWIMMING Top Row — Fisher (Mgr.). Schott, Johnson, Cochran, Tcncher, Taylor, MacLarcn, Swoopc (Mgr.)- First Rtf — Rikcr, Erdman, Hawkins, Bowron, Davidson. Swimming OFFICERS, 1915-1916 J. H. Hawkins, ' 16 Captain G. W. Fisher, 2.6 Manager H. B. SwooPE, Jr., ' 17 Assistant Manager Frank J. Sullifan , . . . . Coach OFFICERS, 192.6-1917 H. R. Erdman, ' 17 Captain H. B. SwooPE, Jr., ' 17 Manager E. M. Ford, ' 18 Assistant Manager Frank J. Sullivan Coach M. D. Hardin, Jr., ' 2.6 J. H. Hawkins, ' 2.6 H. McCuLLouGH, Jr., 16 R. M. Cochran, ' 2.7 H. R. Erdman, 17 R. M. Johnston, ' 17 TEAM D. R. MacLaren, ' 17 A. M. Murphy, ' 17 W. C. Riker, ' 17 F. B. Alexander, ' 2.8 A.J. BowRON, Jr., ' i8 M. B. Davidson, ' 2.8 J. W. Mapletoft, ' 2.8 F. T. Merrill, ' i8 C. ScHOTT, Jr., ' 2.8 W. R. Taylor, ' 2.8 W. K. Tencher, ' i8 REVIEW OF THE SEASON Two defeats by Yale and one at the hands of Navy, marred an otherwise successful season, the team finishing second in the league standing. There were no outstanding stars, but Captain Hawkins in the 440-yard swim and Erdman in the backstroke, were the mainstays in their events. MEETS Jan. 13, Jan. 2.0, Jan. XX, Feb. 16, Feb. 2.2., Feb. 2.6, Mar. 6. Mar. 13, Mar. ID, Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton 54 46 54 50 54 2.2. 2-7 i8 51 C. C. N. Y. Pennsylvania C. C. N. Y. Columbia Pcnnsylvanii Yale Navy Yale Columbia 16 8 IX 8 J9 35 34 10 231 WATER POLO Tap J Bw— Johnson, MacKay, Wcckcs, Miller. Stcond R«p— Fisher (Mgr.), Coghill, Chivcrs, Russell, Bottomlcy, Swoop: CMgr-)- f ' - R — Taylor, Davis, Matalcnc (Capt.) , Newman, Loeb. I II f n u MM 1778 n II II 11 II M I I J ' ? 1928 ff ter Polo OFFICERS, 1915-192.6 H. W. Matalene, ' i6 Captain G. W. Fisher, ' 16 ■ . . Manager H. B. SwoopE, ' 17 Assistant Manager Frank J. Sullivan Coach OFFICERS, 192.6-19x7 John W. Davis, ' 17 Captain H. B. SwooPE, ' 2.7 . Manager E. M. Ford, ' 2.8 Assistant Manager Frank J. Sullivan Coach F. K. BOTTOMLEY, ' ly J. D. K. Chivers, ' 18 R. W. COGHILL, ' 17 J. W. Davis, ' 17 J. H. Hawkins, ' 2.6 TEAM R. M. Johnston, ' 17 C. LoEB, ' i6 H. W. Matalene, ' i6 J. F. Mackay, ' 17 R. C. Miller, ' 8 P. B. Newman, ' 17 T, B. Russell, ' x6 J. Stillman, ' 17 W. P. Taylor, ' x6 C. Weekes, 17 GAMES, 192.5-1916 LEAGUE STANDING date Jan. I}, Princeton 10, Princeton ii, Princeton 16, Princeton Feb. 12., Princeton Feb. 16, Princeton Mar. 6, Princeton Mar. 13, Princeton Mar. 10, Princeton Jan. Jan. Feb. SCORE • 40 • 7} ■ 47 • 71 . 66 . 10 • 2-7 . 8 • 63 opponent SCORE C. C. N. Y 15 Pennsylvania 16 C. C. N. Y 18 Columbia 7 Pennsylvania 10 Yale 40 Navy 37 Yale 56 Columbia o Yale . . Princeton C. C. N. Y. Pennsylvania Columbia WON LOST P.C. 8 1000 6 i 750 4 4 500 ■L 6 2.50 8 000 REVIEW OF THE SEASON On the whole, it cannot be said that the season was a success, although Captain Matalene scored 157 points, the highest individual score ever made in the League. His score was seven points higher than that of Lutz of Yale, who also broke the League record. Matalene did not appear in the second Yale game, nor in the Navy game. 233 WRESTUNG TEAM Back Row — Foster (Coach), Huosicker, Platz, Mcislahn, Wilson, Schob (Mgr.), Nelson (Ass. Mgr.)- first Row — Good, Tckeriao, Roystcr, Buttrcy (Capt), Jefferson, Taylor, Fujiyama. Wrestling OFFICERS, 192.5-1916 T. V. BuTTREY, W. SCHOB, ' i6 C. p. Foster ' x6 OFFICERS, 192.6-19x7 H. E. Meislahn, ' 2.7 A. K. Nelson, ' 17 C. P. Foster TEAM M. Fuj iyama, ' i8 . . . . A. Tekerian, ' 2.7 . . . . B. Jefferson, ' i6; H. Royster, ' 17 T. V. BuTTREY, ' 16, Captain R. Stewart, ' x8 . . . . T. A. Platz, ' z6 . . . . H. E. Meislahn, ' 17 . . . Captain Manager Coach Captain Manager Coach 115-pound 115-pound 135-pound 145-pound 158-pound 175-pound Unlimited class class class class class class class MEETS DATE Dec. II, 192.5, Princeton Jan. 16, 192.6, Princeton Jan. 13, 1916, Princeton Jan. 30, 192.6, Princeton Feb. 2.1, 192.6, Princeton Feb. 2.7, 192.6, Princeton Mar. 6, 1916, Princeton Mar. 10, 192.6, Princeton SCORE OPPONENTS 15 Elizabeth A. c. . . 10 University ■ Pennsylvania II Leliigh 10 Franklin and Marshall 10 Armv 13 Harvard II Yale . . II Columbia iVIEW Ol THE SEASON, 192 . ;-i9i6 SCORE 13 II 18 17 li 9 13 14 The 1915-192.6 wrestling season was rather mediocre. Of the big three. Harvard was defeated. Captain Buttrcy was the outstanding performer on the team, being the intercollegiate champion in the 145-pound class. H. E. Mcishain, in the unlimited class, was a consistent point winner. 235 N M I I I I I I I 11 I J I I I I M I I I I I I I I M lU 1928 7 Top Riw — Ncwhall (Asst. Mgr.), Emlcn, E. Barnouw, Plurasr, Hewitt (Mgr.) Stcond Kow — Packard, Gxhran, Stewart, McPhcrson, Crocker, Nics (Coach) First Reui — Ghcrardi, W. Barnouw, McCabe (Capt.), Gay, Avery. Soccer OFFICERS, 1916 J. D. McCabe, ' 2.7 Captain C. L. Hewitt, ' 18 Acting Manager A. B. NiEs Coach C.J. WooDBRiDGE Assistant Coach TEAM, 1916 E. Barnouw, ' 18 • Goal D. Plumer, Jr., ' 18 Right Fullback C. O. Crocker, ' 2.9 Left Fullback D. P. McPherson, ' 18 Right Halfback M. CuTTS, ' 17 Center Halfback J. D. McCabe, ' x Left Halfback S. Emlen, ' 19 Outside Right C. C. Squires, ' 2.8 Inside Right J. E. Packard, ' i8 Center Forward W. C. Barnouw, ' 2.7 Inside Left L. Stewart, ' 2.9 Outside Left W. Gay, ' 17 L. C. Simons, ' 2.8 SUBSTITUTES G. P. McNeer, ' 2.8 W, H. Avery, Jr., 17 W. Cochran, ' 2.9 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The Princeton Soccer Team had a very successful record for the season of 192.6, losing only to Cornell by a close score. In an early season game, how- ever, Haverford tied Princeton for the second straight time. This Fall marked the beginning of the new Intercollegiate Soccer League. The Princeton forward line was without doubt the strongest in the East. The work of Captain McCabe at left halfback and Packard, Barnouw and Squires in the forward line was consistently good throughout the season. GAMES Princeton 5 Princeton 1. Princeton i Princeton 2. Swarthmore o Lehigh i Haverford i Cornell 5 Princeton 4 Harvard Princeton 4 Yale Princeton 4 Pennsylvania 237 f LACROSSE TEAM, 191.6 Top Row — Bccslcy (Mgr.), Wilson, Baldwin, Sharpc, Somcrville, Colraorc, Nics (Coach). Stcond R«tf WilIaucr, Nics, Goff, Butsch, Rcnoard, Gartner, Thompson, Ballantioc. Firjt Kflic— Rodcn, Fisher, Thulin, Jeffers (Captain), Parker, Anderson, Stevens. Lacrosse OFFICERS 1916 H. W. Jeffers, ' i6 Captain G. A. Beesley, ' 17 Manager A. B. NiES Coach OFFICERS 1917 W. B. Thulin, ' 17 Captain B. R. Jones, Jr., ' 2.7 Managtr A. B. NiES Coach TEAM 1916 A. H. Marshall, 16 Goal D. C. Sharpe, ' 17 Point J. G. Ballantine, ' 17 Cover Point H. W. Jeffers, ' i6 F irst Defense W. Willauer, ' 18 Second Defense C. K. Thompson, ' 17 Third Defense W. H. Stevens, ' 2.6 Center R. H. Anderson, ' i6 Third Attack J. W, Gartner, ' 1.7 Second Attack H. B. NiEs, ' 17 First Attack W, B. Thulin, ' 17 Out Home H. M. Parker, ' 17 In Home SUBSTITUTES R. Baldwin, ' ' x7 W. L. BuTscH, ' i6 H. B. Colmore 17 G. W. FlSHER, ' 16 M. L. R. GoFF, ' 16 I. D. Hall, ' 17 S. C. B. Peck, ' x7 J. C. Rennard, ' i8 H. V. Roden, ' 16 W. G. Somerville, ' 18 H. B. Wilson, Jr., ' 18 Princeton captured the lacrosse championship this year due to the brilliant playing of an exceptionally strong team. It worked itself into harness slowly, losing its first game to Mt. Washington, and holding Lehigh to a tie in the second. Then the twelve hit its stride and won all six of the remain- ing games. The climax came when Yale went down in defeat 6-3. Captain Jeffers was the bulwark of the defense, while Nics, Thulin, and Parker led the attack. Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton GAMES I Mt. Washington ... 13 3 Lehigh 3 7 Stevens 3 7 Rutgers 4 239 Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton 7 Oxford-Cambridge I 9 Harvard I 6 Yale .... . 3 5 L ' Hirondclle 4 I Standing — Rhea (Mgr.). Glcason, Young, Smith, Duncap (Coach), i M (f— Gibson, Welles, Mirick (Capt.), Slade, Crabb. Cross Country OFFICERS, 1916 H. D. MiRiCK, ' zj Captain E. M. Rhea, ' 2.7 Manager R. M. Duncan, ' 15 Coach TEAM E. C. Crabb, ' 2.9 J. R. Gibson, ' 2.8 J. H. Gleason, ' 19 H. D. MiRicK, ' x7 W. B. Slade, ' 2.8 S. C. Smith, ' i8 E. R. Welles, ' iS RECORD October 2.3, 1916 — Dual Meet: First — Princeton, 2.7; Lehigh, i8. October }o, 1916 — Triangular Meet: First — Union, 13; Second — Prince- ton, 31; Third — Rutgers, 65. November 5, 192.6 — Dual Meet: First — Princeton, 2.7; New York University, x8. November 12., 1916 — Triangular Meet: First — Harvard, 15; Second — Yale, 31; Third — Princeton, 64. REVIEW OF SEASON The University Cross Country team began the season quite successfully, winning the first of its meets. Princeton then defeated New York University, and lost to Union in a Triangular Meet by a very close score. The team ' s showing in the annual Harvard-Yale-Princeton Triangular Meet was rather disappointing, but displaying a reversal of form in the IntercoUegiates, the results were quite encouraging. In the latter meet the first three Prince- ton men to place were E. R. Welles, W. B. Slade, and E. C. Crabb. 241 Mia;iry Van Ryn Ewing TP Ti ' I I 1 1 ' IT ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' I | n ' 1 1 n n ' It 1 1 tt t 7 1928 Tennis B OFFICERS, 1915-1916 P. D. Hicks, ' 16 Captain V. ToniN, ' i6 Manager J. V. Norman, ' 2.7 Assistant Manager J. W. Parker, ' i8 Second Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1916-19x7 G. L. Lambert, ' 17 Captain J. V. Norman, ' 17 Manager J. W. Parker, ' 18 Assistant Manager W. C. RiDGEWAY, ' 19 , ■ . . . . Second Assistant Manager S. E. EwiNG, ' 2.7 W. B. Evans, ' iS TEAM, 1916 B. D. Hicks, 2.6 G. L. Lambert, ' 3.7 T. H. MiNART, ' 2.7 G. Snyder, ' 2.6 J. Van Ryn, ' ig MATCHES Apt. 2.4, Princeton 3 Apr. 30, Princeton 8 May 6, Princeton 7 May 8, Princeton 6 May II, Princeton 9 May 15, Princeton 5 May 19, Princeton 7 May 2.2., Princeton 6 OPPONENTS SCORE Baltimore Country Club 6 Lehigh - .... I Cornell 2. Seabright Tennis Club 2. Pennsylvania , o Harvard 4 Williams 2. Yale 3 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The 1916 season was a championship one for Princeton; the team lost only one match, and in the rest it was never extended. The team was the best in years, and the only championship team we have had in four or five seasons. The outstanding feature was the playing of Van Ryn, who won all his matches but one. Incidentally, he also reached the semi-finals of last year ' s National Indoor Tournament. 243 I GOLF TEAM 1916 Clark McDougal Hackl Hart Shannon Golf OFFICERS, SPRINGDALE GOLF CLUB Gerald B. Lambert President Arial Pardee Vice-President John S. Cosgrove Secretary-Treasurer GREENS COMMITTEE Curtis McGraw Chairman HANDICAP COMMITTEE Richard Stockton, 3RD Chairman UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM G. F. Hackl, JR., ' 2.6, Captain R. McDougal, Jr., 16 J. M. Robins, ' 17 W. P. Hersey, ' 2.8 J. D. Ames, ' i L. E. Hart, ' 2.6 C. B. Grace, ' 18 REVIEW OF THE SEASON, 1915-1916 The 1915-1916 Golf season began with bright prospects for a championship year. Despite the quantity of excellent material, the team failed to show the brand of golf which makes champions. Nevertheless the team lost but one league match and that to the Dartmouth golfers by a score of 5-4. In the match with Yale, Haclcl and Grace of the University golf team won their match i up at the list hole, Hackl sinking a forty-foot putt for Prince- ton to win, 6-3. As the scores tell, the IntercoUegiates were hotly contested. Princeton was forced to take third place, three strokes behind Yale and two behind Harvard. Princeton 11 Princeton 10 Princeton 8 SCORES Georgia Tech 6 Princeton 4 Huntington Valley C. C. . 8 Princeton 7 Williams i Princeton 6 Dartmouth 5 Harvard x Yale 3 245 L.YM n-AM, lyi; Top Row — Rogers, Williamson, Edwards, Pierce, Barncrr, Swinncrton (Coach). Sicond Row — Alexander, Bcling, Taylor, Snively, Coster, First Row — Ford, Young. Gym OFFICERS, 1915-1916 R. R. Quay, ' 16 Captain J. C. Waterman, ' 2.6 Manager J. S. Grover, ' 17 Assistant Manager H. H. Bojus Coach OFFICERS, 1916-192.7 J. E. Taylor, ' 18 Captain B. Stout, ' 18 Manager R. SwiNNERTON Coach C. A. Belino, ' 17 M. M. Brien, 17 H. S. Coster, ' 18 E. C. Embury, ' 17 TEAM, 1915-1916 S. R. Morgan, Jr., ' 2.8 R. R. Quay, ' 16 L. C. Simons, ' 18 R. D. Snively, Jr., ' 18 E. C. Stengel, ' 16 J. C. Taylor, ' 18 J. E. Taylor, ' 18 A. M. Young, ' 2.7 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The 1915 season, taken as a whole, was quite successful. The two meets which the team lost were by extremely close scores. Princeton ' s dream of a championship Gym Team was shattered early in the winter by the loss of Bcling, an intercollegiate point winner. The outstanding feature of the season was the clinching of the All-round Individual Intercollegiate Championship by R. D. Snively, a newcomer on the squad. The outlook for the coming season is particularly bright with a wealth of material from last year ' s Freshman Team. Jan. 50, 1916 Mar. 192.6 Mar. li, 1916 Mar. 18, 192.6 Mar. 14, 192.6 Princeton Princeton Princeton Pri nceton Princeton RECORD OF MEETS 37 2-3 12. 3° Temple M. I. T. Dartmouth Penn Army . t6H 17 31 32- M INTERCOLLEGIATE ALL-ROUND CHAMPIONSHIP E. D. Snively All-round Champion 247 Back Kou ' --Myers, Park, C. Henry, Webb, brounngg, Marks. ieconU Kou— Brick, W ilsun, xhnndcr, Harding. Riicy, Dodge, R. Henry, McEIroy (Mgr.)- front Row—Mapr Inglis (Coach), Mayer, Smith, Johnston, Bloch, Auld, Fuller. Rifle Team OFFICERS, 1915-1916 P. B. Albertis, ' i6 President of Club R. R. Head, ' i6 Captain G. D. Strayer, ' 17 Manager W. F. McElroy, Jr., ' i Assistant Manager Major Kayser Coach OFFICERS, 1916-1917 R. M. Johnston Captain W. F. McElroy, Jr., ' 2.7 Manager S. B. Smith, zS Assistant Manager Major Inglis Coach TEAM 19x5-192.6 J. P. Smith, ' 2.7 P. B. Albertis, ' 16 W. K. Bennet, ' 2.8 O. E. Bloch, ' 2.8 A. H. Mayers, ' 17 R. M. Johnston MEETS, 1915-1916 Princeton vs. University of Buffalo Princeton vs. Columbia Princeton vs. Syracuse Princeton vs. C. C. N. Y. Princeton vs. Drexel Princeton vs. Rensselaer A • 249 ' ■ ,-fV - ■- ' rmmm PISTOL TEAM Tup Raw—L. Pcrin, M. F. Ncwcomb, Jr., W. K. Bennett, J. E. Damcrcl. Bmiam Row—K, Suor, Maj. Inglis, F. Chandler ft The Princeton Pistol Team 1925-1926 OFFICERS J. L. Hamar, ' i6 Captain J. D. Page, ' 2.6 Manager F. Chandler, ' 2.7 Associate Manager A. M. SuoR, ' 17 Captain-Elect TEAM J. L. Hamar, ' i6 F. W. Hemmingway, ' 16 W. V. Aldridge, ' 17 Officer in Charge of Pistol Firing F. B. Inglis, Captain (D. O. L.) A. M. SuoR, ' 17 A. M. Shober, ' zj Apr. 15, Apr. 15, Apr. 14, Apr. 30, Apr. 30, Apr. 30, May 8, May 8, May 15, May 15, May 15, May 2.1, 1916, 1916, 1916, 1916, 192.6, 192.6, 192.6, 192.6, 192.6, 1916, 192.6, 192.6, Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton MEETS 1406 University of Oklahoma 1386 Boston University 1404 Culver Military Academy 1397 New Mexico Military Inst. 1397 Purdue .... 1397 University of Utah . 1393 University of Missouri 1393 Ohio State 1432. Alabama Poly 1431 Illinois .... 1432. Norwich University 1411 West Point 1368 142.7 1401 1405 I42.i 1388 142.0 1305 M55 1395 142.5 1396 Princeton TOTALS 7 Opponents 5 The 192.6 season was only mediocre, Princeton winning a little over half of the shoots . In the Intcrcollegiatcs, Princeton failed to retain its title won in 192.5 and placed fourth. The feature of the season was Captain Hamar ' s consistently excellent shooting. In the match of April 30, he shot 98.3 per cent which is within J4 per cent of the world ' s record for the distance. At the close of the season, A.M. Suor was chosen to captain the 1927 team. 251 f Back Row—)icckcl, Schuiz, Dixon, Fciss. Front Reic— Boyd, Dillcr (Capc.)i Klcist. Fencing OFFICERS, 192.5-192.6 G. E. DiLLER, ' l6 Captain R. O. Hereford, ' 17 Manager Captain F. G. McPherson . Coach OFFICERS, 192.6-1917 J. A. Feiss, ' 17 Captain R. O. Hereford, ' 17 . Manager M. McPherson Coach Epri J. A. Feiss, ' 17 T. Jaeckel, ' 2.8 TEAM Foil J. P. Boyd, ' iS G. E, DiLLER, ' l6 C. W. SCHULZ, ' 2.8 Sahrt G. W. Dixon, ' 18 D. C. Kleist, 16 T. Jaeckel, ' i8, Efte . UNIVERSITY CHAMPIONS D. C. Kleist, ' 2.6, Sahrt G. E. DiLLER, ' 2.6, Foil REVIEW OF THE SEASON, 1915-1916 The fencing team was formed for the first time since 1906 and was duly recognized by the Athletic Association as a minor sport. The season was fairly successful considering that it was the initial one for the team, and much credit must be given to the able coaching of Captain McPherson. There were two dual meets, the first with Syracuse, won by Princeton by the score of 9 to 8, and the second taken by Yale, the intercollegiate champions, with the score of 15 to 2.. Then followed a triangular meet between Harvard, Pennsylvania, and Princeton, in which Princeton tied for honors. At the Navy, in the semi-finals of the Intercollegiates, T. Jaeckel qualified, and in the finals at the Hotel Astor placed second in the individual rating of the epee. In addition informal meets were held in New York with the Fencers Club and with the Saltus Club. 253 Princeton Polo Team OFFICERS, 1 915-192.6 I. H. Clothier, ' 16 Captain J. W. Eben, ' i6 Manager J. E. Damerel, ' i7 Assistant Manager Captain Prickett Coach OFFICERS, 1916-1917 H. R. Erdman, ' 17 Captain J. E. Damerel, ' 17 Manager M. C. Parsons, Jr., ' 18 Assistant Manager Captain Prickett Coach OUTDOOR TEAM No. I — F. K. BoTToMLEY, ' ij No. 1 — W. L. CoLKET, ' i6 No. 4 — H. R. Erdman, ' 17 No. 3 — I. H. Clothier, 16 C. R. AoNEw, 2.7 SUBSTITUTES H. L. Crawford, Jr., ' xj R. NicKOLs, ' 17 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The 1916 Polo Team, with comparatively green material, played far beyond the form expected in early season. The indications were that the team would give a good account of itself in the Intercollegiate Tournament, but unfortunately two decisive defeats were suffered at the hands of Harvard and Pennsylvania Military College. The interesting and spectacular game of the season was the one in which the University team defeated West Point by the das ' ; score of eight goals to seven. April 14, May I, May 8, May 15, May 18, June 19, June 13, 1916, 1916, 1916, 1916, 1916, 1916, 192.6, Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton OUTDOOR GAMES SCORE OPPONENTS 6 loist Cavalry . 4 Peon. Military College 8 West Point 17 Fort Monmouth 7 Rumson md . 1 Harvard . . . . 3 Penn. Military College 254 Twentieth Annual Intercollegiate Swimming Association Meet HELD IN COLUMBIA POOL IN NEW YORK CITY, MARCH 2.7, 1916 The Annual Intercollegiate Swimming Meet was won by the Yale team, which took four firsts and two seconds. The Navy team earned three firsts and three seconds. J. H. Hawkins, ' 16, was the only Princeton entry to place, taking a third in the 440-yard Swim. This race was spirited from start to finish as Hawkins was defending his crown as Intercollegiate Champion of the 440-yard Swim. He was dethroned by Luke of Yale. The Princeton Fresh- man team, composed of Baer, Fisher, Armstrong, and Smith, won the 110-yard Freshman Relay in i minute, 47 1 5 seconds. Syracuse took second place and Pennsylvania third in this event. No records were broken in the Meet, although the competition was keen throughout. Bronson, Yale 50-yard Dash 1. WvcKOFF, Navy [ 3. Rule, Navy ii. Co ALE, Navy 1. Sanford, Yale 3. Wyckoff, Navy {I. Bronson, Yale 1. Wyckoff, Navy 3. Lewis, Rutgers f I. Cooper, Navy Fancy Diving 1. Hall, Yale JLL, Brown 1. Hal [ 3. HUL SUMMARY 14 sec. 1 min., 16 sec. 54 3 5 sec. f I. House, Yale 150-yard Back Stroke 1. Morse, Syracuse 3. Rule, Navy I. Allan, Navy 110-yard Breast Stroke 1. Chase, Amherst ( 3. IsHAM, Dartmouth 440-yard Swim 100-yard Freshman Relay I min., 45 1 5 sec. 1 min., 48 4 5 sec. 5 min., 10 1 5 sec. I. Luke, Yale 1. CoALE, Navy 3. Hawkins, Princeton I. Princeton (Baer, Fisher, Armstrong, Smith) i min., 47 1 5 sec. 1. Syracuse 5. Pennsylvania 255 ■i h u Varsity Club EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE E. C. Bartell, ' 17 W. M. Hardt, xS Prtsidtnt Secretary W. H. Edwards, ' 00 M. F. Mills, ' 01 W. W. Roper, ' ox D. Mathey, ' 12. E. L. Shea, ' 16 W. H. Forrest, ' i6 E. L. McMillan, 16 C. F. Gates, ' 16 E. C. Bartell, ' 17 W. M. Hardt, ' 2.8 J. W. Aitkcn (C) 192.5, 192.6 E. E. Alexander. . . .(Basketball) 1915,(0 192.6 R. Baldwin. . . .(F) 192.4, 192.5, 192.6, (L) 1916 W. F. R. Ballard (C) 1916 J. G. Ballentine (L) 1916 W. C. Barnouw (So) 19x5 E. C. Bartell (F) 192.4, 192.5, 192.6 G. R. Beach (T) 192.6 G. A. Beesley, Jr (L) 1916 R. A. Bcardsley (C) 192.6 C. L. Beares, Jr (T) 1914, (F) 1915 G. Blake (T) 192.5 S. R. Bradley (T) 192.5, 1916 J. Casey (H) 192.6 W. B. Carrott (B) 192.6 D. P. Caulkins (F) 1913, 192.5, 192.6 J. R. Chandler (F) 192.6 H. Clark (C) 192.5, 192.6 E. Colladay (H) 192.6 R. C. Collins (C) 1916 W. M. Collins (F) 192.6 H. P. Colmore (L) 1916 A. H. Cook (C) 1916 R. P. Cooke QVC) 192.6 S. S. Cooley (150-lb. C) 192.6 M. Cutts (So) 192.5 MEMBERS, 192.7 R. F. Darby (F), 1915, 192.6 A. S. D. Davis (H) 1915 J. W. Davis (F) 192.4, 192.5, 192.6 W. R. Deemer, Jr (150-lb. C), 192.6 E. J. Dikeman, Jr (T) 192.5, 192.6 S. E. Ewing (F) 192.4, 192.5, 192.6, (Tennis) 1926 G. P. Faust (T) 192.5, 192.6 J. W. Gartner (L) 1916, (Basketball) 1915, 192.6 S. Goodman, III (C) 192.5, 1916 W. C. Gay (So) 192.5 J. W. Grange (H) 192.6 I. W. Hall (L) 1916 A. M. Helmrath (C) 192.6 S. High (T) 192.5 W. R. Howell (T) 192.5, 192.6 C. L. Henricks, Jr (Basketball) 19x6 C. D. James (So) 192.5 A. D, Jenny (C) 192.6 E. E. Keith (F) 192.6 •J. G. Kellogg (B) 192.6 W. B. Krag (150-lb. C) 192.6 R. W. La Beaume (8)19x5, 192.6 G. L. Lambert (Tennis) 19x6 A. N. Lawrence (T) 19x4, 19x6 W. Lewis (B) 19x4, 19x6 S. R. Bradley, ' X7 H. Harding, ' x8 O. E. Miles, ' X9 S. M. McAshan (T) J. D. McCabe (So) 19x5, (Basketball) H. E. Meislahn (F) T. H. Minary (Tennis) H. B. Nies (L) J. V. Norman (Tennis) H. M. Parker (L) L. M. Pirie (C) J. R. Pitman (H) J. Prendergast (F) 19x5, W. J. Rhecs (B) 19x5, T. J, Rosengarten (F) 19x5, W. F. Scharnikow (B) J. W. Slaglc (F) 19x4, 19x5, 19x6, (B) 19x5, J. Stillman (150-lb. C) J. J. Steinmetz (T) A. M. Suor (Pistol) 19x5, H. Supplee (JVC) C. K. Thompson (L) W. B. Thulin (L) T.F.Trimble QVC) W. B. Van Alstyne (T) C. F. Weekcs. . (F) 19x4, 19x6, (T) 19x5 T. R. Williams (F) 19x3, T. S. Wilson (B) 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 92-5 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 92-5 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x6 9x4 9x6 258 ■ ' I M T II 1 1 ' I [ 1 1 ' n 1778 Va rsity Club — ( Continued) A. S. Alexander (JVC) 1916 S. M. Becker (JVC) 1916 J. R. Bridges (F) 1915, 192.6 J. M. Dalenz (T) 1916 H. C. Disston (F) 1915, 1916 W, B. Evans (Basketball, Tennis) 192.6 L. M. Fircy (T) 192.6 S. B. Foot (Basketball) 192.6 J. M. French (F) 192.6, (B) 192.6 J. R. Gibson (T) 1916 H. C. Grumpett (X) 192.6 H. Harding (H) 19x6 W. M. Hardt (B) 19x6 E. E. Baruch (F) 1916 C. H. Howe (F) 192.6 MEMBERS, 192.8 D. N. Hendey (B) 1916 L. S. Jadwin (T) 192.6 H. W. Large QVC) 192.6 R. D. Magee (C) 1916 J. McCullough (Basketball) 192.6 D. P. McPherson, Jr (So) 1915 P. D. Milholland (F) 192.6 C. R. Moescr (F) 192.5, 192.6 J. E. Packard, Jr (So) 192.5 D. Plumer, Jr (So) 19x5 F. K. Rankin (B) 192.6 G. Richman (H) 192.6 E. B. Rockwell (T) 192.6 MEMBERS, 192.9 N. Lawler . . . (F) 192.6 O. E. Miles (F) 19x6 L. R. Scudder (T) 1916 L. C. Simons (So) 192.5 R. D. Snively (Gym) 1916 W. G. Somervillc (L) 192.6 C. C. Squires (So) 192.5 H. R. Stratford (C) 1916 J. H. W. Thompson (150-lb. C) 1916 J. W. Thompson, Jr (T) 1916 J. Van Ryn . ' (Tennis) 192.6 E. R. Welles (CC) 192.6, (T) 192.6 W. Willauer (F) 19x6 A. Z. F. Wood (C) 1916 J. M. Requardt,Jr (F) 1916 J. W. Stinson (F) 192.6 259 Alexander Barnouw Alexander Bartell Aitkcn Baruch Baldwin Bcardsley J Becker Carrot t Bccsley Casey Bradley Caulkins Bridges Chandler i Clark Coolcy Collins Cutts CoHins Dalcnz Cook Darby Davis Dunn Davis England Dike man Evans Diss ton Ewiog Faust Gartner Fircy Gay Foot GoodniaQ French Grange Grumpclt Hendcy Harding Headricks Hardt Howell Hclmrath Jadwio Jcnney Large Keith Lawler Krag Lawrence La Dcaume Lewis MacCrcady Mc Phcrson Marshall Metslaha McAsban Minary McCabc Mocser Niet Plumer Packard Prcndergast Parker Rankia Pitman Rcaoard Requardc Roseagartca Rhccs Schamikow Richman Simoas Rockwell Slagle Snivcly Stratford Somcrville Supplcc Squires Thompson Scinsoa Thompson Trimble Whicsett Van Alstyoe WiUauer Williams II II II I I I I II II M II II II II TT- I II M J 1928 7 ' f Wood 1919 FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM Top Kffw— Emcrt, Sicwart, Paritcr, Palmer, Hcydt. S ' tcond Row — Hanks (Coach), McMillan, Jasper, Rcquardt, Bischoff, Bartlctt (MgrJ, Third Ra ic— Bramhall, Hicks, Wittmcr (Capt.). Baruch Strubiag. 1929 Freshman Baseball Team OFFICERS E. O. WiTTMER Captain J. D. Bartlett, ' 2.7 lAanager A. E. Hanks Coach The 1919 baseball team enjoyed a championship year. With a few exceptions Princeton has never had a freshman team composed of so many good players. Captain Wittmer, who finished the season with a batting average over .500, lead his team to a victory over the strong Yale freshman nine. This victory which brought to a close a highly successful season, marks the first time in four years that a Tiger yearling nine has been able to defeat Yale. When it comes to picking the stars, it is a very difficult task, but Palmer ' s consistent pitching and the brilliant playing of Captain Wittmer, Bramhall, Emert, Hicks, and Stewart were the features of the season. TEAM E. O. Wittmer Catchtr Apr. 10, E. E. Baruch Third Base Apr. 14, P. H. Strubing Short Stop Apr. 17, E. HicKS Second Basi Apr. ii, J. T. Emert First Base Apr. 14, H. K. Bramhall Left Field Apr. 18, L. S. Stewart Center Field Apr. 30, E. Jasper . Right Field May 4, J. R. Requardt.Jr Right Field May 8, M. Palmer Pitcher May 15, H. Heydt Pitcher May 19, W. Parker Pitcher May 11, 192.9 FRESHMAN BASEBALL GAMES 1919 ■L 17 3 16 George Washington H. S. LawrenceviUe Peddie Rutgers, 192.9 . . . Lehigh, 192.9. Princeton Prep. . . ' . Rain Hill 10 Mercersburg Central H. S Oilman Tome Yale, 192.9 13: 4 ' 9 6 4 OPPONENTS 3 6 Rain 4 10 6 o X X 275 I I I I 1 1 I I I 1 1 I I )! I I I I I 11 I I n I I I I M J 7 1928 i9i FRhSHMAN TRACK. TEAM Tflp Row— White house, Brodhcad, Kemp, Howe, Craig, Eckfcldt, Huff. Stconi Row— Rhea (Mgr.). Boyd, Elting, McConncIl, Garrett, Bcddoe, Davis, Hahn (Coach). Third Rou ' — Crabb, McLallci Gore, Hcaly (Cape), Janney, Glcason, Finlcy. t I ■ I r XL 1 1 n ' I II II M M II II II M I I I I I r-rrr 1778 1929 Freshman Track Team OFFICERS W. T. Healey . E. M. Rhea, ' 17 Archibald Hahn Captain Manager Coach The 1919 Freshman Track Team did not enjoy as successful a season as was expected. It had easy victories in the Lawrenceville and Hill School m.eets, but lost to the Yale Freshmen and again to the Penn Freshmen. Captain Healey, Caldwell, and Gore were the individual stars, and contributed a large number of points in each meet. TEAM W. C. Beddoe I. F. Boyd C. D. Brodhead J. M. Caldwell J. Carey E. C. Crabb H. Craio, Jr. L. F. Davis T. E. ECKFELDT W. Elting E. J. FlNLEY C. J. Gable F. L. Garrett J. H. Gleason J. Gore W. T. Healey C. H. Howe J. W. Huff S. S. Janney L. F. Kemp W, F. Marshall R. K. McCoNNELL W. F. McLallen C. A. Whitehouse MEETS OPPONENT I Apr. 17, 1916 ... 77 2- } May I, 1916 80 I x May 15, 1916 34 1 2- May ii, 1916 62. Lawrenceville 4} i j Hill School 45 I Yale, 192.9 100 i i Penn, 192.9 73 277 lyi i-KLsHMAN CRJ-AV Ballantinc Party Bromley Thompson Quarlcs Kcnyon Lawrence Alison MacRac 1929 Freshman Crew OFFICERS J. Alison, Jr., ' 19 Captain GowANS Smith, ' xj Manager C. P. LoGG Coach The 1919 Freshman crew was one of unusual strength, though its success was marred by certain unforeseen circumstances. The triangular race on Lake Cayuga against the first-year men of Yale and Cornell was rowed in such rough water, that both visiting boats were swamped at the finish. A race scheduled with Harvard had to be canceled late in the season. At the regatta on Lake Carnegie, Columbia lead Princeton by a one-foot margin, Penn- sylvania finishing third. It should be mentioned to the credit of the 192.9 men that they won an impressive victory over the championship Princeton Junior Varsity. THE CREW NAME POSITION HEIGHT WEIGHT J. Alison Stroke 6.i 170 J. F. Lawrence 7 6.3 165 R. B. Kenyon 6 6.1 i8r J. V. QuARLEs 5 6.1 175 J. M. Thompson 4 6.i 175 C. S. Bromley 3 6 . 167 W. A. Patty i 61 171 J. B. Ballantine bow 6.2. 168 C. MacRae cox 5.3 III May 11 May 19 first Yale . . Columbia RACES second Princeton Princeton third Cornell Pennsylvania distance 1 miles I 3 4 miles 11:07 ■ ' • Unannounced Lake Cayuga . Lake Carnegie V2 length One foot 279 i i J: MU.SllMAX HOCKLY TEAM Top Row — Foulkc, MacLeod, Carey, Butler (Mgr.), Ruge, Haas. Sicond Row — DuPont. Strubing, G. Jodcs (Capt.), J- Jones, Miller. I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I M 1 1 I ] 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 n I I i j_xLJ 19281 7 1929 Freshman Hockey Team G. Jo nes, ' 19 H. J. Butler, ' j-j B. A. Ramsay Captain Manager Coach TEAM G. Jones Ctnttr A P. H. Strubing J. G. Jones Ri ht Wing Lift Wing F. DuPoNT, Jr. J. C. Miller C. P. FoULKE Right Dtjcnse Lift Dtftnse Goal J. Carey E. W. Rice SUBSTITUTES R. RuoE M. MacLeod M. Haas DATE Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. 18, 1915 192.9 16, 1916 1919 i}, 192.6 1919 30, 192.6 192.9 i6, 192.6 192.9 Feb. lo, 1916 192.9 Feb. 2.1, 192.6 1919 GAMES SCORE OPPONENTS SCORE 9 Kent j 13 Jamaica High School o 2. Pomfret o 3 Kent 4 I St. Paul ' s 3 7 Yale, 192.9 3 5 Nichols School 2. 281 1929 Freshman Basketball Team OFFICERS L. F. Davis Captain E. V. Selden, Jr. Manager J. H. Jeffries, Jr. Coach ■ TEAM TEAM SUBSTITUTES L. F. Davis (c) Forward C. H. Ebbetts Forward G. S. Babcock Forward B. E. POSTE . Guard O. E. Miles Center E. Barnouw Forward J. F. Beaied Guard E. E. Baruch Forward E. O. WiTTMER Guard H. S. Hadsall . I. F. Boyd . Center Forward The 1919 Freshman Basketball Team went through a rather unsuccessful season, winning only four of their eleven games, and losing to Yale i9-i3. Captain Davis and Miles stood out as possible candidates for the varsity. GAMES Dec. 12. Princeton Jan. i Princeton Jan. 16 Princeton Jan. iO Princeton Jan. 2- Princeton ,|an. 2-7 Princeton Feb. 16 Princeton Feb. zo Princeton Feb . 2-7 Princeton Mar 10 Princeton Mar ' 3 Princeton 192-9 15 192.9 2.6 ' 92-9 19 192.9 II 192-9 41 192-9 30 192-9 13 192-9 19 192-9 17 192.9 II 192-9 2-5 Lawrenceville 16 Away Peddie 56 Away Yale 13 Home Princeton Prep 15 Away Hill 15 Away Lawrenceville 17 Home St. Pauls 15 Away Princeton Prep . . i} Home Princeton High 15 Home Columbia 1919 10 Away Penn 192.9 31 Away 282 I II II II I I II II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II I I 1 c 1778 1929 Freshman IVrestling Team OFFICERS W. H. Graham, ' 2.9 . Captain F.J. Walters, Jr., ' 17 . Manager C. P. Foster . Coach TEAM C. MacRae 115-pound class D. O ' Day 115-pound class W. B. Crawford, Jr. . . ii5-pound class S. S. Janney i}5-pound class W. H. Graham 145-pound class C. D. Broadhead .... 158-pound class W. C. Campbell 175-pound class B. B. Odell, III Unlimited MEETS DATE SCORE OPPONENT SCORE Jan. 16, 1916 1919 Canceled Blair . . Canceled Jan. 15, 1916 192.9 ... 9 Oilman . 8 Feb. 2.7, 1916 192.9 .11 Choatc 8 Mar. 6, 192.6 1919 ... 16 Yale, 192.9 . 9 The 192.9 Freshman Wrestling Team enjoyed a cham- pionship season. The exceptionally fine work of Captain Graham featured. Back Kflif— Oawford, Walters (Mgr.), Broadhead, McRac. Front Row — O ' Day, Graham (Capt.), Janney. P. H. W. B. Wood,Jr., xy H. H. Bojus . H. B. Alexander D. F. Edwards, Jr. J. B. Lucke MEETS Princeton score Opponent 1919 Won Newark Academy . 192.9 Lost Dickinson High 1929 FVeshman Gym Team OFFICERS Pierce Captain T. M. Rogers SCORE Lost Won L. K. Barnett Princeton Dickinson High 1919 . . Manager Coach C. R. Ford P. H. Pierce QUADRANGULAR MEET score Opponent First West New York High . Second Lincoln . CD. Stengel SCORE Third Fourth 283 Tl 1 t t I M IT M II l.[ 1 L_.lJ, . ' t M t I [ W 7 1928 1929 Freshman Lacrosse Team J. W. Stinson B. R. Jones, ' vj A. B. NiES . Captain Manager Coach The 192.9 Freshman Lacrosse Team had a championship season which reached its climax when the team defeated the Yale yearlings in a hotly contested match. In recogni- tion of their hrilliant record, the members of the team were awarded straight numerals. Captain Stinson did ex- cellent work at first attack and Sessa held the home position with distinction. Haas and Garland and Miles also starred. -w Bad Kew — Lcvenstinc, BaiHiard. Baldwin, Haas, Warnncr, Graham, McMillan (Coach), hro ir K w— Cochran, Rupc, Scssa, Stinson (Capt.) Elliot, Hanna, Garland. TEAM T. H. Baldwin R. L. Garland C. E. Levenstein O. E. Miles H. Bannard W. a. Graham J. S. Lichty J. A. Moffett W. W. Cochran M. Haas H. G. Meeker N. H. Ott L. P. Elliot MEETS April 2.4, 1916 1919 9 May 8, 1916 192.9 5 May 15, 192.6 192.9 6 May 2.1, 192.6 192.9 5 S. W. Perry R. A. RuGE A. J. Sessa J. W. Stinson J. P. Tyler J. D. Warriner OPPONENTS SCORE Rutgers, 1919 i Erasmus Hall i Yale, 1919 5 Penn, 192.9 4 284 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 I M I N 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 a 7 1928 1929 Freshman Tennis Team George Barker, ' zj Richard P. Cooke, ' z Captain Manager The 1919 Freshman Tennis Team enjoyed a very success- ful season last spring, winning all of its seven encounters by decisive margins. The team had a clean slate for the first four matches, but in each of the last three, one in- dividual match was lost. Fifty-seven of the sixty indi- vidual matches played were won. The sterling work of Captain Barker and Kenneth Appel was the outstanding feature of the team ' s success. Mower , Cooke (Mgr.J, Rotkcrfcllcr, Knidin, Lutkhart, Thurbcr, Barker (Capt.), Appcl, Scmans. TEAM K. B. Appel George Barker R. B. Thurber C. Lockhart L. S. Semans H. S. Kniffin, Jr. SCHEDULE Apr. 14 — Peddie May I— Hill May 5 — Lawrenccville May II — Columbia May 15 — Penn May 19 — Lawrenccville May iz. — Yale 285 1.11 li Li., iL Li 11 II II It II II II n ri Tr rT 7 1928 T. Baer P. Armstrong G. Dodge DATE Jan. 3, 1916 1919 Jan. 30, 1916 1919 Feb. 11, 1916 192-9 Feb. 16, 1916 1919 Mar. 6, 192.6 1919 Mar. 10, 1916 1919 Mar. 10, 1916 192.9 1929 Freshman Swimming Team OFFICERS T. Baer Captain Richard Smith Manager Frank J. Sullivan Coach TEAM F. Ellis J. M. Fisher D. Haseltine J. Kerr H. LOEB W. RiDGWAY MEETS W. Robinson H. Seay R. Smith J. Wallis A. WiLLAUER J. WiLLEY 44 37 2-5 54 49 51 39 OPPONENTS SCORE Princeton Prep 18 Lawrenceville 2.5 Mercersburg 37 Rutgers, 192.9 8 Pennsylvania, 1919 13 Columbia, 192.9 11 Yale, 192.9 33 1929 Freshman Pistol Team T. S. LoVERING M Mar. 17, 1916, Princeton, 1919 Apr. 13, 19x6, Princeton, 192.9 Apr. 2.3, 19x6, Princeton, 192.9 Apr. 30, 192.6, Princeton, 192.9 May 10, 192.6, Princeton, 192.9 May 15, 192.6, Princeton, 1919 May 2.1, 192.6, Princeton, 192.9 OFFICERS T. S. LoVERING J. D. Page, ' 2.6 F. B. Inglis, Captain (D. O. L.) TEAM E. Newcomb a. Nesbitt, II W. D. Cox MEETS Captain Manager Coach R. M. Wood T.J. Lee (alternate) 132.3 Oregon Aggies, 192.9 1311 1360 Culver Military Academy (xnd) 1306 1360 University of Missouri, 1919 1395 1351 N. M. Military Institute, 1919 1397 1330 Alabama Poly, 192.9 1385 1404 University of Wisconsin, 192.9 12.35 1365 Ohio State, 192.9 12.91 REVIEW OF THE SEASON Though the Freshman Pistol Team was an innovation with 192-9, their showing was fair, winning four of their seven shoots. Captain Lovering ' s good shooting was the feature of the team. 286 1929 Freshman Water Polo Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 1919 J. Kahrs R. Smith, ' 17 Frank J. Sullivan Captain Manager . Coach J. F. Beaird W. F. Beasley A. S. Brown C. L. Darnell W. S. Mitchell R. Smith T. Uehlingbr TEAM F. C. Ellis F. F. Embick J. Kahrs F. P. Mellon MEETS o Montclair A. C 41 55 Columbia, 192.9 i o Yale, 1919 . ' 15 Merc mediocrity is the best that can be said of the record of the 1919 Freshman Water Polo team. Of the three games played, Princeton was successful only against Columbia, losing to the Montclair Athletic Club as well as to the Yale Freshmen. All the games were characterized by a decisive advantage to the winner. Freshman Fencing Team B. WiNDusT, ' 2.9 Captain R. O. Hereford, ' x-j Manager Captain F. G. McPherson Coach 1919 1919 192.9 192.9 MEETS 7 7 6 4 Lawrenccville Rutgers Varsity Choate School Yale, 192.9 The 192.9 Fencing Team had an unusually successful year, falling short of a championship season from the one-point victory of Yale, 192.9. Besides ful- filling its schedule, the team made a brilliant showing in informal matches against the Saltus Club and the New York Fencers ' Club. 287 ' I i I 1 1 1 1 II II 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 I I i 1 II ' ' i 1 I ' ' ' ' ' J 7 1928 J. G. Jones Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 Princeton, 192.9 1929 Freshman Golf Team J. G. Jones, 192.5 Captain B. W. DiCKERMAN, 1917 Manager TEAM M. Block J. B. Stevens G. Jones C. B. McDougal MATCHES 12. 9 8 9 9 4 Lawrenceville Tome Hill Penn, 192.9 Lawrenceville Yale . . R. P. GoLDSBURY The 192.9 Freshman Golf Team had a promising preliminary season, but after a hard match lost to Yale Freshmen by the close score of 4 to 5. The playing of Captain Jones was of a high calibre throughout the season. 1929 Freshman Rijle Team OFFICERS D. Q. Coster Captain W. F. McElroy, ' 17 Manager Col. C. O. H. Kayser Coach D. Q. Coster Feb. 3.0 Feb. i6 Mar. 5 Mar. 12. 192.9 192.9 192.9 19x9 TEAM D. V. AULD D. S. Byard E. L. Fuller J. S. Vhay MEETS 450 Lawrenceville 489 483 494 E. S. Reynolds 461 Mar. 19 1919 1773 Monclair Academy Pennsylvania, 1919 491 Clason M. A 499 Navy, 192.9 i860 The 192.9 Rifle Team experienced a rather bad year, losing four out of five meets. The scores were poor except in the Clason M. A. meet in which the Freshmen shot a 494 to their oppoennt ' s almost perfect score of 499 out of a possible 500. 288 1920 Freshman Soccer Team TEAM W. D. Bahfield D. L. Graham D. M. Reese . W. G. Scarlett, G. H. Beddoe R. H. Wood R. H. Snyder J. H. L. French C. T. Bailey R. H. GiEs . N. T. Kenney A. P. Du Pont I. L. C. F. I. R. O. R. O. L. L. H. R. H. R. F. B. L. F. B. C. H. . G. D. McMuLLIN G. J. FiNNBT SUBSTITUTES A. H. Stockwell F. Preston G. L. Stallman R. S. Hendey date Oct. ij, 1916, Princeton Oct. Z7, 1916, Princeton Nov. 3, 1916, Princeton Nov. 13, 1916, Princeton Nov. 17, 1916, Princeton GAMES SCORE OPPONENT SCORE 5 Broolclyn Poly Prep 3 10 Peddie i i Peddie o Yale 3 1 Hightstown High i DATE Nov. 10, 1916, Princeton Nov. 2.7, 1916, Princeton Dec. I, 192.6, Princeton Dec. II, 1916, Princeton 5RB OPPONENT SCORE 3 Cook Y. M. C. A i 3 Curtis High o 5 Penn i 6 Gilman i Except for the one defeat in the hands of the Yale freshmen, the 1930 Soccer Team went through the season undefeated. Captained by Barfield, the team played an excellent brand of soccer during the entire season. 289 1930 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM To; R«i — Shcppard, Maroncy, Fairman, Kcchn, Howell, Adams, Kirkpatrick, Vogt, Pclo. Smnd Km — Let, Lowry, Wen, Caldwell, Ames, (Mgr.), Scarlet Scalcst, Duncan, Cook. Third Row — Shcldrick, Moore, Leviae Barfictd, (Capt.), Whytc, Jaoncy, Ensley. 1 II ir ir II M II 11 II M II II II II M II II II II II 1778 1920 Freshman Football Team W. D. Barfield, ' 30 J. D. Ames, ' 18 A. P. Davis, ' 11 . OFFICERS Captain C. W. Caldwell, ' 15 Manager D. W. Griffin, ' 13 Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach TEAM J. L. Howell Left end J. R. Whyte Left tackle W. D. Barfield Left guard J. S. Janney Center S. H, Levine Right guard L. P. Owen SUBSTITUTES W.A.Moore Right tackle W. J. Sheldrick Right end W. G. D. Scarlett Quarterback D. A. LowRY Left Halfback R. L. VoGT Right Halfback Fullback W. S. Adams, II Quarterback W. G. Caldwell Center and Halfback J. W. Cooke Halfback A. J. Duncan, III Guard H. E. Ensley E. P. Fairman R. D. Keehn.Jr. End Halfback Fullback H. R. KlRKPATRICK End H. G. Lee Guard J. H. Maroney . Fullback C. Scales Guard M. D. Sheppard End N. W. Wagner Tackle GAMES date score opponents Oct. 9, Princeton, 1930 Z5 Peddie Oct. 16, Princeton, 1930 13 Navy Plebes . Oct. Z3, Princeton, 1950 13 Mcrcersburg Oct. 30, Princeton, 1930 44 Rutgers, 1930 Nov. 6, Princeton, 1930 7 Yale, 1930 Nov. 13, Princeton, 1930 19 Dartmouth, 1930 The 1930 football team was composed of players of unusual ability for a freshman team. With a quantity of good material to choose from the coaches developed a team that showed splendid coordination and aggressiveness. In the first game the yearling eleven found Peddie an easy prey. The team out- played the Navy Plebes in a closely contested game, won from Mercersburg, a feat which few freshman teams have been able to accomplish in the last ew years, and completely swamped the helpless Rutgers eleven. At this point the Fres hmen suffered a severe attack of over-confidence and lost to the Yale Freshmen in a sloppy exhibition of football. The season ended with a decisive defeat of the Dartmouth Freshmen. The outstanding players were: Captain Barfield, Moore, Owen, Lowry, Vogt, and Scarlett. t 291 I I I I I M I I I 1 1 I I I I 1 1 I I I I M 11 1 1 I I 1 I I I I I IX 1928 7 1930 Freshman Cross Country Team OFFICERS R. D. Swede, ' 30 . R. L. Kennedy, Jr., ' x8 R. M. Duncan Captain Manager . Coach TEAM W. R. Bryant W. S. Dakin C. S. Hertz G. W. Renchard R. D. Swede R. Spencer J. H, Wright 1930 1930 1930 MEETS SCORE 2.6 34 17 Lawrcnccvillc St. Benedicts . Rutgers, 1930 . Yale, 1930 SCORE 2.9 60 2.9 Third place in the Freshman Intercollegiatcs 292 I I Tap Row — Strubing, Howell, Bole, Jcnncy. lint Row — Hardt, Beard, England. Intracollegiate Athletic Association OFFICERS M. C. Beard, ' 2.7 Chairman W. M. Hardt, II, ' 2.8 Secretary J. W. England, ' 2.8 Treasurer W. M. Hardt, II, ' iS A. D. Jenney, ' 17 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE M. C. Beard, ' 17 J. W. England, ' i8 W. R. Howell, ' 17 R. F. Bole, ' 2.8 HONORARY MEMBERS J. E. Raycroft, M. D. N. B. Tooker, M. D. The Intracollegiate Athletic Association is composed of two men from each uppcrclass club, two from Madison Hall, and two elected from the Sopho- more class. The purpose of this body is to handle adequately athletic contests between clubs and contests not coming under the head of varsity athletics, such as the touch football league, interdass baseball, and tennis tournaments. Great interest has been shown in intracollegiate athletics recently and not a little credit is due the Association. MEMBERS CLUB 1917 MEMBER 192.8 MEMBER Arbor Inn S. H. High.Jr. E. R. Welles Campus . D. C. Gauss, Jr. J. A. Rice Cannon W. B. Thulin T. F. Hasbrouck Cap and Gown W. R. Howell J. H. Stout Charter T. Hale, Jr. G, W. Kepler, Jr. Cloister . W.J. HlTSCHLER C. S. Davison, Jr. Colonial W. B. Krag H. W. Large Cottage . B. F. H. Cale R. F. Bole Court Dial Lodge . A. N. Lawrence J. W. Thompson, Jr Elm . . G. T. Trenholm L. M. FiREY Gateway J. Reine H. 0. Von Deilen Ivy , A. D. Jenney J. W. England Key and Seal T. C. Von Storch W. W. Barry Quadrangle M. W. Egerton J. P. Wilson Terrace . E. J. Dikeman J. W. Van Ryn Tiger Inn H. A. ROYSTER R. 0. PlEPER Tower J. R. Pitman R. C. Miller Madison K. M. Kepler H. S. Waters 1919 MEMBERS J F. Beai RD P. H. Strubing 295 EVENT loo Yd. Dash xio Yd. Dash 440 Yd. Dash 880 Yd. Run Mile Run Two Mile Run 110 Yd. Hurdles 110 Yd. Hurdles Caledonian Games HELD MAY 18 AND 19, 1916 VINNERS TIME, DISTANCE EVENT winners HEIGHT, DISTANCE . High Cry) • . . . 10. 1 sec. f I. Blake C18) . . 6 ft. I in. . Rockwell Cr8) High Jump ■j -L. Thompson ( ' 18) 3. Marshall ( ' 19) . Sweet ( ' 18) . Rockwell (18) . . . ii.i sec. Grumpclt ( ' r8). . High C17) Firey C ' lS) — Tied. . Bucholtz ( ' 17) I. Dikeman ( ' 17) . 11 ft. 9.5 in. . Leeming ( ' 2.6) . 50.9 sec. Broad Jump i. Scuddcr C18) . Van Alstyne ( z ) 3. Firey C18) . Ritchie (17) I. Bradley ( ' 17) . II ft. 6 in. . Gibson ( ' 18) 1 mm. Pole Vault McLallen ( ' 19) — Tied . Reynolds (18) X. Faust (17) . Leeming ( ' i6) Huff ( ' 19) — Tied . Gore ( ' 19) . 4 min. 34.3 sec. I. Gibson ( ' 2.6) . . 40 ft. 1.15 in. . Dumper C -S) Shot Put 1. Wilson Ci8) . Huckin (18) 3. Howe ( ' 19) . Welles (18) . . 10 mm. 15.9 sec. I. Dalenz ( ' 18) . 143 ft. 1 in. . Tyler Ci6) Hammer Throw ■L. Caldwell C19) . Myrick (17) 3. Mann ( ' 18) . Lawrence ( ' 17) . . 15.5 sec. I. Gibson ( ' 16) . . 186 ft. 0.75 in . Jadwin ( ' 18) Javelin Throw 1. Healey ( ' 19) . Mills C2.8) 3.ReaCi6) . Lawrence ( ' 17) . . 14.4 sec. I. Moeser ( ' 18) . 119 ft. 1 in. . Scares ( ' i6) Discus Throw ■L. Caldwell (iq) 3. Von Dielcn C18) . Black (16) SUMMARY CLASS POINTS CLASS POINTS I. 1918 .... • 55-1 3 3- 1916 ■ j X. 1917 .... 35-5 4- 1919 19.5 6 296 li-l-L .Ll ' .l ' l,. 1 1. ' 1 1 I [ ll.J.f r [ ' I I ' rr 1 1 w i ) 1 1 1 1 i i i i j 1928 7 H. K. Bramhall, If. C. H. Ebbets, Jr., cf. F ' all I ntra-C alleviate Athletic Contests J. T. Emert, lb. H. A. Heydt, p. WON BY 192.9 E. Hicks, 3b. S. S. Janney, Jr., r J. J. Moore, c. F. M. Palmer, p. B. E. Post, ss. A. T. Seymour, ib. CANE SPREE November }, 1916 LIGHTWEIGHT CLASS F. T. Updike, ' 19, won over W. S. Stone, ' 30; time, 4 min., 40 sec. UNLIMITED CLASS J. L. ToNETTi, ' 30, won over J. A. R. Dalley, ' 19; time, 5 min., 45 sec. MIDDLEWEIGHT CLASS W. A. Graham, 19, won over J. G. Theban, ' 30; time, 11 min. of an extra perioa. GOLF Reconstruction work at The Princeton Golf Club prevented any Fall Tournament in 1916, but a match was scheduled with Yale to substitute for the usual competition among the Undergraduates. The University Team defeated Yale by the score of 5} matches to 3J . The scores were as follows: Twosomes W. P. Hersey, Princeton, defeated P. Haviland, Yale, 1 up C. B. Grace, Princeton, defeated W. K. Lanman, Yale, 5 and 3 L. Parker, Yale, defeated E. G. Arnott, Princeton, 3 and 1 J. W. Grange, Princeton, defeated E. W. Hoyt, Yale, 7 and 6 G. Brown, Yale, defeated S. J. Pattullo, Princeton, 3 and 2. E. S. Knapp, Princeton, defeated G. Ashford, Yale, 1 and i Foursomes Hersey and Grace, Princeton, defeated Haviland and Lanman, Yale I UP Parker and Hoyt, Yale, defeated Arnott and Grange, Princeton I UP Brown and Ashford, Yale, tied Pattullo and Knapp, Princeton FALL TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP, 1916 Owing to inclement weather this Fall the tennis championship was not completed. It is the custom for the four class winners to play for the cham- pionship of the college but this was impossible this year. The two upper class tournaments were finished with the following scores: 1917 1918 T. H. Minary defeated J. C. Westfall 6-3, 6-2., 6-1 J. Van Ryn defeated R. C. Whitsett 6-1, 6-3, 6-2. The 192.9 championship went to K. B. Appel through the inability of the other two semi-finalists to play off their match. 297 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' I I I I II 1 1 1 1 II I I n 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 I 1 rxrj 1928 7 Annual Fall Regatta • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER ii, 1916 VARSITY CREW SQUAD RACE Stroke Alison ' s crack boatload of Sophomores found the going easy against the three other Varsity crews assembled on Lake Carnegie, winning the fall season ' s final race by four lengths over the Henley distance. Becker ' s shell, after a battle with that stroked by Aitken, came in second, while Ballen- tine ' s shell finished last. The winning Varsity boat ' s time was 7:30:3. Stroke 7 6 5 4 3 2. Becker ' s Boat Becker . Clark Rutherfurd . Ballard DISTANCE I 5 16 MILES Aitken ' s Boat Alison ' s Boat Aitken Alison Alexander Lawrence Large Kenyon . Beardsley Quarles Bow Goodman Cox Burr Magee Trimble Thompson Wood Patty Conwell Stratford Stillman Haven . Ham J. Ballentine Cook McRac . Ballentine ' s Boat R. Ballentine Beaham Greeff Miller Elmer Blake Supplee Bay lis Menecly 150-POUND CREW RACE Over the Henley distance, a dark horse eight stroked by Livingston came in two lengths ahead of a strong field in the 150-pound event. The winning boat ' s handicap was four seconds. Plumb ' s, Smith ' s, and Pell ' s boats finished in that order. The winning time was 7.46. Stroke 7 6 DISTANCE I 5 16 MILES Smith ' s Boat Plumb ' s Boat Pell ' s Boat Livingston ' s Boat Smith Plumb Pell Livingston Eckerson Denniston Packard Dayton Krag Harris Case Armitage 5 Reynolds Hume Butler Cochran 4  Kerr D. Smith Walker McPherson 3 I. W. Thompson . . Kepler Beale Robertson 1 Bassett McMillan Weed Mole Bow Cooley Belcher Mayers Lasater Cox Ncvius Greacen Hughes .... Wise 298 Annual Fall Regatta— {Continued) FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 192.6 FRESHMAN CREW RACE Lloyd ' s boat led four other Freshman boats at the finish of the last Freshman Crew race of the fall season. The others finished in the following order: Second, Pool ' s; third, Ewing ' s; fourth, Wood ' s; and fifth. Baker ' s. DISTANCE 3 4 MILE 1 Lloyd ' s Boat Pool ' s Boat Baker ' s Boat Ewing ' s Boat Wood ' s Boat 1 Stroke Lloyd Pool . Baker Stroke .... Ewing Wood % 7 Tonctti Winston . Easton 7 • Welbourne Chamberlain 1 . 6 Crawford Reeves Van Duyne 6 . Bowen . Palmer 1 5 Bell . . Lawson . - White 5 Stevens Candy % 4 3 1 Bennett Reeves Jones Wimbcrley Brown Frost Brooks Buys . Wilson 4 • 3 1 Bruyere Garber . Taylor Steinmctz Cotton Robinson 1 Bow Cox Voorhccs Howe . Burgoync Christie . . Holden . Meyer Bow Cox Alexander Meade . Thompson Mencely 299 Spring Intra-Collegiate Athletic Events WINNERS BOXING TOURNAMENT, SPRING 1916 J. C, Taylor, ' 18 ii5-pound class E, W. Wooton, 19 145-pound class E. C. Embury, ' i8 135-pound class O. T. Robero, ' 17 160-pound class M. D. Ogden, ' 19 175-pound class INTERCLUB BASKETBALL SERIES ANNUAL FENCING TOURNAMENT Won by Elm Club Spring, 1916 Team: C. L. Beares, R. M. Gibson, E. L. McMillan, M. H. Murphy, Foils Won by G. E. Diller, ' 16 H. B. Nies, T. R. Williams. Epees Won by T. H. Jaekel, ' 2.8 Sabres Won bv D. C. Kleist, ' i6 INTERCLUB BASEBALL, SPRING 1916 ' Won by Charttr Club INTERCLUB HOCKEY Team: A. H. Burchfield, R. Edie, R. H. Haas, J. H. Jordan, H. H. o h T ' rract Club Mayer, F. S. Newberry, F. Peabody, H. Prior, T. Righter, H, A. Team: L. H. Bodman, W. S. Conover, R. F. Green, J. F. Kidde, R. P.- Robinson. Kinder. K. H. Michelet, F.J. Walters. INTERCLUB CREW INTERCLASS SOCCER Won by Tiger Inn Won by ifjiS Members of Crew: E. W. Colman, J. W. Davis, R. W. A. English, J. H. Team:R. K. Black, T. Cover, W. Hirshon, A. Neilson, J. E. Pack- Hawkins, J. M. McCready, M. F. McFarlane, W. M. Roosevelt, ard, D. Plumer, J. S. Richardson, J. K. Shaw, C. C. Squires, H. S. J. C. Stillman, R. W. Street. Waters, R. S. Willis, H. B. Wilson. INTERCLUB GOLF SOPHOMORE INTERCLUB BASKETBALL Won by Ivy Club Won by Elm i iS Team: A. F. Adams, E. M. Durham, E. S. Knapp, S. MacLeod. Team: T. W. Childs, L. Corning, C. E. Eastman, R. S. Huckin, F. L. Hyer, I. E. Packard. INTERCLUB TENNIS Won by Tower Club Team: W. C. Gay, A. C.Johnson, J. R. Pitman, J. C. Westfall. 300 Results of the Fall Handicap Meet, October 27, 1926 PLACE I. Lincoln i. RiTCHEY 3. SiNER TRACK EVENTS 100- YARD RUN HANDICAP 1 yds. I yd. 3 yds. TIME io;6 I. RiTCHEY i. Lincoln . 3. BUCHHOLZ I. Van Alstyne 1. Clark 3. Schwartz no- YARD RUN 1 yds. . . 5 yds. X yds. 440-YARD RUN Scratch 5 yds. 12. yds. 2-37 5x:6 110- YARD HIGH HURDLES I. Hedges ..... Scratch . X. Jadwin Scratch 3. Stover ..... Scratch izo-YARD LOW HURDLES I. Lawrence .... Scratch . X. Beddoe 5 yds. 3. Craig . .... 7 yds. 16:4 2-77 place I. Alder 1. Gray . 3. Hersey I. Marshall . 1. Alexander 3. Alder I. Dodge i. Lawrence 3. FiNLEY I. Marshall X. Hedges 3. Faber . Hedges Bradley Dodge Newmark Marsh Garrett FIELD EVENTS DISCUS THROW handicap distance or height . 15 ft. . . . 108 ft. . ft. . . 106 ft. , I in. . 15 ft. . . 106 ft. JAVELIN Scratch 140 ft. gin. Scratch 130 ft. II in. Scratch . . 116 ft. 4 in. BROAD JUMP ift. . . . . 11 ft. 5 in. ift. . . . . 11 ft. 4 in. I ft. . . . . 11 ft. 3 in. HIGH JUMP X in. . . . 6ft. Scratch . . 5ft. 10 in. I in. . . . 5ft. ID in. POLE VAULT 6 in. . . . IX ft. . Scratch . . lift. 9 in. 12. in. 18 in. . . . lift. 6 in. 18 in. 18 in. i WON BY 15x8 Winning Team INTERCLASS RELAYS, OCTOBER xg, 19x6 second — 19x7 HoRNE, McCready, Tappin third — 1930 RiTCHEY, Rockwell, Sweet 301 « Hn lo BL l l E HKJ Hfeir HV ! ] PI QjBfW K : tt Ml H SMjbs J|0 B( ' -4 1 Ah4A CROSS COUNTRY CLUB Tap RiMtf Kcnncdy. Duncan, Rhea. Second Row — Wright, Cribbc, Gibson, Siade, Fisher, Smith, S. B. Sitting — Welles, Gleason, Mirick, Smith, S. C, Young. Cross Country Club OFFICERS R. K. McCoNNELL President E. M. Rhea Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS, 192.7 B. M. Newman C. B. Fisk W. H. Read H. D. Mirick MEMBERS, 1918 B. M. Babcock S. B. Payne J. R. Gibson P. S. Young S. C. Smith P. A. Snell S. B. Smith W. B. Slade E. R. Welles MEMBERS, 19x9 J. G. Copley E. V. Peters J. A. Stobbe R. C. McNamara J. E. GosE H. S. Fisher J. H. Gleason E. C. Crabb R. K. McConnell F. W. George MEMBERS, 1930 R. M. Brown R. Bryant R. D. Swede G. W. Renchard C. S. Hertz J. Maltman W. S. Dakin G. H. Wright R. Spencer It is the purpose of the Princeton Cross Country Club, which was founded two years ago, to encourage distance running as well as to prepare men for varsity positions. Through the medium of the Club men of unknown calibre may be judged by their showing in the races of the Club. Last fall four races were held. The winners were: I St race Tie — S. C. Smith, J. E. Gore Time — 9 min Distance — i 5 8 mile md race S. C. Smith .... Time — 9:05 min. Distance — i 5 8 mile 3rd race W. H. Read .... Time — 18 min., 15 sec. . Distance — 3 miles 4th race B. M. Babcock . Time — 14 min., 5 sec. Distance — x i i miles 303 John Grier Hibben, ' 8z John W. Davis, ' 17 The Princeton Life Saving Club . Honorary President A. T. Bowron, Tr. ' i8 . Honorary President . President A. J. Bowron, Jr. F. J. Sullivan . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer F. J. Sullivan Instructor The Princeton Life Saving Club concluded its thirteenth successful season last spring. The Club is one of the most popular of extra curricular activi- ties, annually drawing more men than any other intra-collegiate activity. It is also the only Club throughout the country that prescribes its own tests, besides which, it awards diplomas which are recognized by the Camp Counsellors ' Association. The only Life Saving Club having tests equal to those of the Princeton organization is the Royal Life Saving Club of London. A diploma is awarded only after the following tests have been completed: I — Swim 100 yards in i minute and 2.0 seconds. 1 — Swim 440 yards in 8 minutes. 3 — Swim 100 yards on back using feet only. 4 — Running front dive. 5 — Keep afloat with supposed abdominal cramps for 3 minutes. 6 — Swim 75 feet under water from surface dive. 7 — Swim 50 yards using arms only. 8 — Surface dive for human object. 9 — Remove shoes and clothes in deep water. 10 — Swim 50 yards dressed. II — Demonstration of seven methods of release from supposedly drowning person, li — Carry subject 100 yards, using four methods of carry. 13 — Defensive tactics against struggling subject. 14 — Undress on land and enter water in 30 seconds. 15 — Correct demonstration of Schafer method of resuscitation. 16 — Written explanation of methods of resuscitation for the drowned. DIPLOMA WINNERS D. N. Haseltine, ' 19 A. O. WlLLAUER, ' 19 A. J. MacKie, ' 19 F. E. Ellis, ' 19 J. K. Wallis, ' 19 G. G. Kane, ' 19 MEDAL WINNERS H. B. Alexander, ' 2.9 J. A. LiCHTY, ' XJ C. B. Garnet, ' xj S. S. Mac Millan, 2-9 I. A. Hopper, ' 19 J. R. Steves, 19 E. V. Peters, ' 19 E. L. Ward, ' 19 .304 CLASS ca NVMERALS i I ' I ' I ' ' ' M II ' I 11 IF TT— T i 1778 ' I ' ■ M t r T I TT TT M II II 11 ' ' J ? 1928 Class of 1927 E. E. Alexander R. Baldwin M. C. Beard J. Casey W. C. Carroll J. R. Chandler E. E. Alexander M. C. Beard R. N. Begien, Jr. J. D. Adams W. H. Avery, Jr. R. R. Bayes G. Blake S. R. Bradley, Jr. G. M. Castleman J. W. AlTKEN W. R. Ballard J. B. Charles W. M. Collins R. F. Darby J. W. Davis M. W. Egerton C. A. Blake G. J. Carloftes B. C. COMPTON J. B. Charles D. A. Clarke E. j. Dikeman, Jr. G. P. Faust P. E. FURBER J. D. Gallegher, Jr. H. Clarke R. C. Collins F. T. Smith P. H. CONKLIN FOOTBALL J. W. England S. E. Ewing C. W. Farnsworth F. Lea H. H. Mayer BASEBALL R. W. LaBeaume J. D. McCabe F. S. Newberry TRACK S. R. High, Jr. A. B. Hodgman C. R. Howell C. A. R. Keller E. H. LuCKETT R. McCready CREW E. B. ECKERSON S. Goodman, III TENNIS H. E. Meislahn H. B. NiEs S. M. Pell B. F. Pepper j. Prendergast D. C. Rebhun W.J. Rhees J. W. Slagle L. T. McNamara D. C. Moore, Jr. J. S. Packard J. R. Pitman, Jr. M. L. Posey J. Reine R. D. Magee L. M. Pirie T. H. Minary WRESTLING H. A. Royster L. R. Stuyvesant SWIMMING H. R. Erdman T. M. Rosengarten W. Rutherford P. R. Sanson J. W. Slagle J. Tyson E. S. Welch H. B. Swoope, Jr. T. S. Wilson P. R. Sanson E. D. Seerie A. M. Shober J. J. Steinmetz W. B. Van Alstynb, Jr. F. B. Wetherbee, Jr. C. K. Wilson J. D. Bartlett H. J. Butler B. F. H. Calb B. R. James E. M. Rhea R. W. SUMMEY P. G. Thompson CANE SPREE W. W. TOWNLEY A. M. Young MANAGERS Baseball G. Smith . . Hockey R. H, Smith . Football E. V. Selden . Lacrosse F. J. Walters Track Crew Swimming Basketball Wrestling 306 I I I I I I I M I I I II I I 11 I] II II II 11 II I E! [ I I I I J 1928 7 I E. C. Blake J. R. Bridges C. A. Case T. A. Coleman R. L. DiKovics J. R. Bridges F. C. Bauchens M. M. Bright, Jr. F. A. Baker, Jr. W. R. Barnes W. W. Barry E. F. Beddall R. Blake J. Dalenz A. S. Alexander S. M. Becker, Jr. J. Black T. Cover W. M. Hardt C. F. BoOKWALTER J. K. D. Chivers J. D. Ames W. P. Andrews H. A. DissTON B. W. Dudley, Jr. C. E. Eastman J. K. Ebbert J. R. Fanshawe W. P. Elliott J. McK. French H. A. Greene J. K. Ebbert C. T. Elliott L. M. Firey J. R. Gibson H. C. Grumpelt R. S. HuCKIN J. Langhorne H. W. Large W. HiRSCHON J. D. Leggett D. p. McPherson A. R. Morgan E. M. Ford A. N. LiLLEY Class of 1928 FOOTBALL J. McK. French G. A. GoocH D. N. Hendey V. Johnstone J. W. Lewis BASEBALL W. M. Hardt D. N. Hendy V. Johnstone TRACK L. S. Jadwin H. J. Lerch, Jr. P. D. Milholland C. R. MoESER N. M. Newmark D. D. O ' CONNEL CREW H. Shaw, Jr. W. C. Spruance SOCCER A. M. NlELSON J. E. Packard, Jr. D. Plumer J. S. Richardson WATER POLO R. C. Miller J. C. Murphy J. C. Taylor G. E. Clark E. Giles D. D. O ' Connel W. B. Evans J. E. Packard, Jr. WRESTLING GOLF CROSS COUNTRY E. R. Welles TENNIS I. A. Powell C. C. Squires SWIMMING C. R. Luger 307 C. R. Luger H. McAshan C. R. Moeser J. C. Rennard A. E. Sinclair R. Jemison, III W. G. Lackey, Jr. D. P. McPherson J. G. Pappas D. Peterkin J. O. Price S. S. Reynolds E. B. Rockwell L. R. SCUDDER H. R. Stratford J. P. Wilson, Jr. J. Shaw L. C. Simons C. C. Squires H. Waters F. S. Newberry, Jr. A. W. Patterson, III J. W. Lewis C. B. Grace J. R. Gibson D. P. Reed J. W. VanRyn J. C. Stout C. L. Tarver T. C. Wallace W. S. Whittakbr J. W. Wilson D. A. Manly-Power H. A. Prior A. E. Sinclair D. D. Shay J. J. Simpson W. B. Slade J. M. Sturges J. W. Thompson, Jr. J. W. Wilson A. Z. F. Wood C. T. Williams R. A. Willis H. B. Wilson J. K. Weekes W. P. Hershet J. A. RUSSEL Class of 1929 E. E. Baruch C. P. Benedict B. BiRDSALL J. F. Beaird J. M. Caldwell E. E. Baruch E. G. Bischoff H. K. Bramhall A. F. DuPoNT J. Alison, ' Jr. C. S. Bromley, Jr. C. D. Brodhead E. E. Baruch E. Barnouw F. F. Bacon C. O. Crocker W. C. Beddoe I. F. Boyd C. D. Brodhead J. M. Caldwell J. Carey K. B. Appel J. W. Stinson G. H. Schulze J. Carey L. F. Davis W. M. GOTTSCHALK J. T. Emert E. Hicks H. A. Heydt, Jr. M. Haas G. Jones J. B. Ballantine R. B. Kenyon W. D. Campbell W. F. Cochran E. C. Crabb S. Emlen, Jr. W. A. Graham E. C. Crabb H. Craig, Jr. L. F. Davis T. E. ECKFELDT W. Elting FOOTBALL H. S. Hadsall C. H. Howe P. H. Strubing G. Jones J. G. Jones BASEBALL E. L. Jasper J. S. McMillan F. M. Palmer HOCKEY J. G. Jones J. C. Miller CREW J. F. Lawrence ' W. A. Patty W. A. Graham WRESTLING S. S. Janney SOCCER W. E. Gerber T. R. Green A. N. Greminger CANE SPREE H. E. BlXLER TRACK E. J. FiNLEY C. J. Gable, Jr. F. L. Garrett J. H. Gleason J. E. Gore C. F. Mapes O. E. Miles M, N. Morrison J. H. Stevens J. C. Norman W. R. Parker J. Requardt P. H. Strubing M. M. MacLeod P. H. Strubing C. MacRae J. V. Quarles B. B. Odell, III B. C. Patt J. M. Requardt J. C. Reilly D. E. Webster L. S. Stewart E. O. Wittmer F. M. Palmer J. Thompson G. Barker, Jr. H. S. Kniffin TENNIS C. Lockhart C. MacRae J. W. Haines C. E. Levinstein J. S. Lichty F. T. Updike W. T. Healey C. H. Howe W. Huff S. S. Janney L. F. Kemp L. S. Seamans D. ODay B. B. Odell, III T. H. Logan J. W. Stinson L. S. Stewart H. B. Sexton W. F. P. Marshall R. K. McCo NNELL W. F. McLallen, Jr. C. A. Whitehouse R. B. Thurber 308 I II II II I ' II M 11 M I I II II II II II II II ' I II H 11778 1 1 I I II 1 1 1 1 N II 1 1 II N II II 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1928 ? 1930 Numerals FOOTBALL E. S. Adams W. D. Barfield W. G. Caldwell J. W. Cooke A.J. Duncan H. E. Ensley E. P. Fairman J. S. Janney R. D. Keehn H. R. KiRKPATRICK H. G. Lee S. Levine D. A. LowRY J. H. Maroney W. A. Moore L. P. Owen F. F. Pels W. D. G. Scarlett J. Scales W. J. Sheldrick M. D. Sheppard R. L. VOGT N. W. Wagner J. R. Whyte CROSS COUNTRY R. D. Swede R. Spencer CANE SPREE J. L. Tonetti 309 X ' ' ..U—H II II II II II 11 n-TT 1778 7 1928 Thirteenth Annual Inter scholastic Track Games HELD AT PRINCETON, MAY S, 1916 EVENT loo-YD. Dash lio-YD. Hurdles One-Mile Run . 440-YD. Run 440-YD. Run . (High Schools iio-YD. Hurdles iio-YD. Run i-YD. Run One-Mile Run (High Schools only) S. .s. Tit name Wildermuth, Lynbrook H. S Gentry, Mercersburg Hutson, Mercersburg Carney, Lawrenceville Stollwerck, Mercersburg Knobloch, Stuyvesant H Wrobel, New Utrecht H Evans, Swarthmore Prep Deady, St. Benedict ' s . Hewitt, Lawrenceville Henkels, Germantown Academy Shotton, Mercersburg Mickle, Swarthmore Prep. Jennings, Peddie Gillis, Princeton Tutoring Gorman, Manual Training Klumbach, M orris H. S. Trachy, Manual Training Crickard, Lynbrook H. S. Stollwerck, Mercersburg . End, Seton Hall Schlager, Lawrenceville Dorian, St. Benedict ' s Stone, Peddie .... Caminitti, Jos., Manual Training de Waltoff, McBurney Hiller, Flushing H. S. Rosner, New Utrecht Nicholson, Haverford Courtney, Lawrenceville Suto, Trenton H. S. Fitzmaurice, New Utrecht Welsh, Manual Training Bartlett, Trenton H. S. Boise, Glen Ridge TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE ID. I sec. 16.4 sec. 4:35.4 sec. 51.1 sec. 51.00 sec. 15.9 sec. X3.6 sec. 1.5 sec. EVENT Broad Jump Pole Vault . Discus Throw . Javelin Throw High Jump Shot Put Shot Put (High Schools only) Hammer Throw name Wildermuth, Lynbrook H. S. Furth, New Utrecht Oldt, Mercersburg Evans, Lawrenceville Berlinger, Penn Charter . Livingston, Mercersburg Dodge, Mercersburg Zwigard, St. Benedict ' s Downley, West Philadelphia WolfF, New Utrecht Labes, New Utrecht . Maroney, Lawrenceville Shuster, Peddie Painter, Mercersburg Wagner, Lawrenceville . Malin, Manual Training Schwartz, Wenonah Military Larkin, Mercersburg Muslin, Stuyvesant H. S. . Everard, Stuyvesant H. S. Wherry, Lawrenceville Berlinger, Penn Charter Florea, Peddie J Labes, New Utrecht . Berlinger, Penn Charter Greene, Lawrenceville Du Bois, Mercersburg Smith, New Utrecht Malin, Manual Training Bresiloff, New Utrecht Cohen, Princeton H. S. Hockenbury, Mercersburg Seller, Mercersburg King, Lawrenceville Williams, Peddie time, height or distance 11 ft., 5 3 8 in. II ft., 10 3 16 in. Tie Til 156 ft., 7 3 410. 5 ft., II 1 2. in. 54 ft., i 3 4 in. 46 ft., 7 in. 134 ft., 4 i i in. The Thirtieth Annual Interscholastic Track Meet was a very successful one, in that it exceeded all those held previously, both in size and in attend- ance. Mercersburg repeated its victory of the two previous years, leading with 34 points. A n Interscholastics record was made when Labes, of New Utrecht, hurled the shot a distance of 54 feet, x 3 4 inches. 310 g RELIGIOUS S i SOCIETIES I •ifll, Jtlfll JIlHt Jttflt JftHt Jam. JitA, jnA. SO-Sll. JaStL SUm, sdSH. JtltR. So. Si, JtlJR. Jtti Back Row— Hall, England, Hudnut. Kepler, Harbison. StconJ Row— Shamwiy, Blake, Stallman, Prcndcrgast, Kniffin, Nelson. Front Row— Clark, Ewiog, Howard, Barrell, Buxton. 1 II n M II II II n 11 II II I I II II I I M II II I CT 1928 7 ' Philadelphian Society THE CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF PRINCETON . UNIVERSITY MBss. OFFICERS . . , . ' H Charles A. Howard, ' 17 President i fJ ' ' ' M Samuel E. EwiNG, ' 17 Vice-President E. C. Bartell, ' 2.7 .... Undergraduate-Treasurer H CABINET M Sh H H V • l fl ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i 7 ' ' Kniffin, ' zy F. R. Shumway, ' i8 mmi iidt Clark, ' 17 J. Prendergast, ' iy J. England, ' 2.8 I. D. Hall, ' zy H. Supplee, ' 2.7 C. H. Stallman, ' i8 W. H. HuDNUT, Jr., ' 17 E. C. Blake, ' 18 W. Nelson, ' 2.8 K. M. Kepler, ' 2.7 E. H. Harbison, ' z8 R. W. Summey, ' 18 Secretaries THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS John Grier Hibben, ' 8i Ex-Officio John McDowell, D.D., ' 94 Chairman Charles W. McAlpin, ' 88 Treasurer William Gillespie Timothy N. Pfeiffer, ' o8 George W. Perkins, ' 17 J. M. T. Finney, M.D., ' 84 Donald B. Sinclair, ' 10 H. P. Van Dusen, ' 19 Robert E. Speer, ' 89 John Colt, ' 14 Lewis M. Stevern, ' 10 Christy Payne, ' 95 Wilton Lloyd-Smith, ' 16 Cornelius P. Trowbridge, ' 10 S. M. Shoemaker, ' 16 GRADUATE SECRETARIES R. F. PuRDY, ' io .... General Secretary ASSOCIATE SECRETARIES F. Bancroft, ' i6 J. Bryant, ' i6 S. Wishard Howard Blake, ' 14 T. D. Stevenson, ' zj W. B. Van Keurbn, ' z6 313 Activities of the Philadelphian Society THE Philadelphian Society is the Christian Association of Princeton University. It was founded in i8ij and is an indigenous Princeton institution. It is distinctly an undergraduate institution although partially supported by Alumni. Every undergraduate who is a member of an evangelical church is, ipso facto, a member of the Philadelphian Society. Its purpose has been three-fold: first, to confront men individually and collectively with the whole gospel of Christ and its implications for them, and to guide men in Christian decisions; second, to meet their needs by tolerant and sympathetic understanding, yet a vigorous and persistent Christian emphasis, asking for courage, strengthening con- viction, and inspiring faith; third, to enable undergraduates to express their opinions in service to others through the many activities of the Society. During the past six year s the work of the Philadelphian Society, though ultimately in the hands of undergraduates, has been under the supervision of a group of younger graduate secretaries who have been closely in contact with the point of view of the students to meet their personal spiritual needs in a way perhaps more effective than an older man could. The work this year is again in charge of Mr. Ray Foote Purdy, who is assisted by Messrs. Bancroft, Blake, Bryant, Stevenson, Wishard, Van Keuren. Mr. Purdy, after graduating in 192.0, spent the years before he returned to Princeton to prepare for the ministry in teaching and in business. Messrs. Bancroft, Bryant, and Van Keuren returned immediately after graduation to enter into the work of the Philadelphian Society, as did Mr. Wishard, a graduate of Williams College, and at present a student in the Princeton Theological Seminary. Mr. Stevenson has spent a year at Canton Christian College, and Mr. Blake, after teaching at Stony Brook School, returned to Princeton. It is the purpose of these men to be in constant personal touch with the needs of the campus, to be available at all times to give spiritual assist- ance, to help men in need, and to aid men in reaching a spund conclusion on a Christian basis as they are confronted with the greatest of all questions, the problem of life work. Informal vesper services are held in Murray-Dodge every Sunday at 7:30 P. M. They are personal in nature and are conducted by the under- graduates themselves. The meetings have taken various forms, some educational, some evangelical, some expositional, and some from the standpoint of the personal experiences that the speakers have had. Upperclass discussion groups enrolling approximately 300 men have hela throughout the year. During 1916 there were groups led by Presi- dent Hibben, Professor Henry Norris Russell, Professor Robert Scoon, Professor Edwin Grant Conklin, and other members of the Faculty. At the beginning of the year, twenty-five were held, which were attended by more than 400 Freshmen. These were led mainly by Juniors and Seniors, who discussed in personal, man-to-man fashion, the rela- tion of entering men to college life, to other fellows, to women, to studies, and to life-work. In meeting individual needs the Society has indicated its policy of the availability of its Secretaries at all times. At the beginning of each year receptions are held for entering men and for foreign students. The Society is in close cooperation with the student pastors of the Episcopal, Pres- byterian and Methodist churches, and in this way assists in providing a World Court Conference 314 ' III I I I I I I I I I !■ 1778 _Ll_i. Ill 11 II I ! II II 11 II II 11 II 1 T T 1 IT r r ' 19281 7 Activities of the Philadelphian Society— {Continued ' ) church home for the undergraduates while in college. A Handbook is issued to all entering men in order to acquaint them further with Prince- ton life. Deputation work has always been one of the Society ' s most successful and worthy endeavors. Last year eighty-five deputation teams were sent out, visiting schools, churches, colleges, conferences, and clubs, in order to speak to men and boys on Christian ideals. The men who go speak in accordance with their own convictions, and represent the hon- est and searching inquiry of the young manhood of our generation for the ideals which can move society. In connection with the deputation work there was initiated two years ago into the work of the Philadelphian Society the holding of a winter student conference for preparatory schools. At the 192.6 conference 118 students were present, representing thirty-seven schools. The Conference considered the application of Christianity to the problems of college and the choice of a life-work. Deputations to these schools preceded the work of the conference. As a result of its great success, it has become estab- lished as an annual event in Princeton. Social Service work in and about Princeton is one of the Society ' s most important fields, and much highly commendable work is done therein. Practically all of the Boy-Scout and boys ' club work, and much of the Sunday-School work in Princeton is carried on by undergraduates under the supervision of the Philadelphian Society. Educational and Americanization work among foreigners is also administered under the direction of the Society. Several undergraduates give of their time to the extent of two evenings a week to teaching English to foreigners living in Princeton. The results gained — the gratitude and approval of those taught — have amply repaid the expenditure of time spent in this work. Each year trips arc arranged for the undergraduates through the slums, prisons, courts, and hospitals of New York and Philadelphia in order that conditions may be seen at first hand. A delegation of Princeton students attends each year the eight-day conference at Northfield. This conference is an intercollegiate movement held under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A. At this time the questions of importance in the religious and moral life of students are discussed, experiences of the year are shared between the representatives of differ- ent colleges, and information given concerning the Christian implica- tions of great problems of the present day — war, race, and industrial relationships. Forty-six men from Princeton attended this conference last year. Northfield Conference 315 •■■ ' ' ' i I ■ i I I ' II i I II II 113 19281 7 The Princeton Summer Camp For eighteen years the Philadelphian Society has managed the Princeton Summer Camp for the poor boys of New York, at Bay Head, New Jersey. The camp is situated on the shore of the Metedeconck River, four miles from the ocean. The location is ideal for the purpose, as the net gain in weight per boy proves. From its inception this work has attracted the attention of, and gained the support of the campus. From very small beginnings the camp has had a constant growth until now it is one of the recognized pieces of successful boys ' work in the country. The idea behind the camp has been that it should be more than a fresh air vacation for the boys, and that the contacts formed and the influence exerted during the two weeks at camp shall have a lasting effect. Experience has shown that counsellor and boys coming from different worlds to meet on a common plane gain new insights into life and new ideals by the interchange of ideas and experiences which takes place. The daily program is as full a one as possible, with most of the time taken up with swimming, baseball, hiking, boating, and sailing, and trips to the ocean. Only the necessary work of the camp is required of the boys, and they are urged to do this by shack competition, with a chicken dinner at the end for the winning shack. The day ends with an assembly where stories are told and Princeton songs sung. Although the immediate object of the camp is to provide a vacation for the boys, there is a more fundamental aim. By talks, and above all by personal contact, the counsellor strives to instill a spirit of honesty, sportsmanship, and fair play into the boys under his im- mediate care. Realizing that in giving these boys a new outlook on life it has assumed very definite responsibilities in helping them to adapt this view- point to their home conditions, the camp tries more and more to extend its influence through the remaining fifty weeks of the year. By constant follow- mg-up of the boys and keeping alive the contacts between undergraduate and boy, the camp fulfills a service of which the more evident work through the summer is but the beginning. The camp is directed and financed by a board of Trustees working with the Philadelphian Society. This year the budget is expected to be increased to $i2.,coo, which will be raised on the campus, through Alumni friends, and at a Benefit Ball held at Spring Lake, New Jersey, in September. Statistics in such work never show the real results, but during the Summer of 1916 approximately 400 boys were given two weeks in the outdoors under the guidance of thirty-four undergraduates. These were: CHIEF COUNSELLORS Hallet M. Lewis, ' 15 C. Gleason, ' 2.6 C. Perera, ' 2.6 Director Manager R. SUMMEY, ' i8 R. SuMMEY, ' 2.8, W. LuTTMAN . Assistant Managers R. F. France, ' 2.6 .... Camp Doctor C. H. Stallman, ' l8 L D. Hall, ' 17 ACTED AS COUNSELLORS FOR TWO OR MORE WEEKS W. Nevius, ' i6 R. Post, ' 2.6 D. Clark, ' 17 P. CoNKLiN, ' 2.7 K. Egerton, ' 17 C. Keller, ' 2.7 W. Sharnikow, ' 2.7 R. Kleinhans, ' z8 H. Lerch, ' 2.8 W. MacNamee, ' 2.8 F. R. Shumway, ' 2.8 W. Baker, ' 2.9 R. Derby, ' z9 P. Glatfelter, ' 19 J. Hauck, ' 2.9 J. Kerr, ' 2.9 B. B. ScoTT, ' x9 F. Shephard, ' 2.9 G. TiTSWORTH, ' 2.9 F. CoMPLOIER p. Grande N. KiDES J. Maly F. Meyer E. SiBAL 316 The Grenfell Club of Princeton OFFICERS Professor William Gillespie L. D. Trevett .... . Director President E. B. Taylor, ' i6 G. E. Diller, ' i6 L. K. TiMOLET, ' 16 W. D. Lewis, ' i6 E. B. Taylor, ' 16 MEMBERS L. D. Trevett, ' 17 O. T. Roberg, ' 17 C. L. Hewitt, ' i8 H. LOUDERBOUGH, ' 2.9 A. S. Dumper, ' 2.6 T. L. Leeming, ' z6 R. M. Wood, ' 19 A. U. Elser The Grenfell Club of Princeton is an organization of students who have worked under Dr. Grenfell in Labrador. Professor William Gillespie is the director of the Club in Princeton. He has performed his duty so well that Princeton has always had a very active contingent in Labrador during the summer. There are similar clubs in Yale, Harvard, Amherst, Williams, and several other universities. There are several outstanding obstacles to comfortable living in Labrador, namely : The fact that fishing, which is the most important vocation of men in the country, can be carried on only for three months of the year; the fact that education practically did not exist before Dr. Grenfell started his work, and still needs aid in spite of the progress due to his efforts; the fact that the physical education of the people is poor. Dr. Grenfell is alleviating these conditions by teaching new industries to the people, and by providing schools and hospitals. The new industries are rug- and mat-weaving, and lumber- ing. They give the people an occupation for the winter months when there is no fishing. The schools are of rather an elementary sort, since the object is to combat illiteracy rather than to foster higher learning. The main school is at Cartwright. Lastly, there are the hospitals, of which there are four large ones. The chief concern of the medical staff is tuberculosis. They fight individual cases and endeavor to teach the people hygienic principles so that they may improve their health to the point where they are less susceptible to the disease. There is much dental work also to be done, as the teeth of the people are poor as a result of their eating habits. On the whole. Dr. Grenfell has accomplished wonders and his work continues to go on with success. Last summer Taylor, Timolet, and Trevett were at the Battle Harbor Hospital; Loudcrbough was at the Hospital at St. Anthony. 317 ■ qnrn Princeton in Peking THAT Princeton has always manifested a good missionary spirit is attested by the list of alumni engaged in distinctively Christian mission work. There has been a steady stream of Princeton men to the college in Beirut, Syria; a group every summer help Dr. Grenfell in his magnificent work on the Labrador coast; and for many years John Forman, ' 88, carried on missionary work in India. Then, in 1898, when R. R. Gailey, A.M., ' 96, first went out to China, he was asked to be Princeton ' s representative on the mission field. In 1906, this work had progressed to such an extent that a more formal organization was conceived, and what is known today as Princeton in Peking came into existence. Today the personnel of the organization consists of: S. M. Allen, ' i6; S. Becker, ' i6; B. E. Grant; T. C. Blais- dell, Jr.; L. Sweet, ' 16; J. U. Stephens, ' 14; R. R. Gailey, ' 96; O. W. Edwards, ' 04; J. S. Burgess, ' 05; Van Ricketts, ' 13; John Find, ' 2.3; Sidney Gamble, ' ii; nine of these men are permanently in the work; of the others, some are engaged for a short term only, and some for special service. Princeton in Peking, though mainly missionary in motive and thoroughly Christian in its foundation, has made a sincere endeavor always to stand for the broaden- ing influences which are characteristic of our best Ameri- can ideals. The program of activities carried out in Peking by Princeton men has been along the lines of those promoted by the Y.M.C.A., involving a considerable educational work with a total enrollment of over 800 students, a physical department to teach recreational exercises for men and boys, religious and social service for the community, as well as more special attention given to the membership of the association, which numbers more than two thousand. Within the last two years, Princeton has been asked to have a special relationship with Peking University, and the Trustees of Princeton in Peking have decided to expand the scope of its activities to include the responsi- bility for the Department of Sociology and Politics of Peking University, supplying the teaching staff and the necessary money. These trustees are: John Grier Hibben, Honorary President; Ambrose G. Todd, ' 84, President; Charles W. McAlpin, ' 88, Treasurer; M. W. Jacobus, ' 77; T. H. P. Sailor, ' 89; A. A. Bowman; William Gillespie; John McDowell, ' 94; Christy Payne, ' 95; Robert McKel- vy, ' 98; H. Alexander Smith, ' 01 ;L. D. Froelick, ' o6; C. E. Dodge, ' 09; V. Merle-Smith, ' 11. Their chief responsibil- ity is to determine the general policies of the organiza- tion and raise the budget required. The undergraduates of Princeton contribute $6,000 from their community chest toward the work in Peking. The balance of the annual budget is provided by the alumni. The Chinese Y.M.C. A. furnishes its entire local budget, which usually amounts to about equal the amount raised in America for Princeton in Peking. 318 N n II I I II II n M 11 II 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I ? 1928 The Catholic Club of Princeton University OFFICERS F. T. Smith, 1917 President F.J. Walters, Jr., 1917 Vke-l ' resident A. J. Crotti, 1918 Secr etary-Treasurer Mark E. Andrews Ernest J. Brown James Burnham Robert C. Burns N. K. Averill W. W. Barry W. W. R. Bennett K. Butler H. F. Corcoran A. J. Crotti L. C. Davis T. C. Baer V. G. Barnes N. J. Beaudrias C. E. BUTTERFIELD H. L. DeGive C. H. Ebbets C. p. Smith D. G. Aldrich L. R. Barrett A. COVOLO J. M. Doubleday J. H. Eisenhart R. E. English J. L. Feid G. Geraghty M. J. Geraghty John F. Clunan William M. Collins Denis J. Donegan John H. Forbes Butler Hallahan G. C. Doubleday G. F. Dougherty C. E. Eastman E. T. English M. A. Feighan J. M. French H. D. Garrity H. B. Falke G. A. Flanagan, Jr. J. L. Fortune, Jr. W. E. Gerber J. H. Gleason J. E. Gore E. T. Halsey W. H. Hanna F. W. Graves E. J. Hall F. Hitchcock P. G. JuERGENS C. F. Keppler R. C. LeFort J. J. McAnerny F. W. McCann MEMBERS, 192.7 Walter M. Halle Frederick T. Lyhch David T. Monahan Adrian M. Murphy Malvern H. Murphy MEMBERS, 1918 W. S. Hall W. N. Haskell A. F. McBride F. H. MacMillen C. H. Moeser F. K. Murray E. J. Nally MEMBERS, J. S. Hauck R.J. Healy E. A. Henry H. A. Heydt, Jr. J.J. Howley J. Kahrs W. G. KUSER F. P. Kennedy MEMBERS, J. S. McCormick W. McDermott J. McDonough C. M. Malone J. H. OToole T. P. Perkins D. Reilly G. W. Renchard 319 19x9 1930 Emilio L. Roma John F. Schenck R. R. Slattery Furlong T. Smith Richard H. Smith A. J. Nally A. M. Neilson I. A. Powell S. G. Redington W. E. Reyburn E. B. Rockwell C. C. Russell T. N. Lawler R. J. MacDonald W. F. P. Marshall F. P. Mellon J. J. Moore J. O ' Neill P. C. Paul D. C. Reilly R. C. RiGGS W. J. Sheldrick C. T. SiLVERSON E. J. Smith L. A. Smith L. A. Spalding F. C. Stover E. M. Sullivan James E. Vaughn Frederick J. WaltersJr. Joseph A. Whelan Charles H. Yocum J. A. Russell W, Rutherford C. J, Ryan J. J. B. Simpson P. B. Smith J. M. Sturges T. A. Whelan J. M. Requardt G. F. Ryan B. B. Scott A. J. Sessa D. W. Taylor J. S. Vhay D. E. Webster J. G. Theban M. M. Vallb C. VanDyke D. Vhay A. M. Wade D. E. Wardell J. R. Whyte R. A. Woods W. F. YouNO ' I I ' 1 ] i 1 n 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 I i rr: 1928 ? The Wesley Club OFFICERS Dr. Shenfelt . David N. Rowe, ' 2.7 D. LyLE TnODURN, ' 18 Robert O. Wilson, ' 17 . Edward V. Peters, ' 19 . Pastor . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 192.6-1917 Harold Schlosbero G. L. Jepsen John S.McMartin W. Frederick Shaffer Robert P. Kemble John E. Thiele Albert L. Wolfe Freeman F. Wallin Harold B. Wells Charles H. Stone WESLtV CLUB Tip RoK — W. F. Shaffer, J. E. Thicic, J. C. Perkins, A. L. Pcrtins, f ro« Riw — G. I.. Jcpscn, D. N. Rowc, R. O. Wilson. The Wesley Club is the union of the Methodist students of Princeton. Its aim is to provide religious and social life for Methodist students, in associa- tion with the local Methodist Episcopal Church. The meetings of last year were very successful. Among the speakers who addressed the meetings were Professor G. M. Priest, of the Department of Modern Languages, Professor E. G. Conklin, of the Department of Biology, and Professor Sheldon Howe, of the Department of History. Dr. Shenfelt, formerly of Ohio State University, is now caring for the work of the Society on the Campus, as well as taking charge of the local pastorate. 320 Saint Paul ' s Society OFFICERS J. P. CuYLER, ' 17 . J. R. Ramsey, Jr., ' 17 D. M. LiDDELL, Jr., ' i8 President Vice-President General Secretary CLASS SECRETARIES I. D. Hall, ' 17 E. R. Welles, ' i8 W. MacKie, ' 19 J Haik Rew — Liddcll, Welles, Jenkins, Mjckic. front K M ' — Hail, Ramsey, Cuylcr, Marsteller, Oailiard. Prendergast, ' 2.7, Representative of Trustees of Proctor Foundation R. C. Marsteller, ' 17 Chairman for Servers L. L. Gaillard, ' x8 Chaim-an of Choir Club The Saint Paul ' s Society is the association of all Episcopalian undergraduates in the Univer- sity. Its work is carried on under the direction of a Student Chaplain, and is made possible largely through the William Proctor Foundation, an organization sponsored by Bishop Matthews of the Diocese of New Jersey. A year ago the Foundation secured the property at 53 University Place as a center for the work. The activities in which the students are engaged inclnde, chiefly, mission work near Princeton, serving as acolytes, and Sunday School and choir club work in Trinity Church. From time to time prominent lecturers have come to Princeton, the most notable this year being the Right Rev- erend Arthur W. Ingram, Lord Bishop of the See of London, and the Very Reverend F. S. Bennett, Dean of the Ca- thedral at Chester, England, who presented an unusually interesting illustrated lecture on his cathedral. The Chaplain directing the work at present is the Reverend Condit Eddy, of the class of 1911. He succeeded the Reverend Howard W. Fulweiler, who was temporarily appointed last year to fill a vacancy. The Chaplain is the cele- brant of the corporate Communion every Sunday morning as the special Eucharistic service for the undergraduates. This is made possible through the generosity of the rector of Trinity parish, the Reverend Robert Williams. 321 University Preachers, 1926-1927 1916 October 3 — President John Grier Hibben. October id — Rev. Minot C. Morgan, Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York City. October 17 — Rev. Thomas P. Haig, Sacred Reformed Church, Somer- ville, N.J. October x4 — President John M. Thomas, Rutgers College, New Bruns- wicli, N. J. October 31 — Dr. George C. Stewart, St. Luke ' s Church, Evanston, III. November 7 — Father Frederick H. Sill, Kent School, Kent, Conn. November 14 — Dr. Henry Van Dyke, ' 73, Princeton, N.J. November 11 — Rev. W. Crosby Bell, Theological Seminary, Alexandria, Va. November 18 — Dr. Henry H. Crane, Center Methodist Episcopal Church, Maiden, Mass. December 5 — Dr. Albert P. Fitch, Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. December 12. — Dr. Karl Reiland, St. George ' s Rectory, 109 E. i6th St., New York City. 1917 January 9 — Dr. Lewis Perry, Principal, Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H. January 16 — Prof. Henry H. Tweedy, Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Conn. January 13 — Dr. Hugh Birckhcad, Emmanuel Church Parish House, 811 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. January 30 — Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin, Madison Ave. Presbyterian Church, 911 Madison Ave., New York City. February 6 — Dr. John R. Mott, 347 Madison Ave., New York City. February 13 — Rev. Henry P. Van Dusen, ' 19, Student Dept., Y.M.C.A. , 347 Madison Ave., New York City. February 2.0 — Dr. Boyd Edwards, Headmaster, Hill School, Potts- town, Pa. February 17 — Rev. William H. Grath, St. Mark ' s Church, Islip, L. L March 6 — Dr. Samuel S. Drury, Headmaster, St. Paul ' s School, Con- cord, N. H. March 13 — Dr. Karl Reiland, St. George ' s Rectory, 2.09 E. i6th St., New York City. March id — President Clarence A. Barbour, Rochester Theological Seminary, Rochester, N. Y. March 17 — Canon William L. DeVries, Washington Cathedral Offices, Mount St. Alban, Washington, D. C. April 3 — Dr. Alfred H. Barr, McCormick Seminary, Chicago, III. April id — President Bernard L Bell, St. Stephen ' s College, Annandale- on-Hudson, N. Y. April 17 — Easter Sunday. April z4 — Undecided. May I — Undecided. May 8 — Dr. Hugh Black, Union Theological Seminary, Broadway at iioth St., New York City. May 15 — Rev. Dr. George C. Stewart, St. Luke ' s Parish, Evanston, III. May 11 — Undecided. May 19 — Dean Charles R. Brown, Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Conn. June 5 — Undecided. June 11 — Undecided. June 19 — President John Grier Hibben. Baccalaureate Sunday. 322 ARBOR INN CLUB Tep R a — Wolcott, Truitt, Collins, Renchard (J), Ward, Straycr, Burroughs, Mathcson, Snivdy, McElroy. Second Reic— Trcscott, Damcrd (J.), Kcmmcrcr, Smith, Rubidge. Borton, Mead, Hardy, Sncll, Sloat. Third Row—Booth, Renchard (W), Taylor, Scidlcr, Johnston, Ncwnham, Lang, Marstcllcr, Angell, Weed, fourth Kok — Richardson, Durand, Raudcnbush, Hearst, Garrcy, Ncwhousc, Hamncr, Woodward, Norris. Arbor Inn FOUNDED 1513 — INCORPORATED I92.3 OFFICERS Walter E. Garrey, ' tj Arthur L. Hubbard, ' z John C. Collins, ' 2.7 Russell Richardson, ' z8 Daniel B. Barlow, ' z8 President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Harry J. Hemphill, ' 14 Prtsidint Frederic B. Stallman, ' 15 Treasurer Frank D. Waterman, Jr., ' 16 Secretary William T. Dixon, ' x4 Robert R. Thurber, ' i6 Robert S. Tyson, ' 15 Theodore G. Klumpp, ' 14 James A. Wadsworth, ' 14 Edmund W. Burroughs, ' 2.7 Daniel B. Barlow, 18 Richard S. Angell Vincent V. Booth William Brenton Edmund W. Burroughs John C. Collins John E. Dambrel, Jr. William M. Angle Daniel B. Barlow Sam C. Borton William A. Damerel Eugene F. Durand Oliver Gasch Albert E. Griffin George C. Denniston Walter E. Garrey George I. Hagar Samuel H. High, Jr. William H. Hudnut, Jr. James G. Hamner Stranton M. Hardy Arthur L. Hubbard, Jr. JoHN M. Lane William F. Lang Frederick G. Matheson MEMBERS, 1917 Victor W. Hurst, Jr. Caldwell S. Johnston, Jr. Donald L. Kemmerer Warren F. McElroy, Jr. Robert C. Marstellar MEMBERS, 192.8 John J. S. Mead, Jr. Richard M. Newnham Robert F. Norris David W. Raudenbush John W. Renchard William S. Renchard Walter S. Newhouse, Jr. Barclay M. Newman Alexander Seidler, Jr. Frank E. Sloat James P. Smith Russell Richardson, Jr. Richard W. Rubidge William B. Slade Stanley B. Smith Peter A. Snell Robley D. Snively, Jr. Stephen C. Stephano George D. Strayer, Jr. Henry W. Trescott Robinson M. Truitt, Jr. Wilfred B. Wolcott,Jr. Brevoort Stout Warner G. Taylor, Jr. Charles W. Tobin Paul C. Weed, Jr. Edward R. Welles William W. Woodward, III Thomas Ward, II Not returned. 326 CAMPUS CLUB Top R«j— Roberts. Schawb, Shucraft, Bcardslcy, Case, Slcinncr, Read, Chandler. Third RoK Wclsh, Shcpcrd, Ham, Rike, Gorham, Evans, Harper, Cook, Smith. Stand Knu Baylcss, Henderson, Morton, Roby, James, Walworth, Bowman, Marshall, Andrews. Firii Ken;— Lewis, Halstcad, Gauss, Uhl, Wales, Rice, Cochran. Campus Club FOUNDED 1900 OFFICERS Simon K. Uhl, ' 17 D. Christian Gauss, ' tjj Robert W. Wales, ' ij President Vice-President Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Howard N. Deyo, lo Chairman Wyllis p. Ames, ' 19 Treasurer Valentine K. Raymond, ' 19 Secretary George H. Bell, 04 Robert B. Russell, ' 19 W. R. Baker, 19 Frank K. Norman, ' 16 Simon K. Uhl, ' 2.7, ex-officio MEMBERS, 1916 Fielding Chandler Osborne Halstead Henry B. Lewis Simon K. Uhl D. Smith Bowman John C. Byxbee JoHN B. Charles Louis V. Cochran Walter P. Andrews John Bayless Walter R. Beardsley G. V. Becker A. Halsey Cook Cornelius H. DeLamater John I. Evans D. Christian Gauss C. Merritt Case, Jr. Sidney S. Gorham, Jr. John C. Ham Knox Henderson MEMBERS, 192.7 Harvey R. Gaylord N. Vance Harper John C. Marshall Edward J. Nally MEMBERS, 192.8 A. Trowbridge Horton William G. James John H. Read John A. Rice Harry N. Packer David L. Rike James M. Smith Roland K. Smith Joseph B. Roberts Stephen Roby Robert C. Schaub William J. Schukraft Robert W. Wales Leonard S. Walworth Edward S. Welch Charles S. Wilson, Jr. Emmett a. Shepherd Morris P. Skinner Robert R. Smith Charles L. Tarver, Jr. Ni)t returned. 327 CANNON CLUB Back Row — Fitts, Haskcli, Thompson, McCabc, Richardson, Burch, Brecsc. Third Rew — Matthews, Hendron, Scldco, Easby, Cunningham, Hasbrouck, Prcttyman. Blaclc, Hubcr, McNccr, Youngs, Lewis, Hubb«lL Firjt Row — Shillabcr, Hailc, Congleton, Candler. Parker, Gcrtncr, Hoff. Stcmi Row — Wilson, Thulin, I Cannon Club FOUNDED 1896 OFFICERS BoYER Candler, ' 17 Wallace C. Richardson, Harold M. Parker, ' 2.7 18 President Vice-President Secretary TRUSTEES James D. DuEsENBERRY, ' 10 David Mahany, ' 08 ... . Alex Strabo, 05 William G. Wrightstone, 04 William M. Richardson, ' 05 William P. Schussler, ' 07 Edwin Feigenspan, ' ii George R. Roe, 11 Prtsidint Secretary Robert G. Wallace, ' 1} Jerome L. Horton, ' 15 Donald S. Good, ' 16 Stephen W. Waterbury, ' 19 Albert Wittmer, Jr., ' 12. Robert T. Ballentine BuRTis B. Breese, Jr. William L. Brewster BoYER Candler Richard J. Congleton William C. Fitts ' John H. Berkshire Robert K. Black Marcus M. Bright Edward P. Burch, II iiot riturmd. John W. Gartner Edward W. Gwinner, Jr. Walter M. Halle Howard E. Hebble Irwin W. Hoff John H. Cunningham Charles M. Curtiss VicTOR M. Earle Dudley T. Easly JoHN R. Fanshawb MEMBERS, 192.7 Frederick F. Huber JoHN D. Keener James D. McCabe Gordon P. MacNeer William L. Mathews MEMBERS, 192.8 Charles G. Follmer Theodore F. Hasbrouk William N. Haskell, III JOHN C. Herndon C. Hunt Lewis Donald C. Mills Harold M. Parker Stewart G. Patullo Richard H. Post John S. Prettyman JoHN B. Milliken Samuel C. Reed Wallace C. Richardson Jack K. Roberts Charles C. Squires Edward V. Seldon William R. Shillaber Philip G. Thompson W. Bernard Thulin Thomas S. Wilson Chalres H. ' Arthur F. William W William P. Wisner WiLLSON Witherspoon Youngs 329 l CAP AND GOWN Ttp Raw — Hall, Hughes, Richmond, Crorti, Mciriman, Bodman, Jadwin, Bowron, McPhcrson, Ncilson, Stout. Fourth Rfltt -— Collins, Harbison, Chivcrs, Rcnnard, Morgan, Simons, Kasslcr, Scarlett, Cover. Thirii Row — Shaw, Bradley, Holmes, Dcknatcl, Clements, Dooliitlc, Owen, Ford, Townlcy, Rose, Elliott. Sfcond R«f— Hclrarath, Sands, Dunn, Bcardslcy, Crawford, Jcmison, Sloan, Richard- son, Pctcrkin, Stratford. f R«c— Eckersoa, Bucholz, Lc Maistrc, Howell. Snowden, Beard, Prcndergast, Baycs, Wooldridgc. I I I I I M I I I II I I I I II I I II I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I ccj 1928 ? Cap and Gown FOUNDED 1894 OFFICERS George G. Snowden, ' 2.7 William R. Howell, ' 17 Robert Jemison, III, ' i8 Milton C. Beard, ' 17 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Cortland W. Handy, ' ii Presidtnt Hunt T. Dickinson, ' ii Secretary C. R. Hanks, ' 15 Treasurer Van S Merle-Smith, ' 11 Lawrence G. Payson, ' i8 Richard C. Collins, ' 2.7 Wilton Lloyd-Smith, 16 William H. English, ' zi Horace C. Rose, ' 2.8 Albert M. Wangler, ' 2.1 R. Ross Bayes Milton C. Beard R. A. Beardsley Stephen R. Bradley, Jr. William C. Breed, Jr. Richard P. Buchholz Richard C. Collins Harden L. Crawford, Jr. Henry E. Dunn, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 Edwin B. Eckerson Albert H. Harris, III Albert M. Helmrath William R. Howell Kenneth S. Kassler Fontaine LeMaistre Joseph Prendergast Oliver J. Sands, Jr. Samuel Sloan George G. Snowden John A. Townley Webster W. Townley Albert C. Whitaker, Jr. John P. Wooldridge Holmes M. Alexander Eugene C. Blake Henry T. Bodman Arthur J. Borwon, Jr. John K. D. Chivers Robert M. Clements Thomas Cover, III Andre J. Crotti Frederick B. Deknatel William M. Doolittle William P. Elliott Emory M. Ford George E. Hall Edwin S. Hanny MEMBERS, 1918 Elmore H. Harbison Andrew H. Hughes Leander S. Jadwin Robert Jemison, III Howard R. Merriman S. Rowland Morgan Donald P. McPherson Alexander Neilson Percy Owen, Jr. Daniel Peterkin, Jr Joseph C. Rennard John S. Richardson Grey D. Richman Harold C. Rose William G. Scarlett, Jr John K. Shaw Laird C. Simons James H. Stout Herbert R. Stratford Richard W. Summey William K. Tencher Not returned. DeceascJ. 331 CHARThR L-Lhii Top R«p— Sutrgcs, Doschcr, Kepler, Davis, Welles, Humphreys, Read, Mayer, Rigfatcr, Embury, Whclan, Lynn. Stcend Raw— Pitcaira, Walker, Hume, Kellogg, Ebbcrt, Batcman, Jordan, Averill, Tappin, Cleaveland. ThirdR w — Huntsman, Henderson, Bunnell, Dalenz, Herzog, McKcnna, Prior, H. McAshan, Hurcheson, Means, McDiarmid. Fourth Row — Frclinghuyscn.Whitc, Morgan, Smith, Jackson, Newberry, Swoope, Rockwell, Sweet Brown, Taylor. Front Rpu — Hicks, Hudson, Delamater, S. McAshan, Peabody, Hale, McDermott, Haas, Butler. If Princeton Charter Club FOUNDED 1 901 OFFICERS Frank Peabody, Jr., ' 17 Samuel M. McAshan, ' 17 Thomas Hale, Jr., ' 17 Oakley R. DeLamater, Jr. ' i8 President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS John A. Stewart III, President Arnold Wood Robertson D. Ward Oliver Reynolds Allen Da vies Allen Bakewell Addison Brown Henry J. Butler Thomas T. H. Frelinghuysen Robert M. Haas Joseph L. Henderson Samuel B. Hicks, Jr. Fred W. Hudso n Paul A. Huntsman Samuel M. McAshan Nathan K. Averill James Bateman, Jr. Irving Bunnell, Jr. Fred M. Cleaveland, Jr. John M. Dalenz Lawrence C. Davis Oakley R. Delamater, Jr. Frederick S. Doscher James K. Ebbert Edward C. Embury Louis M. Herzog Jaquelin H. Hume William A. Humphreys, Jr. Joseph H. Jordan, Jr. James F. Pitcairn MEMBERS, 1517 Richard H. Means James W. Henry Henry H. Mayer William B. Morgan MEMBERS, 192.8 Thomas P. Kellogg George W. Nepler, Jr. Harris McAshan Hugh C. McDiarmid Charles J. McDermott, Jr. Howard A. Prior William L. Read Frederick S. Newberry Frank Peabody, Jr. Denis E. Sullivan, Jr. Henry B. Swoope,Jr. Thomas M. Righter, Jr. Hamilton A. Robinson Edward B. Rockwell Patrick B. C. Smith John M. Sturges William E. Sweet, Jr. John L. Tappin Clement J. Welles Thomas Hale, Jr. Joseph A. Whelan Maxwell Lester, Jr. Francis P. Wetherbee John C. Taylor William B. Van Lennep William M. Walker, Jr. Robert White, Jr. Preston Wolfe Henry S. Lynn Robert N. McKenna Henry B. Wilson Not returned. 333 Top Roto — Wright, Clapp, Moran, Hcrcfurd, Ballcntiiic, Hod c, Yust. T irJ Row — Morris, C. L. Hewitt, G-iinblc, Reynolds, Jones, Kcilar, Ncs, Barker, Mitthcli. Stcond Row — Shumway, Ross, Shaw, Cordes, Black, Corscr, Allen, Wcstwood, Shugg. First Rew — Ewitig, MacNamara, Moore, Vail, MacLarcn. Burns, Forbes. |l Cloister Inn FOUNDED igil OFFICERS Chester R. Vail, ' xy Donald G. Moore, ' 2.7 . Roger W. Shugg, ' vj WisTAR H. MacLaren, ' x8 Clarence S. Davison, ' 18 President V ice-President - Treasurer Secretary Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Clyde D. Marlatt, i} President Robert Denniston, li Treasurtr David B. Clapp, ' 14 Secretary Donald M. Halstead, ' 2.0 Assistant Treasurer Bridgewater M. Arnold, 13 DwightJ. Harris, ' 18 Sterling Galt, Jr., ' 15 Robert H. Lee, ' 14 Raymond T. Hoopes, 1} Philip A. Meyer, ' 15 John H. Thatcher, 15 WiNTHROP Allen Robert W. Ballantine Joel J. Berrall Roger A. Black R. Carter Burns Edward M. Colladay Winston A. Cordes John B. Corser, Jr. Blaine Ewing, Jr. MEMBERS, 19x7 John H. Forbes C. Brown Garnett, Jr. Robert O. Hereford William J. Hitschler Richard M. Johnston Chauncey A. B. Keller Lawrence T. McNamara Donald C. Moore Heber S. Morris William H. Read Roger W. Shugg Chester R. Vail Frederick B. Alexander William H. Barker Sherburn M. Becker, Jr. Harvey R. Clapp, Jr. Clarence S. Davison, Jr. Alfred Elser Willard S. Gamble Carter E. Hewitt Charles L. Hewitt Edward B. Hodge, Jr. John W. Lewis, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 S. Baird McCaleb Wistar H. MacLaren Bancroft Mitchell Newcomb T. Montgomery Charles Moran, Jr. Charles M. Nes, Jr. Nicholas F. Palmer Sheldon S. Reynolds Donald C. Ross Alexander Shaw Frank R. Shumway David DeG. Smith Charles H. Stallman John R, Vanderbogert John Westwood John P. Wright Charles W. Yost 335 I COLONIAL CLUB Top Row — Parsons, Suiphcn, Husc, Price, Gwinne. Third Row — Lowe, Elliot, Garrity, Large, Shobcr, Hatfield, Lowe. Second Row — Saoford, Spruance, Covington, Barclay, EUiman, Perrin, Gallowhur Reynolds, first Rm — Krag, jacksoa, Rosengarten, Large, Grange, McVitty, Miller. Colonial Club FOUNDED 1 89 1 OFFICERS Henry S. Jeanes, Jr., ' tjj James M. Large, ' 2.8 Henry D. Garrity, ' 18 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Frederick H. Osborne, ' 10 Chairman Alfred Ely, ' 05 Sicrttary Irving B. Kingsford, ' 13 Treasurer George W. C. McCarter, ' 08 Henry C. Merritt, ' 15 Charles J. Biddle, ' ii Harold F. Gibson, ' 17 L. Rodman Page, Jr., ' 11 Chalers D. Jackson, ' 14 John B. Pitney, ' 14 Graham D. Mattison, ' 16 Bayard W. Read, ' i6 Charles W. Barclay George A. Beesley Groverman Blake Lawrence B. Braman Percival E. Furber John W. Grange Alan R. Jackson MEMBERS, 192.7 Henry S. Jeanes, Jr. W. Brace Krag MoRiTZ T. Milburn Adolph G. Rosengarten PiERsoN R. Sanson Herbert C. Sanford Anthony M. Shobbr Furlong T. Smith Duncan D. Sutphen, Jr. Richard Blake ' William C. Bodine William R. Covington George T. Elliman Robert H. E. Elliott, Jr George W. Gallowhur Henry D. Garrity John A. Gwynne Charles A. Hatfield Robert S. Huse MEMBERS, 1918 Henry W. Large James M. Large Richard W. Lloyd William E. Lowe Edward W. McVitty Edward K. Mills •Clement B. Newbold, Jr. MarselisC. Parsons, Jr. Lawrence Perin James O. Price Morgan A. Reynolds Henry Shaw, Jr. William C. Spruance Howard F. Whitney, Jr. N returned. 337 COTTAGE CLUB Back Row — Dodlcy, Ames, Greene, Hardt, Evans, Hcrscy, Mocscr. Fourth Rnii — Grace, Case, Bauchens, Fryberger, Candy, Buchanan, Somervillc, Wallace, Millhoiland. Third Row — Fairbanks, Shel- don, Katzcnbach, Lackey, Calc, Mcbanc, Baker, IDcnniston, Bole, Lcland, Gooch. S ' icortJ Kai ' — Walker, Bridges, Hornc, Chaplin, Thomas, Hunt, Pcttus, Taylor, Hepburn, Gilcrt. First Row — Rhodes, Magce, Lambert, Keith, LaBcaume, Alexander, Carrott. University Cottage Club FOUNDED 1887 OFFICERS E. EwiNG Keith, ' zy William M. Collins, Jr., ' 17 Rembert W. LaBeaume, ' 2.7 President Vice-President Financial Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Harry I. Caesar, ' 13 Julian F. Thompson, ' ii H. Gray Treadwell, ' 09 Asa S. Bushnell, ' 2.1 Elroy Curtis, ' 00 Norman H. Donald, ' 03 Joseph M. DuBarry, III, Richard E. Dwight, ' 97 Richard L. Farrelly, ' 18 George C, Fraser, ' 93 E. Hecks Herrick, ' 88 MEMBERS, 1916 Chairman Secretary Treasurer David C. Chaplin Roger Gilbert Thomas E. Rhodes Erskine Hewitt, ' 91 John A. Larkin, ' 13 Dean Mathey, ' 11. 14 Robert McLean, ' 13 Livingston T. Merchant, ' 16 William F. Meredith, ' 94 Edgar Palmer, ' 03 Albert B. Schultz, ' 03 Henry W. Taylor Edward E. Alexander B. F. Hobart Cale Montgomery B. Carrott William M. Collins, Jr. Bluford W. Dickerman William C. Fairbanks Herbert B. Gillespie George C. Hepburn MEMBERS, 1917 Leonard G. Hunt E. Ewing Keith Rembert W. La Beaume George L. Lambert Richard D. Magee WlLLlAM E. OaTES J. Philips Parker Robert M. Parker Thomas W. Pettus J. GowANs Smith William R. Thomas, III J. Theodore Walker John D. Ames Frank A, Baker William S. Barbour Fred C. Bauchens Robert F. Bole James R. Bridges Ni t returned. R. George Buchanan, Jr. Walter W. Candy Calvin A. Case H. Scott Denniston Benjamin W. Dudley, Jr. Weller B. Evans MEMBERS, 192.8 George McG. Fryberglr G. Amsden Gooch Charles B. Grace Henry A. Greene William M. Hardt, II WiNTHROP P. HerSEY 339 Bernards. Horne,Jr. Frank S. Katzenbach, III William G. Lackey JoHN Langhorne Austin P. Leland Paul D. Millholland Edward M. Mebane Charles R. Moeser Stephen R. Sheldon William G. Somerville Thomas C. Wallace PRINCETON COURT CLUB Top RtfH — Rogers, Ridgcway, Wilmcrding, Bcaham, Winter, Voss, Blank. Stco d R(w— Hillman, Howell, Dclaficld, Wallace, Cilley, Arnott, Brown, Muckle, Powcllson. ThirdKow — McLean, Schall, Dcucl, Pangman, Pa ppas, Wright, Liddcll, Putnam, Huiz, Watkins. FeurthKcuz—BziCi, Hoff, Trcvctt, Wheelwright, Zander, Kimball, Sanford, English, Hamilton, Milbank. Fr ont Row— Stout, Crispin, Cutts, Thomas, Hubball, Sharp, McAllcn. t ' ,a«CET ' :. ' J:. ' : ' JLT-CLUi; Princeton Court Club rOUNDED I 92.1 OFFICERS George T. Thomas, ' zy President Morgan Cutts, ' 2.7 Vice-President James M. Hubball, ' 17 Treasurer S. C. Smith, ' i8 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS A. T. Woodland Prisidtnt E. A. CoRNTWELL . Vtcc-Ftisidint F. M. Gregory Triasurtr L. B. Carpenter Secretary P. L. Byrley J. C. BoYCE J. V. Duncan P. Marshall R. G. Lewis L. K. Timolat R. F. Hartel Earnest J. Brown Morgan Cutts John W. Delafield Edward T. English Louis T. Fiedler Alfred Y. Fisher Henry B. Hillman Kenneth T. Howell James M. Hubball MEMBERS, 1917 David E. McLean Samuel R. Milbank Henry A. Patterson James H. Rogers George T. Thomas Laurence D. Trevett Walter C. Watkins Howard L. Werner Jere H. Wheelwright Lucius Wilmerding Herman B. Winter Fred G. Zander E. G. F. Arnott G. T. Beaham, Jr. R. E. Blank J. K. CiLLEY B. E. Crispin N. V. Deuel F. J. Hamilton N. R. Hoff R. G. Humphrey W. H. HuTZ R. M. Kimball MEMBERS, 192.8 D. M. Liddell, Jr. R. G. McAllen C. R. May C. W. Muckle C. S. Pangman R. V. N. Powelson H. Putnam, Jr. S. J. Sanford R. B. SCHALL R. J. Sharp S. C. Smith J. S. Stout G. Thurber J. L. Voss J. H. Wallace, Jr. 341 til II II II II II II II M 1 1 II II II II H II 11 n 1778 -L. 1 1 iL II [J 1,1 I ' ' ? ' 1 ir ' M ir !T 11 ri it ii i! ' ' p 1928 r ■1 3 DIAL LODGE Tef Raw— Rcai, Simpson, Kingslcy, Griffith, Scott. TWri Rem— Wcllwood, Russell, Russell, Monahan, Cooke, Btigham. SicimJ Rev—faycn, Ferretibach, Conklin, Donaldson, Nichols, Nelson, McMarten, Spcer. Firjl Row — Ballentine, Strachan, Master, Peck, Lawrence, Wallace. Dial Lodffe FOUNDED 1908 INCORPORATED I912. OFFICERS William O. Master, ' 2.6 Frank G. Strachan, ' 17 Samuel C. B. Peck, ' 17 John S. McMartin, ' 18 Sinclair H. Kingsley, ' 18 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Thomas H. McCauley, ' li B. A. Greene, ' 2.5 Kenneth W. Alford, ' 19 President Vice-President Treasurer Assistant Treasurer Secretary Chairman Trtasurtr Stcrttary Alfred V. S. Alcott, ' 09 H. Struve Hensel, ' xi H. Haynes Miles, ' 11 Charles D. Orth, ' 13 COURTLAND OtIS, I7 Bernard Peyton, ' 17 MEMBERS, 1916 Alfred N. Lawrence William O. Master David T. Monahan W. Chapin Read, Jr. John G. Ballentine Philip H. Conklin Richard P. Cooke George H. David Gilbert W. Dixon Roger J. Brigham Oliver M. Evans John C. Ferenbach Charles E. Donaldson Herbert p. Fales Carl F. Fayen Benjamin P. Griffith John W. Jordan JoHN H. Kimball James M. Hadley Jonathan L. Hough Sinclair H. Kingley MEMBERS, 192.7 DoNALD R. McLean JoHN R. C. Master Frederick W. Neilson Alexander K. Nelson E. Snowden Nichols Edward L. Parker MEMBERS, 192.8 William S. Lamont John S. McMartin Fenton S. Newberry, Jr. Samuel C. B. Peck John Reis, Jr. Robert M. Rice Thomas J. Rosengarten John E. Scott Edward S. Stewart Charles C. Russell John A. Russell James J. B. Simpson Frank G. Strachan Byron G. Van Horne Charlton Wallace Ernest B. Weir John C. Wellwood, Jr. Donald L. Speer John W. Thompson, Jr. N returned. 