Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT)

 - Class of 1949

Page 1 of 146

 

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1949 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 146 of the 1949 volume:

2,2, ,,. , 'J VZ7 Kn . x; 9 a K . ,A .. Y. .Ir;1hw3t. . xmnm L4 .2 ' Edilur ANDREW E. FORD . Business Managcr T. RICHARDS POWELL RCT g Mum: . A Jn'rlisiu LOUIS CARGILL 0LLA MDRIM 1949 WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY Middletown 0 Connecticut DEDICATION H'c ol XVcslmun haw :llwzus 1011 that ulhi lcliu mighl Ix- lkulh cnjolxctl. :md guinlulllx cmplolxcd in tho dmclupmcnl ol the indhidv 11le without vlcx'zlling this plmw ul cxllul tulTiullm cnlcl'lzlinmcnl l0 :1 lmsitinn wherein it unnpclcx with our major lusks nl ulmlzn'ship. In lhis cm ml the pmlmsimml zllhlclc and large xunlc publidttx. hmvmm. lhix lhcnn hus ollcn pmwd diH'kull lo sulr slunlialc. To that 1mm nl lmn loollmll marlin whim alum losing sight Ul lhc scromlzn'y pmiliml slmrls mo 10 mruptx in relation 10 slmlivs. m Imning willmul :1 doubt lhal our slxxtcm um xmrkihzls dimmed XVcs gridslcrs lhmugh a sports cm scumtl m mmc in tho rollcgc'x lung and distinguished hixlury is lhis hunk dcdimlcd. . Tn haul unu'h Norm .l Daniels. Impaled lirslle us :1 line imlixiduul. .sctumlh us a unu'h: Io Ixu'kfichl unuh Iulm l. H'mnl: In line umdl Frank A. Mum: and lo l'mslmlun Head coaCh Norm Damm unuh Dun P. Vciu'kump. John L. Wood Frank A. Maze Dan P. Weitckamp . Van Vlvck Observatory . Olin Library 0 Iluyrrm-allu'r vanuxium FOREWORD A yearbook, whether through piclurcs or words. am only by means of implication record within its few pages 1111 whirh occurs during rm cmirc college year. Thu staff 0f the HHQ Ulla Porlridu designated the grczltvr amount of thv task 10 photow graphs, to be augmented only when nu'cssury by qualifying wriloups. It is hoped that within the mzmy rows of familiar faces. the various glimpses of rmncmhcrcd zu'lix'ilics. am he found that peculiar spirit which was the srholuslir year 19-18- 1949. BO0K FACULT PRESIDENT Simm- hc was dthCll President in 19:13. Mr. Butlcl'ficld. pulmlzlrltx known as Viv in tho cmmnunity. has shnwn himself 10 he not nnly u nulmhlc administrator. but alw 21 umlinl and llmlmslumling friend 01 the sludcm Imdvx. XYCH qualiliml i5 Vir for his lmsilitm. Hux'ing grmluzuul l'mnl Cnrncll in 1927. he rucix'cd his MA. Illltl his Ph.D. 1mm thcrc and Harvard. Hc uunc lo Xchlclxzul in 19313 as Diwrmr of Admissions. and dine lhcn has added In his dulics ll mcmlwrship in tho Crnmnissinn 0n Liberal litluullion 0f th Aamriulion nl Anwrimn Cul- leges, u Huxlccship 0n the Cornell Alumni Xssocizuion. 21ml Chuinnzlmhip of lhc Rhodes SdlUlzllsllip Cmnmillw IM' Cmmu'liull. Donald A. Eldridge Director of A dmissinns THE DEANS lhth A. linmmmc A 1113102111 graduate. the dam of '31. MI. 1ilth'it1gc hcminc 1111111101' 01' Admissions in 19-15. In a sense. his job is mic 01 the t'ul- lcgc's must important. Its purpose is twnl'oltl, in that it must stc thzlt Xx'eslestlll attl'ut'ts l1lt' light lipc nli 1mm. and that Cilt'h applit'anl will lit the H'cslcian st'cnc. XVorking with l11t' Manpower Cmimiiltt'c. Don has tlnnc :m t'xcmplztri job. His uhilits to got the right mun is plainh shown in the high slamlzmls ni mt'h entering l'i'cshmun t'luss. 5112R1JNG A. CALLIsLN A graduate 01 Pl'imcton and Harvard Unis wi'sitit's. Dean Calliscn served with 02 0f the 0.8.5. hcloic umling In H'Cslcyzui in thc 1:111 01 191:3. Previously a member 01' the Harvard and Rot'hcstcr lzit'ultics. Dean Cztllisen presented 21 toursc lhis soar in Italian Renais- sunt't- Painting. Dealing with various under- graduate problems and us a representative of thc :ulministi'atimi. 1IC has earned thc rcsput and admiration 01 lhc student hath. Dean Cullistrn leaves us this tczn' Im' the Metro- politan Mliscum 01 Art in New York where he assumes the tlil'ctittn'ship ol the Muscunfs Ct1l1t1111011211 hurt-au. H'IHARD M. XYALLMJ-z A member 01' 11 cs1cyan's fluss 01' '31. Mr. Wallacc unnplctcd his graduate work at the Unchrsity ul Pcnnstxlvunia. 1Vhilc an under- graduate. he was an 01in St'lmlzn' and an outstanding' guard on lhc lutitlmll lClllll. As Dean 01 Freshman. he has helped mum a stutlcnl m'cl' lhc mugh spots in 6011ch 1i1'c. .Xsitlc 1mm his loathing duties in the History Sterling A. Callisen Dyan Willard M. Wallace Dean of Freshmen John Spaeth Sctrclary of Ihc Faculty Department. l1lt' :uniuhlc Dean has tuuml time in the past Ihl'ct- tours to math .117 Inot- hzlll. His inlnrmuhts. gnml n:ntuic, and human understanding 2111- in lurgt- part H'- sponsiblc 1111' his popularity JOHN 1V. Situaiii. jk. Pursuing graduate studies at Hanm'tl and 1,11111t1C1011 alter his graduation 1mm Haver- 1'm't1 in 1917. Pi'nlesui Sput-th czunc t0 XVt's. lcyzm in 1930 1mm Brown lfniwrsitlx. As Set'relary ol the Faculty he is thuii'man 01' the Currituhmi Committee and :1 member 01 1116 Ath'ism's 21nd .hhninislralinn tmnmitlccs. Chairman 01' the Chlasits DCPIII'IIHCHI, Pm- l'cssol' Spaclh 01101111 two Latin courses this yuan: 1n partial i't-Cngnitimi 01 his zluldcmic abilities, lhc Clzlssitnl Association 01' New England clct'tul him president 101' the t1111'1i0111 scar. In his position. one 01 the busiest 0n rumpus, 110 has shmvn himscll 2m cxccllcnt uml nuh tillxlhh' :uhninisll'ulm'. H. C. F. Bell Emcn mU Edwin B. Benjamin Hugh 5. Brockunier Vincent W. Cochrane H'mlmzm's llHlllU. Ullt' 01 Hit lx-sl mmll unIIt-gv luuxllim in llu- unnm'y hml :mnlhvr wu :uliw wzn. lls Im-mhcrx. Ilnuugh lllch Iunmilmliun in zu'lix'ilics lmlh on and all uunlmx. did mm'h In 110nm th- urllcgc'x nunu'. 'l'lu- .XH qurlmcnl huamc :1 purl ml the :ulixily nl vu'n hmhmnn. and through ilx humunilim labs Illc hush wcrc clumnzlgctl lo tlmclul; IhCil H ilit2Il zllul n'n-atiw Izu'ulxim. l'lu- dcpmlmmll supcnisul lrcqucnl 21ml uuird dixpluu 21ml lmlurcs in lhc Dzn'imn Imum ml the lihmn. Prints from the H'cv Imun quL-Hion and 1mm lhc tnllcn'linnx of ncighlmring sdlools u'clc lczllurcd. Mr.C;lllis:-11 zulul as tho Dircrlm' Hi .hlull lidluzlliml Im llr; Metropolitan Museum whizh lmsl he will lill 4m :1 l'ull limo Imsis nvxl wuL 'l'ht- Im'mbcls of the dcpm'lmcnl lhix H'Hl xwu- Pmlvsmn' Samuel M. Growl. Pmlvwn Slvlling X. Culliatn. Pmlcssm Rllsr sL'H I'. Ilinlhzull. 21nd lnslnutor Norman M. Kuulhln. My Green wax dqunlmcnl dmir mun. MI. Rulwrl l . Mathews was added m the .hlmnmnlx lk'pzlrlnu-nl us an insllunol'. :lml lu-gzm umaidvmhlc rmcnrth wmk. Mr. John .Unzum umlinuml his rescarvh in mm;- pllyxiu. 21ml Pmlcssm Cull l, Su-zn'ns. Ilu dL-pzlmm'nl tllilillllilll. ix umlinuing Im sllulx Morton W. Briggs Norman B. Boothby Paul H. Curts Joseph S. Daltry ul xu-Ilzn dislzmu'x. Tho mmnhcn ul lhc Hologx ln-lmllnu-nl zlll umlimml lnixulc mmnh. tlu- rcwllx nl whim u'vn- lnintul in uninus uicnlifit journals. The dvluu'lnlvan umlmgrmluulv umiuulum was Iurgch dt-Volul m prv-Inmliml lmining. Iml it did sponsor umrxm nl gL-nmzll inlcl'ml. Iilw llu inlcnlcpmImvnml cmnw in mululiun. Pmivwn Huhm'l B. Gnmllhh umlinucd us the dvpzll'lnu'nl'x chairman. and MW ulhm mcmh'sls WCH' PIHICSNUI R055 X. Gm'lncl. Assistant Pl'nlvwn' Yintcnl H'. Cathv HlllL'. .hsislzml Pmlusxm lhch-ritk P. Folgui mu. 21ml lnslrmlur David P. MLHlt-slm. Pmlcwn limes! KY. Czlspzni was on lmw 01 QIIMUIIH'. 'Hm sumcwhul nmx'dml unnlilions in Hull Lnlmmlmy in Hunt yours mused all. hul lht' tlvpzulmvnl still mzlinlili'md u Inigo numlm ul gliltluulv xmth-nlx, vilhm un ORIHHCS m H'ISR ltlltnx'sllilh, or in leuzhinq :Issislzlnlx. viv m lhc dL-pznlIm-nl lhix mm mm MI. Ccm'gc Mulsluumu. 'l l1cdclman-m was my thl Ihc dmirmunship 01 MI. liullmd again this um; '15 nwmbm's wcn- PIOIL'sMH M. Gilr ln-H Bln'hml ll. Pmlt'wn G. .UIx-H Hill. Pink'ssm' R055 .L Gm'lni'l. Avislzl H Pmlcxsm .lnsn' GHIIIw-Ilmnw. .Msixlzml I'l'nltwrr .101!!! W. Sumo. :uul Xxxislunl Pmlvwn Gwngv Mnlxmnmw Norman J. Danie1s John W. Darr Jose Gomez-Ibanez Ross A. Gormery Jr. M1. 511211111 11'21s 11121111112111 111 1111- 1112155113 111-11211111111111 11115 11211. 115 11111131 1111'1111101's 2111: 111111155111 N1111112111 0. 111111111 211111 1111111155111 1111111111 17. 11211111. 1111- 111-11211111101111111011111 2111 11111111511115; 111111511 11113 111211 1111 111111.111 211111 11111112111 1111'11111111141 111 English 1111121111111. 1111: 111-111111111115 DCleHlllClll. 11111111 211511 sllI1Cl'V1th 1111' 11111111121121111110111211 s111'1211 511- 111111- 111111511. 11215 111-1111 211 peak silc the 121st 1111' 112115. 11115 111211 1111111111-11 215 11111111111315 11112111111111 1111ss111h M. 11'111121111s1111. 211111 11111111 0. 151511111. P111111w11 513111111111 N1-11111211111. 15515121111 P11111'ss111 1.111' 11. 1511111. 151511121111 111111155111 111511111 D. 1,111111118. .3'11 .15515121111 P1'111'css111 B. 11. 11211111111111, 211111 1115111111111 .11111111 3111111111. 1111111155111 11'11112111151111 11'21s 1111111111 11111111111111111- 121x 111511111111 1111 111119- 1311, 211111 h1- 211111 1111111 1111111111115 111 1111- 11111121117 11111111 111-111 21111111 21s 21111'1s111's 111 121111111s 111'111111-111 1111111111s. 1111' 111115411511 111111211111111111 1121s 11111111115111 111111111211 1111s 11'21111111gi11g 111 1111- 12115411 1111111- 11111 111 1112111113 111 11111 1111111. 11 21111111 1111111- 11112111111115. 111sl111111115 11111111111 D. 111111111111g11111. 1'11111'111 XV. 171111111211111. 211111 12111105 11. M11010- 11112111. M12. Millet 11'21x 1111' 111-11211111111113 1112111: 1112111 11115 111211. 211111 11x 11111111 1111-111111'1's 11'1'111 P1'1111'ss111 1111111111 81111113 1111111Ns111 1111111111 1;. 11'1111111111113411. 15511112110 1111111'ss111 11111111111112 11. Hunkx. .11111112111- 11111111w11 ,1111x211111111 1401' L. E. Gemeinhardt Hubert B. Goodrich W. H. Heidemann. Jr. Louis J. Hudon 111111'11'. .15511112111- 111111155111 112111111 11. 11131111112 11111. Assislanl 1111111155111 Edwin H. 111-11121111111. 15513121111 1111111155111 1111111 1112111111111. Assistant 111111055111 111111121111 1511151. Assistant 111111055111 11111111141: N. 111111111111. .15515121111 P1'111css111' 111111111215 1;. Hc1111c1, 211111 1115111111111 S. .1211 82111111111, 11. 31121111511111 11'1'1111 111111111115 11215 11101'112111'1112111 111 1111- 111-11111111 11111121111111'111. H1: 11215 2155151111 111' R1111 R111 M211grcg111, 211111 1115111111111 Reu- 111'11 1.11am 1.1. 21 111-11' 1111111111111 111 1111- 121111111. 1121111 H. 1211115. 111121111112111 111 1119 11111112111 11131121111111'111 1121s 111111111111 11115 11:211 wilh 1110111- 1101'511111 111 1111: 1'x1x111111'c 1111111111 111 the Amm- 112111 .155111'121111111 111 11111211111115 111' 111111112111. Hc 211111 1113 11111111 1111311111115 111 1111: 11c11211t111c111 1121111 111111. 211111 2111'. 21111111 111 11111111121111111 111 11111112111 111x1x 211111 1121115121111111s. 1110 111112111 11111111 1.5 111111 giving 21 111111511 112181111 1111 111c X11111 515111111 111 1111111111551 12111g1121gc 111 111111540 11111111 111211111 1111' 5111110111 111 1132111 111-11112111 1111111411 111111115411 21 1111111 21111111121111 111 1111- 12111541121541: Tho 111111'1 1111111111111s' wcrc P1'1111's- 51115 1111111 11. 1112111111111215411', 1.2111111111- li. 11111111-11111211'111. 211111 .11111111 11. 811111111. 11111 1111111 111111 2111111111 111 11111 11111'1-1111111'111 111111211'111115111. l11s11'1111111s 11111121111 1'1111'x111112g 211111 1111121111 1. 31211111111111 P11111m111 11211101 11211 1111 111211111121115111111 1111s 1111211. 1111111111111111111117 1:111 111 1111- 11111121111111-111 111-11' 111111'1-ss111s 1.1111111 Russell T. Limbach David P. McAllester Wilbert Snow William A. Spurrier li. Srhullsihm-ith-r. th- ihzlimmn. Viilm Julius and Sigmund Ncumzmn. lH'ulL-wn Sihzllisilmcidcr luughl 21 new ammo lhix twin ml lllt' lmliliml issuex 01 the I918 hill clu- tions. in whith cmh sludcnl made a dvlzlilctl :mzllysis of sonic slalcis poliliis uml lho purl il plau-d in 11K clcttion's icsulls. ilihc whnlc H'cslcym ummlunili and all those with whom he mum in umizu'l. us well as the Hislm'i Department. haw di-cpli rcgrclu-d lho death 01 Pmlbssur Alexander 'J'hmnmiL His was 21 model hit. and his loss will be deeply hill. This was 21 siiucsslul lwzn for tho tlcpzn'lmcnl in olhcr I'cspL-i'ls, hmvcx'L-r. thilc Assistzml Prolcwn' Sdmrskc is 011 lczlw, thrcc new men were zuldul. 'l'hn were In- strutlmis I. .Xhlcn Nichols and Mnhnlm SICEIHIS. II. and 'licathing Assistant me'zn'il R. lmnzn'. 'liht unnplclc department iiltliulL-s also Professors 5. Hugh Bmvkunici'. dniirmnn. Sigmund Nvumunn. Eugene Golnh. uml iVilV 12ml M. Xi'zlllzltc. who was 211w Dczm ul Ii'i'cxhi men. Pmlcwn' Emeritus H. C F. Bell was clonal Minor oi Middlcmwn in the hill. Hcrlwrl 1i. Arnold bcunnc dmirmzm ml the Malhcmzniu DCPZIHIIKTIII. This icur saw the zuhlilion 01 Prnlbssur A. S. Dzu 21ml lnstruvlur Robert '1'. Mathews. Pl'olcswr Mul- inhn C. limlm cmnplclml lhc dcpzn'hncni. Tho Muxit Dcpurlmunl sulx'i'iisul all of E. B. Schattschneider J. Frederick Martin Carl L. Stearns Calvin W. Tenney lhc srhonl's nmximl :ulixilics. Hilltm' Vinu-nl 14. Allison. ll dircrlcd lhc le Club. and Pmlbwn' 'IUM'PII S. Dzilli'i lhc Chnii. The department served in :m zulxis'm'i i'ulmiily 10 1111: Band. whirh was umlm lhc dirmliun 01' Bill XVcrm-r. :m undergraduzllc. Prolkcssoi' Georgi: S. McMunus 21ml olhm ui'lisls ullm'cd nuizlsinnal rctilals to tho UHIHIHHliU. Mr. Dnhri was elected pmxiilcnl ol lhc Cnllcgu Musir .Xssmizlliun lhis y'all: Ht was also iihaii'man 01' the dcpannu-nl. H'cslcyzm wclunncd Ihc iclum this yum ulk Coinclius Kruszr. i'llilil'lllall ol lhi' Philmuphx Dcpurtmcnl. He had been on h-uw in iVuxh- inglon. when- he hmulul lhc .Mnm'ium Cami til nl liczn'nul Smiclics 21ml lhv .hm-iium Philosophiull Assmiziliun. He had zilw min! :15 dlklil'lllkill for lhc .chi'ium li'licmls. Sen- i0: Cmnmitlcc. ol the Inlcr-Anwrimn Cun- grcm ol Philmnphtx. Tho ilvlmrlmtnl's other members were Proxidcm Bullcrlichl and As- sislzml Professor Paul A. Rclxnohls. The department nl Plusiuil Iithuuliun :11, lcmpls to develop moderate xkill in :1 large number of individuals, and lo dowlop in them an inlci'csl for :l lai'gv number 01 W'm'rxv over spurts which umiinuc in later lilv. The department also hzul unusually good lioilum' in turning nut slurcsslul 115mm. lh-zul hmllmll i'mu'h Norman Dzlnicls' lhulhull 1mm mm ils John L. Wood lu'vnlylhinl umsmuliu- game lhis lull. :Iml lu- was Ilighh Iwnmml1mm:tllquul'lms. 'l he tIt'lelllllClll mcmhvn wvrc Pmlcsxms I. lh'cdvrivk Marlin. thuilnmn ml the dcpznlr mtnl uml Dilwlm' nl Allllvlim. Norman .I Daniels. Hugh G. Mdllmh. 'Iulm 1,. IVnml. Frank R. Daniel P. IVCichmnp. Comll lellniw Gluwm. Il'minm lmllmlms Mule. 21ml SlL-u' H'ilktm'ski. :lml Sulwrinlcmlcnl Slow Kminski. 'Hu- Plums DL-qulmcnl is mm :1! work on Hm u-xmnrh IHUICtlsl quart! HIslilh Im' the Signal Corps and ullmrmnim lot the Nun. Pml'cssm' Dmkwurlhk m'w 1mm apocmgmph Wih :m imlmnunl mltliliun. 'l'hv dcpm'lnwnl imlmlcd Pmlvwn's vac li. liulnn. Karl SI Vim lhkc. uml HL'IH'I 1i. Assistant Pmlcwn' Knapp ol thv Psylmlnm Dmkmn'lll. Dcpzlrlmunl mu ml lvzn'c nl ulm'mc this 3 m; and in him plm't' wax Visiting lmlurcr Inhn XV. H'hilficld. in tho BiulugI Department. was lmnm'cd with Mr. XhAlIcslcr. who alm taught mmnlx-rship in tho Anwriuul .Xnlhmlmlogiml .hmui211i011. 'Hu' dcpzlrlnu-nl's nlhcr mem- INFIRMARY STAFF Luff In right: Miss Marion Hubbell. Dr. James H. Clossnn. Mrs. Jane H. Albro. Miss Solvcig Pearson IWM inrllulul lHuh-wns Dmitl IL, Mdllcllnml, thn- lllzlillllilll. :Iml Alvin XI. lAilx-Hnnn: lm- IllH'lh 'qun Ruum :md lh-munl I. Cm'ncl': :lntl Imlnu'lols Gonlon Gwiml :Iml David MLUlt-slcl'. Pmlcwu' Inhn XV. Dm'l was dmimlull nl llu' vaigion DL-lmrlmtnl. lls xlull mu null, plt-lcd wilh PmlL-wn' C. Hclmlnn Wugcls. who ix now this 33:11,;md lnslllulur XVilIium X. Spul'rim'. Mr. Spurricrk lulL-sl Imnk. lhm'm Fur Alrlirm: Clm'xlmu Iilllir'.s in Almlwm I.iIr'. was lmhlidlul during IIIU tullcgn- war. Thc Rtmmmc Lunguugc Department UI- lk'rml Inlmrzlloriu lhix war in lwlh lhn-mh uml Slmnixh. in WIIItII lhc vmphuxix was on wrlml txprvssion. 'l'lu-sv lulu lllt'l llnu- lmun :1 WCCL. 21ml In'mul llclplul In A IIIUIL' thorough uml lum'limling knmvlmlgc ml Ihc lIl'nlICsxm'x Bunncll IHHgUHng .hxislzml 21ml liarlclx were added m the dcpul'lnu-nl ol whh'h Pmltwn Allwrl Mann was the thuinnzm. Lcnuucl .qum Roma. Assistant Pml'cwns Morlon H'. Briggs, Louis I Hutlon. :lml Klulxin XV. IIICHIIUI unnplctul llu- tlt-purnm-nl. 800K II SENIORS 1948 OFFICERS V'icc-prcsidcm jack Mnckscy. President Randy Brown. and Secretary-Trcnsurcr Torry Fields. preside at one of their final meetings COLLEGE BODY OFFICERS 1949 OFFICERS Newly L'IL'cu-d for 1949. Al Amuntn. Warren Haighx and Charlie Tichuul. nlh-r acceptance speeches over station WES GILBERT PARKER ALBRECHT. JR. E X Gil Gulmunlmx'n. Pu. Argux l: Ollu l'ml. 2: :IiSOfilllC cdilm' 3: Senate l: CA I. 2: Puinl 11ml Powder President I: Choir, l. 2: WICN l. 2: Honors College 1: LC Ct-rrlc ll'runcuis 2, 3: 112 Theallrc 2. 3, l. CHIILIL date for Dislinrlion in 'l'hculrc. Major Suhiccl: I'hcnlrc. GEORGE WAGNER ANDERSON X W Gt'rugr' Ilulmlvn Mnim' Mlbim'l: Philuxuphy RICHARD RUSSELL ANDERSON A Y Ilitl: l,ilthlichl Scllzllc 35. l: Dmxnm llouw Ummlillct 3, l. Kluinr Mlhicrl: Philuwplu. DAVID ANGELL AAQ, lhnw Cllcu Chum, Mtl. Rmnmml Hmlgc Huh 3. l. Xluim' tmhiml: l'xuhulum. WERNER THOMAS ANGRESS J u' r. Tum Nmuidlltmll Cunlillul l: Wl'l' l'It-s. I. Ulmlidulc lm hiqimlinn in History Main! MlhiL-Ll: Hismrlx. SALVATORE FRANCIS APICELLA. JR. A X P 'I'I'V Manifold l'lzm-rniu Prm. l: N'L'Imlc 3L l: lluml'vr lmm lllv Cilmlul. Mnim' Sulyiu'l: hmcrnIm-nl. HARRY CARMEN ARDOLINO EX S'IumlIlm chx Huwn lhxkvllmll 2: lenixh Cluly Prusidcnl 3, l: Pru-Uml Club 3. l: Cmucssimls Cmmnillcc 1. Major Suhiurl: Biology CHARLES FREDERICK ASH II WY Lllurl: Nlnlmull. XX J Mximming 1 25. l: Irnvk l. 2. f5. Kluiur Sulr ju'l: bmormm-nl. The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none.-Carlyle l7 LEWIS ASHTON BABBITT $b X 00 I,I'n- Um'riuillc. l'u, Smu'r l. LI. I3: lhwlmll 2. 3 1. Major 8llhjL-cl: Lowrmnonl. PAUL THEODORE BAGLEY AY I'IIIIIU Lcuialnn. XL Y. Noam l.2.1'u. l: WlL-slling l. 2. 