University of New Hampshire - Granite Yearbook (Durham, NH)

 - Class of 1944

Page 1 of 248

 

University of New Hampshire - Granite Yearbook (Durham, NH) online collection, 1944 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1944 volume:

1 1 S335 niversity of New Hamp f shire DEDICATION To the men of the University of New Hampshire who are serving in the Armed Forces of the United States in the second World War, we, the class of l91L4, dedi- cate this the thirty-fifth volume of the Granite. Theirs is the hope of freedom and justice for the future that the many universities and colleges in the nation may continue to live and to expand so that the opportunities which we have had will ever he open to young men and women in the coming years. This is a symbol of what they are fighting for and will continue to fight for until Victory is theirs. When the whole world is in a state of political and economic upheaval, and when no one person can settle its prohlems, but only hy the endeavors of everyone can it he accomplished, it seems only right that those who are fighting for the peace should receive the constant praise and recognition of the people Whom they are serving. This campus will still be here when the war is over and education will go on, there- fore, we say to all of you who could not complete your college education, NCome hack when itas over and you'll see howls i much We think of you! A A A Cl'-.1 5141- 1 Floor-L M pf, I ,p A 4 A, 4 I If ' 1 il -N H Q lg V D 1 A 1 A a , a t flwlf-'A 5 c W u V-'es-. 1 i 3, i sms..-...fd Myomfxxxafa M f 01- , In f M ' Q! ' , A 1 , . G 0' IV' . ' Tzrdahuaall ,Mild ' .N 3 I3 QC T in ,, i , s IRQ!! xx Q , f - ., ' 1, ' ' tha QI 01, A ' PL. f Y t u 'Shi . , . , M ' by ,. 'Ls ' nur f Q6 'Fig LI 'ro' 'Q . Q ., u s .7 y .M gkxf f , a y .3 ...M a -My M 91 'Ei-.x f .w.! g lp, Q Reg g Clbssp G, V Vg Vi. 1 b Maas K . V x X 2 lfqgall xxlxb 3 1 N . XM.. gf :ff- f X X cw' 4 , A '- .. ,.,' H F OREWORD ITH all the shortages and priori- ties, as well as the numerous other prohlems hrought ahout hy the eurrent limes, we the Class of 1944 consitler it a privilege to he ahle to present this the thirty-Hfth volume ofthe GRAlYl'lll'i. We have attemptetl to make it a hook whieh all who possess a Copy will fleem worthy of a plaee in their lihraries he- siele the volumes of past years. Our junior year has heen unique in many ways. Couclitions have existed and ineitlents have oeeurrecl which never eoulcl have exeept during a state of war. Although we eoultl not hope to give a complete reeorml of sueh a year. we have enaleavorerl to portray it aeeurately auml entertainingly anal in such a way that eaeh page will hring hack a memory ol' some person we knew or some moment we have experieneerl. Greater still is the hope that the 1944 GRANITE may at some later date reach the hanlls of all who have founel it necessary to leave our Alma Mater in orfler to serve our nation. anfl that the hook may eouvey to them, at least in some small measure. what life here at the University of New Hampshire has heen like this year. May they see how we have emleavoretl to keep alive every tradition that they onee knew as a part of their eollege life. mf? vw - ... Wttyrdl .K QA,-f.' wr, '25 1.. Q. 'EMS YQ, ..,. 1-, '17 '-fnf ,nu if W ,, 4 ,Wu YY 1' ,-an ,. 9 .kygsf ' ,av S, 'K vs 5.2. Q. 'A-P' Ir 5 3 fa. N? Qywghf, ..zL,iz7 , K W W 5 b 'v-1. M , ,..,.. - Q WW . .W ., V ' , I f, be , fn A -., .uv 'W ' 'sw - A+: ,g'f'fl3-1 Y- . f N , ' ,. ., i,,dQ,,k Q , .l 'mf' m 1 uf an X - , x . - 'nu N' 4, 4239!-w 5' ' .' - I xx' ' ' ai 'P' .v mr. 1. ,gh k 'w 1Hv+ - 1 . aafks 1:-. fuk ' V PP -W f-N. 'Nr w. 5, .M 2 , ,M r Qu , f. 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QQ X ' 'wi ,A VSb.1V if .fm -f V XV rvqfyw E X , lr. l 1 neg Iii? fx S . , Xu I N U , 5 , 3 , . . , 4, , ,. gy .x - JN Y ,. my Q 1 QIKMM 'V 5' 'Sw ' if 76 ' X ff ia .X-.2 -' 4 , -. K' V ff' 6 '- .z ' ' . V:fV,r,. , . wi ,34lg?4l1 ' 'f - v V 2 s fu 944 ,V ' Y an if 2 1.64 1,-vi' Vw., r ' . S f V, uv V ,, -s'-ff' 2193 -13 . W . ,fig ., mfs I U ,, in Q,-4f?475fl5?w ' was H V V VV A X- fs . I if V A V -,X .mm-1--V - 4 ,, - 'V4-iff? 3 Q V , ., A . K X, ' 2, ' X I 3 ' , ' 1 , .., M 1 .Sion Jia! ,S 'iw' X Q -Q35 :-ws 1 : X XSX x Qs - QCKx . - vw SN?-Ns.wX,mx 1- we X N-Xsxww. sw xxx X. af Q x .X-Xwwxbw--.fs-,y .:- XX F lNNQgT3:iQS'3-fx -. 'X 'F k 'A STX-Ri?NXNf3'QEoffixxixx5 . f f .1 f . SQQQQQXXQQQX-M QQGX -sgmxxif 3 K 'xf4'QqsQsQgQ-Q-.-Eriw.5-.. . K will.-x-fswwlx X X - M fM-1Q1g.i5x,- x Qmxsxgi- J-.X 1 A 'X.'- .. X X . X -X X-.x x Qwxx- XX QQQX x x X XLXX . AX .QXENX N XXX X XX fi 5 Xfffil Xii X X 5- sig -XXX s X v- XXX -X XX X X X ,jX X W1 N WU 5 ' ' Ill! A ww mq5!f!!:!g!!!!!!5!!!!W '55, Xa ' :II ll!! 9' mii,susii.l1iiu..aiai::: E: Nl ' W hh :F 11lkiiI1mm!!!!l'iiNi 1 Y rlllniwulv luuqhuuila- LW ,UH IM' ffl js!! 'I' ' iii' w W: I FW 2 1.. r, -Hin ' M H4 LTY i FWTM -fini an . ,X QQ?-..1-W-W A mm..-5-. ..,, ,.y..,....,.,,q ,m,,?,.,.,...,-,,,,, -wr-V,-W X M-M ,.M.-+...,.. ,. . iw 1 .......,.v,-.z,w. ,- ax' Qu 1 Y 1 we v 4 vw'-AA v A-f jf' R ? V M.-ya':eg51 n - ,N-, 1-.w-ML: 'jx' 4 x,+v'w. fr gr .Q A Qffffflwsiieazf xii: , JJ- .H ww W--15-W .. ff. 'L.wf'uf' if 1. TX X E , A 1 fi : 3 11 .Ir BOARD OF TRUSTEES His Excellency, GOVERNOR ROBERT O. BLOOD, M.D EX-officio. President, FRED ENGELHARDT, A.lVI., Pl1.D., LL.D. EX-oflicio Knot picturedl. ANDREW L. FELKER, Commissioner of Agriculture. ROY D. HUNTER, LL.D., President, Wfcst Claremont. HARRY D. SAWYER Wfoodstock. JAMES A. WELLMAN, B.S., Manchester. ROBERT T. KINGSBURY, Keene. GEORGE T. HUGHES, A.M., LL.D., Dover. JESSIE DOE, Concord. FRANK W. RANDALL, B.S., Secretary, Portsmouth. HENRY F. JUDKINS, B.S., White Plains, N. Y. ERNEST W. CHRISTENSEN, B.S., , Dover Cnot picturedl . JOHN T. DALLAS, A.B., D.D., LL.D., Concord Cnot picturedl. 16 FR ED ENGELHARDT President of the University of New Hampshire Ph.B., Yale 19083 A.M., Columhia 1915 Ph.D., Columhia 19243 Became Presi- dent of the University April 1, 1937. N practically all letters that come to the oflice from men ove1'seas there are to he found common thoughts although expressed in different words. The central idea seems to he a desire to return to Durham, to walk freely ahout the campus, to share the heauty, and to again breathe New Hampshire air. In these letters there is expressed a hope that the folks here are preserving for them to share again a New Hampshire that they had known colored hy an enchantment distance lends. Each year the Granite endeavors to meet this hope and desire. Wiithin its covers it strives to capture and to preserve the spirit and the highlights of a year in passing, it gathers together those who shared that year, and leaves our memories to relate the story that is ours and ours alone. The Granite to he sure has helped in part to answer the thoughts of the men overseas. Vlre wish that they might he sent copies of this issue. To them, to you, and to me the days will come when these pages will reveal as expressed in the words of Longfellow that '4 Deering's woods are fresh and fair, And 'with joy that is almost pain Wly heart goes back lo 1fl7!Ill!Il?7' there And among the dreams of the days that were I find my los! youth again. Cordially yours, aio 17 m i'fH1mu RS I ll io f 1 J i sgtwm f w g ADNil ' NORMAN ALEXANDER RUTH J. WOODRUFF Fred Engelhardt, A.M., Ph.D., L.L.D. Eric T. Huddleston, If-A1'0h- President of the University Supervising Architect Norman Alexander, Ph.D., Dean of Men C. Floyd Jackson, B.A:, l Eugene K. Auerbach, MBA. Director of the Biological Institute Alumni Secretary and Director, Bureau of Thelma Brackett, A-B-. Librarian APP0iDtm611lS Raymond C. Magrath, Treasurer Edward Y- Blewett. M.A. Arwood S. Northby, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Assistant to the President George N. Case, M.C.E. Brockway D. Roberts, M.D., University Physician Dean of the College oi Technology, and Director of Eve,-en B, Sackett, Ph,D,, Registrar the Engineering Experiment Station Harold H. Scudder B.S. Lewis C- Swain Acting Dean of- the College of Liberal Arts Acting Alumni Secretary and Director Hermon L. Slobine Ph.D- I. N. Thut, Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School Acting Director of Bureau of Appointments Henry B- Stevens, A,B. Harry M, Fitz Director of Extension Service Acting Superintendent of Properties Ruth J. Woodruff, Ph.D., Dean of Women Leon W. Hitchcock, B.S. Albert F. Yeager, Ph.D. Acting Dean of the College of Technology Assistant Director of the Biological Institute -W-4-wwwi , ,,........wu1f 'M RAYMOND C. MAGRATH EVERETT B. SACKETT Anwoon S. No RTHBY DR. HERMoN L. SLOBIN A.B. Clark University, 1905, Ph.D., ibid, 1908. Director of Graduate School, 1928-19303 Dean of Graduate School, 1930- 2 5 Barber, Henry, Jr. Barratt, Raymond W. Berg, Ruth J. Breen, Robert E. Brennan, E. Doris Crittendon, Lorraine Dickerman, Edmund H Drumheller, Fern Emery, Richard W. Fleming, Mae Garland, Alice Carman, Elizabeth M. Cove, Carolyn E. Grabowski, Peter J. Grant, .lean H. Hatch, Cleon H. Lambert, Frank Lewis, Walter R. Mayor, Rowland H. Metcalf, Frances ,Morgan, C. Richard Murphy, Elizabeth J. Nicoll, Robert T. Peart, Patricia Phaneuf, Albertine Roberts, John E. Rosen, Myron J. Rossell, Margaret Rudnick, Albert Shanahan, Arthur J. Speese, James S. Watson, Murray H. Webber, Lawrence E. West, Barbara C. Wilson, Howard L. Zubroff, Julia 19 . . Elsa. 11, ... I. D, , .JT ..--, L?-'. Q-J, 1 -:J '..-:- ' '1 .-- - ,... X t 1 -: 1. nz.-3 5-xg.: 'i:.x '..J-A 1 : - 5 15 'ap vu 1: -1: -Q T- :: 51 1 7- Q I H lu , , - ' ' ' W OF . L' - iQ ' , 5, ' P.. ' 3 :E L.. I , I v,3 , i If -5 ' A s ,,,-J-,Q ' Fred E- Allen. U-V-M. ,-,,... .-,.... W . .- Harry A. Keener. Pb.D. J Assistant Profegsor. Poultry Husbandry Instructor. Dairy Husbandry o in J. Bakie. B. . L. Phelps Latimer. Pb.D. assistant. Animal Husbandry Assistant Professor. Horticulture Phi ip S. Barton. MS. Walter' R. Lewis. B.S. P Assistalit Psofessor. Applied Farming Assistant. Agricultural Chemistry au . B oo , M.S. Herbert C. Moore. Assistant Professor. Agronomy Assistant Professor. Dairy Husbandry T. Burr Char es. M.S. Kenneth Morrow. MS. Professor. Poultry Husbandry Professor. Poultry Husbandry Henry . . Ilapp. MS. Vffalter C. O'Kane. M.A.. D.Sc. N I?Fff'1Il'F1l's Hlorticulgilre Professor. Entomolagy ic 10 HS '. C0 OVOS- -5- Thomas G. Phillips. Pb.D. J Assisgnzt P1iolfessi1,r.iA11in1al Husbandry Professor. Agricultural and Biological Chemistry 1lmf2S - -011 ' ill. 1. J. Ford S. Prin -e. B.S. Assistant Professor. Entomology Professor.tAgronomy Aliin C. Corbitt. lff .M. Richard C. Ringrose. Ph.D. nstructor. ou try Instructor. Poultry M- C5110 Ellsmlilfls PILD- Stanley R. Shinler. M.S. Dean Assistant Professor. Agricultural and RuS5e1l.EElH0l'i, Biological Chemistry A AI'f1E9ilEFL 'mln1EZ1 S Wyilliam YV. Smith. Pl1.D. rva . ri 'son, . . Assistant Professor. Horti 'ulture Assistant Professor, Agricultural Economics Clillrk L. Stevens. M.F.. Plrlf. Edgilf? 2417-FFOSS, BS. Professor. Forestry . pp ie 'arming Lewis C. Swain. M.S. CCOVSQ M- F0l1lkf0d- MS- Assistant Professor. Forestry Assistant Professor. Agricultural Engineering L01-ing Y, Ti,-1-ell. B,S, Section of Agronomy Professor. Animal Husbandry Hill'0ld Cfillrlell. Irlglrry vffygdwgrlli, ASSOCi1llC Professor, Agl'it'lllllll':Il Elt'0Il0Illil'S Professgr, Agricultural Ee0n0n1ic5 Jesse R. Hepler. MS. Albert F. Yeager. Ph.D. L Associate Professor. Horticulture Professor. Horticulture eroy J. Higgins. BS. Julia Zubroff. B.S. Assistant Proffssor. Agronomy Assistant, Agricultural Chemistry YY d D. H '. Yf..1fuC,0,.. 120,i2,.u1,u,.,, AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION G. Allen Holmes. BS. Max F. Abell. Ph.ll. Applied Farming Assistant Agricultural Economist Wlilliam A. Johnson. BS. Fred E. Allen. D.Y.M. Assistant. Forestry Assistant Horticulturist First row: Grinnell. Macfarlane. Yeager. Charles, Brewer. Eastman, Levcowich, Hosken, Phillips Ritzman. O'Kane. Slanetz. Second row: Corbett. Colovos, Conklin. Enke, Foss, Holmes Barton. Dunn. Johnson. Moore. Blood. Third row: Richards, Glover, Latimer. Keener Ringrose. Percival, Davis. Eggert. Wlaller. Clapp. Holley. 20 ' .lohn H. Baker, B.S. Assistant to Treasurer Raymond N. Barratt Graduate Assistant in Botany Paul T. Blood, M.S. Assistant Agronomist Thelma Brackett, A.B. Librarian Wilma D. Brewer, M.S. Assistant Home Economist T. Burr Charles, M.S. Poultry Husbandman Henry S. Clapp, M.S. Assistant Horticulturist Nicholas F. Colovos, M.S. Assistant in Animal Husbandry .lames G. Conklin, Ph.D. Assistant Entomologist Alan C. Corbett, D.V.M. Assistant Poultry Pathologist Henry A. Davis, M.S. Assistant in Agricultural and Biological Chemistry Lawrence A. Dougherty, B.S. Assistant Economist in Marketing Stuart Dunn, Ph.D. Plant Physiologist Arval L. Erikson, M.S. Assistant Economist in Marketings Assistant to Director Russell Eggert, M.S. Research Assistant in Horticulture J. W. Enke, M.S. Research Chemical Assistant in Entomology Richard Ford Assistant Technician in Poultry Husbandry DEAN M. GALE EASTMAN Leon C. G1over,Ph.D. B.S., New Hampshire College, 19133 M S Cor Research Assistant in Entomology neu 1913, Ph.D. Cornell 1931 Harriet L. Goodwin, B.S. Laboratory Technician in Poultry Husbandry Lurlene Gordon, B.S. Assistant in Charge, Plant and Animal Science Library Harold C. Grinnell, Ph.D. Assistant to Dean and Director Leroy J. Higgins, B.S. Assistant Agronomist Winfred D. Holley, M.S. Research Assistant in Horticulture Albion R. Hodgdon, Ph.D. Plant Taxonomist Dean Hosken, B.A. Research Assistant in Agricultural Economics William A. Johnson, B+.S. Assistant in Forestry Harry A. Keener, Ph.D. Research Assistant in Dairy Husbandry Edythe M. Kenney, B.S. Laboratory Technician L. Phelps Latimer, Ph.D. Assistant Horticulturist Tatiana Levcowich, M.S. Research Assistant in Home Economics Albert D. Littlehale Herdsman James Macfarlane Assistant in Greenhouse Raymond C. Magrath Treasurer Herbert C. Moore, M.S. Assistant Dairy Husbandman Kenneth S. Morrow, M.S. Dairy Husbandman Walter C. O'Kane, M.A., D.Sc. Entomologist June M. Owen, A.B. Assistant Editor Madeline Papachristos, B.S. Laboratory Technician in Poultry Husbandry H. Eaton Parker, B. S. R.O.P. Inspector Gordon P. Percival, M.S. Assistant Chemist Thomas G. Phillips, Ph.D. Chemist Ford S. Prince, B.S. Agronomist Mathias C. Richards, Ph.D. Plant Pathologist Richard C. Ringrose, Ph.D. Assistant Poultry Husbandman Ruth E. Rinta Assistant Laboratory Technician in Poultry Husbandry Ernest G. Ritzman, M.S. Research Professor in Animal Husbandry Betty G. Sanborn Seed Analyst and Assistant in Agronomy Camilla Romstad Assistant Editor A. J. Shanahan, B.S. Graduate Assistant in Bacteriology Stanley R. Shimer, M.S. Assistant Chemist Lawrence W. Slanetz, Ph.D. Bacteriologist Todd O. Smith, M.S. Associate Chemist William W. Smith, Ph.D. Assistant Horticulturist Clark L. Stevens, M.F., Ph.D. Forester Lewis C. Swain, M.F. Assistant Forester Ernest L. Waller, D.V.M. Poultry Pathologist Harry C. Woodworth, M.S. Agricultural Economist Albert F. Yeager, Ph.D. Horticulturist -g-,Q 'z fi 65 X A ' I sf! I ., :Z'w , X 2 E. H. Atkinson, Ph.D. Assistant Professor L. J. B3fCllCld6f lnstructor G. N. Bauer, Ph.D. fpart retiredj Professor LEI1lCl'itllSl Norman Bauer, Ph.D. Assistant Professor F. D. Bennett, Ph.D. Assistant Professor E. W. Bowler, BS. in SE Professor Robert E. Breen, BS. Graduate Assistant G. XY. Case, ll.C.E. Dean Lon lcavel M. S. Demos, Ph.D. Assistant Professor E. T. Donovan, BS. Assistant Professor fon leawel Colon H. Dunn. BS. in E E Instructor Edward L. Fairchild, M S Assistant Professor J. A. Funkhouser, Pl1.D Associate Professor E. L. Getchcll, SE. Associate Professor Horace A. Giddings, Ph Associate Professor Peter J. Cralmowski, BS Graduate Assistant A. F. Daggett, Pl1.D. Harry E. Hall, Pl1.D. Associate Professor Professor Kon leavel C. 0. Dawson, MS. W. H. Hartwell, M.A. Assistant Profesor Kon leavej Assistant Professor First row: Wfork. lddles, Cetchell. Huddleston. Hitclicovk. Eppelsheinier. Howes, Hanson Kelly. Second rauf: Perreton. Skelton. Starke. Batt-helder. Bauer, Jackson, Giddings Laton, Crabowski, Caughey. Breen. Third row: Kichline. Divkernlan. Bauer Funk W ebber, Kauppinen, Stolxsorthy. Nye. Dunn, Sternpin, Bennett. Daggett, Fairchild, Demos Thomas. Seiberlich. 22 houser, Zimmerman. Torgerson. Nvilson. Roberts. Nulsen. Hartwell. Tonkin. Fourth ron Cleon H. Hatch, B.A. Assistant L. YV. Hitchcock, B.S. Acting Dean, Professor H. L. Howes, Ph.D. Professor E. T. Huddleston, B. in Arch. Professor H. A. Iddles, Ph.D. Professor F. D. Jackson, E.E. Associate Professor T. S. Kauppinen, BS. Instructor Ruth B. Kelley, B.A. in Math. Instructor YV. L. Kickline, MS. Assistant Professor Thomas W1 Lamhe, B. of C.E. Instructor T. J. Laton, B.S. Assistant Professor H. I. Leavitt, M.A. Assistant Professor D. C. Lewis, Jr., Ph.D. Associate Professor Rowland H. Mayor, B.S. Graduate Assistant Clarence R. Morgan, B.S. Assistant W. B. Nulsen, MS. Assistant Professor Edwin P. Nye, B.S. Instructor E. M. 0'Connell Instructor D. M. Perkins, MS. Instructor Arnold Perreton, B. in Arch. Assistant Professor John E. Boherts, BS. Graduate Assistant Myron J. Rosen, B.S. Graduate Assistant R. B. Skelton, lNI.S. in E. Associate Professor DEAN LEON NV. HITCHCOCK B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1908 Present position, 1940. H. L. Slobin, Ph.D. Professor M. M. Smith, M.A. Associate Professor NI. R. Solt, MS. Associate Professor Carl W. Stempin, B.S. in Chem. Instructor E. H. Stolworthy, B.S. Assistant Professor G. B. Thomas, B. in Arch. Associate Professor J. C. Tonkin Instructor John L. Torgeson, Ph.D. Assistant Professor William K. Widger, BS. Graduate Assistant Howard L. Wfilson, B.S. Graduate Assistant Mary E. Work, B.A. Instructsr 0. T. Zimmerman, Ph.D. Professor Norman Alexander, B.A., M.A., LB., Associate Professor Erma Andrews, B.A., M.S. Assistant Professor Donald C. Babcock, B.A., M.A. Professor ,loseph E. Bachelder, Jr., B.A., Ph.ll. .? ...A-.. i. M nun...-:..z..: X34 E ,iE w -mf' Co Ph.D Wilma IJ. Brewer. ILS., Assistant Professor Albert F. Bufiington, l5.A., M.A. Assistant Professor Herbert A. Carroll, ILA., M.A., Ph.D Associate Professor Olga Conon, B.A.. M.Ed. Associate Professor Instructor Marion Beclusith, B.A., M.Ed. Wfesley Copplestone. ll.A. lnstructor Assistant Jeanie Begg, B.A. Edmund A. Cortez. ll.A.. B.0.. B.D.. M.A., lVI.Ed Instructor Assistant Professor Harry Berg. B.A.. M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor lljornar W. Bergethon, B.M.. A.M. Associate Professor .lulio lierzunza. B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor Sylvester H. Bingham, B.A., M.A., Assistant Professor liarlan M. llishee. B.A, M.A. Associate Professor lrlna. C. Bowen, B.S. Assistant Professor Wesley F. Brett, B.Ed. Instructor Ph.lJ. Charles W. Coulter. li..-X.. B.D., Ph.D. Professor C. Harris Uaggett, ll..-X.. M.A.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor Carroll M. Degler, ILA., M.A. Assistant Professor Charles G. Dobrovolny. li.A. Assistant Professor Marie A. Donahue, ll.A. Instructor Stuart Dunn, BS., M.S.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor Adolph G. Ekdahl. BA.. D.M.D.. M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor First row: Jackson. Smith. Richards. Wloodruff. Scudder. Alexander. McLaughlin. Parker Jones. Second row: Schaefer. Dunn. Pepoon. Degler. Partridge. Sheehan. Cadbois, Conon Crittendon, Mochel. Stewart. Third row: Johnson. Mitcham. Ekdahl. Levcossich, Starke Bisbee, Evans. llalncock. Beclusith. Bufiington. Bingham. Four row: Nasvik, Bremer Garland, Brett. Tyrrell. Thomas. McKenzie. McDaniel. Kline. llergethon, Keesey. Fifth row Moulton. Richardson, Russell, Record. Sticht. Grant, Uaggett, Reynolds, Donahue, Andrews Scheier. 24 Nell Evans, B.S., M.Ed. Instructor John A. Floyd, B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor Irene Gadbois, B.A., M.A., Pl1.D. Instructor Martha L. Garland, B.S. Instructor Robert H Grant, B.A. Assistant Professor Paul P. Grigaut, B. es. L., Certife de Licence Associate Professor .Iohn IJ. Hauslein, ILA., M.A. Assistant Professor William G. Hennessy, B.A., M.A. Associate Professor Margaret R. Hoban, B.S. Assistant Professor Albion R. Hodgdon, B.S., M.S., Ph.lJ. Associate Professor Arthur F. Howe, B.S. Instructor Lillian Hudon, B.S. Instructor C. Floyd Jackson, B.A., Professor Helen M. Jones, M.A., Ed. Assistant Howard R. Jones, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor Arthur W. Jollnson, B.B.A., M.B.A., C.P.A Associate Professor Gibson R. Johnson, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor Ray E. Keesey, B.A., M.A. Instructor Edythe M. Kenney, B.S. Laboratory Technician Tatiana Levcowicll, ILS., M.S. Instructor Robert W. Manton, Professor Philip M. Marston, B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor Edith M. McKenzie. ILA., M.C.B. Instructor Helen F. McLaughlin, ILA., B.S., M.A. Professor T. Ralph Meyers, B.A,, M.A. Associate Professor Marion E. Mills, B.S., M.A. Assistant Professor Shelby A. Mitcham, B.S., M.B. Assistant Professor Marguerite Mocllel, B.A., M.A. Instructor Marion R. Moody, B.A. Assistant E. Philip Morgan Instructor Verna Moulton. R.S.. M.Ed. Instructor Elizabeth J. Murphy, B.S. Graduate Assistant Harland P. Nasvilx. ILA. Assistant Professor Clifford S. Parker. Ii.A.. M.A., Ph.D. Professor Lucile Pepoon. R.S.M.S. Assistant Professor Allan B. Partridge, B.A.. M.A. Assistant Professor Mason T. Record, I5.A.. Ph.lJ. Instructor John H. Reynolds. M.A. Instructor Alfred E. Richards. ILA.. Ph.l-J. Professor M. C. Richards. RS.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor Edythe T. Richardson. ILS. Assistant Professor DEAN HAROLD H. SCUDDER BS., Dartmouth College. l903. Present posi tion, l94l. Herbert F. Rudd. B.A.. RD., M.A., Ph.D. Professor Everett B. Sackett. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D. Associate Professor Paul E. Schaefer. B.A.. M.S. Assistant Professor Edwin Scheier Instructor James T. Schoolcraft. B.S.. M.A. Assistant Professor Harold E. Scudder, B.S. Assistant Professor Eleanor L. Sheehan, BS., Instructor Lawrence W. Slanetz. B.S., Ph.D. Associate Professor Harry W. Smith, B.A., M.A. Professor Lucinda P. Smith, B.A., M.A Associate Professor Raymond R. Starke, B.A., M.A. Professor Glenn VV. Stewart. H.S., M.S. Instructor John A. Sticht, M.A. Instructor A. Monroe Stove, Ph.R., M.A., Ph.Il. Professor George R. Thomas. B. Arch. Associate Professor Isaac N. Thut. BS.. M.Ed.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor Carroll S. Tots le. B.A.. Ph.D. Associate Professor Doris E. Tyrrell. B.S.. M.A. Assistant Professor Herbert E. Wfarfel, B.A.. M.S. Instructor Robert C. W'ehster. B.A.. M.A. Assistant Professor Ruth J. YVoodruI'f. R.A.. M.A.. Ph.lJ. Associate Professor William Yale, Ph.B.. M.A. Assistant Professor 'I' 9,-s. W First row: Wadleigll, Hill, Stevens, Hoitt, Sanborn. Second row: Jackson, Haddock, Ellis, Beggs, Romstad, King. Barraclough, Nasvik. Third Row: Bradley, Weave1', Rawlings, Foulkrod, Johnson. Q 'IL Q' I l .Q5 X lvl v'lIn 'hw Fred Engelhardt, A.M., Ph.D. L.L.D President Jesse R Hepler, M.S. Extension Horticulturist on Home A v- ---4, v 'l ' ' - E s Max F. Abell, Ph.D. Extension Economist, Farm Management Kenneth E. Barraclough, M.F. Extension Economist, Farm Management Ann F. Beggs Extension Economist, Home Management Jeannie Begg, A.B. University Editor R. Claude Bradley, Ph.D. Extension Poultryman John F. Brock Photographic Technician Henry S. Clapp, M.S. Extension Horticulturist in Home Gardens Lawrence A. Dougherty, B.S, Extension Economist in Marketing Elizabeth E. Ellis, M.A. Extension Nutritionist George M. Foulkrod, M.S. Extension Agricultural Engineer Jay L. Haddock, M.S. Extension Agronomist and Soil Conservationist Arnold E. Hanson. Ph.M., Ph.D. In charge of Extension Courses and Institutes 26 Gardening Hazel E. Hill, M.A. Extension Specialist in Clothing Samuel W. Hoitt, M.S. Assistant to the Director Frederick D. Jackson, B.S., E.E. University Radio Engineer Lawrence A. Johnson, M.S. Extension Dairyman Harland B. Nasvik, B.A. In Charge of Photo-Visual Service John P. Neville, M.A. Extension Editor and Radio Specialist Cecil O. Rawlings, B.S. Extension Horticulturist Earl P. Robinson, B.S. County Agent Leader Camilla Romstad Assistant Editor Mary L. Sanborn Assistant State Club Leader Donald W. Smith, B.S. Assistant in Visual Aids Henry B. Stevens, A.B. Director Clarence B. Wadleigll, B.S. State Club Leader Richard L. Weaver, Ph.D. Extension Specialist in Conservation Harry C. Yvoodworth, M.S. Extension Economist, Planning RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CURPS COLONEL EDWIN K. SMITH M.E., Cornell, l906g Present position, 1938. Edwin K. Smith, Colonel, Coast Artillery Corps, Fred H. Brown, Master Sergeant, Detached En Professor of Military Science and Tactics. listed Men's List, Reserve Officers Training Ted H. Cawthorne, Lieutenant Colonel, Infantry. Corps. George NV. Gage, Major, Coast Artillery. Joseph E. Narhut, Sergeant, Detached Enlisted Henry Hunt, Major, Infantry. Men's List, Reserve Officers Training Corps. Clarence W. Metcalf, Captain, Infantry. Philip J. Wlhalen, Sergeant, Detached Enlisted Malcolm J. Chase, Captain, Coast Artillery. Men's List, Reserve Officers Training Corps. halen, Metcalf, Brown, First row: Hunt, Cawthorne, Smith, Gage, Chase. Second row: W Narbut. SE F. ff, ff 5? V i 'M 15 A 1 w. Aa J :ff ,, Qi? A if sy ' V gg, f f if f Q fe if gi .TX ' Q45 'Zfwz mi . wx W 4 ,f , ff ff, 5 f ff- , 3515 3lf??Wf' if , 2 Q if l Q 3' f in K1 ,W W og, if gf '-ff '51-A if i, fx 70559 VQM, ffm-.Q,f . ' ., Q :X , Q5 9 mm ' K 22:31 f Wifi -n1,f.wg,,.MYW...-v,WW,.,.f.M,,mmw,Nw., 5 iff?-:'WGilm1K-FigxauvfwymQ,,H.-mfg.:if L M.,,yu,v,.41,-w1w'.fwwznw.p.MNwwM,.1.wuw.M4.mw:Mww.aM KX anMme1'f.w..1.,wm.f,-N.,ffm H,wa.ww-A1wwM,mmf,L, W1,,-,QMMM1Wmp..,-QM. , -N w4,awM+w.N..+A.fs,-VQMAM'+wfyw-mmmmy4-2w.,av1awfef:+.zmrq+frvxxwrMv-vww' '41'j6':lw1fi'?' Q 2 1 'mv-mum,Qffz,-,nw2-.wrmufszwwfwdwefxm mme-Q31 glgg , I 3 W-XWM-myW,W.4..2M.,1.,.:,W,mQwfuM K awww ww., 1 z 1 25555.73 v'f,k,M?j E .X -Q 1 W .--..,-.-....Mv..w,.1Q.z.h.,m.wa.-Naamw..w,..,.....was s wwwfiaf-51 wg .5 .N I .WWW mm-f,..w,, ' Q ,M-Vx, 5 mfgfgw-1.---1.y,, W--Ewa .W.L , G,,,,.,,,,,,..-,,.,,. .. . M,--..,-,..,- ,,,,,fQf',wwmg W..,-,x-f.am,f,-.M Wb,,M,Xf,k.,,., .Wn-,.,mygg.Mf,vt-41.-.L-ww'-1.,f.f.,Q uw-mv-nf W -7 K! -'emW.-1.4:D11,..W.1,,f,:W., f,.,,1:, ' J .,mw. 'F ,n'.,LM.m.:Sm, mm, .,Y,.,,-,w,fw.w,,1. , j -qfr.f,,pw,g,2w':.ag xfwwxwfn .-,y,X.4M.mmf:, 1 , LMl:m ,hw mm 41:5 ww ,.3,4,,m ' , ' .f ,J.,,1,v f ,E13385.r:q11J5v-.SZ-iSL'5l4112:'3vH-Tw 'si'mf?Jl1iAY13E'fiEe'liCs'vdlf43AF6r-F?ifk'!r?5 ?'SZ?'6E3'i'fII' T17 ,,.-Q L54-Q, ei 5 y ,ff Prvsirlvnl Fmzn CHARRON Isl Vice-l'rv.siflf-1:1 XX Il.I,l'KfNl C,x1.L 2nd I'7iCC'-PTl?SiflPl1f ROGER NIARSH KLL Svcrvtury DOROTIIX KINIBXLL Treasurer Fumx KINIBALL en iam Ackerman, Wallace G., West Rumney Adnoff, Carolyn L., Dover Agar, Alison U., Concord Amos, Hope J., Woodstock Anderson, Adolph J., Portsmouth Anderson, William T., Ballston Spa, N. Y. Armitage, Hope, Dublin Askenazy, Samuel, Malden, Mass. Augustin, Chester F., So. Natick, Mass. Austin, Jane C., Manchester Avery, Ilene, Cambridge, Mass. Bacon, Mary J., Bridgeport, Conn. Bailey, Margaret J., Woodsville Baker, Dorothy C., Pittsburg Baker, Marjorie, Pittsburg Barkley, Mary E., Contoocook Barrett, Arthur G., Hudson Bartlett, Mabel A., Salisbury, Mass. Battistine, Rita, Bradford, Mass. Batzis, Katherine, Manchester Bauckman, Florence I., Kingston Beal, Russell R., Portsmouth Bean, Everett L., Exeter Blaisdell, Ernest B., Somersworth Blankenberg, Evelyn E., Portsmouth Boles, Wesley E., Hudson Borr, Howard E., Chelsea, Mass. Boucher, Roland R., Lebanon Brennan, Alice M., Dover Brown, Grace M., Manchester Bruni, Gorgo, Berlin Byles, Russell, Edgewood, R. I. Bates, Beverly E., Manchaster X 'I Call, William T., Manchester Callaghy, Thomas A., Lawrence, Mass. Carlson, Carl S., Concord Carr, George A., Goffstown Carter, Robert, Littletown Cassily, Helen E., Dover Chalmers, Marjorie, Tilton Chamberlain, Deane M., Alton Chandler, Muriel E., Brooklyn, Wis. Charron, Fred E., Lincoln Chase, David G., Newport Churas, Frank, Franklin Churchill, Doris E., Westmoreland Depot Churchill, Phyllis A., Westmoreland Deuot Clark, Annie E., Kennebunkport, Me. Clark, Robert H., Dover Clark, Shirley W., Melrose, Mass. Clendenin, Victoria, Quarryville, Pa. Clock, Robert, Litchfield, Conn. Cochran, Richard, Andover Colby, Clarence E., Penacook Conde, Albert H., Sherrill, N. Y. Constable, John T., Hollis, L. I., N. Y. Costigan, Charles H., Portsmouth Cram, Milton B., Augusta, Me. Crosbie, Robert M., Exeter Crosby, Hale, Dover Cummings, Pauline P., Peterborough Dart, Robert A., Peterborough Davis, Gaylord, Concord Davis, Edward T., Portsmouth Davis, Jean E., Fremont ,,j,,ig,J.s. Day, James H., Manchester Delpino, Robert A., New Castle Deming, Robert L., Newmarket Dempsey, Jean C., Freedom DesRoches, Ralph, Mexico, Me. DiMartino, Dominic D., Wolfeboro Falls Dobek, Helena, Manchester Dowd, Robert J., Penacook Dower, Margaret W., Plaistow Dowst, Henry, Short Falls Driscoll, William, No. Andover, Mass. Dudley, Robert M., Tilton Dupuis, Roland, Groveton Durso, Anthony J., Haverhill, Mass. Dyson, Robert H., Salem Eastman, Barbara G., Hanover Eastman, Miriam E., Lakeport Eckman, Leon S., Manchester Ekman, Bernard, Manchester Emery, Richard W., Auburn Farwell, Marjorie M., Nashua Ferris, Emil M., Chicopee, Mass. Flanagan, Dorothy G., Portsmouth Flanders, Irving C., Portsmouth Flavin, Margaret E., Keene Fletcher, Florence, Manchester Flynn, Doris A., So. Berwick, Me. Foley, Richard V., Manchester Forbes, Charles S., Lisbon Foss, Ellena S., Pittsfield Foster, Robert H., Dover French, John R., Rumney Depot Gardner, Robert P., Franklin Gardner, Virginia M., Plymouth Garland, Alice B., Berwick, Me. Gaw, John, Manchester Gibson, Patricia H., Concord Gifford, Malcolm R., Tiverton, R. I. Giovannangeli, Ottavio, Keene Golod, Frances, Manchester Goodfellow, Roy, Rumford, Me. Gove, Carolyn E., Laconia 31 Gove, Rolland R., Jr., Laconia Gowen, Robert H., Stratham Grady, 'John D., Rumford, Me. Grant, Beatrice A., Melrose, Mass. Griffin, Louise E., Danville Grube, Frederick J., Lynn, Mass. Hager, Charles D., Concord Haggart, Ruth E., Newport Haggas, Elizabeth C., Portland, Me. Hall, Milton D., Wilmington, Vt. Hamilton, William W., Dighton, Mass. Hammond, Carolyn E., Chocorua Hanson, Bragdon M., Saco, Me. Hardy, Austin, Concord Hay, Warren H., Dover Herrick, George C., Chester Hewitt, Leonard H., Portsmouth Hill, Franklin A., Marblehead, Mass. Hill, Virginia, Center Ossipee Hills, Henry C., Hollis Hirshberg, Elaine A., Haverhill, Mass. Holmes, Royal B., Charlestown Holton, Dexter S., Keene Horne, Arnold R., Tilton Hutchins, Catherine, Northwood Ridge Ingebretson, Marion, Arlington, Mass. Jenkins, James G., Boston, Mass. Johnson, Evert W., Bridgeport, Conn. Jones, Roger M., Nashua Jordan, Patricia A., Concord Joslin, Robert A., No. Attleboro, Mass. Judd, Charles L., Everett, Mass. Karelis, Irving P., Haverill, Mass. Katzman, Suzanne, Claremont Kelley, George F., Pittsfield Keough, William M., Berlin Kimball, Dorothy M., E. Wakefield Kimball, Flora L., E. Wakefield Kinerson, Scott, Glencliff King, Robert, Palm Beach, Fla. Kinsman, Nancy, Roxbury, Mass. Kischitz, Alexander D., Newport Knowles, Perry G., Swamscott, Mass. Koehler, Ethel A., Pelham Koutsotaseos, Socrates G., Nashua Kowalczyk, Andrew P., Manchester Krauzer. Earl I., Manchester Kulesza, Chester P., Newport Ladd, Arline L., Derry LaFlamme, Rachel A., Manchester Lambert, Frank, Methuen, Mass. Lamond, Allan A., Haverill, Mass. Lang, Kenneth J., Manchester Lang, Robert K., Manchester Lang, Vera F., Medford, Mass. Langley, Henry N., Gilmanton Leavitt. Laurence J., Dover Leeper, Mary L., Exeter Leggett, Robert B., Thompsonville, Conn. LeLoup, George A., Claremont Levy, Joseph B., Portsmouth Libby, Arthur F., Contoocook Lipnick, Albert J.. Nashua Little, Pauline l., Keene Lockwood, Priscilla T., Durham Lord, William J., Farmington Lowe, Malcolm C., Rochester Lowry, Wayne, Arlington, N. J. Lucas, Harry F., Littleton Lucy, Arthur K., North Conway MacDonald, Winslosv H., Amherst Mackel, Edward, Danvers, Mass. Maddock, Robert K., Westville Mallan. John P., Manchester Marr, John D., Jr., Temple Marr, Mary Jane, Temple Marshall, Roger G.. Somerville, Mass. Martin, Philip C., Keene Mathews, Philip J., Berwick. Me. McCready, Dorothy V., Berlin Mclver, Marion L., Newport, Vt. McLaughlin, Charles G., So. Berwick, Me. Mead, John L., Manchester Meneghin, Peter A., Clifton, N. J. Mercer, Elizabeth, Concord Meserve, Edwin C., Newton Centre, Mass. Metcalf, Frances C., W. Springfield Miller, Virginia. Mason Mitton, Parker B., Brookline, Mass. Moller, Charles F., Manchester Morin, Laurant E., Berlin Morrill, Christine S.. Manchester Morrison, Jean E.. Falmouth, Mass. Morrison, Rachel, Keene Morrow, Edward, Bradford Morse, Wallace J., Hanover Morton, Ellen, Gorham, Me. Moscardini, Doris H., Tilton Moss, Robert H., Laconia Murphy, Arthur, Dover Neal, Robert A., Dover Nelson, Ruth A., Greenland Nichols, Eleanor M., Waban, Mass. Nylander, Robert G., Antrim Ober, Helen E., Wilton O'Kane, Robert M., Dover Okolovich, Julius, Nashau O'Neil, Robert J., Nashua Parker, Beverly, Troy Parker, Maurice E., Montpelier, Vt. Parsons, Forrest L., Fremont Paulsen, George A., Cascade Pearce, Andrea H., Saugus, Mass. Peaslee, Esther M., Pittsfield Perkins, Barbara M., Claremont Pfadenhauer, Ruth E., Montvale, N. J. Phair, Edith M., Durham Phaneuf, Albertine, Nashua Phillips, Marion E., Keene Pickard, Greenleaf W., Seabrook Beach Pierce, Audrey T., Marlboro Placy, Gordon E., Colebrook Platt, Walter M., Lawrence, Mass. Plumpton. Dean D., Manchester Pope, Robert M., So. Middleboro, Mass. Powers, David A., Mt. Vernon Prescott, Robert, Suncook Prohaska, Norma, New Castle Rand, Donald P., Nashua Rand, Margaret C., New Castle Randall, Doris, Fitchburg, Mass. Reed, Norman A., Providence, R. l. Richards, John V., Suncook Ricker, Ernest R., Berwick, Me. Robbins, Frank H., Melrose, Mass. Roberts, Jack M., Brookline, Mass. Robinson, Frances M., Leominister, Mass. Robinson, Mescal L., Durham Roger, Norman F., Haverill, Mass. Rogers, William F., Newport Rouillard, Arthur J., Jr., Claremont Rowe, John A., Portsmouth Roy, Leopold R., Manchester Ruggles, Helen L., Salem Rumery, Ruth E., Portland, Me. Russell, Daniel, Milton, Mass. Russell, Donald W., Springvale, Me. Ryan, Mary A., Nashua Sakoian, Albert, Arlington, Mass. Sanders, Nancy E., Concord Sanne, Andrew, Portsmouth Sargent, Leslie B.. Plymouth Satzow, Meyer H., Claremont Saunders, Fred, No. Conway Sawyer, Dorothy, Lawrence, Mass. Sawyer, Elinor, Woodstock Scott, Lorene N., Pittsburg Sideris, John E., Manchester 32 Silvia, Wilfred M., Middleboro Simmons, Charles A., Winnisquam Simon, James E., Dover Sleeper, David A., Watertown, Mass. Smalley, Porter W., Dover Smart, Philip E., Portsmouth Smith, Clayton H., Portland, Me. Smith, Herbert W., Newport Smith, Myrl A., Enfield Smith, Richard Y., Reading, Mass. Smith, Sallie S., Exeter Snider, William W., Glens Falls, N. Squibb, Margaret, Alstead Stackpole, Cecil T., Jr., Portsmouth Stearns, Lucile C., Hinsdale Stebbins, Theodore H., Manchester Stewart, Robert A.. Hopedale, Mass. Stiles, David, No. Conway Stock, Marion A., Hampton Stone, Betty R., Mountain Lakes, N. Stone, Hyman N., Durham Stowell, John F., Merrimack Sullivan, Richard A., Haverill, Mass Tasker, James H., Dover Taylor, Ann E., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Teel, Alison, Marblehead, Mass. Thomas, Irving M., Apponaug, R. I. Thompson, Annotte F., Wolfeboro Tipping, Esther G., Claremont Tipping, Evelyn D., Claremont Tolchinsky, Edna A., Newmarket Toohill, Jeannette E., Rochester Trachy, Roger A., Franklin Trainovich, Virginia A., Nashua Turner, Andreas M., Lynn, Mass. Tuttle, Dorothy M., Durham Tuttle, Robert L., Durham Ulin, Phyllis B., Manchester Valonen, Rudolph, Troy Vaughan, Charles L., Aurora, N. Y. Vaughan, Martha, Newport Vaughan, Robert C., Peterborough Walsh, Aline J., Dracut, Mass. Weatherill, Marcia, Arlington, Mass. Weaver, Betty Jo, Deering Webb, Alice D., Newmarket Webster, Wendell H., West Canaan Wheeler, Louis D., Swanzey Whittemore, Gale, Durham Willcox, .Joanne B., Plymouth, Vt. Y J Williams, Charles W., Jr., Brockton, Mass. Willoughby, Lila R., Plymouth Woodward, Virginia, Farmington Worthen, Roy E., Concord Wright, Eugene A., Schenectady, N. Y. Yeaton, Vinton R., Dover Prvsirlz-nl A-X. Hlcluloxn BIORCONI lvil'1'-I,7'l'Silll'lIf G. BIIQRRAY SMITH Sl'l'fl'flll'y NIl'II.BN B. xlfili.