Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ)

 - Class of 1922

Page 1 of 286

 

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1922 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collectionPage 7, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection
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Page 10, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collectionPage 11, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection
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Page 14, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collectionPage 15, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection
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Page 8, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collectionPage 9, 1922 Edition, Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 286 of the 1922 volume:

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M Mcafam C'l lF'Y. .- I 5 , -- 1,, ' gf ,W34 w 1 '. '- 'Un 1' Hu I --, 1-. ' l , 1. ' 1 I w ,K ' I -4 L u I --, .uw ' . v, H, Nh., - .I :U 4 , Net: uri. ,- , . 1 .I A . ' F ' A Q .Je . HQ.-ny ' n .A N. Y ,-.J ' . ,, H ,J 'I .IA L' fl I 1 -44 P , gn- , VI V - qu y .. , ,-'I . -, lm 'I '!:'in1AV 'n Y'--' A W J Y J 1 4' M as 'lpn fx -fx H ' ' Qhe f A arlet H ' tier. I sv ut ew .,sSSSxyxx fx OCCIDF 51 H I F ' xl lx S ,sr :UPI y wrl' MV tg: Co in 'o 6 JW: ' PHX 7159 A lm E- I N. i ' 'U Tlf Q - xx'!xssLL! . 0 ..,:,H,. X p'. I- SE, rw 'I4 i ,ff y .5 x Nu Y- ., ,L ,. 17126, .N x. In 1' fig: :'H:f'i'-' QQ' -lijlif-sff, 0 1 'v'- --------5. 1, 111' rjiti' ,H .-,V ,,.1'vl, 4 vu? 1 H35 5 H ' f'lQ5fl,I v iw: Ti ' fs I mmf cn if - M 'ff r' Quai' . , - QI I 1 - ,.,- - I-' wi. ,W 3-Q ' W I An,1::.4A,x , , , 4 ,L R 'WI' mi5L?5.iti:L'::l?4 1-. ' me if 0 if - 1 '-.W-.,5 , N. fg- M1' w:,,5, ,, m . IlL,11UQlf' N W'!l'W j: lrgyllsulv Q V W W5EIL?-.5Q,,l,'19'7IW ' HE advertisers in this book have made its production possible. They represent the widest range of interest, both in the nature of their business and their location. They con- tracted for their advertising space on the assump- tion that it' would bring them a returng and it is up to every Rutgers man to give his best consider- ation to those firm names which appear in the advertising section ot this volume. The quality of product of those advertisers whose market is country and world-wide is too well known to require any recapitulation here. Ot those merchants of New Brunswick who have subscribed to advertising space let it be said that they have enjoyed the patronage of Rutgers men in years past, and merit such growth in their cus- tom as new classes at college should bring them. It is a good thing to remember, not only in the case of the SCARLET LETTER, but always, that helping others who help you is the best of policies. RUTGE to COLLEG , EXAMINATIOXS FOR ADMISSION: Thursday, Friday and Saturday, june 2, 3 and -1. 1921 Thursday, Friday and Saturday. September 15, 16 and 17, 1921 CUURSES OF STUDY HE College offers courses leading to the degrees of AB., Litt.B. and B.Sc. Under the last are included a general science course, and technical courses in Civil Engineering. Electrical Engineer- ing, Mechanical Engineering, Chemistry, Ceramics, Agriculture, and Biology. The AB., the Litt.B., and the general science courses permit large freedom in the choice of electives and provide liberal preparatory training for the professions of law. medicine, theology. teaching, and journalism. The technical courses are designed to prepare for industrial positions of leader- ship, except the course in Biology, which aims to give a liberal trainirg in the sciences, and is especially appropriate as a preliminary to the study ot medicine. Short courses, not leading to a degree, are offered in Ceramics and in Agriculture. VV. H. S. DEMAREST, President For Catalogue or for Any Other lnformation, Address LUTHER H. AIARTIN, Registrar 6 1765 1921 The Rutgers Preparatory School with its high standards, fine equipment, refined home life, and Well man- aged athletics is giving satisfaction to many dis- criminating people. You may receive full in- formation it you Will Write to-day for a catalogue. VVTLLTANI P. KELLY llfeadnzaster New Brunswick, N. I THE OPEN DOOR The New ersey College for Women Athliated with Rutgers College NEW BRUNSWICK, N. ' A The courses offered are a Liberal Arts Course, a General Science Course, and a Home Economics Course, leading to the degrees of AB., Litt.B. and B.Sc. The requirements for admission are based on the standard definitions of college entrance sub- jects, totaling 15 units. Applicants may be ad- mitted either by ceitifi- cate or examination. . For Detailed Information, Address THE REGISTRAR OF THE COLLEGE FOR VVOMEN NEW' BRUNSXVICK, N. J. 7 Fix N X I r X I , I ' , iv If f 2 1 , 1 ,,, W4 'il ,53 w 1: MY, V,-Y 'ii E ,Y A K. '-1 H..--.---,.,.............g Q' G,,..Q,,,,,,,A,,-,WL f-A MET? A, 5.4 -,,,,..., M.- X , ,,,.-----,-A-M 1 1 -.fr-gf f f-----4 !..- lf: N L n 'HJ - X -H' . 12' ,' :L M ffny .x,Q f ,f X-K , .I Y v -,.1--. 34.f5.:,.Lf:: f-l.,,K,. j l fL,A.!' f ' N ,-,, , g fibitor in Qlgiqf Q-LL E507 ?.L'7Da1rf 0 iguginesfg Bllanager . giialph f.Stone . 1' ..... Ewen' J . Johnson glhirgrg . . . . . 1l91lli?1IIi3?l'9iiM'kf' llgliwtice Q B, + Q Q Q , !ia1'rg3i.Pratf 0 Q f!'GQf11I!!1f9,' f ' ' , Jihwxnillburanir Q i'h1!99Q11111H,' 0 0 , Iilnvrenp Hjfouliw . Ilgtwensaa, ,sg v . fierman Jikerhnne 'Q 'TWVWiWT7Tf7TTffT2f ?-f if rv' If LJ.-4 L- -L,4g..q,+-,Aj,A,i,,-,-WLAN! M HWY -M , ,U AQ. H -, 1' Y 4 w w ' A c ,-., 1 '2 1, 1 H1 M 3 ..., X li HSXEH ART 5 X Y if : W xf wgt S553 7 E! : A , -- Lg, -V4 N453 fi Sw VN- Y.. ,Q .21 if 3 MEF N 1 N HZ. ii , ,, Qi i: ' e E1 'ill '- 1-5 X !,- EEN L-' Y l ff' L 37 IQ V3 Pi! I EE! W !-1 w 3223 El :Z :U Ei 523' wig. if F ff-53 QE ' 1 Sl U M W 1' mlmlnfmgyig43514431gg1 mgll1 n: u1ummm u u z 11w1wwww m m, .. , 1 mm wm . J EQ yi 3 N. y 41 -. .fp ,, 4K I ,W -H W iw 11 ,7, .J .Jw v Yu il 9 45 jf' 21241 '72 , ',Q, EW ' Wi? 4215 X .. 'Arh ,gil ,EV - Ei' a XM will! in MEM gli? 'AW wif' gag KA N E ' EV E? BU s x N sr: it E 65? E EH 321 li E' Q4 E, KE EN lg! En ig 5M 5: EV if E E E E ? E 15. : Wi-EN S his E WE Wig i E ii 'E - E' - - . wif 1? Illlllllll W l l 1 HrIHlllmIuliv1Hrmwiwlmwlmwwm 1llummsmmmwfwiwamm uwum:HmwumuummwummmmamwwwwwwwwJwmf 'mm w w 3 El ,ii A-.5 1 1 v x ,f ,X iii' f WW M w w w - ,... -l--- ' A ff .-.wg .:a Q ff N' K'-T so 45? ':- . Q f+f-,Ffa-N EE W' Er M E is E+ Er 5 so sg! 'E I 21 E51 Q wi -, 1 E we 2 HE :f HE Qiliot Robertson Payson, s.1s.,Q.m.,1ab.m. E as N5 iE,: ,!-E 15+ LE who ilaas Earn jaot dBnIp iBrofessor, r , if E E But jfrirno as mall r El 5 12 li gg To iEtnrntp:QEigbt Qtlasses E, E rs f: E 4 of Rutgers Men, 5 ?-1 E . ii! I Uibts Book s lg 35s Brsprrtfullp Broiratro ig '1 ir:-1 LZ E+ I a r E ,' S2 - ag E HZ 5 o V1 5 Q li T5 31 E oz E wi E W' E oz? E , Vi EE ml1luummmmnlllullmILao1UH41umsuwIoiHmsnww:m:mms1aumw1umumnmgnm1owmu1Iru1:Hoxam11aninono1HHorrumnneumauHWHzullulmumsranmlriz iw l, qiiiri: L,-im -,, 1 A 1 .. .1 w -'rm v --x il l --1 -gl - X 'f4 A1 .: I ,i l b -J, A V K i ' il 'LTI YEI' E' ' f 34, ,.,, +3 rf. ' ?'i'-.3--, X ,. 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Elgl 2 lla ,H l 'E Him tel E hill ' if El ii ' 1 e is :: f- : S g F o E R D lil TTH the entrance of each new Freshman class at Rutgers a group si I of new personalities is introduced, who give more or less of their ig gli character to the college. 'j El The Class of 1922 entered Rutgers as soldiers in the Student Army gif Training Corps, and under the stern discipline of military training were E gl , I ,--. lg taught to be men. The war over, these new sons of Rutgers, .imbued E it with the spirit of carry on, took up the threads of undergraduate life 5, as it used to be. There followed the usual underclass activities, but it 'Eg Sl is even now too early to declare that the old customs-subjected to revolu- El El tionary changes during the war-have been completely rehabilitated. ,lg gl Rutgers has always been a small college. As the State University, lg? gl however, -its aspect is rapidly changing. The present seems to be a transition period in which old customs and new ideals are struggling gg for supremacy. These changes, of course, are not on the surface, but iii nevertheless new forces are making themselves felt. E13 The record of the year in this volume will reveal no startling depar- S3 turesg but there is an overtone present which presages great things for ig. I R t . YZ' Zi U gm THE ED1ToRs. ia el Wgl glltllllTlillitlllwmllfllWMUitlllllmiMmMMMilmwtlttlmilllllmllttlwumwmuamilliliilllimzimfmlixmmwillwwfw wwgg www iw iivi1wiQgwii.Ei ZZ 1 1 -1 TJ 141 A il El F.: .figs 1 .Ti ,:1 is 'Y cf 'L ' X fb , -A . 5 l' 5 L ' ' ' ,E 'E IE Board of Trustees gg, P l EX-OFFICIO 1 H15 EXCELLENC1' EDWARD l. E1111'ARnS .......................... .... T renton F1 Goifvrzznr of lhc Stale of .Vow Jersey QE HON. XVILLIAM S. GU11A1ERE, LL.11...' ...... i ...... ........... .... N ewark Chief f11.1Ii1'1' of lh-' .Slalc nf .Nero fvrsvy El, - HON. THOMAS F. KICCR.-XN, LL.D ................... h .............., .... T r enton lil' E: .-1Itomay-Ger:1'1'11l Of the Sian' 01' New Jersey 12 7:3 E BY ELECTION , sg REV. 1V1LL1A11 H. S. IDEMAREST, 11.11, LL.D ...... ........ ...... . . Mar. 7, 1899 12 llgi President of the College 151 TUNIS G. BERGEN, Pl-LD ................... Brooklyn, N. Y .... ..June 19, 1883 FREDER1c1: FRE1.1NOHU1'sEN, 11.M., LL.D ...... Newark ........... .June 16, 1885 'g,, lil JAMES NEILSON, .1.11., LL.B ................ New Brunswick .... .... J une 22, 1886 fig gill FREDERICK J. CO1.1.JER, 11.11 ........... .... lr 1llC1SOl'l, Y... .... June 12, E' PAUL COOK, 11.11 ............. .... ' Troy, N. ...... .. une , ' 1: 155 W1LL111111 H. LEUPP, A.111. .......... .... N ew Brunswick .... .... il une 15, ,il E REV. J. PRESTON SEARLE, 11.11 .............. New Brunswick .... .. une .. , 1:1 IE JOHN W. I'1.ERBER'l', JR., 111.sC., LLJ3 ........ 1-lelmetta ..... .... J une 19, 1901 4:5 lg. HON. FOSTER M. VOORI-IEES, LL.D ............ Elizabeth ........ .... O ct. 28, 1902 ,QX lil HON. .ALPHONSO I. CLEARWATER, LL.D ....... Kingston, N. Y ..... ..Jan. 14, 1904 jlg VE l-lo1VAR1J N. FULLER, 11,11 ................... +1 lbany, N. Y ....... ..Jan. 12, 1905 E11 li REV. JOSEPH R. DURYEE, D.D ......... .... N ew York, N. Y... ..Mar. 1, 1905 :' 12 PH11.1P M. BRETT, A.1x., LL.1z .... .... N ew York, N. Y... Uhgill. E, E CHARLES L. EllG.XI1, ...... ...... .... 1 3 oston, Mass. ...... .... c t. ', ,Z ll W. EDWIN FLORANCE, 11.11 ........... ..... N ew Brunswick. ..Oct. 12, 1906 M1154 NE REV. YVILLIAM 1. C1-1A1f113ERLA1N, 11.11 ........ New York, Y... ..Oct. 8, 1909 wg LEONOR F. LOREE, LL.D ............... ..-New York, N. Y. .. ..Oct. 8, 1909 fll, gl DUNCAN' D. SUTPHEN, 11.13 ........... ....New York, N. Y. .. ..Oct. S, 1909 E1 ? REV. HZENRY EVERTSON COBB, n.D .... .... N ew York, N. Y... ..Oct. 13, 1911 REV. VVILLIA111 BANCROFT T'I1Ll., n.n ........ Poughkeepsie, N. Y ..... Jan. 9, 1912 1251 WILLIAM S1-IIELDS NIYERS, D.SC ....... .... N ew York, N. Y... ..April 12, 1912 lil HON. ALFRED F. S1c1NNER, 11.13 .... .. .... Newark ............ ..Apri1 11, 1913 1121 E REV. JOHN PIOWARD RAVEN, 11.0 .... .... ' New Brunswick .... ..Jan. 13, 1914 'j OTTO FIERMANN KAI-IN, LL.D .............. Morristown ....... ..April17, 1914 , ,gl AI.AN TJTARTWELL STRONG, LL.D ............ New Brunswick .... ..June 16, 1914 1 El JOHN XVYCIQOFF TWETTLER, MSC., LL.B ...... Millstonc .... . .... ..Jan. 11, 1916 1,3 'E' ERNEST R. ACKERMAN, ESQ ...... I ......... Plainfield ........ . . .... Nov. 24, 1916 163 HON. JOSEPH S. FREL1NoHU1'SEN, 11.111 ..... Raritan ................. April17, 1917 lg gi LOUIS W. STOTESBURY, M. sc. .............. New York, N. Y... ..Jun-e 12, 1917 151 JOHN VAN NOSTRAND DORR, E.111 ........... New York, N. Y... ..Oct. 12, 1918 lg gl VXIILLTAM P. I'1ARDENBERGH, ESQ .... .Bernardsville ............ Jan. 14, 1919 5 HALE1' FISKE, 11.111 ............... .... N ew York, N. Y ........ June 10, 1919 k .5 GEORGE l-I. BLAKELEY, c.E .... .... S Outh Bethlehem, Pa ..... Oct. 10, 1919 52, 'E ROBERT S. PARSONS, c.E ................... New York, N. Y... ..June 15, 1920 ,f 5 :HENRY G. PARKER ........................ New Brunswick .......... June 15, 1920 E 2 OFFICERS OF THE BOARD 2 REV. J. PMSTON SEARLE, D.D. .............................. . New Brunswick , 2 I St'f'l'6lUl'iV - 2 :HENRY PARSELL SCI-1NEEwE'1Ss, 11.11 ....... I ...... . New Brunswick ' . 2 Tl'BIIlYIl7'l'1' 1 ,QI E , 1: E STATED MEETINGS OF THE BOARD 1 1151 'Second Friday in October, second Tuesday in January and second Friday in l ,El April at 2:00 p. ni., Connnencement day at 9:30 a. n'1. f lg . , 1 lg . , AL , .. A -L - ' 1511 ,I llllllll!Wll'lMQ'lIlI3llllllllllllllllmlllllllIll' lil illii 1 .llllll lllllllllllllllllmml lllllllillllllIllllIlillllIllllIilllllllllIIiIllllIllllIllllIillllIllIllllllllIlllllllillllT'll!l!l!illllE ff ff! , 3 El EI . ' 'A 1 nw- .--.,,xQ ,ff ' ,..-,f 'T I M .XD 'X T f T 72 I - ,-:iff I I I'. if v' I l X T 1 Ip.,--Lf:---l.....-5--.Af I., .- A -L--M f-L rn- V in Lfij 3--3? tie? ,f'-tee if E I X35 , 0,-2 'a O'--- Board of V Is1tors of the State College E KE and of the El' Ei 'r 21 Q. State UHIVCTSIYQV of New ersew Q, 1.1 - E' Ev I 'f E ATLANTIC COUNTY. .. XX II.I.I.xM A. BI-.xIR. .. .... Elwood lg BERGEN COUNTY ...... . . .ART1-I UR LOZIER ..... .... R lClgCXVOOd xi BURLINGTON COUNTY. .. ...R. R. LIPIIINCOTT. .. .... Vmcentown I CAMDEN COUNTY... EPHR.-UM T. GILI. .... ..HaclclonlIeld 54 C.-IRE ALIAY COUNTY. . .. ...SHARLES VRN,xM.xN. .. .... Dias Creek E jg, - QE. CUMBERLAND COUNTY. . . .... CHARLES F. SERBROOI: ..Bridgeton 5 rg' ESSEX COUNTY ........ .... Z I-:Nos G. CRANE ...... ...Caldwell 5 El GLOUCESTER COUNTY. . . .... W'II.IzUR BECIQETT ..... . .Sweclesboro : HUDSON COUNTY ...... .... I .CJEIDRICH BAHRENEURO ...Union Hill E E, HUNTERDON COUNTY. . . .... EGBERT T. BUSH ...... . . .Stockton E RIERCER COUNQTY .... JOSIAH T. ALLISON... ...Yardvxlle E EEN NIJDDLESEX COUNTY. . . JAMES NEILSON ..... . . .New BFLIHS-WV1Cli gi BIIONMOUTH COUNTY. . . .... WII.I.I.xM H. REID. . . . . .Tennent E AIORRIS COUNTY ...... JOHN C. XVELSH .... ...German Valley 'f M511 OCEAN COUNTY. . . JAMES E. OTIS .... . . .Tuckerton gl PASSAIC COUNTY. . . ISAAC A. SERYEN. .. . . .Clifton A15 J SALEM COUNTY. .... CI-IARLES R. HIRES. . . . . .Salem f IEJ SOMERSET COUNTY. . . JOSEPH LAROCQUE ..... . . .Bernardsvnle 1 lil SUSSEX COUNTY. . . ROBERT V. ARMSTRONG. . . . . .Augusta U E EI UNION 'COUNTY .... JOHN Z. H:NTFIEl,D .... .. .Scotch Plams 5 lil WARREN COUNTY .... JAMES I. COOKE .... . . .Delaware ?' If 2 AMES NEILSON Pzmridevfzi if ll: ' . . , - 155 EGBERT T. BUSH, V1ce-Pffgszdezzt A .5 TRVING E. QUACKENBOSS, Secafetary and Trcczsuzfer nil 3 llgii if 53,55 I U I W O' I I A I Ei 3 1 E.. ,iw , vw I - as. 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I 'X i ' xNX ,:f Y -i QFQKFJ V J F CL:-fr'-'Af-NLS g '1 ' 'X X H 6 J Q'N iE5f:37.,,,, ,,,.-M' ' ' -- -1 W 'E U + EE E E E 551 E JE iii! : E E L' E gp E 'gg 1 E 1 f 2 E I E E .. un E I 5 E - 4 3 i 5 - Y 1 I 5 I E rs I - ef 4 ' Z E Z f'-X fn : 2 Q ' , m Y 5 E Q E ? rg E w ,Q l 5 FE-I T 2 2 Ei - E - E E 35 2 I5 PE - - - , 4. A ig rmUH1,HllU , H1 , kll'WNMMMMiWilHHiM'!WElMl'1iHlR mmMm,uUU,m,wmuumwwmlmmlumlymimmmHmmmuewnmH:mmmfrM11:mmmuM111ulumllliiswwfgm ME ' fi. ,I N52 EE H :EL if - r I if 1 EI El E! il if. 3 Ei :, ix ii? E2 gf EW ig! Fe: Ei EN j 525' E61 E1 E+ 3 if EN Ex EN Ea' EV EQ 'Eg E5 'iii Ea EY sv Q l 5 'EH EV 133' fi! EW 'Q gi 31 if '55 il x I: l: .5 :E ,Z 15 E? wi El E Eg EH viii EE ,F agp u:, '15 ,E Ei E? xg' J HMEMM1Mm1w1wU MM w m MiimymWmMw1 ,m ummm mw RESIDENT DEHAREST 1 Ei. I-..i ,.,! I J wi E IE ,I 2-I ZZ .J ix Z2 I 5 1 ,f my A IEA-1' EI Ig Faculty XVILLI.-XM H. S. DEM.-XREST, Presidcnl .P . . . Seminary Place AB., A.M., D.D. CRutgersl: LL.D. CColu1nIbia, Union, Pittsburghl. Ugi FRANCIS CUYLER VAN DYCK ..... Z5 Gran-t Avenue Q AB., A.M. IRutgersjg Ph.D. CUnionl: D.Sc., LL.D. CRutgersI2 Emeritus Il Professor of Physics and Experimental Mechanics. Ii AUSTIN SCOTT ....... 24 Liifiiigsioii .txveiiiie lag. AB. fYaIeJ: A.M. CUniv. Mich.l3 Ph.D. fLeipsicj: LL.D. CPriuceton, Rutgerslg Voorhees Professor of History and Political Science. gl 51 LOUIS BEVTER ......... Bishop Place Ei iii A.B., A.M. CRutgersJg Ph.D. Uohns Hopkinsjg Litt.D. CRutgerslg Professor T of the Greek Language and Literature. 'EIL 'i. E ALFRED ALEXANDER TITSNVORTH .... 590 George Street Ili B.Sc., M.Sc., C.E., D.Sc. CR.utgerslg Professor of Civil Engineering. Q 2 JOHN CHARLES VAN DYKE ..... 564 George Street Z L.H.D. CRutgersD 5 Professor of the History of Art. .EI Ei ELIOT ROBERTSON PAYSON ..... 116 College Avenue QI' AB., AM. CI-Iamiltonjg Ph.D. CRutgersJ: Professor of the History of Q! Educationg Associate Professor of the German Language and Literature. VVILLIAM HAMILTON KIRK ..... 190 College Avenue Ei AB., Ph.D. Cjohns Hopkinsj 5 Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. E' :i JOSEPH VOLNEY LEVVIS ...... ' 35 College Avenue 5 - B.E. CUniv. N. C.Dg SB. in Geol. CI-Iarvardjg Professor of Geology and ,- Eg Mineralogyg D'irectorfof the Geological Museum. , 4 - E, EDWIN BELL DAVIS ....... ' 145 College Avenue EI B'.L. CDartn'iouthDg A.M. fRutgersDg Ofhcier cllAcademieg Professor of ge. 3' Romance Languages. I M WALTER RUSSEL NEVVTON .,... 39 College Avenue E :I A.B. CUniv. Vt.-jg Ph.D. fSyracusejg Professor of the German Language' and E IE Literature. II , ' - :I GEORGE HUBBARD' IPAYSON ..... 15 Union Street E :I AB., D.D. CI-Iamiltonjg Emeritus Professor of Ethics and Eviclences of 5 ii Chr1st1anity. I X Y I QI RALPH GARRIG-UE WRIGI-IT ...... Bishop Place it LI B.S. CColumIbiajg Ph.D. CBaslejg Professor of Chemistry. 5 I ROBERT CULBERTSONVHAYS HECK . . . 35 College Avenue I: Q ME. CLehighjg Professor of Mechanical Engineering. I V - E I ERANKPOIRRESTER THOMPSON ..... The Bayard E I A.B., A.M., EE. CPrincetonDg Professor of Electrical Engineering. E E I TI ' I I I 21 A I I .II LIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' IIIIIPIIIIIIIII IIIIm.III.IHI.IIIIII I IIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIEIIIIIIIZIIIIIIWIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII.I IIIE fl ik LE' Z1 :i 15 151 :1 g-a l i:t?4:..aa,..- S .1,fPEiZPTw E'E'-.Nxh ff- ,T L' . I . '-'-P' f il A.. 4 I .U A 5. ll my t ,zu 1, ,..-V' -, r ,I 1' If - X' ' ,gen A I , X if -'ffrvfr-uf -- I2 '- - A' M' 1- - A ,-i.--A ' ' fr-iq, ,L---' S' ,iffy Ig! We P e ea . Faculty IE I 55 - 15 RICHARD MORRIS ........ 70 Lincoln Avenue 32 IE B.Sc., M.Sc. CRutgerslg Ph.S. CCornelljg Professor of Mathematics. I E HP NVALTER TAYLOR MARVIN ...... 5 senior street If A.B. CColu1nbiajg Ph.D. CBonnDg Collegiate Church Professor of Logic and jj Mental Philosophy. 1: lg , , li E JACOB GOODALIL LIPMAN ...... College Iiarm E El B.Sc. CRutgersJg MQM., Ph. D. tCornt-lllg Professor of Agriculture. E,- li' - ii CHARLES HUNTINGTON XVI-IITMAN . . . 116 Lincoln Avenue 1: 'E A.B. CCol'byJg Ph.D. tYalejg Professor of English. E -' EDXVARD LIVINGSTON BARBOUR .... 172 College Avenue ,El B.O., ME. CNational School of Elocution and Oratoryjg Professor of the Art E lg of Public Speaking. I E JOHN HUBBARD LOGAN ..... i . 172 College Avenue E : A.B. CMercerJg A.M. fColnmbiaDg Professor of History. . i MELVILLE GTI-IURSTON COOK .... 212 Lawrence Avenue 1 Q A.B. CStanfordjg A.M. QDePauwDg Ph.D. COhio State Universitylg Professor E Q of Botany and Plant Pathology. X. E THOMAS JI. I-IEADLEE ..... Seventh and Park Avenues A B.A., M.A. CUniv. Indjg Ph.D. tCornelljg Professor of Entomology. Z MAURICE ADIN BLAKE ..... . 98 College Avenue E B.S. t'Mass. Agr. Coll.Dg Professor of Horticulture. , kg. VVILLIAM EUGENE -BREAZEALE ...... Metuchen A' g M.M.P. Clfurman UniversityDg M.Sc. tRutgersDg Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. CHARLES HERBERT ELLIOTT .... 330 Lincoln Avenue . B.S. CMcKendreeD' AM. Ph.D. CColumbial' Professor of the Sci nce of Education I-IARRY REYNOLDS LEWIS 1 Clifton -Xvenue B Sc NA r CRhode Island State Colle el Professor of Poultry Husbandry STANLEY PUGENE BRASEI IELD 924 Lan rence Avenue CE, MS CLafayettej PhD CCornellJ Professor of Applied Mathematics ARTHUR RUSSEL MOORE 110 North Sixth Avenue GEORGE IIERBERT BROWN 69 South Adelaide Ax enue Cer En COh1o State Universityj Piofessor of Ceramics Director of Department of Clay WOTRIIT and Ceramics AUGUSTINE VVILBERPORCE BLAIR 202 Lawrence Avenue B S ANI Qllaverfordj Professor of A ricultural Chemistry l I 7 X 1 4 7 C 3 ' ' . l i ft U ' . . ow. . . . . V 5 4 I E E I ' 1 4 Q ' - - - - 1' - f 5 .. - - ' I f ' l E . , . . , I I . i 5 A.B. CNebraskaDg Ph.D. CCaliforniaDg Professor of Physiology. 4 -1 - -4 4 s r Y I , . , I ' I I. I I 3 . ., ' .lf . .'. Q A g V , E E A ' E ' 22 E :T I l ' ' ' i 'l I Ill 'ln Ii llllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllll ll Illllilllllllllll lllIIlMllilllllllllllllllllllfllilllllllllllllllllllllmlllU.ll'llllL, 1'T f'P.'..i.j. '',:...iT1P, . Y ...LL ,. L --H ,L LLL. ff' mg: -L L-,V - X ip,-,K -4, 1 ., ii ..f F' iv lg?-il' ll? if .sis gf, Si . , L .A FT -qgur . i J- 4, I ' 'inf -4 ,- rs -' fair tba 1 ' I Tl- L 1 ,a I .sf -25 ,..M2- ew:1..-1:-gtilfi, wkjgil' L .. 2 . . --L. N5 -fi r ,. F 2 - s M.- ,fade If ' ...,L,,wf-A..--:tif -V-V X' 45-Mgt' 'V,.- ,L . Faculty M :i 3 DAVID FALES, JR ..,....... Y. M. C. A. ,Eli ,EN A.B., All. 1' Harvardlg HD. fifhicago Theological Sexninarylg Hill Professor Eli of the English Bible. XVILLIAMI MICHAEL REGAN .... 134 Liviiigsioii Aveiiiie T255 Q?N B.S.g A.M. CUniversity of Missourijg Professor of Animal Husbandry. ei Iii' FRANK GEORGE HELYAR ...... 205 George Street XE!! B.S. CUniversity of Vermontlg Professor of Animal Husbandry. fill E! VVALTER SCOTT GREACEN .... Alumni and Faculty House Lieutenant-Colonel U. S. Armyg Professor of Military Science and Tactics. 1111 gl THOMAS ALAN DEVAN ..... 263 Lawrence Avenue 1532 B.Sc. CRutgerslg M.D. Uohns Hopkinsjg Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary 'gil Science. 4 Hg 'li EDMOND 'WOOD BILLETDOUX .... 324 Lincoln Avenue li 2 A.B., A.M. CVVilliams1lg Oflicier d'Academieg Professor of the Spanish E :Il - Language and Literature. Z ,Y I4 7 WL! i gif, FRANK APP ......... 69 Paterson Street T B.S. CPennsylvania State Collegejg Associate Professor of Astronomy. lg! i-I I if ALBERT CHESTER DE REGT ..... 11AUnion Street lgl A.B., M.Sc. CHamiltonJg .Associate Professor of Chemistry. if WILLIAM BERTRAM TVVISS ..... 304 Lincoln Avenue 4211 xg A.B. CDartmouthJg A.M. CHarvardjg Associate Professor of English. GEORGE AUGUSTUS OSBORN .... 220 Lawrence Avenue B.Sc. CRutgersjg Librarian. A' '-1 E X FRIANK RANDIALL PRATT .... 41 North Seventh Avenue 'Tj Hi B.Sc., M.Sc. CRutgersDg Ph.D. CPE-incetonjg Associate Professor of Physics. i ALBERT RITTENHOUSE JOHNSON . . . 68 North Sixth Avenue iii Z IE Ei B.Sc. CRutgersDg .Associate Professor of Graphics and Civil Engineering. TIE: E iz' V EDIWARD FRANKLIN I-IAUCH ...... Piiiicetoii L .i 2 B.A. CTorontoD3 M.A., Ph.D. CColurnbiajg Associate Professor of Modern I L: ii E A Languages. E 5 HARRY NELSON LENDALL .... Alumni and Paculty House : E B.S. in C.E. CTuftsDg Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. L - IRVING STODDARD KULL ....... Princeton A Q A.B. QBeloitjg M.A. CUniversity of lndianajg Associate Professor of History.: 2 - CHARLES SUMNER CROVV ...... 32 Grant Avenue 3 .A.B. CAlVESt Virginia Universityjg A.M. QT-Iarvardj Associate Professor of E Education. - lei L 3 i E - 23 lg 'I EY y IllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I Wllliflii llllll. IlllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlmllilIlIHllilllilillIlIlIlllliiiillilllllll1IUlIllllllllilllllllllllllllllI'fT1I1l1jIE! 24 W 1259 'L Q 'if 'sl - Faculty E . E HARRY OSCAR SAMPSON ...... 93 Lincoln Avenue E B.S., B.S.A. Clowa State Collegel: Associate Professor of Agricultural E Education. 'il ff. - STUART AUGUSTUS STEPI'-IENSON, JR. . . 266 Redmond Street lg! 1 B.S., C.E. QNew York Universitylq Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. E FRANK ALEXANDER FERGUSON .... 17 Jones Avenue A.B., A.M. QUniversity of Michiganlg Associate Professor of Physics. ARTHUR JAMES FARLEY ...... 275 George Street lil, E B.S. Glass. Agr. Collegejg Associate Professor of llorticulture. lil CHARLES HALE ,..... Alumni and Faculty House Assistant Professor of English. LEIGH XVADSVWORTH KIMBALL . . . 24 North Seventh Avenue it A.B. C,DartmouthJg AM. tSyraeuseDg Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. Eg E LYMAN GIBBS SCI-IERMERHORN . . . 109 North Sixth Avenue B,S. Glass, Agr. Collegelg Assistant Professor of Vegetable Gardening. IE I VVILLARD CHANDLER THOMPSON . -. . . 17 101165-AQEHHC I-1 E B.S, QUniversity of Wfisconsinjg Assistant Professor of Poultry Husbandry. C Z V ERNEST LTTTLE ......... Princeton 2 B.S., M.S. CRochesterDg MA. QColum.biaDg Assistant Professor of Chemistry. gi GEORGE YVALLACE MUSGRAVE .... 94 College Avenue E B.S., M.S.A. CCornellDg Assistant Professor of Agronomy. ' 3 ALVAH PETERSON - ..... Alumni and Faculty House . B.S. Clinoxjg MLA., Ph.D. lUniversity of Tllinoislg Assistant Professor of is Entomology. E RALPH EMERSOIN DANPORTH .... 115 North Sixth Avenue iv AB., Nl.S. CUniversity of Michiganlg Assistant Professor of Zoology. Eg E GEORGE XNTLLARD MARTIN .... 17 Huntingdon Street E Litt.B., MSC. CRutgersDg Assistant Professor of Botany. . i THURLOXN CHRISTIAN NELSON . . 85 South Adelaide Avenue B.Sc. CRutgersDg Ph.D. CUniversity of Wisconsinjg Assistant Professor of gl Zoology. I PETER ANDREW' VAN DER MEULEN . . . 19 Lufberry Avenue .. 5 B.Chem., Ph.D. CCornelljg Assistant Professor of Chemistry. E I VVILLIAM VAN NEST GARRETSON .... 586 George Street 5 tB.Sc. CRutgersDg M.Sc. fYaleDg Ph.D. CUniversity of Michiganlg Assistant - -Professor of Mathematics. 1 i l A 24 A ' ' f lllllllIllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll I lllllllll lllllllllll IllllllllllllllllLlllilllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllillllHIlIllllIlIlIlliHlHllU ll lllllllllllf i i l l l , 55:1-i -R 1 4-I-I I A T' 1 22 E-.1 . P' Area., 5, E . Til lg El Faculty ii E E' MERLE SHARON KLINCK ..... 243 Codwise Avenue Eg B.S. in Agr. COhio State Universityj 9 Assistant Professor of Rural Engineering. 53 E Z ROBERT PIERSON ARMSTRONG .... 49 Nichol Avenue 'f B.S., M.S. CMass. Agr. Collegelg Assistant Professor of Horticulture. 2 FORREST CLINTON BUTTON ..... 132 George Street ii B.S. CCornellJg Instructor in Dairy Husbandry. 'Q if 1 f- E GEORGE FERREE LEONARD .... 63 North Fifth Avenue EE lil Y ,gn A A.B. CUniversity of North CarolinaJg M.D. CGeOrge Washington UniversityJg E ,Ei Lecturer on Bacteriology. E EDWARD FRANCIS JOHNSON . . . Seminary Place E A.B. CRutgersJg Instructor in English. ii El! JOHN HILL . ...... 135 North Fifth Avenue jg ig B.S. CConnecticut Agr. Collegebg Instructor in Dairy Husbandry. lg El 3 ig EMORY POTTER STARK ....... Y. M. C. A. gl Ig A.B., M.A. QColum1biaJg Instructor in Mathematics. 3 E PAUL SNYDER CREAGER ...... S9 Paterson Street P A.B., -A.M. CPennsy1vania Collegejg Instructor in Electrical Engineering. I HENRY BLANCHARD SEAVER ..... College Farm i Y B.S. CDart1nouthJg Instructor in Horticulture. 2 3 WILLIAM CHARLES SKELLY .... , . 138 George Street I B.S. COhio State Universityjg Instructor in Animal Husbandry. Z HOWARD DECKER MCKINNEY .... 66 Harrison Avenue Litt.B. CRutgersJ5 Instructor in Musicj b lg, .. ti I ERNEST THEODORE DEWALD ..... 22 Morris Street ' Z1 : A.B. CRutgersJg A.M., Ph.D'. CPrincetonJg Instructor in Architecture. 2- 'JAMES HERBERT REILLY ....... 35 Mine Street E li U7 E. 3 5. 5 UQ 511 : fl! P9- 'T r: 0 FP o '1 E n-3 cn. IP O U. ':. UQ Q '1 FD 0 PY' O '1 o Ph PU :r 14 U1 H. 0 W .. H T as ... E. : QQ liltll 7 Z. 25 li is l ' lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllll llIlllllilIlIllllliHIMIUIlIllllIllIlllMIWW!llllllllllllllillllllllllMillillllllll1llll1i.l1l4lriz+41i2laiu3llI1linlllIl!llllllzlliiliiilllnlilfllmmml ll! . New i g ,il Q' :I iw i, .iv is f-+ N E f21 '- -1 ,-.12 if liz 1 g, ,K-33 :f -','57Z45Tg.7 ?.,'Tl'I'T'fQ fi, , wjw, ', Y . ,--ff--0----E ,,. ff fd W. EW ' KW if X xl Vlpv A , J, .El Xxx- -1 Q If ,J . T it fy- 1 ,, .ff 4 ... ' ' Q fn' ' 553, .hf! A' f'-1'-f-JA-Qfgjaerglgiggv' Lil- , -Q 13 F swf ,lf N- ,A .sc , X, -, ,.Y1,,-,gag in. iii fQ 22 Q 5 . EU ' E1 gil gl! -f if ? FY i in ,--in E 5211 ?! EIL ,Z El? QQ Ei' l? 31 gi 111 ii if 5, Ai 3 5 'Af' 2' V2 Q25 2 2 il 5 11 E4 -1 M - ,A ij U QQ Q Q if 4 i fn pe? 1 H 5 5 lg Z W Q 5 53 5 45 Ei! 75 WE E 'L' fi 225 E gl Q il El Q E9 3 EU ik E5 if EP 5 vga 2 El 5 Eg ,I 5: gl E1 E ba S15 Q51 ET E5 Eg FN 1'U'UV' - f .. , , - E, M 1' ' I' ''' ' H'UUYUUMQ1UMUMWiUUM'IHMUlWrlwmmlmanlwlmwmmur1MI+'WUWHmmmmum4mNw:4Lmammna:e+1rmmmmwwvummfuwwmwxwrwmQWEfL 'S' , ,T A X ' f' 1 8-.,' , gb ! fQ ff A xg- , ' 1 C+, 1 1 x vi.. - - .-.x '1 J ,f . I ns K, 3 I li , w ,K X ,.-1-...x 4 F,--M ...,a.....,Q,.mg.--.p. 1' , W V . .-.-.... M, -- Y, 1 ----:-,-'- XSL 1f--1--- ---1-1 -, gg 4, V' M- ..,V.... ----. -------vxgz nf,-.,,.4Y4-w F- ,,-1' if 15: XX Q A1 -' 2' 4251 ij ul-.Q ,Nu 4. . ' ' m -1- -- W I -, ,. ,f ,. -'4-2... ,,.,.fLfJ A -A-QQQ-i...,Ff- 4 Xl ,gy ' 'ff---T-P3355 -9 G12 f ,J WEE ,-, -4 45 I I wx f 1 Eg A 11 vm? as! , 1 it R 6-if Q ,g 1 N I 1 ' EH 5 KLM of X X NYJ K y Nn1 7 ol X x AgN G 7 15 +, 0 Qiw J! - JL- ' MAP- Q N fx ,J v H I x J N X gg - ,N Xf : Q 5 1 ,eifiiz-1 1- N ' EM E wg T, , Qiuecxam u5 . Q Eh 1 'EI A ix ' wi! ll WE! I , Lim 3umu11mmr11ui IM 'MMMMWMHsmmmswwiwwWU1 ms:Hwmmmarxruuzmn4mmmuw:1m ummmw uw M m m wwmww1UE5 t n .- ' ., , , X .-RI, ..-.La-lg E if J :, 1-1 1:1 E1 l 5 3 ..: 41 ,11 , 3 ,:i If -1 X- ,- 1 Z 1151 Ei li i: 51131. ,Z E lj HORACE PATTERSQN BILLINGS 1:1 RSC. in Chemistry, University of Penna., 1919. Assistant in Chemistry, University of Penna., gl! 1919-1920. 9:11 will MSC. in Chemistry, University of Penna., 1920. 1321 Instructor in Chemistry, Rutgers College, 1920. NZ: lil E E 21 xl- 'li E' 15 S W E li 7' if . 123 2 HUGH MCDONVALL CLOKIE Ng BA., University of Saskatchewan, 1918. '5 MA., Unirversity of Saskatchewan,.l91f9. Li I Harvard Graduate School, 1919-1920. EE' E Instructor in Political Science, Rutgers College, fi' Z 1920. ae 1 we E 15 Vi' 2' gi EPHRAIM cRoss C 2 B..-X., College of the City of New York, 1913. 1 I 3 .. MA., Columbia University, New York, 1914. , 1 1 Candidate for Ph.D., 1914. E 2 University Scholar in Latin, Romance ,Q E Languages and Linguistics. 1 lnstructor in Romance Languages at Rutgers 1 : 1 and N. I. C., 1920. E E Z 5 ri E ld gl 28 V I ' i 1 ' vw' V1 111' 1 1 11- 'i 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 ' 1EulllLWlIll1Ml 111 ,lla 1..I.11ll111m111l11W1Hl11m1L11Ml11mwmllhlllmmlllrlllllmilllmlumllUI1IllUHrlul11lIE1zl1'm1l1laP111111S11111111111111111'11w1.111JflW 'wllfa NJ K ,, .gA:h,-N ,,...---.,.,,m ZZ 1 1 'f' 1' iz: :Q 3 1 E, - --- 2 E ,i. E VVILLIAM JOHN CROZIER Ei, B.S.g AAI., Ph.D., Harvard. Member: Amer. Soc. Zoo1., Amer. Soc. Nat., 1211 Amer. Physiol. Soc., Fellow of the Amer. 2' E' Assn. Adv. Sci. 2, E Frederick Sheldon Travelling Fellow, Harvard University, 1915-1918. : E1 Resident Naturalist, Bermuda Biological Sta- i tion for Research, 1915-1918. 5 E1 Assist. Professor Physiology, College of Medi- - ii. eine, University of Illinois, 1918-19. 2 E11 Assist. Professor Zoology, University of Chi- ,I E31 cago, 1919-1920. - E1 Professor Zoology, Rutgers College, 1920. i1 E il 2 DAVID PERCY GILMORE E - ' E Q B.A., Princeton University, 1910. . E E, Studied at Universities of Leipzig, Jena, Ge- A E, neva and Grenoble, 1910-1912, at Columbia E Q University, 1912-1919, at Princeton Univer- E i sity, 1919-1920. 3 Z Instructor in French and Spanish, Rutgers Col- .f E E lege, 1920. ' , . 21 Z -1 E E 1 ' E 1 FLOYD EDWARD MEHRHOFF E .2 B.Sci., Rutgers, 1917. E E MF., Rutgers, 1920. -E 3 lst. lim., ofa. Dept., U. s. A., 1917-1919. E 2 lndustrial Work, 1919. Q E E Instructor in Mech. Eng., 1920, Rutgers i 5 College, 1920. I E . 1 E I E E E E 1: E 29 F lllll lll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 1 111111'111111111I1111I1I11 1111111 11111I1111111111111I1111111111111111111l111111111111I111111111111I11111111111111111l1111111111111111111i1111111l1111lM11111KI ea .T - ,,.-1 ir ,--.. 'wt- 'El 13 l use 1:1 1 5 lj 5 4 gl :I E' El 3 -1 E Q11 ,:t El El EI lit IZLKIER LAXVRENCE SARGENT B.S., Colorado Agriculture College, 1919. M.S,, New Jersey Agriculture College, 1919. Instructor in Agriculture, Rutgers College, .Eli 1920. ala lit El! lg El' E , F. C. SCHOENING F I l3.Sci., Columbia University. l Machine and Tool Des'ign with Stamford Roll- ,T ing Mills Co., Springdale, Conn. ff gl The Sperry Gyroscope Cog Wfestern Electric l Co., N. Y. C. B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, O. International Harvester Co., Akron, O. 5 Instructor in Mech. Engineering. Rutgers I College, 1920. i SAMUEL EWING sM1LEY E Graduate U. S. Military Academy, 1Vest Point, 1885. Served in Infantry continuously in various 'rades from Second Lieutenant to Colonel Student Columbia Law School and Columbia School of Political Science 1889 91 Xlember of New York Bar 1891 Phi Delta Phi Columbia I'orei n Service in Mexico Cuba Philippines and China Commanded 16th Infantry Brigade parts of 1917 1918 Professor of Military Science and Tactics Rut gers College 18881891 19031906 1970 l 1 E 5 . - 2 I ' . ' E 2 ,. ' ' ' E - 4 .U . . . . . . Q E I b ' - 1 y E 2 ' , 5 5- V E ' ' . . . .Q E ' r - . H ' I 5 i , 1 - E l E so t I lllll llllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l llllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll llllllllllllllllll lllll ll IllllllIiI ll Illlllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I 'J ff-5 ---i: N...-. ml-. f C 777 rf K,-,,, f p Z2 3 it fs I Z2 1 . x l , I-fm!- X,-X ' l. I V3 .,,, C-6? T:.L1'-N4 nie s fr 1 tggxr'-.L K XI'-:fl vb: ' --V-. V- ,ap-sv-Wg lil Ei E 1:21 :1 El E' CHARLES E. s. SPRINGHGRN 5 ii' BA., coiiimiiia University, 1917. 2 Graduate Student, Columbia University, 1917- E U. S. Department of Labor and U.4S. Army, Z E 1918-1919. Z Graduate Student, Columbia University, 1919- f 1920. 2 lg' Instructor in English, Rutgers College, 1920. ' 1 S 1: E lg E 5 ELBA 1z1v1ANU15L WA1'soN 2 i: BL., University of Michigan, 1895. E E M.A., University of Michigan, 1918. E E Assist., University of Michigan, 1917-1919. E E Assist., University of niiiiois, 1919. 5 E Scientific Staff, N. Y. Botanical Garden, 1920. E E Instructor in Botany, Rutgers College, 1920. i E E ' E E E E E E 2 FRANK WILCOXON B S Penna M1l1tary Colle e Chester Pa 19 7 Chen'11st with Atlas Powder Co of VV1lm1n ton Delaware 19171920 Instructor in General Chemistry Rutgers Col lege 1920 E 2 E 2 : E E E E I ' E ' 'i ' ' D ! 7 'J gf J 1 ' ' ., gn 5 . . - E E ' , . ' E E . E E 1 E S E E 1 . - 391 I 15lllllIlllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lIllll1HHllllllHllIlllll IHllllHlIlllIlillHIlIlHIlHllIlllllHlllIl l I .yr v H91 Y 7 2. 2 l Q-l 4- 1 E f: 2 E E I .- E E E E 2 3 2 E 2 , The Year 1-113 year 1920-1921, while it has brought forth nothing especially startling, has nevertheless been one of steady progress in every line of college activity. Athletics, scholarship, dramatics, forensics, society, music and spirit are not only alive, but have been functioning in a manner that should make any Rutgers man feel proud. The year started off with a record Freshman class, and the annual pep meeting, which lived up to its name, showed the incoming class what Rutgers spirit consists of. Then things began to whirl in college circles with their usual vigor. The student clubs have been making history this year. Both the Civil and Mechanical Engineering clubs have become affiliated with national organizationsg the Radio Club has been getting the scores of games by wirelessg Philoclean has conducted its Interscholastic Debating with greater success than ever beforeg the Glee and Mandolin Clubs have sung and played their way through one of the most successful seasons in their history, the Ag and Biolog clubs have held regular meetings, and been otherwise active, and the Queen's Players, in conjunction with the Mimes. of the N. -1. C., favored us with a play which will go down in the dramatic history of Rutgers as a iworthy tribute to our ability in histrionic art. Spirit has been nowhere lacking: on the contrary it has Ben making itself evident throughout the year. Xlfhen the football Ram went to South Bethlehem to play Lehigh, it was accompanied by about 500 students and a twenty-five piece bandg and at the Nebraska game in New York, the performance was repeated. The spirit meetings during the fall were well attended and full of life, but the spirit of the Year came to a climax in the Student Banquet in the Gymnasium on February 15. That banquet, the hrst of its kind that has ever been held, exemplified real Rutgers spirit. It was a students only function, and if any were absent, it was because the gymnasium was not large enough to hold the crowd that gathered for an evening of festivity and discussion. If for nothing else, the year 1921 will be marked in the annals of Rutgers for that banquet. The social life of the year has been as gay as ever. Beside the regular affairs, the Sophomore Hop, the Junior Prom and the various house parties, the old custom of having a Freshman dance was revived during the fall by the ladies of the faculty. They gave a dance to the Class of 1924 of Rutgers and the classes of 1923 and 1924 of N. J. C. And we must not forget the band. Yes, Rutgers has had a real band this year, consisting of about thirty pieces. It played at all the games during the fall and at most of the 'fpep meetings, as Well as assisting in the R. O. T. C. It is encouraging to note that most of the members of the band are underclassmen thus assuring a better band than ever before in the years to come No there is nothing startling to be found in this renew of the year but it still portrays the spirit of earnest virile endeavor that has character ized Rutgers men of the past the spirit that we cherish and hold as the best of the traditions the past has given us 121 E31 QE' leg as :E 5 gl' -Ii ls, '1 l li l i :ii , I l, l l l 1 l i f P E ' . 2 . . v . . Y ' E - . 5 . E E 332 Y .r I lil ll lmmmllllllmutmiililllsllliilllllmlllul HH!WllirllllllillllllilmlmumiltdlllwmlllllilllIllIlIlilliillilllllllllllllllllllll Hllllllll lll 'll' IE y, A 1 ' ' ?'5L1Q:' '5?'7i Q'f ,TLQ55 , ,T, ,,,, , , .- ' W.- 5' K W -W - ' ,jx F 1:1 . V 1 ' I 1 F Y ' :Q ' '- I . 4 , u xA 1: - ' :lj-LQ rl l ,, , is 1 Y-f ' V5 E 1 iii' 1 ,LH V211 7' 'VZU Ev EH Wiki' ggi 1 H15 E N HE! Eg E! EEM 1 I 2 1 E E1 li W 12' N EH S5 E E, Eid E, W. M1 ,4 5-- ,24 E4 25:1 EE 'Ii FE: JE, EE-N Mi , IL. H r 231, Z sg., E li-, W l' H21 ' f Ii 3 E! 1 I-- I E E1 E .2 5 3 E E! V E EI : 1 E E E E 'E E 1 h Wwz IHIIiNNIWMHMH!1I1HHHIHHHHINlHWXWUHIKEMWlHHIPHWiiimiVNWIWIHVHNHHNHWNHMMHJHHHHHEUXHEHWFUWUI'WMIHPIHHIHNEEWIHIME U ,QA .. ' ai 1 in till ii r f: ,. E llllllll , The Year HE year 1920-1921, while it has brought forth nothing especially startling, has nevertheless been one of steady progress in every line of college activity. Athletics, scholarship, dramatics, forensics, society, music and spirit are not only alive, but have been functioning in a manner that should make any Rutgers man feel proud. The year started off with a record Freshman class, and the annual pep meeting, which lived up to its name, showed the incoming class what Rutgers spirit consists of. Then things began to whirl in college circles with their usual vigor. The student clubs have been making history this year. Both the Civil and Mechanical Engineering clubs have become affiliated with national organizations, the Radio Club has been getting the scores of games by wireless, Philoclean has conducted its Interscholastic Debating with greater success than ever before, the Glee and Mandolin Clubs have sung and played their way through one of the most successful seasons in their historyg the Ag and Biolog clubs have held regular meetings, and been otherwise activeg and the Queen's Players, in conjunction with the Mimes. of the N. ul. C., favored us with a play which will go down in the dramatic history of Rutgers as a iworthy tribute to our ability in histrionic art. Spirit has been nowhere lacking: on the contrary it has Ben making itself evident throughout the year. Xlfhen the football Ram went to South Bethlehem to play Lehigh, it was accompanied by about 500 students and a twenty-live piece bandg and at the Nebraska game in New York, the performance was repeated. The spirit meetings during the fall were well attended and full of life, but the spirit of the year came to a climax in the Student Banquet in the Gymnasium on February 15. That banquet, the First of its kind that has ever been held, exemplified real Rutgers spirit. It was a students only function, and if any were absent, it was because the gymnasium was not large enough to hold the crowd that gathered for an evening of festix ity and discussion. If for nothing else the year 1921 will be marked in the annals of Rutgers for that banquet. The social life of the year has been as gay as ever. Beside the regular affairs the Qophomore Hop the -lunior Prom and the various house parties the old custom of having a Freshman dance was revived during the fall by the ladies of the faculty. They gave a dance to the Class of 1924 of Rutgers and the classes of 1923 and 1924 of N. I. C. And we must not forget the band. Yes Rutgers has had a real band this year consisting of about thirty pieces. It played at all the games during the fall and at most of the pep meetings as well as assisting in the R. O. T. C. It is encouraging to note that most of the members of the band are undeiclassmen thus assuring a better band than ever before in the years to come No there is nothing startling to be found in this renew of the year but it still portrays the spirit of earnest v1r1le endeavor that has character ized Rutgers men of the past the spirit that we cherish and hold as the best of the traditions the past has given us 'El lil EE' ,Iii ,E E is E 1-1 ,El la 1 I l i :il E l l i i l N g l l i I 1 E l 3? 2 7 b , 7 I c c b . S k y C E C l sc 77 , ' E i C b . E i Z C . ' . . b . . Y. , E E U . . . . ' - E E .. . 2 . E E . S E ' E E . : E 332 5 l lll lll ll 'llmll l lLUlllllllllllIlll'lllMlIIl lIllIWWllllllllIlilllIll!llllllllillllllldllHUll!llilIllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllll Ill ll' li' mm ff- . 'ii-115 Ni27 f'1',Q f-S-xii N .... ---Y VNV ,, 1 , ' -'-wwf' Y MT. A- Y- L L I A YY W V - , x 5 r ., . , tx.- , 1 . , 'Fd-V. ,nxt 7 1- -.235 , l 5,4 5'1 s:- Ex ,Y .. 129' W Qi Zu iN EN ii E U1M1l IHHHINIWINIHHHW!!!MHHHHNHIWWHHIMmWH1IlHiWimiYNWMHHIIHHNHHH4'HMHW?HW?HH!1HH?HHEPUWTH'WMHIWHHHHLNH A an-4 -1- X 5 Mc 24:'4-- 'glx.,sN xl - L i l I - ' f Q lf 9 O 3 W M e l O , H he 1 fx g:..i.:.g:1,g,3s:lx E b A . ,1 , ,, a.:.g. 4,4 -w , : ,, my 6- A Wv'-Y' jf' 'X W '- ' 1 '5:E1 155' Tfj, il E1 :U I ,,,, 1111 Ilf W1 ,..1 il in ffl :li 'iii' lm , 111'- liix 'Vi I E21 ' l ll 1 11-.. f ,VA 1 1:51 1 3211 I ll fn., li: 1 1 lil . ' Q ii 13 'Ei Class Of 1921 Q li 0 OFFICERS President-MORTIMER I. REDMOND S6'C1'Eft11'y-CHARLES IRWIN POST Vice-President-H. GRIFFITI-I PARKER Trea.mrc1'-MERRILL H. THOMPSON 2.1 Historian-XVILBUR A. DURYEE Yell 3 Alla garro, garro, garray, 5 Alla, garro, garrun, - I Alla garro for Rutgers, 3 Rutgers, twenty-one. E E - 1 34 ' 1 IlllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l I IlI'l1IlIlilIlIl!!1lI1iI !lil 1lllill1lIl!l!l'Flllllillll lIIlIl!l!liIlII1'I1II lllllllllllllIHl lll i ' 1 gf' K i F'l 1 . 0. 1 l I l 1 l 1 l , 1 i 1 l 1 1 ,y 'x I 1 1: 1.1 .6 1 A L. 1 l 1 V l 1 5 1 1 l 1 l I wa. f 11 fr -lx I 1 4 .ny an 4, I XX E History of the Class of li As the men of 1921 pass through the gates- of old Queen's Campus opportunities and duties and they buckled down to the imperative needs of to face hfe's battles, they enter upon a world just settling down to the lf the time. Looking back over these four years one can see vast changes. Rrlrslrlrs of Peeee arlel Prosperlry-, Tllrollgllollr rlle Pest four Years College As already suggested, the Freshman year was one of expectancy, not llle llels lleell e Verlerl ollfl exelllllg one- The Worlrl has beerl lo rl srere solely of college lite, but of other things. The class was taught its lessons of turmoil and now as peace exists again the last effects of this condition by those who had 111-101-elto tllink of than enhege Snnn- However n entered are Passlllg- College life is ogelrl llorlllelf ellllorlgll rllere llas been 3 into the class rivalry and class and collegebathletics with a wholefsouled tendency for relaxation after several years of tenseness. ll spirit that brought victory to the class in a surprising number of cases. In the fall of 1917 many a man pondered whether he should seek a place in the fighting forces or enter college. Many did the former, but nevertheless one hundred and seventy men entered Rutgers. But during the following months the ranks of the class were depleted, and the ranks s ,. ii I l Thus the Freshman year went by, with no startling events. There were rushes and pee-rades, eprocsu and banquets. But these events are just a repetition of former events of other classes and a means of instilling college spirit into the new man. But greater times and greater things of the army and navy hlled. Then in the fall of 1918 came the Student l were to follow. . ArmY,TrolnlUg Corllsi PraerleallY Wlplllg College life Out Of existence and I The Sophomore semesters were disconnected and as one looks back ell-srlglllg lt to 3 mlllrary one- However, rlle Class had llarl msrllled 1U lr: they seem a puzzle too difficult to solve. Instead of two there were three. during lrs Freshman Year, 611011311 Of the UUE Rurgers splrlr to Pull rllrorrgll ,Q The first might be termed a military semester, the second a recuperative rllese frying morlrlls- period and at last the class reentered upon real college life in a third term. After the signing of the Armistice, 1921, with the other classes, took f In all this excitement and turmoil the class managed to bring before the up the work of building up the activities that once existed. For the first 3 Freshmen the customs of old Rutgers. The banquets, although later than time in their college life the men of the class were able to turn their atten- l customary, were times of great rivalry. For the first time in thirteen years tion wholly to the college and its interests. They saw before them their ' a Freshman president attended a Sophomore banquet. At no time since 35 36 Y ff r if of L1 - j , 5' f 'S 1 ..- Q 1 !f 4,5 tc,-d,yf1i 1, Q., rm, - SS 91 1 - -asf' , 1 f A .. 554: -. .'3'2 .. '1' 3:2-5:2-1, .X '- '. 1' ' ,, f 'rf' ---- 31-3-, it 'N1b?? 