3, l: Choir 1. 2. Ii. 1: Dvllh II': VL-rz'in 34. l: Mniur Suhictl: mermnan SIDNEY BALDWIN . d' N w Aul Sprlllglivltl. Muxs. Argus 35. l: VPl7 3. l. Cundidulc lkn' Dis; limtinn in Hislmy. Muim' Suhjccl: History FELIX BRUNO BARTOSIK B 0011 Brut liusmn H'rusllmg l: Alxmlcr Club 2, 3, Viruprcsidclll 1. Major .Subjccl: Chcnlislr'x. JOSEPH CHARLES BAUER, JR. AY luv M'L-sl llurllmd l'Il'illUI'liiU Rukhing Chairman: Cardinal Km 35: BZISCIIHII l: Snu'cr l; 'l'rzu'k 2: Dmx'ncy Hnusc Committee I. Major Subicrl: Gmcrmncnl. ERIC KIRK BEGG, JR. Kiri: Slrnll'ortl 'I'Nli; Football 2 'l'nu'k l. 2. 3. l: Wrestling 3. 1: Chairman Hlmlu :md Currirulllm Cum- lllilICL' l: Xluior Suhju'l: History. JOSEPH HINGELEY BLAKE E X luv Chicago, Ill. '92 'l'hcnll'c 2. f5: liumomirs Huh 3. l. Major S'ulxjccl: lk'mmmirx. JOSEPH SAVERIO BONEE d? N 00 Im' llurll'm'll Nluiur Suhicu: llhlun. The world,s greatest thinkers have often been amateurs. HaVelock Ellis l 8 DENMAN H. BOYD ID N 00 Dan Winm'lLu. IIIA Suucr Ii: erslling 3L 1: Ilnnllmll I: Cmm'v x'iuns Cummilln' Chairman. Muim' Huhiml: ICIIglixh. CHARLES ACKERLY BRIGGS A A Kb Lluul: lavit'. I'm. Smmlv 2. Union Mllrjul: lNuhnlngL RAYMOND BLAKESLEE BROCK B M II Rl'll llunulrn Cnnlinul Km 3. Huim Suhim: l'hilnmpln. RALPH T. BROOKS I V D Haj; IN-llmm. V. Y. Uuim Suhim l: lillglhll, WILLIAM COLLIER BROOKS A X P IiIlI l'clhmn. N L lNI'; Cunlilml km: Akull MIMI N'I'pcnl: lwml Imll 2. ii: llmk l. 2. Cofupluill 3. Captain l: I'llmlulm-mulx Cnnnnillvv l. Muim' Suhinl: Iwmlnh. MORRIS HENRY BROWN A A4? Hwy Aux hukN.Y. Nmu-I Uzllmgm l: lrlmh Hnnugvl l: Mmmg in; ladilm. Cslnlinul. l: Cult Plia- I: llunms Lollvgo l: hunIunu-nluh Ummlillu- L Mnim Mlhiul: l'JljJJiNIl. RANDOLPH FLETCHER BROWN 4; N M In'umh lum' Hxxliml ch-n: l'uollmll l. 2. 3: Ihlwlmll L13. :5: lt'nnix l; Wn'xlling 2: hgjm l. 2. Managing Indilm .1: Ollzl l'mhidu l. L'. ladilm f5: Cunlinul l. 2. Awwiulc lidilm' 3: W158 l. 2, 3, I: Dulmlv Kinumil 3. l: Pnhlimliom Bound l. 2. 3. 1, WW- Puwitlvm :5: Parker Prilv: Clam PH-sidvnl. 3: hwnlhh Cmnmillvc 3. I: Collcgt' Bmly Pruir dL-nl. Cumlidulc for DNimlinn in Philosophy. Xlnim Suhiml: Philosophy. THEODORE ELDRIDGE BROWN E N I'I'II Nvu Kmllcllv, .V. Y. Cumfnlmln 2. 3: Huxh-lhull I. 13: Irauk l. 2. 3i: IAllllllllllH'IIlillN Umunillvc: Cixh Oulu-xlru: Uitllllclnun NtiL-Illillc Axun; Rum Clull l. Hnim Huhiul: Phuin. The world craves peace that passeth all misunderstanding. ROBERT C. BUCKINGHAM B0015 Ulul: Um-tmlu. XX Y. Crms-Cnunln 3: PruMml Clulx 3. Viu-rlei- 110111 I: .Xlxmlm Club 1. Huim Mllrivuz Llu'mr NH, WALLACE MOREAU BURNETT X KI! ll ulh Springhold. Mum l l'.: l'unllmll L 2. f5. 1: M'nnlc ': I'lumumiu Huh: l'umlumunlulx Umnnillu- :5; Nlnim Null ik'lli I K'UllUlIlilN. CARROLL HEATH BURNS. JR. 4! E K 41m Hm xlmuz N. Y. Major Sulliu'l: linglixll. GEORGE HARRY BUSCHMANN WY I$uull Imlizumpulix. lml. Nkull :nnl Smpvnl: IXI'; Huxkclhnll l. i'y, l: lmmix l. 2. Pu. Cupluin l: .hgux I. 2: ltlL-uimn Unmnillrc Ii. Clunilmun 1. Xlnim whim: lung IML ONNO B. BUSS $1 K 0mm Bultluin. N. V, OutingI Huh 2, 25, l: Dcumhc Ymcin 2. f5: l-unmmin Hull 1. Huior Mlhiul: Hullu-Inuliw. WARREN OAKLEY CAGNEY. JR. X W Lug burdun Cilx, X. Y Iwmllmll L13. I: ankcllmll l: Huwhull l. 3. I3. I: Squmh 2. 3. l: l'u-mh Club 1: .hxixlunl in Hinlngx l: Plc-le Cluh ii. Pltwitlcnl 1. Main! Suhjul: Biologyllhcmislrlx. JAMES DANIEL CALLAHAN X41 Huh $011111 'indx'm' Pullwl Pliic , u: Ollu l'mlritlu 3: Argui I, 2: l-n'mh Huh I. 2: lihwlinm Cnmmillvc 35. 1: qung lh'umrmh l. Huiur S'ulyim'l: LUVNIIIIICIIL CHARLES JEREMIAH CAREY A X P lmllir' Nl-u York. N. L Wlt'xlling Li. I'v. l: lSuxclmll 13, Huim' Huhjml: llixlmL Counting time is not so important as making time count. Jumcs J. Walker 20 NORMAN BROCKLEY CAREY 4' N H .me Ucrillcn Nyucr IL I: bloc Cluh 2. . u. l: lmir l' M-nzlu' l. Uuim' Subicu: liummnizx JAMES P. CARSON I W L lim Ilsullm'tl l'uilll :Iml Pmulm I: WI'K 2.31. Hnim Suhiml: Ianglixh. ARNOLD WELLES CAWLEY W Y Hump xnlllll H'nmhlmlx l-unllmll 2. i5: lhm-lmll l: Hmir l. '3, Cllllllir tlnlt- lur hixlim'liun ill hulliw Wliling: Milim Mlluimlz Ifnglixll. DUDLEY WOODMAN CLARK. JR. l H Um! anm-Ix Huim Nulnim I : l'lu'nlixl I L KEVIN jARECKI COLLINS W Y Ix'rv I'Iit' Pm Huim Nuhit'tlz langlidl, RICHARD BONYNGE COMBS X 11 Hill; l'mu-I Unnuluir. N.l. h'glls filullzllinn Hsumgvl 2. Hnim Nuhiml: Fuglish. THEODORE SAMPLE CONNELLY I H 'I'rrl Hiddlclnun 11- Cculu l rnnulis' l: .112 lhculn' L'. 3: Puinl gmd I'mx'tlm Huh I, Muim Mlhjul: linglhh l'xulmlugx, ROBERT PARKER COOK, JR. BMH Ital: .hlinglun. Maw. lVlun'Inilx I'H'xitlclll l: Smmlr 3, l. Muim Nlllwiwl: lliNIUH, A ladder was never meant to rest upon.--T. H. Huxley 21 ALAN B. COOPER l X h Ilm Nlnlnlmd Mgux l: Ulla Pml l: l'l'Cth Club I. 2: Pl'U' Hui Club 3. I: Cllmx Cluln 3, 1: Chmx Cluh Puwitlcnl l. Nlnim' Mlhjm'l: Biology EDWARD JOSEPH COSGROVE qy N M Xul Hmllnnl Suimlning 2: hgux 3, Humming lidilm l: Ollu Pmlri 14 2. leuum litlilm' 3: SL-nnlc 1: WIN 2: IRL L l. Viu'rPHWillt'lll 3, l: Xcu'mun Club. PlLNidClll Ii l: I'Zlcclionx' Ummlillcc: Hnnm' Sulcm Cmnmillcc :4, 1: leim MIhiL-rl: Ianglixh. WILLIAM BRYAN COTTER. JR. I X D Iiill chridcn l'n-Wlul Cluh lu-murm: Mnjnr Nllhictl: liir ulngx. SIMON ANDREW COURTADE J w c Cy me York. N. Y. Hmil I: Uuulm Club: I'H'Mwl Hull 3. 1: Union Mllyivzl, Hitllngx, JOHN DEYO COWAN d, E K lml: Hpringlicltl, um. Ncnulc 3; Phi Nigmu Kuppzl HL-u'clun 2: CA Vin' I'HNillt'lll I'y: Cullugt lgL-Ilticx' Cummillcc 3: Cnllcgt- ,h'scmhlx Cmnmillt'c l: CK Frmhnmn Cnhincl l. Hnim' .Suhiml: Hmmmiu. HERBERT JAY COYNE l X h Xvu hnk. N. Y. Cnmlitlnlv lm Hixtimlitm in MI; MI Huiul. ROBERT A. CROSBY AA$ Iiiugu lnnglncnllnu. Haw Ihka-llmll: lmrk' YoxI1-um Ihnul Mnuugm 25. l: Yurhl Huh. 3, l. Hniur N'uhicrl: l'x'y flmlngx. HENRY HERBERT DEAN, JR. A A lli' Ilunl: Sulwlulu N. L ,h'gux l: WI'S 2. ?5, Hslim Nuhiwl: l'suhnlugx There is only one important moment in your life that is now. 22 RICHARD HENRY DEATLY A K E Ih'rllx Iwnwl Hilh. X. L Suzn-x l. 2: jV lhm-lmll Cuplzlin 2, 3: Clll'tlr inul: Ncnulc l. 2. Major Mxhjvn: liuummin. NICHOLAS DEININGER A A d- Xitl; VOHmlm. Hnw. HOHUH 3: Yuniu lewhull 2. 3. l: .UHillt'l Huh 3. I'Imidrnl 1: Chairman Cmmulicul Mmlvnl St'imxlilir lelcn-nu': Scnulc 3: Mvmlx't ul Hmmn College: Cululidulc lm Diuiluliun in CIu-Inhln: Major huhjml: Chmnixln DONATO ANTHONY DESOPO. JR. j W C 'I'mn' lcnzllh. NJ. Phi lsmu kappa: Argux 2; Choir 1, 2; Glcc Huh I Candidate for Dixlimliou in Mulhomnb in: Nluim' Suhicvl: Mulllcmulicx. ROBERT ASHTON DEVAUL A A Kb Hm: Grccmvivh Scu'clalr'x PI'cMcd Club I: Atwulcr Club 1: NL'H'L-kun-l'rmsurcr Connmmicul Valllm .Sludvnl Nirnlim Cunlcrrnu- l; Cumlitlzllv for Dixlims lion in Biulngu Major Suhjcrl: Hinlngx. WILLIAM EUGENE DICKINSON l D lu'ull Xvu Lumlun Xlnjm Suhjml: langlhll. JOHN GOLDSBOROUGH EASTON, JR. A A 4; lurl: HI. l.;ILcs. N. I. Cunlinul Km, Mnjm Suhiml: lhnnnmiu. ARTHUR CALVIN ELLIOT l h III Hmmluil. VHJ Vunin anclmll 2. 3: Vulxilx Icmm h Htmm Rnll LR IL I. leiul Huhiml: Hixmn. DAVID EMIL ENGEL 4: X M Iamil limnklxn. Ncu YUIL Muu-r: Wrmlling: lrm'L: Argus Assnriulc lidiv Inl: WIN 1. 3, l. ngmm hilmlm. Chid .hl- nmmu'l: LA Url'n-sith-nl IL I: leml 3. I. Wait Mlhiml: fuglixh. Perseverance comes from a strong will, obstinacy from a strong Wonk. HENRY ERLANGER H M II IIIIIIk Whilv Pluim. V. Y. l'hi Ih-lu Kappa: .hgux l. 2. 3. Nun l' lliIUl'L 011:1 Ptllll'illll 3. ,xsxixlunl l-klilm: PHNiLlClll litu- mmliu Club: Puliliml l'niun 2. Major Suhiccl: lil'nnomiu. WILLIAM ROBERT FAGUE 43 NM Ifill Sululunil. N. Y. Suilmning 3; Cunlinul Pncln Edilur 2. 3: 'EIL' lhmlw X: Dvlcgulv ln Povm Conlvxl 2, 3: m l: Wlah l. 2: Ilmmrx Collt t' Cululitlulc Inr Dislim'liml in Clmliw Writing. Huim' S'uluiml: English. JOHN L. FELDMAN I W t1 Mlnun you YtnL. N, Y. 5uillllllillg l: Mgux lelngrzlphm' l: 011:1 l'ml Phnlngmphm: T?! lln'ulu' I'lmllulinn: nUlllNht: VvH-in: Onling Huh, Union Hulniwl: lkulmlngy THERON J. FIELDS 1 u 0. Twin WimlmlA'l. I'llhliullitllh Bmml: LB N-uvlmr l I't'AHIIIPI' l; Svnntc 2. 3?: W155 Ihmnl nl llirultm 3: WPI' f5: Rznnmml Dodge Clulr $5. I: Ulmliilulc lm llix- Iimliml in Psulmlugx. Uglim Snlniml: l'xulmlr IigV. CLYDE OLIN FISHER. JR. I N H ylwlt' I'ulllnlul l'hi lk'lu Kappa: Myimming 2. Ii, 1: PA 35. l: lztnnmniu tiluly 3. l: Wmltl hmcnmlcnl Club I: lnlcrnulimlzll Rclulitmx Club I: Cmu'cssimn Cnnunillcc f5: Hcrlimh Cmnmillvc l: Cumlidnlv fur Diuimlinn in licnnmnits. Muim' Hllhjcu: lwmmmiu. GEORGE ROSS FORBES A K IC Hrmgr Rnrkl'nul. III. Hulirnl St'xrn: Ynl'silx llzlrk l: Vunin Cull 2. :5, l: Mximming I. 2. 3. l. Cnpluin l: Vuniu Smrcr 2. fr. l. Uvauplzlin l: INF: Mumm Club. Nlninr Nuhjvu: Chomistrx. RICHARD ALFRED FOXALL $2 K Hitl: IHUnIlllil'M Lh'v Clnll l: Cunlinzllx I: CA L'. Viu'rPHwir llCIll: Smlclulv l rvumu'r lnumnmin Huh: N-n nlr. Huim NllhjL-LI: Mullmnin. DUNCAN HAZARD FRASER A'I'A Hum Sanlclu Huliull Ncwn: .Mgnx lwlilm: Sclmlc 33. l; Hmilmun VB hwmhh Unnmillm- IS. I: CB l-M ullxrxludvnl Rtlulium Cummillcr: Pulxlimlinm Bunnl $5. I: Unim' Mlhiul: llixlm'x. Anyone who thinks by the inch and talks by the yard ought to be moved by the foot. 24 DUNCAN CAMERON GALBREATH I V D hmu' Buln Ion. N. Y. Yurhl Club 2. I'u: Llcc Huh 3. l: Choir 4; lhcutrc l. 2, 3: Paint and Pomlvr. Muinr Sulr icrl: XIIINiC;ICIIgHSh. ROBERT SPEER GAMON, JR. AAID Gigx Mcrchnnn'illc. N. j. Vnrsiu 'l'mtk 1!. 3: I V Nutter 2: Cinulnlion Manager Argus 2. 3: lslfllfll Club 1: Pruxlvd Club I: Alwulcr Club I: Cmmcdiull Valley Svicnlilil Ulllll'lcnu' Commillcc. Major Vlhiu'l: Riolugy. JOHN CLYDE GEARY X W Iml: Hcridvn Nz'ull :nul Serpent: X'nrsiu Track I: Yursiu lv'uulllull 2. 3. Culiupluin l: CA I: huullm 0th Cmnmillm: Pn-sidcnl Il'hcln Nu Epsilon: Prcsidcnl Cardinal Km: Slmlcnl-l'ut'uln Cum. mitlcv. Xlzlinr Suhim'l: Gmcrnmcm. RICHARD TUTTLE GIBBONS X 1' nihlw Middlcumn I V Baseball l: I Y Buskvllmll 2: WIN l: Iiuummitx Clllh :5. 1: Spanish Club 3, l: Honors l. 2. fl Xluim' S'ulljm'l: IivmmmiuI PAUL MARTIN GIVILISCO I W C Hil; Hurllord Major Suhiul: Iinglish. WILLIAM HENRY GIGER, IR. A T A Hill Hzlulhnrnc. N. I. Algus Slxnlx litlilm': IVES l. 1 3: Cardinal Km: Nmninutium Cmnmilu-v. Muim' Suhicvl: llimm. WILLIAM EUGENE GOODRICH X W Hill Non llzncn Rmmnml Hodge Club. Malim' Sllhiurl: lkx- clmlugix. NORMAN CLYDE GOODWILL, JR. B 00 H Unmlv lhixlgqmll l'rmtlmll l; I-I'cnrll Huh 2. 3: lirmmlnirs Club 3. l. Major Suhim'l: lirmlmnin. Happiness adds and multiplies when we divide it with others. 25 PHILIP GARDNER GRIFFITH E X Ulill Ilnrllkml .IV ITML l, 2. Major Suhiul: XIHIhvnmliH. ROBERT STEPHEN GRIMES A Y Iuirv Nvu York. N. Y, Swimming: Hmu-r: Silumh: Mgus: l'rcmh Club. Muim' MIhiL'L'I: Englhh. MYRON BARTLETT GRISWOLD. JR. 4 N 00 Jlilu' llmnkhn. N N. INIC: l'nullnlll 2. 3. l: lizlwlmll 2. Calpluin 3. 1: .Vcwmun Club. lejm' Suhjul: lirmmmiu. ERNEST HENRY GROTH E N It'ruit' Non Ihiluin WPl' 3: limlmmirs Club 3, l: IRE f5. 1: Su'l'clul'y'l rcusurrr: Ollling Club I. Plrx'idvnl l Major Suhim'l: I'Zrunmniu. WILLIAM MERVIN GROVE. JR. 3 N ll'illit' Hu-xhiro I'lmllnlll 1: Major Subject: MnlIlL-mzllim. GLENN ALFRED GUILFORD l X h Ulrml 'I orlinglml '92 l'hcuirc 1.2.3. I' Paint and l'mulur Club, Cululidzllo l'ur Dixlinrlinn in .h'l. nglim' Suh- jccl: Art. NATHANIEL HATHAVVAY A X P XIII WL-xl Chuu-r, le. St-Ilzm' l: l'kmlhnll l. 2: VI'vslling l'. Ulm- Huh 3. Xlnim' Suhicx'l: English. FRANCIS KIERNAN HAYES .1 w c I'mul: Non Huu-n Rmnmml Dodge Club :5. l: lk'ululu- ch-in 3. l. Huim' Suhivrl: lkuhnlngx. The right angle to approach a problem is the TRY angle. 26 THEODORE WARNER HEMBERGER A X P 'I'wl Ilulmlvn InuL I: lec Huh IL L Ulltlinzlh 3: lilu'H l. Vnior Nllhit'n: lkulmlum. CHARLES W. HENSTENBERG. JR. 2' N flunk NuququNJ. Hunmx College: Choir 1: I'lt'lull Huh 2: tinmlidnlc lm' Diuinx'liun in linglhh :Inll ML Xlzlim' SuhjL-Hv hl :IIHI linglish. IRWIN HAROLD HERTZ I H' Hzllh'lnlL Pil. I unlImH l. Huim Nulniul: langlidL JOSEPH A. HIGGINS W Y 101' llullhml nl'llil Sigma le: Suimming: Ihm'lmll: Inn lmlv Huh. Muinr Sllhivtt: Ilixlun. RAPHAEL ANGEL HISCANO II A K Ii liml Ulungc. N. .l. l'ummnin Huh IL I: xlmnixh Huh 3. l. Huiur Suhiml: lwmmmiu. ARTHUR LAMBORN HOFMANN X W III lemluil'. N L bull' 2. Hzljm Mlbiwl: Hnth-nmliu, MARK HOLZMAN 4' N H Hml: Wilminglml. lk-l. l'uulhzlll L 2: ankolbull l. 11: lizm-hull 2. 3: .hgux Hllxilu'xs Hunzlgvr: W155: lhznnuliu Huh I. 1!. 3;. l: l'uinl Hllll l'mulcr Club I: Ih-lnllc Cuuntii l: l R C: W P 1' 1L l. Cnmlitlulc lm' Dmiluliun in Hix'lmx, Uniur Nuhicrl: Hislun. HERBERT ERIC HORN B0011 IIt'rIr S:1Hillc.I .I..N Y. Hulitnl 80w : Nnu-r l1Minmning 1.2: Choir l. 1 l: Muhl Huh Suu'lun l: IKuml l, 2. Huim Nubil'tl: Hulht'nmliu. Of all the things you wear to work, the most important is your expression. 27 jOHN FREDERICK HORWATH WALTER MEADE JACKSON 1 X D I D lulu: Ioninglon Hulllmtl Main! Nllllit'tl: I'xuhulngx. II;IIL. Huim Mlltiul: Hixlmx. SIGMUND JAFFE I X h Nig me llzlwn ADELBERT BAILEY HUNT l N D IN! Hidtllclmul HUIIUM Cnllvgv' UMIH'I Huh: Cnmlitlnll' lm Hix'limlinn in Hu-mixln. Hnim Suhiml: Chmnr NH. Phi Ih-Iu kzlplm. Huim Nulximl: Hislmy KIMBALL IGLEHART .m H HARALD ANDERS FREDRIK JAHN Iu l H ,. NU Hunk Plzlim. N. l. S . M , , - . . . Mmmm. Mme-II lIll.Hll ,L hmllm u. 1. Maya: MxhluL ho lmlniu. Muhl Huh: l'umnmiu Huh. Huim Huhinl' I'Hmumiu. ERNEST ALEXANDER INGLIS, JR. 4; V M JEFFREY EUGENE JEFFREY VIIHIV Wixhllt'lnull iv N H I l ! x Wlmlling ii: hgux Ciuululinn Uunugm 'H: l' 1m. l H l' WIN 'll: Cumnulnilx vaulium 3. l: Huim Wu-slliug 1.2. fl: Hmlwln- erin 2. 31. l. Sllhiwl: Ilixlmx. l'tmidt'nl 35: U IN 2. ?1 Hnjm xnhiml. twlnmn. Men and nations can only be reformed in their youth.-Rousscau 28 JOHN EDWARD KAPICA X G! Inlmm Ncn Bl'iluin Ilu'lu Nu lipsiltm: l'oullmll l. 2. 3, l; Scnulc 2: CA 2: Newman Club 3. 1. Major SuhjCCl: Mulhvlnulirs. DAVID WINTHROP KNAPP I; M II IMW' Su'll0I1,N.J. JV Sm'urr: Swimming 1: Argus 2: Buml Mun- :Igvl' 3. l. Klnior Suhiu'l: History. WILLIAM FRED KOPTONAK j W C IHII Colchcslvl Rnszl Club. Muim' Sulliccl: Mullu-mulics. MICHAEL EDWARD KRIPAS stK lfoulhull 2: Aluulcr Club. Mnim' Suhju'l: Chemistry. RICHARD LAZARUS E X Iii4 I: Crcsluoud, N. Y. WEN l. 2. 3. 1: Chief WES lingim-cr 2, f5; HWS Chairman I: Drmnulirs l. 2. Major Suhicrl: l'su'lmlugy. FREDERICK DELAND LEETE III W Y lib Indianapolis. Ind ls'unllmll 35: Vmsilx lrm'L L13. 1: Argus l. 2. . r: Ollu Pmlritlu 2. 3. I: Cardinal Business Sta :3: Xssislunl Business Manager Ul' Cardinal l: WICS I. 2: Yni'hl Cluh Sccrclursth'usurcr f5. Virchonlmmlorc l: Ollling Club 3. l. Major Suhict'l: English. ALFRED JOSEPH LEMIRE A X P Ummljm Sn. Llus'lunlmu Wlih 35: Scnulc 3'. House Rushing Chairman. Major Suhicrl: litmmmics. GEORGE JOSEPH LEVINSKAS I X D Hartford Phi Beta Kappa: Cmss-Cuunlrlx l. 2: Gcrmzm Huh 2. 3. l: Alwulcr Cluly 3. l: I'rC-Mcd Club 2. 3: Vit'c-I'I'Csidcnl me'mun Cluh sl. Major Suluicrl: Chemistry The ladder of life is full of splinters but they always prick the hardest when we are sliding downsW. L. Brownell 29 ROSS VANCE LEWTON I W C Hclloil. Midi. Huim' Mxhiul: huwrnnu'nl, DONALD BRUCE LINDSAY l N h Ihm Ilsultlam blur Lluly I. I5: hmlinulx I'v: leil 1.2, 3. 1: Rpm Clul: 3: Uuulvr Huh ViwrlHL-xidt-nl 3. 1. Muim Mllyiml: CIIt-mixln. MILTON ARNOLD LOEWENTHAL .' W L .Hlll Wumlnlulv. N, Y. I'lli l'u'lu Kappa: Illmurx College 2. 3, I: JV lcmlis 2. f5: Vuniu l'cnnis l: Argus 1.2: Xrgm .luuim l'klilm' 2: French Cluly 2. 3. Dminclion In bmcImm-nl. Xluim S'uhiovl: Gmcrmm'nl. ROBERT EDWARD LOOK A Y Hip .huImL-r. Muss. llmm: Pl'CsidL'lll :md Rushing Chuil'num: .IV Nqunsh 2. 3: Ski Icum: Squash 1: Scnzllc 2. 3, l: Onling Llulu l, 2. 3. l; Pl'c-Mwl Cluh Vicc-Prcsb lk'lll. Mujm Sulyim'l: Biology GEORGE A. F. LUNDBERG, JR. H m H Suwlr Munrhcxlcr. Conn. Basketball l: Baseball 1: PI'c-Mcd Club 3, l: Munlm' Club I. Major SuhjL-cl: CIn-mix'lry JOHN COLEMAN MACKSEY A X P lm l; Mmlltluir. N. I lcnnix Ummgcr 2: hgus l. 2. ?: Argus Slmrls lidilm' 2. 3: Scnulc 2. fi. l: Collggc Bmh Yiu-v l'rvsidcnl. WICN 2: Conslilulinn Committee 2: Cullcgc Butlx Purlo Cmnmillcc 2. Chairman 35; Xvumun Club 3. I: Hmmr Sllulcnl l. 2: Olin M'lmlzn': CA Cnhim-I l. 2. Major Suhiccl: HNm'x. FRANCIS UNDERHILL MACY 4, N M Fm Winnclku. Ill. I71'2Ilcrniu Prositlcnl: Xllxaliull Sewn: Swim- ming l. 2: .Mgux l, 2: Cardinal: Choir l. 2: U100 Clull l, 2: 292 'l hculcr l. 2. 3: Puinl :md I'mx'dcr Clnh: CA 1. 2. lixct'ulixc Cabinet. CrrPrc. tlcnl: 8011;111- 3. l: Eln-climlx Cmnmillcc: Chair mun Fllmlmm-mnh Cmmnillcc: WPl' Secretary l'rcusurct. Czlmlidnlc fur Dislinclion in Gmcrnr mom, Mujm Subjul: bmcmmcnl. PETER SWXORMSTEDT MANSFIELD x11 Y Pir'zlr' WcllL-slvy. Xlnxs. l r:1lmniu Rmhing Clmimlun: llmlnr Roll 3: lkmllmll I; Husclmll 2. :4: W15 3. l, Major s'uhiu'l: linglixh. There are some defeats more triumphant than victories.2Montaigne 3O FRANK TUFT MANSURE l! w ll I'HIHL' 1.1IHHIUHIIC.I,EL l'IL' Mrd Cluln: Hithlh-ltmn Nivnlilik sz'miu lion. Xlnim .Nuhiul: Ulcmislrx. GENE FRANCIS MARRA E N Urm- H'Ullu'lsln'hl l-Iulmniu Uu'AlHuitlvnl: li:hlu'llmH l: Cllnil l: Mgm I: 1.0L01't'lt' ll'rnmuis 3: I, lmlllliu 3, I. Klujm Nllhivtl: l'It'IllIliSlnlllhlL EDWARD GREGORY MASCOLO III I N h I-rl Wult'lhun Cumlidulr IUI Diqimlion in Hullu'nmliu: Union Kuhiul: Nlulllcmuliu. DONALD RUSSELL McGOWN B 00 ll Ihw Slamhml hmlhull I. .IV 2: .hgua l: Rznnmnd Dodge Huh Yr, I'rcxidunl I: Vm'ulimml buidulu'c Com- millcc. Umnulit'lll Villlm Scientific .me'izuion; Cululidzllt l'nr Iiislimlinn ill l'xulmlnm. Muim Sulximl: INH'lmlugx. If your life is a grind use it to 3I BRUCE BRACKER MENIN E N In mr Nun Rtwhcllc. NH Y. I'lnlt-Illin I'H'xitlmll: Nmm l. 3. l: Nunnlo l. 2. I: Cnnlmul Kn l: sznmh Club 3: Bnml IL I: Chic OHIHNIIH 3: Runnmul lkulgc Club 3. l. Uninr Suhim'l: lkuholngx. JOHN RICHARD MEYER W Y Hulrh llllliillmllnlix Ind. hulmnilx Plt'Nidrllli hmlinul Km: I'hullmll 3. l: Ihlwlmll l: Honor l: SL-Ilzllo 1: CA I: tult't' Huh l Major Huhiml: Mulht'muliu. STANLEY ZYGMONT MILEWSKI l l! Vuu Nt'u Hliluin hgux I. 1!. hlu-rlhing Hunzlgvr 3: Aluulvr Huh LE :5, valnuv I Iczmm-I l: mxnmn Club I. Mnim Hulviml: Chenlhln. CHARLES BUELL MITCHELL 1 w a lquIr' lhnkxillt-Cvnlrr, N. X. Ollu thidu 2: Hmir l. 2, 3. l: YliS 2: l.l' Lvulc IVInntuix l: CA L L'. L Cumlitlulv I'm Dislimlirm m I'l'vluh, Uninr Nulxiul: FIL'mIL sharpen your wit. RICHARD ALLEN MONK E N ,Huul: Yhilc Pluim. N Y. l-'r:llcmiu Rushing Chairman: Argus 1: Ir Ccrtlc Frum'uix I. 2: Student chn' Bureau 2, 3, 1: CA I. 2: Chairman l ruth;m Cabinet. leiol' Nulliul: Hixtm'y JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY A T A Iml: Mitltllvlmxn 1V Buwlmll. Muim' Mihiul: Mnlhcnlxlliu. RICHARD FRANK MURRAY A K Ii III! I: Mulm'mml. M;st Xlzlim Suhim l: llixlm'y PETER COEYMANS NEWBURY A K E .Vr'zrll Umn'm'. V L jY li'lmh: Vznsih Nquuxh: Scunlc IL 1: CA I. 2: Plc-Mul Huh. Mujm Subiul: Biology If you cannot win, make the winner break the record. -chuc Thrusts ALAN NEWMAN I XVC Hull Ihnuxwilll', N. Y. Cunlinul: Ollu l'mhidn. Lulnlitluto lur Div linclion in Crculiw Writing. lejm' Suhiccl: English WILLIAM ANDREW NICOL H Y NIH; Vnm Mnk, XXL Huim Mxhiul: lnumnnlits. WILLIAM HAVEN NORTH $ N W Iiill Summit. NI. 