-XY 'I'r1-usurvr VRAINIOND Bmuss - I lfLlfll0lf'5 CLASS HISTORY NTERING the University during the year when all the festivity and excitement surrounding the seventy-fifth anniversary celebration was in progress, the class of 1944, 535 strong, soon became an integral part of its existence. Freshman Week with its hub-buh of placement exams, physical exams, and receptions of various sorts was taken in stride, and the iirst attempts at class organization were made. Smokey Kelleher, Maurice Stetson, Angelo Montrone, Jeanne Henry, and Eleanor Dearborn were chosen as a Freshman Committee to lead the class in its undertakings. In their first effort, that of competition against the Sophs in the traditional University Day program, '44 was successful in humbling their rivals 5 to 4. John Davis, president, Jeanne Henry, vice-presidentg Melba McKay, secretary, and Angelo Montrone, treasurer were the re- sults of the first election for permanent officers. Setting a new precedent for yearling classes, 944 under the leader- ship of Herb Blais undertook to present a dramatic production. For two memorable evenings, Murkland Auditorium was filled to capacity with people eager to witness that stark-stirring melodrama, 'LThe Reward of Crime. ln athletics the names of '6Boo Morcom and Ed Styrna were be- coming known throughout the land as potential collegiate track champs. Three frosh, Ralph Townsend, Curt Chase and Al Merrill, received varsity letters in skiing. Among the women, honors went to Marcia Robinson when she was chosen aide to the queen at the Carnival Ball. Left: Herb Blais as the President of the United States signing the provision for the establishment of land grant colleges. This was a scene from the May Day pageant given as a part of the 75th anniversary cele- bration when the Class of 1944 was the freshman class. Right: A scene from the Freshman Play. 34 The annual Freshman Dance, a semi-formal affair, brought the social life of the class to a successful conclusion. With the advent of fall, the class returned to campus as upperclassmen. Many were now taking their places in all sorts of campus ac- tivities, such as student government, Mask and Dagger, Mike and Dial, Granite Varieties, stu- dent publications and athletics. This year we were not so fortunate in the University Day events, as we were defeated by the frosh. However, our satisfaction came when we won the tug-of-war and pulled them through the pond. Officers for the year were John Davis, president, Murray Smith, vice-president, Melba McKay, secretary and Phil MacDonald, treasurer. The class was well represented in all varsity sports this year, having lettermen in football, basketball, hockey, tennis, lacrosse, baseball, and track. Bob Wheeler was elected captain of the basketball team. New Hampshire's two-man track team, Morcom and Styrna, broke into headlines by capturing national championships. Karl 'GRed Adams was named on the All-New England hockey team. Clara Knight was chosen Editor of the GRANITE, the first coed ever to hold that posi- tion. This year again Marcia Robinson served as aide to the Queen of Carnival Ball. Cancel- lation of the Sophomore Hop this year turned the big class social function into a party for members of the class only. Returning in the fall for the Junior year, '44 found its ranks greatly depleted due to the war. Many members were now serving in the armed services. Class elections were again held, this time offices going to 4'Boo7' Morcom, president, Murray Smith, vice-president, Melba McKay, secretary and Ray Bowles, treasurer. In football this year Tuffy Fitanides, Ralph Pino, and John Greenaway helped give the school its first undefeated season. 'aTuffy was elected captain for 1943. Al Brown served as captain of cross-country. Many important posts on campus were now occupied by our members, including seats on student government, members of honorary so- cieties, and officers in all undergraduate ac- tivities. Tom O'Donnell was elected Editor of THE NEW HAMPSHIRE, Marcia Robinson presided as Queen of the Carnival Ball. The ,lunior year has been a hectic one. Due to the accelerated program, many of our class- mates are a semester ahead of us, tho' we still consider them as members of '44. The class has cooperated in all the various War activities on campus to a high degree, it has been mak- ing the adjustments well in the face of a severe educational shake-up. ln looking back we can remember the good times, the friendships we have made, the ex- periences we have enjoyed together, but a note of sadness creeps in as we look around at the empty places in our midst. To those members of the class who are serving our country we pay tribute, we do not forget them. RALPH J . ALLEN Brunswick, Me Major: General Business Alpha Tau Omegag Tennis Manager 1, 23 B.0.T.C. 3. ROBERT A. ALTENBERN Woodsville, N. H. Major: Bacteriology Bacteriology Club 2, 33 Phi Sigma 3. JOHN S. ALVORD Manchester, Conn. Major: Economics Yacht Club 2, 3g B.0.T.C. 3. JOSEPH A. ARENA, JR. Salem, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Outing Club lg Honor Roll 1, 2, 33 Newman Cluh 33 Phi Lambda Phi 33 Phi Sigma 3. RICHARD P. ABELL Durham, N. H. Major: Horticulture Alpha Gamma Rho: Alpha Zeta: A.S.C.E. 2, 33 S.C.M. 33 Football lg Cross Country 23 Winter Track 2, 33 La- crosse 1, 2, 33 Horticulture Club, President 3. KARL S. ADAMS Concord, N. H. Major: Geology Baseball 1, 2g Hockey 1, 2, 33 A.S.C.E. 1, 23 R.0.T.C. Scabbard and Blade 3. 3: ADRIENNE ASTLE Whiteheld, N. H. Major: Physical Erlucalion Glee Club 1, 2g Softball Team 1, 23 Yacht Club 2g Tennis Manager 2g Hom-key Team 1, 2. 33 Choir 1, 2, 33 Blue Circle 2, 33 Phi Epsilon 3. ,IUDITII .AUSTIN Wlehster. N. H. Major: Home E1'!lllfll7ll!'.9 Alpha Xi Deltar, Mask and Dagger 13 Glee Club 1, 33 Vice-President 2g Varsity Hockey 1, 23 Blue Circle 1, 2. 33 S.C.M. 1, 2, President 33 GRANITE 2, Photography Editor 33 Granite Varieties 13 Freshman Play3 Ho Boll 1. IIOI' LEON F. AUSTIN Wooclsville, N. H. Major: Dairy Husbandry Alpha Gamma Rho: R.O.T.C. 3: Sphinx. ALIDA M. BAKER Marlboro, N. H. Major: Home Economics May Day Pageant, 1: Honor Roll 1: Clee Club 1, 2g Home Economics Club 1, 2, 35 S.C.M. 1, 2, 3, Christian Worlc Cabinet 1, 2, 3. SoLoN L. BARRACLOUGH Durham, N. H. Major: Eronomics Cross Country 1: R.O.T.C. 3: Debating Club 1, 2, 3. HoR.xcE X. B.-xscou Alsteall, N. H. Major: Dairy llusbamlry Alpha Gamma Rho: Band 1, 2: Drum Major 2, 3g Mask and Dagger 2, 33 YVithdrew, Air Corps Enlisted Reserves. V BETTY J. BAKER Laconia, N. H. Major: Secretarial Alpha Chi Omega: Outing Club 1: Sevretzuial Club 2, 33 Newman Club 1. 2, 35 Home Economics Club 3. BRADLEY L. BAKER, JR. Concord, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Band 1, 23 Track 1, 2g Winter Track 2, Alpha Chi Sigma 2, 3: Phi Lambda Phi 2, 3g R.O.T.C. 3. FOSTER H. BALL Derry, N. H. Major: History Football 1: Basketball lg R.O.T.C. 3. PRISCILLA D. BARNARD Keene, N. H. Major: Hospital Dietetics Transfer from Syracuse University, THE NEW HAMP- SHIRE 2, 3. MALCOLNI H. BA'r'1'1.Es Haverhill, Mass. Major: Chemistry Sigma Beta: Alpha Chi Sigma 3. GRETCHEN BAUM Wakeheltl, Mass. Major: Zoology Freshman Play 1: S.C.M. 1, 2: Blue Circ-le 2, 3: lie-noi Club 3: Badminton Club JANE BELROSE Concord, N. H. Major: French May Day Pageant 1: French Cluh 1, 2, 3. CONSTANCE L. BENNER Merriman, N. H. Major: English S.C.M. 1, German Cluh 1, 2: May Day Pageant Orchestra 1: Clee Club: Honor Roll 1, 2, 3. 1wERIT W. BEAN Errol, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Phi Mu Delta: Yacht Club 2: Phi Lamb R.O.T.C. 3: A.S.C.E. 3. GEORGE J. BEDARD Dover, N. H. Major: Chem ical Engineering Sigma Beta: Outing Club 1: Lacrosse 1: Me Cluh 1: Alpha Chi Sigma 3. HENRY K. BEDARD Whitefield, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical da Phi 2, 3: n Commuters Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Basketball 1: Newman Club 1, 2: R.0.T.C. 3. MERTON A. BELL Somersworth, N. H. Major: Chemistry Tau Kappa Epsilon: S.C.M. 1: Winter Track Manager 1, 2, 3, Yacht Club 1, 2, 3. MILLARD H. BERRY, JR. Nashua, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Sigma Beta, Tennis Manager 13 A.I.E.E. 33 Rifle Team Manager 1, 2, Cross Country Manager 1, 2, 3g Duting Club 1, 2. ROBERT B. BIRNBAUM Manchester, N. H. Major: General Business Granite Varieties Ig Tennis Manager 25 Outing Club Ig Debating Club 1, 23 Mask and Dagger 2, 35 Psychology Club 3. SYLVIA L. BISHOP Plainfield, N. H. Major: General Business Theta Upsilong May Day Pageant 1g Outing Club 1, 25 Yacht Club 3g Glee Club 1, 23 Folio Club 33 Secretarial Club 2. .l. WESTON BLACK, III Gloucester, Mass. Major: Architecture Transfer from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Phi Delta Upsilong Withdrew, E.R.C. NICHOLAS H. BENTAS Manchester, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Transfer from St. Anselms College. LIONEL U. BERGERON Rochester, N. H. Major: Pre-Dental CAIWILLE G. BLAIR Lebanon, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilong Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Lacrosse 1, 2, 33 Phi Lambda Phi 2, 35 A.I.E.E. 3g R.0.T.C. 3. DOROTHY A. BOLTON Concord, N. H Major: Social Service Transfer from Plymouth Teacher's College, Sociology Club 2, 3, Omvila Club 2. NVARREN B. BRAINERD Tenafly, N. J. Major: Hotel Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Blue Circle 2, 3: Lens and Shutter 2, 3: Junior Creeters 2, 3. DIARY C. BREVVSTER Wolfeboro, N. H. Major: Music Glee Club 1, 2, 3: S.C.M. lg Class Basketball lg Class Hockey 1, 2, 3: All Star Hockey l, 2, 3: Fencing Club 3. ALSON W. BROWN Wfentworth, N. H. Major: Education Lambda Chi Alpha: R.O.T.C. 3, 4: Scabbard and Blade 3, 4: Cross Country 1, 2, 3: Winter Track 1, 2, 35 Spring, Track 1, 25 Captain Cross Country 4. FRANK W. BROWVN Whitefield, N. H. Major: Education Theta Chi: Honor Roll, Outing Club 3: B.O.T.C. 3: Cross Country lg Winter Track 2: Spring Track 1. EZEKIEL BooTH, JR. Newmarket, N. H. Major: General Business Phi Alpha: Honor Roll: Basketball Manager lg Hillel Club. RAIMOND BOWLES Franconia, N. H. Major: Government Alpha Tau Omega: Class Treasurer 3: Blue Circle 2, 3, Scabbard and Blade 3: THE GRANITE 2, Managing Editor 3: Ski Team 1, 2, 3: International Relations Club 35 Pi Gamma Mu 3: Wl1o's W'ho 3. PHYLLIS E. BROWN Manchester, N. H. Major: Economics Transfer from Syracuse Universityg Chi Omega, Outing Club 2, 3. CHARLES D. BURRAGE, III Peterborough, N. H. Major: Forestry R.O.T.C. 3. DOROTHY F. CAIN Milford, N. H. Major: English Pi Lambda Sigma, German Club lg May Day Pageant lg Newman Club l, 2, 3. GLORIA R. CALLAHAN Swampscott, Mass. Major: English Transfer from Emmanuel College: Alpha Xi Deltag Newman Club 3g Outing Club 3. JANE CARTER Lynniield, Mass. Major: Secretarial Chi Omega: Blue Circle l, 2, 3: Granite Varieties lg Secretarial Club 3g THE GRANITE 1, 2, Fraternity and Outing Club lg B Sorority Editor 3. NTARJORIE CASS Suncook, N. H. Major: Government asketball l, 2, 3: A 1, 2, 3. ll Star Basketball PHILIP C. CANNEY Rochester, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical EDGAR A. CARD Troy, N. Y. Major: Physical Education Transfer from Green Mountain Junior College: Sigma Beta, Phi Epsilon 3, 4g Football 35 Basketball 3. MARY N. CARLISLE Northwood, N. H. Major: Dietetics Home Economics Club l, 2, 3. LILLY V. CARLSON Quincy, Mass. Major: Zoology Blue Circle 2, 3: French Club lg THE NEW HAMP- SHIRE l, 23 Glee Club l, 23 Basketball 25 Softball l, 2g Hockey 2g Archery 1, 2g Folio Club 2. DOROTHY L. CASSILY Dover, N. H. Major: Dietetics Association of Women Day Students 1, 2, 3: May Day Pageant lg Newman Club l, 2, 33 Glee Club lg Home Economics Club 2, 3. GERALDINE LOVETT CHAPLICK Durham, N. H. Major: Occupational Therapy Outing Club lg Glee Club lg Omvila Club 2, 3. Association of CHRISTINE H. CHICK Berwick, Me. Major: Hospital Dietetics Women Day Students l, 2, Club 2. NICHOLAS CHICKLAS Keene, N. H. Major: Bacteriology Football l, 2. 3: Psychology EVERETT B. CHAPMAN Dover, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Sigma Beta. HEOTOR J. CHARTRAIN Nashua, N. H. Major: French Pi Kappa Alpha: R.O.T.C. 3: French Club 1, 2, 3, Newman Club 1, 2. CURTIS C. CHASE, JR. Newport, N. H. Major: English Theta Chi: R.0.T.C. 3: N. H. Club 1, 2, 3: Outing Club l, 2, 3, Seabbard and Blade 33 Ski Team 1, 2, 3: Band 1: Withdraw, Ski troops. FRANK D. CHELLIS Meridan, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering R.O.T.C. 3: Scabbard and Blade 33 A.I.E.E. 3g S.C.M. 1, 2. HERSCHEL CLESNER Lebanon, N H. Major: Pre-Medical Debating Club 1: Hockey Club 1: Lacrosse 1. GENEVIEVE CLOUTIER Epping, N. H. Major: Home Economics Association of Women Day Students 1, 2, 3. ALLAN R. COE Manchester, Conn. Major: Pre-Medical Transfer from Worcester, Polytechnic Institute, Sigma Beta, Yacht Club 1, 2, 35 Wfithdrew, Navy, November 30,1942. JOHN COLOCOUSIS Haverill, Mass. Major: Mathematics Phi Lambda Phi, Psychology Club 1: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 2, Student War Activities 33 Blood Donor Committee 3. PAULINE L. CLARK Manchester, N. H. Major: Home Economics Outing Club 1, S.C.M. 1. C. AUSTIN CLENIENT Nashua, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering R.O.T.C. 35 A.l.E.E. 33 Phi Lambda Phi 33 Cross Country Manager 1, 2, 3g Rifle Team Manager 1, 2. RUTH E. COMERFORD Bedford, N. H. Major: Physical Education Outing Club 1, 3. HARRIET CONGDON Lancaster, Mass. Major: Secretarial Outing Club 1, 2g Blue Circle 33 Secretarial Club 2, 3, Vice-President 3, Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, Glee Club 2: Basket- ball 1, 2, 3g Softball 25 Archery 1, 2. LEONARD CONVEL Durham, N. H. Major: Poultry Husbandry Mask and Dagger 2, 3: Poultry Science Club, Transfer from N.Y.S. lnst. of Agriculture. EDITH J. CONVERSE Amherst, N. H. Major: Botany S.C.M. 1, 2, 3: May Day Pageant 1: Clee Club 13 Forestry Club 2, Vice-President 35 Student Co-op. 2. DORIS I. COOPER Lincoln, N. H. Major: Physical Education 1, 3: Outing Club 1, 3: Choir 1, 2, 3: Glee Club 1, 2: Softball 1, 2: Basketball 2, 3: Hockey 3. ALICE L. COWGILL Nutley, N. J. Major: Home Economics Alpha Xi Delta, S.C.M. 1, 2, 3: Granite Varieties 1, 2: Outing Club 1, 23 Psychology Club 3. MARY C. CONNOLLY Dover, N. H. Major: Hospital Dietetics Association of Women Day Students 1, 2, 3, May Day Pageant 1: Newman Club 1, 2, 33 Badminton Club 3: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. BARBARA W. CONNOR Wolfeboro, N. H. Major: Institutional Administration Outing Club 2, 3: Glee Club 2g Home Economics Club 2, 3, Transfer from Simmons College. SAM CRABTREE Dover, N. H. Major: Architecture Theta Chi: R.O.T.C. 3: Chairman of Student Committee on War Activities, Granite Varieties 2, Mask and Dagger 1, 2, Student Congress 2, 35 Yacht Club 1, 2. FRANK H. CRAM Newport, N. H. Major: Architecture Pi Kappa Alpha, R.O.T.C. 3: Alpha Sigma, Secretary 2, 3: Honor Holl 1, Sphinx 3: Track 1, 2: Cross Country 3: Football 1, 2, 3: Winter Track 1, 2. KENNETH E. CREED Jenkintown, Penn. Major: Chemistry Phi Mu Delta, R.0.T.C. 35 S.C.M. 1, Mask and Dagger 1, 2, Treasurer 3, Yacht Club 1, 2. LLOYD R. CROCKEI: Arlington, Mass. Major: Economics Transfer from Tilton Junior College, Lambda Chi Alpha. WINIFRED B. CURTIS Stony Brook, L. I., N. Y. Major: Chemistry Theta Upsilong Blue Circle 2, 3, Student Committee on War Activities, German Club 15 Women's Student Gov- ernment, Secretary 23 Orchestra 1, 2, W.A.A. Vice- President 3g Softball 13 Hockey 2. GAIL DALY Brookline, Mass. Major: Mathematics Alpha Chi Omega, Transfer from College Rivierg Stu- dent War Activities Committeeg Newman Club 2, 3g Mask and Dagger 2, 33 Women's Student Government 3, Yacht Club 2, 3. DONALD F. Cnoss Berlin, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Theta Kappa Phi, A.I.E.E. 3g Mask and Dagger Newman Club 2, 3. EARL S. CUMMINGS Hyde Park, N. Y. Major: Chemistry 2, 3s Transfer from Cambridge Junior Collegeg Phi Mu Deltag Yacht Club. CALVIN T. CUNNINGHAM Exeter, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering R.0.T.C. 3, A.S.M.E. 3, Men Commuters' Club 13 Rifle Team 33 Rifle Squad 1, 2. WALLIS S. CURTIS Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering M Sigma Alpha Epsilon, R.O.T.C. 3, S.M.E. 33 S.C. 33 Mask and Dagger lg Yacht Club 1, Cross Coun Skiing 1, Lacrosse 1. try 1, 1, 2, HOWARD N. DARLING Contoocook, N. H. Major: Geology Tau Kappa Epsilon: R.O.T.C.g N. H. Club: Lacrosse 1, 2g Winter Track 1. WALTER V. DATKIW Manchester, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering R.O.T.C.g Newman Club 33 Outing Club 3: Yacht Club 3: Track lg Lacrosse 1. WVALTER A. DAVIS Derry, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering R.O.T.C.g A.l.E.E. 35 Yacht Club lg Cross Country 1. DORIS E. DEARBORN Epping, N. H. Major: Home Economics Theta Upsilong Granite Varieties 1, 2: Mask and Dagger lg May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 35 Glee Club 13 Basketball 1, 2g Freshman Class Play lg Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. EDWARD M. DAVIDSON, JR. Hampton, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. 3, 4: Granite Varieties 13 Mask and Dagger 1: Mike and Dial 2, 3: Outing Club lg Football lg Basket- ball lg Freshman Class Play. JOHN B. DAVIS, JR. Haverhill, Mass. Major: History Sigma Alpha Epsilon: R.O.T.C.g Class President 1, 23 Executive Committee 3: S.C.M. 1, 2: Scabbard and Blade 33 Student Council 1, 23 Vice-President 33 Student Con- gress 1, 23 Football lg Student Vllar Activities Committee 2, 33 Chairman War Stamp Committee 33 Who's Who 3. ROBERT I. DAVIS Meredith, N. H. Major: Geology R.O.T.C.g A.l.M.E. 2, 33 Outing Club 1g Track 1, 2. RUSSELL H. DAVIS Keene, N H. Major: Electrical Engineering Phi Delta Upsilon: A.l.E.E. 3g Baseball Manager 1. BARBARA H. DERBY Cornish, N. H. Major: Home Economics May Day Pageant 13 Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Basketball Manager 2: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. BERNICE R. DERBY Hillsboro, N. H. Major: Nursing Transfer from Simmons College: Community Chest Fund Committee 2. MARY Domus Keene, N. H. Major: War German Club 1: May Day Pageant 1, 2: Outing Club 1, 2. JAMES W. DooN, JR. Henniker, N.H. Major: Government R.O.T.C. 3: Debating Club 1, 2, 3: Mike and Dial 3: Newman Club 3: Scabbard and Blade 3: Menis Glee Club 1, 2: International Relations Club. ELSIE E. DEARBORN Hamtpon, N. H. Major: Government Government Club. NORMAN R. DEMING Cornish, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Phi Mu Delta: R.O.T.C. 3: S.C.M. 1: A.S.M.E. 3 Lambda Phi 2, 3: Yacht Club 1, 2 ,3. NORMAN F. DOUCET Nashua, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. 2, 3: Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Outing Club 1, 2, 3 Student Cooperative: Yacht Club 1. PATRICIA CM. Down Nashua. N. H. Major: English Alpha Chi Omega: German Club 2: Newman Club 1 2, 3: Outing Club 1: Folio Club 2. LEO E. DUPONT Rochester, N. H. Major: Physical Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon: R.O.T.C. 3, N.H. Clubg Newman Clubg Scabbard and Blade: Football lg Baseball 1: Varsity Baseball. DoR1sMAE DYER South Duxbury, Mass. Major: Dietetics S.C.M. 1, 23 Outing Club 1, 2: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. MARY F. EASTMAN East Andover, N. H. Major: Dietetics S.C.M. 1, 2, 3: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. FLORENCE L. EATON Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Zoology Transfer from Long Island College, School of Nursingg Outing Club 2: Pl1i Sigma 3g Yacht Club 2, 33 Inter- national Relations Club. ESTHER V. DOYLE Randolph, Mass. Major: English Pi Lambda Sigma: Mike and Dial 33 Newman Club 1, 2, Secretary 3: Outing Club 1. ADRIENNE M. DUINIAINE Nashua, N. H. Major: Zoology Chi Omega: Newman Club 1, 2, 33 Phi Sigma 3. ROBERT G. EDISON Newton, Mass. Major: Chemistry Phi Alpha: R.O.T.C.g Track 3: Hillel Club. NORINE E. EDWARDS Antrim, N. H. Major: Home Economics Outing Club 3g Glee Club 1: Basketball 2, 3: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 33 Freshman Play. EDWARD ELLINGWOOD Peterborough, N. H. BARBARA G. ELLIS Wor1'ester, Mass. Major: Psychology Alpha Xi Delta, Christian Work 1, 2, 3, Granite Varieties lg May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 1, 2, 3g Psychology Club 3g Secretarial Club 2, 35 Clee Club 1, 2, 3g THE GRANITE 2, Features Editor 3. if 1:7 RUTH E. FISK North Weare, N. H. Major: English Omvila Club 1, 2. 3, S.C.M. 1, 2, 35 May Day Pageant 1. 'l'rIRoP1IILUs A. FITANIIIES Saeo, Me. Major: History Lambda Chi Alphag Baseball lg N.H. Club 2. 3, Football l, 2, 33 R.O.T.C. 3, Sc-abbard and Blade 3. CONSTANCE V. Esras Vineyard Haven, Mass. Major: English Alpha Chi Omega, Mask and Dagger 2, Secretary 33 May Day Pageant lg Outing Club lg Tau Kappa Alpha 33 Clee Club l. DIADELINE L. FARMER Keene, N. H. Major: Home Econ omics Kappa Delta, S.C.M. lg THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Subscription Manager 33 Home Economics'Club lg Fenc- ing Club 3. VIRGINIA FALL FARRINGTON Conway, N. H. Major: Secretarial S.C.M. 1, 2g Outing Club 3g Secretarial Club 2, 3g Clee Club 2. EIIITII F. FISHER Manchester, N. H. Major: Home Economics Fl'8I'lCll Club 13 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 33 Freshman Play. NORMAN K. FLINT North Newport, N. H. Major: Sociology Sigma Beta: Ski Team 1: Baseball 1, 2: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Mike and Dial 3, A.I.M.E. 3. DORIS A. FLYNN South Berwick, Me. Major: Physical Education May Day Pageant 1: Newman Club 1: Granite Varieties lg Softball 1: Association of Wlomen Day Students 1, 2: Basketball 1,23 All Star Team 2, 3: Hockey 3: All Star Hockey 35 Modern Dance Club 3: Phi Epsilon 3: Drum Majorette 1, 2, 3. MARY L. FRAZER Monroe, N. H. Major: Home Economics Theta Upsilong Home Economics Club 3. DONALD J. FREEsE Pittsfield, N. H. Major: Pre-Dental Phi Mu Delta: Granite Varieties 1: Sphinx 35 Band 1, 33 Orchestra 1, 3: Cross Country 2. THOMAS E. FLYNN, JR. Portsmouth, N. H. Illajor: Pre-Law Yacht Club 1: Outing Club 2: Mike and Dial 2, 33 New- man Club 1, 2, Executive Committee 3: Debating Club 15 Manager 2, 3. PHYLLIS E. FOLLANSBEE Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Mathematics Association of Wfomen Day Students 1, 2: Commuters Cooperative 2: Lens and Shutter 3: S.C.M. 3, Psychology Club 2, 3. MILTON R. FORTIER Berlin, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Phi Mu Delta: Fall Track 1, 2: Yacht Club 2. EUGENE L. FOSTER Rochester, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Men Commuters, Club 1, 2: Band 1, 2: May Day Pageant 23 Phi Lambda Phi 2, 3: R.0.T.C. 33 A.S.M.E. 3. STEVE GALANES Dover, N. H. Major: Business R.O.T.C. 3: Lens and Shutter 1: Men Commuters Club 1, 2: Wirlter Track lg Spring Track 1. LOUIS M. GELLER Lawrence, Mass. Major: Economics Phi Alpha, Debating Club lg Mike and Dial 1, 23 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, International Club 1, 3: Hillel Club 1, 2, 33 Freshman Play 1. EDWARD GELT Derry, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering Phi Alpha: A.S.C.E. 2, 3: Student Committee on Educa- tional Policy. SHIRLEY M. GLAZERMAN Lawrence, Mass. Major: Secretarial French Club 13 May Day Pageant lg Menorah Society l, 2, 3: Secretarial Club 3: THE GRANITE 1: Hillel Club 1, 2, 3: Freshman Play l. CHARLES A. FRIEND Kingston, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Phi Sigma. VVVANDA A. FURIVIAN Manx-heste1', N. H. Major : Chemistry German Club lg May Day Pageant lg Newman Club 1, 2, Glee Club 1. SAMUEL H. GOODHUE Nashua, N. H. Major : Electrical Engineering Alpha Tau Omega, R.O.T.C. 3: A.l.E.E. 3, Blue Circle 3, Lens and Shutter 1. 2: Outing Club 1, 2: Ski Squad 1. 2: Carnival Ball Committee. ANNE GORDON-SMITH Wfarner, N. H. Major: Sociology Transfer from Boston University: Alpha Kappa Delta 35 S.C.M. 3: Lens and Shutter 3: Outing Cluh 3g Psy- chology Cluh 3: Honor Roll 3: Sociology Club 3, In- ternational Relations Club 3. JOHN H. GREENAWAY, JR. Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Business Theta Chi3 R.O.T.C. 3g N. H. Club 33 Outing Club li Scabbard and Blade 33 Yacht Club 13 Football 1, 2, 3g Hockey lg Track I, 2. RUTH A. GRUBE Lynn, Mass. Major: English Alpha Chi Omegag S.C.M. 1, 2, 33 Mask and Dagger 2, 33 May Day Pageant 13 Outing Club 1, 2, 33 THE GRANITE lg Glee Club 1. ROBERT W. GUILD Nashua, N. H. Major: Business Sigma Betag Cross Country Manager lg Spring Track Manager 1. CATHERINE M. GUYER Hanover, N. H. Major: Home Economics Transfer from Simmons College3 Outing Club 33 Or- chestra 33 Field Hockey 33 All-Star Hockey 3g Tennis Champion 33 Basketball 3g Home Economics Club 3. CHARLES V. GORSEY Newton, Mass. Major: Government International Relations Club3 Government Clubg With- drew, E.R.C., January 30, 1943. CHARLES M. Gozowskv Laconia, N. H. Major: Government Phi Alphag Debating Club 1, 2, 3g Outing Club 23 Sphinx 33 THE GRANITE 3g THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, 3g Cross Country 1, 3, Lacrosse lg Winter Track 1, 3g Hillel Club3 Wilhdrcw, E.R.C., February 12, 1943. ULEVIA J. HALEY East Barrington, N. H. Major: Secretarial Association of Women Day Students 1, 23 Outing Club 3. F RANK W. HABIlL'l'0N Newport, Vt. EARL J. HANDLY Springfield, Vt. Major: Physics 1, 2, 33 Debating Club lg German Club 2g Out- ing Club lg Phi Lambda Phi 1, 2, 33 Psychology Clllll 2, :lg Yacht Club 1, 2, 3g Cross Country l, 23 Winter Track I, 2, 33 Winter Track 1, 2g Freshman Play. EDWARD E. HARRIMAN Berwick, Me. Major: Mechanical Engineering R.O.T.C. 3g A.S.lVI.E. 3g Men Commuters' Clllll 1. 23 Outing Club 13 Yacht Club 1, 2, 3. ANNE E. llASKELL Nashua, N. H. Major: Social Service Transfer from Lassell Junior College:, Theta llpsiloII3 Fencing Club 3. WILFRED M. HAs'rINcs Grantham, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering Theta Chig R.O.T.C. 33 A.S.C.E. 33 N. H. Club 2, 33 Outing Club 3g Scabbard and Blade 33 Football 1, 23 Lacrosse 1. 2, 3g Winter Track 1, 2. DONALD J. HARRIS So. Dartmouth, Mass. Major: Government Sigma Beta3 Granite Varieties 23 N. H. Club 2, 3g THE NEW HAMPSHIRE lg Basketball 1, 2, 33 Football 13 Lacrosse 13 International Relations Club 23 Government Club 3. TOWNSEND L. HARRIS Staten Island, N. Y. Major: Electrical Engineering Sigma Beta3 A.I.E.E. 33 Outing Club 1g Yacht Club 13 Glee Club 1, 2. T. PAUL HARRISON Concord, N. H. Major: Economics Kappa Sigma3 Newman Club 1, 2, Executive Committee 3g Outing Club 33 Hockey 2. WVILLIAM L. HARTOP, JR. Old Town, Me. Major: Chemistry Alpha Chi Sigmag Phi Lambda Phi 2, 3g Honor Roll 2. ROBERT J. HEANEY East Rochester, N. H. Major: Chemistry Phi Mu Delta: Spring Travk 2. FREDERICK R. HEARTZ Exeter, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering A.S.C.E.: Yacht Club. ROBERT E. HINCHEY Berlin, N. H. Major: Economics Kappa Sigma: R.0.T.C. 3: Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Seah- bard and Blade 3: Sphinx 3: Cross Country lg Basketball lg Lacrosse l. HAROLD S. HOCH Lawrence, Mass. Major: Mechanical Engineering Transfer from Northeastern University: A.S.M.E. 3. JOHN R. HELFE West Englewood, N. J. Major: Pre-Medical Alpha Tau Omega: Choir: Spring Track 3. RUTH H. HENDERSON South Berwick, Me. Major: Social Service Alpha Kappa Delta 3. GEORGE A. HERB Keene, N. H. Major: Chemistry R.0.T.C. 3: Alpha Chi Sigma, Treasurer 3: German Club 2: Newman Club 1. ELSIE L. HERSEY East Andover, N. H. Major: English S.C.M. lg Outing Club lg Glee Club 1: Softball 1, 2: Omvilla 2, 3. RICHARD J. HORAN Concord, N. H. Major: Business Theta Kappa Phi: R.O.T.C. 3: Blue Circle 2, 35 Granite Varieties 1, 23 Mask and Dagger 1, 2, 3: Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Outing Club 1: Glee Club 1. GEORGE A. HOULE Dover, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon: R.O.T.C. 3, Newman Club 1, 2, 3g Baseball l. BURTON J. HOYLE Bemus Point, N. Y. Major: Horticulture Phi Sigma 33 University Club l, 2: Horticulture Club 1,2,3. FAYETTE M. HOY'1' Walpole, Mass. Major: Dietetics Transfer from Bates College: Outing Club 2, 3: Psy- chology Club 2, 3: Glee Club 2: Field Hockey 2, 3: Softball. ANNE G. HODCKINS Etna, N. H. Major: Physical Education French Club 2g May Day Peageant lg Outing Club 2 Paychology Club 2, 3: THE GRANITE 2, Organizations Editor 3: Softball l, 2: Basketball l, 2, 3: Hockey 2, 3 RI Badminton Club 3. CHARD E. HOLBROOK Montpelier, Vt. FRED A. HOYT, Ill Manchester, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon, R.0.T.C. 3: THE NEW HAMP SHIRE l, 2, Outing Club lg Football Manager 1, 2 Sigma Alpha Eps Lacrosse 1. JOHN E. HUBBARD Laconia, N. H. Major: Business ilong R.O.T.C. 33 Outing Cross Country l. Club 1, 2 LESLIE M. IRELAND Bethel, Me. Major: Home Economics Blue Circle 2. 3: S.C.M. lg Student War Activities Com- mittee 2g May Day Pageant lg Glee Club Ig Women's Ski Team 1, 2, 3g Manager Softball 2: Class Softball l. 2. ATARGUERITE S. JACKSON Augusta. Me. Major: Home Economics Theta lfpsilong S.C.M. lg Granite Varieties 1. 2g May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 3: Choir l, 2, 33 Orchestra l. 2, 3, Glee Club lg Basketball lg Home Economics Club 1. 2, Vice-President, Freshmen Play. ALVIN M. JACOBSON Manchester, N. H. Major: Government R.O.T.C. 3: German Club 2g N.H. Club: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 2: Baseball lg Tennis 25 Basketball Man- a er 1. 2 3' Government Club 3' International Relations g . , , g , Club2. CHARLOTTE M. ,IANES Conway, N. H. Major: Secretarial German Club 2: Honor Roll I, 2g THE GRANITE 2. ROBERT E. HUTCHINSON Concord, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering CARL A. HYLDBURG, JR. Concord. N. H. Major: Government Lambda Chi Alpha: N.H. Club 23 Sphinx 3, Treasurer Cross Country 1, 2, Fall Track 3g Winter Track 1, 2, 3 Spring Track 1, 2: International Relations Club 1. 2, 3 Freshman Play lg Withdrews'. Army Air Corps. J ,fau- NIARY J ANETOS Dover, N. H. Major: Dietetics Association of Women Day Students l, 2, 3, Home Eco nomics Club l, 23 Commuters' Co-op 1, 2. DoRo'rHY E. JELLEY Stoneham. Mass. Major: Secretarial Alpha Xi Delta: May Day Pageant lg Outing Club I. 2: THE GRANITE 23 Clee Club I, 2. FRED M. J ERVIS Kingston, N. H. Major: Education Alpha Tau Omega, R.O.T.C. 3, Baseball 1, 2, Basketball 1, 2, 3, Scabbard and Blade. CAROLYN E. JOHNSON Nashua, N. H. Major: Zoology Chi Omega, May Day Pageant 1, Outing Club 1, 2, 3, Phi Sigma, Basketball 1, Bacteriology Club 3. J AMES P. IQEENAN, JR. Dover, N. H. Major: Business Sigma Beta, Lens and Shutter, Secretary 2, President 3, Mask and Dagger 2, 3, Newman Club 2, Treasurer 3, Student Congress 3, THE GRANITE 2, Photography Editor 3, THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Advertising Manager 3. EDWARD E. KELLEHER Belmont, Mass. Major: Education Theta Kappa Phi, R.O.T.C. 3, Granite Varieties 2, May Day Pageant 1, N. H. Club 2, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Scabbard and Blade 3, Sphinx 3, Vice-President, Bas- ketball 1, 2, Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, Junior Class Executive Committee, Sophomore Hop Committee. CHARLES F. JoHNsoN, JR. Portland, Me. Major: Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Transfer from Portland Junior College, Granite Varieties 2, Outing Club 2, Skiing 2, Lacrosse 3. lVlIRIAM F. JoHNsoN Durham, N. H. Major: History S.C.M. 1, 2, 3, May Day Pageant 1, Honor Roll 1, 2, Glee Club l. 2. President 3, Omvilla Club 1, 2. 3, Pi Gamma Mu. THELMA M. JoRDAN Newmarket, N. H. lllajor: English Association of WOIIICH Day Students 1. 2, 3, Newman Club 3, Outing Club 1, Clee Club 1. l20R0'l'HY A. Dover, N. H. Major: English Alpha Chi Omega, French Club 1, German Club 2, May Day Pageant 1, Newman Club 1, 2, Outing Club 1, Pan Hellenic' 3, Psychology Club 2, Archery Team 1. ROGER F. KELLER Rochester, N. H. Major: Zoology Kappa Sigmag R.0.T.C. 3. DANYAL N. KERVI-:N Istanbul, Turkey Major: Mechanical Engineering A.S.M.E. 3g Lens and Shutter 3g Yacht Club 3. I hlc11ARu S. TQINNIBURGI1 Stratham, N. H. Major: Bacteriology llat-le-rio'logy Club 3. CLARA A. KNIGHT Marlboro, N. H. Major: German Alpha Xi Delta, German Club 1, 25 Granite Varieties 1, May Day Pageant lg THE GRANITE 1, 2, Editor-in-Chief 35 THE NEXV HAMPSHIRE, 1, News Assistant 2, News Editor 39 Choir 1, 2, 3g Glee Club 1, 2g W.A.A. Publicity Director 23 Honor Roll 1, 2, 3. JAMES M. TQIBERD No. Chelmsford, Mass. Major:Art Sigma Beta, 15 German Club 2g Outing Club 1. 2g Yacht Club 13 Football 1g Spring Track 23 Winter' Track 3. lVlARY E. TCIMBALL lVlancl1ester, N. H. Major: Zoology S.C.lVl. 1. 2, Lens and Shutter 2, 3, May Day Pageant 13 Newman Club 3g Outing Club 3, THE GRANITE 2, THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, Yacht Club 3, Archery 3. STEVEN C. TXING West Labanon, N. H. Major: Poultry Husbandry Phi Delta fpsilong Alpha Zeta 2, 3:, Lens and Shutter lg 4-H Club 1. 2:, Honor Roll 1, 2:, Alpha Zeta Scholar- ship 2g Poultry Science Club 1, 2, 33 Sears Scholarship Club 2, 3, Presiflent 23 Withtlrew, A.C.E.R., February 11.19-13. NYILLIAM F. TQING, JR. Laconia, N. ll. lllajorz Merll an ical lfngin eering l.ambcla Chi Alpha, A.S.M.E. 3. 1, N. H. Club 2g Fall Track 1, 2, 3g YVinter Track 1, 2g Spring Track 1. CAROL J. KORZENIEWSKI, J R. Exeter, N. H. Major: Mathematics Baseball 1. CONSTANTINE G. KYREAGRS Dover, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Men Commuters' Club. SHIRLEY LAICHTON Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Home Economics Theta Upsilon, May Day Pageant 1, Outing Club 2, 3, Hockey 1, 2, 3, Basketball 1, 2, 3, Softball 1, 2, 3, All- Star Hockey 3, Freshmen Play, Home Economics Club 3. ARTHUR W. LANGER, JR. Manchester, N. H. Major: Chemistry Sigma Beta, Alpha Chi Sigma 3, Track 1. ROBERT C. :KNIGHT South Berwick, Me. Major: Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma, A.l.E.E. 3, Granite Varieties 1, 2, THF NEW HAMPSHIRE 2, Band 1, 2, 3, Orchestra 1, Cross Country 1, Skiing 1, 2, Lacrosse 1, Fall Track 2. WILLIAM W. 1i0LINSKY Berlin, N. H. Major: Sociology Kappa Sigma, R.O.T.C. 3, N. H. Club 2, 3, Basketball 1, 2. 3, Lacrosse 1, 2. CLARE E. M. LANCLEY Concord, N. H. Major: Music Pi Lambda Sigma, German Club 1, 2, Mask and Dagger 1, 2, 3, May Day Pageant 1, 2, Mike ancl Dial 3, New- man Club 1, 2, 3, Outing Club 1, Pan Hellenic 3 g Choir 1, 2, 3, Band 2, 3, Glee Club 1, Orchestra 2. PAUL W. LAVVLER Fremont, N. H. Major: Hotel Administration Alpha Tau Omega, R.O.T.C. 3, Junior Greeters, 1,2,3 E UGENE H. LEAVER Newport ,N. H. Major: Architecture Sigma Beta, R.O.T.C. 3g Band 1, 2. STANLEY B. LEE, JR. Littleton, N. H. Major: Government Alpha Tau Omega, S.C.M. 1, Outing Club 1, 2:, Sphinx 3, Spring Track lg Hockey Assistant Manager 1, 2, Man- ager 3, International Relations Club 3g Government 3. ANATOLE LEONOVICTT Berlin, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Alpha Chi Sigma 34 Granite Varieties 2, University Band lg Cross Country 1. JACK H. LEPO1-'F Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Physics Phi Lambda Phi 3. ALYCE M. LAWLESS Dover, N. H. Major: Psychology Association ol Women Day Students 1, Classical Club 2, 33 Cranite Varieties 2g Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Outing Club 1, 2, Psychology 2, 33 Yacht Club 23 Clee Club 1. JOHN A. LEAHY Dover, N. H. Major : Biological Chemistry R.O.T.C. 3, Men Commuters' Club 1, 2, 3g Newman Club 2, 3, Winter Track 1. ,ALEX F. LESNEVSKY Claremont, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.l.E.E. 3, Outing Club 3: Yacht Club 3g Wintet' Track lg Spring Track 1. MARILYN E. LEWIS Andover, Mass. Major: Language Association of Women Day Students lg S.C.M. 1, 2, 3, 4-H Club 2, Omvila Club 1, 2, President 3. MAXINE W. LIBBY Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Zoology Association of Wfllllell Day Students l, 23 lifillllltf Var- ieties 2g Phi Sigma 33 Honor Roll lg Band lg Orclleslra l, 2, 33 Fl'CSl'llll1lII Play. li0BER'I' H. LINNI4:I.I, Northwood Ridge, N. H. Major: Chemistry Alpha Chi Sigma 2, 35 German Club 25 Phi L2llllllClLl Phi 2, 3g Honor Roll 1, 2, 3g Orchestra 1, 3, Spring Track 2. PIIIIJI' E. Loan Milton, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.l.E.E. 3g Outing Club 1, 2, 3. ELIZABETH H. LITCEY Rorhester. N. ll. Major: English Alpha ClIi Omegag German Club 23 Mask and Dagger 2, 33 May Day Pageant lg Mike and Dial 2, 3g Newman Club 1, 3g Outing Club lg Psychology Club 2. DoNAI.n W. L1Nsco1 I' Concord, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Phi Mu Della, R.O.T.C. 3g A.S.M.E. 3, Granite Varieties 2, Lens and Shutter l, 3, President 2g Outing Club 1, 2, 33 Yacht Club l, 2g Ski Team l, 3. RUTH LINSCUTT Nashua, N. H. Major: French Alpha Xi Deltag French Club 2, 3, Granite Varieties May Day Pageant lg Outing Club lg Secretarial Club THE GRANITE 2g Glce Club lg S.C.M. l. RUSSELL B. LISLE, JR. Lowell, Mass. Major: Chemistry Transfer l.l'0lll Boston University, Alpha Chi Sigma 2, German Cluh 2g Glee Club 2. IIENRY F. Lopez Warner, N. H. Major: Business Administration Tau Kappa Epsilon, R.O.T.C. 33 S.C.M. 1, 2, 3g Out Club l, 2, 3g Football l, 2, 33 Winter Track 2. 1: 2 9 3 g ing Hotu1:R'l'lJ.l.tft:i' North Conway. N H. Major: Geology Latnbtla Chi Alpha: Outing Club 2. 3: Witlidreis. -'K l' F R I'lf'IlI'lI'll'N ll l9l'i .1.l... t . -. .louw H. l.t'x't' ll1tw'l'llill, Maw. Major: 1,llj'Sil'S R.0.T.C. 3: Outing Club 3: Phi Lambda Phi 2, 3: Yacht Club 1: Hockey 1. l+ls't'tn1R F. MARIJEN llolflcrttcss. N. H. Major: Dielelicx S.C.lVl. lg May llay Pageant, lg fl-H Club 1. 2: Outing Club 3, Yavht Club lg Home Evonomirs Club l, 2. 3. l'tusc:tt.l,A E. NlARRO'l l'E Dover. N. H. Major: Masir El1lll'1llilIl1 Association of Wotuon Day Students 1, 2, 33 Choir 2, 3. 'lb' '?,,,.'?' SHIRLEY M. LYFoRn Wilton, N. H. Major: Physical Ellllflllillll, Kappa Delta, Outing Club: Pan-Hellenic 2. 3: Psychol- ogy Club 3: Yacht Club 2, 3: All-Star Basketball 2, 3g Hockey 1. 2, All-Star 3: Softball 1, 2: Fencing Club 3. NVESLEY P. LYON, Ju. Summit, N. J. Major: Hotel Administration Theta Chi: Granite Varieties 1: Mask and Dagger 1, 2: May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 1. 2: Junior Greeters 1, 2, Vice-President 3: Cleo Club 1, Vive-President 2. DONALD R. MACGREGOR Derry. N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Glec Club l. 23 Choir 2. 3: Witlidrexs. Aruiy. .November 17. l9t2. 'l'1lox1As,l. NlANNlNG Mancllcstcr. N. H. Major: Clleluislry Alpha Chi Sigma 3: Neuman Club l. 2. 3: Hockey 1. lVlARY-LOUISE. lVlCCAR'I'HY Dover, N. H. Major: Zoology Association of Vllomen Day Students 15 Ncwsxnan Club 2, 35 4-H Club 35 Outing Club 15 Phi Sigma 35 Honor Roll 1, 25 Bacteriology Club 3. MELBA B. MCKAY Gloucester, Mass. Major: Sociology Alpha Xi Deltag Alpha Kappa Delta 35 Blue Circle 2, 35 College Chest Fund Committee, Secretary 2, 35 Student Will' Activities Committee 2, 35 Pan-Hellenic 2, 35 Student Congress 15 Women's Student Government, Treasurer 35 Cleo Club 15 All-Star Hockey 15 Tennis Class Champion 1, 25 Class Secretary 1, 2, 3. JOHN E. MCICOAN Henniker, N. H. Major: Economics Kappa Signlag R.O.T.C. 35 Debating Club 15 Newman Club 1, 2, 35 Outing Club 1, 25 Psychology Club 25 Scabbard and Blade 35 Glee Club 1. l1lAURICE L. V. MCQUILLEN Manchester, N. H. Major: English R.O.T.C. 35 German Club 1, 25 Newman Club 1, 2, 35 Outing Club 15 Folio Club 35 Press Club 1. S.l..M. 1, 2, R.O.T.C. 35 Ermwon E. MARs'roN Loudon, N. H. Major: Home Economics 35 May Day Pageant 15 11--H Home Economics Club l, 2, 3. EVERM1' F. lVlASON Charlestown, N. H. Major: Education Psychology Club 25 Band 1, 1,2. Outing Club l11AR'l'1NE MERRIAM Pelham, N. H. Major: Education 35 Yacht Club 25 Hockey 1. 