Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1938
Page 1 of 328
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 328 of the 1938 volume:
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THE BRIC-A-BRAC 1938 THE 1938 BRIC-A-BRAC % ) Uvamt PUBLISHED BY m ' e JUNIOR • • CLASS of PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRINCETON • NEW JERSEY Dedication In partial recognition of his ser- vices of impressing upon a genera- tion of Princeton students the value of history as a vital world force, and in appreciation of contact with his inimitable personality, the 1938 Bric-a-Brac Board affectionately dedicates this volume to WALTER PHELPS HALL Editor ' s Note It is with some hesitation that the 1938 Bric-a-Brac Board offers this volume to the consideration of its readers in the University and elsewhere. What may appear, however, to be a radical change in format will be found to em- body much the same material as in previous years, with nothing essential omitted. Our efforts have been bent toward a more systematic and orderly method of arrangement; it is to this end that the shape has been changed, several sec- tions consolidated, and the Faculty section divided by Departments; other changes will be obvious to the reader. We have shown preference to no one aspect of undergraduate life, but have tried rather to give each its due consideration in relation to the whole, and to present, as is the function of the Bric-a-Brac, a resume of every cam- pus organization during the year pre- ceding publication. jr ■ ■? ■ .-v r-r .. ••ii -.v • « -, mmumff: ' ! •■.; ' ' ViMi ' . . ' r. ' ' .!t,hfhsmtimmm,iit! h i:kjvuiKnM u mib,Ttiiaii ■% ■•i . r . ' ■4 IW :M .,!; ¥ m ■' i ' i ' j mSKfm- fe :- je «« ] .. ■L tll ' illiWiiW ' ' ' •• ■iWA ' . i I . ' :t .V ■• s LT- ? ' ' iky t Pr ' • m ;4!ffiPSI SSH £ .  V5 i .. Jfl V L i « ' . ; -W .. ? ' M y ' M X ' ' fl  ; ?■' ■•■' M. ..i ,t - v ' ■m ' n WH f 3 ¥ 4 B ' • Sr Fj, • yf ii ' ' ' «  - ti. ii ■: - ▼ ■•.- ™..r B -.-VJrwgj; ; . ■■■nB | fl ' tif ■•■' W] M J art ub Cutnine Aj ministmtm % ::: ■' f ' A ' ik $: ' MWm Presidents of the College of New Jersey and Princeton University College Founded in 1746 Became a University in 1896 PRESIDENT DODDS Accessus REV. JONATHAN DICKINSON, A.B., A.M 1747 REV. AARON BURR, A.B., A.M.. 1748 REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS, A.B., A. M. 1758 REV. SAMUEL DAVIES, A.M. 1759 SAMUEL FINLEY, D.D.. 1761 JOHN WITHERSPOON, A.M., D.D., LLD 1768 tSAMUEL S. SMITH, A.M., D.D., LL.D 1795 tASHBELL GREEN, A.B., D.D., LL.D 1812 tJAMES CARNAHAN, A.B., D.D., LL.D._ 1823 tJOHN MacLEAN, A.B., A.M., D.D., LL.D 1854 tJAMES McCOSH, A.M., D.D., LL.D., Litt.D 1868 tFRANCIS L. PATTON, A.M., D.D., LL.D 1888 tWOODROW WILSON, A.M., Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D 1902 ' ttJOHN A. STEWART, A.M., LL.D. 1910 tJOHN G. HIBBEN, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D 1912 ttEDWARD D. DUFFIELD, A.M., LL.D. 1932 HAROLD W. DODDS, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D 1933 Deceased t Resigned } Pro Tempore Exitus 1747 1757 1758 1761 1767 1794 1811 1822 1853 1868 1888 1902 1910 1912 1932 1933 Twenty-one BOARD OF TRUSTEES TOP ROW: Mr. Bedford, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Van Dusen, Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Lourie. THIRD ROA ' : Mr, Clothier, Mr. Mcllwoin, Mr. Martin, Mr. Mothey, Mr. Morris, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Barr. SECOND ROW: Mr. Garrett, Mr. Lee, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Hope, Mr, Forrand, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Smith. FRONT ROW: Mr, Reed, Mr. Milbank, Mr. Osborn, President Dodds, Mr. Duftield. Dr. Finney, Committees of the Trustees ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE Mr. Duffield, Chairman; Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Farrand, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Hope, Mr. D ' Olier (Secretary), Mr. Milbank. COMMITTEE ON FINANCE Mr. Fleming, Chairman: Mr. Osborn, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Milbank, Mr. Mathey, Mr. Reed, Mr. Smith, Mr. Lee, Mr. Palmer, (Mr. Wintringer, Secretary). COMMITTEE ON GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS Mr. D ' Olier, Chairman; Mr. Garrett, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hope, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Mathey, Mr. Bedford, Mr. Smith, (Mr. Wintringer, Secretary). COMMITTEE ON THE CURRICULUM President Dodds, Chairman; Dean Greene, Dean Eisen- hart. Dean Root, Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Farrand (Secretary), Mr. Fleming, Mr. Osborn, Mr. Duffield, Mr. Cochran, Mr. D ' Olier, Mr. Hodge, Mr. Martin, Mr. Van Dusen, Mr. Mcllwain, Mr. Clothier. COMMITTEE ON THE LIBRARY Mr. Hope, Chairman; Mr. Gerould (Secretary), Mr. Pyne, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Mathey, Mr. Lee, Mr. Rentschler, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Morris, Mr. Perkins. Twenty-two COMMITTEE ON HONORARY DEGREES President Dodds, Chairman; Mr. Farrand (Secretary), Mr Osborn, Mr. Stillwell, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Reed, Mi Morris, Mr. Van Dusen, Professor Osgood, Professor Menzies, Mr. Wertenbaker. COMMITTEE ON THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Mr. Farrand, Chairman; Dean Eisenhart (Secretary), Mr. Stillwell, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Martin, Mr. Langenberg, Mr. Morris, Mr. Barr. COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE LIFE Mr. Duffield, Chairman; Dean Gauss, Dean Heermance, Dean M icks, Dr. Jacobus, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Hope, Dr. Hodge, Mr. Mathey, Mr. Bedford, Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Van Dusen. COMMITTEE ON HEALTH AND ATHLETICS Dr. Finney, Chairman; Dean Gauss, Mr. Wintringer, Dr. York, Mr. Garrett, Mr. Mathey, Dr. Hodga, Mr. Bedford, Mr. Griffith, Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Lourie, Mr. Palmer. COMMITTEE ON CONFERENCE (with Committee on Curriculum) Professors Beggs, Butler, McCabe, Morey, D. R. Stuart, H. D. Smith. Trustees of the University Harold G. Hoffman, Governor of the State of New Jersey, Ex-Officio Presiding Officer of the Board Edward Dickinson Duffield, A.M., LL.B., LL.D Chairman of the Board Harold Willis Dodds, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D President of the University Wilson Farrand, L.H.D., Litt.D Clerk of the Board CHARTER TRUSTEES Melancthon W. Jacobus, D.D Hartford, Conn. Elected November, 1890 Robert Garrett, B.S Baltimore, Md. Elected June, 1905 Wilson Farrand, L.H.D., Litt.D Princeton, N. J. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1909; Reelected June, 1914: Charter Trustee, June, 1919 John M. T. Finney, M.D Baltimore, Md. Elected June, 1910 Matthew C. Fleming, A.M., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1912; Reelected June, 1917; Charter Trustee, June, 1922 William C. Osborn, LL.D New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1914 Edward D. Duffield, A.M., LL.D Newark, N. J. Elected April, 1920 Lewis B. Stillwell, D.Sc Princeton, N. J. Elected April, 1920 Percy R. Pyne, II, 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 Walter E. Hope, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1919; Charter Trustee, October, 1926 Gordon S. Rentschler, A.B New York, N. Y. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1921; Charter Trustee, October, 1926 Franklin D ' Olier, A.B Newark, N. J. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1922; Charter Trustee, October, 1926 John Stuart, C.E Chicago, lU. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1918; Charter Trustee, June, 1927 Albert G. Milbank, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected June, 1927 Edward B. Hodge, M.D PhUadelphia, Pa. Elected January, 1928 David A. Reed, A.B., LL.B., LL.D Pittsburgh, Pa. Elected June, 1930 Paul C. Martin, A.B., LL.D Springfield, Ohio Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1926; Charter Trustee, January, 1931 Paul Bedford, B.S., LL.B Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1930; Charter Trustee June, 1934 Dean Mathey, Litt.B New York, N. Y. Elected Alumni Trustee June, 1927; Charter Trustee, June, 1931 Albridge C. Smith, A.B., LL.B New York, N. Y. Elected April, 1933 Roland S. Morris, A.B., LL.B., LL.D Philadelphia, Pa. Elected April, 1934 Henry P. Van Dusen, Ph.D New York, N. Y. Elected October, 1934 Charles H. Mcllwain, Litt.D Cambridge, Mass. Elected June, 1936 Edgar Palmer, E.E Princeton, N. J. Elected June, 1936 ALUMNI TRUSTEES Harry H. Langenberg, A.B St. Louis, Mo. Term expires June, 1937 Richard M. Griffith, A.B Pasadena, Calif. Term expires June, 1937 William E. Stevenson, M.A New York, N. Y. Term expires June, 1938 Donold B. Lourie, A.B Chicago, 111. Term expires June, 1938 George W. Perkins, B.Litt New York, N. Y. Term expires June, 1939 P. Blair Lee, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Term expires June. 1939 Robert C. Qothier, Litt.B., LL.D., Litt.D New Brunswick, N. J. Term expires June, 1940 J. McFerran Barr, A.B Louisville, Ky. Term expires June, 1940 COUNSEL Messrs. Stewart and Shearer ASSOCIATE COUNSEL William Collins Vandewater, A.B., LL.B. Twenty-three Gauss, College Root, Foculty DEANS OF THE UNIVERSITY Heermance, Freshman Wicks, Chopel Etsenhort, Graduate College Greene, Engire:;rirn Committees of the Faculty CLERK OF THE FACULTY: Professor Stohlman. COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES: The President, Chairman; Pro- fessors T. M. Greene, Hudson, and Menzies. ADMISSION: Dean Heermance, Chairman; Professors Brigham, Duckworth, A. M. Greene, Jr., Kennedy, Laughlin, I. G. Smith, Wade, Wallis. ATHLETIC ELIGIBILITY: Dean Gauss, Chairman; The President, Dr. McPhee, Professors Albion, Dell, Elsasser, Shenstone, Mr. Gates, Mr. Wintringer. CONFERENCE: Professors Beggs, Butler, McCabe, Morey, H. D. Smyth, D. R. Stuart. COURSE OF STUDY: The President, Chairman; Professors Bohnenblust, Boyce, Butler, Cawley, Chapman, Condon, Furman, Godolphin, A. M. Greene, Jr., T. M. Greene, Lang- feld. Mason, Root (Secretary, ex-officio), E. B. Smith, Stewart, Thom, C. R. Whittlesey. DISCIPLINE: Dean Gauss, Chairman; Professors Beller, Ham- well, Heermance, Hudson, Mr. Gates, Mr. Selden. EXAMINATIONS AND STANDING: Dean Root, Chairman; Pro- fessors Albion (Secretary), Dougherty, A. M. Greene, Jr., Hastings, Heermance, Kennedy, Modlin, Oates, Turner. GRADUATE SCHOOL: Dean Eisenhart, Chairman; Professors Armstrong, Bender, Buddington, Carpenter, Dougherty (Second Term), Dugan, G. H. Gerould, F. D. Graham (Sec- ond Term), Howard (First Term), A. C. Johnson, Langfeld, Lefschetz, Morey, Morgan, Scoon, H. D. Smyth, Swingle, Taylor (First Term), Wertenbaker. HONORARY DEGREES: (Joint Committee with that of the Trus- tees) — Professors Menzies, Osgood, Wertenbaker. Twenty-four LIBRARY: Professor J. T. Gerould, Chairman; Professors Beggs, Carpenter, Hitti, McCabe, Prentice, E. B. Smith, Sontag, Stace, Stewart, Tarr, Thorp. MUSIC: Professor Welch, Chairman; Professcrs Ccokc DeWald, Edwards, Pacsu, Rahm, Thorp. NON-ATHLETIC ORGANIZATIONS: Dean Gauss, Chairman; Professors Ball, Comstock, Dorf, Elgin, McKean, Seneif, Weber, Mr. Bunn. PUBLIC LECTURES: Professor Hudson, Chairman; Professors J. D. Brown, Centeno, Dahlgren, Field, C. R. Hall, Menzies, Poole, Robertson, Rowley, Stewart, Wood, Mr. Tomlinson (Secretary). PUBLIC SPEAKING AND DEBATE: Professor McKean, Chair- man; Professors G. A. Graham, W. S. Howell, Irving, Luthringer, MacCIintock, Mclsaac, Simpson, Voorhees, W. L. Whittlesey. RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION; Professor Friend, Chairman; Pro- fessors Eisenhart, Root, Scoon, Wertenbaker. SCHEDULE: Professor Kissam, Chairman; Professors Blakeney, Caley, Gauss, Knebelman, Lowe, The Registrar. ADVISORY COUNCIL OF THE FACULTY: The President, Chairman; Professors Bender, Buddington, Butler, Cain Carpenter, A. M. Greene, Jr., Hewett-Thayer, Howard, Hudson, Langfeld, Morey, Morgan, Munro, Russell, Scoon, H. D. Smyth, D. R. Stuart, H. S. Taylor, York; ex-officio, the Dean of the Faculty, the Dean of the Graduate School. COMMITTEE OF THE ADVISORY COUNCIL: Professors Gauss. Morey, D. R. Stuart. Officers of Administration Harold Willis Dodds, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D Nassau Hall President Robert Greenhalgh Albion, A.M., Ph.D 202 Nassau Hall Assistant Dean of the Faculty Director of the Summer Session I. Hamilton Allan, M.D McCosh Infirmary Resident Physician Fred R. Apgar Purchasing Agent ...Stanhope Hall Ralph Jones Belford, M.D McCosh Infirmary Consultant in Surgery John Raymond Burbidge, M.D McCosh Infirmary Resident Physician Asa Smith Bushnell, B.S First National Bank Bldg. Graduate Manager of Athletics Harry Cauley.. Proctor ..Stanhope Hall John Saville Cosgrave Stanhope Hall Assistant to the Bursar Burnham North Dell. A.M., Ph.D First National Bank Bldg. Director of Athletics Chairman of the University Council on Athletics Henry Green Duffield Princeton, N. J. Treasurer, Emeritus Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D 3 Nassau Hall Dean of the Graduate School Beatrix Farrand, A.M New York City Consulting Landscape Gardener Caleb F. Gates, M.A 201 Nassau Hall Assistant Dean of the College Secretary of the Committee on Discipline Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D 205 Nassau Hall Dean of the College James Thayer Gerould, A.B., Litt.D University Library Librarian Arthur Maurice Greene. Jr, M.E., D.Sc. D.Eng. Dean of the School of Engineering....! 16 Engineering Bldg. Radcliffe Heermance, A.M 302 Nassau Hall Director of Admission and Dean of Freshmen Francis X. Hogorly 2 North Middle Reunion Hall Proctor Mary A. Hopkins, R.N McCosh Infirmary Infirmarian Ledlie I. Laughlin, Litt.B 305 Nassau Hall Assistant to the Dean of Freshmen Alexander Leitch, A.B 313 Nassau Hall Secretary Wilbur Franklin Kerr 211 Nassau Hall Registrar Michael Kopliner Stanhope HaU Proctor Edward Allen MacMillan, C.E Stanhope Hall Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings Harry Roemer McPhee, A.B., M.D. Medical Office, University Gymnasium Assistant University Physician Robert Mellinger. A.B 9 Nassau Hall Manager of Student Agencies Gail A. Mills, B.S., C.P.A Stanhope Hall Bursar Frederick Spring Osborne, A.B 21 Nassau Hall Director of Public Information Clifford Daniel Quick, B.Arch Stanhope Hall Assistant to the Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings ■Willard Greenberry Rainey, M.D McCosh Infirmary University Physician Robert Kilburn Root, Ph.D 202 Nassau Hall Dean of the Faculty William Kirkpatrick Selden, AB 201 Nassau Hall Assistant to the Dean of the Faculty and to the Dean of the College Gordon Gowans Sikes, A.M Murray-Dodge HaU Undergraduate Counsellor Luman Harris Tenney, A.B., M.D. Medical Office, University Gymnasium Assistant University Physician Stephen F. Voorhees, C.E New York City Supervising Architect Richard Webster Warfield, B.S 9 Nassau Hall Director of the Bureau of Appointments and Student Employment Robert Russell Wicks, A.M., D.D University Chapel Dean of the University Chapel George C. Wintringer, E.E Stanhope Hall Controller Wilbur Heskett York, A.B., M.D. Medical Office. University Gymnasium Chairman of the Department of Health and Physical Education Twenty-five TOP ROW; DeWald, Rowley, Sloan, Forsyth, Dovis, Stillwell. SECOND ROW; Beck, Sessions, Egbert, Hufstoder, Stohlman, Comstock. FRONT ROW; Elderkin, Shear, Morgan, Morey ' Chairman), Smith, Friend, Lobatut. Department of Art and Archaeology Charles Rufus Morey, A.M., L.H.D., Chairman----114 Broadmead Professor Eugenic Batista, M.F.A.- 10 Dickinson Street Instructor Martin Luther Beck 41 Harrison Street Assistant Professor Edward T. Canby, M.A Graduate College Assistant Francis Frederic Adams Comstock, M.F.A P. O. Box 162 Assistant Professor lames Edward Davis, A.B 30 Nassau Street Assistant Professor Ernest Theodore DeWald, A.M., Ph.D 76 Library Place Associate Professor Donald Drew Egbert, M.F.A 10 Mercer Street Assistant Professor George Wicker Elderkin, Ph.D 11 Haslet Avenue Professor George Howard Forsyth, Jr., M.F.A 25 Alexander Street Assistant Professor Albert Mathias Friend, Jr., A.M 10 Mercer Street Assistant Director of the Museum of Historic Art Professor lames Andrus Giddings, Jr., A.B 100 Hodge Road Instructor Robert Hufstader, B.Mus Ober Road Assistant Professor lean Labatut, L. de I. F Snowden Lane Professor Sherley Warner Morgan, B.Arch 145 Hodge Road Director of the School of Architecture Professor George Rowley, M.F.A --98 Bayard Lane Curator of Far Eastern Art Associate Professor Roger Sessions, Mus.B Pennington, N. J. Instructor Theodore Leslie Shear, A.M., Ph.D., L.H.D 12 Battle Road Curator of Classical Art Professor Joseph Curtis Sloane, Jr., M.F.A 293 Nassau Street Instructor Earl Baldwin Smith, A.M., Ph.D., L.H.D 120 Broadmead Howard Crosby Butler Memorial Professor of the History of Architecture Class of 1913 Lecturer in Architecture Richard StilweU, M.F.A 208 Library Place Assistant Professor W. FreKierick Stohlman, A.M., M.F.A 10 Mercer Street Associate Professor Roy Dickinson Welch, A.B., Mus.M 162 Library Place Professor R. G. Bradshaw F. H. Osborn, Jr. J. H. Eisenhard W. W. Brenn P. G. Cook G. O. Chadwick W. K. Elliot UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY, 1937 T. A. Potter, Jr. F. W. Severance, Jr. A. M. Wicks H. R. Saalfield 1938 Henry Gardiner F. H. McAdoo, Jr. R. B. MacDonald G. G. Rutherfurd ARCHITECTURE, 1937 C. D. Goldsbury A. P. Lucht R. M. Price J. S. Graham, Jr. C. H. Philips R. H. Savage 1938 F. L. Fisher J. G. Kelley Robert Moment D. E. Van Utt H. C. Wells W. B. Hankin F. S. Kinney W. C. Renwick W. J. Watson Twenty-six Department of Biology Elmer Grimshaw Butler, Ph.D., Chairman 14 College Road Associate Professor Rubert Sigfred Anderson, Ph.D 15-B Graduate College Research Associate Lewis Robinson Cary, Ph.D 48 Vandeventer Avenue Assistant Professor Edwin Grant Conklin, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D 139 Broadmead Henry Fairfield Osborn Professor of Biology, Emeritus Uiric Dahlgren, M.S 7 Evelyn Place Professor Arthur John Dziemian, A.B 174 Graduate College Assistant Gerhard Fankhauser, Ph.D 25 Murray Place Assistant Professor Marcus Stults Farr, D.Sc 20 Vandeventer Avenue Associate Professor Edmund Newton Harvey, Ph.D 2 College Road Henry Fairfield Osborn Professor of Biology Harry Witherow Hays, B.S 206 Nassau Street Assistant Charles Leo Macy P. O. Box 364 Assistant Charles Freeman Williams McClure, A.M., D.Sc.l Battle Road Class of 1877 Professor of Zoology, Emeritus William Milton Parkins, A.M 206 Nassau Street Research Associate Arthur Kemble Parpart, Ph.D 54 Harrison Street Assistant Professor William Olin Pucketl, Ph.D 164 Graduate College Instructor Walter Mead Rankin, Ph.D 5 Evelyn Place Professor Emeritus Charles Henry Rogers, Litt.B 20 Haslet Avenue Curator of Museum of Zoology Lionel Valdemar Silvester, A.B Mt. Lucas Assistant George Harrison Shull, Ph.D 60 Jefferson Road Professor Wilbur Willis Swingle, Ph.D Kingston Road Edwin Grant Conklin Professor of Biology Alton Robert Taylor, B.S 53 Murray Place Research Associate UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, R. G. Ballentine Irving Brown, Jr. J. C. Burke J. W. Burke, Jr. J. J. Byrne A. M. Campbell W. L. Dyson H. B. Adams, Jr. C. M. Baker, Jr. J. E. Baylor R. E. Benjamin 1. D. J. Brady E. L. Chambers J. N. Classen Carl Ferenbach J. M. Finney J. F. Foran R. P. Grimm L. V. Hauxhurst Chapin Hawley Francis Jacobs Bailey Cowan L. D. Fenninger H. K. Fink R. G. Gould A. F. Hopper, Jr. T. B. Hubbard, Jr. A. C. Jones, Jr. R. H. Johnston R. M. Johnston C. E. Kaufman, Jr. M. J. Kempner J. P. Leidy W. M. Lutz K. W. Mann 1938 Merle Lawrence W. W. Light K. M. Lynch, Jr. R. H. McCarter C. G. McKendree W. G. Marr R. E. Mason Condict Moore 1937 R. B. Miller M. K. MiUiken H. T. Randall S. W. Robinson C. E. Roh R. P. Rye F. T. Scanlon, Jr. H. B. Neal, Jr. T. H. Norris E. R. Novak R. L. Offen, Jr. E. S. Olsan S. J. Sarnoff R. L. Schley, Jr. L. A. Scinta E. W. Scott Geoffrey Stengel C. E. Test S. H. Waughtel J. S. Wise A. E. Yahn, Jr. Lawrence Singmaster R. H. Smith W. W. Squire Coakley Taylor D. A. W. Wilson W. W. Wilson T. S. Winslow, Jr. TOP ROW: Silvester, Porport, Puckett, Kempton. SECOND ROW: Dahlgren, Swingle, Cory, Fonkhauser, Harvey, Rogers. FRONT ROW: Rankin, McClure, Butler (Chairman], Conklin, Shull. Twenty-seven BACK ROW Eyring, Alyea, Pacsu, Turkevich, Pease, Caley, Wallis, Dougherty. FRONT ROW: Furman, Menzies, Foster, Taylor (Chairman), Jones, Smith, Smyth, Hugh Scott Taylor, D.Sc, F.R.S., Chairman 115 Broadmead David B. Jones Professor of Chemistry Hubert Newcombe Alyea, Ph.D D-2 Prospect Apts. Assistant Professor John Henry Billman, A.M 27 Madison Street Assistant Earle Radcliffe Caley, Ph.D 20 1 Harrison Street Assistant Professor Gregg Dougherty, Ph.D 95 Library Place Associate Professor Leonard Sidney Echols, Jr., B.S... -. 54 Graduate College Assistant Henry Eyring, Ph.D. 364 Nassau Street Associate Professor Edward Gilmore Ford, B.S 5 Chesnut Street Assistant William Foster, Ph.D 41 Battle Road Russell Wellman Moore Professor of Chemistry Nathaniel Howell Furman, Ph.D .-- 128 Broadmead Associate Professor George Augustus Hulett, Ph.D 44 Washington Road Professor of Physical Chemistry, Emeritus Lauder William Jones, Ph.D., D.Sc 28 Hibben Road A. Barton Hepburn Professor of Organic Chemistry John F. Kincaid, M.A.. 185 Prospect Avenue Assistant Slaughter Warren Lee, M.A 15-E Graduate College Assistant LeRoy Wiley McCoy, A.M., Sc.D ...12 Morven Place Professor Emeritus Department of Chemistry Alan Wilfrid Cranbrook Menzies, Ph.D 187 Prospect Avenue Professor George A. Moore, Jr., M.S 98 Nassau Street Assistant Eugene Pacsu, Dr. Phil Edgerstoune, Winant Road Associate Professor Robert Norton Pease, Ph.D 71 Battle Road Associate Professor William Theodore Richards, Ph.D 186 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor Donald Pritchard Smith, Ph.D 10 Nassau Street Associate Professor John O. Smith, Jr., B.S 1 LC Graduate College Assistant Charles Phelps Smyth, Ph.D 22 Morven Place Associate Professor David Paul Stevenson, B.S 186 Prospect Avenue Assistant Ellison Hall Taylor, B.S 66 Nassau Street Assistant Wendell Hertig Taylor, Ph.D 202 Graduate College Instructor Nelson R. Trenner, Ph.D 61 Wiggins Street Research Associate John Turkevich, Ph.D.... 39 Wiggins Street Instructor Everett Stanley Wallis, Ph.D 5 College Road Associate Professor William A. West, Ph.D 8 College Road Research Associate UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 M. T. Gleason, Jr. R. S. Hartzell F. E. Winans G. E. Alter, Jr. W. W. Armstrong A. H. Dater F. C. Field, Jr. F. B. Jennings W. B. Johnson A. G. Fletcher, Jr. D. C. Hamilton. Jr. E. N. Harvey. Jr. C. E. Kip H. G. Kunkel Twenty-eight S. E. Pendexter, J Phil Porter 1938 S. B. Lupica J. H. McLean, 11 T. H. Maren J. F. Mead O. H. Perry W. G. Raleigh P. R. Pyne, III R. W. Shearman C. C. Reid F. E. Smith D. S. Speer C. R. Stevens J. W. Strong H. E. Westlake, Jr. J. O. Whiteley, Jr. W. P. Tarns Bayard Underwood G. J. Vosburgh R. C. Walden, Jr. E. J. Wilson, Jr. Department of Classics Duane Reed Stuart, Ph.D., Chairman 60 Ba ' .tle Road Kennedy Professor of Latin Languages and Literature Walter Allen, Jr., A.M., Ph.D 194 Graduate College Instructor Edward Capps, Ph.D., LL.D., Lilt.D., L.H.D R. F. D. 2 Professor, Emeritus Paul Robinson Coleman-Norton, A.M., D.Phil., Associate Professor ■174 Prospect Avenue Philip H. DeLacy, A.M., Ph.D 409 Alexander Hall Instructor George Eckel Duckwcrth, A.M., Ph.D 19 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor Francis Richard Bcrroum Godolphin. A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor 76 Alexander Street Frederick Leroy Hutson. Ph.D., L.H.D 42 Cleveland Lane Professor Allen Chester Johnson, Ph.D., LL.D 3 College Road Musgrave Professor of Latin David Magie, A.M., Ph.D 101 Library Place Professor Whitney Jennings Oates, A.M., Ph.D 84 Alexander Street Assistant Professor Norman Twombly Pratt, Jr., A.M., Ph.D 58 Mercer Street Instructor William K3lly Prentice, A.M., Ph.D 12 Nassau Street Professor Edmund Yard Robbins, A,M 144 Library Place Ewing Professor of Greek Langauge and Literature, Emeritus Shirley Howard Weber, A.M., Ph.D 106 Broadmead Associate Professor John Howell Westcott, A.M., Ph.D 200 Mercer Street Musgrave Professor of Latin and Tutor in Roman Law, Emeritus Steven S. Barabas T. S. Collings R. K. Aiken, Jr. D. W. Betts W. L. Cruikshank J. D. Ewing A. F. Frick W. B. Johnson, UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 J. R. Crowley D. E. Foster R. T. Goodsell F. ]. McGinity 1938 A. I. Mendeloff E. H. Morgan E. G. Riggs, II F. R. Starr J. C. Meyer, Jr. J. H. Parke F. W. Rounds, Jr. W. P. Moore P. A. PhilLcs C. H. Smyth Department of Oriental Languages and Literatures Harcld Herman Bander, Ph.D., Litt.D., Phil.L.D., Chairman 120 Fitz Randolph Road Professor of Indo-Germanic Philology Phillip Khuri Hitti, Ph.D 106 Fitz Randolph Road Asso::;ate Professor of Semitic Literature on the William and Annie S. Paton Foundation Henry Snyder Gehman, A.M.. Ph.D., S.T.D 60 Stockton Street Lecturer in Semitic Languages Edmund Yard Rrbhins, A.M 144 Library Place Ewing Professor of the Greek Language and Literature TOP ROW: D Uocy, Duckworth, Coleman-Norton, Weber. SECOND ROW: Paris, Godolphin, Pratt, Oates, Allen, Hitti. FRONT ROW: Hutson, Johnson, Bender (Cholrmon of Oriental Languages), Stuart (Chairman of Classics ' , Prentice, Mogie. Twenty -nine TOP ROW: Dell, Whittlesey, Cline, Luthringer, Modlm, Lvnch, Duncan, Codmon. SECOrjD ROW, J, G Smitli, Millet, Foumici, Plum, Mclsaac, Bryan, Lester, Chandler. FRONT ROW; McCobe, Dixon, Fetter, Howard (Chairman), Lutz. Department of Economics and Social Institutions Stanley Edwin Howard, A.M., Ph.D 7 College Road Chairman Associate Professor Allen Eugene Andress, A.M 126 Graduate College Fellow in the Graduate College lames Douglas Brown, A.M., Ph.D 148 Mercer Street Director of the Industrial Relations Sections Robert Fessler Bryan, A.B 35 Williams Street Instructor John William Cadman, Jr., A.B 192 Graduate College Assistant Lester Vernon Chandler, A.M., Ph.D... 112 Alexander Street Instructor Denzel Cecil Cline, A.M., Ph.D 13 Sergeant Street Assistant Professor Burnham North Dell, A.M., Ph.D Meadow Garden Assistant Professor Director of Athletics Frank Haigh Dixon, A.M., Ph.D 101 Broadmead Professor Acheson Johnson Duncan, A.M., Ph.D 137 Jefferson Road Instructor Leslie Thomas Fournier, A.M., Ph.D. 4 College Road Assistant Professor Frank Dunstone Graham. A.M., Ph.D 8 College Road Professor Thirty Edwin Walter Kemmerer, Ph.D., LL.D., Hon.D., D.Sc. 161 Hodge Road Walker Professor of International Finance Richard Allen Lester, A.M., Ph.D 3 North Edwards Instructor George Francis Luthringer, A.M., Ph.D 60 Harrison Street Assistant Professor Harley Leist Lutz., A.M., Ph.D., LL.D 56 Battle Road Professor of Public Finance Edward Stephen Lynch, A.M., Ph.D 22 Vandeventer Avenue Instructor George Brinton McClellan, A.M., LL.D Washington. D. C. Professor of Economic History, Emeritus David Aloysius McCabe, Ph.D... Ill Fitz Randolph Road Professor Archibald MacDonald Mclsaac, A.M., Ph.D. 25 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor John Perry Miller, A.M 4 South Edwards Instructor George Matthews Modlin, A.M., Ph.D D-3 Prospect Apts. Assistant Professor Lester Virgil Plum, A.M., Ph.D 21 Edwards Place Instructor James Gerald Smith, A.M., Ph.D 80 Murray Place Associate Professor Charles Raymond Whittlesey, A.M., Ph.D. 48 Patton Avenue Associate Professor Undergraduate Members Paul Adams, Jr. A. L. Applegate H. W. Backes, Jr. K. L. Baker, Jr. W. G. Bate, Jr. R. P. Bell R. A. Bendheim B. D. Benson, Jr. F. M. Blaicher J. S. Blay R. E. Borner J. W. Bredenberg J. G. Cannon R. J. Chapman F. S. Chariot W. P. Cleaver W. H. Close, Jr. T. T. Cook, Jr. D. B. Creecy, Jr. I. F. Cross, 111 S. S. Date W. J. Devlin I. D. Dorian H. A. DuFlon A. J. Fallon S. C. Allen R. G. Aller M. J. Arcaya J. L. Armitage W. R. Banks, Jr. G. R. Benson, Jr. 0. K. Boice R. C. Borer R. Borgersen Jonathan Bryan, III J. D. Burke 1. A. Cissel, Jr. C. K. Coddington J. P. Corcoran, Jr. W. P. Covey W. B. Craig R. L. Cropper D. S. Cross E. M. David J. J. G. Deemer G. W. DeSousa I. T. Dickinson, Jr. W. L. Drill C. C. Eaton W. F. Firman T. B. Foster Theodore French A. P. Fuller R. F. Furman 1937 Thornton Gerrish, Jr. E. G. Giflord, Jr. J. C. Goodell B. M. Gordon E. L. Groff Joseph Harris D. M. Hathev ay M. F. Hendrickson J. T. Hill W. R. Hopkin R. B. Hopper H. S. Hov e, Jr. C. P. Kogge E. P. Lebens R. H. LeBrecht J. T. MacDonald Pierce MacNair J. L. Marks, Jr. H. W. Mitchell J. E. Morrissey, Jr. G. A. Nason CD. Nightingale C. C. Northrup R. F. Cher E. T. Pickard, Jr. A. C. Pollock, Jr. 1938 T. O. Gilson G. J. Gores H. A. Heller F. E. Henze J. G. Hoagland J. R. Hoffman, Jr. R. M. Jabara W. W. Johnston E. J. Kauffman, Jr. E. E. Keusch E. T. Kinder C. P. King J. B. Kirkpatrick R. B. Knight S. Z. Krinsky J. H. Laporte S. C. Lawson B. M. Littlehale L. P. Lochridge, Jr. S. S. Logan, Jr. R. S. Longstaff, Jr. P. A. Loomis, Jr. T. D. Lucas, Jr. N. E. LutW J. G. McCuUoch J. E. McHarg G. J. Macgruder S. R. Marks, Jr. J. H. Marter R. C. O. Matheny, Jr. J. F. Pritchard, Jr. H. H. Purvis, Jr. E. B. Pyle H. W. Read S. B. Scovil G. B. Smith, 11 Pinkham Smith W. K. Stanard, 11 E. N. Staub J. D. Stewart N. A. Stoner J. S. Studdiford, II D. F. Sullivan, Jr. I. D. Sylvester N. G. Thacher W. S. Townsend, Jr. R. B. Uphom, Jr. J. C. Ward F. T. Warner, Jr. Northam Warren, Jr. G. W. Watson, III R. B. Wilder A. J. Wilson, II P. B. Wisman J. F. Wood R. R. Meyer, Jr. A. J. Morrell T. H. Moyer, Jr. C. H. Nichols, Jr. W. P. O ' Neill, Jr. William Orchard J. H. Pinckney, IV A. C. Poole R. J. Potter C. D. Reich, Jr. H. A. Reid W. W. Richardson B. W. Ripley, 11 J. R. Simpson N. W. Slack J. D. Snelham F. J. Snyder K. A. Spitz J. P. Stanton O. C. Stephano A. J. Stokely J. H. Taylor F. W. Thacher, Jr. E. S. Tow nend, Jr. M. C. Trover D. R. Underwood Stephen Whitcomb Kemble White, Jr. T. B. Wood Thirty-one l„i I .V Gary, Howell, Hinds, Scott, Elsas-.CT, Thorp, oticc, Siautrcr, Eov eis SECOND ROW. Savage, Wotkins, Larrabeo, Kelley, Ball, McKeon, Hubler, Finch. FRONT ROW: Murch, Cowley, Root, Hudson iChoirmani, Kennedy, Gerould, Osgood. Department of English Hoyt Hopewell Hudson, A.M., Ph.D., Chairman, Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory 28 Edgehill Street Robert Hamilton Ball, A.M., Ph.D .22 Alexander Street Assistant Professor Fredson T. Bowers, Ph.D Nassau Inn Instructor Robert Ralston Cawley, A.M., Ph.D 124 Pyne Hall Associate Professor Morris William CroU, Ph.D., Litt.D 40 Bayard Lane Professor Emeritus Albert Elsasser, A.M., Ph.D 182 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor Jeremiah Finch, Ph.D Nassau Club Instructor Franklin Gary, B.Litt. 14 Alexander Street Assistant Professor Gordon Hall Gerould, B.Litt 119 Fitz Randolph Road Professor George McLean Harper, Ph.D 36 Mercer St. Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature, Emeritus Asher Estey Hinds, A.M 10 Mercer Street Assistant Professor Wilbur Samuel Howell, A.M., Ph.D 44 Washington Road Assistant Professor Edward L. Hubler, A.M., Ph.D 44 Vandeventer Avenue Assistant Professor Maurice Willyle Kelley, A.M., Ph.D 142V2 Hodge Road Instructor Charles William Kennedy, A.M., Ph.D Nassau Club Professor Thirty-two Stephen Larrabee, A.M., Ph.D Ill Pyne Hall Instructor Francis Charles MacDonald, A.B Pearl Harbor, Hawaii Associate Professor, Emeritus Dayton D. McKean, A.M 46 Murray Place Assistant Professor of Public Speaking Archibald MacLeish, LL.B., M.A Farmington, Conn. Special Lecturer in English Literature Herbert Spencer Murch, A.M., Ph.D 5-A Holder Hall Associate Professor Charles Grosvenor Osgood, Ph.D 92 Stockton Street Holmes Professor of Belles Letlres Thomas Marc Parrott, Ph.D --Box 53, Lawrenceville, N. J. Professor Emeritus Robert Kilburn Root, Ph.D. ..The Dean ' s House, 73 Nassau Street Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature Henry Lyttleton Savage, Ph.D - 104 Jefferson Road Associate Professor Walter Bernard Scott, Jr., A.M., Ph.D 34 Wiggins Street Instructor John Duncan Spaeth, Ph.D., Litt.D., University of Kansas City, Kansas City, Mo. Murray Professor of English Literature, Emeritus Donald Alfred Stauffer, A.M., D.Phil 302 Henry Hall Assistant Professor Willard Thorp, A.M., Ph.D 142 Nassau Street Assistant Professor Thomas Hume Vance, A.M., Ph.D 614 Laughlin Hall Instructor Walter Barker Critz Watkins, A.M - 131 Pyne Hall Assistant Professor Undergraduate Members K. B. Alexander, Jr. Alexander Armstrong, Jr. C. W. Bayliss, Jr. M. A. Beltaire, III Barlol Brinkler F. C. Bunn, Jr. H. L. Canoune J. J. Coale, III C. M. Dering R. S. Dumper T. B. Fifield R. G. Fletcher H. L. Giberson, Jr. L. J. Grcss S. R. Hackett I. H. Hines, Jr. 1937 E. W. Hosier, Jr. I. A. Howell W. B. Hunter, Jr. C. E. Jauch E. W. Kahler I. E. Kelly, Jr. J. W. Lippincott, Jr. D. S. Long E. H. Lotspeich J. R. McCord, Jr. J. H. McGiffert G. D. MacRae P. C. Manker C. S. S. Marvin S. F. Medina R. A. Messier, II A. A. Mitchell Rodman Morgan P. E. Neary I. W. Nicholson, III E. F. O ' Connor, III J. W. Ragsdale Thomas Riggs, Jr. E. F. Rivinus, Jr. J. B. Shennan J. E, Sincell T. H. Smithies J. M. Smyth, Jr. D. G. Spencer J. D. Swan W. M. Ward, Jr. W. H. Ziegler 1938 R. M. Ahara S. K. Aitkin J. G. Anderton, Jr. P. B. Anderton J. C. Appel P. R. Applegate, Jr. R. A. Baer J. B. Beaty, Jr. B. M. Bedford Peter Bentley, IV R. A. Burke J, F. Burket, Jr. R. B. Bush H. W. Butterworth, III K. O. Buzby T. F. Carey J. W. Carlile J A. Cashman B. P. Cheesman H. B. Clagett, Jr. L. H. Clark Seymour Colman J. K. Culver, Jr. I. E. Deford, Jr. Ramon deMurias C. P. Dethier C. R. Devine H. B. Evans R. B. Failey, Jr. W. G. Fallon, Jr. W. A. Feather, Jr. H. C. Freeman, Jr. H. O. H. Frelinghuysen Frederick Gilbert A. P. Gorman, II L. A. Gould, Jr. F. R. Hall F. T. Hamilton I. B. Haviland A. B. Heinsohn A. B. Hine, Jr. D. H. Hosier J. H. Hughes, III Burrowes Hunt W. O. Hunt, 11 T. R. Jaeckel R. M. Tanney L. H. Komoski L. W. Lauterstein M. S. Lazaron, Jr. D. V. Lee S. G. McCampbell B. C. McCartney R. G. Maitland Jonathan Mason I. H. Miller H. C. Moses, Jr. K. H. Muir J. R. Murray J. G. Nettlelon, Jr. A. M. Newburger H. R. Niehoff J. E. Nugent E. N. Odell A. R. Ormond R. H. Orr, II D. X. Parreno R. P. Pasley L. A. Pechstein, Jr. C. H. Peckworlh, Jr. H. J. Plants I. C. Pogue, Jr. W. S. Power C. J. Rainear C. H. Reed, Jr. F. E. Reeve, Jr. W. P. Sedgwick, III M. L. Seidelman C. A. Skinner B. B. Sloan, Jr. C. E. Smith, Jr. H. D. Sprowles, Jr. F. C. St. John Adolph Suehsdorf, III B. E. Taylor, Jr. B. E. Tousley, Jr. R. L. Urban T. F. Vietor, Jr. C. R. Watson, Jr. J. H. White Hugh Whittaker, Jr. S. C. Woodhull Evarts Ziegler Thirty- three TOP ROW: Seller, Quigley, Gates, Harbison, Sontag, Boyce. MIDDLE ROW: Shugg, Hole, Strayer, White, Stacey, Palmer. FRONT ROW: C. R. Hall, Wertenbaker, Munro (Chairman), W. P. Hall, Albion. Department of History Dana Gardner Munro, Ph.D., Chairman 49 Springdale Road Professor of Latin-American History and Affairs Robert Greenhalgh Albion, A.M., Ph.D 69 Harrison Street Associate Professor Elmer Adolph Beller, A.M., Ph.D 15 Alexander Street Associate Professor Gray Cowan Boyce, A.M., Ph.D 401 ' 03 Hall Assistant Professor Caleb Frank Gates, Jr., A.B P. O. Box 487 Instructor Richard Walden Hale, Jr., A.B 196 Graduate College Instructor Clifton Rumery Hall, A.M., Ph.D 13 Edgehill Street Professor Walter Phelps Hall, Ph.D 12 Edgehill Street Dodge Professor of History Elmore Harris Harbison, A.M 101 Foulke Hall Instructor Robert Roswell Palmer, Ph.D 11 Alexander Street Instructor John Edwin Pomfret, A.M., Ph.D 176 Western Way Associate Professor W. Carroll Ouigley, A.M 76 Alexander Street Instructor Roger Wallace Shugg, A.M., Ph.D 36 Edwards Place Instructor Raymond James Sontag, A.M., Ph.D 287 Western Way Associate Professor Charles Perry Stacey, A.M., Ph.D 204 Graduate College Instructor Joseph R. Strayer, A.M., Ph.D 49 Springdale Road Instructor Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker, A.M., Ph.D., 164 Prospect Avenue Edwards Professor of American History Lynn Townsend White, Jr., A.M., Ph.D 134 Pyne Hall Instructor Thirty-four Undergraduate Members 1937 J. F. Anderson G. E. Armstrong E. F. Beale, III E. H. Bendley, Jr. J. L. Broderick R. W. Buddington H. A. Caesar, 11 I. P. Chubet, III Bradford Cochran R. M. Crooker E. N. Cutler, Jr. A. H. Davidson, Jr. R. H. Davison J. V. Douglass G. M. Duff, Jr. R. L. Edvvfards N. L. Foote J. G. Frazer, Jr. W. M. Gardiner E. S. Geer E. G. Grace, Jr. F. L. Graham G. K. Greenfield H. N. Hare H. S. Hogon C. C. Honsaker G. H. Houston S. B. Johnson I. E. Jones, Jr. J. H. Kennedy S. K. C. Kopper F. Y. Larkin T. R. Lincoln J. T. Loeb H. C. McCoUom, Jr. H. F. McCreery, II P. V. Miller Robert Miller B. C. O ' SuUivan R. G. Park, II C. I. Peirce W. S. Rawls A. J. Riggs Don Rose C. J. Ruddy, Jr. Peter Rutter R. W. Sayre A. L. Scott W. W. Soverel Brooke Stoddard H. J. Swift F. E. Taplin, Jr. J. M. Trent Bronson Tweedy L. duR. van de Velde Langdon Van Norden I. P. Van Winkle, Jr. 1938 L. C. Allen R. L. Altman P. S. Amos R. E. Anderson J. D. Baker P. E. Barringer E. J. Bender J. R. Belts P. W. Bradbury P. B. Bradley H. S. Broad J. K. Busby J. C. Clark, Jr. T. P. Cobb R. B. Cowdery D. D. Coyle McKim Daingerfield J. R. Deupree N. L. Drummond, Jr. P. F. DuVivier M. S. Emory P. H. B. Frelinghuysen, Jr. W. T. Galey, II W. F. Halsey, III R. A. Haughwout C. G. Herbruck W. L. Hopkins C. F. Jones W. G. Jones W. H. Kahle J. B. Kerr H. F. Klie Philip LeBoutillier, Jr. Blair Lee, III L. B. Mackall C. K. Mitchell Albert Moore R. A. Moss D. C. Nevitt, Jr. J. C. Nevius Courtlandt Nicoll, Jr. D. V. Parsons J. W. Patterson J. B. Phillips F. M. Porter C. A. Powers C. U. Price B. H. Ridder, Jr. G. B. Ross Gisbert Ruge W. F. Russell J. A. Saalfield J. C. Sayen D. A. Scott W. M. Sloan H. A. Stetler, Jr. J. C. Stoddard E. C. Stokes, II E. B. Templeman J. H. Vruwink A. C. Warner Thomas Weber A. B. Wenzell J. A. Wilson W. W. Wooldridge Thiny-five TOP ROW Farr, Dorf, Chute- SECOND ROW: Jepsen, Snelgrove, MocClinfock, Howell, Buddington I Chairman I, Scott, Srmpson Hess, FRONT ROW: Thorn, Phillips, Department of Geology Arthur Francis Buddington, M.S., Ph.D., Chairman, Curator of Petrology, Professor 178 Prospect Avenue Francis Betz, Jr 74 Graduate College Assistant Newton Earl Chute, M.S 24 Hawthorne Street Instructor John Clark, Ph.D 154 Prospect Avenue Assistant and Preparator Max Harrison Demorest, M.S 16 Vandeventer Avenue Assistant Erling Dorf, Ph.D 184 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor Gilbert Howry Espenshade, M.S 98 Nassau Street Assistant Marcus Stults Farr, M.S., A.M., D.Sc 20 Vandeventer Avenue Associate Professor Richard Montgomery Field, A.M., Ph.D 35 Edgehill Street Director of Summer School of Geology and Natural Resources Associate Professor Stephen Knowlton Fox 114 Graduate College Assistant Harry Hammon Hess, A.M., Ph.D 30 Edwards Place Instructor Benjamin Franklm Howell, A.M., Ph.D 12 College Road Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology and Stratigraphy Associate Professor Glen Lowell Jepsen, Ph.D 176 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor I. Brookes Knight, Ph.D., A.M 12 Park Place Curator of Paleozoic Invertebrate Paleontology Paul MacClintock, Ph.D 116 Prospect Avenue Knox Taylor Professor of Geography William Henry Patmore, A.M 73 Graduate College Assistant Alexander Hamilton Phillips, D.Sc 54 Hodge Road Blair Professor of Geology, Emeritus Lecturer George Carman Ridland 73 Graduate College Assistant William Berryman Scott. Ph.D., LL.D., D.Sc 7 Cleveland Lane Blair Professor of Geology, Emeritus Charles Henry Smyth, Jr., Ph.D 22 Morven Place Professor Emeritus Alfred Kitchener Snelgrove, M.S., Ph.D., Assistant Professor Aqueduct , Harrison Street William Taylor Thom, Jr., Ph.D 172 Prospect Avenue Professor Lyman Dorgan Toulmin, Jr., A.M 17 Greenview Avenue Assistant UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 A. P. Brill, Jr. J. H. Buckman, Jr. Benjamin Chew, Jr. L. B. Churchill D. S. Eddy T. S. Gallatin W. R. Barrett Peter Benson J. W. Bitner R. S. Corbin Dean Hill, Jr. J. T. Kinney J. L. Martin, Jr. S. G. Marvin Richard Maxwell Zeb Mayhew, Jr. H. D. Cranston P. B. Esser W. M. Hardy F. P. King, Jr. F. K. Montgomery, Jr. O. J. Myers Peter Nicholls R. S. Paine M. 0. Peterson D. S. Rice 1938 H. 1. Lord, Jr. W. M. Love G. O. Morgan, 111 W. B. Nugent M. H. Ritlenhouse, Jr. A. F. Ritler R. H. Robie L. R. Sargent, Jr. F. D. Sauter F. M. Schall, Jr. J. A. Peterson I. T. Reynolds W. E. Rudel W. H. Sayen, HI H. J. Sloan E. H. Waentig, Jr. C. H. Toll, Jr. S. M. Vauclain, III Thirty-six Department of Mathematics Luther Pfahler Eisenhart, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D., Chairman, Wyman House, Graduate College Dean of the Graduate College Dod Professor of Mathematics Salomon Bochner, Ph.D 51 Patton Avenue Assistant Professor Henry Frederic Bohnenblust, Ph.D 345 Nassau Street Assistant Professor Alonzo Church, Ph.D 30 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor Thomas Carlson Doyle, B.S 219 Brown Hall, Seminary Part-Time Instructor Frederick Arthur Ficken, B.A., M.A 14 Spruce Street Part-Time Instructor Ralph Hartzler Fox, M.A 219 Nassau Street Part-Time Instructor William Gillespie, Ph.D Pyne Tower, Graduate College Professor Morris Samuel Knebelman, M.S., Ph.D 32 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor Solomon Lefschetz, M.E., Ph.D 129 Broadmead Henry Burchard Fine Professor of Mathematics UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS C. S. Bedell W. S. Morris Howard Percy Robinson, M.S., Ph.D 180 Prospect Street Associate Professor of Mathematical Physics Harwood Rosser, A.B 8-B Graduate College Part-Time Instructor Norman Earle Steenrod, Ph.D 127 Jefferson Road Part-Time Instructor Tracy Yerkes Thomas, A.M., Ph.D 42 Hawthorne Avenue Associate Professor Edwin Warren Titt, Ph.D Fairview Avenue, Penns Neck Instructor Ralph Edgar Traber, M.A 78 Graduate College Part-Time Instructor Albert William Tucker, A.M., Ph.D Fine Hall Professor Joseph Henry Maclagen Wedderburn, M.A., D.Sc, F.R.S., Professor 134 Mercer Street Eugene Paul Wigner, Dr. Ing E-1 Prospect Apts. Visiting Professor of Mathematical Physics Samuel Stanley Wilks, A.M., Ph.D 47 Maple Street Assistant Professor 1937 I. E. Segal R. V. Greenslade I. Hock, Jr. 1938 N. F. Jones P. M. Way, Jr. R. M. Bragdon Department of Astronomy Henry Norris Russell, A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc, Chairman, Director of the Observatory 79 Alexander Street Charles A. Young Professor of Astronomy of the Class of 1897 Foundation Raymcnd Smith Dugan, A.M., Ph.D 16 Prospect Avenue Professor Theodore Dunham, Ir., M.D., Ph.D The New Observatory Associate Professor Charlotte E. Moore, Ph.D 14 Prospect Avenue Research Associate in Spectroscopy John Ouincy Stewart, Ph.D The New Observatory Associate Professor UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS 1937 1938 V. C. Cartus, Jr. H. A. A. Panofsky TOP ROW: Bohnenblust, Tucicer, Gillespie, Robertson. SECOND ROW: Knebelman, Bochner, Tiff, Lefschetz, Wigner, Wilks, Thomos, Stewart. FRONT ROA ' : Churcti Ei ,onhijrt ' Chairman of Mothemarics ' , Russell i Chairman of Astronomy I, Wedderburn. Thirty-seven STANDING: Bissell, Ely, Blakeney, Burkart. SEATED: Seneff, Cain (Chairman), Lawhon. Department of Military Science Lieutenant Colonel David Edward Cain, F.A 17 Ivy Lane Professor Major John Ter Bush Bissell, A.B,, F.A 190 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor Major Zim E. Lav hon, F.A 10 Hartley Avenue Assistant Professor Major George P. Seneff, F.A Snowden Lane Assistant Professor Captain Cresswell G. Blakeney, B.S., F.A 40 Patton Avenue Assistant Professor Captain Esher Claflin Burkart, F.A 67 Wiggins Street Assistant Professor Captain Eugene Barber Ely, F.A 38 Edwards Place Assistant Professor UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 A. L. Applegate F. M. DeRosa D. P. Green T. W. Montgomery R. D. Sauter H. W. Backes, Jr. S. W. Don T. G. Greig G. A. Nason R. W. Sayre K. L. Baker R. A. Dubugue, Jr. E. L. Groff P. E. Neary H. H. Schwartz S. P. Banigan R. S. Dumper W. P. Harrison C. C. Northrup J. B. Shennan F. C. Bunn, Jr. J. S. Eberhard A. S. Hart, Jr. R. F. Ober W. B. Shepard R. P. Bell D. S. Eddy P. deW. Hauser A. M. Osgood Pinkham Smith W. H. Borden J. R. Fales J. N. Irwin, II G. G. Otis William Steel R. L. Burger J. M. Farley R. S. Janney R. G. Park, III R. D. Stuart, Jr. B. H. Cameron D. E. Foster M. J. Kempner F. H. Parkin D. F. Sullivan, Jr. T. S. Capers R. R. Furman R. H. LeBrecht C. H. PhUips O. D, Vanderbilt. Ill Charles Carroll T. G. Gallatin F. I. McGinity R. H. Pratt L. duR. van de Velde R. F. Clary, Jr. C. D. Goldsbury J. T. MacDonald H. W. Read Northam Warren, Jr. A. T. Colt J. C. Goodell H. I. Matthews, Jr. A. F. Ritter R. B. Wilder r- -m J. F. Cross, 111 J. L. Graham H. B. Mitchell, 11 E. F. Rivinus, Jr. A. M. Wood r W. S. Delafield 1938 L. W. Young C. D. Agnew D. D. Coyle A. P. Gorman, II R. G. Maitland J. A. Saalfield J. L. Armitage W. B. Craig W. G. Jones K. H. Muir J. C. Sayen W. A. Barrett J. B. C. Denmark E. E. Keusch R. L. Often, Jr. J. D. Snelham P. E. Barringer N. L. Drummond F. R. King, Jr. William Orchard Amedee Spadone. Jr Peter Benson J. W. Bitner R. V, Elder P. B. Esser J. B. Kirkpatrick R. E. Kulp D. V. Parsons O. H. Perry J. P. Stanton C. R. Stevens J. D. J. Brady G. W. Frank S. C. Lav son J. C. Pogue E. S. Townend, Jr. J. W. Chapman H. C. Freeman, Jr. H. I. Lord, Jr. E. G. Riggs, 11 M. C. Traver J. A. Cissel R. F. Furman, Jr. T. D. Lucus, Jr. W. E. Rudel T. B. Wood Bailey Cowan A. O. Furst C. D. McCracken, Jr. G. L. Magruder W. F. Russel W. A. Wood, Jr. Thirty-eight Department of Modern Languages and Literatures Harvey Waterman Hewett-Thayer. Ph.D., Chairman 3 Evelyn Place Professor Frederick Browning Agard, A.M., Ph.D 30 Nassau Street Insiiuctor Edward Cooke Armstrong, Ph.D., LL.D,, L.H.D. 26 Edgehill Street Professor of French Elbert Benton Opt Eynde Borgerhofl, Ph.D 76 Library Place Instructor Douglas Labaree Buffum, A.M., Ph.D. 60 Hodge Road Professor of Romanic Languages and Literature Augusto Centeno, Lie. en Fil. y Let - 134 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor Percy Addison Chapman, A.M. 16 Linden Road Associate Professor Maurice Edgar Comdreau, Ag. de I ' Univ 401 ' 03 Hall Assistant Professor Clifford Mortimer Crist, A.M., Ph.D. 17 Madison Street Instructor in French Frank Lmley Critchlow, A.M., Ph.D. 11 Westcott Road Assistant Professor. Emeritus Bateman Edwards, Ph.D. 58 Murray Place Assistant Professor Harry Eisenbrown, Ph.D. 245 Nassau Street Instructor in German Alfred Foulet, Ph.D 127 Jefferson Road Research Associate Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D. Josaph Henry House, Campus Ph.D. 9 Greenholm Dean of the College Class of 1900 Professor of Modern Languages Henrv Alexander Grubbs. Jr., Ph.D 127 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor Richard Travis Hardaway, Ph.D. , 99 Alexander Street InRtructor Walter Scott Hastings, A.M., Professor Alan Holske, Ph.D. Instructor Hans Jaeger, Ph.D. Assistant Professor William Keren, A.M. Associate Professor, Emeritus Sidney Lawrence Levenqood, Ph.D. 203 Graduate College Assistant Professor Lawrence Francis Hawkins Lowe, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor Kenneth McKenzie, A.M., Ph.D., Hon.D Professor of Italian George Madison Priest, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature William Hutchinson Shoemaker, A.M., Ph.D. 11 Greenview Avenue Assistant Professor Donald Clive Stuart, A.M., Ph.D 182 Western Way Professor of Dramatic Art Frederick Courtney Tarr, A.M., Ph.D 1 College Road Assistant Professor of Spanish Bernard Ulmer, M.A. 14 Murray Place Instructor Albert Van Eerden, A.M., Ph.D 22 Edwards Place Instructor Emanuel von der Miihll, Ph.D 75 Harrison Street Instructor Williamson Updike Vreeland, A.M., D. es L. 180 Mercer Street 20 Nassau Street 57 Jefferson Road .105 Fitz Randolph Road 104 Henry Hall 9 Battle Road .10 Nassau Street -.12 Aiken Avenue Woodhull Professor of Romance Languages Ira Owen Wade, A.M., Ph.D - Associate Professor Jared V enqer, Ph.D Box Wood Farm, R. F. D. 2 Raymond Smith Willis, Jr., Ph.D. 39 Wiggins Street Instructor in Spanish UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 y. J. B. Binq R. K. Bishop P. R. Brown D. C. Cale. II E. D. Candee T. S. Copers J. F. Alexander I. B. Ashcraft Hunnevrell Braman, Jr. Edward Burns, II S. N. Carr, Ir. Charles Carroll W. S. Delafield I. J. Doyle R. A. Dubugue, Jr. P. deW. Hauser ). H. Heminway W. C. Cormany Forrest Cranmer C. W. Davies H. L. Delatour, Jr. J. B. C. Denmark MacDonald Lynch A. G. Miranli H. B. Mitchell, II W. F. Oechler A. M. Osgood R. S. Parker A. J. Duany G. S. Dunbar R. V. Elder R. M. C. Glenn, Jr. W. R. Grimm Julian Peabody F. H. Ridgely, Jr. I. M. Roland J. W. Sayre J. T. Schein H. H. Schneider 1938 P. L. Hogan F. L. Ingram J. K. Kennedy Harry Lane, Jr. R. P. Larkin D. R. Small P. M. Sykes F. E. Warren T. C. Werbe, Jr. Michael Weyl G. Y. Wheeler, II R. A. Lydecker U. E. Morgon G. H. Oliver W. H. Orr, Jr. J. G. Ringwalt, Jr. W. W. Wiggins L. W. Young Frederic Rosengarten, Jr. W. H. Schmidlapp A. O. Therkildsen John Van Ess, Jr. H. W. Von Elm W. A. Wood, Jr. TOP ROW: Levengood, Holske, Agard, Von der Miihll, Eisenbrown, Borgerhoff, Wenger. THIRD ROW: Centeno, Ulmer, Foulet, Tarr, Lowe, Grubbs. Edwards. SECOND ROW: Jaeger, Wade, Armstrong, Hastings, Coindreau, Willis, Crist, Hardaway. FRONT ROW: Gauss, McKenzie, Priest, Hewett-Thayer (Chairman), Stuart, Vreeland, Buffum. Thirty-nine STANDI NG Bowers, Greene, Irving, Hillmon, SEATED Stace, Scoon i Chairman ) , Wood, Department of Philosophy Robert Scoon, Ph.D., Chairman 10 Bayard Lane Professor Clifford Leslie Barrett, A.M., Ph.D 59 Westcolt Road Assistant Professor David Frederick Bowers, A.M., Ph.D 43 Linden Lane Instructor Warner File, Ph.D 66 Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, N. J. Stuart Professor of Ethics, Emeritus Theodore Meyer Greene, Ph.D 200 Prospect Avenue Associate Professor Owen Norton Hillman, M.S., A.M., Ph.D., Instructor Springdale and Ober Roads John Allan Irving, M.A Pyne Tower, Graduate College Assistant Professor Roger Bruce Cash Johnson, A.M., Ph.D 129 Broadmead McCosh Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus Edward Gleason Spaulding, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D., Professor 8 Edgehill Street Walter Terence S ' .ace, Litt.D 150 Fitz Randolph Road Professor George Tapley Whitney, A.M., Ph.D 33 Jefferson Road Associate Professor, Emeritus Ledger Wood, Ph.D ...138 Fitz Randolph Road Assistant Professor UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 R. W. Barrett A. H. Edwards Robert Mayer V. R. Tippett W. H. Borden Thomas Fisher, ]r. T. W. Montgomery F. S. Truesdale L. V. Brown D. C. Kerr T. V. Rankin O. D. Vanderbilt, III W. C. Cummings W. P. MacDcnald H. B. Rockwell A. T. Wall L. B. Dutcher 1938 J. M. Baldwin E. H. Fleer R. D. Lunn T. A. Pfeiffer A. M. Barbieri G. W. Frank A. B. Martin J. G. Powers J. T. Bissell J. N. HiUhouse E. B. Martin J. E. Russell S. L. Block C. H. Huvelle R. H. Mengel, 11 J. G. H. Scoon F. W. Capers C. C. Irvine B. H. Milner J. W. Smith G. B. Covington Guilford Jones, Jr. J. T. Morey C. W. Dick G. M. Lehr E. A. Myers Forty Department of Physics Henry De Wolf Smyth. A.M., Ph.D., Chairman... 66 Battle Road Professor Edwin Plimpton Adams, M.S., Ph.D., D.Sc Edgestoune Road Henry Professor of Physics Walter Bleakney, Ph.D 27 Wilton Street Assistant Professor Edward Uhler Condon, Ph.D 16 Pelham Avenue Associate Professor Hereward Lester Cooke, M.A Palmer Physical Laboratory Professor Gaylord Probasco Harnwell, Ph.D 109 Broadmead Assistant Professor Malcolm Colby Henderson, Dr. Phil 15 Boudinot Street Instructor William James Henderson, Ph.D 25 Hawthorne Avenue Instructor George Augustus Hulett, Ph. D 44 Washington Road Professor of Physical Chemistry, Emeritus Rudolph Walter Ladenburg, Dr. Phil 55 Princeton Avenue Brackett Professor of Physics William Francis Magie, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D 118 Library Place Henry Professor of Physics, Emeritus Joseph Chandler Morris, Ph.D Mt. Lucas Assistant Professor Louis Nicot Ridenour, Ph.D 359 Nassau Street Instructor Howard Percy Robertson, Ph.D 180 Prospect Avenuo Associate Professor Allen Goodrich Shenstone, A.M., Ph.D 66 Battle Road Associate Professor Louis Alexander Turner, A.M., Ph.D 179 Prospect Avenue Associate Professor Cletus Clinton Van Voorhis, M.S., Ph.D Kingston, N. J. Research Associate yw UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 H. M. Bach R. F. Shaw G. E. Beggs, Jr. A. N. Butts D. B. Cook 1938 J. W. Davisson R. J. Emrich G. J. Hogeman W. K. H. Panofsky F. B. Satterthwaite N. M. Stahl TOP ROW: Von Voorhis, Ridenour M. C- Henderson, W. J. Henderson. SECOND ROW: Bleakney, Condon, Turner, Robertson. FRONT ROW: Wigner, Ladenburg, Smyth iChairmanl, Shenstone, Cooke. Forty-one TOP ROW: Williamson, Stofford, Bishop, McDiormid, SECOND ROW: King, Childs, Sprout, Whittlesey, Grahom, Reischousr. FIRST ROW: Mason, Corwin, Carpenter (Chairman I, Myers, Voorhees. Department of Politics William Seal Carpenter, Ph.D., Chairman 121 Broadmead Professor William W. Bishop, Jr., A.B., J.D Springdale and Ober Roads Lecturer Franklin L. Burdette, A.M.. 4-A Graduate College Instructor Harwood Lawrence Childs, Ph.D 15 Jefferson Road Associate Professor Edward Samuel Corwin, Ph.D., LL.D., Litl.D., 115 Prospect Avenue McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence John McDiarmid, Ph.D 99 Alexander Street Instructor Harold Willis Dodds, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D Prospect Professor Frank Albert Fetter, Ph.D., LL.D 168 Prospect Avenue Professor of Political Economy, Emeritus George Adams Graham, Ph.D 48 Murray Place Assistant Professor John William Halderman, LL.B., B.S 11-B Graduate College Assistant Rene De Visme Williamson, Instructor Forty-two James Clement King, Ph.D 274 Nassau Street Instructor William Percy Maddox, Ph.D 9 Aiken Avenue Assistant Professor Alpheus Thomas Mason, A.M., Ph.D 11 College Road Associate Professor Donald C. McVay, Jr., A.B 8-A Graduate College Assistant William Slarr Myers, Ph.D 104 Bayard Lane Associate Professor Harold Hance Sprout, Ph.D 28 Murray Place Assistant Professor Paul Tutt Stafford, Ph.D 45 Cleveland Lane Assistant Professor J. Dayton Voorhees, A.M 11 Morven Place Associate Professor Walter Lincoln Whittlesey, A.B 219 Nassau Street Assistant Professor John Boardman Whitton, J.D 18 Edgehill Street Associate Professor Ph.D 316 Brown Hall, Seminary Undergraduate Members O. W. Acton, Jr. F. E. Avery, Jr. R. G. Barnes F. E. Bell N. E. Biorn J. S. Booth E. S. Burch R, L. Burger B. H. Cameron H. B. Clark R. F. Clary, Jr. A. T. Colt J. T. Congleton, Jr. A. C. Craig, VI N. R. Criss, Jr. S. E. Cullinan R. E. Dennison, Jr. F. M. DeRosa R. M. Dicke J. S. Eberhardt David Escher J. M. Farley D. G. Gamble H. S. Gensler S. S. Gilbert D, P. Green, Jr. T. P. Greig J. B. Avery W. J. Bahr D. D. Ballin, Jr. Edward Blum T. H. Brown. Jr. J. G. Buchanan, Jr. P. D. Caesar N. M. Carter J. M. Cecil J. W. Chesnutt R. G. Clark R. H. Clarke J. H. Cleveland R. R. Clisham R. W. Crosby, Jr. J. J. Davis H. D. Dawbarn A. P. Dennis R. M. Entwisle Irving Goldbert D. L. Gordon 1937 W. P. Harrison A. S. Hart, Jr. F. B. Hennessy A. 0. Hourigan P. W. Hunt T. T. Hutcheson J. N. Irwin, II R. S. Janney W. B. Jones J. A. C. Kennedy P. T. Kimball, II F. L. Koplf, Jr. M. V. Krebs C. W. McRoe J. E. McColgan J. R. Maguire G. R. Masset H. J. Matthews, Jr. R. W. Middlebrook R. A. Miller E. C. Morton E. L. Newhouse A. A. Newton E. P. Oelsner, Jr. John Palaschak, Jr. R. B. Parker E. W. Pomerleau 1938 H. W. Gruning J. L. Herman A. E. Hess W. J. Hoffman R. C. Howe E. M. Howell W. C. Hubbard R. E. Jamison, Jr. F. A. Jenkins H. C. Jones, II J. H. King R. G. King, Jr., 1939 L. B. Kirkpatrick, Jr. Fumitaka Konoye E. M. Koos A. G. Lee, Jr. D. P. Lieblich T. R. McMillen C. A. McLeod Dunstan McNichol B. L. Noojin R. H. Pratt H. Quellmalz P. C. Ralli H. A. Robinson V. F. Roma F. N. Rosenbaum E. K. Sandbach Andrew Sarkady H. H, Schwartz W. B. Shepard L. E. Sherwood, Jr. F. B. Smith, II F. P. Smith D. T. Stanley William Steel F. G. Stickel, III G. B. Stoess Stephen Stone, Jr. O. G. Stonington R. D. Stuart, Jr. S. A. Trentman B. W. Warner T. H. Wolf A. M. Wood J. C. Woodle W. M. Woodward A. A. Notopoulos Richard Palmer R. F. Patterson J. H. Platten, Jr. H. P. Ream W. L. Reed E. J. Reeves W. A. Reiss, Jr. R. H. Rial C. R. Ruhlman, Jr. F. O. Sandstrom, Jr. C. I. Schmelzer R. W. Singer, Jr. Amedee Spadone, Jr. S. J. Stebbins H. M. Stratton L. H. Ulman W. K. Watkins L. D. Watrous A, M. Williams, Jr. K. R. Young Forty-threo STANDING: Holsopple, Stalnaker, Wedell, Taylor. SEATED: Contril, Weaver, Langfeld iChairmanI, Katz, Bray. Department of Psychology Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Ph.D., Chairman Elm Road Professor, Director of Psychological Laboratory Charles William Bray, 11, Ph.D 15 Maple Street Assistant Professor Carl Campbell Brigham, Ph.D 128 Fitz Randolph Road Professor Hadley Cantril, Ph.D 291 Nassau Street Assistant Professor James Quinter Holsopple, Ph.D., 201 Cadwalader Drive, Trenton, N. J. Lecturer on Abnormal Psychology Daniel Katz, Ph.D 41 Jefferson Road Assistant Professor John Marshall Stalnaker, A.M 32 Hawthorne Avenue Assistant Professor, Research Associate Franklin Veazey Taylor, Ph.D 12 Princeton Avenue Instructor Carl Havelock Wedell, Ph.D .65 Olden Avenue Instructor Ernest Glen Wever, Ph.D 23 Markham Road Associate Professor S. P. Banigan W. C. Bartlett T. H. Conderman S. W. Don C. W. Fairlie, Jr. J. R. Pales E. M. Finck, Jr. C. D. Agnew J. W. Chapman T. A. Cosgriff F. D. Creamer D. T. Dort H. W. Foedisch A. O. Furst D. T. Graham UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS, 1937 Harper Follansbee Thomas Gucker, III W. B. Kline N. H. Larzelere H. H. Leigh E. A. Limberg, Jr. S. W. McClave, III F. H. McGuire, Jr. 1938 S. L. Hedrick J. M. Holton C. F. Huston D. E. Jerrems R. E. Kulp C. D. McCracken, Jr. R. C. Morris R. S. Mueller, Jr. E. R. Mens G. G. Otis F. H. Parkin W. E. Rahm, Jr. J. A. Smith E. C. Stollenwerck S. L. Wallace D. P. Reynolds J. B. Salsich J. M. Searles Sv agar Sherley, Jr. R. M. Thompson W. T. Trueblood, Jr. J. P. Whitlock Forty-four Department of Health and Physical Education Wilbur Heskett York. M.D., Chairman 48 Cleveland Lane Professor Clarence Francis Foster 186 Moore Street Instructor William F. Logan 157 Harrison Street Coach of Soccer and Lacrosse Faculty Advisor, Intramurals Earl Martineau Princeton, N. J. Instructor Assistant on Intramurals Program Harry Roemer McPhee, M.D Grovers Mill. N. I. Associate Professor H. H. I. F. Pirotte 9 Harris Road Coach of Fencing Joseph Edward Raycroft, M.D 298 Nassau Street Director Emeritus Professor Emeritus James J. Reed University Gymnasium Coach of Wrestling Hov ard Wellington Stepp Instructor Greenwood Avenue, Lawrenceville, N. J. Richard Swinnerton 59 Harrison Street Instructor Luman Harris Tenney, M.D 177 Prospect Avenue Assistant Professor 5S STANDING: Tenney, Knorr, Logon, Allan, Stepp, Burbidge. SEATED: Swinnerton, McPhee, York (Chairmani, Roiney, Foster. Forty-five STANDING: Reischauer, Moore, Moddox. SEATED: Notestein, Munro, Poole (Director), Simpson, Childs. ill. School of Public and International Affairs Dewitt Clinton Poole, M.Dip., LL.D 18 Springdale Road Professor, Director of the School Harwood Lawrence Childs, Ph.D .15 Jefferson Road Associate Professor of Politics William Perry Maddox, Ph.D 9 Aiken Avenue Assistant Professor of Politics Dana Gardner Munro, Ph.D.._ _ Springdale Road Professor of Latin-American History and Affairs Lyman Moore, A.B 424 Brown Hall Assistant in the School Frank Wallace Notestein, Ph.D .47 Hawthorne Avenue Lecturer Robert Karl Reischauer, Ph.D J-3 Prospect Apartments Lecturer, Instructor in Japanese Eyler Newton Simpson, Ph.D 8 Hartley Avenue Associate Professor Forty-six MEMBERS, 1937 R. G. Barnes Politics F. E. Bell Politics E. H. Bindley, Jr. ._ History J. L. Broderick History F. St. C. Chariot Economics J. F. Cross, III Economics R. H. Davison History W. J. Devlin Economics J. G. Frazer, Jr Histor y H. J. Gensler Politics S. S. Gilbert Politics B. M. Gordon Economics G. K. Greenfield History G. H. Houston, Jr History S. B. Johnson History P. T. Kimball, II Politics M. V. Krebs Politics E. P. Lebens Economics G. R. Masset Politics H. F. McCreery, II History C. W. McRae Politics R. W. Middlebrook Politics P. V. Miller History J. E. Morrissey, Jr Economics E. L Newhouse, III Politics J. F. Pritchard, Jr Economics H. H. Purvis, Jr Economics E. B. Pyle Economics P. C. Ralli Politics A. J. Riggs History Peter Rutter History H. H. Schwartz Politics F. B. Smith, II Politics F. P. Smith Politics W. K. Stanard, II Economics D. T. Stanley Politics J. D. Stev art Economics N. A. Stoner Economics R. D. Stuart, Jr Politics J. P. Van Winkle, Jr History T. H. Wolf.._ _ Politics W. M. Woodward Politics MEMBERS, 1938 P. S. Amos History M. J. Arcaya Economics S. L. Block Philosophy H. S. Broad History J. H. Cleveland.. Politics J. P. Corcoran, Jr Economics R. W. Crosby Politics E. M. David Economics A. P. Dennis Politics G. W. DeSousa Economics Theodore French Economics T. O- Gilson Economics D. L. Gordon Politics H. W. Gruning Politics C. G. Herbruck History A. E. Hess Politics J. R. Hoffman, Jr Economics R. C. Howe Politics C. C. Irvine Philosophy J. H. King Politics L. B. Kirkpatrick, Jr Politics H. F. Klie History G. M. Lehr Philosophy D. P. Lieblich Politics L. B. Mackall History T. R. McMillen Politics Dunston McNichol Politics Albert Moore History T. H. Moyer, Jr Economics B. L. Noojin Politics A. A. Notopoulos Politics W. P. O ' Neill, Jr Economics J. W. Patterson History J. B. Phillips History F. M. Porter History C. D. Reich, Jr Economics W. A. Reiss, Jr Politics W. W. Richardson Economics D. A. Scott History J. R. Simpson Economics N. W. Slack Economics S. J. Stebbins Politics H. M. Stratton Politics D. R. Underwood Economics W. K. Watkins Politics A. B. Wenzell History Stephen Whitcomb Economics J. A. Wilson History MEMBER, 1939 R. G. King Politics SPECIAL MEMBER Warren Roberts Forty-seven TOP ROW: Smith, Vivell, Culver, Constant. THIRD ROW: Dod, Whitweli, Timbv, Beggs, Howell SECOND ROW Hess, Sampson, MacLaren, Heacock, Snelgrove, Willis. FRONT ROW; Sorenson, Elgin, Greene i Dean ' , Schureman, Buddington. School of Engineering Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., D. Sc, D.Eng Dean DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING Frank Henry Constant, C.E., Ph.D., Chairman.. ..57 Battle Road Professor George Erie Beggs, C.E 201 Prospect Avenue Professor Frank Ahern Heacock 202 Prospect Avenue Associate Professor of Graphics and Engineering Drav ing Phillip Kissam, C.E 15 Newlin Road Associate Professor Leslie Robbins Schureman, C.E 3 Harris Road Assistant Professor Herbert Stearns Squier Smith, C.E Stroudsburg, Pa. Professor Emeritus Elmer Knowles Timby, C.E 68 Wiggins Street Assistant Professor Frederick Newton WiUson, C.E P. O. Box 28 Professor of Graphics, Emeritus DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Malcolm MacLaren, E.E., A.M., Chairman 16 Boudinot Street Professor Albert Bayard Dod. Jr., B.S. in E Cedar Grove Road Assistant Professor Hereward Lester Cooke, M.A Palmer Physical Laboratory Professor of Physics Clodius Harris Willis, Ph.D P. O. Box 135 Associate Professor Allan Edgar Vivell 20 Edwards Place Instructor DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Arthur Maurice Greene, Jr., M.E., D.Sc, D.Eng., Chairman, 139 Fitz Randolph Road Dean of the School of Engineering Professor Edward Peck Culver, B.S. in C.E 211 Graduate College Associate Professor Forty-eight Lewis Ferry Moody, M.S 146 Hodge Road Professor of Hydraulic Engineering Louis Frank Rham, B.S. in M.E 1£ Assistant Professor Prospect Avenue Alfred Edward Sorenson, M.E 1 Harris Road Assistant Professor DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Joseph Clifton Elgin, M.S., Ph.D., Chairman 10 College Road Hugh Stotl Taylor, M.Sc, D.Sc, F.R.S 115 Broadmecd Associate Professor David B. Jones Professor of Chemistry Robert Norton Pease, Ph.D 71 Battle Road John Colman Whitwell, Ch.E H-3 Prospect Apartments Associate Professor Instructor Charles Phelps Smith, A.M., Ph.D 22 Morven Place Dr. Richard Herman Wilhelm, Ch.E., Ph.D...24 Dickinson Street Associate Professor Instructor DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL ENGINEERING Arthur Francis Buddington, M.S., Ph.D., Chairman, Curator of Petrology 178 Prospect Avenue Professor of Geology Erling Dorf, Ph.D 184 Prospect Avenue Curator of Paleontology Assistant Professor ..30 Edv ards Place ..20 Vandeventer Avenue Marcus Stults Farr, D.Sc Associate Professor Richard Montgomery Field, Ph.D 35 Edgehill Street Director of Summer School of Geology and Natural Resources Associate Professor Dr. Harry Hammond Hess, Ph.D Instructor Benjamin Franklin Howrell, Ph.D 12 College Road Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology and Stratigraphy Associate Professor ..Lafayette Road Edw ard Sampson, D.Sc Curator of Economic Geology Associate Professor Alfred Kitchener Snelgrove, Ph.D Aqueduct, R. F. D. 2 Assistant Professor William Taylor Thorn, Jr., Ph.D., D.Sc 172 Prospect Avenue Professor DEPARTMENT OF GRAPHICS AND ENGINEER ING DRAWING Frank Ahem Heacock, C.E., Chairman 202 Prospect Street Associate Professor Louis Frank Rahm, B.S. in M.E 188 Prospect Street Assistant Professor Leslie Robbins Shureman, C.E 3 Harris Road Assistant Professor Elmer Knowles Timby, C.E 68 Wiggins Street Assistant Professor Engineering Students 1937 R. G. Adamson C. H. Angell J. R. Barber, Jr. E. C. Bothwell, Jr. G. 1. Brown, Jr. W. H. Curry R. H. Davis, Jr. C. S. Flicker E. G. Engel R. W. Farlee K. N. Fluckey R. R. Furman E. E. Green H. E. Griffith E. J. Jackson R. W. Jackson A. P. Johnson A. R. Johnson C. H. Kearny L. A. Keyes, Jr. M. C. Long G. S. McElroy John Meirs P. H. Melcalf J. H. Morris B. H. Mount, Jr. J. B. Parrish, Jr. Daniel Pratt J. T. Sadler Albert St. Peter, Jr. W. L. Schwenk Albert Seckel, Jr. R. L. Simpson H. B. Spencer R. W. Stanley, Jr. J. M. Steinsieck S. G. Thompson, Jr. W. M. Warner W. C. Wimer J. C. Young T. R. Young 1938 William Arnold D. C. Augustine A. J. Barzaghi, Jr. T. S. Beers H. P. Brokaw D. W. Buchanan, Jr. Colwell Carey W. S. Carpenter, III J. L. Carter, Jr. F. P. Caruthers, Jr. L. A. Carver R. B. Charlesworth W. K. Coors D. H. Crater John English, Jr. F. C. Field, Jr. J. E. Fricker, Jr. A. R. Furbeck C. R. Graham L. R. Gray J. V. E. Hardy J. E. Hulsizer W. L. Johns C. R. Kamm J. F. Kraemer H. G. Kunkel G. L. Lilley E. C. Luther R. S. MacCormack, Jr. S. W. McCune. Ill J. R. McGaw E. R. McLean H. N. Parker, III C. O. Pate, Jr. H. E. Perry D. S. Plumb S. D. Pov ell A. M. Price Robert Rautenstrauch C. H. Robinson J. K. Rudd H. G. Schleicher R. F. Shaffer J. C. Shields, II R. H. Smith, Jr. J. D. Thompson H. D. Van Sciver I. N. Waller J. H. White, Jr. W. P. Whitlock, III C. W. Williams J. W. Wilmer Forty-nine 3n iMemoriam C. H. McCORMICK, 79 Trustee, 1889-1936 A. P. ANDREW, ' gS-, ..Alumni Trustee, 1932-1936 V. L. COLLINS, A.M., ' 92 1936 PETER TEIGEN, M.Arch 1936 ClaSfi; of 1936 G. M. BRYAN Clasisi of 1937 J. W. FOWLER ClasJg of 1938 K. A. BENTKAMP, Jr. Fifty divities - m ' ' wmmmmm$ Undergraduate Council J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 Chairman Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 Vice-Chairman R. S. Mueller, Jr., ' 38 Secretary R. W. Buddington Harper FoUansbee I. C. Goodell MEMBERS, 1937 T. T. Hulcheson Thomas Rigqs, Jr. W. B. Jones F. D. Sauter C. H. Kearny A. M. Wicks R. S. Parker MEMBER, 1938 D. D. Coyle MEMBER, 1939 T. E. Barnicle For some years there was a growing feeling that the Undergraduate Council was not the representative body that it might be. Consequently, it was handicapped and could not readily assume the duties per- formed by student government units in other universities. Last year by common consent, and with faculty approval, it was reorganized on a more representative basis, and it has proved considerably more successful. Representatives are chosen from the following groups: Dramatics, Inter-Collegiate Athletics, Intra-Mural Athletics, Non-Club Members, Publications, Upper Class Clubs, Political and Debating Societies, Student Employment, and the Managers ' Club. The Presidents of all classes, the Vice- Presidents of the Junior and Senior classes, and the Secretary of the Senior class automaticaPy become members. STANDING Barnicle, Riggs, FoUansbee, Goodell, Sauter, Keorny, Jones. SEATED Hutcheson, Gucker, Irwin, Mueller, Wicks. J Fifty-one STANDING: Spitz, Barbien, Furman, Niehoff, Arnold, McLean, Carr. SEATED: Richardson, Weber, Earringer ■Chairmani, Frank, Ringwalt. 1938 Bric-a-Brac PHILIP ELLICOTT BARRINGER, Philadelphia, Pa Chairman THOMAS WEBER, Buffalo, N. Y Managing Editor WILLIAM WHITTLE RICHARDSON, Maplewood, N. J Assistant Managing Editor WILLIAM ARNOLD, East Orange, N. J Photographic Editor ALBERT MARTIN BARBIERL Richmond Hill, N. Y Art Editor GEORGE WOODROW FRANK, New York, N. Y.._ Business Manager JOSEPH GARNEAU RINGWALT, Jr., Yonkers, N. Y Advertising Manager RICHARD EIGHT FURMAN, Trenton, N. J Circulation Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS CHIRLEY NILES CARR, Jr., Montclair, N, J. H. RICHARD NIEHOFF, Cincinnati, Ohio JOHN HULL McLEAN, II, Bronxville, N. Y. KENNETH ARMAND SPITZ, New York, N. Y. Fifty-two Former Bric-a-Brac Officers Year Vol. 1876 1 1877 2 1878 3 1879 4 1880 5 1881 6 1882 7 1883 8 1884 9 1885 10 1886 11 1887 12 1888 13 1889 14 1890 15 1891 16 1892 17 1893 18 1894 19 1895 20 1896 21 1897 22 1898 23 1899 24 1900 25 1901 26 1902 27 1903 28 1904 29 1905 30 1906 31 1907 32 1908 33 1909 34 1910 35 1911 36 1912 37 1913 38 1914 39 1915 40 1916 41 1917 42 1918 43 1919 44 1920 45 1921 46 1922 47 1923 48 1924 49 1925 50 1926 51 1927 52 1928 53 1929 54 1930 55 1931 56 1932 57 1933 58 1934 59 1935 60 1936 61 Choirmcn Business Manoger Art Editor 76 ■04 Arthur B. Turnure Percy R. Pyne, ' 78 Charles A. Talcott, ' 79 David M. Massie, ' 80 Francis C. London, ' 81 Edward B. Critchlow, ' 82 Otto H. Grouse, ' 83 Charles T. McMullin, ' 84 John K. Mumford, ' 85 Marshal Halslead, ' 86 John W. Elder, ' 87 James H. Pershing, ' 88 Robert E. Speer, ' 89 J. Morris Yeakle, ' 90 Charles F. Howell, ' 91 Varnum L. Collins, ' 92 Harrison R. Daniels, ' 93 Montgomery H. Sicard, ' 94 Theodore S. Huntington, ' 95 Charles B. Bostwick, ' 96 Walter S. Harris, ' 97 Robert D. Dripps, ' 98 George K. Reed, ' 99 Charles Yeoman, ' 00 Walter E. Hope, ' 01 Otto T. Mallery, ' 02 Franklin L. Wright, ' 03 Edward McP. Armstrong Kenneth S. Clark, ' 05 S. Hinman Bird, ' 06 C. T. Lazarlere, ' 07 Robert C. Clothier, ' 08 Earl T. Holsapple, ' 09 James S. Dennis, ' 10 Ira F. Bennett, ' 11 George W. Bunn, Jr., ' 12 Earl L. Douglas, ' 13 John M. Colt, ' 14 Donald My rick, ' 15 James R. Stockton, ' 16 Henry T. Dunn, ' 17 Richard M. Griffith, ' 18 Henry P. Van Dusen, ' 19 William H. Downs, ' 20 R. Dean Buterbaugh, ' 21 Howard Cunningham, ' 22 H. Gates Lloyd, Jr., ' 23 Harlow B. Lester, ' 24 Paul S. Havens, ' 25 Sargent Dumper, ' 26 J. Van Dyke Norman, ' 27 Lewis Firey, ' 28 James MacN. Thompson, ' 29 Richard E. Clemson, ' 30 Edwin P. Stevens, ' 31 Archibald G. Murray, Jr. John B. Green, Jr., ' 33 William M. Oman, ' 34 Richard H. Davis, ' 35 Percy C. Madeira, II. ' 36 Robert L. Edwards, ' 37 ' 32 Philip N. Jackson J. L. Rogers Charles A. Case Frank H. Little Harold C. Smith Henry Swan Paul S. Seely Newell W. Mclntyre Thomas S. Taliafero Herbert A. Boas William H. Flammer Louis Stewart, Jr. Carl W. Jones Samuel D. Bell J. Henry O ' Neill James F. Adams John M. Raymond, Jr. Thomas H. Miles, Jr. H. R. Chambers, Jr. Samuel N. Comly Harvey S. Firestone, Jr. Donald S. Foresman Raymond G. Scarlett H. E. Anderson, Jr. Edward R. Buell Morris B. Miller Thomas E. Rhodes Cornelius R. Agnew, Jr. Walter R. Beardsly Seymour S. Preston, Jr. A. M. Beitler, II Franklin A. Sieberling James W. Ely William H. Cahn, Jr. Charles J. Cretors. 