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

 - Class of 1932

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 497 of the 1932 volume:

•! The 1932 Bric-a-Brac BEING THE OFFICIAL YEAR BOOK OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE JUNIOR CLASS The ' Board Archibald Gordon Murray, Jr., Chairman James Wallace Ely, Business Manager Peter Schwed, Photographic Editor Edward J. Welch, Assistant Photographic Editor John Cornell Schenk, Circulation Manager Wilfred Oakley Stout, Jr., Art Editor Arthur Cavanaugh O ' Connor, Jr., Advertising Manager Francis Mark Miller, Assistant Art Editor Harold Arthur Loewenheim, Associate Editor VOLUME LVI On behalf of the Class of 1932 this book is respectfully dedicated to LUTHER PFAHLEM EISENHART Ph.D., D.Sc, L.L.D. Who by his kindly sympathy and understanding, his devotion in the discharge of his executive duties, and his emi- nence in the field of mathematics has inspired love and respect in the hearts of many thousands of Princeton men. MMmMMmMSMmammmnamaKKamMBKMamKm Joreword THE plastic period in the lives of well-bred youths, the four years ' fashioning of mal- leable clay which is to become a noble statue or a tragic figure misshapen through its own incom- petency — this is the University ' s Trust. Excellence in any field of endeavor, acquaint- ance with people and things present and past, here and everywhere, a more thorough understanding, a keener discernment, a cultivated philosophy adaptable to all mankind and the universe — these constitute the University ' s Interest. The multiple activities from day to day, the great and small events that add more zest, the panorama of action and industry from one year ' s end to the next — this is the University ' s Prin- ciple, which is it our honor and pleasure to present. iiiniimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiwniimmiimiiiiiii iiwiimii™ miniiiiBmiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii IIMIIIIMi! ililllMMIHI Table of Qo?ttents THE UNIVERSITY Views 13 Bill Roper ' s Regime 29 Administration .... 35 Classes 57 Seniors 58 Juniors 70 Sophomores 84 Freshmen 96 ACTIVITIES Publications 115 Musical Clubs 129 Dramatics 141 Dances 155 ATHLETICS Major Sports 161 Minor Sports 209 Varsity Club 233 Freshmen Athletics 249 Intramural Sports.. 265 ORGANIZATIONS Religious Societies.. 283 Halls 295 F.A.R.O.T.C 311 CLUBS Upper-Class Clubs. 333 School Clubs 373 MISCELLANEOUS Alumni Associations 411 Commencement . . . 421 Oxford-Cambridge vs. Princeton-Cor- nell Track Meet. 448 Retrospect 451 ] YTiai - Vr--r - tHOEiNCEfoV rrrrrrtrrr rr ' rrrr rr r rrrrrr rr r r gVc A ggr rinceton s Javorite Son Onine seas dim NE crisp, cool day in the autumn of the last year of the neteenth century a little end reported for his first season of Princeton football. For three years this diminutive bit of whipcord, nerve, and steel fought on against the bone-crushing giants of his day, sometimes winning, sometimes losing, but always hoping and trying harder. Little did he think then that some day he would be the creator of teams that would make the nation resound with Princeton ' s gridiron fame. Thus began the career of William Winston Roper as a king of football strategy. During fourteen years he has stood as an example of true sportmanship to Princeton men, in fact, to the entire country. He has had his ups and downs; but in moments of victory he has been quietly reserved, and in defeat he has cheered us on with the hope of future victories and the knowledge that failure is an important part of success. This cheerful, fighting spirit has been the keyword of every Roper team. For the benefit of those who hark back to the good old times and hold up to ridicule the lack of drive in present Tiger teams, let us turn back the pages of the yellow-leafed album of time and view Coach Roper ' s regime at Princeton. Mr. Roper has coached fourteen teams, two in 1910 and 1911, and then after the mighty struggle of the World War, he re- turned to infuse into the Guards of Old Nassau something of his own indomitable will to win. His first year as coach in 1910 created something of a sensation, for the team under his leader- ship won seven consecutive games, losing only to Y ale. But the next year surpassed even that, for the Orange and Black won a Big Three title in an undefeated season. Even with so propitious a beginning Bill Roper decided that more mundane affairs than football called his attention. He resigned his post temporarily and returned again in 1919 de- termined to help Princeton win once more. The seven interven- ing seasons had been lean indeed, and it was feared that Prince- ton was fast losing her reputation as a powerful, in fact invin- cible, adversary on the gridiron. The first year of the new regime showed a marked improve- ment. So did the second. And so it went till 1922 when the football history of Old Nassau was capped with never-to-be-for- gotten team. During these twelve years Coach Roper has gen- erated his men through fifty-three victories, twenty-three defeats, seven ties, and three Big Three Championships. As this history must be brief, it will be possible to mention only certain of the more brilliant seasons of Coach Bill Roper ' s career. First among these is that spectacular season of 1911. With Captain Eddie Hart leading the Tigers prospects, looked bright, 29 gg RINC ETQ : rr Ttrrrrrrr firr rf trrrrrr r ' rrrf rrrr r r g TC A Rg r for Eddie was one of the greatest tackles of his time. Around him was built a great defensive team — a Princeton brick wall that held no matter how hard hit. But it was evident that it lacked the scoring punch that was so neccessary. The backs displayed flashes of beautiful individual running which pro- duced big scores against the weaker teams but which made little impression on the stronger elevens. Consequently the Harvard and Yale games loomed on the horizon as almost unconquerable obstacles in the path of an undefeated season. But that same defensive power and a flash of perfect open- field running won the day against Harvard. The game was a see-saw struggle during the early moments of play. A break, an opening of some sort, would probably cause one team to score. Before the first half closed it came. On the 15-yard line Harvard tried a drop-kick. Somebody blocked it and Sam White, the Tiger end, seeing the ball free, gathered it up and raced to the goal line 85 yards away. But the game wasn ' t over. In the second half Captain Hart threw Gardiner, the Crimson back, over his goal line for a two-point score. In the last minutes of the game Harvard began its last determined drive and though it managed to score once, the game ended before the Crimson could overtake the 8-6 lead. The engagement with Dartmouth was one of the freaks of football history. The result might very well have been a draw had not an attempted drop-kick, bounding along the ground given a sudden twist and sailed over the Green cross-bar. A confident Tiger eleven faced a powerful Blue team the fol- lowing week. The odds were for neither team but it was hoped — well, it was hoped. The sea of mud reduced both elevens to a punting duel in which DeWitt, the Princeton back, more than held his own. As in the Harvard game, a break out of the mass of tangled bodies came Scheerer, the ball safely spelled the outcome. Yale fumbled the treacherously slippery ball, and White, again the hero, picked it up. Fighting for his balance and clawing through the Bulldogs, he raced down the field for a touchdown. The Bulldogs bit back and late in the first half scored with a field goal. But the second half found the Tiger line more determined, and Princeton rode home on the wings of victory, conquerors of Yale for the first time since 1903. When Bill Roper returned in 1919, he produced the strongest team Princeton had had since he left. It wasn ' t a championship team nor was it undefeated. Its greatness lay in the astounding heights it reached in the Harvard and Yale games. After defeats by Colgate and West Virginia this plucky Tiger eleven wasn ' t ceded a chance by most critics to defeat either of its important rivals. The Harvard game, therefore, was a serious upset in the eyes of the Crimson rooters. The Tigers, led by Maury Trimble ' s deft running, completely subdued Harvard ' s most gallant at- tempts for the first three-quarters of the game. A field goal accounted for the first Princeton score. A short time later Trimble, on a beautiful end run, crossed the Crimson goal. Harvard ' s scoring was restricted to a single field goal until well into the last-quarter. Unfortunately for Princeton fans, Casey, the flashy Crimson back, got loose once too often and skimmed down the field to tie the score at 10-10. Yale provided the opposition for the next game and, in spite of the Tiger ' s showing against Harvard was favored to win. Indeed it looked as though the Elis would emerge triumphant for the Orange and Black trailed at the end of the third-quarter, 6-3. But now it was the Tiger ' s turn to flame up in the last- quarter. Trimble intercepted a Yale pass and streaked down the field, only to be stopped some yards from the goal line. But the position was advantageous and Strubling used it to tie the score with a drop-kick. A few minutes later Yale attempted a lateral pass. The entire Tiger backfield sensed the play and tucked away under one arm and the field ahead free of any obstructing Eli. Only a tie with Harvard ' s most powerful team in many years marred the otherwise perfect record of the 1920 eleven. With machine-like accuracy the Tigers smashed their way through team after team. The early part of the season showed many faults in the team-play but these Coach Bill ironed out before any of the major encounters. When the Orange and Black met Harvard in the first of the Big Three games, the Roper outfit was close to its peak. But in the very outset of the game things went wrong. Penalty followed penalty against Princeton until Harvard found herself possessor of the ball on the Tiger two- yard line. Two plays through the line failed but then the Crimson faked a pass while a back found a hole and squirmed over the line. After practically giving Harvard a touchdown, the Orange and Black came back with a vengance. A long pass from Murrey to Don Lourie evened the score, but the Tigers wanted blood. A tie wasn ' t enough. Play by play Harvard retreated to the shadows of its goal-posts. They tried to kick but that driving giant, Stan Keck was in first and Legendre dropped on the ball four-yards from a touchdown. Two plays later Garrity split the line and dove over the final ribbon. With the game almost over, the Crimson team started a barrage of passes. One of them clicked and Harvard had staved off defeat only in the nick of time by forcing a 14-14 draw. The Elis were no match for the Tiger eleven that had tied the 30 gTP RINCC TQ 1 1 rrrrrrrrrr firr rrrrrrrrrr i f rrrrrrrrrr 4J g jc A-mr gg powerful Crimson team. A perfect defensive wall ana a smash - ing attack left Yale without a hope for victory. In the first quarter Murrey scored for the Orange and Black with a field- goal which was followed a short time later by a beautiful play by the two Ail-Americans. Faking a placement by Keck, Lourie took the ball and, with the giant tackle as interference, capered down the field for 35-yards and a touchdown. In the third period Captain Mike Callahan scooped up a free ball and repeated with another score. Keck kicked the point-after-touch- down, completing the remarkable record of 18 points in as many tries. Again Stan showed his extraordinary ability to boot a placement when he scored three more points from the 36-yard line, bringing the final score to 20-0. Passing over the rather commonplace and uninteresting season of 1921, we come to the year that was not only the pinnacle of Coach Roper ' s career in Princeton but also was Princeton ' s high point in all her years of football. The season of 1922 did not, at first, show signs of much im- provement over the season before. Indeed, it was doubted whether the Tiger eleven would be able to win any of its major games, for the minor encounters were won only by the slightest margins. Consequently the team traversed the distance between Princeton and Chicago rather dubiously. Chicago had defeated the Tigers in 1921 and this year Coach Stagg had an even stronger aggregation. By the end of the third-quarter the stands were convinced of the final outcome. Chicago ' s great fullbacks had torn the Princeton line to shreds and piled up 18 points, while the Tigers were able to cross the Maroon goal only once. And now at the beginning of the fourth period the Orange and Black found itself backed up against its own goal. Punt formation from Gorman at quarter. But it wasn ' t a punt. The signal had been for a pass. It couldn ' t work — but it did! On the fifty-yard line the runner was stopped. The Maroon de- fense held for four plays and the ball changed hands. Second down and ten! The pass from center was poor. A Tiger end coming in scooped up the fumble and ran down a clear field for a touchdown. The margin was still comfortable and Chicago chose to kick. But this time a less dubious and more determined machine pounded the line and skirted the ends. The ball went over and the Orange and Black were finally leading — by three points. A slim margin and the game wasn ' t over. Chicago chose to receive and smashed its way down the field. At the 6-yard marker they had a first and ten. Things looked bad for the Princeton bunch. The Chicago fullback was unstopable. But that final drive had sapped too much strength from the big Maroon team and Princeton was dangerously desperate. Once, twice, three times Chicago ' s mighty backs crashed the line. Three times they were stopped. The ball goes back again and once more there is a charge of Maroon men against an inflexible wall of Tiger-striped bodies. The ball is — not over! A sigh goes up from the Princeton side. The Tigers line up, kick, and as the ball lands in the safety man ' s arms, the whistle blows. Once more Princeton has made football history. After a game with Swarthmore, intentionally scheduled as a breather, the Tiger eleven faced a strong Harvard team. In the very beginning of the encounter the Crimson swept down on the Princeton goal and scored three points with a placement. Still stunned by the suddeness of the attack, Princeton allowed herself to be driven back to the 22-yard line, but there the team held stubbornly. Late in the second period the Tigers forced Harvard back toward the Crimson goal. A fumble gave Princeton the ball and a few minutes later Crum scored for the Orange and Black. Early in the second half Baker ' s drop-kick scored three more points for Princeton and from then on the game was almost entirely a Tiger show. This encounter was not only the second consecutive victory over Harvard but the first successful invasion of Cambridge since 1896. The Yale game which followed a week later, was a much closer contest than the Harvard game had been. During the first quarter Yale threatened once with the ball on Princeton ' s t-yard line but failed to make good. Late in the second period, however, Princeton pushed the ball well down into Eli territory but her chance to score with a drop-kick went foul. In the second half Princeton with driving determination, swept her opponent to one side and Smith, from the 13-yard line, sent a drop-kick fairly between the Blue go al-posts for the only score of the game. And now, passing over the times of depression that so naturally follow years of great success, we come to the year of 1925. This year will go down in history as one of the most impressive football records ever made at Princeton. Early in an apparently mediocre season the team was tied by Navy and defeated by Colgate. When the Harvard team, big and powerful, arrived at Palmer Stadium, the sports writers of the country were set to see the Tigers defeated by two or three touchdowns; but the tables were turned more completely than in any Big Three game before or since. The Tigers took hold of the situation early in the first period. A series of passes netted a touchdown and only minutes later Slagle kicked a field-goal. Before the half was over he had intercepted a Crimson pass, paving the way for the second touchdown, and had passed to Caulkin who scored the third. In 31 T jRlNC lTojy rrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr rrrr rrrrr rrftrrr firr h-f rrrrr rr r r rrrr rrrr r r gVcZAlggjf the third-quarter Harvard braced defensively but could carry no sustained attack against Princeton ' s forward wall. In the fourth period, however, Darby, the Tiger left tackle, blocked a punt, scooped up the ball, and dashed twenty-five-yards to the Crimson zero-yard line. Late in the game Prendergast drove eighty yards through the line in seven plays while Beares plunged the ball over the remaining feet to make the score 36-0! This is the worst defeat the Crimson has suffered at the hands of Princeton in all their years of football rivalry. The sport dopesters were still doubtful of Princeton ' s ability to defeat Yale, for two years the invincible defender of the Big Three title; but Roper ' s men showed these incredulous wor- shippers of statistics that the impossible could be done and done thoroughly. The first period was scoreless, just a nip-and-tuck struggle in which the first to weaken would lose. In the second- quarter things began to happen. Starting from his 18-yard ribbon, immortal Slagle slipped, turned, twisted out of the hands of every Eli man and raced across the goal in the most astounding, scintillating, perfect combination of head-work and foot-work ever seen on any gridiron! But the Bulldogs didn ' t Hike it and they showed their dislike by tieing the score a few minutes later in a smashing drive from mid-field. The last part of the half saw the Tigers again jump into the lead. A long, 70-yard punt by Dignan rolled out on Yale ' s three-yard line. The return punt fell short, and Slagle and Prendergast drove the ball down the field till finally the latter put it across. In both the third- and fourth-quarters Princeton repeated. A long series of off-tackle drives accounted for the first of these while a Yale fumble on the Elis ' 11-yard line started the Tigers on their way toward the fourth touchdown of the day. The Blue tried to come back, but though she scored once, the odds were too great and the game ended with the ball in Princeton ' s possession deep in Yale territory. Such was the 25-12 upset and Roper ' s third Big Three Championship. The next season, that of 1926, produced the last of Princeton ' s Big Three titles, for immediately after the season athletic rela- tions were broken off between Harvard and the Tigers. The season was one of contrasts. Hopes were high, early perfor- mance poor, and success emerged from the combination. An early tie followed by a defeat and a 7-6 victory over Lehigh threw a pall of gloom around championship hopes. The Harvard game was not up to its usual form. It was a rather listless exhibition of football resulting in a 12-0 win for the Orange and Black. Fumbles and errors on both sides made the encounter a rather slipshod affair. In the second period Lawler recovered a Harvard fumble on the Crimson 22-yard marker and three plays later Caulkins made the first tally. A few minutes after this Moeser tackled a Crimson back behind his goal line before he could punt into safety, bringing the score to 9-0. Still later in the game Slagle added three more points to the total with a pretty drop-kick from the 23-yard line. The Yale game of that year, if we reverse the names, was very much like the 1930 encounter. Neither team had had a very impressive record but, as usual, records were discarded as signs of strength or weakness. The first period was scoreless although Yale threatened with a drop-kick. The second-quarter, however, saw Princeton on the offensive. A sustained drive carried the ball well into the Eli territory and a pass from Baruch to Caulkins produced the first score. A drop-kick near the end of the period gave the Tigers a 10-0 lead at the half. The second half was Yale ' s turn to show her football strength. An intercepted pass gave them the ball on the three-yard line, and on the fourth down Goodwine scored on an end run. Late in the last-quarter, with the ball on the four-yard marker, the Elis mixed signals and Lawler recovered a pass from center on the Tigers ' twenty-five-yard ribbon. The game ended with Yale hurling long passes in a vain attempt to overcome Prince- ton ' s 10-7 lead. The seasons of 1927 and 1928 were notably successful but they never reached the heights of the two previous years. The 1927 team promised to be undefeated until the last few minutes of the Yale game. With the score of 6-0 against them, the Elis rallied to defeat the Tigers 14-6. Toward the end of the game the Blue team started throwing long passes to every corner of the field. One of the sailed far beyond the farthest Tiger back and landed safely in the arms of a Blue end. The point-after- touchdown was successful, but Yale, not content with a one- point lead, marched through the entire Princeton team to register one of the most surprising upsets of the year. The entire success of the 1928 also rested on the outcome of a single game. After defeating Yale as well as a series of six other teams, the Tigers slumped rather badly and lost to Navy in a contest which had been unconditionally ceded to Princeton by the majority of sports critics. The 1930 season, h owever, showed more forcibly than any other year, except perhaps, that of 1922, Bill Roper ' s unques- tioned ability to infuse into his men some strange strength that enables them to arise gloriously to a given situation. Though it fought bravely, the team was able to chalk up only a win against Amherst and a tie with Chicago. Yale, on the other hand, had proceeded through the season with at least a good record. The day of the game between the two ancient rivals saw the odds 32 t IlEBlMilQA BEsaggg almost 10 to 1 in favor of the Elis to win by a big score. In fact the first few minutes of play brought Yale three points, in the form of a drop-kick from the toe of little Albie Booth. Doing an about-face Princeton drove the ball almost the length of the field and by sheer brute strength shoved the pig-skin across the Blue goal-line. When the game reopened after the half Prince- ton was leading 7 to 3 when she should have been trailing ac- cording to the sports writers, by one, two, or even three touch- downs. Yale, however, hit back hard and late in the third quarter jumped into the lead when a long pass produced a touch- down. The last period brought another sustained drive by the Tigers. Two minutes to go and one down to make six inches for a first-and-ten on the Eli two-yard line! Bennet dove for those precious inches but Yale held and punted into safety. Statistics and numbers, undefeated seasons and Big Three titles — all show only one side of Bill Roper. It is the men who have worked with him for three year of grueling football that know his other side best — the human side, the true sportsman, not the machine-like producer of great elevens. Almost all of us, graduates and undergraduates alike, have heard him talk on the honor system. With what friendly sincerity has he aroused in us the desire to uphold this greatest of Princeton traditions. But this is not a eulogy, nor is it a farewell, for Coach Bill will be with us many years, cheering the team on and thinking of Old Nassau as he has always thought of her. It is only a little note of sorrow at losing the intimate contact with so great a man. And since we cannot say farewell, we say so long to Princeton ' s best-loved friend. 33 tgTEBlNCilo nc-A-air ggr ' Presidents of the Qollege of Zh(ew Jersey and Princeton University College Founded in IJ46 Became a University in i8q6 ACCESSUS EXITUS ACCESSUS EXITUS Rev. Jonathan Dickinson Apr. 1747 Oct. 1747 tjAMES Carnahan, D.D., LL.D. 1823 1854 Rev. Aaron Burr 1748 1757 tj0HN Maclean, D.D., LL.D. 1854 1868 Rev. Jonathan Edwards Jan. 1758 Mar . 1758 Uames McCosh, D.D., LL.D., Rev. Samuel Davies 1758 1761 Litt.D. 1868 1888 Samuel Finley, D.D. 1761 1766 tFRANCis L. Patton, D.D., LL.D. 1888 1902 John WlTHERSPOON, D.D., LL.D. 1766 1794 tWooDRow Wilson, Ph.D., Litt.D. S. Stanhope Smith, D.D., LL.D. 1795 1812 LL.D. 1902 1910 Ashbel Green, D.D., LL.D. 1812 1822 John G. Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D. 1912 Deceased. t Resigned. 34 tgfJJ ft ' NCE JCg frfrrrr rr ' rrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r r 2 J AC ' A ' £X S£ TRUSTEES OF THE UNIVERSITY Top Row — Mr. Brooks, Mr. Franklin D ' Olier, Mr. Dean Mathey. Second Row— Mr. Martin, Mr. Jacobus. Third Row — Mr. Duffield, Mr. Fleming, Dr. Farrand, Mr. Hardin. Fourth Row — Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Finney Mr. Hope, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Renttschler. Fifth Row — Mr. Hodge, Mr. Thompson, the late Mr. Scribner, President Hibhen, Mr. Garrett, D. Stewart, Mr. Lawrence. t?t_PMNccfo Tc3ZS3c Trustees of the University TRUSTEES EX-OFFICIO Governor Morgan F. Larson of the State of New York, Ex Officio President of the Board of Trustees John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., President of the Board in the Absence of the Governor CHARTER George B. Stewart, D.D., LL.D Auburn, N. Y. Elected February, 1887. Cyrus H. McCormick, A.M Chicago, 111. Elected June, 1889. Melancthon W. Jacobus, D.D Hartford, Conn. Elected November, 1890. Alexander Van Rensselaer, A.M Philadelphia, Pa. Elected April, 1916. Robert Garrett, B.S Baltimore, Md. Elected June, 1905. Henry B. Thompson, B.S Greenville, Del. Elected June, 1906. Edward W. Sheldon, A.M., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected December, 1906. Wilson Farrand, L.H.D Newark, N. J. Elected June, 1919. John M. T. Finney, M.D Baltimore, Md. Elected June, 1910. William Cooper Procter, B.S Cincinnati, Ohio Elected April, 1912. Matthew C. Fleming, A.M., LL.D New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1922. William Church Osborn, LL.D New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1914. Edward D. Duffield, A.M., LL.B Newark, N. J. Elected April, 1920. L ewis B. Stillwell, D.Sc New York, N. Y. Elected April, 1920. Wilson S. Arbuthnot, A.B Pittsburg, Pa. Elected June, 1920. Percy R. Pyne, 2nd., A.B New York, N. Y. Elected January, 1922. Henry J. Cochran, A.B New York, N. Y. Elected October, 1922. John R. Hardin. A.M .Newark, N. J. Elected April, 1925 TRUSTEES Walter E. Hope, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected October, 1926. Gordon S. Rentschler, A.B New York, N. Y. Elected October, 1926. Franklin D ' Olier, A.B Newark, N. J. Elected October, 1926. John Stuart, C.E Chicago, 111. Elected June, 1927. Albert G. Milbank, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1927. Edward B. Hodge, M.D. Philadelphia, Pa. David A. Reed Pittsburgh, Pa. ALUMNI TRUSTEES Dean Mathey, Litt.B New York, N. Y. Term Expires June, 1931. Frederick H. Scott, B.S Chicago, 111. Term Expires June, 1931. David Lawrence . .Washington, D. C. Term Expires June, 1932. Thomas A. Wilson Binghamton, N. Y. Term Expires June, 1932. Raymond G. Wright Seattle, Wash. Term Expires June, 1933. Georce E. Cranmer Denver, Col. Term Expires June, 1933. Paul Bedford Wilkesbarre, Pa. Term Expires June, 1934. . Robert M. Green Cincinnati, Ohio Term Expires June, 1934. TREASURER George C. Wintringer, E.E. CLERK OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Wilson Farrand, L.H.D. 37 T TRINCET Og r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr rr rrrrrrrt jg£iAiIJ[£cr (Committees of the Trustees Administrative Committee President Hibben, Chairman; Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Farrand, Mr. Thompson, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Duf- fie ' ld. Dr. Hope, Mr. D ' Olier, Mr. Milbank. Committee on Finance Mr. Fleming, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Procter, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Milbank, Mr. Mathey. Committee on Grounds and Buildings Mr. D ' Olier, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Garrett, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hope, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Mathey, Mr. Wilson, Mr. Wintringer, Secretary. Committee on Curriculum Dr. Jacobus, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean Greene, Dean Eisenhart, Dean Trowbridge, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Farrand, Secretary; Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Cochran, Mr. D ' Olier, Dr. Hodge. Committee on the Library Mr. Hope, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Gerould, Sec- retary; Mr. Van Rensselaer, Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Wilson. Committee on Honorary Degrees President Hibben, Chairman; Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Farrand, Secretary; Mr. Osborn, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Mathey, Professor Morey, Professor Root, Dean Trow- bridge. Committee on Graduate School Mr. Farrand, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean Trow- bridge, Secretary; Dr. Stewart, Mr. McCormick, Mr. Proc- ter, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Pyne, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Lawrence. Committee on Undergraduate Life Mr. Duffield, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean Gauss, Dean Heermance, Dr. Jacobus, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Hope, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Law- rence. Committee on Health and Athletics Dr. Finney, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean Gauss, Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Wintringer, Dr. Raycroft, Mr. Garrett, Mr. D ' Olier, Mr. Scott, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Wright. Committee on Conference , Professors Parrott, Prentice, Bender, Scoon, Baldwin, Smith, Wheeler. 3$ vgj RlNC £fQ y gEAZ£E2f Officers of Administration John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D Nassau Hall President Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc., LL.D. Dean of the Faculty 212 Nassau Hall Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D 214 Nassau Hall Dean of the College Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., M.E., D.Sc, D.Eng. Dean of the School of Engineering 116 Engineering Building Radcliffe Heermance, A.M 302 Nassau Hall Director of Admission and Dean of Freshman Augustus Trowbridge, A.M., Ph.D 3 Nassau Hall Dean of the Graduate School Robert Russell Wicks, A.M., D.D University Chapel Dean of the University Chapel Varnum Lansing Collins, A.M 313 Nassau Hall Secretary James Thayer Gerould, A.B University Library Librarian Wilbur Franklin Kerr 211 Nassau Hall Registrar George C. Wintringer, E.E Stanhope Hall Treasurer and Controller Fred R. Apgar Stanhope Hall Purchasing Agent Edward Allen MacMillan, C.E Stanhope Hall Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings John Saville Cosgrave Stanhope Hall Assistant Treasurer Gordan Gowans Sikes, A.M 314 Nassau Hall Assistant to the Secretary Alexander Leitch, A.B Nassau Hall Secretary to the President Frederic Edcar Camp, A.B 214 Nassau Hall Assistant to the Dean of the College George Robert Meyers, C.E Stanhope Hall Assistant to the Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings Cliff ord Daniel Quick, B.Arch Stanhope Hall Assistant to the Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings William Beekman Van Alstyne, Jr., B.S 9 Nassau Hall Director of the Department of Personnel Frederick Spring Osborne, A.B Nassau Hall Director of Public Information Charles William Kennedy, A.M., Ph.D. First National Bank Building Chairman of the Board of Athletic Control Asa Smith Bushnell, B.S First National Bank Building Secretary of the Board of Athletic Control George Richard Murray, A.B First National Bank Building General Athletic Treasurer Keene Fitzpatrick. . .Corner of Princeton and Aiken Avenues Adviser in Athletics Joseph Edward Raycroft, M.D University Gymnasium Chairman of Sanitary Committee Willard Greenberry Rainey, M.D McCosh Infirmary University Physician Ralph Jones Belford, M.D Princeton Hospital Surgical Consultant Joseph Conway Hiden, M.D McCosh Infirmary Assistant University Physician Harry Roemer McPhee McCosh Infirmary Assistant University Physician Charles Mauri ce Wolbert McCosh Infirmary Resident Physician Gertrude Webster, R.N McCosh Infirmary Infirmarian Francis X. Hogarty 2 N.M. Reunion Hall Proctor 39 rX RINC EfQ EEZAZggjj Trowbridge, Graduate School Greene, School of Engineering UNIVERSITY DEANS Hee mance, freshman Wicks, Chapel Gauss, College EiaE.s iiakt, Faculty tvgnouNCETg v rrrrrr rr rrrrr rrr rr|rrrrrrrr r r - 1.. r - H ESSIAiZE2r (Committees of the faculty CLERK OF THE FACULTY: Professor V. L. Collins. ASSISTANT CLERK OF THE FACULTY: Professor Robert SCOON. COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES: The President, Chairman; Dean Eisenhart, Professors Kennedy and Osgood. COURSE OF STUDY: The President, Chairman; Professors Bard, Buddington, Carpenter, Chapman, Eisenhart (Sec- retary ex-officio), Graham, A. M. Greene, Jr., C. R. Hall, Langfei.d, McClintock, Root, Scoon, Baldwin, Smith, C. P. Smyth, H. Smyth, D. R. Stuart. DISCIPLINE: Dean Gauss, Chairman; Dean Heermance, Pro- fessors Brigham, Savage, D. R. Stuart. ADMISSION: Dean Heermance, Chairman; Professors Brig- ham, Collins, Dennis, A. M. Greene, Jr., Lowe, Savage, Mr. Laughlin. LIBRARY: Professors Armstrong, Bei.ler, J. D. Brown, Cole- man-Norton, Constant, Corwin, Dixon, Fetter, Foster, Hille, Mason, Oscood. NON-ATHLETIC ORGANIZATIONS: Professor Gauss, Chair- man; Professors Hudson, Osgood, Phillips, D. C. Stuart, Thorp, Mr. Bunn. EXAMINATIONS AND STANDING: Dean Eisenhart, Chair- man; Professors Albion, A. M. Greene, Jr., T. M. Greene, Heermance, A. C. Johnson, Kennedy, Phillips, Baldwin Smith. GRADUATE SCHOOL: Dean Trowbridge, Chairman; Pro- fessors Alexander, Armstrong, Bender, Fetter, Gerould, R. B. C. Johnson, Langfeld, McClure, Morey, Morgan, Myers, Shenstone, Thom, H. S. Taylor, Wertenbaker, Wheeler. MUSIC: The President, Chairman; Dean Wicks, Professors Cooke, Collins, DeWald, Levengood, Osgood, Dr. Russell, Professor Thorp, Mr. Downes. PUBLIC LECTURES: Professors Elderkin, Field, W. P. Hall, Harper, Harvey, Mather, Menzies, Munro, Spaeth, Spaulding, Veblen, Mr. Tomlinson, Secretary. CONFERENCE: Professors Bender, Parrott, Prentice, Scoon, Baldwin Smith, Wheeler. HONORARY DEGREES: (Joint Committee with Trustees ' Com- mittee) Professors Morey, Root, Trowbridge. SANITARY COMMITTEE: Dr. Raycroft, Chairman; Dean Gauss, Professor Heacock, Doctors Tooker, Rainey, Mc- Phee, Mr. Wintringer, Secretary. SCHEDULE: Professors Buffum, Elsasser, Furman, Gauss, Howard, Kissam, Wedderburn, the Registrar. PUBLIC SPEAKING AND DEBATING: Professor Hudson, Chairman; Professors Cawley, F. W. Fetter, Harper, Pomfert, Voorhees, W. Whittlesey, Poole. COUNCIL ON UNDERGRADUATE LIFE: Dean of the Col- lege, Dean of Freshmen, Dean of the Chapel, Secretary, Controller, Director of Hygiene and Physical Education, Chairman of the Committee on Athletics, Chairman of the Committee on Non-Athletic Organizations, Professor of Dramatic Literature, Director of the Department of Person- nel, Assistant to the Dean of the College. ATHLETICS: Professor Kennedy, Chairman; Professors Dell, Dougherty, Eisenhart, Hutson, McClure, Raycroft, Sec- retary; Spaeth, Dr. Tooker, Mr. Wintringer, Mr. Fitz- patrick. ADVISORY COUNCIL OF THE FACULTY: President Hib- ben, Chairman; Professors Adams, Bender, Conklin, Cor- win, Gauss, A. M. Greene, Jr., R. B. C. Johnson, McCabe, Morey, Morgan, Raycroft, Root, H. N. Russell, Phillips, H. S. Taylor, Warren, Wertenbaker, Wheeler, and the Dean of the Faculty, ex-officio. COMMITTEE ON THE ADVISORY COUNCIL: Professors Conklin, Gauss, and McCabe. 41 tvVOJUNCETcg gu T-A gge J acuity and Instructors The list is arranged in five groups; professors, associate pro- fessors, 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. LL.D., Litt.D. Prospect Hamilton, Bermuda John Grier Hibben, Ph.D President Stuart Professor of Philosophy Francis Landey Patton, D.D., LL.D Ex-President Stuart Professor of Ethics and the Philosophy of Religion, Emeritus 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. (Oxon.) 59 Bayard Lane Murray Professor of English Literature, Emeritus, and University Lecturer on English Poetry Walter Mead Rankin, A.M., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology, Emeritus Frederick Newton Willson, A.M., C.E., Professor of Graphics, Emeritus John Howell Westcott, A.M., PhD. Musgrave Professor of Latin and Tutor in Roman Emeritus Ernest Cushing Richardson, A.M., Ph.D. Honorary Director of the Library and Research Professor of Bibliography, Emeritus Andrew Fleming West, Ph.D., LL.D., Hon.D.Litt. (Oxon.), Litt.D. Springdale Road Dean of the Graduate School, Emeritus, Giger Professor of Latin, Emeritus LeRoy Wiley McCay, A.M., D.Sc. 12 Morven St. Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus 5 Evelyn Place P.O. Box 63, Princeton, N.J. 200 Mercer St. Lavs, Paul van Dyke, A.M., D.D. 146 Graduate College Pyne Professor of History, Emeritus Master in Residence at the Graduate College William Francis Magie, A.M., Ph.D., Ds.C, LL.D. Henry Professor of Physics, Emeritus 118 Library Place Elmer Howard Loomis, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. 302 Nassau St. Professor of Physics, Emeritus Robert William Rogers, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D., Hon.Litt.D. (Dublin), Hon.D.Litt. (Oxon.) Madison, N.J. Professor of Ancient Literature on the Paton foundation, Emeritus William Berryman Scott, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D. (Harv. et (Oxon.) 7 Cleveland Lane Blair Professor of Geology, Emeritus George Brinton McClellan, A.M., LL.D. Washington, D.C. Professor of Economic History, Emeritus George McLean Harper, A.M., Ph.D. 36 Mercer St. Woodrovj Wilson Professor of Literature Walter Butler Harris, C.E. 5 Greenholm Professor of Geodesy Charles Freeman Williams McClure, A.M., D.Sc. Class of 1877 Professor of Zoology 1 Battle Road Howard Crosby Warren, A.M., Ph.D. 133 Library Place Stuart Professor of Psychology Thomas Marc Parrott, A.M., Ph.D. 44 Princeton Ave. Professor of English Edmund Yard Robbins, A.M. 144 Library Place Evjing Professor of Greek Language and Literature Alexander Hamilton Phillips, D.Sc. 54 Hodge Road Professor of Mineralogy Williamson Updike Vreeland, A.M., D. es L. 180 Mercer St. Woodhull Professor of Romance Languages 42 tuOBiNccTo : rrrrr rrrr rirrrrrrr rrrrrrrr r S bEiAUE3c Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) 12 Nassau St. 22 Morven St. 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., D.Sc. Graduate College, Wyman House Dean of the Graduate School, Professor of Physics Duane Reed Stuart, Ph.D. 60 Battle Road Professor of Classics Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D. Joseph Henry House, Campus Dean of the College, Class of 1900 Professor of Modern Languages Edward Capps, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., L.H.D, Professor of Classics 150 Fitz Randolph Road Edwin Grant Conklin, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D. 139 Broadmead Henry Fairfield Osborn Professor of Biology Malcolm MacLaren, E.E., A.M. 16 Boudinot St. Professor of Electrical Engineering Edwin Plimpton Adams, M.S., Ph.D. 245 Nassau St. Professor of Physics Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D. The Dean ' s House, 73 Nassau St. Dean of the Faculty, Dod Professor of Mathematics George Augustus Hulett, Ph.D. 44 Washington Road Professor of Physical Chemistry William Foster, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Roger Bruce Cash Johnson, A.M„ Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., Ph.D., L.H.D. 3 Evelyn Place Director and Curator of Renaissance and Modern Art Marquand Professor of Art and Archaeology Oswald Veblen, Ph.D., D.Sc. (Oxon.), Hon.Ph.D. (Oslo) Henry B. Fine Professor of Mathematics 58 Battle Road 41 Battle Road 129 Broadmead 115 Prospect Ave. 7 Evelyn Place 121 Broadmead Edward Samuel Corwin, Ph.D., LL.D. McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence Ulric Dahlcren, M.S. Professor of Biology Frank Albert Fetter, Ph.M., Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Political Economy William Gillespie, Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics §David Magie, A.M., Ph.D. 101 Library Place Professor of Classics Joseph Edward Raycroft, M.D. 298 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, Charles A. Young Professor of Astronomy John Duncan Spaeth, A.M., Ph.D., Litt.D. 32 Edgehill St. Professor of English Douglas Labaree Buffum, A.M., Ph.D. 60 Hodge Road Professor of Romanic Languages and Literature Varnum Lansing Collins, A.M. 214 Western Way Secretary of the University, Clerk of the Faculty Professor of the French Language and Literature John Preston Hoskins, Ph.D. 10 College Road Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature George Madison Priest, A.M., Ph.D. 10 Nassau St. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature Edwin Walter Kemmerer, Ph.D, LL.D., Hon.D. (Ecuador, Bolivia) 161 Hodge Road Professor of International Finance Charles Grosvenor Oscood, Ph.D. 92 Stockton St. Professor of English Edward Gleason Spaulding, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D. 8 Edgehill St. Professor of Philosophy Absent on leave. §Not teaching. 43 tffijO £Ilo y: gC A- Rggr Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) 60 Jefferson Road 87 Library Place 5 College Road tALAN Wilfrid Cranbrook Menzies, M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry 187 Prospect Ave. Frank Henry Constant, C.E., D.Sc. 57 Battle Road Professor of Civil Engineering Dana Carleton Munro, A.M., L.H.D. 119 Fitz Randolph Road Dodge Professor of Mediaeval History George Harrison Shull, Ph.D. Professor of Botany and Genetics Philip Marshall Brown, A.M., LL.D.  Lecturer in Politics Warner Fite, Ph.D. Stuart Professor of Ethics Gordon Hall Gerould, B.Litt.(Oxon.) Professor of English 106 Fitz Randolph Road Robert Kilburn Root, Ph.D. 138 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of English Charles Carroll Marden, Ph.D. 112 Mercer St. Emory L. Ford Professor of Spanish Edward Cooke Armstrong, Ph.D., LL.D., L.H.D. 26 Edgehill St. Professor of the French Language William Starr Myers, Ph.D. 104 Bayard Lane Professor of Politics Harold Herman Bender, Ph.D., Litt.D., Phil.L.D.(Kovno) 120 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of Indo-Germanic Philology Charles Rufus Morey, A.M. 114 Broadmead Professor of Art and Archaeology David Aloysius McCabe, Ph.D. A-3 Prospect Apartments Professor of Economics Donald Clive Stuart, A.M., Ph.D. 182 Western Way Triangle Club Professor of Dramatic Art Frank Haigh Dixon, A.M., Ph.D. 101 Broadmead Professor of Economics Frederick Leroy Hutson, Ph.D. 42 Cleveland Lane Professor of Classics tAbsent on leave, Second Term, 1930-1931. Palmer Physical Laboratory Cambridge, Mass. 2 College Road 16 Prospect Ave. Hereward Lester Cooke, M.A. Professor of Physics Karl Taylor Compton, M.S., Ph.D., D.Sc. Honorary Research Associate in Physics Edmund Newton Harvey, Ph.D. Professor of Physiology 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. 55 Battle Road Librarian Morris William Croll, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English Charles William Kennedy, A.M., Ph.D. Nassau Club Professor of English Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., M.E., D.Sc, D.Eng. 139 Fitz Randolph Road Dean of the School of Engineering, Professor of Mechanical Engineering Hugh Stott Taylor, M.Sc, D.Sc. David B. Jones Professor of Chemistry Radcliffe Heermance, A.M. Director of Admission, Dean of Freshmen Allan Chester Johnson, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Classics Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Ph.D. Director of the Psychological Laboratory, Professor of Psychology •Arthur Leslie Wheeler, Ph.D. 109 Broadmead Professor of Latin Kenneth McKenzie, A.M., Ph.D., Hon. D. (Padua) Professor of Italian 9 Battle Road Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker, A.M., Ph.D. Ill Fitz Randolph Road Edwards Professor of American History •Absent on leave, First Term, 1930-1931. tAbsent on leave. 115 Broadmead 89 Mercer St. 3 College Road Princeton Inn 44 T p-INC JTO _ rrrrrrrrrrr Srr rrcrrrr rrr rrrrrrrrr 1 gVcIAZMJc Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) 120 Broadmead 203 Eno Hall 12 Battle Road Earl Baldwin Smith, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Art and Archaeology Carl Campbell Bricham, A.M., Ph.D. 128 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of Psychlogy Edwin Bissell Holt, A.M., Ph.D. Visiting Professor of Psychology Theodore Leslie Shear, A.M., Ph.D. Curator of Classical Art, Professor of Classical Archaeology Harvey Waterman Hewett-Thayer, Ph.D. 168 Nassau St. Professor of Modern Languages Joseph Henry Maclagan Wedderburn, M.A., D.Sc. Professor of Mathematics 134 Mercer St. George Wicker Elderkin, Ph.D. 11 Haslet Ave. Professor of Art and Archaeology tWALTER Phelps Hall, Ph.D. Professor of History Robert Scoon, B.A.(Oxon.), Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy 1 ' Solomon Lefschetz, M.E., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics James Waddell Alexander, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics Harold Willis Dodds, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Politics Harley Leist Lutz, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Public Finance Paul MacClintock Ph.D. Knox Taylor Professor of Geography Wilbur Willis Swingle, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology Major Roger Sheffield Parrott, Field Artillery 17 Ivy Lane Commandant F.A.R.O.T.C, Professor of Military Science and Tactics Andre Maurois, D.C.L. 109 Broadmead M eredith H. Pyne Visiting Professor of French Literature tAbsent on leave, Second Term, 1930-1931. 12 Edgehill St. 19 Cleveland Lane 190 Prospect Ave. 29 Cleveland Lane Springdale Road 56 Battle Road 116 Prospect Ave. 110 Prospect Ave. 84 Alexander St. 15 Boudinot St. 154 Prospect Ave. John Von Neumann, Dr.phil. Professor of Mathematical Physics Eucen Paul Wigner, Dr.inc. Professor of Mathematical Physics George Erle Begcs, C.E. Professor of Civil Engineering Clifton Rumery Hall, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History William John Sinclair, Ph.D. Director of the Paleontological Museum, Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, Professor of Geology and Paleontology Frank Dunstone Graham, A.M., Ph.D. 8 College Road Professor of Economics and Social Institutions William Seal Carpenter, A.M., Ph.D. 180 Prospect Ave. Professor of Politics Paul Laumonier Meredith H. Pyne Visiting Professor of French Literature Wilhelm Kroll, Dr.Phil., Dr.iur. H.C. Visiting Professor of Classics Lewis Ferry Moody, M.S. Professor of Hydraulic Engineering Henry Robinson Shipman, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of History Francis Charles MacDonald, A.B. Associate Professor of English 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 Norman Brown Tooker, M.D. Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Sherley Warner Morgan, B.Arch. 145 Hodge Road Director of the School of Architecture Associate Professor of Architecture 34 Bayard Lane 146 Hodge Road 27 Mercer St. 168 Nassau St. 10 Nassau St. 33 Jefferson Road 7 College Road 149 Hodge Road 45 gT RlNC EfOA : frrrrrr rrirrrrrrr rrrrrrrr r r UXJU s gjC-A Rgg Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) Walter Scott Hastings, A.M., Ph.D. 168 Nassau St. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Ernest Theodore DeWald A.M., Ph.D. 15-A Graduate College Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Shirley Howard Weber, A.M., Ph.D. 106 Broadmead Associate Professor of Classics Arthur Francis Buddington, M.S., Ph.D. 178 Prospect Ave. Curator of Petrology, Associate Professor of Geology Benjamin Franklin Howell, A.M., Ph.D. 12 College Road Curator of Inverterate Paleontology and Stratigraphy Associate Professor of Geology and Paleontology 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. Director, Summer School of Geology and Natural Resources Associate Professor of Geology William Taylor Thom, Jr., Ph.D. 172 Prospect Ave. Associate Professor of Geology Percy Addison Chapman, A.M. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Nathaniel Howell Furman, A.M., Ph.D. 128 Broadmead Associate Professor of Chemistry John Quincy Stewart, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Astronomical Physics Robert Ralston Cawley, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Hoyt Hopewell Hudson, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Public Speaking Charles Phelps Smyth, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry Edward Sampson, M.S., D.Sc. Curator of Economic Geology Associate Professor of Geology Frederick Courtney Tarr, A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Modern Languages •Absent on leave, First Term, 1930-1931. Absent on leave. 293 Nassau St. 200 Mercer St. 124 Pyne Hall 27 Linden Lane 22 Morven St. Lafayette Road 1 College Road Gregg Dougherty, A.M., Ph.D. 95 Library Place Associate Professor of Chemistry Robert Greenhalgh Albion, A.M., Ph.D. 69 Ha rrison St. Director of the Summer Session Assistant to the Dean of the Faculty Associate Professor of History •Albert Mathias Friend, Jr., A.M. 10 Mercer St. Curator of Mediaeval Art Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Theodore Meyer Greene, Ph.D.(Edin.) 200 Prospect Ave. Associate Professor of Philosophy Philip Khuri Hitti, Ph.D. 14 Wilton St. Associate Professor of Semitic Literature Herbert Spencer Murch, A.M., Ph.D. 6-A Holder Hall Associate Professor of English J. Dayton Voorhees, A.M. Associate Professor of Politics Edward Peck Culver, B.S. in C.E. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering W. Frederick Stohlman, A.M., M.F.A. 10 Mercer St. Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Henry DeWolf Smyth, A.M., Ph.D. (Cantab.) Associate Professor of Physics 10 Mercer St. George Rowley, M.F.A. 98 Bayard Lane Curator of Far Eastern Art Associate Professor of Art and Archaeology Allen Goodrich Shenstone, B.A. (Cantab.), A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics 111 Mercer St. Louis Alexander Turner, A.M., Ph.D. 10 Mercer St. Associate Professor of Physics +Clodius Harris Willis, Ph.D. 184 Prospect Ave. Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering Carl Einar Hille, Ph.M., Ph.D. 174 Prospect Ave. Associate Professor of Mathematics Edward Uhler Condon, Ph.D. 16 Pelham Ave. Associate Professor of Physics 30 Nassau St. 211 Graduate College 46 gT TRINCET ngT rrrrrf trrt rnrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr f r gVciAiH2r Jaculty and Instructors — (Continued) William Koren, A.M. 105 Fitz Randolph Road Associate Professor of Modern Languages Raymond James Sontag, A.M., Ph.D. 28 Murray Place Associate Professor of History John Boardman Whitton, J.D. J-l Prospect Apartments Associate Professor of Politics Clyde Colburn Whipple, B.S. in E.E. 28 Hawthorne Ave. Visiting Associate Professor of Engineering Alpheus Thomas Mason, A.M., Ph.D. 11 College Road Associate Professor of Politics Frank Linley Critchlow, A.M., Ph.D. 11 Westcott Road Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Marcus Stults Farr, M.S., A.M., D.Sc. 20 Vandeventer Ave. Assistant Professor of Geology and Paleontology Lewis Robinson Cary, M.S., Ph.D. 48 Vandeventer Ave. Assistant Professor of Biology Walter Lincoln Whittlesey, A.B. 67 Olden Ave. Assistant Professor of Politics Lawrence Francis Hawkins Lowe, A.M., Ph D. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages 104 Henry Hall Charles Thomas Zahn, Ph.D. 43 Graduate College Assistant Professor of Physics Philip Kissam, C.E. 186 Prospect Ave. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Paul Robinson Coleman-Norton, A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon.) Assistant Professor of Classics Tracy Yerkes Thomas, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Henry Lyttleton Savage, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Joseph Epes Brown, Jr., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Robert Norton Pease, Ph.D. Research Associate in Chemistry James Douglas Brown, A.M., Ph.D. Director of Industrial Relations Section Assistant Professor of Economics 23 Linden Lane 42 Hawthorne Ave. 614 Laughlin Hall 190 Mercer St. Battle Road, West 59 Murray Place 182 Prospect Ave. 134 Pyne Hall 176 Prospect Ave. 176 Western Way 60 Harrison St. Sidney Lawrence Levengood, Ph.D. 203 Graduate College Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Augusto Centeno, Lie. en Fil. y Let. 134 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Albert Elsasser, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Elmer Adolph Beller, A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon.) Assistant Professor of History James Gerald Smith, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics John Edwin Pomfret, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Ledger Wood, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy Ira Owen Wade, A.M., Ph.D. M-l Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Captain Josef Robert Sheetz, Field Artillery 19 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Captain Robert Wilson Hasbrouck, Field Artillery D-2 Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Captain Charles Everett Hurdis, Field Artillery 50 Patton Ave. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Kenneth Porter Stevens, A.M., Ph.D. 94 Graduate College Assistant Professor of Biology Bateman Edwards, Ph.D. 188 Prospect Ave. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Leslie Thomas Fournier, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics Wilbur Schofield Hulin, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology Elmer Grimshaw Butler, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology Willard Thorp, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English 4 College Road 48 Cleveland Lane 28 Edwards Place 142 Nassau St. 47 T TRlNCET rgp frrrrrr Srr rrrrr rrrr r ■ rrrr rrrr r r gl£iA E3? J acuity and Instructors — (Qontinued) 10 Mercer St. E-3 Prospect Apartments 184 Prospect Ave. Edgerstoune Road Ph.D. 22 Alexander St. Thomas Jefferson Webb, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Processor of Chemistry William Theodore Richards, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Francis Barretto Stewart, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Frank Whitson Fetter, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics Philip Bard, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology Holmes Van Mater Dennis, III, A.M., Assistant Professor of Classics Captain Walter Compere Lattimore, Field Artillery 170 North Moore St. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Howard Percy Robertson, M.S., Ph.D. D-l Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Mathematical Physics Peter Teigen, M.Arch. 18 Edgehill St. Assistant Professor of Drawing Harry Roemer McPhee, M.D. 214 North Moore St. Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education First Lieutenant Walter Towle O ' Reilly, Field Artillery 170 Nassau S t. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics Maurice Edgar Coindreau, Ag. de l ' Univ. 413 ' 03 Hall Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Francis Frederic Adams Comstock, M.F.A. Rosedale Road Assistant Professor of Architecture Richard Stillwell, M.F.A. Elm Road Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology Joseph Chandler Morris, M.S., A.M., Ph.D. Pyne Tower, Graduate College Assistant Professor of Physics Gray Cowan Boyce, A.M., Ph.D. 401 ' 03 Hall Assistant Professor of History Ernest Glen Wever, A.M., Ph.D. 14 Murray Place Assistant Professor of Psychology 30 Edwards Place 204 Graduate College 25 Murray Place 121 Pyne Hall 9 Aiken Ave. 11 Alexander St. 76 Alexander St. 152 Graduate College Charles Raymond Whittlesey, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics Malcolm Oakman Young, A.B., B.L.S. Reference Librarian Alonzo Church, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Gaylord Probasco Harnwell, A.M., Ph.D. 213 North M oore St. Assistant Professor of Physics Edward Billings Ham, A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon.) Research Associate in Modern Languages Morris Samuel Knebelman, M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Torsten Petersson, A.M., Ph.D. Bibliographer, University Library Erlinc Dorf, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Geology Alfred Foulet, Ph.D. Research Associate in Modern Languages John Roy Sandidge, M.S., Ph.D. M-2 Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Geology Hans Jaeger, Dr.Phil. 14 Murray Place Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Ernst Carl Gerlach Stueckelberg, A.M., Ph.D. Research Associate in Physics Jean-Albert Bede, Ag. des L. 14-D Graduate College Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Asher Estey Hinds, A.B. 10 Mercer St. Assistant Professor of English Everett Stanley Wallis, M.S., A.M., Ph.D. 11 College Road Research Associate in Chemistry Walter Livingston Wright, Jr., A.M., Ph.D. 38 Edwards Place Assistant Professor of History First Lieutenant Alfred Eugene Kastner, Field Artillery The Nassau Club Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics ± Absent on leave. 48 tuQ ' NC ETQg gVclAiS2c Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) Joseph John Pfiffner, M.S., Ph.D. 1-1 Prospect Apartments Research Associate in Biology Archibald MacDonald McIsaac, A.M., Ph.D. 25 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor of Economics Alfred Edward Sorenson, M.E. 1 Harris Road Assistant Professor of Engineering Francis Richard Borroum Godolphin, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Classics 76 Alexander St. Charles Rosenbury Erdman, Jr., A.M., Ph.D. 20 Boudinot St. Assistant Professor of Politics Eugene Pacsu, Dr.Phil. 301 Nassau St. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Luther Harris Evans, A.M., Ph.D. C-l Prospect Apartments Assistant Professor of Politics Philip Marshall Brown, A.M., LL.D. 87 Library Place Lecturer in Politics Chalfant Robinson, Ph.D., F.R.H.S. 12 Boudinot St. Lecturer in Palaeography and Curator of Mediaeval History Alexander Rurrell, Mus.Doc, D.Peg., A.G.O. Hotel Webster, 40 W. 45th St., New York City Director of Music and University Organist Henry Andrews Cotton, A.M., M.D. Lecturer on Psychopathology State Hospital, Trenton, N. J. Paul Elmer More, A.M., Litt.D., LL.D. 59 Battle Road Lecturer in Classics Charles Henry Rogers, Litt.B. 20 Haslet Ave. Curator of the Museum of Zoology Jean Labatut, L. de I.F. 35 Richey Place, Trenton, N. J. Critic in Architectural Design Ralph William Downes, B.A.(Oxon.), A.R.C.M. 15 Murray Place Choirmaster and Director of Music in the University Chapel Edward Lawrence Katzenbach, A.M., LL.D. 1112 Trenton Trust Co. Bldg., Trenton, N. J. Lecturer in Politics DeWitt Clinton Poole, M.Dip. 86 Stockton St. Lecturer in the School of Public and International Affairs Jan Arnoldus Schouten, E.E. Lecturer in Mathematics Harald August Bohr, Ph.D. Lecturer in Mathematics Albert Boersig Nies 41 Jefferson Road Instructor in Physical Education Lawrence Heyl 9 College Road Head of Acquisition Department, University Library George Mann Peck, A.B. 56 Patton Ave. Curator of Special Collections, University Library Philip Miller Kretschmann, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Philosophy Springdale and Ober Roads Clarence Francis Foster 186 North Moore St. Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Joseph Canon Boyce, A.M., Ph.D. 40 Battle Road Research Associate in Physics Richard Swinnerton 54 Harrison St. Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Louis Frank Rahm, B.S. in M.E. The Nassau Inn Instructor in Engineering Donald Alfred Stauffer, A.M., D.Phil. (Oxon.) Instructor in English 302 Henry Hall Robert Hamilton Ball, A.M., Ph.D. 32 Edwards Place Instructor in English and Dramatic Art George Howard Forsyth, Jr., M.F.A. 15 Alexander St. Instructor in Art and Archaeology James Singer, A.M. 172 Nassau St. Instructor in Mathematics Cecil Robert Brolyer, A.B. 344 Nassau St. Research Associate in Psychology Cletus Clinton Van Voorhis, M.S., Ph.D. Kingston, N. J. Research Associate in Physics George Matthews Modlin, A.M. G-l Prospect Apartments Instructor in Economics Preston William Edsall, A.M. 75 Harrison St. Instructor in Politics 49 tvSnfo INC -grojy: rrrrrfrrrt r rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr rrrrrr r firr rr ' frrrrr r rrrrrrr gEZAlS3c r Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) 131 Pyne Hall E-2 Prospect Apartments 121 Jefferson Road 200 Nassau St. 16 Newlin Road 3 Harris Road 68 Wiggins St. 139 Jefferson Road Robert Wallace Elliott, Jr., A.M. 168 Nassau St. Instructor in Modern Languages Charles William Bray, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Psychology Martin Luther Beck Instructor in Architecture Earle Radcliffe Caley, M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry Daniel Katz, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Psychology John Barnes Mull, B.A.(Oxon.) Instructor in Classics Leslie Robbins Schureman, C.E. Instructor in Engineering Elmer Knowles Timby, B.C.E. Instructor in Engineering Howard Wellington Stepp Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education George Eckel Duckworth, A.M. L-l Prospect Apartments Instructor in Classics Burnham North Dell, A.M. East Nassau St. Instructor in Economics Denzel Cecil Cline, A.M. 127 Jefferson Road Instructor in Economics Robert Newton Cunningham, Jr., B.Litt.(Oxon.) Instructor in English 114 Blair Hall Donald Drew Egbert, M.F.A. A-2 Prospect Apartments Instructor in Art and Archaeology Joseph Clifton Elgin, M.S., Ph.D. D-3 Prospect Apartments Instructor in Chemical Engineering Henry Snyder Gehman, A.M., Ph.D., S.T.D. Instructor in Semitic Languages Glenn Lowell Jepsen, Ph.D. Instructor in Geology John Jacob Livingood, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics 36 Wilton St. 20-A Graduate College A-2 Prospect Apartments William Rowland MacNamee, B.S. 32 Vandeventer Ave. Instructor in Engineering Charles Wilbur Ufford, A.M., Ph.D. K-3 Prospect Apartments Instructor in Physics William John Brown Edgar, A.M. 24 Murray Place Instructor in the Philosophy and History of Christianity William Welch Flexner, A.M., Ph.D. 34 Graduate College Instructor in Mathematics Dayton D. McKean, A.M. Instructor in English Howard Samuel Piquet, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Economics William Frederick Shaffer, A.M. Instructor in Classics Edwin Warren Titt, A.B. 307 Alexander Hall, Seminary Instructor in Mathematics Albert William Tucker, A.M. 307 Alexander Hall, Seminary Instructor in Mathematics Daniel Ferguson Aitken, A.M., B.Litt. (Oxon.) 7 South East Brown Hall 54 Graduate College 16-B Graduate College Instructor in English Thomas Charlton Clark, B.S. Instructor in Politics Andrew Longacre, A.M. Instructor in Physics Desire Theodore Veltman, Ph.D. Instructor in Philosophy John Reginald Bates, A.M., Ph.D. Research Associate in Chemistry George Israel Lavin, Ph.D. Research Associate in Chemistry Alfred George Lockitt, A.M. Instructor in Classics James McPherson Jarrett, A.M. Instructor in Economics George Francis Luthringer, A.M. Instructor in Economics 110 Nassau St. 20 Edwards Place 16-A Graduate College G-2 Prospect Apartments E-l Prospect Apartments 301 Nassau St. 16-B Graduate College 17-A Graduate College L-2 Prospect Apartments 50 grptiiNcjfogT: pf r rrrrrrrf rf srr rrtrrf rrrf r rrnrrrrtr ,| ' f ; SCiA RST Jaculty and Instructors — (Continued) Frank Traver deVyver, A.M Instructor in Economics Franklin Gary, B.Litt.(Oxon.) Instructor in English Joseph Reese Strayer, A.M., Ph.D Instructor in History Wheaton Joshua Lane, A.M. Instructor in History Alfred Leon Foster, M.S. Instructor in Mathematics Elbert Benton Op ' teynde Borcerhoff, A.B. 23 Linden Lane 101 Foulke Hall J-2 Prospect Apartments 152 Graduate College B-l Prospect Apartments Instructor in Modern Languages William Hutchinson Shoemaker, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages Clifford Mortimer Crist, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages John Allan Irving, B.A. (Cantab.) Instructor in Philosophy Edward Griffith Fleming Arnott, A.M. Instructor in Physics Ralph E. Winger, Ph.D. Instructor in Physics Richard Rush Weir, M.F.A. Instructor in Architecture Kenneth Stone Kassler, M.F.A. Instructor in Architecture Hubert Newcombe Alyea, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry H Carl Joseph Whelan, A.M. Instructor in Economics Austin Leigh Moore, A.M. Instructor in History Francis Joseph Crowley, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages John Griffith Roberts, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages 47 University Place 168 Nassau St. 24 Graduate College 111 Pyne Hall 183 Graduate College 1-2 Prospect Apartments 28 North Edwards Hall 66 Nassau St. 3 Prospect Apartments 12 Princeton Ave. 106 Alexander St. 173 Nassau St. 121 Pyne Hall Fred Elmore Sweet, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages Charles Wesley Bird, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages Willard Wilson Strahl, A.B., B.D. Instructor in Philosophy Alfred Kitchener Snelgrove, M.S. Instructor in Geology Chester Wells Clark, A.M. Instructor in History Henri Frederic Bohnenbi.ust, Lic.es s Instructor in Mathematics Stephen Cole Kleene, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics Jack Levine, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics Fletcher Halsted Sillick, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Mathematics Allan Lake Rice, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages George Adams Graham, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Politics Roy Veatch, Ph.D. Instructor in Politics Preston Mayne Harris, A.M., Ph.D. Research Associate in Chemistry 26 South Edwards Hall 44 Harrison St. 7 Evelyn Place 27 William St. 69 Jefferson Road .math 173 Graduate College 11-A Graduate College 32 Bank St. 63 Graduate College 28 Jefferson Road 26 Murray Place 4 College Road 57 Jefferson Road ASSISTANTS IN INSTRUCTION Charles Leo Macy Assistant in Genetics Lionel Valdemar Silvester, A.B. Assistant in Biology Maurice Hall Haycock, M.A. Assistant in Geology Acheson Johnston Duncan, A.M. Assistant in Economics Box 364 Mt. Lucas 17 Vandeventer Ave. 137 Jefferson Road 51 T TRlNCET O y rrrrr r rr r rr h-ff rrrrrr r r rrrrrrrr C r il gT C 7 A ' 7 O r Jaculty and Instructors — (Qontinued) Philip Dartt Hammond, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Curtiss Summers Hitchcock, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Paul Vincent McKinney, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Donovan Joseph Salley, M.S. Assistant in Chemistry Wendell Hertig Taylor, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Charles William Wilson, Jr., M.S. Assistant in Geology John Stewart Vhay, B.S. Assistant in Geology James Scotland Wishart, M.S. Assistant in Geology Aucustus Conlin, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Walter Barker Keighton, Jr., A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Wendell Phillip Munro, M.S. Assistant in Chemistry Edward Duer Reeves, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry James Alexander Reid, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Frank Varney Rich, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry 8-B Graduate College 17-B Graduate College 75 Patton Ave. 17-B Graduate College 164 Graduate College 20-A Graduate College 7-C Graduate College 16 Hawthorne Ave. 15-D Graduate College 26 Edwards Place 32 Wilton St. 174 Graduate College 57 Jefferson Road 15-D Graduate College Albert Sherman, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry William Sparks Walls, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Jay William Blum, A.M. Assistant in Economics Harold Dean Gresham, A.B. Assistant in Economics John Richardson Fanshawe, A.B., Assistant in Geology Frank Clingan Foley, A.B. Assistant in Geology Stuart Sowden Holland, B.A.Sc. Assistant in Geology Donald Jonathan MacNeil, B.S. Assistant in Geology Joe Webb Peoples, M.S. Assistant in Geology John Thomas Rouse, A.M. Assistant in Geology George Plant Horton, A.M. Assistant in Psychology Carl Havelock Wedell, B.Ph. Assistant in Psychology John Becker Lucke, B.S. Assistant in Geology 2-A Graduate College 57 Jefferson Road 17-A Graduate College 4-A Graduate College D.ES SCNAT. 12 Upper Pyne Hall 20 Hawthorne Ave. 24 Dickinson St. 24 Hawthorne Ave. 17 Vandeventer Ave. 28 Hibben Road 201 Graduate College 103 Graduate College 176 Graduate College 52 sfyjgj folNCET Ojy r rrt-rrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr r rrr rrrrrr t (JSjr r Jit: rrrrrrrrrr m rr rr r rrrrrr rr r r J2 gEZAlSEac tg TTRlNCET ggr 0EAl4E3c 3Itt mortam professor |iiueritus tWjeohore -laMjitfielo JMmtt .Sfebruarg 19, 1S44 — (April 4, 1930 Soseph, P. fjca, trustee $mxe 2, 18B3 — fauuarg 0, 1939 Claries cribuer, ©rustee ©ctober 18, 1854 — April 19, 1930 JUarrelius artieo. •Bobge, fr. Class of 1930 ■jjulg 29, 1908 — August 29, 1930 Arthur oulton xtc tll, %x. Jlosepb, xnglauo Roberts Kansom $M zx -Hilbison Class of 1931 Hlanuaro 19, 1908 — func 17, 1930 iuuc 23, 1910 — August 23, 1930 September 19, 1908 — August 25, 1930 54 cftgT pRlNCET rgT g yc A Q g gg TRlNCET g P c a ESc Qharles (§cribner The death of Charles Scribner, ' 75, deprived Princeton of a most devoted friend and generous benefactor. His services to the University were many and valuable. As a member of the Board of Trustees from 1912 almost up to the time of his death, Mr. Scribner, because of his contact with leaders of finance and his long business experience, aided greatly in solving the complicated financial prob- lems of Princeton. Charles Scribner ' s greatest contribution to the Princeton of today, however, was the impetus he gave to its intel- lectual life. Elected a member of the Board of Trustees on the Library in 1912 and chosen chairman of the Board three years later, he was in great part responsible for the rapid growth of that organization. Through his direction the circulation of the Library was increased from 56,231 in 1912 to 171,172 at the present time. Mr. Scribner first saw the urgent need for the University Press, was instrumental in providing for the purchase of its building, and was the first President of the Press. He was deeply interested in the Daily Princetonian, the Alumni Weekly, the Nassau Literary Magazine, and the Press Club, being president of the first-named publication from its incorporation until 1926, and a prime mover in the election of Jesse Lynch Williams as first graduate editor of the Alumni Weekly. Mr. Scribner ' s wide experience in the production of books, his acquaintance with distinguished authors, and his loyalty to the highest standards of scholarship and literary excellence not only fostered the cultural life of Princeton, but also enabled him to make the publishing house of Scribner founded by his father, Charles Scribner, ' 40, a great educational power. A man of broad vision, high scholarly attainments, and deepest devotion to the interests of Princeton, Charles Scribner ' 75 formed an invaluable link between the struggling little college of the Seventies and the great University of today. 56 £ ±£ i z iO tSE_EBIN£ilQ5 % £ZAimSc T TRlNCEf OJy nT A-mg g Class Officers, 1931 SENIOR YEAR Edwin Tremaine Bradley President Nelson Peabody Rose .... Vice-President Walter Mitchell Jenifer . . Secretary-Treasurer JUNIOR YEAR Nelson Peabody Rose President Edwin Tremaine Bradley . . . Vice-President Walter Mitchell Jenifer . . Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Edson Killam Green President Nelson Peabody Rose .... Vice-President Douglas Gwynne Levick, Jr. . Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Edson Killam Green Douglas Gwynne Levick, Jr. Nelson Peabody Rose . . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer 60 yg3_ NC£ TCg _ r rrrrrrrr | rr rff rr rrrr r r rrrrrrrr r r EEZAZ£E3c Class of 1931 Clarence Eugene Abbott, Jr. 26 Ridge Drive, Birmingham, Ala. Henry Paul A. G. Abbott 436 W. 6th St., Lexington, Ky. William Cooper Ackerman. .601 E. High St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio Hector Cameron Adam, Jr 156 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Arthur Herman Adams 82 Caryl Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. Braman Blanchard Adams, II 247 Pelhamdale Ave., Pelham, N.Y. Cyrus Hall Adams, III 72 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. Louis Robert Albright, Jr 24 S. 18th St., Allentown, Pa. John Sharer Allen 6550 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sidney Allan Amdur 1348 Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Longstreet Ames 401 W. 14th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Howard Clevenger Anderson, Jr. 535 Monmouth St., Gloucester City, N.J. Arthur Glen Andrews. .Highland Court Apt., Birmingham, Ala. Peter Ralph Anstruther Smithtown Branch, L.I., N.Y. Francis Wallis Armstrong, Jr Riverton Rd., Moorestown, N.J. Joseph Cullins Atkins 3602 Cliff Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Samuel DeCoster Atkins Maple Ave., Basking Ridge, N.J. Edward Sanford Atwater, III. 1245 Waverly PI., Elizabeth, N.J. Carl Chrysler Austin, Jr R.F.D. 1, Media, Pa. Frederic Foss Austin.. 310 Bayview Ave., Douglaston, L.I., N.Y. Richard Avery Auten Princeville, 111. John Bradley Averill Lake Mahopac, N.Y. Gibbs Latimer Baker, Jr.. 21 19 California St., Washington, D.C. John Ezra Baker, Jr 404 Deerpath Ave., Lake Forest, 111. William John Baker 1542 Boulevard, New Haven, Conn. Clarence Hamilton Baldwin 191 De Pew Ave., Nyack, N.Y. Samuel John Barham 924 S. 19th St., Birmingham, Ala. Kendall Montague Barnes 6376 City Line, Philadelphia, Pa. Jacob Allen Barnett, Jr 300 Garfield St., Lafavette, La. Noah Chisholm Bamhart, Jr... 970 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Richard Wethered Drew Barringer 2103 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Edward Rydell Baumann 279 Linden St., Winnetka, 111. Charles Marshall Barton. . 