'f has it happened again and 1921 looks back on this little event with pleasant memories. And then came the junior and Senior years. There were no more chapel rushes or class banquets to engage in. But there were higher and better things for it to do. Many changes have taken place during these last two years. Men from older classes have returned to college and become a part of 1921. The cut system has been abolished and the honor system has come to Rutgers. Although this came into existence in the junior year, the class takes pride in being a united backer of the project. During the Sophomore year the college widened its scope of instruction and the New jersey College for NVomen was started. One hundred and twenty-live men make up the Senior class, the largest one in the history of the college. These men have their mark to make in the world. During the four years in active college life, these men have fought on athletic teams and have helped bring glory to old Rutgers. In the quieter walks of college life we find the results of the energy of the other men of the class. In social functions the class has given to the college dances that will not fade from the memories of the men. Mention must be made of the men that did not complete their four years of studies with the class. They may have failed for one of four reasons. First, there are those who are to be commended for self-sacrihceg then those who gave themselves to their country during the warg and again those who were lost in the race and disqualifiedg and lastly those lured away by the world to cast in their lot a little ahead of their class- mates, hoping to attain something which college life did not seem to give them. These men, while they lasted, did their share to push 1921 into the foreground and to bring glory to the class. Then the old story. 1921 goes out to seek fame. Selhshly? We hope not. Rutgers has given it more than it has given Rutgers. The men go out to live and in the years to follow the acts and memory of the past four years will determine to a large extent how these men live. Their lives have just begun. This history is just an introductory one of a history we feel sure 1921 will make in years to come. VVe do not attempt to fore- tell what lies ahead. We have briefly mentioned what has passed. We have stood a test which only a few other classes have been put to. We have survived. We have upheld the traditions of old Rutgers. With such a life started let it continue to grow and may the Class of 1921 triumph in its efforts to win respect and honor and carry forth with it the love of its glorious Alma Mater. I-HSTORIAN. 37 1 1111 11 V1 lll 'llll II lIHMMlllUUMlllllllllllllllllllllllmmllllllllllllllllllllllllllililHll1111ill1111111111111lIl1V1T1l11l1111111111111121111111111.1111111111111.l1l5ll1ll1l11ll 111 1 ,X l -. f ff, fzrkerl MPM!-Mmm Txlivex .f i uw li:Wi1lt7 l2 Ig! gl ll? ll. El Wg, lil L, 4: 7 It HENRY VERNON ASPINALL fel Jllcclzanifal Engineering ll li ' ' Cornwall, N. Y. lg, KE ,lg ,Z ll.. . fi society, if l C lil You, flavor cvvrytlzing, you are thc vanilla of gf I, lgl V-- l 'lil Sophomore Banquet Committee, Junior Prom gf' an 531, lg Committee, Mechanical Engineering Club, Class EE, El Football 415. lil lg 3 llo 'A 5 - -4, ,ZH li EE' llgl HARGLD MANDEVILLE AUGUSTINE lit' Lum-U1 it ls Nil Hackensack. N. J. l AY 5 l 3 HBIIIUIII, blyflzc and dclmxmirf' lg li President of Y. 1-I. C. A.: Queens Players li li, 2 Cl, 35: President C453 Glee Club Cl, Z, 3, 45, ,lilx Varsity Football C45: Philoclean Literary So- if , . xii, ciety -Cl, 2, 3, 453 Picture Committee C45. lil il ls as lel pil XVILLIA M HENRY BACKUS 55 li l 221' ljil' Liberal ,el .Z llgl Bogota, NQI. 'Ei' Carriagv5 are no longer ill 'vogucf' 5, Class Foofbaii C1, 253 Class Bowling qi, 253 ,El Plfiloclean CZ, 35g Military Editor Targnm C25g W2 il 55 Senior Ball Committee. 155, iii lj. El ,El '- is fl - V--. 1 El ' l: 1 ,E , li 'C' ' E! gc 51' Page at CYRUS VAIN DOLAH BISSEY :l gl Tel if E EW, Liberal ll Rosemont, N. I. lf CIDBK 5 X2 M Bly 7'6Cl'l?Ufl0lZ is in my books. 'Q Class Soccer C155 Philocleang President, Span- i' ,El ish Club C455 Honor Man Cl, 2, 3, 455 Alumni Q I Day Committee. ,- E gl :. li 2: li el E El ' 38 E limlllmlmllmmmlllllllllIlllllllll Illlllllllmlllll lll llll llll ' ill lllllmllqllll lll llllllllWllllilIMMMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llllilf 'li Iilllllllgr IEEE K----l..-:'?'....'Lpi.... g num-WMM X CN M: :ikT U Q,-kia! ,. If Of A Ll, -, ' , Z 3, all if ag , ' -, '1 'l 'QE . ,' Sal :C lil iz it --4 B.. n 1.1 . ,v WE ggi yi. El lil 2 .E- ,B V-4 ,E ll-, N2 'El il Eg. lgl lei lib li-if l:fI '.Egi ,lil l. lie lg l El :El :E lg: C E lil El lil lg' Eel E? El Fl. lip ig, Elf nil iz, yi F' El Eg lil, lil WE? ,-., E El El ,lil lil !Elf Pia El EQ, .15 'lil fd-,gi-r,,,-33,2 'Y , ,..:,- 11:4-113 p mums. Cla Q Nfl?-V t Y if I ' 'af l'7T'5f'5 M' RANDOLPH BRANDT, IR. Liberal Upper Montclair, N. J. El zip El Call, then, for u.'inc. President of lnterfraternity Council, Tennis Ei Team Cl, 25: Varsity Basketball Squad C3, 455 51 Reserve Baseball Team C353 Class Football C153 Self-government board Cl, 253 Chairman Invita- E tions Committee C452 ,lunior Prom Committeeg E. Freshman Picture Committee, Sophomore Hat E, Committee. il gl- HAROLD RAYMOND BRIEGS f-l Liberal ' ,El Perth Amboy, N. I. HKA For G0d's sake hold your tongue and let me love. VVinner Prize Song Contest C453 Class Base- Si ball Cl5g junior Banquet Committee, Senior Ball fig, Committee. ' iii JOHN CLARENCE BROWN ' . Cl1L'71llSl7'y Fort Republic, N. I. Ll? ig ,, K2 . ,, Iii Au empty laugh upon his face. Honor Board C453 Senior Ball Committee, Chemical Club Cl, 2, 35, President C45g Self- government C25 g'Class Football C25 3 Class Bowl- ygll ing C25g Honor Man C35g Holder Du Pont Q Scholarship C45. l: V Y lg l EDMUND UTTER -BURHANS ' l 2 Libeml le'. J , l 5? 'PFA gf - l E Sounde offe, ye lmllghf, .romzde offef' 1 lg Senior Banquet Committee, Philocleang College tfi , fi Band Cl, 2, 35 g President C455 Class Football ' , 52 Cl, 25 3 Class Baseball Cl, Z5 g Class Track Cl, 25 3 I E Class Soccer C255 Rilie Club C353 Biological V - r l- . ., , li Club C35g Spanish Club C455 College Orchestra A , I 3 C45- . fl' l B . 5 i is 39 -Q E . allllll lllllllmlllllilllllllmliliujmmmalqmlzlilllllmfwM,ifiwywlglllillrwmxllwnnmlmwCwwlvslwzlwwinlu li i l i l w le-e il El :l - l r? El - ,A -44 . f l 'S 'e-Wg--C-SCC 'G v ,A Jxqpjfh-fr-5---Q.QSx1 yd F-Y -fi-.331-if:-:gil V N V, :,- -l IZ,- ' ' , at .. flT.- V ll BP ff APP , 75- . -ffl fff -' '53 XL .Ego Q.. -f,- hw, Yftl A' R it f if l Hill x fm ! l' . T3 ll li 'l N -'ll ' 'x f i v Q li 'V M Q A Y V i VK N- H Yiii, yu: pix ' I: 11,9 i i -A ,I Y-6,334-V1 5 5 'os 'W' 'we a j .,:?r5 453.211, af fp? at A' ff r-il .-,,AY,.-53.b1: 1, rx:-,' -- -- .aaffffs .li- eu m o li rlgll li. El E JXXDRIZXY .-XLOIS BURKHARDT ll: .gl .2 lily Lilwvral Sri 115' Newark. N. I. Y li-, His mouth as iv-vdv as a grcatv fzmzeysf' Class Soccer C251 College Baud C4j. lil, ls. -54. lil SEI: ll l 'gh El El DUNCAN CAMPBELL El l g .4lf1I'll llIfHI'C' lg Skillman, N. J. lg 'E. Cai thc' flzilal a 'mandrake root. lg lg 3 1 li lgs lf il lil HERBERT RYERSON CAMPBELL, IR. 55 5 Civil Ellgillldffillg Ig' Prospect Park, N. I. ':g lil HKA lil The Sllzithbq mighty 'man was he. I' 'gl President Rutgers Chapter A. S. C. E5 Foot- T4 I l Eglx ball Squad CZD 5 Class Football Cl, Zj. li lglil El GRAHAM HUTTON CAIRNS Liberal lil Newark, N. I. E E Xa: Q 52g A 711611129 a man for a' that. QI :gil Football Squad Cl, 255 Varsity Track Q1, 235 lil Class Football Cl, ZJ 5 'Class Baseball Cl, 2D 5 Class Z 53' Track Cl, 235 Class Soccer Cl, 255 Sophomore - ISI I-lop Committee 5 Sophomore Hat Committee5 W lil Chairman Junior Banquet Committee5 Interfrater- - nity Council KZD. - lil - Fl ' Lgl li li 5.1 , 40 H lgjlimmllllllllIllMlllmllllllllllmlllllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllmlllllI llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllIllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllIlllmlllllllllllllllllllu., .I .- dx ii 11 -l El 114 111 ,i 2.1 zl lgll Ei, ,Eel Ei l-I -N lil lil' li Nj: E 'argl Fl: will will 415, EH gill El' E354 1:-l L1-v 'fi vl .gg li? W2 yfgr. ,... 1 l M'f3L4'E ' 'A l l i X-X A 1 13 i,.I fIT17?L-if- lf X123 1,7 1' ? .V fm gg .f :AMB , y 1. fs V' 'fl ll il C . . 1:-f L.Ti.1:,Al,, :gli-4.-fi.-A-?'ie,':.e Eur N lk' -, V fr ,L ..- -- '-- 4i131's -' it., .sw , , H 1 s '-uv . F..-1' 'Q - - , ., ,KJl4,.9 A,- IOHN FRANCIS CAMPBELL ,-lgriczclture Bellville, N. J. DVCIVOSOUTJCI' is rleliglifrd in solitude is eitlzer a wild beast or a god. if FRANCIS JOHNSON CHRISTIE Mechanical Eizgincezfilzg Bloomfield, N. I. Casque and Dagger KIDFA Happy is lze that can never obtain lzez' low. Manager Track C431 Cl-ass Treasurer CZD: Sophomore Hop Committeeg Junior Banquet Committeeg 'Member of Rutgers Branch of A. S. M. E.g Mechanical Engineering Clubg Hockey Club C455 Class Track CU. ERNEST ALEXANDER CLARK, IR. Liberal Hackensack, N. J. fIJBK Ivy Clulbi lfVhat I lack my mind supplies. Targum Reporter Cljg Phiilocleang Class Soc- cerg Class Track. FOREST HENRY THEODORE CLICKNER A g1'icultm'e . New Brunswick, N. I. Making speedy way through sjlersed ay1'e. Cross Country Squad C3Dg Team C455 Class Track C4Dg Agricultural Clubg Poultry Judging Team. il I ill il E lg lf? W 41 M4 iWlmliriiwfmzllilllaigmiyiifijii nf.eiiiiiieieliiiiifiiiinjmC T' i ii i -,f?L 61? Q91 !' ' gggg 4 ' 'QL-am., l l ,fa ,. ,:.K. . ,---.xl .. L . - ., L 1 ...ML -,1,,..-.f..5L.,f..,.-F..-.L X , ..-...A,.i,.j...... l fjl .5 T-4 4: I ... 1 J?- :L it in M I . . , X..- ff ,Ag Q. Q. L ,f L 1 X ' 1 'gnu X ff' A . .fy 1. mi ,Y -g l in it if il Ell 3 l .ft 5-if - LTQSL, A, .-'fi ,f X255 ' .Q ' F5 3 .IE gl LRSLST VICTOR CLOSE le flgriculturv Lawrenceville, Pa. gig . KDBK lj EH 'Qlfy mind to mv a kingdom is. iii 5:21 Intercollegiate Apple Judging Teamg Agricul- ture Club: Honor Klan CSD. ELLIS BEVERIDGE COOK Liberal Troy, N. Y. 11. M: Z if Like unto a tru' am I. ' gill Freshman Banquet Committee: Class Soccer 1' C15 1 Student Government Board C25 : Cadet E ,gli Lieutenant R. O. T. C.: Junior Banquet Commit- teeg Senior Ball Committee. will H: ll-. :Lf lil ffl JAMES PATRICK CORRIGAN Gwwrul Science lg 1551 Franklin, N. J. 'El His entrance like the lamb, but exit mild. QQ t lg Q: lm lg El El lg JOSEPH LOUIS COSTA ,ii ll- Cllamistry rj, IQ Fair Haven, N. I. lg fI1BK 2 'gi Al busy man. am I-no time have I for t1'ifZc.s'. IE! li L 'gill , ,El 1 llfli li: Eg '- Sl lg el .E lei 42 lil EliEMlMllli.lmlmMwmM.MMilillll'M1Mm.nl ll llllllll.llllllrlllllllullllllllvlllxljwll,lllvlllllzlallvlllIllllllllnlllll1llllalWlllilwllllllilllllzmil X Q .f T , iff: 54 M,.,f6' ' 5-qlf'jm 4i1f 'I if--A-. . ... -52 .5 T : f -ff li.. Ei li. I5 ,E -lg. -il PE' lil ,E 123 'li Eel ' 'E ROBERT EDXVA-XRD CRANE flgrirzlltilrv Montclair, N. I. AY For further I can say, this is Hur. Varsity Track CZ, 3, 45: Varsity Cross Country Team C3. 45: Captain C451 Targunz Staff CZ, 3, 45 3 Athletic Editor C35 1 President Targum Asso- ciation: Glee Club C455 Philoclean: Freshman Ban- quet Committee: Sophomore Banquet Committee: Class Track Team: Class Swimming: Class Bowling Team: Agricultural Club: Apple judg- ing Team: Memorial Committee. ELVVOOD BERTRAM CRONK Liberal New Brunswick, N. I. Mcthinles the little wif I had is lost. Biological Club: Chemistry Club: Rifle Club. JOHN BEVERLY CROXVILL Libeval East Oran e N. I. AY CDBK He had an odd promiscuous tone. Glee Club C2 3 45 ' Y. M. C. A, Cabinet C3 45 ' Track Squad C3 45' Cross Country Squad C45' Junior Orator. VICTOR IRVING CRUSER lllechanical Eizgimefiiig Orlando Fla. CIJFA Ewwything comes to him who waits. Honor Man C35' Member A. S. M. E. il El El Eel El lil H2 U1 . H1- ,:. Ni llE,l lla' ll till ,.:, Ulf H22 1 l ' l iq f l 4 gl 1 l .fr ' u ll Tl' 1 sgi 1 r 1 lr la 'EI H lla lgq l . l , 4 ll C I l 4 U41 l l ' llxil I l ! i l Y, ,Fl l l Hn l J l l . tial 1 , El lla? l l l 43 El , Mimi mn ll 1 llllllll'lllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllll MMIMl1lillulllllilfllllllmlllmllilrlmmmllmmilllflzlllzllmlwl-lilniiflxwvwwwl1l2lWll'lImMEl L-H-. . L, law ' . 7 i -W- ZZQKNRZS-., . f ,:::::,:......,.. . -. J . Q -'T-' '- ff ' fa. in-siljiy fi' VUVV 'Pt-W A kl1 y .YM J N If X' J ia 1 - - - sv Lf' -' 'iisrfe-,ate--f-fi 'f'leig4r.,ae.ibr N-ggi' - nvfwfs ' T5 E El STEXVART TAYLOR DANFORTH Biologiml New Brunswick, N. J. Sigh no marc, Iadivs. sigh no nz0re. ' Biological Club C3. 43: Philoclean: Secretary Spanish Club K-U5 Honor Man Q2, 35. XV.-XRREN JOHN JOSEPH DARXVENT lllvclzaniral Engineering Cranford, N. J. AXA Junior Prom Committeeg Member of A. S. M. E. RAYMOND OLIVER DAVIES Liberal A Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y. Ivy Club 'Hapf13' the nmn who -is void of farcxr and strife. Class Constitution Committeeg Class Baseball C1, Zjg Queen's Players CU. VVILLARD ROGERS DEVAUL Civil Engineering Trenton, N. J. And ta-Ik not of 'inc0nistancy. Honor Man CZ, 415 Civil Engineering Clubg Historian A. S. C. Eg Alumni Day Committee. 44 ff'T H'iff'ffv 2m 'r'w iw-wi--it fm.,-i,.V-1-N.. ii, ,,-wr, ri ...,,... ,.,,,,,. ,mf , WM. , ,W V N M I, l J ! l 55:1 -ll lijr ii ' l in fi ,fn El . 51 El! gl I i El I W: QV ill ' ii lllli ill l llillflllll will li. .wi1l,l'. :',w,l,l'l1ill-i1'.il+1s.1 ll'lli.ll'lirl1':ul iilllllnl lilll lnlli. wi liffliiillwl lv lin ' 1 W l l l ii lla' l-it -LZLNVN al it jl :Eli it - I M5 1, I v,- gl A El. Z Q5 -:rl .14 l .ill l If Cf? N ix it - ,iq A! bvlr A- I F Q-t: Q If VI .X K- ' All I V fl rf fp i fi if I gag swf . 4 K I. A. : tix, 5:5 95 Qi, if 3 tx ' - , g If Afing-,,.,4,,', -ANA-' i-I fr: Aw '. . x -ETJE ili - U5 ' 1 1 NK, --'J A LI' ,J .Xl wx -,gf ,M--.Q if fi 3 -t- :::'T 5f fi , :gif 5 :Q ' Q I VZ il ' I 153-'Tir 3 JOHN LOUIS DE VRIES ,F 5 I xx E T C he111.i.rtry ,+I eg lg E Nufleyf N- 5- fi El If X119 9' ,-'fig is IE 'ferfafinlgv he hafh ci 'merry note. ig Qlgl I.: Senior Ball Committeeg Glee Clulb K3, 45 5 W 'jf Mandolin Club CZ, 3, 435 Chemistry Club, Sec- wlgzq 'H retary and Treasurer C355 Targum fl, 235 Class ' fljf' ' 7? ,QQ ii: Bowling CU. Q Q it 122 if . V. El 4' ABRAM BECKER DICKINSON, IR. :E Chemistry Wil' Ridgewood, N, J. ii? AXA E Ili, Up, up, my friend, and quit your books. iw H35 Chemistry Club. Qi li HQ. Us Vi I3 1135 E1 LINDEN SEYMOUR DODSON lj Agriculture. -Morgantown, W, Va. ig 53: Soldier, renrt: thy warfare o'er. Poultry Judging Teamg Agricultural Club. E will lg lg, IE CHARLES ALFRED DOEI-ILERT I Agriculture QE' Rutherford, N. I. I Q: ' CIJBK El I! He hath put his heart to school. EQ I Targum Reporter CID 5 Alumniana and Rut- T. gersensia Editor C255 Exchange Editor of Tar- 'Q ll'-1 E' gum CZ, -355 Philoclean, Treasurer C315 Inter- 3 5 collegiate Fruit Judging Team 5 Agricultural 513' 1 Club. QE! I Fl :I E5 - ,ii 2 Elf C1 El '-1 2:1 I . .El I I 43 .ALLHIUIIQUIIIIIMIIIIIII l Il'l ' lllmllMllQlllllllllll3lllllllllMllllllllmlllmgmllllllllllllllllllllllllUlillllllIIlllflIllllilillilllllllllllllllllllllllylill'tillli'IilIll.lllllrlllllllll'lli wll1ll,l-NLE? 2 stiwl-?:N h V' . XG.. - ,-is- 6525 Z 5 Z2 I W A Erik X Q lbg l 4: lil r: ,- :Eli E Ei Ei iz ... iff-li - El E E: 1 E RICHARD WHITE DUNI-l.-UI if Liberal 'EQ New Brunswick, N. I. :lil Caxque and Dagger fi KE fi lg' U-S'lIU'2U.Y most lruc lllL'l'f1C wl11'11 you clivclc his E21 MZ! course. ,gf Varsity Football CZ, 3, 45: Varsity Club: Class N55 Baseball Cl5: Junior Prom Committee: Chair- lj! HQ man :Xlumni Day Committee: Civil Engineering jgl Club: lnterfraternity Council. 'Q E1 li' JOSEPH A-XVERY DUNN 1 Cllrfllllffljl iii East Orange, N. I. :gf gl My IIICIII, 111011 vans! tcmrli a11 all the llf7ft'J.', ,il Senior Banquet Committee: Mandolin Club M5 li Cl, Z, 3, 45: Glee Club CS. 45: Queens Players: 12' gl Targiuiz Reporter CZ. 31 3 College Band Cl, 2, 35 : E Manager C-l5: Sophomore Orator: junior Ora- :gf El tor: College Orchestra: Chemistry Club. 51:1 E l':l- ii Q ABRAKI XVILBUR DURYEE 5 Biology 55' Jersey City, N. I. will E cpm, KIJBK B 1 5 2 fl 111i11d c011l1111f, both crown and 1311151110111 g7a111-J. gg 5' Sophomore Banquet Committee: Junior Prom Committee: Class Historian: Y. M. C. A. Seere- E' , tary C352 Cabinet C45: Photography Editor of E P 7 SCARLET LETTER: Vice-President Pl'1iloclean,C45: : A Honor Man Cl, 25: President Biology Club C351 It - Chairman -Senior Picture Committee: Class L Bowling Team C153 Class Swimming C15: Chem- E istry Club Cl5. 3 1 1 e 3 1 E SOLOMON EISENBERG i E Liberal Z Rahway, N. I. E Q Pram is flm Prize of all his tail and care. E I s : Z 46 Ill lil llllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lll lll llllllllllllllllll Ill Illlllllllllllllll III l llllllllll! illlll 11, xx K! Zz 1-'TTU .-, .Tv r Liza 5 wk th? yup,-X 'fhitfygtf I COLVIN FARLEY Liberal TYhite Plains, N. Y. AID, KIDBK The quiet mind is rirlzcr than fi c1'0twz. Track Squad Cl, 2, 45: Class Track Team Cl, 3, 45: Varsity Cheer Leaderg Honor Man Cl, 2, 3, 455 Philocleang lnterfraternity Council: President of Hockey Club: Class Picture Com- mittee C35 5 Military Ballg Adjutant in R. O. T. C. ARTHUR LOUIS FINK 5 Lilwral Ridgeneld Park, N. I. Ivy Club D1'a11'za is lofty. Class Baseball Cl, 255 Reserves C155 Queen's Players Cl, 2, 355 President C45. XNALTER ERNEST FLEMING Ag1'iculm1'e XfVest Orange, N. I. Ivy Club CIJBK Assistant Business Manager Trwgum C355 Manager C455 Assist-ant Manager Queen's Play- ers C355 Honor Man C2, 355 Philoclean Literary Society: Junior Banquet Committeeg Agricul- ture Club. WALTER EDMUND FRANCKE Clzemistry Greenwood Lake, N. Y. CIJFA HF01' I say the pitch is high. Class Foot-ball Cl, 255 Soccer C255 Track Cl, 255 Swirnlming C155 Targunl Cl, 255 Chemistry Clubg Lieutenant R. O. T. C.5 Hockey Club5 Riiie Team5 Military Ball Committee. 47 -341 ,A I L -'ifvfi - - T--' 'if-I TWA v A lv Q. wig H all . . 7. 7.-V 5- 'g C-L1 -af f ,Qt 1 I if L 4. 1 ' 'W ' - 1 Q 1 Aw, ,Ass at is 3 RX c 5+ Q 1 is F 1, is Ili ' 'N f .4 5 1 ,gg X W vii V 'mf I x f 1 1 sl if 113' HE' iz' Mill El Eli El El? Ei U5 Mil E lii ,- E' EJ :J i C, 5 L 1 ii ll E v '- E E E E E 1 1 E :el lj' l l VI if lil IIIllIIllllIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHI Ill ll llll lIHHmmllllmlllitlwll.lmllulllllllllllulllllllmmwin.wilwill+l'lmlllsl'l1illlnllulwlzlxni fix, 'iT x 5 Geek 535:25 C fi T 1n'P'l ,,.... -. iirb 1 l 'E ,E rz. CE EL ii s..-1 'll ' ll CHURCHILL CHARLES FRANKLIN li? Liberal if Helmetta N. I. AXA KDBK 'lu gouflz and l7Cf11lfj tisdonz is but rare. Junior Prom Committeef Senio. Banquet Com- Zi mitttej Class Boulin Cl 25' Biolo Club. ll JOHN GEORGE FRITZINGER llcclzaniml Eiigizrmwiizg 2 Perth .-Xmbo3 IN. J. ii .-lppurvl oft fvrocluinzs tht man. 2 Freshman Banquet Committee: Sophomore Hop EE 3 Committee' Class Vice-President C35: Iunior C-. ix Prom Committee' Glee and Nlandolin Clubs C3, E' 45' Interfraternity Council C3 455 Senior Ban- ii Ei quet Committee' Mechanical En ineering Club Hg, Q 3 - '52 LISLE ED-WARD GAIGE Elvctv'-ifal Efzigizzceritzg 2' Belmar, N. I. EE Q-1 kinder gL'7lfCC'IllI17L frauds not the earth. gg Radio Club C355 Class Banquet Committeeg Student Member A. S. E. E. Ei E il XWILLIAM HERBERT GARDNER Liberal if Newark, N. I. , EE E Casque and Dagger, Cap and Skull N- Ei BGDII E Kllifastm' of desfimv am I. it Varsity Football Cl, 2, 353 Captain C455 Var- 'Z' Ei sity Basketlball C153 Varsity Swimming Cl, 2, gl 3, 453 Track C3, 455 Captain Reserve Baseball j' 2 C355 Class President C255 Chairman Junior El li Banquet Comm-itt-eeg Senior Ball Committee 5 Ban- Z 5 quet Committee C155 Mandiolin Club Cl, 2, 35. : :l , E E 48 lg iirlllllltlllmwlwmmmsumwwwwillMWH1mmmlmlml1l1l,Hllmslf1WmummuiiuwtlmlimiQCnam.ulumm:eismlwmilllH1mulIlrlalslnwlleilizmwlllii s .I ,. Mg,1? ,r ' . f2g d b .,-' ' ' A in X 'Q fa - P Q I- 1- i1 agua, I 2:5412 +f'd'i , 'Q 1. ,'AA ff if .gif-53 - , ,1- Ll XVILLIAM HIINIRY GXUB I Bzology New Brunswmck N I A p1z11ce there was Bxologlcal Club C3 45 Cl1em1cal Captam R O T C Clu Cll IAMES GIBSON JR CI1e1111sl1fy New Brunswmk N I Too 'wzse to cw too good to be 'lt1ZIZl7Zd Class Football CU Class Baseball CID Chem 1stry Club CU IRVING YOULEN GTDLEY L1bE7'Gl Bound Brook N I AXA I have a f011d11es.r fm gold Class Football C1 Zj Iumor Banquet Com m1ttee Debatmg Team C3j Iumor Orator HILRMAN DAVID GOLDFARB Che1111st1fy New Brunswxck N I N0tI1111g 'z1e11tu1ed 11otI1z11g gamed 1101 lost '41-1 if ffl f 5 wfmlf' ,Q M2476 ig 3358? fw MW if wwf of 121 wi! gl F2 :N w:l 2 EN E 231 :, w:, f J no :Ejl si -, '-' e ' ,' - I, 11 IE ff' - 'fi , Mil T- 'J 'ff 521 ' H f , R. J ' vifaifx El 12 - . 1 iw ssl -1 - x lil 'iw - . l f q 'E' Ei f - - ' lg NE? , . LJ V 'fr Q: 'il' IE . . . '12 if bfi? E ' .... f- 'QL' El' l sl in lil l5' ' ' yi EU I il ii l ES E -5 Z -i.15.5',mmcfQjzgj-:5:3jg1,:i., 1 E , ls ff - , - U 1-f-- 1 21 E . I X Q .... ., I E U , Z2f '3f'. 'El' ii A I 'gl A -31:75,-P5915 ' Lv X.'. ' A' 1 I E af .,.l.,1 il E E B 1 A - Nj ' X LIE' - l E will li .gl E ll: 1 -2: E I Elf 15 - I 1 El! IE ' 'EH E I E ,, . . I -. ' ,, I El .E ' , I I -- ' ' I . lr I Ig IE!! E 'gm 2 Ei i E44 I gg S I .1 I El - I Eli E EJ lilq El 49 , El ,L T llllHU!lllillmmlllllllllllalwlllllllllllltlllwlyMMMllllllmllllwmllnlllilnlllllllll11.lawwlalnlmlllmlwwmlwlvlllllllAll1lEl1llNlmW1l!Alb. ll il K - K ., I -...hath i zz . Z2 ,.,, , X .S,.. . v F ,gi pq X N EJ E is leg. ' E1 1-IOWARD MCCRE.-X GOLDY WEE' ggi Liberal 'lg' obstown, R. J. wi. 1111311 fl f'HI'5IlC'l' of lcnmrlcdge lm er difficuligf' Philoclcang Swimming Squad. ig. Ei , ig., 5 ART1-1 UR r. I-IAELIG E fir Ci' il llzzgincrriuzg if Bound Prook I. Z' BQH 'wi E Uorc of 0 soldier than a srlzolar. .Es 5- Captain l. O. T. C. -sf 5 XYILLI.-XM Kl.xcIxIWL.-XX H.-XDDEX ie' E Nvvlzuniral Engizm ring Poughkerpsie N. Y. if ? l Q 0013 IH al-'ca' .rv 1 ' 1101111-f.' Q Q. Stuflunt Self- 'overnment Poarcl C15 I Class Q l ll -I iT ll li l l il . I 1 W l L Ill ' K xi i T ii li l 1 l 1 lg ll ll l l' 5 ' 2 i V u ' L' il l Y Y V4-1 V I. 2 HC .. ,, ' i ll A Q lr 'i 1 Il 2 l y 12 . ll , 1 f L r 4 T lg l l , sl . , l ' ll ' Q , , 1 Q AY F' ,QI Uv lr G c ' L' N' PDU? ' Ei i Q . I g , , ' E lmll Football Cl, 255 Class Baseball Cl, Zig Iumor if Banquet Committee: Senior Commencement Pro- rzl i fl ' ' l ll ig gl , 4 f, g , 3 I . 1 Q iii A S E :E 5 E l E . . . : 1 E y 5 E I : N I If ' Q, 11' E , 2 U b , , l C , , C V c E-l 1 g ' ' E E , Q , A E I I 50 i ll lllll HIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIll Illlllllllll i Il lllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll - f- 'rams Committee' Glee Club Cl, 2 43: K Leban- E ical llnsineerin' Club CZ J' Stuclult Men.b,r - E '. .M. . - 2 FREDERICK ARTHUR HALL E E flgI'lCIlIf'lH'L I Asbury Park . . I BGDH M3 mind mzcr af cam. : 3 Varsity Basketball C372 Captain Cll' Mandolin Clu C2 3D' Queens Players Cl. 2 35: ie- 1 President C4Dg P1'esiclc:.t A 'riculture Club C-ll. 4 '- lu F'-r ,4 I X 1 -m ',J.. '.1 -I-L I --, E Ei' VVILLIAM LIPPINCOTT HANAVVAY E 5- Cltelnisfry A Long Branch, N. I. Ivy Club . . . . ? l ,E True lzappzziess resides in tlzmgs unseen. gl WE: 1 ,E Banquet Committee C15 3 Sophomore Hop Com- igj ,gg mittee: Banquet Committee C2Dg Junior Prom Committee-5 Rutgers Reserve Baseball C-133 As- lil' '-' sistant Editor Scxkuzr LETTER 633' Senior Ban 'Ei quet Committeeq !Chem'istry Clubg Class Football lil H KID, Class Baseball CU. 'E El ill 1: 5:1 EJ CLAUDE VVESLEY HARKINS - V,-a ,IV EH Liberal will Middletown, N. I. - 5 .gil QIWA I E' li.. - ,, 15: Vi1'iZe in sfrmgflt, ye! bashfzzl as a girl. 5 Chemistry Clubg Targum Staff C2, 3Dg Senior El El Ball Committee, l l is S, Eli H gig 5 Z ARTHUR EUGENE HILLIARD 1 E Civil L-.i7lgl'71-C67'1'7Zg : Valhalla N. Y. 5 1jf Persewwcmre has its 1 award. Qi 4 Honor Student CZD' Treasurer-Secretar3 Rut- 4 . ers Chapter K. S. C. lf: Varsity Football C4D. SAMUEL DAVID HOFFMAN Liberal - New Brunswick N. I. CIDEH silver stream Howeth fvom his mouth lil e he gentle 'rain from heavezz. Debating Team QD Freshman Orator First Honorable Mention Freshman Contest Sopho more Orator Junior Orator l r 1 I ' 1 4 l 1 4 l , 1 A If I 1 JJ r i , ', , l 0' 1- 4 , 4 t J E U51 K: E E A ' J t E E 5 1 ' 7 ,C 5 - 2 E - - . i E l .. ,l Q i 51 Q, lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllll IHHHHH!HHilllhillIlllilltlllulllillll Ill i I lllll ll Ilia! ':',.5,.'5'5'::PPx'3 aa 5 fe' 2 1 rl-'fe -- W . - C . ,- J if - LL, H Y.. -. 5 ,4 ll'-Ci V . ll - 'I v'Pf2'r....i Z .KIRK . C i J ' - 1-s . R X f , X ,ff Ar 'X la w V Al, Q-Q04 WJ! xx , - 4-----.. X -Q... V K W, ,iv GEORGE SEARS HORSFORD E .Za ri! fa Ei Ml til -J El 124 En l-fi .iq aa. C.. E2 l ll -,r :ii Ai Liberal Montclair, N. I. AKE E Blade was lic' of beard, and l1vaz'y. iQ Class Treasurer C15: Vice-President of Class E- C25 1 President of Class C35 I Pipe Committee C15 3 Football Manager C25g Y. M. C. A. Cabinet C2, lg 3, 453 Treasurer C353 Vice-President C455 Cheer lol Leader C453 Sophomore Hop Committee C255 F3 32 Chairman Class Memorial Committee C45g Inter- li fraternity Council C3. 45: Queen's Players C3, li 45: Chairman Proc Committee C253 Biolog Club ,A C35. Q: RALPH BENJAMIN JACOBS Liberal L: Plainfield, N. I. 5 QBK Eg 2 fl book his cniixtiziif ronzfvanimxf' 1: E Class Soccer C153 Class Bowling C155 Philoc- E lean Cl, 2, 3, 45. ill lil ta! E E-Zi 3 JOEL MUNSON JOHNSON E Civil .EH-glll-L'C1 ll1g Bayonne, N. I. E AXA En lg His legs had full four fr'ez'. ,E Freshman Banquet Committeeg Sophomore El Banquet Committee: Sophomore Hop Committeeg 'Ei Reserve Baseball Team C15 3 Varsity Lacrosse C3, 455 Captain C453 Civil Engineering Club C3, 455 wil Vice-President C35. lift 'EH ilzi lei C' gl GILBERT BROOKS 'KEELER Q Classical ,gl East Orange, N, J. E Aft: , QQ Sonzetlii11.g zaomlcrful has Caine into my life. XE TG7'j71l7'l'L Board C153 Class Banquet Committee El' I2 Cl5g Class Invitations and Programs Committee E C45 5 Manager of Ten-nis C45 g Varsity Tennis C45. E E ' E Ei ' gli 'Il -l Eg ai El 52 - - , El fELllUlMWlllHlHWllllIllllllIlllllllllllllllllllilumlmmlllllIWllllllmllllllllllllllIlIlllIllllilIlllllllllllllllljlllllllllilllllllllllilillilrlillllllllilll'lilElllllHllllFlIlllIlIllilllllwllllllilflliflll'ilmlllfil RONALD BARRETT KIRK El Biology gl East Orange, N. J. ITKA ' Sonnets roll 019: his tongue. gl Literary Editor, Sc,xRL1-:T LETTER C333 Secre- gjl tary Biolog Club C33 3 Class Day Committee C45 i Egg Class Poetg Senior Ball Committeeg Class Footi 5 ball CD. E il in HERBERT AKTBA KUVIN El! Mechanical Engineering TE Newark, N. I. .. l E' He claimeth he is a man. Ei Student Member, A. S. M, E. C45 gl ? GEORGE EDWARD LAMB 5 Agriculture i Noank Conn. :' Some are known by their name. 5i'T1t:1 ifX - u p . , 'iii' tg- ' ' .f TZ-.XRS-as I ,Al .Gif ' 'i ' V X ew F 1 tsta gf, an ,.,u,.M, .A ,.,,.,..l-T-T. N, 1 J' , ., .-.hx .fff 'oi-rib www-'MK f ' ,QfL ' e 'o 'AA' 5:53 X 15,-.150 x L, 2'x-esgga.,--- if Y. Vx: TT' ' 5 Swimming Squad Cl, 213 M. E. Club C2 SD 2 SANFORD RICARDO LANGWITH il. : Mechanical Engineering . ' Ocean Port N. I. ..,. ':1- .-- 9 Ivy Club : And many a tale he had to tell. 1.V. 2 lfa Class Baseball C1 25' Sophomore Hop Com- 'l 'l ' V.', 2 mittee' Senior Ball Committee- Secretary-Treas- ' ' I urer Mechanical En ineerin Club' Member - A. s. M. E. ,:.,., iil Ei :EW Fil lil H3 lim :il H E gl 2 Il ls -1 7 . , 5 til 7 ' J i Z sd l I1 E l 4 ,x : fl J my I , so 1 7 'l l rr JJ 'U ' ,Q v .1 i so 2 X I 7 2 7 l A L31 I gl g 7 ! xx V1 f-1 Xxx I :A is Q H , - lil E El E 22' 5 El 'E 12? ... E, - 53 : - . . iii I lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll All Hlllilll lllill llllllllll ill l'TiMmllllllllililllilllalllMwlllllllllllklilllal1lalll'llllllllelll1lll:lllamwlw1ul1l1mlllmwllifulwlavle -a Q ii C is 'gg EQ XX LRDOLIN RANDOLPH LEBER llcclmnical Engineering XVoodbrid e N. I. Ivy Club 'For c'vr-x 1113 In had cz where ore. C1253 F00tball ll 25: President Mechanical Ziihimeriiix Club: Member. A. S. M. E. KIRK LEVI K Clivznisfry CIJEH 'V S0 all' f' : not ' lmbif. Chemistry Club. WILLIAM LOTT C11L'lIIiSfl'j Atlantic City B. I. KS LIPBK BIlssi11g.v on tlztc, Little Man. A Cwptaiu C335 Class Banquet Committee C4D. LOUIS FOSTER MACK Elivfl'-ical ElIg'l1'L2L'7'illg Daretowu V. I. Ivy Club 'Tlzr Engfizziccvs the lfzzgmeersl Student Uember A. I. E. L. C3 45. Chemistry Club La 45' Lacrosse Team C3 ' L- 35 'E f , i -', l l 4 . V E E l Ei , r Le V l jr OL! i V' 7 1,1 L A I I U l l U , 1 :ll i' 1 fi . . . . , H lil L L ' f 1 U ss , . lg! 1 I Q ' Q l l' 3 i I C' il in 4 l ' 1 ,W-'N H NE 1 ig l , 1 lr-::. LL ' l E Trenton, N. . 5 i i 17 I, , I 1, l l ual 115 : 5 4 i i l I A l . l E E T 2 J 2 P4 x: E f H 5 1 7 I il 2 : , . , 49. E' :- E l 1 1 E L 1 E E :' E 4 4 I E E , i E E , , 4 n 2 , E 1 ' 4 ' E E ': E 2 . 54 Illlllllllll IIllllllllIllIllIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllllllll Illll llllllllilllll lllllllilllllllli IllllIlIlllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll . .AQ LX Ti V 1. Q , e HERMAS V1cToR MAIN CCZWUIIITSCI'-Y Perth Amboy, N. I. E A HKA lr 55? Over there, over there. Chemistry Club. Ee E E E Ili, TEU E3 ALBERT LESLIE MASSEY gt Ag1'ieu1tu1'e Goshen, N. J. flH1lJ17ElC as the uiidzzight silence. all V Ei' Ei :gy HENRY LEA MASON if Meehan-ical Engiizeerizzg E Trenton N. I. IIJTA CIDBK 1 He ,reels the fittesf cord fo fill his fvlzzcise. Z' Senior Council' Interfraternity Council C3 4D' it -5, Tafguiizi Staff C2 3 ' llclitor-in-Chief C4D' Var- - sity Swimming Squad CZD' Team C3 4D' Honor A Man C1 2 3 43' Business Mana er Y. M. C. A.. -- Handbook CZD' Business Mana 'er SCARLET LET- A Mu TER C3D' President Philoclean C433 Tunis Qui-k 1 Prize Cll' Member A. S. M. II. E BENJAMIN -MASUROVSKY ' E A g1'ieuItuz'e 2 New Brunswick N. I. 5 Hard woik has its rezuazd TTL?- i..,.,, -. 'T-T 1' .fr V. tfigfnili.,-ZX, ,. , ll! If i 1 l . . E S' 'E R J' in El 12 155 El EU El gl 3 El is 2-'l gi il E I li 4 E s ll f 5 i If , II E :E ' Z' ' l n 1 1 E 'l , D, 4 , 5 '-1 N 3 7 V I J Y l J gn ! A ? 1 ' - g ' . E ' , X , C 4 2 E Af I JJ Z . ' C ' i ' L E E E L S-U E ss l :IlllllllllllllllllllIllllIIllllHlHIlHlllIlIlIlHHHlHIlHHUHllHlHHHHHlIlIHIllHlIHIIlIHlIHlIHlIlHIH uinuuiii1inn1ninliuiuiuiiiimiizliluiiiiieiiimiiiiiiiiuialnlummm mmm: nnmu 4 --'--fa? f' -qs-El CNE.-s,,..? L55 6, :inn X l ., 227 Xt PJ' , 'T .. 1 LT. 1 Cr-. CF.-1 , :gi 1-n r. ,-,i LEON CORNELIUS MCBRIDE .-lgriculturv iz Princeton, N. I. if ll 'l1o will not tlzanlr the kindly cartlz and bless our farmer boys? 1- Ag Clubg Class Track Cl5. li' Eg 'N Q DOUGLAS CRUIKSHANK MCCULLY ,W Liberal Q 'E i Oradell, N. I. HKA 5- Thu calm scholastic mimi. Sophomore Banquet Committeeg Targum Re- porter C155 Targum Cabinet C35. E is El iii GEoRGE MICHAEL MCVEY Agriculture Leonardo, N. I. KE Ea l'Vlzy work or worry? Assistant -Manager. Swimming Cl, 253 Class Program and Invitations Committee C45g Agri- cultural Club, Secretary C355 Vice-President C45. ijg Eli ,Ill NCORMAN RIPLEY 'MEI-IRHOF El Agriculmre - Ridgefield Park, N. J. 2 Ivy Club ig To mind his orders was all he knew. Class Swimming Team C153 Targum Cl, 25g ji Assistant Business Manager C35 3 Queen's Players- ? Cl, 2, 35 3 Swimming Team C25 3 Manager, Swim- i m'n-g C3, 455 Interfraternity Council C3, 453 ,1 Ll Treasurer, Agricultural 'Club C353 Military Ball Hg 'EI Committee C255 Poultry judging Teamg Honor ,: Man C25. : Q 5 2 15 S E lil 56 E E la , . . . -M -. .4 s E EMlllLmll,UlUlMllllMlHMMllMMllHlMMMMlllll llllllMUlMMMllLMlIllHHHllllllIllllllillMwlllllllllllllll!lll441l11l:li11l:mlill:llliillifllHl.lllllElEl1QElllllllliiilil will? . gi -1 El 14 iii r.-11, 5 :W A I. i--p :ig 11 ffiixjiggibbi- C T' ' Fl l ':T:-Ttzlli-'Z-JT, if Q? ill .i i ' R .fe ,J if C A g 1 'ist I5--frilly., X . M C iw ii fi- Q Y fl is nf' iii .l jg. 5- . , ' - :gA,,:-...:. 1..,. ' ' ' V -A-2314, . - -- 'F-'Yl.fT 1' T f X ' K Ty -Tw F - 'N-'-1-U .Lf,,-if-i'.?'laAEi X5 -ff: 'QTL-wks.-lLj,1':5f' nilkyfji- ' C Q , wg. 2 lg 2 JEROME ADRIAN MERQUELIN We S .Meclzaziical Engineering gl Elizabeth, N. I. 4 1 GFA ,Z li? PV-indy of 7'lHl7ll71'g, but not of speech. Varsity Track C3, 45 g Relay Team C3, 45 5 i Cross Country C35 g Vice-President, Mechanical itz!! j Engineering Clubg Honor Man C3, 45 3 A. S. -M. E. lil 'll C45- WS wa ew 112 FRANK PEARSGN MERRITT FE. Electrical E1igi1iee1'i1zg , ,F Red Bank, N. I. A itil Content to live, this is my stay. , Tl--l Queen's Players Cl, Z, 45 5 Vice-President, Radio - -Club C355 Glee Club C45. lil ' IE li l:i A lil li ' . itz! ERVVIN ROBERT MEZGER l gl A griciil ture Newark, N. I. lei Xe 5 iii Life's sweet illiis-ions to pzwsiief' lil Junior Prom Committee, Interfraternity Coun- 32, fcil CZ, 35 g Class Football C15 3 Class Baseball C25 5 ,ix Class Track C255 Class Bowling C255 Agricul- gg, tural Club. ,El ,Ei El if -'11 ,E PAUL REXFORD MOLINEUX ., :A In ' lil I-. ixaeawhen, N. J. , 5 :, Clear the track, boys, here I come. lg! j' Varsity Basketball Manager C253 Varsity La- I I fcrosse Team C3, 45, Treasurer, Varsity Clubg - Chairman, Cap and Crown Committee 5 Interfra- ,ill 5:1 -ternity Council C35. A 'H lil, if it '... - . it lg I Ei Ei T Ei -f 'lj El 5 21 57 V , ,dll iq llllllllmlhmmbll.Ull.llliHmlllllllllllll'lYllmlllllilmlmllllllillllllllllllflliillilllililll:l5l1lllllimlllli1f'Will1Vl'n3l13 W f lt1m ':W.1l'ill',lllllllllllfllllell iz.. , D' W ' ' ? 'r X,x kg! I ' 3' --T lil 51 -1 111 l fs fl El if l :I , if l f r E E eil FREDERICK LE CONGE MULLER gi Biology New York, N. Y. ji lg mu ?ll IE BvhoId fha flazning ol'm7Ie. Z Treasurer of Biology Clubg Class Track. 3 E! ez: 211 U54 1 E IE l--1 El gn' D.-XVID GORDON MULLISON Q? ill Lizwl-1-al 2 i Keansburg, N. I. Q KIPILX lg i HI U'0lI'f feel .cure of his hving good. f Glec Club C2, 3, 433 Turgunx C3l. li PAUL VICTOR INGEM.-XN NTELSEN, I Ag1'icuIt111'c' El Perth Amboy, N. I. 1 rg 'lV1zaf doth this busy youflz- that hr' hath nmzghf , l: of fllllt? for f1Ic1y? Agricultural Club C3, 45. 5 E ? JAMES COX NORRIS, JR. E Clzclllisfljv E E Hightstowu, N. I. E i Thou has! taken good chazzlces, Sir Kiziglztf' E 3 Chemistry Clubg Baseball Reserves. I? 1 E , E E E E E E ' E E l 2 ss l , IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlmllllllHm lllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllll l I Illllllllll III IllIlIllUllIHlUlIlIlIllHIlilllll1llllliilllllilwYllllll llllllllWl.f - drgi- , 'C 'Z' R K S, M X for ' E EEN 52' I .Z ri, 421 ,ll 151 132' GARVVIOOD RUSSELL OTTINGER Q5 i ll Liberal :IEW -f ll- Camden, N. I. lil. E1 Ivy Club lg 'iul . . - - -u 'i wif Hb'V170 will bcIze've my TJCVSC zu time to come. lg! -ry Editor-in-Chief of the SCARLET LETTER. 'g 'E is EE ig 'EI El :A 'E wif: ? E kj gi PRESTON KINNEY PACKARD gl US 'i in Electrical E11yi1z.cr1'i1zg E li-i rig rig Stelton, N. I. For every day brings b1'ig1zl1ic's.f. Z lg Mechanical Engineering Club. ii 512 I E1 :l lg HENRY GRIFFITH PARKER, JR. i,- f , ,, 1- Liberal I gl New Brunswick, N. I. V. VAV, -5 Cap cmd S1 ull ' i He is looling foi move worlds to corzqmr. AVLK- Z Senior Council' Vice-President Senior Class' ., ' 1 Q Head Cheer Leader' Chairmaz., Class Day Com- f ' i mittee' Address to Under raduates C4D' Vice- , ... President Interfraternity Council C4j' Chairman ' 5 Junior Prom Committee' ,Iunior Orator' Mana 'er of Tennis' Musical Clubs CU ' Secretary CZD ' '- I : ' P H -C Leader CISD' Manager C43 ' President C43 ' Secre- L -. tary Class C4J' Sophomore Hop Committee CZ '- ' ' 3D' Chairman Sophomore Banquet Committee' E Class Treasurer CU. 3 CHARLES i:DWiARD PAKTON j E jamesbur N. I. i ui E Amazed he stands nor 'Uoiro noi body stirs. Z E Chemistry Club. '.. . H ' , -U 5 :l S C1 P if ff . , , L , H if , f E E L , lf! W gl v 1 r X: I Q Aj 2 E , y , ry . J , g , W Cf' 1 U CVM. 1 , , , s y X A E 1 ', . ' , y V, 'i f I v-1 5 1 v ' I I I E 6 E 7,524 E 4 4 7 t f J, M E g, ,, N V, E rr , Y 1: AE 4 I I V T 2 1 l 59 l il P lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm lllllllllllllllli IlllllllIlllll!lll!llll.l IilIl!HHIlIlIlllI15lHElIllllllllilllllllllwllllilllUllilI1llWllUl!lllllIUlllllil 1 . Az. iw Z' ,,7t2ff-11'-.L3iQQ I ,. Q-PP -1 ' ,. we I ,. X ' f I ,lmfai .,..l,..ff- I, - I ,f fe- ' I --W ' I,.,,,-g,,-.... - A ,,..,,.,-A I CORNELIUS ALFRED PERRY Biology Greenwich, Conn: How complicate, how wonderful is man. i President Biology Club. lj it El EI lx? XVILLIAM CLERIHEVV PERRY if flgP'lt'1llflll'8 'E Clifton, N. I. 5- Ivy Club Agricultural Club. 1' FRANCIS WILLIAM PETIT Elurfrical Engineering ,i Dunellen, N. I. QBK 52 Shut not your doors to mc, proud libraries. Rille Club i355 Secretary, Radio Club C4D Ill! Member, A. S. E. E. if-if 'li JASON SIIABURY PETTENGILL E Liberal H2 New York City ll? HKA A fond kiss an-rl tlzczz. we sever. Queen's Players Cl, 3, 453 Cheer Leader C45 lil, Varsity Swimming Team Cl, 2, SDQ Class His lj torian CU, Class Constitution Committee CD Glee Club Cl, 2, 355 Senior Banquet Committee, l-I Junior Prom Committeeg Nonsensia Editor, SCAR- IA LET LETTER, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. lil el L lil Q li! le lgl el ri, 60 I-. Eiwlllllmllllllm lIllll.llllHMUHlUMlElUllllllIllllllWlllllll!lll1lllmlmmlllllllllilllllllllllll!lllllllllllilllllflflflllfltlllilulrllllllllllllJHIIII 'II1l1liIIlIl1llllllililllllwllllmill ya X ,,,g.- - -. hfueazg.-Jie:-2.1 ,I ,v '1-K 1, :I- -Xiwexh fl . ,,?iT,.,., 'T: ': :':'.3g.ii.3. 4 5. T ' -rag it i, Qt 4 . -Q, ,QVC u 'H-fr,-57. .' w 4,7 .W . 14- - gg.: H ' If , , -Q. . , ' -,sf lv V, -ag.- .f . 211 in ,,,, V--z fl girl Qi --1 in 'ijt E l Q E . it -a,..tt-V..-. ,-4 :' ,. '. LM-1 .- ,' I . 5. A, . W. .' VL f' , .Lil 135 , - -:1 if -f IJ gal 3 fe Q-.5-,rf - 351, f lei? i ti El 'fi 2 HUGO MENZEL PFALTZ Ei Cl1CI1ITSfI'J' Et Newark, N. J. If at Hrs! you d0I1,f succeed try, try again. in Targum CZ, 353 Chemistry Club, Debating iii' Team C453 Philoclean. 'lil' E E-l 32 lil l E 12' CHARLES IRVVIN POST j-Q Clzeifiistry East Orange, N. I. ,Aa AY I arouse uzzazzswwable questions. llzll Varsity Swimming Cl, 2, 3, 453 Mandolin Club TEV Cl, 2, 3, 453 Leader C453 Military Ball Com- mittee C153 Junior Prom Committeeg Chairman, llit ,gil Senior Ball Committeeg Class Secretary C453 Tn- rig tl-E1 terfraternity Council, SCARLET LETTER ' Board3 Class Baseballg Undergraduate Scholarship Com- ,E mittee C453 Targmn Staff Cl, 25. gl E Qt 'fit LEVVELLYN NEVILLE PRATT E5 Liberal ME Layton, N. Y. Vg' El Zi' E lin N01 f1'0ck um' tau can hide the 'IIZCIILU l:'f Manager, Baseball Team C453 Glee Club CZ, 3, ,lin 153 Queen's Playersg Athletic Editor, SCARLE1: .gg 122- ETTER li ,ii - U31 E Ciyggwgf tj NEAL Dow QUIMBY Gi, Sl: Liberal W 'Zi 1 fi is Morristown, N. I. TE, 3 K2 li lg I fear no foe, I fatm no friend. Lacrosse Team C353 Junior Banquet Commit- 9 'Sie teeg Interfraterniity Council. A ZAVV: ibblilzrl zbln 'F gg ag Eftlllllllllmlllllllllmlllilmlillllllll llllQHUTLEMMIHIl.El.lLliL.l.l.lDlLMQMLE9Wli.LTP -l T will ll -..-..,,-:1f5l -..SQ ,,,,N X , , , Q. ,Z 5 5, if il eel- l in ,:. E' T5 4x 3 J ix' X ' I, ,A-fa :1 .zgtggzik 'p':.L esr Q .......-Tru r i.'s,, ' +1 -QS 2 CC ee X -f' qt? QT' Q me w,f x,, -amo,,4, lsrifeqggaff Si ' lil El 34 E E 'WILLIAM HENRY ROBINOVVITZ Chemistry il? Newark, N. J. ll? I lrvrp rlosc to my business. ,121 El E1 rl W U2 Hg E lg' la iii, HERBERT THOMAS REDMOND 'Es lift Liberal Q: Brooklyn, N. Y. il Casqnc and Dagger Q lg Zip 1 5 Doris, slim and bold was thc hero. ,T Football CZ, 3, 45: Manager, Basketball C455 .1 i Banquet Committee 42. 45 1 Chairman, Sopllo- 1' if more Hat Committee: Class Treasurer L35 3,Cap- F 5 tain, Freshman Football tl5. E, is MORTIMER JAMES REDMOND gg lgsl 1.f1m-U1 21 Brooklyn, N. Y. E 251' Q1 A man of good wfvilfv, carriage, baarillg and lb-E' 5 t'stiu1ati011. E. Varsity Football fl, 3, 455 Varsity Swimming I5 El fl, 2, 3, 45 3 Senior Council: Senior Class, Presi- ,E lill dent, Sophomore Hop Committee. rg 7 li ii l-U El, r lil l- Nil ig 1l- 1 fig! 1 2 SAMUEL RAVITZ li E Chevniistry ' 2 Newark, N. I. Mi I Long ears do not Rabitz make. . f A Menorah Society C3, 45 3 -Chemical Club C3, 45 3 ' lg S. A. T. C. C25. i E I1 ,E iii, ' MTE E 62 uplllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllmMlMUlMUMUMUUlUMllHMMllllIl!llllll!1llll!llHlllllllulililllwlililmlllllilllillllmllllllllwlmllllflwlllilllllillllllllzflilililllllllli ,M -1 T -L: i, El ..l' KE' i-v. li- , gn -Mi :I ,. .T ,YU ill L. 1 -1 Ii it , Il' .34 WU, MU :N :rl f.: I.2',,ii1T3-'35-T - ' S, i T-'ine-Q.:-51:1 -ff-.-, .Hi E-T -'l' -A. T , X ff' Kvllh U FYRJ . 55 ii .' ii X ff A if -5 i T. T' T :Q M e 7 ' F 5 5 , Q S., , J' 7 62. , rgzxr-43,1--41--1-A-1-kt' L, ZLL. 'l..Lg., I'j : it vLi.5gg.,:J- 1-4 me 'rr' . ala if 1 ' l' --.,-f- 'L'ff ' Ra j ' E E QQ E AARON ROTH Civil Enginocririg Flemington, N. I. QDEH E ij He would be like unto the Marcus flzztony. ,QQ Freshman Debating Team: Freshman Soccer' itll. Freshman Bowlingg Civil Engineering Club IZ iigi .3, 455 Second Prize Sophomore Oration: Junior -Oratorg Philoclean CZ, 3, 45. E itil E las fi El lg? MORRIS MORTIMER RUCHAISKY E1 Illerlzan-ical Eilgfllfffillg iii' Newark, N. I. ,4Ilwo1'1e is play fo me. gift Freshman Soccer C155 Menorah Society Cl, Z jig? EEN 3, 45 g Executive Committee C45 1 Mechanical Enffi- neering Club Q3, 45 g A. S. M. E. C45. gif! lil I.-. iz! E1 li! E Ei? Ei 'Q WALTER RUCK qlgii Chc1nist1'y :E New Brunswick, N. I. W'ifh fC'l1Zf7El'LI'l7'Z61Zf not known to many. ij chemistry club 41, 2, 3, 45. E! E li ei Iig VVILLIA'M LYON SCHOONMAKER ' it Liberal E' Sfaugerties, N. Y. el em 2, The son of man goes forth to war. 21 21 Freshman Oratorg Junior Oratorg Queen's 5 'Players Cl, 2, 3, 45 3 Philoclean Q1, 2, 3, 455 Vice- :z 3 President C45g Associate Manager SCARLET LET- gil - 'J:ERg Ring Clubg Cadet Major TR. O. T. c.: chair.. 5 E man Military Ball Committeeg Cap and Gown Ei 5 Committee. lil 3 :W l A .eil Ei 1 Ei l - 1 63 Ei Fill i imllwlrii ! nl Wim 'lmllllllIHllllW,ll,ll,llllilllMlllilllllllllllllllllllllilillMlU3lillIlflllb!'il1li1iilliilll'3f3l1'i11lllllllllllllllilllllfllillllililW3 mzvwiiiiilii lf' 12 l 11, , eil M--4 iz. :-y. vii 111 lil il 2 l El ggi +1 El F. it Ei il :l :i il lil f--s l EA in :I .Q IZ! l:i ? :E -1 ll-I .3 21 :.-B, i-l -C ,. S vi 1-4 4,- 5 'X-,Q , fkgrfl1T l ,,1,WQ2'f ii Al ,f ei W. fi is i C ff ff - f . . g ' 3 ' N Ca, E ' . V. ,I -4 - fffrrzls-112:--' ,,ij'1':'4L r-.-.-..-Q'1' ref?-.i ,- '-4-ff , - .:f----4-- . - 4- .Q li' 55' if 'r e' ' nf!-W t?Qff ii 'iX i+yr is ifx-J: , , ,,.-f . fl Eli QTQQ-mf:- p , Xljff i ' ALFRED KNIGHT SHERWIN :N Liberal Q Valhalla, N. Y. gi ACD I ii, Too black for lzcawn, but too rvlzife for hell. 2 e:l' Senior Council Secretary C455 Chairman, Sen- 5' E' ior Banquet Committee 3 Varsity Swimming mil Team C1, Z, 3, 45, Captain C451 Track Cl, 2, jj l-il , T lg, 5, ang Class secretary mg Mandolin Club C155 Fl Ii! Class Track Cl, 3, 453 Class Football C153 Class ,rl pgs, Bowling C15 3 Address to the President C45 5 2:1 Eli Student Banquet Committee C45g Board of Man- gg ffl agers C453 Sophomore Banquet Committeeg Ca- El 7 Nl det Captain, R. O. T. C. C25. FE' li iz' 52: MARTIN HUTCHINSON SHEHWIN ii Liberal 3 Valhalla, N. Y. Q li Ao E .-lmbifion .rcarfllcs C'L'Fl'j' ,vpI1erc'. gl l- lil I Mandolin Club C1, 2, 3, 45: Manager Musical jf' j Clubs C45 1 Sophomore Banquet Committeey E Class Bowlingg Swimming and Soccer C155 Re- Z serve Baseball C255 Junior Oratorg Cadet First Q Lieutenant, R. O. T. C. C253 Manager College lil - Concert Courseg Cheer Leader C455 Senior Me- E ig morial Committee. 1:1 El El TE ELVVOOD SPENCER SKILLMAN Eg EIc'Ct1'ict1I Elzgizzevrilzg 1 Skillman, N. I. lil S'iIf'1zce is .S'0HICfl'IIIL'S a sign of u'isd0m. ' i? lf ll El ,E-. LAURENCE SLIKER :l lg Inbemz lil Newark, N. I. il Q AKE E lg S67'PE11f and Coffin I No obstacle 'i111.1f1eded. iz! gl Varsity Football Cl, 2, 3, 45: Junior Promi E1 Committee, Sophomore Banquet Committee. lE lei 'Q lj lil llgig . A l.i . El li, . Ei lag :Q r 64 5 llilllllllllllflilllmlmll11wlslzll'll1lf?L'Vll l llTllflULEUQllLliWidlldllwlllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllzllll'lmll'lIl,f.llLQ'lillQ1llfLll'l.l 'Wll will . .am- -1- V WANWWV ,,,1hf-,ml ' VT , ' .,..-- T Y . ' ' s x ff 1 I lx.-T ff X J gg, exp ,QQ 4 -emlamfl ff'4f,.,- if-f A' i C is W LJ - ' ' - '- ,A , - , ' Xl 'I B3 1 M--Y 'lg-. Fl: fir: - , 39 A F l SQ ME l?,?5A4 'Y an I nm .59 I H 35' 'E I 4 X .' . fe l 2' li, 1' ' . , . . . . .,- ..-R ,. - V f N4 li ...L , ., f .zff .. ,,...:Lf-- f 1 Rf, V Eiigfl E? 1,5 1 A R317-,-V ,-N. ,. -9 Pbwl Q :ll ggeffifakg V..--,3g.11 :Ly ' '-'f Vi, .W ,Lt 5 5 El El 5 HARRIS SOLMAN Ei Cizfil Engim'eri1zg E Trenton, N. I. Q El QBK 2,5 E' Sfmt in from all flze world witlzouff' El E2 if E 6 ' ll Ei el El PERRY DICKERSON SMITH Electrical Engizzecr El El Jamesburg, N. I. M 2 AY A 2 Both will and both dezfgfzffaz, mo. I Z Class Baseball Cljg Rifle Team C355 Glee Club i it '13, 4Jg Senior Banquet Committee. - in Q RICHARD WILFRED sooY 4 Liberal E , Ocean City, N. I. E E K2 E 5 Alas, I have tome too lata 150 make my name. E 1 5 - 1 E l E ' T LEO 'WATMAN VSTEINECR 2 I Liberal 3 E Bayonne, N. I. E E CDEII E I A1'gm1ze1zt is the spice of life. '- : Freshman Soccer Teamg Wi11ner of the I. P. 1 Wall Targum Prize, Nonsensia SCARLET LETTER. I 2 1 E 1 2 an 1 f-a E A 65 E. E 'Zl lllillllll llllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllilllllllllwlllllwllllllllllllllilllIl1IllIl!lllIl5llllUll5lIl5lIliHllllllllllllllillllllil x: :- ' EE lvl iii l fl l El Ei li ii 1. --i IE? Zlzl lill ,-. 12 lg? EEN il, lil 1 ,fl tar 0:1 i W QB ww 6-ksffl ikai 2. . if-f if feb is f QW 2 'R'Ns'f! Ting--1':'fdr' Z2 L: .M El :q 5:1 ROBERT BLOCK STONE : Liberal New Brunswick, N. I. qi Ben gg' Ti.9 nrinv ambition to follow the immortal if Deuzpxvyf'-S11akcspvare. iff El' ur :- lil iz, lg 'Z -il E2 'lil' lei Q1 li, RAYMOND STROHL gl EIvctril'aI EIIQUICCI' lg iii Elizabeth, N. I. 'C0mc llazfc' a little Stroll! with uw. E, Q' E ir! lil ll! ii ld! -Qi ll? 1111 HEI L if JOHN JACKSON SUTTON 'ri 'ill Agriculture ' U33 W'arsaw, N. Y. lg AKE Ei llj Oh, for more jack. lil Varsity Footballg Assistant Manager, Basket- ball 3 Rutgers Representative in First Intercol- illi, legiate Air Meetg Senior Ball Committee. lg' lil E2 Eli T Ei? jig- MERRILL HAZLETON THOMPSON ig, lil' Agriculture ll? Metuchen, N. fl. BQH li Casque and Dagger Il: And ctrrtaizzly he hndde a merrye uiglztef' ,il if Treasurer, Senior Class: Varsity Song Leade-r lj - Glee Club Q2, 353 Leader C455 Senior Counirl I Iuterfraternity Councilg Queen's Playersg - li Football Squad Cl, 21: Class Day.Committee V2 E! Junior Prom Committeeg Pipe Oration. lil' F SJ Ei T' l El ill 4 ' gl 66 El lgmllmmmllmmfmllmlmmmlllllillmill lim llll.mlilllllllmmulillnmllmlummlmmumllflielfllwiw will mmmimiiAwwwlulrmwwv ll 'llyflil ,-,:..-1-.g,1,.,.i.,l7 Ss -' lf- - X , 'E ex QQ If iw K-. I , 55, ,Ffh XLR- Q - X ii L-'L'-My-EER' if-mm 'V :K-Med vi -4 C 'jg' ' n '...g. 7' r: if '11 17' if ,gi Ng, ,aLt ' ' 'if-Q E if li 5 E El 51 DONALD VAN BRAKLE gl El Liberal gl' Keypofr, J. gg AKE, QBK ' Silence .S'01llClll1lC5 slzouxf wisd0111. .2 Honor Man Cl, 2, 3, 4Dg Senior Banquet Com- mittee 3 Philoclean. gl E GEORGE JONES VAN DERVEER gl Ag1'i011lt111'0 .Q Freehold, N. J. Em AK!