11 Hans O. Schundler, Jr. Carl H. McQure, Ul Albert St. Peter Henry O. Milliken K. S. Goodman Richard S. Barbee LeRoy Thompson John I. Skull Joseph F. Boyd, Jr. Theodore S. Paul Jacob Riegel, Jr. Warren R. Smith A. C. M. Azoy, Jr. Robert H. Scannell Henry C. Gillard W. M. Broadway Donald R. Shotwell Robert F. Bamett Erdman Harris E. Ritzema Perry Edward S. King Chauncey W. Webster John M. Miller R. A. Blow Edwart W. Newsom John T. Moss, Jr. Alexander Show Price M. Day William A. Moore Arthur H. Adams Wilfred O. Stout, Jr. W. R. Van Liew, Jr. H. G. Davenport, Jr. John W. Kephart, Jr. Managing Editor Richard O. Jones Norman E. Biom Fifty-three TOP ROW: Bean, Bours, Whipple, Redpath, Dennis, Medina, Gillespie. FOURTH ROW: Barnes, Ulmer, Bolte, Broad, Flatten, Thacher, Whit- lock, Bedford. THIRD ROW: Buchanan, Shirk, Clarke, Reis, Trueblood, Bindley, Reppert, Devine, Touhey. SECOND ROW: Wolf, Gorman, Roche, Suehsdorf, Burke, Rounds, Moore, Lee, Riggs. FRONT ROW: Davison, Pritchard, Hutcheson, Broderick, Kimball, Burch, Stuart, Van Norden, Stanard. The Daily Princetonian p. T. Kimball, II, ' 37 Chairman NEWS STAFF J. L. Broderick, ' 37 Managing Editor R. H. Davison, ' 37 Copy Editor J. F. Pritchard, Jr., ' 37 Assignment Editor N. G. Thacher, ' 37 Association Director S. F. Medina, ' 37 Assistant Managing Editor NEWS EDITORS J. A. Benham, ' 39 W. A. Bours, III, ' 39 H. S. Broad, ' 38 I. G. Buchanan, Jr., ' 38 J. D. Burke, ' 38 H. A. Caesar, II, ' 37 J. W. Carlile, ' 38 R. J. Chapman, ' 37 H. O. Buzby, ' 38.. G. C. Bean, ' 39.... J. McC. Clarke, ' 39 E. L. Grain, Jr., ' 39 R. M. Crocker, ' 37 A. P. Dennis, ' 38 G. F. Gillespie, Jr., ' 39 Sturgis Hedrick, ' 38 Blair Lee, III, ' 38 J. P. Meade, ' 39 Photographer ..Assistant Photographer J. H. Miller, II, ' 39 Condict Moore, ' 38 A. M. Newburger, ' 38 H. D. Piper, ' 39 J. H. Platten, Jr., ' 38 F. L. Redpath, ' 39 A. R. Reis, Jr., ' 39 F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38 D. R. Fletcher, ' 39..., R. E. Mason, ' 38 F. C. St. John, ' 38 R. L. Schley, Jr., ' 38 W. P. Sedgwick, 111, ' 38 J. S. Shirk, ' 39 Adolph Suehsdorf, III, ' 38 A. C. Ulmer, Jr., ' 39 A. O. Whipple, Jr., ' 39 ..Assistant Photographer Cartoonist EDITORIAL STAFF T. T. Hutcheson, ' 37 Editorial Chairman E. H. Bindley, Jr., ' 37 Editorial Editor T. H. Wolf, ' 37 Editorial Editor R. G. Barnes, ' 37 E. D. Candee, ' 37 M. A. Beltaire, III, ' 37 F. St. C. Chariot, ' 37 R. L. Edwards, ' 37 J. G. Frazer, Jr., ' 37 COLUMNISTS G. M. Duff, Jr., ' 37 F. H. Parkin, ' 37 R. H. Pratt, Jr., ' 37 Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 J. D. Swan, ' 37 W. H. Ziegler, II, ' 37 Fifty-four BUSINESS DEPARTMENT E. S. Burch, ' 37 Business Manager Langdon Van Norden, ' 37.. R. D. Stuart, Jr., ' 37 Advertising Manager W. K. Stanard, 11, ' 37 A. L. Applegate, ' 37 I. D. Baker. ' 38 I. B. Beaty, Jr., ' 38 B. M. Bedford, ' 38 J. M. Bindley, ' 39 A. H. Bolte, ' 39 D. S. Cross, ' 38 C. R. Devine, ' 38 P. R. Dickinson, ' 39 J. C. Gorman, ' 39 E. P. Lebens, ' 37 H. I. Lord, Jr., ' 38 M. K. Milliken, ' 37 G. H. Reppert, Jr., ' 39 T. K. Roche, ' 39 C. E. Touhey, ' 39 Circulation Manager Make-Up Manager W. T. Trueblood, Jr., ' 38 Damon Van Utt, ' 38 J. P. Whitlock, ' 38 W. V. Winslow, Jr., ' 39 Former Officers of the Daily Princetonian Yeor Chairman Business Manager 1876-77 J. F. Williamson, ' 77 William Libbey, Jr., ' 77 1877-78 C. L. Williams, ' 78 J. H. Kerr, ' 78 1878-79 T. W. Wilson. ' 79 E. O. Roessle, ' 79 1879-80 H. B. Fine, ' 80 William Miller, Jr., ' 80 1880-81 T. D. Warren, ' 81 F. M. Davis, ' 81 1881-82 H. H. Welles. ' 82 B. G. Winton, ' 82 1882-83 J. A. Hodge, Jr., ' 83 F. B. Rue, ' 83 1883-84 G. H. Carpenter, ' 84 F. H. Miller, ' 84 1884-85 F. H. Wilson, ' 85 W. W. Conner, ' 85 1885-86 R. M. Hodge. ' 86 Joseph Cashman, ' 86 1886-87 F. S. Spalding. ' 87 S. S. Iszard, ' 87 1887-88 W. M. Irvine. ' 88 Livingston Farrand. ' 88 1888-89 R. E. Speer, ' 89 J. C. Morris. Jr.. ' 89 1889-90 T. F. Chambers, ' 90 G. M. Gait. ' 90 1890-91 A. P. Dennis, ' 91 A. D. Wilson. ' 91 1891-92 Bowdre Phinizy, ' 92 C. T. Wood. ' 92 1892-93 George Erdman, ' 93 F. H. Lester. ' 93 1893-94 W. C. Spruance, Jr.. ' 94 H. S. Fisher. ' 94 1894-95 W. H. Butler, ' 95 D. R. James, Jr., ' 95 1895-96 I. N. Beam, ' 96 R. S. Morris, ' 96 1896-97 F. N. lessup, ' 97 A. M. Hopper, ' 97 1897-98 P. C. Martin, ' 98 M. F. Loufbourrow?, ' 98 1898-99 Alexander Armstrong, Jr., ' 99 E. S. Mitchell, ' 99 1899-00 F. P. King, ' 00 C. E. Otis, ' 00 1900-01 W. E. Hope, ' 01 J. W. Jameson, ' 01 1901-02 A. J. Barron, ' 02 S. R. Trovifbridge. ' 02 1902-03 J. G. Armstrong, ' 03 S. H. Armstrong. ' 03 1903-04 F. W. Dinsmore, ' 04 J. R. Truesdale. ' 04 1904-05 E. H. Hilliard, ' 05 I. H. Auerbach. ' 05 1905-06 L. D. Froelick. ' 06 F. L. Kline. ' 06 1906-07 C. T. Larzelere. ' 07 G. S. Rentschler, ' 07 1907-08 R. C. Clothier, ' 08 H. L. Jones, ' 08 1908-09 Hugh Chaplin. ' 09 C. R. Dickinson, ' 09 1909-10 L. R. Kendrick, ' 10 H. G. Straus, ' 10 1910-11 I. T. Woodhull, Jr.. ' 11 S. R. Winch, ' 11 1911-12 F. D. Ha ' .sey, ' 12 S. L. Jones, ' 12 1912-13 T. P. Handy, ' 13 W. M. Chester, ' 13 1913-14 lames Bruce, ' 14 D. B. Douglas, ' 14 1914-15 J. V. Forrestal, ' 15 A. B. Craig, ' 15 1915-16 H. D. Harvey. ' 16 F. C. Roberts, Jr.. ' 16 1916-17 J. S. Nichols, ' 17 L. N. Lukens. Jr.. ' 17 1917-18 larvis Cromvvrell, ' 18 L. H. Bieler. ' 18 1918-19 W. A. Kirkland, ' 19 S. N. Comly. ' 19 1919-20 J. M. Harlan, ' 20 H. S. Firestone. Jr., ' 20 1920-21 F. R. Dulles, ' 21 Philip Wallis, ' 21 1921-22 T. C. McEachin, ' 22 I. R. Trimble, ' 22 1922-23 J. S. Martin, ' 23 M. L. Delafield, ' 23 1923-24 W. W. Dulles, ' 24 A. S. Gambee, ' 24 1924-25 J. P. Lee, ' 25 F. H. Conner, ' 25 1925-26 L. T. Merchant, ' 26 A. F. Adams, ' 26 1926-27 Frank Peabody, Jr., ' 27 H. L. Bell, ' 27 1927-28 H. C. Rose, ' 28 W. S. LaPorte. ' 28 1928-29 John Stevens, ' 29 W. B. Hackenbridge. ' 29 1929-30 T. T. Carter, ' 30 A. D. Hannah. ' 30 1930-31 N. P. Rose, ' 31 G. S. Mirick. ' 31 1931-32 E. W. Barrett, ' 32 I W. Ely, ' 32 1932-33 E. W. Lane, Jr., ' 33 C. C. Filzmorris, ' 33 1933-34 J. T. Lambie, ' 34 W. K. Selden, ' 34 1934-35 F. G. Smith, Jr., ' 35 W. L. Fortune, ' 35 1935-36 W. A. Carlile, Jr.. ' 36 H. P. McNulty, ' 36 J Fifty-five TOP ROW: Berlinger, Harvey, Wilder, Srdford, Kip, Wynne, Culberlson, Logon, Loeb, Gould. THIRD ROW: Seorles, Milner, Appel, Nettleton, Deemer, Lyons, Stanley, Turner, Sullivan, Thocher. SECOND ROW: Knowles, Borbieri, Cowan, Curley, Cruikshonk, Gaston, Wicks, David. FRONT ROW: Marvin, Sherwood, Goodell, Brown, Rosenboum, Somes, Hourigan, The Princeton Tiger L. V. Brown, ' 37 Chairman EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT F. N. Rosenbaum, ' 37 Managing Eciitor R. G. Barnes, ' 37 Literary Editor E. C. Luther, Jr., ' 38 Art Editor J. C. Appel, ' 38 E. N. Harvey, Jr., ' 38 Robert Moment, ' 38 A. M. Barbieri, ' 38 H. S. Howe, Jr., ' 37 J. H. Flatten, ' 38 T. M. Culbertson, Jr., ' 39 J. T. Loeb, ' 37 R, J. Sullivan, ' 39 B. K. Curley, ' 39 R. C. Lyons, ' 39 D. T. Stanley, ' 37 L. A. Gould, Jr., ' 38 B. H. Milner, ' 38 A. M. Wicks, ' 37 CONTRIBUTING STAFF K. L. Baker, ' 37 K. M. McClung, ' 39 W. W. Robinson, ' 39 R. B. Baldwin, ' 39 J. W. Nicholson, 111, ' 37 J. E. Sawyer, Jr., ' 39 E. N. Harvey, Jr., ' 38 C. B. O ' Hara, ' 39 T. T. Sinclair, ' 39 H. S. Howe, ' 37 R. J. Sullivan, ' 39 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT J. C. Goodell, ' 37. Business Manager L. E. Sherwood, Jr., ' 37 Advertising Manager S. G. Marvin, ' 37 Circulation Manager Andrew Hourigan, ' 37 Assistant Business Manager W. G. Berlinger, Jr., ' 39 J. J. G. Deemer, ' 38 J. G. Nettleton, Jr., ' 38 F. W. Thacher, Jr., ' 38 J. M. Cecil, Jr., ' 38 J. G. Gaston, ' 39 D. V. Parsons, ' 38 H. G. Turner, Jr., ' 39 S. D. Cowan, ' 39 C. E. Kip, ' 38 J. M. Searles, ' 38 G. H. Wilder, ' 39 W. L. Cruikshonk, ' 38 J. H. Laporte, ' 38 D. W. Sidford, ' 39 J. H. Wilkes, ' 39 E. M. David, ' 38 S. S. Logan, Jr., ' 38 H. G. Smith, ' 39 H. deN. Wynne, ' 39 Fifty-six Former Tiger Officers T. S. Clarke, ' 82 W. G. Sutphen, ' 82 H. W. Hall. ' 83 A. C. Mcllvaine. ' 92 H. R. Daniels, ' 93 Gordon Fisher, ' 95 A. P. Nevin, ' 95 A. W Leonard, ' 97 S. M. Palmer, ' 97 H. P. Converse, ' 99 F, C. Vorhees, ' 99 R. R. Whiting, ' 01 S. F. Whitman, ' 01 W. T. Maclntyrs, ' 02 R. B. Mixsell, ' 03 M. S. Burt, ' 04 CHAIRMEN K. S. Clark, ' 05 K. S. Goodman, ' 06 James Garretson, ' 07 R. S. Durstine, ' 08 Milton Matter, ' 09 James Boyd, Jr., ' 10 Lemuel Skidmore, Jr., G. W. Bunn, Jr., ' 12 C. D. Orth, Jr., ' 13 A. C. M. Azoy, Jr., ' 14 F. L. Pierce, ' 15 L. G. Payson, ' 16 W. M. Boadway, ' 17 John Biggs, Jr., ' 18 F. A. Comstock, ' 19 E. H. Coffey, Jr., ' 20 A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 ' 11 Eldredge Snyder, ' 22 H. C. Miner, Jr., ' 23 Walden Pell II, ' 24 A. R. Bryon, ' 24 J. F. Hamill, ' 25 E. W. Newsom, ' 26 Joseph Bryan, III, ' 27 Carter Hewitt, ' 28 P. M. Day, ' 29 D. E. Woodhull, Jr., ' 30 Philip Burnham, ' 31 H. M. Kennedy, ' 32 Ogden Kniffen, ' 33 Frank Buchner, ' 34 J, C. Hazen, Jr., ' 35 T. A. Parrotl. ' 36 BUSINESS MANAGERS Welcome Flick, ' 82 W. R. Deemer, ' 91 C. W. Somerby, ' 92 F. B. Turner, ' 93 H. O. Brown, ' 95 Samuel Howe. ' 95 C. B. Bostwick, ' 96 B. R. Miller, ' 97 F. W. Maule, ' 98 J. B. Wright, ' 99 Rodman Schaff, ' 01 T, D. Carman, ' 02 I. B Higgins, ' 03 O. C. Reynolds, ' 04 W. B. Littell, ' 05 F. L. Khne, ' 06 N. W. Maclntyre, ' 07 T. S. Taliaferro, ' 08 E, T. Holsapple, ' 09 A. S. Page, ' 10 Louis Stewart, Jr., ' 11 Chauncey Belknap, ' 12 D. A. Hawley, ' 13 C. H. Ill, ' 14 Charles Richardson, Jr,, R. T. Chaplin, ' 16 J. W. Carpenter, ' 17 I. C. Buchanan, ' 18 E. G. Herendeen, ' 19 J. L. Burke, ' 20 W. B. Baker, ' 21 15 F. LcM. Page, ' 22 Louis Long, Jr., ' 23 S. K. Little, ' 24 M, B. Miller, ' 25 J. C. Leslie, ' 26 W. H. Avery, Jr., ' 27 J. H. Hume, ' 28 G. P. Manning, ' 29 L. R. Barrett, ' 30 Gibbs Baker, ' 31 C. F. Heath, ' 32 C. T. Brown, Jr., ' 33 F. W. Hamilton, ' 34 Todd Harris, ' 35 E. F. Britten, III, ' 36 Fifty-seven SlANDihJG. Ainsworth, Robinson, Brown, Gould, Raleigh, Price. SEATED Mr. Osborne, Beltaire, Barnes, Coyle, Mr. Ackermon. The Princeton University Press Club OFFICERS R. G. Barnes, ' 37 President M. A. Beltaire, III, ' 37 Vice-President D. D. Coyle, ' 38 Secretary-Treasurer F. S. Osborne, ' 24 Adviser W. C. Ackerman, ' 31.. Assistant Adviser MEMBERS, 1937 R. G. Barnes M. A. Beltaire, III MEMBERS, 1938 D. D. Coyle C. U. Price L. A. Gould, Jr. W. G. Raleigh MEMBERS, 1939 H. G. Ainsworth G. R. Collins Newell Brown H. M. Robinson, Jr. Sn Jilemoriam JOHN WINTHROP FOWLER, ' 37 Julys, 1916 April 1, 1936 Fifty -eight NEWSPAPERS FOR WHICH THE PRESS CLUB CORRESPONDS Associated Press Baltimore Sun Bergen Evening Record Boston Globe Boston Herald Boston Post Boston Transcript Brooklyn Daily Eagle Cincinnati Enquirer Christian Science Monitor Chicago Daily News Elizabeth Journal Hartford Courant International News Service Montclair Times Newark Evening News Newark Star-Eagle Newark Sunday Call New Brunswick Home News New Haven Register New York American New York Daily News New York Herald Tribune New York Journal New York Post New York Sun New York Times New York World-Telegram Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia Evening Ledger Philadelphia Record Princeton Local Express Science Service Standard News Service Trenton State Gazette Trenton Times Advertiser Trenton Evening Times Underwood and Underwood News Photos United Press Associations Universal News Service University News Service The Princeton University Press Club was organ- ized in 1910 by Dean Christian Gauss to repre- sent Princeton before the outside world through the regular news channels. With the Director of Public Information, the Press Club is the official news agency of the University, and its members serve as the Princeton correspondents for leading newspapers and news syndicates and are re- sponsible for the dispatches from Princeton which appear daily throughout the country. Fifty-nine Price, Taylor, Cameron, Harkless. The Princeton Calendar OFFICERS B. H. Cameron, ' 37 .Editor C. U. Price, ' 38 Associate Editor J. H. Taylor, ' 38 Associate Editor Black type on orange paper is the truly Princetonian color scheme of this, the only Campus publication which reaches its 2,000 readers gratis. In present form the Calendar is the product of a resurrecting process carried out by K. M. Fox, ' 35, three years ago. Since that time it has appeared almost without fail in local mail slots on each Sabbath eve, having as its basic claim for existence a listing of important events in the week to come. As a rule these events take place in the Arcade and Garden threatres, but Biology seminars and athletic contests are not uncommonly foreshadowed in its columns. Editorially, the Calendar makes no bones about being a personal organ of prejudiced opinion. Determined last year by the President of the Woodrow Wilson Democratic Club, its policies were vio- lently Rooseveltian; under the present board there has been a complete reversal toward the G. O. P. standard. Sixty Princeton University Band OFFICERS Pinkham Smith, ' 37 Leader J. P. Leidy, ' 37 Senior Manager G. E. Alter, ' 38 Junior Assistant Manager Hugh Evans, ' 38 Junior Assistant Manager F. E. Fox, ' 39 Sophomore Assistant Manager J. F. Rorke, ' 39 Sophomore Assistant Manager F. H. Ridgley, Jr., ' 37 Drum Major TRUMPETS G. E. Beggs, Jr., ' 38 Dexter Bowker, ' 40 J. H. Duff, ' 40 A. D. Hay. ' 39 Harding Johnson, Jr., ' 39 R. H. Mengel, II. ' 38 J. B. Rowland, ' 37 M. C. Trover. ' 38 CLARINETS F. J. Allsup. ' 39 J. G. Brodshaw, ' 40 D. H. Crater, ' 38 J. C. Early, ' 40 P. G. Harrison. ' 40 Carter Harmon, ' 40 F. E. Henze, ' 38 N. F. Jones, ' 38 J. H. King, ' 38 R. B. Longworthy, ' 40 W. R. Mueller, ' 39 H. B. Neal. ' 38 F. W. Nelson. ' 39 R. H. Savage. ' 37 H. D. Sprowles. ' 38 J. D. Stewart, ' 37 Robert West, ' 40 T. T. Wuerth, ' 40 R. L. Young, ' 40 SAXOPHONES W. R. Banks. ' 38 W. C. Eberhardt. ' 39 C. D. McCracken, ' 38 W. D. Piatt, ' 39 D. M. Shull, ' 40 J. T. Reynolds. ' 38 F. W. Shull. ' 39 J. W. Thompson. ' 40 E. C. Wenger. ' 39 O. C. Yingling. Jr., ' 40 TROMBONES Palmer Bovie, ' 40 R. G. Cassody, ' 39 N. R. Criss. ' 37 W. L. Drill. ' 38 C. C. Gardner, ' 40 J. E. Hulsizer. ' 38 J. V. Hoffman, ' 40 J. W. Strohecker. ' 40 DRUMS C. E. Case. ' 39 Temple Fielding. ' 39 G. T. Fielding, ' 39 I. M. Lee H. C. Myers. ' 40 O. H. Reeder, ' 39 H. L. Shultz. ' 40 P. O. Stearns, ' 40 N. D. Wilson, ' 39 D. R. Woodford. ' 40 PICCOLO R. G. Bradshaw. ' 37 BELL LYRA J. J. Byrne. ' 37 CYMBALS H. B. Clark, ' 37 TUBA A. O. Whipple. Jr., ' 39 BASS C. F. Huston. ' 38 I. E. Keyes, ' 40 H. E. Meyers, ' 37 ALTO HORNS D. B. Cook, ' 38 P. L. Okie, ' 39 FRENCH HORN G. S. Hogeman, ' 39 FLUTE E. E. Brandt, ' 39 OBOE Robert Wronker, ' 40 BARITONE R. S. Davidson, ' 40 R. S. MacCormack, ' 38 H. H. Purvis. Jr.. ' 37 E. L. Stan:ey. ' 40 I TOP ROW: Huston, Early, J. G. Bradshaw, Thompson, D. M. Shull, Yingling, F. Shull, Wenger, Plait, McCrocken, Banks, Meyer. FIFTH ROW: Mueller, Nelson, Sprowles, Crater, Harrison, Young, Jones, Neol, Henze, Bran dt, Bradshaw, R. G. Savage, Herman. FOURTH ROW: Mengel, Johnson, Beggs, Bowker, Eberhardt Duff, McCormock, Rowtond, Hay, Okie, Cook, Hogeman. THIRD ROW: Allsup, Longworthy, West, Wuerth, Purvis, Davidson, Stanley, Strohecker. Drill, Hulsizer, Criss, Cossady. SECOND ROW: Byrne, Shultz, Woodford, Myers, Reeder, T. H. Fielding, Clark, G, T. Fielding, Wilson, Lee, Case, Stearns, Gardner, Rorke Asst. Mgr. t, Evans (Asst. Mgr. t . KNEELING: Ridgeley I Drum Majort, Leidy (Mgr. , P. Smith Leoder . Sixty-one TOP ROW. vom Lehn, Holt, Tossic Frecmon. Skidmorc Gould, Okie Luthi Piatt, Haubcrg, Siegel. FOURTH ROW: Allen, Morgenthau, Mann, Early, Brand, Wiseman, Trimble. Richardson, Zaugg, Arberg. THIRD ROW, Whitman, Hatfield, Squire, Brown, Paddock, Jennings, Allsup, Palmer, Brazelton, Workman. SECOND ROW : Fenstermacher, Roland, Cleovenger, Wagner, Etherington, Farrar, Freeman, Finch, Crabb, Van Lengen. FRONT ROW: Sidford, Scott, Evans, Jauch, St. Peter, Kennedy, Lober, Winslow, Porter. Princeton University Glee Club i OFFICERS • C- ' 2 Albert St, Peter, Jr., ' 37 President (f - James Giddings, ' 30 _ Director D. P. Green, Jr., ' 37 Manager E. J. Kauffman, ' 38 Assistant Manager J. A. Benham, ' 39 Publicity Manager B, F. Bunn, ' 07 Graduate Treasurer FIRST TENORS T. B. Brazelton, Jr., ' 40 A. H. Dater, ' 38 R. R, Holt, ' 39 Phil Porter, ' 37 W. W. Squire, ' 38 A, W, Brown, ' 40 A. C. Davis, ' 39 J. W, Lober, ' 39 R. A. Siegel, ' 40 J. A. Walsh, ' 39 Gordon Crabb, ' 40 J. C. Early, ' 40 Richard Palmer, ' 38 R. W. Van Lengen, ' 40 W. V, Winslow, Jr., SECOND TENORS H. W. Arberg, ' 40 J. M. Finch, Jr., ' 39 Phil Porter, ' 37 J. IvI. Roland, ' 37 T. H. Cleovenger, ' 40 J. H. Hauberg, Jr., ' 39 H. G. Morgan, ' 40 J. M. lassie, ' 39 W. L. Cranston, ' 40 W. B. Jennings, ' 40 A. R. Ormond, ' 38 Nelson Whitman, ' 39 Freeman Fairchild, ' 39 J. K. Kennedy, ' 38 Benedict Peter, ' 40 A. P. White, ' 39 I, X. Farrar, ' 40 J. H. King, ' 38 H. H. Purvis, Jr., ' 37 H. S. Winn, ' 40 J. B. Phillips, ' 38 W, W. McLean, ' 40 C. S. Roberts, ' 39 FIRST BASSES F. J. Allsup, ' 39 J. McC. Finney, ' 37 Mark Hayes, Jr., ' 39 Solon Palmer, Jr., ' 40 H. B. Evans, ' 38 E. H. Furst, ' 39 H;nry Morgenthau, III, ' 39 E. C. Trimble, ' 40 R. S. Cook, Jr., ' 39 A. H. Gleason, ' 39 P. L. Okie, ' 39 E. J. Uihlein, Jr., ' 40 T. F. Fenstermacher, ' 40 W. R. Hatfield, ' 39 J. C. Pogue, Jr., ' 38 E. F. vom Lehn, ' 39 SECOND BASSES L. C. Allen, ' 38 D. F. Freeman, ' 40 C. D. McCracken, ' 38 Lemuel Skidmore, Jr., ' 39 Harrison Brand, III, ' 40 Lee Gould, Jr., ' 38 W. A. Paddock, ' 39 Albert St. Peter, Jr., ' 37 F. W. Elmendorf, ' 40 C. E. Jauch, Jr., ' 37 W. D. Piatt, ' 39 P. B. Wisman, ' 38 S. G. Etherington, Jr., ' 39 G. L. Lilley, ' 38 H. D. Richardson, ' 39 F. S, Workman, ' 40 E, E. Luthi, ' 38 D. W. Sidford, ' 39 Sixty-two ' 39 Princeton University Choir Robert Hufs tader .... MEMBERS, 1937 .Choirmastei ' S L. C. Allen J. J. Coale C. E. Jauch, Jr. W. G. Bate, Jr. J. M. Finney MEMBERS, 1938 J. W. Sayre I. H. Cleveland E. S. Olsan A. R. Ormond I. N. Walter W. K. Watkins H. B. Evans E. H. Morgan H. D. Sprowles, Jr. MEMBERS, 1939 F. I. Allsup A. H. Gleason H. H. Sharkey C. A. Broad, ]r A. T. Greeley R. D. Thum C. V. Cole W. R. Ha ' .field E. F. vom Lehn James Doolittle, Jr. H. L. Hodgetts Jack West 1 R. E. Funkhouser R. R. Holt Nelson Whitman N. L. Gill A. M. Lyon J. V. Whittlesey S. R. Ginsburg P. L. Okie MEMBERS, 1940 Harrison Black T. B. Fryer, Jr. H. G. Morgan S. P. Bovie G. A. Haas W. G. Penfield, Jr. T. B. Brazleton, Jr. Carter Harman Benedict Peter R. S. Davidson D. E. Hillenbrand F. C. Tosh F. W. Elmendor , Jr. T. D. Johnson, Jr. G. B. Vroom, Jr. W. C. Freed, Jr R. S. Laubach T. T. Wuerth J. L. Frothingham W. W. McLean L. S. Yow GRADUATE STUDENTS R. G. Bailey F. M Lyell R. W. Bretall A. H Vrooman TOP ROW: Penfield, Funkhouser, Lyell, Laubach, West, Okie, Doolittle, Whittlesey, Jouch, Finney. THIRD ROW; vom Lehn, Sprowles, Peter, Haas, Freed, Vroomon, Coole, Gleoson. Vroom, Hatfield, Block. SECOND ROW: Evons, Gill, Whitmon, Wuerth, Yow, Sharkey, Fryer, Davidson, Brozelton, Hillenbrand, Tosh. Bailey. FRONT ROW: Walter, Holt, Minor, Allsup, Cole, Prof Hufstader, Johnson, Lyon, Bate, Ginsburg, Hormon. Sixty-three TOP ROW: McHarg, Schmitz, Dickey, Stanley. THIRD ROW. Barnnger, Hogeman, Crater, Jones, Glenney, Thompson. SECOND ROW: Coopsr, Fenstermach3r, Ingram, West, Clark, Brandt, Dorian. FRONT ROW: Dr. White, Krebs, Kohler, Hauser, Savage, Bradshaw, Osborn. Princeton University Orchestra EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE P. DeW. Hauser, ' 37.. R. H. Savage, ' 37 E. H. Kahler, ' 37 Harold Berkley ..Chairman ...Secretary ..Librarian .Conductor VIOLINS I. p. Dorian, ' 37 P. DeW, Hauser, ' 37 J. T. Kinney, ' 37 M. V. Krebs, ' 37 F. L. Ingram, ' 38 H. C. Jones, II, ' 38 R. S. MacCormack, ' 38 I. E. McHare, ' 38 E. C. Beattie, ' 39 D. S. Junker, ' 39 H. A. Schnitz, ' 39 R, F. Dressier, ' 40 T. F. Fenstermacher, ' 40 J. E. Keyes, ' 40 L. M. Mead, ' 40 VIOLA P. R. Whi ' G T. A. Dickey, ' 40 ' CELLO I. H. Sweer E. W. Kahler, ' 37 J. W. Clark, III, ' 39 K. P. Cooper, ' 39 FLUTE R. G. Bradshaw, ' 37 P. E. Barringer, ' 38 E. E. Brandt, ' 39 A. D. Young, ' 40 BASS CLARINET R. B. Langworthy, ' 40 CLARINET R. H. Savage, ' 37 D. H. Crater, ' 38 P. S. Willand, ' 39 DOUBLE BASS F. H. Osborn, Jr., ' 37 OBOE J. D. Thompson, ' 38 Robert West, ' 40 HORNS G. L. Hogeman, ' 38 E. L. Stanley, ' 40 TROMBONE W. L. Drill, ' 38 R. C. Cassady, ' 39 W. G. Glenney, ' 39 TIMPANI J. J. Byrne, ' 37 Sixty-four Princeton University Concerts UNIVERSITY CONCERTS COMMITTEE Mrs. William F. Magie Chairman Mrs. Jessie P. Frothingham Recording Secretary Mrs. W. U. Vreeland Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer C. E. Jauch, Jr., ' 37 Head Usher Prof. H. L. Cooke Prof. William Gillespie Prof. Willard Thorpe Prof. E. T. DeWald Mrs. B. B. Locke Prof. L. A. Turner Mrs. H. W. Dodds Mrs. W. K. Prentice Prof. R. D. Welch Mrs. Holmes Forsythe Mrs. M. T. Pyne UNIVERSITY CONCERTS, 1936-1937 The Budapest String Quartet November 20, December 4, December 11 Robert Cosadesus, pianist January 8 Joseph Szigeti, violinist January 22 The Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, Igor Strawinsky, conducting February 19 The Byzantine Vocal Ensemble March 5 The Aldrich, Laurent, Zighera Trio March 13 Marian Anderson, contralto April 1 6 More than thirty-five years ago a group of Princeton women formed a Ladies Music Com- mittee, later the University Concerts Committee, Anth Mrs. Henry Burchard Fine as chairman. Year after year this committee brought to 50 McCosh the finest musical artists of the day — Womrath, Whiting, Kreisler, famous singers, re- citalists, and quartets, and one or two of the great orchestras under distinguished conductors. The university students attended free of charge, although in 1920 they guaranteed one-half the cost of the year ' s fenterprise. In 1922 the ushers were organized on the basis of ability and desire rather than upon campus prominence. Many of the annual programs are now presented in Mc- Carter Theater. Subscriptions for the series of concerts come mainly from the residents of Princeton. Mrs. Vreeland, secretary for many years, ar- ranges the numerous details of presenting and publicizing these concerts and recitals, and to her, both for proven ability in this connection and for arousing vigorous support of music in Princeton, great credit and honor are extended. Sixty-five Senior Promenade Committee E. N. Cutler, Jr F. Y. Larkin Rodman Morgan Taplin, Hoyt, Cutler, Larkin, Vanderbilt. Chairman F. E. Taplin, Jr. O. D. Vanderbilt, III STANDING Galey, Agnew, Nettleton. SEATED: Carter, Coors, Craig, W. K. Coors C. D. Agnew N. M. Carter Junior Promenade Committee .Chairman W. T. Galey, III J. G. Nettleton, Jr. W. B. Craig Sixty-six The Triangle Club OFFICERS W. H. Borden, ' 37 President F. E. Taplin, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President Alexander Armstrong, Jr., ' 37 Secretary W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 Business Manager C. W. Williams, ' 38 Assistant Business Manager K. B. Alexander, Jr. C. H. Angell R. A. Dubuque, Jr. E. G. Engel J. F. Foran D. G. Gamble MEMBERS, 1937 D. P. Green, Jr. H. E. Griffith J. H. Hines M. V. Krebs E. A. Limberg, Jr. C. S. S. Marvin R. A Messier, II H. W. Mitchell C. C. Northrup F. H. Parkin H. T. Randall R. H. Robie W. K. Stanard, II R. B. Cowdery D. T. Dort MEMBERS, 1938 G. O. Morgan, III C. E. Smith, Jr. MEMBER, 1939 Sanders Maxwell W. J. Watson TOP ROW: Engel, Messier, Hines, Randoll, Dort, Maxwell. THIRD ROW: Norfhrup, Green, Mitchell, Morvin, Dubuque, Cowdery, Williams. SECOND ROW: Watso.-i, Robie, Angell, Stanard, Griffith, Krebs, Morgan. FIRST ROW: Porkin, Armstrong, Toplin, Bordsn, Jones, Alexander, Limberg. Sixty-seven f: nr Borden, Armstrong, Limberg. Hines, Northrup, Hubbard. Northrup, Limberg. Cowdery, Hubbard. Borden, Cowdery. Hayes, Armstrong. Take It Away Book by GORDON CHADWICK, ' SS, F. W. ROUNDS. Jr., ' 38, W. J. WATSON, ' 38, J. S. BLAY, ' 37, and J. H. KENNEDY, ' 37 Music and Lyrics by W. H. BORDEN, ' 37, C. S. S. MARVIN, ' 37, F. E. TAPLIN, Jr., ' 37, K. B. ALEXANDER, ' 37, SANDERS MAXWELL, ' 39, W. C. SPRINGER, ' 40 Orchestrations by F. E. Taplin, Jr.. ' 37. W. H. BORDEN, ' 37, and K. B. ALEXANDER, ' 37 Assisted by SANDERS MAXWELL, ' 39, and W. C. SPRINGER, ' 40 Sellings designed by GORDON CHADWICK, ' 38 Dances staged by MORGAN LEWIS Entire production supervised by Mr. MILES and Mr. LEWIS CAST OF CHARACTERS Dixie Delano R. B. COWDERY, ' 38 Manny Magnum MARK HAYES, ' 39 Chester Pipps ALEXANDER ARMSTRONG, ' 37 Henry Wallingford Westchester, III E. A. LIMBERG, Jr., ' 37 Chuttleworth C. L PIERCE, Jr., ' 37 Newton Weevil F. E. FOX, ' 39 Rex Stuart W. C. HUBBARD, ' 38 Jack W. I. WATSON, ' 38 Fabian W. H. BORDEN, ' 37 Cynthia Foresythe C. C. NORTHRUP, ' 37 Miss Tome J. H. HINES, ' 37 Sixty-eight Triangle Club Staff W. H. Borden, ' 37 President F. E. Taplin, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President Alexander Armstrong, ' 37 Secretary W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 Manager C. W. Williams, ' 38 Assistant Manager B. F. Bunn, ' 07 Graduate Treasurer Prof. R. H. Ball Faculty Director R. W. Warfield, ' 30 University Adviser W. K. Stanard, II, ' 37 Publicity Manager Blair Lee, III, ' 38 Assistant Publicity Manager D. P. Green, ' 37 Program Manager J. A. Saalfield, ' 38 Assistant Program Manager W. T. Trueblood, Jr. ' 38 Assistant Program Manager F. H. Parkin, ' 37 Stage Manager J. H. Miller, ' 38 Assistant Stage Manager R. B. Robie, ' 37 Electrical Manager J. D. Burke, ' 38 --- Assistant Electrical Manager R. A. Dubuque, Jr., ' 37 Costume Manager C. A. Skinner, ' 38 Assistant Costume Manager E. G. Engel, ' 37 Property Manager J. C. Stoddard, ' 38 Assistant Property Manager N. G. Griffith, ' 37 Make Up Manager R. F. Shaffer, ' 38 Assistant Make Up Manager Take It Away For the third successive year the production of the Triangle Club placed its story in a contem- porary setting. A considerable part of the book, ironically entitled, Take It Away , written by Gordon Chadwick, ' 38, W. J. Watson, ' 38, F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38, J. S. Blay, ' 37, and J. H. Kennedy, ' 37, used for its background Hollywood and the motion picture industry. It was a satire dealing with the trends that periodically sweep the cinema capital, showing how the Triangle Club becomes embroiled in its mad world, and even bringing the maligned south stacks of the Prince- ton library into its scope. Alexander Armstrong, Jr., ' 37, veteran of two past Triangle renditions, appeared as Holly- wood ' s latest sensation. One of the principal feminine roles was taken by R. B. Cowdery, ' 38, who played the part of Dixie Delano, a slightly passe but hopeful burlesque queen. Other no- tables were Mark Hayes, ' 39, as the producer Manny Magnum, E. A. Limberg, Jr., ' 37, as the typical collegian H. W. Westchester III, W. H. Borden, ' 37, as Fabian, C. C. Northrup, ' 37, as Cynthia Foresythe, and J. H. Hines, ' 37, as Miss Tome. Whereas William Miles directed the cast for the first time, Morgan Lewis again capably took charge of the chorus of sixteen men and sixteen converted girls. The musical numbers were composed by Bor- den, K. B. Alexander, Jr., ' 37, C. S. S. Marvin, ' 37, F. E. Taplin, Jr., ' 37, Sanders Maxwell, ' 39, and W. C. Springer, ' 40. Sixty-nine Triangle Production ENSEMBLE D. G. Gamble, ' 37 LEADERS OF THE CHORUS E. A. Limberg, Jr., ' 37 Pinkham Smith, ' 37 GIRLS G. C. Burke, Jr., ' 39 H. W. Butterworlh, III, ' 38 J. A. Cashman, ' 38 J. W. Chapman, ' 38 C. C. Eaton, ' 38 R. B. Harding, ' 39 C. H. Huvelle, ' 38 J. H. LaPorte, ' 38 C. F. Limberg, ' 39 W. M. Love, ' 38 R. W. Myers, ' 39 E. S. Olsan, ' 38 E. G. Riggs, ' 38 J. A. Smith, ' 37 L. D. Watrous, ' 38 J. A. Walsh, Jr., ' 39 BOYS S. P. Banigan, ' 37 J. B. Beaty, Jr., ' 38 J. S. Bell, ' 39 R. S. Cook, Jr., ' 39 J. J. Davis, ' 38 R. S. Dumper, ' 37 J. R. Pales, ' 37 C. C. Honsaker, Jr., ' 37 W. N. Lane, ' 39 R. A. Lydecker, ' 38 Robert Moment, ' 38 A. P. Osborn, Jr., ' 39 A. M. Osgood, ' 37 A. W. Schmidt, ' 39 Pinkham Smith, ' 37 W. B. D. Stroud, ' 39 R. D. Thum, ' 39 SPECIALTY DANCERS G. C. Bunker, ' 39 J. W. Chapman, ' 38 ]. H. Hines, ' 37 R. W. Myers, ' 39 C. C. Northrup, ' 37 TRUMPETS Thomas AUsopp, 11, ' 39 Dexter Bov ker, ' 40 R. H. Mengel, ' 38 SAXOPHONES D. T. Dort, ' 38 W. G. McKelvey, ' 39 L G. Powers, ' 38 C. R. Stevens, ' 38 ORCHESTRA Conductor, F. E. Taplin, Jr., ' 37 VIOLIN Dexter Bowker, ' 40 TROMBONE N. R. Criss, Jr., ' 37 FLUTE E. E. Brandt, ' 39 BASS Theodore English, ' 39 PIANO Sanders Maxwell, ' 39 DRUMS R. M. Entwisle, Jr., ' 38 GUITAR R. E. Funkhouser, ' 39 Seventy Theatre Intime 1936-1937 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE T. H. Smithies, ' 37 Michael Weyl, ' 37 R. A. Baer, ' 38 L. E. Sherwood, ' 37 J. R. Crowley, ' 37 C. C. W. Angell W. C. Bartlett F. J. B. Bing W. H. Borden J. G. Anderton, Jr. R. A. Baer P. W. Bradbury J. W. Chapman G. W. Dalton, Jr. E. R. Davis, Jr. M. G. Ferrer Mrs. Malcolm Buchanan Miss Mary Earp Miss Nina Melville Minor MEMBERS OF THE COMPANY 1937 J. R. Crowley J. J. Doyle R. L. Edwards E. G. Engel R. B. Cowdery J. B. Haviland N. F. Jones J. H. McLean F. E. Fox R. S. Hendrickson, Jr. 1938 1939 P. deW. Jiauser W. B. Jones, Jr. E. A. Limberg, Jr. R. A. Moss J. H. Miller W. P. Moore H. P. Niehoff W. W. L. Reed Gaston Jennings Gordon Merrick President Vice-President Secretary Business Manager W. Williams, ' 38 L. E. Sherwood, Jr. T. H. Smithies Michael Weyl W. W. Wriggins GUEST PERFORMERS Miss Jane Rich Miss Roberta Stockton Miss Evelyn Swan R. F. Shaffer W. J. Watson C. W. Williams N. A. Ouinn D. S. Thompson Miss Georgie M. Weinert Miss Jean Welsh TOP ROW: Anderton, Jennings, Ferrer, Borden, Cowdery, Niehoff, Doyle. THIRD ROW; Copper, Quinn, Bradbury, Limberg, N. E, Jones, Williams. Thompson. SECOND ROW: Miller, Davis, Fox, Merrick, Angell, McLean, Watson, W, B, Jones- FIRST ROW Cheesm ' on, Chopman, Sherwood, Smithies iPres. ), Weyl, Boer, Wolf, Seventy-one Theatre Intime Productions, 1936 Three one-act plays by undergraduates were presented by the Intime on the evening of March 5th. PASTORALE , by H. C. Hartman, ' 36, was an almost too deUcate treatment of the theme of calf-love, which portrayed a sensitive boy and girl who are shocked by the callous and vulgar manner in which their four companions approach a situation which they hold sacred. Caroline Van Dyke and J. J. Doyle, ' 37, gave appeal- ing performances as the two leading characters. The second one-act play was BITTER TULIPS , winner of the second prize in a contest sponsored by the magazine Stage , by D. A. Robertson, ' 36, with striking stage-sets by L. D. Ayers, ' 36. Three people, Mary Pluepott (Naomi Watts), Noel Puddephatt (Roger Geffen, ' 39), and John Spleuchan of Inverbunnety (the author), await the exit of a great London actress, at the stage-door of a theatre, thrilled at once by her performance and the news reports of her simple life, only to be disappointed by her appearance in the company of a well-known roue (Bronson Tweedy, ' 37). A highly stylized adaptation by E. L. Skinner, ' 36, of the dramatic Book of Job, with stage-settings and lighting remi- niscent of the medieval mystery plays, was the third presenta- tion. Memorable was the shrouded and silhouetted figure rep- resenting God (J. P. Jones, ' 36), in a dazzling panel of white light, dominating the abased figure of Job (J. R. Crowley, ' 37) on the dim forstage. God ' s Words were spoken by D. A. Robertson, ' 36, and those of the Devil were taken by R. S. Henderson, ' 39. The succession of scenes was set by a reader (Richard Dillon, ' 39). Job ' s friends were played by L. H. Brown, ' 39, N. L. Drummond, ' 38, Gordon Merrick, ' 39, and D. S. Thompson, ' 39. TALK OF THE TOWN , a hilarious satire by B. T. Rulon- Miller, ' 36, G. R. Cooke, ' 36, and W. H. Borden, ' 37, on the annual Bicker Week situation, was the next production by the Intime, the 18th to 21st of March. Its unusual success, recalling TIME OF THEIR LIVES of the 1933 seascn, caused this play to be held over to the following week. The action takes place among familiar Princeton scenes, such as Jack Honore ' s bar- ber shop, McCosh 50, the taproom of the Nassau Inn, and two of the clubs after the hectic session is over. Able staging was done by R. C. Hoffman, 111, ' 37. Such personages as the Emperor Haile Selassie, King of Kings, Conguernig Lion of Judah (Alexander Armstrong, Jr., ' 37), Ferdinand Plimpton, a radio announcer (W. B. Jones, ' 37), Jack Honore (C. I. Pierce, ' 37), and Connie of the Nass (S. K. C. Kopper, ' 37) carried on the swiftly moving dialogue. Other actors in a large and amusing cast were W. H. Borden, ' 37, as chairman of the Bicker committee, R. B. Cowdery, ' 38, and W. J. Watson, ' 38, as Sylvester de Plate, Jr., President of the Sophomore class. One of the most ambitious undertakings ever ventured by an undergraduate organization was the Theatre Intime ' s Peer Gynt Persuade the Group, F i H ■f IriE. ■Retieorsol for The Great God Brown presentation, in collaboration with the Dramatic department of the Finch School of New York, of Henrik Ibsen ' s PEER GYNT , May 1st and 2nd in McCarter Theatre, and the fol- lowing Monday and Tuesday in New York. This work was reduced to twenty-five scenes in three acts, by R. A. Baer, ' 38, and L. D. Ayres, ' 36, who was at once director and designer of stage-sets and costumes. The version was in verse which recaptured much of the beauty of the Norwegian orig- inal, while the Peer Gynt music by Greig, played for the production by an undergraduate orchestra under the direction of P. DeW. Hauser, ' 37, was used with telling effect in many The story deals with degenerate Peer in the various stages of his life, in a highly symbolic manner. It pictures his love- affairs, his mental struggles, and his final redemption from the common end of all whose lives might have had some point, in the Buttonmoulder ' s pot, by his true love, Solveig. The young Peer of the first act was memorably played by E. D. Thacher, ' 36. Outstanding scenes were those v rith Solveig (Nita Easley) at the wedding feast of Ingrid (Frances Pilchard), the bride whom Peer later abducts; with the Troll-king ' s daughter (Jane Rich) in the hall of the mountain-king, and the ever-famous Aase ' s Death scene (Aase played by Isabelle Tennant). The second act brings Peer, now a mature man (T. H. Smithies, ' 37), through the famous scenes with Anitra the dancer (Barbara Strong) and the crazy, colorful scene in the Cairo Madhouse with its crazy Director (Michael Weyl, ' 37). The last act contains the many solioguies by the old Peer (very skillfully played by R. A. Baer, ' 38), now returned to his native Norway. Here Peer meets up with the Button- moulder (R. B. Cowdery, ' 38), and the Lean One (Bronson Tweedy, ' 37), and is redeemed from both by the true love of Solveig, in the glorious Easter dav n scene which comes as a refreshing contrast to the sombre and moody scenes in the rest of the act. The effect of the scenery and lighting was highly sugges- itve, ra ' her than realistic. Huge steps on either side of a cen- tral platform symbolized the Norwegian hills. In several scenes, shadov s proiected on a white gauze suggested trees. The frenzied motion of the Troll scene was heightened by the weird masks of the mountain folk, as well as by the projec- tion of the grotesgue shadows of these performers on the background. One of the most remarkable effects was in the Boyg scene, in which the whole theatre was dark. Here the voice of the mysterious Being with which Peer struggles was made to travel around the theatre from orchestra pit to bal- cony. This was accomplished by a single actor, stationed in the beams of the theatre, and speaking his lines out through a spotlight hole. Such weird effects as these, with the very able supporting cast, made PEER GYNT one of the most successful productions, both technically and artistically, ever done by the Theatre Intime. Seventy-two Theatre Intime Productions (Continued) Egyptian Scene from Peer Gynt . The fall season began with the production of Oscar Wilde ' s ■THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST , which was pre- sented from October 20th to 24th, under the able direction of T. H. Smithies, ' 37. The play, among the most famous in the English language, was characterised by John Drinkwater, the famous playwright, as with several moments of stage mas- tery which can hardly be excelled in comedy, — having not three words in seven dramatically right, but seven in seven. It is essentially satire on modern sophisticated society, with its artificiality and frequent deceptions. In keeping with the artificiality of the characters, and the satirical nature of the dialogue, the scenery was made to resemble glorified cardboard cut-outs, lighted vividly and colorfully. The cast, well-chosen for such a play, included M. G. Ferrer, ' 39, as the affected Algernon Moncrieff, the extremely, I might say ostentatiously, eligible young man , while the lady of his heart, Cecily Cardew, was naively and ably played by Jean Welch. John Worthing, the earnest Ernest of the play, and his love, the Hon. Gwendolen Brack- nell, were played by I. R. Crowley, ' 37, and Roberta Stockton, while Lady Bracknell, Gwendolen ' s mother, was played by Mrs. Malcolm Buchanan. The remaining cast included two very amusing characters, the Reverend Chasuble, played by W. B. Jones, ' 37, in a highly affected manner, and the prim governess. Miss Prism, played by Mary Earp. Canon Chas- uble, somewhat pompous, is of the type among the clergy who are often found at the local afternoon teas, surrounded by all the adoring old maids from thirty onwards, like Miss Prism. The setting is England. The story follows the efforts of Worthing to gain the hand of Gwendolen, overcoming the opposition of Lady Bracknell. At the same time Moncrieff, intrigued by the discovery that his friend Worthing has a very pretty young ward, named Cardew, bends his whole effort to meeting that same ward. Complications arise in the fact both men do their wooing under assumed names. But, these and other complications to the contrary, the course of true love runs smooth in the end. A vivid presentation of O ' Neill ' s powerful symbolic play THE GREAT GOD BROWN was the Inlime ' s last production of the 1936 season, from November 1 7th to November 23rd. Well received by the undergraduates, it merited a personal telegram from the author on the successful production of a play so close to his heart, and expressing his gratitude for helping to keep it alive in the theatre. Irene Rich, popular actress, and mother of Jane Rich, who took the part of Cybel in the play, came to see it twice, and praised the handling of the symbolism, and the masks used in the production. The play contrasts the characters of Brown, a typical bour- geois business man, practical to the nth degree, without crea- tive ability, with Dion Anthony, the sensitive genius, who hides from the harsh touch of the world behind the mask of a mocking satyr. It follows Anthony and Brown from boyhood to death, in their love for Margaret, wife of the first, and loved too well by the second. Throughout, there is the struggle be- tween the artist Anthony, succumbing to his own decadence, through his inability to strike a workable medium for his creative abaility and the demands of the physical world of reality, and the practical, plodding Brown, who hides himself behind Anthony ' s mask after the latter ' s death, and seeks to live the double life of Brown the business man, the mathe- matical architect, and Anthony the poet, the designer of poems in wood and stone. His failure to reconcile and carry on the two lives ruins him in the end as well. J. W. Smith, ' 38, gave a very powerful and moving por- trayal of William Brown. The poet Anthony, the masked satyr , was colorfully portrayed by R. A. Baer, ' 38. Anthony ' s wife, Margaret, was played by Lyn Swann, who gave an excellent performance in her essentially unsympathetic role. Jane Rich, as Cybel, the prostitute, was highly convincing in her dual role, at once hard and worldly-wise, in her relation to Brown, and motherly to the tortured genius, Dion Anthony. Other performers in the ably directed cast were Georgie M. Weinert and E. R. Drake, ' 40, Brown ' s mother and father, end Nina Melville Minor and D. N. Test, ' 40, as Anthony ' s parents. The parts of Anthony ' s two children were taken by Charles Erdman and Norman Barrett. The lough policeman of the last act, who brings the finale to Brown ' s double life, after the sudden disclosure of Anthony ' s death, was played by P. A. Phillips, ' 38. The performance was under the talented direction of Michael Weyl, ' 37. A modernistic set, with a light panel, in several scenes, heightening the emotional effect, helped to make the play one of the best productions of the Theatre Intime in recent years. The swift climaxes of the dialogue in the many scenes, with their sharp contrasts, were aided by the use of a divided stage, with dimming of the lights to change the scene, and shift the action. Clever use of masks by the leading actors showed the physical outlook of the characters to his own world, while able acting behind them made the mental struggles and agonies even more clear and forcible. Keeping abreast of the times, the Intime has joined a new movement in the world of experimental and amateur theatre, with the sponsoring of theatrical groups from different parts of the country. On November 19th the University of North Caro- lina Playmakers presented three folk-plays, by members ol their group, Paul Green ' s QUARE MEDICINE , NEW NIG- GER , by Fred Howard, and Josephine Niggli ' s TOOTH OR SHA ' VE? . Ethyl Barrymore Colt ' s group, the Jitney Players, presented LONDON ASSURANCE and THE ROMANTIC YOUNG LADY , the 8th and 9th of December. Both produc- tions were very well received in Princeton. Roberta Stockton. Alexander Arms. ' rong, Jr., 37. Seventy-three TOP ROW: Roop, Shaskan, Taylor, Thompson, Altman, Haughwouf, Highsaw. SECOND ROW. Bedford, Ginsburg, Gill, Wilson, Leto, Barnes. FRONT ROW: Stoner, Davidson, Van Ess I Pres. i , Cleveland, Wolf. American Whig and Cliosophic Societies OFFICERS John Van Ess, Jr., ' 38 President J. H. Cleveland, ' 38 Vice-President Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 Treasurer R. H. Davison, ' 37 Secretary T. H. Wolf, ' 37 Director of Membership N. A. Stoner, 37.. Director of Debates Albert Moore, ' 38 Director of Meetings EXECUTIVE COUNCIL R. L. Altman, ' 38 S. D. Goodman, Jr., ' 39 H. T. Randall, ' 37 B. E. Taylor, ' 38 N. F. Bedford, ' 39 R. A. Haughwout, ' 38 Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 R. M. Thompson, ' 38 A. H. Bolte, ' 39 H. W. Hazard, III, ' 39 Hugh Robinson, ' 39 A. C. Ulmer, Jr., ' 39 J. McC. Clarke, ' 39 R. B. Highsaw, ' 39 R. W. Roop, ' 39 John Van Ess, Jr., ' 38 J. H. Cleveland, ' 38 1. S. Kampmann, Jr., ' 39 E. A. Seipp, Jr., ' 39 A. W. Waldron, Jr., ' 39 R. H. Davison, ' 37 F. S. Leto. ' 39 F. f . Severence, Jr., ' 37 Howrell Webb, ' 39 Gordon Donald, ' 39 M. C. Long, ' 37 G. F. Shaskan, Jr., ' 39 Thompson Webb, Jr., ' 39 H. J. Gensler, ' 37 P. B. Marzoni, Jr., ' 39 A. B. Sharp, ' 39 Nelson Whitman, ' 39 N. L. Gill, ' 39 Albert Moore, ' 38 N. A. Stoner, ' 37 D. R. Wilson, ' 39 S. R. Ginsburg, ' 39 D. F. Pariser, ' 39 H. B. Swope, Jr., ' 37 T. H. Wolf, ' 37 H. J. Plants, ' 38 G. I. Symington, Jr., ' 39 HONORARY MEMBERS R. G. Barnes, ' 37 ]. L. Broderick, ' 37 Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 P. T. Kimball, II, ' 37 Seventy-four The American Whig-Cliosophic Societies The American Whig and Cliosophic Societies, oldest college political and debating societies in the world, for some time in a somewhat moribund condition, due chiefly to lack of interest, have during the last year been injected once more with the hypodermic of progress. In March, 1936, the annual election was held. It was preceded by something that had all the earmarks of a real political campaign. John Van Ess, Jr., ' 38, and J. H. Cleveland, ' 38, were elected as President and Vice-President, respectively, breaking the tradi- tion of years in which no Junior had headed the organizations. The year ended with a very suc- cessful Whig-Clio Banquet, at which a message from President Roosevelt was read, and the speakers were Jouett Shouse, Arthur Krock, and Raymond Moley At once the new administration embarked on a new program of reform. An ambitious Plan of Organization was drawn up, the Cabinet was reconstituted to include, as much as possible, only functional officers, the heads of the newly formed Departments of Publicity, Membership, Debate, and Meetings. At the opening of the year an application period was set for Freshmen, of whom 105 were finally accepted. Of this number the surprising total of 73 were interested in de- bating, and eight debate classes were set up to accommodate them. From these was to be chosen the Freshmen Debate Panel. Varsity Debating opened its season when a Whig-Clio team in- vaded Governor London ' s home state in late October, 1936, to uphold Roosevelt against the onslaughts of the University of Kansas. The schedule for the 1937 season will include a trip as far south as the sunny shores of Florida. The high points of the Whig-Clio year are cen- tering around the monthly Union meetings. These are being conducted on the principle that a prominent speaker is not always necessary, and that the emphasis on discussion and argu- ment should come from the floor. A fiery meeting on October 22 showed that this is not only a possi- bility but was infinitely more interesting for the average member. This gathering defeated a Roosevelt for President resolution by a narrow majority. At the second Union meeting national- istic Clio met up with the internationalistic Whig in another open forum discussion. Whig-Clio ' s general policy has been to in- crease the centralization of the combined Halls, which are an administrative and fiscal unit, with- out impairing the sovereignties of Whig and Clio in matters relating to discussion and political opinion. This state of affairs was ratified in Octo- ber by the Alumni bodies of the Halls, for it had never been officially legalized since 1929, when the merger was effected. The present progressive administration aims at a high morale among the membership based on gradual restriction, a pol- icy of rigid economy, and an efficient and demo- cratic administration of business. It has as its general aim the permanent establishment of Whig-Clio as an influential, prosperous, and re- spected campus activity. Seventy-five American Whig Society FOUNDED 1769 N. A. Stoner, ' 37 _ President D. R. Wilson, ' 39 Vice-President J. W. Bredenberg J. L. Broderick R. W. Buddington R. H. Davison W. J. Devlin J. J. Doyle N. L. Foote Thornton Gerrish, Jr. MEMBERS, 1937 Thomas Gucker, 111 J. H. Kennedy P. T. Kimball E. H. Lotspeich McDonald Lynch S. F. Medina Rodman Morgan C. D. Nightingale B. C. O ' Sullivan E. T. Pickard, Jr. J. F. Pritchard, Jr. F. N. Rosenbaum R. F. Shaw N. A. Stoner T. H. Wolf L, W. Young Paul Amos P. E. Barringer S. L. Block J. G. Buchanan J. H. Cleveland D. H. Crater MEMBERS, 1938 T. O. Gilson C. C. Irvine B. C. McCartney Courtlandt NicoU W. C. McSherry G. H. Oliver C. C. Reid B. H. Bidder C. H. Robinson S. J. Sarnoff H. H. Stratton John Van Ess, Jr. A. C. Warner E. L. Crain, Jr. P. R. Dickinson Gordon Donald Benjamin Franklin, III S. R. Ginsburg H. W. Hazard, III R. R. Hoh I. S. Kampmann, Jr. F. S. Leto MEMBERS, 1939 P. B. Marzoni, Jr. R. W. Myers P. P. O ' Day D. F. Pariser G. H. Reppert, Jr. H. D. Richardson Hugh Robinson R. W. Roop E. W. Schall G. F. Shaskan, Jr. G. J. Symington, Jr. Charles Townsend, Jr. A. C. Ulmer, Jr. A. W. Waldron, Jr. J. A. Walsh, Jr. Howell Webb D. R. Wilson C. A. Beier, Jr. F. W. Brennan T. H. Cleavinger W. E. Colby D. D. Deacon J. N. DuBarry W. D. Findley W. J. Funk W. R. Gilson R. J. Ginsburg R. F. Goheen R. M. Green, Jr. G. A. Haas Carter Harmon C. C. Hewitt W. B. Jennings J. R. Jones R. P. Kavanagh, Jr. A. deF. Keys, Jr. MEMBERS, 1940 J. M. Klein, Jr. R. H. Koch J. L. Latchum H. L. Latham E. B. Lee, Jr. F. G. McMurray M. H. McCloskey, III G. S. Mosher E. C. Mowry R. H. Myers W. L. Meldringhaus Gustavus Ober, III M. N. Palley J. F. Peckham C. deB. Pell Benedict Peter D. K. Robinson R. M. Robinson, Jr. F. M. Shanbacker Samuel Small R. A. Springs F. W. Sutton Carleton Tobey D. S. Townsend P. R. Teetor J. A. Valentine P. H. Vermilye S. C. Waller D. M. Watts D. R. Whyte S. A. Woodd-Cahusac R. P. WoodhuU J. R. Workman R. B. Yardley J. C. Yates J. G. G. Yocum C. A. B. Zook, Jr. Seventy-six The American Cliosophic Society FOUNDED 1765 OFFICERS H. T. Randall, ' 37 President R. L Edwards, ' 37 Vice-President Albert Moore, ' 38 Secretary E. H. Bindley, Jr. R. M. Crocker R. L. Edwards C. W. Fairlie Carl Ferenbach, 11 Thomas Fisher, Jr. J. B. Frazer T. B. Gallatin MEMBERS, 1937 H. J. Gensler T. T. Hutcheson Pierce MacNair H. J. Mathews R. B. Miller R. A. Moss W. H. Orr, Jr. A C. Poole E. B. Pyle H. T. Randall H. W. Read Thomas Riggs, Jr. J. T. Sadler R. W. Sayre D. R. Small A. E. Yahn O. K. Boice J. P. Corcoran R. I. Cropper Theodore French G. J. Gores J. G. Hoagland MEMBERS, 1938 R. C. Howe W. B. Johnson, Jr. L. H. Komoski D. P. Lieblich C. K. Mitchell Albert Moore W. P. Moore D. S. Plumb W. F. Russell C. H. Smyth A. J. Stokely B. E. Taylor, Jr. B. E. Tousley, Jr. E. J. Beattie, Jr. N. F. Bedford A. H. Bolte J. M. Clarke F. R. Donahue J. H. Flinn, Jr. J. M. French N. L. Gill S. D. Goodman Landis Gores MEMBERS, 1939 A. J. Grossman R. B. Highsaw Washington Irving Harding Johnson, Jr. D. S. Junker H. L. Klein Wolford Kraybill F. E. P. McCarter T. C. Mills S. H. Ogilvy J. W. Pitney E. A. Seipp A. B. Sharp R. F. Sheppard F. P. Smith, Jr. Thompson Webb, Jr. Nelson Whitman J. H. Wilkes J. A. Wilson R. K. Alloways A. K. Baragwanath A. R. Barbour T. B. Brazelton A. W. Brown E. D. Clark D. R. Coffin M. M. Day J. R. Dykema Herbert Epstein T. F. Fenstermacher R. L. Franklin C. C. Gardner MEMBERS, 1940 Stephen Gilman S. E. Harris J. M. Harrison R. P. Hazelhurst Edward Holloway, Jr. S. S. Judson R. C. J. Kitto R. H. Korch M. P. Laird J. C. Lamp R. B. Langworthy R. L. Lovelace L. M. Mead W. E. Mussett C. P. Newman Oliver Norwood C. deB. Pell J. H. Pittenger J. O. Piatt, Jr. H. R. Pyne, Jr. L. C. Smith Lambert Turner, Jr. D. C. VanSiclen E. A. Williams P. H. Wilkie C. E. Wilson Seventy-seven A, SECOND ROW: Shaskan, Davison, Foofe, Cleveland, Houghwouf, Highsaw. FRONT ROW: Gill, Wilson, Stoner (Mgr.), Ginsburg, Von Ess. The Princeton Debating Panel OFFICERS N. A. Stoner, ' 37 Manager D. R. Wilson, ' 39 Assistant Manager S. R. Ginsburg, ' 39 Freshman Manager D. D. McKean Coach W. S. Howell Coach MEMBERS, 1937 R. H. Davison H. J. Gensler N. A. Stoner N. L. Foote H. T. Randall T. H. Wolf F. N. Rosenbaum MEMBERS, 1938 S. L. Block J. H. Cleveland Albert Moore F. W. Capers G. J. Gores A. J. Stokely E. L. Chambers R. A. Haughwout John Van Ess, Jr. T. O. Gilson B. C. McCartney MEMBERS, 1939 A. H. Bolte A. J. Grossman R. W. Roop N. L. Gill H. W. Hazard, III G. F. Shaskan, Jr. S. R. Ginsburg R. B. Highsaw D. R. Wilson S. D. Goodman D. F. Pariser Seventy-eight The Class of 1876 Prize Debate FEBRUARY 22, 1936 WHIG HALL C. E. Shain, ' 36 Presiding Officer AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE J. H. CLEVELAND, ' 38 R. H. DAVISON, ' 37 G. A. CRAIG, Jr., ' 36 A. C. ULMER, Jr., ' 39 OUESTION: Resolved, That this house favors the reelection of Roosevelt in 1936. JUDGES W. K. Prentice, ' 92, Classics Department G. M. Priest, ' 94, Modern Languages Department J. D. Voorhees, ' 05, Politics Department Winner: G. A. CRAIG Honorable Mention: R. H. DAVISON The 135th Annual Junior Oratorical Contest WHIG HALL JUNE 13, 1936 Professor Hoyt H. Hudson Presiding Officer JUDGES Alexander Avidan, ' 23 D. A. Stauffer, ' 23 John Rice, ' 32 CONTESTANTS, 1937 J. L. BRODERICK R. H. DAVISON H. J. GENSLER F. N. ROSEN BAUM N. A. STONER H. B. SWOPE, Jr. T. H. WOLF WINNERS R. H. DAVISON— First The Strange Case of the 1936 American N. A. STONER— Second Conceived in Liberty T. H. WOLF— Third J. L. BRODERICK— Fourth The Maclean Prize, awarded to the contestant w hose topic is considered superior, was won by N. A. STONER. The Lynde Debate for Seniors MAY 12, 1936 Professor Dayton D. McKean Presiding Officer AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE R. L. SEGGEL LYMAN MOORE A. M. AGNEW SCHUYLER CRANE W. E. SNYDER G. A. CRAIG First Prize G. A. CRAIG Second Prize W. E. SNYDER Third Prize A. M. AGNEW OUESTION: Resolved, That this house approves the foreign policy of the present administration. JUDGES Professor H. L. Childs, Politics Department Professor Paul MacClintock, Professor of Geography Professor R. J. Sontag, History Department Seventy-nine 1 1 • -• ' STANDING: Morgenthau, Holt, Ziegler, Lieblich, Wicks. SEATED: Porreno, Severance, Riggs, Pritchord. Nassau Literary Magazine PUBLISHED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE AMERICAN WHIG-CLIOSOPHIC SOCIETIES BOARD OF EDITORS Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 Co-Chairmen F. W. Severance, Jr., ' 37 M. C. Long, ' 37 _ ____. Business Manager D. X. Parreno, ' 38.. ..Literary Editor J. F. Pritchard, Jr., 37 Political Editor A. M. Wicks, ' 37 Art Editor J. D. Swan, ' 37 Contributing Editor S. A. MacKinnon, ' 39 W. H. Ziegler, II, ' 37 ASSOCIATE STAFF M. C. Ferrer, ' 39 R. R. Holt, ' 39 Henry Morgenthau, III, ' 39 Eighty Princeton-Harvard- Yale Conference What promises to be one of the outstanding de- velopments in Big Three circles in recent years was inaugurated in Princeton last May when the Princetonian , Yale News , and Harvard Crimson staged the first of a series of annual Public Affairs Conferences on the general topic, Government and Economic Stability. Features of the two-day program included: a keynote address by Adolph A. Berle, Jr., City Chamberlain of New York; an evening question- box hour at which prominent business and political figures were put under heckling fire; a Constitutional Forum in which John Dickinson, Assistant United States Attorney-General and Professor Edward S. Corwin upheld the liberal interpretation against conservative lawyers Raoul E. Desvernine and Arthur A. Ballantine; and a closing banquet in Procter Hall of the Graduate College addressed by Reconstruction Finance Corporation Chairman Jesse Jones and Heywood Broun. Sandwiche d in between these highlights were three two-hour sessions of the five round table groups on the specific topics of Agriculture, Bank- ing, Foreign Trade, Government and Industry, and Social Security. Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Marriner S. Eccles, Senator Robert F. Wagner of New York, TVA Director Arthur E. Morgan and Robert L. O ' Brien, Chairman of the United States Tariff Commission, headed the list of prominent men who sat in at the various round tables. Thirty Princeton undergraduates participated in the sessions. J. L. Broderick, ' 37, was confer- ence chairman, while P. T. Kimball, II, ' 37, and H. R. Wood, ' 36, presided at the round tables on Agriculture and Banking respectively. The conference personnel by tables: Agriculture — Guests: Henry A. Wallace, Secre- tary of Agriculture; Captain Dan D. Casement, National Farm Alliance head; Mordecai Ezekiel, Economic Adviser to the Secretary of Agriculture; Professor James Grafton Rogers of Yale; Professor John D. Black of Harvard; Professors Archibald MacD. Mclsaac and Eyler N. Simpson of Prince- ton. Undergraduate delegates: Princeton — J. G. Buchanan, Jr., ' 38, J. D. Frazer, Jr., ' 38, T. T. Hutch- eson, ' 37, P. T. Kimball, II, ' 37 (Chairman), H. F. McCreery, ' 37, N. G. Thacher, ' 37, E. T. P. Watson, ' 36; Yale— Peter Behr, William Block; Harvard- Morris Earle, Shippen Goodhue, Charles Storey, William Vanevera. Banking — Guests: Marriner S. Eccles, Chair- man of the Federal Reserve Board; J. H. Riddle, Economic Adviser to the Bankers ' Trust Com- pany; Henry Bruere, President of the Bowery Savings Bank; Thomas S. Lamont, partner with J. P. Morgan and Company; Dr. W. W. Riefler, former Federal Reserve Board Secretary; Howard Loeb, member of Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board; Professors James Harvey Rogers and Richard Bissell of Yale; Professors John H. Williams and Richard V. Gilberd of Harvard; Professor Courtnay H. Pitt of Princeton. Under- graduate delegates: Princeton — S. D. Hart, 36, G. H. Hawks, ' 36, A. L. Metzner, Jr., ' 36, R. L Seg- gel, ' 36, J. S. Studdiford, II, ' 37, H. R. Wood, ' 36 (Chairman); Yale — John Morrissey, Richard Ten- nant, Edward Washburn; Harvard — J. Sinclair Armstrong, John B. Bowditch, Paul M. Hickox, Robert C. Lea. Foreign Trade — Guests: Robert L. O ' Brien, Chairman of U. S. Tariff Commission; Dr. Louis Domeratzky of the Department of Commerce; Alan M. Fox, Director of Research, U. S. Tariff Commission; Laurence Dennis, author and eco- nomic expert; Professor A. Whitney Griswold of Yale; Professors Frank D. Graham and DeWitt C. Poole of Princeton. Undergraduate delegates: Princeton— E. H. Bindley, Jr., ' 37, J. McC. Clarke, ' 39, Lyman Moore, ' 36, H. H. Purvis, ' 37; Yale- Robert Marshall, George Peck, Walter Rostow (Chairman); Harvard — James A. Field, James B. Hallet, Philip Haring, Benjamin Welles, III. Government and Industry — Guests: Dr. Arthur E. Morgan, Chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority; Harper Sibley, President of U. S. Chamber of Commerce; Judge John J. Burns, General Counsel for the Securities and Exchange Commission; Wendell L. Willkie, President of Commonwealth and Southern Corporation; Thomas Woodward, People ' s Counsel for the Guffey Coal Act Administration; Professor Har- vey Mansfield of Yale; Professor Arthur N. Hol- combe of Harvard; Professors Leslie T. Fournier, Clifton R. Hall, and Stanley E. Howard of Prince- ton. Undergraduate delegates: Princeton — E. S. Burch, ' 37, R. H. Davison, ' 37, Blair Lee, III, ' 38, R. S. Rauch, Jr., ' 36, U. J. P. Rushton, ' 36, W. K. Stanard, II, ' 37, H. B. Swope, Jr., ' 37; Yale— Jona- than Bingham, John Field, Louis Goodkind, John Runnalls, John Stevens, Potter Stewart; Harvard — Manning Emery, III, Caleb Foote, Donald B. Straus, Caspar Weinberger (Chairman). Social Security — Senator Robert F. Wagner of New York; Thomas H. Eliot, General Counsel for the Social Security Board; Abraham Epstein, Executive Secretary of the American Association for Social Security; Arthur A. Ballantine, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury; Professor Herman A. Gray of New York University; Pro- fessor R. R. Brooks of Yale; Professor J. Douglas Brown of Princeton. Undergraduate delegates: Princeton — Yorke Allen, Jr., ' 36, R. A. Bendheim, ' 37, B. M. Gordon, ' 37, A. R. Lewis, ' 36, N. A. Stoner, ' 37, Langdon Van Norden, ' 37; Yale — Richard Cross, August Heckscher (Chairman), William Orrick, Louis Stone; Harvard — Arthur A. Ballantine, Jr., Bruce Griswold, Shepherd Robin- son, Peter Weinberg. Eighty-one Vanuxem Lectures The Vanuxem Lectures were founded upon a bequest of $25,000 made under the will of Louis Clark Vanuxem, of the class of 1879. It was specified that the income of this foundation should be used for from four to six public lectures delivered annually before the University. At least one-half of these must be of current scientific interest. It was further provided that these lectures were to be published by the University Press and distributed generally among the schools and libraries of the country. The series for 1935-1936: December 10, 11, and 12, 1935: Subject: THE NATURE OF PHYSICAL THEORY Lecturer: PROFESSOR P. W. BRIDGMAN, Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard University. Stafford Little Lectures In 1899 Henry Stafford Little of the Class of 1844 founded the Stafford Little Lectureship by donating a fund of $10,000 to provide a number of lectures each year on public affairs. The lectures during 1936 follow: Feb. 10, 1936 Professor Edward S. Robinson. Psychology and the Low. Feb. 20, 1936 Mr. Douglas S. Freeman, Editor of the Richmond News Leader. The Newspaper in the Modern World. Mar. 17, 1936 Professor Paul J. Tillich, of the Union Theological Seminary. Religious Interpretation of History. Mar. 19, 1936 Mr. John Foster Dulles: Peaceful Change Within the Society of Nations. The William Pierson Field Engineering Lectureship The income of a gift of $10,000 by Mrs. William P. Field in memory of her husband, William Pierson Field, C.E., ' 83, is used to provide in certain engineering courses lectures and consultations by prominent engineers. Thursday, March 26 (4:15 P.M.) Mr. Allan H. Mogensen, Industrial Consultant and Consulting Editor Factory Management and Mamte- nance Magazine. The Background of Motion Study and Time Study. Thursday, March 26 Mr. Allan H. Mogensen. (7:15 P. M.) Motion Economy. ' Human Engineering and Friday, March 27 Mr. Allan H. Mogensen. The Tools Used in Motion Economy. Eighty-two Spencer Trask Lectures Through the income from $10,000, presented to the University by Spencer Trask of the class of 1866, prominent men and women are obtained during the school year to deliver lectures on topics of general interest. The lectures given during the 1935-1936 season: Oct. 16,1935 Francis W. Hirst. The Value of Liberty. Nov. 6, 1935 Miss Margaret Mead. Anthropology Today — The Signifi- cance of Anthropology in the Social Sciences. Nov. 11, 1935 Bonamy Dobree. An Approach to Criticism. Nov. 19, 1935 Henry Noel Brailsford. England Since the Slump. Jan. 16, 1936 The Earl of Listowel. Standards of Taste — A Reality or an Illusion? Mar. 12, 1936 Harold E. Edgerton. Stroboscopic Light and High Speed Motion Pictures. Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectures Each year, under the auspices of the Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship, various eminent scientists and engineers give a series of lectures dealing with technical subjects. The Princeton Engineering Associa- tion founded this lectureship in 1931 in memory of Dr. Cyrus Fogg Brackett, former Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering in Princeton. The schedule of lectures for 1936-1937 follows: Nov. 10, 1936 C. F. Hirshfeld, Chief of Research, Detroit Edison Company, Detroit, Michigan. Industrial Research. Dec. 8, 1936 Carlton S. Proctor, ' 15, Consulting Engineer, New York City. The San Francisco-Oakland Bridge: Its Foundations. Jan. 12, 1937 L. A. Codd, Executive Secretary, The Army Ordnance Asso- ciation. Munitions and National Defense. Feb. 9, 1937 Otis E. Hovey, Consulting Engineer, New York City. Steel Dams. Mar. 9, 1937 Clarence Francis, President, General Foods Corporation. Frozen Foods. Apr. 13, 1937 Speaker and subject to be announced. E:ghty-lhree The Student-Faculty Association BOARD OF DIRECTORS Laurence Fenninger, ' 09 Director FACULTY AND ADMINSTRATION R. H. Ball L D. Brown, ' 19 John Colt, ' 14 B.N. Dell, ' 12 L. P. Eisenhart T. M. Greene W. P. Hall E. H. Harbison Radcliffe Heermance H. W. Hewett-Thayer J. E. Pomfret D. C. Poole G. M. Priest, ' 94 J. E. Raycroft R. M. Scoon G. G. Sikes, ' 16 R. R. Wicks C. R. Whittlesey M. O. Young UNDERGRADUATES G. E. Armstrong, ' 37 E. H. Bindley, Jr., ' 37 Samuel Clay, Jr., ' 39 W. K. Coors, ' 38 R. B. Cowdery, ' 38 D. D. Coyle, ' 38 W. B. Craig, ' 38 R. H. Davison, ' 37 L. D. Fenninger, ' 38 Harper FoUansbee, ' 37 Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 E. W. Hobler, ' 39 E. T. Holsapple, Jr., ' 39 J. A. Howell, ' 37 J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 C. H. Kearney, ' 37 P. T. Kimball, ' 37 L. H. Marks, ' 37 Robert Miller, ' 37 Condict Moore, ' 38 Rodman Morgan, ' 37 R. S. Mueller, Jr., ' 38 J. W. Pitney, ' 39 H. W. Read, ' 37 C. H. Toll, Jr., ' 38 A. C. Ulmer, Jr., ' 39 W. J. Watson, ' 38 Under the direction of Mr. Laurence Fenninger, ' 09, the Student-Faculty Association is an organization with the aim of bringing undergraduates and faculty members together in informal contact, to study and solve the problems which they meet during the year. In addition to the activities designed to better conditions in the vicinity, the Association sponsors religious discussion groups, maintains the Student Loan Library and Loan Funds, and supports Murray-Dodge Hall, the seat of many undergraduate activities. Eighty-four The Princeton Summer Camp STAFF, 1936 Percy Preston, ' 36 Director J. A. Howell, ' 37 Business Manager L. D. Fenninger, ' 38 Health Officer J. H. Drummond, Jr., ' 36 - Athletic Director R. B. Cowdery, ' 38 Program Director Robert Miller, ' 37 Staff Assistant COUNSELLORS G. V. Banning, ' 39 W. H. Bell, II, ' 39 P. R. Dickinson, ' 39 R. L. Edwards, ' 37 D. E. Foster, ' 37 N. T. Hayes, ' 39 E. T. Holsapple, Jr., ' 39 E. L. Hoskins, ' 39 W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 A. M. Kallop, ' 39 G. A. McKeon, ' 36 R. W. Middlebrook, ' 37 E. J. Salter, ' 39 R. H. Savage, ' 37 A. L. Scott, ' 37 D. A. Scott, ' 38 W. H. G. Smith, ' 39 E. N. Staub, ' 37 H. A. Stetler, Jr., ' 38 W. B. D. Stroud, ' 39 S. H. Wagner, ' 39 J. E. Waller, ' 39 C. R. Watson, ' 38 W. J. Watson, ' 38 Thomas Weber, ' 38 The Princeton Summer Camp was established at Bay Head, New Jersey, in 1909. In 1930, it was moved to a new location at Bass Lake, about three miles north of Blairstown, New Jersey. The new site is ideal for giving under-privileged boys from crowded sections of New York City a vacation of healthful and wholesome out-door life. During the summer of 1936, 197 boys from New York and 32 from Princeton enjoyed two weeks of the camp activities. Under the supervision of undergraduates, they took part in baseball, volleyball, swimming, and group games. The woods on the camp grounds provided opportunities for nature study, hiking, and woodcraft. The close contacts between campers and counsellors result in an interchange of ideas and outlook beneficial to both. Eighty-five Princeton Westminster Society TOP ROW: Wenzell, Scott, Cochran. SECOND ROW: Moore, Cowdery, Rea, Rounds. FRONT ROW: Howell, Foster, Follansbee, Kerr, Hackett. OFFICERS Harper Follansbee, ' 37 President Bradford Cochran, ' 37 Vice-President D. C. Kerr, ' 37 Treasurer J. A. Howell, ' 37 Secretary CABINET R. B. Cowdery, ' 38 D. E. Foster, ' 37 S. R. Hackett, ' 37 M. K. Milliken, ' 37 Condict Moore, ' 38 J. C. Rea, Jr., ' 39 F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38 D. A. Scott, ' 38 A. C. Ulmer, Jr., ' 39 J. H. Vruwink, ' 38 A. B. Wenzell, ' 38 FACULTY ASSOCIATES Dean L. P. Eisenhart Professor C. R. Hall Professor C. G. Osgood Professor Robert Scoon DIRECTOR W. B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20 The Princeton Westminster Society is an undergraduate organization whose purpose is to provide con- tacts with other students, and to be of some help to those less fortunate than ourselves. It tries to give an opportunity for the discussion and study of subjects, religious and otherwise, which are of interest and importance. Through its activities in various institutions, students may learn by actual contact the existence of pressing social problems. The Society conducts Interest Groups in the Annandale State Farm for Boys, and Boys ' Clubs in Princeton and neighboring towns. There are regular weekly discussions at the Foundation House, and a monthly Communion Service in the Chapel. Eighty-six The Young People ' s Society STANDING: Crater, McClung. SEATED: Long, Rev. Niles, Reed, Okie, OFFICERS C. H. Reed, Jr., ' 38 President D. H. Crater, ' 38 Vice-President T. O- Gilson, ' 38 Treasurer Littleton Long, ' 39 CABINET P. L Okie, ' 39 R. M. McClung, ' 39 Rev. F. S. Niles, ' 09 ADVISERS Rev. W. B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20 The Young People ' s Society was organized about fifteen years ago for the purpose of meeting the religious needs of the undergraduate. This pur- pose has remained the same up until the present time, but the character of the organization has changed. Now its feeling and endeavor is to pro- mote the Christian ideals and principles within the campus, by giving to the undergraduate a service for religious contemplation and also a dis- cussion of those problems which must be met in daily life. The Young People ' s Society meets every Sun- day evening at 7:00 in the First Presbyterian Church. A short devotional service opens each meeting, after which an outside speaker gives a talk on some particular religious aspect which he is most qualified to discuss. Throughout the meet- ings great stress is laid on the singing of numer- ous hymns. Thus, the program of the Society is arranged in such a way as to offer something both of a religious and of a practical nature. Besides its regular Sunday evening meetings, The Young People ' s Society carries on other projects of a charitable or social-service charac- ter. To contact under-privileged persons a Com- mittee on Deputations is formed, and help is given to worthy people. Recently, the Westmin- ster Society has joined with The Young People ' s Society, and this connection has greatly benefited the members of both societies by offering to them a greater range of activities. The discussions of the Sunday evening meet- ings are under the supervision of Mr. Bryan, who is also director of the Westminster Society. The membership of The Young People ' s Society is not limited, and any one is welcome to attend its meetings or to participate in any of its varied interests. Eighty-seven The Princeton Catholic Club OFFICERS Rev. O. F. Beckley, O.P., B.C.L, LLD Chaplain T. W. Montgomery, ' 37 President S. E. Cullinan, ' 37 Vice-President N. A. Ouinn, ' 39 Secretary MEMBERS, 1937 F. J. B. Bing J. S. Blay ]. L. Broderick L. V. Brown J. C. Burke J. L. Byrne A. M. Campbell E. D. Candee Charles Carroll V. C. Cartus, Jr. R. J. Chapman T. S. Collings J. R. Crov ley S. E. Cullinan F. M. DeRosa W. ]. Devlin R. A. Dubuque, Jr. E. G. Engel A. J. Fallon J. M. Farley J. F. Foran W. M. Gardiner A. S. Hart, Jr. J. H. Hemin ' way Arthur Hourigan, Jr. J. E. Kelly, Jr. J. C. Kennedy, Jr. J. H. Kennedy J. E. McColgan H. F. McCreery J. T .MacDonald, Jr. F. J. tvlcGinity J. R. Maguire A. G. Miranti T. W. Montgomery J. E. Ivlorrissey, Jr. B. H. Mount, Jr. G. A. Nason P. E. Neary E. L. Newhouse, III A. A. Newton Julian Peabody, Jr. E. W. Pomerleau Thomas Riggs, Jr. V. F. Roma C. J. Ruddy R. P. Bye W. L. Schwenk L. A. Scinta S. B. Scovil L. B. Smith J. M. Smyth A. L. St. Peter, Jr. H. J. Swift J. D. Sylvester J. M. Trent L. R. van de Velde F. E. Warren A. E. Yahn, Jr. MEMBERS, 1938 J. G. Anderton, Jr. P. B. Anderton M. J. Arcaya A. M. Barbieri W. R. Barrett A. J. Barzaghi, Jr. E. J. Bender K. A. Bentkamp J. D. Burke Edward Burns, 11 J. A. Cashman R. G. Clark C. K. Coddington J. P. Corcoran, Jr. T. A. Cosgriff F. D. Creamer C. P. Dethier C. R. Devine A. J. Duany P. F. Du Vivier John English, Jr. W. T. Galey, III C. R. Graham L. R. Gray F. T. Hamilton J. L. Herman P. L. Hogan R. C. Howe C. M. Huvelle R. E. Jamison, Jr. D. E. Jerrems F, S. Kinney L. H. Komoski R. P. Larkin D. V. Lee W. M. Love S. B. Lupica J. E. McHarg Dunston McNichol G. L. Magruder C. K. Mitchell J. R. Murray E. R. Novak William Orchard D. X. Parreno R. P. Pasley C. A. Powers A. M. Price W. A. Reiss, Jr. B. H. Ridder B. W. Ripley G. G. Rutherfurd J. B. Salsich F. E. Smith F. J. Snyder H. C. Wells MEMBERS, 1939 F. A. Ambrose T. E. Barnicle W. H. Bell A. J. Bender C. A. Broad, Jr. G. R. Bunn H. F. Casey ]. H. Clark, III J. W. Coffey B. K. Curley H. P. Dart, III C. J. Balentine F. B. Bender G. G. Blackmore C. W. Boozan R. A. J. Bordley J. B. Bradbury F. W. Brennan H. C. Briscoe P. F. Brogan J. H. Buerger J. C. Burkham G. H. Cadgene L. A. Carey W. E. Colby John Coleman V. G. deWolfe Richard Dillon, Jr. F. R. Donahue, Jr. M. G. Ferrer O. W. Hopkinson, Jr. Ralph Horton, Jr. E. G. Hubbard J. W. Knowles Robert McNichol J. W. Mayers P. J. Murphy, Jr. C. K. Dorwin E. R. Farley W. G. Farrar A. F. Fernandez W. D. Findley James Fitzmorris J. A. Gilleaudeau E. G. Green W. J. Hale R. J. Hart R. J. Hinchman M. O. Jenkins R. P. Kavanagh, Jr. E. J. Kilcullen Frank Killian W. W. Lanahan, Jr. J. I. C. Kirby R. W. Murrie E. F. Norton, Jr. N. F. Pallotti Louis Petito J. W. Pitney G. B. Podesta N. A. Ouinn T. K. Roche J. T. Ross R. J. Sullivan MEMBERS, 1940 A. L. Lane C. B. Lascelles, Jr. Pierre Latour Z. E. Lav hcn W. G. LeBoutillier M. H. McCloskey, III M. J. McCrudden, Jr. R. S. MacDonald L. A. Minnich, Jr. R. W. Minton R. C. Moses A. H. Munkenbeck, Jr. W. L. Niedringhaus J. M. E. O ' Grady F. W. O ' Malley J. C. Paterno PARTIAL STUDENTS C. A. van der Straten W. J. Thron M. T. Tiernan C. W. Toebe, Jr. C. E. Touhey C. J. Tyson. Jr. R. M. Walmsley W. H. Walne, Jr. J. A. Walsh, Jr. P. R. Warner R. B. J. Wathen P. P. Petito H. T. Powers J. C. Rogers P. J. Rosaly, Jr. F. E. Rowe, Jr. J. G. Schaefer A. C. Schmitt H. J. Sohmer, Jr. R. J. B. Sullivan C. W. Tiernan R. F. Tierney, Jr. Albert Van de Weghe T. A. Votichenko C. B. Wall R. E. Wyer, Jr. Eighty-eight The St. Paul ' s Society of Princeton University OFFICERS Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 President S. K. C. Kopper, ' 37 Vice-President Blair Lee, III, ' 38 Secretary K. B. Alexander, Jr., ' 37 G. E. Armstrong, ' 37 Jonathan Bryan, III, ' 38 R. H. Burroughs, Jr., ' 39 A. P. Dennis, ' 38 Fitzhugh Green, Jr., ' 40 E. B. Lee, ' 40 H. L. Canoune, ' 37 B. P. Cheesman, ' 38 CABINET Forrest Cranmer, ' 38 N. L. Foote, ' 37 A. W. Leonard, ' 39 E. R. McLean, ' 38 SERVERS G. R. Livermore, Jr., ' 39 R. S. Lovelace, ' 40 Courllandt Nicoll, Jr., ■?8 SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHERS G. L. Hogeman, ' 38 P. L. Okie, ' 39 G. D. MacRae, ' 37 H. B. Rockwell, ' 37 Brooke Roberts, ' 39 D. M. Pino, Graduate C. E. Smith, Jr., ' 38 G. B. latum, ' 40 J. H. Parke, ' 38 The St. Paul ' s Society, founded in 1876 by Dr. A. E. Baker, Rector of Trinity Church, is an association of all the Episcopal students in the University. The Society was established to enable students to receive spiritual guidance during their college years The William Alexander Procter Foundation provides for a chaplain, who is at pre sent the Reverend John Crocker. Mr. Crocker lives with his family on the edge of the campus, and cordially extends an invitation to all students to call upon him as friend, teacher, or counsellor. The University authorities have granted the use of the North Transept of the University Chapel for the celebration of the Holy Communion. St. Louis Club OFFICERS W. K. Stanard, II, ' 37 President C. A. Skinner, ' 38 Vice-President A. W. Morriss, III, ' 40 Secretary F. St.C. Chariot, ' 37 R. A. Dubuque, Jr., ' 37 W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 E. P. Lebens, ' 37 E. A. Limberg, ' 37 E. B. Pyle, ' 37 D. R. Small, ' 37 W. K. Stanard, II, ' 37 D. T. Graham, ' 38 F. A. Jenkins, ' 38 MEMBERS W. M. Love, ' 38 W. T. Trueblood, Jr., ' 38 C. A. Skinner, ' 38 L. W. Baldwin, ' 39 T. G. Blake, ' 39 W. C. D ' Arcy, Jr., ' 39 C. F. Limberg, ' 39 E. W. Saunders, ' 39 F. G. Watson, ' 39 J. H. Williams, ' 39 B. R. Alger, ' 40 J. C. Burkham, ' 40 L. D. Dozier, ' 40 R. A. Gardner, ' 40 W. G. Farrar, ' 40 W. N. Kelley, ' 40 A. W. Morriss, III, ' 40 W. W. Scott, ' 40 W. R. Skinner, ' 40 R. J. Sullivan, ' 40 Eighty-nine Princeton- Yenching Foundation BOARD OF TRUSTEES H. W. Dodds, Ph.D., ' 14 Honorary President S. D. Gamble, LLD., ' 12_ President Wilson Farrand, ' 86 Vice-President H. J. Cochran, ' 00 Treasurer D. W. Edwards, ' 04 Executive Secretary in China R. R. Gailey, D.D., ' 96 Secretary Emeritus W. B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20 J. S. Burgess, Ph.D., ' 05 E. N. Case, ' 22 J. B. Cochran, ' 29 John Colt, ' 14 E. G. Conklin, Ph.D. E. S. Corwin, Ph.D. C. E. Dodge, ' 09 Laurence Fenninger, ' 09 L. D. Froelick, ' 06 W. P. Hall, Ph.D. C. M. McAlpin, ' 88 W. R. McAlpin, ' 26 John McDowell, D.D., ' 94 Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, ' 11 R. T. Mount, ' 02 D. C. Poole H. N. Russell, Ph.D., ' 97 H. A. Smith, ' 01 W. E. Speers, ' 11 T. H. P. Sailer, Ph.D., ' 89 A. G. Todd, ' 84 Joseph Van Vleck, Jr., ' 23 O. D. Wannamaker R. R. Wicks, D.D. In 1898 the Philadelphian Society sent R. R. Gailey, ' 96, to pioneer in Y. M. C. A. work in Tientsin, China. By 1906, the work had so developed that it was extended to Peking, where the Princeton University Center in China was established. Since that time, as Chinese leadership has developed, Princeton representatives have devoted more and more time to social science education, rather than Y activity. This education is carried on in Peiping by Yenching University, the largest and leading university established by Americans in China. The Princeton- Yenching School of Public Affairs, one of the three colleges of the University, includes the departments of Economics, Political Science, and Sociology. The support for the Foundation is provided by Princeton Undergraduates, faculty, alumni, and friends, through the Princeton-Yenching Foundation, 150 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Oi -iIIl Ninety The Orange Key OFFICERS R. S. Parker, ' 37 President G. G. Sikes, ' 16 Secretary E. H. Bindley, Jr., ' 37 D. D. Coyle, ' 38 W. B. Craig, ' 38 The Orange Key was formed to coordinate and integrate the activities of the various undergrad- uate organizations having to do with the recep- tion and entertainment of visitors. Its goal has been to promote better relationship between Princeton and those colleges with which it is associated. The membership of the Orange Key represents the Managers Club, the Student-Faculty Associa- tion, the Halls, and the Undergraduate Schools Committee. In the course of two years the J. G. Nettleton, Jr., ' 38 J. F. Pritchard, ' 37 Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 Orange Key has assumed responsibility rang- ing from the reception of 600 high school students, 50 foreign students from Columbia, and 130 Brit- ish Women Hockey players to dinners for visit- ing athletic teams. It has also assisted Depart- ments of Instruction in entertaining visitors from abroad. The Orange Key is potentially a powerful or- ganization to foster good feeling between Prince- ton and other colleges, schools, and in general, all visitors to the University. STANDING: Coyle, Craig, Riggs, Nettleton. SEATED; Bindley, Porker, Mr, Sikes. Ninety-one TOP ROW: Thompson, Zaugg, Stroud, Loomis, Reeder, Mclnnes, Hart. SECOND ROW: Findley, Melvin, Test, Ober, Meade, Warner, Harwood. FRONT ROW: Johnston, Warren, Robie iCommodorel, Poles, Arms. Princeton Yacht Club OFFICERS R. H. Robie, ' 37 ..Commodore Northam Warren, Jr., ' 37 Vice-Commodore A. R. Johnston, ' 37.. Rear Commodore J. R. Fales, ' 37 Fleet Surgeon Philip LeBoutillier, ' 38 Secretary J. T. Arms, Jr., ' 39 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 J. R. Pales Richard Maxwell F. W. Thacher J. C. Goodell R. F. Ober B. W. Warner F. B. Jennings A. M. Osgood F. T. Warner, Jr. A. R. Johnston R. H. Robie Northam Warren, Jr. S. B. Scavil Ninety-two C. D. Agnew D. H. Crater A. R. Furbeck W. G. Jones, Jr. J. T. Arms, Jr. G. H. Barrett, Jr. J. M. Finch, Jr. H. S. Fraker W. B. Harwood MEMBERS, 1938 J. S. Kellog F. S. Kinney H. G. Kunkel Philip LeBoutillier MEMBERS, 1939 G. W. Kauffmann J. P. Kerns Andrew Mclnnes J. P. Meade H. D. P. Merrick P. A. Loomis, Jr. J. C. Meyer, Jr. O. H. Perry J. D. Thompson A. P. Olcott W. E. Roosevelt R. L. Topscott Charles Townsend, Jr. MEMBERS, 1940 C. A. Beck W. P. Carl Donald Fest N. P. Findley, Jr. Robert Hart R. P. Melvin, Jr. Foster Osborne Robert Searles R. C. Stroud A. W. Wilkinson T. T. Wuerth J. V. W. Zaugg The activities of the Princeton Yacht Club include: 1 . Meetings at which prominent yachtsmen ad- dress the club. These are held after Christmas. 2. Intercollegiate dinghy racing. Princeton this fall placed fifth out of fourteen in the Intercolle- giate Dinghy Regatta held in the Charles River Basin under the auspices of the M. I. T. Nautical Association. Cornell, who won the Intercollegiate Championship, beat a Princeton dinghy team in a dual meet on Lake Carnegie. A similar duel with Yale was ruled no contest when a mast carried away. 3. Intra-Club Racing. On Sunday afternoons the Yacht Club holds races on Lake Carnegie for its own fleet of dinghies. Last spring Bob Robie won with Cut Pro , with Phil Loomis second in Wet Smack in Series A. In Series B Dick Ober triumphed in Cut Pro , with Phil Loomis again second 4. The Intercollegiate Championship — the big- gest event of the year and the climax of the yachting season. Last spring the Princeton Yacht Club team, composed of J. T. Arms, W. G. Jones, Jr., and R. H. Robie in one boat and J. R. Fales, A. R. Johnston, and Northam Warren in the other, won the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Trophy by the most convincing margin ever made in inter- collegiate yachting history. The Tiger crews were so far ahead in the scoring after the fifth race that the scheduled sixth race was called off. The victory marked the fifth time in nine years that the Princeton team has carried off the Yachting Championship. As all the men on the 1936 team will be available this year for the 1937 clash, the hopes for victory are bright. Ninety-three TOP ROW: Wood, Clary, Comeron, Burger, Shennon, Goodell, Borden, Banigan, Delafield, Colt, Baker, Poole. FIFTH ROW; Farley, LeBrecht, Lorkin, Greig, Bockes, Phillips, Don, Steel, Shepard, Meyer, Green, Park. FOURTH ROW: Woodward. Read, Osgood, Otis, Mitchell, Furmon, Sullivan, Nason, Northrup, Wilder, Janney, Pratt, Groff THIRD ROW: Foster, Kempner, de Rosa, Eberhordt, Warren, Dubuque, Vanderbilt, Applegate, Carroll, Capers, Gallatin, Poles. SECOND ROW: Rivinus, Bunn, Young, McGinity, Bell, Hart, Matthews, Groham, Schwartz, Pinckney, MacDonald, Neary. FRONT ROW; Angell, Ober, Ritter, Souter, van de Velde, Irwin, Sayre, Stuart, Cross, Smith, Parkin. Cadet Officers, R. O. T. C. Unit LIEUTENANT-COLONEL AND REGIMENTAL COMMANDER I. N. IRWIN, II MAJORS AND BATTALION COMMANDERS T. W. MONTGOMERY, Jr. L. duR. van de VELDE I. F. CROSS, III R. F. OBER R. P. Bell R. L. Burger R. F. Clary, Jr. A. S. Hart, Jr. CAPTAIN AND REGIMENTAL ADJUTANT R. W. SAYRE CAPTAINS AND BATTERY COMMANDERS A. F. RITTER F. D. SAUTER FIRST LIEUTENANTS H. I. Matthews, Jr. C. C. Northrup F. H. Parkin J. H. Pinckney, IV R. D. STUART, Jr. H. W. Read E. F. Rivinus, Jr. O. D. Vanderbih, III A. M. Wood Ninety-four SECOND LIEUTENANTS C. H. Angell A. L. Applegale H. W. Backes, Jr. K. L. Baker S P. Banigan W. H. Borden F. C. Bunn, Jr. Barton Cameron T. S. Capers, Jr. C. Carroll. Jr. A. T. Colt W. S. Delafield F. M. DeRosa S. W. Don R. A. Dubuque, Jr. R. S. Dumper J. S. Eberhardt D. S. Eddy J. R. Fales J. M. Farley D. E. Foster R. R. Furman T. G. Gallatin C. D. Goldsbury J. C. Goodell F. L. Graham D. P. Green, Jr. T. G. Greig, II E. L. Groff W. P. Harrison P. deW. Hauser R. S. Janney M. J. Kempner R. P. Larkin R. H. LeBrecht F. J. McGinity J. T. MacDonald Frank Meyer, II H. B. Mitchell, II G. A. Nason P. E. Neary A. M. Osgood G. G. Otis R. G. Park, III C. H. Phillips A. C. Poole R. H. Pratt, Jr. H. H. Schwartz J. B. Shennan W. B. Shepard Pinkham Smith William Steel D. F. Sullivan Northam Warren, Jr. R. B. Wilder W. M. Woodward L. W. Young J Field Artillery Reserve Officers ' Training Corps The Princeton Field Artillery Reserve Officers ' Training Corps was organized by the United States War Department in 1919 at the request of President Hibben. The unit now comprises over four hundred students who receive instruction in military science, tactics, and law under the direc- tion of Lieutenant-Colonel David Cain. Six com- missioned officers assist in teaching and also coach the University polo and pistol teams. The course consists of two years of basic work and two of advanced. Freshmen who are phys- ically fit under United States Army standards are eligible to enter the unit. The course counts towards a regular University degree, but must be taken for two years if any credit is to be given. In the junior year students wishing to take the advanced course sign a contract with the War Department in which they agree to take the course for two more years in return for their uniforms and a pay allowance. Between junior and senior years the students spend six weeks at the camp at Madison Barracks, New York, where they are given practical instruction in the Field UltlCCTS KUV Artillery, including target practice with 75 milli- meter guns, operation of field instruments, and fire control. Upon completing the four-year course students are commissioned as second- lieutenants of Field Artillery in the Officers ' Re- serve Corps. In the senior year students are commissioned as cadet officers and they assist the regular officers in instructing the under classes, in addi- tion to commanding the unit. The equipment of the Princeton unit includes a complete horsedrawn battery of 75 millimeter guns, which is at present being motorized, as well as radio, map and telephone equipment, motors for practical instruction in mechanics, and about ninety horses for cavalry training. There is a large riding hall in the artillery building where equestrian drill is taught and indoor polo is played. This year ' s University polo teams are being coached by Captain Burkart, while the freshman teams will be handled by Captain Lowhon. Cap- tain Ely will again coach the pistol team. Ninety-five BACK ROW: R. Brown (Mgr.), Wenzell, Foedisch, Van Winkle, Power, Parrish (Asst. Mgr. . FRONT ROW. Morrill, Dicke, J. Brown (Copt.), Cross, Anderton. Boxing Club OFFICERS, 1935-1936 J. J. Brown, Jr., ' 36 President and Captain S. S. Miles, ' 36 __ Vice-President R. M. Brown, Jr., ' 36 Manager J. B. Parrish, Jr., ' 37 Assistant Manager • ' ; ■Dr. Joseph Raycroft Facuhy Advisor HONORARY MEMBERS Winthrop Rutherfurd. ' 27 r i .u c .u t j c-.  V Oo-Uonors oi the Kutheriord-btuyvesant Cup Allen Stuyvesant, ' 27 ) J. Blan Van Urk, ' 24 Donor of the Van Urk Boxing Medal John Kelley Boxing Instructor MEMBERS, 1936 H. P. Dicke Beauvais Duffy J. J. Brown, Jr. H. B. Cross, Jr. Gordon Keppel W. W. Merrill, Jr. P. L. Pillsbury S. S. Miles, Jr. MEMBERS, 1937 S. E. Cullinan R. M. Dicke R. A. Dubuque J. G. Anderton J. C. Appel R. B. Baldwin J. W. Boyd John Alexander K. W. Dalzell, Jr. February 21, 1936 March 6, 1936 March 13, 1936 L. B. Dutcher J. P. Van Winkle Julian Peabody MEMBERS, W. G. Fallon H. W. Foedisch MEMBERS, J. H. Flinn, Jr. J. R. Fox S. R. Heath, Jr. J. B. Hannum, 111 MEETS Princeton Princeton 4 Princeton 3 H. J. Sloan W. K. Stanard, II L. B. Smith 1938 W. F. Halsey, III Richard Palmer 1939 J. L. C. Laslie A, P. Osborn. Jr. P. P. O ' Day J. W. Mayers J. M. Smythe. Jr. R. W. Stanley A. B. Wenzell Hugh Robinson R. R. Robinson J T. Ross M. T. Tiernan Harvard 8 Rutgers 5 Pennsylvania 5 Ninety-six Princeton University Pistol Club OFFICERS, 1936-1937 J. F. Cross, III, ' 37 President J. C. Collier, II, ' 39 Secretary W. F. Russell, ' 38 _ .. ._ Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 R. P. Grimm P. E. Neary MEMBERS, 1938 Philip LeBoutillier, Jr. J. D. Snelham W. B. Nugent I. W. Strong MEMBERS, 1939 C. K. Backus, II E. A Seipp, Jr. F. L. Brown, Jr. W. W. Spruance J. H. Hauberg, Jr. J. I. Wendell, Jr. MEMBERS, 1940 L. P. Brown E. T. Fox, Jr. Phil Conway W. G. LeBoutillier M. M. Day E. F. MacNichol, Jr. K. B. Duane, Jr. Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, Jr. J. W. Pyne During the 1935-1936 season the Pistol Club engaged in m.atches with colleges in many parts of the country besides sponsoring several intra-club events. The scores of most of the intercollegiate meets were exchanged by telegraph. A gratifying victory over Yale proved to be the highlight of an otherwise mediocre season. STANDING: Collier, Grimm, Nugent. SEATED Cross, Copt. Ely, Neary Ninety-seven Princeton Engineering Society OFFICERS H. E. Griffith, ' 37 President W. K. Coors, ' 38 Vice-President R. R. Furman, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer C. W. Peterson, ' 36 Graduate Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. G. Adamson, ' 37 H, E. Griffith, ' 37 L. A. Keyes, ' 37 W. K. Coors, ' 38 J. G. Hendrickson, ' 39 M. C. Long, ' 37 R. R. Furman, ' 37 W. B. Jennings, ' 40 T. R. Young, ' 37 The Princeton Engineering Society was estab- ically become Associate members of the Prince- lished in 1893 with the purpose of providing a ton Engineering Association. closer social and non-curricular relationship among the students in the School of Engineering. Under the new Constitution adopted last year the activities of the Society are directed by an Included in the Society are the undergraduate Executive Committee composed of the officers of branches of four national engineering organiza- the Society, the Presidents of the four student tions: The American Society of Civil Engineers, branches, and the class representatives, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, An extensive program for the college year is and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. arranged which includes lectures by prominent Cooperation among these groups is fostered by men in all fields of engineering, inspection trips the Society. Membership at Princeton is avail- to plants and other engineering projects, and able to all students in the various engineering periodic talks by professors of the School of Engi- departments. Members of the Society automat- neering. Ninety-eight The Philosophy Forum OFFICERS, 1936-1937 R. W. Barret, ' 37 President W. H. Borden, ' 37 Vice-President B. H. Milner, ' 38 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 L. V. Brown Thomas Fisher, Jr. T. W. Montgomery F. S. Truesdale W. C. Gumming, Jr. D. C. Kerr T. V. Rankin O. D. Vanderbilt, III L. B. Butcher W. P. Macdonald H. B. Rockwell A. T. Wall, III A. H. Edwards Robert Mayer V. R. Tippett MEMBERS, 1938 J. M. Baldwin E. H. Fleer G. M. Lehr E. A. Myers A. M. Barbieri G. W. Frank R. D. Lunn T. A. Pfeiffer J. T. Bissell J. N. Hillhouse A. B. Martin J. G. Powers S. L. Block C. H. Huvelle E. B. Martin J. E. Russell F. W. Capers C. C. Irvine R. H. Mengel, II J. G. H. Scoon G. B. Covington Guilford Jones, Jr. J. T. Moray J. W. Smith C. W. Dicke FACULTY MEMBERS C. L. Barrett T. M. Greene Robert Scoon W. T. Stace D. F. Bowers O. N. Hillman E. G. Spaulding Ledger Wood The P hilosophy Forum was started thirteen years ago in order to give its members, who are largely made up of the undergraduate and faculty members of the Department of Philosophy, an opportunity to meet on a common basis of intellectual discussion over modern philosophy as well as philsophical science. The Forum has always welcomed at its monthly meetings any students, members of the faculty and townspeople who are interested in their discussions. During the past year the Forum ' s hospitality was increasingly popular and more people than ever before attended its sessions. Such men as Herbert Schneider of Columbia, George Boas of Johns Hopkins, and C. I. Lewis of Harvard have aided greatly in accomplishing the Forum ' s aims. TOP ROW: Fleer, Edwords, Huvelle, Brown, Fisher, Pfeiffer, Cummings. SECOND ROW: Ronkin, Lehr, Mayer, Kerr, Mengel, Covington. FRONT ROW: Dr. Bowers, Prof. Scoon, Milner, Barrett, Prof. Barrett, Dr Hillmon, Truesdale. Ninety-nine V '  BACK ROW; Kimboll, Black, Lewis, Rushton, Grenier, O ' Sullivan. FRONT ROW: Waters, Barnes, Gorin (Commander), Breese, Jones. Veterans of Future Wars OFFICERS L J. Gorin, Jr., ' 36 National Commander J. C. Turner, ' 36 National Secretary Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 National Treasurer fi. G. Barnes, ' 37 Public Relations Counsel REGIONAL COMMANDERS Alexander Black, Jr., ' 36. South Atlantic W. P. S. Breese, ' 33 Middle West and Southwest A, S. Grenier, Jr., ' 36.. Rocky Mountains J. P. Jones, ' 36 Great Lakes P. T. Kimball, H, ' 37 New England A. R. Lewis, ' 36. Far West U. J. P. Rushton, ' 36 South R. D. Waters, ' 36 Middle Atlantic B. C. O ' Sullivan, ' 37 Adjutant for the Home Fire Division One Hundred History of the VFW On March 14, 1936, the leading edit column of the Daily Princetonian carried the first mani- festo of the Veterans of Future Wars. Realizing that war was imminent and that America was bound to be engaged in it, a small number of extremely fertile brains at the Princeton Terrace Club drew up this original demand for a pre-war bonus of $1,000 per man, due June 1, 1965, and payable with interest compounded retroactively from June 1, 1935. All those of military age, from 18 to 36, would be eligible for the proposed Treasury disburse- ment and, because it is customary to pay bonuses before they are due, immediate cash payment was sought. Started primarily in the form of a joke, Prince- ton ' s VFW movement spread over the nation like wildfire, becoming more serious all the time. Hundreds of member posts sprouted up through- out America. Very shortly Lewis J. Gorin, Jr., ' 36, in whose mind the original seeds of the plan had germi- nated, was chosen National Commander. Robert G. Barnes, ' 37, Public Relations Counsel, pro- ceeded to carry on an intensive publicity pro- gram for the movement, while Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37, National Treasurer, went to Washington and began to lobby actively for the support of mem- bers of Congress. New manifestos called for the establishment of Associations of Gold Star Mothers (name later changed to Home Fire Divisions) at women ' s col- leges and the grant of special privileges to all future veterans should they attempt to secure civil service jobs. Membership buttons, char- ters, and stacks of literature were mailed out to branch posts. Two tremendous mass meetings were engi- neered by the local leaders, along with a third gathering which was a photographic reenact- ment for the March of Time. John Paul Jones, ' 36, made history at the initial rally when he shouted forth his now-famous phrase, Manifest destiny has laid another golden egg! At a later gather- ing Congressman Maury Maverick (heartily in sympathy with the movement), and Bryn Mawr ' s May Queen, Jane Lewis, addressed the cheering future soldiers. Organizations of the more bona fide American veterans, much incensed by the popularity and rapid growth of their bonus-seeking rivals, rose up in wrath. Local ex-service men threatened Gorin and his companions with physical vio- lence. Meanwhile newspapers and magazines all over the United States printed stories, com- munications and editorials on this sensational development which swept the nation ' s campuses, leaving several hundred active posts in its wake. Commander Gorin ' s book, Patriotism Pre- paid, was published by Lippincott in May of last year. One Hundred One 5 ' ■' L ' l . . Lfinh, Gittord, Waid, Greig, Cameron, MocNoir. SEATED Lucht, Waughtcl. Mr ' ..i !■j-.r, Mr. Warfield, Booth, Pratt, Mayhew. Bureau of Appointments and Student Employment NINE NASSAU HALL OFFICERS Richard W. Warfield, ' 30 _ _ Director Ledlie L Laughlin, ' 12 Assistant Director Robert T. Mellinger, ' 36 Manager of Student Agencies MANAGERS OF MAJOR AGENCIES J. S. Booth H. H. Leigh Zeb Mayhew, Jr. B. H. Cameron A. P. Lucht L. D. Van de Velde E. G. Gifford MacDonald Lynch J. C. Ward T. G. Greig Pierce MacNair S. H. Waughtel The Bureau of Appointments and Student Employment supervises all the various branches of employ- ment for undergraduates. Also, it advises students concerning their vocations, correlating information about different businesses and professions, and acts as a clearing house for employment opportunities for the graduating seniors and the alumni. One Hundred Two The Princeton Anti-War Society OFFICERS J. H. Cleveland, ' 38 President A. W. Leonard, ' 39 Secretary-Treasurer J. P. Chamberlain, ' 39 D. B. Cook, ' 38 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. B. Cowdery, ' 38 Gordon Donald, ' 39 W. J. Funk, Jr., ' 40 O. C. Stephano, ' 38 The Princeton Anti-War Society was originated four years ago to fill the need for a liberal organization on the campus on behalf of universal peace. Its present platform calls for action against the R. O. T. C. program of the nation ' s universities and for education in behalf of peace. A demonstration for peace in cooperation with Anti-War societies of other universities climaxes the year ' s meetings. Various leaders in the peace movement come before the members to discuss new phases of it in the changing world and to report what progress has been made. Recently, Carlos March, Cuban Youth leader, speaking on the Spanish situation, and Dorothy Thompson, well-known liberal columnist, have addressed the Society. The Undergraduate Motion Picture Committee Groy, Griffith, Jerrems. Aller. H. E. Griffith, ' 37 Chairman R. G. Aller, ' 38 JUNIOR MEMBERS L R. Gray, ' 38 D. E. Jerrems, ' 38 The Undergraduate Motion Picture Committee, reorganized four years ago, has as its function the com- pilation of the complete pictorial record of each class throughout its four years in the University. This record includes such activities of the class as its proms, graduation exercises, and the Freshmen and Varsity records in sports. This picture is presented at the close of the Senior year. One Hundred Three Franklin Delano Roosevelt Coalition STANDING: Latchum, Mines, E. S. Do.,., ,„. jLATL j Wolf, Greenfield, J. S. Davis. OFFICERS T. H. Wolf, ' 37 President Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President J. M. Farley, ' 37 _ ..._ Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE J. L. Broderick, ' 37 J. M. Farley, ' 37 Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 J. H. Cleveland, ' 38 G. K. Greenfield, ' 37 John Van Ess, ' 38 J. S. Davis, ' 39 Roger Hinds, Jr., ' 40 T. H. Wolf, ' 37 MEMBERS, 1937 R. M. Crocker S. B. Johnson John Palaschak, Jr. I. D. Dorian J. E. McColgan F. N. Rosenbaum B. C. O ' Sullivan MEMBERS, 1938 S. L. Block Blair Lee, III Courtlandt Nicoll, Jr. R. L. Cropper T. R. McMillen MEMBERS, 1939 J. S. Davis F. S. Leto C. J. Smith Benjamin Franklin, III P. B. Marzoni Charles Townsend, Jr. Henry Morgenthau, III MEMBERS, 1940 M. C. Andrews E. S. Davis Pierre Latour F. W. Brennan G. A. Haas D. S. McMorris J. L. Latchum In order to give a name of greater significance to the old Woodrow Wilson Democratic Club during the last election, its members changed the name to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Coalition. The Coalition took an extremely active part in the Democratic campaign, sending its speakers out over the surrounding territory, organizing campus and township rallies, and calling upon well-known Democrats to give addresses in Princeton. One Hundred Four Stephen K. Little Republican Club STANDING: Watkins, Cowdery. SEATED: Gifford, Randall, Spadone. OFFICERS H. T. Randall, ' 37 E. G. Gifford, Jr., ' 37 ) Amedee Spadone, Jr., ' 38 ( G. E. Armstrong, ' 37 R. G. Barnes, ' 37 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE O. K. Boice, ' 38 W. K. Watkins, ' 38 Chairman ..Vice-Chairmen Lambert Turner, Jr., ' 40 P. H. Willkie, ' 40 The campus Republican organization, successor to the Theodore Roosevelt Republican Club, was re-named early in the year after the late Chairman, Stephen K. Little, ' 24, of the Republican Club of Princeton, the Borough organization and one of the principal creators of the young Republican move- ment in New Jersey and the nation. During the year ' s campaigns. Republican candidates were assisted by undergraduate speakers and by undergraduate election day workers. One Hundred Five The Club LEFT TO RIGHT: Swan, Wicks, Riggs, Ssveronce. Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 ...Chairman EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE J. D. Swan, ' 37 Honorable Secretary T. H. Smithies, ' 37.. .Honorable Treasurer F. W. Severance, Jr., ' 37 W. H. Ziegler, ' 37 A. M. Wicks, ' 37 Professor Willard Thorp The Club is an organization managed entirely by undergraduates of Princeton University for the pur- pose of providing a forum for the discussion of affairs of interest in the v rorld of literature. Its membership includes Seniors and Faculty members of the English department, upperclass officers of the Daily Princeton i an , the Nassau Lit, the Theatre Intime, Whig and Clio Halls, and certain others specially invited. The Club holds at least six meetings a year, at each of which a prominent man of letters as guest of honor speaks and leads discussion. Its meetings are held in the Nassau Club. V- v 1 The speakers last spring included James T. Forrell, noted novelist, Norris Houghton, ' 31, and Tucker Brooke, well-known professor from Yale. At the last meeting various members of The Club spoke, includ- ing Professors Hudson and Watkins. Dashiell Hammett, author of the new famous Thin Man and other detective stories, addressed The Club at its first assembly this fall. One Hundred Six Camera Club OFFICERS, 1936-1937 Julian Peabody, ' 37___ President Roger Geffen, ' 39 Secretary W. R. Schare Treasurer Robert Ballentine G. E. Beggs, Jr. Roger Geffen BOARD OF DIRECTORS Asst. Prof. L. F. H. Lowe D. H. McAlpin, III Prof. Paul MacClintock Julian Peabody W. VanB. Roberts Charles Rogers W. R. Schare R. V. Adams, Jr., ' 40 P. E. Barringer, ' 38 G. C. Bean, ' 39 G. E. Beggs, Jr., ' 38 H. A. Blake T. G. Blake, ' 39 A. A. Bodine J. T. Boomer, ' 39 A. S. H. Bovier G. H. Bright, ' 40 N. J. Brooks, ' 39 G. D. Butler, ' 40 H. O. Buzby ' 38 E. O. Clark, ' 40 R. B. Duane, Jr., ' 40 MEMBERS P. F. DuVivier, ' 38 A. H. Edwards, ' 37 R. S. Fraprie J. L. Frothingham, ' 40 Roger Geffen, ' 39 E. F. Goodman, ' 40 B. L. Hegeman, ' 40 S. V. Hennel W. F. Hofmann, Jr., ' 39 J. C. Hurdman, ' 39 Frank Kane Ernst Lang H. A. Lecher F. P. Lockhart, Jr., ' 40 E. F. MacNichol, Jr., ' 40 Henry Mayer, Jr. A. 1. Mendeloff, ' 38 E. G. C, Menzies H. 1. Mettee G. A. Moore, Jr. W. S. Morris, ' 37 A. M. Newburger, ' 38 A. N. Pack Benedict Peter, ' 40 H. J. Plants, ' 38 Frederick Quellmalz, Jr. C. E. Snow W. M. Stoons A. W. Waldron, ' 39 C. C. Waugh, ' 40 Percival Wild The high spot of the Camera Club ' s fourth season was the annual salon held early In May. It was very successful, for elaborate preparations brought about the submission of prints from all parts of the world, representing the work of foremost photographers. The regular monthly meetings of the club were addressed by such speakers as Walter Dreiser, J. G. Lootens, and Wendell MacRae. This year the Camera Club has decided to co-operate with other important organizations in exchanges of exhibitions. German Club OFFICERS, 1936-1937 H. H. Schneider, III, ' 37 President F. J. B. Bing, ' 37 Vice-President P. F. Du Vivier, ' 38 Secretary-Treasurer J. F. Anderson, ' 37 P. R. Brown, ' 37 E. G. Engel, ' 37 John Palaschak, Jr., ' 37 J. M. Roland, ' 37 Michael Weyl, ' 37 P. E. Barringer, ' 38 MEMBERS A. E. Hess, ' 38 C. F. Huston, ' 38 T. R. Jaeckel, ' 38 Albert Moore, ' 38 D. S. Plumb, ' 38 S. J. Stebbins, ' 38 J. J. Christian, ' 39 W. F. Hofmann, Jr., ' 39 P. H. Kenly, Jr., ' 39 C. F. Laycock, ' 39 H. D. Piper, ' 39 J L. Rowe, ' 39 D. W. Sidford, ' 39 The German Club, now in its fourth year of existence, was organized for the purpose of furthering under- graduate interest in German Literature and of aiding its members to speak the language more fluently. Authorities on German Literature occasionally give readings at the formal monthly meetings. In order to maintain the active interest of the members, the Club also presents one or two plays a year. One Hundred Seven The Princeton University Gun Club OFFICERS W. B. Nugent, ' 38 President L. R. Gray, ' 38 Vice-President J. I. Wendell, Jr., ' 39 Secretary-Treasurer R. B. Miller, ' 37 Captain J. C. Collier, II, ' 39 _ Manager R. P. Grimm MEMBERS, 1937 R. B. Miller V. F. Roma L. R. Gray J. C. Collier, II L. D. Dozier MEMBERS, 1938 MEMBERS, 1939 MEMBERS, 1940 J. D. Hinchcliffe W. B. Nugent J. I. Wendell, Jr. G. W. Shepherd During the five years since its reorganization the Gun Club has been successful in co-ordinating the activities of the rifle team and the shotgun team of Princeton. Its functions include the gathering of infor- mation on marksmanship, the arrangement of intra-mural matches, and the maintenance of ranges and other facilities for the use of those interested in shooting. ▼ Chess Club OFFICERS P. R. Brown, ' 37 President E. J. Jackson, ' 37 Captain H. M. Bach, ' 37 Vice-President W. W. Wooldridge, ' 38 Secretary W. K. H. Panofsky, ' 38 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 H. M. Bach C. F. S. Bebell P. R. Brown E. J. Jackson MEMBERS, 1938 J. T. Sadler I. E. Segal J. C. Davisson H. A. A. Panofsky W. K. H. Panofsky P. A. Phillips Gisbert Ruge F. B. Satterthwaite MEMBERS, 1939 M. L. Seidelman K. A. Spitz W. W. Wooldridge John Alexander W. J. Barr A. F. Chadwick A. J. Coale W. M. Hunt C. F. Kireker MEMBERS, 1940 F. B. Nimich E. A. Seipp W. R. Silvester A. T. Wateiman H. L, Crane D. F. Demarset E. C. Mowry P. H. Laughlin RECORD E. L. Stanley P. H. Vermilye Princeton 6 Princeton 3 Princeton 4 Princeton 1 Log Cabin 3 Seth Low 3 Princeton Faculty 7 Seth Low 5 Princeton 6V2 Princeton 3 Princeton 7 Mercer County 4V2 Penn 3 DeLaval 5 HARVARD-YALE-PRINCETON-DARTMOUTH LEAGUE TOURNAMENT Princeton 3 Dartmouth 1 Princeton 2 Princeton 1 Yale 2 Princeton.. Princeton . 11 2 ' 2 Yale 2! 2 Harvard 3 ' 2 EASTER TOURNAMENT Princeton 3 Harvard 3 Dartmouth The Princeton Chess Club last year had a fairly successful season, winning three matches, losing two, and drawing two. At the Christmas Tournament at the Harvard- Yale-Princeton-Dartmouth league they tied for second with Yale. At Easter their representa- tives came out in a tie for fourth place in a field of eight. Correspondence chess was also played unofficially by several members. This year there is a four board match going on with Toronto and Minnesota. One Hundred Eight The Princeton Ski Club TOP ROW: Cleveland, Osborn, Brown, Merle-Smith, Tapscott. SECOND ROW: O ' Molley, Small, MacMurroy, Woodhull, Hurdman, Beck. FRONT ROW: Oelsner, Aller, Smith, Ross, Ladenburg, OFFICERS F. P. Smith, ' 37 President R. G. Aller, ' 38 Vice-President and Captain J. T. Ross, ' 39 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1935 Kurt Ladenburg 1937 J. C. Goodell A. S. Hart, Jr. F. B. Jennings E. C. Oelsner H. B. Rockwell, Jr. 1938 J. H. Cleveland F. C. St. John H. C. Wells 1939 C. L. Bausch, Jr. G E. Dale J. H. Hauberg, Jr. R. G. King, Jr. R. P. Smith Newell Brown C. E. P. Dennison J. C. Hurdman J. J. Osborn 1940 C. A. Beck C. D. MacCracken J. Y. Millar W. G. Penfield Samuel Small W. D. Findley F. G. MacMurray T. P. Needham J. G. Schaeffer R. P. Woodhull K. P. Kinard Van S. Merle-Smith, Jr. F. W. O ' Malley In the winter of 1934-1935 several hardy, independent Princeton skiers gathered to travel to the Dart- mouth Winter Carnival and enter the ski competition. The next winter the Princeton Ski Club was officially organized, sending a team to Lake Placid, Williams, and Dartmouth. This year the club plans to send a team to Lake Placid and possibly to Cornell; examinations inter- fere with other meets whose dates are bunched within these several weeks, but members will gather to take the week-end snow trains to nearby ski trails. One Hundred Nine The Right Wing Club TOP ROW: Limberg, Stollenwerck, Porrish, More, Woodward. SECOND ROW: McElroy, Scott, Johnson, HemJnway, Warner, Fisher. FIRST ROW: Cutler, Harrison, Vanderbilt, Mayhew, Larkin, OFFICERS O. DeG. Vanderbilt, in, ' 37 - President W. P. Harrison, ' 37 Secretary MEMBERS, 1937 E. N. Cutler, Jr. W. B. Johnson E. W. Scott Thomas Fisher, Jr. E. A. Limberg, Jr. E. C. Stollenwerck H. N. Hare Zeb Mayhew, Jr. W. M. Warner J. H. Hemingway G. S. McElroy W. N. Woodward F. Y. Larkin J. B. Parrish, Jr. STANDING: Parker, Chew, Upham, SEATED: Lebens, Metcalf, Larzelere. OFFICERS The Two Foot Club p. H. Metcalf, ' 37.. E. P. Lebens, ' 37.. ..President .Secretary Benjamin Chew, Jr. J. T. Congleton, Jr. MEMBERS, 1937 A. P. Johnson N. H. Larzelere R. S. Parker H. J. Sloan R. B. Upham, Jr. One Hundred Ten 4 ' _ ( ¥ V | k. ' ' — The X . JtaAk -K ' . ' ■■f Twenty-One ' ' ;rz Club TOP ROW: King, Goley, Benson, Mueller. SECOND ROW; Classen, Novak, Lowson, Bitner, Covey, Emory. FRONT ROW: Foedisch, Jones, Nettleton, Perry, Ewing, Feather, Bisseli. OFFICERS H. E. Perry, ' 38 Chairman J. G. Nettleton, Jr., ' 38 Secretary-Treasurer W. M. Warner, ' 37 Senior Adviser MEMBERS, 1938 Peter Benson J. D. Ewing R. S. Mueller J. T. Bisseli W. A. Feather, Jr. J. G. Nettleton, Jr. J. W. Bitner H. W. Foedish E. R. Novak R. A. Burke W. T. Galey, 111 H. E. Perry J. N. Classen W. G. Jones Frederic Rosengarten, Jr. W. P. Covey F. P. King, Jr. W. H. Sayen, III M. S. Emory S. C. Lcrwson I. R. Simpson ▼ The Thursday Afternoon Club STANDING: Carter, Galey, Pleiffer. SEATED; Ewing, MacRoc, Fisher, Parrish, Burger. Thomas Fisher, Jr., ' 37 Chairman R. L. Burger, ' 37 G. D. MacRae, ' 37 MEMBERS J. B. Parrish, Jr., ' 37 N. M. Carter, ' 38 J. D. Ewing, ' 38 W. T. Galey, III, ' 38 T. A. Pfeiffer, ' 38 One Hundred Eleven x . r . r . i . i . ERECT: O ' Neill, Read, Ashcroft, Jones, Thocher, Moss. SEDENTARY: Rivinus, Barringer, Lippincott, Logon, Beole. OFFICERS J. W. Lippincott, Jr., ' 37 Gentleman S. S. Logan, Jr., ' 38 Vice-Gentleman P. E. Barringer, ' 38- Gentleman of Vice E. F. Beale, III, ' 37__ Sir B E. F. Rivinus, Jr., ' 37 _ - Sir P AFRICANS J. J. B. Ashcraft, ' 37 R. A. Moss, ' 37 Geoffrey Stengel, ' 37 H. C. Jones, H, ' 38 W. P. O ' Neill, Jr., ' 38 N. G. Thacher, ' 37 H. W. Read, ' 37 T J STANDING: Foster, Marks, Parkin, Follansbee. SEATED: Hackett, Kerr, Frazer. D. C. Kerr, ' 37 Seveners Club ..President J. G. Frazer, Jr., ' 37 S. R. Hackett, ' 37 Harper Follansbee, ' 37 D. E. Foster, ' 37 L. H. Marks, ' 37 F. H. Parkin, ' 37 One Hundred Twelve Rousseau Club Borden, Mr. Bryan, Dort, Marvin, Cowdery, Watson, Rounds, Gardiner, Jones. MEMBERS C. S. S. Marvin, ' 37 Mere Terre W. H. Borden, ' 37 Spokesman R. B. Cowdery, ' 38 Maitre Detours W. B. Jones, Jr., ' 37 Maitre Descartes F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38 .Maitre des Maitres B. T. Rulon-Miller, ' 36. Maitre de Trousseau W. J. Watson, ' 38 Maitre-Goldwyn-Mayer Rev. W. B. Bryan, Jr., ' 20 D. T. Dort, ' 38 Henry Gardiner, ' 38 C. R. Stevens, ' 38 ▼ White Coat Club J TOP ROW: Work. Herman, Reid Bragdon. SECOND ROW: White, Fleer, Holsey, Kinder, Wenzell, Klie. FRONT ROW: Meyer, Dovies, Scott, Thacher. MEMBERS, 1938 R. M. Bragdon C. W. Davies E. H. Fleer W. F. Halsey, III J. L. Herman E. T. Kinder H. F. Klie R. R. Meyer, Jr. H. A. Reid D. A. Scott F. W. Thacher, Jr. H. T. Wark A. B. Wenzell J. H. White, Jr. J. A. Wilson One Hundred Thirteen The Grenfell Club of Princeton University STANDING: Crooker, Hopkin. SEATED: Cobb, Wicks, Couun, OFFICERS A. M. Wicks, ' 37 President MEMBERSHIP R. M. Crooker, ' 37 T. P. Cobb, ' 38 S. D. Cowan, Jr., ' 39 Professor William Gillespie Fifteen years ago, Professor William Gillespie founded the Grenfell Club, made up of Princeton men who have spent a summer in Labrador with Sir Wilfred Grenfell. Through the medium of funds col- lected by the Student-Faculty Association ' s annual drive, or at their own expense, the members have aided in giving educational and medical assistance at the various stations maintained by the Grenfell mission. The principal point where Princeton men are located is St. Mary ' s River, where they have erected a hospital and a school. This station is small, but vitally important, serving hundreds of natives depen- dent upon it for clothing and medical care. One Hundred Fourteen S. F. Medina, ' 09. H. D. Dawbarn, ' 38 D. P. Green, Jr. Sons of ' 09 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE E. T. Holsapple, Jr., ' 39 T. T. Hutcheson, ' 37 MEMBERS, 1937 T. T. Hutcheson R. M. Johnston Chairman H. W. Turner, III, ' 37 S. F. Medina D. D. Ballin, Jr. ]. D. J. Brady ]. G. Buchanan, Jr MEMBERS, 1938 H. D. Dawbarn L. D. Fenninger R. E. Jamison, Jr. R. C. O. Matheny, Jr. C. H. Nichols, Jr. J. T. Arms, Jr. J. H. Clark, III P. R. Dickinson MEMBERS, 1939 C. W. Driver Francis Earle, Jr. E. T. Holsapple, Jr. G. M. Milligan H. G. Turner, Jr. H. A. Boas L. O. Coxe W. J. Funk, Jr. E. C. Kelley, Jr. MEMBERS, 1940 R. H. Koch, II R. S. Laubach R. B. MacSherry A. P. Olcott S. M. Rising William Shand, Jr. C. H. Shaner, Jr. H. W. Turner, III One Hundred Fifteen Behind Nassau Scenes (£._•; Gossip, as the great Latin poet Virgil says, is a fast traveler. There is good gossip and bad gos- sip. The BRIC-A-BRAC hereby transmits to pos- terity only the nicest back-stage news that it could discover in Princeton during the thiitcen lunar cycles of 1936. One interesting little tale Vi as told us by the Press Club candidate who last spring obtained the first interview out of our own Albert Einstein that has been extracted from him in quite some time. This serious young native of Vermont had planned the thing weeks in advance; he watched the bushy-haired genius as he took his walk every morning, timed him and finally drew up his plan of attack. Exactly at ten o ' clock one sunny spring morn he made his bid for glory. The newshawk stepped up and asked the good Doctor if he would answer a few questions. When Mr. Einstein asked why, I ' m a candidate for the Press Club, was the hopeful response. Whereupon the great mathematician relaxed and delivered the goods in most willing fashion, deny- ing the charge made by newspapers that he played games in his spare moments, three- dimensional chess in particular. Then there ' s the Triangle show and its Direc- tor, Bill Miles, who ruined two pairs of trousers by inadvertently plunking himself down upon fresh deposits of chewing gum. Usually a very jovial sort of chap. Bill became considerable irri- tated when the second disaster befell him. He was constantly on the lookout thereafter for gum- chewers among his proteges. Finally he spotted a bespectacled Sophomore comedian who was blowing bubbles with his Beech Nut. The Soph- omore — meekest Thespian of them all — trem- blingly and profusely apologized. Some of us wondered why the Herald Tribune was so sparing in its praise of Take It One Hundred Sixteen Away! The explanation seems to lie in the fact that the poor critic was left stranded in the Prince- ton office of the Western Union Company for the first hour and 45 minutes of the performance. He was evidently a little peeved. The Trianglers certainly catered to the critics, however, once the scribes reached the scene of action. When one critic dropped his smoldering cigarette butt right into the ice cream carton of one of the actors, the injured star simply flashed a forgiving smile and said, Oh, that ' s perfectly all right, sir. Down in Palmer Laboratory there is an amaz- ing physicist who invents a lot of remarkable gadgets but doesn ' t like to have his name noised about. This Thomas Edison in our midst is par- ticularly reticent about his latest discovery, rounded bristles for toothbrushes. But the plain fact is that every dental scrubber manufactured by the Prophylactic people is now equipped with bristles rounded at the ends after his pattern. Another little bit that some folks tried to hush up occurred at election time when the Campus Democrats and Republicans were battling each other with speeches, posters, and accusations. The Donkeymen had evidently received insuffi- cient Rooseveltian handout, for in a special meet- ing of the Whig Clio Council they begged for a small political interest stimulator of $25 from the Halls ' administration. In the ranks of the Council, however, were a number of Campus Republicans who, it seems, were adequately sup- plied with funds — from what source we did not venture to ask. The New Dealers made a great bid for their $25, but in the interests of economy (and of the Republicans) the plea was turned down. After the Harvard game at Cambridge one dis- gruntled Pri nceton Sophomore was caught by a copper taking furtive glances at the Crimson goalposts. With obvious implications the rotund Behind Nassau Scenes (Continued) Cantabridgian bobby pointed to the nearest sta- dium exit. But this Princetonian was just an- noyed, in view of the disheartening 14-to-14 tie which he and all the other Tiger rooters had had to swallow. It ' s a nice gun you ' ve got there, isn ' t it? says our Sophomore, eyeing the policeman ' s revolver. And so what? says the copper. Whereupon our Sophomore snatched the gun out of the policeman ' s holster, dashed through the aforementioned exit portal and hurled the little weapon of death and destruction into the Charles River. When last seen the officer was still panting in chase. Speaking of football games reminds us of the President ' s non-drinking program. On the morn- ing of the Eli-Tiger clash a Yale News heeler was interviewing Dr. Dodds on the subject of the program, its history and results. As the young journalist was preparing to put on his hat and coat, Dr. Dodds flashed forth: It ' s all very well what we ' ve done so far; but if it should snow this Saturday and next, we ' d have a mighty tough time making a go of it! Even the lofty academes seem to know human nature. When pictures of fall activities were being taken for the BRIC-A-BRAC, the order on one day was as follows: (1) Varsity football team; (2) Chess Club. Working up to a climax, so to speak. What with Macbeth, Hamlet et al, the members of the English Department faculty have to deal with a goodly number of fictitious ghosts. But when it came to the real thing last winter they were just as much set back as some of their lit- erary heroes. McCosh 7 was the haunted room. And it was not merely one phantom; it was five or six. On a number of occasions the last preceptor would leave the room and lock it for the night only to find, on returning the next morning, that the room had been entered and lively doings held during the night. Shrewd observers held that poker was the chief pastime of the nocturnal revellers. Cigarette butts were usually littered about; perhaps a faint smell of something that goes in a bottle could be detected. At any rate the English Department didn ' t like it. Carpenters and locksmiths were called in to fix up the weak points in McCosh 7 ' s windows and doors. No more ghosts have appeared since. We knew Mr. Bunn checked up on the finances of many organizations here in addition to our own, but still we were surprised. We had gone to the First Presbyterian Church on the Sunday of its annual business meeting. The pastor. Rev. Mr. Niles, announced, The Treasurer will now come forward to read the Church ' s financial statement for the year. A familiar stubby figure rose up from a pew on the north side of the building and walked to the front. You ' ve guessed who it was already. Moral: we all know a good treasurer when we see one. A Princetonian reporter recently got into ex- traordinarily hot water. It happened in the spring when the unemployed from all over New Jersey were converging in their hunger march on the State House. This newshawk went down to Princeton Com- munist headquarters at 28 Clay Street to find out what the local unemployed were going to do about it. He obtained a lot of information, and then proceeded to give the boys a very unfavor- able writeup in the Campus daily. When the Clay Street moguls read his article, their wrath was unbounded. They wrote a heated communication to the Prince about it. For some One Hundred Seventeen Behind Nassau Scenes (Continued) days the unfortunate scribe, picturing himself riddled with Red bullets, hesitated to venture forth even so far as Nassau Street lest the street- corner Idlers should rise en masse and slay him in cold blood. Only one finished clapper-stealing has come to our attention in time for this article. Interest- ingly enough, one of the two robbers is the son of a boat-manufacturer. His father had the Nas- sau clapper sliced in half and mounted on gleaming mahogany plaques which look very impressive in a certain Holder Court room today. Skunks under West College! A whole family of them. They kept falling down into the little holes in front of the basement wi ndows, from which they were unable to extricate themselves. One was taken out by Prince men who pro- ceeded to carry him over to Reunion and park him in the Tiger office. Another was lifted out in broad daylight by two enterprising Sopho- mores who were slightly sprayed during the pro- ceeding. When they finally set Uncle Rufus on his feet at ground-level, they looked up to find the entire surrounding area devoid of strollers. Heads peeped forth from every window, but even the dauntless University police were conspicu- ously under cover. We wonder why. Did you know that . . . Princeton undergrad- uates, by terms of a reciprocal agreement made years ago, are entitled to take courses at Prince- ton Theological Seminary, getting perfectly good credit toward a degree by passing the same . . . the result of the Princetonian ' s Faculty poll on the Presidential election cost the University a number of large bequests which irate Republi- cans struck out of their wills . . . several alumni are planning to build a glass-enclosed, heated penthouse atop Palmer Stadium, so that no- tables can see the games from a particularly advantageous situation . . . according to the Geology Department, Lake Carnegie is rapidly filling up and will all be sedimentary rock some day . . . Chick Kaufman ' s Physics instructor gave him a special bonus when he made use of the proper scientific principle in cutting across the field to make a tackle, instead of diving straight in and missing because he was too late . . . the new Humanistic Study plan was conceived by two professors over mugs of coffee in the Bait ? One Hunndred Eighteen Athi eti ' cs % • 1,; 1. ' ■: - «?.. ' v!!(18i 33 E. K. Sandbach, ' 37 C. E. Kaufman, Jr., ' 37 J. H. White, ' 38 T. R. Mountain, ' 39 T. W. Montgomery, ' 37 C. H. Toll, Jr., ' 38 S. E. Cullinan, ' 37 J. P. Chubet, III, ' 37 A. F. Ritter, ' 37 W. S. Rawls, ' 37 G. B. Stoess, ' 37 E. R. McLean, ' 38 FOOTBALL TOP ROW: Harper, Hall, Dicke, Taylor, Von Winkle THIRD ROW McLean, Bothwell, Wood, Vruwink, Mountain, Bayer, R. B White SECOND ROW: Crisler iCoochl, Chubet, J. H. White, Marks, Daniel, Lynch, Stanley, Cutler iMgr.l. FRONT ROW: Cullman, Stoess, Sondbach, Toll, Montgomery, Kaufman, Rowls, Hill. Varsity Football OFFICERS T. W. Montgomery, ' 37 Captain E. N. Cutler, Jr., ' 37 _ Manager W. T. Galey, III, ' 38 __ Assistant Manager W. W. Johnston, ' 38 Assistant Manager H. O. Crisler Head Coach TEAM Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position Player Class Age Wgt. Hgt. Position I. P. Chubet, III 1937 23 G. J. Stoess 1937 23 A. F. Ritter 1937 23 S. E. CuUinan 1937 21 T. W. Montgomery.... 1937 23 170 6 ' Left End 198 6 ' 2 Left Tackle 190 6 ' Left Guard 180 5 ' 11 ....Center 183 6 ' Right Guard W. S. Rawls 1937 E. K. Sandbach 1937 J. H. White 1938 C. E. Kaufinan 1937 Dean Hill, Jr 1937 21 185 6 2 .. ...Right End 22 180 6 ' ...Quarterback 21 177 5 ' 10 ...Left Halfback 23 181 S ' ll ...Right Halfback 21 185 6 ' ...Fullback C. H. Toll, Jr 1938 20 222 6 ' 5 Right Tackle R. S. Bayer, ' 39 (LE) E. C. Bothwell, Jr., ' 37 (LG) I. J. Daniel, ' 39 (LHB) R. M. Dicke, ' 37 (LT) F. R. Hall, ' 38 (RE) SUBSTITUTES A. T. Harper, ' 39 (LHB) E. R. McLean, ' 38 (LE) J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 (RHB) T. R. Mountain. ' 39 (LHB) W. B. Lynch, ' 39 (F) R. W. Stanley, ' 37, (LG) J. L. Marks, Jr., ' 37 (QB) Lawrence Taylor, ' 39 (RE) Dote Oct. 3, 1936 Oct. 10, 1936 Oct. 17, 1936 Oct. 24, 1936 Score Princeton 27 Princeton 20 Princeton Princeton 7 SEASON ' S RECORD Opponent Score Dote Williams 7 Oct. 31, 1936 Rutgers Nov. 7, 1936 Pennsylvania 7 Nov. 14, 1936 Navy Nov. 21, 1936 Score Princeton 14 Princeton 41 Princeton 23 Princeton 13 J. P. Van Winkle, Jr. (LG) J. H. Vruwink, ' 38 (RE) R. B. While, ' 39 (RHB) T. B. Wood, ' 38 (RT) Opponent Score Harvard 14 Cornell 13 Yale 26 Dartmouth 13 One Hundred Twenty Review of the Season In Herbert O. Crisler ' s fifth year as head football coach at Princeton, his Tigers finally brought to a close a remarkable winning streak which had grown to twenty-nine triumphs in 30 games throughout four years. The record of victories ended October 17, 1936, when a determined Penn eleven turned back the men of Crisler, 7 to 0. One more defeat and two ties followed this upset, and Princeton concluded its season with a record of four victories, two ties and two defeats. The season opened with Old Nassau enter- taining Williams in Palmer Stadium before an unprecedented crowd of 42,000 spectators, for an opening game. Showing a fine first team and little reserve strength, Princeton rolled up four touchdowns to hand the New Englanders a crushing 27-to-7 loss. Chick Kaufman crossed the goal line twice. Dean Hill once and Dick White once, while Ken Sandbach converted success- fully after three of the tallies to account for all of Princeton ' s scoring. A triple pass from Fielding Simmons to Ed Stanley to Doug Stearns put Williams in a scoring position late in the second quarter and Simmons crossed the line with the only opposing touchdown of the afternoon. Eight penalties for offsides hampered the Tiger offen- sive considerably in this encounter. Sandbach converting ofter Princeton ' s only touchdown against Navy. Princeton scored its second victory of the sea- son on the following Saturday when Rutgers was defeated, 20 to 0, in Palmer Stadium. Two sensa- tional field goals, one a 46-yard dropkick by Sophomore Bill Lynch and one a placekick by Sandbach, featured this contest for Princeton. Touchdowns by Tom Mountain and Jim Salsich furnished the only other Nassau scoring. As in its first game, Princeton showed little of what was expected in actual results, but much in poten- tiality. Lynch ' s amazing field goal marked the first of its kind to score in Palmer Stadium since 1931. Princeton journeyed to Franklin Field, Phila- delphia, on the succeeding weekend and met its initial defeat of the campaign and its second in thirty-one games. A single heart-breaking run- back of a punt for 57 yards and touchdown by Lew Elverson gave Penn its winning margin. The Tigers advanced to within scoring territory no less than five times, but on each occasion the Quakers had just enough left to turn back the Nassau threat. Both lines furnished remarkable defensive exhibitions in this contest, as did Jack White and Lynch in the Princeton backfield. Cap- tain Montgomery played one of his finest games Kaufman scoring first touchdown of the year against Williams. One Hundred Twenty-one Review of the Season (Continued) Lynch ' s 28-yard run to Princeton ' s first score at Cambridge. of the season. A gathering of 60,000 spectators witnessed the tilt. The Orange and Black got back on the road to victory on the following Saturday as Princeton defeated Navy, 7 to 0, in Palmer Stadium. A capacity crowd of 52,000 saw the encounter. One brilliantly deceptive scoring run by Sandbach furnished the only successful offensive gesture of the afternoon. On a reverse and fake spinner, the Princeton quarterback took the ball from Hill midway through the third period and scampered off left tackle for 14 yards and a touchdown. Sandbach then converted with a placekick, and the Tigers ' scoring for the afternoon was ended. Bill Rawls, Charley Toll, Steve Cullinan, Kauf- man, Jack White and Sandbach were outstand- ing for the Orange and Black. At this point in the season it seemed as if Princeton were to recover from its loss to Penn and go through the remainder of a difficult sched- ule undefeated and untied. But this was not to be. Harvard upset these plans on the following Saturday in Soldier ' s Field, Cambridge, when the Crimson stunned Princeton with an amazing 14-to-14 tie. The Tigers were in the lead, 14 to 7, late in the fourth quarter, but a pass from Arthur Oakes to Bob Stuart was completed and Harvard had accomplished a feat it had been attempting ever since the resumption of the Big Three series, preventing Princeton from winning. Lynch and Dick White for Princeton and Malcolm McTernen for Harvard tallied the other touchdowns. All extra points were kicked, and the teams left the field on equal terms, although Princeton had held the upper hand throughout most of the after- noon ' s play. One Hundred Twenty-two On the following Saturday Princeton reached the high point of its offensive perfection when the Tigers crushed Cornell, 41 to 13, in Palmer Sta- dium. Before 20,000 spectators, Old Nassau ' s speedy halfbacks ran wild to register six touch- downs. Jack White with two six-pointers. Jack Daniel, Lynch, Kaufman and Mountain tallied for Princeton. Brud Holland, Cornell ' s brilliant Negro left end, was the Red star, scoring one touchdown and paving the way for Nelson to count the other. Sandbach kicked five out of six extra points. Captain Jack Batten of the visitors showed some of the finest punting seen in Palmer Stadium all season. And so Princeton entered its most important game of the year with Yale in full stride. A throng of 57,000 Alumni, undergraduates and followers of both universities jammed Palmer Stadium with its second largest crowd in history, and the spec- tacle they saw was well worth the price of admis- sion. This 1936 epic Yale-Princeton battle will undoubtedly go down in football history as one of the most spectacular and breath-taking in the lengthy annals of the two schools. It was Princeton ' s misfortune to lose, 26 to 23, but in a contest such as this one, there was great glory even in being one of the participants. From t he action of the first half, it was difficult for the Princeton followers to conceive of a Yale victory. The Tigers opened with an impressive rush, tally- ing first on a field goal by Sandbach and again on two touchdowns by Jack White. The score then stood 16 to 0, and the game appeared at any moment to develop into a repetition of the Prince- ton rout of the year before. But the gallant band of Yalemen did not know the meaning of defeat. White scoring against Cornell on a reverse from Kaufman. Review of the Season (Continued) They countered in the second quarter with a touchdown by their brilliant running back, Clint Frank. And at half-time Yale came back still stronger, scoring twice more on touchdowns by Captain Larry Kelley and Al Hessberg. The Bulldogs were then in the lead, 23 to 16. But here Princeton did its share of recouping. Lynch put the Tigers in the lead with a beautiful exhibition of power bucking through the line. And Princeton was again in the van. But here Frank contributed the final gesture with his sec- ond touchdown of the game, the winning tally, to sound Old Nassau ' s death knell. There were nothing but heroes in this game of games, but the stars of Frank and Kelley and Jack White and Montgomery and Cullinan shone the brightest. Dartmouth came to Tigertown on the following Saturday and tied Princeton, 13 to 13, in what amounted to the anti-climax of the season. With the Tigers lacking the services of their best run- ning back. Jack White, Dartmouth earned a The first of eight tallies in the Yale gome: Sandbach ' s field goal from the 14-yard line. Daniel makes a first down around Dartmouth ' s end. moral victory but had to be content with an ac- tual tie because of an official ' s decision. The Indians were leading, 13 to 7, near the close of the game when Princeton was awarded interfer- ence on a pass which Kaufman attempted to catch in the invading end zone. The Tigers were given the pigskin on Dartmouth ' s one-yard line, and Lynch crashed over with the tying score. Daniel counted Princeton ' s other touchdown, while John Merrill and Joe Kiernan tallied for Dartmouth. And so there were no Big Three victory bon- fires over the cannon this season. But in many ways the year can be termed one of the most in- teresting in recent Princeton gridiron history. It produced some of the most spectacular and gal- lant football ever to be played by a Nassau team. It was merely unfortunate that Captain Mont- gomery and his ill-starred squad were playing in the face of odds which proved unsurmountable. One Hundred Twenty-three A Summary of Princeton ' s Complete Football Record Victories Amherst Army Brown 3 Bucknell Carlisle Chicago A. C Chicago University 2 Colgate 2 Columbia Law Columbia University 2 Cornell 6 Crescent A. C Dartmouth 3 Dickinson Elizabeth A. C Fordham F. and M Gettysburg Georgetown Holy Cross Harvard 9 Lafayette 1 Lawrenceville Lehigh 2 Johns Hopkins Maryland A. C Maryland University Manhattan A. C Michigan 2 Navy 6 N. Y. A. C New York University North Carolina Notre Dame 2 Ohio State Orange A. C Pennsylvania 3 Penn State Rochester Rutgers 1 Stevens Swarthmore Syracuse Trinity Tufts Villanova Virginia Virginia Poly W. and J W. and L 1 W. and M Wesleyan West Virginia 1 Williams Yale 32 Victories Ties Princeton 20 Princeton 5 3 Princeton 6 Princeton 7 Princeton 6 Princeton 1 Princeton 1 1 Princeton 3 Princeton 1 Princeton 13 Princeton 18 1 Princeton 5 Princeton 12 1 Princeton 3 1 Princeton 2 Princeton 3 Princeton 5 Princeton 1 Princeton 3 Princeton 4 Princeton 20 4 Princeton 22 2 Princeton 3 Princeton 32 2 Princeton 5 Princeton 2 Princeton 2 C Princeton 2 Princeton 1 Princeton 13 7 Princeton 1 Princeton 3 Princeton 2 Princeton Princeton 1 1 Princeton 7 1 Princeton 31 Princeton 5 Princeton 1 Princeton 32 Princeton 23 Princeton 9 Princeton - 5 Princeton 1 Princeton 1 Princeton 9 Princeton 7 1 Princeton 3 Princeton 6 Princeton 6 1 Princeton 1 Princeton 13 Princeton 1 Princeton 4 2 Princeton 19 10 Princeton — 412 victories, 78 defeats, 38 ties. One Hundred Twenty-four Princeton University Cheerleaders Cranston, Warren, Jones, Gamble. J. E. Jones, ' 37. H. D. Cranston, ' 38 D. G. Gamble, ' 37 E. A. Limberg, Jr., ' 37 G. B. Smith, II, ' 37 Head Cheerleader Northam Warren, Jr., ' 37 Football Captains, 1869-1936 ' 69 W. S. Gummere ' 70 Alexander Van Renssalaer ' 71 Arthur Johnson ■72 D. T. Marvel ' 73 C. O. Dersheimer ' 74 - I. H. Lionberger ' 75 Collins Denny 76 A. J. McCosh ' 77 W. E. Dodge ' 78 Bland Ballard ' 79 Bland Ballard 80 Francis Loney ' 81 P. T. Bryan ' 82 E. C. Peace ' 83 A. D. Moffat ' 84 C. W. Bird ' 85 C. M. DeCamp 86 H. S. Savage ' 87 E. O. Wagenhorsl ' 88 H. W. Cowan ' 89 E. A. Poe ' 90 E. A. Poe ' 91 R. H. Warren ' 92 Philip King ' 93 T. G. Trenchard ' 94 T. G. Trenchard ' 95 L. P. Lea ' 96 Garrett Cochran ' 97 Garrett Cochran ' 98 A. R. T. Hillebrand ' 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 ' 08 E. A. Dillon 09 R. C. Siegling 10 E. I. Hart ' 11 E. I. Hart ' 12 T. T. Pendleton 13 H. A. H. Baker ' 14 H. R. Ballin ' 15 Frank Glick ' 16 F. T. Hogg ' 17 No Team ' 18 H. A. Callahan ' 19 C. W. McGraw ' 20 H. A. Callahan ' 21 I. S. Keck ' 22 M. P. Dickinson ' 23 A. P. Snively, Jr. ' 24 E. C. Stout, Jr. ' 25 E. L. McMillan ' 26 I. W. Davis, Jr. ' 27 C. R. Moeser ■28 C. H. Howe ' 29 I. R. Whyte ' 30 R. A. Mestres ' 31 W. H. Yeckley ' 32 F. T. Billings, Jr. ' 33 A. S. Lane ' 34 E. McG. Kalbaugh ' 35 Pepper Constable ' 36 T. W. Montgomery Informal team in 1918 composed of the S. A. T. C. and Naval units. One Hundred Twenty-five TOP ROW: Mahnkcn iCoachI, Smith, Light, Sargent, Lord, Wilson, Galloway, Cissel iMgr.i. THIRD ROW Cc:::, U.., ;. .:„-:-:., ' .Aarquardf, Wathen, Leonard, Kerns, Walsh. SECOND ROW; Semmes, Coney, Judd, Pfeiffer, Shepord, Jamison, Dickey, Fallon. FRONT ROW Knowles, Wood, Bedford, Berger, Grange, Power, Brown. 150-lb. Football Team OFFICERS R. L. Burger, ' 37 Captain H. L. Mahnken Coach J. A. Cissel, Jr., ' 38 Manager RECORD Opponent Score Dote Score Opponent Score Villanova Nov. 20 Princeton Yale 8 Pennsylvania 20 Nov. 26 Princetcn 2 Rutgers 7 Lafayette 19 Date Oct. 23 Princeton. Oct. 31 Nov. 6 Score 12 Princeton Princeton.. 7 TEAM Position Player Left End R. W. Grange, ' 39 Left Tackle R. H. Smith, Jr., ' 38 Left Guard J. P. Kerns, ' 39 Cen ' er Irving Brov rn, Jr., ' 37 Right Guard R. B. Wathen, ' 39 Right Tackle A. M. Wood, ' 37 Position Player Right End W. S. Power, ' 38 Quarterback N. F. Bedford, ' 39 Left Halfback R. L. Burger, ' 37 Right Halfback J. W. Know les, ' 39 Fullback G. R. Lord, Jr., ' 39 SUBSTITUTES BACKS Robert Dickey, III, A. J. Fallon, ' 37 39 J. R. Fox, ' 39 O. K. Marquardt, ' 39 J. E P. F. Meade, ' 39 Norton, Jr., ' 39 J. E. Semmes, ' 39 A. I. Wilson, ' 38 J. M. Bindley, ' 39 W. W. Judd, ' 39 A. W. Leonard, ' 39 ENDS R D. Caney, ' 39 LINEMEN W. W. Light. ' 38 L. L. H S. Galloway, ' 39 Livingston, ' 39 R. E. Jamison, Jr., ' C T. A. Pfeiffer, ' 37 W. B. Shepard, ' 37 The 150-lb. team started out from scratch this year, for not one of last year ' s regulars returned, and only six substitutes. Despite this fact, the team was very scrappy and showed fine spirit; its record of but one win in five starts is not a real indication of its mode of play. In only the Penn game were the Princeton lightweights really outplayed. The other three were all lost in the closing minutes of the last quarter, owing to a combination of inexperience and bad breaks. Guiding the squad was Harry Mahnken, who was ably assisted by Associate Coaches Jack Crocker and Don Griffin. An encouraging feature of the season was the enthusiastic turn-out. Some ninety men reported for the opening practice, indicating the growing popularity of lightweight football. Moreover, prospects for next year are very good, since only three of the regulars and three of the substitutes graduate this June. One Hundred Twenty-six E. B, Savage, ' 36 S. K. Gregory, ' 36 jj G. K.Willis, ' 36 F. R. Lawson, ' 36 HOCKEY TOP ROW: Cook, Covey, Burke. SECOND ROW: Vaughan iCoachi, Sylvester, iTonington, Potter, WoodhuM, Edwards iMgr. Barrett, Bissell, Willis (Capt.), Lawson, Gregory. FRONT ROW: Varsity Hockey Date Dec. 7, 1935 Dec. 12, 1935 Dec. 14, 1935 Dec. 18, 1935 Dec. 21, 1935 Dec. 30, 1935 Dec. 31, 1935 Jan. 2, 1936 Ian. 3, 1936 Jan. 6, 1936 Jan. 11, 1936 OFFICERS, 1935-1936 G. K. Willis, ' Se... Captain C. W. Edwards, ' 36 Manager R. L. Burger, ' 37_ Assistant Manager E. W. Scott, ' 37 Assistant Manager R. F. Vaughan Coach L. W. Tiers _ Assistant Coach TEAM S. E. Gregory, ' 36; Courtlandt NicoU, Jr., ' 38 Goal P. H. Holsapple, ' 36; W. R. Barrett, ' 38 Left Defense T. A. Potter, ' 37; R. A. Burke, ' 38 Right Defense E. B. Savage, Jr., ' 36; J. T. Bissell, ' 38; J. D. Sylvester, ' 37 Center G. K. Willis, ' 36; W. P. Covey, ' 38 Left Wing F. R. Lawson, ' 36; P. G. Cook, ' 37 Right Wing GAMES Score Princeton 7 Princeton 6 Princeton 5 Princeton 10 Princeton 4 Princeton 1 Princeton 4 Princeton 1 Princeton 6 Princeton 7 Princeton 4 Opponent Score M. I. T 1 St. Nicholas H. C 4 Boston U 4 Colgate 2 St. Nicholas H. C 3 Minnesota 3 Minnesota - 3 U. S. Olympic Team 2 Williams 1 Toronto 4 Harvard 3 Date Jan. 15, 1936 Jan. 18, 1936 Feb. 6, 1936 Feb. 8, 1936 Feb. 11, 1936 Feb. IS, 1936 Feb. 22, 1936 Feb. 26, 1936 Feb. 29, 1936 Mar. 3, 1936 Mar. 7, 1936 Score Princeton 3 Princeton 1 Princeton 7 Princeton 5 Princeton 1 Princeton 4 Princeton 5 Princeton 3 Princeton Princeton 2 Princeton 4 Opponent Score Clarkson 5 Yale 2 Middlebury St. Nicholas H. C 4 Boston College 1 Dartmouth 3 Yale 1 Yale 4 Harvard 8 Harvard 3 Dartmouth 3 One Hundred Twrenty-eight Review of the Season Thirteen victories, eight defeats and one tie, a fifty-nine per cent winning average, a tie for sec- ond place in the Quadrangular League and a rejuvenation of spirit under the tutelage of Coach Dick Vaughan and captaincy of Ken Willis — these v ere the features of Princeton ' s 1935-1936 hockey season. When the doors of Hobey Baker Rink were shut and the ice was allowed to melt at the conclu- sion of Vaughan ' s first year at Old Nassau, a season teeming with ifs and buts came to an end for the Orange and Black stickmen. Certainly during the opening weeks the entrails were favorable for an auspicious year, as became evident after the Tigers ' first five vic- tories in a row. Prior to the early games of the difficult sched- ule the new mentor trained his eleven returning lettermen and powerful Sophomore aggregation in hockey fundamentals, stressing regular defen- sive plays and spontane ous offensive attacks. Dummies were placed on the ice of the rink in lieu of players, and the squad, as if in scrimmage, spent hours in perfecting various fundamental combinations. M. I. T. was the first to fall before the lash of the Tiger ' s tail when the Engineers succumbed, 7 to 1 , in the opening tilt of the season. Second in order was the St. Nicks sextet, which was van- quished, 6 to 4, in a fast overtime period. During the course of the season the Nassau six per- formed an outstanding feat by turning back the former college stars in two additional contests, 4 to 3 and 5 to 4. A 5-to-4 victory over Boston University and a lO-to-2 triumph over Colgate preceded the great- est trip ever undertaken by a Princeton ice aggre- gation, a journey to the Middle West for a two- game series with Minnesota. This new rivalry resulted in a 3-to-l victory for the Gophers and a 4-to-3 win for the visiting Tigers. Princeton ' s final conquest over the Maroon and Gold was one of the leading performances of the year. The United States Olympic team, which tri- umphed over so many of the international sextets in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, had difficulty in de- feating the Bengals, 2 to 1, in a Christmas vaca- tion encounter. The 6-to-l rout over Williams con- cluded the holiday schedule for Vaughan ' s itin- erant puckmen. Aside from Big Four encounters, the Princeton ice team met Toronto, Clarkson, Middlebury and Boston College during the remainder of the year. The Canadians fell, 7 to 4, and the Vermonters, 7 to 0, while the Clarkson Engineers overcame the Orange and Black, 5 to 3, and the Bostonians tied, 1 to 1. In the Quadrangular League series the Prince- ton squad was able to conquer once on the home ice all the opposing members. Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth. The Tigers were victorious over the Crimson, 4 to 3, over the Blue, 5 to 1, and over the Green, 4 to 3. The Indians won their first game with the Princetonians at Hanover, 4 to 3, the Cantabs evened their count with an 8-to-O slaughter in Boston and the Elis vanquished the Orange and Black, 2 to 1, in New Haven. Both Harvard and Yale won the play-offs, the former, 3 to 2, and the latter, 4 to 3. As the season ' s final result Har- vard finished first in the League, Princeton and Dartmouth tied for second and Yale trailed in last place. ACTION IN BAKER RINK c. R, Lawson, ' 36, scoring in the Boston University game, which was won by Princeton, 5-4. One Hundred Twenty-nine Review of the Season (Continued) From Fred Lawson ' s opening tally of the year through twenty-two games to Bill Barrett ' s closing goal, the Nassau stickmen chalked up eighty- nine points to their opponents ' sixty-five. Of these, seventeen goals were scored for the Ben- gals and twenty-one against in Quadrangular League contests. The veteran first line of Ken Willis, Erie Savage and Fred Lawson was the bright scoring threat for the Tigers. Willis tied with Guibord of Dart- mouth and Roberts of Harvard for Big Four scor- ing honors with eleven points, while Savage fol- lowed with eight and Lawson with five. Aside from these Seniors Stew Gregory at goal and Penn Holsapple at defense were the only players to leave the squad at the conclusion of the season. Jack Bissell, who captains the 1936-1937 team, will lead his forward line at center, flanked by Pete Cook and Wilkes Covey. Other promismg prospects for the year are Bob Burke and Bill Barrett at defense. Court NicoU and Andy Thomp- son in the cage and Johnny Sylvester, Ollie Stonington and Sky Woodhull on the second line. QUADRANGULAR LEAGUE STANDING Won Lost Harvard 4 2 Dartmouth 3 3 Princeton 3 3 Yale 2 4 HOCKEY MAJOR SPORT CAPTAINS, 1926-1937 ' 26 Burton F. Wilkinson ' 27 Austin D. S. Davis ' 28 Joseph C. Rennard ' 29 Graham Jones ' 30 Warren S. Adams ' 31 Robert C. Livingstone ' 32 William W. Barber, Jr. ' 33 Hugh K. Boice, Jr. ' 34 Henry A. Thouron ' 35 - Erie B. Savage, Jr. ' 36 George K. Willis ' 37 John T. Bissell One Hundred Thirty F. D. Sauter, ' 37 H. A. MacMillan, ' 36 R. L. Nevitt, ' 36 S. L. Ridolfi, ' 36 BASKETBALL BACK ROW: Milner (Mgr.), Meyer, Vruwink, Sandbach, Fairman (Coach). FRONT ROW: Tilden, Sauter, MacMilian (Copt.), Nevitt, Ridolfi. Varsity Basketball OFFICERS, 1935-1936 H. A. MacMilian, ' 36 Captain B. C. Milner, III, ' 36 Manager T. C. Werbe, Jr., ' 37 Assistant Manager F. B. Smith, II, ' 37 Assistant Manager R. K. Fairman, ' 34 Coach TEAM R. L. Nevitt, ' 36 W. T. Tilden, III, ' 36.. J. H. Vruwink, ' 38 E. K. Sandbach, ' 37.. I. C. Appel, ' 38 C. H. Toll, Jr., ' 38.. ..Forward ..Forward ..Forward ..ForiArard F. D. Sauter, ' 37 H. A. MacMilian, ' 36.. R. F. Meyer, ' 38 S. L. Ridolfi, ' 36 ..Center .-Guard ..Guard ..Guard Date Score Dec. 7, 1935 Princeton 39 Dec. 11, 1935 Princeton 30 Dec. 14, 1935 Princeton 32 Dec. 17, 1935 Princeton 25 Dec. 19, 1935 Princeton 28 Jan. 2, 1936 Princeton 34 Jan. 4, 1936 Princeton 30 Jan. 8, 1936 Princeton 22 Jan. 11, 1936 Princeton 38 Jan. 14, 1936 Princeton 26 Jan. 18, 1936 Princeton 31 One Hundred Thirty-two SUBSTITUTES Forward D. A. Scott, ' 38 Forward E. J. Kauffman, ' 38,. RECORD Score ..Center .-Guard Opponent Drexel 25 Lafayette 21 Rutgers 29 Rider 19 Williams 41 N. Y. U 60 Syracuse 55 Columbia 32 Cornell 30 Duke 40 Harvard 32 Mar. 14, 1936 Princeton 21 Date Score Feb. 6, 1936 Princeton 26 Feb. 8, 1936 Princeton 33 Feb. 12, 1936 Princeton 29 Feb. 15, 1936 Princeton 33 Feb. 19, 1936 Princeton 30 Feb. 22, 1936 Princeton 44 Feb. 26, 1936 Princeton .30 Feb. 29, 1936 Princeton .34 Mar. 4, 1936 Princeton 12 Mar. 7, 1936 Princeton 40 Mar. 11, 1936 Princeton 37 Pennsylvania 44 Opponent Score Temple 45 Rutgers 44 Yale 20 Harvard 27 C. C. N. Y 36 Yale 47 Columbia -36 Dartmouth 24 Pennsylvania 20 Dartmouth 48 Cornell 27 Review of the Season While the records show a slightly better average than that compiled by last year ' s quintet, the 1935-36 basketball season, which marked the coaching debut of Ken Fairman, ' 34, cannot be termed a successful one. Five victories as against seven defeats landed the team in fifth place in the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League and contributed towards a total of nine wins and fourteen losses. It was an indisputably hard schedule that the Tigers faced, games with outfits of the caliber of N. Y. U., Syracuse, Duke, Temple and C. C. N. Y. coming up with monotonous regularity to plague the Orange and Black ' s winning percentage. The league offered stiff competition too, with Paul Mooney ' s Columbia Lions blossoming forth as one of the East ' s leading teams, ably seconded by Lon Jourdet ' s Penn juggernaut. The tendency is, however, to level too harsh judgment against the Princeton forces. For while some contests saw slipshod, ragged play by the Nassau contingent, many more were able testi- mony to a fighting, determined quintet which made excellent showings against teams out of its class, while handicapped by the belated appearance of some players and beset by injuries to others. Captain MacMillan missed the season ' s initial encounter and Ken Sandbach, a star in ' 34- ' 35, was out for half the season resting after a strenuous football campaign. Bud Sauter, veteran center, Johnny Vruwink, sensational Sophomore forward, and MacMillan were among those on the shel f with injuries at one time or another. Bright points of the season centered around the play of Sophomores Vruwink and Dick Meyer and the rejuvenation of Rabbit Nevitt. Vruwink, Albany Academy alumnus, displayed marked scoring ability, while Meyer, taking over a guard post after the N. Y. U. fracas, performed smartly for the remainder of the year. Nevitt, handi- capped by his lack of height, amply made up for this deficiency with a fiery, inspired brand of play that was invaluable to the sometimes lethar- gic quintet. Captain MacMillan provided an effective counterbalance to the inexperience of the Sopho- more members of the outfit with his cool, heady leadership. Bill Tilden climaxed his career in an Orange and Black uniform by leading the team in scoring with a 148-point total in twenty-two contests for an average of 6.7 points per gome. By tallying 89 of these markers in the league fight, he annexed third place in the scoring. Ken Sandbach played a fine game at both guard and forward although his lateness in reporting was a severe handicap to the team. Bud Sauter, after a fine season at center where he played practically every minute of every game, was elected cap- tain for the ' 36- ' 37 campaign. The curtain-raiser found a weak Drexel five succumbing, 39-25, and Lafayette was added to the list of victims, falling before the Tigers, 30-2 1 . Impetus was added to a successful start when Rutgers ' tough outfit was downed, 32-29, on the Tigers ' court. Avenging a defeat of the year pre- vious, the Bengals made it four straight by trouncing Rider, 25-19. A disastrous road trip over the Christmas vaca- tion saw the Orange and Black drop three in a row, starting with Williams, which won, 41-28. N. Y. U. ' s superb outfit routed the Nassau forces, 60-34, in a game which unveiled the scoring potentialities of Dick Meyer, who tallied 14 points. Up-State, the Syracuse Orange tumbled Coach Fairman ' s charges, 55-30. After the holidays, league play swung under way with Columbia taking the first encounter, 32-22, mainly by virtue of a second-half spurt engineered by the scintil- lating captain of the Light Blue, Bill Nash. Ona Hundred Thirty-three Review of the Season (Continued) Snapping out of this four game losing streak, the Tigers conquered Cornell, 38-30, but bowed before Duke ' s Blue Devils, 40-26, in an intersec- tional clash. Harvard next pulled a surprise win over the Orange and Black at Cambridge, 32-31, this defeat being followed by losses to Temple, 45-26, and Rutgers, 44-33, in a return engagement. The Nassau forces improved their league standing by successive wins over Yale, 29-20, and Harvard, 33-27. But after a non-league encounter with Nat Holman ' s clever C. C. N. Y. club which Princeton lost by a scant margin, 36-30, the Tigers tumbled out of second place by losses sustained at the hands of Yale, 47-44, and Columbia, 36-30, in a battle that was sent into overtime and ultimately clinched by that perpet- ual thorn in the side. Bill Nash. The Orange and Black then broke into the win column again with a smartly executed triumph over Dolly Stark ' s Dartmouth Indians. Penn was hard pressed to take the first meeting of these teams, 20-12, while Dartmouth wreaked sweet revenge by taking the Bengals into camp at Hanover, 48-40. After a second victory over Cor- nell, 37-27, the Tigers journeyed to the Palestra in an effort to snap the jinx exercised by Penn for the past few years. Their hopes were futile, however, for the Red and Blue crashed through, 44-21, to end the season. The only man to place on the All-League teams picked by the seven coaches at the close of the year, was Bill Tilden, who won a forward berth on the second five. Captain MacMillan, Rabbit Nevitt and Ken Sandbach were given honorable mention. INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING, 1935-1936 Won Columbia 12 Pennsylvania 7 Dartmouth 6 Yale 6 Princeton 5 Cornell 3 Harvard 3 Lost P. C. 1.000 5 .583 6 .500 6 .500 7 .417 9 .250 9 .250 •29.. ' 30.. ■3L. ■32.. BASKETBALL MAJOR SPORT CAPTAINS, 1929-1937 Oliver E, Miles ' 33.. ..Edward O. Wittmer ' 34.. Paul I. Carey ' 35.. ..Lloyd E. Rosenbaum ' 36.. Geoffrey W. Helm ..R. Kenneth Fairman -John L. Grebauskcs -Hugh A. MacMillan ' 37.. ..Frederick D. Saute One Hundred Thirty-four J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 S. F.Medina, ' 37 H, V. Hogan, ' 36 W. E. Fackert, Jr., ' 36 TRACK TOP ROW: Mahnken (Asst. Coach), du Flon, Buckman, Toll, Scott, White, Cummings (Asst. Mgr.) SECOND ROW: Don (Asst. Mgr.), Wilson, Way, Johnston, Bradley, Carver, Geis Coach ) . FRONT ROW: Keorny, Wenzell, Irwin, Hogan ) Capt. ) , Packer t, Furlong, Medina. Varsity Track OFFICERS H. V. Hogan, ' 36..... ..Captain D. G. Greene, ' 36 Manager W. C. Cummin gs, Jr., ' 37 Assistant Manager S. W. Don, ' 37 Assistant Manager M. T. Geis ..Coach TEAM P. B. Bradley, ' 38 I. E. Furlong, ' 36 C. H. Kearney, ' 37 J. A. C. Weller, ' 36 J. H. Buckman, ' 37 E G. Grace, ' 37 S. F. Medina, ' 37 L. P. Wenzel, Jr., ' 36 L. A. Carver, ' 38 H. V. Hogan, ' 36 D. A. Scott, ' 38 I. H. White, ' 38 H. A. du Flon, ' 37 J. N. Irwin, III, ' 37 C. H. Toll, ' 38 Kemble White, Jr., ' 38 W. E. Fackert, ' 36 A. R. Johnson, ' 37 P. M. Way, ' 38 W W. Wilson, ' 38 One Hundred Thirty-six Review of the Season Not a single meet victory came home to roost with the 1936 Varsity track team but on the basis of individual performances the season was very far from being a failure. Led by Captain-elect Jack Irwin, Stan Medina, Pete Bradley and Bill Fackert, Coach Matty Geis ' s squad can show a very respectable account book: two all-time Princeton records set, one first place in the Penn Relays, two firsts in the Heptagonals, and the first IC4A title won by a Nassau cinderman since 1934. Insufficient practice because of the New Jersey spring rains hindered the team in its opening meet with Navy on April 18. The contest at Annapolis, incidentally, inaugurated track rela- tions with the Middies. Five Princeton firsts against the strong Navy team showed definite promise, but Captain Joe Patterson carried the sailors through to a 67-59 victory in the final events. Jack Irwin broke into the headlines a week later with a spectacular first place in the 400- meter hurdles in the Penn Relays. Hank duFlon was a step behind his teammate as he hit the tape. Ted Way ' s third in the broad jump was the Irwin Winning 220 Low Hurdles Agoinst Cornell. only other Tiger contribution to the two-day carnival. Cornell came to town on May 2 for the only home meet of the spring. With the feminine touch of a houseparty crowd to inspire them, the Big Red and Tiger trackmen smashed five meet records and staged a very exciting even if not very close meet. Bill Fackert hurtled out 24 ft. AVz in. to break his own University broad jump record by more than seven inches in the most brilliant single performance of the day. Jack Irwin won the low hurdles and took two seconds, while Stan Medina scored in the pole vault at 13 ft. 4 in. But Cornell swept the dash and dis- tance events to roll up an 81 to 53 triumph. In the Heptagonals at Cambridge Pete Bradley gained revenge for his defeat by Cornell ' s half- miler Johnny Meaden the week before, slamming home in a sensational finish to nip Meaden by a foot. He hit the tape in 1 :53.5, only five-tenths of a second behind Bill Bonthron ' s all-time Univer- sity mark. Bradley ' s first was the only Tiger win as Jack Irwin nicked the last barrier in the low One Hundred Thirty-seven Review of the Season (Continued) hurdles and gave Milt Green of Harvard just enough extra yardage to win. Medina tied with his perennial rival, Bill Harding of Yale, in the pole vault. When Yale won the 1935 Priceton meet by the score of 68 to 67, the spectators shook their heads and agreed that a few more meets of that kind and track would be throttled by law as a menace to public peace and calm. But the 1935 meet looked like a rout compared to the epic battle staged at New Haven on May 16 of this season, when Captain Henny Hogan ' s Tigers finally suc- cumbed by 67- 3 to 67 ' . The lead changed hands six times during the afternoon and not until Bob Millett pounded to the tape for Yale in the last event, the 200-meter dash, were things finally decided. Princeton took eight firsts to Yale ' s seven but seconds and thirds told the tale. Jack Irwin and Pete Bradley each scored double wins, in the hurdles and middle distance events respec- tively, while Medina and Johnny Weller in the discus also captured first places. One new University mark and an intercolle- giate title resulted from Princeton ' s efforts in the IC4A meet on May 29-30. Johnny Weller heaved the discus 142 ft. 6Vi in. at Franklin Field to smash the old Princeton record by nearly four feet, though he failed to place in the money. Stan Medina, however, surpassed his best pre- vious effort in the pole vault by two inches as he sailed over the bar at 13 ft. 6 in. to beat out Harding and take a title, Princeton ' s first in two years. Jack Irwin drew the graveyard lane next to the wall in the finals of the low hurdles and lost out by a foot to Jack Donovan of Dart- mouth. Tad Way and Pete Bradley also placed for the Tigers with fourths in the broad jump and 800-meter run respectively. As a result of the 1936 showing Princeton ' s hopes for the coming season can reasonably be set fairly high. Returning will be Irwin, duFlon and Ken White to handle the hurdles; Cress Kearny, Al Newton and Bill Wilson in the dashes; Pete Bradley in the middle distance runs; Medina in the pole vault; Way in the broad jump and Dave Scott in the high jump to form a sizable nucleus of experienced veterans. With capable additions from the 1939 Freshman squad in the offing, the 1937 track team looks ready for action. One Hundred Thirty-eight Navy-Princeton Track Meet ANNAPOLIS, APRIL 18, 1936 Event First Second Third 100-Yard Dash Dalton (N) Morgan (N) Wilson (P) 0:9.7 220-Yard Dash Dalton (N) Morgan (N) Rich (N) 0:22 .. 440- Yard Run Kearny (P) Cutts (N) Furlong (P) 0:50.4 Time, Height or Distance Points 880-Yard Run Brodley (P) Woodruff (N) Shetenhelm (N) 2:00 4 Mile Run Shetenhelm (N) Hogan (P) Carver (P) 4:35.5 5 Two-Mile Run Stuessi (N) Rosengarten (P) Parsons (P) 10:10 5 120-Yard High Hurdles Jrwin (P) duFlon (P) Dalton (N) 0:15.4 1 220-Yard Low Hurdles Patterson (N) Irwin (P) duFlon (P) 0:24.5 5 Discus Throw Lynch (N) Swiderski (N) Bryan (P) 122 ft. 2 in 8 Javelin Throw Bell (N) Gray (N) Foran (P) 176 ft. 6 in 8 Shot Put Lynch (N) Buckman (P) Pike (N) - 43 ft. 3 in 6 Broad Jump Patterson (N) Way (P) Fackert (P) 22 ft. 10% in 5 High Jump i Wenzell (P) Fackert (P) 5 ft. 10 Scott (P) S Pole Vault Medina (P).. (Patterson (P) ) jg ft. 6 in.. I Kelley (P) 67 P 1 6 5 4 4 8 4 1 1 3 4 9 9 59 Cornell-Princeton Track Meet PALMER STADIUM, MAY 2, 1936 Time, Height or Distance Points C P Event First Second Third 100-Yard Dash Scallan (C) Irwin (P) Wilson (P) 0:10.1 5 4 220- Yard Dash Scallan (C) Tatum (C) Kearny (P) 0:21.5 8 1 440-Yard Run Linders (C) Kearny (P) Furl ong (P) 0:49.0 5 4 880-Yard Run Meaden (C) Bradley (P) Hogan (P) 1:56.8 5 4 One-Mile Run Meaden {C)... Hogan (P) Mezitt (C) 4:27.0 6 3 Two-Mile Run Welch (C) Cornell (C) Bassett (C) 9:50.4 , 9 120-Yard High Hurdles Godley (C) Irwin (P) DuFlon (P) 0:15.4 5 4 220-Yard Low Hurdles Irwin (P) Messersmith (C) DuFlon (P) 0:23.0 3 6 Running Broad Jump Fackert (P) Clausen (C) W.ay (P) 24 ft. 4V ' 2 in 3 6 (Scott (P) Running High Jump Fackert (P) Wenzell (P ■.6 ft W, iVi I. Scott (C) S Discus Wood (C) Weller (P) Houpt (C) 155 ft. 1 in 6 3 Javelin Hooper (C) Houpt (C) Johnston (P) 193 ft. 7% in 8 1 Shot Put V ood (C) Houpt (C) Buckman (P) 48 ft. 3 in 8 I Hammer Throw Leone (C) Grace (P) Shoemaker (C) 155 ft. 7 in 6 3 Pole Vault Medina (P! ... Price (C) . Rainear (P) 13 ft. 4 in 3 6 iWi 53 J , One Hundred Thirty-nine Yale-Princeton Track Meet Medina Clearing 13 Feet Against Yale. Yale-Princeton Track Meet NEW HAVEN, MAY 16, 1936 Time, Height or Distance Event First Second Third 100-Meter Dash Millelt (Y) Wilson (P). J. H. White (P) .0:10.9 5 200-Meter Dash . Millett (Y) Kearny (P) Burlingame (Y) 0:21.6 6 400-Meter Run Kearny (P) Bums (Y) _ Alofsin (Y) 0:50.3 -. 4 800-Meter Run Bradley (P) Congdon (Y) ..Michaels (Y) 1:57.2 4 1,500-Meter Run Bradley (P) Woodland (Y) Hogan (P) .....4:01.6 3 3,000-Meter Run Woodland (Y) Fox (Y) Carver (P)... 9:08.9 8 110-Meter High Hurdles Irwin (P) .K. White (P) Zellner (Y) 0:15.4 1 200-Meter Low Hurdles..... Irwin (P) Raymond (P) duFlon (P) 0:23.5 3 Discus Throw „.,Weller (P) Lassiter (Y) Jones (Y) 135 ft. IIV2 in 4 Javelin Throw Wright (Y) Mills (Y) Johnston (P) 181 ft. 9 in 8 Hammer Throw Loeb (Y) ...Castle (Y) Grace (P) 169 ft. 6V2 in 8 Shot Put _.Train (Y) Buckman (P) Toll (P) 43 ft. BYa in 5 Broad Jump Ritzman (Y) - ackert (P) Way (P) 23 ft. 3 ' 2 in 5 High Jump... (Fackert (P) Wenzell (P) 5 ft. 11 in Scott (P) Pole Vault Medina (P) Campbell (Y) ioMacMY) 1 13 ■3 in 3J SVi ' Harding (Y) } 67- , 6754 One Hundred Forty Second Annual Heptagonal Games 110-METER HIGH HURDLES 1. Green, Harvard 0:14.6 2. Donovan, Dartmouth 3. Ladendorf, Pennsylvania 4. Godley, Cornell 5. Moore, Yale 200-METER LOW HURDLES 1. Green, Harvard 0:23.5 2. Inwin, Princeton 3. Donovan, Dartmouth 4. Mitchell, Dartmouth 5. Mills, Yale 100-METER DASH 1. Downer, Harvard 2. Johnson, Dartmouth 3. Scrwyer, Pennsylvania 4. Cretzmeyer, Harvard 5. Mills, Yale 800-METER RUN 1. Bradley, Princeton .0:10.7 .1:53.5 2. Meaden, Cornell 3. Macintosh, Columbia 4. Hoffstetter, Dartmouth 5. Engblom,_ Pennsylvania 1,500 METER RUN 1. Venzke, Pennsylvania ... 2. Northrop, Harvard 3. Ouilan, Columbia 4. Nugent, Princeton 5. Crowfdery, Columbia ..3:52.6 CAMBRIDGE, MAY 9, 1936 3,000-METER RUN Woodland, Yale .. Cornell, Cornell Marcy, Harvard Welch, Cornell Wilson, Columbia 400-METER RELAY 1. Dartmouth 2. Harvard 3. Cornell 4. Princeton 5. Columbia 1,600 METER RELAY ..0:41.8 1. Dartmouth 2. Harvard 3. Pennsylvania 4. Yale 5. Cornell .3:18.2 BROAD JUMP Green, Harvard Fackert, Princeton Ritzman, Yale Clausen, Cornell Way, Princeton ..24 ' % DISCUS THROW 1. Wood, Cornell 2. Millard, Harvard 3. Herrick, Harvard 4. Lassiter, Yale 5. Johnson, Dartmouth .150 ' 6 ' 4 JAVELIN THROW ..8:49.9 1. Johnson, Harvard 202 ' 5% 2. King. Pennsylvania 3. Houpt, Cornell 4. Hooper, Cornell 5. Ryan, Columbia SHOT PUT 1. Geniaviricz, Dartmouth 49 ' 4% 2. Wood, Cornell 3. Houpt, Cornell 4. Litman, Harvard 5. Ryan, Columbia J HIGH JUMP I. Hall, Harvard.. .6 ' 2 2. Godley, Cornell 2. Scott, Cornell 2. Dillingham, Columbia 2. Enrich, Columbia 2. Cuffe, Dartmouth HAMMER THROW 1. Castle, Yale 2. Cahners, Harvard 3. Loeb, Yale 4. Leone, Cornell 5. Brennan, Harvard POLE VAULT 1. Haading, Yale 2. Medina, Princeton 3. Buster, Dartmouth 1 3. Wharton, Dartmouth | 3. Dubiel, Harvard 3. MacNab, Cornell 3. Campbell, Yale Quintuple Tie for Second Place .163 ' r .13 ' Quintuple Tie for Third Place POINT STANDING (6-4-3-2-1 Basis) 1. Harvard GSH 2. Cornell 45J 3. Dartmouth SB ' Ms 4. Yale 31 J 5. Princeton 31 6. Pennsylvania 20 7. Columbia 1154 One Hundred Forty-one Third Annual Invitation Track Meet PRINCETON, JUNE 13, 1936 QUARTER-MILE RUN 1. James E. LuValle, U. C. L. A 2. John Hoffstetter, Dartmouth 3. Edward T. O ' Brien, Syracuse 4. Ray ElUnwood, Chicago 5. Robert Sawyer, Pennsylvania HALF-MILE RUN 1. Lou Burns, Manhattan College 2. Charles C. Hornbostel, Evansville, Ind. 3. Harry W. Williamson, High Point, N. C. 4. Peter B. Bradley, Princeton 5. John J. Wolff, Manhattan ONE-MILE RUN 1. Gene Venzke, Pennsylvania - 2. Glenn Cunningham, Elkhart, Kansas 3. William Daly, University of Detroit 4. William R. Bonthron, New York A. C. 5. William J. Ray, Manhattan TWO-MILE RUN Winners I. Donald R. Lash, Indiana , Time ,.0:47.1 .1:55.3 ..4:13.4 Time ..8:58.3 2. Norman Bright, Olympic Club 3. Joseph P. McCIuskey, New York A. C. 4. Raymond Sears, Butler University 5. Frank Crowley, New York A. C. -.0:14.6 Losh Breaking World ' s Two-Mile Record. 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES 1. Forrest Towns, Georgia 2. Sam Allen, Oklahoma Baptist 3. Philip Good, Bowdoin 4. Alvin C. Moreau, Opelousas (La.) K. of C. 400-METER LOW HURDLES 1. Glenn F. Hardin, Louisiana State University 0:52.3 2. Robert Osgood, University of Michigan 3. John N, Irv in, II, Princeton 4. J. Hamilton Hucker, New York A. C. Winners 1. 2. 3. HIGH JUMP Height Cornelius Johnson, Compton Junior College.. 6 ' 8 Edward Burke, Marguette 6 ' 6 Tie between George Spitz, Nev York A. C, and AI Threadgill, Temple University 6 ' 4 Tie between Walter Marty, Fresno State College, and Harold Osborn, Philadelphia 6 ' 2 ' 2 Indiana ' s Don Lash provided the climax of the Invitation Meet as he ran in a steady fall of rain to a new world ' s record in the two-mile event before a vast throng of cheering spectators. His time, 8:58.3, eclipsed by 1.3 seconds the old world ' s record of 8:59.6 made by Paavo Nurmi at Helsinki in 1931. Jimmy LuValle captured the quarter-mile in 47.1 seconds, while the favored Eddie O ' Brien could do no better than third be- hind John Hoffstetter of Dartmouth. Gene Venzke bested his erstwhile rivals in the mile in the com- paratively good time of 4:13.4. Glenn Cunning- ham took second and Bill Bonthron finished in fourth place. Lou Burns won the half-mile, fol- lowed by Chuck Hornbostel in the runner-up posi- tion. The favorites, Forrest Towns and Glenn Hardin, each took first place in the 120-yard high hurdles and the 400-meter low hurdles respec- tively. The latter event was run for the first time at an invitation meet. Cornelius Johnson, the Negro ace from Compton Junior College, won the high jump at 6 feet, 8 inches, beating his nearest rival, Ed Burke, by two inches. Johnson ' s at- tempted try at a new world ' s record failed. Two Princeton undergraduates participated in the meet. Jack Irwin, ' 37, took third in the 400-meter low hurdles, and Pete Bradley, ' 38, finished fourth in the half-mile. One Hundred Forty-two Track Captains, 1873-1937 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 J. H. Van Deventer, in the seasons of 1873 and 1874; the first Captain was T. B. Hamilton, in the 1888 season. 