4108 duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del. Wilson Thomas Moore Beale, Jr. 6635 N. 11th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Luther Clagett Beck 215 Northway, Baltimore, Md. Holmes Thompson Bennett, Jr.. 670 Park Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio Perry Benson 185 Bethlehem Pike, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Basil Herbert Beyea 167 W. Palisade Ave., Englewood, N.J. Gordon Cook Biddle 65 Atlantic Ave., Long Branch, N.J. Julius William Bierhals 88 Norman PI., Tenafly, N.J. Albert George Bixler, Jr. 330 Overlook Circle, New Rochelle, N.Y. W. Earle Blackburn 22 Hawthorne PI., Summit, N.J. John Collins Bliss 1950 Andrews Ave., New York, N.Y. Jack DeCarteret Blondel 169 Midland Ave., Montclair, N.J. Warren Blossom 266 Henry St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Henry Edward Boehme...240 S. Patterson Ave., Louisville, Ky. John Matthew Bogert Demarest, N.J. George Everett Bond 11 Parkmont Apts., Lynchburg, Va. Gordon Van Der Veer Bond 815 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. William Kenneth Boone, Jr. 10 Alfaro, Julapse, Vera Cruz, Mex. Francis Cyril Bosak 1555 Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. William G. Botzow 362 Heywood Ave., Orange, N.J. Robert Richardson Bowie... 3020 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. F. Heath Bowman, Jr 937 Forest Ave., Evanston, 111. Edwin Tremain Bradley North Broadway, Nyack, N.Y. Lounsbury Branson 1111 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Samuel Henry Brethwaite, Jr. 14 S. Arkansas Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. John William Brittingham 2118 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Fred William Brobvn 4915 Hutchinson St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Harmon Brown Lander Hill Farm, So. Montrose, Pa. 61 t EEMN££fo§ gT c A-mr gg Qlass of 1931 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Ely Norton Buell Portland Ave., Rochester, N.Y. Robert Burkham, Jr 535 Westiminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Gale Burlingham 206 Rugbv Rd., Syracuse, N.Y. Philip Burnham 536 Roslyn Rd., Kenilworth, 111. David Auguste Burr 34 School St., Andover, Mass. George Frederick Burt, Jr 45 E. 82nd. St., New York, N.Y. Charles William Bush, Jr. ..202 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. Julius Byles Ardsley-on-Hudson, N.Y. William Morris Cairns 746 Ridge St., Newark, N.J. Julian Dutro Cale 12 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. William Radcliffe Cameron 508 Main St., Irwin, Pa. Duncan Brown Campbell 370 Slater Ave., Providence, R.I. Ralph Symser Cannon, Jr R.F.D. 7, York, Pa. Paul Joseph Carey 126 S. 11th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Reginald Shaber Carey 710 Equitable Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Geoffrey Carleton 52 W. 94th St., New York, N.Y. John R. Carnochan 34 Mercer St., Princeton, N.J. Edward Francis Carr 35 Linden Lane, Princeton, N.J. Henry Ashley Carr 1917 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Rene Carrillo, Jr 277 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Theodore Jackson Case 5914 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo. John Steven Casement 610 Humbolt St., Manhattan, Kan. George Chaikin .741 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Newton Chapin, II Schenley Apts., Pittsburgh, Pa. Franklin Whitner Chase 902 Oak Ave., Sanford, Fla. Cornelius Christiancy Box 1445, Daytona Beach, Fla. Charles Evans Claggett 5115 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Ernest Judson Clark, Jr 1043 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. George Milton Clarke, Jr 37 Wall St., New York, N.Y. Albert Henry Clayburgh 290 Broadway, New York, N.Y. Mark Hopkins Clayton 2707 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. John M. Cleary, Jr 1118 Scarritt Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Henry Clifton, Jr 1830 Rittenhouse Sq., Phil a., Pa. John Wakefield Clingerman 409 Arthur Ave., Scottdale, Pa. George Searcy Cochrane 1402 Government St., Mobile, Ala. Caleb Coffin 108 E. 86th St., New York, N.Y. NAME ADDRESS David Hunter Collins 70 Park Ave., Babylon, L.I., N.Y. Robert Lionel Colmore P.O. 1115, San Juan, Porto Rico Franklin Osborn Cooke 24 Lawrence Ave., New Brunswick, N.J. Frank Scott Cooper, Jr 1301 Roanoke St., S.W., Roanoke, Va. Henry Cooper 1115 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Merritt Newton Cootes P.O. Bldg., Richmond, Va. Adolph Gessford Cotton State Hospital, Trenton, N.J. Samuel Thompson Couch 501 Merion St., Denver, Colo. Stewart Dering Coulton 2513 Marlboro Rd., Cleveland, Ohio John Henry Covington, III 2320 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D.C. Maurice Browning Cramer, 140 E. Central Ave., Moorestown, N.J. David Brooke Crane 801 W. Ferry St., Buffalo, N.Y. Joseph Noyes Crary Ill Bloomfield Ave., Hartford, Conn. Thomas Thompson Crenshaw, Jr. 314 Jamaica Ave., Flushing, N.Y. Arthur Masten Crocker 21 E. 40th St., New York, N.Y. Archie Dodge Crockett 23 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Edwin Boykin Cromwell. . . .100 Commerce St., West Point, Miss. Donald Stewart Culver 36 Porter PI., Montclair, N.J. John Edgar Curby 4 Washington Terrace, St. Louis, Mo. Lucien Blanchard Curtis 436 Rochelle Terrace, Pelham Manor, N.Y. Alfred Newton Dalrymple 329 Park Ave., East Orange, N.J. Perry Damerel 234 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Pendleton Darling. . . .2320 Terrace Rd., Des Moines, Iowa Whitney Darrow, Jr 108 E. 81st St., New York, N.Y. Clarence Theodore Daub S. Main St., Mercersburg, Pa. David McClure Davis 1503 Fifth Ave., Laurel, Miss. William Potter Davis, III. .1200 Lincoln Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Adrian Stephen Dawley 31 Green Ave., Lawrenceville, N.J. Richard Holzman Demuth. .600 West End Ave., New York N.Y. William Stirling Dickinson 1518 Astor St., Chicago, III. William Woodbridge Dickinson, Jr... R.F.D. 2, St. Joseph, Mich. 62 tHOE!Ncci§ gj C A Il gr Qlass of 1931 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Thomas Bruce Dickson 5200 Westminster PI., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Barnes Diggs 1208 Cheyenne Ave., Tulsa, Okla. Duncan Calvin Dobson 84 Arundel PI., St. Louis. Mo. Leslie John Dikovics 123 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. William Main Doerflinger 324 Bard Ave., West New Brighton, N.Y. George Bruce Douglas, Jr. 165 Summit Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Brooke Dolan, II Villanova, Pa. Robert Emory Glanville Downey 150 Kilburn Rd., Garden City, N.Y. Seymour Dribben 2 E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. Edward Rush Duer, Jr 157 E. 75th St., New York, N.Y. Ellis Duncan 81 Valley Rd., Louisville, Ky. George Terry Dunlap, Jr 40 W. 55th St., New York, N.Y. Arthur Newcomb Dusenbury. .61 Church St., White Plains, N.Y. John Fitz Eaton 6221 Northwood Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Richard Preston Eckels 1 N. Harrisburg St., Steelton, Pa. Ralph Howard Edson 3822 4th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Duncan Lewis Edwards, Jr Camden, S.C. George John Edwards, III. . .4924 Cedar Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Peter Ehlers 508 W. Mt. Airy Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Lawrence Bogart Elliman, Jr 122 E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. Ludlow Elliman Noroton, Conn. Herbert Kingsbury England 117 W. 5th Ave., Roselle, N.J. Woodruff Jones English. ..440 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. George Livingston Erdman c o Dr. Erdman, 20 Library PI., Princeton, N.J. Richard Evans, II 201 S. William St., Johnstown, N.Y. Raymond Flaccus Evans.. 1129 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Wadsworth Farnum...339 Charlotte St., Asheville, N.C. Calvin Fentress, Jr.... 939 Green Bay Rd., Hubbard Woods, 111. Spencer Ferguson.. 26 Verona Apts., Park Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio William David Ferguson 115 E. Spruce St., Titusville, Pa. Parker Thomas Finch 6240 McPherson Ave., St. Louis, Mo. NAME ADDRESS William H. Fineshriber, Jr. 1916 Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. Leonard Kimball Firestone Harbel Manor, Akron, Ohio Irving Fitzpatrick, Jr... 58 Oakwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Harry Paul Fix 325 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. Charles Lewis Fleming, Jr 141 E. 88th St., New York, N.Y. William Wilson Fleming 130 E. 67th St., New York, N.Y. George Schluderburg Flowers. 21 Dwight St., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Freeman Foote Old Lyme, Conn. Hugh Copeland Forbes, Jr... 5400 Diamond St., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Henry Foster 2307 Willard St., Wilmington, Del. John Kennedy Foster 5500 Dunmoyle St., Pittsburgh, Pi. William Henry Franklin 345 S. Stone Ave., LaGrange, 111. Theodore Frelinghuysen 104 Library PI., Princeton, N.J. Henry Warren Frey 200 E. Delaware PI., Chicago, 111. Frank Livingstone Froment 922 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Philip Wolcott Furst 47 Water St., Lock Haven, Pa. John Planten Gaillard 17 E. 76th St., New York, N.Y. George Henry Gardner Lake Placid, Fla. Herbert Spencer Gardner, Jr. 52 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N.Y. Jack W. Gates, Jr 1254 Vinton Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Herbert Bohner Gengler 50 Short Hill Rd., Forest Hills, L.I., N.Y. Alfred Gawthorp Genung . .1442 Highland Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Ernest Edward George 54 Elm St., Worcester, Mass. Wilbourne Sandford Gibbs 1225 11th St., Huntsville, Tex. Fred Rothwell Gibney, Jr. 279 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. George Dean Gibson 64 Battle Rd., Princeton, N.J. Herbert Martin Giffin 41 S. N. Carolina Ave., Atlantic Citv, N.J. Robert Lee Gill, Jr 11 Club Rd., Roland Park, Md. Walter Hamilton Gillespie, Jr. . . . Wentworth Hall, Exeter, N.H. Donald Gilpatrick 20 Midland Ave., White Plains, N.Y. Fletcher Gilpin 118 North Ave., West, Cranford, N.J. Alfred Robinson Glancy, Jr Hill House, Birmingham, Mich. 63 T jRlNCCT Yg OSAiZQSc Qlass of 1931 — (Qontinued) NAME ADDRESS Philip Lamer Gore 1746 P St., Washington, D.C. Willett Noble Gorham 436 S. Stone Ave., La Grange, 111. Robert Lee Graham 4310 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Frank Sloan Graves 267 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Joseph Lolds Gray 318 Parlewood Ave., Columbus, Ohio Theodore Enno Greeff 161 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. Herbert Seymour Green 214 Pine St., Waterbury, Conn. Edward Clarence Griepenkerl 904 Union Trust Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Robert Foote Griggs, Jr 54 Hillside Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Albert Benjamin Gross 1 Beaufort PI., New Rochelle, N.Y. Joseph Richard Guzzardi Pryn Manor, Larchmont, N.Y. Peter Augustus S. Haase. . . . Pinehurst Camp, Saranac Lake, N.Y. Wilfred Morris Hager 240 Library PI., Princeton, N.J. James Barr Haines 1411 Beaver Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Robert Anderson Hall, Jr 225 74th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Halladay Hillside Rd., Cresskill, N.J. Lucius Felt Hallett, Jr 1396 Wistaria Ave., Portland, Ore. Gilmore Semmes Hamill, III Box 253, Oakland, Md. John Hardie Hammett 196 Lincoln PI., Brooklyn, N.Y. Forest Gains Hamrick, Jr... 114 Fairmount Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Samuel Pollack Harbison Pine Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Henry Camp Harris, Jr 1701 Hays St., Wichita Falls, Tex. William Harris 60 Gorham Ave., Brookline, Mass. Charles Lee Havey 414 E. Gowen Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. John Habberton Hawley 283 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N.J. William Prettyman Hearn, Jr.. 227 S. 42nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Ralph Cyrus Heath R.F.D. 2, Noblesville, Ind. Robert Williams Hedges. . .1225 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Arthur William Heinemann 243 6th Ave., Newark, N.J. Standiford Helm 720 Colfax St., Evanston, III. John Dudley Hemley 2413 Scottwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Theodore Paul Henry 254 State St., Perth Amboy, N.J. Brice H. Hereford Mt. Airy Rd., Groton, N.Y. Werner Edgar Heyd 1528 Rockaway Ave., Lakewood, Ohio Joseph West Hibben 1257 Thoreau Rd., Lakewood, Ohio NAME ADDRESS Henry Gerhard Hilken, II. ..512 Woodlawn Rd., Baltimore, Md. Leo Henry Hirsch, Jr 911 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. William Hitz, Jr 1901 N St., Washington, D.C. Frank Stephen Hoag, Jr 2007 Greenwood, Pueblo, Colo. Stuart Edson Hockenbury. . . .2120 Chestnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. Lon Oats Hocker, Jr 39 Portland Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Charles Major Hodell Grandview Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. Frederic Staples Hoffer, Jr. 99 Outlook Ave., W. Hartford, Conn. Walter Welden Horlacher 224 N. 4th St., Allentown, Pa. Joseph Galway Home E. Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. Charles Norris Houghton 134 E. 36th St., Indianapolis, Ind. John Yeatts Howson 134 Walnut Ave., Wayne, Pa. Paul Thomas Huckin 120 E. Hudson Ave., Englewood, N.J. Nathan Taylor Humphrey 7701 Cresheim Rd., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Harry La Due Hurd 13 Scott St., Utica, N.Y. John Richard Hurley 3400 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Richard Bell Hutchinson Oakwood, Jobstown, N.J. William Pittman Huxley 50 Engle St., Tenafly, N.J. Francis Edwin Hyslop, Jr 100 Potter St., Haddonfield, N.J. Frling Mauritz Indahl.205 W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Pa. Warren Ingersoll Penllyn, Pa. Albert Havens Jackman 210 E. 2nd St., Minneapolis, Minn. Frank Rider Jackson, Jr 84 Vreeland Ave., Paterson, N.J. McMillan Tebbs Jackson 2201 Arch St., Little Rock, Ark. Arnold Jacobwitz 112 Dorchester Rd., Buffalo, N.Y. William Alexander Jameson 1870 Wyoming Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. Walter Dore Jenckes 165 Lloyd Ave., Providence, R.I. Walter Mitchell Jenifer Lock Haven, Md. Henry Edgar Jenkins, Jr 713 Section St., Hannibal, Mo. Barclay Giddings Johnson. . ..1 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. William Buswell Johnson 14 Park PI., Princeton, N.J. Adriens Aristieus Jones, Jr 2400 16th St., Washington, D.C. Robert Moses Jones 15 W. 4th St., Dunkirk, N.Y. 64 tHTXMNccfo .rrrrrrrrr fi r r h- r ' r r r r r r r rrrrrrrrr r O SSAiS3c Qlass of 1931 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Richard Klaholt Juergens 52 Bellevue PI., Chicago, 111. John Warren Kaine 456 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. Walter Thomas Kane 20 Maple St., Princeton, N.J. Harry Leslie Keats, Jr 200 W. 58th St., New York, N.Y. Maurice Fischer Keen 112 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Abram Keery Custer City, Pa. Thurston Lovell Keese 314 Summit Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. William Franklin Keim, Jr 25 Roseville Ave., Newark, N.J. Paul Axtel Kellogg 110 Caroline St., Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Donald Bartholmew Kenyon .Steamboat Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Roswell Kepler, Jr 30 Maplewood Ave., Maplewood, N.J. Hugh Thomson Kerr, Jr 827 Amberson Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Stanley Kimball Wampatuck Rd., Dedham, Mass. Roy Milford Kime 72 Van Houten PI., Belleville, N.J. Robert John Kinney 118 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Philip Kipp 188 Lafayette Ave., Passaic, N.J. Horace Dudley Klein Delaware Weqtworth Sts., St. Paul, Minn. Charles Henry Knapp, Jr 28 E. Preston St., Baltimore, Md. Maurice Acomb Knight, Jr.. . .711 N. Portage Path, Akron, Ohio David Hedges Knowles 25 Essex Rd., Summit, N.J. David Conde Knowlton 675 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. John Ernst Koennecke 947 Teller Ave., New York, N.Y. Edward Christian Kohlsaat, Jr... 777 Bryant Ave., Winnetka, 111. Joseph Leyburn Kramer 155 S. College St., Carlisle, Pa. Karl Holt Kreder 4902 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. Robert David Kreitler 406 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. John Pierce Lambert 16 Claremont Ave., Scarsdale, N.Y. Charles Edgar Lane 262 Argyle Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Samuel Loose Lane 433 S. Prospect St., Hagerstown, Md. Henry Frederick Langenberg 49 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Sampson Lanier 104 Mill St., Cambridge, Md. Palmer Jadwin Lathrop 116 Beekman PI., New York, N.Y. Archer Bassford Laurence. . .720 Arlington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. David Sievert Lavender 840 Milwaukee St., Denver, Colo. Richard Wesley Lawrence, Jr. 2205 Sedgwick Ave., New York, N.Y. Henry Hewitt Lea 921 Eleventh Ave., N., Seattle, Wash. Harry Vernon Lee, Jr 80 Hanover Rd., Mountain Lakes, N.J. Ivy Ledbetter Lee, Jr 4 E. 66th St., New York, N.Y. Alexander Hamilton Leighton Cold Spring, Rosemont, Pa. Parker Leimbach 86 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. Harold Daniel Levi 8 W. 75th St., New York, N.Y. Douglas Gwynne Levick, Jr Bellevue Ave., Montclair, N.J. Oakleigh Thome Lewis 197 Hot Springs, Montecito Valley, Calif. Stephen Henry Lewis 817 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Newell Dwight Lindner Hemstead Ave., Malverne, N.Y. John Carnell Lindsley 242 Hearne Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Charles Joseph Lipscomb Sunset-on-the-Miles, Easton, Md. Donald Richards Livingston cor. Drayton and 49th Sts., Savannah, Ga. Robert Cambridge Livingston 175 Osborne Ave., Lawrence, L.I., N.Y. George Dilworth Lockhart 5601 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Alexander Lofthouse Nassau, Bahamas Joshua Lockewood Logan.... 902 Prospect Ave., Shreveport, La. Lane Lovell Woodland Rd., Madison, N.J. David Bernard Loveman Riverview, Chattanooga, Tenn. George William Low, Jr 46 Park St., Bordentown, N.J. Thomas Lowry 1821 Logan Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. David Lyall 80 Fairmont Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Donald Kyle McAllen 374 South Avenue, Glencoe, III. John Marshall McAnerney North Street, Greenwich, Conn. Gibson McCabe 201 26th St., Jackson Hts., New York, N.Y. Elmanson Avery McCarthy 1031 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Calif. John Edward McCarthy. 1920 Pillsbury Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Joseph Iekes McCormick. . .103 W. Sugar St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio James Vernon McDonough. . .3438 McClure Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Ranald Maclnnes, Jr 128 Broadmead, Princeton, N.J. George Washington McKee 714 N. 6th St., Harrisburg, Pa. 65 tYEjl!UNC£TO y rrr trr r rrrrrrr rrr rrr rr r r EEA E3c Qlass of 1931— NAME ADDRESS Robert Donald Mackinnon, Jr 217 S. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa. William L. McPheeters, Jr. 2893 Berkshire Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio Alexander Robinson McVoy 5148 Westminster Ave., St. Louis, Mo. George Allen McWilliams. . .75 E. Wacker Drive, Chicago, 111. John Pollard McWilliams, II Dwight, 111. Edgar Johnson Mack, II. .809 N. Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Francis Page MacKinney Forest Rd., Essex Fells, N.J. Henry Boas Maguire Flourtown, Pa. James Maltman. Jr 835 Castlewood Ter., Chicago, 111. James Hansbrough Mann 214 Duhring St., Bluefield, W.Va. John Hite Marion 215 N. 13th St., Muskogee, Okla. Charles Markell, Jr 9 E. Preston St., Baltimore, Md. David Greenwood Marvin 131 E. 66th St., New York, N.Y. Pedro Alberto Martinto Apartado, 146, Lima, Peru Frank Myers Mathews R.F.D. 2, Bethlehem, Pa. John Alexander Mathews, Jr. 81 Greenacres Ave., Scarsdale, N.Y. Robert Webster Matlack 201 W. Main St., Morristown, N.J. Ezra Wallace Matthews 313 Berkley Rd., Merion, Pa. John Raymond Meagher 1 Stuart Ave., Mamaroneck, N.Y. Clarence Gardner Meeks, Jr 4 30th St., Woodcliff, N.J. Irving Milton Mendelson. . .90 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. Reynolds Merrill 5502 Winchester Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. Samuel Kimball Merwin 1 Sudbury Rd., Concord, Mass. Richard Anglo Mestres 84 Park Ave., Bronxville, N.Y. Maurice Meyer, Jr 440 Parker St., Newark, N.J. George Milburn 1017 E. Blaine St., Seattle, Wash. Francis Turquand Miles 506 Woodlawn Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. William Smith Miles, Jr 375 Moss Ave., Peoria, 111. Earl Bruce Millar 1205 N. State St., Chicago, 111. Maxwell DuVal Millard 85 Morris Ave., Morristown, N.J. Carroll Miller, Jr 4 Von Lent Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. Edgar William Miller, Jr.... 405 Lippincott Ave., Riverton, N.J. Robert Talbot Miller, III 203 Highfield Rd., Baltimore, Md. (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Richard Bateman Miller 1112 S. Main St., Middletown, Ohio Victor Davis Miller, Jr 135 W. Wash. St., Hagerstown, Md. William Harlowe Miller. . .1151 Evergreen Ave., Plainfield, N.J. William Russell Miller 1752 N. 36th St., E. St. Louis, 111. Alfred Slade Mills 36 Miller Rd., Morristown, N.J. Charles Howard Miner, Jr. 264 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. George Swope Mirick 1809 19th St., Washington, D.C. Arthur Moulton Mitchell, Jr.. .44 Oakland Rd., Maplewood, N.J. Frank Miller Mitchell 2425 Seminole Ave., Detroit, Mich. Robert Drake Mitchell 46 Linden Blvd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Willis Alvin Mitchell 98 Croton Ave., Ossining, N.Y. Oscar Ailing Mockridge 8 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. John Day Moffat 526 Park Ave., E. Orange, N.J. Edwin Janney Moles, Jr.. 2418 Stevens Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. William Richard Moller.,2194 University Ave., New York, N.Y. Arthur Montgomery Ill E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. Robert Browne Moody 6351 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Charles Harbough Moore 630 Grove St., Sewickley, Pa. Clayton White Morehead 4815 Bayard St., Pittsburgh, Pa. B. F. Vail Morford 13 Edenville Rd., Warwick, N.Y. Samuel Denton Morford 13 Edenville Rd., Warwick, N.Y. Russell Clark Morley. ..11 S. Highland St., W. Hartford, Conn. Charles Joseph Moroney 88 Shadyside Ave., Summit, N.J. George Palmer Morrell. . .Normandie Hts. Rd., Morristown, N.J. Theodore Wilson Morris, III 25 E. 86th St., New York, N.Y. Copeland Morton, Jr 10 E. Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. Frank Hazlett Moss, Jr Sunny Hill, Bala, Pa. Worral Frederick Mountain, Jr. .66 Chestnut St., E. Orange, N.J. John Gordon Muir 811 Washington St., Evanston, 111. Charles Edward Arrowsmith Muldaur 65 Parker Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. Charles Randall Murray Bower Hill Rd., Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Clifford Kinnaird Murray. 1409 N. Ohio Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. William L. Muttart 1813 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Seelye Cook Nagel 228 Park Ave., Medina, N.Y. 66 tW2MNccTo r: £iAiMSc Class of 1931- NAME ADDRESS John Pritchard Nash 819 N. 14th St., Manitowoc, Wis. Samuel Nesbitt 282 Maple St., Kingston, Pa. William Kincaid Newman 5376 Wingohocking Hts., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. John Nickerson, III 14 E. 78th St., New York, N.Y. Edwin Mark Norris 76 Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. Paul Douglass Nulle 131 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. Llewellyn Eugene Oakley 19 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. Roderick Silsbee Oakley 19 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. Edward Gardner O ' Brien 9 Davis Ave., White Plains, N.Y. Hubert Francis O ' Brien 179 Prospect St., E. Orange, N.J. Frank James O ' Hara 423 Harrison Ave., Scranton, Pa. Cornelius Olcott, Jr 16 E. Winthrop Rd., Kansas City, Mo. John Ordway Fort Hancock, N.J. Morgan Orr 434 Tremont Ave., Westfield, N.J. Horace Gilbert Orser, Jr 12 E. 48th St., New York, N.Y. Carl Ludwig Otto, Jr Mayfair Ave., Garden City, N.Y. John Norcross Page 231 Warwick Ave., S. Orange, N.J. Robert Meade Parker, II.. 63 Macculloch Ave., Morristown, N.J. James Oliver Pease 400 Canner St., New Haven, Conn. S. Walter Pendergast 107 Paul St., Syracuse, N.Y. Seymour Perkins, Jr 502 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N.J. Charles Alan Phillips 15 Locust St., Carteret, N.J. William Dickson Pierson, Jr. 169 Buckingham St., Waterbury, Conn. Albert Pike, Jr 1823 19th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Thruston Pettus 33 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Henry Cooper Pitney, II 14 Farragut PI., Morristown, N.J. Justus Cressingham Poole 133 Cherry St., Elizabeth, N.J. Wm. Morris Poole 237 E. 48th St., New York, N.Y. Horatio Millington Pope 10 St. Andrews PI., Yonkers, N.Y. Thomas George Popp 2204 Forrest Park Blvd., Fort Wayne, Ind. Davis Reade Post Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey William Potem 238 Temple St., Astoria, L.I., N.Y. George Van Tuyl Powell 1030 37th Ave., N., Seattle, Wash. Laurence Priddy, Jr 1 56 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. —(Continued) NAME ADDRESS James Roger Prior 29 Fisher PL, Trenton, N.J. Samuel Cooper Pullman 4 Fairview PI., New Rochelle, N.Y. John Valleau Rathbone, Jr.. 523 Abbotsford Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Edward Milton Reed, Jr 403 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Pendennis White Reed 249 Reynolds Terrace, Orange, N.J. Prentiss Bishop Reed, Jr 46 Bellevue Ave., Ossining, N.Y. Compton Rees Cedarhurst, L.I., N.Y. Charles Norman Reeves Greenbrook Rd., N. Caldwell, N.J. Weatherly Reinmund 95 Dwight PL, Englewood, N.J. Joseph Percy Remington, Jr. 124 S. Van Pelt St., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Joseph Repka 27 Minnehaha Ave., Hillside, N.J. Davis Rich Richwood, Swanton, Vt. Wm. Eastburn Richardson N. Lincoln Ave., Newtown, Pa. Kenneth John Ridgeway 110 Hilton Ave., Hempstead, L.I., N.Y. Owen Francis Riley 3793 Millsbrae Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Charles Hayward Roberts 117 S. 16th St., Allentown, Pa. Joseph England Roberts, III 201 Westmont Ave., Haddonfield, N.J. Harry Leigh Robinson. .2221 Blaisdell Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. John Walla ce Robinson 916 Grant Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Joseph Andrew Robinson 1110 Collings Ave., W. Collingswood, N.J. Joseph Gibson Robinson. . .5511 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Rogerson 21 E. Main St., Le Roy, N.Y. Simeon Harrison Rollinson, Jr. 93 Northfield Rd., W. Orange, N.J. Henry Latrobe Roosevelt, Jr.... 30 Cours Albert 1, Paris, France Abram John Rose, Jr 1 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. Nelson Peabody Rose 190 S. Drexel Ave., Columbus, Ohio Otto Erich Rosner 6911 Shore Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Donald Garret Ross 26 Fox Meadow Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. George Shotwell Roudebush. .5511 Cabanna Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Henry Page Royster R.F.D. 6, Raleigh, N.C. Richard Henry Rubenstein 121 Willow Rd., Woodmere, L.I., N.Y. 67 tSEEMNCCTON r rrrrrr r rr r rrrrrrrrr r ' f rrrrrrrr r f .O gf iC A - £R gg? Qlass of 1931 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Henry Middleton Rutledge Mercersburg, Pa. Frank Elijah Sagendorph, III 126 S. Landsdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Lloyd Seaman Saltus Loantaka Rd. (P.O. Box 560), Morristown, N.J. Grant Sanger Willow Lake, Fishkill, N.Y. Hamilton Hague Sanger Roland Crest, Ruxton, Md. John Richard Savage 71 Hilton Ave., Garden City, N.J. Robert Hopewell Sayre 21 Lake Ave., Montrose, Pa. Edgar Craig Schenck 2611 E. Manoa Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii Henry Reeb Schaefer 127 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Richard Wells Schneckenburger. . 15 Summit Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Clinton Schofield 755 Carroll PI., Teaneck, N.J. Harry Francis Schroeter, Jr 40 E. 50th St., New York, N.Y. Paul Richard Schumann 293 Park Ave., Youngstown, Ohio George Albert Schwarzenbach 508 Washington St., Cumberland, Md. Paul deB. Scott 420 Hillside PL, S. Orange, N.J. Franklin Augustus Seiberling N. Portage Path, Akron, Ohio Monroe Seiberling 358 Merriman Rd., Akron, Ohio Wm. Gooding Shallcross, Jr. 1271 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Carter Shannon 203 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa. Richard Douglass Shelton 4352 Westminster, St. Louis, Mo. George Howell Shields, III. ..6459 Wydown Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Henry Francis Shoemaker, II 21 W. 53rd St., New York, N.Y. Henry Herbert Shultz 128 E. 10th St., New York, N.Y. John Paul Sias 134 Lincoln Ave., Avon-by-the-Sea, N.J. Franklin Siedler. Orchard Rd., Haverford, Pa. Gordon Rutledge Silber 4 Orchard PL, Rochelle Pk., New Rochelle, N.Y. Wellington Hope Simpson c o Mrs. J. A. Toppin, Belle Haven, Greenwich, Conn. Joseph Pyle Sinclair 2904 Market St., Wilmington, Del. Arthur Harold Singer. . .81 Von Wagenen Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Thomas J. Skillman, Jr 124 St. George Rd., Ardmore, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Hugh Walter Sloan Province Line Rd., Princeton, N.J. Joseph Curtis Sloan, Jr.. 1050 S. Madison Ave., Pasadena, Calif. Coventry Waddell Smith 642 Grove St., Sewickley, Pa. Gordon Knight Smith 1136 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, Calif. Harold Byron Smith 1350 N. State St., Chicago, 111. Robert Jerome Smith 264 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N.Y. Wallace Howard Smith.. 1005 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. Thomas Carlisle Snively 34 S. Church St., Waynesboro, Pa. Charles Randolph Snowden Chetwynd, Rosemont, Pa. Thomas Spackman, II 1338 Lovering Ave., Wilmington, Del. John Robins Speer 6748 Thomas Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Albert Garner Spinks Fort Amadon, Canal Zone Wm. Halloway Stafford, Jr. 3111 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind. David Christie Stagg, Jr 105 Hillcrest Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Albert Wm. Staub, Jr 75 Beverley Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Alfred Stengel, Jr 1728 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Bentley Bertram Stenger 3457 Cornell PI., Clifton, Cincinnati, Ohio John George Stephenson, III 1314 Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sidney M. Sternbach, Jr 12 E. 78th St., New York, N.Y. Charles Henry Stevens 107 Beech St., E. Orange, N.J. Edwin Pendleton Stevens 66 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. Robert Alston Stevenson, Jr 57 High St., Yonkers, N.Y. Wayne Oliver Stoughton 58 S. Irving St., Ridgewood, N.J. Donald Strachan 338 W. Seymour St., Philadelphia, Pa. Albert Frederic Strasburger, Jr. 929 Albermarle Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. George Herman Stueck, Jr. .47 E. Spring Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Samuel N. Summer, Jr 846 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio Edward Gair Sweeney 815 Park Ave, New York, N.Y. Charles Farrand Taplin, Jr. 13485 N. Park Blvd. Cleveland, Ohio William Lea Taylor 2021 S. Parkway E., Memphis, Tenn. Walter Frederick Thomas 6 Palisade Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. 68 tvEIMHclTo : r rrrrrri r rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr rrrrrrr rr hrrrrrr rr r rrrrrrr EEZAiSUc Qlass of 1931 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Win. Meredith Thompson 222 Lancaster St.., Albany, N.Y. Frank Leigh Thompson, III 6828 Milton St., Stenton, Pa. Wm. Dubois Thorne Buckeleu Ave., Jamesburg, N.J. Oliver Monter Thurman 6 Hawthorne PI., Summit, N.J. Edmund Cathcart Tier 151 W. 3rd St., Mt. Carmel, Pa. Horace Robert Toy 1175 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joseph Beachem Tredennick 237 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Irvin Wilson Truby 350 W. 55th St., New York, N.Y. Thomas Corrigan Tschundy. .1024 W. 54th St., Kansas City, Mo. Wm. Allen Turner 207 Grammercy PI., Atlantic City, N.J. Carrington Cabell Tutwiler, Jr. 9000 Crefeld St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Alfred Uihlein, Jr 840 Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wis. Ross Bond Updegraff 384 Elmira Ave., Elizabeth, N.J.. Harry A. Volz, Jr 1414 4th St., Louisville, Ky. Gerald Ray Van Doren 2430 Lincolnwood Dr., Evanston, 111. Stewart Samuel Veale 303 E. Chapel St., Hazleton, Pa. William P. Vogel, Jr Hotel Astor, New York, N.Y. Frederick Walter Wagner, Jr.. . .206 Laurens St., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Fraser Dixon Wainwright W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Alexander Minty Waldron 1701 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Foy Culpepper Waldron 5367 Pershing Ave., S. Louis, Mo. Albert Evans Walker Walker Hts., Elizabeth, N.J. Lawrence Colin Ward, Jr.. .569 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. William Douglas Ward, Jr 20 Grove PI., Rochester, N.Y. John Davidson Ware R.F.D. 55, Springdale, Conn. David George Washabaugh 253 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa. David Milne Watt, III 477 William St., E. Orange, N.J. Sydney Peyser Waud 227 E. Delaware PI., Chicago, 111. James Webb, Jr 5290 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Wm. Delano Webb 12 Irving PI., Summit, N.J. Bcnj amin A. Weed Noroton Heights, Conn. Edwin A. Weed Ill W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Jerome Bell Weinstein 247 Wyncote Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Cary Nelson Weisiger, III 823 Hinman Ave., Evanston, 111. Frederick Martin Weiss 74 S. Munn Ave., E. Orange, N.J. Wm. Heisler Wells 101 Farnsworth Ave., Bordentown, N.J. Charles Valentine Weston 277 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. William Wettach 5337 Walnut St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Hathorn Wheeler, Jr.. . .32 Godfrey Rd., Montclair, N.J. Mayland Milbank Wheeler 365 Hillside PI., S. Orange, N.J. John Branbon Wheery 323 Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. Volkert Sherwood Whitbeck 363 Allen St., Hudson, N.Y. Charles Baldwin White 17 Fernwood Rd., Summit, N.J. Ferdinand Roebling White Hill Top, Princeton, N.J. Robert Franklin White 3225 Bell Ave., Bayside, L.I., N.Y. Aaron Pennington Whitehead 1070 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Robert Van Cleve Whitehead, Jr. 20 Perdicaris PI., Trenton, N.J. George Frederic Whitney 8005 Navahoe Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. John Colman Whitwell 1781 Lanier PI., N.W., Washington, D.C. Douglas Britton Wicoff Plainsboro, N.J. Richard Eman Wilson 70 Croton Ave., Ossining, N.Y. Cooper David Winn, Jr 293 Glenn Ave., Port Chester, N.Y. John Miller Winterbotham 1208 Avenue H, Galveston, Tex. Albert Blakeslee Wolfe 1360 Market St., Parkersburgh, W.Va. John Wintringer Wood 317 Park St., Morgantown, W.Va. Frank Kirk Woodfin Christiana, Tenn. Samuel Sydney Woody, Jr... 4000 N. Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Jacob Wortendyke 32 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N.J. John Wister Wurts 926 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Reginald Charles Wyatt 839 W. End Ave., New York, N.Y. Leonard Augustus Yerkes, Jr. 1131 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Carl Nacher Zellner 207 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. James Daniel Zook c o Mrs. John S. Keith, 67 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 69 ygj folNCEf OJy S EA ggg gTP RINC ETo SSAZ2E2r C lass Officers, 1932 JUNIOR YEAR Charles Edward Scarlett, Jr President Donald Houghton Hooker . . Vice-President Edwin Augustus McAlpin . Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Langdon Lea, Jr President Charles Edward Scarlett, Jr. . . Vice-President Edwin Augustus McAlpin . Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Langdon Lea, Jr. Charles Edward Scarlett, Jr. Edwin Augustus McAlpin . . . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer 72 gT RINCE fQ : r rrrrrrrrr r srr rrirrrrrrr t rrrrrrrr r r 1 g C-A- Rg g Class of 1932 NAME ADDRESS George Bliss Agnew, Jr 22 William St., New York, N.Y. William Michael Aicher 8770 95th St., Woodhaven, N.Y. Chalmers Whitfield Alexander. 927 Poplar Blvd., Jackson, Miss. Francis Olcott Allen, IV 2216 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Southworth Allen, Jr 25 Broad St., New York, N.Y. Arthur Moody Alvord, Jr. 240 Hamilton Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. Walker Breckinridge Armstrong Llewellyn Park, W. Orange, N. J. Joseph Ballard Atherton 2234 Kamehameha Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii Harry Thomas Atkins 2207 Upland PL, Cincinnati, Ohio David Lee Austin 17 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Richard Charles Bachman 959 E. State St., Sharon, Pa. Donald Everett Baier 1237 Fillmore St., Philadelphia, Pa. Rea Alden Baker 3740 Walnut St., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Quincy Baker, Jr 1 Sheridan Rd., Coshocton, Ohio Webster Clay Ball Garland Bldg., Chicago, 111. William Heath Bannard 150 E. 72nd St., New York, N.Y. William Wyatt Barber, Jr.. . .St. Mark ' s School, Southboro, Mass. Gordon Barbour P.O. Box 1990, Paterson, N.J. Edward Ware Barrett. .. .4227 Altamont Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Charles Edward Bell P.O. Box 602, Savannah, Ga. Nelson McKenzie Bell 196 Fairview Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Paul Eugene Bender 145 W. 58th St., New York, N.Y. Edward Hartshorne Bennett Middletown, N.J. Charles Francis Bergh Hazelhurst Ave. and Baird Rd., Merion, Pa. Edward Irwin Berry, Jr.. 29 E. Rogers Ave., Merchantville, N.J. Robert Alceid Bessire 1564 Cherokee Rd., Louisville, Ky. Roger Hopkins Bettys 2 Trafalgar St., Rochester, N.Y. John Randolph Beverley Ancon, Canal Zone Abraham Strickle Bickham, Jr. 226 N. Robert Blvd., Dayton, Ohio Paul Edward Bird Amesbury, Mass. NAME ADDRESS Henry Curtis Blackiston, Jr 44 W. 77th St., New York, N.Y. Frank Demenieu Blackistone 317 Rittenhouse St., N.W., Washington, D.C. William Bayard Blackwell. .981 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Albert Gallatin Blair, III... 2049 Scottwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Albert George Blanke, Jr.... 4954 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis., Mo. William Watt Blanton Box 1493, Abilene, Tex. David Robinson Blossom 266 Henry St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Lee Landis Blyler 158 W. Greenwich St., Reading, Pa. Kenneth Mason Boffey 116 Prospect St., E. Orange, N.J. George Washington Bogar, Jr. 12 North Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. Alexander Bonnyman, Jr Kingston Pike, Knoxville, Tenn. Frank Knight Bowman, Jr 569 Belmont St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Edward John Boyd, Jr 264 Decatur St., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Coleman Boyd, Jr 6310 McPherson Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Wright Boyd, Jr 320 W. 245th St., New York, N.Y. Delano King Boynton Marshallton, Del. Paul LeCIair Brand, Jr 317 W. 95th St., New York, N.Y. Carl Frederick Brauer c o Dr. B. W. Baker, Laconia, N.H. James Henry Breasted, Jr. Oriental Institute, Univ. of Chicago, Chicago, 111. Alan Ryder Breed 812 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joseph Howes Bridge 110 Drury Lane, Troy, Ohio Stanley Bright, Jr.... 8836 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Dunham Brooks 802 Boyle Bldg., Little Rock, Ark. Dorsey Washington Brown. 53 U.S. Trust Bldg., Louisville, Ky. George Washington Brown, III Alden Park Manor, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Stephens Porter Brown 320 Jefferson St., Brookville, Pa. Thomas Mitchell Brown 720 Meixell St., Easton, Pa. Walworth Brown 16 W. Baltimore St., Kensington, Md. Richard Wynn Bruere 946 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N.J. George Marvel Buckingham, Jr 25 5th Ave., New York, N.Y. George Buermann 299 Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. 73 tvEEEiNCEfo EEAi£b32? Qlass of 1932 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Charles Walter Burroughs Bulkley 65 Midland Ave., Arlington, N.J. Stevenson Burke 11125 Magnolia Dr., Cleveland, Ohio James Holden Burnett 649 Ridge St., Newark, N.J. Howard Maurice Busick. . .3805 Greenway Ave., Baltimore, Md. Joseph Anthony Campagna 551 5th Ave., New York, N.Y. John Campbell, Jr 106 Walnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. Henry Mathews Canby, Jr Greenville, Del. Francis Forfar Carpenter. . .38 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. Ashley Bancroft Carrick 103 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Richard Annesley Cartmell Newville, Pa. Williston Benedict Case.. 69 S. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Edward Burns Caulkins, Jr. Hendrie Lane, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Johnston Pennypacker Caveny. . .208 S. 12th St., Philadelphia, Pa. George Albert Chadwick, Jr Washington Grove, Md. William Harrison Chaffer 395 Swarthmore Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. James Gardiner Chalmers Glen Head, Long Island, N.Y. William Kennedy Chapman... 68 S. Linwood Ave., Crafton, Pa. Eugene Calvert Cheston 102 W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Milford White Childs 239 W. Center St., Medina, N.Y. Thomas West Claggett, Jr. 706 First Natl. Bank Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Morton Gill Clark 15 Broad St., New York, N.Y. Richard Vernon Clark, Jr. 5234 Westminster Ave., St. Louis, Mo. William Charles Clark 245 Westchester Ave., Mount Vernon, N.Y. Charles Eugene Clift, II 101 West River, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Charles Baker Clotworthy, Jr. 926 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Henry Jessup Cochran, Jr.... 1341 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Samuel Cochran, Jr Lawrenceville, N.J. George Vernon Coe, Jr 760 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. NAME ADDRESS David deForest Colbron East Ave., New Canaan, Conn. Martin John Condon, III .. .American Snuff Co., Memphis, Tenn. Byron Edward Conklin 570 Springfield Ave., E. Orange, N.J. Ernest Vincent Connelly, Jr. Lord Kitchener Rd., New Rochelle, N.Y. Frederic Mason Cook, Jr 135 Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. Henry Wireman Cook, Jr 410 Clifton St., Minneapolis, Minn. Thomas Poultney Cook Withington Farm, Kingston, N.J. James Negley Cooke, Fidelity Title Trust Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Justus Henry Cooley 324 Dunellen Ave., Dunellen, N.J. Robert Grant Cooper 202 Beaver Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Ambrose Cort, Jr 29 Lafayette PI., Woodmere, L.I., N.Y. Jack Millender Cotton 1880 S.W. 9th St., Miami, Fla. Charles Monroe Council 223 Lee St., Americus, Ga. William Harrison Crane.. 2427 Fairfield Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind. John Wilkins Robinson Creighton 390 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N.J. Robert Woolfolk Crutclifield Beaver Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Robert Gordon Currie 106 Harrison St., East Orange, N.J. Donald McBurney Curtis.. 150 Newtonville Ave., Newton, Mass. Gilbert Warren Daane.215 Norwood Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Richard Weil Dammann. . .271 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. David Turner Dana, Jr Hubbard St., Lenox, Mass. Marshall Murat Halstead Dana Old Indian Hill Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio Richard Anderson Dana. Second Nat ' l. Bank, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. George Victor Davis 3 Brentmoor Park, St. Louis, Mo. Edward Kennedy Davison. 1237 Heberton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Howard Patterson Dawson. Patterson Heights, Beaver Falls, Pa. Frank Randolph Decker Sea Cliff Ave., Sea Cliff, N.Y. Robert Frederic deCoppet 897 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Burr DeGraw 207 Washington Ave., Belleville, N.J. Joseph Livingston Delafield.... 92 Stockton St., Princeton, N.J. Hasket Derby 1 Westcott Rd., Princeton, N.J. Wagner Mahlon Dickerson Grange Ave., Red Bank, N.J. Meredith Moore Dickinson 46 East 73rd St., New York, N.Y. 74 tffi-EBiNccfg v} jacZM ESc Qlass of 1932 — (Qontinned) NAME ADDRESS Henry Havelock Dickson 290 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Frederick Yothers Dietrick 101 North Front St., Milton, Pa. William Sherrod Dilworth.317 First Ave., S.W., Ardmore, Okla. Francis Henry Disbrow. . .533 East Argonne Dr., Kirkwood, Mo. Henry Marvin Dodge 2233 Collingwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio James C. Donnell, II 1009 South Main St., Findlay, Ohio George Robert Donner Livingston Ave., Livingston, N.J. Frederick William Doolittle, Jr. 79 Brompton Rd., Garden City, N.Y. Edgar Smith Downing Millbrook, N.Y. William Wallace Drewry, Jr. 229 Ridgewood Rd., S. Orange, N.J. Norman Walter Drey 42 West 58th St., New York, N.Y. Robert Dunning Dripps, Jr. .5906 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. John Sellers DuBois 121 E. 60th St., New York, N.Y. Stanley Harris Duffield 231 Earl St., Rochester, N.Y. George William Duffus, Jr 835 Enfield St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Arthur Butler Dugan 521 High St., Aberdeen, Miss. Frederick Geller Duncan. 190 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. Charles Barclay Dunham 937 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N.J. Harry Hickenlooper Dunham... 304 Vernon PI., Cincinnati, Ohio Walter Bruce Dunn 29 Magnolia Ave., Larchmont, N.Y. Hubert Strange Dunning. . .264 Highland Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. David Du Vivier 1150 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Richard Douglas Dyer 130 E. 57th St., New York, N.Y. Paul Hamilton Earle, Jr.... 400 Cotton Ave., Birmingham, Ala. Maitland Armstrong Edey 1100 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joseph Tappen Edgar 343 Webster Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Beverlv Curtis Diggs Edwards 432 West Tenth St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Harold Sydney Edwards, Jr 300 Summer St., Boston, Mass. Everett Church Ekings 16 Center St., Chatham, N.J. Bart Applegate Ellis Summit Ave., Island Heights, N.J. James Wallace Ely 344 Barrington St., Rochester, N.Y. Thomas Mercer Emory 1 Franklin Place, Morristown, N.J. Amos Eno Saugatuck, Conn. Daniel Webster Evans 550 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. James Dwight Evans Orchard Knoll, Birmingham, Mich. Royal S. Evans, Jr 112 Buckingham Rd., Yonkers, N.Y. William Ward Evans... 65 Overlook Circle, New Rochelle, N.Y. Robert Gordon Fairburn Morristown, N.J. William Armstrong Fairburn, Jr Morristown, N.J. Hutchinson Kay Fairman 501 West Chelten Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Kroell Farnham 329 Park Ave., Newark, N.J. Walter Melville Feldgoise 4424 Old York Road, Philadelphia, Pa. William Harris Fellowes 3122 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. Edward Henry Fennel!, Jr.. Quaker Ridge, New Rochelle, N.Y. John William Ferguson, Jr Old Gulph Rd., Narberth, Pa. Thomas Adamson Fernley, Jr. 225 W. Tulpehocken St., Philadelphia, Pa. Jose Vicente Ferrer Hotel Ansonia, 74th and Broadway, New York, N.Y. George Smith Fichtel..: 119 Syracuse St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Hanna Findley 5602 Lincoln Blvd., Omaha, Nebr. Hubert Frederick Fisher, Jr. House Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. Asa Francis Fisk 105 Warwick Road, West Newton, Mass. Robert Julian Fletcher 5488 Everett Ave., Chicago, III. Gilbert Cadwallader Fonda.... 246 Fuller Terrace, Orange, N.J. James Frederick Foothorap 3206 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. Donald Charles Forbes 68 William St., New York, N.Y. Lawrence Mitchell Forster 119-51 Metropolitan Ave., Kew Gardens, N.Y. David Groendyke Foster. . .932 Cedarbrook Rd., Plainfield, N.J. Malcolm Ottenberg Foster 850 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joseph Paul Free Haslet Ave., Princeton, N.J. Charles Yoe Freeman, Jr.. . .1450 N. Dearborn Ave., Chicago, 111. Eldridge Johnson Freeman. 607 Chester Ave., Moorestown, N.J. William Denny Freeston 64 Treacy Ave., Newark, N.J. George Griswold Frelinghuysen. 104 Library PI., Princeton, N.J. 75 tgg_ P NC ETO f: rr rrrrrrrrrr firr rnrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r f £2 5e3SAiZ[b2c Class of 1 932- NAME ADDRESS Frederick William Frost 419 E. 57th St., New York, N.Y. Morton Allan Harrison Fry 262 N. Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Mortimer Bartine Fuller, Jr... 640 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. Robert Dunlap Fulton 2850 Espy Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walter Hamer Gahagan 231 Lincoln PI., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Taylor Galey 340 East Third St., Beaver, Pa. Nathaniel Purdy Gardner, Jr. 47 S. Parkway, East Orange, N.J. Dudley Hoare Garland Bay Ave., Douglaston, L.I., N.Y. Robert Franklin Garrettson, Jr. East Coolspring Ave., Michigan City, Ind. Eward Dimmick Gasson R.F.D. No. 3, Alexandria, Va. Christian Martin Gebhardt, Jr. 3801 Sedgwick Ave., New York, N.Y. Kenneth Wilfred Gemmill Hartsville, Pa. Arthur Gengler 50 Short Hill Rd., Forest Hills, L.I., N.Y. William Foote Gibby Mommouth Title Co., Freehold, N.J. William Epperson Gilmore. . . .272 W. Main St., Uniontown, Pa. Richard Mason Goddard, Jr. 215 Fernwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. Thomas Cadvvallader Goldsborough 5814 Walnut St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William West Goldsborough, Jr. 5814 Walnut St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Arthur Morton Good.. 1178 Parkwood Blvd., Schenectady, N.Y. Willard Carter Goodpasture 7234 Jeffrey Ave., Chicago, 111. Edwin Tyson Goodridge 660 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Charles Frederick Goodsole 102 Pu tnam St., Buffalo, N.Y. John Kyle Gordon, Jr 253 N. Main St., Chambersburg, Pa. George Danforth Gorin 1129 Cardinal Dr., Louisville, Ky. William Charles Dustin Grannis.112 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. Leslie Jackson Gray, Jr Fenway Hall, Cleveland, Ohio Louis Craig Green. .Harrisburg State Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa. Robert Stafford Green 1105 Jefferson St., Mexico, Mo. William Amos Grier 16 Park Ave., Baldwin, L.I., N.Y. ■ (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Robert Leon Grosjean 288 Avenue de Tervueren, Brussels, Belgium John Earl Groth, Jr 135 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. George Hammond Gurley. .3714 Belleview St., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Sutliff Hackett Riverdale Country School, New York, N.Y. Frank Joseph Hague, Jr 2600 Boulevard, Jersey City, N.J. Andrew Douglass Hall 142 Franklin PL, Flushing, N.Y. Richard Montgomery Hall 5101 Montview Blvd., Denver, Colo. Spencer Gilbert Hall 1061 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. William Lyman Hall 58 Milford Ave., Newark, N.J. Donald Huthinson Halsey. . . .1406 Seventh St., New Orleans, La. Charles Stuart Hamilton, Jr 241 W. Maple St., Lombard, 111. Ben Hollis Hand 110 Hand Ave., Pelham, Ga. Hugh Wadsworth Handsfield 71 North Village Ave., Rockville Center, N.Y. Charles Ashley Hardy, Jr Chatham, Mass. John Huntoon Harmon, Jr. 209 Laurel Ave.. Highland Park, 111. John Beattie Harrington 584 High St., Newark, N.J. Edward Webb Harrison 635 W. 56th St., Kansas City, Mo. Francis Fisher Hart Ambler, Pa. John Joseph Hart, Jr 518 Emerson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Roy Crane Havens 701 Trenton Ave., Point Pleasant, N.J. John Hawes, Jr 64 Overlook Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Harold Hawkey 236 Christopher St., Montclair, N.J. Charles Bart Hawley 242 Greendale Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Madison Haden Haythe. . .Mount Pleasant Farm, Strasburg, Va. Curtis Franklin Heath 25 Fisher PI., Trenton, N.J . Lars Hedstrom Four Winds Farm, Williamsville, N.Y. Joseph Charles Heinlein, Jr Bridgeport, Ohio Percy Albert Hemming 477 Doremus Ave., Glen Rock, N.J. Charles Packard Henderson. . .205 Park Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Thomas Hughlett Henry, Jr Easton, Md. 76 vg X RINCE l QN Urr rrrrrr trrP ur rf rrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrr r r i2 SSArZOSg Qlass of 1932 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Richard Pinkerton Heppner 3215 Johnson Ave., New York, N.Y. Jacob Hawley Herzog 8 Eileen St., Albany, N.Y. Anderson Fowles Hewitt 58 E. 78th St., New York, N.Y. Weimer Kerr Hicks 14 Clifton Ave., Toms River, N.J. Gilbert Pennypacker High York Rd. Washington Lane, Jenkintown, Pa. John Hartwell Hillman, III 5045 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Erwin Rumsey Hilts 14 Hortense PI., St. Louis, Mo. Joel Reed Hinkel 731 Weiser St., Reading, Pa. John Easton Hobart 2512 Pacific Ave., San Francisco, Cal. Myron Downey Hockenbury. .2120 Chestnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. Joseph Hodgson, Jr 17 Rosa Park, New Orleans, La. Boughton Curtis Hogan 21 E. 90th St., New York, N.Y. Dwight Wheeler Hollenbeck 234 Arlington Ave., Springfield, Ohio John Franklin Hollenbeck. 234 Arlington Ave., Springfield, Ohio James Richmond Holmes 202 S. Union St., Olean, N.Y. Eugene Vanderpool Homans 156 Hamilton Ave., Englewood, N.J. Donald Houghton Hooker Upland, St. George ' s Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Ralph Townsend Hopper... 194 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. William Douglass Houser 334 Market St., Troy, Ohio Peyton Hoye Houston 290 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Rutledge William Howard 282 Montgomery St., Jersey City, N.J. John C. Hume Gould Hall, Northfield Seminary, Northfield, Mass. Frank Jone Humphrey, Jr. ...141 Heights Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Hillard Bell Huntington 230 S. River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. John Webster Perit Huntington 292 S. Columbia Ave., Columbus, Ohio Samuel Harvey lams, Jr Library PI., Princeton, N.J. Edwin Charles Ihrig 261 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N.Y. David King Irwin, Jr Ridge Terrace, Short Hills, N.J. NAME ADDRESS William Winsor Irwin... 534 Fountain St., Grand Rapids, Mich. John Gillespie Jackson, Jr 161 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. William Absalom Jackson Bay View Hotel, Biloxi, Miss. Frank Washington Jarvis, Jr 40 Linden PI., Sewickley, Pa. Charles Frank Johnson, Jr Kis-Lyn, Pa. Joel Benjamin Johnson 14 Park PI., Princeton, N.J. Thomas Gayle Johnston Southern Pines, N.C. Robert LeGrand Johnstone, Jr. 100 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Gordon Arthur Kagen 1010 Penn St., Reading, Pa. Stephen Allan Kaufman 504 W. 110th St., New York, N.Y. William Edward Kegel 1956 Boston Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Harry Brinker Keller 125 S. Lexington Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederick Brainerd Kellogg. . .25 Colles Ave., Morristown, N.J. John Gardner Kellogg 117 E. 17th St., New York, N.Y. Henry Moore Kennedy 25 Atterbury Ave., Trenton, N.J. Arthur Dwelly Keown Wilkinsonville, Mass. William Barron Kerkam, Jr. 2720 35th PI., N.W., Washington, D.C. James Archbald Kerr 235 Cedar St., Englewood, N.J. Robert Wilson Kessler 9 St. Asaph Rd., Bala, Pa. John Douglas Kilpatrick, Jr. 3716 Military Rd., Washington, D.C. Edwin Lackard Kimble 17 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J. Elmer Lincoln Kincaid, Jr. Hotel Clarendon, Daytona Beach, Fla. Philip King, Jr 20th and Kalorama Rd., Washington, D.C. Henry Augustus Kingsbury 80 Plymouth St., Montclair, N.J. William Charles Kirk, Jr 49 Claremont Ave., New York, N.Y. Richard Wolcott Knapp 209 Lincoln Pk. Dr., Syracuse, N.Y. James Ashcraft Knipe 215 Harvey St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Henrv Koch, Jr 105 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Eric Koche ' r 434 W. 120th St., New York, N.Y. Richard Henry Kuhlke 166 Casterlon Ave., Akron, Ohio Milton Dana Edward LaBau 145 Monte Vista PI., Ridgewood, N.J. 77 tig TR- ' NCET rgy r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrt r rifijrr rrirrrrrrr rr JJirr rM rrrr rr r tr JilL f f rrrr rrrr r r j ftC ' A ' ir zr Qlass of 1932 — (Qontinued) NAME ADDRESS Gordon Reid Lacy 99 Main St., Cuba, N.Y. William Laimbeer 264 Stewart Ave., Garden City, N.Y. Edward Chauncey Hinman Lammers 2255 Orrington Ave., Evanston, 111. William Henry Lander, Jr 716 W. 10th St., Erie, Pa. Charles Wesley Lanning. . .515 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. Robert Ludlow Lansden 614 Commercial Ave., Cairo, 111. Brooks Spargur Larkin 615 N. High St., Hillsboro, Ohio Olai Ferdinand Larsen, Jr Box 355, Budd Lake, N.J. Hughart Rea Laughlin 104 Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Eugene Lamgdon Laws 75 E. 55th St., New York, N.Y. Langdon Lea, Jr Wynnewood Ave., Wynnewood, Pa. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Jr. ...c o Navy Dept., Washington, D.C. Hudson Bardon Lemkau 287 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Andrew Duvall Lemon Florence Courts, Washington, D.C. Frederick Lenning, Jr Andalusia, Pa. Frederick Norton Leonard Morris Plains, N.J. Rudolf Werner Lenthauser. . .78 Courter Ave., Maplewood, N.J. Scott Leighton Libby, Jr East Williston, N.Y. William Frederick Lipp 177 Anderson PI., Buffalo, N.Y. Job Herbert Lippincott, Jr Lakeview Ave., Short Hills, N.J. Walter Heulings Lippincott, Jr Wynnewood, Pa. John Robert Loeb 1201 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Arthur Loewenheim. . .225 W. 86th St., New York, N.Y. Jere Williams Lord, Jr 1011 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Screven Lorillard 149 Broadway, New York, N.Y. Robert MacLure Love 277 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Edmund De Long Lucas, Jr 214 16th Ave., Columbus, Ohio Edgar Merryman Lucas 14 Edgerole Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Robert Edward Luce 43 Russell Park, Quincy, Mass. Eugene John Luippold, Jr. 85 Columbia Terrace, Weehawken, N.J. Frederick Kennedy Lundy, Jr.. 331 High St., Williamsport, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Edwin Augustus McAlpin, III 120 Madison Ave., Madison, N.J. Malcolm Evans McAlpin. . . .69 Madison Ave., Morristown, N.J. James Everett McAshan 419 Lovett Blvd., Houston, Tex. William Kaye McCampbell 960 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Donald Francis McCarthy. . .104 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J. William Henry McClave 430 Madison Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Samuel Copp McCluney, Jr 418 Olive St., St. Louis, Mo. William Bayard McCoy 21 Portsmouth Terrace, Rochester, N.Y. Robert Paxton McCulIoch. .4394 Westminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. Albert Byrnes MacDonald 149 Broadway, New York, N.Y. John Norris MacDonald 2614 Genesee St., Utica, N.Y. William Foxal MacEIree 11 S. High St., West Chester, Pa. Francis Salisbury Mcllhenny, Jr. 8765 Montgomery Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Robert Murdo Mclver 2037 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, Ariz. George Douglas MacLatchie 229 Charlotte St., Pottstown, Pa. James Edmiston McLean... 78 West King St., Shippensburg, Pa. David Strong McMillan Mayfield Rd., Gates Mills, Ohio Donald McCormick McNamara 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. Richard Douglas MacNamee 32 Vandeventer Ave., Princeton, N.J. Robert Stuart Macdonald.300 London St., Petersboro, Ont., Can. James Merrill Macfarland. . .95 Ball Rd., Mountain Lakes, N.J. Horace Alexander Mackie. . . .3504 Baring St., Philadelphia, Pa. Josiah Macy, Jr 204 South St., Morristown, N.J. Alexander Scott Maltman.835 Castlewood Terrace, Chicago, III. Victor George Manych 519 E. 76th St., New York, N.Y. Alexander Andrews Marks. . .525 S. Perry St., Montgomery, Ala. Oscar Bruno Marx, Jr.... 465 East Garden Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Charles Richard Mason.... 41 Crescent Ave., Staten Island, N.Y. Robert Stuart Mathews 49 W. 52nd St., New York, N.Y. Sydney Mathews 22 E. 36th St., New York, N.Y. 78 tSOJUNCETOAv: rrrrrr rrrr 43 g VC A Rg Qlass of 1932 — (Qontinued) NAME ADDRESS George Fleming Medill, Jr 815 N. 7th St., Cambridge, Ohio David Palmer Meese 811 Hinman Ave., Evanston, 111. Robert DeWitt Clinton Meeker. . .17 E. 96th St., New York, N.Y. William Larimer Mellon, Jr 5360 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edwin Rich Metcalf 70 South St., Auburn, N.Y. Frank Dana Miller 42 Beard Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Francis Mark Miller 136 N. Washington St., DuQuoin, 111. Henry Clay Miller, Jr 1423 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. John Keeling Mills, Jr Byram Shore, Port Chester, N.Y. Paul Ross Minthorne 408 Bird Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. James R. Mitchell 85 8th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Richard Henry Mitchell, Jr. 1925 Grand Concourse, New York, N.Y. George Palmer Moffat, Jr 45 John St., New York, N.Y. Henry Kelker Moffitt 200 Pine St., Harrisburg, Pa. Malcolm Logan Monroe 1424 Louisiana Ave., New Orleans, La. Lewis Ferry Moody, Jr. 408 West Chelten Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. John Lockwood Moore 45 Hickory Dr., Maplewood, N.J. Robert Augustus Moosmann 911 Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Hugh Blake Moran 342 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Jay Elwell Morehouse, Jr. 38 Arleigh Rd., Great Neck, L.I., N.Y. William Buck Morgan, III 431 East Willow Grove Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. William Hannis Morris.. 1532 Delaware Ave., Wyomissing, Pa. Joseph Nicholas Morrison. 1345 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Gerald Griffin Morse 7 Craigie Circle, Cambridge, Mass. Herbert Russell Morss, Jr. ...101 Seminary Ave., Rahway, N.J. Harvey Ward Mortimer 67 Brookfleld Rd., Upper Montclair, N.J. David Paul Morton 224 32nd St., WoodcIiff-on-Hudson, NJ. Garret Mott, Jr 17 Wayside Lane, Scarsdale, N.Y. Charles Waldorf Mullery Glen Iris, North St. Paul, Minn. NAME ADDRESS George Scott Murphy 115 E. 51st St., Minneapolis, Minn. Archibald Gordon Murray, Jr 56 Pine St., New York, N.Y. William Walter Mussmann. . .3362 Boulevard, Jersey City, N.J. Philip Daniel Myers 30 South Stenton PI., Atlantic City, N.J. Stephen Krauss Myers 114 E. 46th St., Savannah, Ga. Frederick William Nash, Jr. 36 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. John Francis Neary, Jr 55 E. 86th St., New York, N.Y. Henry Edward Nicholson 1030 S. 53rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Tatnall L. Nicholson 118 E. Oak Ave., Moorestown, N.J. Alfred Bernhardt Novak. 1326 Independence Blvd., Chicago, 111. Arthur Cavanaugh O ' Connor, Jr. 723 Hammond Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Cornelius Edward O ' Connor, Jr. 945 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. James O ' Malley, Jr 300 W. 106th St., New York, N.Y. Joseph Wallace Oman, Jr 310 W. 86th St., New York, N.Y. William Campbell O ' Neill 1501 Bailey Ave., McKeesport, Pa. James William Orman 251 Cherokee St., Bethlehem, Pa. John Lambert Osmer 301 South Park, Franklin, Pa. Victor Amandus Oswald, Jr 119 W. Holly St., Hakleton, Pa. Paul Ezekiel Paddock 3810 Glendale Terrace, Minneapolis, Minn. Ralph Lathrop Paddock, Jr Week St., Katonah, N.Y. Guy Merriman Page Alger Court East, Bronxville, N.Y. Peter Standish Paine 31 E. 69th St., New York, N.Y. Thomas Fowler Palmer c o Morgan Co., Paris, France William Donald Paradine 616 W. 10th St., Erie, Pa. Challen Rogers Parker, Jr 140 Broadway, New York, N.Y. William Metcalf Parkin, Jr. 5577 Hampton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Leonard Paterson Rose Croft, Grand Blanc, Mich. John Hunter Davie Patterson 70 Oak Lane, Trenton, N.J. William Oliver Patterson 322 Summit St., St. Paul, Minn. Hugh McElveen Patton 5744 Sol way St., Pittsburgh, Pa 79 rX RINC gfo Urr rrrrrrrrr r Krr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr 41 8SAjiS2? Qlass of 1932 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Edward Douglas Pearce, Jr.... 28 E. 63rd St., New York, N.Y. William Armstrong Pearson 278 Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Edward duVal Pels 416 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Oliver Hazard Perry 64 Melrose PI., Montclair, N.J. Robert Moorhead Perry 227 North St., New Castle, Pa. Erie Pettus, Jr 2219 S. 17th Ave., Birmingham, Ala. William Ferdinand J. Piel, Jr. 935 Browers PI., Woodmere, L.I., N.Y. Richard Hugh Pleasant Hayden, Colo. Francis Bennett Poe, Jr 812 17th St., Washington, D.C. Frank Noera Pole Hot Springs, Va. George Whipple Porter 454 Angell St., Providence, R.I. William Post, II East Williston, N.Y. Herbert Jacquelin Potts Hohokus, N.J. Seymour Preston Hohokus, N.J. Robert Emerson Putney 1129 Foulkrod St., Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa. Griswold W. Coles Raetz Woodline Ave., Glendale, Ohio Charles Alexander Ragan, Jr 55 John St., New York, N.Y. John Milton Ranck Duke and Chestnut Sts., Lancaster, Pa. George Ward Randall, Jr 619 Elm St., Westfield, N.J. Donald Hamilton Randell 39 Lincoln Park, Newark, N.J. Charles Bartlett Rawson. .7 W. Montgomery Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Edward Lansing Ray, Jr. ...4615 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. James Brown Reed 1176 Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Horace Greeley Reeder Farnsworth Ave., Pendleton, N.J. Ivan Arthur Reiner 811 North Broad St., Elizabeth, N.J. George Louis Wellington Reinhart 225 Washington St., Cumberland, Md. Harmon Liveright Remmel...llO Johnson St., Little Rock, Ark. Laurence Bender Rentschler 15 Monroe Ave., East Orange, N.J. Henri Paul Reynier 40 Avenue, Alsace-Lorraine, Grenoble, France Frederick Clinton Reynolds, Jr. Hutton Park, West Orange, N.J. NAME ADDRESS William Henry Reynolds 755 Hoffman St., Elmira, N.Y. William Smith Rial, Jr 528 Harrison Ave., Greensburg, Pa. John Howard Rice 651 Poplar St., Macon, Ga. Parke Richards, Jr Box 165, Lawrenceville, N.J. John Eastburn Richardson 320 S. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Daniel Moyer Ricker, Jr 108 Paxtang Ave., Harrisburg, Pa. Henry Haskell Rightor, Jr 720 Beech St., Helena, Ark. Robert Snedecor Ringland 8 Broadmoor Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Algernon Roberts Belmont Ave., Bala, Pa. Richard Brooke Titus Roberts... 10 E. 70th St., New York, N.Y. James Lovejoy Robertson Lawrence Park, Bronxville, N.Y. Ormsbee Wright Robinson 946 Central Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Philip Ely Robinson 94 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N.J. Laurance Spelman Rockefeller. ..10 W. 54th St., New York, N.Y. Sidney Maurice Rodgers 266 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. John Manderson Roeser. .Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N.Y. William Egbert Rollo Orrington Hotel, Evanston, 111. Kenneth Cardwell Rovig 1725 E. 23rd St., Brooklyn, N.Y. George Ebersole Rose, Jr 6758 Bennett Ave., Chicago, 111. Lloyd Emmerich Rosenbaum 1015 Chase St., Anderson, Ind. Milton Leon Rosenberg 614 Cortelyou Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Ross Roscommon, Doylestown, Pa. Thomas Langan Rossi 135 Rector St., Perth Amboy, N.J. James Howard Rowbotham, Jr. 2135 Ritner St., Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Gordon Russell, Jr. 2533 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Harry Landa Rust 5501 Mission Drive, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Slinghoff Rutherford. . .92 Lorraine Ave., Montclair, N.J. Thomas Brown Rutherford R.F.D. No. 1, Painesville, Ohio John Philip Rutherfurd Allamuchy, N.J. Leicester Yarrow Ryan 12 E. 82nd St., New York, N.Y. Robert Willis Ryckman Prospect Park, White Plains, N.Y. Willis Garson Ryckman. . .7 New York Ave., White Plains, N.Y. Hilbert Speich Sabin 3401 Macomb St., Washington, D.C. 80 gg TRINCET Og Ur r rrrrrr r rr r rr rrtrrrrrrr p rrrr rrrr r r .O fgc A ' Rgr Qlass of 1932 — (Continued) John Coggeshall Savage 100 Corn Exchange Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. Charles Edward Scarlett, Jr.... 4308 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. David James Schauffler 23 Pine Crescent, Toronto, Ont. John Cornell Schenck Hotel Margaret, Brooklyn, N.Y. Edward Preston Scherer 227 S. 47th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Cooper Schieffelin 133 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. Karl Morton Schmid 504 Barry Ave., Chicago, 111. Robt. Armand Schmid 222 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. John Graydon Schmidlapp Grandin Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio Wilson Schoelkopf 3905 Beverly Drive, Dallas, Texas Frank Canfield Schroeder, Jr Woodland Rd., Sewickley, Pa. John Andrew Schroth, Jr 115 Mills, Ave., Wyoming, Ohio Peter Schwed 90 Washington Ave., Cedarhurst, L.I., N.Y. Frederick Hossack Scott, Jr 366 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. Jack Delaney Sculley 110 9th St., Garden City, L.I., N.Y. Belford Lawrence Seabrook R.F.D. No. 5, Bridgeton, N.J. John Aylmer Sellon London Woods, Rye, N.Y. James Husted Semans 29 W. Barkley St., Uniontown, Pa. James Lyndon Shanley. .206 Montrose Ave., South Orange, N.J. James Grierson Shennan 523 N. Church St., Hazelton, Pa. Melvin Winfield Sheppard, Jr 4311 Ithaca St., Elmhurst, N.Y. James Nelson Sherwin 11898 Carlton Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Alton Childs Shoemaker Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Co., Rochester, N.Y. John Coulter Shull 60 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J. Garrett Kerr Sias 71 Broadway, New York, N.Y. Richard Walter Simmers Quarters L, Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. Sydney Edgar Sinclair, II.. 1224 Campbell St., Williamsport, Pa. James Fletcher Skinner Huntington Hotel, Pasadena. Calif. Henry Campbell Slack 149 E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. Albert Vanneman Sloan. 5846 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, N.Y. Charles LeRov Smith Terrace Hill, Ithaca, N.Y. Charles Truesdale Smith 905 Haskell Ave., Rockford, 111. NAME ADDRESS Harry Clark Smith, Jr.. 74 S. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N.J. John Henry Smith, Jr.. . .1076 Bedford Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Paul Edgar Smith, Jr 1113 Waverly PI., Schenectady, N.Y. Philip Chabot Smith 52 Gramercy Park North, New York, N.Y. Russell Hunter Smith 445 Walter Rd., Maplewood, N.J. Robert Lee Smith 2701 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Thurston Huntting Smith 17 Cathedral Ave., Garden City, L.I., N.Y. William Henry Snyder, Jr. 8813 Germantown Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Owen Evans Sowerwine 320 St. George PI., Westfield, N.J. Robert Steele Spalding 849 Washington St., Denver, Colo. Charles Hendrick Stephen 189 E. Main St., Lancaster, N.Y. DeWitt Asiel Stern 780 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. James Maitland Stewart 104 N. 7th St., Indiana, Pa. Harold Ramsay Stobie Witherbee Court Apts., Pelham, N.Y. David Lamme Stone, Jr 2400 16th St., Washington, D.C. Wilfred Oakley Stout, Jr 618 Fairmont St., St. Paul, Minn. Pierre Stralem 14 E. 82nd St., New York, N.Y. Daniel Barton Streeter 869 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Mark Sullivan, Jr 2308 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D.C. Charles West-Leigh Summerill 38 N. Broad St., Woodbury, L.I., N.Y. Edgar Charles Suor 4435 Main St., Snyder, N.Y. Charles Raymond Swain, Jr. 18 Warren Court, South Orange, N.J. Harold Turnell Tasker Bryant Ave., Roslyn, L.I., N.Y. William Zachary Taylor. .Hewlett Bay Park, Hewlett, L.I., N.Y. Tens Aage Tellefsen 6 Northern Ave., Bronxville, N.Y. Herbert Lloyd Thomas, Jr 3418 Brisban St., Harrisburg, Pa. Robert James Thomas ...101 East Ridge St., Lansford, Pa. David Allen Thompson. 707 Jefferson Apts., Niagara Falls, N .Y. Frederick Gillingham Thompson. . .Bayard Lane, Princeton, N.J. Ross Watson Thompson 133 Gordon St., Englewood, Pa. William Stanwood Till 99 Park St., East Orange, N.J. 81 g TRlNCET Qg- gvcZAiffi3r Class 0 1932- NAME ADDRESS Jacques Jouvenne Tisne 310 W. 88th St., New York, N.Y. Daniel Tomkins Tomkins Cove, N.Y. Louis Enrigue Toro 325 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. Charles Curtis Towle 1800 E St., Lincoln, Neb. Cuthbert Russell Train 3015 Q St., Washington, D.C. Alan Tredennick 237 South Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Felix Macdonald Triest 102 W. 35th St., New York, N.Y. John Fowler Trow, Jr Morris Lane, Scarsdale, N.Y. Howard Jerome Trueblood. . .1220 Elmwood Ave., Evanston, 111. Charles Selby Truitt Wayne and Westview Sts., Germantown, Pa. Thomas Craig Truscott East King St., Shippensburg, Pa. Edward Tryon, III Rose Lane, Haverford, Pa. Don Luther Tullis 4 Duane Terrace, Buffalo, N.Y. James Miller Tunnell, Jr Georgetown, Del. James Alexander Turner. 