'IY Smu-I: th'c Huh 2. I5. I: Clinil l. Cam didulv fur Dminrlion in Hislm'x. Mujur Suh ictl: Hislon, CHARLES EDWARD OSGOOD I W C Chmlh' lhmlklim'. Haw Outing Huh 3:. I: Raunmnl Dmlgv Huh 3. I: N'Ilull' l: Cullvgc Ihnlx Ihnmilnu Unnmillu: 1. Muim Hulniml: lMtlmlugx CLIFFORD B. OSTERGREN I N D LIIII I'm ll;lml Nulimml Hmmmn Muirly. Mnjm Sllhim'l: liunmmivx RICHARD AMERICO OTICO A X P lmlr va Iluu-n I'cming: l'xuhulngx Ruxmmh Xvimml. Muim Mlhjm l: l'xu Imlngy JAMES HENRY LIPFERT OTT. JR. xl; Y Tiny Lluwlm Unim Nlhjvt l: lurmmmil x. DONALD EVARD OVERSTROM E N Uhir Nth l5lilllill ITIIII'llliH Rushing Chairman: Cardinal Km: Nuimming L': NL'IIMH' 2. Mujm Suhjul: linglixh. CLIFFORD REICHEL OVIATT. JR. AAKD Iiitl: hl'ccmxith l'rutmnilx Vitt'rl'l'tNillt'llll 'l X12 3: Vanity I nnllmll 3: JV limkcllmll 11, 3: Vquin lizlsclmll LE 3. 1. Captain l: Argus 3: Aawmhh Cunnnillu' l: Vm'ulinnul Luitlslnu' Committee 2. 3. 1. Chairman I: Cumpm CIICNI l, Nluinl Sllhiul: Hislm'y JAMES VIBBERT PARSONS l X h limmv .Vcw Bliluin Xlnim Nuhiu I : Hul Iu-Inuliu. THEODORE BRISCOE PATCHEN. JR. A X P I'wl 'l'mlinglnn Pn-Mul Cluh. Muinl Nulviul: liinlugy JOHN WILLIAM PATON $ N M Iml: Vnnkms. N, Y. H'Lull :Iml Sclpvnl: Wu-xlling: Cunlinul lidilnr: N'nult' l: l'uhlitulinn Busz Uuim Suhiul: I'anlile It were not best that we all think alike; it is difference of opinion that makes horse races.-Mark Twain 33 PETER GEORGE PERAKOS. JR. AY Mrln XL-u Britain Vurxin Iynnllmll I: Vuraily I'cming 2. 3. Cup min 1: CA 2. Muim Suhjul: English. HERBERT ARNOLD PHELON. JR. WY .I'igr'r Mumhmlcl Iflulclnin Viu'rPu'x'idcm: Hukahull l: Buu- lmll 1!. 3. I: hgux I. Nfuim' Suhicrl: lirmmmin. ALEXANDER BLACK PORTER QI N M Numly Mum'cslmvll. NJ. I'lulcrnilx RmhingI Chairman: Cardinal Key: IV I'nnlhzlll, IV Buskcllmll: Rushing Cmmnillu' Hmilmnn. Kluim' Suhicrl: th-Imm-nl. DAVID LOVELL PRATT E N Iva' lelh Glammllmly bloc Huh I. 2. 3. I: Clmin I. 2. 3. l: LL' LL'HIv hunrzlh l. Hnim' Nuhjml: lfnglix'h. RODNEY GEORGE PRATT A A q, Hm! Wcslpml Ollu Pudridn 3: lhczllcr f5: BIIINI 35. Muim Mlhiml: ltllglNl. RICHARD SWAIN PRESTON Kb 5. K Hill; Willn'ulmnl. Mun. WIiS 3. I: Rum Club 3. 1. President I. Cun- ditlzllv lur Dixlinrtinn in Physics. Muiur 51th ivH: I'Insivs. THOMAS JAMES PRICE. JR. d3 E K WHAT I cum'rk. N. I Vurxily yVl'mlling' Cardinal: CA I: Band I: W158 l: Rzunmml Dm'lgc Club. Cumlidulc lm Dislimlion in Anlhmpnlngx. Mnior Suluiccl: BiologyJKuImIogix. WALTER ROBERT PRICE AA$ Huh Scursdulc. N. Y. Varsilx Squash 3. 1: Cardinal l: Scnulc: Band: UIINiluliun Umlmillcc 3. Chairman L Mujm Mlhiwl: Hixlmx. . When your illusions are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live. 34 --Mark Twain WILLIAM RUSSELL RAUSCH I X D Gui AlbumUVJ'. Vursin Suilnming f5: Outing Club IL 1!; Al- uulcr Club 3. l: l'rL-rxlcd tlluh 3. I: Downvy Hnusc Bridge Club 3 Major Suhim'l: Chemistry. DUDLEY WELLS REDFIELD. JR. A K E I irltl White Plains. N. Y. Smn-r l; lhmlhull: Ulla l'mlridn: Glee Club 2. 3, I: Cardinal 3. 1. Major Suhim'l: HNm'y JOHN FRANCIS REICHARD E N lur I: Llcnsitlc, I'u. rl'IllCl'lliH Prcsidcnl: szlinnl 25. l: Senate 3. 1; '921'hczllcr2, 3. l: Paint 11ml Ponder 1: Glee Club 2, 3: Honor Slutlcnl. Candidate for His- lim'Iiun in Iinglhll :mtl 1110:110'. Mnim' Suhim'l: 'llhczllcr. DAVID KISER RICHARDS 2' N D K H'umlhun Suimming I: Cardinal: bloc Cluln 2: CA 2: Prc-Mcd Club 2. f5, Cumlidulc lm' Dislimlion in .U'L Muim' Suhiml: .h'l. JOHN RICHARDS E N Im l: Warrior Run. Pu. 'IV Wrestling: LC Ccrtlv Fl'nnmh l. 2. Cilllr Llidulc for Dis'lim'limu in HiSlUU. Major Sulr ivu: History JAMES EDWIN RILEY A X P Iim Hnmdcn Phi Ik'lu Knmm: Vanity I IJHL. Major Subictl: Lnu-Imnan JOHN ADAIR ROBINSON A A 4 Ifnllltit' Burlington, VL hulvmily Rushing Chailmzm: Yzll'silv linolr IHIHI Vursillx 'l luck. Major Suhictl: lirmmmits. ROMOLO RAYMOND RUSSO E N Hum Mitltllclmxn Paint :Iml l'mulm: Nllulmll UIIIL Muir Sull- iml: Ianglixh. Violent exercise after forty is especially harmful when done with a knife and fork. HENRI RAOUL SALAUN A .X $ lIrIIIl: lcllv lluulc. Iml. 'I Kl'I: Muliml Scu-Ir Vul'xih Hmu'l 2, 3. Cu hlpluin l: Yzlrsilx Nqumll i3. Cnpluin 3. Y Vnnih lcnnis l, 3. Captain l: Ollu l'OIlI'iIlZI Spmls lidimr 3: PI'LHML'd Club I: lx- Cowh- Iwnnmh hurclun 2 Cnnditlzllc tol Dislilminn in I rcmlL Mnim' Subject: Rmnunu- lanlguugm. ROBERT WALLACE SANDERS W Y HIM Nulmlnlt'. N. L Innk: Mxinnning: Vunulv l Union thiml: Ile'lx. GEORGE THEODORE SANOSKI J H C CH Mitllllvltmn l'Iv Hm! Huh IL I. Xlujm Huhicrl: Hiulogn KENLY ROYAL SAVILLE. JR. I X D Iu'u ll'llZIIILX.II. l'muing: Algus l: 011;: I'ml. 3: Cunlilml l: lhculcr 2. :5. E L l: WICS L Muim Sulniwl: lhculu. W'ILLIAM COLSON SCHAAB 4 N W Hill Vildumnl, X.I PM leu lxnmm: Vulxin chxlling Nlunugcr 2, f3: Vzllxilx llmk Uzlnugm 11. f3: JV Sm'it'r: Arglh S'Cniur litlilm': Dvlmlo tlluh l: Vl IS l. 2. :5 Fur Immics Clulv: Cunlinul Cnnlrihulm': Ck lixcr ulixc Cuhincl 15. l. Xluinr Suhiml: l'hilmupln Ml. H JOHN WILLIAM SCHMALZ. JR. A Y IWI lhunmilhaN.Y Xluinr S'uhim I : Hm lu-mul it x. LEONARD MARSHALL SCHUMANN X 4' I t'IlIIY H'clhmslwhl 1 NE: VuHiIx l '0nlh;IIl: an'siu Buwhull: Mll'sin Buxlwllmll. Hninr Sllhiul: Mnlllmnuliu. Courtesy, like the air in a tire, eases many a jolt and saves many a sore spot. DONALD EVERETT SCOTT B M H Xmllv UHMCI IV Smtm. Vuim SuhjL-cl: linglidl. ROBERT BENJAMIN SELVIN A X P Slimlv I'mvxl Hilly N. L Vursily Wroslling: W155: liv-uuiw Bumtl. Kllr nmmn'r. linginum Unior Sulxiwl: linglis'lL WILLIAM CULVER SKILLING d? N 00 Iiill Wilmington. In-l. Czn'llinul key I. Huim' Subiu'l: English. DONALD TAIT SMITH I X D Ilnu Hollix N, Y. Hslior Snlxim I : Philmnphx, HAROLD EMIL SMITH l X h Ilul Npl'inglwltl.X!:1v. Cunlinnl 3. h l Iu':llvr l. 2, 3. Xlzlim' Subict'l: Hislmy RICHMOND HALL SMITH WY Hit'llit' Nulwirh Frulcrniu Rushing Chuilmull: .le N'm'u'r: SOIL 1110 2. Main! Nuhivn: lirmmnliu. VINCENT JOSEPH SMITH I5 00 ll HI! Now Ihilnin PIcML-d Huh: Mulllvl' Club Xlnim' Suhivcl: IKinlog'L CLIFFORD HENRY STANTON. JR. 2 N LII'H Ritlgvumul. an Outing Huh 2: 1.12 1110:1101' 2. 3: Pninl :lml Pmuk'r l. Czllulidnlv fur Dislinxliml in Humor. 1110mm Muim'. A politician thinks of the next election; a statesman of the next generation. 37 -James Feeman Lark GEORGE EDWARD STEINMETZ. JR. J u' L Ur'ulgv .Vulcrlmlxx 0min;r Club 2. 3; Ncwnum Clulu 2. 3. 1: Glee Club 3. Cnmlitlulc I'ol' Dixlinrlion in Govcrw Incnl. Major Subject: Umcmmcnl. ARTHUR WHEELER STEMLER A A qi IN 1 '.;1s10I m1gc. N. J. I'XIC: .IY I 00lb;lll I. 2. 3: .Vl'csllillg l. 2, 3. Captain l: Slzmding Committee Collvgc Chllrrh 2. 3. 1. Major Huhiul: litmmlnks. ROBERT EDWIN STEVENS $ 2 K Huh Hul'll'mll I r;llcmilix Pn-xidcnl: Cardinal Kcix: lhlskclr hull l: Scnulc l: CA I. l: litunmniu Club 3. I. Mujnr Suhjivl: liroumniu. ALLEN CLIFFORD STEWART I X D .II Middlclmx'n .IV Football 2. 3: Wrcxlling 2. 3. I: Track 2: Suimming l: Dculschc Vcrcin l'rcsidcul: Dmvncy HUIISC Cnmmillcc Chairman: Ulcc Club Prcsi- dent: Cardinal 3. l: Lutheran Club Vitt-I'HNir dvnl 3. Mnjm Sulljm'l: bcl'mun. CHARLES BRAGDON STONE. JR. Kl! Y . hip Cromwell Hulumiu President: Mystical Sewn: 'I'Nli: Vxlmin Swimming l. l: 'l'HuL 1!. 3. l: Ollzl I'mll'itln Busincsx Mum. . Advertising Manager; Argus l'. lllmur System Commillcc Chairman 3, l: Junior Class ViruPI'csidL-ul: Campus Chcsl Chairman: CA 'I'rcnsurcr. l-lxcculixc Cabinet: SL'nulc l: '92 chzllcr: Publiullions Board. Mujm' Suhicrl: licunomirs. JAMES MAYNARD STRANG A K E lim Chullzmoogu.Tenn. IV lcnnis: Glee Club I: Cardinal Km; Yacht Huh I. Huim' Suhicm: Hislmy JAMES FRANCIS STUPPLE j W C lim 'l m'kuhuc. N. Y. Huck l, 2. 3. l: Cross Counlrlx 1; Swimming I. 2: Sqllznh 3. l: l'nolhull 2'. XHCS 2, 3; Bridge Club Prcsitlcnl 3, 1. Major Sullim't: liconomits. CLIFFORD MILES SVIKHART WY Cliff Glen Ridge. N. .l- Argus l: Cardinal 3: WliS I: l'rmn Cummillcu 24. l: Ncumun Club 3. l: Dchulc Council 3. Kluim' Sulyiotl: litonomicx. It may be farther around the corner of a square deal but the road is better. 38 JOHN FRANCIS TRACY ,l W C Iml: Portland lirmuunice Club L Mnim' Suhivn: lironnmiu. KEITH GARDNER VALENTINE A 'I' A l'ul SL'Imlt' I. Winxlvd Mniur S'uhicrl: hmcrnnlan JAMES MORRILI. VANSTONE l N h Nglxhnu. N. IL Muim Sullim'l: Chl'mixlryl Iiln I'lmllmll I. JOSEPH SALA VILA. JR. A K E High I'urllr'lx lhm'lmll 3. l; xtlusuh 2. ill 1: xuhjml: HNnIL l'hilzulclplliu. Pu. Kollulc ll Wuim' A man, like a tack, can only go as far 39 DAVID STANLEY WADSWORTH B M II llvtllltll' IlevI'nily Ruxhing Chairman; Cl 2; Huim' Nuhjul: liummniu. Prm idcmc. R. l. llmul l, OLE HERMAN WALBERG I N H Olr' Osllu. Nmuux limnomim Club I. leim' Suhim'l: I'lummniu. DAVID MacMONNIES WALLER BM ll Ihh't' lh'unuillc. N, L l'IillL'llllH PI'L-xitltlu l: Ilnmnx College I Mluuxh l: Hmmlv l. L': llnnxliluliml CmmniIu-v l aninulirm Unmnillm- IL Huim Suhiml: ling Iix'h, WILLIAM DAVID WEBB E N Ihlnr' Sxx'nrllmmrc. Pu, Delta Sigma Rho: Wrmlling l. 3: Dchnlc 3. l: In-Imlu llnum'il l: IRE chrclnl'yl'I'cnsurL-r 3. l'rmitlmll l: lVI'l': Cl Iixculliw Cmnmillmz llglmlitlulc llm Uixlinvlilm in Lowrmnvm. Huim Nulviml: lmu'llmu'nl. as his head will let him. HERBERT MARK WEISS ibxm Ilr'rl; Kingdom I'm Lultlilml km 2: lh'llu Niglllzl Rho: hmlhzlll 1.13: Mgux l. 2. Hblm- Cluly I. 2: Debuting I, 2. 3. l: IRC l. 2. f: H'Pl' 3. l: Cumlitlzllv Inl Hislimliun in menlm'nL Hujm Mllxiul hmmmm'nl, FRANK HENRY WENNER W X m Il'irniw Von Ilul'll'm'd. N. Y. Skull and Svllwnl lHt-sixlvnl l: lNIl' Vito I'HNidt'llli lhmlhnll L13: Lnlizlplnin 1: lhleclr Imll l.2.l'r,C:I1pl:lin l: lislwlmll 2. Mnim Mlhiul: UuIIu-nmliu. JOHN WILLIAM WERNER. JR. A .X lb II illir Hlulxull FJIHM V. X. Skull uml SL-Ipcnl l: N-nulc l: Hum! Divalm 2. Hujm' Suhiml: Ikulmluw. MALCOLM WILSON WEST, JR. A A Lb .Hul Short Hills. N.II. bull' 3. I: l'lulvrnily Rushing Chairman: Fur Ilnmin Club 3. I, Unim' Nuhiul: ltrmmmiu. DONALD RICHARD WEYMANN ,I W f. lbw UnrtlchiIx. XXL RLN l. L': PH'WIUI Huh ii, I; Umm-I Huh IV Unim Kuhjwl: Isinlngx, RICI IARD DONALD WHITTAKER I W L Hill; UUIIIIxI'L'HLV L IImL Hulmgt'l 3. l: W128 L L'. 3: CK l: ngl Llllh l, Huim Suhiul: Hnlht'lllzlliu. WILLIAM PIERCE WIDDOES A K E Prlw Sullxtlzllv. X. L hulmnin PItNillt'lll l: Cnulilml Km 35: I'Uulr hall I. 13: anL-lmll l. 2: hull $5. I: M-Imlc I Dtan-x Hnuw Unnmillm 2: Slnmling Cunlr millL-c nl llu- Lnllt-gv HmnlL Unjm' Suhiml: Ilixlmy FRANK KENNETH WIGREN A X P Iu'u Humhcxlm qunr Suhjt-rl: lkwhulugx. An opportunist is a man who, finding himself in hot water, decides he needs a bath anyway. KENNETH FARNAM WILLIAMS vb x M lu-u Iuilliclll IXli 2: linsclmll l: Huxkcllmll Ii: fum-Cmmr 1H 2. 3: Hum! l 2. H. l. Huim Mlhjml: langlix'h. ROBERT TUTHILL WILLIAMS A K IC 'I'I'II Umliwn. V. l. IL'nlm L131. l .Mglh l. 2: Ncnzllv l. 2: H N 1 2.35: Nlmnixh Huh 2. fl: Hzlth-mzlliu Clnh II, I: Hzlim' KulriL-xl: Hullu-nmliu. RICHARD B. WILSON E X lmlthil lAnhmuk. X, L I'mlcrnin I'll'xidtlll :Iml thhillg Cllzlilnmn: Bzm-lmll l. 2. :5. l: Bux'kctlmll L13. 1: Noun 1 f'r Scmllc 3: Nnminuling Cmmnillu', Haljm Nuly ion: Hix'lnn. LAWRENCE MOFFATT WITHEY 1D X M I.IIIH' NIcl'itlcn Suinlming 3. l: Cllu'rlvmlcr 2. 3. 1: Mgux l: Ollling Club 3: xpnnhh S. l: Hnnmx' Cullvgc. Culldiduu- lm Dixlimliun in linglixh. Uuiul Nulzim'l: linglixh. DEANE E. WITT l X h Hmm' Slumm Cumlidulc lm Distimliun in Cu'nliu- Writing; Hnior thim: l-anlish, EDWARD SHEPARD WRIGHT A K Ii Xillx' WL'sl Ininglu-Id. Haw I'lntk Vunugm L': NIKKI l. M-nrlmlx 2: Young Rt'puhlimm Huh I, qum Hllhiml: Hix'lon ROBERT STIRLING WYLIE. JR. X W Huh me VOIL. X. . Xlluliml Nt'u-II: IIHtL . x. 1: 1 12111'Inilx ler in: Chuilmun l: SL-Imlc l: lilulium Unnmim-v. Muim' S'uhjml: Hislmx HENRY KARL YORDON EX Sluml: V1Nllichl. NI szlilml Km 3: Cnmlloumn 3. l: 'l'ImL l. W 3, l. Hninl Nuhiwl: litunulniu. A prejudice is n vagrant opinion without visible means of support. 4l 31132537IUAUIJ. A l'UURIHA BERNARD JAMES ZAWISA l X H lir'ruir' Midtllvlmm Uuim Nulrit'rl: I-LnglimA MAI. EUGENE MAYER ZUCKER I A h C: m' Von York. N, Y lo H'ulv I-mumis 2L Huim Suhjml: llixlmL WARREN EUGENE BELTRAMINI 4A N w Ih'll West langlcuuml. V. L lmlL 1.13. Huim Sulliul: Hixmn, FRANK WILLIAM BORA A K H VHIIM 15mm! IliHs. N. X. IV BihLCl'HIH f5, 1. Huiul Mlhiml: HiulngL LEWIS BALDWIN DANIELS X W I 1hr Uitllllclmxll Halim Mlhjml: liumumitx HAROLD MITCHELL DOLBERG E N Ilul Ihitlgquni Kluim Mllljml: Hinlugx. JAMES ALLYN EATON A K I': NIHHIN Hllllilllh N, A A l-nullmll f1: ll'nvk 1.2' Slumlinu Committee ol the Cullcgc Chmth: .hximml Din-llm ul Mir miviunx. Huim Mlhjul: llixlmy JOSEPH WOODS EWALD A 'I' A Im' AVA! langlcmunl. N. I qum Sulzictl: Hu-mixlly Before investing in a Rgoing concernAA investigate which way it is going. 42 EDWARD LORING FERGUSON A A ID Iirl Holyokc, Mass. Muinr Suhicm: Binlnm. HARRY FARIS FORBES A K 15 Huleim Rutkfmd. lllA Ruxhing Committee k Foulhnll l. 2, 31. l: Iiwrcll Bum .hxurd 3. l: Coll Cnplnin ?'u, l: hgllx l. L'. :5. Hzljm Suhil'tl: h'l. RICHARD THEODORE FROST AD N M Hh l.' W'm u-slcl . Mzux Algllx 1. 2: WIN I. 2: HUI I. 2' IL I: Wl'l' I. 1 f5. Pruidcnl l: Cunlinul Km 2: lk'hulc l. 2: Young Dvnum'uh YiuwPrcxhlvnl l. Cumlidzllt' I'm' Dislimlinn in melmwm. Uuim Mlhiml: hnu-IIIIHHIL LEO FRANCIS GARRISON. JR. 1; M II I m; Runmlux. A. L Mujm whivtt: Himuy HERBERT RINGE HANDS A T A III'rII CI'MHHNHL X. L IAcm'ing 3 l' Argux l: WIA 1: HUI I. 2. 3. l: thl Cluh 2A 3. Major Suhiml: Luu-rnnu-IIL WALTER BOYD HOOVER. JR. A Y ll'rlll I'thnll, Uzm. Wu-xlling L13. I. Huim Mllriwl: CIH-mix'ln. JOHN DARLING JENNINGS A K Ii Mlm Dzlnhun Vzlim Sulliul: Hixlm'lx. ROGER ERNEST KNAPPE ATA Hug Muntlulc. X. L Vurxiu Sxxilnming: NSIHIIL' 2: Aluulm Club 3. l; Danhn- H'Ivin 2. 35. Hnim Nuhiml: Hu-IHA ixln. When a jackass thinks he has horse sense, keep him tied. 43 CHARLES DAVIS LAUFER A 'I' A lnuli4' Mmlll Umugv. X. l. Hzljm Suhiul: lkulmlugx THOMAS W'OOD RIORNINGSTAR A K H Tum er-Imit ll LIIH'IIcmh'I IL I. Hnjm Mllyjml: Hinlugx. IGNATZ PETER NARKIEWICZ A Y IU'Iz' Xcu Bliluin Xlnjm Nuhiul: Iztunmniu. FRANK LESLIE NIXON E N l'umh Pcull Kiwi, X. Y. lCIL-miun Cunnnilln- f'v: Nunuln' I: lhcmh Club 2. l'vaixlcnl 3: Cunlinul km 3: '92 I'hL-zllvr 2. 3. l: l';Iinl uml Pmulcl L Huim Million: l. l, P I'Cllt'll'lfllglish. RALPH NORMAN PETERS B H II Hullilj Rixlgmuuul. N L Hzljm Suhicrl: Hixlmx. JOSEPH VINCENT PESERVICH I N D 1111' Hidnllvlmxn Huim Mllriul. Iiummniu. DAVID LELAND PIERCE Ii 00 II Ier' llilNlnlc. qux. Unjm thjml: langlish. IOHN CHARLES PRESTON B 00 H lulu: Willnnlmm. Hum XIJim Mlhjm l: l' nglish. Learning makes a man fit company for himself. 44 NORMAN PYLE ROBERT MARK WARD A A $ I V D Mnm Ivlwx CilLX. Ir Hull: laml .MIIUI;I. .L Unjm anylul: Hinlngx. Lflmlitluly 1m Dhlillfliull in Pllglixllrllixlnn, Hzllm anrlul: llex. CHARLES HOWARD ROBINSON A T .X Ilulil'ir Nillululv. . . Nnum 1.2: Nllllhll IL I: M'Imu- f1. Unjm Nulr iL'Il: lit'mlmniu. It,s great to be great but ifs greater to be human. WiIl Rogers ROBERT FREDERICK BLACK JOHN DAVID SCHICK A 'l' A A T A I rwl Vvumn llighlzlmk Hum Iw'm SmHIL'. Wash, Unjm NlllbiHli hmulnmcm. Hujm Nuhiwl: hmmmiu DONALD GEORGE BROWN PAUL JULIEN SEMACK I V U Ii m H N'W RH'. ' I'mll Hx XmL. V. Y. Lmulixlnlc lm Dixlimliun in l'hilnwpln. . . . Hzljm Mlhiwl: l'nglhh, Hulm Nuluul: Phllowphx. NICHOLAS SNOW DAVID RALSTON CROSS 1m H H H H XI: k Umw IH-Hx. W. Hnjm Nuhim l: HM'IHNH. Himllrltmn Hclmlc Huh 2;. I: Dvllu Sigma le, Xlnjm xuhiul: l'nglhh. CHARLES GORDON DIBBLE JAMES BARKER SPELMAN A K E A K H lln Min lL-Ilclmn. X M Huh l'nililcltl Cmulidnlu lm Dixlimlion in bmmlmwnl. I'lummlx Rmhing Hmirmzm l: leumh 2. 3L Huim Nihivtl: memm-nl. l. Luplslin l. Icnnh . u. L Huim Mlhiml: I'va nmuiu, FRANK CURTIS HAGE : X ALLAN DAVID TEOT Imlll: IhnnleH. .X AY Huiul Nulriul: langIML ll lthlIclll.Huxx hulk 1;. L Hzlim Mlhiul: Hulhcnmlicx. ALEXANDER MacDOUGALL MacFARLANE. JR. ANTHONY PAUL WATTS VASTOLA. JR. A K IC W Y ,Hm lmlinglm: l'uul anCllmn Hzlim Mllniul: Idlglhll, Huim Mlhiml: I'yinlngx, 45 4b The year 1949 was marred by the loss of one of our most esteemed faculty members, Professor Alexander Thomson, who passed awqy after a brief illness on January 5. By mdny of us he will be remembered for his guid- ing force, serving as a member of the history department since 1928, as chairman of the stu- dent counsellors from 1941 to 1945, as Dean of Freshmen from 1943 to 1944; by all of us he will be remembered as a great friend. Professor Blankenagei Al'runv.u..l uu-u.su..u.w ...... entertains .1 group of German majors in an Honors College room PHI BETA KAPPA Phi Beta Kappa, America's oldest Greek letter society. was founded at H'illianl and Mary College in 1776. conferred Membership in this society is for high st'holastit' standing. The Connet'ticut Gamma Chapter. the ninth the United States was established at Wesleym on Juh 7. 