-3 E Thy 11111110 .shall live while S1flIlZ7lll'I'5 bloom and E fade. ig ,Ely Philocleang TGl'gM17l Staff Cl, 255 Associate lg' Editor C35 g Assistant Editor C45 3 Agricultural 2 lil Club g Senior Ball Committee 3 Class Football lil ,IA1 I- CID g Poultry Judging Team. gg 12 5 ali ig 5 E RALPH P. S. VAN ORDEN Liberal Rid ewood N. I. Cap and Skull A1101 11010 a kllliglll to 011131. Class Football CU' Secretary Athletic Asso- ciation C3D' Vice-President C4J' Varsity Base- bll C2 ISD' Captain C4j' Chairman Honor Board C4D' President Senior Council' Junior Banquet Committee' Senior Class Day Committee. EDGAR VAN SLYKE Biology Nyack N. Y. 'As f11'01Je1f a 1111111 as 011.0 shall 01101 500. 421 El I, l 1 3 5 l l l g , l Zin FJ inf? rr , I ,, I ll 4 LI, F Y ! :I UN 3' 1 ,I 1 i 1 gg ,Q 1 , , 1 ' Il E ' l: lil le t I 1 n I Q V Z y l 1 :l L 'l ji 1 E , 23 if , u T E 1 5 E ' El 'li' - 1531 i - my ' A 67 lUl lil llllllli lll llil I lm HaillulllillllllllllllllHullllllllWwmlwlwlllllllilllllllmls llllolsllulllelllllllllillsl':l1l5l1liWl1:1ll1.WM lW:lrlflllalwumjiiii E E w E - --512 2 E w, , ' xsjml 3 .,.. I 'f f Y .- ,aww 1 K 2 h Q A E 4-',', , Q E ' in , E 4. . . ,..A .,... A ,. F E U 5 M Y - 5 ,ffl 2 W, iff' ' 2 bd gm, : Q5 ,ff 1 51 ox ET Q QAE 56: E E-EQ ff' ' - gm g Q. f-6 :pgsa vv we 15 ffl, I ,-, 2 AWS : Q 'N un ' .' 2 Q s 2 : 3 fdiffi F Vx 4 21 FT N Q -M5933 E 7 eggs E3 gpg -3 4 'Q ... 1. r-1 -1 , p-F, : R 1, 2 fu 23' O Sfgkf 3 5 W 2 H ' 'SS E KX E 5 591, QT? W 2 522 ,mfs X- ? HQJ W QQ? Sig Eyes Q O ac: 524 2 Z '15-iflffw g., Whip: 5-mul vc-NO 5 'a 5 Q ' 5 gr,-iOCf'W 'ClII 'flP'-42,-1 5'- 'U 5 -H -U rv NU-715,-4 ' ' Z 7-1-f. +?fv4 g,,..j f-MQ o,.,,,:.D,SU'PJ 003630, 5 'gg 34 H52-42.3-0 yung afiic 'vm -,QV r I E fxr'wZNl'11 Of UQEW ZKNE ,Q fN'3::,'m,E3-:I-' Q 5 523- .4 mga., ESQ O-55, ZN2 32.21 Pg 5 -J 3,4 2 QNE' 253' P, A MFE- AWE- Z Q . :.' :: - f- +-4 I-f 5- 5 N ,, ' 5- E 2-, EA? ZQW aw' ' 4 gyda' HQZ Z Q 8 EC S E 5 E, 8 Q 'ff 4' -'S E N U SSM- sf - Q wg: PJ m- 5 5 I E O Zi :F 5 rf! 5-0 ' E H fx Q 9+ fi Q U1 'D ' tri as 'F . ll 1 E U-U7 ..-.fx , QQ ,X ,L ly N '. E sv O O -li : .....a:. JA 1 E .. , . E E ' V - i.L..:4. 31:7 '44-A Af A A 4- 1- SSS N il lllllllllll Illllllllll lllllllllll lllllllllllll i lllllllllllllllllllllllllliljll IIIIIII IIIIIIMUII IIIIUIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIllllllllllllllllllllljlIHIIHMIQI UML! JlMH'LlIMLlLllllllUTHlMllHlMlill Hill! l1IHQ 1ilNi.if 43.1-1 C C N J U V N Q 1 'I L w H L , l w Q-1-. ., ' I, -jx. M- 'x 'Irv' Y snr?--Hn-F! 1: HA ' j ' W f-sf ?ix,,..z.- ,. -1, I ,,-hi .7 ,f .K .- -,F-1-Q.z..,--.1---'I-9 H J' . . Rib ff' 1-K. 'ss' ,L 1. ,ff x 49. f wx fl: VJ- 1' M , ' in 'Q' ' ' ' V- N ' 1,7 f ' 'QQ '. Y A 'L 4 ,- fxfm' ,, 1 W' 1' , :xTT1! 1. Rx' w Tl, if 4 '14 ff' tg ,eff ,,, 1. ff-gg, ,v-1-xzggiliiiig Eg, ,T .ff fffrg-7,-, ,....,-l.5 qv, .- W X 1 1 If w E ,-.N .:N -A4 - w :AEN Wi, -W , , v,....-gi., 1 J- 1 --.,nWYYu ,. J- .-, F - -1--..M . .1- L11 115 --4 Q ' - 1- f WI gig T Q wi HA i lyr V- :-1. if: H' r,:, if L 'Q lr ' UT ff IV ii? ss s Q fri EET? E Class of 1922 ,jg OFFICERS .P7'ESid0lZf-VVALTER EMU. BEYER 7'1'cax1zz'c'1 dD0UGLAs HOLDEN DE VVITT VfCC-PI'P.Yidt'7lf-HARRY HAYNHR PRATT St7C'l'L'ft71'j'-XVALTER XVATTS CLARK M5 Hi.vt01'icm-ANDREW :KIP Fouuus f' an E YZW 1 iN iQ Yell 35 is Rah, rah, rah! EU Rah, rah, foo! IZ Rutgers! Rutgers! Ei ig Twenty-two ! figl :- 15 21 Fi fi Q21 R2 5 T E, 70 -E mlllllimYWLULMMUMMMMMIMSUmmmmgmmullillllnsimmnsmumwumwmmQWuwwlsmwwwa Wiflflwi MIMMMHMW'WHHlIiMfEl History of the Class of One hundred and fifty-five classes have entered Rutgers College, but the class of 1922 alone can say that it started its career with military training its chief aim. VVe did not come to increase our learning, but to aid our country in her time of need. Had the war continued the history of this class might never have been written-would surely have been vastly different. Fortunately, however, it did not continue and at rnidyears we began our true college life. Of the two hundred and sixty men who entered in September to become soldiers one hundred and sixty returned in Janu- ary to carry on their college life. TV e, who had worked and drilled side by side with the classes of '19, 120 and '21, were now forced to recognize them as our superiors. The class of '21 was hard pressed to instil in us those traditions which were a thing of the past during our military life. How well they performed their duty may be seen when we look at the effects of our training on the class of '23, How difficult it was for us to train the class of '23 is evident when we realize that the Cane Rush, the Rope Rush and the Pajama Parade were all new to us. XN7e entered upon our duties-for they were both a duty and a pleasure for us--with a spirit which brought to us victory over the large Freshman class. Class banquets, however, were not new to us and here we took advantage of the training we had received in our Freshman year. Our Sophomore Class Banquet was thus a complete success as our Freshman Class Banquet had been. On the social side there was our Sophomore Hop. Those who at- tended the dance know of its success and those who did not were not long held in ignorance of the wonderful time everyone had. The orchestra was carefully tucked away up in the running track to allow a maximum of Hoor space. The palms and flowers which decorated the track made it a not unwelcome spot during the intermissions. Still another phase remains-that of athletics. Wle were always rep- resented, no matter what the sport. To have twenty-five letter men in a 71 1, I.. X K X , 1 K zz it KRT' re-'4' 2 2 z N T ' - ' f ' ---- r .ft-r-- 'rf . LC -'if P T3 ei! ilk. f T45-A. 5945 .E S. T- H ny 1:5 NE ' A i' '55 wifi W-I , . . Q Q li Sophomore class of one hundred and thirty shows the spirit which IS a Z 'FET part of 1922. : yi: Enough for the years we have passedg let us look to the junior Year, i lj now so nearly over. 5 College began with something of the old pre-war spirit. There was a E lil feeling of ease and of a return to the proper order of things. XYe were 2 another long year away from roll of drums and the bugle call. It was Q ! l our duty to oversee the training of the Class of '24. NYe instilled in them if Q5 the spirit grown of the traditions of the college and guided them in paths E -fl which should develop them into real Rutgers men. That our own spirit I ..l has been maintained was shown by our large success in all extra curricula Z activities. I Fi' Our Junior Prom was unanimously voted an entire success: for, with E 5 f the best music available, who could notdance? So large was the number E E that subscribed to the dance that the upper gymnasium, aswell as the E main dance Hoor, was necessary to accommodate the couples. S I In athletics we maintained the place we held in our'Sopl1omore year. E Although the number of men has dwindled to about one hundred and E Fifteen the number of letter men hasincreased. Now we may number E E them as follows in their respective sports: Football, Sp Baseball, 5g Track, E E 5g Basketball, 4g Swimming, 3: Cross Country, 3, and Lacrosse, 7. Such a E 5 number gives evidence that we are fighting for Rutgers and l922. In E E physical development it is certainly evident that the class of l922 is con- E E spicuous, while the percentage of Juniors on the Glee Club, the Mandolin E E Club, the Ta1'g'u11z and the Debating Team keeps pace with our athletic E E record. TN e have more than brawng we have spirit which carries us along E E like a strong current. True, it is a strong current, for it is Rutgers spirit. E ,E VVhen our junior Class Banquet was held at Murray's, in New York E E City, that class spirit was put to a far different test than any of us could -E E have foretold. Forever will that day live in our memories as sacred to Q E the memory of Garrett Scott Voorhees, who was so tragically killed while E on his way to the banquet. .The dinner was a solemn and hushed affair, E A vacant chair to the right of the Toastmaster was reserved for our E Q absent classmate. . E E Three years of the four we are to be at college are now over. Wie E have tried-and succeeded, in good measure-to do our best for our E Alma Mater. Let us continue striving to put this, our class, ever in the E van for Rutgers. It is our duty to uphold it and to make it one which E - will be well remembered when these four short years have ended. Let us E continue to carry on and to work for our goal as we have worked in the E years that have passed. I E HISTCDRIAN. . - E E E E E E 'E E E E E 5 E E i , . 73 , illlllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illll lll ll llllllIlllllll- llllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllillllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ,131-P Gif .E X - ,Y .-. x f . W QQ- 'i gffi 'LT' ,gt i3?i'N--Qigxg ,: ..,:-3..-.??::g:i,l, aff- 'af f ' l----11:- -i'l'l7., ii? ff X' 'Q aa ,1 D Q 7 , ,rffa .gi-V, ,iiflm K, :inf ' ffrrf -al tae- --'-A V5-5-ff' wi gk . ' ' ' ' ' .f -'lf' Q , -f 'V--5:25 '-'--'L-'vin ' ' L VY , -5- '--'Mr' H., -' f' fit - Z3 lg, -r Eli 2 il -F-. A Ak' A Ere-f-,av--rf1?rfL r:g in f4 fl K' 7' w y Ex gill i NE e I 5 lin Iemurlam he Fl' i !i?J f, ,fl i E Z. EU ff gi ,EEN ,pt Q is 'f- 'wil ,il V .,- lhs, 1' EH 1: GARRETT scoT'r voonHEEs,.1n. if The loss of Garrett Sco-tt Voorhees, jr.-sudden 1523 and unexpected as it was-cast a pall of gloom over ig. EET not only the Junior Class of 1922, but the entire lj student body as well. His death came as a thunder H231 bolt from a clear sky, striking where it was least ,jg QQ' expected, and taking from us one whom we could 6 QQ not have held in higher esteem. He was our friend, gg ,gli our classmate, our comrade. xii' Garrett was a loyal son of Rutgers, a valiant cru- ,EQ l'5li sader of the gridiron, a student, a Christian worker, li' a mang one whom every one admired, respected, lg iii loved. We cannot say he died. He was as the eve- liz, ffl ning star and early passed from our sight to shine 21 fifty with that same glorious light in a greater world be- ,511 lg! yond. Would that we could have kept him, but let gy us bow our heads and say as he would have saxd, Aw 'fyi 'KNot our will but Thine, O God, be done. F 2 ill cgii H2 El. le al lla! El SE E EEE 74 if I ll Wlllllllll mwmkmmlnwlmrwwillMwmwzmlmmul!Mmmnumm1muArmlelrlmmw.m.mwrwuwm4mmwm1mnlmemwumiinlmmfmwuml l.fi1l1l.llsma, ..... Q .fl l gil 7:l, 3 il ,el il K -Sl ,W-,Q lzl -l l mix 'T'fr vs'- '-' E ,.-l :i l i-4 li li. ,,,, l l-' lg li M-i '-7 El gl ,Lf-1 All : ' ' - 'Kj-'-L--V. ,J is ,535-P' 5-S e 'il ' ' e read A , Pla' 5:34 2.2--gxxe' nf Q ,zijn 4-if-life ,5l?'N:'f'4'- 'L'-Ig-- -CH-K' m -an li i W' 'Z- mx w ' ' ' f 5- Qs, S ,,.,.Kf-'J ,J ig. -'E-swf:--ff T lil ,. lil ii lil nn Hi-l if RANSFORD JAMES ABBOTT llil gl Rah N371 sf As football manager, success he spells, lg? Q, And snappy dresser he also excels, 12' 133: But his great delight i On Saturday night ,lin bfi Is to park feet above head and smoke 'i' Qi Panatells. liffl gl ' il ill id l 175, E, ROY TVVINING ABBOTT will Some men die of whiskey, ii llw Some men die of beerg Qilll But Roy Twining Abbott lid YVOnlt die an Engineer. lf la lli V21 llg VI li, E3 lil la 1: 'li llgl 'lil H3 lj 'lill lil li H14 JOHN J. ALBERT Hf0ll1Hlj'U :52l We engineers, - ll? We know no fears- Not even of professorsg QE VVe let them rave, l 3 Says Johnny brave 5 li .-, ll., 'El Wie heed not our oppressors. lil WZ' it lg ,li ' :ll lf MALCOLM AUGUSTUS ANGUS lgl UM-an Next year a farmer lad he'll be, lgl li A-pitching hay quite merrily. lA3l lf Though the College farm is a couple Eli li of miles lf Ma Walks the distance vvreathed in El 'lg smiles. 1,5 lg il le lil E l lil El if' 5 Ilul l lIlIllWMlllllllllllMlllllZlllIlll!llllllllllllllMIlllil:llM'ljllllllllllllllllllllllllililllllllllllllElllllllllllllllllllilllflflllllllllllllllllllFlllIlll??ll'lll:ll'llll:f!ll,l lil5l'lll' l Z Ex.,-Xfll Y 4 2 -v l l i l l i l l l ' l E EI l . 1 1 E E E 1 l ll ,v ..,....Q t, X jp X K- .. I , ll ,-m..., ' I X, ,.-...-. .II , I 1 If jf p ' 1 VVILLIAM ROBERTSON .-XNGUS. JR. Squire This man is a farmer, too. lVe hear from all around, He hopes some clay To pitch the hay And also till the ground. CLINTON Hoe,-xm BAKER -'Bai-ff There was a young man named Baker They say he was never a faker. Loyal in school, He never shot pool- I wonder 'if he is a Quaker? LIIOPOLD BECK Leo ' There n as '1 youn ' boy named Beck Ylfho said 'To 'et by Heck W'ould be heaven sublime. So he spent all his time And passed the darn course by Heck. EDXVARD ARB OLD BIIRRX Al Jr I hate to et up in the mornin And I hate to take 1 pill But I like to eat ITU breakfast Rnd then be late for drill ei Q i n :- I E E l -: p l 5 , , 1, 2 E f , ' e H , E E : ff I ,, E E E rl ML IIIllllIllllIlllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllkllllllllmllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllll llilllll HlllllllllllllllllllliIIlllllllll IllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll: a , a a Z fffsmhiii' X fri-1f'Nl' Ns C- Xqo QE! ,E li' lg lj d F El 'Eli EU E E E PHIL.-XNDER HAMMER B Phil V ETTS He always wants what he wants XN'hen he wants it, Sings Philander I-lammer Betts, But yet he never wants what he fjets. FR.-XYCIS ALEXANDIIR BEL'GLTfSS fzan Fran nex er smokes. he seldom chews He never touches that stuff called boo7e For VVll'1C women and son he has no use You wouldnt thmk he has much fun but he does W ALTER lilllll. BLYER Il'aftv llls hexght hom head to foots Gbantxc Yot so much ls 111 between the ears but then He doesnt study much DOY XLD VAN COURT BIRRIILL D011 Oh pshaw oh my dear cr1es he is he tears lns han' when handed a C He dabbles 111 love when moments are rue But l'llS real ann IS to swmg a Pl'11 Jakey key 77 llllllllllllllllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIllllIIllIIIIIIIlIlIIllllllIlIlllIllllllllIllIIIIIllIlllllllllllIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllIIlllIllIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIHllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll gi f - 1 2 llllllll l llIlIIIIlIIIIlIlllIllIlIIIIIIIIlIlllIIIIIllIllIlIIIIIIIIIIllllIlIIIIIIlIIIIIlIlIlIlIlIIIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlllIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllllllll llll llll lllll ll Illlllllllllllll lllllllll V are . P J l -4, I - ,, A T-V, UE. 'I A 4 A - IllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIII Ill IllIIllllllIIllIIIIIlllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllllIllIllllIlllllllllllllllllllll IllIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllllllllll Ill Illllllllllllllllllll lluf ' sm ,..,.. El E., ,Y -I l izl 65.12 w Xi in v... ,i-3 El 535' es f E'5l7?i I ,fy 1:12:13 -X :S: Z 1 ' If ' l I T 'F:T7fM52L:f' ' K! EX fy 2 cgi! QQ is El E: E EJ I-El ssl ell LESLIE MILO BLACK 55, Lex il Vi. JE' Even with the name of Milo And tlieligurc of ri king Hg lil How this Aggie got in '-Philo No one seems to know a thing. Ii, fl ill? E1 XVILLIAM ROBERT BOOCOCK fi! wffffi ls will Bill is the boy who is hard to file. gig UQ, It wins hands down-his 'infectious smileg lg ,El He swings his racquet on the tennis lr green ' And Hunks his courses with stoic gill mien. E E9 W Ei lil lg lff- El gl as va lei lag E will V: E' Ei v El 15,1 NVATSON HENRY BOUDINOT, Ei El IR' El E ffaomzy Boudy is indeed a star, qi He's considered on a par . XfVith the coach whose name is Hill, 5' H2 VVhen he shoots the big round pill. Ig HY' 125 HE' ,li lil! E :lil FRANK ANDREXN7 BRADY El . Fffm1rf ih if Here s a man who's remarkablyhquiet, gli Q Mostly, strenuous work is h'is diet, ii llgy But count up the band when some W fun is at hand E And Brady is sure to be nigh it. Z El 2 2 gl , lf' lg 78 if I lll,MMUlWl!Wllll!lllIl lllllhlml ll llllllilllllllllllllllllllligll'lllllwlliillllllwilllllxlllllUlmllllllmllllllllllllllllllllll l ,dei 1 , - ,,i..... ':l5 ff X QE 1 , f' ' ' Z 1 ' 1 D 1 2' Q fy 1 N - I' 1 ' Y' fy fiihi' -s-41 g GS? in A1 1 1 f ' f LA. ,E 31 4, E1 21 1- 41 '1 '41 11, --1, 171. in 11 --1 A1 71 1 - 1 '11 1111 1- 1 , El l x , . I f H A-V - 1 V VV Y V W IXfQ-- ,,,,..-,, 1 gr' .,g,,, . M-3, xx .. f ff' swf' J xxx f 1- ff 1 - ,. , , li 'M-S+: :jf ' '-NW .Y 4 lg: at 13 E, MZ 132- 51 eg if GEORGE JOHN BRENXER 11f. Gc'0l'gF,I He won his letter at Lacrosse. But thought that not enough, lil .EQ So now he's out for the breast stroke Q52 And churns the water rough. CEE 1 E1 GEORGE MANDEVILLE BRIEN 113 George ll? This is ungainly O'Brien xiii 1'-1 lfVho said, For four years l've been 115' E1 tryin' S ' lil 'fzii At last l'm a Junior, '3- lt should have been sooner, lg But Tm neither sighin' nor cryin'. H51 NE E1 12 11251 1131 El 1:4 1H1 t.,54 X31 lil? 151 15' 1' E1 E 11251 THEODORE BRINKERHOFF li El Brink lrl . Z7 E51 Take a look at this boy from South lid Beacon, X ' 131 Around College he sure is a meek 1iI one: . Q gf But 'he debates with skill l Q21 And will go to the Hill, ,i Vllhere he'll study to become a deacon. QE f. .E1 VVILLIAM DONALD BRIVVA 12 lg 'Miken Q IIE He is a paradox, this Bill, E31 1: VVho pitches hay with zestg ' 1 , NVhat hair he lacks upon his head Q i He has upon his chest. '51 A E -1 Q I ' 121 - :l 1 1 l- ! Mg' E A 79 1 llll M .ll1lIl'-1- 111 1l1L111 IIllllllIllMH11l1l1l111111!1l111111111 illllll llllllllIlllilIll11lm-l11iL1,l1llli2111111111illlill!1!1l1111111ll11llllhlmlllllllililwllllli1lllll'I3l1l11l11Il11El 71 ,V MT. F' Y 1 sg.. LE li HERBERT GLSTAVE BROXVIZR Herb On week-end nights at N. I. C., it is our jealous lot to see The scores of dames that Catcher l-lerb can wing But on his broad and manly breast no fair female her head may rest, For on his chest there leans his mighty eh'in. JOH N RUSSELL BROXVN R-u.v.v The burly sailor of the uncertain deep, But hes not uncertain unless asleep. They claim that a do is a pal amon men But Russ says the pipe is your verx best frienrl THIIRON PHILLIPS BROVVNI L Browny is some en meer Ile really ets by so I hear But with Crea er and Iohnuv And Stevie and Tommie How he does it IS certainly queer XVNIBLRT WI-TI I INTG BURB -XNK Rami Colle iate uell say for the old kid Rem Uanys the fair female ensnared by him But he s ot the Rut ers Splflt tucked under his hat And the kids a man for a of that 'E l l- il :l ll 1: Qs: .l E , l E 3 S E , : 2 'tw' ' 2 P . , 5 E if .5 f E E E EllllllllllllllllllIIllllllllillllllIllllllllIllllllIllllIIIllllllIlllllllllllllllllIllllllllIllllIIIlIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIIIIllllIIllllllllIIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllIIlIlIllIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll I i-1 E .ff 22 Qi J 32 e- If A F 1 M: , I FE ig W: HE rr-4 ik: ri 1-iii E 3 3 3 l a i L 1 I l l l E E E E E 2 E E E E E t FRANK VICTOR C.-Xl-lll.L 'Fra1zle Among gymnasts he is in front rank, Round College he is called just Frank, ln his solid old dome Theres nobody home From the Class of '20 he sank. XVILLIAM EDGAR C.-XLLTSON Bill A bus oun fellovt is Bill b Y Y g ' s T Of work he can ne'er get his hll: From the day that he came He's been always the same, As a social light, tho' he is nil. kg., A-r!,,,.n-1 NVILLIAM DONALD Cl-lRlS'l'll2 Don Ah, ha, said Venus, with voice so sweet, How come, my Don, those form, that feet: But thou hast good character and friendly mien, Thy mark is made-thy success, is seen. PERCY MORGAN CLARK HP. Al-JJ Percy Clark is dear to the grind Who frequents the library day and night Cause he knows just where to lind The books that will Dive the most deli ht. F l 1 y : E 2 .E 2 2 - 5 E - E E 1 E E E 5 3 3 3 E ' -' .E E .: , g IllllIlllIlllllIIllllllllllllIllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilll IIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IE: ., 711215: Yibr k -ill-1-4 4:K -RT- Fw- 1.1739 -A-H' 'mfr' V ' Q gg- A uv, Q Vw K 'Q-L-QQ:-QL.,-1-f X-Eff' ggi El VE QE 'WALTER W1-XTT CLARK, JR. --iifazfff ggi Perhaps your days are lilled with thoughts li, That make them clrear and dark, gl But have no fear while l am here, 51x I'll kill 'em-XValter Clark. lil fl ALLEN BYRON CLAYTON Eli C1lpid ' 125 Clayton, pudgy little man E3 VVith rosy nose and cheek of tan, How I like to see you run- 'li' And come in hrst. O, gee! what fun. Igl lj El lil Pal Ee Eli JEROME COHEN Ei if-Ic,r7,-,vii Jerry, breaker of maidens' hearts, Q Kg Kelly, waster of Cupid's darts, Cohen, thrower of acid cruel, ' life may be dumb, but he ain't no fool CHARLES CLARENCE COOK Wzl 'fStretcIz, lf COok's an Ag and says it's great, l: lle wouldn't have liked another fate. lg llis marks, they lie 'tween B and D. fi And like his initials are C. C. C. if l F ll ii in L 2 l'HllUM,llllllllllIllllll3lllllllllllIlllllllmllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllll lIIl!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllll!lllllllllllLlllliFlIlllEllllll!lllllllllllllIlllllFllllllllllllllllllllllllll'illjlillilllillli W l :Zi l 5, l El 'El --r ,-.l l ,fn VIL 11 kQ , l r'-thi , ,--'iw 46, RA! 5 Q,-I XL! L 1 w ,92 I x A, at - ft, ,- af t M. ' u - ,ff l lL 1 M l - 4 ' ' ' 'g:.:Lv.Qf4 il f Q:,,....-.F---I' ' 'HT' 4, ' 4, Q . a a -T-4 'Ri:, ,f f' ft f'rfff-M-fr 5 GEORGE HOWARD Cowie Eg GE, George ylffl it 'ltzll I fluently speak Castellava. '52, I learned it while down in Havana, lj-gg gl But my head is still aching llijl As though it were breaking: Hit Ext I'll tell you about it Manana, if ssl gli 'lit T, RAYMGND EDGAR CRAY ,Ed f1Ray,1 K El A simple, modest boy is Cray, Qtgll At the farm he pitches hay: l-'il '51, VVith the girls l1e's sure a hummer, .ggi VVatch him now, it's coming summer, 'E His dates are intdozens each day. lg' ll? l il ill l Fil El --f-- lil yi E' li gl le ll? iles , El E t l Q E lg . ALBERT D-U Bots DEYO lEl ? A dominie he aspires to be, E From this photo you plainly can see. e, His morals are straight, El Conscientiousness great, HEI And they say he's a hound at a tea. li? --I CHARLES DIEFFENBACH rfDiefu- E Little bits of redness, Little strands of hair, K E Combined to make our DieFhe's head Outside far from bare. le E l lg El it lill Eel l 5 lzl lil 'lil 1? y 3 r SS y .- , , 1 MImllllmlll1l1l1lu lIlllaalinllllllllUlx,lllllxlll1lllellllelel-l4lyltl1llmmmalllalllllemalllll1lll:llllzlllilllmhxfl llllllw'l1l:lnllmllrlwhim fl .wi lg: - ' ,K E he E in E l E E JAMES LYNNEXVOOD DIXON E ? '-Du- 5 E The idle life I lead A E Is like a pleasant sleep, E E Xllherein l rest anal heecl l E The dreams that by me sweep. -l E 3 E El E E' FREDERICK BARNY DOREMUS i . l71'vd 1 E' . . . I E l'c1 like to be a ininzster. , E There are things worse. :T The onlytrouble with it is You are not supposed to curse. , Q 1 i E E 5 E E . I E E l 5 E X ROBERT REACH DORNAN E P Bob , : V You may sing about Penn if you want E tO, : Or chant of Old Queens many years, E E But I've been to both E E And I'l1 state under oath E E They're hell on the poor Engineers. E L PAUL JOSEPH DUFFY E f PauI ' E : A scholar of merit, E E An athlete of fame, E i Deserves all the credit E E For his pluck in fthe game. :l E e r E E E 84 E ll? I lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I llllllllll II llllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 2 E ...-1 ,fx I K i E ,ZZ or ,O Z2 li-53. 'N-. - J Rink 1 if 'fri-: 151 E :Q ii ii El ig I E 5 . FREDERICK XVILSON Z, JE DETTLINGER - E Fred - At basketball, football or track, Each year this man takes a crackg 5 i- I-Ie's thin and hels tall, ,gi Plays center at basketball- I Runs like a camel, especially his back E1 2 Q El DOUGLAS HOLDEN DE XVITT il Dm-Lg E 1 I-Iere's Captain DeVVitt as you see, i s M Serene as he ever can beg jl ,Q Vxfhen he sprints on the track, il 5 VV'ith one or a pack, ' , - First to finish he is sure to be. I I l i I E l 5 E E I 3 E EDWIN MARTIN DURAND ' Eddie . 1 Eddie Durand is a Chemistry shark I' A, And at math he also excelsg E l But he is poor at those f Compared to this pose: V I With a girl in the swing after clark. n .zu i E JOSEPH WALTER ECKI-IARDT E 5 Butch f-X E I When all togged up in a football suift, V: Butch looks like a terrible brute. lj This is not a lie the players say, I- li VVho have 'fought against him every ,- I day. I- 1 I li I rel 5 me E 3 -llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I lnllll illllllllIlIlllllllllllIiIlllllIl llIllllllilllliilllllllllillllllllllljlllllllllllllllllllllllliHilIllllllllillmllllllllllllllllllllilllllillllllllllllmlllii Uif :1 :in E1 -1 21 As ..H Z1 - 1 1 -1 1 fi-gf Y tm , F-,WM Vi- .'f5' 31. ii 1 1 ,1 ? B xnxx V 'ff :gi-Tiza 1 .-.M .1 1,,., Q 1' 1 -F . ,., .. ' 1 J, Jgf----figx , 4 4 f 1?---J--- .t 'mi-.Q 1 ti., V H N r 6 Q 1 1211 1151 E11 1121 11211 E1 'EI 151 E13 '51 E11 '15 'El ISADORE EISENMAN V211 Cassez-vous, cassez-vous, cassez-vous, UQ' O mer, sur vos froids gris cailloux! 1:31 Ainsi traduisit Laure 11' 1131 Au prolit d'lsadore JIS! jf Bon jeune homme, et son future Slip Adi CDOLIX. 1511 11:1 Viv 11' :N ,ix ALLEN CHRIEST ELY 1215 ,ix l-le aiu't done nothin' to nobody. And he ain't got nothin' from no- gf lil' body, no time. ij' 1i1 And until he does somethin' or some- 3' one. sometime, '21 VVe can't ride him for wig' 1: Nothin' or for nobody, no time. lsii 111 iigil it IEE 'I 151 i1 ii 12' 1 iliif E1 V211 11 151 H211 E1 XVILLIAM ANTHONY FILIRER E1 Bill 1 el , . 'S I If someone would only aspire 1511 To visit and holler at Feirer! Excitement would start, E Books and desks they would part, ig? And some would go and expire. gl I il E1 il fl El 1 E1 21 E11 CLAUDE KER FETTER He came here with armor of inno- cence, Sir Galahad's heart wasnt calmer, But, nevertheless, we have to confess They've put some dents in his armor 1 ' E I' E 1 1 1 2 1 it Z 1 E . 1 . 14 1 1 85 l r ELUU 1 ,llll lllllll I lllllmllllllllll lllil Illlllllllllllll lil 1I1I1I1I1l11I1lii1l11Mllll1111I1I11111111IlU11I111Ill1III1Illl1l111I,li!,Il1 ll II lllll 1 . 31 lf. Ii' ld , El :A E! E7 -J .ij X I , I ' 1 ' flirt?-:WA3 I in ,- Uk 1 I ......- 1,-: 5-N --,fi -M-S ' . -. 5 A - w'e-- s A o in lf., XX ' .- X -ff .. iq-Q XX ff' QTsef4,, WIQl if ef :ll E 2 Els ,:, lfu, ij lam lif ill li ,ill lg? ANDREXV KIP FOULDS Eli Racing around with a camera 1:5 Is not so good as it looksg it If If you had to snap the faces I do ,ill You'd prefer to study your books. 2 A A 1 VERNON CARTVVRIGI-IT FOX E F0xe3 ' is Ex every class from '19 down, lg gl I-Ie came back from the war E To settle in Metuchen town EJ r And try to study some more. -' Q! it F 3 I :ig e - Eg 1 f I lin I- l , E Y ll ? EUGENE VAN NOSTRAND' :J FULLER - Genie, Pal ': A speedy man when he dons the ' spikes : A knock-out with the women : To reach Pou hkeepsie is his '. - bish - If he has to bet there by swinimii. : I like to talk in classes And sometimes in chapel too' ' But oh! I only wish that. I had : Not another think to do. I ,, g E . EVERETT PETER GARDELLA ' 81 llll Ill, llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Ulll il I1 HI llllllwll Iilll llllllllilililllilillllllllMllmilllllillilUMMllHlNllllilllilliEMliilllilIllllllllllllElIlll!lIlI1il1illIlNlNNE ' f 'I Il, g Z2 , -Q Z2 M., J' i .,............ Nix . .E N X l 2 S El 5 E, g: s C El il :l E E E il 'il .J E E E -4 FREDERIC CARROLL GENZM ER Fritz Vlfhy ever he took the Aggie course l can't see at all, can you? ,Cause in almost every class I-le tells the Prof zi thing or two. HARRY wotriz GOLDSMITH '-om-i-1- Oliver-whence comes the name? I-le claims no kin with the poet. Sheepskin coat, unshavcn phiz his fame: And trained ability to throw it. T I-l EODORE KINNE GRAHAM ii .YI Of all the courses M. E. is the best, l think it's got it on all the rest, Although you can't sleep late and lib As all the boys seem to do in Lib. KURT GROEPLER Good old Kurt is sure some worker, Goes at everything with a vim, But like a tobacco-chewer, L'ife's just one big plug for him. ff k r . ,w. , 'ft E 'EE P l el e 1 lg, E5 U E ei it 1 l i E E y., i , E gi- 'Li I 1 he .la E ss . lllllllllllllllllllllll llllllll llll ll il ll lllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll i IHMIH1lllllimlmlllllullmlalllllyllllllllllilillllalltsulvlllvmlmlllllllllllilllllllmslalllalrlrm,l W' K' J' Q ---G G E E E :: E 2 E 2 E E E 2 2 2 3 2 HERM.-KN H.-XRAD 'Herm ' Here's a man who's a commuter And one who never has to tutor. He takes such delight In studying at night We fear he'1l ne'er be a suitor. GEORGE FRANCIS H,-XRRINGTON George George Works the set in hours dark VVhen all good. boys should be in bed. He loves the song of the crashing spark And sometimes studies, it is said. WILLIAM HERSOHN I HB inn 1 , fThis is one of the many grains of sand Coming from Father A'braham's band. He lives in a big sea-side resort, Where boot-leggers thrive and bath- ing beauties sport. JosEPH CARL HILLIARD ' ffcmfzff With this man all like to have a drag, 'Cause when we miss chapel he hands 'in a tag Which spells bad news as we have learned And sometimes means a suspension earned E 89 W V lllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll V Il!lIlIlI'llIlIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l l li 'lllllllllllllllllllll lull MI -F-?+ ,ZSW '-- KA jzz 22 I M I I -- I I s ey ,gf .,..,. : E E 5 1 Fi IIVILBERT BAKER HITCHNER EI 3 Babe 3 You know the meter, ta-da-ta-da, in any old poem? 153 I Well, that's the racket Hitch makes :ISI IE on a saxophone. Q'gI E His girl thinks he's a little old dear, IFI H But she knows not of his time in Q31 Ig Ridgewood, I fear. l E FREDERICK ALLEN HOFFMAN Fred I Y They say that Freddy is a mech. en- H gineer. I t : Can hx alarm clocks or chin himself I on a chandelier. I f I IIILIIIH I Illllll III IIIII, I I IIIlllIlIlIlllllllllll I lIIlIIIIlIlIlIIIllllIIlIIIIllIIIl llllllllllll I He's morally, mentally and physically fit. Never plays poker and never gets lit. HUI HSIEH A quiet chap is Hsieh, lIVho comes from o'er the sea, He always wears a happy grin, Especially when mail comes in. But how he reads it I ean't see. JOHN GARDI NER HUBBARD f0l1I1I1y ' Johnny s his mother s pr'ide and joy For he s learnin A to be a soldier boy. But hes not a sissy like that sounds As his lan ua e with obscene words abounds. I I I I I I I I I I I I I 2 Ii E ,I I 1 E - 2 , 90 u - lllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllll III II IMII Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllll IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II .IIIII llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .in El ..l Q I -V 3 Vi in 7, luggfzbins-O A Lx . g Q 2 W my 615. . .ik I UN' f , - Y -'kit Y Ut fl fix- 1 if z S- A i fo' r 4 fig-gg,-.i:t.f-Qi X .N 2 n -A . 'f,i4:i.L.- Jigga, ': ,F.5 iff 'gf-47 N .rfllxjgiffa-- x D k Eu' Sf 1 IE E. 'gl 'W E5 DONALD FREEMAN IRVING ii , Don DOl1,S an Ag, we'Il grant him that. ig Yet out at the farm he doesn't get fat. : Maybe walking to and fro each day Z Has something to do with what we I 1 say. 2 Ei 2 lat DONALD MORTIMER JAMES Z El: King 2 There was a young man from Mont- 5 E1 - clair, 5 iii VVith beaucoup good looks and dark E E' H hair. ,Ei His one aim is to be X 5 Z Out at N. J. C. 1- i Some night when Mrs. D. isn't there. : in or E E Ei - r 3 or 5 -1 FRANK LOUIS JOHNSON E i 4 nf01Z71113'D E Q A real good scout is Johnson, F. L., E ' A baseball player and fusser as well. L1 E He s at home 111 a davenport, Buick or E Lizzie, 3 'E 'When 1?01Tle for the week-end he's - E terribly busy. il r . ' Q GARRETT IRONS JOHNSON v i Hfqlilzfzyn - I Iohnny's full of talent, Q Ei J'ohnny's full of Jazz, - - But when he plays in study hour - He always gets the razz. E E lg E . I E - V 91 NE HW Hill lllll Hll- lllllillllllllll ll Il Ill lllIlllIllH1llI1IlHMMIlIlII1lilIllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllNillillllllimllillllllllMllililllllllllllllllllllg ' 1 uv k J JAMES CARLTON JONES Jon-cry 'fhcn we turn to J. C. Jones, E A cub reporter he'd be. l-l'e's on the staff of the Daily News, And a success at that is hc. HAROLD CORNELL KAHLE HC1ll'It'j'U Curley comes from the Long Twig town. As a Frosh and Soph he was little known, But as a Junior, on the gridiron- Well, many an oak from an acorn hath grown. JOSEPH HAROLD KELLY Kel Kel is one of the General's squad, I-le swings a wicked batg And though we claim E. E. is hard l-le has it pinned on the mat. JOSEPH KENNY ' f0e ' Joe is a worker from morn till nightg At Mack's during meals, then track, then lqooksg He'does his work and does it right Aid is just as in 'enue as he looks. E E E 5 E E ,E JET rl 1 Ei JS F L l i r l l 2 E 4 E l 97 S llll llllill ill llillllll ll lllllllllllllllllll l I l I lllllmUlllllllIlIlllllllllllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllUllllllllllIl'lWF , ,,....-..m. . I 1 - LF K' 2: 'lg 151 ri l EE. iv 1 ' ' l P-1 Ei C.-XRL LUDXVIG KNITTER 'CarI E lt Hoatsn is the ad applied to Carlg K He has a chest and a hgure like a ' barrel. i He hails from the town of Newark 5 free ' E And is said to be the last of the family tree. E THEODORE KOERNER E ffndff E Ted 'is one of our first Phi fakes, A Lib of the queerest sortg Never Works for the marks he makes ' And he thinks that Math is sport. l E , E . E LENVIS CHARLES KUHL, JR. E Another man from the place near the -E sea, E Who came to Rutgers to take C. E. And now likes this borin course enou 'h To stay up late and, study the stuff. DANIEL GARVER KUHLTHAD Dan w Sandy calls him 'Lantern The fellovis call him 'Dan' At N. I. C. its Garvah ' Where they shake a wicked fan, 93 0' D Z o G 2 2 Y ff n 2 xc yn xi n E ! 4 v i r Y 1 in x Y Q v: IIII IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I Illll Hill llllllllllllllll Il llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll X ra 25? ,7 -i l. 4.1 4 I E- :l .-H f xl , il -f ee -L-..-6'-f-,L'Af::ii-lx If fr- -,'-.....1-H . YK' f'AA f ':::Lf1lL K Nix J' gp: ,ja rg 4 tg Ee EE El is El l: NE FRANK DAVID KULL jlfl 'fF7'Ulll? , Football, basketball, pinochlc too, lg? Are :i few of the things Frank likes : l El to do. 'lil lt really is an awful pity gl! He has to come from Ioisey City. lil El lil RICHARD BURTON LAMSCI-IA 'Diclc, Burl, A'Q1lCF7llt ' llit Now here's a lad the like of whom One does not often see. llv He has good looks, dislikes the ,.- ll- books- N lg I would that l were he. ' li J l? E f-l 3 El 'Z l :I li 'El ' E CHUR-CHILL PIERCE LATI-IROP QE Clzcrry , 'Way back in Freshman year, ln ifil A sure key man he did appear: l But now he's an uproar fan: El I-le also snakes whene-'er he can, l T For the girls think he's a dear. lL lj Q E l lil lg BENJAMIN SAL LEON N i Be1my ' 2 Benny's got a pitcher's wing, l-X : Opposing batters can't hit a thing. E This year 'he'll haye to make the old lg ig -ball spin li 1 To keep the mound in place of Flynn. lg il E lg Qi lg P: A 94 . ll5l llmllllwmlmlllllillll-nl-UllllllUlMHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlm-El-Wllllmllllllllllllllllllllll' l lllllllllllllllllllllllullllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'Qglllllllill X Af X tv 1 ?Z 3 P Lt-gow 5 xi l f mi ' X f ' li I 'WL J i nf' fe- ' f-'-ew -fire'-'if-1f '1 'U' H W ..g-T ' 'fri-'T ji: iii!! 'QS 2 XX ,6 '! 55 f'sz2H T?s ' jf' ff: so . ,553 :life-f 1 E 1, ,funk 1 Q :fy .vl V-1 5 'lil ,E- 12 li, l El i IE -i Lei iii 5 M, l ll 'Ll-11 'El gi THOMAS FRANCIS MACKESSY E' ',Macle 13 'El Here's Eddie O'Dair's right-hand Ei man, l lg VVho types as fast as Eddie cang. lil His neck is not like the typewriter- lil I h od .fl 0 , VVh'ich we all know is Underwood. ggi, 5 l E 55 i 5 I 11, . .,E, 1 lil gl MALONEY gi Dunk His ways are often curious, IE iii And eke and also quaint, Eu And all his little la mates :EQ P Y ,lg Call him Dutch because he ain't. 5 liil 3 E Q iii 2 QE .. E5 - f' - CHARLES LEVERICH MESSER ig . Fil Charlie If you want to go to College i just come along with nie 2 F- And get the job in the ticket booth. It Where I make a Wholesome fee. 'l Ei ,E .Zi --1 LE WALTER LANG M OLINEUX - 'WaIt, ,M,0Ily Z E The lad who ran the book store W E To earn his way through College. E E But two years fixed him up for life! 4 5 He. sure- did use his knowledge. - 2 5 95 lg! Illllll II llllllllllllllllllllllll lil! ll'IlIlilllllilllflllilllllllMillllllliliHllilllH!lllililllllillfiilelllirmmllilllllllllliljl lllllllllllllllilllg E E E E E E E E E E 5 E E E E E E E E E E E E FZ E E E' .:J ,Q C' L. ss- 5 g Q3 LEWIS XVENTWlOR'l'l'l MOORE 'Luw I-Iere's a boy that's bound to get through, , Happy-go-lucky, grinning Lew. His sunny smile gets up with the sun And does11't fade till the day is None. JULIUS FREDERICK HULL ER Fred This man comes from Ridgewood And is a hard-working' .-Kg, But he liuds time for parties And never goes stag. 1 EDWARD FRANK o'DA1R Eddie We used to call him Ed O'Dair, But now it must be O'Dair, Ed.g As Ed-in-chief he's sure a bearg But, as you see, he loves his bed. BIsHoP ADAIR OXENFORD '-'Bf.f1wp Bishop looks and plays the part And tho his course is letters and art He struggles with Tommy to master D. .' Au electrical preacher this lad s Sonna Il llllllllllllllll llllllllll llll C , , 2 : be E lll lllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll T.. ,f I, ?f 'f--All Wy- PPE L ., P. Q . A , If 1 Q2 fly fr if 5' fl A Z' P l NX -.... ' .m.N.r.-' .dizff---.-'rf--gg, ,' 'm'rr r ' A ferr' 1 V' e do if 5 ERNEST RAYMOND P.-XLEN lg Dear, Ernie 'Z ig It's not so easy to write of Deacon, E For when he's been fussin' we never ' were peekin', L gf She may be Spanish, Swede or .Z Q- Dutch, .- l l - r lllllll llllllllllllllll But that doesn't matter much: It's the women that he's always seekin. ROY GAMALI EL PETIIRSIQN Rox PL tc This eu 11 en meer 111 accents bold Proelanns to all who care to lend hlm ear To hlm Prof Brasey s course no ter rors hold He knows hell Hunk lt cold hence has no fear RAYMOND VINCEVT POTTIR Rav Twas the day before 1n1dyears And the skles seemed dark and grax 'When entered this young Iumor Wth a Joke that saved the da3 HARRY HAYNTER PR ATT Uany Plaffv Here s 1 brute who puts the shot But 1tS more than welbht hes got Por he has a clra vvlth all Profs classmates and Urrls both short and tall 97 llIIllIIIIIIIIIllIIIllllIIllIllllIlllIIllllllllIllllIIlllllllllllIlIIIIIIllllllllIIIlIIllIlIIlllllIIIIIlllllllllllllIIllIIIIIlllIIlllllllllIllllIIIIIllIIllllIlllllIIllllIIlllIIllllllIlIIIIIIIllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllll 2 2 2 T 2 2 E , I 1 4 ik rl ' II U , ,U ' , F , 2 ' ' r' or' ' a 2 1 B . , 1 Z 1 2 2 2 - - 2 If A l ' .I 2 z H U 1 ... , A . :. X i I ! 1 1' V -' - - I - v g 2 1 V. -4 2 -1 2 5 - V ' Q 4 2 fr K , r af ff , u 2 ' V - -' -. ' . 2 ':'.' 1 1 3 1 1 1 - 0, 1 , 1 ' 7 - 1 4 0- -- 2 a 2 2 ' 1 o ' 2 E : , E lf: gl il -4 ,,....i lflpl-M A I Q li 9 i li ! X' 22 ZA 'U QL I Piitijf-.ffl Zlfzq' '. ..:-'N-.L L-'1-'J fa'-14 -e f-'PS -Xa I ----- if -- g. I I ,mf-12--Q-i T ii -'L' ,fi i - fx-Y -i E E M3 We 'gl El las ,um H, vii Eg JOHN TL'RNl3L'LL QUIGLEY f0l1m1y Flaxen hair with a wavy bend, Eyes that with sea water softly blend. ,ig jig! You never see him with corcluroys, lg tial, l-le's the aee of liast Orange boys. SQ Fil 'Sy lil E ill: li XVARRIZN CROXVIZLL FITZ . ,iii RANDOLPH His Hagen hair stands stiff and ffl 'iii' stralgwtg 22l QQ His eountenzmce all rosy: E ,lgg He goes his way and waits his fate, 3 lf Hes not the least bit nosy. if f g-ji ilrii il-- E ,ii ,ia Y. lil i Yi if -- ,Iii it 11:51 El lil ii. ET El E si M-. Q, JOHN XVESLEYQRAST.-XLL lg' ll t'x El XfVes came back after quite a long stay 'gil On the shores of sunny France. A I-Ie doesn't overwork the books, ig. li But, then-you should see him li dance! HAROLD XWILLIAM RAY il gl l-lere's to handsome young Ray, E fl Of whom there is much we can say- - 2 With a pole vault's quite spry Z I And on the track can almost Hy. : Q E 51 I H I I ll U , llllllllmmmllllllllllllllllll llllll HHH HV IMllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllMmlllllllllllllllNllFllllllF!l1llllslllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllMUIllllll!.lil!lmlllllll i -4 ,.-44 1:1 71 3 li' fill I-n i::, rf-.' ,- i ,Yi E l 1:4 CII? 125 ME Q gil -r, -1 -y -l l ,yu-U ii, so A , N. as gift gk r Q, 4 J , i f ,Y MM, 3 N ,I ,s.. -fr E ---H , A-f--5 ,f-fg,11':1':3-V 'N 'g X ,Y - 1 .e -V----7--W-.nf---?.A ,ig -1-' '--Q3 J, 5 ,J '::?1i':?tf?::7,13f J EQ El - Nil Ng 1 EE l SHIVLER BERTR.-XM REED Ei El Sm No book hound is our Shivler, llgl, A happy, liberal man: 'Ei But when he grasps an auto wheel just beat him, if you can. X131 El El lg' EVERETT GORDON REID EV 2 lil Ev is neat and without a speck, 'lil NE' But when the bell rings he's never on ilk 51 deckg ggi' But he's a good guy, it Hi' No one can deny, ' M And on this you can bet your neck. ig! lgj lil ll: Eli i 11' 'E Ei .:, 'ji LQ il if ig! CAS-PERNVILLIAM RIEMAN, 3RD 'rj 52: Riernan arrived on the Raritan's EE' Ei banks i To begin his Sophomore year, He enlisted with the '22 ranks And knocks the books dead, we El Ei hear. A 5311 El Ei 13 li , :Z gi : ILE1 gl VVILLIAM REI ROBBINS 5 'fR0bbie Robbie's a promising Hill and Daler 'EN We suggest that he il Can coin a pretty sum lin il By employing a. sightseeing Trailer. ii , t E ill iii ,Il is EQ A a 99 E lllU llll l l llllllllllllllllllllli lllmlllllllilll1llWl.1'l5lll2lllml.l'HllIl I lllll!lllillllllillllllliwlillllIIll1Ill2lIlllliilIlIlllilllllllllllilllllllllimmillilli!ll11lilllilillelllillllgllll:Ev 3' Q 1 ,fag-rw Aff- - ff-f 9952 I 'Rf fr, gl'--ff J-gzrfrf-N ,L-tm---G--:F---f N 4l,f'!-- - -V-f 7 I 229,41-1-in fx ix xx Lf' xg - Xiu! 'q'1r7?1-:r-if-'jf i Q ' E 5 2 ROBERT H ENRY ROLLIXS, JR. E gg! -'lcfilzy' 5 'El Rolly likes to play with acid, E E He runs his tests and breaks his 'Q bcakersg 5 Hut still his temper stays quite placid: E4 He's of our kcencst knowledge seekers. WlLI.l.-XXI KNIGHT RUSSIQLI. Hill, lCzz.v.v Russ, he wants to teach, liven now he can preach. Sundays he goes out of town Wiith his grip, his book and gown. lllay Allah help the empty pew- For Hill can cuss 21 few. x KN. WORD D XNII L SNXL Rai Ray he hails from Palenville So bi and strong and brave And for him the rls will fill XVhen they see his Marcel w'1ve ROBLRI IDXVXRD SINIONT Simon comes to town each clay In quest of learnmff deep and dark An Engineer he ll be some dag And hvht up ILll0'l'll3.1'lCl Park E ,: C 1 E- I i.. E 2 2 2 E E E i 2 l E l E l l E E in 2 E E . Q. N W. A A E , ' B 's 5 E E E 100 5 smlllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIlIllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllll llllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llIlIllllllllIllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll - ' KX X fi ,ii I 'W- ' they e e LEON HAROLD SMITH Lee Lee Smith, a mighty man is he: Gaze on his broad expanse: In build quite large he grew to be, But brains? l'le's dumb, he grants. LAUREN CE I-I ASBROUCK SNYDER He plays the piano with ease, You should see him pounce on the keys: A I-Ie goes up and down Very much like a clown, In his earnest endeavor to please. GEORGE NVANA MAKER S OOY, I IR. George Modest when he's with the boys, Rehned, resigned and quiet, But when the lad gets with the girls 'Ihey say he's quite a riot. 'RALPI-I EMERSON STONE' Ralph Wfhen I go after ads I get 'em by the throat, ' But when they swear and turn me down it ki-nd of gets my goatg Also when they try to ride me, laugh and gloat, But I don't care, as I know in the end it means a new overcoat: F IllllllllllllllIIllllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lll I I llllllllllllll ' llllllllllll I lill lllllll lllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllll El 'rl il Z1 gi 123 In 'El gl :gl 351 11 i-, ,-1 1:1 1-l iw . txt il! in -M , i...'j, ...., EQ l I-,, '1' K fm' '2 li y , X L hi . ,F dr , i Y Qt Q f, . ' - ,l 5 .1i2121':3qg, f5? .......e' 1'i -.H.....- 'f44?i.Hlx .V , -- '- f-1.3g-- ! ,-:f-7:33-5 isttrx Q59 ti of 'Q 65' X3 lf?Wfff---Q-- L x ijt E E! El ,Ill if O EE hi JOHN M. SLYMMERILL -fP1tig ll itil Pennsgrove sent this Junior E5 -lil To broaden out his knowledge, But in sports is where he really shone, Anal brought fame to his College ll' 3:2 if JOHN R.-XY TAYLOR Hkillyu Wgs Ray teaches Mechanics to Schoening, IE, IEW He's the works of the M. E. sec- 'El ,lil tion, ig? li ln :nnb'ition he knows no waning tzr li l-le's our Iirst Phi Jake selection. 2 - lei ,E JEL li e ET lg lit ll? E: 5 'll ' yd ll llri llfl 'e , L l-IERMAN RAMSEY FERHUNE fl ujxltlljlu lfl Tuny writes the humor this yearg 'lffd At reeling it off he has no Peer. IE15 :ffl But he finds time for other things too, E1 fi Ask him sometime what he likes to ig! li Clo. lf ' 5 if LOUIS TILL I E 'tTiIIy , lg Q Yes, Tilly can handle a cue, 3 Drop ivory balls in their nest: lg In mid-year exams he Hunkecl quite a lj 5 few, lj i In finals he'll miss all the rest! I lf E 7 W my li li V 5 l E 102 X h Litllllllllllmllmllllllmlllmutl l ll' : nm WMlitUIlll1l1lllsIlIl1WlmllmHlllllmmilllllllullllW1LlIlIHulIlzwrllmmaiwmnml1lsl1lina1lzramnitnil:lalit:l1liisunnliliulwmllziuutg il :l El :l ,...: .4 I 11 51 --A +1 :xi gl 14 El I El :, 7. :Q :gs ,.LZQ5 7 , 3 'YQ' V ff.--H - TT' XX l in 1 F' -3 M l ,f ,,,,,,,,, X T ',A,,A,,,,a,,,,,Aw4t,:,,l,. ii'r5,x X41 , -M , 1 -- Y ,, fy 3 Q -'i ' T4 ' - Y ',,f,4 '- 'V' -T iT'3 'y. as I9 if-if E n lil El li MYMOND ELWOOD VAN Eg BUSKIRK El T M El E' The frail to N. J. C. to Ray gg lg Maintains no sights unique, ill For does he not across town stray f' ,ig At least three times a week? E E y 2 432 ' E lzll PHILIP STANLEY VAN ORDEN I A Phil Ei A physiologist of parts, . il! He hunts the wily cat, Z But when he plays around with the - 'E Nil girls 24 gf' He don't know what he's at. ,Z Z! 2 ' I E :I El if 5 4: Z E Z 2 5 5 Q i Q QE GARRETT SCOTT VGORHEES, ia JR. 5 A Garry if Here is a lighting farmer, l No peaceful man is heg I2 E Wheli dressed in football armor, li E A warrior bold you see. Hg 1 lg ,Q Ei 5 3 2 ' ROBERT SAMUEL 'VVHEELOCK 21 Z.: I IIBOZJJJ E This lad of our baseball squad f I Came here from Annapolis' hallsg I I Wheli Bob -takes a fall, they say, he E I falls hardg 1 - And for most every girl he falls. 1 l ' fi l E lg! El 103 I A El Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll llllll ll Illlll llllllllll ll l lllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllmilllllllllllllllllllrllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllilillllllllllelmmmiil -1, A ' Mel STEPHEN JULIUS XVOLFF Here's to the star of the cow-judging bunch, But from what we do hear, And it is true we do fear 'llhe smell nearly threatened his lunch. --54 .zen- 4 xJ-'P+ 59? 'ffl Ns-K5 rw E i E 5.- Sfv1'c ' E Who placed this yqar on a darn good E hunchg 1 A if' X 2 Q, 9 G mi A www? , A BN WNW .2 V Q Q E X sw ss. wggxikma' Nl Q QA wif? 5 N .kiln if bylaw md A -xxx whiz u. 'Q 9 ek A x., nah- 2 gg? H +view W' '- WM Wu' Waimea xtxxl , F 235, w 4,, K4 K .xxxwyw Qs RH N? R vt 1 E A 'W '41 N hx lx 'Haig ,AX Q'Yf-fswilaqn' in 'K 1'N'S:Y5' -Q ff Or Qu, Yin im K J W i . .. mW,g,aXX.gi5QigQ,f,, .gwss EZ Wim?-f 6M 6 Qvxs sq 2. ' Sidi xi '1-Q v .ali 4 Q 1'-an .mflfiiiisf Mm. va ,. Rszfwssflis. CANE RUSH XX HER 99 'WERE SOPIIOMORES E , E E Z' Y -'E' 2 -'2:. :1 , 491: Q' P 5 :- - , , F., , , ..., . H - 2 KN417' E':'l ' ., 4- 1- 5, ' f -1 I-: - '. sgqrx- ny' , V -5-lil TQ' l .. - 5 E .-1. -Y Li . . .Q ,L - . rf' X' -K 'L ' - ' --' ' - ff ' ffl' 15 '-W - S+: - ' A .' J' - . - -' 'L' Z' '-rf . -- . : - 4. Q... .. .2 1 ,Joi , . wg ,s 5 l gh,-.3 r-.- Q. . .1 s . -nl ' 3, 5.- Y-N ' ' 3 if A .Vg A-r ,-.1::, b 1.