26 Morningside Park, Memphis, Tenn. Gerald Gordon Van Cise....l0 Valley View Ave., Summit, N.J. John Conover VanCleaf 83 Union St., Montclair, N.J. Frank Barnes Vanderbeek 1 Ridge Terrace, Paterson, N.J. Lewis Harlow VanDusen, Jr. 6071 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. James Albert VanHook 1709 Irving PI., Shreveport, La. Anthony Gerard Van Schaick.218 Vine Ave., Highland Park, 111. Raymond Edward Verwholt Short Beach, Branford, Conn. John Duryea Voorhees 89 Midland Ave., Montclair, N.J. Frank Charles Wachter 805 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Richard Wagner The Gardens, Lakeville, Conn. Robert Miller Walker 336 Sanford Ave., Flushing, N.Y. Calvin Proctor Wallis King Road, Malvern, Pa. Daniel Elliott Walzer 1121 E. 22nd St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Sydney Horace Lee Washington c o Department of State, Washington, D.C. Levin Lyttleton Waters Lutherville, Md. Morrison Waud 227 E. Delaware PL, Chicago, 111. Douglas Bowman Weed 20 Prospect Hill Ave., Summit, N.J. Everett Victor Weil 42 W. 74th St., New York, N.Y. Edward James Welch 20 Laurel Rd., Milton, Mass. — (C on ti nue d) NAME ADDRESS Frederick Strembeck Wemyss, Jr. 562 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Frank Allan West, Jr 3406 R St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Millard Farrar West, Jr 3 Hesketh St., Chevy Chase, Md. Russell Wetmore 66 Milton Rd., Rye, N.Y. Edward Valentine Whallon 30 Roseville Ave., Newark, N.J. John Ross Wheeler 1609 16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Andrew Henderson White, Jr. .2702 Madison St., Houston, Tex. Howell North White, Jr Lakeville, Conn. Allen Earle Whitman 115 Chestnut St., Englewood, N.J. Henry Norris Whitney Glen Cove, N.Y. Henry James Whitson 155 Lincoln St., Englewood, N.J. Rollin Abbott Wilbur, Jr 2919 Attleboro Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Samuel Whitney Wilcox 72 Wyllie St., Honolulu, Hawaii Edwin Rounsevelle Wildman San Juan, Porto Rico Franklin John Wilkes 340 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joel Jackson Wood Williamson. Sherman Ave., Waynesburg, Pa. Lennox Johnston Wilson 103 Washington Ave., Morristown, N.J. William Addison Wilson Beach Drive, Panama City, Fla. Robert Mandel Wineman Shoreland Hotel, Chicago, III. Robert Watson Winston 1231 Asbury Ave., Evanston, III. Hugh Douglas Wise, Jr.. . .428 Washington St., Watertown, N.Y. Caspar Wister Wynnewood, Pa. Charles Parker Wofford. . .Llewellyn Wood, Johnson City, Tenn. John Vernon Woodhull 950 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Witherspoon Woods R.D. 4, Gettysburg, Pa. John Wyckliffe Austin Woody 4000 N. Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Fiske Wright 15 Richey PL, Trenton, N.J. Lindley Kent Wyatt 1413 Van Buren St., Wilmington, Del. Sidney Haldane Wyse 43 Roxbury Rd., Garden City, N.Y. William Hatten Yeckley. . .Suite I, Victory Bldg., Loraine, Ohio George Yost, Jr 25 Chelton Ave., Morrisville, Pa. George Woolbridge Young 830 Lake St., Newark, N.J. Thomas Gorsuch Young, Jr.. 214 Chancerv Rd., Baltimore, Md. Frederick Robert Zundel, Jr 14 Berkley PL, Cranford, N.J. 82 tHEEMNccfoX T A iT gg tvQ ft ' Ncc fcgf: EEZA3E2c g j lNCEf fgy RV C-A- Rgg Class Officers, 1933 SOPHOMORE YEAR James Stanley Purnell President Frederic Tremaine Billings, Jr Vice-President Harrison Garrett Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM James Stanley Purnell President Frederic Tremaine Billings, Jr Vice-President Harrison Garrett Secretary-Treasurer 86 tuOiyNLCETO r r r rrrr rrt rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr g Tc 7 A ' r Tg r Class of 1933 Osier Almon Abbott 436 W. Sixth St., Lexington, Ky. Andrew Gifford Agnew 121 E. 69th St., New York, N.Y. Sanford Martin Agnew 16 William St., New York, N.Y. William Stephen Aisles Scarboro, N.Y. John Parker Arey 555 Audubon St., New Orleans, La. Alexander Laughlin Alexander. . .920 Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Norman Alexander Stokley and Coulter Sts., Germantown, Pa. James Harvey Altizer 905 Edgewood Dr., Charleston, W.Va. Luther Berkley Amerman. . .101 Broadview Ave., Wichita, Kan. Herbert Appleton, II 60 Whittredge Rd., Summit, N.J. Andrew Watson Armour, III 209 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. G. Warren Arms 769 St. Mark ' s Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Sinclair Howard Armstrong, Jr. 108 E. 81st St., New York, N.Y. Harry Bartley Arnold, Jr.. . .275 Stanberry Ave., Columbus, Ohio Robert Findley Arrott 620 Amberson Ave., Pitt sburgh, Pa. Howard Steiner Aufderheide.369 S. Graham St., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Alfred Avirett Rose Hill, Cumberland, Md. William Strong Babcock 733 Mosswood Ave., Orange, N.J. Jonathan Davis Bachman 175 Windsor Ave., Bristol, Tenn. Standish Backus, Jr 1750 Iroquois Ave., Detroit, Mich. Gordon Holmes Baker 118 Wyomissing Blvd., Wyomissing, Pa. William Schuyler Baker Lakeview Ave., Short Hills, N.J. Henry Thomas Ballentine 541 N. 15th St., Muskogee, Okla. Ralph Austin Bard, Jr.. 531 St. John ' s Ave., Highland Park, 111. William Hudson Barker R.F.D. No. 2, Birmingham, Ala. Allan Campbell Barnes 6376 City Line, Philadelphia, Pa. Edmund Bartlett, Jr.. 191 Bellevue Ave., Upper Montclaair, N.J. Frederick Westerman Bates 403 N. Narberth Ave., Narberth, Pa. Ralph Edmond Baxter 309 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Henry Wilson Beardsley 876 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Ernest Patrick Bernuth .410 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Edmund Lawson Bigelow 45 Franklin Park West, Columbus, Ohio Harry Stanley Bignall 36 Jayne Ave., Patchogue, N.Y. Frederic Tremaine Billings, Jr. 4916 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Lucius Henry Bingham, Jr 210 W. 55th St., New York, N.Y. John Bishop, VI Columbus, N.J. Andrew Krause Black, III 60 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa. George Pomeroy Bassett Blaine 1002 Redway Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Henry Abbott Blake... 303 W. Greenman Rd., Haddonfield, N.J. David Rodney Bluhm 125 Harrison St., East Orange, N.J. Howard Alden Blyth Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N.Y. Hugh Kendall Boice, Jr Little Silver, N.J. Richard Huffman Booth Basking Ridge, N.J. Henry Charles Borger, Jr 115 Second Ave., Westwood, N.J. Samuel Brennan Bossard R.F.D. 2, Media, Pa. Horace Bowen 65 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Washington Bowie, V Lutherville, Md. Albert Page Boyce.,225 Chancery Rd., Guilford, Baltimore, Md. John Ballentine Boyd .320 W. 245th St., New York, N.Y. Edward Shoemaker Boylston. . .829 Rielland St., Columbia, S.C. Thomas Baker Bradbury. . 142 Pennsylvania Ave., Louisville, Ky. George Joseph Brady 40 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N.Y. Norman Brassier 74 Spring Ave., Englewood, N.J. Carl Eric Bredenberg 88 Hammerschmidt PI., Buffalo, N.Y. Henry Atwood Breed Blair Academy, Blairstown, N.J. Charles Braislin Brick Crosswicks, N.J. Remsen Brinckerhoff 156 Sherwood PI., Englewood, N.J. James Archibald Brooks 424 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. Charles de Hart Brower, III... .419 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Austin Longworth Brown 315 Heberton Ave., Port Richmond, N.Y. Charles Thomas Brown, Jr.. .618 Chester Ave., Moorestown, N.J. Richard Albert Brown 356 Wlliam St., East Orange, N.J. Warren Halsey Brown ...29 Fairview Ave., South Orange, N.J. Victor Roy Browning 67 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N.J. Clinton Ethelbert Brush, III 2406 Kensington PI., Nashville, Tenn. Donald Stephen Buck 54 Garfield Ave., Madison, N.J. 87 PRINCET ON rE3Z1E3c Qass of 1933- NAME ADDRESS Walter Bayly Buck Brooklandville, Md. Robert Lomas Buckbee 2207 Andrews Ave., New York, N.Y. William Hobson Buffum Dunbarton, N.H. Raymond Elmore Burnes 28 E. 10th St., New York, N.Y. Richard Frederick Burnett. ... 524 Centre St., South Orange, N.J. Mortimer Perry Burroughs, Jr. Box 1017, Price Rd., St. Louis, Mo. Alan Liese Burrows 378 Oakwood Ave., Orange, N.J. William Morris Cahn, Jr 20 Cedar St., Chicago, 111. Walter Scott Calahan 366 W. Elk Ave., Glendale, Calif. George White Caldwell, Jr.. .527 Insurgentes, Mexico City, Mex. Arthur Davidson Calfee 33 Kingsbury PI., St. Louis, Mo. Charles Pluemer Campbell 527 Riverside Dr., Elizabeth, N.J. Edward Gross Campbell 106 Walnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. Paul Campbell, Jr Crocheron Ave., Bavside, L.I., N.Y. Walter Arthur Campbell R.F.D. l.Cranbury, N.J. Henry Pervis Cannon, II Bridgeville, Del. Howard Joseph Carew Murray Hill, N.J. Clinton Playter Carhart 116 Cambridge PI., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Joseph Carolan. 64-03 Larkin St., Rockaway Beach, N.Y. Thomas King Carpenter, Jr 409 Post Rd., Rye, N.Y. John Claiborne Carrington 120 Patterson Ave., San Antonio, Tex. Philip Thomas Carroll, III 57 Wiggins St., Princeton, N.J. Howard Carter, Jr 955 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. John Preston Carter, Jr Scenic Dr., Knoxville, Tenn. Raymond Hitchings Carter 1625 16th St., Washington, D.C. Russell Winfield Case, Jr 197 Rosemont Ave., Trenton, N.J. Austin Johnson Cate 8B Godfrey Court, Fort Riley, Kan. Kimberly Chalmers 42 W. 58th St., New York, N.Y. Roswell Wilcox Chamberlain, III 48 Susquehanna Ave., Great Neck, N.Y. Ernest Ray Chamberlain 110 Broad St., Hightstown, N.J. Horace Leete Chapman, II 1610 Hawthorne Park, Columbus, Ohio Page Chapman, Jr Short Hills, N.J. Theodore Stillman Chapman. .. .North Street, Greenwich, Conn. Donald Palmer Cheatham. .2a Capuchinas 48, Mexico City, Mex. —(Continued) NAME ADDRESS Paul Gratiot Cheatham, Jr. .2a Capuchinas 48, Mexico City, Mex. Charles Wanamaker Childs 3315 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. Harold Baring Churchill 108 E. 35th St., New York, N.Y. Arthur Claffy 14 Merion Ave., Overbrook, Pa. Richard Walter Clemmer. . .1863 Cadwell Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Robert Laning Clifford 3033 N St., Washington, D.C. William James Coad, Jr Fairacres, Omaha, Neb. Robert Pearce Coates Hillcrest Rd., Plainfield, N.J. Frederic Alva Collins 36 Cedar Lane, Babylon, N.Y. Varnum Lansing Collins, Jr... 214 Western Way, Princeton, N.J. John David Colson 421 W. 114th St., New York, N.Y. Arnold Mills Combrinck-Graham, Jr. 1043 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Walter Ames Compton . .900 W. Lexington Ave., Elkhart, Ind. George Webb Constable 4509 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. Judson Hand Corrigan 2400 16th St., Washington, D.C. Nelson Cover Garrison P.O., Baltimore, Md. Herbert Ellsworth Cragin, Jr. 1140 Lorraine Ave., Plainfield, N.J. John Sergeant Cram, Jr 9 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. Thomas Creigh, Jr 200 Prospect St., Highland Park, 111. Horace Guy Crockett, Jr 8 Summit St., Glen Ridge, N.J. Wilbur Melvin Crook 505 Grove St., Upper Montclair, N.J. Harry Hickman Cropper Ocean City, Md. William Jerome Croul. . . .Siamasia Hotel, Santa Barbara, Calif. Huntington Beard Crouse. . . .400 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. William Langstaff Crow Milton Point, Rye, N.Y. Peter Hood Ballentine dimming 375 Mount Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Joseph Inskeep Cunningham. .402 Fayette St., Cumberland, Md. Edgar Alan Custer 680 Steamboat Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Allen Aldrick Davis, Jr 34 E. Melrose Ave., Baltimore, Md. Charles Collins Davis, Jr 306 Berkeley Rd., Merion, Pa. Chester C. Davis 57 Speedwell Ave., Morris Plains, N.J. John Wilson Dayton, Jr 218-19 40th Ave., Bayside, N.Y. Ward Winchell Dayton 21 Linden Ave., Wilmette, 111. Frank James Dean, Jr 1032 W. 55th St., Kansas City, Mo. 88 tHg X RINC Eg EyciA_iS5c Class of 1933— Edmund Thomas Delanev 541 Ridge St., Newark, N.J. William Churchill Delanev 440 E. 26th St., New York, N.Y. William Francis Delaney 541 Ridge St., Newark, N.J. John Wellington Dennis. . .1500 Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph DeSipio 5339 N. Carlisle St., Philadelphia, Pa. Walter Bourchier Devereux, III Syosset, L.I., N.Y. J. Walter Dickson, Jr Trenton, N.J. James Gorman Dill 325 18th Ave., Paterson, N.J. William Henry Dinsmore. . . .718 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N.J. John Willard Dippel 79 Winsor PI., Glen Ridge, N.J. John Randolph Bland Disbrow 533 E. Argonne Dr., Kirkwood, Mo. Charles Boone Doak 134 W. Coulter St., Germantown, Pa. Franklin D ' Olier, Jr 98 Madison Ave., Morristown, N.J. Frederick Emerson Donaldson, Jr. 1088 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Paul Cook Downing, Jr.. 200 Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass. Nelson van Nuys Dungan 32 W. Cliff St., Somerville, N.J. John Donald DurandT 2303 Ohio Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Benjamin Wilkins Durham... 265 N. Union Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. David Prince Earle, Jr Woodland St., Englewood, N.J. James Paterson Eastman 602 W. 180th St., New York, N.Y. Henry Ezra Eberhardt, Jr. 2 Mountain View Terrace, Maplewood, N.J. Robert William Eberhardt 122 Gates Ave., Montclair, N.J. William Edgar Edmonston. . . .28 Warrenton Rd., Baltimore, Md. Harold Sydney Edwards, Jr Dexter St., Dedham, Mass. James Eldridge 235 N. Chelsea Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. Frank Osborne Elliott Hotel Ambassador, East Chicago, III. John Scarsborough Elliott 165 Seminary Ave., Rahway, N.J. Charles Phillips Emerson, Jr. 3177 N. Pa. St., Indianapolis, Ind. Thomas Martin Emerson 610 Market St., Wilmington, N.C. Willard Winn Erdman..417 W. Chelton Ave., Germantown, Pa. Burton Hazell Etherington, Jr. 6411 Wayne Ave., Germantown, Pa. William Howard Evans... 1129 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sanford Atwater Farrand 27 DeWitt Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Osborn Ferguson Stoneleigh Court, Dallas, Tex. Robert Carl Ficke, Jr 2020 Grand Ave., Davenport, Iowa Raymond Christy Firestone Harbel Manor, Akron, Ohio Chester Lewis Fisher, Jr 15 Highland PI., Maplewood, N.J. John Alexander Barker Fisher 8 Norwood PI., Guilford, Baltimore, Md. Charles Cecil Fitzmorris, Jr.. 1540 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Albert William Flanagan. . .75 Renshaw Ave., East Orange, N.J. James Snowden Fluckey 3422 Garfield St., Washington, D.C. Anthony Henry Forbes 137 E. 66th St., New York, N.Y. Peter Charles Fortune 1451 Astor St., Chicago, 111. Worth Blanding Fowler 1153 Thurman St., Portland, Ore. Stephen Knowlton Fox, Jr. 447 Fort Washington Ave., New York, N.Y. Daniel Piatt Frame 1319 3rd Ave., S., Fargo, N.D. Charles Montayne Franklin. . .141 S Main St., Hightstown, N.J. William Morris Franklin. . .240 Reynolds Terrace, Orange, N.J. Thomas Robert Frost. . . .115 Beechmont Dr., New Rochelle, N.Y. Robert Oliver Fulton, Jr 6417 Jackson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Paul A. Furrer 153 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, N.J. Miller Schlager Gaffney 72 Riverside Dr., Binghamton, N.Y. Seaton Gales Overlook Rd., Locust Valley, N.Y. Robert Calvin Gallager 4934 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. William Garfield Galliher, Jr. 1411 Decatur St., Washington, D.C. Jack Fentress Gardner Lake Placid, Fla. Harrison Garrett St. Charles Ave., Baltimore, Md. Biddle Hiles Garrison, Jr Vista PI., Red Bank, N.J. Sheridan Hunt Garth 55 E. 10th St., New York, N.Y. Edward James Gay, Jr Plaquemine, La. Marshall Geer, Jr Jefferson Rd., Short Hills, N.J. Christopher Gerould 10 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N.J. Lloyd Irving Gibbons 14 Place Vendome, Paris, France William Merriam Gibson 429 Tenth St., Wilmette, 111. Nathaniel Howland Gifford, Jr. 62 Alumni Ave., Providence, R.I. Lawrence Gilbert 911 W. Seventh St., Plainfield, N.J. 89 gTRlNCETQ g yc A-W gr Qlass of 1 933- NAME ADDRESS William Templeton Giles, Jr. 3003 Mountain Ave., Birmingham, Ala. William Ernest Gillespie Wentworth Hall, Exeter, N.H. John William Henry Glasser 390 19th Ave., Paterson, N.J. Francis Henny Glazebrook, Jr.. . .37 Ogden PI., Morristown, N.J. Francis Page Glazebrook 18 Badeau Ave., Summit, N.J. Thomas William Goas 440 Conover Terrace, Orange, N.J. Ellwood Watson Godfrey Ambler, Pa. Robert Gait Goldsborough, Jr. 821 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Robert Goldstein P.O. Box 72, Dover, N.J. Herbert Elmer Gooch, Jr 2025 S. 25th St., Lincoln, Neb. Stanley Jay Goodman 50 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N.J. John Arthur Goodsell 22 Millington Ave., Newark, N.J. Charles Richards Gordon 378 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Frank Harmon Gordon 607 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. James Holdsworth Gordon, III.. 38 Franklin PI., Flushing, N.Y. Robert Calvin Gordon, Jr. 1046 Edgar Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. Bryant Kittrell Goree, Jr.. 1416 S. Adams St., Fort Worth, Tex. George Atkins Graham, Jr 81 Lincoln St., Englewood, N.J. George Struby Graham 1622 Race St., Denver, Colo. Francis William Gramlich 28 Knoerl Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Samuel Carl Grant, Jr 153 N. 3rd St., Newark, N.J. George Wallace Gray 1828 Dexter Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Meldrum Gray, Jr Roswell, N.M. Merwin Mallory Gray 67 Ledyard Rd., Hartford, Conn. George Gardiner Green Fifth Ave., Laurel, Miss. Harry Edward Green 1602 E. Chestnut St., Coshocton, Ohio John Bradley Green 28 Woodland Ave., East Orange, N.J. John Wilson Green 39 S. Wyoming Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Thomas Lee Grier 142 Irwin Ave., Ben Avon, Pa. Arthur Bentley Griffen 49 Fairview Ave., Verona, N.J. Thomas Edward Griffin .1975 Seneca St., Buffalo, N.Y. Benjamin Howell Griswold, III Harvest and Edgevale Rds., Baltimore, Md. Frank Berkshire Gunther 103 W. 3rd St., Owensboro. Ky. Robert Lewis Gwinn 15 Ridge Rd., Bronxville, N.Y. David Fendrich Hack 241 Elk Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. —(Continued) NAME ADDRESS Eugene Rolland Hack 241 Elk Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. Richard Samuel Half 5537 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Ellis Halsey 65 W. Bridge St., Oswego, N.Y. Christie Patterson Hamilton. .1210 Denmark Rd., Plainfield, N.J. Frank Upton Hammett, Jr. . . .6331 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Frederick Moran Hammond Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Arthur Boyd Hancock, Jr Paris, Ky. John Nepomucene Harman, Jr 579 16th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. William Humiston Harrar 199 E. 74th St., New York, N.Y. Charles James Harrington 16th St., Wilmington, Del. Reese Harvey Harris, Jr 600 Connell Bldg., Scranton, Pa. Ross Johnston Harris Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Compton Harrison, Jr. 800 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. Robert Littlefield Hatch, Jr 1070 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Madison Haden Haythe Strasburg, Va. Rodman Arthur Heeren 17 E. 90th St., New York, N.Y. Charles Benedict Hellerson 406 W. 21st St., New York, N.Y. Geoffry William Helm Greenhill, South Manchester, Conn. James Edward Hendry, Jr. ...1920 Fowler St., Fort Myers, Fla. Philip Herrmann, Jr 101 E. Tabor Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Lester William Herzog, Jr 8 Eileen St., Albany, N.Y. William Beresford Hewson. . . .161 W. 54th St., New York, N.Y. Frank Cummings Hibben. . .1257 Thoreau Rd., Lakewood, Ohio Raymond Webster Hilles, Jr. 532 E. Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Lawrence Mayer Hirsch 31 E. 72nd St., New York, N.Y. Richard Walker Hirst Severance Hospital, Seoul, Korea William Holloway Hirst Railroad Ave., Haverford, Pa. Harold Wilkinson Hixon, Jr. 116 Mulberry St., Springfield, Mass. Sloat Fassett Hodgson 851 Clifton Rd., Atlanta, Ga. William Arden Hoffman Fieldson Rd., Riverdale, New York, N.Y. Richard Dallam Hollowell 944 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. Edward Bronson Holschuh 814 Park Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. Sibley Worth Hoobler 805 Three Mile Drive, Detroit, Mich. Edward Orson Hopkins 809 S. First St., Evansville, Ind. 90 tggX RINC ilQg7: . frrrrtrrr rr hT ' rrrrrr r f rrrrrrrr t r ja£lA£33c Class of 1933- NAME ADDRESS John Russell Hopkins 195 Bryant St., Buffalo, N.Y. Henry Schuyler Horn, Jr. 306 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Dwight Anthony Home East Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. Philip Clark Horton 722 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, R.I. Robert John Horton 3215 Oak Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio George Cook Howell, Jr 3818 Seminary Ave., Richmond, Va. David Pike Howlett 17 S. Marion Ave., Ventnor City, N.J. David Graham Hoyer 614 Tacoma Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Arthur Scott Hudson 861 Taylor Ave., Detroit, Mich. Gordon Sayre Humphrey. 205 Belvidere Ave., Washington, N.J. Alexander Johnstone Irwin 600 Orleans Ave., Keokuk, Iowa William Gifford Isom 10 Murray Hill Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. Louis Albert Jackes, Jr 16 Madison Ave., Montclair, N.J. Thomas Francis Jackson 115 Worthington Ave., Spring Lake, N.J. John Francis James, Jr 19 Montgomery PI., Brooklyn, N.Y. Walter Coggeshall Janney, Jr. Bryn Mawr Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Charles Adams Jayne, Jr.. Apt. G-2 Merion Manor, Merion, Pa. Frederick Lewis, Johanns, Jr.. . .Mount Gray, Setauket, L.I., N.Y. Donald Dodge Johnson 69 Myrtle Ave., Montclair, N.J. Joseph Wilson Johnson, Jr. .1103 E. Terrace, Chattanooga, Tenn. Walter deForest Johnson 132 Columbia Hts., Brooklyn, N.Y. William Judson Johnson. 225 Fountain St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Goodwin Johnston 88 6th St., Hinsdale, III. George S. Johnston, Jr 152 Brewster Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. Stanton Clarke Johnston. . .Cathedral Mansions, Pittsburgh, Pa. Eric Livingston Jones Chellowe, Chestnut Hill, Pa. William Edwin Jones 3825 Cliff Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Charles Frederick Junod.Witherbee Court, Pelham Manor, N.Y. Abner Kalisch, Jr 681 Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. Charles William Kappes 123 Cantello St., Union City, N.J. Robert Harrison Kaufman 5430 Walnut St., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Laurence Dwen Kearney, Jr. Ciderbrook Rd., Farmington, Conn. Anthony Quinton Keasbey 33 Macculloch Ave., Morristown, N.J. Albert Keidel, Jr 4110 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. — Continued) NAME ADDRESS John Leisenring Kemmerer, Jr Short Hills, N.J. Samuel M. Kennard, III 4970 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Maurice deKay Tho mpson Kennedy 370 Humboldt St., Denver, Colo. Tyler Gatewood Kent... 21 12 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D.C. John Freeman Kerkam 2720 35 Place, Washington, D.C. James Kerney, Jr 373 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. John Douglas Kilpatrick, Jr. 3716 Military Rd., Washington, D.C. Ben Webster Kittredge Yorktown Hts., New York, N.Y. Lawrence W. Knapp, Jr Schenley Apts., Pittsburgh, Pa. Raymond Edward Knell 38 Chateau Terrace, Snyder, N.Y. Ogden Kniffen Ocean Ave., Cedarhurst, L.I., N.Y. Frank Grevatt Koch 105 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. William David Kohlins 223 Highland Ave., Newark, N.J. Henry Lloyd Thornell Koren. .Fitz Randolph Rd., Princeton, N.J. John Frederick Kraft, Jr. 1772 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Howard William Kramer. . .1462 Glenwood Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Raoul Weston LaBarrer 18 Ben Lomond St., Uniontown, Pa. Wilbur Leroy LaFean, Jr 233 East Walton PI., Chicago, III. Ferdinand LaMotte, III. . .1700 Greenhill Ave., Wilmington, Del. Stanley Arvid Landeen 38 Ravine Ave., Caldwell, N.J. Edward Wood Lane, Jr.... 3730 Richmond St., Jacksonville, Fla. Charles Markham Langham. ..1045 Mariposa St., Altadena, Cal. Thomas Miller Lasater La Mota, Falfurrias, Tex. Harvey Deppen Leinbach, Jr.. 1067 Penn Ave., Wyomissing, Pa. William Norris Leonard 26 Hunt St., Rowayton, Conn. Richard William Leopold 15 E. 58th St., New York, N.Y. William Leslie, Jr 25 Howell Rd., Mountain Lakes, N.J. Clarence McKenzie Lewis, Jr.. .1000 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Hobart Durbin Lewis Plumstead Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Lionel Lightner 10 Bellvale Rd., Mountain Lakes, N.J. Harrison Philip Lindabury, Jr Gladstone, N.J. Kendall Ide Lingle 1301 N. State St., Chicago, III. Huyler Louis Lisk 605 Orange Ave., Cranford, N.J. Andrew Owen Locke 2346 Tudor Dr., Cleveland, Ohio William Noble Lockwood 311 Downing St., Buffalo, N.Y. Robert Wood Long 928 W. 34th St., Kansas City, Mo. 91 tgg X RINC € XQN: rrrrri r rrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrr r g TC-A- R gg Class of 1933— Samuel Crawley Loveland, Jr..BeIlevue Ave., Hammonton, N.J. Robert F. Stockton Lowndes 300 High St., Denver, Colo. Goodrich Lowry 1821 Logan Ave., So. Minneapolis, Minn. William Hartwell Ludlow Midwood Terrace, Madison, N.J. David McWilliams Ludlum 139 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N.J. John Arthur Luetscher, Jr 12 E. Eager St., Baltimore, Md. Donald Charles Lynch 916 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N.J. Andrew Gorecki Lyon 60 Elm Ave., Hackensack, N.J. Albert Dod McCoy 21 Portsmouth Terrace, Rochester, N.Y. John Henry MacDonald 1903 Manada St., Harrisburg, Pa. Charles Phillips McGean. .13473 N. Park Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio William McPherson McGill, Jr Thurmont, Md. James Robert Mcllroy Highland Ave., Allison Park, Pa. David Gregg Mcintosh, III Rodgers Forge P.O., Baltimore, Md. Henry Langenberg Mclntyre 5244 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Thomas McKean, Jr Conestoga Rd., Ithan, Pa. Montgomery Nelson McKinney. . . 5 Auburn Rd., Winnetka, 111. Malcolm William McKinnon.715 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Archibald Fleming MacLeish 1326 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Thomas S. McPheeters, Jr. ..5099 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Hugh Lafayette McWilliams, Jr 73 E. Elm St., Chicago, 111. Alan Magary 1157 Edison Ave., Detroit, Mich. Herbert Earl Marks, Jr 1308 Linden St., Sewickley, Pa. John Francis Marsden, Jr 30 Malbone Rd., Newport, R.I. Theron Ludlow Marsh Midwood Terrace, Madison, N.J. Edgar Lewis Marston, II 151 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. Morris Buchwalter Martin. . .1215 E. High St., Springfield, Ohio Robert Lockitt Martin... 348 Tichener Ave., South Orange, N.J. Richard McFall Martin 5807 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Brewster Mather 275 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. Sidney Mathews 22 E. 36th St., New York, N.Y. Walter Lewis Mayo, Jr 802 Fairmount Ave., St. Paul, Minn. David Vaughan Meeker 117 Clark St., Glen Ridge, N.J. Arthur Vincent Meigs 1736 M St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Frank Millin Mellinger Slickville, Pa. ( ' Continued) NAME ADDRESS George Rodney Meneely 65 2nd St., Garden City, N.Y. Isaac Lincoln Merrill, Jr Camden, Me. Oscar Ernest Mertz, Jr. 29 Pelham Rd., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Theodore Conrow Merwin 796 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Frank Rich Metcalf 70 South St., Auburn, N.Y. Alan Metcalfe 239 N. 5th St., Newark, N.J. Thomas Heffron Mettler. . .275 S. Broadway, South Nyack, N.Y. Albert Murray Metz 2800 Espy Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles William Miles. . .724 E. Exchange St., Union City, Tenn. James Golden Miller 16 Welsh Ave., Bradford, Pa. Mitchell Hooper Miller 203 Highfield Rd., Baltimore, Md. Harry Dorsey Mitchell. . .1344 19th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. James Hugh Moffatt, Jr. 104 W. Montgomery Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Robert Arkell Moffett 299 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Arthur Maurice Green Moody 408 W. Chelten Ave., Germantown, Pa. Carlisle Moore 126 Beech Tree Lane, Wayne, Pa. Malcolm Hay Moore 630 Grove St., Sewickley, Pa. James Rogers Moreland, Jr.. . .Preston Rd., Morgantown, W.Va. DuBois Schanck Morris, Jr 441 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Seymour Morris 1170 Westmoor Rd., Winnetka, 111. Reuben Moores Morriss, Jr.... 1400 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, III. Wilmer Baldwin Morrow. .31 Fairview Ave., South Orange, N.J. Malvern Frye Morse 2337 California St., Washington, D.C. David Scott Moulton 75 E. Orchard Ave., Providence, R.I. Vincent Strong Mulford, Jr. 130 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. Gleeson Murphy, Jr Millers Court, Owensboro, Ky. Robert Roper Muschlitz 435 Main St., Slatington, Pa. Robert Edward Nail, Jr Albany, Tex. Thomas John Naughton. . .1329 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. Doddridge Henderson Nevitt.1310 Vinton Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Albert Hartman Newfield. . .300 N. Oxford St., Hartford, Conn. Thomas Nichol, Jr 1300 Kanawha St., Charleston, W.Va. John Henry O ' Donovan, Jr.. . .700 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Henry John Oechler 9413 85 Rd., Woodhaven, N.Y. James Piatt Okie Piedmont Farm, Marshall, Va. 92 ygr RlNCE TQ rrr r rrr rr rrtrrrr rrr p rrrrrrrrr r EEA r3T Qass of 1 933- NAME ADDRESS Donald MacDonald O ' Neill 85 Inwood Ave., Montclair, N.J. Montgomery Maigs Orr 2260 Ohio Blvd., Terre Haute, Ind. Samuel Torrey Orton, Jr.. .50 Morningside Dr., New York, N.Y. Clifton Brooks Osgood 423 Essex Rd., Kenilworth, 111. John Lambert Osmer 301 South Park, Franklin, Pa. Ogden Peabody Outhwaite R.F.D. No. 1, Gahanna, Ohio Frank Pace, Jr 2301 Broadwav, Little Rock, Ark. David Goodwin Park, Jr 25 Richelieu PI., Newark, N.J. William Lee Parker 1 E. Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md. Robert Stephen Pasley. . . .456 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N.J. Charles Rushmore Patterson 2501 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D.C. Raymond Valentine Paul 212 Jane St., Weehawken, N.J. Thomas Clinton Pears, III. . .308 East End Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Thomas Pecora 360 Bloomfield Ave., Newark, N.J. Albert Edwin Peirce 656 Ardsley Rd., Winnetka, 111. Williamson Pell, Jr Dogwood Lane, Rye, N.Y. George Alfred Perera 38 W. 83rd St., New York, N.Y. John Randolph Perkins Woodcliff Lake, N.Y. Caulder Baynard Perryclear, Jr... Fox Hill Rd., Mt. Tabor, N.J. Robert Eugene Pflaumer 2413 N. 52nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Lee Phyfe Washington Ave., Haworth, N.J. Fred Van Loan Pindar Middleburg, N.Y. LeRoy Brinkerhoff Pitkin 51 Hillside Ave., Englewood, N.J. R. Blaine Piatt, Jr 12 Louella Park, Wayne, Pa. Ralph Lane Polk, Jr Lone Pine Rd., Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Joseph Williams Pool 241 Stratford Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. William Flynn Powell Box 5587, Asheville, N.C. Herman Preston Price. . ..820 Morningside Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Frederick Welles Prince 73 Valley Rd., Montclair, N.J. James Stanley Purnell Bellemore Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. William John Pyle 332 Penn Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Robert Coles Raetze Newfield Rd., Stamford, Conn. Edward Reilly Ralston 25 E. 77th St., New York, N.Y. Knowlton Daniel Read, Jr... 138 Milton PI., South Orange, N.J. Ralph Erskine Rearick, Jr. Middlesex Rd., Noroton Heights, Conn. —(Continued) NAME ADDRESS John Sloneker Redpath. . .107 Maplewood Ave., Maplewood, N.J. Louis Emil Reik 613 N. Broad St., Lansdale, Pa. John Norris Renneburg 6 Midvale Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Julius Christian Renninger, Jr 130 Second St., Oakland, Md. Robert Frederick Reybine 171 Sutton Manor, New Rochelle, N.Y. Joel Stewart Reynolds Northfield Rd., West Orange, N.J. Richard Everett Rhea 5445 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. David Brown Richardson. 419 W. 14th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Harold Banning Richardson 12 W. 56th St., New York, N.Y. John Norman Riley 1060 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Henry Tucker Robertson. . .1161 Columbia Ave., Claremont, Cal. Tate MacEwen Robertson, Jr. 432 Bolsover Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Thomas Robins, Jr Merion, Pa. Alfred Bruming Rhode, Jr.. .Hotel Bretton Hall, New York, N.Y. Addison Sturgeon Rodgers, II 1209 N. Limestone St., Springfield, Ohio Ferdinand William Roebling, III 222 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. Rudolph Roell 209 7th St., West New York, N.J. John Leonard Roemer 435 Carter St., Rochester, N.Y. Charles Woodman Root 32 Washington Sq., New York, N.Y. Oren Root, Jr 455 E. 57th St., New York, N.Y. Ovid Rose 110 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. John Arthur Rosenbaum. . .525 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. William Anthony Rossiter. . .285 Harrison St., Manchester, N.H. Alexander Rush Chesteridge, West Chester, Pa. Whitney Clark Russell 33 Vassar Ave., Newark, N.J. John Earls Rutherford 77 Edgemont Rd., Montclair, N.J. Irvine Hart Rutledge Mercersburg, Pa. James Wesley Samuels 64 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. Frederick Parker Sands 1713 18th St., Washington, D.C. Philip Pettibone Schaffner. .208 Lincoln Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Gustav Edward Schmitt 334 Heights Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. Ralph A. Schoenfeld 2639 Harvard Ave., N., Seattle, Wash. Gordon Arthur Scholes Warehouse Point, Conn. 93 r _F RINCC l gv Srr (rrrrrrrrr r - rrrrrrrr tr 0cZAZZI3? Qass of 1933- NAME ADDRESS Harry James Schonblom 130 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa. Harry Donald Schwaab 4110 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Edwin Samuel Schwab 324 Clermont Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Laurence Sanford Schwing Plaquemine, La. Frederick Hossack Scott, Jr. 175 Sheridan Rd., Hubbard Woods, 111. Robert Crawford Scott, Jr. . . .Longchamps Apts., Asheville, N.C. John Gilmore Scranton Broadheath, Harbor Beach, Mich. John Emery Seibert 715 Highland Ave., Westfield, N.J. Edward Ernest Seifert 5 Clinton PI., New Rochelle, N.Y. Dor ranee Sexton 119 Union St., Montclair, N.J. Francis Shackleford 613 N. Jackson St., Albany, Ga. Donald Rockwell Sheldon 555 Morris Ave., Summit, N.J. Wilbert Joseph Shinn 28 Maple St., Princeton, N.J. Morris Shipley 77 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Henry Clay Clarke Shute, Jr 146 High St., Glassboro, N.J. Alfred Dennis Sieminski 2750 Boulevard, Jersey City, N.J. George Washington Sigel, Jr. Academy Rd., Torresdale, Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Haw Simmons 1144 Chestnut Ave., Wilmette, 111. William Sherwood Skelly Meade St., Monongahela, Pa. John Alba Skinner 65 S. Chenango St., Greene, N.Y. Burrows Sloan, Jr Dodd ' s Lane, Ardmore, Pa. Andrew Augustus Smith, III. . .1088 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Brewster Weed Smith 159 Front St., Binghamton, N.Y. Howard Alexander Smith 81 Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. Howard Garthwaite Smith. 144 Ralston Ave., South Orange, N.J. Hubert George Smith, Jr.. 153 Avada. Presidentes, Havana, Cuba Leonard Thornton Smith. . .32 Washington St., East Orange, N.J. Philip Waddell Smith 50 Hodge Rd., Princeton, N.J. Phillips Smith 314 Wyoming Apts., Washington, D.C. Sheldon Monroe Smith Terrace Hill, Ithaca, N.Y. Sedgwick Snedeker 429 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Wiley Snider 169 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Ewing Snyder, Jr 725 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. William Speer 24 Gramercy Park, New York, N.Y. Frank Norton Spencer, Jr. Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N.Y. — (Qont ' mued) NAME ADDRESS John Willard Springer. .. 1013 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. Preston Lea Spruance 2507 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Warren Issac Staebler 7203 Fernbank Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio George Russell Stearns, Jr Milledge Rd., Augusta, Ga. Henry Stern 251 W. 89th St., New York, N.Y. Rolland Ezra Stevens, Jr. 500 S. Ridgewood Ave., Daytona Beach, Fla. George Strawbridge Cheltenham Rd., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Alfred Struck, Jr 39 Castle Wood, Louisville, Ky. George McConnell Sudduth, Jr. 3220 Drummond St., Vicksburg, Miss. George Francis Sullivan, Jr 730 Hudson St., Hoboken, N.J. John Gordon Summerfeldt R.F.D. No. 6, Trenton, N.J. Frederick Robbins Swan Farmington, Conn. Clinton Alan Swezey Long Hill Rd., Briarcliffe Manor, N.Y. John Fyfe Symington, Jr Lutherville, Md. Thayer Talcott 204 Vose Ave., South Orange, N.J. Arnold Pitcher Taylor Franklin Turnpike, Allendale, N.J. Clark Ellis Taylor 620 Mellon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Gordon Taylor 830 Linwood Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Lane Taylor 6017 Greene St., Germantown, Pa. James Redel Tencher 828 Ashland Ave., Wilmette, III. Arthur Poe Terrell 4501 Caroline Boulevard, Houston, Tex. Frank Louis Tettemer 896 Penn St., Denver, Colo. Lewis Thomas 259 Amity St., Flushing, N.Y. Robert McKean Thomas, Jr Bernardsville, N.J. Henry Swift Thompson. . .The Knoll, Hoffman St., Elmira, N.Y. Morris Mordecai Thompson. 104 Rutgers Ave., Jersey City, N.J. John Kingsley Thorne Prospect Ave., Oradell, N.J. Charles John Tiensch, II 28 N. 10th St., Newark, N.J. Harry Tipper, Jr 350 W. 88th St., New York, N.Y. Edmond Neville Todd 167 Main St., Matawan, N.J. John Harrison Tompkins 277 W. Main St., Babylon, N.Y. William Ford Torrey 575 Lake Shore Rd., Grosse Pointe, Detroit, Mich. Frank Townend 85 W. Union St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. James Philander Townley 3633 Locust St., Kansas City, Mo. Don Carlos Travis, Jr 6300 5th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 94 tttOB! ££lo y rrrtrrr firr H-f frrrr rr r ? rrrrrrrrrr 41 fEEAZZE3f Class of 1933- NAME ADDRESS John Shipley Troth 210 Windermere Ave., Wayne, Pa. Russell Hatch Tucker 70 E. 77th St., New York, N.Y. Don Luther Tullis 4 Dane Terrace, Buffalo, N.Y. Charles Learning Tutt, Jr. 1205 N. Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Joseph Edwin Upson Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Kelvin Cox Vanderlip Scarborough, N.Y. Robert Whitsitt Van de Velde..l7 Fairview Ave., Madison, N.J. Frederick Leas Van Lennep Pugh Road and County Lane, Wayne, Pa. Willard Randolph van Liew, Jr 108 Park St., Montclair, N.J. Thomson Welling Van Sann. . . .250 W. 74th St., New York, N.Y. Samuel Vitiz 1 825 New Chestnut Ave., Trenton, N.J. Frank Harvey Vivian 56 Clonmore St., Southfields, London S.W. 18, England Joseph Benson Foraker Wainwright Bryn Mawr, Pa. Grant Tozer Waldref 628 S. Third St., Stillwater, Minn. Harrison Howell Walker. . .2016 R St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Longley George Walker 174 Summit St., Summit, N.J. Stephen Archie Walker. 419 Groveland Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Talbott Hunt Walker Drumquhazel, Govans, Baltimore, Md. Howard Oscar Wallace 304 Lincoln St., Denver, Colo. Russell Arthur Wallace.. 438 Summit Ave., Cedarhurst, L.I., N.Y. Richard Travis Wallace 14 Grumman Ave., Newark, N.J. Chauncey Prentiss Ward 112 Chancellor Ave., Newark, N.J. Charles Wigton Ward P.O. Box 426, Orlando, Fla. Stanley William Warzala, Jr.. . .140 W. Cliff St., Somerville, N.J. Richard Starr Waterhouse 1944 Keeaumoku St., Honolulu, Hawaii Robert Kingsbury Watson... 99 Deer Hill Ave., Danbury, Conn. William Wood Watts 42 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N.J. Richard Porter Weaver. . .1104 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Albert Weinrich 260 E. 19th St., Paterson, N.J. Theodore Hu ntley Welch .118 Wyllis St., Oil City, Pa. Robert Alexander West 45 Tuscan Rd., Maplewood, N.J. Ernest Ellwood Wetherbee, Jr.. . .Madison Terrace, Albany, Ga. Jamer Simpson Whedbee, Jr. 911 Lake Ave., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. —(Continued) NAME ADDRESS Ahlborn Wheeler 32 Godfrey Rd., Upper Montclair, N.J. George White, Jr 322 Fifth St., Marietta, Ohio William Littell White, Jr 317 Swede St., Norristown, Pa. Andrew Carnegie Whitefield 563 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Allen Myers Whitlock 36 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. Hamilton Jerome Whitlock 1185 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Louis Ivey Whitlock, Jr 36 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. Albert Randell Whitman 756 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Frank Chauncey Whittelsey 86 Jaggar Avenue, Flushing, L.I., N.Y. Walter Edward Whitton 5 Madison Ave., Danbury, Conn. Harold Hinton Wilcox 3 E. 9th St., New York, N.Y. Franklin Hallowell Williams 110 W. Moreland Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Frederick William Williams . .392 Washburn St., Lockport, N.Y. Gerhard Mennen Williams 441 Merick Ave., Detroit, Mich. Linsley Rudd Williams, Jr 130 E. 67th St., New York, N.Y. Donald Pastorius Wilson 379 E. 5th St., Mount Vernon, N.Y. Edward Strong Wilson 127 Midland Ave., Montclair, N.J. Franklin Bills Wilson 113 Clarewell Ave., Montclair, N.J. James Mazyck Wilson 39 Legare St., Charleston, S.C. James Sims Wilson, Jr 119 Houston Ave., Paris, Ky. Laurence Raeburn Wilson 180 Franklin St., Denver, Colo. Samuel Winfield Wilson, II 33 Seventh Ave., Clarion, Pa. Otis Theodore Wingo, Jr Kenesaw Apts., Washington, D.C. William Brewster Winton 31 Brunswick Rd., Montclair, N.J. Chandler Withington 15 Crary Ave., Mount Vernon, N.Y. Wesley Henry Woltman 380 Park Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Donnell Knox Wolverton 505 State St., Camden, N.J. Charles Martin Wood, Jr.... 5950 Drexel Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Ralph Woodburn 99 Main St., Binghamton, N.Y. John Francis Woods, Jr.... 315 Stuyvesant Ave., Lyndhurst, N.J. John Taylor Woodward 901 W. University Parkway, Baltimore, Md. Stevens Mason Wright.. 512 Ridgewood Rd., South Orange, N.J. William Pelton Wright, Jr 1235 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. George William Young... 1317 Kanawha St., Charleston, W.Va. William Clements Young 830 Lake St., Newark, N.J. 95 tfflZEM GQ : EBSAISJf gTP RINC EfQ g j A Tf ggr Class Officers, 1934 Directed by committee of the Undergraduate Council during the first term. This committee consisted of W. M. Jenifer, S. P. Harbi- son, W. O. Stoughton, and G. C. Morse. According to the plan insti- tuted by the Senior Council of 1926, the class of 1934 did not elect any officers during the first term, but used this time to become better acquainted with one another and to judge the capacity for leadership possessed by their fellow class-mates. 98 g TRINCE TQ rrrrrrr firr rrrrrrrrr r • rrrrrrrr tr VC 7 A ' r n gc Class of 1934 NAME ADDRESS Sanford Martin Agnew 620 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Emory Glenn Albright River Road, Spring Mount, Pa. Charles Coolidge Alden, Jr 27 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Melville Joseph Alexander, Jr. Alamac Hotel, 71st Broadway, New York, N.Y. John Merrithew Allen 414 Keywood Ave., Orange, N.J. Robert Joseph Amberg...529 Summit Avenue, Maplewood, N.J. Paul Hamilton Ambrose 34 N. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N.J. Lewis Ames 359 Westminster Rd., Rochester, N.Y. John Gaddis Anderson 1650 Sherman St., Denver, Colo. Edmund Gilmour Anderson, Jr. .4 Lyons Place, Larchmont, N.Y. David Guy Anderson, Jr 4324 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Hand Anthony. . .1068 Douglas Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. John Archbold 3905 Reservoir Rd., Washington, D.C. Evan Chandler Archer 570 Warwick Rd., Haddonfield, NJ. John Edward Arens 1062 Rahway Rd., Plainfield, N.J. Houston Churchwell Armstrong, Jr.. .604 Mabry St., Selma, Ala. Victor Constantine Armstrong, Jr. 373 Prospect Ave., Hackensack, N.J. William Howard Arthur. 38 North Harrison Ave., Bellevue, Pa. Aikman Armstrong, Jr 1012 Van Dyke Ave., Detroit, Mich. William Louis Asmuth. . . .468 Redmond Rd., South Orange, N.J. Dwight Finch Andrews. . .R.F.D. No. 3, Charlottesville, Virginia Robert Eugene Asnis The Hermitage, Conshohocken, Pa. Asa Isham Atkins 2207 Upland Place, Cincinnati, Ohio Owen Beal Augsporger, Jr 22 Penhurst Park, Buffalo, N.Y. William Cornelius Austin. 3419 Ventnor Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. Eugene Edward Bachran ..837 St. Charles PI., Ocean City, N.J. William Van Vliet Bacon 11 Wisner Terrace, Goshen, N.Y. Aaron Moore Bagg 72 Fairfield Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Bruce A. Baker 404 Deerpath Ave., Lake Forest, 111. John Foster Bales 151 East Main St., Circleville, Ohio Rhodes Semmes Baker 3919 Lemmon Ave., Dallas, Tex. Clayton French Banks, Jr Villa Nova, Pa. Jeptha Fowlkes Barbour, Jr.. .221 Grand Ave., Yazoo City, Miss. James Higbie Barker 565 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. NAME ADDRESS Davis Piersol Barnett Edgemere, Bar Harbor, Me. Thomas Reginald Bassett 369 W. Blackwell St., Dover, N.J. Talcott Bates 12 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. John James Beattie, III .67 Colonial Ave., Warwick, N.Y. Charles Frederick Becker 175 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Leonard Francis Beckers 184 W. Fairview Ave., South Orange, N.J. Robertson Livermore Belden. . . . 1122 First St., New Orleans, La. Alexander Chartis Bell. 260 Washington Circle, Lake Forest, 111. Coleman Hamilton Benedict. .101 S. Victoria Ave., Ventnor, N.J. George Slocum Bennett. . ..76 West Union St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Maxon Alexander Berger 530 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. George Alfred Berkheimer. .1001 Graham Ave., Windber, Pa. Charles McGillenddy Bermuth 410 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Steel Berwell 110 Gilpin St., Denver, Colo. Frank Whittelsey Berrien Navy Yard, Washington, D.C. Edward Richard Bertram.. 14 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. John Case Besson 116 East 58th St., New York, N.Y. Richard Charles Bethge 2626 Lakeview Ave., Chicago, III. Samuel Johnson Beveridge.,1000 Grand Ave., Asbury Park, N.J. Samuel Biddle 2129 S St., Washington, D.C. Gordon Francis Biehn 2215 Andrews Ave., New York, N.Y. Hargrave Jouet Bishop 253 E. Third Ave., Roselle, N.J. Philip T. Blackwood 60 Stockton St., Princeton, N.J. Charles Warren Bledsoe Overlea, Md. John Bion Bogart 68 Montague St., Brooklyn, N.Y. William Robert Bonthron 865 Chicago Blvd., Detroit, Mich. William Filbert Bottiglia 34 Maple St., Bernardsville, N.J. ' John Chester Botts 41 5th Ave., New York, N.Y. Edmund DeLong Bowman Sunset Hills, Fairfax County, Va. Edward Bonner Bowring 66 E. 91st St., New York, N.Y. Andrew Culver Boyd 186 N. Lansdowne, Lansdowne, Pa. Frederick Doxee Bragdon 43 Ferncliff Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. Douglass Maxwell Bramlette Woodville, Miss. Milville Campbell Branch, Jr. 1830 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va. Erk Richard Braun 67 Myrtle Ave., Long Branch, N.J. 99 T TRtNCEf Ov- gEZA3E2c Qlass of 1934— (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Edward Yarde Breese, Jr.. 1032 Edgewood Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Edwin Herman Bressler 202 Hathway Park, Lebanon, Pa. Theodore Eugene Briell, Jr.. 6225 San Bonita Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Clexton Brooks 601 W. 180th St., New York, N.Y. Robert Daniel Brooks 314 Elmwood Ave., Ithaca, N.Y. Gordon Eames Brown Marine Base, Quantico, Va. Stuart Brown 717 S. 4th St., Springfield, 111. Frank Marey Browning 3300 Newark St., Washington, D.C. Donald Maynard Bryant 67 E. Main St., Le Roy, N.Y. Frank Tilford Buchner 157 Harrison St., E. Orange, N.J. Robert Morris Buck 381 Penn Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Joseph Holland Burchenal 415 Thayer Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Eilfred Buckland, Jr 1905 Orchid Ave., Hollywood, Calif. Herbert Alexander Burns Spring Valley, N.Y. John Franklin Burrowes 25 Girard Place, Maplewood, N.J. Hendrik L. Busch 134 E. 22nd St., New York, N.Y. David Bush Canby Greenville, Delaware, N.J. Samuel Ferdinand Carstens, Jr. 129 Hilton Ave., Hempstead, N.Y. James Michael Cartlidge. . . .37 N. Johnston Ave., Trenton, N.J, William Randolph Cosby 98 Bayeay Rd., New Rochelle, N.Y. George Sims Casebelt 26 Cypress St., Newark, N.J. Charles Barrus Ceppi 240 McLennon Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. David Laurance Chambers 5272 N. Meridan St., Indianapolis, Ind. John Atner Bell Chapin Dorset Hotel, 30 W. 54th St., New York, N.Y. Henry Breckinridge Chatfield Point Rd., E. Marion, Mass. Donald Palmer Cheatham. 2 a Capuchinas 48, Mexico City, Mex. James North Chenoweth 20 E. New Jersey Ave., Somers Point, N.J. David Townsend Christie. .. .666 Greenwood Ave., Glencoe, III. Waldo Milton Claflin. . .5840 Overbrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Roger Wheaton Clapp 4401 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. Dumont Clarke, Jr Manchester, Vt. Eugene Holt Clark 637 via Horquilla, Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. Lewis Atterbury Clarke 1035 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. NAME ADDRESS Robert Louis Clarke 135 N. 34th St., Omaha, Nebr. Charles Henry Classen 104 Elmhurst Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Harold Edgar Clearman, Jr 57 Grove St., Montlcair, N.J. Harrison Higbie Clement 307 Brentford Rd., Haverford, Pa. Thomas Hill Clyde 941 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Franklin Coburn, Jr. 2612 Wellington Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio James Alexander Cobey 60 W. Union St., Frostburg, Md. Charles Campbell Cole 444 Heywood Ave., Orange, N.J. Robert Zane Collings, Jr 254 E. Main St., Moorestown, N.J. James Morrow Chadwick-Collins 239 Roberts Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Edward Gordon Collister.12 Adele PI., Baldwin, New York,N.Y. Alfred Donaldson Compton, Jr. 605 W. 142nd St., New York, N.Y. Harris Russ Connick 368 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Haldan Everett Connor. .Indian River Ranch, New Smyrna, Fla. Bruce Keator Conover, Jr 813 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. William Van Vorhis Cook 135 Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. Richard Maxwell Cooley 2109 E. Galer St., Seattle, Wash. Keith Philip Copping 316 Margaret Ave., Peterboro, Ont. Charles Alfred Coppinger 2600 Boulevard, Jersey City, N.J. William Horace Corbin 60 Fernwood Rd., Summit, N.J. Victor Emanuel Costanzo 46 Chester St., Stamford, Conn. Henry Dering Coulton. .2513 Marlboro Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio John Todd Cowles 100 Ledge Rd., Burlington, Vt. Norton Van Voorhis Coyle 6608 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Allen Cracraft, Jr Lenox PI., Wheeling, W.Va. Robert Barret Cragin 1140 Lorraine Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Adam Weir Craig 625 Main St., Latrobe, Pa. Charles Hays Craig 73 Stockton St., Princeton, N.J. Thomas Alexander Craig 625 Main St., Latrobe, Pa. Charles John Cretoro 5948 Sheridan Rd.. Chicago, III. James Slater Crawford 5557 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Cruikshank 92 Sixth St., Garden City, N.Y. Larabie Cunningham Deer Lodge, Montana Edward Sims Dailey 141 Connett Rd., S. Orange, N.J. Hughes Dallas 655 Sheridan Rd., Winnetka, 111. 100 tgg_F RINC ilQN: rrrrrrr rr rrrrrrr rr r r rrrrrrrr r r il SSA2E2r Qlass of 1934 — (Qo?itinued) NAME ADDRESS William Augustus Dall Meyer, Jr. 600 Capital Avenue, Jefferson City, Mo. George Sarles Damerel 234 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Wickliffe Bond Dashiell, Jr 1470 Carr Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Philip Hays Dater 350 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Herbert George Davenport, Jr.. 353 W. 85th St., New York, N.Y. John Foster Davidson 1638 Juneway Terrace, Chicago, 111. Thomas Osborne Davies. . ..6817 Stenton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Edwin Janney Davis 675 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Richard Holland Davis 7207 Charlton St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Bowdoin Davis 215 Wendover Rd., Baltimore, Md. Donald MacKay Day 520 W. 122nd St., New York, N.Y. Arthur Tyrell Dear, Jr.. .Franklin Maple Apts., Ridgewood, N.J. Masaru Debuchi 1321 K St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Stevan Dedier 9 Loubina, Belgrade, Jugoslavia Richard Hartwell Delano, Jr. 6 Boxford Terrace, W. Roxbury, Mass. Irving Brady Delcher, Jr.. . .Kenilworth Apts., Germantown, Pa. Lawrence Lorenzo D ' Elena. . .431 Locust Ave., Burlington, N.J. Charles Franklin Deshler 106 E. 85th St., New York, N.Y. John Clarence Dielhenn 12337 Cedar Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Charles Louis Donahue, Jr.. . .Delano Park, Cape Elizabeth, Me. James Henry Donnelly, Jr 5131 Morris St., Germantown, Pa. John Benjamin Dorrance 577 N. Main St., Hightstown, N.J. David Carson Dougherty Hotel Roosevelt, 16th St., Washington, D.C. Dwight Van Rensselaer Dowley 3808 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Paul Cook Downing, Jr.. 200 Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass. Millard Edwin Draudt..610 West Wheeling St., Lancaster, Ohio Alfred T. Drury 29 Bank St., Princeton, N.J. John Edward Duker, Jr... 3904 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Bernard Moran Dunn 134 Keeler St., Rochester, N.Y. Burton Crawford Dunn 5837 Solway St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Laurance Dunning 375 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Nicoll Durrie 833 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. Charles Dusenberry 1049 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Ralph Ellwood Duston 2057-7th St., Cuyahoga Fall, Ohio Gordon Anderson Eadie 11 Blackburn Rd., Summit, N.J. NAME ADDRESS George Dilworth Edwards. . .826 Devonshire St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Stephen Larned Eckard Monsey, N.Y. George Leonard Eckel 529 Franklin St., Buffalo, N.Y. George Roop Eckels 193 Elm St., New Rochelle, N.Y. Churchill Eisenhart The Dean ' s House, Princeton, N.J. William Schmucker Eisenhart, Jr McClellan Hts., York, Pa. Lester Eisner, Jr 247 Broad St., Red Bank, N.J. Oswald Elbert 361 E. 25th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. David Potter Elliott 632 Love Lane, Wynnewood, Pa. Loran La Joie Elliott 180 Hilton Ave., Hempstead, N.Y. John Elting Winnetka, 111. Howard Gilbert Engler 310 Scotland St., S. Orange, N.J. Milton George Englert 344 Jefferson Drive, Pittsburgh, Pa. Nicholas Conover English 90 Whittredge Rd., Summit, N.J. Henry Escher, Jr 200 Lincoln St., Englewood, N.J. John Stephenson Evans 1525 S. Hull St., Montgomery, Ala. Townsend Evans U. S. Naval Operation, Washington, D.C. R. Kenneth Fairman. .1027 Westermoreland Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. Edward Louis Fausak 113 Main St., Hightstown, N.J. Armand London Fell 46 Model Ave., Trenton, N.J. Frank John Fellows, Jr 8840 193rd St., Hollis, N.Y. Jose Maria Ferrer 10 E. 66th St., New York, N.Y. Floris Livingstone Ferwerda Daretown, N.J. Prescott Hollister Finley 50 Exeter St., Forest Hills, N.Y. Adrian Sanford Fisher 640 Anderson St., Memphis, Tenn. George Bliss Flaccus Sharpsburg Station, Pittsburgh, Pa. Acan Evar Flanigan 555 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Fletcher, Jr Fletcher Farm, Scott, Ark. Alfred Leonard Florman 708 Newark Ave., Jersey City, N.J. George Charles Foedisch . . . . Scotforth Rd., Mt. Airy, Phila., Pa. George Little Follansbee Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Nicholas Foran 102 Mine St., Flemington, N.J. Robert Lethbridge Foshay 220 Rugby Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas D. Foster 118 W. 19th St., Sioux Falls, S.Dak. William Watt Foster 5500 Dunmoyle St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Green Foulke, II Bethlam Pike, White Marsh, Pa. Horace Earle Frane, Jr 20 E. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. John Musser Frame, II 901 N. 3rd St., Reading, Pa. John Weed Franklin 55 Bank St., Flushing, N.Y. 101 T TRlNCEf ny rrrrrrr rrrrrrr rrr rrrrrrrr t r £2 %f££L 6j[£e Qlass of 1934 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Mclntyre Fraser, Jr 303 S. Melcher St., Johnstown, N.Y. Joseph Sherman Frelinghuysen, Jr Far Hills, N.J. George Thomas Clark Fry 262 North Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. William Hill Fulper, III Flemington, N.J. Charles Holmes Gardner.. 76 Greenacres Ave., Scarsdale, N.Y. William Earl Garrison Elmgrove, Jobstown, N.J. Leonidas George Gavalas 51 Baldwin St., Newark, N.J. Charles Gaylord 217 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Edgar Mills Gemmell 317 W. 83rd St., New York, N.Y. Eugene Clifton Berhart 2 Highland Ave., Madison, N.J. Robert Newton Gilmore, Jr 495 8th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. John Drum Gill Ill Buena Vista Rd., Santa Barbara, Cal. John Joseph Gill 30 152nd St., Flushing, N.Y. Charles Leslie Gilliland, Jr Bryn Mawr, Pa. Gaylord Wilson Gillis, Jr.. 17431 Maumee, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Alexander Ginn Gates Mills, Cleveland, Ohio Nathaniel Stratford, Goldsmith. Ill E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. Daniel Webster Goodenough Longacres, Farmington, Mich. S. Kenneth Goodman 344 Maple Ave., E. Orange, N.J. Andrew Jackson Goodwin, Jr. 1230 Woodstock Ave., Anniston, Ala. John Edgar Gomery, Jr.. 6398 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Louis Chancellor Gordon.. 253 N. Main St., Chambersburg, Pa. Wilmer Welty Gosnell R.D. No. 4, Greensburg, Pa. Walter Taber Grange, Jr Shields, Sewickley, Pa. William Anderson Gray Roswell, N.Mex. Wharton Green, Jr 38 Lenox Rd., Summit, N.J. Julian Ross Greene 2103 Belair Rd., Baltimore, Md. Edward Weidman Greeno, Jr.. 1507 Aster Place, Cincinnati, Ohio Andrew S. Grey 2031 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. John P. Griffith 500 E. Evergreen Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Robert Morgan Grummon. . .583 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N.J. Groover Ugo Guerrini 330 W. 102nd St., New York, N.Y. John Kirkman Gurney Third St., Garden City, N.Y. Robert Patton Hapgood, Jr... 73 W. Corydon St., Bradford, Pa. Douglas Hahn 448 Spring Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Donald Campbell Hain. . 121 Park St., Montclair, N.J. Richard Samuel Half 5537 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. NAME ADDRESS George Lawrence Hall... 2960 Clavemont Blvd., Berkeley, Cal. James Scott Hall, Jr 6027 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Hall Harbor Dr., Belle Haven, Greenwich, Conn. Robert Austin Hall 125 Brookside Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. William Harry Haller, Jr 18 E. Second St., Frederick, Md. William Halton, Jr 45 Wilson Block, Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Chalkley Jay Hambleton 46 E. Elm St., Chicago, 111. Barker Gummere Hamill 31 Richey Place, Trenton, N.J. Frederick Warner Hamilton. 215 S. Main St., W. Hartford, Conn. John Taylor Hamilton. . .2345 Linden Drive, Cedar Rapids, Iowa Thomas Parker Hamilton, Jr. 744 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N.J. William Wallace Hamilton. 744 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Frederick Harris Harbison Pine Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Gilbert Walbridge Harman 59 E. Main St., Cambridge, N.Y. Charles Shailer Hascall, Jr 19 Adele Place, Baldwin, N.Y. John Wesley Haubner.4918 N. Hutchinson St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Dods Hawkins. .Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N.Y. Charles Edward Haydock, Jr Chappaqua, N.Y. Coulter Dunham Huyler, Jr Round Hill, Greenwich, Conn. Lynn Sanford Haynes 1140 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Andrew Stewart Hegeman, Jr. 199 Midland Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Noel Hemmendinger . . .62 High View Ave., Bernardsville, N.J. Ralph Woods Hench, Jr 48 Park Ave., Suffern, N.Y. Frederick Kahler Henrich 522 Lin wood Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Richard Townsend Henshaw, Jr Rectory St., Rye, N.Y. John Walter Hermann Parkville, Mo. John Brackett Hersey Miles Rd., Wolfeboro, N H. William Sinclair Heyniger, III 65 Pine St., Waterbury, Conn. Arthur Sidney Hicks 14 Elliott Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Edwin Bruce Hill, Jr 5909 Hampton St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Richard Donigan Hilliard Upper River Rd., Louisville, Ky. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle Hinman Kent, Conn. Robert Enoch Hobart, Jr Edgemont, Lansford, Pa. Robert James Hoey 125 Irving Ave., Providence, R.I. Henry Green Hodges, Jr 708 Centre Ave., Reading, Pa. John Chetwoode Hodges 2210 Burns, Detroit, Mich. William Charles Hogg, Jr 126 Union St., Ridgewood, N.J. 102 tffiZEEiNC£fo gu A££E2r Qlass of 1934 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS William Butterworth Holmes Alden Park Manor, Germantown, Pa. John Gage Holschuh 814 Park Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. Robert Ketcham Holton Westover Essex Falls, N.J. Thomas Chase Homan 15 Edgehill Ave., Chatham, N.J. Russell Houghton Hooker.. 1016 St. Georges Rd., Baltimore, Md. Rudolph Senn Houck, Jr 315 Clay Ave., Scranton, Pa. John Hampton Hoult Elmbrooke, Robinson Rd., Grand Rapids, Mich. Alfred Hunt Howell 24 Monroe Place,. Brooklyn, N.Y. Arthur Sewell Hughes 278 Aycrigg Ave., Passaic, N.J. Ralph Hustace Hubbard, Jr Windcrest Rd., Rye, N.Y. Joseph Washington Hunsicker.Sheaff Lane, Fort Washington, Pa. Joseph Ross Hunter 1571 Quarrier St., Charleston, W.Va. Allen Carrington Hutcheson, Jr. . . .1720 Milford, Houston, Tex. Robert Leroy Hutton 167 E. 82nd St., New York, N.Y. Thomas Edward Irvine 1006 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Stanley George Ivins Rumson Rd., Little Silver, N.J. John Collins Jackson 1 Winthrop Place, Maplewood, N.J. Louis Eugene Jallade 139 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y. Sherman Brownell Joost, Jr Quoque, L.I., N.Y. Edward Dudley Johnson 1260 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio Malcolm Johnson 2228 Bonnycastle Ave., Louisville, Ky. Sidney Dupuy Johnson Stephens St., Rahway, N.J. John Lawrence Johnston, Jr 625 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Arthur Henry Jones. .9 Walbridge Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Alexander Henry Joseph.. 5645 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederick Mahlon Kafer Lawrenceville, N.J. August Frederick Kammer, Jr., 425 Hillside Place, S. Orange, N.J. Charles Buckman Katzenbach. .497 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. Abraham Kazan 431 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. Alexander Wriedt Keer 601 Clifton Ave., Newark, N.J. Edmund Halsey Kellogg 25 Collis Ave., Morristown, N.J. Mahlon Sistie Kemmerer Short Hills, N.J. Joseph Clarence Kennedy, 525 W. Washington St., Fayetteville, Tenn. Norman Low Kennedy 44 Curtis PI., Maplewood, N.J. Robert Wallace Jennedy 25 Atterbury Ave., Trenton, N.J. NAME ADDRESS Richard Carter Kennedy 220 Longwood Rd., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Albert Kerr 220 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Joseph Alexander Kershaw 22 Radcliff Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. John Edward Kerney 373 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. David Stoughton Kimball 1064 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Malcolm Gault Kirk 135 N. 6th Ave., Steubenville, Ohio Owen Alden Kirkland 145 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Alexander Stuart Kirkman 984 Sterling PI., Brooklyn, N.Y. Roger Bertine Kirkpatrick Jamesburg, N.J. Harry Kleinkauf 24 New Rose St., Trenton, N.J. George D. Kline 1407 S. 3rd St., Louisville, Ky. Remick Kniffin Ocean Ave., Cedarhurst, L.I., N.Y. Francis Ellis Knowles. .8106 Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Raymond Burns Koehler 87 Maple St., Rutherford, N.J. Carl A. Krafft 464 E. Illinois Rd., Lake Forest, 111. Henrik Johannes Krebs, Jr., 2506 Willard St., Wilmington, Del. Robert Christian Kuser 315 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. John Prentice Laimbeer, 264 Stewart Ave., Garden City, L.I., N.Y. Joseph Thistle Lambie Le Moyne Ave., Washington, Pa. Arthur Stephen Lane 13 Winter St., Arlington, Mass. Karl Henrik Larsen 1000 South High St., Columbus, Ohio James Watt Laughlin 211 Walnut St., Barnesville, Ohio Arthur Plimpton Lawler, 280 Van Cortlandt Pk. Ave., Yonkers. N.Y. Frederick Porter Lawrence. .6th Jefferson St., Newell, W. Va. David McDougal LeBreton 35 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Edmund Woodham Lee 170 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Martin Lee 3 Harvard PI., Charlotte, N.C. John Carter Legg, III, University Pkwy and 39th St., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Weiss Leidy 132 Windsor St., Reading, Pa. Marcus Jay Leschin 210 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. Burdette Gibson Lewis, Jr... 57 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N.J. Joseph William Lewis 12 Hortense PI., St. L ouis, Mo. William Garthwaite Lewis 1365 North Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. Philip Livingston, Jr 20 E. 80th St., New York, N.Y. Grinnell Willis Locks 2017 S St., Washington, D.C. 103 tglJi RINC ETQJs rtrrrrr rrrrrrr rr r rrrr rrrr r r 3 ESLl ZSlJc Qlass of 1934 — (Qontinued) NAME ADDRESS Frederick Eugene Lombard R.D. No. 1, Farmingdale, N.J. John Norton Lord, 107 Touraine Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. John Thompson Lovett Branch Ave., Little Silver, N.J. Alfred Northrup Lowenstein 15 Ellis Ave., Irvington, N.J. Hugh Jerome Lynch 16 Princeton Rd., Elizabeth, N.J. James Joseph Lynch 4224 Hazel Ave., Chicago, Hi. John Voorhees Maple 20 Chestnut St., Princeton, N.J. Robert Lorraine Mark Wyomissing Hills, Pa. Pompeo Henry Maresi 36 W. 44th St., New York, N.Y. Allan Marquand 201 Mercer St., Princeton, N.J. Walton H arper Marshall, Jr., Knollwood Country Club, White Plains, N.Y. William McFall Martin 5807 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Roger Mathews 22 East 36th St., New York, N.Y. Ernest Max May 48 Stanley Rd., South Orange, N.J. Lester Eugene May 257 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N.Y William Johnson M ' Allen, Jr 374 South Ave., Glencoe, 111. Roy Edward McCabe, 124 Irwin Ave., Ben Avon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph Benedict McCarthy. .. 104 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J Richard Donald McCarty 242 Heywood Ave., Orange, N.J. Clarence Conaway McClaine, 3316 Newark St., Washington, D.C. Norman McClave, Jr.. .430 Madison Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Bentley Grimes McCloud, Jr., 338 Kenilworth Ave., Kenilworth, 111. Charles Naumann McCloud, Jr., 135 N. Lexington Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Charles Hanna McCree 14 Stuyvesant Ave., Arlington, N.J. Joseph Stevens McCulloch, Jr. .Golf House Rd., Haverford, Pa. David William McGann 1505 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. James Brier McGiffert 124 W. 6th Ave., Roselle, N.J. Eugene McGuckin Domremy, Rydal, Pa. David Howe Mcllvaine..312 Bryn Mawr Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Stephen John McPartland 150 E. 49th St., New York, N.Y. Harold Raymond Medina, Jr. .14 East 75th St., New York, N.Y. Harry Wallum Megan 39 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Neil Meredith 5800 Hampton St., Pittsburgh, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Henry Curtis Mial 38 Elm St., Morristown, N.J. Frank William Milbourn, Jr., 830 Mentor Ave., Painesville, Ohio Henry Loose Miller.. 131 W. Washington St., Hagerstown, Md. Henry Wisner Miller, Jr 53 E. 66th St., New York, N.Y. John Rulon-Miller, 3rd 31 S. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Joseph Walter Miller, Jr Springfield Farm, Princeton, N.J. Oscar Winston Miller, Jr... 808 Crescent Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal. Peter MacNaughton Miller, Jr... 160 Chestnut St., Albany, N.Y. Alfred Derby Mittendorf, Jr., Field Point Park, Greenwich, Conn. John Huntington Moore 33 Concord Ave., Larchmont, N.Y. John Thackeray Morgan, 504 Kenilworth Apts., Philadelphia, Pa. Randal Morgan 7920 Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Barclay Morrison 311 Casino Ave., Cranford, N.J. James Donald Morrow 31 Fairview Ave., So. Orange, N.J. Charles John Moynihan 802 Main St., Montrose, Colo. Charles Daniel Murphy 775 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Donald Gerald Murphy Marlboro Inn, Montclair, N.J. Lawrence Bernard Murphy, 2243 Tudor Dr., Cleveland Hts., Ohio John Alden Murray Ill Vroom Ave., Spring Lake, N.J. Edward Mitchell Murrary 40-25 155th St., Flushing, N.Y. Clay Kenton Myers 601 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Brittain Myers, Jr Chestnut Hill, Pa. Philip Faxon Mygatt 26 E. 10th St., New York, N.Y. Frank Alexander Nantz 6549 Iris Ave., Cincinnati, O. Douglas Evon Nelson. .. .201 N. Murtland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Wells Newell 1075 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. John Whitney Nixon Circle Dr., Ross, Calif. John Bertram Oakes, Ansonia Hotel, Broadway at 73rd St., New York, N.Y. Francis Joseph O ' Brien 40 N. Main St., Brewster, N.Y. Francis Gurney Okie, Jr... 682 Fairmount Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Raymond Willard Olson, 1766 Humboldt Ave., So. Minneapolis, Minn. William Morse Oman 310 West 86th St., New York, N.Y. William Oncken 15 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J. 104 tHOMNCElgv rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrt rr rr r r 42 EEZAZSaHf Qlass of 1934 — (Continued) Arthur Houghton Otis, Jr., 1115 Buckingham Rd., Birmingham, Mich. William Pagenstecher 14 Sutton PI. So., New York, N.Y. Wayne Pahl 50 Mackey Ave., Port Washington, N.Y. John Hillyer Palmer 453 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Nathan Grier Parke, III 29 Meyer St., Forty Fort, Pa. Andrew James Parker Walnut St., Reedsville, Pa. Alan Templeton Parson 10 W. 96th St., New York, N.Y. Dwight Kittelberger Parsons 519 Earl Ave., Kent, Ohio Henry Cooley Parsons 1008 First Ave., Williamsport, Pa. Donald Evans Peacock 188 E. Main St., Westfield, N.Y. Corning Pearson 210 W. Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill, Pa. Edward Gibson Pearson 27 S. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Warren Andrew Peters, Jr 625 Maple St., Westfield, N.J. Frederic Robert Peterson. .. .1216 Riverside Ave., Trenton, N.J. Ambrose John Petzinger 458 Sixth Ave., Paterson, N.J. Walter Hermann Pflaumer, 2413 N. 52nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Lewis Phillips 161 Henry St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Thomas Edwin Pickering. .1051 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harry Morrow Pierce, Jr. . Hilltop, New Castle, Del. R.F.D. Frank Waghorne Plant, Jr., 201 Clifton Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Waddill Piatt Versailles, Ky. James Andrew Plummer 84-01 Chapin Pky., Jamaica, N.Y. Jack Martin Poe 302 Main St., Little Rock, Ark. Roland Dudley Pollock, Jr., 8319 Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Charles Northrop Pond.... 1400 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Eldert Bergen Pool 7924 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N.Y. Ralph Hutchinson Poole, Jr Box 203, Lake Forest, III. David A ' Layne Poor 1 University PI., New York, N.Y. Edward Major Prindle. . . .30 Lincoln Ave., W. Barrington, R.I. Frederick Quellmalz, Jr 306 Suffolk Rd., Baltimore, Md. Warren Rusling Rainear. . . .358 Aubrey Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Edward Reilly Ralston 25 E. 77th St., New York, N.Y. Stephen Marion Ramsey 594 Myrtle St., Portland, Ore. William Holdship Rea 102 Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Manning Reed, VI 406 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa. Frank James Reed, Jr 21 Playter Blvd., Toronto, Ontario Joseph Condron Reed Oregon, 111. Charles Edgar Graham Reeves Hobart Ave., Summit, N.J. William Rufus Reitzell, Jr., 4703 Kingessing Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Peter Havens Remington 403 Paddock St., Watertown, N.Y. Alfred Owen Reynolds 500 E. Ridge St., Marquette, Mich. Edward Lowudes Rhett Jefferson Ave., Short Hills, N.J. Myron Lafayette Rice 107 Berkeley PI., Glen Rock, N.J. Edward Henderson Richardson, Jr., 3 Whitfield Rd., Baltimore, Md. Frank Garrett Richter 621 Maryland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edgar Worthington Riebe, Via Dante Da Castiglione, Florence, Italy William Andrew Ringler, Jr Monroe, N.Y. Ralph Koenig Ritchie 162 Trenor Dr., New Rochelle, N.Y. Dean Kirby Rizer 2301 Oliver South, Minneapolis, Minr. Robert Inskeep Rizer, Jr., 2301 Oliver Ave., S. Minneapolsi, Minn William Randolph Robbins....5 Grove Court, New York, N.Y. Bayard Henry Roberts Belmont Ave., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Victor Jamison Roberts, Jr.... 26 E. Brown St., Norristown, Pa. Albert Gillespie Robinson 94 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N.J. Richard Randolph Robinson.. 280 Convent Ave., New York, N.Y. John Lowry Roe, Jr 1827 Stockton St., Jacksonville, Fla. Walter Ludwig Rothschild, Jr., Ill E. Pinebrook Rd., New Rochelle, N.Y. John Gould Rouse, Jr 403 Somerset Rd., Baltimore, Md. John Bowlin Routh 21 Indian Hill Rd., Winnetka, III. Andrew Loring Rowe 33 E. Division St., Chicago, III. Alexander Carst Ruigh 22 Dickinson St., Princeton, N.J. Edgar Felton Rulon-Miller 110 Church Rd., Ardmore, Pa. George Henry Rundle 620 Caldwell St., Pigua, Ohio Henry Norris Russell, Jr 79 Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. James Stewart Russell 940 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Armistead Dudley Rust.. 805 N. Magdalen, San Angelo, Texas Hugo Anthony Rutherfurd Allamuchy, N.J. William Lee Sanders 1103 1st Ave., Columbus, Miss. Frank De Wolfe Sanger Ruxton, Md. 105 p TP-INCg TO rrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr f f gV C A- gggr Qlass of 1934 — ((Continued) NAME ADDRESS John Henry Kelly Shannahan, Jr., 904 C St., Sparrows Point, Md. Edward Roney Schaible 1825 Northampton St., Easton, Pa. James Hamilton Scheifly . . . .335 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa. John Norman Schenck 2611 Manoa Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii Remsen Ten Eyck Schenck.25 Hillcrest Rd., Mountain Lakes, N.J. Henry Frelinghuysen Schenk. . . .194 Main St., Flemington, N.J. Amedee Benoist Cole Sheilds. .305 Westgate Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Carl Victor Schieren 89 Llewellyn, Montclair, N.J. Chaloner Baker Schley Santa Barbara, Calif. William Emerson Schroeder Woodland Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Edward Robert Schuh 417-A 18th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Layton Martin Schoch, Jr Wendover Ave., Rosemont, Pa. William Mathias Schulz 6106 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, III. John Sullivan Scully, III.. 102 S. Stewart St., Winchester, Pa. Hess Thatcher Sears Plaza Hotel, Trenton, Mo. John Rumner Searles, Jr. .8100 E. Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. John Emery Seibert 715 Highland Ave., Westfield, N.J. William Kirkpatrick Selden. . . .408 W. Second St., Oil City, Pa. Perry Kimball Sellon P.O. Box 745, Babylon, L.I., N.Y. Louis Henderson Seton Lake Placid Club, N.Y. Jackson Penrose Serfas 446 West Ave., Mt. Carmel, Pa. Hugh Martin Seyfarth. .542 S. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, 111. William DuBose Sheldon. 1850 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D.C. Teizo Shiohara 51 Pleasant PI., Arlington, N.J. Frederic Merrill Sibley, Jr., 750 Whittier Blvd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. John Edward Silberfeld. . .365 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. Morton Moses Silberfeld 32 Ingram PI., Newark, N.J. Charles Thompson Silloway, Rittenhouse-Plaza. Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Glenn Sipe, Jr 5810 Hampton St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Jenkinson Skillman. .124 St. Georges Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Hayden Smith 175 E. 64th St., New York, N.Y. Herbert Arthur Smith, Jr Lawrenceville, N.J. Hermon Emerson Smith Ill E. 48th St., New York, N.Y. Richard Bull Smith St. James, N.Y. Rufus Burr Smith : 10 Delaware Rd., Bellerose, N.Y. William Edgar Smith 4203 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. NAME ADDRESS John Tattersall Smithies 5555 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Christopher Harrison Snyder 109 Edgehill Rd., Bala, Pa. Arthur Kasel Solomon 5706 Bartlett St., Pittsburgh, Pa Benton French Speece. . . . 5047 N. Camac St., Philadelphia, Pa. James Kenneth Stallman R.D. No. 7, York, Pa. William Ronald Stevens 904 Grant Ave., Plainfield, N.J. William Damon Stevenson, Jr., 7038 Thomas Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Donald Fraser Stewart 29 Arleigh Rd., Great Neck, N.Y. Averill Stowell The Park Lane, Buffalo, N.Y. William Porter Sullivan 1625 Hinman Ave., Evanston, 111. Samuel Donovan Swann, Jr 879 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md George Paschall Swift 125 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. John Jacob Swigart. .7225 E. Seaside Walk, Long Beach, Calif. Thomas Suffern Tailer, Jr 1010 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Masahiko Ralph Takami..l76 Washington Pk., Brooklyn, N.Y. Charles Conover Talbot 62 E. Division St., Chicago, III. Julian Drake Taylor 16 Midland Ave., E. Orange, N.J. William Lycurqus Taylor, Jr... 850 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, III. Muneyori Terashima Kojunachi-ku, Tokyo, Japan Arthur Terhune 97 Slocum Ave., Englewood, N.J. Henry Burgess Thielbar. .521 Keystone Ave., River Forest, 111. Edward Robert Thomas, Jr.. 1911 Panama St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Charles Suor Thomas 19 Revere PI., Buffalo, N.Y. Walker Van Atta Thomas Hackettstown, N.J. Walter Frederick Thomas 156 Grand Ave., Baldwin, N.Y. Cameron Thompson 139 Grand St., Newburgh, N.Y. Henry Augustus Thouron Glen Rd., Ardmore, Pa Lindley Welsh Tiers 41 Nelson Ave., Cooperstown, N.Y. John Laing Tiffany 1423 E. Locust St., Cincinnati, O. Middleton George Charles Train, 3015 Que St., Washington, D.C. William Booth Trainer, Jr 945 Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Francis Herron Trimble, Jr.. 7152 Brighton Rd., Ben Avon, Pa. Thomas Hooker Trimble Huntington Hills, Rochester, N.Y. George March Trumbower Mahwah, N.J Robert Patterson Turner, Jr Country Club Rd., York, Pa. Warren Hires Turner, Jr 31 Miller Rd., Morristown, N.J. 106 rg RINCE TQN rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrf r rrrrrrrr rr7? rr r r J f 1 1 r r ■r rr r r rr r rr frrrr rr r rrrrrrrr r r SSAZSESp Class of 1934 NAME ADDRESS Frank Johnson Turnbull 218 Fifth St., Elizabeth, Pa Herbert James Twelvetree, Jr., 1887 Hillside Ave., E. Cleveland, Ohio Francis Lund Van Dusen. . . .6071 Drexel Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. John Henry van Dykc.R.R. 6 — Station C, Milwaukee, Wis. John Richardson van Dyke.... 80 Hillcrest Ave., Summit, N.J Carroll Van Ness, Jr Owings Mills P.O., Md. William Buchwalter Van Nortvvick, 24 S. Batavia Ave., Batavia, 111. Theodore Venard 1039 Rush St., Chicago, III. Walter Cochran Viol 6 Vernon PI., E. Orange, N.J. Ernest Rudolph Von Starck 1412 W. State St., Trenton, NJ. Albert Romaine Vreeland 11 Barry PI., Passaic, N.J. Alan Haswell Vrooman 58 Rose Ave., Patchogue, N.Y. Robert Osborn Waddell 2895 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Ga. John Emory Wadsworth. . . . 103 McDonough St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Addison Clark Waid, Jr., 2580 Wellington Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio Henry Babcock Walker, Jr. 710 S.E. Second St., Evansville, Ind. Robert Giles Walker 5430 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Richard Deane Wallace 1362 Astor, Chicago, 111. Arthur Bernard Walsh, Jr., 828 Bronx River Rd., Bronxville, N.Y. James Edmund Walsh Merrick Rd., Merrick, L.I., N.Y. George William Warch, 164 No. Van Dien Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Edmund Donnan Wardrop, 16424 Jefferson Ave., Grosse Pointe, Mich. John Russell Warner, Jr.... 3006 Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wis. Lendall Pitts Warriner Edgemont, Lansford, Pa. Harry Powell Watson 311 Church St., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Thomas Stanley Watson 254 3rd St., Clifton, N.J. William Watt Sandy Hill Rd., Norristown, Pa. William Merritt Weaver, Jr. .253 Wyncote Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Arthur Lincoln Webber. .. 1617 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Morris Twining Weeks, Jr.. 222 Westbourne St., La Jolla, Cal. George Harold Wegener. . 10322-107th St., Richmond Hill, N.Y. Warman Welliver 4130 Guilford Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. — (Continued) William Lindus Cody Wheaton, 3040 Somerton Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio George Howard White, III 917 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Robert White 322 Fifth St., Marietta, Ohio Bradford Hill Whiting 1438 N. State St., Chicago, 111 Lawrence Howard Wight, 206 Grand Central Ave., Amityville, N.Y. Ralph Ulyate Whipple.. 372 Ogden Ave., West Englewood, N.J. Robert Jenks Whipple 4 Wheeler Ave., Worcester, Mass. Donly Hawley Wilder Meadow Court, Bronxville, N.Y. Eliot Butler Willauer 100 Pelham Rd., New Rochelle, N.Y Robert King Willett 11 Belloire Drive., Montclair, N.J. Jonathan Currier Willey 6516 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Stanley Williams. .Kenburn, Kings Point, Great Neck, L.I., N.Y. John Derrick Wilsey, III 191 Brayton St., Englewood, N.J. Robert Clifford Wilson, Jr 235 Corona Ave., Pelham, N.Y. William Alan Wilson The Moorings, Upper Nyack, N.Y. William Pannell Wilson Highland Park, Wheeling, W. Va. Morgan Wing, Jr 130 E. 67th St., New York, N.Y. John Colburn Winslow 202 Pine St., Punxsutawney, Pa. David Rudolph Wintermann Eagle Lake, Texas Malcolm Lloyd Wister Cherry Lane, Wynnewood, Pa. Josiah Oliver Wolcott, Jr Dover, Del. Ethelbert Paxson Wolferman, 5725 State Line Rd., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Snyder Womrath Sasco Hill, Southport, Conn. Arthur MacDougall Wood.. 181 Belle Ave., Highland Park, 111. Rusling Wood, Jr 125 S. Grove St., E. Orange, N.J. William Joseph Woods... 317 Stuyvesant Ave., Lyndhurst, N.H. Richard Lyman Worcester. 3 Seminary PI., New Brunswick, N.J. William Dutton Wright.. 817 West End Ave., New York, N.Y. Nelson Paul Yeardley . . . .1423 Spring St., Parkersburg, W. Va. James Keil Yohe 76 King Edward Apts., Pittsburgh, Pa. Donald Keith Yost 98 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N.J. Arthur Young, Jr 110 E. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Arthur Middleton Young 70 Tradd St., Charleston, S.C. John Frederic Young 615 Fair Oaks Ave., Oak Park, 111. Maurice Decker Youngman. . .5407 Atlantic Ave., Ventnor, N.J. William Hughes Zing, Jr.. 425 Franklin Ave., Steubenville, 0. Frank Frederick Zittell Broonside Park, Greenwich, Conn. 107 T Trincct o rrfrrrfrrr r rrrrrffrr rrrrrrrrrr r rfflrr rrrrrrr rr r rr ?nl rr rrrrrrrrr r rami t rrrrrrrrrr 41 aSZAZSEjf ' Partial Students William Anderson Trenton, N.J. Louis Binder Trenton, N.J. John Edward Bloom Spokane, Wash. George Fridjhof Bloomquist Missoula, Mont. Albert Nicholas Greminger, Jr New York, N.Y. George Barker Hulett Princeton, N.J. Ralph Burtsall McCuen Mt. Nebo, Pa. James Bolard More Delaware, Ohio Ernest William Redeke New Brighton, S.I., N.Y. Elmer Merril Reed Camden, Me. Edward Eugene Reilly Trenton, N.J. Earl Fredrick Schottke Cleveland, Ohio Thomas Richard Shoaff Fort Wayne, Ind. Walter Leonard Thring Cambridge, Eng. Ralph Wesley Todd Sharptown, N.J. (general Summary OFFICERS Trustees 36 Faculty and Instructors 300 Assistants in Instruction Officers of Administration (duplicates 11) GRADUATE SCHOOL Visiting Fellows Advanced Fellows Ordinary Fellows Graduate Scholars 31 36 392 26 10 38 11 Other Graduate Students 151 Graduate Students in Engineering 236 14 UNDERGRADUATES Senior Class A.B B S b!s! iii Eng. . ' . ' . ' . ' ., 333 134 31 498 Junior Class A.B B S B.S. iii Eng. Sophomore Class A.B B.S B.S. in Eng. Freshmaat Class A.B B.S. in Eng. Partial Students Total for the year 1930-1931. 332 174 45 551 346 182 51 579 556 78 634 15 2527 108 r jRINCE fg g VC-A ir gr (geographical Summary c. ENG. SR. JR. so. FR. PAR. TOTAL G. ENG. SR. JR. so. FR. PAR. TOTAL New York 31 3 124 148 127 164 2 599 Oregon 2 1 1 4 New Jersey 16 7 115 119 158 148 5 568 Idaho 1 1 1 3 Pennsylvania 29 1 74 109 75 110 1 399 Vermont 1 2 3 Ohio 18 18 29 21 24 2 112 Montana 1 1 2 Illinois 5 20 21 24 32 102 South Dakota 1 1 2 -Maryland 6 23 16 27 23 95 Arizona 1 1 Missouri 7 1 21 9 12 7 57 Utah 1 1 Connecticut 14 11 3 12 10 50 Hawaii 1 2 1 1 5 District of Columbia 2 1 10 8 15 11 47 Canal Zone 1 1 2 Michigan 3 2 9 10 13 37 Philippine Islands 1 1 2 California 12 6 2 2 9 31 Porto Rico 1 1 2 Minnesota 4 4 7 6 8 29 Nevada Massachusetts 6 3 10 3 6 28 New Mexico ° 1 Indiana 4 4 4 5 3 1 21 North Dakota Alabama 3 5 4 4 4 20 Wyoming Delaware 2 3 5 5 5 20 Canada 13 2 1 1 2 19 Kentucky 4 3 2 7 4 20 England 7 1 8 Texas 5 4 1 5 4 19 China 3 1 1 Virginia 4 4 3 2 5 18 France 1 1 1 Tennessee 1 5 4 4 3 17 Mexico 1 1 Colorado 1 3 2 7 3 16 Poland ■2 West Virginia 2 4 3 5 14 Bahamas 1 Florida 2 4 5 2 13 Belgium 1 Georgia 1 4 7 1 13 Cuba 1 North Carolina 3 3 1 3 1 11 Germany 1 Rhode Island 4 1 1 3 2 11 Greece 1 ..« Louisiana 1 2 4 2 1 10 India i Mississippi 2 3 2 3 10 Italy 1 Oklahoma 2 2 2 2 8 Japan ■ 1 Arkansas 1 1 2 1 2 7 Jugoslavia J ' ■ ' 1 Nebraska 1 1 3 1 1 7 Korea f 1 New Hampshire 1 1 1 3 1 7 New Zealand j Wisconsin 2 1 3 6 Persia Iowa 1 1 2 1 5 Peru 1 Kansas 2 2 1 5 Scotland 1 South Carolina 2 2 1 5 Turkey 1 Washington 1 2 1 1 5 Maine 1 1 1 1 4 236 14 498 551 579 634 15 2527 109 UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL Standing — Billings, Morse, Harbison, Hooker, Purnell, Staughton. Seated— Jenifer, Bradley, Rose, Scarlett, Mestres. T TRINCET Pgy rrrrrrr rrfrrrrrr r rrrrrrr r r p TC A- Rg g Undergraduate Qouncil 1930-1931 Billings Mestres Bradley Morse Harbison Purnell Hooker Rose Jenifer Scarlett Staughton 111 zmjiMTD THE DAILY PRINCETONIAN Top Row— Carpenter, Darrow, Clifford, Wingo, Rockefeller, Ragan, Ferine, O ' Malley, Brower, Doerflinger, Clayburgh, DuVivicr. Sixth Row— A. Barnes, Lane, Howell, Council, Loveman, Burnett, K. Barnes, Kennedy, Root, Whallon, Hereford, Sloane. Fifth Row — Randell, Hoffer, Leonard, Damman, Delaney, Bowie, Harman, Symington, Eckels, White. Fourth Row — McWilliams, Pasley, Wetherbee, Fitzmorris, Barrett, Saltus, Kepler, Hamilton, Reed, Burnham, Findley, Ely. Third J?oa — Hatch, Edwards, Coats, Carhart, Arnold, Welch, Perera, Schwed, Kineshnber, Vogel, Stengel. Second Row — Roudebush, Lee, Millard, Mirick, Rose, Stevenson, Silber, Hilken, Post. Front Row — Leutscher, Shackelford, Stevens, J. H. MacDonald, Wright, Anderson, Tompkins, Chapman, Piel, Gasson, J. N. MacDonald, Morris, Boffey. tvETUiNCEf rrrrr rrrr rr (rrrrrrrrrr l r rrrrrr rr f r 31 gLiAj QOjr The T)aily T rincetonian Nelson P. Rose, Chairman NEWS STAFF R. A. Stevenson, Jr., Managing Editor Henry G. Hilken, Assignment Editor George S. Roudebush, Make-Up Editor W. G. Botzow, ' 31 B. H. Hereford, ' 31 E. W.Barrett, ' 32 K. M. Boffey, ' 32 D. DuVivier, ' 32 B. C. D. Edwards, ' 32 W. A. Fairburn,Jr., ' 32 C. H. Findley, ' 32 E. D. Gasson, ' 32 C. S. Hamilton, Jr., ' 32 H. M. Kennedy, ' 32 J. N. MacDonald, ' 32 J. O ' Malley, Jr., ' 32 W. F. Piel, Jr., ' 32 E. Reed, Jr., ' 32 H.B.Arnold, Jr., ' 33 A. C.Barnes, ' 33 E. L. Bigelow, ' 33 H. L. Chapman, ' 33 G.C.Howell, Jr., ' 33 E. W.Lane, Jr., ' 33 G. A. Perera, ' 33 O. Root, Jr., ' 33 F. Shackelford, ' 33 J. F. Symington, Jr., 33 J. H. Tompkins, ' 33 O.T.Wingo, ' 33 Gordon R. H. C. Anderson, Jr., ' 31 R.R.Bowie, ' 31 EDITORIAL STAFF Silver, Editorial Editor Davis R. Post, Assistant Editorial Editor P. Burnham, ' 31 R. P. Eckels, ' 31 J. C. Sloane, ' 31 P. R. Schumann, ' 32 W. Darrow, ' 31 W. H. Fineshriber, ' 31 W. P. Vogel, Jr., ' 31 P. Schwed, ' 32 W. M. Doerflincer, ' 31 R. J. Kepler, ' 31 G. H. Gurley, ' 32 BUSINESS STAFF George S. Mirick, Business Manager Ivy L. Lee, Jr., Advertising Manager O.T.Lewis, ' 31 J. H. Burnett, ' 32 H. C. Blackiston, ' 32 F. F. Carpenter, ' 32 Albert H. Clayburgh, Circulation Manager Ludlow Elliman, Service Manager R. W. Damman, ' 32 E. V. Whallon, ' 32 R. L. Clifford, ' 33 J. W.Ely, ' 32 C. Brower, ' 33 W. F. Delaney, Jr., ' 33 F. N. Leonard, ' 32 PHOTOGRAPHIC STAFF Maxwell D. Millard, Photographic Chairman Kendall M. Barnes, Service Manager F. S. Hoffer, ' 31 D. B. Loveman, ' 31 I. V. G. Perine, ' 31 L. S. Saltus, ' 31 C.B.White, ' 31 C. M. Council, ' 32 C. A. Ragan,Jr., ' 32 Alfred Stengel, Jr., Secretary D. H. Randell, ' 32 E. J. Welch, ' 32 L. B. Rentschi.er, ' 32 C. P. Carhart, ' 33 L. S. Rockefeller, ' 32 R. P. Coates, ' 33 J. N. Harman, Jr., ' 33 J. A. Luetscher, Jr., ' 33 J. H. MacDonald, ' 33 R. E. Stevens, Jr., ' 33 117 tgEJ fo |NC Ei ggr gT C A- O TIGER BOARD Top Row — Kennedy, Morris, G. H. Baker, Council, Taylor, Marston, Whitney, Swain. Third Row — Evans, Wood, Thomas, Hibben, White, Kniffen, trow, Beardsley, lams. Second Row— Stout, Wheeler, Brown, Heath, Hewitt. Chapman, Brush, Patton, Rawson. Front Row — Miller, Klein, G. L. Baker, Burnham, Darrow, Adams, Vogel. r T INCET oy gy c A- R gg The Princeton Tiger Philip Burn ham, ' 31 Chairman EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Whitney Darrow, Jr., ' 31 Art Editor A. H. Adams, ' 31 C.J. Moron ey, ' 31 C. Council, Jr., ' 32 A. F. Hewitt, ' 32 S. H. Iams, ' 32 H. M. Kennedy, ' 32 J. R. Loeb, ' 32 S. Morris, ' 33 J. N. MacDonald, ' 32 H. M. Patton, ' 32 W. O. Stout, Jr., ' 32 C. R. Swain, Jr., ' 32 H. N. White, Jr., ' 32 C. E. Brush, III, ' 33 O. Kniffin, ' 33 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Gibbs Baker, ' 31 Business Manager Horace D. Klein, ' 31 Advertising Manager W. H. Miller, ' 31 Circulation Manager R. H. Rubenstein, ' 3 1 Service Manager W. P. Huxley, ' 31 C. H. Wheeler, ' 31 A. R. Breed, ' 32 W. K. Chapman, ' 32 M. M. Dickinson, ' 32 T. M. Emory, ' 32 J. D. Evans, ' 32 C. U. Freeman, ' 32 C. F. Heath, ' 32 C. B. Rawson, ' 32 J. B. Reed, ' 32 P. Stralem, ' 32 G. H. Baker, ' 33 H. W. Beardsley, ' 33 C.T. Brown, ' 33 W. L. Crow, ' 33 L. A. Jackes, ' 33 E. S. Marston, ' 33 Lane Taylor, ' 33 C. M. Wood, Jr., ' 33 119 tSEE NCEfg % £lAimSc HBk ■ . Hf W -t A- . I ' M fen V ■S dl B xH A HtE J l ▼ M 1 1 MM h ck ' ■■■ n fefPr ' w JP j Km W SlJnA ' — • v ' 3h I k. v BRIC-A-BRAC Seated (.left to right) — Ely, Murray, Schenck. Standing — Stout, Loewenheim, Schwed, Miller. tnlZLBlNCEfo BE3ZS3f 1932 Bric-a- c Brac Archibald Gordon Murray, Jr Chairman James Wallace Ely Business Manager Peter Schwed Photographic Editor Edward J. Welch Assistant Photographic Editor John Cornell Schenk Circulation Manager Wilfred Oakley Stout, Jr Art Editor Arthur Cavanaugh O ' Connor, Jr. . . . Advertising Manager Francis Mark Miller Assistant Art Editor Harold Arthur Loewenheim Associate Editor 121 g TRINCET Og rrrrrrr firr rrrrrrr rr r ■ rrr-T rrrr f r O g Vc A lT gr The Bric-a-Brac VOLUME LV Class of Nineteen Hundred and Thirty-One THE BOARD Edwin Pendleton Stevens Chairman Franklin Augustus Seiberling Business Manager Clarence Eugene Abbott, Jr Photographic Editor Edward Carter Shannon Circulation Manager Arthur Herman Adams Art Editor Oakleigh Thorne Lewis Advertising Manager Alexander Minty Waldron Assistant Business Manager William Main Doerflinger Assistant Photographic Editor Clarence Mangan Malone Assistant Art Editor Irving Milton Mendelson Associate Editor Carl Naeher Zellner Associate Editor 122 tYUTEElNClEgf r rfrrrrrr i r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr r rrttjr ' r r Fn rr rri|jk r ir rr rr r r r r r rr ' rrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r r S £yc3IS[2f Jormer Bric-a- Brac Officers YEAR VOL 1876 1 1876-77 2 1877-78 3 1878-79 4 1879-80 5 1880-81 6 1881-82 7 1882-83 8 1883-84 9 1884-85 10 1885-86 11 1886-87 12 1887-88 13 1888-89 14 1889-90 15 1890-91 16 1891-92 17 1892-93 18 1893-94 19 1894-95 20 1895-96 21 1896-97 22 1897-98 23 1898-99 24 1899-00 25 1900-01 26 1901-02 27 1902-03 28 1903-04 29 1904-05 30 1905-06 31 1906-07 32 1907-08 33 1908-09 34 1909-10 35 1910-11 36 1911-12 37 1912-13 38 1913-14 39 1914-15 40 1915-16 41 1916-17 42 191718 43 1918-19 44 1919-20 45 1920-21 46 1921-22 47 1922-23 48 1923-24 49 1924-25 50 1925-26 51 1926-27 52 1927-28 53 1928-29 54 1929-30 55 CHAIRMAN A. B. Turnure, ' 76 P. R. Pyne, ' 78 C. Talcott, ' 79 D. M. Massie, ' 80 F. G. Landon, ' 81 E. B. Critchlow. ' 82 O. H. Grouse, ' 83 C. T. McMullin, ' 84 J. K. Mumford, ' 85 M. Halstead, ' 86 J. W. Elder, ' 87 J. H. Pershing, ' 88 R. E. Speer, ' 89 T. M. Yeakle, ' 90 C. F. Howell, ' 91 V. L. Collins, ' 92 H. R. Daniels, ' 93 M. H. Sicard, ' 94 T. S. Huntington, ' 95 C. B. Boswick, ' 96 W. S. Harris, ' 97 R. D. Dripps, ' 98 George K. Reed, ' 99 C. Yeoman, ' 00 W. E. Hope, ' 01 O. T. Mallery, ' 02 F. L. Wright, ' 03 E. McP. Armstrong, ' 04 K. S. Clarke, ' 05 S. H. Bird, ' 06 C. T. Larzelere, ' 07 R. C. Clothier. ' 08 E. T. Holsapple, ' 09 J. S. Dennis, ' 10 T. F. Bennett, ' 11 G. W. Bunn, ' 12 E. L. Douglass, ' 13 T. M. Colt, ' 14 D. Myrick, ' 15 T. R. Stockton. ' 16 H.T.Dunn. ' 17 R. M. Griffith, ' 18 IT. P. VanDusen. ' 19 W. H. Downs, ' 20 R. D. Buterbaugh. ' 21 H. Cunningham. ' 22 H. G. Lloyd, ' 23 H. B. Lester, ' 24 P. S. Havens. ' 25 S. Dumner. ' 26 T. VanD. Norman, ' 27 T.e- ' is Firev, ' 28 T. MacN. Thomnson, ' 29 P. E. Clemson. ' 30 E. P. Stevens. ' 31 BUSINESS MANAGER ART EDITOR J. L. Rogers C. A. Case F. H. Little H. C. Stn.th H. Swan P. S. Seely N. W. Mclntyre T. Taliaferro H. A. Boas W. H. Flammer L. Stewart, Jr. C. W. Jones S. D. Bell J. H. O ' Neill J. F. Adams T. M. Raymond, Jr. T. H. Miles, Jr. H. R. Chambers S. N. Comly H. S. Firestone D. B. Foresman R. G. Scarlett H. E. Anderson, Jr. E. R. Buell M. B. Miller T. R. Rhodes C. R. Agnew, Jr. W. R. Beardsley S. S. Preston, Jr. A. M. Beitler. II F. A. Seiberling 123 H. O. Millikin K. S. Goodman R. S. Barbee L. Thompson J. I. Scull J. Boyd, Jr. T. S. Paul J. Riegel W. R. Smith A. C. M. Azoy, Jr. R. H. Scannell H. S. Gilland W. M. Boadway D. R. Shotwell R. F. Barnett E. Harris E. R. Perry E. S. King C. M. Webster T. M. Miller R. A. Blow E. W. Newsom J. T. Moss, Jr. A. Shaw P. M. Day W. A. Moore A. H. Adams gTP RINCE TQ £iAiISSc NASSAU LITERARY MAGAZINE Seated {left to right) — Groome, Casement, Gray, McCormick, Jackman. Standing — Delaney, Breasted, Horton Loeb. vg XmNCET By- r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr r f rrrrrrrr r rijtjr r rrjarr rrij Ir r rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrr rr r rrrrrr rrf r gEAliE3c U assau Jitter ary Magazine EDITORIAL BOARD J. L.Gray, ' 31 H. C. Groom e, ' 31 W. M. McCormick, ' 31 J. H. Breasted, Jr., ' 32 C. Gerould, ' 33 P. C. Horton, ' 33 BUSINESS BOARD W. H. FlNESHRIBER, Jr., ' 31 A. H. Jackman, ' 31 J. R. Loeb, ' 32 E. T. Delaney, ' 33 125 gT PRINC ETQ % £zAimS PRESS CLUB Top Row — Piatt, Rice, Rose, Griffin, Taylor. First Row — Dripps (Sec ' y.), Barnett, Ackerman (Pres.), Farnum (V. Pres.), Weisiger. tHfZEMNCETO y rrrr rrr rrrrrrrrr r tt rrrrrrrr rr 45 fJES Aj HOv? William C. Ackerman Robert D. Dripps, Jr. Princeton University ' Press Qlub William C. Ackerman Charles W. Farnum, Robert D. Dripps, Jr., Frederick S. Osborne, OFFICERS ' 31 President ' 31 Vice-President ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer ' 24 Adviser In 1910, Dean Christian Gauss organized the Princeton University Press Club in order that Princeton might be authentically represented to the outside world through newspapers. The Press Club is the official news agency of the University, wherefore its members are Princeton correspondents for the leading newspapers and news syndicates of the East, and are directly responsible for the greater part of the news despatches from Princeton appearing daily in the newspapers throughout the country. MEMBERS 1931 James A. Barnett, Jr. Charles W. Farnum MEMBERS 1932 John H. Rice George E. Rose, Jr. Cary N. Weiseger, III William Z. Taylor MEMBERS 1933 Arthur B. Griffen R. Blaine Platt, Jr. Newspapers for which the Press Club corresponds: Associated Press Ne w York American New York Herald Tribune New York Times Ne w York World New York Sun Neiv York Evening Post New York News Philadelphia Ledger Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia Record Philadelphia Bulletin Boston American Boston Globe Boston Herald Boston Post Boston Transcript Baltimore American Baltimore Sun Newark News Newark Star-Eagle Newark Sunday Call Trenton State Gazette Trenton Times New Brunswick Home-News Christian Science Monitor Pittsburgh Gazette Times St. Paul Pioneer Press United Press International News Service Standard News Universal News Service 127 tVUTBUNC£fo f frrrrrr rrrrrr r rrrrrr rrrr 0£iAiS2c tglJB NCETON SSSAiISJc GLEE CLUB Top Row — J. Schenck, Hawkins, Foran, Vrootnan, Kappes. Cook, Moffat, T. H. Walker, Noble, Van Nortwick. Second Row — A. D. McCoy, Pettis, Brower, Dunn,, Furst, Brethwaite, Hogg, English, Crane. Third Row — Schneckenburger, Schmid, Avirett, Gay, Whallon, Cort Atherton, Deckers, Miner, Edgar. Fourth Row — Van Dyke, Dungan, Murray, Pindar, Durand, E. Schenck, Fry, Hench. Fifth Row — Miles, Osmer, Stoughton, Knox, Knowlton, R. M. Walker, Adams. gf Nc rroffi r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr f frrrrrrrr rrrrrr r Srrlrf irrrrrr r 1 rrrr rr tr r r S 0clAZ2g2c IMKMmK O. Abbot, ' 33 J. D. Durand, ' 33 C.H.Adams, ' 31 B. H. Ethrington ' 33 W. V. Bacon, ' 34 J. N. Foran, ' 34 D. M. Bramiett, ' 34 P. W. Furst, ' 31 W. A. Crosby, ' 34 E. R. Hack, ' 33 J. Cowles, ' 34 S. E. HOCKENBURY , ' 31 J. A. Avirett, ' 33 VV. H. Crane, ' 32 T. Bates, ' 34 F. DlETRICK, ' 32 G. Beddoe, ' 30 N. V. N. Duncan, ' 33 J. H. Burnett, ' 32 VV. English, ' 31 N. V. Coyle, ' 34 J. M. Ferrer, Jr., ' T. D. Foster, ' 34 34 F. Allen, ' 32 A. Cort, ' 32 N. C Barnhart, ' 31 F. W. DOOLITTLE, 32 J. H. Breasted, ' 32 W.B.Dunn, ' 32 E. Bressler, ' 34 J. T. Edgar, ' 32 C. W. Buckley, ' 32 H. S. Edwards, ' 33 H.A.Burns, ' 34 J. Elting, ' 34 T. P. Cook, ' 32 C. C Alden, ' 34 G. A. Eadie, ' 34 J. B. Atherton, ' 32 W. M. Feldgoise, 32 L. Beckers, ' 34 F. L. Froment, ' 31 N. Brassler, ' 33 P. L. Gore, ' 31 S. Brethwaite, ' 31 F. GUNTHER, ' 33 C. Brower, ' 33 C. P. Henderson, 32 A. D. Compton, ' 34 ' Princeton University QleeQlub D. C. Knowlton, ' 31 President Dr. Alexander Russell Director VV. O. Stouchton, 31 Business Manager A. Knox, Jr., ' 31 Leader A. Struck, ' 33 Accompanist G. L. Erdman, ' 32 Publicity Manager This year marks the Glee Club ' s first complete season as an independent organization. In taking the step of withdrawing from the Musical Clubs the aim was toward the development of a program of greater unity and breadth in which a larger num- ber of men could participate than heretofore. In this develop- ment the club is carrying on the high standards set in the reor- . ganization which took place last year. FIRST TENORS L. A. Jackes, ' 33 VV. Petty, ' 34 J. A. Turner, ' 31 A. G. Lyons, ' 33 F. V. Pindar, ' 33 J. R. Van Dyke, ' 34 J. A. McAnerny, ' 31 A. B. Rode, ' 33 R. M. Walker, ' 32 C. J. Meeks, ' 31 O.Rose, ' 33 H. O. Wallace, ' 33 E. M. Murray, ' 34 E. C. Schenck, ' 3 1 R. Wetmore, ' 32 J. O. ' Malley, ' 32 F.H.Trimble, ' 34 O. T. Wingo, ' 33 SECOND TENORS E.J. Gay, Jr., ' 33 D. C. Knowlton, ' 31 H. D. Schwab, ' 33 J. R. Greene, ' 34 L. F. Moody, ' 32 J. A. Skinner, ' 33 J. E. Groth, ' 32 J. N. Morrison, ' 32 P. C. Smith, ' 32 H. L. Hurd, ' 31 VV. Morrow, ' 33 J. W. Springer, ' 33 S.Johnson, ' 34 R. E. Noble, Jr., ' 32 T. H. Trimble, ' 34 S. B. Joost, Jr., ' 34 R. L. Paddock, ' 32 FIRST BASS G. L. Erdman, ' 31 R.J. Kinney, ' 31 W. H. Morris, ' 32 A. H. Fry, ' 32 S. Loveland, ' 33 G. M. Pace, ' 32 A. M. Combrinck-Graham, ' 33 S. Mathews, ' 33 J. Schenck, ' 32 VV. D. Hawkins, ' 34 W. S. Miles, ' 31 R. VV. Schneckenburger, ' 31 R. Hench, ' 34 M.H.Miller, ' 33 S. D. Swann, ' 34 J. A. Kerr, ' 32 C. H. Miner, ' 31 T. H. Walker, ' 33 E. V. Whallon, ' 32 SECOND BASS W.C.Hogg, ' 34 M.Orr, ' 31 W. O. Stoughton, ' 31 C. W. Kappes, ' 33 J. Osmer, ' 33 E. K. Tryon, ' 32 J. T. Lambie, ' 34 W. Randall, ' 32 W. Van Nortwick, ' 34 A. D. McCoy, ' 32 R. A. Schmid, ' 32 A. H. Vrooman, ' 34 VV. B. McCoy, ' 32 R. J. Skillman, ' 34 H. B. Walker, ' 34 G. P. Moffat, ' 32 W. R. Stevens, ' 34 F. W. Williams, ' 33 G. T. Waldref, ' 33 131 tttOMNccfcg 0cZAiH3c INSTRUMENTAL Top Row — Loveman, Schieren, Williams, Chapin. Cairns, Fisher, Fineschreiber, Fry. Second Row — Parker, Swigart, Irwin, Seifert, Fry, Scelly, Sanger. Sitting — Goas, VanLiew, Atkins, Thomas, Demuth. TPJllNCEfOM EEZAZZlSf J. E. Arens, ' 34 R.F. Brown, Jr., ' 31 J. Chapin, ' 34 W. H. Fulper, ' 34 A. S. Fisher, ' 34 f Princeton Instrumental Qlub EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. F. Brown, Jr.. ' 31 H. L. Thomas, Jr., ' 32 A. G. Cotton, ' 3 1 W. R. Van Liew, Jr., ' 33 OFFICERS D. Gilfatric, ' 31 Manager E. D. Pearce, ' 32 Asst. Manager uwi, J. Atkins, ' 31 Leader K. L. Weaver Director BANJOS J. G. Holschuh, ' 34 A. G. Robinson, ' 34 S. Williams, ' 34 D. B. Loveman, ' 31 C. V. Schieren, ' 34 G.White, ' 33 E.B.Myers, ' 34 E. E. Seifert, ' 33 W. B. Winton, ' 33 A. J. Parker, ' 34 E. R. Von Starck, ' 34 H. L. Thomas, Jr., ' 32 E. B. Poole, ' 34 W. R. Van Liew, ' 33 VIOLINS R. H. Demuth, ' 31 W.M.Oman, ' 34 J. J. Swigart, ' 34 SAXAPHONES W. M. Cairns, ' 31 J. R. McIlroy, ' 33 G. W. March, ' 34 G. T. C. Fry, ' 34 TRUMPETS A. J. Irwin, ' 33 A. D. Rust, ' 34 F. D. Sanger, ' 34 PIANO BELLS DRUMS T.W. Goas, ' 33 A. G.Cotton, ' 31 A. L. Leuthauser, ' 32 T. B. Harrington, ' 32 J. P. Nash, ' 31 ACCORDION BASS XYLOPHONE R.M.Perry, ' 32 A. H. Fry, ' 32 R. E. Hobart, Jr., ' 34 133 50EAZ£E3T ORCHESTRA First Row {left to right) — Emerson, Post, Harbison, Loveman, Pcrera. Second Row — Burroughs, Ward, Park, Carter, Wofford, Armstrong. Third Row — Smith, Waters, Curtis, Renneburg. gT WNCET Og jg AiMgF S -- VIOLAS A. Andrews, ' 31 L. Rentschler, ' 32 CLARINETS F. Harbison, ' 34 J. R. McIlroy, ' 33 G. A. Perrera, ' 33 TROMBONE K. Goodman, ' 34 XYLOPHONE A. Cotton, ' 31 Princeton University Orchestra Samuel P. Harbison, ' 31 President-Conductor Robert M. Crawford Director Davis R. Post, ' 31 Manager PERSONNEL C. P. Emerson, ' 33 Concert Master VIOLINS A. Armstrong, ' 34 R. W. Leuthauser, ' 32 J. Swicart, ' 34 F E Camp, ' 34 D. B. Loveman, ' 31 W.Thorne, ' 33 R.H.Carter, ' 33 H.M.Pope, ' 31 L. L. Waters, ' 32 K. Kayser, ' 31 J. N. Renneburg, ' 33 C. P. Wofford, ' 32 CELLOS BASS W. Martin, ' 34 P. J- Lathrop, ' 3 1 FLUTES TRUMPETS R. M. Martin, ' 33 B. Burrowes, ' 34 G. W. McKee, ' 31 P- Ehlers, ' 3 1 J. Poole, ' 31 OBOES PIANO D. M. Curtis, ' 32 C.P.Ward, ' 33 N.G.Parke, ' 34 PERCUSSION C. LeR. Smith, ' 32 135 tv O SSv ESA E3c | A .t J A s J .1 J it A Jt JL A £ I . J! : X X X 1 a S ' «A '  t % t S « BAND 7 op Row — Biddle, Rust, Jackson, Curtis, Clifford, Foster. Fourth Row — Brown, Koch, Rundle, Jones, Car hart, Serfas, Heath, Coates, Siegelin. Third Row — Brethwaite, Whitfield, Kramer, Harrington, Peers, Custer, Watson, Koch, Ammerman. Second Row — Eckard, Ficke, Hersey, Fry, Clark, Kennedy, Durrie, Moore, Anthony, Kirkam. Front Row — Haines, McKee, Heinlein, Nash, Damcrel, Smith, Ekings, Reeder. gg T R1Ncg l QS •r r r ! rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrr ■rrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr aEA gSc R. E. Asnis, ' 34 D. R. Bluhm, ' 33 H.Burns, ' 34 M. A. H.Fry, ' 32 BARITONES A. L. Brown, ' 33 P. Clark, Sem. BASSES W. F. Gibby, ' 32 J. B. Harrington, ' 32 ' Princeton University Band OFFICERS J. P. Nash, ' 31 Concert Master S. P. Damerel, ' 31 Drum Major S. H. Brethwaite, ' 31 Manager R. L. Weaver Instructor D. Clarke, ' 34 R. P. Coates 33 S. L. Echard, ' 34 J. B. Hersey, ' 34 TROMBONES D. L. Coddington, ' 26 A. H. Jones, ' 34 K. Goodman, ' 34 J. H. Koch, ' 32 W. K. Hicks, ' 32 W. R. Ridington, Grad. J. P. Serfas, ' 34 G. BlDDLE, ' 31 G. W. Doane, ' 32 T. D_Foster, ' 34 J. C. Heilein, ' 32 L. A. Jackes, ' 33 SAXOPHONES H.W.Kramer, ' 33 G. R. Lacy, ' 32 J. H. Moore, ' 34 A. P. Terrell, ' 33 S. Wyse, ' 32 PICCOLOS C. H. Anthony, ' 34 D. M. Curtis, ' 32 G. W. McKee, ' 31 TRUMPETS A. J. Irwin, ' 33 T. F.Jackson, ' 33 F.G.Koch, ' 33 W. F. Lipp, ' 32 J. Ross, ' 32 A. D. Rust, ' 34 F. Sanger, ' 34 A. B. Walash, ' 34 CLARINETS E. A. Custer, ' 33 J. Lentscher, ' 33 R. Ficke, ' 33 D. K. McAllen, ' 31 F.H.Harbison, ' 34 J. R. McIlroy, ' 33 T.L.Keese, ' 31 T C. Pears, ' 33 R. W. Lenthauser, ' 32 D. M. Ricker, ' 32 P. P. SCHAFFNER, ' 33 ALTO HORNS C. P. Carhart, ' 33 M. D. Hockenbury, ' 32 J. N. Durrie, ' 34 R. VV. Knapp, ' 32 FRENCH HORNS G. H. Rundle, ' 34 C. O. Siegilin, ' 32 DRUMS R.L. Clifford, ' 33 F. C. Ekings, ' 32 J.B.Haines, ' 31 R. C. Heath, ' 31 J. F. Kerkam, ' 33 CYMBALS H. G. Reeder, ' 32 R. W. Kennedy, ' 34 H.V.Lee, ' 31 C. C. McClaine, ' 34 G. S. Murphy, ' 32 R.K.Watson, ' 33 BASS DRUM C. T. Smith, ' 32 137 ygTT RINCn rOfr rrrrrrrrrr rr (n rr rrrrrrrrrr rr JHL r r rrtf rrrr r P g xc A ir g Princeton University Qhoir 1930-1931 R. W. DowNES Choirmaster J. W. Carty H. C. Forbes, Jr. N.M.Bell A. Cort A. Knox, Jr. A. B. Dugan 1931 H. LeD. Hurd A. Knox, Jr. 1932 J. B. Harrington A. D. Keown R. W. Kesler C. W. MOREHEAD W. O. Stoughton D. P. Morton G. M. Page R. M. Perry J. H. Rowbotham D. A. Abbott C. P. Emerson W. M. Gibson W. DeF. Johnson F. G. Koch 1933 A. G. Lyon R. M. Martin L. E. Reik J. A. Skinner H. G. Smith, Jr. L. T. Smith W. Speer W. L. Staebler C. C. Alden W. L. Asmuth P. T. Blackwood R. D. Brooks 1934 [J. T. Cowles If. L. Ferwerda W. Green, Jr. R. W. HenJh,Jr. J. B. Hersey, Jr. A. K. Vreeman R. E. Brittain S. L. Faison W. H. Forsyth GRADUATES H. D. Gresham H. P. Riley L. W. Smith A. T. Williamson 138 gr XRiNCEf ng- EELA gjy Princeton hCusic Qommittee Mrs. William F. Magie Chairman Miss Jessie P. Frothingham Recording Secretary Mrs. Williamson U. Vreeland Treasurer and Corresponding Secretary Mrs. John Grier Hibben Mrs. Charles G. Osgood Mrs. William K. Prentice Mrs. Moses Taylor Pyne Professor H. Lester Cooke Professor Ernest T. DeWald Mr. Ralph W. Downes Professor William Gillespie Professor Willard Thorpe Dean Augustus Trowbridge STUDENT CHAIRMAN D. C. Knowelton, ' 31 139 tggX RINC £lo aEAZSSc DRAMATICS ' Brovo-n, gT TRINCEf og: rr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrr rr r r 43 SciAjiZESc TRIANGLE CLUB, 1930-1931 Top Row — Dana, Roudebush, Tasker. Second Row — Jones, Carty, Coo ke, Dalrymple, Dunham, McMillan. Third Row — R. J. Smith, Berger- lioff, Crockett, Huxley, Coulton, Mirick, Bond. Front Row — Waldrcn, Harbison. Lewis, Logan, Houghton, Claggett, Blancke. tuHEElNCEfo EEiAiSHc Triangle Qlub (Cembers F. W. Armstrong C. C. Austin E. Bond C. Claggett C. Coffin F. O. Cooke A. D. Crockett A. L. Dalrymple S. P. Harbison MEMBERS, 1931 R. W. He dges C. N. Houghton A. A. Jones J. W. Kaine J. L. Kramer P. J. Lathrop O. T. Lewis J. L. Logan E. A. McCarthy G. S. Mirick C. W. Morehead G. S. Roudenbush R. J. Smith C. F. Taplin W. D. Thorne F. Waldron E. A. Weed A. G. Blanke R. M. Dana MEMBERS, 1932 H. H. Dunham D. McMillan H. Tasker 143 tSZEENCCTcS rrfrrrrrrt r rrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrrr r rigjr r r rrrrr rrrr rr frfi rr rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r r S aEZA3S3c THE GOLDEN DOG tgQ ' NCE TQ : rr rrrrrrrrrr rr rrrrrrrrrr rrjrrrt rrrr r r .o 0cZAi4E2 Triangle Staff 1 929- 1 930 C. Norms Houghton, ' 31 Technical Director J. F. Page, ' 30 . Stage Manager G. S. Mirick, ' 31 Assistant Stage Manager F. E. Smith, ' 30 Electrical Manager C. Coffin, ' 31 Assistant Electrical Manager Douglass Hannah, ' 30 Program Manager C. W. Morehead, ' 31 . . . Everrett Bond, ' 31 Assistant Program Manager Fred W. Graves, ' 30 Publicity Manager Charles Claggett, ' 31 ... . Assistant Publicity Manager Walter L. Smith, ' 30 Costume Manager F. C Waldron, ' 31 Assistant Costume Manager J. S. Turner, ' 30 Property Manager . Assistant Property Manager Costumes executed by Brooks Costume Company Wigs by Oscar Bernner, New York City Program cover design by D. A. Kilburn, ' 30 Poster by D. A. Kilburn, ' 30 and C. R. Swain, ' 32 Musical score published by John Church Co., New York Program prepared and printed by Grolier Craft Press THE GOLDEN DOG The Golden Dog, the Triangle Club ' s contribu- tion to the campus activities of 1929-30, was met by enthusuastic acclaim in all the principal cities of the East and as far West as Chicago and St. Louis, and was readily ranked alongside the out- standing shows of the past. The whole of the setting took place in romantic old Quebec at the time of the final British victory over the French. Kerr, McMillan, Logan, and Smith, in the prin- cipal roles, performed with an ease usually ac- credited only to the best of professional actors. The antics of Dalrymple and the quieter humor of Wade brought many a roar of laughter from the audiences. The chorus has to be complimented especially for its work in the Blue Hell interlude and the military review. Several specialty dances were well done while the accordion playing of Stewart and Perry repeatedly called for encores. Due credit for the book must be given to Wade and Logan and to the promising writers of such hits as Living On Love, She ' ll Come Along, Men of Guyenne, and Blue Hell. The settings and costumes were designed by Houghton, who spent considerable time in Quebec on the work. Financially and critically speaking, the show was justly accompanied by huge success in all its pre- sentations. 145 gr rn-iNccf rg gV C-A- R ggc Triangle Show THE GOLDEN DOG A musical romance of Old Quebec Book by Alfred Wade, ' 30, and Joshua Logan, ' 31 Assisted by Samuel H. Iams, Jr., ' 32 Lyrics by Joshua Logan, ' 31; Seymour Morris, ' 33; Benjamin Hedges, ' 30; Leonard Barrett, ' 30; and Alfred Wade, ' 30 Music by F. O. Cooke, ' 31 ; Robert Hedges, ' 31 ; Carl Austen, ' 31 ; and Denny Bereton, ' 30 Settings and costumes designed by C. Norris Houghton, ' 31 Musical numbers arranged and orchestrated by Robert Crawford, ' 25 Dances staged by Gus Shy, assisted by Jack Connors Orchestra leader, J. Cambell Hawthorne, ' 30 Musical director, Robert M. Crawford, ' 25 Production under the direction of Donald Clive Stuart Cast Thais de Vaudreuil, daughter of the Marquis Alfred Wade, ' 30 Paul Morey, a private in the battalion of Guyenne John Kerr, ' 31 Anne Gardiner, ward of the Marquis de Vaudreuil David McMillan, ' 32 Louis Lamotte, Battalion Sergeant Major Joshua Logan, ' 31 Marquis de Vaudreuil, Governor General of Quebec Robert Smith, ' 31 Colonel George Townshend . Elmer Borgerhoff, ' 30 Limoilu, the battalion cook . Alfred Dalrymple, ' 31 Pierre Delouche, Sergeant of the Guard John Metz, ' 30 A Soldier Harold Tasker, ' 32 A Sentinel W. P. Palmer, ' 30 146 tvBn fo ' Nc € ioN gc-A-mg y Ensemble Leader of the chorus G. E. Nichols, ' 30 Assistant lender of the chorus . . A. D. Crockett, ' 31 Ladies of the chorus: L. R. Barrett, ' 30; J. R. Bennet, ' 30; W. R. Bryant, ' 30; W. C. Roberts, ' 30; D. H. Robinson, ' 30; S. D. Coulton, ' 31; A. D. Crockett, ' 31; W. P. Huxley, ' 31 ; J. W. Kaine, ' 31 ; J. E. McCarthy, ' 31 ; C. V. Weston, ' 31 ; H. H. Dunham, ' 32. Gentlemen of the chorus: F. Beardsley, ' 30; W. L. Cook, ' 30; G. Austen, ' 30; G. G Kane, ' 30; H. P. Leverich, ' 30; G. E. Nichols, ' 30; F. H. Smith, ' 30; E. A. Steimle, ' 30; T. Thatcher, ' 30; J. H. Wright, ' 30; W. H. Staf- ford, ' 31 ; R. M. Dana, ' 32. Alternate chorus: H. Elting, ' 30; S. Vanduyne, ' 30; O. B. Wilcox, ' 30; J. W. Brittingham, ' 31 ; C. Maroney, ' 31 ; E. A. McCarthy, ' 31 ; J. E. Curby, ' 31 ; F. C. Wald- RON, ' 31. Singing ensemble : G K. Beddoe, ' 30; J. Carty, ' 30; W. P. Palme.., ' 30; J. A. Metz, ' 30; C. H. Adams, ' 31; S. H. Brethwaite, ' 31; H. T. Tasker, ' 32. Augmented singing ensemble: E. A. Lightner, ' 30 ; J. F. Trow, ' 32. Specialty dances: J. H. Wright, ' 30; W. E. Bryant, ' 30; L. R. Bar- rett, ' 30; W. C. Robers, ' 30; F. H. Smith, ' 30; H. H. Dunham, ' 32; R. M. Dana, ' 32. Accordian players: J. M. Stewart, ' 32; R. M. Perry, ' 32. Orchestra Instrumental Director .... Robert M. Crawford Conductor J. C. Hawthorne, ' 30 Concert Master S. P. Harbison, ' 31 Piano — F. O. Cooke. Violins— S. P. Harbison, ' 31 ; G. R. Van Doren, ' 31; W. D. Thorne, ' 31; C. P. Wofford, ' 32; H. M. Pope, ' 31. Violas — G. M. Denson, ' 31; A. C. Andrews, ' 31. Flute—]. W. Lincoln, ' 30. Clarinet — J. Luck ens, ' 30 Cellos— J. D. Curran, ' 30 ; B. Labaree; ' 30. Double bass and saxaphone — W. F. GlBBY, ' 31. Saxophones — A. L. Miller, ' 30; C. L. Smith, ' 32. Trumpets—?,. P. Damerel, ' 31 ; J. C. Poole, ' 31. Trombone — J. C. Mulock, ' 30. Timpani— R. C. Wyatt, ' 31. AUGMENTED Violins — R. W. Leuthauser, ' 32; L. B. Rentschler, ' 32. Trumpet — P. Ehlers, ' 31. 147 tgj_£ RINC ElQ f: %f£ 2AiMSe TIGER SMILES r TRiNCEf ovr SSA M? ' Press £onwients on The Qolden T og ' Philadelphia Public Ledger — The dancing was tremendously clever, the music intriguing, and the play beautifully staged. Nne York Sun — The chorus in its dancing and its grouping shows careful training the scenic effects are remarkably gaod, and these two are combined in the Blue Hell dance number in a manner to commend it to the attention of Mr. Ziegfeld and other promotors. New York Herald-Tribune — In staging, direction, costuming, and tuneful sorgs, this operetta ranks high among the many successful productions the Princeton players have brought to New York. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — The mountings and scenery were quite sumptuous, and the ladies of the ensemble from their foundation under-garmer.ts to their jaunty white wigs were some of the best Princeton has ever sent on a tour. Cleveland News — It was a smooth running production, gor- geously costumed and well staged. St. Louis Post-Dispatch — Abounding in comic chatter, the moments in which the Triangle players were unable to draw some kind of humorous reaction from their audience, were few and far between. St. Louis Globe Democrat — From the spectacular military drill, the initial ensemble number, through a rapid succession of hilarious comedy, well executed chorus features and specialty songs and dances, the Princetonians drew from the spectators a constant round of applause. Wilmington Express — The scenes were excellently executed, the costumes were dazzling and elaborate enough to do credit to professional musical shows. 149 THEATER INTIME Top Row — -Walker, Morriss, Roudebush, Nelson, Blythe, P. W. Smith, Third Roto — Emory, Knapp, Nail, Marvin, Heinemann, Singer, Gard- ner, Burnett. Second Row — -Garth, Barber, McAlpin, Reynolds, Turner, McCormick, Jackman, P. C. Smith, Stengle. Bottom Row — Sloan, Dalrymple, Whitehead, Haughton, Logan, Hibben, R. Smith. gr NCEi Ssr rr Trrrrr rr r r rfirrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr S QSAilEJr Theatre Intime EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE C. Norris Houghton, ' 31 President Joshua L. Logan, ' 31 Vice-President Robert VanC. Whitehead, ' 31 . . . . Secretary-Treasurer A. N. Dalrymple, ' 31 J.W. HlBBEN 31 A. H. Jackman, ' 31 R. J. Smith, ' 31 SW. McCormick, ' 31 f)G. S. Roudebush, ' 31 SJ. C. Sloane, Jr., ' 31 F. W. Armstrong, Jr. D. E. Ferry C. L. Fleming MEMBERS OF THE COMPANY 1931 H. S.Gardner, Jr. A. W. Heinemann J. D. Hemley R. W. Lawrence, Jr. D. G. Marvin I. M. Mendelson A. H. Singer A. Stengel, Jr. G Barbour J.H.Burnett H. H. Dunham T. M. Emory W. A. Grier 1932 P. Houston A. A. Marks E. A. McAlpin, III W. H. Reynolds P. C. Smith J. A. Turner H. A. Blyth S. H. Garth 1933 R. M. Morriss, Jr. R. E. Nail P. W. Smith L. G. Walker Miss Grace Cook Miss Ethel Dyer Mrs. G. S. Frantz Miss Mary Hamman GUEST PERFORMERS Mrs. M argot Herriot Mrs. Hoyt H. Hudson Mrs. Elsie Hurdis Miss Elizabeth Johnson Miss Dora Langer Mrs. Wm. J. Norton, Jr. Miss Elizabeth Parrott Miss Elizabeth Sampson Mrs. Mary Stancil Mrs. H. McKim Steele Miss Geraldyn True Mrs. Ledger Wood 151 g TRINCET Og py C A Q THE PIGEON rjRINCEfOAT: ji±c MJE£e Press Continents on Intime Productions Androcles and the Lion, by G. B. Shaw The Theatre Intime has now without loss of its artistic integrity presented a bill which should be the most successful of the season. The choice of Shaw ' s historical comedy, Androcles and the Lion, is admirable. — Dr. Robert R. Ball Othello, by William Shakespeare In undertaking a presentation of Shakespeare ' s ' Othello, ' the members of the Intime essayed a difficult task. In view of the inevitable limitations under which they labored the initial performance had in it an unusual and surprising quality of distinction. — Professor J. Duncan Spaeth The Intruder, by Materlinck The most severe critic would find nothing to criticise in this production. — Professor M. E. Coindreau The Right Sort, by J. E. Hobert, ' 32 Its repartee, its interest, and its generally pleasant atmo- sphere leaves one with a sense of having spent a completely enjoyable two hours. — Daily Princetonian The Pigeon, by J. Galsworthy It is unusual to see an Intime play in which every actor so well combines an intelligent grasp of the emotional values of his part with the necessity of subordinating it to the whole. — Professor P. A. Chapman 153 tvgT-EJ EjgS EE£M3r THE PIGEON p folNCET Oy BLAi££2c f f C f P l Senior T ' rom r iff 1 - fll 1 u 4 JH M IvSjk V ' i Junior T ' rom Sk tgf lP NCEf rgr czAHSSc Senior ' Promenade (Committee C. E. MULDAUR Ch(, E. T. Bradley C. E. Claggett W. M. Jenifer C. W. Weisiger A. D. Crockett Junior Promenade Qommittee R. A. Bessire Cho A. Bonnyman, Jr. H. J. Potts D. H. Hooker C. E. Scarlett E. A. McAlpin, 3rd 157 t EJOuHOCEcg rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrc rrfflrr rrrrrrrrrr rnluf rrrr rr rr r t n 0EAl2E2f ' Prince ton University hCotion Picture Qommittee G. D. Lockhart, ' 31 Chairman J. M. WlNTERBOTHAM, Jr., ' 31 The aim of the Motion Picture Committee is to secure a record of the activities of each class. The pictures are shown during the year at local theatres, and also at various gatherings, such as alumni re-unions. The Committee takes pictures of all important fall, winter, and spring athletic contests, as well as the senior members of extra-curricular organizations each year. The Committee is supported by funds contributed from the treasury of each class. 158 tgHB RINC £lQg7: g vc A-mr g Board of Supervisors of Extra-Qurriculum ZSQm-zAthletic Activities FACULTY MEMBERS Christian Gauss Chairman Frederic E. Camp Secretary Hoyt Hopewell Hudson Charles Grosvenor Osgood Alexander Hamilton Phillips Donald Clive Stuart Willard Thorpe GRADUATE MEMBERS B. Franklin Bunn Financial Adviser UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL MEMBERS E. T. Bradley, ' 31 S. P. Harbison, ' 31 N. P. Rose, ' 31 W. O. Stoughton, ' 31 C. E. Scarlett, ' 32 159 1 r TA H.W.KXAMt P RINCj fQ fSSAiMS? «. 1  -3t ■% « % - VARSITY FOOTBALL, 1930 Top Row — Armour, Mclver, Wistcr, Levick. Third Row — Purnell, Colson, Meeks, Garrett, Rutherford, Nicholson, Lea, Hirst. Second Row — Shields (Mgr.), Knell, James, Billings, Bogar, Muldaur, Reinmund, Fitzpatrick (Trainer). First Row — Hockenbury, Hawson, Yeckley, Mestres (Capt.), Bennett, Byles, I ' endergast. gg TRINCET Ogr rrr rrr r rrrrrrrrr r rrrt rrrr r r rVciA eSc Football OFFICERS, 1930 R. A. Mestres, ' 31 Captain G. H. Shields, III, ' 31 Manager C. D. Brooks, ' 32 Assistant Manager O. H. Perry, ' 32 Assistant Manager W. W. Roper, ' 02 Head Coach TEAM Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position C. WlSTER 1932 20 176 6:1 Left End J. Byles 1931 22 180 6 Right End W. H. Gahagan, Jf . 1932 20 209 6:3 Left Tackle H. T. Bennett 1931 21 175 5:11 y 2 Quarterback S. E. HoCKENBURY 1931 23 190 6:2 Left Guard J. F. James, Jr. 1933 19 185 5:10 Left Halfback R. A. Mestres 1931 21 191 6 Center R. M. McIver 1932 21 192 6:2 Right Halfback S. W. Pendergast 1931 24 197 6:2 Right Guard J. Y. Howson 1931 22 170 5:9 Fullback W. H. Yeckley 1932 21 190 6:1 Rig it Tackle SUBSTITUTES Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position D. G. Levick, Jr. 1931 22 185 6:2 End A. W. Armour, III 1933 21 182 6:1 Back C. G. Meeks, Jr. 1931 22 206 5:11 Guard F. T. Billings, Jr. 1933 19 186 6:1 Guard C. E. A. Muldaur 1931 24 158 5:8 Back J. D. Colson 1933 19 169 5:11 Tackle W. Reinmund 1931 21 161 5:7 Back H. Garrett 1933 19 207 6:3 Tackle G. W. Bogar, Jr. 1932 20 164 5:10 Back W. H. Hirst 1933 21 195 6 Guard L. Lea, Jr. 1932 20 178 6:1 End R. E. Knell 1933 18 161 5:7 Back H. E. Nicholson 1932 21 167 6 Back J. S. PURNELL 1933 19 183 6:1 Back J. P. RUTHERFURD 1932 20 205 6:5 Tackle October 4 Princeton October 11 Princeton October 18 Princeton October 25 Princeton SEASON ' S RECORD 23 Amherst November 1 Princeton. Brown 7 November 8 Princeton. 7 Cornell 12 November 15 Princeton. Navy 31 Chicago 9 Lehigh 13 7 Yale 10 165 tvgD[B! NC -ilQjy: rrr trrr rrrrrrr rrr rrrrrrr r P 3 gEAiZaSf Review of the 1930 Jootball Season «(T R E A VJ Princeti rinceton foot- ball teams will come along, but never a more cour- ageous one. Thus wrote Robert Har- ron in the New York Evening Post of the Monday after the Yale game. Never were words more truly uttered. For Captain Ric- ardo Mestres ' 1930 eleven will go down in history as the most courage- ous team of fighters to ever pull on an orange-striped jer- sey. On record, those cold, mislead- ing statistics, the 1930 team was the poorest to ever rep- resent the Tigers crouched before the tradition - soaked gates of Nassau Hall. Beaten four times, tied by the weakest Chicago team in history, and with only a victory over Amherst to redeem a complete failure, the Princeton eleven trotted out on the rain-soaked turf of the Palmer Stadium, the worst underdog ever to answer the opening whistle of the annual battle with the Blue. But, battered, beaten and bruised, the sorely wounded Tiger was ready to rise up in his dying agonies and claw the over-confident Bulldog. Before trying to review the epic drama that was enfolded down on the cleat-worn sword that afternoon, in one of the most (if not the most) thrilling battles of the Yale-Princeton series of a half- century of keen rivalry, it seems appropriate to review the record of the whole season. MESTRES In the opening game with Amherst, an aggressive and alert, though woefully green Tiger took advantage of Amherst nerv- ousness and, capitalizing on every break, ran up a margin of 23 points to Amherst ' s none in the first period and the early part of the second, before the regulars were sent to the showers. Three times in that first period did the Tigers recover a trickling pig- skin deep in enemy territory and thrice did they score, once when Garrett recovered a punt blocked by Lea over the goal, once when Purnell ' s 25 yard drop-kick split the uprights, and again when James went over after a 30 yard march. In the second period, James intercepted a Purple pass and ran 90 yards for a score. The rest of the game was scoreless stalemate. The next Saturday found a relentless, smashing Brown attack overcoming a clawing, fighting but green Tiger team 7 — 0. A powerful and deceptive offense was far too much for the un- seasoned and inexperienced Nassau linesmen, while a haphazard disorganized Princeton attack, marked by an uncanny lack of power ahead of the ball, proved futile in its efforts to dent the beautifully-welded veteran forward wall of Brown, which was playing in mid-season form. A frenzied last minute air attack, with Trix Bennett on the throwing end, threw a scare into the enemy camp, but the tying touchdown failed to materialize. Howson and Mestres starred for Princeton, while Mackesey, S chein and Gurll were brilliant throughout for the victors. The following Saturday, a desperate Nassau eleven put on a game, frenzied rally in the second half, and with a little bit more luck, would have beaten a fine Cornell eleven, the strongest outfit that has come down from far-above Cayuga ' s waters since the Halcyon days of Kaw and Pfan. The Tigers played fine football in the second half, but the two touchdowns registered in the first two periods by the sustained driving attack of the Ithacans, led by their sophomore ace, Bart Viviano, one of the best backs seen in Palmer Stadium in years, proved too much of a handicap for the gallant Tiger team to overcome, and the Big Red Team eked out a narrow 12-7 victory. Pendergast and Wister were stalwart rocks of defense for the Tigers, while Viviano and Handleman bore the Big Red Standards brilliantly. The low-ebb of Princeton football annals was reached the next week-end, when a much-berated Navy team cruised into the Palmer Stadium and completely submerged an utterly disorgan- ized and demoralized Princeton team by a crushing 31 — 166 tlEJyNccfo y rrrrrr r firr rrrrrrr rr r r rrrrrrrr C r J2 c AjLmSc Tfeview of the 1930 Jootball Season — (Qpnt ' d) margin. Captain Mestres was a moving stone-wall behind the Tiger line, while Jay Howson stood out like a Colossus of Rhodes above the deluge. It was no lack of courage, no want of a fighting heart that caused the Nassau downfall, merely a day when everything went wrong at the same time. The loss, of Jack James, the guiding genius of the offense, and the main cog of the secondary defense, early in the second period, was a telling blow to the Nassau hopes. The value of this sophomore star to the 1930 team was clearly shown that dismal afternoon. Cheered by the most inspiring rally of recent years, a much- improved-defensively Princeton team journeyed out to the mid- way and played a weak Chicago eleven to a scoreless stalemate, an exact converse of the 1922 thriller. The Junglecats had three fine opportunities to score, but failed to cash any at the touch- down bank. Byles, Pendergast and James played lustrous foot- ball for the Tigers, and Knudson and Horwitz bore the Maroon in brilliant fashion. Back home again the next week-end, a vastly-improved Prince- ton offensive, led by the diminutive, spark-plug, Knell, and the burly James, marched up and down the field, rolling up 18 first downs to four but two long runs from scrimmage by Ware, an in- tercepted pass by Clark, plus a gallant, inspired goal line defense allowed the Brown and White of Lehigh to take a 13-9 decision, the first victory scored by the Engineers in 33 years of combat. And so the final game of the season rolled around, the swan- song of Bill Roper as Nassau football mentor. Most of the bet- ting was on the score the Elis would roll up. Saturday morning dawned gray and dismal. The Tigers looked like a different outfit, as the play began, but when a missed signal in the Tiger backfield allowed Herdy Barres, smashing Eli wing, to pounce on a loose ball deep in Tiger territory a few minutes after the play started, the onlookers smiled, some wistfully. Here was the beginning of the rout. But no! three times the Nassau line held firm, and so the Lilliputian blue spark, dropped back to the 26 yard line and sent the ball spinning over the bar for the first three points. After the kick-off a determined, well-knit Tiger defense plus Trix Bennet ' s angling punts kept Yale pinned deep in her own territory. Finally, as the last waning minutes of the first half tacked away into the realms of time, a low Boothian punt failed to allow time for the Elie ends to get down under it, and Trix Bennett, his antelopian stride carrying him over the mud-sheathed turf at a terrific rate, slithered back 27 yards to the Eli 42 before Freddie Loeser ' s diving tackle nailed him from the rear. Then came the Nassau ' s unstop- a b I e touchdown drive. With Ben- nett and James slic- i n g off - tackle, through the line and around the end, the irresistible Jun- gletown machine drove the desper- ately-battling Blue back yard by yard, until finally Trix Bennett surged over the backs of his charging linesmen across the last white stripe. A few seconds later, Pur- n e I 1 ' s beautiful placement put the Tiger total at 7, just before the gun ended the half. Psy- chologically and subconsciously let- ting down, when the Blue second team was sent on the field at the start of the second half, the Princeton eleven was played to standstill for the first twenty minutes of the half, by the irre- pressible Eli youngsters, eager to fulfill the trust placed on them, and late in the third period as Nassau vigilance let down for a bare moment, a long pass from the south-paw Tommy Taylor to the damian grasp of Charlie Sullivan gave the Bulldog the touchdown on which they rode to victory. Late in the final period, as a humid mist and a drizzling fog settled down on the great stadium, a roar arose for the Yale stands as the Blue regu- lars, fresh and rested, trotted out to relieve the weary substitutes, BENNETT 167 t J fo ' Ncg ojy: rrrrr rrr r r rrrrrrr r rrr rrrrr .rrrrr rrr r rr (rrrrrrr rr r t rrrrrrrr r r gVcZAHESc ' Review of the 1930 Jootball Season — fQont ' d) JAMES who retired, their work done, their task accomplished. The Big Yale var- sity is coming on to redeem their poor showing of the first half. Six minutes to play and right here begins the greatest march ever put on by an Orange and Black machine, a drive that will live forever in football saga. No Princeton eleven, in all her football h i s t o ry , ever exhibited such genuine continuity of attack, such power-vibrating of- fensive drive. No Tiger striped for- w a r d wall ever showed such a co- hesive charge as did those 1930 stal- warts, Hockenbury, Mestres, and their mates; forward, un- stoppably, irresistibly march Captain Mestres ' men. Seventy- nine yards through the darkening dusk, the dark and dismal fog, their feet slithering on the rain-drenched mud, drives the 1930 Princeton team, down the one-yard line fourth down and a foot to go for a first down. Freddie Linehan, his Irish face con- torted with pain from his battered hip, hobbled on to bolster up the scattered Blue morale. Trix Bennett, his jersey torn off at the shoulder, his face smeared with blood and grime, dives into the mass, wiggles a bit and lies still. The pile is untangled. Breathlessly, the terse, trembling spectators await the decision. Referee Crowell waves toward the Orange and Black goal. The Blue has held and the Tiger ' s great drive has failed; three plays more and the game is over. Yale has won, but as the soaked and weary crowd winds its way homeward, the smiles wreath the face of the Princetonian, bitter scowls cloud the Eli brows. And way over on the eastern side-line, a figure in a slouched hat, and long coat, moves slowly toward the exit. A smile illuminates his care-worn face, his long years of duty are ended, and his work is done, but the memory of his last team will linger long after his more successful elevens. A gallant fighter, an inspiring charac- ter slowly nears the field house. William W. Roper has sent his last team out to battle, and he lingers slowly on the final walk from stadium to the lockers, he can hear the ghostly clamor of the silent bells on Nassau Hall, which seem to ring louder than ever before tonight. 168 g XRlNC ETQ gjC A gggr ' Brown ' Defeats ' Princeton Gurll of Brown carries the ball into Princeton territory tYtfTTiUNCEfgy: pX c A-iTg gg Princeton vs. Qornell Princeton Positions Cornell Byles Right end Younc Yecki.ey . . Right tackle . Rothstein HOCKENBURY . . Right guard Hunt Mestres . Center Penny Billings . Left guard TULLAR Positions Cornell Left tackle George Left end Leuder . Quarterback . Beyer . Rig it halfback . Handleman . Left halfback . . Viviano Fullback . Pond Princeton Garrett . Wister Bennett . Reinmund Howson . James . Touchdowns — Viviano, Handelman, Nicholson. Point after touchdown— James. Substitutions — Princeton: Mclver for Wister, Wister for Mclver, Levick for Wister, Pendergast for Garrett, Hirst for Pendergast, Meeks for Billings, Purnell for Hockenbury, Hockenbury for Purnell, Colson for Yeckley, Mclver for Byles, Bogar for Bennett, Bennett for Bogar, Nicholson for Reinmund, Knell for Nicholson, Reinmund for Knell, Muldauer for Reinmund. Substitutions — Cornell: Claggett for Leuder, Hackstaff for Tullar, Penny for Reikert, Martinez-Zorilla for Young, Smith for Young. Referee — E. C. Taggert, Rochester. Umpire — W. R. Crowley, Bowdoin. Head Linesman — D. Watkeys, Syracuse. Field Judge — E. W. Carson. SCORE BY PERIODS Princeton 7 0—7 Cornell 6 6 0—1? Princeton vs. O avy Princeton McIver Colson Pendergast Mestres . Billings . Positions Navy Left end ; . Steffanideo Left tackle Bowstrom Left guard Underwood Center Black Right guard Gray Positions Navy Right tackle Bryan Right end . Byng Quarterback . Bauer Left halfback . . Kirn Right halfback . . Techirci Fullback . Hagberg Touchdowns — Kirn (2), Substitutions — Princeton : Princeton Yeckley Byles Bocar James Knell Howson Steffanideo, Byng, Gann. Point after touchdown — Bowstrom. Purnell for Mclver, Wister for Purnell, Lea for Wister, Hockenbury for Colson, Garrett for Hockenbury, Rutherford for Garrett, Kellogg for Mestres, Hirst for Billings, Meeks for Hirst, Levick for Byles, Bennett for Bogar, Muldauer for Bennett, Reinmund for James, Nickolson for Knell, Fortune for Howson, Gooch for Fortune. Substitutions — Navy: Torgerson for Steffanideo, Tuttle for Black, Thompson for Underwood, Peterson for Bryan, Williams for Bauer, Campbell for Kirn, Gann for Tschergi. Referee — W. G. Crowell, Swarthmore. Umpire — J. T. Thorpe, Columbia. Head Linesman — H. A. Fisher, Penn. Field Judge — D. W. Very, Penn State. SCORE BY PERIODS Princeton — Nav y 12 13 6—31 170 tvEEM cifo y: rEIAjiSSc Princeton vs. Chicago Princeton Lea . Rutherford Garrett . Mestres . Pendergast Positions Left end Left tackle Left guard Center Right guard Substitutions — Princeton: Wister for Lea, Purne Substitutions — Chicago: Toiga for Walsh, Gabel Casselo for Trude, Wallace for Kanne, Stackle Referee — J. Masker, Northwestern. Umpire — F. M. Morton, Michigan. Princeton Chicago Chicago Walsh Reiwitch Hamberg Zenner Horwitz Princeton Yeckley . Byles Nicholson James McIver Howson . Positions Right tackle Right end Quarterback Left halfback Right halfback Fullback Chicago Trude Abbott Kanne McKenzie Birney Knudson for Rutherford, Gahagen for Purne! for Toiga, Thompson for Bellestrom, r for Temple. H. Lambert, Ohio State. Field Judge- I, Bogar for Nicholson, Bennett for Bogar. McNeille for Reiwitch, Brisbane for Hamberg, — H. B. Hackett, West Point. Head Linesman — SCORE BY PERIODS 0—0 0—0 Princeton vs. Tale Princeton Byles Yeckley . Pendergast Mestres . hockenbury Positions Right end Right tackle Right guard Center Left guard Yale Princeton Positions Yale Barres Gahacan . Left tackle . Wilbur Vincent Wister Left end Flygare Linehan Bennett . . Quarterback . McLennan LOESER McIver . Right halfback . Dunn- . Hare James . Left halfback . Parker Howson . Fullback . Crowley Touchdowns — Bennett, Sullivan. Field Goals — Booth. Points after Touchdowns — Purnell, Taylor. Substitutions — Princeton: Lea for Wister, McIver for Armour, Garrett for Pendergast, Purnell for Howson, Armour for McIver, McIver for Armour, Howson for Purnell, Pendergast for Garrett, Howson for Purnell, Armour for McIver, Wister for Lea, Garrett for Pendergast, Purnell for Howson. Substitutions — Yale: Austin for Parker, Rotan for Linehan, Avery for Flygare, Hall for Wilbur, Stewart for Hare, Walker for Loeser, Sargent for Barres, Heim for Booth, Taylor for Dunn, Sullivan for Austin, Mulefeld for Crowley, Bronkie for Stewart, Linehan for Austin, Bean for Rotan, Flygare for Avery, Wilbur for Hall, Barres for Sargent, Booth for Heim, Dunn for Taylor, Austin for Sullivan, Crowley for Mulefeld, Hare for Bronkie. Referee — W. G. Crowell, Swarthmore. Umpire — C. G. McCarty, Philadelphia. E. E. Miller, Penn State. SCORE BY PERIODS Princeton 7000 — 7 Yale 300 7—10 Head Linesman — H. A. Fisher, Penn. Field Judge — 171 tgOMNccTgS: g TC-A- Rg gc Booth of Yale scoring with a drop kick after five minutes of play Beyer of Cornell smashing through tackle for an eight- yard gain r rtu Ei gv rrrrrrr firrWirrrrrrr r rrrr rrrr r r g c-A- Tg g cLy Summary of Princeton 9 s Complete Jootball ' Record 1869 to 1930 VICTORIES VICTORIES TIES Amh ' jrst Princeton .... 16 Army Princeton 5 3 Brown 2 Princeton 5 Bucknell . Princeton 7 Carlisle . . Princeton 6 Chicago A.C. Princeton 1 Chicago Univ. 2 Princeton 1 1 Colgate . 2 Princeton 3 Columbia Law Princeton 1 Columbia Univ. 1 Princeton 12 Cornell . . 5 Princeton 15 Crescent A.C. Princeton 5 Dartmouth . 3 Princeton 9 Dickinson Princeton 3 1 Elizabeth A.C. Princeton 2 Fordham Princeton 3 F. and M. . Princeton 5 Gettysburg . Princeton 1 Georgetown . Princeton 3 Holv Cross . Princeton 4 Harvard 9 Princeton 18 3 Lafavette 1 Princeton 22 2 Lawrenceville Princeton 3 Lehigh 1 Princeton 29 2 John Hopkins Princeton 5 Maryland A.C. Princeton 2 Maryland Univ Princeton 2 Manhattan A.C Princeton 2 Michigan Princeton 1 Navy N. Y. A. C. New York Univ North Carolina Notre Dame Ohio State . Orange A.C. Pennsylvania Penn State Rochester Rutgers . Stevens Swarthmore . Syracuse . Trinitv Tufts ' . . Villanova Virginia Virginia Polv W. and J. . W. and L. . VV. and M. . Wesleyan West Virginia Williams Yale . . . VICTORIES 5 2 2 1 1 29 Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton Princeton VICTORIES TIES . . 10 6 1 3 2 1 1 7 1 30 5 1 29 23 9 5 1 1 9 7 1 3 6 4 1 1 13 1 1 2 17 9 Princeton — 380 victories, 66 defeats, 33 ties. 173 tHSJO Qirg y 5EEiAi E3c v ' - 4 ft ' - ' -«• •■ ■ HX.KMMt tgr P. ' NCEf rg SEi ciAig ggg VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM, 1930 Top Row Keiter (Mgr.), Aicher, Muldaur, Ray, MacKinney, Morse, Eno, Goodpasture, Bessire, Winterbotham (Asst. Mgr.). Second Row — Tredennick (Asst. Mgr.), Bowman, Gould (Asst. Coach), Moles, Cameron. Howson, Reinmund, Bierhals. Brick. First Row — Austen, Carter, Swift, Douglas (Coach), O ' Toole (Capt.), Wittmer, Vogt, Hendey. gj P R.INCC fojy rrrrrrrr Srr trrt rrrr rr r r rrrrrr rrrr .O g TC-A Rg gr baseball OFFICERS J. H. O ' Toole, ' 30 . C« W«j B. R. Reiter, ' 30 . Manager B. Douglas, ' 16 ifearf Coach W. Gould . . Assistant Coach T. T. Carter, ' 30 . G. Austen, Jr., ' 30 . W. H. Swift, III, ' 30 J. H. O ' Toole, ' 30 . R. L. Vogt, ' 30 . . E. O. Wittmer, ' 30 . . Catcher . First Base Second Base Shortstop Third Base . Left Field TEAM C. E. Muldauer, ' 31 H. T. Bennett, ' 31 R. S. Hendey, ' 30 . F. K. Bowman, ' 32 . E. J. Moles, ' 31 . S. Waud, ' 31 . . Center Field Right Field . . Pitcher . . Pitcher . Pitcher . . Pitcher J. Y. Howson, ' 31 . . W. R. Cameron, ' 31 . J. W. Bierhals, ' 31 F. P. MacKinney, ' 31 G. G. Morse, ' 32 . . W. Reinmund, ' 31 . Catcher Catcher Infield Infield Infield Outfield c R eview of the 1930 Season Although as regards victories the 1930 baseball season was rath yet several well-played games offset the number of defeats. The Yale game. The season was opened by losing to Rutgers 6-5 in a ten-inning both sides. Vermont was defeated 12-2 in the second game in whic dey shared the pitching honors. Fordham won from the Tigers 11-7 The Tigers next encountered Williams in a three-game series, performance. The second game resulted in a 10-10 deadlock, the pitcher, was pounded and Sid Waud went the full game, resulting for the Tigers. On the annual southern trip made during the Easter vacation th mond and from Virginia, and losing to William and Mary, and t the Tigers in the next game, playing brilliant baseball to win 8-3. Bennett hitting a home run. In the first of the league games Dartmouth smothered Princeton er unsatisfactory, since they lost twenty out of thirty games played, outstanding performances were the second Penn game and the first game which was marked by ragged playing and many errors on h Wittmer and Muldaur starred at the bat while Aicher and Hen- in a batting spree with Trix Bennett shining at the plate. Princeton won the opener 9-4 with Ray turning in a fine pitching game being called because of darkness. Winston, the Williams in a 7-4 Princeton victory. O ' Toole and Vogt starred in the field e team was fairly successful, winning from the University of Rich- he strong team from Georgetown. Holy Cross was victorious over Wesleyan was routed 11-1 with Ray only allowing four hits and 13-4, Hendey giving way after holding the opponents scoreless for 177 rr rrrr rrrrrrr rr r rrrrrrfr r r O gRV C-A ' I ggy five innings. Hollstrom turned in an excellent pitching game for the big Green team. The Tigers again suffered defeat, the boys from Duke University snatching away a very close win, 1-0, by virtue of Bowman ' s wild toss in the seventh. Amherst won from the Tiger team, 1-0, in an unusual game which was featured by the no-hit, no-run game turned in by Nichols, the Lord Jeff pitcher. The team was now in a slump, losing in succession to Cornell twice, Georgetown, Dartmouth, Penn and Lafayette, in spite of a radical change in the line-up which put Eno, Howson, Muldaur and Hendey into action. The team, however, redeemed itself by de- feating Penn 7-5 for the Tiger ' s first league victory. They scored three runs in the first and drove Peterson, the Penn hurler, off the field in the sixth. Swift was brilliant at bat for Princeton while Bowman allowed only seven hits. Columbia was twice victorious over Nassau, 8-7 and 9-8, in two close and exciting games. In the opening game of the Yale series at New Haven, Yale by a barrage of hits in the eighth inning regained the lead that it had lost in the opening and won 11-7. Pitchers of both teams were forced to be relieved, Bowman in the fifth and Jennison in the sixth. Snead of Yale lead the batters with four hits but both Capt. O ' Toole and Dick Vogt were close behind him. The next two games were won, conquering Rutgers 10-5 and 4-2. In the second Yale game, held at Princeton, the Tigers pounded Jennison, Newton and Taylor for nine hits. Muldaur scored first on Booth ' s error, and then Vogt and Hendey also scored on an error by Vincent. A few innings later Carter scored the same two on a very pretty squeeze play. These hits combined with good fielding gave Princeton a 6-2 victory. In the deciding game the following Saturday at the Polo Grounds Yale won 7-4 in spite of the desperate attempts of the Tiger batsmen. Much credit is due to Coach Douglas and to Capt. O ' Toole and to the team for their fine spirit and their ability to come back to winning form after a long string of defeats. Princeton vs. Tale — Jirst Qame Princeton Wittmer, If. Muldaur, cf. aBENNETT Swift, 2b. Vogt, 3b. Hendey, rf., p. Austen, lb. O ' Toole, ss. Carter, c. bHowsoN Bowman, p. Reinmund, rf. tB R H PO A E 3 2 1 n 4 1 3 2 1 n 3 2 4 3 n 4 1 1 4 2 3 2 n 13 1 4 1 l 6 4 5 1 3 1 1 1 i 2 1 1 Yale AP R H PO Totals 35 7 12 24 14 McKenzie, cf 5 2 2 5 1 4 1 1 2 6 5 1 2 3 2 12 1 5 2 5 3 1 4 2 1 4 1 3 2 1 3 1 1 Beyer, 2b. 2 1 1 1 1 Jennison, p. 2 1 1 1 1 1 Totals . 34 11 15 27 16 ■ a Batted for Mulda lr in ninth. h Batted for Carter in ninth. Princeton Yale 00210300 1—7 110 14 13 x— 11 Two-base hits: Swift, Bowman, Walker. Three-base hits: Snead, Reinmund. Home run: Aldrich. Stolen bases: Wittmer, Muldauer, Vogt, Hendey, O ' Toole 2, Booth. Sacrifices: Wittmer, Muldaur, Hendey, Austen, Booth, Warren, Rudd. Bases on ball?: off Bowman 9, Hendey 2, Jennison 3. Rudd 2. Struck out: by Bowman 1, Hendey 2. Hits: off Bowman 11 in 5 1 3 innings, Hendey 4 in 2 2 3, Jennison 10 in 5 2 3, Rudd 2 in 3 1 3. Hit by pitcher: by Rudd (Swift), Bowman (Vincent). Umpires: Stafford and Barrv. 178 tHOEiNCCfOM rrr r rrr Srr hrrrrrrrr r - rrrrrrrr r r 0S S3? Princeton Wittmer, If. Reinmund, If. MULDAUR, cf. Swift, 2b. . Vogt, 3b. IIendey, rf. Morse, lb. O ' Toole, ss. Carter, c. Moles, p. Bowman, p. ' Princeton vs. Tale — Second Qame AB 3 4 4 4 2 4 4 2 2 31 R 1 1 3 1 H 1 2 2 1 2 1 PO 2 1 3 2 11 2 6 A 4 1 2 3 2 2 27 14 1 Yale McKenzie, cf. Booth, ss. Walker, rf. Vincent, lb. Snead, If. Warren, 3b. Maine, c. Beyer, 2b. . Jennison, p. Newton, p. . Taylor, p. aLlNEHAN AB R H PO A E S 1 1 1 n 5 2 1 4 2 3 1 1 4 2 12 2 4 l 1 3 1 5 2 n 1 5 4 2 1 3 1 2 1 4 n n n l Totals 2 2 31 0—2 x— 6 Totals a Batted for Newton in 8th. Yale . Princeton Runs batted in: McKenzie, Maine, Carter 3. Two-base hats: Hendey. Home run; McKenzie. Sacrifices: Warren, Jennison, Hendey, Carter. Left on bases: Yale 12, Princeton 6. Bases on balls: Off Moles 4, Bowman 4, Jennison 2, Taylor 1. Struck out: By Moles, 2, Bowman 3, Jennison 2, Newton 1. Hits: Off Moles 6 in 4 2 3 innings, Bowman 3 in 4 1 3, Jennison 7 in 4 2 3, Newton 1 in 1 1 3, Taylor 1 m 1 inning. Maine. Winning pitcher: Moles. Losing pitcher: Jennison. Umpires: Stafford and Berry. 21 18 Passed ball : Princeton vs Princeton AB R H PO A Wittmer, If 5 2 3 1 Muldaur, cf 6 3 3 3 Swift, lb., 2b 5 1 1 11 2 Voct, 3b 5 1 1 2 3 Hendey, rf. 6 3 1 Morse, lb. . 2 1 2 Bierhals, 2b 1 1 aREINMUND 10 Austen, lb O ' Toole, ss 6 1 3 7 Carter, c 6 1 1 7 Moles, p 1 1 1 2 Bowman, p. 3 1 1 Totals 47 9 16 30 16 Princeton . . 3 Yale ... 2 Runs batted in: Wittmer 2, Muldaur, Hendev. Morse, Bierha Beyer, Muldaur, Hendey, Moles, Home Runs: Wittmer, Newton and Morse. Left on base: Princeton 11, Yale 13. Bases on balls: 2, Taylor 2, Newton 2, Moles 3, Bowman 3. Hits off: Jennison pitcher: Bowman. Balk: Taylor. Umpires: Berry and Stafford. . Tale — Third Qame E Yale AB R H PO A E McKenze, cf., If 6 112 Booth, ss 5 2 2 3 4 2 Walker, rf 4 2 2 10 1 Vincent, lb 5 1 12 Snead, If., cf 5 2 2 1 Warren, 2b 5 10 15 Maine, c 5 1 2 8 1 Beyer, 2b 6 3 3 1 O Jennison, p 1 1 ° 9 A X dQuinn ° ' 2 ? S. n Taylor, p 10 1 Newton, p _____ — Totals 45 10 14 33 13 3 4 a Hatted for Bierhals in 11th. b Batted for Jennison in 4th. None out when winning run was scored. 202020000 0—9 10 3 12 1—10 Is, Booth 2, Walker 2, Snead 2, Beyer, Newton 2. Two-base hits: Booth 2, Walker, . Sacrifices: Swift Moles, Maine. Double plays: Boo th and Vincent, O Toole, Swift Off Jennison 2, Taylor 1, Newton 1, Moles 4, Bowman 3. Struck out: By Jennison 10, Taylor 3, Newton 3, Moles 5, Bowman 9. Winning pitcher: Newton. Losing 179 t§lJ0UNC£TO g2SAZS3c Princetons 1930 Baseball ' Record DATE SCORE OPPONENT SCORE PLACE April 2, Princeton .... 5 Rutgers 6 . Princeton 5, Princeton . . 12 Vermont 2 . Princeton 8, Princeton 7 Fordham 11 . Princeton 10, Princeton 9 Williams 4 . Princeton 11, Princeton 10 Williams 10 . Princeton 12, Princeton 7 Williams 4 . Princeton 16, Princeton a Lehigh . a . Princeton 18, Princeton . 3 Richmond 4 . Richmond 21, Princeton 2 William Mary . 4 . Williamsburg 21, Princeton 2 William Mary 6 . Williamsburg 22, Princeton 9 Virginia 4 . . University 23, Princeton . 6 Virginia 7 . University 24, Princeton . 4 Georgetown 7 . Washington 25, Princeton 3 Holy Cross 8 . Princeton 26, Princeton . 11 Wesleyan . 1 . Princeton 28, Princeton 4 Dartmouth 13 . Princeton 30, Princeton . Duke . . . 1 . Princeton May 2, Princeton . Amherst . 2 . Princeton 3, Princeton 6 Cornell . . 9 . Princeton 7, Princeton 2 Georgetown 5 . Princeton 10, Princeton . 2 Cornell 14 . Ithaca 12, Princeton 3 Dartmouth . 13 . Hanover 14, Princeton . b Columbia . b . New York 15, Princeton a N. Y. U. . . a . Princeton 17, Princeton 5 Pennsylvania 7 . Princeton 21, Princeton . 4 Lafayette . 1 . Princeton 24, Princeton 7 Pennsylvania 5 . Philadelphia 28, Princeton . b C. C. N. Y. . b . Princeton 31, Princeton . 7 Yale . . . 11 . New Haven June 4, Princeton 7 Columbia 8 . Princeton 5, Princeton 8 Columbia . 9 . Princeton 7, Princeton . 10 Rutgers 5 New Brunswick 11, Princeton 4 Temple 2 . Princeton 14, Princeton 6 Yale . . . 2 . Princeton 21, Princeton 9 Yale . . 10 . . New York •Eastern Intercollegiate League Game. a — wet grounds. b — rain. 180 Yg X RINC i lQjv g VC A- Rg y ' Princeton ' s Qomplete baseball ' Record, 1860—1929 Name Opp. Pri. Victories Ties First Game Name Opp. Pri. Victories Ties First Game Name Opp. Pri. Victories Ties First Game Acme .... 1 1894 Cleveland . 1 1883 Georgetown 29 29 1 1893 Active . . . . 1 1883 C. C. N. Y. . . 1 1900 Germantown . 3 1874 A. M. (Va.) . 1 1908 Colgate 4 4 1914 Gettysburg 3 1904 Alaska .... 3 5 1876 Columbia A. C. . 1 1897 Harvard 63 55 1 1863 Albright . . . 1 1 1909 Columbia Law 1 1883 Haverford 1 1924 Alert .... 1 1894 Columbia . 5 25 1868 Holy Cross 8 9 1900 Allegheny . 1 1884 Cornell . . . 14 36 1 1880 Holy Oak . . . 1 1879 Amherst 11 25 1 1875 Crescent 1 3 1920 Illinois .... 1 1902 Andover 1 6 1889 Cuban Giants . 1 1 1 1888 Indianapolis . 1 1877 Army .... 1 1922 Dartmouth 7 25 1880 Jersey City 5 1 1879 Athletics (Phila.) 18 9 1863 Defiance 1 1879 Johns Hopkins 7 1877 Atlantics . 6 1 1863 Detroit . . . 2 1881 Keystone . 1 1883 Auburn 1 1883 Dickinson . 6 1896 Klientz . . . 1 1878 Baltimore (A. L.) 2 1911 Dolly Varden . 1 1877 Lafayette . 6 39 1873 Boston College 3 1922 Domestic . 1 1 1 1873 Lawrenceville 23 1902 Boston (N. L.) . g 1876 Duke .... 