1815. At present, Pmtessnr Albert Mann is exclusively oldest in President 01' the local t'haliter while faculu members H. E. Arnold and .1. C. Blankenagel :tre secretary and Vice-presitlent respectively. B. A. Kosit'ki, 2! Mitldletmvn treasurer. attorney. is The societs yoniei's membership upon sen- iors only. electing the first group in October and the second in Altmc. Fifteen per cent 01 the class may be thosen, though the facults board is free to pick fewer it it sees fit. In determining eligibility. grades in plus- 49 ital education are not t'nunted, election to the the intlixidual's academic record. It is interesting to note that, though election does not by any organization being based entirely 011 means insure suttess in later lile, membership in Phi Beta Kappa-zm indication of col- Iegiate success-is also a good recommendation for future attainments. The high percentage of uPhi Betes in Who's Who is almost living testimonial to that fact. The following ten men were elected to the society in October and were initiated on Jan- uary seventh 01' 19-19: XVemer Thomas Ang- ress, Donatu Anthony D'Esposo, Ir. Henry Erlanger. Clyde Olin Fisher. It. Milton Gra- bowsky, Adelbert Bailey Hunt, George Joseph Levinskas, Milton Arnold Lowenthal, James Edward Riley, III, XVilIiam Colson Schaab. and Mystical Seven, unc 01 the two senior honor- 1837 hit seven 01' th-slc'utn'ts leading undergraduates. 'lhhrough the intcrcat 0t Wesleyan's presidentt XVilbur Fisk. the new group was recognilcd my societies. was lountlcd in us a college fraternity. and the attic 01' old North College was granted us a place for the brotherhood to meet. A constitution and a most distinctive ritual were drawn up. and the society flourished fmm then on. Early cvcry spring, seven members ol' the junior class, who in their three years haw excelled in athletic and literary pursuits. and who have distinguished themselves in im- portant campus activities are tapped for mcnr bcrship in the hcptagonal house. built in 1912, on XVyllys Avenue where they meet thereafter on every seventh day. This yeark delegation includes: Ranth 50 ' MYSTICAL SEVEN Sitting: Gt Forges, Wylie. R. Brown, Salaun, Macy Brown. College Body president and former Olin Pmlridu editnr-in-chief; George Forbes. captain of the swimming team, co-captain of the soccer team; Duncan Fraser, editor of the Argus and president of Delta Tau Delta; Jack Macksey, College Body vice-presitlent; Fran Macy, active in dramatic productions, chair- man of the CB Fundamentals Committee. president of Phi Nu Theta. Also in the society are: Hank Salaun, cap- tain of the tennis team and former New Eng- land singles champion. captain of the squash team, co-captain of the soccer team; Chip Stone, thrce-time high scorer 0n the swimming team, president of Psi U, former Olin Podridrl Business manager. CB Honor System Chair- man, member of the track team; Bob Wylie. member of the track team. Chairman of the CB Elections Committee, president of Chi Psi. Stone. Standing: Macksey, SKULL AND SERPENT Second 01' lhc two senior honorary societies lhoundcd at hVelean, Skull and Serpent selects its 111cmhcrs' for their outstanding mn- lributions and leadership in the field 01' extra- curricular activilics. Despite the fact that the society was organilcd several years after its mmpaninn, Mystitzll Seven. it was loundcd solely :15 an honorary sorictlx; therefore, it justly claims the distimlitm 01' being the old- est one now in cxislcm'c 2n chlqan. Founded in 1865 under the guidance ol tht late President Stephen H. Olin. Skull and Serpent met secretly in various plates at the mllcgc and in Middlomwn until its prescnl Left 10 right: Wanner. Geary. H. Forbes. Buschmann. Paton, Werner meeting place was erected in 1914. As the result 0f 21 current drive for funds. the interior nl' this brownstone building has been recently I'clurnishcd 21nd redecorated. Meetings are held at regular intervals and are of :1 secret nature. New members are lapped from the junior vlass every spring. Onasimmlly members of the two honor societies unn'cnc together for the purpose of tlisnlssing college policy. Pl'cacm membership indudcs: Bill Brooks. Ucmgc Buschmum-I, Jim Eaton, Harry Forbes. jzu'k Gcary. Jzuk Paton. Frank XVcnner. and Bill Xchcr. B 0 0K Ill ACTIVITIES The Senate entertains suggestions of fellow students President Brown directs a meeting 54 Front row: Apicella. Malamud, Macksey, R. Brown. Fields, Anderson, Look. Second: Tiebout, Upham, Wahl, Goodale, Nagle, Osgood, Scott. Seibert. Back: Hippler, R. Stevens, Fraser. Richardson, J. Phillips. Stone, Cook, SENATE Under the able leadership of Randy Brown, jack Mackscy, and Terry Fields, president, vice- prcsident, and secretary-trcasurer respectively, the Senate attacked the problems of the college hotly with an enthusiasm almost without paral- lel. XVorking with a new constitution, written by Bob Price, a great amount of beneficial legisla- tion was passed. Through the etiorts of Sandy Porter and his Rushing Committee the Senate met fall rushing, its first problem, with complete success. Dutch Meyer introduced the idea of intrafraternity football on campus and student response was very favorable. Chip Stone and his senate ap- pointed Honor System Committee did much work to clarify the position of the system on campus and to spread the meaning of the XVesleyan Honor System throughout New Eng- land. Houscpartics; nominations for scholar- ship recipients; plans for improvement of stu- dent body-athletic department relationships; the College Body elections handled by George Buschmann, Chairman of the Elections Com- mittee; and other rttatters of Vital interest to all undergraduates were handled with confidence and authority. The honorary society for the entertainment of visiting athletic squads and sub freshmen through undergraduate supervision, The Car- dinal Key. was especially active this year dur- ing the formal Sub Freshmen XVeek End, the Olin XVeek End. and the visit of Deerheltl Academy Students. Members, representatives from the junior delegations of the twelte fra- ternities and the john XVes Club. are selected CARDINAL KEY early in the fall to serve the entire year. Among the members this year were: Frank johnson, Philip Fox, XValt Mannini, Howie Marston, Len Hippler, Aloe Shakespeare, Bill Whlbbenhorst. Ed Grant. Ed Carter, Bill Nel- son, Charlie Jones. Neil Whiting, and Bruce Keers. johnson and Fox were president and secrete:ry-treusurer respectixely. Front row: Mannini, Fox, Shakespeare, Grant, W. Nelson. Back: Hippler. Keers, F. Johnson, Wubbenhorst, Marston, E. Carter Front row: D. Taylor, Welsh, Berlew, Vujs. Second: D. Ford, R. Jones, Shaw, Velleu, Demmer, Gaviglio, D. Jones. Back: J. Phillips, R. S. Wilson, W. Stewart, Studwell, Benson, Spencer, Keller TNE Theta Nu Epsilon, under the direction of retiring president Bill Firstenberger, selected 27 new members from the sophomore class during the December initiation. Supporting its new oEicers-Dick Velleu, president; Gene Demmer, vice-president; Biff Shaw, secretary- treasurer-TNE has performed its duties, once again, quietly and efficiently. Charlie Shorter Neil Keller Dan Taylor Dave Welsh Dave Jones Ralph Jones Al Benson Jim Studwell Bill Stewart Chap Spencer Gene Demmer Biff Shaw Joe Vujs Dick Velleu Tom Daniels 56 Each year the men of the sophomore class whose athletic records and general character are of high merit are tapped for membership. The main function of this organization is to see that the training rules as required by the various coaches are observed. This year the TNE cup, annually awarded to the best all- round freshman-athlete, went to Neil Keller. Charlie Schultz Don Ford Bob Gardner Dick Wilson Jim Phillips Henry Gaviglio Larry Scanlon Ted Bartolotta King Berlew Barney Kathan WES The collcgc radio station, lVES, looks back on 1948-49 as the first posl-war year of normalcy. Under the capable leadership of Messrs. Dick Lazarus. Dave linglc, Bob Solvin, and Bob Bil: Hey the rejm'enated organization hmctioned smoothly. A College Body grant and lull status as :1 Publication Board member, plus a strong, advertising revenue gave campus listeners six hours a day 01' recorded music. live shows- .IllJel'S, drama. and special cvcnts-and the best sports awemge in the history 0f the station. All away football games. home basketball games, and home baseball games were bmzuhast. thanks to the acquisition ol' lung-dislancc broadcasting equipment. Alter lcn lull yczus ul operation its members still cmphusilc inipl'm'cmcnl in all liclds, The incmning hoard of Messrs. Bull l'iinth, Jim lVylic, Ed Carter. Charlie Selig. and Bruce Andrews plan in the near luturc to string coaxial table to all houses uml dorms which, with a change in frequency. will guarantee optimum signal iucplirm l'nr lel parts til the campus cmnmuniu. Looking through the control room to the studio Chief Announcer Engel winds up uJive at Five show WES sports staff in actionhWilliams-Wesleyan basketball game Pete Mansfield offering free movie tickets on nComedy of Errors show Station members in a.formal pose during a staff meeting Comic disc jockey Bill Siebert Suds his own humor maddening XVesleyan has a long history as a debating college. and the Intercollegiate Champion- ship teams 01' 1927-28 and 1930-31 are out- standing examples of VVesleyan's forensic prowess in the past. Like most Wesleyan ac- tivities, the Debate Club has been more active this year than at any time since the war. Besides a very heavy debating schedule, the Debate Club conducted the annual Intra- mural Debate Tournament and established a Student Speakers Bureau. Student interest in debating has increased considerably and the club membership has shown a rapid growth. More than thirty men actively participated in the club's activities. XVesleyan met nearly forty colleges in over eighty debates with vert DEBATING CLUB Front row: Zachos, Zocco, Fricke, Turner, Webb, Ellis, Ward, Malamud. Back row: Mr. Savereid, Montell, Buck- ingham, Morris, Holzman, Buckley, Weiss, Beitzell, Schaab, Gilman, RoboH, Macy, Mr. Crawford first semester, XVcsleyan won sixtyvtwn per cent and was steadily raising that average at the start of the second semester. VVCsleyan engaged in a number of tournaments, which included the Boston University and Brooklyn College Tournaments, and was again host to the New England Regional Tournament. The high point of the freshman season was the Dartmouth Freshman Tournament in the spring. The Student Speakers Bureau is a new addi- tion to the debate schedules this year, and presented a large number of debates and pro- grams before Connecticut high schools and civic groups. The Speakers Bureau also presented a series of programs m'er radio station VVMMXV in Meriden. satisfactory results. 01' the debates in tht Club member George White delivers a speech before large audience at Middle town High DELTA SIGMA RHO Delta Sigma Rho is a national honorary debating society with chapters in seventy-three colleges. The purpose of Delta Sigma Rho is to encourage sincere and effective public speaking, and to stimulate inter- est in speech activities. Its membership is limited to upperclassmen who have been active in intercollegiate debating. Delta Sigma Rho has had a long and illustrious history at XVesleyan. The membership rolls of the XVesleyan chapter include such names as Wilbert Snow and Arthur Vanderbilt. The XVesleyan chapter elected foui students, three juniors and a senior, to membership in 1948. The members of Delta Sigma Rho helped in the work of the Debate Council and served as judges in the early rounds of this year's Intramural Debate Tournament. 58 DEBATING COUNCIL Front row: Mr. Reynolds, Professor Snow, Ward. Back: Mr. Crawford, Turner, Buck- ley, Mr. Savereid, Weiss, Webb The Debate Council, sparked by the advice and aid of Professors Crawford, Snow, Rey- nolds, and Savareid, made great strides in promoting an ambitious debating program. At the beginning of the year, it was hoped by the Council that special attention might be given intercollegiate debates before high school audiences and civic groups. Their am- bitions were realized beyond their hopes and they are already planning greater things for next year. Under the auspices 0f the Debate Council, two tournaments were held at Wesleyan, the North-Eastern Regional Tournament and a tournament for Connecticut high schools. The annual debate banquet was a great SULTCSS, and the social activities of the Debate Club saw considerable expansion under the present Council. Their ambition and work has shown the way tn the future success of debating at XVesleyan. Professor Wilbert Snow being introduced by son Nick at Club Banquet Left to right: Prof. Connelly, R. Brown, Birney, A. Ford, Lazarus, and Paton in an informal discussion PUBLICATIONS BOARD The Publications Board was formed in 1.916 and consists of the editors and business man- agers 0f the Argus; Cunlimll, and 0110 Purlrirlu; the manager and business manager 01' H'ES; the president and secretary-treasurer of the College Body: the faculty committee on student publications; and the alumni secretary and two alumni. The board does not haVe any financial re- sponsibility for the various organizations. but it has several important functions in connec- tion with these publications. It supervises the linant'es 01. the various publications and their activities in general. A part of each student's tuition is allotted to the board, which in turn distributes it to the various publications. The Pub Board also selects the editors and business managers of the pub- lications the rectmnnentlations 01. the retiring stalf members. It audits the accounts and may discharge any staff member found with 60 to he incompetent. A few years ago a sinking fund was estab. lished into which not more than ten per cent of the profits of each business board, if any, must go. From this fund, money is given to the various publications I'm the purchase of new office equipment. The members of this year's board were: Dn'nt' Fraser and Mark Holzman, representing the xIIgIH: Did; Lazarus and Bob Birney rep- resenting XVES; Cricketts Powell and Andy Ford for the 01111 Pml; Dale Sutton and John Paton for the Cardinal: Randy Brown and Terry Fields for the College Body. The faculty members were Messrs. Curts, Henney, Burford, and Limbach, Mr. Connelly and Mr. Andrews. The officers were Professor Curts, president; Terry Fields, viee-president; and Professor Btn'l'ortl. hnztnt'ial secretary. DLLA PODRIDA Kennedy Powell, A. Ford. Huang, Eldred. Second: Welsh, Skelley, P. Stone, Williams, Herbert. Third: Thompson, McCallum, Car- gill, Miner, Brummel, Dilts OLLA Ponkum STAFF Editor .............................. Mulrew E. Ford Assoriale Editor ...................... John Williams Photography Edilm' .................. William Huang Sports Editor ............................ Al Amenta Assistant Edilms ............ A l Brummel, Bob Herbert Photography Stuff. . . .Fred D. Leetc, III, John Feldman, Bob Reymond, Toby 'I hmnps0n, Al Newman Contributors ............ Richard Scher, Tim Cooney, Joe Skelley, Matt Clark, Jim Kennedy, John Pallein, Bill Siebert, jack Ekh'ed. Al Lynn, Dave Welsh, Dave Mile, Dick Barth, Al Cooper, John Ginn, Irving Lee, Bob Harris, George White, Bob Nicko- loff, Dave Batdorf. Hayward Upham, Larry Stevens. Bob McCallum, Walt Mannini, Jim Turner, Jud Miner, Bob Willem Business Manager ................ 1 . Richards Powell A dwertising Manager .................... Louis Cargill Business 8'1qu ............. Robert Dilts, David Welsh, Percy Stone. Toby '1 110111ps0n. Matt Clark, Paul Sutro, john Henll, Jack Eldred Editor Ford and Business Manager Powell iron out the di$culties Segments of the staH hard at work ARGUS Under the editorship of Dunc Fraser the :Irgux continued its policy of reporting eam- pus news as thomughly and objectively as possible during the year from February 1948 to February 1949. The paper was issued twice a week. An attempt was made to reach a satisfactory balance of news. sports. and features, but the problems presented by the inelasticity 01' column inches constantly forced a cutting of feature material. lifht'ient'y was increased. and Editor in Chief Duncan Fraser a better paper produced, by dividing the staff intn two tmnpunents, one which did only desk wmk and the other which concentrated on the reportingr end. Editorial writing was shared by the mem- bers 01' the senior editorial board. Their pur- pose, as the editor put it in his lirst editorial, was to 11articulate campus opinion to the best 01' our ability, to interpret it properly, and where needed. to suggest action, This they did. t'lariiying such problems as the com- pulsory chapel issue, discussing minorities. criticizing detrimental action by students and :ulministration, and praising advances made at Wesleyan. A highlight of the year was the Intercol- legiate Press conference at which the Argus was host in February 1948. Over ninety dele- gates from twenty-five colleges were present at the conference which lasted two days. Round table discussions and forums were held to examine the many problems that arise from the making 01' a college paper. XVorking with Fraser were Ned Cosgrove, managing editor; Hank Erlanger, news editor; and Bill Gigcr, sports editor, while Mark Holzman and john Evans headed the business staff. In the fall, both Giger and Erlanger resigned because of pressure of studies and were succeeded by Al Amenta and Mike Churehman respectively. Churehman was selected in February, 1949, as editor for the ensuing year. Also chosen were jack Dolph as managihg editor, Bill Malamutl as news editor, and Cob Jenkins for the sports etlitor position. A Front row: Dyke, Paton, M. Brown, Birney. Back: Mize, Hall, Reich, H. D Smith, Judd, Carrott, Ogilvie, Angress, Reichard, D. K. Richards The Cardinal, first published in 1925, is the campus literary magazine. It is published by the student body with College Body treasury funds, and all contributions found in the magazine are products of the XVesleyan community. Its aim is to present to the student body the best in critical and creative writing that can be found in the XVesleyan Community. At the same time it strives for the widest pos- sible diversification in subject matter. The quality of the magazine is determined. in the end result, by the contributions of the stu- dents themselves. More than ever before. student art work, such as wood cuts, wood engravings, paint- ings, lithography, etchings and photography appeared as a regular feature of the magazine. Despite the slightly increased cost of such 21 policy, the response of the students was so favorable, the appearance of the magazine s0 improved, that it is probable the work of the art laboratory will continue to be a regular feature of future issues. Jack Paton was editor for the year of 1948, Moe Brown the managing editor, and Norm Ives the art editor. In January of 1949 Paton turned the editorship over to Pete Dyke. Bob Birney became managing editor. and Norm Ives remained as art editor. Tap: Newly elected Editor Dyke receives pointers from the retiring Paton. Middle: Angress, Dyke, and Brown discuss magazine policy. Bottom: Carefully surveying potential Cardinal copy MUSIC THE 1IIBERS 'I'hc Jihcl'h. Wcslcyan's traditional and Iimcrpmx'cn male quartet, umlplclcd 2111011161 glmypzu'kcd season during 19118 and 19-19. Singingl as guests at mam C011ch as well as non-mmpus smiul 1tmcliuns, the 111mm wcrc VCllx popular with th'il' rcmliliom 01112111111131 quzutcl piucx. Members this war. 115 seen opposite. wcl'c: Richard C Raincs '50. Ted XV. Hmnbcrgcr '-1SL Ralph XV. limcrsrm '50. Donald S. Smith :30. THE CARDINALS Accompanying the Glee Club on its CM'ur- arc Cardinals Stewart. 