-434 vm- Qf A-5 . E ,, ' -1 Ag, ,gm 5 Q . 5. : .mf - y.ssg.s,r,, y ' - .4. - H - S .xx p x . I-M f V 'W,..s. ',4-nu. : Q: K feqgs, -- .. A U W Y . -- . R -A , .X vw.. - -f s? '-hz 5 - - E A V r ' X wr,g-3 4. . ' .' ': ' fs N 1 'si an . m f.. 11' -X '- 1. w..A. ' -4 - ,L :xr . 1- .l - , -, v i 2 . sp ..-ss: af. '- M N- swift'-'. 2 ... 5- 53.1 H . 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V SH J-,I EH 1 1 ig: E 1 ' E11 11 'E' , 151 3 2 ill' ' 1 ,, E 1111 11 1 V 1 E A',', gigig A- 2 1! . E if .AA f f ' Ei 3 1 1 EE ,byv h 3 13 I .I X xwggg: X A fi 1 ', , 1 ' ' 'Q 1 G - T -5 1 , E 1 21 ' A 'A ,- ' 1 uf 1 H 1--. ..,,2, M., , ,,, 1 , gk ,:- 13, X3 VV - . su W 1 1- ikW.,f::4.4.,1..,,..-,.,,+,Y ,,,,, 1, Q ,n,, E 1: i ' Zi -- 1 - .. .-..,.... Tmmg - Y 15 jj 1lm111I1'1111l1lliHW! 1 nM1i!111il1111111lMMMU1111111111U11111111111i11l111111111!11111l1E111i111111111111111Ui111111111111111111111111111111v11111:11w 111l1f11mgjFiF? 11-1 . uv: 1111 ' 1 .Mx , 1 11 341, fl 11 1 1 ,. ' 1 4 1' 11, ll , lt? I1 . U 41' 11 ,1- 1J I1 1: i 1 .li 1-ll 11 L-, 11 t'v 1 941 11 1 1411. 111.1 11 , 1g Y 11 F11 1111 21 U Wi: 19 iff: 1132 15? 6 lg Q 1 511 Y ff ,1. 11 111 1 1, I' 1 11 11' ll, 11 13 fi 11,1 nm! .1 'R 11 nfl WW 111g 1111 1'! 11 I? H15 1 3 12' 5 I 'I11 IE. Us 111 112 in T, . H .1 1 Hi -' 1. lf' 1? 1?- 111 x -QW . - viggi., 3 ,..,.....-....-,P.-,....U- ,2f' Xs .M...iill N' Av av, W... ...- T 'frm Gr' F' if ll . 4 lf' 1 -, X -.Q ' 3 - 3 sf il, If it-fir 3 .' ' mf. ,, I. f ' pg' 'NL - .-' ' I 1 A l A F ,ff ' 'X ' ,' 1 3:i,:.w.L.1 Twin A . tw n l ., df, x Y iii :J--A f 'ix' A l A ,CFA Clif l J, A gd 'A M, 1, ,,,, .mf 4: v fl. El iii ,4- lg lf, Q QQ ,J ..,,, El -l iz. lil I: 24 .l -X Tfl , li , fl l l ,. ii 1 tl if 1 ,gl II, --ll 'lip lil lil ,lfll fjj lin, ,QV lijim J lllrlll Q ,l El El gl lil Qi jg lf: Class of 1923 gl lil El ij OFFICERS- l P7U5fd871f-CRAWFORD STUART BEANIE Sccrrtary-WAYLAND AYER DUBOIS VUL'-P7'C'JidC71f-JOHN SCUDDER Tv-ca.v'z1rar-EDWARD HENRY BENZONI 'i Hi.Yf0VfHl1f-HARVEY REAVILL COOK X 1 ' lil i Yell E E' EI Z Hoorah, hoorah, E Hoorah, ree ,Zi E ' Rah, rah, Rutgers, 'f E Twenty-three. Ni E Z ,E 12 El 1 NE Wg .E 'ii 106 El , - l .. . . 42 FH! l VJHMIMQIM1 l Mylmlllllllllllmllxllllilillllllillmlllulllu!lNllilmwglllmllilmuwlllnllUmslllmlllmwlwww. ll'wlllflllllllllllllllllllllllflllllll Wlwwi History of the Class of lfVhen the Class of 1923 returned to college in September it was found that there were only one hundred and seventy of the original two hundred and sixty-five left to carry on the work that the class had begun so suc- cessfully in the freshman year. The task of training the two hundred and sixty-five frosh of 1924 has been difficult, but the class feels that it is doing everything possible to obtain the desired end. A new rule, forbidding the freshmen to wear army breeches and golf stockings or leggings on days other than drill days, is now enforced. The task of training the freshmen has become harder with the growth of the college, for the classes have been larger and are not so easy to manage. Every year the number of rushes have been decreased, and their form modified. At the beginning of this year class scraps were almost unknown, but, later, the Casque and Dagger received permission to organize and carry on a system of rushes. Although little has been accomplished on account of the short space of time it is the general opinion that organized rushes-though not replete in enjoyment for the participants-will react 107 to the best interests of the college by stimulating the lagging class spirit. Recalling the false alarm that was sent into fire headquarters during the scuffle to reach the coveted poster in the Proc Rush last year, the Senior Council changed the scene of the final scrap from the fire alarm box to a lamp post on. Hamilton Street, at the head of Bleeker Place. But while the rush was at its height some one slipped away and turned in an alarm which brought out the fire department again, so that the efforts of the Senior Council went for naught. In class banquets 1923 has always been successful. On the occasions of both the freshman and sophomore banquets the class president was at hand. As freshmen the spread was held at Hotel Brevoort, New York City, without disturbance from the present Junior Class, who were holding their sophomore banquet at Stewart's-not a mile away from the scene of festivities. An attempt to break it up resulted in finding that 1922 had dined and then broken up to take in a show. This year's banquet was held at Keen's Chop House, in Thirty-sixth Street. After an enjoyable meal the entire class rushed to the Forty-fourth Street establishment bearing the 108 .,.,,.,...a,......-...Q--. T-.-aa.,-----f-r-2-----. l . . . r' ' I' ,mn ..'--1-ffrxs, f---e-w--1-?- l if' -, .W -lL:TT::t....2is- . ss 3 . if ' . 1 as I ai v, ..:f ., y as , 5... , , F ,V . X r i Qtiiijigtglivi '- 'b 'V fl- :fizvr ' ,-1 . 1 1 ,ff 1 4,:,11.:.,.:.,Q5A ,:...--eel- ----- -A? -1 -,gifs A ,g,f.-L.-.-- W- F - V M--M Y r-- 1 Eglin- 1 me 13.5 G g at X -ix .. 3-' W.. .ff i'?':e'e-:rfl'5 N?'g15 y ' r 'ii same name, where the freshmenwvere holding forth. There was a short is ig interruption, quelled by the police, and the class retired from the held, for ,Ei g there 'are far more comfortable sleeping accommodations-even in Winants Jig, 1 :-' i .113 S1 -than in the establishment provided for transgressors by the City of wg, El New York. ' 1 L...- ln the football rush and the few chapel rushes that were held the class E 'T-' 'li continued to come out on top. if l V T at ,-, The Sophomore Hop, held in Ballantine Gymnasium on December 12. Z vig marked the debut of the class in the social world. Like everything else that 3 1923 undertook, it proved a success in every respect. The Class of 1923 has clone its full share in upholding the name of M251 Rutgers in the field of athletics. There is not a team that wears the sig LE Scarlet that does not have on its roster at least one member of this class. 5 LE, 1 Not only in athletics has the class bent its efforts, but in the Queen's E El Players, the Philoclean Literary Society, the Targum, the Glee and Man- Hg l dolin Clubs, the Y. M. C. A., and in various other college organizations lg ' 1923 has given its best support. In all subscription drives the class has held up its end. 1 l The Class of 1923 is now on the second quarter of its journey through ig Rutgers. It started to make a name for itself and has thus far been suc- lg cesstulg but during the two remaining years Rutgers may look for even 'Z more. The standard set has been high, but it will be maintained and E E Rutgers will be better for it. It may be said now of 1923 that 'fThat which ig E they have done is but earnest of the things that they shall do. i I-HSTGRIAN. ..t . ..... .-.. f . E 5 E E E 2 5 Z E : E1 E S 1 E E ,- e 2 E E 4 E . Q, E E 5 Tub: BAND ONINIELSEN FIELD - Z 2 109 . llllllllllIIIIlllllllllllllllIIllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' il 'I I1 I I llll- HlilllllilllllilllulHHlmmu1mumulml:1wilimmmuii1i1lli11H li- lllrllllllisi 1 1 , 1 .i ,xx Y ,X X 1 V'u 1 4, ,ly V7 ' ' '- 'T 'f' f '1'-fAfw77Yi-'Am ' xl' WM wx ' 1 wx W -Y: ' ,Lg gg-vw-V ' :W , yn M uf 1 ' , Ifff , 1:4 1, 'N X , yigg fl lf? 14 44 73 iff' gg FT X QE! H122 1:1 Pig E1 ii 5531 Egg Nz? w:!: jij' lit ii' EH lfh ig in EQ En wif. 31 351 5 EU :fi U E2 iim Emi ll 5 1.HHHUHHm' uummm H - - 551 -' 4' .' - ' X V ,,MU,I'llH l, l Il H1 , ' ' ww 'WWW wwv, ,ww-T. f--- , . - E M A -av:-f--' A - CE!-, -V '-f 1--ff . ' A 9 I , H . .wx ,. :, . . . x wjr, ,3 , W ,' ' M' u , .'. If V-l 51 .V U . XJ. V. ,- f... -, S HN,-.X ,, , ,f, VM' a'-mix? L...1-lg3 J' ' 17 x ,f 'W . 5 - 'K 'M' A 'lx n- 4: .:,.,...fX f Q 7.1. Mx ,f ' f f xg? wiv M , , E X N I 1 If X , . 'Q X 1- Lf- , , , ,M ,Y-,,, ,f R. A,,, I 1 'ir F ??, .jj 1 JN 'Y-w 1 -1. ,. ff-V - N.-jj, - v .ew 1 ,X ., . , V -,,- I , J 1- w iii .Il w -iw 1 v wiv g uf, 1 f , . v 7 U ww. fir.-M -4 23,15 -L1------ af ,WM --A-- 7 --lx Y,i-i51:- -' sm, iv! 1 JJ rr V xr V A -'1J '1 1 i 54 Q2 li Class of 1924- .f E OFFICERS Q? PTESiCl61lfgDANA -BARTHOLOMEXV SCUDDER SCC'l'L'fC1l'j'-RAYMOND NORTON GALE Mix Vice-P1'eside1zt-W1LI.IAM KINGMAN Trvnxufw'-JOHN C. OSTERBERG ,Iii ,EH HiSt0l'iG7l-ROBERT CURRAN DOUGLAS V2 wg A -I1 gil 'EV H3 ali? Rip rah roo, 153, Rip I'Elh roar, Rutgers, Rutgefs, HEI! Twenty-four. E 'EV gi Ei A 112 I E A MIHMWQML Mmm Hwewal WHiwH miMHMMmMim! miHmimHiMUMmwwwH u mw 1m m HmmmvimmmUvm2m1:mMlmE History of the Class of The Class of 1924 entered Rutgers with two hundred and sixty-live members. After the mid-year examinations the enrollment was practically the same. Good scholarship is our first attribute to be remembered. 1 But the Freshmen of to-day should not be thought bookworms with- out any initiative. In class activities the men of '24 have more than held their own. The Proc Rush came before We were fully organized. The men of '23 can attest to our fighting qualities. They were declared the victors, but the fact remains that the proc in front of Jersey Hall was down at the close of the final struggle. In the three-game baseball series with the Sophomores we overwhelmed them easily in every contest. I The next event of interest was the lnnterclass Track Meet and again we were victorious, but by a narrow margin. I . The Freshmen were represented in practical-ly every College activity, including Football, Track, Basketball, Swimming, ll.gL1S1C21l ClubS, and the Queen's Players, and no mean part of the Scarlets success was due to these underclassmen. Rutgers spirit does not seem to be lacking in this class. In the first two Chapel Rushes after Christmas the younger classmen scored two more notable victories and success in the future battles at the east end of Queen's seemed assured. The class banquet was a great climax to our list of triumphs and our president was with us, as was the Sophomore vice-president for some time. The speakers, including several popular members of the faculty, gave very fine talks, which were of interest to all. About one hundred and fifty were present. We have also to thank the faculty for the Freshman Reception, which was enjoyed by all and marked our entrance into social life at Rutgers. In brief, our class is making a name for itself in scholarship, is upholding the good old Rutgers traditions, and at an early age is helping fight the Big R's battles. 'What more can be asked of any class? HISTORIAN. 113 114 i s N I fl 1 l 4 4 'F' ,fi :Pix ,iiy W T, -,, , fi: QI , ii 2 ,QR 3 'Ei 55 F N--w 1 .L+ Y ,iJ ' w-1 ,il N531 ,-Eg. ,N f, V: , 22,3 :Z 1 121 E vi, 4 ' vfiw f 15:1 3 ,xiii ii' 'iM if , ,,,. WLS! ,Z V1 , , W L21 1 N , 2. , ,W-,N ff SX .1 1 A ' A D '- id ' ,Y , ....:,:f- W' 5 E E - ix I ' E E V ., 1' -, . ? x m v -5- 5 E 2 1 'B q.. 2 5 A-. E 2 ff' - E- El AID- f E I i349:rff'I.'X 1.1-RJTIE E ,- ' ' Qg ,, 2 4- g. -ffl..-ft: . A,--My -. z 'Z 2 f: 1 1 Q-.. : ff' ffl' , 7 Mg, A' XV, :- - EE E F mmmn Ililll llllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllll I lllll llll l l ll ll l llll ll 1'immn1In1mmmmmmmunn u llllllllllllllll lllllllll lllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllll - . if - it .,.1...: ff X. azz Q NX ? Z2 rg..-Ei 2 f-Wi--is ,vm L: , 114 ' ii iw 14 ,L E 'V 151. Ei iff QE' Ei ai-1 EL fl 1-ix Ei iii' V-l E! 14 Iii L- Ei 5211 Eg :ily 'Q Q3 . JE' 'gi Fx ii? E Q1 El Iii 'i' Ei E' E1 iii Ei :Eli iii 51215 his ALPHA iii BETA ..... Q- GAMMA DELTA ig! EPSILON gQi ETA N -A . . -1, LAMBDA ............................. ':'! NU . . . xii -i En 1 XI .................,.......,.................... ii' I -i OM 1cRoN ............................ ......... . ......... Y alfe ! P1 ................... .... ........... .................. 1 RHO ................................. . .University of Virginia gi , V N I ,su Ei SIGMA .......................... .... .......... . .......... T r inity TAU ................................. ...... U niversity of Illinois M E A . M 5 119 llllll llilllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHH l!lHUIlllI5.Hl1I HHH 1llliilmiiillllilllllmljmllmiiNIMH!HlilliillIiiillliillllillilmmilHMMifiliiimlllliilmlmlllil 4 Mi W 1 5 gl gl Ee Wg ' E 30.79. . V I E E E -.E E 5 E E Delta Phi I3 E SEMPER UBIQUE 2 E' CURATORS E E WILLIAM H. S. DELIRXREST Z RICHARI1 C. RICE E TUNIS G. BERGEN JOHN W. NIETTLAR. ' 5 RESIDENT MEMBERS 5 E GEORGE V. N. BALDWIN ,E Q E .HENRY DE LA B. CARPENDER E E . -I. NEILsoN CARPENDER E -E E SYDNEY B. CARRENDER II E E WILLIAM CARPENDERI, 2Nn E E E WILLIAM I-I. S, DERIAREST E f E IRVING H'OAGLAND E Z E J. BAYARD YQIRKPATRICK E E E JOHN W. BIETTLAR E E E ROBERT C. NICHOLAS E E E VVILLIAM REILLY E E E RICHARD C. RICE E 5 f LAURENCE P. RUNYON E E E ARTHUR V. SCI-IENCK E Y E E CHARLES I. SCUDDER E E 'E WII,I.I2XBI H. STRONG E 5 E CHARLES T. COWENIIOVEN, JR. E ,E JAMES C. WESTON E E PERRY J. FULLER I E Z E - .E 5 E E E E E E 120 ? - IlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIIIIllllIlllllIIIlllllllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllH111 +. ,.-IL. 1- fe +971 41 :ff 1 +1 1 I 12.5 E 1121 HEI! H' E21 'EI MEM 'Cl' V1 WIS 1531 H51 131 1153 3511 N511 E1 1:1 151 Q12 H 12 E1 14: is UQ 1? 15 IE Ji E fe 4 i .n 1,2 ij lg E5 DELTA PHI V II S ,L Undergraduates E H H CLASS OF 1921 5 i ELLIS BEVERIDCE COOK GILBERT BROOKS QCEELER OLVIN FARLEY ALFRED KNIGHT HERWIN A I HENRY GRIFFITH PARKER, JR. MARTIN HIUTCHINSON SHERWIN 21 C CLASS OF 1922 il WILLIAM ROBERT BOOCOCK EDYVIN MARTIN DURAND ,E I b JAMES CARLTON JONES E E ' E51 I CLASS OF 1923 131 E H. HARRISON CHASE A JOHN SCUDDER IE E DRURY WALL COOPER, JR. RALPH H. VON GLAHN E ' CLASS OF 1924 E TREDWELL KIRKPATRICK BERG GEORGE RICHARDSON SCOTT I5 E RICHARD ALLEN BOOTH ALFRED PARROTT SCRANTON pg gl EVERETT JOHNS JEWETT DANA BARTHOLOMEXV SCUDDER 1: KENNETH CLINTON LARABEE CHARLES H. WARR E J. APPLETON VAN MATER, JR. JE! 2 Ei ggi 121 13 511111 I JW- JJlml111HmW11l1U1H111I151E1TI1HM1Wlm1H1EMWU.!1WWV11IHMMI111+1i411'ii11H1111MEFA7fwiA--WMTWTTJWT-H31 'E' 'Zin -4 1. ,fm 'fs i W A, 'zp :1 if .Q :H ,Zi 1, .-51 3 Q.-'31 n., r: , V 464 Q- W ?Rxx wwf! q'Wwf . lg' V' 'gi E QE' :E E1 Ei El F E15 pj EU 'Pj ij! Hi E3 EU if Ei EEA. Ei E9 mm E31 ?lL, A -- Ei QQ ' M Ei . iw: F , 1, 9' EW XE Qu' P -eo-I El 1 Q El ag?-1 l f 'A' ' 5 ,, , E1 A sg , X. 53 li HL. J- 1 ifil E! , 2 3, we l. , V , I K. .,.. ig: X -gil! B0 ' h ii gi gg 5. E V E4 4 IE E2 E 5 s yi :- - Q Q T Q 5 E i E 4 5 2 1 Q ii i QIMWWWLW1HHNWMMHHHHIMlHUHHNHINHIHP1XMIHHHH!UHIWWKU!llllHUIllHiH1lIllil1HuHlI!HUhHWUI1UiENlN1IU L31W1H11URWI1HNEllNUL1Hll!WillHilI4i1!i!iiH:i51E?L!1WIZii2l!?fEE 1 , A aa. F ..n,1as.i.s..Q ' ' ' ' ' A - f'-f Xi, A 'ff-,----- ,.nTT 'r ...-' JT-w-.sill it. ' . - T . ... ff, lg -:i v, ' , V .. r :I -l , i Ei ,ga 45' fx ,, Z, ' AE ggr lil ' li' gl Zeta PS1 lil I FOUNDED AT NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, 1846 Ei CHAPTER ROLL El g PHI ........................ .... N ew York City ZETA .... .. ......,... Ylfilliams College DELTA .... .............. R utgers College NE' SIGMA .... ..... L Tniversity of Pennsylvania El! L2 CHI ...... ............. C olby University llgii fig EPSILON .... . . .... .... B rown University KAPPA .... ................ T ufts- College QE TAU ...... .....,..,..... L afayette College UPs1LoN .... .... L lniversity of North Carolina il, X14 ....... ...... U niversity of Michigan Mil ' LAMBDA .... . . .. ...... Bowdoin College lg ME' BETA ..... .... U niversity of Virginia lg Psi ..... ........... C orncll University ' IOTA ...... ..... U niversity of California il E l GAMMA ...... ...... S yracuse University gl lg 'PI-IETA XI .... .... U niversity of Toronto Q E ALPHA ....... . . ....... Columbia University Z' E ALPHA Psi ..... .............. L lcGill University it lj NU ........... Case School of Applied Science 3' ,E ETA .......... ................... Y ale Universilty g li MU .......... Leland Stanford, Ir., University - gl .ALPHA BETA ..... ..,..... L Tniversity of Minnesota i 'Q ALPHA EPSILON .... ........ U niversity of Illinois E Q1 LAMBDA PSI ...... .... U niversity of Wiscoiisin 5 'E PSI UPSILQN ........... ..... .... D a rtmouth University gil .Alumni Associations T Buffalo Association oi Zeta Psi ........... i ............... ..... B uffalo, N. Y. Chicago Association of Zeta Psi ....................... ..... C hicago, Ill. Cleveland and Northern Ohio Association of Zeta Psi .... .... 1 Cleveland, O. - If Detroit Association of Zeta Psi ........................ ..,.. D etroit, Mich. X - Los Angeles Association of Zeta Psi ................... .... L os Angeles,-Cal. it I Manitoba Association of Zeta Psi .... ..... W innipeg, Canada i E Minnesota Association of Zeta Psi... .... Minneapolis, Minn. E 2 New. England Association of Zeta Psi... ....... Boston, Mass. El -' New York Association of Zeta Psi... ..... New York City 5 2 Philadelphia Association of Zeta Psi., .... Philadelphia, Pa. U 2 Pittsburgh Assoc'iation'of Zeta Psi... .... Ptittslaurgh, Pa. W f Portland Association of Zeta Psi.. ..... Portland, Me. lL Q Puget Sound Association of Zeta Psi ..... ..... S eattle, Waslh. i Rhode Island Association of Zeta Psi. .... Providence, R. I. - Rochester Association of Zeta Psi ..... .... R ochester, N. Y. if Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi ..... .... S yracuse, N. Y. E St. Louis Association of Zeta Ps'i... .... St. Louis, Mo. in El El is Eli llllllll 3-my lllllm ll'3lllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIl!lillllllllllllLllmllllllllllllllazllll'l l r 'AI'l1UrlZlliqlllllllllilmllllllllll.wlllllllli 3 E 2 E ' 5 E E E Zeta PS1 I E E DEl.T.N CHAPTER, ESTABLISHED 1848. E 2 TRUSTEES ' E E E E HERBERT M. VVALDRON JOHN H. RAVEN E E ALFRED E. HITCHNEII SELAH VV. STRONG - E E JOHN H. WYCKOIIE LAWRENCE G. GILLAM E E RESIDENT MEMBERS 2 E ALLEN F. CONGER RICHARD F. POTTER ' E E JOHN C. CONGER NIVILLIAM H. WALDRON E E RALPH J. FAULKINGHAM STUART A. STEPHENSON E E HARRY N. LENDALL SELAH XIV. STRONG E E HOWARD V. WALDRON EDWARD A. WALDRON 2 E JOHN F. MCGOVERN HERBERT A. WALDRON 2 E . WILLIAM J. MACFARLANE, JR. RALPH L. WILLIS ' E E JOHN H. RAVEN ' FREEMAN WOODBRIDGE E E . I E E . E E E 2 124 J mllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIIIllllIllllllllllllllllllllll llllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllIllIllIllllllllllllllllIlllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllIllIIIIIIIlllIIIllillllllllllllllllllllllllll T R TTTTW A X,-.nr 'N f J 1Q C ' U A ? K ? V? . J x-ff N 'T RANDOLPH BRANDT, JR. LEWELLYN N. PRATT EVERETT G. REID RICHARD W. BARKELEW JOHN M. ELLIS JOHN D. GROTHE RALPH C. HEARN ROBERT J. BLACK WILLIS L. BRACE C. BROOKE DLAISLEY ALBERT H. DARNELL Undergraduates OF 1921 HERBERT T. REDMOND AlORTIMER,J. REDMOND VAN ORDEN OF 1922 FRANCIS A. -BEUGLESS OF 1923 NOEL T. VV. IQANE JAMES F. NIACKAY CVRIL J. REDMOND JOHN B. ROWE SHERMAN OF 1924 FRANK M, PONVELL SAMUEL K. STRYKER FERDINAND VS. VAN DOREN NORLIAN J. VVH11-EHILL 125 llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllll I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllll I IVIHIE H IH , IIIJl1iNHiriN2HHM?1l!Ii!lliiiili WIIUHUIIH 1 il' IUJM 3:1 k A ,Q-LG, ., V 1 22 zz f? m?I.3 f fgixrh- 1 XJ , Li ,E 2. E1 14? 1 I-V 5, ai 5 E E - QE lil W 5 E 3 .fl :W N-'E i ., E E , If , -Q 5 fu 'F 3 2' ' 'aglfig sie 533 2 ' 1 ' -' - E? . A ix I g UE 5 ,E 'W,Qf.,.J.K n : ' ' 1 1 x 4 W 3 , X y. E 2 x 15' W if Wk X , 1 1 3 ' BRG. W ff 3' '- '+ I A ' -nl-Tf'2 ,.A 4 :1 I A f . 'Vw 'Q 51 ,f X Fa 1 ,qllr X QJJQQ. fb Q14 YT ogg, L., : Y E 1 .E r x E ' E E 5 5 4 E W I E 1? , I M Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllll lllllllllllllllllilllllIIIIIIHHIHHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIUlllllllllllllllill llllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllll I . 2:-em: . .gi .-. 1 I I I Delta Upsilon FOUNDED AT VVILLIAMS COLLEGE, 1834 N..! -T' L Ez E! ga 55 T 1834. WILLIAMS. 1838. UNION. E 1847. HAMILTON. 1847 AMI-IERST. 1847. WESTERN RESERVE. 1850. COLBY. 2 1852. ROCHESTER. 2 1856. MIDDLEBURY. i 1857. BOWDOIN. 5 1858. RUTGERS. 2 1865. COLGATE. 1865. NEW YORK. 2 1868. MIAMI. E 1868. BROWN. ' E 1869. CORNELL. E 1870. MARIETTA. E 1873. SYRACUSE. 2 1876. MICHIGAN. 2 E E 1880 1885 NORTHWESTERN. 1881. HARVARD. 1885. WISCONSIN. LAFAYETTE. 1885. COLUMBIA. ' 1885. LEHIGH. 1'886 1890. 1896. 1 898 1904. 1911 1917 127 TUFTS. 1887. DE PAUW. 1888. PENNSYLVANIA. MINNESOTA. 1891. TECHNOLOGY. 1894. SWARTHMOREM STANFORD. 1896. CALIFORNIA. 1898. MCGILL. NEBRASKA. 1899. TORONTO.' 1901. CHICAGO. OHIO STATE. 1905. ILLINOIS. 1910. WASHINGTON. PENN STATE. 1913. IOWA STATE. 1914. PURDUE. 1915. INDIANA. CARNEGIE INST. OF TECH. 1919. KANSAS. '4 1919. VVESLEYAN. llll Illlllllll IIII llII1 1 ll lllllllllllllllll II ll llllllllll I llll 2 IIIII I IllIIIIIIIllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll E E E , 5 . 5 E E ll Il L . 'X Q ' Ez E Z E E E E E Delta Upsllon E Q RUTGERS CHAPTER, FOUNDED 1858 5 2 . TRUSTEES LE E CHARLES DESHLER DONALD HAVENS E E CHARLES REED E. R. W. VOORHEES E E FRANCES SCARR JAMES P. XVILLIAMS E E Z E MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OE DIRECTORS TO THE DELTA UPSILON E E ERATERNITY, INC. E : DONALD THAVENS IVIELVILLE T. COOK Z E RVESTDENT MEMBERS S E 5 JOHN B. BEARDSLEE RAYMOND S. PATTERSON 2 : STANLEY E. BRASEFIELD ELIOT R. PAYSON Z : EDWARD H. BRILL GEORGE H. PAYSON E E MELVTLLE T. COOK CHARLES H. REED E E CHARLES DESHLER J. PRESTON SEARLE 2 ERNEST T. DEVVALD SPENCER DEVAN T. ALLEN DEVAN JASPER S. HOGAN EVERETT W. JACKSON CHARLES S. IJAMSON ROBERT LUFBURROVV HOWARD D. JXHCKINNEY ROBERT W. SEARLE HOXVAXRD R. SEGOINE WARREN R. SCHENCK ARTHUR L. SMITH THEODORE VOORHEES ROBERT L. VOORHEES PAUL VVALRUTH LTEFEORD R. RUNYON E E ' , A 128 E IIIIIIIIIIIllllIlIIIIIIllllIllllIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIllllIIIllllIlIIIIllIIllIlllllIIIIIIIlIIIIlIlIIlllIIIllllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIllIllllllIIlilIIUIIllIlIIIllIlllllIllllllllllllllIlllIIIIIIllIIIllllllIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIllllIIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllll .,..Q,.,-:ff If. 1.-J-z1i.- . ikygg-4- R-xmx. f.L ivisi ,,..,,., ' FiT,T:Tl'I.4Lfi1:g.. K, -' 'J V' Xu W ?Z S 1 1 AI f I ff 242 LLL-- F ,.,,,,,2,.,...L,.2.m.-lf-, iff 14--. .A - I gf-' Q-,,...ff'X 'S -,., 3 'Ei E1 E1 EJ '21 E' 51 5 51 I 1 E1 A Ei L IE! - I - 144 111.4 'wif I: L: Undergraduates 3 C1 ASS OF 1921 E HAROLD NIANDEVILLI' AUGUSTINE CHARLES IRWIN POST 1: ROBERT EDWARD CRANE PERRY DICKERSON SMITH JOHN BEVERLY CROWEI L ROBERT WOODRUTT VOORHEES : WILLIAII NI HADDEN JAMES PATRICK VVILLIAMS E E CI ASS OF 1922 E FREDERICK WILSON DE11LING1IR RICHARD BURTON LAMSCHA DOUGLAS HOLDFN DE WITT SHIVLER BERTRAM REED : I: FUGENE VAN NOSTRAND FULLER PHILIP STANLEY VAN O1 DEN E DONALD 1XC1ORTIMER JAMES GARRETT SCOTT VOORHEES, JR. E CI ASS OF 1923 E :, WILLI x1xI RUPERT AYDELOTT : HXRVEY REAVILL COOR IHOMAS VVII RUR CUMING VVIIIIAIII TISS FINLTY FREDERICK RUDOLPH OTTMAN CLASS O CHARLES JAMLS BRASETIELD GRANT ALLISON DORI AND ROBERT CURRAN DOUGLAS CHARLES 2 EDXVARD ARTHUR LELAND MARSHALL SMITH VVILLARD FRANKLIN SUTTON JAMES HAROLD TERVVILLIGER RD SEVVELL TAYLOR XIVILSON ORVILLE JOSEPH WEAVER F 1924 q JOHN C. OSTERBERG ELLIS ALBERT ENANDER ELMER ALLEN GLENN PATTISON ,Hi 114 1 , , I: . E ! . E' E E 5 E1 E E E E ' E E E . E E E E , 1 E I . E E I I . E F . . . A .. . E -5 A 4 E I 1 1 A - I ,E - i ERNEST SMITH AYDELOTT 1'IARRY PIOVVARD SCHOONMAKER : HENRY NIANDEVILLE BARTLETT 5 4 . . K X E A I E i , E I . E ' . E 5 I , I 129 I I I I1 I I T I1 my IJ I 4 E' I . H11 1 Mliihilll III HIIIIII Ll' WI Ill , fm MII1'111i'HU1I'M'1M HIIMAJ I Illlllllllllllllll Illlllllllll I Illlll l1,I I H1 , ' , .I I Lili I1IHIIPIlilHl'MlIUl-LHIHYWZ' C32 LWWJWJIEWH! ,g gin' 'X-' - gg. 15? E 25 f Q1 lg Es. hm 'E ,Wi ri E 'il 1 E 5 Ei 55 ? f 'I . i I ' Y M- 4 'sv f A gg EJ , J we ' f QLSV A fC .5 x . ,. : h is-:.:,,,. ,fix E .... .11IlIllm llIlll1 1.,.,, - llllm M, 'wp 2 if iilef E 5 -Il ! 3 MT TW p' 5 ' U f -A - 4 - N , .,., . , Z E Q I , E , 2 Q Z 'E E 2 5 E : E 5 E : - IIIIIIIIIII , llllllllllllllllllllllllllll N, Illlllllllil lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll HIIHHHIHHHIIIHFHHII IIHUMJIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHHHIIH!IHIIHHI!HlHIHIIIUIIIII mllmmm HIE ,::, E l r--'- - '-'-'- -.-3, gfmx il. f q f ' I Q, 5. 'X kv 6 XM ,. 1 in ., l. H 5, If ,gy 2 Z rv KXIKQ Y fx ,f-If it 1 M V G-A X tl Y -Q '41-'.. -2-2 3:',.1-'nm'-'-X 1 ' . ,fp ---' ig... 'N' .nkv if E 'ill Ei Delta Kappa Epsilon 3 Ei 211 lil FOUNDED AT YALE, 1844 fig I CHAPTER ROLL Q E Yale, PHI, 232 York St., New Haven, Conn. : 54 Bowdoin, THETA, D. K. E. House, Brunswick, Me. - El, Colby, SIGMA, D. K. E. House, Waterville, Me. 3 gi, Amherst, GAMMA, Box 464, Amherst, Mass. I IEE? Vanderbilt, XI, Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, Tenn. 1 lf' Alabama, PI, 1217 U11iv. Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala. L , Brown, UPSILON, 65 College St., Providence, R. il. El 5 North Carolina, BETA, Box 172, Chapel Hill, N. C. E E, Virginia, ETA, Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va ' Q Miami, IQAPPA, East High St., Oxford, O. - Q1 Kenyon, LAMBDA, Box 336, Gambier, O. I Dartmouth, PI, D. K. E. House, Hanover, N. H. 2 Central, IOTA, 221 Maple Ave., Danville, Ky. Z I Middlebury ALPHA ALPI-IA, Box 784, Middlebury, Vt. E : Michigan, OMICRON, 607 So. State St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 2 E' Williams, EPSILON, Box 27, Williamstown, Mass. :' : Lafayette, RHo, D. K. E. House, Easton, Pa. E 1 Hamilton, TAU, Lock Box 8, Clinton, N. Y. I Colgate, . MU, Box 423, Hamilton, N. Y. E Q, C. 'C. N. Y., NU, 54 Hamilton Place, N. Y. C. E 2 Rochester, BETA CHI, 49 Prince St., Rochester, N. Y. E i Rutgers, PHI CHI, 78 College Ave., New Brunswick, NJ Z De Pauw, PSI PHI, 212 So. College Ave., Greencastle, lncl :I 3 Wesleyan, GAMMA PHI, 332 High St.. Mi-ddletown, Conn. E - Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., P'sI OMEGA, 16 Elm Ave., Troy, Nf Y. E I Western Reserve, BETA CHI, 2044 Cornell Road, Cleveland, O. S : Cornell, DELTA CHI, l3 South Ave., lthaca, N. Y. E Ii Chicago, DELTA DELTA, 5754 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, Ill. 5 i Syracuse, PHI GAMMA, 1011 Walnut Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. :E Columbia, GAMMA BETA, 608 W. 118th St., N. Y. C. E I Cal'ifornia, THETA ZETA, 2330 Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, Cal. E ' Trinity, ALPHA CHI, 94 Vernon St., Hartford, Conn. ' E Minnesota. ' PHI EPSILON, 1711 Univ. Ave., S. E., Minn., Minn. ,IT- E Mass. Inst. of Technology, SIGMA TAU, 104 Charles River Rd., Boston, Mass E E rlwiilane, ' TAU LAMBDA, 5949 Fei-et St., New Orleans, La. E E loronto, -ALPHA PI-II, S0 So, George St., Toronto, Canada. E ,- PCY1USylva1Iia, DELTA KAPPA, 3603 Locust St., Plhiladelphia, Pa. E 1 McGill, TAU ALPHA, 305 Pr. Arthur St., W. Montreal, 'Can E I Leland Stanford, Ir. SIGMA RHO, Stanford University, Cal. E 5 lllinois, DELTA PHI, 313 East Iohn St., Champaign, Ill. 1 Wisconsin, RHo DELTA, 524 No. Henry St., Madison, 'vVis. E Z VVashington, ICAPPAEPSILON, 4520 21st Ave.. N. E., Seattle, Wash if I Texas, OMEGA CHI, 610 VV. 24th St., Austin, Texas El - D. K. E. Club and Council, 30 W. 44th St., N. Y. C. - E 2 E I 4 - E S E ng 'E l 131 ,E lllllllllllllllllllllllll Wlllmunsililarllilirlllx 'li Htl llIlliIlMMMllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllliliMlllillllllmiEel!lil!lil!liIllllllliliililiillmlllliZlllillllllllllllliiilllillliiilwwlig I Q7 Delta Kappa Eps11on PHI CHI CH IPIDR FOUNDED 1861 TRUSTEES RICHARD T GREENE XX XRREX V VAN SLYKE VVILLINM H LDUPP VVxxxE H THOMPSON ELLIOTT E VAN CLEDI' FREDERICK W BLRGEN NVILLIAM H LEUPP WILLIAII T CASE IXIILES Ross EDWIN B DAVIS M FILMORE Ross IR HOLMES V M DENNIS H F SMITH WILLIAM P GARRISON ALFRED A ,FITSXVORTH E S INGRAM I M TUCKERMAR FLTSHA B JOYCE FRANCIS C VAN DYKE CHARLES H WHITMAN Q L...-.......... . 'Z 3 6' P Q 5 2 E E E ' RESIDENT MIEMBERS I 2 E I E E I H E E ' E i I 2 132 A I lllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIIII IlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllllIlllllllIIIIIIIllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll E E 2 -5, I Z - Z z E E 2 E E 2 i E ... 1 . if 1 22 ' ' X ' A L. -l ' 'SQ g wwxiv E W ,, TAL gp js f RS-Sf-I-mf g Ei 3 E A S I . .. E DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Z Undergraduates E CLASS OF 1,921 E E GEORGE S. I'IORSFORD JOHN I. SUTTON ' E LAWRENCE SLIKER DONALD VAN BRACKLE E E GEORGE VAN DERVEER 5 CLASS OF 1922 E E WALTER E. BEYER VVALTER WV. CLARK, JR. E ' GEORGE M. BRTEN ROBERT R. DORNAN E : GEORGE COWIE FRANCIS L. MALONEY E E CLASS OF 1923 E E WARREN DIXON, IR. HAROLD MILLISON E CHESTER L. MORRISON E E CLASS OF 1924 ' 5. JOHN CROWELL GORDON JMIULCHAHEY E - F. RAYMOND DANTELL FRANK NIEISTRELL E E GEORGE GLASIER NIARVIN A. RILEH' E LEON R. KOLB CONRAD SUTHERLAND E ALEXANDER VAN WAGONER, JR. I :I - 5 133 E U t E 1 E 2 5 2 il 2 - Z 2 3 2 E E E -llllIIIlllllIlIllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllll ill! illlllll I HI IiUiHMMUHI1i1!H1l1 H lllll llllllll I Illllllllllllllllllllllllllll N I fp? , X md ' X fy-.NE 4' - 0 - -' ' - E M :- K wx' N Z. X52 O: .. Q- .,.'? ':.. E 2 ?i5' A 32? ' E E E E 2 - E E E : E E HlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I lllillll l Z ' I 1 Z 2 E E f 5 E E ' E E + E 5 w E P :NWI li, Ei .gpm-54.5. ,.. E5 ,zz . .., V V M I if Cx E E QE E E T ef lg lg' I- E 2 .Ev i I 15 Z E 2 IE Chi Phi 5 lr ' 5 FOUNDED AT PRINCETON, 1824 3 Eu E .ALPHA, University of Virginia, University, Va. ,F BETA, Mass. Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 1 GAMMA, Emory University, Oxford, Ga. lg D'ELTA, Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. I. 5 EPSILON, Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. E 1 ZETA, Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. I E ETA, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. ' 3 THETA, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. Y. V I IOTA, Ohio State University, Columbus, O. E i KAPPA, University of VVisconsin, Maclison,VWVis. E E LAMBDA, University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Z ' MU, , Stevens Institute of Technology: Hoboken, N. I. E, E NU, I University of Texas, Austin, Texas Ig E XI, Cornell University, Ithaca, N- Y- Z ' OMICRON, Yale University, S. S. S., New Haven, Conn. 1 E RHO, H Lafayette College, E2SfO11, IJ- , 1 E SIGMA, University of Illinois, Champaign, Ill. E TAU, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala- E PHI, Amherst College, Amherst, MHSS. I CHI, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. I-I. A-gi PSI, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. ALPHA CHI, Ohio Wesleyaii, Delaware, O. 2 OMEGA, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. E E E .1 E 3 E 1 E E 'T E . E 135 I IllllllIIllllIllIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHHHI I lllllllllll Illlllllilllllllilllll 'Nl 'lilllIHIIllIll!I1HHHIlllllllllllMillil!lIlilll!lll!ll.lIlllll I lllilllllllllilmlm. J 15,0 f . -: ' . ' ., j4 A ,, I E E fi' E E 4 E E .- E Chl Ph1 E E DELTA CHAPTER FOUNDED 1867 E E RESIDENT MEMBERS E ' E JOHN BISHOP . WALTER C. SEDAM 5 E -. VVILLARD P. CLARK SCHUYLER RUST g A- E ' GEORGE R. DESHLER ' RALPH O. SMITH 5 E RAYMOND D. PIOWELL CHARLES' W. STEVENS JR. E , E RENSSELAER CLARK KENYON CHARLES E. TINDELL : E GEORGE R. MORRISON GEORGE C. TOVVLE ' E W. FRANK PARKER GEORGE W. XV1LMON'r - E RAYMOND P. WH SON E - :IlIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllllIIIIIllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIlIllllllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIliIIIIIIIIIIIllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllli E I Z E E A , - : P E 5 ' i 4 1 Ji' ' L , 'r I - gi - , E 733 Z A C Z W R E W if E E iw E E ' ' E A E . E Q E A 5 E E a '1 E - 51 E Y 'L' E ' 136 - if . .1 4 LZ.. - - -T' ' iff f--frfssy , 'I' 'I '--I-9' 1 fx ,..:, -1. f, - - ', F xr ,I ' 1g,...- In ,gre . H. 113 17122 f ,L ' 3' '-f .-T' X -Y - --mi -- QQ- I 'wrgfgfly p ,- I . ' .:.--.':- nw fn .fs .-5 Ara, - ,I : ' Iiglzfir 'A 2 , ,--fiif - A ,fif I 1 ' :.,x::L.1f+'- ' 1, 'ff ' ,fi 1 EN EV 121 ,211 511 EQ 1 Q1 1 255 il E CHI P1-II E! I Undergraduates 'E CLASS OF 1921 GRAHAM HUTTON CATRNS JOHN GEORGE FRITZINGER JOHN LOUIS DE VRIES ERVVIN ROBERT NIEZGER Ei CLASS OF 1922 E ,E HGAROLD VVILLIAM RAY ROBER1' SAMUEL VVHEELOCK Iii XNILLIAII RIERTAN jig CLASS OF 1923 2 ROBERT VVALLACE CRAWFORD OSCAR DAIIIUS GRIFFEN 'g VVAYLAND AYER DUBOIS RENSSELAER 'CLARK IKENYON, IR. Z CYRUS PETER FRANCISCO VVILLARD RICHARDS LUDLOVV E PHILIP OGDEN ROBERTS 5 CLASS OF 1924 DAVID TRUEX BUCK ALLAN IWACKENZIE O,HARE I JACK DAVIDSON GOODMAN FREDERICK WILLIA11 SHAW 5 GEORGE .ADDISON HOBART PETER VAN DYKE VOORHEES JOHN OGDEN VVINNER Li: 5 137 1:1 31 231 ,ly 533: 15: E21 EH 1 E51 FEL EU 151' E, ii -:W :gi IH' WE E Ig IE IE 'ig wg 5 E' 111 HE 11: 1,7 'V 1: HH VE E lg 14 .5 UL 112 U: N51 H lg LE lg EI H H 1 WE ll 13 I Hllllm IHINMHWINN11H111WiH1i llMUiNHiN!if!'3?1ElWE4WNHIE!Nli!NHWilEi.3?lHH!H2111311111,l.1HIW1ll33!135' MW H1lfV'I'IU1f?f1iF1l 3'11lW1'W WllW1llH HE 22 X S a ' - J J, ' 4 WQMIIIIIDINTI 2 E - E , E I A E E E : 2 2 E E E E Q E ' , V E I I lllllIlllllllll llllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllIllllllllIIIIllIllllIHIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I Illll Hill? IlllllllIillllllllilllllllll H Il I IIIII llllllllllllllllllll lillllll 3.tfm',..-....... W ,,, If! -' ,.-,,,,' :i' .f,gQ- 1-'THE . -..-.a...g..,..--y l . W'II,, r . I' ff. '-qs., ,IL ,. I ,Ci-f::1:f.-:::TT.:Tg5. , fa , eu -ff 'IE It linll - A-ag ,I -. I I 5.51 'ix 'fis'i.f'ef !l . I Cf, f yl If-I I '- fre PL 5. .I-'E' N' 7 il l Xin l r' . ' .m. I., I A -IE' l .Z .IL H21 'IEI -I --I .,J -I fl El I I I '.:-V III If A - I- ,, . II A ,...,. Y .Y.-+,x Y ,. - , . HC,--Y . ,Y ..-X , I V- --af MA A -f --A, IA- ', I -I NS, . I f A - - 5 +-,If .2 Ilia ' mega' .- . . .f- p , an f .I- 'T f -S-Agni,-f' 1 ., ,,.. Beta Theta P1 Founded at Miami University, 1839. ANIHERST CBD CID? Amherst, Mass. BELOIT CXH CXIVD, Beloit, Wis. BETHANY CWI CVIID, Bethany, W, Va. BOWDOIN CBE? CD, Brunswick, Me. BROWN CKJ CD, Providence, R. I. CALIFORNIA CQQ CXXD, Berkeley, Cal. CARNEGIE CFD CVID, Pittsburgh, Pa. CASE CAKJ CIXJ, Cleveland, O. CENTRE CED CXID, Danville, Ky. CHICAGO CAPJ CXIID, Chicago, Ill. CINCINNATI CBN! CXJ, Cincinnati, O. COLGATE CBGJI CIID, Hamilton, Y. COLORADO CBTJ CXIXJ, Boulder, Colo. COLORADO COLLEGE CFAJ CXIXD, Colo. Springs, Colo. COLOCIEADO MINES CBCIJD CXIXJ, Golden, Olo. COLUMBIA CAAD CVD, New York, Y. CORNELL CBAD CIVJ, Ithaca, N. Y. DARTMOUTH CAQ7 CID, Hanover, N. H. DAVIDSON CIIJAJ CVIID, Davidson, N. C. OKLAHOMA CFCIJJ CXVIID, Norman Qkla. OREGON CBP! CXXJ, Eugene. Ore. PENNSYLVANIA C1113 CVD, Philadelphia Pa. PENN STATE CAYJ CVID, State Col- lege, Pa. PURDUE CBM? CND, La Fayette, Ind. RUTGERS CBPJ CVD, New Brunswick N. ST, LAXVRENCIE CBZH CIID, Canton N. Y, SOUTH DP-K0'l A CPAP CXVJ. Vermilion S. Dalc. STANFORD CAEJ CXXIJ, Stanford, Cal STEVENS CEB CVD, Hoboken, N. J. SVRACIISE CBEJ CIVJ, Syracuse, N. Y TEXAS CBOT CXVIID, Austin, Texas TORONTO CGZH CIVD, Toronto, Ont. TULANE CBEJ CXVIID, New Orleans La. li 'E DENISON 'CAHD CIXJ, Granville, O. UNION CNE CIID, Schenectady, N. Y pig DENVER CAZD CXD, Denver, Colo. UNIVERSITV OF XVASHINGTON CBB CXXJ Il: DE PAUW CAD CXD, Greencastle, Ind. Seattle, Wfeslh. lj? DICKINSON CAZB CVD, Carlisle, Pa. UTAII CFB? CXIXJ. Salt Lake City if GEORGIA TECH CFHJ CXID, Atlanta, Ga. Utah. gg, I'II-XNOVER CID CXD Hanover, In-d. VANDERBILT CBAI CXID, Nashville wi' IDAHO CFFH CXXJ, Moscow, Idaho. Tenn. ,ISI ILLINOIS CEPJ CXIID, Champaign, Ill. VIRGINIA CO5 CVIID, University, Va Ili INDIANA CID CXD, Bloomington, Ind. VVARASH CTD CXD, Cra1wfordsville IOWA CABJ CXVJ, Iowa City, Ia. Ind. IQ: IOWA STATE CTEJ CXVJ, Ames, Ia. VVASHINGTON CAD CXVD, St. Louis JOHNS HOPKINS CAXD CVD, Baltimore, Mo. C J ,Z Md. XVASHINGTON-JEFFERSON CFD VII ,QQ IKANSAS CAND CXVID, Lawrence, Kan. Vlhashington, Pa. ig KANSAS ST.iA2I'E CFEJ CXVID, Man- VVASHINGTON-LEE CAP? CVIID, Lex- att-an, an. ington, Va. KENYON CBA5 CIXJ, Gambier, O. VVASHINGTON STATE CI'9l CXXF, Pull- ,iif KNOX CED CXIID, Galesburg, Ill, man, VVash. M: LEHIGH.CBXJ CVD, So. Bethlehem, Pa. XVESLEVAN CME? CID, Middletown I2 IYTAINE CBHJ CD, Orono, Me. Conn. ,El MASS. INST. CBYD CD, Boston, Mass. WESTERN RESERVE CBD CIXJ, Cleve- Ili' IIVIIAMI fAIfX55J,foixf05fI, O. land, O. CA D CX D Fl C, ICHIGAN I III , Ann Arbor, WESTMINSTER A VI , All ton ,IQ Mich. , Mo. if IVHINNESOTA CBIID CXVJ, Minneapolis, WEST VIRGINIA CBIPJ CVID, Morgans- zl. , Minn. , town, NV. Va. il MISSOURI CZCIJD CXVD, Columbia, Mo. WHITIIIAN CFZ5 CXXD, IfValla VValla E NEBRASICA CATH CXVID, Lincoln, Neb. VVash. El NORTH CAROLINA CHBD CVIID, Chapel VVILLI.-NMS CZJ CID, XCXfllll3111StOXV1'1 131 Hill, N. C. Mass. lgll NORTiIiiWX'ESTERN CPD CXIVJ. Evanston, WISCONSIN CAID CXIVJ, Madison, 1 . IrVis. - OHIO CBKJ CXJ, Athens, O. VVITTENBERG CAIW CXD, Springfield, O. 'E SHIO EATIATE CGADCSNICCOLLIIIQDIIF, O. YALE CCDXJ CID, New Haven, Conn. Q' H10 ESLEVAN .X , eaware, ---- Ohio. Il' Roman numeral indicates district. I+. 1 139 I1llUmlllzll,lllllllllIWllilllllll'.UMMMDMUllUMIHUlLlIli''1I'i.Il1llf..UlLll!L!5llli'll'll'3l'l5'llflndlllf wlwl' Wlgi 5 -I'I II 'CHILI ll 'll I A A f - MBL Illllllll IllIlllIIIllIllllllllIllIIIIllIIllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllll llllll Im llllllllllllllllll Ill Tllllllllllllllllll IllllIIIIIIIIIllIIIllIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll ll ll lllllllllllllllllIllIIIIIllIIIlllmllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIllllllllIlllllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllll f 4 ' . '-I , ' J A V' .- . l 'C ' i A 'Tl f . as n . . D . 5 D - 2 V . . X f' Z A ' n D h , R z -' A . ' ' i S . ' ,, W ' . . A V Q A C A A ' A . D W L A , Q L . m A pq. , F5 ,z I ,A . 5 ' ,N V 1 A GIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllC llllHlllIm llgIIf I iglmmlllllmllilmlllilllllllllllllllllllllllmfl IlmllllillllllflilllliIllllllmlllllllllllmmllllllllllwlllllllllllillllflllllllIlllllllllllllllIllllllIIHIIlllllillllllllmllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllIIIIIHHIIICIIIIIIlllllllllllllllmmu- !' 24- ring., v ,fl','l! iQi,f IL: 'I '1 '.,-- - .:'i'l v.,',:,'I,.n , A,1fluj ,II'.wnr: I Y 'kr :A ' H fl .- ., M H . U , nh Am! It-M-l I A I, Beta Theta P1 BETA GAMMA CHAPTER 1151-ABLISHED 1871 TOUNDED AQ THE ALLPHA OF ALPHA SIGMA C1-11 lllllll RLSIDIINIT MIINIBIIRS 1' STERLING ALLMUTH WILLIAM H Kllh GEORGE H BUTTLER I' PAUL MACLEANI HOWARD V BUTTLER CALVIN C M1:URx WILLIAM B Cook GLOPG1: A OSBORNE GEORGE HILL VIVIAN C Ross ARTHUR H I-TOLTMAN SCHUYLFR RUS! GEGRCE bAF1'o1n E ilIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIllllIllllIIIIIIIIIllllIIIllIllllllllIllllllIIlllllIlllIllIIIllllIlIIIIIllllIIIIIIIlIiIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllllllllllllllfllllllllllll Illl II llllllllllllIllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll JE in-:, AI, Ii -1 I . ' ' f ' , N, , l ,A , Y , 1 ' A, . X -. . -J ,.1,....,A -, Y, IR .1,Ef, if: F lf. .iv 1111 E511 X 4? 154 E Ig 15, 11:1 if lf: El if .Q Z, JY. 1 EJ 52 z:-fi v' E 1 E31 1 H1 Ei! 1 1' - E1 25 Z1 if je Q 1 2 1 - 1 ' E . ' 4 E I u?- 21 E -1 Undergraduates E f .- T CLASS OIF 1921 Z WILLIAM HERBERT GARDNER ROBERT BLOCK STONE - ARTHUR FRANK HAELIG MERRILL HAZELTON THOMPSON ,- Z FREDERICK ARTHUR HALL JOHN RIGBY GILL VAN WINKLE - ' CLASS UF 1922 E ' DONALD VAN COURT BIRRELL PAUL JOSEPH DUFFY ' E JOHN RUSSELL BROWVN VVILBERT BAKER HITCHNER, JR. 4 REMBERT WHITING BURBANK FREDERICK ALLEN HOFFMAN - VVILLIAM DONALD CHRISTIE JOHN TURNBULL QUIGLEY - 2 HERNIAN RAMSEY TERHUNE W CLASS OF 1923 2 CRAWFORD STUART BEATTIE JAMES IRVING KIBBE I 2 EDWARD JOSEPH BUTLER HERBERT I'IERMAN MEYER ln 1 - ARTHUR -JEYVETT HARRISON WILLIAM ATWATER COOKE PALMATIER - : DOUGLAS NIALLORY HICKS CLARENCE ARTHUR ROSS 5 E CLASS OF 1924 5 E HOXVARD YATES BROEK AUGUST VVILLIAM LENTZ E ALAN JULIUS DENMAN RUSSELL WVVIILLIAM MORGAN I E GEORGE WITFIELD DOUGLAS ARTHUR HOXA'ARD GZIAS - E1 STUART ROBERTS ELDER FRASER BOTEN RHODES I E. MALCOLM BAISLER HICKS JOHN FASEL SCHILLER J-, E 'WILLIAM WASHBURN KINGMAN RAYMOND SCHROEDER IE E 1 ' E 141 Ei , HHHH 1 i 'lH'5HHHiW'U 'H 3NUIHHWINlHHM!HNlMMMHMNHHllHMlldjilillliitWQWKMMMEUINQIIE'WlNHlJlii1:H1?11l,Mm31HHHMN1NiN5NUiNHiVVI!lWiWbWYH1 t H , :Eh , 'fx wx :' ' Y 1 ' T ',,gl I' , J! ,fl'-A-WAGQQE'-A-S'Tl6 V '1i'L ,ffidf jJ':1-'ffgw X511 if QSM fx?-5-hw' E 5' -EEN is ff! gl 'sl :ti Ev wi I A 5 . 'EN g, -v 13:23 'W fEN -f' 52 w Y, 7? iA.: WEE vii , A t-, ,li 1 1 , EJ 'li' ' EH EE.- 'S+ EI EI fa E QE? E AIV 135' EE 21 E3 E ggi E5 5 fl: ZEN iii gl ,VJ J A ,WW 15 Es Ei 2,251 I ,:, EE! V, i-,S 5 52' E E1 51 N V ---- ' 'i af' ,.. 5 XTLX 1 ,EJ ,51 HE' H-- 'zu if N51 1 ,mi , . w ' Q E1 :EN E ii! E lg E1 NE! 21' E! 2' V gi I Ii f 1-. y Z 15 2 E E if 'Sl if E . E -W , - V - EIU-WMKUNNH HWHH1MlUHilNHIHHI?IHH'HNIH HHH HMIHIIIHH. II HMMUILUINIHIIIIEIHN IIUIHIIHKUNliIH5HHHHi1l4l4HlN1i?HH!,HiMMMHNH1HHMMrNIHHHHlI!UNISHIMTWWIUE' In fi 122 lf-fl ,iff-'H like i7 Ei iz-! E e E E ie DEQ P1 .......... ,EJ THETA ...... ii MU ....... 'l?l ETA ........ 1 ALPHA ..... E PHI ...... 1,2 EPSILON .... f CHI ...... 3 PSI ..... ig' NU ....... It IOTA ...... 1 RHO .... , ...... P XI ............ 7 ALPHA DELTA .... ii , -.1 4. E -1 2 BETA DELTA. . . GAKMBIA DELTA DELTA DELTA.. 9 . l zz ? I 7' ' .,,, l N. Chi Psi FOUNDED AT -UNION COLLEGE, 1841 ACTIVE ALPHAS ...................,......Un'ion College, . . . . . . .Williams College, . . . .Middlebury College, . . . . . . . . .Bowdoin College, . . . . .Wesleyan University, . . . . . . . .Hamilton College, ....University of Michigan, . . . . .Amherst College, . . . . . . . . .Cornell University, , . . . .University of Minnesota, . . . . .University ' of Wisconsin, . .........., Rutgers College, . . . . . . . . .Stevens Institute . . . . . .University of Georgia, ... . . . . . . . .Lehigh University, . . .... Leland Stanford University . . . . . .University of California EPSILON DELTA ..... ...... U niversity of Chicago ZETA DELTA... PSI DELTA ..... ETA DELTA .... 3 E . . . ....... University of Illinois, . .... University of Colorado, . . . .University of Oregon, 1 s, 1 1841 1842 1843 1844 1844 1845 1845 1864 1869 1874 1878 1879 1883 1 1890 1894 1895 1896 1898 1912 1920 1921 E 11 E ii E -1 :i El Ei 3 if Z1 4. E 3 3 El is il 2 El is E 1 l:::I E -1: 'E El I-. E in 1 lg ii 1 E E' i ' ig 5 3 gd A 143 ' . IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil 1111 II 1 I11ul11uUli11llmum111ml1l111l11111I1lllilillsilrlmlmH11111Mn111111111111111111n41l111111111I sllllilllli Q s'H-A - ,I N I, 1 7. ,..... 'V .........-....,, GEORGE ASHWELL ASHER ATKIB SON TVIONCURE C CARPENTER LOUIS DU Bois W H DUINIONT VV EDWIN PLORANCE W EDWIN FLORANCE I Chl PS1 ALPHA RHO EOUNDED 1879 RESIDENT MEMBERS GEORGE E JONES I M MACOR GEORGE W NUTHMAN RALPH PERLEE A DUDLEY WAT ON WALTER K Woon DAVID :KELLY Lisfg 1 - Y AP - 4. . A AP . . f AP AP ' - - . 1 AP .' A A AP AP .. AP A . . AP -. A A APP JOSEPH H. EDGAR A P RUSSELL E. WATSON ' AP ' W. 'Q AP . f AP 1 ., R. AP A AB A A Y ,A . 144 A A lllllllllllll IIIIIllllIIIIIllIllllIllllllIIIlIIIIllllllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllil IF S nw .L TS, ff' I Q ' 1 . , . ., A jffr i fb - IX 'V , i IE j ' gl! ! 9 js 32 .pf A ' 1 I, .S Ig. A I IN-sv! Y '- K Lg.:-5-,, . TQ- J ,' nf '- 1 4, , - . . L i,,L, xx ii' A -, - Ji -- -A -' '-V' rl-3 - ' ' ' ' ,I ff f -'T-'- N f f ' ' 1 ggzw' w, N K: 2 -S , E A Le! E EA A4 in Wg iix E Er FE E11 BE 559 IE lg! IE is E El 3 3 Ef El il Si SN Is 5 EI E E gl 2 A E -I A CHI PSI - El L E Undergraduates - .13 ji LV ii 1 E CLASS OF 1922 EDNVARD ARNOLD BERRY ANDREW KIP FOULDS LIIFODORII KINN1: GRAHANI CLASS OF 1923 CEORGT' RANDALL ATKINSON ROBTRT ELROI BRORAIA ARCHIBALD F GRAHANI DAVID P QUACKENBUSH iw I I - i A H , ' - ' A E E - L ' ' . I E E E : - . . ' El E ,Ei 5 V 2 CLASS OIF 1924 gl ASHER ATKINSON, IR. RAYMOND M. GALE 3 E LOUIS P. HASBROUCK, IR. ERNEST OTTO KOLLNIORGAN 5 E WILLIAI-I DUNCAN LIDDLE RIXLSAMOND M. MATTOCKS E - :M E ' EA E E A 3 E 145 H, E NE ' ' I ww I I . HAROLD GORDON LUNDBERG JOSEPH B SHARP I IIHNH lmIHlH1HHHHlMiHV 1 WI IlWlllHHI1I1IlIJH!IlHlllillllIIIKHHHIIHUNHW,MENHlHWIlMHilllallIIlIHITWIlHI1ll!HllWUE .1 E 1 .1 we 6 jj.. L 1 E E E E A E E E E -E gggfgggr Y E E an E 2 GV E :I E E E . E :- V 2 P1 Kappa Alpha 2 I E Z ALPHA Psi. ESTABLISHED 1904 5 E ' . E 3 E I TRUSTEES E 1 E E THOMAS L. HANSON BIILO CLAUDE IWOSEMAN E REGINALD P. LUKENS M IRVING L. OWEN E E FRANKLIN M. RITCIJIE' Z RESIDENT MEMBERS RICHARD MORRIS GLORG1: A. MCDONALD PERCY CUNNIUS Ikvxzxc L. OWEN FRANKLIL M. RITCHIE I'Rx1xK R. PKATT I-ILRBLRT WILLIAM NAFLY IIIllIIIllIllllllIllllIIIllllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllllllllIlllllllllllIlllllIIllllIllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Ill llllllll rl 5 M. lillllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllljlll llllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllmllll, Illll ll fr Y as 1- YL 92 f, ia... R' - A 1 ' I ss 'P I . i N 'Y- A -lf- - . X I A ' I' 12 :V in 45 -'I fl I -4 -I -i.. 1... -il ii 21' Qi ..l, gil E. ll +I QCf 'T'1,-gb x ' -, 1' K tes, II' ' r E, El , 'H l: E, P1 Kappa Alpha E5 lr? FOUNDED AT UNIVERSITY or VIRGINIA, 1868 Z! fE'3F El, E5 'E CHAPTER ROLL EJ? A ,al ALPHA, University of Virginia University, Va. BETA, Davidson College Davidson, N. C. A ,ll 13, GAMMA, William and Mary College Williamsburg, Va. IEFQ DELTA, Birmingham-Southern College Birmingham, Ala. .Ei ZBTA, University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. gil ETA, Tulane University h ' New Orleans, La. ,El- ,gli THETA, Southwestern Pres. University Clarksville, Tenn. lg IOTA, I-Iampden-Sidney College Hampden-Sidney, Va. KAPPA, Transylvania University Lexington, Ky. lliil OMICRON, Richmond College Richmond, Va. iE5 EJ PI, Washington and Lee University Lexington, Va. lf, lg TAU, University of North Carolina Chapel I-Iill, N. C. ,li UPSILON, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Auburn, Ala. ,L PSI, North Georgia Agr'icul. College Dahlonega, Ga. gli, li OMEGA, University of Kentucky Lexington, Ky. lil l: ALPHA ALPHA, Trinity College Durham, N. C. 5: ALPHA GAMMA, Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, La. lg! ,j ALPHA DELTA, Georgia School of Technology Atlanta, Ga. llgi QQ ALPHA EPSILON, N. C. State College of A. and M. A. Raleigh, N. C. iglfx ll ALPHA ZETA, University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Ark. ALPHA ETA, University of State of Florida Gainesville, Fla. I: ALPHA IOTA, Millsaps College Jackson, Miss. 'lil '- ALPHA KAPPA, Missouri School of Mines Rolla, Mo. L ALPHA LAMBDA, Georgetown College Georgetown, Ky. llil H ALPHA NU, University of Missouri Columbia, Mo. lil E ALPHA XI, University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, O. ,Eli ALPHA OMICRON, Southwestern University Georgetown, Texas 'lil :lg ALPHA PI, Howard College East Lake, Ala. lil ll?