1, 25 Basketball 35 Archery 2. RICHARD W. l1lERRIFII'Ll.lJ Brockton, Mass. Major: Mechanical Engineerin R.O.T.C. 35 A.S.M.E. 1. Club 1, 2, 35 25 Orchestra 2, 35 Softball Rfwmown J. lW'llLAS Meriden. Conn. Major: Mer-hunicul Ellfgill0Cl'illg A.l.M.E. 35 Newman Cluly 2, lWAURICE E. PMIVILLI4 Manchester, N. H. Major: Chemistry Track 1, 2. PETER MOORENOVICL1 Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Horticulture ' R.O.T.C. 3. A. RICHMOND MoRcoA1 Braintree, Mass. Major: Physical Education R.O.T.C. 3, N. H. Club 2, 33 Scabhard and Blade 3g Student Council 2, 3, Cross Country lg Indoor Track 1, 2, 3g Class President 3, YVh0's Who 3. CHARLES A. MERRILL Andover, Me. Major: Forestry R.O.T.C. 33 N. 11. Club 1, 2, 33 Outing Club 1, 2, 3g Svabbard and Blade 3g Ski Team 1, 2, 3. ll'lAl,l20l.M W. MEsERvE Mevhunic Falls, Mc. Major: Forestry R.U.T.C. 35 Scabbard and Blade 35 Football 1, 2, 33 Baseball 1, 2. .louw C. Mom:AN, JR. News tonville, Mass. Major: Chemical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon, R.0.T.C. 3g Phi Lambda Phi 2, 33 Hockey 1. GLENYS H. MORSE Portsmouth, N. H. Major : Business Association of Vlfomen Day Students 1, 25 Commuters Co-op, Secretary-Treasurer 2. J oHN H. MUDGE Moosup, Conn. Major: Business Alpha Tau Omega, R.O.T.C. 3: Outing Club 3: Football 1, Lacrosse 1: Hockey 1, 2, 3. WAYNE J. MULLAVEY Manchester, N. H. Major: Pre-Law Sigma Alpha Epsilon: R.O.T.C. 33 Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Debating Club, German Club. PRISCILLA NOELTE Pawtucket, R. l. Major: Social Service Transfer from Colby Junior College, Outing Club 3. THEDA L. OAKES Lisbon, N. H. Major: Physical Education Blue Circle 1, 2, 3: Lens and Shutter 2, 33 Mask and Dagger 2, 3, Hockey 1, 2, 3, Softball 1, 23 Basketball 1,2. JAMES W. NELsoN Greenland, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical Men Commuters' Club 1, 2: Winter Track. ARI.INE A. NICHOLS Kingston, N. H. Major: Biology S.C.M. lg Outing Club lg Phi Sigma 3. THOMAS R. NILES Berlin, N. H. Major: Education Sigma Beta: R.O.T.C. 33 Scabbard and Blade 3g Sphinx 35 Junior Greeters 1, Lacrosse 1, 2: Basketball lg With- drew, Army Air Corps. RUTH C. NISSEN Hillsboro, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical German Club 1, 2: May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 1, 2, 3: Yacht Club 1, 2, 35 Hockey 1, 2, 3. CHARLES F. OBERG Wilton, N. H. Major: Poultry Husbandry Phi Lambda Phi 1, 2, 3, Yacht Club 1, Student Co-op 1, 2, Chess Club 1, President 2, 3, Poultry Science Club 1, 2, 3, Student Committee on Educational Policy 3. RITA 07CONNOR Lynn, Mass. Major: Secretarial Transfer from Stoneleigh Junior College, Alpha Xi Delta, Newman Club 3, Outing Club 3. RALPH J. OTIS, J R. Dover, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering R.O.T.C. 3, A.S.M.E. 3, Men Commuters, Club 1. WARREN H. PAPEMAN Pearl River, N. Y. Major: Chemical Engineering Transfer from Bergen Junior College. THOMAS A. 07D0NNELL Salem Depot, N. H. Major: Biology Theta Kappa Phi, R.O.T.C. 3, Debating Club 1, Granite Varieties 1, Executive Committee 2, Mask and Dagger 2, 3, Mike and Dial 1, 2, 3, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Execu- tive Committee, Student Council 35 Tau Kappa Alpha 2, 3, THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Editor 3, Who's Who 3. MELVAIN OLIPHANT Goshen, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Sigma Beta, A.1.E.E., Baseball Manager 1, 2, 3. BARBARA A. O7NEILL Dedham, Mass. Major: History Alpha Chi Omega, May Day Pageant 1, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Psychology Club 2, 3, THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1. RUSSELL C. ORTON Ashland ,N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Tau Kappa Epsilon, R.0.T.C. 3, A.S.M.E. 3, Mask and Dagger 3, Outing Club 3, Scabbard and Blade 3, Sphinx 3, Glee Club 2, Basketball 1, Baseball lg Winter Track. GEORGE A. PATTEN Bristol, N. H. Major: Forestry Alpha Gamma Rhog R.0.T.C. 3g S.C.M. 13 Forestry Club 1, 2, 33 Secretary 2, Treasurer 3. HELEN A. PEARCE Bethlehem, N. H. Major: English Theta Upsilong Student War Activities Committee 23 May Day Pageant 13 Outing Club 1, 2, 33 Psychology Club 2g Currier Fisher Scholarship 33 Freshmen Play 1. SARA M. PEARSON Webster, N. H. Major: English French Club 1, 23 German Club 23 Mike and Dial 3g Outing Club 33 THE GRANITE 23 Yacht Club 1, 2, Secretary 33 Freshmen Dance Committee3 Tau Kappa Alpha Bronze Medal 1. LUCILE PERLEY Laconia, N. H. Major: Zoology Transfer from Endicott Junior College. JOHN T. PAPPAS Keene, N. H. DOROTHY PARKER Durham, N. H. Granite Varieties 1, 23 Mask and Dagger 2, 3g May Day Pageant 1, 23 Mike and Dial 33 Psychology Club 2, 3g THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Advertising Manager 3, Business Manager 33 Glee Club 13 Field Hockey 1, 2, 3g Freshman Play 13 Honor Roll 2. LEo A. PERREAULT Somersworth, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Alpha Chi Sigma 2, 33 German Club 23 Men Commuters, Club 1, 2g Newman Club 3g Assistant Manager Track 1, 23 Manager Varsity Track 3. BERNARD J . PERRY Manchester, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.l.E.E.3 Newman Club. RALPH R. PINO Gloucester, Mass. Major: Education Theta Kappa Phi, R.O.T.C. 33 Student War Activities Committee 23 N. H. Club 2, 3, Newman Club l, 2, 3: Scabbard and Blade: Student Council 2g Football l, 2, 3: Spring Track l, 2, 3g Winter Track l, 2, 3: Class Executive Committee l, 2, 3. ELIZABETH A. PIPER Northwood Ridge, N. H. Major: Music Association of Women Day Students lg Outing Club 3g Choir 2, 3: Orchestra l, 2, 33 Glee Club 2. RAY E. POMEROY, JR. Mount Vernon, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering R.O.T.C. 35 A.S.C.E. 3: May Day Pageant lg 4-H Club 1, 2, 33 Spring Track. CARLTON B. PREBLE Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha, Blue Circle 2, 3: Outing Club 1, 2, 3: Freshman Play. PHILIP G. PETERS Franklin, N. H. Major: Government Debating Club lg May Day Pageant lg Mike and Dial 1, 2: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 1, 2, Sports Editor 33 Government Club 33 International Relations Club l, 3. WVILLIAIVI S. PINE Manchester, N. H. Major : Electrical Engineering Sigma Beta: R.O.T.C. 3, 4: A.l.E.E. 3, 4: S.C.M: 1, 25 Granite Varieties l, 2: Glee Club l, 2. CHARLES S. PRESCOTT, .I R. Portsmouth, N. H. Major: English Band lg Orchestra lg Honor Boll. EARLE C. QUIMBY Keene, N. H. Major : Mechnical Engineering Theta Chig Outing Club l, 2, 3: R.O.T.C. 33 Scabbard and Blade 33 A.S.M.E. 33 Yacht Club lg Spring Track 1.2. I-I. SCOTT RANDALL, JR. Dover, N. H. Major: Chemistry Outing Club 13 Men Commuters' Club lg Hockey lg Tennis 1. HENRY A. RAPSIS Nashua, N. H. Major: Sociology Sigma Betaz, Newman Club 1, 2, 3g R.O.T.C. 3g Scabbard and Blade 33 Sociology Club 1, 3g Football 13 Basketball 1, 23 Track 1. GEORGE W. RIOLO Hastings-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. Major: Business Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon3 S.C.M. 13 Student War Activities Committee 2g Economics Club 33 Granite Varieties 23 Honor Roll 1, 2, 33 Sphinx 33 Cross Country 13 Track 13 Tennis 23 College Chest Fund Committee 2g Glee Club 1. LESLIE E. ROBERTS Alton, N. H. Major: Dairy Husbandry R.O.T.C. 3g Alpha Zeta 2, 33 4-H Club. SHERMAN M. REED Keene, N. H. Major: Engineering Phi Delta Upsilong R.O.T.C. 33 Scabbard and Blade 33 A.I.E.E. 33 Baseball 1, 23 Ski Team Manager l. PATRICIA E. REYNOLDS Danvers, Mass. Major: French Transfer from Colby Junior Collegeg Outing Club 1. CHARLES A. RICHARDSON East Kingston, N. H. Major: Business Theta Chi3 Granite Varieties 13 Mike and Dial 1, 2, Publicity Director 33 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 23 Psy- chology Club 2, 33 Glee Club 13 Tau Kappa Alpha 2, Treasurer 33 Baseball 13 Basketball 13 Track 2. ALLEN P. RICHMOND Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilong R.O.T.C. 33 S.C.M. lg A.1.E.E. 33 Outing Club lg Yacht Club 1, 2, Commodore 33 Ski Team Manager 1. MARCIA ROBINSON Manchester, N. H. Major: English Chi Omega, Blue Circle 1, 2, 3, Outing Club 1, 2, 3, Secretarial Club 2, Women's Student Government 2, W.A.A. Secretary 2, Rec Manager 3, Aide to Carnival Queen 1, 2, Carnival Queen 3. NIARGUERITE F. RUGGLES Salem, N. H. Major: Dietetics S.C.M. 1, May Day Pageant 1, Outing Club 1, THE GRANITE 2, Activities Editor 3, Yacht Club 1, Sec- retary 2, Basketball 1, Home Economics Club 3. W, 45. , 3 --:, ELLEN L. SANBORN Sanhornton, N. H. Major: Geology S.C.M. 1, 3, 4-H Club 1, Yacht Club 1, 2, 3, Choir 3, Glee Club 1, 2, Field Hockey 1, 2, 3, All-Star Hockey 3, Softball 1, 2, Omvila Club 2, Secretary-Treasurer 3. VERNON E. SANBORN Alton, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering A.S.M.E. 3. WALLACE A. RUSSELL Keene, N. H. Major: History Alpha Gamma Rho, R.O.T.C. 3, Psychology Club 2, THE GRANITE 2, Business Manager 3, Orchestra 1, 2, 3, Band 1, Clee Club 2. HELEN RZEZNIKIEWICZ Manchester, N. H. Major: Zoology May Day Pageant 1, Newman Club 3, Outing Club 1, Phi Sigma 3. CONSTANCE J. SALTA Laconia, N. H. Major: English Chi Omega, Blue Circle 3, Outing Club 1, 2, 3, Pan- Hellenic 2, 3, Secretarial Club 2, Student Committee on Educational Policy 3. BEATRICE M. SANBORN Rochester, N. H. Major: Mathematics S.C.M. 1, 2, 3, May Day Pageant 1, 4--H Club 1, 2, 3, Outing Club 1, Honor Roll 1, 2. ROBERT N. SAWYER, J R. Franklin, N. H. Major: Hotel Administration Kappa Sigmag R.0.T.C. 33 S.C.M. 1, 23 Mask and Dagger 2, 3g N. H. Club 33 Outing Club 1, 2, 3g Junior Greeters l, 2, 33 Varsity Football Manager 2, 3g Spring Track l: Ski Team 13 College Chest Fund Committee 3. OTTO SCHRICKER, JR. Manchester, N. H. Major: Chemical Engineering Sigma Betag Alpha Chi Sigma 2, 3g Newman Club 2, 33 Phi Lambda Phi 2, 3. RAYMOND J. SCHUTZ Haledon, N. J. Major: Chemical Engineering Newman Club 3. HELEN E. SHERMAN Franklin, N. H. Major: History Outing Club lg Glee Club 13 Fencing Club 3. EUNICE E. SANDER Concord, N. H. Major: English Classical Club lg Outing Club 13 THE GRANITE l, 23 Yacht Club 23 Folio Club 3. RALPH E. SANDERS Rochester, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering A.S.C.E. ROSAMOND M. SHORTELL Manchester, N. H. Major: Language French Club 23 Newman Club l, 2g Outing Club l, 2. l'lERlVIAN T. SKOFIELD New Boston, N. H. Major: English R.O.T.C. 3: Student War Activities Committee 23 De- bating Club l, 2, 3g Mask and Dagger 3g Mike and Dial 2, 3g Scabbard and Blade 3g Tau Kappa Alpha 2, 33 International Relations Club 3. G. MURRAY SMITH Braintree, Mass. Major: Economics Theta Chi: Class Vice-President 2, 3: R.O.T.C. 3: Scali- hard and Blade 3: Student Council 2, 3: Student Con- gress l: Football 1: Winter Track 1, 2, 3: Spring Track 1, 2, 3. JOAN R. SIVIITH St. Petersburg, Fla. Major: Home Economics Theta Upsilon: May Day Pageant l. VIVIAN M. SMITH Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Zoology Theta Upsilon: May Day Pageant 1: Outing Club 1, 2, 3: Psychology Club 2: Fencing Club 3: Freshman Play l. SHIRLEY SPECTOR Manchester, N. H. Major: English Menorah Society 2, 3: Psychology Club 2: Choir 2. MARY E. SMALL Hollis, N. H. Major: English Theta Upsilon: S.C.M. 1: May Day Pageant 1: Outing Club 1: Pan-Hellenic 3: THE GRANITE 2: Yacht Club 1, 2: Glee Club 1. WILLIAM L. SMART Portsmouth, N. H. Major: Geology R.O.T.C. 3: A.l.M.E. 2, 3: Men Commuters, Club 1, Secretary-Treasurer 2. W RICHARD 0. STAFF Claremont, N. H. Major: Government Alpha Tau Omega: R.O.T.C. 3: Blue Circle 3: Outing Club 2: Glee Club 3: International Relations Club 3: Defense Stamp Committee 3. STEPHEN L. STARKEY New Castle, N. H. Major: English R.O.T.C. 3: German Club 1: Yacht Club 1: Band 1: Winter Track 2: Folio 2: Commuters' Co-op 1, 2. ELIZABETH F. STEARNS Hancock, N. H. Major: Chemistry German Club 1: May Day Pageant 1: Yacht Club 3: Glee Club 1, 2: Class Basketball 1, 2: All-Star Basketball Team 1, 2, 3. CAROLYN E. STEELE Kennebunk, Me. Major: English May Day Pageant 1: Glee Club 1, 2: Omvila Club, Treas- urer 1, President 2. lVIARJORIE L. STOCK Tilton, N. H. Major: Dietetics S.C.M. 1, 2, 3: May Day Pageant 1: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3. ELEANOR STORM Hollis, N. H. Major: Dietetics S.C.M. 1: May Day Pageant 1: Outing Club: THE GRANITE 2, Managing Editor 3: Glee Club 1: Class Basketball 1: Badminton Club 3: Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3: Honor Roll 1. ETHEL C. STEIGINIANN Manhasset, N. Y. Major: Home Economics Alpha Xi Delta: S.C.M. 1: Outing Club 1: Glee Club 1. JAMES S. STEVENS, JR. Greenwich, Conn. Major: Chemistry Alpha Tau Omega: S.C.M. 1: Outing Club 1, 2: Psy- chology Club 1, 2, 3: THE GRANITE 2: Winter Track 1: Spring Track 1: .I.V. Football 2. EDMUND L. STEWART, JR. Manchester, N. H. Major: Business Tau Kappa Epsilon: R.O.T.C. 3: Lens and Shutter: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE, Business Manager 3: Cross Country 1: Winter Track 1: Track 1: Withdrew, Armed Services. ROBERTA A. STEWART Rochester, N. H. Major: Chemistry Association of Women Day Students 1, 2: French Club 1, 2: Outing Club 1. Sl , is R.o.T.c. 3, DAVID G. STUART Lakeport, N. H. Major: Civil Engineering A.S.C.E.g Newman Clubg Yacht Club, Track lg Winter Track 1. HENRY F. SZCZEPAN Manchester, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Phi Mu Deltag A.S.M.E. 3. S.C.M. lg French Club 23 German Club 2g S.C.M. 1, 2, JANET B. Tozmn Plaistowg N. H. Major: History EDITH M. TREGANZA Enfield, N. H. Major: Social Service 33 May Day Pageant 13 Sociology Club 15 Band 1. Outing Club 1. RUTH TASKER Northwood Narrows, N. H. QUENTIN 0. THEROUX West Stewartstown, N. H. Major: Mechanical Engineering Alpha Gamma Rhog R.O.'1 .C. 33 A.S.M.E.g Hockey 1. PHILIP E. THURRELL East Wolfeboro, N. H. Major: Poultry Husbandry Theta Chig R.0.T.C. 3g Student Wal' Activities Com- mittee Sg Outing Clubg Scabbard and Blade 3, Sphinx 3, Student Committee on Educational Policy 25 Poultry Science Club 1, 2, 3. NORMAN E. TOUSSAINT Berlin, N. H. J AMES C. TUCKER Stoneham, Mass. Withdrew February 9, 1943, Air Corps Enlisted Reserve. ALFRED A. TURBIELLE Rochester, N. H. Major: Architecture Sigma Betag R.O.T.C. 3, Men Commuters' Club 1, 2. EDGAR G. VARNEY, JR. Rochester, N. H. Major: Art Lambda Chi Alpha, R.O.T.C. 3, Blue Circle 35 Outing Club 2, 3, Scabbard and Blade 33 Skiing 1. 2, 33 Student Writer 2. NORMA H. VINCENT Laconia, N. H. Major: Zoology Phi Sigma 3g THE NEW HAMPSHIRE lg Mortar Board Plaque for Freshman Women l. DOROTHY M. Tltow Nashua, N. H. Major: Home Economics Theta Upsilong S.C.M. lg Granite Varieties 2g May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 1, 2, 3, Yacht Club lg Glee Club lg Home Economics Club 1, 3. GLENNA F. TRUE Fremont, N. H. Major: Home Economics 3g May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 13 Glee Club 1, 2, Home Economics Club 3. R.O.T.C. 3, Mas PAUL H. R. WALDRON West Hartford, Conn. ALLEN W. WALKER Grantham, N. H. Major: Chemistry lc and Dagger 2, 3g Ski Team Manager 3 . M D0RoTHY XVENTZELL Somerville, Mass. Major: English Blue Circle 35 Outing Club 2, 35 Yacht Club 2g Glee Club 3. hlAR'l'HA ZINK WTHEELI-IR Xvest Newbury, Mass. Major: Art Chi 0mega5 May Day Pageant 15 Psychology Club 35 Glee Club 15 Pepcat 2, 3. ROBERT F. WHEELER Concord, N. H. Major: Physical Education Theta Chig R.0.T.C. 35 N.H. Club 2, 35 Scubbarll and Blade 35 Yacht Club l. 25 Basketball 1, 2, Captain 35 Baseball 1. JEAN M. WIHITCOMB Keene, N. H. Major: English S.C.M. 2, 35 THE GRANITE 25 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 2, 3. HAROLD H. WARREN Mount Vernon, N. H. Major: Chemistry Phi Delta Upsilong Honor R011 15 Choir 1, 25 Glee Club 1, 2. XVYATT L. NVEBB Dover, N. H. Major: English Phi Mu lJelta5 Band 1, 2, 35 Witl1d1'ew, E.R.C. January 30, 1943. 1N1ARlLYN S. VVHITCOMB Bath, N. H. lllajor: English Alpha Chi Omega, Big Sister Committee 35 Psychology Club 25 Honor Roll 1, 2, 35 THE NEW HABIPSHIRE 1, 35 Basketball 2, 35 Folio Club 35 College Chest Fund Committee 35 George Engelhardt Scholarship 3. HARLAN D. NVHITEHEAD Methuen, Mass. Major: Chemical Engineering Lambda Chi Alphag Outing Club 1, 2, 35 Band 1, 25 Hockey 15 Lacrosse 15 Hockey Manager 2, 3. HERBERT C. WIELAND Lawrence, Mass. Major: Architecture Transfer from U. S. Naval Acaclemyg Alpha Sigma 33 Honor Roll 2, 35 Winter Track 2, 33 Spring Track 2, 3g Cross Country 3. EDWIN A. WIGGIN Exeter, N. H. Major: Chemistry Alpha Chi Sigma 33 German Club 1g Men Commuters' Club 1, 2. MARTHA H. Wo0DWoRTr1 Durham, N. H. Major: Zoology S.C.M. 1, 2g German Club 1, 2g Mask and Dagger 3g May Day Pageant lg Outing Club 1g Honor Roll 1, 2g Orchestra 2. HERBER'f M. XVUTH West Roxbury, Mass. Major: Mechanical Engineering Phi Mu Delta: A.S.M.E. 3g S.C.M. lg Outing Club lg Yacht Club 1, 2, 3g Basketball Manager 1, 2g Varsity Basketball Manager 3. IQENNETH R. XVIGGIN Stratham, N. H. Major: Dairy Husbandry Alpha Gama Rhog R.O.T.C. 3g S.C.M. 1, 2, 3g Granite Varieties lg lnterfraternity Council 33 Outing Club 1. GERALD H. WTOLCOT1' Bethlehem, N. H. Major: Economics Theta Kappa Phig R.O.T.C. 3g Newman Club 1, 2, 3g Scabbard and Blade 3. BERNARD A. WOODS Manchester, N. H. Major: Pre-Medical German Club 2. DUNCAN F. WOODWARD Penacook, N. H. Major: Poultry Husbandry Theta Chig R.O.T.C. 3g Alpha Zeta 2, 3g Honor Roll 1, 2g Spring Track 2g Poultry Science Club 1, 2, 3g Sears Roebuck Scholarship Club 2, 3. ALBERT G. YEATON Epson, N. H. Major: Electrical Engineering A.l.E.E. 3. OLGA E. YEATON Short Falls, N. H. Major: Mathematics Granite Varieties 23 May Day Pageant lg Outing Club lg Psychology Club 25 Honor Roll 1, 25 Choir 2, 3: Glee Club lg Ski Team lg Freshman Play: Sophomore Hop Committee. HAZEL BROWN Walpole, N. H. JAMES T. YOUNG Dover, N. H. Major: History R.O.T.C. 3: Men Commuters' Club 1, 2. JANE B. BROVVNING Washington, D. C. Major: English Transfer from Vassar College: Mask and Dagger 3: THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 3. DONALD H. RICHARDS Exeter, N. H. Major: History BERNARD P. ROSENBLATT Concord, N. H. Major: History Phi Alpha: Debating Club lg Granite Varieties lg Mike and Dial 1, 2g THE NEW HAMPSHIRE 13 Hillel 1, 2, 3: Freshman Play. 78 X -Nl!-I n f D f 6 ,f ,nib ... 5 A54-o -- I, s -. 1 f Pl! 9-H gy- K jf L- f 7' Az Q' X' Eg gl, N Naa- Prasidenl . , A JOSEPH STRIFMSKI Vice-President ..,. .. ,. JOYCE SMITH Secretary ., . . BARBARA SHEPARD Treasurfr . ,1'HlL1PPA1,I.As 57lUA0IflfL0l if Abbott, Francis W., Peterborough Abbott, Maurice E., Chocorua Abell, Paul I., Durham Agnew, Jean F., Brattleboro, Vt. Ainley, Carol M., Manchester Ames, Mary E., Somersworth Anderson, Maye, Hyannis, Mass. Andrew, Virginia A., Fitchburg, Mass Angelowitz, Shirley, Berlin Appleyard, Robert G. Methuen, Mass Arlauskas, Stanley M., Nashua Atwood, John H., Wellesley, Mass. Auderer, V. Elaine, Wolfeboro Auerbach, David I., Brookline, Mass. Avery, Roland M., Framingham, Mass Baker, Eli B., Rochester Barr, Laurence S., Natick, Mass. Barrett, Paul, Hudson Barry, Donald F., Lewiston, Me. Barton, Jane, New London Basdekis, William H., Manchester Batzis, Evangeline, Manchester Bean, Franklin E., Exeter Bean, Robert W., Errol Bedard, Robert G., Whitefield Benedict, George B., Seabrook Benson, Kirk L., Dedham, Mass. Bergethon, O. Millard, Brooklyn, N. Y Birdsall, Keith, Caldwell, N. Y. Bisbas, James A., Manchester Bisbee, Margaret J., Waitsfield, Vt. Bobotas, Socrates C., Manchester Bograkos, Nicholas, Dover Bond, Elinor F., Medford, Mass. Boody, Margaret C., Franklin Booth, Mary-Louise, Foxboro, Mass. Borrok, Martin J., Jackson Heigths, N. Bowley, John T., Milford Boyd, Robert B., Bradford, Mass. Boynton, Shirley B., North Whitefield, Me. Bratt, Albert V., Wellesley Farms, Mass. Brewster, Irving R., Exeter Brooks, Dorothy E., Manchester Brown, Aaron R., So. Berwick, Me. Brown, Barbara, New London, Conn. Brown, Elizabeth N., Manchester Brown, George I., Lebanon Brown, Howard H., Laconia Brown, Marion P., Revere, Mass. Brown, Oscar W. L., Wentworth Brown, Rachel, Hinsdale Brown, Ruth E., Bradford Brungot, George R., Berlin Bryan, John K., New Augusta, Ind. Bryant, William R., Goffstown Burbank, Elliot W., Jr., Alton Butler, William S., Fremont Cahall, Robert B., Pittsfield, Mass. Canton, Charles R., Whitefield Carde, Philip R., Milo, Me. Carens, Ruth M., Newburyport, Mass. Carlson, Charles W., Newmarket Carlson, Viola H., Hampton Carpenter, Paul F., Somersworth Carrier, Ruth H., Winchester, Mass. Case, Chester A., West Hartford, Conn Chadwick, Joyce, Bradford, Mass. Chandler, Alma G., Kittery, Me. Chapman, Lloyd E., Southbridge, Mass. Chase, Anita, Sutton Christian, Beatrice M., Dedham, Mass. Churchill, Raymond F., Putney, Vt. Churchill, Ruth J., Westmoreland Depot Clapp, Barbara M., Nashua Clark, Charles, Jr., Belmont, Mass. Clark, George A., Lisbon Clark, Walter B., Melrose, Mass. Y. Clarke, Shirley M., Springvale, Me. Cleasby, Carolyn, Lancaster Clifford, James E., Contoocook Clifford, Mary E., Nashua Clough, Yvonne M., Concord Coburn, Margaret, Tyngsboro, Mass. Colby, Marilyn F ., Hillsboro Collins, Joan, Laconia Cook, Mildred E., Newmarket Copeland, Normajane, Rochester Corchary, George S., Concord Corey, Norma E., Manchester Cram, Burton W., Newport Crane, Doris A., Hillsboro Crepeau, Lionel T., Whitefield Cressy, Marilyn R., Bradford Cressy, Ruth A., Bradford Cross, John D., Berlin Cummings, Robert C., Colebrook Cunning, David P., Medford, Mass. Curcuru, Philip B., Gloucester, Mass. Cushing, John D., Hampton Dalton, Bettina J., Durham Dane, William J., Concord D,Arcy, Barbara L., Southbridge, Mass Davis, Katherine S., Contoocook Davis, Robert S., Jr., Orleans, Mass. Davis, Ruth P., Meredith Dean, David A., East Hartford, Conn. DeCicco, Ernest M., Wakefield, Mass. DeCicco, Gloria, Portsmouth DeGross, Paul R., Manchester DeMeritt, John, Pennington, N. J. DeMuzio, Josef A., Bellows Falls, Vt. Derby, Bernice R., Hillsboro DeRochemont, Margherita G., Portsmouth DesMarais, Lionel A., Somersworth Deveneau, Marion P., Durham Dillon, Robert F., Manchester Dixon, Donald F., Rochester Docos, Andre S., Manchester Dodge, Philip R., Lawrence, Mass. Dodge, Richard A., Moorestown, N. J Dondero, Alan P., Medford, Mass. Donovan, Anne, Plymouth, Mass. Dooley, Philip G., Hudson Dougherty, Marshall H., Lowell, Mass. Dow, Albert H., Jr., Tuftonboro Dowd, Virginia C., Nashua Downer, Raymond J., Southbridge, Mass. Downs, Evelyn L., Portsmouth Drew, Ernest L., Union Drew, Esther S., Union Dube, M. Jeannette, Conway Durfee, Mary E., Dover Dutton, Estelle L., Derry Dwyer, Thomas F., Manchester Dyer, Stephen W., Jr., Lawrence, Mass. Eckfeldt, Rosamond, Fitchburg, Mass. Edgerly, Margaret C., Pittsfield Edwards, Marcia L., Antrim Elkins, Dorice F., Hampton Falls Ellis, Elizabeth P., Haverhill, Mass. Emery, Dorothy A., Greenland Emery, Faith E., Springvale, Me. Entwistle, Margaret E., Portsmouth Ericson, Martin W., Claremont Faigel, David S., Lawrence, Mass. Farwell, Lloyd S., Wakefield, Mass. Feldman, Merrill I., Brighton, Mass. Fessenden, Paul E., Brookline Fischer, Robert, Bronx, N. Y. Fitts, Dorothy, Durham Fletcher, Charles R., Westford, Mass. Foley. Carolyn C., Dover Folsom, Carolyn A., Arlington, Mass. Forbes, William J., Newton, Mass. Foulkrod, Jean, Durham Fredyma, Paul, Suncook 80 Freese, William S., Pittsfield French, Constance, Hopkinton French, Warren F., East Andover Gagne, Stella M., Suncook Garran, Priscilla E., Hanover Garrett, Mary E., Berlin George, Ralph H., Hopkinton Gilchrist, Priscilla K., Franklin Gillett, Dorothy M., Portsmouth Goddard, Wallace, Laconia Goodrich, Barbara L., Exeter Gorfinkle, Herbert J., Chestnut Hill, Mass. Gove, David, Laconia Gozonsky, Morris J., Laconia Grant, Donald C., Chelmsford, Mass. Graziani, Ellen C., Dover Griffin, Mary E., Portsmouth Griffin, Pauline L., Berlin Hager, Robert R., Concord Haine, Dennis M., Durham Hale, Anne L., Rockaway, N. J. Hale, Charles E., Dover Hall, Anne C., Gloucester, Mass. Hammond, Dean G., Haverhill Handy, Robert A., Marshfield, Mass. Harding, Alfred S., Portsmouth Harrington, Hattie E., Windsor, Vt. Harte, E. Beverly, Portsmouth Harvey, Agnes A., Epping Haselton, Ernest F., Manchester Hastings, Alfred F., Contoocook Hatch, George W., Dover Haubrich, Robert R., Claremont Hayes, Ferne G., Dover Haynes, Ruth A., Lancester Hefterman, Rachel, Manchester Hewey, Beverly A., Washington, D. C Higson, Kenneth J., Rochester Hill, Royce W., Brentwood Hon, Phyllis M., Rye Beach Honkala, Rudolf A., Salisbury Howard, Marion F., Glen Hoxie, Lloyd B., Plaistow Hoyt, Lillian C., Wvalpole, Mass. Hoyt, M. Elizabeth, Etna Hunton, John H., Athol, Mass. Huse, Eleanor F., Laconia Hutchins, Ardelia, Melrose, Mass. Innes, Ethel M., Franklin Isaak, Andrew, Manchester Jackson, Vera W., Fall River, Mass. Janetos, George, Dover Jewett, Eleanor L., Gloucester, Mass. Johnson , Edith N., Arlington, Mass. Johnson Grace E., Manchester Johnson, K. Louise, New Bedford, Mass. Johnson, Margaret E., Winchester Johnson Virginia, L., Northwood Narrows Joslyn, Joyce E., South Royalton, Vt. Kapit, Elbert S., New York,Ei3i. Y. Katze, Louis, Lawrence, Mass. Katzman, Barbara E., Claremont Kazienko, Henry J., Manchester Keaton, Charles E., Concord Kelleher, T. Joseph, Haverhill, Mass. Kelley, Willis W., Pike Kemp, Willard H., Jr., Springdale, Conn Kendrick, Virginia F., Hillsboro Kennett, Philip R., Short Falls Killough, William B., Portsmouth Kimball, Arthur L., Schnectady, N. Y Kimball, Shirley V., East Wakefield King, Edith M., Minneapolis, Minn. King, John H., Concord Kischitz, Nicholas M., Newport Koon, Barbara G., Charlestown Koorkanian, Elizabeth, Manchester Koumantzelis, John G., Lowell, Mass. Kuligowski, Stanley F ., Derry Kuss, Frederick R., Laconia Kustra, Josephine H., Manchester Labombarde, Raymond A., Nashua LaForge, William F., Dover Landry, Bernice M., Pelham Lane, Clayton H., West Chesterfield Lane, Elwin A., No. Scituate, Mass. Lang, Donald W., Manchester Langlois, Alfred E., Manchester Lanza, Frank J., Concord Laraba, Evelyn R., Manchester Latourette, John M., Jr., Hampton Leavitt, E. Hale, Concord Lempke, Paul H., Dover Leonard, Patricia W., Plainfield, N. J. Lipski, Mathew A., Manchester Little, Rita M., Errol Lycett, Constance C., Magnolia, Mass. Macalaster, A. Loring, Laconia MacAusland, Donald M., Lowell, Mass. MacDonald, Alice G., Danville, Vt. MacFarlane, Janet, Manchester Madison, Wenonah O., Gay Head, Mass. Magnani, Leo D., Keene Mandell, Leon H., Manchester Manning, Mary C., Manchester Manus, Markos E., Concord Marcus, M. Paul, Nashua Marden, Leon, Jr., Wolfeboro Marden, Richard G., Wolfeboro Marsden, Donald A., Lynn, Mass. Mason, Richard F., Baldwinville, Mass. McCarten, William A., Lancester McCrone, Gladys I., Dover McDermott, Richard J., Franklin McHugh, Eleanor J., Littleton McLaughlin, Patrick J., Nashua McNair, Robert S., Gloucester, Mass. Melanson, Richard C., Gloucester, Mass. Merrill, Beverly A., Hanover Merrill, David N., Manchester Merrill, Frank B., Nashua Metzger, Ruth M., Milton, Mass. Michaels, Arthur, Lowell, Mass. Michel, Frank, Beechhurst, L. l., N. Y Miles, Guy H., Montpelier, Vt. Miller, Ann B., Dover Miller, Bernard S., Dorchester, Mass. Miller, Joseph, Rochester Minichiello, Anthony T., Concord Mitchell, Rita, Durham Mitchell, Rita M., Woodsville Mitiguy, Harry R., Bethel, Vt. Monagle, William J., Portsmouth Monroe, Gloria A., Rochester Moody, William F., Exeter Moore, Mary E., Manchester Moran, C. Vernon, Durham Morehouse, Robert W., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Morse, Charles H., Haverhill, Mass. Moulton, Richard P., Portsmouth Mudge, John H., Northwood Murchie, Mary Ann, Dover Murphy, Arthur F., Arlington, Mass. Murphy, Clarence J., Munsonville Murphy, Grace E., Westfield, N. J. Nelson, Betty J., Kittery, Maine Nevers, Virginia A., Waterbury, Conn Newell, Robert W., Wollaston, Mass. Newton, Margaret C., Auburn, Me. Ngoon, Chin T., Nashua Norman, George H., New Canaan, Conn. Norrick, Edythe J., New Canaan, Conn Norton, Evelyn L., Dover Norton, William l., Dover Nye, Esther M., Westville O,Dowd, Norma J., Manchester Ordway, Anna E., W. Hampstead Otis, Chester E., Geneva, N. Y. Paige, Maurice C., Godstown Pallas, Philip S., Laconia Parker, Edward G., Framingham, Mass. Parsons, Ralph E., Lebanon, Me. Pashigian, Sarkis, Haverhill, Mass. Pasichuke, George W., Lincoln Pasquale, Ralph D., Haverhill, Mass. Pease, Phillip W., Nashua Peaslee, Dorothy, Pittsfield Peckham, Richard S., Concord Pelonsky, Frederick E., Keene Peterson, Niles A., Falmouth, Mass. Pettigrew, Ida F., Kittery, Me. Phelps, Robert D., Andover Phillips, Carolyn J., Claremont Pietuch, Daniel J., Nashua Pilling, Lois F., Dedham, Mass. Pinhero, Kenneth T., Portsmouth Piper, Myra S., South Lee Piper, Ruth, Reading, Mass. Pitman, Vaughan P., Laconia Porter, Mary E., Palmerton, Pa. Porter, Myron E., Dorchester, Mass. Pratt, Philip E., East Jaffrey Price, Paul C., Candia Price, Ruth, Manchester Prior, Gregory C., Jr., W. Roxbury, Mass. Rainey, Ernest A., Manchester Ramsey, Robert L., Berlin Rangazas, Ernest P., Nashua Ratta, Corinda M., Northwood Narrows Ray, Noreen A., Wilder, Vt. Raymond, Howard E., Errol Redden, Roberta A., Dover Reed, Margaret C., Laconia Reed, Perry J., Rutherford, N. J. Resseguie, Helen L., Manchester Reynolds, Donald N., E. Walpole, Mass. Ricciardone, Joseph A., Jersey City, N.J Ricker, Martha E., Berwick, Me. Ritchie, Alice J., Haverhill Ritchie, H. David, Wellesly, Mass. Robbins, Warren M., Worcester, Mass Roberts, Jack M., Brookline, Mass. Roberts, Mary J., Alton Roberts, Preston T., East Alton Robinson, Kenneth O., Cascade Robinson, William A., Marblehead, Mass. Rollins, Clarence M., Alton Bay Rollins, Dale, Durham Sanborn, Glenna N., Springvale, Me. Sanborn, Janet M.. Amesbury, Mass. Sanborn, Stanley G., Alton Scammon, Richard B., Hartford, Conn Scarlett, Dorothy S., Deland, Fla. Selig, Janet M., Gloucester, Mass. Sharpe, Myron N., Nashua Shaw, Lydia P., No. Easton, Mass. Sheahan, Marion D., Somersworth Shepard, Barbara C., No. Bennington, Vt. Sheridan, Willizxm E., Concord Simses, Richard J., Nashua Sipe, William C., Jr., Deering Slack, Stanwood C., Franklin Sleeper, Gordon W., Epping Sloane, Shirley S., Somerville, Mass. Smillie, John M.. Manchester Smith Smith, Smith Smith, Smith. Smith Anita J., Lawrence, Mass. Frances B., Danvers, Mass. Gerald B., Claremont Gerald L., Piermont Joyce, Wollaston, Mass. Nancy E., Exeter 81 Smith, Parker, East Hebron Smith, Roderick W., Cranford, N. J. Smith, Walter H., Jr., Alstead Smith, Willard S., Jr., East Jaffrey Sokol, Edward D., Franklin Somes, Helen M., Marblehead, Mass. Sorg, Enid L., Wentworth Soule, Albert F., Jr., Middleboro, Mass. Southworth, Richard N., Tilton Spector, Shirley, Manchester Standish, Gilbert M., Meredith Stanley, John W., Jr., Concord Stearns, G. Wendell, W. Epping Steele, James E., Kennebunk, Me. Steele, Sylvia J., Weymouth, Mass. Stevens, Christopher, Concord Straw, June R., Hampton Falls Stroyman, Roland L., Brookline, Mass. Strumski, Joseph F., Canton, Mass. Swan, Helen F., Durham Swift, Marguerite, Wolfeboro Tarr, Virginia L., Exeter Taylor, Lee H., Exeter Temple, Ann, East Pembroke, Mass. Temple, Barbara, East Pembroke, Mass Temple, Louise, Smithtown Tennant, James L., Jr., Nashua Tenney, Richard E., Concord Terhune, Miriam, New Hampton Thacher, Hazel, Winchester Thing, Charles, Gorham Thompson, Mary-Alice, Highland Pk., N. J. Thyng, Lorraine, Exeter Tibhetts, Donald C., East Rochester Tillson, Mary, Middleboro, Mass. Tinker, Elizabeth A., Wolfeboro Tirrell, Theron L., Durham Todaro, Andrew C., Everett, Mass. Tower, Richard L., No. Hampton Trachy, Richard A., Franklin Tupper, Stephen l., West Lebanon Tupper, Virginia L., Derry Tuttle, Joan H., Peterborough Vancore, Robert B., Colebrook Van de Bogart, Jean K., East Weare Van Voorhis, Virginia E., Fishkill, N. Y. Varney, Eleanor M., Berwick, Me. Volkman, Norma V., Portsmouth Wadleigh, Ruth E., Durham Wakefield, Frederick I., North Stratford Wallace, William H., Flushing, N. Y. Wallis, Carol, Winchester, Mass. Waterman, Albert O., Concord Weber, Alice L., Schenectady, N. Y. Weinreb, Dorothy, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Welch, Virginia M., Manchester Whippen, Warren G., Claremont Whitcomb, E. Parker, Keene Whitman, Francis B., Rochester Whitney, Earl H., Pembroke Willard, Anne, New Castle Vlfilliams, Ann M., Portsmouth Williams, Charlotte B., Claremont Williams, Earle, New Castle Williams, James C., Sunderland, Mass. Williams, Wendell C., Craftsbury Commons, Vt. Willoughby, Hollis E., Plymouth Wills, Charles B., Melrose, Mass. Wing, Richard E., Lancaster Winn, Janet D., Somersworth Wiseman, John T., Quincy, Mass. Wolverton, Marquerite, Lancaster Wood, Leonard C., Concord Wood, William H., Jr., Ossipee Woodard, Paul V., Dover Wormhood, Leeman B., Jr., Madbury Xanthaky, Louis P., Manchester .5 President , BLEAKNEY BENEDIC1' Vice-President A AIARGARET TOWER Secretary LILA SPRAGIIE fl'rensu,rer . ,CHARLIQS IAIUMPHREYS l 6 lflflelfl iff W ,fa L55 L.. yor' of 5 qi-5 AWA' ,Me 4 . . D . 54' .