Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 236

 

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 236 of the 1929 volume:

(. The Jumbo Book 192 9 2 The Jumbo Book 1929 Tufts College Massachusetts 3 4 5 Copyright by Raymond J. Fay Editor-in-chief Donald C. Fisk Business Manager George A. Haraden Art Editor 1929 1N THIS bo ok we have aimed to pre¬ sent a record of the seventy-fourth year of the College and of the accomplish¬ ments of those who constituted its stu¬ dent body. We have endeavored to cre¬ ate an impression of the signifi cant things of the year which may serve as a witness to the achievements of the past and an indication of the promise of the future. If these pages reflect this spirit success¬ fully, our purposes have been achieved. CONTENTS Book 1 The College Book 2 The Classes Book 3 Organizations Book 4 Fraternities Book 5 Athletics The College v, 1 . ' • ' a ■ ' ’ .v;:- -v aa,:a ■ : A ty-Afafafa ■ ■ . ' ' • ' . ' ,v ' ' i’ j : , . :• , ■ ■, ! r-.A :■ . ■ % . ; a .V:.:v aaaA.. ' a ’! ;•. a.; ' ■■■. ; . : • : ; $■■■ J - - ' ' IV ' .. ' ■ ■ : va .a a: a: , ; v- aa-.a ' V : a ■ ■ . . . , . •; : ? Av-aa: a a aa-aAaa-: ■« fa 1 fa , re . , . ■ .. ■ A - , a a a a-.aaaa=a ' Aa n m w mmrmti ■ ■ a m a . . fa • ■ . ■ vv-A .■: . ■., - a;, , . 1 , ' . fa ■, ■ a a a • ’fa ' fa ;• iO. •X ' V ' ' iV ' JoR.: •.V-V .a; ' A,•. . • ' . • ' fa, , ' V • ■ ' . • A, ■ v. ■ . ■. • .• . ' A- ! ' ■ A. i ' ■ ' . ' A A: fafafafa ' i fa A AkAA a ' ■ A a ' aaa | |M | . ' ■ • ' -. A!i ' ' V V .A v uO:V .t ' . ' . ' s r, . • . ’i V •; f. A .. . • . . v .v - • 8-.- -A. ;: ' - T A u The Faculty JOHN ALBERT COUSENS A.B., LL.D., ATA, $BK J OHN Albert Cousens became acting president of the College in September, 1919, and in June, 1920, he was elected eighth President of the College. He is a gradua te of Tufts with the Class of 1898. During the past ten years in which he has served as President, there has been great improvement and devel¬ opment of the College. There has been a large increase in the enrollment of the undergraduate body. There have been many additions in the matter of buildings, Pearson Laboratory, Fletcher Hall, Braker Hall, Stratton Hall, and the new Theological Buildings and Memorial Stair¬ way all coming within this time. Along with this mate¬ rial advancement, has gone progress in academic lines and extracurricular fields of endeavor. ' ■A; X, ' • ' •• ■ ' THE DEANS Frank George Wren Dean of the School of Liberal Arts JValker Professor of Mathematics A.B., Tufts, 1894; A.M., 1897. ATf . .Assistant in Mathematics, Tufts, 1 894-95; Instructor, 1895-99; Assistant Professor, 1S99- 1902; Professor, 1902-04; Walker Professor of Mathematics, 1904-; Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, 1907-; Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, 1907-. Edwin Butler Rollins Acting Dean of the Engineering School B.S., Tufts, 1901. A 2. Member of the Engineering Faculty since 1901. Edith Linwood Bush Dean of Women A.B., Tufts, 1903. XQ, 4 BIv Professor of Mathematics. Lee Sullivan McCollester Dean of Crane Theological School A. B., 1881; S.T.B., 1884; S.T.D., 1899. PA0, 4 BK. Minister of Universalist Church, Claremont, N. H., 1884-88; Detroit, 1899-1912; Dean of Crane, 1912; Chaplain, 1919; Librarian of Universalist Historical Society; Trustee, Univer¬ salist General Convention, 1906-27; Chairman of Board, 1911-23; President of Genera! Convention, 1915-19; Chaplain-General, Sons of American Revolution, 1918-21. Herbert Vincent Neal Dean of the Graduate School essor o A.B., Harvard, 1893 ; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., 1S96. Professor of Biology, Knox College, 1897-1913 atory, 1926-; Lecturer in Harvard, 1925-27. BK, 23, hBK. Director, Mt. Desert Island Biological Lab 20 FACULTY J. A. C. Fagginger Auer Professor of Church History and Philosophy B.D., Meadville Theological School, 1906; Ph.D., Cornell, 1924. Received degree in theology at Amsterdam, Holland, in 1910. Instructor, University of Pittsburg, 1913-14; Instructor, Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1914-15; Minister, Wheeling Unitarian Church, 1915-17; Minister, Ithaca Unitarian Church, 1917-24; Instructor, Cornell University, 191S-24. George Preston Bacon Professor of Physics A. B., Dartmouth, 1887; A.M., Dartmouth, 1890. 0AX, 4 BK. Instructor in Mathematics and Physics, Ripon College, 1888-89; Instructor in Physics and Chemistry, Peekskill Military Academy, 1890-92; Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Beloit College, 1892-1902; Professor of Physics, Wooster College, 1902-08; Assistant Professor of Physics, Simmons College, 1910-19. Crosby Fred Baker Professor of Analytical Chemistry B. S., Tufts, 1910; M.S., Tufts, 1911. A f 2. Assistant in Chemistry, Tufts, 1909-11; Instructor, 1911-18; Assistant Professor, 1918-24; Professor, 1924-. Harry Poole Burden Associate Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., University of Maine, 1912. 0X. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Tufts, 1913-18; Assistant Professor, 1919-21; Associate Professor, 1922-. Charles Harris Chase Professor of Steam Engineering S.B., M.I.T., 1892. Instructor and Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1896-1908; Professor, 1908-. Samuel Lucas Conner Associate Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., University of Delaware, 1897; M.S., 1912. A b2. Instructor, Tufts, 1909-12; Assistant Professor, 1912-17; Professor of Railway Engineering, 1917-20; Associate Professor Civil Engineering, 1920-. William Penn Cresson Fletcher Professor of International Law and Diplomacy Studied at Ecole des Sciences Politiques. Ph.D., Columbia, 1922. Diplomatic Service, 1909-17; Conference on Limitation of Armaments, 1921-22; Assistant Professor, Princeton, 1921-22; Georgetown University, 1923-26; Professor, Tufts, 1927. 22 William Kendall Denison Professor of Latin Language and Literature A.B., Tufts, 1891; A.M., Harvard, 1892; A.M., Tufts, 1893. Z ' F, f BK. Studied at Harvard Graduate School, 1891-95; American School of Classical Studies in Rome, 1895-96. Head of the Latin Department, Tufts, 1 897-. Frank Williams Durkee Professor of Chemistry A. B., Tufts, 1888 ; A.M., 1889; Sc.D., 1921. AT, d BK. Instructor in Chemistry, Gymnasium and Natural History, 1839-95 ; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1S98-1917; Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, 1917; Professor of Chemistry, 1917-. Walter Elwood Farnham Professor of Graphics B. S., University of Maine, 1917. K2. Instructor, University of Maine, 1909-17; Head of English Department, New Bedford Textile School, 1917-18; Instructor in Engineering Drawing, University of Illinois, 1918-19; Assistant Professor of Graphics, Tufts, 1919-25; Associate Professor, 1925-27; Professor, 1927-. George Hussey Gifford Professor of Romance Languages A.B., Harvard, 1913; Balliol College, Oxford, 1913-16; A.M., Harvard, 1921; Ph.D., Harvard, 1927; Harvard Travelling Fellow and American reader at the University of Paris, 1922-23; Instructor in Modern Language, U. S. Naval Academy, 1917-20; Assistant Professor and Professor of Romance Languages, University of Buffalo, 1923-2S. Professor, Tufts, 1928. Robert Chenault Givler Fletcher Professor of Philosophy and Psychology A.B., Hamline University, 1906; A.M., Harvard, 1913; Ph.D., Harvard, 1914. Instructor in Psychology, University of Washington, 1914-17; Instructor, Harvard and Rad- cliffe, 1917-19; Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1919-22; Professor. 1922-25; Fletcher Professor, 1925-. Charles Gott Fletcher Professor of English A. B., Tufts, 1911; A.M., Harvard, 1914; Ph.D., Harvard, 1919. AT, f BK. Instructor in English, Tufts, 1911-14; Assistant, Harvard, 1914-19; Assistant Professor, Carnegie, 1919-22; Associate Professor, 1922-25; Professor and Head of Department, Tufts, 1925-. Charles Henry Gray Professor of English B. L., University of Michigan, 1895 ; M.L., 1896; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1901. f)AX. Assistant Instructor in English, University of Michigan, 1895-98; Instructor, Oberlin, 1898-1900: Assistant Instructor, University of Chicago, 1902-04; Professor, University of Kansas, 1904-14; Harrison Research Fellow in English, University of Pennsylvania, 1914-15; Professor, Tufts, 1915-. 23 2 + Frank Oliver Hall Professor of Homiletics and Philosophy B.D., University of St. Lawrence; D.D., 1901; S.T.D., Tufts, 1905. Pastor of Universalist Church, Fitchburg, 1S84-91; Lowell, 1891-95; Cambridge, 1895-1902; Church of Divine Paternity, New York, 1902-19; at present Pastor Emeritus. Halford Lancaster Hoskins Dickson Professor of History A. B., Earlham, 1913; A.M., University of Pennsylvania, 1921; Ph.D., 1924. ZT. Teacher in High Schools, 1913-17; Instructor in History, Friends University, 1917-18; As¬ sistant Professor, Duke, 1918-19; Harrison Fellow, University of Pennsylvania, 1919-20; Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1920-24; Dickson Piofessor, 1924-; Member, Summer Session Fac¬ ulties, Kansas, 1919; Pennsylvania, 1920-23; Western Reserve, 1921-22; Pittsburgh, 1925. Clarence Preston Houston Braker Professor of Commercial Law Athletic Director B. S., Tufts, 1914; LL.B., Northeastern, 1923. 0AX. Teacher, Adironack-Florida School, 1914-17; Officer, U. S. Army, 1917-19; Lawyer with Russell, Pugh and Joslin, 1924-25. Fred Dayton Lambert Professor of Botany Ph.B., Tufts, 1894; A.M., Ph.D., 1897. ATA, $BK. Assistant in Biology, Tufts, 1896-97; Instructor, 1897-98; Sub-Master, Edward Little High School, Auburn, Me., 1898-99; Instructor in Natural History, Tufts, 1899-1904; Assistant Pro¬ fessor, 1904-13; Professor of Botany, 1913-. Alfred Church Lane Pearson Professor of Geology and Mineralogy A.B., Harvard, 1883 ; A.M., Ph.D., 1888 ; Heidelberg, 1885-87; Sc.D., Tufts, 1913. BK. Instructor in Mathematics, Harvard. 1883-85; Petrographer, Michigan Geology Survey and Michigan College of Mines, 1889-92; Assistant State Geologist of Michigan, 1892-99; Special Lecturer in Economic Survey, University of Michigan, 1904; State Geologist, Michigan, 1899-1909; Pearson Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, Tufts, 1909-; with Y. M. C. A. and Head of Department of Mines, A.E.F. University Beaune, France, 1919. Leo Rich Lewis Fletcher Professor of Music A.B., Tufts, 1887; Litt.D., 1922; A.B., Harvard, 1888; A.M., 1889; Diploma, Conservatory of Music, 1892. ZT, TBK, KP ' F. Instructor in French, Tufts, 1S92-1920; Professor, Theory and History of Music, 1895-1920; Professor of Music and Associate Professor of Modern Languages, 1920-24; Visiting Instruc¬ tor, Harvard Summer School, 1915-22; Fletcher Professor of Music, 1924-. Edgar MacNaughton Professor of Mechanical Engineering M.E., Cornell, 1911. BK, IIT2, TBIT. With General Electric, 1911-14; Associate in Mechanical Engineering, University of Illinois, 1917-1918; With Boston Elevated, 1916-17; With Westinghouse Electric Co., 1924. 25 rrofessor of Electrical Engineering S.B., 1920. Engineer, New England Tel. and Tel. Co., 1920-27; Professor, Tufts, 1927-. Joseph Mayer Professor of Economics and Sociology B.A., Southwestern, 1911; M.A., Harvard, 1914; Ph.D., Columbia, 1922. IITM. Assistant in Mathematics and Physics, Texas, 1908-10; Instructor, Southwestern, 1920; Instructor, Social Ethics, Meeting House Hill, Dorchester, 1912-13; Instructor in Mathematics, Texas, 1913-14; Instructor in Mechanics, Elm Vocational School, Buffalo, 1914-16; Instructor in Business English and History, Baylor and Hardin Military School, 1918-19; Lecturer on Business, Business Training Corporation, New York, 1919-20; Educational Director, Niagara Falls Motion Picture Co., 1914-16; Secretary, Investigation of Prostitution in America, Bureau of Social Hygiene, Rockefeller Foundation, New York, 1916-18; Director, W.C.C.S. Activities, 1918; Director, Industrial Economic Research, National Industrial Conference Board, 1920-23; Consulting Engineer and Economist, New York, 1919-24. Newell Carroll Maynard Fletcher Professor of Oratory A. B., Dartmouth, 1910; M.Ed., Harvard, 1927. ATO. Minister, Congregational Church, Haverhill, 1917-23; Middleboro, 1913-17; Lecturer, War Work Council, 1918-19; Lecturer in English, Harvard Summer School, 1922-27. Florence Syndon Meredith Professor of Hygiene B. S., Temple; M.D., Tufts Medical, 1916. Instructor in Surgery, Tufts Medical, 1916-20; Physician in charge of women, Hood Rubber Co., 1917-18; War Work, 1918-19; New Yoik Health Center for Women and Girls, 1919-20; Professor of Hygiene and Public Health, Woman’s Medical College, 1920-23; Professor of Hygiene and College Physician, Smith, 1923-27; Professor, Tufts, 1927-. William Northrop Morse Professor of Dramatic Literature A.B., Amherst, 1904; A.M., 1905; A.M., Harvard, 1905. AKE. Harvard Graduate School, 1904-05, 1921-23, 1924-26; Instructor, George Washington Uni¬ versity, 1923-24; Associate Professor, Middlebury, 1926-27; Chairman, Department Drama and Public Speaking, 1927-28; Professor, Tufts, 1928-. William Richard Ransom Professor of Mathematics A.B., A.M., Tufts, 1898; A.M., Harvard, 1904. I BK. Cascadilla School, 1898-99; Brooklyn Polytechnic, 1899-1900; Shipping Board Navigation School, 1917. William Howell Reed Professor of German A.B., Harvard, 1898; A.M., 1899. f BK. Assistant, Teaching Fellow, and Instructor in German, Harvard, 1899-1904; Instructor, M.I.T., 1902-03; Instructor in German and Spanish, Tufts, 1904-10; Assistant Professor, 1910- 26; Professor, 1926-. Frank Elias Seavey Professor of English A. B., Bowdoin, 1905; A.M., Harvard, 1916. ZT. Instructor in Modern Languages, Somes School, 1905-06; Instructor in English and Public Speaking, Highland Military Academy, 1906-08; Instructor in English, Tufts, 1908-13; As¬ sistant Professor. 1913-17; Professor, 1917-; Instructor in English Composition, University Extension, 1924-. Edwin Adams Shaw Professor of Education B. S., Tufts, 1893; M.A., Harvard, 1916; Ph.D., 1918. A E2, Acacia, 4 BK, MK. Engineering Work, 1898-1901; Teacher, Various Schools, 1901-15; Instructor and Assistant Professor, Education, Tufts, 1917-21; Babson Institute, 1920-21; Assistant Professor of Edu¬ cation, Harvard Graduate School, 1921-27; Assistant Director, Psycho-Educational Clinic, Harvard, 1921-27; Professor, Tufts, 1927-. Clarence Russell Skinner W oodbridge Professor of Applied Christianity B.A., St. Lawrence, 1904; M.A., Meadville, 1909; D.D., 1926. B0II, I BK. Minister, Mt. Vernon, N.Y., 1904-09; Lowell, 1909-14; Settlement Work, New York; Social Service Secretary of Universalist Church; Leader of Community Church; Leader of Old South Forum; Trustee, St. Lawrence University. Carleton Ames Wheeler Professor of Romance Languages A. B., Harvard, 1899; A.M., 1904. I BK. Country School for Boys of Baltimore, 1899-1902: Clarke School for the Deaf, 1908-10; Tufts, 1910-11; Baltimore City College, 1911-12; Hollywood High, 1912-17; Supervisor of Modern Languages, Los Angeles, 1917-24; Special Investigator, Columbia, 1924-26. David Elbridge Worrall Professor of Organic Chemistry B. S., R. I. State, 1910; M.A., Harvard, 1911; Ph.D., 1919. GX, d ' Kd’, AX2. Chemist, Quantanamo, Cuba, 1911-12; Instructor in Chemistry, Smith, 1914-17; Assistant Chemist, Bureau of Mines, and Lieutenant, Chemical Warfare Service, 1918; Tufts, 1919- Edwin Hanscom Wright Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1894. ATH, 4 BIv. Architectural and Engineering practice, 1894-1918; Instructor, Tufts, 1918-19; Assistant Professor, 1919-26; Professor, 1926-. William Frank Wyatt Professor of Greek A.B., Centre, 1904; Ph.D., Harvard, 1915. I BK, KA (Southern). Instructor in Greek and Latin, Transylvania, 1905-10; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Greek. Tufts, 1914-22; Professor, 1922-. 27 ASSISTANT PROFESSORS Robinson Abbott Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1918. A4 Z, TBII. Resident Engineer, 1912-14; Instructor, Tufts, 1918-22; Assistant Professor, 1922-; In¬ structor, Franklin Union, 1922-26-27; Assistant Coach, Football, 1919-22; 1925-27. Ruhl Jacob Bartlett History A.B., Ohio University, 1920; M.A., University of Cincinnati, 1923; Ph.D., Ohio State. Instructor in History, State University of Iowa, 1925-26; Instructor, Ohio State, 1925-27. Harold Hooper Blanchard English A. B., Clark, 1916; A.M., Harvard, 1921; Ph.D., 1921. Instructor of English, Princeton, 1922-25; Assistant Professor, Wooster, 1925-26; Professor, Wooster, 1926-27. . Harris Marshall Chadwell Physical Chemistry B. S., Dartmouth, 1919; M.A., Harvard, 1921; Ph.D., 1924. AXA, AX2, TA. Instructor, Dartmouth, 1919-20; Assistant Director, Walcott Gibbs Memorial Laboratory, Harvard, 1922-23. William Fitch Cheney Mathematics A. B., California, 1916; A.M., 1917; Ph.D., M. I. T., 1927. 4 BK, Sg. University of California, Teaching Fellowship; DeWitt Clinton Hebbard H. S. Lewis Swinnerton Combes Physics B. S., Wesleyan, 1921. AXP. Haverhill H. S.; Simmons College; Tufts, 1926-. Myron Jennison Files English A. B., Dartmouth, 1914; A.M., Harvard, 1916. Round Robin. PAE. Instructor, Tufts, 1914-16; Dartmouth, 1916-17; U. S. Army, 1917-18; Instructor and As¬ sistant Professor, Tufts, 1919-. Raymond Underwood Fittz Mechanical En gineerin g B. S., Tufts, 1915. A4 2. Edison Laboratory, 1915-16; U. of P., 1916-18; Tufts, 1919-. 7 ' Carl Herbert Holmberg Civil Engineering S.B., M. I. T., 1916; Ed.M., Harvard, 1926. dA. Bethlehem Steel, 1916-17; U. S. Army, 1918; Instructor, Tufts, 1923-26; Assistant Professor, 1926-. Nathaniel Hobbs Knight Physics B.S., Dartmouth, 1907. SN. Sub-Master, No. Yarmouth Academy, 1909-10; Tufts, 1911-. Roland Winthrop Lefavour Civil Engineering 4 A. Instructor, Tufts, 1918-22; Assistant Professor, 1922-. Arthur Whiting Leighton Graphics B.S., M. A. C., 1921; Ed.M., Harvard, 1924. AXA, MK. Instructor, University of Maine, 1914-17; Tufts, 1917-19; Huntington School, 1921-22; Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1922-. Titus Eugene Mergendahl Mathematics B.S., Tufts, 1907; M.S., 1913. ATA. Instructor and Assistant Professor, Mathematics, Ripon, 1907-11; Professor of Mathematics and Head of Department, Emporia, 1911-18. George Stewart Miller Government, Assistant to the President, Secretary of the Faculty A. B., Tufts, 1906-; A.M., 1907. ATD, $BK. Teacher, Concord High School, 1907-09; Assistant Principal, Monson Academy, 1909-12; Head of History Department, Medford, 1912-16. Melville Munro Electrical Engineering B. S., 1904. AT. General Electric, 1904-05 ; Tufts, 1905-. Raymond Vincent Phelan Economics A.B., Western Reserve; A.M.; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin. ABIC, t PZ, IIPM, Amikaro, Acacia. Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota; Professor, Otterbein; Professor, St. Louis; U. S. Army; Business Counsellor. John Moses Ratcliffe Religious Education Ph.B., Chicago, 1916; M.A., 1916. Acacia. Director of Religious Education; Instructor, Tufts, 1927-28; Assistant Professor, 1929. James Alfred Reynolds Electrical Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1910. A I 2. General Electric, 1910-17; Southern Power, 1917-18; General Electric, 1918-19. Arthur Graves Sampson Physical Education Coach of Football and Track B.S., Tufts, 1911. AT. Medford High, 1911-26; Tufts, 1926-; Summer School for Football Coaches, 1928, 1929. Lloyd Lorenzo Shaulis Economics A.B., Harvard, 1915; M.B.A., 1921; M.A., 1922 . AKt. Instructor in Economics, Denison, 1917-18; War Trade Board, 1918-19; Accountant, War and Treasury Departments, 1918-19; Assistant Professor, Queen’s, Economics and Commercial Subjects, 1919-20; Associate Professor, Economics, William and Mary, 1922-23; Professor, 1923-24. Ruth Tousey English A.B., Tufts, 1900. XU. Westbrook Seminary, 1900-01; Somerville High School, 1903-18. Frederic Weaver Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1913. 2TA. Structural Engineering, 1913-15; Passaic High School, 1915-17; U. S. Army, 1917-19; In¬ structor, Mathematics and Civil Engineering, Tufts, 1919-21; Assistant Professor, Civil Engi¬ neering, 1922-. William Stanton Yeager Physical Education Iowa State Teachers’ College, 1905; B.P.E., Springfield, 1910. Superintendent of Schools, No. English, Iowa, 1906-08; Mount Hermon School, 1910-26; Tufts, 1926-. INSTRUCTORS Charles Francis Hitchcock Allen Chemistry A. B., B. U., 1919; A.M., 1920; A.M., Har¬ vard, 1924; Ph.D., 1924. Wesley Collver Casson Mechanical Engineering B. S., Tufts, 1924. Marshall Walter Cox Chemistry A. B., Harvard, 1911; S.M., 1912. AX2. Samuel Hazzard Cross German Theodore De Luca Romance Languages Reuben Benjamin Ellestad Chemistry Esther Beatrice Ereeman Physical Education Henry F. Gray Mechanic Arts Henry Eligene Hartman Romance Languages B. S., Cornell, 1918. 211, OA. Albert Henry Imlah History A.B., British Columbia, 1922; A.M., Clark, 1923. Fred Simmons Keller Philosophy and Psychology B.S., Tufts, 1926. ZT. Ernest Frank Lawrence Electrical Engineering James Millidge Le Cain Physical Education B.S., Tufts, 1922. ATA. Lewis Frederick Manly Economics B.S., Wooster, 1925; A.M., Tufts, 1927. AT. William Kolb Provine German A.B., Vanderbilt, 1920; A.M., 1922; A.M., Harvard, 1927. B0II. Harry Enos Rouillard English S.T.B., Tufts, 1898. Leonard Perkins Sayles Zoology A.B., Brown, 1923; A.M., 1924; Ph.D., 1926. 