-i ALPHA RHo, Ohio State University Columbus, O. lil ME ALPHA SIGMA, University of California Berkeley, Cal. lji ALPHA TAU, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah ,gl ig ALPHA UPSILON, New York University New York City HE: l ALPHA PHI, I. S. C. t'Ames', Ames, Iowa 'Eli lil ALPHA CHI, Syracuse University Syracuse, N. Y. ,Ei ig ALPHA PSI, Rutgers College New Brunswick, N. I. I: ALPHA OMEGA, K. S. A. C, Manhattan Manhattan, Kan. UE' ig BETA ALPHA, Pennsylvania State College State Cgllege, Pa. '- IZ BETA BETA, University of Washiiigtoii Seattle, Wash. UE, TI BETA GAMMA, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. ,Ei E BETA DELTA, University of New Mexico Albuquerque, N. Mex. ' lii ,I BETA EPSILON, Western Reserve University Cleveland, O. ggi 'E BETA ZETA, Southwestern Methodist University Dallas, Texas 'lil li BETA ETA, University of Illinois Champaign. Ill. lg, BETA THETA, Cornell University Ithaca, N, Y, lgl I BETA TOTA, Beloit College Beloit, W'i5, l,:l Q BETA KAPPA, Emory University Atlanta, Ga, li BETA LAMBDA Xlfashington University St, Louis, Mo. A, 2 BETA MU, University of Texas Austin, Texas ,Eli 2 BETA NU, Oregon Agricultural College Corvallis, Ore. 'l l BETA XT, University of Wfisconsin Madison, VVis. li F BETA OMICRON, University of Oklahoma Norman, Okla. .51 , E, 'EI l-I7 sz' r lWWWWWMmllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllzllllllllllllmlllllmlmlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllmlllalllllrllllllllllellllllslllilllllllPM I limi . ,O ' zz ...A I, - zz 5 i , E H P1 Kappa Alpha 2 ALUMNI CHAPTERS E E : Q: ALUNINUS ALPHA ...................................... Richmond, Va. E '- ALUMNUS BETA ..... .....,........... 3 Iemphis, Tenn. Q .ALUMNUS GAMMA .... .... X ?Vhite Sulphur Springs, VV. Va. 'IE ALUMNUS DELTA .... ................ C harleston, S. C. .. ALUMNUS EPSILON .... ,.,...,........... orfolk, Va. E ALUMNUS ZETA ..... ................... D illon, S. C. E ALUMNUS ETA ...... ............... N ew Orleans, La. 5 ALUMNUS THETA ..... .... 3 14 Deere Bldg., Dallas, Texas E ALUMNUS IOTA ...... ................ K noxville, Tenn. E l ALUMNUS KAPPA ..... ......... C harlottesville, Va. E E ALUMNU5 LAMBDA .... ......... O pelika, Ala. : ALUMNUS MU ..... ..... F ort Smith, Ark. 2 ALUMNUS NU ..... .... B irmingham, Ala. E ALUMNUS X1 ......... ..... L ynchburg, Va. E ALUMNUS OMICRON ..... .... S partanburg, S. C. : ALUMNUS Pr ......... ..... G ainesville, Ga. E ' ALUMNUS RHO .... .... Lexington, Ky. E ALUMNUS SIGMA ..,. ..... ' Raleigh, N. C. E E ALUMNUS TAU .... ..... S alisbury, N. C. E ALUMNUS UPSILON .... ...... C harlotte, N. C. E ALUMNUS PHI ...... .... H attiesburg, Miss. E E ALUMNUS 'CHI .... ..... IX luskogee, Okla. E E ALUMNUS PSI ............ ................ P ensacola, Fla. E E ALUMNUS OMEGA .......... ................. N 21sl1v'ille, Tenn. E E ALUMNUS ALPHA ALPHA ..... ....... R ealty Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla. E E ALUMNUS ALP1iA BETA ..... ..... 7 03 Haddon Road, Oakland, Cal. E ALUMNUS ALPHA GAMMA .... ....................... A tlanta, Ga. ? E : ALUMNUS 5 g ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALUMNUS . ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALUMNUS E E - ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALUMNUS ALPHA DELTA ..... ALPHA EPSILON. . . ALPHA ZETA ..... ALPHA ETA ...... ALPHA THETA ..... ALPHA IOTA ..... 1 ................. Kansas City, Mo. . . . .660 Carroll' St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ....607 Brunson Bldg., Columbus, O. ................Charleston, W. Va. .....................Chicago, Ill. . . . . .2437 -Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, O. ALPHA KA1'PA ................ 311 4th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. ALPHA LAMBDA ....... 169 S. 13th St., Sal-t Lake City, Utah ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA U ...... 5761Stenton Ave. Germantown Phila. Pa. U St Louis Mo 31 Oakdale Ave Akron O ALPHA OMICRON 648 New York Block Seattle Wash IIIIIIIIIIIIIII III IIIIIIIII a M , Y , A - 5 N .................................. . , 1 . - E X1 ...................... ., , . E E 4 148 ' E Illl lllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII I II I I IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- h-Q -. ,J 1 wig-fb , 1,-,.-....,,.-. ,Y f S'S+S ,Eff-ET-W-an--W--911. --- I' lr--I '--Q-fi N in I E 34 gy ,fy ck II- , Q f iff Ez ewg, if-ffyffn-A-Q ' l:'j'4,:.,LL-..-,- A 14 I-!'lf-, . 14-5 ' T 'WEEKS ff' X 7ff Ff :-,511 'fy' ' ' ,, ks, Q' xsix i f 4121 K iii-L--A LLL. -fi, 15'--2.1-'Fil -r--'49 XLZ ix' ' L -f' ' E5 Y '-I CEB! iii E11 1:21 E1 E1 E1 E' JE C EE IE 'I 1? ' PI KAPPA ALPHA ' ,Z Undergraduates E CLASS OF 1921 E HAROLD RAYMOND BRIEGS PIERMAS VICTOR MAIN ,Ei HERBERT RYERSON CAMPBELL DOUGLAS CRUIKSHANK MCCULLY E JAMES PATRICK CORRIGAN RONALD BARRETT KIRK E JASON SEABURY PETTENGILL E CLASS OF 1,922 WILLIAM DANIEL BRIWA JOSEPH HAROLD KELLY E HERBERT GUSTAVE BROWER CHARLES LEVERICK NIESSER E JOHN GARDINER HUBBARD STEPHEN JULIUS WOLEE E . CLASS OF 1923 2 WILLIAM BRUBAKER, JR. I EARL WHITAKER HANCE E ROBERT JAMES COLLERAN GEORGE HENDERSON KENNEDY 3 LAWRENCE ELTON SWENSON , CLASS OF 1924 E ORIN EDWARDS CARPENTER HARVEY WILSON LLOYD E RICHARD HENRY CUNDY ALFRED WALTER PLATT E WALTER HYDE DONAHUE CARL LORENZO WOLEE E FREDERICK WILLIAM FREI, JR. CARL VVERNER WOLEE 5' 149 H! I L1 IMlmIH11111I111HIU11111IMHE1E1111HH1HWHMIlI1IHWMUHI1I1l1I1i111I1i1l1I1I1U1I1I1I1l1i1I1Ulli14111111111111'1x1'IiwI,I,11,'13IW1H'1I111!1l11111IFiW111111111'3f111II MI ' 1'--V - 2 vue' - V-2 - 2 -.-:H v 5:g'2,5,' Mi' 3-,, L .51 I :. Avfe-H f -, , '. , , Y ' lk: Vi-r. 'n A----m-F Q ' 1 ' , ' . . , f Y Nfl- -1 1 fr, ., .. ' - ,fu 1 ,' ' L E ' . ,, QQ ' A V -' In X '- , Q tg' :Qi,f1?,-251 fy 5 AE -, .Q , ff ' -, ' If - H il '.r T-,S L1 2 'f'fi,1'4. 1 fjkh- A 3.1. Q A IL. T15 X ji ! I .r Il ', 'Vf',.l',Y:,w,5 1:6 ' 5:12111 - 1 .N P ,, ..a YQ' V 'E iff, ' 'i -as-g: ' ' ' ' V - N , t g 1. Ia ? ' f 4 . ,L X. Q -. ' M ' -lip, - .f 11.Ll4 -wx Y' 'RQ , , ' 1 X ' ,-1. ' . , QQM. ff' 'fuk'-A , .,,11g. ' 'Q .,.-' ' ' ' 5 5 - ' - - 1 ,I Y, 7 5 ' Q - NN, K V. -' w E E - E V E ' E : I - - i 4 E E X , -E I+ I b - 2 - - E - : E 'N - 5 N 'z E fir 1:3 i ' .-. Ai 5 W. Z E V - L Q- E 1? w.E Y. V gl' ' E I fs 'ff' 1 ' - E ar -V , 2 4 l ' E ' ' 'fn u ' E 25:24 llv i-1' -'gy - . , A 2 ..- 'I -. H.: . ' E .4 H5 ii L! 5 I E -- -1 ' ' ' E Q' E ' '- E ,1 7 X - - , E - E . Q 1 ' 1 Wu l . . Q E f 'I ei 'f 1-, Ji f Q I a nga lllllliil , E ' IIIIllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllil llllllll lll lllllll lllllllill lllllllllllllll lllllllll illl l lllll l l ll ll ll lll l l 14 0 , wb I-ij U , J. fx H I ' W m J! W H! HQ , 'I A I.: hi ': z 4, , 'I- - Y V3 V' f - 1 , , , , L V?-f J If , -3' 11. f ' ' . Twcf , 'ii ff ' 'X 4 , ,El ' I, ' ' , ,nf 7 7 i ', ' I- nlx. . 'J 'F' ,..: P+' V , ...zainx fr :fy-.-.V - --.,,-51, A A U Z B X22 O -,O ,. 4 . . D EB M 1 E . E E . The 1 5 Ivy Club i E of Ei 15 Rut ers Colle O Z ei g g E, 5 INCORPORATED 1913 ' El E E1 E Esta Viv - E E ' TRUSTEES E ' C. STEWART BECKWITH FLOYD E. NIEHRHOF xl E E JOHN H. LOGAN EDWARD T. PAXTON - Q E E LAWRENCE D. THOMPSON 2 E , E D+ 2 E 2 151 O E 1 ' EIIIIIIllIllIllllIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII N Q I zz . NE E E N E x ' . ' Ziff X .: W IIIIII llllllll lll lllllllll llll Illll Illllllllll tv , Y' lf, l, X I ' liz.,-761 . N - Q , L F V4 V -ETH' W , -I. -N , U- , NT Y ,P , :4-1,Ii LL- ,,.-9' E' , - --P-Lff' r - . Ivy Club . - RESIDENT MEMBERS C. STEWART Bsckwrrx-i JOHN V. Brssmui J. CLYDE ENK CHARLES HALE JOHN H. LOGAN . LEONARD,A. SIBLEY FLOYD 12. MEHRHOE FREDERICK ZIMMERMAN llllllllIllllllllllllllllllilllllllllIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IlllllillllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli Illll IllllllllllllllIllllllllll llllllll llillll E E :. E . X 2 2 N H W Y xl E E N E 2 E 2 E N 152 . ,LL. 5 :, -1 -1 -11 W Q L. .:.-...,..- :, Q2 ll .1 7:2 R f? -ff' T '?'T:m:lE1,. 6. A . . . J E 11. .1 'WA f ' ,-- if R 1 X if-amieivw hx BI. 5' 3 :- !.-f- ------Xb gf? -,V'. L11-f----LH:-Q1.1f-::EQ If. ff- , ,gig Tizfmrw, i ' F FQM' wuyigib 21 1'gpI.f':.51 N Q23 A'f'1,, X'4. .- 'il-LL .Mg ,. PQ 1: ff -. . -H ,,,,..,.f:L3- X1 . ,-ff' :-:YQ .E 'Y ,,,.,,,:..,.-Af H pg! V-11 i E1 'Z 1,-.fl 11211 1' EA - !-Ea. V211 -- 531 E. Eg. 3 13? 151' Q51 IE E1 gl. HE' ':'1 IE! QE! 112 ij E3 122 T--1 'fi Lg iii EJ 'Eh UE' -1 5 E M: I1 151 Q4 I1 E? Q11 3 151 it Undergraduates E 31 CLASS OF 1921 Qi Z' ERNEST A. CLARK, IR. WVENDOLIN RANDOLPH LEBER 'Z Q RAYMOND OLIVER DAVIES LOUIS FOSTER MACK ' I Mi ARTHUR L. FINK NORMAN RIPLEY IVIEHRHOF WALTER ERNEST FLEMING GARWOOD RUSSELL OTTINGER - XNILLIAM LIPPINCOTT HANAWAY CHARLES EDWARD. PAXTON 1 gm SANFORD R. LANGWITI-I WILLIAM CLERIHENV PERRY I'- -IQ CLASS OF 1922 - 423 ROY TVVINING ABBOTT HARRY HAYNER PRATT 5 E' MALCOLM AUGUSTUS ANGUS WILLIAM KNIGHT RUSSELL - f VVILLIAM ANTHONY FEIRER WILLIAM REI ROB'BINS 14- 1 HAROLD CORNELL KAHLE RAYMOND DANIEL SAXE 1 CLASS OF 1923 HE! E ROBERT HENRY BENNETT HEBER ANTHONY LOVELAND 'E' I, WILLIAM SNOW COLBURN VVINTHROP ATXVATER TRAVELL 1 RUDOLPH VOGEL EI' 1 CLASS OF 1924 1? fi HOWARD SERVICE ANDERSON, JR. PAUL BJCCLAIN NIAXWELL gi 3 JOSEPH EVERETT BONVEN ROBERT CARTER GLEY E, -1 WILLIAM HENRY KING GEORGE HERMAN STANWOOD -ll ENOS ROWVLAND LANNING NEXVLIN BECK WATSON X21 Q E 153 .15 'V' 1 1IW'HU'iWlllNNlH!'KI HMM! V IlllkiilwmjlliiilliilililiHM iIH11HPIP1llHilililllllwlilwWWE'EW,'1Ei?Ui:WlUW'UMlW E b , I 'Y V +,L. k Q7 1 fy f Z2 Q., . I' , X , . JE it F li E 5 E E1 El 5 E i is PP IE 'Iii gi . 25 I :Ei Ex E E :H E j U' v. E 2 IA Q dw 1 ,..' Q? h 5 2 2 ? E :I E 1 l 5 . 4 ffivx v 1' - ' if N 'V ' 1' 'E w if E V - 3, V? E fllzllfsnusfdmum 4 y JN Mu fx f U M ' X, V g 4, Xl fx 1: I I I x wx. XA? f L- K 'XA f A AN , . :N X A hi 'K My ww 2, HL fy mmm-' Qu! . . - -f L E 2 E, E E 2 E 2 W Q Z E E 5 E E E E is 5 1 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIHIIIHIIU I IHHIIIHHIHIHllIHIIIIHIIIIIHHIIMIVIHIII II Illllilmlllliiiimmmizfl. ,-..- f f I I YI ' I 'P KZ!-YV . ,DIE - M: 1 , a AV if ai 'iz f v il g 4 if il f 2 N Q. 51,-I . .I f' :W Y! VI?-'aw---LQ. Y ffge -W fLi,,g7'i. -L ' ' Q Lg 9 Y V,, .1 ,K 'drgf f?iL?l ETITQITQT' fe NXT'-'ff I OIL-If-:7CIwg',a-I3 5 l-3 T111 iii fl Lambda Chi Alpha IE li. FOUNDED AT BOSTON UNIVERSITX' 1909 ill - El ZETA ROLL ALPHA .... ........................ . Boston University El GAMMA .... .... A lassachusetts Agricultural College 121' X152 EPSILON .... ........ U niversity of Pennsylvania lil ZETA ..... .... ....... P e nnsylvania State College lj IOTA ...... ...................... B rown University , -- LAMP-DA .... ...Massachusetts Institute of Technology BETA ..... ................. U niversity of Maine yi SIGMA .... .... ..... L T n'iversity of Michigan wg PHI ..... ............... R utgers College i lg DELTA .... ............. I3 ucknell University Z PI ......... ...Worcester Polytechnic Institute il, gli OMICRON. . . .............. Cornell University Tgz E MU ....... ...,... U niversity of California Il 5? TAU .... ...Washington State College 5 115 ETA ...... ..... R hode Island State College gl li 'EJHETA .... ..... . . .Dagmoutlil College it ij PsILoN .... ..... o uisiana tate niversity I XI ........ .......... D e Pauw University lg CHI ...... ............. U niversity of Illino'is lg OMEGA. . . ..... Alabama Polytechnic Institute -. lil KAPPA .... ............ .' .... Kuo? gollege L il? .... .......... I I1VC1'SilH2ign' Cen?-fgia E 1 ' ........... ......... g C L: ii PSI ............. ......... P urdue University 2 lg ALPHA ,ALPI-IA.. ............... Butler College gl ,E ALPHA GAMMA .... .... U niversity of South Dakota ALPHA EPSILON. ......... I-Iarvard University 4, 1 ALPHA ZETA ...,.. ............. C olgate University Al E ALPHA IOTA ..... ........ N orthwestern University E ' ALPHA LAMBDA. ...Oregon Agricultural College gl E ALPHA BETA .... ..... U iiiversity of lfVisconsin fl E ALPHA SIGMA. . . ..... Cumberland University fl f ALPHA PHI ..... ...... ' .University of Alabama ,Eli 'lg ALPHA DELTA. .. .... Missouri School of Mines S ALPHA PI .......... ..... U niversity of Denver i E ALPHA OMICRON ...University of Indiana :Ll ' QLPHA lffflu ........ ........ U glgvergty ofCTExas E LPHA AU ..... ........... ' IO tate o ege 2 : ALPHA ETA ..... .. .Oklahoma A. and M. College :E ALPHA THETA.. .......... Franklin and Marshall lgj 2 ALPHA UPSILGN. .,............. Syracuse University If 5 -ALPHA XI ....., .New Hampshire State College E ALPHA CHI ..... ............. R ighmond College E ALPHA OIMEGA.. ............. 'h'io University E1 E ALPHA KAPPA ..... .............., W abash Collegei I? ALPHA NU ...... .... W estern Reserve University 5 2 ALPHA RHO ..... ............,... C olby College :ll : ALPHA Psi ..... .... U niversity of Washington EE' E GAMMA ALPHA. ........ University of Akron GAMMA GAMMA ..... University of Cincinnati li E GAMMA EPSILON .... ....... U niversity of Pittsburgh ,: E GAMMA ZETA. . . . .lfVashington-Jefferson College Izt E GAMMA IOTA ....... ............ D enison University E .,, GAMMA LAMBDA .... .. ....... University of Chicago S. E . El gl 155 5 T lllllllll ll llllllllllllllllllllTl'lllllllllvlllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllfQllilllllll..ll,.i I' ll ill'illlfllilllllltllllllllllllll l I E E E E E 3 Lambda Ch1 Alpha E E PHI ZETA CHAPTER, FOUNDED 1913, INCORPORATED 1916 E E W Z E TRUSTEES : 1: RUSSELL FLEMING GEORGE W. HERVEY Z E LOUIS N. GRIER HAROLD M. TERRILL 5 2 VV. NIARTIN VAN XVAGENER - E I FRATRES IN URBE ' 5 2 FRANK ARI' ALBERT R. JOHNSON E E ' LEROY S. DRAKE WILLIAM H. STANG E E RUVSSELL FLEMING W. NIARTIN VAN WAGENER E f CLARENCE A. DRAICE Z E A E E E 2 E S E E E E . g E A 156 : ,f IllllllllllIIIIIlIlllllllllllIlIlIllilIllllllIlllIllllllllllIIIIIIlIllHlllllIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 'H 13 ' E Ii' Y J -1-1 pi. N21 M-, ii l .-, lg S1 E1 QE L EV E 154 - .L HQ E A E JE EI 3 Fig E5 -Q 1 it .-1 C Z HE E 1' E 55, S i i 151 2 ei 2 1- I If IE - E E1 IE 5 Eg E S S .S 5' ii E 1: .- LAMBDA CHI ALPHA . . E Undergraduates T -1 i4 1 1 - I CLASS OF 1921 I: . 1,21 ff ,f -X3 8, 0 AM if 1 I V 1 1 1 WARREN J. J. DARWENT CI-IURCHILL CHARLES FRANKLIN iQ li.: ABRAM BECKER DICKINSON IRVING YOULEN GIDLEY JE JOEL NIUNSON JOHNSON If I A CLASS QF 1922 E GEORGE JOHN BRENNER FRANK VICTOR CAI-IILL Ni: ig ALLEN BYRON CLAYTON JOSEPH WALTER ECKHARDT 'E WE E A CLASSOF 1923 E IE A REGINALD EDWARD DICKINSON IRVING COLLIER JOHNSON 5 GEORGE DURLAND FRASER JR. EBERHARD OTTO LINCK I4 1: Y ,Iii gg VVALLACE HENRY GIBSON ALLAN BRUCE LINCOLN ,E lg EDWIN LOUIS GIDLEY VVILFRED P. V. NIULLIN IS E CLASS OF 1924 L ,I WILLIAM FRANKLIN BANSMITH , HENRY SHERMAN INGALLS 12 ' WALTER CALLEN ABISHOP VVALTER FRANKLIN SCOTT E' HARRX' OTTO BLUMENTHAL ROBERT LAKE SHERIDAN 1: f' THOMAS DEXTER DUGGAN VVILLIAM CLARENCE SLAVIK Kip: f- DAVID STANLEY GIBSON VVILBUR D. SLOAN 5 ' 157 P lliliiilllilllll 1 I H1IHIHH1Hill1WilIWIFIMMMIINI1M11H11111l1r1111121r111:11111111111mm111111w1s1f1:1:111m1111111111111.111111w:11wM1'U1 fUlV2W H WEE - 1 4: UE in . It N i M 1' ka X F C , El ld Eg EE KL- 'ix il F E i lm :H vi: 1 U , i 3 WMU - 1: - V i E ' E1 - Q1 U6 mE Q E Q K QP E 1- Z E , E , l HIllllllllllilHI1I1MHHIUMHHill!IIHHHIIIH!HIllIlHIlI1 ll II I I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll -I ,- -I 'fi .rg I it - 1 ,A I-. ,-gr Wi! -I -. L. -P lil. ,W , TEA , V . fr ,A ' I P. .vii If 0252! f I PQ-I T H ' L 'M .',, Zi 449 ' 1 1' V ' ,U L- U?-I ,RK L. L ,M-L Mag-A ,Y .L P ,ffggz-Q mlrzzsk .j 'T -----':'J T ' iii -2-ij, V V pf- ' yf6..f..----- --e '- rr --M-- -ia, ifflffgfge-AA f ',..ff'i Niwlfzf' 'P B'f 'T Tf'f5ff'.El .wb -Q.,-A 13 I it M22 E Kappa Sigma Qi :V IIOUNDED AT LNIVERSITY OF VIRCEINIIX, 1869 If? CHAPTER ROLL Iwi. iii! ' DISTRICT I. LAMBDA, University of Tennessee. Will PSI, Maine University. PHI, Southwestern Presbyterian Uni' ITA' iggil ALPHA LAMBDA, Vermont Un'iversity. versity. lil ,Eff ALPHA RHO, Bowdoin University. OMEGA, University of the South. ll? T23 BETA ALPHA, Brown University. BETA NU, University of Kentucky. ijt 521, BETA KAPPA, New Hampsh'ire College. DISTRICT IX- H511 ii GAMMA EPSILON' Dartmoqth Cpuege' ALPHA SIGMA Ohio State University 'El' ILT GAMMA ETA, Howard University. P ' C' S h 1 f A H d i- IIQQ GAMMA PI, Massachusetts Institute of ETEQHCQU' asc C OO O L pp C C jig TeChnO1Og5iSTRIC.1. H GAMMA XI, Denison University. PI, Swarthmore College. i DISTRICT X' 12 ALPHA EPSILON, University of Pennsyl- CHI, Purdue U111V'2fS1tY-- I , Ei vania. ALPHA GAMMA, University of Illinois. nga IELPHA KAPI'A, Cornell University. -RI-PHA EI, WE1bE5hFC0HigS , ,t in ETA IOTA, L h' h U ' 't , LPHA' I-II, a e ores n1vers1 y. Q51 'Eli GAMMA ZETA? Few H?iJiiIcrSUhiversity. BETA TIHETA, UUiYCfSif.Y of Iildfalla- si GAMMA IOTA, Syracuse University. GAMMA BETA, UIUVCTSIIY of Chlcago- lfzil ,if GAMMIA UPSILON, Rutgers College. DISTRICT XI. DISTRICT III. ALPHA PSI, University of Nebraska. gl ALPIiIA DELTA, Pennsylvania State Col- BETA MU, University of M'innesota. Iii Q ege. BETA RHO, University of Iowa. tj' fl ALPHA PHI, Bucknell University. GAMMA LAMBDA, Iowa State College. L. , fl il BETACDELTA, Washington and jefferson DISTRICT XII- E fl ollege. - - 2:1 BETA PI, Dickinson 'College' ALPHA OMEGA, Vifilliarn Jewell College. , - - - . - BETA GAMMA, University of Missouri. -1 E! GAMMA PHI, West Vlfglnla University. BETA SIGMA Washington University Ei DISTRICT IV. B T k U ' 't G ' IE. gl ZETA, UUiVCYSifY Of Vilfglnia- , BETA IXIIsseciLIrinSZl?1iJBlyof Mines. IXEATA, 5V3UiQ1D1Z'MaC051E011E3eg ,t GAMMA NU, Washburii College. 5, l U, as ing on an ee niversi y. 7 E! E UPSILON, Hainpden-siduey College. ,, PISTRICT MH' T23 E ALPHA ALPHA, University of Maryland. XI, University of Arkansas. lg, E ALPHA ETA, George Vtfashiugton Uni, GAMMA KAPPA, University of Oklahoma. Ei 5 versity. DISTRICT XIV. jjj' in BETA BETA, Richmond College. IOTA, Southwestern University. lill 'I DISTRICT V TAU University of Texas iii' gy DELTA, Davidson College. ' DISTRICT XV. gl -W1 BETA CPrirnej, Trinity College. BETA OMICRON, University of Denver. 'ET I' ALPHA NU, Wofford College. BETA OMEGA, Colorado College. TIE, 5, BETA UPSILON, N. C. A. and E. College. GAMMA GAMMA, Colorado School of E' DISTRICT VI Mines- E' As - G . . . M, 5: BETA, University of Ambama, GAMMA Rno, Umversity of Arizona. El 1 ALPHA BETA, Mercer University. GAMMA TAU, University of Colorado. I ALPHA TAU, Georgia Institute of Tech- DISTRICT XVI. FEI E nology. U E BETA ZETA, Leland Stanford, Ir., Uni- ' BETA ETA, Alabama Polytechnic Insti- versity. fgij ,gi tute. BETA XI, University of California. gil 'Il BETA LAMBDA, University of Georgia. DISTRICT XVII. ,EH Z I B 2 DISTRICT VII. GAMMA, Louisiana S-tate University. SIGMA, Tulane University. ALPHA UPs1LoN, Millsaps College. DISTRICT VIII KAPPA Vanderbilt University BETA Psi, University of VVashington. GAMMA ALPHA, University of Oregon. GAMMA THETA, University of Idaho. GAMMA MU VVashington State College. GANIMA SIGMA Oregon Agricultural Col e e 'lil' itil El El IL 5 ' I ' D' 3 159 IIIIIIUIIIIIIMUI l' ll ll Il Mnmmillllll IIllllliI1lsI1HIIIIiljllmmmnlIIIIIsllllIll.illmmllli1lMil2I5IIIIIllrIzIIUI1l1la1tlli:l:l.lll.m2lwily-IliItWslllllilslmlzl:lwMQlEi 1.5 1 'f L X' E E E Kappa Sigma GAMMA UI'sII.oN, ESTABLISHED 1918 TRUSTEES A. T. IXICNIICHAEL H. R. LEWIS LUTHER H. IVIARTIN - LEONARD S. BRIGGS VV. H. DURHARI A WALLACE T. EAKINS VVILLIAM V. BECKER RESIDENT MEMBERS W. H. DURHAM LUTHER I-I. MARTIN GEORGE W. NIARTIN H. R. LEWIS VVALLACE T. EAKINS PAUL S, I-IANEY ALUMNI CHAPTERS AND CLUBS Atlanta, Georgia Baltimore, Maryland Boston, Massachusetts Birniingham, Alabama Chattanooga, Tennessee Chicago, Illinois Cincinnati, Ohio Denver, Colorado Ithaca, New York Indianapolis, Indiana Lincoln, Nebraska Little Rock, Ankansas Los Angeles, California Louisville, Kentucky Memphis, Tennessee Milwaukee Wiscoiisxn Nashville, Tennessee New York, New York New Orleans, Louisiana Oakland, California Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Omaha, Nebraska Peoria, Illinois Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Portland, Maine Providence, Rhode Island San Francisco, California Seattle, Vlfashington St. Louis, Missouri Syracuse, New York Tucson Arizona 'Washington D C Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l llllllllllllll Ill WlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIII l is Q .1 ,-17 E3 ,..:...-. ,.: 1-at-lf. . 4, +4 ,,..,, :I I I A1 S if fi :gf - I . 'TP I .L ::::S. N El: Hs? 2 L- X: iz: ki- va - VV- -X nn N2-L X 32 J RQ 2' ,fd V np' 'I 64 Ivy , 7 ,iw .ed E Of I S. S, BX my a Z3 I I fx: T 'JOHN-'amS'x Lwglk lj- Q 'W' -A--HA A SSTL A -L1fiO,,,f2? ig :Q Er H 124 E' .1 EJ Eg is E12 21 El E I TEH El u:1 i 5 WH E E Ag JE I :Ji - lf' H E Undergraduates Z E E CLASS OP 1921 E 2 HENRY VERNON ASPINALL GEORGE M. MCVEY E - JOHN CLARENCE BROWN PAUL REXEORD BJOLINEUX 2 RICHARD WHITE DUNHAM NEAL DOW QUIMBY E 15 VVILLIAM A. LOTT RICHARD WILERED SOOY f E1 JOHN MORRIS SUMMERILL 5 CLASS OF 1922 F RANSFORD JAMES ABBOTT WALTER LANG NIOLINEUX I 'EJ WATSON HENRY BOUDINOT RAYMOND VINCENT POTTER I E RAYMOND EDGAR CRAY WARREN CROWELL RANDOLPH i: 'I GARRETT IRONS JOHNSON JOHN VVESLEY RASTALL E E OSCAR ESKENSEN MATHIASON GEORGE WANAMAKER SOOY E 55 CLASS OF 1923 ig' BEDA VOGT BECKER JOHN CLARENCE HOFER Z J2 EDWARD HENRY BENZONT HAROLD RODMAN LAMBERT E il FREDERICK WILLIAM DUNHAM RALPH NEWTON PARTRIDGE gl JOHN CRAMER FRANKE HOWARD BURTON RAUB I - LEO EDWIN GIEBEL GEORGE BOUD ROBINSON ri I HAROLD DEWITT GOULDEN DONALD NORTON SCHAFFER 15 If HENRY JOHN HEINE GYSBERT OWEN STRYKER Hi! fl ROLAND VINCENT TAILBY Ag 3 CLASS OF 1924 vi 1 PAUL EDMUND CHESTER EDGAR JOHN POTTER - IRVING ABEL HANSEN STEPHEN FRANCHON SAYRE NIH JOHN BAILEY 1XqOLINEUX ANDREW JACKSON STEELMAN HES' i GEORGE WESLEY SMITH XE E l-J 161 F17 I H l ' 11Ifm1H111111111JMI111I1I111I11111IU1I11111I1111111H111111HMM11111111m:1111m11111111111111111111-1WU1111111'1111U11'11N?14'11111w1Hl11U311111111:111:11,'1J1 11 111 5 -N X E E 2 E 2 E E 5 I gg: . f I f vvP+fpY w w S y.,f -.l4Vi!M1FgIj,1ylt,1 E 1ij f'HlEAsf1 'x W ,!QMl4 ' E ' Q E my E X fr list, E . E Z1 'I E R I IL. ii -I A !,.+- 9-fs f ' . . ,I . ' if N :P 'Q X- ' . .. :ff ckfd 1 ' I T' I . Qs If is 1 -I ,IQ-::i.:L..:Ii,x gf:'.g..-,.EE:.-,i ':L: : ..1'iQ L 'TELL' ..i:L'iT.., ',3i32i'if':t-. is 1 ri :ff E .. fe 1 . Lie: ., 'Eb Q ' 5 xx lx J, ,Qi I 5: 17? Amie-9 Q V5JQ7i'5 1:g' ,a-ff' 'T E El I: lgil ISI . Phi Gamma Delta gg :N - - gf' . .gl Q FOUNDED AT NVASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE 1848 :I it gl ACTIVE CHAPTERS Ei IEII SECTION I. SECTION IX. EI IQI AMHERST, AU11'1C1'Sf, Mass- DE PAUW, Greencastle, Ind. Z ,QI BROWN, PYOVMCUCC, R- I- HANOVER, Hanover, Ind. gl gi DART-MOUTH, Hanover, N. H. INDIANA, Bloomington, Ind. it MAINE. UFOUO, MC- PIIRDUE, Lafayette, Ind. ' MASS. INST. TECH., Boston, Mass. WABASH, Crawfordsville, Ind, 1 E11 TRINITY, Hartford, Conn. Z WILLIAMS, Williamstown, Mass. SECTION X, If ,gy WORCESTER TECH., Worcester, Mass. A U . .t A1 - -I New Cm SIIIIIII 55322252 - +I SECTION H. TQENNES-SEE, Knoxville, Tenn. T COLUMBIA, New York, N. Y. , 1 1 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, New York, N. Y. SECTION XI- 'Q RUTGERS, New Brunswick, N. J. CHICAGO, Chicago, IH, H SEQTIQN III. ILLINOIS, Champaign, Ill. :I COLGATEV Hamilton, N. Y. ELINOIE YVEsl.EYAfii Bloomington, Ill. j CORNELL, Ithaca, N. Y. MNOXE 3 ejkufgh b- M. h L 3 SYRACUSE, Syracuse, N. Y. MICHTIGANf Y Off. E i UNION, Schenectady, N. Y. Mig?Si?OGS'iS mn' E E, SECTION Iv. 1 ' ' E JOHNS HOPKINS, Baltimore, Md. SECTION XII- E I LAFAYETTE, Easton, Pa. I I - I F- Y' LEHIGH, South Bet'hlehem,' Pa. S2ffT1,CX,fgef,a1a' 1 PENNSYLVANIA, Ph1lade1ph1a, Pa. KANSAS, Lawrence, Kan' E I SECTIQN V, MISSOURI, Columbia, MO, E V BUCKNELL, Lewisburg, Pa. SITZBRASKAI Lmcolni-,Tgeb M. EI GETTYSBURG, Gettysburg, Pa, ILLIAM JEVVELL, 1 erty, Iss. E E E E I I I PENN STATE, State College, Pa. SECTION VI. RICHMOND COLLEGE, Richmond, Va. VIRGINIA, University, Va. WASHINGTON AND LEE, Lexington, Va. SECTION VII. ALLEGHENEY, Meadville, Pa. PITTSBURGH, Pittsburgh, Pa. WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON, Washing- ton, Pa. WESTERN RESERXE Cleveland O. SECTION VIII. DENISON Granville O. OHIO STATE Columbus O. OHIO VVESLEYAN Delaware O. WITTENBURG Springfield O. SECTION XIII. COLORADO COLLEGE, Colorado Springs, Colo. COLORADO UNIV., Boulder, Colo. SECTION XIV. OREGON, Eugene, Ore. WASHINGTON, Seattle, Wash. SECTION XV. CALIFORNIA Berkeley Cal. STANFORD Stanford University a. SECTION XVI. OKLAHOMA Norman Okla. TEXAS Austin Tex. ii , 1 7 y C I E , , , , 3 E J 7 J Y E , , , , I E I E I! E I : 163 IE E IIIIII Il Illllllllllllll IIWIUMIMIMUIMMUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHEMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWUEI TE y 3 H I 'I-ff.. U r :- 4 I 'M I- J V5 ,-I ? ii E Phi Gamma Delta NU BETA CHAPTER, ESTABLXSHED 1918 CFouncled as the Scarlet Club, 19091 DAvID H. BOWMAN TRUSTEES JACOB G. LIPMAN H. ADDINGTON SCHELL FRANK F. THOMPSON PIENRY L. VAN BIATER RESIDENT MEMBERS DAVID H. FALES XVALTER S. GRAECEN J. VOLNEY LEWIS THOMAS H. LETSON JACOB G. LIPMAN CHARLES H. MACDONALD FRANK F. THOMPSON HENRX' L. VAN BLIATER CARL R. VVOODWARD HARRY O. SAMPSON CHARLES SPRINGHORN ELBA VVATSON , FRED W. JACKSON EDWIN JN. BILLETDOUX GRADUATE CHAPTERS ALPHA, La Fayette, Ind. BETA, Indianapolis, Ind. -:DELTA CHI, Wfashington, D. C. DELTA MU, Detroit, Mich. KAPPA, Chicago, Ill. LAMBDA, Dayton, O. XI, New York, N. Y. OMICRON, Pittsburgh, Pa. TAU, Denver, Colo. CHI, Toledo, O. PSI, Cincinnati, O. IOTA, Spokane, Wash. ALBANX', Schenectady, N. Y. 'ALLENTOwN, Allentown, Pa. BALTIMORE, Baltimore, Md. BIRMINGHAM, Birmingham, Ala. BUFFALO, Buffalo, N. Y. CLEVELAND, Cleveland, O. COLUMBUS Columbus O DALLAS Dallas Ter. DES MOINES Des Nloines Ia 'H-ARVARD, Cambridge, Mass. IQANSAS CITY, Kansas City, Mo. ' IKNOXVILLE, Knoxville, Tenn. KOROMO, Indianapolis, Ind. LINCOLN, Lincoln, Neb. - LOS JANGELES, Los Angeles, Cal. BIADISON, Madison, W is. Nl.-XINE, Orono, Me. NEWARK, Newark, N. J. OMAHA, Omaha, Neb. OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma City, Okla. PEORIA, Peoria, Ill. E i I I I ig 5 E l E E E E E I l E Es' E E PHILADELPHIA, Philadelphia, Pa. E PORTLAND, Portland, Ore. QUINCY, Quincy, Ill. RICHMOND, Richmond, Va. SEATTLE, Seattle, Wasli. SPRINGFIELD, Springfield, O. ST JOSEPH St Joseph Mo ST LOUIS St Louis MO SYRKCUSE Syracuse NI Y TULS A Tulsa Okla E 1 il 7-. v N I - I I ' ' E E E - ' E E L 164 I , Illlllllllllllllllllllllll I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I I IIII llllllllll Illlllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIAIIIIIII III IIII Illllllllllllii il EH Ei I - -I .... ,V :I il L.-NNN if-L I F-1'ii5 'C 'C I' ,-,WL ,N 2?g3:4 SNQ5Al lv ? ,Irv -----A--.rg-I :. ' r- ' ' 'I I ' . I I- -N-. jr H. Y- Xg 'gJ' fx .111 P' I4 I ' 'I , 1 H 5,2452 xx. 5 ff A ,' . , ,W . Q., , ,L ,LAN LLL. 'fix ISL ff . - A A--H, , PLA'- ------1 , mi, I . A----A f--A ------ fr-A , - -, 1-M AEK ? ' ig Ev,-a,,T 'gzrf' Veg! if IEE wi - -7- A , ME' 1 W ffl' ki ' NE 12, Mi 'EP' N5 JE: Mi! E EJ FEE EJ E :Q Hg ii. Ii' E1 IE 5 JE 24 .ji in 15 Eg VE! Q24 E92 If E? S iii! JE L, . EJ 2 if E :il I E, ,I E1 JE! E 3 Undergraduates - CLASS OF 1921 ,- ggi EDMUND UTTER BURHANS JEROME ADRIAN IWERQUELIN I E1 FRANCIS JOHNSTON CHRISTIE FREDERICK LECONGE MUI,I,ER lg VICTOR TRVING CRUSER DAVID GORDON LVIULLISON 7 ii ABRAM WILBUR DURYEE WILLIAM LYONS SCHOONMAKER 3 CLAUDE WESLEY HARKINS WALTER EDMUND FRANKE E- 53 HENRY LEA MASON '- :EI gif CLASS OF 1922 5 LESLIE NIILO BLACK DANIEL GARVER KULTHAU Z 1 FRANK LEWIS JOHNSON ERNEST RAYMOND PALEN 5 RALPH EMERSON STONE - is CLASS OF 1923 T 2' ' EVERETT FOGG DAVIS THOMAS CARNEY SUMMERILL , 3 EUGENE CLARK DURYEE GEORGE ROBERT AUGUST NVIRTH 1 : HARRY CARL GEIE CASSIUS MARCUS WRIGHT - E GEORGE KENNETH MACDONALD WALTER OWEN RTANNVARING g E! JULIUS RICHARDS NELSON GEORGE ADDISON MAGEE Ig fy CLASS OF 1924 I L, : iN JAMES MITCHELL CASSIDY KENNETH ELTON RITSCHER :E JOHN BOLTON ALBERT ROBERTSON COLVILLE lg 'I KENNETH CLEMENT ECKRODE VVILLIAM GERHARD KIEB ,EH I, ARTHUR CLAUS HOMEX'ER KEARNEY YARNELL KULTHAU Tgij -,1 LEONARD GEORGE NIETZGER GEORGE SEIBERT FEI -'1 , ,SEQ El EI I 15:1 wi' 51 n 165 JEJ 1 rl Illlllllllllllllll I I HI llllll H HHN W HMI EM! J1IfEJZHN11NIl4HEWHHMJMMMiiHI11lW11fHlNH3Nlae1iiIIMNEJINFNMJZNWHYWHUIIUNIIW,WW 'I V11 W1'jlWll1Ni35NiJ2MME! ' 'Ng-rf RJ f R, I WIIIIIIII TN IIIIIIIIIIII I I III IIIIIII II III 'muh i 2 .wi Q E LI - 5 X16 I 5 07773 12 0 E Illllllllllllll lllll llIlIllIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHHIIIHHIIIHIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIHIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIHH IIIIIIIIII I IIII I I IIIIII I III IIIIIIIIII II lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll E , E , E , - ' E , E . I E E E . E E , A . E , ' E I E ' I llllllll-llill N ,Q 11' . , -1' ' T 22, tj ,922 4-1, :Q 2 . li A :E 1 E . . . 1 l: A Phi Epsilon P1 E Q E FOUNDED AT THE COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK 1902 : n CHAPTER ROLL 2 Eastern Province i ALPHA ....... ....,........ . C. C. N. Z ig BETA ........ ..... C olumbia University I gg KAPPA .... ............... N . Y. U. : F LAMBDA ..... ...... R utgers College fl E EPSILON .............. ..... C ornell University - 15 -CHI ................... ....... S yracuse University E Middle Atlantic Province ? i ETA ....,.............. ..... U niversity of Pennsylvania '- Z THETA ..........,.... .... P ennsylvania State College 5 ZETA .... ..... U niversity of Pittsburgh! E ' IOTA .... .... .......... D i ckinson College I : PHI ...........,.. ..... C arnegie Tech. 3 E1-zgland Province ' E ? E OMICRON ......... ................ ' Tufts College E : PI ............. .....,...... U niversity of Maine E RHO ........... .... R hode Island State College E E UPSILON .......... ..... C onnecticut State College E E - ALPHA ALPHA ...,. ......... D artmouth College ' E SOMfI'LL'7'1'L Proffince E E MU, ............. .......... U niversity of Georgia E E NU ..... ........... University of Virginia E f XI ............. ...... G eorgia School of Technology E 5 DELTA ........... ., .... Wasliiiigton and Lee University f ALPHA EPSILON .... ......,. J ohns Hopkins University E lllid-lfffestem Pnwinte E GAMMA ............ .... . Northwestern University E I PSI ....,....... ......... U niversity of Illinois E 1 OMEGA .......... ..... U niversity of Cincinnati E Q ALPHA BETA ..... ......... U niversity of. Iowa E Q ' , E 5 E - E Z 167 IIIIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllll IllllllllllllllllllllllllllHMMilHillllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIllll lllll I llllmlllh, 4? zz zz fan:-1---.X -- f E 4 , A 1' 'S I E E' E 2 3 9 O n 1 E Ph1 Eps1lon PI I E E E LMVIBDA, FOUNDED 1915 .Z g : E TRUSTEES E WILLIAM NEWCORN ABE J. DAX'ID ? E VVILLIAM -M. CHERRY ARTHUR R. LEWIS E LOUIS B. GITTLI-:MAN HARVEY T. MI-INN E THEODORE ROSEN : RESIDENT MEMBERS 2 E MORRIS BREITKOPF MAX LEVY E E PHILLIP M. BRENNER ENIANUEL BREITKOPF E 5 ROBERT H. STAHL Q E E E ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS 2 E Eastern Pennsylvania A. A .......................... Philadelphia, Pa. T 5 Western Pennsylvania A. A ..... ..... P ittsburgh, Pa. E E Rhode Island A. A ............. .... P rovidence, R. I. 2 E Connecticut A. A ....... .... H artford, COIU1- E E Boston A. A ............' ................................ B oston, Mass. Z State of Georgia A. A ................................... Atlanta, Ga. E lllll ...New York City ..Ch'icagO, Ill. New York Clty A. A .............................. . Chicago A. A ........................................... South Jersey A. A .............................. x..Atlar1tic City, Nl I. North Jersey A. A ..................................... Newark, N. I. 168 E E ll IIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IlllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I- E ,..-.B,m,.-. :.f.-.:..g..-.:zl.,:.1 1 ,.,,,..-.,.-,........1.-,-.. , . . L-.LX ..f- -- . I ,. I Ag:-1-rf::'.'1':S7.-.T-. 'Y l J X73 W A A ' A .Af 51' 1 '19 ' 'A X1 A .A ff f , 17 if E as ix ,fy it .1 f 3. vu .ffl ji, K .N , ' Ai, --.U ,. ....,i,1..,,,.-.Nj ,,f,A-f..-. -. .,.x V--.N--......nL fp 1, -A lx ,,1f ' ' .Q-N ,jg,, '-- X:-R :ff P-3 Y l.'.V.w-----f:1-- - T .Q ,, Afgiiff' ' ' Qi V E E1 A AE JE 1- E4 Ai 1:4 1 - , E , ii ' :1 I .-V - SH ' : Z- Q1 1-1 ., 144 1 - :E E1 'U E31 E11 Z. Ei , 2 L, ,ll 1:5 1 - 1: 1- -, ,LII .41 A -Ea? :ll Cl : 11' -v ir: 1 L ,ix Q I 13 E E 2 E 2 E A S 5 E f PHI EPSILON PI V-' s Undergraduates M E1 CLASS OF 1921 E SAMUEL D. HOFFMAN AARON ROTH R- : NIAX LEVIN LEO. W. STEINER 11 CLASS OF 1922 E I JOHN I. ALBERT NVILLIAM W. HERSOHN - I BENjAM1N S. LEON . 2 CLASS OF 1923 - 2 SAUL R. ALEXANDER JOSHUA L. STRAUSS I 5 HAROLD S. CONNAMACHER DAVID PAUL VVEISBERG ' 2 MARKS HENRX' SHEYER SAMUEL VVEITZMAN ' A CLASS OF 1924 2 E BENJAMIN BERAINGHAUSE LEO FRIEDBERG NE E ALEXANDER FELLER RQBERT GARLOCK 2 E DANIEL FELLER J. GEORGE NIEYERS, JR. I E E L E .E 169 ' E IllllllllllllllllllllIHHHHHHIHHHHHHHIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIHHHHIIHHHHMIHIHIIIIHIHIHIIIIIIII l IHHll1I1l1INI1IlIlI1l IItHIIILIlIH1H!I!HHi11111I1111Ea111i:1l1!lUI1l1I1!1!I!WWUIHIW!HI1WIH1Ei HW y , il' I V ' , , 44. 1: n Ti ' 1 'M Y , Q fx f w M if 7 J' . 1 -1 LL INANTS HA W W I , 1 ,N 1, M 1 ,. , 'ff-W W , W f+ ff ' ' ' W' l1N'NU' ,Ml H w m!,Hm Wx' W, ww ' ,.,wx,,,,,..,X sfjwi-522f'mn fi U in vm +'-' : fA i ' 4 Xifffilflw ffgij' U'-'LM ' X AX s 1 '. 'A.z+A:-R-in I 1 gr f X. H 1' .f --HL 1' 2 V37 f4.fijQ,17f ., ,,A, ,, 4 75 X - , ,, Q 15 Xgifx Q fx 55 HU Qi'! jY,, WH 1 w ww x ff X -.4 ii S! ia il I-. 121 3 -1 f. :x :lx I V.. K E I gi L -'gl- f-L'-' fig-gas' ,, F- - -- H 1 F ,,r.'-- Alba QE Q ' EX ff' '-gy J 2:1-E-N--,E xc: Q,-, ,ff .fi 55' 'Hy E - E si 3 5 E' 2 ? F ig IE E Mil 21' V if VE 5: VT 1' 2' 2 5 Z E E j 3 E 5 ? Cap and Skull EQ 1- 3'- I7 b HONORARY SENIOR SOiIETY E F RALPH P. S. VAN ORDEN XNILLIAM HERBERT GARDNER Q ld ? ITIENRY GRIFFITH PARKER l- 2 E F E li E , E ij 5 l E a E 172 I mlllllllllllllllllmlllllllmmllllllllmllllllllHIIH Ili IH! IlIlll 1IMIIililllllillllllillllli I Hll llIIIHIIIVH:HIYIJIHHHPIIQHHKH4f1HIIH1llI!IWWIrWIlIWu., fi '4 'x I v ,Mb E lg, uf 24 l A----.nf M-PM Avia'-ml' fs:-'Z A .,-,, ,,.......wiM H , Y' Ti' X affix rzjlgj .. c.g.+-...:nia.-al L LI- 4- PM - - f-----Q----11-h L V,-' xi, ll' Eli 'T . afxxlvi sg cliff H if fir iw S..,:ff2. ik it il I 'Y QQ l 'T' ' T A wx , . l , A ,.,, hi' -ta, . . . . ...nu - - ii M ,W -M morflifl Nfl?-Ei7 if.E'.f': . ,U l V' enqgf, , ff---4 ,,-2' -i..g:,f ' 'T J- urn? Wg. T lazy lil ei lil li il lllllllllllllllllll . UUE El El l ffl El 3 El gl 2 ill ,l ja i :l 4 5 Casque and Dagger ' HONORARVY JUNIOR SOCIETY il E 2 A 2 WALTER E. BEYER HARRY H. PRATT E E E RANSFORD I. ABBOTT EDWIN M. DURAND E DOUGLAS H. DEWITT PAUL J. DUFFY The Casque and Dagger, until this year purely an honorary society, 2 is now exercising complete jurisdiction over the unclerclass rushes and 1 banquets. 3 lu I- l 173 l i lllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll llllil' ll l I HH III HH Il I ll' ll!llIlllIlilllllllmmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllallllallllllllllllll5l1l5llllllllllllllllilllllllllllli. E Ili ' 3 ., a,f 'ee 14 S-J Q , Ziff: AA 13' 5 4' J' e '- -af-ilif , ,-L 5 U ' S' E Phi Beta Kappa N Alpha of New Jersey E Established February 22, 1896 E OFFICERS FOR 1920-21 H .President ....... ...................... X: VALTER TAYLOR MARVIN E Vice,-President ............ ..................... Lo UIS BEVIER E E C07'l'6.Yf7011d'ilZg Secretary .... ................ E DWARD C. JOHNSON E E ,RC'l'0'7'fH1L3'1 Secrefmry .... .... ' .WILLIAM VAN NEST GARRETTSON E Treasurer ............ ...... ........... G 1: ORGE H. BROWN I E E N Q ? , E . . 174 A 2 IIIIIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllIlIlllIllllIllllllIlililllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllll lllllll Ill HNIII Illl I I Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll W: 715, 35-w E El 'Ei EM 'EW EN ,gf ,E-if UE! ,Ex Ek X11 N ,--N1 ME! ,114 Vfitw 4:1 Urn ,M 1, Zu ,fy 'xiii EF? :rig E2 EL lgfl iw 1 1 -w Eu WEE? 523 :Eu YE? MEN El 153 EET 'EU lg IEW Nil HE' N31 , W. g 123 EN eil iid 'YI E E .1-g,,g..-1- .,1,4.Xk ,. ,.v, .,,., , XEJ -if--- , , Y -Q , , , .Xb W 'iw 'LTiil Wrif1-'if'fN---f- xx we f 'fp mwvuv K M QXXXYQ -ifi?-rvlfif k if-----4 mix Q- 'u 1ff-, +4- ,, X, if ff R, -.yr f 'ff'.,1 J : ,V Qf:....,, THLL C Li . -Q E' JJ 1 c L X Q W 4 J I H W Q- fx! !74f.',' E3 Q ' M-' 1 f I Q N 1 K if I Q .5 - 39177 J 7 00 v k ,L 5K xff i 5 ll wfqlww H, 1 rg' .9 H 5 Q N L1 J ,lf l I UIHHNMHH H49 INHMHMMMHIWIWMMM 1HMHHWWWiwi HUmzjL wL iMwE ' Wwww:U1V1 w mWMLM H W L. ,L 22 'I Q3 , f'e,..:g.:+ 22 ---N A ' .km--Q-S--t X . We-A-- T IE.-Q-A-. . N If J fe- a eff 4 Fil E Athleuc Association ie E lil President ........... JOHN M. SUMMERILL, JR., 38 College Ave. I2 l'ivc-Pnvsidmzt ..... RALPH P. S. VAN ORDEN, 18 College Ave. 3 .Sierretury ........ E. C. DURYEE, Hertzog Hall, Seminary Pl. 1 j 71-ca.vzm-r ...... NYM. P. GARRISON, Ballantine Gymnasium -i i BOARD OF TRUSTEES - 4:2 P l'1-esidt-nf .......... ............................. 13 R. ELIOT R. PATSON E l'icv-Pnvsuiwzt ..... ..,.. D EAN LOUIS BEviER -Q E Svcrelary ...,.... ......... ......... ...... L L ' THER H. lXlARTIN gn, Treasurer' .................... ..................... X Yu. P. G.ARRlSON 12, : PROE. M. A. BLAKE GEORGE V. N. BALDWIN, JR. E E FREDERICK AVElGEI. l-l. V. M. DENN1S : E CHARLES H. REED 2 BOARD Ol? AIANAGERS E - - - 1 E FACULTY REPRESENTATIVES I DEAN LOUIS BEVIIER .......................,................ Rutgers College E : DR. PBLIOT R. PAYSON ..... .......................... R utgers College E 5 MR. JAMES H. RETLLY .... ............................ l Rutgers College E I PROF. M. A. BLAKE ..............., Agr. lfxp. Station, New Brunswick, N. E E ALUMNI REPRESENTATIVES 5 E l'lOLMES V. M. DENN1S ............................ 261 Broadway, New York , I l-I. RICHAIQD SEGOINE ............ l-liglilancl Park Bldg. Co., 238 Cleveland Ave., ' New Brunsw'ick, N. J. .E E R. C. R1cE.. ............ cfo J. K. Rice, Jr., 8 Co., 36 lVall Street, New York E E UNDERGRADUATE VOTING MEMBERS , E WM. H. GARDNER ................. A .... Senior Representative, 74 College Ave. E PAUL J. DUFFY ........ .... J unior Representative, 74 College Ave. E E ALLEN C. SHERMAN ............................... Sophomore Representative E E 2 NONNOTING DELEGATES E E RANSFORD J. ABBOTT ...................... Manager Football, 38 College Ave. E E LEWELLYN N. PRATT. .... Manager Baseball, 18 College Ave. E E HERBERT I. REDMOND . ...Manager Basketball, 18 College Ave. E 2 IRVING TC. JOHNSON. . . .... Manager Gymnasium, 502 George St. : E GILBERT B. KEELER. .. ..... Manager Tennis, 77 Hamilton St. E 2 RENIBERT W. BURBANK ....., Manager Lacrosse, 74 College Ave. E E FRANCIS J. CHRISTTE ..... .......... B Hanager Track, Seminary Place E 2 -EDWARD F. O,DAIR. ..... ...,..... A flanager Swimming, 514 Ford' Hall E E HERMAN R. TERHUNE ..... .... A lanager Cross-Country, 74 College Ave. E F. ARTHUR HALL ........ ....... C aptain Basketball, 74 College Ave. E E FRANK V. CAHILL .... ..... C aptain Gymnasium, 502 George St. E XVM. R. BOOCOCK .... ..... C aptain Ten.nis,'77 Hamilton St. 5 E J. M. JOHN-SON .....,. .,.... C aptain Lacrosse, 502 George St. E E DOUGLAS H. DEWITT. ........... Captain Track, Bleeker Place ': E ALFRED K. SHERXVIN ..... ....... C apta'in Swimming, 77 Hamilton St. E ' ROBERT E. CRANE ..... .... C aptain Cross-Country, Bleeker Place E E E E E 176 E - lllllllllll lllllIIllllllllIIlIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Ill llllllllllll Illlllllllllllllll IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllll 'X' If V ,- EI ? if ,U f . .L , X -Mfr LQ . ,, XM- Ay- f , . . if W f XL 55 5::-3412 'xl may U Kfsg ff-J Q51 5 1 - ,-U., ' :. 1 AZ. -1. :G ,' - i f XR. '-Qt Q51 XL' iffy , W -li-112, wgf,.,.,4ag g:3? 4- 1 f1f'f'Nf x X fr 1 ,cv '-A 'wifi , iw 71 , ,,fff'f12J' 'XI' '-ff Q, E ' :.-es-4:n .,.,f ' ,-.u 41 IQ, -E, --x fig --x ,L ,-. V 4-x :M Z! gl QV 5: ,3. 'Z vfg 1 '25 Wjf E QQ if H3 12 f FW 'EQ 'N iii' 2' Nw f EQ U3 YI, E fig 1!iU 3552 ES Vi! 12 Nj 2:1 125' Ng? NEI flf, Egg vi EJ Et! 1221 E! EH EV EV ag w-, E! II' ll? Q33 Ili' a- i2 V4 E+ El 55' Ee gh 513 EI 5. if Q P4 Q EE 3 E 2 Il il i 1. EU 2 iii 3 ein 11 43 lgf lei!! -N mis 2 Ev i1 T EH s E ,SL E1 1-- ' il I WW mx Hmr mlmlmmymmmmsmmwmmwlmummMmwm:uwmmwwgw rmww 11 1 m wuw:jwm will' gQg w3H!1Ef 1920 EAM, T L SITY FOOTISAL R VA am- Q V -....,.....-.--L:-,Q ,.fv fr--Kg fA , r gr, .. .. ,, .Ay -----------S 4' - , 41' yt. 1 . ,, Y if fi? lx 2 ff L '- fu tfiis '-i' 'f'--f sa ff Q we 2 -4, ,G A WPHQQ., YR . l ffl, W .N .. . mi :AZ-:gh N A .gn u -gig' ?y,,,4,...,. ......... ,,Y..- 4 an f- ye 4, 1 --pf f -.1-X, 3' 7 ' ' ' f-N-2... .L,:,,. i??iT::'--- f ' Vi. QA! V ' ' Football Season 1 920 , The 1920 season of football here at Rutgers was the V least successful season during Coach Sanford's connec- J at gl 2 tions with the University. :ffl . - At the conclusion of last season, and even the begin- ning of this, with a large number of men well trained in Sanfordian tactics, prospects for an excellent team El .f if it -:li ,Yu v l'll ll il ll ,ill 'N l ,q i 155 E 'il F-i fi r 1- , ' looked bright. Unfortunately, however, some of the most If' ,f K valuable men left college and Mr. Sanford, with his ,ir assistants, Rendall and XVhittpenn, had nothing but green V Q material with which to work. n fig ' - All these menwho left have made estimable records will in this branch of athletics in the colleges with which tg they are now afhliated, showing that they would have it .been of great value to the Scarlet. 521 r Notwithstanding these handicaps, V 7. 1. av . +221 t -from about sixty-five men a nucleus E i was picked and trained, so -that even E ' though they were unsuccessfull in the ,je i up outcome of the games they made a very creditable showing and the who-le SANDY cfollegle reaiffes 'ixhlat they did their best '23 or tieir ma ater. ill The schedule was ra-ther heavy, but was arranged by 'Eh Manager Abbott when the prospects looked good. Coach Sanford, although disappointed, is not discour- aged and will be with us another year to build up his strong machine, which has heretofore been looked upon with envy 5551 by larger institutions. Such an example of faithfulness E1 deserves the best that we can give. Captain Gardner, Duffy and Witn- ii ner were kept out of some of the big- igi gest games because of injuries sustained ll? in the early part of the season. 'ATHUGH URSINUS: 14-7-The foo-ttball season opened with llgl Ursinus, who, for the first time in all the times they f have played against the Scarlet, succeeded in coming out with a victory. It was a big surprise to all, but 1: they played an excellent game. E. UNIVERSITY or MARYLAND: O-7-After the JE, defeat in the first game pressure was brought to bear, and gif, the Maryland team suffered defeat to the tune of 7-0,1 ,ll not an overwhelming victory, but enough to give the team Hi confidence to see them through the season. LEI-HGH: 9-O-With an escort of the larger part of the student body the Scarlet invaded the town of South li Bethlehem and fought one of the hardest battles of the 1NIIK-EY, season with the Lehigh team. The outcome, however, in li, 179 l ,MlllllMMMllilillHulllfillblllllllvils-iHMM .Mlmvw.' iliggg,w'smMQlH,wi i l QQ ll L v r l gg. 5 if-S ? -V '- Qs -,..t......-is ,V r. -..',.,4. H .sf i V es Y,-...Q i -, - ' 1 ' ,.. , .- ' a,x.J ftT5557'14 q ::-is-N I I ,lin . ,- all I S79 if li j it I fi s.f,. , KX , v , , X. -1 Q i 1 J - K ff 1 SA-A ilu fx it T i il Iii Ei' lg: a - i il li 'i ,E ii EEF.. A H F EE 1 lil lff -ti 'Eli Ei' -i -1 -L til eil sf. , -kxxagbsjfjf ixxljf ' UE' ,- was disappointing and added another defeat to the Rutgers column. VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE: 6-19-Like a see-saw the team won the fourth game and evened up the results, so after a hard- fought contest savoring of new found iii skill on the part of our team the blow- I1 ing of the whistle awoke the spectators if to the fact that we had defeated the If invaders from the South. ilily UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA: Eli 7-O-Revenge is sweet and another STE'- Southern team came up to show Rut- L' gers how to play football. They had a dilhcult time with their demonstra- ,EI tion and it was only by their very sturdy bracing in their own territory my that they kept the score from being a tie. ISV TURN, CORNELL: 24-0-For the first ARAB time in years Cornell appeared on Rut- gers' schedule and with fifteen or twenty loyal Rutgers men-who say ,ii littlelabout how they went there to cheer them on-they succeeded in Ei showing the Ithacans that this little jersey team knows a little about foot- ball. I-Iowever, we were unable to prevent defeat and came back to get E4 et in trim for the next game-three days later. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA: 28-O-The Giants of the Wfest they certainly were, and even Howie Raub looked like a midget beside Eli some of the Cornhuskers They were like a stone wall and the little fl Ely Rutgers team could not do much except bring the onlookers to the sup- - IE, port of the little fellows. - iii - I iii. .V 'lx S IQ - fig gi is E' - is j Ei i it 2 Qi , lei Q VIRGINIA POLY GAME p iso id igillllilmllIilHWWIIWHIWllllilllWIllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllIUUUIIHHHill I lllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIItIlllllJllHHHillllllllllllllilillllllllillllllll 1 lllll!illlI,llIl!lIliIll ii. nsmmtu Tl.-- ,..-.-.-. M.. , .. sa Y -g:-, L,J, Y,,Js . 1 .4 Jil- 544 5, pair , ,D W. +--as-s -1--FX .1 -s,..Qbw xfigs.f-- .X f V5 V. 1.3 its fd 'i ve'E'vi.i?3 ' ,' M' V . 'ea-T ffl .uf ' .-array amp! :gg-7' A H-fed-g1f,s'f,'Eg at , . we ,S , if me .,,,w,s:,...a-... Calif. f-L. s- . . . .-- I- gnu,-L ,g-e....L.-.... ----- - .. H i,f.1f,,gP K-.,.