1 1 1928 Lehigh 25 1890 Bordentown 1 1889 Eastons 2 1874 Long Island . 1 1886 Bowdoin 2 7 1908 Eckford 1 1872 Louisville . 1 1876 Brooklyn (N. L.) . 6 2 1878 Edgehill . . . 1 1896 Manchester 2 1879 Brown .... 17 40 1 1870 Elizabeth . 1 1897 Manhattan 9 1881 Bucknell 4 1902 Englewood F. C. . 2 1890 Maryland A. C. . 1 1898 Buffalo .... 1 1885 Enterprise . 1 1877 Meiji Univ. (Japan 1924 Burlington 2 1 1866 Eureka .... 1 1874 Mercersburg 2 1906 California . 1 1920 Exeter .... 5 1903 Metropolitan . 5 1881 Carlisle 1 1901 Flyaways . 2 1874 Michigan . 1882 Catholic Univ. 1 1914 Fordham 11 19 1877 Montclair . 1889 Centennials 1 1875 F. M. . . . 3 1895 Montgomery . 1895 Chelsea 2 4 1873 Georgia 1 1924 Monumentals . 1884 181 : gf RINC| fOfr ?33 Zwni2r ' Princeton ' s (Complete Baseball l ecord, 1860-1929 (Qontinued) Name Opp. Pri. Victories Ties First Game Name Opp. Pri Victories Ties First Game Name Opp. Pri. Victories Ties First G ame Murray Hill A. C. 1 1894 Pittsburgh (N. L.) 1 1897 Tri-Mountain . . 1 1870 Nameless . 2 1874 Pittsburgh . . . 1 1914 Trinity 6 1903 Navy 1 3 1906 Providence 1 1881 Tufts . . . 5 1900 Neptune 1 1870 Quaker City . 3 1 1885 Union . 1 1 1879 Newark 3 2 1870 Rahway 1 1891 Union College 2 1895 Newark 3 2 1883 Randolph Macon .1 1 1926 Univ. of Richmond 1 2 1926 New Bedford 1 1878 Resolutes . 2 3 1 1873 Ursinus 1 9 1905 New Haven 2 1 1875 Richmond . 1 1 1 1896 Utica . . 1 1879 New York (N L.) 18 1 1881 Rose Hill . . . 1 1870 Vanderbilt . 2 1921 New York (A L.) 2 1911 Rutgers 6 19 1866 Vermont 2 7 1897 New York A. C. . 1 1926 Second Naval Distric 1 1918 Villanova . 2 11 1910 New York Univ. . 4 10 1 1899 South Orange . 1 1910 Virginia 13 32 1886 North Carolina . 4 1912 Southwark 1 1880 V. P. I. . 1 1929 Notre Dame 2 1914 S. I. C. C. . . . 3 3 1 1874 Washington 3 3 1881 Ohio State . 1 1927 Springfield 1 1927 W. J. . 2 1904 Olympics . 1 1863 Stars Brooklyn 2 1863 W. L. . 1 1 1896 Orange 1 2 1873 Stars (N. Brunswick) 1 1862 W. M. . 3 3 1907 Orange A. C. 1 7 1891 Stars (Syracuse) 2 1876 Wesleyan 1 11 1892 Pelham Bay Station 1 1918 Stevens 2 1913 West Virginia 4 1899 Pennsylvania 22 36 2 1879 Swarthmore 1 5 1919 Williams 5 21 1 1864 Penn State 11 10 1895 Syracuse 1 6 1 1904 Worcester . 2 1879 Philadelphia 9 2 1874 Temple 1 2 1928 Yale . . 91 62 1868 Trenton 6 8 1871 Princeton: Victories, 825; Defeats, 486; Ties 14. 182 gr jUlNCE fQ p rrrr r r rr r rr rrrr rr r rrrrrrrr r r U1L O S£Ai£e3c TRACK TEAM Top Raw — Burnett, Maloney, Gorman, Flowers, Whitehead, Buerman, Watt, Weisiger, Andrews, Spinks (Asst. Mgr.). Second Row — Cummings (Mgr.), Hand, Hagerman, Whitman, Pendergast, Scarlett, Wood, Faver, Fit7patrick (Coach). First Row — Summerill, Byles, Thompson, Hedges (Capt.), Horne, Dakin, Mills. tSS_EBdNC£fo f ' rrrrrrrr Mrrrrrrr rrrrrrr rr s gg VC-A- R ggr Track OFFICERS, 1929-1930 B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 Captain T. Cummings, ' 30 Manager A. R. Glancy, ' 31 Assistant Manager A. G. Spinks, ' 31 Assistant Manager Keene Fitzpatrick Coach OFFICERS, 1930-1931 J. Byles, ' 31 Captain A. G. Spinks 31 Manager T. A. Fernley, ' 32 Assistant Manager J. H. Hillman, ' 32 Assistant Manager Keene Fitzpatrick Coach D. L. Austin, ' 32 G. S. BUERMANN, J. Byles, ' 31 W. S. Dakin, ' 30 H. P. Dawson, ' 32 32 H. Faber, ' 30 W. H. Gahagan, ' 32 J. M. Gorman, ' 30 S. T. Hagerman, ' 30 TEAM B.H.Hand, ' 32 J. G. Horne, ' 31 A. D. Keown, ' 32 J. W.Lincoln, ' 30 A. S.Mills, ' 31 W. A. Moore, ' 30 J. M. Ranck, ' 32 G. W. Ruckert, ' 30 L. S. Saltus, ' 31 C. E. Scarlett, ' 32 R. Spencer, ' 30 C. W. Summerill, ' 32 A. P. Whitehead, ' 31 G. F. Whitney, ' 31 REVIEW OF THE 1930 TRACK SEASON Although the addition of the 1932 Freshman Championship team greatly strengthened the Varsity squad, the 1930 track team met with but little success. In the opening meet with North Carolina, the squad outdid itself and won a close and exciting meet, Dawson tieing the Princeton mile record. Even though the score of the Yale meet was greatly in favor of our opponents, this is in part explained by the fact that the team was greatly handicapped by the loss of Captain Ben Hedges, Intercollegiate title-holder and member of the 1928 Olympic team. In the third encounter, Cornell won most of the field events though Summerill broke the broad jump record. The track events, how- ever, were very closely contested. The team made a poor showing in the I. C. A. A. A. A. meet, the only man to place being Lincoln, who took third place in the low hurdles. 185 g P RINC CTQ rrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr t r il £zAiS Sc r Qornell- Princeton Track zJIfTeet PRINCETON, MAY 24, 1930 Keown a close second — Cornell-Princeton Meet EVENT 120-yd. High Hurdles 100-yd. Dash . . One Mile Run . 440-yd. Dash . . Two Mile Run . 220-yd. Low Hurdles 220-yd. Dash . . 880-yd. Run . . . Shot Put . . . . Javelin .... Pole Vault . . . t: High Jump tie Discus Broad Jump Hammer FIRST Clarke (C) Hand (P) Dawson (P) Elmer (C) Ranney (C) Lincoln (P) Hand (P) Treman (C) Levy (C) Northrup (C) ( Colyer (C) I Ranck (P) Ebelhare (C) 1 Faber (P) Shoenfeld (C) Summerill (P) Weis (C) . SECOND Heasley (C) . Meining (C) Spencer (P) Keown (P) . Pattison (C) Scarlett (P) . Meining (C) Dulaff (C) . Shoenfeld (C) Buermann (P) Lew (C) . Williams (C) Ellis (C) . . Watt (P) . Hauserman (C) Martin (C) Home (P) . Levering (C) Weisiger (P) Keown (P) . Sheppard (P) Byles (P) . Hagerman (P) Austin (P) . f Allen (C) . . •! Gorman (P) I Buermann (P) Northrup (C) . Andrews (P) Moore (P) . . TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE 0:15 2 5 sec. 0:10 sec. . 4:27 3 5 sec. .48 4 5 sec. 9:39 1 5 sec. :24 sec. . :22 sec. . 1:59 3 5 sec. 44 ft., 2 in. 169 ft., 10 in. 12 ft., 6 in. 5 ft., 11 in 4 1 3 133 ft., 5 in. 23 ft., 8 in. 152 ft., V 2 in. 9 3 8 79 1 3 1 5 8 4 9 6 1 1 4 5 4 2 3 6 1 55 2 3 186 jT TRlNCEf cgry frftU A«6l gyr Tale- Princeton Track zJYCeet NEW HAVEN, MAY 17, 1930 Exciting finish in the 120 yard hurdles TIME, HEIGHT POINTS POINTS EVENT FIRST SECOND THIRD OR DISTANCE Y T Mile .... Dawson (P) . Spencer (P) . Sheffield (Y) . 4:27 2 5 sec. . . . . 1 8 440-yd. Dash . . Engle (Y) . . . Talcott (Y) . . Home (P) . . 0:49 1 5 sec. . . . . 8 1 120-yd. High Hurdles Devoe (Y) . . Summerill (P) . Breereton (Y) . 0:15 2 5 sec. . . ' . . 6 3 100-vd. Dash . . MacDonald (Y) . Hand (P) . . Yeomans (Y) . 0:10 sec. . . . . . 6 3 220-yd. Dash . . Hand (P) . . . MacDonald (Y) Engle (Y) . . 0:21 3 5 sec. . . . . 4 5 Two Mile Run . . Dakin (P) . . . Saltus (P) . . Whitehead (P) . 9:54 3 5 sec. . . . . 9 Half Mile Run . Tuttle (Y) . . . Sumner (Y) Mills (P) . . 2 :03 sec. . . . . . 8 1 220-vd. Low Hurdle Lincoln (P) . . Scarlett (P) . . Fates (Y) . . :24 sec. . . . . . 1 8 Avery (Y) . . . ( Wolf (Y) . . Faber (P) . . 6 ft., 2 in. . . . . . 7 2 High Jump . Shot Put ... Vihlein (Y) . . . Byles (P) . . Cook (Y) . . 42 ft, %Vi in. . . . . 6 3 Tyson (Y) . . . Buermann (P) . Whitney (P) . 172 ft., 1 in. . . . . 5 4 Squires (Y) . . S Belinke (Y) . 12 ft., 6 in. . . 7 2 Pole Vault . . . } Austin (P) Avery (Y). . . . Weicker (Y) . Gahagan (P) . 137 ft., V 2 in. . . 8 1 Hammer Connor (Y) . . . Moore (Y) . . Moore (P) . . 168 ft.,  ' A in. . . . 8 1 Broad Jump Oldt (Y) . . Summerill (P) . Ruckert (P) . . 22 ft., 11 in. . . 5 4 80 55 187 tgT T R1Nc iT ra r rrrrrrr r rrrrr rrr r r rrrrrrrrr .rrrrrrr rnrrrr rrr rrrrrrrrr r Utft 32 EEZAHl3r ' Princeton Track Qaptains 1873-1931 From 1873 to 1888, instead of being called the captain of the Track Team the head of that organization 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. {Presidents) Jacob H. Van Deventer, 74 1873-1874 Frank Dunning, ' 76 1875 John A. Campbell, ' 77 1876-1877 Henry Marquand, ' 78 1878 Cleveland H. Dodge, ' 79 1879 Henry M. Cutts, ' 80 1880 Francis G. Landon, ' 81 1881 George Westervelt, ' 82 1882 William Church Osborne, ' 83 1883 Alexander G. Fell, ' 84 1884 J.Borden Harriman, ' 85 1885 George B. McClellan, ' 86 1886 William M. Spalding, ' 87 1887 Ferris S. Thompson, ' 88 1888 ( Captains ) Thomas B. Hamilton, ' 88 1888 Hugh H. Janeway, ' 90 1889 Walter S. Dohm, ' 90 1890 Joseph S. Roddy, ' 91 1891 Peter Vredenburgh, II, ' 92 1892 William B. Woodbridge, ' 93 1893 George R. Swain, ' 94 1894 Darwin R. James, ' 95 1895 Robert Garrett, ' 97 1896-1897 Harry C. Potter, ' 98 1898 John F. Cregan, ' 99 1899-1900 Alexander W. Coleman, ' 02 1901-1902 Daniel S. Horton, ' 03 1903 Lynn M. Adsit, ' 04 1904 Robert E. Williams, ' 05 1905 William M. Armstrong, ' 07 1906-1907 John C. Atlee, ' 07 1908 Ralph A. Gamble, ' 09 1909 James T. Moore, ' 10 1910 Maitland Dwight, ' 11 1911 Howard M. Sawyer, ' 12 1912 Rupert B. Thomas, Jr., ' 13 1913 Torrance Fiske, ' 14 1914 Ian D. Mackenzie, ' 15 1915 William B. Moore, ' 17 1916-1917 John H. Barrett, ' 18 1918 Charles R. Erdman, Jr., ' 19 1919-1920 Robert M. McCulloch, ' 21 1921 William E. Stevenson, ' 22 1922 S. Harrison Thomson, ' 23 1923 Harvey C. Emery, ' 24 1924 Ralph G. Hills, ' 25 1925 Caleb F. Gates, Jr., ' 26 1926 Stephen R. Bradley, ' 27 1927 Leander S. Jadwin, ' 28 1928 William Healy, ' 29 1929 Benjamin V. D. Hedges, Jr., ' 30 1930 Julius Byles, ' 31 1931 188 gg RINCETQ y: rrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r rrrtrr « Sir rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrcr .O gs gzszs ag EVENT 100 Yd. Dash 220 Yd. Dash 440 Yd. Run 880 Yd. Run Mile Run Two Mile Run 120 Yd. High Hurdles 220 Yd. Low Hurdles Annual zMeet, L C. A. A. A. A. CAMBRIDGE, MASS., MAY 30 AND 31, 1930 WINNERS 1. Wykoff, Southern California 2. Tolan, Michigan 3. Dyer, Stanford 4. Giberson, Stanford 5. Maurer, Southern California 1. Dyer, Stanford .... 2. Tolan, Michigan 3. Stevens, Dartmouth 4. Troy, Brown 5. Howell, Stanford 1. Engle, Yale 2. Graham, Syracuse 3. Williams, Southern California 4. Whitney, Colgate 5. McCafferty, Holy Cross 1. Chapman, Bates .... 2. Cobb, Harvard 3. Bullwinkle, C. C. N. Y. 4. McGeagh, Southern California 5. Drake, Colgate 1. Bullwinkle, C. C. N. Y. . . 2. Hallowell, Harvard 3. McKniff, U. P. 4. Viles, Bates 5. Goan, U. P. 1. Hagen, Columbia .... 2. Meisinger, Penn State 3. Detwiler, Penn State 4. Brown, Michigan State 5. Levering, Cornell 1. Record, Harvard .... 2. Welch, Southern California 3. Stollwerck, Colgate 4. Heasley, Cornell 1. Carls, Southern California . 2. Payne, Southern California 3. Lincoln, Princeton 4. Stollwerck, Colgate 5. Record, Harvard ME, HEIGHT, OR DISTANCE EVENT . . 9.7 sec. Running High Jump . . 21.3 sec. Running Broad Jump . . 48.2sec. 16 Pound Shot Put 1:52.4 sec. Javelin Throw 4:18.8 sec. Discus Throw 9:26.8 sec. Pole Vault 14.8 sec. . . 23.7 sec. So. California Stanford Harvard Michigan 4414 Yale . . 36% Columbia 23 J Pennsylvania 14J4 C. C. N. Y. Hammer Throw time, height, or winners distance O ' Connor, Columbia 6 ft., 3 in. Stewart, Southern California Avery, Yale 1 Kuelin, Harvard rTied for third Moody, Dartmouth Van Osdel, Southern California J West, Stanford 24 ft., 1JS in. Furth, N. Y. U. Dowel!, Stanford Paul, Southern California Boyle, U. P. Rothert, Stanford 52 ft., A in. Krenz, Stanford Levy, Cornell Berlinger, U.P. Hall, Southern California Churchill, California . . . Mortensen, Southern California Myers, N. Y. U. Curtice, California Snider, Southern California Krenz, Stanford Gowetl, Maine Hall, Southern California Rothert, Stanford Brooks, Michigan Sutermeister, Harvard 13 ft., 6 in. Berlinger, U. P. Berry, Stanford Chlentzos, Southern California I Colyer, Cornell fTied for second Cone, Yale Hubbard, Southern California Livingston, Southern California I Pottle, Michigan J Connor, Yale 177 ft., 10 4 in. Campbell, Michigan Vonckx, Harvard Flanagan, Holy Cross King, Dartmouth 212 ft., 5 in. 160 ft., 9H ill. STANDING 1254 Colgate . 10 Cornell . i l A Bates 8 California N. Y. U. 8 7 ' A 7 7 7 Penn State Dartmouth Maine Syracuse 7 syi 4 4 Princeton Holy Cross . Brown Michigan State 189 tffl X INC € lON: rrrrrrr rr?« rr(rrrrrrr rr r Tiijir r rrrrrrrr r r gVC A Rgg Princeton Track c R cprds Austin clearing the bar with plenty to spare. North Carolina Meet — Hand (P.) second. EVENT PECORD 100-yard Dash 9 4 5 sec. . . 9 4 5 sec. . 220-yard Dash 21 3 5 sec. 21 3 5 sec. . . 440-yard Dash . . 48 3 5 sec. 880-yard Dash 1 min., 53 2 5 sec. One-mile Run 4 min., 20 sec. . Two-mile Run 9 min., 30 sec. . 120-yard Hurdles 15 sec. . . . 220-yard Hurdles 23 4 5 sec. . High Jump 6 ft., 4 in. . Broad Jump 23 ft., 8J4 in. . Pole Vault 13 ft. . . Shot Put 50 ft., Yi, in. . Hammer Throw 168 ft., 7 in. . Discus Throw 136 ft., 7] 2 in. . Javelin Throw 199 ft., 11 in. J. H. Rush, ' 98 . . C. R. McKim, ' 24 . . W. B. Moore, ' 17 W. L. Dawbarn, ' 09 . W. E. Stevenson, ' 22 C. H. Kilpatrick, ' 99 I. D. Mackenzie, ' 15 H. P. Dawson, ' 32 . Allan Swede, ' 22 . . B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 . J. C. Taylor, ' 23 . . B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 . C. W. Summerhill, ' 32 S. R. Bradley, ' 27 . . R. G. Hills, Jr., ' 25 . J. R. DeWitt, ' 04 . . C. F. Gates, ' 26 . . R. M. Gibson, Jr., ' 26 YEAR 1898 1923 1916 1909 1921 1899 1915 1930 1920 1929 1923 1929 1930 1927 1925 1903 1926 1924 190 H-W. KR«rAlT( r TRINCCT Oy S£3Z2E3f 1930 VARSITY CREW Jones, Hardy, Sherman, Bauer, Rutherford, Schieffelin, Pease (Capt.), Hawkey, Colmore (Cox). iHtjOUNCEfo y g gc ' ZTRg r J. O. Pease, ' 31 . M. Alexander, ' 30 . Qrew OFFICERS, 1929-1930 Captain W. M. Thompson, ' 31 . . . . . . Manager D. Ross, ' 31 ... C. Logg Coach Assistant Manager 1 50-Pound Manager OFFICERS, 1930-193 1 R. L. Colmore, ' 31 Captain W. M. Thompson, ' 31 Manager D. A. Thompson, ' 32 Assistant Manager C. W. MuLLERY, ' 32 Assistant Manager J. H. Rowbotham, Jr., ' 32 . . . ISO-Pound Manager C. Logg Coach REVIEW OF THE 1930 SEASON With injuries and ineligibility claiming several promising can- didates, the 1930 crew outlook was none too bright. Coach Logg kept his men hard at work in preparation for their first meet, but in spite of his efforts the Varsity were defeated rather easily by M. I. T. over the mile and three-quarter Carnegie course on May 3. The Junior Varsity was likewise unsuccessful while the 150- Pound Crew atoned partially by winning its race. A week later this same crew was not so fortunate as it trailed both Yale and Harvard in the Derby race on the Housantic the Elis crossing the finish line first. In the Carnegie Cup Regatta with Cornell and Yale held May 17 at Princeton, the Varsity and Jayvees bowed their heads to the Blue in both events, the Nassau Junior Varsity managing to place second ahead of Cornell. On May 31 at Philadelphia the Childs ' Cup Regatta took place with Princeton, Columbia, Yale, Harvard, and Penn the contending crews. The Columbia Varsity took first honors, Penn second and the Orange and Black a good third. The Tiger lightweights pulled a surprise and avenged their former defeat at the hands of Yale and Harvard by conquering them along with Penn and winning the Joseph Wright challenge trophy. On the same day the Third Varsity placed fourth with Yale, Penn, and Harvard leading in the order named. The final Varsity race of the season was held on Carnegie on June 14. Princeton once again brought up the rear as Navy, by dint of superior oarmanship, outsprinted California in a thrill- ing battle. However, in spite of the Varsity ' s unsuccessful sea- son, Princeton crew prestige was given a good boost when Gordon Sykes ' 150-Pounders journey to England to compete for the Thames Cup over the Henley course with some of the world ' s best crews. Rowing two beautiful races, Nassau ' s entry was victorious in its first two heats, but in the quarter-finals round it was nosed out by the Kent School boat in a wonderful exhi- bition of rowing. 193 r TRlNCET Og rrfrrrrrri r r j| r rrrrrrrrr t r rrrrrrrrr i . r rrrrrrrrr r irr rrrrrrr rr r rjrrrrrr rr f r C ' A- W The Qrews VARSITY POSITION AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT YEAR Stroke, H. Hawkey, ' 32 20 5:11 168 First No. 7, J. O. Pease, ' 31 . . 21 6.03 188 Second No. 6, C. SCHIEFFELIN, ' 32 . 20 6:04 192 First No. 5, J. P. Rutherford, ' 32 20 6:05 198 First No. 4, J. L. J. Bauer, ' 30 . . 21 6:03 180 First No. 3, J. G. Shennan, ' 32 . 19 6:03 176 First No 2, M. F. West, Jr., ' 32 20 6:01 167 First Bow, H. M. Jones, ' 30 . . . 24 6:01 171 Third Cox, R. L. Colmore, ' 31 20 5:05 115 Second Sub, C. A. Hardy, ' 32 . . 20 6:00 165 First Stroke, J. W. Clingerman, ' 31 No. 7, B. H. Hereford, ' 31 No. 6, D. H. Hooker, ' 32 . No. 5, A. Uihlein, Jr., ' 31 . No. 4, L. A. Yerkes, ' 31 No. 3, F. B. Kellogg, ' 32 . No. 2, W. G. Botzow, ' 31 Bow, A. B. Wolfe, ' 31 . . Cox, C. Meneely, ' 30 . . VARSITY 150- POUND AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT YEAR POSITION AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT u 20 6:01 171 Second Stroke, G. C. Voorhees, ' 30 22 6:00 151 First 21 6:00 174 First No. 7, L. R. Hallett, Jr., ' 31 . 19 6:00 158 Second 21 6:01 170 First No. 6, C. H. Moore, ' 31 . . 20 6:00 160 Second 22 6:03 180 Second No. 5, W. W. Drewry, ' 32 20 6:01 158 First 21 6:05 185 Second No. 4, J. L. Pool, Jr., ' 30 . . 22 6:00 152 First 20 6:01 175 First No. 3, L. M. Forster, ' 32 . 19 5:10 161 First 19 6:02 163 First No. 2, T. F. Wimberly, ' 30 . 20 6:02 147 First 21 6:02 175 Second Bow, F. G. Frost, Jr., ' 30 . . 22 5:09 148 Second 21 5:07 118 Second Cox, F. J. Mayer, ' 30 . . . 23 5:03 115 First 194 tvEEEINciXON rrj rr |rr iff f f rr r rrrt rr rr t r -ff ' 33 frgU ' A- gggc Varsity Qrew Traces May 3, 1930 — at Princeton May 17, 1930 — at Princeton First — M. I. T. (Carnegie Cup Races) Second — Princeton First — Yale Distance, 1J4 miles Second — Cornell Time, 9 min., 14 1 10 sec. Third — Princeton Distance, 1J4 miles Time, 9 min., 20 3 5 sec. May 31, 1930 — at Philadelphia (Child s Cup Races) First — Columbia Second — Penn Third — Princeton Fourth — Yale Distance, 1 5 16 miles Time, 6 min., 42 sec. June 14, 1930 — at Princeton First — Navy Second — California Th ird — Princeton Distance, l J miles Time, 9 min., 23 4 5 sec. Junior ZJarsity c Races May 3, 1930 — at Princeton First— M. I. T Second — Princeton Distance, 1 4 miles Time, 9 min., 30 sec. May 17, 1930 — at Princeton First— Yale Second — Princeton Third— Cornell Distance, 1 4 miles Time, 9 min., 38 1 5 sec. May 3, 1930 — at Princeton First — Princeton Second— M. I. T. Distance, 1 5 16 miles Time, 7 min., 2 5 sec. 150-POUND VARSITY RACES May 10, 1930 — at new haven First— Yale Second — Harvard Third — Princeton Distance, 1 5 16 miles Time, 6 min., 33 2 5 sec. THIRD VARSITY RACE May 31, 1930 — at Philadelphia First — Yale Second — Pennsylvania Third— Harvard Fourth — Princeton Distance, 1 5 16 miles Time, 7 min., 48 sec. May 31, 1930 — at Philadelphia First — Princeton Second — Pennsylvania Third— Yale Fourth — Harvard Distance, 1 5 16 miles Time, 7 min., 41 1 5 sec. 195 gg lNCE TQM EEIAiSSc HVJ.KRJiMER tgp ft ' NC ETQ EBSAZZeHt HOCKEY Top Row — MacKinney, Blackwell, Cuyler. Middle Row — Duncan (Mgr.), Cooke, Lockhart, Cray, McAlpin, Wilkinson (Asst. Mgr.). — Barbour, Livingston, Adams (Capt.), Pennypacker, Cook. Front Row tgOOUNCETgvr -g nc AT ir ggc Hockey OFFICERS, 1929-1930 W. S. Adams, ' 30 Captain A. J. Duncan, ' 30 Manager C. F. Weston, ' 31 Assistant Manager R. M. Wilkinson, ' 31 ... Assistant Manager L. K. Neidlinger . Coach OFFICERS, 1930-1931 D. R. Livingston, ' 31 Captain R. K. Juergens, ' 31 Manager S. G. Hall, ' 32 Assistant Manager M. J. Condon, ' 32 Assistant Manager L. K. Neidlinger Coach TEAM H. S. Pennypacker, ' 30; F. H. Shearer, ' 30 Goal D. R. Livingston, ' 31; W. B. Blackwell, ' 32 Left Defense W. S.Adams, ' 30; T. F. Palmer, ' 32 Right Defense M. E. McAlpin, ' 32; G. D. Lockhart, ' 31 ; F. P. MacKinney, ' 31 Center H.W.Cook, ' 32; G. Cyler, ' 30; L. Lea, ' 32 Left Wing W. W. Barber, ' 32; J. Cooke, ' 30; A. D. Hall, ' 32 . . . . Right Wing GAMES DATE Dec. 7 Dec. 14 Dec. 17 Dec. 30 Jan. 1 Jan. 4 Jan. 8 Jan. Hi Jan. 15 SCORE Princeton Princeton 1 Princeton 2 Princeton 7 Princeton Princeton 3 Princeton 4 Princeton 3 Princeton 3 OPPONENTS SCORE St. Nicholas A. C 3 Crescent A. C 2 St. Nicholas A. C... 4 Williams 3 Dartmouth 4 Michigan Tech 3 St. Nicholas A. C 5 Amherst 2 Middlebury 2 DATE Jan. 18 Jan. 22 Feb. 7 Feb. 8 Feb. 12 Feb. 15 Feb. 19 Feb. 22 Mar 1 SCORE Princeton 4 Princeton 4 Princeton 3 Princeton 5 Princeton 3 Princeton 2 Princeton 6 Princeton 1 Princeton 3 OPPONENTS SCORE Dartmouth 8 Clarkson Tech 2 M. I. T 1 Williams 2 Boston U 1 Yale 4 Cornell Yale 5 Dartmouth 2 REVIEW OF THE SEASON Though they got off to a poor start with five defeats, one tie, and only one victory in the first seven games, the hockey team man- aged to come through the season with nine victories and a tie against eight defeats. After dropping two games to Dartmouth and Yale each, they ended their season by defeating Dartmouth in the final game. The defense of Capt. Adams and of Capt.-Elect Livingston and the attack of the first string forwards (McAlpin, Barber, and H. Cook) were the features of the season. The out- look for the coming year is bright with Pennypacker ' s place at goal looming as the hardest to fill. 199 tv fjOUNC£lQ : 0cZAiS3c H.W.KSAMCH. gg j[RlNCEf cgr £iMmSc BASKETBALL TEAM Top Row— Brown (Mgr.), Bessire, Goodpasture, Lowe, Nicholson, A. Wittmer (Coach). First Row— Lord, Cary, E. Wittmer (Capt.), Dicovics, Rosenbaum. tHLXM XON: g VC-A Rg r Basketball P. J. Carey, ' 31 . . J. R. Prior, ' 31 . . H. E. Nicholson, ' 32 P. J. Carey, ' 31 . OFFICERS, 1930-1931 . Captain W. Z. Taylor, ' 32 . Asst. Manager . Manager A. Wittmer, Jr Coach TEAM . . Forward J. W. Lord, Jr., ' 32 . . Forward E. O. Wittmer, ' 30 L. E. Rosenbaum, ' 32 . . Guard Center Guard DATE 1929 Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 1930 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. OPPONENTS G. W. Low, Jr., ' 31 . T. J. Skillman, ' 31 E. Dikovics, ' 30 . . RECORD SCORE DATE SUBSTITUTES Forward R. Bowen, ' 30 Guard . Center R. A. Bessire, ' 32 . . . Guard Forward W. C. Goodpasture, ' 32 . Forward 14, Princeton 14, Princeton 17, Princeton 31, Princeton 1, Princeton 3, Princeton 4, Princeton 7, Princeton 11, Princeton 15, Princeton 18, Princeton 22, Princeton 16 38 25 38 29 26 26 25 26 25 25 23 Albright 46 Feb. 6, Pr Ursinus 19 Feb. 8, Pr William Mary . . 18 Feb. 12, Pr Cathedral College . . 18 Feb. 15, Pr Feb. 18, Pr Washington College 23 Feb. 22, Pr Dickinson 25 Feb. 26, Pr Drexel . . ... 15 Mar. 1, Pr C. C. N. Y 37 Mar. 5, Pr Cornell 18 Mar. 6, Pr Columbia 38 Mar. 8, Pr Dartmouth .... 28 Mar. 12, Pr Yale 21 Mar. 15, Pr nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton nceton ORE OPPONENTS SCORE 33 Williams 26 33 Army 30 27 Navy 23 25 Lafayette 28 17 Pennsylvania ... 22 24 Yale 30 23 Dartmouth .... 42 32 Cornell 25 25 Columbia 44 25 Lehigh 30 28 Rutgers 40 39 Brown .... 30 16 Pennsylvania .... 26 TEAM Columbia Pennsylvania Dartmouth INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING, 1929-1930 WON LOST P.C TEAM . . 9 1 .900 Yale . . 7 3 .700 Cornell , 4 6 .400 Princeton WON LOST PC. 4 6 .400 3 7 .300 3 7 .300 REVIEW OF THE 1929-1930 SEASON Winning thirteen games and losing twelve, the basketball team again failed to approximate the high standard it set for itself a few years ago. However, they did better last year ' s poor showing. With three wins and seven losses, they tied with Cornell for last place in the league. In their non-league games they enjoyed more success, taking two-thirds of the contests. OFFICERS E. O. Wittmer, ' 30 Captain H. S. Brown, ' 30 Manager 203 Toward the end of the season there became noticeable a grow- ing inability to function together. In part the showing may be attributed to the inexperience of the Sophomores who made up the majority of the team, and the disability of Carey through injuries. The play of Captain Wittmer was consistently good all season. 1929-1930 J. R. Prior, ' 31 Asst. Manager A. Wittmer, Jr Coach gg ERlNCET Oy BSAjiSSf SHIELDS THOMPSON MAJOR SPORT MANAGERS JUERGENS PRIOR REITER SPINKS t§S_EMNCETO r. BSC -WSe ' 69— V. S. GUMMERE 70 — A. Van Rensselaer 71 — A.Johnson 72— D. T. Marvel 73 — C. O. Dershimer 74 — I. H. Lionberger 75 — C. Denney 76— A. J. McCosh 77— W. E. Dodge 78 — B. Ballard 79— B. Ballard ' 80— F. Loney Jootball Qaptains ' 81— P. T.Bryan ' 82— E. C. Peace ' 83 — A. Moffat ' 84— C. W. Bird ' 85— C. M. DeCamp ' 86— H. S. Savage ' 87 — E. O. Wagenhurst ' 88— H. W. Cowan ' 89— E. A. Poe ' 91— R. H. Warren ' 92— P. King ' 93— T. G. Trenchard 1869-1930 ' 9-1 — T. G. Trenchard ' 95— L. Lea ' 96 — G. Cochran ' 97— G. Cochran ' 98— A. R. T Hildebrand ' 99— W. H. Edwards ' 00— H. W. Pell ' 01— H. W. Pell ' 02— R. T. Davis ' 03— J. R. DeWitt ' 04— W. L. Foulke ' 05— J. L. Cooney ' 06— H. L. Dillon •07- -J. B. McCormick ' 19— C. W. McGraw ' 08- -E. A. Dillon ' 20 — H. A. Callahan ' 09- -R. C. SlEGLING ' 21— J. S. Keck ' 10- -E. J. Hart ' 22 — M. P. Dickenson ' 11- -E.J.Hart ' 23— A. B. Snively, Jr ' 12- -T. T. Pendleton ' 24 — E. C. Stout, Jr. ' 13- -H. A. H.Baker ' 25— E. L. McMillan ' 14- -H. R. Ballin ' 26— J. W.Davis, Jr. ' 15- -F. Click ' 27— C. R. Moeser ' 16- -F. T. Hogg ' 28— C. H. Howe ' 17- -(No Team) ' 29— J. R. Whyte ' 18- -H. A. Callahan ' 30 — R. A. Mestres •Informal team in 1918 composed of members of the S. A. T. C. and Naval units. Haseball Qaptains ' 60— L. W. Mudge 61— L. W. Mudge 62— L. W. Mudge 63 — H. C. Milspaugh ' 64 — H. C. Milspaugh ' 65— E. P. Rankin ' 66— W. H. Wickham ' 67— R. F. Little ' 68 — E. A. Van Wagenen ' 69— E. P. Rankin 70— W. H. Buck 71 — A. Van Rensselaer 72— T. K. Bradford 73— A. Pell 7-1 — D. Patton 75— J. M. Woods 76— J. M. Woods 77 — D. Laughlin 78— E. Furman 79— C. B. Wighton ' 80— W. S. Horton ' 81— A. McCune ' 82 — O . Rafferty ' 83— J. M. Harlan ' 84 — J. M. Harlan ' 85 — D. Edwards ' 86— J. P. Shaw ' 87 — A. H. Larkin ' 88— E. O. Wagenhurst 1869-1931 ' 89— W. H. King ' 90— C. C. Dana ' 91— C. C. Dana ' 92— L. A. Younc ' 93— P. King ' 94 — C. S. Mackenzie ' 95— J. H. Brooks ' 96— J. Bradley ' 97— W. W. Wilson ' 98— F. W. Kafer ' 99— F. W. Kafer ' 00 — A. R. T. Hillebrand ' 01— W. E. Green ' 02 — W. J. Steinwender ' 03— F. G. Pearson ' 04 — C. G. Stevens ' 05— G. T. Wells ' 06— S. R. Reid, Jr. ' 07— J. L. Cooney ' 08— E. H. W. Harland ' 09— W. R. Sides ' 10— F. T. Dawson ' 11— S.B.White ' 12— C. H. Sterrett ' 13 — F. D. Worthington ' 14 — B. K. Rhoads ' 15— O.S.Greene ' 16— B.C. Law ' 17— E. H.Driggs ' 18— W. H. Madden ' 19— W. H.Bade ' 20— R. M. Trimble ' 21— J. Fisher, Jr. ' 22— W. S. MacPhee ' 23 — J. H. Jefferies ' 24— P. Euwer ' 25 — J. M. BOOHECKER ' 26— T. S. DlGNAN ' 27— R. W. LaBeaume ' 28— W. H. Hardt, III ' 29— P. H. Strubing, II ' 30— J. H. O ' Toole ' 31— C. E. Muldaur 205 tvODOUNC£lo EEAiSSc FITZPATRICK MAJOR SPORT COACHES ROPER VVITTMER NEIDLINGER LOGO DOUGLAS tgrP RINC £foX7 ' 12 ' 13 ' 14 ' 15 ' 16 ' 17 ' 18 ' 19 ' 20 gg VC A TjT gy £Wz ; Qaptains 1911 -1931 R. T. Roche ' 21 . S. J. Ranch ' 22 S. J. Ranch ' 23 T. C. Brigcs ' 24 0. S. Putnam ' 25 R. A. Cochran ' 26 R. A. Cochran ' 27 H. S. Roche ' 28 W. M. Paxton, III ' 29 R. S. Lamont ' 30 ' 31 . . H. C. Creswell S. W. Milne J. T. Pirie, II C. L. Austin W. G. Dyer A. Kennedy, Jr. H. Clark H. R. Stratford J. MacN. Thompson J. O. Pease Hockey zMajor Sport Qaptains 1926-1931 ' 26 B. F. Wilkinson ' 27 A. D. S. Davis ' 28 J. C. Rennard ' 29 G. Jones , ' 30 W.S.Adams, Jr. 31 R. C. Livingston Basketball Major Sport Qaptains 1929-1931 ' 29 O.E. Miles ' 31 P.J.Carey 30 E. O. Wittmer 207 gg TRlNCCT ggp gg A £ggg WRESTLING TEAM Top Row— Perkins (Mgr.), Colemore, Roysker, Hooker. Ihrie, Foote. First Rou -Hertz, Meyers, Barfield (Capt.), Strawbridge, Kent. tV T3nNClTg rffrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr frfrrrr rrh-f r rr rr rr r rrrrrr rrf r gBEAZSiJc Wrestling OFFICERS, 1929-1930 W. D. Barfield, ' 30 Captain N. M. Perkins, ' 30 Manager C. H. Miner, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager F. Foote, ' 31 Assistant Manager C. F. Foster Coach TEAM R. L. Colmore, ' 31 115-lb. Class C. S. Hertz, ' 30 115-lb. Class E. C. Irhig, ' 32 125-lb. Class F. R. Kent, ' 30 135-lb. Class R. P. Myers, ' 30 145-lb. Class H. P. Royster, ' 31 158-lb. Class W. H. Yeckley, ' 32 175-lb. Class W. D. Barfield, ' 30 Unlimited Class REVIEW OF THE SEASON The wrestling team enjoyed a successful season during 1930, winning six out of nine meets, and placing third in the Intercollegiates. The meet with Yale was won when Barfield threw his opponent, and then secured a time advantage to win his match. In the In- tercollegiates, Barfield won in the unlimited class, while Hooker and Hertz took second in their respective divisions. MEETS DATE SCORE Jan. 11, 1930, Princeton 29 Jan. 13, 1930, Princeton 21 Jan. 18, 1930, Princeton 13 Feb. 8, 1930, Princeton 17 Feb. 12, 1930, Princeton 18 Feb. 15, 1930, Princeton 11 Feb. 19, 1930, Princeton 20 Feb. 22, 1930, Princeton 5 Mar. 1, 1930, Princeton 15 OPPONENT SCORE Duke 3 Michigan 15 Lehigh 19 North Carolina 13 Columbia 12 Penn. State 15 Rutgers 8 Navy 26 Yale 11 209 t EZEESccTo SOCCER TEAM Top Row — I.) oak, Laughlin, Logan (Freshman Coach), Taylor, Boice, Mulley. Second Row — Nies (Coach), Kesler, Mcintosh, Cochrane. First Row — Stagg, Keen, Jennifer (Capt.) Matlack, English. Baker, Parker, Breasted, TTrincetq r rrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr p rf rrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr tr 5 gc-A gg? Soccer OFFICERS W. M. Jenifer, ' 31 Captain P. D. Nulle, ' 31 Manager A. B. Nies . Coach TEAM A. P. Boyce, ' 33 Goal R. M. Goddard, ' 32 Left Fullback C. B. Doak, ' 33 Inside Left W. M. Jenifer, ' 31 Right Fullback D. C. Stagc, ' 31 Centre Forward A. P. Taylor, ' 33 Outside Left D. G. McIntosh, ' 33 Right Halfback S. Cochrane, Jr., ' 32 Centre Halfback R. W. Kesler, ' 32 Right Halfback L. K. Wyatt, ' 32 Outside Right H. R. Laughlin, ' 32 ... . ... Left Halfback L. F. Keene, ' 31 Inside Right G. K. Beddoe, ' 31 J. H. Breasted, ' 32 SUBSTITUTES H. L.T. Koren, ' 33 J. H. O ' Donovan.Jr., ' 33 J. S. Troth, ' 33 H. Garrett, ' 33 R. W. Matlack, ' 31 C.R.Parker, ' 32 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The soccer team went through a very poor season, winning two games, losing five and tieing one. The necessary rearrangement on account of injuries proved disastrous to their play. Oct. 12, Princeton Oct. 18, Princeton Oct. 23, Princeton Nov. 1, Princeton RECORD 1 Crescent A. C. . . . 1 Cornell 1 2 Swarthmore ... 1 3 Penn State .... 2 Nov. 8, Princeton Nov 15, Princeton Nov. 22, Princeton Nov. 26, Princeton Haverford . 2 Yale . . Pennsylvania 3 Lehigh . . 211 fgT TRiNcg TojT: gV£iAZM3r LACROSSE Top Row — Carnochan, Dana, Dikovics, Roberts, Zundel, Graham, Kime, Kessler. Middle Row — Nies (Coach), Keese, Brown, Cane (Mgr.), Yeckley, Bogar, Albright (Asst. Mgr.). First Row— Campbell, Jenifer, Schwartzenbach, Scarlett (Capt.), Page, Clark, Levick. g TRlNCEf oKf U J acrosse OFFICERS, 1930 J. T. Lane, ' 30 Manager W. D. G. Scarlett, ' 30 Captain A. B. Nies Coach OFFICERS, 1931 L. R. Albright, Jr., ' 31 Manager G. A. Schwarzenback, ' 3 1 Captain A. B. Nies Coach TEAM W. D. Campbell, ' 30 Goal W. M. Jenifer, ' 31 Point D. G. Levick, ' 31 Cover Point E. J. Hall, ' 30 First Defense J. R. Carnochan, ' 31 Second Defense G. A. Schwarzenback, ' 31 Third Defense D. W. Graham, ' 30 Center W. D. G. Scarlett, ' 30 Third Attack E. R. Dikovics, ' 30 Second Attack W. C. Clark, ' 30 First Attack J. F. Page, ' 31 Out Home J. H. Brown, ' 31 In Home G. W. Bogar, ' 32 D.T.Dana, ' 32 A. P. Davis, ' 31 T. L. Keese, ' 31 SUBSTITUTES R. W. Kessler, ' 32 R. M. Kime, ' 30 J. W. Lord, ' 32 R. A. Mestres, ' 31 A. Roberts, ' 32 C. Wister, ' 32 W. H. Yeckley, ' 32 REVIEW OF THE SEASON Although the team did not live up to the excellent record of the 1929 Championship Season, it won four games out of eight with ne tie. The schedule was extremely difficult and the absence of Captain Scar lett was largely responsible for what defeats there were. DATE SCORE Apr. 4, Princeton 2 Apr. 12, Princeton 8 Apr. 17, Princeton 6 Apr. 26, Princeton May 2, Princeton 5 May 10, Princeton ■ . . . . May 17, Princeton 1 May 22, Princeton 2 GAMES OPPONENT SCORE Cornell 2 Union 2 Pennsylvania 1 Lehigh ... 4 Lafayette 1 Johns Hopkins .... 7 Rutgers 5 Yale 8 213 CROSS COUNTRY Top Row — Downing, Flanagan, Edwards, Miller, Bell. Front Row — Geis (Coach), Sheppard, Prior (Capt ), Saltus, Clifton (Mgr.). tv IJDUNC£ioN EEiSBgg £Wj Qountry OFFICERS J. R. Prior, ' 31 Captain H. Clifton, Jr., ' 31 Manager H. T. Geis Coach TEAM N. M. Bell, ' 32 E. S. Downing, ' 32 H. S. Edwards, ' 33 J. G. Miller, ' 33 A. S. Mills, ' 31 J. R. Prior, ' 31 L. S. Saltus, ' 31 M. H. Sheppard, Jr., ' 32 Oct. 18, 1930. Princeton Oct. 24, 1930. Princeton Nov. 1, 1930. Princeton Nov. 8, 1930. Princeton RECORD 23 Rutgers 32 27 Columbia 28 26 Lafavette 29 25 Yale 30 RESUME OF THE SEASON The University Cross Country Team had a very successful season, claiming a championship team. They thus repeated last year ' s record. Captain Prior and Saltus showed exceptional form, while Bell ' s running was also outstanding. Prior was unable to compete in the Intercollegiates due to a foot injury. Saltus and Miller who were entered against a large field of competition ran very well. 215 T TRtNCCT rgp fEEZAZggJf TENNIS TEAM Standing — Irwin, Kennedy, McCabe, Bradbury (Mgr.). Seated — Strachan, Thomas (Capt.), Lockhart. tuTEMN££lo?v: igg c Tg jg; Tennis OFFICERS, 1929-1930 W. F. Thomas, ' 31 Captain J. M. Bradbury, Jr., ' 30 Manager R. V. C. Whitehead, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager T. R. Wagner, ' 32 Second Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1930-1931 W. F. Thomas, ' 31 Captain R. V. C. Whitehead, Jr., ' 31 Manager T. R. Wagner, ' 32 Assistant Manager R. A. Wallace, ' 33 ) . . .. . ,m itt o a t t Second Assistant Managers VV. S. Ailes, 33 S. P. Harbison, ' 31 W. W. Irwin, ' 32 MATCHES TEAM, 1930 H. M. Kennedy, ' 32 C. Lockhart, ' 30 G. McCabe, ' 31 D. Strachan, ' 31 W.F.Thomas, ' 31 Apr. 15, Princeton 6 Apr. 18, Princeton 4 Apr. 26, Princeton 9 Apr. 30, Princeton 6 May 3, Princetpn 7 May 7, Princeton 9 May 10, Princeton 9 •May 15, Princeton May 17, Princeton 3 May 23, Princeton 9 June 7, Princeton Unfinished because of rain. OPPONENT SCORE Rutgers 3 Cornell . 2 Union Columbia 3 Lehigh 2 Pennsylvania Alumni Dartmouth Yale . Williams California 10 6 6 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The defeat by Yale cost the team a Championship Season. The schedule was difficult but the team showed up excellently. A post- season game however, was dropped to California, and the Alumni nosed out the Combined Varsity and Junior Varsity by one point. 217 t grmiNciTo f r rrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrr r rr rrrrrrrr rrrrrr rrrr rr rrrrrrt rrrrrrrr r r .O gEZAHE2? GYM TEAM, 1930 Standing — Parker (Mgr.), Halladay. Mathews, LaBau, Evans, Page. Seated — Freeman, Clagett, Hagerman, Miller, Alexander. gTL RINC CfQ rrrrrn r r rrr r rr r r rrrrrrr r g nc TT gr? Qym OFFICERS, 1929-1930 J. H. Maroney, ' 30 Captain P. T. Finch, ' 31 Manager D. C. Dobson, ' 31 Assistant Manager R. Swinnerton Coach OFFICERS, 1930-193 1 C. E. Claggett, ' 31 Captain P. T. Finch, ' 31 Manager H. Hawkey, ' 32 Assistant Manager R. Swinnerton Coach E. G. Adams, ' 30 A. G. Alexander, ' 30 C. E. Clacgett, ' 31 R. S. Evans, ' 32 E. J. Freeman, ' 32 S. T. Hagerman, ' 30 TEAM, 1 929- 1 930 T. Halladay, ' 31 J. G. Horne, ' 31 A. Lofthouse, ' 31 J. H. Maroney, ' 30 R. S. Mathews, ' 32 C. Miller, Jr., ' 31 G.M.Page, ' 32 J. R. Speer, ' 31 J. D.Zook, ' 31 REVIEW OF THE SEASON Though handicapped by the loss of Captain Maroney who was unable to compete during the year due to a broken knee, the team went through the season iosing only to Navy and N. Y. U., and winning from Army, Dartmouth, M. I. T., and Temple. Claggett was the outstanding performer of the team, while Hagerman was awarded the cup given annually by Mr. Swinnerton to the man most valuable to the team. In the Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnastic Championships Claggett took first on the side horse, third in the parallel bars, and fourth in the rings. MEETS DATE SCORE Feb. 8, Princeton 30 Feb. IS, Princeton 3054 Feb. 21, Princeton 34 Feb. 21, Princeton 34 Mar. 8, Princeton 10 Mar. 15, Princeton 26 OPPONENT SCORE Temple 24 Army 23J4 M. I. T 20 Dartmouth 20 Navy 44 N. Y. U 28 219 TTR-INCfTog gV C-A Rgg PISTOL CLUB Standing — Jackman, Howland, Doerflinger. Seated — Beaham, Lieutenant O ' Reilly, Coulter. tHgn iNc £iQN rrrrrrrrrr r riiHrf irrrrrrtTrr rrrrrrrrrr rr 5srr rrirrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr ' rjllltf rrrrrrrrrr — £ EEZAEISS Pistol Team OFFICERS T. G. Beaham, ' 30 J. H. Coulter, ' 30 Captain Captain-Elect TEAM T. G. Beaham, ' 30 G. G. Blanchard, ' 29 J. H. Coulter, ' 30 W. M. DOERFLINGER, ' 31 W. HOWLAND, ' 30 A. H. Jackman 31 T. S. Lovering, ' 29 R. B. Park, ' 30 Officer in Charge of Pistol Firing Lieutenant W. T. O ' Reilly The pistol team had a very successful season. It lost only two meets in its entire schedule of twenty-five. 221 ygj folNCEf OM- frrtrr r rrhTtrrrrrr r r rrrr rrrr f P 41 gycZAiIESc FENCING TEAM Standing— Miller (Mgr.), Larsen, Douglas, Waters, Furst, DeVos (Coach). Seated— Wheeler, Marvin, Hegner (Capt.), Lobenstine, Hocker. grwUNccTo : . rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r rrrr rrrr f r SISAiSSc fencing OFFICERS, 1929-1930 C. F. Hegner, ' 30 Captain A. W. Miller, ' 30 Manager Joseph DeVos Coach OFFICERS, 1930-1931 D. G. Marvin, ' 31 Captain C. D. Winn, ' 31 Manager Joseph DeVos Coach Epee C. F. Hegner, ' 30 W. M. LuBENSTINE, ' 30 D.G.Marvin, ' 31 TEAM Foil GB. Douglas, ' 31 R. C. Havens, ' 32 O. F. Larsen, ' 32 L. L. Waters, ' 32 C.H.Wheeler, ' 31 Sabre P. W. Furst, ' 31 L. Hocker, ' 31 REVIEW OF THE SEASON, 1929-1930 In its fifth year as a sport at Princeton, the University Fencing team duplicated last season ' s record of three victories and three de- feats. An encouraging start brought triumph over Lehigh, Columbia and Cornell. Hamilton, Navy, and Yale brought the season to a close with three consecutive defeats. The epee team this year was able to clinch the Semi-finals at Annapolis, while Marvin and Lobenstine, both epee, came out 1st and 2nd respectively in the individuals. The finals at New York saw the epee team tied for third position with Marvin receiving a medal for third place in the epee individuals. Coach DeVos has successfully put the team on a sound basis and with the available new material should be able to build up a formidable team. 223 tiEHISclloK eE5HI3c POLO TEAM Freeman, Firestone, Lattimore, MacDonald. TP RINC ilQN gj c A- li ge Princeton T olo Association ) V OFFICERS f s fj C. L. Otto, ' 31 President f f ) v W. Post, II, ' 32 Vice-President V — J- G. Russell, Jr., ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer [ EX-OFFICIO T j sSs 1 J y I ( Major R. S. Parrott, U. S I ) BOARD OF GOVERNORS |C V  Ss Arthur B. Borden, ' 29 President l oy J. P. McLanahan, ' 16 Vice-President r I J. M. Doubleday, ' 30 Treasurer _ Arthur B. Borden, ' 29 Secretary MANAGERS J. H. Smith, Jr., ' 32 Indoor Manager W. B. Kirkam, Jr., ' 32 Outdoor Manager A. J. Irwin, ' 33 Asst. Indoor Manager A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 Graduate Manager MEMBERS, 1931 S. P. Damerel L.K.Firestone T. Halladay D. C. Knowlton C.L.J. Otto MEMBERS, 1932 J. S. DuBois E. J. Freeman W. B. Kerkam, Jr. B. MacDonald J. G. Russell, Jr. B.C.Edwards E. R. Hilts W. Post, II J. H. Smith, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 W. Bowie D. P. Cheatham T. L. Grier G. S. Johnston, Jr. S. Mathews E. M. Bernuth F. O. Elliott F. M. Hammond T. M. Lassater R. S. Waterhouse W. S. Calahan R. C. Firestone A. J. Irwin A. F. MacLiesh F. C. Whittelsay G. G. Green F. L. Johanns E. L. Marston MEMBERS, 1934 J. E. Arens F. J. Fellows, Jr. T.E.Irvine P. Livingston, Jr. J.S.Russell D. P. Barnett G. B. Flaccus J. L. Johnston, Jr. A. D. Mittendorf, Jr. T. S. Watson H.E.Connor C. L. Gilliland M. S. Kemmerer W.L.Phillips M. Wing B. M. Dunn C. D. Huyler, Jr. J. G. Rouse A. Young 22S SWIMMING TEAM Top Row— Young (Mgr.), Stepp (Coach), Murray (Asst. Mgr.). Third Row— Bryant, Stone, Mountain, Grey. Second Row— Steimle, Cooley, Nickelson, Perrine, Manych, Schenk, Lea. First Row — Schenk, Turner, Brooks, Moles, Gaillard. TPRINCEfQg: rrr r rrr firrhrrrrrr rr r } rrrrrrrr t r 0ciAZZE3c Swimming OFFICERS, 1929-1930 J. H. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 Captain W. F. Young, ' 30 Manager C. K. Murray, ' 31 Assistant Manager Howard W. Stepp Coach OFFICERS, 1930-1931 W. A. Turner, Jr., ' 31 Captain C. K. Murray, ' 31 Manager W. M. Aicher, ' 32 Assistant Manager Wilson, ' 32 Assistant Manager J. H.Brooks, Jr., ' 30 W. R. Bryant, ' 30 J. H. Cooley, ' 32 H. E. Gaillard, ' 30 L. J. Gray, Jr., ' 32 W. H. Lander, Jr., ' 32 I. L. Lee, Jr., ' 31 V. G. Manych, ' 32 TEAM W. L. McPheeters, ' 31 V.D.Miller, Jr., ' 31 E.J. Moles, ' 31 W. F. Mountain, ' 31 J. T. L. Nicholson, ' 32 D. H. Robinson, ' 30 F. E. Sagendorph, ' 31 C. C. Shenk, ' 30 D. L. Shenk, ' 32 E. A. Steimle, ' 30 D. L. Stone, ' 32 W.A.Turner, Jr., ' 31 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The team enjoyed a very successful season, finishing in second place in the Eastern League. They won most of their meets by large margins, and lost only to Navy and Yale. Captain Brooks was a consistent winner in diving, while Moles and Manych took first and second respectively in both the National Collegiate Swimming Championships at Boston and in the Eastern Collegiates at New Haven. The medley relay team composed of Stone, Moles, and Turner took second place in the Nationals at Boston. DATE Jan. 10, Princeton Jan. 18, Princeton Feb. 15, Princeton Feb. 20, Princeton MEETS SCORE OPPONENT SCORE DATE . 49 C. C. N. Y 13 Feb. 25, Princeton . 48 Pennsylvania 14 Mar. 1, Princeton 49 Syracuse 13 Mar. 8, Princeton . 46 Dartmouth 16 Mar. 15, Princeton SCORE OPPONENT SCORE 42 Columbia 20 . 24 Navy 38 34 Rutgers 28 . 24 Yale 38 227 rUlNCCTOM E3ZZr2c Twenty- Jourth Annual Intercollegiate Swimming Association hteet HELD AT YALE UNIVERSITY, NEW HAVEN, MARCH 22, 1930 There were no team scores taken in the meet, as only individual championships were contested for. Kojac of Rutgers was the star, with two firsts and a third, while Howland of Yale broke the intercollegiate record for the 50 yard dash by winning the event with a time of 23 1 5 seconds. Moles and Manych of Princeton finished first and second respec- tively in the 200 yard breaststroke, while Brooks, Princeton ' s former intercollegiate diving champion, took third in the diving. SUMMARY 1. Howland, Yale en j t- u J 2. Messimer, Yale 50-yard Dash , ., . „ ' . J I 3. Kojac, Rutgers [ 4. Butler, Yale 100-yard Dash 220-yard Swim 440-yard Swim V, Kojac, Rutgers 3. Messimer, Yale [ 4. Brenes, Yale ( 1. Kojac, Rutgers . J 2. Osborn, Yale 1 3. C. Leedy, Yale [ 4. Phillips, Rutgers f, Ruddy, Columbia C. Leedy, Yale 1 3. Osborne, Yale [ 4. Phillips, Rutgers . . 23 1 5 sec. . 52 4 5 sec. 2 min. 18 3 5 sec. 5 min. 5 3 5 sec. 200-yard Freshman Relay 300-yard Medley 150-yard Backstroke 200-yard Breaststroke Mil Fancy Diving 1. Columbia (Bain, Neichardt, Wimer Ray) 2. Yale 3. N. Y. U. 4. Dartmouth f 1. Harms, Fordham . 3 min. J 2. Merriam, Pennsylvania ] 3. Howland, Yale [ 4. E. Leedy, Yale 1. Wohl, Syracuse . 2. Arnold, Brown ] 3. Harms, Fordham [ 4. Cahill, Yale 1. Moles, Princeton 2. Manych, Princeton 3. Enghahl, Syracuse ard, Yale, finished second but was disqualified, f 1. Grandy, Pennsylvania •j 2. Manuel, Yale [ 3. Brooks, Princeton 56 1 5 sec. 1 min. 45 1 5 sec. 2 min. 36 4 5 sec. 228 ygj miNCEJ Tg - pV A-mr gg Board of Athletic Qontrol Dr. Charles W. Kennedy Chairman Asa S. Bushnell, ' 21 Secretary George R. Murray, ' 93 Treasurer George C. Wintringer, ' 94 Controller TRUSTEE MEMBERS Dr. J. M. T. Finney, ' 84 Franklin D ' Olier, ' 98 Dean Mathey, ' 12 ALUMNI MEMBERS Jerome Bradley, ' 97 A. A. Gulick, ' 97 C. W. McGraw, ' 19 FACULTY MEMBERS Dean L. P. Eisenhart Dr. Charles W. Kennedy, ' 03 Dr. Joseph E. Raycroft UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS C. E. Claggett, ' 31 G. H. Shields, ' 31 J. B. Tredennick, ' 31 229 tgT TiUNCET n SSAZZEar Top Row- GOLF -Livingston, McWilliams, Wright. Front Rozv — Bourne (coach), Dunlop, Waud. r jUlNCCf Oy g AC A 6 X£ Qoif OFFICERS, SPRINGDALE GOLF CLUB Gerard B. Lambert President Ario Pardee Vice-President Bradford B. Locke Secretary-Treasurer GREENS COMMITTEE Curtis W. McGraw Chairman HANDICAP AND TOURNAMENT COMMITTEE Paul G. Tomlinson Chairman F. P. Hersey, ' 30, Captain G.T. Dunlap, ' 31 G. A. Mc Williams, ' 31 D. R. Livingston, ' 31 UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM V. P. Palmer, ' 30, Manager M. W. Waud, ' 32 W. SCHOELLKOPF, ' 32 F. P. Russell, ' 30 W. F. Wricht, ' 32 REVIEW OF THE SEASON After defeating every team on the regular schedule by decisive scores, Princeton, represented by Captain Hersey, Dunlap, McWil- liams, and Livingston won the Intercollegiate Trophy. Dunlap earned further honors for Princeton by capturing the individual Inter- collegiate title. Apr. 25, 1930, Princeton Apr. 26, 19 30, Princeton Apr. 30, 1930, Princeton May 2, 1930, Princeton May 3, 1930, Princeton May 10, 1930, Princeton SCORE OPPONENT . 4 . 9 Georgia Tech Army . 9 . 8 Rutgers Pennsylvania . 8 . 9 Georgetown Holy Cross SCORES SCORE 2 1 1 May 10, 1930, Princeton May 15, 1930, Princeton May 16, 1930, Princeton May 17, 1930, Princeton May 17, 1930, Princeton IRE OPPONENT SCORE 8 Harvard 1 8 Dartmouth 1 6 Yale 3 5 Brown 4 7 Williams 2 231 tgTEP lTo rffrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rHJrr ' rrrrr r rr r rrJSltr rf rrrrr rrr r !iilk r r rrrrrr rr r r 0EAZ2e3t McCarthy BRETHWAITE CHEER LEADERS LEE BRITTINGHAM WALDRON tuO cilON: _ r rrrrrrtrrr rr Fffi rr rrr rrrrrr r rrrrrr rrrr gjC A Rge Varsity Qlub R. A. Mestres, ' 31 M. E. McAlpin, ' 32 OFFICERS President Secretary E. S. Atwater (F) 1930 H. T. Bennett (F) 1928, 1929, 1930 (Basketball) 1929 (B) 1929 J. W. Bierhals (B) 1930 R. Burkham (C) 1929, 1930 J. Byles (F) 1928, 1929, 1930 (T) 1929, 1930 W. Cameron (Basketball) 1930 P. J. Carey (F) 1929 (Basketball) 1929, 1930 J. R. Carnochan (C) 1929, 1930 J. W. Chugerman (C) 1929, 1930 C. Claggett (G) 1929, 1930 R. L. Colmore (C) 1929, 1930 J. D. Curran (G) 1930 G. T. Dunlap (Golf) 1929, 1930 L. F. Hallett (C) 1930 S. P. Harbison (Tennis) 1929, 1930 S. E. Hockenbury... (F) 1928, 1929, 1930 L. Hocker (Fencing) 1930 MEMBERS, 1931 J. G. Home (T) 1929, 1930 J. Y. Howson (F) 1930 W. M. Jennifer (L) 1929, 1930 R. K. Juergens (H) 1930 D. G. Levick (F) 1928, 1929, 1930 (L) 1929, 1930 D. Livingston (H) 1929, 1930 R. C. Livingston (H) 1929, 1930 G. Lockhart (Tennis) 1930 G. W. Lowe (Basketball) 1930 G. A. McWilliams (Golf) 1929, 1930 F. P. Mackinney (B) 1929, 1930 C. G. Meeks (F) 1929, 1930 G. C. Merrill (C) 1929, 1930 R. A. Mestres (F) 1928, 1929, 1930 R. T. Miller (C) 1929, 1930 A. S. Mills (T) 1930 E. J. Moles (S) 1929, 1930 (B) 1929, 1930 C. E. A. Muldaur (F) 1929, 1930 J. O. Pease (C) 1929, 1930 S. W. Pendergast (F) 1929, 1930 (T) 1929, 1930 J. R. Prior (CC) 1929, 1930 W. Reinmund (F) 1929, 1930 (B) 1929, 1930 R. H. Rubenstein (CC) 1930 L. S. Saltus (CC) 1929, 1930 G. A. Schwarzenbach (L) 1929, 1930 G. H. Shields, III (F) 1930 T. J. Skillman (Basketball) 1930 A. G. Spinks (T) 1930 D. S. Strachan (Tennis) 1929, 1930 J. B. Tredennick (B) 1930 W. F. Thomas (Tennis) 1929, 1930 W. M. Thompson (C) 1929, 1930 A. Uihlein (C) 1929, 1930 A. P. Whitehead (T) 1930 G. F. Whitney (T) 1930 J. M. Winterbottom, Jr (C) 1930 A. B. Wolfe (C) 1929, 1930 234 g RINCEf ojy . rrrrtrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrr f r ' ■ ■ Vj$£LiA JLf[Sc ' Varsity Qlub (Qontinued) D. L. Austin (T) 1930 W. W. Barber (H) 1930 N. M. Bell (CC) 1929, 1930 R. A. Bessire (Basketball) 1930 W. B. Blackwell (H) 1930 G. Bogar (F) 1930 F. K. Bowman, Jr (B) 1930 C. D. Brooks (F) 1930 G. Buermann (T) 1930 H. W. Cook, Jr (H) 1930 H. P. Dawson (T) 1929, 1930 E. S. Downing (CC) 1930 W. W. Drewry (H) 1930, (C) 1930 L. M. Forster (C) 1930 W. H. Gahagan (F) 1930, (T) 1930 A. W. Armour (F) 1930 F. T. Billings, Jr (F) 1930 J. D. Colson (F) 1930 MEMBERS, 1932 W. C. Goodpasture (Basketball)1930 A. D. Hall (H) 1930 B. H. Hand (T) 1929, 1930 C. A. Hardy (C) 1930 H. Hawkey (C) 1930 D. Hooker (W) 1930 A. D. Keown (T) 1929, 1930 S. Kimball (C) 1930 L. Lea, Jr (F) 1929, 1930, (H) 1930 J. Lord (Basketball) 1930 M. E. McAlpin (H) 1930 R. M. Mclver (F) 1930 G. G. Morse (B) 1930 H. E. Nicholson (F) 1930, (B) 1930 MEMBERS, 1933 H. Garrett (F) 1930 (L) 1930 W. H. Hirst (F) 1930 J. F. James (F) 1930 C. R. Parker (F) 1930 J. M. Ranck (T) 1930 L. E. Rosenbaum (Basketball) 1930 J. P. Rutherford (F) 1929, 1930 C. E. Scarlett (T) 1930 C. Scheiffelin (C) 1930 J. G. Shennan (C) 1930 M. W. Sheppard, Jr (CC) 1930 C. W. L. Summerill (T) 1930 M. Waud (Golf) 1930 M. West (C) 1930 C. Wister (F) 1930 W. F. Wright (Golf) 1930 W. H. Yeckley.(F) 1929, 1930, (L) 1930 F. R. Zundel (F) 1929, 1930 R. E. Knell (F) 1930 J. G. Miller (CC) 1930 J. S. Purnell (F) 1930 235 tgT£BlNC£fgv gEEAIIES GAHAGAN CAREY HOCKENBURY BOGAR DODGE VAN SCHAICK VJr TRlNCCT Ojr rfrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrr r r r rrrrrrrrr r rfflrr rrrrrrrfrr rr ?ni rr rr rrr rrr r rr JtlL ' r rrrrrrr r r £2 bEZ5ZS3c POST MEEKES MULDAUR HOWSON RUTHERFORD LEA tSZEElNCCTo gV C A- ggg BENNETT LEVICK REINMUND BYLES PENDERGAST MESTRES tSEEMNC£lo f: gVcIAiSSc HAWKEY SHENNAN BELL SCHIEFFELIN HALLETT FORSTER -gnc-A ' Rggr MacKINNEY BARBER COOK LIVINGSTON McALPIN LOCKHART gf RlNC jTcg; gVClAjL gJ LOW SKILLMAN CARNOCHAN HARBISON SWARZENBACK THOMAS tffiX RINC Sojy AUSTIN SCARLETT HAND WHITNEY HORNE DOWNING gg ERiNCEf ojy- gjC A- Rgg RANCK KEOWN MILLS SALTUS WHITEHEAD DAWSON tHf3 N£iES r rrrrrrrr f rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr _ rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r ,r t r r - 11 O gEZAHES? MERRILL COLMORE BURKHAND PEASE CLIXGERMAN t§E_EElNccfo : gVc ggr McWILLIAM MOLES DUNLOP LIVINGSTON O ' TOOLE MORSE tv T0U £S5fc gVcZAZH3c Undergraduate Athletic Qommittee G. H. Shields, ' 31 Chairman A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 Secretary FOOTBALL G. H. Shields, ' 31 CREW W. M. Thompson, ' 31 BASEBALL J. B. Tredennick, ' 31 TRACK J. Byles, ' 31 HOCKEY R. K. JlJERGENS, ' 31 BASKETBALL P.J. Carey, ' 31 MINOR SPORTS C. E. Claggett, ' 31 VV. M. Jenifer, ' 31 UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL R. A. Mestres, ' 31 246 T WllNCET Og gEAiIESc ATHLETIC EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Top Row — Carey, Juergens, Mestres, Kaufman. Bottom Row — Byles Thompson, Shields, Tredennick, Claggett. grP RlNCE fOv cZAiASSc FRESHMAN ATHLETICS BliiK [tSEEMNCETO g g A- r g25 1933 TRACK Top Row — Cragin, Isom, Snedeker, Johannes, Boylston. Third Row — Rose, Combrinck-Graham, Chapman, Brower, Mellinger, Robertson, Edwards, Marsh. Second Row — Mayo, Ludlow, Gibson, Doak, Flanag ' n, Brown. Dill, Townley. First Row — Okie, Whitton, James, Walker (Capt,) t Osgood, Hopkins, Morris. t gcE RiNc Sojy rrrrrrri rrrrrrrrrt rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrr rr Trrrr rr r rr rr rrrr f r 41 g nc A £tr g r 1933 Jreshman Track Team OFFICERS H. H. Walker K. DOHERTY Captain Coach The Freshman Track Team unfortunately did not have as successful a season as the team that preceded it. They started off rather well by defeating Hill by a good margin, but in their next meet they were defeated by Lawrenceville by a very close score. In their last two meets the 1933 team came up against very strong opposition and were decisively defeated by Yale and then Pennsylvania. The most consistent performers were Captain Walker and Morris. THE TEAM E. S. BOYLSTON C. Brower C. T. Brown, Jr. T. S. Chapman A. M. Combrinck-Graham H. E. Cragin, Jr. J. G. Dill H. S. Edwards A. W. Flanagan W. M. Gibson E. O. Hopkins W. G. Isom J. F.James, Jr. F. L. Johanns, Jr. A. Keidel W. H. Ludlow T L. Marsh W. L. Mayo J. G. Miller D. B. S. Morris J. P. Oakie C. P. Osgood O. Rose S. Snedker J. P. Townley H. H. Walker W. E. Whitton MEETS Princeton 1933 72 Princeton 1933 62 Princeton 1933 35 Princeton 1933 .... 34 Hill . . . Lawrenceville Yale . . Penn . 54 63 100 101 251 vgT THlNCEf oy gl£iAiS2c 1933 FRESHMAN CREW Cumming, Williams, Pflaumer, Smith, Speer, Pell, Dayton, Strang (Capt.), Kennedy (Cox). tvgnnyj cEfgM rrr rrr r firr frrrcrrrrr r rrrTrrrr r r i5 u£ E3c 1933 Jreshman Qrew OFFICERS Arthur L. Strang Captain Stanley Kimball Manager C. P. Logg Coach The 1933 crew was one of the most successful Freshman crews in several years. In their first race they beat M. I. T. by a clear margin of six lengths, having held the lead from the very start. On May 17 they followed this up by overcoming Cornell by four lengths and Yale by eight. In the face of strong opposition from the Navy two weeks later the Freshman won the Childs Cup Race bv a half a length, and on June 14 they concluded their victorious season by beating Navy again after a furious see-saw battle for the lead. A. L. Strang J. W. Dayton W. Pell, Jr. W. SPEER B. W. Smith R. E. Pflaumer S G. M. Williams I P. Campbell, Jr. j P. H. CUMMING . M. deK. Kennedy . THE CREW POSITION HEIGHT WEIGHT stroke 6 ' 1 166 7 5 ' 11 174 6 6 ' 1 180 5 6 ' 4 198 4 6 ' 4 180 3 6 ' 170 2 6 ' 2 172 2 6 ' 2 167 bow 5 ' 11 170 cox 5 ' 4 120 RACES DATE FIRST SECOND THIRD COURSE May 3 Princeton M. I. T Lake Carnegie May 17 Princeton Cornell Yale Lake Carnegie May 31 Princeton Navy Columbia Schuylkill June 14 Princeton Navy California Lake Carnegie 253 ggJ RlNC Effi gy pTC -TRg 1933 FRESHMAN ' HOCKEY TEAM Standing— Hirsch, Glazebrook, F. H. Strawbridge, Boice, Wright, Rush. Seated— Wilson, Sexton, Brooks, Whitman, Grey. g TRlNCET O r rrrrr rr r rrrrrrrrf rrrrrrrrrr 1933 Jreshman Hockey Team OFFICERS J. A. Brooks Captain R. K. Juergens Manager L. K. Neidlinger Coach Ending a glorious season with a hard-fought win over the Yale yearlings with the score of 3-2, the 1933 Freshman Hockey Team handed in a fine card of seven victories against only two defeats. The preponderance of victories was made possible by the adept scoring power of Glazebrook, Whitman, Boice, and Chapman, the first being the high point scorer of the season with twelve tallies to his name. Brooks, at goal, filled that position with able dexterity. TEAM F. H. Glazebrook Center P. Chapman, Jr Wing A. K. Whitman Wing H. K. Boice, Jr Defense G. Strawbridge . Defense J. A. Brooks Goal M. M. Gray L. M. Hirsch SUBSTITUTES J. R. Hopkins A. Rush D. Sexton F. B. Wilson S. M. Wright GAMES DATE Dec. 21 1933 Jan. 11 1933 Jan. 15 1933 Feb. 7 1933 Feb. 1 1933 Feb. 12 1933 Feb. 15 1933 Feb. 19 1933 Feb. 22 1933 SCOUE OPPONENT SCORE 1 St. Paul ' s 2 8 Carteret 5 Morristown 2 Kent 1 7 Hotchkiss 2 4 Hun 2 12 Lasalle M. A 8 Monarch Club 3 Yale 1933 2 255 tHOMNCETO y EEiAiS2r 1933 Jreshman Basketball Team OFFICERS P. C. Fortune Captain J. R. Prior, ' 31 Manager J. H. Jeffries, Jr Coach TEAM G. W. Helm Forward T. H. Mettler .... J. R. Tenscher Forward H. S. Bignall ... P. C. Fortune Center Guard Guard J.B. (JOYCE DATE Dec. 17, 1929 1933 Jan. 11, 1930 1933 Jan. is. 1930 1933 Jan. 18, 1930 1933 Jan. 22, 1930 1933 Feb. 8, 1930 1933 Feb. 12, 1930 1933 Feb. 15, 1930 1933 Feb. 19, 1930 1933 Feb. 21, 1930 1933 Feb. 26, 1930 1933 Feb. 28, 1930 1933 Mar. 5, 1930 1933 Mar. 8, 1930 1933 Mar. 15, 1930 1933 F. P. Glazebrook SUBSTITUTES E. O. Hopkins GAMES J. W. Johnson J. B. Boyd ORE OPPONENTS SCORE 31 Lawrenceville 19 34 Peddie .... • 30 28 Hun School 30 22 Hill School . 30 39 Princeton Prep 16 27 Lafayette ' 33 23 30 Lawrenceville 24 13 Manlius Military Academy 47 42 Princeton Prep 30 23 Yale ' 33 28 22 Hun School 32 32 Dartmouth ' 33 20 22 Peddie 37 31 Columbia ' 33 32 29 Pennsylvania ' 33 31 256 tvOETMNCETg : ga C ' A ' i Rgc 1933 Jreshman Qolf Team OFFICERS— R. A. Moffet, Captain; W. P. Palmer, Manager TEAM H. Carew J. Gordon J. Kearney J. Reynolds G. S. Graham MATCHES G. Green R. Moffett Princeton 1933 . Princeton 1933 . Princeton 1933 . 7 Lawrenceville 5 Lawrenceville . . . 9 Hill . . . 2 Princeton 1933 . . . 4 Princeton 1933 . . . . Princeton 1933 . . . . 9 Haverford 1933 . . . . . 2 Yale 1933 .... . . . . 7 . . 5 The 1933 Freshman Golf Team had a moderately good season losing to the fine teams of Hun and the Yale Freshmen. 1933 Jreshman Tennis Team OFFICERS — E. Bartlett, Jr., Captain; C. F. Taplin, Jr., Manager E. Bartlett R. Brown TEAM F. Donaldson F. Gramlich C. Patterson A. Terrell S. Wright Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Columbia 1933 Blair Academy Princeton Prep Hill . . . . MATCHES Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 The 1933 Freshman enjoyed a very good season losing only to the powerful aggregations from Hi Poly Prep Yale 1933 4 Hun Penn. 1933 7 and the Penn. Freshmen. 257 tHOJUNCETO gVcZAiSS? G.P.Blaine H. Bowen Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 1933 Jreshman Qym Team OFFICERS C. L. Fisher Captain D. C. Dobson, ' 31 Manager R. SwiNNERTON Coack C. L. Fisher D. A. Horne W. D. Johnson MEETS W. D. Kohlins C. J. TlENSCH E. N. Todd J. S. Troth 26 Newark Academy 11 Dickinson High . 11 New York University, ' 33 18 44 1 1933 Jreshman J acrosse Team D. G. McIntosh, Captain William Till, ' 32, Manager N. Roberg, Coach TEAM B. H. Griswold, Out Home D. G. McIntosh, In Home J. B. Boyd, First Attack J. T. Woodward, Second Attack E. S. Schwab, Third Attack H. D. Schwaab, Center A. P. Boyce, Point E. A. Custer, Cover Point J. D. Scranton, Third Defense F. T. Billings, Second Defense O. Ferguson, First Defence J. A. Brooks, Goal SUBSTITUTES — C. J. Harrington, W. B. Hewson, A. Magary, L. H. Peard SCHEDULE Princeton 1933 1 Princeton 1933 5 Princeton 1933 3 Princeton 1933 2 Princeton 1933 Princeton 1933 4 Alexander Hamilton H. S 2 Peekskill Academy 2 Rutgers, ' 33 6 Poly Prep 1 Pennsylvania, ' 33 5 Yale, ' 33 1 SUMMARY Viewed from the percentage standpoint, the 1933 Freshman Lacross Team did not have a successful season. However, the strong Peekskill Academy was defeated, and a victory over Yale culminated the season. Boyd and Brooks were outstanding on the defense, while E. Schwab and Woodward featured the attack. 258 tggT RlNC ETQg B« f rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrr r r 31 g jC-A R ggr R. F. S. Lowndes 1933 Jreshman Wrestling Team OFFICERS Captain F. Foote, ' 31 ... Manager C. P. Foster .... Coach TEAM W C. Delakey . H. B. Buffum . B. H. Griswold R. F. S. Lowndes W. E. Jones . F. T. Billings . 115-pound 125-pound 135-pound 145-pound 155-pound 175-pound Princeton Princeton 21 Princeton 23 Princeton 19 Princeton 20 MEETS 11 Gilman 14 Pennsylvania 14 Columbia 6 Yale 15 Choate 15 Winning four out of five matches and losing to the Gilman team by a slim margin, the Freshman Wrestling Team enjoyed a suc- cessful season. Captain Lowndes and his team will be worthy additions to the Varsity. J 933 ffieshman Swimming Team J. W. Dayton, Jr. . . Captain OFFICERS J. H. Hawley, ' 31 . . Manager Howard Stepp Coach H. A. Breed C. T. Brown TEAM K. Chalmers N. Cover J. W. Dayton, Jr. D. Kilpatrick, Jr. H. L. T. Koren R. W. Long H. K. Stokes A. P. Taylor R. A. West A. C. Whitfield Jan. 18, 1930 Feb. 8, 1930 Feb. 12, 1930 Feb. 22, 1930 Feb. 26, 1930 Mar. 1, 1930 Mar. 8, 1930 1933 1933 1933 1933 1933 1933 1933 MEETS 36 Lawrenceville 30 43 Hun School 22 43 Rutgers, ' 33 19 38 Mercersburg 28 41 Columbia, ' 33 21 49 Pennsylvania, ' 33 13 37 Yale, ' 33 25 The 1933 Freshman Swimming Team enjoyed an undefeated season conquering all its opponents by decisive scores. Captain Dayton was outstanding during the entire season. 259 tgg X RINC S o f rrrrrrri rrrrrrrrrr f r rrrrrrrr rrr rrr r rr rrrr rr r rrrrrr c r il SE£SAZ£a3c 1934 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM Top Row — Duker, Vrooman, McCabe, Foran, Frelinghuvsen. Third Row — Hogg, McPartland, Stewart, Kafer, Seyfarth, Cragin, Parker (Mgr.). Second Row — Kirkland, Legg, Schenck, Draudt, Otis, Hill, Lee, Taylor. First Row — Fairman, Craig, Ceppi, Lane (Capt.), Hinman (Trainer), Winslow. gp n-iNc ng QzM S gt 1934 Jreshman Jootball Team A. S. Lane, ' 34 . E. S. Atwater, ' 31 OFFICERS Captain J. Gorman Manager ' 23 Coach W. D. Barfield, ' 30 Assistant Coach J. C. WlNSLOW . W. B. Trainer, Jr. C. B. Ceppi . . D. S. T. HlNNMAN J. F. Smithies A. S. Lane . . TEAM Left End Left Tackle . Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle R. K. Fairman Right End M. E. Draodt Quarterback A. H. Otis, Jr Right Halfback K. H. Larsen Left Halfback A. W. Craig Fullback J. F. Bales . . C. H. Classen W. H. Corbin . R. B. Craigin . W. Cruickshank H. Dallas J. E. Duker J. J. Gill . . W. W. Gosnell J. M. Foran F. S. Frelinghusen W. Halton, Jr. E. B. Hill, Jr. . W. C. Hogg, Jr. F. M. Kafer SUBSTITUTES . Back O. A. Kirkland Guard Tackle A. P. Lawler Back . Back E. W. Lee Back Tackle J. C. Legg, III End . Back R. E. McCabe Center . Back S. E. McPartland End . End H. M. Seyfarth Back Tackle H. F. Schenck Back Guard L. M. Shock, Jr End Guard C. G. Sipe, Jr Guard Guard D. F. Stewart Back . Back W. L. Taylor, Jr Back Center A. H. Vrooman End . End W. J. Woods Guard . Back SEASON ' S RECORD Oct. 18, Princeton 1934 Oct. 25, Princeton 1934 Nov. 1, Princeton 1934 7 20 6 Nov. 8, Princeton 1934 g Mercersburg Academy 7 North Carolina, 1934 . . . Columbia, 1934 6 Yale, 1934 o RESUME OF THE SEASON The ' 34 football team had a most successful season, being undefeated, and overcoming Yale for the first time since 1925. 261 gg TRINCET Og- rrrrrr r rr r rcrrrr rr r rrrrrr rr f P ii EEZAiSa? 1934 Jreshman Soccer Team OFFICERS R. C. Kenney Captain A. B. Nies Coach TEAM T. Shiohara . D. P. Elliott R. C. Kenney B. A. Baker . B. A. Davis . R. D. Brooks . S. D. SWANN . C. W. Locke . B. G. Lewis . R. M. Cooley L. H. Seton . S. Dedier . W. Parsons . L. O. C. F. L. I. R. I. R. O. L. H. C. H. R. H. R. F. L. F. . G. C. F. L. F. SUBSTITUTES J. J. Swigart J. B. Dorance RECORD DATE SCORE Oct. 19, Princeton 3 Nov. 22, Princeton 7 Nov. 15, Princeton 3 Nov. 22, Princeton Dec. 6, Princeton 2 Dec. 13, Princeton OPPONENTS SCORE Poly Prep 2 Fieldston 1 Yale 3 Pennsylvania , 2 Hill 1 Gilrnan REVIEW OF THE SEASON Although winning the majority of their games the 1934 hooters did not have an entirely successful season, being defeated by Penn and tied by the Yale cubs. The Gilman game had not been played when the book went to press. 262 fj RlNC EfOM gKZAiiULjc 1934 Jreshman Qross Qountry Team OFFICERS J. C. Reed Captain M T. Geis Coach H. F. Leary, ' 32 Manager W. R. Bonthron A. S. Hicks TEAM E. McGuckin, Jr. J. C. Reed A. Stowell J. E. Walsh RECORD Oct. 18, 1930. Princeton 15 Oct. 24, 1930. Princeton 17 Nov. 1, 1930. Princeton 19 Nov. 8, 1930. Princeton 17 Rutgers 40 Columbia 38 St. Benedicts 36 Yale 38 RESUME OF THE SEASON The Freshman Team enjoyed a championship season, and are consequently awarded their straight numerals. Captain Reed, and Bonthron finished first in every meet, with Hicks in third place. The entire team was entered in the Annual Freshman Intercollegiates. Princeton took third place with Reed and Bonthron fifth and ninth respectively. The entire squad is congratulated upon their excellent showing and should be an asset to the Varsity next year. 263 T jRlNCEf oy g Tc 7 A ' r R gr 1933 Jreshman Baseball Team OFFICERS B. H. Etherington B. DlNSMORE Captain Coach Inasmuch as the 1933 Freshman Baseball Team did not have a very successful season, it can be said that, individually many stars were uncovered. Penn and Yale were decisively victors while Lafayette and Columbia also were victorious. Herzog was the most consistent hitter. Purnell ' s hitting was sensational in that he twice hit a home run with the bases loaded in the same game again Hun. TEAM B. H. Etherington Catcher H. C. Borger, Jr First Base J. S. Purnell Second Base R. E. Knell Shortstop T. H. Mettler Third Base L. W. Herzog, Jr Right Field W. B. Buck Center Field A. B. Hancock Left Field W. H. Woltman Pitcher W. J. Croul Pitcher A. R. Whitman Pitcher R. E. Burnes Infield H. S. Bignall Outfield G. M. Sudduth, Jr Outfield M. W. McKinnon Pitcher SUMMARY Baltimore C. C 7 4 Peddie — — Central H. S 11 2 Columbia, ' 33 7 10 Hill 8 3 Hun 17 4 Lawrenceville 16 11 Mercersburg 13 8 Rutgers, ' 33 14 6 Princeton Prep — — Yale, ' 33 4 12 Lafayette, ' 33 1 7 Penn, ' 33 7 13 264 rEZa3E3? Qaledonian Q antes HELD MAY 7 AND 8, 1930 IN PALMER STADIUM EVENT WINNERS TIME EVENT WINNERS HEIGHT, DISTANCE f 1 - Hand, ' 32 . . . . 10.4 sec. f L Byles, ' 31 . . . . . . 43 ft. 1 in. 100 Yd. Dash 2. Lincoln, ' 30 Shot Put If: James, ' 33 Is. Thomson, ' 31 Gahagan, ' 32 L Hand, ' 32 . . . . . 22.9 sec. i. Summerill, ' 32 . . . 22 ft. 4.5 in. 220 Yd. Dash It Keown, ' 32 Andrews, ' 31 Broad Jump 1 Johnson, ' 33 Andrews, ' 31 t Horne, ' 31 . . . Keown, ' 32 . 51.4 sec. Javelin Throw I . . . 169 ft. 3 in. 440 Yd. Dash Whitney, ' 31 U Johnston, ' 33 u Isom, ' 33 880 Yd. Run (i Spencer, ' 30 . . Sheppard, ' 32 Van Dusen, ' 32 Summerill, ' 32 . . 1 min., 59.7 sec. . . . 15.8 sec. Discus Throw [l Gahagan, ' 32 . . Galey, ' 32 Snedeker, ' 33 . . 132 ft. 9J4 in. 120 Yd. Hurdles Watt, ' 31 r Moore, ' 30 . . . . 137 ft. 2 in. 1 3. Okie, ' 33 Hammer Throw • 2. 3. Lingle, ' 33 JOHANNS, ' 33 f 1 - Scarlett, ' 32 . . . . . 24.8 sec. 220 Yd. Hurdles 2 - Lincoln, ' 30 I 1 - Faber, ' 30 . . . . . . 5 ft. 10 in. Is. Weisicer, ' 31 High Jump - 1 2- Caveny, ' 32 f 1 - Dawson, ' 32 . . 4 min., 30.4 sec. . .s. Buermann, ' 32 One Mile Run 1?: Mills, ' 31 Spencer, ' 30 1. . 12 ft. in. Flowers, ' 30 f 1 - Prior, ' 31 . . . . Pole Vault 3. Maloney, ' 30 Two Mile Run 11 Whitehead, ' 31 Dakin, ' 30 McVVilliams, ' 30 Ranck, ' 32 SUMMARY CLASS POINTS CLASS POINTS 1. 1932 56 3. 1930 . . . . . . 24J 2. 1931 , . i6] 2 4. 1933 . . . ... 19 266 tuOEIN££ToXf: gcZAiMJc £ross Qountry Qlub OFFICERS F Moss, Jr., ' 31 President R. Mirick, ' 31 Vice-President C. Christiancy,Jr. MEMBERS, 1931 F. Moss, Jr. R- Mirick MEMBERS, 1932 E. C. Ihrig T. R. Wagner E. L. Bigelow (J. W. Constable MEMBERS, 1933 R. O. Fulron, Jr. J. B. Green W. L. Mayo, Jr. F. M. Mellinger M. M. Thompson F. Townend MEMBERS, 1934 A. L. Fell W. A. Gray THE RACES SPONSORED BY THE CLUB ARE AS FOLLOWS: Novice Race Interclass Race Two Club Races 267 g£PRlNC£fo yj ftC ' A ' fi AT zAnnual Jail c Regatta THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1930 AND TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1930 With the usual interest being shown in fall rowing, especially by the yearling oarsmen, the Varsity and Freshman regattas were both run off successfully. Other fall sports prevented a great many potential Varsity candidates from report- ing, and therefore the races did not indicate much toward the crew outlook for the coming spring. However, the contes- tants all showed improvement during the autumn and several gave exceptional promise of developing into first-rate material. In all the races three crews participated, and usually finished in bunched order due to the clever arranging of the handi- caps given. Freshman Heavy Race Freshman 150-Pound Race Winning Crew Winning Crew Pflaumer Nixon Kellog Joost Rutherford Henshaw Belden Gill Roberts Gardner Hamilton Yost Smith Reeves White Talbot Turner Sears 7 min., 16 sec 7 min., 42 sec. Scratch 10 sec. SUMMARY Varsity Heavy Race Varsity 150-Pound Race Winning Crew Winning Crew Stroke Strang . . SlEMINSKI 7 Dayton . . Root 6 . Smith Reed 5 BURKHAM Thompson . 4 . Botzow . Davis . . . . 3 West . Brower . 2 Shennan . Backus . . . . Bow CUMMING . Avirett . . . . Cox . Kennedy . Morrow . . . . Time 7 min., 10 sec. 7 min., 34 sec. Handici p . . . Scratch Scratch Distance of all races: 1 5 16 Miles Singles Race Won By : A. L. Strang 268 gri RlNC EfO y fESAiZas? Jail Intra-Qollegiate Athletic Qontests BASEBALL Won by 1931 CANE SPREE LIGHTWEIGHT CLASS Evans, ' 34, defeated Brown, ' 33, in 2 minutes, 56 seconds. MIDDLEWEIGHT CLASS Hooker, ' 34, defeated W. A. Campbell, ' 33, in 6 minutes, 58 seconds. HEAVYWEIGHT CLASS White, ' 34, defeated Williams, ' 33, in 6 minutes, 16 seconds. FOOTBALL Won by 1933 FALL GOLF CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP, 1930 G. T. Dunlap, Jr., ' 31, winner; R. A. Moffett, ' 33, runner-up. M. P. Dickinson, ' 32, winner of second. sixteen. J. P. Gaillard, ' 31, runner-up of second sixteen. G. P. Faust, G.C., winner of third sixteen. D. Rhoades, winner of fourth sixteen. W. A. Dallmeyer, ' 34, winner of fifth sixteen. INTER-CLASS CROSS COUNTRY RUN Won by 1931 269 OjUNCETCg g TC A- Q g Results of Jail Handicap zMeet, October 22 and 23, 1930 TRACK EVENTS 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES PLACE AND WINNER TIME 1. Summerill, ' 32 16 sec. 2. Bradley, ' 31 3. Watt, ' 34 120-YARD LOW HURDLES 1. Weisiger, ' 31 13 sec. 2. Bradley, ' 31 3. Okie, ' 33 100-YARD DASH 1. Johnson, ' 33 10 3 10 sec. 2. Bradley, ' 31 3. Thomson, ' 31 220-YARD DASH 1. Horne, ' 31 23 sec. 2. Weaver, ' 34 3. Johnston, ' 33 440- YARD DASH 1. Keown, ' 32 48 sec. 2. Whitton, ' 33 3. Cragin, ' 33 880-YARD RUN 1. Mills, ' 31 1 min., 55 sec. 2. Rosner, ' 31 3. Shelton, ' 31 FIELD EVENTS POLE VAULT HEIGHT OR DISTANCE ... 12 ft. 1931 FINAL SCORE 48 points 1933 . . . . 28 points PLACE AND WINNER 1. Thring 2. Austin, ' 32 2. Ranck, ' 32 HIGH JUMP 1. Morrison, ' 32 5 ft., 10 in. 2. Ranck, ' 32 3. Buermann, ' 32 HAMMER THROW 1. Johanas, ' 33 126 ft., 4 4 in. 2. Merrill, ' 31 3. Von Starck, ' 34 BROAD JUMP 1. Watt, ' 31 . 22 ft., % in. 2. Johnson, ' 33 3. Buermann, ' 32 JAVELIN THROW 1. Osgood, ' 33 168 ft., 11 in. 2. Isom, ' 33 3. Burnett, ' 32 DISCUS THROW 1. Bradley, ' 31 117 ft., 2Vi in. 2. Johnson, ' 33 3. Meeker, ' 33 •Partial Student BY CLASSES 1932 .... 25 points 1934 .... 7 points 270 tHQJ llNc i log7: gg jC A Rg r The Princeton J ife Saving Qlub John Grier Hibben, ' 82 . . . Honorary President W. A. Turner, ' 31 President Howard W. Stepp Manager The Princeton Life Saving Club concluded its seventeenth season last spring. Although among the most difficult extra- curricular organizations to make, it is popular, drawing annually more men than any other intra-collegiate sport. Unique in this country, it is the only club which prescribes its own tests and awards its own diplomas. Only the Royal Life Sav- ing Club of London has tests as difficult as the Princeton organization. A diploma is awarded after the following tests have been completed: 1 — Swim 100 yards in 1 minute and 15 seconds. 2 — Swim 440 yards in 8 minutes. 3 — Swim 100 yards on back, using feet only. 4 — Running front dive. 5 — Keep afloat for three minutes with supposed abdominal cramps. 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. 11 — Demonstration of seven methods of release from supposedly drowning person. 12 — Carry object 100 yards, using four methods of carrying. 13 — Defensive tactics against struggling subject. 14 — Undress on land and enter water in 30 seconds. 15 — Correct demonstration of Schafer method of resuscitation for the drowned. 