343 ELM CLUB B ck Rov — Packard, Pcrkcrson, McBridc, HcnscI, Murphy, Childs, Gaston, Moffitt. Fourth Ron ' — Dayton, Tucker, Pierce, Slaughter, Corning, Hall, Taylor, Bannerman, Hycr. Third Rm£ — Palmer, Ncwhall, Barr, Eastman, Huckin, Perkins, McCulIough, Thoburn, Lichty, Serena. S$ctnd R«tf— McMillan, Bradford, Mann, Sommers, Nics, Baekey, Butler,Xlark, Murray, Schlubach. frtiu Row — Lcc, Fircy, Dolman, Dccmcr, Trcnholm, Fcighan, Schcnck, Mann, Moore. Elm Club FOUNDED 1895 OFFICERS George T. Trenholm, ' 2.7 Jackson H. Tucker, ' 17 President Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Louis G. Irskine, ' 18 President Cornelius B. Kowenhoven, ' 07 Vice-President Jay Downer, ' 05 Treasurer George H. Sibley, ' lo . Secretary David Bannerman, ' 99 Joseph R. Greenwood, ' 05 J. S. Cooke, ' ii James G. Scarff, ' 2.2. L. Donald Schimpff, ' i6 Barclay B. Baekey Andrew W. Barr R. H. Casey William R. Deemer Robert W. Gardner James A. Hall WiLLARD Hill George S. Hoffman Robert P. Kemble MEMBERS, 1917 Alvin E. Kephart John A. Lichty, Jr. Malvern H. Murphy Herman B. Neis Clement W. Perkins Robert G. Pierce Grandwin W. Schenk H. Leslie Schlubach Elmer P. Serena R. R. Slattery Harry S. Sommers George T. Trenholm Jackson H. Tucker Theodore R. Williams David Bannerman John P. Bradford Kelvin Butler Thomas W. Childs, III George Clark Leavitt Corning, Jr. George D. Dayton John E. Dollman Charles E. Eastman M. Feighan Lewis M. Firey Silas B. Foot John M. Gaston, Jr. Paul L. Hensel Richard S. Huckin MEMBERS, 1918 Frederick L. Hyer John M. Kennedy, III Francis C. Lea James W. Lee, Jr. ANDRE v F. McBride John McCullough Francis H. MacMillen Orville H. Mann Thomas B. Mann Joseph W. Mapletoft Frank C. Moffatt M. D. Moore F. B. Murray Donald N. Newhall John E. Packard John R. Palmer Arthur W. Patterson William T. Perkerson Roger C. Slaughter Clinton G. Stockly Wilham R. Taylor Lyle Thoburn William R. Webster, Jr. 345 GATEWAY CLUB Back Riw— Dougherty, Salmon, Giles, Lorspeich. Lent, W. H. Young, Cannon. Fourth R(?« — Butrcrworrh, Krcwson, Vandcrbcck, Bergh, Schuiz, Coolcy, Brooks, Riggs, Crawford. Third Rout- Adams, Roycs, Ncvius, Reid, Bcnnet, Luks, Louden, Picrson, Pcvear. StconJ Rew — Bachran, Chase, P. S. Young, Kimball, Gale, Gadcbusch, Marsh, Scyfert, Jones. Ftrsl Row — Decker, Reinc, Har- rower. Parsons, Hahner, Nightingale, Clunan. I n rr ii i r ii ii ii ii i i ii i i i i i i || n n i CTT 1 1778 Princeton Gateway Club FOUNDED I913 OFFICERS Harry DeF. Parsons, ' 17 Clinton R. Harrower, ' 17 Carl W. F. Hahner, ' i j John Reine, ' 2.7 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer William S. Doty, ' 15 C. H. BoNSALL, 15 . Sargent Bush, ' 17 Kenneth F. Kramer, ' 16 Arthur W. Horton, Jr., ' 10 Earl F. Rahn, 11 President Sicrttary-Trtasurtr William Rogers, Jr., 15 Elmer A. Sheets, Jr., ' 16 Hans A. Widenman, ' 18 Julius L. Wilson, ' 18 Theodore G. Bachran Richard H. Bennett Moncure B. Berg Stewart S. Brooks Theron H. Butterworth Samuel S. Cooley Joseph M. Decker Alfred P. Degenhardt E. Kettner Gadedusch George W. Gale, Jr. MEMBERS, 15x7 Carl W. F. Hahner Clinton R. Harrower Albert B. Lent David S. Loudon Kraemer Luks Chauncey H. Marsh, Jr. Craig E. Nightingale, Jr. Harry DeF. Parsons George B. Pearson, Jr. Valentine C. Putz John Reine Harold C. Riggs Donald H. Robinson William H. Seyfert Albert B. Vanderbeek, Jr. Joseph M. Adams William A. Alexander, Jr. James B. Butchart Harry B. Cannon C. Ward Chase Henry R. Clinger H. Preston Cox James W. Crawford George F. Dougherty F. Ryan Fort Ellsworth Giles MEMBERS, 1918 Artimus W. Jones George E. Kimball James F. Krewson Henry G. Lotspeich Thomas E. Marshall Richard E. Nevius James C. Norton Barton T. Pevear Clarence E. Reid, Jr. Henry C. Remick Robert E. Royes A. DicKERSON Salmon Carl W. Schultz Emerio R. Van Liew Henry O. von Deilen Percy S. Young. Jr. WilburforceH. Young, Jr. Not returned. 347 IVY CLUB Back Rffiif—Kcllcy, Merrill, Lewis, Clark, Scuyvcsant, Redmond, Knapp, Alexander, Rutherford, Stevens, DcLancey. Third Row Hughcs, George, Bigelow, Bartlctt, Stewart, Davis, Durham, Ryan Thompson, Price, Bryan, Jcnney. Stcond Re« SIagIc, Ewing, Rcbhun, Goodman, Taylor, Taylor, Harding, England, Whelan, Disston. First Row— KtWogg, Pell, Dunn, Baldwin, Chandler. Packard] Trimble. Ivy Club FOUNDED 1879 OFFICERS Richard Baldwin, ' 17 . RoswELL C. Dunn, ' xj . John R. Chandler, ' 17 F. Livingston Pell, Jr. ' 2.8 . George R. Packard, Jr., ' z8 President Governor Treasurer Secretary Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS p. Blair Lee, ' i8 L. Caspar Wister, 08 Jarvis Cromwell, 18 Edgar A. Poe, ' 91 Percy R. Pyne, III, ' 0} Isaac W. Roberts, ' 05 L. Caspar Wister, ' 08 F. Eugene Dixon, ' 09 H. Fairfield Osborne, ' 09 Herbert L. Dillon, ' 07 Clarence V. S. Mitchel, ' ij William C. Motter, 06 Walter Hughson, ' 13 Jesse HoYT, ' 16 Prtsidenr Treasurit Secretary VanR. Halsey, ' 18 Jarvis Cromwell, ' 18 P. Blair Lee, ' 18 George S. Piper, ' ii RoswellC. Dunn, ' 17 John R. Bigelow John G. Kellogg MEMBERS, 192.6 Dan p. Caulkins WiNsLow Lewis Theodore F. Trimble Richard Baldwin James D. Bartlett Joseph Bryan, III John R. Chandler Howard Clarke Austin S. Davis Darragh DeLancey Roswell C. Dunn ED vARD M. Durham MEMBERS, 1917 James W. England, Jr. Samuel E. Ewing, Jr. William D. George, Jr. Samuel Goodman. Ill Alexander D. Jenney James W. Kelley Theodore H. Price, Jr. Henry Redmond Daniel C. Rebhun Jacob W. Slagle Alan Stuyvesant Henry F. Taylor Archibald S. Alexander Horace C. Disston Henry K. Harding Thomas C. Hughes Edward S. Knapp Frederick T. Merrill MEMBERS, 1918 George R. Packard, Jr. F. Livingston Pell, Jr. WiNTHROP RuTHERFURD ClendenninJ. Ryan, Jr. Robert L. Stevens Redmond C. Stewart Jaquelin E. Taylor James H. W. Thompson Thomas A. Whelan 349 KEY AND SEAL Bj.-k R « — Duchay, Clark, Dyer, Stein, Van LovctI, Urquhart, Putnam. Ftarlli Rmo— Barry, Murray, W(X)d, Rcdington, Laffcrty, Chambers, Barber, Caldcr, Hall, n rj Roi«— Dutton, Birdsall, Houscr, Ad ams, Plumb, Huuscr, Smith, Bennett, Menccly. SicetiJ Reu flall, Whitsett, Jcpsum, Hart, Wilson, Van Duyn, Cosier, Glanz, Smith. Firjt R«a — Walker, King, Bcling, Fciss, Boycc, Koeh- ler, Wasbabaugh. ., Key and Seal Club POUNDED I 904 Julian V. Feiss, ' xj William L. Boyce, ' i8 Christopher A. Beling, OFFICERS 2-7 President V ice-President Secretary Douglas G. Adam Jeffery K. Armsby David B. Bandler Christopher A. Beling J. M. Birdsall •Stephen A. Boone Cable G. Ball Henry P. C. Barber William W. Barry Walter W. Bennett William L. Boyce Robert D. Calder James Q. Chambers Clifford S. Chapin, Jr. RoBERT S. Christopher Charles S. Clark Huntley D. Dibble Francis G. Duehay Herbert S. Coster RicHARD Coulter Nelson W. Deyo Erroll Dunbar George B. Dutton William W. Dyer Frank H. Hall BOARD OF GOVERNORS Matson C. Terry, ' 15 William B. Schrauff, ' ii William B. Haffner, ' 2.0 Howard J. Gee, ' 06 Harold C. Richards, ' 06 Roger Hinds, ' 06 Morton H. Fry, ' 09 Kenneth M. McEwen, ' 06 Ralph B. Higgins, ' 16 Arthur C. Lewis, ' 17 President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 Julian W. Feiss Robert L. Glanz K. Harts Glenn L. Jepsen Milford a. Koehler MEMBERS, 192.8 William S. Hall Bond Houser, Jr. Franklin D. Houser WiLLARD Van B. King Joseph S. Lafferty Cornelius V. Lovett Chester B. Meneely James C. Penny Henry H. Putnam Emilio L. Roma, Jr. Richard D. Smith Thomas Smitham John B. Murray Gilbert H. Osgood Carl R. Peterson John S. Plumb Stuart G. Redington JohnJ. Roshek,Jr. Lewis R. Scudder JRichard D. Urquhart John Van Duyn Theodore C. Von Storch William B. Washabaugh Thomas E. Wood, Jr. B. B. Smith Fred C. Stein William L. Seibert Henry M. Walker John W, Wilson Ralph C. Whitsett Raymond Zeller Not rtturmd. Deceased. 351 PRINCETON QUADRANGLE CLUB Tep Kflic— Buxton, Stuart, McGuinncss, Huston, Emmons, Blair.Wilson, Haven, Wood, Wirbclaucr. Sicond Riw— Williams, McMillan, Kipp, Dail, Keep, Hackney, Milton, Gillette, Monies, Norris. Third Kow— Clark, Hinman, Powell, Hall, Cuylcr, Pease, Bookwaltcr, Gibbs, Hallahan, Mcintosh. Fourth Kow—Jamcs, Williamson, Williams, Cox, Agncw, Knifiin, Oct, Andrew Agnew. i-ijrh Rotc— Carter, Robbins, Egerton, Camp, Supplcc, Colmorc, GhcrarJi, Mirick, Potts. , Harper, Winsoa, f Cornelius R. Agnew, Jr. Henry P. Andrews C. Lbe Buxton Samuel T. Carter, III Dean A. Clark Donald Agnew John M. Blair Charles F. Bookwalter Chandler Bragdon Robert G. Bushnell Frederic E. Camp Henry P. Colmore John P. Cuyler McKenny W. Egerton Charles O. Emmons Harry T. Gheradi W. T. Dixon Gibbs Douglas F. Cox, Jr. Calvin W . Dail Hyde Gillette Clement Hackney John S. Haven Princeton Quadrangle Club FOUNDED I50I OFFICERS Henderson SupPLEE, Jr., ' 17 President Henry P. Colmore, ' uj Treasurer Frederic E. Camp, ' z8 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Dayton J. Vorhees, ' 05 President John D. Harrison, ' 12. Treasurer C. S. White, ' 13 Assistant Treasurer James N. Hynson, ' lo Secretary Richard E. Merrifield, ' zi Assistant Secretary Penn Harvey, ' 08 de Benneville K. Seeley, ' ii Lemuel Skidmore, ' 11 MEMBERS, 1917 Isaac D. Hall Butler Hallahan Gordon H. Harper George Hinman Charles D. James Joseph F. Johnston MEMBERS, 1918 Charles L. Huston, Jr. Albert Keep Donald B. Kipp Joseph R. McIntosh William McMillan Edgar A. Kniffin Aims C. McGuiness John W. Milton Henry D. Mirick David P. Monks Roderic C. Oit Benjamin W. Norris Henry H. Pease, Jr. William R. Potts Irwin A. Powell William A. W. Stewart George D. Randall Duane R. Stuart, Jr. Harvey F. Williamson, Jr. CURTIN WiNSOR GusTAV A. Wirbelauer John K. Weeks Charles T. Williams, Jr. Francis R. Williams John P. Wilson, Jr. A. Z. Foster Wood 353 tlrrace: club Back Row — Aitkcn, Lcrch, Mcislahn, Hall, J. R. Gibson, Wood. Fourth Row — J. M. Gibson, Burrows, MacFarlan, Bronson, Howard, Read, Bricn, Grovcr, Hanna. Third Row — Kinder Ramsay, Lcnz, Knapp, Hunsickcr, Payne, Shay, McWilliam, Bodman. Stcond Row — Good, Frascr, Babcock, Willis, Bachcller, Dalrymplc, Bedford, Bellows, Klcinhans, Munoz. Ftrjt Row — Crocker, Green, Walters, Rhea, Randall, Rliccs, Dikcman. A Princeton Terrace Club rOUNDED 1904 OFFICERS Edwin M. Rhea, ' 17 President Frederick J. Walters, Jr., ' 17 .... Vice-President Samuel J. Randall, III, ' 17 Treasurer Richard E. Kleinhans, ' 2.8 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Alden D. Groff, 1} Chairman H. Sadler, ' 2.4 V ice-Chairman A. C. M. AzoY, ' 14 Sicritary William E. Speers, ' ii Treasurer Henry A. Barry, 12. Charles Garside, ' 1} Byron D. Benson, ' ir G. C. Worth, ' 07 B. F. BuNN, 07 Harold R. Medina, 09 W. Trowbridge, ' 15 MEMBERS, 192.7 Walter V. Aldridge Lewis H. Bodman Mason M. Brien Charles G. Buffum Curtis C. Crocker Edwin J. Dikeman,Jr. J. Desmond Evans George P. Faust Donald C. Fraser Juilian M. Gibson Richard F. Green John S. Grover Thomas Hannah, Jr. Charles A. Howard, Jr. Benjamin R. Jones, Jr. J. William Kumm Gordon C. MacWilliam Harry E. Meislahn, Jt. Donald E. Murphy John R. Ramsay, Jr. Samuel J. Randall, III Thomas G, Reifsnyder Edwin M. Rhea William J. Rhees Frederick J. Walters, Jr. William B. Wood, Jr. MEMBERS, 192.8 Beekman Wm. Aitken William J. Babcock John S. Bacheller Wilson B. Baldwin Frank A. Bedford, Jr. Kendrick F. Bellows A. E. Bronson, Jr. William R. Burrows John I. Dalrymple Joseph R. Gibson Herbert S. Hall Charles Hunsicker, Jr. Harold Kinder Richard E. Kleinhans Arthur Knapp, Jr. Robert R. Layton, Jr. Harry J. Lerch, Jr. Winthrop C. Lenz Richard S. MacFarland James J. Mead Samuel B. Paynb David P. Reed Donald D. Shay John W. Van Ryn Raymond S. Willis, Jr. Not returned. 355 TIGER INN Top Row — Rankin, Carroll, Hcndy, Schcnk, French, Atwood, MacCrcady, Stcmd Row — Sherry, Roystcr, Gaffncy, Acuff, Pcipcr, Wcckcs, Mitchell, Murphy, StiUman. Third Row — Boatwright, Comp- tOQ, Hale, English, Aitkeo, Van Siclca, Eddy, Roosevelt, Macfarlane. Fourth Row—Bell, Gifford, Farosworth, Ballard, BarccU, Davis, Andrews. Tiger Inn FOUNDED 1850 INCORPORATED 189! OFFICERS William R. Ballard, ' 17 President Charles W. Farnsworth, ' 2.7 .... Vice-President Earnest C. Bartel, ' -lj Secretary Charles W. Weekes, ' 2.7 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Ralph L. Crow, ' oo . Prtsidtnt William M. Barr, ' 15 Sicritary Charles H. Murphy, ' 00 Trtasurtr J. R. MuNN, ' 06 E. W. Brown, ' 2.3 E. L. Shea, ' 16 F. P. K. Taylor, ' z4 J. H. ACKERMAN, ' 19 J. M. BOOHECKER, ' 15 S. M. TiLLsoN, ' 2.5 Mark E. Andrews William R. Ballard Earnest C. Bartel Hugo L. Bell Herbert L. Boatwright, Jr. Edwin W. Colman Beverly C. Compton John W. Davis, Jr. Thomas H. Eddy, Jr. MEMBERS, 192.7 Richard W. A. English, Jr. Charles W. Farnsworth R. Walter Hale Malcolm F. MacFarlane Robert McCready DavidC. Monroe John T. Moss, Jr. Hubert A. Royster, Jr. Dudley C. Sharp John F. Schenk Avery Sherry James C. Stillman Robert D. Van Siclen Charles W. Weekes John K. Acuff John W. Aitken Fred H. Atwood Walter C. Carroll, Jr. C. L. Clifford Jack McK. French MEMBERS, 192.8 J. W. Gaffney Donald N. Hendey James F. Mitchell, Jr. Welles Murphey Robert O. Pieper Francis K. Rankin William M. Roosevelt John T. Williams ' Not returned. 367 19281 ? i i i I TOWER CLUB T(P R«p— Van Dcvcnter.Judd, Plumcr, Byron, Hcyl, Miller, Todd, Davidson, Schott, Ritchey. f r A Rwr— Leggctt, Parker, MacLaren, Warner, Curtin, MacKay, Nelson, Edwards, Crandall, Pitman. T j r( K« ' — Eking, Wcstfall, La Porte, Ely, Posey, Hampden, Caspar!, Jcnltins, Capps, Johnson. Sicmd Row — Whitaker, Corcoran, Hinchman, Thompson, Luckctc, Kennedy, Smith, Erdman, Cumoitngs, Tasker, Cochran. First Rne — Avery, Norman, Joycs. Muhlhauser, Gay, Castleman, Watts, Murphy, Bottomley. Humphrey E. Ambler William H. Avery Francis K. Bottomley James Burnham Frederick D. Burrell Richard B. Capps Godwin M. Castleman Charles G. Baldwin James W. Byron Charles E. Caspari Howard F. Corcoran WiLLLAM W. CraNDALL, Jr. Robert McN. Cochran Willard F. Cummings Talbot Curtin Robert F. Darby Arthur M. Edwards John W. Ely Marshall B. Davidson Victor Eltino, Jr. Paul Hampden David B. Hinchman John R. Jenkins Not relumed. Princeton Tower Club FOUNDED 1901 OFFICERS William C. Gay, ' 17 Godwin M. Castleman, ' 17 Robert F. Muhlhauser, ' 2.8 President Treasurer Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Frank H. Little, ' o} Sidney F, Holt, ' 03 Norman D. Weir, ' 13 Sinclair Hamilton, ' 06 Richard S. Hayes, ' 15 Raymond F. Fish, 13 William C. Gay, i Godwin M. Castleman, ' 17 Chairman MEMBERS, 19 7 Harold R. Erdman William C. Gay Bernard C. Heyl Arthur C.Johnson, Jr. Morton V. Joyes, Jr. Edward H. Luckett MEMBERS, 19x8 Howard C. Judd Richard L. Kennedy, Jr. William S. Laporte John D. Leggett, Jr. Robert C. Miller 359 John F. MacKay Donald M. McLaren Adrian M. Murphy J. Van Dyke Norman, Jr. John R. Pitman, Jr. Marshall L. Posey Robert F. Muhlhauser Wenley D. Nelson John W. Parker Davenport Plumer Hugh M. Ritchey Franklin S. Reitzel, Jr. Richard H. Smith, Jr. F. Gris vold Tasker James Todd, Jr. Arthur W. Warner Sewell S. Watts, Jr. James C. Westfall Colon Schott, Jr. Irwin W. Thompson William F. Van Deventer W. Stanley Whitaker Whiting Willauer Top Rjiff — Fciss, Krag, Garrcy, Pcvcir, Farnsworth, Kingslcy, R:atl, Raudcabush, Muhlhauscr, Conglcron. T itrJ Row — Jones, MacLarcn, Jcmison, Skinner, Randall, Tucker, Dolman, Candler, Lcnz, Parker. Stcond Row — Boycc, Uhl, Vail, Beard, Masters, Hale Castlcman, Peabody. First Row — Rhea, Snowdcn, Large, Supplcc, Ames, Kcirh, Gay. Interclub Committee B. Candler W. E. Garrey F. Peabody, Jr. G. C. Snowden B. T. Pevear S. H. KiNGSLEY D. Raudenbush H. SuppLEE, Jr., ' 2.7 G. T. Trenholm, ' 2.7 S. K. Uhl S. R. Vail S. J. Randall H. M. Parker T. Hale MEMBERS, 192.7 J. W. Feiss President Secretary E. E. Keith E. M. Rhea H. SuppLEE, Jr. G. T. Trenholm MEMBERS, 1918 R. J. CONGLETON R. Jemison, III J. E. Dolman W. L. BOYCE C. W. Farnsworth W. L. Read R. F. Mulhauser W. H. Mac Laren W. B. Krag J. H. Tucker M. C. Beard G. M. Castleman M. P. Skinner W. C. Lenz J. D. Ames 361 The University Club Late in October at a meeting held in Madison Hall, the non-clubmen of the Junior and Senior class organized for the purpose of changing their eating place from its present location to Prospect Street. It was felt by the meeting that the greatest objection to the Club System as it now exists is the isolation of nearly one-quarter of each of the two upper classes from their classmates at the meal hour which is without doubt the social hour of Princeton. Then, too, the present Upper-Class Commons does not afford an adequate place to entertain guests as it is extremely crowded. There are a large number of non-clubmen who eat at the various eating places around town. This serves further to divide and isolate the members of the upper classes. The original idea was to obtain some house near Prospect Street which would accommodate the Senior Sections each year until the Activities Building should be completed. However, after considering the matter with the Trustees, it was decided that it would be better to wait for a place that would not be a mere make-shift. A Constitution has been framed and passed by the Non-Clubmen. The following officers were elected for the year i T-G-2.j: W. B. Van Alstyne, Jr., President; K. M. Kepler, Vice-President; R. P. Johnson, ' 2.8, Secretary; and C. K. Thompson, Treasurer. The Executive Committee consists of three Senior Members: H. E. Foster, C. B. Conwell, H. S. Johnson, and two Junior Members: D. V. Lansden, H. S. Waters, and the officers. W. B. Van Alstyne and R. P. Johnson represent the University Club, as it is now called in lieu of another name, upon the Inter-Club Committee. 362 I L II I rn ' 11 f I II 11 II II II 11 I 7 Schools Committee of the Senior Council SENIOR COUNCIL MEMBERS Joseph Prendergast, ' 2.7 W. B. Van Alstyne, Jr., ' zrj R. Baldwin E. C. Bartell M. C. Beard H. L. Bell J. R. Chandler W. M. Collins J. W. Davis S. E. EwiNG C. A. Howard Chairman Secretary W. R. Howell R. W. LaBeaume F. Peabody J. W. Slagle COMMITTEE MEMBERS D. P. McPherson ' 18 ' R. Jemison, ' i8 V. Elting, ' 2.8 E. H. Kahlo, ' 2.3 F. H. Kingsbury, ' tjj Director Vice-Director J. MULFORD, ' 2.9 The Schools Committee of the Senior Council is the undergraduate organization which furnishes a point of contact between Princeton and the schools from which Princeton men come. It endeavors to promote friendly feeling, and uses as its aid the School Clubs of the University. Through the officers of these clubs the schools are informed of what their alumni are doing, and are urged to cooperate with these bodies in maintaining lines of com- munication. 364 J M. Fujiyama Berkshire School Club OFFICERS J. H. Stout, ' 17 President F. Pleasants, ' 2.9 Vice-President M. W. Katzenbach, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 C. B. E. Harts W. E. Reyburn MEMBERS, 192.8 C. Hackney C. E. Hewitt A. Keep MEMBERS, 1919 G. Braman J. C. Murphy F. Pleasants MEMBERS, 1930 W. N. Chapin T. Cornwall M. W. Katzenbach J. F. McKernon, Jr. 365 J. H. Stout, Jr. T. M. Anderson B. BiRDSALL F. F. Bradshaw Blair Academy Club OFFICERS A. K. Nelson, ' 2.7 W. W. Woodward, ' 2.8 T. B. HiTCHMAN, ' 30 President Vice-President Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 V. F. Hopper A. K. Nelson F, E. Sloat MEMBERS, 1918 S. B. Smith W. W. Woodward W. K. Wright A. H. Lance C. G. Ellis MEMBERS, 1919 L. W. Sloat J. Steves MEMBERS, 1930 T. B. HiTCHMAN W. J. Reeves 366 A. M. Turnbull S. Van Duyne I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 ] I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I J3 1928 ? Carteret Academy Club OFFICERS Newton P. Stallknecht, ' 17 President Grier Hart, ' 2.8 .... Vice-President, Secretary MEMBER, 1517 N. P. Stallknecht MEMBERS, 1918 P. G.Hart, Jr. L. P. Stallknecht MEMBERS, 1919 R. W. Bennett, Jr. R.E. Kirk.Jr. B.B.Scott G.K.Taylor MEMBERS, 1930 G. D. Gorman J. I. Templeton 367 R. C. Bbroh C. F. Fayen O. R. Delamater J. K. Ebbert C. K. Agls G. C. Bassett I. F. Boyd, Jr. R. Ervino Choate School Club OFFICERS George C. Hepburn ' 17 President George M. Fryberger ' 2.8 Vice-President Rowland Erving ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS i9i7 W. D. George E. W. Gurimer C. J. Wells MEMBERS— 192.8 G. M. Fryberger T. C. Hughes P. D. Millholland M. Fujiyama F. S. Katzenbach, Jr. D. B. Morrison A. H. M. Hughes T. P. Kellogg J. W. Persse MEMBERS— 1919 J. C. Fullmer T. M. Lawler J. Miksak C. H. Githler T. J. Lee B. Page B. DE LA G. Greef C. Lockhart R. E. Robinson MEMBERS— 1930 G. Milburn F. D. Petrie B, T. Wilson J. L. Parsons J. L. Tonetti D. E. Woodhull 368 G. C. Hepburn J. T. Walker S. C. Smith L. Thurber J. Stevens C. G. Weatherly F. E. Smith LI ' 1 1 ' 1 ) If t ' I ' I ' n T I I 1778 II M II I I II II Germantown Academy Club G. C. Denniston, ' i President D. B. Barlow, ' i8 Vice-Presiden t N. A. Petry, Jr., ' 30 Secretary % M. C. Beard C. C. Denniston MEMBERS, 1917 S. H. High, Jr. D. C. Moore J. J. Steinmetz R. M. Truitt, Jr R. S. Clark R. F. Bole S. S. Truitt D. Dodge MEMBERS, 19x8 MEMBERS, 192.9 MEMBERS, 1930 W. F. Dannehauer D. B. Barlow W. E. Caveney N. A. Petry J. D. SiNER Gilman Country School Club OFFICERS J. W. Slagle, ' t-J . President D. P. McPherson, ' i8 . Vice-Pres. R. W. Warfield, ' 30 . Secretary H. P. Andrews C. W. Barclay H. M. Alexander W. H. Barker H. R. Clapp, Jr. T. Cover, III C. W. Dail W. F. Alexander B. Blake W. F. Cochran, Jr. C. B. Alexander W. S. Candee R. A, Carey G. J. Finney D. L. Graham B. C. CoMPTON R. C. Dunn A. B. Griswold W. S. LaPorte J. R. McIntosh D. P. McPherson R. Gibbon E. T. Gieskb J.J. Hurst, Jr. J. S. Janney, Jr F. H. Johnson F. R. Kent MEMBERS, 1917 M. W. Egerton C. C. Emmons MEMBERS, 192.8 C. M. Nes, Jr. L. Perin D. Plumer, Jr. M. S. Reichner MEMBERS, 1919 W. W. Graham C. R. Helgenberg MEMBERS, 1930 W. T. Kenney E. C. McLean F. A. Meade T. P. Perkins 370 W. T. D. Gibes G. H. Harper W. G. Scarlett A. Shaw J. K. Shaw R. C. Stewart, Jr. S. S. Janney, Jr. C. MacRae H. R. Preston L. B. PuRNELL, III D. M. Reese R. C. RiGos H. A. ROYSTER J. H. Wheelwright J. R. Vanderbogart T. A. Whelan, III C. T. Williams F. R. Williams L. S. Stewart J. W. Stinson D. SWANN W. D, Scarlett W. C. Trimble J. F. Turner R. W. Warfield T Haver ford School Club S. E. EwiNG, ' 2.7 President L. H. BODMAN S. E. EwiNG, Jr. R. W. D. Caldwell W. McC. Hardt, Jr. E. E. Baruch W. Beddoe W. H. BoDMAN G. H. Beddoe A. M. BeITLER, iND B. C. Heyl A. R. Mangold W. H. Cox H. B. Gay, Jr. Van H. Ely H. W. KoEHN, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 W. S. HiTSCHLER MEMBERS, 1918 F. G. Matheson MEMBERS, 1919 W. B. Hackenberg K. G. Keen MEMBERS, 1930 R. M. Keech.Jr. W. C. Roberts H, Morris C. R. May C. E. Levinson F. K. Mangold W, HoWLAND J. T. MUTRAGH A. M. Young R. B. SCHALL F. P. Mellon W. R. Parker, Jr. J. Stewardson A. H. Smith 371 Hill School Club OFFICERS G. G. Snowden, ' 17 President R. Jemison, III, ' 18 Vice-Presidetit G. Austen, ' 30 Secretary J. K. Armsby C. E. Donaldson H. E. Dunn E. K. Gadebusch J. F. Gallagher W. R. Gallagher, Jr. P. A. Huntsman MEMBERS, 1917 A, R. Jackson K. S. Kassler W. B. Krao D. V. B. Lansden E. H. LuCKETT W. O. Master D. C. Mills E. L. Parker R. G. Pierce J. S. Prettyman, III G. G. Snowden J. Todd, Jr. J. C. Wellwood, Jr. A. C. Whitaker,Jr. G. A. WlRBELAUER C. G. Baldwin, Jr. R. K. Black R. G. BuSHNELL C. A. Case R. M. Clements H. G. Collins W. W. Crandall, Jr. W. P. Elliot O. M. Evans J. C. Ferenbach L. M. FlREY C. J. Follmer MEMBERS, i9i8 J. N. Gaffney W. S. Gamble R. F. Hall W. A. Humphreys, Jr. C. L. Huston, Jr. R. Jemison, III A. W. Jones K. A. Kellog D. B. Kipp F. D. Lorch J. F. Mitchell, Jr. R. S. Montgomery J. C. Norton D. Peterkin, Jr. I. A. Powell R. V. N. Powelson V. L. Read J. S. Richardson S. R. Sheldon P. A. Snell H. R. Stratford C. Wallace, Jr. W. S. Whitaker H. B. Wilson J. S. Ancona R, D. Bartlett C. P. Benedict E. Cage, Jr. W. D. Campbell O. W. Clinger W. D. Cox I. H. Dixon J.J. FoULKROD M. Goodrich, Jr. J. M. Graham T. W. Hellyer MEMBERS, 19x9 C. R. HooPEs E. Jasper J. Kahrs, Jr. F. B. Kellog R. B. Kenyon F. H. Kingsbury, Jr. H. LoUDERBOUGH W. F. McLallen, III O. T. Martin, II P. W. Nash E. y . Peters P. H. Pierce J. D. Reifsnyder T. M. Rogers J. R. Sheppard,Jr. W. M. Sloane, III C. P. Smith R. D. Smith J. M. Snowden C. F. Wheaton J. A. Woolley MEMBERS, 1930 G. Austen D. F. Collins R. A. Ke£ry D. MacAlister J. P. Pearson H. L. Scott W. H. BiNNS W. C. Elliot L. T. Klauder C. H. Miner S. H. ROLLINSON W. L. Smith P. Carson F. W. Graves E. C. Kohlsaat A. M. Mizener H. L. Rose A. J. Ulman F. 0. Geubbs J. P. KoONTZ H. C. Patterson R. M. Schafer 373 W. A. CoRDEs, ' iy W. C. Barnouw R. P. Barden L. K. Harnett R. H. GiES W, A. CoRDES Horace Mann School Club OFFICERS President E. Barnouw, ' 19 J. H. Happoldt, Jr., ' 30 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 19x7 J. A. Kaufman F. T. Lynch MEMBERS, 19x8 W. HiRSHON J. F. Miller MEMBERS, 19x9 E. Barnouw T. O. Freeman W. R. Boyd, III M. Haas, Jr. G. E. BucKBEE, Jr. H. A. Heydt, Jr. MEMBERS, 1930 J. H. Happoldt, Jr. J. D, Rode E. S. Taylor Vice-President W. B. Morgan J. W. Westwood G. G. Kane, Jr. E. O. Kindler H. A. Loeb G. D. Strater, Jr. J. L. Lucke W. B. Wilder D. H. Whitney r ' J. H. Wright : , ' : ' L. .__ 374 I I 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 II ri I ! II I r 1 1 TT-rr 19281 7 WitiH - 111 T% Hotchkiss School Club J. R. Chandler, ' 17 H. T. BoDMAN, ' x8 . J. H. Brooks, ' 30 C. R. Agnew, Jr. J. R. Chandler C. DoUBLEDAY F. Gary OFFICERS MEMBERS, 1917 T. B. Jeffery F. B. Murray T. E. Rhodes W. R. Shillaber President Vice-President Secretary D. D. Sutphen H. W. Taylor R. D. Van Siclen H. F. Williamson D. Agnew H. T. BoDMAN N. W. Deyo A. U. Elser V. Elting, Jr. D. W. Gallowhur L. S. Jadwin H. C. JuDD MEMBERS, 1918 J. D. Leggett J. W. Lee, II P. 0 ven, Jr. J. O. Price H. E. Richards H. C. Rose F. R. Shumway W. F. Van Deventer J. K. Weekes A. Z. F. Wood C. W, Yost P. Adams T. W. Armitage A. B. Borden A. Brown J. Carey J. H. Case E. J. Chambers H. P. Cochran J. B. Cochran MEMBERS, 1919 W. W. Cochran W. Elting J. B. Hempstead T. Logan J. Long M. M. MacLeod J. McPherson T. A. Mathews A. B. Moffit J. C. Murphy J. V. Quarles.Jr. E. W. WOOTEN J. C. Bennett J. H. Brooks R. M. Brown D. Chamberlain M. Cravens J. M. Doubleday D. Ferry T. Griswold C. S. Henry MEMBERS, 1930 R. Henry D. A. LowRY R. K. McInnes G. D. Morgan E. A. NoYEs 375 W. P. Palmer H. S. Reeder R. E. Reeves F. H. Schaupfler J. F. SCHOELLKOPF J. B. Welborn B. V. WhiteJ R. M. WiLKISON O. B. Wilcox III ir I I 1778 11 II M II M II I Kent School Club OFFICERS W. R. Ballard, ' 17 . W. E. Lowii, ' i8 G. C. VOORHEES, ' 30 President Vice-President Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 W. V. AlDRIDGE J. P. CuYLER A. D. Jenney VV. R. Ballard D. C. Gauss, Jr. A. C. McGuiness H. P. CoLMORE R. F. Green D. R. Stuart I. D. Hall R. H. E. Elliott MEMBERS, 1918 J. E. Hall W. E. Love, II J. D. Beam J. G. Breck MEMBERS, 1919 G. Jones S. S. McMillan H. Moore, Jr. J. E. Rose P- T. Breuyere MEMBERS, 1930 G. CuYLER T. Thompson J. C. Voorhees 376 J. F. Beaird Lake Forest Academy Club OFFICERS J. H. Tucker, ' tj President J. P. Bradford, ' i8 Vice-President N. B. RoBERG, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 19x7 O. T. RoBERG, Jr. J. H. Tucker MEMBERS, 192.8 J. P. Bradford T. B. Mann V. E. Packard MEMBERS, 1919 A. G. Kling G. Nash F. C. Norris V. H. Polacheck MEMBER, 1930 N. B. Roberg 377 J. TiNCHER, in I I 1 1 H M N 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 -n-rr II II II I I 19281 7 Liawrenceville School Club G. L. Lambert, ' 17 President Vice-President OFFICERS J. L. Howell, 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 E. E. Alexander M. E. Andrews R. Baldwin J. G. Ballantine F. S. Bancroft J. D. Bartlett H. L. Bell R. H. Bennett F. A. Baker, Jr. J. H. Berkshire E. C. Blake M. M. Bright, Jr. R. G. Buchanan K. G. BUCKLIN W. W. Candy, Jr. C. M. Case A. J. Alexander J. Angus, Jr. F. M. Ashley C. S. Baker G. Barker R. T. Beatty J. W. Carrott O. D. Cass, III J. T. Cosby W. A. Barr, Jr. W. C. Battin C. B. Brooks W. R. Bryant W. E. Candy O. O. Cooper H. A. Cotton, Jr. E. J. Brown M. B. Carrott R. M. Cochran J. S. Collins E. T. Conner R. Covington E. M. Durham J. K. D. Chivers J. H. Cunningham C. M. CuRTISS F. B. Deknatel H. S. Denniston N. V. Deuel E. C. Embury R. Flint D. Q. Coster J. S. CoxE, Jr. C. L. Darnell L. F. Davis W. F. Deknatel R. M. Deuel R. B. Derby G. W. Dodge J. T. Emert S. C. Davis J. S. Easton J. Edwards R. F. EuwER J. T. Feid G. A. FoYE, Jr. H. E. Gaillard H. R. Erdman D. K. Evans J. I. Evans W. C. Fairbanks N. V. Harper J. L. Henderson S. B. Hicks G. A. GoocH T. E. Graecen H. A. Greene W. C. Hamilton E. H. Harbison B. HousER, Jr. A. W. Jones E. J. FiNLEY E. L. Fuller R. L. Gee H. S. Hadsall W. W. Harts A. G. Isaacs, Jr. C. F. Jamieson B. Kelham W. H. HiLDRICK I. W. HOFF C. R. Howell F. K. Huber E. E. Keith A. E. Kephart J. KlRKPATRlCK G. L. Lambert S. M. McAshan.Jr. E. J. Nally, Jr. H. N. Packer J. P. Parker R. M. Parker F. Peabody MEMBERS, 19x8 H. McAsHAN E. M. Mebane J. H. Jordan, Jr. ' W. V. King W. G. Lackey W. F. Lang H. W. Large J. Large W. H. MacLaren R. C. Miller C. R. MoESER J. R. Palmer J. S. Plumb F. W. Prichard MEMBERS, 1919 J. S. Parrish, Jr. J. E. Parrott B. C. Patt J. B. Kerr V. A. Lee I. W. McCaskey C. B. McDougal G. P. Manning J. C. Miller H. E. Mole, Jr. M. N. Mo rrison W. E. Robinson N. S. Noble, Jr. M. D, Ogden, Jr. J. M. Pardoe S. S. Preston, Jr. MEMBERS, 1930 R. C. Gibson J. L. Howell A. V. H. Jennings H. P. Jordan, Jr. E. Keith W. C. Keith, Jr. N. Kelsey W. W. Knapp F. T. Lawrence E. A. McCarthy J. Maltman, Jr. j. H. Maroney W. A. Nones C. W. H. Oechler 379 T. W. Pettus J. F. PlTCAlRN D. L. RiKE E. V. Seldon J. G. Smith R. B. Smith A. T. Tekirian G. M. Payne, Jr. F. F. Pels, Jr. W. A. Pollard, Jr. R. F. Puffer G. W. Renchard J. D. Ross R. H. RUBENSTEIN J. H. Scales A. K. Shenk C. C. Shenk E. J. Smith, Jr. F. H. Smith R. Spencer M. Spraoue W. R. Thomas J. A. TOWNLEY B. G. Van Horne, Jr . R. W. Wales S. S. Watts T. S. Wilson F. G. Zander W. C. Richardson, Jr. T. M. Riohter, Jr. J. J. Roshek, Jr. C. W. SCHULZ D. L. Speer J. M. Sturges W. E. Sweet, Jr. R. H. Rankin T. R. Rudel G. H. SCHULTZ L. S. Semans J. W. Simpson J. A. Simpson W. B. Sloan J. B. Stevens J. C. Taylor J. W. Thompson, Jr. C. W. TOBIN E. B. Vandyck, Jr. T. C. Wallace, III P. C. Weed, Jr. A. F. WiLLSON C. H. WiSNER P. H. Strubing, II J. L. TiNCHER, III J. T. Waterhouse W. C. Weakley T. A. Wells W. I. Westcott R. D. Williams R. H. Wise W. B. Worthen E. M. Sullivan F. L. Sullivan J. A. TURNBULL W. W. Wagner E. B. Ward E. W. Wheery E. B. Wilson, Jr. A. N. Greminger G. H. Babcock L. G. Chambers LiOomis School Club OFFICERS S. Carter, III, ' tj President J. D. Rockefeller, III ' xg Vice-President ' 30 Secretary G. H. Babcock, K. W. Hooker M. H. Dodge, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 S. Carter, III MEMBERS, 19L8 G. F. FOUGHERTY MEMBERS, 1919 D. M. Robertson MEMBERS, 1930 B. V. Hedges, Jr. 380 J. D. Rockefeller, III E. S. KiFE B. H. Shoemaker B. Labaree 1 « J SNi.. - . ■ 1 tat — Mercersburff School Club T. R. Williams, ' 17 President J. M. French, ' z8 Vice-President W. A. Moore, ' 30 Secretary S. A. Boone S. S. Brooks H. H. Carspecken R. C. Collins S. S. CoOLEY MEMBERS, 192.7 J. W. Crawford J. D. Gallagher R. H. Haas G. S. Hoffman R. P. Kemble K. M. Kepler J. A. LicHTY, Jr. S.J. McCoy W. R. Miller F. C, Moffat J. McN. Myers P. S. Pitcher W. L. RUIGH E. P. Serena H. B. SwooPE, Jr. J. B. BUTCHART H. B. Cannon W. C. Carroll, Jr. H. R. Clinger, Jr. H. G. Deiohan V. W. Dyer J. D. Everitt MEMBERS, 1918 J. McN. French J. B. Goodwin D. K. Henderson J. L. Hough G. H. Kelly H. J. Lerch, Jr. J. McCullough T. E. Marshall F. S. Newberry H. A. Prior A. D. Salmon D. D. Shay Jh- R. Sims, II C. G. Stockly W. G. Taylor, Jr. J. M. Adams K. B. Appel S. R. Bridge J. M. Caldwell W. E. CoBEY E. C. Crabb W. Elmer, Jr. E. J. EsTEP F. L. Garrett T. R. Green MEMBERS, 1919 H. M. HippLE J. W. Huff V. K. Irvine, Jr. W. C. Keller J. S. Lichty D. W. Merrill R. N. Mould S. W. Perry, Jr. W. T. Priestly, Jr. J. H. Stauffer W. C. Stevens, Jr. C. M. Strauss T.H. Swift J. H. Wanner D. G. Watkins C. A. Whitehouse.Jr. E. O. Wittmer MEMBERS, 1930 R. W. Atherton J. Carnwath J. W. Carty R. L. Churchill J. E. Coachman H. L. Custer S. L. Dewey H. S. Dickerman C. L. Ensminger H. H. Faber C. A. Paris E. E. Fike J. H. L. French O. F. Gardener J. A. Giddings C. M. Hanna C. S. Hertz A. M. Irvine O. D. Johnson E. I. Kelly H. M. Kirk J. W. Mack R. N. Marshall G. C. Miles H. L. Moore W. A. Moore R. B. Park I. Pbrine R. F. PlETERS R. S. PlETERS W. R. RiDDINGTON A. H, RUTLEDGE J. N. SiMONSON K. a. Stevens D, A. Stirling W. A. Walker J. R. Whyte F. W. Wile R. N. Wood 381 W. A. Alexander, Jr J. S. Bacheller H. B. Alexander F. W. Ball, Jr. F. CoNKLiN, Jr. W. V. G. Eakins E. G. Adams, jr. L. R. Brock Newark Academy Club OFFICERS R. W. A. English, ' 2.7 President J. S. Bacheller, ' 18 Vice-President H. A. Schneider, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 C. A. Beling R. W. a. English T. T. K. Frelinghuysen C. R. Harrower MEMBERS, 192.8 T. H. Becker H. S. Coster A. F. McBride F. S. Stein H. O. VonDeilen MEMBERS, 1919 D. F. Edwards, Jr. P. Weller F. W. Schumann H. A. Strasser P. M. Goodwin R. W. Kirkman A. A. Scribner G. Titsworth J. S. Hanck R. Mellis J. W. Stengel A. Van Blarcom, Jr. R. Zimmerman MEMBERS, 1930 J. A. CoNKLIN J. LuKENS F. P. RusSELL T. L. SiSSERSON T. L. Hilton F. S. Meyer H. A. Schneider J. H. Stumpf C. F. Keppler L. G. Rankin M. D. Sheppard 382 I II II I ' II II II I ' M M II II II I IE 1778 - M s fl SjW pBi 1 Li Mf-Mi IPRSflS 1 M 1 ,i ' 1 1- M m Hfi IH H 1 nn 1 Pawling School Club L. G. Hunt, ' 2.7 . R. S. Hendey, ' 30 . President Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 192.7 L. G. Hunt J. Bayless J. G. Jones J. S. DiCKBRSQN, Jr. MEMBERS, 192.8 F. J. Hamilton D. N. Hendey J. J. S. Meade MEMBERS, 192.9 C. F. Reidemeister R. A. Ruge J. G. Stewart MEMBERS, 1930 J. N. FuRNESs R. S. Hendey W. L. Lashar 3S3 Penn Charter Club OFFICERS W. R. Howell J. J. FOULKROD T. E. Frame, Jr. . President . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer W. R. Howell MEMBERS, 19x7 D. C. VOLLRATH W, B. WOLCOTT J. M. Adams K. B. Atkinson J. S. Benn, Jr. R. B. Ely A. Cramer MEMBERS, 192.8 J. R. Gibson MEMBERS, 1919 J.J. FoULKROD R. S. MacFarland C. J. Gable, Jr. H. C. Remick R. Richardson A. M. Shumate MEMBERS, 1930 T. E. Frame, Jr. P. M. Mecray 384 The Andover School Club W. B. Van Alstyne, Jr., ' i President W. T. Healey, ' 19 Vice-President B. R. Reiter, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 G. M. Castleman W. C. Gay C.D.James W. H. Liebman, Jr. J.C.Marshall C. B. CoNWELL R. O. Hereford W. B. Lee G. P. McNeer F. S. Newberry J. W. Ely MEMBERS, 1918 W. R. Beardsley V. M. Earle, Jr. W. G. James F. T. Merrill D. S. Ross R. E. Blank W.B.Evans R. R. Layton, Jr. C. S. Pangman W. Schenk.Jr. F. M.Cleveland, Jr. J. C. Hutcheson, 3RD J. J. Mead J.B.Roberts M. P. Skinner E. DuPoNT MEMBERS, 1919 W. P. Armstrong C. E. Arnt, Jr. N. F. Flowers L. F. Kemp E. G. Morgan N. P. Bastedo C. D. Brodhead J. T. Hague G. M. Lasater H. B. Reiter R. Bernheim J.J. Chickering,Jr. W. T. Healey C. F. Mapes W. C. Ridgway, Jr. H. E. Bixler W.E.Curtis D.James S. S. Marsh, Jr. D. C. Smith, Jr. G. G. Blanchard J.M.Fisher E. H. Kahlo W.P.Marshall H. M. Southgate, Jr. MEMBERS, 1930 J. A. Begg T. Johns P. Maloney W. McKinley M. Seberling T. A. Browneiqq C. R. Layton W. McDermott B. R. Reiter E. A. Steimle 385 M. L. Posey W, B. Van Alstyne.Jr. J. Van Duyn, znd T. Ward, znd G. C. Watson R. S. Willis J. H. Stevens J. R. Ullman D. M. WiLSEY J. C. WiLLEY D. L. Wells Phillips Exeter Club of Princeton OFFICERS J. Prendergast, ' 17 E. M. ASHCRAFT, III, ' 19 H. Elting, Jr., ' 30. President Vice-President Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 D. B. Handler R. P. Cooke J. H. Kimball J. Prendergast S. R. Bradley D. H. Dunn D. E. McLean J. R. Ramsey W. Brenton E. B. Eckerson W. L. Matthews J. H. Rodoers A. Brown J. H. Forbes D. C. Monroe C. R, Vail E. E. COLLADAY G. I. Hagar B. M. Newman L. S. Walworth E. W. CoLMAN E. N. Huff B. W, Perkins C, S. Wilson, Jr. C. R. Kellar J. R. Pitman MEMBERS, 1918 B. M. Atkins J. W. Byron W. N. Haskell J. M. McCready G. H. Osgood D. D. Smith C. G. Ball J. G. Cilley J. S. Haven E. W. McVlTTY F. W. Pardee A. R. Thom.as S. M. Becker, Jr. H. F. Corcoran D. B. HiNCHMAN E. K. Mills J. W. Parker W. B. Van Lennbp v W. WiLLAUER J. W. Wilson J, M. Blair R. Coulter A. T. Hortqn E. S. Morris F. K. Rankin S. C. Borton S. S. GoRHAM J. H. Hume W. Murphy J. H. Read J. H. Burr F. H. Hall, Jr. T. Jaeckel B. W. NORRIS S. ROBY P. S. Young J. C. Ham G. E. Kimball R. F. NoRRis R. C. ScHAUB MEMBERS, 192.9 F. S. Allen W. L. Broad J. E. Gore W. R. Huff J. F. Lawrence C. S. Scott E. M. AsHCRAFT, III H. T. BuNN H. H. Hadley W. F. Jackson R.J. McDonald F. L. Smith, Jr. H. Barnard W. F. COAN C. C. Hall W. T. Johnston J. Mulford J. White T. M. Bloch D. C. Colladay A. B. Harper T. B. Kerr P.J. O ' Neil A. C. WlLLAUER C. A. Edwards D. M. Haseltine T. N. Lawler W. R. Pond.Jr. MEMBERS, 1930 • B. C. Alder W. N. Chapin R. R. Garside J. M. HiNCHMAN W. KoREN, Jr. C. H. Murphey A. G. Alexander B. C. Connelly A. S. Goff G. B. Hulett J. E. Love J. H. OTOOLE J. D. Austin J. H. Coulter F. N. Goodrich B. 0, Jackson, Jr. C. M. Malone, Jr. N. M. Perkins T. G. Beaham, II H. Elting, Jr. P. M. Ham E. G. Kirtland J. S. McCormick, Jr. L. H. Ross, Jr. E. W. Bell, Jr. R. 0. Evans B. Heald H. D. Kistler A. E. McVitty,Jr. E. F. Story W. C. Byron F. Foote F. P. Hersey A. Knox, Jr. C. . S. Miller 386 Poly Prep Club OFFICERS J. W. Davis, Jr., ' 2.7 President H. E. Meislahn, Jr., ' 17 Vice-President J. L. Alley, ' 19 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 D. F. BuRRELL D. C. Fraser D. v. B. Hegeman T. CuRTiN J. S. Grover J. F. McKay J. W. Davis, Jr. E. Hecksher H. E. Meislahn S. H. Steinbrink MEMBERS, 19x8 W. W. Bennett R. Bruce L.J. La Fleur R. D. Calder J. L. Alley ' W. H. Hanna R. V. Jacobs MEMBERS, 1919 A.J. Mackey ' J. A. Stobbe R. K. McCoNNELL A. J. Sessa J. M. Tr ompen A. E. Wood L. W. Smith H. G. Browne MEMBERS, 1930 T. L. J. Bauer J. M. Irving A. H. Davis I.J. Pedley R. O. HlOGINS 387 F. B. Alexander H. Putnam ' V.. Pomfret School Club OFFICERS H. L. Crawford, Jr., ' 17 President B. S. HoRNE, Jr., ' 2.8 Vice-President C. C. Crawford, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 H. L. Crawford J. W. Delafield E. A. Kniffin MEMBERS, 1918 B. S. HoRNE, Jr. D. Ridgeway W. G. Somerville MEMBERS, 192.9 A.S.Davis H. S. Kniffin, Jr. B.H.Jackson MEMBERS, 1930 R. Delafield C. C. Crawford 388 J. W. Lewis W. M. Roosevelt Princeton Prep Club J. D. McCabe, 2.7 J. K. AcuFF, ' 2.8 T. H. Moore, ' 30 T. G. Bachran, Jr. A. Y. Fisher L. L. Gaillard, Jr. J. M. Hubball OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 J. D. McCabe H. H. Mayer E. L. Roma, Jr. W. H. Sevfert F. G. Tasker A. B. Vanderbeek, Jr E. S. Welch MEMBERS, 1918 J. K. AcuFP F. G. Belcher R. F. Bole D. C. Brodie W. L. M. Burke C. E. Caspari J. E. Dolman F. S, Doscher F. G. DuRAND J. M. Gaston T. R. IviNs J. S. Kuh.Jr. W. F. Mohan W. C. Spruance W. R. Taylor MEMBERS, 19x9 J. Allison, Jr. T. C. Baer C. C. Balmer A, S. Brown W. J. Christenson C. O. Crocker C. H. Ebbbts L. P. Elliot W. E. Gerber J. C. Reilley J. Requardt F. L. Stout, Jr. P. L. Wardenburo J. F. Williams MEMBERS, 1930 C. T. Baily B. W. Biedenharm J. F. Critchlow j. Forney G. Geraghty M. J. Geraghty R. W. Hardenbergh, Jr. E. M. Indahl H. R. Kirkpatrick R. V. MacKinnon 389 T. H. Moore N. A. Petry D. H. Robinson E. W. Schulbk E. D. Smith P. E. Spaeth W. F. YouNO Shady Side Academy Club OFFICERS S. B. EwiNG, Jr., ' 17 . . President H. S. Lynn, ' i8 . Vice-President A. H. Cline, III, ' zg Secretary-Treasurer MEMBER, 1917 S. B. EwiNG, Jr. MEMBER, 1918 H. S. Lynn MEMBERS, 1919 A. H. Cline, III A. H. Orr, Jr. J. Rial MEMBERS, 1930 C. B. Baton R. E. Clemson A. Crutchfield J. B. Haines M. L. McCune J. O. Nelson A. R. Robinson, II W. R. Wheat, III L. H. Christie E.J. Coyle R. F. Evans K. P. Hughes J. McDonough A.J. Powers, II C. A. Wanamaker, Jr. The Undergraduate Club of Ridf ewood OFFICERS C. K. Thompson, ' 17 President F. W. Pardee, Jr., ' 2.8 Vice-President J. K. Steves, ' 19 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 MEMBERS, 192.8 MEMBERS, 1919 C.K.Thompson C.J.Welles F. W. Pardee, Jr. J.K.Steves R. D. Williams MEMBERS, 1930 G. W. Fitzhuoh J. Peavoy,Jr. C.H.Hodges W.F.Young 390 St. George ' s School Club OFFICERS J. M. RoDBiNs, ' 2.7 President A. M. Neilson, ' i8 Vice-President E. C. McLean, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 192.7 R. M. Ballantine H. T. Gherhardi D. P. Monks F. W. Neilson J. M. ROBBINS MEMBERS, 192.8 T. J. Rosengarten C. Winsor C. F. BOOKWALTER D. F. Cox, Jr. J. H. Grossman, Jr. C. B. Grace H. K. Harding R. W. LOYD H. R. Merriman W. McMillan C. MoRAN MEMBERS, 1919 A. M. Neilson C. B. Newbold, Jr. H. H. Pease J. E. Rennard R. E. Roberts C.J. Ryan, Jr. J. B. Ballantine C. S. Bromley, Jr N. F. BuscH M. P. Collins J. A. R. Dalley E. Dyer R. H. ElSENBREY, Jr. H. G. Powell L. P. Roberts G. F. Ryan J. R. Wainwright J. D. Warriner R. M. Williams, Jr I. D. Windsor, III MEMBERS, 1930 A. P. DuPoNT E. C. McLean 391 N. K. AVERILL A. H. Dakin H. K. Bramhall St. Marks ' School Club OFFICERS , D. P. Caulkins, ' 2.7 President F. L. Pell, ' i8 Vice-President F. M. Palmer, ' zg Secretary MEMBERS, 19x7 J. R. BiGELow D. p. Caulkins H. Clark W. Lewis H. S. Redmond MEMBERS, 1918 E. S. Knapp N. F. Palmer F. L. Pell J. L. Tappin MEMBERS, 1919 J. A. Degen, Jr. F. M. Palmer R. L. Taylor H. H. Tucker MEMBERS, 1930 W. S. Dakin W. Turnbull 392 E. P. BURCH K. Butler St. Paul Academy Club OFFICERS G. T. Trenholm, ' -lj President D. A. Clark, ' 2.7 Vice-President K. Butler, ' z8 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 C. L. Buxton D. A. Clark J. W. Milton W. H. Read G. T. Trenholm MEMBERS, 1918 G. E. Clark R. L. Kennedy B. Mitchell P. C. Weed, Jr. L. Corning, Jr. R. N. Martin D. W. Raudenbush MEMBERS, 1919 J. H. Burr R. B. Okie C. R. Read S. R. Steadman MEMBERS, 1930 F. P. Bradford E. W. Dakin L. G. Dorety 303 A. S. Alexander W. S. Barbour B. Crispin H. L. DeGiveJr. A. F. DuPont.Jr. M. Alexander E. J. Berwind J. W. Cooke F. E. Crispin I St. Paul ' s School Club OFFICERS A. D. S. Davis, ' 17 President A. S. Alexander, ' i8 Vice-President G. G. Thouron, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 J. W. AiTKEN S. Goodman, III A. N. Lawrence A. G. Rosengarten W, C. Breed, Jr. J. W. Grange T. H. Price, Jr. S. Sloan A. D. S. Davis A. H. Harris, II T. W. Pettus H. F. Taylor J. D. Dudley MEMBERS, 19x8 W. Dudley E. M. Ford G, R, Packard R. Stevens G. T. Elliman N. R. Hoff W. Potts J. S. Stout MEMBERS, 19x9 C. p. Foulke J. G. Livingston, Jr. N. W. Mackie H. R. Roberts, Jr. MEMBERS, 1930 D. E. Dismukes, Jr. D. C. Gordon G. H. McFadden, II J. L. Poel B. Dolan, II H. C. G roome J. H. McIlvaine F. Preston N. B. Fry S. B. Lloyd, Jr. A. P. Mills G. P. Seabrease F. Hitchcock F. W. McCann 394 J. H. W. Thompson J. Wilson N. P. Youngs E. Vanderpool R. S. Young F. H. Shearer R. G. Stout C. G. Thouron ( - s•: - nii  ii ,iiwy niiiTiii i—i.viCJIii ' Tl- ' l J Tome School Club OFFICERS George A. Beesley, ' x6 President Walter P. Andrews, ' 2.8 Vice-President Robert McCabe, ' 30 Secretary MEMBERS, 19x7 L. B. Froelich W. W. Marting R. W. Hale MEMBERS, 19x8 F. H. McCoNNELL R.N.Kimball W.P.Andrews J.H.Jordan MEMBERS, 19x9 p. B. CoTT F. Haines J. M. Requardt J. Haines MEMBERS, 1930 R. C. McCabe A. McCracken R. H. Snyder, Jr. 395  ' f It ,   ■ ' ■■ ' Wyoming Seminary Club OFFICERS B. R.Jones, Jr., ' x7 President F. H. Samson, ' 2.7 Vice-President C. D. Brodhead, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 B. R. Jones F. H. Samson C. W. Perkins H. W. Trescott MEMBERS, 19x8 S. G. Redington W. W. Sweet MEMBERS, 1919 C. D. Brodhead J. E. Deitrick A. B. Lewis C. H. Marcus A. Nesbitt, II R. F. Wall MEMBERS, 1930 J. M. Coon C. H. Miner, Jr. 396 California Club OFFICERS J. H. Hume, iS President B. Kelham, ' 19 Vice-President H. L. Lee, ' 30 Secretary-Treasurer A. Y. Fisher J. L. Henderson J. M. HuBBALL MEMBERS 192.7 R. D. Magee J. H. Hume A. W. Patterson B. P. Ghifeith W. W. Candy, Jr. MEMBERS 192.8 H. Gillette W. M. Newmark F. G. Belcher B. Kelham D. C. Smith C. D. McWlLLIAMS MEMBERS J. S. Vhay M. W. Sloane [919 T. C. Baer J. C. Murphy G. D. Braman W. E. Candy G. H. Babcock M.J. Geraghty G. MiLBURN MEMBERS 1930 H. B. Robinson H. L. Lee E. A. McCarthy G. Geraghty D. Vhay J. D. CURRAN 398 Kentucky Club OFFICERS J. V. Norman, Jr., ' xj D. A. Rash, ' 30 . FACULTY MEMBERS C. L. Fleece W. Foster G. M. Priest MEMBERS, 19x7 S. Bowman E. H. Luckett G. M. Castlemak C. Wallace, Jr. H. L. Schlubach T. H. Minary President Secretary-Treasurer R. N. McElroy M. V. JoYEs, Jr. J. V. Norman, Jr. O. E. Bloch MEMBERS, 1918 J. W. Parker J. H. Wallace, Jr. A.J. Alexander, Jr. E. H. Brown, III ' J. C. Norman W. E. Bessire MEMBERS, 192.9 E. D. Halsey B. F. Wilson F. H. Bradbury McK. Miller C. F. Wood J. M. Bradbury D. A. Rash MEMBERS, 1930 S. F. Farmer I. R. Miles J. H. Scales 399 1 I ' II II II II II II ' I ' I II II II II M II II I l_U-ll I M I II I I I I II II I I II II l| II II II TT-T ? 1928 St. Louis Club E. G. BiscBOPF I. F. Boyd W. E. Candy D. F. Collins J. T. Emert T. R. Gkben S. P. Hawkins OFFICERS R. W. La Beaume, ' 2.7 . President R. Baldwin, ' z7 . Vice-President F. C. Bauchens ' 2.8 . . Secretary MEMBERS, I 92-7 R. C. Burns R. W. La Beaume T. W. Pettus H.J. Butler G. L. Lambert H. Salinger B. Raldwin W. F. McElroy .JR. J. T. Walker B. F. H. Cale J. T. Moss, Jr. E. M. Durham MEMBERS, I 918 R. Waterman F. H. Atwood F. C. Bauchens W.W. Candy, Jr. C. E. Caspari, Jr. A. P. Leland C. S. Pangman S. R. Sheldon L. B. Von Weise, Jr J. T. Williams, III MEMBERS, 1919 E. B. HOCKER McV. Goodman C. L. Thompson J. S. McMillan C. H. ScHLAPP F. C. NORRIS MEMBERS, 1930 H. R. KiRKPATRICK C. S. Fox W. S. McChesney D. B. McElroy 400 R.O.T.C. OFFICERS Back Row — Capt. Babcock, Capt. Lawhon, Lieut. Bixby, Lieut. McConnaughy. Frmt Row — Major Inglis, Major Vin Dcusen, Maj. Priclectt. Field Artillery Reserve Officers ' Training Corps AVERY large increase in the number of students enrolled and an expansion in equipment, notably the completion of the new R.O.T.C. quadrangle near the Stadium, marked the seventh year of the existence of the Reserve Officers ' Training Corps at Princeton. Under the direction of Major Van- Deusen and a staff of six commissioned officers, the activities and -wovk of the courses of the University unit have been considerably broadened, and Princeton undergraduates now have an opportunity to study at one of the leading college military training schools in the country. Inspectors from the War Department have on several occasions pronounced it to be of the first rank in every respect. In its basic features, the course in Field Artillery has not been changed. Emphasis is laid on the study of subjects which will be of assistance to the men both in civil and military life. For this reason, radio, the development of the telephone, motors, gas engines, gun construction and design, ballistics, topography, military law, hippology, military history, and various phases of the manufacture of steel are included in the curriculum. At the end of four years, the student is given a commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Field Artillery division of the national Reserve Army. In case of war, he will be V called into service as a regular officer in that rank, but with the unlimited opportunity for advancement, due to the scracity of well-trained men at such a ■ time. The Princeton unit is under the direct supervision of the War Department at Washington, and was one of the first college units to be established on a permanent basis at the conclusion of the World War. J Since it was at President Hibben ' s request that the Government sanctioned the starting of an R.O.T.C. unit at the University in 1919, the fullest i cooperation with the college Faculty and the other departments of study has been maintained. Field Artillery is offered as a two and four-year course to Freshmen, while it is elective for upperclassmen under the new four-course plan of study if the Freshman and Sophomore courses have been completed. i The unit now includes over 700 men, a staff of seven commissioned officers, and about zo non-commissioned officers and privates of the regular army to ' care for the equipment and the 90 horses provided for its use by the War Department. During the summer, over 90 men attended the Field Artillery R.O.T.C. camp at Madison Barracks, N. Y. Starting on June i8th, the members of the Princeton and Cornell units spent the first four weeks of their six weeks of service at the home garrison in routine work, consisting of gun drill in the mornings and mounted drill in the afternoons. The last two weeks of the training period were passed at Pine Camp, about 15 miles distant from Madi- son Barracks, where the men lived under canvas and took part in actual firing. Here both batteries fired a graduation problem under conditions made as realistic as possible. Firing began shortly after midnight, continued for eight hours, and included a defensive concentration fire, a rolling bar- rage, and a progressive concentration of fire in support of an imaginary infantry attack. The University polo and pistol teams are under the supervision of the R.O.T.C. and are coached by officers from the Princeton unit. Captains Prickett and Lawhon were in charge of the poloists during the past season, which was only fairly successful due to the lack of suitable mounts and the poor field. During the season, the team practiced at Rumson for two weeks. The home season was quite successful, the team only losing to P.M.C., but in the intercollegiate tournament at Rye, Princeton was put out by Harvard and lost to P.M.C. in the consolation tournament. The new polo field on Harrison Street just north of Lake Carnegie has been finished. It is on a par with any college field in the country. There has been no opportunity for indoor practice, but it is hoped that by next year the new riding hall will be constructed, allowing play during the entire year. A grandstand seating 300 people is also planned for the new field. Students who are not members of the R.O.T.C. must furnish their own mounts. The new buildings near the Stadium consist of the stables containing stalls and harness and saddle rooms. There is also a blacksmith ' s shop with a forge and a machine shop containing motors, buffers, and other conveniences which make it very complete. The class rooms, gun sheds and pistol range occupy one side of the quadrangle. The range is a complete one andean be used for firing at distances of 15, 2.5, and 50 yards. The targets are illuminated by lights with parabolic reflectors fully protected from stray bul lets. The backstop consists of a two-inch plank wall, then 10 inches of sand, one inch of solid concrete and the outside tile wall. In front of the wooden wall is a steel backstop consisting of inclined and vertical plates to deflect the shots. The men operating the targets, which are of both the fixed and bobbing types, are sheltered in a seven-foot pit in front. The bobbing targets are so arranged that they can all be controlled by one man, while the fixed targets are made in pairs, one target being down in the pit and mended while the other is up in the firing position. A steel ladder leads into the pit and is so arranged that a man cannot climb out of the pit without ringing an alarm bell. The range is about 165 feet long and 33 feet wide and has seven firing points with shooting platforms. Last year ' s pistol team started the season with only a few fairly good shots, having lost most of the best men through graduation. By the end of the season, there were four upperclassmen who were excellent shots and also a Freshman team of five men who were practically as good as the Varsity. The team was quite successful, winning 11 out of the 15 matches. This year ' s team has last year ' s Freshman team as a nucleus and there is hope of turning out a championship team. During the fall term. Captain Inglis became a Major, and the staff of the University unit now includes Major E. R. Van Deusen, Major F. B. Inglis, Captain P. B. Prickett, Captain Z. E. Lawhon, Captain L. F. Babcock, Lieutenant D. S. McConnaughy, and Lieutenant E. A. Bixby. 403 UNDERGRADUATE BATTALION OFFICERS F.A.R.O.T.C. Top Rpw — Fairbanks, Mayes, Collins, Eckcrsoo, Halle, WcisI, Djraivall, Duqq. Sicond Row — Kniffin, Watts, Kellogg, Baldwin, Thulia, DenoistOQ, Prendcrgast. Third Row — Erdman, Wooldridge, Chandler, Pitman, Beard, English, Bryan. N II II I I II II II M II I I II II II M II M n I M I J 7 1928 The Princeton Officers ' Club The Princeton Officers Club is an organization for Seniors, founded in the Fall of 192.4. There are three types of membership — Active, Graduate, and Honorary. The Active members are Officers and First Sergeants of the F.A.R.O.T.C. The Graduate membership consists of these men upon their gradua- tion and also any former Officers or First Sergeants of the Unit, vt-ho have been duly elected. The Honorary membership includes the Regular Army Officers stationed at Princeton as instructors in Military Science, and any outsiders who have been formally elected. There is an Advisory Board of three members, consisting of the Commanding Officer (instructor), who acts as Chairman, one of the other Officers stationed at Princeton, and other members who are selected either from the Faculty or residents of Princeton. The organization of such a club was part of the plan of Major Van Deusen, the present Commandant, to increase the interest in the Unit, and to in- sure cooperation between the War Department, the instructors, and the members of the Unit. Aside from this, the Club also provides an opportunity for several social functions, such as drag-hunts, paper chases, horse shows, and banquets. J. R. Pitman, Jr. OFFICERS Vrcsident M. C. Beard Secretary-Triasurtr Capt. Z. R. Lawhon ADVISORY BOARD Major E. R. Van Deusen Chairman Dean Radcliffe Heermance Prof. John Colt J. R. Pitman, Jr. R. Baldwin M. C. Beard J. Bryan, III R. H. Casev J. R. Chandler R. C. Collins J. E. Damerel, Jr. G. C. Denniston R. C. Dunn E. B. ECKERSON MEMBERS R. W. A. English H. R. Erdman W. C. Fairbanks W. M. Halle J. G. Kelllgg E. A. Kniffin H. H. Mayer J. R. Pitman, Jr. J. Prendergast W. B. Thulin T. F. Trimble S. S. Watts, Jr. B. A. G. Weisl J. P. WOOLDRIIXJE Maj. E. R. Van Deusen M.4J. F. B. Inglis Capt. I. E. Babcock HONORARY MEMBERS Capt. F. B. Prickett Lieut. D. S. McConnaughy Prof. George B. McClellan Capt. Z. R. Lawhon Prof. John Colt Prof. Radcliffe Heermancb G. T. Trenholm, ' 17 Mr. Franklin D ' Olier A. M. Helmrath, ' 17 405 Princeton Polo Association OFFICERS H. R.Erdman, 2-7 President C. R. Agnew, Jr .. ' 2.7 Secretary-Treasurer Leland H. Ross, ' 03 Richard Stillwell, ' 11 A. P Osburn, ' 05 Van S. John Colt, ' 14 P. H. I Merle Smith, ' ii . Frelinghuysen, ' 04 Coulter Huyler, ' 07 R.T. Oliphant EX-OFFICIO Major E. R. Van Deusen, U.S.A. BOARD OF GOVERNORS Alvin Devereaux, ' iz A. D. B. Pratt, 04 . . Prisident Percy R. Pyne, II, ' 18 Vice-President F. Eugene Nixon, ' 09 Secretary . Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE GOVERNORS H. R. Erdman, ' 17 C. R. Agnew, ' 17 MEM BERS I9Z7 A. B. Borden, ' 2.9 C. R. AONEW F. K. Bottomley H. L. Crawford, Jr. R. W. A. English, Jr. H. R. Erdman MEMBERS 1918 ■ W. Halle E. S. Nichols J. Todd, Jr. H. Alexander C. DOUBLEDAY J. R. McIntosh MEMBERS 1919 J. K. Shaw, Jr. R. C. Stewart C. Arnt A. B. Borden R. DiEBOLD G. W. Dodge W. M. DURYEA E. L. Fuller W. H. Haoen J. Hauck C. G. HoGAN B. H. Jackson MEMBERS 1930 H. Koch U. S. McDonald L. Morrill G. A. Schmidt C. P. Smith H. L. Springer, Jr. R. E. Wormser F. G. Beahan F. Beardsley J. Carnwath W. C. CoLBRON J. H. Coulter J. M. Doubleday R. D. HiGGINS W. R. Hine.Jr. F. Hitchcock H. D. KiSTLER E. A. McCarthy J. T. Murtagh G. E. Nichols L. H. Ross, Jr. G. B. Smith G. E. ScHOTLAND C. F. Silverson 406 I I 1 1 I I I I n 1 1 1 1 r I 1 1 I r M 1 1 1 1 I [ u 11 1 1 I I rjH 1928 r Personnel of R. O. T. C. Major John R. Pitman, Jr., ' xy Communications Officer 1ST Lieut, B. A. G. Weisl, ' vj Reconnaissance Officer 1ST Lieut. G. C. Denniston, ' ij BATTERY A Captain, ]. R. Chandler, ' 17 Lieut., T. F. Trimble, ' 17 2nd Lieut., H. H. Mayer, ' 2.7 BATTERY B Captain, M. C. Beard, ' 2.7 ist Lieut., W. C. Fairbanks, ' 2.7 2nd Lieut., R. C. Dunn, ' t-j BATTERY C Captain, R. W. A. English, ' 17 ist Lieut.,]. Prendergast, ' 2.7 2nd Lieut., E. A. Kniffen, ' 2.7 BATTERY D Captain, J. P. Wooldridge, ' 2.7 ist Lieut.,]. E. Damerel,Jr., ' 17 2nd Lieut., W. M. Halle, ' 17 BATTERY E Captain, H. R. Erdman, ' 2.7 1st Lieut., R. C. Collins, ' 17 2nd Lieut., E. B. Eckerson, ' 17 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Adjutant W. B. Thulin, ' 17, Captain Battery C Battery A J. Bryan, III, ' 17, Captain Battery D Battery B R. H. Casey, ' 2.7, Captain Battery E R. Baldwin, ' xj. Captain S. S. Watts, Jr., ' 2.7, Captain ]. G. Kellogg, ' 2.7, Captain 407 i I II II II II II II |l II N -U 11 II It ' If ? 1928 Personnel of R. O. T. C. 1927 D. G. Adam C. R. Agnew R. Baldwin M. C. Beard R. O. Bergh L. H. BODMAN L. M. BOSKEY F. K. Bottom ley S. R. Bradley M. M. BiRIEN J. Bryan, 3RD R. C. Burns T. H. Butterworth R. H. Casey F. Chandler J. R. Chandler R. C. Collins R. P. Cooke J. B. Corser H. L. Crawford, Jr. J. E. Damerel, Jr. A. P. Degenhardt J. W. Delafield G. C. Denniston E. J. Dikeman, Jr. G. W. Dixon H. E. Dunn, Jr. E. B. Eckerson R. W. A. English, Jr. H. E. Erdman W. C. Fairbanks C. F. Fayen W. E. Garrey W. D. George, Jr. A. R. Gessinger V. S. Gettner R. Gilbert R. L. Glanz G. F. Good W. M. Hallo C. B. E. Harts E. Hecksher R. O. Hereford W. H. HiLDICK H. B. Hillman V. W. Hurst, Jr. P. F. HUSSERL H. S. Jeanes, Jr. R. M. Johnston J. G. Kellogg E. A. Kniffin M. A. Koehler W. F. McElroy L. T. McNamara C. H. Marsh, Jr. H. H. Mayer D. C. Mills D. C. Moore R. R. Munoz E. S. Nichols H. N. Packer S. C. B. Peck M. C. PiRES J. R. Pitman J. Prendergast V. C. PUTZ A. G. ROSENGARTEN, Jr. O. J. Sands, Jr. E. V. Selden, Jr. A. M. Shober M. A. Schultz R. R. Slattery F. E. Sloat R. D. Smith G. G. Snowden F. G. Strachan A. M. Suor W. B. Thulin J. Todd, Jr. T. F. Trimble W. A. Valentine S. S. Watts, Jr. B. G. Weisl A. C. Whitaker W. W. Withey J. P. WOLLRIDGE R. C. Dunn 408 !| I I ' II II I ' 11 ' I II II II II II II II II 11 I gj 1 1778 n I I I I I I 1 1 1 1 n II M II 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I 1928 r Personnel of R. O. T. C. — (Continued) 1928 S. M. Alexander K. B. Atkinson N. K. AvERiLL, Jr. J. Bateman, Jr. J. Bay LESS S. M. Becker, Jr. F. G. Belcher W. W. K. Bennett R. F. Bole C. F. Bookwalter S. C. Borton W. L. BoYCE M. M. Bright A. E. Bronson, Jr. R. G. Buchanan, Jr. R. W. D. Caldwell F. E. Camp W. C. Carroll, Jr. C. A. Case H. R. Clapp, Jr. E. L. Clifford H. S. Coster J. I. Dalyrimple C. S. Davidson, Jr. H. S. DONNISTON W. M. DOOLITTLE F. S. DOSHER J. K. Ebbert E. C. Embury J. C. Ferenbach G. M. Fryberger W. B. George T. E. Grabcen, znd H. C. Grumpelt J. A. Gwynne T. F. Hasbrouck W. N. Haskell, 3RD D. N. Hendey W. P. Hersey C. L. Hewitt R. S. HuCKIN R. G. Humphrey C. L. Huston, Jr. W. H. Hurz G. P. Inglis T. H. Jaeckel R. Jemison, 3RD H. Kinder W. V. KiNF D. B. Kipp H. W. Large C. H. Lewis, Jr. D. M. LiDDELL, Jr. W. E. Lowe J. R. McIntosh J. S. McMartin O. H. Mann J. W. Mapletoft F. G. Matheson H. R. Merriman P. D. Milholland J. R. Murrey H. H. Pease, Jr. F. L. Pell, Jr. L. Perin D. Plumer, Jr. W. R. Potts H. PUTMAN, Jr. J. H. Read C. E. Reid J. C. Rennard J. A. Rice J. S. Richardson W. C. Richardson, Jr. S. ROBEY H. C. Rose R. W. Rubidge R. B. SCHALL R. C. Schaub W. L. Seibert J. K. Shaw W. B. Slade B. B. Smith D. D. Smith D. L. Speer T. E. Stern R. C. Stewart, Jr. B. Stout H. R. Stratford J. L. Tappin W. F. Van Deventer L. B. VON Weise T. C. Wallace, 3RD T. Ward, ind G. C. Watson T. A. Whelan, 3RD R. C. Whitsett, Jr. J. M. Wineman C. H. WiSNER C. A. Wright R. Zellar J. R. Eanshawe 409 Personnel ofR. O. T. C. — (Continued J 1929 J. M. Adams W. F. Alexander, Jr. J. Allison, Jr. F. S. Allen J. S. Ancona J. Angus, Jr. K. B. Appel C. E. Arnt, Jr. E. M. ASHCRAFT, 3RD T. C. Baer W. H. Baker, Jr. T. H. Baldwin J. B. Ballentine H. Bannard G. Barker, Jr. R. D. Bartlett E. E. Baruch G. P. BaSSETT, 3RD J. F. Beaird R. T. Be ATT Y N. J. Beaudrias J. A. Becker, Jr. B. Blake, 3RD T. M. Block W. H. BODMAN A. B. Borden I. F. Boyd, Jr. W. R. Boyd, Jr. F. H. Bradbury G. D. Braman, Jr. J. G. Breck C. S. Bromley, Jr. A. S. Brown E. Cage, Jr. J. M. Caldwell W. D. Cambell J. J. Chickering, Jr. W. J. Christeneen C. C. Clarke W. F. Coan W. E. Cobey W. F. Cochran, Jr. M. P. Collins, Jr. W. D. Cox J. S. CoxE, Jr. W. E. Curtis W. A. Damerel P. M. Day A. R. DiEBOLD G. W. Dodge I. DOUGHTON, 3RD A. F. Du Pont, Jr. W. M. DURYEA C. H. Ebbetts, Jr. T. E. Eckfeldt C. A. Edwards F. H. Edwards L. P. Elliott W. Elting J. T. Emert E. J. Finley H. S. Fisher, Jr. J. M. Fisher N. F. Flowers J. J. Foulkrod, 3RD E. L. Fuller C. J. Gables, Jr. R. L. Garland F. W. George W. E. Gerber E. T. Gieske J. O. Giles G. E. Gillespie R. P. Goldsbury M. Goodridge, Jr. M. GOODSON W. A. Graham D. K. Gray A. N. Greminger, Jr. W. H. Hagen J. T. Hague, Jr. F. T. Haines J. W. Haines C. C. Hall R. G. Hanna W. W. Harts, Jr. J. S. Hauck W. T. Healey E. Hicks D. W. Hisstand E. B. HOCKER C. G. HOGAN C. H. Howe A. G. Isaacs, Jr. B. H. Jackson R. V. Jacobs D. James S. S. Janney, Jr. E. L. Jasper W. T. Johnston G. Jones J. Kahrs, Jr. G. G. Kanes, Jr. K. G. Keen, Jr. B. Kelham T. B. Kerr F. H. Kingsbury, Jr. H. F. Kleinhans A. G. Kling H. S. Kniffin, Jr. H. Koch W. G. KiSER A. W. Laidlaw G. M. Lasater F. Lavis, Jr. J. F. Lawrence T. D. Lee V. A. Lee C. E. Levinstein D. F. Lewis 410 Personnel of R. O. T. C. — (Continued) 1929 F. J. LiND J. G. Livingston C. LOCKHART H. A. LoEB T. H. Logan T. S. LOVERING W. G. LUQUEER L W. McCaskye C. B. McDoUGAL C. L. McIlvaine, Jr. ■ W. F. McLallen, Jr. M. M. McLeod J. S. McMillan C. MacRae U. S. MacDonald A. J. MacKie T. A. Matthews B. Mayor R. Mellis F. P. Mellon O. E. Miles D. H. Miller J. C. Miller M. Miller W. S. Mitchell, Jr. J. A. MOFFATT H. Moore, Jr. E. G. Morgan L. M. Morrill D. B. Morrison J. C. Murphy G. Nash A. Nesbitt, ustd W. J. Newell E. M. Nicholas, Jr. N. S. Noble, Jr. D. O ' Day B. Page, Jr. F. M. Palmer H. C. Park J. S. Parker, Jr. J. S. Parrish, Jr. J. E. Parrott, Jr. ' B. C. Patt W. A. Patty C. H. Pitt F. R. Pleasants B. E. POSTE W. T. Priestley, Jr. M. H. Raney J. D. Reifsnyder J. M. Rquardt, Jr. E. S. Reynolds J. Rial E. W. Rice J. M. Richardson W. C. RiDGWAY, Jr. W. E. Robinson J. F. Rood J. E. Rose T. R. RUDEL G. Ryan E. L. Sawyer C. H. ScHLAPP, Jr. G. A. Schmidt B. B. Scott H. B. Sexton, Jr. F. G. Shepard J. R. Sheppard, Jr. B. H. Shoemaker J. A. B. Simpson J. W. Simpson L. W. Sloat C. P. Smith J. M. Snowden H. M. SOUTHGATE, Jr. H. L. Springer, Jr. G. D. Stengel J. B. Stevens J. H. Stevens L. S. Stewart T. H. Swift J. S. Thomas C. L. Thompson L. E. Thron R. B. Thurber G. Titsworth H. H. Tucker J. P. Tyler J. Urquhart J. R. Wainwright J. K. Wallis J. D. Warringer C. G. Weatherly J. C. Webster J. White b. N. WiLBER C. T. Wilder A. C. WiLLAUER R. D. Williams R. M. Williams, Jr. J. D. WiNSOR, 3RD R. H. Wise R. M. Wood J. A. WOOLEY E. W. WOOTEN R. E. WORMSER F. W. Wright J. R. Ferenbach F. D. Updike R. H. Rankin J. G. Jones H. W. Maescher G. Gallowhir G. E. Clark J. J. Roshek 411 Personnel of R. O. T. C— (Continued) 1930 B. C. Alder W. E. Candy J. H. Eisenhart, Jr. H. C. Groome, Jr. C. B. Alexander, Jr. R. A. Carey W. C. Elliott J. B. Haines, IV. S. H. Anders R. S. Carey H. Elting, Jr. C. A. Hamann R. W. Applegate G. G. Carkener H. E. Ensley J. H. Happoldt, Jr. G. Atkins J. Carnwath, Jr. R. Erving W. Hard, Jr. G. Austen, Jr. P. R. Carson R. F. Euwer R.W. Hardenbergh, Jr G. H. Babcock H. W. Carter R. F. Evans B. V. Hedges, Jr. C. T. Bailey, Jr. T. T. Carter R. O. Evans R. S. Hendey C. N. Baker L. G. Chambers E. P. Fairman C. S. Henry, Jr. W. D. Barfield L. H. Christie C. A. Fairs R. Henry, II L. R. Barreti ' R. E. Clemson D. Ferry F. P. Hersey C. M. Baton J. E. Coachman E. P. Field, Jr. R. D. HiGGINS W. C. Battin W. C. COLBRON E. E. Fike F. L. Hilton, Jr. T. G. Beaham D. F. Collins G.J. Finney F. Hitchcock F. Beardsley J. W. Cooke D. N. Fisher E. Holden, III G. H. Beddoe O. S. Cooper J. Forney J. L. Howell E. M. Beiterl, II H. A. Cotton, Jr. D. H. Foxall W. Howland E. W. Bell, Jr. J. H. Coulter G. A. FoYE J. J. Hurst.Jr. J. R. Bennett 1. R. COYLE T. E. Frame, Jr. B. O. Jackson, Jr. B. W. Beidenharn C. C. Crawford J. H. L. French J. S. Janney G. W. Booth F. E. Crispin H. E. Gaillard A. V. Jennings J. M. Bradbury A. P. Crutchfield S. T. Garber O. D. Johnson D. Brereton B. L. Curry O. F. Gardner W. L. Johnston N. B. Brisco E. W. Dakin D. E. Garnar H. M. Jones J. H. Brooks, Jr. A. H. Davis G. S. Gavan H. P. Jordan H. S. Brown, Jr. S. C. Davis G. Geragthy P. G. JUERGENS R. M. Brown R. Delafield M. J. Geragthy H. H. Kasab P. P. Brownrigg J. S. DiCKERSON, Jr. E. D. Gillis R. M. Keech, Jr. P. T. Bruyere, Jr. D. Dodge A. S. Goff R. A. Keery W. M. BURGOYGNE M. H. Dodge E. L. Goodwin E. Keith W. C. Bryon B. Dolan, II D. C. Gordon N. T. Kenney W. G. Caldwell J. M. Doubleday H. K. GoscH F. R. Kent, Jr. B. D. Campbell A. J. DUNCA, III D. L. Graham J. H. Kerr N. D. Campbell H. A. Dunn, Jr. C. R. Griffen E. S. Kip W. S. Candee J. S. Easton, Jr. T. Griswold H. M. Kirk 412 T ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1778 I I I 1 1, n ll_li M I r 1 1 I I M n 1 1 1 1 I I I I i-r-T 1928 ? Personnel of R. O. C. T.— f Continued) 1930 H. R. KiRKPATRICK G. MiLDURN W. C. Roberts C. S. Stevenson E. G. KiRTLAND J. S. Milton D. H. Robinson A. H. Stock well H. D. KlSTLER C. H. Miner, Jr. H. Robinson W. S. Stone, II W. W. Knapp, Jr. A. M. MiZENER H. L. Robinson, Jr. J. Strawbridge J. P. KOONTZ T. H. Moore, Jr. E. C. Rogers F. L. Sullivan W. L. Lashar W. A. Moore S. H. RoLLiNsoN, Jr. W. H. Swift, III F. T. Lawrence, Jr. D. C. Morganthau H. L. Rose E. S. Taylor C. R. Layton J. T. MuRTAGH J. D. Ross M. Taylor R. C. Le Fort R. p. Myers L. H. Ross, Jr. T. H. Taylor S. H. Levine G. E. Nichols P. S. Ross, III F. S. Teachout J. R. Lewis A. S. Nicholson G. W. Ruckert J. H. Thatcher, Jr. E. A. LlGHTNER, Jr. T. Noel, II S. D. S. Sadler G. G. Thouron C. E. LiNVILLE G. W. Oakes, Jr. J. N. Sawyer W. C. Trimble W. M. LODENSTINE C. W. H. Oechler J. H. Scales, Jr. W. TuRNBULL, II D. A. LowRY G. S. Oram W. D. G. Scarlett J. F. Turner, Jr. D. Mac Alister J. H. O ' TooLE J. F. SCHOELLHOPF, Jr. A. J. Valk E. A. McCarthy, Jr. G. E. Owen C. E. Schotland M. M. Valle A. M. Mac Cracken L. P. Owen T. P. Scott G. H. Venard J. McDonough J. F. Page, III G. P. Seabrease R. L. VOGT D. B. McElroy W. P. Palmer, Jr. F. H. Shearer B. H. Vos J. H. McIlvain R. B. Park W. J. Sheldrick N. W. Wagner R. K. MacInnes J. L. Parsons, Jr. A. K. Shenk W. A. Walker R. D. McKiNNON G. M. Payne, Jr. C. T. SiLVERSON C. D. Webb D. MCMULLIN, III J. Peavoy, Jr. J. D. SiNER J. B. Welborn J. W. Mack, Jr. I. J. Pedly T. L. SiSSERSON W. R. Wheat, III C. M. Malone, Jr. •H. S. Pennypacker E. D. Smith B. V. White, Jr. J. Maltman, Jr. N. A. Petry, Jr. E. J. Smith, Jr. R. C. Whitman D. M. Manning W. A. Pollard, Jr. G. B. Smith }. R. Whyte, Jr. J. H. Maroney R. P. Powell, Jr. L. W. Smith b. B. Wilcox L. A. Martin F. Preston G. E. Snyder, Jr. W. Wilson H. M. Marx H. R. Preston, Jr. P. E. Spaeth F. F. Winters, Jr. J. M. Mason, Jr. R. F. Puffer F. D. Sperry B. F. Wolcott P. M. Mecray, Jr. D. A. Rash S. C. Stanton A. E. Wood C. Meneely H. S. Reeder W. H. Stearns D. E. WooDHULL, Jr F. S. Meyers R. C. RiGGS K. A. Stevens 413 :§ MISCELLANEOUS S 1 % Bjck Row — Ijrwis, Baldwin, Bradley. Stcond Row — Carrott, Kicth, Alexander, K.rag, Ballard, Slagle. Ironf Row — Sr.owdcn, Andrews, Bryan, Rhodes, Jaclisoo. Right Wing ' Club OFFICERS J. Bryan, III G. L. Lambert . MEMBERS E. E. Alexander S. R. Bradley, Jr. A. R. Jackson M. E. Andrews J. Bryan, III H. S. Jeanes, Jr R. Baldwin M. B. Carrott E. E. Keith W. F. Ballard D. P. Caulkins W. B. Krag G. G. Snowden ' ■ Not returned t President Secretary-Treasurer G. L. Lambert R. W. Lewis T. E. Rhodes J. W. Slagle 417 MOTION PICTURE COMMITTEE Stdndmi — Agncw, VanSiclen, Hughes, Buckholz, Clark. St tttd — Evans, English, Bartell. The Princeton University Motion Picture Committee CLASS OF 1917 R. W. A. English, Jr., ' 17 Chairman W. B. Evans, ' i8 Secretary E. C. Bartell R. P. BuCHHOLZ MEMBERS, 192.7 R. W. A. English, Jr. R. D. Van Siclen J. P. WOOLDRIDGE D. Agnew W. B. Evans MEMBERS, 1918 T. C. Hughes M. P. Skinner By means of funds contributed by the treasury of each class, the University Motion Picture Committee secures for every class a complete record, in film form, of its activities while in college. In addition, the Committee photographs a complete record of athletics, showing at the local theatres pictures of all important contests. These are shown at all appropriate occasions, such as class reunions and similar gatherings, and before groups of prep school men, thus arousing interest in Princeton. The films are at the disposal of alumni throughout the country. 419 CHESS CLUB Standing — Miller Stern Webster, Cimklio, Coachman, Sharp. StaiiJ — Laflcur, Findlcy, Emery. Chess Club OFFICERS W. G. FiNDLEY, ' 2.7 President L. J. Lafleur, ' i8 Vice-President A. G. Sharpe, Jr., ' i8 Secretary F. CONKLIN, III, ' 2.9 E. Smery, ' 2.9 W. G. FiNDLEY, ' 17 S. P. Goodrich, ' z8 S. A. KORFF, ' i8 L. J. Lafleur, ' 2.8 MEMBERS T. W. Miles, ' }o T. E. Stern, ' 2.8 G. H. Venard, ' }o J. E. Coachman, ' 30 D. M. LiDDELL, Jr., ' x8 F. L. Garrett, ' 19 A. M. Miller, ' 19 A. W. Patterson, ' 17 A. H. RuTLEDGE, Jr., ' 30 A. G. Sharp, Jr., ' 2.8 W. M. Spackman, ' 17 J. C. Webster, ' 2.9 S. Waterhouse, ' i8 I. L. J. Lafleur, ' 2.8 2.. W. M. Spackman, ' 17 3. W. G. FiNDLEY, ' 2.7 4. S. Emery, ' x9 5. T. E. Stern, ' 2. 6. A. M. Miller, 2-9 TEAM 7. J. C. Webster, ' 19 8. F. Conklin, III, ' 19 9. D. M. Liddell,Jr., ' 2.8 10. A. W. Patterson, 2.7 11. F. L. Garrett, ' 2.9 12.. J. E. Coachman, ' 30 13. S. Waterhouse, ' i8 14. T. W. Miles, ' 30 MEETS, 192.6 Jan. 15, 192.6 Rutgers, 3 — Princeton, i. Mar. 2.0, 192.6 U. S. Military Academy, i 1 2. — Princet on, 3 1 2.. Nov. 12., 192.6 Yale, i — Princeton, 9. Nov. 2.0, 192.6 Rutgers, 2. — Princeton, 3. Dec. 4, 192.6 Pennsylvania-Princeton. Resulted in a Draw. The University Chess Team terminated a successful season by winning the Intercollegiate championship over the Xmas holidays. 421 Howard Cuylcr Decker Samuels Bartell Prcndcrgast M 1 1 II i I 1 1 M 1 1 II 1 1 11 II 1 1 : ? 1928 Department of Personnel 1926-1927 Philip Brasher, ' o6 Director BUREAU OF STUDENT EMPLOYMENT NoRVELL B. Samuels, ' 2.4 Manager ADVISORY COMMITTEE E. C. Bartell, ' 17 J. Cuyler,Jr., ' 2.7 J. M. Decker, ' 17 C. A. Howard, ' 17 J. Prendergast, ' 17 Organized in I9i4the Bureau of Student Employment has grown steadily until it now operates for undergraduates various agencies which provide commodities and services for the student body, assumes complete responsibility for all employment at the various contests of the athletic association, and directs the student waiters ' system in the University Dining Halls. It also obtains employment for undergraduates during Christmas recess and the summer vacation. An advisory committee of five seniors counsels the Manager of the Bureau of Student Employment in general policy and also sits with him each year when awards are made of the managerships of the various agencies. If agencies are run by competition the committee decides whether such competition has been effectively conducted, discusses the relative merits of the candidates and confirms the appointment of the winners. This year there are registered with the Bureau of Student Employment 555 undergraduates, or about io per cent of the entire undergraduate body. Last year the same number earned $188,311. The Department of Personnel of the University has been organized to coordinate all the functions of personnel and employment. It provides a channel through which information and counsel can be given to members of the student body who are seeking a decision in the matter of their future careers. It can help graduating seniors secure positions for which they are qualified and interested because then they will be really likely to find success. It will keep a progressive record of all Princeton men in teaching in order to help them advance to positions of increasing influence as their capacities develop, thus serving to increase Princeton ' s influence in the educational field. Of course, the Department will continue through the Bureau of Student Employ- ment to assist undergraduates to find remunerative employment. Mr. N. B. Samuels, ' 14, who has been in charge of the latter function as Manager of Student Employment, will continue in direct charge of this work and will assist with the other functions as well. Mr. Philip Brasher, C. E., ' 06, has been appointed Director of the Department of Personnel, and his office is Room 509, Nassau Hall. 423 TPIt rt H Tf ' TT II 11 [1 II 11 IT It II ' J ' 19281 7 Princeton Radio Club OFFICERS i 1 A. N. Lawrence, ' 2.7 President , M. A. Mayers, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer ' n R. V. MacGregor, ' 2.8 Chief Operator MEMBERS, 19x7 MEMBER, 1919 i -. A. N. Lawrence M. A. Mayers A. Cramer ' 1 fe H MEMBER, 1918 MEMBER, 1950 K. S R. W. MacGregor E. B. Wilson . w, ( V: V f RADIO CLUB Standing — Wilson, Cramer. Sirting — Mayers, Lawrence (president), MacGregor. As prophesied at the beginning of last year, 1916 was the most successful year in its history for the Princeton Radio Club. The Princeton station was heard in England, France, Holland, Germany, Italy, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, and on several occasions was in direct communication with stations in Brazil and Honolulu. The Princeton station is one of a chain of stations along the lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad which are used by that road in its emergency service during the winter months. The Princeton station played a most important part in this service last year. 424 a fT ' S ij B K ' ' 4Kt ig mjm ; 1 B H ■■1 KIbHI ' l l H f  1 1 1 H B-V HllnSn fl9 R[ P Ht-.-mm ' tm E3! K Ul B ■1 Hi Im ii Hfc K P K 1 Npl i ri ■ IHI uE Hi l r F ' ' ' - 1 n m ■H 1 mm ] 1 1 1 H ■P I ' 4MW The Princeton EngineerinfT Society OFFICERS Robert G. Pierce, ' 17 . President William C. Spruance, ' 18 Vice-President WiNTHROP Allen, ' 2.7 . . Secretary Kendrick F. Bellows, ' 2.8 . . Treasurer Members of the Executive Committee include the officers of the Society and the following members ' Winston M. Gottschalk, ' 2.9 Paul H. Pierce, ' 2.9 Walter J. Reeves, ' 30 The Princeton Engineering Society, the undergraduate organization of the Princeton Engineering Association, was founded in 1893, and has as its aim the promotion of social and non-curricular engineering activities among the student members. The Society is unique in that it encompasses the Prince- ton student branches of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, which were established at Princeton by the Princeton Engineering Society in 1916. Four smokers are held during the year, with the entire program under the direction of the undergraduates. Joint meetings of the student branches of the National Societies are held at the time of the regular meetings of the Society. Members of the Society are eligible to membership in the student branches of the National Societies, and the officers of the Princeton Engineerig Society automatically hold the same positions in the Princeton branches of the National Societies. In addition to a short motion picture depicting some industrial processes, four upperclass members give ten-minute talks at each meeting, the subject of which are usually taken from experience gained while fulfilling the summer technical work required of students in the School of Engineering. Through these talks students are enabled to acquire a general survey of the various branches of industry and engineering, especially important in their selections of fields for specialization. Membership in the Society is open to all undergraduates in the School of Engineering, and to all other undergraduates, sub- ject to the approval of the Executive Committee. 425 II n n 1 1 II II II i r 7 1928 6) T ' he Princeton Engineering Associaton OFFICERS K. H. CoNDiT, ' 13 Alfred Rheinstein, ' ii C. S. Proctor, ' 15 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer INCORPORATORS William P. Field, ' 83 Wilbur C. Fisk, ' 90 Frank F. Davis, JohnD. Kilpatrik, ' 95 Charles H. Higgins, ' 03 ' 07 The Princeton Engineering Association was founded in 1911 for the purpose of Iceeping up contact, fellowship, and mutual helpfulness among Prince- ton men interested in engineering. It aims to promote contact between Princeton graduates established by long experience in the engineering field and the younger men as they graduate; and to bring about an interchange of ideas between the graduates and the faculty. There are two chief media through which it operates. The first in the Princeton News Letter, a quarterly magazine containing the news of the engineering world, and the discussion of its relation to the colleges. The second is a series of Brackett lectures, founded in 192.1 in memory of Cyrus Fogg Brackett, late Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering. These, by bringing to Princeton practical engineers and men of affairs, serve to keep the undergraduates informed on develop- ments of importance in the field of engineering. Allied with the Association are three undergraduate organizations, the Princeton Engineering Society, the Princeton Geology Club, and the Princeton Chemical Club. 426 The Round Table The Round Table satisfies a definite need in the life of its members in providing them with interesting and enlightening discussions of national and international events in congenial surroundings. The Round Table meets every third Thursday at the residence of Professor and Mrs. Phillip Marshall Brown, to whom they are indebted for their kind hospitality. R. P. BUCHOLZ R. A. Beardsley J. R. Chandler MEMBERS, 1917 R. C. DuNM M. W. Egerton J. F. Johnston S. Sloan C. WlNSOR G. A. WiRBELAUER R. Stewart MEMBERS, 1918 H. C. Rose S. A. KoRFF A. Alexander 427 Ml I 11 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I 19281 7 The Philosophical Club of Princeton University This Club was formed in the spring of 1916 by a group of upperclassmen who desired to meet regularly to dicuss various phases of philosophy in which they where interested. Weekly meetings began with the fall term and are of two types: the first symposia composed purely of members, the second meetings at which some eminent philosopher explains his position in regard to a particular problem and answers questions of the members. Through the cooperation of the Department of Philosophy the following men have addressed the club during the autumn: Dr. Lucien Levy-Bruhl of the Sorbonne, Dr. Paul Elmer More of Princeton, and Dr. F. C. S. Schiller and Dr. J. A. Smith, both of Oxford. h. l. boatwright Jame s Burnham R. P. Cooke E. C. Blake R. W. Caldwell W. F. CuMMINGS A. H. Dakin H. C. Disston H. D. Garrity Sydney Gorham N. P. Stallknecht, ' xj J. P. WOOLDRIDGE, ' ZTJ P. G. Hart, Jr., ' 18 . E. A. Beller H. C. Blote A. Y. Fisher F. E. Fritts Franklin Gary F. J. Hamilton E. H. Harbison P. G. Hart, Jr. E. B. Hodge, Jr. L. J. Lafleur E. W. McVlTTY W. Fite T. M. Greene C. W. Hendbl MEMBERS, 1917 J. A. Kaufman Herman Salinger W. M. Spackman MEMBERS, 19Z8 G. B. Moment Norman Newmark P. Owen R. O. PlEPER J. F. PiTCAIRN I. A. Powell HONORARY MEMBERS S. J. Herben R. B. C. Johnson P. R. Kretschman President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer N. P. Stallknecht A. M. Stein D. D. SUTPHEN G. D. RiCHMAN H. A. Rue W. Rutherford R. R. Smith L. P. Stallknecht J. C. Taylor H. C. LoNGWELL R. M. ScooN R, SONTAG C. K. Thompson Robert Wales J. P. Wooldridge J. P. Thatcher J. M. Trout P. C. Weed F. G. Weir T. A. Whelan H. P. Wolfe P. S. Young E. G. Spaulding G. T. Whitney The Chemical Club The Chemical Club was organized in 1911, to provide an opportunity for its members to know what the Chemical world is thinking and doing. To this end, largely as a result of the generous endowment of the Club by Mr. Albert Plant, men of renown in their special fields of science are brought to address the meetings of the Club, The Membership of the Club consists of members of the Faculty, the Graduate and Undergraduate students in Chemistry, and many chemists of nearby cities. Colloquiums are held frequently for informal discussions by members of the department on subjects of special interest to the Club. During the past year, Mr. W. A. Noyes, a past President of the American Chemical Society, and Dr. J. M. Braham of the Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, of Washington, have been among those to address the Club. 428 Vanuxem Lectures The Vanuxem Lectures were founded with a bequest of $15,000 left to the University by Louis Clark Vanuxem of the Class of 1879. His will provided that the income from this bequest be used for the delivery before the University of from four to six lectures annually, one-half of which must be on some topic of current scientific interest. This bequest also provided that these lectures be published by the University Press and distributed among the schools and libraries of the country. Last year a series of four lectures was delivered in November by J. Franklin Jameson, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., Director of the Department of Historical Research in the Carnegie Institution of Washington, on The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement. This year Henry Fairfield Os- born, LL.D., Sc.D., D.Sc, Ph.D., President of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, will deliver a series of lectures on a topic to be announced. The Stafford Little Lectures The Stafford Little Lectureship on Public Affairs was founded in 1899 with a gift of $10,000 by the late Henry Stafford Little, of the Class of 1844. At the suggestion of the donor, the Hon. Grover Cleveland, ex-President of the United States, was invited to deliver before the students of the Uni- versity such lectures as he might be disposed to give from year to year, and until his death in 1908 Mr. Cleveland was the Stafford Little Lecturer. Since that time it has been customary to have a different lecturer every year. This year the Hon. John W. Davis will deliver a series of lectures on a subject to be announced. Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectures 192.6-1917 The Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship was established in 1911 by the Princeton Engineering Association in memory of Dr. Cyrus Fogg Brackett, form- erly Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering in Princeton. A scries of lectures is given during the college year on technical subjects by eminent engineers and scientists. The series for 1916-1917 is as follows: October 9, 1916 Thaddeus Merriman, Chief Engineer, Board of Wa- March 15, 1917 ter Supply, New York City — The Walir Supply of the City of New York. December 8, 1916 Guy Emerson, Vice-President, Bankers Trust Com- April 11, 1917 pany. New York City — Business Opportunities for Engineers, Jantuary 18, 1917 L. F. Loree, President, Delaware Hudson Com- May 10, 1917 pany. New York City — Developments in Railroad Engineering. February 14, 1917 (Lecturer to be announced later). San Cal- Harold K. Fox, Engineer of Construction, Joaquin Light and Power Company, Fresno, ifornia — Meeting the West ' s Electrical Demands. Samuel D. Warriner, President, Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, Philadelphia, Pa. — The Coal Industry. Elmer A. Spcrry, President, The Sperry Gyroscope Company, Brooklyn, N. Y. — The Utilization of the Gyroscope in Navigation. 429 1917 PROM COMMITTEE Slaniitu — R. W. La Bcaumc, I. D. Hall. Sulii — A. Sherry, G. L. Lambert, W. R. Howell Senior Promenade Committee G. L. Lambert Chairman I. D. Hall R. W. LaBeaume W. R. Howell C. Payne A. Sherry Junior Promenade Committee W. B. Evans Chairman I. Bunnell, Jr. R. Jemison, III W. M. Hardt, III A. Z. F. Wood 433  1 Sophomore High Hat P-rade RETROSPECT i?! iff ' 5i ife ! jfir Si jfe Si ife ! la a jfe ifc I I I I I I I I I 1 M I I I I II M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I IT- T 1928 7 Basketball Practice Hockey Davis Hayes, Speaker Wittmer January ON the morning of the fifth signs of life began to reappear on the campus. Thoughts of vacation were grudgingly cast aside as the student body settled down to battle with the annual bugaboo, the mid-year examinations. The Princeton Triangle Club completed its 4,000 mile circuit presentation of Fortuno, the longest trip on record. Newspaper critics were generous in praise of the production, while alumni expressed their enthusiasm by rilling to capacity every house along the route which stretched from Pittsburgh to Omaha, and back via Chica- go to New York, including the larger intervening cities. If the Triangle Club experienced a delightful trip, the Musical Clubs found the holidays equally enjoyable in journeying to Bermuda where they were hospitably wel- comed by ex-President Patton. During the holiday trip of Princeton ' s hockey squad Coach Ramsey ' s men failed to develop the necessary offensive or defensive ability to account for more than a single victory, three of the four games on the schedule resulting in defeat. In post vacation contests the Uni- versity sextet suffered setbacks from Queens College of Canada, Harvard, and St. Nicholas. A brilliant victory was won over the fast New York A.C. by a one point score in an extra period. The Basketball quintet under Coach Wittmer brought back one victory and four de- feats from the games played during the Christmas recess. After vacation the quintet won from George Washington University, Haverford, Pennsylvania, and the Pennsyl- vania Military Academy, but was defeated by Columbia and Cornell. In the course of the month the University was visited by several speakers of national and international fame who lectured on a variety of subjects. Mr. Michael I. Pupin described some of the work that he had accom- plished in the field of electro-dynamics; Mr. Roy Chap- man Andrews, world famous explorer and naturalist, told of the trip that he had recently made into the Gobi Desert in Mongolia which resulted in the valuable dis- covery of the dinosaur eggs; Dr. H. W. Stunkard spoke on Animal Parasitism with reference to the Blood In- festing Flukes ; Mr. Clarence J. Hicks, Assistant to the President of the Standard Oil Company, gave an inter- esting lecture on the Labor Policy of the Standard Oil Company ; Mr. William J. Hale told how research in Chemistry might best be promoted; the Hon. Alfred Nerinex, mem.ber of the Belgian Senate informally ad- dressed the Polity Club on relations between Belgium and the United States. The members of the University enjoyed several musical attractions during the month. Arthur Whiting again delighted a Princeton audience with his piano solos. Despite the on-coming examinations the students found time to enjoy the Fiske Jubilee Singers and the Organ Recitals of the noted Belgian musician, Charles M. Courboin. The record of athletic activities during the past month shows the wrestling, swimming, and water polo teams undefeated, while the University hockey and basketball teams have won as many victories as they have suffered defeats. 437 Barber Poles Van Ryan Wins Tournament I I I I I M M I 1 I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I IIJ 1928 ? Student Purged Exams ] February THE mid-year examinations arrived at last ushered in by long faces from sleepless nights of study. False lire alarms together with the uproar of the celebra- ted Poler ' s Recess furnished brief recreation for the strenuous days of exams. With the end of the examination period athletic activi- ties took on a brighter outlook. The University hockey team took the measure of Cornell, Hamilton, Yale, and Williams, but was defeated by Dartmouth and a second time by Harvard. The two weeks of purely academic pursuits had no beneficial results on the team play of the University quintet. The first post examination con- tests resulted in defeats from the Catholic University of Washington and from Cornell. The Tigers won a very close game at New Haven from Yale by a 31-2.9 score. The swimming and water polo teams easily won from Columbia and Pennsylvania, but suffered intial defeats of the season from Yale. The Tiger matmen were downed by Army, but won from Harvard. Fencing has been rein- stated as a minor sport at Princeton. In the first match the Tigers won from Syracuse by a one point lead. Base- ball, crew, and track resumed activities in preparation for the coming spring season. The social life of the Campus began once more. The Triangle Club presented Fortuno to thoroughly ap- preciative audiences in Philadelphia and Plainfield. The Princeton Musical Clubs sung and played to Orange and Brooklyn audiences. The Halls, too. Whig and Clio, started upon an imposing program of lectures and de- bates. Musical attractions afforded pleasure for many. Arthur Whiting presented the third of his series of five recitals; a song recital by Eva Gauthier and Ernest De- Wald delighted a capacity audience; the Flonzaley Quar- tet, most famous organization of its kind in the world, thrilled the music lovers of Princeton; Pablo Casals, probably the world ' s greatest living cellist, gave the undergraduates a rare musical treat. Several prominent men gave interesting lectures to a more interested group of hearers. Professor A. A. Bow- man presented a series of ten lectures on Philosophy; William Green, President of the American Federation of Labor, explained the great significance of the new wage policy ; William H. Truesdale, President of the Dela- ware, Lackawanna Western Railroad, told of his experiences in railroading. All classes were suspended on Washington ' s birthday. The National Alumni Association held a meeting in the morning with over 500 Princeton graduates present. The holiday orators and debaters demonstrated their re- spective rhetorical and forensic abilities in Alexander Hall. W. H. Vodrey, III, ' 16, was awarded the debater ' s prize, and H. C. Rose, ' 18, the orator ' s prize. In the after- noon the Tiger hockey team furnished thrilling entertain- ment to the holiday visitors to the tune of a x-i defeat over Yale. That night the swimming and water polo teams easily defeated Pennsylvania. News was received from New Haven that the basketball team had defeated Yale, too. During the course of the month Laughlin Hall, recently finished, supplied rooms on Campus for 85 men. With the signs of spring approaching work is progressing with renewed vigor on the new chapel. 439 Blanton of Texas Bicker Week Distributing Brie Junior Prom TTTI I C ' ' ' ' ' f ' Tf r r ' 1 1 1 1 it m t i m m i i i i j 7 I March IT is during March that winter sports give way to spring sports. It is the time when other extra-curricu- lar activities are at their height. March also brings the Sophomore Club elections and the usual bickering and calling. During this month last year the number of Sophomores enrolled was the largest in the history of Princeton ' s clubs, and the second trial year of the new elections system was very successful. The basketball season was concluded with a victory over Penn though earlier in the month the Tigers bowed to Dickinson and Columbia. Princeton won only half of its League games, although Loeb was high scorer in the League. Princeton was nosed out of the Intercolleg- iate swimming title by Navy and Yale, and the water polo team, handicapped by the loss of several players through sickness was defeated by both Yale and Navy. Earlier in the month The Tiger tankmen overwhelmed Columbia at New York. Late in March Captain Hawkins ' i6, and Bowron, ' 2.8, placed third and fourth respectively in the 440-yard swim and backstroke in the Intercolleg- iates, and the freshman loo-yard relay team won their event. In the final meet of the season, the gym team lost to Dartmouth by a one-sided score. J. E. Taylor, ' i8, how- ever, during the meet set a new Princeton record for the rope climb. R. D. Snively, ' iS, won the Intercollegiate gym title in Philadelphia by piling up the greatest num- ber of points in five events. The Triangle Club elected as its oificers for next year Herbert C. Sanford, president, and A. Sherry, secretary. C. A. Howard and S. E. Ewing were elected president and vice-president respectively, of the Philadelphian Society for 1916-192.7. Two sports captains were elected — E. G. Alexander was chosen to lead the basketball team, and A. D. Davis was elected head of the hockey team for 1917. Coach Ramsey of Princeton named G. Hallock, ' xj, on his all-eastern hockey sextette. Princeton ' s Musical Clubs were active during March; the Glee Club taking second place in the Intercollegiate Glee Club contest, which was won by Ohio Wesleyan; the Musical Clubs recorded for two records in the Bruns- wick studios, after which they gave a concert in Newark ; and the University orchestra, assisted by Rosemary Street gave a delightful concert in Princeton. Arthur Whiting, assisted by the Hartmann quartet, and Schola Cantorum also made appearances in Princeton. Can- dida, successfully presented by the Theatre Intime, was another attraction of the month. Helen Keller, Richard Halliburton, ' 2.1, Albert Shaw, editor of Review of Reviews, Norman Thomas, ' 05, and Representative Thomas L. Blanton were speakers at Princeton during March. At a meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society twenty Seniors and five Juniors of Princeton were elected to that honorable institution. While Princeton debaters defeated Amherst at Princeton by three votes, the Princeton nega- tive team lost to Brown at Providence in the early part of March. Due to the lateness of the season the spring sports were unable to make any headway until the latter part of March, when the crew candidates were finally able to get out on the lake after a long winter on the machines and a week ' s practice on the canal. The baseball squad for- sook the cage for outdoor practice on University Field and the track men began practice in the Stadium. At the same time the spring call for football candidates was issued. The first baseball game with Bowdoin on the last Saturday of the month resulted in an 8-5 victory for the Tigers. 441 I I I n n 1778 ' I ' I ' I ' ' ' I ' I ' I ' ' ' I M i 1 11 Activities Building Plans Crew Practice House Parties Booth ' s daggers April WITH April came the welcome Easter recess, fol- lowed by preparations for graduation. Class day officers and the class day committee were elected, and the seniors shoneres plendent in their beer suits. Un- derclass ownership of cars was prohibited by the action of the Senior Council, and the Administration put the plan into effect. Prohibition furnished a lively topic for camp- us discussion. The Princetonian published the opinions of many prominent men. The Senior Council passed a merger, under which the Polity, Law, and Arts Clubs were affi- liated with Whig and Clio. The present upperclass club system was endorsed by a referendum in which both clubmen and non-clubmen voted. Four men were elected to the Senior Council of 192.7. Competitions for freshmen were in progress for the Princetonian, the Tiger, the Press Club, and Triangle Managerial Staff. The Trustees amended the four course plan so that seniors of excep- tional ability could have a greater opportunity to develop their knowledge through independent research by taking only three regular courses. During the Easter recess, the University Orchestra took a trip South and reveled at White Sulphur Springs, Hot Springs, Staunton, Charlottesville, and Baltimore. Later in the month it gave its final concert of the year at Princeton, with John Kirkpatrick as soloist. Under- graduate music lovers also heard Robert M. Crawford in his own recital and the fourth of a series of lectures by Dr. Alexander Russell on The History and Apprecia- tion of Music. Concluding the series of four concerts arranged by the Princeton Music Committee, the Phil- adelphia Symphony Orchestra presented a program in Alexander Hall. The outstanding entertainment of the month was Will Rogers ' trip to town. He brought with him the De Reszke Singers, who had a wonderful reper- toire, but one that was completely overshadowed by the line shot by the Follies comedian. The baseball team also went South, on its annual spring training trip, and won all its games except the one at Georgetown. Upon its return it played six regular games during the month, with Villa Nova the only rival that chalked up a victory. The lacrosse team opened what proved to be a championship season and placed Lehigh, Stevens, and Rutgers among its victims. The track team competed in the Penn Relays, in which S. R. Bradley, ' 17, took first place in the pole vault. Coach Logg gave the crew stiff workouts in preparation for the first race of the season with Harvard and M. L T. The University tennis team played two matches, losing the first to the Baltimore Country Club and winning the second from the Lehigh netmen. Harvard won the triangular debate by defeating the Princeton and Yale teams. The subject was Resolved, that education is the curse of the present age. A team was sent out to the University of Chicago to participate in the initial debate between the two institutions. This marked the renewal of college relations as well, since they had been broken after the gridiron battle of 1911. Princeton was awarded the decision in an Oxford style debate. The English-speaking Union repeated its invitation of the prev- ious year, offering Princeton an opportunity to send two representatives to tour England during the summer. Much work was done on the plans for the campus activities building which will house the student organi- zations in the near future. Plans for a new Engineering Laboratory were also considered. The end of the month ushered in house party week-end at the clubs. The Thea- tre Intime presented as its bill for this occasion, The Dover Road, by A. A. Milne. The production was high- ly successful. 443 = J Mi I ' lii • OIll ' Alll.lii il ' WPIfPVm H H ' t K f •-. ' WW ' Senior Singing Home Plate Action I ■Bbi p E Annual Horse Show Cheer Leaders May WITH the coming of May, the extra-curricular activities expanded to an unusual degree of fullness. Athletic, social, and miscellaneous interests were present in more than sufTxient measure to cause serious injury to academic pursuits. To this were added the soothing blights of spring fever and warm, balmy nights. The baseball team was fair, first beating Harvard i6 to 6 and then on May 19 losing the return game by the score of 5 to o. The Freshmen had an entirely successful season by their 4 to z victory over Yale. The showing of the track team was poor. We lost to Harvard, Yale and California. In the annual Caledonian Games 1918 was victorious. On the water the 150-pound crew was out- standing by its string of victories, particularly by their great showing at Philadelphia on May 31. The Carnegie Cup races had to be cancelled because of rough water. In polo and golf the work was fair. Five championships were won this month, increasing the long list of this year. These were the Varsity lacrosse and tennis teams, and the Freshmen baseball, lacrosse and tennis teams. May was fittingly welcomed with entrancing music from the many famous orchestras along Prospect Street. These were playing for the pleasure of the club members and their fair guests. For several days some of the more intellectually inclined had grave fears that the Univer- sity had suddenly become co-educational. But with Monday their fears were over and spring fever returned with renewed energy. Senior singing and beer suits made their appearance on the campus. The orchestra gave its final concert and the Field Artillery entertained with a most interesting horse show. Bands of candidates began getting the Triangle show ready to set up. Intellectually the month was successful. A new three- course plan for exceptional upperclass students was decided upon in order to promote individual initiative. A large audience had the privilege of hearing Richard Halliburton, ' 2.1, tell of his amazing travels and adven- tures. Prof. A. A. Bowman gave a farewell series of lec- tures on Religion and Life. The heavy hand from Nassau Hall descended on the Personal Number of the Tiger , and accordingly it came out safely censored. Of utmost importance to the undergraduates was the new ruling regarding cars. Restrictions are now place on their use, particularly for Sophomores, and permits are required for ownership and operation. A referendum on Prohibition conducted by the Prince showed that the undergraduates and faculty were opposed to Volstead- ism and the saloon. As usual, statistics and elections were recorded in print almost daily. The new chapel continued to rise in spite of disputes and strikes by some of the workers. West College was given over to the re- juvenators. It was generally agreed that it couldn ' t be made worse. Only a few Seniors were to be heard singing under the elms on these May nights. The four-course plan was continuing its deadly work. 445 « Commencement Caught West Begins to Grow H Ti Tr n If 1 r ' ' TT ' TT Tr ' 1 1 1 1 rr ' ' ' ' ' It ' W 1928 June JUNE entered bringing along its lazy afternoons, its gorgeous sunsets, its period of examinations, and its horde of returning alumni. Too many were the dis- tractions as some learned to their grief. The month moved rapidly along with many high spots and many seem- ingly unimportant episodes and events that go to make up the life and tradition of the University. Iced tea was the cry in Commons. Baseball held a certain amount of interest, although the season ended disastrously with a second loss to Harvard and two defeats at the hands of Yale. The Commencement game was incidental to the huge, spectacular P-rade of the Classes that have gone before. Round the field moved innumerable bands, ban- ners, the Spirit of ' 76, ' 81 with its flags of General Wash- ington and the thirteen Colonies, ' 01 with its flock of future Princeton men and future Princeton supporters, and ' 16 with its record-breaking crowd. Previous to Commencement a great amount of excite- ment pervaded the Campus. A daring Professor staged an Alpine stunt on the perilous walls of Henry Hall. A ferocious student boldly saot at buckets and street lights with an air rifle while safely concealed in his room. The Class of 1901 filmed a mystery movie around Alex- ander Hall. On the night of June eighth a full-grown riot was staged by the student body. The police dummy, the fire engine, and the tear bombs suffered severe in- juries. The Senior Council officially did away with the Flour Picture for future Freshmen. Those who lived through exams either left for home or enjoyed the many entertainments of Commencement. Numerous tents put in their appearances in vacant lots. Undergraduates became lost in the milling mob of alumni. And the grass had been preserved for this! The five days of glorious weather were crowded to the full. The Tri- angle Club produced Fortuno on Friday and Saturday nights, while on Monday night the Sophomore reception was an unusual success. In honor of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the Declaratio 1 of Independence, old Nassau Hall was lighted with 140 tallow dips, two in each of its windows. The Baccalaureate Sermon was delivered by President Hibben. With Class Day came the final preliminaries to gradua- tion. L. T. Merchant, ' i6, was Master of Ceremonies. The time-honored customs were again carried out as the Oration and Class Poem were read, as the Ivy was planted beside Nassau Hall, and as the Cannon exercises were concluded with the breaking of the clay pipes. As the 393 Seniors were awarded their diplomas in front of Nassau Hall, the 179th Annual Commencement was brought to a close. Tuesday night saw the Senior Class reigning supreme on a deserted and lonely campus. 447 First Mass Meeting Bishops of London 1. t ' Cane Spree Intime Presents ■Faustus October A FTER summer had come to a close, Princeton Univer- f sity entered upon its i8oth academic year. The ■ ■ ■ - Class of 1930 started its career with 6ix members. The Philadelphian Society welcomed the freshmen at a reception, and the following weelc President and Mrs. Hibben greeted them at Prospect. As usual, a great many competitions for the various student activities were opened to the Sophomores, who did not fail to take advantage of their opportunities. Football was foremost in everyone ' s mind. The team had practiced for two weeks before college opened in order to be ready to meet Amherst on October 2.. The game resulted in a Princeton victory, but the team exhibited weaknesses that were not remedied until the end of the month. The following week Washington and Lee held them to a tie, and then the Navy visited Princeton and administered the only defeat of the season. Lehigh and Swarthmore completed the October schedule, and left the undergraduates looking forward to the Big Three contests that were to prove so eventful. The soccer team met many rivals during the month. It made a good record, dropping only one game when Cornell nosed its way to a one-point victory. Trackmen were called out for fall practice, and the annual Intra- mural meet attracted a large number of the unrecognized athletes. Lacrosse candidates also went into fall training. The cross country men finished second in a triangular meet with Rutgers and Union College. The members of the crew resumed their ceaseless grind as soon as they reached college. A touch football league v as organized by the clubs to provide fun for the undergraduates who did not participate in the more vigorous sports. The month was full of important events in campus life. The Philadelphian Society had no sooner launched its annual charity drive than an open forum was held in which the students expressed their disapproval of some of the methods of the organization. A committee was appointed to investigate the charges that were made, and the Senior Council took over the management of the drive. The upperclass clubs adopted a system of exchange privileges of guests for a month ' s trial. They also formu- lated a plan of combined purchasing that is expected greatly to reduce club expenses. The non-clubmen organ- ized themselves into what will be called the University Club, and they decided to move from the University Dining Halls to Prospect Street as soon as housing ac- commodations are provided. The Halls started their activities for the year guided by the merger that was passed last spring, under whicn the Polity, Law, and Arts Clubs were incorporated with them. The lecture season opened with some exceptionally fine speakers. The most renowned of them was the Right Reverend and the Right Honorable Arthur Foley Win- nington-Ingram, D.D., Lord Bishop of London. He visited Princeton hile making a tour of the American colleges in order to talk to the youth of the country. The first Trask Lecture of the year was given by Professor S. Radhakrishnan upon the philosophy of Hinduism. Another was g:iven later in the month by Professor John Alexander Smith, who dealt with Italian Philosophy. Professor Hermann Weyl spoke at a third provided by the fund. A series of lectures on The Religious Paintings of the Christian East was given by M. Gabriel Millet, Professor of the History of Art at the College de France. The Triangle Club conducted a number of cast and chorus trials for its new production and made prepara- tions for the Christmas tour. The Theatre Intime outdid itself in its presentation of Marlowe ' s play, Dr. Faust- us. With Hallowe ' en came the Senior Prom, and it was a wonderful affair. 