1873-74 J. H. Van Deventer, 74 1875 Frank Dunning, ' 76 1876-77 J. A. Campbell, 77 1878 Henry Marquand, 78 1879 C. H. Dodge, 79 1880 H. M. Cutts, ' 80 1881 F. G. London, ' 81 1888 T. B. Hamilton, ' 88 1889 H. H. Janeway, ' 90 1890 W. S. Dohm, ' 90 1891 J. S. Roddy, ' 91 1892 Peter Vredenburgh, II, ' 92 1893 W. B. Woodbridge, ' 93 1894 G. R. Swain, ' 94 1895 D. R. James, ' 95 1896-97 Robert Garrett, ' 97 1898 H. C. Potter, ' 98 1899-00 J. F. Cregan, ' 99 1901-02 A. W. Coleman, ' 02 1903 D. S. Horton, ' 03 1904 L. M. Adsit, ' 04 1905 R. E. Williams, ' 05 1906-07 W. M. Armstrong, ' 07 1908 J. C. Atlee, ' 08 1909 R. A. Gamble, ' 09 1910 ]. T. Moore, ' 10 1911 Maitland Dwight, ' 11 1912 H. M. Sawyer, ' 12 1913 R. B. Thomas, Jr., ' 13 PRESIDENTS 1882 George Westervelt, ' 82 1883 W. C. Osborne, ' 83 1884 A. G. Fell, ' 84 1885 J. B. Harriman, ' 85 1886 G. B, McClellan, ' 86 1887 W. M. Spalding, ' 87 1888 F. S. Thompson, ' 88 CAPTAINS 1914 Torrence Fiske, ' 14 1915 I. D. MacKenzie, ' 15 1916- 17 W. B. Moore, ' 17 1918 J. H. Barrett, ' 18 92 1919- 20 C. R. Erdman, Jr., ' 19 1921 R. M. McCulloch, ' 21 1922 W. E. Stevenson, ' 22 1923 S. H. Thompson, ' 23 1924 H. C. Emery, ' 24 1925 R. G. Hills, ' 25 1926 C. F. Gates, Jr., ' 26 1927 S. R. Bradley, ' 27 1928 L. S. Jadwin, ' 28 1929 William Healy, ' 29 1930 B. V. D. Hedges, Jr., ' 30 1931 Julius Byles, ' 31 1932 H. P. Dawson, ' 32 1933 D. D. Johnson, ' 33 1934 W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1935 J. A. McWilliams, ' 35 1936 H. V. Hogan, ' 36 1937 J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 One Hundred Foify-three Princeton Track Records Event Record 100-Yard Dash 9.8 sec. Holder Year : J. H. Rush, ' 98 1898 F. W. larvis, ' 00 1899 C. R. McKim, ' 24 1923 100-Meter Dash 10.6 sec D. D. Johnson, ' 33 1933 220-Yard Dash 21 sec H. H. Derby, ' 32 1932 200-Meter Dash 21 sec H. H. Derby, ' 32 1932 440- Yard Run 48.6 sec H. H. Derby, ' 32 1932 400-Meter Run 48.6 sec H. H. Derby, ' 32 1932 880-Yard Run 1 rnin. 53 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1933 800-Meter Run 1 min, 53 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1933 1-Mile Run 4 min. 8.7 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1933 1-Mile Run (Indoors) 4 min. 14 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1934 1500-Meter Run 3 min. 48.8 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1934 1500-Meter Run (Indoors) 3 rain. 52.3 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1934 2-Mile Run 9 min. 25.9 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1932 3000-Meter Run 8 min. 53.8 sec W. R. Bonthron, ' 34 1933 120-Yard High Hurdles 15 sec B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 1929 C. W. L. Summerill, ' 32 1932 110-Meter High Hurdles 15.2 sec G. J. Willock, ' 35 1933 220-Yard Low Hurdles 23.5 sec. 200-Meter Low Hurdles 23.6 sec. High Jump_ 6 ft. iVi in - Broad Jump 23 ft. 8% in Pole Vault 13 ft. 9 in J. A. McWilliams, ' 35, Shot Put 50 ft. % in R. G. Hills, ■25... I. N. Irwin, II, ' 37... 1936 J. C. Taylor, ' 23 1923 C. E. Scarlett, ' 32 1932 B. V. D. Hedges, ' 30 1929 W. E. Fackert, Jr., ' 36 1936 1934 1925 Hammer Throw 185 ft. 9 in Discus Throw 142 ft, 6 ' 4 in.... Javelin Throw 199 ft. 11% in.. I. R. Dewitt, ' 04 I. A. C. Weller, ' 36.. M. T. Gibson, ' 26 1903 1936 1925 One Hundred Forty-four E. R. Novak, ' 38 Dean Hill, Jr., ' 37 R. R. French, ' 36 R. P. Bell, ' 37 BASEBALL TOP ROW: Hill, Morris, Bell. THIRD ROW: Bissell, Eno lAsst. Coach I , Johnson, Underwood, Hare, Noval , Klie, Hoffman. SECOND ROW: Fallon, Chubet, Paine, Masset, Rice, Sandboch. FRONT ROW: Perry, Brown, Lynn, French (Copt.), Clarke, (Coachi, Spencer, Willis. Varsity Baseball OFFICERS R. H. French, ' 36 Captain R. O. Jones, ' 36 Manager T. H. Brown, Jr., ' 38 Assistant Manager Guilford Jones, Jr., ' 38 Assistant Manager W. J. Clarke Coach Amos Eno Assistant Coach F. B. Johnson, ' 36 R. P. Bell, ' 37 I. H. Morris, ' 37 John Reichel, Jr., ' 36-. W. G. Fallon, Jr., ' 38... E. K. Scindbach, ' 37... Date Mar. 27 Mar. 28 Mar. 30 Mar. 31 Apr. 1 Apr. 4 Apr. 15 Apr. 18 Apr. 22 Apr. 25 Apr. 25 Apr. 28 Apr. 30 Score Princeton 8 Princeton 1 Princeton 3 Princeton 10 Princeton 12 Princeton 10 Princeton 3 Princeton 2 Princeton 3 Princeton 2 Princeton 3 Princeton 4 Princeton 5 Eastern Intercolleg TEAM Catcher Pitcher Pitcher Pitcher First Base Second Base RECORD Opponent Score Panzer Fordham 2 Long Island U 8 Williams 17 Williams 12 C. C. N. Y 7 Lafayette 5 Harvard 9 Columbia 7 Cornell 6 Cornell 1 Alumni 2 Penn 4 iate League Game. R. H. French, ' 36 H. B. Lynn, ' 36 J. P. Chubet, III, ' 37.. R. L. Nevitt, ' 36 G. F. Brown, ' 36 Dean Hill, Jr., ' 37 ....Third Base Short Stop ...Right Field ..Center Field ....Right Field Left Field Score Dote May 2 Princeton.... May 5 Princeton.... May 6 Princeton... May 9 Princeton.... May 9 Princeton.... May 12 Princeton.... May 14 Princeton.... May 16 Princeton May 23 Princeton May 30 Princeton June 6 Princeton June 10 Princeton June 13 Princeton. Princeton — Won Opponent Score Harvard 13 Duke 6 N. Y. U 1 Dartmouth 5 Dartmouth 4 Rutgers 10 Rutgers 2 8 Penn 9 5 Navy I Columbia I 8 Yale 3 4 Waseda 5 6 Yale 13 10, Lost 15, Tied I. EASTERN INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDINGS Team Won Lost % Harvard 9 2 .800 Dartmouth 8 4 .667 Penn 6 5 .545 Yale 5 5 .500 One Hundred Forty-six Team Won Lost % Princeton 5 7 .417 Columbia 3 6 .333 Cornell 2 8 .200 Review of the Season Coach Bill Clarke, returning to Princeton to start his twenty-eighth year of coaching Nassau nines, had a problem on his hands when he set out to form the 1936 baseball team, and that problem was lack of pitchers. Shorty Morris, leading twirler of the 1935 ball outfit, had a bad knee that was to trouble him throughout the season, and that left the whole burden on Dick Bell. As for the rest of the team, the outlook was brighter. Cap- tain Bobby French could be counted upon to play heads-up ball on third during the season and returning lettermen Ken Sandbach, Dick Perry, Jack Chubet, Garry LeVan, Rabbitt Nevitt, Dean Hill and Dale Rice were on hand to start spring practice. During the spring, Ed Spencer proved himself to be a first baseman of the highest qual- ity, and Bill Fallon, a Sophomore, showed by his play that he would fill the position capably in the future. To round out the nine, Frank Johnston and Johnny Reichel alternated at catcher ' s position. Reichel was eventually converted by Coach Clarke into a pitcher to help the mound situation. The team got under way slowly, and during the spring vacation Fordham, L. I. U. and Wil- liams downed the Tigers in quick succession; Princeton then tied Williams in a frenzied 12-12 encounter. First victory for the Tigers came when they won over C. C. N. Y., 10 to 7, on University Field, and beset by rain, finally got back on schedule to defeat Panzer a week later. Lafayette was the next to trim the Nassau ball club and the play of Sandbach and Spencer were the high features of the game for Princeton. A losing streak let the powerful Harvard nine, in the first Princeton league battle of the season, easily rout Princeton, 9 to 2. The Columbia contest fol- lowed hard on the heels of the Cantab victory and Princeton again came out on the short end of the score to the tune of 7 to 3. This week showed the Tigers playing their poorest ball of the year and the spell was finally broken when the Prince- otn outfit, at Ithaca, dropped the first contest of a double-header but came back in the nightcap to win its first league battle. The Alumni were victims of an aroused Tiger, and Princeton two days later eked out a 5-4 win over Penn. Hugh Lynn, Tiger short stop, drove in the winning run to end a sensational eleven- inning encounter. Harvard again conquered the Princeton nine at Cambridge. Duke, boasting a strong aggregation, repeated the trick the same week in a close game and N. Y. U. was defeated, 5 to 1. Princeton split a twin bill with the Dartmouth Indians and Rutgers downed the Nassau nine twice in succession. Penn got even with Prince- ton when the Quakers in their home town won by a 9-8 score. High point of the year for Princeton came when Navy, with Princeton ' s Bell pitching a wonderful game, Columbia and Yale were conquered and during this period the team showed elements of greatness. A travelling team from Waseda Uni- versity, Japan, stopped long enough to break the victory streak and added a hard-fought win to its list of American conquests. The Yale game, traditionally held on Alumni day, was played on a muddy field with rain fall- ing intermittently. In one bad early inning, enough Yale men slipped and slid home to de- cide the contest. Princeton ' s rally late in the con- test was not enough to save the game for the alumni, and the final score read 13 to 6 in favor of the Elis. The Tigers won ten games, tied one and dropped fifteen more. Ending up in fifth place in the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League, Princeton was fifth also in the league batting and fielding statistics. Rabbitt Nevitt, whose play was a redeeming feature of an otherwise uninspiring season, was rated sixth leading batter. He gar- nered a place on the all league nine. One Hundred Forty-seven Official Baseball Averages for 1936 BATTING Name Bafs G AB R H Novak R 8 12 4 6 Nevitt L 23 79 19 28 French R 27 97 17 33 Klie R 1 3 1 1 Hill R 16 61 8 19 Lynn R 21 60 10 18 Chubrt R 21 77 8 21 FaUon - R 16 59 9 16 Rice R 16 49 3 13 Sandbach - R 25 78 25 19 Paine R 15 38 5 9 Johnston - - R 20 66 8 15 Spencer R 10 28 4 6 Masset R 10 24 4 5 Brown L 18 59 11 12 LeVan R 7 31 8 5 Morris R 10 19 3 Bissel R 7 7 1 WiUis L 3 7 1 1 Bell - R 13 33 2 4 Reichel R 13 23 1 2 Perry L 5 15 Underwood R 3 3 2 Pyle R 1 2 Hare R 1 1 Elkins R 1 Barnes R 1 C TEAM TB 7 33 41 1 23 21 28 20 18 29 14 22 7 8 15 6 5 1 1 4 2 2B 1 3 2 2 1 3 2 1 2 2 2 1 1 2 3B 1 3 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 HR 2 1 1 I 1 BB 1 13 17 2 9 7 3 1 19 5 4 4 4 8 1 1 2 5 HP 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 so 8 I 14 17 11 10 10 18 7 8 5 3 8 2 4 1 1 8 4 2 2 2 SH 3 2 1 2 3 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 SB 1 9 1 1 1 3 2 6 2 4 cs 2 1 1 1 3 1 2 1 1 RBI 4 10 20 9 11 9 10 2 18 6 10 1 5 3 2 2 1 2 1 Ave. .500 .354 .340 .333 .311 .300 .272 .271 .265 .244 .237 . 227 .214 .208 .203 .160 .158 .143 .143 .121 .083 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 27 928 150 236 305 25 13 6 106 10 146 26 30 13 15 125 .254 PITCHING Nome Th Reichel R Bell R Bissell -. R Morris R Chubet R Elkins L Fallon R Pyle L Hare R Barnes R French R II 14 7 10 2 CG TO FG IP 58 fS 96 3 22 3 44 4 2% 3 3 3 3 W 3 5 2 1 Ave. ShO BFP H TR ER SH BB SO HB WP Bk ER Ave. .750 .556 .500 .167 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 271 40 34 17 422 97 56 27 103 21 12 10 200 57 36 26 19 16 11 15 13 3 3 45 20 39 44 15 15 13 26 4 1 2.61 2.51 3.97 5.32 6.75 6.75 27.00 9.00 0.00 81.00 0.00 FIELDING FIRST BASEMEN Th G PC A E TC Rice R 1 3 3 Perry L 5 32 1 1 34 Spencer R 11 78 8 4 90 Fallon R 15 120 4 6 130 SECOND BASEMEN Chubet R 4 12 6 1 19 Sandbach R 23 86 69 14 169 Novak R 2 1 3 2 6 THIRD BASEMEN Lynn R I 1 1 French R 27 49 62 7 118 Novak R 1 2 1 3 Chubet R 1 SHORTSTOPS Novak R 2 3 4 7 Lynn R 17 33 45 12 90 Chubet R II 16 29 9 54 CATCHERS Th G PO A E TC PB Klie R 1 6 1 7 Reichel R 2 4 4 8 1 Johnston R 19 77 35 4 116 5 Paine R 8 44 8 2 54 2 One Hundred Forty-eiqht DP Ave. 1.000 4 .971 3 .956 6 .954 .947 10 .917 1 .667 1.000 5 .942 .667 .000 DP 3 1.000 .867 .833 Ave. 1. 000 1.000 .966 .963 Th Hill R Chubet R Paine R Willis R Brown R Nevitt R LeVan R Masset R Rice R Th Morris R Bissel R Chubet R French R Hare R Elkins L Reichel R Bell R Barnes R Fallon R Pyle L TEAM OUTFIELDERS G PO A 24 15 5 3 3 17 20 6 8 12 5 2 28 39 7 13 PITCHERS G PO A 1 I 3 3 11 1 1 1 2 16 19 TC 27 9 5 2 31 42 9 16 11 TC II 2 I I 2 1 20 26 27 710 341 77 1128 DP DP I 2 15 Ave. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .968 .952 .889 .875 .727 Ave. 1. 000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1,000 .950 .846 .000 .000 .000 .932 Baseball Captains, 1860-1937 ' 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 Alexander Van Renssalaer ' 72 T. K. Bradford ' 73 Arthur Pell ' 74 David Patton ' 75 J. M. V ocds ' 76 J. M. Vi oods ' 77 D. Laughlin ' 78 Edward Furman ' 79 C. B. Wigton ' 80 W. S. Horton ' 81 Alexander McCune ' 82 Ogden Rafferty ' 83 J. S. Harlan ' 84 J. M. Harlan ' 85 Duncan Edwards ■86 ■87 ■88 ■89 ■90 ■91 ■92 J. P. Shaw A. H. Larkin E. O. V Aagenhorst W. H. King C. C. Dana C. C. Dana L. A. Young ' 93 Philip King 94 C. S. MacKenzie ' 95 J. H. Brooks ' 96 Jerome Bradley ' 97 W. W. Mfilson ' 98 J. W. Kafer ■00 ■01 ,.A. R. Hillebrand W. E. Green ■02 ■03 ■04 ' 05 ■06 ■07 W. I, Steinwender F. G. Pearson C. G. Stevens G. T. •Wells S. I. Reid, Jr. I. L. Cooney ' 08 ■09 ' 10 E. H. W. Harlan W. R. Sides F. T, Dawson ' 11 S. V. White ■12 ' 13 C. H. Sterrett F. D. Worthington ■14 B. K. Rhoads ■15 ■16 O. S. Greene B. S. Law ■17 E. H. Driggs ■18 W. H. Madden ■19 -W. H. Bade ' 20 R. M. Trindle ' 21 Janon Fisher ■22 . . . W. S. MacPhee ■23 J. H. Jefferies ' 24 Paul Euwer ' 25 J. M. Boohecker ■26 T. S. Dignan ' 27 R. W. LaBeaume ■28 W. M. Hardt ' 29 P. H. Strubing, Jr. ' 30 J. H. O ' Toole ' 31 C. E. Muldaur ' 32 F. K. Bowman ' 33 J. S, Purnell ' 34 G. L. FoUansbee ' 35 J. L. Myers ' 36 R. H. French ' 37 Dean HUl One Hundred Forty-nine Complete Baseball Record, 1862-1936 VICTORIES Oppo- Prince- First NAME nent ton Ties Game Acme 1 1894 Active 1 1883 A. M 1 1898 Alaska 3 5 1876 Albright 1 1 1909 Alert 1 1894 Allegheny 1 1894 Alumni 1 2 1933 Amherst 12 26 1 1875 Andover 1 6 1889 Army 1 1922 Atlantics 6 1 1863 Auburn 1 1883 Baltimore (I. U 2 1911 Boston College 4 1922 Boston (N. L.) 8 1876 Bordentown 1 1889 Bowdoin 2 7 1908 Brooklyn (N. L.) 6 2 1878 Brown 7 40 1 1870 Bucknell 4 1902 Buffalo 1 1885 Burlington 2 1 1886 California 1 1920 Carlisle 1 1901 Catholic 1 1914 Centennial 1 1875 Chelsea 2 4 1873 Cleveland 1 1883 C. C. N. Y 1 5 1900 Colgate 4 4 1914 Columbia A. C 1 1897 Columbia Law 1 1883 Columbia 12 28 1 1868 Cornell 20 41 1 1880 Crescent A. C 1 3 1920 Cuban Giants 1 1 1 1888 Dartmouth 16 28 1880 Defiance 1 1879 Detroit 2 1881 Dickinson 6 1896 Dolly Varden 1 1887 Domestic 1 1 1 1873 Duke 6 2 1 1928 Hastens 2 1874 Eckford 1 1872 Edgehill 1 1896 Elizabeth 1 1897 Englewood F. C 2 1890 Enterprise 1 1877 Eureka 1 1874 Exeter 5 1903 Flyaways 2 1874 Fordham 15 20 1877 Franklin Marshall 3 1895 Georgia 1 1924 Georgetown 30 29 1 1893 Germantown 3 1874 Gettysburg 3 1904 Harvard 72 55 2 1863 Haverford 1 1924 Holy Cross 10 9 1900 Holy Oak 1 1879 Illinois 1 1902 Indianapolis 1 1877 Jersey City 5 1 1879 Johns Hopkins 7 1877 Keystone 1 1883 Klientz 1 1878 Lafayette 8 42 1873 Lawrenceville 22 1902 Lehigh 1 28 1890 Long Island 2 1 1886 Louisville 1 1876 Manchester 2 1879 Manhattan 9 1881 Maryland A. C 1 1898 Maryland 1 1927 NAME Meiji (Japan) Mercersburg Metropolitan Michigan Montclair Montgomery Monumentals Murray Hill A. C Nameless Navy Neptune Nev rark New Bedford New Haven New York (A. L.) New York A. C N. Y. U North Carolina Notre Dame Ohio State Olympics Orange Orange A. C Panzer College Pelham Bay Station Penn A. C Pennsylvania Penn State Philadelphia (A. L.) Philadelphia (N. L.) Pittsburgh Pittsburgh (N. L.) Princeton A. C Providence Ouaker City Rah way Randolph Macon Resolutes Richmond Rose Hill Rutgers Second Naval District South Orange Southwark S. I. C. c Springfield - Stars (Brooklyn) Stars (New Brunswick) Stars (Syracuse) Stevens Swarthmore Syracuse Temple Trenton Tri-Mountain Trinity Tufts Union Union College University of Richmond Ursinus Utica Vanderbilt Vermont Villanova Virginia V. P. I Waseda University (Japan) Washington Washington Jefferson Washington Lee Wesleyan West Virginia William and Mary Williams Worcester Yale 1 VICTORIES Oppo- Prince- First nent ton Ties Game 1 1924 2 1 1906 5 1 1881 5 1882 3 1889 1 1895 1 1884 1 1894 2 1874 1 4 1906 1 1870 3 2 1870 1 1 1878 2 1 1875 2 1911 1 1926 7 12 1 1899 1 4 1912 2 1914 1 1927 1 1863 1 1873 1 7 1891 1 3 1933 1 1918 3 1 1932 29 41 2 1879 11 11 1895 19 9 1863 10 2 1874 1 1914 1 1897 1 1933 2 c 1881 3 1 1885 1 1891 1 1 1926 2 3 1 1873 1 1 1 1898 1 1870 11 23 1866 1 1918 1 1910 1 1880 3 3 1 1874 1 1927 2 1863 1 1862 2 1876 2 1913 1 5 1919 1 6 1 1904 3 4 1928 6 8 1871 1 1870 6 1903 5 1900 1 1 1879 2 1895 I 2 1926 1 9 1905 1 1879 2 1921 3 9 1 1897 3 13 1910 13 24 1886 1 1929 1 1936 3 3 1881 2 1904 1 1 1896 1 11 1892 4 1899 4 3 1907 7 26 2 1864 2 1879 00 67 1867 Princeton: 886 Victories, 581 Defeats, 17 Ties One Hundred Fifty Gordon Keppel, ' 36 H.J.Swift, Jr., ' 37 1 1 Brooke Stoddard, ' 37 F. H. Osborn, Jr., ' 37 CREW STANDING: Stoddard, Armstrong, Osborn, Dicke, Keliy, Kouffmann, Keppel (Copt.t, Warner. SEATED: Hudson (Coxswain). Varsity Crew OFFICERS Gordon Keppel, ' 36 ..Captain J. R. Reist, ' 36 .Manager J. M. Farley, ' 37 Assistant Manager R. D. Stuart, ' 37 Assistant Manager G. G. Sikes, ' 16 Coach VARSITY Position Age Height Weight Year Bow Brooke Stoddard, ' 37 21 6 ' 0 170 Second 2 G. E. Armstrong, ' 37 20 6 ' 0 165 First 3 F. H. Osborn, Jr., ' 37 21 6 ' 3 173 First 4 H. P. Dicke, ' 36 21 6 ' 3 2 173 First 5 I. F. P. Kelly, ' 36 22 6 ' 3 ' 2 185 Second 6 Rudolph Kauffman, II, ' 36 21 6 ' 4 174 First 7 Gordon Keppel, ' 36 21 6 ' 31 2 182 Second Stroke F. T. Warner, Jr., ' 37 20 6 ' 3 175 First Cox. H. K. Hudson, Jr., ' 36 22 5 ' 3% 104 First RACES APRIL 25— AT NEW YORK (CHILDS CUP) First Penn Second Princeton Third Columbia Distance 1 V4 miles Time 9 min. 3 sec. MAY 2— AT CAMBRIDGE (COMPTON CUP) First Princeton Second Harvard Third M. I. T. Distance 13 4 miles Time 9 min. 8 sec. One Hundred Fifty-two MAY 9— AT PRINCETON First Navy Second Princeton Third Syracuse Distance 1- 4 miles Time 9 min. 12.6 sec. MAY 16— AT PRINCETON First Cornell Second Princeton Third Yale Distance 1% miles Time 9 min. 1.6 sec. 150-lb. Crew Position Age Height Weight Yeor Bcw 2 H. B. Roberts, ' 36 J. F. Kraemer, ' 38 .. . 22 5 ' 1 1 153 Third „... 21 5 ' 10 149 First 3 H. B. Rockwell, ' 37 20 5 ' 6 146 First 4 A. H. Edwards, ' 37 20 5 ' 9 153 Second 5 S. J. Stebbins, ' 38 20 5 ' 11 151 First 6 I. A. Saalfield, ' 38 20 6 ' % 155 First 7 B. W. Warner, ' 37 19 6 ' 0 149 Second Stroke G. R. Cooke, ' 37 22 6 ' 0 150 Second Cox. G. D. Macrae, ' 37 20 5 ' 6 122 Second First .... Second RACES APRIL 25— AT NEW YORK . Coluniibia Distance 1 i ' l miles Princeton Time 6 min. 15 sec. MAY 2— AT CAMBRIDGE First Second.. ..Princeton M. I. T. Distance If.! miles Time 7 min, 17.1 sec. MAY 16— AT PRINCETON (GOLDTHWAITE CUP) First Second Third ... Yale ...Harvard ..Princeton Distance 1 1 ' n miles Time 7 min. 1,5 sec. STANDING: Cooke, Warner, Saaltield, Stebbins, Edwords, Rockwell, Kraemer, Roberts. SEATED: MacRae iCox.l One Hundred Fifty-three Review of the Season The 1 936 campaign on Lake Carnegie and neigh- boring waters appears quite disappointing at first glance, but actually Coach Gordon Sikes and Captain Gordon Keppel, along with the rest of the Varsity boat, have every right to be proud of the record that they have achieved. Although it won but one of its four races, the Varsity shell finished second in the other three encounters, defeating five of its eight opponents. And by defeating Harvard in the Compton Cup Race and Yale in the Carnegie Cup clash two weeks later, the Orange and Black annexed the mythical Big Three championship. Various members of the Nassau fleet engaged in twenty-four contests throughout the spring, col- lecting eleven victories and another tie for first place. They triumphed over twenty-three oppo- nents and bowed to fourteen, thus amassing an average of .622 for the season. The outstanding thrill of the Varsity season was the night race at Cambridge for the Compton Cup, which resulted in the sole Princeton victory of the year. With this race, in which Harvard, M. I. T., and Princeton are the traditional rivals, delayed for three hours because of the high winds that were churning up the Charles River Basin, the boats did not leave the line until well after nightfall The intelligent stroking of Fred Warner and the brilliant piloting of Jack Hudson, however, sufficiently offset the unfamiliarity with the course and the confusion created by the lights on the shore and the bridges to put the Nassau boat across the finish line a length and a quarter ahead of the Crimson. The Varsity made its debut on the Harlem River on April 26, when Penn ' s championship crew repealed its performance of last year in snatch- ing the Childs Cup away from the Lions of Co- lumbia and the Tigers of Princeton. The smooth- stroking Quakers assumed the lead at the half- mile buoy and were never thereafter in any dan- ger of losing it. The Princeton boat finished a length and a half in the rear, easily outdistancing the widely-acclaimed Morningsiders. In the Navy-Syracuse engagement on Lake Carnegie the Midshipmen continued the powerful drive which they had initiated the week before with their smashing upset of the Cornell eight. Employing a new short, choppy stroke and the stratagem of getting an early lead and then de- fending it against the following boats, the Blue and Gold flashed across the finish line half a One Hundred Fifty-four length ahead of Princeton, with Jim Ten Eyck ' s Orange well in the rear. A week later Coach Jim Wray brought a wealth of power and endurance down from Ithaca and swept the Carnegie Cup Regatta, as the Cornell varsity led Princeton home by three- quarters of a length and clipped eleven seconds off of the record for the new reverse course on Lake Carnegie, bringing it down to 9:01.6. The Tigers ' consolation was the consummation of the long-awaited Beat Yale movement. The 1936 showing of the 150-pound crew did not come up to expectations, in view of the fact that it was composed of six veterans of the pre- vious year ' s championship boat and three mem- bers of the excellent 1938 Freshman outfit. The lightweights won only one of their three contests. All hopes for another championship season were rudely shattered at the first race of the sea- son, when the Columbia boat was the first to cross the finish line. This reverse was followed by a decisive defeat of M. I. T. on the Charles the next week. Since neither Syracuse nor Navy brought 150-pound crews to Lake Carnegie, the Princeton lightweights had two weeks of practice for the Goldthwait Cup Race against Harvard and Yale, and, during that period, important shifts were made in the lineup. But, as in the case of the varsity oarsmen who were that day tack- ling Cornell, the favorite fell before two powerful crews who were violently on the upgrade. The Junior Varsity crew ' s claim to fame is that throughout the season it never finished indis- putably first and never last. In their first race against Penn and Columbia, the Jayvees pro- vided the biggest thrill of the spring by tying the Lions for first place — a very rare event in the crew world — with the Quakers trailing behind. The Princeton boat finished second out of three in all of the three remaining clashes of the season, bowing to Harvard, Navy, and Cornell and de- feating M. I. T., Syracuse, and Yale. Junior Varsity Crew STANDING: Wright, Wister, McMillen, Swift, Smith, Bugbee, Pierce, Fenninger. SEATED: Hopkins (Coxswain). Position Age Height Weight Year Bow H. R. Saalfield, ' 37 22 6 ' 2 190 Second 2 W. K. Coors, ' 38 21 6 ' 2 184 First 3 T. R. McMillen, ' 38 19 6 ' 3 185 First 4 L. W. Wister, ' 36 21 6 ' 2 185 Second 5 A. C. Smith, ' 36 22 6 ' 3 185 Third 6 H. F. Swift, ' 37 20 6 ' 3 185 Second 7 J. T. Peirce, ' 36 22 6 ' 0 185 Third Stroke Laurence Fenninger, Jr. ' 36 21 6 ' 1 175 Second Cox. W. R. Hopkin, ' 37 21 5 ' 6 125 First RACES APRIL 25, 1936 (CHILDS CUP RACE) Dead heat Princeton Time: 8:48 Dead heat Columbia Time: 8:48 Third Pennsylvania Time: 8:52 Distance 1 % miles MAY 9, 1936 First Navy Time: 9:34.8 Second Princeton Time: 9:43.8 Third Syracuse Time: 10:01.8 Distance 1% miles MAY 2, 1936 (COMPTON CUP RACE) First Harvard Time: 9:22 Second Princeton Time: 9:23.8 Third M. I. T. Time: 9:37 Distance 1% miles MAY 16, 1938 {CARNEGIE CUP RACE) First Cornell Time: 9:28.2 Second Princeton Time: 9:34.8 Third Yale Time: 9:42.2 Distance 1% miles ' 11— Robert T. Roche ' 12— Rudolph Rauch ' 13— Rudolph Rauch ' 14 — Theodore C. Briggs ' 15 — Oliver S. Putnam ' 16 — Robert A. Cochran ' 17 — Robert A. Cochran Crew Captains, 1911-1936 ' 18 — Harding S. Roche ' 19— William M. Paxton ' 20 — Rogers S. Lament ' 21— Hugh C. Cresswell ' 22— Sidney W. Milne ' 23— John T. Pirie, II ' 24 — Charles L. Austin ' 25— Walter G. Dyer ' 26 — Arthur Kennedy, Jr. ' 27— Howard Clark ' 28— Herbert R. Stratford ' 29 — James M. Thompson ' 30 — James O. Pease ' 31 — Robert C. Colmore ' 32 — James G. Shennan ' 33— Brewster W. Smith ' 34 — Aikman Armstrong, Jr. ' 35 — Gordon Keppel ' 36 — Gordon Keppel One Hundred Fifty-five Rodman Morgan, ' 37 Frederic Rosengarten, Jr., ' 38 H. L. Canoune, ' 37 Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 M. S. Emory, ' 38 K. B. Alexander, Jr., ' 37 W. M. Woodward, ' 37 E. C. Oelsner, Jr., ' 37 MINOR SPORTS TOP ROW; Cogon iTroiner ' , S Ivcsfcr, Follonsbec, Logan (Coach), Kerr (Mgr.), Reed (Asst. Coach , Grcenslade, Johnson. SECOND ROW: Tweedy, Singmoster, Fletcher, Oelsner, Close, Montgomery. FRONT ROW: Reed, Stonington, Morgan, Davison, Soyre. Varsity Soccer OFFICERS Rodman Morgan, ' 37 Captain D. C. Kerr, ' 37 Manager W. F. Logan Coach TEAM Harper FoUansbee, ' 37 Goal E. C. Oelsner, Jr., ' 37 Left Halfback G. H. lohnson, ' 39 Right Fullback W. W. L. Reed, ' 38 Outside Right Lawrence Singmaster, ' 38 Left Fullback O. G. Stonington, ' 37 Inside Right Bronson Tweedy, ' 37 Right Halfback R. H. Davison. ' 37 Center Forward A. G. Fletcher, Jr., ' 38 Center Halfback Rodman Morgan, ' 37 Inside Left R. W. Sayre, ' 37 Outside Right SUBSTITUTES W. H. Close, Jr., ' 37 F. P. Kii R. V. Greenslade, ' 38 F. K. Mc GAMES Date Score Opponent Score Oct. 3 Princeton. -- 5 Lafayette 1 Oct, 10 Princeton... 4 Lehigh 1 Oct. 16 Princeton... 2 Haverford 4 Oct. 23 Princeton... 1 Swarthmore ., ' SB F. R. Starr, ' 38 mery, Jr. ' 37 R. W. Sylvester, ■39 S Date Score Opponent Score Oct. 31 Princeton... 2 Harvard Nov. 7 Princeton... 2 Cornell Nov. 14 Princeton... 2 Yale 2 Nov. 20 Princeton... 3 Pennsylvania 2 Review of the Season Sweeping through an eight game schedule with six wins, one loss, and one tie, the Varsity Soccer Team enjoyed one of the most successful seasons in years. Its final victory over Pennsylvania gained the championship of the Middle Atlantic Soccer Association. On successive weekends, the team turned back Swarthmore, H arvard, and Cornell without the opposition being able to garner a single goal. Captain Rod Morgan and Rod Davison, together having scored three-quarters of the team ' s points, deserve special mention, and to Coach Bill Logan goes the praise which accompanies a championship team. One Hundred Fifty-eight Varsity Cross-Country OFFICERS Frederic Rosengorten, Jr., ' 38 Captain P. M. Sykes, ' 37 Manager M. T. Gels Coach TEAM A. G. Gilkes, ' 39 W. B. Johnson, Jr., ' 38 P. R. Applegate, Jr., ' 38 L. A. Carver, ' 38 T. Waterman, Jr., SUBSTITUTES Frederic Rosengarten, Jr., ' 38 F. C. St. John, ' 38 ' 39 B. K. D. V. ' 39 Curley, ' 39 Parsons, ' 38 Dote Oct. 16 Oct. 24 Oct. 24 Score Princeton 20 Princeton 30 Princeton 23 Thompson Webb, Jr MEETS Opponent Score Date Score Rutgers 35 Oct. 31 Princeton 29 Army 17 Nov. 6 Princeton 39 Columbia 30 Nov. 6 Princeton 37 Opponent Navy Harvard , Yale Score 26 18 18 Review of the Season Defeated by both Yale and Harvard, and winning but two of its six meets, the Princeton Cross Country Team experienced an unsuccessful season. Its two victories came in the opening meet with Rutgers and a week later over Columbia. Three successive losses marred the latter part of the season. Com- posed entirely of Juniors and Sophomores, the team ' s prospects for next season are good. Outstanding on the team were Captain Rosengarten, Gilkes, and Waterman. STANDING- Sykes i Mgr. i , Applegate, Johnson, St. John. SEATED; Gilkes, Rosengarten iCapt. I , Watermon. One Hundred Fifty-nina TOP RO V Dli Vivi-r A3st. Mgr.i. Petersen, Gruning, Van Horn (Assf. Troinerl. THIRD ROW: Esser lAsst. Mgr.l, Zacharias (Mar.l, Foote, Fricker, Simpson, Kinney lAsst. Mgr. ) . Lehr lAsst. Mgr.l. SECOND ROW: Stepp iCoochl, Drill, Stickel, Sullivon, Whiteley, Borner, Kelly, Cogan (Trainer). FRONT ROW: Severance, Baiter, Canoune, Willey iCapt.l, Crawford, Webster, Cranston. Varsity Swimming OFFICERS, 1936 W. H. Willey, Jr., ' 36 Captain J. E. Zacharias, ' 36 Manager J. T. Kinney, ' 37 Assistant Manager H. W. Stepp Coach TEAM R. E. Baiter, ' 36 H. C. Crawford. Jr., ' 36 Craig Severance, ' 36 G. R. Webster. ' 36 W. H. Willey, Jr., ' 36 C. W. Bayliss, Jr., ' R. E. Borner, ' 37 H. L. Canoune, ' 37 Peter Nicholls. ' 37 J. A. Smith, ' 37 D. F. Sullivan, Jr., ' 37 J. O. Whitely, Jr., ' 37 T. R. Young, ' 37 H D. Cranston, ' 38 J. E. Fricker , Jr., ' 38 MEETS Date Score Opponent Score Jan. 11 Princeton 55 Jan. 16 Princeton 54 Jan. 18 Princeton 62 Feb. 7 Princeton 43 Feb. 19 Princeton 46 Lehigh 16 Rider 17 Lafayette 9 Dartmouth 28 Pennsylvania 25 Date Score Feb. 26 Princeton 55 Feb. 29 Princeton 24 Mar. 4 Princeton 52 Mar. 7 Princeton 31 Mar. 14 Princeton 25 H. W. Gruning, ' 33 J, G. Kelley, ' 38 J. R. Simpson, ' 38 Opponent Score Columbia 16 Rutgers 47 Navy 19 Harvard 40 Yale 46 Review of the Season The totals on Princeton ' s Varsity sw imming slate showed seven victories and three defeats as the results of the 1936 season. The Orange and Black mermen swept triumphantly to six straight victories before bov ing to Rutgers, 47-24, for their first loss. Harvard downed the Nassau swimmers only by a sensational win in the relay, and the Elis scored their victory by surg.ng through in a cloud of close finishes. At the IntercoUegiates Harry Cranston captured the dive and Captain Howie Willey led the field in the 150-yard backstroke, while the N. C. A. A. meet saw Jim Simpson set a new Princeton record when he swam the 440 in 5:04.6. Willey and Canoune hung up new marks during the regular season, the former bettering the intercollegiate figures for the 150-yard backstroke and the latter gaining a new Nassau mark in the 220. One Hundred Sixty Varsity Wrestling OFFICERS, 1936 G. B. Treide, ' 36 Captain H. C. Essertier, ' 36 Manager L. H. Marks, ' 37 Assistant Manager Harper FoUansbee, ' 37 Intercollegiate Manager J. J. Reed Coach Richard Palme r, ' 38.. G. B. Ross, ' 38 W. W. L. Reed, ' 38.... C. K. Bowie, Jr., ' 36.... TEAM .118-lb. Class I. V. Ouinn, ' 36 145-lb. .126-lb. Class C. A. Powers, ' 38 155-lb. .1351b. Class M. S. Emory, ' 38 165-lb. .135-lb. Qass G. B. Treide, ' 36 175-lb. Class Class Class Class Benjamin Chew. Jr., ' 37 Unlimited Class Dote Score Jan. 1 1 Princeton 26 Ian. 18 Princeton 30 Feb. 8 Princeton 24 MEETS Opponent Score Dote Score Opponent Score Rutgers Feb. 15 Princeton 15 Harvard 9 Lafayette Feb. 22 Princeton 17 Columbia 9 Pennsylvania 6 Feb. 29 Princeton 17 ' 2 Yale lO ' i Review of the Season The dream of that undefeated season which Princeton teams had failed to attain in 30 years of wrestling came true in 1936 as Jimmy Reed ' s powerful grapplers swept through the six meets on their regular schedule unbeaten, with the remarkable record of having no man thrown in dual competition. An excellent third place in the Intercollegiates saw the Tiger matmen net 26 points to rank just behind Penn State with 31 and Lehigh with 30. In these matches, held in the University Gym, Mouse Emory and George Treide captured the 165-lb. and 175-lb. titles respectively. Emory, with I8V2 points, was high scorer during the regular season, in which the team bowled over all opposition, totalling 129 ' 2 points to 34 ' . ' 2 for its opponents. TOP ROW: Zonfrini iTroineri, Marks lAsst Essertier, iMgi Mgr.i, Follansbee lAsst. Mgr. I . SECOND ROW: Reed iCoachI, I. BOTTOM ROW: Quinn, Emory, Treide I Copt, 1, Chew, Bowie. Palmer, Powers, Reed, Ross, One Hundred Sixty-one TOP ROW: Greenslode, Schwenk, Houston, Hart (Mgr.), Nicholson, Ferenbach, Gucker. FRONT ROW: Kilcullen, Jacobs, Forshew, White (Copt.), Eargart, Robbins, Stengel. Varsity Gym OFFICERS, 1935-1936 J. H. White, ' 36 Captain S. T. Hart, ' 36 Manager A. Q. Hourigan, ' 37 Assistant Manager Richard Swinnerton Coach W. D. Earhart, ' 36 R. D. Kilcullen, ' 36 W. R. Robbins, ' 36 J. H. White, ' 36 Dote Score Opponent Feb. 15 Princeton 44! 2 M. I. T.... Feb, 29 Princeton 23 Array Mar. 7 Princeton 23 Navy TEAM Carl Ferenbach, ' 37 Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 G. H. Houston, ' 37 Francis Jacobs, ' 37 J. W. Nicholson, ' 37 W. L. Schwenk, ' 37 Geoffrey Stengel, ' 37 R. V. Greenslade, ' 38 MEETS Score Date 9 Mar. 14 31 Mar. 16 31 Score Opponent Princeton 17 Temple .... Princeton 26 Dartmouth Score 37 18 Review of the Season This year ' s team, one of the best-balanced aggregations in years, was, in the early part of the season, considered to be heading for a championship. However, these hopes were blasted in mid-season when injuries kept Fran Jacobs, star horizontal and parallel bar man, out of the Army and Navy meets, both lost by fairly close margins. The climax of the season was furnished by the splendid performance of the men who competed in the Intercollegiate Individual Championships at Philadelphia on March 28th. In this Tommy Gucker lopped three-tenths of a second off the old world ' s record for the rope climb, bringing it down to 3:08. He also won the side-horse event. Carl Ferenbach took fourth place on the rings and George Houston was third in the rope climb, tying the old world ' s record. One Hundred Sixty-two c Varsity Fencing OFFICERS, 1936 K. B. Alexander, Jr., ' 37 Captain J. T. Mason, Jr., ' 36 Manager L. A. Scinta, ' 37 Assistant Manager H. H. Pirotte Coach K. B. Alexander, Jr., ' 37 J. T. Schein, ' 37 I. S. Wise, ' 37 TEAM I. B. Haviland, ' 38 B. M. Littlehale, ' 38 S. I. Sarnoff, ' 38 K. A. Spitz, ' 38 B. E. Taylor, ' 38 MEETS Date Score Feb. 8, 1936 Princeton 13 Feb. 15, 1936 Princeton 12 Feb. 22, 1936 Princeton 20 Feb. 28, 1936 Princeton 12 Feb. 29, 1936 Princeton 6 Opponent Score Rutgers 4 Penn 5 St. Johns 7 Hamilton 5 N. Y. Fencing Club U Dote Score Mar. 7, 1936 Princeton 11 Mar. 10, 1936 Princeton 12 Mar. 14, 1936 Princeton 7 Mar. 21, 1936 Princeton 12 Opponent Score Harvard 16 Columbia 15 Yale 20 Rollins 5 1 K Review of the Season With only three lettermen from last year ' s successful squad returning, the Varsity fencing team was greatly handicapped by lack of material and experience. A mediocre season resulted, with five wins against four defeats. Although the team easily defeated their first four opponents, they were unable to compete with the superior strength of their later rivals. Captain Kirk Alexander, last year ' s Eastern epee champion, was outstanding. STANDING: Pirotte iCooch), Scinto lAsst. Mgr.), Haviland, Taylor, Littlehole, Mason (Mgr.) SEATED: Spitz, Schein, Alexander (Capt.), Wise, Sarnoff. One Hundred Sixty-three STANDING: White iCoachI, Batterson, Ridder, Morgan, Hemingway (Mgr.i. SEATED: Richard, Oelsner, Williams (Copt.), Rouch, Wheeler. Varsity Squash OFFICERS, 1936 J. G. Williams, ' 36 - - - Captain D. S. Hemingway, ' 36 Manager J. E. Jones, ' 37 Assistant Manager W. F. White Coach E. P. Oelsner, ' 37 Rodman Morgan, ' 37 TEAM R. S. Rauch, Jr., ' 36 H. VanB. Richard, ' 36 B. H. Ridder, Jr., ' 38 MATCHES, 1936 A. B. Wheeler, ' 36 I. G. Williams, ' 36 Date Score Dec. 30 Princeton 5 Jan. 18 Princeton 4 Feb. 7 Princeton 1 Opponent Score Purdue M. I. T 1 Yale 6 Dote Score Feb. 8 Princeton Feb. 15 Princeton 5 Feb. 22 Princeton 6 Opponent Harvard Pennsylvania Pretty Brook Club.. Score 7 2 1 Review of the Season Handicapped by the lack of veterans, Princeton ' s Squash team experienced a rather poor season compared to the past few years, dropping both the Harvard and Yale matches. B. H. Ridder, ' 38, played first man for Princeton. It is hoped that the formation this year of a Quadrangular League composed of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Pennsylvania will lead to further advancement of this sport in Princeton. One Hundred Sixty-four Rifle Team OFFICERS E. M. Yard, ' 36. R. B. Miller, ' 37.. ....Captain .Manager J. W. Clark, ' 36 J. C. Collier, ' 38 Hugh Dunn, ' 38 TEAM L R. Gray, ' 38 R. P. Grimm, ' 37 R. B. Miller, ' 37 W. B. Nugent, ' 38 A. J. Riggs, ' 37 V. F. Roma, ' 37 E. M. Yard, ' 36 Review of the Season During the 1935-1936 season the membership of the Rifle Team displayed a marked lack of interest in the competitive matches and encounters with outside teams. In spite of thi s somewhat lethargic attitude, Princeton ' s men managed to eke out a victory in five of the eight matches held in the course of the early spring. The only losses were those to the Philadelphia Navy Yard Marines, U. C. L. A., which was held by mail, and Yale. In the early part of the season the team showed marked ability in defeating R. P. I., New Brunswick R. C, and New Hampshire by substantial scores. Most gratifying of all were the wins over Columbia and Harvard; these went far toward giving Princeton a completed record that can com- pare favorably with those of previous years. One Hundred Sixty-five TOP ROW: Davies, David, Wilmer, Foedisch, King, Marter, Foster, Bentley, Classen. Second Row: Bell (MgrJ, Martin (Asst. Mgr.), McLean, Moyer, Powers, Stollenwerck, Brady, Stewart, Ormond, Cogan (Troinerl, Logon (Coach). FRONT ROW: Lazaron, Dering, Ralli, Woodward, Britten (Copt.i, Bedell, Coburn, Rogers. Varsity Lacrosse OFFICERS E. F. Britten, III, ' 36 Captain F. H. Bell, II, ' 36-,.- Manager J. L. Martin, Jr., ' 37 Assistant Manager W. F. Logan Coach tm TEAM E. F. Britten, III, ' 36, P. C. Ralli, ' 37 Goal J. B. Coburn, ' 36 Point W. H. Bedell, ' 36, M. S. Lazaron, ' 38 Cover Point S. W. Robinson, ' 37, I. N. Classen, ' 38 First Defense C. M. Dering, ' 37, T. B. Foster, ' 38 Second Defense E. R. McLean, ' 38, C. B. Rogers, ' 36 Center T. H. Moyer, Jr., ' 38 Second Attack W. M. Woodward, ' 37, R. F. Shaffer, ' 38 First Attack A. R. Ormond, ' 38, J. D. J. Brady, ' 38 Out Home W. L. Schwenk, ' 37 In Home GAMES Date Score Mar. 28, 1936 Princeton 10 Apr. 4, 1936 Princeton 7 Apr. 11, 1936 Princeton 5 Apr. 18, 1936 Princeton 9 Opponent Score Alumni 2 Mount Washington 11 Navy 8 Harvard 1 Dote Score Apr. 25, 1936 Princeton 19 May 1, 1936 Princeton 11 May 9, 1936 Princeton 11 May 16, 1936 Princeton 9 Opponent Score Cornell 1 Penn 2 Rutgers 6 Yale 6 Review of the Season After three successive undefeated seasons, Princeton ' s Varsity Lacrosse Team finally met its match when it was vanquished by a team from Mount Washington, and a week later again tasted defeat at the hands of Navy. The Orange and Black stickmen more than redeemed themselves, however, by easily winning their last five matches, scoring a total of over three times as many points as their opponents. One Hundred Sixty-six Princeton Rugby Club Dr. J. E. Raycroft Honorary President W. J. Pasley, ' 36 Captain F. C. Gephort, ' 36 Manager Professor J. B. Whitton Coach EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE H. I. Davis, ' 36 Charles Carr, Jr., ' 36 B. W. Jesser, ' 36 W. M. Warner, ' 37 TEAM Charles Carr, Jr., ' 36 Pepper Constable, ' 36 G. I. Davis, ' 36 H. J. Davis, ' 36 F. S. Dudley, ' 36 F. T. Gephart, ' 36 W. E. Gillespie, ' 36 C. C. Groel, Jr., ' 36 B. W. Jesser, ' 36 J. T. MacDonald, Jr., ' 37 R. T. Mellinger. ' 36 F. A. Pasley, ' 36 J. A. Petersen, ' 38 A. M. Price, ' 38 F. T. Richards, ' 36 J. B. Salsich, ' 38 E. D. Tagg, ' 36 W. M. Warner, ' 37 Date Team Varsity March 21 Princeton 9 French R. C Princeton — French R. C. 2nds — March 28 Princeton 20 Long Island U April 4 Princeton 6 New York R. C 5 Princeton — Nassau R. C — April 11 Princeton 1,1 New York R. C 5 Princeton — ■New York R. C. 2nds — April 18 Princeton — St. Andrews R. C — Joyvees MATCHES Varsity 12 Date Team April 21 Princeton 22 Long Island U 8 April 25 Princeton 3 Harvard 5 Princeton — Harvard — May 2 Princeton 4 Pilgrems R. C May 9 Princeton 18 French R. C Princeton — Nassau R. C — May 16 Princeton 22 New York All-Stars 3 Joyvees 5 13 The 1936 Varsity Rugby squad missed an undefeated season by the very narrowest of margins, losing only to Harvard, 5-3. The team had won its first five matches by sizable scores w hen it met its mid-season set-back, but won its next tv o games without iDeing scored upon. The Tigers climaxed their season with an overwhelming triumph over the New York All-Stars, 22-3. ciACK ROW: McDonald, Craig, Winons, Price, Tagg, Ross, Martin, Wood. SECOND ROW; Gillespie, Randall, Seyfarth, Olsan, Small, Salsich, Donald Ouigley Byrne Cleaver, Wylie, Nason Piper, Newman. FRONT ROW: Mellinger, Carr, Groel, Richards, Posley (Copt.), Gephort, H. J. Davis, G. J. Davis, Dudley. One Hundred Sixty-seven STANDING: Myers, Beasley (Coach), Thompson. SEATED: Oelsner, Martin, Minnich (Copt.), Whitman, Rawls. Varsity Tennis OFFICERS, 1936 R. L. Minnich, ' 36 Captain R. H. Schuerhoff, ' 36 Manager G. B. Smith, II, ' 37 Assistant Manager M. H. Rittenhouse, ' 37 Assistant Manager C. S. Elicker, ' 37 Interscholastics Manager Mercer Beasley Coach C. M. Baker, Jr., ' 38 A. B. Martin, ' 38 R. L. Minnich, ' 36 TEAM F. R. Myers, ' 36 E. P. Oelsner, ' 37 W. S. Rawls, ' 37 J. W. Thompson, ' 36 W. T. Tilden, ' 36 F. C. Whitman, ' 36 1 R MATCHES Date Score April 18 Princeton 9 April 25 Princeton 9 April 29 Princeton 8 May 2 Princeton 9 May 6 Princeton 9 Opponent Score Boston College N. Y. U Alumni 1 Harvard Columbia Date Score May 8 Princeton 2 May 9 Princeton 7 May 13 Princeton 4 May 16 Princeton 7 Opponent North Carolina Pennsylvania .. Yale Dartmouth Score 7 2 5 2 Review of the Season For the third straight year of Mercer Beasley ' s coaching, the tennis team finished its season with a very good record. The first five matches were won by overwhelming scores; Princeton lost only one point. The North Carolina match was the first loss for the Tigers and five days later they were defeated by Yale by the close score of 5 to 4. The defeat by North Carolina was not unex- pected, for the Southerners have lost but two matches in the last eight years. In the fall a class tournament was held, and the following were winners: Seniors — F. R, Lawson; Juniors — F. Y. Larkin; Sophomores — C. M. Baker; Freshmen — W. V. Winslow. One Hundred Sixty-eight Varsity Golf OFFICERS OF THE SPRINGDALE COUNTRY CLUB C. W. McGraw President G. C. Wintringer Vice- President P. G. Tomlinson Secretary N. B. Samuels Treasurer OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM, 1936 J. F. Malloy, ' 36 Captain R. C. Mayo, ' 36 Manager L. E. Sherwood, Jr., ' 37 Assistant Manager Walter Bourne Coach R. D. Lunn, ' 37 F. Malloy, ' 36 TEAM L. Marks, Jr., ' 37 W. F. Marks, ' 36 W. B. Newsome, ' 36 R. B. Parker, ' 37 MATCHES, 1936 Score Opponent Princeton IS ' -i Princeton 6 Princeton 9 Princeton 9 Princeton 6 Score Merion C. C - 8 ' ' 2 Boston College Navy Lafayette Pennsylvania State 3 Score Princeton 8 Princeton 6 ' 2 Princeton 8 Princeton 8 Princeton 4 Opponent Score Pittsburgh 1 Corneli 2 ' 2 Pennsylvania 1 Georgetov n 1 Yale 5 Review of the Season Yale ' s fourth consecutive victory over the Princeton linksmen cost the Varsity the Eastern Intercollegiate Golf Association crown. Princeton, w inning all their other matches, finished second to Yale, Captain Malloy became the new University golf champion, defeating J. B. C. Denmark, ' 38, in the final round of the annual tournament. BACK ROW: Parker, Lunn, J, Morks. FRONT ROW: Newsome, Bourne (CoochI, Molloy iCopf.i, Moyo, W. Marks. One Hundred Sixty-nine ■ro, Ccpl. Kcefe iCoachi ' inus Wood (Copt.), Johnson, Vonderbilt, Peobody, Cameron (Mgr.: Princeton Polo Association BOARD OF GOVERNORS A. H. Borden, ' 29 __ President J. P. McLanahan, ' 16 Vice-President J. M. Doubleday, ' 30 __._ .Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS J. H. Pinckney, IV, ' 37 __ _ President W. H. Borden, ' 37 __.._ Vice-President O. DeG. Vanderbilt, III, ' 37 Vice-President D. H. K. Flagg, ' 39 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 W. H. Borden W. B. Johnson J. H. Pinckney, IV O. DeG. Vanderbilt, III Barton Cameron Julian Peabody, Jr. E. F. Rivinus, Jr. MEMBERS, 1938 F. A. Jenkins W. M. Love E. G. Riggs W. F. Russell H. I. Lord, Jr. MEMBERS, 1939 L. A. Baker, Jr. D. H. K. Flagg E. W. Pyne W. W. Spruance R. S. Eisner MEMBERS, 1940 G. F. Ball S. S. Combs C. P. Neumann E. F. MacNichol, Jr. R. F. Bortz A. W. Dern F. W. O ' Malley The Princeton Polo Association last year, after a rather disappointing indoor season, came back in the spring to be fairly successful in its outdoor schedule. After two highly gratifying victories over strong Yale and Cornell quartets, the Tigers reached the second round of the Intercollegiate Championships, v hich were finally won by the Army. This year the Association is organized on a new basis, being entirely under undergraduate control and self-supporting. Even the control of publicity is in the hands of the students. Although in the first game of the fall season this year Princeton suffered a stinging defeat at the hands of a powerful 112th Field Artillery team, the next two matches resulted in convincing victories for the Tigers over Red Bank Polo Club and the 109th Field Artillery. One Hundred Seventy The Princeton Managers ' Club OFFICERS R. S. Parker, ' 37 President W. C. Cummings, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President J. G. Nettleton, Jr., ' 38 Secretary MEMBERS, 1937 E. H, Bindley, Jr. D. C. Kerr L. E. Sherwood, Jr. R. L. Burger J. T. Kinney F. B. Smith B. H. Cameron G. S. McElroy G. B. Smith, II W. C. Cummings, Jr. L. H. Marks R. D. Stuart, Jr. E. N. Cutler, Jr. I. L. Martin, Jr. P. M. Sykes S. W. Don R. S. Parker T. C. Werbe, Jr. J. M. Farley I. B. Parrish, Jr. R. B. Wilder A. O. Hourigan, Jr. L. A. Scinta A. M. Wood I. E. Jones, Jr. E. W. Scott MEMBERS, 1938 I. F. Alexander A. B. Heinsohn E. A. Myers J. W. Bitner W. B. Johnson, Jr. J. G. Nettleton O. K. Boice W. W. Johnston W. W. Richardson T. R Brown, Jr. W. G. Jones, Jr. W. F. Russell, Jr. J. A. Cissell, Jr. J. B. Kerr N. M. Stahl T. P. Cobb I. H. Laporte H. A. Stetler, Jr. H. L. Delatour, Jr. G. M. Lehr W. P. Tarns J. R. Deupree L. P. Lockridge, Jr. F. W. Thacher, Jr. W. T. Galey, 111 B. H. Milner The Managers ' Club, under the direction of Mr. Bushnell, is an organization composed of managers and assistant managers of major and minor sports. The purpose of the club is to promote closer cooperation between the managers of the various sports in Princeton and to provide suitable facilities for the mem- bers of the visiting teams. Last year the club adopted a plan whereby a committee is appointed for each sport with the manager of that sport as the chairman to provide for the reception and entertainment of the visiting teams. Also, to create a greater social occasion for the weekend of the Yale football game the club this year revived the Yale Ball, which had been discontinued for several seasons. TOP ROW- Hourigan Delotour Wilder, Brown, Cobb, Johnston, Stetler, Meyer. THIRD ROW: Milner, Johnson, Smith, Jones, Cameron, Kerr, Martin, Marks, Don. SECOND ROW: Toms, Thacher, Kinney, Scinta, Mr. Bushnell, Burger, Lehr, Bindley. FRONT ROW: Goley, Stuart, Nettleton, Parker, Cummings, Cutler, Wei be. One Hundred Seventy-one Varsity Club 1936-1937 OFFICERS F. D. Sauter, ' 37 President M. S. Emory, ' 38 Secretary MEMBERS, 1937 K. B. Alexander, Jr (Fen) 1935 G. E. Armstrong (Q 1936 R- P- Bell (B) 1935, 1936 E. C. Bothwell, Jr (F) 1936 Irving Brown, Jr (H) 1935 J. H. Buchanan, Jr (T) 1936 J. P. Chubet, III (F) 1936 (B) 1935, 1936 W. H. Close, Jr (S) 1936 P. G. Cook (H) 1935, 1936 S. E. Cullinan (F) 1935, 1936 R. H. Davison (S) 1936 C. M. Dering (L) 1935 R. M. Dicke (F) 1935, 1936 H. A. duFlon (T) 1936 E. M. Finck, Jr (L) 1935 Harper Follansbee (S) 1936 J. F. Foran (T) 1935 J. C. Goodell (L) 1935 E. G. Grace, Jr (T) 1935, 1936 Thomas Gucker, 111 (Gymn) 1936 Dean Hill, Jr (F) 1935, 1936 (B) 1935, 1936 G H. Houston, Jr (Gymn) 1936 J. N. Irwin, II (F) 1935, 1936 (T) 1935, 1936 A. R. Johnston (T) 1935, 1936 C. E. Kaufman, Jr (F) 1933, 1935, 1936 C. H. Kearny (T) 1935, 1936 G. F. Lauritzen (B) 1935 (H) 1935 J. L. Marks, Jr (F) 1934, 1935, 1936 S. F. Medina (T) 1935, 1936 F. K. Montgomery, Jr (S) 1936 T. W. Montgomery (F) 1934, 1935, 1936 Rodman Morgan (S) 1936 J. H. Morris (B) 1935, 1936 A. A. Newton (T) 1935 E, P. Oelsner (S) 1936 F. H. Osborn, Jr (C) 1936 R. G. Pagenkopf (T) 1935 T. A. Potter, Jr (H) 1935, 1936 W. S. Rawls (F) 1935, 1936 D. S. Rice (B) 1935, 1936 A. F. Ritter (F) 1934, 1935, 1936 S. W. Robinson (L) 1935 E. K. Sandbach (F) 1934, 1935, 1936 (BB) 1935, 1936 (B) 1935 F. D. Sauter (BB) 1935, 1936 R. W. Sayre. (S) 1936 W. L. Schwenk (L) 1935 R. W. Stanley (F) 1936 Brooke Stoddard (C) 1935, 1936 G. B. Stoess (F) 1934, 1935, 1936 E. C. Stollenwerck (L) 1935 0. G. Stonington (H) 1936 (S) 1936 1. D. Sylvester (H) 1935, 1936 H. J. Swift (C) 1935 Bronson Tweedy (S) 1936 J. P. Van Winkle (F) 1936 F. T. Warner, Jr (C) 1936 W. M. Woodward (L) 1935 MEMBERS, 1938 W. R. Barrett (H) 1936 J. T. Bissell (H) 1936 P. B. Bradley (T) 1936 R. A. Burke _ (H) 1936 L. A. Carver (T) 1936 W. P. Covey.. __ (H) 1935 H. D. Cranston (Sw) 1936 M. S. Emory (Wj 193g W. G. Fallon, Jr (B) 1936 A. G. Fletcher, Jr (S) 1936 R. V. Greenslade (S) 1936 f- R- Ha ll (F) 1936 E. R. McLean (P) 1936 R. F. Meyer (BB) 1936 W. W. L. Reed (S) 1936 D. A. Scott (T) 1936 Lawrence Singmaster (S) 1936 C. H. Toll, Jr (F) 1935, 1936 (T) 1936 J. H. Vruwink (F) 1936 (BB) 1936 P. M. Way (T) 1936 J. H. White (F) 1935, 1936 (T) 1936 Kemble White, Jr (T) 1936 W. W. Wilson (T) 1936 T. B. Wood (F) 1936 S. C. Woodhull, Jr (H) 1936 MEMBERS, 1939 R. S. Bayer (F) 1936 J. J. Daniel : (F) 1936 A. T. Harper (F) 1936 G. H, Johnson, Jr (S) 1936 W. B. Lynch (F) 1936 One Hundred Seventy-two T. R. Mountain (F) 1936 R. W. Sylvester (S) 1936 Lawrence Taylor (F) 1936 R. B. White (F) 1936 Class of 1937-Numerals F. B. Bayer, Jr. E. C. Bothwell, Jr. R. H. Buddington R. L. Burger Benjamin Chew, Jr. J. P. Chubet, III S. E. CuUinan R. M. Dicke I. W. Burke, Jr. W. H. Close, Jr. Bradford Cochran R. H. Davison R. W. Anthony, Jr. McKim Daingerfield H. C. Barrett, Jr. M. A. Behaire, III Irving Brown, Jr. R. S. Dumper Dean Hill, Jr. I. N. Irwin, II M. C. Klugh E. P. Lebens T. R. Lincoln C. G. Luiz MacDonald Lynch G. W. Elkins Harper Follansbee E. G. Grace, Jr. J. H. Heminway H. F. McCreery, II P. V. Miller P. G. Cook I. M. Hoyt, Jr. G. F. Laurilzen FOOTBALL J. L. Marks, Jr. S. L. MacCorkle P. H. Metcalf I. P. Miller T. W. Montgomery J. W. Nicholson, III G. G. Otis SOCCER R. P. Larkin R. H. Lebrecht H. J. Matthews, Jr. CROSS COUNTRY A. C. Poole HOCKEY R. H. Lebrecht P. A. Leventritt T. A. Potter, Jr. R. G. Pagenkopf A. C. Pollock, Jr. P. R. Pyne, III W. S. Rawls W. C. Renwick D. S. Rice A. F. Ritter F. K. Montgomery, Jr. Rodman Morgan E. P. Oelsner J. M. Spencer P. R. Pyne. Ill O. G. Stonington E. K. Sandbach C. B. Simonton T. H. Smithies R. W. Stanley, Jr. G. J. Stoess, Jr. I. P. Van Winkle, Jr. W. P. Yakeys R. W. Sayre L. E. Sherwood, Jr. O. G. Stonington D. T. Stanley J. D. Sylvester F. S. Truesdale BASKETBALL I. P. Chubet, III C. L. Crawford C. M. Dering C. W. Bayliss, Jr. R. E. Borner H. L. Canoune W. P. Cleaver D. P. Alexander, Jr. Benjamin Chew, Jr. C. W. Gillahan Dean Hill, Jr. W. M. Lutz E. M. Finck I. P. Foran C. D. Goldsbury A. P. Lucht C. C. Dunlap, Jr. E. G. Gifford, Jr. J. L. Marks, Jr. R. B. Parker SWIMMING J. H. McGiffert G. A. Nason Peter Nicholls WRESTLING J. A. C. Kennedy, Jr. H. E. Perry A. F. Ritter E. K. Sandbach J. A. Smith F. G. Stickel, III D. F. Sullivan W. S. Rawls F. D. Sauter W. M. Woodward S. H. Waughtel, Jr. J. O. Whileley, Jr. T. R. Young D. R. Small B. D. Benson Scott Danahue, Jr. Carl Ferenbach, II Thomas Gucker, III GYMNASTICS G. H. Houston, Jr. T. T. Hutcheson Francis Jacobs Geoffrey Stengel K. B. Alexander C. H. Angell A. H. Davidson, Jr. H. B. Mitchell, 11 FENCING G. B. Smith, II J. D. Sv an C. E. Test W. M. Warner S. Wise L. A. Auh C. R. Tyson SQUASH RACKETS O. DeG. Vanderbilt A. W. Von Elm F. T. Warner, Jr. S. McG. Gawthorp R. P. Bell R. L. Burger I. P. Chubet, III J. W. Burke, Jr. C. C. Dulap, Jr. G. W, Elkins, Jr. Harper Follansbee BASEBALL C. W. Gillahan H. N. Hare Dean Hill, Jr. C. C. Honsaker, Jr. S. K. C. Kopper G. F. Lauritzen G. R Massel G. S. McElroy P. R. Pyne, III E. K. Sandbach F. D. Sauter W. M. Warner C. L. Crawford B. D. Beanson A. M. Campbell, Jr. McKim Daingerfield H. A. Du Flon E. G. Grace, Jr. W. P. Harrison J. N. Irwin, II TRACK A. R. Johnston C. H. Kearny S. F. Medina P. V. Miller A. A. Newton R. G. Pagenkopf R. M. Price R. H. Robie Swagar Sherley. Jr. D. T. Stanley Van Rensselaer Tippet R. H. Davir, Jr. Benjamin Chew, Jr. A. H. Davidson, Jr. C. M. Dering R. S. Dumper H. D. Dawbarn L. VanD. HauxhursI I. A. Howell J. N. Baldwin R. M. Dicke E. M. Finck, Jr. E. G. Gifford, Jr. J. C. Gooddell R. S. Janney J. M. Hoyt, Jr. E. W. Kahler F. H. Osborn, Jr. A. H. Edwards G. D. MacRae LACROSSE E. A. Limberg, Jr. H I. Matthews, Jr. T. W. Montgomery N. A. Orbe CREW T. A. Potter, Jr. H. B. Rockwell C. H. Phillips P. C. Ralli S. W. Robinson W. L. Schwenk C. B. Simonton B. B. Sloan, Jr. SECOND FRESHMAN CREW E. R. Mens H. R. Saalfield T. C. Werbe, Jr. A. M. Wicks W. M. Woodward L. W. Young Brooke Stoddard H. J. Swift J. B. Shennan One Hundred Seventy-three Class of 1937 — Numerals (Continued) G. E. Armstrong R. F. Clary, Jr. P. G. Cook H. H. Schwartz 150-POUND CREW W. W. Soverel J. D. S van B. W. Warner. F. T. Warner, Jr. S. McG. Gawthrop Chapin Hawley W. L. Dyson J. H. Hemmingway F. B. Hennessey Rodman Morgan E. P. Oelsner R. D. Lunn J. L. Marks, Jr. W. D, Johnston TENNIS W. S. Rawls R, W. Sayre GOLF S. G. Marvin R. G. Parker POLO Julian Peabody, Jr. E. F. Rivinus, Jr. L. B. Smith A. H. Warren, Jr. O. DeG. Vanderbilt Class of 1938-Numerals R. G. Aller J. L. Armitage W. R. Barrett J. E. Baylor G. R. Bunn R. A. Burke J. N. Classen J. H. Cleveland W. B. Craig N. L. Drummond, Jr. M. S. Emory John English, Jr. E. H. Fleer T. B. Foster I. E. Fricker, Jr. J. H. Frost E. W. Givens F. R. Hall J. B. Hannum, III Burton Halstead FOOTBALL J. L. Herman D. E. Jerrems D. K. Jones L. B. Kirkpatrick, Jr. H. F. Klie J. H. Marter S. A. MacKinnon E. R. McLean R. P. Morten R. S. Mueller, Jr. J. R. Munn, Jr. D. E. New ton, Jr. S. D. Powell C. J. Rainear W. G. Raleigh C. D. Reich, Jr. H. A. Reid D. P. Reynolds J. B. Salsich J. W. Sargent R. L. Schley, Jr. C. H. Toll, Jr. D. R. Underwood Stanley Walsh J. H. White W. W. Wilson J. A. Wilson T. B. Wood P. R. Applegate, Jr. L. A. Carver CROSS COUNTRY C. R. Kamm D. V. Parsons Frederic Rosengarten P. B. Bradley C. D. Agnew J. W. Bower H. B. Clagett T. P. Cobb E. M. David J. J. Davis J. W. Davisson W. A. Ehret F. L. Fischer A. G. Fletcher, Jr. Henry Gardiner SOCCER R. V. Greenslade F. P. King, Jr. R. B. Knight R. E. Kulp J. H. Laporte W. W. L. Reed David Reid H. A. Reid A. B. Richardson J. C. Sayen H. T. Schlapp R. H. Shaffer Lawrence Singmaster F. R. Starr Hugh Whittaker J. W. Wilmer SWIMMING D. W. Buchanan, Jr. J. W. Chestnut! L. H. Clark H. D Cranston G, W. DeSousa W. L. Drill J. E. Fricker, Jr. H. W. Gruning W. L. Hopkins T. B. Hubbard J. E. Hulsizer J. G. Kelley J. F. Mead R. R. Meyer, Jr. J. A. Peterson R. S. Pierrepont, Jr. J. R. Simpson E. C. Stokes, 11 Bayard Underwood Stanley Walsh Peter Bentley, IV J. D. J. Brady J. F. Burket, Jr. J. N. Classen J. H. Cleveland W. P. Covey J. K. Culver, Jr. E. M. David C. W. Davies W. P. Earle, HI LACROSSE H. P. Foedisch T. B. Foster W. F. Halsey, III C. P. King E. R. McLean J. H. Martin T, H. Moyer, Jr. R. P. Morten R. S. Mueller, Jr. A. R. Ormond C. A. Powers Richmond Roulon-Miller R. F. Shaffer J. W. Wilmer BASEBALL K. A. Bentkamp, Jr. D. W. Betts J. T. Bissell W. G. Fallon C. M. Baker, Jr. W. R. Barrett J. T. Bissell I. W. Bitner J. S. Appel W. G. Fallon, Jr. M. S. Emory F. C. Field, Jr. Henry Gardiner H. A. Heller W. F. Hoffman, ] I. M. Hunter J. D. J. Brady R. A. Burke W. P. Covey C. W. Dick E. W. Givens W. B. Johnson, Jr. Richard Palmer C. A. Powers R. M. Jabara E. M. Koos E. R. Novak HOCKEY W. B. Craig W. O. Hunt S. C. Lawson SQUASH R. T. Goodsell BASKETBALL E J. Kauffman R. F. Meyer WRESTLING W. W. L. Reed G. B. Ross H. A. Reid W. H. Sayen, III J. M. Searles J. C. Meyer, Jr. Condict Moore R. S. Mueller, Jr. B. H. Ridder, Jr. J. W. Sargent DA. Scott R. H. Smith H. V. L. Smith E. P. Thompson D. R. Underwood Courtlandt NicoU, Jr. A. M. Williams, Jr. S. C. WoodhuU D. S. Speer C. H. Toll, Jr. J. H. Vruwink T. B. Wood One Hundred Seventy-four Class of 1938 — Numerals (Continued) I. K. Busby M. P. Copp F. T. Hamilton P. R. Applegate, Jr. P. B. Bradley Jonathan Bryan, III J. L. Carter, Jr. L. A. Carver G. B. Hayes, Jr. M. S. Lazaron, Jr. B. McP. Littlehale J. J. Davis W. A. Feather, Jr. J. G. Kelley J. L. Nugent D. V. N. Parsons FENCING W. P. Moore C. H. Peckworth TRACK R. F. Patterson J. C. Pogue B. W. Ripley, III Frederic Rosengarten, Jr. D. A. Scott K. A. Spitz B. E. Taylor, Jr. J. C. Shields C. A. Skinner R. M. Thompson R. D. Thomson P. M. Way S. J. Sarnoff Jack West J. H. White Kemble White, Jr. W. W. Wilson T. B. Wood S. C. Allen J. L. Armitage J. D. Baker J. S. Kellogg SECOND FRESHMAN CREW G. L. Magruder William Orchard G. L. Lilley L. D. Fenninger W. G. Marr A. M. Williams INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONSHIP CREW W. K. Coors Forrest Cranmer John Evans, Jr. C. M. Baker E. J. Bender L. D, Fenninger C. G. McKendree J. W. Bitner R. G. Gould G. L. Magruder W. G. Marr TENNIS J. V. E. Hardy A. B. Martin R. H. Orr, III G. G. Rutherfurd E. B. Martin P. W. Osborne J. C. Stoddard A. M. Williams S. C. WoodhuU W. K. Coors H. B. Cox John Evans, Jr. Peter Benson J. W. Chapman F. S. Kinney T. H. Norris Forrest Cranmer R. V. Elder CREW C. H. Perry Philip Le Boutillier, Jr. 150-POUND CREW Frederick Gilbert J. F. Kraemer T. R. McMillen G. G. Rutherfurd C. K. Mitchell Robert Moment F. L. Taeusch W. A. Wood J. A. Saalfield S. J. Stebbins J. K. Busby L. I. Hook, Jr. W. L. Allen, Jr. R. S. Ingersoll Fumitaka Konoye D. K. Jones H. I. Lord, Jr. GOLF W. E. Rudel POLO D. P. Reynolds P. B. Knight Richard Borden F. G. Wrightson E. G. Riggs Class of 1939-Numerals FOOTBALL W. D. Ayer T. E. Barnicle R. S. Bayer W. C. Bickel H. F. Casey R. C. Cassady K. M. Cathles R, S. Cook J. J. Daniel I. B. Darlington, Jr. J. D. Dusenberry, Jr. F. R. Downey A. B. Duvall, Jr. W. M. Edmonstone D, L. Farber, Jr. W. J. Flather, III J. W. Foster, II H. Y. Haffner I. E. Harkless W. G. Harris R. E. Hill I. F. Kieckhefer William Lane W. B. Lynch J. S. McKnight I. R. Moor W. B. Moore T. R. Mountain A. P. Osborn, Jr. O. M. Palmer K. D. Pettit W. O. Price W. C. PuUen, Jr. E. W. Pyne M. T. Robbins T. K, Roche F. G. Stager C. B. Sv artv ood, Jr. E. B. Sydnor, Jr. Lawrence Taylor M. T. Tiernan C. W. Toebe, Jr. R. B. White H. D. Wynne E. M. Burke D. G. Cochrane Thomas Connell W. H. Daub, Jr. W. P. Davison Richard Edwards SOCCER G. H. Johnson, Jr. Sanders Maxwell A. R. Reis A. W. Schmidt David Scull W. B. D. Stroud R. W. Sylvester D. S. Thompson W. J. Barr B. K. Curley A. G. Gilkes E. C. Morrison J. T. Gifford CROSS COUNTRY G. C. Norton CANE SPREE J. E. Higginbotham A. T. Waterman, Jr. W. M. Hunt Thompson Webb, Jr. T. E. Barnicle Benjamin Coates R. E. Chislett, II D. G. Cochrane P. K. Covey E. R. Davis, Jr. HOCKEY A. J. Greeley W. G. Johnston Harris Metcalfe Rowley Miller M. T. Robbins Brooke Roberts K. B. Smith, Jr. W. H. G. Smith H. N. Young, II R. S. Bayer H. N. Furnold, Jr. R. D. Gilliam W. G. Harris M. F. Hill E. W. Hobler BASKETBALL W. B. Moore E. S. S. Neely R. A. Peelor K. D. Pettit G. R. Scofield, Jr. R. B. White J. H. Wilkes One Hundred Seventy-five Class of 1939 — Numerals (Continued) W. L, Acker, Jr. R. H. Demaree C. M. Elkan A. Y. Foshay, Jr. WRESTLING R. W. Grange R. B. Harding J. E. Harkless, Jr. J. T. Gifford J. D. Verdery N. T. Hayes, Jr. G. F. IngersoU G. C. Bean J. T. Beaty J. J. Osborn G. B. Calkins, Jr. W. F. Hofmann, Jr. SQUASH E. W. Pyne FENCING Harrison Johnston, II D. A. Loper D. K. Richards W. S. Morgan P. L. Okie W. B. D. Stroud F. W. Shaffer A. T. Harper R. R. Hough W. B. Lynch H. L. Moeller, Jr. Hendrik van Oss Thomas AUsopp, II SWIMMING R. H. Binns, III W. B. Harwood, Jr. F. E. P. McCarter T. R. Mountain C. S. Roberts R. J. Sullivan J. H. Clement R, S, Eisner D. H. K. Flagg POLO J. A. James E. W. Pyne M. B. Waterhouse E. W. Clark L. W. Maxwell, Jr. H. N. K. Brookings C. M. Elkan J. M. Fritz J. T. Gifford Henry Aplington, II L. W. Baldwin, Jr. D. G. Nes R. D. Gilliam John Graham J. E. Higginbotham C. F. Limberg G. M. Hornblower R. G. King, Jr. GOLF Trumbull Richard LACROSSE F. E. P. McCarter J. C. Matthews J. W. Moffat, Jr. CREW A. C. Rogers D. W, Sidford R. I. Riddle G. R. Scofield, Jr. J. E. Semmes, Jr. W. H. G. Smith A. H. Silvers R. T, Stotler, Jr. J. S. Taylor, Jr. C. B. Swartwood, Jr. A. P. White H. D. Wynne B. W. Wright E, R. Blout A. L. Butler, Jr. W. C. Eberhardt C. D. Burke G, E. Dale, Jr. S. K. Ellis, Jr. E. C. Hall K. W. Dalzell, Jr. H. R. Fischer 150-POUND CREW R. W. Humphrey G. W. Kaufmann A. H. Keyes, Jr. J. P. Meade SECOND FRESHMAN CREW E. H. Hager E, T, Holsapple, Jr. I. T. Kerr J. W. Pitney J. J. Osborn Brooke Roberts R. L. Tapscott Tinsley Adams R. M. Backes I. M. Day, Jr. Francis Earle, Jr. D. L. Farber, Jr. W. J. Flather, III J. H. Gefaell A. T. Harper BASEBALL M. F. Hill E. W. Hobler J. W. Knowles O. K. Marquardt W. B. Moore P. I. Murphy, Jr. W. C. Parsons M. T. Robbins J. C. Rogers, Jr. E. R. Steele, Jr. R. W. Sylvester William Weeks E. J. Beattie N. F. Bedford C. L. Botthof K. A. Burgess R. E. Chislett, II B. K. Curley A. G. Gilkes P. A. Goold, Jr. A. T. Greeley J. G. Hendrickson TRACK W. N. Lane W. B. Lynch G. C. Norton K. D. Pettit, Jr. W. C. Pullen, Jr. R. E. Reiss R. R. Robinson A. W. Schmidt R. D. Thum Thompson Webb, Jr. Nelson Whitman Grandin Wise H. S. Fraker I. S. Kampmann, Jr. R. J. McKay, P. L. Okie TENNIS S. H. Ogilvy R. A. Peeler E. B. Sydnor, Jr. W. V. Winslow, Jr. R. F. L. Wortham Class of 1940— Numerals B. R. Alger C. J. Balentine H. H. Bertram, Jr. Nicholas Biddle, Jr. R. D. Bokum, II W. M. Davidson D. D. Dickey W. T. Dixon A. D. Ferguson P. D. Forsch G. A. Andrews W. G. Farrar J. H. Buerger T. H, Dixon J. E. Freeman, Jr. R. G. Galey E. G. Green I. A. Gilleaudeau, Jr. R. F. Goheen S. E. Harris, Jr. R. J. Hart G. H, Found FOOTBALL R. J. Hinchman G. A. Howell I. W. Keller, II E. I. Kilcullen A. L. Lane SOCCER P. D. Kimball R. S. Lovelace R. S. Macdonald I. A. Meeker CROSS COUNTRY W. S. Kirkland H. E. Newman, Jr. Anson Perina R. I. Purnell I. W. Pyne S. B. Rogers T. P. Needham F. D. Newbold F. F. Richardson M. B. Robertson F. M. Shanbacker H. J. Stokes, Jr. R. F. Tierney, Jr. R. D. Wells J. H. Worth G. L. Russell, III D. R. Schoenfeld R. J. Schweizer D. M. Watts C. M. Wright One Hundred Seventy-six Major Sports Captains T. W. Montgomery, ' 37, 1936 G. K. Willis, ' 36, 1935-1936 H. A. MacMillan, ' 36, 1935-1936 H. V. Hogan, ' 36, 1936 R. H. French, ' 36, 1936 Gordon Keppel, ' 36, 1936 FOOTBALL HOCKEY BASKETBALL TRACK BASEBALL CREW C. H. Toll, Jr., ' 38, 1937 J. T. Bissau, ' 38, 1936-1937 F. D. Sauter, ' 37, 1936-1937 J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37, 1937 Dean Hill, Jr., ' 37, 1937 H. J. Swift, ' 37, 1937 Major Sports Managers E. N. Cutler, Jr., ' 37, 1936 C. W. Edwards, ' 36, 1935-1936 B. C. Milner, III, ' 36, 1935-1936 D. G. Greene, ' 36, 1936 R. O. Jones, ' 36, 1936 J. R. Reist, ' 36, 1936 FOOTBALL HOCKEY BASKETBALL TRACK BASEBALL CREW W. T. Galey, III, ' 38, 1937 E. W. Scott, ' 37, 1936-1937 T. C. Werbe, Jr., ' 37, 1936-1937 W. C. Cummings, Jr., ' 37, 1937 G. S. McElroy, ' 37, 1937 R. D. Stuart, Jr., ' 37, 1937 One Hundred Seventy-seven STANDING; Mr. Logan, Halsey, Watson, Dr. York, SEATED: Novak, Follansbee, Hutcheson, McElroy, Porker. Intracollegiate Athletic Association OFFICERS T. T. Hutcheson, ' 37 President Harper Follansbee, ' 37 Secretary G. S. McElroy, ' 37 Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. B. Parker, ' 37 E. R. Novak, ' 38 W. F. Halsey, Jr., ' 38 W. J. Watson ' 38 Dr. W. H. York Ex-Officio Member W. F. Logan ..Advisor MEMBERS Club Member Arbor Inn A. J. Morrell, ' 38 Campus L. B. Smith, ' 37 Cannon J. D. Sylvester, ' 37 Cap and Gown J. W. Burke, Jr., ' 37 Charter Chapin Hawley, ' 37 Cloister Inn R. H. Robie, ' 37 Colonial J. W. Ragsdale, ' 37 Cottage G. G. Otis, ' 37 Court E. M. Finck, Jr., ' 37 Tower Club Member Dial Lodge L. A. Scinta, ' 37 Elm C. C. Honsaker, Jr., ' 37 Gateway R. G. Adamson, ' 37 Ivy R. S. Parker, ' 37 Key and Seal E. J. Jackson, ' 37 Madison N. L. Foote, ' 37 Quadrangle F. W. Thacher, Jr., ' 38 Terrace J. W. Bredenberg. ' 37 Tiger R. B. Parker, ' 37 G. M. Duff, Jr., ' 37 Representatives from each upper-class eating club, from the Madison Club, and the Sophomore dor- mitory sport managers constitute the membership of the Intracollegiate Athletic Association. The pur- pose of this organization is to foster a competitive spirit among the clubs and among the Sophomore dormitory units, and to further the development of intra-mural sports at Princeton. One Hundred Seventy-eight Council on Athletics EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 Graduate Manager of Athletics B. N. Dell, ' 12 Chairman, Director of Athletics Christian Gauss Dean of the College G. C. Wintringer, ' 94 Controller Dr. W. H. York, Chairman of the Department of Health and Physical Education TRUSTEE MEMBERS Dean Mathey, ' 12 Paul Bedford, ' 97 ALUMNI MEMBERS A. A. Gulick, ' 97 C. W. McGraw, ' 19 FACULTY MEMBERS President H. W. Dodds R. G. Albion A. G. Shenstone UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 C. H. Toll, Jr., ' 38 Fall Intra-Collegiate Athletic Contests, 1936 BASEBALL Won by 1939 WINNER OF THE INTER-CLUB TROPHY Tower Club INTER-CLUB TOUCH FOOTBALL Won by Tiger Inn • • , INTER-DORMITORY TOUCH FOOTBALL Won by Henry PRINCETON UNIVERSITY SPRING GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP Winner— J. F. Malloy, ' 36 Runner-Up — J. B. C. Denmark, ' 38 FALL GOLF-CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP Winner — Fumitaka Konoye, ' 38 Runner-Up— R. J. Riddle, ' 39 Winner of the Second Sixteen — C. W. McGraw, ' 19 Runner-Up of the Second Sixteen — Trumbull Richard, ' 39 Winner of the Third Sixteen — Dean Mathey, ' 12 Winner of the Fourth Sixteen— T. S. Dignan, ' 26 Winner of the Fifth Sixteen — Lasater Terrell, ' 19 CANE SPREE LIGHTWEIGHT— R. M. Backes, ' 39, defeated J. C. Daubenspeck, ' 40 MIDDLEWEIGHT— C. H. Kurtz, ' 40, defeated W. M. Edmonstone, ' 39 HEAVYWEIGHT— J. D. Hackett, Jr., ' 39, defeated V. S. Merle-Smith, ' 40 UMPIRE— M. S. Emory, ' 38 ANNOUNCER— J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 One Hundred Seventy-nine Caledonian Games HELD APRIL 28 AND 29, 1936, AT PALMER STADIUM TRACK EVENTS 100-YARD DASH Winners Time 1. Wilson, ' 38 0:10.2 2. Whitman, ' 39 3. Tippett, ' 37 220-YARD DASH 1. Kearny, ' 37 0;22.5 2. Whitman, ' 39 3. Goold, ' 39 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES 1. Irwin, ' 37 0:16.0 2. DuFlon, ' 37 220-YARD LOW HURDLES 1. Irwin, ' 37 0:24.6 2. DuFlon, ' 37 3. Benson, ' 37 440-YARD RUN 1. Kearny, ' 37 0:49.2 2. Goold, ' 39 3. Furlong, ' 36 880- YARD RUN 1. Bradley, ' 38 1:58.0 2. Thum, ' 39 3. Applegate, ' 38 THREE-QUARTER MILE 1. Hogan, ' 36 3:15.4 2. Carver, ' 38 3. Waterman, ' 39 ONE AND ONE-HALF MILE 1. Rosengarten, ' 38 7:35.0 2. Parsons, ' 38 3. Curley, ' 39 FIELD EVENTS RUNNING HIGH JUMP Winners Height 1. Fackert, ' 36 6 ft. 2. Robinson, ' 39 3. Scott, ' 38 POLE VAULT 1. Patterson, ' 38 12 ft. 1 in. 2. Medina, ' 37 3. Rainear, ' 38 RUNNING BROAD JUMP 1. Fackert, ' 36 22 ft. IOV2 in. 2. Wilson, ' 38 3. Way, ' 38 SHOT PUT Distance 1. Buckman, ' 37 42 ft. 9 4 in. 2. Toll, ' 38 3. Cambell, ' 37 HAMMER THROW 1. Lynch, ' 39 144 ft. 3 in. 2. PuUen, ' 39 DISCUS THROW 1. Weller, ' 36 138 ft. 6 ' 4 in. 2. Lane, ' 39 3. Wise, ' 39 JAVELIN 1. Bedford, ' 39 154 ft. 2. Johnston, ' 37 3. Foran, ' 37 SUMMARY 1937 41 1938 38 1939 35 1936 21 One Hundred Eighty Fall Handicap Meet NOVEMBER 10, 1936 TRACK EVENTS FIELD EVENTS Winner and Ploce Time Winner and Place Height or Distance 100- YARD DASH SHOT PUT 1. L. L. Bicidle, Jr.. ' 40 0:10.6 1. J. H. Buckman, Jr., ' 37 39 ' 0 2. A. T. Greeley, ' 39 JAVELIN THROW 3 Hendrik van Oss, ' 39 , i ir r- i ' n i ao ' a 1. J. E. Freeman, Jr., 40 148 8 300-YARD RUN 2. L. A. Carton, ' 40 „ „c n 3. R. M. Bragdon, ' 38 1 C. H. Kearny, ' 37 0:35.0 2. Macdonald Halsey, ' 40 POLE VAULT 3. J. J. Doyle, ' 37 1. L. S Yow, ' 40 10 ' 6 2. P. T. Gebhard, Jr., ' 39 600-YARD RUN 1. C. H. Kearny, ' 37 1:17.4 BROAD JUMP 2. J. L. Nugent, ' 38 • W. W. Wilson, ' 38 20 ' 5 - a 2. K. A. Burgess, ' 39 3. Lawrence Sweeney, 40 3 ,jj ,3g l 2-MILE RUN HIGH JUMP 1 Thompson Webb, Jr., ' 39 7:30.0 j j y Burdick, Jr., ' 40 5 ' 9 2. C. M. Wright, ' 40 2. K. A. Burgess, ' 39 3 Frederic Rosengarten, Jr.. ' 38 3. P. T Gondii, ' 40 DISCUS THROW 1. J. H. Hauberg, Jr., ' 39 119 ' 0 2. J. H. Buckman, Jr., ' 37 3. J. E. Freeman, Jr., ' 40 Fall Rowing With a good turnout and several additions to the coaching staff, a great deal was accomplished during the 1936 Fall Rowing season on Lake Car- negie. Head Coach Gordon Sikes supervised crew activities, assisted by James Ten Eyck, an expert on sculling; Bill Bryan, coach of the light- weights; Durrand Echeverria, and Pete Schwartz. The annual Fall Regatta, held on the 7th of November, was most successful. Sixty-six men entered and an excellent brand of oarsmanship was shown. The Schultz Trophy for Sophomores was won by John Osborn, and Jack Kraemer emerged victorious in the 150-pound race for upperclassmen. Eight men, those who placed first and second in these two races and the win- ners of the four upperclass heats, became eligible to compete in the semi-final for the Coaches ' Cup. The final was comprised of the men who took the first six places in the semi-final. The participants in the final heat of the Coaches ' Cup were hampered by a bitter North- east wind, but this did not prevent the finish from being the closest ever seen on Lake Carnegie. Allen took an early lead, but relinquished it to Kraemer, who seemed destined to win the race. However, Osborn, coming from behind with a burst of speed in the last quarter, overtook him and won by less than half a length in the time of 6:29.4. Kraemer ' s time was 6:30 and Tom Mc- Millen, who placed third, covered the course in 6:32.6. The first annual Intercollegiate Sculling Re- gatta, held in memory of John Schultz on the Saturday after the Fall Regatta, took place on November 14th. One entrant, Thomas Darcy, of Harvard, was defeated by Jack Kraemer in the 150-pound class. An informal race between the Yale and Princeton Varsities was also held. The Princeton boat won by two lengths over a half- mile course. An informal intracollegiate handicap race on November 23rd was won by the varsity boat. This closed the varsity season. The lightweight season ended on November 16th, but the Fresh- men remained on the lake, during periods of favorable weather, until the 15th of December. The annual Fall Crew banquet was held at the Nassau Inn on Friday, December llth. The cups and trophies for the regattas were presented by B. W. Smith, ' 33, toastmaster, and T. T. Hutcheson, ' 37, President of the Intracollegiate Athletic Asso- ciation. 1929 C. A. Hardy, ' 32 1930 A. L. Strang, ' 33 1931 A. L. Strang, ' 33 1932 B. W. Smith, 33 COACHES ' CUP WINNERS 1933 W. H. PHaumer, ' 34 1934 H. G. Bugbee, ' 36 1935 L F. P. Kelly, ' 36 1936 F. H. Osborn, Jr., ' 37 One Hundred Eighty-one The Princeton Life Saving Club Dr. W. H. York Faculty Advisor H. L. Canoune, ' 37 President Howard Stepp Instructor Last year alter twenty-two years of being an independent organization, the Princeton Life Saving Club joined the National Collegiate Life Saving Society. Therefore in place of its own tests, the Club gives tests which are uniform in all colleges belonging to the Society. A diploma from the latter organization is given to those men who successfully pass these tests. All to be eligible to take the tests must be Red Cross Senior Life Savers. All Red Cross Examinations are given under Instructor Howard Stepp. NATIONAL COLLEGIATE LIFE SAVING SOCIETY DIPLOMA WINNERS Curtiss Cummings, ' 39 A. M. Eastburn, ' 39 N. L Foote, ' 37 P. T. Gebhart, Jr., ' 39 R. R. Hough, ' 39 R. B. Jackson, ' 39 W. W. Janeway, ' 39 E. H. Morgan, ' 38 A. P. Olcott, ' 39 Hendrik van Oss, ' 39 RED CROSS LIFE SAVING EXAMINERS F. J. Allsup, ' 39 R. H. Einns, III, ' 39 R. E. Eorner, ' 37 H. L. Canoune, ' 37 H. D. Cranston, Jr., ' 38 G. W. De Sousa, ' 38 W. L. Drill, ' 38 F. M. Hendrickson, ' 37 J. F. Mead, ' 38 R. B. Miller, ' 37 F. G. Stickel, III, ' 37 RED CROSS SENIOR LIFE SAVERS A. H. Bolte, ' 39 D. B. Cook, ' 38 N. L. Gill, ' 39 D. H. Jaquith, ' 39 R. M. Johnston, ' 37 H. G. Kunkel, ' 38 V. S. Merle-Smith, Jr., ' 40 Robert Moment, ' 38 Albert Moore, ' 38 J. Palaschek, Jr., ' 37 C. R. Ruhlman, Jr., ' 38 C. J. Smith, ' 39 F. R. Snyder, ' 39 A. C. Ulmer, Jr., ' 39 C. R. Watson, Jr., ' 38 W. H. Wilson, Jr., ' 39 One Hundred Eighty-two A. L. Lane 1940 Football Captain Anson Perina 1940 Footboll M B. Robertson G. L. Russell, III ( 1 940 Soccer Co-Captains FRESHMAN SPORTS TOP ROW: Howell, Newmcn, Ticrncv, Bertram, Biddle THIRD ROW W T Galey iMgr i, R G Galey, Green, Pvne, Bokum, Freeman, Johnston iMgr.i. SECOND ROW: Kilcullen, Purnell, Alger, Rogers, Worth, Stokes, Wells, Gorman iCoachi. FRONT ROW: Dixon, Bolentine, Hinchman, Lane (Capt.), Keller, Buerger, Perino. 1940 Freshman Football Team OFFICERS A. L. Lane Captain J. P. Gorman, ' 23 Coach C. F. Foster Assistant Coach R. E. McCabe, ' 34 ..Assistant Coach G. K. Wilhs, ' 36 ...Assistant Coach TEAM R. I. Purnell Left End J. W. Pyne ..Right End R. D. Bokum Left Tackle T. H, Dixon Quarterback I. H. Worth Left Guard R. D. Wells Quarterback B. R, Alger Center Anson Perina Left Halfback C. J. Bolentine Right Guard R. J. Hinchman Right Halfback J. H. Buerger Right Tackle A. L. Lane Fullback SUBSTITUTES H. H. Bertram, Jr End Nicholas Biddle, Jr End I. W. Keiler End J. E. Freeman Tackle R. F. S. B. Date Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Tierney, Jr Tackle Rogers Guard H. J. Stckes Guard H. E. Newman Center R. G. Galey Back E. G. Green Back G. A. Howell Back E. J. Kilcullen Back Score Princeton 7 Princeton 15 Opponent Mercersburg Columbia 1940.. GAMES Score Date Oct. 30 Nov. 6 Score Princeton Princeton Opponent Score Pennsylvania 1940 12 Yale 1940 Review of the Season In spite of an exceptionally slow start due to the tardy opening of college, the 1940 edition of the Princeton Freshman football team rounded into shape rapidly and proved to be one of the best first-year teams in several years. Under the tutelage of Coach Gorman, they won two games, tied one and were defeated in their fourth. The first game saw the yearlings win their traditional opener with Mercersburg by the close margin of one touchdown. In the next game last year ' s triumph over Columbia was repeated, this time by the safe margin of 15-0. Pennsylvania proved too strong for a determined Tiger eleven and pushed over two touchdowns in the closing minutes to down Princeton by a score of 12-0. In the traditional battle with the Yale Freshman, Princeton was conceded a good chance to win, but the strong Eli line stopped all the Orange and Black onslaughts, and the game ended in a scoreless tie. One Hundred Eighty-four 1939 Freshman Hockey Team OFFICERS r.owley Millar ... Captain r : E. W. Scott, ' 37 .Manager fii R. L Burger, ' 37 -Manager L. W. Ti ers, ' 34 ...Coach TEAM W. G. Johnston Rowley Miller K. B. Smith Goal D. G. Cochrcn?. . le. ' t Defense H. G. Smith r.ight Defense M. T. Bobbins.... Center Left Wing Right Wing SUBSTITUTES Harris Metcalf T. E. Barnicle R. E. Chislett, I! Benjamin Coates P. K. Covey . T. Greeley R. S. Davis Brooke Roberts H. N. Young, III GAMES, 1935-1936 Dote Score Opponent Score Date Score Opponent Score Dec. 14 Princeton 5 Dec. 19 Princeton 4 Jan. 8 Princeton 6 Ian. 11 Princeton 8 Ian. 14 Princeton 5 Jan. 18 Princeton 10 Feb. 6 Princeton 2 Feb. 7 Princeton 2 Jayvee St. Paul ' s Manhattan Arrows. Gilman Jayvee Lawrenceville Hotchkiss Kent 2 Feb. 12 Princeton... 1 Feb. 17 Princeton... 1 Feb. 22 Princeton.... 1 Feb. 24 Princeton.... 3 Feb. 25 Princeton.... Feb. 26 Princeton... 3 Mar. 2 Princeton.... 1 12 5 6 7 12 9 3 Hun Jayvee - Yale ' 39 - Nichols Carteret Morristown Northwood . . 4 - 4 . 1 . . . 3 Review of the Season Although handicapped throughout the season by ineligibility, sickness, and injuries, the 1939 Freshman Hockey Team made a creditable showing, losing cne, tying two, and winning twelve games. Three times ' he Freshmen proved themselves superior to the Jayvees, most of whom played on last year ' s lauded Freshman team. The two high spots of the season were the victory over St. Paul ' s, and the 6-4 win over the favored Yale ' 39 sextet. Although many players starred. Captain Miller, Bobbins, Johnston, and Barnicle were particularly outstanding. TO. ROW: Metcolf, Chislett, Tiers iCoochi, Roberts, W. H. G. Smith. SECOND ROW: Scott (Mgr I, Bornicle, Coates, Greeley, Covey, Burger lAsst. Mgr. i . FRONT ROW: Johnston, Cochrane, K. B. Smi.h Miller iCapt.i, Young, Dav s, Robbins. One Hundred Eighty-five TOP ROW: Gilliam, Neely, Pettit. SECOND ROW: Nies iCoochl, Wilkes, Bayer, Harris, Moore, Furnald, Werbe (Mgr.). FRONT ROW: White, Hill, Nobler iCapt.i, Scofield, Peelor. 1939 Freshman Basketball Team OFFICERS E. W. Hobler _ Captain B. C. Milner, III, ' 36 Manager A. B. Nies Coach TEAM R. A. Peeler Forward G. R. Scofield, Jr M. F. Hill Forward E. W. Hobler R. B. White Guard ..Center ..Guard SUBSTITUTES R. S. Bayer H, N. Furnald, Jr. Date Score Dec. 7 Princeton, 1939 40 Dsc. 11 Princeton, 1939 45 Dec. 14 Princeton, 1939 25 Ion. 11 Princeton, 1939 34 Jan. 15 Princeton, 1939 41 Ian. 18 Princeton, 1939 28 Feb. 8 Princeton, 1939 23 R. D. Gilliam W. G. Harris W. B. Moore E. S. S. Neely GAMES Opponent Score Princeton ]. V 22 Lawrenceville 31 Trenton H. S 20 Hill 32 Lafayette 1939 27 Trentcn H. S 32 Army 1939 35 Dote Score Feb. 12 Princeton, 1939 22 Feb. 15 Princeton, 1939 47 Feb. 20 Princeton, 1939 28 Feb. 22 Princeton, 1939 34 Feb. 26 Princeton, 1939 13 Feb. 29 Princeton, 1939 31 Mar. 4 Princeton, 1939 28 K. D. Pettit J. H. Wilkes Opponent Score Hun 27 Peddle 24 Hun 19 Wyoming Seminary 22 Columbia 1939 22 Yale 1939 1 6 Pennsylvania 1939 39 Review of the Season The 1939 Freshman team enjoyed a fairly successful season, winning nine out of fourteen games. The yearlings overcame the Yale 1939 five in an easy battle, but lost to the superior strength of the Columbia and Pennsylvania freshmen. Captain Hopler led the attack with his work under the basket; Hill and Peelor, scoring from farther out, aided constantly. White and Gilliam starred at guard. One Hundred Eighty-six 1939 Freshman Track Team OFFICERS R. D. Thum Captain M. T. Geis Coaches H. R. Mahnken TEAM Bruce Bedford, Jr. P. A. Goold, Jr. G. C. Norton A. W. Schmidt C. L. Botthof A. T. Greeley K. D. Pettit, Jr. R. D. Thum K. A. Burgess R. S. Hendrickson, Jr. W. C. Pullen, Jr. Thompson Webb, Jr. R. E. Chislett, II W. N. Lane R. E. Reiss Nelson Whitman B. K. Curley W. B. Lynch R. R. Robinson Grandin Wise A. G. Gilkes MEETS Date Score Opponent Score Dote Score Opponent Sco April 17 Princeton 1939 83 Hill ...43 May 9 Princeton 1939.. 77 Pennsylvania I939..58 May 2 Princeton 1939 96 ' 2 Lawrenceville ...29 ' 2 May 16 Princeton 1939.. 70 Yale 1939 65 Review of the Season The powerful 1939 Freshman team climaxed an undefeated season with a fine 70-65 victory over the Yale freshmen, breaking the Eli string of eleven consecutive wins. The well-balanced yearling team overwhelmed Hill and Lawrenceville with Thum and Whitman leading the runners and Wise and Lynch starring in the field events. Robinson cleared 6 ' 2 in the high jump against Lawrenceville, the most brilliant individual performance of the season. Penn was crushed in stride, but the Yale meet went to the last event before victory was secured. BACK ROW: Fettit, Lynch, Gould, Thum iCapt.i, Botthof, Whitman, Chislett. SECOND ROW: Mencken iCoochi, Webb, Gilkes, Curley, Bedford, Reiss, Greeley, Pullen, Geis iCoachi. FRONT ROW: Burgess, Gorman, Schmidt, Robinson, Cummings, Wise, Lane, Norton, Hsndr.ckson. One Hundred Eighty-seven BACK ROW; Adams, Moore, Knowlcs, Rogers, Gorman iCoachi, Murphy, Farbor, HiM iCaptJ, Morquardt SECOND ROW Thachcr ' Mgr i, Day, Tillinghost, Backes, Lonman, Gefoell, Flother, Parsons, Hobler, Robbins, Foster (Coach ' . FRONT ROW; Sylvester, Eerie, Weeks, Steele, Demaree, Lober, Havens, Schuerhoff, Harper. 