23, ‘f’BK. Ralph Aubrey Smith Alechanical Engineering William D. Turner Psychology Robert Clarke White English GRADUATE TEACHING FELLOWS ECONOMICS Hamline 1927; University of the South, 1928 Ripon, 1928 William and Mary, 1927 Whitman, 1927 Baylor, 1927 Colorado, 1928 Kalamazoo, 1928 Lawrence William Chidester, KTX, IITM A.B John Rogers Crawford, K2, $BK A.B Edmar Lynn Gardner A.B Minos Francis Hastings, Jr., KA A.B H arriet Haines Hood B.S. ene Parker, ATA A.B Carey Eug Susie Elizabeth Sanford Julius Tugendreich Wendzel ENGLISH A.B. A.B A.B xn, $BK, A2P A.B A.B A.B Newman Baughman Birk, B f n Virginia Elliot Campbell, $21 Theodore Adams Hersey Lucy Jeannette Johnston, Mary Ransom, X12, t BK Feltus Wylie Sypher, $BK Centre, 1928 Wooster, 1928 St. Lawrence, 1928 North Dakota, 1927 Tufts, 1928 Amherst, 1927 CHEMISTRY B.S., Worcester Tech., 1927 Nelson Edwin Parmelee HISTORY Gertrude Fay Holmes, $BK Richard F. F. Tyner Uhicago Carleton -■ ' iminiun nimnm mmumnH ' Wiiiiiiiiiimiiliiiiiiiimmniiii “Mllimc The Classes 34 mm Back row: Holmes, Austin. Front row: Fisk, Fay, Garcelon TUFTS 1929 OFFICERS Raymond Joseph Fay . . . Donald Converse Fisk . Irving Gray Garcelon . . . Robert Webster Holmes Arthur James Austin... President -President Secretary Treasurer Marshal Back row: Wakefield, Handy, Jacoby Front row: McLellan, Quinby, Van Buren, Reynolds JACKSON 1929 OFFICERS Dorothy Spetrs Quinby . . . Vera Leona Wakefield . Helen Lauretta Jacoby . . Muriel Louisa Van Buren Margaret Reynolds . Constance Rhodes Handy . Maria Martha McLellan . President . J ice-President . Secretary . Treasurer . Marshal . Historian Social Chairman 37 Leo Amando Appiani. Medford Engineering Alpha Tau Omega; Tufts Weekly, Business Manager, 3, 4 Tuftonian, Advertising Mana¬ ger, 2; Dramatics, 2; Manager Golf Tournament, 2; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 4; Baseball, 1; G. T. V. Francis Littlefield Archibald . . Medford Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Junior Manager Wrestling, 3; Jumbonians, 2; Band, 3, 4; Concert Orches¬ tra, 4. Robert Taylor Atkinson .... Melrose Engineering Phi Delta. Guy B. Atonna. New York City Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Interfraternity Council, 4; Secretary New York Club, 3; Wrestling Tour¬ nament Committee, 3; Football, 1; Wrestling, 1. Arthur James Austin. Lynn Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Tower Cross; Ivy; Sword and Shield; Class Marshal, 2, 3, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4. Jacob Berger. Lawrence Engineering Sigma Omega Psi. William Herrick Bernstein . New York City Liberal Arts Philosophy Club, 3, Sec retary 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 3; Librarian, String Quartet, 3. Newman Maurice Biller . . . Somerville Liberal Arts Phi Beta Delta; Dramatics, 2, 3, 4; Tufts Weekly, 2; International Relations Club, 3, Treasurer, 4; Menorah Society, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4. 39 Ernest Henry Brehaut . New Rochelle, N. Y. Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Dramatics, 3, 4; Athletic As¬ sociation, Secretary, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Bas¬ ketball, 1, 2, 3, 4. Curtis Campbell. Marblehead Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Student Council, 4; Chairman Class Day Committee, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 4; Calendar Committee, 3; Business Club, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council, 3; Track, 1, 2, 3, Captain 4. Harlan Leonard Carroll . . . Brockton Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Glee Club, 1, 2; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1. Daniel Thurston Chane, Jr. . Manchester Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Tower Cross; Sword and Shield; Musical Clubs, 1, 2; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1. George Bruce Chisholm .... Everett Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Interfraternity Council, 4; Evening Party Association, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 2; Glee Club, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2. Harold Luther Chur buck . . Bridgewater Engineering Theta Delta Chi; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, 4. Eben Thomson Colby . . . IV. Somerville Liberal Arts Historical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 3, 4; Dramatics, 4; Band, 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, 2. Frank Sherman. Dorchester Liberal Arts 40 Henry Stephen Condon .... Medford Engineering Civil Engineering Society, 3, 4; Track, 1; Cross Country, 1. Charles Joseph Crowley . . . Somerville Engineering Beta Kappa; A. S. M. E., 2, 3, Secretary 4; Track Manager, 4. Howard Proctor Cummings . . . Melrose Liberal Arts Sigma Tau Alpha; Press Club, 3, 4; Biology Club, 3, 4; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Chemical Society, 2; Tennis, 1. William Birchard Davis . . Moscow, Idaho Liberal Arts Beta Kappa; Baseball, 3. Lewis Howard Delano, Jr. . . • Orleans Engineering Phi Delta; Evening Party Association, 4; Nom¬ inating Committee of Class, 2; Civil Engineer¬ ing Society, 3, 4; Basketball Tournament Com¬ mittee, 1; Baseball, 1. Thomas Peter Devlin .... Stoneham Liberal Arts Delta Phi Sigma; Medical School, 4; Track, 1; Wrestling, 2; Football, 3. Felix Edward Dine. Revere Liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi; Menorah Society, 2, 3, 4; Histor¬ ical Society, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2, 3; Deutscher Ver- ein, 2, 3; Economics Club, 2; Baseball, 1. Harold Downes. Lynn Liberal Arts Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; Dramatics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tufts Weekly, 1; Tuftonian Staff, 4. 41 n Harold Goodwin Dubrow . . . Dorchester Liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa; Historical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Menorah Society, 3, 4. Fred Melvin Ellis. Medford Engineering Delta Upsilon; Sword and Shield; Football, 1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. Richard Vaughan Elms. Melrose Liberal Arts Beta Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels, Secretary; Interfraternity Council, 3, Vice-President, 4 ; Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3, President, 4; Tufts De Molay Club, 3, Presi¬ dent, 4; Tufts Weekly, 3; Dramatics, 3, 4. Donald Wellington Farqlthar . Lawrence Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Interfraternity Council, 3, President, 4; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Biology Club, 2, Vice-President, 3, President, 4; Glee Club, 2; Operetta, 4; Press Club, 4; G. T. V. Raymond Joseph Fay . . . Meriden , Conn. Liberal Arts Sigma Tau Alpha; Tower Cross, Secretary- Treasurer; Ivy, Secretary; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels, President; Class President, 4; Student Council, Secretary, 4; Editor-in-chief, Jumbo Book, 4; Tufts Weekly, 1, 2, News Editor, 3, Managing Editor, 3; Tuftnnian Staff, 3; De¬ bating Council, 1, Manager, 2, President, 3; Varsity Debating, 1, 2, 3 ; Dramatics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Historian, 3; Ivy Orator, 3; Interfrater¬ nity Council, 3, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 2, 3; Press Club, 2, 3, 4; G. T. V. Donald Converse Fisk . , Rockville, Conn. Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Tower Cross; Ivy, Treas¬ urer; Class Vice-President, 1, 2, 3, 4; Student Council, President, 4; Evening Party Associa¬ tion, President, 4; Business Manager, Jumbo Book, 4; Jumbo Book Committee, 3; Class Debatin ' ?, 2; Class Smoker Committee, 2; Chair¬ man Calendar Committee, 4; G. T. V. James Joseph Fitzgerald, Jr. . . Winchester Engineering Delta Upsilon; Football, 1, 2, 3; Basketball, 1, 3; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Athletic Council, 4. Richard Coring Foote. Everett Engineering Phi Delta; Band, 1; Radio Society, 1, 2, 3. 42 Roger Sheffield French .... Melrose Engineering Alpha Tau Omega; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tuftonian, Distribution Manager; Football, 1; Track, 1. Atherton Graydon Fryer . . fV. Somerville Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Business Club, 1, 2, 3, Presi¬ dent 4; Cross Country, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 4. Samuel Gale. Mattapan Liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi; Interfraternity Council, 3, 4; Biology Club, 3, 4; Menorah Society, 2, 3, 4; Chemical Society, 1, 2; Deutscher Verein, 1, 2, 3. Mark Edward Gallagher . Knoxville, Tenn. Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Historical Society, 2, 3, Pres¬ ident, 4; Class Day Committee, 4; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Biology Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Treas¬ urer, 3; Glee Club, 1, 2; Tennis Manager, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis, 1; Track, 1; G. T. V. Irving Gray Garcelon . Severna Park, Md. Engineering Alpha Tau Omega; Tower Cross; Ivy; Class Secretary, 2, 3, 4; Student Council, 3, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 1; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling Captain 1, 2, 3, 4; N. E. Inter¬ collegiate Wrestling Champion, 115 lb. Class, 2, 125 lbs. Class, 4; Football, 1 ; G. T. V. John Roswell Gifford. Saugus Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, 4; Band, 4; Tennis, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4. Elias Pablo Godreau . . Ponce, Porto Rico Engineering Track, 1, 2; Football, 2; Wrestling, 2. David Goldberg. Fall River Liberal Arts Tau Epsilon Phi; Biology Club, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3; Deutscher Verein, 2; Football, 1; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. 43 Frederico Munoz-Gomez, Guasipati, Venezuela Engineering William Knowland Goodwin . Marblehead. Engineering Delta Tau Delta; Basketball Manager, 4; As¬ sistant Basketball Manager, 3; Class Nominat¬ ing Committee, 3; A. S. M. E. Jester Joseph Hairston . . Homestead, Pa. Liberal Arts Kappa Alpha Psi; Dramatics, 4. Lyman Dudley Hall. Melrose Engineering Beta Kappa; A. S. M. E.; Cross Country, 1, 2; Track, 1; Baseball, 1. Richard Hubbard Hamill. Lynn Engineering Alpha Tau Omega; Track, 2, 3, 4; Cross Coun¬ try, 4; Football, 1; Tennis, 1; Civil Engineer¬ ing Society. George Albert Haraden . . . Manchester Engineering Art Editor, Jumbo Book, 4; A. S. M. E. Edward Ellis Harlow. Ayer Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Baseball Manager, 4; As¬ sistant Baseball Manager, 3; Advertising Man¬ ager, Jumbo Book, 4; Class Nominating Com¬ mittee, 3, 4; Banquet Committee, 4; G. T. V. Lawrence Shaumon Harvey . . . Everett Liberal Arts 44 Dorman James Hayes. Waltham Liberal Arts Dramatics, 4. Julian Francis Haynes . Far Rockaway, N. Y. Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Interfraternity Council, 3, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 4; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; A. S. M. E.; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4. Ernest Francis Herrmann .... A da ms Liberal Arts Zeta Psi; Tower Cross; Ivy; Sword and Shield; Athletic Council, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Cap¬ tain, 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4. Robert Heartz FIickey. E. Lynn Engineering Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, 4. Cecil HingKing .... Trinidad, B. W. I. Engineering Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4. Charles Edward Hingston .... Lynn Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; President TBII, 3, 4; Commencement Speaker, 4; ' 82 Scholarship, 4; Civil Engineering Society, Vice- President, 3; Class Banquet Committee, 4; Tuft- conic Club, 1, 2; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling, 2, 3, 4; Track, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1. John Albert Holmes, Jr. . . . Somerville Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Tufts Weekly, 1, 2, Editor- in-chief, 3; TufIonian Staff, 2, 4; Pipers, 1, 2, 3, President, 4; Student Council, President, 3. Robert Webster Holmes .... Somerville Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Tower Cross, Vice-Presi¬ dent; Ivy; Class Treasurer, 2, 3, 4; Student Council, Vice-President, 4; Football Manager, 4; Assistant Manager Football, 3; Wrestling Manager, 4; Greenwood Prize in Oratory, 4; Tufts Weekly, 1; Football, 1; Basketball, 1; Baseball, 1; G. T. V. 45 John Rockwell Hubbard. Lynn Liberal Arts Delta Tau Delta; Tufts Weekly, 2, 3, Circula¬ tion Manager, 4; Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Tennis, 1, 2, 3, 4. Francis Edmund Ingalls . ... E. Lynn Liberal Arts Delta Tau Delta; Tower Cross, President; Ivy, President; Sword and Shield; Class President, 2, 3; Tufts Weekly, 1, Managing Editor, 2. As¬ sociate Editor, 3, Editor-in-chief, 4; Ivy Book, Editor, 4; Student Council, 4; Interfraternity Council, 3; Head Cheer Leader, 4; Assistant Cheer Leader, 2, 3; Class Banquet Committee, Chairman, I, 2; Smoker Committee, Chairman, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, Vice-President, 2; Base¬ ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; G. T. V. Walter Beverly Ingalls .... Methuen Liberal Arts Alpha Tau Omega; Sword and Shield; Class President, 1; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 4; G. T. V. Edmund Church Ireland .... Brookline Liberal Arts Delta Upsilon; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Foot¬ ball, 1, 2, 4; Baseball, 1. Salvatore Jacobs. Bradford Liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa; Tuftconic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 2, 3, 4; Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3 ; Deutscher Verein, 3, 4; Economics Club, 2, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, 2; Philosophy Club, 3; Medi¬ cal School, 4. Everett Harry Jodrey .... Gloucester Engineering Beta Kappa; Student Council, 3; Glee Club, 2; Operetta, 4; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, Treasurer, 4; Track Manager, 3. Emil Fred Karklin ..... Roslindale Liberal Arts Beta Kappa; Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Radio Club, 1, 2, 3; Football, 2, 4; Baseball, 1, 3. Edward Peter Keenan .... Marblehead Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Cap and Gown Committee, 4. 46 Daniel Brown Knight .... Newbury Engineering Beta Kappa. Harry Louis Koss. Revere Liberal Arts Sigma Omega Psi; Menorah Society, I, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Band, 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Ver- ein, 1, 2; Economics Club, 2. Benedict Kudish. Boston Liberal Arts Medical School, 4. David Israel Levine. Lawrence Liberal Arts Tufts IVeekly, 2; Menorah Society, 1, 2; Wrest¬ ling, 2; Medical School, 4. Eli Maurice Libber. Brookline Liberal Arts Everett Hans Lundsten .... Attleboro Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; Evening Party Association, 4; Dramatics, 2, 3, 4; Assistant Cheer Leader, 3; A. S. M. E.; Wrestling Tournament Committee, 3. Robert Burns AIacDonald .... Lynn Engineering Vincent Robert MacDonald . . Roslindale Engineering Phi Delta; Chemical Society, 2, 3, Treasurer, 4; Football, 3. 47 Robert Philbrick MacLaughlin . Burlington Liberal Arts Delta Tau Delta; Tower Cross; Ivy; Student Council, +; Class Day Committee, +; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Track, 2, 3, +; Baseball, 1; G. T. V. Kenneth Alexander MacLe od . Somerville Liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa; Tuftonian, 3; Class Debating Team, 2; Philosophy Club, 2, +. Charles Fred Manning .... Medford Liberal Arts Pen, Paint, and Pretzels, Business Manager; Tuftonian Staff, 4; Cross Country Manager. Hugh Franklin McKenna . Meriden, Conn. Liberal Arts Zeta Psi; Ivy; Student Council, 3; Debating Council, 1, Treasurer, 2, Manager, 3, President, 4; Tufts Weekly, 1 , News Editor, 2, 3, Associate Editor, 3, Managing Editor, 4; Varsity Debat¬ ing, 1, 2, 3, 4; Evening Party Association, 4; Interfraternity Council, 3; Class Secretary, I; Smoker Committee, 2; Dramatics, 1, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, Treasurer, 2; Historical Society, 4. Joseph Francis McKenna. Lynn Engineering Don Alonzo Miller . . Southington, Conn. Liberal Arts Phi Delta; Interfraternity Council, 3, 4; Class Nominating Committee, 1, 3; Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 3; Cross Country, 2; Wrestling, 1. Clarence Nolan Morang .... Medford Engineering Tau Beta Pi; Civil Engineering Society; Med¬ ford H. S. Alumni Club; Cross Country, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Football, 1. Edward Joseph Murray .... Somerville Delta Phi Sigma. 48 Harris Ford Neil. Somerville Engineering Band, I, 2, Major, 3, 4; A. S. M. E., 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1. Burnham Lonsdale Paige . . . Medford Liberal Arts Student Council, 3, 4; Band, Librarian, 1, Mana¬ ger, 2, 3, 4; Tuftconic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4. Victor Della Paolera .... W atertown Liberal Arts Arthur Pratt Phillips .... Brookline Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Football, 1, 2, 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2. Ralph Adam Phillips . . . E. Bridgewater Liberal Arts Phidias Lewis Pollis . . . Newark , N. J. Liberal Arts Historical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Political Economy Club, 2, 3; Deutscher Verein, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling Tournament Committee, 3; Wrestling, 1, 2, 4; Cross Country, 1, 2; G. T. V. David Harold Richards . . . . Dorchester Engineering Robert Thomas Roht .... Middleboro Engineering 49 Abraham Samuel Rosen .... Chelsea Liberal Arts Tufts Weekly, 1 , 2, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4; French Play, 2. Maurice Samuel Rothman . . Dorchester Liberal Arts Medical School, 4. Samuel Philip Sesen. Lynn Liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi; Interfraternity Council, 2; Econ¬ omics Club, 2; Sociology Club, 3; Menorah So¬ ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1; Tennis, 1. Amos Edward Shepard. . Southington, Conn. Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; A. S. M. E., 2, 3, Chairman, 4; Dramatics, 2, 3, 4; Tufts Weekly, 2; Football, 1; Track, 1. Allen Irving Sherman. Revere Liberal Arts Tau Epsilon Phi; Glee Club, 1, 2; Deutscher Verein; Philosophy Club; Menorah Society, Treasurer, 4; Football, 1. Leslie Kimber Sherman .... Medford Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Class Banquet Committee, 1; Civil Engineering Society, 3, President, 4; Football, 1, 2. Joseph Oliver Smethurst . . Marblehead Engineering Joseph Clemens Sprang . Arlington Heights Liberal Arts Delta Upsilon; Football, 1. 50 Leslie Mason Stewart .... Winchester Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; Evening Patty Association; A. S. M. E.; Glee Club, 1, 2; Track, 1, 2, 3. Paul Frederick Stockwell . . . Medford Liberal Arts Student Council, 4; Tuftonian Staff, 2, Manag¬ ing Editor, 3, Editor-in-chief, 4; Philosophy Club 2, President, 3; Tuftc onic Club, 1, 2; Deut- scher Verein; German Play, 3. Albert Bernhard Sundquist . Cranston, R. I. Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Tufts Weekly, 3, 4; Wrest¬ ling, 1, 2, 4; Track, I, 2, 3, 4; Cross Country, 1. Bernard Swift. Melrose Engineering Robert Warren Sylvester .... Boston Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Tau Beta Pi; Class Nomin¬ ating Committee, 4; Civil Engineering Society, 1, 2, 3, Secretary, 4; T. C. Republican Club, 4; Football, 1. Arthur Adelarde Thibodeau . Neivport, N. H. Liberal Arts Theta Delta Chi; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; Dean Club, 1, President 2; Glee Club, 1, 2; Football, 1,2, 3; Basketball, 1; Medical School, 4. Richard Leland Thomas . . . Sumner, Ale. Liberal Arts Delta Upsilon; Tower Cross, Marshal; Ivy; Class Historian, 4; Circulation Manager Jum¬ bo Book, 4; Ivy Book, Business Manager, 4; Interfraternity Council, 3, Secretary 4; Class Day Committee, 4; Chairman Underclass Rules Committee, 4; Chairman Nominating Committee, 2, 4; Chairman Intramural League Committee, 4; Class Debating, 2; Wrestling, 3, 4; Football, 1, 2; Track, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1; G. T. V. Benjamin Robbins Tilden . . Mattapoisett Liberal Arts Zeta Psi; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; Dramatics, 2, 3; Biology Club, 2, 3; Medical School, 4. 51 Bernard Born Twombley .... Medford Engineering DeMolay Club; Football, 1, 2. John Patrick Walsh . . Newburgh, N. Y. Liberal Arts Zeta Psi. Philip Lancaster Warren . . . Waltham Liberal Arts Beta Kappa; Pen, Paint, and Pretzels; Even¬ ing Party Association, 4; Tufts Weekly, 3, 4; Dramatics, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 2. Donald Gardner White . . . N. Attleboro Engineering Leslie Carlos Withers .... Roslindale Liberal Arts Delta Tau Delta; Evening Party Association, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2; Football, 4; Track, 2. Edmund Alexander Workman . Framingham Liberal Arts Delta Upsilon; Evening Party Association, 4. Charles Ralph Worters . . . Somerville Engineering Delta Tau Delta. Joseph Richard Yarrow .... Mattapan Engineering Beta Kappa; Glee Club, 1, 2; Operetta, 4; Civil Engineering Society, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling, 2, 3, 4. 52 Eno Thomas Cassellini. Quincy Engineering Joseph John Lukacs . . Neiv Rochelle, N. Y. Engineering Theta Delta Chi; Tau Beta Pi; Class Banquet Committee, 2; Smoker Committee, 2; Dramatics, 2, 3; A. S. M. E.; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrest¬ ling, 1, 2, 3, 4. JACKSON Ella Frances Young . . . W. Somerville Sigma Kappa; Class Secretary, 1; Historical Society, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 3, 4; Baby Party Committee, 2; Manager Basketball, 4, Assistant Manager, 3; Varsity Hockey, 2; Class Athletics, 1, 2. Mary Lucy Zandi. Plymouth Phi Beta Kappa; Historical Society, 1; Tuft- conic Club, 1; Cercle Sans Souci, 3, 4; “J” Pin, 2; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, Captain 4; Varsity Basketball, 3, 4; Class Basketball, 1, 2. Margaret Caverly. Norwood Alpha Omicron Pi; Class Historian, 1; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 1, 3, 4; Sociology Club, 2, 3, 4; Tuftconic Club, 2, 3; Philosophy Club, 4; Class Play, 1; Class Athletics, 1. Portia Russell. Newton Alpha Omicron Pi; Student Council, 1, 2,. 