-L'-ff e--'- ' ' ' ' Are? ff 32:5 , -. ff FLaR,e .' -:4' 45, ' ilk ,,fl,,f.' , .K g ' 9. J ,I -ftgqswf-V r, Q ,lg ,F ...f 'K ii 'T.gl.g1LIfL535!i '- ,ffl XYEST VIRGINIA: Zl-O-The Mountaineers again defeated Rutgers this year, but it was a hard-fought game E, from start to nnish and expressed the rising rivalry of gg these two teams in the past four seasons. UNIVERSITY OF DETRQIT: 27-O-On Thanks- giving Day the Scarlet eleven traveled out to Detroit to meet the mid-XVestern teamg and with the spirit of the last 5 chance and the last game, they put every effort forward to lg win. But, alas! they came back home with the seventh defeat of the season regrettably tucked away in Docls E' pocket. At the end of the season Paul Duffy was chosen captain, with Raymond D. Saxe manager for next year. if So the season ended. Each man in his turn showed 3 signs of excellent playing, but even with the capable leadership of Captain Gardner and Acting-Captain H Redmond the team work was faulty, for new men had to ill be put first in this place and then that to fill the vacancy of some injured member. HPAUL.. Let the past season and its vicissitudes be remembered as one which is likely to come to any team in the course of the changing years, and. work harder than ever before to make the coming season as near- Wlggjl ly as possible like it in cleanness of playing, but unlike it in final results. But in our schedule for next year we are not retrenching. Wle are not choosing to meet those teams which are classed among the weaker elevens. Such is not the' spirit of Rutgers. VVhen, in 1917, we had the team which was hailed the country over :lil 5 ij -aye, and even the world over--as the 'Scarlet Scourgef' we set for our- ,faq y selves an ideal indeed worthy of emulation by any institution. I ry VVe shall hold to our ideals, and know that they will is bring us their proper return. .3 No, if anything, the schedule for the season of 1921 .W will be far harder than that ever before encountered by a Rutgers football team. Of course, we will begin the 3 season by meeting our perennial rival, Ursinus-and far , different indeed wfmst be the result of the game next year than that of the season past. Wie are to meet Lehigh at . Neilson Field. The game with the Brown and VVhite has now assumed the position of the biggest game of the ll SGHSOTJ, ll ill- For two successive years victory has favored the l 1 . l South Bethlehem warriors. The game that is to marl: l H, the turning of the tide is near at hand. :gi ,Q Two universities that have not appeared on our vig .El schedule for some considerable time are to be met on 12 their own home grounds: Lafavette. at Easton, and New York University, at Ohio Field, New York. They ln' are two natural. geographical rivals, and in those games HRAYH we may look to see 'two hard-fought battles. :El ,il . isi fsqegeeefl ies? 1, 41114171l:Li:ef,,.:,f'-.eff-ie if 1, .'Lil.i!l'dlW-l.l Nile I. ill ll i lliggiug, njviffwm, , ,WI..:::,,,,,.-,,A,m...... A.Yf.fu.. .---.M ff. Y ,Y - Q Nam e 'fb ... Z I ff Z2 1:11-1'-Q41 ' 'E r 31 Ei 1:1 '1 21 '-ll 1 v 311 V11 Zigi :gy l it I:- 'iii ,z .Sl il' :I zr 12, if In next year's schedule there is one thing to be noted: only one game-- E1 that with Georgia Tech-is to be played at any great distance from New Z' Brunswick. Thus, in all but that one game we, who are not fortunate Q.-f enough to light for the Scarlet on the gridiron, may at least swarm the stands and cheer the team on to victory. And for those of us who went .21 to Cornell last fall-will a triiling couple of hundred miles be any obstacle? Ei The football season of 1921 is near. Even now spring practice has :eg started. Wie are beginning early, and will prove this coming year the worth of the old maxim: A good start is half the race. - 1920 Varsity Football Team Captain .................................... VVILLIAM H. GARDNER, '21 :il Manager ........... ...... R ANSFORD J. .A.BBOTT, '22 ,:,, Assistant Manager. .. ..... RAYMOND D. SAXE, '22 lf Head C aavlz ......... .... G 1-:ORGE FOSTER SANFORD ii' 1 T fl' v v Assisfalzl Coaches .... .... 3 QSEEQNSHHREQEEEEL Eli Trainer ......... ............. ........... J A KE BESAS THE LINE P' Augustine, Guard I. Scudder, Guard Kahle, Center iii? Sliker, Guard N. Scudder, Tarlele Eckhardt, Tackle .gl Raub, Tackle Dunham, Center Kingman, Tackle jzl H. Redmond, End Lentz, Guard VVinner, End ,Yi Summerill, End Daisely, Tackle .gg E, THE BACKEIELD lil M. Redmond, Half Gardner, Full itgl Maloney, Quarter Beugless, Quarter ig. G. S. Voorhees, Quarter ' Hilliard, Half izw Duffy, Full :I EH El , 2 il? ' ' , A . 83 4 at 3 - Q- I El alll l I-E' lli 1 lil ri , iii 551 El 122, 154 MARYLAND GAME El 4 Q: , 5: :Ei Ea 12' I5 'lil lil 1:1 El E11 ii! Ei lil Ei. fe E. Et 'E Eu I... EQ gp if fl :l 1 al' 182 1 ll lllllll lllllllll!ll!l!llFllllllllllllI lllllll .II IlllNlwllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilflwilllllallllwFllllllilllhllllillllllmmlllllllmllllllll-lllllllll1HUlI ll IME MEL L -. BE Trigg XS' gif fl' A ' .,,AA A. W' witzi i djrrill V MM fx! N ffx xxx f X f ,- XX 4 l If N l Y ' ' f X 40 'HIM I Tx 3 VX f J ' Qld Kiwi W , ' 1 X X x ! NX X r X R Y- - f 6 Q 1 1 fn X + XZ ,f an E N 1 ---d fi WWW'' H'TIWINIHHWWm' EM w mywwQfmMj m w f 1 m T7' T77 1 1 as if 'K 2 fi E i fi, -:Tj Z i ' ' ali A! T X ,Fi ffQ ...i - firfatfr...-..--fHf? 't'XltQX ,if 4 'h aj gf exif?-Tigx A 823111-.,,q 6 ,lily -f-gs A lufvigglw 'xi-11-,:- E .il El .lj I i'-1 71 'l E l gel it' . E' ' 1 - E i: 3 5 1 5:.- 1 .14 , -3 meg 12' vi-i if 1, 4, .iii in . 1- i A32 . I, .tg 3 Y: Eli E. Z2-i E 'irq E 1--it i.:,i .1 :I , ai i t . 'Iii ' - li: i i V-iq Z. l N' '1 ill? l -i gg 12 i 2 .2 lleitl gif 'Till 45. til gi, Nfl VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM, 1920 12 1 4, E, liizi ff Mill E Wil 2 ,if . 3: 53.1 2- iil Baseball Season 1920 V From the standpoint of games won the season of 1920 W -1 'x131,.I - lQ , l wig can hardly be called a success. The record shows five .. - ' 2,12 ., . ,. . ,,, 'fl 133 viotories and nine defeats, but only the spectators at the ig, games can appreciate how fast our opponents played to , 166 ,gg A iff ' -' . A 121, ev. keep the Scarlet from showing a better games won and lost :I +1511 . -. V W. QV. -Ei Mgt standing. g . . in t' . as, , A 1 E251 5133 Although the team was strengthened in the infield by st., . EEN Q l ,, ., X31 19 i .5 A X r X NX ' I Qfii the return of Eddie and Bub Durand from War service, ' ggi 1- 2 lan N iz as qi Y s .fa gi i 5 the great Weakness was in the mound position. Both -, -- Ei i .MN tel , - 1:1 , ,, ,M Mgl Waterfielcl and Leon played good games, but their ability Qgarxf Q in pitching lay not so much in their speed or curves, but .- --te at 1 E17 lill t g E. in outguessing the batter. Unfortunately, too often the - ifgiz 1, - ., ii-, batter outguessed them. A 121 --at MEM The inheld, consisting of the Durand brothers, Talia- fll cf! :Ei ferro and Van Orden, Worked together in fine form: and ggi. gr: A-. AW, .ig the outfield, of Captain Baker, French and VVheeloclq, 2 121 l wil stopped many a ball that was out of reach of the guardians ig. 1 . l ,V .1 .ll i-fi -' . - RALPH,' K ,ii of the inner diamond. El E: iii 5, 2-l lg is V 184 n- '?' 'f'? ,:??::q-4:.:W:r4:.7.7.RTl1TT.T.7T-TTLTT,xx A M W M W -1-M T M W W M ,N , ,N . ., X, 1 .E iiitllilml1'MLtcLQl!llM,lU1E!Lg151111llllilmlgj ,1!M!lJw,l:j!i1iw.g1l31.11im'1.1 ii,,i.i.1-i ,im 1 V :'iiW.w g I jil ..,..,...,i-... rx, K ADX 1 QE f T i xv- f' . K N as , 1 .i ,, ,514 , ., , ,r vf A ,Sze nm S I D23 'iff5f14,'i,,- f,. ' ,f f' f' T' -15 5? F T ' tt X It ff T ,Q +-ii. 'Le .- ,fi53.i'.. S g.::. f.:'rt::g-gf 1, ,Q 5 ' ., X Q -, '-Q53 -ff R is pr' , ' ,af Iac?-5,1 iii- X .. . 375:-V . .. ,,,,..-Q-S-'fi' , , J, -.. 'fi 1. -ea, . -f , ,,::. 32' f' i 'E. Q IE --1 isa, E By far the most interesting game was that against H E f.-. 1: jg our old rival at Castle Point-Stevens. The score re- is I l 5. mained 3-3 from the seventh inning until the thirteenth, r- E. ET when Captain Baker drove in the winning run. t a 2 4 -1 ii 7. I '-iv 7 ,. V 1 7 The game with Delaware was a hard one to lose. ,MQJYEE E vig! Both teams played their best, but the Scarlet could not t Q -11 W H51 overcome the one-run lead that Delaware secured early H in the game. ,QV As in no other sport like baseball, the breaks count ' swuun ,Eg in large measure in deciding the final score, and it was f E1 Ei just at the critical time in most of the games that the El gods of chance chose to smile unkindly on the fortunes V El of the Scarlet. - iii The record of the season shows that first we would ' fffi, . -I 'El .E win, then lose a gameg win again, only to lose the next- Eg 12? and possibly the next after that. This erratic record El might well be explained by saying that the cause lay with the teams that we played: that iirst we would win 2 EQ over a weak nine and then be defeated by a strong team. 1 GENERAL ,lei Rather, however, it seemed to those who followed V 42 lil the team closely in their part of the national game CGX E' Ei that it was the Rutgers nine that was first good, then poorg an-d that the teams that we met were of more or less average col- Ei lege team ability, with now and then a really good combination showing up. ,gg E, Q if 1 ,li The hitting of the Rutgers team was a weak point, and although E3 Hg practice as the season progressed showed an improving batting average. Wil i ,ii i l .11 ':i i--v gi there was that subtle something which we call a batting eye that simply Eg ,E would not develop. N51 .fi lil i -- From observation of players' records in baseball, it seems that men fig: 1:21 ' ' ii. are not developed into hitters, but that that ability is a natural gift- iii? either you have it when you start, or it do-es not ,come eg 5, l ,i:.,! at VE' S' Ei, A call for candidates for fall practice was made im- N535 mediately after college opened in September. About ,gi E, sixty men answered, and while the weather continued iii 1 ...- ,. , 555 fair, they made the most of their opportunity to keep E L at 5 at theigame. A serious handicap to tall practice lies in 1555, I 5 Ti E the fact that many members of the baseball squad are ti Ni Eat also out for footballg and since the latter sport is in 'Qi I - if-N .-fi i ,E its active season at that time, of course it takes prece- ii .5 dence. The greatest value of fall practice, however, is, 5 7151 perhaps, that it gives General Cox an opportunity to 2' Il? size up his material so that he will know what he will E' E have to work with when the spring does come around. is s J:- ,Ya 'AA . 7 iii ' E: He found a good deal of likely material come to light lljj during the fall, and believes they will round into form till Ei in good time. , lil just as this goes to press baseball practice has started. Leon, Eddie Durand, Ross, VVheelock and Cap- BILL tain Van Orden are the only veterans who are still in i fit rg iss f- El atlltllllitl il I I ltttlmlmilmmWW1iilmwuulimmtltlhmulillllwmlitllmlityiilwueuisiiiimimimi-fimimiwi::mmil+uwwF1.v13,yiilvvbitg, Hllllllll college, but in the development of the reserves of last year, and rookies from the class of 1924, there is every indication that the team for the coming season will have unusual success. Although the schedule calls for Tlhlllllllll MT . N is 1 KM rn. iv -Ml IN, --,..lllL A r-4 T. E games with our old rivals, and some new ones, General Cox is confident Ei' that his charges will be able to render a good account of themselves. . lei E H21 ig 1920 Varsity Baseball Team ii . Captain.. .... ..... C LIFFORD N. BAKER, '20 Manager .......... ..... P IAROLD C. TAYLOR, '20 Assistant Manager... ..... NV. K. RUSSELL, '22 Coach ............. .......... F RANK Cox E E BATTERY lg VVATERFIELD, '20 P. LEON, '22 P. BROWER, '22 C. Ross, '23 C. E gl INFIELDERS E. DURAND, '22 TALIAFERRO, '20 E J. B. DUMND, '20 VAN ORDEN, '21 E DUFFY, '22 H OUTFIELDERS -V BAKER, '20 VVHEELOCK, '22 A lj MUTCH, '20 FRENCH, '23 E SUMMARY ' : R Played at : April 9 Cathedral New Brunswick 5 April 10 U. of Penn. Philadelphia ' April 13 Colgate New Brunswick 3 April 24 Princeton Princeton E April 29 Syracuse New Brunswick I --May 1 Middlebury New Brunswick ' ' May 5 N. Y. U. New York Z May 7 Delaware Newark, Del. - May 15 Stevens Q Hoboken 1 May 18 Dartmouth New Brunswick I May 22. West Point Wfest Point ' May 31 Crescent A. C. New York - June 12 Union Union . June 14 U. of California New Brunswick I 'N i E i l-1 s 1 I '-! l 1 lg, I ,-i El .Ei Ei! UE' 1-.. E, 1 l l ig. El l li-1 i l l 15, Ei E QE l E . . 1 2 , , I k 5 r '. lUWl11l IIIIll!!illHIHIIMIHl1IUllIlIl!llllll!lMUHlllllllll IlllllIlmllllIlllllllllllllllilllllMmillllllHIPIHHIlllllIHHill!IlllI!lIlIlllllllllIlIMU.lIlI1i llllllllWWmlE Y E F ' 3 1:11 - . -,, ,Q .f 1 f , - ,K L , ,s g 1 fm' ',, N ,W , -- -wr -Q! x 1 'WK H x P N Q S, N CIIAMPIONSIIIP TRACK TEAM 1070 . - '- N i ' 'F ff 1523321 .V 'rf W' ' ' if' S? Y ' '- 'Fw x ie - ' Q CHAMPIONSHIP RELAY TEAM 1990 V I -, TT'7Tfr Tf'-'frfr--r-P--f-P----v---M----My ,Um M ,MWNM1 ww ,Xl WN ,U , ,,'1'M' W V , ,M 'N 1 W' , W mm 1 1 J mf il tit 1 vi l ...ng pmf .gs 4 L fbi .J il Zi v it Hi .44 -i E is i ...l ,, .., , El il Ei -ti . fr K ,,,,f--- 'Y --r 2- - ' A ,Ad '-5 - il ,ffgtsz QBQX, K if ,ll 'Y ' if Q 1 ' A'-4 5 I-. W ', 1' .5 it 1 . 4gZfiiiJ11fIQ-25:31 ,fh gf1:eT 't t'eef i1LBg: - If K 2,1 V .j. ,LQ A i.:'i:.T5. V Q , fa-.ffq.,.,-W , ':.,, x! ''eewsimffgffe-e'izgi1i 1: Ei j Track Season 1920 ,Q El rg l-af El Q2 The Track Team brought its season to a linish with- . gl out a break in its chain ot victories. This is the second El season under Coach Anderson's excellent coaching, which 'Q El, has registered only victories for the Scarlet. This speaks I 'Q' 5 Cl well for Ca'rl,7' who deserves a great deal of credit. 4 l gil TE The biggest and most exciting event of the season was ll the Middle Atlantic States Championship Meet, held at i El! I Neilson Field. For the second successive R 1 4 ,Zi in year the Scarlet team captured the cup, but S sf'-s ,:1' lgl by the extremely bare margin ot a halt point. fr lil, The score was Rutgers, 31M 5 Lafayette, 31. it ln the Penn Relays, not satisiied with lil making a record in 1919, this year's quar- I Ei' tet, composed ot Captain Rice, DeWitt, ' 1 lli, El Merquelin and Beattie, lowered the old 2 ,D 45 lljll mark by three and one-htth seconds, mak- ll? Ei' ing the new time three minutes, twenty-six 'tDOUG it llll and tour-fifths seconds. lil El In the Inter-Collegiates, held at Franklin Field, De- 'Q lil Wfitt scored the only point tor Rutgers when he took fourth l? place in the century in a hotly contested race. 1,5 El The dual meet held at Rutgers with Lehigh in the pour- ing rain was an easy victory for our team, which rolled up lil ligll a score of 66 points against Lehigh's 22. lg, I The only other dual meet was held at Swarthmore, li lj HCARLH where the Scarlet team received the surprise of its life lgl lg . when the Swarthmorians came through with almost a lg' V1ClOI'y,, after their poor showing in the championships. lip jil Had the meet been run off with all the events as sched- uled the score would have tallied up as a losstor Rutgers. llgl However, all the javelms were broken, causing the event 'ig to be ruled out, leaving a victory of 54-50 for Rutgers. El lg During the meet two college records were shattered. lg il? Doug DeWitt set a new mark in the 220-yard dash lg, and Herbie Meyer made a new record in the hurdles. lg ii' Several good men were lost by graduation, but the lil E Freshman Class will do its share toward Filling the til vacancies and the prospects look brighter than ever. During the indoor season of the winter of 1921 the li ,E Track Team participated in contests held under the aus- lil pices ot Brooklyn College, Central High School, the lg fi Junior Championships Committee of -the Metropolitan if' Amateur Athletic Union, Millrose Athletic Club, johns Ili Hopkins University and of the New York Athletic Club. gil E In these competitions the relay team of Fuller, Ray, lg lg - Beattie and Capt. DeVVitt secured one tirsit place, three 5, Z! seconds-losing first place by inches each time-and one i third place. Kolb ran in Ful1er's place at .the Central f-FRAXKH lil 5 189 il Illllllllllll lt Illllllllllllllllllllllllllll ,li ill it itllilliillllillliiiiltililllllilliliiilllllwwlivivzlliliiili my wiiiiat,milletixzkiili Wfiil lulmilw lltuil 'X' zf 3 ll zz lggfi p- ., il il lfl -:ll ill El gl 3 l l li, -I -1 QT gl l Q52-rirrreezrw - H-F , 2 g re W.. f it UE ' :dl 2 Meet and shows excellent promise of development. 'gig Meyer starred individually in the hurdles, taking four first places, and E, gg ,Douglas did excellent work in the distance runs. :l I 2 5' EH 1920 V3fS1fy Track Team Captain .......... .... ....... X N 'ALTER Rica, '20 ? :ill Mazzayfr ........... ...... G EORGE Tixmilxos, '20 3 Assislanl Manager. .. ..... FRANCIS J. CHRISTIE, '21 gil ffl, Coach .............. .................. . .. .... CARL ANDERSON il 121 - V -4 Ei il ' Points scored li Meyer, '23 . ' li DeWitt, '22 il Pratt, '22 .. Z, 13 Troup, '23 . - Barbehenn, '20 .... . .. gil lil Beattie, '23 . Il l2 Crane, '20 .. Eg 41, Robbins, '22 'ml Eselienfelder, '20 E, l:' Rice, '20 .......... . . . lf lil Aydeiort, '23 2 U5 Merquelin, '21 ... ... : Partridge, '23 ..... 3, l Summerill, '21 .... IE' IH .3 El! lg 32 li ' lil E, , l VET E il E El e 1:3 E li E l? E E 'E .. iEl f l- ... li E l F E 2 lf INDOOR RELAY TEAM : , 190 , lliillllllllu llllllllllllllllllllll lll lllll ll lll llll ll lllllllll lll lllll'llUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllmllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllll llllll ,,.....,.......a..,-f.-,, , -W i K ,.r,,.,,......,.r............. , ' 4'z 't ig' gW'1A T'.l 'l. ..7 f - --.., ' Y 4, -f J-HQQ'-nk! X -2--:ff-4-rS1f-'gf'--f-'-fix ig- -'-' ix, 2 . V 14' 4 41 w 1 . ,sw 515 ' 45 f H 1 X ,LT fx- .' N xl :ww ' f '-AHL' I4 4' 1 ., ,qxw 1, 1: X gk. 5.1! W ' L 1-X ' 4 'A X 1 ij EE. :Ei VE ti? Lie. pin .W lj 33 WEE E! 'EEN Sgt Ui! IEE EL EL N-ii V5 EV ii Ein mi' E LE! IE? EE E ii EE 5 I V11 'Eu 5 iii Es K? 95 E5 -V ., Dc , , VY -,Y -Wx., , v X , . ,-, ,YF I ' WVQVQZ' Qwwgga W1 4'-Vx , f 4319 Ef f X ,, 1 1 I l . f X7 ' -In '1, xl Viik. W ,,f .f'r. '.T xx '74 nv' X K ? . . f' -r-1-s 5 E, EU W .21 w Mi: ED his 'ir XE x5? H531 wi! WEN IEN Hi' EU N5 WEN mg! EW Ei EL E E wg rin VE' V52 VE! nil, 154 Q E wgf 1-5 Nj E, xii Mi NE Nil: EV -.El EE' iii' EJ 155 wi Vi QE Eg WE' H21 1iJ E Ui1lUUlHlHWUUMMMMUlQMM1MlMDMMM ENMwM1 M2ii.MMUL1WWW W W l Eel y , , ,fffF55?'T '-sea ,gg-'---e-S-...... ...... , j 1 , . - T T54 gf x k im . V N 1 'A xl , 1 - f f ,fbi i, ' . Flzffyl ixg ' . f'Tii:'T T 'T ,7 ' -we C -f 'sliigffff , i ' t N1 , . 'E ig? in 'lil 'fell E. .:-.i F-i ' 4 il 'i ,Y3, :X V--T .- ,.. ga l gf-Qfl Q5 lil El ,iii Eli . X ii? . 1 E . Ei. 5:- 1 Eh IF: 1 TE li Elf. l iii '1 fE,i li, ,gf lv TE :M laell IE' iii, lil QE i ,Eli 'I til- FE I-. Y 4 lil .E liiil El All lffii' i ill' VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM, 1921 E, lg! Zell TEE. lg. Basketball Season 1921 The basketball season just past was one of varied success. At times - e, Ei ,fi gf-, :fc ri' ?'il at other times the team fell down miserably, but the latter was the case 1 zeal Wil Rutgers looked unbeatable and played a championship brand of basketball, ,Q i W--1 --. .:- ,f:,1 -gall only on one or two occasions. lt was a great year for basketball both at ,ggi lag. Rutgers and elsewhere. , 2 2+ if 1 l . fill Great interest was shown by the undergraduate body and at the first uf: . pf ,. .: call for candidates over Fifty men reported. In order to get the best Eli L, L i W 51 r Q possible results the squad was cut to fifteen at Christmas time. These ig, li . . . . Ei! E men worked hard all the season, doing their best to turn out a winning 'gp Zi Z E team. . gil Z izi 2 Coach Hill worked tooth and nail and put all his energy into his Eli E coaching. He came down here early and stayed late with but one ambition, Eli l El . . . . . lgl E that of increasing the glory of Rutgers by producing a Winning team. 1 E The season opened with Ursinus. Rutgers felt the result of fine lg' Ei coaching and came out with the leading score. The next two- games, with WE 'ig Columbia Law School and Delaware, were won in an easy fashlon. .Z E On Friday, january 14, the team played johns Hopkins at Baltimore, ,E 5 Winning by the score of 25-13. The next day, at Annapolis, Rutgers suf- .E gi fered her first defeat. A The Naval Academy team, big, fast and strong l basketball players in every sense of the word, completely outclassed Rut- 1 F 5 192 El 2 -- ei iElllmmlmmwlllfllllmllliI1rlIl1l1ummm1l1um1i1rlIiiinliilIaluilrilmummialrlalliirlilgiullliamlalmilamilineniniiiwwiliiiiiisififiI.1i1iiililiimiiiullllziisllluulmmmlmalilH MEI, -4 741 ,- 11 -l ..-I. I 2 E if it L-I., .-I I-i is Yr.: ..,,,. Q f' AJAV, 'X Q, f' Q ti VJ, V ', 1- sg N f .. q 1 22 ,I . is-. . .1 .ff I 'I Qffm--4-1 fe- H1 '-'- A--ees--:dm-Ae - ' -' -:H .,,,-.-g.,'Y- ----4:-M. , . iggiif' 'f-at if I 4. fg5tif ' I. -1 Qxbghx . , ., A s-11 El . gers. The score was 38-13. This relapse was partly due if the absence of Coach Hill, who had been confined to his , Z 'Eg bed with pneumonia. ' l' 1 lg till The following week the team suffered defeat at the hands of Lehigh. Then Coach Hill returned and put new , - life in the squad. His return was an inspiration and the p 2 team worked harder than ever. After ax week of good, I El stiff practice the strong North Carolina team was forced to yield to our basketeers. Q lil if Stevens had a great team, one of the strongest in the 1 il East, and we were obliged to accept defeat both at Ho- E boken and at the Ballantine Gymnasium. li NEI On the afternoon following the Junior Prom Swarth- i Nfl more met her 'Waterloo before a large crowd of fussers. E The following Tuesday at N. Y. U. Rutgers again met ' Elm her superiors in basketball and was forced to accept the I small end of a 45-15 score. fag 2 ,E The greatest achievement of this year was our spectac- Q jlf ular victory over Cornell University. This game was the - HARTN 3 E fastest and the hardest-fought game which we have played E3 lj since we defeated Princeton last year. The hnal score was 35-31. if . The only man lost to the squad this year by graduation is Captain 2 ll Hall. -Watson Boudinot has been elected captain for the coming season gl il and with the material left from this year's team and the new men coming in fl ,Q Rutgers will have a great team next year. The best of luck to you, E Boudief' E 'g! i The squad was made up of Captain Hall, Benzoni, Boudinot, Enander, 12 5 Ellis, Brandt, Raub, Kull, Gardner, Heine, Dettlinger, Black and VVhitehill. E EI A great deal of credit is due to the men who worked lj 'gl through the entire season-some of whom did not get . xi 151 into more than one or two games. . ISI ' 1921 VQISIE I Basketball Team B 12 gl' Capmm ,..,.,,,,,,,, ........... F . ARTHUR HALL E fig Mamzgcwf ........... . . . .HERBERT T. REDMOND if j Assistant Mamzger. . . . . ., . . .VVTALTER E. BEYER EE i Coach ............... ................ F RANK HILL E Forwards Guards ' Cmzterx I BENZONI, '23 BOUDINOT CCapt.-electl HALL, '21 'gi I ENANDER, '24 DORNAN, '22 DETTLINGER, '22 lg ELLIS, '23 RAUB, '24 E 2 XVHITEHILL, '24 - 3 SUMMARY li E Rutgers Opponents Rutgers Opp01zen,fs E 34 URsINUs .......... 15 25 NORTH CARoI.INA...20 Z 24 COLUMBIA LAw.....23 19 STEVENS ..... . ..... :gt I 45 DEI,Aw.xRE ..... .... 2 4 26 STEVENS . .......... IIE T 25 JOHNS HOPIQINS .... 13 35 CORNELL ........... lc, : 13 ANNAPOLTS ........ 38 25 SXVARTHMORE ...... RE UHERBI' 27 LEHIGH ........... 32 15 N. Y. U .......... 15 E .Em N131 193 El l ll ll lllllllmlifnllllllllllllllmfllllllIl1llllIlllllllllllElI1llllllllllllilllllllllllilllllitlllll'llwIllll5lllllllIlllllllllllllililllllllllllllllllElllllllllllllllllllllllllrl-lllfblldlllllii if 'xx I I5iTx:llL1...:. I I 'li I 'EI , 4:1 YJ ::1' JI '11 A1 -fir If It .N 7 , ,, r trim I 'N . i3Q ,,-f ' i FII in L-,.g:g:f'I 5-fffi I Ei EI E :II I2 ,ggi To the Cheer Leaders is I XYI1611 the prospects seem but Ig EI dreary, IQI, XYhen the team is getting weary, And it seems as though we'll if never win the day, XYith 21 snappy cheer to stir them, V Rouse their lagging spirits, spur Z 1 I them, Ig A ' Then but brick walls cam deter them, IE L And Grit, Mart, Bob, George or - if i -f Tommy leads the way. ' I T1-1oMPsoN F.-XRLEY ? , Q i I I Q I I Q EI : :,I 5 I I IE IE - EI E :si 5' E Z Iii E I ' 2 I E Z 1 1 SHERWVIN PARKER HORSFORD I' ei E ri E 2 I - 194 Ii: ? I, Illll I. II I I! III IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Ill I IIIIIUUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII IIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I I 7 WE Vi 'ri is wig. 3 QQ: lf! EU gil, Fw 5? 12 Er FW X ,,, E 'El E QE! Wimnxirx S El 453 IEEE 'EQ '21 il ir! EH E11 EEN v ggiw is EE 31, EN eq !i1 Eg Ez E31 E E F21 5 lj V4 w 4 E 15, lg 45 E Gil 'EN E' Vg 'Ei' N35 ,K NEW ir! Wil' ,iii lg EM !541i!lMj,',WMNHWH!UWMMWHWN11QNMMENUU1!!l,1HWM115NMMHiMlHlWNQE-M11EIQHWM!'WU W 'V' W X X ' 1 ' ' 'W ,li - rv slr, .... Y .-i1 iii. ---4 1:4 nl, :i li sl xii! Il ti: -ir --i gl ffif it li ll 'W , ,,..,.,...il .It Eli :il El Ql ...ai lil 41 f-1 l:.-, f .-.., ff- Tf':4TbXb A:rq3gn:. g , Q . .,., I ,.,. K ' K jigs if ky tl .I . ,1. yy -I 445 I:-fQf'l, ' I - ff rI?'e-Q-5 J I I Wm ' lv I I ,lf 5:21:11 N---.-u IL-'zv-seem:-'-'-4 'e '::E 2 . t ' i -f ' ' -' - , --68'--Q f I ' 'Teiib I Q N -TQ? 'NN tg... ,if . gy af iff' lil EE IFN fl gil li? El Iliil lil il 111: li lin, i .QQ ,Eli li :ii TE! f Tift! lit tell ei will gi lgl ff' :gil 1511 lgil Fl L, lli! la ET QF! VARSITY SXVIMMING TEAM, 1921 'Qi llgll 4, l 1' .I . . lf lf E ig. Swimming Season 1921. gg 'Qi For the second time in as many years the Swimming Team has com- pi' pleted its schedule without being defeated. There were seven dual meets. and the Individual Championships of both the Eastern Collegiate and Intercollegiate Swimming Associations. ' -il ' . 2 il In every department of the sport Rutgers secured more points than lg' Q all her competitors together, with the single exception of the breast stroke 5 event. Criebel was easily the individual star, leading the rest of the team I: 'j by far in the number of points scored. Clarence Ross followed the big Q Q boy with the next highest total. Bobby Galbraith made the record of Ig placing First in the fancy dive event in every meet in which he competed. ,Q Q As a recognition of the excellent record of the Swimming Team, and la 'Q . . . . . - ll' : in view of the prominence that water sports now occupy in intercollegiate li E athletics, the Board of Managers of the Athletic Association raised the E standing of the Swimming Team from a minor to that of a major sport. if 5 The Varsity R is now awarded to members of the Swimming Team who 32 2 score ten or more points in intercollegiate competition. 2 Although Captain Sherwin and Mort Redmond are lost through 5- 5 A ,l96 E lll lllllHMMWUIllilIisllllil1llilllllllllliilllllltllllllllllllllllllillmlollmllll Illrmlllllllllllllllllllllllllrtlslcliliiwwllllllwlllrigl-llimitllsizlzmtlilllzllllimlilwzllllllil .e-A :il 121 ti iy ,gl ,N -'I 7--1 .....,,.. ..,..,......,i t 1? ' U ------ff -L--2-N -f f ' T T ,ff? 'CTT-'T--Ti 4 ., lila- -, x' - Q. X 'I l -' it fi lgi many CJ li . E' graduation, prospects for next year's team are indeed 55, li bright. Candidates who failed to make the team this year are rapidly improving under the tutelage of the best swimming coach in the country- .lim' Reilly, and ot Ei' next year's Freshman class will probably be recruited ,rg still other aspirants. gg LEHIGIAI, 20, RUTGERS, 33.-In the first meet of the Et! I: season, held at the Ballantine pool, Rutgers won over Eg, gi Lehigh. This was the First meet scheduled to decide the Vg li Eastern Collegiate Championship, and Rutgers started out gli lg along the right path.. TlIe only lirst place Lehigh was ,Et lf able to secure was in the plunge tor distance. El' M. I. T., 23, RUTG12Rs, 30.-In perhaps the closest gli tj meet of the season, with Galbraith out on account of ill injuries, the Scarlet had to work its hardest to come out lj ,xi on top. The Tech men took First in the dive and plunge, lil and with the second and third places they were able to gather the score was tied at 22 points each when the last JIM event, the 100-yard swim, was contested. Giebel and F Ross came in first and second, respectively, bringing victory to the Scarlet. yi ,lil CI C. N. Y., 14, RUTGERS, 39.-Although badly crippled imme- lg: diately after mid-years by the ineligibility ot Ross, Galbraith and Hearn, 112' Rutgers went to New York and defeated City College in their pool, the Er lil: home team taking first only in the plunge. SWARTHMORE, 9g RUrG12Rs, 44.-Before the guests at the junior iii :l Prom the Swimming Team, once more with its full quota of men, easily E, defeated Swarthmore swimmers. Schaeffer began to get in form in the plunge, and beginning with this meet took first place in all the rest but one. joI-INs HoI1KINs, 21, Ruroeizs, 5O.- E2 At the deciding meet for tlIe Easter-n Collegiate Swimming Association Cham- QQ pionships the team e-stablished itself de- EE ' cisively as the leader in this association. SYRACUSE, 83 RUTGERS, 45.-Defeating Ig, El Syracuse by the largest score made this lg 13 season, the Swimming Team won its last 5 home meet. Syracuse was able to win lil E only one second place-in the dive-the Ci balance ot the honors going to the Rut- Il gers mermen. I Mgt El SPRINGFIELD, 22, RUTGERIS, 3l.-In- it vading New England, the Jersey repre- sentatives finished their schedule of dual til contests by defeating the Y. M. C. A. in ij College in a closely contested meet. Iii 'fl EASTERN COLLEGIATE INDIVIDUAL lil IE CHAMPIONSHIPS 1 i Eli f-AU Rutgers conhrmed its title as champion -1120 El ' El ,ll 197 . .,.:1l IallllqmllmwlllllIlllllilllllUlllllllllllmlhllllllllllllllillwfillll,.PlLllllmlhittbHtllilllllQl?lllil'll1Lbllllflfl'lWlllil-l'lillllIilllllilrrltlllll VW l W 'l'llW7lllil'i'lllll'il ,Y ,:: 'gijxi 'IIN lin :ls ,ii ,-. J, is 1, Lili ff 1 L,l'i Ei' E IE I-1 'E Ez 21 -4 ,.......-i.:-..g...ii, YH ll in IE :a If l ww 17551923 . P' I, 2 gg-,.--. -ai ,LM MT-c.+. I 15- 1.-.sm . ,Q tksfi .ij w rs? V ,f E?Vxgtgs,,.f4 -XX... Rakes, by leading the entire held of entries with little difficulty. Zn Although no points were counted officially, on the basis 2' of places won, the result of the meet was: Eli Qi Rutgers ...................... 54 li Eg p , Lehigh ........... . ............ 21 Z gli Johns Hopkins ................. 20 3 F . Swarthmore .......... . ........ 2 El The Rutgers aggregate of points was obtained by E LQ taking seven of the possible eight first places, three each :ZW of seconds and thirds, and four fourths. In this meet Ei gp Captain-elect Giebel lowered the record for the 50-yard Q7 back stroke by three seconds, setting the new mark at egyg 325. for the distance. , ell :Q INT12RcoLI.Ec1ATE INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONSHIPS: Gie- If I il bel secured first place in the 220-yard swim, with Ross iii coming in fourth. In this event Leo lowered the inter- 'Fl collegiate record to 2m. 271-Ss. gg ill At the end of the season Leo Giebel was elected to El lg --ED1m2 captain the team for 1922. .Q 5 E' . . . gil rg 1921 Varsity Swimming Team Lg, Capfam ...... ........................ A urea K. Sherwin, '21 ,Manager .... . . . . . . .... Edward F. 0'Dair, '22 Coach ..... .............. ........... ....... I a m es H. Reilly E' .5 l:' lim Individual Point Score: El Giebel ...................... 120 gg if Ross .... . . . 70 A Galbraith . , . . . 37 :I Hearn . .. ... 35 Schaeffer .. . .. 33 - - Redmond . . . . . . 29 .- E Enander ... . .. 24 i E Aydeioa 15 I I Sherwin . . . . . '10 E Brenner . . . . 7 i Mason .. . 4 1 gi Gardner . . . . 4 IE gl Summerill .. . 4 H 5 Post .... . 3 lj li Chase . . . . . . . 1 5 gl! 198 iliilell l l-llllmllllllllllllllillllllllhiililllQlllltllwll3illil'wildWMlimlllillillllllllllllllillllllMlIlllllllllllllli1ll.l'lfl'lill'yillQ'?if I1iiL ll'ff,.l'll2ll'fII:1'ii ' WE I...v............-... at rf-- wma .,........+. Tennis Season 1920 It cannot be said that the Tennis Team had a Red Letter record in 1920, but, considering the fact that their schedule was a stiff one, they deserve full credit for the showing they made. At the close of the season W. R. Boocock was chosen captain and G. B. Keeler manager for the year 1921. - Captain ..... ..... C ORNELIUS B. Boococrc Manager ..... .... H. GRIFFITHS PARKER Rutgers , Opponents 3 Lafayette 3 2 New York U. 4 6 Princeton l 0 Annapolis 6 4 Yale V2 5 Union l 5 Colgate I 0 California 6 199 llllllllllllllllllllllllllll rlllllllllllf ll Uilillllmlllllllllll llllillilVlliillllllliillllIlllllllllilllilllllllllIlHH1llllllilllllliwilallR1if?'lm!iIii' NfljmlllilhlullirlllimllillltHH ,,,,.,.......-...,..i. , fl-H:-1... ' ef ' 'T ..f f -Qs-. ,-- QS. ',., . K.. .1 g---?.'x--.. .fi f 'ax-ix f-,lf . , . .gs - - - - 5: 5 ft 1. q. V 1' Q I f ' 1 viii' -4, i l ' -. 1 . A+- it , 60645 fxmf-1 L' ' 1 V f--- '.. '! I ' 7-ef' A:-. 57- -L Qiigri-I--Y A 'arf' xv cs' M, N ' f r'...' VL-4-' sg-Lie-. ,---f,.,f .,1-Lll-ASQ l fl ij 7, X i if L7 il Y vi g fi J , X I , I i 4. I, 4 x .fe x i , ff! fs i X 3 JJ X 5 ,j 'psig g. V' 1 hip' jr' ,fag ig-4, ' auf cg -. ,. r-. I . V ,gy e. ,ex ,J Nb, -V '. '-sg: fa,,, Z-,U-f,f' - l ive? ,...-ffjf' sf . .-f'f ' JT :Ld ' -a-..a.,.f-4 '1'f' ' XI a 4 ,- 1 1111 ii . ll i ' E4 :E ii, 'ii ll ,Y i L... , 4 l V- 1 f , :J f' 1 ,WIN m i 1 i- ll' 7 il i W l .ll i deli 'E ,fill E .1 ,1 lil' 3 E 'iii' 5. i-i-H 5 iff wif 'E itil' lg it-.1 3 fag 5 lil 5 1'3 E i: ,gl f iefli :pt f lil il 1 llr- l 1, lil L ,. ii- 1 ,, il: i 'Q H7 ,il ie. . g , Y 1 lf , ll- g, E41 3 LACROSSE TEAM, 1920 - Lacrosse Season 1920 i T if in .1 E Y i ,.,H -- ggi pass a ball around with the assistance or rather, as it seemed ' . . :mi 'P it, I gl, to them at first, the hindrance of what is commonly known as tif a lacrosse' stick. They had decided to organize a Lacrosse f. ETJ f Team. Fifteen of the candidates had never see-n a game E 1- played ,and only three had felt the kindly touch of one of the 12 ir, if l: yi above-mentioned sticks across the sihins. The outlook was E 1 very doubtful. The fellows were determined, however and it E , 7 -, 1 ,- fa i -. y .,. was not long before they handled the sticks like a natural gi M limb, and when they went to Swarthmore the only lg: rl? ? -M fn, W 1 ,331 ii. 5 E i thing about them that didn't look like a lacrosse ef- Q L - - . 1 - I H '- if , 'i 5 team was their equipment. They carried their . si - al P v L 5 clubs,', but gloves, helmets and other armor were lg 2 missing. The boys put up a hard fight with the Swarth E E morians, but were decisively defeated. The one bright spot 2 ia : in this first season of the sport was the victory over the New li 5 York Lacrosse Club by the narrow margin of one goal. Of 5 the teams played johns Hopkins administered the severest triaf l E 1 trouncing. But if it is considered that the Hopkins team was .A N ,N , , 1 3 : .E National Champion while We were but infants, .and that ffi3rLL'7 ii: Ei le gl 200 E V LE 2.1 WIWHHMMUH 1IlIHtllmmllillllmmwumllilillllllmiltllllmmlilllilllHlllillltlillllmllllllllllmllliiiiiizinglWillllvmvwlliiilumwllflflfllllmllmldmigiiiim My Q ,-. E' lt was late in March when about twentv men started to 2 s .. m .R :l 1 :QI il 55:1 fl Z. l :, t.. it :i 3 ,-l f-4 'V-Q J-4 i 4 . f I v - . ., f fs ' fx 023, JT-BR ff :E T V f F Tir if 199 f K H 1- as 1' f A X ., .- If :L ' pf Q l 'iffiitl fi' -'ali we- ':' 16352 6 if 0 ILL. .LX Er. if . .. ' . .,- . 5 f 0 cllgkgxi My wi piyf V nah 'A pr ,ia nEfi12'lff' - iflg:f Di-slr? , they were held to a 3-0 score to the end of the first half, lil there is no reason to feel an fthinff but elated at the show- tg X .X - 5 13 if mg of our team. . Q I f' gi The Lacrosse squad of 1920 labored un-der dihiculties K Eg- that only the inspiration of their real love of the sport 'gi il ll ' P ' ' al cj. enaa ed them to overcome. Equrpment. They dug it up 3 Q by themselves. Bizarre indeed was the appearance of the team 'when they made their debut on Neilson 'Field E All varieties of athletic equipment were presented m the ji ti habiliments of that one squad. Shoes of the tennis or If lip basketball courts, or football lieldg jerseys of all variety Es Ei in shape and colorg helmets, none at allg and sticks-the El! Q, only real Lacrosse equipment that was in evidence-they 'ill bought themselves. Expenses on trips were in large part g paid out of their own pockets. I will 513 The team was organized spontaneously. In the fall, il: few on the campus knew the game except by nameg when .rig spring came every one was fluently conversing about the . gg sport. Such was the interest it commanded. El E2 Hence, it was only proper that the Athletic Associa- WE tion should give the men who played on the team some QQ' E recognition. The Board of Managers awarded the LRT f-1-OTSH Q51 A3 to those members of the team who had played in a ma- 151 'orit of Games' and what is more to the oint made Jrovisiofn in the 'QL M I J Y s n , I P , 1 L, jg budget to equip the team for the coming season, and guarantee expenses on trips, and to teams that are to play here. Dr. Graham, who coached the team during its tlirst year, has left QQ, gil to accept a professorship at Dartmouth. The services of a professional lil' pi coach have been secured, however, so the efforts of the men will not be ,Fig without direction. E ' VV ith the advantages of experience, recognition, and equipment, there is now every encouragement to the team. May it develop anrd. attain that same prestige that marks the teams of Rutgers in all other sports. Ili? 1920 Lacrosse Team Captain ..... ................................ W ILLIAM H. LOTT Manager. ..... 1 ..... ........ H . L. MEISTRELL ilf' Assistant Manager .... ............ R . W. BURBANK H21 i-m if- lii Coach ............... .... D R. FRANK D. GRAHAM lil Elf U3 Rutgers Opponents ig: lp-Z H ir lg' 3 Swarthmore 8 0 Johns Hopkins 13 jill 1 Stevens 2 3 N. Y. Lacrosse Club 1 3 Brooklyn Lacrosse Club 4 12 E E5 201 T 'iff' ..,. ...WL .... 1... ...L,.-,,,,,.-, ,,,,,,. -,-s.,-,,.,...,L ,,,, ,,,. M L4 L., - -7--V --f --iii lfmMUillMYl,M,U.1mllWt!1lw-111!MlQWl W 1wwtthtwllil-wMW llwpii 1 will 1 uL.,LL-Ls1..a ,I----,N fz NIJ .fffwv if- f 2- I Ya gl ik xxx, vl Q. If T . ,fff Y 1 5' l. YT, ,- 'l ' 1 fm 'L ' 1 t 3 1 1 951' 5 V: to .L I , 7,11 If .1 X pggga, -'1 41.14-51:1 IELILL- is. '..+...-.i ff' eexihx I-It 75,1 .'v,' A ' ,,g:i,L:,1,.L1.-'.+-tip A rf - eg. --' , Wg:---f--v,, ,gk F. .-:1-,..-,..,......... , 1- , ,ff asf I. , L.. ...:...L,a . ,v- .. . , .. ,. , ,ig-:Tim AY H J.-03:13, U 4,-' .ft,g, L --1 '- if .,, xx '- ,J - V :14-:.-. --ii -IJ11 . 'H - J . 1,7 .1 1,- -., , M. LL. ,- Hlgl 1,1 1 1'- VE-1 li 1531 15 '151 JE? 1 1 -.. 'EDI i 1 iii 1,7 , ,M Q El E-l 4LY'l 1 '-' 1 14 11 1..-1 11 l' A, 1:11 fg. 1. 23 .11 'Til : alll 5' p il' E1 it gil 5 -31. Z- 1lDi1 if' E '17-11 E 1?-11 ls, 1 5 E11 'ii' E llfri' 2 12- ll E 2--1' f 1, . L '+L 15 11 il L.. la' 1 1. YL: ,. 11 nil l :T 2? 11 CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM, 1920 L E11 E 11211 1151 11?-. Cross-Country Season 1920 NZM The year of 1920 saw the successful end of the second season of cross- E 11211 country at Rutgers. Vtfe won all our dual meets, coming second only to ,Z the winning Lafayette team at the Middle Atlantic States Championships, at South Bethlehem. Great credit is due Coach Anderson, who has L, V: E1 developed such a strong combination in so short a time. gp 2 1 5:1 lili The team opened the season with an easy win over C. C. N. Y. on al .:. October 22nd. Douglas led the field home, followed by Captain Crane, 5, 115: the score being 21-34. 1 15 151 13 1 The next week the team journeyed to South Bethlehem and avenged- L, ,ZW 1 lg the defeat they sustained last year at the hands of Lehigh, winning by the E1 1 i1 L score 24-31. .13 On November 6th the Scarlet gained their third victory, this time Ili? defeating Delaware, 24-31. The race was run over the home course in EQ E1 excellent time. EL 211 At Van Courtland Park in New York, two weeks later, Douglas E21 lg again led the hill and dalers across the tape for their fourth victory over 211 E Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 16-39. 121 E The last race was the Middle Atlantic States Championship, held at El, 1 Lehigh over their very hil'ly course. We finished second to Lafayette. E1 .lg but led Muhlenberg and Lehigh across the tape at the finish. igl 111 I l lgi 1 12 L 12,1 1: C V 202 TTMIllljlU1l1UMm,1MTmUMmlmUm1Ml lQMfl111111111lmiml1lHHmmmUll1H1llfllllllllillllllllillilllllliljlll1li,,i1i,3'11l'l1 11'l ilu' f1lL'll1ll1'lilllilillllllrli11111llllllllliilllliii f f?f?'Tb+c-5, 'vw ' A AAACN A lf' Q' 1.1, T. 1 ,U ,QV 3 ,I g' 'Q X2 ' if fc, 1 1 5 i 'C 3 .... rf it :tl 5, 2,1 il it if gl l im iv, ,Eli .:, ':' 31 El ,ig +3 1 161, Il, i pimms-13' ,ft-1, X X.. 5 s. V V 5 . .-'!':i:LT-21:45, iiiaaltfe'-J,.-'l-'fr-f.r .'y '-. i iiisa fiiiftglg, ,..L1. 2,,,.3ll5'-fl 4:5 isa fr ,asf gi, .-.,, W,-,..,.-55? , .fi'f'ir 'ilTf'fE1ff-2-2---rfffgx tg 'Rf-if-A-ef' 'stiff' 'f ' fe E lg The good work of Douglas, who placed first in every Ep race, in no small part accounts for the success of the Scarlet 'Ig ,E Team. He was closely followed in all his races by Captain Crane and Robbins, with Clickner, Kenny and Crowell V2 pressing each other hard on the home stretch. lg lg Last year cross-country was considered part of the Wi' '55 Track Team, and the only recognition that the hill and ll? 551 dalers secured was the award of the Track letter-providing Wg that they met the requirements for the regular award. At 'ii the close of the season just past, however, cross-country 1,1 was recognized as a distinct sport and the R, with accom- El panying insignia C-C awarded to the men who made the V 'il 7 y-E1 team. lg, E? Athletically, Rutgers is growing in leaps jlflr ,pg and bounds. Swimming has -been mad-e ,lj if a major sport' Lacrosse has been recog- 59-A nized and is supported by the Athletic Association, and now Cross-Country, ,QA ij HBOBH until last year considered part of the jj llil, track team, is given its own and indi- ,iii El vidual place among the other sports. I ' Although intimately connected with track, -there is lil this disltinction: most cross-country men make the track gg, team, while every track man has not the endurance re- F' fig 'quired of a man to be able to run over the long courses of EE' F3 cross-country competition. L, it Thus it is only proper that, for their distinct skill, gl these men should be awarded a distinctive insignia. D 9:1 gig At the end of the season Robbins was elected captain WE? of the team for next year. In spite of the loss of Captain E1 1:1 ,--11 Crane, Crowell and Clickner by graduation, Robby looks ,E-Q, forward to a season next year in which the Scarlet will H2 not suffer a single defeat. WVith indoor track during the HTUNEYH winter, and regular outdoor even-ts when spring comes, track men have the opportunity of keeping in condition ji' and practice all the year around, and present indications seem to point that iii li: next year will see Rutgers leading everyone over the hilly courses. Q24 E5 21 iii ' l ual 1 1920 Cross-Country Team fig gl Captain, ............................................. ROBERT E. CRANE i Manager ..... ..... H ERMAN R. TERHUNE ,Fl ,gi Coach .... ...... C ARL G. ANDERSON ,ggi !E, 153, 3 1921 1922 1924 ' Il CRANE KENNY DoUcLAs gl' CLICKNER ROBBINS LANNING if CRONVELL E El Ei 203 E E IWMLlllilitllllllllrigilwjlglmliwjfmj'itll'll'llVl'MMilMlll1llll1l1ll,'l,ElM'1'llw . 1 +wmaim,1l1211111141wsmz1ugly -i N Q59 f 42 '11 - 'A . 1 ,141-1:::,T.::' Q31 A' R A ...L 'MMSNI :',.. ' QA-.jjj--M I xx ' ,gfx -ff yu, z !A. Fgq1 Bf2.z..-f Mp.,-fff'.f'5' X-1 C 15 ,,,,, 'QE' 1-A -1 QQ: ,fd :, H 5 Y- 4 W. -, ..r :J .5 4 EE EEE QE Ei' Ei .11 ,:. ,ff 1 1,1 13, 153 '11 1:1 1 E-I il: 111 '-- 1 12. H 1:-1 3. ii! 155 :E QE. QE! .4 tg E51 E tif ,Q-11 '54, 151 Qf. EM 1-f 3 if E51 1115 - Sf 151 VHfS1tY Club 53 H1 FOOTBALL BASEBALL 1922 521 1921 1921 D. H. DeVVitt ,Fav NI. .Augustine L. Pfatt E. N. Fuller R. W1 Dunham R. P. S. Van Orden H. H. Pratt. 1:1 1131 W. H. Gardner 1922 W R- Robbms, Eg- jlfr G. S. Horsford H. G. Brower J- M- Summeflu if 2- .1 if 1. . ,531 . e mO11 -. 1' . uran - . 151 H. T. Redmond B. S. Leon Hijftfj lf, JSli1ger F. L. Maloney ' ' y 11:11 - - UU011 1923 , SVVIMMING 311 1922 C. A. Ross 1921 15? A 113, 5. Agbott BASKIISSEBALL E-I.1XEardner TQ 1. A. eugless - - - ' 35011 13, P. J. Duffy B. A. Hall N- R- Nehfhof 211 fi! I. VV. Eckhardt H. T. Redmond H- T- Redmfmd -jg H. C. Kama P. R. .1v1d1ideuX A- K- Shefwm 155- G. Voorhees Q51 F. L. Maloney R. T. Abbott , . li! I. M. Summerill VV. H. Boudinot E- F- ODa1f . EQ' 1923 F. W. Dettlinger J. M- Summeflll E1 ' H. B. Raub R' R' DOTSQE . 1923 fi J' Scudder E. H..Benzoni 55656555 I4-CHY11 jig' W. G. K'ieb ' D. N. Shaeffer 12- sfgf C. B. Daisley E' A' Enandef B. S. Agdeldd 1:3 ffl' W. W. Kingman TRACK QQI A. W. Lentz 1921 1924 D. B. Scudder F. J. Christie E. A. Enander 12, 13211 J. 0. wvalmef J. A. 1v1efqde1in R. B. Galbraith 53 HEP .WW ii' Eg 204 A51Wf1WV7lf.UlhL1.-6751111731 3131 UE1i1ll11TlWTUUWWWW'ifAY 11 V 11 HAH- A '- 1 K, f vi, 11 Wi LQQ KE E HT! Liz' EV IEP N311 wi iii NZM WT x, Hi M251 Yi wif w '. Iii' PY, Qjwl -N ,I-1 W ifi NE? vii' NEW .7131 I V1 FCE Fil 'lil Ez! gf iw Q ,:1 E ig pm LT' 7l1MQNx1N me E E F . ' E S E E E . E E 1922 Freshman Banquet Committee E . STEwART'S RESTAURANT 5 EE New York City, Mofoh 13, 1919 , E . E XVALTER F. BEYER, Chairman - PAUL I- DUFFY EUGENE FULLER I Z W1LL1AM R. Boococrc R, D, SAXE E Z ' GEORGE WV. Sooy A 5 E 1 1 1 3 , 1922 Sophomore Banquet Committee , E ' STEWARTS RESTAURANT E E New York City, February 2, 1920 i i E E Y , HARRY H. PRATT, Cliairman Z E . LESLIE M. BLACK IOHN G. HUBBARD g E . 5 E 1922 Junior-Banquet Committee 9 E 5 ' MURRAY'S 5 A R New York City, March 16, 1921 ' l ENV. L. NIOLINEUX, Clzaoirvuazz E ' W. R. Boococic D. M. JAMES E if H. G. BROWER F. L. JOHNSON Q E ii' 'R. W. BURBAN-K F. L. NIALONEY E E T. K. GRAHAM E. G. REID .E E I. C. HILLIARD W. K. .RUSSELL E E V A J. W. ECKHARDT R. S. WHEELOCK E S 2 E - E Q: E 5 zoo ' . 1 - IlllllmlillmllmiilmllilmmIimnlillm IMmnmnlmunM M If II IIHllIUHHIt I1l5IIlIII11HHIIHIllHIHZHllllllllmllllllmlilllli Ili Ulllllilfmm 1-..g,-...Z-:. 74 ,.,J...,..,..c ,',1f9 'f6- rx -4' p-'. U.- ,, ' 7 -,,,,,, 7 ,-' ' ' .4 Q Q f Qu x ,J 1 1, ,- ' in 1 A f K X L .Q -I w-E. . -' M' ,6 ' 6 x :, 1'-Af 'L ' -,- - . F' 'ff' 1' . -lx , ff' ' A xg H j',fg: f: ' ,lp giilfsw. xl , I X-ffi N:-qw VA.. ...,.,--- f'QlfLEif xwlg 'ff ,:gJ,f - , ,Q-W., ii I 'M H ' z , 4,1 ' EEN Z V i ,YV ' Ili T' l :Zu Nw ii 1 'iw M-, -1 Ei? gi ' E11 25 EN :N -11 -,V Ev 7,1 7 21 iN Ui 25 , xii E1 ,-,fl :V 1-ll iii' V, Eli gg. 'Ei IEW '3:e. rf, X f? if Eli 'EEN 2 1-EU '.T, 4 1 MEN E En sl rvf' Eg EH iii E51 Ee V 1' W if Hgh fg liz il bi? in wig, lj, EH E' I-V-1 W WEN f- y W 4 : JZ 1 .Q 4 .1-- N1 IE? Ei! MZ, aiu E .., y ig ai!! ,Z 122 we EE E H? 09? E El 2 Es U5 E E, E 1 1 UE E N14 EQ Pi' 2. WEN Iii 'Em 2- WEE: 2, NEI r EW E Z E, ig . IE Em i! iigfmmuwunQ1smu1mna1au:rsrwwU1 1 1 muQmmsm+gu Mlm:Aimwmmzwmmfrww,mm ww - lww mTMiEf ww , www 3 wji 3. ........-...i, N 'K f S v Eff , iv ci, A8 nf f .Gif Ag 131- 't N., i:: an Class of 1920 Semor Ball Hnld 'lt B11l'mtme Gx 11111ElQlL1111, -Tune 15th, 1920 CONIMIITFE C YN XI IFR RIC? CfItTil'Ill!7II RICHARD S. VOSE XVILLARD L. .HULTS JAMES K. LOSEE XVILBUR F. RUE JOHN R. VAN ARSD XLE ARTIAIUR K. VAN FLEET M111tary Ball of 1920 CONIMITTIIE F NV BWBUIIENA Clzaziwzzan V B101 ER A. F. E561-IENFELDER I Durrx E. N. FULLER L GIDLIIX C. A. Ross T TODD H. TROUP EAKWWMMMMWWMMWWWWWHWMMMMWWWMMWMMWWWMWWMMMN KWWV 1-.,f -Y-T- , zz ,, .-.1 .... X 1 2 w v - 1 ,..