16 — Written explanation of methods of resuscitation for the drowned. L. R. Albright, ' 31 C. E. Bredenberg, ' 33 C. W. Bush, ' 33 F. F. Carpenter, ' 32 F. A. Collins, ' 33 N. Cover, ' 33 W. E. Gillespie, ' 33 F.H.Gordon, ' 33 C. P. Henderson, ' 32 R. W. Leuthauser, ' 32 R. W. Long, ' 33 DIPLOMA WINNERS R. N. Marshall, ' 30 R. M. Morriss, ' 33 C.J. Moroney, ' 31 J. H. McDonald, ' 33 M. N. McKinney, ' 33 J. N. Riley, ' 33 J. Ross, ' 32 H. K. Stokes, ' 33 A. P. Taylor, ' 33 R. McK. Thomas, ' 33 J. H. Tompkins, ' 33 W.A.Turner, ' 31 C.B. Van Thorn, ' 30 R. A. West, ' 33 E. L. Marston, ' 33 G. R. Meneely, ' 33 V. G. Manych, ' 32 R. H. Booth, ' 33 E.J. Brown, ' 30 W. E. Edmonston, 33 J. S. Fluckey, ' 33 S. A. Farrand, ' 33 J. W. Glasser, ' 33 MEDAL WINNERS N. D.Lindner, ' 31 A. M. McCracken, ' 30 J. Kerney, Jr., ' 33 R. F. Pieters, ' 30 H.G.Smith, ' 33 S. Vmz, ' 33 R. P. Weaver, ' 33 A. E. Wood, ' 30 271 thTEBIN£IIon: ,_ rrrrtrrr rrr rr rr rr r rrrt rr rr c r gyclAUgj Intra- Qollegiate Athletic Association OFFICERS E. S. Atwater III, ' 31 Chairman L. Lea, ' 32 Secretary C- R. Parker, ' 32 Treasurer E. S. Atwater, 31 S. Perkins, ' 31 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE C. Weisiger, ' 31 L. Lea, ' 32 C. R. Parker, ' 32 L. Ray, ' 32 B. H. Etherington, Jr., ' 33 HONORARY MEMBERS J. E. Raycroft, M.D. N. B.Tooker, M.D. The Intra-Collegate Athletic Association is made up of two men from each upper class eating club, two representing Madison Hall, and two elected by the Sophomore Class. The purpose of the body is to handle athletic contests between the different clubs and all contests not coming under the supervision of Varsity Athletics such as class sports and tennis tournaments. The association has been very successful in its efforts in the last few years. Club Arbor Inn Campus . Cannon . Cap and Gown Charter . Cloister . Colonial Cottage . Court MEMBERS 1931 MEMBER V. D. Miller R. D. Higgins C. Miller L.Ward W. Baker C. Markell T. Moles D. Strachan P. S. Lanier 1932 member V. Manych A. Lawrence J. K. Mills M. Edey F. Wachter W. M. Aicher P. Robinson H. Kingsberry J. H. ROWBOTHAM Club Dial Lodge Elm Gateway Ivy . Key and Seal Quadrangle Terrace . Tiger Inn Tower 1933 MEMBERS 1931 member r. h. rubenstein A. G. Andrews R. A. Matlach W. W. Fleming D. McAllen R. L. Colmore J. H. Marion J. O. Pease F. MacKinney 1932 member H. Hawkey G. Morse D. M. Curtis H. Blackistone J. E. Edgar L.Ray R. S. Mathews F. R. Zundel C. Heath B. H. Etherington, Jr. A. L. Strang 272 grP RINCg TQAy: gV C AT Rgg INTRA-COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC COMMITTEE Top Row — Parker. Lea. Bottom Row — Perkins, Atwater, Weisiger. ygXft ' NCCTQJy VcZAiZUc t IIE!UNC£T§A7; gn c A ' TTRg r Qlass of 1931 — Numerals FOOTBALL J. Byles H.T. Bennet E. T. Bradley P. Carey R. Evans, II E. K. Green S. E. Hockenbury J. Y. Howson W. Incersoll D. G. Levick N. D. LlNDER C. G. Meeks, Jr. R. A. Mestres BASEBALL E. W. Miller, Jr. G. P. Morrel C. E. Muldaur R. S. Oakley E. G. O ' Brien J. O. Pease S. W. Pendergast W. Reinmund M. M. Wheeler E. S. Atwater, III H.T. Bennet T. W. BlERHALS W. R. Cameron G. S. Hammill, II W. N.Jenifer F. P. MacKinney H. R. Merrill TRACK E. J. Moles C. R. Muldaur S. P. Perkins J. D. Ware S. P. Waud A. G. Andrews J. E.Baker, Jr. J. D . Blondel E. T. Bradley J. Byles R. Evans, II G. S. Flowers H. C. Forbes S. E. Hockenbury J. G. Horne A. B. Lawrence J. P. McWilliams A. S. Mills CREW S. W. Pendergast S. C. Pullman O. E. Rosner L. S. Saltus F. L. Thompson F. C. Waldron D. M. Watt C. N. Weiseger A. P. Whitehead R. Burkham J. W. Clingerman R. L. Colmore T. Lowry R. B. Miller C. H. Moore HOCKEY H. F. Shoemaker T. J. Skillman A. UlHLEIN A. B. Wolfe P. Benson F. S. Graves W. Incersoll T. L. Keese H. D. Klein R. C. Livingston G. D. Lockhart CROSS COUNTRY J. E. McCarthy F. P. MacKinney C. Rees W. Reinmund J. D. Ware A. S. Mills E. M. Norris J. R. Prior O. E ROSNER L. S. Saltus A. P. Whitehead WRESTLING R. L. Colmore K. CANE SPREE Burkham A. G. Spinks TENNIS S. Dribben E. C. Griepenkerl S. P. Harbison G. McCabe GOLF H. G. Orser D. Strachan W. F. Thomas G. T. Dunlap E. V. Homans D. R. Livingston G. A. McWilliams C. R. Snowden LAC -OSSE SOCCER GYM M.N. COOTES P. D. Nulle B. B. Stegnef D DOBSON 276 tgOBiNcito rrrr rrrr rr rrrr rrr rrrrrrrrr r fgjC A-Tggg Qlass of 1932 — Numerals W. B. Armstrong F. D. Blackistone A. G. Blair, III G. W. Bogar, Jr. A. Bonnyman, Jr. J. H. Breasted, Jr. W. H. Chaffee J. G. Chalmers C. B. Clotworthy W. M. Aicher R. A. Bessire F. K. Bowman D. L. Austin N.M.Bell C. Buerman J. P. Caveney M. J. Condon, III W. W. Barber V. B. Blackwell H. W. Cook R. A. Bessire A. M. Alvord, Jr. C. A. Hardy J. Cotton M. M. Dickinson H. M. Dodge G. S. Fichtel D. G. Fo ster W. H. Gahagan J. T. Galey W. C. Goodpasture C. P. Henderson T. W. Claggett A. Eno H. P. Dawson H. Derby R. D. Dripps W. C. Gahagan J. T. Galey D.T.Dana, Jr. F. R. Decker W. C. Goodpasture D. H. Halsey D. H. Hooker F. B. Kellogg WRESTLING D.H.Hooker E. C. Ihrig W. H. Yeckley C. F. Heath W. W. Irwin E. C. Barrett H. M. Kennedy H. P. Dawson E. S. Downing FOOTBALL J. Herzog W. K. Hicks S. H. Iams D. K. Irwin T G. Johnston F. B. Kellogg E. C. Kincaid P. King, Jr. L.Lea, Jr. BASEBALL W. C. Goodpasture W. K. Hicks TRACK W. E. Gilmore B. H. Hand J. Hodgson, Jr. A. D. Keown HOCKEY A. D. Hall L. Lea, Jr. BASKETBALL C. F. Heath A. D. Lemon CREW R. M. McIver J. B. Rutherfurd S. L. Libby, Jr. H. A. Mackie R. M. McIver H. E. Nicholson A. C. O ' Connor A. Roberts J. Ross J. P. Rutherfurd R. W. Ryckman F. W. Jarvis G. B. Morse L. Lea, Jr. G. F. Medill, Jr. D. P. Meese J. N. Morrison C. E. Scarlett, Jr. M. E. McAlpin R. R. Minthorne J. W. Lord, Jr. N. P. Rose C. SCHEFFELIN J. G. Shennan W. W. Goldsborough R. S. Hackett CANE SPREE D. H. Hooker TENNIS J. Macy, Jr. CROSS COUNTRY A. S. Maltman D. P. Meese W. W. Mussman M. W. Sheppard L. H. Van Dusen F. C. Shroeder R. S. Spalding A. Treddennick A. G. Van Shaick A. H. White C. Wister S. Wyse W. H. Yeckley F. R. Zundel P. D. Myers T. F. Palmer E. L. Ray, Jr. M. W. Sheppard C. W. Summerill C. R. Swain, Jr. L. H. Van Dusen F. S. Wemyss S. Preston D. A. Thompson L. H. Van Dusen L. E. Rosenbaum M. F. West, J r F. R. Zundel T. Ross J. M. Triest J. C. Savage C. R. Train F. S. Wemyss 277 gfj foiNc grovf: rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr rr rrrrrrrr frr r rrr rrrr rrr rrrrrr rrrr EEZAiIEjy Qlass of 1933 — Numerals F. T. Billings A. L. Burrows T. J. Carolan J. D. Colson H. S. BlGNALL H. C. Borger, Jr. VV. B. Buck H. K. Boice J. A. Brooks H. S. BlGNALL A. P. Boyce P. Campbell P. H. CUMMING S. H. Armstrong E. S. BOYLSTON F. T. Billings H. B. Buffum W. C. Delaney P. H. CUMMING P. C. Fortune H. Garrett M. Geer, Jr. R. E. Burnes W. J. Croul B. H. Etherington P. Chapman F. P. Glazebrook M. M. Gray P. C. Fortune F. P. Glazebrook J. W. Dayton H. M. Kennedy P. Herrmann, Jr. E. O. Hopkins WRESTLING B. H. Griswold W. E. Jones R. F. Lowndes F. T. Billings A. P. Boyce J. B. Boyd J. A. Brooks . A. Custer O. Ferguson FOOTBALL N. H. Gifford, Jr. J. E. Hendry, Jr. W. H. Hirst BASEBALL A. B. Hancock L. W. Herzog HOCKEY L. M. Hirsch E. O. Hopkins A. Rush BASKETBALL G. W. Helm E. O. Hopkins CREW W. Pell R. E. Pflaumer CROSS COUNTRY W. L. Mayo, Jr. H. Bowen C. Fisher LACROSSE B. H. Griswold C. J. Harrington W. B. Hewson A. Magary J. F. James, Jr. A. Keidel R. E. Knell R. F. Lowndes R. E. Knell M. W. McKennon T. H. Mettler D. Sexton G. Strawbridce A. R. Whitman T. H. Mittler W. J. Pyle B. W. Smith W. Speer J. G. Miller D. B. S. Morris GYM D. A. Horne W. D. Kohlins J. R. Tencher D. G. McIntosh L. H. Peard, Jr. H. D. Schwaab J. S. Purnell W. J. Pyle J. S. Reynolds J. G. Scr ANTON J. S. Purnell G. McG. Sudduth A. R. Whitman F. B. Wilson S. M. Wright J.W. Samuels J. R. Tencher A. L. Strang G. M. William W. W. Walker R. A. Wallace E. N. Todd J. S. Troth E. S. Schwab J. G. SCRANTON J. T. Woodward 278 gTPRINCEfQA : . rrrtrtrrr rrhTf rrrrrrf r rrrrrrrr rr il % £IAiMSc Qlass of 1933 — Numerals — (Qont ' d) W. B. Devereux H. A. Breed C. T. Brown K. Chalmers A. W. Forbes D. P. Frame R. M. Martin T. Nichol A. P. Boyce R. E. Burns P. Chapman W. L. Collins J. F. Bales C. B. Cappi C H. Classen W. H. Corbin R. B. Cragin A. vV. Craig W. Cruikshank H. Dallas W. R. BONTHRON E. McGuckin, Jr. R. Firestone N. Cover J. W. Dayton FENCING W. T. Pecora A. S. Rodgers C. L. Tun- C. W. Ward W. L. Crow O. B. Doak L. I. Gibbons POLO F. Hammond J. L. Kemmerer SWIMMING W. E. Gillespie J. E. Kilpatrick TENNIS R. Patterson CANE SPREE E. L. Jones SOCCER W. E. Gillespie T. G. Kent H. L. Koren T. M. Lasater H. L. Koren R. W. Long C. L. Fisher F. C. Hibben L. E. Jones D. O. McIntosh O. E. Mertz, Jr. J. H. O ' Donovan R. S. Waterhouse H. H. Stokes A. P. Taylor A. C. Whitfield RIFLE TEAM W. L. Parker J. R. Perkins F. H. Rutledge J. G. Taylor Qlass of 1934 — Numerals M. E. Draudt J. E. Duker, Jr. R. K. Fairman J. M. Foran F. S. Frelinghuysen, Jr. J. J. Gill W. W. Gosnell W. Hallon, Jr. FOOTBALL E.B.Hill, Jr. D. S. Hinman W. E. Hogg, Jr. F. M. Kafer O. A. KlRKLAND A. S. Lane K. H. Larson A. P. Lawler E. W. Lee J. C. Legg R. E. McCabe S. J. McPartland A. H. Otis, Jr H. F. SCHENCK L. M. Schock, Jr. H M. Seyfarth S. T. Orton, Jr. J. S. Purnell L. Taylor ]. S. Troth C. H. Sipe,Jr. J. T. Smithers D. F. Stewart W. L. Taylor, Jr. W. B. Trainer, Jr. A. H. Vrooman J. C. Winslow W. J. Woods CROSS COUNTRY A. S. Hicks J. C. Reed CANE SPREE J. E. Walsh A. Stowell T. Evans R. H. Hooker R. White 279 r K li j US S ocielidi gT R |Nc ilQN rrrrrrr rrrrrrr rrr rrrrrr rr f r Hi gV C A- R gg The Student-Jaculty Association Frederic E. Camp Thurston J. Davies Theodore M. Greene BOARD OF DIRECTORS FACULTY Walter P. Hall Radcliffe Heermance Paul MacClintock George M. Priest Robert M. Scoon Gordon G. Sikes Robert R. Wicks STUDENTS E. T. Bradley, ' 31 Temporary Chairman J. H. Hammett, ' 31 S. P. Harbison 31 S. Kimball, ' 31 F. H. Moss, Jr., ' 31 P. W. Reed, ' 31 D. M. Watt, III, ' 31 C. N. Weisiger, III, ' 31 E. W. Barrett, ' 32 J. C. Donnell, II, ' 32 D. H. Hooker, ' 32 J. W. Lord, Jr., ' 32 R. M. McIver, ' 32 L. S. Rockefeller, ' 32 C. E. Scarlett, ' 32 C. Wister, ' 32 F. T. Billings, Jr., ' 33 H. S. Edwards, Jr., ' 33 H. Garrett, ' 33 K. I. Lingle, ' 33 D. G. McIntosh, ' 33 D. S. Morris, Jr., ' 33 J. S. Purnell, ' 33 W. Speer, ' 33 H. H. Walker, ' 33 284 tvVTjBdNccTo : gV c 7 A 7 7m gc The Student- J acuity dissociation The Student-Faculty Association is an experimental or- ganization recently established for the purpose of enabling students and Faculty to work together unofficially in con- necting the life of the University with human needs in the region of which it is a part ; in maintaining extensive work like that under Dr. Grenfell in Labrador and in Yenching University in China; in helping to arrange facilities for private groups intereste d in various aspects of religion ; in furnishing a working organization in which commissions may be set up from time to time to study and help work out problems that may arise on the Campus. For one year the old Philadelphian Society, while not going out of existence, will permit this association to ex- periment with new methods of student and faculty co- operation. Several permanent commissions on activities have been set up which will have charge of the following lines of work : the Princeton Summer Camp for poor boys of near- by large cities, situated near Blairstown, New Jersey; work at the New Jersey State Home for boys, Jamesburg, New Jersey — a reform school taking care of some 600 boys; regional service — associations with the rural prob- lem of America as prevalent in the neighborhood of Princeton; The Grenfell Club — work with the Grenfell Mission among the natives of Labrador ; interest in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Yenching, Peking; vocational interest groups; and the Upper-class advisory system of having each Freshman un- der the guidance of a Junior or Senior. A Board of Directors will supervise the work of the Student-Faculty Association and will be made up of stu- dents and Faculty who are actively engaged in the work of the permanent commissions. Mr. Laurence Fenninger, 1909, has been employed by the Association as Executive Head of the Board. 285 t5LJ3UNC£ray g3 AiZEe2r WESTMINSTER SOCIETY Top Row — Whipple, Savage, Speer, Walker. Front Row— Muir, Weisiger, Watt. gX RINCE -XQN: gSZAHE2c The Westminster Society OFFICERS C. N. Weisiger, III, ' 31 President D. M. Watt, III, ' 31 Treasurer CABINET J. C. Savage, ' 32 H. Garrett, ' 33 J. S. Purnell, ' 33 W. Speer, ' 33 STUDENT PASTOR Rev. Wilhelmus B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20 The Westminster Society was organized two years ago, and, under the able guidance of Reverend Wilhelmus B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20, has been carrying on active work among the undergraduates. The aim of the society is to present a workable view of Christianity. This has been accomplished through its weekly discussion groups. The organization will cooperate with Dean Wicks ' Commission, and the St. Paul ' s Society. Its various activities include sending delegates to conferences, providing leaders for boys ' groups in town and Jamesburg Reformatory, and supplying teachers for Sunday School classes. Every effort is being made to bring the students into contact with diverse lines of Christian service. 287 ggj RINCE fo ElClA g2 r The Princeton Summer Qamp H. Reining, (G. C.) E. C. Schenck, ' 31 Swimming Mgr, A. B. Wolfe, ' 31 CHIEF COUNSELLORS . Director R. W. Boyd, ' 32 . O. T. Wingo, Jr., C. W. Smith, ' 31 . . Doctor ' 33 . Doctor S ' ports Mgr. L. S. Rockefeller, ' 32 ACTED AS COUNSELLORS FOR TWO OR MORE WEEKS E. W. Rice, ' 29 H. K. England, Jr., ' 31 P. W. Furst, ' 31 F. H. Moss, ' 31 E.G. Sweeney, ' 31 J. T. Edgar, ' 32 W. Feldgoise, ' 32 A. H. Fry, ' 32 J. H. Herzoc 32 J. A. Kerr, ' 32 R. W. Winston, ' 32 THE Princeton Summer Camp was inaugurated in 1909, under the auspices of the Philadelphian Society, for the poor boys of the crowded sections of New York and Philadelphia. Since that time it has maintained constant growth. Last summer the camp began a new era in its long history of usefulness through the purchase of a new camp site at Bass Lake, three miles north of Blairstown, New Jersey. The new site is ideally located and large enough to admit unlimited expansion of the camp. The idea behind the camp has been more than a mere outdoor vacation for the boys; experience has shown that the in- terchange of ideas between counsellors and boys has enabled both to gain new insights into life and new ideals. The camp life includes swimming, sailing, hiking, baseball, volley ball, hand ball, picnicking, hiking, treasure hunt- ing, over-night trips, and other forms of recreation. The woods on the property furnish excellent opportunity for J. B. Boyd, ' 33 C. Brower, ' 33 H.G.Crockett, Jr., ' 33 J. W. Glasser, ' 33 L.W.Herzog, ' 33 VV. H. Ludlow, ' 33 T. L. Marsh, ' 33 D. R. Sheldon, ' 33 nature study and woodcraft. Only the necessary work of the camp is required of the boys and this is accomplished by shack competition, with a chicken dinner at the end for the winning shack. The day ends with a camp-fire around which stories are told and Princeton songs sung. Realizing that in giving these boys a new outlook on life it has assumed very definite responsibilities, the camp tries more and more to extend its influence through the re- maining fifty weeks of the year. By constant following up of the boy and keeping alive the contacts between under- graduate and boy, the camp fulfills a service of which the more evident work through the summer is but the beginning. During the summer of 1930, 16 boys from the slums of New York, Trenton, and Princeton were given two weeks in the utdoors under the guidance of the above undergraduates. 288 mX NCETQA yc 7 A ' r M c The Qrenfell Qlub of Princeton University OFFICERS S. Kimball, ' 32 President H. T. Atkins, ' 32 Secretary MEMBERS A. M. Crocker, ' 31 W. W. Dickinson, Jr., ' 31 H. S. Gardner, ' 31 R. T. Miller, ' 31 A. B. Wolfe, ' 3L H. T. Atkins, ' 32 E. C. Cheston, ' 32 T. M. Emory, ' 32 S. Kimball, ' 32 W. H. Lippincott, ' 32 G. P. Moffatt, ' 32 L. S. Rockefeller, ' 32 G. W. Constable, ' 33 H. S. Edwards, ' 33 W. T. Giles, ' 33 J. A. Walker, ' 33 E. H. Kellogg, ' 34 The Grenfell Club of Princeton has for the last ten years aided Dr. Grenfell in his medical and educational work among the natives of Labrador. The Princeton unit, under the direction of its founder, Professor William T. Gillespie sends volunteer student workers each summer to the various stations maintained by the Mission. Dr. Grenfell and his co-workers, instead of merely rendering charitable services to the poverty stricken natives, combat the ever-present diseases such as tuberculosis, which are the most prevalent, and endeavor to teach the people various principles of hygiene. Teaching the natives the rudiments of education also claims a share of Dr. Grenfell ' s inspiring work. Since fishing is the sole occupation of the natives and can only be carried on during three months of the year, the task of teaching the arts of weaving, rope-making, and various other handicrafts is also being carried out by the Mission. In fact, Dr. Grenfell has accomplished wonders and his work continues to go on with success. At present the interest of the Grenfell Club is concentrated on the new school and hospital at St. Mary ' s Bay, a little north of the Straits of Belle Isle. Last year M. T. Gilmour, S. Kimball, ' 32, and E. H. Kellogg, ' 34, were engaged in the work. The Princeton Club is but one of the many organizations which send their members to Labrador to aid in this unselfish work. Yale, Harvard, Amherst, Williams, and other universities also send their undergraduates who faithfully co-oper- ate with Dr. Grenfell and aid him greatly in securing his far-reaching results. 289 t TlBlNCCTo gn AjvZQQr Princeton- in - Pek ing BOARD OF TRUSTEES John Grier Hibben, LL.D., ' 82 . . . Honorary President Sidney D. Gamble, ' 12 President Cleveland E. Dodge Acting Treasurer E. G. Conklin, Ph.D. Edward S. Corwin, Ph.D. Louis D. Froelick, ' 06 Wilson Farrand, ' 86 Ambrose G. Todd, ' 84 Charles W. McAlpin, ' 88 T. H. Sailer, Ph.D., ' 89 John McDowell, D.D., ' 94 Christy Payne, ' 95 John Reilly, Jr., ' 97 Henry N. Russell, Ph.D., ' 97 H. Alexander Smith, ' 01 Robert Russell Wicks. Ph.D. Russell T. Mount, ' 02 Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, ' 11 William E. Speers. ' 11 Joseph Van Vleck, Jr., ' 23 FROM 1897, for practically twenty-five years, the work of the Princeton contingent in China was directed toward practical social and religious ends. It constituted one unit of the general Y. M. C. A. enter- prise in China, the Princeton men having charge of this work in China ' s most important city, Peking. Along with the development of native initiative and leadership, the need for the foreign staff gradually diminished. The Princeton organization recognized this development and extended its work by the training of Chinese personnel in modern applied sociology. This work expanded rapidly until its scope became identical with one of the divisions of Yenching University, one of the most im- portant American Universities in China. Now the Princeton contingent carries the responsibility for the division of the Applied Social Sciences. Great progress has been made although the financing of this extremely important unit has been rather difficult. Each year the relation between Princeton University and Yenching becomes closer. The report that Professor E. G. Conklin brought from Peking in 1926 after a semester of lecturing there heightened the interest of Princeton Alumni, faculty and trustees in the seriousness of the undertaking. The total budget requires about $65,000 annually of which $25,000 is provided by one of the New York foundations and the remainder by Princeton Under- graduates, Faculty and Alumni. 290 T TiUNCET OM . — ll T fl = _ r rrrrrrr r r rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr r rJJ? rr rrlHIr r ' rrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r r S 5 g TC-A ggg Tfo Qatholic Qlub of Princeton University OFFICERS Philip Burnham, ' 31 President William F. J. Piel, ' 32 Vice-President Gerald G. Morse, ' 32 Secretary Rev. Dr. Q. F. Beckley, O.P., J.C.B., LL.D Chaplain MEMBERS, 1931 L. Ames P. Burnham J. O. Gray J. M. McAnerney H. F. O ' Brien O. F. Riley J. B. Averill P.J.Carey T.P.Henry J. V. McDonough F.J. O ' Hara R. J. Smith W. J. Baker R. Carillo W. D. Jenckes P. A. Martinto J. Ordway H. R. Toy J. DeC. Blondel J. M. Cleary R. K. Juergens J. R. Meagher S. W. Pendergast T C. Tschudy F. C. Bosak H. B. Gengler C. H. Knapp C.J. Moroney C.J. Repka R.F.White MEMBERS, 1932 W. M. Aicher D. DuVivier R. P. Heppner V. G. Manych P. S. Paine J. P. Rutherfurd P. E. Bird T. M. Emory R. T Hopper G. G. Morse W. D. Paradine J. L. Shanley J. A. Compagna J. V. Ferrer D. F. McCarthy C. W. Mullery W. F. J. Piel J. H. Smith W.C.Clark A. Gengler A. B. MacDonald J. F. Neary C.A.Ragen J.J. Tisne M. J. Condon J. J. Hart J. N. MacDonald C. E. O ' Connor T. L. Rossi E. J. Welch MEMBERS, 1933 H. Bowen E. T. Delaney M. Gray W. H. Hirst J. H. O ' Donovan R. W. Van de Velde A. L. Brown W. F. Delaney T. L. Grier L. W. Knapp R. S. Pasley J. S. Whedbee P. Campbell C C. Fitzmorris T E. Griffin W. Leslie W. T. Pecora W. L. White H. J. Carew A. W. Flanagan D. F. Hack D. McW. Ludlum R. L. Polk H. J. Whitlock P. T. Carroll P. C. Fortune E. R. Hack G. Murphy, Jr. G. McC. Sudduth W. E. Whitton R. W. Chamberlain J. A. Goodsell F. U. Hammett R. E. Nail G. F. Sullivan J. F. Woods W. J. Croul F. W. Gramlich F. M. Hammond T. J. Naughton F. L. Tettemer MEMBERS, 1934 M. Alexander, Jr. B.M.Dunn C. L. Gilliland, Jr. A.H.Jones J. B. McCarthy F.J. O ' Brien L. F. Beckers G. L. Eckel R. N. Gilmore, Jr. J. E. Kerney E. M. McGuckin, Jr. F. W. Plant, Jr. J. M. Cartlidge M. G. Englert W. A. Gray R. C. Kuser S. J. McPartland J. B. Routh C. A. Coppinger F. J. Fellows G. N. Guerrini A. S. Lane H. W. Miller H. A. Rutherfurd V. E. Costanzo J. M. Ferrer W. H. Haller A. P. Lawler A. D. Mittendorf H. F. Schenck C. J. Cretors J. N. Foran A. S. Hughes H. J. Lynch B. Morrison G. P. Swift M. Debuchi J. D. Gill J. R. Hunter J. J. Lynch, Jr. C. D. Murphy J. E. Walsh C. L. Donahue D. G. Murphy W. J. Woods 291 gTP R ' NCf fo gVcZAiZE2c ST. PAUL ' S CABINET Top Row — Saltus, Meigs, Blossom, Oman, Carter. First Row — Levengood, Kellogg, Moss, Rowbothan, Wise. r jR.INCET O gj j A- rg r St. T ' auVs Society of ' Princeton University OFFICERS F. H. Moss, Jr., ' 31 President P. A. Kellogg, ' 31 . . Vice-President and Treasurer J. H. Rowbotham, ' 32 .... Secretary CABINET S. L. Levengood, ' 15 J. W. Oman, Jr., ' 32 W. Blossom, ' 31 H. D. Wise, ' 32 L. S. Saltus, ' 31 R. H. Carter, ' 33 R. V. Meigs, ' 33 The St. Paul ' s Society, founded in 1875 by Dr. Baker of Trinity Church, is an association of all the Episcopalian undergraduates of the University. It carries on its work through the William Proctor Foundation. Undergraduates, through the St. Paul ' s Society, are doing active work in the Sunday School and Choir, as acolytes, and in missions in the rural section surrounding Princeton. This year the Reverend J. Crocker has replaced the Reverend C. P. Johnson as chaplain of the Society. 293 tiOiUNCEfo : EAZZEgr tHE™NCETO Esaasag Officers OFFICERS OF WHIG-CLIO, 1930-31 G. R. Silber, ' 31 President J. H. Marion, ' 31 Vice-President A. A. Marks, ' 32 Secretary C. S. Hamilton, ' 32 Treasurer EXECUTIVE COUNCIL H. P. Abbott, ' 31 K.M.Barnes, ' 31 R.R.Bowie, ' 31 R. W. Chamberlain, ' 33 H. F. Leary, ' 32 B. MacDonald, ' 32 H.B.Smith, ' 31 J. Van Hook, ' 32 J. F. Woods, Jr., ' 33 J. H. Rice, ' 32 Debate Manager J. M. TuNNELL, Jr., ' 32 Freshman Debate Manager J. G. Van Cise, ' 32 Freshman Section Manager J. C. SCHENCK, ' 32 Librarian Speaker ' s Committee — J. H. Marion, ' 31, Chairman; H. B. Smith, ' 31; H. C. Anderson, ' 31; B. MacDonald, ' 32; A. Meigs, ' 33. House Committee — C. N. Houghton, ' 31, Chairman. THE AMERICAN WHIG-CLIO SOCIETY The Halls have played an important role in undergraduate life since their birth at Princeton about 1765. All forensic and debat- ing activities are under their direct guidance and sponsorship. Whig and Clio send the Princeton delegation to the Student Model League of Nations Assemblies and also keep alive interest in current events by open forums. 296 j nc-A-mO gc WHIG-CLIO EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Standing — Woods, Van Cise, Meigs, MacDonald, Schenck, Leary, Cham ' jerlain. Seated — Bowie, Rice, Marion, Silber, Hamilton, Tunnell, Smith. gTERlNCEJOgT: g V A Ij g Qliosophic Society Founded 1765 OFFICERS, 1930-31 J. H. Marion, ' 31 President C. S. Hamilton, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President H. P. Abbott, ' 31 Secretary A. A. Marks, ' 32 Treasurer K.M.Barnes, ' 31 EXECUTIVE COUNCIL H. F. Leary, ' 32 J. Van Hook, ' 32 J. F.Woods, Jr., ' 33 FACULTY MEMBERS J. W. Basore H. H. Bender D. L. Buffum V. I. Collins K. T. Compton F. H. Constant C. E. Abbott, Jr. H. P. Abbott L. Ames F. W. Armstrong S. D. Atkins K. M. Barnes R. W. Barringer C. E. Bond R. G. BURLINGHAM G. F. Burt, Jr. D. B. Campbell H. A. Carr G. Chaikin F. W. Chase J. M. Cleary E. S. Corwin U. Dahlgren G. W. Elderkin C. Gauss W. Gillespie W.B.Harris H. Clifton, Jr. A. G. Cotton D. S. Culver L. B. Curtis W. P. Davis, III W. S. Dickinson S. Dribben E. R. Duer,Jr. P. Ehlers W. J. English W. F. FlNESHRIBER C L. Fleming D. Gilpatric H. M. Griffin J. P. Hoskins T. W. Hunt A. C. Johnson E. W. Kemmerer W. Koren E. H. Loomis D. Magie H. C. McComas W. S. Myers C. G. Osgood W. K. Prentice E. Y. Robbins MEMBERS, 1931 W. H. Gillespie E. C. Griepenkerl T. Halladay R. W. Hedges H. L. Hurd W. A. Jameson, Jr. T. L. Keese R. J. Kepler R. J. Kinney H. D. Klein K. H. Kreder J. P. Lambert P. J. Lathrop S. H. Lewis A. Lofthouse T. Lowry J. H. Marion D. G. Marvin J. R. Meagher M. Meyer, Jr. R. B. Miller W. R. Miller W. MOLLER C. W. MOREHEAD R. C. MORI.EY R. E. Noble W. K. Newman F. J. O ' Hara R. M. Scoon H. R. Shipman G. H. Shull E. B. Smith J. D. Spaeth D. R. Stuart C. Olcott H. M. Pope W. Poole D. R. Post G. S. ROUDEBUSH P. W. Reed, Jr. C. J. Repka W. E. Richardson J. W. Robinson L. S. Saltus H. H. Sanger W. R. Sawyer R. J. Smith C. R. Snowden H. D. Thompson H. van Dyke O. Veblen H. C. Warren S. H. Weber T. J. Wertenbacker A. F. West E. P. Stevens S. M. Sternback, Jr. C. F. Taplin R. V. Whitehead, Jr. J. Weinstein T. F. Wainright W. D. Webb C. H. Wheeler V. S. Whitbeck A. J. Whitehead D. Wicoff R. E. Wilson CD. Winn, III C. N. Zeli.ner 298 tgr j R|NCE -ios tSESSEjr ( liosophic Society — (Continued) F. O. Allen E. W. Barrett P. E. Bender C. F. Brauer G. W. BULKLEY J. H.Burnett G. V. Coe H. Derby N. W. Drey H. Dunham B. Edwards T. Emory J. V. Ferrer H. F. Fisher W. A. Grier J. K. Gordon, Jr. J. E. Groth MEMBERS, 1932 C. S. Hamilton C. B. Hawley J. H. Herzog P. Houston H. B. Huntington S. A. Kaufman H. F. Leary, Jr. A. A. Marks A. Novak J. O ' Malley, Jr. J. H. Patterson W. O. Patterson D. H. Randall I. E. Richardson R. S. Rincland O. W. Robinson P. Schwed A. C. Shoemaker D. A. Stern C. W. Summerill L. H. VanDusen J. A. VanHook L. J. Wilson J. V. Woodhull J. W. Woody G. W. Arms H. Borcer, Jr. R. L. Clifford Ji I. Cunningham R. C. Harrison W. J. Johnson C. W. Cappes.Jr. W. J. Montgomery, Jr. W. Leslie MEMBERS, 1933 C. McK. Lewis, Jr. H. L. Lisk C. R. Meneely D. B. S. Morris D.G.Park, Jr. R. S. Pasley, Jr. W. Pell, Jr. R. B. Platt, Jr. H. P. Price E. R. Rushin H. Stern G. M. Sudduth, Jr. G F. Sullivan, Jr. J. F.Woods, Jr. C. H. Anthony J. Archboi.d A. I. Atkins J. A. COBEY R. Z. Collings A. D. Compton, Jr. B. Dashiell, Jr. G. R. Eckels J. S. Evans A. GlNN A. S. Grey H. Hemmendinger MEMBERS, 1934 J. C. Kennedy T. A. Kerr B. G. Lewis, Jr. F. E. Lombard J. J. Lynch E. McGuckin, Jr. H. R. Medina, Jr. F. W. Milbourn A. F. Mittendorf, Jr. J. R. Oakes W. Pagenstencher D. K. Parsons D. E. Peacock W. A. Ringler, Jr. H. T. Sears J. E. SlLBERFELD C. H. Snyder A. L. Webber R. C. Wilson, Jr. 299 tHjL X RINCE S Sr rrrrrrrrrr r rrf rrr rr r rrrrrrrrrr rrTTfrr rr ' rrrrrr r Tjillr r rrrrrrrr r r ' 4. .J trrr , rrrrr g TC-A- ig g American Whig Society Founded 1769 OFFICERS, 1930-31 G. R. Silber, ' 31 President H. B. Smith, ' 31 Secretary R. R. Bowie, ' 31 Treasurer John Grier Hibben E. P. Adams W. M. Adriance W. M. Alexander, II P. Boutroux P. M. Brown E. Capps F. L. Critchlow M. W. Croll EXECUTIVE COUNCIL B. MacDonald, ' 32 R. W. Chamberlain, ' 33 R. S. Dugan L. P. ElSENHART M. S. Farr F. A. Fetter C. L. Fleece W. Foster G. H. Gerould N. E. Griffen G. M. Harper FACULTY MEMBERS E. N. Harvey F. L. Hutson C. W. Kennedy F. L. MacDonald M. MacLaren F. J. Mather D. A. McCabe L. W. McCay C. F. McClure R. M. McElroy C. McMillen A. W. Menzies C. R. Morey H. S. Murch P. R. Norton T. M. Parrott A. H. Philips G. M. Priest P. Reeves A. S. Richardson C. Robinson P. E. Robinson R. K. Root W. B. Scott W. J. Sinclair C. H. Smith N. K. Smith E. G. Spaulding D. C. Stuart C. F. Sylvester A. Trowbridge J. S. VanNest J. H. Wedderburn J. H. Westcott G. W. Whitney F. N. Willson MEMBERS, 1931 C. H. Adams, Jr. J. S. Allen H. C. Anderson, Jr. J. C. Atkins W. Blossom F. C. Bosak R. R. Bowie C. W. Bush, Jr. J. N. Cary A. H. Clayburgh C. Coffin J. P. Darling D. M. Davis R. H. Demuth R. P. Eckels C. W. Farnum F. Foote H.C.Forbes, Jr. H. W. Frey F. L. Froment J. P. Gaillard J. O. Gray T. E. Greff J. W. Hibben F. S. Hoffer, Jr. C. N. Houghton N. T. Humphrey F. E. Hyslop, Jr. R. M. Jones H. L. Keats, Jr. P. A. Kellogg I. L. Lee, Jr. D. B. Loveman C. Markell, Jr. M. D. Millard V. D. Miller, Jr. G. S. Mirick W. A. Mitchell C. R. Murray W. L. MUTTART S. C. Nagel J. P. Nash C. L. Otto, Jr. C. A. Philips J. C. Poole W. F. Poten R. W. Schneckenberger J. P. Sinclair G. R. Silber H. B. Smith J. G. Stephenson, III S. N. Summer, Jr. C. C. Tutwiler, Jr. B. A. Weed R. C. Wyatt 300 tSZEMNCETON JA C A ' fi Xr American Whig Society — ((Continued) G. B. Agnew, Jr. N. M. Bell R. H. Bettys D. R. Blossom G. A. Chadwick, Jr. C. R. Clift, II D. M. Curtis A. Cort R. Currie R. W. Damman J. L. Delafield S. H. DUFFIELD D. DuVivier R. K. Farnum V. M. Feldgoise J. W. Ferguson D. C. Forbes F. W. Frost E. D. Gasson K. W. Gemmill C. F. Goodsole A. F. Hewitt R. W. Howard G. A. Kacen MEMBERS, 1932 R. L. Lansden B. S. Larkin E. M. Lucas B. MacDonald J. M. MacFarland J. Macy, Jr. W. H. McClave G. P. Moffatt G. F. Medill F. D. Miller J. R. Mitchell D. P. Morton J. L. Osmer W. L. Patterson H. M. Patton R. E. Putney J. H. Rice K. C. Rorvig J. H. Rowbotham J. C. SCHENCK R. A. Schmid F. H. Scott, Jr. R. H. Smith C. H. Stephens E. C. Suor R. J. Thomas J. M. Tunnell, Jr. J. G. Van Cise T. R. Wacner R. M. Walker H. N. White, Jr. R. Winston H. D. Wise J. W. Woods K. L. Wyatt G. W. Young O. A. Abbott L. B. Amerman S. H. Armstrong, Jr. W. Bowie, V E. S. Boylston N. Brassler C. E. Bredenberg W. A. Campbell P. T. Carroll, III J. P. Carter, Jr. R. W. Chamberlain W. A. Compton G. W. Constable H. E. Cragin, Jr. H. G. Crockett, Jr. A. A. Davis F. J. Dean M. S. Gaffney MEMBERS, 1933 E. J. Gay, Jr. J. W. Glasser G. S. Graham R. S. Half F. C. Hibben S. W. HOOBLER W. B. Mather S. Mathews A. V. Meigs J. G. Miller R. R. Muschlitz F. Pace, Jr. F. Van L. Pindar C. W. Root L. S. SCHWING R. H. Simmons H. A. Smith, Jr. H. K. Stokes F. L. Tettemer D. C. Travis, Jr. J. E. Upson R. A. Wallace R. K. Watson A. Weinrich T. H. Welch J. S. Wilson D. K. WOLVERTON R. J. Amberg J. C. Anderson T. R. Bassett F. D. Bragdon E. Y. Breese.Jr. B. M. Dunn R. E. Duston A. L. Florman D. W. GOODENOUCH R. A. Hall F. K. Heinrich J. B. Hersey H. G. Hodges, Jr. M. Johnson MEMBERS, 1934 M. S. Kemmerer P. M. Miller, Jr. W. Miller, Jr. E. M. Murray A. J. Parker F. Queli.malz, Jr. P. H. Remincton V. L. Roberts, Jr. J. G. Rouse, Jr. J. H. Scheifly J. H. Shannahan, Jr. W. D. Sheldon R. B. Smith A. Stowell S. D. SWANN H. B. Theilbar H.B.Walker, Jr. G. W. Warch G. H. White, III J. R. Young 301 gT TR-INCEf n g V AT Rg g DEBATING PANEL Standing— Lowenhcira, Meigs, Davis, Watson, Mitchell, Bredenberg, Van Cise. Seated — Keats, Bender, Leary, Rice, Hamilton, McDonald. gfT RINCE TQ : rr rrrrrrrrrr Srr rrrrrrrrr r r rf rrrrrr rr il X C A- JT The Princeton Debating Panel F. H. Moss MEMBERS, 1931 R. H. Demuth P. E. Bender G. A. Chadwick C. S. Hamilton K. Kreder MEMBERS, 1932 H. L. Keats, Jr. H. A. LOEWENHEIM H. F. Leary, Jr. A. B. MacDonald J. R. Mitchell J. H. Rice J G. Van Cise J. M. Tunnell, Jr. G. W. Arms C. E. Bredenberg H. A. Cropper MEMBERS, 1933 A. A. Davis, Jr. F. W. Gramlich W. J. Montgomery H. K. Stokes R. K. Watson J. H. Rice, ' 32 D. D. McKean DEBATING PANEL Manager Coach G.W. Arms 33 P. E. Bender, ' 32 C. E. Bredenberg, ' 33 G. A. Chadwick, ' 32 H. A. Cropper, ' 33 A. A. Davis, Jr., ' 33 MEMBERS, FIRST TERM, 1930-1931 R. H. Demuth, ' 31 F.W. Gramlich, ' 33 C.S.Hamilton, ' 32 K. Kreder, ' 32 H.L. Keats, Jr., ' 32 H. A. Loewenheim, ' 32 H. F. Leary, Jr., ' 32 A. B. MacDonald, ' 32 J. R. Mitchell, ' 32 W. J. Montgomery, ' 33 F. H. Moss, ' 31 J. H.Rice, ' 32 H.K.Stokes, ' 33 J. M. Tunnell, Jr. J. G. Van Cise, ' 32 R. K.Watson, ' 33 W. L. Thring, ' 31 ' 32 3U3 gg TRINCET Og IJanuxem J ectures The Vanuxem Lectures were founded with a bequest of $25,000 left to the Univ ersity by Louis Clark Vanuxem of the Class of 1879. The income of this bequest is used for the delivery before the University at large 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 Uni- versity Press and distributed among the libraries and schools of the country. Sir James C. Irvine, Chancellor of St. Andrew ' s College spoke 01 Chemistry and Social Evolution last year, while the 1930-1931 lecturer will be Bliss Perry. (N.B. There were no Stafford Little Lectures last year, and as yet, none have been announced for this coming year.) Qyrus Jogg Brackett £ectures The Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship was established in 1931 b Fogg Brackett, formerly Professor of Physics and Electrical Engin of lectures on technical subjects is given by eminent scientists and e The series for 1930-1931 follows: the Princeton Engineering Association in memory of Dr. Cyrus eering in Princeton. Under the auspices of this lectureship a series ngineers during the college year. October 11, 1930 November 11, 1930 December 9, 1930 January 13, 1931 James Aston, Metallurgist, A. M. Byers Company, Pittsburgh, Pa.— New Develop- ment in Wrought Iron Manufacture. Clyde M. Bennett, General Manager, Vacuum Oil Company, Houston, Texas — The Petroleum Industry. Sir Henry W. Thornton, K. B. E., Presi- dent, Canadian National Railways, Mon- treal, Canada. — Men and Industry. M. J. Gormlev, Executive Vice-President, American Railway Association, Washing- ton, D. C. — How the American Railways Meet the Public ' s Transportation Demand. February 10, 1931 March 10, 1931 April 14, 1931 May 12, 1931 Stephen F. Voorhees, ' 00, Architect, New York City. — Buildings as Tools of Serv- ice. J. L. Kilpatrick, Vice-President, New York Telephone Company, New York City. — What New York ' s Telephone Means to New York. William C. Dickerman, President, Ameri- can Locomotive Company, New York City. — Locomotive Building in the United States. Neil C. Hurley, President, Binks Manu- facturing Company, Chicago, III. — Execu- tive Management in Industry. Spencer Trash J ectures The income from $10,000, presented by Spencer Trask, of the Class of 1866, is available to secure the services of eminent men to deliver public lectures on subjects of special interest. The series of lectures for 1930 follows: January 22, 1930 A. Riheni — The Arab Kings. April 25, 1930 Karl von Frisch — The Senses and Lang- April 10, 1930 H. W. Garrod— The Criticism of Poetry. uage of the Bees. 304 tgT-E RINC £log: VcZAZZgJf Class of ' 76 Prize T)ebate FEBRUARY 22, 1930 B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 Presiding Officer AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE F. W. Gramlich, ' 33 J. H. Rice, ' 32 R. S. Warwick, ' 30 R. H. Demuth, 31 Question: Resolved, That Every College Graduate Is Under Obligation to Participate in Public Affairs, Beyond Merely Voting. JUDGES Professor Dayton Voorhees, ' 05 J. N. Beam, ' 96 F. H. Groehl, ' 21 John Howard Rice, ' 32 was awarded the prize. The J ynde T)ebate for Seniors Professor H. H. Hudson .... AFFIRMATIVE G. W. Oakes, Jr. H. S. Warwick, III D. E. Woodhull, Jr. First Prize— D. L. Newborg Second Prize — W. W. Haynes Third Prize — D. E. Woodhull, Jr. Question: Resolved, That Princeton University should adopt a quadrangle plan. Chairman NEGATIVE W. W. Haynes K. P. Hughes D. L. Newborg Professor J. Duncan Spaeth JUDGES Professor Walter Whittlesey Mr. Jacob Beam 305 gTE RlNCE fON gycZAilESc The 129th Annual Junior Oratorical Qontest HELD AT ALEXANDER HALL, JUNE, 16, 1930 The Junior Oratorical Contests have been held annually since 1801. First Prize — R. H. Demuth — New Humanism Honorable Mention — W. K. Newman Second Prize — E. C. Schenck — A Defense of the Four Course Plan Third Prize — W. A. Jameson, Jr. — Newspapers? Fourth Prize — N. P. Rose — A Training in Martyrdom H.P. A. G. Abbott A. G. Andrews R. H. Demuth CONTESTANTS W. A. Jameson, Jr. H. C. Keats K. H. Kreder W. K. Newman N. P. Rose E. C. Schenck Prize for the best Oration — R. H. Demuth PRESIDING OFFICER Professor W. L. Whittlesey Rev. T. F. Chambers, ' 90 JUDGES Rev. J. J. Moment, ' 96 Cottier Hamilton 306 T TRINCET OM __ rrrrrrrr Srr hT ' rrrrrr r rrrrr r r gycL iffiJc c Princeton- r Uictoria Qollege, J (ew Zealand ' Debate AT PRINCETON, NOVEMBER 27, 1929 Question — Resolved, That the emergence of Woman from the home is a regretable feature of our modern life. AFFIRMATIVE G. R. Powles — Victoria W. J. Mountjov — Victoria W. J. Hall — Victoria Result — The judges voted a tie. negative C. S. Hamilton — Princeton W. W. Haynes — Princeton H. L. Keats — Princeton ' Princeton- Washington and JPee Debate AT PRINCETON, DECEMBER 2, 1929 Question — Resolved, That higher education should be given only to those with special abilities. AFFIRMATIVE C. B. Fulton — Washington Lee T. W. Davenport — Washington Lee S. R. Neddes — Washington Lee NEGATIVE H. P. Abbott — Princeton G. A. Chadwick — Princeton Karl Kreder — Princeton Result — The judges voted in favor of Washington and Lee. [Princeton-Smith Debate DECEMBER 7, 1929 each college debated On the above date two teams representing simultaneously at Princeton and Northampton. Question — Resolved, That censorship of the stage and literature should be abolished. AT PRINCETON AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE W. Oakes — Princeton Miss Helen Kirkpatrick — Smith A. B. MacDonald — Princeton Miss Ghernda Von Briesen — Smith Result — The judges voted 2-1 in favor of the affirmative. AT NORTHAMPTON affirmative negative Miss Sylvia Cohen — Smith C. S. Hamilton — Princeton Miss Elizabeth Kingsbury — Smith F. H. Moss — Princeton Result — The judges and the audience voted in favor of the affirmative. c Princeto?t- ' r Uassar Debate AT PRINCETON, FEBRUARY 22, 1930 Question — Resolved, That legal censorship of the stage and literature should be abolished. AFFIRMATIVE C. S. Hamilton — Princeton A. B. MacDonald — Princeton negative Miss Louise Lasker — Vassar Miss Margaret Walters — Vassar Result — The judges voted a tie. The audience voted in favor of the negative. c Princeton- Buffaio Debate AT PRINCETON, FEBRUARY 27, 1930 Question — Resolved, That all nations shall immediately and completely disarm; each government maintaining only such military force as may be necessary for the maintenance of order in the respective countries and dependencies. AFFIRMATIVE E. L. Cohen — Buffalo E. Tropman — Buffalo M. J. Weig— Buffalo Result — No decision rendered. NEGATIVE K. II. Kredek — Princeton K. ,W. Gemmill — Princeton R. V. Winston — Princeton 307 tgOMNCCTo yT SSAj Evt The School of Public and International Affairs Princeton in the nation ' s service expresses Princeton ' s oldest tradition and inspires her newest venture, the School of Public and International Affairs. The School has been in actual operation only three months. Forty undergraduates and four graduate students are enrolled for this first year. Small numbers among Princeton ' s 2,200, but the School is already felt as a dynamic factor on the campus. The purpose is to perfect the training which Princeton offers to those who are to carry on the nation ' s business, in private or in public life, at home or abroad. The product, it is hoped, will be good business men, good bankers, good lawyers, good journalists, good public officials and diplomats; or rather the makings of such. It is fundamental training which the School proposes to give in the undergraduate years. For graduate students there will naturally be specialization. But the underlying thought is that a university should not attempt to turn out bankers, business men and journalists ready-made but to lay in the mental discipline and the fund of basic knowledge from which such can develop. Future Blackstones will still have to go to law school, and the technicalities of banking, manufacturing, exporting or diplomacy are to be learned not at Princeton but in the apprentice years which follow graduation. The School has been created by a partial bringing together of the Departments of History, Politics, Economics and Modern Languages. It is run by an Administrative Committee comprising the chairmen of those departments and also President Hibben, Dean Eisenhart, Dean Trowbridge, Professor Kemmerer, Professor Dodds and Mr. DeWitt Clinton Poole. Professor Dodds is the chairman of the Administrative Committee and he and Mr. Poole are the active managers of the enterprise. The School has also an Advisory Board, including some of the nation ' s foremost citizens. Chief Justice Hughes is a member, John W. Davis, Senator Dwight W. Morrow, Owen D. Young, Roland S. Morris, William Church Osborn and Albert G. Milbank. The last three are Princeton men and Mr. Osborn and Mr. Milbank are trustees. Mr. Poole is also a member of the Advisory Board and its chairman. 308 tvg-B RINC EXQjv g TC A- Rg gr The School of Public and International Affairs — (Qontinued) It is plain that the School does not lack for experienced guidance either on the academic or the worldly side. Besides being a political scientist, Professor Dodds is an active partici- pant in public affairs. He is editor of the National Municipal Review, member of the Mercer County Planning Board, adviser to Trenton and other municipalities. He went with General Pershing to Tacna-Arica and with General McCoy to Nicaragua and helped them in their difficult tasks with advice on election laws and such things. Mr. Poole resigned from the Foreign Service of the United States to join Princeton ' s new enterprise, because he had seen a great deal of the educational deficiencies in young men under the stress of the world ' s work and thought he would like to lend a hand, if he could, in making education for public affairs more effective. He had been twenty years in the Foreign Service — in Germany, France, Russia, South Africa and for some years in the Department of State at Washington. His last post was as Counselor of the American Embassy in Berlin. Professor Kemmerer needs no introduction to Princeton readers. Adviser on financial reform to eleven governments and he is soon to give Peru a diagnosis and cure, he still has time between trips to head the International Finance Section at Princeton and help run the School. Professor Wertenbaker is chairman of the Department of History and an authority especially on American life. Professor McCabe is chairman of the Department of Economics and Social Institutions and an authority on labor questions. He has cooperated with Professor James Douglas Brown in building up Princeton ' s Industrial Relations Section. Both the International Finance Section and the Industrial Relations Section are important supports of the School. Professor Corwin, chairman of the Politics Department, is a distinguished jurist and writer of authoritative works on constitutional questions. He spent half a year recently as visiting professor at Yenching and Psing-Hua Universities in China. These gentlemen, with the guidance of President Hibben, Dean Eisenhart, Dean Gauss and Dean Trowbridge, are molding the new School in its formative years. The School is an integral part of the University and neither its faculty nor its students are differentiated from the faculty or the student body generally. It is part of the campus life and part of Princeton ' s incessant effort to serve in the highest measure the nation ' s needs. 309 ygj QllNCE TQg: fg SlAlg gggr tvEEMNccToAv: RU Ajl£r2c R. O. T. C. OFFICERS ' CLUB Top Row — Rathbone, Livingstone, Hoffer, Douglas, Knowlton, Graves. Third Row — Gore, Blossom, Shields, Jackson, Miles, McAllen, Walker. Second Row — Gray, Whitney, Elliman, Damerel, Waldron, Davis, Burt, England. First Row — Hereford, Skillman, Wurts, Levick, Huxley, Bradley, McAnery, sfyg TR-lNCET O rrrrrrrr r rrrrrtrrr rrrrf rrrr r gycZArSJf jfield Artillery c Reserve Officers ' Training Gorps SINCE 1919, when President Hibben requested the War Department to found the Unit, the Princeton Field Artillery Reserve Officers ' Training Corps has enjoyed a steady and healthy growth. Under the capable direction of Major Parrott and his staff of six commissioned officers and with the constant cooperation of the Faculty, the under-graduates are offered an R. O. T. C. course of practical value both in peace and war. The Unit not only undertakes the instruction in Military Science but also supervises and coaches the polo and pistol teams. The Military Science course at Princeton is given in two main div sions. A basic course is given the first two years and then those who have completed the basic course may take the advanced work which covers the Junior and Senior years. In addition to a funda- mental study of organization, gun construction and operation, explosives, and optics, the Freshman take up the theory of gasoline motors, supplemented by practical shop work. The laboratory work consists of dismounted elementary drill and work around the guns, ending with an Expert Gunners test. In the second year, map making and map reading, hippology, elementary electricity, the theory of switch-boards, theory of radio, fire control instruments, and computation of firing data are the subjects studied. In connection with the study of radio there is practical work with the Signal Corps using sending and receiving sets. In laboratory, Sophomores are individually mounted and taught the seat and simple aids to equitation. During the first year of the advanced course, military tactics concerning the conduct of artillery and its special relation with the infantry in warfare are studied. Problems requiring an estimate of the situation by the student followed by a decision, and the actual methods of conducting artillery fire are also a part of the year ' s study. This prepares the student for actual firing of guns at the summer camp. Military History and Military Law, together with the tactical employment of Field Artillery make up the last year ' s work. This final laboratory is used for the practice of com- manding and as assistant instructors to the three lower classes with the object of instilling poise and ability to command. Commissions as Second Lieutenants in the National Reserve Army are given those completing the four-year course. So great has the popularity of the Princeton R. O. T. C. become in the last few years that the total enrollment consists of over 620 students. It requires twenty enlisted men with their non-commissioned officers to care for the ninety horses, guns, and other equipment used. During the middle of June about ninety men went to Madison Barracks, New York, where, with the Cornell Unit they spent the first four weeks of camp life at the home garrison in routine work, consisting of gun-drill in the morning and mounted drill in the after- noon. During the last two weeks of the training period of six weeks the men moved to Pine Camp about twenty-five miles distant. The two batteries had ample opportunity to put into practice all that they had learned in the classroom. Under these realistic conditions intricate firing problems were worked out, and practice was given in defensive concentration of fire, sweeping fire, a rolling barrage, and firing in support of an imaginary infantry attack. The polo team is being coached by Captain Walter Lattimore, assisted by Lieutenant Kastner. In the winter the team is able to practice in the riding hall, which is heated for use in cold weather. The pistol team is being coached this year by Lieutenant O ' Rielly. The arms used are those regularly issued by the Army, and both the arms and ammunition are free to members of the R. O. T. C. One change was made in the personnel of the staff during the summer. Captain D. S. McConnaughy was transferred to Hawaii, and his vacancy filled by Lieutenant A. E. Kastner. The Princeton R. O. T. C. staff now includes Major R. S. Parrott, Captain R. W. Hasbrouck, Captain C. F. Hurdis, Captain W. C. Lattimore, Captain J. R. Sheetz, Lieutenant W. T. O ' Reilly, and Lieutenant A. E. Kastner. 313 tvOJUNC£fg f g Tc A ' TTR gj? F. A. R. O. T. C. OFFICERS Standing — Capt. Sheetz, Capt. Hasbrouck, Capt. Lattimore, Lieut. Kastner. Seated — Lieut. O ' Reilly, Maj. Parrott, Capt. Hurdis. tv r r RiNc a oN: r rrrrrri rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr . Tfrfrrrr firrfrrirrrr rr r p rrrrrrrrrr BEAlggJr The Princeton Officers ' Qlub The Princeton Officer ' s Club is an organization for seniors which was founded in the fall of 1924. There are three types of mem- bership, Active, Graduate, and Honorary. The active members are the Cadet Officers of the F. A. R. O. T. C. The Graduate member- ship is made up of these men after their graduation and also any former officers of the Unit who have been duly elected. The honorary membership includes the Regular Army Officers stationed as Instructors in Military Science and any outsiders that may have been formally elected. The organization of a club such as this was ' a part of the plan of Major Van Deusen, the former Commandant, to heighten the interest in the unit, and to insure cooperation between the War Department, the instructors and the members of the unit. Besides this the club affords an opportunity for several social functions during the year, such a drag-hunts, paper chases, horse shows, and banquets. D. G. Levick OFFICERS President W. P. Huxley Secretary-Treasurer ADVISORY BOARD Major R. S. Parrott Chairman MEMBERS G. L. Baker W. Blossom E. T. Bradley G. F. Burt T. T. Crenshaw W. P. Davis S. P. DOMMEREL G. B. Douglas H. K. England L. B. Elleman F. L. Fromant P. L. Gore F. S. Graves J. O. Gray H. C. Groome C. L. Havey B. H. Hereford F. S. Hoffer, Jr. W. P. Huxley A. H. JACKMAN D. C. Knowlton R. W. Lawrence D. G. Levick, Jr. R. C. Livingston A. Lofthouse L. Lovell D. K. McAllen T M. McAnery W. S. Miles S. Perkins, Jr. J. Y- Rathbone T. J. Skillman E. P. Stevens F. C. Waldron G. F. Whitney J. W. WURTS Maj. R. S. Parrott Capt. R. W. Hasbrouck Capt. C E. Hurdis HONORARY MEMBERS Capt. W. C. Lattimore Capt. J. R. Sheetz Lt. A. E. Kastner Lt. W. T. O ' Reilly Prof. G. B. McClellan Prof. R. Heermance Mr. E. A. McMillan 315 TP P-INCg Tog A5 ,..■- . ■• _ r rrrrrrrr r r rrrrrr rr r r rrrrrrrrr r rjtjrr Trrrr r rr r rr nSi rr rrtrrrrrr r r jilt r rrrf rrrr f r SSAl2E3r g P RlNCET OM gVClAj Rjf tSOMNccfo EEAZZlEJc TWO-FOOT CLUB Top Row — Thomson, Barnett, Strachan, Cameron. First Row — Frelinghuysen, Muldauer, Fleming, Crockett, Benson. tHL-E RINC ilO ScZAiIESf The Two-Joot Qlub W. W. Fleming Chairman Jfc.- ' MEMBERS J. A. Barnett, Jr. P. Benson W. R. Cameron A. D. Crockett T. Frelinghuysen C. E. Muldauer D. Strachan F. L. Thomson 519 rS filNCE TQg: 0cZAi4E3c HE 1 mt • '  V) W ■i S ' ftk. ' ' .. f )Hk ' Jl ' p iHu A i wmW Hi j I $ ilk J ' B i BklTkvV 4H V BH v Rfl fc V KJ r k Ipv wlr ' ' J JET W ' x? Apr IBP - 2jJl ■Kfe v C - I 1 f J i NwJ H H 1 I , ' V K RIGHT WING CLUB Top Row — Groom, Firestone, Tredennick. Second Row — Duer, Frelinghuysen, Perkins, Benson, McCarthy, Byles. First Row — Waldron, Rein- mund, Ridgeway, Fleming, Livingston. g X RINC € I§N: % £iAimSc ' Rjght Wing Qlub OFFICERS J. K. RlDGEWAY, ' 31 W. Reinmund, ' 31 President Secretary P. Benson J. Byles E. R. Duer W. W. Fleming MEMBERS R. C. Livingston T. Frelinghuysen H. C. Groome W. C. Keith J. E. McCarthy S. Perkins, Jr. F. C. Waldron 321 t OBlNC£tOAv gn c-A-mr gj: FIFTH WHEEL Top Row — Parker, McAlpin. Bottom Row— Shields, Waud, Royster. tuEEM I§S _ rrrrrrr r rrhrtrrrr rr r ' rr rrrrrr f f 3J EEA S3c The Jifth Wheel Qlub OFFICERS G. Shields, ' 31 President C. R. Parker, ' 32 Vice-President M. E. McAlpin, ' 32 Secretary H. P. Royster, ' 31 Treasurer MExMBER AT LARGE S. P.Waud 31 J. H. Brooks G. C. Miles Decease l 1929-1930 SECTION R. M. Wilkinson G. Shields S. P. Waud 323 r TRINCEf o gVciA3E3c BUREAU OF STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Top Row — Hawes, Lawrence, Gillespie, Giffin, Muir. Front Row — Hodell, Woodfin, Warfield, Poten, Kinney. r jRINCE fQ EJcZA gjc T Personnel Department of Princeton University Nine Nassau Hall W. B. Van Alstyne, Jr., ' 27 Director R. W. Warfield, ' 30 Assistant to Director HE Personnel Department of Princeton University primarily endeavors to be a vocational guide to the under- graduate of the college and the Alumni, and also to serve those students who need work of any sort to meet their college expenses. This department is now in two sections, namely, the Department of Personnel at the head of which is Mr. Van Alstyne and the Student Employment Section under the leadership of Mr. Warfield. The former tries to advise students about their future vocations whenever this advice is desired and to cooperate with them as a vocational council and a source of contacts. The latter section has control over all enterprises carried on by undergraduates for self-support, the agencies being organized under its supervision. 325 tvOBINCEIg y: ESAiffiJc Qhess Qlub OFFICERS E. A. McAlpin, III, ' 32 President D. A. Stern, ' 32 Vice-President, Treasurer D. C. Forbes, ' 32 Secretary R. L. Belden, ' 34 E. S. Boylston, ' 33 H. E. Clearman, Jr., ' 34 T. P. Cook, ' 32 G. W. Daane, ' 32 R. K. Farnham, ' 32 R. J. Fletcher, ' 32 MEMBERS D. C. Forbes, ' 32 G. T. C. Fry, ' 34 S. K. Goodman, ' 34 H. B. Huntington, ' 32 W. W. Irwin, ' 32 J. H. Koch, ' 32 E. A. McAlpin, III, ' 32 W. L. Rothschild, ' 34 C. SCHIEFFELIN, ' 32 M. M. SlBERFELD, ' 34 J. E. SlBERLING, ' 34 D. A. Stern, ' 32 H. Stern, ' 33 S. D. Swann, ' 34 G. M. Trumbower, ' 34 E.S. Boylston, ' 33 G. W. Daane, ' 32 R. K. Farnham, ' 32 R. J. Fletcher, ' 32 TEAM, 1929-30 D. C. Forbes, ' 32 H. B. Huntington, ' 32 W. W. Irwin, ' 32 J. H. Koch, Jr., ' 32 E. A. McAlpin, ' III, ' 32 D. A. Stern, ' 32 H. Stern, ' 33 MATCHES Nov. 23, 1929— Princeton, 5 Solebury Chess Club, 2 Nov. 15, 1929— Princeton, 4 Yale, 4 Dec. 14, 1929— Princeton, V 2 Pennsylvania, 5}4 Dec. 26-28, 1929 — Intercollegiate Championship Princeton, lVi-%Yi Harvard, 12-4 Yale, tyi-uyi Feb. 15, 1930— Princeton, 4 West Point, V 2 Mar. 15, 1930 — Princeton, 1 New York University, 3 April 5, 1930 — Princeton, Harvard, 8 H.Y.P. League Championship won by: Harvard, 12 times Yale, 3 times Princeton, 2 times Columbia, 19 times West Point, times Rutgers, times 326 gTP RlNCE TQ g Vc A- ng g The Princeton Engineering Society OFFICERS F. W. Armstrong, Jr., ' 31 President L. F. Moody, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President W. Webb, ' 31 Secretary J. C. Savage, ' 32 Treasurer Members of the executive committee include the officers of the society and the following members: A. N. G. Moody, ' 33 C. C. Davis, Jr., ' 33 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 activities among the student members. The Society includes 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 1926. Several smokers were 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 same 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 Engineering Society auto- matically hold the same positions in the Princeton branch of the National Societies. At the meetings of the Society short motion pictures depicting various industrial processes are presented. In addition upper-class mem- bers give talks on special subjects of general interest to the casual visitor as well as to the future engineer. Membership in the Society is open to all undergraduates in the School of Engineering and to all other undergraduates, subject to the approval of the executive committee. This year the membership is larger than ever before, encompassing a number of graduate students and almost two hundred undergraduates. 327 grT RlNCE TQg Trrrrrrrr rrtrrrr rrr rtrrrr r r i5 RjC A- Rgg The ' Princeton Tacht Qlub COMMODORE James O. Pease, ' 31 VICE-COM MODORE William G. Botzow, ' 31 SECRETARY-TREASURER Ashley Hardy, Jr., ' 32 Gibbs L. Baker, Jr. William G. Botzow Robert Burkham, Jr. Herbert B. Gengler MEMBERS 1931 George G. Merrill, Jr. Robert T. Miller, 3rd W. O. Patterson James O. Pease Franklin Siedler C. Baldwin White Leonard A. Yerkes, Jr. 1932 Maitland Edey Gilbert C. Fonda Robert L. Johnstone ■ Frederick B. Kellogg Robert S. Mathews Herbert J. Potts Georce Schlegel, III 1933 R. Brinckerhoff Paul Campbell, Jr. G. W. Constable William L. Crow Peter B. Cumming John W. Dayton Theodore C. Merwin Robert F. Reybine 1934 Edmund G. Anderson, Jr. Edmund H. Kellogg Mike J. Leschin Remsen Ten E. Schenck Eliot B. Willauer The Princeton Yacht Club ended a very successful year last June by capturing the Intercollegiate Yacht racing championship off Southport, Conn., in a series of six races against Harvard, Yale, Williams, Cornell, and Dartmouth. Due to the skilful handling of the Atlantic One-Design sloops by skippers Crow and Cumming and the efficient seamanship of crews Potts, Pease, Johnstone, Hardy, Botzow, and Dayton, Princeton won with a total of 99 points, 8 points ahead of her nearest rival Yale. This gave Princeton her second leg on the HYP cup, donated by Mr. George May in 1928, which falls permanently into the hands of the college winning it three times, and also the William MacMillan cup, known as the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association Challenge cup, emblematic of the inter- collegiate title. During the series, which lasted two days, June 16th and 17th, the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association was formed consisting of the six competing colleges, and Pease was elected its first chairman. The purpose of this association is to have an organized body which may arrange for the annual races and insure constant membership and representation. 328 tgpL RINCE -I§S gOSESiJc Princeton University c I(adio Qlub OFFICERS G. Barbour, ' 32 . E. N. Todd, ' 33 . Secretary- Treasurer Chief Operator MEMBERS, 1931 F. B. Barrett H. Kuper MEMBERS, 1932 G. Barbour J. N. Morrison C. O. Siegelin H. N.Whitney H. B. Churchill A. B. Griffin MEMBERS, 1933 G. S. Humphrey R. E. Pflaumer E. N. Todd J. F. Woods, Jr J. M. Cartlidge H. B. Chatfield MEMBERS, 1934 A. S. Hegeman, Jr. H. Klienkauf N. G. Parke, III In the past year, the Princeton University Radio Club from its short wave station temporarily located in the Concrete and Materials laboratory, communicated with over twenty-five countries in all parts of the world, handling radiograms directly with points over 8000 miles distant. The club ' s transmitter operates under the call letters W-3DH and is a unit in the nation-wide American Radio Relay League, and the American College Radio Union. The work of the club this year received a great setback in the unfortunate death of its president, A. M. Mitchell, ' 31, and in the failure to obtain a suitable location for a station; the old one having been destroyed with the School of Science. Plans, however, are being made for a permanent installation in the near future. 329 tvgZEDJNCEfo EULlAjlZOSJc ARBOR INN Top i?ow — Richardson, Fleming, Bond, Woody, Wicoff, Grier, Winston, Thomas, Macfarland. Fourth Row — Colbrun, Low, Brand, Randall, Randell, Dunn, Siegelin, Furst, Mackie, V. Miller. Third Row — Doolittle, Wells, Richardson, Morris, H. Miller, Woodrin, Gardner, Cleary. Second Row — Miller, Mortimer, Adam, Houser, Dunham, Bosack, Lambert. Wyatt, Miller. First Row — Laimbeer, Laws, Seiberling, Clark, Couch, Manych, Hemley. v T Ta |NCE l rg rrrrrr r Xrrtrtrrrt rr r rr rf rrr rrr r r 0cZA-_S3c r D. B. Barlow E. B. Boynton J. S. Collins L. H. Lawton, Jr. A. Nesbitt, ' 29 R. F. Norris Arbor Inn Founded 1923 — Incorporated 1923 OFFICERS G. M. Clarke, Jr., ' 31 President S. H. Brethwaite, Jr., ' 31 Vice-President P. E. Smith, Jr., ' 32 Secretary F. A. Seiberling, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES R. S. Tyson, ' 25 President F. B. Stallman, ' 25 Vice-President F. D. Waterman, ' 26 Secretary J. D. Hemley, ' 31 Senior Trustee E. L. Laws, ' 32 Junior Trustee A. J. Powers, II, ' 30 R. S. Tyson, ' 25 J. H. Stauffer J. A. Wadsworth, ' 24 G. E. Thompson W. V. Woodward, III, ' 28 H. C. Adams, Jr. G. V. Bond W. K. Boone, Jr. F. C. Bosak S. H. Brethwaite, Jr. C. Christiancy P. LeC. Brand, Jr. F. W. Doolittle, Jr. H. H. Dunham W. B. Dunn G. M. Clarke, Jr. J. M. Cleary S. T. Couch C. L. Fleming P. W. Furst H. S. Gardner E. C. Ekings R. F. Farnham K. W. Gemmill W. Laimbeer E. L. Laws MEMBERS, 1931 G. D. Gibson P. S. Haase J. D. Hemley J. P. Lambert G. W. Low, Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 H. A. Mackie V. G. Manych H. C. Miller, Jr. W. H. Morris J. W. Morrison V. D. Miller, Jr. A. Montgomery P. NULLE W. E. Richardson F. A. Seiberling H. R. Toy H. W. Mortimer G. W. Randall, Jr. J. E. Richardson C. O. Siegelin P. E.Smith, Jr. W. H. Wells D. B. Wicoff W. K. Woodfin S. S. Woody, Jr. R. C. Wyatt J. D. Zook H. L. Thomas, Jr. C. P. Wallis R. W. Winston S. H. Wyse 335 T TRlNCET rg gVC A- Rggr CAMPUS CLUB Top Row — Schlegel, Evans, Paradine, Coe, Smith, Lawrence, Wherry, Fourth Row — Hedstrom, Tisney, Simmers, Van Hook, Tryon, Medill, Keller, Lavender. Third Row — Whitson, Schmid, Dilworth, Knight, Mitchell, Schneckenbttrger, Cromwell, Canby, Kramer. Second Row— J. Hollenbeck, Ball, Lindner, Beverley, Freeman, Taylor, Lanning, Bruere. D. Hollenbeck. First Row — Farnum, Atkins, Crenshaw, Higgins, Wood, Roberts, Poten. gr jRINCET g rr rrrrrrrrrr Srr rrrrrrrrrr t rrrrrrrrrr S j$£lAiI[nSe Qampus Qlub Founded 1900 OFFICERS R. D. Higgins, ' 31 President J. W. Wood, ' 31 Vice-President R. W. Simmers, ' 32 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Howard N. Deyo, ' 20 President Wyllis P. Ames, ' 19 Treasurer Valentine K. Raymond, ' 19 Secretary George H. Bell, ' 04 F. K. Norman, ' 26 W. R. Baker, ' 19 R. R. Russell, ' 19 E. W. Wherry, ' 30 J. C. Atkins T. T. Crenshaw E. B. Cromwell G. J. Edwards C. W. Farnum R. D. Higgins D. B. Kenyon R. A. Kerry MEMBERS, 1931 M. A. Knight J. L. Kramer D. S. Lavender F. M. Mitchell W. A. Mitchell W. F. Poten C. H. Roberts J. E. Roberts R. W. Schneckenburger R. W. Wilson J. W. Wood W. C. Ball J. R. Beverly R. W. Bruere H. N. Canby G. V. Coe, Jr. W. S. Dilworth W. W. Evans E.J. Freeman L. Hedstrom D. W. HOLLENBECK MEMBERS, 1932 H. B. Keller C. W. Lanning A. B. Laurence G. F. Medill H. E. Nicholson A. C. O ' Connor H. L. Remmel R. A. Schmid R. W. Simmers C. T. Smith W. Z. Taylor J.J.Tisne E. K. Tryon J. V. Van Hook J. B. Wherry H. J. Whitson 337 yvEEMNC£To£ f r rrrrrr r rr r Vf rrrrr rrrrf - rrrrrrrr x c £ ESAiSJ CANNON CLUB Top Row — Lemon, O ' Neil, Ames, Hager, Skillman, G. W. Brown, Robinson, Mills, Larkin. Third Row — Morss, Hutchinson, Dribben, Merrill, Sullivan, Oiepenkerl, Huckin, G. W. Brown, Wofford, Miller. Second Row — Murray, Bierhals, Gurley, Moran, Harrison, Semans, Keese. Sloane, Myers. Front Row — J. H. Brown, Mountain, Wilson, Johnson, Turner, MacW ' illiams, Schwartzenbach. tSOBiNCCTOK gS AZZEjr L. R. Albright L. Ames J. W. Bierhals J. H. Brown S. Dribben E. C. Griepenkerl W. M. Hager P. T. Huckin Qannon Qlub Founded 1896 OFFICERS B. G. Johnson, ' 31 President W. A. Wilson, ' 32 Vice-President W. A. Turner, ' 31 Secretary-Treasurer TRUSTEES James D. Dusenberry, ' 10 President David Mahany, ' 08 Graduate Treasurer Stephen W. Waterbury, ' 19 Secretary F. G. McKelvy, ' 04 W. P. Schussler, ' 07 W. G. Wrightstone, ' 04 E. DeF. Case, ' 08 P. Morrell, ' 05 G. E. Roe, ' 12 W. M. Richardson, ' 05 A. Wittmer, ' 22 J. H. Jefferies, ' 23 MEMBERS, 1931 B. G. Johnson H. R. Merrill J. R. Prior T. L. Keese C. Miller, Jr. G. A. Schwartzenbach G. A. McWilliams W. F. Mountain, Jr. T. J. Skillman, Jr. C. K. Murray W. A. Turner A. M. Alvord, Jr. G. W.Bogar.Jr. G. W. Brown, III T. M. Brown G. Buermann •Not returned G. S. Fichtel L. J. Gray, Jr. G. H. Gurley E. W. Harrison J. H. Herzog W. Hicks MEMBERS, 1932 H. B. Hutchinson B. S. Larkin A. D. Lemon J. K. Mills, Jr. H. B. Moran H. R. Morss, Jr. P. D. Myers •J. T. L. Nicholson W. C. O ' Neil J. W. Robinson H. Rust J. H. Semans H. W. Sloan M. Sullivan, Jr. W. A. Wilson C. P. WOFFORD W. H. Yeckley 339 CAP AND GOWN CLUB Top Row—M. Waud, Clingerman, Burkham, Austin, S. Waud, Rightor, Mclver, Weisiger, Watt. Fourth Ron— Rutherford, Snyder, Sherman, Ward, Lathrop, Hardy, Kennedy, Goldthwaite, Tellefson. Third Row— Truitt, Edey, Cochran, McMillan, Sherwin, R. Miller. Mills, W. Miller, Duncan. Second Row— Barrett, Weed, Sculley, Elliman, Perkins, McCann, Buell, Hudson. First Roto— Parker, Goddard, Levick, Livingston, Jenifer, Halsey, Bradley. tSOMNciTgy: rrrrrrr rfHlrrWfrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr f p gsssoss ' nB .  «.iW J b L a P 1 -. ?. % n ji ■ Mkhm SB| m bi m Founded 1894 OFFICERS R. C. Livingston, ' 31 President D. G. Levick, ' 31 Vice-President W. M. Jenifer, ' 31 Treasurer R. M. Goddard, Jr., ' 31 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES C. R. Hanks, ' 15 President H. T. Dickinson, ' 22 Secretary W. H. English, Jr., ' 21 Treasurer T. S. Beck, ' 11 Van S. Merle-Smith, ' 11 C. W. Handy, ' 11 L. G. Payson, ' 16 W. Lloyd-Smith, ' 16 F. F. Austin J. B. Averill E. T. Bradley E. N. Buell R. Burkham J. W. Ci.ingerman E. Duncan L. B. Elliman R. W. Hedces W. P. Huxley MEMBERS, 1931 W. M. Jenifer P. J. Lathrop D. G. Levick C. J. Lipscomb R. C. Livingston R. J. Miller, III W. H. Miller A. S. Mills R. M. Parker, II S. Perkins, Jr. L. C. Ward D. M. Watt S. P. Waud C. N. Weisiger C. V. Weston E. W. Barrett S. Cochran, Jr. J. N. Cooke, Jr. M. A. Edey R. M. Goddard, Jr. C A. Hardy, Jr. H. M. Kennedy R. M. McIver MEMBERS, 1932 D. S. McMillan H. H. Richtor J. D. Sculi.ey J. G. Shennan W. H. Snyder, Jr. J. A. Tellefsen F. S. Rutherford J. N. Sherwin A. Waud C. S. Truitt D. Wolsey 341 tvuTEHEcITo r Trrrrrrr r Xrr rrirrrr rr r r|rrrrrrrr r r g c-A gg CHARTER CLUB To£ ?otf — Stafford, Lemqua, Reeves, Swain, Roudebush, Sloane, Raetzc, Stewart, Brower, Tschudy, Adams. Fourth Row — Ryckman, Hart, Holmes, Powel, Lea, White, Wolfe, McWilliams, Lewis, Smith, Blackman, Nesbeth. Third Row — Bell, Casement, Houser, Chapman, McVoy, Wachter, Harmon, Decker. Carpenter, Finch. Second Row — Reeder, Goldsborough, Chase, Dobson, Evans, Lee, Oram, Dunlap, Baker, R. Spink. First Row — -Baker, W. Blanke, Abbott, Clancy, Brittingham, Rose, Uihlein. gT TRINC ET : r Trrrrr rrr rr rr ' rrrrrrr t rrrrrr rrrr il % £iAiMSSc H. P. Abbott C. H. Adams F. W. Armstrong W.J.Baker W. E. Blackburn J. W. Brittingham J. S. Casement F. W. Chase D. C. Dobson G. T. Dunlap, Jr. R. F. Evans P. T. Finch A. R. Glancy C. L. Havey Princeton Qharter Qlub Founded 1901 OFFICERS 1930-1931 A. R. Glancy, ' 31 President J. W. Brittingham, ' 31 Vice-President H. P. A. G. Abbott, ' 31 Treasurer A. G. Blanke, Jr., ' 32 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS John A. Stewart, III, ' 05 ...... . Chairman Oliver C. Reynolds, ' 05 Allen Davies, ' 10 Allen C. Bakewell, ' 14 Arnold Wood, Jr., ' 21 MEMBERS, 1932 L. I. Lea H. K. Lee 0. T. Lewis 1. Lovell A. R. McVoy J. P. McWlLLIAMS C. J. MORONEY S. Nesbitt G. V. Powell C. H. Reeves A. J. Rose, Jr. G. S. Roudebush J. C. Sloane, Jr. Wheeler H. Page, ' 23 KOBERTSON D. WARD, ' 26 I homas Hale, Jr., ' 27 F. M. Cleveland, Jr., ' 28 H. B. Smith A. G. Spinks W. H. Stafford, Jr. T. C. Techudy A. Uihlsin, Jr. R. F. White A. E. Wolfe R. A.Baker N.M.Bell A. G. Blanke, Jr. S. P. Brown J. A. Campagna F. F. Carpenter W. K. Chapman F. R. Decker T. C. Goldsborough J. H. Harmon MEMBERS, 1931 J. J. Hart, Jr. C. B. Hawley J. R. Holmes W. D. Houser H. B. Lemkau S. C. McClaney A. W. Oram E. D. V. Pels G. W. C. Raetze H. G. Reeder, II R. W. Ryckman J. M. Stewart C. R. Swain J. H. Trow F. C. Wachter 343 tuE£BlNLCcTo : GfgczMmgt CLOISTER INN Top Row — Cootes, Cook, Bergh, Stobie, O ' Malley, Greene, Van Cleef, Fairburn, Redeke. Fourth Row — Boyd, Beale, Whitbeck, Lucas, Good, Gemmill, MacNamee, English. Third Row — Barnhart, Covington, Duncan, DuVivier, Wagner, Wyatt, Rawson, Hodgson, Beddoe. Second Row — Claggett, Meagher, Roberts, Downing, Gaillard, Aicher, Smith, Maltman. Goren. front Row — Genning, Crocker, Wortendyke, Greef, Clayburgh, Knapp; Market. -fuEEJ cfrgx rrrrrrrrrt rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr r rrffijr r rr (ftl rr r r i f 1 1 r r rrrrrrrrrr rr rrrr rr r rrrrrr rr r r gXC-A l|ggr Qloister Inn Founded 1912 OFFICERS T. Greeff, ' 31 President J. J. Wortendyke, ' 3 1 Vice-President M. N. CoOTES, ' 31 Treasurer W. A. FAIRBURN, ' 32 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Clyde D. Marlatt, ' 13 President Robert Dennison, ' 21 Treasurer David B. Clapp, ' 14 Secretary Donald M. Halstead, ' 20 Ass ' t. Treasurer B. M. Arnold, ' 23 Dwicht J. Harris, ' 13 Sterling Galt, ' 15 Robert H. Lee, ' 24 Raymond T. Hoopes, ' 13 Philip H. Meyer, ' 25 John H. Thatcher, ' 25 N. C. Barnhart T. W. N. Beale A. H. Clayburgh W. N. Cootes H. Covington A. Crocker W. English MEMBERS, 1931 A. Dalyrymple J. Gaillard A. Genning T. Greef H. Jenkins S. Kimball C. H. Knapp C. Markel J. R. Meagher V. S. Whitbeck J. J. Wortendyke W. Aicher C. F. Bergh R. W. Boyd T. W. Claggett T. P. Cook E. S. Downing F. G. Duncan D. Duvivier W. A. Fairburn H. F. Fisher K. Semmil A. M. Good G. D. Gorin MEMBERS, 1932 L. C. Green J. Hodgson A. Jackson E. L. Kincaid, Jr. E. Lucas R. D. McNamee A. S. Maltman A. A. Marks J. O ' Malley R. L. Paddock C. A. Racan C. D. Rawson E. W. Redeke R. B. J. Roberts S. E. Sinclair R. L. Smith H. R. Stobie J. Van Cleaf T. R. Wagner L. K. Wyatt 345 tV Ncc_fo y: 5E£AZH3f COLONIAL CLUB Top Row — Robinson, Duer, Sagendorph, Lowry, Lennig, Macy, Whitney, Burt. Third Row — Langenbery, Russell, Wurtz, Drake, Hammett, Delafield, Smith, Dickinson. Second Ronv- — Stevenson. Barbour, Mcllhenny, MacDonald. Whitney, Ross, Wainwright, Barringer, Bennett. First Row — Yerkes, Gray, Wilcox, Groome, Berwind, Elliman, Snowden. tuOElNccfo : rrr rrrr firr rrrrrrr rrr p rrrrrrfr T f 43 eEASE3c Qolonial Qlub Founded 1891 OFFICERS H. C. Groome, ' 30 President S. Wilcox, ' 30 Vice-President S. W. Pendergrast, ' 31 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Charles J. Biddle, ' 11 Chairman Colman P. Brown, ' 05 Secretary Irving B. Kingsford, ' 13 Treasurer M. Lloyd, ' 94 Harold F. Gibson, ' 17 Edward C. Page, ' 12 Charles D. Jackson, ' 24 H e nry C. Merritt, ' IS J. P. B arrincer, ' 24 Henry S. Jeannes, ' 27 h. W. Barringer G. F. Burt E. R. Duer L. Elliman J. O. Gray J. H. Hammet T. Lowry MEMBERS, 1931 E. J. Moles J. Nickerson S. W. Pendergrast F. E. Sagendorph C. R. Snowden R. A. Stevenson T. F. D. Wain wright G. F. Whitney J. W. Wurts L. A. Yerks 3. B. Barbour E. H. Bennett J. L. Delafield M. M. Dickinson W. H. Drake F. Lennig MEMBERS, 1932 J. Macy, Jr. J. N. McDonald F. S. McIllhenny, Jr. P. E. Robinson J. Ross J. G. Russell, Jr. J. H. Smith H. N. Whitney 347 tgfX ft cj lQAT: r rrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrffrrrf rrrrrrr rrhrrrrrrrrr rrrr rrrr r r Ei£iAiS2c COTTAGE CLUB Top Row — Blondel, Irwin, A. Tredennick, Tasker, Mullery, Cale, Weed. Fourth Row — Jackson, Kingsbury, Wright, MacDonald, Post, Galey, O ' Brien, Carson. Third Row — Pettus, Chaffee, Fairman, Curby, Scherer, Dickerson, Dodge, J. McCarthy. Second Rotv — Winterbotham, Thomas, Barnett, Lockhart, Brooks, Bright, Clagett, Woodhull. Bottom Row — A. McCarthy, Firestone, Reinmund, Shields, J. Tredennick, Waldron, Howson. r ra |Nc ilQN _ rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrr r s EEiAiZEJc y iiiiip -iy ' ywjiiix ffiiMB ft _M HlJM ■T«flfc ' , 5K I . • ' • ■PSHHHI HBk. T. R. Armstrong, ' 13 A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 H.I. Caesar, ' 13 H.T.Dunn, ' 17 M. DWIGHT, ' 11 J. A. Barnett J. D. Blondeli. J. D. Cale P. Carson C. E. Clagcett D. A. Crockett S. Bricht C. D. Brooks W. Chaffee W. M. Dickerson •Not returned R. E. Dwight, ' 17 J. N. Ewinc, ' 12 R. L. Farrelly, ' 18 G. C. Fraser, ' 93 J. E. Curly L. K. Firestone J. Y. Howson J. W. Kaine G. D. Lockhart H. M. Dodge •P. Earle H. Fairman J. T. Galey University (pottage Qlub Founded 1887 OFFICERS G. H. Shields, III, ' 31 . President W. Reinmund, ' 31 Vice-President J. A. Barnett, ' 31 Secretary J. D. Cale, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Brown Rolston, ' 10 Chairman H. Gray Treadwell, ' 09 Treasurer William E. Stevenson, ' 22 Secretary J. S. Harick, ' 29 J. A. Larkin, ' 13 Edgar Palmer, ' 03 E. H. Herrick, ' 88 F. V. Lawrence, ' 26 J. D. Scheerer, ' 21 Erksine Hewitt, ' 91 T. H. Marshall, ' 08 A. B. Schultz, ' 03 W. G. Irons, ' 22 L. T. Mulant, ' 26 H. H. Short R. L. Tompkins, ' 21 MEMBERS. 1931 E. A. McCarthy J. E. McCarthy H. F. O ' Brien T. Pettus W. Reinmund MEMBERS, 1932 D. K. Irwin J. G. Jackson, Jr. H. Kingsbury A. B. MacDonald D. G. Ross E. C. Shannon G. H. Shields, III G. K. Smith D. Strachan C. W. Mullery W. Post, II J. L. Robertson E. P. Scherer W. F. Thomas J. B. Tredennick A. M. Waldron F. C. Waldron B. A. Weed J. M. Winterbotham D. L. Stone H. Tasker J. V. Woodhull W. F. Wright 349 tY £jOUN£IIO y ?T C 7 A 7 mi gr r COURT CLUB Top Row— Schauffer, Nash, Huntingdon, Miller, Morton, Daane, Stralem, Leary, Gardner, Derby. Third Row— Wemyss, McCoy, Nagel, Poole, Cort, Tutwiler, Pearce. Hobart, Miller, Reynolds. Second Row — Carty, Stengel, Lanier, Rowbotham, Gilpin, Carr, Doerflinger, George, Pike. Front Row — Whetmore, Muir, Douglas, Hoffer (Pres.), Wheeler, Allen, Wise. r r fi rr rr rrrr rr r 33 ScIAiSSr Princeton Qourt Qlub OFFICERS Frederick S. Hoffer, ' 31 President George B. Douglas, Jr., ' 31 Vice-President Hugh D. Wise, Jr., ' 32 Secretary Charles H. Wheeler, Jr., ' 31 Treasurer F. C. Allen, ' 32 Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Pendleton Marshall, ' 22 President Lout K. Timolat, ' 25 Vice-President F. Hamilton Merrill, ' 26 Secretary Frank M. Gregory, ' 24 Treasurer Benjamin E. Crispin, ' 28 Assistant Treasurer H. Thomas Woodland, ' 23 H. Carr J. W. Carty W. W. Dickinson W. M. DOERFUNGER G. B. Douglas, Jr. G. H. Gardner E. E. George F. Gilpin T. Halliday F. S. Hoffer, Jr. MEMBERS, 1931 C. N. Houghton R. S. Lanier P. Leimbach I. Mendelson C. W. Morehead C. Morton J. G. Muir S. C. Nagel A.Pike W. M. Poole H. R. Schaefer A. Stengel C. C. Tutwiler H. A. Volz C. H. Wheeler, Jr. CD. Winn, III F. C. Allen A. S. Bickham A. Cort, Jr. G. W. Daane H. Depby J. F. FOOTHORAP E. R. Hilts T. E. Hobart H. B. Huntington MEMBERS, 1932 E. C. Ihrig W. E. McCampbell W. B. McCoy F. M. Miller F. D. Miller E. D. Pearce, Jr. W. H. Reynolds J. H. Rowbotham D. J. Schauffler P. Stralem F. S. Wemyss R. Wetmore R. A. Wilbur H.D.Wise, Jr. 351 Y g r INCg T Sg JJrr rffrrrrrrr rr rnrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr X t $2 %j£ciAiMS[£f; DIAL LODGE Top Row — J. Sias, Hawkey, Ryckman, G. Sias, White, Freeman, Porter, Woody. Fourth Row — Heppner, Novak. Hackett, Duffield, Hutcheson Marx, Dammann, Foye, Havens, Putney. Third Row — Case, Heald, Welch, Bush, Bogert, Edwards, Keim, Fisk, Smith, Currie. Second R ow — Ferguson, Jackson, Robertson, Bettys, Rubenstein, Veale, Baier, Moody, Tunnell. front Row — Olcott, Harris. Shelton, Stegner, Lyall. Adams, Pope. tffijJUNCETOAv rrrrr rrr r rrirrrrrrrrr r Lt rrrrrrrr rr EZAZ gj Dial cQodge Founded 1908 — Incorporated 1912 OFFICERS B . B. Stegner, ' 31 President R. D. Shelton, ' 31 Vice-President L. F. Moody, Jr., ' 32 Secretary D. Lyall, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Thomas H. McCaulev, ' 12 Chairman Bartholomew A. Greene, ' 25 Treasurer Courtlandt Otis, ' 20 Secretary Alfred V. S. Alcott, ' 09 Kenneth W. Alford, ' 19 Joseph F. Mann, ' 11 Arthur Gardner, ' 23 BramanB. Adams John M. Bogert C. W. Bush, Jr. T. Jackson Case, Jr. Adolph G. Cotton Duncan L. Edwards, Jr Spencer Ferguson F. G. Hamrick, Jr. MEMBERS, 1931 Henry, C. Harris, Jr. John H. Hawley, Jr. Richard B. Huchinson M. T. Jackson W. F. Keim, Jr. David Lyall Cornelius Oi.cott, Jr. Horatio M. Pope Richard H. Rubenstein Richard D. Shelton J. PaulSias Bentley B. Stegner Stewart I. Veale D. E. Baier J. M. Cotton R. G. Currie R. W. Dammann S. H. Duffield C. Y. Freeman R. S. Hackett H. Hawkey R. P. Heppner W. B. Kerkam, Jr. O. F. Larsen, Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 J. H. Lippincott, Jr. W. F. Mac Elree O.B.Marx, Jr. L. F. Moody, Jr. G. Mott, Jr. A. B. Novak G. W. Porter R. E. Putney R. S. Robertson J. C. Schenck G. K. Sias H. C. Smith, Jr. J. M. Tunnell, Jr. F. B. Vanderbeek E. J. Welch H. N. White, Jr. J. W. A. Woody 353 tv 0 £HSN: Iff f rrrrr rrrr firr rr ' rrrrrrf p rrrrrrrrrr a gc-A ir ggr war .1 - 3F •!.: ' ■ PI 2 r -v % « ■ bF H El - Jl Br | 14 In « . J K 4 • t Nf r r, fz.  r Si ELM CLUB To Row — Patterson, Froment, Neary, Henderson, Muttart, A. Gengler, Groth, Young, Summerall, Schuman, Andrews. Fifth Row — H. Gengler, Clifton, Marvin, Baldwin, Burnett, Johnston, Murphy, Roeser, Sweeney, Bachman, Beck. Fourth Row — Haynes, High, Davison, Kerr, Knapp, Heinlein, Morse, Emery, Dietrich, Nash. Third Row — Brauer, Dawson, Thompson, Sheppard, Towle, Abbott, Sayre, Foster, Rossi, Mitchell, Stout. Second Row — Carnochan, Rutledge, Smith, McAlpin, Hoag, Cochran, Gillespie, Cannon, Barton. First Row — Page, Gilmore, Bauman, Ackerman, Hodell, Webb. T TRlNCET Og rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrr t rrrrrr rrrr rT JK rr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrr r r H SAUSS C. E. Abbott W. C. Ackerman A. G. Andrews, Jr. C. M. Barton, Jr. C. H. Baldwin E. R. Bauman L. C. Beck R. S. Cannon, Jr. J. R. Carnochan H. Clifton, Jr. G. Cochran Elm Qlub Founded 1895 OFFICERS Frank S. Hoag, ' 31 President Edwin A. McAlpin, III, ' 32 . . Vice-President Charles M. Hodell, ' 31 ... Manager BOARD OF TRUSTEES Louis G. Erskine, ' 18 President George E. Clark, ' 29 Vice-President Edward D. Miers, ' 08 Treasurer George H. Sibley, ' 20 Secretary Paul Bedford, ' 97 J. B. McTigue, ' 16 Cornelius B. Kouenhoven, ' 07 T. H. Westgate, ' 21 ' L. S. Plaut, ' 09 Frederick Hyer, ' 28 FrankS. Hoag, ' 31 MEMBERS, 1931 C. H. Foster L. Hocker, Jr. R. M. Rutledge F. L. Froment C. M. Hodell R. H. Sayre H.B.Gengler D.G.Marvin W.H.Smith W. H. Gillespie, Jr. C. R. Mac Innes, Jr. E. G. Sweeney I.B.Haines W. L. Muttart J. Webb, Jr. F. S. Hoag, Jr. J.P.Nash R. C. Bachman S.J. Barham C. F.Brauer J. H. Burnett R. W. Crutchfield E. K. Davison H. P. Dawson F. Y. Dietrick R. D. Dripps, Jr. T. M. Emory R. D. Fulton W. Gahagan, Jr. A. Gengler W. E. Gilmore J. E. Groth, Jr. J. C. Heinlein MEMBERS, 1932 C. P. Henderson G P. High R. L. Johnstone J. A. Kerr R. W. Knapp E. A. McAlpin, III R. T. Mitchell, Jr. G. G. Morse G. S. Murphy J. F. Neary, Jr. G. M. Page W. O. Patterson R. M. Perry J. M. Roeser T. L. Rossi P. R. Schumann M. W. Sheppard, Jr. J. P. Sinclair A. V. Sloan W. B. Stout, Jr. C. W. L. Summerill R. W. Thompson C. Curtis Towle G. W. Younc 355 rTRiNCCTO gvciA iQsr GATEWAY Top Row— LaBau, Koch, Bixler, Paddock, Curtis, Campbell, Flowers, Atkins, Tliorne. Third Row— Morton, Biddle, Luippold, Lacey, Lammers, Clark, Zellner, Forbes, Martinto. Second Row— Stueck, Howard, Thomas, Smith, Ilorlacher. Wettach, Blyler, Fletcher, Pearson, Carnck. First Row — Lofthouse, Keen, Gibney, Gifford, Truby, Matlack. tvg X RINC £I§jv: ■rrrrrr rr fnl rr rrrrrrrrr r r rrrrrrtr f r gr ic A-mr gg  - ' J- ' 1 J l Princeton Qateway Qlub Founded 1913 OFFICERS Clarence G. Meeks, Jr., ' 31 President Fred R. Gibney, Jr., ' 31 Vice-President Maurice F. Keen, ' 31 Secretary Herbert M. Giffin, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Hans A. Widenmann, ' 18 Chairman George H. Bonsall, ' 15 Secretary and Treasurer R. Bartlet Bradshaw, ' 22 Arthur W. Horton, Jr., ' 20 Philip M. Davis, ' 26 George W. Loos, ' 22 Francis K. Decker, ' 24 David S. Loudon, ' 27 Carl C. Fischer, ' 24 William Rogers, Jr., ' 21 S. D. Atkins G. C. Biddle A. BlXLER W. M. Cairns D. B. Campbell G. Carleton M. B. Cramer R. E. G. Downey G. S. Flowers MEMBERS, 193 1 F. R. Gibney, Jr. H. M. Giffin W. W. Horlacher M. F. Keen A. Lofthouse P. Martinto R. W. Matlack C. G. Meeks, Jr. J. G. Stephenson G. H. Stueck W. D.Thorne J. W. Truby W. Wettach C. N. Zellner L. L. Blyler J. Campbell, Jr. A. B. Carrick YV. C. Clark D. M. Curtis N. W. Drey R. S. Evans R. J. Fletcher MEMBERS, 1932 D. C. Forbes R. W. Howard J. H.Koch, Jr. M. D. E. LaBau G. R. Lacy E. C. H. Lammers E. J. Luippold, Jr. D. P. Morton P. E. Paddock W. A. Pearson P. C. Smith R. J. Thomas 357 tfip ft ' NC EXQA EEZAZ2E3c IVY CLUB Top Row — -Kellogg, Lea, Condon, Blackwell, Merrill, Hart, Lord, Hooker, Wister, Rockefeller. Fourth Row — Streeter, Shoemaker, Roberts, Lippincott, Dana, Scarlett, Hand, Maguire, Caulkins, Cook. Third Row — Paine, Reynolds, Parker, Ridgeway, McAlpin, Blackiston, Hall, D. Thompson, Benson, Cheston. Second Row — W. Thompson, Eno, Atwater, Barber, Crary, Van Dusen, Fleming, Rose, Potts. Front Row— Roose- velt, Rutherford, Whitehead, Byles, Ware, Palmer, Frelinghuysen. grjRiNcgTQjy: Ivy Qlub Founded 1879 OFFICERS Julius Byles, ' 31 President A. Pennington Whitehead, ' 31 .... Governor Thomas F. Palmer, ' 32 Secretary J. D. Ware, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Stacy B. Lloyd, ' 98 President F. Eugene Dixon, ' 09 Secretary Van R. Halsey, ' 18 Treasurer Douglas Garman, ' 03 H. H. Gile, ' IS S. H. Bird, ' 06 Jarvis Cromwell, ' 18 H. F. Osborn, Jr., ' 09 W. S. Gray, Jr., ' 19 Thomas Swann, ' 12 J. H. W. Ingersoll, ' 22 A. C. Wall, ' 24 E. S. Atwater, III P. Benson J. Byles J. N. Crary W. W. Fleming T. Frelinchuysen MEMBERS, 1931 W. Ingersoll G. G. Merrill, Jr. C. Rees K. J. Ridgeway H. L. Roosevelt, Jr. N. P. Rose H. F. Shoemaker, II W. M.Thompson J. D. Ware A. P. Whitehead W.W.Barber, Jr. H. C. Blackiston W. B. Blackwell, E. B. Caulkins, Jr. E. C. Cheston H.W.Cook, Jr. D.T.Dana, Jr. Not returned M. M. Dana A. Eno S. G. Hall B. H. Hand F. F. Hart D. H. Hooker •F.W. Jarvis. Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 F. B. Kellocg L. Lea, Jr. W. H. Lippincott, Jr. J. W. Lord, Jr. E. DeL. Lucas, Jr. H. B. Macuire J. C. Martin, III M. E. McAlpin P. S. Paine T. F. Palmer C. R. Parker H. J. Potts F. C. Reynolds, Jr. A. Roberts L. S. Rockefeller J. P. Rutherford C. E. Scarlett, Jr. W. SCHOELLKOPF D. B. Streeter D. A. Thompson L. H. Van Dusejj C. Wister 3 59 TEBINcIToa EEAlggj KEY AND SEAL CLUB Top Row — Mctcalf, Bliss, Lawrence, Carey, Cooper, Morely, Orr, Rathbone, Dickinson, Keats, Riley, Damerel. Fourth Rou — Keown, Gore, Kerr, Frey, Truscott, Phillips, Eaton, Blossom, Garrettson, Hall, McLean, Gordon. Third Row — Ferguson, Hemming, Rial, Robinson, Allen, Leuthauser, Smith, Freestone, Harrington, McAllen. Second Row — -Kredcr, Edgar, Kreitter, Gasson, Schmidt, Fry, Morehouse, Miller, Ratton. Front Row — Murray, Whitwell, Moody, Cooper (Pres.)i Parkin, Hibben, McDonough. tgTTRINCCTo rrrrrrr rrtrr rrrrr rrrf rrrr r r 5EE AiZEj? Key and Seal Qlub Founded 1904 OFFICERS Henry Cooper II, ' 31 . President Robert B. Moody, ' 31 Vice-President Joseph T. Edgar, ' 32 Secretary Joseph W. Hibben, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Matson C. Terry, ' 15 President William B. Schrauff, ' 22 Secretary William Haffner, ' 20 Treasurer 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 J. C. Bliss F. W. Blossom F. H.Bowman, Jr. R. A. Carey H. Cooper II D. S. Culver W. S. Dickenson J. B. Diggs S. P. Damerel J. F. Eaton W. D. Ferguson F. Foote H. C. Forbes, Jr. H. W. Frey MEMBERS, 1931 P. L. Gore J. W. HlBBEN H. D. Kerr R. H. Kreder R. D. Kreitler R. W. Lawrence D. K. McAllen G. McCabe J. W. MCDONOUGH C. H. Miller C. H. Miner R. B. Moody R. C. Morley C. R. Murray M. Orr C. A. Philips J. V. Rathbone, Jr. O. F. Riley J. C. Robinson J. C. Whitewell J. S. Allen R. G. Cooper J. T. Edgar W. D. Freeston M. A. Fry R. F. Garretson, Jr. E. D. Gasson J. K. Gordon, Jr. W. L. Hall J. B. Harrington MEMBERS, 1932 P. A. Hemming H. L. Keats A. D. Keown R. W. Leuthauser J. E. McLean E. R. Metcalf J. E. Morehouse W. M. Parkin H. McE. Patton W. S. Rial, Jr. K. M. Schmid R. H. Smith J. R Speer T. C. Truscott R. B. Updegraff 361 tvgnoyN££xg f: §23 13 QUADRANGLE CLUB Top Row — O ' Connor, Bower, Coffin, Irwin. Fourth Ron — Train, M. West, Drewley, F. West, Foster, Scheiffelin, Fairburn, Kellogg, Mac- Anerney. Third Row — Ray, Hall, Miles, Breed, Knowlton, Myrick, Carey, Sabin, Whitehead, Pettus. Second Row— Lane, Shauff, Page, Moss, Hewitt, Knox, Johnson, Preston. Front Row — Kipp, Colmore, Pullman, Hereford, Monroe, Reed, Stevens. tttSZOHNClTO r rr rrr rrn r rrrrrrrrt r r rrr rrrrr rT (K) rr r r ! j 1 1 r r rrrrrr rrr r rrrrr rrrr r rrrrrr rrrr bEZAHI3c ' Princeton Quadrangle Qlub Founded 1901 OFFICERS Brice Hereford, ' 31 : . President S. C. Pullman, ' 31 Treasurer Malcolm L. Monroe, ' 32 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES J. Dayton Voorhees, ' 05 Preside nt John D. Harrison, ' 12 Treasurer C. S. White, ' 23 Assistant Treasurer James N. Hynson, ' 20 Secretary Richard E. Merrifield, ' 21 Assistant Secretary Penn Harvey, ' 08 Chauncey Belknap, ' 12 Donald B. Sinclair, ' 10 Donald W. Griffin, ' 23 Lemuel Skidmore, ' 11 Henderson Supplee, ' 27 J. Bauer Reginald Carey Caleb Coffin Robert L. Coi.more John K. Foster Brice H. Hereford Frank H. Johnston John P. Kipp David C. Knowlton MEMBERS, 1931 Arthur Knox, Jr. Samuel L. Lane J. N. McAnerney Georce S. Mirick Frank H. Moss John N. Page Samuel C. Pullman Pendennis W. Reed Lloyd S. Saltus Edwin P. Stevens R. Schoaffe G. R. Van Doren R. V. C. Whitehead, Jr. A. R. Breed W. W. Drewry R. G. Fairburn A. D. Hall A. F. Hewitt W.W.Irwin J. G. Kellogg MEMBERS, 1932 M. L. Monroe C. E. O ' Connor E. Pettus, Jr. S. Preston E. L. Ray, Jr. H. S. Sabin C SCHIEFFLIN C. R. Train F. A. West M. F. West 363 tHtZEElNccTo : rrrrrr rrrr rnrrrr rrr rrrrrrrr x r l rf ; il gc -A Rggc TERRACE CLUB Top Row — Moffat, Waters, Atkins, Matthews, DuBois, Ely, Stevens, Ringland, Marion, Suor, Rogers. Fourth Row — Silber, Hamilton, Rice, Ferry, Smith, Staub, Mann, Barnes, Weed, Henry, Lane. Third Row— Kime, Kepler, Reed, Whallon, Jackman, Walker, Priddy, Thurman, Cur- tis, Aldrich, Seabrook. Second Row — Moller, Schofield, Dana, Mitchell, Dickson, Stagg, Atherton, Boffey, Edwards. Front Row- — Heath, Fern- ley, Conklin, Bond (Pres.), Schenk, Buckley, Popp. tSOJUNCEio : rrrrrf rrrr firr rr  rrrrrrr f rr frrrrr r r il EEAzggg? 7 |i -Mil 1 HI 1,1 1 J — if Ml ° Terrace Qlub K. M. Barnes G. E. Bond L. B. Curtis T. B. Dickson R. C. Heath J. B. Atherton H. T. Atkins W. W. Blanton K. M. Boffey C. W.B.Bulklev •Not returned J. A. Conklin T. P. Henry A. H. JACKMAN W. A. Jameson, Jr. R. J. Kepler, Jr. R. M. Kime R. J. Kinney R. A. Dana J. S. DuBois B. C. Edwards J. W. Ely T. A. Fernley, Jr. Founded 1904 OFFICERS G. E. Bond, ' 31 President J. A. Conklin, ' 30 Vice-President C. W. Bulkley, ' 32 Secretary E. C. Schenck, ' 31 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Alden D. Groff, ' 13 Chairman Alfred Dashiell, ' 23 Vice-Chairman Charles Garside, ' 23 Secretary William E. Speers, ' 11 Treasurer Harold R. Medina, ' 09 Arthur F. Mead, ' 20 Goulding K. Wright ' 13 Winthrop Trowbridge, ' 25 Geoffrey V. Azoy, ' 20 Winthrop Lenz, ' 28 Herbert Kleinhans, ' 29 MEMBERS, 1930 D. Ferry MEMBERS, 1931 C.E.Lane J. R. Remington, Jr. A. W. Staub, Jr. J. H. Mann E. C. Schenck W. L. Taylor J. H. Marion C. A. Schofield O. M. Thurman W. R. Moller G. R. Silber A. E. Walker T. Popp C. Smith E. A. Weed L. Priddy, Jr. D. C. Stagg, Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 C. S. Hamilton, Jr. J.W.Oman, Jr. B.L. Seabrook R. S. Matthews E. Reed, Jr. C. H. Stephens R. P. McCulloch J. H. Rice E. C. Suor P. R. Minthorne R. L. Ringland L. L. Waters J. R. Mitchell S. M. Rodgers E. V. Whallon G. P. Moffat 365 ttt£jOUNC£lo rrr rrrr rrrrrrrrr r rr rt rr rrrr jA C ' A ' R gr: TIGER INN Top Row — Nitz, Caveny, Shanley, Bowman, Carrillo, Botzow, Clark, Graves. Fourth Row- — Burke, Zundel, Lauglilin, Ranck, Royster, Savage, Council, Bennett, Livingston. Third Row — Bessire, Keith, Vanschaick, Miles, Walker, Humpheries, Evans, Mallett, Home. Second Row — Carey, Oakley, Baker, Davis, Sanger, Thompson, Moore, lams, Wildm n . Front Row — Jones, Cameron, Fennell, Mestres, Muldaur, Juergens, Pease. tgjlB J 11 nc jtqm: ggE ESg Tiger Inn Founded 1890 — Incorporated 1892 OFFICERS R. A. Mestres, ' 31 • President E. H. Fennell, ' 32 Vice-President BOARD OF GOVERNORS C. W. McGraw, ' 19 President C. H. Murphy, ' 00 Vice-President M. P. Dickenson, ' 22 Secretary and Treasurer M. B. Fuller, ' 99 V. M. Barr, ' 15 W. C. Booth, ' 00 J. Boohecker, ' 25 C. W. Luke, ' 09 W. F. Ballard, ' 27 J. E. Baker, Jr. H. T. Bennett W. G. F. Botzow W. R. Cameron Paul Carey Rene Carillo W. P. Davis, III R. Evans, II F. S. Graves L. F. Hallett, Jr. G. S. Hamill, III MEMBERS, 1931 William Hitz J. C. Horne A. A. Jones, Jr. R. K. Juercens W. C. Keith, Jr. D. K. Livingston R. A. Mestres W. S. Miles, Jr. C. T. H. Moore C. E. A. Muldaur L. E. Oakley J. O. Pease H. P. ROYSTER G. Sanger J. R. Savage F. L. Thomson, III W. A. Walker R. A. Bessire F. K. Bowman, Jr. S. Burke •Not returned J. P. Caveny M.G.Clark G. M. Council G. V. Davis MEMBERS, 1932 E. H. Fennell D. C Hogan F. J. Humphrey, Jr. S. H. Iams.Jr. H. R. Laughlin J. M. Ranck J. L. Shanley J. F. Skinner A. G. VanSchaik E. R. Wildman F. R. Zundel 367 gr p-INCE TQ % £lAiESSc TOWER CLUB Top Row — Robinson, McKinney, Crane, Seidler, Findley, Hillman, Creighton, C. Smith, Cooper, Reed, Kohlsaat. Fourth Row — -Franklin, Thring, Savage, Fitzpatrick, Logan, Rollinson, McClave, Breasted, Millard, Allen, Schroeder. Third Row — Darrow, McNamara, Goodpasture, Loveman, Sanger, Hockenbury, M. Henry, Taplin, Rose, Piel, Lansden. Second Row — McPheet ers, Huntington, Heath, Gates, Bowie, Leonard, Post, Coulton, Kesler, R. Smith, Walker. First Row — Austen, Hilken, Harbison, Jenckes, Burnham, Klein. tHtTElNCCTO r r rrrrrfrrrr 5rr rr rrrrrr r ■ rrrrrrrr rr 1 g T A Rgg Princeton Tower Qlub R. R. Bowie P. BURNHAM F. S. Cooper D. B. Crane M. F. Cravens H. S. Allen, Jr. D. L. Austin, Jr. J. H. Breasted, Jr. J. W. Creighton J. C. DONNELL, II •Not returned •J. P. Darling W. Darrow, Jr. I. Fitzpatrick, Jr. W. H. Franklin J. W. Gates W. N. GORHAM C. H. FlNDLEY W. C. Goodpasture C. F. Heath T.H.Henry, Jr. J. H. HlLLMAN, III Founded 1902 OFFICERS S. P. Harbison, ' 31 President D. L. Austin, Jr., ' 32 Secretary S. E. Hockenbury, ' 3 1 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Frank H. Little, ' 03 Chairman Sidney F. Holt, ' 03 Treasurer Raymond F. Fish, ' 13 Secretary Sinclair Hamilton, ' 06 Richard S. Hayes, ' 25 Norman D. Weir, ' 13 S. P. Harbison, ' 31 S. E. Hockenbury, ' 31 MEMBERS, 1931 S. P. Harbison J. L. Logan S. H. Rollinson H. G. Hilken, II D. B. Loveman, II H.H.Sanger S. E. Hockenbury F. P. MacKinney R. J. Smith W. D. Jenckes W. L. McPheeters . C. F. Taplin H. D. Klein M. D. V. Millard W. H. Thrine E. C. Kohlsaat, Jr. D. R. Post MEMBERS, 1932 M. D. Hockenbury W. H. McClave G. E. Rose, Jr. J. W. P. Huntington D. McC. McNamara J. C. Savage R. W. Kesler W. F. J. Piel,Jr. F. C. Schroeder R. L. Lansden J. B. Reed C. LeR. Smith F. N. Leonard O. W. Robinson R. M. Walker 369 tgOBiNCETQS: EEAjiMSc The University Qlub The University Club is organized for the purpose of supplying a meeting place for that quarter of the upper class students which does not make a club. The following students were elected as officers for the college year: W. O. Stoughton, ' 31 President G. R. Donner, ' 32 Vice-President P. A. Kellogg, ' 31 Secretary W. B. Johnson, ' 31 Treasurer Popular opinion has lately been leaning towards the establishment of a University Center to be used by the students of all classes. 370 tg pft ' NC jTQ r rrrrrrrrr r rf irrrr rr r ' r rr rr rr rr f r O g VC A lf g Inter club Qommittee Dean Gauss Professor Hall G. E. Bond J. Byles G. M. Clarke, Jr. H. Cooper A. R. Glancy, Jr. MEMBERS T. Greeff H. C. Groome, Jr. S. P. Harbison B. H. Hereford R. D. Higgins F. S. Hoag, Jr. F. S. Hoffer, Jr. B. G. Johnson R. C. Livingston C. G. Meeks, Jr. R. A. Mestres N. P. Rose G. H. Shields, III B. B. Stegner EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE J. Byles President R. C. Livingston Secretary Dean Gauss Professor Hall R. A. Mestres N. P. Rose G. H. Shields, III The Interclub Committee, as reorganized in November 1929, consists of two faculty members, the eighteen club presidents, and an undergraduate representative of the Student Council. No business, however, originates with this large group, since all matters are first investigated by the executive committee, consisting of two faculty members, the Student Council representative, and four club presidents elected by the entire eighteen. In this body, measures are carried by a majority vote. Thus, a measure, having been inves- tigated and approved, it is brought before the entire committee and here also is passed by a majority vote. The improvement over former club committees lies in the fact that the faculty are represe.ited and that measures are considered by a small, well-organized group before being put to a general vote. 371 --rvJt3V $ Qf L T TRINCEf Qg S£3ZZE2f zAshville School Qlub OFFICERS W. W. Dickinson, Jr., ' 31 . . J. H. Harmon, Jr., ' 32 . W. B. VanNortwick, ' 34 . . President Vice-President Secretary J. H. Harmon, Jr. R. C. Scott E. W. Greeno, Jr. MEMBERS, 1931 W. W. Dickinson, Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 E. C. H. Lammers MEMBERS, 1933 MEMBERS, 1934 W. B. VanNortwick F. M. Miller W. J. B. Stokes T. Vernard St. Qeorge ' s School Qlub OFFICERS F. F. D. Wainwright, ' 31 President J. H. Breasted, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President G. W. Locke, ' 34 Treasurer H. B. Churchill D. D ' Olier.Jr. J. H. Covington H. S. Allen, Jr. R. G. GOLDSBOROUCH E. B. Bowring MEMBERS, 1931 C. R. Snowden MEMBERS, 1932 J. H. Breasted, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 R. A. Heeren MEMBERS, 1934 H. H. Clement T. F. D. Wainwright D. A. Thompson R. H. Tucker W. W. Watts CM. Wood, Jr. G. W. Locke 374 tv 0535355r gEZA3E3r D. G. Levick, ' 31 W. S. Dickinson R. A. Bard, Jr. Berkshire School Qlub OFFICERS .... President H. H. Walker, ' 33 . H. Dallas, ' 34 Secretary C. Fentress R. Brinkerhoff D. P. Earle, Jr. H. Dallas MEMBERS, 1931 D. G. Levick MEMBERS, 1933 E. Jones K. I. Lingle MEMBERS, 1934 P. C. Downing H. B. Smith R. F. Reybine J. P. TOWNLEY J. Hambleton . Vice-President C. V. Weston H. H. Walker 375 t gT TRiNC Efo f: ESAiZaSr T. W.Beale.Jr. T. M. Brown B. E. Conklin W. Austin R Bassett Blair Academy Qlub OFFICERS A. W. Turner, ' 31 President J. G. Shennan, ' 32 Vice-President E. R. Schaible, ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 J. W. Bierhals C. G. Ellis H. R. Merrill MEMBERS, 1932 R. D. Currie P. Myers J. G. Shennan W. W. Drewry A. C. Shoemaker MEMBERS, 1933 J. W. Dickson N. Van N. Duncan W. Leslie S. W. Warzala MEMBERS, 1934 D. Day J. Lovett C. McCree L. Gavales D. Poor W. A. Turner H.C.Smith, Jr. M. F. West, Jr. R. Rowe E. R. Schaible 376 tvOUJUNCEfd y cZAHSSc Qarteret Academy OFFICERS P. W. Reed, ' 31 G. C. Fonda, ' 32 W. M. Franklin, ' 33 MEMBERS, 1931 W. G. Botzow J. N. Page MEMBERS, 1932 G. C. Fonda MEMBERS, 1933 W. H. Brown W. M. Franklin MEMBERS, 1934 R. D. McCarty President Vice-President Secretary P. W. Reed R. L. Martin 377 T PRINCFT OKr rr rrrrrr tfrr firr |rrr rrrrrr r rrrrrr r r g Tc A - l?Rg j The Qhoate School Qlub OFFICERS G. D. Lockhart, ' 31 J. V. WOODHULL, ' 32 W. Cruikshank, ' 34 President Vice-President Secretary B. B. Adams, II W. R. Cameron E. S. Downing J. H. Hillman, III F. T. Billings, Jr. H. K. Boice H.P.Cannon, II T. K. Carpenter J. Archbold W. VanV. Bacon S. Biddle M. C. Branch, Jr. R. Carrillo W. D. Jenckes A. B. Laurence J. W. Dennis F. E. Donaldson S. H. Garth G. E. Brown S. F. Carstens J. A. B. Chapin W. Cruikshank MEMBERS, 1931 G. D. Lockhart A. Lofthouse MEMBERS, 1932 H. R. Stobie MEMBERS, 1933 G. W. Gray R. L. Hatch E. O. Hopkins MEMBERS, 1934 P. H. Dater G. D. Edwards A. S. Fisher J. K. Gurney R. L. Hutton, Jr. S. M. Sternbach R. A. Stevenson A. Tredennick W. L. Lafean V. S. MULFORD C R. Patterson D. E. Peacock T. E. Pickerinc C. V. Schieren M. G. C. Train J.Webb J. M. Winterbotham E. R. Wildman J. V. WOODHULL W. L. Phyfe T. E. Snyder R. McK. Thomas F. C. Whittlesey W. B. Trainer J. R. VanDyke E. D. Wardrop F. F. Zittell 378 ' fgg RlNC jTQjv: gc-A- ggg Qolumbus Academy Qlub OFFICERS N.P.Rose, ' 31 President J. O. Gray, ' 31 Vice-President E. L. BlGELOW, ' 33 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 F. G. Bowman J. O. Gray N. P. Rose S. M. Summer H. B. Arnold E. L. Bicelow MEMBERS, 1932 J. W. P. GUNTINGTON MEMBERS, 1933 E. L. Chapman M. Gray O. P. Outhwaite J.J. Stevenson, Jr. MEMBERS, 1934 W. A. Gray E. D. Johnson 379 t jT E RINC IlQjy r rrrrrrtr t r rrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr 2 EEZAiggjf Qermantown Academy Qlub OFFICERS S. S. Woody, ' 32 President L. F. Moody, ' 32 Vice-President J. W. Hunsicker, ' 34 . Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 W. K. Newman D. Strachan J. P. Caveny R. D. Dripps MEMBERS, 1932 T. A. Fernley G. P. High L. F. Moody C. S. Truitt J. W. A. Woody S. S. Woody C. C. Davis MEMBERS, 1933 W. W. Erdman A. M. G. Moody R. E. Pflaumer G. C. Foedisch MEMBERS, 1934 J. W. Hunsicker W. H. Pflaumer B. F. Speece 380 tvCpn clxoS : rrrrrrrrrr r rflRJr rlrrrrrr r rrr r rrrrrrrrr rr JTirr rffffrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rnHttr rrrrrrrrrr 41 rEZaZSST H. M. Busick T. W. Clagcett, Jr. S. M. Agnew A. P. Boyce E. S. BOYLSTON C. DeH. Brower, III W. B. Buck T. R. Baker C. W. Bledsoe R. W. Clapp C. H. Classen W. B. Davis D. H. Halsey D. H. Hooker G. W. Constable N. Cover A. A. Davis W. E. Edmonston J. A. B. Fisher J. E. Duker R. H. Hooker R. C. Kenney J. Clecc, III MEMBERS, 1932 J. W. Lord, Jr. E. M. Lucas MEMBERS, 1933 H. Garrett B. H. Griswold R. F. Lowndes J. A. Luetscher D. G. McIntosh MEMBERS, 1934 A. Marquand J. R. Miller, III F. Quellmalz, Jr. E. H. Richardson Qilman Qountry School Qlub OFFICERS Wm. Jennifer, ' 31 . President C. E. Scarlett, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President A. D. Rust, ' 34 . . Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 R. R. Bowie R. L. Graham H. G. Hilken W. M. Jennifer C. H. Knapp, Jr. S. L. Lane P. Leimbach C. J. Lipscomb C. Markell F. T. Miles C. Morton, Jr. H. H. Sanger F. W. Wagner C. E. Scarlett, Jr. R. L. Smith J. H. O ' Don ovan L. H. Peard F. H. Purnell J. N. Renneburg J. W. Samuels J. Y. Rause A. D. Rust H. H. Sanger C.B.Schley F. C. Wachter T. G. Young H. D. Schwab A. A. Smith, III T. H. Walker J. S. Whedbee J. T. Woodward W. E. Smith S. D. Swann G. H. White W. P. Wilson A. M. Young 3S1 Haverford School Qlub OFFICERS J. Y. Howson, ' 31 President S. E. Sinclair, ' 32 . V. J. Roberts, Jr., ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 J. y. Howson W. L. Mutart MEMBERS, 1932 E. C. Ekings S. E. Sinclair J. W. Ferguson, Jr. A. V. Sloan MEMBERS, 1933 A. D. Claffy V. H. Hirst MEMBERS, 1934 D.P.Elliot C. B. Katzenbach V. J. Roberts, Jr. J. E. Gomery K. M. Barnes C. B. Agnew, Jr C. F. Berg A. C. Barnes R. E. Asnis R. M.Bdek A. A. Hauck H. C. Parsons W. R. Rainear W. R. Stevens H. B. Walker . Vice-President J. W. Wurts E. K. Tryon, Jr. J. S. Troth W. Watt, Jr. M. D. Youngman 382 tSilEBiNCfTOAs % SAiASSS 1 i  - • 2 - y ' v p i ' -..v R. H. Demuth, ' 31 R. W. Boyd, Jr. J. B. Boyd Horace h(ann School Qlub OFFICERS President J. P. Eastman, ' 33 . ... A. J. Parson, ' 34 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1931 G. Carleton R. H. Demuth I. M. Mendelson MEMBERS, 1932 R. W. Damman W. C. Kirk, Jr. R. H. Mitchell, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 J. P. Eastman L. H. Hirsch, Jr. G. A. Perera J. A. Rosenbaum MEMBERS, 1934 A. B. Compton, Jr. A. J. Parson 383 J ' ice-President C. A. Racen, Jr. W. P. Wright, Jr. tgf RlNC jfcfe - c A iS St gg TR |NC E XQN rrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrr rrrr £2 g gC A TT ggc The Hill School Qluh OFFICERS R. A. Mestres, ' 31 President E. Barrett, ' 32 Vice-President A. J. Goodwin, ' 34 Secretary J. C. Atkins J.E.Baker R. W. Barringer G. S. Cochrane G. T. Dunlap, Jr. L. K. Firestone P. W. Furst A. R. Glancy, Jr. G. S. Hamill, III J. D. Hemley MEMBERS, 1931 R. K. Juergens R. A. Keery J. P. Kipp E. C. KOHLSAAT L. LOVELL R. A. Mestres A. Montgomery J. Nickerson T. Pettus S. H. ROLLINSON H. P. ROYSTER J. C. Sloane, Jr. T. C. Tschudy A. B. Wolfe E. W. Barrett R. V. Clark H. M. Dodge P. H. Earle W. E. GlLMORE W. C. D. Grannis T. H. Henry P. Houston D. K. Irwin, Jr. R. Johnstone H. A. Kingsbury R. L. Lansden MEMBERS, 1932 E. A. McAlpin W. H. McClave A. B. MacDonald R. McDonald W. F. McElree G. D. MacLatchie W. A. Pearson W. Post, II C. B. Rawson H. Richter C. T. Smith D. B. Streeter C. C. Towle M. Waud D. B. Weed C. P. WOFFORD W. F. Wright M. S. Gaffney S. Gales W. E. Jones C. F. Junod, Jr. M. B. Martin H. D. Mitchell MEMBERS, 1933 J. H. Moffatt, Jr. G. Pace, Jr. A. C. Peirce, Jr. R. E. Rhea L. T. Smith S. M. Smith J. G. Taylor T. H. Welch M. Alexander L. Ames B. A. Baker A. C. Bell D. Clarke R. Z. Colli ngs A. J. Goodwin MEMBERS, 1934 R. E. Hobart J. H. Hault N. McClave H. R. Mellina C. J. Moynihan J. A. Murray W. Newell E. G Pearson J. L. Rae P. K. Sellan A. Stowell 385 tHf EScfTO y: r rr rrrr i rrrrrrrrrt r rrrrrrrr rr r rr r rrh-frrrr rr r rrrr rr rrrr 0cZAZ2E2r t T - zf m fr J ' Sjul B dg ■i iii-J SB P . ' m-Jb zZmMtmM ' W - Zi WttmM f •j J 4} lBwrTfl L • ■ i( Sb 1 Iflalifl-liily 7 fe Hotchkiss School Qlub OFFICERS Nelson P. Rose, ' 31 President C. R. Parker, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President T. Nichol, Jr., ' 33 Secretary C. L. Fleming E. L. Froment J. P. Gaillard E. E. George D. Gilpatrick MEMBERS, 1931 T. E. Greeff T. Halladay B. Hereford D. C. Knowlton P. J. Lathrop I. L. Lee, Jr. W. Reinmund N. P. Rose E. P. Stevens A. Uihi.ein H. J. Cochran S. Cochran, Jr. F. G. Duncan D. G. Foster L. Hedstrom F. S. McIlhenny MEMBERS, 1932 C. R. Parker, Jr. J. L. Roberston J. C. Schenck W. SCHOELLKOPF F. H. Scott, Jr. J. N. Sherwin W. H. Snyder, Jr. J. C. Van Cleaf T. R. Wagner H. N. White, Jr. A. G. Agnew H. W. Beardsley E. L. Bigelow G. J. Brady J. A. Brooks R. W. Chamberlain H. B. Crouse, Jr. W. L. Crow MEMBERS, 1933 C. J. Harrington J. W. Johnson, Jr. A. O. Locke R. A. Moffett DuB. S. Morris, Jr. T. Nichol, Jr. W. Pell, Jr. A. Rode, Jr. B. W. Smith W. Speer W. F. Torrey L. A. Clarke H. E. Connor J. Elting C. Gardner G. W. Gillis G. W. GUERRINI J. Hall MEMBERS, 1934 A. C. Hutcheson S. B. Joost A. F. Kammer J. W. Lewis J. N. Lord W. L. Phillips R. H. Poole C. E. G. Reeves F. M. Sibley R. D. Wallace B.H. Whiting 386 tvgTT RtNc fcgv frrrrrr Srr Jrr rrrr rr r r rrrrrr rr r r 2 B£Ai2I3f K ent School Qlab OFFICERS R. L. Colmore, ' 31 . . . . President R. K. Ritchie, ' 34 ... . Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 R. Burkham, Jr. R. L. Colmore C. W. Farnum R. J. Kinney R. D. Kreitler R. T. Miller, III C. H. Moore C. E. A. Mui.daur L. E. Oakley R. S. Oakley J. O. Pease R. H. Sayre G. H. Shields, III V. S. Whitbeck G. F. Whitney MEMBERS, 1932 S. Bricht M. G. Clark M. A. Edey A. D. Hall H. W. Handsfeld F.J. Humphrey, Jr. H. M. Kennedy P. S. Paine C. E. Halsey O. Kniffen C. C. Alden T. Bates W. D. Hawkins C. E. Haydock M. H. Miller D. S. T. Hinman J. L. Johnston R. W. Kennedy MEMBERS, M. H. Moore 1933 MEMBERS, 1934 R. Kniffen H. C. Mial W. Plait A. Q. Keasby E. L. Rhett R. K. Ritchie J. Stevens J. F. Symington H. W. Thompson T. H. Trimble L. W. Tiers W. H. Turner C. Van Nesse 387 gg TRINCET Og rrrrrrrr r rrflgjrr rrtrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr rrTJJTrr rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r ' Ji|L r r rrrrrrrrrr 1 r rc-A-a ggg :j • • ' ST 1 iii ii - wJKL ' ' j£ jQake Jorest Academy Qlub OFFICERS L. E. Rosenbaum, ' 32 President A. G. Van Schaick, ' 32 Vice-President B. S. Larkin, ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBER, 1931 J. P. Nash MEMBERS, 1932 B. S. Larkin L. E. Rosenbaum A. G. Van Schaick MEMBERS, 1933 F. B. Gunther W. J. Johnson MEMBERS, 1934 J. F. Bales M. E. Draudt C. A. Krafft J. T. Smithies 388 tgp RINC iIg y: gy c A ggg jQoomis School Qlub J. Byles, ' 31 A. CORT J. S. DuBois OFFICERS President J. Hawes, Jr., ' 32 J. B. Bogart, ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 E. N. Buell J. Byles R. W. Hedges MEMBERS, 1932 J. Hawes, Jr. J. M. Roeser j. A. Kerr J. W. Robinson MEMBERS, 1933 W. S. Baker D. G. Hoyer R. E. Rearick, Jr. MEMBERS, 1934 E. G. Anderson, Jr. J. B. Bogart Vice-President H. J. Whitson R. A. Wilbur, Jr 389 rX R-lNCE fO gg TC-A- Rg gr W. Keith, ' 31 H. P. A. G. Abbott F. W. Armstronc F. F. Austin L. C. Beck W. E. Blackburn J. de C. Blondel G. E. Bond J. W. Brittingham J. R. Carnochan A. G. Cotton R. A. Baker E. H. Bennett E.J. Berry R. A. Bessire C. D. Brooks G. W. Brown J. M. Cotton O. A. Abbot J. P. Airey L. B. Amerman H. A.Blake H. A. Blyth A. L. Brown C.T.Brown V. R. Browning C. E. Brush A. L. Burrows J. P. Carter W. L. Asmuth J. F. Barbour J. H. Barker G. S. Bennett J. C. Botts D. M. Bramlette S. Brown H. A.Burns D. A. Chambers B. K. Conover J awrenceville School Qlub OFFICERS President E. H. Fennell, ' 32 . J. H. Van Dyck, III, ' 34 Secretary Vice-President MEMBERS, 1931 L. B. Curtis G. B. Douglas E. Duncan R. Evans W. M. Hager F. G Hamrick S. P. Harbison C. L. Havey N. T. Humphrey J. R. Hurley I. W. R. Creighton R. A. Dana G. V. Davis T. L. Delafield H. H. Derby E. H. Fennell D. P. Cheatam P. G. Cheatham W. K. Coad H. G. Crockett J. G. Dill B. H. Etherington R. C. Ficke C. C. Fitz morris F. W. Godfrey H. E. Gooch J. H. Gordon F. H. CONSTANTINE C. H. Craig L. Cunnincham W. B. Dashiell A. T. Dear, Jr. C ElSENHART L. Eisner M. G. Enclert H. Escher F. Fellows R. B. Hutchinson A. H. Jackman W. A. Jameson, Jr. A. A. Jones T. L. Reese V. Keith D. B. Kenyon M. A. Knight H. H. Lea D. R. Livingston D. B. Loveman J. E. McCarthy C. R. McInnis J. Maltman J. H. Mann F. M. Matthews M. D. Millard A. M. Mitchell MEMBERS, 1932 G. Freylinghuysen S. G. Hall R. C. Havens J. C. Heinlein J. R. Holmes R. T. Hopper MEMBERS, G. G. Green C. P. Hamilton J. E. Hendry P. Herrmann W. A. Hoffman G. S. Humphrey A. J. Irwin G. S. Johnston J. Kerney J. F. Kraft F. LaMotte MEMBERS, M. Fraser W. E. Garrison F. H. Harbison R. D. Hili.iard S. P. Johnson F. M. Kafer A. W. Keer N. L. Kennedy J. E. Kerney W. D. Houser H. B. Huntington R. W. Knapp R. H. Kuhlke R. M. Love A. S. Maltman 1933 C. M. Langham H. P. Lindabury S. C. LOVELAND S. Morris R. M. Morriss R. E. Nail T. J. Naughton D. H. Nevitt H. J. Oechler W. L. Parker J. R. Perkins 1934 M. Lee B. G. Lewis P. H. Maresi C. C. McClaine J. S. MCCULLOCH J. W. Miller J. B. Oakes W. Pahl F. R. Peterson J. M. Poe F. M. Mitchell O. A. Mockridce J. P. Nash S. Nesbitt S. Perkins D. R. Post L. Priddy C. N. Reeves E. Rocerson H. K. Moffitt G. S. Murphy E. M. Norris W. C. O ' Neil P. Richards P. E. Robinson F. V. Pindar W. F. Powell H. B. Richardson J. N. Riley T. M. Robertson H. J. Schonblom F. SCHAKELFORD H. C. C. Shute A. A. Smith P. W. Smith F. N. Spencer E. W. RlEBE W. A. Ringler, Jr. G. H. Rundle W. L. Sanders T. Shiohara H. A. Smith J. K. Stallman D. F. Stewart W. P. Sullivan J. J. Swigart H. L. Roosevelt F. A. Seiberling C. W. Smith G. K. Smith A. G. Spinks E. G. Sweeney L. C. Ward J. D. Ware R. V. Whitehead D. B. Wicoff P. Schwed J. H. Semans J. F. Skinner M. Sullivan W. Z. Taylor J. A. Turner S. W. Wilcox R. E. Stevens A. P. Terrell E. N. Todd L. G. Walker R. S. Waterhouse R. A. West E. E. Wetherbee G. White A. C. Whitfield C. R. Woodburn G. W. Young M. R. T. Takami W. L. Taylor M. Terashima W. V. A. Thomas J. H. VanDyke, III E. R. Von Starck J. R. Warner G. H. Wegener E. P. Wolferman W. Woods 391 tvEEMNCESg : g Tc-A T[ gg A. B. Gross T. P. Henry R. M. Kime G. BUERMANN A. B. Carrick S. J. Goodman J. M. Allen C. C. Cole The Newark Academy Qlub OFFICERS O. A. Mockridge, ' 31 President G. Buermann, ' 32 Vice-President J. M. Allen, ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 F. P. Mackinney O. A. Mockridge H. F. O ' Brien R. B. Updecraff M. Meyer, Jr. J. D. Moffat O. M. Thurman E. E. Weed MEMBERS, 1932 J. B. De Graw W. D. Freeston J. B. Harrincton R. W. Lenthauser J.T.Edgar W.L.Hall P. A. Hemming J. H. Lippincott MEMBERS, 1933 J. A. Goodsell D. McW. Ludlum W. C. Russell C. J. Tiensch A. Kalisch K. D. Read J. E. Rutherford W. R. Van Lievv MEMBERS, 1934 C. A. Coppinger R. M. Grummon R. K. Holton A. M. Lowenstein F. M. Weiss C. B. White J. J. Wortendyke J. D. Voorhees C. P. Ward E.May T. J. Wetson 392 gr RlNC FTQ gvciAjiAaSc The (Jchols School Qluh OFFICERS R. SCHNECKEN MEMBERS, 1931 D. B. Crane A. JACOBOWITZ S. C. Nagel MEMBERS, 1932 H. Schafer R. Schneckenburger L. Hedstrom W. Lipp P. MlNTHORNE S. Rodgers C. Stephens MEMBERS, 1933 J. Hopkins MEMBERS, 1934 E. Suor D. Thompson D. Tullis O. AUGSBURGER C. Beeker M. R. Burger B. Conover C. Gaylord J. Thomas J. Palmer 393 tgrj RINC €Tg gVcZAZZQc bawling School Qlub OFFICERS F. S. Graves, ' 31 President M. J. Condon III, ' 32 Vice-President L. S. Haynes, ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 A. N. Dusenburv F. S. Graves MEMBERS, 1932 MEMBERS, 1933 J. G. Chalmers W. M Dickerson R. W. Ryckman K. Chalmers G. R. Meneely M. Shippley M. J. Condon, III R. L. Paddock W. G. Ryckman W. G. Isom A. F. MacLiesh F. B. Wilson MEMBERS, 1934 L. F. Beckers L. S. Haynes T. A. Kerr G. M. Trumbower 394 YggJ ' NCEf Qgp 0EAiS3f Neddie School Qlub OFFICERS C. G. Meeks, Jr., ' 31 President H. Borger, ' 33 Secretary D. P. Morton, ' 32 ... . Vice-President T. C. Homan, ' 34 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1931 Gordon C. Biddi.e William M. Cairns Harold D. Levi Clarence G. Meeks, Jr. Albert Pike, III William F. Poten Charles H. Stevens William D. Thorne Recinald C. Wyatt Paul E. Bird Norman W. Drey Donald C. Forbes Weimer R. Hicks MEMBERS, 1932 Robert A. Moosmann David P. Morton Harry E. Nicholson Ivan A. Reiner Robert S. Rincland Frederick R. Zundel Henry Borger G. S. Casebolt L. D ' Ei.ena Charles Franklin R. E. Duston T. C. Homan MEMBERS, 1933 Charles Hellerson MEMBERS, 1934 S. G. Ivins Charles Kappes A. J. Parker W. C. Viol Carlyle Moore Ovid Rose A. R. Vreeland W. H.Zink,Jr. 395 tgL ? RINCE I Cg g T A- g? T enn. Qharter Qlub OFFICERS F. L. Thompson, III, ' 31 President W. P. Davis, III, ' 31 Vice-President C. T. SlLLOWAY, ' 34 Secretary R. H. Davis, ' 34 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1931 H. A. Carr H. Clifton, Jr. M. B. Cramer W. P. Davis, III G. J. Edwards P. Ehlers W. R. Hearn.Jr. J. P. Remincton, Jr. A. Stengel F. L. Thompson, III MEMBERS, 1932 W. A. Chaffee J. E. Richardson J. H. Rowbotham C. W. L. SUMMERILL C. P. Wallis J. Bishop, VI C. T. Brown MEMBERS, 1933 R. W. HlLLAS T. M. Robertson D. K. Wolverton D. G. Anderson, Jr. MEMBERS, 1934 R. H. Davis E. B. Myers C. T. Silloway 396 tSTSUNCEfgy 0cZAZZE3c D. M. Watt, III, ' 31 ' Phillips zAndover Qlub OFFICERS President R. M. Walker, ' 32 H. S. Edwards, Jr., ' 33 Secretary Vice-President J. S. Casement W. P. Huxley F. F. Carpenter W. K. Chapman B. C. D. Edwards W. S. Calahan W. H. DlNSMORE H. S. Edwards, Jr. J. S. Benwell F.W.Berrien C. J. Cretors C. J. Moron ey H. F. Fisher. Jr. C. Y. Freeman, Jr. C. P. Emerson F. H. Gordon K. L. Gwinn G. Johnston G. T. C. Fry R. W. Hench H. G. Hodges MEMBERS, 1931 S. C. Pullman, II MEMBERS, 1932 C. F. Heath J. Hodgson, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 T. M. Lasater H. L. McWilliams, Jr. T. L. Marsh T. H. Mettler MEMBERS, 1934 J. T. Lambie F. P.Lawrence J. T. Morgan W. H. Stafford, Jr. H. S. Matthews R. E. Putney W. B. Morrow H. H. Newfield J. S. Redpath G. R. Stearns B. Morrison J. D. Morrow E. M. Murray W. F. Thomas D. M. Watt, III J. B. Reed F. C. SCHROEDER R. M. Walker F. F. Story F. Townsend D. P. Wilson J. N. Schench W. E. Schroeder J. C. Willey 397 gg TRINC ETQv E£iAZ2E3f VV. C. Ball k. m. boffey S.Burke H. M. Canby, Jr. F. M. Cook, Jr. R. E. Baxter E. P. Bernuth H. A. Breed D. S.Buck W. A. Cahn, Jr. H. Carter, Jr. H. C. Armstrong, Jr. J. H. Bairchenal C. M. Bernuth W. R. BONTHRON F. O. Bragdon R. C. Brooks Phillips Exeter Qlub OFFICERS E. T. Bradley, ' 31 President G. G. Morse, ' 32 Vice-President A. S. Lane, ' 34 Secretary C. M. Council A. B. Ducan W. B. Dunn T. C. GOLDSBOROUGH W. W. GOLDSBOROUGH V. L. Collins, Jr. J. D. Colson C B. Doak,Jr. B. H. Garrison, Jr. W. E. Gillespie W. Buckland F. T. Buckner D. B. Canby H. H. Clement J. M. C Collins H. R. Connick B. C. Alder W. J. Baker E. T. Bradley F. W. Chase G. M. Clarke, Jr. C. Coffin J. P. Darling F. Foote W. H. Franklin MEMBERS, 1932 E. T. Goodridge J. F. Hollembeck MEMBERS, 1931 A. G. Geming W. H. Gillespie W. N. Gorhan S. Helm W. Herry J. W. Kaine V. D. Miller, Jr. W. H. Miller A. S. Mills J. K. Gordon, Jr. C. A. Hardy, Jr. A. F. Hewitt D. W. Hollembeck J. W. P. Huntington W. C. Kirk, Jr. E. H. V. Lambers O.B.Marx, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 R. C. Gordon B. K. Goree R. H. Harris, Jr. W. DeF. Johnston B. W. Kittredge H. L. T. Koren R. W. Leopold C. P. Osgood R. Roall A. S. Rodgers, II MEMBERS, 1934 W. V. Cook W. H. Corbin W. R. Cosby W. S. Eisenhart, Jr. T. Evans T. Fletcher R. L. Foshay E. M. Gemmil R. N. Gilmore L. C. Gordon F. E. Knowler A. S. Lane G. G. Morse J. M. Ranck J. L. Shanley J. H. Smith, Jr. C. W. Summerill W. A. Rossiter R. SCHOEN FIELD, II B. Sloan H. G. Smith S. Snedecker H. K. Stokes B. G. McCloud D. H. McIlvane H. L. Miller W. R. Reitzell R. I. Ricer L. M. Schoch H. C. Pitney W. M. Poole G. V. Powell W. E. Richardson J. E. Roberts D. G. Ross T. C. Snively G. C. Stagg, Jr. A. W. Staub, Jr. H. T. Tasker C. S. Truitt R. W. Winston C. W. Young A. R. Taylor T. Talcott J. R. Tencher F. L. Van Lennep G. T. Waldref W. C. Young L. H. Seton C. Thompson A.B.Walsh W. M. Wegner D. H. Wilder E. B. Williams W. D. Wright 398 tvgjO TOS glcZAiZE25 ingry School Qlub OFFICERS W. J. English, ' 31 President H.R. Morss, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President N. E. English, ' 34 Secretary E. S. ArwATER B. D. Campbell MEMBERS, 1931 H. K. England, Jr. W. J. English F. Gilpin J. B. Wherry S. A. Farrand MEMBERS, 1932 H. R. Morss, Jr. P. E. Bird MEMBERS, 1933 R. T. Wallace A. M. Whitlock J. D. Stout L. I. Whitlock J. N. Durrie N. E. English MEMBERS, 1934 W. G. Lewis H. J. Lynch J. B. McGiffert J. E. Seibert 399 tS£lElNcito g[ Tc-A if 3 r Toly Trep Qlub OFFICERS R. D. HlGGINS, ' 31 President E. C. Ihrig, ' 32 Vice-President J. E. Wadsworth, ' 34 Secretary R. A. Hall J. H. Hammett MEMBERS, 1931 R. D. HlGGINS C. E. Lane S. H. Lewis C. N. Zei.lner E. J. Boyd, Jr. W. H. Gahagan W. A. Grier E. C. Ihrig MEMBERS, 1932 G. P. Moffat, Jr. E. M. Reed, Jr. G. SCHLEGEL D. E. Walzer F. S. Wemyss C. P. Carhart J. W. Harman, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 J. F.James, Jr. H. W. Kramer T. C. Merion R. L. Foshay A. H. Howell A. S. Kirkman MEMBERS, 1934 O. A. Kirkland H. W. Megraw R. H. Poole J. E. Wadsworth 400 tSEEBINCETO u A £Eg ■ m T omfret School Qlub lillP ' ,:-■ J- S - Horne, ' 31 President D. A. Horne, ' 33 Vice-President J. R. Searles, Jr., ' 34- Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 D. I. Edwards, Jr. L. Elliman,Jr. L. F. Hallett, Jr. J. S. Horne K. H. Ridge way H. F. Shoemaker MEMBERS, 1932 W. K. McCampbell E D. Pearce,Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 M. Geer, Jr. D. A. Horne J. L. Kemmerer, Jr. R. C. Raetze D. B. Richardson F. W. Roebling MEMBERS, 1934 B.N.Dunn M. S. Kemmerer P. Livingston, Jr. C. M. Reed, VI J. R. Seari.es, Jr. M. Wing, Jr. J. C. Hodges A. Young 401 t OBlNQEfOV S£iAiMSc ' Princeton Prep Qlub OFFICERS G. A. McWlLLIAMS, ' 31 President H. L. Keats, Jr., ' 31 Vice-President R. E. McCabe, ' 34 Secretary G. D. Gibson E. N. Indahl H. L. Keats, Jr. K. H. Kreder MEMBERS, 1931 G. A. McWiixiams J. Ordway O. F. Riley C. A. SCHOFIELD G. Schwartzenbach W. D. Ward D. L. Austin F. D. Blackistone F. R. Decker H. S. Dunning C. H. Findley MEMBERS, 1932 J. T. Galey R. F. Garretson, Jr. F. J. Hague, Jr. W. A. Jackson W. B. McCoy J. E. Morehouse F. B. Vanderbeck J. H. Altizer H. S. Bignall A. J. Cate W. C. Delaney MEMBERS, 1933 A. W. Flanagan R. F. Hack E. R. Hack W. N. Lock wood E. E. Seiffert H. Tipper, Jr. W. E. Whitton E. E. Bachran S. J. Beveridge R. L. Clarke J. F. Coburn, Jr. I. B. Delcher A. T. Drury J. L. Dunning MEMBERS, 1934 H. E. Engler J. J. Gill N. S. Goldsmith B. G. Hammil R. B. Kirkpatrick R. E. McCabe O. W. Miller W. Onchen, Jr. H. M. Pierce, Jr. H. N. Russell 402 tvAtjnnHOCEo gEZAHE3? MEMBERS, 1932 R. G. Cooper R. W. Crutchfield R. F. Arrott E. K. Davison H. P. Dawson W. H. Evans R. D. Fulton J.J.Hart W. M. Parkin, Jr. J. B. Reed MEMBERS, 1933 S. C. Johnston L. W. Knapp Shady Side Academy Qlub OFFICERS President H. Cooper, ' 31 . . W. M. Parkin, Jr., ' 32 Vice-President G. L. Follansbee, ' 34 Secretary- Treasurer MEMBERS, 1931 T. W. Cungerman H. Cooper T. B. Dickson R. F. Evans J. K. Foster J. G. Robinson J.B.Haines H.T.Kerr, Jr. C. Miller, Jr. J. McDonough C. R. Murray W. S. Rial, Jr. J. R. Speer H. E. Marks, Jr. J. W. Williamson R. McF. Martin W. H. Arthur N. VanV. Coyle J. S. Crawford G. B. Flaccus G. L. Follansbee MEMBERS, 1934 W. W. Foster E.B.Hill, Jr. A. H. Joseph M. G. Kirk W. McF. Martin C. K. Myers W.H.Rea,II F. G. RlCHTER C. G. Sipe A. K. Solomon F. H. Trimble 403 tffijO NCEfov ESAHE f W. W. Barber E. B. Caulkins St. zJftCark ' s School Qlub OFFICERS R.M.Parker, II, ' 31 President T. F. Palmer, ' 32 . Vice-President R. T. Henshaw, ' 34 Secretary J. B. AVERILL T. P. Cook MEMBERS, 1931 E. R. Duer.Jr. MEMBERS, 1932 A. Eno R. M. Parker, II J. G. Jackson, Jr. A. W. Armour P. H. B. CUMMING MEMBERS, 1933 A. B. Hancock R. J. Harris MEMBERS, 1934 R. T. Henshaw L. P. Warriner S. LORILLARD T. F. Palmer E. L. Marston T. Robbins 404 tY OB!NCEfO 5SSAjiS3c St. Paul Academy Qlub OFFICERS H. D. Klein, ' 31 President C. W. Mullery, ' 32 Vice-President C. N. McCloud, Jr., ' 34 Secretary MEMBERS, 1931 H. D. Klein MEMBERS, 1932 C. W. Mullery W. O. Paterson W. O. Stout, Jr. MEMBERS, 1933 C. R. Gordon W. L. Mayo A. R. Whitman MEMBERS, 1934 D. S. Kimball C N. McCloud, Jr. F.G.Okie, Jr. 405 gg TRINC gTQ r rrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrn _ rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrrtr - s ' f ■ 1 fEEZAiggjf George F. Burt, Jr., ' 31 P. Benson E. J. Berwind G. F. Burt, Jr. G. Barbour W. B. Blackwell A. R. Breed E. C. Cheston A. L. Alexander C. Banko W. G. Foulke E. D. Johnson St. haul ' s School Qlub OFFICERS .... President C. Wister, ' 32 . . . F. L. Van Dusen, ' 34 . Secretary-Treasurer Vice-President J. N. Crary A. M. Crocker L. Elliman G. V. Coe D.T.Dana, Jr. M. M. Dickinson F. F. Hart W. Janney A. Keidel D. McD. LeBreton, Jr. R. Morgan MEMBERS, 1931 W. W. Fleming H. C. Groome H. F. Langenburc R. C. Livingston T. Lowry H. B. Maguire S. H. Iams, Jr. J. G. Kellocg L. Lea, Jr. W. H. Lippincott MEMBERS, 1932 M. E. McAlpin A. G. Murray, Jr. F. B. Poe,Jr. H. J. Potts MEMBERS, 1933 S. M. Kennard G. Lowry M. M. Orr J. S. Reynolds MEMBERS, 1934 W. Pagevsteher B. H. Roberts E. F. RULON-MlLLER H. Rutherfurd G. G. Merrill F. Moss L. S. Sai.tus S. Preston E. L. Ray, Jr. F. C. Reynolds, Jr. A. Roberts O. Root A. Rush H. Smith H. A. Thouron F. L. Van Dusen A. P. Whitehead L. A. Yerkes R. B. T. Roberts J. P. Rutherfurd L. H. Van Dusen, Jr. F. A. West, Jr. F. Wain wright J. Wilsey M. L. Wister J. WORDEN 406 tvCEiUNCCTOA %JA C ' A 6R fi HA A Ml tgT jRINC ETQfr: gg vc A ir g zAlumni Qlubs ALABAMA Princeton Alumni Association of Alabama Leo Bashinsky, ' 13 ... . Secretary c o Bashinsky Cotton Co., Birmingham, Ala. ARKANSAS Princeton Alumni Association of Arkansas Maxwell J. Lyons, ' 19 Secretary 901 N. Spruce St., Little Rock, Ark. CALIFORNIA Princeton Club of Southern California and Nevada Thomas S. Bailee, ' 02 Secretary 600 Calif. Bank Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. Princeton Alumni Association of Northern California and Nevada Reginald H. Foster, ' 21 Secretary 333 Adams St., Oakland, Cal. CAROLINAS Princeton Alumni Association of the Carolinas Frank Green, ' 02 Secretary 304 Selwyn Ave., Charlotte, N. C. COLORADO Rocky Mountain Princeton Club John Pershing, ' 21 ... Secretary 555 Race St., Denver, Col. DELAWARE Princeton Alumni Association of Delaware Howard Duane, ' 24 Secretary Marvel, Morford Ward, duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del. and dissociations DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Princeton Alumni Association of the District of Columbia F. Moran McConihe, ' 26 Secretary 2447 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. FLORIDA Princeton Alumni Association of Jacksonville Sidney L. Moore, ' 04 Secretary Box 167 Jacksonville, Fla. Princeton Club of Miami Gaston Drake, ' 94 Secretary Drake Lumber Co., Miami, Fla. GEORGIA Princeton Alumni Association of Georgia Hugh Richardson, Jr., ' 22 Secretary 160 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. HAWAII Princeton Alumni Association of Hawaii K. B. Barnes, ' 96 Secretary P. O. Box 3380, Honolulu, T. H. IDAHO Princeton Alumni Association of Idaho Walter Barton, ' 24 Secretary 103 Warm Spring Ave., Boise, Idaho ILLINOIS Princeton Club of Chicago George J. Cooke, Jr., ' 22 Secretary 30 N. Green St., Chicago, 111. Princeton Club of Quincy M. F. Carrott, ' 00 Secretary 16-17 Stern Bldg., Quincy, 111. 412 gTJ RftlNCET OgP C A W SC lAlumni Qlubs and ±Associations — (Qontinued) INDIANA Princeton Alumni Association of Indiana John G. Kinghan, ' 25 Secretary Kinghan Co., Indianapolis, Ind. IOWA Princeton Club of Iowa L. F. Jamison, ' 19 Secretary c o T. M. Sinclair Co., Cedar Rapids, Iowa KENTUCKY Princeton Alumni Association of Louisville Newton T. Yager, Jr., ' 22 . . Secretary 1482 Cherokee Rd., Louisville, Ky. LOUISIANA Princeton Club of Louisiana Jean Mason Smith, ' 15 Secretary 4605 Carondelet St., New Orleans, La. MARYLAND Princeton Alumni Association of Maryland Thomas A. Whelan, III, ' 28 Secretary 5504 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. MASSACHUSETTS Princeton Alumni Association of New England L. B. Slocum, ' 21 Secretary 30 State St., Boston, Mass. Princeton Alumni Association of the Berkshires Alexander Simpson, ' 22 Secretary Pittsfield, Mass. MICHIGAN Princeton Club of Michigan Dan P. Caulkins, ' 26 Secretary Guardian Detroit Bank, Detroit, Mich. MINNESOTA Princeton Alumni Association of the Northwest Donald N. Newhall, ' 28 Secretary 519 Marquette Ave., St. Paul, Minn. MISSOURI Princeton Club of Kansas City Irving O. Hockiday, ' 21 Secretary 3821 Warwick Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Princeton Club of St. Louis Austin P. Leland, ' 28 Secretary 18 Windermere PI., St. Louis, Mo. NEBRASKA Princeton Alumni Association of Nebraska Herbert M. Rogers, ' 93 Secretary 1405 Harney St., Omaha, Neb. NEW JERSEY Princeton Alumni Association of Northern New Jersey F. S. Grandin, ' 21 Secretary 77 Park PI., Englewood, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Hudson County, New Jersey Arthur Gardner, ' 23 Secretary 122 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Lackawanna Theodore W. Sill, ' 11 Secretary 78 Essex Rd., Summit, N. J. 413 tgE X RINC i To rEAiSSc Alumni Qlubs and Associations — (Continued) Princeton Alumni Association of Montclair and Vicinity Howard N. Deyo, ' 20 Secretary 64 Water St., New York, N. Y. Princeton Club of Newark Winthrop C. Lenz, ' 28 Secretary 612 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges M. R. Everett, Jr., ' 24 Secretary 312 N. Arlington, Ave., East Orange, N. J. Princeton Alumni Association of Paterson, Passaic, and Ridgewood S. William Walstrum, ' 26 Secretary 243 W. Ridgewood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Princeton Club of Plainfield Felix O. Janke, ' 18 Secretary 203 W. 9th St., Plainfield, N. J. Princeton Club of Trenton Howard L. Hughes, ' 10 Secretary Free Public Library, Trenton, N. J. NEW YORK P rinceton Alumni Association of Northern New York Harrison Bullock, ' 17 Secretary 74 Grant St., Cohoes, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Long Island C. D. Robert, ' 04 Secretary 36 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Princeton Club of Buffalo Norton Forgie, ' 25 Secretary 1038 Amherst Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Princeton Club of New York Laurence G. Payson, ' 16 Secretary Palisade Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Rochester and Vicinity Alexander Russell, ' 04 Secretary 440 Powers Bldg., Rochester, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Southern New York Clifford S. Reuter, Jr., ' 25 Secretary 44 Hamilton Rd., Searsdale, N. Y. Princeton Alumni Association of Central New York Alexander D. Jenney, ' 27 Secretary 5 Brattle Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. OHIO Princeton Alumni Association of Cincinnati Oliver S. Baily, ' 25 Secretary 1804 First National Bank Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Northern Ohio Rudolph A. Cannon, ' 20 Secretary 11350 Hessler Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Columbus and Vicinity Richard F. Sater, ' 26 Secretary c o Vorys, Sater, Seymour Pease, 52 E. Gay St., Columbus, Ohio Princeton Alumni Association of Youngstown R. L. Henderson, ' 22 Secretary 1894 Cordova Ave., Youngstown, Ohio OREGON Princeton Alumni Association of Oregon P. L. Jackson, ' 15 Secretary Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore. PENNSYLVANIA Princeton Alumni Association of Eastern Pennsylvania Joseph S. Younc, ' 19 Secretary Lafayette Meixsell Sts., Easton, Pa. 414 tYEBUNCEfg g TC A R ggr zAlumni Qlubs and Associations — (Qontinued) Princeton Alumni Association of Erie Spencer A. Sisson, ' 12 Secretary 409 Marine Bank Bldg., Erie, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Central Pennsylvania Henry Fink, ' 21 . . Secretary 2419 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. Princeton Club of Philadelphia Charles C. Townsend, ' 24 Secretary Provident Trust Bldg., 17th Chestnut Sis., Philadelphia, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Western Pennsylvania Laurence C. Woods, Jr Secretary 421 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Princeton Alumni Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania Murray S. Scureman, ' 21 Secretary 80-82 S. Pennsylvania Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. TENNESSEE Princeton Alumni Association of Tennessee Walter H. Watkins, ' 00 Secretary Hamilton National Bank Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. Princeton Alumni Association of Memphis Benjamin Goodman, Jr., ' 24 Secretary c o Wilson, Gates Armstrong, Memphis, Tenn. Nashville Middle Tennessee Association Evving E. Keith, ' 27 Secretary Harding Rd., Nashville, Tenn. TEXAS Princeton Club of Dallas James C. Oehler, ' 18 Secretary 5318 McCommas St., Dallas, Texas The Border Association Miers C. Johnson, ' 14 Secretary Burton Lingo Company, El Paso, Texas Princeton Alumni Association of Houston Ben A. Calhoun, ' 13 Secretary Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas Princeton Alumni Association of Texas T. J. Hart, ' 24 Secretary 814 Gunther Bldg., San Antonio, Texas UTAH Princeton Alumni Association of Salt Lake City George A. Critchlow, ' 11 Secretary Critchlow Critchlow, Continental Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah VIRGINIA Princeton Alumni Association of Virginia James H Devereux, Jr., ' 15 Secretary 210 Royster Bldg., Norfolk, Va. WASHINGTON Princeton Club of Washington George McIlwain, ' 22 Secretary 1205 3. Pike St., Seattle, Wash. FOREIGN  Princeton Club of Australia Thomas H. Robinson, ' 14 Secretary c o Consulate General, Melbourne, Australia Princeton Club of the Himalayas Walter D Griffiths, ' 19 Secretary Presbyterian Mission, Utah, U. P. India Princeton Alumni Association of Japan Princeton Club of Paris Norman Armour, ' 09 Secretary American Embassy, Paris, France Princeton Alumni Association of Shanghai W. C. Belknap, ' 10 Secretary British Cigarette Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China Princeton Alumni Association of Syria 415 gfj folNCg TQjy rrrrrffi f rrrrrrrrr r rrrrrrrr f f rrrrr rrrr Srr rrrrrf rrrr rrrrrrrr 42 gEZAiUHj Rational zAlumni Association of ' Princeton University LIFE MEMBERS ' 81 Francis G. Landen 60 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 84 Ambrose G. Todd 165 Broadway, New York, N.Y. HONORARY REPRESENTATIVES ' 69 George K. Ward 19 Holt St., Bronxville, N.Y. 70 George B. Kinkead Lexington, Ky. 73 Joseph H. Dulles Princeton, N.J. ' 81 Arthur H. Scribner 597 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. ' 82 Charles W. Parker Morristown, N.J. ' 83 Henry G. Bryant 2432 Fidelity Trust Bldg., Phila., Pa. ' 86 Henry W. Jessup 27 Cedar Street, New York, N.Y. ' 88 Benjamin van D Hedges, 1225 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N.J. ' 89 John R. Todd 420 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 91 Cornelius R. Agnew 16 William St., New York, N.Y. ' 92 V. Lansing Collins Princeton, N.J. ' 94 George C. Wintringer Princeton, N.J. ' 99 Thornwell Jacobs (G.S.) .. .Oglethorpe Univ., Atlanta, Ga. ' 00 Frederick P. King 160 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 09 S. Butler Murray 10 Westcott Road, Princeton, N.J. ' 94 Gabriel S. Brown.. Alpha Portland Cement Co., Easton, Pa. CLASS REPRESENTATIVES ' 96 Charles Brown Princeton, N.J. ' 97 Percy H. Williams 429 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 98 Frederic L. Johnson Prudential Bldg., Newark, N.J. ' 99 George K. Reed 120 Wall St., New York, N.Y. ' 00 Thomas F. Wilcox 40 Wall St., New York, N.Y. ' 01 George W. Yuengling 70 Fulton St., New York, N.Y. ' 02 Herbert McCord 101 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 03 William G. Barr 24 Broad St., New York, N.Y. ' 04 Francis G. McKelvy, Alpha Portland Cement Co., Easton, Pa. ' 06 F. Ray Howe 129 E. 69th St., New York, N.Y. ' 07 Charles T. Larzelere 320 De Kalb St., Norristown, Pa. ' 08 William R. Neff 88 Worth St., New York, N.Y. ' 09 Morton H. Fry 5 Nassau St., New York, N.Y. ' 10 Theodore M. Tonnele 20 Pine St., New York, N.Y. ' 11 Theodore W. Sill 52 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 12 Frank D. Halsey, Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. ' 13 Reuben J. Ross 63 Wall St., New York, N.Y. ' 14 John Colt 162 Mercer St., Princeton, N.J. ' 15 John D. Sullivan 140 Nassau St., New York, N.Y. ' 16 Edward L. Shea, Tidewater Oil Co., 11 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 17 Lewis N. Lukens 132 S. 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 18 Van R. Halsey 27 William St., New York, N.Y. ' 19 Stephen W. Waterbury 63 Wall St., New York, N.Y. ' 20 C. Fred Buechner, Jr.. 180 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 21 Henry C. Irons 70 E. 77th St., New York, N.Y. ' 22 Everett N. Case 120 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 23 G. F. Havell, The Forum, 441 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 24 Alexander Leitch Nassau Hall, Princeton, N.J. ' 25 John K. Jenney 9162 duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del. ' 26 Sayre MacLeod, Jr Prudential Ins. Co., Newark, N.J. ' 27 H. Langedon Bell, c o Lehn Fink Co., 683 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 28 Joseph C. Rennard, Air Reduction Co., 2236 S. Lumber St., Chicago, 111. ' 29 J. F. Lawrence, Scudder, Stevens Clark, 111 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 30 Curtis B. Brooks 700 Government St., Mobile, Ala. 416 tgi_EBIN£ilQ rrrrrrr rf rrrrrrr r rrrrrr t r 4J frgT A ' T Tftggr CAQational zAlumni Association of T ' rinceton University — (Qonfd) ASSOCIATION REPRESENTATIVES Alabama — John C. Henley, Jr., ' 02, Birmingham Pub. Co., Birmingham, Ala. Arkansas — Andrew H. Scott, ' 08, 1510 Broadway, Little Rock, Ark. Buffalo — Norton S. Forgie, ' 25, 259 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Cedar Rapids — Archer C. Sinclair, ' 98. Thornelea, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Central New York — Weir Stewart, ' 15, 17 Grover St., Auburn, N.Y. Central Pennsylvania— Francis J. Hall, ' 01, Commonwealth Trust Co., Harrisburg, Pa. Chicago— James H. Douglas, Jr., ' 20, Field, Glore Co., 120 Adams St., Chicago, III. John C. Van Dyke, ' 10, Van Dyke Knitting Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Cincinnati — Loren G. Gatch, ' 13, Union Central lildg., Cincinnati, Ohio. Columbus — Meldrum Gray, ' 96, 20 S. 3rd St., Columbus, Ohio. Dallas — Alfred O. Anderson, ' 97, Dallas Dispatch, Dallas, Texas. Delaware — Jasper E. Crane, ' 01, duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Dei. Eastern Pennsylvania — G. Howard Bright, ' 94, 8th and Elm Sts., Read- ing, Pa. Engineering Assn. — Kenneth H. Condit, ' 13, 1st National Bank Bldg., Princeton, N.J. Erie— Frank H. Payne, ' 91. Metric Metal Co., Erie, Pa. Georgia — Robert H. Jones, ' 06, 809 Citizens and Southern Trust Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Hawaii — John P. Erdman, ' 96, Honolulu, T.H. Houston — Ben A. Calhoun, ' 13, 503 Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas. Idaho — P. B. Carter, ' 05, 204 McCarty Bldg., Boise, Idaho. Indiana — Fred G. Appel, ' 07, 4124 N. Penn St., Indianapolis, Ind. Jacksonville — James R. Stockton, Jr., ' 16, Laura and Duval Sts., Jack- sonville, Fla. Jersey City — Joseph A. Dear, ' 93, Jersey Journal, Jersey City, N.J. Kansas City — Bevis Longstreth, ' 15, 75th St., West of Belinder Rd., Route 1, Kansas City, Mo. Lackawanna— Edward F. deSelding. ' 14, 8 Bridge St., New York, N.Y. Long Island — C. D. Robert, ' 04, 36 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Los Angeles — S. Wells Morris, ' 13, 700 Roosevelt Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. Louisiana — Lewis H. Stanton, ' 81, 601 Hibernia Bank Bldg., New Or- leans, La. Louisville— Isaac Hilliard, ' 02, 130 S. 5th St., Louisville, Ky. Maryland— John J. Hurst, ' 95, 413 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Memphis — Donelson M. Lake, ' 16, 630 Bk. Commerce Bldg., Memphis, Tenn. ' 95, 524 Omaha Natl. Bank Bldg., Omaha, Michigan — Emory L. Ford, ' 96, 1622 Ford Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Montclair — Charles L. Bowman, ' 12, c o Standard Oil Co., 26 Broad- way, New York, N.Y. Nashville — Frederic Leake, ' 08, 1100 American Trust Bldg., Nashville, Tenn. Nebraska — Arthur R. Wells, Neb. Newark— E. G. Wherry, ' 93, 323 Clinton Ave.. Newark, N. J. New England — Frederick Winant, Jr.. ' 15, 40 Central St., Boston, Mass. J. Edson Andrews, ' 14, 216 Lincoln St., Boston, Mass. D. W. Tibbott, ' 17, 17 Tarleton Rd., Newton Centre, Mass. Lorimer B. Slocum, ' 21, c o N. W. Ayer Son, 30 State St., Boston, Mass. Howard H. Sawyer, ' 12, 2 Perrin Rd., Brookline, Mass. C. C. Darling, ' 10, 152 George St., Providence, R.I. New York— Henry E. Mattison, ' 97, 79 Wall St., New York, N.Y. Northern California — Robert W. Forsyth, ' 08, 206 Sansome St., San Francisco, Calif. Northern New Jersey — Clarence D. Kerr, ' 01, 5 Nassau St., New York, N.Y. Northern New York — C. E. Newman, ' 96, 258 State St., Albany, N.Y. Northern Ohio — Robert C. Lee, ' 13, The Guardian Bank, Cleveland, O. Northwest — Carl W. Jones, ' 11, Minneapolis Journal, Minneapolis, Minn. Oranges — Wilfred M. Brooks. ' 07, Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N.J. Oregon — Edmund S. Hayes, ' 18, American Bank Bldg., Portland, Ore. Paterson — J. Smylie Kinne, ' 01, 27 Lincoln Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. Philadelphia — George Ross, ' 00, 600 Provident Trust Bldg., Phila., Pa. Pittsburgh — Charles A. McClintock, ' 07, 6425 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Plainfield— J. Whitney Baker, ' 04, 3 S. William St., New York, N.Y. Quincy — M. Finlay Carrott, ' 00, Quincy, 111. Rochester — Harry Otis Poole, ' 93, 339 Powers Bldg., Rochester, N.Y. Rocky Mountain — James H. Pershing, ' 88, Equitable Bldg., Denver, Colo. St. Louis — Robert Burkham, ' 03, 5035 Westminster Place. St. Louis, Mo. Seattle — Chester F. Lee, ' 84. 654 Colman Block, Seattle, Wash. Southern New York — Carlton S. Proctor, ' 15, 342 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. Spokane— B. P. Van Court, Jr., ' 20, 715 E. 20th St., Spokane, Wash. Trenton — Bruce Bedford, ' 99, Luzerne Rubber Co., Trenton, N.J. Virginia — James H. Devereaux, ' 15, 210 Royster Bldg., Norfolk. Va. Washington, D.C.— Courtland Nixon, ' 95, 1518 K St., N.W., Washing- ton, D.C. Youngstown — Fred T. Fruit, ' 08, Sharon, Pa. 417 gT TRINCCf og rrrrrrr rrrrr rrrrr rrrrrrrr r t 33 EElAHgj Rational zAlumni Association of Trinceton University — (Qont ' d) REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE To serve until August, 1931: ' 97 Walter L. Johnson 71 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 12 Sanford B. White 606 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111 ' 14 A. C. M. Azoy, Jr.. .Rogers Peet Co., 842 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 16 Laurence G. Payson Palisade Ave., Riverdale-on-Hudson, N.Y. To serve until August, 1932: ' 04 Edward McP. Armstrong 45 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 06 Charles C. Nicholls, Jr 485 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 10 Marion J. Verdery, c o Quaw and Foley, 30 Broad St., New York, N.Y. To serve until August, 1933: ' 95 Andrew C. Imbrie 40 Worth St., New York, N.Y. ' 03 Albridge C. Smith 150 Montrose Ave., South Orange, N.J. ' 12 Lawrence D. Blair 5618 Northumberland St., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 21 George S. Piper 383 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. To serve until August, 1934: ' 97 Selden Spencer 4425 McPherson St., St. Louis, Mo. ' 03 Charles H. Higgins 101 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 10 James D. Dusenberry 80 W. 4th St., New York, N.Y. ' 16 Thurston J. Davies ' Nassau Hall, Princeton, N.J. To serve until August, 1935: ' 97 Archibald A. Gulick 120 Broadway, New York, N.Y. ' 00 Philip LeBoutillier 372 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 04 George A. Vondermuhll 357 4th Ave., New York, N.Y. ' 13 Alden D. Groff 68 William St., New York, N.Y. ' 23 Alfred S. Dashiell, c o Charles Scribner Sons, 597 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 418 T TRINCET Og- g TC-A- fg ggr Alumni Day FEBRUARY 22, 1930 9:00-5:00 10:00 A.M. 11:00 a.m. Library. Exhibition of rare manuscripts. Alexander Hall. Class of 1876 Memorial Prize De- bate in Politics. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Inspection of the Frick Chemistry Laboratory. Nassau Hall. Meeting of the National Alumni Asso- ciation. Walter L. Johnson, ' 97, President of the Association, presiding. Presentation of the Dr. McP. Armstrong Cup. Presentation of the M. Taylor Pyne Prize. Address by Dr. Livingston Farrand, ' 88, President of Cornell. Address by President Hibben, ' 82. 1:00 a.m. 1:30 p.m. Prospect ' Alumni Wives ' Luncheon with Mrs. Hibben as hostess. Madison Hall. Alumni Luncheon. Presentation of the portrait of John Poe of the Class of 1895. 2:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6:30 P.M. 8:30 p.m. Hobey Baker Rink. Hockey, Yale vs. Princeton. Freshmen. Gymnasium. Fencing, Columbia vs. Princeton. Gymnasium. Wrestling, Navy vs. Princeton. Cleveland Memorial Tower. Carillon Recital. Fred Rocke. Nassau Club. Alumni Buffet Supper. Whig-Clio Hall. Debating, Vassar vs. Princeton. Hobey Baker Rink. Hockey, Yale s. Princeton. 419 tYOD JlNCITO y Tj C A- Rg r? g r lNCE i g r gj R |NCE j rgf S ££g Eag Class of 1930 Curtis W. Brooks, Secretary, (1930-1935) OFFICERS 1929-30 Benjamin van Doren Hedges .... President William Den ham Barfield .... Vice-President William Adair Moore Secretary FORMER OFFICERS FRESHMAN YEAR SOPHOMORE YEAR Benjamin van Doren Hedges .... President William Denham Barfield .... Vice-President William Adair Moore Secretary Benjamin van Doren Hedges .... President William Denham Barfield .... Vice-President William Adair Moore Secretary JUNIOR YEAR Benjamin van Doren Hedges .... President William Denham Barfield .... Vice-President William Adair Moore Secretary 423 tv EiJUNc£F§ tag.. , . - - rrfrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr r rrrrrr rrr rr (a rr rrlEllr r ' •irifrrrr rrr rrr rrr r rrrr rr rr r F gEA2l5f tvEEJUNccfo gVcZAZZE3c AQissau Herald (Committee R. E. Clemson, Chairman A. M. Beitler, II B. C. Connelly R. P. Powell, Jr. D. A. Rash A. K. Shenk W. C. Stevens, Jr. 425 tSOJUNCCTOA rrrrrrrrrrr rr rrrrrrr rr f r rrrrrrrr r f £2 fjSEAISSjc Class of 1930 This list includes only the names of those who received degrees in June 1929. Former members and candidates for degrees in February are listed in the Class of 1930. Edwin Griggs Adams, Jr.. 410 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N.J. Warren Sanford Adams, 2nd c o National Bancservice Co. N.Y.C. Archibald Gillespie Alexander 1 West 72nd Street, N.Y.C. Charles Butler Alexander, Jr. Standard Oil Building, Baltimore, Md. Maitland Alexander, Jr 920 Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Moorhead Alison 123 West 8th Street Bayonne, N.J. Sterling Horn Anders 1412 Euclid Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Ralph Applegate 2540 Quincy Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Willard Atherton 1603 Munsey Ave., Scranton, Pa. Gordon Atkins 1424 Caton Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. George Austen, Jr Rugby Road, University, Va. John DeLong Austen 220 Glen St., Glen Falls, N.Y. Ravmond Bacon 271 Madison Ave., N.Y.C. John William Bambey 42 Bedford Park Blvd., N.Y.C. William Denham Barfield, 1840 Seminole Road, Jacksonville, Fla. Leonard Rutledge Barrett. . .337 Tillon Road, South Orange, N.J. Charles Bickley Baton 326 South Graham St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Leopold Jurgens Bauer, 984 Bushwick Parkway, Brooklyn, N.Y. Norman Frederic Beach... 265 Speedwell Ave., Morristown, N.J. Thomas Graham Beaham. .1025 West 54th St., Kansas City, Mo. Richard Scott Bear 301 South Fifth St., Miamisburg, Ohio Franklin Beardsley Slingerlands, N.Y. Erwin Beck 138 South Fairmont Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Wheeler Bell 925 Sunset St., Scranton, Pa. John Reinhart Bennet 975 Park Ave., N.Y.C. John Connable Bennett 1105 Park Ave., N.Y.C. George Matthews Benson. .. .Gramatan Hotel, Bronxville, N.Y. Russell Weller Benton 175 Woodward Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. NAME ADDRESS Elbert Benton, O ' pt Eynde Borgerhoff, 3051 Coleridge Road, Cleveland, Ohio Robert Wells Bowen. .104 South Oxford Ave., Ventnor City, N.J. John Mason Bradbury. . . .142 Pennsylvania Ave., Louisville, Ky. Denny Brereton 1 Lexington Ave., N.Y.C. Edgar Bricks Crosswicks, N.J. Hobart Louis Brinsmade Hotel Park Central, N.Y.C Norris Bartlett Brisco 404 Orchard St., Cranford, N.J. Curtis Bush Brooks 700 Government St., Mobile, Ala. John Hubert Brooks, Jr 424 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. Edward John Brown 37 Kingsley St., West Orange, N.J. Hiram Staunton Brown, Jr South Drive, Rye, N.Y. Raymond Farrar Brown, Jr... 16 Oakley Place, New Dorp, N.Y. Robert Montgomery Brown, Belcroft, Cheltenham Road, Chestnut Hill, Pa. Harold George Browne 90 8th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Philip Parker Brownrigg. . .88 Ashland Ave., East Orange, N.J. Richard Henry Bruning 233 Stiles St., Elizabeth, N.J. Paul Tulane Bruyere, Jr 5758 Harper Ave., Chicago, 111. William Robert Bryant 16460 East Jefferson, Detroit, Mich. Walter White Burgess 149 Broadway, N.Y.C. Normand Drummond Campbell, 520 Grove Terrace, South Orange, N.J. George Guyton Carkener.3677 Belleview Ave., Kansas City, Mo. James Carnwath, Jr Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa. Russell Carter, Jr 87 Midland Ave., Montclair, N.J. Thomas Thedford Carter Scarborough-on-Hudson, N.Y. William Galbraith Chaffee, 12 Avenida de Belgica, Havana, Cuba Douglas Chamberlain. 42 Chamberlain Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. Wight Nelson Chapin...l2 West Ave., Great Barrington, Mass 426 tHtZEEiNCiXQK rrrrrr - rrh-rirrrrrrr rrrrrrrrr r 42 gV C-A £gg £7 tti ? i9j? — (Continued) Lindsay Harding Christie 1608 Denniston St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Lang Churchill Ravencroft, Phillipsburg, N.J. Rene Ellison Clark 126 Highland Terrace, Pitman, N.J. William Campbell Clark. 100 E. Mosholu Parkway, Bronx, N.Y. Richard Ernst Clemson 6609 Kinsman Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph Edward Coachman, Largo da Carioca, 9, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Bernard Chamberlin Connely Safety Building, Rockport, 111. William Leigh Cook, Jr 5+4 Elm St., Westfield, N.J. James West Cooke Ambler, Pa. John Marcy Coon 42 James St., Kingston, Pa. Robert Cornwell 266 Park St., Upper Montclair, N.J. Henry Andrews Cotton, Jr Station A, Trenton, N.J. John Head Coulter Harrison City Road, Greensburg, Pa. Albert Covolo 722 Jackson St., West New York, N.J. James Rice Cowden 5720 State Line, Kansas City, Mo. Elliott Rodgers Coyle 6608 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederic Eberhardt Craig 262 Oakwood Ave., Orange, N.J. William Ellsworth Crouch, Jr 712 10th Ave., Munhall, Pa. Gerald Malcolm Crowley 51 Lake St., Jersey City, N.J. Tilden Cummings 4900 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. Burton Lee Curry 81 Ridgedale Ave., Madison, N.J. Edward Warren Dakin 1021 Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Winthrop Saltonstall Dakin, 115 South Pleasant St., Amherst, Mass. William Fegely Danehower, 70th and Lakeside Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Albert Harding Davis 27 East 11th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. James Mercer Davis, Jr 98 Water Street, Toms River, N.J. Shelby Cullom Davis 527 Moss Ave., Peoria, 111. Richard Delafield 17 East 79th St., N.Y.C. Henrv Street Dickerman, Jr... 1606 Leland Ave., Springfield, 111. Ernest Rudolph Dikovics. . .123 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N.J. Douglas Eugene Dismukes, Gladstone Hotel, South 11th and Pine St ., Philadelphia, Pa. Donald Melick Ditmars, c o Mr. Arthur Stryker, Yardley River Road, Trenton, N.J. NAME ADDRESS Donald Dodge 425 West Chapin St., Germantown, Pa. Dallas Webb Dort 1025 East Kearsley St., Flint, Mich. Andrew Jackson Duncan, 3rd, 2028 East 88th St., Cleveland, Ohio Ashton Dunn 840 Park Ave., N.Y.C. Jonathan Edwards 803 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N.J. John Henry Eisenhart, Jr 29 East 33rd St., Bayonne, N.J. William Coulter Elliott 317 South 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Heywood Ellis 501 Ivens St., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Howard Elting, Jr 900 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Robert Edwin English 375 Hawthorne Lane, Winnetka, 111. Chalmers DaCosta Ensminger 409 West Market St., York, Pa. Robert Fulton Euwer 224 North Second St., Jeannette, Pa. Richard Orvis Evans 879 West Galena St., Butte, Montana Herbert Henry Faber 2843 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Endsley Perrine Fairman.501 W. Chelten Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Alexander Faris 1611 Twelfth St., Altoona, Pa. Sidney French Farmer 843 Fourth St., Louisville, Ky. Eugene Elbridge Fike Confluence, Pa. George Junkin Finney, 211 Woodlawn Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. John Fisher 4 Colonial Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. William Calderwood Fisher... 302 W. Eleventh St., Tyrone, Pa. Gilbert Wright Fitzhugh 56 Beverly Road, Ridgewood, N.J. John Forney 80 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. William Holmes Forsyth, Jr 142 Hodge Road, Princeton, N.J. Charles Smith Fox 6351 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Douglas Hanley Foxall 2 Greenfield Lane, Rochester, N.Y. Thomas Ellwood Frame, Jr.. .135 S. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. Lloyd Arther Free 3024 Tilden St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Frederick George Frost, Jr., 115 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, N.Y. Nelson Barnes Fry 35 Valley Road, Bronxville, N.Y. Henry Erben Gaillard 25 Sutton Manor New Rochelle, N.Y. Stanley Thomas Garber Oak Ave., Glendale, Ohio 427 gT TRlNCCf o %$3EAiMJ[£e Qlass of 1930 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Donald Edward Garnar...337 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N.J. Ruel Rushforth Garside..259 E. Putnam Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Gordon Styles Gavan Blind Brook Lodge, D-61, Rye, N.Y. Maurice Jean Geraghty. .5930 Franklin Ave., Hollywood, Calif. Robert Cassell Gibson 1367 E. 48th St., Chicago, 111. James Andrus Giddings, Jr 426 Hill St., Reynoldsville, Pa. Robert Henry Gies 609 W. 115th St., New York, N.Y. Elwyn Douglas Gillis 61 Pelham Rd., Rochester, N.Y. Robert Myar Goldenson. .1230 Squirrel Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederick Norman Goodrich 280 Park Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. Walter Lyle Gordon 425 Tacoma Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. John Marshall Gorman 21 Argyle Park, Buffalo, N.Y. Henry Kendall Gosch 204 Goundry St., N. Tonawanda, N.Y. Raymond Francis Gould... 163 Shonnard Terrace, Yonkers, N.Y. Donald Lennen Graham 4502 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. Frederick Wyatt Graves. . . .1743 Harbert Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Talcott Griswold 985 Hill Road, Winnetka, 111. Francis Olmsted Grubbs Walnut Street, Waterford, Pa. Louis Gutmann 1021 Redway Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Stephen Tallman Hagerman..89 Durand Road, Maplewood, N.J. Philip Martin Ham 254 Hope St., Providence, R.I. Carl Ampt Hamann, Jr.. .2780 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Oh ' io John Cowin Hamm 1324 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. A. Douglas Hannah 337 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Hard, Jr 1607— 28th St., Washington, D.C. Joseph Campbell Hawthorne. . .280 W. 4th St., New York, N.Y. William Wallace Haynes Bluff City Pike, Bristol, Tenn. Casper Forman Hegner 1528 Steele St., Denver, Colo. Richard Stephen Hendey.12 Littlejohn Place, White Plains, N.Y. Clement Sullivane Henry, Jr... 14 E. 60th St., New York, N.Y. Ryder Henry, II 14 E. 60th St., New York, N.Y. Francis Prescott Hersey..l34 Abbott Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Charles Schaeffer Hertz 125 N. 8th St., Allentown, Pa. Edwin Donald Hewitt 825 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Sam Ashton Higginbottom, Allahabad Agricultural Institute, Allahabad, India John Marshall Hinchman, II 92 Vendome Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Charles DuBois Hodges 5 Sherman Place, Ridgewood, N.J Inslee A. Hopper, II Box 135, Morristown, N.J. Jack Kenneth Howe 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Wallace Howland 1701 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. David Abraham Huber 544 Main St., Pennsburg, Pa. Karl Patterson Hughes 55 E. Fifth St., Bloomsburg, Pa. John Jones Hurst, Jr. .100 W. University Parkway Baltimore, Md. George Immerwahr 439 Aldine Ave., Chicago, 111. Jervis Spencer Janney Garrison, Md. Alfred Van Horn Jennings 7 S. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. William Louis Johnston. .876 Arlington Place, N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Harold Massie Jones Red Star, Fayette Co., W.Va. Herbert Pendleton Jordan. .. .100 S. Second St., Memphis, Tenn. Paul Gustave Juergens Belden Hotel, Chicago, 111. Worthington Whittredge Katzenbach New Canaan, Conn. Henry Austin Kaye 1050 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Roy Dee Keehn, Jr 2400 Foreman Bldg., Chicago, 111. Edward Isett Kelly 2608 Tenth St., Altoona, Pa. Nathaniel Taylor Kenney, 220 Longwood Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Frank Richardson Kent, Jr Lombardy Apts., Baltimore, Md. Carl Francis Keppler ... 