-3 Abbott, Elinor, Reading, Mass. Adamakos, Anthony G., Nashua Adams, Eleanor M., Dover Adams, June V., Northwood Ridge Adams, Rachel H., Gorham Adams Adamsi Warren E., Hinsdale William A., Manchester Aldrich, James S., Berlin Allen, Kenneth A., Conway Allen, Warren H., Portsmouth Amato, Nicholas P., Winchester, Mass. Ames, Miriam L., Somersworth Amirault, Robert J., Wakefield, Mass. Amsden, June V., Laconia Amsden, Ralph V., Laconia Annicchiarico, Joseph, Concord Arnold, M. Anne, Melrose, Mass. Atkins, Thomas R., Lynn, Mass. Atwood, Shirley A., Pelham Audette, James D., Manchester Austin, Richard S., Manchester Averill, Pauline R., Concord Ayer, John L., Marblehead, Mass. Bachelder, Alvin M., Suncook Bagley, Bailey, Russell W., Newport Joseph W., West Springfield Baker, Harold A., Berlin Baker, John A., Concord Baker, John E., West Ossipee Baker, Robert S., Marlboro Ballentine, Robert, Wolfeboro Bannister, Howard G., Claremont Barker, Carl W., Stratham Barkin, Alan S., Brookline, Mass. Barndollar, Frank W., Manchester Brown, Wynetta I., Lebanon Brownsword, Walter W., No. Adams, Mass. Buciak, Ann I., Newburyport, Mass. Bunker, Harry D., Jr., North Conway Burnham, Bertha F., Bristol Burrows, Charles G., Center Sandwich Buttrick, Nancy, Arlington, Mass. Byrne, Elaine, Holliston, Mass. Byron, Robert H., Exeter Cadorette, Norman G., Nashua Cady, Ruth P., Manchester Calkin, Thomas B., Egypt, Mass. Callaghan, Frank D., Rochester Campbell, Elaine V., Nashua Capron, Theodore J., Walpole Carnevale, Matthew R., Manchester Caron, Donald F., Manchester Carpenter, June M., Hampstead Carpenter, Richard F., Jr., Fitchburg, Mass. Cartier, Clement R., Gonic Cavaretta, Michael, Portsmouth Chadwick, Walton W., New London Chaloux, Peter A., Lebanon Chamberlain, Brenda R., Alton Chamberlain, Mary L., Wolfeboro Falls Chandler, Kenneth B., Concord Chase, Carolyn, Newport Chase, Harriet L., Rochester Chase, June E., Hillsboro Chase, Philip A., Rochester Cheeseman, Sumner A., Marlboro Barris, Ralph H., Lyndeboro Barron, Natalie F., Somerville, Mass. Bassett, Joseph A., Fremont Batchelder, Edwin L., Hampton Battles, Harold F., Haverill, Mass. Beard, Frederick L., So. Berwick, Me. Belios, Vasilike, N., Manchester Benedict, Bleakney, Salmon Falls Benedict, Deborah, Salmon Falls Benner, Blair M., Merrimack Benson, Robert H., Lebanon Benson, Torsten E., Concord Bernier, George R., Epping Bernstein, Richard, Brooklyn, N. Y. Berry, Beryl L., Rochester Bevan, Jane, West Point, Miss. Bickford, Harry G., Manchester Bill, Marcia A., Rochester Bisbee, Marion L., Waitsfield, Vt. Bittner, John P., Westmoreland Depot Bjorkman, Alan L., Swampscott, Mass. Blackwell, Wallace H., Buzzards Bay, Mass. Blakslee, Ralph C., Whitefield Blanchard, Virginia E., Sugar Hill Blood, Frank L., Groton, Mass. Bouras, George, Newmarket Chirnside, Albert, Stamford, Conn. Christy, William, Manchester Cilley, Herbert L., Concord Clapp, Elizabeth H., Portsmouth Clark, Beatrice, Sanford, Me. Clark, Bertha L., Malden, Mass. Clark, David M., Middleboro, Mass. Clark, Guy R., Antrim Clark, John R., Kennebunkport, Me. Clark, Marion L., Kingston Clarke, Theodore C., Melrose, Mass. Cleveland, Jane, Wellesley, Mass. Clevenson, Sherman A., Laconia Clough, Grant W., Ashland Coffey, Conrad J., Nashua Cohen, Frank A., Lawrence, Mass. Cole, Mary L., Springfield, Vt. Cole, Reuben D., Lebanon Coller, Robert B., Keene Collishaw, Edwin L., Exeter Colt, Richard E., Hanover Conn, Clayton E., Melrose, Mass. Conner, Robert E., Lebanon Conway, Robert F., Laconia Cook, Gladys B., Newmarket Costello. Geraldine V., Manchester Couch, Alston P., Concord Bourn, Bourn, Beverly B., Dover Winthrop M., Milford Bowen, Bruce F., Portland, Me. Bowen, Marilyn L., Lowell, Mass. Bowley. Carl A., Saugus, Mass. Bradley, Proctor D., West Swanzey Bratt, Barbara O., Wellesley Farms, 5' Mass. Brill, Francis J., Whitefield Brock, Priscilla. Rochester Brodhead, Andrew D., Laconia Brooks Brooks , Elbridge J., Jr., Saugus, Mass. , Judson M., Jr.. Claremont Brooks, Natalie L., Hampton Brown, Brown, Brown, Betty J., Hampton Cecil S., Claremont Cynthia A., Hollis Coughlin, James E., Nashua Cowan, Laura, Dedham, Mass. Cox, Kenneth W., East Jaffrey Cressy, Barbara A., Bradford Crowley, Francis J., Manchester Cunningham, Orville W., Exeter Currie, Jean W., Manchester Currier, Richard E., Danville Cushing, Robert C., Groveton Dam-ause, Lionel A., Greenville Daniels, Phyllis R., Gorham Daukas, Anne, Nashua 83 Davis, Herbert M., Berlin Day, James M., Methuen, Mass. Dearden, William J., South Acworth Deming, Elizabeth A., Cornish Deming, Elsie L., Windsor, Vt. DeQuoy, Paul B., Nashua Derbyshire, Mary F., Fall River, Mass DesJardins, John A., Kittery, Me. Devlin, Joseph A., Jr., Nashua Dey, Kinsley V. R., Wellesley, Mass. Dickey, Carol A., Hudson Dickie, Newton B., Reading, Mass. Dinwoodie, Hugh J., Laconia Doe, Wallis N., Newmarket Dole, Winston R., West Newbury, Mass. Donahue, Marguerite C., Lawrence, Mass. Douglas, Fernald D., Eliot, Me. Dowell, William A., Franconia Dragon, Albert, Penacook Drolet, Phyllis D., Pittsfield Duff, Phyllis A., Milford Dumont, Doris M., Manchester Dunklee, Silas B., Brattleboro, Vt. Dwenger, George A., Montclair, N. J. Dyott, Charles H., Stratford, Conn. Economopoulos, John G., Nashua Ekman, Arline V., Manchester Eldred, Richard D., Longmeadow, Mass. Emerson, Wallace F., New Rochelle, N. Y. Emerv, Hollis L., Groveton Emery, Mary L., Greenland Erb, Leslie H., Hudson Erskine, Robert W., Brooklyn, N. Y. Estfan, Fred J., Manchester Eteson, James M., Worcester, Mass. Eynon, Stuart B., Lynn, Mass. Fairbank, Rebecca, Sudbury, Mass. Falk, Ellsworth S.. New Rochelle, N. Y Farr, Mabel M., Salem Depot Fassas, Thamai, Salem Depot Ferguson, Barbara E., Columbia, S. C Ferguson, Nancy, Pittsfield Fife, James A., Newton Highlands, Mass. Fifield, Charles D., Exeter Fitch, Agnes S., Wilmington, Vt. Fitzgerald, Hubert B., Walpole Flanders, Edith H., Newport, R. I. Flanders, Ruth I., North Weare Flynn, Annie E., Portland, Me. Flynn, Frank F., Portland, Me. Folsom, Gordon R., So. Berwick, Me. Foster, Lois C., Dover Foulkrod, Robert M., Durham Fournier, Pauline L., Whitefield Fowler, Charles S.. Derry Fox, Elaine C., Lisbon Fradd, Cynthia, Manchester Franco, Roberto H., New York, N. Y. Frink, Theodore C., North Haverhill Fritz, J. William, Efiingham Gagnon, Jules O.. Jr., Manchester Galanes, George. Dover Galbraith, Joan S., Lancaster Gamble, John F., Portsmouth Ganley, William J., Jr., Lawrence, Mass. Garnsey, John E., Sanford, Me. Garvin, Mary E., Sanbornville Gaskell, John M., Newtonville, Mass. Gaul, George A., Hinsdale Gay, Donald T., New London George, Bert D.. Rochester George, Elmer S., Fremont Gerngross, John. Laurel Springs. N. J. Giblin, Edward T., Belmont, Mass. Gibson, Robert H., Elizabeth, N. J. Gilpatrick, Cleston W., Concord Glunt, John D.. Portsmouth Glynn, S. Joseph. Belleville, N. J. Godfrey, Edward F.. Lisbon Goldbaum. Russell C., Bradford, Mass. Goodwin, Russell C., So. Berwick, Me. Goodyear, Jean A., TenaHy, N. J. Gorman, Marion A., Durham Gowan, Frederick A., Stratham Graesser, Carl, Springfield, Mass. Graham, Sylvia L., Methuen, Mass. Grant, Howard, Winchester, Mass. Granton, Jane M.. Stratham Grider, William H.. Laconia Griggs, Harriet, Vllaltham, Mass. Hagen, Robert D., Berlin Hall, Ralph E., No. Attleboro, Mass. Hall, Vernon H., Wellesley, Mass. Hall, Wlilliam E., Pleasantville, N. Y. Halladay. Jacquelene V., Hillsboro Hallam, Priscilla J., Melrose, Mass. Ham, Judith A., Durham Hamilton, Raymond A., Warner Hamm, Laura E., Reading, Mass. Hammond, Eugene A., Northwood Narrows Hanks, Nan. W. Orange, N. J. Hanson, Alma J., Concord Hanson, Arnold P., Berlin Hanson, Robert L., Wolfeboro Hanson, William E., Hancock Harding, Barbara R., Springvale, Me. Harney, Lois C., Marblehead, Mass. Harrington, Natalie Y., Leominster, Mass. Harris, Edith R., Caratunk, Me. Harris, Marshall D., Keene Harris, Robert B., W'inchester, Mass. Hartman, Benjamin A., Haverhill, Mass. Haskell, Kenneth W., Manchester Hastings, Andrew D., Newport Hatch, A. Chesley, Dover Hayden, Barbara, Goffstown Hayden, B. Helen, Newcastle Hayden, Hugh S., No. Adams Hayes, William H., Jr., Enfield Heath, John C., So. Danville Hebert, George E., Manchester Hecker, Ann E., Manchester Helff, Katherine, W. Englewood, N. J. Henderson, Roger F., Penacook Hennebarger, John W., Tilton Herlihy, Robert W., Dover Herman, Lloyd J., Jr., Lancaster, Pa. Higgins, F. Anna, Exeter Hill, James T., Egvnt, Mass. Hilton, Myrtle A., Keene Hoffman, John H., Plymouth Holbrook. Richard E., Montpelier, YI. Holden, Phyllis E., Concord Holleman, Wlilliam O., Springfield, Mass. Holton, Stanley L., Lancaster Hopkins, John W., Lansdowne, Pa. Hopkins, Phyllis A., Bristol Hotte, Roland J., Biddeford, Me. Houghton, Ralph A., Coneord Howland, Gene A., Rochester 84 Howland, Walter C., Wfinchester, Mass Huggan, Sue, Claremont Huggins, Louis R., Pemllrulie Hujsak, Edward J., Reeds Ferry Humphreys. Charles B., Newmarket Huse, Erle S., Kents Hill, Me. Ibey, Francis R., Enfield Inman. Wlilliam E., Saco, Me. Irish, Louise H., Presque Isle, Me. Irwin, James R., Laconia Isaak, Louis C., Manchester Jachc, Albert W., Manchester Jackson, Roland B.. Augusta, Me. Jacobs, Elizabeth M.. Alstcad James, Michael A., Nashua James, Robert M., Jr., Dayton, 0. Jameson, Pauline A., Canaan Janetos, Peter. Dover Johnson, Carl YV., Colebrook Johnson, Donald P., Gorham Johnson, Marion L., Durham Jolmson, Mildred L., Concord Johnson, Stephen H.. Amherst, Mass. Johnson. Susan. Milford Johnston, Eleanor L.. Keene Johnston, Robert E.. Manchcster Jones, Richard H., Portland, Me. Jones, Richard K.. Salem, Mass. Jordan, Bernard H.. Concord Jordan, Daniel NV., East Andover Jordan, Harold V., Laconia Junkins, Margaret E.. Portsmouth Karanikas, Anna, Goffstown Kathios, Dorothy M., Somersworth Keane, Constance L., Newport Keller, Arthur H., Manchester, Mass. Kilburn, Lawrence F., Walpole Kilduif, Jeanne F., Amesbury, Mass. Kiley, Daniel P., Lawrence, Mass. Kimball, George H., Ashland, Mass. Kimball, Robert B., Jr., Haverhill, Mass. Kimball, Robert G., Exeter Kingsbury, Donald L., Framingham, Mass. Kirkman, Karl A., Jr., Lakeport Knowlton, Eleanor C., Barnstead Knowlton, Elizabeth C., Strafford Koerner, M. lra, Brighton, Mass. Koromilas, James S., Dover Krupa, Emil F., Manchester Kuehn, Frederick R., Lawrence, Mass. LaBombard, Ruth A., Nashua Labombarde, Elie J., Nashua Ladd. Betty A., Loudon La Fleur, Jeanne d'Arc L., Manchester Lamothe, Rosalie E., Arlington, Mass. Lamson, Donald C., Bristol Lane, Beverly, East Swanzey Lane, Robert H., Jr., Randolph Lange, G. Robert. Malden, Mass. Lange, Paul H., Bridgeport, Conn. Langlev. Harold E., Concord Lapierre, Theodore L., Concord Larmondra, Joseph R., Derry Village Lazarus, Norma M., Dorchester, Mass. Leddy, John S., Epping Leen, Harold, New Bedford, Mass. Legg, Priscilla A., Franklin Lehto, Tepo E., Lebanon Lemieux, Dorian J., Manchester Lempke, Robert E., Dover Leslie, Harriet J., Manchester Lessard, Edgar W., Jr., Plymouth LeTourneau, Eugene G., Berlin Lewis, Bennett L., Strafford Lewis, Charles J., Jr., Colebrook Lewis, John C., Lebanon Libby, Leon S., Pine Point, Me. Linnell, Constance R., Northwood Ridge Little, Noyes S., Atkinson Lockwood, Priscilla T., Durham Loiseaux, Pierre R., Port Washington, N. Y. Lopes, Richard F., Gloucester, Mass. Lovejoy, Robert B., Sanford, Me. Lowe, Mrs. Marion D., Portsmouth Lucier, Catherine C., Nashua Lyford, Jean E., Concord Lynde, Louise H., Wollaston, Mass. Lyons, Phyllis M., Manchester Macaulay, Austin M., Littleton MacDonald, Stuart, Rochester, N. Y. Macdonald, William A., Hanover Macey, Benjamin A., Concord MacKay, Barbara I., Methuen, Mass. Magoon, Paul C., Gilman, Vt. Magoon, William K., Littleton Magrath, Raymond C., Jr., Durham Maguire, Mary E., Nashua Maher, John P., Manchester Maher, Marilyn J., Exeter Malomian, Nazareth G., Haverhill, Mass. Manion, Harold F., Keene Mansfield, Richard C., Newport Mantos, Peter W., Lowell, Mass. 85 Marceau, Mary J., Winchester, Mass. Marche, Richard P., Wakefield, Mass Marcotte, Frank B., Fremont Marden, Marie, Newton Margil, Gerald P., Roxbury, Mass. Marois, Lionel A., Berlin Marrotte, Paul A., Dover Marshall, Robert F., Haverhill, Mass. Marvin, Jane E., Concord Mason, Eunice E., North Conway Mather, Bruce D., Medford, Mass. Maynard, Roger D., Lebanon Mazzolini, Mary E., Randolph, Vt. McAdoo, Raymond A., Hudson McAuliHe, John R., So. Danbury McBride, Ruth E., Exeter McCafferty, William B., Enfield McCarthy, Ola F., Portsmouth McDougal, Robert H., Sanford, Me. McKelvey, George, Jr., Lowell, Mass. McKernan, Mary K., Dover McKinnon, Madeline A., Claremont McLoon, Charles A., Salem McNally, Francis J., Dover McNamara, Raymond A., Manchester McNealus, Joseph G., Portland, Me. McParland, Bernard P., Lawrence, Mass. McPherson, Daniel E., Beverly, Mass Mercer, Robert S., Nashua Merrill, John W., Worcester, Mass. Metalious, George, Manchester Meyer, Miriam C., Medford, Mass. Mikol, Frances H., Hartford, Conn. Miner, Raymond W., Keene Mocas, Ulysses C., Nashua Monahan, Andrew J., Berlin, Mass. Moody, Barbara L., Worcester, Mass. Mooradian, Andrew T., Revere, Mass Moore, Anstes D., Littleton Moore, Lewis C., Balboa Heights, Canal Zone Moorenovich, William C., Portsmouth Morang, Charles H., Portsmouth Morin, Robert G., Laconia Morrison, Donald G., Brookline, Mass. Morrison, Irving, Berlin Moster, Joseph S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mudgett, Mariette, Intervale Mullavey, Richard E., Concord Mullen, Maurice D., Concord Munson, Thomas P., Dover Nassikas, John W., Manchester Nawoj, Henry J., Tilton Neal, Nancy, Dover Neff, Allen W., Orange, Conn. Nestor, James F., Medford, Mass. Nevers, Robert A., Whitefield Newcomer, Shirley J., Needham, Mass. Newell, Nellie E., Nashua Nichols, Bruce S., Lempster Nichols, Richard A., Chester Nims, Gerard C., Keene Nute, Millard P., Groveton Nye, Dorothy E., Atkinson Oliphant, Charles D.. Goshen Olsen, Ruth E., Dublin O,Merra, Walter W., Manchester O,Neil, Allan H., Montpelier, Vt. O'Neil, Robert J., Nashua Orrald, Jack H., Winthrop, Mass. Osborne, Charles E., Marblehead, Mass. Ouellette, Edward G., Berlin Owen, Virginia R., Berlin Palmer, John J., Manchester Papatones, Alexander J., Somersworth Paquette, Armand R., Manchester Parker, Ann C., Swanzey Parker, Beverly, Needham, Mass. Parker, Francis L., Auburn, Me. Parker, Jean E., Medford, Mass. Parker, Virginia E., Newport Parsons, Roger L., Rochester Pearce, Kathryn D., Edgewood, R. I. Peck, Robert, Englewood, N. J. Peel, Frances A., No. Andover, Mass. Penniman, Anne L., Hampton Perkins, Clifford H., Jr., Keene Perkins, Gerald J., Saco, Me. Perkins, Harold W., Dover Perrins, William A., Westford, Mass. Pettigrew, David R., Kittery, Me. Philbrook, Elmer L., Chester Phillips, John A., Northwood Phillips, Mary V., Hopewell Jct., N. Y. Phipps, Albert H., Gorham Phipps, Donald S., Portsmouth Phipps, William I., Walpole Pia, Albert J., Stamford, Conn. Pickard, Mary K., Seabrook Beach Pieciorak, Thaddeus J., L. I. C., N. Y. Pike, Scott, Rowlev, Mass. Pingree, Hedley G., Great Neck, N. Y. Pipilas, Thomas C., Nashua Placy, Luwilda M., Colebrook Pleatsikas, Timothy C., Manchester Plummer, Jane, Milton Plummer, Warner M., Barrington, R. I. 'hm-u Lou- W' s..u?.lM 1 f9f '4 Wf Q Pointer, Veva H., Portsmouth Poisson, Lawrence A., Berlin Poe, Richard S., Wilton, Conn. Powers, James J., Woodsville Powers, William R, Mt. Vernon Price, Freda M., Concord Proctor, William H., Jr., Jackson Pucher, Janet M., Hamden, Conn. Pugsley, Beatrice E., Milford, Mass. Putnam, Roger A., Portsmouth Putney, Edward W., Jr., Durham Raduazo, Rocco, Concord Ragonese, Carmen D., Bridgeport, Conn. Rainey, John G., Manchester Rand, Bernice M., New Castle Ray, Robert B., Anson, Maine Reeves, Palmer B., Sringdale, Conn. Relpe, William J., Portsmouth Retalis, George S., Ipswich, Mass. Reynolds, Nancy H., Walpole, Mass. Reynolds, Theodore C., Peterborough Rhodes, Constance L., Rochester Richards, Lillian M., Suncook Richardson, Howard S., Marboro Rines, S. Melvin, Berlin Ritchie, James W., Billerica, Mass. Roberts, Elaine H., Durham Robertson, Miriam A., Peterboro Robinson, Alice L., Reading, Mass. Robinson, Edward H., Antrim Robinson, Helen L., Manchester Robinson, Philip L., Rochester Rodis, Nicholas, Hudson Roe, Jacqueline F., Dover Ross, Jack, Lakeport Ross, Leo L., Somersworth Rounds, Burton W., Berlin Rowden, Phyllis A., Newport Roy, Phillip M., Lincoln Rudnick, Ralph, Manchester Runyon, Elmer E., Plainfield, N. J. Rushlow, F. Edward, Jr., Concord Russell, James F., Glen Falls, N. Y. Russell, Thomas C., Bartlett Saboski, Arthur F., Hanover Sagris, Olympia, Portsmouth Salta, Hope, Laconia Samel, Norman L., Methuen, Mass. Sanders, Elizabeth L., Newmarket Sanderson, Robert F., Berlin Sands, Harold G., East Jaffrey Santos, Irene L., Gloucester, Mass. Sargent, Barbara L., Concord Sawyer, James H., Bradford, Mass. Sawyer, Leonard S., Woodstock Sawyer, Robert B., Franconia Sayewich, Stephen P., Franklin Schwartz, Norman H., Manchester Scott, Robert C., Hartford, Conn. Seawards, Earlon L., Dover Sedgewick, Richard D., Danbury Sharek, Carl R., Manchester Shattuck, Elmer A., Pepperell, Mass. Shaw, Robert N., Derry Village Sheehan, Francis B., Tewkshury, Mass. Sheehy, Frederick, Newfields Sherman, Diana, New Rochelle, N. Y. Sherman, Ernest A., Lancaster Sherman, Richard I., Somerville, Mass. Sherwood, Shirley B., Worcester, Mass. Shortell, Elizabeth A., Manchester x a I ip' ,ny . fr WMM arm 'o rv-WW f-fffW- .ff M Sickmon, Suzanne, Springfield, Mass. Sidelinger, John W., Wollaston, Mass Silva, Charlotte M., Somersworth Silver, Marjorie V., Verona, N. J. Simonds, Stephen P., Lisbon Simpson, Arthur E., Durham Sipe, Charles C., Deering Sleeth, George R., Wollaston. Mass. Smerlas, Peter, Cambridge, Mass. Smith, Alexander J., Jr., Farmington, Conn. Smith, Arthur F., Laconia Smith, Helen W., Salem Smith, Kendall P., Londonderry Smith, Richard C., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Snook, George A., Chesterfield, Mass. Snook, Paul E., Portsmouth Snow, John G., Manchester Soule, Lewis F., Salem Spearman, John S., Concord Spiller, John P., Beverly, Mass. Sprague, Lila M., Manchester Stackpole, Barbara D., Manchester Staff, Frederick B., Claremont Stanford, Charles H., Troy Staples, Ralph L., Springfield, Vt. Stark, Richard I., Groveland, Mass. Stearns, Herbert C., W. Epping Stearns, Lois A., Keene Stein, Jerome E., Berlin Stergion, Sotirios P., Nashua Sterling, Elinor F., Claremont Stevens, Frank J., Dover Stevens, Leon B., Farmington Stevens, Willard C., Nashua Stewart, Kenneth L.. Rochester Stewart, Robert A.. Hopedale, Mass. Stimson, Beryle M., Woodsville Stover, Alcot H., Hampton Falls Stuart, John J., Belmont, Mass. Sugden, Francis M., Sanford, Me. Sullivan, Daniel F., Newburyport, Mass. Surette, F. Elizabeth, Somerville, Mass Susynski, Lawrence W., Hopkinton Swain, Mary E., Exeter Sweeney, Bernard H., Keene Swift, Janet H., Wolfeboro Sylvester, Shirley V., Nashua Sylvestre, Anne J., Berlin Taggart, Phyllis A., Grasmere Talmers, Frederick N., Concord Tatarczuk, Frank M.. Portland, Me. Tewksbury. Charles I., Portsmouth Thayer, Edwin C., Worcester, Mass. Thomas, Hawley D., Amesbury, Mass. Thomas, Robert C., Bridgeport, Mass Thompson, Barbara A., Haverhill, Mass. Thompson, Donald S., Melrose, Mass. Thompson, Donald T., Claremont Thornber. Marjorie J., Pelham Tierney, Ralph D., Elior, Me. Tillotson, John M., Dalton Tompkins, Edward A., Essex, Mass. Tower, Margaret K., No. Hampton Trimble, Raymond L., Hudson Tufts, Ralph W., Exeter Turcotte, Gloria C., Nashua Turmelle, Oscar J., Rochester Turpeinen, Ollie W., Newport Tu ombly, Albert A., Laconia Twomblv, Charles A., Dover Twomey, John A., Portsmouth Underdorfel, Richard E., Holyoke, Mass. Urban, Irene L., Claremont Van de Bogart, David A., East Weare Van Hennik, Martha E., Antrim Varney, Robert C., Kittery, Me. Vollkommer, Peter P., Valley Stream, N. Y. Waid, Nancy, Scarsdale, N. Y. Wakefield, Frances A., Kennebunk- port, Me. Wakeman, Robert E., Laconia Wall, Edward, Hampton Falls Ward, Elizabeth A., Hanover Ware, Marjorie B., Nashua Wassall, Nancy B., Worcester, Mass. Waterhouse, Lois J., Stoneham, Mass. Waters, Robert C., Berlin Watson, Gail B., Gerrish Waugh, James S., Concord Weathers, Robert D., Concord W'ebb, Vernon W., Dover Webber, Elizabeth M., Portsmouth Webber, Robert A., Berlin Weeden, John S., Lyme Weiner, George, Chelsea, Mass. Welch, Ernest E., Jr., New London Wells, David T., Concord Wentworth, Harriet, Durham Whetton, Frederica, Needham, Mass. White, James P., Dover White, Nathan P., Jr., Concord White, Richard G., Ossipee White, Webster W., Hudson Whitehouse, Frederick G., Keene Whitham, Frederick H., Pittsfield, Mass. Whitman, Margaret G., Kittery, Me. Whitman, William C., Drewsville Whitney, Virginia E., Cumberland Centre, Me. Whittemore, Douglas H., Bristol, Pa. Whittemore, Irving C., Jr., Belmont, Mass. Whittemore, James F., Winchester, Mass. Whittemore, Sylvia-Jane, Durham Wielgus, Thaddeus H., Lynn, Mass. Wildes, Richard C. Fr., Portsmouth Williams, Barbara A., Nashua Williams, David G., Manchester Williams, George C., Scituate, Mass. Williams, Guy F., Jr., New London Williams, John A., Jr., Colebrook Williams, Louise G., Manchester Williamson, Edith R., Concord Wilson, Frederic L., Kittery, Me. Wilson, Josephine C., Hudson Winkley, Harvel E., Rochester Winn, Ruth E., Somersworth Witherell, Patricia, Gonic Wunderlich, Brigitte B., N. Y., N. Y. Yatsevitch, Margaret, Cornish Young, Cavid C., Wilton Zelinsky, Shirley P., Manchester Znaidowsky, Joseph P., Laconia I W ir . B III ' Qiiiiif'ih!!,,..Qff3 I ' I: I E .xllllhlldgf 'lll . 3. ll? 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Q .1 if X 'K fl ,gg S M Y, w S252 -29 3 2 -wipe is www, -my ef, 25Qg,s?f I TERF RATE RN ITY COUNCIL OFFICERS President WILLIAM CALL Vice-President ARTHUR ROUILLARD Secretary THEODORE STEBRINS Tr fefz I surer ROGER MARSHALL MEMBERS Alpha Gamma Rho IKENNETH WIIGGIN Alpha Tau Omega ROGER MARSHALL Kappa Sigma RICHARD COCHRAN Lambda Chi Alpha EUGENE XVRICHT Phi Alpha MEYER SATZOW Phi Mu Delta ROLAND BOUCHER Phi Delta Upsilon PERRY ICNOWLES Pi Kappa Alpha HENRY DOwsT Sigma Alpha Epsilon WTILLIAM CALL Sigina Beta ALEXANDER IQISCHITZ Tau Kappa Epsilon GEORGE HERRICK Theta Chi THEODORE STEBBINS Theta Kappa Phi ARTHUR ROUILLARD Wfiggin, Marshall, Slebhins, Call, Rouillard Cocliran, Wriglit Satzow, Knowles Boucher, Dowst Kischitz, Herrick PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL OFFICERS President MARGARET DOWER Secretary CONSTANCE SALTA Treasurer RACHEL LAFLAMME MEMBERS Alpha Chi Omega DOROTHY KEEFE Alpha Chi Omega JEAN MORRISON Chi Omega Chi Omega Alpha Xi Delta Alpha Xi Delta Phi Mu Phi Mu Theta Upsilon Theta Upsilon Kappa Delta Kappa Delta DOROTHY FLANAGAN CONSTANCE SALTA MELBA MCKAY SHIRLEY CLARK RITA MITCHELL LORENE SCOTT LUCILLE STEARNS MARY SMALL EDITH PHAIR SHIRLEY LYFORD Pi Lambda Sigma CLARE LANGLEY Pi Lambda Sigma RACHEL LAFLAMME LaFlamme, Flanagan Scott, Mitchell Clark, McKay, Keefe, Morrison Phair, Lyford, Langley, Small, Stearns XEQX W N QM Qf jim, Nt. Ji? W 2125 M AFP CRUD my 3 XX o cz N we 4 Q X fs , O ALPHA GAMMA RHO OFFICERS President ,,.,.A ,,... . . .. .. . ....,A,. IQENNETH WVIGGIN Vice-President ...., .......... R ICHARD ABELL Secretary. ..,A,.. ,A,, . .WALLACE RUSSELL Treasurer... .... GEORGE KELLEY LPHA GAMMA RHO was formed in 1908, when Alpha Gamma Rho of Ohio State University and Delta Rho Sigma of the University of lllinois, both local fraternities, became incorporated to form one national general frater- nity. Since that time Alpha Gamma Rho has grown to thirty-two chapters with a membership over 10,000. In November 1923 the local chapter was founded as a local fraternity, Beta Sigma Alpha. ln the spring of 1924 it was affiliated with the national Alpha Gamma Rho as Omega Chapter. At present, though the membership consists primarily of agricultural students, there are students admitted from the other colleges of the University. ' Although two of our top-ranking officers left us for the Air Corps last sum- mer, the chapter has maintained its full quota of members and is enjoying one of its most successful years. The Osgood Memorial Plaque, the interfraternity scholarship award, Was retained for the fifth consecutive year. Many well atten- ded house dances have been held, and plans are being made to keep Alpha Gamma Rho on top during the intramural season. 92 il Steve Chagrasulis . . . Evert . . . Harold Brown . . . Dean Hammond . . . Johnson . . . George Kelley Hale Leavitt . . . Harry Mitiguy . . . Allen . . . Gordon Placy . . . Porter Smalley. 1- 4 Richard Abell . . . Leon 9 4 Austin . . . Horace Bascom . . . George Patten . . . Wfallace Russell . . . Quentin Theroux . . . Kenneth Wiggin. Francis Abbott . . . Paul Abell . . . Keith Birdsall Peterson . . . Paul Price . . . Howard Ray- mond . . . Parker Smith . . . James Steele . . . James Williams. 6 Robert Baker . . . Robert Ballentine . . . Ralph Barris . . . Thomas Calkin . . . Leslie Erb . . . Edward Godfrey . . . Russell Goodwin . . . John Hopkins . . . Charles Mclioon . . . James Vilhittemore . . . Thaddeus Wielgus. First Row: Abell, Raymond, Patten, Kelley, Wiggin, R. Abell, Russell, Birdsall, Wielgus. Second Row: E. Johnson, Hammond, Austin, Ballentine, P. Smith, Goodwin, Mitiguy, Peter- son, Bascom, H. Brown, MeLoon. Third Row: Abbott, Price, Williams, Steele, Barris, Godfrey, Baker, Erb, Hopkins. , , , , , , ,Q .,., ,ww ammwmiwwtaawwmtm-4,,-yMV..,,,.,,,,,,f ,.,, ,, . , ,M 4,1 ,,,,e,,i,. -M.,n.tQ.A,,, V., . , , . -I-M - ..f..M - If 11 that ww g s sE A T Q Fl W 'L fait Swzxorf ALPHA TAU OMEGA OFFICERS President ....A.,.,, ,4A.,,.,...,.A,..,.,... R OGER MARSHALL Vice-President ..,... ...A...A R OBERT CLOCK Secretary .. , ,... ..., M ILTON CRAM Treasurer ...,,. ,,..L.L G LENN WRIGHT LPI-IA TAU OMEGA was first represented on this campus in 1917 when Gamma Theta, a local, Was absorbed hy Alpha Tau Omega. Since its origin, about four hundred and fifty men have been members of Delta Delta Chapter. Some of the occasions at wl1icl1 the House entertains a relatively large number of guests are Homecoming, Dad's Day, Mil Art Weekend, Winter Carnival Wveckend, Mother's Day, and Commencement. One of the most pleas- ant evenings of the school year occurs just before the Christmas holidays. On the Friday before vacation, we have about twenty small boys from Dover over for a Christmas party. The Christmas tree with gifts for the boys never fails to please tl1e brothers as much as or more than the guests. The house is active in intramural sports and we generally end the year with at least one or two championship teams in the various sports offered. Other activities, such as Stunt Night and the Song Fest, are also entered hy the fratern- ity. For purely social entertainment we have vic parties nearly every Friday night throughout the school year. 94 Lee . . . John Mudge . . . Richard Staff . . . .lames Stevens. 1 4' Robert Clock . . . Milton Morehouse . . . Clarence Murphy . . . Fred- 9 3 Cram . . . Richard Garnsey erick Pelonsky . . . Donald Reynolds . . . Roger Marshall . . . Edmund Meserve . . . VVayne Taggart . . . War1'en Whippen . . Charles Moller . . . Frank Robbins . . . An- Vlfendell Vlfilliams. drew Sanne . . . Richard Smith . . . Glenn Wright. Vlfilliam Adams . . . .loseph Bass tt . . . Edwin Batchel- Ralph Allen ' ' ' Raimond der Jr .... Elbrid4feeBrooks Jr .... Kenneth Bowles ' ' ' Samue1GOOdhue Chandler . . . Gu? Clark . . .John Garnsey Fred Jervis . . . Paul Lawler . . . Stanley ert Harris . . . John I-lelif . . . Charles Hum- phreys . . . Robert Johnston . . . Robert Lovejoy . . . Richard Mansfield . . . Robert Albert Bratt ...John Bryan Mercer . . . Richard Nichols . . . Paige . . . Robert Cummings . . . Simonds . . . George Sleeth . . . Frederick W llllillll Forbes . . . John Hunton . . . Fred Staff . . . Ralph Staples . . . Robert Weathers Kuss . . . Loring Macalaster . . . Robert . . . Irving Wlhittemore Jr. First Row: Allen, Stevens, Meserve, Moller, Clock, W1'ight, Marshall, Cram, R. Smith, Robbins, Sarme. Bassett, Bowles. Second Row: Mudge, Jervis, Bratt, Macalaster, Kuss, Helff, Pelonsky, Staff, Lee, Whittemo1'e, Whippen, Simonds, Mercer, Gay. Third Row: Murphy, VVilliams, Cummings, Mansfield, Reynolds, Hunton. Taggart, Forbes, Sipe. Bryan, Chandler, Harris Crider. Fourth Row: Carnsey, Lovejoy, Brooks, Adams, Batchelder, Humphreys, Jonnston Goodhue, Weathers, Nichols, Staples, Clark, Sleeth. 1 . . . Donald Cay . . . Wlilliam Grider . . . Rob- 0 si ' U uv IIII E K D y KAPPA SIGMA OFFICERS President .V....... ,.V.,..,A..,4,......... R ICHARD COCHRAN Vice-President. .... ....... R OBERT VAUGHAN Secretary , ..,.,, ,,...... W IILFRED SILVIA Treasurer... ,A.. ...RAI.PH DESROCHES HE KAPPA SIGMA Fraternity was founded in 1869 at the University of Virginia by five men who had an opportunity to join one or more of the fraternities then existing at the university, but, wishing to belong to the same one, decided to found a new one. From that day the fraternity has rapidly pro- gressed to the distinction of being second largest in the country, with one hun- dred and thirteen active chapters. The Beta Kappa Chapter of Kappa Sigma was established on February 27, 1901. On the day of its establishment twenty-seven men were initiated into the fraternity. For the first fifteen years the Beta Kappa Chapter Was located at the present site of the Lambda Chi Alpha house. The new house was built in 1916 and the chapter was moved to the location it now enjoys. The men responsible for the establishment of the chapter here at the University of New Hampshire were C. W. Burkett and S. F. Johnston, professors of agriculture. 96 Frank Churas . . . Richard Parker . . . Ralph Pasquale . . . Kenneth Cochran . . . Ralph Des- Pinhero . . . Gilbert Standish. Roches . . . Robert Dowd . . . Anthony Durso . . . Robert Gardner . . . Winslow Joseph Annicchiarico Macdonald . . . Laurent Morin . . . Wilfred 1- - - - - - Thomas Atkins . . . James Silvia . . . Robert Vaughan. Audette . . . Torsten Benson . . . Alfred Cl .'df...K'Ul D ...S't Paul Harrison Robert lung L mms ey Cy tudr ' 'L 's ' E' H'11...W'11'f H- - Hinche Robert Knivfht ynon Vcrnon d 1 lam dn . . . Wlilliam Kolinskg I. Roger-ilieier Son ' lvalter Holivlaml ' i l Ellgar Lcssarfl . . . ugene Letouineau . . . Lionel MHFOIS ' ' John lVICK0an ' ' ' Robert Sawyer' . . . Roger llflaynard . . . Andrew Monalian . . . Wlillard Nute . . . Edward Ouelettc . . . Il- 5 Robert Cahall . . . Charles Al Phipps . . . Albert Pia . . . Carmen Rag- 94 Clute . . . Philip Curcuru . . . onese . . . Palmer Reeves . . . Shirley Rincs Royce Hill . . . Wlillard Kemp . . . Frank . . . Robert Scott . . . Richard Smith . . . Lanza . . . Donald lVlacAusland . . . Markos John Spearman . . . John Stuart . . . Robert Manus . . . George Norman . . . Edward Wfaters. First How: Macdonald, Churas, Gardner, Silvia, Cochran, Vaughan, DesRoches, Dowd, Morin. Second Row: Keller, Sawyer, Phipps, Pasquale, Waters, Kolinsky, Lessard, Monahan, Knight, Kemp, Pinhero, Hinchey. Third Row: Eynon, Atkins, Scott, Chirnside, Stuart, Pia, Ragonese, Benson, Mardis, Hanson, Hall, Letourneau. Fourth Row: Curcuru, Ouellette, Annicchiarico, Lanza, Spearman, Howland, Audette, Durso, Harrison, Parker, Maynard, Rines. Sw ag, :rfb 4?s A144 dlfllllln r v A X A 'fs' H A WB 3999 IR QLLISQUEQ LAMBDA CHI ALPHA OFFICERS President ...,.,, V. .,....,.,......,.,.A EUGENE W7RIGI-IT Vice-President ...A,.4 I. .... WILLIAM F. ICING Secretary ,..I,I,... ........ R OBERT DYSON AMBDA CHI ALPHA was founded at Boston University on November 2, 1909, when the Cosmopolitan Law Club decided to form itself into a Greek- letter society. The most extensive amalgamation in the Greek-letter fraternity took place in August, l939, under the terms of a merger with Theta Kappa Nu with the result that Lambda Chi Alpha became the second ranking fraternity. Lambda Chi Alpha now l1as more than one hundred and seven active chapters in forty- ftwo states and Canada. The fact that there is a chapter at the University of Toronto makes it one of the few international fraternities. A local fraternity, Beta Phi, was founded at the University of New Hamp- shire in l906. This society was affiliated with Lambda Chi Alpha in l9l8 through the efforts of George Blatchford, Arthur Clapp, and Wilfred Osgood, and on March 29 of the same year, it was installed as Alpha Xi Zeta of Lambda Chi Alpha by Warren Cole of the Grand High Zeta. The first chapter house was on Ballard Street, but in l922 the present house was purchased. The chapter held the distinction of winning the Tetrelhalon Award in l932-l933, an honor given only to the best all-round chapter nationally. 98 Wesley Boles . . . Robert Perry Reed . . . Richard Scammon . . Crosbie . . Robert Dyson Wlilliam Scotland . . . Wfalter Smith . . Robert King . . . Wayne Lowry . . . Parker w'Tlll.tC0II1l7. A Kenneth Lucy . . . John Rowe . . . Fred Saunders . . . Charles Vaughan . . . Eugene il Richard Austin . . - .lOl1I1 Wfright. 9 Ayer . . . Robert Conway . . . Lloyd Crocker . . . Josef DelVtuzio . . . Silas Alson Brown . , , Thegphilus Dunklee . . . Peter Fitanides . . . Chesley Fitanidgg , , , C31-1 Hyld. Hatch . . . George Hatch . . . Leon Libby burg . . . William King . . . Robert Lucy . . . Bruce Mather . . . Richard Mullavey . . . Carleton Preble . . , Edgar V31-ney , , , Allen Neff . . . ,lack Orrall . . . Gerald Per- Harlan Whitehead. kins . . . William Phipps . . . Stephen Saye- wich . . . George Snook . . . John Snow . . . 1 4. Howard Brown . . . Marshall Lewis Soule . . . Frederick Talmers . . . 9 Dougherty . . . Ralph George Donald Tibbetts . . . Robert Walker . . . Gail Clayton Lane . . . Richard McDermott Wlatson . . . Willia111 Whitman . . . Charles Phillip Pallas . . . Robert Phelps . . . Wills. First Row: Boles., R. King, K. Lucy, W. King. Dutchess,', Preble, Wright, Dyson, Whit- comh, Crosbie, Dougherty. Rowe. Second Row: Talmers, R. Lucy, Varney, Brown, W. Smith Hyldburg, McDermott, Wills, Tihbetts, Reed, Scammon, Pallas, Whitehead. Third Row: T. Fitanides, R. Austin, Phipps, G. Hatch, DeMuzio. C. Hatch, Snook, Snow, Watson, Scotland, George, C. Vaughan, A. Brown. Fourth Row: Soule, Phelps, Mullavey, Perkins, Ayer, Orrall Lane, P. Fitanides, Crocker, Saunders, VValker, Neff, Libby. e s 'f -L ' ' r '. . M 12 1 fr.-.,,:m.2:1:f,:: ,,,- af, ,,,. tw -,,. ,... , , ...., ,, ,N fgifr' ' ' -wb A S Um WWW 1 ik K, N NL., X is Q1 AGP' X 'f 9' Q U 15' S Q lm I .uu'F xT 1-:,'.', lljfgup . ,olhs ff..,l 1- 1- L-: . .jg-g m.,.S1 ,-b-- ----- - ZX X Q . A C 5 2 V 1 25:5 5 -xy, e -12 5 N ,ff ,G 4'- new I If 6 GM, r x X 4 Wo, Q, .S ' ' S '07 'A et x X V X X PHI ALPHA OFFICERS President ,,..., ,,... , . . .. .. . 1, 111EYER SATZOWV Vice-President ., . HCHARLES GozoNsKY Secretary .,.,..,A,,. .,.A....A E ZEKIEL Bo0'rH Treasurer , .... ...SAM ASKENAZY HE PHI ALPHA Fraternity was organized in October 1914, by tive freshmen at George Washington University. In November 1914, a charter was granted Phi Alpha by that university, and the fraternity became an established Hellenic institution. In 1923, at the University of New Hampshire, a group of Jewish students founded a local, Tau Gamma Phi. On May 18, 1924, the local chapter was in- stalled as the Omicron chapter of the Phi Alpha Fraternity. Throughout its existence at the University, Umicron chapter has participated actively in all campus and interfraternity functions. For a number of years Phi Alpha was prominent in intramural debating winning the Edward Munroe Stone Cup for forensic achievement three of the four years that this trophy was in competition. This award was iinally retired pcrn1anent1y in 1934. 100 rill Feldman . . . lllaurice Gozonsky . . . Albert Kapit . . . Louis Katzc . . . Leon Mandcll . . . Bernard Miller . . . Warren Robbins . . . .lack Roberts . . . Gerald Smith. il 6 Frank Cohen . . . Herbert 94' Davis . . . Robert Erskine . . . Ellsworth Falk . . . Russell Goldbaum . . . Herbert Goriinkle . . . Benjamin Hart- mann . . . Ira Koerner . . . Harold Lecn . . . Bennett Lewis . . . Gerald Margil , . . Irving Morrison . . . Ralph Rudnick . . . Norman Samel . . . Norman Schwartz. lwrst Row Borr Geller L Cozonslxy batzow Askenazy, Booth, Roberts. Second Row: Feldman bfxmcl Brown C, bmlth Cohen Mxnclcll, Michaels. Third Row: Rosenhlatt, LBYSI bchwvlrtz Davl MOFYI on Colflnkle lxocrncr, Celt, Katze. ,, x IFLA- . . f. as me rv e'+ t at if M fr fill 1 J 1' Qrgiffl tif N- .ff 1... 4 f jj sk! ' 1 Q37 f , .dwg .J PHI DELTA UPSILO OFFICERS President 4.,., , ,. . .... PERRY KNow1,Es Vice-President .,.,.. ..,.. H AROLD XVARREN Secretary A.....4 ..... S HERMAN REED Treasurer ,..,. ....., M ALCOLM GIFFORD SMALL group of undergraduates on this campus hegan negotiation for a fraternity in the fall of 1924. The establishment of Phi Delta Upsilou took place on February 27, 1925. The fraternity was founded on the fundamental ideals of hrotherhoocl, schol- astic and athletic achievements. Although the fraternity is a local one it ranks high in scholarship and is enthusiastic in athletics. Phi Delta Upsilon enters into the social life on campus by having thc usual parties and house dances throughout the year. 102 1 Malcolm Giiforii . . . Perry Knowlcs . . . Harry 'Luvas . . . Charles Simmons . . . Myrl Smith . . David Siilcs . . . XYYCIHICH Wichstcr. . . . Philip Pvusnf . . . Philip Prall . . . lxcu- ncih Hililillrillll . . . XX iiiarei Smilh. 1 Xxayiic' Uaihri . . . John BJ 'I' . . . Paul Barrel! . . . lxt Hohcrl Benson . . . Sllllllllfl' QIIICCSCIIIRUI . . John Blavk . . . Russell Davis U H , . V .. A Hcrhcrl Llllm . . . Hohort Lollcr . . . kon- . . . Stow on King . . . SilC1'1l12ill N ' 1 Y ' nolh Lox . . . .IHIIICS Dav . . . ffoorgrc Dwongor Hood . . . Harold W arrcn. Y ' ,, H . . . Howard Grant . . . John La lourcttc . . . Austin Macaulay . . . Paul Nlagoon . . . 1 5 Laurence Barr . . . John Yvilliani Magoon . . .Donald Rand . . . Harold Bowloy . . . George Brungot Sands . . . John Tillotson . . . xvilliillll Vial- . . . Philip Dooley . . . William Killough iavc . . . Xvohster Xvllitil. First How: Blavk. M. Smith. Wvbhler. Uifforrl. Knoulrs. Warwn. Hvvfl. Slilv-. Rand. SPCUIIII lf0ll'I H. Rurscll. W. Sniiih. l4lll'ilS. Peaso. Killough. Boisiry. W'2liiil1'P, Rohinsun. Dooley, Brungol. Third Row: Mau-aulay, llhccsoiiian, R. Benson, Salida, Magzoou, Tillotfon. lloller. Burrell. While, Cilley. CDMA Mu 557' PHI MU DELTA OFFICERS President .,...........,....4.,...,...,...A.,. ROLAND BOUCHER lst Vice-President ..,.,., . ..., , HBRAGDON HANSON 2nd Vice-President ..,..,... ,,......... R OLAND SMITH Secretary ..4.,..,.....,. .. ,.... ...DONALD RUSSELL Treasurer ......,. .... R OLLAND GOVE HE PHI MU DELTA fraternity was founded on March 1, 1918, during a convention of the National Federation of Commons Clubs at the Massachu- setts State Chapter of the Federation. It was made up of local chapters in various colleges. On March 8, 1918, at the Massachusetts Convention, the Connecticut, Vermont, and New Hampshire delegates voted to form a Greek-letter fraternity, adopted the name of Phi Mu Delta, and drafted a constitution. The Fraternity has grown from the three original chapters to the present thirteen chapters extending from Maine to California with a total membership of 3,900. Phi Mu Delta, on this campus, was first located at the intersection of the Newmarket and Dover Roads. In 1920, the chapter moved to a house on Main Street opposite the intersection of Madbury Road on Main Street. After living there for over nine years, the fraternity built its present chapter house at 24 Mad- bury road. 104 Roland Boucher . . . Roger Chamard . . . Dean Cham- berlain . . . Chester Cordon . . . Rolland Cove . . . Milton Hall . . . Bragdon Han- son . . . Parker Mitton . . . Edward Morrow . . . Donald Russell . . . Roland Smith . . . Vinton Yeaton. il 4 hlerit Bean . . . Kenneth 9 4' Creed . . . Norman Deming . . . Nlilton Fortier . . . Donald Freese . . . Wfarren Hay . . . Robert Heaney . . . Don- ald Linscott . . . Richard liflerrifield . . . Henry Szezepan . . . James Tucker . . . Wyatt XVebb . . . Herbert Wuth. il Roland Avery . . . Oscar 9 Brown . . . Lloyd Chapman . . . William Dane . . . Raymond Downer . . . Martin Ericson . . . David Cove . . . Robert Handy . . . Boyd MacKinnon . . Gregory Prior . . . Richard Tenney. Stanley Arlauskas . . . Rob- ert Bean . . . Alan Bjorkman . . . Richard Carpenter ,lr .... John Cushing . . . Dwight Douglas . . . Charles Fowler . . . . . . Wiilliam Freese . . . Theodore Frink . . Andrew Hastings . . . Richard Jones . . . Robert Lang . . . G. Robert Lange . . . Rich- ard Marehe . . . Leon Marden Jr .... John McAuliffe . . . R. McDonald . . . Stuart Mc- Donald . . . Robert McDougal . . . Raymond Minor . . . William Moody . . . Robert Morin . . . William O'Meara . . . David Pettigrew . . . Lawrence Poisson . . . Theodore Rey- nolds . . . Richard Sherman . . . Arthur Simpson . . . Edward Tompkins . . . Stephen Tupper . . . Albert Twombly . . . Robert Varney . . . Peter Vollkommer . . . Paul Waldron . . . Robert Webber . . . Penley White . . . Frederick Whitham. First Row: Hay, Yeaton, Morrow, Russell, Boucher, Mrs. Grilk, R. Smith, Cove, Mitton, Chamberlain, Lang. Second Row: Avery, Ericson, Merrifield, Creed, Charnard, Marche, Deming, Vollkommer, Prior, Whitham, Dane, Downer, O. Brown, Linscott. Third Row: Chapman, Webb, Simpson, D. Cove, Douglas, Bjorkman, Heaney, Freese, Hastings, Twombly, Jones, Szczepan, Waldron. Fourth Row: 0,Meara, Pettigrew, McDougal, Varney, Reynolds, MacKinnon, Webber, Lange, Tupper, Tompkins, Carpenter, M. Bean, R. Bean, Poisson. Nl! X i j y iffy UIC 7050 fqqf fel i I I Z S f 42 r NX PI KAPPA ALPH OFFICERS I'resident.,. , . . ,. ,. .A,..,.,, ,.....FRANK CRAINI Viz-1--I'residm1,t , lh:c'roR CHARTRAIN Sm-rotary .CnAlu,f:s f1EROULD Treasurer ,. . llI'INRY KAZIENKO RI CAM MA was organized in 1921, anrl very quiekly rose to he a popular local fraternity. Desiring an aHiliation with a national fraternity, a petition was sent to Pi Kappa Alpha, antl on Det-emher 7. l929, it heealne the Gamma M.l. ,.'m u L laptct ol l i Kappa Alpha fraternity. The school year hegins when the memhers come hack during Freshman Week to work and to repair the house. Vie parties are held every other Fritlay night. Da4l's Day is the first important event of the year. Luneheon is servefl and after the foothall game eoffee and doughnuts are served. A formal hanquet is held for the lIl0llllH'l'S and their guests the night of the annual Military Ball. Our annual eostume hall is helfl the following night. The theme for the tleeorations is taken from national news of Current times. The higgest event, of the year eomes the night after the annual Carnival Ball when we hold our Dream Girl Dance. During the tlanee a girl attencling is chosen to he the dream girl of the fraternity. She is presented a eup on whieh her name is inseriheal. 106 il 44 Henry Dowst . . . J0llI1 . . Pllilip Kennett . . . Clarenee Rollins 9 3 Marr . . . Rolmert Nylander . . .lames Tennant. Norman Reed ..., l elm Stowell . . . Rolnerl, Traehy. Russell Bagley . . . ,luflson Brooks ,lr .... james Eteson Hamm- Clm,-'min I . . F,-imk . . . Roberto Franco . . . Kenneth Haskell C,-um 1 u i Wlim,-im, Mivijlt. . . William Hayes ,lr .... Louis Huggins u ' . Earl Whitney. . . . Nlatliew Lipski . . . Clifford Perkins ,I r. . . . Scott Pike . . . Stanwoocl Slack . . . C. Wendell Stearns . . . Herlrert Stearns Burton Crain . . . Charles . . . Ollie Turpeinen . . . Ernest NVQ-lffll Jr. Ceroulrl ..., llenry liazienko , . George Williams. First Row: Marr, Stoxsell, W'hitney, Ceroulcl, Cram, Chartrain. Kennett, Nylander, Dowst. Second Row: Tennant, Rollins, Kazienko, Slack, B. Crain, Pike, Lipski, Welch, Brooks, Franco. Third Row: G. Wendell Stearns, Perkins, Bagley, H. C. Stearns, Haskell, Hayes, Wfilliams. 