-1 iw ' 1? -' eifl Q E' ? .il E2 Er' X l 5 A I--' l:' IE! : 'Q E5 ix ji fi W 3 1 Eg Ei ' : ' -gg fl E F - E E E E Q 4 A E E E E ' 5 E E E. E E 1 5 Q E E 1 E E E E Q I -N 2 1 W E E - E 4 Z :IIIIIII HllIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lll II HllllllIlllMLMllMU!li1IbillllliHNHlllllil!HHinilhlilllllI1ilNHHMmHH!llH1!tUlUll1l si! il E! vip, ,il ,El li T1 Tw --I ,IIN EI TIM ff! I Ii. I1 i- . E! ., W-Q I is --I I ...II Z2 N xxx -N ts KX--fa-fs-JI I - Xxx ' Tx 'HNDQ I Ii EV EY 'EI Ei Ig, 5-' Hi I 1 E -I 'EI' Ii iffj ig. 533. Im E IE' la IEE4 lg H21 :I IQ !i', lg J: ,EIT 'ZX FW 33+ if E E 71, V-I IEI 11' E' ,li Eid Ig is E2 El .ifl gin Class of 1922 Sophomore Hop +5 E E, COMMITTEE DOUIILAS H. DEVVITT, Cfldffllltlll A ,El RALPH E. STONE EVERETT G. REID VII RANSFOIID J. ILXBBOTT WILLIAM R. Boococx ix MALCOLM A. ANGUS PAUL I. DUFFY ii i STEPHEN J. XMOLFF FRANK V. CAHILL I i VVALTER W. CLARK ' EDWARD F. O'DAIiz f 1 TI-IEODORE K. GRAHAM BURTON C. NIEYER '-I E ' Er 2 Held at Ballantine Gymnasium, December 12th, 1919. 3' fs ' E E? IE? WA E 210 . FEEL il lWllllINiWU!IHlHWi1N1WhHNiMHIliFiHHHIH IH! ' HH ' Ii! Hi WHIW IHHIIIPIUUMMMQIIHIMHmHiHH'NlHNi:iiiN1HH5HHillN51IIIIIHHHHKIHHHIH1LAIEHHYEWNKI II 'iff N1 xi Q, ,K . 1 ,..,- , -,..,-'Lf Y ff- I . ,.- ,., w w F. f 'f ' 'N ' af, 'I 1Jl MM,M.UUQMMM.LM.d!lL!11LLLl V Vw + M N 21 wr 1,1 gl- ,J 21 if l -ll ll -E1 all il f '-L. -if PE ff-, 1 Vfujiw, :::5L3'iZ fs:..42 X , 1 ff,-' ' mf? 5? If Qgial 1 My gl, X, . 0 5-197' K2-,ff V V 'gig A' 1-U, I- if , ff i O' 'iii ' ll H ' -441 m '- '.f 5 '2?.,5 ff O ' E 3 . ii Hi 9 E El lim 12 :I Ev 311 521 Sq E 13 il E21 ig, 'ill ill E EH i . Eil 1 l gil A1 12:1 Q. u,vw T tial 2 2 El 11 E. 22 IE: 1' l':1! E' 21 i . 1 Y 144 1. E31 11 E1 E, 1: E1 5 E 1 12 - - vl, 131 Class Of 1922 .lumor Prom 5 gl E. El COMMITTEE E' lg' PAUL J. DUFFY, Clmirumn lg, EDWARD A. BERRY RAYMOND E, V.fXN BUSKIRK ROBERT R. DORNAN LESLIE M. BLACK X- E' EUGENE V. FULLER FRANCIS A. BEUGLESS il E' RAYMOND D. SAXE X HAROLD WV. RAY E El' ALLEN B. CLAYTON EDWIN M. DURAND E gl GARRETT 1. JOHNSON JOHN G. PIUBBARD E 3 1 E Held at Ballantine Gymnasium, February 18th, 1921. 5 51 i cj l ij 212 P . .1lUlll1WWlllllUIIIll ll lllllllllmllllllillllllIlIl1l1IllllMljIlIlllUlMlUl1IllmMllHl4Illl111ImllllllllllllllllllllWW!llll11llIlllIllll1llllllilllltllmlllllllllllilIllllllll lIIllllIIl1llIIl!lIW1l1llllLL, I , ,.f?,,q-Q 1 LQ 'imffir --in v L-,..g.,,,,,f-, f IM.-. ----WM ------ ' ,- , P-Af - ---Af-2 ' ' F' '. g 1 T-1, , ,.,,,QQT,M ,, , ,5r , - , --...-.-.,.- X 1 sl C F ,J gis Pai: Q.. ,- 2 .v - : -WL-,Az :a il 111 ': N Q1 X21 I 1.7,-. W Z1 Ei' I 2 5 N 31 lp 1 l EM ,vw :ld itil 4 W id i! :IN xii! 53 A N ,gy 3 EW lil f fi r'-H, Il? iN EH Hi? :V will F E P, Wi' H2 M L Pj EN Q-. ,im :J ji 2 13 NUR ,'1 .' vw' 3.,,V.f' , - -, V 1 , N 3- .fx .41 CQLLE LZ'UONS W W M 7 -, -w gi 3 ,-w 'fx it It :rl :U iill -:qt it il l:l ..1-2 1- :ll Zi -1 El, -N -4 Zia Q: 97 E' Zh 'mm .Y.. . L ll 'IL'-'bf-'----'-kxx -- ---- . V- 4. tix Cb Q ,f' QD , ,N-,,.,-f J 'N A - El ' e' 'El lg dn ' lil El E 5. lg Ei Q ll I: Eli E wx- 5 li? 21 7 gl ii iff' S il EE 'El li llfw IE. Ji. 1 El H Lei H lt? E .Eg . . -l I-, ,. Ei Sc-:mor Counc1l E :il Ea lid ffl it hill Eli RALPH P. S. VAN ORDEN, Chairman El l-l. GRIFFITH PARKER H. LEA NIASON il JASON S. PETTENGIL ALFRED IQNIGHT SHERWIN ig NIERRILL H. THOMPSON MORTIMER I. REDINIGND 21 2 L fa The Senior Council exercises jurisdiction in all undergraduate matters I lg. affecting the general Welfare of the college. Recommendations made are presented to the student body, the faculty, or the Board of Trustees for ?ll I consideration. - ' I I-I Meetinffs of the Senior Council are o en to an 'one interested in or - I s P 3 - I1 concerned with the college. E 1 I Vg 214 lt? lifilllllllllmii llllIMDllllllllWHUUWEll!lilllllllmlHIllHVlUUlllil'IlMlllmllllmmllillllllllllHliwllilwIUENFWlH+-ii'l1fl'I1l1llll!?ll'l?llill?l'Wll!lllI Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll it 'Al ' iii W., lit Lil i ige 51 l 11? .li Ei l ,,,, , ,Y i tif ' ,I :rl -A-r 1 :fi l 'el i E Ei, E , m--1,-f ,t?,.1e-2-H.-,f,i.L.. i , .I ' ,MAg 1'g::-.::, .g.::if:-:'..Ji if,-,-..-4.C 'L,.,,-,--' H'iQr'::::,1?v:lf-. N A ,fy -V, 1, ., -A J..-4--MM-1 , , , N- A :Qu KV -ll .1 ' .Ai ' lf? f X. X . fi tl ,gn 211 it ,-4 --...:1L...::L Llpsx - 3 TQ -Y x Honor Board RALPH P. S. VAN ORDEN, Chairman CLARENCE BROWN WALTER E. BEYER EDWIN M. DURAND CHARLES WARR JOHN SCUDIJER The Honor System was introduced at Rutgers in the fall ot 1920. The covenant of the system here is much the same as at other colleges. It is the function of the honor board to hear in formal trial all charges of violations of the code and, on the evidence submitted, to make proper recommendations to the faculty for action. 215 11 1 til :ii .Qi Z9 1 :L iq -. Ei :i Y. :gi l ff wi! 59 'sei Er! ,LL .CQ VY, --i l-I Ei E , 1., ln, , L ix, NT iii ti. Ii' TZ.. wfi lil 1154: itil: Mn :REQ TEL? if iq, .QI If, iw. lf- iz.. WE il- i Wk ..-M il'- EV 1 iii 53 ' iii N-4 K: it if? if ' WifimmliltiwwimmiiWMEQQiii-L,.iiilnxwimntiiiiiWrwtwwlwitis-livin V . Z5 Q----L-,i ps.,-.--f,...::.i...:-,.?....f . T 'A - 1 is T:'i?Tls - ,:xa4.:.e:i1ie'sdl 5 . mira ,ff - , , , irrr me-if as ef, if X p. F ., pg, ,f gas f 1.157511 1 wi' VV h, -f iff'--V. .. , 1 155,115 .1 . . -... by . o' M s r 'o rsffyes, f .: if - -- Ld ,,. sei! - --V -:.,A ' - .Y- If wi 11, 'i in ai in Y-I 'El i Q E L5 13 ii CABINET il The Targum The Targzzm has passed the half century mark in its existence as the College paper. The period of 1920-1921 finds the publication in its fifty- second year. From a yearly publication, in 1867, it was changed to a E1 monthly, in 1869. Through trying periods it then emerged as a bi-monthly 1 'T and then a weekly. In 1919 it was changed from a pamphlet to a news- E, paper form, a change that facilitated publication and which was met with distinct approval. The present staff has e-ndeavored to carry on the new rg, form and in many ways has improved upon the details of the paper. 2, Dr. Newton, who for many years has undertaken the work as treas- urer of The Ta-rgum, recently offered his resignation and was succeeded gg, ii by Mr. W. P. Garrison, Graduate Manager of Athletics. Dr. Newton's .ggi 1- ,fl :fix services to The Targum have been greatly appreciat-ed and the opportunity E is taken at this time to express the sincere gratitude of the paper and its ,Ei A-,i present representatives, and to extend to Mr. Garrison the hope of a l l successful administration. f:, 17. l Wi : 216 IiillT'iTVTTT'fT'WTFiwWW 1i7'm'llllThTMl'll'l'i'll'll lll'lt'l'W'1ll'l'lll 1 v wi 1 1 '1llW 'Hl' hai 1 1 w , ,, , , ll, il in ,i ,it 1, ,l,ij,u , ri' J 44 J, ,iw mm ,imp . lp i , 1 1 1 it 'ii , k,,,Y,YY,4,1, 1 it it -N -I : l ,.. iz 24 . YI -11. F- E My- . H F, ,A g S . -.-..,,f,, :Y ff., - O ,, , b y J., i jj ir X . I' 1 XM :L--O--Q-.SQL , . L -I - .' If 13-:LT-ZQ1 ,.1.Z. '... ' - in., Jiygglfl 'G 149 Due to the efforts of The Targzmz- during the latter part Of last Season li the Honor System was brought to a vote by the College and was carried El yi by a generous majority. Qg E A new step was taken by The Targfzrm when it voted to present each .E year to the Editor and Business Manager the emblem, in the form of a jj EN key, which was chosen by the Inteieolleglate Newspaper Association and Ui intended as an award for the heads of the college newspapers. 'El Q3 gi E' BOARD OF EDITORS lil' YE . I3 15' H. LEA MASON '21, Editor-in-Clzicf l'?l' 'Ii' l E'- Assistant Editors 12. G. J. VAN DERVEER '21 ...... Copy Editor R. w. VOORHEES '21 .... Managing Editor get 'E sl Associate Editors T. BRINCKERIIOFF '22 .... ........ N ews D. V. C. BIRRELI, '22 ....... . ...... Form HEI E. F. O'DAIR '22 ............... Athletics C. T. DIEFFENBfXCK '22 ....... Exchanges 2, 'IE G. S. VOORHEES '22 .............. Alumni W. R. ANGUS '22 ,.,... . . . .Rutgersensia 'Zu ' i C. L. MESSER '22 .......... Targumclrops wget zlzl Re . 122 1123 p01'fC'?'5 -I itil' THEO. KOERNER '22 E. I. PENDLETON '23 Iii, ill R. B. LAMSCHA '22 T. C. SUMMERILL '23 gt L, W. MOORE '22 OD. w. TELLER '23 lj w. K. RUSSELL '22 G. C. Rim '24 lilly I. E. BEBOUT '23 L A. FELLER '24 H. R. COOK '23 E GOKEY '24 D. M. HIC'KS '23 W. C. BISHOP '24 ii' H. F. SOARR '23 H. BROEK '24 ggi E. J. BUTLER '23 H. B. CARPENTER '24 A. R. COMMUNALE '23 G. W. DOUGLAS '24 E. F. DAVIS '23' G. A. DORLAND '24 O. H. ENTWISTLE '23 K. JENNINGS '24 EJ G. C. FREEMAN '23 E. W. PHILLIPS '24 'fi C. R. KLEINHANS '23 V. SIMONS '24 - J. W. MCWILLIAMS '23 K. STRYKER '24 E 115 W. E. FLEMING '21, Business Manager 1.3! lil I. C. HILLIARD '22, Advert-ising Mgr. M. A. ANGUS '22, Circulation Mgr. '5 - ' EV ig, Assistants to the Business Manager L. H. .SNYDER '22 H. ULISNIK '24 121 W. TRAVELL '23 GEORGE DONOHUE '24 G. M. LINDSAY '23 GEORGE HOBARTK '24 NE' !E4 A. HARRISON '23 F. RHODES '24 Hji iii W. E. FINLEY '23 H. LUN-DBERG '24 lil W. BRACE '24 N. WATSON '24 lz' I m H. TOMS '24 A J. SCHILLER '24 E - Iggy I E I 217 E E 5 'ru MM I l lll lllll llllll Ill lllillflllllllillllllfll llillll Il llll l lllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllilillllllillllllilllllllll!lllllfllllsl1lillliifllllll5Ill.lhllllllllillllllhlilllllllhlllfl 11 211 7 .... E--- 4 - E- Ei . V Y' 4' N ff H A ll 11 S c.x1:1xE'1' 11 3 ll Y M C A 19201921 5 O1f1f1CERS Presidcizf ........ .,............ .... 1 ' IAROLD M. :XUGUSTINE gil Vice-Prcsidczzt ...., .. .GEORGE S. HORSFORD ji Sc'C1'6flll V .... .... .... E R NEST R. PALEN Treasurer .....,... . . . .W11.L1AM R. Boococlc Q! General Secretary. .. .... EUGENE C. BROWN 11 l :El If CHAIRMEN OF Co1xf11111TTEEs 331 Campus Svrvice .,................................. A. W1L1aUR DURYEE I. ll'I!'1lZlJC'l'-Ylllfl ...... .,...... I OHN B. CROVVELL Mi,vsio1iai'y ......... .... 1 GHEODORE BRINCKERHOFF ,L Bible Sindy ......... ............ I OHN SCUDDER 1 Religious Mevfings .... .......... G EORGE S. HORSEORD Social Sorzfico ....... ..... G ARRETT S. VOORHEES, JR. S' llliixic ...,........ ........... J . LAVERY DUNN E 1 Zi ,1 El I V 1 if 218 El .MllWTfFf7:TTTETi1111'1'fT1'.:111111V11111111'111IEW121.1'1111111111111111111111111111'1111a111w'111 11411111111 1 if El 'il Q., l :ci 3 l 'CJ .gl -11 M ig! 2 - 1 3 iz! l:a ii l-T 4: 4.-fi Eg r: ,fL7Z Stl ' frfi by . ,, Xt' iN f i ll-, ' ,gg xc tl. il-tp. , l Q fl! EE? l il- -1--1-.-QV, fgg-,,- gL sg ,..c.g4Q4f,. ' i :s: iiil f '7f i:1V?I15s-., .,,. , ...--1:2521 gifts.:-Za 'sggjpf S so 4 ' s'f gffl l-ill j The Y. M. C. A. work of the year really begins with the great Student ll! ix Conference held during the latter part of June at Silver Bay on Lake ,gl George. Rutgers was represented by seven delegates, and considerable ki E' preliminary work in the formation of plans for the following year was accomplished. At the setting-up conference of the Cabinet, held during E1 the week-end immediately preceding the opening of college, the plans formed at Silver Bay were enlarged and perfected, and the various details 5 of the year's program worked out. lj, Lil The work of helping the Freshmen with their schedules on Registra- tion Day, and of securing roomsnin town for those who were unable to li hnd accommodations on the campus, was carried out as usual. A special ,El Ugly committee was organized to visit the Freshmen in their rooms, give them a 2. .El hearty welcome to Rutgers, inform them as to the various churches in town, l 5 and encourage them to attend one of the churches of their denominational Qt preference. N3 M The Freshman Reception was held as usual. The work of getting out llj tl: the Handbook was completed during the summer, but owing to printing I and binding delays, over which the Association had no control whatever, Hit, ,Q delivery was not made until nearly a month after the scheduled time, and li a considerable part of the value of the book to theinew men was thus lost. l?l lil The VVednesday evening meetings this year have been unusually E li successful. Good talks by excellent speakers have been the rule, and a L li good, average attendance has resulted. The open discussion meetings, E S: while not so well attended, have been of exceptional interest, lil Instead of the usual invitation in Chapel to membership in the Asso- Hg li ciation, a committee of forty, under the leadership of the Membership E, wig Chairman, made a complete canvass of the college, explaining the privileges P and obligations of membership, and giving membership cards to all who 21 felt that they could conscientiously sign the objective card. This campaign Q Z resulted in nearly five hundred members, not so large a proportion of the H lr whole student body as usually enroll, but a more satisfactory membership, T I it was felt, in that each man had been able to consider more carefully what f membership in the Association involved. - Owing to the fact that the City Association has given up, for the time ' EET being, its Americanization work, this parttof our program, which began so 1 auspiciously last year, has been temporarily discontinued. In its place a yg 3 comprehensive program of big brother work inico-operation with the local El II Red Cross and the City Probation Ofhcerg of Boy Scout work, Sunday i School teaching, and social settlement work isbeing undertaken under the : leadership of the Chairman of the Social Service Committee. Six or eight E If men are already acting as big brothers to boys in town, two others are Elf i serving as deputy scout commissioners, ten more are giving special instruc- 1 tion among the different scout troops, a number more are acting as assistant Z scoutmasters, and several are teaching classes in Sunday School. ,ji Several deputations have already been sent out to different parts of ill the State, and there is every prospect of a good season in this department gl of the work. gil I: ij . ,Et 2 219 is 131 - , - g5 umrllllmluilalil.lllilzlwll llmlilllalilslmlllzmmlilzlelillLlll,lsl:l.lllml we .Qt iw t l wall 1 I f fn iifgfri-Llfx .fe'1.i ' if X V E - 1 ff 'iiix fx ffm - il if 'H it 'H 4' P f I ,AA , be -4-s -S tv .ta . - f it A li A' I .li PJ' 1 'fl ...-,- .Ji , - ,,,s, ma faux. Mm' P:F.1,. -Qjxv lT1,i19,f Eli ii E ffl iii 1 lg ig lil ri. ts 53 El e E9 Qui :gg is l . E The Ph1loclean Llterary Society Ep Q El OFFICERS rg T First Term Second Term 2 President... ........... H. LEA MASON Prcsidenf ....... ROBERT W. VOORHEES lei 'il Vue-Preszdent.WM. L. SCHOONMAKER Vice-President .... A. WILBUR DURYEE 12 1 Secretary. .GARRETT S. VOORHEES, JR. Secretary .......... ERNEST R. PALEN till Treasurer ...... WILLIAM K. RUSSELL Treasurer ..... RICHARD B. LAMSCHA Hi 'El - ,E i:1' QE lj . E The Plrilorlgan Literary Society has become firmly established as the rg. ig leader m the'L1terary pursuits of the college. Not only are the high lljy ia standards maintained in its meeting the indications of this, but again El Plzzloclean has come forward and piloted the Interscholastic Debating ii League .through at most successful year. Plziloclean has also been instru- iii gi, mental 1n continuing the interest in intercollegiate debating and in main- tim taining the prestige which Rutgers has ever held in this form of intercol- ill eglate contest. in at The consistent attendance of members throughout the year has been proof of the excellency of the literary programs and of the fact that li, EU Philoclean looks out upon a future filled with usefulness both to its mem- EN Si bers and to the college. R if it - Ei at i l l lui' Et 220 iii 3' ,mg y EI iLQHQlQhlMQMQWi1fln1lfQj1lQQMMggMQ.QlWMQuW!. U'limQL.ii3wi mtvmililmillHilllllluliimiillili I il1lll.liWiiEl ,f 54' .bv I ZZ Y a:-m.,.f1 I I y - lj NS.. 1 . S E Ng MEMBERSHIP, 1920-1921 Q EE ' EE - HONORARY MEMBERS is DR. LOUIS BEVIER PROE. CHARLES HALE I DR. CHARLES H. WHITMAN PROF. JOIIN H. LOGAN Q I PROF. VVILLIAM B. TWISS PROF. IRVING S. KULI. PROF. E. LIVINGSTON BARBOUR MR. EDWARD F. JOHNSON MR. SPRINGHORN 1 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1 ' 1921 ! AUGUSTINE GIDLEY, I. Y. l E BISSEY GOLDY . - BURHANS JACOBS 2 CLARK, E. A. JOHNSON : CRANE IVIASON f DANFORTH OTTINGER 2 ' DARWENT PFALTZ I DOEHLERT ROTH I DURYEE, A. W. J SCHOONMAKER ' FARLEY . STONE, R. B. E FLEMING VOORHEES, R. Wf 2 WOOD u E 1922 BERRY KENNY - BLACK KOERNER BRINCKERHOFF LAMSCHA Il CAI-TILL . O,DAIR ' CLARK, W. W. PALEN , CRAY ROBBINS 1' GRAHAM RUSSELL - E FOULDS VAN BUSKIRK Q VOORHEES, G. S. 5 ' 1923 AYDELOTT, E. S. KLEINHANS ABEBOUT LECRAW BENNETT LINCOLN E 'BISSON MCW1LLIAMVS E DU BOIS GTTMAN ' E DURYEB, E. C. SEIEEERT E FINLEY SELLERS E GOULDEN ' ' ' 221 , m1ul1111umuI'11j1ulu I.lIIIHHHllIlIEHIIIllHHIIHHHliHNlltlllHllilllllllillllllllI!HHIIHIUJI1IllMIII1I!lllN 1'P N- 7 f tl f 2 ' Q A, 1. f il if 'Nil' ' I' 1 ppm QQC-wyftl ini L Y r if 'Z.Zl.1'r'---41. if-'--J' - -'f r-'--Lf-11--I-P xxx ' i -5-ff W X Lf' liifki-.ilir r- 'F'f ' 'J xg! Q ' ' 1 - -17: Q- if llji Q if E? 1-.1 1 gil 5 tgp I SE, li E E lj E lA! lil IE-1 ,gl Ei ii E' 2 'El' T C El E E: 3 Q-J if -l gi Ei E El - Ei 5 :y . HE! E it 3 Ei ' il 2' Interfraternity Council - 4: President ......... . ......... RANDOLPH BRANDT, IR. l-n Vice-Presridmzt ..... ..... H ENRY GRIFFITH PARK:-LR, JR. ' fC Secretary .................................. JixsoN SEABURY PETTINGIL E The function of the Interfraternity Council is to promote the general E 'Z interests, welfare and fraternal spirit among the various chapters on the l campus. The Council acts entirely in an advisory capacity with no execu- E E tive authority, but its recommendations are received with that consiclera- S 1 tion which they deserve. Its personnel consists of two delegates from E I 4 each of the recognized fraternities. E E 5 E g MEMBERS , E I HUBBARD DICKINSON FARLEY '- DE WITT THOMPSON QUACKENBUSH Posr SAXE MEZGER l MOLINI-:Ux HORSFORD FRITZINGER i QUIMBY STONE x BIRRELL E- MASON CLARK HANAXVAY 'E FRANKLIN BEUGLESS GRAHAM i LOTT X E ' E 222 E i, lWWllHMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllill-flwllllllll lil llllllllll i Llllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll llllllllllwlllllllllmllllllll lll Ill rlll , NIMH ll ll El 4 f.-P l v:.,Wf,:V In ,V ., .7 Y T 5 - Q ,,,Q , . 5 'fr N E b p E X I xx A I5 NL -I f H Rfk hm ,X I X 3 2 t ,I 1 I X, . I K Vw-M My . 81,51 -ML---.ass npr 1 . I , - -'-X.f.-.L,za JLG.. ff' 'gg Q ix Q .1-I leaf .R Tn - A ff' iff' 'Q' '- 4 x . -' ' ,Aw , .1 ff' Q1 3 -.. ,I ' ,fe fl?--Ar :L:z,.,..,..-fgQ139 J' L. girl? L..-.-if NX -'-- ' 'nfl ,-J. ...aaazv-R ,V W I Lf, r:. li E EQ El EE. lil Viw El ,J ix gl ls if fl! M518 it la' il? E EI ft' l:l E il l2' A. id I 'EET I ll . l all l EI ill 4 :El E EI! 3 5 E fy . . . . E il Intercolleglate Debatmg ASSOCIHYIOH f ' President .......,................... ' .... PROF. E. LIVINGSTON BARBOUR Vg Secafetfzry ................................ THEODORE BRINGICERIIORF, '22 E 'gy PROF. WILLIAM B. TWISS EDWARD E. OJDAIR, '22 if PROE. JOHN H, LOGAN G1ARRET S. VOORHEES, '22 I DR. LOUIS BEVIER :EH V THE TEAMS El Affirmative Negative THEODORE BRINCKERHOFF, '22 MORGAN R. SEIFFERT, '23 C. DONALD RICHARDS, '23 ALAN B. LINCOLN, '23 JOHN B. MOLINEUX, '24 ALEXANDER FELLER, '24 :M Y -I -x -I - I Alternates : JOHN E. BEBOUT, '23 HUGO M. PFALTZ, '21 ii -l A THE SUBJECT LKRESOLVED' That the uSe of the injunction in labor disputes Should be abohshed THE RECORD On March 7th a dual debate was held Wltli Lvfayette In wlnch Rutgers was w1ctO1'1OuS on both S1deS On March llth a trlanffular debate wxth Hannlton and Wesleyan was held In wlnch Rutffers defeated VVeS leyan S af:F1rmatIve team and was defeated by Hamlltons negatne team makmcf the record for the Season three v1ctOr1eS and one defeat E -. Ll I -I gl gl 23? il I-H ' lg Q A C . C , . . . . . ' - . . A Ll 1 , . ' . b , . A ' l g I ' , I I i U ' A la' i 223 Mmm' all I sw: 'Imls1ulzlulzmgmulxmwlIIIIIIfIMelulmIIIIIImmnmlmlmlmlnllmwmlawmnmllwawmlllwulllwlII..II.I.Imf.'Iw1wII.wwffuwlwllllygg Interscholastic Debating Committee Wn.r.1.-xM L. SCI-IOONAI.-XKER, Clzairnzan .-X. XV1LBUR DURX'EE, Tmmcrvr rlslll-EODORE BRINCKERHOFF, Secretary NEVV JERSEY ADVISORY BOARD CHAS. T. STONE, Clzairwnanv, New Brunswick RALPH F. FILES, East Orange H. S. lblARRY KN. B'lO0RE, High Bridge H. S. C. S. HUFF, Asbury Park H. S. H. VV. XVE1DNER, Vineland H. S. RALPH W. V'OOR.I-IEES, General Secretary NEW YORK ADVISORY BOARD ERNEST W. QUITTMEYER, Clzairmarzv, Peekskill H. S. IWONTGOMERY C. SMITH, Goshen H. S. H. H. VAN COTT, Schenectady H. S. For the seventh time the Interscholastic Debating League, under the skilful leadership of a Philoclean committee, proved an overwhelming suc- cess. Some 325 delegates, representing 125 high schools, were entertained at New Brunswick on january 8, 1921, and after the plans were laid for the best season yet, talks by Speaker Hobart, of the New Jersey House of Representatives, and Mrs. Douglas Robinson, sister of the late Theo- dore Roosevelt, were the means of adding anything that might be lacking in inspiration and enthusias-m. 224 l.l..,. ii., . ni ni i, , .. .. ,,,, ,,, ll W lvfllE.'.li..L..l..LLLQ.ll.-Jg1a,L..dllQuUH.tU.l.'11llsllilJ!illQ11lie.nL.'..E,- lE,.....g.E...-- .... ..-E - '.i.,L,uEg..44.E- gi -l zu ..-V N is gl :1 zz, -4 3 i .ti ,ill -V -.l il I 1 7 , Q?l'l'1Z,,1'2 .T2ETZ.. .g1i gr , xi i i., . ,, M 5 li,-gif-1171.-r:-in - f' R .,Vh W 9 9, lf' R -,Y ,g i l STEER!! 63 if l 531' W' 'ff-X-.'f' if 522 f' ' F by H ll ff 'V sl ...-.-.ggydi '- ?43x'- ,fir-gL4k,, W-- ,,,, ' Wgdgrls-, V C, Y.- , ' fini 1!Q .C1.,- 1 - ffl' r 1432? ,Ai -, ,TN 'lj -5 - I 'ff lic! are ' til iii 3 2 Ep E E1 5 Zi wil izl il E11 ig ii il 3 if 5 at UZ! Q le e ne: Eli 5 Eid 2 15, ' l' ii i fe Z - 553 5 E3 utgers CHOYE1 OC1CtY R M 11 s ' 2 E i R 5 2 OFFICERS E ,E President ......... .............. ......... A , NRON ROTH Vice-P1'e.ride1zt .... ..... X NTORRIS RUCHAISICY E Secretary ....... .......... N TAX LEVIN Q2 7il'E'US1fU'CI' ..... .................... ............. I S ADORE EISENRIAN ig-5 El 13 i The Rutgers Menorah Society, a branch of the Intercollegiate fl - Menorah Association, was organized in 1913. The purpose of the society Q e is primarily to promote an interest in Jewish ideals and culture. It aims 'gi f to invoke a knowledge of the Wealth of Hebrew literature, in relation to 5 j its contribution to American thought. Ng 1 The society is all inclusive and non-sectarian. The membership con- 'E i sists of divers convictions, private religious opinion being left entirely to lg is the individual. The strength of the society lies in the true catholicity of Q, 3 its spirit. Eli E During the past year, at the regular meetings of the society, a number gif Q of men prominent in the affairs ofthe world of today spoke before E members of the society. 53,1 A' 225 I'l Il ll ,ll WHIli5lIliPIIIlilllll1lllMMMIlllElllllllllllil!llllllmmlU1lLlUflilllMjll'l'lIlllllllijmll11l11,lE1i1112lEii!iilmllil'limi1illllllflllillflilil NWN' l3':'3s' 4 ii 1 it Ra, W. Cadet E Cadet E Cadet : Cadet I Cadet S Cadet E Cadet S, Cadet Cadet E Cadet I Cadet E Cadet E Cadet 5 Cadet E Cadet M Cadet 1' Cadet I Cadet Cadet - Cadet Cadet Cadet Corporal- 'Corporal- Cor oral ' D 'Corporal Corporal- Corporal- . Corporal- K llllllll ll H llllllllll llllllllllilllll II ll ll HI NMI! iw! Il Il Ill Il I Illll IIIUI IWW 'A f l 9999999 999 9 99 I J O.D.D..Cl-O-Q-x'l- OaQ.Q. 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Atkinson Sergeant-H. H. 'Chase Sergeant- . M. Ellis Sergeant- . T. W. Kane Sergeant-I. R. Nelson Sergeant- . T. Wilson Corporal-I. E. Bebout Corporal- . K. Borman Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Corporal- Corporal 'Corporal Scrubsky Corporal-l. VV. T. Skillman I. L. Strauss D. W. Teller, Ir. Z Corporal- . Corporal- Corporal- Corporal Corporal COMPANY A Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet Cadet 2 Corporal UO I PDU Corporal- . Corporal- Corporal- Corporal 'Corporal Corporal- Corporal- Corporal- Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal wowOOwmaw Tischler Tyson llVeitzma11 I. Zullo W. Cooper, Ir. WV. Chamberlain R. Communale . L. Diederich Federi hi O. Linck P. Merritt A. Ross D. Richards W. Schaible K. Sellers L. M. Smith E. Stevenson -V. A. Topkins ZZ a Qu mnummnnnmummu nl E 5 E a E 5 2 2 IT! U? ZQ4 oq 3 . 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O OED' P3 -'CY ' Er' -' 'TJ ' ?E,,z,evgaa51Q? ,512 20f,Qg1gU5:5f1:Eg-3 Pg1203g!ep?- mm? Eg, n,O53g5....uO ,-nf-'L'-c....:TCrU.O..:50-G.,-r amew-fL56':.g:rQdn A :zqowfh 0 x- :.-'CSR fn-oc-ozmr 4-t,, 9'-can-'H,:7f' .21 Of-,FD Q Wim V X7-DO.,f1:53U1Oi,..fD H-,T-,-, 144-.Mragfgfvl ,1,t,A, 5-51 -15T'--10 UPH14 34 FD'-1Qr-f m5D'.T'f'-'B' .-1m ' SOS aJ5','E2 IK -s E 234 1.-gum tqlfi-1393 ,DZ 52-c :zona U1 Q. A m3 .3 aww J' j 3 ii .2 f ,.. f 2 Q ll.. 'Ny 2 Cadet Cadet Cadet H. Anekstein ' A Corporal Corporal- M. H. Sheyer I Ed 5 Cadet Corporal A. Bisson , E Cadet Corporal-C. -M. Wright : BAND 5 2nd Lieut.-Edmund U. Burhans O. R. C. Cadet Sergeant-R. W. Barkelew Cadet Sergeant-W. A. DuBois Cadet Sergeant-J. I. Kibbe Cadet Ser eant-G. R. Magee Cadet Sergeant-W. O. -Manwarin Cadet Corporal Cadet Sergeant- Cadet Corporal-I. V. Cadet Corporal- Cadet 'Corporal- Cadet Corporal- Corporal-L. H. . .H. E. I. - .V. E. F. E. Swenson, Jr. Pennington Africano Africano Butler N. Casey Davis l .E E E E E 5 3 2 ,ull y-, El il ...l li ':ls Eli ml Zi L-E 21.1 -,l sr. ,- , ,.df?9 R'-S K,-ff:-,T'...?fg': ' . j-,, 1.2 ,t,.,, w , ' 5, ff 4? W at E if 2 y T ggqakfe xx. my A . It ff, . ,....- 'H --,LX lgTL11,,Aw V-w,,,,f-ff! :,37?'s.TT-fgf.,,,1-' T fi E' 115. :W Av EN 'El Mi 'E' ,Ex E it lg! Mfr if Q1 I E4 itll lill New a ugly :f ist gill Fl lit F lil Ei ig Q li is li il ii fel gl E .1 LE: lg ll l lm - se , 1 QE as The College Band Eg ig 'fl IE? Presidezzf ........................... .... E nwmzu BURHANS, '21 El Jilftlllll-UCI' .....................................,... J. .AVERY DUNN, '21 I Libmrian ....,............................... THEODORE BRINCKERHOFF ' U il Tl 1 rl f t f tl I 1 ll f 1 Q iis year mar cs ie orma ion o ie Jana as a co ege organiza ion. F X Although connected with the R. O. T. C., it maintains its distinct position 55, 3 in college life apart from affairs military. A constitution has been drawn QE! up and regular officers are elected. V 1 El The organization has served well during the past year. Their presence ul 3 at football games and student gatherings has shown the college what they i can do in accompanying singing and leading triumphal marches. A 5 - Saxojlhone Cornet Alto LY j PENNINGTON BURHANs AFRICANO, S. lAl 3 BARKELEXV BRINCKERHOFE WOODFIELD M i Scow TWANVVARING VVEICHERT 3g j DoUcLAss GOODMAN TVIAGEE 1- 1 GARLOCK MORSE Baritone lg 3 T7'01'Hb01lC Clarinet DAVIS Q AFRICANO, QI. DU Bois , BUTLER lg : HEADLEY PLUSCH Bass ll E VV 1LsoN CASEY KIBBE Z .3 PEPLING STANWOOD DIXON i - ' MERRITT SORENSON LAMBERT 1: f Piccolo Drums FI E1 DUNN KOLB 5 I SPIRNOW KULTHAU l E l E '228 g 5 El Illf llll' Wmmllllilllllllllmllllllilllllllllll llllIlllillllllilllllllllllllll lJlllllllllllllmllllllllillllllllllllllilllilillllllil'l'lllllllll'lllllill'lll4Ml!l!lllllllilIllllllllllllllllll''wllllmmli v UE iw L , 1, ffl, M1 F3 if Ml- il HS, mix ,F E V51 HQ P pi ig I Q7 E F 3' , Q E' ,....n.,-:aka-.,,t., , -E-xv- . -ax, - ,-,fs,- 2 1 CL E A 4, dn ef 9 A 5 Y? K H 2 X? gf : ' 4 V S S -,1- , MW MW PMLlHMHimmmhfmuwfL wLm2ims m Q ,LJ3g wmimv1 m + , v 5 3 it l i I To A arf 'LY ff fe l - it ,. a , Z ff 'll' P9 ' ll, f fZ?573,'i --:-ia , V l,,,-1,,2-'---1i..-s11f-a- X ff--+- - -Y 'V '+- A:-.b 'if,T'f ':'H3 lx 25 Eg' mga lf:-snr., s..,,f- i iii-if-X., --- 'if at N fe-er a E --3 li I5 E EI i E1 as l 5 5? li ll? Vi lil lbs ji: le af' lg ,: lil T: iii lei l:l :E if F- ife lg 15 Ei is E ,Z lg 1 li I 3 i ,I 1 E ,Q l T it , . C, pl' 5 e E Agricultural Club T- E lwfsdi-,if-F. A. HALL gl VTE?-P7'0Jl'dF7'Lf'-G. M. MCVRY Publicity Jllamiger-M. H. THOMPSON i Scrreiary-J. F. MULLER .Sl!I Z'L'j' Editor-C. A. DOEHLRRT T1 Yi1'CG.YZll'El'-R. E, CRAY Surwy Mmmgcz'-G. S. VOORHEES I , Survey Scfrvtarjv-XV. EXNGUS , 1 I ! The Club activities from the time of last year's report show that the i I year has been one of action. Although the Agricultural Fair project was F 2 nipped in its prime by the outlaw railroad strike of last Spring the more l E than State-wide publicity and the large array of exhibits obtained proved j 2 that a Fair was not too big a thing to undertake. It is hoped that the l I Club will renew this activity under more favorable conditions. i The Field Day held last .lune displayed the athletic prowess of our T- E 'lprofsu and students in keen rivalry. This friendly spirit has been pleas- f E antly maintained in the four Smokers held at the various fraternity houses J N E on the Campus. :- E Another innovation of the Club is the awarding of medals to mem- Z E bers of the Intercollegiate -ludging Teams, encouraged probably by the 5 E signal success of the Fruit -ludging Team and which brought home the Q E Trophy awarded by the Eastern Intercollegiate Fruit judging League. E E 230 T , IIII IIIII lll1llllll!lIlHlFIllllIll IIIWI ll lllllf Hll H1 Hn :mmm I I1lru14iliivinl1:mmmmmqimmiinlmlmum:lliillullimmiililrllif . ,?. it -4 X -3 --4 JL ,E 1 l l I l I 3 5 il ,ff . ---.q.W.....-- law' A fe X ' N. . , aff-fi KX ,f Z2 1 . ' ' 67' Lfffzr-NX' gf'-'L -NS -0 -Qff - ' ' ' 'l4 ALlI-.. 'il-. . - f':',.:L.....'t l:re-a si X E1 l?l iii .--l 2 le 'Ez HS El, E mil lgi lg El 'ji Ea F is E a lf vi i :: l rig' i i5 - - l I: 4, C . L E . E Q 1 'I ss, E r Chemical Club 7 President ........ ..... I OHN CLARENCE BROWN 1 Vice-Presz'dmt ......... .. L .CHARLES IRNVIN Posr -' S ecretary-T1'easu1'er ..... ...... G EORGE W. Soov Z l - - . 5 E The purpose of this organization is to keep the undergraduate mem- :I i bers acquainted with the latest developments of the Chemical Industry, to 1- if . . . . 4 A encourage some individual research work and to promote better acquaint- lf ance between the faculty and the undergraduates. - For this purpose meetings are held once a month and smokers at fre- E quent intervals. 3: E This year the Club consisted of Fifty-two undergraduates and members iz E of the faculty associated with the Chemical Department. We are looking 2 E forward to an even larger membership the following year. N- E L: 231 lg IIllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllll Il ll l1l'll illilllllll l .l llllllll ll llmlllilllilllilli lllllllllllllllllllllilfliilllillliliil121ulililllllillllHIHUIIlIl2llIilllIMllllllll s-4 , .rl 1 11:23-1-..g P -, Y, M f ll A 8- 4 'WSF T 'Nf5?. fig- --vim----K--any , .if I XX V. df ff- C .lx ,r L ri XL, , , .9 I i'- l- . , TAT' slr' - I JF I! I! I if 1 Eff? i K A I 'air '-'I' ff 'Ni' ' C ' - J' A . .1351 --1' -- ' v' K .'?'li:.,...' ' ' 'Q i..'.wk glgiif' ' 1' 1-p ' ,T Q '---I R VJ,- fl'TQjIL.Tfi 1,35 'iff ily t iff-r' -fx! nwfgfl ,Q LJ, :Tee , .M 1217! TX- ' ' fav' fl:--a,....-r .fS-if f Y, ,Fai H- ny- ' . ,,- .r . . ,TT-..-:-SP 1 y li is ,EB l:3 .fl Lili li3l i El .lil il l l J:-,N i ,E. , ll? 1 ig. El The Rutgers College Mechanical ,Ei ,E Engineering Club E .AFFILIATED VV 1TH IQ. ., .if THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS 535 OFFICE-rs President ....... . ........... ......... W . R. LEBER WE, Vice-President .... .......... I . R. BRONVN UE' Treasurer ...... ..... F . W. DE1'rI,1NGER rig, Secretary ........ ........... J . G. HUBBARn Honorary Chairman ........................... PROF. R. C. H. HECK 1,21 , ala Rutgers has now a Student Branch of the American Society of Me- ll: li chanical Engineers. Last fall, due to the untiring efforts of the Con- : stitutional Committee, the Club was awarded a charter by the national lg organization. This comes as a result of two years' hard work and the LE Mechanicals can feel a just pride in their achievement. lg During the past year Rutgers has been well represented at the F. national conferences of the A. S. M. E. Student Branches, attended by 5 representatives of Columbia University, New York University, Stevens 2 IZ Institute, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn and Cooper Union. iii NEI 232 lg E 5 Il llllmlmmi lilllmlrl1lmal!lW,UmUm1mllmmmmlmlmmismi in ll'HmlmmrlllmrmllilmilrlzmwmiiiiAilwvglzwwwiiliiwviziimmamnillmiurliiaiswmlmmmial ,--5. ffTl .f.,i.T.1..g....-.': 6z r'7:'s ' 2--.xxx xxg ,,fQ1-.Lfi-4-i:.':-:.z'g. ,..,.,,' ifm. 4 a 1. .,.,. '3 ...A ..... l.. .- 2..,2 fa fp' ' ' al , ' H I 5, .f , xv , , - if 7 i - 1 1' ' 3 3 1 N' . fe . 1 5 . J Q 'sn its 'rv-1, 'L ff' Y .gs 'i ii N f Tx 7 il f', 'Tl f YF.,-Q, SA, 2 ,. Lp- ..n.c.2 .,.-...aw-.-Jr, .ff 5 2 I In 'v lfgi. . .JL Y W -. Y-..-mx 1 -if at 213: xv, Q ,f '-5' fy -'- krE'J Q Nb iw ' 1 ,f six -v,! ,.+ , 51 :TTL A-:,: Q,!z TWT' if V7 11 I 5? Zi ii 1 5 lm Ji 131 E I1 Ei til' .:i El -ll l :Q EFI fm lla' 151 li ell tl 31 il '-1 lil lil 1:1 1:I .Y il -1 rl fl ill' 112' E li El 1- sy? .. ...... - lu 15, ' E The Rutgers College Student Chapter ,ii 1,3 Gf Ao So Co Ea President ........... ...... H ERBEIQ1' R. CAMPBELL, '21 i? Vic:-Prcsideizt ...... ..... D ONALD V. C. BIRRELL, '22 Secretary and Treasurer ..... ARTHUR E. HILLIARD, '21 flzf Historian .....................,.............. VVILLARD R. DEVAUL, '21 liz, .E- The Rutgers College Student Chapter of the 'American Society of HQ Civil Engineers was originally the Civil Engineering Club, as organized liiy by the class of 1908. The Work of the club was started at the beginning of the year with unusual spirit. EQ A membership campaign was instituted and every member of the Senior, Junior, Sophomore and Freshman classes pursuing the Civil lg Engineering Course was enrolled. The Society then became affiliated with the American Society of Civil Engineers as a Student Chapter. Such iii affiliation has a twofold significanceg First, the club is of national impor- L tance, and, second, it makes it possible- for Rutgers men to hear men of ali authority in the engineering world. The attendance during the year far surpassed that of previous years. 'iii' Due to the assistance of its faculty members, the Society enjoyed many fill talks and illustrated lectures of great value throughout the year. 5: 1 ' 233 VH liullwillillmmmzllM11smvlb?.llmillll.uM.f1l2l:l.l.'13mllwllallwllAli:-wliil,lm QQmm1.1.1315-lQQEEl If . ,V ff Ga' Q3 ,J 45' El lei E31 IEI Elo stil Ev, iii ill -I Ai ii ifl gl E' 52 ,- 11 2 1 'gill il - il lfgizi lfl F1 Fil lil li: Fl gg ill lil Isl nil li. iii ll2'i El El, lil gl el iii E :gi El rl ll 3 W 1 E .RER N :ff- ' 1 N. zz zz I ,I Xxx I- 1 - L.-.v ----S------ . W X ,ff .1443 - :Zi-f 'v xvlligy' 'iii-A Biological Club President ........ ........ C . A. PERRY, '21 Vice-Presidvul ..... .... C . A. FRANKLIN, '21 Secretary ....... ..... 1 V. E. C.xLL1soN, '22 Tv'c'as1,w'c'1' .... .... D . G. KUHLTHAU, '22 The origin of the Biological Club is the Lab Club, which was forined as far back as 1895. The present club was not formed as a separate body until 1910. Since then it has grown considerably and much interest has been taken in it by those pursuing scientific courses. Its purpose is to create an interest along biological lines and to acquaint the students with the more modern and practical biological and medical happenings. Bi-monthly meetings are held, at some of which lectures are given along biological lines. Among the lecturers of this year were Dr. Nelson, Dr. Crozier and Dr. Devan. A M I 234 ,wi 4. gi Ill lg YEL NE' Mil' HE. E -.1 E? .g, N51 ,Ez N31 ll-EI H: ,gl llg' I IE!! F51 'E YE: 1: E .1 ME E E E4 Eg. 'EE lil 1521 13 is E EI lil IQ! El li El rg! Ei 3 II Tl ll llllllllll llllli lllllllilll ll lllllllllllllmllllllllllllllllimlnllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllilrlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll l J 111 zz , . zz 1 ' X 'rr-'ri SE s -HN QSANIJ -'L j 1 1 1 E e E E 15 E E E 1: it - A f'1 E E 3 1 2 1 I .5 E1 ii 1211 E+ E Es 'S Iii: 2' H5 ij lg gl. E, 151 -1 41 A E L , - 5 5 E1 C1rcu1o Espanol E :gi Presideizt ............................ ........... C . V. D. BISSEY, '21 : rg Vice-President ............... ..... P . S. MAXXVELL, '24 A ?' Cowesjvonding Scc1'rfa1'y ..... ..... V1 7. A. DUBOIS, '23 E Q - Recording Sec1'eI'a1'y ........ ...... .... S . T, D'ANFORTH, ,21 ' Tz'easu1'e1' ................ .............. ......... F . W. SHAW , '24 -3 -1 1921 . E if BISSEY BURHANS DANFORTH I . 1922 E , p LATHROP VAN BUSKIRK :H . 1923 2 1 p BALIKIIAN COLLERAN DUBOIS LECRAW E1 1924 5 BARRETT NIACKESSY S PANTALEONE SHAW j CAPRARIO A MAXKNVELL SCHMOLDT SUTHERLAND I1 ELLIOTT NIOREHOUSE SCOTT SWACKHAMER 5 E1 Circulo Espanol was formed with the object of promoting interest E 2 in 'Spain and Spanish-speaking countries and in Spanish and Hispano- ji American ideals, customs and Ianguage. if A Meetings are held the second Friday of each month. At the january Q meeting a number of lantern slides of South American views were shown. El V, In March Professor Cross gave a talk in Spanish. The club has been Zi 4 in communication with some consuls from Spanish-speaking countries, E 1 and it is hoped to have some outside speakersaddress the chib in Spanish. 1 235 tg . i llili T 1l1l1l'111I4!1i1li113I ri, 1 Illlllllllllllllllll IllMUN!illllIHi1HI1l!IlIllwllll1H111H1It1HE51Hillli1llHHH!!I1HlH1IliH1!VliHHH 1l1E11iH1l1l111IH11HHHi1l1HI1 1, I I, H:-5,-I lim:- 2.t.g-:.....-, 1 -,v....,X N. , , . . I..-.ef-..,1,.u-,,SI . -I Q f-f--,-- f ,,I V - Q fr Y A F. 'II Q 'lU1.:. ,. ., ii . .E R. 52, , ' ., -'-5, V ' -I in -'I I I t I 5? .I,I1'I5 7:45 Q I 'X ' I II'A -'ffl , H ff-fi-w -WNW- Y ,I Ifg- ' ' I I ' ' ' 1 rg, LI: , ' II -GI. ' I - ,I ,fav N, ' ' .,..- ,f . , Ji, ,:..W 4' F 'I I I I , . I I I I I I I I I I, ztx 1 , I' I R ' l XX I I II L. I l f .v. I I I I 2' , - .121 1? . ,, 1 , fb., ,. ,, . -,Img-...-f IBRARY L VOORHEES Q -as i, EI E E Ii. EI Ifm ,EI -II E I EII Ei' E14 I5 EI EI Elf I5 E Ig EI :EI .EI lib 5SII EI :EI ISI IE E :EI I i'I 15' I ,EI 1, I IE, I E I IZI I EI 'EI EEII EI III- IEW II-I 'Iii' I EI EI I Ig I I EII EI IMIMMIIMIIIISIIIIIIII I IL II I II II IIII IIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIII,IIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIIIIIIII II IIII I, II I I II IIII .'I I , '-,I EI II ........+J ,.--.-.. .M - Inu- J. ,,I T,,z-evi-, x -: , - ff -inf--ill N, H - va L:-f- f i'::1L X f ' i xx, cis V' Y 'L' 12 3 ,QA-f If ' N'-E ff !' ' 1, W:..z'5lJ - fl-J fy! ,fb . P A Ps I ll '-YQET'- '1,l, W f 1 . 1 ' ,YW '?ff f2ZQli?eQN f ' 4 il if 'I ig - '-Y. :4Q.4.g.. ' N AM L ':::g:f ,gif K Y 3:9 'Nj , 2P52'i-,rx-3' ill- Y -ff ,, .. :i f gs:-. ,,.,,ff? 'Q 41 'rw - '-raqxigiffvfisy Z, - ,way -iff Y W, - 5 'k:: 2 . is f ' -' ' XE! ,dm Y Ei MEN 3 1511 , E1 ,E E, -1, :-,X .11 1 w 'Eg 5:11 1 5' 1: --A - .II N M5 1 L 3 2 EH F 22 E 25 El Els :El ig? 452' EH Q - EH 3 ,-. A I F '-w 'N n.. E 2 E 3 E 12 5 E1 1 Ei 2 , ' 1 4 5 E I E ip: E 55' 2 E I x, uma IH us zmummmmmm 's ww: MHUHUMMMIHHHHLHHHINHHMMUSHNHSMWMHQHMKWHKMHH1WmMimi!HHMMNi'N1!lNIMMllliilili . - 2 , , 1' X K' will .v -f 1. 2 . Xu, 1 s.,.,,r,jfj to Rx all QCGMQ 'mg' 1 fmt 1 -- - as lil :il : gi, ...i le? at lil li! E 12' 1 sill fi 15,1 S 11:1 1 31 1 l it HE, 'E H55 E ll? E2 1 El, Q '-l 111 r-. 1 : 'f 1 1 5- 1-1: : -4 r : 1' i 1 -.11 , : - 1 , : Q11 1 r: ' -. 2 1:1 111. ,E ll: ill L- --'Z , li lg Ev li 52. lg ssl ,Q - V El ' ' Z' ' 1 3 li, :ill 1-I f rv 4 i 1 3- tilt 1g Rutgers College Glee and Mandolin ei lf, 1:1 r: lg! Clubs li si ,Z 15 Season of 1920-1921 ,El i E1 E El orrrcsns Pmvizlaazvf ................. ............... h HH. GRIFFITH PARKER, IR. El Managez' ................... ........ A LXRTIN H. S1-IERXVIN Coach .....................,.. ..... I- IOWARD D. MCKINNEY Leader nf nrmrfzozm Cum ..... ................ C . 1Rw1N Posr gli E Leader of Give Club ........ .......... R lERR1LL I-I. THOMPSON 1 J NVILBERT B 1-11rcHNER, IR. itil E1 A ' 1 . ' ..................... ' ' , li' sszrtalzf Maizagcvs.. 4 RICHARD B- LAMSCHA 11' ,- E The aim of the Musical Clubs this year has been toward a large E, 5 1-l I 11'- i number of concerts at places within easy traveling distance of New Bruns- iz, 2 wick, rather than' an extended trip comprising only a few concerts. W7 ith vi . . . . . - li this end in View the manager arranged a schedule comprising seventeen El lg concerts, equally distributed throughout the winter and including the fol- ,Ig E lowing cities: jersey City, Rahway, East Orange, Bloomfield, Ridgewood, 5 Easton, Pa., Plainfield, New Brunswick, Perth Amboy and Wlhite Plains, 15 5 Y. lg 5 The faculty allowed the Clubs more cuts than usual this year and the ,E E 'great success enjoyed practically insures the continuation of this leeway. V r' re, i 1 1 V E 238 E, C --- . ., ,, , . , El H1 lllllutllmlllllllllllllmmmllllllllllllllllllmlllllllmlllmlllllllllllllQllmlllrl, lllll 9111111111111:11111111l11111lmUVlWl11111l1s1111111111 llillll-l 1N11mm1111M11111-M111111111111111 ilLlll1'lE, af WQDY Ill lil 1 Zi 2 ln xiew of the excellent reputation made in the towns Where concerts were given this seasonthe prospects are very bright for succeeding years as performance is the best advertisement. The Glee and Mandolin Clubs form Rutgers oldest orvanization having just completed the forty-First con- secutive se'1son 'md newer were prospects so bright for the future. . .NERRVIT 21 I-3 Q 11-1 '11 '11 rn A :va r Q E N rv DEVRIES, '21 . . DUNN, '21 5'5 R. 1X.l'.XNXVARING, '23 Glee Club first Tmovs I. T. QUIGLEY XV. Dixov IR. Second Tenors XV. M. 1'lADDEN, '21 P. D. SMITH, '21 J. R. NELSON 23 W. S. COLBURN 24 M, A. ANGUS, '22 D. M. JAMES, '22 C. D.'R1cHARDs, '23 Jef , sl, . -i-' I ZZ ' 1' -' 2 1 we-.1 2 ' A C Mft 3 T5 1:1 ig , 5 Y y C I 3 1 F . , i F P' 1 , ' , '22 N, ' 1 C 1 , , ' 1 , , ,223 , ' E 51 1 1 1 E E 1 E EVRIES 21 C I Posr 21 Nl. 1-T. S1-Iizimw - I. L. D - , ' ' I. G. FRITZINGER, '21 I . . 1 7 1 , O1 B T. K. I A DUNN '21 G I Joniwsox 22 Tenor Banjo G I IoHNsoN BRG, '24 Mandolin Club Ma1'zd0li1zs E. Vi N. FULLER, '22 R. B. LAMSCHA, '22 H. R. TERIIUNE, '22 G. I. JOHNSON, '22 'D G. A. DORfLAND, Guitars G PxR1'ER JR '21 fa baudzts W B I-IITCHNER IR 22 Sawplzoue NV B HITCHLER JR 22 A Accompauzst R GXRLOCK 24 VV. D. CHRISTIE, '22 A. F. GRAHABI, '23 H H. SCHOONMAKER, '23 QUACKENBUSH, '23 '24 V C BIRRELL ' L XNIBERT 23 Vzolm FELT ER 24 Hlllll I Ilfl IW Illli IIlllllIlI1IlIlI1l111iUllWll'lU 5 ZUFU FFF? . O. 5 1-159 LMP 7: mffb SEG ' OFZ H40 :saw HEC ww' M r-+L :nc Y 'H ' QZN N M5 Zi '-' 'ANA N. lx-3 P4, New ts, P-I D-l wt-1 fwfr wed w G' 5 G HAD 3. pw?'4p1 Q7N:1pw W3 WQZQQP size, Q SQ' e 'W S' 51 :- E E22'T1iH S M FQ ti Q 23251 ss 1657 3 mars ow A rm ' .Um 2 E P' 2 2 9 S -Fl: ISL, Q 5 Bllgwg 'fe M 5 N3 H- N fi 5 WWE 'HEP H . . 3 0545 fn:-'CD H 'Sf .. - w as fn: lg FUR-l gum . O v-L1 1 1 Z 3514 -455' We rn WWQ '-is! 525 its IU , is 'L E Ca-I lllllll. lllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lll llllllllllll. 111111 MM ll 1. LHWH1 Ig , . , , H. . , X , ., D. . . ,22 - . . ' 5,7 , , N , .,i 11' , i E , . - A . ' ' E E . . ,f V 1 239 E 1 1 llllllIIIIIIllIIIIIHlIlllllHIlHHllllllllllIlIIllllllHlllHllllIlIllllIIlllllllIlllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllll 11 11l1l1l111l1111 1111 111 1 11 1111111111111111111ml11111l1l1M11111111111111111111111111111111111,1l.1H.H11111l1Q The Kirkpatrick Chapel Choir FACULTY MEM BERS MR. TAIOWARD D. TXICTQINNEY, Dirrclor of lluxir PROP. :HARRY N. LENDRLI. DR. ERNEST T. DEXVALD UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS TXTALCOLM A. ANGUS ELSTON C. COLBY JOHN B. CROWELL W. B. LTITCHNER, IR. DONALD M. JAMES J. TRVING KIBBE NOEL T. XV. KANE M. H. THOMPSON 240 TETAROLD R. LABIBERT XVILSON LLOYD I. RICHARD NELSON BISHOP A. OXENFORD JOHN T. QUIGLEY XV. REI ROBBINS JOHN F. SCHILLER HH WMMIMIIMMMUU1LuMMMMMImlwwIHIHIMUMHMwwmuMmwmwuwsmWHIHNmmsmvwmww MVMIWHwuwvw MW MmI!WmMH'wI T f-A 1-.-1 r: l l 1 l ij. .l W1 1 :I Mi, l I I 1 .. .KT - . ......EA 'z if-I .-. . IE! . it E-J 4 1 .-1 5- ' X ' ' fi if H, 1 1 a. , if X ' .fl i.: 't'l-,- Ji '1 Z Tgifitfx E T if E 2 . E: Annual Concert Course 1921 in Qi lli True to the promise Of last year, this concert course proved to be the most attractive that has yet been offered. For some seasons past students Egg, of Rutgers College and the town people of New Brunswick have enjoyed lg a series of concerts by leading musicians and singers. The interest taken E1 in these courses is well illustrated by the fact that capacity audiences lil E' attended each of the concerts. They have become an institution With'us, Fil and each year We find them more enjoyable. The concerts form a distinct contribution to our education while at college, in that they provide us with l Zi ffl an opportunity tO add one more touch of refinement, one more touch. of f culture, in short, they make Our education well rounded. Wfe appreciate fl this Opportunity-as is only proper, for music is one of the finest things lv 2 of life and its appreciation marks the real qualities of man, for has it not E been said, A U E The man that hath not music in himself lg . lil Z Is fit for treason, treachery and spoils. . ,E f, The movements Of the spirit are as dark as night lla gl And his soul is black as Erebusf' iw' ill 1 :- .Although we cannot, in our limited talents for the appreciation of - i music, claim to follow entirely the interpretation the artists endeavor to Vg : present, we can all recognize and admire the beauty and true art Of the it renditions We have heard. 'T It is due entirely to the efforts Of Mr. McKinney that we have been E -. able to attend these concerts. Each year he has secured artists Of national Q ' reputie to entertain us in tovvn. Preliminary Work for the program next 3 year is Well under way and promises to give an even more enjoyable course. g The program for the season past followsz- ip lffl -1 1 El NOVEMBER 4, 1920 FEBRUARY 23, 1921 W Contralto 50j,,,a,w A M155 SOPHIE BRASLAU Mrss OTTILIE SCHILLIG E DECEMBER 9, 1920 Baritone 3 5 Piano Recital MR. JOHN QUINN i 2 MRS. E .M D 1 rg I DWARD AC OWELL MARCH 17,1921 gl - JANUA?Y,l?' 1921 Sympliorzy O1'cIz.est1fa IE Vwlmzst T V yi 3 W M A p INEW YORK CHAMBER MUSIC ,E - R. LBERT SPALDING 1- Z , SOCIETY 1 Pianist EQ MR. ANDRE BENOIST Eli - asf - I y 241 gi A, lg l H llllllmlmmlllllllllll-I lylggilll1lMinlglilylmmlluliumuemilplllnrillalmwzllllulnllllulMlmlmwllill.:1l211lll,amllwlglilgzlllliugilxlzllmig .Ll ..-:i-.,. .LAL 1 LL, Q, .,1..1g1L1,,-1!i...lL.:.,L ...., ii.-...Na-. W., f-.-.-L--'-----L--- l 'r-3.14 1 u til . 71-'fix ly JQLQM i-:t':?il K kiln? e 'Yf:'--if Jffiiir ' l 1- . Z-F , i' QV' ' It ,f rf lg 1' fc 1' if 'N' ef' QJ 4 if i 1 ' , I It ' ' V Y , , - ,Lex . ,-'Q' eff' FJ. ' .::ir- N l Yfirin. ,- .. ,lam X' Q V, 1-Y I , if Y! f .f.. , ,V -p - p .lf . ,, Queens Players OFFICERS President ..... ................. H AROLD M. fXUGUSTINE VlC6-Pl'C.TidCIlff .... ...... F . ARTHUR HALL Business Manager .... ..... N ORMAN R. hlEHRHOF Secretary ......... ............ E DXV.-XRD F. O,DAIR T1'ca.m1'er .... ..... D R. CHARLES H. XVHITMAN As a fitting start for the Junior Wleek festivities the Queens Players, in conjunction with the Minies Players of the iVO1UCI'1,S College, presented Louis N. Parlcer's Poniander VValk in the High School Auditorium on February 17. It was a distinct success, especially in View of the fact that dancing to Johnsonys Orchestra followed the performance. This is the third tinie in as many years that the two clubs have worked together, and the calibre of the performance they are now able to present is the best indication of the value of co-operation between the two societies. 