3; Panhellenic Council, 3, Secretary, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 2, 4; Glee Club, 1; Philosophy Club, 4; Class Play, 1. 53 Margaret Louise Abbott . Long Hill, Conn. Alpha Xi Delta; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, +; Oper¬ etta, 1, 3, 4; Class Play, 1; Historical Society, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1, 3. Frances Martan Archibald . . . Methuen Chi Omega; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 4; Operetta, 1, 4; Sociology Club, 4; Economics Club, 2; Class Play, 1; Dramatics, 2. Htlda Mae Bailey. N. Billerica Student Council, 2; Historical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4. Sadie Jean Baskin. Adams Menorah, Secretary, 2, 3, 4; International Re¬ lations Club, 3, Secretary, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1; Philosophy Club, 4; Class Play, 1. LTrsula Shaw Bergin ..... Dedham Tuftconic Club, 1, 2; Chemistry Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 4; Glee Club, 1; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3; Class Athletics, 1. Alice Maude Brown, Welsford, New Brunswick Eva Agnes Bruce ... ... Reading Student Council, 4; Sociology Club, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 3; Philosophy Club, 4; Class Play, 1; Varsity Hockey, 3; Varsity Basketball, 1, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1, 3, 4. Dorothy Mary Burns. Chelsea Glee Club, 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4. 54 Harriot Germain Cazneau . Montpelier, Vt. Alpha Xi Delta; Masque, 3, Secretary 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Operetta, 1; Class Marshal, 1; Tra¬ ditions Committee, 2; Tufts Weekly, 1, 2; Biol¬ ogy Club, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3, 4; “J” Pin, 4. Elizabeth Catherine Connell . . . Ware Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, 2; Socio- Club, 1; Economics Club, 2; Varsity Tennis, 2, 3; Jackson Tennis Champion, 3; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3. Mildred Alice Coolidge. Hudson Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, President 4; Operetta, 1, 3, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Economics Club, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, 2. Melba Belle Davis ...... Medford Sigma Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; Historical So¬ ciety, 1; Traditions Committee, 2; Tufts Weekly, 1, 2, 3; Biology Club, 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 4; Medford H. S. Alumni Club, 3, Vice-Presi¬ dent 4. Evelyn Bai.ch Ei.lms . . Newton Highlands Biology Club, 2, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, 3 ; Medi¬ cal School, 4. Elizabeth Cilley Fernald . Nottingham, N. H. Sigma Kappa; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Tuftconic Club, 1; Class Athletics, 1, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball, 3; Operetta, 4. Josephine Fernald . . Nottingham, N. H. Sigma Kappa; Glee Club, 1; Student Council, 3; Sociology Club, 1; Varsity Hockey, 4; Class Athletics, 2, 3. Lucile Anna Gardner. Littleton Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club, 1; Class Dra¬ matics, 1; Dramatics, 2; Operetta, 4. 55 Constance Rhodes Handy . . . Somerville Alpha Omicron Pi; Phi Beta Kappa; Masque, 3, 4; Commencement Speaker; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Dramatics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Secretary, 2; Class Historian, 3, 4; Orchestra, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4. Cora Belle Harlow ..... Plymouth Phi Beta Kappa; Tuftconic Club, 1, 2, Vice- President, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 2; Deutscher Verein, 4. Marion Elizabeth Hart .... Medford Glee Club, 2, 3; Traditions Committee, 2; Class Athletics, 1, 2. Aletha Gertrude Hill .... Walpole Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 1, 3, 4; Class Play, 1; Traditions Committee, 2. Mary Lyn Horwitz. Chelsea Menorah, 3, 4, Vice-President 3; Deutscher Verein, 3, 4; Philisophy Club, 4. Doris Houghton. W. Somerville Chi Omega; Phi Beta Kappa; Tufts IVeekly, 2, 3, Jackson Editor, 4; TufIonian, 3, Editor-in- chief, 4; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Hockey Man¬ ager, 4; Basketball Assistant Manager, 3; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3; Varsity Hockey, 2; Traditions Committee, 2; Class Banquet Committee, 2; Cer¬ cle Sans Souci, 2, 3. Helen Lauretta Jacoby . . . Harrisburg, Pa. Alpha Xi Delta; Masque, 3, Vice-President 4; Class Secretary, 4; Panhellenic Council, 3, Pres¬ ident 4; Dramatics, 2, 3, 4; Class Play, 1; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Press Club, 3, 4; Chemical Society, 1 , 2, 3; Varsity Basketball, 2; Varsity Hockey, 3; Class Ath¬ letics, 1. Doris Rachel Katz. Gloucester Cercle Sans Souci, 4. 56 Lucia Adesta Kendall . . . .Augusta, Me. Sigma Kappa; Philosophy Club, 2. Mildred Mae Kohler. Methuen Sigma Kappa; Cercle Sans Souci, 3, 4; Glee Club. Ida May Lane.. Portland, Me. Masque, 4; Dramatics, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 1, As¬ sistant Director 4; Tufts IVeekly, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3. Doris Pelton Mahoney • . Long Hill, Conn. Alpha Xi Delta; Class Marshal, 3; Class Day Committee, 4; Tennis Champion, 2, 3 (Fall) ; Varsity Tennis Captain, 3; Varsity Basketball, 1, 2, 4; Class Banquet Committee, 2; Class Ath¬ letics, 1. Beatrice Ethelyn Mann . . . Somerville Pipers, 3, 4. Kathryn Marcuerite McInerney . Adams Alpha Omicron Pi; Class Vice-President, 1, 2; Glee Club, 1, 2; Biology Club, 2, 3, Secretary 4; Press Club, 2; Varsity Hockey, 1, 2; Class Ath¬ letics, 1, 2. Maria Martha McLellan . . New York City Class Social Chairman, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Day Committee, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball, 2, 3; Class Athletics, 1, 2. Dorothea Theresa Norwood . . Amesbury Student Council, 3, 4; Class Vice-President, 3; Class Play, 1; Glee Club, 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, 3, 4. 57 Li ami Vieno Nylund . . . New York City Student Council, 2, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 3; Deurscher Verein, 3, 4; Dramatics, 3, 4. Mary Kathryn Ocilvie. Lynn Alpha Xi Delta; Student Council, 4; Philosophy Club, 4; Sociology Club, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1. Janet Pullman Pierce . . Germantown, Pa. Sigma Kappa; Masque, 3, 4; Class Treasurer, 1, 2; All Around Club, Representative, 1, Secre¬ tary 2, Vice-President 3, President 4; Athletic Association Treasurer, 3; Toast Mistress Class Banquet, 2, 4; Jackson Day Committee, 2; Jack- son Day Chairman, 3; Traditions Committee, 2; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Manager 3; Panhellenic Council, 3, 4; Student Government, 4; Dra¬ matics, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 1; Class Athletics, 2, 3. Helen Clark Potter. Attleboro Sigma Kappa; Glee Club, 1; Deutscher Verein, 1, 2, 3, 4. Dorothy Speirs Quinby .... Medford Alpha Xi Delta; Masque, 4; Class Presideft t 4; Class Treasurer, 3; Student Council, 4; Jumbo Book Staff, 4; Treasurer Deutscht “ x Verein, 2, 3; Secretary-Treasurer Medford S. Alumni Club, 3, 4; Chairman Class Ring ' Committee, 3; Class Banquet Committee, 3; Operetta Business Manager, 4; Dramatics 4; Varsity Basketball, 2; Class Athletics Alice Elvira Quist W orcester Glee Club, 1; Sociology Club, 1; Pipers, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, 3; Class Athletics, 4; Dramatics, 4. Jeanne Worthington Relyea, fVest Hartford, Conn. Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club, I, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 1, 2; Operetta, 1, 4; Class Play, 1; Chairman Class Banquet Committee, 2. Margaret Reynolds. Marblehead Chi Omega; Masque, 3, 4; Class Marshal, 4; Student Council, 2, Vice-President 3, President 4; Panhellenic Council, 3, 4; Class President, 2, 3 ; Athletics Association Secretary 2, Vice-Presi¬ dent 3; All Around Club Executive Board, 3; Jackson Day Committee, 2; Class Historian, 1; Glee Club, 1; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3. 53 Lydia Esteli.e Risi . . . Bridgeport, Conti. Student Council, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, Treas¬ urer 3, 4; Glee Club, 1; Sociology Club, 1; Deutscher Verein, 4. Dorothy Louise Shepperd, Alt. Vernon, N. Y. Chi Omega; Student Council, 3, 4; Cercle Sans Souci, Secretary 3, President 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Class President, 1 ; Deutscher Verein, 4. Muriel Simonson. Medford Sigma Kappa; Masque, 3, President, 4; Dra¬ matics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 3, 4; Medford H. S. Alumni Club, 3, 4; Chair¬ man Class Dramatics, 3, 4; Student Council, 4; Director of “War Brides,’’ Assistant Director of “Outward Bound 4; Goddard Prize Read¬ ings, 3, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2; Class Athletics, 1 . Fannie Sirkin. Bridgeport, Conn. Philosophy Club; Cercle Sans Souci, 3. Augusta Maria Sjostrom .... Methuen Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 4; Chemical So¬ ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 4; Student Council, 4; Class Dance Committee, 2, 3, 4; Class Play, 1; Varsity Basketball, 2; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3. Eunice Mabel Smith . . York Harbor, Me. Chemical Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tuftconic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 2. Alice Marjorie Stone. Orange Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3. Dorothy Louise Stone. Billerica Glee Club, 1 ; Chemical Society, 1, 2, Secretary 3, Vice-President 4; Tuftconic Club, 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 4; Deutscher Verein 3, Secretary 4. 59 Mary Aurora Sylvia . . . Providence , R. I. Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Operetta, 2; Tuftconic, 2, 3. Esther Emma Thorin. Monson Alpha Xi Delta; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 3, 4; Deut- scher Verein, 4. Louise Heathwood Totten . . N. Attleboro Alpha Xi DeltaMasque, 4; Student Council, 4; Sociology Club, 2, 3, Secretary-Treasurer 4; Glee Club, 2, 3; Cercle Sans Souci, 3, 4; Class Play, 1, 2; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basket¬ ball, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Hockey, 2, 3, 4. Marguerite Alicia Towle . . . Gloucester Sigma Kappa ; Cercle Sans Souci, 3 ; Class Hoc¬ key, 1. Glee Cluh ,l, 2, 3, 4; Operetta, 1, 3, 4; Histori¬ an Sopdty, 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer 3; lau riay, 1; Cercle Sans Souci, 3; Class Ban- f rct Committee, 2; Class Secretary, 3; “J” Pin, President Jackson Republican Club, 4; Presi¬ dent Student Council, 4; Varsity Tennis, 2, 3; Tennis, 3; Class Athletics, 1, 3, 4. Traverso Student Council, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President, 3 ; Cer¬ cle Sans Souci, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 4. Helen Tucker. Peabody Chi Omega; Masque, 3, 4; Chairman Class Dra¬ matic Committee, 1, 2; Dramatics, 1, 2, 3, 4; Sociology Club, 1, 3 ; Biology Club, 4. Muriel Louisa Van Buren . . Scotia, N. Y. Alpha Xi Delta; Tufts Weekly, 1, 2; Class Play, 1; Traditions Committee, 2; Cap and Gown Committee, 4; Class Treasurer, 4; Class Day Committee, 4; Jackson Day Committee, 2; Press Club, 2, 3; Basketball Manager, 3; Class Bas¬ ketball, 3. Lois Towne. Concord 60 Vera Leona Wakefield . . . W. Somerville Sigma Kappa; Student Council, 4; Class Vice- President, 4; Class Marshal, 2; Glee Club, 4; Athletics Association, Executive Board, 1, Presi¬ dent, 4; “J” Pin, 2; Class Banquet Committee, 2; Assistant Manager Tennis, 3; Varsity Hock¬ ey, 2, 3, 4; Class Athletics, 1, 2, 3, 4. Pauline Violet Webrer .... Medford Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3, 4; Goddard Prize in French, 2; Medford H. S. Alumni Club, 3, 4. Florence Edna Weston .... Medford Sigma Kappa; Chairman Class Banquet Com¬ mittee, 3, 4; All Around Club Treasurer, 3; Traditions Committee, 2; Historical Society, 1; Class Ring Committee, 3; Tuftconic Club, 2; Biology Club, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 3; Medford H. S. Alumni Club, 3, Treasurer 4; Class Ath¬ letics, 1, 2. Helen Whitcomb. M . Medford Phi Beta Kappa; Tuftconic, 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci, 2; Deutscher Verein, 3; Biology Club, 3; Secretary, 4; Medford H. S. Alumni Club, 2, 3, 4; Goddard Prize in Biology, 4; AOFI Prize Scholarship, 4. Florence Bertha White .... Brighton International Relations Club, 2; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Biology Club, 4; Sociology Club, 4; Deutscher Verein, 3, 4; German Play, 3; Menorah Society, 2, 3, Secretary 4; Class Basket¬ ball, 2. Edith Marguerite Wilker .... Chelsea Sociology Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein, 2, Vice-President 3, Treasurer 4; International Re¬ lations Club, 3, 4; Menorah Society, 1, 2, 3, 4. Beatrice Mary With am. Lynn Historical Society, 4. Martha Wolk. Malden Cercle Sans Souci, 2, 3; Menorah Society, 2, 3, 4; Sociolog} ' Club, 4. 61 Lawrence Wesley Abbott . . . Boston Liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa; Philosophy Club, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2. Elliot Couden Brown . . . Somerville Engineering Robert Cohen. Winthrop Engineering Sigma Omega Psi. Barton Francis Curit .... Portland Engineering Zeta Psi; Tau Beta Pi; Secretary Tau Beta Pi, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4. Reginald Marshall Dennis . Provincetown Engineering Phi Delta. Howard Blair Fleming . . . Manchester Engineering Sigma Tau Alpha; Class Smoker Committee, 1; Radio Club, 2, Secretary, 3, President, 4; Musical Clubs, 2; Baseball, 1. H arold Israel Hurwitz . . . Roxbury Liberal Arts Sigma Omega Psi; Menorah Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Economics Club, 2, 3; Deutscher Verein, 2; Football, 2; Wrestling, 1. Augustus Merle Irvin . . Dexter , Me. Liberal Arts Albert Edward Irving . . . Somerville Liberal Arts Frederick Johnson. Everett Liberal Arts Delta Tau Delta. Fred Lloyd Kennedy. Lynn Engineering Delta Phi Sigma; President Athletics Asso¬ ciation, 3, 4; Civil Engineering Society; Soc¬ cer Coach; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Track, 3, 4. William Sheldon Krause . Plainfield, N. J. Liberal Arts Alfred John Leonardi .... Brookline Engineering Baseball, 1, 2, 3, Captain +; Soccer, 2, 3. Joseph Rowe Little .... Cambridge Liberal Arts Jerayr Manikian. Lynn Liberal Arts Delta Phi Sigma. Saul Louis Marcus .... Worcester Liberal Arts Thomas Mathers. Milton Liberal Arts Fred Hamilton Miller .... Worcester Liberal Arts Wilburn Beach Miller . . . Paris, Maine Liberal Arts Zeta Psi. Carl Harold Olson. Quincy Liberal Arts Philosophy Club, 2, 3, President 4. Gilbert Andrew Potter .... Adams Liberal Arts George Rittenburg .... Dorchester Engineering Phi Epsilon Pi; Menorah Society, 2; A. S. M. E.; Track, 1, 2; Cross Country, 1, 2. Irving Washburn Stultz . . . Allston Liberal Arts Benjamin Lozard Weinstein . . Revere Liberal Arts Burton W. Wetherbee . Middletown, Conn. Liberal Arts Shirley Kessell. Dorchester Jackson A CKNO W LED GMEN TS JN THE work of the publication of this book the editors have re¬ ceived cooperation from various sources which has been most beneficial. They therefore desire to make this expression of their appreciation to Professor Melville S. Munro, whose assistance in the securing of photographs has been invaluable; to F. W., who so kindly permitted them to print sections of his diary; to Mr. Peter S. Gurwit, of Jahn and Ollier Co.; to Mr. William J. Heffernan, of the Heffernan Press; to Dr. Charles Gott, for his advice and encourage¬ ment; to White Studios and its representatives; to all our subscribers and advertisers who have made this book financially possible; and to all those who, in one way or another, have helped in the shaping of this, the 1929 Jumbo Book. The Class of 1930 68 Back Row: Glennie, Earnshaw, Rising Front Row: Mendell, Crosby, Rourke JACKSON 1950 OFFICERS Rachel Durgin Crosby .... Frances Louise Mendell . . . Jennie Margaret Glennie Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw Grace Margaret Rourke . . Priscilla Elizabeth Rising . . . . President Vice-President . . . Secretary 1 reasurer Marshal Historian 69 V 1 . A -_ lb.. V t 68 Back Row: Glennie, Earnshaw, Rising Front Row: Mendell, Crosby, Rourke JACKSON 1930 OFFICERS Rachel Durgin Crosby . Frances Louise Mendell . . . Jennie Margaret Glennie Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw Grace Margaret Rourke . . Priscilla Elizabeth Rising . . . . Preside tit Vice-President . . . Secretary . . . Treasurer . . . . Marshal . . . Historian 69 Q.tejj it ' £39 |Kp17 vppT ' !l ilVNi-fl 9 1 „)| n-tw j.• i a ■■ ■ Jl • j, ’ ' J f 9 ' JP il (If 1 1 m i ' Y ifenr -. “ — 1- 70 CLASS I ' Ll Lucien Page Adams Engineering WAKEFIELD Robert Gilman Adams Liberal Arts MEDFORD George West Armstrong Liberal Arts BOSTON Hugo Victor Ascolillo Liberal Arts W. SOMERVILLE Clarence Ora Atkinson, 7A Liberal Arts STOUGHTON Leon Harold Auger Liberal Arts E. WEYMOUTH Frank Xavier Basanez Engineering VERA CRUZ, MEXICO Norman Stuart Bean Engineering MELROSE Charles Davis Belcher Engineering WINTHROP Marcus Wolfe Berman Liberal Arts DORCHESTER OF 1930 FTS Henry Waite Bigelow, 5TA Engineering BROOKLINE Civil Engineering Society 2, Treasurer 3; Cross Country 1, 2, 3 ; Track 1, 2. Charles Edward Boardman, ATQ Liberal Arts GEORGETOWN George Ellsworth Bowles, Z ' P Liberal Arts PLYMOUTH, N. LI. Gordon Clewell Brown Liberal Arts SOMERVILLE Morris Louis Budnick, SO ' P Liberal Arts W. BOXFORD Football 1, 2, 3; Wrestling 1, 2, 3. Charles Sumner Butters, AY Engineering PEDRO MIGUEL, CANAL ZONE Sword and Shield; Football 1, 2, 3 ; Basket¬ ball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3. Anthony Orlando Cardullo Liberal Arts BOSTON Ralph Sewell Carvill Engineering W. SOMERVILLE George Adams Clark Engineering W. SOMERVILLE Carroll Leander Coburn, ATO Liberal Arts E. MONTPELIER, VT. Philip Pacy Cohen, I BA LiberaI Arts ROXBURY Lewis Weston Collins, I A Engineering ORLEANS Edward Richard Comstock, T a Liberal Arts NEW LONDON, CONN. Charles Henry Coogan Engineering BRIGHTON W illiam Joseph Conway Liberal Arts CHARLESTOWN Peter Diacoumis Coumoundoureas Liberal Arts LOWELL William Segar Coy, Jr. Engineering STONEHAM Ian Cameron Crawford Engineering BELMONT David Gordon Crockett, ATA Engineering SOMERVILLE Edward Allen Currier Liberal Arts WINTHROP William Henry Curtis, ATA Engineering STRATFORD, CONN. Dwight Hayden Davis Liberal Arts W. MEDFORD William Nash Davis, ATA Liberal Arts NEWTON Class Nominating Com. 