190x. Kauhnann. sions but handling songs more appropriate Hoover. Rcdficld. Carney Burdick, Reardon 10 smaller vocal groups were 1116 1Vesleyan and Roberts. Missing 110111 the photo arc Cardinals. Pictured around director Vinnie John Iicrwcrda and .100 chll. Allison at the piano during a prauicc session BAND Behind the inspiring leadership of director XVillie VVeI'neI; the XVesleyan Band Completed u very fmc musical year. About forty-six men participated in the organization which added much spirit to the various athletit events. During the second semester Fred Prentice took over as director and conducted several con- certs. Dax'c Knapp and Bob Crosby were managers. THE GLEE CLUB The XVcsleyun Glee Club. some sixly-l'our undergrzuluatcs strong, was led through a highly enjoyable season by music instructor Vinnie B. Allison. Several concerts were given in surrounding Connecticut cities induding Hartford and Essex, as well as appearances in Boston and VVosmn, Massachusetts. Per haps most enjoyable were the joint musicals with Smith, Pembroke and Mt. Holyoke held at various times during the year. A highlight of the season was a radio broadcast over station XVTIC. Hartford. emanating from the '92 hl'heatcr. Ruth Jennings, Theodore Con- nelly, and Doug Kit: in a scene from Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer Cuts from WAntigone by G. B. Shaw Once again the '92 Theater aiforded ample opportunity for XVesleyan students to display their theatrical abilities. The season opened with the presentation of three one act plays, each of which was directed by a student. I. M. Barriehs The Twelve Pound Look was directed by Jack Reichard; Cliff Stanton did Edna St. Vincent Millay's Aria Dn Capo, and Gil Al- brecht directed The Prologue to Key Largo by Maxwell Anderson. These plays were followed by Shaw's Candida, which gave the VVesleyant community its lirst taste of central staging. Robert Ludlum and Bill Young turned in sterling performances as Eugene Marchbanks and the Reverend james Mavor Morell respectively, and Sue Thumas' rendition of the title role was indeed admirable. These three were well supported by Beverly Mlhite as Miss Prosperpine Garnetl, Gil Albrecht as the Reverend Mill, and Jack Reichard as Mr. Burgess. Following the production of Candida three more one act plays were presented, Pirandello's The Alan With the Flower in His MOutlI, di- rected by Miss White, Paul Green's Hymn to the Rising Sun, directed by Ralph Pendleton, and Frank Nixon's Liebeslmum, directed by the undergraduate author, Forsaking the contemporary, the '92 'Theater next produced Marlowe's Dortm Faustm', a fascinating medieval drama with a cast of nearly fifty people. The season concluded with the production 01' T. S. Eliot's poetic drama Murder in the Cathedral. This play, as weil as Doctor Faustus, was directed by Ralph Pendleton and worked on extensively by the members oli his Theater 3-4 group. Director Ralph Pendleton confers with Bob Tharp Cuts from iiAntigone by G. B. Shaw STANDING CHURCH COUNCIL The Church of Christ in Wesleyan Uni versity is. according to its statement of pur pose. a hfellowship of students and member of the faculty for the purpose of commo y worship and mutual encouragement in seek ing to discover and follow the Christian way of life. Any member of the Wesleyan com- munity may become a member of the College Church by subscribing to this statement. Policies are decided by the members of the Standing Committee of the College Church. who may recommend changes in the hour on nature of the service and who carefull select the speakers for the coming year. An vacancies in the planned schedule of speaker. are filled by the college pastors and other members of the faculty. This committee is made up of both faculty and students, the latter halvingr been elected by the members of the church. Seated: D. Armstrong, Cargill, F. Johnson, Young, Stemmler, Widdoes. Standing: Dr. Butterfield, Prof. Kruse, Rev. Spurrier, Prof. Daltry, Rev. Dart CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION The Wesleyan Christian Association is intended to promote social and religious fel- lowship among the students by offering Christian principles as the means to a fuller life. The work of the Christian Association is handled by various committees under the general direction of the Executive Cabinet. The Conference Committee holds forums on significant topics of the day. The chairman is Bill Sehaab. The Community Relations Com- mittee under Sandy Inglis promotes relations with the community. It arranged for over 75 local children to have Christmas and Thanksgiving dinners in the fraternity houses. The Social Action Committee under Dave TVebb arranges visits to various institutions in this area. The Deputation Committee led by Gene TTSanta Claus Herb Weiss proves quite a hit with young Middletown guests Seated: Batdorf, Rev. Spurrier, Engel. Standing: Webb, Register, Schaab, Inglis, Hammett. Young, Raines, Wahl Register conducts religious services in churches about town. The Orientation Com- mittee tries to integrate foreign students to campus life; Bill Wahl is chairman. The Em- bassy Committee under Don Armstrong holds panel t1istttiSsions once a semester with prominent speakers The Conference Come mittee; Clyde Fisher, chairman, announces conferences with other New England CA's. The officers of the CA were: Fran Macy and Dave Engel, co-presidents; jack Cowan, vice- president; Dave Batdorf, secretary; and Cric- ketts Powell, treasurer. Mr. Spurrier was the faculty zulvisor. In addition to the officers and the chairmen and the several committees, the other members of the executive cabinet were Dick Raines, Barney Kathan, and Larry Stevens. the publicity Chairman. Front row: G. Whyte, Kellom, Protos, J. Wylie, Rowe, P. Carter, R. Porter. Second: Jakobson, W. Rausch, Sloat, Ackerly, J. Armstrong, Moore, Heck, Osgood. Back: W. Fisher, Treadwell, Beebe, Stearns, Burke, The TVesleyan Outing Club once again completed a very successful season. En- thusiasm in this activity has greatly increased since the war until the organization this year boasted seventy members. The boys were specialists in hiking, skiing, and canoeing. As members of the Eastern IOCA the club often participated in large joint outings with neigh- boring institutions including Connecticut College, Mt. Holyoke, and Smith. Frequently The club,s popular cabin in Vermont under snow D. Sanders, Staples, Sherwood, Cclton, Loomis, Cole, Prof. Goodrich, Kathan, Robbins, Teulings, Bagg, Ross, Nagle OUTING CLUB the members went on trips in smaller groups, visiting beautiful Mount Equinor at Man- chester, Vermont, where is situated the club cabin. The very stimulating president of the club was Jack Armstrong; vice-president, Bill Ac- kerly; treasurer, Ralph Sloat; and secretary, Ken VViding. Fraiser Keith, Ed Moore, AI Ryan, and the faculty advisor, Dr. Hubert Goodrich, composed the executive board. The IRC entertains guest speaker Vera Dean in an informal discussion at the Alpha Chi Rho House IRC The tense international situations have aroused student interest in global politics, and the International Relations Club provides a mnrenient medium for discussion of all phases of the picture. Professors from XVes- leyan and from other colleges occasionally spoke to the club or participated in its dis- cussions. Members of the club made frequent POLITICAL UNION Early in I947 21 number 01' turtlergratluzttes felt the neetl 01' a student organization for student participation in national and inter- national politics. The lVesleyan Political Union was established to fill this need for spontaneous and extra-curricular interest in the field all government and politics; it was a means for expression along lines undirected by faculty and classroom opinion. The founders and backers had feared an attack from the more conservative minded students, but on the other hand found that the chief tlifhculty was the apathy and in- difference toward political problems. The early meetings and programs of the club were designed to provide topics of such vital inter- est that the community would be politically alert. That end has been realized. The foundation laid by the XVPU channeled the great excitement over the presidential clet'tions to political organization, and groups were founded representing almost all points of view. Among these groups are the Wes- leyan Young Democrats, the Wesleyan Young Republicans. and the Wallace for President visits to the UN Assembly while it was in this country but now their participation must be purely vicarious. I.RC is supported in its attempt to arouse interest in world problems by grants from the College Body and the Carnegie Foundation. Dave XVehh was President 01' the IRC. group. Such widespread participation en- couraged the Political Union and gave it faith in its own progress. Tim Cooney was elected President of the XVPU Prexy Dick Frost conducts an informal meeting at the Eclectic House i y Sitting: Savilie, Reichard, Albrecht, Carson, Russo. Standing: D. K. Richards, Stanton, Conneliy, Carrott, R. Pratt, Cooper, Guildford, Galbreath PAINT AND POWDER CLUB The Paint and Powder Club, inactive since before the war, was reorganized with mem- bership open to seniors and second semester juniors who have been active participants in the '92 Theateris productions. The club has been busy establishing mntact with alumni P The Pre-Ministerial Club meets every Thursday evening at the home of its advisor, Mr. Spurrier. The group is not only open to undergraduates planning to enter the ministry. but to all students who wish to learn more about the Christian faith. The club is primarily a discussion group in which mem- and with the dramatic clubs of nearby c01- leges, in addition to assisting Mr. Pendleton at try-outs, and sponsoring a revue of their own in the spring. The officers are Gil Albrecht. president: Jim Carson, secretary; and jack Reichard. treasurer. RE MINISTERIAL CLUB hers can exchange ideas on such religious topics as the nature of prayer or the accu- menical movement. The club members have held informal meeting with several of the visiting ministers after Sunday evening chapel servxces. Sitting: Rev. Spurrier, D. Smith, Wissemann. Standing: D. Armstrong, Buss, Violante, Sontag, Moore, Hammett, Ferwerda, Sloat. Eastman Kneeling: Jacobson, Schweig, Prof. Schulz, Feldman, J. Brown, A. Stewart. Standing: Bagley, Hoover, Prof. Gemeinhardt, Levinskas, Prof. Curts, Prof. Blankenagel, Phillips, Buss, Huang La Tertullia La Tertullia, revitalized last year, held reg- ular meetings for the purpose of stimulating student interest in Spanish and Latin-American culture and increasing student's ability in con. versational Spanish. Professor Roura spoke to the club, for example, on the topic, With UNESCO in Venezuela. Harry Ardolino was the president of the club, and Professors Roma and Arnold were its faculty advisors. Deutsche Verein Known as the Deutsche Verein, the German Club is the oldest organization of its kind on campus. Faculty and student members spoke to the club and led the discussions of its monthly meetings in the basement of Winchester House. No English was spoken at the club's meetings, in keeping with its purpose of cultivating an interest among the College's students of Gennan and the culture and customs of the people of Germany. Allen Stewart was the president of the club, and its faculty members included Professors Blankenagel, Curts and Gemeinhardt. Sitting: Prof. Roura, Mrs. Routa, Ardolino. Standing: Lazarus. Mannini, Smith, Loomis, Cassella, Tharp, Muzzey Cheerleaders Members of the cheerleading staff take time out to pose for the camera. Kneeling are Alle- man, Fekety, and Dilts; standing Withey. Morn- ingstar, and Gelfand. Rog Taylor and Dick Knight missed the picture. Tom Morningstar served as captain of the group. Raymond Dodge Club The Raymond Dodge Club was established to provide an opportunity for discussing problems of psychological interest. Although only psy- chology majors are eligible for membership, the monthly meetings in Judd Hall are open to anyone interested in the subject. The field of discussion is varied, ranging from frontal lobo- tomy techniques to alcoholism. This year, under the presidency of Don McGown, visiting speak. ers were procured including Mr. David McAlles- ter of psychology department, Dr. Simon 0f the Connecticut State Hospital, and Mr. Matclaf 0f Berger Brothers. Front row: Erbacher, Griffiths, Prof. Burford, Milewski, Deininger, Lindsay, G. Forbes, Ramette, Nielsen. Second row: Dr. Sease, Dr. Gortner, Drobinski, Butler, Satkiewicz, Miner, Levinkas, Witt, Dr. Gomez-Ibanez, Leibbrand,Mat- suyama. Front row: Stearns, Moir, Preston, Vernon, Gordon. Back: Whittaker, Woodcock, Prof. Duckworth, Prof. VanDyke, Brown, Humphrey, Prof. Eaton This year the Pre-Med Club had probably the finest organization in its career. O'ver hfty mem- bers actively participated in the many club func- tions. Several fine speakers were guests at the meetings, after which informal discussions were held. The Pre-Med Club worked in close asso- ciation with both the Raymond Dodge and At- 73 Kneeling: Crosby, Werner, Hohmeister, McGownY Angell, Hayes, Hemberger. Standing: Coyne, Fields, Horwath, Schweig, Wheeler, Ferriss, Dean, Menin, Grant, Feldman Atwaler Club The Atwater Club, one of the largest and most advanced clubs on the campus, consists of faculty members, graduate students, and ad- vanced undergraduates interested in chemistry. Meetings feature lectures and occasional movies. Speakers at this year's monthly meetings in- cluded Mr. Matsuyama of the chemistry depart- ment, who spoke on polarography; Mr. Barrett Taft of Pratt and Whitney Corporation, who spoke on metallurgical chemistry in the aircraft industry; and Dr. Lowell Milligan of the Norton Company. This year's officers were Nicholas Deininger, president; Donald Lindsay, vice- president; and Stanley Milewski, secretary- treasurer. Rosa Club The Rosa Club, which provides extra-cur- ricular opportunities in advanced physics fields, has a membership composed of graduate stu- dents and physics majors in their junior and senior years. Monthly meetings are held, at which papers are read on various topics. These meetings afford the students and faculty the opportunity to consider many unusual, special- ized problems not within the general scope of classroom topics. The club was headed this year by Dick Preston, secretary jim Moir, and faculty advisor Professor V. E. Eaton. Pre Medical Club water Clubs. Quite a few joint meetings among the three were held with topics of interest for all the groups under discussion. Officers were: Warren Cagney, president; Bob DeVaul, secretary; Bill Cotter, treasurer; and Dr. Hubert Goodrich, faculty advisor. B 0 0 K I V ATHLETICSX FOOTBALL ,. Wanner and Geary lead the squad on field for a practice session Wesleyan's amazing football team extended the length of its reign to three years in 1948 by trebling what it had done in 1946 and V17. The undefeated and untied '48 eleven garnered eight victories, making the complete un- blemished skein twenty-three consecutive wins. Tutored by the coaching trio of Norm Daniels, Johnny Wood and Frank Maze, the same staff which guided the two previous undefeated teams, the Cardinals gained additional glory during their campaign. The '48 team was unique in that it did not rely on power but re- sourcefulness, quick thinking, heads-up football playing and impeccable quarterbacking. More than once the Redbirds were forced to outsmart opponents when power, alone, failed. An infiux of sixteen lettermen and twelve sophomores offset the loss of twelve letter win- ners who were graduated. Moreover, the arrival of five men who had not had any previous Wesleyan football experience helped Daniels to mold another superb team. Although Daniels and his statf encountered all the vicissitudes of pre-season practice, it became apparent after a few games that the Cards were on their way to another successful, if not undefeated, season. ,6??ij Co-captain Jack Geary WESLEYAN 13, BOWDOIN 0 Notwithstanding that Bowdoin had entered the contest the favorite team-by dint of its vic- tory over Tufts the week before-Wesleyan out- classed the Polar Bears in almost every depart- ment. Early in the game Wesleyan's line proved vulnerable, but the defects were cemented as the battle progressed. Both Cardinal touch- downs were made on paSSes: A Harry Forbes-to- Dan Robertson aerial in the hrst quarter, and 3 Charlie Medd-toeDon joffray toss in the third period. The initial score was consummated the second time the Ball came into Wesleyan possession. Frank VVenner returned a punt to the Bowdoin 36-yard line, Forbes penetrated for seven yards, and on the ensuing play, Medd Hipped a lateral pass to Forbes, who, behind excellent blocking, angled a pass to end Robertson on the 10, from where he scampered into the end zone. Geary's place kick for the point was wide. The visitors failed