5 i 5 D If fl ! r- Z9' I Q, ff! Q QE s f ,H W fa 32. 1 2 1 P ' fn s 1 n A , far? 4 I l ff K I , x 'I 4 I ' F ,ff - 1 H M, 5' 'ff '-' 7f'f A' Qji.-'5 E -g.., ff... A f-. ff ,M 4' AMW Ii I , 'Mimi' ++4 I if 4 . ,X Q I 'if F X X 4 7 101' f ' fm .4---'fif?Q5lllQi':1 1 f , as 45, ,r X? ,Q ? in I Q -V r I H 1 1 f L 4 W 1 f 3 fy Q91 All eil! 1 0? , I 1 I Z4 2 ,f ff ,nf 'Wi 'Q I . d igg . ' 9 L V, 9114 ! ar e fr A , ef- aa 'FEF' . yy ff ..., . ,, f ' SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON OFFICERS President ,.,.......Q,.. ....,,., W ILLIAM CALL Vice-President .,...,.. ....,..,,. J OHN DAVIS Secretary .4..,.,..,. ,.,..,,. W ALLIS CURTIS Treasurer .....,, .e..,.... G EORGE R1oLo N MARCH 9, 1865, Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded at the University of Alabama. The local fraternity, Zeta Epsilon Zeta, became the New Hamp- shire Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon on March 10, 1917. Zeta Epsilon Zeta was located in both Ballard and Bickford Halls before moving to its present house on the corner of Madbury and Garrison Roads. Sigma Alpha Epsilon has representatives in every campus organization be- sides placing many men on varsity athletic teams and in prominent campus organizations. The highlights of the social season at the house are Mother's Day and Dad's Day, the Spring Formal, with banquets before the big dances and novelty dances the night after. Every Friday and Saturday night there are informal vic dances. 108 Gordon Barnett . . . Wlilliam den . . . Arthur Nlurphy . . . Dai 1d RllCl116 Call . . . Albert Conde . . . . . . Albert YVaterman . . . Paul W1SCH1dIl John Constable .... l ohn Gaw . . . Malcolm Lowe . . . Cecil Stackpole . . . Andreas Nicholas Amato . xxfdlttql' Turner. Brownsword . . W ilham Christy . . . Clayton Conn . . . Hu ll Din woodie . . . John Gaskell . . . Bobcit Gibson Henry Bedard . . . Xvarren . . . Robert Hagen . . . Paul Harlunson Brainerd . . . Wlallis Curtis Boland Hotte . . . James Irwin . Andi ew jolm Davis , , , L90 Dupont , , , George Isaak . . . Louis lsaak . . . Stephen Johnson Houle . . . Fred Hoyt . . . John Hubbard . . . Richard Jones . . . Robert Kimball Charles Johnson . . . Alex Lesnevslcy Donald Kingsbury . . . Teppo Lehto Ralph B101-ang , , , -101111 M01-gan , , , Dorian Lemieux . . . Wfilliam lllffaffeity Wayne Mullaxrey ...A , Ulm, fl-liffllmongl . , . . . Charles blorang . . . Donald lllorrison fem ge Biolo. . . Hedley Pingrec . . . lllfarnei Plummci . . . Jack Ross . . . Elmer Bunyon ward Bushlow . . . James Russell James Robert Bedard . . . Camille Sawyer . . . Frederick Sheehy . Coidon 94' Blair . . . Robert Dillon . . . Sleeper ...t A lexander Smith . . Kenneth Richard Dodge . . . Lloyd Farwell . . . Paul Stewart . . . Donald Thompson Ralph Fiedyma . . . Edwin Lane . . . Donald Mars- Tierney . . . Frederick Wlilson. First Row: Lowe, Barnett, Richmond, Stackpole, Curtis, Morang, Call, Mrs. Barnes, Davis Riolo, Dupont, Conde, Caw, Constable. Lesnevsky. Second Row: Tierney, Lemieux, Gaskell Pingree, Dresser, C. Johnson, Morgan, Blair, Turner, Brainerd, Dinwoodie, lrwin, C. Morang Hubbard, Hoyt, A. Isaak. Third Row: Ritchie, Lehto, Dodge, Morrison, Sleeper, Lane, Murphy Wisenlan, Marsden, Vlfaterman, Dillon, Farwell, Houle, Jones, Harkinson. Fourth Row Amuto, Buslilow, Sawyer, Kingsbury, Stewart, K. Smith, L. Isaak, Slleehy, Plummer, Wilsorl Runyon, S. Johnson, R. Kimball, Mc-Cafferty, Brownssw ord, Hagen. fm , .. V , , ' . ,, 1 .ll 3 J 31177 f D NNXFVXN fa AA' M' la y f ' L A A egg fff' 'iii V ,. Qi: fyfj' CA f-mi ,,,, ,L c , V 2-11 - Ffa-if: ,-,1 K-,Q Q- 1 J K 1 A 'fi ff M27 q,,V ky fy XM' Q47 1 Xl SIGMA BETA OFFICERS President 4....,....V , ..,....,.. VA,.. A L EXANDER KISCHITZ Vice-President ,.,...A. A4...A..... 0 TT0 SCHRICKER Secretary .....,...... ..,....... E UGENE Lmvsn Treasurer. ....... MAURICE PARKER ICMA BETA was founded on April 4, 1921, as a local fraternity. The charter members were a group of undergraduates who organized in Room 312, Fairchild, moving that same year to the Jenkins house, which later became the Great Bay Inn and is now unused. The fraternity moved to the Langley house now occupied hy Phi Delta Upsilon in the fall of 1922, and in the winter of 1927 the Chapter took up residence in its present house at 26 Mad- hury Road. Members of Sigma Beta were charter members and active delegates in the formation of the national organization of Theta Upsilon Omega at Buck- nell University in 1924. Theta Upsilon Omega turned in its national charter on May 15, 1936, after twelve years as a national fraternity, and again he- came a local fraternity under its original name, Sigma Beta. 110 Wallace Ackerman . . . Rus- sell Byles . . . Thomas Cal- lagy . . . liolncrt Clark . . . George Carr . . . Alex liischitz .... A llan Itillllflllil . . .Kenneth ltang . . . Etlwartl Macliel . . . liolrert O'Neil . . . Maurice Parker . . . Greenleaf Pielcarfl . . Walter Platt . . . Arthur Sawyer. lvIlllt'0llll Battles . . . George lletlarcl . . . Millartl Berry 5 Donalrl Barry . . . Socrates Bollotas . . . lNieholas Kis- f-hitz . . . llaylnonfl I1ZlllOllllllll'll0 . . . Donalxl Lang . . . Sarlcis PllSlllQ1liill . . . Ernest, Rangazas. il 6 ,lolln Baller . . . llaroltl Bat- 94 tlcs . . . Eflgar Garcl . . . Don- ald Caron . . . Everett Chapman . . . Clarence Colhy . . . Richard Ellll'l'y . . . ,lohn Grafly . . . Eugene Hannnonfl . . . Arnold Hanson . . . Williant Johnson . . . Bernarel ,lortlan . . . Daniel Kiley . . . Emil Krnpa ..., I ohn ' v . . 'T . . fwignfllml Mallet' . . . llohert Marshall . . . Hllylllllllll ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' MeA1loo . . . Frank lWeNally . . . liaymonrl ' ' ' 'll' l'1 l'l llilrrlg ' ' ' Jlllw Kmxmm ' ' ' llllCNiiIlll'll'2l . . . Bernarml Blflpllllflilllll . . . .lamcs Kiln-ral .... f xl'lllLl1'LilI11.fPl' . . . Eugene Daniel Blcphcrson l . . David Ouplumt ' . Leaver . . . 'l'l1on1as Niles . . . Melvain Oli- John Palmer . . ' 'flmddcus llieciomk ' . . phant . . . NX illianl Pine . . . Henry Rapsis Xigholag Rodis . . . Earlon Seawurcls . . . . . . Otto Sf'lll'lI'lit'l' ..., Nlfrctl 'llurnlcllc . . . Richard Scflgewicli . . . Frank 'llatarczulc rlllltlllttli XX hilly. . . . Rolmcrt 'l'hotnas ..., l ames xxilllgll. First Row: Carr, Lamoncl, Callagy. Bylcs, Mat-liel, Harris, Leaver, A. Kiscllitz, Parker, Scln'ickcr. Keenan. l'irliartl, liilrercl, ElIlCl'f', Grady. Second Rolf: Colliy. ltanger, Turmcllc. Pine, Harris, Ollllllillll. Ralpsis, lllcserve. Lang, Tatarczuli. YY. ,lolmson, Jorilun, Clllllllllllll, Mcl'zn'lantl. xyllllglll. Third Rolf: lgUll0l1lS. liangazas. Wvllitty. Barry, Niles, N. Kiscllitz. ItZlll0lIlllill'll6, Roalis, Card. Mt-Adoo, Piecioralt. Battles, H. Battles. Bedard. Flint. Fourth Roni: Krupa, ll1l'NlllIllll'il, Baker. BfI2llll'l'. Tllomas. Palmer, Marshall, Hammond. I-Ianson. . ! 5 Y 2 l W 5 s 2 E s NJN? C, X., Dx K . , I X J . v S., ' N., sXA ,g X Q 7 Xzf f0 f ff , 7209! ff! f f if ff X 7 A- 0 X X ff! r v V 4 r iff ff!!! f , f ZW! ff? U QW! f ZQN, if f' QQ ff, X X puff, ' 1 X ! f X w X X X .N 4. . TA KAPP EPSILO OFFICERS President ....,...... .........A,....A..,.., G EORGE HERRICK Vice-President .....,. ...... M ERTON BELL Secretary .,.... ...,... R OBERT CARTER Treasurer ........ ,....... F RANK LAINIBERT N 1889, five students at lllinois Wesleyan University bonded themselves to- gether to live as brothers in Esteem, Charity and Love in the fraternity of Tau Kappa Epsilon. Since then, Tau Kappa Epsilon has spread its influence to all sections of the country, having an enrollment of 43 active chapters and 39 graduate chapters. Delta Sigma Chi, the original local chapter, was founded in 1926 in Fair- child Hall with 24 charter members. Under the guidance of the late Dr. Eugene Bishop, Delta Sigma Chi's faculty advisor, the new chapter soon made its influ- ence felt by the success of its members in scholarship and extra-curricular activities. The local chapter decided to affiliate with a national fraternity in 1929, and, after two years' probation, its petition to Tau Kappa Epsilon was accepted and it became Alpha Nu Chapter. The new chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon carried on where the Delta Sigma Chis left off hy winning permanent possession of the Wilford Osgood Schol- astic Trophy in 1923 and by placing men in all the important campus activities. Today Tau Kappa Epsilons have heen following the pace set hy their prede- cessors and in spite of the fact that it is the youngest fraternity on the campus it is one of the most active. 112 1943 Robert Carter . . . George . . . Ricluard Mason . . . Chin Ngoon . . Herrick . . . Frank Lambert Chester Otis . . . William Sheridan . . . . James Sleeper. Gerald Smith. B161-ton Bell . . ' Howard Wrarren Adams . . . Norman il , Cadorette . . . Rolmert Cusli- Darhng ' ' ' Henry Lopez inff . . . Paul DeQuoV . . . Jules Gaffnon . . . . . . Russell Orton . . . Edmund Stewart. , U ' . , D . George Gaul . . . Francis George . . . Dennis Haine . . . Raymond Hamilton . . . Albert il Andre Docos . . . Wallace .laelie . . . Robert Larmondra . . . Donald 9 Goddard . . . Rolwert Hau- Mullen . . . Rolrert Nevers . . . Edwin Thayer briell . . . Philip Kelly . . . Rieliard lllardeu . . . David Wlilliams. First Row: Darling, Lambert, Herrick, Orton, Lopez. Second Row: Robinson, Marden. Sheridan, George, G. Smith, Ngoon. Third Row: Haine, Mason, Stewart, llilllllfltfll, Larmondra. Kelly, Otis. w1 ' iSL1'i?1?1t1'-fit' V K 31921122251 .JEFQASQV 1 1 I, ,f , fa , 5 X . Mm m H L 9 tr, fix f ' f t . .ta i f ttxxM2t,7 ill . 11,11 N K I B at W n ' it : uit 1 :W 1 A -at ' at 2? J' GHPSNOXA Y THET CHI OFFICERS President .. . .. . , UTIIEODORE STEBBINS Vice-President ..,. , ....,.. DANIEL RUSSELL Secretary ..LL., H .,,..,. FRANK BROWN Treasurer ., ...,.. ROBERT STEWART N the evening of Octoher 10, 1903, a nunlher of new students at New Hampshire College niet in the roo111 of Cl1ar1es H. Merrifield, class of 1904, and founded the Delta Xi Society. The same night a constitution was adopted. 1'n a room on the third floor of Thompson Hall, eleven charter fmemhers proceeded to choose the colors and motto of the newly formed organization. Delta Xi had a prosperous career as a 1ocal fraternity for seven years. Later it seemed desirous to he affiliated with a national fraternity, so on March 16, 1910, it was voted to petition the Theta Chi Fraternity for a charter. The charter was granted April 29, and Delta Xi was installed May 21 as the Zeta Chapter of' Theta Chi. A house was leased in 1905 and hccalnc the home of the chapter until 1922 MfllC11 a large, We1l-built house was purchased in the residential section of the town. ln 1925, Zeta Chapter purchased the lot on which her house now stands. The first meeting of the chapter was held in the house on February 18, 1930. Since its installation on campus, Theta Chi has participated actively in all campus and interfratcrnity functions. For the third consecutive year, Zeta Chapter has Won the Skulls, Stunt Night competition, and it also has members i11 niany prominent and important CHIIIPUS activities. An outstanding tradition of Theta Chi is the Tea Party which is held in Boston annually. 114 www.41:.:im:'.s:g,...ms.,'ag4, W-we -..L Russell Beal . . . Carl Carlson . . . David Chase . . . Charles E. Clark . . . Charles Costigan . . . Franklin Hill . . . Arnold Horne . . . Robert Joslin . . . Rohert Leggett . . . Daniel Russell . . . David Sleeper . . . YVilliam Snider . . . Theodore Stebbins . . . Robert Stewart. Frank Brown . . . Curtis Chase . . . Sam Cralrtree . . . John Greenaway . . . Wlilfred Hastings . . . Wfesley Lyon . . . Richmond Moreom . . . Earl Quimby . . . Charles Richardson . . . Murray Smith . . . Philip Thurrell . . . Rohert Vlfheeler . . . Duncan WO0dWa1'fl. 45 ,lohn Atwood . . . Kirk Ben- 19 son . . . Robert Chase . . . First Row: Joslin, Snider, Horne, Sleeper, Stew ut Steblnns Mr Sn11th Russell I' Brown Real, Costigan, Hill, Carlson. Second Row: Moxtom W7heele1 Benson C Cl lrk llllllby C E. Clark, M. Smith, Leggett, Hastings, Creenns IV C Chase Newell lwon R Ch lse Third Row: Dodge, Stewart, Grant, Wood, Richardson Vtfoodu nd Atwood D lhlse Chulchlll R. Smith, Thurrell, Whittemore, Pasirhuke. Fourth Ixou Raduuzo Splller Craesset Meulll Manion, Macey, Clark, Thomas, Lamson, Hanson Nichols Osborne Benedlct Q M 1 UMTS q -lu ilu lg v ., Jw X. nh , ,f ft ' ' 32' QIIIIII. mms nun ii unnnuuuumuu Eta AUTTA Wgiar .Q S: M is N ' THETA KAPPA PHI OFFICERS President , . . , .... ARTHUR ROUILLARD Vice-President .. .. . . HGERALD WoI.coT'r Secretary .,..A , . ROY G0onFu1.Low Treasurer .,.,. ..... , DONALD CROSS HETA KAPPA PHI was founded in 1919 as the XS Cluh at Lehigh Univer- sity in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, hy a group of students who wished to perpetuate an everlasting hond of friendship. It was organized as Theta Kappa Phi, a Greek-letter society, on Octoher 1, 1919. In Marcli, 1922, Theta Kappa Phi at Lehigh University and Theta Kappa Phi at Pennsylvania State College amalgamated, thus establishing a national social collegiate fraternity. Since that time the organization has es- tablished chapters at leading colleges and universities throughout the United States. Nu Sigma Nu was founded at the University of New Hampshire to con- form with the needs and desires of a group of students who wished to hind their friendships more closely together through one common ideal. On Marell 10, 1924, this local was installed as Epsilon Chapter of Theta Kappa Phi. Since its installation on this campus, it has won perlnanent trophies in intramural foothall, haskethall, and howling. Parties and house dances are held throughout the year. 116 Fred Charron . . . Dominic DiMartino . . . Roy Good- fellow . . . Charles Judd . . . Vllilliam Keough . . . Norman Roger . . . Arthur Rouillard . . . Richard Sullivan. Donald Cross . . . Richard Horan . . . Edward Kelleher . . . Thomas O'Donnell . . . Ralph Pino . . . Gerald Wolcott. il Robert Canton . . . John Cross . . . Ernest DeCicco . . . Joseph Kelleher . . . Norman Lennon . . . Patrick McLaughlin . . . Rohert McNair . . . Richard Melanson . . . William Monagle . . . Richard Peckham . . . Ernest Rainey . . . Joseph Ricciardone . . . Richard Simses . . . Joseph Strumski . . . Frederick Wakefield. 6 Robert Amirault . . . Francis Brill . . . Theodore Capron . . . James Coughlin . . . Hollis Emery . . . Hubert Fitzgerald . . . William Ganley . . . Ralph Hall . . . Richard Lopes . . . James Nestor . . . James Powers . . . Phillip Roy . . . Frank Sheehan . . . Daniel Sullivan . . . Bernard Sweeney . . . Joseph Znaidowsky. First Row: Horan, Keough, Chai-ron, Wolcott, Rouillard, Judd, Goodfellow, Roger, Cross. Second Row: Emery, Fitzgerald, Ricciardone, Peckham, Kelleher, Pino, Melanson, Simses, 0'Donnell, Coughlin. Third Row: Sweeney, McNair, McLaughlin, J. Kelleher, J. Cross, Lennon, Canton, Wzlkefield, Powers, Hall, Roy. Fourth Row: Caron, Znaidowsky, Lopes, Sullivan, Strumski, Nestor, DiCicco, Amirault, Brill. W ik W1 ID A X K t 'XY h f oUd'LUwut.v 'VIL arid Nfkfm ALPHA CHI UMEGA OFFICERS President ..V...V , . . .. , ..........,,A..... HANN TAYLOR Vice-President .. ,, .. .JEAN MORRISON Secretary . .,.,.R ...BARBARA O,NEIL Treasurer .,., ,...,..R P ATRICIA Down LPHA CHI GMEGA was founded in 1885 at DePauw University in Indiana by seven women whose main interest was music. This is why the lyre is the symbol of the sorority. The local chapter was first organized in 1913 as Phi Alpha Phi. The difference between the founding of Alpha Chi Omega and other fraternities is that music was the chief tradition and its members are expected to be interested in musical and literary culture. During the year, several dances are given, including the annual formal. A tea is held on Father's Day and Mother's Day. A special program is held on Founder,s Day. During the fall of the year, there is the annual rushing with the rush banquet and then pledging. On the weekend of the Pan-Hellenic Dance, a special house dance is held. 118 Marjorie Chalmers . . . Doris Randall Condee . . . Mar- . . Arlinc Ladd . . . .lean Norma Prohaslia . . . Ann Betty Baker . . . Patricia Dowd . . . Constance Estes Ruth Grubc . . . Dorothy Keefe . . . Maxine Llbby . . . Elizabeth Lucey . . Barbara 0Ne1l. Jane Barton . . . Joan Col- l V ins . . . Gail Daly . . . ir- gina Dowd . . . Evelyn Laraba . . . Con- stance Lycett ..., A nn Miller . . . Norma 0'Dowd . . . Marion Sargent . . . Helen Somcs . . . Miriam Terhune. il Elinor Abbott . . . Beatrice 9 Clark . . . Dorice Elkins . . . Harriet Griggs . . . Barbara Harding . . . Natalie Harrington . . . Barbara MacKay . . . Mariette Mudgett . . . Mary O,Neil . . . .lanet Pucher . . . Nancy Vlfaid . . . Marjorie Ware . . . Nancy Wfassall . . . Lois Water- house. Fzrst Row: Daly, Ladd, Prohaska, Taylor. Mrs. Seavey, Morrison, Chalmers, Dower, P. Dowd. Second Row: Pucher, Collins, Terhune, Waid, Whitcomb, Elkins, Grube, Baker, Waterhouse, Mrs Conde, Griggs, Ware, Harrington. Third Row: M. O'Neil, B. 0,Neil, Clark, Libby, B. MacKay V. Dowd, 0'Dowd, Lycetl, Abbott, Wassall, Harding, Barton. Ci XXX iii: 75 Q CWNX J x ' K - Tj l Q QR. we at ff x 19,4 WW Q WM55? f F' gi?-:LQ xjj,,,X 1-1 gy Q13 .1 .ZFQ fsfiffif Amis I-4 ,Mfg Q! N'2 '-ffl-'-FCQII' gf? gee 1 fr 4 ff! ilffirieis Ni! X - QQA Q f 1 Q .QQQS -. 3 ,K Qrfffjg lu we 0 ff W f W9 Pa M9 K it ' ALPHA XI DELTA OFFICERS President ..,...,.,. ...4,.,A.. ...W.....,,A4, P A TRICIA JORDAN Vice-President ....,... ..........,.... C LARA KNIGHT Secretary .,,.4.4A.. ..A..... F LORENCE FLETCHER Treasurer .. ...... DOROTHY KIMBALL N April 17, 1893, at Lombard College, Galesburg, Illinois, Alpha Xi Delta was founded by ten earnest young women. From the very beginning it was intended that Alpha Xi Delta should not remain a local sorority. ln 1901- ' ' ' ' d tl nstitution 1902 deHn1te plans for nationahzation were finally made, an 16 co was formally adopted on April 17, 1902. Since then Alpha Xi Delta has grown and spread to fifty-live colleges in all parts of thc United States, concentrated particularly in the Middle West where it had its begmmng. Phi Delta was the first local sorority at the University of New Hampshire to become aililiated with a national organization, and became Tau Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta in 1914. ln 1924 Alpha Xi Delta built the first sorority house to be erected on this campus. Throughout the history of its growth, Alpha Xi Delta has striven to promote a spirit of friendship among its members and its sister sororities. 120 Shirley Clark . , . Hale . . . Patricia Gibson . . . Beatrice Grant . . . Virginia Hill . . . Patricia Jordan . . . Dor- othy Kimball . . . Flora Kimball . . . Nancy Ruth Carrier . . . Anne Don- ovan . . . Priscilla Garran . . . Anne Hale . . . Nancy Johnson . . . Shirley Kimball . . . Ruth Piper . . . Mary Elizabeth Porter . . . Lydia Shaw . . . Marion Crosby Florence It letcher Sheahan . . . Barbara Shepard . . . .loyce Kinsman . . . Vera Lang . . . Audrey Pierce G ' Alison ,reel Alice Xvcbh Smith . . . Enld Sorg . . . .lune Straw. ' l , ,lean Affnew . . . Priscilla .ludith Austin Gloria Hallam? t . Eleanor John- Callahan . . . Alice Cowgill . . . Barbara Ellis . . . Dorothy ,lelley . . . Clara Knight . . . Ruth Linscott . . . Melha McKay . . . Rita O'Connor . . . Ethel Steig- mann. ston . . . Rosalie Lamothe . . . Harriet Leslie . . . Norma Murchie . . . Shirley Newcomer . . . June Pearce . . . Anne Penniman . . . Lila Sprague . . . Phyllis Taggart . . lrene Urban . . . Frances Vllakefleld. First Row: Crosby, Gibson, F. Kimball, D. Kimball, Fletcher, Mrs. Sawyer. Jordan, Knight, Ellis, Pierce, Teel. Second How: Jelley, Piper, Kinsman, Porter, Newton, Shaw, S. Kimball, Sheahan, Donovan, Johnson, O7C0nnor, Cowgill, Hale. Third Row: Carrier, Garran, Webb, Lang, Smith, Linscott, Steigmann, Clark, Shepard, McKay, Callahan, Grant, Austin. Fourth Row: Hill, Lamothe, Straw, Sorg, Taggart, Murchie, Agnew, Hallam, Pearce, Wakeheld, Newcomer, Urban, Penniman, Johnston, Sprague. y x R H CHI OMEGA OFFICERS President . . A . . A .,..V.. , ,...,. MARCIA ROBINSON Vice-President , . DOROTHY FLANAGAN Secretary ...,,....,. . ALINE WVALSH Treasurer ., rr.,.. ADRIENNE DUMAINE N April 5, l895, Chi Omega was founded at the University of Arkansas hy four women students guided hy Dr. Charles Richardson, a Kappa Sigma and a regent of that University. There are at present ninety-six active chapters in forty-three states and l05 alumnae groups. Each year the sorority sponsors a national award, a gold medal, which is presented to the country's Outstanding woman in one of the following fields: social service, vocations, business, puhlic affairs, science or arts. The sorority was established on this campus in l9l5 when the local Alpha Alpha Alpha became the Mu Alpha of Chi Omega. Mu Alpha during the year leads the life of a typical sorority. Faculty teas, house dances, celebration of the Spring and Fall Elusian, celehration of Founderls Day, Pan-Hellenic han- quet, Open house, Mother's Day and Dad's Day are some of the various activities. While Mu Alpha chapter has existed only a third of the time that our University has, it has endeavored to carry out the ideals of the University as a whole and to give a fuller meaning to life. 122 Jane Austin . . . Barbara Eastman . . . Dorothy Flana- gan . . . Lorraine Leeper . . . Pauline Little . . . Frances Metcalf . . . Ruth Pfadenhauer . . Aline Walsh. Barbara D7Arcy . . . Constance French . . . Mary Garrett . . . Eleanor Huse . . . Ethel lnnes . . . Louise Johnson . . . Eleanor McHugh . . . Ellen Morton . . . Grace Murphy . . . Jane Norrick . . . Glenna San- born . . . Sylvia Steele . . . Virginia Tarr . . . Barbara Temple. 1- Jane Carter . . . Adrienne 9 Dumaine . . . Carolyn John- Deborah Benedict . . . Joyce son . . . Marcia Robinson . . . Constance Chadwick - - - D0I'iSDUU10Ht Salta , , , Martha Zink Wheeler, . . . Nancy Ferguson . . . Cynthia Fradd . . . Priscilla Legg . . . Mary Maguire . . . Mary Maye Anderson . . . Barbara Brown . . . Marion Brown Mazzolini . . . Miriam Meyer . . . Priscilla Noelte . . . Ann Parker . . . Dale Rollins . . . Ann Temple . . . Barbara Thompson . . . Phyllis Brown . . . Barbara Clapp . . . . . . Carol Wallis. .BUSY N'1 'j due lo 'king amocboid party-sH6: vnouen-91-t ei- M11 CIYC1 maifdrt I am spec amass. Qwhqa- Offbniej Klkvwtwa , welll SCC uiou -H-sb Sumnngr a+ .school and p.l'obabt1 durines kvd-q,r.sg.sslan 39747 '1 P99951 UWB Uff'0l4.'lJ down fb vngrg - tubs - . 4x, Len' lee-me in First Row: C. Johnson, J. Austin, Eastman, Dumaine, Robinson, Mrs. Pearl, Flanagan, -.xv Walsh, Little, Leeper, Pfadenhauer, Metcalf. Second Row: Benedict, Maguire, Steele, B. Tem- 4' ple, Anderson, Moore, Garrett, P. Brown, Salta, A. Temple, Chadwick, Innes, Norrick. Third Row: Fradd, Ferguson, B. Brown, Tarr, Meyer, Clapp, Carter, M. Brown, Wallis, Noelle, Huse. Fourth Row: Legg, D'Arcy, Sanborn, Dumont, Murphy, Mazzolini, French, McHugh, Thompson, K. Johnson, Cressy, Wheeler, Parker. K . -- , , Y .-W.. . fa . W... . 4. i,z ,m::smumm.v:,1n1...m fff-- ---- N - M-'M-12fHemau 'M'f-fu-avian-N--1 M. S 'fs'Y7'Y7'f ' SK 54 H R 1 f ki S X K A ' F itit 1 A ff . U - P l r f ,f if K PPA DELTA OFFICERS President ., ..EDI'1'H PHAIR Vice-Presirlent DOROTHY FITTS Secretary A r YRUTH WTADLEIGII Treasurer , BIADELINE FARINIER HE purpose of Kappa Delta sorority is to promote true friendship among thc college girls of our country hy ineulcating into their hearts and lives those principles of truth, of honor, of duty, without which there can he no true friendship. The leading events of Kappa Delta sorority are scattered throughout the year with numerous informal get-togethers. Rushing is a hig event in both the first and second semesters. Uctoher 23 is ohserved as Foundeifs Day. Each year we have a formal White Hose Banquet and every year in the late spring we desert the campus for a weekend camping trip. 124 Edith Phair. 1 4' Anita Chase . . . Dorothy 9 Fitts . . . Jean Foulkrod . . . Margaret Johnson . . . Lorraine Thyng . . . Ruth Wadleigh. 1- Madeline Farmer . . . Shirley 1- Edith King. 9 Lyford. 9 First Row: Johnson, Fitts, Phair, Farmer, Wadleigh. Second Row: Foulkrod, King, Lyford, Chase, Thyng. QXIIV F17 WD an UMM 15115 pa me-e ,-- -- it em M 9 MS ' In 'fx' fix wfllrcuz NS af ik -- 'fflflfllsfffnj it C12 M -I X Wf' A ' N ff? -'Z ' ,I 1 Y Qui? at ff 4.2.1,-,Q , 630 wt 4? is 1 1 , 'ia 5 4 'E L 1 ii5OL?JLDY?35J A 1' at PHI MU OFFICERS President A.A....... 4,4.....,.4V,V.....,.A....... J EAN DEMPSEY Vice-President 4. .A.. .,.... P HYLLIS CHURCHILL Secretary .,....,, . ,...,.,. SHIRLEY BoYNToN Treasurer .. ,.....,. LORENE SCOTT H1 MU, founded in the South, is the second oldest Greek-letter organization for women. Three progressive students at Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgia, started the Philomathean Society, which later developed into the present day Phi 1Vlu. Among the first notable honorary members were Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis. After the Civil 1X7ar, the mother chapter enlarged rapidly. So successful was this first fraternity that it became a national organization in 1904. Phi Mu was admitted to the National Pan-Hellenic Congress in 1911. Most influential among the philanthropies of the fraternity are the National Healthmobile and the Building Fund which aids many chapters in financing their houses. The local sorority Pi Delta was founded in 1916, petitioning for a chapter membership in the national Phi Mu in 1918. The present chapter, Beta Gamma, was granted its charter in February, 1919. The national sorority, Alpha Delta Theta, affiliated with Phi Mu in November, 1939. Today sixty-one chapters spread the tradition and heritage of Phi Mu from Maine across the entire United States. 126 Doris Churchill . . . Phyllis . . Jean Stephenson . . . Louise Temple Churchill . . . Jean Dempsey . . . Virginia Tupper. . . . Lorene Scott . . . Betty Stone. il 6 Ann Bueiak . . . Barbara 5 Shirley Boynton . . . Rachel Cook . . . Barbara Ferguson Brown . . . Joye Churchill . . . Jane Granton . . . Judith Ann Ham . . . . . . Mildred Cook . . . Faith Emery . . . Louise lrisln . . . Marion Johnson . . . Eliza- Carolyn Folsom , . , Eleanor Jewett . , . Rita beth Sanders . . . Mary Alice Thompson . . . Mitchell . . . Lois Pilling . . . Helen Besseguie Margaret Wllitrllall . . . Virginia Whit11t'y. First Row: B. Cook, Boynton, P. Churchill, D. Churchill, Mrs. Armstrong, Dempsey, Scott, M. Cook. Second Row: Ham, Tupper, Pilling, Johnson, Resseguie, Thompson, Brown, Jewett, Emery, J. Churchill. Third Row: Cranton, Buciak, Whitman, Irish, Sanders, L. Temple, Ferguson, Whitney, Mitchell. Sl ll 1 1 1 1 Q 3' 1 1 in 1 1 l 5 Q l 1 Q 1 l Q - . ummm 2 1.1- - - ,..1-..-...i- F 1 Q 1 - Q- l v v v v Q - ?,'4'.g.gq ...- ', .gg 7 '- E mg.. . . ii':2:f:'v2'24:-'1:2:251'5 3 .Nav 'r2v.'Z'.'s.'fe in 4:'3'aii'? w'f- v'6Y'Z W E O O Q Q9,v,0.0,0,0.9 4, I v .l.c. 1-11. en...,,..,.,.,,.,p,..,....... W,..,,. 1- i -,-,t mg. A il 1 un :q,t?fE I-v I1 -1- -t Mg.-3, -I g 1 Q an gqqgy A! I - - ' F - Q - 5 I .-.-.- -.-.-.- 1-.- -1. -1- ...1.... H 1--Q - Q - - vnu- 1' ug 1 we 1 1- - PI LA BDA SIGMA OFFICERS President .,... . .,... DOROTHY MCCREADY Vice-President ,.,. ......, E STHER DoYLE Secretary ..A.,,., ...,. C LARE LANGLEY Treasurer ,.,.. ......H12LENA DOBEK N February 23, 1920, Lambda Ph became Epsilon chapter of Pi Lambda Sigma, national Catholic sorority. I . n the fall of the year, there 1S the usual rushing of freshman with the de s t s er suppers and formal rush banquet, and then pledging Later on tl . , ie fall dinner dance takes place. The annual Pi Lambda sleigh ride is given ever Y winter. A banquet is held preceding the Pan-Hellenic dance. Throughout the year there are exchange suppers with other sororities, vic parties, and one social meeting every month. Each year, a tea is given for all house mothers d h an ouse presidents. There are also teas on Founder's Day and lVlother's Day. The year usually ends with tl1e initiation of new members and the initiation banquet held in the spring. i of the University of New Hampshire 128 Helen Cassily - - - Helena 5 Jeannette Dulwc . . . Eliza- Dobek . . . Marjorie Farwell beth Emwigtlg , , , Mary . . . Rachel LaFlamme . . . Dorothy MC- Griffin . . . Pauline Griffin . . . Anne Hall CI'CI:ldy . . . Ruth Nelson . . . Albertine , , , Ngreen Ray , , , Virginia Wfglch , , , Phaneuf. Ann Williams. Esther Doyle . . . Clare Ruth Lalromliarcl . . . Dor- Langley, othy Kano. First Row: Laflamme, Langley, McCready, Doyle, Dobek. Second Row: Cain, Hull, Farwell, H. Cassily, Dube, Welch. Third Row: Phaneuf, Ray, Entwistle, Griffin, Williams, Nelson. M 1 ,N st, 'i iff? X P' gy .. Q H- 5: high THETA UPSILON OFFICERS President .,,.,.,. . M .. .. ......,. MARCIA WTEATHERILL Vice-President . ,. ....,..... HEI,EN PEARCE Secretary ......,, ..A...,, R ACHEL MORRISON Treasurer .... A..,..... D OROTHY SAWYER IGMA OMICRON was formed in May 1926, on this campus by a group of girls led by Mrs. Naomi Ekdahl. On March 14, 1930, thirty-two members of Sigma Omicron were pledged to Theta Upsilon and thus the group became Tau Chapter. Of all memorable occasions celebrated during the school year, Home- coming is the first with excollegios in attendance. Dad's Day is observed with a luncheon before the game and a tea afterwards. Tau celebrated Founder's Day by attending Durham's Community Church in a body on January 18th. The Dover City Association joined for luncheon and special services. Courtesy Day is observed by entertaining the presidents of other campus sororities at dinner on Feb. 21. A Province Convention was held in Boston with Tau Chapter presenting the initiation service. Motheris Day was observed by a luncheon followed by a meeting of Omega Chapter. 130 :l 44 Mabel Bartlett . . . Miriam . . . Gloria DeCicco . . . Esther Drew . . . 9 3 Eastman . . . Elizabeth Hag- Ardelia Hutchins . . . Rita Little . . . Ruth gas . . . Marion Ingebretsen . . . Rachel Metzger . . . Carolyn Phillips . . . Frances Morrison . . . Dorothy Sawyer . . . Lucille Smith . . . Nancy Smith . . . Alice Welner. Stearns . . . Annotte Thompson . . . Marcia Weatherill. Sylvia Bishop Winifred Shirley Atwood . . . Natalie Curtis . . . Doris Dearborn . .Brooks ' ' ' Betty 'lo Brown i I u Mary L- Frazer I . . Marguerite Jackson . . . Elsie Deming . . . Barbara Ferguson . . . . . . Shirley Laighton . . . Helen Pearce . . . Agnes Fitch ' ' ' Barbara Harvey ' ' ' Anne Mary Small i . . Joan Smith . i . Vivian Haskell . . . Barbara Hayden . . . Mary Smith . U u Dorothy TIOWI . Marceau . . . Nellie Newell . . . Frances ' I-I Peel . . . Mary Pickard . . . Veva Pointer 1 Mary L, Bogth , , , uth . . . Nancy Reynolds . . . Barbara Stackpole Carens . . . Margaret Coburn . . Lois Ann Stearns . . . Elizabeth Surette. T'-Q. rs- ,.lfff ' ' .,-1 fx, ' 'w.-9 v M. .J Lf- - . First Row: Trow, Dearborn, Ingrebretsen, V. Smith, Pearce, Weatherill, Mrs. Miller, Brewer, Sawyer, Morrison, Jackson, Thompson, Bartlett. Second Row: Brooks, F. Smith, Little, Frazer, Small, Carens, Pickard, Coburn, Hutchins, N. Smith, Metzger, Newell, Johnson, Bishop, Peel. Third Row: Deming, Reynolds, Surette, Pointer, Hayden, Haggas, Laighton, Haskell, L. Stearns, Drew, E. Stearns. Fourth Row: Curtis, Eastman, Harvey, Marceau, Atwood, Fitch, Phillips, B. Brown, Stackpole, Booth. 5 fv I lil' L 1 'MM WM n sw sill :J '32 I LMFQ -f HLET i T w 14115 J 2 A rl 'YY Q ii M g a la 44,5 61153 W, 'x 6 fx W- fx QA. Q . , iifffgg , 1 ' n , 1, w Az: if wuz:-.41 Y, -' ffm-' 'Qi' fix 'L -...M - 1 -.',, rljfiflwli Z' . 4..,, f,:11f.,,f.L NH, ? .- we ,.,1M,. ,--ff.-vu.-a..:.,J ...i, ..W....,,,.x..., ., QW,-.vwf.,:vn.-v,,'....,.w.q.,.,, f'-,wwqv-n2,..,m'.:f11mw4aewn4m.f...m1a -xv.-:gut-mwwaxmw-+Mvwnwwunu N-1-v-Q w- - J- Q :-.fw.w1w-wuwuauwhuwwn-Q1 .fm5.-X-.-m..i,+w-qf:wf.,x,wa.:,f.51,5.,pr. swam A nwm'rQy.Jfmmvn1nae+ww1xn-f-- -wi--ww .wr Y. .sm ,fy .4,..,1vfvzsv.-fnrsvmzi-zafufkffs ' .iv.n4r.f.n,f,-w..-.,--M.-w-..,,-,.,-4..fw. ff. ka-My M L-4,K,,1, ,.1,. nww.mna..,a,-fywl-.mwmw M FOOTBALL X recorded just how suc- Q cessful the 1942 New :Y Hampshire football team xi i? I L' was. For the first time in , I f the 76-year history of the E ' 1 University of New Hamp- Q ' shire, the varsity football f I G' '7 team went through a wr ' six-game schedule unde- feated. A recapitulation shows that New Hampshire averaged 14.9 first downs per game to their opponents 10 and outrushed them 310 yards to 225 yards. While the Justicemen fumbled only seven times throughout the season, their six opponents lost the ball 18 times. New Hampshire completed 47 per cent of its passes and held its opponents to a low 25 per- centage. Furthermore, the Wildcats intercepted more of their opponents' passes than the latter completed. They threw 68 and completed 17g but 22 were intercepted by New Hampshire de- fenders. Individual statistics show that Theo Fitanides carried the ball 144 times and gained 735 yards for an average 5.2 yards on 39 attempts which were good for 205 yards. The Wildcat football team, in outscoring the opposition 101-60, ran up a total of 89 first downs, 29 more than their six victims were able to accumulate. ED MACKEL PETE MENEGHIN ,In the first game of the season, the University of New Hampshire football team downed Maine 20-7. The game marked the beginning of a parade of victories for the Justicemen. That first game also marked the debut of Tuffy Fitanides as the star of the New Hampshire attack. New Hampshire's early 6-0 lead was the result of a sustained march of over 70 yards. Captain Charles 4'Pappy Judd took the ball over for the Wildcats' first score of the year. The tide seemed to be turning a few minutes later when Maine retaliated with a touchdown pass from Hutchinson to Presnell. Hutchinson's successful conversion gave the Bears a 7-6 lead. ln the third period, freshman Peter Fitanides blocked a Maine kick and brother Tuffy cli- maxed the subsequent drive by lugging the SONNY LAMOND WALLY ACKERMAN 13 - D leather across into pay dirt. Center Bob Neal's well-aimed boot gave the Wildcats a 13-7 lead. Fitanides and Ragonese led the last touch- down drive, Fitanides scoring and Neal again converting. This made the final score 20-7. Springfield College provided the next opposi- tion - and they came here with one of their best squads in years. Seven minutes after the opening gun had been fired, Springfield's Dock- ham banged the line from the one-foot line and went over. Slaughteris kick sent the visitors into an early 7-0 lead. V However, Justice had a cure for the team's ills, a cure spelled F-i-t-a-n-i-d-e-s. Soon after Tuffy came into the game in the second period, be grabbed a punt on his own 25 yard line and ran it back to his own 39, and then gave one of the greatest iron-man performances displayed on any gridiron by carrying the ball on fifteen consecutive plays and across the goal line. De- pendable Roy Goodfellow tied the ball game up at seven all to complete the scoring for the first half. The next score didnit come until early in the fourth quarter, when Tuffy, aided by Grant, Judd, and Janetos, plowed through the Gym- nasts' defense. Goodfellow converted to make the score New Hampshire l.4, Springfield 7. The last tally came primarily as a result of a 28-yard pass from Fitanides to Ragonese, who was tackled on the Springfield l7. The former First Row: Coach Justice, E. Rainey, Creenaway, Pino, Sakoian, Hanson, Ackerman, Lamond, Captain Judd, Call, Mackel, Coodfellow, Neal, T. Fitanides, Meneghin, Lane, Coach Dougal. Second Row: Manager Sawyer, Ross, Ragonese, E. Parker, Ricciar- done, Norman, Kemp, Soule, Clark, Churnside, Clute, McDermott, Grant, Munson, Amirault. Third Row: Nassikas, J. Rainey, Retalis, Mather, P. Fitanides, Atkins, Mullen, Rodis, R. Parker, Sewards, Gerngross, Weston, Znaidowsky, Hall, Janetos Fourth Row: Fogal, Corchary, Wood, Robbins. carried the pigskin to the 7 and the latter went over. The try for the point after failed. Fitanides, although playing but a short time because of an injury, nevertheless sparked the team to victory. Coach .lustice,s charges had to come from behind to chalk up their third successive victory at the expense of Rhode Island, 14-13. It was the third straight home game for the Wfildcats. The Rams demonstrated their power early in the game, but a stiffened Wildcat defense stalled the Ram attack on the New Hamp- shire ten-yard line with the result that the first quarter was scoreless. In the second period, the Rams were able to score but it was against .lustiee's second team. Witli the entrance of Fitanides and the first team the tide turned. The Wiildeats were on the Rhode lsland 30. It was the last down. Only one more attempt lay before the 'Cats and Tuffy made the most of the slim opportunity by tossing a thirty-yard pass to Earlon Seawards who was knocked out of bounds on the one foot line. Two plays later, Fitanides crashed across and Goodfellow gave his team a 7-6 7 lead. That completed the first half scoring. The third period was the beginning of the end for the Rams, even though they scored soon after the opening of the second half for the visitors had played with few substitutes and it began to tell on them. Thus, although the third period ended with Rhode Island leading 13-7, it was obvious that the capability of New Hampshire's substitutes might well be the determining factor in the game. It was well along in the fourth period when Sonny Lamond recovered a ball fumbled by the exhausted Rams. Tuffy ran the ball to the two. Here a penalty seemed to ruin the chances of the ,luddnleng but Tuify's touchdown pass to Pino averted a tough situation and Goodfe1low's usual presented New Hampshire with a 14-13 victory. 