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci 2, 3; Operetta 3. Ered Ernest DeBaggis Engineering FRANKLIN Joseph Adams DeLinks Engineering WATERBURY, CONN. Joseph Christopher Derby Engineering LAWRENCE Leslie Richard Dimes Engineering WINTHROP Joshua Drooker, £ EIT Liberal Arts DORCHESTER Interfraternity Council 3; Glee Club 2; Track 2. Thurston Ham belton Edwards AT fi Engineering SOMERVILLE Howard Boyton Ellis, Jr., AY Liberal Arts DORCHESTER Band 1, 2, 3, Manager 2. Eliot Putnam Emerson, ®AX Liberal Arts SHARON Harold Valfrid Erickson Engineering ARLINGTON Norman Ellsworth Eyster Liberal Arts MEDFORD Frank Marshall Fellows, Jr. Eng ineering NEWTONVILLE Perry Moore Fitch, I A© Liberal Arts ST. JOHNSBURY, VT. Basketball I, 2, 3; Golf Team 2. Nicholas Howard Fitzgerald Engineering WINCHESTER Edward Ellsworth Folsom, on Engineering SWAMPSCOTT Nathan Harris Friedman, TE L Liberal Arts STRATFORD, CONN. Alonzo Osias Gariepy, Liberal Arts BARRE Paul Lawrence Giblin, ©AX Liberal Arts SAUGUS John Warren Gillon Engineering WINTHROP Charles Herbert Gilmor, A £5 Engijieering LYNN Isadore Goldman, I EII Liberal Arts DORCHESTER George Luis Govoni Engineering W. MEDFORD 73 Hubert Alexander Gurney Liberal Arts MEDFORD Raymond Joseph Hagerty Engineering HUDSON Harry Sutherland Hall, A I 2 Engineering LYNN Charles Champlin Hersey, ATI) Liberal Arts CANTON, N. Y. Thomas Francis Hersey, 2TA Liberal Arts NEW HAVEN, CONN Sherburne Hill, Jr. Engineering METHUEN Everett Hale Hinckley, Jr., ©AX Engineering MAMARONECK, N. Y. Band 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1; Chemical So¬ ciety 1; Civil Engineering Society 2; Football 1, 2; Wrestling 1, 2, 3. Hilton Costello Holland, ATQ Liberal Arts FAIRHAVEN Robert Kennedy Hood, ©AX Liberal Arts BARRINGTON, R. I. Tufts Weekly 2; Glee Club 2. Robert Campbell Horn Engineering WELLESLEY Wendell Winslow Horton, ©AX Liberal Arts READING Tufts Weekly 2, 3; Historical Society 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3. Donald Acton Hosmer, 2TA Liberal Arts WALTHAM Tufts Weekly 2; Press Club 3. Hyman Itzkowitz, SQ ' P Liberal Arts NEW LONDON, CONN. Wrestling 1, 2; Baseball 1, 2. Alton Elof Johngren Engineering BROCKTON Axel Harold Johnson Engineering W. SOMERVILLE Alfred Richard Kenyon Liberal Arts ANDOVER John Milton Kilgore Engineering WALTHAM Duane Edward Kimball, A3 2 Engineering CHESTER 74 George Edward Kinmonth, Jr., £A Liberal Arts MYSTIC, CONN. Interfraternity Council 3; Dramatics 3; Historical Society 3. Louis Krupp, SO ' P Liberal Arts WALLINGFORD, CONN. Benjamin Frank Kubilius Liberal Arts S. BOSTON Alexander Hackett Ladd Liberal Arts SOMERVILLE Howard James Leahy Liberal Arts COLLINSVILLE, CONN. Paul Joseph LeMaistre, Engineering COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. Ivy; Sword and Shield; Football 1; Basket¬ ball 1. Ralph Levine Engineering MALDEN Samuel Sonna Levinson, J EII Liberal Arts BROOKLINE Robert Hallam Lewis Liberal Arts GLOUCESTER Jacob Lewiton, Sfi ' P Liberal Arts REVERE Interfraternity Council 3; Historical So¬ ciety 2, 3. Howard Arthur Lincoln, ©AX Liberal Arts W. SOMERVILLE Ivy; Class Banquet Com. 1, 2; Historical Society 1, 2; Football 1, 2. Robert Loveland, ATfl Engineering MEDFORD Herbert Dudley Lovewell, ata Engineering S. LINCOLN John Lydon MacRae, ATI) Engineering LYNN John David Maloney, 2TA Liberal Arts WAKEFIELD Charles Victor Mann Liberal Arts WALTHAM Robert Isaac Mann, £BA Liberal Arts BOSTON Political Economy Club 1, 2; Dean Club, 1, 2, 3; Deutscher Verein 1. John Francis Manning Engineering BRIDGEWATER 75 Nathan Marcolis Liberal Arts CHELSEA John Arthur Masse, $A Engineering EVERETT Ralph Thomson Mathews Engineering W. SOMERVILLE Leroy Edward Mayo, ata Liberal Arts BOSTON Harold Thomas McCarthy, ATfi Engineering HAVERHILL Ivy, President; Sword and Shield, Presi¬ dent; Class President 2, 3; Class Vice- President 1; Banquet Committee 1, 2; Civil Engineering Society, Vice-Presi¬ dent 3. Edward Wayi.and McCaul, ATfi Engineering NEWTONVILLE Everett Thomas McKinney, AY Liberal Arts S. MANCHESTER, CONN. Assistant Football Manager 3; Wrestling Tournament Com. 2; Chapel Monitor 3 ; Football 1. Herman Gordon Merchant, ata Liberal Arts BROOKLINE John Mill Engineering DEDHAM Donald Haskell Mitchell, ©AX NEEDHAM Engineering John Joseph Mohon, A I 2 Engineering SOMERVILLE John Crosby Moody, ATO Liberal Arts MARLBORO, VT. Ralph Horton Morse, ata Liberal Arts MARBLEHEAD Thomas Richard Mum ford, BK Engineering WAKEFIELD Interfraternity Council 3; A.S.M.E.; Wrest¬ ling 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3; Football 2. Lawrence Moulton Munro, ATQ Engineering SOMERVILLE Glee Club 1; Band 1; Cross Country 2, 3; Track 2. Donald Emery Murch Engineering W. MEDFORD Cross Country 1; Track 1. Joseph Henry Nicholson Liberal Arts LAWRENCE Robert Wood Nicholson, ATO Liberal Arts SHELDONVILLE George Wilbert Nold Engineering MEDFORD Malcolm Allen Orr, 4 A Liberal Arts SOUTHINGTON, CONN. John Oskar, £A Liberal Arts LAWRENCE Charles Kenneth Owen, 7 A Liberal Arts PITTSFIELD Wallace Archibald Parkhurst, 2TA Engineering S. WEYMOUTH David Morris Podvey, 20 ' ! ' Liberal Arts Historical Society; Menorah Society. Robert Emerson Polk, ata Engineering BROOKLYN, N. Y. Tufts Weekly 1 , 2, Feature Editor 3; Dra¬ matics 1, 2, 3. Elmer Joseph Pollard, 2TA Engineering LEOMINSTER Dominic Potito Liberal Arts E. BOSTON Herman Robert Rachdorf, Z ' P Liberal Arts N. ADAMS William Masterson Redman, I A Liberal Arts NEWPORT, R. I. Andrew Ellsworth Reynolds Liberal Arts LYNN Charles Homan Reynolds, 2TA Libera! Arts TOWNSEND Historical Society 3; Wrestling 2; Cross Country 2. Italo Lesto Rigazio Engineering N. CAMBRIDGE Milton Harold Rodofsky Liberal Arts LEXINGTON Byron Alexander Roscoe, AY Engineering MEDFORD Interfraternity Council 3; Class Nominating Com. 1, 2, 3; Tufts Weekly, Advertis¬ ing Manager 2; Assistant Tennis Manager 3; Track 1. Manuel Harry Rosen, 212 ' P Liberal Arts MILLIS Menorah Society 2, 3. Theodore Rosen Liberal Arts BROCKTON 77 Simon Max Ross Engineering CHELSEA Benjamin Rower, 3?EII Liberal Arts LYNN Homer Emii. Ruggiero, BK Engineering WATERBURY, CONN. A.S.M.E.; Football 1, 2, 3; Track 2, 3; Basketball 2. Philip Lawry Rusden Liberal Arts SOMERVILLE Henry Forbes Russell Liberal Arts QUINCY Joseph Edward Sardella, TA Engineering WAKEFIELD A.S.M.E.; Track 1, 2, 3; Wrestling 2, 3; Cross Country 1. Carl Albert Seaward Liberal Arts WAKEFIELD Richard Clark Shipman, Zvp Engineering LEWISTOWN, MONTANA Irving Nelson Simmons Engineering W. SOMERVILLE Benjamin Spritz Liberal Arts CHELSEA Harold Brown Swindells, ATQ Liberal Arts FALL RIVER George Anthony Tamiolakis Engineering LYNN George Otis Tapley, AY Liberal Arts PORTLAND, ME. Philosophy Club 1, 2, 3 ; Biology Club 2, 3 ; Press Club 1, 2, 3. John Arthur Thompson, A I 2 Engineering BEVERLY Eugene Harry Tobey, ©AX Liberal Arts EVERETT Athletic Association 3; Historical Society; Cercle Sans Souci; Football 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2. George Roger VanIderstine, Z ' P Liberal Arts SOMERVILLE Morris Elias Vexler, 2QT Engineering NEW BEDFORD Ora Wagman, I BA Liberal Arts EVERETT Warren Bartlett Walsh, Z ' F Liberal Arts HOLYOKE Historical Society 1, 2, Vice-President 3; Biology Club 3; Dramatics 3. Richard Henry Ward Engineering GUILFORD, ME. Richard Carter Warren, ATfi Liberal Arts SOMERVILLE Ivy; Student Council 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Golf Champion 1, 2; Captain Golf Team 2; Winner Interfraternity Cross Country 1. Louis Weiner, SO ' P Liberal Arts DORCHESTER Ernest Gallienne Wiles, 2TA Engineering MARION Ivy; Sword and Shield; Class Secretary 2; Interfraternity Council 3; Civil Engi¬ neering Society 1, 2, 3; Cross Country 1, 2, Captain 3; Track 2, 3. Irvin Thomas Wilkinson, ATO Liberal Arts LAWRENCE Assistant Baseball Manager 3 ; Concert Or¬ chestra 3; Glee Club 1; Chimes Ringer 1, 2, 3. Lewis Epes Wilkinson, 2TA Engineering GARDNER Class Nominating Com. 2, 3; Civil Engi¬ neering Society 1, 2, 3; Band 1; Foot¬ ball 2, 3; Wrestling 1, 2, 3. Richard Austin Winslow, AY Liberal Arts AUBURNDALE Debating Council 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Cross Country 1; Track 1. George Harmon Wood, ATO Engineering HILL, N. H. Glee Club 2; Operetta 3; Band, Librarian 1; Civil Engineering Society 2, 3. Erwin Davis Woodbury, ata Engineering HUDSON Herbert George Worters Engineering SOMERVILLE Ralph Wesley Wyman Engineering W. MEDFORD Chester Harold Young Engineering LYNN Clark Dudley Young Liberal Arts NORWICH, CONN w 79 JACKSON jm Phyllis Ardelle Applin WINCHESTER Chemical Society Ora Lulu Ashley ELMSDALE, N. S., CANADA Freda Ross Barrett NORTH ATTLEBORO Dramatics 2; Dean Club. Olive Bowman Bartlett MEDFORD HILLSIDE Medford H. S. Alumni Club. S+ ' Barbara Bendall UTH MANCHESTER, CONN, ma Kappa; Cercle Sans Souci. Dolphie Evelyn Berg WEST SOMERVILLE Glee Club 1; Cercle Sans Souci; Varsity Hockey 2, 3 ; Class Athletics 1, 2, 3. Mabel Sears Bryant EVERETT Dramatics 2. Marion Burdett WOLLASTON Chemical Society. Eleda Wycliffe Burdoin NEW YORK, N. Y. Chi Omega; Student Government 3; Soci¬ ology Club; Dramatics 3. WlNNIFRED PlNGREE CHASE WEST MEDFORD Alpha Omicron Pi; Treasurer All Around Club 3; President Biology Club 3; Class Dramatics 1; Varsity Baseball 2; Class Basketball 1. Marion Noble Chick CHELSEA Chi Omega; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Sociology Club; Dramatics 2, 3. Priscilla Cobb NEWTON UPPER FALLS President Sociology Club 3 ; Class Athletics 1, 2; Varsity Hockey 2; Dean Club; Philosophy Club; Student Government 4 . Barbara Carolyn Cole WORCESTER Sigma Kappa; Tufts IVcekly 1; Deutscher Verein; Assistant Manager Basketball 3. Rachel Durgin Crosby ARLINGTON Sigma Kappa; Class Vice-President 2; Class President 2, 3; Student Govern¬ ment, Vice-President 3; All Around Club Representative 2; Glee Club 3; Cercle Sans Souci; Biology Club. Dorothy Constance Curtis GROTON Sigma Kappa; Cercle Sans Souci Josephine Jennie D’Amico WAKEFIELD Class Hockey 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci Edith Miner Doane WALLINGFORD, CONN. Class Marshal 1, 2; Student Government 2, 3; Athletic Association, Secretary 2, Vice-President 3; Varsity Hockey 2, 3; Varsity Baseball 2; All Around Club, Secretary 2, Vice-President 3; Class Dramatics 1; Class Athletics 1, 2. Alice Mary Dowse SHERBORN Tuftconic Club; Traditions Committee 2; Varsity Hockey 3; Assistant Manager Hockey 3; Dramatics 3; Class Athletics 1, 2, 3. Eunice Marion Dowse SHERBORN Tuftconic Club; Historical Society; Tradi¬ tions Committee 2; Assistant Tennis Manager 3; Dramatics 3; Class Ath¬ letics 1, 2, 3. Dorothea Marie Duner BRIDGEPORT, CONN. Chi Omega; Masque; Varsity Hockey 2; Class Basketball 2; History Club; Cercle Sans Souci; Class Dramatics 1; Dramatics 2. Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw FISHERVILLE Alpha Xi Delta; Assistant Jackson Editor, Tufts JVcckly 3; Class Treasurer 1; Historical Society, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Biology Club; Philosophy Club; So¬ ciology Club; Pipers; Class Dramatics 1; Dramatics 2, 3. Emilie Louise Finkenzellar WATERBURY, CONN. Class Hockey 1; Glee Club 1; Deutscher Verein. Pauline Louise Gerald SOMERVILLE Alpha Xi Delta; Class Baseball 1; Glee Club 1; Cercle Sans Souci. Dorothy Gertrude Giles ARLINGTON Sigma Kappa; Cercle Sans Souci Jennie Margaret Glennie NORTH ANDOVER Alpha Xi Delta; Class Secretary 3; Deut¬ scher Verein. Mary Alice Goldberg AMESBURY Glee Club 1; Cercle Sans Souci; Philosophy Club. Doris Allcott Goodwill MERIDEN, CONN. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Tufts IVeekly 2, 3; Class Hockey 1; Dramatics 3. Anna Marie Goulding CONCORD Historical Society; Cercle Sans Souci; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Class Basketball 1; Ring Committee 3. Jean Guthrie Knowles NEW YORK, N. Y. Alpha Xi Delta; Student Government 1, Vice-President 3; Class Basketball 1; Dean Club; Class Ring Committee; Junior-Freshman Dance Committee. Lucy Leib MEDFORD Medford H. S. Alumni Club; Cercle Sans Souci; Class Hockey 1. Ruth Lowe WINCHESTER Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; His¬ torical Society; Tuftconic Club; Student Government 2, 3. Mary Agnes Mahoney SOMERVILLE Caroline Juliette Marsh WEST SOMERVILLE Chi Omega; Varsity Hockey 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Cercle Sans Souci; Traditions Committee 2; Student Government 2, 3; Class Athletics 1, 2, 3. Frances Louise Mendell WEST SOMERVILLE Sigma Kappa; Tuftconic Club; Cercle Sans Souci; Chairman Banquet Committee 2; Class Vice-President 3 ; Assistant Mana¬ ger Baseball 3; Class Athletics 1, 2, 3. Florence Edith Miller WEST SOMERVILLE Eunice Gould Murray BEVERLY Sigma Kappa; Deutscher Verein; Cercle Sans Souci. Virginia Jewell Hall WEST UPTON Alpha Xi Delta; Masque; Tufts Weekly 2, 3; Tuftonian Staff 3; Dramatics 2, 3; Class Dramatic Chairman. Frances Marion Heald LITTLETON, N. H. Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club 1, 2, 3 ; His¬ torical Society; Sociology Club; Secre¬ tary Student Government 2, 3 ; Assistant Manager Basketball; Cercle Sans Souci. Elena Josephine Ivaska SOMERVILLE Cercle Sans Souci Virginia James PITTSBURGH, PA. Chi Omega; Panhellenic Council; Cercle Sans Souci; Class Basketball. Marion Elizabeth Jenkins revere Glee Club 1, 3. Elizabeth Britain Kane BRIDGEPORT, CONN. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Historical Society; Deut- scher Verein. Mary Glenna Kelly PORTSMOUTH, N. H. Historical Society Dorothy Esther Myers WEST SOMERVILLE Chi Omega; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Dramatics 3; Class Secretary 2; Traditions Com¬ mittee 2; Class Athletics 1, 2. jladys Ingle Nason WEST BOXFORD KTHockey 1; Deutscher Verein; Tuft- conic Club. Althea Louise Pearson WEST MEDFORD Sigma Kappa; Class Basketball 1, 3; Var¬ sity Hockey 2; Cercle Sans Souci; Med¬ ford H. S. Alumni Club. Gladys Adelia Pingree WEST SOMERVILLE Tuftconic Club; Cercle S ans Souci; Soci¬ ology Club. VIary Eva Poor TOPSFIELD Alpha Xi Delta; Class Basketball 1; Pan¬ hellenic Council; Class Banquet Com¬ mittee 3; Dean Club; Historical Society. Ruth Eva Roberton WEST MEDFORD Alpha Xi Delta; Cercle Sans Souci; Deut¬ scher Verein; Medford H. S. Alumni Club. Kate Elizabeth Rose WELLESLEY HILLS Sigma Kappa; Historical Society; Biology Club; Cercle Sans Souci; Dramatics 2. Grace Margaret Rourke MELROSE Alpha Omicron Pi; Class Vice-President 2; Class Marshal 3; Varsity Hockey 3; Varsity Baseball Captain 2; Orchestra 2, 3; Treasurer Jackson Athletic Asso¬ ciation 3; Class Athletics 1, 2, 3. Catherine Mary Stevens WINTHROP Sigma Kappa; Class Social Chairman 3; Cercle Sans Souci, Vice-President 3. Marion Fuller Stevens NEEDHAM Alpha Omicron Pi; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Phil¬ osophy Club; Biology Club. Alida Groce Taylor MARSHFIELD Historical Society; Class Banquet Commit¬ tee 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Sociology Club; Student Government 3; All Around Club Representative 3; Assis¬ tant Manager Tennis 3. Louise Elizabeth Wilcox WEST SOMERVILLE Sociology Club 82 7 3 —□—□—□—□—□— 3 —=r 84 Back Row: Godfrey, Blodgett Front Row: Russell, Palmer, Pedersen TUFTS 1931 OFFICERS . . . President Vice-President . . . Secretary . . . Treasurer . . . Marshal Sidney Christian Palmer Howard Johnson Godfrey Maurice Merton Blodgett Robert Pratt Russell John Thorlief Pedersen . 85 86 Back Row: Hancock, Libbey Front Row: MacKinnon, Peabody, Loud JACKSON 1931 OFFICERS Elizabeth Sears Peabody . Elizabeth Thackeray Lol d Kaye MacKinnon . Dorothy Hancock . Ruth Elinor MacDuffee . . Ruth Alene Libbey. . . President Vice-President ... Secretary . . . Treasurer . Marshal . . Historian 87 88 CLASS OF 1931 TUFTS Charles Hovsep Aaronian Liberal Arts Somerville Joseph Adelson Engineering Roxbury Harry Arlanson Engineering Lynn Francis Edward Arnold Engineering Hyde Park Floyd Leigh Avery Engineering Woodstock, N. H. Charles Albert Baker Liberal Arts Portland, Me. George Baker Engineering Roxbury Willis Harland Ballou Engineering Medford Andrew Porter Bancroft Engineering Lynn George Beckerman Liberal Arts Boston Mazeppa Don Betts, Jr. Engineering Gloucester Maurice Merton Blodgett Liberal Arts Barnard, Vt. Chester Payson Bond Engineering Lynn Vincent Hurcourt Bonnito Engineering Boston James Edward Bovaird Liberal Arts Woburn Benjamin Bernard Bregman Liberal Arts Revere Waldo Francis Bucek Engineering Winthrop Walter Fuchsius Bugden Liberal Arts New Rochelle, N. Y. Wellington Gile Burnham Liberal Arts Cliftondale Maurice Bernard Burstein Engineering Chelsea 89 Francis Elwell Butler Engineering Salem Gaetano Domenico Cammarano Engineering Cambridge Harold William Campbell Liberal Arts Hampton, Conn. Edward Michael Carney Liberal Arts Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Carson Pierce Case Liberal Arts Watertown, N. Y. Frederic Howard Case, Jr. Liberal Arts Worcester Albert Maurice Casperson Engineering Hyde Park Harry Augustus Chase Engineering Winthrop Sheldon Olaf Christian Liberal Arts Somerville George Closset Engineering Floral Park, L. I. Maurice Hyman Cohen Liberal Arts Laconia, N. H. Murray Aaron Cohen Liberal Arts Lowell Samuel Joseph Cohen Engineering Cambridge George Augustus Connoly Liberal Arts Boston Thomas Dudley Crockett Liberal Arts Somerville Vito Michael Czeikus Liberal Arts Mattapan Lincoln Davison Liberal Arts T aunton Raymond Anthony Days Engineering Provincetown Emmanuel Deitch Liberal Arts Dorchester Robert John Denny Engineering Boston Sidney Solomon Deutch Liberal Arts Dorchester Leo Joseph Doheny Liberal Arts Kingston, N. Y. Carlyle Edgar Drew Engineering Warren, Vt. Nicholas George Dumbros Liberal Arts Mattapan Alfred Newton Dunnell Engineering Belmont Harry Fulton Edinger Engineering Kingston, N. Y. Benjamin Edward Etsten Liberal Arts Methuen Leslie Lindsey Fairfield Liberal Arts Chelsea Joseph George Falk Liberal Arts Brooklyn, N. Y. Philip Faraci Liberal Arts Haverhill Andrew Jameson Farquhar Liberal Arts Lawrence Frank Shaw Farquhar Engineering Winthrop John Rogers Foss Engineering Stoneham Orville Noah Faust Liberal Arts Cleveland, O. Jack Gibbons Engineering Lynn Edmund Winslow Giles Engineering Lincoln Chester Ellsworth Gilson Liberal Arts Everett Harry Click Liberal Arts Roxbury Howard Johnson Godfrey Engineering Needham Maxwell Goldings Liberal Arts Roxbury 91 Leo Goldman Engineering Roxbury Richard Lane Goodrich Liberal Arts Malden Roger Louis Goodwin Engineering Melrose Leo Herbert Hadler Liberal Arts Roxbury Arthur John Harty, Jr. Engineering Medford John Schofield Hayes Engineering Waltham Harry Hecker Liberal Arts Valley Falls, R. I. John King Hoban Liberal Arts Newport News, Va. Sumner Jesse Hoisington Liberal Arts Windsor, Vt. Clifford Parkhurst Hunt Engineering Littleton Veikko Oskar Hurme Liberal Arts Maynard Alfonso Richardo Ibarguen Liberal Arts Guatamala City, Guatamala Edward Avery Jackman Liberal Arts Sterling Fred Lesh Jacobs Engineering Atlanta, Ga. John Henry Jarvis Engineering Chelsea Frank Albert Johnson Engineering Dorchester Arthur Shortwell Jones Engineering Medford Randall Crosby Kean Engineering Woburn George Kelley Liberal Arts Attleboro Fred John Kennan Liberal Arts Boston Raymond Francis Killion Engineering Dorchester Paul Thomas Kyte Liberal Arts Waltham Winston Bradford Leach Liberal Arts Plymouth George Hoyt Le Cain Engineering Quincy Gustav Henry Lidberg Liberal Arts Lexington Angelo Arthur La Vetere Liberal Arts E. Boston Sinclair Mayer Lieb Liberal Arts Boston Earl Fredrick Littleton Engineering Dedham Frank Ulysses Lupien Liberal Arts So. Manchester, Conn. Philip Mabel Engineering Medford David Stuart MacIntyre Engineering Provincetown Norman Edward MacCuspie Liberal Arts Boston Stanley Forest Maclaren Liberal Arts Niagara Falls, N. Y. Earl Mahoney Liberal Arts Medford George William McMaster Liberal Arts Wakefield Walter Aldwin Mendes Liberal Arts Trinidad, B. W. I. Robert William Meservf. Liberal Arts Medford Charles Richmond Metchear Engineering Stoneham Frederick Francis Meuse Liberal Arts Cambridge Raymond Alexander Michelson Engineering Hyannis Barnett Miller Liberal Arts Chelsea Francis Joseph Mullen Engineering Brookline Gordon Henry Milligan Engineering Saylesville, R. I. Edward Arthur Monier Engineering Medford Warren Webster Morton Liberal Arts Everett Ulisse Donald Moscatelli Engineering Boston John Edmond Moseley Liberal Arts New York City Gabriel Victor Mottla Liberal Arts Quincy Lester Rhodes Moulton, Jr. Liberal Arts Melrose Wasphy Assad Mudarri Liberal Arts Allston John Jacob Mudgett Engineering Salem Stanley Forsyth Murray Liberal Arts Arlington Kenneth Michael Muskavitz Engineering Melrose William Thayer Neal Engineering Collinsville, Conn. Walter Bengt Nelson Liberal Arts Everett Murdock Henry Newman Liberal Arts Worcester Frederick Stanley Nichols Engineering Lynn William Oaks Engineering Jamai ca Plain Raymond George Ockert Liberal Arts Attleboro Harold Franklin Ordway Liberal Arts Somerville Wendell Howe Packard Engineering Stoneham Sidney Christian Palmer Engineering Medford George Wilkins Parker Engineering Meriden, Conn. Andrew Currier Paton Engineering Melrose John Kenneth Pearson Liberal Arts Cochesett John Taft Thorlief Pedersen Liberal Arts Dedham Nelson Bonney Piper Liberal Arts Medford Holland Pittock Liberal Arts Malden Roger Kay Poole Engineering Taunton Lin Quan Engineering Boston Charles Foster Ransom Liberal Arts Somerville Thomas Jefferson Reese Liberal Arts Philadelphia, Pa. Howard William Reid Liberal Arts Meriden, Conn. George Philbrick Roberts Engineering W. Medford Richard Augustine Rose Liberal Arts New Rochelle, N. Y. Chesley Brigham Russell Engineering Hudson Robert Pratt Russell Liberal Arts Newton John Lawrence Ryan Engineering Boston Joseph Anthony Sapienza Liberal Arts Lawrence Maurice Saslavsky Liberal Arts Chelsea 95 Karl Winfield Silva Liberal Arts Somerville John Tweed Small Liberal Arts Keene, N. H. Walter Richardson Spofford Liberal Arts Berlin Frank Stella Liberal Arts Malden Edward Saul Stone Liberal Arts Brookline Waldo Evans Stone Liberal Arts Sudbury Chester Bradstreet Story Liberal Arts Wilkinsburg, Pa. Olaf Trygve Sundlie Engineering Cambridge Stanford Harold Sword Engineering Northfield David Yeaton Taylor Engineering Medford Erland Williams Thayer Engineering Bridgewater Joseph Michael Thornton Liberal Arts Somerville John Summerfield Todsen, Jr. Engineering Somerville Charles Eldon Tuck Engineering Bridgewater George William Tuttle Engineering Wakefield Eugene Leonce Watt Engineering Lubec, Me. Arthur William Webster Liberal Arts Kensington, N. H. Eldon Dyment Wedlock Liberal Arts Somerville Francis Reynolds Welch Engineering Medford Gilman Page Welch Liberal Arts Mattapan Edwin Whittaker Raymond Albert Yeaton Liberal Arts Liberal Arts Adams Saugus Arthur Wolf Sidney Myer Zeff Liberal Arts Liberal Arts Waltham Dorchester George Joseph Wright Liberal Arts Andrew Alfred Zimboldi Engineering Newton Medford V r y. JACKSON Helen Ackermann, Aon SWAMPSCOTT Elizabeth Hadley Austin, AXA PITTSBURGH, PA. Isabelle Marguerite Avellar PROVINCETOWN Madeline Taylor Beattie, AOII MEDFORD Sara Beinstein HARTFORD, CONN. Catherine Ellen Bickford CONWAY, N. H. Edith Ciullo, AOII ARLINGTON K. Helen Mae Cloutier W. SPRINGFIELD Thelma Margaret Cowey, 2K YORK HARBOR, ME. Elizabeth Louise Currie, 2K V SOUND BEACH, CONN. Eleanora Leontine Czerniewska MANCHESTER, N. H. Dorothy Mary Doane ARLINGTON HEIGHTS Ruth Emily Ellison SPRINGFIELD, VT. Ruth Fedor, AXA BRIDGEPORT, CONN. Mildred Farrar Fortier MORRISVILLE, VT. Yetta Green WATERBURY, CONN. Dorothy Hancock EVERETT Dorothy Louise Hand W. MEDFORD Hazel Hill, XQ METHUEN Ruth Holmes, 2K W. SOMERVILLE 9S Helen Eugenia Hugo, 2K MERIDEN, CONN. Thelma Johnson WALTHAM Elizabeth King, XO BOSTON Doris Richardson Lamb LEXINGTON Ruti ( (V x V . ww ) Elizabeth Thackeray Loud, 2K BRAINTREE Dorothea Mary Loughlin, AXA W. CONCORD Miriam MacDonald, AXA MIDDLEBORO Ruth Elinor MacDuffee, Xfi CLIFTONDALE Kaye MacKinnon, 2K BELMONT Elizabeth MacLean, XO W. BRIDGEWATER Dorothy Mary Mallett, AXA LYNN Edna Louise Marland BALLARD VALE Marjorie Helen Moles, XO WOLLASTON Anna Josephine Murphy MILTON Elizabeth