449 Chapel Growing Pres. Hibher and Dr. Crane Remnants of Bonfire Prince Touch-football Team J I I I I I I I N I I I I I I II I I I I II I I I I I [ I I I 1 1 I I I 19281 7 November COMING as a direct result of the growing spirit of mutual ill will manifested by the undergraduate body of Harvard and Princeton, the threatened break has taken place in the athletic relations of these two traditional sport rivals. The partial agreement reach- ed in early October by the athletic heads of Yale, Har- vard and Princeton was only temporarily successful, and on Wednesday, November loth, athletic relations in all sports were officially severed. Word of the move was received with audible rejoicing among the Princeton undergraduates. After the importance of the move was realized, much regret was evident, but on the whole the general opinion was that the action of the Board of Con- trol was inevitable and wise. Princeton has won the ' ' last Big Three Championship! Starting in September with a wealth of material and prospects for a brilliant season, the Team encountered difficulties in early season games, but developed into a powerful aggregation which was victorious over Har- vard and Yale. A rejuvenated Harvard team was con- ceded an even chance, but early in the game the Tigers revealed a superiority in both attack and defense which carried them on to a ii to o victory. Spurred on by the desire to win the last Big Three Championship, Prince- ton faced Yale for the fiftieth time, determined to claw the Bulldog. With Slagle out of the game, the result was in doubt to the last. Princeton won lo to 7. The final Big Three Championship has been won; however, the Bulldog and Tiger, after 50 years of friendship and good sports- manship, will continue their long-standing rivalry. Gleeful Freshmen collected indeterminate cords of fire- wood, ravished dumps for obsolete Fords, and buried the Cannon 30 feet deep beneath the result of their labors, in preparation for Princeton ' s celebration of the last Big Three Championship. After a mournful P-rade, led by the band, the torch was applied to the pyre by Captain John Davis, amid the din of many locomotives and the firing of a French .75. Princeton ' s fall sport teams closed their seasons this month with records which on the whole were successful. For the fourth time in 8 years, the Princeton Soccer Team won the Association Championship. The 11930 Football Team ended a very successful season with only a close defeat by Yale Freshmen to mar its record. The call was made for candidates for the winter sports — hockey, basketball, swimming, water polo, wrestling, and fencing. After a week of canvassing, in which there were al- most 100 refusals and little more than one-half the cam- pus canvassed, the Philadelphian Society decided to pro- long its drive. The canvassers and contributors seemed to be playing a game of hide-and-seek. As a last resort the Senior Council took charge of the drive. President Hibben has announced the appointment of a Committee for the investigation of the Society. During the past month, the Triangle Club ' s new pro- duction, Samarkand, has shown rapid development. The Musical Clubs were again active auring Thanksgiv- ing, presenting concerts at Pelham and on the eve of both the Yale and Harvard games, combined concerts were given by the Yale-Princeton and Harvard-Princeton Glee Clubs. The University band has achieved a note- worthy record, climaxed by the Walter Camp Memorial exercises between the halves of the Yale-Princeton game. The Theatre Intime recovering from the effects of its Dr. Faustus, has decided to produce three undergrad- uate plays next month. With a stag line 15 men long in continuous pursuit of Lois Moran and Ben Bernie ' s orchestra doing noble work, the Senior Promenade was proclaimed a distinct success. 451 The Chorus Golden Samarkand Triangle Mentors Hockey ' December A GENERAL quickening of spirits after the Thanks- giving recess indicated the approach of the long- awaited Christmas holidays to the campus. Even the Freshmen, with the ominous shadows of the Uni- form Tests looming before them, looked to the future with confidence. With the closing of the outdoor athletic season, the hockey and basketball teams once again began to receive well-deserved attention. The rinkmen met with rather good fortune in their preliminary games, but had a fairly discouraging Christmas trip. The basketball team practically duplicated this record, defeating Lehigh and Lafayette before the holidays, but meeting with virtual failure on its mid-Western tour. The wrestling, swim- ming, and water-polo teams also got under way with reasonably good outlooks for their respective seasons. Echoes were heard from the football gridiron with the announcement of the election of C. R. Moeser to the captaincy of the 1917 team. In the world of music, a capacity crowd filled Alex- ander Hall to hear the New York Philharmonic Orches- tra, conducted by shock-haired Willem Mengelberg, present a brilliant concert, the second in a group of four sponsored by Princeton music-lovers each year. Arthur Whiting presented the first of his annual musical offer- ings — a recital of 17th and i8th Century chamber music. Both Whig and Clio were active in this busy season, and speakers before joint meetings of the two Halls included such well-known men as Alexander Woollcott, dramatic critic of the New York World, and Clarence Darrow, famous criminal lawyer who was heard here last year in the National Collegiate World Court Conference. A Sophomore inter-club committee of ten members was chosen to act as an intermediary body between the club members and the underclassmen. Calling at the clubs under the new election rules took place on the two Sundays before the beginning of the vacation. The Theatre Intime returned to its policy of producing undergraduate plays and staged four such one-act dramas, namely, Shore, by H. E. Ambler, ' 2.7; The Lady in the Chair, by H. Clark, ' 17; Make Believe, by S. B. Ewing, ' 2.7, and Confessional, also by Ambler. The Musical Clubs returned from a successful journey through the East, making excursions to Pelham, Montclair, and Glen Ridge. After a feverish period of rehearsal and preparation, the Triangle Club produced its latest offer- ing, Samarkand, an Oriental comic opera, for three nights at the Trent Theatre in Trenton, and then departed on an ambitious tour of the East, South, and Middle West. H. C. Rose, ' 2.8, Chairman of the Committee on Com- pulsory Chapel of the Student Federation of America, made public the results of a questionnaire sent to college presidents, ministers, and editors of undergraduate pub- lications, which indicated a heavy vote in favor of compulsory daily chapel, but an unfavorable vote in regard to compulsory Sunday chapel. At the same time, the Philadelphian Society was choosing delegates to represent the University at the Milwaukee Conference of the National Student Movement held from December 2.8th to January ist. Work was begun on the excavating for the new dormi- tory in Gothic style which was the gift of James H. Lockhart, ' 87. The building will be situated between the Hill Dormitory and Professor Critchlow ' s residence on University Place. Of an architecture to harmonize with the nearby dormitory groups of ' oi-Laughlin and Foulke-Henry, the new building will probably be completed in 152.8. 453 I 1 I COMMENCEMENT - ' i ' ' CJHUMATF 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II n 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 1928 Class of 1926 Sayre MacLeod, Jr., Secretary (192.6-1931) OFFICERS, 1915-1916 Waller Beall Booth, Jr. Livingston Talmadge Merchant Sayre MacLeod, Jr. President V ice-President Secretary and Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, FIRST TERM FORMER OFFICERS Robert Nelson Moore Prrsidint William Morris Austin Vict-Prtsidcnt Waller Beall Booth, Jr Secretary and Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM William Morris Austin . Dan Platt Caulkins Waller Beall Booth, Jr. President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Dan Platt Caulkins President Waller Beall Booth, J r Vice-President Livingston Talmadge Merchant Secretary and Treasurer JUNIOR YEAR Waller Beall Booth, Jr. Livingston Talmadge Merchant William Van Keuren President V ice-President Secretary and Treasurer 457 Class of 1926 This list includes only the names of members of the Class of 1 26 who received degrees in June, 1 26, or in the Fall of 1 26 by special arrangement. Former members of the Class, candidates f or degrees in February or June, 1(127, ■ ' listed in the Class of 1 2 . Charles John Adami.Jr Bonne Terre.Mo. Avon Franklin Adams 150 E. jind St., New York City John Gorden Alexander 148 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Ralph Irving Alford 9 N. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Stuart Mason Allen 949 Marshall Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Herbert Edward Anderson Corning Rd., Norwich, Conn. Richard Hundley Anderson. . . .195 College Ave., New Brunswick, N.J. George Baker Atwood 100 S. Clay Ave., Ferguson, Mo. Knight Guild Aulsbrook Green Hill Rd., Madison, N. J. Joseph Henry Bacheller, Jr 97 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. William Wright Backes 608 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Robert Bradley Bacon 191 Lincoln St., New Britain, Conn. Thomas Jennings Bailey 1844 Columbia Rd., Washington, D. C. Theodore Lang Baily Ingeborg Rd., Overbrook, Pa. Charles Scott Bannerman 15 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. Daniel Joseph Barry, Jr 51 S. Lake Drive, Lakewood, N. J. Harry Edwm Battin, Jr 116 E. First St., Corning, N. Y. George Raimes Beach, Jr 167 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Harold Ashton Beatty Syracuse Trust Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Thaddeus Edmund Beck Whipple, Fayette Co., W. Va. Philip Smith Becker 651 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa. Stewart Becker 433 Rochelle Ave., Rochelle Park, N. J. George Daniel Besler 917 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. William John Besler 917 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Hobart Dominick Betts, Jr 40 E. 83rd St., New York City Theodore Berry Bird 6io Taylor Ave., Scranton, Pa. Donald Spencer Black 30 Blymyer Ave., Mansfield, O. Gilmer Vardiman Black 1150 Asbury Ave., Evanston, 111. Jeremiah Sullivan Black Grove Rd., Princeton, N. J. George Frederick Blackburn Cessna, Pa. Eugene Edward Blazier, Jr. .1130 E. Burnside St., Portland, Ore. William Graffen Blood 114 Fulton St., Keokuk, la. John Clark Bole, Jr., Delmar-Morris Apts., Philadelphia, Penna. Cecil Snow Booth 361 Huntington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Lansdowne Hebbard Bowen. . . .75 Greenacres Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Edmund Beber Boynton 131 Nassau St., New York City August Brauer, Jr 135 Nutly Ave. , Nutly, N. J. John Withrow Brewer 40 Central St., Boston, Mass. William Weeks Brinckcrhoff. .iioN. Fulton Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. NAME ADDRESS Howard Benner Brown 612. W. Hortter St., Philadelphia, Pa. Sherman Thompson Brown Brown Hotel, Denver, Colo. Samuel S. S. Browne 12.0 St. Georges Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Archibald Johnston Buist, Jr, ...2.79 Meeting St., Charleston, S. C. Albert Home Burchfield, Jr 2.10 Tennyson Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Baldwin Gwynne Burr 33 N. High St., Columbus, O. Pierce Butler, Jr 368 Audubon St., New Orleans, La. Winfield Louis Butsch 136 Hartwell Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. Theodore Verne Buttrey Havre, Mont. Edward Lester Carpenter iiiij Bellflower Rd., Cleveland, O. S. Levering Cartwnght 2.115 Lincoln St., Evanston, 111. Martin Allen Charles i Beach St., San Francisco, Cal. Louis Joseph Cheskin 381 Fairmount Ave., Newark, N. J. Wade Turner Childress 400 S. Broadway, St. Louis, Mo. Thomas Charlton Clark ii8 N. Martin Ave., Canton, O. James Logan Clevenger, Jr 115 Rector St., Perth Amboy, N. J. David Leroy Coddington 831 Monroe Ave., Scranton, Pa. Mulfred Albert Colebrook Hotel Rochester, Rochester, N. Y. John Guion Coleman 47 W. 56th St., New York City W. Lippincott Colket Bryn Mawr, Pa. Henry Hill Collins, III Yarrow Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Edward D. Cone 83 Beverly Rd., Montclair, N. J. Roland Hunt Conklin 38 E. 85th St., New York City Donald Westbrook Conner. .47 Mersereau Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Frank Hayden Connor. .951 — N. Beechwood Drive, Hollywood, Cal. Woolsey Scranton Conover 39 William St., Worcester, Mass. George Rea Cook, III Princeton Inn, Princeton Joseph Victor Coty 12.4 Central St., Watertown, N. Y. John Huges Crago Waynesburg, Pa. Julian Creighton 1809 Ave. H., Brooklin, N. Y. Charles Hammond Cromwell, Jr., 2.041 W.Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. Franklin Benner Dana 448 S. River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Philip McGrath Davis 115 Broadway, New York City Wetmore Dawes Lydecker St., Englewood, N. J. Dwight Franklyn Dean 32.04 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Edward Duryea Decker 9 Hillside Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Benjamin Franklyn Deford, Jr 608 W. Franklin St., Richmond, Va. John Frederick Degener, III 2.2.5 - ■ ' ' York City Fordham Harry Deopker Miami, Fla. 458 Class of 1 926 —( Continued) NAME ADDRESS Thomas Sherman Dignan }6 Caroline Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. George EUmaker Diller 5837 Solway St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harry Whitfield Dodge Napoleonville, La. Edgar Howard Donaldson, Jr Montrose Ave., Catonsville, Md. Guy Orlando Dove, Jr 614 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D. C. Ralph Clarence Drews 145 Lexington Ave., Passaic, N. J. Robert Alfred Drysdale, Jr 147 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Daniel Morrell Duffield 130 Library Place, Princeton, N. J. John Edward Dug an 2.54 Mercer St., Trenton, N. J. Robert Henry Dulley 170 S. Normandie St., Los Angeles, Cal. Edward Dumbauld 44 S. Mt. Vernon Ave., Uniontown, Pa. Arthur Sargent Dumper jioMt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Barrows Dunham Hamilton Court, Philadelphia, Pa. Lee Semmes Eastman 680 North Ave. , New Rochelle, N. Y. John William Easton. .. .Washington Blvd. Bldg., Detroit, Mich. James Weller Eben 199 Lincoln Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Edie, III 2.87 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. John Handy Edwards 431 W. loth St., Oklahoma City, Okla. William Wads worth Ellis. Room 7, State Capitol Bldg., Hartford,Okla. Lewis Nichols Evans 849 W. Galena St. , Butte, Mont. John Samuel Ewing 615 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Finis King Parr, Jr i Lane Seminary Place, Cincinnati, O. Thomas Manchester Farr Princeton Ave., Wenonah, N. J. Daniel Aylesbury Finlayson, Jr Monticello, Fla. Gerald Wilcox Fisher 39 Grandview Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. Abram Gilmore Flues ii3oScottwood Ave., Toledo, O. Starr MacLoed Ford, Jr 61 Auburndalc Place, Cincinnati, O. Henry Chandlee Forman Oakley Road, Haverford, Pa. William Henry Forrest, Jr 170 Park St., Medford, Mass. Arthur Douglass Foster 830 University Pkway., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Elbridge Foster 35 Liberty Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. James McFerrcn Fowler Port Norris, N. J. Lewis Fox 710 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn. Richard France loii Continental Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Abbott Henry Fraser 1716 E. 8th St., Charlotte, N. C. Eugene Frank Frey lad Park Ave., East Orange, N.J. Marc Friedlaender P. O. Box 1010, Columbus, Ga. Richard Milton Fulle 550 Park St., Montclair, N. J. Hugh Stuart Fullerton, Jr 769 St. Mark ' s Ave., Brooklyn, N. J. Sidney Dale Furst 143 West Church St., Lock Haven, Pa. Maurice Leonard Gaffney 159 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa. William Dawson Gaillard, Jr 17 E. 76th St., New York City Herbert Archibald Garner 337 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Smith Garston 41 E. Kinzie St., Chicago, 111. Caleb Frank Gates, Jr 12.1 Academy St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Thomas A. G. Gavalas 15 Baldwin St., Newark, N. J. Henry Hamilton George 85 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Robert Murray Gibson, Jr 1601 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph Anthony Gilligan 86 Van Ness PI., Newark, N. J. William Kirk Gilmore 416 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Bronson Goddard 115 Fern wood Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Francis Boydell Goeltz 1150 E. md St., Salt Lake City, Utah Leroy Goff, Jr M3° Tracy PI., Washington, D. C. Bertram Melvin Goldsmith x Stratford PI., Newark, N.J. Ezra Odley Goldstein 82.1 Pennsylvania Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Grant, Jr Box 558, Wilmington, N. C. Philip Diggs Gully ...3900 Classen Blvd., Oklahoma City, Okla. Clarence Alexander Gunther 3111 Chicago St., Omaha, Neb. Phillip William Haberman, Jr 41 E. 4ind St., New York City Lewis Marshall Haines 3 2. Ashmead PI., Washington, D. C. Gerard Hollock, III Great Barrington, Mass. James Lewis Hamar, Jr 2.69 Park Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Benjamin Duffield Hamilton 137 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Addison Hanan 112.1 Albemarle Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Handler i6i Pomona Ave., Newark, N. J. Francis Louis Handy 15 Beach St., Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. Martin D. Hardin, Jr 117 E. Buffalo St., Ithaca, N. Y. Marshall Cathcart Harrington 807 Edge wood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Archibald Murdock Hart Greenway Aprs., Baltimore, Md. Louis Edward Hart, Jr 959 The Rookery, Chicago, 111. Reed Ferdinand Hartel 75 Whitney Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. Anthony Haswell Mayfield Rd., Dayton, O. George Frederick Hawkins, Jr 14 Wall St., New York City John Howland Hawkins 2.11 Lincoln Park Drive, Syracuse, N. Y. Robert Clinton Hay ward 878 Cleveland Ave., Cincinnati,©. Ralph Russell Head R. D. No. 3, Warren, Pa. Franklin Hemingway 5440 State Line, Kansas City, Mo. Barlow Henderson loxi Lawrens St., Aiken, S. C. Paul DeForest Hicks Lake Placid Club, Essex Co., N. Y. Dan Harrington Hill East Liverpool, O. Robert Irwin Hobson M3 Morris Ave., New York City John Whitcomb Holloway 589 Sheridan Rd., Glencoe, 111. ' George Plaut Horton 1562. Richmond Ave., Columbus, O. Edgar Payne Houpt 150 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Craig Huston Lehman Lane, Germantown, Pa. 459 Class of 1926 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Booth Tarkington Jameson 1035 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Henry William Jcffers, Jr Plainsboro, N.J. Beverly Jefferson 1135 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. Jotham Johnson 10 Chestnut St., Newark, N. J. Edmund Harris Kase, Jr., 7309 Boyer St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Hcndre Kelby, II 913 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Thomas Kemp, Jr 37 Franklin St., Annapolis, Md. William Lester Kendnck Haverford, Pa. John Burton Kennard, Jr 400 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Arthur Kennedy, Jr 76 Brompton St., Garden City, N. Y. Raymond Fitch Kepler Han-Si-Meng, Nanking, China John Frederick Kidde 56 Gates Ave., Montclair, N. J. Edmund Kiedrowski 147 Hallett St., Astoria, N. Y. Ralph Peckham Kinder 107 City Ave., Bala, Pa. Lewis Charles Kleinhans 137 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Dudley Clark Kleist 1309 Hawthorne Ave., Newark, N. J. James Frederic Koehler 5348 Magnolia Ave., Chicago, 111. John Theodore Koehler 42.4 Stokes Ave., No. Braddock, Pa. Preston Stewart Krecker,Jr. . . .45 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N.J. Henry Richardson Labouisse, Jr 1544 Webster St., New Orleans, La. Harry Wintersmith Lackey Ponca City, Okla. John Robert Lawrence Sanderson, Te.x. Frank Vinton Lawrence, Jr. ...1314 Denmark Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Lewis Henry Lawton, Jr 42.8 Hamilton Ave., Trenton, N. J. Edwin Logan Ledbetter 8io S. Church St., Murfreesboro, Tenn. Thomas Lonsdale Leeming, Jr 130 William St., New York City John Charles Leslie 301 S. 5th St., Minneapolis, Minn. William Draper Lewis, Jr.. . .3400 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Penna. Denver Lindley 11 W. 53rd St., New York City William Sheridan Locke 879 Kearney St., Denver, Colo. Carl Morris Loeb, Jr 61 Broadway, New York City Charles R. Loeb 47 S. Raleigh Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Victor Theodore Lowenstein, Jr.. . .103 Michigan Ave., Mobile, Ala. Caroll Hardy Long 431 W. Locust St., Johnson City, Tenn. William John Lonquist 717 Conway Bldg., Chicago, 111. Harold Norris Love Riverside, 111. Charles Edward Lucke, Jr 1.60 Riverside Dr., New York City Alan Franck Luckens io Grove Rd., South Orange, N. J. Horace Churchman Luckens 2.04 E. Union St., Burlington, N.J. George Francis Luthringer, Jr 717 loth St., Petersburg, 111. William Rockefeller McAlpin 410 Park Ave., New York City Herbert Hook McCampbell 614 Walnut St., Knoxville, Tenn. NAME ADDRESS Francis Moran McConihe Metropolitan Club, Washington, D. C. George Englert McCracken 98 Academy St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Hiram McCullough, Jr 39 La Salle St., Chicago, 111. John Russell McCullough, 149 Windsor Ave., Rockville Center, N. Y. Frank Roberts McDermand, Jr., 1036 Westover Rd., Kansas City, Mo. J. Martin McDonough, 505 Merchants Bank Bldg., Fort Smith, Ark. Robert McDougal, Jr 4804 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. Alan Van Keuren McGee 64 Laurel PI., Trenton, N. J. John Shepardson McGovern 508 W. 114th St., New York City Harris Van Brunt McKeever. . . 103 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. James Newell McMeen loi E. 3rd St., Lewiston, Pa. Edward Lewis McMillan 116 Kennedy Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John McMurray, Jr W. Main St., Newark, Del. Chester Rockwell McPherson . . . 34 St. Andrews PI., Yonkers, N. Y. Chester Ford McSpadden, 115 Gordonhurst Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Edward Clarence Mack, 33 E. 48th St., Hotel Chatham, New York City James Edgar Marcuse 114 E. jind St., New York City Alfred Hubert Marshall 601 W. 113th St., New York City Eugene Manuel Matelene 42. James St., Newark, N.J. Henry William Matelene, Jr 4i James St., Newark, N. J. Graham Dale Mattison 79 Wall St., New York City Charles Stewart Maurice Ballintoy, Eagle Springs, N. C. Millard L. Meiss 3972. Rose Hill Ave., Cincinnati, O. Livingston Talmadge Merchant i8 E. 68th St., New York City Frederick Hamilton Merrill 2.1 E. 65th St., New York City Robert McConnell Metcalfe 139 N. 5th St., Newark, N. J. Philip Avery Meyer 167 N. Walbut St., East Orange, N. J. Karl H. Michelet Roosevelt Hotel, Washington, D. C. George Carpenter Miles Lockhaven, Norfolk, Va. Charles Warren Millard, Jr Ardsley Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Daniel Leslie Monroe 452. Fifth Ave., New York City Franklin Frazee Moore River Rd., Trenton, N. J. Robert Nelson Moore i63z Ridge Ave., Evanston, 111. William Condell Moore 171 N. Walnut St., East Orange, N. J. Edgar Martin Morsman, III 518 S. 38th St., Omaha, Neb. Nathan Isadore Moyse 2.2.0 W. 98th St., New York City Charles Vernon Muchmore 107 Coudert PI., South Orange, N. J. William Barclay Nevius 6 Winthrop Ter., East Orange, N. J. James Williams Newman 1743 P St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Procter Wallace Nichols Cliff House, Manitou, Colo. William Browning Nisbet, Jr., Ardsley Club, Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Thomas Wilson Nobles 2.705 E. Overlook Rd., Cleveland, O. Whitney Jennings Oats 900 The Rookery, Chicago, III. 460 Class of 19 2Q— {Continued) NAME ADDRESS Owen Lawther Odcll 2.05 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa. Jean Blaise Orteig 11 5th Ave., New York City Winthrop Markham Otis 409 Edgecombe Ave., New York City John Upshur Dennis Page Box 473, Panama City, Fia. Arthur Devereux Parker, Jr. Parker-Blake Co., New Orleans, La. Franklin Lord Partridge, Jr ii Hickory Dr., Maplewood, N. J. Richard Kates Pavnter, Jr 457 Fifth Ave., New York Citv Charles Allen Perera 38 W. 58th St., New York City Glen Hayes Perry 11 Rudd Court, Glen Ridge, N. Y. Hamilton Stewart Peyton 105 N. i8th Ave., Duluth, Minn. Henry Barber Pdager 1632. Pierce Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. William Henry Phelps, Jr Caracas, Venezuela Howard William Phillips 2.34 W. Center St., Medina, N. Y. Theodore Adolph Platz 14 Arleigh Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Garrett Porter 15 15 W. 15th St., Topeka, Kan. John Lemoyne Porter Alma, Neb. Richard Howell Post Quoque, N. Y. Richard Roberts Quay, Jr Sewickley, Pa. John Barmore Rasor, Jr 601 Pendleton St., Greenville, S. C. Dolson Walter Rauscher 177 Liberty St., Bloomfield, N. J. Hasseltine Chafee Ray Aiken, S. C. Wilton Treat Rea 37 N. i6th St., Flushing, N. Y. Alexander McKnight Richards. . . .7047 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, III. Rowland Richards 407 N. 5th St., Ironton, O. William Baker Richards 114 Edgecliff Ter., Yonkers, N. Y. Theodore Charles Rissell Stanhope, N. J. Mario Antonio Rivas 3 Heroes 45, Mexico City, Mex. Charles Sammis Robertson lo Hilldale Ave., Jamaica, L. L Lewis Speare Robinson 137 E. Kirby Ave., Detroit, Mich. Richard Ivers Robinson 12.0 S. River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa, William John Robinson 112. 14th St., Wheelin g, W. Va. John Hopper Roblin 952. Broadwav, Watervliet, N. Y. Walter Ralph Rockhold, Jr 50 High St., Glen Ridge, N. Y. Hugh Valentine Roden, Murray St. and Baysidc Ave., Flushing, N. Y. John Barney Rodgers 166 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. John Seymour Rosebery Grape St., Hammonton, N. J. George Maurice Rosenfeld Central Ave. and Richmond PI., Lawrence, L. L Mitchel Herman Rosenthal, Jr 2.82. Madison Ave., Memphis, Tenn. David Wright Rubidge 85 Hanover Rd., Mt. Lakes, N. J. Lewis Rumford, II 1403 Market St., Wilmington, Del. Theodore Bing Russell Scarsdale, N. Y. Trustcn Wheeler Russell 112. Dana St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Ralph Dudley Rutenber.Jr 114 Bourbon St., Georgetown, Ky. Richard Francis Sater 1654 E. Broad St., Columbus, O. Walter Hyde Saunders, Jr 5 4° Cates Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Andrew Koric Scharps 2.10 W. 70th St., New York City Leo Donald Schimpff 40 S. i6th St., Allentown, Pa. Adolph William Schmidt 611 Shaw Ave., McKeesport, Pa. Walter J. Schob 801 Gilham St., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard T. Schwartz zr} Central Ave., Dayton, O. Samuel Sumney Scott 467 Union Trust Bldg,. Pittsburgh, Pa. H. Orvel Sebring, Jr Sebring, Fla. Alexander Seymour 12.1 Virginia Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Gustavus V. Menzies Seymour 50 W. 45th St., New York City James Owens Seymour 52- E. Gay St., Columbus, O. William Frederick Shaffer Mercersburg, Pa. Arthur Vernon Shannon 131 Franklin Park, W., Columbus, O. Russell Shearer 45 Wall St., New York City Arthur Edward Sherman 3ioMt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Henry James Sidford 17 Roosevelt Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Eli Samuel Silberfeld 32. Ingraham PI., Newark, N. J. Louis DeSaussure Simonds, Jr 48 Meeting St., Charleston, S. C. Frank Patrick Slattery, Jr., 308 Coal Exchange Bldg., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. DeWitt Hendee Smith 44 E. 6ist St., New York City Rauland Pratt Smith, cor. Montgomery and Academy Sts., Trenton, N.J. Charles Francis Smithers 19 Nassau St., New York City Robert Jo hn Smythe, Jr Mountain Lakes, N. J. George Snyder Sea Cliff Ave., Sea Cliff, N. Y. Willmer Clephane Speir Remsenburg, L. I. Walter Richard Staub Milburn, N. J. Harold Everett Stearns, Jr Box 385 Kasson, Minn. Hollins McKim Steele Ruxton, Md. Edward Christian Stengel 39 Randolph PI., Newark, N. J. James Frederick Stengel Linden Flail, Lititz, Pa. Donald Stephens 2.7} Stuyvesant Ave., Lyndhurst, N. J. Raymond Arthur Sterret 56 Pine St., New York City Lcighton Hale Stevens 33 5th Ave., New York City Ralph Cuyler Stevens, Jr 61 Douglas Rd., Glen Ridge, N. Y. David Hays Stevenson, Jr in Deepdene Rd., Baltimore, Md. William Henry Stevens 435 Colvin Parkway, Buffalo, N. Y. Charles Stevens Stock Bethesda, Md. Luther Milton Strayer, Jr 35 9 Main St., Stratford, Conn. Rolla Wells Street 42.18 Lindell Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Edmund Weyman Strother 16 Roosevelt PI., Montclair, N.J. Ralph Alonzo Sturges, Jr 8 E. 83rd St., New York City 461 Class of 1926,- (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Eugene Swigart, Jr 1003 Dana Ave., Cincinnati, O. Sam Sykes 1106 Fiske St., Scranton, Pa. Alexander Torrance Taft loPelham PI., Colorado Springs, Col. Edmund Berkeley Taylor 1311 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. George Chadbourne Taylor, Jr 318 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Wendell Hertig Taylor 1800 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg, Pa. Edward Arthur Terrell 5477 Aylesboro Ave., Evanston, 111. James Moulton Thomas 4307 Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Lewis Thompson, Jr Red Bank, N. J. Robert Russell Thurber. House M , Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. Ned Bass Tilt 455 Bradford St., Pasadena, Cal. Louis King Timolat 59 4th St., New York City Vergil Edwin Tobin 801 Maple Ave., Newport, Ky. Hubert John Tracy Lakewood, N. J. Rufus Avery Tracy, Jr 446 Park Ave., West, Mansfield, N. J. Edward Gatewood Trueblood. . . .1x09 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. Frank Trunkey 415 E. lith St., Spokane, Wash. Joseph Patrick Tumulty, Jr.. .1917 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. Louis Hollenbach Twyeffort 57 Rue d ' Hautville, Paris, France Thomas Henry Tyler Bristol, Tenn. Howard Bruce Vail 134 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. William Van Keuren Fitz Randolph Rd., Princeton, N. J. George Lee Van Wyck 31 Willow St., Belmont, Mass. Raymond Bradt Veeder 108 Ardsley Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. George Vinsonhaler 500 E. 9th St., Little Rock, Ark. NAME ADDRESS Joseph Kelly Vodrey Park Blvd., East Liverpool, O. William Henry Vodrey Park Blvd., East Liverpool, O. Herbert George Vogt 154 Villa Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Samuel William Walstrum Lin wood Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Frank Wells Warburton 49 Wall St., New York City Robert Dwight Ward 2.40 Central Ave., Newark, N. J. Frank Dan Waterman, Jr 655 Park Ave., New York City Jeremiah Colwell Waterman 177 Lefferts PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Staring Bailey Wells 148-05 Terrace Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. George John Whelan 8 S. Montpelier Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Roger Quincy White 108 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, III. William Cameron White 2.344 Sheridan Ave., Evanston, 111. John William Whiteley, Jr 93 Franklin Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Herman Frasch Whiton Locust Valley, L. I. Ford Steele Whitaker Box 95, North East Harbor, Me. John Edward Wicoff Plainsboro, N. J. Burton Francis Wilkinson 551 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. David Williams, Jr 80 N. Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. Edward Foss Wilson 4815 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. George Peck Wilson 715 Berkley Ave., Orange, N. J. Robert Wilson, III 39 Legare St., Charleston, S. C. Archer Winston 2.5 W. 44th St., New York City Henry Hatten Wittmer Hotel Schenley, Pittsburgh, Pa. August Zinsser, Jr 6 W. 9th St., New York City John William Rogers Zisgen Wycoff Ave., Ramsey, N. J. 462 .1.1 LJ— L ' II ' i ! I , I ' I 1 I ! , I 1 t I 1 I [ I ' 1 t I t I I I I J 1928 7 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Back Row — Beach, Dumper, Booth, Bachcllcr, Thurbcr. Front Row — Matrison, Merchant, Hallocit, MacLeod, Jcffcrs. Class Day Exercises of the One Hundred and Seventy-Ninth Annual Commencement June 21, 1926 L. T. Merchant OPENING EXERCISES Master of Ceremonies Lewis Fox .... A. G. Flues Class Poem Class Oration IVY EXERCISES R. R. Quay, Jr. Ivy Oration CANNON EXERCISES A. B. Atwood Presentation H. B. Pflager Class History W. B. Booth, Jr. S. McLeod, Jr. Address by Class President Roll Call by Class Secretary R. F. Hartel CLASS ODE COMMITTEE A, W. Schmidt A. V. Shannon J. H. Bacheller, Jr. G. R. Beach, Jr. W. B. Booth, Jr. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE G. Hallock, III . A. S. Dumper J. W. Easton, II P. D. Hicks . . Chairman A. W. Jeffers S. McLeod, Jr. G. D. Mattison L. T. Merchant R. R. Thurber E. D. Decker S. D. FuRST, Jr. P. D. Gully CLASS MEMORIAL COMMITTEE F. V. Lawrence . G. Hallock, III J. C. Leslie Chairman P. A. Meyer A. V. Shannon R. R. Thurber W. F. Wilson 465 NASSAU HERALD COMMITTEE Back Kow — Kcnnard, Reid, Burr, Mc Donnough, France Front Row — Sccvcns, Dean, Atwood, Wilkinson, Hicks Nassau Herald Committee George B. Atwood I i B. GwYNNE Burr DwiGHT F. Dean Richard France Thomas Hale, Jr. Paul D. Hicks John B. Kennard, Jr. J. Martin McDonough Chairman Bayard W. Read Ralph C. Stevens, Jr. Burton F. Wilkinson « I 467 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I H I I I I I I I I I I I 19281 7 SENIOR HONOR MEN Valedictory Honors Conferred Eli Samuel SiLBERrELD FINAL SPECIAL HONORS George Chadbourne Taylor, II Latin Salutatory Architecture. Highist Hokom— John Barney Rodgcrs. Honors — Martin Allen Charles, Henry Chandlee Forman. Art and Archaeology. Hightst Ho«or.r— Philip Diggs Gully. High Honors— ]o a Charles Leslie. Honors— Dia ' ieX Aylesbury Finlayson, Jr., Ralph Russell Head. Biology. Highest Honor — Charles Allen Perera, DeWitt Hendee Smith. High Honors — Richard France, Edmund Kiedrowski, William Bar- clay Nevius, Theodore Burg Russell, Robert Wilson, III. Honors — Winfield Louis Butsch, Ralph Clarence Drews, James Edgar Mar- cuse, Richard Howell Post, Luther Milton Strayer, Jr. Chemistry. High Honors — Gustavus Vasa Menzies Seymour, Edmund Berkeley Taylor, Robertson Dwight Ward. Honorj— Wendell Hertig Taylor. Classics. Highest Honors— EAmunA Harris Kase, Jr., Whitney Jennings Oates, William Frederick Shaffer. High Honors— T ' homa. ' i Jennings Bailey, Jr., Lewis Nichols Evans, Abbott Henry Eraser, George Englert McCracken, Joseph Kelly Vodrey. Honorj otham Johnson. Economics. High Honors— Howard Benner Brown, Fordham Harry Deopker, Thomas Manchester Farr, Bertram Melvin Goldsmith, Preston Stewart Krecker, Jr., Frank Vinton Lawrence, Jr., Charles Edward Lucke, Jr., George Francis Luthringer, Jr., James Newell McMeen, Hamilton Stewart Peyton, John Seymour Rosebery, Harry Orvel Sebring, Jr. Honors — Richard Hundley Anderson, Sherman Thompson Brown, Edward Lester Carpenter, Philip McGrath Davis, Thomas Sherman Dignan, Lee Semmes Eastman, William Wadsworth Ellis, Thomas Atha George Gavalas, John Robert Laurence, Robert McConnell Metcalfe, Jean Blaise Orteig, Howard William Phillips, Dolson Walter Rauscher, Mario Antonio Rivas, Adolph William Schmidt, Franklin Fell Trunkey, Frank Dan Waterman, Jr. English. Highest Honors — Denver Lindley, Edward Clarence Mack, George Carpenter Miles, Ralph Dudley Rutenber, Jr. , George Chad- bourne Taylor, II. High Honors — Pierce Butler, Jr., Joseph Victor Coty, Edwin Logan Ledbetter, Alan Van Keuren McGee, Graham Dale Mattison, Charles Sammis Robertson, John Hopper Roblin, Staring Bailey Wells. Honors — Stanley Levering Cartwright, John William Easton, Finis King Farr, Marc Friedlaender, Benjamin Duffield Hamilton, Archibald Murdoch Hart, Booth Tarkington Jameson, Victor Theodore Loewenstein, Jr., Horace Churchman Lukens, Livingston Tallmadge Merchant, Winthrop Markham Otis, Henry Barber Pflager, William John Robinson, Ralph Cuyler Stevens, Jr. Geology. Highest Honors — Nathan Isadore Moyse. High Honors — Richard Milton Fulle. Honors — George Daniel Besler, Hobart Dominick Betts, Jr., Henry Hill Collins, III, George Rea Cook, III, Francis Louis Handy, Hubert John Tracy. History. Highest Honors — Caleb Frank Gates, Jr., Herbert Hook Mc- Campbell, Jr., Garrett Porter, William Henry Vodrey, III. High Honors — Arthur Sargent Dumper, Richard Roberts Quay, Jr. Honors — Charles R. Loeb, Edgar Martin Morsman, III, Harold Everett Stearns, Jr., Eugene Swigart. Mathematics. High Honors — Eli Samuel Silberfeld, James F. Stengel. Honors — Charles Vernon Muchmore. Modern Languages. Highest Honors — Edward Gatewood Trueblood, Howard Bruce Vail. High Honors — Frank Carter Bancroft, Jr., George Ellmaker Diller, Philip William Haberman, Jr., Robert Clinton Hayward, Andrew Korn Scharps, Rauland Prall Smith. Honors — Eugene Edward Blazier, Jr., Robert Irwin Hobson, Row- land Richards, George Peck Wilson. Philosophy. Highest Ho cr — Julian Creighton. High Honors — William Graffen Blood, William Weeks Brinckerhoff, Barrows Dunham, Dudley Clark Kleist, Alexander McKnight Richards, Theodore Charles Rissell. Honors — Charles Scott Bannerman, Samuel Stan- hope Stryker Browne, John Guion Coleman, Owen Lawther Odell, Theodore Adolph Platz, David Wright Rubidge, Edmund Weyman Strother, Stuart Mason Allen. Physics. Highest Honors — Marshall Cathcart Harrington. High Honors — Edgar Payne Houpt, Wilton Treat Rea. Honors — Jeremiah Sullivan Black, James Frederic Koehler, August Zinsser, Jr. Politics. Highest Honors — John Withrow Brewer, John Theodore Koeh- ler, Joseph Patrick Tumulty, Jr., John William Rogers Zisgen. High Honors — William Thomas Kemp, Richard Francis Sater. Honors — John Gorden Alexander, George Baker Atwood, Thomas Charlton Clark, David Leroy Coddington, John Hughes Crago, Edgar Howard Donaldson, Jr., Edward Dumbauld, Thomas El- bridge Foster, Eugene Frank Frey, William Dawson Gaillard, Jr., Joseph Anthony Gilligan, LeRoy Goff, Jr., Barlow Henderson, William Sheridan Locke, John Russell McCullough, James Wil- liams Newman, Arthur Devereux Parker, Jr., Hasseltine Chafee Ray, Alexander Seymour, Frank Slattery, Jr., Willmer Clephane Speir, Robert Russell Thurber. tt| 468 1 1 I I 1 1 1 M I I I n II It II II II 11 II I ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' 7 1928 E. P. Adams t_i J. W. Alexander E. C. Armstrong J. W. Basore G. E. Beggs D. L. BuFFUM E. Capps K. T. CoMPTON E. G. CONKLIN C. C. Connell F. H. Constant H. Cottier H. F. Covington F. L. Critchlow Ulric Dahlgren B. N. Dell H. V. Dennis F. H. Dixon G. Daugherty R. S. DUGAN L. P. Eisenhart G. W. Elderkin F. A. Fetter H. B. Fine Phi Beta Kappa BETA OF NEW JERSEY Organized provisionally in 1895. Charter granted in October, 1898. OFFICERS, 192.5-1916 Professor Robert K. Root Professor L. P. Eisenhart Professor C. W. Hendel FACULTY MEMBERS W. FiTE William Foster N. H. Furman Christian Gauss G. H. Gerould J. T. Gerould William Gillespie T. M. Greene W. P. Hall G. M. Harper W. B. Harris C. W. Hendel, Jr. H. W. Hewitt-Thayer John Grier Hibben j. p. hoskins S. E. Howard S. J. Howe B. F. Howell G. A. Hulett F. L. HuTsoN A. C. Johnson R. B. C. Johnson E. W. Kemmerer C. W. Kennedy P. M. Kretschmann R. W. Lee D. LiNDLEY E. H. LooMis G. B. McClellan C. F. McClure M. McLaren David Magie W. F. Magie C. C. Marden P. E. More C. R. Morey S. W. Morgan D. C. MUNRO W. S. Myers Frederick Neher C. G. Osgood T. M. Parrott A. H. Phillips W. K. Prentice G. M. Priest J. E. Raycroft E. Y. ROBBINS R. K. Root President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer H. N. Russell R. M. Scoon A. G. Shenstone H. R. Shipman W. B. Scott E. B. Smith C. H. Smyth H. D. Smyth J. D. Spaeth J. Q. Stewart D. C. Stuart D. R. Stuart F. C. Tarr H. D. Thompson Augustus Trowbridge Henry Van Dyke Paul Van Dyke H. B. Van Hoesen O. S. Veblen W. U. Vreeland S. H. Weber A. F. West G. W. T. Whitney A. L. Wheller ilil 469 J. W. Brewer J. Creighton E. DUMBAULD R. France W. D. Gaillard, Jr. E. U. GOLSTEIN E. H. Kase, Jr. James Burnham D. A. Clark Phi Betta Kappa E. Kiedrowski J. F. Koehler F. V. Lawrence D. LiNDLEY E. C. Mack M. L. Meiss W. J. Gates MEMBERS, 1916 C. A. Perera W. T. Rea R. D. Reutenber, Jr. G. V. M. Seymour W. F. Shaffer E. S. Silberfeld D. H. Smith MEMBERS, 1917 J. Van Dyke Norman, Jr. H. L. Reinke R. P. Smith J. F. Stengel G. C. Taylor R. R. Thurber W. H. Vodrey, J. W. R. ZlSGEN R. W. Wales III 470 I I I I I I I I I I II I I n M I I I I I I M I I I I 1 I I I I I IT 7 1928 Prizes Awarded iBER llET, III ISCE.N The M. Taylor Pyne Honor Prize Richard Roberts Quay, Jr. The Lyman Biddle Scholars Senior Scholar Frank Vinton Lawrence, Jr. Junior Scholar Dean Alexander Clark The Alexander Guthrie McCosh Prize Barrows Dunham The Class of 1859 Prize Denver Lindley The Class of 1869 Prize in Ethics Stuart Mason Allen Honorable Mention: Theodore Charles Rissell, William Graffen Blood The George Potts Bible Prize George Englert McCracken The Lyman H. Atwater Prize in Political Science William Thomas Kemp, Jr. Honorable Mention: John Withrow Brewer James Williams Newman John William Rogers Zisgen The Lynde Debate Prizes First Richard Francis Safer Second Lewis Fox Third Edward Dumbauld The New York Herald Prize Joseph Patrick Tumulty, Jr. Honorable Mention: John Theodore Koehler The Class of 1876 Memorial Prize William Henry Vodrey, III The Frederick Barnard White Prize in Architecture Henry Chandlee Forman The Philo Sherman Bennett Prize in Political Science LeRoy Goff, Jr. Honorable Mention: Edward Dumbauld, Joseph Anthony Gilligan The Class of 1870 Prize in Old English Ralph Dudley Rutenber, Jr. The Class of 1870 Junior Prize in Enolish Walter Barker Critz Watkins The Dickinson Prize Newton Phelps Stallknecht Honorable Mention: William Ferdinand Scharnikow The Mary Cunningham Humphreys Junior German Prizes Firit Gordon Cameron MacWilliam Second Gustav Adolf Wirbclaucr The Junior Orator Medals First Vincent Virgin Ravi-Booth Second Elmer Porter Serena Third Roger Wallace Shugg Fourth Karl Gustav Pearson The Maclean Prize Roger Wallace Shugg The Thomas B. Wanamaker English Language Prize James Burnham Honorable Mention: Karl Gustav Pearson The Manners Prize Nova Caesarea Scholar Pinckney Alston Waring Winner of the Golden Tiger No Award The Class of 1873 Fellowship in English Pierce Butler, Jr. The Alden Memorial Prizes in French First Archibald Stevens Alexander Second Robert Ross Bayes Honorable Mention: Alan Richard Jackson The Garrett Prize in Politics Alexander Seymour Honorable Mention: Thomas Charlton Clark, Eugene Frank Frey The Charles Ira Young Medal Frank Theodore Chestnut The Prize in American History Established by the Society of Colonial Wars in New Jersey William Henry Vodrey, III 471 Prizes Awarded— {Continued) The Class of 1861 Prize Theodore Eugene Stern Honorable Mention: George Elbert Kimball The Class of 1870 Sophomore English Prize Hugh McDiarmid Ritchcy Honorable Mention: Charles Robert Morse The Francis Biddle Sophomore Essay Prize William Metcalf Doolittle Honorable Mention: William W. Woodward, III The Lawrence Hutton Prize in History William Henry Vodrey, III The Du Pont Fellowship in Chemical Engineering William Henry Stevens The Sayre Fellowship in Applied Electricity Alan Franck Lukens The Sayre Fellowship in Applied Chemistry Harold Ashton Beatty The George A. Howe ' 78 Prize in Analytical Chemistry William Livingston Ruigh The Class of 1883 English Prize for Freshmen in the School OF Engineering Frank Lawrence Garrett The William Marshall Bullitt Prize in Mathematics Arthur Middleton Young The Princeton Club of Paris Prize in French Frank Carter Bancroft, Jr. The Erdman Prize in Biblical Literature Charles Allen Perera Honorable Mention: John Theodore Koehler The New York Times Current Events Prize Daniel van Brunt Hegeman The Princeton Prizemen in Architecture, 1916-1917 Leslie F. Ayres George Elliston Brcnnen The Class of 1901 Medal Livingston Tallmadge Merchant The John Prentiss Poe Cup Edward Louis McMillan The Frederick W. Kafer Memorial Cup Thomas Sherman Dignan The Leroy Gifford Kellogg Cup Evans Hicks The W. Lyman Biddle Medal for Good Sportsmanship Charles Hammond Cromwell, Jr. u 472 1111 l.pi [ 1 f [ 1 I f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 I I rj 19281 ? Notables and Favorites of the Class of 1926 First Best All-Around Man Booth Most Respected Quay Best All-Around Athlete Gates Best All-Around Man, Outside Athletics Merchant Most Representative Princetonian . Merchant Most Popular Booth Most Likely to Succeed Taylor Done Most for Class Merchant Most Original Farr Most Scholarly Lindley Most Brilliant Taylor Color of Eyes Blue Cigarette Lucky Strike Toothpaste Squibbs Do you Smoke? Yes, 173 Do you Drink? . . . . . . Yes, 107 Most Respected Extra-Curriculum Activity Princetonian Favorite Man ' s College after Princeton Yale Favorite Woman ' s College . . Smith Have you ever been Suspended? . . No, 316 NOTABLES Second First Srcond Gates Most Entertaining Green Eben Forrest Handsomest Quay Fisher Dignan Wittiest Farr Eben Taylor Best Natured Booth Jeffers Quay Best Dressed Clark McKeever McMillan Finest Legs Dignan Fisher Forrest Biggest Politician Booth Lewis Booth Most Collegiate Drysdale Clark Eben Greatest Woman Hater . • . . . . Kennard Dumbauld Vodrey Class Clown Even Lewis Silbcrfeld Brown Chesterfield Kolynos No, 70 No, o i. Triangle Club Williams Vassar Yes, 49 FAVORITES Hardest Year .... Favorite Department in College Favorite Study Hardest Course . Most Valuable Course Professor Preceptor Movie Actress Amusement Novel Tom Jones Sophomore Freshman English English History, 101 Biology, ioi W. Hall Politics Women Const. Interpretation History, loi Root Stohlman Norma Shearer Taylor Eleanor Boardman Bridge Tom Jones Reading Thunder on the Left 473 1% Honorary Degrees June 22, 1926 Master of Arts William Gilbert Van Tassel Sutphen, a graduate of this Univer- sity in the Class of 1882.. A genial author of stories long and short. With profound religious convictions, recently ordained a priest of the Protestant Episcopal Church, he sets forth in his works that sane and cheerful view of life which comes to a man who has a healthy body, a sense of humor, and an abiding faith in the provi- dence of God. William Mestrezat Hudson, a graduate of this University in the Class of 1893, and of Princeton Theological Seminary. A minister of the Presbyterian Church, for several years a pastor, president of Waynesburg College and since 1911 president of Blackburn College in Illinois. Doctor of Letters William Augustus White, a graduate of Harvard University. For forty years he has been a collector and a student of books. His library is peculiarly rich in the poetry of the Elizabethan Period, and his knowledge of that field is extensive. He has made a special collection of the works of that fascinating genius, William Blake, and he collaborated with the librarian of the University of Liver- pool in publishing an edition of Blake ' s poetical works. Doctor of Divinity Robert Wilson Hamilton, a graduate of this University of fifty years ' standing. A minister of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland, for over forty years pastor of the church at Lisburn, County Antrim, serving as moderator of his Presbytery and Synod. His career has been crowned by his election as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland. DuBois Schanck Morris, a graduate of this University in the Class of 1895, and of Auburn Theological Seminary. A minister of the Presbyterian Church and a missionary to China. He has been the representative of the mission in the China Council of the Pres- byterian Church, and an honored guide and counsellor. Doctor of Science William Holland Wilmer, a graduate in medicine of the Uni- versity of Virginia. Early in his career beginning the study of the eye, he is now one of the foremost ophthalmologists of the world. During the Great War he was in charge of the Medical Research Laboratories both here and in France. His services were recognized by the Distinguished Service Medal, and by a designation as Com- mander of the Legion of Honor. Doctor of Laws John Fleming Main, a graduate of this University in the Class of 1891, a lawyer and judge of extensive learning and great ability. After his admission to the bar in Illinois, and a few years ' practice in that state, he sought the opportunities offered to able men in the great and growing state of Washington. He was soon made one of the law faculty of the State University. He was elected to the Superior Court, then to the Supreme Court, and three times elected as Chief Justice of that Court. Owen D. Young, a graduate of St. Lawrence University, and of the Boston University Law School. He found his place as a tactful negotiator between conflicting interests when he became Vice-President of the General Electric Company in charge of the welfare of employees and their relations to the company. He organ- ized the Radio Corporation of America, under which the art of radio communication has been brought to practical perfection. He was one of the two American members, with General Dawes, of the Committee of Experts which studied the difficult problem of Reparations. Decorated by many governments and honored with degrees by many universiti:s. Doctor of Letters Archibald Allen Bowman, a graduate of the University of Glas- gow with honors in Classics and Philosophy, a teacher in that institution, and for fourteen years a Professor of Philosophy in this University. When Great Britain went to war, he entered her army, was wounded in action and captured. In his published writings and in his lectures he expounds the loftiest idealistic philosophy, infused with strong religious feeling. I ■■,■ ■ ' ' I i i 474 ALVMNI itSSOCMTIONS 1 r 1 ' 1 It II I [ I. F Mil II II u 1 1 ' 1 1 II II I I ' j 19281 7 National Alumni Association LIFE MEMBERS ' 8 1 Francis G. Landon 6o Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 84 Ambrose G. Todd 165 Broadway, New York, N. Y. HONORARY MEMBERS 69 George K. Ward 19 Holt St., Bronxville, N. Y. 70 George B. Kinkead Lexington, Ky. 7} Joseph H. Dulles Princeton, N.J. 81 Arthur H. Scribner 597 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 8i Charles W. Parker 63 Macculloch Ave., Morristown, N.J. 83 Henry G. Bryant 804 Flanders Bldg., Philadelphia, Penna. 86 Henry W. Jessup 17 Cedar St., New York, N. Y. 88 B. Van D. Hedges 703 Watchung Ave., Plainfield,N. J. 89 John R. Todd Summit, N. J. 91 Cornelius R. Agnew 16 William St., New York, N. Y. 94 George C. Wintringer Princeton, N. J. 99 Thornwell Jacobs (G.S.). . .Oglethorpe University, Atlanta, Ga. 00 Frederick P. King 160 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 09 S. Butler Murray 15 Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. CLASS REPRESENTATIVES 91 V. Lansing Collins Princeton, N. J ' 93 Martin Saxe 17 Pine St., New York, N. Y 94 Gabriel S. Brown Alpha Portland Cement Co., Easton, Penna 95 Edward R. Otheman 31 Nassau St., New York, N. Y 96 Charles Browne Princeton, N. J 97 Walter M. Dickinson ' 45 . Hanover St., Trenton, N.J 98 Robert R. Boyce iii Claremont Terrace, Orange, N. J 99 George K. Reed 9 Hanover St., New York, N. Y 00 Elroy Curtis 47 Leonard St., New York, N. Y bi George W. Yuengling 75 Fulton St., New York, N. Y 01 Fletcher Swain 138 Pearl St., New York, N. Y 03 Ward B. Chamberlain 1 Rector St., New York, N. Y 04 William A. Bours, Jr 99 John St., New York, N. Y 05 A. Perry Osborn 33 Pine St., New York, N. Y 06 Charles C. Nicholls 386 Broadway, New York, N. Y 07 Charles T. Larrelere 3x0 DeKalb St., Norristown, Penna 08 Robert C. Clothier Haverford School, Haverford, Penna 09 Morton H. Fry 5 Nassau St., New York, N. Y 10 David Lawrence 39°° Nebraska Ave., Washington, D. C 11 Alfred Rheinstein ii East 40th St., New York, N. Y II Frank D. Halsey Princeton University Press, Princeton, N. J 13 Alden D. Groff 68 William St., New York, N. Y 14 John Colt Princeton, N. J 15 W. Manning Barr 14 Wall St., New York, N. Y. 16 Edward L. Shea, Tidewater Oil Co., 11 Broadway, New York City 17 Lewis N. Lukens 132. South 4th St., Philadelphia, Penna, 18 Charles U. Caesar 144 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. 19 Albert Shaw, Jr 55 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 2.0 C. Fred Buechner, Jr 315 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. II Harry B. Gaffney, Dillon, Read Co.,i8 Nassau St., New York City 11 I. Ridgeway Trimble 8 Madison St., Baltimore, Md. 2.3 Alfred S. Dashiell care of Charles Scribner ' s Sons, 597 Fifth Ave., New York City 2.4 Alexander Leibch Nassau Hall, Princeton, N. J. i5 E. C. Stout, Jr. (pro tem). . . .74S0. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. 2.6 Sayre MacLeod, Jr 12.16 Widener Bldg., Philadelphia, Penna. ASSOCIATION REPRESENTATIVES Arkansas — Andrew H. Scott, ' 08, Southern Trust Bldg., Little Rock, Ark. Buffalo — W. Gresham Andrews, ' ii, 79TonawandaSt., Buffalo, N. Y. Cedar Rapids — A. C. Sinclair, ' 98, Thornlae, Cedar Rapids, la. Central New York — Weir Stewart, ' 15, 17 Grover St., Auburn, N. Y. Hall, Commonwealth Trust H. Central Pennsylvania — Francis J. Co., Harrisburg, Penna. Chicago — Frederick H. Scott, ' oo, 300 Adams St., Chicago, 111.; S. Clinedinst, ' 94, Menasha Co., Menasha, Wis. Cincinnati — Loren G. Gatch, ' 13, Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, O. Columbus — K. E. Burr, ' 00, New First National Bank Bldg., Colum- bus, O. Delaware — William C. Spruance, ' 94, duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del. Eastern Pennsylvania — Stanley Bright, ' 02., Box 92.2., Reading, Penna. El Paso — Erie — A. Blaine Robinson, ' 00, North East, Penna. Georgia — Robert H. Jones, ' 06, 809 Citizens Southern Trust Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Hawaii — John P. Erdmann, ' 96, (Rev.), Honolulu, T. H. Houston — Ben A. Calhoun, ' 13, 503 Cotton Exch. Bldg., Houston, Tex. Idaho — P. B. Carter, ' 05, 2.04 McCarty Bldg., Boise, Ida. Indiana — Sylvester Johnson, Jr., ' 06, H. R. HeinickeCo., Indianapolis, Ind. Jersey City— Joseph A. Dear, ' 93, 1600 Hudson Blvd. .Jersey City, N.J. Kansas City— Gilbert E. Faeth, ' 15, 112.7 W. 8th St., Kansas City, Mo. Lackawanna— Wyant D. Vanderpool, ' 98, 86 Miller Rd., Morristown, N.J. Long Island — C. D. Robert, ' 04, 36 Picrrcpont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 476 National Alumni Association — {Continued) Los Angeles — Daniel S. Hammack, ' 06, 419 Amcr. Bk. Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. Louisville — John McF. Barr, ' 16, Cherokee Park, Louisville, Ky. Maryland — L Ridgeway Trimble, ii, 8 W. Madison St., Baltimore, Md. Michigan — MoNTCLAiR — John H. Nutting, ' 09, 114 Liberty St., New York, N. Y. Nebraska — Arthur R. Wells, ' 95, 514 Omaha National Bank Bldg., Omaha, Neb. Newark — E. G. Wherry, ' 93, 31} Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. New England — Harold S. Edwards, ' 06, 300 Summer St., Boston, Mass. J. Edson Andrews, ' 14, 2.16 Lincoln St., Boston, Mass.; Howard M. Sawyer, ' 11, 2. Perrin Rd., Brookline, Mass.; C. C. Darling, ' 10, Hospital Trust Bldg., Providence, R. L; Philip Drinker, ' 15, 55 Van Dyke St., Boston, Mass.; Russell L. Jones, ' 91, 46 Pearl St., Hartford, Conn. New York — Dickson Q. Brown, ' 95, 11 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Northeastern Pennsylvania — Paul Bedford, ' 97, Miners Bank Bldg., Wilkes-Barre, Penna. Northern California — K. R. Kingsbury, ' 96, 115 Bush St., San Francisco, Calif. Northern New Jersey — Clarence D. Kerr, ' 01, 5 Nassau St., New York, N. Y. Northern New York — James Gibson, ' 94, Attorney General ' s Office, Capitol, Albany, N. Y. Northern Ohio — Northwest — Carl W. Jones, ' ii, Minneapolis Journal, Minneapolis, Minn. Oranges — Albridge C. Smith, ' 03, 150 Montrose Ave., South Orange, N.J. Oregon — Simeon R. Winch, ' 11, Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore. Paterson — Robert Williams, Jr., ' 15, 676 E. 17th St., Paterson, N. J. Philadelphia — S. E. Slaymaker, Jr., ' 14, Haverford, Penna. Pittsburgh — Charles A. McCIintock, ' 07, 6415 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Plainfield — Duncan W. Taylor, ' 89, 105 Hudson St., Jersey City, N.J. Quincy — Matthew F. Carrott, ' 00, Quincy, III. RiDGEwooD — Arthur Dear, ' 03, 15 Exchange PI, Jersey City, N.J. Rochester — Harry Otis Poole, ' 93, 339 Powers Bldg., Rochester, N. Y. Rocky Mountain — James H. Pershing, ' 88, Equitable Bldg., Denver, Colo. St. Louis — Walter L. Schmitz, ' 05, Eighth and Washington Sts., St. I-ouis, Mo. Salt Lake City — San Antonio — Seattle — J. Irving Colwell, ' 04, 84 Marion St., Seattle, Wash. Southern New York — George A. Walker, Jr., ' 07, Bronxville, N. Y. Tennessee — Toledo — William G. Dice, ' 93, 140 Michigan St., Toledo, O. Trenton — Bruce Bedford, ' 99, Luzerne Rubber Co., Trenton, N. J. Virginia — James H. Devereux, ' 15, no Royster Bldg., Norfolk, Va. Washington, D. C. — A. B. Duvall, ' 99, Hibbs Bldg., Washington, D. C. YouNGSTowN — Fred T. Fruit, ' 08, Sharon, Penna. Engineering Association — John H. Drummond, ' 10, 10 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE To serve until August, i(}2j: ' 10 Marion J. Verderv,Jr. care of Quaw Foley, 30 Broad St., New York, N. Y. ' 92. Charles P. Spooner 14 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 01 John G. Frazer Union Arcade, Pittsburgh, Penna. To serve until August, 1 28: ' 95 Andrew C. Imbrie 310 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 95 John W. Garrett Garrett Bldg., Baltimore, Md. •06 L. D. Froelick 461 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 03 Whitney Darrow Fifth Ave. and 48th St., New York, N. Y. To serve until August, 1929: ' 03 Charles H. Higgins 19 West 44th St., New York, N. Y. ' 96 Albert G. Milbank 49 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 97 Irving L. Roe Greenholm, Princeton, N. J. To serve until August, iijjo: 00 Philip Le Boutillier 372. Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 03 Burt B. Hodgman 50 Church St., New York, N. Y. 04 George A. Vondermuhll 357 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. 95 Henry M. Canby Equitable Bldg., Wilmington, Del. 97 Archibald A. Gulick 12.0 Broadway, New York, N. Y. To serve until August, it))!: ' 97 Walter L. Johnson 71 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 12. Sanford B. White 606 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III. ' 16 Laurence G. Payson. P.O. Box 1042., City Hall Sta., New York.N.Y. 477 Alumni Clubs and Associations Princeton Engineering Association John H. Drummond, ' io lo Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Graduate College Union S. BuTLRE Murray, ' 09 15 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Western Association of Princeton Clubs Robert D. Christie, 08 1002. Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Stcrttary Sicrttary Secretary ARKANSAS Princeton Alumni Association of Arkansas Frank H. Parke, ' 14 io9 Spring St., Little Rock, Ark. CALIFORNIA Princeton Club of Southern California and Nevada S. Wells Morris, ' ij Secretary 72.4 S. Spring St., Los Angeles, Cal. Princeton Alumni Association of Northern California and Nevada F. S. Deuel, ' 2.0 George Looms, 08 464 California St., San Francisco, Cal. COLORADO Rocky Mountain Princeton Club 771 Franklin St., Denver, Colo. DELAWARE Princeton Alumni Association of Delaware Henry M. Canby, ' 95 Equitable Bldg., Wilmington, Del. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Princeton Alumni Association of the District of Columbia Lawrence A. Baker, ' 13 Secretary Smith Bldg., Washington, D. C. GEORGIA Princeton Alumni Association of Atlanta 75 N. Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga. IDAHO Princeton Alumni Association of Idaho Secretary Robert L. Nourse, ' 17 1419 Harrison Blvd., Boise, Idaho ILLINOIS Princeton Club of Chicago James F. Oates, Jr., ' 2.1 II S. LaSalle St., Chicago, 111. Princeton Club of Quincy Secretary M. F. Carrott, ' 00 16-17 Stern Bldg., Quincy, 111. INDIANA Princeton Alumni Association of Indiana Secretary Robert A. Milliken, ' 14 509 Medical Arts Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. IOWA Princeton Club of Cedar Rapids Secretary Arthur Poe, ' go Care of Quaker Oats Co., Cedar Rapids, Iowa KENTUCKY Princeton Alumni Association of Louisville R. W. Covington, Jr., ' 2.3 2.01 Starks Bldg., Louisville, Ky. Carl Fox, ' 04 Secretary MARYLAND Princeton Alumni Association of Maryland Edward S. Page, ' ii Ins. Co. of No. America, Baltimore, Md. Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary V I i 478 Alumni Clubs and A ssociations—f Continued) I MASSACHUSETTS Princeton Alumni Association of New England Philip Drinker, ' 15 Sicritary 55 Van Dyke St., Boston, Mass. MICHIGAN Princeton Club of Michigan R. Noble Wetherbee, ' 17 Secrttary 710 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Mich. MINNESOTA Princeton Alumni Association of the Northwest B. G. WooDwoRTH, ' 11 Stcrttary Minneapolis Trust Co., Minneapolis, Minn. MISSOURI Princeton Club of Kansas City R. Hovey Tinsman, ' 19 Stcrttary 918 Baltimore Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Princeton Club of St. Louis John J. Johns, lo Stcrttary 704 Locust St., St. Louis, Mo. NEBRASKA Princeton Alumni Association of Nebraska Montague A. Tancock, 16 Chamber of Commerce, Omaha, Neb. Stcrttary NEW JERSEY Princeton Alumni Association of Northern New Jersey Theodore P. Barber, ' 15 Stcrttary Winthrop PI., Englewood, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Hudson County, New Jersey Orro F. Seggel, ' oj Stcrttary 358 Central Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Princeton Alumni Association of Lackawanna Edward F. deSelding, ' 14 Stcrttary 19} Summit Ave., Summit, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Montclair and Vicinity Sidney T. Coale, ' 07 Stcrttary 10 Edgehill Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Princeton Club of Newark Edward ScHicKHAUs, Jr., ' lo Secretary 2.5 Van Ness PI., Newark, N. J. Princeton Alumni Federation of New Jersey Howard Carter, ' 01 Stcrttary 100 Broadway, New York City Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges Charles R. Beattie, ' 15 Stcrttary 9 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Passaic County Willard L. De Yoe, ' 17 ■ . Stcrttary 508 U. S. Trust Bldg., Patcrson, N. J. Princeton Club of Plainficld Joseph Van Deventer, ' ii 631 Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Ridgewood Lennox Ransom, ' 16 19 Circle Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Princeton Club of Trenton Kenneth W. Moore, ' 14 Broad St., Bk. Bldg., Trenton, N. J. NEW YORK Princeton Alumni Association of Northern New York James F. Adams, ' 15 Stcrttary 194 Washington Ave., Albany, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Long Island C. D. Robert, ' 04 Secretary 161 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Princeton Club of Buffalo WiMAN H. Smith, Jr., ' x5 Secrttary 119 North St., Buffalo, N. Y. Princeton Club of New York S. G. Etherington, 06 Secretary 50 E, 4ind St., New York City Princeton Alumni Association of Rochester and Vicinity Alexander Russell, ' 04 Secretary 440 Powers Bldg., Rochester, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Southern New York Carlton S. Proctor, 15 Secretary Stcrttary Stcrttary Secretary 479 1778 ' ' ' ' t r M II n I ' ■ ' n II M J 7 1928 Alumni Clubs and Associations — (Continued) Bronxville, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Central New York Stuart F. Raleigh, ' ii Secretary III DeWitt St., Syracuse, N. Y. OHIO Princeton Alumni Association of Cincinnati LoREN G. Gatch, ' 13 Stcrctary Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Northern Ohio Rudolph A. Cannon, ' 10 Secretary 1 1483 Hessler Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Columbus and Vicinity Richard A. Morehoues, ' 2.4 Secretary Morehouse-Martens Co., Columbus, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Toledo E. R. Herendeen, ' 18 Secretary 4 Miltmore Aprs., Toledo, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Youngstown W. G. Hayward, ' 17 Secretary 2.1 Broadway, Youngstown, Ohio OREGON Princeton Alumni Association of Oregon P. L.Jackson, ' 15 Secretary Oregon Journal, Portland, Oregon PENNSYLVANIA Princeton Alumni Association of Eastern Pennsylvania John H. Leh, ' 2.1 Secretary Leh Department Store, Allentown, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Erie Spencer A. Sisson, ' 12. Secretary 409 Marine Bank Bldg., Erie, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Central Pennsylvania John McI. Smith, ' 15 Secretary 502. Bergner Bldg., Harrisburg, Pt Princeton Club of Philadelphia William M. Prizer, ' 09 Secretary 52.9 Market St., Philadelphia, Pa. Princeton Club of Pittsburgh W. L. Jones, ' 15 Secretary William Penn Hotel, Pittsburgh, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Western Pennsylvania T. Howe Nimick, ' 15 Secretary 900 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania Robert C. Miner, ' 15 Secretary X92. S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. TENNESSEE Princeton Alumni Association of Tennessee Walter H. Watkins, ' 00 Secretary Hamilton Nat ' l. Bank Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. TEXAS The Border Association MiERS C. Johnson, ' 14 Secretary Care of Burton Lingo Co., El Paso, Texas Princeton Alumni Association of Houston Ben a. Calhoun, ' 13 Secretary Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas UTAH Princeton Alumni Association of Salt Lake City George A. Critchlow, ' h Secretary McCormick Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah VIRGINIA Princeton Alumni Association of Virginia James H. Devereux, Jr., ' 15 Secretary 2.10 Royster Bldg., Norfolk, Va. WASHINGTON Princeton Club of Western Washington George McIlwain, ' 2.2. Secretary 1105 E. Pike St., Seattle, Wash. FOREIGN Princeton Alumni Association of Syria T. D. EwiNG, ' zi Secretary American University of Beirut, Beirut, Syria Princeton Alumni Association of Hawaii K. B. Barnes, ' 06 Secretary P. O. Box 3380, Honolulu, T. H. Princeton Club of Paris Edward R. Stoever, ' 08 Secretary Ave. des Champs Elysees, Paris, France 480 i M 1 L II It II ' I M If ' I ' t ' ' . ' ' ' M f T ' T ' T 1928 ? Alumni Day FEBRUARY ii, 1916 10.00 A. M. Alexander Hall. Washington ' s Birthday Exercises. 1. 00 p. M. Madison Hall. Alumni Luncheon. 11.00 A. M. Faculty Room, Nassau Hall. Meeting of National Alumni Association. Report of Committee to Nominate Alumni Trustees. Award of Pyne Honor Prize. Unveiling of Portrait of James Madison, 1771. Report on Princeton Fund, William Church Osborn, ' 83, Chairman. Address by President Hibben, ' Sl. 1. 00 p. M. Prospect. Ladies ' Luncheon with Mrs. Hibben as Hostess. 3.0C p. M. Baker Rink. Hockey, Yale versus Princeton. 8.30 p. M. Brokaw Pool. Swimming and Water Polo, Pennsylvania versus Princeton. 481 Directory Faculty NAME ADDRESS Achorn, E., Inst 54 Patton Ave. Adams, E. P., Prof 11 Nassau St. Albion, R. G., Prof 69 Harrison St. Alexander, C. I., Inst 35 Williams St. Alexander, J. W., Prof 19 Cleveland Lane Armstrong, E. C, Prof i6 Edgehill St. Babcock, L. E., Prof X5 Wilton St. Bally, G. B., Inst 55 Battle Road Barrett, D. C, Prof Nassau Club Basore, J. W., Prof loi Library Place Bassett, M. E., Prof 115 Prospect Ave. Beckhart, H., Prof. Beggs, G. E., Prof 39 Park Place Beller, E. A., Inst i}4 Py- Bender, H. H., Prof no Fitz Randolph Road Bennett, W. W., Inst xo6 Nassau St. Bixby, E. A., Prof 155 Nassau St. Blanchard, L. R., Inst 11 College Rd. Blote, H. C, Inst 3-E Prospect Apts. Bond, J. H., Prof 174 Prospect Ave. Bond, R. W., Inst 31 G. C. Bonner, K., Inst On Leave Boyce, G. C, Inst 134 Little Hall Boyce, J. C, Inst 30 Nassau St. Brenner, C. D., Inst 77 Jefferson Rd. Brigham, C. C, Prof 1J1.-K Prospect Ave. Brown, J. D., Inst 3 College Rd. Brown, J. E., Jr., Prof 190 Mercer St. Brown, P. M., Prof 8i Library Place Buddington, A. P., Prof 178 Prospect Ave. Buffam, B. S. W., Inst ii-BG. C. Buffum, D. L., Prof 60 Hodge Rd. Butler, E. G., Inst 2.4 Dickinson St. Byrne, W. E., Inst 106 Broadmead Capps, E., Prof 150 Fitz Randolph Rd. Carmichael, L., Prof 102. G. C. Carnochan, J. McD. , Physician 34 Mercer St. Carpenter, W. S., Prof z6 Murray Place NAME ADDRESS Gary, L. R. , Prof 48 Vandeventer Ave. Causey, D., Inst 30 Olden Lane Cawley, R. R., Prof IM PX- Centeno, A., Inst 171 Nassau St. Chapin, S., Inst i6 Edgehill St. Chapman, P. A., Prof 193 Nassau St. Coindreau, M. E. , Inst 34 y. Coleman, Norton, P. R., Prof 13 Dickinson St. Collignon, G. H., Inst 8 Madison St. Collins, V. L., Scc ' y of Univ 114 Western Wav Colt, J. M., Prof 162. Mercer St. Compton, K. T., Prof 106 Fitz Randolph Rd. Comstock, F. A., Inst 166 Nassau St. Conklin, E. G., Prof 139 Broadmead Connell, C. C. , Inst 192. Nassau St. Cons, L., Prof 84 Alexander St. Constant, F. H., Prof 57 Battle Rd. Cook, A. N., Prof 177 - Moore St. Cooke, H. L., Prof Nassau Club Corwin, E. S., Prof 115 Prospect Ave. Cottier, H., Inst 12.8 Fitz Randolph Rd. Cotton, H. A., Lect State Hosp., Trenton Covington, H. F., Prof 53 Battle Rd. Critchlow, F. L., Prof 56 Univ. Place Croll, M. W., Prof 31 Chambers St. Culver, E. P., Prof 8 Dickinson St. Dahlgren, U., Prof 7 Evelyn Place D ' Amato, F., Lect ■ Stockton St. Dameron, K., Inst ; 14 Pla :e Davis, N. F. G.,Inst 38 Jefferson Rd. Dean, P. N., Inst 92. G. C. Dearing, W. C, Inst 2.8 Jefferson Rd. Dell, B. N., Inst East Nassau St. Dennis, H. V., Inst 12. Alexander St. DeWald, E. T., Prof 15-A G. C. De Young, G.M., Inst 44 Mercer St. Dixon, F. H., Prof 101 Broadmead Dodds, H. W., Prof Springdale Rd. 484 Faculty — ( Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Dorf, E. , Inst 4 College Rd. Dougherty, G., Prof 95 Library Place Dufficid, G. V 157 Nassau St. Duffield, H. G., Trcas. of Univ 130 Library Place Dugan, R. S., Prof 16 Prospect Ave. Duncan, A. J., Inst 91 G. C. Duncan, R. B. , Inst Arbor Inn Edwards, B., Inst 141 Nassau St. Eidmann, F. L. , Prof 188 Prospect Ave. Eiscnhart, L. P. , Prof Deans House Elderkin, G. W., Prof ii Haslett Ave. Elliott, R. W., Jr., Inst 7 West Brown Elsasscr, A. R., Inst 181 Prospect Ave. Engel, E. W., Inst 55 Aiken Ave. Eno, H. L., Lcct 65 Stockton St. Erdman, C. R., Jr., Inst io Boudinot St. Parr, M. S., Prof 2.0 Vandeventer Ave. Fetter, F. A., Prof .■ 111 Broadmead Field, R. M., Prof 35 Edgchill St. Fine, H. B., Prof 73 Library Place Fite, W., Prof 5 College Rd. Flint, F. C, Inst 302. Henry Ford, R. S., Inst 14 Park Place Foster, C. F., Inst 33 Maple St. Foster, W., Prof 41 Battle Rd. Fournicr, L. T., Inst 53 Park Place Fox, G. G., Inst 184 Prospect Ave. Friend, A. M., Jr., Prof. 15-B G. C. FuUe, R. M., Inst i-M Prospect Apts. Furman, N. H., Prof 13 College Rd. Galline, F. E., Inst 5-B G. C. Gauss, C. , Prof Joseph Henry House Gerould, G. H., Prof 10 Bayard Lane Gerould, J. T., Prof 55 Battle Rd. Gibson, J. J., Inst i-A G. C ' Gillanders, E. B., Inst 40 Jefferson Rd. Gillespie, W., Prof Py. Tower, G. C. Gleason, A. H., Inst 11 Vandeventer Ave. Glenn, R. C, Inst 18 Jefferson Rd. Goldstein, E. Z., Inst 141 Little Graham, F.D., Prof 8 College Rd Green, J. C, Prof 176 Western Way Greene, A. M., Jr., Prof Fitz Randolph Rd. NAME ADDRESS Greene, T. M., Prof 12.1 Jefferson Rd. Hall, C. R., Prof 151 G. C. Hall, W. P., Prof li Edgehill St. Harper, G. McL., Prof 36 Mercer St. Harris, W. B., Prof Greenholm Harvey, E. N., Prof 1 College Rd. Hastings, W. S., Prof 168 Nassau St. Hawkins, E., Inst i i-A G. C. Heacock, F. A., Prof 78 Jefferson Rd. Heermance, R., Prof 2.98 Nassau St. Hendel, W. M., Jr., Prof 76 Murray Place Herben, S. J.,Jr., Inst 106 Nassau St. Herling, R., Inst io6 Nassau St. Hewett-Thayer, H. W., Prof ii Nassau St. Hibbcn, J. G., Pres Prospect, Princeton Hill, D. G., Inst 93 Alexander St. Hill, S. E., Inst 112. N. Moore St. Hille, C. E., Prof. (On leave) 174 Prospect Ave. Hinds, A. E. , Inst loi Foulkc Hitti, P. K., Prof 14 Wilton St. Holmes, R. St. C, Inst 14 Dickinson St. Holt, E. B., Prof Eno Hall Hoskins, J. P., Prof 10 College Rd. Howard, S. E., Prof 7 College Rd. Howe, S. J., Prof 4 College Rd. Howell, B. F., Prof ix College Rd. Hulett, G. A. , Prof 44 Washington Rd. Hulin, W. S., Inst 114 G .C. Hutson, F. L., Prof 41 Cleveland Lane Inglis, F. B. (Major) K-i Prospect Apts. Johnson, A.C., Prof. (On leave) 3 College Rd. Johnson, R. B. C, Prof 12.9 Broadmead Jones, L. W., Prof Nassau Club Jones, W. H., Inst x-B G. C. Kemmerer, E. W., Prof. (On leave) 12.8 Fitz Randolph Rd. Kennedy, C. W., Prof 66 Battle Rd. Kenty, C, Inst 56 Patton Ave. Kirk, Rev. H. E., Inst 502. Cathedral St. Kissam, P., Prof 186 Prospect Ave. Knebelman, M. S., Inst 9 Aiken Ave. Koren, W., Prof 105 Fitz Randolph Rd. Kretschman, P. M., Inst 42. Mercer St. Langfeld, H. S., Prof Princeton Inn 485 Faculty — ( Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Lawhon, Z. E., Prof 193 . Moore St, Lee, R. W., Inst 36 Edwards Place Lefschetz, S., Prof 190 Prospect Ave. Levengood.S. L., Inst Pyne Tower, G. C. Lind ' ey, D., Inst Nassau Inn Longwell, H. C, Prof 91 Mercer St. Loomis, E. H., Prof 301 Nassau St. Lowe, L. F. H., Prof 104 Henry Lucarini,C.,Inst 7 Park Place McCabe, D. A., Prof 143 Cuyler McCay, L. W., Prof 12. Morven St. McClellan, G. B., Prof Nassau Club McClure, C. F. W., Prof i Battle Rd. McComas, H. C, Prof 109 Broadmead McConnaughy, D. S., Prof 16 Wilton St. MacDonald, F. C, Prof 8 Dickinson St. Maclnnes, C. R., Prof 118 Broadmead Mclsaac, A. M., Inst 54 G. C. McKenzie, K., Prof 9 Battle Rd. MacLaren, M., Prof 38 Washington Rd. MacLaren, M., Jr., Inst 38 Washington Rd. Macy, C. L., Inst Box 346, Princeton Magie, D., Prof 101 Library PI. Magie, W. F., Prof 118 Library PI. Marden, C. C, Prof iii Mercer St. Mason, A. T., Prof 30 Nassau St. Mather, F. J., Jr., Prof 3 Evelyn PI. Menzies, A. W. C, Prof 187 Prospect Ave. Miles, J. B., Jr., Inst 64 Nassau St. More, P. E., Inst 2.45 Nassau St. Morey, C. R., Prof 114 Broadmead Morgan, S. W., Prof 145 Hodge Rd. Morris, J. C.,Jr., Inst PyneTower, G. C. Morrison, L. A., Inst 16 Park PI. Munro, D. C, Prof 119 Fitz Randolph Rd. Murch, H. S., Prof 6-A Holder My ers, W. S., Prof 104 Bayard Lane Neher, F., Prof 151 Library PI. Neiderhauser, W. S., Inst 105 Fitz Randolph Rd. Nies, A. B., Inst 41 Jefferson Rd. Norman, G. W. H., Inst 40 Jefferson Rd. Osgood, C. G., Prof 92. Stockton St. Parker, W. V., Inst i Dickinson St. NAME ADDRESS Parrott, T. M., Prof 44 Princeton Ave. Pease, R. N., Prof 15-E G. C. Perry, E. L.,Inst 16 Hawthorne Ave. Phillips, A. H., Prof 54 Hodge Rd. Piquet, H. S. , Inst 3 College Rd. Pomfret, J. E., Inst 11 Princeton Ave. Prentice, W. K., Prof li Nassau St. Prickett, F. B., Prof 40 Patton Ave. Priest, G. M., Prof 10 Nassau St. Rahm, L. F. , Inst 2.4 Hawthorne Ave. Rainey, W. G., Asst. Phys McCosh Infirmary Raycroft, J. E., Prof 198 Nassau St. Rice, J. M., Inst 3 Hamilton Ave. Richards, W. T., Inst 16 Alexander St. Robbins, E. Y., Prof 144 Library PI. Robinson, C. Rogers, C. H., Curator 1.0 Haslett Ave. Rogers, R. S., Inst. 2.19 Nassau St. Rogers, R. W., Prof Madison, N. J. Rogers, V. C, Inst 7 Park PI. Root, R. K., Prof 138 Fitz Randolph Rd. Rowley, G., Prof 15-A G. C. Russell, A., Dir. of Music 45th St., New York City Russell, H. N., Prof 79 Alexander St. Sampson, E., Prof 106 Fitz Randolph Rd. Savage, H. L., Prof 131 Pyne Schofield, S. B., Inst Hun School Scoon, R. M., Prof 19 Cleveland Lane Scott, T. C, Inst Hun School Scott, W. B., Prof 7 Cleveland Lane Sessions, W. V. , Inst 105 Fitz Randolph Rd. Shear, T. L., Lect iz Battle Rd. Shenstonc, A. G., Prof 30 Nassau St. Shipman, H. R., Prof 17 Mercer St. Shoemaker, W. H., Inst 93 Alexander St. Shoup, C. S. , Inst II Alexander St. ShuU, G. H., Prof 60 Jefferson Rd. Silvester, L. V., Inst Mt. Lucas, Princeton Sinclair, D. B., Prof 140 Hodge Rd. Sinclair, W. J., Prof 154 Prospect Ave. Sloat, C. A. , Inst 173 Nassau St. Smith, D. P., Prof 90 Bayard Lane Smith, E. B., Prof 11 Cleveland Lane 486 Faculty— (i Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Smith, H. A., Exec. Sec 8i Alexander St. Smith, H. R. W., Prof 16 Westcott Rd. Smith, J. G., Inst 176 Prospect Ave. Smyth, C. H., Jr., Prof 2.1 Morven St. Smyth, C. P., Prof ir Morven St. Smyth, H. DeW., Prof 7-C G. C. Sontag, R., Prof in Pyne Sorenson, A. E., Inst 78 Jefferson Rd. Spaeth, J. D., Prof (On leave). Spaulding, E. G., Prof 8 Edgehill St. Stevens, K. P., Inst 94 G. C. Stevens, W. L., Inst 180 Alexander St. Stewart, F. B. , Inst 10 Nassau St. Stewart, J. Q. , Prof loo Mercer St. Stillwell, R., Inst 14-A G. C. Stohlman, W. F., Prof. (On leave). Stoops, W. N., Inst 38 Moore St. Stuart, D. C, Prof 181 Western Way Stuart, D. R., Prof 60 Battle Rd. Sullivan, F. J., Inst 44 Jefferson Rd. Swinnerton, R., Inst 57 Jefferson Rd. Tarr, F. C, Prof i College Rd. Taylor, E. A. , Prof Nassau Club Taylor, H. S., Prof 115 Broadmead Temby, J. L., Inst 55 Battle Rd. Thomas, T. Y., Prof 170 N. Moore St. Thompson, H. D., Prof. (On leave). Thompson, S. H., Inst. Thorp, W. W., Inst 8 G. C. Tooker, N. B., Prof 149 Hodge Rd. Trowbridge, A., Prof. (On leave). Turner, L. A., Prof 7-C G. C. Vail, H. B., Inst 61 Wiggins St. Van Dcusen, E. R., Prof 59 Murray PI. van Dyke, H., Lect 59 Bayard Lane van Dyke, P., Prof 154 G. C. Van Hocsen, H. B., Prof 16 Linden Lane Veblen, O., Prof 58 Battle Rd. Voorhees, D. , Prof 30 Nassau St. Vreeland, W. U., Prof i8o Mercer St. Walton, L. B., Inst 15 Jefferson Rd. Warren, H. C, Prof. (On leave). Webb, T. J., Inst Nassau Club NAME ADDRESS Weber, S. H., Prof 106 Broadmead Wadderburn, J. H. M., Prof 134 Mercer St. Wells, A. B., Inst 131 Mercer St. Wertenbakcr, T. J., Prof in Fitz Randolph Rd. West, A. B., Prof 50 Patton Ave. West, A. F., Prof Wyman House, G. C. Wheeler, A. L., Prof 138 Jefferson Rd. Wheeler, D., Inst n Alexander Hall, Seminary Whitcomb, L., Inst io Hawthorne Ave. Whitney, G. T., Prof 33 Jefferson Rd. Whittlesey, W. L., Prof 13 N. Edwards Hall Willis, C. H., Prof 30 Edwards PI. Wright, G. C, Inst 51 G. C. Young, M. O. , Library 14 Dickinson St. Zahn, C. T., Prof 43 G. C. Graduate Students Adams, M. R Pyne Tower, G. C. Alexander, C. I., Jr 4.55 William St, Alexander, H. M 12. G. C. Alison, V. S 31 A. S. Armstrong, K. L 46 A. S. Ayearst, M. J 74 G. C. Bainbridge, K. T 1 1 G. C. Ball, R. H 54 G. C. Bannerman, H. M 1 i-C G. C. Barton, T. C 14 Murray PI. Bates, J. R 8z G. C. Beatty, H. A 64 G. C. Benjamin, P. M 104 G. C. Bennett, R. D 15-D G. C. Bennett, W.W 2.06 Nassau St. Bole, J. C, Jr 81 G. C. Bond, R. W 31 G. C. Brasefield, C. J 73 G. C Bray, C. W., II i-A G. C. Brode, R. B Apt. H-3, Prospect Apts. Broomall, W., Jr 107 H. S. Brown, B. LeF 14 Prospect Ave. Buffam, B. S. W i i-B G. C. Burns, E. T 2.4 Dickinson St. 487 Graduates — ( Continued NAME ADDRESS Bussmann, H. W ii8 G. C. Cameron, J. A xr Bank St. Campbell, A. W 415 H. S. Capps, E., Jr 141 G. C. Cate, J. L zi G. C. Charles, M. A X4 Dickinson St. Chen, P. T 62. G. C. Chesebro, P. R 108 Stockton St. Church, A., II 44 G. C. Cline, J. M 52. G. C. Coleman, R. B., Jr 93 G. C. Comfort, H 6-A G. C. Connell, C. C lop. Nassau St. Cooley, G. P ....117H. S. Cutting, J. R 64 Nassau St. Davis, E. R 81 G. C. Davis, N. F. G 38 Jefferson Rd. Davis, P. H 7-B G. C. Dearing, W. C i8 Jefferson Rd. de Lancey, De V i-B G. C. Dell, B. N Meadovp Garden De Young, G. M 44 Mercer St. Dignan, T. S Prospect Apts. Dorn, R. C 38 A. S. Douglas, J Nassau Inn, Princeton, N. J. Duncan, A. J 91 G. C. Duncan, R. M Arbor Inn Club Dunham, T., Jr Grad School, Princeton, N. J. Durgan, E. S 175 Nassau St. Eagleson, H. A 93 Alexander St. Earnest, E. P 7-A G. C. Edsall, P. W 2.4 Dickinson St. Edwards, H. J 8-A G. C. Egbert, D. D 15-F G. C. Ellis, C. N 2.09 H. S. Engel, E. W 55 Aiken Ave. Ewing, B. R.,Jr 4-A G. C. Ewing, R. McC 2.1 A. S. Evans, C. S 5-A G. C. Fairley, A. S 14 Prospect Ave. Fennelly, J. F 14 Dickinson St. Fisher, E. L 5 Guilden St., New Brunswick, N.J. Fleck, E. E 104 G. C. NAME ADDRESS Flexner, W. W 31 G. C. Flosdorf, E. W 15 Aiken Ave. Folk, E. H., Jr 7-A G. C. Foulet, A. L 14-C G. C. Forsyth, G. H.,Jr 15-B G. C. Fowler, F. C, II 77 B. S. France, N. H 146 G. C. Franklin, W.N 12.4 G. C. Eraser, L. M 14-B G. C. Friedman, D 2.06 H. S. Fudge, D. G 2.3 G. C. Fulle, R. M Apt. i-M, Prospect Apts. Gahagan, L. H 11 G. C. Galline, F. E 5-B G. C. Gearhart, M. A 16 Vandeventer Ave. von Gcbauer-Fulnegg, E 63 G. C. Gibson, J. J i-A G. C. Gillanders, E. B 40 Jefferson Rd. Gleason, A. H 11 Vandeventer Ave. Glenn, R. 2.8 Jefferson Rd. Godolphin, F. R. B 2.5 Wilton St. Gosnell, C. B 12. G. C. Greene, R. L 8-A G. C. Grubbs, H. A., Jr 33 G. C. Gurney, R. W 106 Alexander St. Gwynne, J. H 306 H. S. Hall, N. F i-A G. C. Hamlin, J. F 41 G. C. Hargroves, V. C 415 H. S. Harnwell, G. P Pyne Tower, G. C. Harrington, M. C 4-B G. C. Harrison, E. F 34 A. S. Hawkins, E .ii-A G. C. Hayes, W. C, Jr 34 Edws. PI. Heathcote, R. J Z2. Bank St. Herling, R. R 106 Nassau St. Hibben, J. H 13 Jefferson Rd. Hill, D. G 93 Alexander St. Hill, S. E ixi N. Moore St. Holmes, R. St. C 14 Dickinson St. Holzmann, A. W xoo Ward St., New Brunswick, N. J. Huse, W. W., Jr 52. G. C. Jackson, W.J 8 College Rd. 488 Graduates— Q Continued I NAME ADDRESS Jones, E. H 33 A. S. Jones, W. H., Jr i-B G. C. Jones, W. J }ii H. S. Kamplain, J. C 55 Jefferson Rd. Kelbaugh, P. R io8 Stockton St. Kerr, D. E 34 A. S. Key, R. W }8 Alexander St. Killian, T. J 11 G. C. Kimball, L. W Hamilton Rd., New Brunswick, N. J. King, E. S Ill G. C. Kinsler, F 77 B- S. Kirk, R i-BG. C. Kistiakowsky, G. B 152. Alexander St. Kitazawa, N 2.4 Moore St. Koopman, B. 78 G. C. Kovalenko, M ix Bank St., Princeton, N. J. Kuykendall, W. F 14 A. S. Lathrop, C. P 80 Alexander St. Laurie, J. W 4 A. S. Lcsch, E. C. A 12. G. C. Lewis, C. H., II 12.6 G.C. Lindabury, R. V., Jr 61 G. C. Livingood, J. J 14-D G. C. Logan, J. v., Jr 6-A G. C. Lowry, T. McC, Jr 80 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Lucarini, C 7 Park PI. McComb, J. H 409 H. S. McConnell, P. S 153 Nassau St. McDowell, Q. A 2.03 H. S. MacLaren, M., Jr 38 Washingtpn Rd. MacLeod, A. N 41 A. S. MacMorran, H. G 311 Foulke Hall MacRae, A. A 303 H. S. Metzger, A. L 63 Jefferson Rd. Michal, A. D 185 Moore St. Milas, N. A 15-D G. C. Modlin, G. M loi G. C. Morgan, S. O i-B G. C. Morledge, J. S 103 H. S. Morrison, H. S 72. G. C. Morse, P. McC 103 G. C. Moser, C. C 64 Nassau St. Niederhauser, W. S 105 Fitz Randolph Rd. NAME ADDRESS Norman, G. W. H 40 Jefferson Rd. Gates, W. J 76 G. C. Oguri, J. J I A.S. Osterholt, W. R. B Trenton, N. J. Parker, W. V i Dickinson St. Pease, R.N 15-E G. C. Pegrum, R. H ii-B G. C. Pitkin, T. M 2.2. Bank St. Porter, A. G 14 G. C. Rein, E. R 44 Mercer St. Reitzel, C. E 175 Nassau St. Rian, E. H 19 A. S. Richardson, A.S 41 Battle Rd. Rick, J. F. A 8-B G. C. Robinson, C. A., Jr . 148 G. C. Rodgers, J. B 14 Dickinson St. Rodgers, V. C 7 Park PI. Rowe, C 403 H. S. Rutgers, W. H 37 B. S. Sanders, A.J 301 H. S. Schimpff, L. D 93 G. C. SchlosDerg, H 91 G. C. Schofield, E. M 303 H. S. Schofield, S. B 108 Stockton St. Scott, T. C 108 Stockton St. Severs, J. B 8-B G. C. Shaffer, W. F 4-B G. C. Shearer, E. M 71 G. C. Shoemaker, W. H 93 Alexander St. Shoup, C. S II Alexander St. Singer, J ii G. C. Sloat, C. A 173 Nassau St. Soper, A. C, III 14 Dickinson St. Steele, H. McK 130 Library PI. Steese, E 64 Nassau St. Stoops, W.N 38 Moore St. Taylor, F. H 12.2. G. C. Todd, G. L 5-CG. C. Underwood, P. A 2.4 G. C. van der Gracht, I. van W 34 G. C. VanTil, C 19 Alexander St. Wahlert, H. E 2.4 Dickinson St. Wallace, S. LeR 42. G. C. 489 Gra duates — ( Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Wells, E. H 132. Mercer St. Whaler, J. W 7 Newlin Rd. Whitcomb, L 10 Hawthorne Ave. Whittlesey, C, R 92. G. C. Williams, F. R 15 A. S, Wilson, L. R ij G. C. Wood, F. T 144 G. C. Woodbridge, C. J 40 A. S. Wright, G. C 51 G. C. Wright, W. L.,Jr 51 G. C. Yeomans, E. G 107 H. S. Yusufji, H Hartford Theological Seminary, Hartford, Conn. Zurcher, A.J 103 G. C. Undergraduates Acuff, J. K., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) .51 H Adam, D. G., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 305 F Adams, E. G., Jr., ' 30 45 University PI. Adams, J. M., ' 19 iz N M R Adams, J. M., ' 18 (Gateway) 36 Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Adams, P. R., ' 2.9 ' . 10 S M R Adams, W. S., II, ' 30 35 Bank St. Adler, T. C, ' 17 112. F Agle, C. K., ' 2.9 2.ii- ' oi Agnew, C. R., Jr., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 34 Bl Agnew, D., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 12. Bl Aitken, B. W., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 34 L Aitken, J. W., ' i8 (Tiger Inn) 14-79 Akinson, K. B., ' 18 313 F Alder, B. C. , ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Aldrich, D. G., ' 30 49 Wiggins St. Aldridge, W. V., ' 17 (Terrace) 12.4 L Alexander, A. J., Jr., ' 2.9 4 E M W Alexander, A. G., ' 30 617 Py Alexander, A. S., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 104 Hy Alexander, C. B., Jr., ' 30 141 H Alexander, E. E., ' 17 (Cottage) 12.2. L Alexander, F. B., ' x8 (Cloister) 53 L Alexander, H. B., ' 2.9 i42.- ' oi Alexander, H. M., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) I3 79 Alexander, M., ' 30 716 Py NAME ADDRESS Alexander, W. A., Jr., ' 2.8 (Gateway) i42.- ' oi Alexander, W. F., Jr., ' 19 16 Bl Alison, J. M., ' 30 2.5 Bank St. Alison, J., Jr., ' ig 2.3i- ' oi Allen, F. S., ' 2.9 3EMW Allen, N. E., xg 5SD Allen, W., ' tj (Cloister) 44-79 Alley, J. L., ' 19 19 University PI. Alsop, T. P., ' 30 13 N D Ambler, H. E., 17 (Tower) 4 N R Ames, J. D., ' i8 (Cottage) 31 Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Ancona, J. S., ' 2.9 i Hill Dorm Anders, S. H., ' 30 11 Dickinson St. Anderson, T. McD., ' 2.7 331 Py Andrews, H. P., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 76 H Andrews, M. E., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) i6x Cy Andrews, W. P., ' 2.8 (Campus) iii F Angell, R. S., ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 32.4 Hy Angle, W. McC, 18 (Arbor Inn) 133 F Angus, J., Jr., 19 53 H Appel, K. B., ' 19 9 N R Applegate, R. W., ' 30 2.3 Chambers St. Armitage, T. W., ' 2.9 14 Hm Armstrong, J. E., ' 2.9 41 University PI. Armstrong, W. P., Jr., ' 2.9 14 Vandcventer Ave. Arnott, E. G. F., ' i8 (Court) 633 Py Arnt, C. E., ' 19 2.1 N W Ashcraft, E. M., ' 19 11 L Ashley, F. M., ' 2.9 i Hill Dorm Atherton, R. W., ' 30 2.0 Moore St. Atkins, B. M., 18 32.4 F Atkins, G., ' 30 45 Vandeventer Ave. Atkinson, H. S., ' 17 5 N E Atwood, F. H., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 74 Bl Auld, D. v., ' 2.9 lo Nassau St. Austen, G., ' 30 3 B Hm Austin, J. D., ' 30 8 Hamilton Ave. Averill, N. K., Jr., ' 2.8 (Charter) 3ii- ' oi Averv, W. H., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tower) 41-51 P Babcbck, B, M., ' 2.8 9SD Babcock, G. S., ' 2.9 72-7 Py Babcock, G. H., ' 30 47 N- Tulanc St. Babcock, W. J., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 3oi- ' oi 490 I I I I I I I I I II I I I ! II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I CT 7 1928 Undergraduates— {Continued) NAME ADDRESS Bachcllcr, J. S., ' 18 (Terrace) 2.3 P Bachman, A. E., ' 2.9 61 P Bachman, E. K., ' z8 i C Hm Bachran, T. G., Jr., ' 17 (Gateway) 8 S E B Bacon, F. F. , ' x9 6 Bl Backey, B. B., ' 17 (Elm) 9= P Baer, T. C, ' 19 , 19 University PI. Bailey, C. T., ' 30 2.7 Bank St. Bailey, G. O ' B., ' 19 2.3 L Bain, F. D., ' 30 11 Dickinson St. Baker, C. N., ' 30 3°9 Hm Baker, F. A., Jr., ' 18 (Cottage) 32-3 Py Baker, W. H., Jr., ' 19 iii- ' oi Baldwin, R., ' 2.7 (Ivy) 35 L Baldwin, T. H., ' 2.9 66 Nassau St. Baldwin, W. B., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 3oi- ' oi Balfour, C. E., ' 2.7 101 F Ball, C. G., ' 2.8 Key and Seal Club Ball, F. W., Jr., •2.9 2.3 P Ballantine, J. B., ' 2.9 104 H Ballantine, R. W., ' -lj (Cloister Inn) 44- ' 79 Ballard, W. F. R., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 14-79 Ballentine, J. G., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 85 P Ballentine, R. T., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 94 P Ballenger, W. S., Jr., ' 19 44 Hill Dorm Balmcr, C. C, ' 2.9 54N. TulaneSt. Bambey, J. W., ' 30 15 N M R Bancroft, F. S., Jr., ' 2.7 42.1 Cy Bandler, D. B., ■2.7 (Key and Seal) iii Hy Bannard, H., ' 2.9 2.1 C Bannerman, D. B., Jr., ' 2.8 (Elm) 13 S W Baptisti, A., Jr., ' 2.8 35 William St. Barber, F. G., ' 2.7 13 E W Barber, H. P., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 4X- ' 79 Barbour, W. S., ' 18 (Cottage) 131 H Barclay, C. W., ' 2.7 (Colonial) 2.61 Cy Barfield, W. D., ' 30 309 Hm Barker, G., Jr., ' 19 33i- ' oi Barker, W. H., ' 18 (Cloister) 80 P Barlow, D. B., ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 2.02. F Barnes, V. G., 19 58 Wiggins St. Barnctt, L. K., ' 2.9 42.1 Py Barnouw, E. , ' 2.9 1 9 S M R NAME ADDRESS Barnouw, W. C, ' 17 5WMW Barr, A. W., •17 (Elm) 3 S D Barr, W. A., Jr., ' 30 15 University PI. Barrett, L. R., ' 30 2. Nassau St. Barry, W. W., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 3-B H Bartell, E. C, ' 17 (Tiger Inn) Tiger Inn Bartlett, J. D., ' 17 (Ivy) 35 L Bartlett, R. D,, ' 2.9 616 La Barton, C. M., Jr., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Bartrop, F. F., Jr., ' 2.9 301 Hy Baruch, E. E., ' zg 8 WW Bassett, G. P., Ill, ' 2.9 iii H Bastedo, N. P., ' 2.9 16 E W Bateman, J., Jr., ' 18 (Charter) i W W Bates, J. R., Jr., 18 (Court) X3 N W Baton, C. B., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Battin, W. C., ' 30 lo Nassau St. Bauchens, F. C, ' x8 (Cottage) 114 H Bauer, J. L. J., ' 30 ixi Hy Bayes, R. R., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 113 Hy Bayless, J., ' 2.8 (Campus) 341 Cy Baylis, C., Jr., ' 2.9 2.3i- ' oi Beach, N. F., ' 30 34 S E Beaham, G. T., Jr., ' z8 (Court) 511 La Beaham, T. G., ' 30 ii6- ' oi Beaird, J. F., ' 2.9 97 Bi Beale, W. L., Jr., ' 17 334 F Beam, J. D., 19 11 W W Bear, R. S., ' 30 iSE Beard, M. C, ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) Cap and Gown Club Beardsley, F., ' 30 11 Dickinson St. Beardsley, R. A., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) ii Hm Beardsley, W. R., 18 (Campus) 183 L Beasley, W. F., -19 18 S E Beatty, R. T., Y9 72.8 Py Beaudrias, N. J., ' 2.9 2.2.6 Hy Beck, E. R., ' 30 35 Park PI. Becker, J. A., Jr., ' 19 30 Nassau St. Becker, S. M., Jr., ' iS (Cloister) 8i P Becker, T. H., ' iS 314 Py Beddoe, G. H., ' 30 B-W B Beddoe, W. C, ' 19 D-W B Bedford, F. A., Jr., ' i8 (Terrace) 403- ' oi 491 I H II II II II II II II II II II II II n II II I in 1 1778 Undergraduates— Q Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Beesley, G. A., ' 17 (Colonial) 331 Cy Begg, J. A., ' 30 35 Bank St. Beitler, A. M., II, ' 30 in Py Belcher, F. G., ' 18 51 H Beling, C. A., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 41 Bl Bell, E. W.,Jr., ' 30 19 Bank St. Bell, H. L., 17 (Tiger Inn) 8 S W B Bell, R. W., ' 30 II Vandevenrer Ave. Bellingrath, E. A., ' 2.9 ii S W Bellows, K. F., ' 18 (Terrace) 4WMW Benedict, C. P. , ' 19 3 1 L Benn, J. S., Jr., ' 2.9 115-01 Bennett, J. C, ' 30 185 L Bennett, J. R., ' 30 41 University PI. Bennett, R. H., ' 2.7 (Gateway) Gateway Club Bennett, R. W., ' 2.9 18 Madison St. Bennett, W. W. K., ' 18 (Key and Seal) 414 Py Benson, G. M., ' 30 10 S E B Benton, R. W., ' 30 2.2. Vandeventer Ave. Berwind, E. J., ' 30 loi Bl Berg, M. B., ' 2.7 311 Py Bergh, R. C, ' 2.7 (Gateway) 51 Bl Bernard, T. j., ' 17 in. Py Bernheim, R., ' 2.9 36 Hill Dorm Bessire, W. E., ' x 105 F Biedenharn, B. W., ' 30 131 L Bigelow, J. R., ' vj (Ivy) 131 L Biggs, J. Y., ' 30 511 Py Binns, W. H., II, ' 30 2.3 Chambers St. Birdsall, B., ' ig 36 Hill Dorm Birdsall, J. M., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) looP Bischoff, E. G., 19 3 E. B. Bixler, H. E., ' 2.9 ii4- ' oi Black, R. K., 18 (Cannon) 94 Bl Black, R. A., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 32.1 Hy Blair, J. M., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 4 Hm Blake, B., Ill, ' 2.9 ii3- ' oi Blake, E. C, ' r8 (Cap and Gown) 92. H Blanchard, G. G., ' 19 116 Py Blank, R. E., 18 (Court) 611 La. Blanton,J. E., ' 2.9 12. Vandeventer Ave. Bloch, O. E., ' i8 1 M D Bloch, T. M., ' 19 718 Py NAME ADDRESS Blynn, P. R., ' 2.9 55 University PI. Boatwright, H. L., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 15 Bl Bodman, H. T., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 64- ' 79 Bodman, L. H., ' 2.7 (Terrace) Terrace Club Bodman, W. H., ' 2.9 35 S W Boese, A. B., Jr., ' 2.8 42.8 Py Bole, R. F., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 51 H Book waiter, C. F., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 419 Py Booth, G. H., ' 30 16 Edwards PI. Borden, A. B., ' 2.9 14 Hm Borton, S. C, 18 (Arbor Inn) 38 E B Boskey, L. M., ' 17 144 Py Bosworth, O. B., ' 2.9 • 37 Bank St. Bottomley, F. K., ' 17 (Tower) 133 By Bowen, R. W., ' 30 ii Edwards PI. Bowie, C, ' 2.9 19 University PI. Bowman, D. S., ' 2.7 (Campus) 513 La Bowron, A. J., Jr., ' 18 (Cap and Gown) 3ii- ' oi Boyce, W. L., II, i (Key and Seal) 2.8 C Boyd, I. F., Jr., ' 2.9 44 C Boyd, J. P., ' iS 311 Hy Boyd, W. R., Ill, ' 19 171 L Bradbury, F. H., ' 19 65 Bl Bradbury, J. M., ' 30 2.13 Py Bradford, F. P., ' 30 ixH Bradford, J. P., ' iS (Elm) 4i- ' 79 Bradley, S. R., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 2.03 F Bradshaw, G. F., ' 30 5 Bl Braman, G. D., Jr., ' 2.9 2.6 Hill Dorm Braman, L. B., ' 18 (Colonial) 2.2. H Bramhall, H. K., ' 2.9 64 H Brandman, H. S., ' 2.7 142. L Breck, J. G., ' 2.9 66 Nassau St. Breed, W. C, Jr., ' t-j (Cap and Gown) 134 Hy Breesc, B. B., Jr., ' 2.7 (Cannon) io4- ' oi Brener, C. , ' 2.9 601 Py Brenton, W., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 44 Washington Rd. Brereton, D. J., ' 30 ii-A H Brewster, W. L., Jr., ' 17 (Cannon) 81 Bl Brick, E., ' 30 8 Hamilton Ave. Bridge, S. R., ' 30 15 S D Bridges, J. R., 18 (Cottage) SUP Brien, M. M., ' 17 (Terrace) 614 Py 492 Undergraduates — (Continued NAME ADDRESS Bcrrall, J. J., ' 17 (Cloister Inn) i E B Brigham, R. J., ' z8 (Dial Lodge) lo Nassau St. Brigham, W. T., ' 30 48 Vandcvenicr Ave. Bright, M. M., ' 18 (Cannon) ' 35 L Brinsmack, H. L., ' 30 7W M W Brisco, N. A., ' 30 7 Bl Broad, W. L., 19 16 E W Brock, L. R., ' 30 47 University PI. Brodhead, C. D., ' 2.9 i8 Edwards PI. Brodie, D. C, ' 18 8 U P Bromley, C. S., Jr., ' 2.9 17 Edwards PI. Bronson, A. E., Jr., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 92. Bl Brooks, C. B., ' 30 50 University PI. Brooks, J. H., Jr., ' 30 2.11 Cy Brooks, S. S., ' 17 (Gateway) io2.- ' oi Bross, M. G., Jr., 19 8 L P Brown, A., ' 2.7 (Charter) 734 Py Brown, A. S., ' 2.9 19 University PI. Brown, E. J., ' 30 33 Bank St. Brown, E. H., Ill, ' 2.9 3 E. B. Brown, E. J., ' 2.7 (Court) 716 Py Brown, F. W., ' 2.8 Box 14 Brown, H. S., Jr., ' 30 63iLa Brown, R. F., Jr., ' 30 13NE Brown, R. M., ' 30 6 M D Browne, H. G., ' 30 15 University PI. Browne, M., ' 2.8 51 Nassau Inn Browning, P. P., ' 30 19 Edwards PI. Bruce, R., ' 2.8 i Bl Bruning, R. H., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Bruyere, P. T., Jr., ' 30 41 Park PI. Bryan, J., Ill, ' 2.7 (Ivy) 13 Bl Bryant, W. R., ' 30 14 N D Buchanan, R. G., ' lA (Cottage) 12.3 H Bucher, J. V., ' 2.8 51} Hy Buchholz, R. P., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 13 P Buckbee, G. E., Jr., ' 2.9 36 Nassau St. Bunn, H. T., Jr., ' 2.9 61 Bl Bunnell, I., Jr., ' i8 (Charter) 2.15 Hy Burch, E. P., II, ' 18 (Cannon) 4H- ' oi Burgess, F. S. , ' 19 35 University PI . Burgess, W. W., ' 30 17 Edwards PI. Burgoync, W. M., ' 30 ' 34H NAME ADDRESS Burke, W. L. M., ' 2.8 2.02. Hy Burnham, D., ' 19 138 Nassau St. Burnham, J., ' 17 (Tower) 331 F Burns, R. C., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 32.5 F Burr, J. H., ' 19 34 H Burr, N. R., ' z7 344 Py Burrell, F. D., ' 2.7 (Tower) 114 Py Burroughs, E. W., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 2.SD Burrows, W. R., Jr., ' i8 (Terrace) 2.43 Py Burch, N. F., ' 19 138 Nassau St. Buschmann, C. E., ' 2.9 4 U P Bushnell, R. G., ' x8 (Quadrangle) 33 C Butchart, J. B., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 2.-B Hm Butler, H. J., ' 2.7 (Charter) 32-5 F Butler, K., ' 2.8 (Elm) 2-3- ' 79 Butterfield, C. E. , ' 2.9 10 N E Butterworth, T. H., ' xj (Gateway) 2.44 Cy Buys, C. K., ' 30 A-E B Buxton, C. L., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 4 P Buxton, R. v., ■x9 18 N E Byand, D. S., ' 19 19 University PI. Byron, J. W., ' 2.8 (Tower) 31 H Byron, W. C, ' 30 19 Bank St. Byxbee, J. C, ' 2.7 (Campus) 3LP Cage, E., Jr., ' 19 z Nassau St. Cainwath, J., Jr., ' 30 44 Vandeventer Ave. Calder, R. ' D., ■x8 (Key and Seal) 34- ' 79 Caldwell, J. M., ' 19 52.2. La Caldwell, R. W. D., ' 18 53 C Caldwell, W. G., ' 30 2.1 Chambers St. Cale, B. F. H., ' 2.7 (Cottage) iii Hy Camp, F. E., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 12. Bl Campbell, B. D., ' 50 51 N E Campbell, J. B., ' 18 17 E W Campbell, N. D., ' 30 47 University PI. Campbell, W. D., 19 12. S E B Campbell, W. R., ' 30 462. Cy Candee, W. S., ' 30 4 Hill Dorm Candler, B., ' 2.7 (Cannon) i2-- ' 79 Candv, W. E., ' 30 32.6 F Cand ' v, W. W., Jr., 8 (Cottage) 155 I. Cannon, H. B., 18 5 N R Capps, R. B., ' 2.7 (Tower) 4i-5i-P 493 Undergraduates — ( Continued ) NAME . ADDRESS Carey, J., ' 2.9 304 F Carey, R. A., ' }o 4ix Cy Carkener, G. G., ' 30 34 Chambers St. Carny, R. S., ' 30 19 Bank St. Carroll, W. C, 18 (Tiger Inn) 18 L Carrott, J. W., ' 19 113 Py Carrott, M. B., ' 17 (Cottage) i U P Carson, P. R., ' 30 x Nassau St. Carspccken, H. H., ' 17 34 P Carter, H. W., ' 30 Nassau Inn Carter, R., Jr., ' 30 19 Bank St. Carter, S., Ill, ' 17 (Quadrangle) 41 P Carter, T. M., ' 30 ix Park PI. Carry, J. W., ' 30 14 Park PI. Case, J. H., Jr., 19 34 C Case, C. A., ' rS (Cottage) 6UP Case, C. M., ' 18 (Campus) 133 L Casey, J., ' 17 (Elm) 102. Bl Caspar!, C. E., Jr., ' 2.8 (Tower) 9 S E B Cass, O. D., Ill, ' 2.9 60 P Castleman, G. M., ' 2.7 (Tower) Tower Club Caton, C. B., ' 2.7 6 N R Caulkins, D. P., ' z7 (Ivy) 41-79 Caveny, W. E., ' i9 19 University PI. Chaffee, W. G., ' 30 2.3 S E Chalmers, W. S., ' 19 2.2. S W Chamberlain, D., ' 30 185 L Chamberlain, J. L., ' 2.9 15 S M R Chambers, E. J., ' 2.9 X2.6 Hy Chambers, J. Q., Jr., ' x8 (Key and Seal) x W M W Chambers, L. G., ' 30 x8 N E Chandler, F. , ' 17 (Campus) 38L Chandler, J. R., ' X7 (Ivy) 1x3 Hy Chapin, C. S., Jr., 7 (Key and Seal) 8-A H Chapin, W. N., ' 30 19 Madison St. Chaplin, D. C, ' X7 (Cottage) 40-50 P Chapman, R. M., ' x9 11 Madison St. Chase, C. W., ' x8 (Gateway) xix- ' oi Chickering, J. J., Jr., ' X9 xi5- ' oi Childs, T. W., II, ■x8 (Elm) 9-A H Chivers, J. K. D., ' x8 (Cap and Gown) 113 H Christenson, W. J., ' xg x Nassau St. Christian, S. B., ' x8 11 S M R NAME ADDRESS Christie, L. H., ' 30 x-D H Churchill, R. H., ' 30 95 Bl. Cilley, J. K., ' xS (Court) X5 N W Claggett, J. P., ' x9 307 F Clapp, H. B., ' x8 (Cloister Inn) x M D Clark, C. S. , ' X7 (Key and Seal) 305 F Clark, D. A., ' X7 (Quadrangle) 4X P Clark, G. E., ' xg 6ix La Clark, H., •x7 (Ivy) 94 H Clark, R. E., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Clark, R. S., ' 30 15 University PI. Clark, W. C, ' 30 xo Moore St. Clarke, C. C, ' X9 xi Chambers St. Cleaveland, F. M., Jr., ' xS (Charter) ix}4 Vandeventer Ave. Clements, R. M., ' x8 (Cap and Gown) lo-A H Clemson, R. E., ' 30 x-D H Clifford, E. L., ' x8 (Tiger Inn) iiiL Cline, A. H., Ill, ' xg 19 University PI. Clinger, H. R., Jr., ' x8 (Gateway) 91 P Clinger, O. W., ■X9 n Bl Clunan, J. F., ' x7 (Gateway) ix P Coachman, J. E., ' 30 8SR Coan, W. p., ' x9 X5 N E Cobey, W. E., 9 15 Park PI. Cochran, H. P., ' X9 3-A C Cochran, L. V. , ' X7 (Campus) 300 Hm Cochran, J. B., ' X9 42--5X P Cochran, R. M., ' X7 (Tower) X31 Hy Cochran, W. p., Jr., ' X9 19 University PI. Cochran, W. W., ' X9 jxL Coghill, R. W., •x7 614 La Cohn, P. A., ' x7 14X H Colbron, W. C., ' 30 34 Chambers St. Colladay, D. C, ■X9 X41 Py Colladay, E. E., ' x7 (Cloister Inn) xxx Hy Collins, D. P., ' 30 35 University PI. Collins, J. S., ' x7 (Arbor Inn) 73 Bl Collins, M. P., Jr., •x9 6x L Collins, R. C, ' x7 (Cap and Gown) 64 L Collins, W. M., Jr., ' x7 (Cottage) 43 ' 53 Colmore, H. P., ' X7 (Quadrangle) Quadrangle Club Compton, B. C, ' X7 (Tiger Inn) 9SWB Comwcll, R., ' 30 3X Mercer St. 494 Vndergra duates — ( Con tiu u ed ) NAME ADDRESS Conant, R. E., iS ii L P Conglcton, R. J., ' 18 (Cannon) iii Hy Conklin, F., Ill, ' 19 6}i Py Conklin.J. A., ' 30 15 Edwards PI. Conklin, P. H., ' 17 ( Dial Lodge) 9 M D Connelly, B. C, ' jo 704 Py Conner, E. T., Ill, 17 93 P Conwcll, C. B., V 10 S D Cook, A. H., ' 17 (Campus) 16 M D Cook, J. C, ' iS 314 Py Cook, W. L., Jr., ' 30 Ill Hy Cooke, J. W., ' 30 68 L Cooke, R. P., ' 17 (Dial Lodge) 141 Hy Cooley, S. S., ' 17 (Gateway) 6EW Coon, J. M., ' 50 ' . 16 Park PI. Cooper, O. S., ' 30 11 Chambers St. Copley, J. G., ' 19 11 Hill Dorm Corcoran, H. F., ' iS (Tower) 95 P Cordes, W. A., ' 17 (Cloister Inn) 51 H Corning, L. , Jr. , ' 18 (Elm) lo S E Corser, J. B. , Jr. , ' 17 (Cloister Inn) 41 N W Cosby, J. T., 19 132- Py Coster, D. W., ' 19 441 Py Coster, H. S., ' 18 (Key and Seal) 41 Bl Cott, P. B., ' 19 413 Py Cotton, H. A., Jr., ' 30 431 Py Coulter, J. H., ' 30 15 University PI. Crutchfield, A. P., ' 30 15 University PI. Cover, T., Ill, ' 18 (Cap and Gown) 5-A H Covington, W. R., ' 18 (Colonial) 38 Mercer St. Covolo, A., ' 30 30 Wiggins St. Cowdcn, J. R., ' 30 10 Nassau St. Cox, D. F., Jr., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 711 Py Cox, H. P., 18 (Gateway) 85 P Cox, W. H., Jr., ' 19 10 Nassau St. Cox, W. D., ' 19 iiSEB Coxe, J. S., Jr., ' 19 614 Py Coyle, E. R., ' 30 8-B H Crabb, E. C, 19 11 S D Craig, F. E., ' 30 36 N E Craig, H., Jr., ' 19 10 E B Crandall, W. W., Jr., 18 (Tower) 51-79 Cramer, A., ' 19 31 SE NAME ADDRESS Cravens, M. F., ' 30 1 Dickinson St. Crawford, C. C, ' 30 11 Chambers St. Crawford, H, L., Jr., ' 17 (Cap and Gown) nWB Crawford, . W.J, ' 18 (Gateway) 5LP Crawford, W. B., Jr., ' 19 n Chambers St. Crispin, B. E., ' 18 (Court) 711 Py Crispin, F. E., ' 30 31 University PI. Critchlow, J. F., ' 30 18 Bank St. Crocker, C. C. , ' 17 (Terrace) 41 Bl Crocker, C. O., ' 19 3 W B Crotti, A. J., ' 18 (Cap and Gown) 51 C Crouch, W. E., Jr., ' 30 14 Vandeventer Ave. Crowley, G. M., ' 30 18 S E Crowther, F. B., Jr., ' 18 113 Py Cummings, T., ' 30 14 C Cummings, W. F., ' 17 (Tower) m Cy Cunningham, J. H., ' 18 (Cannon) 31 P Curran, J. D., ' 30 47 University PI. Curry, B. L., ' 30 31 Vandeventer Ave. Curtin, T., ' 17 (Tower) J17 F Curtis, W. E., ' 19 38 L Custer, H. L., ' 30 51 Bl Cutts, M., ' 17 (Court) 31 Bl Cuyler, G., ' 30 43 S. W Cuyler, J. P., Jr., ' 17 (Quadrangle) Quadrangle Club Dail, C. W., 18 (Quadrangle) 71 L Dakin, A. H., Jr., ' 18 11 Stockton St. Dakin, E. W., ' 30 613 La Dakin, W. S., ' 30 8 Madison St. Dalenz, J. M., ' 19 333 Hy Dalley, J. A. R., ' 19 i33- ' oi Dalrymple, J. I., ' i8 (Terrace) 4o3- ' oi Damerel, J. E., Jr., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 13 Cy Damercl, W. A., ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 9BI Danehower, W. F., ' 30 48 Vandeventer Ave. Darby, R. F., ' 17 (Tower) 16 M D Darnell, C. L., ' 19 6 S E B Davidson, M. B., ' 18 (Tower) Tower Club Davis, A. D. S., ' 17 (Ivy) 331 Cy Davis, A. H., ' 30 9 Madison St. Davis, C. E., Jr., ' 18 10 S W D Davis, J. M.,Jr., ' 30 46 Vandeventer Ave. Davis, J. W., Jr., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) 1 N D 495 I I I M I I I n 1 1 M II I I 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I f 19281 r Undergra dun tes — ( Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Davis, L. C, 18 (Charter) 6}i Py Davis, L. F., ' 19 641 Py Davis, S. C, ' 30 iWMW Davison, C, S., Jr., ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) 2.2. P Day, P. M., ' 2.9 12. L Dayton, G. D., ' 2.8 (Elm) 19 M D Decker, J. M., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 10 S D Degen, J. A., Jr., ' 19 51 C Deemer, W. R., Jr., ' 2.7 (Elm) 114 Bl Dcgcnhardt, A. P., ' 17 (Gateway) 12. P deGive, H. L., ' 2.9 66 L Dcignan, H. G., ' 2.8 352- Py Deitrick, J. E., ' 2.9 6 E M W Deknatei, F. B., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 91 H Deknatel, W. F., ' 19 73 P Delatield, J. W., -2.7 (Court) 8-A H Delafield, R., ' 30 42-5 Py DcLamater, C. H., ' 2.7 (Campus) Campus Club DeLamater, O. R., Jr., ' xS (Charter) 2.3X Cy deLanccy, D., ' i8 (Ivy) 41 University PI. Denniston, G. C, ' ±j (Arbor Inn) S ' lHy Denniston, H. S., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 5i- ' 79 Derby, R. B., ' 2.9 i}i Nassau St. Deuel, N. V., •i8(Court) 641 Py Deuel, R. M., ' 2.9 2.0 N E Dewey, S. L., ' 30 14 Vandeventer Ave. Deyo, N. W., ' 18 (Key and Seal) 142. Cy Dickeman, H. S., ' 30 16 Bank St. Dickerson, J. S , Jr., ' 30 143 L Diebold, A. R., ' 2.9 5 Hill Dorm Dikeman, E. J., Jr., j (Terrace) Terrace Club Dikovics, E. R., ' 30 5 S R Dikovics, R. L., 18 5SR Dismukes, D. E., Jr., ' 30 44 Vandeventer Ave. Disston, H. C, ' 2.8 (Ivy) 5 ' 3 La Ditmars, D. M., ' 30 12. S M R Dixon, G. W., ' 18 (Dial Lodge) 43H Dixon, I. H., ' 2.9 12.SWB Dodge, D., ' 30 41 University PI. Dodge, G. W., ' 2.9 3xi- ' oi Dodge, M. H.,Jr., ' 30 ii8 Hy Dolan, B., ' 30 114 Py Dolman, J. E., Jr., ' 2.8 (Elm) 301 Hin NAME ADDRESS Donaldson, C. E., ' xy (Dial Lodge) 13-A H Donegan, D. J., ' z.j 7 S M R Doolittle, W. M., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 11 E B Dorety, L. G., ' 30 12. H Dort, D. W., ' 30 72. L Doscher, F. S., ' i8 (Charter) 333 Hy Doubleday, G. C, ' 2.8 74 H Doubleday, J. M., ' 30 172. L Dougherty, G. F., ' 2.8 (Gateway) Gateway Club Doughton, I., ' 2.9 19 University PI. Dowell, H. R., ' 30 116 Bl Dudley, B. W., Jr., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 131 H Dudley, J. D., 17 8EW Duehay, F. G., ' 17 (Key and Seal). 