1939 Freshman Baseball Team OFFICERS M. F. Hill Captain F. W. Thacher Manager J. P. Gorman __ Coach TEAM M. T. Robbins Catcher J. H. Gefaell ...First Base W. C. Parsons ..Second Base J. C. Rogers Third Base E. W. Hobler Shortstop R, M. Backes ...Center Field M. F. Hill Left Field J. W. Knowles. Right Field E. R. Steele D. L. Farber Pitcher P. J. Murphy.. Pitcher O. K. Marquardt Pitcher T. Adams Infield W. Moore Infield W. J. Flather Outfield Francis Earle, Jr Outfield A. T. Harper Outfield Outfield GAMES Dote Score April 8 Princeton 1939 6 April 15 Princeton 1939 1 April 18 Princeton 1939 2 April 22 Princeton 1939 17 April 25 Princeton 1939 3 April 29 Princeton 1939 3 Opponent Score Tome School 4 Lafayette 1939 New Rochelle H. S 1 Lawrenceville 5 James Monroe H. S 2 Trenton H, S. 1 Dote Score May 1 Princeton 1939 4 May 6 Princeton 1939 4 May 9 Princeton 1939 9 May 12 Princeton 1939 7 May 14 Princeton 1939 15 May 16 Princeton 1939 2 Opponent Scon Hill School 5 Columbia 1939 5 Mercersburg 9 Yale 1939 8 Rutgers 1939 6 Pennsylvania 1939 9 Review of the Season Despite their record of seven wins and one tie in thirteen starts, the season was a rather disappointing one for the yearlings. After having started with a brilliant winning streak of six straight games, its fortunes changed with equal decisiveness. The remainder of the season v ras characterized by several close defeats and by but one victory. The two outstanding players were pitcher Lefty Farber and Captain Mark Hill. Although he weakened towards the end of the season, Farber pitched an exceptional brand of ball and shows real promise. Mark Hill was the most consistent hitter on the team, and his fielding was equally good. One Hundred Eighty-eight 1939 Freshman Crew OFFICERS G. M. Hornblower, ' 39. G. G. Sikes, ' 16 .Captain ...Coach THE CREW Name Position R. T. Slotler, Jr Stroke R. B. Baldwin 7 Henry Aplington, II 6 R. G. King, Jr 5 D. W. Sidfcrd 4 Nome Position A. H. Silvers 3 A. C. Rogers 2 B. W. Wright Bow G. M. Hornblower Cox. Dote April 25.- May 2.. May 16.. RACES 1936 First Second Third Course Princeton 1939 Penn 1939 Columbia 1939 New York Harvard 1939 Princeton 1939 M. I. T. 1939 Charles Cornell 1939 Princeton 1939 Yale 1939 Lake Carnegie Review of the Season With one first and two seconds, the 1939 rowers were more successful than their predecessors of last year. Headed only by Harvard and Cornell, the Freshmen showed their wake to Penn, Columbia, M. I. T., and Yale. STANDING: Stotler, Baldwin, Aplington, King, Sidford, Silvers, Rogers, Wright. SEATED: Hornblower (Cox.l. One Hundred Eighty-nine 1940 Freshman Soccer OFFICERS MB. Robertson { Co-Captains G. L. Russell, III j J. B. Kerr, ' 38 Manager W. F. Logan Coach TEAM D. R. Schoenfeld Goal D. D. Dickey Right Fullback R. J. Hart Left Fullback S. E. Harris, Jr Right Halfback D. M. Watts Center Halfback M. B. Robertson Left Halfback T. P. Needham W. M. Davidson.. G. L. Russell R. F. Goheen F. F. Richardson.. Outside Right Inside Right ..Center Forward Inside Left Outside Left SUBSTITUTES W. T. Dixon J. A. Gilleaudeau, Jr. Date Score Oct. 16 Princeton ' 40 2 Oct. 20 Princeton ' 40 2 Oct. 23 Princeton ' 40 Oct. 28 Princeton ' 40 2 Oct. 31 Princeton ' 40 2 P. D. Kimball F. D. Forsch R. S. MacDonald I. A. Meeker RECORD Opponent Score Pennington Central H. S. 1 Hamilton High School 4 Hightstown High School.. 2 Pennington Ce ntral H. S. Hill School i Dote Score Nov. 6 Princeton ' 40 Nov. 11 Princeton ' 40 2 Nov. 14 Princeton ' 40 4 Nov. 20 Princeton ' 40 1 F. D. Newbold R. S. Lovelace Opponent Score Trenton High School 2 Hightstov n High School.. 2 Yale ' 40 1 Penn ' 40 Review of the Season Coach Logan again produced a very fine Freshman team which went through its season of nine games with only three defeats and one tie. In spite of these defeats, the season might be considered successful as the Freshmen beat their most important rivals — Yale, Pennsylvania, and Hill School. Starting the season with a win over Pennington Central High School, the team slumped badly and went down in defeat in the next two games but rallied to beat Pennington and set the stage for some brilliant games ahead. The tough opposition of Hill School was overcome 2-1. Then to close the season, the team played smart ball to beat Yale 4-1 and Penn 1-0. 1940 Freshman Cross Country OFFICERS C. M. Wright .._ _ .Captain P. M. Sykes, ' 37 Manager M. T. Geis Coach G. B. Andrews J. X. Farrar, Jr. TEAM G. H. Found W. S Kirkland F. M. Shanbacker Lawrence Sweeney C. M. Wright F. B. Lee, Jr Date Score Oct. 16 Princeton... 22 Oct. 24 Princeton... 20 Nov. 6 Princeton... 37 W. E. Flanagan Score Opponent Princeton 24 Yale Intercollegiates at New York City.. Score 34 ..Fourth Place SUBSTITUTES MEETS Opponent Score Date Rutgers 33 Nov. 6 Columbia 25 Nov. 16 Harvard 19 Review of the Season The Princeton runners had a highly successful season, defeating Rutgers and Columbia in dual meets, and closing the season with fourth place in the Intercollegiates in New York, an excellent performance. The triangular meet with Yale and Harvard produced the team ' s only defeat by the latter and a very satisfactory win over Yale. Captain Wright led the yearling harriers, ably supported by Found, Kirkland, Andrews, and Farrar. One Hundred Ninety 1939 Freshman Swimming Team OFFICERS Hendrik van Oss and R. R. Hough Co-Captains J. E. Zachorias, ' 36 Manager Howard Stepp Coach Thomas AUsopp, II R. H. Binns, III I. H. Clement A. T. Harper W, B. Harwood TEAM R. R. Hough R. B. Jackson W. B. Lynch F. E. McCarler H, L. Moeller T. R. Mountain C. S, Roberts W. L. Smith R. J. Sullivan Hendrik Van Oss Dote 11 le Jan. Jan. Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Score Princeton Freshmen 54 Princeton Freshmen 59 Princeton Freshmen 33 Princeton Freshmen 33 MEETS Opponent Score Dote Far Rockaway H. S 24 Feb. 19 Peddle School 16 Feb. 22 Blair Academy 42 Mar. 7 Mercersburg 38 Mar. 14 Score Princeton Freshmen 46 Princeton Freshmen 42 Princeton Freshmen 45 Princeton Freshmen 34 Opponent Score Lawrenceville 25 Trenton H. S 33 Pennsylvanit Fresh ' n..26 Yale Freshmen 37 Review of the Season The 1939 Freshman Swimming Team enjoyed a moderately successful season, losing only three of its eight meets. The Freshman 200-yard relay team, composed of Harper, Moeller, Lynch, and van Oss, won that event in the I. S. A. meet. Dick Hough broke all existing Princeton breast-stroke records, and he also set a new world ' s mark for the 100-yard breast-stroke. 1939 Freshman Wrestling Team OFFICERS Richard Harding ___ Captain H. C. Essertier, ' 36 Manager James J. Reed Coach MEMBERS OF THE TEAM C. M. Elkan 118-lb. Class A. Y. Foshay 126-lb. Class R. B. Harding 135-lb. Class R. W. Grange— 145-lb. Class I. D. Verdery and W. L. Acker 155-lb. Class J. T. Gifford 165-lb. Class J. E. Harkless 175-lb. Class R. H. Demaree Unlimited Class Dote Score Ian. 1 1 Princeton Freshmen 27 Ian. 18 Princeton Freshmen 33 Feb. 8 Princeton Freshmen 29 MEETS Opponent Score Date Teaneck H. S 3 Feb. 15 Gilman C. D. S 3 Feb. 21 George School Feb. 29 Score Princeton Freshmen 1 1 Princeton Freshmen II Princeton Freshmen 13 Opponent Score Blair Academy 15 Poly Prep C. D. S 15 Yale Freshmen 17 Review of the Season The 1939 Freshman Wrestling Team enjoyed a rather mediocre season, winning three and losing three of its meets. R. H. Grange won the Hooker Cup, awarded to that member of the Freshman Wrestling Team who shows the best improvement throughout the season. One Hundred Ninety-one 1939 Freshman Fencing OFFICERS W. S. Morgan, Jr _ .Captain J. T. Mason, ' 36 Manager H. H. Pirotte Coach C. L. Bausch, Jr. G. C. Bean I. T. Beaty G. B Calkins, Jr. TEAM W. F. Hoff mann, Jr. Harding Jofinson D. A. Loper W. S. Morgan, Jr. P. L. Okie A. J. Parmentier, Jr. F. W. Shaffer Jack West MEETS Date Score Feb. 8 Princeton 14 Feb. 15 Princeton 13 Feb. 22 Princeton 6 Feb. 28 Princeton 12 Opponent Score Rutgers 3 Loomis 4 Barringer High - 11 Germantown Academy 5 Date Feb. 29 Mar. 7 Score Princeton 7 Princeton 11 Mar, 10 Princeton 8 Mar. 14 Princeton 17 Opponent Score Choate 10 Penn Charter 6 Columbia 9 Yale 10 Review of the Season The Freshmen Fencers experienced a moderately successful season, winning five out of eight matches. The team counted among its victims Rutgers and Yale, whereas its Columbia classmates managed to eke out a one point victory. 1939 Freshman Lacrosse OFFICERS J. T. Gilford Co-Captain C. B. Swortwood, Jr Co-Captain Ken Fairman, ' 34 ...Coach J. L. Martin, Jr., ' 37 Manager TEAM J. C. Matthews Goal H. D. Wynne Point F. E. P. McCarter Cover Point H. N. K. Brookings First Defense J. T. Gilford Second Defense R. D. Gilliam Center J. E. Higginbotham Second Attack C. M. Elkan First Attack C. B. Swartwood, Jr Out Home J. E. Semmes, Jr In Home SUBSTITUTES J. M. Fritz John Graham C. F. Limberg J. W. Moffat, Jr. G. R. Scofield, Jr. W. H. G. Smith A. P. White Dote Score April 18 Princeton 1939. 1 April 25 Princeton 1939 4 May 2 Princeton 1939 1 GAMES Opponent Score Dote Score Alex. Hamilton H. S 4 May 9 Princeton 1939 6 Poly Prep C. D. S.. 10 May 15 Princeton 1939 11 Oilman 10 Opponent Score Yale 1939 3 Pannsylvania 1939 5 Review of the Season The 1939 Freshman Lacrosse Team did not enjoy so good a season as last year ' s, owing for the most part to lack of players with previous experience. The team opened its season by suffering impressive defeats in its first three encounters with Alexander Hamilton High School, Poly Prep Country Day School, and Gilman. All of these opponents, however, had fine teams and were backed by more experience. Never- theless, in the face of these defeats, the team pulled itself together to beat Yale by the score of 6 to 3. The following week the team journeyed to Philadelphia to climax the season with an overwhelming victory over the Penn Frosh by the score of 1 1 to 5. One Hundred Ninety-two 1939 Freshman Tennis Team OFFICERS R. A. Peelor Cctptain H. W. Rittgers Coach H. S. Fraker I. S. Kampmann, Jr. R. I. McKay, Jr. TEAM P. L. Okie S. H. Ogilvy R. A. Peelor Date Score April 18 Princeton 1939 3 April 24 Princeton 1939 9 April 29 Princeton 1939 8 May 2 Princeton 1939 9 MATCHES, 1936 Opponent Score Dote Episcopal H. S 3 May 6 Hun May 9 Scarborough I May 14 Hill E. B. Sidnor, Jr. W. V. Winslow, Jr. R. F. L. Wortham Score Princeton 1939 9 Princeton 1939 7 Princeton 1939 6 Opponent Score Columbia 1939 Pennsylvania 1939 2 Yale 1939 3 Review of the Season Owing to lack of time for practice before the first match with Episcopal High School of Virginia, the 1939 Freshman Tennis team was forced to be content with a tie, the only encounter it did not win by a decisive margin. Although members of the team lacked footwork at first, Princeton ' s new Freshman Coach Rittgers put them through a period of intensive training which resulted in giving the University a well-rounded squad. The climax of the season came with the defeat of Yale by the score of 6 to 3, which was totally unexpected. The only other college Freshman teams played were Columbia and Pennsyl- vania, who bowed before overwhelming opposition by the score of 9 to and 7 to 2 respectively. Prince- ton met some first class preparatory and high school opponents such as Hill School, Hun, and Scar- borough, all of whom bowed before one of the best teams to represent the Freshmen on the courts in recent years. 1939 Freshman Golf Team OFFICERS L. E. Sherwood Manager Walter Bourne Coach E. W. Clark L. W. Maxwell, Jr. TEAM D. G. Nes Trumbull Richard R. J. Riddle J. S. Taylor. Jr. MATCHES Dote Score April 29 Princeton 1939 6 ' 2 May 2 Princeton 1939 6 May 6 Princeton 1939 6 Opponent Score Lcrwrenceville 2 Vz Yale 1939 3 Peddie Date Score May 9 Princeton 1939 2 May 13 Princeton 1939 8 May 15 Princeton 1939 6 Opponent Score Hill 7 Lcrwrenceville 1 Pennsylvania 1939 3 Review of the Season Losing only to the interscholastic champion Hill School squad, the 1939 Freshman Golf Team turned in a highly successful record. The first three matches resulted in victories for the yearlings. Peddie was com- pletely shut out in a four-man match, and the tables were turned against Yale Freshmen, avenging the defeat suffered last year by the 1938 squad. After the disappointment at Pottstown, the team marched on to subdue its remaining rivals, concluding the season with five wins and one loss. One Hundred Ninety-three 1939 Freshman Polo Team OFFICERS R. S. Eisner Captain Barton Cameron Manager Captain Burkhart Coach R. S. Eisner D. A. K. Flagg TEAM M. B. Waterhouse E. W. Pyne MATCHES Date Score Dec. 14, 1935 Princeton 1939 8I 2 Feb. 15, 1936 Princeton 1939 IV2 Feb. 22, 1936 Princeton 1939 IOI 2 May 6, 1936 Princeton 1939 4 May 9, 1936 Princeton 1939 6 May 16, 1936 Princeton 1939 3 Opponent Score La ' wrenceville 18 Lawrenceville 16 Vz Yale 1939 13 Lawrenceville 8 Lawrenceville 9 Yale 1939 9 Review of the Season The 1939 Freshman Polo Team continued the course of its predecessors by suffering a disastrous season. Six matches were ployed in all, three indoor and three outdoor, but the Yearlings were unable to emerge victorious in any encounter. The experienced Lawrenceville riders easily defeated the Freshmen in four attempts, while Yale accounted for the other two losses. Of the five numeral men. Captain Eisner was the outstanding horseman and high scorer of the season. One Hundied Ninety-four lCa.- w Sub Cuinine The Interclub Committee EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE A. M. Wicks, ' 37 President G. S. McElroy, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer COMMITTEE ON ENFORCEMENT T. H. McCauley, ' 12 Chairman of the Graduate Interclub Committee G. G. Sikes, ' 16 Undergraduate Counsellor D. W. Griffin, ' 23 Secretary of the Graduate Council J. N. Irwin, II, ' 37 Chairman of the Undergraduate Council P. T. Kimball, II, ' 37 Cha;rman of the Daily Princetonian T. E. Barnicle, ' 39 President of the Sophomore Class R. S. Mueller, Jr., ' 38 President of the Junior Class A. M. Wicks, ' 37 President of the Undergraduate Interclub Committee F. P. Smith, ' 37 L. H. Marks, ' 37 UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERSHIP C. H. Angell, ' 37 W. B. Johnson, ' 37 J. B. Parrish, Jr., ' 37 E. S. Burch, ' 37 F. Y. Larkin, ' 37 F. P. Smith, ' 37 R. J. Chapman, ' 37 L. H. Marks, ' 37 J. S. Studdiford, II, ' 37 J. J. Doyle, ' 37 G. R. Masset, ' 37 N. G. Thacher, ' 37 W. M. Gardiner, ' 37 T. W. Montgomery, ' 37 W. M. Warner, ' 37 T. T. Hutcheson, ' 37 G. S. McElroy, ' 37 A. M. Wicks, ' 37 TH!RD ROW: Porrish, Gordiner, Chopmon, Larkin. SECOND ROW: Angell, Masset, Hutcheson, Thacher, Studdiford, Burch. FIRST ROW: Montgomery, McElroy, Wicks, Warner, Smith. One Hundred Ninety-five TOP ROW: Dickinson, Fluckey, Gores, Frank, Trover, Taylor. THIRD ROW: Brenn, Elder, Mayer, Snelham, Lieblich, Lilley, Bebell. SECOND ROW: Carr, Templemon, Miller, Morrell, Devlin, Myers, Johnson, Dorian. FRONT ROW: Dethier, Herbruck, Bishop, Gordiner, Mitchell, Scanlon, Strong. Arbor Inn FOUNDED 1923, INCORPORATED 1923 OFFICERS Wimbert Mohler Gardiner, ' 37 President Robert Knox Bishop, ' 37 Treasurer Henry Weber Mitchell, ' 37 Vice-President Charles G. Herbruck, ' 38. Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES R. S. Tyson, ' 25.. President F. B. Stallman, ' 25 Vice-President F. D. Waterman, ' 26 Secretary D. B. Barlow, ' 28 A. L. Powers, Jr., ' 29 E. B, Boynton, ' 26 J. H. Stauffer, ' 29 J. S, Collins, ' 27 G. E. Thompson, ' 24 L. H. Lawton, Jr., ' 26 R. S. Tyson, ' 25 Abram Nesbitt, ' 29 J. A. Wadsworth, ' 24 R. F. Norris, ' 28 W. W. Woodward, ' 28 F. T. Scanlon, Jr., ' 37 One Hundred Ninety-six S. L. Block Edward Blum S. N. Can, Jr. C. P. Dethier J. T. Dickinson, Jr. R. V. Elder MEMBERS, 1938 G. W. Frank G. J. Gores C. G. Herbruck D. P. Lieblich G. L. Lilley A. J. Morrell J. W. Smith J. D. Snelham J. W. Strong J. H. Taylor E. B. Templeman M. C. Trover C. F. S. Bebell R. K. Bishop W. W. Brenn W. J. Devlin I. D. Dorian MEMBERS, 1937 K. N. Fluckey W. M. Gardiner J. T. Hill S. B. Johnson Robert Mayer R. B. Miller H. W. Mitchell O. J. Myers F. T. Scanlon, Jr. R. W. Stanley, Jr. One Hundred Ninety-seven TOP ROW: Koos, Lane, Niehoff, McCrockcn, Douglass, Brill, Beers, Davis, Ulmon, Ale ar-ider THIRD ROW. Arcava, Benson, Trueblood, Northrup, Nicholson, Hamilton, Morgan, Singer, Aiken. G. B. Smith. SECOND ROW: Hughes, Banks, Hotfmon, Greenslode, Fuller, Reiss, Field, McCord, Chestnutt, Hendrickson. FRONT ROW: van der Stroten-Ponthoy, Canoune, Bell, Marks, Stahl, Waughtel, Orr. Campus Club FOUNDED 1900 OFFICERS Lewis Henry Marks, ' 37 President Richard Porter Bell, ' 37 _ _ Vice-President Nicholas McLeod Stahl, ' 38 Secretary Robert Hunter Orr, II, ' 38 _ ...Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS H. N. Deyo, ' 20... President W. P. Ames, ' 19 Treasurer V. K. Raymond, ' 19 ..Secretary W. R. Baker, ' 19 F. K. Norman, ' 26 G. H. Bell, ' 04 R. R. Russel, ' 19 E. W. Wherry, ' 30 One Hundred Ninety-eight R. P. Bell B. D. Benson, Jr. A. P. Brill, Jr. H. L. Canoune T. S. Collings R. H. Davis, Jr. J. V. Douglass R. K. Aiken, Jr. J. F. Alexander M. J. Arcaya W. R. Banks, Jr. T. S. Beers J. W. Chesnutt C. K. Coddington R. L. Cropper N. L. Drummond F. C. Field, Jr. A. P. Fuller MEMBERS, 1937 H. A. du Flon F. M. Hendrickson G. H. Houston R. P. Larkin Bert McCord H. F. McCreery L. H. Marks, Jr. J. L .Martin, Jr. MEMBERS, 1938 D. T. Graham R. V. Greenslade D. C. Hamilton, Jr. A. B. Hine, Jr. J. R. Hoffman, Jr. J. H. Hughes, III E. M. Koos Harry Lane, Jr. R. S. Longstaff, Jr. C. D. McCracken, Jr. J. T. Moray G. O. Morgan, III J. W. Nicholson, III C. C. Northrup R. H. Pratt J. E. Sincell G. B. Smith, II L. B. Smith S. H. Waughtel, Jr. H. R. Niehoff W. B. Nugent R. H. Orr, II W. A. Reiss, Jr. J. G. H. Scoon R. W. Singer, Jr. N. M. Stahl W. T. Trueblood, Jr. L. H. Ulman G. J. Vosburgh F. G. Watson One Hundred Ninety-nine TOP ROW: Foran, Glision, Sherwood, Allen, Benson, Lucht, Beotty, Orchard, Armitagc, Peterson, Thompson, Rolli. FIFTH ROW Bcntley, Ormond, Kip, Phillips, Eberhordf, Borzoghi, Posley, Devine, Mockoll, P. B, Anderton, Stebbins, Kogge. FOURTH ROW: Powell, Sullivan, Rye, Powers, Steele, Cameron, Shepard, Staub, Anderson, J. G. Anderton, Jr. THIRD ROW: Wood, Creamer, Nichols, Snyder, Myers, Byrne, Burket, Hooglond, Polmer, Fallon, SECOND ROW: Wilder, Ritter, Sylvester, Barrett, Montgomery, Toll, Morrissey, Green, Kimball. FRONT ROW: Kraemer, Butterworth, Baylor, Philips, Clagett, Duony, Wilson. Cannon Club FOUNDED 1896 OFFICERS Thomas William Montgomery, ' 37... President Charles Hansen Toll, Jr., ' 38 ..Vice-President Roger Watson Barrett, ' 37 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES F. G. McKelvy, ' 04 President D. Mahany, ' 07 Graduate Secretary S. W. Waterbury, ' 19 Secretary E. D. Chase, ' 08 J. D. Dusenberry, ' 10 W. R, Herrick, ' 98 G. Hunter, ' 14 J. H. Jefferies, Jr., ' 23 P. E. Morrell, ' 05 P. B. Niles, ' 22 G. Roe, ' 12 W. A. Turner, ' 31 W. G. Wrightson, ' 04 Tv o Hundred R. W. Barrett J. J. Byrne B. H. Cameron J. S. Eberhardt A. J. Fallon J. F. Foran M. T. Gleason, Jr. D. P. Green, Jr. P. T. Kimball, II S. C. Allen R. E. Anderson, Jr. J. G. Anderton, Jr. P. B. Anderton J. L. Armitage A. J. Barzaghi, Jr. J. E. Baylor J. B. Beaty, Jr. G. R. Benson, Jr. Peter Bentley, IV J. F. Burket, Jr. H. W. Butterworth, III MEMBERS, 1937 C. P. Kogge A. P. Lucht R. A. Miller T. W. Montgomery J. E. Morrissey, Jr. G. A. Nason C. H. Philips P. C. Ralli A. F. Ritter MEMBERS, 1938 H. C. B. Clagett, Jr. F. D. Creamer C. R. Devine A. J. Duany J. G. Hoagland C. P. King C. E. Kip J. F. Kraemer L. B. Mackall Frank Meyer, II C. H. Nichols, Jr. William Orchard R. P. Rye W. B. Shepard L. E. Sherwood, Jr. E. N. Staub William Steel D. F. Sullivan, Jr. J. D. Sylvester R. B. Wilder J. F. Wood A. R. Ormond Richard Palmer R . P. Pasley J. A. Peterson J. B. Phillips S. D. Powell C. A. Powers F. J. Snyder S. J. Stebbins C. H. Toll, Jr. W. W. Wilson Two Hundred One TOP ROW: Reich, Burke, Grace, Pollock, Bryan, Baker, Jenkins, Cocliron, Eddy, Winslow, Swan. FOURTH ROW: Agnew, Foedisch, Hoiton Solsich, Curry, Bothwell, Brown, Milliken, Follansbee, LeBoutillier, Pfeiffer, Mueller. THIRD ROW: Hall, Ripley, Classen, Ewing, Don, Cissel, Morgan, Whitlock, Gucker, Armstrong SECOND ROW: Dedford, Gardiner, Nevitt, Reed, Meyer. Carter, Burger, Stengel, Cranmer, Cross. FRONT ROW: Fisher, Galey, Von Winkle, Porrish, MacRae, Coors, MacNoir. Cap and Gown Club FOUNDED 1894 OFFICERS John Bertrand Parrish, Jr., ' 37 .President Julian Proctor Van Winkle, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President Pierce MacNair, ' 37 Senior Trustee William Kistler Coors, ' 38 Junior Trustee William Thomas Galey, III, ' 38... Secretary BOARD OF T RUSTEES R. 1. Robinson, ' 26 President C. W. Bowring, Jr., ' 25 Secretary F. C. Peck, ' 20 Treasurer H. J. Cochran, ' 00 H. T. Dickinson, ' 22 W. H. English, Jr., ' 21 G. G. Finney, ' 21 J. H. Garrett, ' 33 J. N. Hopkinson, ' 24 Sidney Lanier, ' 24 H. G. Lloyd, Jr., ' 23 Wilton Lloyd-Smith, ' 16 F. W. McCann, ' 30 Van S. Merle-Smith, W. B. Todd, ' 22 T. F. Wilcox, ' 00 Two Hundred Two G. E. Armstrong E. C. Bothwell, Jr. G. I. Brown, Jr. R. L. Burger J W. Burke, Jr. Bradford Cochran J. F. Cross, III S. E. Cullinan W. H. Curry C. D. Agnew C. M. Baker, Jr. Johnathan Bryan, III N. M. Carter J. A. Cissell, Jr. J. N. Classen W. K. Coors Forrest Cranmer J. E. Deford, Jr. John Evans, Jr. MEMBERS, 1937 R. M. Dicke S. W. Don D. S. Eddy A. H. Edwards Thomas Fisher, Jr. Harper Follansbee E. G. Grace, Jr. Thomas Gucker, III Pierce MacNair MEMBERS, 1938 J. D. Ewing H. W. Foedisch Henry Gardiner F. R. Hall J. M. Holton F. A. Jenkins Philip LeBoutillier, Jr. R. R. Meyer R. S. Mueller, Jr. D. C. Nevitt, Jr. G. D. MacRae M. K. Milliken Rodman Morgan J. B. Parrish, Jr. A. C. Pollock, Jr. Geoffrey Stengel J. D. Swan J. P. Van Winkle, Jr. H. W. Von Elm E. R Novak W. W. L. Reed C. D. Reich, Jr. D. P. Reynolds B. W. Ripley, II J. B. Salsich W. H. Sayen, III J. P. Whitlock T. S. Winslow, Jr. Two Hundred Three Iv TOP ROW; Herman, Knight, Hubbard, Kennedy, Schall, Shennan, Schmidlapp. FOURTH ROW: Mason, Young, Brown, F. Smith, P. Smith, Wheeler, Dyson, Stevens. THIRD ROW. Porter, Williams, Kouffman, Reid, Griffith, McCampbell, Kinder, Smith, Long. SECOND ROW: Clark, Tarns, Klie, Hopper, Rial, Cranston, Dunbar, Schaffer, LaPorte. FRONT ROW: Craig, Jones, MacDonald, Buddington, Burch, Gamble, Hauxhurst, Hawlcy, Condermon. Princeton Charter Club FOUNDED 1901 OFFICERS Ernest Suhr Burch, ' 37 President David Gibbs Gamble, ' 37 Vice-President Russell Wait Buddington, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS J. A. Stewart, III, ' 05 Chairman Allan Davies, ' 10 F. S. Osborne, ' 24 F. T. Lawrence, Jr., ' 30 G. N. Padgitt, ' 35 Ivy Lee, ' 31 O. G. Reynolds, ' 04 Evelyn Luquer, ' 23 C. O. M. Sprague, ' 09 Howard Menand, Jr., ' 36 G. A. Vondermuhl, ' 04 Arnold Wood, Jr., ' 21 Two Hundred Four S. p. Bannigan W. H. Borden R. W. Buddington E. S. Burch A. T. Colt T. H. Conderman, II A. C. Craig, II G. B. Dunbar W. L. Dyson D. G. Gamble T. H. Brown, Jr. J. C. Clark, Jr. H. D. Cranston J. B. C. Denmark W. M. Hardy H. A. Heller J. L. Herman T. B. Hubbard, Jr. A. C. Jones, Jr. C. F. Jones MEMBERS, 1937 H. E. Griffith Chapin Hawley L. V. D. Hauxhurst R. B. Hopper J. E. Jones, Jr. J. K. Kennedy M. C. Long J. T. MacDonald, Jr. W. P. MacDonald R. P. Parsons, Jr. MEMBERS, 1938 E. J. Kauffman, Jr. J. G. Kelley E. T. Kinder H. F. Klie R. B. Knight J. H. Laporte Jonathan Mason S. G. McCampbell T. H. Moyer, Jr. E. J. Reeves J. H. Pinckney Philip Porter R. H. Rial F. M. Schall, Jr. J. B. Shennan D. R. Small Pinkham Smith G. Y. Wheeler K. R. Young C. E. Smith, Jr. H. A. Reid E. G. Riggs, II W. H. Schmidlapp R. F. Shaffer F. E. Smith C. H. Smyth C. R. Stevens W. P. Toms C. W. Williams Two Hundred Five TOP ROW: Drill, Johns, Luthi, Kirkpatrick, Taylor, Wells, Sayen. FOURTH ROW: Clisham, Littlehale, Furst, Townend, Richordson, Chadwick, Carter, Bedford,. THIRD ROW: Ross, Joeckel, Beltaire, Wilson, Townsend, Miller, Alexander, Suehsdorf, Fisher. SECOND ROW: Earon, Bell, Price, Howe, Buzby, Russell, Burke, Rounds. FRONT ROW: Hunt, Young, Brown, Wicks, Price, Robie, Cowan. Cloister Inn FOUNDED 1912 OFFICERS Alden MacMaster Wicks, ' 37 President Irving Brown, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President Bailey Cowan, ' 38 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES C. D. Marlatt, ' 13 Chairman D. A. Patton, ' 15 Secretary Chester Vail, ' 17 Treasurer W. B. Morrow, ' 33 Assistant Treasurer W. D. Gaillard, ' 26 D. G. Kennedy, ' 1 6 T M. Greef, ' 31 P. A. Meyer, ' 26 D. M. Halstead, ' 20 John Mulford, ' 27 Two Hundred Six F. E. Bell M. A. Beltaire, III Irving Brown, Jr. H. S. Howe, Jr. P. W. Hunt B. H. Bedford J. D. Burke H. O. Busby J. L. Carter, Jr. G. O. Chadwick Bailey Cowan R. R. Clisham McKim Daingerfield W. L. Drill C. C. Eaton MEMBERS, 1937 R. H. LeBrecht H. J. Matthews, Jr. P. V. Miller R. M. Price R. H. Robie MEMBERS, 1938 F. L. Fisher A. O. Furst T. R. Jaeckel W. L. Johns L. B. Kirkpatrick, Jr. B. M. Littlehale N. E. Luthi A. M. Price C. U. Price W. W. Richardson G. B. Ross H. H. Schwartz W. S. Townsend, Jr. A. M. Wicks J. C. Young F. W. Rounds, Jr. J. E. Russell J. C. Sayen Lawrence Singmaster J. P. Stanton Adolph Suesdorf, III B. E. Taylor, Jr. E. S. Townend, Jr. H. C. Wells E. J. Wilson, Jr. Two Hundred Seven TOP ROW; Lord, Marr, Whittaker, Cobb, Hamilton, Delafield, Lydecker, Caesar, Poles, McCulloch, W. A. Wood, T. B. Wood. FOURTH ROW: Ziegler, Oechler, Sloan, Hart, Baker, Perry, McRae, Soverel, Goldsbury, Dumper, Johnston, Coyle, Russell. THIRD ROW: Woodhull, Lincoln, Ream, Love, Graham, Wallace, Boice, Messier, Escher, Ward, Rittenhouse, Stoddard. SECOND ROW: O ' Connor, Moment, Borringer, Van Norden, Warren, Mitchell, Chopmon, Renwick, Cross, Gilbert, Wotrous. FIRST ROW: Skinner, Tweedy, Mayhew, Peobody, Lorktn, Pierce, Rogsdole, Osborn, Dick. Colonial Club FOUNDED 1891 OFFICERS Frank Yoakum Larkin, ' 37 President Julian Peabody, ' 37 Vice-President Charles Ingals Pierce, Jr., ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS J. M. Large, ' 28 Chairman R. W. Lloyd, ' 28. Treasurer R. B. Duane, ' 10 Secretary J. P. Barringer, ' 24 C. J. Biddle, ' 11 C. P. Brown, ' 05 G. T. Elliman, ' 28 I. B. Kingsford, ' 13 Alfred Ely, ' 05 H. S. Firestone, Jr., ' 20 J. S. Hatfield, ' 24 H. S. Jeanes, ' 27 Two Hundred Eight W. S. Delafield R. S. Dumper D. A. Escher J. R. Fales Thornton Gerrish, Jr. C. D. Goldsbury F. L. Graham A. S. Hart, Jr. F. Y. Larkin T. R. Lincoln MEMBERS, 1937 C. W. McRae Zeb Mayhew, Jr. R. A. Messier H. B. Mitchell, II W. F. Oechler E. F. O ' Connor, III F. H. Osborn, Jr. Julian Peabody J. W. Ragsdale H. P. Ream W. C. Renwick M. H. Rittenhouse, Jr. B. B. Sloan, Jr. W. W. Soverel Bronson Tweedy Langdon Van Norden S. L. Wallace W. M. Ward, Jr. Northam Warren, Jr. J. D. Baker P. E. Barringer O. K. Boice P. D. Caesar J. W. Chapman T. P. Cobb D. D. Coyle D. S. Cross C. B. W. Dick MEMBERS, 1938 Frederick Gilbert F. T. Hamilton W. W. Johnston H. I. Lord, Jr. W. M. Love R. A. Lydecker J. G. McCulloch W. G. Marr Robert Moment O. H. Perry W. F. Russell C. A. Skinner J. C. Stoddard L. D. Watrous Hugh Whittaker, Jr. W. A. Wood T. B. Wood S. C. Woodhull, Jr. Evarts Ziegler Two Hundred Nine TOP ROW. Wilson, Robinson, King, Scott, Barrett, Wilmer, D. H. Hester, E. W. Hosier. FOURTH ROW; Irwin, J. Soolfield, Hoffman, Foster Adorns, Covey, Mogruder, Otis, Burns. THIRD ROW: Dubuque, Olson, Stonington, Pogue, Deupree, Hunt, Morter. Craig, Jamison, Muir. SECOND ROW: Lebens, Meyer, Sargent, McKendree, Bitner, Watson, Cashman, Lawson, Rainear, Larzelere. FRONT ROW: Limberg, Metcolf, Harrison, Stollenwerck, Warner, Heminway, Stanard, Mens, H. Soolfield. University Cottage Club FOUNDED 1887 OFFICERS William Martin Warner, ' 37 President Edward Carroll Stollenwerck, ' 37 __ Vice-President George Gorham Otis, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES R. L. Tompkins, ' 21 Chairman H. G. Treadwell, ' 09 .Treasurer T. R. Armstrong, ' 13 Erskine Hewett, ' 91 A. S. Bushnell, ' 21 W. G. Irons, ' 22 H. 1. Caesar, ' 13 John G. Jones, ' 29 William Cruikshank, ' 34 J. A. Larkin, ' 13 R. E. Dwight, ' 97 F. V. Lawrence, ' 26 J. N. Ewing, ' 12 Dean Mathey, ' 12 R. L. Farrelly, ' 18 Edgar Palmer, ' 03 Y. C. Eraser A. B. Schultz, ' 03 E. H. Herrick, ' 88 W. E. Stevenson, ' 22 Two Hundred Ten R. E. Dubuque, Jr. W. P. Harrison, Jr. J. H. Heminway E. W. Hoster, Jr. J. N. Irwin, II N. H. Lazelere H. B. Adams, Jr. W. R. Barrett J. W. Bitner Edward Burns, II J. A. Cashman W. P. Covey W. B. Craig J. R. Deupree T. B. Foster MEMBERS, 1937 E. D. Lebens E. A. Limberg, Jr. P. H. Metcalf E. R. Mens G. G. Otis H. R. Saalfield MEMBERS, 1938 W. J. Hoffman, Jr. D. H. Hoster W. O. Hunt R. E. Jamison, Jr. F. P. King, Jr. S. C. Lawson C. G. McKendree G. L. Magruder J. H. Marter J. C. Meyer, Jr. L. R. Sargent, Jr. W. K. Stanard, II E. C. StoUenwerck O. G. Stonington W. M. Warner, Jr. K. H. Muir E. S. Olsan J. C. Pogue, Jr. C. J. Rainear J. A. Saalfield D. A. Scott W. J. Watson J. W. Wilmer J. A. Wilson Two Hundred Eleven - ' — - n TOP ROW l-lof4 ms, Newburger, An,, ,, Cur., ' - , . ,,jire, Booth, Odell. THIRD ROW: Rudd, Borer, Borbieri, French, Mendeloff, McLeon, Furbeck. SECOND ROW;: Thomson, Green, Simpson, Gray, Mengei, Orr, Moore, Lozoron. FRONT ROW: Mann, Gordon, Harris, Mosset, Finck, Elicker, Baker. Court Club OFFICERS George Rowe Masset, ' 37 _ .._ __ President Edgar Moore Finck, Jr., ' 37 Vice-President Joseph Harris, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Pendleton Marshall, ' 23 President E. W. Wootton, ' 29 Vice-President R. G. Wilson, ' 25...... Secretary F. M. Gregory, ' 24 ...Treasurer D. H. Hahn, ' 34 F. H. Merrill, ' 26 R. R. Fisher, ' 35 H. D. Wise, Jr., ' 32 Two Hundred Twelve K. L. Baker, Jr. J. S. Booth R. E. Borner C. S. Elicker P. S. Amos A. M. Barbieri R. C. Borer F. P. Carruthers, Jr. Theodore French A. R. Furbeck A. E. Hess MEMBERS, 1937 E. M. Finck, Jr. B. M. Gordon C. E. Green Joseph Harris K. W. Mann i MEMBERS, 1938 W. L. Hopkins C. F. Huston M. S. Lazaron, Jr. P. A. Loomis, Jr. R. A. McCormack, Jr. J. H. McLean A. I. Mendeloff R. H. Mengel, II G. R. Masset D. S. Rice R. L. Simpson S. G. Thompson W. P. Moore A. M. Newburger E. N. Odell W. H. Orr, II. P. A. Phillips J. O. Rudd W. W. Squire Two Hundred Thirteen i TOP ROW: King, Thompson, Shields, Graham, Hulsizer, Dennis, Bahr, Wilson, Crater, Henze, Lutz. FOURTH ROW: Wan Utt, Weber, Plctten, Bartlett, Sornoff, Kirkpatnck, Evons, Date, Campbell, Porter, Johnston. THIRD ROW: Trentman, Biorn, Purvis, Stanley, Cale, Arnold, McNichol, Esser, Plumb, Kahler. SECOND ROW: Neal, Roh, Scinto, Kulp, Pickard, Freemen, Notopoulos, Pendexter, Burke, Parreno. FRONT ROW: Johnson, Kinney, McGinnity, Doyle, Condee, Leidy, Randall. Dial Lodge FOUNDED 1903— INCORPORATED 1912 OFFICERS Joseph John Doyle, ' 37 _ President John Thomas Kinney, ' 37 Vice-President Frank Joseph McGinity, ' 37..._ Treasurer James Boyer Kirkpatrick, ' 38 Secretary Willard Barron Johnson, Jr., ' 38 -Vice-Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES T. H. McCauley, ' 12 Chairman Courtlandt Otis, ' 20 Secretary B. A. Greene, ' 25 - Treasurer Arthur Gardiner, ' 23 J. F. Mann, ' 11 Sinclair Hatch, ' 28 A. V. S. Olcott, ' 09 TWo Hundred Fourteen W. C. Bartlett N. E. Biorn J. C. Burke D. C. Cale, II E. D. Candee J. R. Crowley S. S. Date J. J. Doyle T. B. Fifield William Arnold W. J. Bahr D. H. Crater A. P. Dennis P. B. Esser H. B. Evans H. C. Freeman, Jr. Charles Graham F. E. Henze J. E. Hulsizer MEMBERS, 1937 C. E. Jauch, Jr. R. H. Johnston E. W. Kahler J. H. King J. T. Kinney J. P. Leidy W. M. Lutz F. J. McGinity J. R. Maguire MEMBERS, 1938 W. B. Johnson, Jr. J. H. King J. B. Kirkpatrick R. E. Kulp Dunstan McNichol H. B. Neal, Jr. A. A. Notopoulos Desiderio Parreno J. H. Platten, Jr. D. S. Plumb S. E. Pendexter, Jr. E. T. Pickard, Jr. A. C. Poole H. H. Purvis, Jr. H. T. Randall C. E. Roh D. T. Stanley L. A. Scinta F. M. Porter S. V. Sarnoff J. C. Shields, II J. D. Thompson B. E. Tousley, Jr. R. L Urban Damon Van Utt Thomas Weber D. A. W. Wilson Two Hundred Fifteen FIFTH ROW: Gilbert, Wilson, Schmelier, Spencer, Avery, Young, Deemer, Alter, Clary, Gross FOURTH ROW, Parkin, Hubbard, Walden, Howe, Frozer, Light, J. B, Kerr, R. H. Smith, Jr., Cosgriff, THIRD ROW: Osgood, Schleicher, De Murias, Foster, Luther, Wimer, Power, Entwisle, Pate, D. C. Kerr. SECOND ROW: Often, Rudel, McGow, Lochridge, Huvelle, Leigh, Cruikshank, Brady, Cormany, Neary. FRONT ROW: McGiffert, Honsacker, J. L. Marks, Jr., F. P. Smith, Cannon, S. R. Marks, Jr., Hackett. Elm Club FOUNDED 1895 OFFICERS Frederick Plympton Smith, ' 37..... President Edward Allen Myers, ' 38... Vice-President James Gray Cannon, ' 37 .Secretary TRUSTEES G. E. Clarke, ' 29 President J. B. McTigue, ' 16 Vice-President W. W. Wrenn, ' 18 Treasurer Two Hundred Sixteen F. E. Avery, Jr. J. G. Cannon R. F. Clary, Jr. D. E. Foster J. G. Frazer, Jr. S. S. Gilbert L. J. Gross S. R. Hackett MEMBERS, 1937 C. C. Honsaker, Jr. R. A. Johnston D. C. Kerr H. H. Leigh D. S. Long J. H. McGiffert J. L. Marks, Jr. P. E. Neary A. M. Osgood F. H. Parkin F. P. Smith J. A. Smith H. B. Spencer W. C. Wimer A. J. Wilson, II T. R. Young MEMBERS, 1938 G. E. Alter, Jr. J. D. J. Brady W. G. Cormany T. A. Cosgriff W. L. Cruikshank J. J. G. Deemer R. M. Entwisle Ramon De Murias R. C. Howe W. C. Hubbard C. H. Huvelle W. W. Light L. P, Lochridge, Jr. E. C. Luther R. G. Maitland S. R. Marks, Jr. J. R. McGaw E. A. Myers R. L Offen, Jr. C. O. Pate, Jr. W. S. Power W. E. Rudel A. G. Schleicher R. H. Smith, Jr. S. M. Vauclain, III R. C. Walden, Jr. Two Hundred Seventeen TOP ROW: McHarg, Thompson, Furman, Potter, Van Sciver. SECOND ROW: Lehr, Augustine, Spitz, Kunkel, H. Panofsky, W. Panofsky FRONT ROW: Winans, Westlake, Kempner, Angell, Adamson, Moore, Lee. Gateway Club FOUNDED 1913 OFFICERS Charles Hart Angell, ' 37 _._ __ ___.. President RaYmond Jay Emrich, ' 38 Vice-President Mortimer Jay Kempner, ' 37 _, .__ Secretary Robert George Adamson, ' 37 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS A. W. Horton, ' 20 __ .Chairman F. K. Decker, ' 24_ _ .Secretary F. F. Russell, ' 20 _ .Treasurer D. H. Alexander, ' 21 P. M. Davis, ' 26 C. S. Bannerman, ' 26 T. L. Sisseron, ' 30 Two Hundred Eighteen R. G. Adamson C. H. Angell W. B. Hunter, Jr. R. W. Jackson D. C. Augustine R. J. Emrich R. F. Furman H. G. Kunkel D. V. D. Lee MEMBERS, 1937 M. J. Kempner J. H. Morris Andrew Sarkadi J. T. Schein MEMBERS, 1938 G. M. Lehr R. B. MacDonald J. E. McHarg H. A. A. Panofsky W. K. H. Panofsky N. A. Stoner H. E. Westlake, Jr. F. E. Winans R. J. Potter K. A. Spitz R. M. Thompson H. D. VanSciver Two Hundred Nineteen TOP ROW: Rutherfurd, Williams, Potter, Stoddard, Chew, Pyne, Benson, Kinney. THIRD ROW; Rockwell, Cook, Woodward, Culver, Nicoll, Hare, Wall. SECOND ROW: Rosengarten, McAdoo, Vietor, Janney, Lee, Moore, Geer, Truesdale. FIRST ROW: Emory, Gorman, Vanderbilt, Johnson, Cutler, Parker, Swift. Ivy Club FOUNDED 1879 OFFICERS William Benedict Johnson, ' 37 President Oliver De Gray Vanderbilt, III, ' 37 Vice-President Earle Newton Cutler, Jr., ' 37 Treasurer Arthur Pue Gorman, II, ' 38 Secretary Morris Soper Emory, ' 38 Assistant Treasurer Richard Stevenson Parker, ' 37 Librarian BOARD OF GOVERNORS Van Rennselaer Halsey, ' 18 President David McAlpin, ' 20 ._ Treasurer Donaldson Cresswell, ' 24 Secretary A. S. Alexander, ' 28 H. F. Harris, ' 03 S. H. Bird, ' 06 A. L Haskell, ' 16 Joseph Bryan, III, ' 27 Stuart Janney, ' 29 D. P. Calkins, ' 26 W. B. Mcllvaine, Jr., ' 22 Douglas Gorman, ' 03 G. R. Packard, Jr., ' 28 J. E. Gowen, ' 17 Argyll Parsons, ' 05 G. S. Piper, ' 21 Two Hundred Twenty Benjamin Chew, Jr. P. G. Cook E. N. Cutler, Jr. E. S. Gear H. N. Hare W. B. Johnson MEMBERS, 1937 R. S. Parker P. R. Pyne, 111 W. S. Rawls H. B. Rockwell Brooke Stoddard H. J. Swift F. S. Truesdale O. D. Vanderbilt, III A. T. Wall, III W. M. Woodward Peter Benson J. K. Culver, Jr. M. S. Emory A. P. Gorman, II R. M. Janney MEMBERS, 1938 F. S. Kinney Blair Lee, III F. H. McAdoo, Jr. E. R. McLean Condict Moore Courtlandt NicoU, Jr. Frederic Rosengarten, Jr. G. G. Rutherford A. M. Williams, Jr. T. F. Vietor, Jr. Two Hundred Twenty-one TOP ROW: Lawrence, Cleveland, Ringwolt, St Peter, Hem ohn, Gould, Stewart, Hook, Gordon, Locb, Charlut FOURTH ROW: R. H. Clarke, Lotspeich, Raleigh, Stickel, Cleaver, Adams, Marvin, Watson, Konoye, Boer, Avery. THIRD ROW: Hauqhwout, Stratton, H. B. Clark, Krebs, Nichols, Barber, Backes, Greenfield, Robinson. SECOND ROW: Jackson, Furmon, Young, Cook, Morris, Rosenbaum, St. John, Aitken, Pechstein, Mecde. FRONT ROW: F. W, Capers, Lynch, Hourigan, Studdiford, Tippett, T. S. Capers, Hednck. Key and Seal Club FOUNDED 1904 OFFICERS James Stryker Studdiford, II, ' 37 President Van Rensselaer Tippett, ' 37 Vice-President Fred Wallis Capers, ' 38- _ Secretary Andrew Quinn Hourigan, Jr., ' 37 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS W. B. Schrauff, ' 22 President E. B. Gardiner, ' 23 ...Secretory William Haffner, ' 20 Treasurer M. C. Fry, ' 09 R. B. Higgins, ' 10 H. C. Richards, ' 06 H. J. Gee, ' 06 Roger Hinds, ' 06 M. C. Terry, ' 15 Edward Glassmeyer, Jr., ' 36 A. C. Lewis, ' 17 J. C. Williams, ' 25 K. M. McEwen, ' 06 Two Hundred Twenty-two Paul Adams, Jr. H. W. Backes, Jr. J. R. Barber, Jr. F. M. Blaicher F. C. Bunn, Jr. T. S. Capers, Jr. F. S. Chariot H. B. Clark W. P. Cleaver T. T. Cook, Jr. Carl Ferenbach, II MEMBERS, 1937 T. G. Gallatin G. K. Greenfield A. Q. Hourigan, Jr. E. J. Jackson R. S. Janney M. V. Krebs J. T. Loeb E. H. Lotspeich MacDonald Lynch H. C. McCollom, Jr. S. G. Marvin W. S. Morris Peter NichoUs M. O- Petersen F. N. Rosenbaum W. L. Schwenk J. D. Stewart F. G. Stickel, III J. S. Studdiford, II P. M. Sykes Van Rensselaer Tippett G. W. Watson, III L. W. Young S. K. Aitkin J. B. Avery R. A. Baer F. W. Capers R. H. Clarke J. H. Cleveland W. F. Firman D. L. Gordon MEMBERS, 1938 L A. Gould, Jr. R. A. Haughwout S. L. Hedrick A. B. Heinsohn P. L. Hogan J. I. Hook, Jr. Burrowes Hunt E. E. Keusch Fumitaka Konoye Merle Lawrence J. F. Mead L. A. Pechstein, Jr. W. G. Raleigh J. G. Ringwalt, Jr. C. H. Robinson F. C. St. John H. M. Stratton, II Two Hundred Twenty-three TOP ROW: Nugent, P. R. Applegate, Jr., Gruning, Howell, F. T. Warner, Jr., Caesar, Oelsner, Trent. FOURTH ROW; McCorter, Ballin, Fleer, Du Vivier, McLeod, Elliot, Pritchord, Jacobs. THIRD ROW: Wenzell, Halsey, J. H. White, Jr., A. L. Applegate, Alexander, Rose, Stone, Close, Carlile. SECOND ROW: Way, Thocher, Whitely, Bindley, Beale, Finney, Schley, Morris, Wise. FRONT ROW: Goodell, Medina, Sayre, Hutcheson, B, W. Warner, Moses, Kemble White, Jr. Quadrangle Club FOUNDED 1901 OFFICERS Thaddeus Thomson Hutcheson, ' 37 President Beverly Walden Warner, ' 37 Vice-President Henry Clay Moses, Jr., ' 38 Secretary Robert Wrigley Sayre, ' 37 Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES J. N. Hynson, ' 20... President C. R. Beattie, ' 25 Treasurer R. E. Merrifield, ' 21 Assistant Treasurer and Secretary F. E. Camp, ' 28 Assistant Secretary Penn Harvey, ' 08 J. D. Voorhees, ' 05 Two Hundred Twenty-four MEMBERS, 1937 A. L. Applegate K. B. Alexander, Jr. E. F. Beale, III E. H. Bindley, Jr. H. A. Caesar, II W. N. Close, Jr. J. C. Finney J. C. Goodell J. A. Howell T. T. Hutcheson Francis Jacobs, III S. F. Medina E. A. Oelsner J. P. Pritchard, Jr. Don Rose, Jr. R. W. Sayre F. W. Severance, Jr. Stephen Stone, Jr. J. M. Trent B. W. Warner F. T. Warner, Jr. J. O. Whitely, Jr. J. S. Wise MEMBERS, 1938 P. R. Applegate, Jr. D. D. Ballin, Jr. J. W. Carlile J. W. Clark P. F. Du Vivier W. K. Elliott E. H. Fleer H. W. Gruning R. H. McCarter C. A. McLeod R. C. Morris H. C. Moses, Jr. J. L. Nugent R. L. Schley, Jr. F. W. Thacher, Jr. P. M. Way, Jr. A. B. Wenzell J. H. White, Jr. Kemble White, Jr. Two Hundred Tv enty-five TOP ROW: Matheny, Buchonan. Ashcraft, Sloan, C, 5. Carey, Pork , 01, .cf FOURTH ROW. Lippincott, O ' Neill, Churchill G-o ff, Moore, Logan, Sullivan, Mason. THIRD ROW: Moss, Jones, Plant, Clark, Hogeman, Houser, Bredenberg, Bayliss, Allen. SECOND ROW: Frelinghuysen, Cook, Dater, T. F. Corey, Watson, Buchanan, Reynolds, Grimm, Norris. FRONT ROW: van de Velde, Morgan, Rivinus, Thacher, Barnes, Riggs, Crooker. Terrace Club FOUNDED 1904 OFFICERS Nicholas Gilman Thacher, ' 37 President Edward Florens Rivinus, ' 37 .Vice-President Robert Gaylord Barnes, ' 37 Treasurer Edward Holden Morgan, ' 38. Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS A. S. D. Dashiell, ' 23. __ Chairman Charles Garside, ' 23.. Vice-Chairman Gerard Hallock, 111, ' 26 Secretary W. E. Speers, ' 11 Treasurer A. CM. Azoy, ' 14 D. Groff, ' 13 H. W. Jeffers, ' 26 R. M. McCulloch, ' 21 M. C. Morgan, ' 35 William Oman, ' 34 Robert Strange, ' 09 Two Hundred Twenty-six R. G. Barnes C. W. Bayliss H. J. Braham J. W. Bredenberg L. B. Churchill L. C. Allen J. J. B. Ashcraft H. S. Broad D. W. Buchanan J. G. Buchanan C. S. Carey T. F. Carey L H. Clark D. B. Cook A. H. Dater MEMBERS, 1937 R. M. Crooker E. L. Groff, II P. D. Hauser J. W. Lippincott, Jr. E. L. Newhouse B. C. O ' Sullivan MEMBERS, 1938 H. O. H. Frelinghuysen P. H. B. Frelinghuysen, Jr. W. R. Grimm G. L. Hogeman H. C. Jones, II S. S. Logan, Jr. R. E. Mason R. C. O. Matheny T. R. McMillen Albert Moore H. W. Read Thomas Riggs, Jr. E. F. Rivinus, Jr. N. G. Thacher L. D. van de Velde E. H. Morgan R. A. Moss T. H. Norris G. H. Oliver W. P. O ' Neill, Jr. J. H. Parke H. J. Plants J. T. Reynolds W. M. Sloan C. R. Watson Tv o Hundred Twenty-seven I F-V ' ft I iA. Sj m JF ' i TOP ROW: Vruwink, Baldwin, Jerrems, Davis, Fricl er, Jolinson, Dering, De Sousa, Montgomery, Sloan. FOURTH ROW: Appel, Guilford Jones, Jr., Searles, Corbin, Betts, Brown, Nettleton, Feather, Fallon. THIRD ROW: W. G. Jones, Milner, Cecrl, Bissell, Cummings, Upham, Scott, Stewart, Werbe. SECOND ROW: Davies, McClove, Aller, Simpson, Kennedy, Smyth, Bradley, White, Perry. FRONT ROW: Souter, Taplin, Sondboch, Burke, McElroy, Parker, Johnston, Stoess, Hill. Tiger Inn FOUNDED 1890 OFFICERS George Spahr McElroy, ' 37 President Robert Arrington Burke, ' 38..- Vice-President BOARD OF GOVERNORS M. P. Dickenson President J. R. Munn, ' 06 .Vice-President R. A. Mestres, ' 31 Treasurer A. M. Whitlock, ' 33. Secretcrry R. E. Baiter, ' 36 Andrew Hazlehurst, ' 04 W. R. Ballard, ' 27 O. A. Kirkland, ' 34 D. R. Chamberlain, ' 35 C. W. McGraw, ' 19 T. S. Dignan, ' 25 C. A. McClintock, ' 07 S. G. Etherington, ' 06 R. J. Shaeffer, ' 24 Two Hundred Twenty-eight J. M. Baldwin L. V. Brown J. T. Congleton, Jr. W. C. Cummings, Jr. C. M. Bering Dean Hill, Jr. A. P. Johnson A. R. Johnston MEMBERS, 1937 J. A. C. Kennedy, Jr. G. S. McElroY F. K. Montgomery, Jr. R. B. Parker H. E. Perry E. K. Sandbach F. D. Sauter E. W. Scott H. J. Sloan T. H. Smithies J. M. Smyth, Jr. G. J. Stoess, Jr. R. D. Stuart, Jr. F. E. Taplin, Jr. R. B. Upham, Jr. T. C. Werbe, Jr. MEMBERS, 1938 R. G. Aller J. C. Appel D. W. Belts J. T. Bissell P. B. Bradley R. A. Burke J. M. Cecil, Jr. R. S. Corbin C. W. Davies J. J. Davis G. W. DeSousa W. G. Fallon, Jr. W. A. Feather, Jr. J. E. Fricker, Jr. D. E. Jerrems Guilford Jones, Jr. W. G. Jones R. D. Lunn B. H. Milner J. G. Nettleton, Jr. J. M. Searles J. R. Simpson J. H. Vruwink Two Hundred Twenty-nine TOP ROW Underwood, Whitcomh, Powers Riddcr, Lrns, Hardy, Murray, Dort, Carpenter. FOURTH ROW: Stokcly Speer Brokow Lynch Scott, Test, Blay, Taylor, Busby, Starr, THIRD ROW. Sherley, Kamm, Whitlock, Wood, Dennison, Delotour, Davison, Stetier, Fairlie Gould ' . SECOND ROW: Reed, Watkins, Pyle, Nightingale, Park, Monker, Ober, Lucus, Hopkin, Farley, Sedgwick. FRONT ROW: W. ' w. Arrristrong, Patterson, Duff, Kopper, Edwards, Chapman ( Pres. I , Jones, Cowdery, Howell, Alexonder Armstrong, Jr. P rinceton Tower Club OFFICERS Robert James Chapman, ' 37 President William Boardman Jones, Jr., ' 37..... .....Vice-President Robert Lansing Edwards, ' 37 Secretary- John Paul Chubet, III, ' 37.. Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS F. H. Little, ' 03 Chairman S. S. Holt, ' 03 Treasurer R. F. Fish, ' 13 .Secretary R. J. Chapman, ' 37 R. S. Hayes, ' 25 J. P. Chubet, ' 37 James Newman, ' 26 Sinclair Hamilton, ' 06 N. D. Weir, ' 13 Two Hundred Thirty Alexander Armstrong, J. S. Blay Charles Carroll, Jr. R. J. Chapman J. P. Chubet, III N. R. Criss, Jr. R. H. Davison R. E. Dennison, Jr. W. W. Armstrong H. P. Brokaw J. K. Busby W. S. Carpenter, III R. S. Cowdery H. L. Delatour, Jr. D. T. Dort John English, Jr. R. M. Glenn, Jr. R. G. Gould J. V. E. Hardy MEMBERS, 1937 G. M. Duff, Jr. R. L. Edwards C. W. Fairlie, Jr. J. M. Farley E. G. Gifford W. R. Hopkin W. B. Jones, Jr. S. K. C. Kopper MEMBERS, 1938 E. M. Howell C. R. Kamm T. D. Lucus, Jr. K. M. Lynch A. B. Martin E. B. Martin J. R. Murray R. F. Patterson J. H. Powers C. H. Reed B. H. Ridder, Jr. P. C. Manker C. D. Nightingale R. F. Ober R. G. Park, III E. B. Pyle A. L. Scott C. E. Test A. M. Wood W. P. Sedgwick Swagar Sherley, Jr. D. S. Speer F. R. Starr H. A. Stetler, Jr. A. J. Stokely Coakley Taylor W. K. Watkins Stephen Whitcomb W. P. Whitlock, III Two Hundred Thirty-one The Madison Club OFFICERS R. S. Hartzell, ' 37 _ President J. C. Ward, ' 37 Vice-President A. F. Frick, ' 38 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1937 Steven Barabas W. G. Bate, Jr. R. A. Bendheim T. S. Collings H. J. Gensler R. T. Goodsell R. S. Hartzell L. A. Keyes, Jr. Robert Miller E. W. Pomerleau S. B. Scovil Albert Seckel, Jr. I. E. Segal G. B. Smith, II J. E. Sincell J. M. Steinsieck J. C. Ward P. B. Wisman MEMBERS, 1938 R. L. Altman J. B. Avery E. J. Bender Roland Borgersen Seymour Colman J. P. Corcoran, Jr. R. W. Crosby, Jr. J. H. Eisenhard, Jr. A. G. Fletcher, Jr A. F. Frick W. B. Hankin J. N. HiUhouse P. L. Hogan A. F. Hopper, Jr. W. W. Wooldridge C. C. Irvine R, M. Jabara L. H. Komoski Merle Lawrence S. B. Lupica S. W. McCune, III B. L Nooiin H. N. Parker, Jr. Robert Rautenstrauch C. R. Ruhlman, Jr. Amedee Spadone, Jr. H. D. Van Sciver G. J. Vosburgh J. N. Walter The Madison Club provides a social center, Upperclass Commons, for those upperclassmen who do not join the Prospect Street eating clubs; it serves as a meeting place for them and arranges intramural athletic contests with the various other clubs. Two Hundred Thirty-two iLa -j  %vb Kumine asses % Wafers Keppel Corlile Wister Class Officers, 1936 Richard Duer Waters Graduate Secretary SENIOR YEAR William Arthur Carlile, Jr. President Gordon Keppel Vice-President Lewis Wynne Wister Secretary-Treasurer JUNIOR YEAR Pepper Constable President William Arthur Carlile, Jr Vice-President Lewis Wynne Wister Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Pepper Constable President William Arthur Carlile, Jr Vice-President Lewis Wynne Wister Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Pepper Constable President William Arthur Carlile, Jr Vice-President Lewis Wynne Wister Secretory-Treasurer Two Hundred Thirty-three Class Beer Suit Picture Class of 1936 Name Address Augustus Dixon Adair, Jr 104 Poplar St., Atlanta, Ga. Robert Edward Adams 535 Wheeler Ave., Scranton, Pa. Arthur Melville Agnev r....394 Conklin Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. Robert Henry Alford Longfields, Westbury, N. Y. Harry Lewis Allen 6550 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Herbert Allen 506 S. 41st St., Philadelphia, Pa. Yorke Allen, Jr 33 E. 70th St., New York. N. Y. Alastair Burnes Wedgwood Anderson, 266 Kimball Ave., Westfield, N. J. Hugh Wilson Arthur 910 Mt. Curve, Minneapolis, Minn. William Blaine Asher, 2101 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Edwin Duden Ashton 29 Washington Sq., New York, N. Y. William Elijah Attwood, Jr 175 Vine St., New Britain, Conn. Joseph Burton Ayers, Jr 2400 Overlook Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Lemuel DeLos Ayers, Jr., 424 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Richard Englis Bailer Loantalsa Way, Madison, N. J. Alfred Thornton Baker, III Kingston Rd., Princeton, N. J. Augustus Lynn Baker, Jr 389 W. Blackwell St., Dover, N. J. Robert Allen Baker 11 Sherman Ave., White Plains, N. Y. George Fox Barber 20 Lyncroft Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Henry Charles Barkhorn, Jr 45 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. George Leroy Barnes, Jr., 8100 West Chester Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. Seaton Granlland Barnes Griffin, Ga. Henry Brewster Barr Sterling Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Walter Irving Barrows, Jr. ..30 Kenilworth St., Waterbury, Conn. Walter Arthur Bastedo, Jr 36 E. 68th St., New York, N. Y. James Goodwin Batterson, IV.. 240 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. William Hoyt Bedell 37 Oakwood Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Francis Herrington Bell, II 34 Perdicaris PI., Trenton, N. I. James Ouinlan Bensen 392 E. 38th St., Paterson, N. J, James George Benziger 605 Front St., Hempstead, N. Y. Seymour Bernstein 130 Scheerer Ave., Newark, N. J. Frank Valentine Best 400 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. Two Hundred Thirty-four Name Address Alexander Black, Jr 347 S. Aiken Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harry Ferdinand Bliss, Jr 323 Parker St., Newark, N. J. John Eraser Bliss, Jr 935 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Card Bourne Wells, Maine Clarence Keating Bowie, Jr... 106 Charlcote Rd., Baltimore, Md. Brooks Bowman 430 Highland Ave., Salem, Ohio Gordon Cart3r Braine 19 Brace Ct., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edward Balloch Bready Wyoming Apts., Washington, D. C. William Palmer Smi.h Breese, 1333 Evergreen Ave., Plainfield, N. J A-ddiscn Gorgas Brenizer, Jr. 2218 Hopedale Ave., Charlotte, N. C. Robert Johnston Brewster 5138 Waterman St., St. Louis, Mo. Edward Franklin Britten, III .18 Lake Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Francis M. Brooke, Jr Glimpsewood , Bryn Mawr, Pa. Barry Brown 92 Prospect St., Providence, R. I. Joseph Jeanes Brown, Jr White Marsh, Pa. Ralph Manning Brown, Jr 57 Georgian Ct., Elizabeth, N. J. Steffen Samuel Brown 202 Spirea Dr., Dayton, Ohio Thomas Wister Brown, IV 5920 City Line, Overbrook, Pa. William Warner Brown 415 Reilly Rd., Wyoming, Ohio Henry Greenwood Bugbee 124 E. 38th St., New York, N. Y. Charles Franklin Burroughs, Jr. 512 Pembroke Ave., Norfolk, Va. Frederick Sidney Burroughs, Jr., 458 N. Ridgewood St., South Orange, N. J. Henri Marcel Cadgene Sylvan Blvd., Englewood, N. J. John Clarke Cahill 131 Moraine St.. Brockton, Mass. Robert Lothrop Carlee 222 Roseland Ave., Essex Fells, N. J. William Arthur Carlile, Jr 2595 Bryden Rd., Columbus, Ohio Charles Carr, Jr 250 Jefferson Rd., Webster Groves, Mo. Eric Ronald Ingriff Carson. Caixa Postal 3003, Sao Paulo, Brazil John Fredric Carspecken-.,.245 Grand St., Morgantown, W. Va. Richard Diarmied Chadwick-Collins, 239 Roberts Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Robert Holden Chapman 1519 Hinman Ave., Evanston, 111. Class of 1936 (Continued) Name Address Radcliffe Palmer Cheesman, 510 Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. John Woolson Clark 212 N. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. John Boviren Coburn Wooster School, Danbury, Conn. Ward Baldwin Coe, Jr Ridervirood, Md. Harold Vinton Coes, Jr 18 Braemore Rd., Up. Montclair, N. I. John Paige Cofrin 1105 S. Jackson St., Green Bay, Wis. Donald Andrew Colvin 829 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Edward Joseph Connolly, Jr., 50 Montgomery PI, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pepper Constable 4509 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. William Palen Conway, Jr Blue Mill Rd., Green Village, N. J. George Richardson Cooke, Jr., 64 Country Club Lane, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. John Maxwell Corbett 443 W. 21st St., New York, N. Y. Charles Paul Corrigan Herrick Rd., Southampton, N. Y. Frank Vanderlip Cosby 98 Bayean Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Edward Daily Cosden Southold, N. Y. Gordon Alexander Craig 142 Beach St., Jersey City, N. J. Schuyler Crane 659 Newark Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Harry Clement Crawford, Jr 529 8th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. George Wishart Creighton, 390 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N. I. Richard Lee Crist 1125 Cornell Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry Baumgardner Cross, Jr 415 Brook St., Providence, R. I. Charles Harper Crozer Cherry Lane, Wynnewood, Pa. Charles Sumner Cummings, II 30 Lloyd PI., Belleville, N. J. J. Michael Curto 705 Ligonier St., Latrobe, Pa. Monford Daniel Custer 1 Kensington Rd., Coshocton, Ohio Gordon Butler Cutler 207 Woodstock Ave., Kenilworth, 111. John H. Dalton Hotel Gramatan, Bronxville, N. Y. Wickliffe Bond Dashiell, Jr 1470 Carr Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Arthur Frank Davies, Jr., 310 N. Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Charles Strout Davis, Jr 400 Deming PL, Chicago, 111. Howard McParlin Davis, Jr 94 College Ave., Annapolis, Md. Rcbert Jay Davis.. .236 Farragut St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Samuel Boyer Davis, Jr Paoli, Pa. Clinton Owen Calvert Davisson, Campbell Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Harry Tartup Deakyne, Jr 35 S. Plaza St., Atlantic City, N. J. Marshall Harkness Dean.... 1030 W. 55th St., Kansas City, Mo. Edward Horace Decker 581 Upper Blvd., Ridgewood, N. J. Richard Redwood Deupree, Jr., R. R. 1, Madisonville, Cincinnati, Ohio Robert Rudolph Deutsch..l31 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N. J. John DeYoe 245 E. Main St., Ramsey, N. J. Harold Paul Dicke 2643 Livingston St., Allentown, Pa. Albert Joseph Diesinger, Jr 322 Calvert Rd., Merion, Pa. Roger Coit Dixon 101 Broadmead, Princeton, N. J. Albert Bayard Dod, Jr 250 Highland Ave., Orange, N. J. C ' arence Dodge, Jr 2204 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. Norman Henderson Donald, Jr., Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Edward Victor Donaldson, Jr., 507 Esplanade Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Francis Hotham Dowley, 210 E. Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Nome Address John Hamilton Drummond, Jr. ..3240 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Beauvais Duffy 7 Bethlehem Steel Co., Bethlehem, Pa. Arthur John Dziemian 544 Elm St., Arlington, N. J. William Corwin Earhart 215 Lothrop St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Jchn Edie 287 Palisade Ave., Yonker s, N. Y. Charles William Edwards, Noble Greenough School, Dedham, Mass. Gordon Madison Einhaus, 23 Chestnut St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Thomas Ketchen Elliott, III Winnsboro, S. Car. Charles Clement English, Jr Montrose Ave., Rosemont, Pa. Edward Bradbury Entwistle, 1521 Prospect Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Eugene Erler 360 Irving Ave., South Orange, N. J. Kenneth DuBois Ervin 114 York Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Harland Crandall Essertier 275 State St., Hackensack, N. J. Cary McNab Euwer Upper Marlboro, Md. William Edward Fackert, Jr...ll7 Llewellyn Rd., Montclair, N. J. Laurence Fenninger, Jr 52 Edison St., Quincy, Mass. George Jackson Fickes 6 Grove St., South River, N. J. Arthur James Fisher, Jr 120 Grosvenor Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Robert Lownds Fisher 136 Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Lawrence Charles Ford. .2298 Pacific Ave., San Francisco, Cal. Robert Pierpont Forshew 161 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Herbert Hastings Foster, Jr 717 Dixie Lane, Plainfield, N. J. George Anderson Fowler 229 Corona Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Robert Hobbs French 36 Park Ave., Worcester, Mass. Frederick Henry Frick, Jr Cotswold Apts., Tenafly, N. J. Carl Knott Fried, Jr 1317 E. High St., Springfield, Ohio George Samuel Friend Curren Ter., Norristown, Pa. John Edward Furlong, Jr...l28 Lorraine Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Garret James Garretson, II, Woodward, Baldwin Co., 43 Worth St., New York, N. Y. Summerfield Baldwin Garretson.. ..44 Wall St., New York, N. Y. Allre Henry Garrett 12 Jackson St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Lawrence Joseph Gatt 58 Fairfield Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Francis Thomas Gephart..l36 Parkview Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Budd Gibby 158 E. 5th Ave., Roselle, N. J. George Martin Luther Gill.. 187 Sherwood PL, Englewood, N. J. Edward Glassmeyer, Jr. ..54 Van Reipen Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Richard Rhea Patton Goheen....218 E. 17th St., New York, N. Y. Charles Henry Goodsell Short Hills, N. J. Lewis Jefferson Gorin, Jr 1129 Cardinal PL, Louisville, Ky. Edmund Nash Gorman Stevenson, Md. Robert Eugene Goudreau 73 St. Pauls PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter Worlhington Graham 1622 Race St., Denver, Colo. Otto Joseph Anthony Grassi, Jr., 427 W. Broadway, New York, N. Y. Arthur Zabriskie Gray Garrison, N. Y. John Davis Gray Blairstown, N. J. David Gorham Greene 42 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Stewart Evans Gregory 84 Carlton St., East Orange, N. J. Arthur Sylvester Grenier, Jr 330 Park St., Montclair, N. J. Campbell Clark Groel, Jr 152 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Harvey Hall, Jr 6 Grosscup Dr., Charleston, W. Va. Robert Austin Hall 125 Brookside Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. David Carpenter Hamilton 927 Rahway Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Two Hundred Thirty-fivo Class of 1936 (Continued) Nome Address Edwin Wombwell Hampton Box 235, Warren, Ark. Paul Munde Hancock.... 1870 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. Barton Harrison 1000 Poplar Hill Rd., Baltimore, Md. William Harrison 5210 Davenport St., Omaha, Neb. Stanley David Hart 422 S. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. Howard Carl Hartman ...153 W. 74th St., New York, N. Y. Jesse Lee Hartman, 11 614 Allegheny St., Hollidaysburg, Pa. George Maurice Harton, III, Park Mansions, Frew St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Haywood Hawks, Jr... 1286 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Norman Hovey Hayes 14 Irving St., New Bedford, Mass. Thomas Aloysius Hayes, Jr., 93 Wyoming Ave., South Orange, N. J. Burchard Miller Hazen..l89 Glenwood Ave., East Orange, N. J. John Wilson Heck 19615 100th Ave., Hollis, L. I., N. Y. Elleard Buridan Heffern 434 Wesley Ave., Ferguson, Mc. David Stuart Hemingway Ill South St., Auburn, N. Y. Willard Max Henkleman 640 Hickory St., Scranton, Pa. Ralph Eugene Herendeen, Jr.. .155 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Robert Robins Heroy River Rd., Belmar, N. J. Leon John Heuser.... 481 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Howard Hazlett Hildreth 901 N. Main St., Wheeling, W. Va. Hugo Alfred Hilgendorff, Ir 16 Oakwood PI., Elizabeth, N. J. John Porter Hine 179 Cove St., New Haven, Conn. Henry Voss Hogan 21 Ludington Rd., West Orange, N. J. Henry Bertram Holmes 249 Ridge Rd., Douglaston, N. Y. Penn Harvey Holsapple.. Horse Mesa Farm, Dover Plains, N. Y. Dayton George Hopkins New Egypt, N. J. Chauncey Todd Horton, Jr., 25 Rockaway Rd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Hans Kierstede Hudson, Jr Mill Neck, L. I., N. Y. Robert Alonzo Hull, Jr Waverly, Pa. Frederick William Hummel.. ..World 4th Sts., W. Belmar, N. J. John Hunt R. F. D. 3, Wayzata, Minn. Carl Eric Hutz 292 Maple St., Englewood, N. J. John Frederick Hyle 348 12th Ave., Homestead, Pa. William Torbert Ingram .R. F. D. 2, Trenton, N. J. Joseph Randall Jaquillard, 107-8 86th Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. George Pollock Jenkins 25 Wildwood Ter., Glen Ridge, N. J. Randolph Jenks Mt. Kemble, Morristown, N. J. Benn Wainwright Jesser 358 Hamilton PI., Hackensack, N. J. Howard Walter Johnson. ...24 Lexington St., New Britain, Conn. Frank Bremond Johnston 319 Summit Ave., Wayne, Pa. William Dickenson Johnston 40 E. 88th St., New York, N. Y. Alan Wood Jones, Jr 1224 Fayette St., Conshohocken, Pa. Gillespie Seaver Jones Walnut Gate , South Orange, N. J. Herbert Ivor Jones Allendale Ave., Saddle River, N. J. John Paul Jones 249 N. Heights Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Richard O ' Donnell Jones 4221 E. Douglas St, Wichita, Kan. Thomas Scott Jones 125 Park Ave., Hinsdale, 111. Rudolph Kauffmann, II.. ..1 West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. Herbert Kaufman 302 Seymour Ave., Newark, N. J. Leslie R. Kaufman 328 Main St., West Haven, Conn. James Holland Keet, Jr 1215 Meadowmere, Springfield, Mo. Edward Demarest Keller. .269 Roseland Ave., Essex Fells, N. J. Roger Edmund Kellogg West Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Two Hundred Thirty-six Name Address John Francis P. Kelly 16 Lakeview Rd., Deal, N. I. Gordon Keppel 522 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Frederick Gordon Ketcham..750 Summit Ave., River Edge, N. J. Frederick Lewis Keyes 593 S. Main St., Geneva, N. Y. William Austin Kienbusch 12 E. 74th St., New York, N. Y. Richard Henry Kilcullen 230 W. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Frederic Paige Kimball 277 Walnut St., Dedham, Mass. George Duncan Kinder 908 National Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. Aubrey Edmunds King, Jr 200 Northfield PL, Baltimore, Md. William Joseph Kirby 110 E. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. George Stanley Koehler 87 Maple St., Rutherford, N. J. Raymond Burns Koehler 87 Maple St., Rutherford, N. J. Edward Walter Koerber 91 Maple St., New Britain, Conn. Robert Yates Kopf 509 Market St., Warren, Pa. Eugenie Martins Lage, 650 Avenida Atlantica, Rio de Janiero. Brazil William George Lamb 49 E. 96th St., New York, N. Y. John Rogers Lanahan 10 Atterbury Ave., Trenton. N. J. Fred Gourley Lancaster, Jr., 39 Hoodridge Dr., Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Kumler Landis, Jr 930 Schantz Ave., Dayton, Ohio Robert Christian Lang Gillette, N. J. Charles Wesley Lapha 50 Beach St.. East Orange, N. J. William Frederic Laporte, Jr 86 Passaic Ave., Passaic, N. J. Laurence Henry Larsen 750 W. Market St., Lima, Ohio William Law Fort Sill, Okla. Frederick Richmond Lawson, 19 S. Sydney St., Dorchester, Mass. Gilbert Lea Paoli, Pa. Francis Woodburn Leary 216 Court St., Binghamton, N. Y. Malcolm Leighton 7 Hilton PL, Hempstead, N. Y. Garrett Benjamin LeVan, Jr Sunset Blvd., Steubenville, Ohio Harry Henry LeVeen 182-35 Midland Pkwy., Jamaica, N. Y. Felix Joffre Levy-Hawes Woodlands Rd., Harrison, N. Y. Archibald Ross Lewis 57 Cleveland Lane. Princeton, N. J. Arthur Robert Lewis 817 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Melvin Palmer Lewis Perrysburg, Ohio Thomas Amerman Lewis 566 Mowbray Arch, Norfolk, Va. Harold Alexander Ley, Jr 10 Millard Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Charles Ewing Green Lloyd Short Hills, N. J. Charles Wait Lloyd 183 Vassar St., Rochester, N. Y. Morris Lloyd Mill Creek Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Willis Frederick Loeffel 91 Zabriskie St., Jersey City, N. J. Frank William Loveioy, Jr 56 Berkeley St., Rochester, N. Y. George Harold Lucas Farnsworth Ave., Bordentown, N. I. Alvin Lothrop Luttrell, 2001 Connecticut Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. John Keith Lynahan 221 Church St., Bound Brook, N. J. Hugh Bailey Lynn 70 Elmwood Rd., Verona, N. J. Duncan MacDougald, II Greenville Rd., Brevard, N. Car. Hugh Allen MacMillan 229 Union St., Cumberland, Md. Percy Childs Madeira, III. .West School Lane, Germantown, Pa. John Francis Malloy 1131 E. 19th St., Tulsa, Okla. Robert Kade Mardfin 57 Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Bruce Ramage Martin 5807 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank Leslie Marline 328 Park Ave., Newark, N. J. Class of 1936 (Continued) Name Address Howard Burton Marvin, 792 Avenida Atlantica, Rio de Janiero, Brazil John Tufton Mason, Jr., 447 W. South Orange Ave., South Orange, N. I. Ralph Schweizer Mason 104 Parker PI., Trenton, N. I. Robert Sev ell Mather 6054 Kimbark Ave., Chicago, 111. Albert Touzalin Maurice 405 E. 54th St., Nev? York, N. Y. Edward Henry Maxwell Box 1064, Greenwich, Conn. Robert Caldwell Mayo, 4000 Cathedral Ave., Washington, D. C. Charles Williston McAlpin, II, 130 Madison Ave., Madison, N. I. Harry McCall, Jr 2426 Prytania St., New Orleans, La. Roscoe Parke McClave, Jr 244 Clark Ter., Cliffside, N. J. Quincy Gordon McClennan 143 N. Pitt St., Mercer, Pa. Carl Holz McClure, III 121 Trenor Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. Charles Edward McConnell, Jr.. .640 W. 8th St., Plainfield, N. J. John Edward McCracken 5 Jefferson St., Lambertville, N. J. William McDermott 31 W. 12lh St., New York, N. Y. Charles Francis McDonald 833 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Lyman Leavitt McGrath....44 Lafayette Ave., East Orange, N. ' . George Alexander McKeon..58 Arsdale Ter., East Orange, N. J. Dennis Francis McMahon, Jr 2104 S. Madison, Tulsa, Okla. George Wells McMurray Graystone Park, N. J. Henry Piper McNulty 186 Sullivan St., New York, N. Y. Charles Braddock Meech, 2603 Newton Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. John Wister Meigs 1736 M St., Washington, D. C. Robert Thomas Mellinger 71 Akers St., Johnstown, Pa. Howard Menand, Jr., 15 N. Lyons Ave., Menands, Albany, N. Y. William Gerhard Mennen, Jr., 135 Raymond Ave., South Orange, N. J. Walter Williamson Merrill, Jr Glendale, Ohio George Rich Metcalf 70 South St., Auburn, N. Y. Arch Louis Metzner, Jr 23 Rockledge Rd., Wheeling, W. Va. Stanley Wheeler Midgley, Jr., 1131 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, 111. Samuel Stockton Miles, 506 Woodlawn Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Benjamin Charles Milner, III... .2101 Auburn Ave., Toledo, Ohio Ralph Justin Minnich 1851 E. Erie Ave., Lorain, Ohio Samuel Keene Mitchell, Jr... 1724 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort, Pa. Philip Vaughan Mohan 269 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Lyman Moore 261 N. 9th St., Newark, N. J. Israel Wister Morris, Jr., 38 Summit St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. John McLean Morris 449 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. William Henry Morris 2491 Highland Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Ouin Morton 640 Holley Ave., Charleston, W. Va. John Cornell Murray, Jr Yardley Rd., Yardley, Pa. Freeman Rawdon Myers.. ..39 Colony Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Clifford Armitage Nangle 120 Fountain Ave., Trenton, N. J. Richard Wilson Nebel 2 Washington Rd., Parlin, N. J. Douglas Houghton Needham 46 Pine St., West Orange, N. J. Raoul Henry Nehr 411 Lenox PI., South Orange, N. J. Robert Lee Nevitt 257 28th St., Atlanta, Ga. Garrett Winder Nevius 115 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Name Address Fiank Albert Newman Summit Dr., Manhasset, N. Y. William Barnes Newsome 4324 St. Johns Dr., Dallas, Tex. William Seton Duys Niven, Rhunacraig, Millhill Rd., Oyster Bay, N. Y. George Marcellus Onken 96 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Thornton Osborne, 3 Mosswood Ave., South Orange, N. J. Frank McDowell Parker, Jr Walnut St., Reedsville, Pa. Thomas Alexander Parrott 122 E. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. William John Pasley 456 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Paul Henry Pauk 2024 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Pyper Peacock, Jr 1402 Loraine Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. James Townsend Peirce Canterbury Farms, Warrenton, Va. Edward Hadduck Peplow, Jr., 1301 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Richard Byron Perry, Jr 3155 Annapolis Ave., Dormonl, Pa. Carl Williams Peterson 1415 Surrey Lane, Merion, Pa. William Henry Peterson, Jr Woods Lane, Colonia, N. J. Frank Alfred Petito 224 Pearl St., Trenton, N. J. Richard Robinson Pettit Rancho La Morada, Bostonia, Cal. Samuel Fiske Pierson 160 Glenbrook Rd., Stamford, Conn. Philip Lonsdale Pillsbury, 2215 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. William Edgar Porter 650 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Woodburn Potter, Jr 240 Shawnee Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Percy Preston 25 W. 9th St., New York, N. Y. Raphael Pumpelly 119 Waverly PL, New York, N. Y. Lowell Mason Pumphrey 957 Government St., Mobile, Ala. David McAlpin Pyle 57 William St., New York, N. Y. James Alonzo Quigley Orchard Hill, Lock Haven, Pa. James Valleau Quinn 18 Cambridge St., Rochester, N. Y. Stanley John Ouinn, Jr., 526 Highbrook Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Robert Victor Rafter 7 Moore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Charles Frederic Ramsey, Jr New Hope, Pa. Angus Crawford Randolph, Virginia Episcopal School, Lynchburg, Va. Rudolph Stewart Rauch, Jr Villanova, Pa. Cleveland Dodge Rea 102 Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Reichel, Jr 4947 Walton St., Philadelphia, Pa. Jay Robert Reist 210 Summit Ave., Jenkinlown, Pa. John Otto Rhome, Jr 618 Grassmere Ave., Interlaken, Pa. Harold Van Buren Richard 1060 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Bruce MacDonnell Ridgway..llO Hilton Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. Spencer Coryell Ridgway....440 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Sido Louis Ridolfi 439 Whitlaker Ave., Trenton, N. J. John Frederick Riebow..l73 Onderdonk Ave., Manhasset, N. Y. Verus Taggart Ritter, Jr 336 N. Latches Lane, Merion, Pa. William Randolph Robbins, 859 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. David Roberts, III 3880 Crescent Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Henry Butcher Roberts Bala, Pa. David Allan Robertson, Jr. ..2229 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. John Brooks Robinson 1025 3rd Ave., N., Great Falls, Mont. Thomas Blackwood Rodgers, III, 517 Berkley Ave., Orange, N. J. Albert Sutherland Roe 7 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. I. Charles Bartlett Rogers 506 Walnut Rd., Lake Forest, 111. Two Hundred Thirty-seven Class of 1936 (Continued) 5 h ' Nome Addresi Robert Burton Romberger, Apt. J-2, Prospect Apts., Princeton, N. J. William Winston Roper, Jr., 7201 Lincoln Drive, Philadelphia, Pa. Kennedy Paul Ross 29 S. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. Urban Joseph Peters Rushton, 2832 Balmoral Rd., Birmingham, Ala. George William Russell 376 Prospect Ave., E. Orange, N. J. Gerald Sinnott Ryan 21 Dante Ave., Larchmont, N. Y Joseph James Ryan 2 E. 61st St., New York, N. Y. Lawrence Thomas Ryan Red Oak Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Erie B. Savage, Jr R. F. D. 3, Wayzata, Minn. John Morris Sayre 36 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. Alan Murray Schaeffer, 409 Clements Ridge Rd., Harrington, N. J. William Hurd Scheide....221 N. Washington St., Titusville, N. J. William Frederick Schmick, Jr., 4601 Millbrook Rd., Baltimore, Md. Roland Henry Schuerhoff....2530 Erickson St., E. Elmhurst, N. Y. Peter Aston Schwartz Nassau Hall, Princeton, N. J. David Haven Scott. .Roberts Ashbridge Rds., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Robert William Scott 3300 E. 7th St., Denver, Colo. Richard Louis Seggel 36 Hampton PL, Metuchen, N. J. Craig Severance River View Dr., Brielle, N. J. Francis Seyfarth R. F. D. 3, Princeton, N. J. Robert Seyfarth R. F. D. 3, Princeton, N. J. Walter Seymour, Jr 297 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Charles Edward Shain, Los Alamos Ranch School, Otowi, N. Mex. Paul Baker Sheatsley..98 Crestview Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. ]. William Chastain Shelton, 3211 Tennyson St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Hampton Gilbert Silcox, IH, Wharton Winding Rds., Jenkintown, Pa. Sidney Bayley Silleck, Jr 8 Brayton Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Robert Abbott Sincerbeaux..43 Geenway Ter., Forest Hills, N. Y. Edwin Lemoine Skinner, Jr., 100 Orchard Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. William Vanuxem Slaughter.. Prestwould Apts., Richmond, Va. Jonathan Slocum Beacon, N. Y. Alan Leslie Smith 32 Washington St., E. Orange, N. J. Albridge Clinton Smith, III.. 150 Montrose Ave., S. Orange, N. J. Gerald Hewitt Smith 7 E. 78th St., New York, N. Y. Gordon Howell Smith 1601 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. Irving Heddens Smith, Jr 39 E. 39th St., New York, N. Y. John Chabot Smith 27 W. 67th St., New York, N. Y. Lawrence LaGrave Smith.. 19 Garthwaite Ter., Maplewood, N. J. Walter Henry Smith 264 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y. John Clinton Snyder 529 Kenilworth St., Clinton, Iowa Willis Embry Snyder.. ..Chosen Christian College, Seoul, Korea Alexander Pyott Spence Kahdena Rd., Morristown, N. J. Edgar A. Spencer 116 S. Lake Ave., Albany, N. Y. Robert Harold Sperber 15 W. 81st St., New York, N. Y. Albert Campbell Steece, Jr.. .820 Franklin Ave., Columbus, Ohio Harry James Stevens, Jr 438 Walton Rd., Maplewood, N. ]. George Black Stewart, III 17 Grover St., Auburn, N. Y. John Albert Stilwell 29A Charing Cross Rd., London, Eng. Robert Winthrop Storer 522 Vose Ave., S. Orange, N. J. Two Hundred Thirty-eight Name Address Oscar Solomon Straus, II 6 E. 93rd St., New York, N. Y. John Anthony Strazza, Jr 41 Beach St., Bloomfield, N. J. Jomes Clark Streett, Jr 36 Kingsbury PL, St. Louis, Mo. Donald Sutherland Ogontz School, Rydal, Pa. Aaron Snyder Swartz, III 1739 DeKalb St., Norristown, Pa. John David Sweeney, Jr., 263 Beechmont Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. Reginald Wilfred Borack Sykes, 28 Frederick St., Montclair, N. J. Arthur Lloyd Symington 167 E. 6Sth St., New York, N. Y. lA illiam Louis Taggart, Jr. ..100 Mayfair Dr., Grand Rapids, Mich. Benjamin Holliday Taplin, 13485 N. Park Blvd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Walter Taradash 20 Pine St., New York, N. Y. Arthur Earl Tator, Jr 57 DeForest Ave., Summit, N. J. Howard Wilson Taylor, Jr 6017 Greene St., Germantown, Pa. John Frank Adams Taylor, 1358 Redondo Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. William Jack Taylor 252 N. 6th St., Indiana, Pa. Justus Stevens Templeton 625 N. Ottowa Ave., Dixon, 111. Edwin Daisley Thatcher Syosset, L. I., N. Y. Charles deYoung Thieriot Rosecourt, Burlingarae, Cal. John Alexander Thompson, Pittsburgh-Xenia Seminary, Pittsburgh, Pa. John William Thompson, 1730 New Hampshire Ave., Washington, D. C. William Tatem Tilden, III. .525 Hansberry St., Germantown, Pa. George Baker Treide 4201 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Edmund Kiernan Tre nt Sewickley, Pa. William Trevor 103 W. 29th St., Baltimore, Md. Abraham Charles Troup, IV. Norman Towers, River Rd., Harrisburg, Pa. John Coburn Turner, Brighton Hotel, 2123 California St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Samuel Tyler, Jr 58 Via Napoli, Rome, Italy David Richardson Upson. ...6650 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Morris Crawford Valentine, 8345 Lefferts Blvd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Wynant Davis Vanderpool, Jr. ..86 Miller Rd., Morristown, N. J. Samuel Child Vanneman 88 S. Main St., Port Deposit, Md. Earl Travis Van Sciver 349 Pelham Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Van Valzah, Jr Goby, Va. Nicholas Biddle Wainwright R. F. D. 1, Ambler, Pa. Roger Atkinson Walke, Jr St. Mark ' s Rectory, Pikesville, Md. Alan Barnes Walker Morningside, Milford, Conn. William Henry Walker, IL. 144-85 Sanford Ave., Flushing, N. Y. William Walsh Wallin 357 Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. John Britton Ward 286 Highland Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Harry Borden Wardell Curtis Ave., Point Pleasant, N. J. Alba Hoghton Warren, Jr 1017 Lovett Blvd., Houston, Tex. Richard Duer Waters 38 Poplar St., Douglaston, N. Y. Ed ' ward Thomson Powell Watson, 1000 Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. George Russell Webster.... 1466 Longfellow Ave., Detroit, Mich. Frank Benjamin Weiss 47 E. 88lh St., New York, N. Y. John Allen Claude Weller 48 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Samuel Mauldin Wells, 874 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Morrisville, Pa. Class of 1936 (Continued) Name Address Frederic Sager Welsh 2619 Highland Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Jack Reed Welsh 2619 Highland Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Louis Pierre Wenzell, Jr 4166 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. John Henry West, Jr 4004 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. John Benjamin Westcott, Jr 51 Hillside Ave., Chatham, N. J. Alexander Bowman Wheeler Ardmore Ave., Ardmore, Pa. John Hov ell White 17 Fernv ood Rd., Summit, N. J. William Henry White 308 Innis St., Oil City, Pa. Frederick Crocker Whitman, 2265 Ralston Ave., Burlingame, Cal. Marland Hamilton Whitman. ...34 W. Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. Edward Fletcher Whitney 21 E. 90th St., New York, N. Y. Ralph Rohrer Whittaker, Jr 220 High St., Williamsburg, Pa. William Madison Whittington, Jr., 401 E. Market St., Greenwood, Miss. George Wilgus 148 Cuyler Ave., Trenton, N. J. Carl Frederick Wilkening, Jr 33 Owen Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Willis Howard Willey, Jr., 505 Goodwyn Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Alvin Marcus Williams, Jr 110 High St., Montclair, N. J. Name Address Edward Mercur Wiiliams, 76 W. Northampton St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. John Gilmore Williams 455 E. 57lh St., New York, N. Y. Richard Lucas Williams, Jr 325 FuUerton Pkwy., Chicago, 111. Edward John Williamson, 49 Riggs Ave., West Hartford, Conn. Roger Willock, c o Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Daniel Winters Keuka Park, N. Y. Lewis Wynne Wister Cherry Lane, Wynnewood, Pa. Harlestcn Read Wood 615 Pembroke Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Robert MacPhers n Wood 231 S. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. William Henry Wood Tuxedo Park, N. Y. William John Wood 433 Jennings St., Beverly, N. J. Joseph Cass Woodle Irvington, N. Y. Willard Jurey Wright 1237 Federal Ave., Seattle, Wash. John Jacob Wyckoff 372 Parke Ave., E. Orange, N. J. David Bourne Wygant 713 Pierce St., Birmingham, Mich. Jean Wylie 2388 Pine St., San Diego, Cal. Edward Madison Yard 244 W. Slate St., Trenton, N. J. John Filing Zacharias 119 Herding Ave., Clifton, N. J. Nassau Herald Committee R. O. Jones Chairman R. M. Brown, Jr. D. S. Hemingway R. D. Waters STANDING: Woters, Brown, Hemingwoy. SEATED: Jones. Two Hundred Thirty-nine I L Class Day IJlllllle Exercises  ' vi ' W W ' ¥7 (T ' H Tp; -7 ,, ir • TOP ROW: Crawford, Parrott, Euwer, Woters, Mellinger. SECOND ROW: Toggart, Crane, Holsapple, Foster, Edwards, Menand, Whittaker. FRONT ROW: R. Jones. MacMJIIcn, Constable, Carlisle (Chairman), McAlpin, G. Jones, Brewster. ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-NINTH COMMENCEMENT MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1936 OPENING EXERCISES W. A. Carlile, Jr Master of Ceremonies Howard Menand, Jr Class Orator A. H. Warren, Jr Class Poet Yorke Allen, Jr Ivy Orator CANNON EXERCISES G. D. Kinder Class History R. D. Waters Call of Roll by Class Secretary CLASS MEMORIAL COMMITTEE C. W. Edwards Chairman J. M. Curto A. W. Jones, Jr. A. L. Smith, III H. H. Foster, Jr. R. T. Mellinger L. W. Wister CLASS DAY COMMITTEE W. A. Carlile, Jr Chairman R. J. Brewster P. H. Holsapple T. A. Parrott Pepper Constable G. S. Jones W. H. Smith Schuyler Crane R. O. Jones W. L. Taggart, Jr. H. C. Crawford, Jr. Gordon Keppel R. D. Waters C. W. Edwards G. D. Kinder R. R. Whittaker, Jr. C. M. Euwer C. W. McAlpin, 11 L. W. Wister H. H. Foster, Jr. H. A. MacMillan, Jr. Two Hundred Forty Honors Conferred Valedictory G. A. Craig Salutatory G. S. Koehler Final Special Honors ARCHITECTURE: High honors W. D. Vander- pool, Jr.; Honors — Morris Lloyd, W. H. Walker, II. ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY: High honors— W. A. Kienbusch, R. A. Walke, Jr.; Honors— R. D. Chadwick-CoUins, Percy Preston, Raphael Pumpelly. BIOLOGY: Highest honors— A. J. Dziemian; Hon- ors— J. F. Bliss, Jr., A. G. Brenizer, Jr., H. V. Goes, Jr., Pepper Constable, Rudolph Jenks, H. B. Lynn, William McDermott, J. W. Meigs, S. S. Miles, ]. M. Morris, A. C. Randolph, A. L Smith, J. A. Strazza, Jr., J. C. Street, Jr., D. R. Upson. CHEMISTRY: High honors— P. L. Pillsbury; Hon- ors — W. A. Bastedo, Jr., Seymour Bernstein, F. T. Gephart, S. W. Midgley, Jr., R. W. Nebel. CLASSICS: Highest honors— F. C. Bourne, E. L. Skinner, Jr.; Honors — J. F. Carspecken, Donald Sutherland, J. B. Westcott, Jr. ECONOMICS: Highest honors— L. M. Pumphrey; High honors — A. J. Diesinger, Jr., G. P. Jenkins, F. A. Petito, H. R. Wood; Honors— R. E. Adams, W. B. Asher, J. P. Cofrin, Clarence Dodge, Jr., A. S. Grenier., Jr., E. W. Hampton, H. B. Holmes, R. A. Hull, Jr., H. W. Johnson, W. D. Johnston, R. K. Landis, Jr., L. L. McGrath, R. S. Mather, B. C. Milner, III, W. E. Snyder, E. T. Van Scriver, W. W. Wallin. ENGINEERING: Highest honors— C. E. McCon- nell, Jr.; High honors — S. S. Brown, W. T. In- gram, E. M. Lage, R. C. Lang, W. F. Loeffel, C. W. Peterson, Francis Seyfarth; Honors — G. L. Barnes, R. P. Cheesman, G. S. Friend, J. W. Heck, B. W. Jesser, R. P. McClave, Jr., W. E. Porter, Robert Seyfarth, F. B. Weiss, L. P. Wenzell, Jr. ENGLISH: Highest honors— D. C. Hamilton, Her- bert Kaufman, G. S. Koehler, A. H. Warren, Jr.; High honors— J. G. Benziger, H. C. Hart- man, Malcolm Leighton, Quin Morton, D. A. Robertson, Jr., C. E. Shain, A. B. Wheeler; Honors— M. E. Andrews, A. T. Baker, III, J. G. Batterson, IV, C. H. Goodsell, J. D. Gray, R. H. Kilcullen, William Law, W. J. Pasley, H. B. Roberts, U. J. P. Rushton, P. A. Schwartz, A. B. Walker, W. M. Whittington, Jr., A. M. Wil- liams, Jr. GEOLOGY: Highest honors— W. P. Conway, Jr.; High honors — N. H. Donald, Jr., Rudolph Kauffmann, II; Honors — J. S. Templeton. HISTORY: Highest honors— G. A. Craig, A. R. Lewis; High honors — Laurence Fenninger, Jr., A. S. Swartz, III; Honors— H. C. Barkhorn, Jr., Schuyler Crane, R. R. Deupree, Jr., John Edie, C. W. Edwards, R. H. French, R. R. Heroy, J. H. Keet, Jr., F. W. Leary, W. S. D. Niven, D. M. Pyle, J. F. Riebow, R. L. Seggel, J. C. Smith, R. W. B. Sykes, J. A. Thompson, J. W. Thomp- son, N. B. Wainwright, E. T. P. Watson. MATHEMATICS: Highest honors— J. O. Rhome, Jr., W. C. Shelton; High honors— W. W. Mer- rill, Jr. MODERN LANGUAGES: High honors— F. J. Levy- Howes, Harry McCall, Jr., W. W. Potter, Jr., D. C. Travis, Jr.; Honors— E. B. Heffern, T. S. Jones, C. F. Ramsey, Jr., J. C. Turner, E. J. Williamson. PHILOSOPHY: Highest honors— J. F. A. Taylor; High honors — H. G. Bugbee, Jr., F. H. Dowley, G. W. McMurray, R. R. Pettit. PHYSICS: High honors— C. S. Cummings, II, Jean Wylie; Honors— J. C. Bright, Harvey Hall, Jr. POLITICS: Highest honors— Yorke Allen, Jr., H. F. Bliss, Jr., J. R. Lanahan; High honors — R. H. Alford, H. L. Allen, R. A. Baker, J. C. Coburn, L. C. Ford, Lyman Moore, J. A. Ouigley, J. R. Reist, W. F. Schmick, Jr., F. C. Whitman, J. G. Williams, R. M. Wood; Honors— R. M. Brown, Jr., C. H. Crozer, J. M. DeYoe, W. C. Earhart, J. E. Furlong, Jr., P. M. Hancock, W. M. Henkel- man, J. P. Jones, G. D. Kinder, W. F. Laporte, Jr., L. H. Larsen, R. S. Rauch, Jr., R. A. Sincer- beaux, W. H. Smith, A. L. Symington, H. W. Taylor, Jr., M. H. Whitman. PSYCHOLOGY: High honors— S. B. Silleck, Jr.; Honors— R. E. Baiter, G. C. Braine, C. W. Lapha, John Reichel, Jr. Two Hundred Forty-one TOP ROW: Constable, Davison, Edwards, Schmick, Allen, Davis, Kienbusch, Shelton. THIRD ROW; Symington, Robertson, Dowley, Borkhorn, Taplin, McColl, Lewis, Pyle, Quigley, SECOND ROW: Merrill, Corspecken, Moore, Pumphrey, Warren, Bliss, Jenkins, Watson, Shain. FRONT ROW: Sutherland, C. Cummings, Bourne, Taylor, Koelher, Thompson, Hartmon, Rhome, Peterson. Phi Beta Kappa FACULTY OFFICERS Dean Christian Gauss President Professor Robert Scoon Vice-President Professor W. J. Oates Secretary-Treasurer Professor R. G. Albi EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Professor L. A. Turner Professor H. H. Hudson MEMBERS, 1936, ELECTED IN 1935 AND 1936 Jr. Yorke Allen H. C. Barkhorn, J. G. Benziger H. F. Bliss, Jr. F. C. Bourne J. F. Corspecken Pepper Constable G. A. Craig C. S. Cummings, II H. McP. Davis F. H. Dowley A. J. Dziemian Two Hundred Forty-two Laurence Fenninger, C. H. Goodsell H. C. Fiartman G. P. Jenkins Randolph Jenks Herbert Kaufman W. A. Kienbusch G. S. Koehler J. R. Lanahan F. J. Levy-Hawes A. R. Lewis Harry McCall, Jr. C. E. McConnell, Jr. W. W. Merrill, Jr. Lyman Moore C. W. Peterson F. A. Petito P. L Pillsbury L. M. Pumphrey D. McA. Pyle J. A. Ouigley R. S. Rauch, Jr. J. O. Rhome, Jr. D. A. Robertson William Schmick, Jr. C. E. Shain W. C. Shelton E. L. Skinner, Jr. J. C. Smith Donald Sutherland A. L. Symington J. F. A. Taylor J. S. Templeton J. A. Thompson A. B. Warren E. T. P. Watson J. G. Williams Jean Wylie R. H. Davison R. L. Edwards Phi Beta Kappa (Continued) MEMBERS, 1937, ELECTED IN 1936 C. H. Kearny E. H. Lotspeich S. E. Pendexter, Jr. Thomas Riggs, Jr. F. E. Taplin, Jr. A. M. Wicks Princeton Chapter Sigma XI OFFICERS Dr. Carl Ten Broek President Professor N. H. Furman Vice-President Professor L. A. Turner Secretary Professor Erling Dorf Treasurer Professor G. E. Beggs i Professor H. P. Robertson Members of Executive Committee Dr. J. W. Gowen ' BIOLOGY A. J. Dziemian Randolph Jenks S. S. Miles Jonathan Slocum J. C. Streett, Jr. CHEMISTRY Seymour Bernstein F. T. Gephart P. L. Pillsbury ASSOCIATE MEMBERS, 1936 GEOLOGY W. P. Conv ay, Jr. N. H. Donald, Jr. Rudolph Kauffmann, II MATHEMATICS W. W. Merrill, Jr. J. O. Rhome, Jr. W. C. Sheltcn PHYSICS C. S. Cummings, II M. C. Valentine PSYCHOLOGY C. W. Lapha S. B. Silleck, Jr. Two Hundred Forty-three Prizes Awarded, 1936 THE M. TAYLOR PYNE HONOR PRIZE Pepper Constable, ' 36 THE LYMAN BIDDLE SENIOR SCHOLAR Gordon Alexander Craig, ' 36 THE ALEXANDER GUTHRIE McCOSH PRIZE John Frank Adams Taylor, ' 36 THE CLASS OF 1859 PRIZE Herbert Kaufman, ' 36 THE CLASS OF 1869 PRIZE IN ETHICS Richard Robinson Pettit, ' 36 THE LYMAN H. ATWATER PRIZE IN POLITICAL SCIENCE John Bowen Coburn, ' 35 Honorable Mention: Lyman Moore, ' 36 THE LYNDE DEBATE PRIZES First: Gordon Alexander Craig, ' 36 Second: Willis Embry Snyder, ' 36 Third: Arthur Melville Agnew, ' 36 THE NEW YORK HERALD PRIZE John Rogers Lanahan, ' 36 Honorable Mention: Harry Ferdinand Bliss, Jr., ' 36 THE PHILO SHERMAN BENNETT PRIZE IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Frederick Crocker Whitman, ' 36 Honorable Mention: Jay Robert Reist, ' 36 THE MANNERS PRIZES Neo Caesarean Scholar: No Award Winner of the Golden Tiger: Charles Edward Shain, ' 36 Honorable Mention: Alba Houghton Warren, Jr., ' 36 THE C. O. JOLINE PRIZE IN AMERICAN POLITICAL HISTORY David McAlpin Pyle, ' 36 THE ROBERT THORNTON McCAY PRIZE IN CHEMISTRY Stanley Wheeler Midgeley, Jr., ' 36 THE GEORGE B. COVINGTON PRIZE IN MATHEMATICS Divided between: John Otto Rhome, Jr., ' 36, and William Chastain Shelton, ' 36 THE GALE F. JOHNSTON PRIZE IN THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Yorke Allen, Jr., ' 36 FRANCE-AMERIOUE PRIZE MEDAL IN THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Charles Frederick Ramsey, Jr., ' 36 Honorable Mention: Robert Hobbs French, ' 36 THE LYMAN BIDDLE JUNIOR SCHOLAR Thomas Gucker, III, ' 37 THE JUNIOR ORATOR MEDALS First: Roderick Hollett Davison, ' 37 Second: Norman Abraham Stoner, ' 37 Third: Thomas Howard Wolf, ' 37 Fourth: Joseph Lyons Broderick, ' 37 THE MACLEAN PRIZE Norman Abraham Stoner. ' 37 THE CLASS OF 1870 PRIZE IN OLD ENGLISH Divided between: James George Benziger, ' 35, and Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37 THE CLASS OF 1870 JUNIOR PRIZE IN ENGLISH LITERATURE Divided between: Standish Forde Medina, ' 37, and Edgar Hale Lotspeich, ' 37 Honorable Mention: Thomas Riggs, Jr., ' 37, and Thomas Burns Fifield, ' 37 THE FREDERICK BARNARD WHITE PRIZE IN ARCHITECTURE Chester H. Philips, ' 37 THE DICKINSON PRIZE Francis Hotham Dowley , ' 37 THE MARY CUNNINGHAM HUMPHREYS JUNIOR PRIZES IN GERMAN First: Michael Weyl, ' 37 Second: William Franklyn Oechler, ' 37 THE THOMAS B. WANAMAKER ENGLISH LANGUAGE PRIZE Standish Forde Medina. ' 37 Honorable Mention: Bartol Brinkler, ' 37 THE ANDREW H. BROWN SCHOLARSHIP IN MATHEMATICS Irving Ezra Segal, ' 36 THE WILLIAM MARSHAL BULLITT PRIZE IN MATHEMATICS William Scott Morris, ' 37 Honorable Mention: Irving Ezra Segal, ' 35 Two Hundred Forty-four THE CLASS OF 1861 PRIZE Nathan Ford Jones, ' 38 Honorable Mention: Wolfgang Kurt Hermann Panofsky, ' 38 THE CLASS OF 1870 SOPHOMORE ENGLISH PRIZE James Ward Smith, ' 38 Honorable Mention: Thomas Frend Carey, ' 38 THE FRANCIS BIDDLE SOPHOMORE ESSAY PRIZE Thomas Hartley Maren, ' 38 THE CLASS OF 1883 ENGLISH PRIZE FOR ACADEMIC FRESHMEN John Phelps Chamberlain, ' 39 Honorable Mention: Donald Rogers Fletcher, ' 39, and Howell Webb, ' 39 THE CLASS OF 1883 PRIZE FOR FRESHMAN IN THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING John Vincent Whittlesey, ' 39 THE CLASS OF 1876 MEMORIAL PRIZE Gordon Alexander Craig, ' 36 THE ALDEN MEMORIAL PRIZES IN FRENCH First: Francis Ewart Warren, ' 35 Second: Joseph Thomas Schein, ' 36 THE CHARLES IRA YOUNG MEDAL Henry Escher, Jr., ' 36 Honorable Mention: Edwin Joseph Merrell, ' 36 THE PRIZE IN AMERICAN HISTORY ESTABLISHED BY THE SOCIETY OF COLONIAL WARS IN AMERICA John Muhlenberg DeYoe, ' 36 THE LAURENCE HUTTON PRIZE IN HISTORY Gordon Alexander Craig, ' 36 Honorable Mention: Archibald Ross Lewis, ' 36, and John Alexander Thompson, ' 36 THE JOHN G. BUCHANAN PRIZE IN POLITICS Harry Ferdinand Bliss, Jr., ' 36 THE MYRON T. HERRICK PRIZE Frank Brownne Hennessy THE UPPERCLASS CLUB SCHOLARSHIP TROPHY The Ivy Club THE PRINCETON PRIZE IN ARCHITECTURE, 1936-1937 Allan C. Johnson THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS MEDAL Melville Campbell Branch, Jr., ' 34 THE HOWARD CROSBY BUTLER PRIZES IN ARCHITECTURE Henry A. Jandl and Raymond W. Olsen THE D ' AMATO PRIZE James A. Armentrout, Jr., ' 35 LOWELL M. PALMER FELLOWSHIP Kenneth J. Heidrich THE CLASS OF 1901 MEDAL Pepper Constable, ' 36 THE JOHN PRENTISS POE CUP FOR SPORTSMANSHIP, PLAY, AND INFLUENCE IN FOOTBALL Garrett Ben:amen LeVan, Jr., ' 36 THE FREDERICK W. KAFER MEMORIAL CUP FOR SPORTS- MANSHIP, PLAY. AND INFLUENCE IN BASEBALL Robert Hobbs French, ' 36 THE LEROY GIFFORD KELLOGG CUP FOR SPORTSMANSHIP, PLAY, AND INFLUENCE IN FRESHMAN BASEBALL Mark Tucker Robbins, ' 39 THE W. LYMAN BIDDLE MEDAL FOR GOOD SPORTSMAN- SHIP IN ROWING Albridge Clinton Smith, III THE BENJAMIN F. BUNN TROPHY FOR SPORTSMANSHIP, PLAY, AND INFLUENCE IN BASKETBALL Frederick Donald Sauter THE WILLIAM B. BLACKWELL CUP FOR SPORTSMANSHIP, PLAY, AND INFLUENCE IN HOCKEY George Kenneth Willis THE WILLIAM R. BONTHRON CUP FOR SPORTSMANSHIP, PLAY, AND INFLUENCE IN TRACK Standish Forde Medinc: THE WILLIAM WINSTON RO ER TROPHY FOR GENERAL PROFICIENCY IN ATHLETICS Hugh Allen MacMillan Honorary Degrees, 1936 MASTER OF ARTS Charles Lucius House, a Princeton graduate of the class of 1909; a practicing civil engineer until 1917, when he succeeded his father as Director of the American Farm School in Salonica — which provides a practical training in the scientific methods of agriculture, so much needed in Greece, inspires the young to higher standards in rural life, and, because of the spirit of the place, is an outpost of international understanding; dec- orated by the Greek Government with the Gold Cross of the Order of the Savior, its highest honor; graduated a civil engineer, his life is devoted to human engineering and to fundamental foreign service. Russell Wilson, of the class of 1899; Mayor of Cincinnati since 1930; lawyer, banker, dramatic critic, editor and leader in welcome reforms in municipal government; an organizer of the Char- ter Party of Cincinnati, devoted to good govern- ment and the merit system in the public service, under which Cincinnati is reputed to be the best governed city in the nation ; with intelligence and trenchant wit he has made a winning fight against sinister political intrigue in municipal government; an example for members of the graduating class as they return to their com- munities DOCTOR OF SCIENCE Edwin Powell Hubble, staff member of the Mount Wilson Observatory; graduate of the University of Chicago and of Oxford, as a Rhodes Scholar; member of the National Academy of Sciences and Astronomical Societies in this country and abroad; by an extensive well planned campaign of observation and unusual insight in interpreta- tion he has supplied the first real understanding of the nature of the nebulae, showing that the diffuse nebulae are clouds of dust in our galaxy, and that the spiral and elliptical white nebulae are swarms of stars, external to our galaxy, reced- ing with enormous velocities and millions of light years distant; a Ulysses embarked with his tele- scope upon a great adventure in our expanding universe, seeking knowledge beyond the utmost bound of human thought . James Alexander Miller, graduate of Princeton of the class of 1893; since 1913 Professor of Clin- ical Medicine in the College of Physicians and Surgeons; for many years President of the Asso- ciation of New York Tuberculosis Clinics, of the National Tuberculosis Association in 1921, and recently of the American College of Physicians; decorated by the French Government for his ser- vice in France against the ravages of tuberculosis resulting from the World War; a leader in the field of public health, notable for his scientific knowledge and devotion, he has contributed much to the conquest of one of the greatest enemies of mankind. DOCTOR OF LETTERS Lewis Perry, Principal of Phillips Exeter Acad- emy; a graduate and now trustee of Williams College, a Master of Arts of Princeton; teacher of English in Lawrenceville School and Williams College until 1914; for over twenty years he has guided the destinies of one of the oldest acad- emies in America, developing it in keeping with its traditions, enlarging and enriching its faculty, and inaugurating instruction in small groups which prepares students well for our preceptorial conferences; a valued member of the Headmas- ters ' Association, as much concerned for the wel- fare of other schools as for his own; a speaker of grace and humor, a constructive force in educa- tion, a winning personal leader of young men. Ralph Barton Perry, a Princeton graduate of the class of 1896; Pierce Professor of Philosophy in Harvard University; past President of the Amer- ican Philosophical Association; one of a small group which twenty-five years ago initiated the school of New Realism as opposed to the philos- ophy of idealism, a movement of widespread in- fluence in the philosophy of today; writer with lucid, graceful style of many books and articles, notably Present Philosophical Tendencies and General Theory of Value ; a pupil and intimate friend of William James, and recently his biog- rapher; in this work, awarded the Pulitzer Prize, he guides the reader to an understanding of the thought and character of James and reveals his love of the man; a profound critical and construc- tive philosopher, a worthy son of Princeton, mother of philosophers. DOCTOR OF DIVINITY . Ross Stevenson, President of Princeton Theo- logical Seminary; graduate of Washington and Jefferson College and McCormick Seminary; stu- dent and teacher of church history; a devoted and forceful minister in pastoral charges in New York and Baltimore; formerly Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church and active in its Board of Foreign Missions; for more than twenty years he has administered the affairs of our neighboring institution with fidelity and char- ity, esteemed by his colleagues and by genera- tions of students; loyal to the standards of his church, kindly counselor and guide in matters of faith and works. DOCTOR OF LAWS James Hampton Kirkland, Chancellor of Vander- bilt University for more than two score years; a teacher of the Classics, editor and interpreter of Horace for American youth; by temperament a scholar and endowed with great executive abil- ity, he has transformed and enriched his own uni- versity; founder and continuing counsellor of the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of Southern States; called to positions of public service in his state and beyond its borders; rec- ognized as the educational leader of the South, his way directed by a happy philosophy of life; in the words of his favorite Horace, Sapiens sibi qui imperiosus , A sage who owns no master but himself . Two Hundred Forty-five The Notables of the Class of 1936 1 First Second Third Best AIl-Around Man CONSTABLE CARLILE KEPPEL Most Respected CONSTABLE CARLILE KEPPEL Best All-Around Athlete MacMILLAN LeVAN LEA Best All-Around Man Outside Athletics CARLILE MENAND CRAIG Most Thorough Gentleman CONSTABLE KEPPEL MORRIS LLOYD Most Popular CONSTABLE EDWARDS CARLILE Most Original WELLER WHITTAKER W. H. WOOD Most Scholarly CRAIG ROBERTSON J. A. THOMPSON Most Brilliant CRAIG PETITO H. F. BLISS, Jr. Most Likely to Succeed CARLILE G. H. SMITH R. O. JONES Done Most for Class CONSTABLE CARLILE LeVAN Done Class Most CARLILE W. H. PETERSON, Jr R. O. JONES Most Entertaining WHITTAKER ADAIR BOWMAN Biggest Grind J. A. THOMPSON YORKE ALLEN WYLIE Handsomest CONSTABLE McNULTY MORRIS LLOYD Wittiest WHITTAKER KINDER . . ADAIR Thinks He Is Wittiest WHITTAKER R. M. WOOD W. H. SMITH Most Pious ORKE ALLEN J. A. THOMPSON PYLE Busiest CARLILE MENAND R. O. JONES Laziest S. B. DAVIS F. B. JOHNSTON MARDFIN Best Dressed HILDRETH MESSLER SINCERBEAUX Thinks He Is Best Dressed SINCERBEAUX HILDRETH MESSLER Worst Dressed S. B. DAVIS W. H. WOOD WYLIE Most High Hat WISTER SYMINGTON... R. M. WOOD Talks Most and Says Least ADAIR W. H. SMITH R. L. WILLIAMS Biggest Snake MAYO W. H. SMITH CREIGHTON Thinks He Is Biggest Snake MAYO W. H. PETERSON W. H. SMITH Biggest Bluffer W. H. PETERSON W. H. SMITH Smoothest MESSLER HILDRETH W. H. SMITH Biggest Gloom WILLEY RAFTER Most Likely Batchelor SUTHERLAND STEECE WYLIE Biggest Drag With Faculty CARLILE CRAIG W. H. SMITH Needs It Most SPOFFORD GIBBY WILLIS Biggest Politician CARLILE DUFFY R. O. JONES Best Build MacMILLAN CONSTABLE BUGBEE Most Collegiate R. M. WOOD G. S. JONES Most Uncollegiate WYLIE SUTHERLAND STEECE Greatest Woman-Hater SUTHERLAND CONSTABLE Most Unconscious...... R. M. WOOD STEWART STEECE Best Natured GROEL ADAIR WELLER Two Hundred Forty-six The Favorites of the Class of 1936 First Second Third First Choice Phi Beta Kappa Major P Daily Princetonian Most Respected Non-Athletic Activity Princetonian Triangle Intime Professor W. P. Hall McCabe Mason Coach Crisler Logan Stepp Sport to Watch Football Hockey Sport to Play Tennis Golf Squash Novel Tale of Twro Cities Anthony Adverse Tom Jones Poem If Elegy, Written in a Country Churchyard Dover Beach Play Ah, Wilderness! Cyrano de Bergerac Anything Goes Movie Mutiny on the Bounty David Copperfield Tale of Two Cities Artist Petty Rembrandt Cezanne Dramatist Shakespeare O ' Neill Coward Favorite Man ' s College (After Princeton) Yale Harvard Williams Favorite Woman ' s College Vassar Smith Wellesley Favorite Orchestra Ray Noble Benny Goodman Hal Kemp Automobile Ford Packard Buick Cigarette Camel Chesterfield Old Gold Beverage Milk Beer Scotch Morning Newspaper New York Times New York Herald Tribune Evening Newspaper New York World-Telegram Stage Actress Katherine Cornell Helen Hayes Lynne Fontaine Movie Actress Myrna Ley Ginger Rogers Claudette Colbert Stage Actor Leslie Howard Walter Hampden George Cohan Movie Actor Charles Laughton Ronald Colman Robert Montgomery Do You Support Yourself Wholly? Yes, 42 No, 344 Do You Support Yourself in Part? Yes, 106 No, 252 Have You Ever Been Suspended? Yes, 51 No, 313 How Many Courses Have You Flunked? None, 238; One, 75; Two, 23; Three, 24; Four, 10; Five, 9 Hardest Year Senior Freshman Junior Most Pleasant Year Senior ' unior Sophomore Hardest Course Constitutional Interpretation.... History 201-2 Mathematics 109-10 Do You Approve of the Four-Course Plan Yes, 294 No, 79 Have You Ever Grown a Moustache? Yes, 51 No, 280 Can ' t, 26 Do You Drink? Yes, 314 No, 52 Do You Smoke? Yes, 302 No, 64 Is Your Future Occupation Dscided? Yes, 181 No, 198 Have You Attended a Prom at Princeton? Yes, 280 No, 104 Would You Marry for Money? Yes. 135 No, 253 How Many Times Have You Been Turned Down? Never, 312; Once, 24; Twice, 16; More Than Twice, 19 Have You Ever Been to Europe? Yes, 190 No, 234 What Would You Do if You Ran the University? Get Reading Periods Abolish or Change Clubs Get a Library Two Hundred Forty-seven Alumni Day FEBRUARY 22, 1936 9:00 a. m.-5:00 p. m. Exhibition of Princetoniana and Princeton Memorabilia, Treasure Room, University Library. 11:15 a. m. Meeting of the National Alumni Associa- tion, Nassau Hall. Report of committee to nominate Alumni Trustees. Award of Armstrong Upper Class Scholarship Trophy Cup to the Ivy Club, and of the Pyne Honor Prize to Pepper Constable, ' 36, by Dean Gauss. 1:15 p. m. Alumni Luncheon, Madison Hall. Ladies ' Luncheon, Prospect, Mrs. Dodds, Hostess. Swimming, Brokaw Pool: Princeton ' 39, 42; Trenton High School, 33. Squash, University Gymnasium: Princeton, 6; Yale, 1. Fencing, Trophy Hall: Princeton, 20; St. Johns, 7. Fencing, Trophy Hall: Princeton ' 39, 6; Bar- ringer, 1 1 . 3:30 p. m. Wrestling, University Gymnasium: Prince- ton, 17; Columbia, 9. Polo, Indoor Riding Hall: Yale J. V., 13; Princeton ]. V., IOV2. 4:00 p. m.-6:00 p. m. Reception by Department of History, Engi- neering Lounge. 2:00 p. m. Basketball, University Gymnasium: Prince- ton ' 39, 34; Wyoming Seminary, 22. Squash, University Gymnasium: Yale ' 39, 3; Princeton ' 39, 2. 2:30 p. m. Hockey, Baker Rink: Princeton ' 39, 6; Yale ' 39, 4. 3:00 p. m. The Class of 1876 Memorial Prize for De- bate in Politics, Whig Hall: Won by G. A. Craig, ' 36; Honorable Mention, R. H. Davison, ' 37. 4:30 p. m. Polo, Indoor Riding Hall: Alumni, 10 ' 2; Princeton, 6V2. 5:00 p. m. Football movies, McCarter Theatre. 5:30 p. m. Recital on Class of 1892 Carillon, Cleve- land Memorial Tower, by Edward J. Parsons. 8:30 p. m. Hockey, Baker Rink: Princeton, 5; Yale, 1. Two Hundred Forty-eight National Alumni Association of Princeton University Officers and Members of the Graduate Council OFFICERS, 1936-37 L G. Payson, ' 16 Chairman Chauncey Belknap, ' 12 Vice-Chairman D. W. Griffin, ' 23 Secretary A. A. Gulick, ' 97 Treasurer W. L. Johnson, ' 97 Member-at-Large THE GRADUATE COUNCIL The Graduate Council of Princeton University, which now regulates the activities of the National Alumni Association, was first granted its Charter as an independent body in the spring of 1909. Then, in 1919, it was consolidated with the various local alumni associations to form the National Alumni Association of Prin ceton University. The purpose of this association is to establish more effective relations between the University, the Alumni, and the Alumni Associations, to cooperate with the University in suggesting or carrying out proposals looking toward its progress and welfare; and particularly to advance the interests, influence, and usefulness of Princeton. In leading the way in carrying out these duties the Graduate Council performs many valuable offices, among them the furtherance of the University ' s repu- tation among the preparatory schools and high schools, the direction of the publicity of the University, a share in the publication of the Alumni Weekly, and close cooperation with those in charge of the endowment fund. LIFE MEMBERS •81 Major F. G. London 14 Wall St., New York. N. Y. ' 84 A. G. Todd 165 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ■97 W. L. Johnson 14 Wall St., New York, N. Y. HONORARY REPRESENTATIVES ' 69 G. K. Ward 25 Brookside Circle, Bronxville, N. Y. ' 70 Hon. G. B. Kinkead Lexington, Ky. ' 73 Rev. J. H. Dulles Princeton, N. I. ' 75 Dr. T. W. Harvey 59 Main St., Orange, N. J. ' 76 W. P. Stevenson Roselle, N. j. ' 77 J. A. Campbell Trenton Potteries Co., Trenton, N. J. ' 78 A. H. Wintersteen 1421 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 81 H. G. Duffield 130 Library PI., Princeton, N. J. ' 82 Hon. C. W. Parker 63 Macculloch Ave., Morristown, N. J. ' 83 W. P. Agnew 6 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. ' 85 Hon. W. L. Wilbur Hightstown, N. J. ' 86 Rev. C. R. Erdman Princeton. N. J. ' 88 W. H. Johnson 9 Hamilton Ave., Princeton, N. J. ' 89 C. B. Mitchell 41 Broad St., New York, N. Y. ' 90 Prof. Malcolm MacLaren Princeton, N. J. ' 91 J. C. Meyers 358 Heights Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. ' 91 Hon. W. M. Parker Judges ' Chambers, Oil City, Pa. ' 92 G. W. Belts 120 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 93 J. A. Dear Jersey Journal, Jersey City, N. J. ' 94 G. S. Brown Alpha Portland Cement Co., Easton, Pa. ' 94 G. C. Wintriner Princeton, N. J. ' 95 G. W. Barr Villanova, Pa. ' 96 Hon. Charles Browne Princeton, N. J. ' 97 D. M. Craig 1500 Koppers Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 98 Hon. L. H. ' Van Dusen, 6071 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. ' 99 C. Y. Freeman 120 W. Adams St.. Chicago, 111. ' 99 W. M. Wardrop 905 Penn. Station, Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 00 Hon. M. G. Buchanan State House, Trenton. N. J. ' 00 F. P. King 160 Broadway. New York. N. Y. ' 00 Philip LeBoutillier 372 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 01 G. W. Yuengling 93 Worth St.. New York, N. Y. ' 09 S. B. Murray Princeton, N. J. ' 16 President T. J. Davies, Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colo. Two Hundred Forty-nine National Alumni Association of Princeton University CLASS REPRESENTATIVES 02 Williamson Pell 45 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 03 W. G. Barr 60 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 04 T. E. Hardenbergh, Jr Bedford Hills, N. Y. ' 05 C. E. Scribner 20 Exchange PI, New York, N. Y. ' 06 H, S. Higbie 452 Highland Ave., Newark, N. J. ' 07 C. T. Larzelere 320 De Kalb St., Norristown, Pa. ' 08 R. D. Osborne C. S. Osborne Co., Harrison, N. J, ' 09 M H. Fry 40 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 10 T. M. Tonnele 20 Pine St., New York, N. Y. ' 11 J. C. Kennedy, Jr 205 E. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. ' 12 Chauncey Belknap 61 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 13 R. J. Ross 63 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 14 John Coh. Red Bank, N. J. ' 15 I. D. Sullivan. ...Sun Bldg., 280 Broadway, New York,, N. Y. ' 16 L. D. Seymour 53 Park PI., New York, N. Y. ' 17 T. H. Anderson, Jr 1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 18 B. P. Leeb 16 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 19 A. M. Greene, W. B. Saunders Co., W. Washington Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 20 D. H. McAlpin, 111 61 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 20 G. H. Sibley 54 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 21 G. G. Finney 2947 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. ' 22 M. P. Dickenson Princeton, N. J. ' 23 G. F. Havell, Survey Graphic, 112 E. 19th St., New York, N. Y. ■24 A. S. Gambee II Broad St., New York, N. Y. ' 25 J. McE. Boohecker .555 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ■26 G. R. Cook, 111, Princeton Bank and Trust Co., Princeton, N. J. ■27 W. B. ' Van Alstyne Princeton, N. J. ' 28 R. L. Kennedy, Jr., Harris Upham Co., II Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 29 H. A. Heydt, Jr 510 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 30 G. C. Miles 1 Wall St., New York, N. Y. ' 31 Grant Sanger Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. ' 32 Algernon Roberts 1531 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 33 Dorrance Sexton. 119 Union St., Montclair, N. J. ■34 Bayard Roberts Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. ■35 D. C. Stuart, Jr., American Institute of Public Opinion, Princeton, N. J. ■36 R. D. Waters 38 Poplar St., Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. ASSOCIATION REPRESENTATIVES ALABAMA— J. C. Henley, mingham, Ala. Jr., 02, Ave. B and 1 9th St., Bii KANSAS CITY— G. T. Beaham, ■OI, 1025 W. 8th St., Kansas City, Mo. CENTRAL NEW YORK— Weir Stewart, Auburn, N. Y. ■15, 17 Grove St., CHICAGO— A. T. Carton, ' 05, First National Bank Bldg., Chi- cago, 111. CINCINNATI— J. R. Carruthers, ' 25, Glendale, Ohio. COLUMBUS— Meldrum Gray, ' 96, 30 N. Washington Ave., Columbus, Ohio. CONNECTICUT VALLEY— Charles Vezin, Jr., ' 00, Milton Rd., Litchfield, Conn. DALLAS— A. O. Anderson, ' 97, Dallas Dispatch, Dallas, Texas. DELAWARE— I, E. Crane, ' 01, duPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del. EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA— G. H. Bright, ' 94, Eighth and Elm Sts., Reading, Pa. ERIE— F. H. Paine, ' 91, 502 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa. GEORGIA— R. H. Jones, Jr., ' 06, Jones, Fuller, Russel Clapp, Suite 1307, 22 Marietta St. Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. HAWAII -Rev. J. P. Erdman, ' 96, Box 150, Honolulu, T. H. HOUSTON— B. A. Calhoun, ' 13, 503 Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas. IDAHO— P. B. Carter, ' 05, Box 1638, Boise, Idaho. INDIANA— R. B. Failey, ' 08, Indiana Mirror Mfg. Co., Indian- apolis, Ind. IOWA— C. C. Greene, ' 77, 528 C. R. Savings Bank Bldg., Cedar Rapids, Iowa. JACKSONVILLE— W. L. Wilson, ' 03, 519 Barrett Natl. Bank Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla. JERSEY CITY— Dr. H. S. Foreman, ' 93, 640 Bergen Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Two Hundred Fifty LACKAWANNA- A. Stewart. Ill, ' 05, Short Hills, N. J. LONG ISLAND— P. E. Twitchell, ' 16, 150 Broadway, New York, N. Y. LOUISIANA— Raburn Monroe, ' 29, 1424 Whitney Bldg., New Orleans, La. LOUISVILLE— A. S. Winstead, ' 27, I80I Spring Drive, Apt. J, Louisville, Ky. MARYLAND— R. F. Cleveland, ' 19, c o Semmes, Bowen Semmes, 2500 Baltimore Trust Bldg., Baltimore, Md. MEMPHIS— D. M. Lake, ' 16, 630 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Memphis, Tenn. MICHIGAN— C. B. Grouse, ' 16, 1817 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Mich. MONTCLAIR— N. E. Thomas, ' 21, 7 N. Brookwood Dr., Mont- clair, N. J. NASHVILLE— Frederic Leake, ' 08, 14 Cummins Station, Nash- ville, Tenn. NEWARK— F. H. Groel, ' 21, 571 Parker St., Newark, N. J. NEW ENGLAND— J. E. Andrews, ' 14, 179 Lincoln St., Boston, Mass. H. M. Sawyer, ' 12, 20 Thorndike St., E. Cambridge, Mass. L. B. Slocum, ' 21, 918 Statler Bldg., Boston, Mass. D. W. Tibbott, ' 17, 17 Tarleton Rd., Newton Center, Mass. Frederick Winant, Jr., ' 15, Ipswich, Mass. NEW YORK— H. R. Mixsell, ' 06, 161 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. W. M. Whitney, ' 12, Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co., 225 Broadway, New York, N. Y. NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA— R. C. Miner, ' 15, 287 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. National Alumni Association of Princeton University ASSOCIATION REPRESENTATIVES (Continued) NORTHERN CALIFORNIA— H. S. Margetts, ' 21 , 35 Cernlos Ave., San Francisco, Cal. NORTHERN NEW JERSEY— C. D. Kerr, ' 01, 20 Exchange PL, New York, N. Y. NORTHERN NEW YORK— Harrison Bullock, ' 17, New York State National Bank, Albany, N. Y. Thomas Hardenberg, Jr., ' 04, Bedford Hills, N. Y. NORTHERN OHIO— S. S. Reynolds, ' 28, 2800 Terminal Tower, Cleveland, Ohio. NORTHWEST— C. W. Jones, ' II. Minneapolis Journal, Minne- apolis, Minn. ORANGES I. P. G. Perine, Jr., ' 30, 152 N. Arlington Ave,, East Orange, N. J. OREGON— P. W. Cookingham, ' 11, 604 Mead Bldg., Portland, Oregon. PATERSON, PASSAIC, AND RIDGEWOOD— H. G. Turner, ' 09, 281 Mountain Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. PHILADELPHIA— J. G. Roper, ' 05, 618 Stephen Girard Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. PITTSBURGH— T. H. Nimick, ' 15, 1045 Union Trust Bldg., Pitts- burgh, Pa. PLAINFIELD— C. F. Ivins, ' 09, 35 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. OUINCY— M. F. Carrott, ' 00, 16-17 Stern Bldg., Quincy, III. ROCHESTER— W. H. Kline, ' 07, Burke Steel Co., Inc., Roches- ter, N. Y. ROCKY MOUNTAIN— J. H. Pershing, ' 88, Equitable Bldg., Denver, Colo. ST. LOUIS— G. F. Johnston, ' 24, 7201 Creveling Dr., St. Louis, Missouri. SAN ANTONIO— J. M. Bennett, ' 00, Travis Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. SEATTLE— C. W. Donahoe, ' 17, 210 Security Bldg., Seattle, Washington. SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA— E. E. Roberts, ' 23, 1402 Security Bldg., Miami, Fla. SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY— Frank Clowney, ' 18, 103 S. Mans- field Ave., Margate, N. I. SOUTHWESTERN CONNECTICUT— E. B. Kilner, ' 14, 63 Wall St., New York, N. Y. SPOKANE— S. G. Pattullo, ' 27, 1201 Adams St., South, Spo- kane, Wash. TRENTON— Bruce Bedford, ' 99, The Luzerne Rubber Co., Tren- ton, N. J. VIRGINIA— J. H. Devereux, ' 15, c o Norton Ellis, Inc., Brokers Exchange Bldg., Norfolk, Va. WASHINGTON, D. C— H. H. Armstrong, ' 05, Barr Bldg., Washington, D. C. W. I. Flather, ' 11, 1508 H St., Washington, D. C. WESTCHESTER, N. Y.— J. R. Munn, ' 06, 500 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. WEST VIRGINIA— T. B. Jackson, ' 16, Kanawha Valley Bldg., Charleston, W. Va. WESTERN NEW YORK— J. McC. Mitchell, ' 94, Kenefick, Cooke, Mitchell, Bass Letchwork, Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo, New York. WISCONSIN— C. D. James, ' 27, 526 E. Wisconsin Ave., Mil- waukee, Wis. YOUNGSTOWN— P. H. Schaff, ' 06, 631 Wick Ave., Youngs- town, Ohio. ENGINEERING ASSOCIA ' HON— J. C. Whitwell, ' 31, H-3 Pros- pect Apts., Princeton, N. J. REPRESENTATIVES-AT-LARGE TO SERVE UNTIL AUGUST, 1937 ■04 Dr. E. McP. Armstrong 230 E. 48th St., New York, N. Y. ' 10 M. J. Verdery 30 Broad St., New York, N. Y. ' 16 H. M. Thomas Princeton Bk. and Tr. Co., Princeton, N. J. ' 17 L. N. Lukens, Jr Lukens, Savage Washburn, 132 S. 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa. TO SERVE UNTIL AUGUST, 1938 ' 95 A. C. Imbrie Hibben Road, Princeton, N. J. ' 07 C. A. McClintock 6425 5lh Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 21 G. S. Piper c o Jacques, Bodart, Inc., 385 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 21 Philip Wallis Drinker, Biddle Reath, 1429 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. TO SERVE UNTIL AUGUST, 1939 ■03 C. H. Higgins 101 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. ' 15 Bevis Longstreth c o Thiokol Corp., Yardville, N. J. ' 20 J. H. Douglas, Jr 1500 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. ' 24 Alexander Leitch Nassau Hall, Princeton, N. J. TO SERVE UNTIL AUGUST ' 940 ' 97 A. A. Gulick 120 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ' 04 G. A. Vondermuhll 357 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. ■13 A. D. Groff 68 William St., New York. N. Y. ' 23 A S. Dashiell Franklin Ave., Harmon-on-Hudson, N. Y. TO SERVE UNTIL AUGUST, 1941 12 T. H. McCauley Deering Millikin Co., Inc., 79 Leonard St., New York, N. Y. ' 13 R. M. Green. ...The Prudential Insurance Co., Newark, N. J. ' 16 L. G. Payson 18 Broad St., New York, N. Y. ' 26 Sayre MacLeod, Jr., The Prudential Insurance Co., Newark, N. J. ' 25 L. V. Swan 46 N. 7th St., Newark, N. J. ' 25 J. D. Swan, Jr Turtle Valley Farms, Inc., Delavan, Wis. Two Hundred Fifty-one National Alumni Association of Princeton University ASSOCIATION SECRETARIES ALABAMA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ALABAMA Secretary, Robert Jemison, III, ' 28, Realty Mortgage Co., Birmingham, Ala. ARKANSAS PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ARKANSAS Secretary, M. J. Lyon, ' 19, 2922 Prospect Ave., Little Rock, Ark. CALIFORNIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN CALI- FORNIA AND NEVADA Secretary, Wellington Henderson, ' 25, 340 Pine St., San Francisco, Cal. PRINCETON CLUB OF SAN DIEGO Secretary, F. G. Belcher, ' 28, First National Trust and Sav- ings Bank, San Diego, Cal. PRINCETON CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Secretary, H. B. Robinson, ' 30, 1938 Mill Road, Pasadena, Cal. CAROLINAS PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CAROLINAS Secretary, Franklin Green, ' 02, 304 Selwyn Ave., Char- lotte, N. C. COLORADO ROCKY MOUNTAIN PRINCETON CLUB Secretary, G. S. Graham, ' 33, 1622 Race St., Denver, Colo. CONNECTICUT PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CONNECTICUT VALLEY Secretary, D. D. Duffield, ' 26, 139 Mountain Road, West Hartford, Conn. GRADUATE COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVE, SOUTHWEST- ERN CONNECTICUT E. B. Kilner, 63 Wall St., New York, N. Y. DELAWARE PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF DELAWARE P. L. Wardenburg, ' 29, 1504 Pennsylvani a Ave., Wilming- ton, Del. WASHINGTON, D. C. PRINCETON CLUB OF WASHINGTON, D. C. Secretary, Samuel Biddle, ' 34, 2129 S St., N. W., Wash- ington, D. C. FLORIDA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF JACKSONVILLE Secretary, Kenyon Parsons, Jr., ' 25, 322 St. James BIdg., Jacksonville, Fla. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA President, E. E. Roberts, ' 23, 1402 Security Bldg., Miami, Fla. GEORGIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA Secretary, R. S. Sams, ' 25, 1607 William-Oliver Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Two Hundred Fifty-two IDAHO PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIA ' nON OF IDAHO Secretary, Donald Davidson, ' 22, 1205 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, Idaho. ILLINOIS PRINCETON CLUB OF CHICAGO Secretary, James Miksak, Jr., ' 29, Baird Warner, 134 S. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. PRINCETON CLUB OF QUINCY Secretary, M. F. Carrott, ' 00, 16-17 Stern Bldg., Quincy, 111. INDIANA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCATION OF INDIANA Secretary, W. H. Wemmer, ' 25, 1000 Fletcher Trust Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. IOWA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF IOWA L. F. Jamison, ' 19, Central City, Iowa. KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION W. H. Harrison, 1460 St. James Court, Louisville, Ky. LOUISIANA PRINCETON CLUB OF LOUISIANA Raburn Monroe, ' 29, 1424 Whitney Bldg., New Orleans, La. MARYLAND PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF MARYLAND Secretary, L. B. Purnell, ' 30, 514 St. Paul PL, Baltimore, Md. MASSACHUSETTS PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NEW ENGLAND Secretary, H. M. Sawyer, ' 12, 20 Thorndike St., East Cam- bridge, Mass. MICHIGAN PRINCETON CLUB OF MICHIGAN Secretary, W. B. Krag, ' 27, 3456 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Mich. MINNESOTA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION NORTHWEST Secretary, G. D. Dayton, II, ' 28, c o The Dayton Co., Minneapolis, Minn. MISSOURI PRINCETON CLUB OF KANSAS CITY Secretary, R. A. Morehouse, ' 24, 1000 Board of Trade Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. PRINCETON CLUB OF ST. LOUIS A. P. Leland, ' 28, 1032 Syndicate Trust Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. NEBRASKA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NEBRASKA Secretary, M. H. Rogers, ' 23, 522 S. 38th Ave., Omaha, Neb. National Alumni Association of Princeton University ASSOCIATION SECRETARIES (Continued) NEW JERSEY PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF HUDSON COUNTY Secretary, M. J, Bunnell, ' 16, 70 Monticello Ave., Jersey City, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF LACKAWANNA Secretary, W. W. Cochran, ' 29, Dominick Dominick, 115 Broadway, New York, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF MONTCLAIR Secretary, H. B. Sexton, Jr., ' 29, 119 Union St., Montclair, N. ]. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ROCHESTER AND VICINITY Secretary, W. B. McCoy, ' 32, 274 N. Goodman St., Roch- ester, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN WESTCHESTER AND PUTNAM COUNTIES Secretary, W. E. Riegel, Jr., ' 22, Lawrence Farms, Mount Kisco, N. Y. PRINCETON CLUB OF WESTERN NEW YORK Secretary, H. G. Vogt, ' 25, 131 Eisenman Road, Ken- more, N. Y. PRINCETON CLUB OF NEWARK Secretary, G. T. Wofford, ' 29, 320 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. PRINCETON ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN NEW JERSEY G. G. Tennent, Jr., ' 22, 49 Forest Road, Tenafly, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE ORANGES Worrell Mountain, Jr., ' 31, 66 Chestnut St., East Orange, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF PATERSON, PASSAIC, AND RIDGEWOOD J. W. Zisgen, ' 26, Wyckoff Ave., Ramsey, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF PLAINFIELD Secretary, David Foster, ' 32, 1 Wall St., New York, N. Y. OHIO PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CINCINNATI Secretary, C. B. Hawley, ' 32, 2735 Colerain Ave., Cin- cinnati, Ohio. PRINCETON CLUB OF COLUMBUS Secretary, R. F. Sater, ' 26, Vorys, Sater, Seymour Pease, 52 E. Gay St., Columbus, Ohio. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN OHIO Secretary, S. S. Reynolds, ' 28, McKeenhan, Merrick, Arter Stewart, 2890 Terminal Tower, Cleveland, Ohio. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF YOUNGSTOWN Secretary, R. L. Henderson, ' 22, 525 Todd Lane, Youngs- town, Ohio. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY Secretary, A. F. L. Hemmersley, ' 24, Guarantee Trust Bldg., Atlantic City, N. J. PRINCETON CLUB OF TRENTON Secretary, F. S. Katzenbach, III, ' 28, 28 West State St., Trenton, N. J. NEW YORK PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCATION OF CENTRAL NEW YORK Secretary, A. D. Jenney, ' 27, 5 Brattle Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF LONG ISLAND Secreatry, P. E. Twitchell, ' 16, 150 Broadway, New York, N. Y. PRINCETON CLUB OF NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK Secretary, J. R. Savage, ' 31, 71 Hilton Ave., Garden City, L. 1.. N. Y. PRINCETON CLUB OF NEW YORK Secretary, J. R. Jenkins, ' 28, Park Ave. and 39th St., New York, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN NEW YORK Secretary, J. M. Gibson, ' 27, 108 Jay St., Albany, N. Y. OKLAHOMA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF OKLAHOMA N. 1. Moyse, ' 26, Mid-Continent Petroleum Co., Box 381, Tulsa, Okla. OREGON PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF OREGON Secretary, P. L. Jackson, ' 15, Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore. PENNSYLVANIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA Secretary, Henry Fink, ' 21, 2419 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA Secretary, G. E. Leh. ' 24, 2844 Chew St., AUentown, Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ERIE Secretary, R. S. Clark, ' 30, 1154 E. 26th St., Erie, Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA Secretary, C. H. Miner, Jr., ' 31, 713 Coal Exchange Bldg., Wilkes-Borre, Pa. Two Hundred Fifty-threa National Alumni Association of Princeton University ASSOCIATION SECRETARIES (Continued) PRINCETON CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA Secretary, Theodore Eckfeldt, ' 29, 1223 Locust St., Phila- delphia, Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA Secretary, N. V. Coyle, ' 34, 619 William Penn Place, Pitts- burgh, Pa. TENNESSEE PRINCETON ASSOCIATION OF MEMPHIS Secretary, Benjamin Goodman, Jr., ' 24, 2283 Poplar Ave., Memphis, Tenn. NASHVILLE AND MIDDLE TENNESSEE ASSOCIATION Secretary, C. E. Brush, III, ' 33, Granada Apts., 3, 25th Ave., North, Nashville, Tenn. TEXAS THE BORDER ASSOCIATION Secretary, R. H. Washburn, ' 19, Gatev ay Hotel, El Paso, Texas. PRINCETON CLUB OF DALLAS Secretary, J. C. Oehler, ' 18, 5318 McCoramas St., Dallas, Texas. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF HOUSTON Secretary, B. A. Calhoun, ' 13, 508 Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS Secretary, I. S. Kampmann, ' 05, 612 Milam Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. WASHINGTON PRINCETON CLUB OF SPOKANE Secretary, W. L. Matthews, ' 27, 526 Summer Ave., Spo- kane, Wash. PRINCETON CLUB OF WESTERN WASHINGTON Secretary, G. VanT, Powell, ' 31, 1030 37th Ave., North, Seattle, Wash. WEST VIRGINIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF WEST VIRGINIA Secretary, T. L. Horn, ' 15, Kanawha Valley Bldg., Charles- ton, W. Va. WISCONSIN PRINCETON CLUB OF WISCONSIN Secretary, J. A. Russell, ' 28, University Club, 924 E. Wells St., Milwaukee, Wis. HAWAII PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF HAWAII Secretary, J. T. Waterhouse, ' 21, 1944 Keeaumoku St., Honolulu, T. H. ENGLAND PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ENGLAND Secretary, L. L. Tweedy, ' 05, 6 Lothbury, London, E. C. 2, England. ENGINEERING ASSOCIATION PRINCETON ENGINEERING ASSOCIATION Secretary, J. C. Whitwell, ' 31, H-3. Prospect Apts., Prince- ton, N. I. UTAH PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SALT LAKE CITY Secretary, G. A. Critchlow, ' II, 77 O St., Salt Lake City, Utah. VIRGINIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF VIRGINIA Secretary, J. H. Devereux, Jr., ' 15, Norton Ellis, Inc., Brokers Exchange Bldg., Norfolk, Va. FRANCE PRINCETON CLUB OF PARIS Secretary, Raymond Harper, ' 18, 32 Avenue de I ' Opera, Paris, France. SYRIA PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SYRIA Secretary, S. C. Dodd, ' 22, American University, Bierut. Syria. Two Hundred Fifty-four Gucker Irwin Follonsbee Class Officers, 1937 SENIOR YEAR John Nichol Irwin, II President Thomas Gucker, III Vice-President Hcrrper Follansbee Secretary-Treasurer JUNIOR YEAR John Nichol Irwin, II President Thomas Gucker, III Vice-President Harper Follansbee Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR John Nichol Irwin, II President Elmer Kenneth Sandbach Vice-President Thomas Gucker, III Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM John Nichol Irwin, II President Elmer Kenneth Sandbach Vice-President Thomas Gucker, III Secretary-Treasurer -f. Two Hundred Fifty-five Class of 1937 Name Address Name Address Oakford Woodnut Acton 47 Market St., Salem, N. J. Paul Adams, Jr La Moure, N. D. Robert George Adamson 7132 Chew St., Germantown, Pa. Kirkland Barker Alexander, Jr... 1415 Parker Ave., Detroit, Mich. John Franklin Anderson Ridgewood Rd., Akron, Ohio Charles Hart Angell 198 St. James Ave., Springfield, Mass. Arthur Lowrie Applegate Academy Ave., Sewickley, Pa. Alexander Armstrong, Jr 1209 Calvert Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Grant Eddy Armstrong 1012 Van Dyke Ave., Detroit, Mich. Frank Edwin Avery, Jr. ..479 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Henry Michael Bach, Jr 120 Pine St., Woodmere, N. Y. Herbert Wright Backes, Jr R. F. D. No. 1, Titusville, N. J. Keith Lanneau Baker, Jr., 157 Euston Rd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Robert George Ballentine 133 Buckingham Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Shaun Peter Banigan Shorehaven, South Norwalk, Conn. Steven Barabas 504 Broadway, Passaic, N. J. James Rezner Barber, Jr 912 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Robert Gaylord Barnes 6376 City Line, Philadelphia, Pa. Roger Watson Barrett 623 Abbottsford Rd., Kenilworth, 111. William Clement Bartlett....l2 Archer Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. William George Bate, Jr 103 Kinsey St., Richmond, Ind. Charles William Bayliss, Jr 210 Pembroke Ave., Wayne, Pa. Edward Fitzgerald Beale, III, 2025 Delancey St., Philadelphia, Pa. Clifford Swift Bebell 1216 Fourth Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Francis Edward Bell 178 Oakridge Ave., Summit, N. J. Richard Porter Bell 5619 Elgin St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Mark Anthony Belltaire, III 57 Lawrence Ave., Detroit, Mich. Robert Austin Bendheim 150 E. 52nd St., New York, N. Y. Byron David Benson, Jr 215 Passaic Ave., Passaic, N. J. Edward Houston Bindley, Jr 6111 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Franz Joseph Bernhard Bing..300 Monterey Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Norman Edward Biorn 94 Crocus PL, St. Paul, Minn. Robert Knox Bishop 1356 Park Blvd., Camden, N. J. Fred Martin Blaicher 444 Berkley Ave., Orange, N. J. John Spratt Blay 1130 Parker Ave., Detroit, Mich. John Stuart Booth New St., Mendham, N. J. Two Hundred Fifty-six William Howard Borden Rumscn, N. J. Russell Edward Borner 3 Brooklands, Bronxville, N. Y. Edgar Clinton Bothwell, Jr., 120 Beach St., Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert George Bradshaw 125 Hutchinson Rd., Trenton, N. J. Jack William Bredenberg..88 Hammerschmidt PL, Buffalo, N. Y. William Westphal Brenn 420 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J. Alfred Polland Brill, Jr 712 St. James St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Bartol Brinkler 104 Park St., Portland, Me. Joseph Lyons Broderick, 2600 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. George Irving Brown, Jr P. O. Box 183, Honolulu, T, H. Irving Brown, Jr Haworth, N. J. Lawrence Vroome Brown, 315 Herberton Ave., Port Richmond, N. Y. Paul Ray Brown 1246 Lake Dr., Zanesville, Ohio J. Hibbs Buckman, Jr Langhorne, Pa. Russell Wait Buddington, 3049 E. Calhoun Blvd., Milwaukee, Wis. Frank Caulkins Bunn, Jr 30 Hillyer St., Orange, N. J. Ernest Suhr Burch 205 W. Third St., Oil City, Pa. Robert Landy Burger 223 Grendale Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio John Clark Burke 1937 Fifth Ave., Troy, N. Y. John Woolfolf Burke, Jr 2311 Tracy PL, Washington, D. C. John Joseph Byrne 11 Madison St., Morristown, N. J. Henry Adolph Caesar, II 133 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. Dutro Carvale Cale, II 7532 Parkdale Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Barton Hastings Cameron 1210 Astor St., Chicago, 111. Edward DeForest Candee....294 Bronxville Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. James Gray Cannon 400 Hermitage Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Howard LeGrand Canoune, 1208 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Thomas Stacy Capers, Jr 420 Penn St., HoUidaysburg, Pa. Charles Carroll 48 Rue Spontini, Paris, France Valentine Charles Cartus 208 Renner Ave., Newark, N. J. Robert James Chapman 518 Danforth Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Fred St. Clair Chariot 43 Kingsbury PL, St. Louis, Mo. Benjamin Chew, Jr Radnor, Pa. John Paul Chubet 111 9 St. John Ave., Norwood, Mass. Lester Butler Churchill Lincoln Ave., Rumson, N. J. Class of 1937 (Continued) Nome Address Harry Bruce Clark 107 Essex St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Ford Clary, Jr 1400 Third Ave., N., Great Falls, Mont. William Pennington Cleaver..512 Sixth Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Walter Harvey Close, Jr 131 E. 66th St., New York, N. Y. James Johnson Coale III 5 Randall PL, Annapolis, Md. Bradford Cochran 1341 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Thomas Stuart Collings 1532 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Alexander Tufts Colt 121 Hemlock St., Hazelton, Pa. Theodore Henry Conderman, 11 Bryn Mawr, Pa. Jerome Taylor Congleton, Jr. .488 Highland Ave., Newark, N. J. Peter Geoffrey Cook Kingston, N. J. Thomas Tyson Cook, Jr 45 Summer St., Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y, Alexander Crawford Craig, VI. ...122 E. 16th Ave., Denver, Colo. Donald Brooke Creecy, Jr Roland Pk. Apts., Roland Park, Md. Nicholas R. Criss, Jr 119 Yorkshire Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Maynard Crooker 21 South Dr., Larchmont, N. Y. James Frederick Cross, III. .121 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. John Rourke Crowley 333 Redmond Rd., South Orange, N. J. Stephen Edwin Cullinan 2227 Terwilliger St., Tulsa, Okla. William Charles Cummmgs, Jr., 4900 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. William Hays Curry Oliver BIdg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Earle Newton Cutler, Jr Van Beuren Rd., Morristown, N. J. Sydney Stoate Date 677 Walden Rd., Winnetka, 111. Adam Hawthorne Davidson, Jr., Roland Park Apts., Baltimore, Md. Roblin Henry Davis, Jr 2945 E. Seventh Ave., Denver, Colo. Roderic Hollett Davison 80 North St., Auburn. N. Y. William Sloane Delafield 1021 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Robert Evans Dennison, Jr., 627 Springdale Ave., East Orange, N. J. Charles Maxwell Dering 70 E. Walton PI., Chicago, 111. Florindo Michael De Rosa 42-48— 77th St., Elmhurst, N. Y. Walter John Devlin Macdonald St., High Bridge, N. J. Richard MacLane Dicke 2643 Livingston St., Allentown, Pa. Stuart Warren Don. ...Dartmouth Apt., Willow St., Louisville, Ky. Ira Dickran Dorian 28 Hamilton Ave., Cranford, N. J. John Van Kirk Douglass, 14 Franklin St., East Orange, N. J. Raymond Amedee Dubuque, Jr., Montpelier Speede Rd., Creve Coeur, Mo. George Morgan Duff, Jr., Riverdale Ave. and 248th St., New York, N. Y. Henry Albert DuFlon Old Stamford Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Robert Sargeant Dumper..510 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. L Lincoln Bull Dutcher 4 Duryea Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. William Lauderbach Dyson, 309 W. Diamond Ave., Hazelton, Pa. John Stephen Eberhardt Mt. Heights Ave., Lincoln Park, N. J. Donald Simpson Eddy 1558 Ridge Ave., Evanstcn, 111. Alfred Henry Edwards 706 Highland Ave., Elgin, 111. Robert Lansing Edwards 68 Franklin St., Englewood, N. J. Charles Stuart Flicker 36 E. Clay Ave., Roselle Park, N. J. Edward Grossman Engel 254 E. Third Ave., Roselle, N. J. David Adolphe Escher 200 Lincoln St., Englewood, N. J. Charles Wilson Fairlie, Jr Essex Fells, N. J. John Richmond Fales 436 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, R. I. Arthur Joseph Fallon 86— 80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Wilson Far ' .ee 29 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. John Marshall Farley 276 Hamilton PL, Hackensack, N. J. Carl Ferenbach 108 Butler St., Kingston, Pa. Thomas Burns Fifield 200 Garfield Ave., Janesville, Wis. Edgar Moore Finck, Jr Toms River, N. J. James McCormick Finney 307 Overhill Rd., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Fisher, Jr 437 N. Highland Ave., Merion. Pa. Ralph Gilchrist Fletcher 300 State St., Alpena, Mich. Kenneth Newton Fluckey 300 Slate St., Alpena, Mich. Harper FoUansbee Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Name Address Norman London Foote 31 Fifth Ave., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. James Fisher Foran The Elms, Flemington, N. J. David Ewing Foster 432 Walnut Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Gilfillan Frazer, Jr 720 Amberson Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Ralph Furman 943 Edgewood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Thomas Gerry Gallatin Big Horn, Wyo. David Gibbs Gamble 1883 Madison Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio Wimbert Mohler Gardiner, 3719 Livingston St., Chevy Chase, Washington, D. C. Edward Shippen Geer 333 E. 68th St., New York, N. Y. Howard Joseph Gensler 16 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. Thornton Gerrish, Jr 25 Seneca St., Rye, N. Y. Harry Lee Giberson, Jr 707 Seventh Ave., Asbury Pork, N. J. Eli Garfield Gilford, Jr 132 Connet PL, S. Orange, N. J. Samuel Stuart Gilbert 829 W. Market St., York, Pa. Marshall Tiebout Gleason, Jr., 58 Whitehall Blvd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Christopher Devereux Goldsbury, 204 Edgeworth Lane, Sewickley, Pa. John Carlton Goodell 96 Collingswood Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Robert Thorn Goodsell Western Dr., Short Hills, N. I. Blaine Morton Gordon. .Wykagyl Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. Eugene Gifford Grace, Jr Bethlehem, Pa. James Staples Graham, Jr 726 N. Downing St., Piqua, Ohio Frederick Lorimer Graham 995 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Dwight Phelps Green, Jr 329 Chestnut St., Winetka, 111. Elmer Ewing Green 434 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. J. Gordon Kraus Greenfield, 6399 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Gordon Greig 2826 Clermont Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry Evans Griffith 5650 High Dr., Kansas City, Mo. Randolph PercifuU Grimm, U. S. Marine Hospital, Seattle, Wash. Edward Lane Groff 24 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. Lambert John Gross.. ..16 Cuthbert PL, Kew Gardens, L. I., N. Y. Thomas Gucker, III, 8438 Germantown Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Spencer Ross Hacket 204 S. Lexington Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Hobart Nixon Hare 1 175 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Jos3ph Harris Moreton Farm, Coldwater, N. Y. Winston Pope Harrison 1460 St. James Ct., Louisville, Ky. Augustine Snow Hart, Jr., lis Whitehall Blvd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Royland Sunday Hartzell 414 Forest Ave., Bellevue, Pa. David Morris Hatheway 308 Fern St., West Hartford, Conn. Peter de Windt Hauser 139 Hathaway Lane, Merwood, Llanerch P. O., Pa. Lawrence Van Dyke Hauxhurst, 1551 N. Prospect Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Chapin Hawley 3490 Holly Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio John Hylan Heminway 1060 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Manville Fritjof Hendrickson..l20 Park Ave., Watertown, N. Y. Frank Brownne Hennessy Sunset Ave., Haworth, N. J. Dean Hill, Jr 468 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. John Timothy Hill 2326 California St., Washington, D. C. John Henderson Hines, Jr., 1979 S. Parkway, East Memphis, Tenn. Harry Joseph Hogan 994 Sanford Ave., Irvington, N. J. Charles Coy Honsacker, Jr 500 S. 46th St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Ralph Hopkin 5226 Castor Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Bogert Hopper 25 First Ave., Westwood, N. J. Emil Walter Hosier, Jr 18 Hibben Rd., Princeton, N. J. Andrew Ouinn Hourigan, Jr., 1 18 W. River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. George Harrison Houston, Jr., The Barclay, Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. Hubert Shatluck Howe, Jr 141 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Joseph Azor Howell SO E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Phillip Wesley Hunt Deerfield, Mass. Two Hundred Fifty-seven Class of 1937 (Continued) Name Address Nome Address William Bridges Hunter 32 Easlover Ct., Louisville, Ky. Thaddeus Thomson Hutcheson, 1405 N. Boulevard, Houston, Tex. John Nichol Irwin II 600 Orleans Ave., Keokuk, Iowa Edward John Jackson 318 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Francis Jacobs R. F. D. No. 6, West Chester, Pa. Robert Stevenson Janney 700 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. Cleveland Edward Jauch 677 W. Ferry St., Buffalo, N. Y. Frederic Beach Jennings Cold Spring Harbor, L. I., N. Y. Alden Porter Johnson 44 Metcalf St., Worchester, Mass. Sidney Borden Johnson, 21 Riverdale Ave., Monmouth Beach, N. J. William Benedict Johnson Far Hills, N. J. Alan Rogers Johnston 980 Bluff Rd., Glencoe, 111. Robert Henry Johnston 1701 N. 61st St., Philadelphia, Pa. Russel MacAnally Johnston, 166 S. Market St., Selinsgrove, Pa. John Elmer Jones, Jr 770 Carnegie Ave., Cleveland, O. Wilbur Boardman Jones, Jr., St. Louis Country Club Grounds, Clayton, Mo. Edward Wieber Kahler 435 Hawthorne Lane, Winnetka, 111. Charles Edwin Kaufman, Jr 328 Main St., West Haven, Conn. Cresson Henry Kearney 815 Grayson St., San Antonio, Tex. John Eugene Kelly 30 Kiwassa Rd., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Mortimer Jay Kempner 90-01— I66th St., Jamaica, L. I., N. Y. James Aloysius C. Kennedy, Jr 521 N. 38th St., Omaha, Neb. John Hopkins Kennedy 847 Delavan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Donald Craig Kerr 827 Amberson Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Leonard Alexander Keyes 91 Durand Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Penn Townsend Kimball, II, 61 Lexington St., New Britain, Conn. John Thomas Kinney 752 DeGraw Ave., Newark, N. J. William Burke Kline Allen Creek Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Charles Paul Kogge..l400 S. Wanamassa Dr., Asbury Park, N. J. Frederick Louis Kopff 2218 Newkirk Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Keene Claggett Kopper...-54 Prospect St., Madison, N. ]. Max Vance Krebs 15 E. Interwood PI., Cincinnati, Ohio Frank Yoakum Larkin 1120 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Nicholas Henry Larzelere 1440 DeKalb St., Norristown, Pa. Edward Potter Lebens 4432 Washington Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Henry LeBrecht 320 E. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. John Philip Leidy 132 Windsor St., Reading, Pa. Henry Hayden Leigh 46 E. Cedar St., Chicago, 111. Edward Armin Limberg, Jr 2 Lenox PL, St. Louis, Mo. Thomas Ridgley Lincoln 620 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Joseph Wharton Lippincott, Jr Bethayres, Pa. Joel Traitel Loeb 4220 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. David Scott Long 316 Shaw St., New Castle, Pa. Marshall Coleman Long 600 Rialto BIdg., Kansas City, Mo. Edgar Hale Lotspeich. 416 Resor Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Allan Power Lucht 242 Fulton Ter., Cliffside Park, N. J. Wilbur Masser Lutz 120 S. 10th St., Reading, Pa. MacDonald Lynch 1315 S. Oakland Ave., Pasadena, Calif. Stephen Wood McClave, 111 244 Clark Ter., Cliffside, N. L James Eugene McColgam, 200 N. Beechwood Ave., CantonsviUe, Md. Harold Chaffee McCoUom, Jr. Pecksland Rd., Greenwich, Conn. James Robert McCord 3687 Peach Tree St., Atlanta, Ga. Henry Forbes McCreery, II 123 E. 40th St., New York, N. Y. George Spahr McElroy 621 E. Town St., Columbus, Ohio John Howe McGiffert 101 Wayne Ave., Easton, Pa. Frank Joseph McGinity Indian Lake, Denville, N. J. Frederic Hamilton McGuire, Jr 2413 Leslie Ave., Detroit, Mich. Colin William McRae 451 Walton Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Pierce McNair 10 Clove Rd., Great Notch, Little Falls, N. J. John Thornton MacDonald Belle Haven, Greenwich, Conn. George Davis MacRae 75 S. 3rd St., Wilmington, N. C. Two Hundred Fifty-eight William Peter Macdonald 147 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. John Randolph Maguire 999 Sterling PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Philip Colbert Manker 219 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. Kenneth Walker Mann 39 Tollman Ave., Nyack, N. Y. James Lafayette Marks, Jr Saltsburg, Pa. Lewis Henry Marks, 1308 Linden St., Glen Osborne, Sewickley, Pa. James Littell Martin, Jr 104 Summit Ave., West Trenton, N. ]. Charles Stephen Sands Marvin Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y. Seymour Grant Marvin, 792 Avenida Atlantica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil George Rowe Masset, 117 Oxford Blvd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Harry Joseph Matthews. Jr., 1219 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Richard Maxwell Box 164, Greenwich, Conn. Robert Mayer 115 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Zeb Mayhew, Jr 1519 Calhoun St., New Orleans, La. Standish Forde Medina 14 E. 75th St., New York, N. Y. John Meirs, Jr New Egypt, N. J. Robert Ayres Messier, II 35 Lloyd Rd., Montclair, N. J. Paul Harry Metcalf ...700 Berkeley Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Robert Ward Middlebrook 9-15 Parsons Blvd., Malba, L. I., N. Y. Paul Vincent Miller 16 Welch St., Bradford, Pa. Robert Miller 1 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Robert Abram Miller 1I2I1 Detroit Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Robert Bernhardt Miller 75 Bowers St., Jersey City, N. J. Minot King Milliken 951 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Albert Girard Miranti 234 Wegman Pkwy., Jersey City, N. ]. Austin Avery Mitchell 70 Oakland PL, Buffalo, N. Y. Henry Bedinger Mitchell, II. 244 Whitestone Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Henry Weber Mitchell R. F. D. No. 2, Canton, Ohio Elwood Raymond Mons 157 Woodstock Ave., Kenilworth, III. Frank Keith Montgomery, Jr., 185 Christopher St., Montclair, N. J. Thomas William Montgomery ..423 Richland, Wheeling, W. Va. Rodman Morgan. ...431 E. Willow Grove Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. John Haynes Morris -163 Myrtle Ave., Millburn, N. J. William Scott Morris 102 Taylor St., Stolen Island, N. Y. John Edward Morrissey, Jr., 300 S. Burnett St., East Orange, N. J. Edward Comstock Morton 1 St. Morton ' s Rd., Baltimore, Md. Benjamin Harrison Mount, Jr 24 Maple St., Princeton, N. J. Otto Jay Myers Bonniecrest, New Rochelle, N. Y. Gardner Agostini Nason 161 Third St., Far Rockaway, N. Y. Philip Edward Neary 377 Lydecker St., Englewood, N. J. Edgar Lieber Newhouse, III 829 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Alexander Alfred Newton Orrington Hotel, Evanston, 111. Peter Nicholls 22 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. John Whitall Nicholson, III 245 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. J. Columbia Downing Nightingale, 902 Halifax Sq., Brunswick, Ga. Charles Cross Northrup 96 E. Main St., Johnstown, N. Y. Richard Francis Ober, 908 St. Georges Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Eugene Franklin O ' Connor, III, 16 Carteret PL, Garden City, L. I., N. Y. William Franklin Oechler, 15 Grenfell Ave., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Edward Carl Oelsner, Jr., Seacroft, Center Island, Bayville, N. Y. Frederick Henry Osborn, Jr 123 E. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. Alfred Morse Osgood 423 Essex Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Benjamin Cartwright 0 ' Sullivan..51 E. 90th St., New York, N. Y. George Gorham Otis 32205 Bingham Rd., Birmingham, Mich. Rolf Sturdy Paine 14 Elston Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. John Palaschak. Jr 263 N. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N. J. Class of 1937 (Continued) Nome Address Richard Gray Park, III 1913 S St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Robert Burton Parker 89 S. Harrison Ave., Bellevue. Pa. Richard Stevenson Parker, E. Rockaway Rd., Hewflett, L. I., N. Y. Frederick Haskell Parkin 5577 Hampton St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Bertrand Parrish, Jr 6303 Towano Lane, Richmond, Va. Julian Peabody, Jr 18 E. 84th St., New York, N. Y. Sidney Eugene Pendexter, Jr., 11 S. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. Morten Ouistgaard Peterson, 1907 Palmer Ave., New Orleans, La. Chester Hoen Philips 10 Hobart Ave,, Short Hills, N. J. Edvirard Thomas Pickard, Jr., 3029 O St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Charles Ingals Pierce 105 E. Delaware PL, Chicago, 111. Alfred Cavitt Pollock, Jr 318 Richland Lane, Pittsburgh, Pa. Edwin William Pomerleau 9 Clifton Ave., Lawrence, Mass. Phil Porter 1225 E. 25th St., Tulsa, Okla. Thomas Albert Potter, Jr., 117 Westminster Ave., Lake Forest, III. Daniel Pratt 781 Oslrom Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Richard Henry Pratt, Jr 3250 De Leon Ave., Mobile, Ala. Robert Morton Price 39 E. Logan St., Germantown, Pa. John Franklin Pritchard, Jr. ..6533 Summit Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Harry Hale Purvis, Jr., Cliftt Rd., Belle Terre, Port Jefferson, N. Y. Emery Bruce Pyle Melrose Hotel, Dallas, Texas Percy Rivington Pyne, III Bernardsville, N. J. Henry Quellmalz 255 Melrose Ave., Kenilworth, 111. John Wesley Ragsdale 49 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. Walter Edward Rahm, Jr 359 Orange Rd., Montclair, N. J. Pandia Constantine Rail: West Road, Short Hills, N. J. Henry Thomas Randall 87 N. Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. Thomas Vernon Rankin 150 W. Second St., Sparta, III William Stowe Rawls 3929 Canterbury Rd., Balti more, Md. Howard Wood Read Spring Mill Rd., Conshohocken, Pa. Dale Sheppard Rice R. F. D. Cropwell Rd., Marlton, N. J. Frank Harris Ridgley, Jr., Lincoln University, Chester County, Pa. Arthur Jordy Riggs, Vercoy Co., Huntington Bank BIdg., Columbus, Ohio Thomas Riggs, Jr., 2550 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. Martin Helzel Rittenhouse, Jr 407 Pepper Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Albert Frederick Ritter 63 Vance St., New Britain, Conn. Edward Florens Rivinus. Jr., 416 W. Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Robert Hodges Robie 3804 Gretstone Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Harlan Amen Robinson E. South St., Hanover, N. H. Samuel Wallace Robinson Nawbeek Farm, Paoli, Pa. Henry Benson Rockwell 2 High Street, Bristol, Conn. Charles Ernest Roh 192 Christopher St., Montclair, N. J. Joseph Morgan Roland 121 E. Durham St., Philadelphia, Pa. Victor Francis Roma..273 W. Tulpehocken St., Philadelphia, Pa. Don Rose, Jr 46 Beaver St., Sewickley, Pa. Francis Newman Rosenbaum....910 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Charles John Ruddy 9214 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Name Address Peter Rutler Pino Forge, Berks County, Pa. Robert Parry Rye 176 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, N. J. Henry Robinson Saafield Robinwood, Copley, Ohio James Thompson Sadler.. ..120 Buckingham Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Elmer Kenneth Sandbach 6 Duncan Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Andrew Sarkadi 24 Elm St., Trenton, N. J. Leonard Rundlett Sargent, Jr.. 335 Morrow Rd., Englewood, N. J. Frederick Donald Sauter....3750 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. Robert Huntingdon Savage.. ..139 Virginia Ave., Audubon, N. J. James Wilcox Sayre 3 Hawthorne PL, Montclair, N. J. Robert Wrigley Sayre 3026 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Franklin Taylor Scanlon, Jr 429 Park St., Morgantown, Pa. Frederick Muller Schall, Jr Darien, Conn. Joseph Thomas Schein 406 Central Ave., Newark, N. I. Henry Herman Schneider, III 741 Parker St., Newark, N. J. Henry Hitchens Schwartz, Hotel Broad-Lincoln, Columbus, Ohio Walter Lee Schwenk 102 Stanton Ave., Baldwin, L. L, N. Y. Louis Anthony Scinta....26 Strathallam Pkwy., Rochester, N. Y. Arthur Lincoln Scott 207 Inwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Edward Webster Scott.. 1075 Sheridan Rd., Hubbard Woods, 111. Samuel Barton Scovil 315 Fairmount Ave., Morristown, N. J. Albert Seckel, Jr 130 S. Kennilworth Ave., Oak Park, 111. Irving Ezra Segal 34 S. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N. J. Frank Ward Severance, Jr Leelsdale, Pa. Robert Findley Shaw 5818 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert William Shearman....418 Princeton Ave., Palmerton, Pa. John Burt Shennan 523 N, Church St., Hazleton, Pa. William Brown Shepard Overlook Ter., Short Hills, N. ). Lawrence Edgar Sherwood, Jr.. 9 Hawthorne Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Lawrence Simpson... .18 Macy Ave., White Plains, N. Y. James Edward Sincell 816 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry James Sloan 2281 Woodmere Dr., Cleveland Heights, Ohio David Ramsay Small 5415 Maple Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Fred Burton Smith, II 201 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville, N. Y. Frederick Plympton Smith 375 Maple St.. Burlington, Vt. George Byron Smith, II 522 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. John Alfred Smith 78 4th St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Lampson Beston Smith 70 Exeter St.. Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. Pinkham Smith Sanborneville, N. H. Thomas Holliday Smithies 44 Bank Street, Chicago, 111. John MacDonnell Smyth 1104 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. William Wolcott Soverel 5 Warren PL, Montclair, N. J. Donald Garrison Spencer 35 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold Baker Spencer.. ..Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N. Y. William Kulfman Stanard, II.. .Old Bonhomme Rd., Clayton, Mo. David Taylor Stanley 329 Long Ridge Rd., Orange, N. J. Robert William Stanley, Jr., c o Roade Lang, Inc., Chicapee, Mass. Elmer Norman Staub Woodcrest Ave., Short Hills, N. J. William Steel 30 Division Ave., Greensburg, Pa. John Mingin Steinsieck 12 W. Union St., Burlington, N. J. Geoffrey Stengel 1728 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Two Hundred Fifty-nine Class of 1937 (Continued) Name Address John Dougherty Stewart 126 College Ave., Indiana, Pa. Fred George Stickel, III 183 Ballantine Pkwy., Newark, N. J. Brooke Stoddard 45 Hilton Ave., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. George Backmire Stoess, Jr., 9 ' 2 North Carolina Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Edward Carroll Stollenwerk 53 E. 66th St., New York, N. Y. Stephen Stone, Jr 6325 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Norman Abraham Stoner 104 E. 3rd St., Oil City, Pa. Oliver Gordon Stonington, 421 Henderson Ave., West New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Albert St. Peter, Jr 22 Fairlawn St., Hohokus, N. T. Robert Douglas Stuart, Jr., 528 Mayflower Ave., Lake Forest, III James Stryker Studdiford, II ..15 Richey PI., Trenton, N. J. Donald Francis Sullivan, 134 Rockaway Pkwy., Valley Stream, L. I., N. Y. John Davenport Swan 345 Stamford Ave., Stamford, Conn. Harlan Justin Swift 125 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y Peter McCready Sykes 1113 Putnam Ave., Plainfield, N. J. John Dale Sylvester Hamilton Drive, North Caldwell, N. J. Frank Elijah Taplin, Jr 3090 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Charles Edward Test 42 W. 43rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. Nicholas Gilman Thacher 458 W. 51st St., Kansas City, Mo. Samuel Garver Thomson, Jr 3702 I47th St., Flushing, N. Y. Van Rensselaer Tippet 43 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Vi illiam Subers Townsend, Jr., Apartment 10 D, 2 Beekman PI., New York, N. Y. John Martin Trent Sewickley, Pa. Stephen Anthony Trentman, 501 W. Washington St., Hartford City, Ind. Francis Scott Truesdale 25 E. 80th St., New York, N. Y. Bronson Tweedy 15 Radnor, Hyde Park, London, England Robert Bradford Upham, Jr...9O0 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Oliver De Gray Vanderbilt, IIL Maderia, Ohio Louis Du Rest Van de Velde _ Wilton, Conn. Langdon Van Norden 903 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Julian Proctor Van Winkle, Jr 37 Hill Rd., Louisville, Ky. Eugene Herbert Waentig, Jr., 7312 Narrows Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Eshbel Tingley Wall, III.. ..145 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, R. L Stanley Lewis Wallace, 438 Summit Ave., Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y. Nome Address John Gondii Ward 11 Chestnut St., East Orange, N. J. Waldron Merry Ward, Jr 73 Wittredge Rd., Summit, N. J. Baverly Walden Warner 17 Conklin PI., Hackensack, N. J. Frederick Thome Warner, Jr 17 Conklin PL, Hackensack, N. J. William Martin Warner, Club Circle, Fox Point, Milwaukee, Wis. Francis Ewart Warren ...44 Maple St., Princeton, N. J. Northam Warren, Jr 191 Hudson St., New York, N. Y. George Weston Watson, III, 63 Harvest St., Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. Samuel Harrison Waughtel, Jr 307 Hope St., Providence, R. I. Thomas Chandler Werbe, Jr 926 W. 8th St., Anderson, Ind. Harry Edward Westlake, Jr., 168 Bergen Ave., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Michael Weyl 220 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. George Yandes Wheeler, II, 2438 Belmont Rd., Washington, D. C. Joseph Osborne Whitely, Jr.. 905 S. Beaver St., York, Pa. Alden MacMaster Wicks Harrison St., Princeton, N. J. Richard Bethel Wilder Fusion Rd., Garden City, L. 1., N. Y. Arnold Jordon Wilson, II 135 Marquette St., La Salle, III. William Carlton Wimer 14 Paddington Rd., Scarsdale, N, Y. Frederick Erving Winans 119 Laning Ave., Pennington, N. J. John Sergeant Wise 73 Wescott Rd., Princeton, N. J. Phillip Brosius Wisman 465 Morris Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Thomas Howard Wolf.. 151 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Alexander MacNaughton Wood, 541 Providence St., Albany, N. Y. John Frederick Wood 255 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Joseph Cass Woodle Riverview Rd., Irvington, N. Y. Walter McNeill Woodward, 903 University Pkwy., Baltimore, Md. Walter Wilbur Wriggins, 134 Reynolds PL, South Orange. N. L Arthur Edward Yahn, Jr 112 N. Clinton St., Clean, N. Y. James Conner Young 70 Tradd St., Charleston, S. C. Lawrence Woodward Young, 100 High St., St. Clairsville, Ohio Thomas Rumsey Young 97 Warren PL, Montclair, N. J. William Henry Ziegler 347 S. Los Robles, Pasadena, Calif. Two Hundred Sixty i- Mueller Moore Class Officers, 1938 JUNIOR YEAR Robert Swan Mueller, Jr President Dan Dunn Coyle Vice-President Condict Moore Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Robert Swan Mueller, Jr President John Carey Appel Vice-President Jock Waltz Sargent Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Robert Swan Mueller, Jr President John Carey Appel Vice-President Jack Waltz Sargent Secretary-Treasurer 5 1 r V Two Hundred Sixty-one Class of 1938 Name Address Harry Burdsall Adams, Jr Buck Lane, Haverford, Pa. Charles Dutilh Agnew .82 Beaver St., New York, N. Y. Robert Kennedy Aiken, Jr.. .328 Highland Ave., New Castle, Pa. Stuart King Aitkin 28 Conshohocken Rd., Bala, Pa. John Forsyth Alexander 134 Booth Lane, Haverford, Pa. Langdon Cheves Allen 2216 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Samuel Clement Allen 1226 Denmark Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Rodney Goddard Aller 2 Rector St., New York, N. Y. George Elias Alter, Jr 314 Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Loewi Altman, Jr 65 Nottingham Ter., Buffalo, N. Y. Paul Stoddard Amos Terhune Rd., Princeton, N. J. Robert Earle Anderson, Jr 745 Dixie Lane, Plainfield, N. J. John Gayle Anderton, Jr... 110 Baywood Ave., San Mateo, Calif. Pierse Barron Anderton....! 10 Baywood Ave., San Mateo, Calif. John Carey Appel 247 N. Penn St., Indianapolis, Ind. Paul Ray Applegate, Jr 21 Franklin PL, Morristown, N. J. Mariano Jose Arcaya....l333 16th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. John Lacey Armitage 448 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. William Wellesley Armstrong Barr Bldg., Washington, D. C. William Arnold 440 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. John Bosler Ashcraft 2039 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Duncan Colfax Augustine 104 Third Ave., Johnstown, Pa. James Bowen Avery 17 Allen PL, Hartford, Conn. Richard Alphonse Baer, 3700 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. Wesley John Bahr 138-145 224th St., Laurelton, N. Y. Clifford Myron Baker, Jr 1424 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N. J. John Drayton Baker 1424 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Josiah Morris Baldwin 460 Felder Ave., Montgomery, Ala. Douglas David Ballin, Jr 40 E. 66th St., New York, N. Y. William Ridley Banks, Jr., 719 Warm Springs Ave., Huntington, Pa. Albert Martin Barbieri, 10418 111th St., Richmond Hill, L. I., N. Y. William Riker Barrett. ...112 Washington St., East Orange, N. J. Philip Ellicott Barringer 1530 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. Arthur Jerome Barzaghi, Jr., 1664 Shippan Ave., Stamford, Conn. John Edward Baylor 3800 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. Julian Bonar Beaty, Jr Dogwood Lane, Rye, N. Y. Barron Mott Bedford Kenwood Station, Oneida, N. Y. Thomas Shreve Beers 257 Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. George Earle Beggs, Jr .201 Prospect Ave., Princeton, N. J. Edward John Bender 342 W. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. Two Hundred Sixty-two Name Address Richard Edwards Benjamin 506 Spruce St., Scranton, Pa. George Rixon Benson, Jr 210 Melrose Ave., Kenilworth, 111. Peter Benson 185 Bethlehem Pike, Chestnut Hill, Pa. Peter Bentley, IV 229 Broad St., Red Bank, N. 1. Derick Whitefield Betts 27 Brayton St., Englewood, N. J. John Rickards Betts 1440 Washington St., Easton, Pa. John Thompson Bissel 2020 Washington St., Canton, Mass. John William Bitner 131 Esplanade Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Samuel Lester Block 110 School Lane, Trenton, N. J. Edward Blum 940 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Orrin Kendall Boice 447 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Chamberlain Borer 718 Main St., Riverton, N. J. Roland Borgersen 4710 Sansom St., Philadelphia, Pa. Paul Wenzel Bradbury 660 Locust St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Peter Butler Bradley 205 Elderwood Ave., Pelham, N. Y. James Douglas Jerrold Brady Ruxton, Md. Robert Miller Bragdon 7107 Ohio River Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Hunnewell Braman, Jr Washington, D. C. Henry Sawyer Broad .815 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Howard Pyle Brokaw 614 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. Thad Harold Brown, Jr., 1633 Van Buren St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Jonathan Bryan, 111 2312 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va. DeWitt Wheeler Buchanan, Jr. 297 N. Green Bay Rd., Lake Forest, 111. John Grier Buchanan, Jr. 1174 Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Dougherty Burke 653 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Arrington Burke —-441 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. John Franklin Burket, Jr 405 Gulfstream Ave., Sarasota, Fla. Edward Burns, II .14 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jack Kemp Busby St. Moritz Hotel, New York, N. Y. Robert Burton Bush Hathaway Lane, Essex Fells, N. J. Harry Warner Butterworth, III, 8408 Navahoe St., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Harry Orrick Buzby 50 Overhill Rd., Baltimore, Md. Porter Dean Caesar 133 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. Fred Wallis Capers 420 Penn St., Hollidaysburg, Pa. Colwell Carey 12 Whitney St., White Plains, N. Y. Thomas Frend Carey 317 Linwood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. John Webster Carlile 2595 Bryden Rd., Columbus, Ohio Walter Samuel Carpenter, III, 9020 DuPont Bldg., Wilmington, Del Shirley Niles Carr, Jr -.140 N. Mountain Ave.. Montclair, N. J. Class of 1938 (Continued) John Lawrence Carter, Jr 92 Elm St., Montclair, N. J. Norman McLeod Carter.. ..955 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Felix Porter Caruthers 40-26 168th St., Flushing, N. Y. Lloyd Allen Carver Box 796, Lawrenceville, N. J. John Augustin Cashman 2881 S. Park Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio James McCosh Cecil, Jr 37 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y. Gordon Oakley Chadwick, 105 E. Palisade Ave., Englewood, N. J. Edward Lucas Chambers 62 E. 78th St., New York, N. Y. lohn Ward Chapman 71st St. and City Line, Overbrook, Pa. Roger Barnes Charlesworlh, 358 Hartford Rd., South Orange, N. J. Benbow Palmer Cheeseman 16 Academy Rd., Madison, N. J. lames Wood Chesnutt 2412 Central Ave., Hot Springs, Ark. John Atkinson Cissel, Jr 704 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Hal Bowie Clagett Weston, Upper Marlboro, Md. John Clinton Clark, Jr 90 Riverside Drive, Binghamton, N. Y. Lawrence Holt Clark 717 Esplanade, Redondo Beach, Calif. Robert Gerard Clark ...245 Westchester Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Roger Henry Clarke 1126 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. John Newell Classen 104 Elmhurst Rd., Baltimore, Md. James Harlan Cleveland....2538 Hackbury St., Cincinnati, Ohio Roger Remmell Clisham Hotel Roosevelt, New York, N. Y. Tyler Perry Cobb 119 Brunswick St., Rochester, N. Y. Carlton Kilrow Coddington, 777 Riverside Drive, Johnston City, N. Y. Seymour Colman 7013 Clyde Ave., Chicago, 111. Donald Bowker Cook 10 Payson Ave., Easthampton, Mass. William Kistler Coors Golden, Colo. Robert Stockton Corbin 808 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. John Paul Corcoran, Jr Rhinebeck, N. Y. William Gill Cormany 548 Maple Ave., Winnetka, III. Thomas Andrew Cosgriff 1130 E. 7th Ave., Denver, Colo. Wilkes Perry Covey. ...307 Ridgewood Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. George Bishop Covington I E. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Bailey Cowan 185 Oakridge Ave., Summit, N. J. Richard Belden Cowdery 254 S. Broadway. Geneva, Ohio Dan Dunn Coyle Bala Ave. and Kent Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. William Bradford Craig West Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Forrest Cranmer 200 Cherry St., Denver, Colo. Harry Dow Cranston 3010 Wisconsin Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. David Hopkins Crater 311 Monterey Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Frank Daniel Creamer 25 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Lee Cropper Ocean City, Md. Reginald Wayne Crosby, Jr Route 2, Concord, N. H. Deming Stedman Cross 415 Brooks St., Providence, R. I. Warren Lott Cruikshank 53 Linden Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Kennicott Culver, Jr Tramore, Mt. Washington, Md. McKim Daingerfield 3405 Green Way, Baltimore, Md. Arnold Henry Dater 147 Lafayette Ave., Hawthorne, N. J. Edward Morris David. ...92 West School Lane, Germantown, Pa. Charles Woolover Davies 21 W. 26th St.. New York, N. Y. James John Davis. .3012 Massachusetts Ave.. Washington, D. C. Tames Willans Davisson Campbell Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Henry Dunlop Dawbam Ruxton, Md. John January Grundy Deemer 331 Pine St., Williamsport, Pa. John Edward Deford, Jr 5412 St. Albans Way, Baltimore, Md. Hunter Labatut Delatour. .5 Buckingham PL, Great Neck, N. Y. Ramon De Murias 74 Douglas Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Joseph Benjamin Chestnut Denmark, 101 E. 36th St., Savannah, Ga. Alfred Pearce Dennis .800— 2Ist St., N. W., Washington, D. C. George William De Sousa, 111-15 Brentford Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. Charles Putnam Delhier...l361 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. John Rule Deupree Route 1, Madisonville, Cincinnati, Ohio Charles Robert Devine 264 Eastland Ave., Pelham. N. Y. Charles Wright Dick Norwood Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. John Turner Dickinson 1126 Evergreen Ave.. Plainfield, N. J. David Truscott Dort 1025 E. Kearsley St., Flint, Mich. Walter Lloyd Drill 20 Parker Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. Nelson Loudon Drummond, Jr 190 Genesee St., Auburn, N. Y. Andrew Joseph Duany 1060- -5th Ave., New York, N. Y. George Booth Dunbar 715 Carlton Ave., Wheaton, III. Paul Fuller DuVivier 1150 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Chester Crolhers Eaton, Shawnee Rim Rd., Indian Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio lohn Henry Eisenhard. Jr 2216 Chew St.. AUentown, Pa. Nome Address Robert Vincent Elder 30 Berwick St., Rumford, R. i. William Kemper Elliot 55 Willow St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Morris Soper Emory 3935 Cloverhill Rd., Baltimore, Md. Raymond Jay Emrich 2745 Vine St., Denver, Colo. John English, Jr 5 Lowell Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. Robert Morgan Entwislle 121 University PL, Pittsburgh, Pa. Pratt Boice Esser Orienta Point, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Hugh Bean Evans 14 Schantz Ave., Dayton, Ohio James Dennis Ewing Indian Rd., Fieldston, N. Y. Robert Burnett Failey, Jr 25 Pine St., Indianapolis, Ind. William Grattan Fallon, Jr...36 Andrew Rd., Swampscott, Mass. William Arthur Feather, Jr., Caxton Bldg., Huron Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Leonard Davis Fenninger 294 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Frederick Cromwell Field, Jr., 3021 West Coulter St., Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Kenneth Fink Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Walter Fletcher Firman 19 Laclede Ave., Trenton, N. J. Frederick Letson Fisher 136 Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Edward Herman Fleer 425 Grove St., Evanston, 111. Archibald Grey Fletcher, Jr., Presbyterian Hospital, Taiku, Chosen, Japan Herbert Wells Foedisch, 119 W. Mermaid Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas Bitting Foster 204 Menlo Ave., Glenside, Pa. George Woodrow Frank 242 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Herbert Charles Freeman, Jr 960 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Harry O. H. Freylinghuysen Morristown, N. J. Peter H. B. Freylinghuysen Morristown, N. J. Theodore French 551 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Augustus Frederic Frick, Jr., 200 Lorraine Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Jacob Ellsworth Fricker, Jot 3 Howes Ave., Stamford, Conn. Andrew Powie Fuller 1400 Elizabeth Blvd., Fort Worth, Tex. Allen Rees Furbeck 48 College Ave., Houghton, Mich. Richard Ficht Furman 943 Edgewood Ave., Trenton, N. ]. Austin Owen Furst 124 W. Linn St., Bellefont, Pa. William Thomas Galey, III 1124 Indian Creek Rd., Overbrook, Pa. Henry Gardiner 1118 Waverly PI., Schenectady, N. Y. Fiederick Gilbert, 114 Rue de Connetable, Chantllly, Oise, France Thomas Ouinlevan Gilson 85 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. Richard Murray Cunningham Glenn, 125 Upper Mount St., Montclair, N. J. Irving Goldbert Hotel Edison, New York, N. Y. David Livingstone Gordon 55 Seminary St., Middlebury, Vt. Guide James Gores 3874 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Arthur Pue Gorman 217 E. Redwood St., Baltimore, Md. LeGrand Adams Gould, Jr 19 W. 69th St., New York, N. Y. Richard Glenn Gould 710 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Charles Richard Graham.... 8 162 E. Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. David Tredway Graham 4711 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. Louis Rogers Gray, 31 Rua Monsenhor Bacellas, Petropolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Rush Varley Greenslade 2416 S. Owasso PL, Tulsa, Oklu. William Rodearmel Grimm 1120 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Herman William Gruning 214 Conway Ct., So. Orange, N. J. Franklin Ruthslaller Hall, Hardscrabble Rd., Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. William Frederick Halsey, III, U. S. S. Saratoga, c o Postmaster, Long Beach, Cal. Donald Campbell Hamilton, Jr., 5814 Murray Hill PL, Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank Tiernan Hamilton 3D E. 60th St., New York, N. Y. Walter Blears Hankin. Wilfred Ave., Washington Crossing, N. ]. John Van Etten Hardy 105 Upper Mt. Ave., Montclair, N. J. Williams McCombs Hardy 2400 Broadway, Little Rock, Ark. Edmund Newton Harvey, Jr 2 College Rd., Princeton, N. J. Robert Alexander Haughwout, 20 Glenwood Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. John Brenard Haviland 126 Second Ave., Gloversville, N. Y. Sturgis Lee Hedrick 220 S. Cayuga Rd., Williamsville, N. Y. Allen Burnett Heinsohn..Haverslraw Rd., Valley Cottage, N. Y. Howard Austin Heller 72 E. Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. Frederick Edward Henze, 264 W. Ridgewood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Charles G. Herbruck 1950 Market Ave., N., Canton, Ohio James Louis Herman 673 E. Parkway So., Memphis. Tenn. Two Hundred Sixty-three Class of 1938 (Continued) Nome Aaaress Arthur Emil Hess 1211 Delaware St., Wyomissing, Pa. James Newton Hillhouse Route 6, Box 897, Phoenix, Ariz. Alfred Blakelee Hine, ]r...l401 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Grinnell Hoagland....l5I Hoagland Ave., Rockaway, N. J. John Robert Hoffman, Jr 204 Java Ave., Hershey, Pa. William Jacob Hoffman, Jr 211 E. 55th St., New York, N. Y. Philip Leo Hogan..54 Hollenbeck Ave., Great H arrington, Mass. George Ledget Hogeman 76 Watchung Ave., Chatham, N. J. John Mortimer Holton 7800 Navahoe St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Ingraham Hook, Jr 190 W. High St., Waynesburg, Pa. Walter Lamb Hopkins.... 140 Wadsworth Ave., New York, N. Y. Arthur Frederick Hopper, Jr., 131 Pemberton Ave., Plainfield, N. J. David Hall Hosier, 2372 No. Commonwealth Ave., Columbus, Ohio Raymond Cornwallis Howe, 2218 New Haven Ave., Far Rockaway, N. Y. Edgar McPherson Howell. ...3818 Seminary Ave., Richmond, Va. Thomas Brannon Hubbard, Jr Lane ' s End, Montgomery, Ala. Warner Clyde Hubbard Philadelphia, N. Y. James Hurd Hughes, Jr 46 S. State St., Dover, Del. James England Hulsizer 41 Lenox Ave., East Orange, N. J. Burrowes Hunt Byroad Farm, Lambertville, N. J. William Olney Hunt 2318 First Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. Charles Francis Huston 41 Ruskin PL, Indianapolis, Ind. Camille Henry Huvelle 168 E. 74th St., New York, N. Y. Frank Leslie Ingram R. F. D. No. 2, Trenton, N. J. Charles Crawford Irvine 41-07— 157th St., Flushing, N. Y. Raymond Massoud Jabara..8007 Narrows Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Theodore Ridgway Jaeke), c o American Consulate, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Ralph Eccles Jamison, Jr 342 N. Main St., Greensburg, Pa. Richard Mott Janney Garrison, Md. Parish Alston Jenkins 625 E. Skinker Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Donald Edwin Jerrems 1301 N. State St., Chicago, 111. Willard Lloyd Johns 407 W. 9th St., Wilmington, Del. Willard Barron Johnson, Jr 93 Fairmont Ave., Chatham, N. J. John Malcolm Johnston, Jr Colonial Village, Wayne, Pa. Walter Winthrop Johnston, 36 Witherbee Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Arthur Cummings Jones, Jr 501 W. 5th Ave., Gastonia, N. C. Charles Frederick Jones 130 Greenfield St., Tiffin, Ohio Guilford Jones, Jr 4221 E. Douglas St., Wichita, Kans. Horace Conrad Jones, II 516 Fayette St., Conshohocken, Pa. Nathan Ford Jones 77 Windemere Rd., Rochester, N. Y. William Gould Jones 3601 Newark St., Washington, D. C. William Hesbett Kahle 947 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio Charles Robert Kamm, Burlingame Country Club, Burlingame, Cal. Edmund Jamison Kauffman, Jr 505 E. Broadway, Girard, Ohio John Gregory Kelley 144 E. 36th St., New York, N. Y. John King Kennedy, Prescott Rd., Prospect Park, White Plains. N. Y, James Ben-amin Kerr P. O. Box 98, Greensburg, Pa. Ernest Edward Keusch Sussex Ave., Morristown, N. J. Eugene Tupper Kinder, 2465 Arlington Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Charles Phelps King 200 Northfield PL, Baltimore, Md. Frederick Paul King, Jr 100 Broadway, New York, N. Y. James Hartley King 2201 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Francis Sherwood Kinney Lee ' s Hill , Morristown, N. J. Charles Edo Kip 210 Aycrigg Ave., Passaic, N. J. James Boyer Kirkpctrick 3211 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Lyman Bickford Kirkpatrick, Jr., West Harwich, Cape Cod, Mass. Hamiltcn Fuller Klie....l841 1 S. Woodland Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Richard Broyton Knight ...42 Pine St., Providence, R. I. Louis Arnold Komoski....l 13 Van Winkle Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Fumitaka Konoye 2113 Spruce St., Phi ' adelph-a, Pa. Edward Milton Kocs 39 Conklin Ave., Newark, N. J. John Frederick Kraemer 24 State St., New York, N. Y. Stuart Siris Zalmy Krinsky 270 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Robert Edward Kulp King of Prussia Rd., Radncr, Pa. Henry George Kunkel Route No. 2, Princeton, N. J. Harry Lane, Jr 71 Prospect Ave., MontcloT, N. L John Henry Laporte 86 Passaic Ave., Passaic, N. J. Raymond Patrick Larkin 8 East 63rd St., New York, N. Y. Lincoln Weil Lauterstein 756 Broadway, Woodmere, N. Y. Merle Lawrence 603 10th St., Ocean City, N. ]. Two Hundred Sixty-four Samuel Chapin Lawson, 19100 S. Park Blvd., Shaker Hts., Cleveland, Ohio Morris Samuel Lazaron, Jr Naylor Lane, Pikesville, Md. Philip LeBoutillier, Jr 38 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. Albert Graham Lee, Jr 848 N. 4th St., Steubenville, Ohio Dwight Van Deusen Lee 764 State St., San Diego, Cal. Blair Lee, 111 Silver Spring, Md. George Morton Lehr 7 Tonnele Ave., Jersey City, N. ]. William Wayne Light 55 Booth Lane, Haverford, Pa. George Leavens Lilley 670 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn. Bradner McPherson Littlehale....655 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Lloyd Pampell Lochridge, Jr. 219 Greenway North, Forest Hills, N. Y Samuel Simpson Logan, Jr. 429 Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Ralph Stanley Longstaff..959 E. Maplewood Rd., Lake Forest, III Philip Albert Loomis, Jr., 1414 Culebra Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Herbert Ivory Lord, Jr 360 Lincoln Rd., Grosse Point, Mich. William McBride Love 32 Portland PL, St. Louis, Mo. Thomas D ' Arcy Lucus, Jr 14 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. Richard Dwight Lunn 20 Elm St., Auburn Maine Sebastian Benjamin Lupica Hopewell, N. L Edwin Cornelius Luther 1530 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Netzer Eugene Luthi 51 Highland Ave., Elizabeth, N. I. Richard Ackerman Lydecker....48 Lincoln St., Glen Ridge, N. J. Kenneth Merill Lynch, Jr 43 Church St., Charleston, S. C. Francis Huger McAdoo, Jr 435 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. Stuart Gore McCampbell 1120 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Robert Harris McCarter Lefcourt Bldg., Newark, N. J. Benjamin Conkling McCartney, 2556 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. Charles Dowden McCracken, Jr., 5 Jefferson St., Lambertville, N. J. John Gurd McCulloch 143 Esplanade, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Samuel Walker McCune, III, 1900 Riverview Ave., Wilmington, Del. Joseph Reed McGaw 1520 Valmont St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Edgar McHarg 121 Connett PL, South Orange, N. J. Charles Gillett McKendree 162 E. 81st St., New York, N. Y. Edward Righter McLean 65 Bauer Ter., Elizabeth, N. J. John Hull McLean 232 W. Pondfield Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Charles Anderson McLeod 536 Providence St., Albany, N. V. Thomas Roberts McMillen 465 W. Macon St., Decatur, 111. Dunstan McNichol Chamounix Rd., St. Davids, Pa. Robert Sayre MacCormack, Jr., 319 S. Euclid Ave., Westfield, K. J. Robert Byram MacDonald, 352 Roumfort Rd., Mt. Aairy, Philadelphia, Pa. Laidler Bowrie Mackall .3410 Woodley Rd., Washington, D. C. George Lloyd Magruder 2810 — 44th St., Washington, D. C. Robert Glen Maitland... 448 Goffle Rd., Hawthorne, N. J. Thomas Hartley Maren, 531 E. Lincoln Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Samuel Reynolds Marks, Jr 1807 Powell PI, Jacksonville, Fla. William Gotthard Marr... 5 Blythewood Rd., Baltimore, Md. John Hart Marter 309 Warwick Rd., Haddonfield, N. J. Alastair Bradley Martin Westbury, L. I., N. Y. Esmond Bradley Martin Westbury, L. L, N. Y. Jonathan Mason 139 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Eugene Mason 3802 Cliff Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Rodman Charles Matheny, Jr 408 W. Cook St., Springfield, 111. James FrankLn Mead ...2800 Grant St., Evanston, 111. Albert Irwin Mendeloff....l707 McClung St., Charleston, W. Va. Ralph Cain Mengel, Jr 808 N. 3rd St., Reading, Pa. John Christopher Meyer, Jr 13 Monroe PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Frederick Meyer 73 E. 34th St., Paterson, N. T. Robert Randolph Meyer, Jr., 1502 Corner Bldg., Birmingham, Ala. James Hull Miller 3820 Waldo Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Ben Hudson Milner 1679 Spring Dr., Louisville, Ky. Craig Knowlton Mitchell Tuxedo Park, Tuxedo, N. Y. Robert Moment 815 Park Ave., Pla infield, N. Y. Albert Moore 775 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Condict Moore Essex Fells. N. I. Wilton Poe Moore 4408 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Jonathan Tapper Morey 114 Broadmead, Princeton, N. J. Edward Holden Morgan 18 Lafayette PL, Greenwich, Conn. Class of 1938 (Continued) Nome Address George Orlando Morgan, III 285 N. Ridgewood Rd., So. Orange, N. J. Norman Ernest Morgon 6828 Ingram St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Arthur James Morrell Deans Lane, Deans, N. J. Robert Crawford Morris.. 173 S. Parkview Ave., Columbus, Ohio Henry Clay Moses, Jr 183 Liberty Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Robert Adams Moss City Line, Bala, Pa. Tilghman Huber Moyer, Jr 116 N. ISth St., AUentown, Pa. Robert Swan Mueller, Jr 12 Englewood Rd., Baltimore, Md. Kenneth Hart Muir 4 Benedict Place, Pelham, N. Y. John Robert Murray 142 Cleveland St., Orange, N .J. Edward Allen Myers 29 Wilder St., Elizabeth, N. J. Harry Beacher Neal, Jr 936 Church St., Indiana, Pa. John Gilbert Mettleton, Jr., 3209 Cleveland Ave., Washington, D. C. Doddridge Chichester Nevitt, Jr 257— 28th St., Atlanta, Ga. Jacob Carr Nevius 842 Riverside Ave., Trenton, N. J. Andrew Morris Newburger 65 W. 54th St., New York, N. Y. Charles Herbert Nicholls, Jr., 1924 Elizabeth St., Pueblo, Colo. Courtlandt NicoU, Jr 149 E. 78th St., New York, N. Y. H. Richard Niehoff 6329 Montgomery Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio Balpha Lonnie Noojin Noojin Supply Co., Gadsden, Ala. Thomas Hughes Norris 8 Stockton St., Princeton, N. J. Alexander Anastasios Notopoulos, 1104— 14th Ave., Altoona, Pa. Edmund Rogers Novak. ...5223 Springlake Way, Baltimore, Md. Julian Lake Nugent 2 E. 70th St., New York, N. Y. William B. Nugent 2 E. 70th St., New York, N. Y. Edward Nevin Odell..477 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Roger Lansing Offen, Jr Shippon Point, Stamford, Conn. George Hill Oliver 1115 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Edwin Samuel Olsan 395 Canterbury Rd., Rochester, N. Y. William Paul O ' Neill, Jr Rydal, Pa. William Orchard 50 Sagamore Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Alexander Robertson Ormond, 64 Warrington PI.. East Orange, N. J. Robert Hunter Orr, II 125 South St., Lewes, Del. William Howell Orr, Jr 825 Lawrence Ave., Westfield, N. J. Richard Palmer Sunnyside Lane, Irvington, N. Y. Hans Arnold Albert Panofsky..! 14 Prospect St., Princeton, N. J. Wolfgang Kurt Hermann Panofsky, 114 Prospect St., Princeton, N. J. John Holbrook Parke 50 Main St., Amherst, Mass. Horace Norton Parker 72 N. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N. J. Desiderio Xavier Parreno 130 E. 75th St., New York, N. Y. Douglas Van Ness Parsons 51 Milton Point Rd., Rye, N. Y. Richard Paul Pasley 456 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Carlton Overton Pate, Jr., 79 Bush Ave., Belle Haven, Greenwich, Conn. Jere Wescott Patterson 735 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, 111. Richard Fuller Patterson 4101 Grove Ave., Richmond, Va. Louis Augustus Pechstein, Jr., 183 Lafayette Circle, Cincinnati, Ohio Charles Halsey Peckworth....513 Spring Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Henry Ernest Perry 64 Melrose PI., Montclair, N. I. Oliver Hazard Perry 161 E. 65th St., New York, N. Y. John Arvid Peterson 1216 Riverside Ave., Trenton, N. J. Timothy Adams Pfeiffer....4600 Palisade Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. John Bradford Phillips 300 Fairview Ave., Winnetka, 111. Paul Armand Phillips 47 E. 88th St., New York, N. Y. James Henry Pinckney, 71 Second St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y Harvey Jack Plants 26 Main St., Hornell, N. Y. John Homer Flatten 390 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Name Address David Smith Plumb 5 Northwest Way, BronxviUe, N. Y. John Crawford Pogue.... Drake Rd., Indian Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio Alan Cornell Poole 18 Springdale Rd., Princeton, N. J. Frederick Martin Porter 127 Mountain Ave., Summit, N. J. Richard James Potter Gory Brook Rd.. No. Tarrytown, N. Y. Stephen Dunlap Powell 434 Willow Rd., Winnetka, 111. William Shallenberger Power, 5803 Wellesley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Augustin Powers 205 W. 39th St., New York, N. Y. John Gledroice Powers.. 36 Great Oak Lane, Pleasantville, N. Y. Alfred Marsden Price 944 Euclid Ave., Hubbard Woods, III. Charles Urner Price 223 E. 2nd St., Frederick, Md. Charles Joseph Rainear 358 Aubrey Rd., Wynnewood, Pc. William Gere Raleigh 112 Dewitt Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Robert Rautenstrauch 235 Dorin Court Rd., Palisade, N. J. Henry Putnam Ream 770 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Charles Hopkins Reed, Jr 219 Broadway Bel Air, Md. William W. Lord Reed Roberts Lane, Yonkers, N. Y. Frederic Eugene Reeve, Jr 51 Euclid Ave., Maplewood, N. I. Edwin Joseph Reeves 10 Mitchell PL, New York, N. Y. Charles David Reich P. O. Box 191, Yokohama, Japan Colin Campbell Reid 536 So. Elmwood Ave., Oak Park, III. Howard Armand Reid Hotel Carlyle, New York, N. Y. William Anthony Reiss, Jr., 636 Michigan Ave., Sheboygan, Wis. William Crosby Renwick...-14 Washington PL, New York, N. Y. David Parkam Reynolds 120 East End Ave., New York, N. Y. John Thomas Reynolds 1009 Park Ave., Plainfield, N. Y. Robert Huch Rial 528 Harrison Ave., Greensburg, Pa. William Whittle Richardson, 97 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Bernard Herman Ridder 22 N. William St., New York, N. Y. Edward Gridley Riggs 236 East 61st St.. New York, N. Y. Joseph Garneau Ringwalt, Jr., 145 Hudson Ter., Yonkers, N. Y. Bradford Williams Ri pley, II, 325 Fullerton Pkwy, Chicago, HI. Clifton Hamilton Robinson.. ..Applegarth Road, Cranbury, N. J. Frederic Rosengarten, Jr., 500 West Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. George Blaikie Ross Roscommon, Doylestown, Pa. Frank Wendell Rounds, Jr 43 Central St., Winchester, Mass. John Krom Rudd P. O. Box 1741, Asheville, N. C. William Escott Rudel Pinehurst, N. C. Gilbert Ruge 8 Tannenbergallee, Berlin, Charl. 9, Germany Cassel Rudolph Ruhlman..324 South Main St., Pennington, N. J. James Earl Russell 409 West 117th St., New York, N. Y, William Francis Russell....390 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Guy Gerard Rutherfurd AUamuchy, N. J. James Albert Saalfield R. D. I, Copley, Ohio Francis Cushman St. John, The Choate School, Wallingford, Conn. James Brady Salsich....296 No. Columbia Ave., Columbus, Ohio Frank Sandstrom, Jr 656 Lafayette St., Denver, Colo. Stanley Jay Sarnoff 1406 Albemarle Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Franklin Bache Satterthwaite Ridge Ter., Short Hills, N. J. James Conyers Sayen Springdale Rd., Princeton, N. J. William Henry Sayen, III Hamilton Square, N. J. Hans Gottfreid Schleicher Woodstock, N. Y. Richard Larcombe Schley, Jr. 310 East Gwinnett St., Savannah, Ga. Charles Joseph Schmelzer, 1003 Huntingdon Rd., Kansas City, Mo. William Horace Schmidlapp..lO Grandin Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio John Grier Hibben Scoon 10 Bayard Lane. Princeton, N. J. Two Hundred Sixty-five Class of 1938 (Continued) Nome Address David Alan Scott 207 Inwood Ave., Upper Montdair, N. J. John Malcolm Searles 123 Woodridge PI., Leonia, N. J. William Parker Sedgv ick 80 Broad St., Nev York, N. Y. Morton Leonard Seidelman, 1919 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Richard Fiske Shaffer 543 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. S-wagat Sherley, Jr 2600 Upton St., Washington, D. C. James Culver Shields, II Pembine, Wis. James Randolph Simpson 12 Beechwood PI., Elizabeth, N. J. Robert William Singer, Jr 219 Center Ave., Greensburg, Pa. Lawrence Singmaster 2815 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Claiborne Adams Skinner 306 N. Fourth St., St. Louis, Mo. Neal Willard Slack 30 Colonial Ave., Pitman, N. J. Benson Bennett Sloan, Jr 41 East 65th St., New York, N. Y. William Milligan Sloan 41 East 65th St., New York, N. Y. Francis Edward Smith 115 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y. James Ward Smith 30 North Easton Rd., Glenside, Pa. Robert Hall Smith, Jr 110 Sumners St., Bluefield, W. Va. Robert Hendee Smith 901 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. Craig Hugh Smyth 15 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. John Dewhurst Snelham Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Frederick Joseph Snyder, Jr 1242 Clinton PL, Elizabeth, N. ]. Amedee Spadone, Jr 36 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. David Stockton Speer Alger Ct., East Bronxville, N. Y. Kenneth Armand Spitz 156 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. Harry Dyer Sprowles, Jr 4409 Decatur St., Philadelphia, Pa. Wilbur Welles Squire P. O. Box 894, Meridan, Conn. Nicholas McLeod Stahl 40 South 16th St., Allentown, Pa. John Pulsifer Stanton, Westchester Country Club Estates, Rye, N. Y. Frederick Russell Starr 16 Montgomery PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Stuart John Stebbins 329 Raleigh Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Oreste Constantine Stephano 509 Ashburne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. Henry Albert Stetler, Jr 444 Edgewood PL, Rutherford, N. J. Charles Rolfe Stevens 1246 Ridge Ave., Evanston, 111. John Caswell Stoddard 45 Hilton Ave., Garden City, N. Y. Alfred Jehu Stokely Clifton Heights, Newport, Tenn. Edward Casper Stokes II 233 Corlies Ave., Allenhurst, N. J. Henry Mayers Stratton 1048 Stuyvesant Ave., Trenton, N. J. John Ward Strong Orchard Lake, Mich. Adolph SuehsdorL 111 16 Norman Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. William Purviance Tarns Tarns, W. Va. Burt Eddy Taylor Detroit Club, Fort St., Detroit, Mich. Coakley Taylor 3008 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. James Harris Taylor 624 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. Edward Bryan Templeman....353 West 57th St., New York, N. Y. Frank William Thacher, Jr Fairholm , Edgewater Park, N. ]. Edwin Pendleton Thompson 25 Granite St., Westerly, R. L Alfred Ostrom Therkildsen 347 East 50th St., New York, N. Y Joseph Duvall Thompson. .444 Wolfs Lane, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Rockwell Morell Thompson East Main St., Mendham, N. J. Charles Hansoen Toll, Jr 12 Snell St., Amherst, Mass. Two Hundred Sixty-six Name Address Bennett Edwin Tousley, Jr., Hotel Traymore, Atlantic City, N. J. Ernest Sharps Townend, Jr., 79 West Union St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. M. Callear Trover River Rd., Titusville, N. J. Wilbur Tyson Trueblood, Jr 751 Yale Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Lewis Holmes Ulman....l929 19th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Bayard Underwood 3021 Cathedral Ave., Washington, D. C. Dean Ramsay Underwood, Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R. 1. Robert Luchars Urban 163 Western Dr., Longmeadow, Mass. John Van Ess, Jr 44 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Herbert Doane Van Sciver 38 Abernethy Dr., Trentcn, N. J. Damon Edwin Van Utt 32 Bretton Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Samuel Vauclain, III 848 Buck Lane, Haverford, Pa. Thomas Frederick Vietor, Jr 625 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Walter Von Elm 53 Underwood Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. Gilbert Vosburgh 88 Smith St., Canajoharie, N. Y. John Henry Vruwink 1 Pinewood Ave., Albany, N. Y. Robert Clarence Walden, Jr 226 Winding Way, Merion, Pa. James Nelson Walter 43 Bleecker St., Newark, N. J. Arthur Cyrus Warner 323 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. William Krigbaum Watkins..43 Walnut Ave.. Wheeling, W. Va. Livingston Day Watrous 2601 Altura Blvd., El Paso, Tex. Charles Roger Watson, Jr., 1000 Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. William Joseph Watson 27 Whittier Ave., Trenton, N. ]. Palmer Martin Way, Jr 2400 Atlantic Ave., Wildwood, N. ]. Thomas Weber 365 Lincoln Pkwy., Buffalo, N. Y. Hewitt Campau Wells Woodward Bldg., Washington, D. C. Albert Bates Wenzell 372 Bala Ave., Cynwyd, Pa. Stephen Whitcomb 211 Stewart Ave., Ithaca, N. Y. Jack Howard White 248 South 9th St., Lebanon, Pa. James Herbert White, Jr Watts Bldg., Birmingham, Ala. Kemble White, Jr Clarksburg, W. Va. James Palmer Whitlock 36 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. Willard Palmer Whitlock, 111 20 Scotland Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. Hugh Whitlaker, Jr 491 Missouri Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Andrew Murray Williams, Jr 455 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. Charles Wilmot Williams Route 3, Pontiac, Mich. John Whittingham Wilmer Nassau Club, Princeton. N. J. David Alan Whitwell Wilson, Independence Ave., Spuyten Duyvil, New York, N. Y. Elwood Justin Wilson, Jr Waverly PL, Montvale, N. |. John Arnot Wilson 640 North Portage Path, Akron, Ohio William Warrman Wilson Narbeth, Pa. Thomas Scudder Winslow, Jr., 901 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. Thomas Brodnay Wood 276 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. William Alexander Wood. ...276 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Schuyler Colfax Woodhull, Jr., 2417 Pillsbury Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. William Ward Wooldrige 6841 Reynolds St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Kirk Rogers Young 650 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Evarts Ziegler 151 East 83rd St., New York, N. Y. Hobler Gifford Class Officers, 1939 SOPHOMORE YEAR Thomas Edward Bamicle President Edward Windsor Hobler Vice-President Joseph Tomlinson Gifford Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Thomas Edward Bamicle President Edward Windsor Hobler Vice-President Joseph Tomlinson Gifford Secretary-Treasurer Two Hundred Sixty-seven Class of 1939 Nome Address WilUam Lewis Acker, Jr 725 N. Webster St., Scranton, Pa. Tinsley Adams 4901 Edgemoor Lane, Edgemoor, Md. William Alexander Adams. ...3608 N. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Montgomery Ahara 1501 Forest Ave., Evonston, 111. H. Gardner Ainsworth Naval War College, Newport, R. I. John Alexander 29 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N. ]. Herrick Kidder Allen, 51 New St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa, Thomas AUsopp, II 357 Lake St., Newark, N. J Frederick James Allsup 5 Oak St., Franklin, N. Y Francis Andrew Ambrose 1028 E. 25th St., Paterson, N. J Henry Aplington, II 55 Lincoln Ave., Amherst, Mass Joseph Hunt Johnes Applegate, 1125 Greenwood St., Trenton, N. J. John Taylor Arms, Jr Greenfield Hill, Fairfield, Conn. James Bell Armstrong, Jr., 1339 Sguirrel Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas Charles Armstrong, Jr., 30 Brinkerhoff Ave., Teaneck, N. J. James Alden Arnold .8220 Austin St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Lindsay Grier Arthur 910 Mount Curve, Minneapolis, Minn. Wardner Daniel Ayer, Jr...614 University Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Robert Bach 120 Pine St., Woodmere, L. L, N. Y. Robert Maddock Backes R. D. No. 1, River Rd., Trenton, N. J. Charles Kellogg Backus, II, 725 Lake Shore Rd., Grosse Point, Mich. Lawrence Adams Baker, Jr., 2500 Foxhall Rd., Washington, D. C. Lewis Warrington Baldwin, Jr., 23 Westmoreland Place, St. Louis, Mo. Robert Bruce Baldwin 359 Hazel Ave., Highland Park, 111. Jean Paul Jacquett Baltzell, Digby Rhawn St., Fox Chase, Philadelphia, Pa. George Vroom Banning 261 Summit Ave., Hackensack, N. J. William Evans Bardusch, 84 Maplewood Ave., Maplewood, N. ]. Thomas Edward Barnicle....ll Gorman Rd., Framingham, Mass. William Joseph Barr 39 Howard St., Westlawn, Pa. Guernee Hinman Barrett, Jr Spring Lane, Chappaqua, N. Y. Carl Louis Bausch, Jr 260 Dorchester Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Robert Steel Bayer, Jr 104 Third St., Huntingdon, Pa. George Clark Bean 29 Templar Way, Summit, N. J. Edward James Beattie, Jr., 292 Turrell Ave., South Orange, N. J, John Thurston Beaty Dogwood Lane, Rye, N. Y, Bruce Bedford, Jr 45 Perdicaris PL, Trenton, N. J, Nathaniel Forrest Bedford, 335— 8th Ave., N. E., St. Petersburg, Fla John Stanley Bell 3565 N. Shepard Ave., Milwaukee, Wis Two Hundred Sixty-eight Name Address William Henry Bell, II 1541 Schuyler St., Schenectady, N. Y. Augustus John Bender, Jr 78 Grove St., Elizabeth, N. j. James Armen Benham 40 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y. William Gottlob Berlinger, Jr., 1 104 Valley Rd., Mellrose Park, Philadelphia, Pa. William Croft Bickel ...Squaw Run Rd., Aspinwall, Pa. Kirk LeMoyne Billings 101 East Preston St., Baltimore, Md. James McKelvy Bindley 6111 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Ralph Holden Binns, III 227 Claflin Ave., Mamaroneck, Pa. William Rowley Bishop, Jr 12 E. 25th St., Baltimore, Md. Thomas Gaynor Blake 121 Plant Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. Edward Montgomery Bland 17 St. Asaph Rd., Bala, Pa. Elkin Rogers Blout 175 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Samuel Taylor Bodine County Line, Villanova, Pa. Fred DeWitt Boice, Jr 2410 Carey Ave., Cheyenne, Wyo. Arthur Hemphill Bolte 17 Irving PL, Pelham, N. Y. John Thatcher Boomer 2225 Douglass Blvd., Louisville, Ky. Charles Lynn Borland 179 S. Church St., Goshen, N. Y. Charles Laury Botthof 156 Abington Ave., Kenilworth, III. William Alsop Bours, III 315 Stelle Ave., Plainfield, N. j. James William Boyd 789 Valley Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Nathaniel Augustus Boynton....224 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Jacques Bramhall, Jr 56 Miller Rd., Morristown, N. J. Edward Eugene Brandt 8 Hilltop Dr., Great Neck, N. Y. Burnett Gordon Britcherd, Jr 306 Berkely Dr., Syracuse, N. Y. Charles Augustus Broad, Jr 436 Tenth St., Wilmette, 111. Henry Nason Kinney Brookings. .Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va. Nathaniel John Brooks .98 Maple St., Rutherford, N. ]. Francis Marion Brower, III 956 Fillmore St., Philadelphia, Pa. Frederick Lane Brown, Jr., 67 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Newell Brown Maynesboro Farm, Berlin, N. H. William Adams Bryan 1907 Orrington Ave., Evanstcn, 111. George Regan Bunn 2101 Willamore Ave., Springfield, 111. Kenneth Alexander Burgess, 106 West Ferry Rd., Morrisville, Pa. Char les Dana Burke 37 Lynton PL, White Plains, N. Y. Edwin Maston Burke Land ' s End, Newport, R. I. George Cass Burke, Jr 854 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Findley Burns, Jr 1526 Bolton St., Baltimore. Md. Richard Hansford Burroughs. Jr., 1100 W. 43 Forest Hill, Richmond. Va. Albert Louis Butler, Jr Bitting Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C. David Ely Cain 17 Ivy Lane, Princeton, N. J. George Burnham Calksins, Jr., 1030 Hubbard Lane, Hubbard Woods, 111. Charles Stuart Callman, 765 Gramatan Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Richard Douglas Caney 281 Terrell Rd., Fanwood, N. J. Class of 1939 (Continued) Nome Address Joseph Burchlield Cartwrighl, 7 Elysian Way, E. Liverpool, Ohio Clarence Edwards Case, Jr., 254 Altamont PI., Somerville, N. J. Howard Francis Casey 17 Dawes St., Dorchester, Mass. Richard Charles Cassady..5477 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry Moir Cathles 12 Fenimore Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Cameron Walton Cecil, 689 S. New Hampshire Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Albert Fredenburgh Chodwick, 176 Ketcham Ave., Amity ville, N. Y. Fidel Gillette Chamberlain, Jr., 302 W. Hollywood Ave., San Antonio, Tex. John Phelps Chamberlain 25 South St., Goshen, N. Y. Maurice Scott Chapin, Jr 41 Everett Ave., Providence, R. I. George Byron Chapman, Jr Aurora, Ohio Richard Edwards Chislett, II 5131 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Jermyn Christian 645 Taylor Ave., Scranton, Pa. James Patton Clarendon, II, 251 Hamilton PI., Hackensack, N. J. Edward Wemple Clark 30 Corsa Ter., Ridgewood, N. J. John Helley Clark, III 308 Lincoln St., Flushing, N. Y. James McClure Clarke 44 School Rd., W. Asheville, N. C. Samuel Clay Jr The Ridge , Paris. Ky. James Higbie Clement 307 Brentford Rd., Haverford, Pa. John Frenzel Cline 15 Carstensen Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Ansley Johnson Coale Box 159, Annapolis, Md. Benjamin Coates Golf House Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Douglas George Cochrane 174 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. John William Coffey 50 Wykagyl Ter., New Rochelle, N. Y. Bayard Coggeshall 14 Franklin PI., Morristown, N. J. Carl Vincent Cole Springhill, Ala. Jena Cuthbert Collier, II Thomaston St., Barnesville, Ga. George Rosebrough Collins, 27 Hillside Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. Edward Toner Cone 1030 Summit Ave., Greensboro, N. C. Ludolph Henry Conklin, Jr. 383 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. Robert Sutherland Cook, Jr... 222 Crenert St., Cedar Rapids. Iowa Kent Pettit Cooper 12 Roosevelt Rd., South Orange, N. J. Joseph Clift Cornwall 634 Tremont Ave., Westfield, N. ). Robert Randolph Gotten 11 41 Oxford St., Winchester, Mass. Preston King Covey. ...307 Ridgewood Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Stuart DuBois Cowan, Jr., 195 Soundview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Hollister Burton Cox, University Club, Buffalo Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Leonard Grinstead Cox, Jr 427 W. Third St.. Lexington, Ky. David Mahon Craig, Jr 418 Emerson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Lillo Grain, Jr 2421 Milam Dr., Houston, Tex. John Alfred Crocker, III 22 DeMott Ave., Clifton, N. J. Thomas Means Culbertson, Jr., 2425 S. Bay Shore Dr., Coconut Grove, Fla. Curtiss Cummings Biddeford Pool, Maine Bernard Kears Curley, Castleton Park, St. George, Staten Island, N. Y. John Caleb Gushing Ill N. Long Common Rd., Riverside, III. George Ernes Dale. Jr 26 Fisher PI., Trenton, N. J. George William Dalton, Jr 1514 K St., Washington, D. C. Kenneth Whitney Dalzell, Jr., Hobart and Lakeview Ave., Short Hills, N. J. Jaquelin James Daniel 1851 Mallory St., Jacksonville, Fla. William Cheever D ' Arcy. Jr .6 Hortense PL, St. Louis, Mo. Harry Plauche Dart, III. ...1803 Jefferson Ave., New Orleans, La. Waher Henry Daub, Jr Bella Vista, New Cumberland, Pa. Addison Cutter Davis 1328 Wilson St., Eau Claire, Wis. Earl Russell Davis, Jr 133 Arlington Ave., Providence, R. I. Edgar Clark Davis, Jr 20 Greystone Ter., Yonkers, N. Y. John Sawyer Davis 310 Main St., Mount Holly, N. J. Roger Hasbrouck Davis, 3601 Lowell St„ N. W., Washington, D. C. Walter Phillips Davison 80 North St., Auburn. N. Y. Richard Hiward Demaree R. F. D. No. 1, Asbury Park, N. J. Charles Pugh Dennison 40 E. 49th St., New York, N. Y. Charles Henry Detwiller, Jr 151 E. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Robert Dickey, III 545 Glen Arden Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa. Philemon Richard Dickinson, 32 Chelsea PL, East Orange, N. J. Richard Dillon, Jr 888 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. Thomas Dimond Alger Court, Bronxville, N. Y. Frank Rogers Donahue, 115 W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Gordon Donald Wellesley Farms, Mass. Name Address James Doolittle, Jr 102 Mt. Kemble Ave., Morristown, N. J. Standish Montgomery Douglas, 257 Stewart Ave,, Garden City, N. Y. Elisha Peairs Douglass 6475 Greene St., Philadelphia, Pa. Franklin Robert Downey 1072 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. I. Clarence Warren Driver.... 158 S. Anita Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Lewis Robert Driver, Jr 2231 Bancroft PL, Washington, D. C. Andrew Adgate Duer, Jr Stevenson, Md. Andrew Bradley Duvall, Jr., 2128 LeRoy PI., N. W., Washington, D. C. Francis Earle, Jr 128 Highland Ave., Montclair, N. i. Arthur Moses Eastburn, Jr 148 E. State St., Doylestown, Pa. Williams Charles Eberhardt, 2 Mount View Ter., Maplewood, N. J. William Mason Edmonstone, 14 New Bedford St., Hyde Park, Mass. Richard Edwards 68 Franklin St., Englewood, N. J. Robert Samuel Eisner Prospect Ave., Red Bank, N. L Carl Martin Elkan 75 Prospect Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Sherman Kingsbury Ellis, Jr., 16 Paddington Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. George McKee Elsey 319 Fifth St., Oakmont, Pa. Charles William Engelhard Bernardsville, N. J. Clarence McDonald England, Jr., Park Hills, Huntington, W. Va. Theodore English 700 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Sondford Garland Etherington, Jr., 152 E. 81st St., New York, N. Y. John Evans, Jr 2001 E. Alameda Ave., Denver, Colo. Freeman Fairchild Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, N. Y. Dawson Lycurgus Farber, Jr 914 D St., Sparrow Pt., Md. William Wallace Paris 201 W. Spring St., Anna, 111. William Bonner Fell 871 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. ]. Melchor Gaston Ferrer 10 E. 66th St., New York, N. Y. George Thomas Fielding, III.. 20 West North St., Stamford, Conn. Temple Hornaday Fielding. .20 West North St., Stamford, Conn. James Myers Finch, Jr 6 Centre Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Henry Robert Fischer 316 W. 9th St., Erie, Pa. David Hazlitt King Flagg Denbigh , Radnor, Pa. William James Flather, III, 4000 Nebraska Ave., Washington, D. C. George Kenneth Fla veil, Jr., 5438 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Donald Rogers Fletcher, 414 Swarthmore Ave., Ridley Park, Pa. James Harmon Flinn, Jr... 1000 Harvard Rd.. Grosse Point, Mich. Robert Stevens Forman, Middle Neck Rd., Sands Point, Long Island, N. Y. Addison Youngs Foshay, Jr 220 Rugby Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. John William Foster, II 494 Riverside Ave., Trenton, N. J. Frederic Ewing Fox 12 Clubway St., Hartsdale, N. Y. Joseph Robert Fox 24 Levering Mill Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa, Harrison Shedd Fraker 1001 Rahway Rd., Plainfield, N. J. Benjamin Franklin, III Box 121, Glenside, Pa. Norman Randolph Freeman, Jr 210 Northway, Baltimore, Md. James Mott French 936 Lakeshore Rd., Detroit, Mich. John Winslow French Pawling, N. Y. David Henry Frisch 130 Luther Dr., San Antonio, Tex. James Mcllroy Fritz 490 Wilbur St., Dubuque, Iowa Frank Montford Fucik, 2767 S. Deere Park Dr., Highland Park, 111. Henry Elwell Funk 419 Bolsover Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Richard Edgar Funkhouser 33 Perdicaris PL, Trenton, N. J. Henry Natsch Furnald, Jr., 4701 Grosvenor Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Ellwood Harrar Furst 124 W. Linn St., Bellefonte, Pa. Lawrence Henry Galloway 1401 Civic Opera Bldg., Chicago, 111. Robert Fetter Galvin 2217 West Market, Lima, Ohio John Garretson Gaston, II 174 W. High St., Somerville, N. J. James Thomas Gearhart 935 Wayne Ave., Wyomissing, Pa. Peter Ten Eyck Gebhard, Jr 37 Grover St., Auburn, N. Y. John Harrison Gefaell 2 Stoneleigh Park, Westfield, N. J. Roger Geffen 439 E. 51st St., New York, N. Y. Joseph Martin Gidding....285 Central Park W., New York, N. Y. Joseph Tomlinson Gifford 132 Connett PL, So. Orange, N. J. Arthur Gwyer Gilkes. 119-20 Union Turnpike, Kew Gardens, L. I., N. Y. Norman Lembach Gill. .39 Tallahassee Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Gardner Gillespie Adam Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Robert Dale Gilliam 208 Pershing Ave., Collingdale, Pa. Stanley Hugh Gilman 9 Marshall Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Samuel Robin Ginsburg 227 Paulison Ave., Passaic, N. J. Edward Walker Givens 303 Jericho Rd., Abington, Pa. Two Hundred Sixty-nine Class of 1939 (Continued) f. Name Address Alan Harold Gleason 6 Highland Heights, Rochester, N. Y. William Gregg Glenney 916 Madison Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Lorens Henry Good 10551 Wyton Dr., Los Angeles, Cal. Stanford Denton Goodman, Jr 845 Boulevard, Westfield, N. J. Philip Atherton Goold, Jr 414 W. 120th St., New York, N. Y. Landis Gores 3874 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio John Craven Gorman 182 White Plains Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Homer Gralton....lll2 Michigan Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. John Graham Bloomfield Ave., Montclair, N. J. Robert Waddington Grange, 330 Ueadow Lane, Edgewrorth, Pa. Alton Tegethoff Greeley Hotel Strafford, New York, N. Y. Adrian Jacques Grossman The Granada, Ashland PI. and Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Milton Monroe Grover Wingdale, N, Y. James Dominick Hackett, Jr., 138-17 Franklin Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Eric Hill Hager 4 De Puyster Ave., Tenafly, N. J. George Steiner Haight 23 Oak Lane, Pleasantvllle, N. Y. Eben Clarke Hall 268 Madison Ave., Flushing, N. Y. William Burton Hall 4 East Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md, John Berne Hannum, III Middletown Rd., Elwyn, Pa. Raleigh Hansl, Jr 22 E. 36th St., New York, N. Y. John Wellmer Hanson 81 Superior Rd., Bellerose, N. Y. Richard Bernay Harding 1233 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Elton Harkless, Jr 1409 Centennial St., McKeesport, Pa. Ashby Taylor Harper 1456 Pennington Rd., Trenton, N. J. George Staples Harrington, 16th St. and Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del. William Gibson Harris 5417 Gary St., Richmond, Va. William Bradford Harwood, Jr 37-24 147th St., Flushing, N. Y. Robert Haskins, Jr 5904 Three Chopt Rd., Richmond, Va. Walter Rutherford Hatfield, 312 Ouinobequin Rd., Waban, Mass. John Henry Hauberg 23rd Street Hill, Rock Island, 111. Oliver Hershman Havens 550 Fairmont Ave., Westfield, N. J. Arthur Donald Hay 145 Morris Ave., Mountain Lakes, N. J. Mark Hayes, Jr 105 S. Oakland Ave., Ventnor, N. J. Norman Trump Hayes, Jr Airdale Ave., Rosemont, Pa. Harry Williams Hazard III 83 Montague PI., Montclair, N. J. Donald Bryce Heard Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Samuel Roy Heath 435 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. J. John Griffith Hendrickson Princeton Junction, N. J. Robert Scovil Hendrickson, Jr Lawrenceville, N. J. Everett Josiah Higbee, Jr., Runneymede Hotel, Atlantic City, N. J. John Edwards Higginbotham, 290 Voze Ave., South Orange, N. ]. Robert Baker Highsaw..286 South Watkins St., Memphis, Tenn. Robert Bertram Hilgendorff 16 Oakwood PL, Elizabeth, N. J. Mark Frieder Hill 468— 4th Ave., New York, N. Y. Robert Eugene Hill 222 Locust St., Roselle, N. J. Canfield McKnight Himes Prospect Hall , Frederick, Md. Robert Yost Hinshaw Westlawn, Pa. La Bar Post Hoagland 54 Tradd St., Charleston, S. C. Edward Windsor Hobler -26 Northway St., Bronxville Herbert Leonard Hodgetts-468 Linswood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. William Frederick Hofmann, Jr 85-33 149th St., Jamaica, N. Y. Leavenworth Holden Easton, Md. Earle Taylor Holsapple Scarsdale, N. Y. Robert Rutherford Holt 1816 Avondale Cir., Jacksonville, Fla. Oliver William Hopkinson, Jr 711 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. George Marshall Hornblower.-755 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Ralph Horton, Jr 21 E. 82nd St., New York, N. Y. Everett Leonard Hoskins, Jr 12 North Dr., Malba, L. 1., N. Y. Richard Ralston Hough 1456 Pennington Rd., Trenton, N. ]. William Robert Howard 978 Sunbury Rd., Columbus, Ohio Edward Gordon Howe 177 High St., Passaic, N. ]. Benjamin Franklin Howell, Jr 12 College Rd., Princeton, N. J. Edward George Hubbard 941 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Robert Walker Humphrey 145 Heights Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. Adrian Clyde Humphreys, Jr., 45 Exeter St., Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. William McClelland Hunt Byroad Farm, Lambertville, N. J. John Campbell Hurdman..l39 N. Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. Edwin Mars Irish 504 N. 4th St., Steubenville, Ohio Washington Irving 16 E. 65th St., New York, N. Y. Donald McDonald Irwin East Setauket, L. I., N. Y. Ralph Borden Jackson Western Military Academy, Alton, III. William Burr Jadden 824 Beaver St., Sewickley, Pa. John Alexander James, Jr. 205 W. French PL, San Antonio, Texas Nelson Pierce James 169 Mt. Vernon St., West Newtonville, Mass. Two Hundred Seventy William Walser Janeway....! St. Marks PL, Staten Island, N. Y. John Frederick Jansen West St., Wrentham, Mass. David Henry Jaquith 171 W. Lafayette St., Syracuse, N. Y. Gaston Jennings 21 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. George Howard Johnson, Jr., 324 Shadeland Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Harding Johnson, Jr 34 Hawthorne PL, Summit, N. J. John Brayton Johnson 221 Flower Ave., W., Watertown, N. J. Woodruff Barnes Johnson Redstone Lane, Washington, Pa. Don Porter Johnston, Jr Wake Forest, N. C. Harrison Johnston, IV 5410 Westover Rd., Kansas City, Mo. William Gordon Johnston, Hobart Ave. and Whitney Rd., Short Hills, N. J. Wallace Wylie Judd, 852 Pennsylvania Ave., Youngstown, Ohio David Seguin Junker 22 Montrose Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Fred August Kahler, 111 435 Hawthorne Ave., Winnetka, III. Arthur McKinley Kallop....I64 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Ike Simpson Kampmann, Jr., 131 E. King ' s Highway, San Antonio, Texas Godfrey Willis Kauffmann, I West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. John Howard Kay- Peapack, N. J. Howard Atwood Kelly 904 Johnston BIdg., Charlotte, N. C. John Stewart Kellogg 118 E. 70th St., New York, N. Y. Perry Hoge Kenly 70 E. Cedar St., Chicago, III. Thomas Kenworthy, N. E. Corner Limekiln Pike and Waverley Rd., Glenside, Pa. John Paige Kerns Seaview Ave., Tuisset, Mass. John Thompson Kerr 156 Irving Rd., York, Pa. Arthur Hawkins Keyes, Jr 77 Grove St., Rutland, Vt. James Ferdinand Kieckhefer, Station C, Route 9, Box 819, Milwaukee, Wis. Rufus Gunn King, Jr Woodway Park, Edmonds, Wash. C. Frank Kireker, Jr Saddle Rd., Hackensack, N. J. Howard Lincoln Klein, 42 Mohican Park Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. John Wingo Knowles 5001 Cary St. Rd., Richmond, Va. Wolford Kraybill 455 Lincoln Ave., Beaver, Pa. Elliot Carter Laidlaw, Jr 758 W. 8th St., Plainfield, N. J. William Noble Lane.. ..2810 E. Bradford Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Charles Angus Langill....252 Clinton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. David Haskell Lanman, Jr 161 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Lewis Cobbs Laslie 426 Felder Ave., Montgomery, Ala. Charles Latham, Jr.- 1314 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind. Charles Frederick Laycock, 78 W. Northampton St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Fred Leake, Jr Harding Rd., Nashville, Tenn. Walter Ashton Lee Stagwell, Queenstown, Md. Alexander Hay Lehmann 236 E. 62nd St., New York, N. Y. Archibald Willard Leonard Covewood, Rowayton, Conn. Frank Steven Leto 21 Stoner Ave., Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Charles Foster Limberg 2 Lenox PL, St. Louis, Mo. E. Burrell Lindsay 22 Valley Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Richard Faye Lindsay Haiku, Mani, Hawaii William Henry Lippitt 110 Nun St., Wilmington, S. C. Rufus Lisle, 111 32 Woodcrest Ave., Dayton, Ohio Robert Forsyth Little 25 East End Ave., New York, N. Y. George Robertson Livermore, Jr., 1456 Carr Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Lorton Stoy Livingston 3221 Drayton St., Savannah, Ga. Jere Wheelwright Lober Ill Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. Robert Arthur Lockwood Ben Mar Rd., Pelham, N. Y. Littleton Long 827 Colfax St., Evanston, 111. Douglas Anderson Loper 821 Prospect Ave., Winnetka, III. George Ransom Lord, Jr., 452 Pelhamdale Rd., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Walter Lord 4314 Roland Court, Baltimore, Md. Philip Holt Lowry Vineyard Lane, Greenwich, Conn. David Miles Lustig 115 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. William Berger Lynch 931 Forest Ave., Birmingham, Mich. Ashton Murray Lyon 126 Poplar Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Roger Powell Lyon 349 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Ross Cooper Lyons, 4971 Hillbrook Lane, N. W., Washington, D. C. Lambert Lyons-Montgomery, Jr. Abbott Court Apartments, Radburn. N. J. Francis Eyre Parker McCarter Rumson Park, Red Bank, N. J. Robert Marshall McClung 324 W. Penn St., Butler, Pa. Andrew Morrill McCullagh..444 Hillside PL, South Orange, N. J. Andrew Mclnnes 1080 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert James McKay, Jr Basking Ridge, N. J. William Graham McKeIvy Oakhurst, High St., Easton, Pa. James Brett McKinney 1086 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Class of 1939 (Continued) Name Address Sterling Alexander MacKinnon 17 Avon Rd., Narberth, Pa. John Shockley McKnight 2821 N. Taney St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert McNichol Chamounix Rd., St. Davids, Pa. John Forrest MacEnulty Port Washington, L. I., N. Y. Osv ald Karl Marquardt....26 Norman Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. Robert Ain.ey Marsh. ...82-15 Abingdon Rd., K.ev Gardens, N. Y. Manton Camp Martin, ...248 W. Hazelw ood Ave., Rahway, N. J. James Layng Martine 79 Roland Ave., South Orange, N. J. Pettersen Barto Marzoni, Jr., 1815 Melrose PI., Birmingham, Ala. Morris Mather, Jr 1242 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. John Carstens Matthevirs 73 Nevirfield St.. East Orange, N. J. Thomas Fowler Maurice 405 E. 54th St., New York, N. Y. Lee Wilder Maxwell, Jr Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Sanders Maxwell 15 Richey PI., Trenton, N. J. John Wheaton Mayers East River Rd., Grosse He, Mich. John Paulding Meade Old Bedford Rd., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Robert Baldwin Meech, 2603 Newton Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. Herbert William Melum 823 Ashland Ave., River Forest, 111. Henry DePuy Merrick Morewood Heights, Pittsburgh, Pa. Gordon Merrick... Bryn Mawr, Pa. William Findley Merrifield, 13705 Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Harris Metcalf 87 Williams St., Providence, R. I. John Edward Meyer 4227 Altomont Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Alverton Miller 1218 Farragut St., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Hamilton Miller, II Tide Marshes, Duxbury, Mass. Rowley Miller Maplewoods, Wayzata, Minn. George McFarlane Milligan 5718 Elgin Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thorley Charlton Mills, 3004 Washington Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Herbert Louis Moeller....l39 McKinley Ave., New Haven, Conn. John Wise Moffat, Jr 324 Redmond Rd.. South Orange, N. J. James Robley Moor 914 S. Aiken Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederick Potts Moore, II 293 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. William Brown Moore 572 Manor Lane, Richmond, Va. William Edward Moore, Greenwhich Lodge Apts., Lafayette PL, Greenwich, Conn. Charles Baird Morgan 8701 Ridge Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. William Silsby Morgan, 55 High Ridge Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Henry Morganthau, III 2201 R St., Washington, D. C. Richard Paul Morten 321 Griggs Ave., Teaneck, N. J. Thomas Raymond Mountain. .66 Chestnut St., East Orange, N. J. Russell Lowell Mueller 55 Christopher St., Montclair, N. J. William Randolph Mueller 312 Northfield PI., Baltimore. Md. James Whedbee Mullen. II 4909 Gary St. Rd., Richmond, Va. Peter James Murphy, Jr 1 Hickory Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. Richard Wallace Murrie 256 E. Chocolate Ave., Hershey, Pa. Howard Ellis Myerle Bedford, N. Y. Richard William Myers 969 Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Edwin Stuart Neely 5115 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Francis Winter Nelson 317 Lawn Ridge Rd., Orange, N. J. John Ogden Nelson 2 E. 86th St., New York, N. Y. David Gulick Nes 100 W. Springettsbury Ave., York, Pa. John Seymour NichoU, Jr., 5 Hundreds Circle, Wellesley Hill, Mass. William Burgoyne Nichols. .30 Clermont Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. Francis Bailey Nimick Thorn Run Rd., Coraopolis, Pa. Vanburen Nixon 149 Central Ave., Fredonia, N. Y. Edward Francis Norton, Jr., 5 Colonial Court, West Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Gilbert Clarence Norton 110 Highland Ave.. Yonkers, N. Y. Patrick Parnell O ' Day 517 Washington St., Buffalo, N. Y. John Patton Ogden 50 E. 45th St., New York, N. Y. John Lyman Ogg 250 Cambridge St.. Syracuse, N. Y. Stephen Hunter Ogilvy....78 Sutton Manor, New Rochelle, N. Y. Clifford Bradley O ' Hara 448 Lincoln Ave., Orange, N. J. Packard Laird Okie Old Lancaster Rd., Berwyn, Pa. Frederick Osann, Jr 257 Soundview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Alexander Perry Osborn, Jr 160 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. John Jay Osborn 123 E. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. Philip Osborne 17 Park St., Tenafly, N. J. Ben Mather Osbun 12 Chatham Rd.. Atlanta. Ga. Percival De Witt Oviatt. Jr 236 Harrington St., Rochester, N. Y. William Annin Paddock Katonah, N. Y. Nicholas Francis Pallotti 44 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. Otto Morrow Palmer, 103 W. Willow Grove Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa. Daniel Frank Pariser 99 Murray Ave., Uniontown, Pa. Amory Jencks Parmentier. Jr 220 Third St., Uniontown, Pa. William Crocker Parsons 204 Kent Rd.. Ardmore, Pa. William Acker Pate 79 Bush Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Name Address Philip Cooper Patterson Gwynedd, Pa. Robert Affleck Peelor....l63 Academy Rd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Joseph Gaxton Pendleton, Jr Calcium P. O., Berlo County, Pa. William Robert Perkins..5510 16th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Louis Petito 224 Pearl St., Trenton, N. J. Karl Dravo Peltit, Jr Ridgeview Rd., Princeton, N. j. Henry Dan Piper 213 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. John Williams Pitney Bernardsville, N. J. Warren Dikeman Piatt, Jr 32 Herkimer St., Waterbury, Conn. Gerard Bernard Podesta 216 Grove St., Montclair, N. J. Ezra Parmelee Prentice, Jr 206 E. 61st St., New York, N. Y. William Olmsted Price 39 E. Logan St., Germantown, Pa. Weston Carpenter PuUen, Jr 75 Crescent St., Norwich, Conn. Eben Wright Pyne Bernardsville, N. J. Nicholas Alvin Ouinn, 192 Woodland Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Lawrence Parker Ralston 64 Fifth Ave., Stamford, Conn. James Childs Rea, Jr 102 Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frederick Lawrence Redpath, 107 Maplewood Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Oliver Howard Reeder 101 Charlcote Rd., Baltimore, Md. David Reid 150 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. Arthur Robert Reis 50 E. 68th St., New York, N. Y. Richard Emerick Reiss 146 Central Park W., New York, N. Y. George Henry Reppert, Jr., 270 N. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Trumbull Richard 1060 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Donald Kirkland Richards P. O. Box 825, Lawrenceville, N. J. Albert Butler Richardson c o Chesebrough Mfg. Co., 17 State St., New York, N. Y. Henry David Richardson 15 Waldron Ave., Summit, N. J. Robert John Riddle 63 Central Ave., Manasquan, N. J. Whitman Ridgway 440 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Paul Henry Ringer, Jr 273 Pearson Dr., Asheville, N .C. Albert Edward Rising 117-15 84th Ave., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Mark Tucker Robbins 25 Kenilworth St., Pittsfield, Mass. Brooke Roberts Bala, Pa. Charles Shepherd Roberts 247 Chestnut Rd., Winnetka, 111. Harold McAfee Robinson, Jr., 7944 Pleasant Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Hugh Robinson 2101 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Richard RoUand Robinson-Hawthorne Court, Wheeling, W. Va. William Wheeler Robinson 210 North Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Clyd Shannon Roche Via Bellaria, Palm Beach, Fla. Thomas Kirby Roche 1815 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Archibald Coleman Rogers Waterbury, Md. Jesse Comfort Rogers, Jr 978 E. 40th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Henry Rolston 268 Robin Rd., Englewood, N. J. Robert Wendell Roop, St. George Hotel, Clark St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Emlen Roosevelt 804 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Joseph Franklin Rorke 342 N. 5th St., Reading, Pa. John Thompson Ross 200 E. Chestnut St., Chicago, 111. James Lincoln Rowe 817 Peoples Gas Bldg., Chicago, 111. Homer Burket Russell 2715 Broadway, Great Bend, Kan. Elwin James Salter 23 Forest Ave., Everett, Mass. Edward Johnson Sanger Ruxton, Md. Edward Watts Saunders 18 Crestwood Dr., St. Louis, Mo. John Emery Sawyor, Jr 136 Prospect St.. Westfield, N. J. Bernard Streeper Sayer 3 Hawthorne PL, Montclair, N. J. Edward William Schall 17 Altamont Ct., Morristown, N. J. Arthur Walter Schmidt 58 Wi ' dwood Rd., Ridgeway, N. J. John Frederick Schmidt, Jr 771 Avenue C. Bayonne, N .J. Herman Albert Schmitz Hotel Pierre, New York, N. Y. Elmer Charles Schuerhoff... 2530 Erickson St., E. Elmhurst, N, I, Giles Rolfe Scofield, Jr 750 Seneca Pkwy., Rochester. N. Y. Oren Scotten 910 Edgemont Park. Grosse Point, Mich. David Scull 8525 Ardmore Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. John Martin Seabrook R. F. D. No. 5, Brldgeton, N. J. Stephen Stanley Sechrist 256 W. Broadway. Red Lion, Pa. Edwin Alexander Seipp, Jr 2340 Lincoln Park W., Chicago, 111. John Edward Semmes, Jr., 100 W. University Parkway, Baltimore, Md, Harold Hawley Seymour Oak Hearth, Chatham, N. Y. Frank Wampler Shaffer .2108 Jenny Lind Ave., New York, N. Y. Henry Howe Sharkey, R. F. D. No. 6. Wilburlha Rd., Trenton, N. I. Albert Bord Sharp 920 Washington Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. George Francis Shaskan, Jr.. 195 Central Ave.. Lawrence, N. Y. George Woodthorp Shepherd, Jr., 620 Bloomfiold Ave., Verona, N. J. Ronald Fitz-Randolph Sheppard. 189 Montclair Ave., Montclair, N. J. John Stager Shirk Lantoga Route No. 3, Lititz, Pa. Two Hundred Seventy-one Class of 1939 (Continued) Name Address Nome Address Fiederick Whitney Shull 60 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. J. David Webber Sidford 20 Fernwood Rd., Summit, N. J. Arthur Homer Silvers 90 Donaldson Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Walter Rankin Silvester State Hway. No. 31, Princeton, N. J. Thomas Taggart Sinclair.. ..5797 Sunset Lane, Indianapolis, Ind. Lemuel Skidmore, Jr 13 Edgewood Dr., Summit, N. J. Corbin Jewett Smith 25 Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Fulcher Perry Smith, Jr EUerslie Rd., Cum berland, Md. Howard Kingsley Smith.... 144-25 Northern Blvd., Flushing, N. Y. Karl Beckwith Smith, Jr., 6 North Mountain Drive, Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Robert Pease Smith 375 Maple Ave., Burlington, Vt. William Headley Garthwraite Smith, 144 Ralston Ave., South Orange, N. J. William Leigh Smith 195 Glenwood Ave., East Orange, N. J. Frederick Reinhardt Snyder, 1226 Perkiomen Ave., Reading, Pa. William Willing Spruance....2507 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Fred Gordon Stager 244 Merion Rd., Merion, Pa. Ernest Richmond Steele, Jr 42 State St., Dover, Del. John Nelson Steele 156 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y Bayard Macdonald Stevens Forest Dr., Short Hills, N. J. Frank Moore Stewart American University, Beirut, Syria Wilbur Coe Stoll 9 5th Ave., Brooklyn Park, Baltimore, Md. Raymond Tracy Stotler, Jr., The Ambassador, 7 W. 14th St., Tulsa, Okla. William Boulton Dixon Stroud .Broughton Lane, Villa Nova, Pa. Robert Joseph Sullivan 121 Rynda Rd., South Orange, N. J. Charles Brown Swartwood, Jr 201 Pine St., Corning, N. Y. Eugene Beauharnais Sydnor, Jr. 6016 St. Andrew ' s Lane, Richmond, Va. Richard Warfield Sylvester 345 Ninth Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. Gilbert Joton Symington, Jr., 2150 S. Hobart Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. Robert Livingston Tapscott 62 3rd St., Garden City, N. Y. John Milton Tassie 404 Winthrop Apts., Meriden, Conn. James Swan Taylor, Jr 3030 Broad Ave., Altoona, Pa. Lawrence Taylor 475 Lancaster Ave., Haverford, Pa. Thomas Harry Taylor R. D. No. 1, North Girard, Pa. John Montague Teevan 1619 Ridge Ave., Evanston, 111. Philip Gibson Terrie 1573 Virginia St., Charleston, W. Va. David Scott Thompson, Assiut College, American Mission, Assiut, Egypt Herbert Fergus Thompson, Jr.. .38 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Richard Dowling Thomson....6828 Milton Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Dudley Thum.. 15681 Brewster Rd., East Cleveland, Ohio Wolfgang Joseph Thron 220 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. Martin Thomas Tiernan Oak Lane, Essex Fells, N. J. Charles MacNaughton Tillinghast, 2374 Woodraere Dr., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Albert Tippen 221 Beechwood Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. Charles William Toebe, Jr., 6448 Woodbine Ave., Overbrook, Pa. Carl Edward Touhey 16 Terrace Ave., Albany, N. Y. Charles Townsend, Jr 228 Angell St., Providence, R. I. Howard Griffin Turner, Jr., 281 Mountain Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Cornelius John Tyson, Jr 23 Ridge Dr., Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Richard Rathuon Uhl 240 Reynolds St., Kingston, Pa. Robert Perkins Uhl 240 Reynolds St., Kingston, Pa. Alfred Conrad Ulmer, Jr Ortega Ter., Ortega, Fla. James Sowerbutt Vandermade, 218 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Hendrik vanOss 226 E. 9th St., Plainfield, N. J. John Duane Verdery....Pomfret Landing, Pomfret Center, Conn. Charles Wills Vernon, Jr 65 Brookfield Rd., Montclair, N. J. John Gray Vockrodt 3061 Lewiston Rd., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Edgar Frederick Vom Lehn 464 E. 24th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Karl Mensch Waage 4513 Chester Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Stanley Harrison Wagner.. ..4600 Fieldston Rd., Fieldston, N. Y. Alexander James Dallas Wainwright, Meeting House Rd., Gwynedd, Pa. Albert Whitney Waldron, Jr 3044 Rodman, Washington, D. C. Julius Earll Waller 11 Front St., Schenectady, N. Y. Robert Miller Walmsley, III 1515 State St., New Orleans, La. Walter Hillman Walne, Jr 1405 South Blvd., Houston, Texas lames Augustus Walsh, Jr 4300 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, lU. Philip Russell Warner Oval and Fells Rds., Essex Fells, N. I. Guy Scott Warren, Jr 404 Franklin St., Grand Haven, Mich. Alan Tower Waterman, Jr., Hartford Turnpike, North Haven, Conn. Richard Bernard James Wathen, 435 E. 52nd St., New York, N. Y. Frank Graham Watson 31 Clermont Lane, Clayton, Mo. Howell Webb Webb School, Claremont, Cal. Thompson Webb, Jr Webb School, Claremont, Cal. Hendryk Snydam Weeks 1279 Clinton PI., Elizabeth, N. J. William Weeks 150 Bryton St., Englewood, N. J. James Isaac Wendell, Jr The Hill School, Pottstown, Pa. Richard Gordon Wendt 1323 Central Ave., Sandusky, Ohio Earl Chester Wenger Oregon St., Mercersburg, Pa. Jack West 32-45 46th St., Long Island City, N. Y. Cuyler Van Ness Westcott, 241 E. South Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah Allen Oldfather Whipple, Jr., 5263 Fieldston Rd., Riverdale, N. Y. Alanson Perine White, 5116 Aldrich Ave.. S. Minneapolis, Minn. Richard Brighton White 248 S. 9th St., Lebanon, Pa. Nelson Whitman Simsbury, Conn. Charles Aven Whittington, 401 E. Market St., Greenwood, Mass. John Vincent Whittlesey 219 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. William Hollingsworth Whyte, III, Virginia Ave., West Chester, Pa. Henry Lawton Wightman, Jr 42-36 147th St., Flushing, N. Y. George Howe Wilder 694 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J. James Henry Wilkes 64 Harwood Dr., Upper Darby, Pa. Pitt Sawyer Willand 237 State St., Batavia, N. Y. James Hazelwood Williams. ...4938 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Donald Randolph Wilson.. ..350 Hickman St., Clarksburg, W. Va. John Allen Wilson 264 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Norman Douglas Wilson Hammermill Rd., Erie, Pa. William Henry Wilson, Jr 350 18th Ave., Paterson, N. J. William Valentine Winslow, Jr., 1 1 1 Mayhew Dr., South Orange, N. J. Grandin Wise 2610 Spuyten Duyvil Pkwy., New York, N. Y. Pierpont Jeffris Wood 502 St. Lawrence St., Janesville, Wis. Richard George Woodbridge, Jr. 2407 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Richard Fielding Lewis Wortham 200 Kimberly Ave., Asheville, N. C. Beaumont Whitney Wright, 300 W. Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill, Pa. Hugh deNeufville Wynne 55 Plymouth St., Montclair, N. J. Gayle Lafon Young, Jr 400 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Henry Newton Young, III Rosedale Rd., Princeton, N. J. Ernest August Zillessen 11 West Parkway, Clifton, N. J Two Hundred Seventy-two Class Officers, 1940 No officers were elected by the class of 1940 during the first term of its Freshmen year in accordance with the established custom. A plan of the Senior Council in 1926 provided that this time be allowed entering men for acquainting themselves with mem- bers of their class and consideration of their capaci- ties for leadership. A committee of the Undergrad- uate Council consisting of T. E. Barnicle, ' 39, E. W. Hobler, ' 39, and F. D. Sauter, ' 37, directed the class. Two Hundred Seventy-three Class of 1940 Name Address Name Address John Bland Aaron 16 Ziegler Tract, Penn ' s Grove, N. J. Russel Vroom Adams, Jr 48 North Ter., Maplewood, N. J, William Scott Agar 13 Newlin Rd., Princeton, N. J, Bruce Reynolds Alger -1102 Summit, Webster Groves, Miss. Richard Keith AUoways .928 S. Rose St., Kalamazoo, Mich. Dwfight Merwin Allyn..453 EUsv orth Ave., Nev Haven, Conn. Charles Brov n Anderson----608 Academy Ave., Sewickley, Pa. David John Anderson, Netherwood, The Great Rd., Princeton, N. J, Robert Edwin Anderson....3418 R. C. A. Bldg., New York, N. Y, George Borup Andrews U E. 73rd St., New York, N. Y, Mason Cooke Andrews 929 Graydon Ave., Norfolk, Va. John Edward Angst Montreal, Wis Harold Walton Arberg 10 Morningside Ave., Montclair, N. J Jack Glasson Areson 65 N. FuUerton, Montclair, N. J Henry Louis Austin 809 Carpenter Lane, Philadelphia, Pa John Absalom Baird, Jr., 252 Everette Rd., Edgewood Arsenal, Md. Edward Bruce Baetjer Garrison P. O., Baltimore, Md. John Stewart Baker, Jr 31 Forest Dr., Short Hills, N. J. Conrad James Balentine 241 St. Joseph St., Easton, Pa. Albert Kingsmill Baragwanath....l03 Alta Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Spencer Finney Barber 912 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. A.lfred Raymond Barbour..! 1 18 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Alexis Irenee duPont Bayard. .9 Red Oak Rd., Wilmington, Del. Carl Augustus Beck 107 Montgomery Ave., Cynwyd, Pa. Carl Albert Beier, Jr 921 55th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gordon Flint Bell 260 Washington Circle, Lake Forest, 111. Frank Blatz Bender 342 W. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. Edward Henry Bennett 12 McKinley St., Bronxville, N. Y. William Kramer Bennett 7416 Church Ave., Ben Avon, Pa. Robert Granger Benson 103 E. 84th St., New York, N. Y. Herman Henry Bertram, Jr., 14 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Livinston Ludlow Biddle, Jr Highland Lane, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Nicholas Biddle, Jr Old York Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Frederic Wolfe Binns 507 Claflin Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Edward Welles Bixby, Jr., 292 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Harrison Black 1881 Madison Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio George Glover Blackmore, 37-33 76th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Herbert Allan Boas Byde-a-Whyle , Farmington, Conn. Richard Carlton Boeker 39 High St., Passaic, N. J. Two Hundred Seventy-four Richard Drummond Bokum, II, 1242 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Charles Edward Bonine, Jr., 100 Surrey Rd., Melrose Park, Pa. Robert Clemens Boone 121 Buckingham Rd., Montclair, N. J. Charles William Boozan 666 Union Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Robert Austin Joseph Bordley Garden Apt., Baltimore, Md. Richard Francis Bortz 1510 Hampden Blvd., Reading, Pa. Smith Palmer Bovie Box 96, Eatontown, N. J. Dexter Bowker 46 E. Grant Ave., Roselle Park, N. J. John Douglas Bradbury. ...3706 Ingomar St., Washington, D. C. Joseph George Bradshaw 532 E. State St., Trenton, N. J. Harrison Brand, III 3221 Woodland Dr., Washington, D. C. Robert Nead Brandin 14 Rugby Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Thomas Berry Brazelton, Jr., 2400 Washington Ave., Wacc, Texas Francis William Brennan 119 N. Munn Ave., Newark, N. J. George Howard Bright 25 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N. J. Howard Copland Briscoe, 292 S. Columbia Ave., Columbus. Ohio Paul Francis Brogan.. 8 Greenway North. Forest Hills, N. Y. John Reynolds Brooks 15 Hatch Ter., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Archer Brown, II Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Arthur Willever Brown ...26 Holly St., Cranford, N. J. Charles Harold Brown, Jr 8 Woodland Ter.. Yonkers, N. Y. Louis Page Brown Villa Nova, Pa. Josef Henry Buerger 700 River Rd., Beaver, Pa. Edgar Quinby Bullock, Jr., 714 Greenhill Ave., Wilmington, Del. Jervis Watson Burdick, Jr 625 Walnut Lane, Haverford, Pa. James Campbell Burkham....2 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. William Vance Burley, Jr., 37 Washington Sq. W., New York, N. Y. George Deal Butler 952 Foulkrad St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Allan Butz 18 Burnett Ter., Maplewood, N. J. George Henry Cadgene Box 543, Englewood, N. J. Robert Alexander Calsibet 36 Chester Ave., Newark, N. J. Lee Andrew Carey 35 Prospect Park West. Brooklyn, N. Y. William Price Carl 264 Grand Ave., Baldwin, L. I., N. Y. David Bassel Carper 519 W. Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. Laurence Alfred Carton 6 E. Laurel Ave., Lake Forest, 111. Edward Dodd Cashore, 2276 Bellefield Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Edward Owen Cerf 6705 S. E. 32nd Ave., Portland, Ore. Class of 1940 (Continued) Name Address Henry Bishop Chalmers, Jr., 5026 Arlington Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. John Rea Chamberlin, Jr St. Davids Ave., St. Davids, Pa. John Thompson Chew Radnor, Pa. Edvirard Ogden Clark, 490 E. Abinqton Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Thomas Howard Cleavenger 2279 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. David Robbins Coffin, 44 Sound Beach Ave., Old Greenwich, Conn. William Egan Colby 710 Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Peter Duane Cole Millbrook, N. J. John Coleman, Jr 55 Green Bay Rd., Lake Forest, 111. John Chichester Collingwood, Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Sydney Sayre Combs Route 5, Lexington, Ky. Paul Taylor Condit 34 Westcott Rd., Princeton, N. J. Philip Conway Blue Mill Rd., Green Village, N. J. Edward Bernard Cornelius.. ..39 Penn Dr., West Hartford, Conn. George Cowen 39 E. 74th St., New York, N. Y. Louis Osborne Coxe 42 Chestnut St., Salem, Mass. Gordon Crabb 5 Greenview Way, Upper Montclair, N. J. Harold Lyon Crane, Jr 9 Wilson Ter., Elizabeth, N. J. William Lyle Cranston, 3010 Wisconsin Ave. N. W., Washington, D. C. James Jefferson Cross, Jr 746 Fourth Ave., Laurel, Miss. Grant Curry, Jr R. F. D. No. 2, Corapolis, Pa. Robert Porter Cutler 207 Woodstock Ave., Kenilworth, 111. Joseph Benson Darlington 762 Clark St., Westfield, N. J. James Campbell Daubenspeck 1207 24th Ave., Altoono, Pa. Jack Dougan Davidson.. 