Sears Peabody, XO BROCKTON Mildred Josephine Pender, XO FITCHBURG Sarah Phelan, XO W. MEDFORD Charlotte Elizabeth Poore W. NEWBURY Janet Hunter Putnam, AXA W. SOMERVILLE 7 i Delilah Riemer CHELSEA Priscilla Elizabeth Rising BEVERLY Mildred Emma Robinson, 2K LAWRENCE Helen Gladys Roetzer EVERETT Sylvia Ruby BROOKLINE Pearl Augusta Russell TOWNSEND Helen Gladys Sakin MATTAPAN Helen Brown Sanders, XO BEACHMONT Charlotte Gertrude Smith, XO SALEM Elaine Marie Smith, XO LEBANON, N. H. Helen Elizabeth Smith, AOH E. WALPOLE Madeleine Lydia Snow, XO BROCKTON Charlotte Isabel Starling, 2K N. ANDOVER Helen Stafford Taylor GREENWOOD Agnes Wallace Templeton, XO ROSLINDALE Rhoda Emma Thatcher ORANGE, CONN. Elizabeth Muriel Verveer ROXBURY Marjorie Winslow, AOII ALBURNDALE Isabelle Wolcott, XO WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Esther Joy Woolley MERIDEN, CONN. 100 ly • v. i. k «. - ■ ' 0KKMk - ,A 21 MBS i : :: -- $ mm X ' 102 Back Row: Cochran, Carely, Fine Front Row: Bush, Daniels TUFTS 1932 OFFICERS . . . President Vice-President . . . Secretary . . . Tre usurer . . . . Marshal H. Granville Bush . Samuel David Daniels .... Warren Ellis Carley . Jacob Harold Fine. Arthur Maitland Cochran 103 yap- : ' • =4 Mi p --x •■ W. ' , r fi wrg Bp 3 mj m ioBRBm ULMM ' Tt W 1 laL v Mgr- v V ' Ife 104 Back Row: MacKissock, Foster, Sullivan Front Row: Fleming, Pullman, Burnham JACKSON 1932 OFFICERS Evelyn Elsie Pullman. President Katherine Elizabeth Fleming . Vice-President Eleanor Mona Sullivan . Secretary Prudence Webber MacKissock . Treasurer Esther Elizabeth Burnham . Marshal Elizabeth Wass Foster. Historian 105 7 7 teP® N ’ ' jB P A to; ; f_. -a 3 106 CLASS OF 1932 LIBERAL ARTS Armas John Aijala . Fitchburg Raymond Ernest Allard . Littleton, N. H. Nathan Angoff . Roxbury C. G. Eben Backstrom . Somerville Melvin Bacon . Haverhill Charles Bergan . Auburn, N. Y. Joseph Eugene Berinsky . Dorchester George Purnell Betts . Portland, Me. Irl Hazard Blaisdell . Providence, R. I. Fletcher Schofield Boig ... Everett Benjamin Boyarsky . Springfield Homer Lincoln Brayton . Dorchester Norman David Breil . Brookville Edward Joseph Brolli . Union City, N. J. Herman Louis Brown . Chelsea Francis Salvatore Buccheri . Lawrence H. Granville Bush . Endicott, N. Y. James Edwin Butters . Somerville Warren Ellis Carley . N. Attleboro Coryell Palmer Chester . Malden William Francis Clark . Belmont Isadore Cohen . Haverhill Max Cohen . IValtham Romaine Brabrook Cole . Newton Center Loring Derby Collier . IV. Somerville Charles Edward Connelly . Swampscott Otis Arthur Cooper . Winthrop Richard Bertram Cooper . Somerville Clito Robert Damiani . S. Boston Samuel David Daniels . Dorchester Simon Philip Devine . Roxbury John Felisberto Dias, Jr. New Bedford John Francis Donovan . Dorchester John Steel Dunk . Saugus Raymond Anthony Dunn . Fitchburg Joseph Edward Dushane . Haverhill Herbert Howell Eames . Keene, N. H. Robert Franklyn Eliot . Dexter, Me. Jesse Efrem Escowitz . Mattapan John Estok . Ansonia, Conn. Edward Cranshaw Fearns . Maynard Theodore Feldman . Mattapan Jacob Harold Fine . College Point, N. F. Clifford Provost Fox . Stratford, Conn. Frank Domenic Fratantuono . N. Providence, R. . Edgar Allison Fulton. Milton Bradford Eugene Gale . Clinton John Norman Gallivan . Meriden, Conn. Charles Gerald Geary . IVoburn Arthur Aaron Giddon . Brookline George Gold . Roxbury George David Gordon .. Chelsea Richard Warren Gordon, Jr. Floral Park, N. Y. Thomas Damon Gorham . Bryantville Edwin George Graham . Douglaston, N. Y. John Edward Grigas . Hudson Peter Bedros Hagopian . Lawrence Peter Joseph Harrington . S. Boston James Lowe Hastings . Delmar, Del. George Nicholas Heos . Somerville William Dearborn Hersey . Canton, N. Y. David Michael Higer . E. Boston Clifford Martin Holmes . McKeesport, Pa. William Hart Howard . Somerville Sheldon Leslie Hunt . W. Somerville Ernest Armstrong Hussar, Jr. Somerville Leslie Raeburn Johnson . Somerville Robert Russell Johnson . New Rochelle, N. Y William Victor Johnson . New Rochelle, N. Y Napoleon Armenag Kasparian . Dorchester Julius Kastantin . Brockton John Joseph Kelleher . Lawrence Edward Eaton Kimball . Hyde Park John Curtis Laing . Ypsilanti, Mich. Jerome Coombs Lewsen . Portland, Me. Milton Salva Litchfield . Brooklyn, N. Y. Carlton Robert Lohmeyer . Brooklyn, N. Y. Americo Macaluso . Dorchester Bernard Mack . Chelsea Donald William MacKay . Watertown Heywood Solberg Mansergh . New Britain, Conn. Winthrop Ritter Manwaring . Middleboro John Joseph Marchand . Manchester, N. H. Donald Alton Martin . Ayer James Edward Martin . Somerville Russell Henry Mazzola . E. Weymouth Edward Aloysius McCarthy . Malden Richard Joseph McKelleget . Cambridge John Paul McKillop . W. Roxbury Frederick Sidney Milgroom . Gloucester Melvin Clifford Miller . Kingston, N. Y. Edward Milton . Philadelphia, Pa. Peter Minasian . Kingston, N. Y. Charles Carl Montano . Hartford, Conn. Robert McDonald Moore . Elizabeth, N. J. Paul Alfred Morin . Biddeford, Me. Francis Parker Moulton . Auburn, Me. Chester Anthony Nasiatka . Webster John David O ' Brien . Portland, Conn. Edward John Ostrowski . Holyoke George William Packard . Westboro Howard Enoch Page, Jr. Belmont Irving Manuel Pallin . Chelsea Will Valarous Peck . E. Calais, Ft. Langdon Melvin Phillips . Cambridge John Dominic Piccolo . Hartford, Conn. Robert J. Pigeon . Broad Brook, Conn. Parker Webster Pillsbury . W. Newton Abe Polakoff . New York, N. Y. Louis Polonsky . E. Boston Harvey Benton Poole . Cliftondale John Cameron Prescott . Medford Hillside Harold Alan Press . Brighton William Malcolm Priestly . Lowell Frank Princi . Boston Robert Lawrence Raby . Meriden, Conn. Timothy Francis Ring . Woburn Wallace Woodsome Robbins . Taunton Kenneth William Roberts . Pittsfield Harold Rodofsky .. Revere Lawrence Bradford Rogers . Melrose Roland Cornelius Rogers . Newport, Ft. Louis Paul Rose . New Rochelle, N. Y. Milton Gabriel Rosoff . Roxbury Harold William Rubin . Chelsea John King Ru ggles . Weehawken, N. J. Ernest Dustin Sackett . Somerville Louis Mata Saenz . Medford George Brock Sargent, 2nd . Brighton Oscar Miller Schubert . Plainville Lazarus Secunda . Pittsfield Albert Wilson Senter . Houghton, Mich. Frederic Leo Shaw . Medway Nathaniel Showstack . Dorchester Harold Siersma . Waltham Leslie Farrar Simmons . H mg ham Center Wendell Allen Simonson . Medford John Ellsworth Smith . Weymouth Lester Hawes Smith . Barre Gerald Stanislaus Smyth . Wollaston Joseph Cronbach Sonneborn . New York, N. Y. Abraham Spack . Boston Samuel Spinner . Dorchester Aaron Arnold Starr . Mattapan Carl Arnold Storm . Stafford, Conn. Hayward Hunton Sweet . Attleboro Charles Willis Thompson . Attleboro Euclide Leo Tremblay . Woonsocket, • R. I. Franklin Spilman Tuttle . Wakefield Lewis Charles Tuttle .. Somerville John Robert Verge . Auburndale Vitot John Vosilus . Danbury, Conn. Thomas Edmund Wallace . Revere Clyde Henry Walsworth . Watertown Thomas Edward Watman . Lynn Francis Atherton Whittle . Weymouth Arthur William Webster . E. Kensington, N. H. Ross Clair Wilcox . Glenbrook, Conn. Charles Kendall Yeaton . Auburn, Me. 109 ENGINEERS Isadore Abell . Peabody Maurice Abramovitz . Revere George Rodney Adams . Leominster Henry Adelman . Roxbury Sheldon Reynolds Bishop . West Peabody Theodore Oscar Bogosian . Watertown Chester Payson Bond . Lynn Robert Donald Burns . Woburn Morris Bernard Burstein . Chelsea Luther Moore Child, Jr. W. Medford Earl Fredrick Christensen . Jamaica Plain Gordon Lovell Clark . Melrose Arthur Maitland Cochran . Medford Earle Henry Collins . West Concord Ross Freeman Coon . Saugus Angelo Victor Croce . Brockton Warren Stanton Darling . Orleans Israel Davidson . Chelsea Stuart Fremont Davis . Collinsville, Conn. Arthur Michael DeGregory . Everett Edward Herbert Diggins . Arlington David Tanerede Dionne . Grand Isle, Me. John Elmer Eklund . W. Medford Benjamin Slavin Eldredge . Chatham Levi Wilber Eldridge . S. Chatham William Joseph Ellsworth . W. Lynn John Robert Farmer . Medford Hillside Francis Ellison Farnham . Hingham Centre Frank Paul Fasanello . Roslindale James Edward Ferguson . Somerville Earl Clarence Finnegan . Stoneham Robert Adolph Fischer . Meriden, Conn. Lawrence Edward Fitzpatrick . Medford Louis Douglas Fleming . Pawtucket, R. . Alexander Joseph Ford . Cambridge Samuel Edgar Gazan, Jr. Belmont Reginald Packer Geer . Tufts College Joseph General . Cambridge Harold Max Gerrish . Roxbury Morris Goldenberg . Dorchester George Hopper Gowdy . Cambridge Philip Ricker Hartson . Winchester Francis Willard Haskell . Bar Harbor, Me. Harold Charles Hatch . Winchester Mervyn Haskell Hatch . Auburn, Me. Oscar Henry Hornig . N. Attleboro Charles Owen Hosterman, Jr. Dorchester Herbert Francis Howe . Waltham Freeman Wilfred Howes . Chatham Ralph Eugene Hughes . Everett Dominic Ierardi . E. Boston Fred Lesh Jacobs . Boston Arnold Edward Johnson . W. Somerville Thorburn Kennedy . Malden Stanley George Kindred . W. Somerville Ernest Victor Knapman . Lynn Clive Dorman Knowles . Roxbury Carl Albert Lindstrom . Dedham Edward Ingalls Lummus . Lynn Ronald Gregory Macdonald . Wakefield John Joseph Maloney, Jr. S. Portland Israel Marcus . Brookline Thomas John Marshall. Medford Ardash Matthewsian . Somerville Ernest Wentworth McAdams . Winchester John Frederick McGann, Jr. Somerville John Francis Milo . Lynn Edward Arthur Monier . W. Medford Eben Bachellor Moore . Everett Joseph James Moran . Somerville John David Nagle . Cambridge Herbert Ellesworth Nelson . Winchester Walter Eldon Ness . Brockton Walter Nelson Ober, Jr. Lynnficld Centre Louis Palter . Revere Albert S. R. Patton . Boston Carmine Hugo Pettinati . W. Somerville Russell Edwin Peverly . Melrose Stephen Edward Ralph . Northeast Harbor, Me. Philip Allan Ramsay . Jamaica Plain John Gabriel Real . Santiago de Cuba Wesley Franklin Restall . Springfield Albert Barzillai Rich . Atlantic Grant Raney Robinson . W. Medford Theodore Mandi Robis . Roxbury Harold Blair Robison . Meriden, Conn. Frederick Edgar Roome . Charlestown Henry Samuel Rudin. Allston Guy Haskell Sargeant, Jr. W. Medford Harry Sattin . Malden Julius Harold Sheinberg . Dorchester Frank Theodore Smith . Ipswich George Ambrose Spencer . Cleveland Heights, Ohio David Shafer Sprague . Holyoke Arthur Henry Staffon . Cambridge Homer Everett . Hudson Don Neil Sutherland . Boston Louis Swartz . Dorchester Arnold Franklin Sylvester . Abington Melvin Earl Terrill . Collinsville William Joseph Walsh . So. Boston Earle Franklin White . Watertown Edwin Whittaker . Adams Arthur Wise . Dorchester Nathan Wiseblood . Haverhill Richard Tufts Woodbury . Melrose Bronick Zapolski . W. Lynn 111 t jV JACKSON Janice Appier . Melrose Helen May Baker, ASA . Arlington Margaret Webster Beattie, AOn . Medford Winifred Blackmer, AOIT . So. Sudbury Arline Lenore Booth, Xfi. IV ethers field, Conn. Ruth Irene Boyd, ASA . Wallingford, Conn. Cynthia Stevens Bradford . Gardner Josephine Mary Brown . Quincy Alice Burke . Chelsea Esther Elizabeth Burnham, Xf2 . Gloucester Muriel Louise Burns . Somerville Solglad Augusta Burtch . Lexington Marjorie Case, XS2 . Bridgewater Doris Alice Chase, XQ . Brockton Stella Mary Chmiel . Manchester, N. H. Hortense Williams Clapp . Northampton Adele Field Clark, AOII . W. Medford Esther Lillian Cohen . Brookline Eunice Barbara Collupy . Somerville Elinor Howard Crockett, XK . Springfield Margaret Alice Danforth . Chesterfield _ Marguerite Dilling . Winthrop V.. Alice Doan, XK . Winchester 0 Vera Mabel Dodge . Medford Gladys Grace Doolittle . Plantsville, Conn. Gladys Elizabeth Doughty . Everett Katherine Elizabeth Fleming, ASA . Greenfield Vivienne Augusta Forstrom . Fairfield, Conn. Elizabeth Wass Foster, XK. Gloucester Lucille Elaine Funk . Groton, S. D. Hester Gibbs . Hudson Elisabeth Winchester Gray, XK . Damariseotta, Maine Muriel Rutledge Grover . Dover, N. H. Mary Madeline Halloran . Lynn [Eleanor Louise Haskell . Beverly ouise Ellen Hawkins, AOU . Peekskill, N. Y. Rita Coleman Hayes . Bridgewater arjorie Sears Hill . Lynn lien Elizabeth Hinckley . Mamaroneck, N. Y. ildred Dodge Ingalls, XS2 . Gloucester Eliza Ingraham, XK . Methuen Dorothy Thelma Jelly, XI2 . Swampscott Caroline Helen Jordan . Millbury Margaret Anne Lacey . Somerville Jean Carlyle Lamb, AOII . W. Somerville , Isabelle Martha L’Heureux . Ware -«- ♦ • i t ir % Anne Marie Linscott . Swampscott Georgie Augherton MacCormack . W. Medford Muriel Jean MacDougall . Merrimac Prudence Webber MacKissock . Manchester, N. H. Olive Beatrice MacPherson . Somerville Joan Alexandra MacWillie, AOII . Winthrop Kathryn Elizabeth Mannion . Littleton Marston . Boston ft (t CUoA. n t( « . JUL n — £Anita Blanche r j i •I ' . 4 112 H. Elizabeth Annie McKee . Medford Janet Harrison Motherway . Gloucester Elsie Augusta Mueller, 2K . Somerville Victoria Lempi Ollila . Quincy Emily Solveig Olsen . Lakeport, N Sylvia Parker . Lynn Virginia Pettingill, Xfi . Gloucester Evelyn Elsie Pullman, SK . Nevutonville Beth Marion Ringer, AOII . Gloucester Ramona Jeanette Sawyer, 2K . IVare Nathalie Ellen Scales . Concord, N. H. Victoria Albertina Scharton . Derry Hester Marie Shaw .. H Marjorie Shepherdson . No. Beverly Sophie Ruth Silverstein . Dorchester Amy Louise Smith . Stamford, Conn. Ruth Palmer Smith, 2K . Manchester, Conn Ruth Vivian Smith, AOIT .. Cliftondale Elizabeth York Stahl, XO . Berlin, N. H. Florence Mabie Stickel, 2K. Sound Beach, Conn. Ellen Louise Strout, ASA . Lynn Eleanor Mona Sullivan . N ewburyport Eileen Patricia Sweeney . Winthrop Mary Margaret Taylor, ASA . Sound Beach, Conn. Esther Evelyn Terry . Gloucester Harriet Evelyn Tholbard . Medway Dorothy Esther Thomas, AOIT . Swampscott Evelyn Ruth Thomas, AOII . Swampscott Emily Newton Thurston, ASA . New York, N Eleanor Raynor Trowbridge . Lexington Estelle Florence Waddell . Somerville Evelyn Elizabeth Wheeler . Rochester N A Elizabeth Boyden White, . Amherst F Hilda Abbie Whitney, XO .. South Sudbury Mabel Adeline Williams, ASA . E. Bridgewater Enid Marjorie Wood, 2K . Medford Mary Angelina Zervas . Ipswich erry, N. H. . . A J Somerville rt R ?ei) nr! m I 0 VI 1 L AROUND THE HILL Our Own Sam Pepys (During the past three years the College has been fortunate in having had the observations of our own Sam Pepys, who has written at frequent intervals his im¬ pressions and comments on what he found in his college life. In many ways our Air. Pepys has seemed a member of all of the classes; but more especially he seems a mem¬ ber of the Class of 1929. It is fitting therefore that this book should preserve some pages from his diary. We should like to express to him our personal appreciation and that of the College at large, as we offer these entries from the diary of our own Sam Pepys. The Editors.) APRIL FOOLS’ DAY. Up exceeding betimes, being highly resolved to make the most of the day which to my mind doth truly mark the incoming of Spring, no matter what prank the weather may play us of a sudden with an extremity of heat or cold. For now 7 the bluebirds are w 7 ith us again, and the great beech at our entrance hath put on that satiny sheen which doth alw 7 ays invite me to stroke its gray bark that I may more fully enjoy its texture. And as I look toward our wallows and stately larches for the first signs of greenery, I can indeed almost believe “a tree to be among my far progenitors, such sympathy is mine with all the race; and I have many a long- lived, leafy friend’’ on the Hill to which I shall be loth to say farewell w r hen June will bring sad parting to us all. And this being the first day of our holiday, I did on my bravest garments and went early to the town to see what I might find to ref resh me, for Lord! my wfits have grow 7 n stale and dusty and do sorely need a change. And in the omnibus I did meet wfith a lively damsel who asked if April Fools’ Day were not my birthday, and w T hen I did answer nay, she said it by all rights should be, w 7 hich idea so tickled my fancy that 1 am minded to ask a Justice if some change may not be made in my records, since I have always felt myself unworthy of the true date of February 22nd. To the great Club in Trinity Place to lunch with my good chirurgeon where we did ourselves very well on steak with mushrooms and a fresh green salad wfith a ripe cheese; and w ' e afterward fell into pleasant talk of college happenings of the past four years in the which he hath alw r ay showm much interest. And albeit he doth rightly belong to Harvard-on-the-Charles, he spake with high favor of various Tufts events which he had witnessed at the Club, and of his hope that many of our college men may be aided in a practical way by their placement bureau, in which wish I did heart¬ ily concur. And w r hen I marvelled openly at his hearty interest in us, w 7 ho are so modest a neighbor, he quoth sagely that “it is not always the largest bird that casts the wddest shadow 7 in his flight, but oftimes the smaller, if only it fly nearer the sun’’; which saying doth please me the more, now 7 that I think on it soberly. 114 To the great Library and various galleries in the pleasant Square where are dis¬ played so many choice pictures and objets d’art that the eye is all too soon surfeited with richness- Thence to a favorite playhouse for another mystery play, which God knows we should weary of, but seemingly do not; and as I watched an engaging little actress play her role, I wondered what that caustic critic, St. John Ervine, had eaten to upset him when he wrote that “women had spoiled the theatre, just as they had spoiled everything they had ever gone into.” Noted with much pleasure that we may soon see more new plays, and hear some good old operas, for the which I must at once set about saving some monies. Late home by devious routes to my chambers, and to bed. p. PRIL 19TH. (Patriots’ Day) Roused from a sweet slumber by a great ring¬ ing of bells, I dressed myself at top speed in my gaudiest knickers and new sweater and made off to the village that I might miss nothing of the day’s stirring events. For in all the years of my sojourn on the Hill I have but once failed to see Paul Revere gallop down the quiet streets of Medford town; and whether it be childish or patriotic, I know not, hut hold it among my pleasant memories of these historic environs. And while waiting for the gallant horseman to appear, I fell in with some old cronies on a holiday who craved the latest gossip from the campus. And I, nothing loth, regaled them with sundry happenings,—of how the new hall for women had been opened with much pomp last season, and how certain merry dames did think the various booths should be named for different states, following the plan of South Station; and how one of them observed the whole effect to be Early American, in particular the parlour which is held too sacred for daily usage. And I did also tell them of the latest use found for the fire drill in a smaller hall, and of the great need for conservatories well stocked with sheltering palms in all reception rooms on Hill, holding that if we are to be truly co-educational in spirit, more provision should be made for elegant ease and private converse. Then they did question me as to a prac¬ tical use for the Grand Staircase looking towiard Robinson and the Annex, holding it a good idea for the annual Sing to be held upon its steps so that all who passed by in car or omnibus might be impressed, and the College profit by such timely Publicity. Then one of them inquiring as to the plays of the year, he being of the cast of our notable Othello, I told him of how we had watched the fortunes of both “the quick and the dead” on the stage, and he could but hold them as spooky and think us wise to rest upon the repute of Emperor Jones and Outward Bound, and not venture into more wild and lawless fields of human experience, however vicarious,—the College this year having won such a name for sobriety and diligence that we do sometimes wonder if we are living on the surface of a volcano which may suddenly burst its bounds and disclose hidden, smoldering fires of independent thought. The patriotic events being over, we made our way to the high tower in the Fells which hath welcomed so many wanderers from the campus in countless years, and as is our wont, gazed o’er the fair expanse of woodland and gleaming water with a wist¬ ful longing to hold its memory forever in our thoughts wheresoever the Fates may lead us hereafter. And the distant Chapel tower took on a glamour under the mild spring skies that is like to the softening haze of time. Home very cheerful, with much pleasant talk and merry jests, so that I did thank God, as often, for good friends! ATAY DAY. Up with the first robin on this my favorite morning of the year, and having made myself fine with a cold shower and a tingling dash of fougere royale, put off to the links feeling so skittish that when I met the Cynic who doth often annoy me by being first on the field, I asked him whether I most resembled Bacchus or Donatello; but he made answer morosely that tq his mind I had the nature of a goat hid behind the manner of a lamb, which reply seemed to me but the churlish words of one who hath just lost his newest golf ball, so that it dashed me not a whit, albeit I know there is truth in his comment. But Lord! why should any one pause for dull introspection when the trees are in leaf and winter safely past! The day’s lectures being over, and my mind being so addled that I fear I have learned nothing whatsoever, to walk with Corinna who hath given me all too little of her company of late,—it being my accursed luck to place my affections on damsels who look