114 Hy Duncan, A. J., Ill, ' 30 32. Mercer St. Dunn, H. A., Jr., ' 30 16 Edwards PI. Dunn, H. E., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 352. Cy Dunn, R. C, ' 17- (Ivy) 6oi Py duPont, A. P., ' 30 II P duPont, A. F., Jr., ' 2.9 12.4 F duPont, E., ' 19 3 Bl Durand, E. F., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) I54 L Durham,E. M., Ill, ' 17 (Ivy) 35 L Duryea, W. M., ' 2.9 ii8- ' oi Dutton, G. B., Jr., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 32-1 Cy Duval, G. B., ' 2.9 13 Vandeventer Ave. Eakins, W. v., ' 2.9 9 N E Easby, D. T., Jr., ' 18 (Cannon) 362. Cy Eastman, C. E. , ' 2.8 (Elm) 3 1 P Easton, J. S., ' 30 5EMW Ebbert, J. K., ' xS (Charter) 15 P Ebbets, C. H., ' 2.9 106 Nassau St. Eckerson, E. B., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 2.03 F Eckfeldt, T. E., 9 8 W W Eddy, C. B., Jr., ' 30 16 Edwards PI. Eddy, T. H., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) iii L Edsall, H. L., ' 17 13 MD Edwards, C. A., ' 2.9 ii L Edwards, D. F., Jr., ' 19 7 N D Edwards, F. H., ' 19 ii9- ' oi Edwards, J., ' 30 131 F Egerton, M. W., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 63 H Eisenbrey, R. H., Jr., 19 83 Bl 496 Undergraduates— ( Continued MAMB ADDRESS Eisenhart, J. H., ' 30 17 M D Ekings, J. P., Jr., ' zg 10 Nassau St. Elder, J. D., ' 17 38 N E Eiliman, G. T., ' 2.8 (Gjlonial) 2.6C Elliott, W. P., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) Cap and Gown Club Elliott, L. P., ' 19 lo Nassau St. Elliott, R. H. E., Jr., ' iS (Colonial) loP Elliott, W. C, ' 30 II P Ellis, C. G., Jr., ' 30 39 S E Ellis, C. H., ' 30 ._ 47 N. Tulane St. Ellis, F. C, ' 19 62.5 La Elmer, W., Jr., -19 4WW Elser, A. U., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 163 Cy Elting, H., Jr., ' 30 ii-A H Elting, W., ' z9 5 E B Elting, V. J., ' 18 (Tower) 310 Hm Ely, R. J., ' 18 Ill Fitz Randolph Rd. Ely, J. W., ' 2.7 (Tower) 91 H Ely, R. B., Ill, 18 133 Py Ely, v., Jr., ' 30 136 Py Embick, F. F., ' 19 138 Nassau St. Embury, E. C, ' i8 (Charter) 335 Py Emert, J. T., ' 19 73 P Emery, E. W., ' 2.9 Nassau Inn Emery, S., ' 2.9 2.1NE Emlen, S., Ill, ' 2.9 12.5-01 Emmons, C. C, ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 63 H England, J. W., ' 2.7 (Ivy) 141 Cy English, E. T., ' 2.7 (Court) 75 H English,R. W. A., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) 13 P English, R. E., ' 30 54 N- Tulane St. Ensley, H. E., ' 30 2.1 Chambers St. Ensminger, C. L. D., ' 30 95 BI Erdman, H. R., ' 2.7 (Tower) 2.31 Hy Eriandsen, O., Jr., ' 19 2. Nassau St. Euwer, R. F., ' 30 42. L Evans, D., Jr., ' 2.9 2. W W Evans, D. K., 17 8MD Evans, J . I. , ' 17 (Campus) loi H Evans, O. M., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) ■ 52-- ' 79 Evans, R. F., ' 30 8-B H Evans, R. O., ' 30 12.1 L Evans, W. B., ' 18 (Cottage) Cottage Club NAME ADDRESS Everitt,J. D., ' zS 4S R Ewing, B., ' 30 3SWB Ewing, S. B., Jr., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 33 79 Ewing, S. E., Jr., ' 17 (Ivy) 141 Cy Faber, H. H., ' 30 11 Alexander St. Fairbanks, W. C., ' 2.7 (Cottage) lUP Fairman, E. P., ' 30 2.31 Py Faike, H. B., ' 19 Thomson Hall Fanshawe, J. R., ' 19 3-A Hm Faris, C. A., ' 30 2.3 Madison St. Farmer, S. E. , ' 30 2.5 M D Farnsworth, C. W., ' i8 (Tiger Inn) 116 Bl Faust, G. P., ' 2.7 (Terrace) 343 F Fayen, C. F., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 312. Cy Feighan, M. A., ' 2.8 (Elm) 13 BI Feiss, J. W., 17 (Key and Seal) 4 E B Feldman, M., ' 2.9 Kingston, N. J. Ferenbach, J. C, ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) 3-A Hm Ferry, D., ' 30 31 University PI. Field, E. P., Jr., ' 30 143 H Fike, E. E., ' 30 715 Py Findley, W. G., ' 2.7 41 N W Finley, E. J., ' 2.9 2.5 Bank Sc. Finney, G. J., ' 30 19 Bank St. Firey, L. M., •2.8 (Elm) 11 ND Fisher, A. Y., 17 (Court) 5SMR Fisher, D. N., ' 30 114 Py Fisher, F. S., Jr., ' 2.9 10 Madison St. Fisher, H. S., Jr., ' 2.9 2.34 Py Fisher, J. M., ' 19 617 La Fisher, W. C, ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Fisk, C. B., ' 2.7 6 N R Fitts, W. C, Jr., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 313 Py Fitzhugh, G. W., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Flanagan, G. A., ' 2.9 2.6 S E Flowers, N. F., ' 2.9 35 S W Foot, S. B., ' 2.8 (Elm) 4EW Foote, F., ' 30 51 Mercer St. Forbes, J. H., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) Z2.5 Hy Ford, C. R., ' 2.9 15 Dickinson St. Ford, E. M., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 64 ' 79 Forney, J., ' 30 80 Nassau St. Forsyth, W. H., Jr., ' 19 163 L 497 Undergraduates — Continued ' ) NAME ADDRESS Fortune, J. L., Jr., ' ig zij- ' oi Foster, H. E., ' 2.7 54 L Fouike, C. P., ' 19 IMF Foulkrod, J. J., Ill, ' i.y 2.5 Hill Dorm Fowler, R. H., ' 30 2.2. Vandeventer Ave. Fox, C. S., ' 30 2-1 Hill Dorm Foxall, D. H., ' 30 ii5- ' oi Foye, G. A., ' 30 2.3 St. Frame, T. E., Jr., ' xo 14 D Eraser, D. C, ' 2.7 (Terrace) 104 P Free, L. A., ' 30 17 Madison St. Freeman, T. O., 19 lEMW Frelinghuysen, T. T. K., ' 17 (Charter) 104 Library PI. French, J. H. L., ' 30 2.1 Chambers St. French, J. M., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 45 ' Cy Friedman, M. S., ' 2.8 434 Py Fritis, F. E., 7 719 Py Froelich, L. B., ' 2.7 12. Hm Frost, F. G., Jr., ' 30 7 W W Frost, L. F., 19 13 S M R Fry, N. B., ' 50 36 Vandeventer Ave. Fryberger, G. M., ' 18 (Cottage) 2.-C H Fuller, E. L., ' 2.9 ix M D Fujiyama, M., ' 2.8 i6i Cy Fullmer, J. C, ' 19 37 Bank St. Furness, J. N., ' 30 3 - Mercer St. Gable, C. J.,Jr., ' 19 iii- ' oi Gadebusc h, E. K., 7 (Gateway) 83 P Gaffney, J. N., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 2.4 L Gaillard, X. E., ' 30 Dickinson St. Gaillard, L. L., xS 2.0 E W Gale, G. W., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 32-2- F Gallagher, J., ' 17 3 7 F Gallagher, W. R., ' 17 3VF Gallowhur, G. W., ' 2.9 2.4 C Gamble, W. S., xS (Cloister Inn) .5 M D Garber, S. T., ' 30 ii7- ' oi Gardner, O. F., ' 30 412.-01 Gardner, R. W., ij (Elm) 3 LP Garland, R. L., 19 zEMW Garnar, D. E., ' 30 13 C Garnctt, C. B., Jr., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 7-A H Garnett, F. L., ' X9 16 N E NAME ADDRESS Garrey, W. E., ' xj (Arbor Inn) Arbor Inn Garrity, H. D,, ' 18 (Colonial Club) Colonial Club Garside.R. R., ' 30 iz Princeton Ave. Gartner, J. W., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 313 Py Gary, F., ' 2.7 74 H Gasch, H. K., ' 30 6 S R Gasch, O. H., ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 41 S W Gaston, J. M., Jr., ' 2.8 (Elm) 6i- ' 79 Gauss, D. C, Jr., ' 2.7 (Campus) Joseph Henry House Gavan, G. S., ' 30 6 E B Gay, H. B., Jr., ' 19 ix Stockton St. Gay, W. C, •x7 (Tower) 3X N W Gee, R. L., xg .4 E M W George, F. W., ' xg 65 Wiggins St. George, W. B., ' x8 55 Patton Ave. George, W. D., Jr., ' X7 (Ivy) Ivy Club Geraghty, G., ' 30 31 University PL Geraghty, M. J., ' 30 31 University PL Gerber, W. E., ' xg 35 University PL Gessinger, A. R., ' x7 439 ' .Py Gettner, V. L. , ' X7 1x5 Hy Gherardi, H. T.. ' X7 (Quadrangle) 3 ' H Gibbon, R., ' xg 16 Bl Gibbons, D. R., ' xg x S E Gibbs, W. T. D., ' x7 (Quadrangle) 76 H Gibson, J. R., ' xS (Terrace) X4 S W Gibson, J. M. , ' x7 (Terrace) 9X Bl Gibson, R. C., ' 30 Hill Dorm Giddings, J. A., ' 30 17 S M R Gies, R. H., ' 30 39 M E Gieske, E. T., ' X9 19 University PL Gilbert, R., ' xj (Cottage) 40-50 P Giles, E. , ' x8 (Gateway) 6x Bl Giles, J. O., ' x9 x3i- ' oi Gill, R. P., Jr., ' 30 441 Py Gillis, E. D., ' 30 7 Bl Gillespie, G. E., ' X9 303 F Gillette, H., •x8 (Quadrangle) 33 N W Githler, C. H., ' xg iig- ' oi Glanz, R. L., ' X7 (Key and Seal) i6x L Glatfelder, P. H., ' xg 6xx Py Gleason, J. H., ' X9 xo Nassau St. Gotf, A. S., ' 30. XIX Cy 498 Undergraduates — {Continued NAME ADDRESS Goldcnson, R. M., 30 9 Madison St. Goldsbury, R. P., 19 11 SD Gooch, G. A., ' 18 (Cottage) 11 W B Good, G. F., ' 17 (Terrace) , 54 79 Goodman, S., Ill, ' 2.7 (Ivy) 94 H Goodrich, F. N., ' 30 9 P PI. Goodrich, H. P., 18 8 E M W Goodridge, M., Jr., ' 19 }i6 F Goodson, M., ' 19 411 Py Goodwin, E. L., ' 30 15 Bank St. Goodwin, P. M., ' 2.9 43 Spring St. Gordon, D. C, ' 30 36 Vandevcnter Ave. Gordon, E. C, ' 2.7 633 La Gordon, L. H., 17 431 Py Gordon, S., ' 17 114 F Gordon, W. L., ' 30 47 Tulane St. Gore, J. E., ' 2.9 3EMW Gorham, S. S., Jr., ' 2.8 (Campus) 61 H Gorman, J. M., ' 30 133 Hy Gottschalk, W. M., ' 19 53 H Gould, R. F., ' 30 II Vandeventer Ave. Grace, C. B., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 31 First Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Graham, D. L., ' 30 lo Nassau St. Graham, J. W., Jr., ' 2.9 17 W W Graham, W. A., ' 19 103 H Grange, J. W., ' 17 (Colonial) 735 Py Graves, F. W., ' 30 47 University PI. Gray, D. K,, ' 2.9 6 Hill Dorm Greaccn, T. E., ' i8 2.2.1 Cy Greeff, B. G., 19 10 U P Green, R. F., ' 2.7 (Terrace) 431 Cy Green, T. R., 2.9 184 L Greene, H. A., ' 18 (Cottage) 12. W B Greminger, A. N., ' x9 9 E M W Griffen, C. R., ' 30 2.3 Chambers St. Griffin, A. E., Jr., ' 2.9 3 S E B Griffith, B. P., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 141 Hy Griswold, A. B., ' 2.8 42.4 Py Griswold, T., ' 30 103 Bl Groomc, H. C. , ' 30 loi Bl Grover, J. S., ' -l-j (Terrace) 96 Bl Grubbs, F. O., ' 30 14 N E Grumpelt, H. C, ' 2.8 32- L NAME ADDRESS Gutmann, L., ' 30 16 University PI. G winner, E. W. , Jr. , ' 2.8 (Cannon) 65 H Gwynne, A. C, Jr., ' 2.9 31 University PI. Gwynnc, J. A., ' 2.8 (Colonial) }i3- ' o ' Haas, M., ' 19 631 La Haas, R. H., ' 2.7 (Charter) 36 Pa Haase, E. T. , ' 2.9 118 Nassau St. Hackenberg, W. B., ' 2.9 2.0 Nassau St. Hackney, C., ' i8 (Quadrangle) 351 Cy Hadley, H. H., Jr., xg 43 L Hadsall, H. S., ' 2.9 loz- ' oi Hadsall, J. M., ' 2.9 loi- ' oi Hagen, W. H., ' 2.9 435 Py Hagerman, S. T., ' 30 47 University PI. Hague, J. T., ' 2.9 ii N W Hahner, C. W. F., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 3ND Haines, F. T., ' 2.9 34 S W Haines, J. B., ' 30 15 University PI. Haines, J. W., ' 2.9 12. E B Hale, H. E., Ill, 18 Battlefield Farm Hale, R. W., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 2.1 P Hale, T,, Jr., ' 2.7 (Charter) Charter Club Hall, C. C, 19 331 F Hall, E. J., ' 30 19 University PI. Hall, F. H., Jr., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 135 Py Hall, G. E., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 84 P Hall, H. S., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 2.02. F Hall, I. D., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 5-A C Hall, J. A., ' x7(Elni) 56 Patton Ave. Hall, W. S., •z8 (Key and Seal) 306F Hallahan, B. , ' 17 (Quadrangle) 2.42. Cy Halle, W. M., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 12.-79 Halsey, E. T., ' 2.9 14] Vandeventer Ave. Halsted, O., Jr., ' 17 (Campus) 82. H Ham, J. C, ' 2.8 (Campus) 2.0 W W Ham, P. M., ' 30 19 Bank St. Hamann, C. A., Jr., (30 32. Mercer St. Hamilton, F. J., ' i8 (Court) 2.17 Hy Hamm, H. K., ' 2.8 18 WW Hamm, J. E., ' 30 11 Hill Dorm Hammond, J. D., ' 30 2.7 Bank St. Hammond, J. B., ' 30 2.2.3- ' oi Hamner, J. G., ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 62.7 La 499 Undergra duates — ( Contin ued ) NAME ADDRESS Hampden, P., ' 18 (Tower) 32. C Hanna, C. M., ' 30 10 Bank St. Hanna, J. C, ' 17 66 H Hanna, R. G., ' 19 33 P Hanna, W. H., 19 356 F Hannah, A. D., ' 30 15 University PI. Hannah, T. J., ' 17 (Terrace) 108 P Hansen, H., ' 19 11 Madison St. Happold, J. H., Jr., ' 30 13 Ba nk St. Harbison, E. H., ' 18 (Cap and Gown) 11 E. B Hard, W., ' 30 71 Bl Hardenbergh, R. W., Jr., ' 30 13 Madison St. Harding, E. R., ' 30 31 Wiggins St. Harding, H. H., ' 18 (Ivy) 15 C Hardt, W. H.,Jr., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 181 L Hardy, S. M., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 84 H Harper, A. B., Jr., ' 19 718 Py Harper, G. H., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 602. Py Harper, N. V., ' 2.7 (Campus) 134 Hy Harris, A. H., ' 2.7 134 Hy Harris, S. F., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 717 Py Harrower, C. R., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 5 LP Hart, P. G., Jr., ' 2.8 30 P Hartman, J. H., ' 19 3 S E Harts, C. B. E., ' 17 (Key and Seal) 114 F Harts, W. W., Jr., ' 2.9 413 Py Hasbrmick, T. F., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 16 C Haseltine, D. M., ' 2.9 o Nassau St. Haskell, W. N., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 3-B H Haskins, F. H., ' 30 15 University PI. Hastings, C. A., ' z8 615 ' Py Hastings, C, 1.9 138 Nassau St. Hatfield, C. A., ' iS (Colonial) Colonial Club Hathaway, C. S., ' 2.9 2.1 M D Hauck, J. S., ' 2.9 62. C Hausfield, H., ' 30 173 Nassau St. Haven, J. S., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 53 H Hawkes, A. W. , ' 2.9 38 L Hawkins, S. P., ' 30 9 Park PI. Hawley, J. H., Jr., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Hawthorne, J. C, ' 30 19 Bank St. Haynes, W. W., ' 30 32. Mercer St. Heald, B., ' 30 14 E W NAME ADDRESS Healy, R. J., Jr., ' 2.9 Nassau Inn Healey, W. T., ' 2.9 42. C Hebble, H. E., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 102. Hy Heckscher, E., ' 2.7 z33 Py Hedges, B. V., Jr., ' 30 45 Vandeventer Ave. Hegcman, D. V., ' 2.7 105 Hy Hegner, C. F., ' 30 13 Dickinson St. Heller, P., ' 2.9 2.3 Chambers St. Hellyer, T. W., ' 2.9 442. Py. Helmrath, A. M., ' 2.7 (Cap andGown) 11 W B Hempstead, J. B., ' 19 115 Bl Henchman, J. M., ' 30 11 S W B Henderson, D. K., ' i8 (Campus) iii Cy Henderson, J. L., ' 2.7 (Charter) 112. Bl Hendey, D. N., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 341 Cy Hendey, R. S., ' 30 145 L Hendricks, C. L., Jr., 17 (Terrace) 5 W M W Henry, C. S., Jr., ' 30 34 Vandeventer Ave. Henry, E. A., ' 2.9 i-B H Henry, R., Jr., ' 30 172. L Hensel,P. L., ' 2.8 (Elm) 31 P Hepburn, G., ' 2.7 (Cottage) Cottage Club Hereford, R. O., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 44 B ' Hersey, F. P., ' 30 12.-A H Hersey, W. P., ' z8 (Cottage) 31 Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Hertz, C. S., ' 50 15 University PI. Herrog, L. M., ' iS (Charter) 31C Hewitt, C. E., ' 2.8 (Cloister) 7-B H Hewitt, C. L., ' 2.8 (Cloister) 19 M D Hewitt, E. D., ' 30 42. Wiggins St. Heydt, H. A., Jr., ' 2.9 19 University PI. Heyl, B. C, ' vj (Tower) n3 Hy Hicks, E., ' 19 15 N D Hicks, S. B., ' 2.7 (Charter) 7z P Hiestand, D. W., ' 2.9 i33- ' oi Higginbottom, S. A., ' 30 40 N E Higgins, R. D., ' 30 9 Madison St. High, S. H.,Jr., ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 311 Hy Hildock, W. H., Jr., ' 2.7 }ii F Hilgenberg, C. R., ' 2.9 io3- ' oi Hill, C, M., 18 43 NW Hill, D. H., ' 2.7 162. L Hill, J. R., ' 2.9 7-A H 500 ,1.1. Ji m 1778 Undergraduates — ( Continued, NAME ADDRESS Hill, W., ' v (Elm) I, SE B Hillman, H. B., ' 17 (Court) 9) P Hilton, F. L., Jr., ' 30 Nassau Inn Hinchman, D. B., ' 18 95 P Hinc, W. R.,Jr,, ' 30 161 L Hinman, G, L., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 4 N R Hinman, M., ' 18 11 S M R Hippie, H. M., ' 19 4i3- ' oi Hitchcock, C. S., ' 19 11 Bl Hitchcock, F., ' 30 66 L Hitschlcr, W. J., ' 17 (Cloister Inn) lEB Hitchwaer, T. B., ' 50 4SWB Hitz, F. P., ' l7 40i- ' oi Hobson, W. L., Jr., ' 17 13 L Hocker, E. B. , ' 19 ii Bank St. Hodge, E. B., Jr., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 91 Bl Hodges, C. D., ' 30 7 Park PI. Hoff, N. R., ' 2.8 (Court) loi Hy Hoff, I. W., ' 17 (Cannon) 94 P Hoffman, G. S., ' 17 (Elm) 34 P Hogan, C. G., ' 19 2.6 Hill Etorm Holdcn, E., Ill, ' 30 30-32. Mercer St. Hooker, K. W., 19 2.55 Hy Hoopes, C. R., ' 19 35 Hill Dorm Hopper, V. F., ' 17 35 N W Hornblower, W. B.,Jr., ' 30 10 W W Home, B. S., Jr., ' 2.8 (Cottage) ABl Horton, A. T., ' 2.8 (Campus) 2.0 W W Hough, J. L., 18 (Dial Lodge) 186 L Houser, B. , Jr. , ' 18 (Key and Seal) 511 La Houser, F. D., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 52.1 La Howard, C. A., Jr., ' xj (Terrace) 314 Hy Howe, C. H., 19 6 S M R Howe, J. K., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Howell, C. R., 17 15 N E Howell, J. L., ' 30 35 University PI. Howell, K. T., ' 2.7 (Court) 31.1 F Howell, W. R., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 11 S E B Howland, W., ' 30 44i- ' oi Howley, J. J., ' 2.9 37 S E Hubbard, A. L., Jr., 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 105 P Hubball, J. M., ' 17 (Court) 9 S R Huber, D. A., ' 30 ix Park PI. NAME ADDRESS Huber, F. K . , ' 2.7 (Cannon) 11 IB Huckin, R. S., 18 (Elm) 11 N D Hudnut, W. H., Jr., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 131 Hy Hudson, F. W., ' 2.7 (Charter) 72. P Huff, E. N., ' 2.8 44 Washington Rd. Huff, J. W., ' 2.9 5NMR Huff, W. R., 19 10 Nassau St. Hughes, A. H. M., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 513 La Hughes, K. P., ' 30 II S E Hughes, T. C, ' 18 (Ivy) 9WB Huletr, G. B., ' 30 342. F Hume, J. H., ' 2.8 (Charter) 113 H Humphrey, R. G., ' 2.8 (Court) i W B Humphrey, R. K., ' 2.7 iWB Humphreys, G. A., ' 2.7 io4- ' oi Humphreys, W. A., Jr., ' 2.8 (Charter) 10-A H Hunsicker, C, Jr., ' 18 (Terrace) 42.7 Py Hunt, L. G., ' 17 (Cottage) Cottage Club Huntsman, P. A., ' 17 (Charter) zxi F Hurst, J. J., Jr., ' 30 141 H Hurst, V. W., Jr., ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 154 L Huse, R. S., Jr., 18 (Colonial) 2.2.1 F Husserl, P. F., ' xj ix E W Huston, C. L., Jr., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 4ii- ' oi Hutchins, B. H., ' 2.9 2.5 Chambers St. Hutcheson, J. C, III, ' 18 (Charter) 16 C Hutz, W. H., ' 2.8 (Court) 703 Py Hyer, F. L., ' i8 (Elm) 332.- ' oi Immerwahr, G., ' 30 14} Vandeventer Ave. Indahl, E. E., ' 30 11 Dickinson St. Inglis, G. P., 18 14NMR Irvine, A. M., ' 30 11 S E Irvine, V. K., ' 2.9 132. H Irving, J. M., ' 30 65 Wiggins St. Isaacs, A. G., Jr., ' 1.9 3-C Hm Ivins, T. R., ' 2.8 xvL- ' oi Jackson, A. R., ' vj (Colonial) 13 Bl Jackson, B. O,, Jr., ' 30 lEMW Jackson, B. H., 19 61 P Jackson, E. H., ' 2.7 (Charter) 6 N D Jackson, W. L., ' 2.9 2.04 F Jacobs, R. v., ' 19 2.0 Nassau St. Jacobus, M. W. , Jr. , ' 2.9 5 1 C 501 Undergraduates — ( Continued. ) NAME ADDRESS [adwin, L. S., 2.8 (Cap and Gown) ( ' ■ - ' 73 jaeckel, T., ' 2.8 6SE B James, C. D. , ' 18 (Quadrangle) 3 ■ i Cy James, D. , ' 2.9 4 L P James, W. D., ' x8 (Campus) 32-- ' 79 Jamieson, C. F., ' 2.9 345 Py Janney, J. S., ' 30 44 N W Janney , S. S. , Jr. , ' 19 2.4 Bl Jarrett, E. S.,Jr., ' 2.9 343 Cy Jasper, E. L., ' 19 316 F Jeanes, H. S., ' 2.7 Colonial Club Jeffers, A. J., ' 2.9 12. E B Jeffery, T. B., ' 2.7 16 L Jemison, R., Ill, ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 3}2-- ' oi Jenkins, H. L., ' 2.9 ; 61 P Jenkins, J. R., ' 2.8 (Tower) 6ii Py Jennings, A. H., ' 30 82. Bl Jenney, A. D., ' 2.7 (Ivy) 311 Cy Jepsen, G. L., ' 17 (Key and Seal) 314 Hy Jessup, R. S., ' 2.9 313 Hy Johns, T., ' 30 12. Vandeventer Ave. Johnson, A. C.,Jr., ' 2.7 (Tower) 41-51 P Johnson, F. H., ' 30 17 Bl Johnson, H. S., 17 8 N R Johnson, J. B., ' 19 35 University PI. Johnson, O. D., ' 30 19 University PI. Johnson, R. P., ' xS 8 NR Johnston, C. S., ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 363 Cy Johnston, J. F. , ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 7SD Johnston, R. M., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 102. P Johnston, W. L., ' 30 15 University PI. Johnston, W. T. , ' 19 loi- ' oi Johnstone, V. , ' 19 i U P Jones, A. M., ' 2.9 9 Madison St. Jones, A. W., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 32.i- ' oi Jones, B. R., Jr., ' 2.7 (Terrace) 2. S E B Jones, G., ' 19 12.3 L Jones, G. H. , ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) 2.15 Hy Jones, H. M., ' 30 30 Mercer St. Jones, J. G., ' 19 12.3 L Jordan, H. P., ' 30 19 University PI. Jordan, J. H. , ' 2.8 (Charter) 1 2.4 H Joyes, M. V. , ' x7 (Tower) 2.1 Bl NAME ADDRESS Judd, H. C, ' 2.8 (Tower) 104 Bl Juergens, P. G., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Kahlo, E. H., ' 2.9 4 U P Kahrs, J., Jr., ' 2.9 ix S W B Kane, G. G., Jr., ' X9 x-B C Kasab, H. H., ' 30 ix Vandeventer Ave. Kassler, K. S., ' X7 (Cap and Gown) 35X Cy Katzenbach, F. S., Ill, ' xS (Cottage) 9 W B Katzenbach, W. W., ' 30 7x5 Py Kaufman, J. A., ' X7 ix Hm Kaye, H. A., ' 30 14 Vandeventer Ave. Keech, R. M., Jr., ' 30 45 Hill Dorm Keehn, R. D., Jr., ' 30 xi Chambers St. Keen, K. G., Jr., ' X9 36 L Keep, A., ' x8 (Quadrangle) iix H Keery, R. A., ' 30 35 University PI. Keith, E., ' 30 X14 F Keith, E. E., ' X7 (Cottage) ixx L Keith, W. C, ' 30 4x L Kelham, B., ' xg 34 H Keller, C. A. R., •x7 (Cloister Inn) 4X N W Keller, W. C, ' xg X7 Bank St. Kelley, G. H., 8 4 S R Kelley, J. W., ' X7 4i- ' 79 Kellogg, F. B., ' x9 x Nassau St. Kellogg, J. G., •x7 (Ivy) 7 Kellogg, T. P., xS (Charter) X3X Cy Kelly, E. I., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Kelley, J. W., •x7 (Ivy) 4i- ' 79 Kelsey, N., ' 30 4-A C Kemball,R. N., ■x8 xi7 Hy Kemble, R. P., ■x7 (Elm) 9-A H Kemble, W., •x7 13 L Kemmerer, D. L., ' X7 (Arbor Inn) 73 Bl Kemp, L. F., ' xg xx N W Kennedy, D. OD., xg X3 Hill Dorm Kennedy, F. P., ' X9 ix Stockton St. ■ Kennedy, G. H., ' X7 45 University PI. Kennedy, J. M., Ill, 8 31X F Kennedy, R. L., Jr., % (Tower) 6x1 Py Kennedy, W. H., ' X9 ix Stockton St. Kenney, N. T., ' 30 45 University PI. Kent, F. R., ' 30 701 Py 502 Undergraduates — ( Continued) ■ NAME ADDRESS Kenyon, R. B., ' 2.9 i Nassau St. Kephart, A. E., 17 (Elm) 32-7 F Kepler, G. W., Jr., iS (Charter) 115 Hy Kepler, K. M., ' ly 31 N W Kepler, C. P., ' 30 705 Py Kerr. J. B., 19 718 Py Kerr, J. H., ' 30 31 Mercer St. Kerr, T. B., ' 1.9 iii Py Kilurn, D. A., ' 30 19 Madison St. Kimball, R. M., ' 2.8 (Court) 2.17 Hy Kimball, G. E., ' zS (Gateway) 133 F Kinder, H., iS (Terrace) xi8 Hy Kindler, E. O., ' 19 41 University PI. King, G. B., ' i8 314 Hy King, W. vanB., 18 (Key and Seal) 331 Cy Kingsbury, F. H., Jr., ' 19 141 Py Kingsley, S. H., 8 (Dial Lodge) 4i- ' 79 Kipp, E), B., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 411 La Kirk, H. M., ' 30 ii Chambers St. Kirk, R. E., Jr., 19 15 Park PI. Kirkman, R. W., ' 2.9 43 Spring St. Kirkpatrick, H. R., ' 30 118 Nassau St. Kirtiand, E. G., 50 40 S E Kistler, H. D., ' 30 iii L Kitchell, W. J., ' 30 46 Hill Dorm Klauder, L. D., ' 30 2.01- ' 01 Kleinhans, H. F., ' 19 42. Bl Kleinhans, R. £., ' 2.8 44 Bl Kling, A. G., ' 2.9 io SB Knapp, A., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 182. L Knapp, E. S., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 94 H Knapp, W. W.,Jr., ' lo 5 E M W Kniffin, E. A., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 34 Bl Kniffin,H. S.,Jr., ' 2.9 308 Hm Knight, H., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Knowlton, H. A., Jr., iS i EM W Knox, A., Jr., ' 30 6 W M W Koch, H. , ' 2.9 632. La Koehler, M. A., 2.7 (Key and Seal) Key and Seal Club Koehn, H. W., Jr., ' 30 44i- ' oi Kohlroot, E. C, ' 30 2.3 MD Koontz, J. P., ' 30 9 E B Koon, R. H., ' 30 2.07 Hy NAMB ADDRESS Korea, W., Jr., ' 30 6 W M W Korff, S, A., ' 2.8 E-EB Krag, W. B., 17 (Colonial) iii F Kremer, J. B., Ill, ' 19 17 Edwards PI. Krewson, J. F., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 62. Bl Kridel, A. M., ' 30 73 H Krimsky, A. J., ' 30 13 Bank St. Kuhn, T. C. , ' 30 19 University PI. Kuser, W. G., ' 2.9 12. Stockton St. Labaree, B., ' 30 39 N E La Beaume, R. W., ' 2.7 (Cottage) iii Hy Lackey, W. G., ' 2.8 (Cottage) ' 53 L Lafferty, J. S., ' i8 (Key and Seal) 615 La Lafleur, L. J., ' 2.8 17 N E Laidlaw, A. W., ' 19 43 Bl Lambert, G. L., ' 2.7 (Cottage) 43-53 P Lance, A. H., ' 2.9 93 B Lane, C. E., ' 30 11 Dickinson St. Lane, J. T., ' 30 12. Vandcvcnter Ave. Lansden, D. B., ' 2.8 3i4- ' oi LaPorte, W. S., ' 18 (Tower) 12.7 Hy Large, H. W., 18 (Colonial) 2.rz F Large, J. M., ' 2.8 (Colonial) i2.i F Lasater, G. M. , ' 19 42. C Lashar, W. L., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Lavis, F., ' 19 7LP Lawler, T. N., ' 2.9 45 ' Cy Lawrence, A. N., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 34 B Lawrence, C. R. , ' 2.8 Lawrenceville Rd. Lawrence, F. T.,Jr., ' 30 19 University PI. Lawrence, J. F., ' 2.9 97 B Lawson, A. J., ' 30 zo Nassau St. Layton, C. R., ' 30 ii N M R Layton, R. R., Jr., ' 2.8 (Terrace) zo P Lebhar, N. J., Jr., ' 30 11 Alexander St. Lee, H. G., ' 30 ix Dickinson St. Lee, J. W., II, ' 2.8 (Elm) 301 H Lee, T. D., ' 2.9 2.1 Chambers St. Lee, T. J., Jr., ' 2.9 37 Bank St. Lee, V. A., 19 3EMW Lee, W. B., 17 13 L LeFort, R. C, ' 30 lo Nassau St. Leggett, J. D., Jr., ' 2.8 (Tower) 104 Bl 503 Undergraduates — ( Continued NAME ADDRESS Lcland, A. P., ' 18 (Cottage) 114 H LeMaistre, F. , ' 17 (Cap and Gown) 11 S E B Lent, A. B., ' 17 (Gateway) 15 L P Lenz, W. C, ' 2.8 (Terrace) i} P Lerch, H. J., Jr., iS (Terrace) 5SWB Leslie, J. K., ' 19 173 Nassau St. Leverich, H. P., ' 30 ii-A H Levinstein, C. E., ' 19 9EMW Levine, S. H., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Levy, N. A., ' i8 4}8 Py Lewis, A. B., ' x9 18 Edwards PI. Lewis, C. H., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 71 H Lewis, D. F. , ' 19 zi S E Lewis, H. B., Jr., ' 17 (Campus) 2.i- ' 79 Lewis, J. W., Jr., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 53L Lewis, J. R., ' 30 i-B Hm Lewis, W., ' 17 (Ivy) 131 L Lichty, J. A., Jr., ' 17 (Elm) 31 Bl Lichty,J. S., ' 2.9 11 N M R Liddell, D. M., Jr., iS (Court) 13 S W Liebman, W. H., Jr., ' 17 141 H Lightner, E. A., ' 30 47 Tulane St. Lincoln, J. W., ' 30 47 University PI. Lind, F. J., ' 19 41 Hill Dorm Lindsley, C. H., ' 30 17 S E Lingle, E. E., ' 17 113 Bl Linville, C. E., ' 30 41 N E Lippman, W. B., ' 19 15 S E Livingston, J. G., Jr., ' 19 114 F Lloyd, R. W., ' 18 (Colonial) iii Py Lloyd, S. J., ' 30 II Hm Lloyd, B., ' 30 68 L Lobenstein, W. M., ' 30 13 Dickinson St. Lockhart, C. , ' 19 44 C Lockson, A. R., ' 2.7 13 Bl Lockitt, A. G., ' 2.7 313 F Lockwood, J., ' 19 34 Vandeventer Ave. Locb, H. A., ' 2.9 II C Logan, T. H., ' 2.9 12. N E Long, J. E., ' 19 14 U P Long, W. F., xS 2.5 S E Lopez, S. H. , ' x9 96 Moore St. Lotspeich, H. G., ' 18 (Gateway) iii- ' oi NAME ADDRESS Louderbough, H., ' 19 33 Hill Dorm Loudon, D. S., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 83 P Love, J. E., ' 30 19 Bank St. Love, P. D., ' ig 10 E W Lovering, T. S., ' 2.9 2.-A Hm Lovett, C. v., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 532. La Low, M. B., ' 2.9 3iiHm Lowe, W. E., ' 2.8 (Colonial) 5-A C Lowry, D. A., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Lucke, J. B., ' 19 171 L Luckett, E. H., ' 2.7 (Tower) 35 P Lukcns, J., ' 30 ii Chambers St. Luks, K., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 13-A H Lunger, H. W., ' 18 30 N E Luqueer, W. G., ' 19 zo Nassau St. Lynch, F. T., ' Z7 114 Hy Lynn, H. S., ' 18 (Charter) 107 P MacAlister, D., ' 30 Z3 M D McAllen, R. G., ' 18 (Court) z W B McAnerney, J. G., ' 30 18 M D McAshan, H. , ■z8 (Charter) 114 H McAshan, S. M., ' z7 (Charter) Charter Club McBride, A. F., ' 18 (Elm) 31Z F McCabe, J. D. , ' 17 (Cannon) izz H McCabe, R. C, ' 30 301 F McCaleb, S. B., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) zz4Hy McCann, F. H., ' 30 4oz- ' oi McCarthy, E. A., ' 30 19 University PI. McCaskey, I. W., ' 19 zi Chambers St. McCondhy, H. L.,Jr., ' 30 z8 Bank St. McChcsney, W. S., ' 30 zi Hill Dorm McConnell, F. H., Jr., ' z8 144 Cv McConnell, R. K., ' zg 336 F McCormick, J. S., Jr., ' 30 3Z Wiggins St. MacCracken, A. M., ' 30 433 Py McCreadv, R., ' 30 54 B ' McCuIlough, J., ■z8 (Elm) Z15 F McCune, M. L., ' 30 Z7 C McDermott, C. J., ' z8 (Charter) 307 F McDermott, W., ' 30 Z9 Bank St. McDiarmid, H. C, ' zS (Charter) izz H McDonald, R. J., ' Z9 loi- ' oi MacDonald, U. S., ■z9 138 Nassau St. 504 11 1,1 1. ' ■ ' I ■ t J ' t ' t II II II N n ' I ' ' ' T T 1928 P Undergraduates — (Continued ' ) NAME ADDRESS McDonough, J., ' }o 2.5 Chestnut St. McDougal, C. B., ' 2.9 131 H McElroy, D. B,, ' 30 15 Edwards PI. McElroy, W. F., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) i E B Macfarlane, M. F., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) A Bl MacFarland, R. S., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 713 Py MacGregor, R. W., ' 18 616 Py McGuinncss, A. C, ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 6SD Mcllvaine, C. L., Jr., ' 19 5} University PI. Mcllvain, J. H., ' 30 xi3 Hy Mcintosh, J. R., ' i8 (Quadrangle) 71 L Mclnncs, R. K., ' 30 33} Py MacKav, J. F., ' 17 (Tower) 4 Py McKenna, R. N., 18 (Charter) 2.2.6 Hy McKernon, J. F., Jr., ' 30 45 University PI. MacKie, N. W., ' 30 2.-BH McKinley, W., ' 30 17 Edwards PI. MacKinnon, R. D., ' 30 17 University Pi. McLallcn, W. F., Jr., 19 .442. Py MacLaren, D. R., ' 2.7 (Tower) 35 Boudinot St. MacLaren, W. H., ' i8 (Cloister Inn) 91 Bl McLaughlin, W. H., ' 2.7 io2.- ' oi McLean, D. E., ' 2.7 (Court) i-D Hm McLean, E. C, ' 30 17 Bl McLean, G., ' }c 12. Stockton St. MacLeod, M. M., ' 2.9 304 F McMartin, J. S., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) Dial Lodge MacMillen, F. H., iS (Elm) 5 W B McMillan, J. S., 19 134 H McMillan, S. S., ' zg 41 Hill Dorm McMillan, W., ' i8 (Quadrangle) 2. M D McMullin, D., Ill, ' 30 43i- ' oi MacNamara, L. T. , ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) Cloister Inn McNamara, R. C, Jr., ' 2.9 2.2. L MacNamee, W. R., 18 43 N W McNeer, G. P., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 14 Bl MacNeil, D. B., IV, ' 30 4 S E McPherson, D. P., Jr., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 81 P McPhcrson, J. C, ' 2.9 2.2.1 Cy McQuilkin, F. S., ' 2.9 10 Dickinson St. McQuilkin, W. W., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) 12. Princeton Ave. MacRae, C., ' 2.9 103 H McRac, J. F., ' 2.7 9LP NAME ADDRESS McVitty, A. E., Jr., ' 30 LaVake PI. McVitty, E. W., ' 2.8 (Colonial) 33 H McWilliams, C. D., ' 19 2.06 Hy MacWilliam, G. C, ' 17 (Terrace) 96 Bl Mack, J. W., Jr., ' 30 51 Nassau St. Mackey, A. J., ' 2.9 2.0 Nassau St. Macomber, B. W., ' 19 Box 364 Maescher, H. W., ' 2.0 i L P Magee, R. D., ' 18 (Cottage) 54 Bl Malone, C. M., Jr., 30 2.1 Chambers St. Maloney, P., ' 30 n?? Maltman, J., Jr., ' 30 30 Bank St. Mangold, A. R., ' 2.8 2.5 N W Mangold, F. R., ' 2.9 138 Nassau St. Mangold, V. K., ' 2.9 437 Py Manly-Power, D. A. , ' 19 307 F Mann, O. H., ' 2.8 (Elm) 3-A H Mann, T. R., ' i8 151 L Manning, D. W., ' 30 19 University PI. Manning, G. P., ' 2.9 131 F Mapes, C. F., ' 19 . . 13 Vandeventer Ave. Mapletoft, J. W., ' 2.8 (Elm) 12.1 Hy Mason, C, Jr., ' 2.8 12. C Marsh, S. S., Jr., ' 2.9 33 S W Marsh, C. H., Jr., ' 2.7 (Gateway) 34 C Marshall, J. C, ' 2.8(Campus). . . ' . 513 La Marshall, R. N., ' 30 . ' 41 S E Marshall, T. E., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 85 P Marshall, W. T., ' 2.9 32. Mercer St. Marsteller, R. C, ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 33 ' Hy Martin, L. A., ' 30 42.i- ' oi Martin, O. T., ' 2.9 50 Nassau Inn Martin, R. N.,Jr., 18 4E W Marting, W. W., Jr., v 116 Bl Marx, H. M., ' 30 35 University PI. Mason, J. M., ' 30 35i Pv Master, ' w. O., ' 17 (Dial Lodge) 2.2. H Matitage, C. F., ' 30 3 Madison St. Matheson, F. J., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 41 S W Matthews, T. A., ' 2.9 16 Hm Matthews, W. L., ' 17 (Cannon) 12.1 H May, C. R., ' 2.8 115 Bl Mayer, H. H., ' 2.7 (Charter) 2.-A H 505 1778 Undergraduates— (Continued) Mayer, F. J. , ' 30 54 N. Tulane St. Mayers, M. A., ' 2.7 633 La Mayor, B., ' 19 12.1 F Mayot, B., ' xg i8o Nassau St. Mead, J. J., Jr., ' z8 (Terrace) 7x1 Py Mead, J. J. S., iS (Arbor Inn) X5 S W Meade, F. A. Means, R. H., Mebane, E. M, Mebane, F. C, Mecray, P. M Meeker, H. G. Meislahn, H. E. Mellis, R. Mellon, F ' 30 10 Nassau St. 17 (Charter) 111 F . ' 2-8 343 Py Jr. , ' z7 (Cottage) 3MD . Jr., ' 30 315 PY , ig 38 SE Jr., ' 17 (Terrace) 2. N D ' x9 10 Nassau St. P., 2-9- ■35SW Meneely, C. B., xS (Key and Seal) i8i L Meneely, C, ' 30 13 N W Merrill, D. W., 19 15 SD Merrill, F. T., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 6 U P Merriman, H. R., ' x8 (Cap and Gown) 131 Cy Merson, E. W., ' 17 733 Py Metz, J. A., Jr., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Meyer, F. S., ' 30 X3 Bank St. Miksak, J. J., Jr., ' 2.9 zij- ' oi Milbank, S. R., ' 17 (Court) Nassau Inn Milburn, G., ' 30 x-j Bank St. Miles, I. R., ' 30 106 H Miles, O. E., 19 6 S M R Miles, T. W., ' 30 2.8 N E Miller, A. L., ' 30 19 Madison St. Miller, A. M., ' 2.9 33 N W Miller, C. S., ' 30 7 S E B Miller, D. H., ' 2.9 zo Nassau St. Miller, E. C, 17 8SMR Miller, F. F., ' 2.7 15 WW Miller, R. C., ' 2.8 (Tower) 131-01 Miller, J. C, ig 3-C Hm Miller, J. F., 18 53 Bl Miller, M., 9 65 Bl Miller, W. H., Jr., ' 19 iiz- ' oi Miller, W. P., ' 2.9 34 Vandeventer Ave. Miller, W. R., ' 2.7 10 M N R Miller, W. T., •2.8 13 Park PI. NAME ADDRESS Millholland, P. D., ' 2.8 (Cottage) i-C H Mills, A. P., ' 30 36 Vandeventer Ave. Mills, D. C, ' rrj (Cannon) iii Hy Mills, E. K., Jr., 18 (Colonial) 4-AH Milton, J. W., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 61 L Milton, J. S., ' 30 II Dickinson St. Minary, T. H., ' 2.7 33 P Miner, C. H., Jr., ' 30 19 University PI. Mitchell, B., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 2-3- ' 79 Mitchell, J. F., Jr., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 2.4 L Mitchell, W. S., Jr., ' x9 8 W M W Mirick, H. D., ' xj (Quadrangle) ii C Miyar, J. M., ' 30 17 Madison St. Moeser, C. R., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 5i- ' 79 MofFat, F. C, ' 2.8 (Elm) 141 Cy MofFett, J. A., ' 19 n8- ' oi Moffitt, J. J.,Jr,, ' i6 436 Py Mole, H. E., Jr., ' 2.9 18 Madison St. Moment, G. B., ' 2.8 13 S D Monahan, D. T., ' xj (Dial Lodge) 63 P Monks, D. P., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 114 Hy Monroe, R., ' 19 x Chambers St. Montgomery, N. T., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 7 MD Montgomery, R. S., ' x9 ' 33 H Moore, D. C. , ' x-j (Cloister Inn) 34C Moore, H., Jr., 19 8 N E Moore, H. L., Jr., ' 30 51 Bl Moore, J. J., ' 2.9 3 W B Moore, M. D., ' 2.8 (Elm) 151 Li Moore, T. H., ' 30 19 University PI. Moore, W. A., ' 30 15 University PI. Morgan, E, G., ' 19 13 Vandeventer Ave, Morgan, G. D., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Morgan, S. R., Jr. . ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 84 P Morgan, W. B., ' 2.7 (Charter) 2.4 ' 79 Morganthau, D. C, ' 30 13 Park PI. Morrill, L. M., ' 2.9 44 H Morris, H. S., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 33 ' 79 Morris, W. F., ' 2.9 16 Hm Morrison, D. B., ' 2.9 x-Q H Morrison, M. N., ' 2.9 702. Py Morrisson, W. D., ' xg iii- ' oi Morse, C. R., ' 2.8 xo M D 500 Undergraduates — ( Continued ■I I I NAME ADDRESS Morse, S. B., 18 307 Hm Morse, W. T., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Morton, J., ' 17 34 H Moss, J. T., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 15 Bl Mott, F. D., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) 461 Cy Mould, R. N., 19 BWB Muckle, C. W., ' i8 (Court) ii3- ' oi Muhlhauscr, R. F., ' 18 (Tower) _ 611 Py Mulford, J., ' 19 43 L Munoz, R. R., ' 17 (Terrace) 131 F Murphy, A. M., ' 17 (Tower) 11 Hm Murphy, D. E., ' 17 (Terrace) z S E B Murphy, J. C, ' 19 iii Py Murphy, M. H., ' 17 (Elm) 2.1-79 Murphey, C. H., ' 30 34 N W Murphey, W., ' x8 (Tiger Inn) 33 H Murray, F. B., ' 2.8 (Elm) ic3- ' oi Murray, J. R., 18 (Key and Seal) 3 S R Murray, W. K., ' 19 31 Hill Dorm Murtagh, J. T., ' 30 53 C Mulock, J. G,, ' 30 1 E W Myers, J. C, ' 30 11 Hm Myers, J. E. S., ' 19 10 Nassau St. Myers, J. M., 18 1 E M W Myers, R. P., ' 30 15 University PI. Nygatt, R. E., ' 2.9 314 Py Nally, E. J., 18 (Campus) 8 S W B Nash, G. , ' 2.9 37 N E Nash, P. W., ' 2.9 iii- ' oi Nealc, D. T., ' 2.8 x-B Hm Neidlinger, C. R., Jr., ' 2.9 2.5 Bank St. Neilson, A. M., ' i8 (Cap and Gown) 2.31 Cy Nelson, A. K., ' -lj (Dial Lodge) 331 Py Nelson, J. O., ' 30 15 University PI. Nelson, W. D., ' 2.8 (Tower) 62.1 La Nes, C. M., Jr., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 80 P Nesbitt, A., II, 19 16 Park PI. Nesslage, C. F., Jr., ' 30 33 Bank St. Nevius, R. E., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 4 W B Ncwborg, D. L., ' 30 15 University PI. Newberry, F. S., ' 17 (Charter) 2.-A H Newcomb, M. F., Jr., ' 19 14 M D Newell, R. O ' C, 17 i43 Py NAME ADDRESS Newell, W. J., -19 11 S W Newhall, D. N., ' 18 (Elm) 613 La Newhousc, W. S., Jr., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 14 N W Newman, B. M., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) Arbor Inn Newmark, N. M., ' 18 113 Bl Newnham, R. M. , ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 617 La Newton, G. A., Jr., ' 19 z E M W Nicholas, E. M., Jr., ' 19 115 Py Nichols, E. S., ' 17 (Dial Lodge) 65 H Nichols, G. E., ' 30 7 W M W Nichols, R., ' 17 14 P Nicholson, A. D., ' 30 31 University PI. Nics, H. B., 17 (Elm) 98 Bl Nightingale, C. E., Jr., ' 17 (Gateway) 3ND North, N. S., Jr., ' 19 11 M D Noel, T., II, ' 30 zo Nassau St. Norman, J. C, ' Z9 311 Hm Norman, J. VanD., Jr., ' 17 (Tower) 35 P Norris, B. W., 18 (Quadrangle) 6SWB Norris, F. C. , ' 19 7 L P Norris, R. F., ' 18 (Arbor Inn) 5 E W Norton, J. C, ' z8 (Gateway) 34 H Noues, W. A. P., ' 30 II Dickinson St. Noyes, E. A., ' 30 103 B Oakes, G. W., Jr., ' 30 19 University PI. O ' Day, D., ' 19 6 Hill Dorm Odell, B. B., ' 19 H Oechler, C. W. H., ' 30 zo Nassau St. Ogdcn, M. D., ' 19 44 Hill Dorm Ohl, J. F., ' 30 41 Park PI. Okie, R. B., ' 19 Z4 Hill Dorm O ' Ncil, P. J., ' 19 6EMW Oram, G. S., ' 30 47 University PI. Orr, A. H., Jr., ' 19 138 Nassau St. O ' Toole, J. H., ' 30 zi Chambers St. Ott, N. H., ■z9 6z5 La Ott, R. C, •z7 (Quadrangle) 61 L Ottenheimer, L., ' 18 6Z5 Py Owen, G. E., ' 30 6 Madison St. Owen, L. P., ' 30 6 Madison St. Owen, P., Jr., ' z8 (Cap and Gown) 63 L Packard, G. R., Jr., ' 18 (Ivy) Z5 C Packard, J. E.,Jr., 18 (Elm) 41 L 507 Undergraduates — ( Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Packer, H. N., ' 17 (Campus) M3 Hy Page, B. , ' 19 61 La Page, J. F., Ill, ' 30 104 Hv Palmer, F. M., ' 2.9 64 H Palmer, J. R., ' 18 (Elm) 1 Bl Palmer, N. F., ' i8 (Cloister Inn) ii4- ' oi Palmer, W. P., Jr., ' 30 m F Pangman, C. S. , ' 18 (Court) 611 La Pape, G. E., ' 18 51 1 La Pappas,J. P., ■i8(Court) 2.13 Hy Pardee, F. W., ' 2.8 16 M D Pardoe, J . M. , 19 1 1 i- ' oi Park, H. C, ' 19 2.5 Chambers St. Park, R. B., ' 30 iiy- ' oi Parker, E. L., ' 17 (Dial Lodge) 4 ' H Parker, J. W., ' 2.8 (Tower) 9 S E B Parker, H. M., ' 2.7 (Cannon Club) Cannon Club Parker, W. R., Jr., ' 2.9 36 L Parker, W. McC, Jr., ' 30 30-31 Mercer St. Parrish, J. C, Jr., ' 19 46 Hill Dorm Parrott, J. E., Jr., ' 19 32-3- ' oi Parsons, H. DeF., ' 2.7 (Gateway) i N D Parsons, J. L., Jr., ' 30 2.2.i- ' oi Parsons, M. C, Jr., ' 2.8 3i3- ' °i Patt, B. C, 19 331-0 ' Patterson, A. W., Ill, 18 (Elm) 5 W B Patterson, A. W., 17 (Arbor Inn) 3 W W Patterson, H. C, ' 30 9 E B Patterson, H. A. S., ' 17 (Court) 72.3 Py Pattullo, S. G., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 12.1 H Patty, W. A., ' 2.9 66 Nassau St. Paul, K. S., ' 2.9 12.2. Pv Paul, R. C, 19 2.2.1 Py Payne, G. M., Jr., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Payne, S. B., % (Terrace) 5SWB Peabody, F., Jr., ' 2.7 (Charter) Charter Club Pearson, G. B., Jr., ' xy (Gateway) 2.EB Pearson, J. B., ' 30 xoi- ' oi Pearson, K. G., ' 2. 7 2.11 Py Pease, H. H., Jr., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 712. Py Peavoy, J., Jr., ' 30 7 Park PI. Peck, S. C. B., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) Dial Lodge Pedley, I. J., ' 30 54 Tulane St. NAME ADDRESS Pelo, F. F., Jr., ' 30 19 University PI. Pell, F. L., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 64 H Pendlebury, A. H., ' 2.9 lo Nassau St. Penney, J. C., Jr., ' 17 (Key and Seal) 52. H Pennypacker, H. S., ' 30 135 Hy Perin, L., ' 2.8 (Colonial) 2.6 C Perine, I. vanG., Jr., ' 30 9 Park PI. Perkenson, W. T., Jr., ' 2.8 (Elm) 318 F Perkins, C. W., ' 2.7 (Elm) 92. P Perkins, J. C, ' r8 90 Jefferson Rd. Perkins, N. M., ' 30 4o4- ' oi Perkins, T. P., Jr., ' 30 14 Park PI. Perry, S. W., Jr., ' 19 52. L Persse, J. W., Jr., ' iS 62.6 Py Peterkin, D., Jr., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) lo-A H Peters, E. V., ' 2.9 32. Vandeventer Ave. Peterson, C. R., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) i-E Hm Peterson, R. G., ' 19 18 S M R Pettus, T. W., ' 2.7 (Cottage) 43-53 P Petrie, F. D., ' 30 ii Park PI. Petty, N. A., Jr., ' 30 34 Chambers St. Pevear, B. T., 18 (Gateway) 7 E B Pieper, R. O., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) 8i P Pierce, P. R., ' 19 7 E M W Pierce, R. G., ' 2.7 (Elm) 7 S D Pierson, H. L., ' 30 10 Dickinson St. Pieters, R. F., ' 30 9WMW Pieters, R. S., ' 30 9 W M W Pires, M. C, 17 15 E W Pitcairn, J. F., ' 18 (Charter) 36 P Pitcher, P. S., ' 2.7 (Elm) 92. P Pitman, J. R., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tower) 32. N W Pitt, C. H., ' 2.9 19 S E Pleasants, J. R., ' 19 742. Py Plumb, J. S., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 2.WMW Plumer, D., Jr., ' 2.8 ... .(Tower) 104 Bl Polachek, V. H., Jr., ' 2.9 311 Cy Pollard, W. A., Jr., ' 30 2.3 Bank St. Pond, W. R., ' 2.9 Hill Dorm Pool, J. L., Jr., ' 30 36 Vandeventer Ave. Posey, M. L., ' 2.7 (Tower) 91 H Post, R. C, Jr., ' 2.8 (Cannon) L-i Prospect Apts. Poste, B. E., ' 19 141 L 508 Undergraduates— {Continued NAME ADDRESS Potts, W. R., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 3} C Potter, J. G., ' 2.8 57 Jefferson Rd. Powell, H. G., ' 19 17 Edwards PI. Powell, I. A., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 411 La Powell, R. P., Jr., ' 30 47 University PI. Powers, A. J., II, ' 30 17 C Powelson, R. vanN., ' i8 (Court) lo Nassau St. Prendergast, J., ' 17 (Cap and Gown) Cap and Gown Club Preston, F., ' 30 105 Hy Preston, H. R., Jr., ' 30 19 Bank St. Preston, S. S., Jr., ' 2.9 in Hy Prettyman, J. S., ' 17 (Cannon) x x Hy Price, J. O., ' 18 (Colonial) 3M ° ' Price, T. H., 17 (Ivy) 6-A C Prichard, F. W., ' 19 44 S W Priestly, W. T., Jr., ' 19 184 L Prior, H. A., ' 18 (Charter) 31 P Prowell, H. R., ' 19 35 William St. Puffer, R. F., ' 30 82. Bl Purnell, L. B., Ill, ' 30 19 Bank St. Putnam, H., Jr., ' 18 (Court) 512. La Putnam, H. H., ' z7 (Key and Seal) 413 Py Putnam, N. H., ' 30 64 Nassau St. Putz, V. C. , ' 2.7 (Gateway) 5 1 Bl. Quarles, J. V., Jr., ' 2.9 5 E B Rampona, L. E., ' i8 10 W B Ramsey, F. H., ' 30 49 Wiggins St. Ramsey, J. R., Jr., ' xj (Terrace) 331 Hy Randall, S. J., Ill, ' 17 (Terrace) Terrace Club Raney, M. H., ' 2.9 6SEB Rankin, F. K., iS (Tiger Inn) 95 P Rankin, L. G., ' 30 ii Chambers St. Rankin, R. H., ' 2.9 i2.6- ' oi Rash, D. A., ' 30 113 Py Rau, R. S., ' 18 53 B Raudenbush, D. W., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 90 P Ravi-Booth, V. V., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 198 Nassau St. Read, C. R., 2.9 2.4 Hill Dorm Read, D. N., 9 14 N E Read, J. H., 18 (Campus) 2.0 W W Read, W. C, Jr., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 734 Py Read, W. H., •2.7 (Cloister Inn) 7-A H Read, W. L., ' 2.8 (Charter) lo-A H NAME ADDRESS Rebhun, D. H., ' 17 (Ivy) i2-3 Hy Redington, S. G., ' 18 (Key and Seal) i8 C Redmond, H. S., ' 2.7 (Ivy) ii- ' 79 Reed, D. P., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 2.01 F Reeder, H. S., ' 30 12.1 F Reese, D. M., ' 30 14 Hill Dorm Reese, J. S., IV, ' 2.7 5 S E B Reeves, R. E., ' 30 36 Vandeventer Ave. Reeves, W. J., ' 30 45 Vandeventer Ave. Reichel, G. P., Jr., ' 2.9 11 MD Reichner, M. S. A., ' 2.8 1-A C Reid, C. E., ' iS, (Gateway) io5- ' oi Reidcmeister, C. F., ' 2.9 19 Madison St. Reilly, D. C, 19 10 M D Reilly, D. F., ' 30 68 Wiggins St. Reif snyder, J. D., ' 19 loi- ' oi Reifsnyder, T. G., ' 17 (Terrace) 66 H Reine, J., ' 17 (Gateway) Gateway Club Reinke, H. L., ' 2.7 3 NR Reiter, B. R., ' 30 11 N M R Reiter, H. B., ' 1.9 12. N W Remick, H. C, ' i8 (Gateway) 36 First Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Renchard, J. W., ' 2.8 305 Hm Renchard, G. W., ' 30 14 N D Renchard, W, S., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 305 Hm Rennard, J. C, ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 2.31 Cy Reno, J. L., Jr., ' 30 SUP Requardt, J. R., Jr., ' 2.9 6ir La Reyburn, W. E., ' 2.8 2.3 Chambers St. Reynolds, E. S., ' 19 51 Little Reynolds, M. A., ' 2.8 (Colonial) 2.2.7 Hy Reynolds, S. S., ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) it H Reynolds, W. O., ' 2.9 731 Py Rhea, E. M., ' 17 (Terrace) 614 Py Rhees, W. J., ' 2.7 (Terrace) 108 P Rhodes, T. E. , ' 17 (Cottage) 4°-5° P Rial, J., ' 2.9 138 Nassau St. Rice, j. A., ' 2.8 (Campus) 14 W W Rice, E. W., ' 19 31 SE Richardson, J. M., ' 2.9 6 Bl Richardson, j. S., ' i8 (Cap and Gown) nj Vandeventer Ave. Richardson, R., ' x8 (Arbor Inn) 14 P Richardson, W. C, ' i8 (Cannon) 93 H 509 Undergraduates — {Continued ' ) NAME ADDRESS Richman, G. D., ' 18 (Cap and Gown) 5-A H Rickard, J. T., ' 19 134 Princeton Inn Ridgway, D. H., ' i8 (Court) 32- C Ridgway, W. C, ' 2.9 14 Vandevcnter Ave. Ridington, W. R., ' 30 41 S W Riggs, H. C, ' -L-j (Gateway) 15 L P Riggs, R. C, ' 30 81 H Righter, T. McN., Jr., ' 18 (Charter) 531 La Rike, D. L., ' 2.7 (Campus) loi H Riker, W. C, 17 (Court) 161 L Ritchey, H. M., ' 18 (Tower) i3i- ' oi Robbins, J. M., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) 42-2. Py Roberg, O. T., Jr., ' 2.7 441 Cy Roberg, N. B., ' 30 2.5 Bank St. Roberts, H. R., ' 2.9 11 Dickinson St. Roberts, L. P., ' 19 83 Bl Roberts, J. B., ' 2.8 (Campus) 183 L Roberts, W, C, ' 30 2.11 Py Robertson, D. M., ' 2.9 2.35 Hy Robinson, A. R., Jr., ' 30 15 Edwards PI. Robinson, D. H., ' 17 (Gateway) 312. F Robinson, D. H., ' 30 30 Mercer St. Robinson, F. W., ' 19 343 Cy Robinson, H., ' 30 12. W W Robinson, H. A., ' 2.8 (Charter) 31 C Robinson, H. B., ' 30 11 Alexander St. Robinson, H. L., ' 30 33 B Robinson, R. E., Jr., ' 2.9 14 S M R Robinson, W. E., ' 2.9 3i2.- ' oi Roby, S. , ' 2.8 (Campus) 61H Rockefeller, J. D., Ill, ' 2.9 113-01 Rockwell, E. B., ' 2.8 (Charter) 631 Py Rode, J. D., ' 30 1-C Hm Rogers, E. C, ' 30 13 S E Rogers, J. H., ' 17 (Court) 311 F Rogers, T. M., ' 2.9 7 E M W Rollinson, S. H., ' 30 i3i- ' oi Roma, E. L., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 2. S W B Roos, J. F., ' 19 5 WW Roosevelt, W. M., ' 2.8 (Tiger Inn) A Bl Rose, H. C, ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 52. C Rose, H. L., ' 30 80 Nassau St. Rose, J. E., 19 uSD Rosengarten, A. G., ' 2.7 (Colonial) 66 C Rosengarten, T. J., ' 17 (Dial Lodge) 151 L Ross, D. S., ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) 3 Bl Ross, J. D., ' 30 10 Nassau St. Ross, L. H., Jr., ' 30 n-A H Ross, P. S., Ill, ' 30 40 Nassau St. Rowe, D. N., ' 2.7 i-A H Royes, R. E., ' 2.8 (Gateway) Gateway Club Royster, H. A., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 9 S W B Rubenstein, R. H., ' 30 47 University PI. Rubidge, R. W., ' i8 (Arbor Inn) 13 N M R Ruckert, G. W., ' 30 18 S M R Rudel, T. R., ' 19 641 Py Rue, H. A., ' 2.8 452- Cy Ruge, R. A., ' 2.9 35 Park PI. Ruigh, W. L., ■2.7 33 S W Russell, C. C, Jr., 18 (Dial Lodge) 112. L Russell, F. P., ' 30 332. Py Russell, J. A., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) m L Rutherford, W., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 40 Nassau St. Rutledge, A. H., Jr., ' 30 41 S W Ryan, C. J., 18 (ivy) ,5 C Ryan, G. F., ' 19 56 C Sadtier, S. D. S., ' 30 16 W W Sailer, J., Jr., ' 30 2.9 Bank St. Salinger, H., ' 2.7 2.1 Bl Salmon, A. D., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 5NR Samson, F. H., Jr., ' 2.7 7 N M R Sands, O. J., Jr., ' 17 (Cap and Gown) 31 79 Sanford, H. C, ' 17 (Colonial) ii- ' 79 Sanford, S. J., ' 18 (Court) 613 La Sauer, W. C. , ' i8 54 L Sawyer, E. L., ' 2.9 Nassau Inn Sawyer, J. N., jo 13 Chambers St. Scarlett, W. D. G., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Scarlett, W. G., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 63 H Schafer, R. M., ' 30 ; 71 L Schall, R. B., ' iS (Court) 13 N W Scharnikow, W. F., ' 17 35 N W SchaufFIer, F. H., ' 30 54 Vandcventer Ave. Schaub, R. C, ' i8 (Campus) 10 W M W Scheff, M., Jr., 17 102. H Schenk, J. F., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) 333 F 610 Undergraduates — {Continued t NAMU ADDRESS Schcnk, G. W., ' 17 (Elm) 103-01 Schermcrhorn, R, F., ' 2.9 135 Py Schlapp, C. H. , 19 305 Hm Schlubach, H. L., 17 (Elm) 13 Bl Schcuer, A. L., ' 19 19 University PI. Schmidt, G. A., ' 19 43 B Schmitz, A. E., ' 30 514 Py Schneider, H. A., 30 47 University PI. Schoellkopf, J. P., ' 30 10 Nassau St. Schotland, C. E., ' 30 47 University PI. Schoenfeld, H. A., Jr., ' 30 33 L Schott, C, Jr., ' i8 (Tower) 611 Py Schumann, F. W., ' 19 7 N D Schukraft, W. J., ' 18 (Campus) iii Cy Schulcr, E. W., ' 30 131 L Schultz, M. A., ' 17 15 P Schuiz, C. W., ' i8 (Gateway) 33 ' Cy Schulz, G. H., ' 19 3ii- ' oi Schwartz, H. G., ' 18 54 H Schwartz, W. M., ' 30 131 Py Schwenger, L. S., ' 2.7 33 L Scoles, J. H., Jr., ' 30 316 F Scott, B. B., ' 2.9 15 L Scott, C. S., ' 2.9 97 Bl Scott, H. L., ' 30 47 University PI. Scott, J. E., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 43 H Scott, T. P., ' 30 17 Edwards PI. Scott, W. R., 19 10 E M W Scribner, J. W., ' 19 11 N E Seabrcase, G. P., ' 50 12. Vandevcnter Ave. Scay, H. H., ' 2.9 15 Dickinson St. Seay, H. L., Jr., ' 30 41 University Pi. Seiberling, M., 30 311 Py Seibcrt, W. L,, ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) i8 C Seidler, A., Jr., ' xj (Arbor Inn) 363 Cy Seldcn, E. V., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 65 Cy Semans, L. S., ' 19 2.16 Hy Serena, E. P., 17 (Elm) 32. Bl Scssa, A., ' 2.9 2.0 Nassau St. Sexton, H. B., ' 2.9 Nassau Inn Seyfert, W. H., ' 17 (Gateway) 2. S WB Seymour, A. T. , II, ' 2.9 141 L Sharp, A. G. , ' 2.8 Nassau Inn NAME ADDRESS Sharp, R. J., ' 18 (Court) 334 Py Shaw, A., ' 18 (Cloister Inn) 60 P Shaw, J. K., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) ( ' Yl Shaw, R. S., ' 30 R. F. D. No. z Shay, D. D., ' 18 (Terrace) 4WMW Shearer, F. H., ' 30 36 Vandeventer Ave. Sheeley, W. W., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) 12. Princeton Ave. Sheldon, S. R., ' 2.8 (Cottage) 53 H Sheldrick, W. J., ' 50 19 N E Shenk, A. K., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Shenk, C. C, ' 30 66 Nassau St. Shepard, F. G., ' 2.9 2. L P Shepherd, E. A., ' i8 (Campus) 47 N. Tulane St. Sheppard, C. W., ' 2.9 31 University PI. Sheppard, J. A., Jr., ' 19 616 La Sheppard, M. D., ' 30 35 Park PI. Sherry, A., ' 2.7 (Tiger Inn) 2.1 P ShiUabcr, R., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 317 F Shober, A. M., ' 17 (Colonial) m F Shoemaker, B. H., ' 19 19 University PI. Shugg, R. W., ' 2.7 (Cloister Inn) Cloister Inn Club Shumate, A. M., ' 19 ii5- ' oi Shumway, F. R., ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) 143 Cy Sidford, R. D., ' 29 65 Bl Silverson, C. F. , ' 30 3 3 Bl Simons, L. C, ' i8 (Cap and Gown) 84 P Simonson, J. N., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Simpson, J. A. B., ' 2.9 Simpson, J. J. B., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) loi P Simpson, J. W., ' 2.9 ii6 Hy Siner, J. D., ' 30 34 Chambers St. Singley, J. D., Jr., ' 2.9 2.0 Nassau St. Sisserson, T. L., 30 32.1 Py Skinner, M. P., ' 2.8 (Campus) 3 -79 Slade, W. B., 18 (Arbor Inn) 42. S W Slagle, J. W., 17 (Ivy) 9SWB Slattery, R. R., ' 2.7 (Elm) 6 W W Slaughter, R. C, ' i8 (Elm) 42. H Slirting, D. A., ' 30 15 University Pi. Sloan, D. B., ' 2.7 R.F.D., N0.2. Sloan, S., ' x7 (Cap and Gown) 135 Hy Sloan, W. B., ' 19 Province Line Rd. Sloane, W. M., ' 2.9 31 L 511 Under gradua tes — ( Continued Sloat, Sloat, Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith, Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith F. E., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) 53- ' 7 L. W., ' 19 743 Py A. Q., ' 30 34 Vandeventer Ave. B. B., 18 (Key and Seal) 141 Hy C. P. , ' 19 Nassau Inn D. C, ' 19 43 Hill Dorm D. D., 18 (Cloister Inn) n P E. B., ' 30 II Dickinson St. E. J., Jr., ' 30 45 University PI. E. D., ' 30 30 Mercer St. T. C, ' 19 8 Madison St. F. E.Jr., ' 30 II Park PI. F. H., ' 30 411 Py F. L., Jr., ' 2.9 1 Nassau St. F. T., ' 17 (Colonial) 141 Hy G. B., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. G., ' 2.7 (Cottage) 106 P J. P., ' 17 (Arbor Inn) i S D L. W., ' 30 54 N. Tulane St. L. P., Jr., -30 341 Py P. B. C, ' iS (Charter) 41 H D., ' 30 3 Hill Dorm D., 17 (Key and Seal) 164 L G., ' i9.... ' II EB H.,Jr., ' i7(Tower) iz Hm K., Jr., ' 2.7 (Campus) 62. P R., Jr., ' iS (Campus) m F B., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 7 E W C, -zS 64 Bl , L., ' 30 3-BHm Snell, P. A., 18 (Arbor Inn) 84 H Snellings, G. M., Jr., ' 2.9 Nassau Inn Snively, R. D., iS (Arbor Inn) 14 P Snowden, G. G., Jr., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 6WB Snowden, J. M., ' 2.9 12.2.-01 Snyder, G. E., Jr., ' 30 12. Dickinson St. Snyder, R. H., Jr., ' 30 19 Edwards PI. Snyder, W. K., ' ' 3o 47 University PI. Sommers, H. S., ' 2.7 (Elm) 4}- ' 79 SomerviHe, W. G., Jr., 18 (Cottage) A-B Sour, G. B., ' 30 73 H Souihgate, H. 1., ' 2.9 13 Vandeventer Ave. Spackman, W. M., ' 2.7 ii Bl NAME ADDRESS Spaeth, P. E., ' 30 34 S W Spalding, L. A., Jr., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Specht, H., ' 30 16 Edwards PI. Speer, D. L., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) 2.0 Nassau St. Spencer, R., ' 30 47 University PI. Sperry, F. D., ' 30 13 Bank St. Sprague, M., ' 30 66 Nassau St. Springer, H. L., Jr., ' 19 2.1 Hill Dorm Spruance, W. C, Jr., ' 2.8 (Colonial) 5 S E B Squires, C. C. , ' 2.8 (Cannon) 46 L Stary, E. F., ' 30 704 Py Stallman, G. L. , Jr., ' 30 116 Bl Stallknecht, L. P., ' i8 11 UP Stallknecht, N. P., ' 17 11 U P Stallman, C. H., ' 2.8 (Cloister Inn) 143 -y Stanton, S. C, ' 30 19 E W Staples, W. D., ' -l 3UP Starche, C. G. , ' 19 36 S E Starr, T. D., Jr., ' 2.9 72. Bl Stauffer, J. H., ' 2.9 2.3X Hy Steadman, S. R., ' 2.9 34 Hill Dorm Stearns, W. H., ' 30 71 Bl Steimle, E. A., ' 30 35 N E Stein, A. M., j 15 M D Stein, F. C. , ' z8 (Key and Seal) 532. La Steinbrink, S. H., ' 2.7 512. Py Stephano, S. C, ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 42.6 Py Steinfirst, J. U., ' z8 141 Py Steinmetz, P. H. , ' 30 31 N E Stengel, C. D., ' 19 zo Nassau St. Stern, T. E., ' z8 9SMR Stevens, J., ' zg 9 N D Stevens, K. A., ' 30 513 Py Stevens, J. B. , ' Z9 i iz Hy Stevens, J. H., ' Z9 134 H Stevens, R. L., ' 18 (Ivy) Ivy Club Stevens, S. G., Jr., ' 30 11 Alexander St. Stevenson, C. S., ' 30 zzz H Stevenson, T. I., ' Z7 9 N M R Steves, J. R., ' z9 9 E W Stewardson, J., ' zg 71 Bl Stewart, E. S., ' z8 (Dial Lodge) 41 C Stewart, J. G., ' 19 113 L 512 1778 Undergraduates — Continued ' ) I NAME ADDRESS Stewart, L. S., ' 2.9 16 Bl Stewart, R. C, Jr., ' 18 (Ivy) 63 79 Stewart, W. A. W., Jr., ' 18 (Quadrangle) 41 C Stinson, J. W., ' 19 14 BI Stillman, J., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) 10 N R Stobbe, J. A., ' 19 14 Chambers St. Stockwell, A. H., ' 30.-. 18 Dickinson St. Stone, W. S., ' 30 15 University PI. Stout, B., ' 2.8 (Arbor Inn) 7-B H Stout, F. L., Jr., ' 2.9 118 Nassau St. Stout, J. H., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 351 Cy Stout, J. S., ' 2.8 (Court) 113 F Stout, R. G., ' 30 8WB Stovel, R. W., Jr., ' 30 6 E B Stover, F. C, ' 30 54 N. Tulane St. Strachan, F. G., ' 2.7 (Dial Lodge) 32.1 Hy Strasser, H. A., ' 2.9 10 L P Stratford, H. R., ' r8 (Cap and Gown) 11} Vandevenier Ave. Strauss, B. M., ' 2.8 54 H Strawbridge, J. J., ' 30 2.9 Bank St. Strayer, G. D., Jr., ' 2.7 (Arbor Inn) 53-79 Strauss, H. A., ' 19 41 N E Street, F. C, Jr., ' 2.9 41 Wiggins St. Strouss, C. M. , ' 2.9 8-C H Strubing, P. H., II, 19 iz M D Stuart, D. R., ' 2.7 (Quadrangle) i S D Studt, H. H., Jr., ' 2.8 731 Py Stumpf,J. H., ' jo 35 Park PI. Sturges, J. M., ' 2.8 (Charter) 53i La Stuyvesant, A. R., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 40 Nassau St. Sullivan, D. E.,Jr., ' 2.7 (Charter) 71 P Sullivan, E. M., ' 30 2.7 Bank St. Sullivan, F. L., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Summers, L. M., ' 2.7 E B Summey, R. W., ' 2.8 (Cap and Gown) 9 M D Supplee, H., Jr., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 361 Cy Suor, A. M., Jr., ' 2.7 6x3 Py Sutphen, D. D., Jr., ' 2.7 (Colonial) 2.11 F Swann, D., ' 19 19 University PI. Swartz, J. M., ' 2.9 16 S E Swede, R. D., ' 30 46 Spring St. Sweet, W. E., Jr., 18 113 H Sweet, W. W., ' 2.8 (Charter) 10 N R NAME ADDRESS Swift, T. H., ' 19 4 W W Swift, W. H., Ill, ' 30 4.A C Swoopc, H. B., Jr.. 17 i-A H Sykcs, J. A., ' 30 45 University PI. Tappin, J. L., ' z8 (Charter) 3zi- ' oi Tasker, F. G., ' 2.7 (Tower) 2.2.2. Cy Taylor, D. W., ' 2.9 ; n Chambers St. Taylor, H. F., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 6-A C Taylor, E. S., 30 13 Bank St. Taylor, G. K., ' 2.9 316 Py Taylor, H. W., ' 2.7 (Cottage) 4o- ' ;o P Taylor, J. E., ' 2.8 (Ivy) 144 L Taylor, J. C, ' 2.8 (Charter) 53 ' La Taylor, R.L., ' 2.9 35 University PI. Taylor, M., ' 30 ii W W Taylor, R. G., ' 30 14 S D Taylor, R. H., ' 30 48 Vandeventer Ave. Taylor, T. H., ' 30 35 S E Taylor, W, G., Jr., •%% (Arbor) 103 P Taylor, W. R., ' 2.8 (Elm) 61-79 Teachout, F. S., ' 30 n Alexander St. Teid, J. T., ' 30 151 Hy Tekirian, A. T., ' 2.7 i4i- ' oi Thatcher, J. H., ' 30 331 Hy Thatcher, J. P., ' 2.8 138 Nassau St. Theban, J. G., Jr., ' 30 15 Dickinson St. Thicle, J. E., -2.9 10 E M W Thoburn, L., ' 2.8 (Elm) 3 S R Thomas, G. T., ' 2.7 (Court) 14-A H Thomas, J. S., ' 2.9 63 C Thomas, W. R., Ill, ' iS (Cottage) 106 P Thompson, C. L., i) 308 Hm Thompson, C. K., ' 2.7 3 E W Thompson, I. W., ' 2.8 (Tower) i E W Thompson, J. H. W., ' 18 (Ivy) 13 C Thompson, J. MacN., ' 2.9 51 L Thompson, J. S., ' 2.7 634 Py Thompson, J. W., Jr., ' x8 (Dial) 112. L Thompson, P. G., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 32.1 Cy Thompson, T., ' 30 zo Nassau S t. Thron, L. E., ' 19 42. SE Thouron, G. G., ' 30 8 W B Thulin, W. B., ' 2.7 (Cannon) 98 Bl 513 I I n I I I I 1 1 1 1 I ! 