136 BILL CALL TUFFY FITANIDES BRAC HANSON AL SAKOIAN At Norwich with one minute of play remaining, the score tied at thir- teen all, and New Hampshire's undefeated, untied record hanging in the halance, Roy Goodfellow kicked the all-important Held goal, which gave the ,Cats their fourth win in four starts. A Domina to Miller pass gave Norwich a 6-0 margin in the first quarter and the same combination repeafted ten minutes later with the result that Norwich had 13-0 lead at the twenty minute mark, but the Justicemen refused to surrender. With but one minute of the half to go, Fitanides faded hack and pitched a forward pass into the arms of Pino who was conveniently located in the end zone. The score at the close of the first half read Norwich 13, New Hampshire 6. No sooner did the second half get under way than Ragonese inter- cepted a Domina forward at midfield and raced all the way to the promised land. Goodfellow made the score 13-13. The rest of the en- counter was all New Hampshire. Countless opportunities arose for what looked like New Hampshire scores, hut penalties and the hreaks pre- vented further scoring - until Coach Justice sent Goodfellow in to save the day and preserve the Wildcats 'Gun and un record. New Hampshire won its fifth straight game hy defeating Tufts, 13-6, at Medford. The Jumhos gave the Wildcats one of their hardest games. Tufts' Charlie Fortin, possessing a puzzling pass delivery, threw a 35-yarder to end Sampson, who caught the hall in the end zone. The score remained 6-0 in favor of Tufts until the third period. Sonny Lamond started the action hy recovering a Tufts fumhle. A few plays later, Tuffyfs touchdown and Goodfellow's hoot had put New Hampshire in the driver's seat, 7-6. In the final quarter, Fitanides, Janetos, Grant, Meneghin, and Ragonese all shared hero roles in the 80-yard march. Meneghin made the score 13-6 - and so it remained. A large Dads' Day crowd saw Coach Charles Justice's foothall team make New Hampshire foothall history hy downing Northeastern 18-0. It was the last game for the Wildcats and it meant that they had achieved the first clean slate in the University's history. Pete Janetos, suhbing for the injured Fitanides, and Ragonese hoth performed ad- mirably. Senior Bill Call, in his last game, scored the first touchdown in the initial canto and Fitanides, making one of his few appearances in this game, went over for the second. The final marker came in the fourth quarter, when Ragonese reeled off a 46-yard run for a touchdown, victory, and an undefeated season for the fighting Wildcats. BOB NEAL FRANK ROBBINS 137 LETTERMEN Wallace Ackerman Bragdon Hanson Clayton Lane Theo Fitanides Peter Meneghin Edward Maekel John Greenaway Carmen Ragonese Joe Znaidowsky Allan Lamond Alhert Sakoian Ralph Pino Rohcrt Neal Donald Grant Francis Parker Peter .lanetos Rohert Sawyer, ilfnnnger RALPH PINO BASKETB LL ,U A disappointing 1943 New Hampshire basketball team won only five games and lost iifteen. Captained by Junior X Bob Wfhecler, the 1Vildcats a' , showed promise early in the season but never did live up Q to expectations. The scarcity A I of veterans and the inter- collegiate inexperience of the majority of the squad were major factors. However, the team provided the crowds at the Field House with an abundance of thrills. ln tl1e first game of the season, Bates College took a 46-36 decision from the New 1-lampshire 1Vildeats on the Durham court, December 10. Captain Robert Wfheeler was Coach Swasey's sole starting veteran. The remainder of the quintet was composed of freshmen. The Vlfildcats led 19-14 at the end of the first half, but the visitors' unexpected display of confusing zone defense ill the second half effectively put the quietus on the home tcam's offensive efforts. Freshman Bob Conway was New 1'1ampshire's high scorer with 17 points and shared the spotlight with W7ll6C1Cl', and another freshman, tall Francis Parker. The next encounter found the varsity hoop- men victorious over M.1.T., 35-32, in a game in which the lead changed hands sixteen times. Soc Bobotas, high 111an with seven points, sparked a second-half rally which OVCTCHIIIC the Engineers. Poor defensive play coupled with a lack of foul shooting skill played major roles in the second defeat of the season for the 'Cat hoop- men, this time at the hands of St. Anselm's, 34-32. After having built up what seemed like a prohibitive 16-4 lead i11 the first few minutes of the game, the 1Vildcat varsity hoopmen eve11- tually lost out to Northwcastcrn, 47-44. The Swaseymen came out for the second half with the Huskies leading, 25-19. With five minutes to go the home team again led, this time by ten points, but the visiting Northeastern team re- peated its early game performance and put on another exhibition of concentrated scoring which gave them thc game. Freshman Frank Tatarczuk, having recovered from an appendectomy, made his first appear- 138 ance as a varsity hoopman and was New Hamp- shire's high scorer with 12 points. Bob Wheeler had ten. New Hampshirels fourth defeat of tl1e season in the first away-from-home contest was pri- marily a matter of too much Shapiro and An- tanelli who scored 23 and 19 points respectively. Tufts took the lead immediately and led at the end of the first half 40-19. Captain Bob Wheeler again led New Hampshire's offensive with ten points. The University of Connecticut triumphed over the University of New Hampshire in a high scoring game played at Storrs, Conn., 51-40. It was the second out of town game for the Wild- cats. The home team took an early lead and led at half time, 19-14. The Swaseymen came within one point of tying up the ball game in the second half -- but in vain. Ed Card was New Hampshire's high scorer with nine points. Avenging an earlier defeat, the Swaseymen traveled to Boston and administered a 40-31 spanking to Northeastern on January 16. Un- like tl1e action in previous games, the Swasey- me11 were able to overcome an early deficit and come from behind to win. Parker, Bobotas, Bograkos, and Wheeler were all instrumental in New Hampshire's second victory. Although New Hampshire jumped into a short-lived lead, a veteran Springfield team roared back to prevail 54-29 in a powerful offen- sive display. Dey, Johnson, Tatarczuk, each with six points, were the leading Wildcat scorers. Paced by Captain Bob Vlfheeler, the New Hampshire hoop squad ran over Lowell Textile, 61-49, for its third victory of the year. Wheeler caged 17 points for scoring honors. Playing against one of the best basketball teams in the northeastern part of the country, the New Hampshire varsity dropped its seventh game to a United States Coast Guard team from Boston, 60-42. The Coast Guarders, paced by such famous players as ulggyn Strzrlecki of Clark University and Lou Belanger, a former Worces- ter Norton star, took command of the game very early, and although at times threatened by the fighting Wlildcats, never were headed. The defensive star for the Servicemen was ,lim Hegan, former Cleveland Indian catching star. Tatarczuk and Krupa performed well for the 'Cats. The Wildcat hoop squad lost their eighth battle of the year to B. U. in Boston, February 3, in a rough game that ended 55-52. Playing once again on home territory the Wildcat hoopsters nearly gained a victory over a tough Connecticut squad, but finally met de- feat 46-37. Card gained ten points for New Hampshire. In quick succession, New Hampshire lost games to Maine, Colby, and Rhode Island by scores of 54-38, 44-333 and 97-58. ln tl1e final contest of the season tl1e Univer- sity of New Hampshire basketeers downed a favored Maine quintet to the tune of 43-36. The victory was led by Captain Bob Wfheeler, who played outstanding ball. First Row: Bobotas, Card, Krupa, Wheeler, Conway, Johnson, Tatarczuk. Second row: Pasichuke, Docos, Kolinsky, Dey, Waters, Jervis. Third Row: Vlfuth, Kelleher, Thomas, Harris, Glynn. BASEBALL An impressive 11-0 vic- tory over Lowell Textile Nw' opened New Hampshire's X baseball season, April 25, at Lewis Field, with Sheik Karelis pitching for the Yvildcats. QW -X , .kg 2 gi X :nn in 6 XAIL Z J' The Wfildcats gathered sg, six big runs in the third inning, after scoring two in the second. From here in victory was assured as Karelis checked thc Lowell batsmen inning after inning. ln the eighth Ray Dupell came in to relieve Karelis. Lowell found Dupell no soft touch as he allowed only one safety. New Hampshire scored two runs in the eighth inning, and finally a single tally in the ninth frame. The offensive display was sparked by .lerry Thayer and lke Rhuland, eacl1 of whom collected two safe bingles. New Hampshire's baseball nine was the be- grudging loser of a 6-5 ball game, April 30, in the first galuc of a doubleheader played in Durham. Although badly outhit the Wildcat's played a great game, but a tally in the seventh gave the victory to Maine. Ray Dupell and Sheik Karclis shared pitching honors for New Hampshire. Paul Nugent garnered two safeties in four trips to lead the Nvildcat offense. The Wildcats gained an even split in the doubleheader with Maine as Ed Morrow pitched and batted his team to a 6-4 victory. New Hamp- shire came from behind in the fifth inning by scoring five tallies. Adams, double was the heavy hit of the inning in which the 'Cats con- nected safely five times. The combination of Sheik Karelis' pitching and Leo Dupontis hitting was unbeatable when the New Hampshire Yvildcats met the Con- necticut Nutmeggers on their home grounds May l. The Wildcats brought a 4-1 decision back to Durham. Karelis was in mid-season form as he limited the Connecticut team to a scanty pair of singles in nine full innings. Leo Dupont, New Hampshireis right-fielder, was really in the groove as lead-off man, garner- ing four safeties in five trips to the plate, one a terrific triple. George Alimi poked out two singles in adding to the Wildcat attack. New Hampshire suffered its only shutout of the season May 2, as the Rhode Island Rams in- flicted a 2-0 defeat on the Wildcats at Kingston, R. I. Freddy Draper pitched a five-hitter against the Rams, but they took advantage of every break to snatch the victory from him. The R. I. nine started its offense in the first inning by punching over their initial tally. From then on they were held scoreless until the ninth, and could connect for only two safe hits in the innings which followed, but in the ninth frame two more hingles and a sacrifice ac- counted for their second run. The Wildcats lost their third game of the season on May 5 on home grounds, as a veteran ball club from Northeastern eked out a close 3-2 decision in the first game of a doubleheader. The Huskies presented a team which took neat advantage of their long-hitting ability. A home run by Sullivan in the tenth inning drove in two runs to win the contest for Northeastern. Sheik Karelis was hit for ten safeties by the Northeastern club, while New Hampshire was able to connect safely nine times off the de- liveries of Calantonio, the visitors' flinger. The Wildcats took another beating in the second game of the doubleheader as the Huskies administered a 10-1 decision over their Victims. Garnering ten big hits, including a four base hit by A1 Pajonas, and taking advantage of New Hampshire's seven errors, Northeastern scored almost at will. The Wildcats were held well in check by Northeastern's Coole, who scattered four singles over six innings. Coach Swasey injected thirteen men in the game at Durham, May 6, between American International and his Wildcats, trying to stem the losing string in which the New Hampshire ball team was enmeshed. The visiting team spoiled the effort as they outhit and outscored New Hampshire by a score of 8-4. With Freddy Draper pitching an effective five hit game, and Capt. Dick Sughrue leading the 'Cats at bat, the New Hampshire nine trimmed Connecticut's varsity team 3-l on May CAPTAIN DICK SUGHRUE PITCHER SHEIK KARELIS 8, in the eighth game New Hampshire had played in nine days. The Wildcats sewed up the decision early in the game with a three-run splurge in the second inning on three hits. The enemy was held score- less until the ninth inning when they managed to score their solitary run. New Hampshire's varsity baseball team ended its season in blazing style May 9 at Durham, as Sheik Karelis twirled a beautiful one-hit ball game against the Rhode Island Rams and led his team to a 2-0 victory. Karelis was well on his Way to a no-hit decision, but one solitary safe l1it in the fifth by McNally, the Rhode Island shortstop, spoiled l1is effort. At that, Karelis faced only twenty-nine bats- men in his near-perfect game as the Rams were able to connect for only grounders and pop flies to the outfield. New Hampshire made good use of their six hits, scoring once in the first inning and again in the fourth inning. Leo Dupont, the leading Wildcat slugger, collected two basehits. Lettermen were Hall, Adams, Thayer, Dupont, Nugent, Alimi, Hanson, Karelis, Charron, Rhu- land, Morrow, and Dupell. VARSITY TRACK Although the end of the short season saw the University of New Hampshire varsity track team with but one .VX F , victory as against two defeats, New Hampshire's fame in E' the track and field world continued to spread as Coach f Paul Sweet's famous twosome, '6Boo Morcom and Ed ' Styrna carried on in championship style. N. it The varsity trackmen engaged in three dual meets. 5' I Their first engagement was with the University of Maine on April 29, with Maine emerging an easy victor, 89-46. Brown provided the next opposition and fell victim to the Sweetmen, 75-63. The third and last dual meet was with Northeastern. The latter won handily, 87-48. ln addition to sending his entire squad into the three dual meets, Sweet also had Morcom and Styrna in the Penn Relays which were held at Philadel- phia on April 25. The former won the pole vault at 13 6 and also fashioned a second in the high jump, an event captured by Adam Berry at 6' 7 . Styrna's toss of 163' 4M was good enough for first place in the hammer throw. During the summer, both Morcom and Styrna won honors. Boo won firsts in the lC4A high jump, the Canadian Naval Relief vault and high jump at Halifax. This was after he had won tl1e same double in the New England AAU meet in which he set records in both events. Styrna took first place in the IC4A javelin and hammer throw and was third in the NAAU hammer. Lettermen were Cannell, Styrna, Morcom, Lowry, Sleeper, Pino, French, Holmes, Prescott, Driscoll, Pushee, and Sargent fmanagerl . In their first spring track meet of the season the Wlildcats were buried by the Maine Bears, 89-46. As was expected, the Sweetmen's weakness in the running events proved to he their downfall. Wayne Lowry,s victory in the half-mile and Cannell's in the 220 low hurdles were the only firsts taken by the 'Cats aside from the field events. In the latter, however, the picture took on a different hue. Morcom was supreme in his three specialties - the high jump, hroad jump and pole vault, while 142 Styrna was number one in both the javelin and the hammer. Styrna also picked up a second place in the discus and a third in the shot put. Other point winners for the Wildcats were James Sleeper, who placed third in the mile, an event which was won by Maine's great dis- tance runner, Martinez, in the fast time of 4 minutes 29.9 seconds. John French was third in the two-mile grind as was William King in the 220 low hurdles and Sleeper in the 880. In the field events Captain Dwight Stiles won a third place in the broad jump, and Murray Smith repeated in the discus. Ralph Pino oc- cupied the same position in the javelin. Against Brown University on May 2 the varsity trackmen did an about face and came out with their first victory of the season. With one meet remaining, their record was now one won and one lost. Ed Styrna was the leading point-winner of the meet with first places in the hammer, discus, and the javelin, in addition to a second place in the broad jump. This gave him a total of 18 points in one meet. Boo Morcom, almost a sure bet for 15 points in any dual meet, won his usual first places in the pole vault Q13' 6 J, the high jump C6' 2 j, and the broad jump f22' 5 J. Between them, Styrna and Morcom were responsible for 33 points. The Durham team fared much better in the running events against Brown than they had against Maine the previous week. .loe Pushee and John French tied for first place in the gruel- ing two-mile as did Sleeper and Holmes in the mile. Lowry snapped the tape in the 880 and was second in the 440 yard dash. Cannell and Baker were two and three in the 220 low hurdles and Baker was third in the high hurdles. Sleeper was also good for a point in the half mile. In their last dual contest of the abbreviated schedule the University of New Hampshire trackmen suffered an 87-48 setback at the hands of a powerful Northeastern squad on May 9. Lack of strength in the track events was the primary reason for the severe defeat. The Wild- cats were unable to garner even one victory in the running events. In fact they took only ten out of a possible 72 points in the running por- tion of the meet. The other half of the program was entirely different -- as is to be expected with Styrna and Morcom competing. Styrna won both the ham- mer and the javelin, while Morcom, for the 'nteenth time, was an easy triple winner in the pole vault, broad jump, and high jump. His leap of 23' 6 in the broad jump was a 1942 field record. Whereas the Wildcats were able to capture but ten out of 72 points in the running, they took 38 out of a possible 63 in the field events - ample proof of the importance of the work of Morcom and Styrna. Although he wasn't sure of it at the time, this meet with Northeastern was to be the last time that Ed Styrna was to represent New Hamp- shire in a dual meet. He was called to duty in the armed forces shortly after school opened this fall. L'BO0', MORCOM ED STYRNA First How: Churas, Jewell, Feeney. Joslin. Second Row: Couch Fielding, Saunders, Randall, Ordwsay, Marshall. TEN N New Hampshire's tennis forces, under the tutelage of Coach George Fielding, achieved a fair IIICHSIITC of suc- cess last spring hy splitting four matches. On April 25, the tea111 journeyed to Kingston, R. I., to ii K take a 6-3 defeat from Rhode lsland. The three New y Hampshire wins were all singles victories, Captain Frank 51' Churas, Roliert Joslin, and A1 Jacohson winning their 'ff 1 A matches easily. Jewell, lfeeney, and Ordway lost their mmf 5 ' matches in straight sets. Rhode Jsland also captured the ' three douhles. Churas and Joslin, Jacobson and Jewell, and Milialslii and Feeney made up the three combinations. Sweeping the match with the University of Connecticut on hlay l, with the exception of one of the singles matches, Coach Fielding's team shellacked the Nutmcgger tennis squad hy an 8-1 margin. Churas, Joslin, Jewell, Jacohson, and Feeney all won their single 111atches. The encounter with Connecticut was the first in a series of two to he played on the road trip. ln a tennis match played at Jackson Heights, N. Y., against St. John's, the varsity team ahsorhed an 8-1 pasting. A1 Jacohson garnered the single point for New Hampshire. Defeating Boston University hy the same score that St. John's had crushed it, the Vlvildeat tennis squad rang up its second victory of the season, 8-1. The match was played in Boston on May 5. Joslin, Churas, Jacohson, Feeney, Jewell, and Ordway closed out the season with singles victories as did Joslin and Churas, and Jacohson and Jewell, in the doubles portion of the program. The Field- ingmen yielded their only point to B. U. hy default. 144 CROSS COUNTRY Forced to cancel the first three meets on the schedule, because of the late beginning of school, Coach Paul C. Sweet was able to arrange but one inter- collegiate contest for his cross-country team before competing in the New England. The Wildcats first meet was a triangular affair between Tufts, Amherst, and New Hampshire. Held on October 30 at Medford, the meet resulted in a Tufts, victory, 26 to 37 for New Hampshire to 66 for Amherst. Tufts, Roy Phillips won in 19.54. Freshman Si Dunklee was third in the race and the first New Hampshire fan to finish. His time was 20.21, Churchill was fourth and French was fifth. New Hampshire finished fifth in the New England Cross-Country run. Rhode lsland fulfilled pre-game predictions by finishing first by the amazing margin of 22 to 119, the total run up by the second place winner, Springfield. Si Dunklee finished eighth and Ray Churchill eighteenth. The other three Sweetmen to Hnish in the money were French, Brown, and Sleeper. This gave the fifth place Sweetmen 147 points. The big event of the season calne on November 16, when the Wildcat fresh- man sensation, Dunklee, finished 13th in the lC4A cross-country run, which was won by Frank Dixon, the New York University ace, wl1o ran the hilly course in 27.08. Dunklee's time was 28.29, and Churchill's was 29.02. First Row: Berry, Cram, Brown, Holmes, Sleeper, French, Dunklee, Churchill, Sweet. Second How: McGowan, Cozonsky, Thayer, Folsom, Atwood, Barndollar, Flynn, Wleathers, Johnson. ,1............-uni i1.17 145 HOCKEY Faced by overwhelming odds the New Hampshire varsity hockey team was able to play but two games, after which the if Y existing circumstances forced the can- cellation Of the remaining scheduled games. Coach Tony Dougalis men, despite the fact that they improvised their own rink due to the lack of university help, l defeated Tufts, 6-5, in their first game FS , , 'Vx f ff, -WWWWD 'fi v- 'ftTlZ?E'9 ' ' - ' 'I Md Tn - My n ID and then bowed to Harvard 13-2. To go back to tl1e very beginning of the winter season, the situation as far as hockey was concerned appeared so hopeless that the University Committee on Athletics decided that, with the labor shortage and the transportation problem, there would be no hockey at all. An appeal hy the members of the team led to a reversal of tl1e decision and hockey was reinstated with the stipulation that the members Of the team would have to provide their own rink. Far frOn1 deterred, however, the squad went to work and spent most of its time in preparing the ring. This left tlIen1 little time in which to practice, but the Dougalmen were, nevertheless, able to edge out Tufts at the Boston Arena on January 5. JUNIOR STAR RED ADAMS CAPTAIN AL SAKOIAN SQUAD ICARL ADAMS ROBERT AMIRAULT ROBERT CLARK DAVID CUNNING ALAN DONDERO LLOYD FARWELL WILLIAM FORBES RICHARD MARDEN JOHN MUDGE FRANK LANZA ROBERT OBKANE ALBERT SAKOIAN GORDON SLEEPER GEORGE SLEETII STANLEY LEE CManagerD 146 'I .1 23 Q. 'gf 'i -in-4' 'V H A, ,,- ,, an f ou in .pr an-.... 'Lf' ,,..- sn., in 5 First Row: Mudge. 0,Kane, Cunning. Forbes, Sleeper. Second Row: Sleeth. Dondero. Farwell. Clark, Amirault. Third row: Lee, Lanza, Marden, Dougal. Back to Durham went the victorious Wiild- The tean1 came out for the opening whistle cat sextet determined to get into shape for the with Bill Kemp i11 the goal, Cunning and feared Harvard Crimson team. Then misfortune Sakoian on the defense, and Karl Adams center- struck again - the team was ahle to get in some ing between wings Slceth and Forbes. Although real practice on only two days, the remainder of Adams and Amirault each shot the puck past the time heing spent in flooding the rink - with the Tuft's goalie, the ,lumhos more than retali- the ahle assistance of Director of Athletics Carl ated and came out of the first session leading Lundholm. 4-2. Tuft's Price matched Amirault's second period goal. Thus it was that the third period , . llhus vl- tlxtr' ' tlt t - - ' M 'Ln IL Ulm J l'1 'VW Sou 1 0 mee found New Hampshire on the short end of a Harvard, it .was in poor shape, the 13-2 defeat, 5-3 Score. under the circumstances, was nothing of wl11cl1 to be ashamed. Before the game was over, the Dougalos Offense h0WCV0 v Started to function Whole Harvard mam was Well aware that the more smoothly in the last canto and goals hy four New Hampshire stars, Adams, Sleeth, Cun- Adams- Cunmngv and Amlfalllt enabled the ning, and Sakoiang were mal hockey players. Wildcats to pull the game out of the fire. . The Wildcats' second allfl final game was A perusal of the records of the two games , , . played in Boston on January 12, against the shows that Adams and Annrault each scored T . , , strong Harvard sextet. lNot denying the nmcll three goals while Dave Cunning, the ace defense . . . . , , greater strength of the Crimson, the tact remains man from Medford, fooled the goalie twice. f , , that the score does not tell the story. Adams made two assists and Amlrault and Cun- ' Hin., Calm. up with one aggiqt 315000 For the first seven minutes of the contest, the Harvard team l'CIll31I1Cfl scoreless then lt llP 'lIl N ' nr' A 3 fl' ' ' - . -v. 1 11 ' f I fa 11 N H 7 fl IQ! H5 Pdmco lf Emu' le ew 'imp to assert ltself and wore the Wildcat defense shire Wildcats made an astounding comehack down in the third period to nose out the Tufts Jumhos, 4 , Y. . . ' s - T . 6-5. Behind 5-3 at the end of the second session, Kdll Adams- who was 'l ummmlouh All New the Wildcats roared hack in the final period to England Cholcc last year when lm was only fl Wore the winning thrpc Uoalq Third period sophomore, again stood out for the Dougahnen t , , g , g .. ' . W eomehacks heing extremely rare in intercollegi- by Solomg flown the up to MUN' NM' Hump' ate hockey games, the victory of the Dougalmen Slum S first goal umlgslslml' was really one of which the whole squad might The visitor's second tally was the result of well he proud. Amirault's pass to Cunning. 147 LACROSSE Despite the lack of co- L-cwsse operation from both the CH military powers and the ig: weather, the New Hamp- r ., shire 1942 varsity lacrosse fl '- Z team, coached by Tony in Dougal and captained by T1 . senior star Hal Monica, if enjoyed a successful sea- son. The team won three and lost two. Sparking the team from his center post, Cap- tain Hal Monica was New Hampshire's leading scorer with eight goals. Sophomore Tom Niles, captain of the previous year's frosh lacrosse team, developed into a capable offensive star and scored a total of six goals, while Bill Rudd rang the bell five times. Horace 4'Pep,' Pointer, a transfer from Yale, and senior James Kalled, each contributed four goals. The remainder of tl1e point total was dis- tributed among Kolinsky, Kelleher, Abell, Mar- tin, and Blair. Statistics show that New Hamp- shire scored 39 goals as against 22 for the opposition. The highlight of the season came in the last game in which New Hampshire defeated Har- vard I4-0. Bill Budd came into his own in this, his last game, and came up with four goals in the second period. Diminutive James Kalled, who had been plugging away every season from his frosh on, really showed that his years of work were finally producing results by getting the rubber past the Harvard goalie three times during the game to take his place as one of the stars of the game. At the end of the season, Phil Martin, star attack man, was voted captain-elect. Martin, although plagued by a heel bruise most of the season, was, nevertheless, an outstanding player. Coach Tony Dougalis varsity lacrosse team opened its 1942 season rather inauspiciously by dropping a 7-3 game to the highly touted Dart- mouth Indians. The game was played at Durham on April 20. That the Dougalmen lost was nothing of which to be ashamed for several reasons. First, the Dartmouth team had had the benefit of a short southern trip and were, therefore, in better shape than the Wildcats, who had been forced to contend with bitter New Hampshire weather. Second, actual game experience is of great advantage to any team and while the Hanover team had the benefit of several games, New Hampshire was facing the Indians without the experience of even one previous game. New Hampshire stayed with Dartmouth until after the second half was well under way, but then, with Wilder, Craig, and Melanson leading the attack, the Big Green took command of the situation. After Hal Monica scored New Hamp- shire's third goal thirty seconds after the second half got under way, the Indian defense stiffened and held New Hampshire scoreless for the remainder of the game. On April 25 Tufts payed a fruitless visit to the local lacrosse field. After a scoreless first period, the New Hampshire attack rolled away to a 5-I win. Hal Monica was high scorer with three goals, and Call and Pointer each chipped in with single markers. The game was rough - too rough. Fifteen penalties were called against New Hampshire and seventeen against Tufts. In its first game away from home the New Hampshire stickmen were edged out I1-10 by M.I.T. in an overtime upset on April 29. It was the second defeat for the Wildcats. At the end of the regulation four fifteen- minute periods, the score was tied up at eight goals apiece. Thus, it was necessary to play a ten minute overtime. This proved to he the most exciting game of the whole season. Five goals were scored in ten minutes, but three of them shot past Patsy Improta, the Wildcat goalie, with the result that Smokey Kelleher's two goals went for naught. Tom Niles was Dougal's leading scorer of the day with four goals, a total matched by MlT's Hechel. Captain Monica scored twice, as did Kelleher, while Kalled and Pointer each came up with goals. It was Pointerls fourth period goal that tied up the hall game. Building up a 3-0 lead by the end of the first period as a result of two goals by Dick Abell and a single tally by Tom Niles, the New Hampshire lacrosse squad went on to their third contest of the season by trouncing Spring- field at Springfield on May 2. The Gymnasts continued to threaten and did manage to score three times, hut tl1c Dougal- men plugged away and with Kolinsky, Rudd, Martin, and Blair each hitting the hullls eye once, they defeated the Springfield aggregation, 7-3. Wliitewashing Harvard, lil-0, New Hamp- shire's lacrosse team maintained its hex over the Crimson hy winning for the third consecu- tive year. It was the shutout victory of' the sea- son for the Dougalmen. Queerly enough, the first period was score- less. However, Bill Budd's four tallies and Monica's single goal sent the Wildcats into a five to nothing lead as early as the end of the first half. As the game progressed, Kalled scored three times, Pointer twice, and Kelleher, lllartin, and Kolinsky each once to bring the New Hamp- shire total up to fourteen. The game, which was played at Cambridge, was one of the most decisive wins ever recorded in the annals of the New England Lacrosse League. First Row: Darling, Kolinsky, Martin, Kalled, Improta, Duprey, Rudd, Hastings, McCrone, Pointer. Second Row: Dougal, Call, Blair, Steele, Cram, Matthews, Kelleher, Abell, Beal. Third Row: Pappas, Lapeza, Thurston, Bedard, Lucy, Niles. nl-ll i QM , 7 A Coach Ed Blood did it 4 Us again. With the loss of af 'V Captain Bobby Clark by graduation, Ralph Town- 'lf izfa' N send and former fresh- ff' man star, Steve Knowlton, i ' H p- , by enlistment in the U. S. ,fi i i Army Ski Troops, the A EP: if outlook seemed dark at V ' the beginning of the sea- son. Returning veterans were Captain Billy Keough, Al Merrill, Curt Chase, Ray Churchill, Dave Chase, Ray Bowles, and John Atwood. Shortly after the season started, ,lohn Atwood withdrew from school, a member of the En- listed Reserve Corps, pending induction into the ski troops. But with the appearance of fresh- men Si Dunklce and Bob Hanson, the future looked brighter. Although the Wildcats could not boast the individual stars who had set the pace in New England during past seasons, they had an exceptionally well-balanced group. At thc annual lnvitalion Collegiate Ski Meet at Lake Placid, N. Y., the Wildcats gained their first victory of the '42-'43 season. Tn the jumping event Si Dunklce took sixth place, followed by Bay Churchill in eleventh place. ln the down- hill race Al Merrill was in ninth position and Curt Chase was in fourteenth. Si Dunklee was TER SPORTS third in the cross-country and second in the cross-country and jumping. The Wfildcats came through in first place to cop the meet. Norwich, second, Williams, third, and Middlebury, Syra- cuse, Cornell, Harvard, Colgate, St. Lawrence and Dartmouth finishing in that order. The 9 balance of New Hampshire was outstanding as they placed in every event. Flashing their customary team balance throughout the two day affair, the New Hamp- shire ski team, for the second year in a row, walked off with the Middlebury Carnival honors. Led by Captain Bill Keough the team performed admirably in all events. Si Dunklee, Al Merrill, and Bill Keough succeeded in gaining first, second, and third places in the grueling cross- country race. This gave New Hampshire a per- fect score of l0O. Al Merl'ill, Bill Keough, and Si Dunklee finished fourth, fifth, and sixth in the jumping. When the scores were tallied, New Hampshire had taken the honors with 575.92 points, while the second place Dartmouth Indians had 565.70 points. The meet for the following weekend at Norwich was cancelled, making New Hampshire the number one team in New England for the third consecutive year. This year's team held even greater prestige than the teams of the two preceding years in that they were the first undefeated ski team in the history of the University, a truly impressive recoril for Coach Ed Hlooil aml his flashy skiers. At, the annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival New Ilampshirc cmleal Dartmouth's I. S. U. HlllDl'ClIl2lt'y. vIJ1ll'Illl0lIIIlHH hcralllcel lllIlllIll'l' om: position in the ski worlil came to an ahrupt eml when tha- results of the I. U. senior clivi- sion championships were postcal. 'I'he Wilrlcat team was fleclareil the winner with 567.5 points, Hve aheail of the Big Creen's 562.5. As Dartmouth's I. S. U. crown came tumhling flown the Vsihlcats hail sweet revenge, for last year the Imlian skiers came through on 'thc thircl flag' to retain the I. S. U. title in the face ol' ilefcat in the Dartmouth aml New Ilanlp- - w - T ' ' shire Iiill'IllV2lIS at thc hamls of tho lf. B. II. team. This time thc I. S. U. title aml tho Dart- mouth Invitation Crown hung on the same hook. aml the Wildcats pickecl them hoth. Dartmouth steppeil into an early lcarl on the Inasis of the ilownhill event hut thc lll0l't'-IlilI- ancell Wildcats eilgcil out a win in thi- cross- country aml starteil cutting into the Big Grccn margin heforc the first ilay of thc meet was over. Merrill. I-Junklec. aml Kcough took sccoml. thirrl. aml fourth in the cross-country. The slalom hail to contcml with icy comlitions aml a shortened course hut again tha- N. H. lroys hail Irctter time than Dartmouth aml passml tht- Big Green in scoring. It was story of halanccrl team strength that gave Xew Hampshire its clean sweep for the tlay in competition when it took the jump. The Wildcats had three men in the first ten -sf Al Nlcrrill. lilth: Si Uunklce. sixth: aml Bill Iicough. seventh. As the scores were talliecl, New Hampshire took a well tlcscrveil Iirst place -- winning hoth the coveted Intercollegiate Ski Union Cham- pionship aml the Dartmouth Winter Carnival. Dartmouth was sccoml, NX illiams third, and Nor- wich. Bates. XIIKIIIIUIIIIFY, Harvarrl, aml Maine Iinishctl in that ortlcr. First Row: Blood. Dunklec. Merrill. Reough. tl. Chase. tllmrchill, Walker. Second Row: Linscott. Garnsev. Narnev. ll. Chase. Atwood, Hanson. lJesRoches. Hastings. Third row: I I.ove'-joy. Macaulay. Sawyer. Mansfield. larsons, Bagley. Lamson. W., A., 'vi S' . ,sw 4' if-v .aa sv--ef First Row: Hunton, Day. Metcalf. Cunningham. Hoxie. Second Row: Hamilton, Morin, Snooks, Dwenger, Clement, Manion. Atkins. Hammond. RIFLE TEAM New Ha1npshire,s B . 5 sharpshooting rifle team, up In hard hit as they were hy I ' graduation, traveling re- gg V strictions, and the call to , .5 arms of several of their f best triggermen, never- . theless, enjoyed a success- I 1 fl ful season. Capt. Clarence Metcalf, coach, found only one letterman returning to school from last year's squad, in the person of acting Captain James Day. Prospects were none too good, hut sophomores Clement, Steele, and Hunton soon hrightened the scene considerahly. Tn their first match of the year, January 8, New Hampshire met the Coast Guard's crack l0Hl1l in a postal match and was defeated l393 to l358. This was to he the only defeat inflicted upon the Wfildcat squad up through midseason, as the New Hampshire riflemen waded through their next matches with four consecutive vic- 2 tories over Rhode Island, Yale, Harvard, and Connecticut. These matches are all part of the New England College Rifle League competitions in which New Hampshire participates. A feature event of the season was the Wild- cat's match against Connecticut, January 22, in which New Hampshire fired its highest total in five years, shooting a total of 1387 to the Nut- meggefs 1342. This match, however, marked the team's last with the full squad. At the end of the first semester four of tl1e star memhcrs of the team, Godfrey, Hunton, James, and Steele, were called to active duty. Other lllClllll0l'S of the squad who were firing high scores consistently were Dwenger, and Hoxie, who, along with the previously mentioned memhers of the team, helped in keeping New Hampshire's place in the league among the first four. Other memhcrs of the team were Mo1'in, Hamilton, Hammond, and Manion. N the quarter of a century that the Womenis Athletic Association has been a functioning unit of the University of New Hampshire, no other year has offered a greater challenge than the present one. Today efficiency on the l1on1e front depends upon physical fitness and, to a greater extent than ever before, upon the well-being of women, who are invading realms hitherto considered strictly for men. The Women's Physical Education Department, in accordance with this fact, has launched a physical conditioning program which complies with army specifications. The W.A.A. Board has cooperated by formulating a health program which stresses all-round health as it is achieved through proper body care and nutrition. The Association also provides co-recreation, popularly called uRec,,' which is held in New Hampshire Hall on Saturday and Sunday after- noons from three to five o'clock. Men accompanying women may use the equipment provided for ping pong, box hockey, badminton, shuffle-board, deck tennis, basketball, or battleboard tennis. On Mon- day and Wednesday evenings from seven to eight, in addition to these activities, there is social dancing to Livio music and occasionally square dancing. Beginners' alice, under the guidance of qualified dancing teachers, is held in the fall so long as there is any demand for it. In season golf and archery are also enjoyed by couples, the field and equipment being available after four o'clock in the afternoon daily, as well as on Saturdays and Sundays. Intercollegiate competition has been at a minimum this year due to transportation difficulties. The hockey game with Stoneleigh Junior College this fall, in which the University of New Hampshire All-Stars were victorious Q7-lj , has been the only outside game. However, intra- mural, both interclass and interhouse, competition has Hourishcd. Classes organized their teams and played softball, hockey, and basketball. The all-star teams in these sports are made up of the best players from all 153 Xp Standing: Evans, Cleashy, Shepard Robinson. Sitting: Robinson, Griffin Curtis. ! W HOCKEY CHAMPIONS First Row: Hodgkins, Guyer, Laighton, Flynn, Parker Oakes. Second Row: San: born, Hoyt, Merriam, Ly ford, Cooper, Astle. q .,! 