fair to those more affluent than myself. And tho I do alway prate loudly of my penchant for Walking as the most aristocratic and healthful form of exercise, I do sometimes mistrust her bright acquiescence when I see her flash past me in a jaunty green roadster whose driver I know not. To a pleasant little coffee-house for supper, very seasonable and tasty, and then to walk round the Rez a little before turning to our waiting books; and as we looked across the misty landscape, Corinna did of a sudden surprise me with a verse writ long ago: “God keep you, merry Gentlemen, Wherever you may stray; And turn your thoughts to Medford, Whenever blooms the May: For well you know, where’er you go, There watcheth o’er you still, The beacon that shineth on the Hill.” And we spake together of how Samuel Pepys the Elder did in this very month of May in 1669, sadly inscribe in his diary, “And this ends all that I doubt I shall ever do in the keeping of my Journall”. So to my chambers for a quiet hour of reading against the work for the morrow, with my good pipe for company,—and so to bed! F. W. Organizations Honorary Societies Back Row: Garcelon, Herrmann, Chane, Austin, Macl.aughlin Front Row: Thomas, Holmes, Ingalls, Fav, Fisk TOWER CROSS npOWER CROSS, founded in 1897, is the Senior Honorary Society, election to which constitutes one of the highest undergraduate honors. The members are pledged to promote the highest good of their Alma Mater and are usually men prominent in extracurricular affairs. The organization plays an imortant part in the conduct of undergraduate life. Francis Edmund Ingalls . President Robert Webster Holmes . Vice-President Raymond Joseph Fay. Secretary-Treasurer Richard Leland Thomas . Marshal Arthur James Austin Irving Gray Garcelon Daniel Thurston Chane Ernest Francis Herrmann Donald Converse Fisk Robert Philbrick MacLaughlin 118 Back Row: Wiles, Rachdorf, LeMaistre, Lincoln, Bowles Front Row: Warren, Boardman, McCarthy, Woodbury, Curtis IVY SOCIETY npHE Ivy Society, the Junior Honorary Society, is chosen, like the other honorary A societies, by the popular vote of the class. Its members are usually active in cam¬ pus and class activities. One of the most important of the society’s functions is the management of the Junior Prom and Junior Day. Harold Thomas McCarthy Erwin Davis Woodbury . . . Charles Edward Boardman President Secretary Treasurer George Ellsworth Bowles William Henry Curtis Howard Arthur Lincoln Paul Joseph LeMaistre Herman Robert Rachdorf Richard Carter Warren Ernerst Gallienne Wiles 119 Back Row: Lundsten, Downes, Shepard, Warren Front Row: Manning, Fay, Elms PAINT, AND PRETZELS T)EN, Paint, and Pretzels is the honorary dramatic society, in which membership is open only to members of the senior class of Tufts. Originally, the purpose of the society was to encourage the writing and production of original plays. While the organization still works for this end, its chief function has come to be the pro¬ motion of dramatic interests by the production of worthwhile plays. Raymond Joseph Fay. Charles Frederick Manning Richard Vaughan Elms. President Manager Secretary Harold Downes Everett Hans Lundsten Amos Edward Shepard Philip Lancaster Warren 120 Back Row: Tucker, Reynolds, Lane, Totten, Duner, Hall, Handy Front Row: Pierce, Mclnernev, Jacoby, Simonson, Cazneau, Quinby THE MASQUE A MEMBERSHIP in Masque Society, the Jackson Honorary Dramatic Society, is A open to Seniors and Juniors. The organization is self-perpetuating, and new members are selected from those who have done conspicuous work in dramatics. At present the society produces two plays each year. Muriel Simonson. Helen Lauretta Jacoby. Harriot Germaine Cazneau .... Kathryn Marguerite McInerney ... President Vice-President . . . Secretary . . . Treasurer Dorothea Marie Duner Virginia Jewell Hall Constance Rhodes Handy Ida May Lane Janet Pullman Pierce Dorothy Speirs Quinby Margaret Reynolds Louise Heathwood Totten Helen Tucker ■ t ' B i IAB MB B •• n 121 Back Row: Abbott, Houghton, Jacobs, Davis, Dubrow, Zandi Front Row: Harlow, MacLeod, Whitcomb, Elms, Handy PHI BETA KAPPA T vELTA chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the national honorary scholastic society, was organized at Tufts in 1892. Members are elected each November from the senior class, and from the previous graduating class. Membership in the society is considered one of the highest scholastic honors granted in the School of Liberal Arts. Lawrence Wesley Abbott Melba Belle Davis Harold Goodwin Dubrow Richard Vaughan Elms Constance Rhodes Handy Cora Belle Harlow Doris PIoughton Salvador Jacobs Kenneth Alexander MacLeod Helen Whitcomb Mary Lucy Zandi 122 Front Row: Morang, Lukacs, Hingston, Curit, Back Row: Gifford, Crowley, Kimball ' TT ' AU BETA PI, the national honorary engineering society, established the chapter at Tufts in 1927. The members are elected from the outstanding scholars of the School of Engineering. Seniors and Juniors are eligible for election to member- Charles Edward Kingston Joseph John Lukacs. Barton Francis Curit Clarence Nolan Morang . President . Vice-President . Secretary Corresponding Secretary Charles Joseph Crowley John Roswell Gifford Duane Edward Kimball Robert Warren Sylvester Frederick Cecil Ward 123 Front Row: Godfrey, Carney, Palmer, Pedersen, Reese, Morton Back Row: Blodgett, Russell, Story, Farquhar, Arlanson SWORD AND SHIELD r JpHE chief function of Sword and Shield, the Sophomore Honorary Society is the regulation and maintenance of Freshman Traditions. With the weakening of traditions and freshman rules in recent years, the duties of the organization in this respect have been lessened and the chief purpose of the society now is to promote the interests of the class. John Thorliff Pedersen Sidney Christian Palmer Thomas Jefferson Reese Harry Arlanson Maurice Merton Blodgett Edward Michael Carney Andrew Jameson Farquhar . . . President V ice-President .. . . Secretary Howard Johnson Godfrey Warren Webster Morton Robert Pratt Russell Cheter Bradstreet Story 124 Governing Bodies Third Row: Stockwell, Warren, Campbell Second Row: Garcelon, Harlow, Herrmann, Ingalls, MacLaughlin, Palmer Front Row: Fay, Holmes, Fisk, Miller, Curtis TUFTS STUDENT COUNCIL r | A HE Student Council, first organized in 1924, is composed of representatives from the extracurricular activities and the athletic teams. The Council represents the interests of the undergraduate body, and exercises supervision over all the under¬ graduate activities. Among the accomplishments of the Council this year have been the authorization of an annual Jumbo Book and the work on the chapel question. Donald C. Fisk . President Robert W. Holmes . Vice-President Raymond J. Fay . Secretary Curtis Campbell Robert P. MacLaughlin William H. Curtis Burnham L. Paige Irving G. Garcelon Sidney C. Palmer Edward E. Harlow Paul F. Stockwell Ernerst F. Hermann Richard C. Warren Francis E. Ingalls Professor George S. Miller 126 Third Row: Peabody, Pierce, Totten, Fedor, Quinby, Simonson Second Row: Doane, Avellar, Knowles, Norwood, Shepperd, Maclnerney, Taylor, Lowe Front Row: Quist, Wakefield, Crosby, Reynolds, Sjostrom, Traverso, Bruce JACKSON STUDENT COUNCIL npHE Student Council of Jackson is made up of the presidents of the three upper A classes, of the presidents of the Jackson organizations, and of representatives from the classes and from the dormitories. The council assumes responsibility for the con¬ duct of the student body, making and enforcing the necessary regulations. Margaret Reynolds . President Rachel D. Crosby . Vice-President Frances M. Heald . Secretary Janet P. Pierce Dorothy S. Quinby Alice E. Quist Dorothy L. Shepperd Muriel Simonson Augusta M. Sjostrom Alida G. Taylor Louise H. Totten Mary R. Traverso Vera L. Wakefield Isabelle M. Avellar Eva A. Bruce Priscilla Cobb Edith M. Doane Ruth Fedor Jean G. Knowles Ruth Lowe Caroline J. Marsh Dorothea T. Norwood Elizabeth S. Peabody 127 Third Row: Miller, Kinmonth, Boardman, Roscoe, Hurfwitz Second Row: Atonna, Wiles, Mumford, Kimball, Drooker, Lewiton Front Row: Gale, Chisholm, Elms, Farquhar, Thomas, Fay, Haynes INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL npHE membership of the Interfraternity Council during the present year consisted of delegates from nine of the eleven fraternities, two fraternities being suspended from membership for refusal to follow the new rushing system. The Council has been very active and has made great progress, being successful in putting into operation a system of delayed rushing for the first time. Donald W. Farquhar . President Richard V. Elms . Vice-President Richard L. Thomas . Secretary-Treasurer I A Don A. Miller George E. Kinmonth e a x G. Bruce Chisholm Guy B. Atonna A T Richard L. Thomas Byron R. Roscoe A T fl Donald W. Farquhar Charles S. Boardman a T A Raymond J. Fay Ernest G. Wiles A $ A Julian S. Haynes Duane E. Kimball p e n Samuel Gale Joshua Drooker Harold I. Hurwitz Jacob Lewiton b K Richard V. Elms Thomas R. Mumford 128 Back Row: James, Crosby, Ackermann, Poor Front Row: Reynolds, Jacoby, Pierce THE PAN El ELLEN IC COUNCIL ' THE Panhellenic Council, composed of two representatives from each sorority, is organized in accordance with the recommendations of the National Panhel¬ lenic Congress for local groups. The main function of the council is to formulate rules governing rushing. The present rushing system is that of delayed rushing and preferential bidding. Helen L. Jacoby . President Portia Russell . Secretary X ft Margaret Reynolds Virginia James Helen L. Jacoby M. Eva Poor a o n Portia Russell Helen Ackermann Janet P. Pierce Rachel D. Crosby 129 Back Row: Parker, Fay, Ibarguen, Winslow Front Row: Russell, Irving, McKenna, Thornton, Case THE DEBATING COUNCIL npHE Debating Council is chosen from the three upper classes at tryouts early in A the year. From its membership are chosen the varsity teams. Under the direc¬ tion of Professor Newell C. Maynard, the varsity teams engaged in the most suc¬ cessful schedule of recent years, defeating Dartmouth, Bowdoin, and Springfield and losing to Lafayette and Rutgers. Hugh F. McKenna . Joseph M. Thornton Frederick H. Case Raymond J. Fay Alonzo R. Ibarguen President Manager Albert E. Irving George W. Parker Robert P. Russell Richard A. Winslow «• T | ' , m wa IIP ' ' Jm gB ’g, Ib I MS -N.A 130 Publications 0 Front Row: Fisk, Houghton, Fay, Quinbv, Farquhar, Handy Back Row: Harlow, Thomas, Ireland, Cummings, Gallagher THE JUMBO BOOK HE present Jumbo Book marks the beginning of the annual production of a volume by each Senior Class. The Student Council has authorized the publica- , and has adopted rules which provide for the first time for a continuity of the Raymond J. Fay Editor-in-chief George A. Haraden Art Editor Associate Editors Constance R. Handy Doris Houghton Edmond C. Ireland Howard P. Cummings Donald W. Farquhar Mark E. Gallagher, Jr Donald C. Fisk Business Manager Edward E. Harlow Advertising Manager Irving G. Garcelon Ass’t Advertising Manager Richard L. Thomas Circulation Manager Robert W. Holmes Ass’t Circulation Manager Advertising Assistants Dorothy S. Quinby Helen L. Jacoby 132 Front Row: Houghton, Ingalls, McKenna Back Row: Appiani, Reese, Polk npHE Tufts Weekly, founded in 1895, is the weekly paper of the undergraduate body, published every Wednesday of the college year. Prominent among its editorial policies of the year have been support of chapel as a requirement for a de¬ gree, discussion of fraternities and rushing rules, and advocacy of increased support for various student activities. Francis E. Ingalls Editor-in-chief Doris Houghton Jackson Editor Carolyn Earnshaw Assistant Jackson Editor Sen : or Editors W. W. Horton I. M. Lane Junior Editors H. J. Leahy M. MacDonald W. W. Morton K. MacKinnon J. Rockwell Hubbard Circulation Manager Thomas J. Reese Ass t Business Manager Hugh F. McKenna Editor managing Robert E. Polk Feature Editor A. S. Rosen P. L. Warren D. H. Davis V. J. Hall E. S. Peabody M. J. Pender A. E. Quist M. L. Snow G. Beckerman C. E. Bickford M. M. Blodgett I). A. Goodwill Leo A. Appiani Business Manager 133 Gurney, Manning, Moody, Rising, Stockwell, Houghton THE TUETONIAN r j ' ' HE Tuftonian is a literary magazine published quarterly and containing both undergraduate and alumni contributions. It was founded in 1874 and was published until 1911, when it became non-existent. In May, 1924, it was reestab¬ lished through the efforts of a group of interested undergraduates. Paul F. Stockwell (1928) Doris Houghton (1929) Editor-in-chief Hugh A. Gurney Managing Editor Dr. Charles Gott Advisory Editor Associate Editors Harold Downes Virginia J. Hall John A. Holmes, Jr. Charles F. Manning Priscilla E. Rising John C. Moody 4 elvertisin g Manager Joseph W. Morton Bnsiness Manager 134 Dramatics and Music DRAMATICS TOURING the past season, the work in dramatics has been under the general direction of Professor William N. Morse, who came from Middlebury to suc¬ ceed Professor Albert H. Gilmer. The season opened with the production of three one-act plays by Masque on Novem¬ ber 14 and 15 to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the signing of the Armis¬ tice. “The Old Lady Shows Her Medals” was presented by a well balanced cast, with acting honors going to Miss MacDuffee as Mrs. Dowey and to Mr. Walsh as Private Dowfe. The exceptionally fine work of Miss Pierce in the leading role of Hedwig carried the play, “War Brides.” “O’Flahertv, V.C.” was, on the whole, the most successful play of the evening, with fine work by the whole cast dominated by the work of Mr- Carney in the title role. The casts: “THE OLD LADY SHOWS HER MEDALS” By James Matthew Barrie Mrs. Dowie . Ruth E. MacDuffee Mrs. Twymley. Helen Tucker The Haggerty Woman . Elizabeth L. Currie Mrs. Mickleham . Mildred E. Robinson Rev. Mr. Willings. George W. Tuttle Private Kenneth Dowie . Warren B. Walsh THE EMPEROR JONES WAR BRIDES By Marion Craig Wentworth . Janet P. Pierce Elizabeth T. Loud .Yetta Green Carroll L. Coburn . . Delilah Riemer . . . Robert E. Polk . Richard V. Elms Hedwig . Amelia. Mother. H ans Hoffman Minna . Arno. Captain Hertz “O’FLAHERTY, V.C.” Bv George Bernard Shaw . . Edward M. Carney . . . . Kaye MacKinnon Kathryn M. Mclnerney . . . Hugh F. McKenna O’Flaherty, V.C. . . Teresa Driscoll . . . Mrs. O’Flaherty . . . Sir Pearce Madigan The production of Eugene O’Neill’s “The Emperor Jones” by Pen, Paint and Pretzels Society on December 13 and 14 was the outstanding presentation of the year. The play gave an opportunity for some of the finest acting and the most original THE OLD LADY SHOWS HER MEDALS 137 sets on the Jackson stage in recent years. Mr. Mosely, in the title role, was al¬ ways most effective, and upon his brilliant work depended in large measure the success of the play. Mr. Hairston did a fine bit of work in the part of the Witch Doctor. The sets were designed by Mr. Downes, a member of the society. Pro¬ ductions were also given in Winchester and Lynn. I he cast: The Emperor Jones . John E. Moseley 0 . . i Dorman J. Hayes Sm,tl ' erS . i Edward M. Carney Lem . . Jester J. Hairston Old Woman . Elizabeth L. Currie Pantomime Characters Congo Witch Doctor . Jester J. Hairston Auctioneer.Vitot J. Vosilus Guard .C Charles C. Hersey Jeff . Sheldon Christian Negroes: Eben T. Colby, Harold Downes, Jester J. Hairston, George E. Kinmonth, Roger K. Poole, Richard T. Woodbury. Planters: Chester E. Gilson, Robert W. Nicholson, Wallace A. Park- hurst. Southern Belles: Eleda W. Burdoin, Marion N. Chick, Kaye Mac¬ Kinnon. Slave Women: Carolyn T. Earnshaw, Delilah Rimer, Yetta Green. “Outward Bound” by Sutton Vane was the final offering of the Masque Society on March 7 and 8. The play was skillfully interpreted by the actors who success¬ fully surmounted the difficulties of the unusual nature of the play. The members of the cast showed marked ability in making real the difficulties of the characters who become aware that, being dead, they are bound “for both Heaven and Hell.” The characters: Scrubby . Edward M. Carney Ann . Muriel Simonson Henry . Robert W. Nicholson Mr. Prior. Raymond J. Fay M rs. Cliveden-Banks . Janet P. Pierce Rev. William Duke . Warren E. Carley Mrs. Midget.Mildred E. Robinson Mr. Lingley . Ernest H. Brehaut Rev. Frank Thomson.Warren B. Walsh 138 Owing to the decision of Pen, Paint, and Pretzels not to present a second play, the newly-organized Play Production class offered on April 24 and 25 the comedy, “The Whole Town’s Talking” by John Emerson and Anita Loos. The play is highly amusing in its material and treatment and provided a wealth of entertainment. Making their last appearance on the Tufts stage were Miss Pierce, Miss Simonson, and Mr. Brehaut, who have been prominent in dramatics. The cast: Harriet Simmons . Muriel Simonson H enry Simmons... Ernest H. Brehaut Chester Binnev . Carroll L. Coburn Ethel Simmons. Harriot G. Cazneau Rogers Shields . Harold Downes Donald Swift. Norman E. Eyster Letty Lythe . Janet P. Pierce Lila Wilson.Doris A. Goodwill Sadie Otis . Eleda W. Burdoin Sadie Bloom . Dorothea M. Duner Annie . Frances M. Heald Mrs- Jackson.Mildred A. Coolidge Girl Friend . Barbara C. Cole Taxi Driver. Newman M. Biller There have been several noteworthy features during this season. A system where¬ by undergraduates act as assistant directors of the plays has been introduced. A new course in play production has been added to the curriculum. There has been the brillia nt acting of John E. Mosely as the Emperor Jones and the sustained ex¬ cellence of the work of Janet P. Pierce in all the plays in which she has appeared. The work of those who have taken an active part in dramatics in all its branches has maintained throughout the season the high standards set by their predecessors in this field at Tufts. 139 MUSIC MR. CHIDESTER rm Jmm if • | V-: ' ' ■ V.c.sfe: ' - - ' V n - r flfiy ' « (kA @S|i|jyKS ’f f | 4t| ’ |‘13 , TflPk , . • • a ;. JMffl Jl -v .’44 b « fy 140 tion. The production was a difficult undertaking, taxing the stage in its space re¬ quirements, and demanding all the best talent in the college to fill the needs of the chief solo parts. The cast: Nanki-poo .. Maurice M. Blodgett Ralph Rackstraw . Joseph R. Yarrow Hon. Joseph Porter. Norman E. Eyster Ambrose Mulligatawney . Edwxird A. McCarthy Josephine Corcoran . Muriel Simonson Yum-Yum . f Vir S inia Pettingill { Marion E. Jenkins Queen of the Fairies.Vivienne A. Forstrom Harold Stanton . Theodore A. Hersev Muriel Blake . Marion F. Stevens O Ta Ka San . Joan A. MacWillie Yum Yum’s Attendant . Janet H. Motherway Pianist . Elizabeth C. Sonier Conductor . Lawrence W. Chidester Also: Orchestra: Chorus of Yankee Tourists, Chorus of Fair¬ ies ; Chorus of Policemen. The girls have also been showing keen interest in musical affairs. In addition to being one of the sponsors of the operetta, the Jackson Glee Club has had two particularly successful appearances at the All Around Club Social and at the Christmas Entertainment of the Tufts Women’s Club. A Jackson concert orches¬ tra has also been started this year. The officers of the Glee Club are: Mildred A. Coolidge Winifred P. Chase . . Constance R. Handy Marion E. Jenkins . Kaye MacKinnon . . . . President . Manager 1929 Representative 1930 Representative 1931 Representative W ( m ] XL 141 Back Row: Lundsten, McKenna, Chisholm, Warren Front Row: Stewart,, Withers, Fisk, Workman, Delano EVENING PARTY ASSOCIATION ' TpHE Evening Party Association is a self-perpetuating organization composed of representatives from various fraternities. The function of the society is to pro¬ mote a series of formal dances throughout the vear. Four dances are usually held, and these are considered among the most attractive dances of the social season. Donald C. Fisk . President Leslie C. Withers . Secretary G. Bruce Chisholm Hugh F . McKenna Lewis H. Delano Leslie M. Stewart Everett H. Lundsten Edmund A. Workman Philip L. Warren jr Fraternities The Fraternities 14 + ZETA PS I FRATERNITY Founded at New York University in 1847 Twenty-nine Active Chapters KAPPA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1855 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Harvey Eastman Averill William Kendall Denison Halford Lancaster Hoskins Fred Simmons Keller Leo Rich Lewis Frank Elias Seavey FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Barton Francis Curit Hugh Franklin McKenna Ernest Francis Herrmann Wilburn Beach Miller John Patrick Walsh Class of 1930 Clarence Ora Atkinson George Ellsworth Bowles Alonzo Osias Gariepy Charles Kenneth Owen Herman Robert Rachdorf Richard Clark Shipman George Roger VanIderstine Warren Bartlett Walsh Charles Albert Baker Edward Michael J. Carney, Jr. Frederic Howard Case, Jr. George Closset III Class of 1931 Alfonso Ricardo Ibarguen Raymond Alexander Michelson Roger Kay Poole Chester Bradstreet Story II Edwin Whittaker Class of 1932 Charles Edward Bergen Herbert Howell Eames James Edward Fergueson John Norman Gallivan Richard Warren Gordon, Jr, Julius Kastantin Stephen Edward Ralph Harold Blair Robison Roland Cornelius Rogers David Shafer Sprague Arthur Henry Staffon Ross Clair Wilcox jr L M -Jp-ini WJ hi - 146 THETA DELTA CHI FRATERNITY Founded at Union College in 1847 Thirty Active Charges KAPPA CHARGE ESTABLISHED IN 1856 FRATRESIN FACULTATE George Preston Bacon Charles Ernest Fay Charles Henry Gray Clarence Preston Houston Kenneth Leland Nash FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Guy Bruno Atonna Harold Luther Churbuck Ernest Henry Brehaut Atherton Graydon Fryer Curtis Campbell Joseph John Lukacs George Bruce Chisholm Alfred Bernhardt