190 Clinton Ave., Newark, N.J. John Harlan Kerr 2095 Lennox Road, Cleveland, Ohio Don Alexander Kilburn..l71 Kilburn Place, South Orange, N.J Edward Somerville Kip Quaker Hill, Conn. Henry Martin Kirk 735 N. Sixth Ave., Steubenville, Ohio Hugh Russell Kirkpatrick 7532 Parkdale Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Herbert Donald Kistler 901 W. Silver St., Butte, Mont. Louis Thornton Klauder, Jr. .435 Camden Ave., Moorestown, N.J. James Philip Koontz Clendenin, W.Va. William Koren, Jr 105 Fitz Randolph Rd., Princeton, N.J. Alan Marcus Kridel 1010 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. Abraham Jerrold Krimsky.263 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N.Y. Benjamin Labaree Lincoln University, Pa. 428 TPJUNCEfo frrr rr r rr ' rrrrrrr rr rr rr rr t r ' ■ 0£lAiZE3? Qlass of 1930 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS James Taliaferro Lane. .. 3730 Richmond St., Jacksonville, Fla. Frederick Theodore Lawrence, Jr. 77 Prospect Hill Ave., Summit, N.J. Arthur Jost Lawson 40 Broad St., Boston, Mass. Caleb Rodney Layton Georgetown, Delaware Rober Collet LeFort Southgate, Bronxville, N.Y. John Lemp 1224 State St., Boise, Idaho Henry Priestley Leverich 154 Orange Rd., Montclair, N.J. Samuel Horace Levine 503 E. 53rd St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Edwin Allan Lightner, Jr Mountain Lakes, N.J. John Ware Lincoln 2509 Irving Ave., S. Minneapolis, Minn. Charles Halsey Lindsley 242 Hearns Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Clarence Edwin Linville 408 Chilton St., Elizabeth, N.J. Samuel Joseph Lloyd. 17 S. Caroline Ave., S. Atlantic City, NJ. Stacy Barcroft Lloyd, Jr Ardmore, Pa. Wm. Munroe Lobenstine 164 E. 72nd St., New York, N.Y. John Evans Love Fort Stanwix Hotel, Johnstown, Pa. David Auld Lowry 2876 Weybridge Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Jaywood Lukens 20 Grove Rd., South Orange, N.J. Donald MacAlister 333 Van Houten St., Paterson, N.J. Alan Mitchell MacCracken Comstock Hill, Norwalk, Conn. David Breakenridge MacNeil, IV, 47 N. Walnut St., East Orange, N.J. Clarence Mangan Malone...,30 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. Paul Maloney Ill N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. James Hilton Maroney 102 Orchard St., Cranford, N.J. Robert Nelson Marshall Fati, Canton, China Henry Mosler Marx 25 Broad St., New York, N.Y. James Monroe Mason, III.... 1320 Niazuma, Birmingham, Ala. Charles Frederick Mattlage 312 Cherry St., Douglaston, N.Y. Frank Joseph Mayer 1040 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. William Samuel McChesney. . .5619 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Marshall Lockhart McCune, 1902 Union Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walsh McDermott 5009 Broadway, New York, N.Y. David Brown McElroy 23 Portland Place, St. Louis, Mo. NAME ADDRESS George Henry McFadden Villa Nova, Pa. William McKinley, Jr 40 Melrose Place, Montclair, N.J. Edwards Chapin McLean 846 S. George St., York, Pa. Gale McLean 2121 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D.C. David McMullin, III 174 Bethlehem Pike, Ambler, Pa. Paul Mulford Mecray, Jr 54 E. Oak Ave., Moorestown, N.J. Clinton Meneely 22 River St., Troy, N.Y. John Alfred Metz, Jr 2800 Espy Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. George Cable Miles Miles City, Mont. Irving Long Miles, Louisville Taxi Transfer Co., 9th and Liberty Sts., Louisville, Ky. Thomas Ward Miles 57 Atlantic St., Carteret, N.J. Arthur Willard Miller. . .3215 Hawthorne Place, St. Louis, Mo. Austin Leonard Miller 547 Lake Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Allen Paine Mills 11 Portsmouth Terrace, Rochester, N. Y. John Sutcliffe Milton 1450 Peabody Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Arthur Moore Mizener 163 West Sixth St., Erie, Pa. Thomas Huston Moore, Jr... 2304 Newkirk Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Adair Moore 1010 West Newton St., Tulsa, Okla. Gerald Demuth Morgan 15 Broad St., New York, N. Y. D. Charles Morganthau, 1735 New Hampshire Ave., Washington, D. C. Bertram Morris 712 Lafayette St., Denver, Colo. John Green Mulock Ill Moss Ave., Detroit, Mich. Chauncey Hulburt Murphey, Jr., Ill E. 48th Street, New York, N. Y. Jacob Christian Myers, Jr., 30 South Stenton PI., Atlantic City, N. J. John Oliver Nelson 201 N. Murtland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Frederick Nesslage, Jr., 511 Gregory Ave., Weehawken, N. J. Donald Leo Newborg Ill East 56th St., New York, N. Y. George Edward Nichols 7 Dey Street, New York, N. Y. Alfred Slayman Nicholson 27 Simpson Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Theophilus Noel, II 406 Linden Ave., Oak Park, 111. 429 tgp INC Scg grciA£4R2? Qlass of 1930 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Walter Alexander Payne Nones. .Woodlands, Southport, Conn. Edward Ailing Noyes Shrady Road, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. George Washington Oakes, Jr., Hotel Ansonia, 73rd St. and Broadway, New York, N. Y. Charles William Henry Oechler, 9413-85th Rd., Woodhaven, N. Y. Horton O ' Neil Valley Rd., Cos Cob, Conn. George Stickle Oram 93 Main St., Rockaway, N. J. Joseph French Page, III, 451 Lake Park Drive, Birmingham, Mich. Wm. Pendleton Palmer, Jr., 2332 Overbrook Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Richard Bartlett Park 723 Ridgway Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Joseph Lester Parsons, Jr 88 High St., Montclair, N. J. Harry Clay Patterson. .. .1431 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Morton Payne, Jr... 845 W. 57th St., Kansas City, Mo. John Bevan Pearson 27 South Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Joseph Peavoy, Jr 82 Godwin Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Irving James Pedly 1810 Cortelyou Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Niels Mortenson Perkins 48-13th Ave., Columbus, Ohio Frederick Darby Petrie 526 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Nicholas Alfred Petry, Jr., 4953 McKean Ave., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Lowrey Pierson 30 Church St., New York, N. Y. Reuben Field Pieters. .144 S. Grammercy PI., Los Angeles, Calif. Richard Sawyer Pieters, 144 S. Grammercy PI., Los Angeles, Calif. John Bennett Platner 110 N. 54th St, Omaha, Nebr. John Lawrence Pool, Jr 21 Club Rd., Rye, N. Y. Richard Pitts Powell, Jr 501 S. 48th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Alonzo Joseph Powers, II 5048 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Herbert Rush Preston, Jr Paradise Ave., Catonsville, Md. Richard Francis Puffer.. 176 Buckingham St., Waterbury, Conn. Lyttleton Bowen Purnell, III, Bellemore Rd., Roland Park., Baltimore, Md. Frederic Haynes Ramsey 594 Myrtle St., Portland, Ore. NAME ADDRESP Langdon Gilbert Rankin. 224 Warwick Ave., South Orange, N. J. Dillman Atkinson Rash. 2140 Bonnycastle Ave., Louisville, Ky. Henry Sutherland Reeder 405 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Richard Early Reeves Hobart Avenue, Summit, N. J. Walter Jewell Reeves 931 Fifth St., Columbus, Ind. Benjamin Reynolds Reiter Sayre Park, Bethlehem, Pa. George Wilmont Renchard 300 Arden Park, Detroit, Mich. William Lawson Reno, Jr... 202 East Third St., Owensboro, Ky. William Robbins Ridington, 3507 Hamilton St., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Cromwell Riggs 606 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md Norman Bridge Roberg 3812 N. Keeler Ave., Chicago, III. Wm. Caldwell Roberts 210 Windemere Ave., Wayne, Pa. John Brown Robertson, 130 Ninth Ave., North, Twin Falls, Idaho Archibald Rowan Robinson, Jr. .6100 Bryant St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Hamilton Robinson 12 Boudinot St., Princeton, N. J. Harlan Baird Robinson. .. .346 Palmetto Dr., Passadena, Calif. John Dobbin Rode 351 West 245th St., New York, N. Y. Edward Congdon Rogers 5214 Case St., Omaha, Nebr. Leland Hamilton Ross, Jr Madison Ave., Madison, N. J. George Wallace Ruckert 746 Clark St., Westfield, N. J. Franklin Parkhurst Russell ... .33 Vassar Ave., Newark, N. J. Archibald Hamilton Rutledge, Jr Mercersburg, Pi. Joseph Sailer, Jr 1718 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Neal Sawyer 734 Argyle Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. William Dorman Sill Scarlett, 4806 Greenway, Guilford, Baltimore, Md. Robert May Schafer 970 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Hubert August Schneider 741 Parker St., Newark, N. J. Clement Ettinger Schotland. . . .239 Meeker Ave., Newark, N. J. Thomas Preston Scott 44 Afterglow Way, Montclair, N. J. Harry Lauderdale Seay, Jr.... 3707 Beverly Dr., Dallas, Texas Robert Seth Shaw R. F. D. 2, Princeton, N. J. Allen Kirkpatrick Shenk..5305 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Chalfant Shenk 5305 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa 430 rz RINCE -iog rrrr rr r rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrr f f ,0 cZMEkS Qlass of 1930 — (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Charles Taney Silverson, 2655 Lake of Isles Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. John Nichols Simonson 522 Dayton St., Hamilton, Ohio Jaryl Deverell Siner 2925 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Langdon Sisserson, 311 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. Edwin Joseph Smith, Jr 425 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Frank Edward Smith, Jr 101 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y. Frederick Hoffman Smith, IV. 455 East 51st St., New York, N. Y. Lester Wickham Smith 1335 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lewis Peter Smith, Jr O. C. S. Bank Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y. Tolbert Clifton Smith 820 Penn St., Fort Worth, Texas Walter Lane Smith, Jr 1520 Central Ave., Memphis, Tenn. George Elton Snyder, Jr 109 Edgehill Rd., Bala, Pa. Roy Hammond Snyder, Jr 66 S. Main St., Port Deposit, Md. George Bernard Sour 21 West 88th St., New York, N. Y. Leonard Augustine Spalding, Jr., 102 Elmhurst Rd., Baltimore, Md. Heinz Specht 1136 South 47th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Ridgway Spencer Laurence Park West, Bronxville, N. Y. Frederick Donald Sperry. .24 Huntington St., New Haven, Conn. Marshall Sprague 25 North First St., Newark, Ohio George Lincoln Stallman, Jr R. D. 7, York, Pa. Edmund Augustus Steimle..l74 West 93rd St., New York, N. Y. Philip Humason Steinmetz, 7809 York Rd., Elkins Park, Philadelphia, Pa. Sydney Gilman Stevens 300 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N. J. Charles Summers Stevenson, 111 Deepdene Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Donald Alexander Stirling 3826 State St., Erie, Pa. Aylward Howard Stockwell, 119 East Maple Ave., Moorestown, N. J. Warren Sanford Stone 781 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Gwynne Stout Glenn Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Russell Wellesley Stovel, Jr., 48 Watchung Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Frank Chester Stover, II, 1183 Tower Road Hubbard Woods, III. John Strawbridge, Jr., Cheltenham Rd., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Jacob Herbert Stumpf 21 New Lawn Ave., Arlington, N. J. Edmond Mortimer Sullivan 811 County Bldg., Chicago, 111. Frank Louis Sullivan 5875 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Henry Swift, III, 11 No. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. James Andrews Sykes, 1318 W. Allegheny Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Earl Stough Taylor 133 W. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Matt Taylor 1135 Main St., Racine, Wise. Robert Hill Taylor 575 North Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Thomas Harwood Taylor. .. .132 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. John Hamilton Thacher, Jr., 934 N. Y. Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Tyler Thompson The Knoll, Hoffman St., Elmira, N. Y. George Gray Thouron 217 Glenn Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Joseph Lawrence Tonetti 135 E. 40th St., New York, N. Y. William Cattell Trimble.. 8 West Madison St., Baltimore, Md. Howard Trivers 885 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. John Ashton Turnbull 225 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J. William Turnbull, II 49 Broad St., New York, N. Y. John Stebbins Turner, Hotel Leonori, Madison Ave. and 63rd St., New York, N. Y. Schuyler Van Duyne 790 Broad St., Newark, N. J. Harold Campbell Vaughan 610 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. George Haskell Venard 1039 Rush St., Chicago, 111. Richard Leonard Vogt 154 Villa Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Garret Coerte Voorhees Kent School, Kent, Conn. Alfred Munroe Wade New Canaan, Conn. Nelson Whitaker Wagner, Leatherwood Lane, Wheeling, W. Va. Clarence Adolphus Wanamaker, Jr., 601 Lexington Ave., Aspinwall, Pa. 431 3 EAUE c Qlass of ipjO — (Qontinued) Electus Backus Ward 42 W. 58th St., New York, N. Y. Daniel Edward Wardell 214 Renner Ave., Newark, N. J. Richard Webster Warfield. . . .607 Somerset Rd., Baltimore, Md. Robert Warren, 273 Lake Shore Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Herbert Sherwood Warwick, II, 265 Benita Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Charles Douglas Webb 12 Irving PI., Summit, N. J John Baker Welborn Fort Logan, Colo Daniel Lennox Wells 1057 Parker Ave., Detroit, Mich Edgar Warren Wherry 57 Wilson Ave., Rutherford, N. J Benjamin Vroom White, Jr.... 35 Ox-Bow Lane, Summit, N. J Donald Howard Whitney.. 448 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y Frederic William Wile, Jr.. 3313 Sixteenth St., Washington, D. C Orlando Blake Willcox 41 Broad St., New York, N. Y NAME ADDRESS Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr., 209 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Franklin Herkimer Wilson Pleasant Valley, Conn. Ken neth Wilson, c-o Wm. A. Wilson, Trust Dept., Bank of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas Felton Wimberly, Jr., 2011 First Ave., Birmingham, Ala. Charles Curtis Winston.. 14 Overlook Ave., West Orange, N. J. Edward Ogden Wittmer. .. .Cedar Grove Rd., Princeton, N. J. Albert Elmer Wood. . Cape May Court House, N. J. Richard Harvey Wood 912 N. Beaver St., Wooster, Ohio Daniel Ellis W ' oodhull, Jr 950 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. Joseph Henry Wright 1235 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. William Francis Young... Ill Godwin Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. 432 tttOElNCCfo g nc 7 A mr gg? 0cZA3E3? SENIOR CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Standing — Young, T. Brooks, Wolcott, Jordan, Carter. Seated — Moore, C Brooks (Chairman), Bennett. tviSJOy ciIdfe EEAilggg Qlass T)ay Exercises OF THE ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-THIRD ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT iHnn ag, %xxm IB, 1930 OPENING EXERCISES Benjamin van Doren Hedces . . . Master of Ceremonies Robert Cassell Gibson Class Poem Alfred Munroe Wade Class Orator William Denham Barfield Ivy Oration CANNON EXERCISES Joseph Lester Parsons Class History George Cable Miles Presentation Speech Curtis Bush Brooks . . Calling of Roll by Class Secretary CLASS ODE Shelby Cullom Davis Denny Brerton, Jr. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Curtis Bush Brooks Chairman John Connable Bennett Herbert Pendleton Jordan John Evans Love John Hubert Brooks Edwin Allen Lightner William Adair Moore Thomas Thedford Carter Samuel Joseph Lloyd Walter Aldrich Young CLASS MEMORIAL COMMITTEE A. Douglas Hannah Chairman John Hubert Brooks John Edwin Hamm Herbert Pendleton Jordan Tilden Cummings Jervis Spencer Janney Robert May Shafer 435 gg jTRlNCEf gKT gEAZUjf Honors Qonf erred VALEDICTORY SALUTATORY . William Koren, Jr. Charles Halsey Lindslev FINAL SPECIAL HONORS Architecture. Highest Honors — Lester Wickham Smith. High Honors — Frederick George Frost, Jr., Caspar Forman Heg- ner, Horton O ' Neil, William Tumbull 2nd. Honors — Charles Frederick Mattage, George Morton Payne, Jr., Frank C. Stover 2nd, Robert Hilt Taylor. Art and Archeology. High Honors — George Matthews Benson, Josiah Kendall Wallis. Honors — Williams Holmes For- syth, Jr., Walter Lyle Gordon, Charles Taney Silverson, John Stebbins Turner. Biology. High Honors — Benjamin Reynolds Ruter, Benjamin Vroom White, Jr. Honors — Erwin Beck. Richard Henry Bruning, William Fegely Danehower, Stanley Thomas Gar- ber, Carl Ampt Hamann, Jr., Charles Schaeffer Hertz, Sam Ashton Higginbottom, Samuel Joseph Lloyd, Walsh Mc- Dermott. Chemistry. Highest Honors — Richard Scott Bear, Charles Halsey Lindsley, Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr. Honors — Ray- mond Charles Bacon, Norman Frederick Beach. Classics. High Honors — David Abraham Huber, Charles Doug- las Webb. Honors — Frederick Norman Goodrich, Henry Mosler Marx, Williams Robbins Redington. Economics. Highest Honors — Hiram Staunton Brown, Jr., Wil- liam Wallace Haynes. High Honors — Gordon Atkins, Nor- ris Bartlett Brisco, John Hubert Brooks, Jr., Edward John Brown, Edgar Warren Dakin, Endsley Perrine Fairman, John Edwin Hamm, Jack Kenneth Howe, Richard Francis Puffer, Dillman Atkinson Rash. Honors — Norman Drum- mond Campbell, Tilden Cummings, Ernest Rudolph Diko- vics, Richard Orvis Evans, Herbert Henry Faber, Robert Henry Geis, Donald Lennen Graham, Jabez Dean Ham- mond, Ryder Henry 2nd, Arthur Willard Miller, Chauncey Hulbert Murphy, Jr., George Wallace Ruckert, Edwin Joseph Smith, Matt Taylor, Daniel Edward Wardell, Don- ald Howard Whitney. Engineering. Highest Honors — John Bennett Platner. High Honors — Robert Wheeler Bell, Donald Melick Ditmars, Sidney French Farmer, Jacob Christian Myers, Jr., Charles Frederick Messlage, Jr., Robert May Schafer, Charles Curtis Winston. Honors — Floyd Blackwell Barrett, William Rob- ert Bryant, Robert Lang Churchill, George Wilmont Ren- chard, Harlan Baird Robinson, Joseph Sailor, Jr., Joseph Neal Sawver, Robert Seth Shaw. 436 grT RINC CTQv aEA E3? Honors Conferred- — fQonfd) English. Highest Honors — Jerrold Krimsky, Arthur Moore Mizener. High Honors — John Mason Bradbury, Carl Fran- cis Keppler, George Cable Miles, John Oliver Nelson. Honors — Franklin Beardsley Curtis Bush Brooks, Gordon Styles Gavan, Jervis Spencer Janney, Frank Richardson Kent, John Harlan Kerr, John Sutcliffe Milton, D. Charles Morganthau, George Edward Nichols, Edward Ailing Noyes, John Bevan Pearson, Norman Bridge Roberg, Marshall Sprague, Clarence Adolphus Wanamaker, Jr., William Francis Young, Jr. Geology. Highest Honors — John Hamilton Thacher, Jr. High Honors — James Welch Cooke, Frank Bliss Wolcott, Albert Elmer Wood. Honors — Richard Stephen Hendey, Worth- ington Whittredge Katzenbach, James Philip Koontz, Mar- shall Lockhart McCIure, Harry Clay Patterson, Frank Ed- ward Smith, Jr. History. Highest Honors — Shelby Cullom Davis. High Honors — Donald Leo Newborg, Charles William Henry Oechler, Honors — Hobart Louis Brinsmade, Bernard Chamberlin Connelly, Herbert Pendleton Jordon, Paul Maloney, John Alfred Metz, Jr., Richard Pitts Powell, Jr., William Cattell Trimble, Frederic William Wile, Jr. Mathematics. High Honors — Gilbert Wright Fitzhugh, George E. Immerwahr, Richard Sawyer Pieters. Modern Languages. Highest Honors — William Koren, Jr. High Honors — Elbert Benton Op ' t Eynde Borgerhoff, George Bradshaw, Benjamin Labarree, Clinton Meneely, Sidney Gilman Stevens. Honors — Maitland Alexander, Jr., Rene Ellison Clark, Barton Lee Curry, Francis Olmstead Grubbs, Ray Dee Keehn, Jr., Hamilton Robinson, Tyler Thompson. Philosophy. Highest Honors — Bertram Morris, Harrard Triv- ers. High Honors — Warren Sanford Adams 2nd, Russell Weller Benton, Robert Myer Goldenson. Honors — Maurice Jean Geraghty, Samuel Horace Levine, Irving Long Miles, Robert Emmett Robinson. Physics. High Honors — Wil Robert Nelson Marshall iam Monroe Lobenstine. Honors — Politics. Highest Honors — William Denham Barfield, Lloyd Arthur Free. High Honors — Edwards Chapin McLean, Harry Lauderdale Seay, Jr. Honors — John Connable Ben- nett, Otis Boehmer Bosworth, Jonathan Edwards, Ruel Rush- forth Garside, Herbert Donald Kestler, William Lawson Reno, Jr., Archibald Rowan Robinson, Jr., Clement Ettinger Schotland, Jaryl Deverell Siner, Ray Hammond Snyder, Jr., Robert Warren. Psychology. Highest Honors — Louis Gutman. High Honors — Frederic Eberhardt Craig, Hugh Russell Kirkpatrick. Hon- ors — Edward Somerville Kip, Charles Lockhart, Victor Wil- liam Evan Payne, Allen Kirkpatrick Shenk, Charles Chal- font Shenk. 437 r jRiNccf ng- rrrrrrr rrirrrrrrrrr r rrrtrrrrr r EZAZSDjj Thi Beta J appa BETA OF NEW JERSEY Organized Provisionally in 1895. Charter granted in October, 1898 OFFICERS, 1930-1931 Dean Luther Pfahler Eisenhart .... President Professor Duane Reed Stuart .... Vice-President Professor James Douglas Brown .... Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Professor Robert Scoon Professor Henry Lyttleton Savage Professor Charles Phelps Smyth E. P. Adams R. G. Albion J. W. Alexander E. C. Armstrong, Jr. P. Bard J. W. Basore G. E. Begcs H. H. Bender J. D. Brown J. E. Brown P. M. Brown D. L. Buffum A. F. Buddington E. Capps P. R. Coleman-Norton V. L. Collins K. T. Compton E. G. CONKLIN C. C. CONNELL F. H. Constant E. S. Corwin F. L. Critchlow U. Dahlgren B. N. Dell H. V. Dennis E. T. DeWald F. H. DrxoN G. Dougherty G. E. Duckworth H. G. Duffield R. S. Dugan, Jr. L. P. Eisenhart FACULTY MEMBERS G. W. Elderkin F. A. Fetter W. Fite G. H. Forsyth, Jr. W. Foster N. H. Furman C. Gauss G. H. Gerould J. T. Gerould W. Gillespie T. M. Greene C. R. Hall W. P. Hall G. McL. Harper W. B. Harris H. W. Hewitt-Thayer J. G. Hibben J. P. HOSKINS S. E. Howard S. J. Howe B. F. Howell G. A. Hulett T. W. Hunt H. C. O. Huss F. L. Hutson A. C. Johnson R. B. C. Johnson E. W. Kemmerer C. W. Kennedy P. M. Kretschmann E. H. Loomis H. L. Lutz M. Maclaren D. Macie, Jr. W. F.Magie C. C. Marden D. A. McCabe L. W. McCay G. B. McClellan C. F. W. McClure K. McKenzie P. E. More C. R. Morey S. W. Morgan D. C. Munro W. S. Myers F. Neher C. G. Osgood 438 T TRlNCEf OM- rrrr rrrr ' rrrrrr r rrrr rrrr r r g c £ir g7? T. M. Parrott F. L. Patton R. N. Pease T. Petersson A. H. Phillips W. K. Prentice G. M. Priest J. E. Raycroft E. C. Richardson Phi Tteta Kappa — ((Continued) E. Y. ROBBINS H. P. Robertson R. K. Root H. N. Russell H. L. Savage R. M. Scoon W. B. Scott T. L. Shear A. G. Shenstone •FACULTY MEMBERS— (Cont ' d) H. R. Shipman E. B. Smith C. H. Smyth, Jr. C. P. Smyth H. DeW. Smyth J. D. Spaeth E. G. Spaulding K. P. Stevens J. Q. Stewart D. C. Stuart D. R. Stuart F. C. Tarr W. T. Thom, Jr. A. Trowbridge L. A. Turner H. van Dyke P. van Dyke O. Veblen W. U. Vreeland H. C. Warren S. H. Weber T. J. Wertenbaker A. F. West J. H. Westcott A. L. Wheeler G. W. T. Whitney J. O. Whitney F. N. Willson MEMBERS, 1930, ELECTED IN 1929 AND 1930 Gordon Atkins W. D. Barfield N. F. Beach R. S. Bear E. R. Beck G. M. Benson E. B. O. E. Borgerhoff O. B. Bos worth J. M. Bradbury H. L. Brinsmade Deceased. S. DeC. Atkins G. F. Burt, Jr. J. H. Brooks, Jr. W. W. Burgess J. W. Cooke F. E. Craig G. W. FlTZHUGH L. A. Free R. M. Goldenson W. L. Gordon Louis Gutmann P. M. Ham W. W. Haynes D. A. Huber G. E. Immerwahr C. F. Keppler William Koren, Jr. Benjamin Labaree C. H. Lindsley W. M. Lobenstine Paul Maloney F. A. Meade J. A. Metz, Jr. A. M. Mizener D. L. Newborg R. S. Pieters J. B. Platner D. A. Rash A. R. Robinson, Jr. MEMBERS, 1931, ELECTED IN 1930 R. H. Demuth R. E. G Downey C. W. Farnum H. S. Gardner, Jr. Thomas Lowry L. W. Smith R. H. Snyder, Jr. S. G. Stevens, Jr. J. H. Thacher, Jr. Howard Trivers William Trumbull, II E. B. Wilson, Jr. F. B. Wolcott, Jr. A. E. Wood R. H. Wood J. G. Stephenson, III W. D. Webb 439 t tOBdNC£fOAy 33£lA Bl2? ' Prizes Awarded The M. Taylor Pyne Honor Prizeman William Denham Barfield The W. Lyman Biddle Scholars Senior Scholar William Koren, Jr. Junior Scholar .... Charles Wadsworth Farnum, Jr. The Alexander Guthrie McCosh Prize Bert Morris The Class of 1859 Prize Arthur Moore Mizener Honorable Mention: Marshall Sprague The Class of 1869 Prize in Ethics William Henry Swift, III The George Potts Bible Prizes Harper Roome Dowell and Charles Halsey Lindsley The Lyman H. Atwater Prize in Political Science Lloyd Arthur Free The Lynde Debate Prizes First Donald Leo Newborg Second William Wallace Haynes Third Daniel Ellis Woodhull, Jr. The New York Herald Prize Archibald Rowan Robinson, Jr. The Class of 1876 Memorial Prize John Howard Rice The Frederic Barbard White Prize in Architecture Charles Edgard Lane The Philo Sherman Bennett Prize in Political Science Otis Bochmer Bosworth Honorable Mention: Ruel Rushforth Garside The Class of 1870 Prize in Old English Charles Wadsworth Farnum, Jr. The Class of 1870 Junior Prize in English Charles Wadsworth Farnum, Jr. and Charles Norris Houghton The Class of 1883 English Prize for Juniors in the School of Science No Award The Dickinson Prize William Noble Gorham and Nelson Peabody Rose The Mary Cunningham Humphreys Junior German Prizes First Donald Gilpatric Second Jens Aage Tellefsen The Junior Orator Medals First Richard Holzman Demuth Honorable Mention: William Kincaid Second Edgar Craig Schenck Third William Alexander Jameson, Jr. Fourth Nelson Peabody Rose The Maclean Prize Richard Holzman Demuth Honorable Mention: Nelson Peabody Rose The Thomas B. Wanamaker English Language Prize Gordon Rutledge Silber Honorable Mention: William Main Doerflinger The Manners Prizes Nova Caesarea Scholar: No Award Winner of the Golden Tiger: John Mason Bradbury The Ai.den Memorial Prizes in French No Award 440 yjg Xft ' Nc llQSr: g VC A- R g ' Prizes iA warded — (Qontinued) The Garrett Prize in Politics The Grace Carter Erdman Prize in Biblical Literature William Denham Barfield Edwin Allan Lightner, Jr. Honorable Mention: William Lawson t-, t „ a, u -a c  . I he Andrew H. Brown Scholarship in Mathematics The Charles Ira Young Reno Medal Forrest Gains Hamrick, Jr. William King Murray „, „ „ „ „ B J The George B. Covington Prize in Mathematics The Prize in American History Established by the Society George Wright Fitzburgh and George E. Immerwahr ° F C0L Don A a L ld V Leo S Kwb g ™ The Upperclass Club Scholarship Trophy Honorable Mention: Bernard Chamberlain Connelley Princeton Court Club The Class of 1861 Prize „ , The New York Times Current Events Prizes Richard Brooke Titus Roberts F ' rst Rlc ar H ° ? man ?? ? uth Second Arthur Vincent Meiggs The Class of 1870 Sophomore English Prize Third Otis Bochmer Boswirth Richard Hugh Pleasant „ n . The Princeton Prizemen in Architecture The Francis Biddle Sophomore Essay Prize William W. Seenus and Charles F. Schillinger „ J° h M B , e - attie p?- a r rin ru°k . e i.k The American Institute of Architects Medal Honorable Mention: Philip Chabot Smith „. . , „ , „, . r Richard Rush Weir The Lawrence Hutton Prize in History The Hqward Crosby Butler Prizes Architecture ohelby Cullom Davis .-. -Dr. j s . - D r -i J Eugenio Balista and George O Bryan Bailey The Robert Thorton McCay Prize in Chemistry „ . _ Charles Halsey Lindsley and Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr. The Princeton Architectural Association Prize Richard Rush Weir The George A. Howe 78 Prize in Analytical Chemistry „ _ ., George William Low, Jr. J HE ,, ClA £ ° F 1 ?? 1 j M,!D l Ben Van Doren Hedges, Jr. The Class of 1883 Enclish Prize for Freshman in the School of Engineering The J ohn Peentis Poe Cup Morris Mordecai Thompson William Denham Barfield The Princeton Club of Paris Prize in French The Frederick W. Kafer Memorial Cup Clinton Meneely J oh n Henry O ' Toole The William Marshall Bullitt Prize in Mathematics The Leroy Gifford Kellog Cup Maleolin Cravens Henry Charles Borger, Jr. The John G. Buchanan Prize in Politics The W. Lyman Biddle Medal for Good Sportmanship in Lloyd Arthur Free Rowing Honorable Mention: William Denham Barfield Garrett Coerte Vorhees 441 TTR ' NC €IQ : rr rrtrrrrrrr Srr rrrrrrr rrr -■ rrrrrrr r % £lAiSSSc Honorary Degrees June , ipjO Master of Arts John Hinsdale Scheide, of the Class of 1896. Enlightened organizer and supporter of preventive and curative agen- cies in the campaign against tuberculosis. To the bibliophile he is known as the discriminating collector of a fine library of manuscripts and rare editions. To the worker for the advancement of human welfare through religious, social and educational agencies he is known as an enlightened patron. Doctor of Music Arthur Whiting, pianist and composer. Founder and manager of the university concerts of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton through which for twenty years he has fostered in college audiences an appreciation and increasing love of music. He has held aloft the fine and steady flame of classical beauty, the beacon which marks the solid rock of artistic achievement through the ages. Doctor of Letters John Leighton Stuart, Founder and President of Yenching University in China. Born in the ancient empire of the Orient and influenced early by its culture rich in the knowledge of human nature, he came for his later training to Virginia, cradle of western democracy. Returning to China in 1905 he won widely recognized leadership in the Christian educational movement in the Far East. Through long association with the leaders in China he is giving effectual help in the perplexed and momentous affairs of the young republic. Doctor of Divinity Walter Lowrie, of the Class of 1890, for the last twenty- three years Rector of Saint Paul ' s American Church in Rome. Before undertaking parochial duties he spent the greater part of a decade in study in the theological schools of Ger- many and in research in early Christian archaeolo gy in Rome. His archaeological hand-book is of high value to the secular student of the last phase of graeco-roman art and is indispensable to the student of church history. As a writer on New Testament exegesis he is critical, philosophic and yet deeply religious; as a preacher he is vigorous, trenchant, and eloquent. In 1890 he was presented to your illustrious predecessor, Dr. Patton, for a degree in recognition of four years ' faith- ful study. Today I present him for a degree in recognition of forty years of productive scholarship and of ministry to the spiritual needs of his countrymen in a foreign land. Doctor of Science Karl Taylor Compton, Brackett Professor of Physics in Princeton University and noiu President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His career crowded with achieve- ment in a difficult science has illustrated alike the brilliancy of his powers and the soundness of his professional train- ing. His researches have furnished the first adequate ex- planation of the phenomena observed in the electric arc now more than a century ago. His long series of investigations in the general field of electrical discharge has furnished in- valuable material to guide hypothesis as to the structure of the atom. Engrossed in an ardent pursuit of knowledge he has been unsolicitous of the high repute which now is his. He merits honors the more because he counts them less than the satisfaction of work well done. 442 tvgZEEINCEfo . rfrrtrr r rrfrrrr rr r rrrrr r r sssns? 7 Honorary T)egrees — fQontinued) June 17, 930 Doctor of Science William Berryman Scott, of the Class of 1877, Blair Professor of Geology in Princeton University, who today becomes Professo r Emeritus after fifty years of distinguished service. Brilliant contributor in the field of vertebrate paleontology not only as author of standard works and expositor of the theory of evolution but as organizer, and interpreter of the results of, expeditions sent out by Princeton University. His brilliant monographs descriptive of new fossil forms found in our own western country and in Patagonia are broadly philosophical in scope and spirit and have won him inter- national reputation. Honored by universities and academies at home and abroad as an investigator his own University also honors in him the gifted teacher, lucid and inspiring to all his students. Doctor of Laws John Van Antwerp MacMurray, of the Class of 1902, for over twenty years in the diplomatic service of the United States and lately our Minister in Peking, now Director of the School of International Relations at the Johns Hopkins University. As a graduate student his self-impelling mind urged him adequately to prepare himself without haste, and without waste, for his notable career. Secretary, counsellor and chief of important misions abroad, and at home in charge of divisions of the Department of State, author of the author- itative work on our foreign policy regarding China, he has honorably and most capably maintained the interests and dignity of his country and has advanced the cause of international understanding and friendship. Doctor of Laws Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior in the Cab- inet of the President of the United States. First attaining distinction in the field of education as Professor of Physiology, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and President of Stanford University, his academic mother; then, still in early manhood, vigorous and wise in council, answering the call of his country in time of war to direct most skilfully the conservation of the nation ' s food supp ly. Now, in full maturity of tested power, supervising the re- lation of Government to public education, safeguarding the interest of the nation ' s wards; guarding for posterity our undeveloped material resources. He is finding and following newer and wider outlets for his abounding energy, well aware that the best achievement measures only a stage of advance and discloses the need of still further progress: Nil actum reputans dum quid superesset agendum. 443 tSULBlNCEfcg EEZAiMSc ZAQotables and Javorites of the Qlass of 1930 NOTABLES FIRST Best Ill-Round Man Barfield Most Respected Hedges . Best All-Round Athlete Wittmer Best All-Round Man Outside Athletics . . . G. C. Miles Most Thorough Gentleman Hedges . Most Popular Hedges Most Original R. Brown Most Scholarly Koren . Most Brilliant Koren . Most Likely to Succeed W. Campbell Done Most for Class Hedges . Done the Class Most F. Sullivan Most Entertaining T. Moore Biggest Grind A. Robinson Handsomest Lowry Prettiest Griswold Wittiest T. Moore Thinks He Is Wittiest Woodhull Most Pious Dowell . Busiest D. Hannah Best Dressed J. C. Bennett Thinks He Is Best Dressed Renchard Most High Hat Swann and Reeder Talks Most and Says Least Brigham Biggest Snake D. Robinson Thinks He Is Biggest Snake D. Robinson Biggest Bluffer F. Sullivan Smoothest Lowry Biggest Gloom Layton Most Likely Bachelor Custer Biggest Drag With Faculty Hedges Needs It Most Hedges Biggest Politician Hedges Best Build Hedges Most Collegiate F. H. Smith, iv Most Uncollegiate Tonetti Greatest Woman Hater Custer Most Unconscious Cuyler second Hedges . Barfield Hedges . C. Brooks Lloyd G. C. Miles Wade Free Rash D. Hannah Barfield Hedges . Wade Brinsmede D. Chamberlin LlGHTNER Pennypacker Brigham Stevenson Carter . E. Sullivan E. Sullivan Oechler Lowry . Brigham Cuyler . C. Brooks Cotton . Immerwahr Barfield Barfield Maroney Brigham Covolo . Hendey . A. Miller third Carter W. Moore Carter D. Chamberlin W. Moore C. Alexander P. Maloney Oechler Barfield Carter Gauss Morgan Beck W. Moore Bryant O ' Toole Barrett Nelson Hedges C. Brooks Koehn H. Robinson Swann C. Brooks Koehn McDermont D. Robinson Keppler Vaughan Koren Graves W. Moore Koehn A. Wood D. Chamberlin D. Robinson 444 TSESc?ToX rrrrrn r rrrr rrrri r r rrf rrrrr rrrrrrr rf rrrrrrrr rrrrrrrr f r 32 g C A-£ j[g LSfotables and Javorites of the Qlass of 1930 — (Qonti?iued) FIRST Most Dopeful Carkener Class Baby Hughes . Best Natured Welborn SECOND C. Brooks Hendey . Miles CLASS FAVORITES First Choice Phi Beta Kappa Second Choice Varsity P . Third Choice Triangle Club Most Respected Extra-Curriculum Activity (Non-Athletic) Professor Preceptor Coach Roper Sport to Watch Football Sport to Play Tennis . Princetonian McClellan . McDonald . Novel Tom Jones Poem If Most Interesting Lecturer W. P. Hall . Most Inspiring Teacher McClellan . Play Journey ' s End . Movie Disraeli . Fiction Writer Hemmingway Artist Arno Eating Place in Princeton Baltimore Dairy Lunch . Poet . Browning ... Worst Poet Guest Dramatist Shakespeare Favorite Man ' s College After Princeton . . Yale Favorite Women ' s College Vassar Amusement Movies Automobile Packard . . . . Cigarette Lucky Strike Beverage Whiskey . . . . Newspaper New York Times . Magazine Saturday Evening Post Tooth Paste Squibb ' s Study Women Actress (Stage) Lynn Fontaine . Actress (Movie) Greta Garbo Varsity P . Phi Beta Kappa Princetonian Tiger W. P. Hall Friend . Fitzpatrick Hockey . Golf All Quiet on the Western Front Gray ' s Elegy McClellan C. R. Hall Cyrano de Bergerac Wings Van Dine Titian . Viedt ' s . Kipling . L. Barrett O ' Neil . Harvard Smith Bridge . Ford Camel . Beer Herald Tribune New Yorker 1 Kolynos History . Jane Cowl . Ruth Chatterton third Oechler Horneblower Diploma Triangle Club Varsity P Press Club E. B. Smith MODLIN Foster Baseball Squash Farewell to Arms Don Juan C. R. Hall E. B. Smith Hamlet Woman of Affairs Wodehouse Leonardo Ticer Tea Pot Keats Wordsworth Shaw Williams Women Lincoln Chesterf;eld Milk Time Pepsodent Enclish Marilyn Miller Norma Shearer 445 tgrE ' NCE TOg gVClAjlSS? Sfotables and Javorites of the Qlass of 1930 — (Qontinued) FIRST Actor (Stage) Walter Hampden Actor (Movie) George Bancroft Exact Age At Graduation (Average) .... 21 Years, 11 Months and 23 Do You Support Yourself Wholly? .... Yes, 25 . Do You Support Yourself in Partf .... Yes, 110 Have You Ever Been Suspended? Yes, 27 . How Many Courses Have you Flunked? . . None, 247 Hardest Year Senior Pleasantest Year Senior . Hardest Course Historical Introduction Dullest Course Economic Principles . Modern European Easiest Course Economic Problems Most Valuable Course Biology 201-202 . You Were Choosing Your Department Over Again Would You Choose the One You Did? . . . Yes, 305 . What One Would You Choose? Politics .... Modern European Most Interesting Course Economic Problems Most Useless Course Economic Principles What Would You Do If You Ran the University? . Abolish Chapel . What Has 1910 Done for Princeton? .... Have You Ever Grown a Moustache? .... What Do You Consider the Greatest Benefit Gained from College? (a) Education? (b) Contacts? . Do You Drink? Do You Smoke? Are You in Favor of Prohibition? Have You Ever Attended a Prom at Princeton? Is Your Future Occupation Decided? .... Would You Marry for Money? Are You Engaged? How Many Times Have You Been Turned Down? Do You Intend to Do Graduate Work? . Have You Ever Been to a Night Club in New York? Have You Ever Been to Europe? Are You Going This Summer? Do You Approve of the Four-Course Plan? . Nothing Yes, 305 . Contacts, 158 Yes, 317 Yes, 313 Yes, 48 . Yes, 316 Yes, 185 Yes, 129 Yes, 42 . Never, 344 Yes, 156 Yes, 325 Yes, 181 Yes, 120 Yes, 199 second George Arliss William Powell Days No, 376 . No, 268 . No, 397 . One, 92 . Freshman Junior Constitutional Interpretation Logic and Metaphysics Logic and Metaphysics History 201-202 . No, 99 . History .... History 201-202 . Logic and Metaphysics Abolish Four-Course Plan .... Lost Football Games No, 323 . Education, 153 No, 84 No, 95 No, 344 No, 38 No, 208 No, 210 No, 344 Once, 30 No, 219 No, 67 No, 221 No, 224 No, 199 THIRD Alfred Lunt John Barrymore Two, 3 1 Junior Sophomore Renaissance and Refor- mation History Anglo-Saxon Astronomy Modern European Economic Problems Geology Architecture 201-202 Mathematics 109-110 Resign Twice, 8 446 =fgr T R|NCE i fgp gc A Egr • . .. . ' ■ rPRINClfo €E SiS3E 3g The Princeton- Qornell vs. Oxford- (Cambridge Track Meet JULY 12, 1930 ONE of the most important events in which Princeton men participated during the summer of 1930 was the Fifth International Track Meet between the combined teams of Oxford and Cambridge representing England and Princeton and Cornell representing the United States. For the second consecutive time America carried off the honors with a score of seven events to five. Setting sail June 28 on the Baltic, the American team arrived in Liverpool July 7 to spend a pleasant week as the guests of the English athletes. The first stop was Oxford where the team spent two days examining the University and its grounds situated in a peaceful English town. From here they journeyed to Cambridge to see the second of the famous British seats of learning. After a day of sightseeing about the old medieval colleges, Lord David Burleigh, the famous English hurdler who is so well known here and abroad for his remarkable performances on the cinder track, invited the Americans to visit his country estate just outside of Cambridge. July 11 saw the Princeton-Cornell com- bination safely in London waiting for the meet which was scheduled for the next day. At Stamford Bridge Park in London the two teams clashed in a friendly track battle. The meet promised to be an exciting one, for the supporters of each team felt certain of victory and statistics showed no marked edge of superiority in favor of either team. The Americans, however, were seriously handicapped by the loss of Ben Hedges, the Princeton captain, who was out due to injuries suffered early in the season. Perhaps this one absence accounted for Princeton ' s rather poor showing. Charlie Scarlett was the only man on the squad able to win but in doing so he tied Lord Burleigh ' s record for the 220-yard low hurdles in 24.7 seconds. More- over he was forced to run on a curved track while Lord Burleigh had had the advantage of a straightaway. Although Princeton accounted for only one victory, the men were never so far behind. Only two men placed fourth while Mills came in third in the half-mile event and Dawson scored another third place in the mile. Lincoln in the low hurdles, Faber in the high jump, and Summerill in the broad jump accounted for three more third places. Hand in the hundred and Rank in the pole vault each chalked up second places while Keown came in inches behind his Cornell rival in the decisive quarter-mile victory. At the beginning of the meet the Americans stepped out well into the front with victories in the 100-yard dash and the high hurdles. In the former Meinig of Cornell broke the tape a fraction of a second before Hand to win in 10 3 10 seconds. In the hurdles Heasley of Cornell took the lead at the first barrier and held it until the end, breaking the meet record by a tenth of a second. Oxford and Cambridge came in for their share of the spoils in the mile event. Dawson and Mills held the edge during the first quarter but at the half were running second and third. During the remainder of the race the Englishmen took the lead with Cornes winning in 4 minutes, 20 2 5 seconds. Meanwhile the shot-putt event had been in progress and it was announced that Levy had won with a throw of 48 feet, 5 3 4 inches followed by another Cornell man. In the 220 event Meinig of Cornell came up from behind to win 448 tSDSdNCCTQ %££C ' A ' 6KgF The ' Princeton-Cornell vs. Oxford-Cambridge Track Meet — (Qonfd) in 22 3 10 with Hand of Princeton trailing in fourth place. But in the meantime Oxford and Cambridge had won their second event, this time in the high jump. Gordon, the winner, left his opponents at 6 feet but continued till he had cleared the remarkable height of 6 feet, 3 3 8 inches. With the score standing 4 to 2 in favor of America, the English climbed another notch with a decisive victory in the half mile. The Britishers finished first and second in this race, Townend winning in 1 minute, 56 4 5 seconds with his country-man, Gutteridge, less than two seconds behind. Next came the key event of the afternoon as says Mr. Abrahams in his write-up in the London papers, the low hurdles and Princeton ' s lone victory. It was conceded that the race would be closely contested by Lincoln of Princeton and Tisdall, his English opponent. The Britishers were particularly eager for a victory in this event, for it would tie the score and give the Oxford-Cambridge team a very good chance to win. Lincoln and Tisdall proceeded as was generally expected but at the ninth hurdle Scarlett suddenly appeared and, leading the Englishman at the tenth, he broke the tape a scant six inches ahead of his opponent. The score: America 5, England 3. Suddenly the English turned the tables on the Americans with consecutive victories in the two-mile and broad-jump events. A tre- mendous spurt gave Benson a surprising victory over the two Americans while Revans won the broad jump for the Oxford-Cambridge team with a leap of 23 feet, 2 3 4 inches. The pole vault was mere play for the Americans, Coyler of Cornell winning at 12 feet, 7 inches while Rank of Princeton took second place at 12 feet. The quarter-mile, although it was the last event on the program, was strictly an American affair for Elmer of Cornell came in just ahead of Keown of Princeton in 51 seconds. That evening a very perfect farewell dinner was given in honor of the Princeton-Cornell team at the Mayfair Hotel in London. Hand ' s start which placed him second in Oxford-Cambridge vs. Cornell- Princeton Meet. 449 rB MiiQA 0cZAi a3? Acknowledgment The Bric-a-Brac takes this opportunity to express its heart-felt gratitude to Orren Jack Turner, who took the group photographs appearing in this book, for his splendid co-operation. The Editorial Board is gratefully appreciative of the patient help •which Gordon Sikes extended in aiding it to compile a great deal of the data appearing herein. Especial thanks to Wilfred Stout, Jr. for his artistic work in the scenic sections. Athletic Action pictures -were obtained from the Daily Princetonian and Wide World Photos. January y jf NjHE joyous days and sleepless nights of Christmas vaca- tion over, the student body wearily returned with happy reminiscences of the recess just over. The first DAILY PRINCETONIAN of the year announced the retirement of Bill Roper, Princeton ' s revered coach of fourteen elevens, and the selection of Al Wittmer, line coach, and head basketball coach for several seasons, as his successor. The Triangle Club terminated its annual pilgrimmage with a presentation of The Golden Dog in New York. At each of the cities where the Club played the members were feted with luncheons, tea dances, dinners, and debutant parties. The song hits of the show Living on Love and She ' ll Come Along became as popular as the recent releases from New York. While the Triangle Club was leaving a trail of joy in its path, the basketball team was winning all four of its vacation encounters. (Continued on page 454) Marsh Co. Pharmacists 30 Nassau Street Princeton, N.J. Prescriptions compounded from purest drugs and chemicals obtainable Full line of toilet articles and sick-room supplies. If dandruff is making your hair dull, dry and lifeless, use Jack Honore ' 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 zoc for a sample bottle or $ 1 . 2 5 for a full sized bottle. We pay post- age. JACK HONORE PRINCETON, N.J. ■■ ■■ fc MKi } ™ ™ KNOWLEDGE KRESGE Tailoring is an exact Art... Made possible by three decades of experience in serving discriminating men... and by an organization whose willingness to please, combines expert knowledge with the world ' s finest fabrics. EVENING CLOTHES cA SPECIALTY == 1 L 1 I I ' I W ' L mmU. ti. KKbbijbmwM EXCLUSIVE TAILORS FOR COLLEGE MEN SINCE 1806 PHILADELPHIA PRINCETON 452 ESTABLISHED 1818 tttlrfttm WtiLtm §ln$ mtwb , MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Clothes for Boys and Young Men at School and College Prompt and Careful Attention is Given to Orders or Enquiries by Mail BRANCH STORES BOSTON Newbury corner of Berkeley Street © BROOKS BROTHERS NEWPORT PALM BEACH 453 January (Continued from page 452) The Hockey team defeated Williams but was turned back by Dartmouth. The end of January found the Princeton Swimming team faring exceptionally well. Although forced to forfeit all meets because of the discontinuing of the Water Polo team, the natators easily overcame all league swimming opponents. In Basketball the situation was far more gloomy. The tigers defeated Yale and Cornell but were trounced by Columbia and Dartmouth. Starting slowly the Hockey team showed great improvement by defeating Clarkson and from then on were quite successful. As the month came to an end the details for Bicker Week were announced to the Sophomores who were looking forward to the Mid-year exams with a bit more trepidation than the others. Douglas L. Elliman Co., Inc. 15 EAST 49th STREET PLAZA 3-9200 Specialists in APARTMENTS AND PRIVATE HOUSES East and South of Central Park BUSINESS PROPERTIES Throughout New York City INSURANCE :: MANAGEMENT :: INVESTMENTS The Best Photoplays are Shown at AT THE SAME TIME OR SOON AFTER THEIR SHOWING IN NEW YORK. GREAT CARE IS TAKEN TO SELECT WORTH- WHILE FEATURE FILMS AND SHORT SUBJECTS. 454 i) ENJOY THE BEST! Modern, scientific equipment and management make it possible for you to enjoy the best in New York at the Hotel Lincoln. 1400 RoOmS Each with Bath and Shower 3to $ 5o°„ r . U to 7 Telephone Lackawanna 1400 NEW YORK ' S NEW I I L I W 1 L I hotelLINCOLN EIGHTH AVENUE, 44th and 45th STREETS, TIMES SQUARE 455 The HUN SCHOOL Prepares ' Boys for College JOHN G. HUN, Ph. D. 114 Stockton Street, Princeton, N. J. Jebruary INTO the short month of February were crowded many activities. With the examinations over, the winter sport teams swung into action once more. The third Dartmouth game concluded the 1930 season for the skaters. Although they showed a great improvement and continued to develop after the Clarkson game in January, their season was not a marked success, having lost twice to Dartmouth and twice to Yale. How- ever, the brilliant playing in the last Green encounter made up for a great deal. The basketball team at the end of the month was in the cellar league position. Although triumphs over the Army and Navy were encouraging, the league battles resulted in defeats for the Princeton team. Pennsylvania, Yale and finally Dartmouth overcame the Tigers. The University natators easily crushed their foes. Ted Moles, (Continued on page 458) Martha s Kitchen 1-3 NASSAU STREET ' Peacock Inn 20 BAYARD LANE Under same management 456 Walker Gordon laboratory Co. Plainsboro, N. J. zAll visitors welcome Fidelity- Philadelphia Trust Company 1 3 5 South Broad Street 325 Chestnut Street 6324 Woodland Avenue PHILADELPHIA 457 Cjfebruary (Continued from page 456) breast stroker, broke his own record for the 200-yard swim in Brokaw pool by one-fifth of a second in the Dartmouth meet. Syracuse was the other college to bow. Alumni Day brought many back to Princeton. In the annual exercises President Hibben and Dr. Livingston Farrand, ' 88, President of Cornell were the chief speakers. Other features of the gala week-end were the dedication of the McCarter Theatre and announcement of the New School of Public and International Affairs. The theatre was made possible by a gift from T. N. McCarter, ' 88 and has accommodations for 1,080 spectators. Many interesting speakers lectured at Princeton during the month. Count Felix Von Luckner, telling how the desire to meet (Continued on page 460) PRINCETON MOTOR SHOP INCORPORATED Fireproof Storage Radios Studebaker Sales and Service G. E. R efrigerators 20 NASSAU ST. TELEPHONE IOOO aogcooogoogooc presenting Gentlemen ' s Clothes tailored by Hickey -Freeman Hats Accessories of distinguished character for all occasions F. R. Tripler Co. Outfitters to Gentlemen MADISON AVENUE AT 46 STREET • NEW YORK .3 i; i3i; c ; .: ; ;0 .458 The latchstring hangs outside the door of The Chelsea ATLANTIC CITY for PRINCETONIANS The Chelsea occupies an entire boardwalk block in the choicest section of Atlantic City — io-story fireproof addition — delectable food — interesting rates on both American and European Plans. J. B. Thompson J. C. Myers, sr. J. C. Myers, jr., ' 30 Owners and Operators 459 Gfebruary (Continued from page 458) Buffalo Bill brought him to America and how he subsequently returned to Germany to become a lieutenant in the German Imperial Navy, described his experiences as a raider in the World War to the members of Whig-Clio. The Theatre Intime presented Androcles and the Lion by Bernard Shaw, and Maurice Maeterlinck ' s The Intruder. The New York reviewers were no less cordial than the amateurs who applauded it in the columns of the Prince. The month was ushered out with the beginning of early spring practice for such teams as Baseball, Crew, Lacrosse, and football. RENWICK ' S PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY ICE CREAM :: TASTRT CONFECTIONS zAgents for LOUIS SHERRY CANDIES special Attention Qiven To ejifai i tg Orders The Finest Human Hands Can Achieve CLOTHING AS DEVELOPED BY LANGROCK FOR THE UNIVERSITY GENTLEMAN HAS BEEN THE CRITERION FOR CORRECT DRESS FOR OVER A QUARTER OF A CENTURY. See Our Presentation for Spring LANGROCK I NASSAU ST. PRINCETON SHOP PRINCETON, N.J. POTTS AUTO EXPRESS PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY PADDED MOTOR VANS AND FIRE PROOF STORAGE LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING PACKING AND CRATING PIANO HOISTING tMain Office— 65 Pine St. Store House — Patton Ave. 1 1 J— Phones — 724 Night 460 RETAIN YOUR MEMBERSHIP in the ' Princeton University Store AFTER YOUR GRADUATION! JT will enable you to order books, athletic goods, shirts, haberdashery, or anything else we stock, by mail, and to have them charged on your store bill. You will thus retain the privileges of store mem- bership. The resultant advantages on your pur- chases of current books will amount to a consider- able sum. Ask about it! THE PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE Cverything the Qolkge JtCan feeds ' ' 461 Sayles, Zahn Co Dealers in Meat s, JPoiiMry am ir rovisions ,i 434 Sixth Avenue New York City Established i860 March WITH the club e deserving of its entire year. lections over, March rapidly became reputation as the dullest month of the As far as sports were concerned, no major sport was played in Princeton after the basketball team wound up one of the most disastrous seasons in the history of the game, losing to Lehigh, Rutgers, and Pennsylvania in the league final. This last defeat put the Tigers in a tie for last place with Cornell. The Tiger wrestlers entered several men in the finals of the Intercollegiates at Ithaca. W. D. Barfield was successful in the unlimited finals for Princeton. The Swimmers engaged in a thrilling meet with Yale which the Blue finally won after being hard pressed. A defeat at the hands of the Tigers would have resulted in a first place tie between Yale and Princeton for the Intercollegiate Title. At the Intercollegiates Princeton scored nine points. After conclud- ing a fairly successful season the Gym team took third place with M. I. T. in the Intercollegiates. Claggett was the shining light for Princeton, winning the side-horse and placing in two other events. Of paramount interest during the month was the PRINCE- TONIAN Prohibition Poll in which 87 2% favored either modi- fication or repeal of the present laws. This poll was the result of a continued discussion of the subject in the columns of the PRINCETONIAN. Hundreds of prom-goers danced to the tunes of Ben Bernie and Ben Pollack at the Junior Prom which was held on the 29th and 30th. The Intime produced Othello with much success. March was also notable for the 1st Intercollegiate Polo Crown coming to Princeton since 1922. This was a result of P. M. C. and the Army being routed. Other events of interest were the spring football practices which brought forth daily approximately 100 candidates for three weeks ' drill, and the shaping of such spring teams as Baseball, Crew, and Lacrosse. 462 Qompliments of The Student Employment Section ' Department of ' Personnel PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 463 zApril f If NHE Winter Prom past, and the trees around the campus beginning to blossom forth, April brought promise of the Easter recess. T While Coaches Logg, Sikes and Fitzpatrick were daily drilling their candidates for Crew and Track, the Baseball Nine opened its season with a discouraging defeat at the hands of Rutgers. This was followed by victories over Vermont and Williams and set-backs by Fordham and Holy Cross. During the Easter Vacation William and Mary and Georgetown over- came the Tigers. A novel feature of the 1930 baseball season was the fact that the coach was on the bench, the team being directed by the captain. The Lacrosse team started of well with a Cornell tie, and a 9-2 decision over Union, and victories over Pennsylvania and Lehigh. You will always be welcome at THORNE ' S When you come back for Reunions you will receive the same greet- ings that you received during your Student Days. THORNE ' S DRUG STORES (Not a chain) Four years old and still growing 44 and 168 NASSAU STREET Telephone 649 The Reliable Furniture Co. WE SPECIALIZE IN STUDENTS ' FURNISHINGS 23 Witherspoon treet, Trinceton, ZA( J. F. A. Bamman, Inc. Wholesale and Retail Qrocers Distributors Canada Dry, White Rock, Clicquot Club Ginger Ales and Mineral Waters. In fact anything and everything that consti- tutes an up-to-date grocery store. Nassau St. Princeton Charles Nill ' s Bakery 1 20 Witherspoon Street Princeton, N. J. 464 Estate of W. M. LEIGH Men ' s Furnishings Dress Suits a Specialty Foreign Woolens 56 NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N.J. Established 1832 PHILADELPHIA Official Jewelers for Charms, Pins, Trophies and Wedding Gifts to a number of the Clubs and Societies at Princeton University Inquiries Solicitea tApril After a successful career of 23 years Arthur Whiting, prom- inent New York musician, gave his last recital with compositions of Haydn and Dvorak. Mr. Whiting was a pioneer in college musical instruction and it was with deep regret that Dr. Hibben bid him farewell. Elections to varied posts were numerous, Juniors and Soph- omores selected their class officers; P. J. Carey was chosen to captain the 1931 courtmen, and Nelson Rose was elected as Chairman of the Student Council for 1930-31. 465 THE PRINCETON INN ALEXANDER ST., PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY zJXCodern p Fireproof r- American T ' lan 100 T ooms with ' Bath Accommodations for permanent and transient Guests J. Howard Slocum, Manager 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 class- mates and friends. Under the same management The Seymour, 50 West 45th St., New York, N. Y. and The Flanders, Ocean City, N. J. American Plan — May to October 466 467 The TIGER TEAPOT 8 Dickinson Street FOOD AT ALL HOURS BREAKFAST LUNCH AFTERNOON TEA DINNER Jos. B. HottelCo. Q mart Hats and . . . Jfaberdashery Shoes Men ' s Clothing of quality and distinction Custom Made Shirts 46 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. zMay zMay I y ( NJHE Annual Spring House Parties the first week-end brought joy, jazz, and laughter to the campus. For a short while the ban on cars was lifted, and autos of all kinds sped along the roads of Princeton. But only for a few days could one forget that the year was drawing to a close, that examinations would soon begin. The Triangle Club brought to Princeton The Second Man. This highly sophisticated drawing room comedy was the feature of House Party week-end and marked a new departure in Princeton dramatics. The Track team endured an unsuccessful season. After a brilliant defeat of North Carolina, unbeaten since 1921, the Tigers lost to Yale and Cornell. The Caledonian Games were won by the Sophomores who finished with 56 1 3 points. The Varsity Crew was not successful in a single Regatta but the Freshman aggregation enjoyed a championship season, beat- ing M. I. T. by six lengths and winning by four lengths in the Carnegie Cup races with Cornell and Yale. They also took the first position in the Freshman race of the Henley Regatta. After losing to the Eli and Harvard 150 lb. crews in the race for the Goldthwaite Cup on the Housatonic, the Princeton Lightweights defeated these same rivals to win the Joseph Wright Challenge Trophy and the 150 lb. Championship in the American Henleys. The Baseball Team was most unsuccessful. Victories over Lafayette and Pennsylvania were only eked out after defeats by Amherst, Cornell (twice), Georgetown, Dartmouth, and Penn- sylvania. A bright spot in Princeton Athletics was the Championship Golf Team with G. T Dunlap, the Intercollegiate Champion, as Captain. The tennis team was successful in all but the Yale encounter. (Continued on page 470) Morris Maple Paints and Decorating of Quality 200 NASSAU STREET 468 JENNINGS HOOD Jeweler ' ( iledalist - Stationer SOUTHEAST CORNER CHESTNUT AND 13th STREETS PHILADELPHIA Distinctive Wedding Gifts become family heirlooms. Section Gifts are popular when applied with the club insignia ENGAGEMENT AND SIGNET RINGS BOOKENDS :: PLACQUES Family coat of arms or club insignia cut intaglio Manufacturers of the official emblems of the leading Princeton clubs 469 PRINCETON BANK TRUST CO. PRINCETON, N. J. TJ E invite your account on the confidence the cAlumni and Undergraduates ha-ve placed in this Bank since 1834. Chartered 1834 Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits Over 700,000 zApplegate s Stationery and . . . Novelties Pennants and Banners Subscriptions to Magazines taken Compliments of Arcade Theatre iMay (Continued from page 468) McCarter Theatre was the scene of several important dramatic offerings. Ruth Draper appeared in a series of her original monologues and William Gillette gave his farewell performance in Sherlock Holmes. Mr. Gillette has been a dominant figure on the American Stage for many years. Toward the end of the month classes were discontinued and final examinations loomed above the horizon. The year was nearlv finished. 7 ' une ing d Senio y i HE month of June, living up to its reputation for scorch- days found the campus vacated of all students save niors who were impatiently awaiting their Com- mencement. There were still a few athletic contests to be held, however. In baseball the Tiger conquered Rutgers in a return engage- ment, and then, after evening the series against Yale before a huge crowd of Alumni, succumbed to the Eli in the rubber game by a score of 10-9. The Polo team also bowed to the Blue while the netmen were overcome by California. The Varsity crew completed an unsuccessful season by trailing Navy and Cali- fornia in its final meet held on Lake Carnegie. Aside from these athletic features, June was mainly taken up with Commencement and its social contemporaries. The Soph- omore Prom came off as scheduled as did the numerous Class Reunions and on the 13th and 14th the Triangle Club gave its final performances of The Golden Dog in the McCarter Theatre. Sunday the 15th, President Hibben delivered the Baccalaureate sermon; Monday the traditional Class Day ex- ercises and Graduation rites were held; and on Tuesday the 17th the 183rd Commencement drew to a close with the presenta- tion of the diplomas to the Seniors in front of old, historic Nassau Hall. 470 HEADQUARTERS for RACCOON COATS Raccoon Coats Deep furred, tailor made coats cut to your specifications. Fur Joined Coats Made of the finest imported fab- rics and selected quality pelts. Gunther 666 Fifth Avenue, New York 471 G. R. Murray, Inc. t eal estate Insurance Princeton New Jersey ♦ Telephone 1 5 Cut flowers PLANTS o   Shoulder Corsages m t floret 1 54 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. Telephone 1643 Flowers telegraphed to all parts of the world National Prestige in Men ' s Apparel The name of this house has for years been nationally known for men ' s apparel that is exceptionally fine in quality . . . and authentic to the last detail of style. Jacob Reed ' s Sons October PRINCETON auspiciously opened its 184th year with the inauguration of the School of Public and International Affairs, and the opening of Dickinson Hall, the new building designed to house the School, in addition to the Departments of History, Economics, and Politics. At the first meeting of the New School Dr. Hibben and other officials an- nounced the proposed Conference on Public and International Affairs which was to be the School ' s most distinctive feature for the year. Another feature of the Opening of College was the arrival of Andre Maurois, noted French biographer who joined the Prince- ton Faculty as first incumbent of the Meredith Howland Pyne Lectureship in French Literature. While Triangle Club plans were rapidly maturing, Mrs. Fiske successfully opened the Princeton Theatrical Season at the Mc- 472 Octob er Carter Theatre with two farces. Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh and Becky Sharp were the revivals presented. But Football as usual held the October spot-light. After several disappointing pre-season practice scrimmages with neigh- boring elevens, the Tigers crashed through to a 23-0 victory over Amherst, in a game marked by a succession of good breaks for Princeton. Brown followed with strong interference to down the Princeton team 7-0. On the 18th the Tigers again bowed to a superior football team. Cornell managed to stifle a second half Princeton rally to win 12-7. All eyes now turned to the ensuing Navy encounter. The Tigers showed steady improve- ment at practice during the week, but were unable to ward off the unexpectedly flashy Middies. The final score was Navy 31, Princeton 0. With this utter rout the month of October came to a close. {Continued on page 474) Compliments of u DRIVE-IT CO. 128 No. Warren St. Trenton, N.J. Gowns Hoods  Caps Correct Outfits for All Degrees Princeton University Store represents us. Cotrell Leonard albany, n. y Est. 1831 College Dept. VIRGINIA IOT SPRINGS 1 Three splendid golf courses frequent tournaments for guests, numerous excellent tennis courts, horseback riding, driving, mountain trails and superb views everywhere. The social life is delightful, and almost everyone who is anyone comes here at least occasionally. Dancing, concerts, smart entertainments. New York Booking Offlce : R1TZ CARLTON HOTEL The HOMESTEAD Christian S. Andersen, Resident Mgr. Hot Springs Virginia 473 Octob er (Continued from page 473) The Tigers had bowed three times in a row, a thing unpre- cedented in the annals of Princeton football. In spite of the gloomy outlook nearly every undergraduate was present at a most spirited rally in Alexander Hall on the eve of the Chicago game. So excited were the students that the most destructive riot in recent years broke out with the Christian Students and the Garden Theatre Box Office succumbing to the will of the mob. Strict disciplinary action, considered by many as unduly severe, followed this outburst of enthusiasm. r lA T ' rinceton Institution THE BALTIMORE DAIRY LUNCH 80-82-84 NASSAU STREET • ♦ INSTITUTED FOR EFFICIENT SERVICE VIEDT ' S CHOCOLATE SHOPPE 110 Nassau Street Confections Soda Luncheon The Fountain where Purity and Quality reign supreme O.J. DeMoll Co. Twelfth G Sts. Washington, D.C. xA ' Unliable Place to Buy Tour Radio, Piano, or furniture 474 JTOR TWENTY-THREE YEARS we have been building an organization that can be of material assistance to you in YOUR PRINTING PROBLEMS i g o 8 f i y 3 i %t Ucnt X ©raff eo Circulars Booklets Qatalogs Tear Books . 406-426 West 31ST Street, New York, N.Y. Telephone: CH ickering 4-1 1 20 1 Our experience, knowledge and expert ' advice are always at your service PRINTERS OF igj2 PRINCETON BRIC-A-BRAC 475 CASE FLORIST, Inc. Tbe Best 20 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON, N.J. Ki ovem ber T y if njHE month of November, 1930 will always be remembered for revealing Princeton ' s most courageous football team. After a 0-0 battle with Chicago in the Windy City, the Tigers were downed by Lehigh 13-9 for the first Brown and White victory over a Princeton team. By this time cries of the worst Princeton team ever were in evidence over the entire campus. But this was not to be so. The never-to-be-for- gotten stand against a strong Yale eleven epitomized the ever present Nassau fight, the courage and spirit that is a magnificent part of Princeton tradition. The past failures were forgotten and the defeat by Yale 10-7 was interpreted as a moral victory for the 1930 Tiger eleven. After outplaying the Blue in all departments of the game and staging a breath-taking last minute sustained march of 79 yards down the field to within A. G. Becker Co. INVESTMENT SECURITIES 54 PINE STREET, NEW YORK IOO SOUTH LASAIXE STREET, CHICAGO 476 November half a yard of victory, these inspired eleven men clearly showed their magnificent courage, never exceeded by any Princeton Team. The Cross Country team concluded an undefeated season under the leadership of Captain Prior, and two members of the team qualified for the Intercollegiates. The soccer team wound up a rather unsuccessful season with defeats by Yale 3-2 and Pennsylvania 4-0. In Freshman sports the Football team enjoyed an undefeated season and for the first time since 1925 beat the Yale Frosh 8-0. The cub Cross Country team also experienced a championship record. Several men joined the Varsity in the Intercollegiates. The night before the Lehigh game the gymnasium, gorgeously decorated and brightly illuminated, was the scene of the Senior Prom. The syncopating and rhythmic jazz of Smith Ballew and the Dorsey Brothers kept the gay couples dancing until the first shadows of dawn came creeping into the windows. A few days before the Lehigh game the annual cane spree was held, resulting in a complete Freshman victory. A free-for- all fracas between the two classes ensued in which neither side could claim superiority. With the end of the football season, the campus settled down to monotonous routine, broken only by the brief Thanksgiving recess. FURNITURE AND TRUNKS Moving Any Time and Anywhere STUDENT EXPRESS CO. 9 NASSAU HALL RUBIN BERMAN Tailors f Importers Accessories 1 1 38 CHAPEL ST. NEW HAVEN 7 EAST 47 th ST. NEW YORK 477 Customed Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Haberdashery © sy3 1 O A iW MEN ' S WEAR OF OISTINCTIO a: 32 Nassau Street Opposite Holder Arch ' December DECEME winter Triang ECEMBER was as usual a popular month: opening the cr sports season the first performances of the ugle show and thoughts of the Christmas holidays followed by that immortal bliss itself. Two weeks before vacation W. H. Yeckley, 1932, of Lorain, Ohio was chosen by the football lettermen as Captain of the 1931 Tigers. He was a mainstay on the Line for two years and captained the 1932 Freshman team. The Triangle Show opened with more than usual success. The first two performances of the Tiger Smiles were nothing short of knock-outs at the McCarter Theatre. The customary tour of several of the larger cities was highly successful. As recognition of Bill Roper ' s long connection with Princeton football and in appreciation of his support of the Honor System, the undergraduate body presented to him a Silver Punch Bowl. December A Princeton Shield was engraved upon it and a suitable inscription. December, for most of the student body, was a month to be remembered. The Christmas holidays seemed especially long and cheerful to everyone. During these days the Winter sport teams played their preliminary games. Especially from the Varsity Hockey Team a very successful season is expected. Al- though the prospects for Basketball are not so rosy, an improve- ment over last year ' s record is anticipated by those in charge. Compliments of A FRIEND 478 LOUIS KAPLAN « DISTINCTIVE AND EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN Hand Tailored Clothes ALSO Foreign Haberdashery % NASSAU STREET PRINCETON, N.J. Three Successive Tears IT has been our privilege and pleasure to bind the Bric- a-Brac for 1929, 1930 and I93 1 - It is our hope that the future will continue to find this splen- did book among the annuals which we bind for Yale, Dartmouth, Annapolis, West Point, Colgate, U. of P., and many others. J. F. TAPLEY COMPANY LONG ISLAND CITY, NEW YORK 479 TE-PE-CO ALL CLAY PLUMBING FIXTURES Our Quarantee We make but one grade of ware — the best that can be produced — and sell it at reasonable prices. We sell no seconds or culls. Our ware is guaranteed to be equal in quality and durability to any sanitary ware made in the world. The Te-Pe-Co Trade Mark is found on all goods manufactured by us and is your guarantee that you have received that for which you have paid. THE TRENTON tmtim POTTERIES CO. TRENTON §§7 NEW JERSEY World ' s Largest Makers of All-Clay Plumbing Fixtures SHOWROOMS: ioi Park Avenue, New York City, N. Y. Room 404, Architects Building, 1 7th Sanson) Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. OFFICES: Philadelphia - New York - San Francisco - Boston EXPORT OFFICE: 1 1 5 Broad Street, New York City, N. Y. 480 FOR OLD and NEW MODEL DOUBLE --EDGE RAZORS The m Best Shave Y u Ever Had Or bur Money Back j 481 Index to Advertisers NAME PAGE A Applegates 470 Arcade Theatre 470 B Bailey, Banks Biddle 465 Baltimore Dairy Lunch 474 Bainman, F. A., Inc 464 Becker Co., A. G 476 Brooks Bros 453 Bureau of Student Employment.. 463 C Case Florist, Inc 476 Cotrell Leonard 473 D De Moll Co 474 E Elliman Co., Douglas L 454 F Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co... 457 Floret Shoppe 472 G Garden Theatre 454 Gommy 478 Gunther 471 NAME PAGE H Homestead, The 473 Honore, Jack 452 Hotel Chelsea 459 Hotel Lincoln 455 Hottel Co., Jos. B 468 Hun School 456 J Jennings Hood 469 K Kaplan, Louis 479 Kresge, D. H 452 L Langrock 460 Leigh, W. M., Estate 465 Lent Graff Co., The 475 M Marsh Co 452 Martha ' s Kitchen 456 Morris Maple 468 Murray, G. R 472 N Nill ' s Bakery 464 NAME PAGE P Peacock Inn 456 Potts Auto Express 460 Princeton Bank a.nd Trust Co.... 470 Princeton Inn 466 Princeton Motor Shop 458 Princeton University Store 461 Probak Razor Blades 481 R Reed ' s Sons, Jacob 472 Reliable Furniture Co 464 Renwick ' s 460 Rubin and Berman 477 S Sayles, Zahn Co 462 Student Express Co .... 477 T Tapley, J. F 479 Thome ' s Drug Stores 464 Tiger Teapot 468 Trenton Potteries Co 480 Tripler Co., F. R 458 U U Drive It 473 V Viedt ' s 474 W Walker Gorden Milk Co 457 482 Printed by The Lent and Graff Company New York City


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

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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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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