1-hill. TENNIS CHAMPIONS First Row: Garland, Barton, Halladay, Guyer. Second Row: Goodyear, Drew, Pierce, M1-Kay. tl1e class teams. The interelass singles tennis tournament was finished in the fall. During the year interhouse tournaments in basketball, ping pong, badminton and bowling are played oil: in competition for the Inter- house Activities Cup. The Posture and Poise Contest, the interhouse doubles tennis tournament, and the archery tournament also count toward winning it. The cup is awarded to the house which has the greatest number of points at the end of the year, these points being accumulated on the basis of percent participation as well as actual success in competition. Any house winning the cup for three consecutive years keeps the cup permanently. Last year Smith had this honor. Each year tl1e University of New Hampshire girls shoot in the National Intercollegiate Telegraphic Archery Tournament. During the past year the total score of the highest eight girls was greater than it has ever been, raising considerably our ranking in the national com- petition. Mendum trips to the W.A.A. cabin have been at a minimum due to lack of transportation. Nevertheless, the VV.A.A. Board voted to make a few improvements, and mattresses, a stove, and some cooking utensils have been added. The Board hopes to make a bicycle trip there before the school year is out. 154 SOFTBALL CHAMPIONS First Row: Vifoodward Rob inson, Gardner, Grlflin Goodrich. Second Row Ba con, Pierce, Morton lhur An annual award night is held late in the spring, at which time numerals, pins, and letters are awarded on the basis of the W.A.A. point system. These points are accumulated by par- ticipation in interclass sports, by averaging a certain amount of health credits for the semes- ter, and by serving in leadership positions. Present conditions have of necessity curtailed some W.A.A. activities, but the absence of these is not seriously felt due to the greater enthus- iasm and extent of participation exhibited by U.N.H. women. BADMINTON CLUB First Row: Hoyt, Gardner, Pearce, Boynton, Churchill. Second Row: Harvey, Adams, Fair- bank, King, Gilchrist. Third Row: Dearborn, Cloutier, Swan, Williams. FENCING CLUB First Row: Ward, Smith, Mochel, MacKay, Oakes. Second Row: Tower, Kimball, Williams, VanHennik. BASKETBALL ALL-STARS First Row: Flynn, Pierce, Gardner, Durfee. Second Row: Cass, Stearns, Adams, Lyford. ' ARCHERY CHAMPIONS Fzrst Row: Pearson, Kimball, Carlson. Second Row Merriam, Van deBogart. T. L . ll f- ! A ,NI m1'!!f!2!'!!!f!l!!!!!!UII his W ,aa H H, i!!!i!aaii!hi iiiim: H1175 W M... -.L..I rer I HIIIIIeflmmmlllllllll HI N u!!1:w -i isllw un. IMA n-Hum 'vu I I Jn. pw 'wf . f1 mh H 5. if WHAT HES .3 -L Q, Q nl , . , 5 t 1 , N r x . , 1 1 3 , V i l 1'- .4 , O - TVN., V' ' .wit - - x 3 'I It I- 'K l. I A Q - In 4 s r N U ,VV . 5-J.: ' r CARL CARLSON Theta Chi, Class President 2, 3, R.0.T.C. 3, 43 Honorary Economics Society 3, 4, Outing Club 3, Scabbard and Blade 3, 4, Sphinx 3, Secre- tary, Student Council 2, 3, 43 Vice-President 3, President 4, Student Congress 2, 3, 4, THE GRANITE 2, 3, Business Nqanager 35 Blue Key 4, University Committee on Educational Policy 43 Sophomore Hop Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee Chairman, Wl1o's Who. MOST REPRESENTATIVE OF THE BLUE AND WHITE LOUISE GRIFFIN Nlortar Board 43 Big Sister Committee 2, 3, 4, German Club l, 2, Mortar Board Plaque Win- ner lg lllask and Dagger Trio lg 4-H Club lg Phi Kappa Phi 4, Phi Lambda Phi 3, 4, VVomen's Student Government 2, 3, 43 Secretary 2, Treasurer 3, Vice-President 4, Glee Club lg XVomen's Athletic Association 2, 3, 43 Secretary l, 2, Vice-President 3, President 4g Hockey l, 2, 3, 4, Class Basketball l, 2, 3, 4, Softball l, 2, 3: All Star Hockey l, 2, 3, All Star Basketball l, 2, 3g lllay Day Pageant 23 Freshman Dance Committee, Student Committee on Educational Policy l, 2, 3, 4, YVl1o's Wrbog Honor Roll l, 2, 3. 4. Most Representative Boy CARL CARLSON Most Representative Girl LOUISE GRIFFIN Wittiest Boy RALPH PINO Winiesi Girl DOROTHY KEEFE Best Actor HERMAN SKOFIELD Best Actress CONSTANCE ESTES Most Collegiate Boy WAYNE MULLAVEY Most Collegiate Girl MELBA MCKAY Best Boy Dancer ROBERT WHEELER Best Girl Dancer DOROTHY PARKER CLASS FLIRT MOST BASHFUL , JUNIOR CLASS POLL I El 4 if I ' III 5 uf a X j Best Girl Athlete Best Looking Girl Best Dressed Girl Most All-Round Girl LESLIE IRELAND MARCIA ROBINSON CONSTANCE SALTA MELBA MCKAY Best Boy Athlete Best Looking Boy Best Dressed Boy Most All-Round Boy WBOOM MORCOM .4 MURRAY SMITH ROBERT WHEELER .IOHN DAVIS 'S' 161 JUNIOR PROM Miss Aline Walsh, a member of Chi Omega sorority, and the class of 1943, reigned as queen of the annual gala spring affair, the Junior Prom. I OFT pastel splashes of light thrown about New Hampshire Hall formed an intimate atmosphere for the popular Charlie Barnet at the Junior Prom on April 10, 1942. Couches and divans were placed at intervals to provide a comfortable background. All this, along with the Court of Beauty, Queen Aline Walsh and aides, Babe Fletcher and Vera Lang, joined to intrigue one of the largest crowds ever to till New Hampshire Hall. The chaperones, President and Mrs. Fred Engelhardt, Dean and Mrs. Norman Alexander, Dean and Mrs. Harold Scudder and Dean Ruth J. Woodruff spent an enjoyable evening dancing, chatting or listening to the delightful music. Charlie Barnet fulfilled the highest hopes of everyone and played his best. The vocalists, Hazel Bruce and Allen Lane, added their talents for the delighted crowd. Charlie played all of his best numbers, including the famous uCherokee. The climax of the evening was reached just before intermission when Queen Aline Walsh and her aides, Babe Fletcher and Vera Lang, proceeded to the White Throne of Beauty. Here Aline was presented the silver cup of honor and Babe and Vera received bouquets from President Engelhfardt. The rest of the evening was spent dancing, and at 2:30 A.M. the happy couples said Mgoodnightl' and 'cgoodbyew to a grand evening. The ioyal coronatlon, with Queen Aline Walsh gf Chl Omeba Q01-grity, and her aides, Babe Pastel lights, strains of Charlie Barnet and the Fletcher and Vera Lang, both of Alpha Xi atmosphere of spring, provlded the dell htful Delta sorority setting for a gay throng of dancers 'wwll lv 1.5137 HMM fH' ' . GBUS -w AIDE BEVERLY PARKER CADET COLONEL VERA LANG AIDE BABE FLETCHER BILLIANT flags covered the walls and hung in criss- cross fashion from the ceilings of New Hampshire Hall, giving a military atmosphere to the annual Mil Art Ball, held on December 4, 1942. The orchestra for the aHair was Sonny Dunham. Preceding intermission, the senior officers of Scabbard and Blade formed a saber arch through which Cadet Colonel Vera Lang of Alpha Xi Delta sorority Was led by Fred Charron, followed by her aides Florence Fletcher, also of Alpha Xi Delta, and Beverly Parker. Forming a V-shaped line before the honorary members, the pledges of Scabbard and Blade kneeled in turn as the Cadet Colonel tapped each one. After the ceremony, senior members of Scabbard and Blade were given their permanent assignments for the remainder of the year. Miss Vera Lang of Alpha Xi Delta, Honorary Cadet Colonel, and Fred Charron led the procession. Following them were the aides Florence Fletcher of Alpha Xi Delta and Beverly Parker. Wlith an outstanding military atmosphere of shining crossed sahers and brilliant flags, a large and cnthusias tic crowd danced to music hy Sonny Dunham and his well-known orchestra. 165 CARNIVAL WINTER Nt-NWIWW , HE largest crowd ever to attend a formal dance in the history of the University filled New Hampshire Hall to capacity and enthusiastically received the music of .lack Teagarden and his fourteen piece orchestra. Wartime economy and the condensed program decidedly curtailed festivities of the 1943 Winter Carnival, hut the spirit and gaiety of the week- cnders was higher than at any of the twenty-two preceding Outing Club celebrations. New Hamp- shire Hall was decorated in a winter askin theme, with pine trees around tl1e edge of the dance floor and posters hung on the walls. The coro- V nation of the King and Queen was the highlight of the dance. The pages, Carolyn Slanetz and quit!! Albert Bufiington, lr., lcd the procession fol- lowed by Queen Marcia Robinson, of Chi Omega, who was wearing the red and white sovereign robes and escorted by King Murray Smith. They were followed by the aides, Melba McKay, a member of Alpha Xi Delta, and Kay Helfli, and their escorts, Andy Turner and Bill Snider, respectively. Dean Alexander then crowned the Queen and Doc Deslioehes, chairman of the dance, presented her a book of Wfar Stamps from the Outing Club. The King and Queen remained on the throne and reigned over the dance until intermission. The ski meet and fraternity dances brought to a close the weekend of tl1e 1943 Wiinter Carnival. -rin n--A-H wf11-.davit fs , .,,,,.,,,t.s e - . f ff' 1ff'1--wW'11 mf M12 Marcia Robinson, a member of the class of l944, and Chi Qmega Sorority, who was chosen by the student body to reign as Queen. N a typical carnival scene, a capacity crowd with gay and enthusiastic spirit enjoyed the music of Jack Tea- garden and his orchestra. The climax of the evening was the coronation, in which tbe King and Queen and their royal aides and pages highlighted the affair. Kay Helff, a member of the class of 1946, who served as an aide at the annual Yvinter Carnival. Melba McKay, a member of Alpha X1 Delta sorority and the class of 1944, who also served as an aide to the Queen. E 3 2 5 fiaikggy E235 iA.'41f?,l4rf ' W- -V wig- , 71 dass? sizes- R? X -1' f V, k rffgg , k, 5'ff ug, i -R 5. A ,Mm J V f -1 i'5'?? .4355 xiii wg? fx ,- iefkk ,Q f ' h P in ,f ,QA,, . 351+ - ,gf A , - Q K ijt 3 Qs MIP' Jwdlk L-v-if Q45 5913 sw-w0 f'F W I I I E ,M . x ,KEY S: f ,A-K -vue I Q1 Mm 7 gi . iii x.f If ,fi 5 ATIGNAL ITH college campuses all over the country entering into the all out for defense pro- gram, drastic changes have come over both cur- ricula and outside activities. Math and sci- ences, the once dreaded courses, have become popular and increased physical educational courses are now required. Many of the fairer sex have turned from the needle and thread to the T-square and slide rule and a few brave ones have entered into the welding and shop classes. The precinct of the Halls of Technology are no longer sacred to the male animal. To tl1e amazement of all, the coeds have so successfully overcome the test tube and the T-square, that the originally scaled down courses planned for DEFENSE them have been discarded in favor of the same courses which regular tech men are taking. Some of the very little extra time from the new crowded courses is taken up with the First Aid classes where everything from minor cuts and bruises to broken bones is treated. The girls have made history for themselves with the new physical education program which includes run- ning the obstacle course, drill and calisthenics. The experience which is received in military drill is good preparation for later service in the XVAACS and WAVES for many girls. Lastly, in keeping with the war effort, War stamps are sold weekly, and the students have pledged them- selves to ustamps each week for Victory. 177 f 4 5 ysfg M hi! ' iiiiii ,,,,, lh, I1 'WE H1 i ?1 mg3ii1 ea: l' .llrQ!l,H,:1 -lg5iSiE ffi.aq1'!g13 Lg., 'Ew a' li Ili! 3 W :yi 1 xl' ,E M5 :Q- s I S ii 3, 3 2 5 if wa STUDENT COUNCIL JOIIN DAVIS XX ILLIAM CALL CARL CARLSON OFFICERS CARL CARLSON .. . , President JOHN DAVIS L,LLL . , .. Vice-President FRED CIIARRON , .F... , I, , ...Secretary XXFILLIAINI CALL I , ,I,. I .Treasurer 180 1943 1944 1945 1946 FRED CHARRON CHARLES COSTIGAN WILLIAM IQEOUGH HERBERT SMITH RICHMOND MORCOII THOMAS OODONNELL JOSEPH STRUNISKI PHILLIP PALLAS BLEAKNEY BENEDICT EMBERS WYILLIAM CALL CARL CARLSON FRED CHARRON JOHN DAVIS RICHMOND MORCOM JOSEPH STRUMSKI BLEAKNEY BENEDICT CHARLES COSTIOAN XVILLIAIVI KEOUOH HERBERT SMITH THOMAS 0,DONNELL PHILLIP PALLAS 181 4 '1 I, W 51 . fc-1' ,iff . 1 5,5551 ,... ' .ik wa - ' ts V ur-f Ya' ' g Y ,' 4. 1 . A'..uSIt JJ'- f ,, I II.. M- Q, I L. nv f ' L,ffxFPJ-I S, 'Y .- WJ .- 1 I KIMBALL EASTMAN DALY ROBINSON WILLCOX MCIYER AVERY BRENNAN ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN STUDENTS flilllgi? EXECUTIVE COUNCIL OFFICERS President ..,.., , . .... IVIARJORIE CHALIVIERS Vice-President .. ..,. ....... L OUISE GRIFFIN Secretary ,..I I . .LOUISE JOHNSON Treasurer .. ,MINIELBA MCK.AY MEMBERS PAULINE AVERY ALICE BRENNAN NIARJORIE CHALMI-QRS NIIRIAM EASTMAN 1943 LOUISE GRIFFIN DOROTHY KIMBALI. WIARIAN NICIVICR JOANNE NVILLCOX GAII, DALY 1944- MELBA MCKAY NIARCIA ROBINSON IIOUISE JOHNSON EASTMAN MORRISON TOOHILL PHANEKF GRIFFIN DEYENEAU DOW ER 183 KIMBALI, ORT R BO RD OFFICERS President DOROTHY KIRIBALL Vice-President RIIRIAM EASTMAN Secretary RACHEL MORRISON Treasurer ALBER'FINE PHANEUF Editor-Historian J EANETTE TOOHILL MEMBERS PHYLLIS DEWIENEAU NIARGARET DOWER BIIRIAINI EASTMAN LOUISE GRIFFIN DOROTHY KIMBALL RACHEL DIORRISON ALBERTINE PHANELI' JEANETTE TOOHILL Scene from the winning skit presented at '6Stunt Night , one of the activities sponsored President Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer .,. ,, CARL CARLSON FRED CHARRON RALPH DESROCHES ROY GOODFELLOWV CHARLES JUDD annually by BLUE KEY. BLUE KEY Senior Honorary Society OFFICERS o.., HXVILLIAINI KEOUGII , THEODORE STEBBINS MEMBERS IRVING KARELIS XVILLIAINI KEOUGH ALLAN LAIVIOND EDSYARD BIACKEL ROGER BIARSHALL 184 , ,,., IRVING KARELIS ARTHUR ROUILLARD ALBERT SAKOIAN FREDERICK SAUNDERS HERBERT SMITH TIIEODORE STEBBINS JUDD, DESROCHES CHARRON CARLSON, GOODFELLOVV, LANIOND STEBBINS KEOUGH IQARELIS MACK!-:L BIARSHALL, ROUILLARD, SAKOIAN SINIITH, SAUNDERS Prvsiflvnt ,. . . ViCl?-Pfl'Silll'llf Svcrvtury . . f W I rvnszlrvr . XYALLACE ACIQIQRMAN SAAIUI-:L ASKENAZY ROLAND BOLCIIRR WLILLIASI CALL 186 OFFICERS MEMBERS ROBERT CLOCK RICHARD COCHRAN CHARLES COSTICAN ROBERT CROSBIE U'I l'AYIO CLIOYANNANGI-11.1 SENIOR SKULLS Senior Honorary SOI lvty SULLIVAN CALL LLCAS CROSBIE RICHARD SULLIILAN , I,IV. XYILLIAINI CALL . . HARRY LUCAS ROBERT CROSRII: HARRY LIJCAS FRANK ROBBINS RICIIARD SIQLLIN AN ROBI-1R'l' VAI Gll w gkfwf Qmfzlfgw, Diiif3?'ffW TL . if QAQJMVAM Www MW! HXZZZM' ' gms www 54441 4L3g,p,,,, ipiwf 8. Vwyfgw Maxi may OFFICERS President , A.... THOINIAS NILES Vice-President ,. V. V. EDWARD KELLEHER Secretary .. . . ., ROBERT HINCHEY Treasurer CARL HYLDBLYRG 188 SPHIN X Junior Honorary Society THONIAS NILES Sigma Beta EDVVARD IQELLEHER Theta Kappa Phi ROBERT HINCHEY Kappa Sigma CARL HYLDBIIRG Lambda Chi Alpha 1 1 MEMBERS LEoN AUSTIN FRANK CRAIWI DONALD FREESE CHARLES GOZONSKY STANLEY LEE RUSSELL ORTON GEORGE RIOL0 S PHILIP THURRELL HAROLD WARREN Alpha Gamma Rho Pi Kappa Alpha Phi Blu Delta Phi Alpha Alpha Tau Omega Tau Kappa Epsilon igma Alpha Epsilon Theta Chi Phi Delta Upsilon tl ARA KNIGHT. WALLACE RUSSELL 1944 GR ITE T was in the year l905 that the Junior Class here at the University. which was then Kew Hampshire College, attempted their first annual in the puhlieation of the nineteen hundred and six GRANITE. It was then a rather small hook heing only seven inches wide and nine inches long. They continued to progress until exist- ing world conditions prevented the puhlication of the nineteen hundred and fifteen GRANITE. However, the following year the ,lunior Class again took over the puhlication and continued as usual until, in the early twenties, the size was increased to seven and one-half inches in width and ten and one-half inches in length. Under the ahlc guidance of their faculty ad- visor, Mr. A. VV. Johnson, the staff continued through years of prosperity and depression. In the year 1939 the size of the GRANITE was again increased to our present size which has fulHlled our requirements to the present year. The GRANITE is a hook which should he Valued hy every alumnus of the University of New Hampshire, and a record which will serve as a remembrance ofthe happy years spent in Durham. This is our ohjeetive in puhlishing our 35th volume and the fulfillment of it de- pends on you. First row: Austin, Bowles, Knight. Russell, Storm. Second row: Ruggles, Carter, Ellis, Keenan, Gozonsky, Hodgkins. 190 Wa, PROFESSOR A. W. JOHNSON Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Nfanaging Editors Photograph Editors Activities Editor Organizations Editor Sports Editor Features Editor Clara Knight Wallace Russell Eleanor Storm Raimond Bowles Judith Austin .lames Keenan Marguerite Ruggles Anne Hodgkins Charles Gozonsky Barbara Ellis Fraternity and Sorority Editor Jane Carter Faculty Advisor Arthur W. Johnson HEELERS .loseph Bassett Elinor Bond John Bryan Ruth Carens Katherine Davis Carolyn Folsom Priscilla Garran Mary Griffin Eleanor Huse Ardelia Hutchins Shirley Kimball Barbara Koon Clarence Murphy Robert Newell Margaret Newton Ruth Piper Glenna Sanborn Lydia Shaw Barbara Shepard Frances Smith James Steele Wendell Williams i7 LC-,pai Q2 Q- 3 Q THE HAMPSHIRE ,X 'i Mi me' 1 P at . First row: O'Donnell, Deveneau. Smith, Eastman, Smart. Second row: Peters, Gozonsky, Parker, Shepard, Farmer, Knight, Whitcomb, Stewart. UCCEEDING from the old COLLEGE MONTHLY, a literary magazine published when New Hampshire University was young and still at Hanover, THE NEW HAMPSHIRE was first printed in September, 1911. For twenty-four years, commencing witl1 that date, the paper was issued once a week. Then in 1935, through aid from the Student Activity Fund, two issues a week were made possible. This policy continued until the fall of 1942 when tl1e acute paper shortage made it necessary to return to one issue a week. Operating under a non-faculty supervision system, THE NEW HAMPSHlRE'S chief objective is to keep the faculty and stu- dents constantly aware of news on their own campus. The by- word of the paper is to present the news correctly and vividly, and to stimulate interest, awaken comment, and guide public opinion. The chief factor in keeping the paper alive through years of financial uncertainty has been the untiring work of both editorial and business staffs, whose only compensation has been the satisfaction of seeing issue after issue roll off the presses. For a smaller circle, the immediate staff, the paper is a great experience. The life of a campus reporter or editor is rich in daily contacts with new problems and new situations. The busi- ness department is also one of many interesting experiences. The character of the editorial stafs personnel will be reflected in the editorial content of the paper. And what is in the col- lege press is inexorably related in the long run to the question of what the campus thinks. 192 Editor-in-Ch ief Business .Wulmger STAFF EDITORIAL BOA Associate Editor iwanaging Editors Sports Editor News Editors Board Secretary Herbert YV. Smith Philip Smart RD Phyllis Deveneau Thomas 0'Donnell Charles Gozonsky Philip Peters Clara Knight Parker Wlhitcomh Barbara Shepard Miriam Eastman BESIXESS BOARD Assistant Business .l1!lllllgl'l' Edmund Steyyart Advertising illllllllgl'7' DOl'OillV Parker Subscription ,llanugcr Madeline Farmei 193 NEWS REPORTERS Richard Carpenter .lean Currie Marion Gorman Morris Gozonsky Ann Haskell Barbara Hayden Anna Karanikas Evelyn Laraha D. E. McPherson David Oliphant Hope Salta Sallie S. Smith Betty ,lo Weaver Marilyn Wlllitcomh BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Priscilla Barnard Howard Bannister Mary Lou Cole Marilyn Cressy Elsie Deming Xorma 0'DoWd Madeline McKinnon Eleanor McHugh .l oe Miller Ann Williams Svvnc from AWr. mul Urs. North Dorothy Briggs Bernard Miller Stage setting for Lnrlivs in Hl'fifl'llll?llt,, Xnn Villc-1' Clayton Smith Srvllv fl'Ulll l,111li1's in R vtirvm ent' Mary Evelyn Moore Ann Miller Conslznwv Estes President Vice-President f freasurer Secretary Scenic Director Russell Beal Robert Crosbie Marjorie Farwell Horace Bascom Robert Birnbaum Allan Coe Sam Crabtree J ohn Atwood MASK DAGGER Clayton Smith Jeannette Toohill Kenneth Creed Constance Estes ,lohn Gaw Technical Director Publicity Director Wlusic Director Properties Director Electrical Director MEMBERS sEN1oRs ,lohn Gaw Elaine Hirshberg Robert Joslin George Kelly Robert Maddock Dorothy McCready' Albertine Phaneuf Daniel Russell JUNIORS Kenneth Creed Constance Estes Richard Horan Clare Langley Paul Lawler Elizabeth Lucey Wlesley Lyon John Morgan SOPHOMORES Leonard Convel Robert Phelps Robert Newell Albert Soule Richard Horan Albertine Phaneuf Clare Langley Dorothy MeCready Leonard Convel Clayton Smith Robert Stewart Jeanette Toohill Theda Oakes Thomas O'Donnell Dorothy Parker Robert Sawyer Charlotte lvilliams First row: Convel, Horan, Toohill, Brett, Hennessy, Smith, Estes, Gaw, Clarke. Second row: Ricciardone, Cross, Miller, Thompson. Terhune, Phaneuf. Farwell, Nelson. Oakes. Wfeaver. Third row: Parker, Barton, Hull. Langley, Wfoodworth, Griffin, O,Dowd, O'Donnell. Taylor. Grube, Collins. Fourth row: Black, Bust-om, Orton, Keenan, Kelley, Browning, Robinson, Skofield, Wallier, Birnbaum. . ,1, Y .,.H, OUTI G CLUB OFFICERS President David Sleeper Publicity Lilly Carlson Vice-President Robert Stewart Cflfnival Chairman Secretary Adrienne Asde T RaE9l1lDesRoches , ' ' ' l H ' Treasurer Theodore Stebbins WiZ'1Z?3StglZ?Z,eam IC lan man Trip Chairman Judith Austin wfinifred Curtis Cabins and Trails Raimond Bowles Programs Patricia Jordan HE University of New Hampshire Outing Club was established in 1915 by a group of fellows with the intention of promoting out- of-door activities. The club has grown steadily and is now one of the largest student organizations of the University, playing a very important part in its recreational and social activities. The governing board of the Outing Club is NBlue Circlef' This board is chosen from the members of the Outing Club wl1o show an active interest in its projects and serve as heelers for a reasonable length of time. The Outing Club, through tl1e nBlue Circle, conducts most of its activities of a recreational nature in the Wfhite Mountains where its Franconia and Jackson Cabins serve as excellent base camps for climbing and skiing on the Presidential Range. Mendumls Pond Cabin, located but a few miles from campus, is the scene of many memorable Thursday supper outings. Activities which the Outing Club sponsors annually are Winter Car- nival and the Women's Ski Team, as well as various movies and lectures. ln normal years the Horse Show is one of its projects. 196 MEMBERS SENIORS Phyllis Churchill Ralph DesRoches Virginia Hill Elizabeth Sanders Patricia Jordan Theodore Stebbins David Sleeper Robert Stewart Virginia Woodward .loanne Willcox JUNIORS Adrienne Astle Judith Austin Gretchen Baum Raimond Bowles Warren Brainerd Lilly Carlson Jane Carter Harriet Congdon Winifred Curtis Samuel Goodhue Richard Horan Leslie Ireland Melba McKay Theda Oakes Carlton Preble Marcia Robinson Constance Salta Richard Stall' Edgar Varney Dorothy Wentzell SOPHOMORES John Atwood Maye Anderson Keith Birdsall Ruth Brown Raymond Churchill Esther Drew Anne Hale Ardelia Hutchins Patricia Leonard William McCarten Mary Moore Joseph Reed Richard Scammon Virginia Tarr Parker Whitcomb ,...l First row: Brauer, Churas, Langley, Dudley, Nul- sen, Foley, Deming, Chellis, Lesnevsky. Second row: Trachy, Stackpole, Anderson, Cowen, Parker, Grady, Davidson, Blair, Barnett, Knight. Yeaton. Third row: Valonen, Kowalczyk, Dou- cet, Harris, Oliphant, Lord, Clement, Hutchin- son, Berry. A.I. E.E. OFFICERS Chairman Richard Foley Vice-Chairman Robert Dudley Secretary-Treasurer Robert Deming SENIORS: Adolph Anderson, Arthur Barrett, Frank Churas, Robert Deming, Robert Dudley, Richard Foley, Robert Cowen, John Grady, An- drew Kowalczyk, Earl Krauzer, Henry Langley, Mallrice Parker, Cecil Stackpole, Robert Stew- art, Roger Trachy, Rudolph Valonen, Eugene Wiright. JUNIORS: Blillard Berry, Camille Blair, Frank Chellis, C. Austin Clement, Donald Cross, Wal- ter Datkiw, Edward Davidson, Robert Davis, Norman Doucet, Samuel Goodhue, Townsend Harris, Robert Hutchinson, Robert Knight, Alex Lesnevsky, Philip Lord, Melvain Oliphant, Wil- liam Pine, Carlton Preble, Sherman Reed, Allen Richmond, Albert Yeaton. 198 A.I.M.E. OFFICERS President Robert Crosbie Vice-President Robert I. Davis Secretary-Treasurer Franklin Hill Faculty Sponsor Glenn Stewart SENIORS: Robert Crosbie, Franklin Hill, Ed- ward Mackel, Greenleaf Pickard. JUNIORS: Karl Adams, Charles Clark, Howard Darling, Robert Davis., Norman Flint, William Smart. FACULTY MEMBERS: Professor Eppelsheim- er, Professor Meyers, Mr. Stewart, Mr. Sticht. HE American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers was founded in l87l. This Institute is the professional society for all of the mining and metallurgical industries. The A.I.M.E. has over l0,000 mem- hers with nearly 4,000 student associate members. The student associate chapter at the University of New Hampshire was rec- ognized in April, l942. The purpose of this chapter is to pro- mote and foster interest in all fields concerned with and related to geology. Any geology major in good standing who has completed a year and a half of study in this field at the University is eligible to become a member of the local chapter. Activities included dur- ing the year are lectures by guest speak- ers and motion pictures. The A.I.M.E. was among the engineering groups spon- soring a joint dance during the winter. First row: Davis. Crosbie, Hill. Second row: Sticht, Pickard, Mac-kel. Smart, Stewart. 199 HE student branch of the American Society of Civil Engineers affords the student professional contacts to a great- er extent than can be developed in the classroom. The training received helps him to enter tl1e civil engineering pro- fession. It is open to junior and senior men who are majoring in the subject. The New Hampshire branch is closely af- filiated with the National Society of Civil Engineers. First row: Wheeler, Giovannangeli, Pope, Di- Martino, Celt, Stuart, Driscoll. Second row: Bean, Smart, Richards, Cochran, Rogers, Tasker. Third row: Davis, Marr, Askenazy, Pomeroy. A.S.C.E. OFFICERS President Dominic DiMartino Vice-President Robert Pope Secretary Edward Gelt Treasurer David Stuart SENIORS: Samuel Askenazy, Richard Cochran, Dominic DiMartino, William Driscoll, Ottavio Ciovannangeli, ,lohn Marr, Robert Pope, John Richards, Williams Rogers .lr., Wilfred Silvia, Philip Smart, James Tasker, Louis VVheeler. JUNIORS: Merit Bean, Frederick Heartz, Wlil- fred Hastings, Edward Celt, Walter Davis, Ray- mond Pomeroy, David Stuart, Ralph Sanders. 200 .t. A.S.M.E. OFFICERS President Frank Robbins Vice-President Richard Sullivan Secretary-Treasurer Frederick Grube Corresponding Secretary George Kelley SENIORS: Albert Baker, Russell Beal, David Chase, Clarence Colby, James Day, Robert Dy- son, Robert Foster, Frederick Grube, William Hamilton, George Herrick, Leonard Hewitt, James Jenkins, George Kelley, Robert King, Perry Knowles, Arthur Murphy, Robert Neal, Donald Rand, Frank Robbins, Leopold Roy, Donald Russell, Andrew Sanne, James Sleeper, Myrl Smith, John Stowell, Richard Sullivan. JUNIORS: Calvin Cunningham, Wlallis Curtis, Norman Deming, Eugene Foster, Edward Harri- man, Harold Hoch, Danyal Kerven, Williarii King, Donald Linscott, Richard Merrifield, Ray- mond Milas, Russell Orton, Ralph Otis, Earle Quimby, Vernon Sanborn, Henry Szczepan, Quentin Theroux, Herbert Wuth. 201 First row: Dyson, Nye, Sullivan, Robbins, Grube, Kelley, Sanne. Second row: Foster, Baker, Murphy, Milas, Jenkins, Quimby, San- born. Third row: Chase, Colby, Hewitt, Cun- ningham, Neal, Hoch, Wuth, Harriman, Otis. Fourth row: Sleeper, Herrick, Russell, Roy, Day, Theroux, Deming, King, Curtis, Orton. HE American Society of blechanical Engineers is composed of junior and senior men majoring in engineering. The organization hopes to aid tl1e student in understanding and in being interested in the more practical side of the field, and also in developing l1is ability to speak in public. Wleekly meetings are held to accom- plish this, at which time two members speak or some phase of mechanical en- gineering is discussed. lnspections are held every year. New Hamphire mem- bers may attend the New England Con- vention which is an annual affair. v-f APPLIED FARMING First row: George, Scotland, Kelly. Merrill. Clement. Second row: Pierce, Stark, Coffey, Clarke, Fletcher, Parker, Phillips. HE Applied Farming Student Or- ganization was organized in 1940 with the following purposes and objec- tives: 1. To provide an organization to fit the needs of the students of the Ap- plied Farming Course. 2. To maintain the identity of the Applied Farming Course students on campus. 3. To provide social, recreational, and educational benefits for the mem- bers of the organization. 4. To work together cooperatively. 5. To improve farming standards and an appreciation of farm life. Membership is open to all students currently enrolled in the Applied Farm- ing Course. OFFICERS President Philip Kelly Vice-President William Scotland Secretary Francis George Treasurer Raymond Merrill SECOND YEAR: Roger Chamard, Charles Clement, Francis George, Philip Kelly, Ray- mond Merrill, William Scotland. FIRST YEAR: Theodore Clarke, .lohn Coffey, Robert Fletcher, James Lampesis, William Par- ker, John Phillips, Wesley Pierce, Peter Smerlas, Richard Stark. 202 WOMEN DAY STUDENTS OFFICERS President Alice Garland Vice-President Priscilla Marrotte Secretary-Treasurer Carolyn Foley Head Proctor Ellen Graziani SENIORS: Alice Brennan, Alice Garland, Alice VV ebb. JUNIOBS: Dorothy Cassily, Christine Chick, Mary Connolly, Genevieve Cloutier, Mary .lane- tos, Thelma Jordan, Priscilla Marrotte, Ruth Tasker. SOPHOMORES: Mary Ames, Mildred Cook, Bettina Dalton, Carolyn Foley, Ellen Graziani, Beverly Harte, Gloria Monroe, Mary Murchie, Evelyn Norton, Roberta Redden, Eleanor Varney. FRESHMEN: Eleanor Adams, Miriam Ames, Arlene Behan, Beverly Bourn, Barbara Coolc, Barbara Ferguson, Lois Foster, Anna Higgins, Gene Howland, Dorothy Kathios, Diana Lowe, Marilyn Maher, Ruth McBride, Mary McKernan, Anne Murphy, Margaret Murphy, Rosamond Raynes, Jacqueline Roe, Olympia Sagris, Eliza- beth Sanders. R f 0614 W First row: Howland, Murphy, Graziani, Mar- rotte, Foley, Brock, Sanders, Sagris. Second row: Roberts, Roe, M. Murphy, McKernan, Harte, Dalton, Janetos, Varney, Behan, Foster. Third row: Cassily, Ames, Connolly, Murchie, Norton, Chick, Marelli, Jordan, Kathios. 203 DEBATING SOCIETY N the campus of the University of New Hampshire the Debating Soci- ety has been active throughout the past several decades. Students interested in debating begin their training in October of each college year. Students who have maintained an interest throughout the first semester are permitted to register for English 6 1!Vasity Debatingj during the second semester. The purpose of this society is that through active partici- pation in debates on current, state and national issues the students develop abil- ity in the logical organization and ef- fective presentation of arguments. The regular schedule for debates throughout the season includes contests with Amherst, Dartmouth, Harvard, Bates, and Middlebury. First row: Rowden, Gozonsky, Keesey, Skofield, Placy. Second row: Flynn, Michaels, Karanikas, Cole, Wakeman. Cadorette, Adams. Third row: Sherman. Michel. Benner, Bassett, Doon, Tal- mers. OFFICERS Varsity lllanagcr Thomas Flynn Freshman Manager Normand Cadorette JUNIORS: Solon Barraclough, James Doon. Tholnas Flynn, Charles Gozonsky, Herman Sko- field. SOPHOMORES: Arthur Nlichaels, Frank Mi- chel, Betty Nelson, Ann Wiillard. FRESHMEN: Wiarren Adams, .loseph Bassett, Arlene Behan, Blair Benner, Nornland Cador- ette, David Clark, Louise Cole, Anna Karanikas, James Koromilas, Stuart MacDonald, Richard P. Marche, Mildred Placy, Leo Ross, Phyllis Anne Howden, Suzanne Sickmon, Alexander Smith, John Snow, Shirley Sylvester, Frederick Talmers, Robert Wfakeman, Edward Wiall. 204 ,... HILLEL CLUB OFFICERS President Wfarren Robbins Vice-President Howard Borr Secretary Anita Smtih SENIOBS: Carolyn Adnoff, Samuel Askenazy, Evelyn Blankenberg, Howard Borr, Leon Eck- man, Bernard Ekman, Frances Golod, Suzanne Katzman, Earl Krauzer, Jack Lepoff, Joseph Levy, Edna Tolchinsky, Phyllis Ulin. JUNIORS: Ezekiel Booth, Robert Edison, Louis Geller, Shirley Glazerman, Jack Roberts, Ber- nard Rosenblatt, Shirley Spector. SOPHOMORES: Shirley Angelowitz, Meloine Fellman, Morris Gozonsky, Rachel Hefterman, Louis Katze, Barbara Katzman, Leon Mandell, Warren Robbins, Anita Smith, Gerald B. Smith, Roland Stroyman, Dorothy Wleinreb. FRESHMEN: Alan Barkin, Natalie Barron, Sherman Clevenson, Frank Cohen, Herbert Davis, Arline Ekman, Joseph Glynn, Benjamin Hartman, Ira Koerner, Norma Lazarus, Harold Leen, Marilyn lVliller, Irving lllorrison, Ralph Rudnick, Norman Samuel, Gerald Stein, Shirley Zelinsky. 20 v D First row: Borr, Hefterman, Robbins, A. Smith. Michaels. Second row: Colod, Eckman, Celt, C. Smith, Roberts, Ulin. HE purpose of the Hillel Club is to further Jewish culture and social life on campus and to uphold religion among the students. Activities consist of lectures by col- lege professors on and oil' the campus, and participation in inter-state debates at Dartmouth. Some dances, sings, and holiday parties are also held. Membership is open to any Jewisll student on campus. H0 E ECO OMICS CL B First row: Bartlett. Mitcham, Levcowich, Thompson, Batzis, Trainovich. Jackson, Brewer. Pepoon, Tipping. Second row: Parker, Sher- wood. Johnston, Tuttle. Bond, Harrington. Ricker .Mitrhell, Piper, Thyng. Johnson. Third row: King, G. Johnson, Temple. Fitts, Moody, Berry, Connor, Hamm, Fairbank, Wezntherill, Marvis. Fourth row: Phair, Pearce, Foulkrod. Y. Johnson. True. Uearhorn. Stearns. Churchill. Ekmzin, Sickmon, Newcomer, E. Batzis. OFFICERS President Virginia Trainovieh Vice-President Nlarguerite Jackson Secretary Anita Chase Tr eerz SILTUT Katherine Batzis Publicity Chairman Ethel Koehler SENIOBS: Mary Bacon, hlahel Bartlett, Kath- erine Batzis, Helen Cassily, Ellena Foss, Andrea Pearce, Esther Peaslce, Marion Phillips, Edith Phair. Lucille Stearns, lllarion Stock, Annotte Thompson, Evelyn Tipping, Virginia Traino- vich, Marcia Wveatherill, Lila Wvilloughhy. JUNIOBS: Alida Baker, Mary Carlisle, Barbara Connor, Doris Dearhorn, Dorismae Dyer, Mary Eastman, Norine Edwards, Mary Frazer, Fayette Hoyt, Marguerite Jackson, Shirley Laighton, Es- ther Marden, Marguerite Buggles, Marjorie Stock, Eleanor Storm, Dorothy Trow, Glenna True. SOPHOIVIOBES: Evangeline Batzis, Elinor Bond, llarion Brown, Viola Carlson, Anita Chase, Dorice Elkins, Dorothy Fitts, Jean Foulk- rod, Hattie Harrington, Grace Johnson, lylar- garet Johnson, Virginia Johnson, Edith King. Beta Little, Beverly Nlerrill, Bita Mitchell, Es- ther Nye, Carolyn Phillips, Myra Piper. Martha Bieker, Helen Swan, Louise Temple, Lorraine Thyng, Joan Tuttle. FBESHNIEN: Elinor Ahhott, Beryl Berry, Phyl- lis Daniels, Rebecca Fairhank, Priscilla Hallam, Laura Hamm, Natalie Harrington, Eleanor Johnston, Mary Knowlton, Jane Marvin, Barbara llloody, Shirley Newcomer, Beverly Parker. Miriam Bohertson, Constance Rhodes, Shirley Sherwood, Suzanne Sickmon, Virginia Whitney. JUNIOR GREETERS OFFICERS Prvsiflenl Alhert H. Conde Vice-Presirl rfrl t Wesley P. Lyon Secretary William WY. Snider Treasurer Paul Lawler Executive Clmir lllr 1 n Herhcrt YV. Smith Faeuliy Advisor Prof. Raymond R. Starke SENIORS: Russell Byles, Albert Conde. Rohert Nylander, Herhert Smith. William Snider. JUNIORS: Warren Brainerd. Paul Lawler, Wies- ley Lyon, Rohert Sawyer. SUPHUMUHES: John Atwood. Bruce Grant. Parker w7llllI'Olllll. FRESHNIEN: Phyllis Urolet. Vs arner Plummer. William Proctor. X . Q' ,KN .34 HE Junior Greeters was organized in 1938 hy a small group of students majoring in Hotel Administration. This organization was patterned after a sim- ilar club at Cornell called '4Yet Host. The purpose was to gather socially at certain specified times young men who intended to make a career of hotel work to discuss the set-ups and johs held at various hotels in which they had heen employed during the summer months. Althouffh the eluh is still in its in- F fanev it received state-wide reeoffnition ,, 7 F' among hotel men in l94l, when the New Hampshire Hotel Association held its spring meeting: in Durham. The present eluh will have represen- tative oragnizations on the campuses of all universities offering courses in Hotel Administration. First role: Brainerd. Snider. Conde. Starke. Smith. Second FDIC! wYlllll'0lllll. Atwood. Lyon. Plummer. Lawler. Sawyer. Q, f gnu , 1, .W Qx 5, K- lux x :L 207 LENS AND SI-IUTTER Ml Q First row: Crube, Ulin, Keenan, Carr, Dooley. Second row: Kimball, Oakes, Gordon-Smith. Sanders. Third row: Wakeman, Corfinkle. Brainerd, Drew, Nasvik. OFFICERS Presiflcnt James Keenan Vice-President Andreas Turner Secretary George Carr Treasurer Phyllis Ulin SENIORS: George Carr, Phyllis Deveneau, Bea- trice Grant, Norman Reed, Nancy Sanders, An- dreas Turner, Phyllis Ulin. JUNIORS: Warren Brainerd, Russell Byles, Phyllis Follansbee, Anne Gordon-Smith, Fred- erick Grube, James Keenan, Danyal Kerven, Mary Kimball, Theda Oakes. SOPHOMORES: Paul DeGross, Philip Dooley, Herbert Gorfinkle, Nicholas Kischitz, Guy Miles, Helen Resseguie. FRESHMEN: Elizabeth Knowlton, Robert Lovc- joy, Robert Wlakeman. 