Sundquist Arthur Adelarde Thibodeau Eliot Putnam Emerson Paul Lawrence Giblin Robert Kennedy Hood Everett Hale Hinckley Class of 1930 Wendell Winslow Horton Howard Arthur Lincoln Donald Haskell Mitchell Eugene Harry Tobey Jr. Class of 1931 Walter Fuchsius Bugden Leo Joseph Doheny Richard Lane Goodrich Randall Crosby Kean George Winfield Kelley Raymond Francis Killion John Thorlief Pedersen Richard Anthony Rose Stanford Harold Sword George Joseph Wright Class of 1932 Horace Granville Bush Warren Ellis Carley Edwin George Graham John Edward Grig as Oscar Henry Hornig Robert Russell Johnson William Victor Johnson Jerome Coombs Lewsen John Joseph Maloney John Joseph Marchand Peter Xenophone Minasian Robert McDonald Paul Alfred Morin Francis Parker Moulton Edward John Ostrowski John Dominick Piccolo Charles Willis Thompson Euclide Leo Tremblay 147 148 DELTA UPS I LON FRATERNITY Founded at Williams College in 1834 Fifty-two Active Chapters TUFTS CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1886 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Frank Williams Durkee Charles Gott Lewis Frederick Manly Melville Smith Munro Arthur Graves Sampson FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Fred Melvin Ellis James Joseph Fitzgerald Edmund Church Ireland Joseph Clemens Spang Richard Leland Thomas Edmund Alexander Workman Class of 1930 Norman Stuart Bean Everett Thomas McKinney Charles Sumner Butters Byron Alexander Roscoe Howard Boynton Ellis, Jr. George Otis Tapley Richard Austin Winslow Class of 1931 Earl Mahoney William Thayer Neal George Rees Marsh Sidney Christian Palmer Lester Rhodes Moulton, Jr. George Philbrick Roberts Robert Pratt Russell Class of 1932 Coryell Palmer Chester Francis Ellison Farnham Charles Owen Hosterman, Jr. Winthrop Ritter Manwaring Wii .liam Malcolm Priestly Grant Raney Robinson Wallace Woodsome Robbins John King Ruggles Guy Haskell Sargeant, Jr. Albert Wilson Senter 149 ISO DELTA TAU DELTA FRATERNITY Founded at Bethany College in 1859 Seventy-four Active Chapters BETA MU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1889 FRATRESIN FACULTATE John Albert Cousens Fred Dayton Lambert James Millidge LeCain Titus Eugene Mergendahl FRATRES IN IJNIVERSITATE Graduate School Carey El t gene Parker Class of 1929 William Knowland Goodwin Robert Philbrick MacLaughltn John Rockwell Hubbard Leslie Carlos Withers Francis Edmund Ingalls Charles Ralph Worters Class of 1930 David Gordon Crockett William Henry Curtis William Nash Davis Herbert Dudley Lovewell Erwin Davis Woodbury Class of 1931 Thomas Dudley Crockett Fred Lesh Jacobs Chester Ellsworth Gilson George Hoyt LeCain Howard Johnson Godfrey Warren Webster Morton George William Tuttle Class of 1932 Leroy Edward Mayo Herman Gordon Merchant Ralph Horton Morse Rorert Emerson Polk Armas John Aijala George Purnell Betts Romaine Brabrook Cole Donald Alton Martin Melvin Clifford Miller Freeman Wilfred Howes Ernest Victor Knapman Wesley Franklin Restall Earle Franklin White Stanley Forest Munro Maclaren 151 .. •■■■ ' , -■ 152 ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY Founded at Virginia Military Institute in 1865 Ninety Active Chapters GAMMA BETA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1893 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Newell Carroll Maynard George Stewart Miller Frank George Wren Edwin Hascom Wright FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Leo Armando Appiani Carroll Leander Coburn Donald Wells Farquhar Donald Converse Fisk Mark Edward Gallagher, Jr. Irving Gray Garcelon Richard Hubbard Hamill Edward Ellis Harlow John Albert Holmes Robert Webster Holmes Walter Beverly Ingalls Class of Charles Edward Boardman Thurston Hambelton Edwards Charles Champlin Hersey Robert Loveland John Lydon MacRae Harold Thomas McCarthy Edward Wayland McCaul 1930 John Crosby Moody Lawrence Moulton Munro Robert Wood Nicholson Harold Brown Swindells Richard Carter Warren Irvin Thomas Wilkinson George Harmon Wood Class of 1931 Maurice Merton Blodgett Carson Pierce Case Andrew Jameson Farquhar Norman Oscar Ingalls Edward Avery Jackman Earle Fredrick Littleton Thomas Jefferson Reese Olaf Trygve Sundlie Gilman Page Welsh Class of 1932 Arthur Maitland Cochran Mervyn Haskell Hatch William Dearborn Hersey Clifford Martin Holmes Will Valarous Peck Langdon Melvin Phillips John Cameron Prescott Albert Barzillai Rich Leslie Farrar Simmons Wendell Allen Simonson Clyde Henry Walsworth 154 SIGMA TAU ALPHA FRATERNITY LOCAL FRATERNITY ESTABLISHED 1905 FRATER IN FACULTATE Frederic Nixon Weaver FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Everett Hans Lundsten Francis Littlefield Archibald Daniel Thurston Chane Howard Proctor Cummings Raymond Joseph Fay Howard Blair Fleming Arthur Pratt Phillips Amos Edward Shepard Leslie Kimber Sherman Robert Warren Sylvester Class of 1930 Henry Waite Bigelow, Jr. Thomas Francis Hersey Donald Acton Hosmer John David Maloney Wallace Archibald Parkhurst Elmer Joseph Pollard Joseph Edward Sardella Charles Homan Reynolds Ernest Gallienne Wiles Lewis Epes Wilkinson Harold William Campbell Carlyle Edgar Drew Harry Fulton Edinger Class of 1931 Winston Bradford Leach Robert William Meserve Raymond George Ockert Class of 1932 Raymond Ernest Allard John Elmer Eklund Lawrence Edward Fitzpatrick Reginald Packer Geer Kenneth William Roberts 9SI DELTA PHI SIGMA FRATERNITY LOCAL FRATERNITY ESTABLISHED IN 1908 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Robinson Abbott Crosby Fred Baker Charles Harris Chase Samuel Lucas Connor Raymond Underwood Fitts James Alfred Reynolds Edwin Butler Rollins Edwin Adams Shaw FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Arthur James Austin Harland Leonard Carroll John Roswell Gifford Julian Francis Haynes Charles Edward Hingston Edward Peter Keenan Fred Lloyd Kennedy Jerayr Maniktan Edward Joseph Murray Frank Brankin Rogers Leslie Mason Stewart Class of 1930 Lucien Page Adams Paul Joseph LeMaistre Charles Herbert Gilmor Ralph Thompson Mathews George Luis Govoni John Joseph Mohan Harry Sutpierland Hall Irving Nelson Simmons Duane Edward Kimball John Arthur Thompson Ralph Wesley Wyman Class of 1931 Harry Arlanson Chester Payson Bond James Edward Bovaird Francis Xavier Foley John Rogers Foss Jack Gibbons Charles Richmond Metchear, Jr. Wendell Howe Packard Lester Nelson Stanley Class of 1932 Philip Ricker Hartson Ronald Gregory Macdonald Harold Charles Hatch John Francis Milo Carl Albert Lindstrom Joseph James Moran Herbert Ellesworth Nelson 157 ilttll 158 PHI EPSILON PI FRATERNITY Founded at the College of the City of New York Tiventy-four Active Chapters OMICRON CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1916 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 George Rittenburg Felix Edward Dine Samuel Gale Samuel Paltl Sesen Class of 1930 Samuel Sonna Levinson Benjamin Rower Class of 1931 Murdock Henry Newman Maurice Saslavsky Edward Saul Stone Class of 1932 Jacob Harold Fine Aaron Arthur Giddon Harold Max Gerrish George Gold Joseph Cronrach Sonneborn Joshua Drooker Isadore Goldman George Beckerman Kenneth Muskavitz 159 PHI DELTA FRATERNITY LOCAL FRATERNITY ESTABLISHED IN 1912 FRATRES IN FACULTATE George Robert Cronin Carl Herbert Holmberg Edward Albert Joy Roland Winthrop Lefavour FRATRES IN UNI VERS ITATE Class of 1929 Robert Taylor Atkinson Richard Loring Foote Lewis Howard Delano, Jr. Vincent Robert MacDonald Reginald Marshall Dennis Don Alonzo Miller Class of 1930 Lewis Weston Collins George Edward Kinmonth, Jr. Edward Richard Comstock Malcolm Allen Orr William Masterson Redman Class of 1931 Francis Elwell Butler Harry Augustus Chase Alfred Newton Dunnell Leslie Lindsey Fairfield Arthur Shortwell Jones David Stuart MacIntyre Frederic Francis Meuse John Jacob Mudgett Andrew Currier Paton Richard Henry Ward Andrew Alfred Zimboldi Class of 1932 George Hopper Gowdy Timothy Francis Ring Oscar Miller Schubert Lester Hawes Smith George Ambrose Spencer Lewis Charles Tuttle • I • • . 162 s BETA KAPPA FRATERNITY Founded at Hamline University in 1901 Twenty-five Active Chapters THETA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1925 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Alfred Church Lane Edgar MacNaughton Herbert Vincent Neal Wesley Collver Casson FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Ernest Dorr Bicknell Lyman Dudley Hall Charles Joseph Crowley Everett Harry Jodrey William Birchard Davis Emil Fred Karklin Richard Vaughan Elms Philip Lancaster Warren Joseph Richard Yarrow Class of 1930 Schuyler Lamb Clapp Thomas Richard Mumford Homer Emil Ruggiero Class of 1931 Waldo Francis Bucek George William McMaster Edwin Sumner Cobb Sumner Jesse Hoisington Frank Shaw Farquhar Frederick Stanley Nichol Arthur John Harty, Jr. John Kenneth Pearson John Schofield Hayes David Yeaton Taylor Erland Williams Thayer Class of 1932 Irl Hazard Blaisdell Louis Douglas Fleming James Edwin Butters Carlton Robert Lohmeyer John Estok Lawrence Bradford Rogers Franklin Spilman Tuttle 164 SIGMA OMEGA ESI FRATERNITY Founded at the College of the City of New York in 1902 Twenty-nine Active Chapters MU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1921 FRATRESIN Class UN IVE RSI TATE of 1929 Jacob Berger Harold Hurwitz Morris Budnick Robert Cohen Hyman Itzkovvitz Louis Krupp Ralph Levine Class of 1930 Louis Class Weiner of 1931 Benjamin Bregman Harry Koss Abraham Rosen Jacob Lewi ton David Podvey Manuel Rosen Simon Ross Morris Vexler Harry Hecker Class of 1932 Herman Brown Otis Cooper Samuel Daniels George Gordon Irving Pallin Harold Rodofsky Nathan Wisebi.ood Milton Rosoff Harold Rubin Harry Sattin Julius Sheinberg Louis Swartz Arthur Wise 165 166 I The Sororities of Jackson 168 ALPHA XI DELTA FRATERNITY Founded at Lombard in 1893 Forty-six Chapters LAMBDA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1907 SORORES IN UN1VERSITATE Class of 1929 Margaret Louise Abbott Harriot Germaine Cazneau Helen Lauretta Jacoby Doris Pelton Mahoney Dorothea Theresa Norwood Mary Kathryn Ogilvie Dorothy Speirs Quinby Esther Emma Thorin Louise Heath wood ' Rotten Muriel Louisa VanBuren Class of 1930 Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw Virginia Jewell Hall Pauline Louise Gerald Jean Guthrie Knowles Jennie Margaret Glennie Mary Eva Poor Ruth Eva Roberton Class of 1931 Elizabeth Hadley Austin Miriam MacDonald Ruth Fedor Dorothy Mary Mallett Dorothea Mary Loughlin Janet Hunter Putnam Ellen Lo.uise Strout Class of 1932 Helen May Baker Ruth I rene Boyd Katherine Elizabeth Fleming Mary Margaret Taylor Emily Newton Thurston Mabel Adeline Williams 170 ALPHA OMICRON PI FRATERNITY Founded at Barnard in 1897 Thirty-seven Chapters DELTA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1908 SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Margaret Caverly Kathryn Marguerite McInerney Lucile Anna Gardner Maria Martha McLellan Constance Rhodes Handy Jeanne Worthington Relyea Aletha Gertrude Hill Portia Russell Class of 1930 Helen Ackermann Ruth Lowe WlNNIFRED PlNGREE CHASE CrRACE MARGARET RoURKE Frances Marion Heald Marion Fuller Stevens Class of 1931 Madeline Taylor Beattie Ruth Alene Libbey Edith Ciullo Helen Elizabeth Smith Marjorie Winslow Class of 1932 Margaret Webster Beattie Winifred Blackmer Adele Field Clark Louise Ellen Hawkins Jean Carlyle Lamb Joan Alexandra MacWillie Beth Marion Ringer Ruth Vivian Smith Dorothy Esther Thomas Evelyn Ruth Thomas 171 172 CHI OMEGA FRATERNITY Founded at University of Arkansas in 1S95 Eighty-four Chapters CHI ALPHA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1910 SORORESIN FACULTATE Edith Linwood Bush Ruth Tousey SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE Graduate School Lucy Jeannette Johnston Frances Marian Archibald Doris Houghton Mary Ransom of 1929 Margaret Reynolds Dorothy Louise Shepperd Helen Tucker Class of 1930 Arlink Lenore Booth Dorothea Marie Duner Eleda Wycliffe Burdoin Virginia James Marion Noble Chick Caroline Juliette Marsh Dorothy Esther Myers Class of 1931 Hazel Hill Elizabeth King Ruth Elinor MacDuffee Elizabeth MacLean M arjorie Helen Moles Elizabeth Sears Peabody Mildred Josephine Pender Class of Esther Elizabeth Burnham Marjorie Case Doris Alice Chase Mildred Dodge Ingalls Sarah Phelan Helen Brown Sanders Charlotte Gertrude Smith Elaine Marie Smith Madeleine Lydia Snow Agnes Wallace Templeton Isabelle Wolcott 1932 Dorothy Thelma Jelly Virginia Pettingill Elizabeth York Stahl Hilda Abbie Whitney V| y mm B ah - — a Ww ■ ■- ms-i -K M!7 h SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY Founded at Colby College in 1874 Forty-two Chapters OMICRON CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1913 SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE Class of 1929 Melba Belle Davis Elizabeth Cilley Fernald Josephine Fernald Lucia Adesta Kendall Mildred Mae Kohler Janet Pullman Pierce Helen Clark Potter Muriel Simonson Marguerite Alicia Towle Vera Leona Wakefield Florence Edna Weston Ella Frances Young Class of 1930 Barbara Bendall Barbara Carolyn Cole Rachel Durgin Crosby Dorothy Constance Curtis Dorothy Gertrude Giles Frances Louise Mendell Eunice Gould Murray Althea Louise Pearson Kate Elizabeth Rose Catherine Mary Stevens Class of 1931 Thelma Margaret Cowey Elizabeth Louise Currie Ruth Holmes Helen Eugenia Hugo Elinor Howard Crockett Alice Doan Elizabeth Wass Foster Elisabeth Winchester Gray Eliza Ingraham Kaye MacKinnon Elizabeth Thackeray Loud Mildred Emma Robinson Charlotte Isabel Starling Class of 1932 Elsie Augusta Mueller Evelyn Elsie Pullman Ramona Jeanette Sawyer Ruth Palmer Smith Florence Mabie Stickel Enid Marjorie Wood ALL-AROUND CLUB OFFICERS LA CERCLE SAN S0UC1 OFFICERS HISTORICAL SOCIETY TUFTCONIC CLUB Athletics t f ' ' . “I : ■ f. ,c. • • ! - . s. Tufts Athletics FOOTBALL THE LETTER MEN Fred M. Ellis Fred L. Kennedy Leo A. Appiani Arthur J. Austin H arry Arlanson Newman M. Biller Ernest H. Brehaut Daniel T. Chane Barton F. Curit Mark E. Gallagher H oward J. Godfrey .lack Gibbons Charles E. Flingston W. Beverly Ingalls E. F ' fed Karklin Earl F. Littleton Robert P. MacLaughlin Arthur P. Phillips Herman R. Rachdorf Homer E. Ruggiero Chester B. Storey Eugene H. Tobey Robert W. Holmes CAPTAIN ELLIS 178 OFFICERS Season of 1928 Fred M. Ellis . . . Robert W. Holmes . Captain Manager Season of 1929 Fred L. Kennedy . Everett T. McKinney Arthur G. Sampson . Head Coach Lewis F. Manly . Assistant Coach Samuel Ruggeri .... Trainer CAPTAIN-ELECT KENNEDY THE RECORD Date Oct. 6 Oct. 13 Oct. 20 Oct. 27 Nov. 3 Nov. 10 Nov. 17 Opponent Colby Bates Bowdoin Brown U. of N. H Middlebury M. A. C. Played at Tufts Lewiston Brunswick Providence Tufts Tufts Tufts Tufts 24 Opponent Post Season Nov. 28 Butler U Indianapolis Total 109 •OACf[ SAMPSON was addressing the members of the 1928 football team and the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity at the annual banquet tendered the team by that organization last January. In the course of his remarks “Sam alluded to an introduction which he had received at a banquet a few weeks previous to that time. “Last year,” said the toastmaster, “we introduced Arthur Sampson as the coach of the only unbeaten team in the East. This year we are just as glad to ser him although we are forced to introduce him as the coach of a losing team.” “That introductory speech made no hit with me,” Sam told his audience, “because this team before me is just as much a winning team as that one which turned back every one of its adversaries a year ago.” 1 he student body shares Coach Sampson’s feeling. Better teams aren’t made than the one which fought the great Brown Bear to a standstill in the Providence Bowl last October. Consider that game for a moment. Coach Sampson had been forced to build prac¬ tically an entire new line from end to end because of the heavy inroads made by graduation and ineligibility. The line had shown up well in the three previous en¬ counters, but it had met little to test its true mettle prior to the Brown game. Brown was strong—as strong as it had been in the days of the famous “Iron Team.” Yet Tufts with a “green” line and the not inconsiderable mental hazards of playing an eleven distinctly out of its class, out-fought the two best elevens which Brown could COACH SAMPSON 180 MANAGER HOLMES muster and only acknowledged defeat at the hands of their greatest athlete, Captain A1 Cornsweet. Captain Fred Ellis probably had the best afternoon in his gridiron career at Tufts-—and he’s had many good ones. The “Pish” put Tufts in the lead early in the second quarter by a brilliant 45-yard dash through the entire Brown team. Coach “Tuss” McLaughrey of Brown substituted an entire new eleven at this juncture, but Tufts was not to be denied and before the half ended Ellis had gone over for another touchdown after the Jumbo eleven had bewildered the Bruins with a succession of short passes. Brown evened the score in the third quarter, and then came the breathless battle which, with less than five minutes to play, was climaxed by Captain Cornsweet’s 72-yard sprint for the score and the Brown victory. With the touchdown went Tufts’ hope of annexing its 13th consecutive win. The backheld was superb that afternoon, but how about the new line? A hundred and fifty pound sophomore end stopped play after play directed against his wing by a hundred and ninety-five pound backfield. It was only after Arlanson had been carried from the field in the last few minutes as a result of the battering he had taken that the Brown back was able to sweep off tackle for the winning score. Of Rachdorf and Ruggiero, who never played football until they came to Tufts, Coach McLaughry said immediately after the game: “The best pair of guards that have played in the Bowl for some time!” ■I.ltir m The team appeared to be pointed for another undefeated season when it started by easily disposing of the three Maine teams, although Bowdoin flashed a bit of power and held the rampaging Jumbo scoreless for the first half of the game. Two of the touchdowns in the Colby game came as the result of skillful forward passes from Phillips to Ellis. It was this passing combination which nearly spelled defeat for the Bruin at Providence and which accounted for long gains in most of the contests. Coach Sampson’s men showed the effects of their great stand against Brown when they met New Hampshire the following week. Tufts seemed to have a slight advan¬ tage offensively, but was unable to break the scoreless dead-lock with which the game ended. The oft-repeated charge that Tufts had a one-man team received its death blow the next week when the team routed Middlebury with Captain Ellis on the bench nursing an injured knee, and with most of the regular line watching developments from the sidelines. Charlie Hingston provided the thrills and scores in the absence of the “Fish.” Homecoming day was fittingly celebrated by a 32-6 win over our traditional rivals M. A. C. Strangely enough, the score was identical with that made by the team at Amherst the year before and the Aggies’ only score was made each year by Fred Ellert, the Farmers’ star back. Thus did our team complete its regular season with but a single glorious defeat and a tie game to mar its faultless record. Small wonder that its coach objected to its being called a “losing team.” For the second time during the Fall, the Tufts eleven went out of its class, this time in a Thanksgiving Day post-season encounter with the powerful Butler Bulldogs 182 at Indianapolis. The lighter Tufts team, playing under miserable weather conditions and crippled by the loss of Fred Kennedy and Harry Arlanson, gave the best that it had, but it was unable to stem the wide end sweeps of Butler’s “pony” backheld. The long dashes of Cavosie and Hinchman, All-Indiana backs, the difficult field goal and the brilliant defensive play of Captain Ellis, and Tufts’ great fighting finish, even though they were hopelessly outscored, were the highlights in our only real defeat of the year. In summarizing the 1929 season we have nothing but praise for the signal ac¬ complishment of Coaches Arthur Sampson and Lewis Manly in their development of the Brown and Blue outer defense. Undiscouraged by the lack of seasoned, or even rugged, material, they set out to build a line which would function in perfect co-ordination with a sturdy, all-veteran backfield and which would utilize every pound of its scanty weight to best advantage on the defensive. We have only to refer to the record of the team to note how well they succeeded in their difficult task. Tufts had at the close of the season one of the lightest and yet gamest lines in its gridiron history. 183 BASKETBALL THE LETTER MEN Ernest F. Herrmann Fred M. Ellis Richard C. Warren Wendell W. Horton Charles Butters Ernest H. Brehaut Leo A. Appiani THE OFFICERS 1929 Ernest F. Herrmann . Captain William K. Goodwin . Manager Lewis F. Manley. Coach 1930 Wendell W. Horton . Captain CAPT. HERRMANN Charles C. Hersey . Manager 184 TpHlS winter basketball came out of the slump into which it had fallen since the highly successful season of 1924. The Jumbo quintet hung up a record of nine victories in fifteen games, three of which were lost by a single basket. The outstanding performance of Captain-elect Win Horton, Red Butters and Dick Warren, hardly more than beginners at the game a year ago, is a tribute to the coaching of Lew Manly. The return of Fred Ellis to the team after a year’s absence was another factor in the success of the season. Fish again received “All” mention, this time as a forward on the mythical All-Eastern quintet. The feature game of the season was probably the Boston University encounter. The clash was remin¬ iscent of a like meeting with B. U. a year ago when Tufts was nosed out in two thrilling overtime periods. This year the game was bitterly contested all the way, neither team holding more than a two point advantage at any time. With consider¬ ably less than a minute to the final whistle, Ellis sank a foul shot to break a 31-31 deadlock and bring Tufts the victory. THE RECORD Jan. 5 Tufts 25 Trinity 22 at Tufts Jan. 9 Tufts 32 Boston Univ. 31 at Boston Jan. 11 Tufts 23 Vermont 22 at Tufts Jan. 16 Tufts 27 Conn. Aggie. 