242 '---f-f 'fi' 'Wi--1+--wfvre'-cf''-'wfy'- V'7i ' 2 rGf 1. fi' ,, i i, , , 1 , 1 1, 1 1 i H yllllll lwlllll. l11lf3i'l-l 'U1 'i1'l 1ll1l1 llllllll.lilllJllnlmil'l .i'1l',1,1I Nl, 1l ,,1l1 -i,ll1'ilill'l'lil1li1-l1' 1fl111l'l-l , 1 ii' 1, L21 M- 5? w -1 wf ,-., V, ' 1, Q-3 -1 E w' ix - ,-iw ,Q x ,f QU ' V 'fi li ,A ,H Nia 2 sy 1 , ,, ,, Til E FU 115 Ni! 1 -x -:Q , WW, ,Y ae! 'ii Lis ,m ,f Alix, L LL: ,V ,LQU Y, ,Wig ,f 'Elf ' E ':'N gg 1 --x 'fi fig' 'Yi fy f if! f ,f-w 1 WH i 1+ 4 i 3 1' ' , f ZZ i. s - Q- r ii! w I - F' El if -, E 1 The House Ei .:l F -. i Some people scoff and say such happenings i531 Belong to idle fancy, not to liteg , H5 Some say such acts have died out long ago. 1,- ,Ml , But there are those can tell you stranger things A That cut you, sear you like a red-hotknife, 2 Who have not lived so long. just this I know: El Eg, The house stood there. -g nge, , . 1 :Ii The town some squalid hovels oi? the beat - llfal - - rl Lil' Of money-seekers, still, doors tightly shut. W 'Elf No life was there, no grass, no zninnals. i ,EZ Barren: a winding rut the only street. Z, A great white building set across the rut, 1 A mansion winged with high, white limestone walls, ' lip The house stood there. 5 ggi The great front rose up from the stinking soilg :iv h4l o . Ei No stepsg the bronze door hung tlush with the elayg If Two large, dark-eurtained windows tlanked the door. I lill The walls stood straight and drab in rigor royal. Ei :l And fast within its fertile acres lay f' Men starvedg but with its storehouse full, and more, gl li The house stood there. E2 The small and great walked up that wretched path I Et And faltered not until they heard the hum ' I-i VVithin the huts, the strangled ghoulish cries ,I Of gruesome welcome. Pawns they of the wrath Q, if Of one all-powerful, on would they come ii To where, grim altar of the sacrihee, 5 The house stood, there. ii 3- Z They came, sent by the wonkers far and near, Q :gi , Some weeks but one, some weeks fifteen or more. .E El None dared refuseg none turned: all slowly went I :I ' VVithin. Received as ones awaited long, and dear, IE They lived and feasted, pampered to the core, - - 5 And waiting, as they wondered what 'it meant, : ' The house stood there. ill + . . Each night there came again that savage hunig i i I: si F il El The huts disgorged, the scavengers rushed out. Men, women-naked, seanied with hlth and grimeg Weak, haggard, starving-brutish, hereely dumbg They struggled to the door and stood about Vtfith dogged air, while, hiding Well its time, The house stood there. A hundred, fearing but one saorihee For them to tear. One curtain drew aside, Disclosed a feast they gave the savage. Two men, one fat, gorged there before their eyes. The curtain closedg the wolves for vantage vied. Calm as it spewed the mangled corpses out The house stood there These happenings they say are crazy dreams There never were such people such a house That bronze door never glinted in the sun But not so long ago such ghastly screams Were echoed through the world and gay carouse Preceded horiid death These deeds were done The house stood there W R A E ? ' i - . T s i C : I -' . .T ' Q E l , . . . -E l , - 244 ,E i I V . Elllllllml Illlllll It lfmml nl WI I I mv HIluIuirlnlumlllmllllllHHmlwilllulluianmimlUsisiiiii1lTUU'ul'il'lliuumuml llllmlllllll ig lyd -. i 22 E3 . ,sg .2 -'J Q ' Q il Z1 L74 , is .E ' -' 2 QD. lf: The Smoke Charmer. There's a witching little maiden Comes before me as I dream In my armchair by the fireside Wfhile the dying embers gleam- Iust an airy, fairy creature Vtfith a head of golden curls, - QE And with eyes that dance in mischief, VV hen my memory unfurls From the smoke of my tobacco Such a vision of delight ' Wotild enrapture any mortal As it falls upon the sight. E ,I For my vigil's well rewarded When, on wreaths that twine and kiss, Dancing down the clouds of fancy Comes my Pipe R Dream Miss! 'Tis a magic, luring charmer : Formed of smoke and dream and air, Trips to greet me in the firelight As I sit in fancy there- With a form of passing fairness And a pair of dainty feet That come twinkling thru the smoke-rings In a silence low and sweet, And there dances, with her laughter, Such a dimple of desire I am wafted into Heaven On a flame of leapin fire E I 1 Til the dream is lost forever When my pipe goes out and bliss Fades away upon the night wind Wltll my Pipe Dream Miss' 9 E ' E E . E E , 0' '- E - g . V i , . . , , E - y ' ff , ' E I R . - . i . E E . - E E : E . . 2 E A Q RONALD BARRETT KIRK. E E E E ' E E 5 -45 2 E l , ' I : l .H .. ' IIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll KI lllill I I Ill 1 Illll IHlIilllllllllllllllllilllll Ill! lllH'l'l H lllllll llll'lWllllUIlll'l'lWIE vi, .gli ...,,, ill in 'xx I I r - 1 tiff- M 'A Spring. l-:I i---1 fill I think that Spring will come again this year E, -In sudden music from the valley ways- l A flare of color and a hidden flower- ifiig A flame across the sun-dawn of our days. l is , :i l if I shall hear laughter that were deaf to ears, :T Suddenly-from the silence of the nightg vi And light on blowing flowers, we know not where, Eli And fairy feet that dance too swift for sight. f.: 4 ,,. is I And roads will call me-and the blinding sun- Then I will know some restless old desire, That whispers softly from a troubled sleep: --.-1 El And things unutterable and swift and deep: .51 i-El, 21 Ghosts that were ancient when the earth was young And many colored dreams I could not know, Small brown forgotten hands, that cling and kiss, Will come to me at dusk-and beg to go Over the long, swift hills of fairyland Eli To heart's desire, and love, and memory, iE -For Spring will come down hidden trails some night gli? VVith a gay garland of old dreams for me. 'l:, And all those dreams, so beautiful and fair, EH Fashioned from rose-leaves and a glint of Gold, ,Q Follow and call me to be gone away , b V Whence Spring will come-by trails forgot and old. ,El Q5-El And, somehow, I shall know them, as a soul c El Remembers even thru the unloved years, The little things-that made him love her more- Laughter and song-the bitterness of tears- ' So will 1r1y heart leap from its spirit bands il? Unto the glory of a steadfast star, El And I will linger in the land of lands- ' 'A ,lil Springtime-a Hame-a splendor from afar! l RONALD BARRETT KIRK. lil E4 li l l il 246 NEI 22 I gs lg ,.- gi g? E: E -Q US, E2 H3 lla? HEL E l it it sd i-.. VE. iii E, Ei: gl al 1 1 -.l El E 151 , Ei r l - Q li I Q .lHUll l ll 'Illlllllflllf.-:1l,llIllil!lDf,l-,Illlllllllll I ,,,,, lTill!Illsllllrlnliiulillliilzlimlliisit1lii1ur:IiIl1lIsiisulanalin1iilallizrlual1raHuululeaslalslnaflrimmlmmg --71 luri- E51 1, :sl 51 if el it iv F.. :Ivo It gli 5 Ei vi r 57 3' If lil ,ff e' W .,A. I ,. c c , ,al --.----Q-X, ,V if 2 if X i 'gp 5- -ij? .V,.Al N - I, . fl k I Im, ' ' ' IE 3 e Il li E U2 1 :- lil just You. li llf' ,iff I kissed you. Your head reposed on my breast 'Mid feelings of shelter, of love, and of rest. :gli My amns held you close. Ch, those arms were so bold. Eli E Heart beat against heart in their passionate hold. ij lg I sighed, dear, my breath quite taken from me, EEL iz And you sighed, my own. Greater joy could not be. EQ Your lips clung to mine and I prayed in my bliss lg, They might never unclasp from that rapturous kiss. lljl ' ii. I kissed you. My heart and my breath and my will In delirious joy, for the moment, stood still. Eli Life then held for me no temptations, no charms, Qi lj No haven of leasure outside of our arms. lg li' D . y itll li: Oh, were I this instant an angel possessed EH H3 Of the glory of peace that is given the blessed, I EM H54 Would Hing my white robes unrepiningfly down, ,lil And tear from my forehead its beautiful crown Eli To hold you once more in that heaven of rest Iiigl With my lips upon yours and your head on my breast. xl-w l 1 H513 . . . . . lf Q. I kissed you. My soul in a bliss so divine 51, Rose and soared as I cherished you then as but mine. -iw And delicious the thought then to die if but death gl Would come while my lips felt the warmth of your breath. Delicious to die if my heart might grow cold gli While my arms held you fast in that passionate fold. I fi' These are the questions I ask day and night: I3 Must my life taste but one such exquisite delight? Would you care if my breast were your shelter as then? Ez i If we were to meet, could I kiss you again? gl E. I. B. 5 fir A :N 2, 3,53 :N Isl - Wil: :l lil sl la il iq? 2:4 5 51 247 , gl Es l lUMMIll H 1lil!lllluhlullrlmliwmwwl:iiwl5WMWil!milllIi?m3lil2lIilllHlq1mlllxrw.immlHwll'il liin il J YJL , i 5 Mountain Cabin. i gl Cabin of mine, in the mountain, i E Wfhere the wind whispers low in your eaves, And the sun rises close to caress you iii Thru ribbons of gold that it weavesg Q' El By the pathway that leads to your doorstep F And the flowers that grow close to your wall, E I would I were free and might answer , Your magic, low, lingering call- 3 E , f l E I would come to your shadow and listen 5 Z And dream with you, cabin of mine, l I And whisper low words that the night-wind L Q Vtfould bear to the Hower and the pine. l j In my dreams I would come and lean closer ' Q And smoke my old brier at your doorg E You would know then, old cabin, and hold me, E And call me your sweetheart once more. 5' I know that the flowers would grow sweeter, 55' I I know that the rain would be low, E E And the wind would blow soft, and remember 2 E I-Ier lover of aeons ago- I 5- Ah, cabin of mine, in the mountain ' E How I long to creep close to your fire- 2 E VVith the rain dropping soft on your rafters Q E' And the smoke rising up from my brier. E E . ' E So remember, our loves cannot vanish E E Tho we pass to the beautiful shore, I E And, living or dead, you will find me Y E In aeons to come, at your door- E just smoking my blackened old brier E QThe pipe that we relished the mostj- E just dreaming old dreams in the lirelight, : An old cabin there-and a ghost! E RONALD BARRETT KIRK. E E qcopyfigm 1921. R. B. Kifkq i ? 5 i 2 E E E ' 248 E lllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllll llllll Illllllllllllll Illlll lllilllllili IllllllllllllllllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll aw-.iq1L ,Q,,..-aL.,:....,T :,.-......,.h. K N -QQ Hvffcx-if-'alt xr -U 1 f'.7l.,.,...,g - K 1 M 1,51 2-LL -2-+2-: . r ' -- f lk I N iff. I -1 f wr, aw f' w ' ,gr ,Q , .x X .4 . f 'f' Fw ' x - X-Qs. fir!! ,A L? ' 4' f N 5195'!'r1:f y ,.4f'f, L-T, fi 2: :'--- 7.77 g , ,LM -f40 , I 1 --I ,S .Y , . .A ' ' 1 -x my I 31 'vw '- Q , s . - ,XM , ,J , , , ' ,.,,,, W , -,112 wi-,.,1,,!4,n ,.:, 1. 145.1 WX -+:' , 1 , W , - .-.MMV - V' ii,--M--,.g:, L+'-----f--------ff-wg. 3, N1- iff ----- 'M-U ff -- X i1 Lvz E! ,ii 5-1 ggi- ig 'gL,g2:.:.,:f 2 -' b ' -f:p:,s gQNSENS A QQ QC, - co M9 Q L Q , CD Qluaciczn bus fx.. 25 V zu 'AN iw ix ffl 71 WY, .-, V E3 E 2 ,Sm V iii yi 15' iii w-. VZ, ,ZW Y, W... N2 ,, iii' iii: ,il Mi N ,wiv ,ilu ,EU 'EN 11' 121' YA.. EQ 1-M, vf, :Ei if' LIN , . iff, yy: ,yi 14, lf , . ,Qu Mil 325, Wi! MQL E14 li' K5 TE: FQ 'Em E2 ,-l If E1 M- wil UE! ,i iv if 1,4-N ' N' X .., E W fT F5 F5 Wil! wi? Mlm 1,7-u, E: S in X iw Nw . SN Q'-B' N-L X h QS ,EH X XX El wig .X lg 1 -'-, Y ' ij f X Ei S W ig l Q iq - ii iii! EELMMMUUMM HMSMWWWNWHWLMMMUMlUwElMiI gL ' 1WW lw 1,glLf VICQgQQfQfITfj1TQffi TQi?+ ,' 'THQ L QfEfi,,i3ifiT,ifQ f... Af ,f ,L +4 ,-,,v., .Q A :nfl rss, s Q-W: K, . , ,,. '. ' f '-A iv-, ww ,- 'f' RQ, 1 vi f 4: i w ,ff ,ff ff L +493 -N -.-:.s,-- N'Q- '15,-L ' - H + ' 1 lurks i ll -if-Eb'?Elf gl -as li ,' , 0 ' Q DOf17t Let Us Worry You Please, ladies, withhold your motherly instincts to grab this child and save it from a horrible death, but it is perfectly safe -where it is. Here's the idea-his old man was a pickpocket in the Congo district and used to sell ice in Alaska, therefore, according to the Mendelian law, the kid inherited sticky fingers and the little dear makes the wall his romping ground. Moreover, although the eye cannot scrutinize to so fine a discretion, yet there is a folding wash boiler, containing bottles of soft stuff so that the child may have a comfortable landing place when the little lamb tires of his play and floats blithely downward. No, no, kind reader, it matters not if he misses the downy life-net, for he is equipped with a peculiar apparatus for said emergency. You might just as well be acquainted with the facts: his father always wore rubber boots even in the worst kind of weather, rain or snow: in fact, he died with his boots on like our ancient Lil, And so Cthough Mendel or Darwin may not agree with this forth approaching idea-but imagine the game played according to me and not Hoylej and therefore through the old man always wearing his boots the kid would, per Dr. Marvin, have his brains covered with rubber. In this case the higher nervous center was located in the doineal region, so that in landing-'take notice a baby insists on landing on his head-he just bounces up and down a couple of times and goes right to sleep. Qur American people have choked this kind of child at birth. I hate to preach eugenics to the better class citizen, but the smothering of this Wonderful sort of baby should be stopped by the proper authorities. Look at the World-wide good which would result from the propagation of such a species. Think of the trade the five-and-ten would realize if paper-hangers should breed more XN'all Climbers. The child would save many a kink A 250 mwlvmHmltlltlimdhlfwwwllml ww WWililllwlwrsmilwwllllitlllWftlwml.mWumwwlll1iflalililwlllilllimslW W v it ww ll W W I.: f , 7 71 in the hangers neck-not to mention much damning of paste in his eye. One could train the child so that he would understand the expression, Go to Roost g or even do away with this annoyance by merely hanging him around the chandelier for the night and wrapping him in the bird cage cover. In this way one could save the price of a high chair, a bed and many other inconveniencesg moreover, on summer nights, when the mosquitoes got bad, just wake the baby and turn him loose to hunt them down. There are, of course, drawbacks to this so-called Ceiling Dweller, but, then, every good thing has arguments pro and con Cnot T. B.j. The first of the difiiculties is in the inaccessibility of a child perched on the ceiling. What would you do when it was time for-well, say, to give him his milk? Then the baby may take a fancy to the popping of electric light bulbs on the Hoor below. But these are just childish pranks, of which he will soon tire-you have had children, ladies, and you know how quickly they age-it does beat all. Then, too, some babies are very loving and playful, especially female babies-this trait is known to exist even when they are twenty and twenty-one years old, and, of course, it would be rather disconcerting and might reach the point of annoyance if babies were continually jumping on your neck. And now, newlyweds, and we can include those more or less accuse tomed to the life, see if you can't raise the standard of your next baby toward the ceiling and become a martyr to the cause of morals and better world economics. ' ' fig Ig, QM. UL t 9 ' . si 'il x Pj: X XRXX ,s , E113 X XX IQT - clit 5113 . .X Ii .RX xx MIK, X :X p. , 1 ,, 4. lit X it iff ' L X- t VEW K N 5 dj ' ' piss ed f , lily X ,QNX Sf: Ngsysi -' if film t N X s Ns X ,gli N N X ' ' S li' YI' Q ia it 'X N Q 55' - I . TET . After the Lehigh Game ,-1 l Tomm : Sa , Grif, lend me five dollars to get home onf' MQ! Y Y e, :ij Grif: Sure I-Got change of twenty F H24 251 as i in ,..,e.. -' -.?.,.,....?.-........! --.....Y......-.-..7..ta.,,..a.1g,.vili1:Li 3:pf .:::..:-.i EgwwlgwumliiiwllllzixiziiiiiWittliltyggllty p mi iisuiwmuwj it ggi 4 ' I I 71 I , ,Q A f . J x ,z 1 Q N r 1 'Qi K 1 ...4 wg ii! 35 E1 W. :L :L Z4 fm.. Y. A Y VL , Xl g ifs, ,kg ' 22 Uk ' 4' A W 4 -V 'ml ' ' V ,. f'.f 'ni-:Li .7.'f3--er.--,fgL:.':Nill. If 1 .VQ ,g..Lg ,, 'L,.f11l V V. ,. ,.gT'?f '?: . MW ' 5 Ei EQ wg 2 51 1 , 2 ii i ww, , Q gg Ei . J Q1 5 2: E5 H ' if ifnv 2 5 as E 5' EU 1 E . Q E' E ,i i ' fwevef knewadcmce :auld he - ' EI W N50 dehr 41. fixing beggrg, -Ex 1,5 crugl foxami 'faxhgf ,S-MHA, ' fl 'Z H' mrghf' have COST me marey A 2, si ' 1 E 2 fbi E 1.1 ily 55 if 2 5 i E 5, IQ IE I , 5 iff E I: Lliv E ll! E2 E1 'i 2 E1 ii 5? Q EP E gif IE fi! 5 Si - E1 E wg' .5 Q is Ei E E - E1 V HlH.m.U IHHIMHHI IHWHUHI HWHI'HMMEMUUUMQUUMli!HW!1HElH1illUlMQW1WIWHUQHHELHWUNF!l3lIWWiWEi!'NNTIWITHUU'WW'NEI l ce ffffrffw rf f f c,,,,f,,,, fi 2 , 'f f nffsffif- j' f 'T , E 2,-flibqilw A CAMPUS flcruvmss Q Ode to a Cigarette Butt ff-rl Vile smelling, slandered, cast-off thing Now spurned by men and swept aside, To Lady Nicotine I sing. 4-N For once you ruled-for you men lied. il i Born and bred in Southern lands. ri Rain, your father-Sun, your mother, Dressed in white by gentle hands 3 And placed in confinement with nineteen othersg f Purchased with gold to fill man's desire. ,A . . . rig Pressed to his lips contentment you bringg 'il Your heart, burning red with smoldering nre, gg, ls wasting your body. you coveted thing. al l E! El l El 1 vi if Man is so fickle Csome women, tool . You'll not hold his love very long, I'll say. He'll cast you aside-yes: sad, but true. 'E :Xnd worship your sister this very day. l ,i , ,Y L'i ag' Ah, poor little remnant, did I not speak the truth? li 'Tis a shame you should perish when yet so young, ggi But youlve had revenge for the loss of your youth, eil, For your man, false lover, has a spot on his lung! li ' D. P. QUACKENBUSH, '23. l-Q -- lil lE 'TfRfSr . lll mum , lf, -V Pop, buy me a tm horn? H X Nog yould make me nervous I-I with the noise. lfVell, I'd only play it while you itil were asleep. ei Q ffl f f 53 Better than 2.75 , ' l 41 1 1 ' pu ' I1 Shay, wha cn I get for thish. as l'l Four percentf' 1 Q. l l Gimme a keg. l I: tg! 254 5, Q F X iilllwllmmllllllllmllllllllllllil'llllllIllllllmlllilll ll' l'lli lllllllblllllllll llllllll 5 I llilllllfllllll!lll'll,1lllllt!wFlll,llZMIN lbrllll lllllllld l . 15 EEE li? :Ei ME' .sf L L+ iii: IE Hg 1223 E wg E is 15 ii E! 2, eg li . -4 if gl -A I W 1 E 3 5 EQ if pfaekaye, 5' 1' 'Jack' X- : ' A9 F 'B I I I Hawskms . A 1 X' hill? fiuuifl , xi-T 1 'HWWII M: if Qj,,M9zS'l1ai 'Q ff J A ill U J E- 5 L ggi?-I ,QQ 1 I j lm LF A Swheesdl-QD 1 'A I Z,-3 .- . 1 , 1 3 fi 1? My NW , EV 5 S K? -Rmand rml J J J f if N J K J X Q t . 1 ? M, 'QA I nw, gfhskkkx VI YP . W! 5 C3 s QQ ' y 1 lv? l. ' A ww N f Cllktqrs 'rx Goofggfxeg--1 yt' ff- g, . Tie Ie 'PNCK Nea hi ,A xx YE IAZZf3:lfNCli fs' EEL . -. - - .HUMUIH HHWWMMMLMMULUlUUlMiMMUMHUMMH!HW1-MMHI.MH?WiWLLL wg V ' HN N. lil ,si , 1 ,ull l ,Ii gl i l il --l il El is llff-.F as gvn , - it so , Q. ki l I 'Mil f ' , , ,H . I N ,K J- r, All f-L f 9 e-9--fc . as I . ll: -' 5' 'H ' Tj .f A73 , ,,,,.. Qi i , li!! R-M , .f XTfQ..,.,- 'f11 sf- ,il f-1 K.. ef. E New PI'OfS--Conlinued Kxocx M. KOLD E University of Experi- ence, 1902-06. lf' ' International r e c o r d for throwing natu- P rals, 1907-11. -1 if! lnstructor at U. of B. fi' Cljnderworld of Ba- 2 -e-, bylonial, 1911-18. j Q Head of Department ' 0 of African Golf, ji Rutgers, 1921. 2? 1 il 1- llifill sam-ew., fl llill ' E3 1 , g ai. Elf 1LD1To1ts NKQJ'1'EI-'ILISY exactly one thousand pardons offered sepa- E rately and severally, but due to his late arrival we have had to place the PM pedigree of this new member of the faculty in this section of the book. VVe might add that Professor Kold is one of the most adept in this department of education, and we are extremely fortunate in inducing him to come from his home at Getjor Point to hll the vacancy so long devoid Qi: lg of an incumbent. E4 if His course here consists in laborator ' demonstrations of all the wealth if .sl . . . 5 . . , ig. '31 of knowledge he has acquired in his long experience. There is included 1: interpretation of expressions resistless to any bones, such as: Little lumps EW of sugar be sweet to me lu, and the like. The special training also covers ji' the art of showing the chalk in your eye, palming the cubes and getting Eg hill enthusiasm when luck is running in the gutter. . . lfi lg XV e are making a direct appeal to all the students now at college to ffl consider the worth of this course over and against that of any other Wil E before choosing an elective for next year, and sincerely hope that the j instruction Dr. Kold is good enough to give will be accorded that interest ligl 5 and attention it so eminently merits. wlgi gl Perhaps no better demonstration of the interest manifested in the course lies in the fact that members of Professor Kold's class work on lil 5 their subject matter even when far away from dear old' Queens Campus. E Below is an illustration reproduced from an actual photograph, showing E El some of the students deeply engaged in extra laboratory work. ig ill E El E El lg 'lill 255 El ..:.:,.- .... ..ff.-f:v4g tj-'1:::.v..- .,..,.. r' g A X ,WM M XT--T-- j,T'r7:7, , ,,,,,,,,.,:,,l it il,l,HW,.Wi, iii,iW,,ii ,Hpi,Mllllllllillwlqzmlg, EiU.MlLlhNQUl,!lll.lQMM.HUUllllllMgtgllhlwlhhlllllQlMhMliMMQQlQQQM1lllllslllwmllllfifllllll'lwlwl l'l 'fl l 'll ill l'll I .:::. w 4 1 :ip 9 7,1 . ,,,, '. if .iyffg I 2 jg . 'ffm ii 7 ,. 1 T . n ffn il 2 , W x- if ' f ET .y X ,Q 'i M oc so Q' GLEE CLUB PRACTICING AFRICAN GoLF fl in ,EQ - gif' Reveries Snugly you sit in your easy-chair, 'gil A cloud of smoke you blow. Your room-mate's gone-the Lord knows where, EQ You shrugg and, content, you turn to stare At the dying embers' glow. Nil Adown the lane to Memory Manse, Fond thoughts recall the charms When eyes met eyes-she smiles-your glance Boldly, asks her for a dance. She nods-and melts in your arms. Hill E22 Smooth as the petal of a 'rose EQ A From over the Eastern Seas, figl So is her cheek-and warm as those Of bashful maids, when swains propose To dandle them on their knees. She hums the tune in cadence neat, lg But-Lord! Wlhatls this you hear? llly K'You oil can! Ouchl Git off me feet ! lj Pk Pk P we 2: Pk ' wk ill Sweet memories, sweet-Bittersweet X25 Br-rr! You banish your memories dear. QE jg L. VV. STEINER ret F, lea 257 - . .. .. iZ:aT..,..,..1....-::: .vs.. 1.1. llilllllmlhmllmllllwllifllilMfllUlliMlMULllM ll iL.!.Mig5U3i. t.l. l.lQl.lgQgi -I will llll 1:21 uf 1 lil frls' ,,-I 'lf '14 lf' 11.4 11' will ,,l ,ggi le 551 E E, El El El il Il il Eli li if ill E11 l:!l E ' lEii El .Eg 3 X key Co-operation You oft complain that I am coldg I pray you feed the flame A little more of love. Be bold Enough to share the blame. El El E1 li' l'-J lj li! lg El El E: l I ,fl El 'El Elllllmli V WWWllllllllllllmllllwllmmlllillllll, ll' IlllllllllillllllllllwlllllMHlMillHWWNHillllllHHllHllllllIllllll!l1lWllllllllmllHlllIMmmillllUllUlFll1l4lillll733l1 E9 iv if il if 2, Y in niw in Q, -V x fi -. f X , ---. 3. :i Ep EI 35 12.3 151 E1 FE, xii EW Ea Eg, ES li 1 E 5 E gl l i 5ulHHLUHDmLMMmmmmmpmgujv 17. 2:1 'fx gl ,il 1-1, E1 is E21 V? EV EU 5? Es' El! Ei E12 El: E1 Y if 1:1 N 1 ::: Eg M El ffl M 1 521 YE 423 Eg 351' H ypm if pix f25NN y yy 5 Z , ?i .-4 713 fi' E fi E - M A Q ,Ain f'. SQARLH 3 flfTTER 2 L M922 w 1 5 ww 2 l?THEeND 1 1 v ' '. 4 M IT E E I IIIIIIII mm!! llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllll HIllllllllllIII4MUHIHI1IHllllIHHHHIIIHIIHHHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII IIIIIIIIIIII H IIII l. I INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Acme Tailors ..... ........... Al's Cigars ............,....... Appleton, D., it Co., Publishers. Bahash, joseph, Confectionery .... Bartholomew, H. L. Painter ...... Bartholomew, J. E., Painter .... Bennett, Photo Service .... P A G E .XVII .XVII ...XV XXIV XVIII ..XIV ...VII Bissett, G. H., Drugs ..... .... X VIII Blue, I. N., Printer ..... .... X XI Board, Lewis, Coal ...... ..... X X Brool-as Bros., Clothing .... ...... I II Bruns' Chocolate Shop ............ XIII Buttler-Howell Co., Lumber ...... XXIII Campus Tea Room, The .... .... X XI Christie Press ............. ..... X VII College Merchant Tailor .... .... X IV College Pharmacy ................ XVI Collier, john, Ice and Coal .... ..... X Cox Sons 8.: Vining, Gowns ........ XIV Crittenden Printing Co ............. VII Cronk Manufacturing Co., Mill- work ................. , ....... XXVI Daily Home News ................ XVI Donomore, Williaiii, Moving ...... XXII Dugan, T. C., Coal .............. XXVI Dumpty-Hump Tea House ........ XXIV Edgar, James A., Real Estate... Eimer tb Amend, Chemicals. French Pastry and Tea Room. ,. Ford Hall, 514-Candy ........... General Electric Co .......... Globe Furniture Co .... Gruessner's Pharmacy . . . . . . Hanover Shoe Co ...... Hart Bros., Pianos ....... Hartman's, Haberdasher Heidingsfeld, I., Printing ........ Highland Park Building Co.. Hildebrecht, Ice Cream.. . . . . .. Hingher Co., Edward, Furniture. Hoagland's Drug Store ......,... .XVIII Iet White, Steam Laundry ..... .XVIII ....IX .XXV ..XVI XXX111 ....XI ....VI .....V . .XVI XXVI XXIII ..XIV Ionlee Co., Paints ........... .... X VI Klein, Hotel ..................... XIII Laggren Brothers, Decorators .... XXIV Lenox Lunch ..................... XIV Lorber, E. C., Painter and Paper- hanger .......................... XII Louis', Confectionery ........... PAGE .XVIII McCormick, Charles, Plumber ........ X Mansfield, IVilliam H., Shoes... .XVIII Masterson, Edward I., Trucking..XVII Merchant, Alexander, Architect. Merckens Candy Shop ......... . .XXVII . .XXV Monigaifs Pharmacy ............... XX Mount, NV E., Ford Service ..... Nathan's Department Store .... .XXVI ..XXII National Bank of New Jersey ........ IX Neverslip VVorks, Calks ........ . New Brunswick Printing Co. .... . .XXIV .XXV New Jersey 'College for VVomen ...... 7 Nybo Studio, Photography ........ XIV Opera House .................... XXV Paris Confectionery ....... ..... X IV Paris Restaurant ...... ..... X XV Paulus Dairy ........... ..... X 7I People's National Bank ..... ....... X I Plaza Restaurant ....... ..... X XIII Price, I., Gowns ...... ...... X II Raritan Coal Co ..... .... X XII Reed's Book Store ......... Ruck, Louis P ................ Rule, George B., Carpenter ..... Rutgers College .............. Rutgers Preparatory School ..... Schilling Press, The, Publishers... Schumann, A. J., Photography. Slcillkrafters, Stationery ...... ...XV .XIX .....XII ...XXII Spalding Bros., Athletic Goods.. .. .XII Stillman, O. O., Jeweler .......... XIV Strong Hardware ....,..... .... X VII Students' Supply Store. . L . ...... XV Sunday Times ........ ..... XVI Targum, The .................... XIII Taxi, Louis P. Ruck ......... .......V Thompson Sz Binger, Engineers. ..... IV Van Derveer, I. S., Photography ................ .XVIII Viken, O. B., Photography .......... X VValker, Hotel ..................... XI VX-'all, John P., I-Iaberdashery ...... XX Welsli Co., P. M., ,Coal .......... XVIII White Studio .................... VIII VVirth, Nic, Tailor ............... VIII Young Dry Goods Co., P. I ........ XV Zimmerman, Barber ....... ...... .XVII SH' UPPOSE that a stove burns too much coal for the amount of heat that it radiates. The manufacturer hires a man familiar with the principles of combus- tion and heat radiation to make experiments which will f Q . U VVhat Is Research? , . iff y o W indicate desirable changes in design. The stove selected as the most efficient is the result of research. Suppose that you want to make a ruby in a factory-not a mere imitation, but a real ruby, indistinguishable by any chemical or physical test from the natural stone. You begin by analyzing rubies chemically and physically. Then you try to make rubies just as nature did, with the same chemicals and under similar conditions. Your rubies are the result of research-research of a different type from that required to improve the stove. Suppose, as you melted up your chemicals to produce rubies and experimented with high temperatures, you began to wonder how hot the earth must have been millions of years ago when rubies were first' crystallized, and what were the forces at play that made this planet what it is. You begin an investigation that leads you far from rubies and causes you to formulate theories to explain how the earth, and, for that matter, how the whole solar system was created. That would be research of a still different type-pioneering into the unknown to satisfy an insatiable curiosity. Research of all three types is conducted in the Laboratories of the General Electric Company. But it is the third type of research- pioneering into the unknown-that means most, in the long run, even though it is undertaken with no practical benefit in view. At the present time, for example, the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company are exploring matter with X-rays in order to discover not only how the atoms in different substances are arranged but how the atoms themselves are built up. The more you know about a substance, the more you can do with it. Some day this X-ray work will enable scientists to answer more definitely than they can now the question: Why is iron magnetic? And then the electrical industry will take a great step forward, and more real progress will be made in five years than can be made in a century of experimenting with existing electrical apparatus. You can add wings and stories to an old house. But to build a new house, you must begin with the foundation. . .. -'sf as.-wr ,ss e General Office Scl1enectady,N.Y. 95-379-B II ESTABLISHED l8l8 mamma -xg xf 5l gf Cieaeeea are SEED tleinema urnishixig nba, MADISON AVENUE COP. FOPTY'FOURTH STREET BROOKS BROTHERS' New Building Telephone Murray Hill 8800 NEW YORK 'P-+--Y Y --e ,. ,, . , . . L - f m A 1?A'.'- F i .itz . H '-, x f. ' v - ,g I, , V, .R l , A 1 , , A . ,f , .1. '.g,2 N: . ' A v ' A f .1-j,.g'gi,g9 V '75 l ' I 'I 1 H 1 fl' ,rr lil ' .5-' , 'E , -l T.,.,g1:l' Ll. fl-if , .W ,L ,jj L- f' ., ,H ri H, ,ir 'gg ld ts wir gi ' ' 'QT' - -' , , gig S IZ, y llf. f 2.46 ONLY A STEP FROM Grand Central, Subway and many leading Hotels Everything for Menls and Boys' Wear in Town and Country Suits and Overcoats Ready-made or to Measure All Garments for Riding, Driving, Hunting, Yachting Golfing, Tennis and Polo Motor Clothing, Liveries and Furs English and Domestic Hats Shirts, Cravats, Collars, Pajamas, Underwear Hosiery and Gloves Shoes for Dress, Street or Sporting Wear Imported Hand Bags, Suit Cases, Portmanteaux, Trunks, etc Many useful Silver and Leather Novelties Send for Illustrated Catalogue BOSTON NEWPORT TREMONTCOR.BOYLSTON 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE IH THOMPSON 81 BINGER, INO. ENGINEERS an CONTRACTORS f NEW YORK 280 MADISON AVENUE SYRACUSE NEW YQRK IX' LOUIS P. RUCK Telephone 73 GARAGE-RUCK BROS. wp Q X.-13 A-3 ir' f 1 'f tryin Vffl rg' I Ss ALBANY ST. 7 Q , Q' f li Qi' Vw. NEXV BRUNSVVICK, N. J. ljaawi ll.i!tm1N K ii Q 1 X l UQ il' 7VW1'i?1 For a taxi call 73. We make a specialty of furnishing Well appointed cars to college students for all occasions. Cars furnished With or Without driver. Flat rate per mile charged When rented Without driver. All calls are received at garage and will receive personal attention. I am the only taxi driver who is a subscriber to the Rutgers College Endowment Fund. Your patronage is earnestly solicited. For cz Tasty Bite and Good Food , HARTNIA-N78 . CALL AT THE Haberdasher and French P35tfY Haney for Mm Tea Room and who are critical R e S t a u r a n t 134 ALBANY STREET 23 LIBERTY STREET I Pl'1011C 19,02 Opposite the Opera House Open until 2 a. nz. 4 V 2 The Picture of Health J IS stamped on every bottle of milk purchased from us. The most SHI careful attention is given to IE I every process through which it i has to go. ll YOU will buy .fafe if you buy gfffggg oUR MILK AULUS' OSITIVELY U E ILK A 5 T E U Rl Z E D THE PAULUS DAIRY john Paulus, Prop. 189-l9l-193 NEVV ST. Give our njicicnt and dependable delivery system: a trial Phone 1434 L:fa:-5' p' n rv PI ' ,, r ll f'5ff ' li li li l t or T E mil ima? e I r 'ese f Tuning ' all l Repalrmg cp lo , P HART BROTHERS Pianos to Rent 94 Bayard Street NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. Phone:882 VI CRITTENDEN PRINTING CO. 32 ALBANY STREET NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. 151111611726 7'111l'111g LETTERHEADS ADVERTISING ENVELOPES BOOKLETS and CARDS FOLDERS OFFICE and BANK FORMS Telephone 252 Many of the Photographs in this book ' were made by the I Bennett Photo Service Pfzotos for Aa'fver1z3'z'1zg, Illustrazzhg, and all Purposes. Hziffz-Class Commerczkzl and Amateur Fz'm1vfzz'1zg 339-343 GEORGE STREET NEW BRUNSWICK, N. I. VII ' NIC. WIRTH Tailor Suits to Order. Cleaning, Repairing. Pressing by Hand 31 l't'tIl'S' E.rf1r1'iv11rr in Tailor BIIXI-IIFSS 18 EASTON AVENUE, NEW' BRUNSVVICK, N I Telephone 1517 Photographers to THE SCARLET LETTER Equipped with many years' experience for making photographs of all sorts, desirable for illustrating college annuals. Best obtainable artists, Work- manship and the capacity for prompt and unequalled service. Address requests for information to our Executive Of-lfices, 1546 BROADWAY New York City VIII TO RUTGERS CHEMISTS: The equipping of your Iirst laboratory will be one of the most important undertakings of your business career. You cannot gamble on the results this lirst equipment will give you. Your volumetric glassware must be accurately graduated, your balances and weights must be carefully stand- ardized, your chemicals must be guaranteed by the labels on them. You must feel safe in assuming that your laboratory apparatus, chemicals and supplies are of the highest grade. Our reputation has been built up on sixty-nine years of honest merchandis- ing, where Qzzaiify has always been our great aim. Throughout the whole scientific world 8: A. are the recognized distributors of dependable and accurate laboratory apparatus, chemicals and supplies. EIMER and AMEND 3rd Ave., 18th-19th St. 55 , Pittsburgh Branch New York lf ? 2011 jenkins Arcade 'f voY3' National Bank of New ersey NEW BRUNSWICK, N. Founded 1834 Resources . . ...................... Sl0,000,000,00 STRENGTH carefully guarded and maintained through ample resources SERVICE based on true appreciation of the depos- itorls point of view SYSTEM efficiently governed in accordance with sound banking principles TDEALS that include every constructive influence for conserving our depositors' interests and encouraging individual and business enterprise IX John Collier Ice and Coal Co. Orrlciss : 211 and 213 BURNET STREET Cold Spring and Silver Lake Ice LEI-HGH COAL Telephone 615 OUR PLUMBER Charles A. McCormick, Ir. New Brunswick New Jersey Telephone 246 'Phone 2061 Portrait Photography O. B. VIKEN Commercial Photographer Panoramic Pictures a Specialty Flash Lights Groups and General Viewing 14 Erencnh Street CSCCOINI F1000 Opp. P. R. R. Station NEW BRUNSVVICK, N. I. 1872 1921 Bedding, Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, Carpets, Mattings, VVindow Shades, etc. Repair- ing and Upholstering. Edward Hingher Co. Dealers in Furniture Antique Furniture a Specialty Years of experience enable us to maintain our reputation for reliability, in furnishing Houses or Offices with selected pieces of furniture of any description. Our repair department is in the hands of skillful mechanics. 116-122 NEILSON STREET New Brunswick New Jersey Telephone 639 THE HANOVER SHOE 54.50 and 55.00 The Greatest Shoe Value on Earth-Factory to Consumer Exclusively 61 STORES IN 43 CITIES Factories, Hanover, Pa. NEW BRUNSVVICK STORE, 377 GEORGE STREET The Hanover Shoe Mail Order Department, Hanover, Pa. Send for Caialog and Order by Ma1'Z PEOPLE'S NATIONAL BANK New Brunswick, N. ul. Transact a General Banking, Dixcount and Exchange Business INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS CAPITAL ................ 31001300.00 SURPLUS ............... S200,000.00 SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT, 32.50 AND UPWARDS George Corner Church St., New Brunswick, N. HT. HOTEL WALKER Restaurant and French Pastry Shop i The Best Place to Eat f11,L?g5igieI2g25 CATERING A SPECIALTY OPPO SITE PENNSYLVANIA STATION V4 I Banners Pennants Pillow Tops Spalding Athletic Supplies I-P Memos and Notebooks Waterinan Pens REED'S BOOK STORE 391-393 George Street XI V W' . , z' 5 -- ff-- lf5::1SJmgV-ii mil- ...rex v.- :C .3-rL'f5A-ki, ll ii ,fl get ...I , ,. l6,'T'L SPALDING Superiority in competition is the result of quality CSpalcliugl in Athletic Equipment. Everything for every Athletic Sport. just as good is never just the same. Sena' for Catalog A. G. SPALDING ZSLBROS. 126 Nassau St. 523 Fifth Ave. New York City Uniforms for Internes Nlade of Heavy Shrunk Duck Laboratory Gowns at 31.50 I. Price 313 East 26th Street New York City E. C, LORBER Painter and Paperhcmger 23-25 CHURCH ST. Telephone 1479 Compliments of Schumann Photo Company COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY 115 ALBANY STREET NEVV BRUNSXVICK, N. I. X Hotel Klein . READ ALBANY and BURNET STREETS THE RUTGERS COLLEGE WEEKLY NEXV BRUXSXX ICK, N. I. BRUNS' CHOCGLATE SHOP EVER PGPULAR 361 George Street New Brunswick A full line of Paints, Oils, Varnislies, Enamels, Glass, etc. Painting, Paper-lzangilzg Decoralfng JOHN E. BARTI-IOLOIVIEW 120 Easton Avenue THE LENOX LUNCH 46448 PATERSON STREET, New Brunswick, N. HARRY SILVERSTEIN, Prop. Phone 131 4 PARIS i f CAPS andoowns T I illalecrx 10 CONFECTIONERY ,fl i s in RUTGERS if .1 .4 DC'IIfIt7IIS Soda.: and Szmdacs K L L E G E High Grade Cazzdirs af Peace Privvs 380 GEORGE STREET PULPIT AND CHOIR GOXYNS JUDGES' ROBES Cox Sons 81 Vining 72 Madison Avenue New York ESTABLISHED 1879 O. O. STILLMAN JEWELER and OPTOMETRIST Diamonds, VVatclies, Sterling Silver Eine VVatch Repairing a Specialty Eye Specialist in Charge of Optical College Merchant Tailor Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing ana' Repairing Suits Made to Order Department Special Rates for Students l A 1 + XI 33- LBANY STREET 11 Easton Avenue I ew Biunswick New Jersey P. NYBO 2Vefw and Up-to-Date Studio ALL LINES OF PHOTOGRAPHY 92 ALBANY STREET New Brunswick Hoagland's Drug Store Prescription Specialists CORNER GEORGE AND PATERSON STREETS New Brunswick, N. XIV Have You Read EARL REED SILVERKS Stories of Rutgers? Three cracking good tales that show the old campus to the life. In the dormitories, on the athletic field, in the classroom, here is Rutgers to- day. Each book 31.75 net, DICK ARNOLD OF RARITAN COLLEGE DICK ARNOLD PLAYS TI-IE GAME ' DICK ARNOLD OF TI-IE VAR- SITY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 35 West 32nd Street, New York Students' Supply Store sTAJioNERY ATHLETn:GooDs PENNANTS FOUNTAHQPENS JEWELRY 12 XVINANTS I-IALL Telephone 744 George B. Rule Carpenter and Builder 7l John Street Foot of Morris PgLYOUNG DRYGOODSCO. George and Paterson Streets TI-IE LARGEST DEPARTMENT STORE IN THIS PART OF TI-IE STATE Menls Furnishings Ladies' Furnishings Carpets Rugs and Linoleums Trunks and Bags House Furnishings To Keep Informed Read the Daily Home News and Sunday Times Because of excellent news service rendered in these newspapers many alumni of Rutgers, even in far-off places, are daily readers. The Jonlee Co. 23 Bayard Street 184 Smith Street New Brunswick, Perth Amboy, N. J. N. I. E'oeryflzing Best in Paint HEIDINGSFELD 0 . 42 ALBANY-STREET . Publishzezg P7'Z.77ZLZ.7'Ig B00kbi7'I6Z7Z.77g NEVV BRUNSXVICK - - NEXVJERSEY THE COLLEGE PHARMACY A. Robitsek, Prop. 47 Easton Avenue Telephone 1048-W .Arfflff Bl'llIZ5QC'l.CiIZ,J La rg est and L ea a' 1' n g Fll1'Hl.fZl1'6 ' flame GLOBE FURNITURE COMPANY CHURCH AND NEILSON STREETS CORNER New Brunswick, N. XVI STRONG'S Hfholemle and RefailDea!ers IN HARDWARE HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS SPORTING GOODS PAINTS, GLASS, OILS IRON, STEEL FARMING TMPLEIIENTS OF .ALL KINDS ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES AND .AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES Strong Hardware Co. 289-291-293 BURNET STREET NEW BRUNSWICK NEW JERSEY Telephone 197 The Christie Press ll PEACE STREET NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY '13 S..L I..,:,,II, Q HYEI rIS I snr A LIGHT In , X Jeff, ,RLSRLI 'S T 7 356 George Street and 115 Albany Street QTWO Storesj For Your Cleaning and Pressing Call Up THE ACME TAILORS Cleaners and Dyers 403 GEORGE STREET Telephone 236 ZIMMERMAN The Barber Goldfish and Birds Church St., above National Bank Of N. Telephone 1433 EdWardJ.MaSterSOn LIGHT and HEAVY TRUCKINC1 City or Country MCTOR TRUCKS 22 Prosper Street NEW BRUNSWICK NEW JERSEY Prompt Attention XVII JAMES EDGAR Real Estate and General Insurance Telephones 482-XV and 515-M Paterson St., Cor. Spring St. G. H. BISSETT Draggirt Kodaks, Developing and Printing 420 GEORGE STREET New Brunswick, N. Ll. I. S. VAN DERVEER Pfiozfograpfzer 34-5 GEORGE STREET New Brunswick, N. J. Oxfords, Pumps ana' Shoes of Every D6.S'Cl'I.1Df1.07Z MANSFIELDB Big S h o e Store 9 PEACE STREET New Brunswick, N. I. MEET ME at LOUIE'S H. L. Bartholomew Painter and Decorator 177 Church Street New Brunswick - N. J. All Wlork Executed Promptly and in the Best Manner Telephone 47 JET WHITE Szfaam Laundry 80-82 Church Street New Brunswick - N. J. P. M. WELSH CO. Coal ana' Maxonr' lVIate1'z'al5 239-241 Burnet Street XVIII What's in a Name N buying trade-mark goods you look for the manufacturers' imprint, Whether it is an automobile or a Watch. You Wouldn't take any Watch the dealer handed you just because the price was 52.00-yet many buyers of printing do this very thing just because it's printing. Qur Equipment, Service and Science make a Schilling Press product better. I They might try to imitate the Schilling Press product, but they can't imitate the name. The im- print is important and the buyer of good printing should look at the bottom of the last page of the books that are so distinctive and different. The mark of Schilling Press Service is their Imprint. The Schilling Press, lnc V Engineers of Printing 137-139 E. 25th Street, New York City XIX John P If You Want the Best CGAL With the Best Service Tailoring CALL and Furnishings LEWIS BUARD Successor to C. XY. Russell French and Schuyler Streets Tel lhonc 612 Toilet Aids for Many Uses at Moniganls A rnan's toilet is very simple, hut the best ofieach of the few articles needed ought to be used, since they cost no more at Monigan's than the poorer - kind sold elsewhere. MONIGAN'S PHARMACY 376 George Street KX 77X 1. Phones: 5165 and 5167 Madison Sq. U0 Xerox if J QQ ff4?iQ,S 1 S, .Inn-A ,W l,Wx' 3 Jo XX5 I5 ,,,. -,:Cx.1 3 9 Fx I pl f f .I,5HEfQ5Qf3 EB E EE Q Ssnfe UDLCE r 0 I y' , r i , Cjhffh 1 p s PPJQTQHZRQNG ' E ., M. f - , A ggtggfe ,, ,rf -- WLIEQ ZQ L 77 LEXINGTON AVENUE X11i4g.4,fj2??f 'QTENYEW NEW'YORK ,'V: Q ' Makers of FINE HALF TONES AND LINE ETCHINGS for SCHOOLS and COLLEGES VERY MODEIRATE PRICES The Engravings in This Book Were Made in Our Shop THE CAMPUS Ia Nu BLUE TEA ROOM Invites Your Patronage MEALS THAT REMIND YOU OF HOME SPECIAL VVEEKLY RATES FOR STUDENTS PARTY SUPPERS ARRANGED 82 Somerset Street Opp. Queens Phone 1018-W' Printing Successor fo Morrison Sc Blue Printing Co. 7-13 BETHANY STREET U NEXV BRUNSVVICK, N. I. Telephone 750 XXI Raritan CoalCompany Hz'gh Gracie Cm! COMMERCE SQUARE New Brunswick Shllkmfters fl1L'0l'f7OI'!Ifl'd Stationers, Engravers 8 Jewelers ccHonor Quality DANCE PROGRAMS INVITATIONS E N G R A V E D S T A T I O N E R Y GREETING CARDS VISITING CARDS CLASS PINS Sa RINGS P R I Z E C U P S MEDALS iQ INSIGNIA 1723 Ranstead Street Philadelphia, Pa. Are You Going to Move? I do1z'zf clazim to be cheaper than the other fellow, but do claim I can gifve you better .verfvice VV MOVING, TRUCKING and STORAGE illiam Dononiore Padded Motor Vans for Out-of- Town or City Movings. Packing and Shipping. Pianos Hoisted 75 PATERSON STREET ' NEW BRUNSXYICK, N. J. Telephones: OHice 1576, Residence 2158 The man who is particular about his appearance can never go wrong If he chooses from our extensive assort- ment of Furnishings for Men. Menys Shirts, Men's Neckwear, Men's Hosiery, I-Iandkerchiefs, Underwear, etc., etc. Too many articles to mention in detail, but absolutely articles that are distinc- tive as to style and in a class by them- selves as to quality. Prices, of course, as low as it is safe to pay. MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT NATH AN' S George Street Telephone 740 XXII I D R U G S I Developing Printing Enlczrging Filnzs Kodalzy Stationery GRUESSNI-ER7S PHARMACY HGTEL VVALKER BUTTLER-HGWELL PLAZA COMPANY RESTAURANT HQUSE AND CABINET MILL- CLEAN' WIgeCiEif?ME FOOD WQRK MANUFACTURERS LIGHT, NE.-IT SURRQUNDINGS Established 1852-Incorporated 1912 Landsberg Building-Albammy Stree Factory and Ixfafelwusez Nw Pemw- R- R- NEW BRUNSWICK, N. I. WILLIAMS, Prop. HILDEBRECHT IC E C R E A M SANFORD STREET - NEW BRUNSWICK - NEW JERSEY XXIII Laggren Brothers Company Decorated the gymnasium for the Sophomore Hop, junior Prom and Senior Ball during 1921. 1170-80 E. GRAND ST. ELIZABETH, N. J. Telephone 873 Dumpty-Hump-Tea House 227 GEORGE STREET Dancing Caierirzg Lunch Dinner Tea Joseph Bahash Confectionery lee Cream and Fruzis 120 Somerset St. New Brunswick N. NI. RED TIP RED HEEL GALKS 1 SHOES 'CDN gf? '11 1 E 1 - - QW Qs :iz- NEVERSLIP SIDE CUTTING PLIERS Renewable S5 'r 'frf' Wear Blades of 1 1 1 i,'l 1111 1N , f ,,..,,..,ii.,,..., Sh-SFPCSI Crucible I IIIII' r1'1 1 ffffffi f,,,,,U 1 '11' 11 11111 11 11f+ 1'111111'111f11111 K , Last Steel E 111'11'11 11 1'1 1'11'11'11 A .1 ,1 Loligffsf THE NEVERSLIP woRKs, Q1fQfQB1ifmjj XXIV For the Best that can be made Pastry Candy Ice Cream MERCKEN'S CANDY SHOP 378 GEORGE STREET P1 648 10116 OPERA HOUSE fFeiber 81 Shea, Mgrs.J High Class Vauttefville and Motion Pictures 3-SHOVVS DAILY-3 Phone 1933 For Clean, Quick Service at M0de1'ate Prices Visit the Paris Lunch and Restaurant Opposite the Post Office. New Brunswick Printing Co. Printers, of Everything New Brunswick, N. Tel 1h e 962 On Your Way to Class Stop for Candy Cigarettes or Tobacco AT 514 FORD XXV 4 'O Highland Park Building Co. General Contractors hleehzrnics Furnished in All Building Trades Interior Decorating a Specialty 238 CLEVELAND AVE. Phonel5-10 W. E. MOUNT New Jerseyis Oldest Cronk Nlanufaczturing Company- Millwork Specialists in 1,1161-W cnbmmo,-16 6 Otlice-238 Cleveland Avenue Mill-139 Burnet Street Phone 1340 PUSSY CQAL Authorized Ford Dealer FOR EUSSY PEQPLE 4' AT S3163 amd T. C. DUGAN'S S e 1' V i C e ' W STREET S t a t 1 o n S 16 NE Telephone 666 NEW! BRUNSWICK RED BANK ENGLISHTOWN MATAWAN XXVI


Suggestions in the Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) collection:

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925


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