208 MEN ORAH SOCIETY OFFICERS President Edna Tolchinsky Vice-President Suzanne Katzman Secretary Dorothy Weinreb Treasurer Barbara Katzman Faculty Advisor Ruth .l . Woodmlf SENIORS: Carolyn Adnoff, Evelyn Blanken- ' ' U S e lrerg, Frances Golod, Elaine H1ISlllJCFC, uzann Katzman, Edna Tolchinsky. JUNIOBS: Shirley Glazerman. SOPHOMORES: Shirley Angelowitz, Rachel Barbara Katzman, Shirley Sloane, Anita Smith, Dorothy Weinrela. Hefterman, FRESHMEN: Natalie Barron, Arline Ekman M 'l n Miller, Shirley Zel- Norma Lazarus, ar1 y insky. 209 First row: Ekman, B. Katzman, Tolchinsky, S. Katzman, Weinreb. Second row: Angelowitz, ' k Glazerman, Hirshberg, Spector, Zelms y. HE Menorah Society, alliliated with the National Menorah Organization, was founded at the University of New H m shire in 1927 by a Jewish coed a P group. In 1934 Menorah became a cluh wholly for girls and it has remained as such. Weekly meetings are held at Scott Hall with Dean Woodruff as acting advisor. Th Menorah Society has endeavored e to carry out hotll a social and cultural vram and has strived to further the prom , l ' n its members. bond of friends up amo g ---Y MIKE AND DIAL First row: Richardson, Davidson. Taylor, Too- hill, Cortez, Weaver, C. Smith. Kapit, Ricciar- done. Second row: Hewitt. Anderson, Flynn. S. Smith, Hale, Terhune. Miller, Lucey, John- son, Kendrirk. Davis. Skofield. Doon. Third row: Deming. Michaels. Flint. H. Smith. East- man, Parker, Langley. Doyle. 0'Donnell, Dodge, DeGross. I Qunevl OFFICERS Program Director Betty ,lo Weaver Business .Wanngcr Ann Taylor Secretary Louise Johnson Technical Director Rohert Deming EXECUTIVE CONUIITTEE CHAIRMEN Script Sallie Sawyer Smith Announcing Clayton Smith Sound Effects Leonard Hewitt Publicity Charles Richardson Talent Jeannette Toohill SENIORS: Adolph Anderson, Arthur Barrett, Charles Costigan, Marjorie Chalmers, Esther Doyle, Rohert Cowen, Leonard Hewitt, Eliza- beth Lucey, Thomas O'Donnell, Sara Pearson, Barhara Perkins, Clayton Smith, Herhert Smith, Sallie Sawyer Smith, Ann Taylor, Jeannette Too- hill, Betty ,lo Wreaver. JUNIORS: Edward Davidson, ,lames Doon, Leon Eekman, Norman Flint, Dorothy Parker, Charles Richardson, Herman Skofield. SOPHOMORES: Katherine Davis, Paul De- Gross, Rohert Deming, Philip Dodge, Anne Hale, Louise Johnson, Virginia Kendrick, Ann Miller, Miriam Terhune. FRESHNIEN: Natalie Brooks, Norman Cador- ettc, David Clark. ,lean Currie, Anna Karanikas. 210 CLUB OFFICERS HE Newman Cluh is a cluh of Cath- President Vive-President Correspondin ff Secretary Z' Recording Secretary Treasurer CONINIITTEFI Cntholie fl etion Publicity Soeial Chairmen ,Iewelry Chairman Executive Committee Ralph Deslioehes Rachel LaFlamme Ruth Nelson Estelle Dutton Je llll es Keenan CHAIHNIEN Donald Cross Mary Griilin Anne Hall John MeKoan Mary Manning .lean Morrison Esther Doyle Paul Harrison William Keough Thomas Flynn Thomas U'Donnell olic culture and fellowship organized in secular Colleges and universities of the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and Hawaii. The purposes of the Cluh are identical with the activities: Religious, Educational, and Social, in that order of importance. The first Newman Cluh was formed at the University of Pennsylvania in 1894 hy tive medical students. ln 1915 the Federation of Newman Cluhs was or- ganized in New York. There are now three' hundred eluhs helonging to the Newman Cluh Federation whose head- quarters is at the National Wlelfare Con- ference in Vivashington, D. C. First row: Morrison. Keough, Hall, Keenan, Manning, DesRot-hes, Rev. 0'Connor, La- Flamme, Cross, Nelson. Griffin, Dutton, Flynn, Doyle. Second row: M. McCarthy, Turcotte, Rich. O. Mt-Carthy, B. 0'Neil, M. O'Neil, Dowd, Sylvester, Lamothe, Kimball, McHugh, Dower, Farwell, Callahan. Third row: Rzeznikiewicz, Selig. 0'Dowd. Carens, Entwistle, Costello, Chandler. Cain. LaBomhard, Pickard, Lyons, Shortell. Dube. Pino. Judd. Fourth row: Wol- von. McLaughlin. Rive-iardone, Strumski, Horan, MeKoan. Doon. Hinvhey, Marois, Gagnon, Ouel- lette. LeTourneau. Monahan. Fifth row: Char- ron. Coodfellow. Rouillard, Simses, Kelleher, Tennant. Lihhy. Grady. 211 POULTRY SCIENCE CLUB HE Poultry Science Club of the University of New Hampshire was organized by six seniors interested in poultry husbandry. The first meeting was held on March 6, 1939. The object of the club is to unite those interested in furthering the cause of poultry hus- bandry. There is also a chance for stu- dent-faculty relations. Any person in- terested in poultry, either directly or indirectly, may become a member. Meet- ings consist of talks and discussions led by outstanding poultrymen in the state as well as movies and reports by various members of the club. First row: Charles, Woodward, Clock, Plump- ton, Waller. Second row: Houghton, Convel, Wallace, Ringrose, Ballentine, Thurrell, King, McLoon. OFFICERS President Robert Clock Vice-President Dean Plumpton Secretary-Treasurer Duncan Woodward ADVISORS: T. Burr Charles, Richard Ringrose Herbert Wfaller. SENIORS: Robert Clock, Ray Haskell, William Lord, Charles Oberg, Gordon Placy, Dean Plumpton. JUNIORS: Alson Brown, Leonard Convel, Steve King, Philip Thurrell, Duncan Woodward. SOPHOMORES: Charles Clement, Philip Emil- io, William Wallace. FRESHMEN: Robert Ballentine, Ralph Hough- ton, Charles McLoon. 212 mm ------1 PSYCHOLOGY CLUB OFFICERS President William Snider Vice-President Marjorie Chalmers Secretary-Treasurer Dorothy Kimball SENIORS: Beverly Bates, Flora Kimball, Mar- jorie Chalmers, Shirley Clark, Dorothy Kimball, Flora Kimball, Nancy Kinsman, Norman Reed, Dorothy Sawyer, William Snider, Alison Teel, George Paulsen. JUNIORS: Robert Birnbaum, Barbara Connor, Barbara Ellis, Anne Gordon-Smith, Anne Hodg- kins, Alyce Lawless, Wesley Lyon, Melba McKay, Ethel Steigmann, Olga Yeaton. SOPHOMORES: .lean Agnew, Maye Anderson, Barbara Brice, Barbara Brown, hlarion Brown, lvilliam Butler, Viola Carlson, Ruth Carrier, Mary Eileen Clifford, Marilyn Colby, ,loan Col- lins, Katherine Davis, Ruth Davis, Philip Dodge, Esther Drew, Merrill Feldman, Stella Gagne, Priscilla Garran, Priscilla Gilchrist, Ellen Gra- ziani, Phyllis Hon, Marion Howard, Lillian Hoyt, Vera Jackson, Nancy Johnson, Joyce Jos- lyn, Virginia Kendrick, Shirley Kimball, John LaTourette, Constance Lycctt, Alice MacDonald, Loring lllacalaster, Richard McDermott, Robert llrlcNair, Mary Evelyn Moore, Clarence Murphy, Virginia Nevers, Betty Ordway, Dorothy Peas- lee, Carolyn Phillips, Noreen Ray, Mary Rob- F irst row: Parker, Drew, Hill, Sawyer, Ekdahl, Chalmers, Snider, D. Kimball, Clark, F. Kim- ball, Sloane, Smith, Colby. Second row: Kend- rick, F. Hoyt, L. Hoyt, Phillips, Lycett, Carrier, S. Kimball, Ellis, Cowgill, Teel, Steigmann, Wil- liams, Pucher, Collins, Ordway, Joslyn. Third row: Steele, Davis, Phaneuf, Yeaton, Gilchrist, Harvey, Peaslee, Brice, Sanborn, Cordon-Smith, Gagne, McKay, Carlem, Anderson. Fourth row: Dodge, Flynn, Birnbaum, Colocousis, Butler, Thyng, Follansbee, Keefe, Lucey, Robinson, Feldman, Staples, Murphy, Paulsen. HE Psychology Club was founded in 1936. It evolved from a joint meet- ing of the Psychology Seminars and an annual party given by the majors in the department. This meeting decided that there was a definite need for some spe- cific way to aid the psychology students to gain actual experience in their own field, wl1icl1 would be accomplished by field trips and case studies, to improve the scholarship of the students compris- ing this group, and to promote good fellowship. erts, Williaili Robinson, Janet Sanborn, Marie Selig, Lydia Shaw, Marion Sheahan, Shirley Sloane, Frances Smith, Enid Sorg, Sylvia Steele, June Straw, Barbara Temple, Lorraine Thyng, Mary Tillson. FRESHMEN: Bleakney Benedict, Doris Crane, Frank Flynn, Janet Pucher, Ralph Staples, Louise Wfilliams. IOR R.0.T.C. First row: Adams Freed M . . . organ. Hubbard. Mullavey, Blair. Houle. Richmond. Dupont. Curtis, Bedard. Wheeler. Morcom. Creenaway. Cunningham, Chellis. Reed. Second ron-1 Mudge, Allen. Merrifield. Deming. Nlclioan. Linnell. Cram, Patten. Pino. Kelleher. Turmelle. Smith. Datkiw. Jacobson. Yvolcott. J. Davis. Third row: Roberts. Bowles. Staff. Coodhue. Jervis, Lawler, Varney. Bean. Wiggin. W. Davis. COAST ARTILLERY: Karl Adams , Bradley Baker, Merit Bean H i - , , , enry Bedard, Blair. George Brown Frank Cl Camille , , z lellis, Charles Clem tS ' ' ' en , am Crabttee, Prank Cram, Kennetl Creed, Calvin Cunningham, Wallis Curtis, Wal ter Datkiw Wfaltu D ' l , 2' IIVIS, Norman Deming, R . . obert Edison, Iuuvene Fost S g, , . er, .teve Galanes, John G ' J l reenaway, Samuel Goodhue, Edward Harriman, Wfvilfred Hastings, George Herr, Rich- ard Horan, George Houle, Fred Hoyt, Eugene Leaver, Donald Linscott, Henry Lopez, John McKoan, Maurice McQuillen, Richard Merri- field, John Morgan, John Mudge, Russell Orton, R . ,. . . alph Otis, W 1ll1am Pin H Quimby, Sherman Reed, Allen Richmond, Mur- ray Smith, Richard Staff, David Stuart I ' . , Quentin Theroux, Alfred Turmelle, Gerald Wolcott. INFANTRY: R Austin, Foster Ball e, Rav Pomeroy, Earl alph Allen, John Alvord. Leon , Solon Barraclough, Rai- 214 C. Chase. Crabtree. Hastings. Quinby. Pomeroy. Starkey. Fourth rote' Orton K ll , . ' . e er. Lunt, Char- train. Fitanides. Meserve. Brown. Harriman. Al- vord. Burrage. Smart. Sawyer. Hinchey, Ball. Hoyt. Kolinsky. Fifth row: Lopez, Darling, Clement. Mt-Quillen. Moorenovich. Theroux. Rapsis. R. Davis. Mason. Horan. O'Donnell. W d ' ' ' ' oo NN.lFCl.Tl1UflBll. Hkofleld Doon Sixth r . . ow: Niles. Stewart. Russell. Austi ' n. Lever. Lmscott. mond Bowles, Alson Brown, Frank Brown, Charles Burrage, Hector Chartrain, Curtis Chase, Howard Darling Robert Davis, John Davis, Paul DeGross, James Doon, Leo DuPont, Theophilus Fitanides, Homer Hamlin, Robert Hinchey, John Hubbard, Alvin Jacobson, Fred- erick Jervis, Edward Kelleher, Roger Keller William Kolinsky, Paul Lawler, John Leahy, Jolm Lunt, Everett Mason, Charles Merrill, Mal- colm Nleserve, Peter ilioorenovich, Richmond Mort-om, Wayne Wlullavey, Thomas Niles, Thomas U'D fl J f ' ' onnt l, Gtoige Patten, Ralph Pino, Gregory Prior, Henry Rapsis, Leslie Roberts, Wallace Russell, Robert Sawyer, Herman Sko- field, William Smart, Stephen Starkey, Edmund Stewart, Philip Thurrell, Edgar Varney, Allen Walker, Robert Wheeler, Carl Whitney, Ken- neth Wiggin, Duncan Woodward, James Young. SENIOR R.0.T.C. COAST ARTILLERY: Russell Beal, Frank Churas, Milton Cram, Robert Deming, William Driscoll, Edward Flynn, Richard Foley, Robert Foster, Uttavio Ciovannangreli, John Grady, Robert Joslin, Robert King, Andrew Kowalczyk, Arthur Libby, Harry Lucas, John Marr, Julius Okolovich, Donald Rand, Norman Reed, John Richards, Ernest Ricker, Norman Roger, NX il- lialll Rogers, Leopold Roy, Wilfred Silvia, Theo- dore Stebbins, Robert Stewart, John Stowell, Richard Sullivan, James Tasker, Roger Trachy. First row: Beal. Richards. Grady, Callagy. Loxs e. Wheeler. Charron, Crosbie, Mackel, Call, Sul- iivan, Costigan. Okolovitch. Second row: Sat- zow, Tasker, Smith, Kowalczyk, Rogers, 'Yal- onen, Foley, Roger. Flynn. Marshall. Rand. Rouillard. Ciovannangeli. Third rout: Trachy. Rudolf Valonen, Charles Vaughan, Louis Wl'l6C1CT. INFANTRY: Roland Boucher, Yvilliam Call, Thomas Callagy, Carl Carlson, Frederick Char- ron, Robert Clock, Charles Costigan, Robert Crosbie, Edward Davis, Ralph DesRoches, Rob- ert Dowd, John French, Royal Holmes, Charles Judd. Scott Kinerson, Allan Lamond, Malcolm ltowe, Arthur Lucy, Winslow Macdonald, Ed- ward Vlackel, Roger lllarshall, Philip Martin, Arthur Rouillard, Meyer Satzow, David Sleeper. Churas. Carlson. Lamond. Libby, Stebbins, Stew art. Clock, Cram, Kinerson. Dowd. Ricker. Fourth row: Mead, Holmes, French, Lucas, Boucher. Stowell. Marr, Leggett. Roy, Joslin, King. Sleeper, Yeaton. Judd. DesRoehes, Del- plno. SCABBARD AND BL DE First row: Beal, Grady, Callagy, Lowe, Leggett, Rouillard, Charron, Lucas, Crosbie, Mackel Call, Sullivan, Ciovannangeli. Second row: Churas, Rogers, Foley, Carlson, Lamond, Steb bins, Stewart, Clock, Marshall, Joslin, King Deslloches. Third row: Reed, Bowles, Hincheyj McKoan, Niles, Fitanides, Meserve, Dupont Pino, Kelleher, Varney, Brown, Jervis, Davis Fourth row: Thurrell, Adams, Orton, Quimby, Smith, Hastings, Chase, Greenaway, Chellis Rapsis, Wolcott, Doon, Skofield. 9 OFFICERS Captain Frederick Charron Ist Lieutenant Harry Lucas 2nd Lieutenant Arthur Rouillard lst Sergeant Robert Crosbie SENIORS: Thomas Callagy, Carl Carlson, Wil- liam Call, Frederick Charron, Robert Clock, Robert Crosbie, Ralph DesRoches, Ottavio Gio- vannangeli, Robert Joslin, Robert King, Allan Lamond, Robert Leggett, Harry Lucas, Edward Mackel, William Rogers, Arthur Rouillard, Fred Saunders, Theodore Stebbins, Robert Stewart, Richard Sullivan. JUNIORS: Karl Adams, Raimond Bowles, Alson Brown, Frank Chellis, Curtis Chase, Leo Du- pont, Edward Davis, James Doon, Tuffy Fitan- ides, John Greenaway, Robert Hinchey, Wilfred Hastings, Fred Jervis, Edward Kelleher, Mal- com Meservc, A. Richmond Morcom, Alison Mer- rill, John McKean, Thomas Niles, Russell Orton, Ralph Pino, Earl Quimby, Sherman Reed, Henry Rapsis, Herman Skofield, Murray Smith, Phillip Thurrell, Edward Varney, Robert Wlleeler, Gerald Wolcott. 216 , Y ' J Q. - Q STUDE T CHRISTIA MOVEMENT OFFICERS President Judith Austin Vice-President Annette Thompson Secretary J ean Davis Treasurer Kenneth Wviggin COMMISSION HEADS Seeiel Service Mary Barkley Wallis Curtis Tens Alida Baker Campus Relations Evelyn Tipping Recreation lllary-,l ane Marr Deputations Forrest Parsons Sllllfllly Evening Fellozrslzip Ruth Wvadleigh lliarion Sheahan Wlembership Florence Bauekman John Davis Esther Tipping Church Relations Shirley Kimball Forrest Parsons World Christian Community Richard Abell 217 Front row: A. Thompson, Abell, Austin. Parsons, Davis. Bark row: Manion. Tower, Wlietton, Merrill. MvKoon, Lamson, B. Thompson, Ware, James. HE present organization of the Stu- dent Christian Movement had its founding when the University was still a part of Dartmouth College. The mem- hers of the organization in Hanover con- tinued the movement when the college was moved to Durham. It is one of the largest organizations on eampus and is a member of the New England Student Christian Movement as well as the Vforld Student Christian Fed- eration. It is all organization hased on the religious needs of the student life and it functions for the students. It sponsors. as an annual event, the Re- ligious Embassy which llrings well- linown religious leaders from all over New England who offer their services for personal guidance. As a part of its program it offers Sunday night fellow- ship meetings at the Durham Church. It also has a strong Deputations Com- mission and a very active wlorld Chris- tian Community Commission. I .1 W'HO'S WHO FTER two years of preliminary work the first issue of wlH0,S XVHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVER- sITIEs AND COLLEGES was printed in 1934. The motivating idea behind the organ- ization was two-fold. First, to serve as an ,outstanding honor to students, an honor which is void of all politics, fees and dues, one in which a deserving stu- dent after accomplishing a goal in col- lege and displaying merit, would not be confronted with solne fee before being recognized. Second, that of establishing a reference volume of authoritative in- formation on the great body of Ameri- can college students. All students who have completed two full years of college and are rated as a junior or senior are eligible, provided the qualifications of character, leader- ship, scholarship, and potentialities are fulfilled. First row: Griffin, Phaneuf, Toohill, Morrison, Kimball, Chalmers. LaFlamme, Eastman, Dev- eneau. Second row: Lamond, Smith, Keough. Carlson, Charron, O,Donnell. Third row: Call, Morcom, Rouillard, Marshall, Stewart, Stebbins, Davis, Bowles. SENIORS: Wlilliam Call, Carl Carlson, Mar- jorie Chalmers, Fred Charron, Phyllis Deveneau, Miriam Eastman, Louise Griffin, William Kcough, Dorothy Kimball, Rachel LaFlamme, Allan Lamond, Roger Marshall, Rachel Morri- son, Albertine Phancuf, Arthur Rouillard, Her- bert Smith, Theodore Stebbins, Robert Stewart, .leanette Toohill. JUNIORS: Raimond Bowles, John Davis, A. Richmond Morcom, Thomas 0'Donnell. 218 YACHT CLUB OFFICERS Commodore Allen Richmond Vice-Commodore Ruth Cady Secretary Sally Pearson Treasurer Marcia Wleatherill SENIORS: Carolyn Adnoff, Robert Deming, Warren Hay, Frances Robinson, Hellen Rug- gles, Marcia Vileatherill. JUNIORS: Charles Clement, Norman Deming, Florence Eaton, Danyal Kerven, Eleanor Kim- ball, Alex Lesnevsky, Sally Pearson, Allen Rich- mond, Marguerite Ruggles, Ellen Sanborn, Betty Stearns, Herbert W'uth. SOPHOMORES: John DeMer1'itt, Richard Dodge, Herb Gorfinkle, Dennis Haine, Jack Roberts, Janet Sanborn. FRESHMEN: Jane Bevan, Nancy Buttrick, Ruth Cady, Elizabeth Deming, Carol Dickey, James Fife, Robert Foulkrod, Peter Graesser, Howard Grant, Charles Humphreys, Steve Johnson, Paul Lange, Jane Marvin, Frances Mikol, Hedley Pin- gree, James Wlhittemore, Sylvia-Jane Whitte- more, David Young. I , I' X First row: Dodge, Robinson. Richmond, Kim ll H D ' Second row Sanborn ba , ay, emmg. : ' Lange, Pingree. Young, Wutli, Cady. Third row: Humphreys, Stearns. Foulkrod, Whittenlore Sanborn, Corfinkle. 219 ALPHA CHI SIGMA Honorary Chemistry Society lg XQ First row: Atkinson, Herr, Kulesza, LeLoup, Roger, Flynn, Paulsen, Flanders, Iddles. Sec- ond row: Torgeson, Hartop, Morgan, Mitton Hay, Creed, Schricker, Leonovieh, Langer, Bei dard, Kischitz. Third row: Battles, Bruni Baker, Perreault, Manning, Lisle, Koutsotaseos Mayor, Grabowski, Wiggin, Dupuis. 1 9 OFFICERS Master Alchemist Norman Roger Vice Blaster Alchemist Edward Flynn Reporter George Paulsen Recorder Irving Flanders Treasurer George LeLoup Master of Ceremonies Chester Kulesza Faculty Advisor Dr. Edward R. Atkinson Alumni Secretary Dr. Harold A. Iddles FRATRES IN FACULTATE: Dr. Edward R. Atkinson, Dr. Norman Bauer, Dr. Albert F. Daggett, Herman Fogg, Dr. Harold A. Iddles Dr. S. R. Shimer, llelvin Smith, Dr. John L. A Torgeson, Dr. 0. T. ZIIIIIIICFIIIHH. GRADUATE MEMBERS: Peter Grabowski, Roland Mayor, Richard Morgan, John Roberts, Howard Wilson. SENIORS: Gorgo Bruni, Irving Flanders, Ed- ward Flynn, Wlarren Hay, Dexter Houlton, Alexander Kischitz, Socrates Koutsotaseous, Chester Kulesza, George LeLoup, John Mallan, Parker Milton, Laurent Morin, Norman Roger, Theodore Stebbins, Charles Vaughan, Wlendell Wlebster. JUNIORS: Bradley Baker, Malcolm Battles, George Bedard, Merton Bell, Kenneth Creed, Roland Dupuis, William Hartop, George Herr, George Houle, Arthur Langer, Anatole Leono- vich, Robert Linnell, Thomas Manning, Leo Perrault, Otto Sehicker, Edwin Wliggin. 220 - ALPHA KAPPA DELTA Honorary Sociological Society OFFICERS President Charles Costigan Vice-President Lorene Scott Secretary-Treasurer Tremaine Goodrich Faculty Advisor Mason F. Record National Advisor Charles W. Coulter Faculty Member Joseph Bachelder SENIORS: Gordon Barnett, Charles Costigan, Leon Eckman, Margaret Flavin, Frances Golod, Tremaine Goodrich, Malcolm Lowe, Helen Ober, Lorene Scott. JUNIORS: Anne Gordon-Smith, Ruth Hender- son, Melba McKay. 221 First row: Bachelder, Goodrich, Costigan, Scott, Coulter. Second row: Eckman, Miller, Gordon- Smith, McKay, Lowe, Robinson, Golod, Flavin, Barnett. LPHA chapter of Alpha Kappa Delta, national honorary sociologi- cal fraternity, was founded at the Uni- versity of New Hampshire on February ll, 1939, with fifteen charter members. The aims of the local chapter are to carry out the purpose set up by the national chapter and to promote a great interest in sociology on this campus. The members are asked from time to time to present their own particular re- search projects and surveys for discus- sion by the group. Each spring there is a lobster bake which is tremendously successful. The local group is only two years old, but it has progressed a great deal and we are sure that in the years to come our chapter will greatly increase its prestige, not only on this campus but throughout the country. , .. ,. .s..auanu jg-mf ALPHA SIGMA Honorary Architectural Society First row: Huddleston, Gove, Libby, Maddock, Thomas. Second row: Brett, Pasquale, Durso. Stiles, M. Cram, F. Cram, Case, Isaak. Third row: Caw, Wieland, Lucas, Simmons, Black, Crabtree. LPHA SIGMA was founded at this University in 1925 as an honorary architectural society. Membership includes all students of architecture with averages above 80 for two consecutive years. Nominations must be unanimously approved by the members of the society. New members are chosen at the beginning of each semester. Professors and instructors in architecture may become associate members. An attempt is made to acquaint tl1e members more fully with the practical side of architecture by means of mov- ing pictures, and lectures by architects and men in the building field. An Alpha Sigma banquet is given annually. OFFICERS President Arthur Libby Vice-President Rolland Gove Secretary Frank Cram Treasurer Robert Maddock Faculty Advisor Eric Huddleston ASSOCIATE MEMBERS: Wesley Brett, Eric Huddleston, Arnold Perreton, George Thomas. SENIORS: Milton Cram, Anthony Durso, John Gaw, Rolland Gove, Arthur Libby, Harry Lucas, Robert Maddock, Julius Okolovich, Charles Simmons, David Stiles. JUNIORS: Weston Black, Sam Crabtree, Her- bert Wieland. SOPHOMORES: Chester Case, Andrew Izaak, Ralph Pasquale, Aaro Reivo. 222 ALPHA ZETA Honorary Agricultural Society OFFICE HS Prcsiflcnt Conlon Placy Vicc-Prcsirlcllt Hobcrt Clocli Sccrctur ' Duncan NX ooflwarfl 3 Tfl'llSllfI?T Royal Holmes SENIORS: Robert Clock. ,l0llll Frcncll. Royal Holmes, Evert JOllI1SOll. Hogcr Nl2ll'SllJ:lll. Gorflon Placy, David Powers. JUNIURS: HlCll31'll Abell. Nlcrit Bean. Steve King, Leslie Roberts, Duncan Wooxlwarcl. FACULTY: T. Burr tlll2ll'li'F.. E. Gale EilSllllhll1, Thomas Phillips. will I QW 'MILK Firxl row: lNlill'Sll1lll. Wbodxsarrl, Clock. Holmes Benn. Second row: King, Roberts. Johnson Abell. French. Thirrl row: Powers. Chau-les ELISUIIAIII. Phillips. 'Q' KAPPA DELTA PI Honorary Education Society HE Beta Beta Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi was installed at the Univer- sity of New Hampshire on February 23, 1928. It was organized in order to recog- nize outstanding contributions to educa- tion and to encourage high intellectual and scholastic standards. Open to stu- dents of education, the organization hopes to establish a closer bond among them and to foster high standards of preparations for teaching. Kappa Delta Pi began as the Illinois Education Club at the University of Illinois in 1909. On March 11, 1911, the Illinois Education Club was reorganized, and on June 8, 1911, it was incorporated under the laws of Illinois as the honor- ary educational fraternity, Kappa Delta Pi. Since October 4, 1932, it has been a national organization. First row: Dowd, Toohill, Lambert, Sideris, Tipping, Bisbee, Phair. Second row: Morrison, Grant, Marr, Phillips, Tipping, Moulton, Whit- temore, Phaneuf, Conon. OFFICERS President John Sideris Vice-President Frank Lambert Secretary Esther Tipping Treasurer Harold I. Leavitt Counselor Harlan M. Bisbee FACULTY MEMBERS: Philips Barton, Harlan M. Bisbee, Herbert Carroll, Olga Conon, Adolph G. Ekdahl, Fred Engelhardt, Harold I. Leavitt, Verna Moulton, Herbert F. Rudd, Everett B. Sackett, Herman L. Slobin, A. Munroe Stowe, Isaac Thut. SENIORS: Fred Charron, Robert Dowd, Alice Garland, Beatrice Grant, Frank Lambert, Mary J. Marr, Rachel Morrison, Edith Phair, Alber- tine Phaneuf, Marion Phillips, John Sideris, Esther Tipping, Evelyn Tipping, Jeannette Too- hill, Mrs. E. Gale Vlfhittemore. 224 President Secretary-T PHI EPSILO Honorary Physical Education Society Front row: Gardner, Robinson, Morton, Flynn, C d, Lundholm, OFFICERS Astle. Back row: Tucker, ar Milton Hall F es Robinson Faculty Advisor RS Vil inia Gardner Milton Ha SENIO : 'g , A Ward lllorrow, Ellen Morton, Frances Robinson. TGILSUTQT 1'3DC Carl Lundholm ll, Ed- l, Doris JUNIORS: Adrienne Astle, Edgar Carr ' ,l ICS Tucker. Flynn, Frank Hamilton, an 22 5 Hall, Morrow. N tlie spring of 1941 the men enrolled in the Physical Education Teacher d hon- Preparation Curriculum forme an orary Physical Education Club. Mr. Lundllolm became faculty advisor at this time. A constitution was submitted ' ' t d. d after several revisions, aceep e an , . Several meetings followed before the name Phi Epsilon was finally selected. During tbe next fall tl1e men decided b were t include in the club Women W o o enrolled in tlle same course. Since that time Plii Epsilon bas been an bonarary society for men and Women. , and Tony Dougal are llonorary members of the ciety at the present time. Miss Hoban, Paul Sweet S0 l .-. uu---U-f PHI KAPPA PHI Honorary Scholastic Society First row: Brewer, Phair, Trainovich, Woodruff, BuHington, McLaughlin, Marston, Gadbois, Charron, Amos, Ulin. Second row: Dempsey Rossell, Scudder, Hitchcock, Iddles, Parker Alexander, Phillips, Yeager, Marr, Morrison Third row: Parsons, Bruni, Gifford, Rouillarrl Phaneuf, Griffin, Libby, Foley, Kelley, Milton. gd ZXZMZXZ: ,.f fr u Q- . 1i1....l--- l1. .11-1...-.1....-l.-.- OFFICERS President Mre. Helen F. MeLerrglrlrrr Vzee.Preeir1errr Mr. Philip Nlarston Secretary Mree lrerre Grrlleeie Trerrerrrer Mr. Albert Brrmrrgrerr Ereerrriee Beer-rf Deen Rrrrlr Wloodruff, l year llr. Edmond Bowler, 2 years Journal Co rrerr mittee Mrs. M. M. Smith MEMBERS: Hope Alllos, Gorgo Bruni, Fred Ch:-lrron, Jean Dempsey, Richard Foley, Mal- colnl Gifford, Louise Griffin, George Kelley, Ar- thur Lihhy, Mary ,lane hlarr, Parker lllitton, Rachel lllorrison, Alhertine Phaneuf, Edith Pllair, Margaret Rossell, Arthur Rouillard, Vir- ginia Trainovicll, Phyllis Ulin. 226 PHI LAMBDA PHI Honorary Physics Society OFFICERS President Arthur Barrett Vice-President George Kelley Secretary-Treasurer Arthur Libby Social Chairman Richard Foley MEMBERS SENIORS: Adolph Anderson, Arthur Barrett, Russell Beal, Gorgo Bruni, Norman Deming, Irving Flanders, Richard Foley, Louise Griffin, Scott Kinerson, George Kelley, Arthur Libby. Charles Uberg, Ernest Ricker, Norman Roger, Hyman Stone, Phyllis Ulin. JUNIORS: Bradley Baker, Merit Bean, Camille Blair, Austin Clement, Robert Deming, Eugene Foster, Earl Handly, Austin Hardy, Willianl Har- top, .lack Lepoff, Joseph Levy, Robert Linnell, ,Iohn Lunt, ,Iohn Mallan, John hlorgan, For- est Parsons, Otto Schrickcr, Harold Wlarren. HI Lambda Phi is an honorary phys- ics society. It was founded on this campus in 1919 and at present is not affiliated with any national society. Dr. Howes and the late Professor Moran were instrumental in organizing the society together with the original nine charter members. These were: R. J. Young, 0. W. Pike, C. W. Boodey, E. G. Riel, H. M. Barton, E. M. Ford, M. M. Connell, and S. H. Davis. The emblem of the society which is a tripod containing an everlasting fire is derived from the sacred oracle of the Greeks and is symbolical of man's etern- al research in the sciences. The colors are black and gold. First row: Kinerson, Kelley, Barrett, Libby, Foley, Flanders. Second row: Arena, Mitton, Anderson, Ulin, Parsons, Bean, Colocousis. Third row: Lunt, R. Deming, Clement, N. Deming, Levy, Roberts. 22. I E PHI SIGMA Honorary Biological Society N Decemher 8, l9l6, a group of stu- dents in the advanced zoology courses feeling the need of a closer association of interests formed Pi Gam- ma. Only students ohviously interested in zoology and its applied fields we1'e considered for memhership. Pi Gamma hecame a national organization when it was installed as Phi chapter of Phi Sig- ma, national honorary hiologieal soci- ety, in May, l926. During its life on campus, Phi Sigma has hrought honor to the University. The great majority of its memhers have heen successful in the world of science and have set an example of effort and accomplishment. First row: Barratt. Ruggles, Smith, Sawyer, Howe, Shanahan, Prescott. lngehretsen. Ham- mond. Seeond row: Eaton. McCarthy. Nichols, Rumery, Vincent. Hirshberg. Clark. Johnson. Dempsey, Bzeznikiewicz. Dumaine. Libby. Third row: Kenney. Murphy. Altenbern. Rud- nick. Hoyle. Hall. Hills. Powers, Ferris, R. Tuttle. D. Tuttle. OFFICERS President Arthur Howe Vice-President Arthur Shanahan Chapter Secretary Dorothy Sawyer Corresponding Secretary Nlrs. Dohroyolny Treasurer Boland Smith FACULTY MEMBERS: Erma Andrews, Charles Dohrovolny, Marjorie Dohrovolny, James Conk- lin, Stuart Dunn, Alhion Hodgdon, C. Floyd Jackson, lllrs. C. F. Jackson, Paul Schaefer, Lawrence Slanetz, Herhert Warfel, Eleanor Sheehan, Arthur Howe, Ernest Waller, Hohert Prescott. GRADUATE WEMBERS: Raymond Barratt, Lurlene Gordon, Edythe Kenney, Alhert Hud- nick, Arthur Shanahan. STUDENT MEMBERS: William Papageorge. Roland Smith, Stephen Chagrasulis, Annie Clark, ,lean Dempsey, ,lohn Duggan, Emil Fer- ris, Chester Gordon, Carolyn Hammond, Elaine Hirshherff, Royal Holmes, Kenneth Lang, Gor- 1' don Placy, David Powers. Dorothy Sawyer, Dor- othy Tuttle. Rohcrt Tuttle. 228 PSI L BD Honorary Home Economies Society OFFICERS President Mabel Bartlett Vice-President Virginia Tl'3lHOX'iCll Secretary hlarion lielver Treasurer Ethel Koehler Social Chairman Etlith Pllair MEMBERS: llahel Bartlett, Katlterine Batzis, Beatriee Grant, Ethel Koehler, Priscilla Lock- woofl, lllarion lllelver, Ruth Pfatlenhauer, Edith Phair, Evelyn Tipping, Annotte rllhompson, Vir- ginia Trainovieh, Nlarcia Wfeatherill. ADVISUBS: Wvillllkl Brewer. Martha Garland, Verna liioulton. 229 First row: Phair. Melver, Bartlett. Brewer, Truinovirh. Koehler. Second row: Thompson, Grunt. Wetntherill. Pfadenhuuer, Garland, Tip- ping. lrovkwood. Batzis. -F7-X :N I ,dlfiff ,Y i E ' EL-2 ,nf lg, I 4?-si? g wb- N fggzll 5, f .EJ fy., I -- A K! 9.4.1. THANK YOU With sincere appreciation for all their cooperation and assistance, we, the staff of the 194-1 GRANITE, extend our thanks to Mr. Harlanfl Nasvik and the staff of the Photo- Yisual service for their untiring service and eo- opcration in securing for us all the pictures which have gone into the making of this volume. lir. Robert YY. Kelly of the Robert XV. Kelly Publishing Corporation for his invaluable aitl in assembling, printing, anal servicing the book. llr. licantlre Strantlt of the Union-Leader Pub- lishing Company for his promptness and care in the engraving work. The members of the zulministration for their contributions, especially in helping to solve the innumerable problems which have constantly arisen throughout the compiling of this annual. THE NEW' HAMPSHIRE for their interest and service during the year. Professor A. NV. Johnson for his unfailing as- sistance and advice. The members of last year's staff, other members of the student body, and all who have helped to mal-.e our work lighter, we wish to express our thanks for their interest and Willing support. 1944 GRANITE StaH. 230 BEF Lr.L'IIDI13 ot you and your classmates upon your sclwool lite aclwieve immortality in a carefully planned and executed yearbook. From tl'ie arid desert of Arizona, and tl'1e sultry green island OF puerto Rico, to time snow-blanlseted slopes orc Nortbern New England, we have traveled, lwappy and proud to lwave been an instrument in tlwe translating into print, tlwe lwumor patlwos, excitement, and sentiment Found in time campus life of over seventy-tive colleges and preparatory sclwools. As Former members of yearbook statins in our sclwool days, we bring into our professional duties a real understanding ot tlwe many problems contronting eaclw yearboolc editor. MEMBER OE COLLEGE ANNUAL PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION AND AMERICAN INSTITUTE OE GRAPHIC ARTS 231 Compliments of CONSOLIDATION COAL COMPANY PORTSMOUTH, N. H. Winston-Salem, S. C. Newport News, Va. Philadelphia, Pa. Washington, D. C. Chicago, Ill. Cincinnati, Ohio New York, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Fairmont, W. V a. Detroit, Mich. Bluefield, W. Va. Cleveland, Ohio Compliments of THE J. P. KEENAN CO. Electrical Contractors for twenty-five years DOVER, H. MThe most delicious thing in the urorlcl is a banana. A - BENJAMIN DISRAELI Distributed in New Hampshire by R. THEODORE Distrubtor of YELORIPE BANANAS Manchester, New Hampshire Compliments of FRENCH AND HEALD CO. MILFORD, N. H. illanufacturcrs of solid wood Dormitory and Occasional Furniture 1856 1943 Eighty-seven consecutive years ARTISTS' SUPPLIES Grumhacher -:- Winsor Sz Newton Devoe 85 Reynolds HOITT 81 WENTWORTH'S DOVER, N. H. Let's Pull Together if? for Freedom Sf? Life, liherty, and the pursuit of hap- piness are our hirthright as Amer- icans. When the word '4Ameriean is spoken in countries under the Nazi and Japanese domination, you see men's faces light up, hecause America is synonymous with freedom in the world's thought. Let us practice our four freedoms . . . freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of re- ligion and free enterprise, and show the world hy example what freedom means. W Public Service Company of New Hampshire FREEZERS For FARM HOME COMMUNITY Refrigeration For Every Purpose H. E. HUMPHREYS CO. Refrigerating Engineers 57 SOUTH MAIN STREET Concord, N. H. - . -.-.x -- -.N ...... . Q 9 H. X X :-xi-.--. . 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K:ff-z:s2e2a2z2s222e22f: W irisieisisizie? l 12525229 T M 121 ' - ' -- - -1-:-:':-:'t-t-I-I- - -I-I-iz'-:-. .. -: '-' . -.:-'-:3 ' I 3 43.3:5:5:3' -1434-3, 5'i:':3:i.i:3' '3:' '125:i:i.3:3:f:QZg.g.,gfffff'i'f ' of Let,s get behind the men behind the guns Let's huy War Bonds, pitch in at home whenever opportunity to do so arises. That's the spirit that will win the war. Strafford National Bank DOVER. NEW HAMPSHIRE Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. QRVIZ-6 io 5- fs AMOSKEAG 'ilwmss BANK 'o ' U MANCHESIER, NEW HAMPSHIRE 'Z' f,?EN6x THE WILDCAT R. W. DALAND, '28 Proprietor DURHAM, N. H. Compliments of A FRIEND FOR HOME DEFENSE Buy Bonds! Buy Holsteins! Write today. Learn why purebred reg- istered Holsteins are among the best investments you can make now for your farm of the future. Their superiority among dairy cattle is proven by scientific facts. Free liter- ature. THE HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN ASSOCIATION or AMERICA Box 2096, Brattleboro, Vermont Compliments of THE COLLEGE SHOP BRAD NICINTIRE DURHAM, N. H. Compliments of THE ,IENNISON COMPANY Engineers and Contractors FITCHBURG, MASS. Compliments of RAND'S STORE Compliments Of COLLEGE PHARMACY THE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE The oflicial agency for required textbooks Hlld classroom necessities, fountain pens, stationery, a splendid set of campus post cards, and other campus knicknacks. The Seventy-Fifth Anniversary Edition of the University History and the Anthology of Student Writings may be secured at S52 per copy, includ- ing prepayment of postage. THE UNIVERSITY DINING HALL Operating a dining room for all freshmen students and a modern cafeteria for all students, faculty, and visitors to the campus. Reasonable prices and excellent service. Savings made pos- sible by quantity purchasing and reduced costs of operation passed along to students in the form of reduced board charges. 235 Success Depends on Satisfied Customers Quality engravings mean satisfied customers. Satisfied customers mean repeat orders. Repeat orders mean more business. More Business means success. On such a foundation we have built our business for the past twenty years and we are proud of the fact that we still number among our present customers, those who first entrusted us with their first orders. DOES THIS MEAN ANYTHING TO YOU MR. BUYER? The Union-Leader Publishing Company Engraving Department MANCHESTER - - -' NEW HAMPSHIRE 236 Best wishes from BURLEIGH OPTICAL CO. National Creamery Co. SOMEHVILLE, MASS. Wholesalers and Awanufacturers Manufac-lurers ofthe famous f . X T 7 IILTON' 3' H' DIANIOND BRAND DAIRY PRODUCTS PP 038 ' po I W W ' '6Large enough to serve you, Small enough to know youw SHEPPARD ENVELOPE COMPANY WORCESTER, MASS. Compliments of Compliments RIVAL FOODS, INC. of WHOLESALE GROCERS CONCORD DAIRY' INC Compliments of The DIAMOND MATCH CO. Thompson-Winchester Co Lumber and Builders Supplies INCORPORATED 201 STATE STREET Dover -:- Portsmouth -:- Rochester Boston Blass. 237 Compliments Of A FRIEND OAKES BROS., Inc. Q SWEATERS The Finest Jlude Q JAMAICA PLAIN BosToN, MASS. The Coast Artillery Journal and the U. S. lioast Artillery Association offer hest Wishes to THE GRANITE and the Student Body at The University of New Hampshire on their 77th year of service has fl af Congratulations to the GRANITE staff, and to the student body of the University of New Hampshire, for producing an outstanding eollege yearbook. A FRIEND I hr vm illampahirr Member Associated Collegiate Press Pulrlished Weekly' During the Academic Year by the Students of the University of New Hampshire Durham, New HHIIIIJSIIIYQ I O F F I C E S Editorial 306 Ballard Hall Business 308 Ballard Hall SUBSCRIPTION AND ADVERTISING RATES ON REQUEST 239 M. J. MURPHY Sz SONS, INC. ROOFING AND SHEET METAL YYORK Ventilation Contractor. Rubber and Asphalt Tile Floorin REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS 12 PORTLAND AVENUE CANAL STREET Dover, Tel. 169 MANCHESTER, Tcl. 2848 'k uk STUDENTS AT U. N. H. KNOW THAT WAR BON DS are An Investment In Victory N t t 240


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University of New Hampshire - Granite Yearbook (Durham, NH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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