to extricate themselves from the confines of their own territory in the second quarter, due in no small measure to Forbes's superb punting. Again in the third period the Bears, repulsed by Wesleyan's adamant line, failed to cross the mid-held stripe. Co-captain Frank Wenner Late in this period the Cards started a march from the Bowdoin 48, and after reaching the four, Medd deceived the Bears by passing to Joffray for a touchdown. Bill Nelson's dropkick for the point was successful. In desperation the Bears filled the autumn air with passes in the final quarter, but an interception by Forbes in the waning minutes was the coup de grace Wesleyarfs 1948 Coaching Surf Left to right: Frank Maze, Head Coach Norm Daniels, John Wood, Dan Weitekamp VVESLEYAN 20, COAST GUARD 7 At New London a week later, a stubborn, aerial-minded Coast Guard eleven almost dis- pelled thoughts of another unsullied season. The Cadets performed three notable feats: They punctured the Wes backfield with 28 passes, 12 of which were successful; they dampened hopes of an unscored-upon Wes team by registering a touchdown; and they held the Cards scoreless in the first half, something which no team had been able to do since Williams prevented the Cards from scoring for 56 minutes in 1946. The most outstanding play was authored by Cadet Charlie Kenny, who catapulted the ball 75 yards in the air, a punt, the total gain of which was well over 80 yards. Yet in this game the VVesmen showed a quality which endured throughout the season. They just would not become discouraged, and their unHagging, relentless spirit in the second half resulted in three touchdowns. Early in the third period XVesleyan transformed a Cadet fumble at midfield into a score. In four plays Forbes crossed the goal line. Geary's place kick for the point was good. In the last quarter Dick Velleu, speedy Car- dinal back, raced to the one-yard line from the Cadet 45, and fullback Johnny Kapica plunged over for the score. Geary's placement was blocked. A few minutes later halfback Lenny Schumann intercepted a Cadet pass on the Wes 25. and two plays later, the same Schumann broke loose for 68 yards and a touchdown. Geary's place kick was true. Harry Smith, Cadet passer, took advantage of VVesleyanE weak pass defense with hve minutes remaining and brought his team down to the Wes 10. A Statue-of-Liberty play, during which Smith handed the ball to Sid Vaughn, was good for nine yards, and Vaughn hit pay dirt for the only Cadet score on the following play. Forbes, Ted Bartolotta, and Gil Bowles close in on Bowdoin ball carrier Harry Forbes with the assistance of Adair Robinson tries to elude Amherst tacklers Dick Velleu 60 takes hand-off as Cardinal play opens up against Coast Guard Halfback Jim Studwell sidesteps Bowdoin tackle: behind key block of Neil Keller VVESLEYAN 41, SWARTHMORE 20 Daniels and company journeyed to Philadel- phia to collide with a most amazing Swarthmore team. The score belied the versatility of the Garnets, who were conspicuously superior in passing and collecting first downs. While attempting to punt in the opening quarter, the Gamets messed up the play, lost control of the ball, and Pete Wichowski re- covered on the Swarthmore 20. After two yard- gaining plays, Wenner scored from the 12, and Geary converted. Fumbling was contagious, and Swarthmore recovered a Card fumble on the Wes 20 in the second period. Passing star Rex Gary pitched to Dick Esrey for a touchdown and kicked the point himself. Infiamed by their sudden success, the Gamets struck again. While Robertson juggled a Medd pass, Bob Chalmers purloined the loose oval and spurted to the Wes 37. With Gary passing Swarthmore scored quickly, a toss to Hall doing the trick. Gary kicked the point. Late in the period a vindictive Cardinal line assailed Gary on his own 40; he fumbled and Robertson re- covered the ball on the Garnet five. Forbes ripped through center to score, but Gearyis all- important place kick was blocked. The Cards made up the deficit and.went ahead before time ran out in the first half. A 70-yard touchdown drive shattered Swarthmore's lead. Forbes's touchdown was facilitated by a timely block by end Stubby Hayles. Geary's successful place kick put the Cards ahead, 20-14, at half time. Early in the third period Hayles blocked a kick, recovered the ball, and sprinted to the Swarthmore six. Medd passed to Robertson for a touchdown. In the final period the Garnets scored their last touchdown on Hall's 76-yard sprint, and XVesleyan tallied twice. .Geary inter- cepted a pass and raced 30 yards to the end zone unmolested, following which Don Burdick, Players and spectators greet Mo Demopolous after the Bowdoin game player-manager, kicked his first extra point. After center Wally Burnett intercepted a pass, sophomore backs Velleu and Jim Studwell col- laborated in bringing the ball deep into Garnet territory. Studwell finally scored, and Geary's successful place kick concluded the day's scoring. VVESLEYAN 27, AMHERST 0 The traditional and storied Little Three series added another chapter to its history in '48. Entering the Amherst game as titleholders, the Cards quickly made it known that they again were the principal threat to the championship. Playing before an Alumni Week End crowd of 6500, Wesleyan out-rushed, out-kicked and out- passed the Lord Jeffs. Although culpable of six penalties and three fumbles, the Cards, for the first time during the campaign, finally got their running attack to function consistently. The Wes forward wall was practically impregnable as evidenced by the fact that only two Jeff first :lowns were made on running plays. A blocked kicked by joffray in the first period set up Wesleyan's initia'l score. Six plays later, Forbes faded back from the Jeff 35 and tossed diagonally to Robertson on the goal line for the score. Geary's try for the point was wide of the uprights. Wesleyan's next score came in the second period. Beginning from the Amherst 47, the Cards pushed deeper into Jeff territory on four plays. Then Forbes reared back to pass as Robinson drifted wide around right end and sauntered into the Amherst backfield. Forbes rifled a pass, Robinson suddenly cut in sharply near the goal line, snatched the ball and raced into the end zone. Geary missed the extra point. In the last quarter Forbes climaxed a 35-yard march by scoring from the four, and Geary con- verted. A little later, Joffray recovered a Jeff fumble 0n the Amherst 29 and scored himself on an eight-yard pass from Medd. Geary's place- ment was successful. Amherst's triple-threat back, Lew Hammtmd, around whom the Iefi offense was built, performed outstandingly, but his yeoman work went unrewarded. Blockers Forbes 030, Keller e660, and Bowles e60 clear way for Wenner against Amherst WESLEYAN 28, WILLIAMS 7 Another Little Three contest; another Alumni home-coming crowd, this time 7000 at We'ston Field in Williamstown, and the Ephmen of Wil- liams were assigned the task of stopping the redoubtable Redbirds. The Epnmen managed to contain the Cards in the first quarter, but early in the second, Forbes intercepted one of Stu DuHield's passes on the Wes 40, streaked toward the Williams goal line, and when confronted by tacklers, Iateralled to Robinson who was stopped on the Eph 17. Williams held, took over the ball, and when forced to punt, Cardinal tackle Jim Pyne blocked the kick on the Eph seven. Forbes scored through center, and Burdick kicked the point. In the second half, a long drive from VVes- leyan's 48 culminated in a Medd-to-Wenner touchdown pass. Burdick's place kick was good. The rest of the Cardinal scoring was left to the diminutive Velleu who grabbed one of Medd's passes for one touchdown and intercepted one of Dufheld's passes and evaded Eph tacklers for the other. The reliable Burdick kicked both extra points. Daniels employed his reserves dur- ing the final minutes, but the Ephmen were able to score before the game ended. VVESLEYAN 53, NEW ENGLAND COLLEGE 0 The game with New England College of Hen- niker, New Hampshire, a recent addition to intercollegiate competition, was somewhat of a breather. In retrospect this term is appropriate, but prior to the game, Daniels and his squad neither conceded New England's weakness nor succumbed to unfavorable newspaper reports about the Henniker eleven. Although New Eng- land had lost four games, all of them by as tmnomical scores, the Cardinals doggedly pre- pared for the game. But when Saturday arrived it was all too clear that the visitors were too impotent against the smoother Cardinal team. New England fielded eleven men, but that was their only claim to equality. The Cards turned into a powerhouse against the hapless invaders and amassed 420 yards rushing. Six VVesmen scored touchdowns: Studwell hit pay dirt three times, and Robinson, Velleu, Hayles, Willie Firstenberger and Dick Lucas all crossed the goal line once. Burdick's versatile toe accounted for five extra points. Co-captain Wenner breaks loose for touchdown run against New England College Front row: Trainer Witkowski, Head Coach Daniels, Wichowski, Kapica, Geary, Wenner, W. Brooks, J. Robinson, Firstenberger, Coaches Wood and Maze; Second row: Joffray, Schumann, Beliobuono, D. Ford, Bowles, Spencer, Holmes, Keller, Bateman, Pyne, Binswanger, H. Forbes; Third row: Burnett, Benson, Bartolotta, Eustis, D. Armstrong, McGrath, Studwell, WESLEYAN 16, TRINITY 0 A day before the clash with Trinity, the Argus expressed the general feeling succinctly. Emblazonetl on page one was the three-word headline. This Is ll. Perhaps party week end had something to do with student fervor, but the Trinity battle was the pier? r1? resistunrr' on the weekend menu. The affair began with Trinity winning the toss. The Cards, with Wenner, Robinson and liorbes lugging the ball ate up 75 yards before they were stopped on the Trinity five early in the second period. Trinityls goal-line stand was the first of several performed by both teams. Very late in this period Wesleyan scored after moving from the Wes 17 to the Trinity 17. With time for only one or two plays, Medd called for a field goal, and Geary, standing unrufHed at a difficult angle, obliged by kicking the ball be- tween the uprights on the last play of the half. On the first Wes play from scrimmage in the second half, Forbes, starting from the Trinity All, burst through right guard, stumbled into the secondary. and when it appeared that he was snared by tacklers, regained his equilibrium and went the distance for the score. Burdick's place kick was good. A resurgent Trinity team almost scored, but spectacular defensive work by Schumann and the Wes line staved oh the visitors. Early in the final quarter as Whitey Kunkiewicz prepared to punt, Robinson, as- sisted by a couple of linemen, shot into the Trinity secondary unmolested, blocked the kick. and fell on the bouncing pigskin in the end zone. Burdick's place kick was wide. A group of Wes reserves almost scored again before fum- bling on the Trinity five. Varsity Football Squad 'mm my; $93 t s: i . a Nelson, Boyd, Lang, Crone; Fourth raw.- Shorter, Velleu, Gardner, Griswold, VanStone, Robertson, Medd, Scher, Hoch, Shakespeare, Berlew, Manager Cannel; Last row: Manager Shapiro, Burdick, Carter, R. Brown, G. Brodigan. Welsh. Wall, Kallfelz, Meyer, Lucas, Py lp, Drobinski, White WESLEYAN 26, ROCHESTER 0 The finale with Rochester came as in anti- climax after the climactic tussle with Trinity. The one-sided final score became a reality only after Rochester had harassed the Cards for most of the game. In fact the Yellowjackets collected more first downs than the Wesmen. Late in the first period the Wes machine got into high gear, and starting from their own 32, the Cards needed only five plays to score. Wenner swept around left end for 19 yards and a touchdown. Burdick kicked the extra point. Before the half closed the Cards began a march from the Rochester 45, an 18-yard pass from Medd to Forbes clicking for a touchdown. Burdick's try for the point was wide. With halfbacks Don- Beattie and Dick Eden toting the ball, Rochester moved to Wesleyanis 17 in the third quarter. At this point, however, the Yellowjackets could not dent the Wes line. For the rest of the period both teams parried, but neither scored. In the final period Rochester marched to the Wes 25, but Robinson threw a monkey wrench into Rochester's oHensive plans by intercepting a pass on the line of scrimmage and racing all the way for a touchdown. Bur- dick 'kicked his final point of the year. Robin- son's score was the final blow, and the dis- couraged home team could not stop the Wes reserves. Substitute tackle Fred Schneeberger recovered Edenls fumble on Rochester's 32, and with 13 seconds remaining, quarterback Joe Shakespeare passed to Firstenberger on the three, from where the shifty back scored. The try for the point was marred by a fumble, but the miracle had happened; Wesleyan completed its third consecutive undefeated and untied season. Varsity Soccer Squad Front row: Stevens, Young, Vujs, Demmer, J. Miller, Stimson, Gaviglio, Taylor, Jones. Second row: Coach McCurdy, Manager M. Brown, Menin, O1Brien, Sharp, G. Forbes, Salaun, J. Armstrong, Bauer, Fox, Ogilvie, Manager Arms Co-captain Hank Salaun With Co-captains Hank Salaun and George S 0 C C E R Forbes leading the way, the Wesleyan soccer team had another successful season under the competent coaching of Hugh McCurdy. The Red and Black hooters compiled a commenda- ble record of live wins and four losses against Co-captain George Forbes some of the toughest opposition in the country. The season was highlighted by the game with the University of Bridgeport in which two Wesleyan records were set: The most number of goals, 14, scored by a Wesleyan team in one game, and the most number of goals scored by an individual player in one game. All-American Hank Salaun performed the feat by drilling seven goals past the Bridgeport goalie before the final whistle sounded. 1n Little Three competition the McCurdy men bowed out as they lost a heartbreaker to a well-balanced Amherst squad. The Lord Jeffs put across the winning tally in the third period to break the 1-1 tie. However, the Cards bounced back to win the Williams game, 5-1. Aftel fifteen minutes of indecisive 82 play Williams broke through the Wesleyan defense and scored, but Salaun, with an assist from Dan Taylor, tied the score. During the third period Taylor booted in a difficult angle shot which put the game oh ice for the Mc- Curdymen. Salaun was leading scorer with 14 goals for the season and Taylor the runner-up with seven. The graduating seniors, Hank Salaun, George Forbes, Joe Bauer, and Bruce Menin, will no doubt be missed, but the prospects for next year look bright with such outstanding veterans as Jack Armstrong, Dan Taylor and Ralph Jones returning ree'nforced by fresh- man standouts, Mike Rosenbluth, Ron Daniel and Don Maurer. SEASON RECORD Wes 8 Clark 0 Wes 3 Brown 1 Wes 0 RPI 2 Wes 5 Williams 1 Wes l4 Bridgeport 0 Wes 0 UConn 3 Wes l Amherst 2 Wes 2 Trinity 1 Wes l Yale 2 83 Crickets Powell approaches ball during a scrimmage Quintet of Cardinal booters use their heads during practice Duncan, Forbes, Bauer, Powell, and OiBrien converge on a loose ball Captain Frank Venue: The Wesleyan basketball season, under the dilection of Coach Johnny Wood, was high- lighted by the copping 0f the Little Three title for the second straight year. The Car- dinal quintet, captained by guard Frank Wenner, won three of its four league tilts to retain the crown. Woodis charges emerged from a seventeen game season just short of the .500 mark, con- cluding with an eight-nine record. Little Three competition commenced with Williams. Danny Robertson who dropped in seventeen points broke a tight game wide open in the second half and raced to a 49-38 victory. The next Little Three encounter was with the Sabrinas from Amherst, the Red birds again emerging victorious 55-46. In their second 84 meeting, however, a red-hot Williams squad turned on its previous vanquishers 71 to 43. With Rabbitt Wilson and Wenner leading the way, Wesleyan clinched the title by sweeping the second game with Amherst, a 43 to 42 thriller. The home and home series with Trinity College also resulted in two breath-taking contests, the Cardinals taking the first tilt at Hartford but dropping the decision to the visiting Hilltoppers at Middletown, 39-37. An injury to Don Joffray in the beginning of the season hampered the squad; however, the addition of Stubby Hayles and Tom Daniels during the latter part of the winter helped to offset this. .Statistics show that Robertson, with a 12.7 average, VVenner, and Wilson finished in that order for scoring honors. The squad compiled a total of 854 points during the season. while their opponents hit for 835. Front row: Grunkny, Daniela, Demmer, K. William, Crowley, and Brown. Second: Schumann, Francis, Robertson, Wanner, Busdunann, JoEI-ay, Benson. Last: Cogdl Wood, Stewart, R. B. Wilson, Scanlon, Sacharoli, Wubbenhom, Batman, Trainer Witkowski Wu defense tangles up 2 Williams' drive SEASON RECORD u Ls OPP 46 ...... Union ........ 56 58 ...... RPI .......... 59 66 ...... Bales ......... 55 38 ...... UConn. ....... 42 59 ...... Colby ......... 66 34 ...... Bowdoin ...... 29 48 ...... Coast Guard . . . 52 49 ...... Williams ...... 38 55 ...... Mass. U. ....... 39 51 ...... Tufts ......... 61 51 ...... Trinity ....... 47 45 ...... UConn. ....... 63 58 ...... Coast Guard . . . 48 55 ....... A Inherst ...... 46 43 ...... XVilliams ...... 71 43 ...... Amherst ...... 42 37 ...... Trinity ....... 