11 I I I I 1 1 1 I n I I . I I I I I I I r ? 1928 Undergraduates — Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Thurber, R. B., ' iS 648 ' Thurber, R. B., 19 10 N D Tincher, J. L., Ill, ' 2.9 15 Dickinson St. Tinsman, C. H., ' xS 301-01 Titsworth, G., ' 19 II E W Tobin, C. W., 18 (Arbor) 17 N D Todd, J., Jr., ' 2.7 (Tower) 84 Bl Tomlinson, A. S., ' 30 12. S M R Tomlinson, J. H., ' xS 32. S W Tonneti, J. L., ' 30 3 S W Totten, k. H., ' 30 iii Nassau St. Townley, J. A., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 15 P Trenholm, G. T., ' 2.7 (Elm) 72- H Trescott, H. W., ' 17 (Arbor) 54- ' 79 Trevett, L. D. , ' ±y (Court) 6x H Trimble, T. F., ' 2.7 (Ivy) Ivy Club Trimble, W. C, ' 30 81 H Truitt, R.M.,Jr., ' 17 (Arbor) 131 Hy Truitt, S. S., ' 2.9 i2.5- ' oi Trivers.H., ' 30 19 University PI. Trompen, J. M., ' 30 15 University PI. Trout, J. ' m., ' xS 32. S W Tucker, H. H., ' 2.9 9 U P Tucker, J. H., 17 (Elm) Elm Club TurnbuU, A. W., ' 2.9 x Nassau St. Turnbull, J. A., ' 30 15 ' Hy Turnbull, W., II, ' 30 7M Py Turner, J. F., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Turner, J. S., ' 30 2.1 Madison St. Tyler, J. P., ' 19 16 W W Tyson, R. C, ' 17 62.- ' 79 Uehlinger, T., ' 2.9 40 Nassau St. Uhl,S.K., ' i7(Campus) 300 Hm Ullman, J. R., ' 19 19 University PI. UUman, A. J., ' 30 48 Vandeventer Ave. Updike, F. T., ' 2.9 Quaker Rd. Urquhart, J., ' 19 15 N D Vail, C. R., ' xj (Cloister) 2.12. Hy Valentine, W. A., ' xj Nassau Inn Valk, A. J., ' 30 •. 31 University PI. Van Alstyne, W. B., Jr., ' xj 53 University PI. Van Arkel, G. P., ' 19 2.9 S E Van Blarcom, A., Jr., ' 2.9 2.2.4 Py NAME ADDRESS Vanderbeek, A. B., ' 17 (Gateway) 8 S E B Vanderpool, E., ' x9 315 F VanDeventer, W. F., ' 2.8 (Tower) 310 Hm Van Duyn, J., ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 31 Bl Van Duyne, S., ' 30 19 Edwards PI. Vandyck, E. B., Jr., ' 2.8 4 S E B Van Dyke, C. S. , ' 30 Nassau Inn Van Dyke, J. H. B.,Jr., ' 2.9 zo Nassau St. Van Gelder, C. P. , ' 19 34 Hill Dorm Van Ryn, J. W., ' 2.8 (Terrace) 9 N R Van Siclen, R. D., V7 (Tiger Inn) 3i- ' 79 Vaughn, H. C, ' 30 114 L Vaughn, J. E., ' 2.7 4 M D Velbon, J. B., ' 30 2.0 Nassau St. Venard, G. H., ' 30 7 W B Vhay , D. , ' 30 42-2- Cy Vhay, J. S., ' 2.9 442- Cy Vogt, R. L., ' 30 6 S R Volodimirov, A., ' 2.7 62. Wiggins St. Vollrath, D. C, ' 17 12. U P Von Deilen, H. O., ' 2:8 (Gateway) 12-5 Py Von Lehn, R., ' 2.9 18 N E Von Storch, T. C, ' 2.7 (Key and Seal) 102. P Von Weise, L. B.,Jr., ' 2.8 181 L Voorhees, G. C., ' 30 19 W W Vos, B. H., ' 30 ji Mercer St. Voss, J. L. , ' x8 (Court) 32.1 Hy Wagner, M. W., ' 30 38 Edwards PI. Wacker, W. A., ' 30 19 University PI. Wade, A. M., ' 30 49 Park PI. Wainwright,J. R., ' 2.9 5x1 Cy Waite, R. E., 18 7 Park PI. Wales, R. W., ' xj (Campus) 62. P Walker, H. M., Jr., ' 2.8 (Key and Seal) 411 Cy Walker, J. T., ' 2.7 (Cottage) 43-53 P Walker, W. M., xS (Charter ) 15 P Wall, R. F., •x ) 4i Hill Dorm Wallace, C, Jr., ' 2.8 (Dial Lodge) 133 H Wallace, J. H., Jr., 8 (Court) z W B Wallace, T. C, ' 2.8 (Cottage) m F Wallis, J. K., 19 131 H Walters, F. J., Jr., ' xj 43 Bl Walworth, L. S., ' x7 (Campus) ii3- ' oi 514 Undergraduates— Continued ' ) NAMB ADDRESS Wamick, H. S., ' 30 3X Bank St. Wanner, J. H., ' ig 8-C H Ward, E. B., • JO i W M W Ward, E. L., ' 2.9 105 H Ward.T., iSCArbor) 341 F Warden, D. E., ' 30 2.6 N E Wardenburg, F. A., ' 17 8 E B Wardenburg, P. L., ' 19 35 Bank St. Warfield, J. E., ' 30 31 Mercer St. Warfield, R. W., ' 30 Murray-Dodge Warner, A. W., ' xy (Tower) 11 Hm Warner, W. E., ' 18 loi Hy Warren, R., ' 30 , 17 Eewards PI. Warrin, D. P., ' 19 35 University PI. Warriner, J. D., ' 19 104 H Washabaugh, W. B., xy (Key and Seal) 11 S W Watterhouse, J. T. , ' 19 30 S E Waterhouse, S. , ' iS 306 Hm Waters, H. S., ' 18 3 N R Watkins, W. C, ' 17 (Court) 6iz Py Watkins, D. G., II, ' 19 2.3 Madison St. Watson, G. C, ■2.8 31 S W Watts, S. S., ' 2.7 (Tower) M ' 79 Weatherley , C. G. , ' 2.9 i 1 1 H Webb, C. D. , ' 30 12. Vandeventer Ave. Webster, D. E. , ' 2.9 113 F Webster, J. C, ' 19 6NMR Webster, W. R., % (Elm) 3 S D Weed, P. C, Jr., ' 18 (Arbor) 90 P Welden, P. M., 17 30 P Weekes, C. W., ' 17 (Tiger Inn) Tiger Inn Weinberg, G. G., ' 19 i2i- ' oi Weir, F. G. , ' 18 341 Py Weir, R. R., ' 18 1 W W Weisl, B. A, G., 17 102.H Welch, E. S., 18 (Campus) 1 U P Weller, D. N., 29 43 Vandeventer Ave. Welles, C. J., ' vj (Charter) 43- ' 79 Wells, D. L., ' 30 iiSWB Welles, E. R., ' 18 (Arbor) Arbor Inn Wells, H. B., •29 311 Hm Wells, T. A., ' 19 I ND Welwood,J. C.,Jr., ' 2.7 (Dial) 41 H NAME ADDRESS Werner, H. L., ' 27 (Court) 75 H Welsh, J. A., •x9 34 N E Wesselmann, D. E. , ' 19 iLP Westcott, W. I., ' 29 i24- ' oi Westfall, J. C, ' 27 (Tower) 41-51 P Westwood, J., ' x8 (Cloister) 163 Cy Wheat, W. R., Ill, ' 30 lo Nassau St. Wheelwright, J. H., Jr., ' 27 (Court) 335 F Whelan, J., ' 27 (Charter) 6 N D Whelan, T. A., Ill, ' iS (Ivy) 5-A H Wherry, E. W., ' 30 151 Hy Whitaker, A. C, Jr., ' 27 (Cap and Gown) 6WB Whitaker, W. S., ' 28 (Tower) 5 -79 White, B. v., -30 44 L White, J., ' 29 2 Nassau St. White, R., Jr., 28 (Charter) 71 P Whitehouse, C. A., ' 29 23 Madison St. Whitman, R. C, ' 30 31 University PI. Whitney, D. H., ' 30 34 Vandeventer Ave. Whitsett, R. C, Jr., 28 (Key and Seal) 11 H Whyte, J. R., ' 30 21 Chambers St. Wight, W. K., 27 1 S W B Wilber, D. N., ' 29 443 Py Wilder, C. T., ' 29 10 N D Wilder, W. B., ' 29 2 Nassau St. Wile, F. W., ' 30 12 Dickinson St. Wilkison, R. M., ' 30 : 212 Cy Willauer, A. O., ' 29 241 Py Willauer, W., ' 28 (Tower) 14 SE Willard, T. W., ' 29 66 Wiggins St. Wilcox, O. B., ' 30 333 Py Willey, J. C, ' 29 20 Nassau St. Williams, C. H., Jr., ' 29 54 Tulane St. Williams, C. T., 28 (Quadrangle) 3 N E Williams, F. R., ' 28 (Quadrangle) i3- ' 79 Williams, J. P., ' 19 31 University PI. Williams, J. S., ' 30 ii Mad ison St. Williams, J. T., ' 28 (Tiger Inn) 74 Bl Williams, L. W., ' 28 i-A H Williams, R. D., ' 29 642. Py Williams, R. M., ' 29 511 Cy Williams, T. R., ' 27 (Elm) Elm Club Williamson, H. F., ' 27 (Quadrangle) 7 S D 515 Undergraduates — {Continued ) NAME ADDRESS Willis, R. S., ' i8 (Terrace) 132- Hy Willits, M. N., ' 19 6 Bl Wilmerding, L., ' 17 (Court) Nassau Inn Wilson, B. F., ' 19 304 Hm Wilson, B. T., ' 30 31 University PI. Wilson, E. B., ' 30 2.0 Nasau St. Wilson, F. K., ' 30 7 N E Wilson, F. R., ' 19 35 University PI. Wilson, J. P., Jr., ' 2.8 (Quadrangle) 10 S R Wilson, J. W., ' iS (Key and Seal) 10 S R Wilson, K., ' 30 42- Wiggins St. Wilson, R. O., ' 17 51 N W Wilson, T. S., ' 17 (Cannon) 81 Bl Wilson, W., ' 30 12. Vandeventer Ave. Wilson, W., ' X9 8 S E Wimberley, T. F., ' 30 31 University PI. Windust, B. , ' 2.9 138 Nassau St. Wineman, J. M., ' zS 405-01 Winsor, A., ' 17 (Quadrangle) 114 Hy Winsor, J. D., Ill, ' 2.9 52-1 Cy Winstead, A. S., 17 9 L P Winston, C. C, ' 3c 35 St. Winters, F. F., ' 30 ii Chambers St. Winter, H. B., ' 17 (Court) 161 L Wirbclauer, G. A., ' -l-j (Quadrangle) 42. P Wise, R. H., 9 3 Py Wisely, E. B., ' 2.8 loi Hy Wisner, C. H., ' i8 (Cannon) 93 H Witherspoon, J., ' x9 44 ' 7 Witherspoon, W., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 4xi- ' oi Withey, W. W., ' -lj 6i- ' 79 Wofford, G. T., Jr., ' 2.9 44 H Wolcott, F. B., 30 iNE Wolcott, W. B., ' 2.7 (Arbor) 54-79 Wolfe, A. L., ' 2.7 109 P Wolfe, H. P., ' 2.8 (Charter) 3ii- ' oi NAME ADDRESS Wood, A. E., ' 30 15 S E Wood, A. Z. F., ' i8 (Quadrangle) Quadrangle Club Wood, C. F., Jr., ' 2.9 312. Hamilton Wood, R. H., ' 30 8SR Wood, R. M., 19 43 L Wood, T. E., Jr., 17 (Key and Seal) xi S W Wood, W. B., ■i7 (Terrace) 104 P Woodward, W. W., ' 18 (Arbor) 9 Bl Woodhull, D. E,, ' 30 i2.i- ' oi Woods, R. A., ' 30 115 Hy Woodworth, W. V., ' 30 47 University PI. Woolley, J. A., ' 19 2.5 Hill Dorm Wooldridge, J. P., ' 2.7 (Cap and Gown) 64 L Wootton, E. W., 9 14 U P Wormser R. E., 19 iS E W Worthen, W. B., ' 2.9 ii S W Wright, C. A., 18 (Court) 9 W W Wright, F. W., ' 2.9 8 W M W Wright, J. H., ' 30 34 Vandeventer Ave. Wright, J. P., •i8 (Cloister) 314 F Wright, T. W., Jr., ' 2.8 iio- ' oi Wynkoop, S., ' 2.8 116 Hy Yocum, C. H., ' i7 64 Wiggins St. Yost, C. W., ' 2.8 (Cloister) 5 M D Yost, J. E., ' 30 98 Jefferson Rd. Young, A. B., ' 2.8 6ii- ' oi Young, A. M., ' 2.7 142. Py Young, P. S., Jr., ' 18 (Gateway) 5 N D Young, R. S., ' 2.9 315 F Young, W. A., ' 30 58 Wiggam St. Young, W. A., ' 2.8 (Gateway) 41 L Young, W. F., ' 30 41 Vandeventer Ave. Youngs, W. P., ' 2.8 (Cannon) 14 Bl Zander, F. S. , ' 2.7 (Court) 62. H Zeller, R., 18 (Key and Seal) 3-A H Zimmerman, R., ' 2.9 . . .2.2. M D 516 n J ' ' ? : W ' ' Mi JLCKNOWLEDGME T Group photographs and campus views for this book tvere taken by Orren Jack Turner. Retrospect and action pictures were secured from the Daily Prince- TONIAN. Pictures of the Yale and Harvard football games tvere taken by Under- wood AND Underwood. Old cuts of the University were reproduced from the Princeton Pictorial through the courtesy of the University Library. Ink for this book was manufactured by Philip Ruxton, Inc. It is through our advertisers that the publication of this book is made possible. We ask your inspection of our highly attractive advertising section, and solicit your patronage of our advertisers wherever possible. . M® i ib. Jv. JJi iSk, A 518 Index Acknowledgment 518 Alumni Associations 475 Alumni Day 481 Alumni Weekly 119 American Whig Society 12.7 Athletics 175 Band 157 Banjo Club 151 Baseball 19} Baseball Captains 2.12. Basketball 2.2.9 Board of Athletic Control 178 Board of Supervision of Non-Athletic Extra-Curriculum Activities 14} Brackett Lectures 42.9 Bric-A-Brac Board (1917) 112. Bric-A-Brac Board (192.8) in Bric-A-Brac Officers, Former ii} Bureau of Appointments and Student Employment 42.} Caledonian Games Z96 Calendar 36 Catholic Club 319 Chapel Choir 159 Cheer Leaders 179 Chemical Club 418 Chess Club 411 Class Exercises, 192.6 465 Class Favorites, 192.6 473 Class Roll, 192.6 457 Class Roll, 192.7 65 Class Roll, 192.8 73 Class Roll, 192.9 83 Class Rol 1 , 1 930 93 Cliosophic Society 12.4 Commencement 455 Committees of Board of Trustees 40 Committees of the Faculty 44 Crew iij Crew Intercollegiate Races 2.16 Crew Captains 113 Cross Country 2.41 Cross Country Club 303 Dances 433 Debating 133 Dedication 6 Delta Sigma Rho 141 Directory 483 Dramatics 161 Engineering Association 42.6 Engineering Society 42.5 Faculty 41 Fall Handicap Track Meet X97 F. A. R. O. T. C 401 Fencing X53 Football 183 Football Captains 2.2.2. Foreword 9 Freshman Athletics X73 Glee Club 149 Golf X45 Graduate Students 56 Grenfell Club 317 Gvm 147 Halls 12.2. Hockey 2.1 9 Honorary Degrees Conferred 474 Honors Conferred 468 In Memoriam, Students 60 519 Index- ( Continued ) Interdass Athletics 2-93 Interclub Committee 3 ' Intercollegiate Swimming Meet 2.55 Interscholastic Track Meet 310 Intra-Collegiate Athletic Association 2.95 Jntra-CoUegiate Athletics 2.96 Junior Oratorical Contest 131 Lacrosse 2.39 Life-Saving Club 304 Medical Club 4 4 Motion Picture Committee 419 Musical Clubs 145 Music Committee 160 Nassau Herald Committee 467 Nassau Literary Magazine 115 National Alumni Association 476 Numerals 305 Officers of Administration 43 Officers ' Club 405 Old-time Princeton Views 13 Orchestra 153 Partial Students 102. Phi Beta Kappa 469 Philadelphian Society . ' . 313 Pistol Team 2.51 Polo Association 400 Polo Team 2.54 Presidents of the University 37 Press Club i J Princetonian Board 107 Princeton-in-Peking 318 Prizes Awarded, 192.6 471 Prom Committees 432. Publications 105 Radio Club 42.4 Religious Societies 311 Retrospect 435 Rifle Team 149 Right Wing Club 417 Round Table 417 School CI ubs 363 Schools Committee 364 Sectional Clubs 397 Senior Council 63 Soccer 137 Speakers ' Association 141 Speakers ' Council 135 Stafford Little Lectures 419 St. Paul ' s Society 311 Summer Camp 316 Swimming 2.31 Tennis 143 Theatre Intime 173 Tiger Board 109 Track 103 Track Captains 113 Triangle Club 163 Trustees of the University 39 Undergraduate Athletic Committee 177 University Preachers 311 University Press 118 Upperclass Clubs 3x3 Vauxem Lectures 42.9 Varsity Club 158 Water Polo Z33 Wesley Club 310 Wrestling 135 520 rofesiSor tubtnt ratiuate Books, Stationery, Cigars, Tobacco and Athletic Goods at can find their every need at prices that appeal Sfje Princeton nibersiitp Then, too, we have the thing that is new in Mail Orders Solicited Souvenirs, Pins, Pennants, Etc. II ESTABLISHED 1818 flemen s Wnvnis in mooi 9, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Clothes for School and College a Specialty Send for Brooks ' s Miscellany BOSTON PALM BEACH NEWPORT LITTLE BUILDING PL AZ A B U I LD I NG AUORAIN BUILDING Trcmont coK. BoruTOM County Ro o 220 Bcllivuc Avcnuc III Men Appreciate These Features ! They ' re full cut, roomy and swagger. Their neatlytailored shoulders fit snugly. They ' re modeled in selected skins of superior quality. And they ' re priced to keep every man a friend. Raccoon Coats I 295 upivards A large selection for immediate wear Gunther Fifth Avenue at 36th Street New York HEADQUARTERS FOR RACCOON COATS IV 1. Altittatt ®jcr. GENTLEMEN ' S CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS « n Fifth Avenue Madison Avenue Thirty-Fourth Street Thirty-Fifth Street NEW YORK SARTORIAL PRINCETON 1777 1927 THE modern-day interest in dress finds reflection in the attitude of the college undergraduate toward clothing styles. This college town is an example of this trend through the number of haberdasheries catering almost exclusively to the University, which it supports. Over 40 clothing stores now supply the sartorial needs of the Princeton student, whereas less than half that number of shops existed here 10 years ago. Possibly three-quarters of these stores are under the direc- tion of representatives from large stores in neighboring cities. Daily the advertising columns of the Princetonlan announce the arrival of agents from leading metropolitan haberdash- eries to display their wares to students searching for sartorial FRANK BROTHERS Fifth Avenue Boot Shop When in New York visit Between 47th and 48th Sts. New York MAXWELL 1 ' j. ., , J S Bib. BP aife RENDICH Footwear which excels from every standpoint of style and quality. CLOTHIERS Exhibit Shops in all the Large Cities li West 46th St. distinction. That such a course must be profitable becomes self-evident when the constantly increasing number of such shops is taken into consideration. However, one aspect of the situation is seldom realized. We refer to the benefits derived by the students themselves through the great influence exerted upon their dress by the display of prevailing metropolitan fashions in clothing. Whereas in former days the mention of ' collegiate ' styles called up visions of loud ties and louder socks, bell-bottom pants of exagerated width, and general lack of conservatism, the impartial observer must grant that such is not at present the case. The more radical types of clothing are scoff ed at to-day by the majority of college men and such difi erences as still exist between collegiate fashions and those of the well-dressed man about town may be accounted for largely by natural divergence of taste due to difl erence in age. On the ISOth anniversary of the Battle of Princeton an amusing picture comes to mind of the contrast between Rev- [Continued on page XI) VI = D. H. Kresoe D. M. Kresge Clothes of Excellence Without Extravagance D. H. KRESGE EXCLUSIVE TAILOR FOR COLLEGE MEN Philadelphia Princeton, N. J. VII Cuyler Court m Springtime VIII COLLEGIATE SEASONED CONTACT WITH THE MOST DISTINGUISHED APPEARING COLLEGE MEN HAS ENABLED THIS ESTABLISHMENT TO FITTINGLY INTERPRET THEIR STYLE PREFER- ENCES IN CLOTHES AND ACCESSORIES. THE riPTH AVENUE AT FORTY-SIXTH STREET NEW YORK r £X2 ' 2s ' X2ii ' 4i£X2a ' 4g£X2:i i ' STYLE of Assured (Correctness T)istinctive clothing and accessories ready to wear in the accepted styles of university men and sportsmen. Unusual patterns and fabrics of dependability, sensibly priced gentlemen ' s furnishing goods HATS • clothing FrTRIPIERSc [d. established 1886 MADISON AVENUE AT 46TH STREET New York ] ' D ' X? ' 9C= t G tX? 3 IX An Election Ball — 7777 Athletic Outfitters Come to the recognized authority for equipment Stores in all large cities 105 Nassau St. NEW YORK 518 Fifth Ave. Joseph B. Hottel Company 46 Nassau Street, Princeton MEN S CLOTHING OF QUALITY M.ade to Measure and Ready to Wear HABERDASHERS— SMART HATS, SHOES, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKERS :4 AM ' f. ' rS i «; -£r: Easter Sunday (Continued from page VI) olutionary dress and clothes of the present day. The trappings which were the pride and joy of young men in 1777 seem as ridiculous to us now as our clothes would undoubtedly appear to them. The amazement of a Colonial buck, who had been suddenly brought back to life, at our attire can easily be imagined. The three-cornered bonnet has been superceded by the felt hat and the derby, which now cover closely clipped hair instead of a powdered wig, and elaborate waistcoats, muchly bedecked with ruffles, have evolved into quietly designed coats and vests. No longer does the well-dressed young man about town worry over the shape of his limbs as in the days when silken stockings and breeches graced every dandy ' s. In every detail we find utility triumphing over the orna- mental embellishments which made Revolutionary attire so picturesque, even as an age noted for ceremoniousness in manners and customs has been succeeded by one distinguised chiefly for lack of it. Refined Conservatism THE cut of Rosenberg Clothes changes not with every turn of fashion ' s wheel. They are built on natural lines — designed not to call attention to themselves, but rather to accentu- ate the individual they serve. 1014 Chapel Street New Haven II East 47TH Street New York Shirt Economy Shirt economy can never be measured by price aione. True sliirt economy is that fine bal- ance between durability with- out coarseness, stylishness without loss of long wear and comfort without sacrifice of appearance. In our POLO SHIRT these virtues combine in a remarkable proportion, in them you get quality, style, fit and workmanship, which is real shirt economy. FRANK KANE Upper Pyne Princeton, N. J. Blackstone is showing Gamer clothing in a variety of models, a wide range of colors — but each suit and coat expresses the correct conservatism favored by Princeton men, and found in Gamer clothes. Blackstone Estate of W. M. Leigh men ' s furnishings Dress Suits a Specialty Foreign Woolens 66 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. XI i Prospect — Home of the President of the University XII LOUIS KAPLAN Distinctive Exclusive Patterns in Hand Tailored Clothes also Foreign Haberdashery Nassau St. Princeton, N. J. ,V r ) tV) y ) iV rV tV) iV) iV) rV) (V)   V)_  Fashions at the Universities Best ' s has a large patronage among the young men at the colleges and knows their tastes to perfection. The new unfinished worsteds with fine stripes and overplaids are being asked for now, and we have them. HJegt Sc Co. Fifth Avenue at 35th Street— N. Y. 168 Regent St., London ®©®® @© ®® ®®© xin THE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL PRINCETON ' S new chapel, when completed in the spring of 1928, will be a masterpiece of collegiate Gothic archi- tecture. Parallel to McCosh Hall, to the north, it will not only form the next step m the completion of a new and imposing quadrangle, but it will also occupy a position such that it will be best seen from the center of the campus, and where it will obtain the wide, sloping foreground of grass and trees which extends from its site to Nassau Street. One of the largest university chapels m the world, being second in size only to King ' s College chapel in England, it is calculated to accom- modate practically the entire student body if occasion de- mands. The essential element of the external design is extreme John Black Son, Inc. Flumbing, Heating and Ventilating Contractors and Engineers JOBBING 2.0 Nassau Street Telephone 1149 Newton A. K. Bugbee Co. INCORPORATED Engineers and Contractors STRUCTURAL STEEL AND ORNAMENTAL IRON zo6 East Hanover Street Trenton, N. J. simplicity. It is, of course, in Princeton ' s conventional Gothic style, in harmony with the architecture of the newer buldings on the campus. The material is a warm colored stone which harmonizes with the stone of McCosh Hall, but because of its deeper color, it modulates in a way from McCosh Hall to the Pyne Library. The chapel is being built without a tower, but provision is being made so that if ever it is found desirable to add this crowning feature, it may be done without diffi- culty. The opportunity for memorials by Classes, groups or individuals is almost unlimited. The chapel ' s windows are all to be memorials, and many of them have already been given, includmg the large windows in the nave, the chancel and the transepts. The pews, organs, and communion table are also among the memorials. At the present time ninety-six of the pews have already been given. {Continued on next {Continued from preceding page) The chapel is expected to fill a need long felt by the Uni- versity. At the present time, Sunday service is held in Alex- ander Hall, a building entirely unsuited for this purpose as regards both size and acoustic qualities, being built fifty years ago as an auditorium for a small college. It was only after the old chapel burned that Alexander Hall was used temporarily as a church to serve until a new chapel could be built. It was many years before a new structure became feasible, and in these intervening years, the plans have ma- tured and grown until they crystallized into the magnificent building now under construction. The completion of the work will mark an era in the de- velopment of Princeton, a development which has made the Princeton campus one of the most beautiful in America. It is hoped and expected that future years will see this policy of effort and foresight, as shown by the chapel, carried on to its ultimate conclusion. Western Samuel Yellin Waterp roofing Company METAL WORKER ENGINEERS CONTRACTORS k Princeton Chapel Waterproofers St. Louis, Philadelphia, Detroit, New York, Cleveland, Boston 552.0 Arch Street Philadelphia 41 East 4Lnd Street New York City Princeton ' s Progressive Paint Store FOR PAINTS, ARTIST SUPPLIES AND DECORATING MATERIALS IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WALL PAPERS OF LATEST DESIGNS Our practical experience will he helpfu in solving I 81- _your problems, and assure real economy my J MORRIS MAPLE Painting and Decorating of Quality Phone 58 170 Nassau St. ■Oh Matthews Construction Company INCORPORATED PRINCETON NEW JERSEY 285 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK CITY. GENERAL CONTRACTORS The folloimng are a few of the Collegiate Gothic Buildings we have erected : Princeton Dining Halls, Holder Hall and the Sage Memorial Tower. Foulke and Henry Halls at Princeton. Day Klaudcr, Architects Zantzinger, Borie Medary, Architects Residential Buildings at Cornell University. Day Klauder, Architects Princeton Graduate College Buildings, Proctor Hall and the Cleve- Cornell Union. Delano Aldrich, Architects land Memorial Tower. Cram Ferguson, Architects The following are a few examples of our Country Estate Work . Gerard B. Lambert Estate, Princeton. Faculty Houses at Princeton. Thomas F. Victor Estate, Rumson, N. J. Harrie T. Lindeberg, Architect „ ■ r ° ' Princeton Inn. Aymar Embury, Andrew J. Thomas, Architect Architect Harrie T. Lindeberg, Architect Harris Hammond Estate, Bordentown, N. J. Wyeth King, Architects G. Herman Kinnicutt Residence, Far Hills, N. J. Wm. DeF. Manice Estate, Roslyn, Long Island. Cross Cross, Architects Godley Sedgwick, Architects R. L. Benson Estate, Princeton. H. O. MiUiken, Architect Faculty Houses at Princeton. Park Morgan, Architects We now have under construction Chapel for Princeton University. Cram Ferguson, Architects Graduate College Extension Cram . Ferguson, Architects East Dormitory, WcUesley College. - ij o 1 i Associated Architects Coolidge Carlson i Percy R. Pyne, md. Estate, Roslyn, Long Island. Cross Cross, Architects xvil MATTHEWS BROTHERS CO. BLOOM INGTON, IND. Build T e Nation Securely With jvie Nation ' s Building jStone PIONEERS 1862 — 1927 E .cKpiece a.n.d block, of livdiajvac LiI .c5to e,for tk Pri ce ' o c e[ i bJS) CMt re?xd j for 5ettiivQ at of ir fabricbiiKg plajxt i 5loon i 9to , l diaJ .. 5i ce ]86 Matt .ew5 Drotlvers Co. Ka.6 ei jo )ed iKe coMide ce, djvd built ajv eiwibJble repMta.tloR, i colla.bor ltj 9 witKtKe bMilders of tKe Kac+ioMs better buildings. XIX Blair Tower XX PFLUEGERS ' LATEST More Than a Catalog Shows truthful illustrations of all the principal fresh and salt water game fish with reliable informa- tion about habits, where found, what they feed on, food value, heaviest fish of each kind on rec- ord caught and Pfluegers ' recom- mendations for tackle to use in catching. Every fisherman should have a copy. Even the old timer of long experience will find something new, vital and helpful. This is a book of real, practical, helpful information about fish and fishing. Filled With Tips From Old-Tim ers For the Novice as well as the Expert. The new pocket edition not only describes and illustrates (many in n atural colors) a piece of tackle for every kind of fishing, but gives many helpful hints from experienced fishermen on the best ways of using each. Explains in bree?y interesting style, proven methods of fly cast- ing, bait casting, surf-fishing, trolling- etc. Pocket Catalog No. 146 THE ENTERPRISE MFG. The Pfluegers COMPANY AKRON. OHIO You need Pfluegers ' Pocket Catalog right now. Give us the word and we will send your free copy at once. PFLUEGERS ' PRONOUNCED fLEW-GEr FISHING TACKLE LEADERS SINCE 1864 Oldest and Largest Manu- facturers of Fishing Tackle in the United States. MEMBEr .g-s BELL BECKWITH 514 Madison Ave. Phone Main lSt6 PA ' ' EY.BANKS B|DD.. Established 1831 PHILADELPHIA The Gift Suggestion Book Mailed Upon Request Illustrates and Prices Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver, China Glass, Leather and Novelties From which may be Selected Distinctive Wedding, Birthday, Graduation and Other Gifts Compliments of the First National Bank Rutter Co. 14 Wall Street New York BONDS MUNICIPAL RAILROAD PUBLIC UTILITY CANADIAN XXII Football in 1882 was in its infancy. That was the year of the first really great Princeton team, led by the immortal Moffat — he who kicked thirty-two field goals in one season. Even at that early date coaches used ST. JACOBS OIL to help keep their teams in perfect condition. They had used this oil themselves for twenty-five years to alleviate the handicaps of sprains, bruises and muscular soreness. Today, forty-four years later, ST. JA- COBS OIL still leads the list of lini- ments endorsed by most trainers. St. JACOBS OIL Get a bottle of ST. JACOBS OIL today and the next time you feel muscular soreness after exercise apply It to the afflicted parts with vigorous hand rubbing two or three times a day. In severe cases first apply cloths wrung out In hot wzter changing cloths every five minutes for a half hour. Then apply the oil and cover with hot dry cloths for fifteen minutes more. Play every min- ute — don ' t be handicapped b y minor injuries. Nassau Motor Company 1 Phone 416 Compliments of LINCOLN FORD FORD SON DAN MORIARITY The Universal Car 1 18-14 Chambers Street Princeton, N. J. i APPLEGATES Gowns Hoods Caps For All Degrees W. R. LEWIS: Pro?. j 1 Stationery amd Novelties Best Workman- WT ship at Lowest The Princeton m L UniversityStore is Our Local H Agent JHI Compliments of the Arcade Theatre Nassau Inn Opposite Campus 5 1 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. 1 1 loz Nassau Street Phone 790W CotrelJ Leonard Established 1831 Albany, N. Y. MEALS AT ALL HOURS Telephone ii ! XXIV Fletcher ' s Castoria Children Cry for It THE CENTAUR COMPANY 80 Varick Street, New York The Graduate College Why Suffer? DR. MILES ' ANTI-PAIN PILLS They Usually Relieve Dr. Miles Medical Company Elkhart, Indiana Investment Securities Eastman, Dillon Co. Members New York Stock Exchange Members Philadelphia Stock Exchange Members Pittsburgh Stock Exchange iio Broadway, New York Philadelphia Chicago Albany Syracuse Pittsburgh Washington Reading Allentown Lancaster Pottsville XXVII Everedy Modelling Material (Note the Clean Delicate Odor) For Schools, Colleges, and other large users where the bulk material is desired EVEREDY MODELLING MATERIAL is antiseptic, germ proof: always plastic and ready for use, It is safe to use, and will not injure the skin. Contains no poisonous ingredients and will not deteriorate with age. It is not affected by either heat or cold, and remains plastic under all conditions. It is very economical because it may be used over and over again. The stability of EVEREDY MODELLING MATERIAL is unusual and it will withstand considerable of its own weight without drooping or bending. Therefore, artificial support is wholly un- necessary except in very extreme cases. Because of this particular quality EVEREDY MODELLING MATERIAL is far more satisfac- tory for all kinds of modelling, and it should not be compared with substitutes which droop out of shape and arc continually changing in consistency. Because of all these qualities EVEREDY MODELLING MATE- RIAL is very satisfactory for use in schools, colleges, and also by artists, sculptors, architects, and all others who desire a uniform plastic modelling material. EVEREDY MODELLING MATERIAL is made in one quality only, and in the following colors : Gray, Red, Blue, Green and Yellow and White. It is packed i n one pound packages, which are just right for school and professional use. THE EMBOSSING COMPANY Manufacturers Albany, N. Y., U. S. A. The Garden Theatre ENDEAVORS AT ALL TIMES TO PRESENT ONLY THE BEST PHOTOPLAYS AND SHORT SUBJECTS ' ' Everybody ' s Going to the Garden ' To Present and Future Members of the PRINCETON CLUB OF New York You are cordially invited to use the facilities of our near- by Projection Room (for Amateur Motion Picture Makers) exactly as though it were a room of the Club. Gillette Camera Stores Inc. Park Avenue at 41 st Street M. E. LaVAKE Jeweler Princeton, N. J. XXVIII For Earache Headache Rheumatism TABLETS Boxes of 12 Bottles of 24 Bottles of 100 Colds Toothache Neuralgia CAPSULES Package of 12 Package of 24 Bottles of 100 I few York ' erCoitipsiiy ' HudsonSt NeivYork XXIX McCosh Walk Music A Great Mind Trainer Oxford University Proves TEN per cent, of the students at Magdalen College, Oxford, take music, but these ID per cent take 75 per cent of the scholar- ships, the record for 30 years shows. When you play in the band you share honors with the team, go on trips, build friendships that outlast the years. Start now to cultivate your musical bump with a Conn instrument — easy to play, perfect in scale, beautiful in tone. Free trial; easy payments on any Conn for band and orchestra. Write now for Catalogs and complete information; no obligation. WORiS ' S 1AHGE5T MANUFACTURED C. G. CONN, LTD. Conn Building, Elkhart, Indiana Princeton Herald INCORPORATED Publishers of The Princeton Herald Printers of The Daily Princetonian AND The Nassau Literary Magazine Executors of Job Printing MARTHA ' S KITCHEN Breakfasts Luucheons , Teas and Dinners WAFFLES A SPECIALTY 3 Nassau Street Princeton, N.J. Marsh Co. Pharmacists 30 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. Prescriptions compound- ed from purest drugs and chemicals obtainable. Full line of toilet articles and sick-room supplies. Telephone 42.7 -J The Rehable Furniture Co. WE specialize in student ' s furnishings 13 Witherspoon Street Princeton, N. J. NILL ' S BAKERY BREAD CAKE AND PIES zo Witherspoon St . Princeton, N. J. Telephone 69-J 1834 1916 PRINCETON BANK and TRUST COMPANY Princeton, N.J. University Depository Opposite Dining Halls. Your Account is Solic- ited. BF.LI. PHONES: Main 149J - 3048 ESTABLISHED 1900 INCORPORATED 191 The Kuhlke Machine Co. MANUFACTURERS OF AUTOMOBILE TIRE MOLDS AND CORES Cor. West Exchange and Water Streets AKRON, OHIO The Hun School of Princeton A Preparatory School for Princeton Yale and Harvard They Taught Me Beauty By EDNA WALLACE HOPPER French experts taught me beauty. And I now go to France every year to keep in intimate touch with the latest beauty discoveries. What I use now is the final result of a 40-year quest. By these helps I became a famous beauty. By them I kept my youth. I appear before thousands daily on the stage looking like a girl of 19. Now the best I found is at your call. All toilet counters supply them in the name of Edna Wallace Hop- per. They are bringing countless girls and women new beauty and new youth. I urge you to try them at my cost and learn what they mean to you. One is my White Youth Clay. That purges the skin of all that clogs and mars it, the causes of blackheads and blemishes. It com- bats all lines and wrinkles. It brings at once a youthful glow. Most women see, in 30 minutes, a delight- ful and amazing change. One is my Youth Cream. That combines the best factors I found to foster, feed and preserve the skin. After one night ' s use you will never go without it. Another is my Face Powder, the sort that stage stars use to get the ideal effects they demand. The coupon will bring you all three in a package — enough for a test. My Beauty Book will come with it. Make these tests for your own sake. They will be a revelation. For Trial Package B-56-P.B. Mail this coupon to Edna Wallace Hopper, 536 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, for a trial packet of my White Youth Clay, Youth Cream and Face Powder. XXXIII Nassau Hall XXXIV Serving ' The World FROM modest beginnings more than 130 years ago, the business of the American Bank Note Company has grown until today its products — bank notes, postage stamps, revenue stamps, and bond and stock certificates — are in actual use by more than three-quarters of the civilized world. This record has been accomplished in an industry where trustworthiness and responsibility are as important as super- ior workmanship. American Bank Note Company Business Founded in 1795 Company Established in 1858 EXECUTIVE OFFICES: 70 BROAD STREET NEW YORK CITY . XXXV Whitloci PAT ' D AUG- 3. 1926 REG. U.S. PAT, OFF (}:)i;U3AGE FOR W in LOCK G)i i GE Company 46 South Street. New b ' k. Cannon, Rifles Pistols, Swords, Antique (iir Modern; Uniforms, Helmets, Saddles, Tents ; all American guns since 1775; all World War Rifles, with other valuable informa- tion, shown in 380 page catalog, illus- trated , at 50c a copy . FRANCIS BANNERMAN SONS 5oi Broadway New York City Theo. Knocke FLORIST FRESH CUT FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS 170 Alexander Street Princeton, N. J Ttte phone 121 The Engravings in this book were made by SCIENTIFIC ENGRAVING COMPANY 406 to 42.6 West 31st Street New York WE ARE PHOTO ENGRAVERS WHO SPECIALIZE IN THE MAKING OF PLATES FOR COLLEGE ANNUALS AND YEAR BOOKS iA ' i w? ' j ' ff! ' g ' ? tffe y; --V; ' i ,vyr ' - : ' . XXXVI We point ivith pride to the 192.7 Bric-a-Brac Dubois Press ROCHESTER NEW YORK eA Our noble art of printing is the very foster mother of all learning; for though the few had books before Gutenberg gave us our art, not until ■printing came could learn- ing, yes and wisdom also, knock at everyman ' s door. — Arthur Dean, Sc.D. r Entrance to Campus from South XXXVIII Most of thi Good Times of College days are set to Music (rT)OPULARITY PLUS! The glad hand M of welcome everywhere, and the smiles of those whose smiles are worth while, that ' s the happy heritage of the fellow who plays a Buescher True-Tone Saxophone. Even the glamour of the Grid ' King fades before this magic maker of merriment. He ' s the life of the party; the center of attraction— always. You can master this wonderful instrument in just a few weeks. Practice won ' t take time from your Qreef This beautiful book gives the complete history oj the Saxo ' phone, and tells why the Buescher is so easy to learn to play. In ityouivilliind the firstlesson chart and many interesting pictures. You must have this fine book. necessary routine. Three lessons, given on re- quest with each new instrument, start you. You can teach yourself. Try any Buescher Instrument, Saxophone, Trom- bone, Trumpet, for six days. See what you can do. Test your talent. If you like the instrument f)ay a little each month. Discount for cash. Send or beautiful catalog; any instrument. No obli- gation. Mention favorite instrument. Send now. BUESCHER BAND INSTRUMENT CO.. Everything in Band and Orchesira Instruments, 1561 Buescher Block. Flkhart. Indian o XL J. p. MORGAN CO. New York MORGAN Cm. Paris MOR GAN, GRENFELL CO. London DREXEL CO PHILADELPx4IA, PA. COMMERCIAL AND TRAVELLERS ' LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED. BILLS OF EXCHANGE BOUGHT AND SOLD. ORDERS FOR THE PURCHASE AND SALE OF STOCKS AND BONDS ON COMMISSION EXECUTED. xu Compliments of John M. Tut tie 2.-LO West 4xnd Street New York City The Star of Princeton Social Activities BEN BERNIE wishes to announce that his orchestras are now available for future booliings Princeton Proms and Dances, 1915-17 Definite boolfings may now be secured at his studios Ben Bernie Enterprises, Inc. 745 Seventh Avenue New York City HERMAN BERNIE, General Manager Circle 6344—6345—6346 WALKER-GORDON CERTIFIED MILK t Walker- Gordon Laboratory Co. PLAINSBORO, N.J. Skirm ' s Smoke Shop Importers of London-Made Pipes and Smokers ' Articles 68 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. Pr inceton ISAen of the Capitol District know they can find their Clothes, Hats Furnishings and Shoes at Steejel Bros. Albany, N. Y. XLII In the evening, by the moonlight . . . . a package of ' and they ' re always good taste during the daytime, too ' will add much to your enjoymint Compliments of American Coating Mills ELKHART, INDIANA XLIIT Freshman Commons — Lower Cloister Carl C. S j pptc Perry B. Kawson Archibald F. MacNichol Austin A new Allen H. Seed SHIPPEE RAWSON MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Trinity Building III Broadway New York PRINCETON MEN! Are you interested in Underprivileged Boys ? Boys ' Clubs in all parts of America are looking for college-trained paid leaders and volunteer workers Boys ' Club Federation (INTERXATIOXALj 3037 Grand Central Terminal New York City W. R. LEWIS Proprietor Nassau Inn Opposite Campus 52. Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. MEALS AT ALL HOURS Telephone II da idrujf is making your hair dull, dry and lifeless, use Jack Hondre ' s UNSCENTED OLEAQUA The best dandruff remedy on the market. Used as a dressing, it also keeps the hair in place — smoothly brushed — all day long. Send 2.0c for a sample bottle or 5i-i5 for a full sired bottle. We pay post- age. JACK HONOR E PRINCETON, N.l. Chester B. Pullen CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER MILL WORK Princeton, N. J. Phone 857 JOHN B. GROVER JOHN H. R. GULICK Grover GuHck Lumber Co. LUMBER MILL WORK MASON MATERIALS AND COAL 194 Alexander Street Princeton, N. J. Telephone 640 Auld Lang Syne XLVI H. S. FISHER Insurance TELEPHONE ASHLAND 4760 103 PARK AVENUE New York I Blair Arch XLVIII The cover for this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois §vi ery Molloy Made Cover bears this trade mark on the hack lid- National Newark and Essex Ranking Company NEWARK, N. J. Established 1804 The Oldest and hargest National Bank in New Jersey Automatic Block Signals Safety First Trenton -Princeton Traction Company Fast Line — 35 Minutes PRINCETON to TRENTON Half Hour Service Saturdays and Holidays From Noon to Midnight SMOKING COMPARTMENT IN EVERY CAR TEA at LUNCH at- [DINNER - Formal SUPPER -► DANCING - TEN EAST SIXTIETH ST. Wonderful Villa Venice and its Music Special Note : Maintain- -1 f ing its reputation as the best specific for ennui, Villa Venice Ten East Sixtieth Street, which has effected notable cures in the past, is in full swing, and, with added distractions for its many patients, offers its ever-delightful and delighting TeaDances-hours 4 to 6:30. And also the correct thing for Luncheon, Dinner and Supper. Philip T. Carroll CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Jobbing and Mill Work Furniture Repairing Shop ID Branch Avenue Princeton, N. J. Phone 75 HARRIS BRAND OAK AND MAPLE FLOORING HARRIS on flooring means the same as STERLING on silver Manufactured by HARRIS MANUFACTURING COMPANY Johnson City Tennessee Compliments of Charlton iT Company 634 Fifth Avenue New York City Complimets of a Rutgers Alumnus Russell W. Gies Rutgers, ' 12 Creator of Fine Homes in Summit, N. J. Druid Hill Summit, N. J. EQUIPMENT « SUPPLIES Importers, Manufacturers, Jobbers Bakers, Confectioners, Creameries Dairies, Ice Cream Plants, Hotels, Restaurants, Institutions BESSIRE CONPANY INCORPORATED INDIANAPOLIS LOUISVILLE - ATLANTA - MEMPHIS - COLUMBUS - RICHMOND Your Innings For Your Outings No matter what kind of an outing you are planning there are suit- able Heinz varieties for any big hun- ger innings. Heinz Oven-Baked Beans or Heinz Cooked Spaghetti are always good — they satisfy the appetite. All you do is heat them and eat them, and enjoy them — then eat ' em again. HEINZ 57 The Taste is the Test Millett, Roe Co, MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Investment Securities ixo Broadway New York Bayard Lane Coffee House 8 Stockton Street Princeton, N. J. BROMM ' S Delicatessen and Market Nassau Street LII I Iffl iddittbMihM mtAttrnttm m Fidelity- Philadelphia Trust Company Capital . , Surplus . , Trust Funds $ 6,700,000 $ 21,000,000 $625,000,000 3 5 Chestnut St. 143 1 Chestnut St. 415 Chestnut St. Broad and Chestnut Sts. 63x4 Woodland Avenue Philadelphia LIII 1 S 5 The Lake and University Boat House LTV Atwater Kent RADIO One Hand O.. E Dial ATWATER KENT MANUFACTURING COMPANY A. Alwattr Kent, Pm. 4700 Winshiekon Ave- Philadelphia. Pa. ' NE means ONE, a single unit, no more — the dictionary says so, we agree. Atwater Kent One Dial Receivers have only One Dial— no second- ary tuning devices to fumble with, no mysteries— just One Dial to bring in the stations, in a split second, with true, natural tone. Whatyou wanted in Radio is here. Try it. Now in more than a million homes ANYWHERE BUT PRINCETON TET ' S get out of here, WhifFer! Result — a week-end in -L ' New York or Philadelphia, Atlantic City or Washington, a friend ' s house or home! Wandering members of Princeton may be sighted at almost any hour of the day or night in the Biltmore, the Village, the Bellevue, or merely roaming the streets of Trenton and Kingston. It is a restless, curious urge for variety, new sights, and new experiences which sends out the crowds of students like mud from a spinning wheel. Dur- ing the session of college, the movement is continual, but with the arrival of a general vacation, the exodus is en masse. The limited vacations of Christmas and Easter find the luckiest men on the Triangle or Musical Club trips to Bermu- da or the West. The others hop trains to Hot Springs, White Sulphur, Pinehurst, and Florida for a rest in the sunshine and on the golf links. A few even reach {Continued on page LVII) Plan Your Summer Vacation Now I l-DAY NORTHERN CRUISE ALL EXPENSE Novel, delightful, health-giving trip $IXO ' RED CROSS LINE TO HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA AND ST. John ' s, Newfoundland No hotel bills, changes or transfers. You live on the ship. ss. nerissa (new)andss. silvia Sailings every Saturday. No passports needed. For full particulars apply to BOWRING COM ANY, 1 7 BATTERY PLACE NEW YORK NORTH CAROLINA TO LOVERS OF OUTDOOR SPORT TOVERS of outdoor sport choose -L- ' Pinehurst, N.C., the Sport Center of the Country, for their holidays. You ' ll find gay crowds of them at the Carolina Hotel, famous for its tempt- ing menus and luxury of service. Golf on four i8-hole D. J. Ross courses, polo, riding, tennis, shooting, arch- ery, racing, and all outdoor sports are in full swing. Special tournaments for the holidays. In the evenings, dancing at the Caro- lina to a lively jazz orchestra, movies, and other entertainments. Carolina and Holly Inn, Berkshire, now open. Full information may he obtainid from THOMAS R. RUDEL 641 Pyiic Hall Princeton, N. J. | H HH|| HMI|||| H M| [C(( H If. T IV i 1 1 ' 1 % HBl BBbHff ' ' ' ' SBv ! H | ' ' I HH |. B 1 ft K wi HpHI P BB w- nK w ' Hf ' - ' i iEr ' ' ' H B ' fi — BSk ! P Wte Lourttsy oj B. D. McDonald BENEATH THE MEDUSA OF CELLINI I ANYWHERE BUT PRINCETON Continued from page LVI) sunny California on a doctor ' s excuse or overtime privilege. Many and devious are the ways. Conies June and three long months of irresponsibility! The college scatters to the winds. Whether it be to Europe with its ancient cities and culture, its third cabins and pensions, its beer gardens and cabarets, wagon-lits and funiculaires, its beaches and mountains; to the North Cape, Iceland, and Cop- enhagen; or, to ' ' See America First, by Pullman and auto to the West, Yellowstone, Glacier, the Canadian Rockies, Seattle and San Francisco, Tahoe and Yosemite — wherever they may roam, the spirit of travel and variety carries them on and on. The habit of old which caused a man to be born, live, and die in one locality has been killed by modern speed transportation, and a restless nomadic phase has taken its place. Some chron- ics call it a vicious tendency. Perhaps. Royal Blue Line Motor Tours (The Standard of the World) Operating a de luxe service in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Chicago and Montreal. We publish large illustrated maps and guides to the above cities, mailed free to any address. THE ROYAL BLUE LINE COMPANY, INC. HOTEL BRUNSWICK BOSTON, MASS Virginia Hot Springs OPEN ALL YEAR In the heart of the Alleghanies — 1500 feet elevation. Ideally located for outdoor sports or quiet relaxation. Riding, driv- ing, tennis, golf, swimming. Famous natural mineral springs and complete hy- drotherapeutic apparatus. Wonderfully effective in treating gout, rheumatism, digestive and nervous disorders. The Homestead CHRISTIAN s. ANDERSEN, Resident Manager HOT SPRINGS, VIRGINIA LIDO, VENICE C.urHs, fB.D.McD«,aU LVII ' 7j Arch LVIII ' NEAREST EVERYTHING Rates, $400 to $5°° a Person, (no higher) Restaurants Include : Roof Garden — Ladies ' Tea Room — Coffee Grill Children s Service at Half Price US iM. toTiHwJentyi The Gymnasium LX PHILADELPHIA Chestnut and 39th Street Hotel Pennsylvania OSCAR W. RICHARDS, Manager Fireproof — Unrestricted Parking Garage 600 Rooms 500 Baths Rooms with running water from $2.50 per day Rooms with private bath and shower from $3.50 per day Food and Service the best Near West Philadelphia Station Pennsylvania Railroad University of Pennsylvania — Franklin Field Infirmary and Guyot Hall Potts Auto Express Princeton, N. J. PADDED MOTOR VANS AND FIRE PROOF STORAGE LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING PACKING AND CRATING PIANO HOISTING Main Office 48 Nassau St. Store House Patton Ave. II} — Phonts — J24 Night FATE BECKONS YOU An old and highly esteemed institution with three generations of life behind in the Metropolitan District and many mil- lions of assets; a financial institution with an incomparable record has an Opening for a man of integrity with a record of successful achievement. The position referred to should earn at least $j,ooo. After the first year (depend- ing on the ability of the applicant) and ic the right kind of man should increase rapidly to much higher fi gures. Address with full particulars, in con- fidence : ALLEN SCHMIDT, General Agents New England Mutual Life Insurance Company XI7 Broadway, New York Balance your Summer with a M.onth off the Beaten Track The Odyssey of 1927 LIMITED TO EIGHTEEN UNDERGRADUATES EIGHTY-EIGHT DAYS ONLY TWELVE ON THE ATLANTIC PARIS, MONTREUX, LUGANO, MILAN, VENICE PLORENCE, ROME, TIVOLI, NAPLES, BAR! MOTORING THRU DALMATIA AND MONTENEGRO HORSE CARAVAN ACROSS UPPER ALBANIA TWENTY-DAY YACHT CRUISE FEATURING CORFU, ITHACA, ATHENS, CRETE, RHODES, MILOS, VOLCANIC THERA, ATHOS, BRUSA. CONSTANTINOPLE, BOSPHORUS, BLACK SEA. SINYSTON EXPRESS TO BUDAPEST, DANUBE TRIP. VIENNA, INNSBRUCK, LUCERNE, INTERLAKEN B. D. Mac Donald THE OAKS Haverford, Pa. Twelve wen tvere enrolled as the Bric-a-Brac goes to press, rep- resenting Princeton ( ), Yale (2), Williams (2), Wesleyan (7), Columbia (2), Colgate ( ). Three Princeton men tvere on the Odyssey of igiC. LXIII Campbell Hall LXIV Vanderbilt Hotel dNEVf fOJiK. c7 iirtu fourth Strut Sast at Qark. vtnuo f DMIRABLY situated on the crest of Murray ' Hill. It is convenient to the business, shopping and theatre centers and to the Pennsylvania and New York Central Railway terminals Its clientele is made up of intelligent travelers from all parts of the world. One finds in the dining rooms excellent service and a perfect cuisine. Every bedroom is an outside room and each one has its own private bath. TARIFF Single room with bath $4 per day and up. Double room with bath $8 per day and up. Walton H. Marshall i-TU Manager The Princeton Inn from the Golf Links LXVI I THE PRINCETON INN Princeton, N. J. New ' —  Modem —  Fireproof ' — American Plan Accommodation for permanent and transient Guests J. Howard Slocum, Manager c ouLD one spend ;i more pleasant week or fortnight in rest and recreation than among the attractive and beautiful surroundings of Princeton ! The Inn faces the Graduate College. The Golf Course, directly in front of The Inn, is available for our patrons and offers the added advantage and possibility of meeting one ' s former classmates and friends. Under the same management The Flanders Ocean City, N. J. American Plan May to October LXVII Index to Advertisers A Adclphia Hotel LIX Allen Schmidt LXIII Ajtman Co., B V American Bank Note Co XXXV American Coating Mills XLIII Applcgatc ' s Stationery Store XXIV Arcade Theatre XXIV Atwatcr Kent Manufacturing Co LV B Bailey. Banks Biddle XXII Bannerman Sons, Francis XXXVI Bayard Lane Coffee House LII The Bayer Co XXIX Bell ScBcckwith XXII Ben Bcmie Enterprises XLII Bessire.E. H LI Best Co XIII Black Son. Inc., John XIV Blackstone Shop XI Bowring Co LVI Bromm ' s Market LII Brooks Brothers Ill Buescher Band Instrument Co XXXIX Bugbee Co.,Inc.,Ncwton A. K.... XIV c Charleton Co L Carroll, Philip T L Centaur Co. , The : XXV Conn. Ltd., C. G XXXI Cotrell Leonard XXIV D Drcxcl Co XLI Du Bois Press, The XXXVII E Eastman. Dillon Co XXVII Embossing Co., The XXVIII Enterprise Manufacturing Co., The. . . XXI F Fidcliry-Philadclphia Trust Co LIII Finchley, Inc IX First National Bank XXII Fisher. H. S XLVII Frank Bros VI G Garden Theatre ' . XXVIII Gies, Russell W L Gillette Camera Stores, Inc XXVIII Grovcr Gulick Lumber Co XLV Gunthcr Sons. C. G IV H William E.Hall (Boys Club Federation) XLV Harris Manufacturing Co L H.J. HeinrCo LII Homestead, The LVII Honore, Jack XLV Hopper, Edna Wallace XXXIII Hottel. Josephs X Hun School of Princeton, The XXXIII K Kane.Frank XI Kaplan, Louis XIII Knocke, Theodore XXXVI Kresgc.D. H VII Kuhike Machine Co.. The XXXIII L Langrock VI UVake, M. E XXVIII Uigh,W. M XI Life Savers, Inc XLIII M MacDonald. B. D LXIII Maple, Morris XV Martha ' s Kitchen XXXII Marsh Co XXXII Matthews Brothers Co XIX Matthews Construction Co XVil Maxwell Rendich, Inc VI Dr. Miles Medical Co XXVII Millet, Roe Co LII Molloy, David J XLIX Moriarity, Dan XXIV N Nassau Inn XXIV Nassau Motor Co XXIV Princeton Inn. The LXVII National Newark Essex BankingCo. XLIX Nill. Charles XXXII P Pennsylvania Hotel LXI Pinchurst, Inc LVI Potts Auto Express LXIII Princeton Herald, Inc XXXII Princeton Bank Trust Co XXXII Princeton University Store, The II Pullen, C. B XLV R Reed ' s Sons, Jacob VII Reliable Furniture Co XXXII Rosenberg Co., The Arthur M XI Royal Blue Line Co., Inc LVII Ruttcr Co XXII s Scientific Engraving Co XXXVI Shippce Rawson XLV Skirm ' s Smoke Shop XLII Spalding 8i Bros., A. G X Steefel Bros XLII St. Jacobs Oil XXIII T Trenton-Princeton Traction Co L Triplet Co., F. R IX Tuttle, John M XLII Turner, Orren Jack LXIII V Vanderbilt Hotel LXV Villa Venice L w Walker-Gorden Laboratory Co XLII Western Waterproofing Co XV Whitlock Cordage Co XXXVI Y Samuel Yellin XV i


Suggestions in the Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) collection:

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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