29 at Tufts Jan. 19 Tufts 15 Springfield 35 at Springfield Feb. 1 Tufts 31 Manhattan 33 at New York Feb. 2 Tufts 18 Fordham 47 at New York Feb. 6 Tufts 48 Northeastern 35 at Tufts Feb. 9 Tufts 27 Worcester Poly. 21 at Worcester Feb. 13 Tufts 28 New Hamp. U. 31 at Tufts Feb. 15 Tufts 34 Wesleyan 31 at Tufts Feb. 20 Tufts 23 Clark 24 at Worcester Feb. 27 Tufts 31 Lowell Textile 24 at Tufts Mar. 2 Tufts 23 Mass. Aggie. 16 at Tufts Mar. 6 Tufts 27 M. I. T. 25 at Cambridge Won 9 Lost 6 BASEBALL THE LETTER MEN Alfred J. Leonardi Arthur P. Phillips John O’Hayre Myron Dorenbaum Fred L. Kennedy Fred M. Ellis Ernest F. Herrmann James J. Fitzgerald Edward W. Smith Melvin R. Bowker CAPT. KENNEDY OFFICERS 1928 Fred L. Kennedy, Captain Willard I. Savage, Manager Kenneth L. Nash, Coach 1929 Alfred J. Leonardi, Captain Edward E. Harlow, Manager Kenneth L. Nash, Coach ' y ' UFTS managed to maintain its excellent diamond reputation in the Spring of 1928 despite the per¬ sistent efforts of old “Jupe Pluvius” to spoil the season. It was necessary to cancel or call in early innings five important games, and at least two others were played under moist circumstances. Undoubtedly the Tufts record would have compared more favorably with that of the famous 1927 nine, had playing con¬ ditions been better. To a slightly lesser degree than this season, Coach NASH Ken Nash was faced with the problem of developing pitchers. Eddie Smith was the only twirler avail¬ able with varsity experience, graduation having re¬ moved Stan Robinson, mound ace of the previous year. The team was strong in the field, with practically an entire veteran lineup available. Coach Nash decided to develop Mel Bowker, a substitute hurler on the 1927 team, to share the mound assignment with Smith. Mel promptly showed the effects of Nash’s coaching by winning successively his first four games. He was finally stopped by the Holy Cross batsmen, the Crusaders taking an 8-6 decision in a closely-contested battle. The Tufts nine did not fare so well in the final three games of the season. A dogged New Hampshire team flashed a squeeze play in the tenth inning to win the first of the trio of contests. Dartmouth gave the Jumbo team its first whitewashing in five years in the annual Class Day game. Behind the smooth-working Brecken- ridge, the Big Green turned back the Brown and Blue by an 8-0 score. The Harvard game the following day saw the Tufts team in its best display of the season. Trailing 5-3 in the last half of the ninth, Tufts staged a desperate rally which brought home one run and very nearly tied the score. THE RECORD April 10 Tufts 10 Lowell Textile 0 at Tufts April 17 Tufts 6 Northeastern 1 at Tufts April 24 Tufts 4 Yale 7 at New Haven May 2 Tufts 4 B. U. o at Tufts May 5 Tufts 11 Bowdoin 1 at Tufts May 8 Tufts 4 U. of New Hamp. 1 at Durham May 16 T ufts 5 Middleburv 1 at Tufts May 22 Tufts 23 M. I T. Beavers 2 at T ufts May 25 Tufts 6 Holy Cross 8 at Worcester May 26 Tufts 5 Williams 1 at Williamstown June 2 Tufts 3 Newport Training Sta. 1 at Tufts June 9 Tufts 3 U. of New Hamp. (10 ini.) 4 at Tufts June 15 Tufts 0 Dartmouth 8 at Tufts June 16 Tufts 4 Harvard 5 at Tufts Games called because of rain: Springfield, Vermont, Bates, New York U. and M. A. C. Won 9 Lost 5 WRESTLING LETTER MEN Irving G. Garcelon Charles E. Hingston Frank Stella Julian Haynes Arthur J. Austin Lewis E. Wilkinson Edmund W. Giles Joseph J. Lukacs Cecil HingKing Alfred B. Sundquist CAPT. GARCELON OFFICERS 1930 Frank Stella, Captain Duane E. Kimball, Manager Samuel Ruggeri, Coach 1929 Irving G. Garcelon, Captain Robert W. Holmes, Manager Samuel Ruggeri, Coach 138 A FT ER carefully scanning the records of past years, it does not seem that we are making extravagant claims in labeling the 1929 wrestling team the best in the twelve year existence of the sport at Tufts. It is true that the team suffered two reverses, one from a superior Yale aggrega¬ tion, and the other by Brown, who edged our grapplers by four points in the Harvard Tournament to win the New England Intercollegiate title; but in the performance of its individual members this year’s team stands out from all its predecessors. Captain-elect Stella, in twice throwing Cardon of Brown, holder of the 115 pound championship, and in remaining undefeated in his two seasons of ' wrestling for I ufts, holds an unique record. Hardly less brilliant was the work of Captain Chick Garcelon and Charlie Hingston, both of whom were undefeated this year. Each emerged from the Harvard Tournament with an intercollegiate title, Garcelon in the 125 pound class and Hingston in the one hundred and seventy-five. Three Inter¬ collegiate champions in one year is a record of which the team should be proud. High praise is due Captain Garcelon for his sterling leadership and Coach Ruggeri, not only for his success with the team this season, but also for raising the sport from relative obscurity to a high plane in a few years. Jan. 9 Tufts 24 THE RECORD M. I. T. 6 at Cambridge Jan. 19 Tufts 36 Amherst 0 at Tufts Feb. 9 T ufts 22 Springfield 7 2 at Tufts Feb 19 Tufts 21 Harvard 15 at Tufts Feb. 23 Tufts 7 Yale 19 at New Haven Feb. 26 Tufts 33 Boston Univ. C u at Tufts Mar. 2 Tufts 36 Norwich 0 at Tufts Mar. 8 Tufts 13 Brown 21 at Providence Won 6 Lost 2 TRACK OFFICERS 1929 Curtis Campbell, Captain Francis Archibald, Manager Arthur Sampson, Coach Milton bisson, Captain Harry Jodrey, Manager Arthur Sampson, Coach FHE LETTER MEN Paul E. Johnson Fred L. Kennedy John A. Masse John C. Moody Joseph Sardella Karl K. Soule Everett Id. Jodrey FHE RECORD 1928 Tufts 81 Conn. Aggies 54 at Tufts Eastern Intercollegiates at Worcester Tufts 69j M. A. C. 65at Amherst Milton M. Sisson Curtis Campbell Fred M. Ellis Ralph S. Fellows Henry J. Fitzpatrick Robert H. Hickey Charles E. Hingston ' : Jfl l - J pf ' sM Wfk :-7 . • j m it . : Jj t M ■ m . • • -IkS K jap M A m m CROSS COUNTRY OFFICERS 1929 Carl A. Seaward, Captain Donald H. Mitchell, Manager William S. Yeager, Coach 1928 Ernest G. Wiles, Captain Charles Manning, Manager William S. Yeager, Coach THE LETTER MEN Francis F. Meuse Lawrence M. Munro Charles Manning Ernest G. Wiles Carl A. Seaward Atherton G. Fryer THE RECORD Tufts 31 N ortheastern 24 at Tufts Tufts 30 Wesleyan 25 at Middletown Tufts 4-6 Bates 17 at Lewiston Tufts 19 B. U. 39 at Tufts New England Intercollegiates at Franklin Park Tufts finished in sixth place. Eleven entries 191 TENNIS OFFICERS 1929 John R. Gifford, Captain Mark Gallagher, Manager Stuart Crowell, Coach April 27 1929 SCHEDULE Brown at Providence May 2 Clark at Tufts May 4 Boston College at Tufts May 6 M. I. T. at Tufts May 15 Springfield at Tufts May 18 Colby at Tufts May 22 Holy Cross at Worcester May 24 Boston Univ. at Weston May 27 Bowdoin at Brunswick May 28 Bates at Lewiston May 29 Colby at Waterville 1928 TEAM Charles R. Stevens, Captain John R. Gifford Charles Hyson Irving W. Schiller Francis J. Golden John R. Hubbard Chester Young Harland F. Evans Walter A. Weisleder, Manager G VARSITY GOLF OLF came into its own as a minor sport last spring, after a College tournament had uncovered some good exponents of the game. Dick Warren, twice winner of the college championship, and several other ardent devotees obtained Professor Houston’s official sanction for the formation of a team to represent Tufts in inter¬ collegiate matches. Dick Warren was elected Captain. Practice matches were arranged and played with Amherst, Boston University, and Boston College. Richard C. Warren C. Proctor Stanlev 1928 TEAM Perry M. Fitch Leo A. Appiani Joseph J. Le Maistre Ernest F. Herrmann Hugo V. Ascolillo Freshman Athletics FRESHMAN FOOTBALL OFFICERS John J. Marchand Carson P. Case Tames M. Le Cain L apt am Manager Coach THE RECORD Andover Academy Eluntington U. of New Hampshire M. I. T. ’32 Dean Academy Sophomores Won 3 Lost 2 Tied 1 Tufts 6 Tufts 15 Tufts 0 Tufts 31 Tufts 7 Frosh. 14 at Andover at Brookline at Tufts at Tufts at Franklin THE SQUAD George P. Betts Romaine Cole Luther M. Child John Estok Jacob H. Fine Alexander J. Ford John E- Grigas Mervvn H. Hatch Clifford M. Holmes Julius Kastantin Thorburn Kennedy Earl F. Christensen Ernest V. Knapman Clive D. Knowles John J. Marchand Edward A. Monier Herbert E. Nelson W. Valorous Peck John D. Piccolo Wesley F. Restall Arthur H. Staffon Harold B. Robinson Earle F. White John R. Verge 19-4 FRESHMAN BASKETBALL OFFICERS Arthur M. Cochran Charles C. Hersev . James M. Le Cain Captain Manager Coach THE RECORD Jan. 9 Tufts 49 B. U. ’32 22 at Boston Jan. 19 Tufts 18 Andover Academy 22 at Andover Jan. 26 Tufts 32 Lynn General Elec. 31 at Tufts Jan. 30 Tuftsi 16 Attleboro H. S. 12 at Attleboro Feb. 6 Tufts 56 Wentworth 28 at Tufts Feb. 8 Tufts 34 Milton H. S- 9 at Milton Feb. 12 Tufts 32 Milton Academy 24 at Milton Feb. 16 Tufts 24 Dean Academy 38 at Franklin Feb. 20 Tufts 54 Northeastern ’32 26 at Tufts Feb. 23 Tufts 38 Tilton Academy 27 at Tilton Feb- 27 Tufts 57 Lawrence Academy 16 at Groton Mar. 2 Tufts 22 Tabor Academy 10 at Marion Mar. 6 Tufts 32 M. I. T. ’32 ' 25 at Cambridge Mar. 20 Frosh. 44 Sophomore 21 Won 12 Lost 2 THE SQUAD Arthur M. Cochran Jacob H. Fine Harold B. Robinson Russell H. Mazzola M. Clifford Miller Thomas J. Marshall George P. Betts Frank S. Tuttle John R. Verge 195 FRESHMAN WRESTLING OFFICERS Carleton R. Lohmeyer Duane E. Kimball Samuel Ruggeri Captain Manager Coach THE RECORD Jan. 9 Tufts 10 M. I. T. ’32 28 at Cambridge Jan. 26 Tufts 12 Andover 8 at Andover Feb. 9 Tufts 16 Springfield 16 at Tufts Feb. 16 Tufts 19 Harvard 15 at Cambridge Mar. 3 Tufts 24 Milton Academy 3 at Milton Mar. 8 Tufts 18 Brown 16 at Providence Mar. 20 Frosh. 20 Sophomores 16 Won 5 Lost 1 Tied 1 Second place in N. E. Intercollegiates, with three champions. THE TEAM Carleton R. Lohmeyer Samuel D. Daniels James L. Hastings Wallace W. Robbins Peter Minasian John Estok William V. Peck John N. Gallivan 196 — _l—□—□—□—□—□—□—□—I Jackson Athletics JACKSON FIELD HOCKEY OFFICERS Captain Manager , . Coach Mary L. Zandi Doris Houghton Helen F. Libbey CAPT. ZANDI THE SEASON The Jackson field hockey team enjoyed a successful season under the competent coaching of Miss Helen Libbey. The feature of the season was the victory over the University of Maine by a score of 4 to 1. Several practice games were on the schedule. THE TEAM G. Margaret Rourke Elaine M. Smith Helen E. Smith Louise H. Totten Vera L. Wakefield Madeline T. Beattie Elizabeth C. Fernald Dorothea M. Loughlin Maria M. McLellan Margaret Reynolds Marv L Zandi 198 JACKSON BASKETBALL OFFICERS Captain . Coach . Coach Margaret Reynolds E. Frances Young . Louise E. Sewall . . CAPT. REYNOLDS THE SEASON The regular schedule of the Jackson basketball team included three intercollegiate games in addition to the practice games. In the first game, Jackson defeated Pem¬ broke for the first time in three years, by a score of 31-23. The remaining two games were lost after hard-fought contests, to Wheaton 36-51 and to Radcliffe 24-38. THE SQUAD Madeline T. Beattie Mildred J. Pender Catherine E. Bickford Margaret Reynolds Eva A. Bruce Elaine E. Smith Esther E. Burnham R. Vivian Smith Adele F. Clark M. Margaret Taylor Ruth Fedor Dorothy E. Thomas Rita C. H ayes Evelyn R. Thomas Elizabeth MacLean Louise H. Totten Doris P- Mahoney Marjorie Winslow Marjorie H. Moles Mary L. Zandi Wimm 1 . ms . cm r ¥ ■ •• ygi- n % m iJ | w 2JE 1 199 JACKSON TENNIS OFFICERS Captain Manager Doris Mahoney Lois Towne . . . THE SEASON Under the captaincy of Doris Mahoney, who was re-elected for the present season, the 1928 Jackson Tennis team enjoyed a successful season. In an intercollegiate contest with Pembroke, the team made a clean sweep, winning all the matches. THE TEAM Doris P. Mahoney Lucile E. Powers Lois Towne Elizabeth C. Connell J. Louise Hull Helen C- Lucas 200 Advertisements INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Alumni . 17 Tahn Ollier . . . 15 Andrews, Jones, Biscoe Whit- I umbo Spa . 9 more . 13 Meade, John Paulding, Co. 6 Balfour, L. G. Co. . 9 Medford Publishing Co. 16 Beacon Trust Co. . 7 Medford Theater . 7 Bookstore . 4 Medford Trust Co. . 11 Brine, James W., Co. . 17 Metropolitan Coal Co. 11 Bullerwell, C. D., Co. 18 Mucci’s . 5 Burke, Arthu r W., Co. 3 O’Brien, Thomas, Sons . 3 Clarendon Hill Hardware Co. . . . 8 Rave Hat Shop, The . 19 Colgate, A. B. 20 Reid, Murdock ' , Co. 18 College Printing Co., The . 5 Riverside Theater . 11 Curtis, Claude . 19 Seiler, H. Co. 5 Curtis Street Fruit Store . 7 Sinclair Hardware Co. . 12 Delays Flower Shop . 12 Somerville Talking Machine Co. . 19 Dewick Flanders, Inc. . 8 Somerville Trust Co. . 12 Desmond, Airs. 19 Sousa, R. A. . 19 Doe, William A., Co. 16 Teele, Frank A. 12 Driscoll, James, Son, Inc. 13 Trustees of Tufts College . 10 Farquhar, A. G. 7 Tufts College Press . 18 First National Bank of Medford . 9 W alters . 8 Fisk Teachers’ Agency . 19 Warren Kav Studio . 7 Heffernan Press 14 Watkins Brothers, Inc. 20 Hezlitt, Andrew I. 12 White Studio . 16 Hotel Somerset . 17 Wiseman, L. E. 20 Hunter, J. B. Co. . 18 The advertisers listed in this section have made the publication of the Tufts 1929 Jumbo Book possible. To them we extend our heartiest best wishes, and we sincerely hope that the students of Tufts College will, upon every possible occasion, show them their appreciation. u SINCE 1886 A reliable Place to do Business Clothing, Hats and Furnishings HARRY C. O’BRIEN, 72 Thomas O’Brien Sons Medford Square, Opposite Medford Theatre IVe Fill Mail Orders from any part of the World Telephone, Hubbard 8060 Arthur W. Burke T Romas S. Proutj Arthur W. Burke Sr Co. Insurance Boston Insurance Exchange 40 Broad Street Boston , Mass. m PERSONAL SERVICE TO ALL That little touch of personal in¬ terest that you find lacking more and more as the big combines get under way will always be with you here. It is worth a lot. We have expanded to cover all the needs of all the students. Men’s furnishings and ladies’ wear THE BOOKSTORE Irving L. Seiler Andrew S. Seiler H. J. SEILER COMPANY Established Since 1873 513 TREMONT ST., BOSTON Caterers to Tufts for over 25 years 200 BOYLSTON ST., BOSTON Luncheon - Dinner Candy - Soda - Pastry Tel. Som 3254-W Mucci ' s Modern Barber Shop and Beauty Parlor Tel. Charlestown 2171 Edward Murray, Class of ’29 The College Printing Four Expert Barbers Specialize on Hair Cutting Department of the Expert on Finger Wave, Marcel Wave and Water Wave A Iso PERMANENT WAVE Bunker Hill Press Price $9.00 34-35 City Square Building Opposite Teele Square Theater CHARLESTOWN, MASS. John Paulding Meade Co. Jhuwranee JOHN PAULDING MEADE President and Treasurer CALVIN E. WARREN Vice President LOWELL D. MacNUTT Vice President and Clerk JOSEPH A. MONAHAN Assistant Treasurer and Director PAUL BURDETT Director 45 Kilby Street, Boston Telephone Hubbard 1480 WALTER L. 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TARKKA Insurance of Every Description Clarendon Hill Hardware Company Fidelity and Surety Bonds Plumbing and Electrical Supplies BOSTON INSURANCE EXCHANGE 40 Broad Street, Boston 220 Holland Street Telephone Somerset 3580 viii Best Wishes to Tufts and Jackson ’29 JUMBO SPA ICE CREAM SODA CANDY LUNCHEON ALL KINDS OF HOME¬ MADE, TOASTED AND PLAIN SANDWICHES CHARLES S. PARIS, Prop. TEELE SQUARE SOMERVILLE A SOUND FOUNDATION This institution is founded on the sound basis of financial strength and safe policies. Our depositors’ interests are permanently safeguarded by able management and by es¬ tablished rules of prudent banking practice. COMMERCIAL ACCOUNTS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CHRISTMAS CLUB SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank in Medford MEDFORD, MASSACHUSETTS Fraternity, College and Class Jewelry Commencement Announcements and Invitations OFFICIAL JEWELER TO JACKSON COLLEGE L. G. Balfour Company Manufacturing Jewelers and Stationers ATTLEBORO, MASS. IX TUFTS COLLEGE John A. Cousens, LL.D., President THE ASSOCIATED SCHOOLS The School of Liberal Arts—Frank G. Wren, A.M., Dean Jackson College for Women—Edith L. Bush, A.B., Dean Engineering School—Edwin B. Rollins, B.S., Acting Dean Crane Theological School — Lee S. McCollester, S.T.D., Dean Graduate School—Herbert V. Neal, Ph.D., Dean For information concerning these schools address The Registrar Tufts College, Mass. Medical School—A. Warren Stearns, M.D., Dean Dental School—William Rice, D.M.D., Dean For information concerning these schools address The Secretary 416 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 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XIV We are America’s largest school annual designers and engravers because we render satisfaction on more than 400 books each year. Intelligent co-operation, highest quality workmanship and on-time deliveries created our reputation for dependability. JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. ' Photographers , Artists and Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black or Colors. 817 W. Washington Boulevard •. Chicago Telephone MONROE 7080 We do not sub-let any art or engraving xv Equipped with many years’ experience for making photographs of all sorts desirable for il¬ lustrating college annuals. Best obtainable ar¬ tists, workmanship and the capacity for prompt and unequalled service. WHITE STUDIO Photographers to “1929 Jumbo Book” 220 WEST 42ND STREET NEW YORK Medford Publishing Company WILLIAM A. DOE CO. We Specialize in School and College Printing WHOLESALE DEALERS IN BEEF, PORK, LAMB, VEAL POULTRY BUTTER, CHEESE, EGGS Designing, Printing, Engraving Linotyping 12 Forest Street MEDFORD, MASS. Telephone: Mystic 0045, 00+6, 2606 Faneuil Hall Market, Boston General Warehouse and Fish Dept. At Old Fish Mart, 21-23 T Wharf, Boston Main Office, 37-39 Faneuil Hall Market Tel. Richmond 2830, all departments xvt This Year Book of yours will bring back the old times in years to come BUT The Tufts Alumni Fund will keep you in close touch with Tufts progress Subscribers to the Fund from the Class of 1929 re¬ ceive the Weekly and Tuftonian until August, 1931 FOR YEARS OFFICIAL ATHLETIC OUTFITTERS TO TUFTS COLLEGE GOLF, TENNIS, BASEBALL, BATHING, CROQUET, BICYCLES, TRACK, FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL SOCCER, SNOWSHOES, SKIIS, HOCKEY, BOXING JAMES W. BRINE 286 Devonshire Street BOSTON, MASS. HOTEL SOMERSET 400 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston The Recognized Hotel for Class Meet¬ ings, Luncheons, Dinner Dances, and Banquets The Louis XIV Ball Room of the Somerset is the most beautiful ball room in Boston. The individual attention given, our highly trained personnel and facilities enable us to successfully care for any social functions. William P. Lyle, Manager XVII Telephone Richmond 731, 732 BUILDERS’ AND GENERAL HARDWARE C. D. BULLERWELL PAINTS AND VARNISHES IV holesale The best of Cutlery and Specialties in Hardware FRUIT AND PRODUCE All Mechanics ' Tools of the Best Alakers and Warranted SP Fishing Tackle J. B. HUNTER CO. 7 New Faneuil Hall Market At, 60,. Summer Street (North Side) BOSTON, MASS. BOSTON, MASS. Aft Up-to-datc Store TUFTS COLLEGE Tufts College Reid, Murdoch Co. Established 1852 Established 1853 PRESS Character Building for Alore Than Three Generations The Character of a School is Reflected Printers and in Its Product Publishers The Character of a Manufacturer or Packer is Reflected in His Product That is why MONARCH QUALITY H. W. Whittemore Co. FOOD PRODUCTS Have Stood the Test for Seventy-five Years xviii FISH TEACHERS’ AGENCIES Boston, Mass.—120 Boylston St. New York, N. Y.—415 Congress St. Syracuse, N. Y.—402 Dillaye Bldg. Philadelphia, Pa.—1420 Chestnut St. Pittsburg, Pa.—549 Union Trust Bldg. Birmingham, Ala.—808 Title Bldg. Kansas City, Mo.—1020 McGee St. Portland, Ore.—409 Journal Bldg. Send to any address above for Registra¬ tion Form. IVe fill educational positions of all kinds everywhere. GOWNS HATS Hats of Tomorrow shown Today AT The RAYE HAT SHOP 39 Salem Street MEDFORD SQUARE HOSIERY JEWELRY DICK’S BARBER SHOP Opposite Fire Station RICHARD A. SOUSA 235 Holland Street Teele Square Compliments of CLAUDE CURTIS MRS. DESMOND D resses and Coats 17 Main Street, Medford Square Somerville Talking Machine Co. H. G. APPLIN, Prop. RADIOS, VICTROLAS, RECORDS SHEET MUSIC 17 College Avenue, Davis Square XIX QlNCE 1874 this institution has been known for its fine furniture and pianos. Today it is considered one of New England’s foremost au¬ thorities on interior decorating and home furnishing. Featured is the Watkins Collection of Early Amer¬ ican Reproductions. Watkins Brothers, Inc. SO. MANCHESTER, CONN. Best Work — Most Service ALL PLAIN AND FANCY on Clothes CREAMS AND ICES by USED BY DICK WARREN JACK MOODY STUDENT SERVICE MANAGER In College Catering and Sand- wich Routes FURNISHED BY L. E. WISEMAN A. B. COLGATE Curtis St.—Teele Sq. WEST MEDFORD Official College Tailor TUXS RENTED Manufacturer of Quality Ice Cream XX 137


Suggestions in the Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) collection:

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932


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