39 Head basketball coach John Wood Charlie Stone lakes OK in a lap of the relay Charley Ash exhibits nice starting form Freshmen Barth and Baldwin receive congratulations after a victory Front row, seated: C. 0. Fisher, Stone, G. Forbes tcath, Ash, R. E. Hill. Second: Harris, Malcolm, R. Taylor, W. Johnson, Black, Ramme, Coach McCurdy. Last: Welling, McCallum, J. Savant. Harrison, Stair, Avery SWIMMING The Wesleyan swimming team fmished the season with a not too impressive record. win- ning flVC meets and dropping four. But the record belies the team's performances, accord- ing to Coach Hugh McCurdy, who said that this year's varsity was the best in Wesleyan 'listory. Despite the fact that the team won barely more than half its meets, the times and general performances were the best in years. Many records were broken: Chip Stone shattered records in the 100 yard dash and 200 yard freestyle; the relay team of Charlie Ash, Chip Stone, Jim Stevens, and Ridge Har- rison shaved three seconds from the 400 yard relay record; and backstroker Clyde Fisher tied the 100 yard record. Several new faces were seen in this year's lineup. Sambo Welling, Bones McCallum. Jim Stevens, Ridge Harrison, and Hunter Stair were up from last year's frosh squad, showing considerable improvement through- out the season and much promise for next year. The natators emerged in third place at the New Englands. Rog Taylor took second in the diving, Chip Stone placed in the 50 and 100 yard freestyles, and the relay team came in second in the 400 yard relay. Chip Stone also journeyed to the Easterns. SEASON'S RECORD 31 .................... Dartmouth ............ 44 24 .................... West Point tPracticefu 51 41 .................... MIT ................. 34 50 .................... U of Mass ............ 25 53 .................... Tufts ................. 22 37 .................... Springfield ............ 38 26 .................... Bowdoin .............. 49 40 .................... Amherst .............. 35 30 .................... Williams .............. 45 46 .................... Trinity ......... . ..... 29 Front row: Gambril.Silliman, Brewer, Stemler kath, J. Dolph, C. Schultz. 1 Second: Bagley, Begg, Keller, Coach Maze, Wichowski,Welsh, Maines lasst. coachl 'llhe Wesleyan University wrestling team en- joyed only mediocre success during the 1948- 1949 season. Burdened with an unusually heavy schedule 01' tough opposition, and hampered by injuries throughout the year to key men, the Mazelnen managed to win only two out of nine matches. Despite the rather poor team showing the individual performances were not without promise. Captain Art Stemler proved to he one of the better 145 pounders in the New England area as he won seven decisions while losing only twice. Pete VVicllowski, football tackle, was undefeated in the heavyweight division through the regular season, winning live matches and being held to two draws. John Silliman also proved a worthy opponent in the 128 pound class. Other point makers were Neil Keller. Jack Dolph, Tony Brewer, Gene Register, and Bill Berkman. The squad finished fifth in a seven team Fred Schneeberger watches a pair of entangled colleagues as Coaeh Maze 'oHers instructions Jack Dolph on top of the Coast Guard 155 pounder lield at the New Englands. Varsity men failed to win any crowns during that outing but Warren Russell took the freshman 145 pound laurels l'or XVesleyan and fresh heavyweight Bill Copeland was narrowly edged out in the linals. With the aid of these frosh plus the return of all but one letterman, Coach Frank Male should have the nucleus 101 a winning team next season. SEASON RECORD wus. OPP. 6 ............ Harvard ............ 24 6 ............ Coast Guard ......... 24 18 ............ MIT ................ 12 12............Springfield .......... l4 l6 ............ Tufts ............... 13 12 ............ Brown .............. l4 8 ............ Amherst ............ 21 3 ............ Williams ............ 23 l l ......... -. . .Hofstra ............. 19 Front row, kneeling: Perakon tcath, Femard, Peck, Matienzo, Cargill, MacDonald, Hands, Briggs Onng. Second: White, Phillips, Chapman, Janosi, Ferris, Ditmore, Casale. Last: Hither, Lynn, Given, Goodale, Davis, 1. Hoover, DiAmanda The Cardinal fencers culminated a most F E N I successful season by capturing the Little C N G Three Championship for the second consecu- tive year. In addition the Wes bladesmen won seven out of nine meets during the regular season, suffering defeats only at the hands Of a potent Yale team and a surprisingly strong MIT club. Throughout the season Captain Socky Perakos and veteran Herb Hands starred in the foil and epee divisions respectively. Seven of this year's nine regulars were sophomores, with only Perakos and Hands to be graduated. With this in mind, Coach Maurie Grasson is looking forward to an even brighter season , X next year. Jim Peck, Classy sabre artist, has t been elected captain of the 1950 squad ' SEASON RECORD ,1 wt-zs. OPP. .2 22M2 ........ New Britain YMCA 4V2 HIA ........ Clark ................. 121A 12V? ........ Yale .................. 141A, 17 ........ Waterbury YMCA ...... 10 21 ........ Bowdoin .............. 6 22 ........ Trinity ............... 5 l l ........ Mit ................... 16 17 ........ UConn ............... 10 24 ........ Williams .............. 3 Little Three Meet 19 ........ Williams .............. 8 27 ........ Amherst .............. 0 tforfeitx Sabennan D'Amanda attacks with slashing force We: swordsman leaves feet to drive home an advantage Captain Perakos disarm: opponent Front row: C. Robinson, R. Jones, Salaun icath, Travis, Carney. Back: Coach Daniels, Net- lleton iasst. mng, Vila, Spelman, Newbury, Price, Burke tmng After opening the season auspiciously with an 8-1 victory over M.I.T., the varsity squash team weakened considerably and dropped all but three of the remaining contests on its schedule. Norm Daniels, fresh from coaching his third consecutive undefeated football team, tutored the racquetmen ably until he was confined to his bed after undergoing a tonsillectomy. Hank Salaun, playing in his final season, was both captain and bellwether 0f the team. 1115 individual brilliance and artistry repeatedly saved the team from shut- outs. Later Hank went on to win the Con- necticut-Western Massachusetts Squash Cham- pionship hands down, following which he traveled to Princeton and reached the semi- hnals of the National Intercollegiate matches. Perhaps the most exciting and least one-sided contest of the campaign was the Little-Three match with Amherst. Warren Cagney, who had reported to the team very late in the season, defeated his opponent to give the Cards 3 5-4 victory over the Jeffs. In the season finale the Redbirds over- whelmed Trinity, Bel, for their second win over the Hilltoppers. Following the con- clusion 0f the season, Bob Travis was elected Captain of the 1949-50 team. Cagney delivers a Iehhanded shot Warren Cagney in action scoops a shot off the side wall SQUASH SQUASH RECORD 1948-49 WESLEYAN OPPONENT 8 .................... M.I.T. ................ l l .................... Princeton ............. 8 2 .................... Hartford tPracticei 7 7 .................... Trinity ............... 2 1 .................... Army ................. 8 l .................... Dartmouth ............ 8 l .................... Williams .............. 8 l .................... Harvard .............. 8 l ........ . ............ Yale tPracticei ........ 8 5 .................... Amherst .............. 4 8 .................... Trinity ............... l Driscoll, H. Smith, G. Forbes, H. Forbes, P. Forbes, Coach McCurdy GULF The 1948 Wesleyan golf team compiled one of its best records in years by winning six out of its eight matches. The two defeats were inHicted by strong Princeton and Yale teams, with the latter defeating the McCurdymen by a 5-4 margin. Because of the fine play of the entire team throughout the campaign, the Card linksmen were able to capture the Little Three crown for the second year in succession. In addition to this outstanding achievement the team placed second in the New England championships. Captain Harry Forbes was the only man to reach the quarter-finals; nevertheless the teamhs aggregate score was low enough to earn a runner-up spot. SEASON RECORD Wesleyan fiy2 ........... UConn 2M2 7V2 ........... Bowdoin 11A b 1y2 ........... Princeton 71A 4 ........... Yale 5 .1 9 ........... Trinity 0 b 7 ........... Amherst 2 7 ........... Trinity 2 h 6 ........... Williams 3 Totals 481A, ........... 231A 6 wins, 2 losses; 2nd in New England Championships. 90 Front row: Greene, Leete, Upham, Horn, Brodigan. Back row: Braitmayer, Fisher, Mr. Freimarck, Carter, Gi1man, Roboff, Lovejoy, Brunet The 1948 spring season found the Wesleyan Y A C H T I N G Yacht Club in a much stronger position than in previous years. Active membership in- creased when the Athletic Department recog- nized the club as an official spring athletic activity, and the club was able to launch a successful attack during nine intercollegiate regattas, More than 40 men actively partic- ipated, and under the leadership of Fred Newell, comnmdore, Hayward Upham, vice- commodore, and Fred Leete, secretary-treas- urer, the club brought home two victories. The fall was similarly active, eight regattas being scheduled Again Wesleyan 'was vic- torious in two of them. Such a fine showing was displayed by this youthful club that it was chosen by the Intertollegiate Yacht Racing Association to participate in the Second AnA nual Fall Invitational and First Annual Timme Angsten Trophy Regatta at the Q73 '33: 3? Chicago Yacht Club during Thanksgiving , . , . - vacation. Wesleyan finished eleventh out of 16 contesting crews, thus climaxing a most successful and auspicious 1948 season. The Club officers for 1948-49 were Hayward Upr ham, commodore; Fred Leete, vice-commo- dore; Herb Horn, .secretary-treasurer; and Jack Braitmeyer, freshman team captain. Wesleyan dinghy leads one heat in big Thanksgiving Regatta at Chicago An array of dinghies at Middletown club dock Smooth sailing on the Connecticut River ITRACK During the spring of 1948 Coach Fritz Mar- tin's trackmen turned in a successful record of 5 wins and 2 losses in dual competition. Although the squad suffered its first setback in two years and had to relinquish its crown as Little Three Champions, the Martinmen subdued the cindermen of Mass State, Coast Guard Academy, Williams, UConn and Trinity. In the opener, an indoor meet in the local cage, Wesleyan trounced weak Mass State, 76-37. A week later, determined to make their first meet outdoors an auspicious one, the Wes trackmen, paced by Bill Brooks, who again tied the college record by hurrying thru the lOO-yard dash in 9.8 seconds, completely overwhelmed a visiting Coast Guard squad, 871Ar48yz. After ten straight victories the Cardinals finally bowed to a well-balanced Springfield aggregation, 77-58. Not since UConn upset the squad two years previous to the day had the Wes team tasted defeat. The Wesmen were checked only temporarily, however, and the following week swamped Williams, 7768. Bill Brooks again led the squad by taking victories in the century and furlong. A few days later the Martinmen ignored a slow track and bothersome wind to defeat UConn, 791565172. The Red and Black stand- outs were Brooks, Chuck Stone, Frank John- son, Len Hippler, Spook Yordan and Don Joffray. Then came the fatal day. Having won the first leg of the Little Three crown, the Wesmen collided with Amherst. Despite the fact that the Cardinals garnered eight firsts out of a possible thirteen, the Lord JeEs mustered enough seconds and thirds to upset the Big Red team, 70-65. This victory was made possible by virtue of a clean sweep in the 35-pound weight. As the season drew to a close Coach Martin sent Brooks, Frank Bowles, Johnson, Spook Yordan and Don JoEray to Providence, R. I. to compete in the NEICAA. The Red and Black squad took fourth place over Holy Cross by three points. Brooks won the cen- tury and placed second in the 220-yard dash; Joffray garnered a second in the shot put V s 1 Firs! 10w: Malamud, F. Johnson, Manager Whittaker, Carter, Firstenberger; Second row: Young, Yordon, F. Bowles, Teot, Co- captain Charlie Stone, Co-captain Bill Brooks, Robinson, Stone, Hanford; Back row: Coach Martin, Gamon, Hippler, Stupple, Jackson, Leete, JoHray, Pyne, Begg, Coach Maze and a third in the javelin, and Bowles cap- tured a third place in the broad jump. Joff- ray's shottput heave of 44 feet, 81A inches shattered the previous Wesleyan record. To conclude a successful season the Cardinal machine rolled over its arch rival, Trinity, capturing eleven first places out of a possible fourteen, and winning 972A,-281A. In the meet with Trinity, Joffray had the distinction of smashing the existing Wesleyan javelin record of 183 feet, 214, inches by toss ing the lance 184 feet, 81A mches. Bob Phelps taku off in broad jump against Coast Guard Ace dashman Brooks leads Geld rounding bend of the 220 92 r; 9th 1 G e : CoaCh Martin, Williams, Mara- ton, Yordon, Captain Frank Johnson, W. Hoover, PfeiRer, Manager Gruakay Wesleyan, Williams and Am- herst harriers set for gun -in Little Three Meet CROSS COUNTRY Wesleyan's harriers had a disappointing 1948 season. Coach Fritz Martin's squad was defeated five times in six meets. A well- rounded squad composed of Captain Frank Johnson, Barney Kathan, Jack Pfeiffer, and Howie Marston will be back, however, for the 1949 campaign. The squad loses Hank Yordan, Kenny Williams, anti Walt Hoover by graduation. Wesleyanis distancemen opened the season with a one point loss to Connecticut at Storrs. On the road again the Wesmen absorbed another defeat at Springfield. Running on the home course for the last four meets, the team lost to Amherst by five points, romped over Trinity, was beaten by Coast Guard, and in the seasonxs finale dropped the Little Three meet, finishing third behind Williams and Amherst. Standout of the season was Frank Johnson, whose winning time of 24:07 in the Amhers.t meet broke the existing home course record of 24:12:16. Then in the Little Three meet John- son cracked his own record with a time of 23:53z3. BASEBALL The XMesleyan baseball team, although pos- sessing the nucleus of a winning combina- tion, did not live up to pre-season expecta- tions. A pre'campaign trip through the South, during which the Cardinal nine won three games and lost two, provided the basis for optimism once the regular seventeen-ganie schedule began. Coach Norm Daniel's Cardinals, captained by third baseman, Smiley Abbott, defeated American University twice and took the measure of Randolph-Macon while dropping contests to William and Mary and Rutgers during the southern excursion. Notwithstanding that the exhibition games gave the Wesmen invaluable experience, they succumbed to the heavy artillery of West Point's Cadets, 10 to 2, in the season opener. Both clubs employed three pitchers with Frosty Francis, lanky Cardinal hurler, being charged with the defeat. Still seeking a vic- tory in season competition, the Redbirds en- Captain Smiley Abbott takes a cut at the ball 94 gaged Arnold College on Andrus F ield. After stifling oppOsing bats for eight innings, and working with a 3 to 1 lead, southpaw Cliff Bull walked to the mound in the ninth and continued his command until two men were out and-two on base. There was no imminent danger, but Andy Robustelli, stocky Arhold center fielder, gave the game a storybook finish by blasting one of Bull's high, outside fast balls for a home run. A rejuvenated Wesleyan nine pulled them- selves out of the limbo of defeat beginning with the third game, and proceeded to con- struct a winning skein. Springfield, Brown, Bowdoin and Stevens Tech fell in succession before the Cards could be stopped. The game with Stevens Tech was a complete rout, which kept the scorekeepers working overtime. Be- fore it was over the Redbirds crossed home plate 22 times, while Stevens managed to collect seven runs. Front row: Hurd, Medd, Harris, Stearns; Second row: Wilson, Oviatt. Dwyer, Bull, ,Abbott, Schumann. Griswold, Francis, McBride; Last row: Trainer Wit- kowski, Coach Daniels, Leone, Robertson, Phelon, Deininger, Vila, Coach Wood, Manager McCoy However, the Cards were not to taste an- other triumph until they had swallowed five consecutive defeats. A smooth Coast Guard nine, playing errorless ball behind the one- hit twirling of Fritz Hilgenfritz, whitewashed the Wesmen, 2 to 0. In a Little Three en- counter, Amherst held sway over the Cards, 7 t0 3. Then VVilIiams, Trinity and the Uni- versity of Connecticut took turns ,in sup- pressing their Cardinal foe. The Redbirds redeemed themselves tem- porarily by blanking the New Britain Teach- ers nine, 5 to 0, but the Lord Jeffs from Amherst confirmed their mastery over the Cards by trouncing them, 7 to 2, in a yeturn engagement. A 4 to 2 victory over the Mas- sachusetts team was the sixth and final win for Wesleyan, as Williams, Trinity and the University of Connecticut each scored a second triumph over the Cards to wind up the campaign. 95 BASEBALL Southpaw hurler CHE Bull set to deliver one of his fast balls Captain Hank Salaun prepares to slam the ball The tennis season in the .spring of 1948 saw the return of five lettermen from the 1947 Little Three Championship team. However, Henry Salaun, team captain and 'New Eng- land Single Champion in 1947, played only a few matches because of a serious operation. Despite this loss, the netmen ended the season with a record of six wins and live losses. After only two weeks of practice, the team opened the campaign. against Harvard and lost, 7-0. This match was not, however, indi- cative of the remainder of the season. The team was victorious over Connecticut, Bow- doin, Brown, Trinity ttwicQ and Amherst, while losing to Williams tLittle Three Championsy Harvard, Army, MIT, and Springheld. The team members included Salaun, Don Bruster, Maury Cowan, Fred Norton, Sco Soule, George Buschmann, Charlie Lake, and Art Elliot. Elliot, Manager Brown Wesleyan Manager Congdon, Buschmann, Norton, Soule, Coach Reid, Bruster, TENNIS SEASON RECORD 0 ......... Harvard 7 6 ......... Connecticut 3 8 ......... Bowdoin l 6 ......... Brown 3 3 ......... Springheld 6 2 ......... MIT 6 9 ......... Trinity 0 l ......... Williams 8 3 ......... Army 6 7V2. ! ....... Trinity 1 8 ......... Amherst 1 1A: FRESHMAN SPORTS 'I'IIL- dilM ul 19:32 ulhlclcx prmul lhcnr svlwx mlmhlv ul xlczuh imprmt'nwm dupin- scx'cml hcurllnmking curb rmcnnlm Ulcr lusing' its first IIH'CC umlcsh. lhv lrmh I001; hull 1mm. sparked In lulllnuk Bill Hitks. finithl strong with lwn wins. the last Vinnn mm the Springfield JVK. In H'tmiumnlu the same inlpnm'cnwnl was nulcd, :Is the hush hanivl's sutunnlx-tl in their hm lhrvv Dick Barth off for his lap of relay race mununlm'x. Ullh In umlc hmk to win lhcir lust lwn duzll moon and the llilllv 'l'lnt'c lillc. Tom Sonkup wen u Hank winnm throughout 1110 scumn. The full sthcdulc was mumlcd out In lhc- mam Immk two won. Iwn 1051. one liul uml. Goalie Dunn Mama pt'llurmul musland- ingly lm llu- lmsh lmnlcrs. Frosh grappler gets Taft man in difficult straits Wayne Christensen picks up yardage during win over Springfield IVE B 0 0 K V FRATERNITIES PHI NU THETA l'Ilc lioIcrliI Smicu ul Phi Nu VIIIH'IZI was Ihc IIN Il'nlvrnin csIaIIIisIu-d :11 IYCsIcyun. and is the unlI 10ml on uunpm. 