170 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Robert Sloan Davidson 62 East St., Walton, N. Y. William Melvin Davidson, 63 Overlook Rd., Upper Montclair, N. ]. Robert Sanders Davies 49 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. Edwin Sawyer Davis 310 Main St., Mt. Holly, N. J. Frank Faville Davis Lake Mills, Wis. Murray MacLellan Day Temple, N. H. David Duffield Deacon 16 E. 83rd St., New York. N. Y. Albert Ivans CroU De Friez....4 Gibson Ter.. Cambridge, Mass. David Franklin Demarest 33 Clarendon PL, Bloomfield, N. I. William Gustavus Demarest, 36 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y. Arthur William Dern..60 Woodland Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Victor George De Wolfe, 5 Windsor House, Tudor City, New York, N. Y. Daniel Dana Dickey 2827 Scarborough Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Thomas Atherton Dickey Oxford, Pa. Thomas Henry Dixon 7801 Creshelm Rd., Chestnut Hill, Pa. William Thomas Dixon Worton, Md. Charles Kenneth Dorwin Minocqua, Wis. Lewis David Dozier, III 5577 Llndell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Elliott Ramsey Drake Western Dr., Short Hills, N. J. Robert Franklin Dressier 5147 Saul St., Philadelphia, Pa. Edmund Hope Driggs 89 11th St.. Garden City, N. Y. Richard Bach Duane, Jr Locust P. O., N. J. Joseph Napoleon DuBarry, IV Laurel Lane, Haverford, Pa. John Hosack Duff Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York, N. Y. Richard O ' Neil Duff 1435 Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Brokaw Duffield 349 Nassau St., Princeton, N. ]. Samuel Rollin Dunnuck 315 No. Shore Dr., South Bend, Ind. John Russel Dykema..4 10 .Lakeland Ave., Grosse Pointe, Mich. John Collins Early 25 Fernwood Rd., Summit, N. J. George Henry Eckhardt, Jr., 2047 No. Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Francis Charles Edmonds, Jr., 51 Highland Rd., Glen Cove, N. Y. Douglas Alexander Elliott, Jr. 16 Brookside Circle, Bronxville, N. Y. William John Elliott. .5221 Wissahickon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Donovan Russell Ellis. Jr. ..59 Mountain View Ave., Nutley, N. J. Frank Willard Elmendorf 7 Rynda Rd., South Orange, N. I. Frank Newlin Entwistle 44 Garfield PL, Maplewood, N. J. Herbert Epstein 733 Winsor Ave., Elmira, N. Y. Seymour Epstein 14 Altamount Ct., Morristown, N. J. Robert Ennis Farber 914 D, Sparrows Point, Md. Edward Raymond Farley, Jr.. .98 Bodine St., Staten Island, N. Y. John Xerxes Farrar 1512 Hawthorne Ave., Columbus, Ohio William Gregg Farrar.. 8 Edgewood Rd.. McKnight Village, Mo. Theodore Frederick Fenstermacher. 736 E. Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa. Alan David Ferguson. ...14 Princeton PL, Upper Montclair, N. J. Name Address Alberto Federico Fernandez, Calle 26 y 5a Ave., Miramar, Habana, Cuba Norman Painter Findley, Jr. 1917 Ditmars Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Delaplaine Findley Ridge Rd., Rumson, N. I. Thomas Walker Fisher, Jr 302 West 11th St., Tyrone, Pa. James Fitzmorris 1500 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. William Edward Flanagan, 75 Renshaw Ave., East Orange, N. J. Frederic Augustus Fletcher, Jr Tuscany Apts, Baltimore, Md. Frederick David Foots, Jr 2 Beekman PL, New York, N. Y. Gordon Forbes 100 Ashley Rd., Santa Barbara, Cal. Marshall Forrest, Jr 849 Hill Rd., Winnetka, 111. Peter Dean Forsch 11 East 68th St., New York, N. Y. George Hambly Found.. 1190 Phoenix Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. Edwin Tunnicliff Fox, Jr 141 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Robert Charles Fox, Jr 1515 Michigan Ave., La Porte, Ind. Richard Louis Franklin 15 Webster Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Walter Curtin Freed, Jr 1236 Isabella St., Williamsport, Pa. David Forgan Freeman 21 East 90th St., New York, N. Y. John Edgar Freeman, Jr 185 Chestnut St., Winnetka, 111. Robert Strohecker Fricker 3 Howes Ave., Stamford, Conn. Henry Frielinghaus, III 220 Oak St., Weehawken, N. J. William Henderson Friesall, III 102 Dewey Ave., Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa. Cornelius Field Froeb 56 Short Hill Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. Samuel Jackson Reid Froelick....42 Broadway, New York, N. Y. John Langdon Frothingham....2128 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. Newton Philips Frye, Jr 436 Oakdale Rd., Glencoe, 111. Theodore Burroughs Fryer, Jr., 3 East Providence Rd., Lansdowne, Pa. Alfred Dwight Gleason Fuller Gleasondale, Mass. Benjamin Apthorp Gould Fuller, II 376 Randolph Ave., Milton, Mass. Elmer Ellsworth Fuller, Jr., Worcester Ct., Falmouth Heights, Mass. Wilfred John Funk, Jr 16 Erwin Park Rd., Montclair, N. J. Francis Holt Galey, Jr Hillbrook Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Robert Gardiner Galey 340 Third St., Beaver, Pa. Charles Carroll Gardner, Jr 26 Park Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Russell Allan Gardner 43 Portland PL, St. Louis, Mo. John McAlister Geisel 2337 N. Second St.. Harrisburg, Pa. Joseph Alfred Gilleaudeau Shore Acres, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Eugene Pierce Gillespie 5 Chambers Ave., Greenville, Pa. Stephen Oilman R. R. No. 2, Waynesville, Ohio William Allen Gilroy, Jr 6 Morristown, Elizabeth, N. L William Reading Gilson 85 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. Robert J. Ginsburg 11 Dakota St., Passaic, N. J. Robert Francis Goheen. . 50 Maynard Rd., Northampton, Mass. Everett Franklin Goodman. .420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Thomas Yuille Gorman.. 182 White Plains Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Donald Clinton Grant 1736 Winton Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Cleve Gray 30 West 54th St., New York, N. Y. Edward Gounoud Green 8718 Colonial Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edwin Hall Green, Jr 57 Deer Hill Ave., Danbury, Conn. Fitzhugh Green, Jr Sunny Ridge, Harrison, N. Y. Robert Morris Green, Jr Beech Tree Lane, Essex Fells, N. J. Gordon Dix Griffin 808 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N. J. Jonathan De Witt Grout Brooklawn Pk., Bridgeport, Conn. George A. Haas 126 Waverley Way, Atlanta, Go. John Merrick Hage Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Homer Huston Haggard 5 Garden St., Potsdam, N. Y. William Edward Hague, Jr 119 Library PL, Duquesne, Pa. David Crater Haight 131 Hamilton Ave., Englewood, N. J. John McVicker Haight, Jr., 1118 Clay Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. William Joseph Hale Plainsboro, N. ]. MacDonald Halsey 27 Prince St., Elizabeth, N. J. Philip Winthrop Ham, Jr 51 Seymour St., Auburn, N. Y. George A. Hamid 112-15 Fife St., Forest Hills, L. L, N. Y. David Scott Hanson 2736 Berkshire Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Ralph Norman Harkness 221 Sycamore Rd.. Lexinaton. Ky. Crater Harmon Canoebrook Rd., Short Hills. N. J. Stanley Edwards Harris. Jr., 556 S. Landsdown Ave., Landsdowne, Pa. Victor Stevens Harris 405 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Francis Grillet Harrison, Jr 108 Edgehill Rd., Bala, Pa. John Stovell Harrison Hunting Creek Farm, Edgemont, Pa. Julian Mark Harrison, Jr 127 W. Wesley Rd., Atlanta, Ga. George Harrison Hart Ambler, Pa. Robert John Hart Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Harold Hartshorne, Jr 40 E. 65th St., New York, N. Y. Rutherford Louis Hatch 1 Sutton PL, New York, N. Y. Joseph Buckley Havens 550 Fairmont Ave., Westfield, N. J. -1 Two Hundred Seventy-five Class of 1940 (Continued) Nome Address Rowland Gibson Hazard Peacedale R I Robert Purviance Hazlehurst, Jr Main S.., Spotswood, ' n ' j ' Robert Clarence Hector 261 N. E. 27th St., Miami, Fla ' Herbert Brewster Hedden Providence Rd„ Wallingford, Pa Bernard L Hegeman 199 Midland Ave., Glen Ridge, N ] wT ' T ' ' } 329 Edisto Ave., Columbia, S. ' C. William Townsend Het2el..826 Winchester Ave., Elizabeth N J Charles Conrad Hewitt, Jr 29 Bryn Mawr Ave. Trenton ' n ' t ' Lawrence Heyl, Jr 9 College Rd., Princeton! N. ' J. ' hrank Kingsbury Heyniger 70 E. 5th St., Corning N Y Donald Everett Hillenbrand 151 Grove St., Irvington, N. j ' John DarnleyHinchliffe... Fairy Bridge Rd., Washington, Conn Robert Joseph Hinchman 2036 Wendover St., Pittsburgh Pa Roger Hinds, Jr 161 Grove Rd., South Orange, N j ' FrederiCK Herbert Hoffman, Jr., T , ,, , ,, 1133 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio tf v T I f Hoffman Box 217, Cranbury, N. J. William Marshall Hollenbeck, Jr., P, , „ ,, 19 ' JO S. hit.enhouse Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Holloway, Jr 1 Edgement Rd., Scarsdale, N Y John Anson Hood 32 Clinton Rd., Glen Ridge N j ' WW W .1 u P ' Chappaqua, N. Y. ' ack Willson Horner North Bay Ave., Racine, Wis. John Henry Hcskinson 3410 Garfield St., Washington, D C George Arthur Howell 400 W. Paies Ferry Rd., Atlanta, Ga ' bamuel Thomas Hubbard, III.. ..755 Park Ave. New York N Y Reginald deKoven Hudson. 1025 Park Ave. New York ' n ' y ' Richard Fairfield Humphreys 40 Fifth Ave. New York ' n ' y ' ames Kinslow Hundley 909 St. George ' s Rd., Baltimore, Md ' Jarnes Burke Irwin, Jr 1275 Clinton PI., Elizabeth, N. J w if y ' he Irwin, III 6828 Quincy St., Philadelphia Pa cf.Td w ' ' ' ,1 u ° ' ' e a . Long Island, N. Y. Richard Woodruff Jacobus 191 Main St., Chatham, N J Wyllys Burr Jennings 2 E. 82nd St., New York, N. Y. Michael Oswald Jenkins Credito Italiano, Florence, Italy Sylvester Johnson, Jr 3668 Central Ave., Indianapolis, Ind ihoraas Daniel Johnson, Jr., P.,,,1 I r- .J T u J,?° ' Hillman Ave., Birmingham, Ala. PaulLeGrandJohnston.lOORidgewood Ave., Glen Ridge N J w r f°: (° ' ..Gates Mills, ' Ohio James Richard Jones Ill Brookside Ave., Caldwell N I Robert Lansing Jordan 123 Cambridge PI., Brooklyn ' n ' y Lester Scot Kafer. Jr 241 Dudley Ave., Westfield, N. J Marion Leslie Kamenetzky..393 Springfield Ave., Newark N iT ' l ™ ' ' ' 25 Hillside PI, South Orange ' n ' J Edward Lawrence Katzenbach, Jr., R„„ D ■I- 438 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. J. Hoger Prince Kavanaugh, Jr., w niv, . I- , Terrace Dr., Port Washington, N. Y. T wt, °?f ■' ' - ' 3° - Vezzango St., Philadelphia, Pa John William Keller, „ Charleston Apts., Jefferson St., Paducah, Ky. Eugene Cornell Kelley, Jr...39 Garfield PL, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. William Neal Kelley....48 Sylvester Ave., Webster Groves Mo Francis Leonard Kellogg 118 E. 70th St., New York N y ' Thomi, R°T r r 3 ° Humboldt St., Denver, Col. ' SmT w y ' I Joanna Way, Short Hills, N. J. Orman Weston Ketcham 2711 Ave. K, Brooklyn, N. Y. AHr ed 7f r T ' ' ' - Maplewood, N. J. Alfred deForest Keys Jr 21 Prospect St., White Plains, N. Y. Edward Joseph Kilcullen 142 W. 180th St., New York N Y Frank Mark Killian.. 334 Robin Rd., Englewood, N. ]. Peter DennistonKimball....3 11 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia Pa fotT-fl T ' ' ' ° -6 ' ' St., Kansas City, ' Mo! Phmn n T T ' - ° ™ ' St., Baltimore, Md. Phihp MiUs King, Jr.. 930 Park Ave., New York N Y Weymouth Stone Kirkland . .1320 N. Slate St., Chicago 111 ' mT W ' i ' ' . ' ■u J ' Dr., Jamesburg N. J ett t 1; ' ' ' ' ' ° ' ' ' ' ' ' 23 Reeder St.. Easton. Pa. RrcharH ' ' r , -.- ' 2 ' ' St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Richard Charles Jackson Kitto, Vr A vi ' ® - ' St., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa rh!;.lf T ' -T . ;■365 Palos Rd.. Glencoe, 111. W K M ? x.P ' ' ' - P° ° ' ' = Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. Jacob Mortimer Klein 178 Rector St., Perth Amboy, N J Malcolm Edward Kneeland, y. ' ■J- n- V, J TTj . ,r , , 310 S. Homewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Richard Edwin Kobilar 149-01 Hollywood Ave., Flushing, L. I. Car Fred r ' m ' ° ' L ' ' Haverford Pa. £hn V r ?, ' ' J V P ' St., Bordentown, N. J. John Van Cortlandt Koppelman, ri, ri ri • 1 1- u ' °2 Millbrook Rd., Baltimore, Md. Charles Daniel Kuehner 33 Christopher Ave., Trenton, N. I. Two Hundred Seventy-six Nome Address Ve oh K ' 225 Logan Ave., Altoona, Pa. MoM i °y°f °- 3219 60th St., Woodside, N Y Wnh r ? ' ' ,° ° 20 Sherwood Rd., Philadelphia, Pa ' WiltST llt rLanaha ri ' ' ? ° ' ' j ' J ;;l ' s;r ° ' :.-33oschantzAve::iS;rc RoheH R . T V ' 3 Winter St., Arlington, Mass. Charl, R r L° 5worthy..810 West 57 Ter., Kansas City, Mo. Charles Bishop Lascelles, Jr...35 Cleveland Ave., Buffalo N Y James Levin Latchum.. ..602 N. Walnut St., Milford, Del. Hugh LeRoy Latham 6 Brookside Dr., Plandome, LINY RolT, ? T ' r u-C 2-15 207th St., Bayside, ' n ' y ' PaWr h ' h T ' t Box 84, Benton, Pa ?° r °d5 Laughlin 211 Walnut St., Barnesville, Ohio John Ronnow Lauritzen 2315 Newton St., Minneapolis, Minn. sZc r ' ' ' ° y Ave., Princeton, N. J wlZZ r r V-.- ' ' ° ' °P ' Savannah, Ga. Vmiiam Goodman LeBoutillier....ll Clark Ct., Larchmont, N Y c. ' -T ' l. ' ? ' J Silver Spring, Md. ' i 1 Mt. Vernon St., Salem, Mass. Frederick Burton Lee.. Trr .- I ■T t. ■v iij ji 01., ouiem. Mass ob 1 rr ' f ' ' i ' ' Kensington Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y Robert Clinton Lew,s 805 Robbins Ave., Niles Ohio Darwin Milton Ley 888 Winyah Ave., Westfield N J rZh R h T°° ' ' ' ' ' ' ' t ' Chestnut Hill, Pa. Robert Bnttam Livingston..235 Woodbridge Ave., Buffalo N Y FraT,k P H f t ' -. - ' St., Princeton, N. J. ' R chord Tv, ' ° ; ' American Embassy, Peiping, China rTovo w7i °7 ' °= 4705 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. Giovanni Welding Liuzzato, Wiiii„„ n T P ' - B ' 4 P ' ° ° St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Wil lam Dawson Lynn 4303 Rugby Rd., Baltimore, Md Robert h ° ' .- ' ' °9 P P ' - Wilmington, Del. UnZ S ' ' '  f-; 3000 Tilden St., Washington, D. C. Matthew Henry McCloskey, III -j . ■• Mi h =i T u y. r , , Indian Creek Rd., Overbrook, Pa. TeRnv k ' ?. A ' ' ' ' ' ' 30 Lapsley Rd., Merion Pa. Roh , M PU ' 19™ Riverview Ave., Robert McEldowney, w ir M f wood Gardens, Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Colder McGibbon, III, Tj , , ,., , 915 West End Ave., New York N Y Waltl w ' n Tk. , ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - -30 E. 71st St., New York, N. ' Y. Wallace Willard McLean 1 Birchall Dr., Scarsdale, N. Y. Robert Vincent McMenimen..75 Prospect St., East Orange N J Lavid Spencer McMorris, T,,v,„ M ■„ , 2934 Newark Ave., Washington, D. C. rolvi ' r ' iT. ' -r- i - 3rd St., New York, N. Y. Ualvm Dodd MacCracken, „, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Robert Scrymser Macdonald.. 2 E. 86th St., New York N Y Hugh Norman Maclean, ' ' ' u , , 271 Central Park West, New York N Y Howard Clarence MacMillan, Jr., ' ' Vr ,.v n A  , «x 381 Franklin Ave., Aliquippa, Pa. t-rank Goodnow MacMurray Willio i ,K w M D P ' f ' ° ' Slate, Washington. D. C. Wilham Arthur MacNamara 829 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa RiZrH R°1 °f ' !:° ' ' ' South Hamilton, Mass. Richard Bnnton Macsherry Port Washington, LINY Paul Eweres Machemer Box 216, Paoli, ' Pa ' Cameron Mackenzie IO4 i„ing Ave., Providence, R. I. Barclay Taliaferro Macon... ...63 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa. Crawford Clark Madeira, Jr Andover Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Burton L. Mallory, Jr., 4311 Woodland Ave., Western Springs, 111. R-ber Carter Mann... ..Cronest, Grover Lane, Caldwell, N. J Robert Patterson Marshall..5810 Murray Hill PL, Pittsburgh Pa Gordon Ford Mathescn 19 Nassau Blvd., Malverne N y ' tSsniamin Alphonso Matthews, Jr., 131 Riverside Dr., New York N Y Lawrence Myers Mead, Jr., ' ' „,,,,, 600 Lexington Ave., New York, N Y Robert Meckauer. 10 Wen Ave., Larchmont, N Y iu c f 2 Bellevue Ave., Montclair, N. J. Alfred Sherman Mehl..6382 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, Pa r l; ' ■' ' ' ' ' ■' South River, Annapolis, Md. William Morns Meredith, Jr Darien, Conn. Van bantvoord Merle-Smith, Jr., John Laird Metcalf, Jr., ' ' ' ■° ' - ay, N. Y. r,. u J ' °° ' 2733. Grand C-n ' ral Bldg., New York N Y Richard Grove Metz. 2800 Espy Ave., Dormon t, ' Pa. ' Walter Edward Meub, Jr...l51 Newport Dr., Youngstcwn Ohio Class of 1940 (Continued) Name Address John Gerhardt Meyer 1044 Williams Blvd., Springfield, 111. John Conrad Meyerholz 436 Cherry St., Elizabeth, N. j. Peter William Michaels, Nevy Pam Rd., Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. John Young Millar 14 Olive PI., Forest Hills, N. Y. Lav rence Potter Mills, Jr Broadalbin, N. Y. L. Arthur Minnich, Jr 1850 East Erie Ave., Lorain, Ohio Robert William Minton 350 Boulevard Ave., Mt. Lakes, N. J. Chester Shepard Moeller, 139 McKinley Ave., New Haven, Conn. Dixon Morgan Gates Mills, Ohio Henry Green Morgan 18 Lafayette PI., Greenwich, Conn. Kenneth Archbell Morris. .State Department, Washington, D. C. Alexander William Morris, III. .23 Oakleigh Lane, St. Louis, Mo. Lawrence Booker Morris, Jr Circle Hill, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Richard Cummings Moses, 108 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, N. Y. Gordon Samuel Mosler....440 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. John Hall Moss Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Elza Christopher Mowry....l380 Waverly Rd., San Marino, Cal. Donald Lewis Milford 130 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Alfred Hedges Munkenbeck, Jr 77 82nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Edward Musselt R. F. D. 1, Hopkins, Minn. Harold Leslie Myers, Jr 24 Georgian Rd., Morristown, N. J. Jacob Martin Myers, Jr Mercersburg, Pa. Robert Holt Myers 102 E. Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. Donald Laphara Mygate Newfield Ave., Stamford, Conn. William Douglas Neal, 301 N. Landsdowne Ave., Landsdowne, Pa. Theodore Prince Needham, 21 Wendover Ct., Finchley Rd., London, England Charles Pilgrim Neumann, Green Acres, Central Valley, N. Y. Theodore Clare Nevins, 257 Upper Mt. Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Fitz Eugene Dixon Newbold, Jr Deuon, Pa. Harry Ellsworth Newman 205 River Ave., Lakewood, N. J. George Guernsey Nichols, Jr 15 East Way, Bronxville, N. Y. William Louis Neidringhaus, 701 S. Linden Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Leonard Arthur Nikoloric 292 Robin Rd., Englewood, N. j. James Jennings Norton 53 Mackey Ave., Port Washington, N. Y. Karl Benton Norton, Jr 203 Hillair Cir., White Plains, N. Y. Oliver Norwood Ill Belmont Ave., Greenville, S. C. Chester Linwood Nourse, Jr., 105 Larchmont Rd.. Melrose, Mass. Gustavus Ober, III. . Bagatelle , Govans P. O. Woodbrook, Md. James Victor O ' Brien 19 Derwen Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. James Michael Earle O ' Grady 1238 Prospect, La JoUa, Cal. Alexander Purves Olcott 375 W. 250th St., New York, N. Y. Frank Ward O ' Malley Brielle, N. J. Foster Story Osborn Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J. John Greenleaf Owen, Jr Eau Claire, Wis. John Henry Pace, Jr 3546 Richmond St., Jacksonville, Fla. Peter Paige 241 E. 61st St., New York, N. Y. Marshall Nevin Palley 5432 Hobart St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Elwood Marshall Palmer 1415 Alsace Rd., Reading, Pa. Solon Palmer, Jr 152 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. I. Paul Parker 72 N. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N, J. James McCan Parrish 6303 Towano Ave., Richmond, Va. Jack Casella Paterno, 252nd St. Independence Ave., Riverdaleon-Hudson, N. Y. Donald Hamilton Patterson 219 Northway, Baltimore, Md. Aubrey Pearre Pikesville, Md. Edwin Jerome Pearson.... 1 06 Jefferson Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. John Ford Peckham R. F. D. 2, Torrington, Conn. Clairborne deBcrda Pell Hopewell, N. Y. Wilder Graves Penfield 4302 Montrose Ave., Montreal, Can. Anson Perina 96 Hillside Ter., Irvington, N. I. Benedict Peter 35 W. 11th St., New York, N. Y. Humphrey Marshall Peter Grosvenor Lane, Bethesda. Md. Hugh Eberhardt Peterson 222 Cumberland Ave., Kenilworth, 111. P. Philip Petito 224 Pearl St., Trenton, N. I. Walter Fitch Pettit Ridgeview Rd., Princeton, N. I. Alexander Pick ering 1060 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal. Loring Pickering 1060 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal. Howard Wilson Pierson 433 E. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Robert Matthews Pierson, Jr., 116 W. Exchange St., Akron, Ohio Harry Gushing Piper, Jr., 112 Mt. Curve Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. John Thomas Pittenger 535 Washington St., Newell, W. Va. Address John O. Piatt, Jr Fairfields. Paoli, Pa. Donald Campbell Platten..390 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. William McClellan Pomeroy, Jr Little Lane, Haverford, Pa. John Haynes Porter 156 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Harry Tyndale Powers 60 Elsmere Rd., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Charles Shaw Presbrey 1120 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Norman Adye Prichard St. Mark ' s Rectory, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Dell Monroe Prints, II 1004 Main St., Evanston, 111. William Barrow Pugh, Jr Providence Rd., Wallingford, Pa. Richard Ingram Purnell 919 Bellemore Rd., Baltimore, Md. Herbert Rivington Pyne, Jr Far Hills, N. J. John Wright Pyne Bernardsville, N. J. Macpherson Raymond Cleve House, Lawrenceville, N. I. Alan Reed Hall Rd., Wyncote, Pa. Hubert Kearsley Reese, Jr...5438 Central Ave., Memphis, Tenn. William Reiber 62 East 83rd St., New York, N. Y. Alfred Reed Reppert Flemington, W. Va. Allen Stanley Reynolds, Jr., 35 Crescent Rd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Peter Lloyd Richards Dibble Rd., Aiken, S. C. Frederick Fales Richardson New York, N. Y. Robert Lyle Rinehart 41 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Simeon Marshall Rising 28 North St., Granville, N. Y. Malcolm Brooks Robertson.. .116 Madison Ave., Madison, N. J. David Kirk Robinson.... 1723 Edgewood Blvd., Royal Oak, Mich. Russell Moore Robinson, Jr 5 Hasbrouck PL, Rutherford, N. J. Alan Roy Robson 109 S. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Ned Waterbury Rochon Lorraine Apts., Anaconda, Mont. John Clark Rogers 41 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Samuel Bryan Rogers Belyoir Manor, Waterbury, Md. John Frick Root R No. 7, York, Pa. Pedro Juan Rosaly, Jr 33 Mayor St., Ponce, Puerto Rico Carlton Wallace Rose, Jr 88 Moore St., Princeton, N. J. Frederick Earle Rowe, Jr 6390 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Pa. George Louis Russell, III, The Cambridge Apts., Germantown, Pa. Elbert Kyle St. Claire 837 Edgewood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Theodor Charles Sauer 59 Harvest St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Edward Baker Saunders 407 Vose Ave., So. Orange, N. I. James Gerard Schaefer... .Wellington Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Arthur Christian Schmitt 138 Ford Ave., Woodbury, N. J. Walter George Schnee, Jr 8726 168th PL, Jamaica, N. Y. Douglas Red Schoenfeld 3448 34th PL, Washington, D. C. George LaVie Schultz....354 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N. J. Stephen Gormly Schwartz. ...343 Aubrey Rd., Wynnewood. Pa. Raymond Joseph Schweizer.... Middlesex Farms, Noroton, Conn. William Wallace Scott 4629 Maryland Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Robert Searles 123 Woodbridge PI., Leonia, N. I. Edwin Norton Seller 34 North Dr., Great Neck, N. Y. John Kenneth Selden 445 Highland Ave., Orange, N. I. Alistair Semple 36 Kingsley St., W. Orange. N. I. George Philip Semple 402 Front St., Buchanan, Mich. Peter Seyffert 1 W. 67th St., New York, N. Y. Frank Morse Shanbacker Littlebrook Rd., Berwyn, Pa. William Shand, Jr 2 E. King St., Lancaster, Pa. Charles H. Shaner, Jr 103 N. Reading Ave., Boyertown, Pa. Philip Charlton Shirkey, Jr... 108 Brookside Ave., Trenton, N. J. Leonard Shirley 119 Gordon St., Edgewood, Pa. David Macauley ShuU 60 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. J. Herbert Lloyd Shultz 385 Ouail St., Albany, N. Y. Richard Arnold Siegel 746 CoUingwood, Detroit, Mich. Albert Simons, Jr 84 South Battery, Charleston, S. C. Frederick Snowden Skinner, Jr., 147 Lloyd Ave., Providence, R. I. Walter Rumsey Skinner, Jr... 415 E. Argonne Dr., Kirkwood, Mo. Samuel Small Garrison, Md. Elting Hills Smith 2 Dudley PL, Yonkers, N. Y. Lindsay Crawford Smith 1109 S. 33rd St., Birmingham, Ala. Levi Pease Smith, Jr 375 Maple St., Burlington. Vt. William Dennis Snyder 845 Melrose Ave., Trenton, N. J. Harry Joseph Sohmer 245 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Waller Russell Sparks, Jr 405 Penwyn Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Wilbur Clark Springer, Jr 77 Market St., Salem, N. ' ,. Richard Austin Springs, Jr 853 7th Ave.. New York, N. Y. Robert Starr Stainton, HI 201 W. 23rd St., Chester, Pa. Edward Livinston Stanley....329 Lawn Ridge Rd., Orange, N. J. Evans Foster Stearns. .1321 Observatory Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio Philip Olcott Stearns, 209 Lakeshore Dr., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Alfred Steel 9220 Germantown Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. William Watts Stelle 20 N. Malcolm St., Ossining, N. Y. John Wescolt Stevens 1 Court, Belfast. Me. Robert John Stewart 20 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Herbert Douglas Stine 1227 Thornton Ave.. Plainfield. N. J. Two Hundrey Seventy-seven Class of 1940 (Continued) Name Address Richard AUyn Stirling 160 Alden Ave., New Haven, Conn. Harold James Stokes, Jr 327 River Rd., Red Bank, N. J. Huntley Stone 1375 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. John William Strohecker 1406 Lorain Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Church Stroud 1817 Ave. N., Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold Mitchell Stuart, Jr 19 Summit Rd., Verona, N. J. William Hugh Stuart, Jr., 312 Windermere Ave., Interlaken, N. J. Robert Joseph B. Sullivan 4540 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Richard Warren Sutphen Compo Rd., Westport, Conn. Frank William S utton 402 Main St., Toms River, N. J. Lawrence Sweeney 601 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Burr Sweetser Swezey, Jr 605 Lingle Ave., Lafayette, Ind. Suyehiko Takami 176 Washington Park, Brooklyn, N. Y. Edwin Taradash 500 Piermont Ave., Hillsdale, N. J. Ben Ethan Tate, Jr 12 Garden PI., Cincinnati, Ohio George Bishop Tatum 768 Potomac Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Howard Metcalfe Taylor 1037 Prospect PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. London Dudley Taylor 244 Cumnor Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Paul Raymond Teetor 25 Main St., Poultney, Vt. Donald Newby Test 42 W. 43rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. William Taylor Thom, III 172 Prospect Ave., Princeton, N. J. Henry Briscoe Thomas, III.. ..1124 N. Calvert St., Bahimore, Md. John Roberts Thomas 214 S. Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. Jack Willson Thompson North Bay, Racine, Wis. William Blackford Thompson, II, 204 Wyncote Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. George Edward Thurman 91 Millard Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Charles Wallace Tiernan Oak Lane, Essex Fells, N. J. Robert Francis Tierney, Jr. Box 805, Blawelt Rd„ Pearl River, N. Y. Harry Coleman Tily, III 32 Overhill Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Kenneth William Tipping 476 Poplar Ave., Maywood, N. J. Carleton Tobey Lighthouse Farm, Southold, L. I., N. Y. Edward Kennedy Torrington..l070 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Franklin Cleir Tosh 395 E. Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa. Dallas Selwyn Townsend, Jr... 24 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. James Benjamin Townsend 99 High St., Hoosick Falls, N. Y. Arnold Joseph Trattler..350 Pennsylvania Ave., Freeport, N. Y. Robert Lawrence Trembley 726 Stone St., Rahway, N. J. Edward Callender Trimble. ...Huntington Hills, Rochester, N. Y. Charles Thelin Turner....5407 Greenspring Ave., Baltimore, Md. Horatio Whitridge Turner, III Mansgrove, Princeton, N. J. John Turner, 11 72 Miller Rd., Morristown, N. J. Lambert Turner, Jr 5462 Kipling Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Wily Garrett Tuthill 1416 Asbury Ave., Evanston, 111. Edgar John Uihlein, Jr Lake Bluff, 111. Thomas Porter Ulmer Ortega, Fla. John Ashby Valentine, Jr., 112 Daniel Law Ter., Staten Island, N. Y. Stanley van den Heuvel, 4612 Grosvenor Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Richard Warren Vanderbeck 35 Oakdale Rd., Glenbrook, Conn. Joseph Nelson van der Voort..272 Central Ave., Fredonia, N. Y. Albert Van de Weghe 465 Straight St., Paterson, N. J. Russell Sackett Van Duzer 34 Manning Blvd., Albany, N. Y. Robert Warner Van Lengen..l54 Robineau Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. DeWitt Clinton Van Stolen, 755 Beverly Rd., Douglaston, N. Y. Willard Penfield Van Voorhees, Landing Lane, New Brunswick, N. J. Peter Hoagland Vermilye 74 Ascan Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. William Martin Vogel 21 Appleton PL, Glen Ridge, N. J. Terry Alexander Votichenko 7 Weslbourne, London, Eng. Guysbert Bogart Vroom, Jr No. 5, Phippsburg, Me. Charles Barney Wall Meadow Rd., Riverside, Conn. Two Hundred Seventy-eight Name Address Samuel Carpenter Waller 2249 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga. Randolph Stephen Warner, Jr 2 E. 93rd St., New York, N. Y. James Keir Watkins, Jr 1024 Parker Ave., Detroit, Mich. David Miller Watts Chichester Lane, Ardmore, Pa. Charles Cartwright Waugh 136 N. Chancellor St., Newtown, Pa. Louis Seabury Weeks, Jr., 175 Briarwood Crossing, Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y. Edward Ray Weidlein, Jr 325 S. Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Richard David Wells 20 Winthrop Ave., Marblehead, Mass. Sheldon Boese Wells Green Farms Rd., Green Farms, Conn. John Potts Wendell Hill School, Pottstown, Pa. Langdon Hall Wesley 48 Beverly Rd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Herbert Margerum West 1430 Riverside Dr., Trenton, N. J. Robert West 1338 North Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Robert Elmer Westlake..l68 Bergen Ave., Ridgefield Park, N. J. John Montgomery Whallon 30 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. John Sidney Whelen Berlin, Md. Bishop White Route 3, Princeton, N. J. David Beacham Whitlock, 5910 Cedar Pkwy., Chevy Chase, Md. Richard Trueblood Whitmer, 504 Lima Blvd., Albuquerque, N. M. Augustus Sherrill Whiton, Jr Chestnut Hill, Norwalk, Conn. Donald Robert Whyte 2985 Fairfax Rd., Cleveland, Ohio David Douglas Wicks Harrison St., Princeton, N. J. Villie Kirkpatrick Wiles 1535 5th Ave., Huntington, W. Va. Henry Wood Wiley, Jr Buck Lane, Haverford, Pa. Alvin Warren Wilkinson 512 Concord Ave,, Belmont, Mass. Edward Alexander Williams, 1415 Pollan Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Robert Kettering Williams 131 McLean Ave., Detroit, Mich. Robert Lloyd Williams Baltusrol Way, Short Hills, N. J. Philip Herman Willkie 1010 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Charles Ervin Wilson 1305 Cambria Ave., Windber, Pa. Robert Bruce Wilson 180 Franklin St., Denver, Colo. Hudson Sumner Winn 69 High St., Northampton, Mass. Sydney Anglin Woodd-Cahusac, 1980 Troy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald Robert Woodford.... 16 Koewing PL, West Orange, N. J. Robert Patterson WoodhulL.ll 1 Springhouse Rd., Dayton, Ohio Alan Churchill Woods, Jr 103 Millbrook Rd., Baltimore, Md. Frank Sigel Workman 22 Norwood Ave., Charleston, W. Va. John Rowl Workman Lititz Pike, Lancaster, Pa. Rufus Worrell, 111 21 Lockwood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. James Huntling Worth 17 Garden Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Berriman Worts Box 514, Clearwater, Fla. Charles McQuown Wright Mountain City, Tenn. Wesslan Gilbert Wright 17 Sussex Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Wronker 26 Huron Rd., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Tom Taylor Wuerth Stewart Rd., Essex Fells, N. J. Ralph Emerson Wyer, Jr Route 3, Wayzata, Minn William Beck Wylly Oak Lodge, Tennille, Ga. Frank Clerihew Wymond, Jr Carpinteria, Cal. James Wyper, Jr 59 Highland St., W. Hartford, Conn. Ralph Baggaley Yardley....901 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Copeland Yates 3214 2nd Ave., Harrisburg, Pa. Orvis Clyde Yingling, Jr 902 Empire Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Gay Gordon Yocum....5830 Drexel Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. Alfred Dennis Young 510 Ridge St., Newark, N. J, Harrison Hurst Young, Jr., 924 McKinley Ave., Sand Springs, Okla. Robert Luther Young, Jr...llll Allengrove St., Philadelphia, Pa. Lawsan Shadburn Yow..385 W. Lancaster Ave., Haverford, Pa. John van Wie Zaugg 450 E. 52nd St., New York, N. Y. Henry Matthews Zeiss 1194 Westmoor Ave., Winnetka, 111. Charles Augustus Bitner Zook, Jr Route 5, Lancaster, Pa. Partial Students William Paton Alexander, Jr Newark, N. J. Herbert Jackson Braham, Jr Brooklyn, N. Y. Arthur Mahlon Byers, Jr Philadelphia, Pa. Clifford Conly, Jr San Francisco, Calif. Robert Padgitt Dupree Waco, Texas James Harold Guy.- New Castle, Pa. John I. Carroll Kirby Baltimore, Md. John Vincent Lesley Palo Alto, Calif. Weston Lewis Portland, Maine Frank Rathauser Trenton, N. J. Warren Roberts, Jr Macon, Ga. Ross Edgar Taggart Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles A. van der Straten-Ponthoy, Washington, D. C. Frank Bradshaw Wood Jacksonville, Fla. General Summary OFFICERS Trustees 36 Faculty and Instructors 332 Assistants in Instruction 33 Officers of Administration 41 442 GRADUATE SCHOOL Visiting Fellows 17 Advanced University Fellows 12 University Fellows 31 Junior Fellows 22 University Scholars 7 Fellows and Scholars on other Funds 9 Other Graduate Students 175 (minus 1 duplicate) Graduate Students in Engineering Total Advanced Students 272 12 284 UNDERGRADUATES Senior Class A.B 432 B.S. in Eng 41 473 Junior Class A.B 51 1 B.S. in Eng 52 563 Sophomore Class ■A.B 548 B.S. in Eng 68 616 Freshman Class A.B 542 B.S. in Eng 94 636 Partial Students 14 Total Undergraduates 2302 Total Students 2586 Two Hundred Seventy-nine Geographical Summary G. Eng. Sr. New Jersey 51 5 128 New York 39 1 107 Pennsylvania 34 1 80 Illinois 6 .... 27 Maryland 10 .... 12 Ohio 8 .... 19 Connecticut 5 .... 13 Massachusetts 9 .... 6 District of Columbia 2 1 8 Missouri 7 1 12 California 17 .... 2 Michigan 3 .... 7 West Virginia 4 .... 2 Alabama 5 .... 1 Georgia 3 .... 2 Indiana 3 -.. 4 Minnesota 3 .... 2 Florida 2 Rhode Island 1 .... 4 Texas 1 .... 4 Wisconsin 1 .... 3 Dela vare Virginia 1 .... 1 Colorado 1 .... 2 Kentucky 2 .... 4 North Carolina 1 .... 2 Tennessee 3 .... 1 Maine 3 .... 1 Vermont Ill New Hampshire 3 .... 2 Washington 6 .... 1 South Carolina .... 1 Louisiana 1 2 Oklahoma .... 2 Iowa 1 .... I Mississippi 2 Kansas I Montana 1 Arizona Oregon 1 Utah 1 Wyoming ... 1 Nebraska .... 1 New Mexico North Dakota South Dakota I Canada 10 England 6 China 3 Germany 2 Brazil Italy 1 Egypt France 1 Hawaii Belgium 1 British West Indies Cuba Hungary I Japan 1 Korea 1 Puerto Rico Spain 1 Switzerland 1 Syria 272 12 473 Jr. 138 157 75 20 21 26 15 9 17 7 6 7 5 6 3 3 4 4 4 3 1 5 3 7 I 2 2 1 1 So. 152 144 104 25 20 13 21 15 II Fr. 153 161 112 19 29 21 22 14 8 12 6 8 5 2 6 5 5 4 3 I 5 5 2 2 3 2 2 2 1 4 1 1 1 1 Par. Total 629 610 409 97 93 87 76 53 48 47 40 33 20 18 18 18 19 17 17 16 15 14 14 13 13 12 11 8 9 8 8 7 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 I 563 616 636 14 2586 Two Hundred Eighty M .„ Sub Cumine an am e Prooks Brother Brooks is more than the name of a famous maker and importer of fine clothing and accessories. It really stantls for a way of dressing, for a certain man- ner, for a distinguished style perennially adopted hy thousands of men all o er the United States as under- graduates at the hest-known eastern colleges, and continued permanently no matter where they live. Our Travelling Representatives visit 50 cities from coast to coast. Our Mail Service Department gives careful attention to orders from all other points. ' ' •iis.isi nii5 rni5Miig5. Hats ibof5 NEW YORK ■BOSTON MADISON AVEN Ut CORNER KORrV-i-OURTH STREET NUMBER ONE WAl.I. STREET NEW YORK Two Hundred Eighly-one January, 1936 Their ears still ringing with Eddie Riley ' s The Music Goes Round and Round , Princeton undergraduates returned from a cold but ever enjoyable Christmas vacation. The unusually successful Triangle trip was marked by one very interesting incident. When the cast arrived in Detroit it was found that the sets had been left in a baggage car in Buffalo. After much excitement the missing car was rushed by special engine from Buffalo in time to make the show in Detroit. Unfortunately, because of a dispute between Warner Brothers and the Ameri- can Society of Composers and Authors, all Triangle music was banned from the air, thus stopping Love Will Live On and others from achieving national recognition. During the Christmas vacation the Hockey team traveled to Minneapolis where they scored three victories and suffered two defeats from Minnesota. Another athletic achievement was that of P. R. Pauk, ' 36, and Pepper Constable, ' 36, who played in the East-West football game on New Year ' s Day. Pauk scored the first touchdown for the East and was the only man injured during the game. Concluding his service at Princeton, Ralph W. Downes, director of the University choir and chapel music, led the University choir, the Choir and Glee Club of Bryn Mawr, and part of the Philadelphia Orchestra in an excellent rendition of Handel ' s Messiah . In the selection of Rhodes Scholarship students, Gordon Craig of Jersey City and Alba Warren of Houston received the coveted honor, bringing Princeton ' s all time total of Rhodes Scholars to fifty-four. In a winter sports meet at Lake Placid the Orange and Black ski team placed seventh in a field of twelve. The basketball team lost three straight games during the vacation. During the month of January the Tiger Quintet was defeated by Columbia, Duke, and Harvard, while the only victory was that against Cornell. In the Quadrangular League games the Princeton Hockey team defeated Harvard in a closely contested match only to lose to Yale the next week by the score of tv ro to one. Other events during the month were the last Shakespearian lecture of J. Duncan Spaeth to an enraptured and overflowing McCosh 50. On the eve of Club calling Cap and Gown an- nounced that the new King Edward VIII was an honorary member of their club. During the grinding and cramming of the always fatal mid-years several undergraduates tried to keep alive the ancient tradition of Polers Recess by exploding each night at nine a few firecrackers and more harmless shouts from their windows. A Safe Driving campaign started by the Princetonian resulted in 1500 pledges. Episodes and Compositions in Dance Form were presented in McCarter by the dancer and painter Agna Enters. February, 1936 Princeton rowing suffered an irreparable loss in the death of John Schultz on February I. He served Princeton crews as instructor in sculling and as rigger from 1925 until his death. His was a character not soon forgotten, and his presence at the Boathouse will be sorely missed. After plaguing the undergraduates since the middle of January, examinations came to an end. The west end of Nassau Hall again was decorated with slips of paper telling students of their success or failure in hurdling one more barrier between themselves and graduation. For the second time in four years, the Princeton School of Architecture was awarded first prize in a competition of about one hundred schools and colleges in the United States, Canada, and Cuba. New York ' s popular comedy, Three Men on a Horse , was presented successfully to a large and enthusiastic audience at McCarter Theatre. Later in the same week, the concert ot the Cleveland Orchestra under the direction of Arthur Rodzin- ski was also well received. Professor Welch the day before had explained the works to be presented in this concert to an audience of interested undergraduates. The University Athletic Association announced that the only admission charge to the Third Annual Invitation Track Meet would be a government tax. The Department of English made a long-sought-for change in its curriculum. The old Freshman course was scrapped and the famous Sophomore course on Shakespeare replaced it. Launching the VFW The course in Eighteenth Century Literature is now given to Sophomores, and other upperclass courses have also been re-arranged. On Alumni Day, February 22, Pepper Constable, ' 36 was awarded the M. Taylor Pyne Honor Prize. The Ivy Club cap- tured the Armstrong Scholarship Trophy for the first time. G. A. Craig, ' 36 received the 1876 Debate Prize. Athletically, Princeton ' s guintet split its annual basketball series with Yale, while it gained revenge for an earlier defeat by Harvard. The Tiger sextet lost to Dartmouth but defeated Yale to even the series before dropping the play-ofL A trio of Nassau mermen smashed the existing world ' s record, setting a new one in the 150 yard medley relay. Two Hundred Eighty-two Goiii1 Miieii. wo liive you Ko; ;ers Poet! T r linol clollu-.- the hand  ! ' tnan aii create. Tailond of (le|.cn(lahle all-wool fabrics. Styled ill the iiianniM- to which Princeton men are accu loiiicd. To the many Princeton men hoth in and out of college who help us in styling clothes which lit the campus |.i( lure, we are ever grateful. II O IT fp L A S Mac D A I D IM. 20 .XASSAI STHKKT | UI. « KTO Two Hundred Eighty-three Section Wedding Gifts STERLING silver Section wedding gifts of today are the heirlooms of tomorrow. The graceful lines of today ' s sterling hollow- ware are the heritage of ages of skilled craftsmen; our inheritance of the long ago Guilds. JENNINGS HOOD Jeweler Medalist c Stationer S. E. Corner 13TH and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia Two Hundred Eighty-four i PI t r « ll ps ' ii v Jennings Hood Jeweler .y Medalist .y Stationer • S.E. Corner 13th and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia, Pa. L Princeton Club Emblems ARBOR INN CAMPUS CANNON COLONIAL CLOISTER INN CHARTER DIAL LODGE COTTAGE ELM CAP AND GOWN COURT IVY TOWER KEY AND SEAL QUADRANGLE TERRACE TIGER INN Two Hundred Eighty-flvo March, 1936 With February and its long nights of club calling departed, peace once again descended on the campus. Under the strict supervision of the newly formed Committee on Enforcement of Interclub Election Rules, the club elections were very orderly and the rules laid down by the committee were en- forced with but few infractions. This month marked the end of the season in all of the winter sports. The hockey team, after dropping a play-off game to Harvard, came back to eke out a decision over Dartmouth and thereby gained a second place tie with the latter college. The basketball team started out this month in good fashion by beating Dartmouth but lost its last three games of the season, thereby finishing in fifth place in the league. The swimming team was again beaten by Yale for the twelfth straight year. However, ten entrants gained enough points to win second place in the Intercollegiates. The mat team set an unprece- dented record by defeating all of its opponents of the season. At the Eastern Intercollegiates bouts held here, the team gained third place. Al Nies, associated with Princeton athletics for 17 years, concluded his career here as a successful coach. With 474 members of the fair sex to grace the campus and the music of Ray Noble and Hudson-Delange to provide the entertainment, the annual Junior Prom was run off very suc- cessfully in spite of the fact that many girls were unable to attend, owing to rising floods all along the Eastern United States. Before the prom, The Talk of the Town , a humorous farce on Princeton clubs, v as presented by the Theatre Intime. A group of students under the leadership of L. J. Gorin, Jr., 36 conceived the idea of having patriotism paid for in peace- .ime, rather than after the next war. From this idea, a new undergraduate organization, destined to sweep the country, was started. The Veterans of Future Wars instituted a move- ment to realize this idea by securing a $1,000 bonus in 1965 yet wanted immediate payment of the sum, for, argued Gorin, all bonuses ought to be paid before they are due. This bally- hoo against war swept the country and soon there were chapters at Vassar, Southern Methodist, and many other universities. It was taken up by newspapers everywhere and a newsreel was made by the March of Time showing the founding of the organization. Other interesting events took place this month: John Van Ess, Jr., ' 38 gained the presidency of Whig-Clio by one vote in a stormy election: W. H. Borden, ' 36 was chosen to head the Triangle: Freshman discarded black ties on Washington ' s birthday: the English Department started special extra cur- ricular course, An Introduction to Contempary English Litera- ture , which was well received. Junior Prom Time Arrives and the Four Weylin Nightcaps entertain each evening in the WEYLIN BAR ALEXANDER FOGARTY Composer at tiie Piano DURING THE COCKTAIL HOUR Two Hundred Eighty-six HOTEL WEYLIN Madison al 541h St. lu Yiin BAR Founded 1824 Five T ' For over five times the aver- age age of Princeton Seniors, this organization has been apparel headquarters for well-groomed men. This an- cient record for reliability is coupled with a most modern style viewpoint. £,r3 1424 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA LEADERSHIP Reflects — CUSTOMER SATISFACTION • In the final analysis, Customer Satisfaction is the real acid-test, the unquestionable proof of the character and capacity of our organization, servicing customers with Printing and Lithography. • With a foundation of 34 years ' experience, our busi- ness today represents a veritable parade of orders from substantial names in the business world . . . expert buyers of printing who come to us year after year for their requirements ... all testifying to our leadership for faithful quality and helpful service. • That spirit pervades all departments of our business . . . and it is our purpose to further advance the policies that have contributed so conspicuously to our success. • To users of Printing and Lithography, who are not acquainted with American Colortype SERVICE, we pledge to deliver a degree of cooperation that will surpass every like effort you have known in the past. OUR SERVICE INCLUDES Blotters Folders Labels Juvenile Books Booklets Displays Posters Magazine Inserts Box Wrappers Decals Macyart Transparencies Broadsides Greeting Cards Metal Signs Picture Post Cards Calendars Engravings Paper Novelt es Christmas Cards Catalogs Direct Mail Window Disp ays Tags and Seals American Colortype Company Printers - Lithographers - Publishers New York Office: 200 Fifth Ave. CHICAGO, ILL. CLIFTON N. J. COSHOCTON, O. Tv o Hundred Eighly-seven April, 1936 Samuel Tyler, Jr., B. M. Ridgway, and A. B. W. Anderson, all of the Senior Class, turned in the winning beer suit design. A beer can with the Class numerals, the letters P. O. N., and the most significant episodes in the class history at the top and the score of the Yale football game with the head of a maimed bulldog at the fool formed the nucleus of the design. A triangle, dumb-bell, and the traditional cannon completed the design. After the reenactment of the beginning of the Princeton Veterans of Future Wars had been filmed in McCosh 50, the University presented the March of Time with pictures of the activities of the organization. Bedlam broke loose as the various stages of development and accomplishments of the Veterans were projected on the screen of the Arcade Theater. Sophomores showed their preference for Economics as a field for upperclass study as the Class of 1938 made its choice of faculty departments. English showed an amazing rise in popularity. Previously Politics had attracted equally as many students as Economics. At its meeting this month the Board of Trustees accepted a plan whereby upperclassmen will be able to work in more than one department. Dorothy Thompson, noted journalist, spoke at a peace mobilization meeting held in Alexander Hall. A day or so later Edwin Markham on his 84th birthday spoke to a capacity audience in Whig Auditorium. The University ' s first serious fire in eight years swept through Elm Club. The fire, which broke out in the basement lounge, severely damaged the furnishings of the first floor. Whig-Clio held its annual banquet near the end of the month. An imposing array of distinguished speakers and Faculty guests addressed the 125 undergraduates who at- tended on many interesting political and non-political topics. Athletically, victories over Cornell and Pennsylvania marked the only bright spots in an otherwise disastrous month lor the Nassau baseball aggregation, which lost three League games to Harvard, Cornell, and Columbia. Pennsylvania retained the Childs Cup by outracing the Princeton and Columbia crews on the Harlem River. Of o Pleasant Sunday Afternoon Three Stepping Stones to Success RELIABILITY COURTESY HONESTY Member of Federdl Deposit Insiiraitee Corporation — F ederal Reserve System Two Hundred Eighty-eight liiEATKittOKHS. looking for a siiiarl rfstaiirant wliere tliey can dine in a hurry, will like it here . . . after llje theater it is a soothinj: plaee to have a night- cap ' anil talk over the evenin;;. For luncheon anil cocktails, up and do  n the fifties, friends are overheard saying — WE ARE NOW MEETING AT 70 EAST 55TH ST • NEW YORK ZV icN ill need of Cjozvns IhToods Caps for your f raduation, the cli- max of your college career, be sure that you receive authentic regalia made by AMERICA ' S OLDEST and I .ARGFST MANUFACTURKR Cotrell and Leonard Est. SjJ Inc. JOSS ALBANY, N. Y, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE Local Refresenlatwe Princeton ' s Choice More Schaefer Beer is sold in Nassau town than any other brand N CANS— N BOTTLES— ON DRAUGHT IN 94 YEARS OUR HAND HAS NEVER LOST ITS SKILL Two Hundred Eighty-nine WWSBHiite, T Tripler Clothes provide the stvie leadership preferred bv university men of good taste RIPLF.R CLOTHES are tailored hv H I C RE V-FREE M AN leadiniT makers ot gentlemen ' s clothes ready- tor-wearing Outfitters to Geutlem-n ■Estahlislmi i886-F-R-TRIPLER CO Two Hundred Ninety 1 ri pler ' s Formal I ' .v en i nc; Clothes offer the correctness expected at the most important occasions Tr I pler ' s Clothes tor country or campus wear assure casual comfort and lasting tjood appearance F • R • ' 1 R 1 P L E R C O • M.i.Hson Jvenue at 46 Street ■Ne-ic York Two Hundred Ninely-one May, 1936 May and Princeton spring started officially with the annual Houseparties in the Prospect street clubs. With sixteen orchestras furnishing sweet and swing and five hundred and forty-two fair feminine guests the scene was complete. To entertain the Houseparty guests in a fitting manner there were interclass crew races on Lake Carnegie, several other athletic contests and the Finch School-Theatre Intime produc- tion of Peer Gynt. The climaxing entertainment of the House- party Weekend was a fire which started on a shed on the roof of the gymnasium. Early in May the fourth photographic exhibition of the Princeton Camera Club opened in McCormick Hall, with en- tries from ten countries. On Friday the eighth of the month the first annual confer- ence on Public Affairs was held in Wh ig. The general topic Government and Economic Stability was discussed by repre- sentatives from Princeton, Harvard and Yale. These confer- ences v ere instigated to promote relations between the Big Three and also to stimulate progressive education by en- couraging a link between theoretical and practical knowledge. Senior Singing An Annual Spring Custom Several distinguished government officials in the national government were also participants in the conference, among whom were Secretary Wallace, Senator Wagner and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, Marriner Eccles. Early in the month the Princeton Varsity Crew won the Compton Cup for the fourth year in succession, defeating Harvard and M. 1. T. in almost complete darkness. During the Houseparty regatta staged between crews from Rutgers, Penn, and Cornell, Princeton won three out of four scheduled events. On the 11th the Carnegie course record was broken by the Navy crew when it defeated Syracuse and Princeton. In the Carnegie Cup races Cornell defeated both Princeton and Yale, taking the cup from Yale and cutting eleven seconds from the lake ' s mile and three quarters course. Yale, how- ever, tasted victory in defeating Harvard and Princeton in the lightweight race which gave her the Goldthwait Cup. This meet closed the Princeton rowing season. In the baseball games played during May the Princeton moundsman defeated N. Y. U., Dartmouth, Navy while they lost to Dartmouth, Rutgers, Harvard, Duke, and Pennsylvania. The track squad placed fifth in the Heptagonal meet at Cam- bridge and suffered defeats at the hands of Cornell and Yale. Elmer L. Cline Advertising; 11 East 40TH Street E. L. Cline ' 06 H. V. JULIER ' 04 LOOK SMART! Show that you are smart by taking care to look smart and remember that one of the greatest aids is Oleaqua. Just a little rubbed into the scalp before brushing, will keep the hair in perfect order the whole day. Oleaqua is also the best dandruff rem- edy on the market. Manufacluied by JACK HONORE ' S BARBER SHOP 38 Nassau Street Next to Langrock Use Oleaqua and Look Your Best F. A. BAMMAN, INC. Wholesale and Retail Grocers Phone 1282 Distributors of Ginger Ales, Mineral Waters and Beer 10 NASSAU STREET Two Hundred Ninety-two Distinctive Portraiture Orren Jack Turner Princeton, New Jersey Unexcelled Group Photographs THE DIES of nearly all the Charms of the various Clubs at Princeton University, are in the possession of this Establishment. Inquiries Soluilcd The brochure (ilFTS illus- trating many popular-price Ciift suggestions mailed upon request. £Y.BANKS B|Dh„ ESTABLISHED 1H32 I2I S CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Sayles, Zahn Co. DEALERS IN MEATS, POULTRY and PROVISIONS BERNHARD ZAHN, President Chelsea 3-3166 84-88 GANSEVOORT STREET NEW YORK CITY Established 1860 Two Hundred Ninety-three June-September, 1936 The first two weeks witnessed frantic undergraduates taking their last examinations for the year. The summer exodus from Princeton by undergraduates began early in June. Towards the end of the second week in June, alumni returned to re- unions, meeting old friends and once again treading the ground they once did as undergraduates. Commencement Day dawned cloudy and damp. Just as the Alumni P-rade began its trek across the campus to University Field, a disagreeable drizzle began to fall from the leaden skies, but rain failed to dampen the spirits of the gaily dressed graduates. After witnessing Yale ' s baseball victory of 13-6 over the Nassau nine, the alumni joined the throngs in Palmer Stadium composed of sports enthusiasts as well as under- graduates who had stayed over to see the Invitation Track Meet before returning to their homes for the summer. Don Lash of Indiana turned in the outstanding performance of the Third Annual Invitation Track Meet by shattering the world record for the tv o mile run. A temporary lull descended upon the campus before sum- mer school opened, except for the hot sultry days that wit- nessed that annual pastime of undergraduates, moving their furniture from one dormitory to another. Senior Comprehensives Compliments of THE HAPPY WONDER BAKERS who bake Slo-Baked WONDER BREAD AND HOSTESS CAKE CONTINENTAL BAKING COMPANY Fifteentti Reunion The beginning of July found summer school in full swing, but New Jersey ' s insufferable heat plagues the unlucky under- graduates who returning to Princeton for further study. Pro- fessor R. G. Albion conducts his class out in the open under a shade tree. The death during the summer of Dan ' Wheeler, rubber for Princeton football and track teams for more than thirty years, came as a hard blow to all who knew him. During his years at Princeton his good nature, thoughtfulness, and tireless activity had won him a place in the hearts of all Princeton men who came into contact with him, as is attested by the many expressions of sorrow which came to Princeton after his death. Princeton again assumed its prominence in intercollegiate athletics after another football campaign season began when Captain Montgomery and a large squad opened practice on University Field, September 15. The University opened its 190th session September 28. The campus was a scene of the usual confusion which accom- panies the beginning of a new college year. Again s alesmen mobbed the hapless freshmen and old friends met to exchange stories of their vacation. Roberson ' s Riding Academy During the winter months use our large indoor riding ring. Arrange- ments made for sleighing parties. SADDLE HORSES Our Car WUl Call for You Phone 1705 T. LOONEY Wines and Liquors 128 NASSAU STREET Phone 31 ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED Two Hundrey Ninety-four What ' s Ahead in Chemistry? TEAR AFTER YEAR, research chemistry produces a stream ■■of new or improved products to serve human needs. Each major chemical development means another forward step in assuring a higher standard of living for the American people. Research chemists have created new textile yarns from the cellu- lose of plants. Coal tar now yields beautiful dyes and bases for medicines to relieve suffering. Out of common salt chemists make products to fight insect pests — and nitrogen for the fertilizer ingre- dients needed to replenish the soil is captured from the air. From cotton come x-ray film, coated fabrics, quick-drying finishes. These and other Du Pont developments have created new jobs in industries that never existed before. They have brought new comforts and conveniences to millions of people. And they have opened to the farmer new markets for agricultural raw materials such as corn products, tung nuts and soy beans. Yet the marvels that chemistry has performed in the past only foreshadow even greater things to come. The money which Du Pont invests in chemical research, amounting to six million dollars annually, will bring about new advances during coming years. The age of chemistry is just beginning! Ir, J s PAT o Wilmington. Delaware BETTER THINGS for BETTER LIVING through CHEMISTRY Two Hundred Ninety-five Two Hundred Ninety-six The Princeton Inn Alexander Street 100 ROOMS PRIVATE BATHS FIRE PROOF AMERICAN PLAN The Princeton Inn faces the Graduate College. Our Gardens at each end of the hotel are especially attractive in the Spring, Summer and Fall. CLASS MATES and FRIENDS Make the Inn THEIR MEETING PLACE Because . . . The Princeton Inn offers the facilities of the exclusive resort hotels. Special attractive weekly rates, includ- ing meals, are guoted throughout the year. The finest Wines and Mixed Drinks are served in our Dining Rooms and Grill. We Solicit Your Inquiries J. HOWARD SLOCUM Manager Two Hundred Ninety-seven October, 1936 In the Presidential Poll conducted by the Princetonian London defeated Roosevelt with 1127 votes to 405. This resuhed in much conservative jubilation on the campus. The Prince- tonian, strongly Democratic, issued I Want Roosevelt Again buttons Vi ith the paper on the fifth of the month. In a poll taken of the Princeton Faculty Roosevelt led by a slim margin. At the opening of the School of Public and International Affairs for the seventh year Director DeWitt Clinton Poole and Associate Professor E. N. Simpson announced the elimination of all inactive participation in the conferences and the reduc- tion in the number of conferences from five to four. During the summer changes had made in the arrangement of commons in an effort to lengthen the time taken for meals. Tablecloths were provided and the number of tables of waiter must serve have been lessened. There is now both a Fresh- man and Sophomore lounge where members of the two classes may congregate when they so desire; the advantage of this plan was manifested in a speech by President Dodds. The Theatre Inlime presented as its first production of the year Oscar Wilde ' s The Importance of Being Earnest . The cast of this satire on the follies of Wilde ' s day was headed by M. G. Ferrer, ' 39. Starting the New Term Princeton Stands at Franklin Field On the 28th the annual Cane Spree was held for the first time on Brokaw Field instead of on Witherspoon Green. After the three wrestling bouts under the direction of J. N. Irwin, 11, ' 37 there was a general free-for-all up and down the slope of Brokaw until no participant remained clothed. With Henry Hull in the leading role a dramatization of the life of Edgar Allan Poe called Plumes in the Dust written by Sophie Treadwell was presented in McCarter Theatre. The political campaign was vividly reflected on the campus as each side staged huge rallies to boost their candidate. John G. Winant, the Social Security Leader, came to Princeton to speak for the New Dealers. One of the most interesting phases of the struggle was reflected in a series of debates between student political leaders and members of the Faculty. Edwin S. Corwin and Buzzer Hall participated in two de- bates against prominent student Republicans while Professors William S. Carpenter and Harley L. Lutz held fourth the Republican cause against student Democrats. November, 1936 The Student Faculty Association held its drive for funds to be used in the maintenance of the Princeton Summer Camp, Murray-Dodge Hall, the Student Loan fund and other chari- table organizations. The goal was set at $10,675, and was very nearly reached. The Yale week-end in addition to the football contest was filled with varied entertainment. The Yale Glee Club and the Princeton Glee Club co-operated in a concert in McCarter Theat re Friday night. On Saturday night the Theatre Guild presented William McNally ' s Prelude to Exile directed by Philip Moeller which made the 60th Drama presented by the Guild. The Yale Ball was revived this year and held in the Gym, and a large cro vd enjoyed the music of Charlie Rogers and the Princeton tigers. In its second production of the year the Theatre Iniime pre- sented The Great God Brown , a play by Eugene O ' Neill m which the principal characters v ore masks. It v as well re- ceived by the undergraduate body. Work Starts on a New Nass Wreck of Fast Express at Princeton After defeating Charter Club in Touch Football, Tower gained possession of the 1936 All Sports Trophy presented annually by the IntracoUegiate Athletic Association to the Club obtaining the highest total of points after a year of competition in intramural athletics. The Prince-Tiger dance was held in the University Gym the night before the Dartmouth game; The Barbary Coast orches- tra from Dartmouth, the Princeton Tigers, and Chick Webb ' s orchestra provided music for the five hundred guests. The football games played during the month of November were notable for the excitement they provided both fans and spectators. On the seventh Princeton started well by defeat- ing Cornell 41-13. In all the history of Yale-Princeton rivalries there has seldom been a more thrilling game than that played on the fourteenth. After leading for the half, losing the lead and regaining it the Tigers finally lost, 23-26. The final game was a 13-13 tie with the Dartmouth Indian. The soccer team had its best season since 1927 by heading the Middle Atlantic Soccer League and tying with Yale for the Big Three Title. Two Hundred Ninety-eight Fidelity- Philadelphia Trust Company Organized 1S66 An Agency Account with this Company covers any financial or business service, and is a special boon to travelers. TRUST DEPARTMENT 135 South Broad Street 32 5 Chestnut Street 6324 Woodland Avenue Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation PATRONIZE The Nassau Barber Shop T e A ew Most Modern, Sanitary, Efficient Shop ' Satisfaction Guaranteed HfTMCl ' RTAT NEXT TO BALTIMORE LUNCH IffllJp. J LW ERNEST HUNT, Prop. V ., (2ocktM Sat It has been our extreme pleasure to produce the covers for the 1938 Brie- A-Brac 55ih ST. al M A D I s N_AV:i:; KINGSPORT PRESS -filt- ( Qcndtttioncd KINGSPORT, TENN. Two Hundred Ninety-nine December, 1936 Sports continued to hold the interest of the undergraduates as December was ushered in by the election of C. H, Toll, Jr., ' 38 as the captain of the 1937 Varsity football team. The season came to its official end with the annual banquet at the Princeton Inn. The crowning event of the evening was the presentation of the John Prentiss Foe Cup to Captain T. W. Montgomery, ' 37 and E. K. Sandbach, ' 37. It was the first time in the twenty years the cup has been presented that two men had been thus honored simultaneously. W. S. Power, ' 38 succeeded R. L. Burger, ' 37 as captain of the 150 lb. team. Other fall sports held their banquets during the early part of December. After the undergraduates returned from the Thanksgiving weekend, the Intracollegiate Athletic Association supervised the opening of its winter program and inaugurated a new intramural hockey league. Much interest was displayed on the campus in the editorial published in the Princetonian and six other college papers advocating the formation of an Ivy Football League. President Dodds announced a plan whereby Princeton ' s enrollment would be more geographically distributed and those students of the highest standing in schools in the South, West, and the rural East not preparing for College Board Examinations would be admitted without any examinations. After the trustees of the University Store voted a ten per cent dividend for all its members, eager undergraduates thronged the cashiers ' window labelled Dividends to pocket the checks, which were especially handy before the vacation began. F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38 was chosen to be the Chairman of the 1938 Daily Princetonian while C. R. Devine, ' 38 will direct the 1938 Business Board of the paper After weeks of tireless activity the Triangle Club performed Take It Away , a gay satire on the capital of filmdom, Holly- wood, before capacity crowds each night it played in McCarter Theatre. The spontaneous enthusiasm of the audi- ence showed that the Triangle Club had produced a show well worthy of its two very popular predecessors. The two performances of Take It Away marked the last important event before the undergraduates began their exodus home for the Christmas Vacation by rail, car, and air. Athletically, both the hockey team and the basketball team opened their seasons impressively by winning three contests apiece and losing none. Hopes for successful seasons in each sport were considerably raised by these encouraging per- formances. Scene From the Triangle Show RETAIN YOUR MEMBERSHIP in the Store AFTER YOUR GRADUATION! It will enable you to order by mail books, athletic goods, clothes, haberdashery, or anything else that we stock, and to have them CHARGED ON YOUR STORE BILL. You will find especially advantageous the saving on your purchases of books. Retain the Privileges oi Store Membership THE PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE Everything the College Man Needs Three Hundred William Patrick, inc. Typesetters For Priuters and Publishers 16 LAWRENCE STREET NEWARK, N. J. PARK YOUR TOPPER ALL NIGHT • ANY NIGHT — and let your party join New York ' s gayest at — NEW YORK ' S SMART AFTER THEATRE RENDEZVOUS LONGCHAMPS MADISON AVENUE at 59th STREET (Entrances on Both Madison and 59th) L OPEN ALL NIGHT INDIAN RESTAURANT OVAL TERRACED STAND-UP BAR WALKSIDE CAFE PULLMAN DINER INDIAN TERRACE DINING ROOM CHAFING DISH BUFFET OPEN ALL NIGHT THERE ARE TEN RESTAURANTS ONGCHAMPS To Be Well Dressed is to be DISTINGUISHED! BERKSHIRE, INC presents timely values in smart conservative garments styled to appeal to discriminating shoppers. 64 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON. N. I. Three Hundred One JAHN OLLiER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Wdshinglon Blvd., Chicago, Illinois In the foreground - Fl. Dearborn re ' erected in Grant Park on Chicago ' s lake front. Illustrattop. by Jahn - Oilier Art Studios. Three Hundred Two BUILD YOUR YEARBOOK WITH MASTER CRAFTSMEN Mn f:oTJ.Kf;K puinikus Fine Quality Printing is nowhere so essential as in school and college an- nuals. The story told by- copy is worthless unless the printed pages provide eloquent testimony of its truthful reproduction of campus life. • Production of distinctive printing depends upon the masterful handling of such technicalities as layout, artwork, make-ready, and presswork, and also upon the selection of proper ink, paper and binding. • Consistently good print- ing has made the Colyer organization the first and last choice of the lead- ing schools and colleges. Colyer printing company SUSSEX AVENUE AND DEY STREET • NEWARK • NEW JERSEY HUmboldt 3-4150-51 • LARGEST PRINTERS OF YEAR BOOKS IN THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY Thiee Hundred Three If you hare enjoyed this book, remember that it has been in part made possible through the cooperation of the advertisers. Acknowledgments For their assistance in the preparation of this volume the 1938 Bric-a-Brac is deeply indebted to: N. A. lakes, Jr., of the Colyer Printing Company, P. S. Gurwit of the John and Oilier Engraving Company, and W. K. Deighton of the Kingsport Press for their sincere interest and unflagging devotion to every phase of publication, and espe- cially for their enthusiasm in connection with the new form of the book. O. J. Turner and Thomas Mulvey for able cooperation in taking all the group photographs appearing in this volume, as well as the majority of those in the view section and elsewhere. Clearose Studio for the dedicatee ' s portrait, several views, and numerous individual portraits on these pages. D. C. Smith, Jr., 29, E. W. Luginbuhl, W. F. Hofmann, Jr., ' 39, Roger Geffen, ' 39, and Frank Kane, Jr., for assistance in compil- ing the photographs of campus and ath- letic events. W. K. Selden, ' 34, for invaluable sug- gestions in connection with the Faculty section. G. G. Sikes, ' 16, and Laurence Fennin- ger, ' 09, for help with those articles on the Prospect Street Clubs and the Prince- ton Summer Camp, respectively. Princetonian editors S. L. Hedrick, ' 38, F. W. Rounds, Jr., ' 38, A. D. Suehsdorf, III, ' 38, H. S. Broad, ' 38, J. D. Burke, ' 38 ' and Blair Lee, III, ' 38, of football, hockey, basketball, track, baseball, and crew, respectively, for articles reviewing these major sports. J. H. Cleveland, ' 38, for the Whig-Clio article. B. F. Bunn, ' 07, for assistance in the dis- tribution of the book. Those candidates from the Class of 1939 competing for positions on next year ' s Board, without whose hard work the 1938 Bric-a-Brac would have been impossible. Advertising Index PAGE American Colortype ..................... 287 Bailey, Banks and Biddle 293 Bamman, Inc. ...................... 292 Berkshire, Inc. ...................... 301 Brooks Brothers 281 Elmer L. Cline 292 Colyer Printing Co 303 Continental Baking Co. .................... 294 Cotrell Leonard, Inc 289 E. I. DuPont De Nemours Co 295 Fidelity Philadelphia Trust Co 299 First National Bank 288 Jack Honore ...................... 292 lahn oilier 302 lennings Hood ..................... 284-285 Kingscraft ...................... 299 L ' Avignon ....................... 289 Longchamps Restaurant .................... 301 T. Looney ....................... 294 Douglas McDaid ..............••••••• 283 Nassau Barber Shop ...........•.•••.•••• 299 William Patrick. Inc 301 Princeton Inn ............■.■■..•.• 296-297 Jacob Reed Sons ..............•.••■•. 286 Roberson ' s Riding Academy ■294 Sayles, Zahn Co. .............•■•.•■•• 293 Schaefer Beer .............■.••..••■289 F. R. Tripler Co 290-291 Orren Jack Turner ...............•■.••• 293 University Store .............■.•.•■•• 300 Weylin Bar 286 Winslow Bar ...................... 299 Three Hundred Five Index A. A. A. A. A 112 Acknowledgments 305 Activities 51-118 Administration 21-50 Administration, Officers of 25 Advertising Index 305 Alumni Day 248 Alumni Organizations 249-254 Anti-War Society 103 Appointments, Bureau of 102 April, 1936, Review of 288 Arbor Inn 196-197 Art and Archaeology Department 26 Astronomy Department 37 Athletics 119-194 Athletics, Council on 177 Band 61 Baseball 145-150 Baseball Averages 148 Baseball Captains 150 Baseball, Complete Record 149 Baseball, 1939 Freshman 188 Baseball Review 147 Baseball, Varsity 146 Basketball 131-134 Basketball Captains 134 Basketball, 1939 Freshman 186 Basketball Review 133-134 Basketball, Varsity 132 Behind Nassau Scenes 116-118 Biology Department 25 Boxing Club 96 Brackett, Cyrus Fogg, Lectures 82 Bric-a-Brac Board 52 Bric-a-Brac Former Officers 53 Bureau of Employment 102 Cadet Officers, R. O. T. C. Unit 94 Calendar, 1936 Advertising Section Calendar, The Princeton 60 Caledonian Games 180 Camera Club 107 Campus Club 198-199 Campus Views 9-20 Cannon Club 200-201 Cap and Gown Club 202-203 Catholic Club 88 Charter Club 204-205 Cheerleaders 125 Chemistry Department 28 Chess Club 108 Choir 63 Class Day Committee and Exercises, 1936 240 Class Favorites of 1936 247 Class Notables of 1936 246 Class Numerals, 1937 173-174 Class Numerals, 1938 174-175 Class Numerals, 1939 175-176 Class Numerals, 1940 176 Class Officers, 1936 233 Class Officers, 1937 255 Class Officers, 1938 261 Class Officers, 1939 267 Class Officers, 1940 ! 273 Class Roll, 1936 234-239 Class Roll, 1937 256-260 Class Roll, 1938 262-266 Class Roll, 1939 268-272 Class Roll, 1940 274-278 Classics Department 29 Cliosophic Society 77 Cloister Inn 206-207 Club, The 106 Clubs, Upperclass 195-232 Coalition, Franklin Delano Roosevelt 104 Colonial Club 208-209 Commencement, 1936 233-247 Committees of the Faculty 24 Committees of the Trustees 22 Concerts Committee 65 Conference, P-H-Y 81 Cottage Club - - 210-211 Council on Athletics 179 Court Club 212-213 Crew 151-156 Crew Captains 155 Crew, 150-lb 153 Crew, Junior Varsity 155 Crew, 1939 Freshman 189 Crew Review 154 Crew, Varsity 152 Cross Country, 1940 Freshman - 190 Cross Country, Varsity 159 Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectures 83 Debate, 1876 Prize 79 Debate, Lynde, for Seniors 79 Debating Panel 78 December, 1936 300 Dedication 6-7 Three Hundred Six Index Degrees, Honorary 245 Dial Lodge 214-215 Dodds. H. W., President 21 Dramatics ■67-73 Economics Department 30-31 Editor ' s Note 8 1876 Prize Debate 79 Elm Club 216-217 Engineering Society 98 Engineering, School of 48-49 English Department 32-33 Faculty 24-49 Faculty Committees 24 Fall Handicap Track Meet 181 Fall Intracollegiate Contests 179 Fall Rowing 181 F. A. R. O. T. C 94-95 Favorites of 1936 247 February, 1936 282 Fencing, 1939 Freshman 192 Fencing, Varsity 163 Field, William Pierson, Engineering Lectureship 83 Football 119-126 Football Captains 125 Football, Complete Record 124 Football, 150-lb 126 Football, 1940 Freshman 184 Football Review 121-123 Football, Varsity 120 Foot, Two, Club 110 Forum, Philosophy 99 Franklin Delano Roosevelt Coalition 104 Freshman Athletics 183-194 Future Wars, Veterans of 100-101 Gateway Club 218-219 General Summary of Students 279 Geographical Summary of Students 280 Geology Department 36 German Club 107 Glee Club 62 Golf, 1939 Freshman 193 Golf, Varsity 169 Graduate Council 249 Grenfell Club 114 Gun Club 108 Gym Team, Varsity 162 Halls, Whig-Clio 74-80 Health and Physical Education Department 45 History Department 34-35 Hockey 127-130 Hockey Captains !. 130 Hockey, 1939 Freshman 185 Hockey Review 129-130 Hockey, Varsity 128 Honorary Degrees 245 Honors Conferred 241 135th Annual Junior Oratorical Contest 79 Index of Advertisers 305 In Memoriam 50 Interclub Committee 195 Intracollegiate A. A 178 Intramural Sports 177-182 Ivy Club 220-221 January, 1936 282 June-September, 1936 ■. 294 Junior Oratorical Contest 79 Junior Prom Committee 66 Key and Seal Club 222-223 Lacrosse, 1939 Freshman 192 Lacrosse, Varsity 166 Lectures 82-83 Life Saving Club 132 Lit, The Nassau 80 Little, Stafford, Lectures 83 Little, S. K., Republican Club 105 Lynde Debate for Seniors 79 Madison Club 232 Major Sports Captains and Managers 177 Managers ' Club 171 March, 1936 286 Mathematics Department 37 May, 1936 292 Military Science Department 38 Minor Sports .. .157-170 Modern Languages Department 39 Motion Picture Committee 103 Musical Clubs 62-66 Nassau Herald Committee 239 Nassau Literary Magazine 80 Notables of 1936 246 November, 1936 - 298 Numerals, 1937 173-174 Numerals, 1938 174-175 Numerals, 1939 175-176 Numerals, 1940 176 October, 1936 298 Officers of Administration 25 Orange Key 91 Three Hundred Seven Index Orchestra 64 Oriental Languages Department 29 Partial Students 279 Phi Beta Kappa 242-243 Philosophy Department 40 Philosophy Forum 99 Physical Education Department 45 Physics Department 41 Pistol Club 97 Politics Department 42-43 Polo, 1939 Freshman 194 Polo Association 170 Presidents of the University 21 Press Club 56-57 Princeton-Harvard-Yale Conference 81 Princeton Summer Camp 85 Princeton- Yenching Foundation 90 Princetonian Board 54 Princetonian Former Officers _ 55 Prizes Av arded 244 Prom Committees _ _ 65 Prospect Street Clubs 195-232 Psychology Department 44 Public and International Affairs, School of 46-47 Publications 52-60, 80 Quadrangle Club 224-225 Religious Societies 86-90 Republican Club, S. K. Little 105 Rifle Team 165 Right Wing Club 110 Rousseau Club 113 Rugby Club I57 St. Louis Club 89 St. Paul ' s Society gg School of Engineering 48-49 School of Public and International Affairs 46-47 Senior Prom Committee 66 Seveners Club 112 Sigma Xi 243 Ski Club jOg Soccer, 1940 Freshman igo Soccer, Varsity 15g Sons of ' 09 J15 S pencer Trask Lectures 83 Spring Intracollegiate Golf igi Squash, Varsity I54 Stafford Little Lectures 82 Student-Faculty Association 84 Summer Camp g5 Sv imming, 1939 Freshman 191 Sv imming, Varsity 160 Tennis, 1939 Freshman 193 Tennis, Varsity 168 Terrace Club 226-227 The Club 105 The Halls 74-80 Theatre Intime 71-73 Theatre Intime Productions, 1935 72-73 Thursday Afternoon Club Ill Tiger Board 56 Tiger Former Officers 57 Tiger Inn 228-229 Tower Club 230-23 1 Track 135-144 Track Captains 143 Track Meets: Cornell-Princeton 139 Heptagonal Games 141 Invitation Meet 142 Navy-Princeton 1 39 Yale-Princeton 140 Track, 1939 Freshman 187 Track Records 144 Track Review 137-138 Track, Varsity 136 Trask Lectures 82-83 Triangle Club 67-70 Triangle Club Cast for Take It Away! 68 Triangle Club Chcrus and Orchestra 70 Triangle Club Program 69 Triangle Club Review and Staff 58 Trustees 23 Trustees Committees 22 Twenty-One Club 1 1 1 Two Foot Club 110 Undergraduate Council 51 Upperclass Clubs 195-232 Vanuxem Lectures 82 Varsity Club 172 Westminster Society 86 Whig-Clio 74-80 Whig-Clio Review 75 Whig Society 76 White Coat Club 113 Wrestling, 1939 Freshman 191 Wrestling, Varsity 161 Yacht Club 92-93 Young People ' s Society 87 William Pierson Field Engineering Lectureship 82 Three Hundred Eight y ■■■::■■■■.•■■•■,.• ■-■tSy.] • , ;. .. 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