'I'Ilis Itnr liIIuliI had an unusuulh Izngc I'Inss 01' Iwcnlyliw scnim's Whose high individual at, lainmcnls gzlw IitIt-rm ll lnmnincnl position. Ramltx Brown smu'd 215 CnIIL'gv IImI-v I'H'SA idvnl lIn'nugh most 01 IEIIX. Clluilmcn ul sm- HuI CB unmnilm-s u'm'c Santh Pol'lcl'. Huh- Mun. Dun Mntl, ngcm'im. Ih'olhcrs Cosgmx'c 21ml WHI- ing: Ihzm lundumcnlztls: uml nm m-Ic CB umnnillcs mchu-rs. 'I'Ilv umlpm lmhliullinns also Iouml lhc Imusc chI rcplcstmcd. .XmllI Foul ulilul Ihis Ival'lumk, m whidl Tim Connclx umlrir Imlml. .Izlck I'nltm was l-inlm ol' lIK' Cunlilml. :mislul In Puclry l-klilm' Polo Ik-muld. :Irgm In-lnmcnl'rltiuw u'clc ch Cosgnn'c. Inunzlging ctlitm: Hcrh H'ciss. desk editor: and Jau'L IIoIpII. .th Fowl, :md Lam Slou'ns. scnim' HIIlms. immcsl in UIIIH' cxlm-um Iix idvmc nl xirulm' :ulhilics is sImwn In IIu- mum bm- lIu-n pzlrtitipzlling. lelen Mum and Dzlw lingcl wmv un-plmidcms nI IIIC Christian qu ialiun. VIIIHI YoungI Dcmml'ulic Club was headed In Mao and DiIk Ihml. In inter uxllcgiulc dclmling IIIL' Imusv mu represented by IICIII IVcixs. Bill Srlmzlh. :nuI Fran Mum. 100 Program DIICHOI' ol HHIIU station H'I'LS Wilh an lingcl. wIm also rzln lhc popular III and Five program. Disk iockq lftl Dolph had a Incgqun' show. 81mm mmmuu'crs through the 3cm u'crc Randy Brown and Mark Holr m:nL President ilzu'k M'mslmng sII'L-nglhn'ncd Ihc Outing Club immensely MIu-duling 50v cruI now mulls. Scumd Icnm' on the Ilihms was Ralph limclson. and the Glcc Club was stmkcd In six lk'IU'lim. IIIIIC house had xcu'rul members in Imnmv XViIIiC Ifirslcnlwlgm Mag :nul Blown societies. wzls llu- Iclil'ing 'II I were Izlppcd In Mysliml SUCH wIliIv Frank H IW i president. H'cnnm Ix-mmc :1 mcmlx'r nl Skull and Scr- pcnl. Minn HI lIIc Innolhcrx pzlllitilmlvd in mgun- iIuI leIlIt'lILs. H 'mIingl lhc Iisl xx'zls H'L'nncr. ulptnin nI huskHlIxIII 21ml UH'HPIRII'I nl IOHL ball. Mm mnlrilmling tn :mnlIM-r umIn-lvulul uml unliul IImlImII .wawn Iur H'mImnn WCH' III'NI suing right guard Gil 131lech and DHII Ford. :1 Ivllvl'man 211 ccntmn. OIIIn-r HEIIXHIHx u'crc Mike Griswold, IiirslmlIym'gL-r. Ilnlm Ik-Ilnhumm. and Dan BUHI. Bmlhcl' Dun Bunlhk wax lIlt plzuc kid; spu'iuIisL I'IuIIv Inuk Imk M'mslmng and wing I00 Vuis wow- wu'cr Icllcrmcn. litlmtifs Imu- tloss-unmln Icllmmzm was Ix'L'Il XI'iIIiums while Imlgv Mom was llu' lnnllwl In H-Incwnl IIH' Imuw un lhv xwinlmmg 1mm. I'vlv Fomuld xzm' mmh :uliull us :I lcmm in 1919; am! u'rn-slling nlmlitlntcx xx'm'c IIzqu Hulph, Inlm Bvllulnumn. :lml Iim BHHVH. In llu- spring Il'ilxlcnlx-rgm Inmul jumped and lmlv mulled 101' the lrzuL 1mm. 'Hw husclmll lL'lell Low Ullhhill. Huh SH-mnx. um! MHII lhml. lklmm. liming WHII Ilu- inlmmuml lmskcl- wzlx lmlslm'cd 1n hull tllzunpimlship Hm wars in :1 Hm: gunned lm Wluilmlcnl nl Ilu- Hip lx-himl ils xlmng Imlh. IV. II. l'mlm . ,L IS. N IIIIJIIL II . I .. Wciw, II. V, H't'ImL-I. I9. II. IViIliuIlu. K. I'. IVilth. l I H'. xINIORx hulclmn. H. I . lh-llllnnini. W, I limiun I. x. melmlllu Hind. II. II. lhtmn. R. l: hum. N Is. Lnxgllnu II. I IlIVIURS Mllmlung. I. K. Mun. IN lh-llnhlmnu. I. R. lhmxnuI. M. l'mmwn. R. H. I'IlgvlJI. In I :Igmx W. R. I'luxl. K. II I-Iixunltl. H. I5. HUIIIIIJIIL H Inngu I l'ilxlvlllwlgm.IVU, IVIIII'LII. I'Lmtl. I. ll, Hmulu l. lwxl'.0. uluml. In wlllmll 11w unnlmx Illnlllpinlh. litlmlh. zlimwl 1n muinluin ilx Ill xdlnlzlxlh umlpcliliml the house was .smr m llu- .Inlm H'cxlm Club. Bill Sthzmh. u'lmw :ncrugt ditl 11111311 to hum! lhz- xulnmnuu. oml onh house In its Inllyx Imxilion in tho IHIIxxUIl Cup slumlingx, u-wiu-d his Phi Bela KZIIJIJZI Lu. UIhCL'ls lor the hm wnlcxlm wow: limn Mun. In't'sidcnl: 'Inlm Rmnnldx. xL'H't'Iurx: lluH-n leh. lH-muvm: uml Suml-x Ihnlt-I. mxhillg dminnun. Mlix ,I- I . WilIA-II.R,I Rmnultlx. I l'. slunnx. R, I . vau'm. I'. I lehunLll. lIRI'SllHl-I Dunirl. IL R. DUIIIIL I11 I lmchL H. II, NUPHUHORI-N HUI Imx . In Ix. HIIHIilIx. h. IL biI-m. I. H. UlmIIn-IsJZJ. I-INUIILX l. I- I;IIm-x.h. I. 1.00.1. HM :Ihv. I ll. Huull'.D,l. HUIIiHVIL I. Ilnt'xkll, Rilll'nln-Ig. II. I . Iuilllu'lL LL. HENLR. X, Unmru l. Dolph. I H. MIMI. HJI Iulu-Iw.I.. U. IIIIIII.H. I, Mlmllll . I . lnIm-r. I X h. VIII:1H'II.L.L. was u at omzncncs. ALrnco IOI PSI UPSILUN 0111- 111111111-1-11 111111 1111- 11-111s 111411. 111 1813. 1111- X1 1111311111 111 11'1-s11-11111 Wils 1111111111111 111 11'1-511-11111 111 51-11-1111-1-11 1111111: s11111- 1111-11 11 1121s grown 111 111-1111111- 11 11113141- 111111 11101111110111 1111- 11111111 11111111111111s. 111'111111-1's1111151 11 111111- 111111 11 1111141-111111-11-11 s11111-1111111111111'111 11111'111111111s. 111111 11111111 111-111 1115411 1111111-5 111 1111- V1111Ull$ 1-x11-1111111'1'11111111 11111111115. 1111- 111-1-s1111-111 111 1111- 50111101111111- 1-1113s. Di1'k 1'1-111-11: 1111s1111-ss 111111111g1-1-s 111 1111- 1111111111111. 0H Purl. 111111 11111: 1111-11111111111111111- 111 1111- 1111111 1111111: 11111-11111 111 1111- 111111111115 11111-51 111'11'1': 11111111111s 1-11-1'1 111 5111111 111111 11111115: 1111 1111-11 Psi 17's. D1111 11111101151111, 111111 1'1-111-11. .1111111 M1-11-1s 111111 15111111; 13111511'1111gc1' 11'1111 V111s111 11-111-1s 111 111111111111. 111111 111-11- 11111111 1'1-11-11-1-11 his 1111- IIIL'1111S 1111-.1X' 111111. 111111 111111'1-11. 11111111111-1-11-11 1111 1111- 11111111155. 11119 .s1-11s1111f11-11 11111111111. 111111 11111-1- 1111105 1111 111111 1111-111 11-111-1s 111 s111'11-1'. 1111- 11111111111 111 1111- 1111511 5011131 11-11111 11'11s D1111 3111111'1-1'. 1111111111 1111 111 1'11111 111-11. 1111111111-1 11111111-1'111 11'111111-1'. 111111 1111111 19111110. 111111 111-111 11111111 1111- 111111111141-1'3 1111s1. 131111 111-1111 11'11s Ps1 11's 1'1-11- 11-s1-111111111- 1111 1111- 11111111 11'11ss-111111111'1 11-11111. 81-11-11 111'111111-1's 11'111-1- 1111-111111-1-s111 1111- 1111's111 s11'1111111111g 11-11111. 1211111'11-s 5111111 111111 1111111-11-s- 1511. 111-1- s1111- 11-1-11111 11111111-15. 11'1-1'1- s11111111111-1l I11 311111111111, 511-11-11s. 111-1111154. 11111111. 1111111, 111111 111-11111111. 111-11 1N1 1' 11111111-1's. 111111 R11111-1151111 111111 111-111111- 1111s111111111111. 1111-11- 1111 1111- 111sl 1111- 111 1111- 11115111- I111sk1-1111111 11-11111. D1111 31111111-1'. 1111111 51111111. 111111 11111 1111Ls 1111111111s1-1l 1111- 111111s1-'s 1'1-111'1-s1-111111111-s 1111 1111- 1'1'1-s111111111 1111-. 111-111111;; 111111111-11 1111111 V11s111111. 11 1111-11111 111 11111111 11 11111-1 111st 111-111: 111111 I'111111111x1111 111111 1111 1111- 111111s 1111 1111- 111115111. 115 11'1-11- 11111 111111117 1111111 111111 .1111111 151-11-111- 1111' 1111- 1111311 s11111111. 1111111111 1111- 111151-111111 501151111 111111111- 110111-11- s1111 11111111 111- 111111111 111 11114111 111-111 1111' 1111- 1111111s. 11'11111- H1-1'l1 11111-11111 distinguished 1111111 s1-11 11s 11 11111-11-1'. 111-urge 11115111111111111 5111111011 1111- 11111115 1011111 1111 .sc11.s1111 111111 was 1-11-1IC11 11111111111 1111' 1111s 11-111 s 5111511111 1111 111111115 11115 1-11-111-11 1111- 11111111111 1111' 1111- 11111511 111-1 11-11111. B111 111' 1111 1111-11115 111-11 1111- Psi 11's CXPCI'ls 111 1111- 1111111111 111-1115 111111112 1111- 11114111 111111 111-111 1111111 111111 '111111111131111. 111111 111-1111. 11111111 151111113 .11111 111-11111111. Bill 1:11111-1111111. 111111 11111111. 111111 D1111 M11111'1-1'. 811111 11111111-1s 111s 111111- 811111111. 1511-11 111-etc. 1911-11 N111'11111, 11111'1- 511111113. .1111- 5111-1111. 111111 1111111 11111 1111110111111 1111 1111- Business $11111 111511-1' 111 1111- 11111'11111111. 811111111 11'11s 1111s1111-ss 311111111401 111111 15111-11 111-1-11- s1-1'1'1-11 11s .1s51s111111 Business 311111111401. 11111-11; 111111115, D1111- 81111111-s. 111111 11101 111111111111 1111 11'1-1'1- 1111-111111-1s 111 1111- 151718.111 111-51131111 1111:1- 1211111. 111 1111111111111. 1111111101 R111111-s 1111111-11 111s 1111-1111 1111.ss 111111 111 1111- 11111-1's'. '1'111- 1111111111111 Pulls, 111 11'1111s1- 1111541111- 1I11111111 Ruines 1111111-11 1111 111111111'111111 11111: 111111111-11 1111- 1111-111111-1s11111 111 111111 1111111 Psi 11's'. .11 311111111111. 11111 51111111-1s. 111111 1211111 81111112 1111- 0H1: IJ111I1115111111111111-1111141111111111 11111- 1111'ls 1111 11s s11111. 1111- x1-111 111 1111s1111-sx M11117 11541-1 11'11s 11111-11 111' 11111k1-1s 111111'1-11. 1111111- 111'111111-1'5 11111111115011. 31112111111111. 51111-11. 111-111x. .1 '1 ... . 11,1. 11 11w- 21ml SkcIk-y supported him on the ad xlull. Mam nl llu- photographs lIlill :lpIx-zn in llu' Ulla Pmlnklu um lJc zu'n'cdilml 1n HI'Olllle Fwd Lcclc 11ml 'lhln 'Hmmpwll. Bull liimh lu-zulctl llu- mlwrlising cml ml IVFS. the campus rzulio slzllion. Mum :1 mnr mcrriul was IIIHdL' possible In the cllm'lx ul .Inhn Frk'kc. who worked under h'olhvr Hum 011 1111' business hoard. Polo lemlivld was an unlmum'vr. while Bun : Muh'mx's was a disr jockey .Ii' Kmmudy lnoznlmst mam ol' lhc athlclif tvcnls that IHCS soul over the air. lid Duncan. Toby 'lIlmmpwn. uml Monty Ridlards. howcwr. rllmc to twist dials 2h engineers. H'ilh surh a long lisl olI mlix'ilics Psi l7 still was able m :ulx'zlm'c several Imuht's in lhc .Iarkmn 'lImphy rating. and when lapping mum'ctl lnr the various humor sox'ictics on Ullllpllh Ihc Mlxsliml Sewn dime In honor Chip Sumo. while Skull aml Serpent picked Gcm'gc Blmlmlzum. The Cardinal Key saw 111:.- suacss 01 lid Grant. and 'lINli pk'kcd Did; X'cllcu. Dave Ioncs. and III Phillips this yczu; Chip Stone moved into lhc Inuidcnl's rhuir vaulted In Iolm Meyer lnidxvzu through lhc winter lcmi, and. together with Yitc-PrcsL tk'nl Cliilord Sx'ikhzlrt. and Svumnrlx Frul Norton. lctl Psi U through the scumd Imrliun of :1 WM vwnll'ul :md surrcsshll um. HIIINIORK BILL Imsclmmnn. L. Cunlm. M Cnllinx. K. Higgiux. I lm'lv. l'l HuIMu-ld P. Howl. I. Niuil. WV. OHHL PhclmL II. Namdcw. R. Smith IL Smith. R. Sumo, C. MilerIJL lH-x ix. R. Vuxlulzu L I'. Il'NIURS .huhmn. Ii, lkinxuungm. l . Byron. I. Cuplx I I imh. II. 0mm. 1.. HuknlnL A, H:qu-1LW,L Xmlun. Ix. Pmu'll. I . R. Ruim's. IL Rulx-llmn. H. RULI. SLCIIH. I. N'Illlnn. h. Xth-Icr, IV. VHIHUUURI'N Clark. XI. lk'rln. IL Human. l5, Ilillwl. l'. Iclh'cy. R. .Iuncs. D. KCllllL'lhalI Hdlzlllum. R. Phillipx, I Rit'lmnlmn. R. Shvmmn. I3. Mcu-nx. I Ihmnlmm. C. Vcllcn, R. H'L-Ilillg. SI IVIlilu I. Ymmg. IL II'RliNHMICN Bnhlnin. IL. Ihmh. R. Culwluml. W. l-thc. I HIIIIIK. IX HurL H. anll. I. Hith IV Ken: 1'. Kipp. D, M;Illl1'l'.D. Rilh:ll'd$.1l, IL Maples. D. Slum, D, Wiikim, 9 CHI PSI Sintc ISH. whvn thvrc were but three lira, lct'nitics 1m atmpus, Alpha Mphu oli Chi Psi has maintained ;1 high standard in CXU'zl-t'lll'v riullar palitii'ipution. Alwzus with an mt: lim' impmwmcnl. however. the brothers worked hill'thl' than cx'cr this hill to pledge :1 line delegation to which thvt am now point with pride. lt hax zihx'uy ht'cn u poliq ill the Lotlgt' that 2111 hmthct's should tnnttihutc urtix'tih to 5mm- phasc ul' rumpus life through the medium ul t'ollcgc :u'tix'itics, and in this tv- sport Chi Psi rontinucs to he an integral putt ol' the XVcslcym program. Mam spots were l'ouml for the brothers 0n unions athlcth tcmm throughout the twat. Bmthcrs Kapim. St'humzmn, Gcztrt. Mcdd. tVit'hmx'ski. Sludwcll. Burnett, Sthnccbcrgcr. tloth'nlx'. aml Shakespeare wcrc leluahlc mcmlx-is uli this past tcztlk undefeated limt- hull squad, was sclutctl to thc All-liztst uml Ml, tczlm. Jilt'k Gt-urlx, urt'uptain HI. 1110 New England clubs in addition to making hrst xtt'ing Iut'klc on the Little All-Amcriczm xtlllutl. Churlm Mcdd and Pete XYithmx'ski u't-t't- Clt't'l'ctl t'tH'ztpttlins of next year's tcnm. 'lihc Mitttl' tt'ilnl lntmtl Paul tflhicn play- ing hix wmml um o! Vut'sitt hall. while I04 hmthcrs Stewart. BcnsmL St'hunlzmn, Fritm'is. :uul ,Iolh'nt tmnpriscd lil'ty per tCllt 01' the basketball squad. tt'un'cn Czlgnct continual us one oli tht loading squash platen in school and Matti Mzttitrnm tompctctl as a licnvcr. Bill Johnson and Polo XVichowski pztrticv ipatcd in sWitlllllillg ztml xx't'cstling, ltspCtF lively Spring louml Frostt Frauds 21ml Churlm Mcdd among lilL' t'vtuming Icttt-t'mcn in hascv hull. litizint'is serving his third tt-zn' 011 the mound fur the Cardinals. In the mid; and held department Johnson unitinucd as the outstanding hammer thmwcr in sthuol. and Don Jolh'uy now has in his possession the vol, Itsgc rcumls lhr shot put and jzn'clin. Mam brothers were pt'mnincnt 011 t'nllcgc both t'mmnittccs. H'zn'rcn Hztight was presiA Dirk Combs headed the Dmnopoulos Committee. dent oli thc Pzttlct Cmnmittcc. and .Usn at'tit'c in tmnmittccs wcrc Brothers Ben- son. Shakespeare. thstvott. Callahan, H'ylic. 21ml Gczli'lx. Bmthcr Callahan wzts president of the Young Dcnux'ratit' Club and Cagnq Prc-Mcd Club. PlH'lCtl to thc Mistit'al Sewn. 21ml tlzlrk Geart hczulul thc Bah Xthic wus st-H'ul 21s :1 mcmhcr ul' lht' Skull 21nd Scrpcnti Ht-nwn, Stt-wurt. Slwmm'. :tml Sttulwcll wow Ulwlcd In 'l'Nl'Z. Other lnolhcl's xcncd 0n lhc dillcrcnl cun- pus publiullinnx. m1 Iudtl rezu'hul grout zurlaim 2n :1 pool on lhc Cunlimll, and 511111ch hcrgm and Dirk Sdlcr unm'ilmtcd m the xlrgm. Jud Miner and Sthcr wrote 101' the Ulla Pmlrirlu. Ralph BClllih. 'I'nnl Ridlzmlmn. jud Mincl. .U Chicn, and Joe lelxm'al sung lnr tho Glu- Cluh. 21ml JUC Shakespmw uml 5'th cm- ploycd their x'uiws ax spollsuhlors Ibr stallion Wl-IS. Firsl scmcxlcr nHucrx th'v: Bub V4xlin'. president: Jim Callahan. VifCVpl't'ble'lHI V2n rcn Huighl. surctary: Hal Hm. treasurer. 15m Ihc xtumd scmcxlcr tho wcrc: Ym l cn Huighl. president: Fred Pills, Utt-Pltw'dk'llll Jzu'k Sdllimnull. sun'lznlx: lull NthmL ll'CZhllH'l'. SICXIORN Cagney. W. Lulluhun. I Cumin. R. Dilllit'lx l Luau. j. Lihhmh. R. K:lplt:1.l. de-mlh. R. St'hlnnuImJ. Wx Iic. R. ll'VmRs huh'hun. I' lh-Inix. K. IMIIM'II.j. l'mnuim P. l-mx. Il lluighl. . IlulleJ. HUIIL C. lull'lux. D. HHMJL Mim-I.j. Humno. L. O'lhicn. l'. Pillx. l , Nvlllit'lllllll.vl, Slhm'vlwrgvr . Shukoxlwultz l. Wt-xlmll. h, Wk hmuLi. l'. VHWIUHORLS HL'INm. L Cumnlh. R. Unlicnlu, H. Xhlxod. l Xmlnn, N. Rithurdxml. l. thr. D. Ryme Mnilh. R. Spcm'mf Mn'uull. Y IOS Slmlxwll..l. Vinlzmlv. x l-RIWIHHX Hngg. H'. BillkvL Ii. fhicn, X. Ulriucnxnn. W. Cleriuns, 0.. Cult. I. Dm'wa. Hnncgun. h HUITIIHIIL l'. Nlmumlj. RngminJ'. 'l Ulllillgi. W DELTA UPSILON Dcllu l'lhilmll uum- inln lx-ing n: u nmr scum l'Izm-rnilvx ul H'illiztms Cnllcgc in lh'fH. This was the hm dmplcr 01' :m mgun- ilaliun lhul grow 10 sixlyluur strong in liltlc nu-r om- hundrml wins. The H'cslclxzm dmplcr, now limlh established in ilx third pml-wzn' Ix 'zn hm zlsxumtd its pruwur xlulus in silt and impollumc. llzngch lln'ough the film- mn'k ul Rushing Chairman Joe Bauer. lhc Incmhm'xhip 01' the ll'utm'niu was augmented In lilIc-L-n now pledges in ScplcmIwrithirlccn lrcshnlcn and two zululmul standing stu- Hlix inllux cxpnmlml the tuning duh lo 21 mlul nl liltlx mt-n wlm'h ill lhv present is the duh's mpzu'illx. Bcl'm'c I'cgislmlion :lml througlmul 1110 full lhc home piuhul in :Iszl wlmlc 101ml lhc old dcnlx. ViIar Mansion in m lint xhulx- 215 possible. The downstairs lix'ingl'umn. zlnlcmmn. uml rzmlmmn wcn' unnplcu-llx rvdvunzuul with now tlrulwrics, rugs. and lurnilmc. whilL- lhc nulsidv cnimml :ul vnlin rvmoling jnl; and :1 lrcsh uml ul 1min! lmm 510111 to su-m. The hmlhms look it upon Ihmnsvlws to IC- puinl lhc lllhlilih and In rn'l'ul'nish llu- Inn and u-uculinn mum in preparation lor llu- mum lunllmll wwk cmls Whifh lhn' lull wnwn promisml. The highlight nl lhv xminl wzlmn lnmul lo ho llu' lull lmuwlun'lics lm wlm'h the am iul mmmillu- dmiwd 2m inlm'mul 1mm dum- in u Hlun The entire house was house nmlil. l06 lillul will: smh unnixul .slumllns as u mule. ztil' jcls. peep shows. and pcnm lhmws. ll gull unm'ilmlml m 21 hilarious wcck cud. and was topped all In the H'cs xiunn mm Triniu 2qu u suhwquunl lhrmzll dam:- lht' twcning nl Nowmlx-r 13. Miss Hum! Kills 01 Penn Slaw mu rhmcn lhc qu-L'Ihuurl nI lh-llu U Im lU-IH. 11 um- Ihing till! be singled uul 11x DUE mltslzlnding arhimcmcnl lm' Ilu- um il ml; minh should he the 'l1aplcr's winning ml the Dmmq Cup lur impmwnwnl in ulmlnr- :m'm'dul Pl'vsidcnl xhip. 'l'hv Ulp was In Rohcl'l 15. Look In Prnlcxsor Spuclll nl lllv l'zu'ullx during the mulriunluliun svrxiu-s. DU had the third highest wlmlnxlh rulingl nn uunpm. climbing l'mm ila numhm wwn position the previous war. Vcs DL'R wcrc ilCIhC in smm- lwcnltwiwn Musicnlh the house wax cxlrcnu-h Inusyx. with hum l-Zgllx. Gm'dml liumn. Mm Maxwvll. .luc Proud. Dun 82m- dcrs, 21nd 'l'ul Comm plzuing in lllc lmml. Cmm'ilmling their talents ln Illk' Gln-c Clul; wcrc .lzu'k Humm. Dean ligly. Nod liusmum. Duke Vt nlu'm'lh. and lrcslml'cn Pvlc Cl'mvn'll :Intl le Sunburn. I10: ml the Cardinals and Clmw-ll sung with llu: h'cthun quzlrlt-l. In lhc livid nl juurnzllism. .li' Ridm-l. l-Ztl Bmwn. and Ned liuslmzln WCH' junior ulilms on llu- xhgm while Dmc Phillips and 'lmL student organizations. Humor mu nlw :l mun- Yhiu-mull W010 sruh. Mztlxll lilmtnt th :Ilw u wniur wlilm ml the spoils slnll. Tlu- lmxilion ul :Ixsixlunl :ItlH'rlisillg nmnzlgm nl Ilu- Ulla Pm! mu lu'ld In RHIWII Dillx. Srouls Wlsr Dcllu Upsilon luul mcn lmllit ipuling in 0ch held. 'Ioc Baum 21ml Rugm Stimson pluwd unsillx mum while leglctx plau'd 4m szuh Hugh Mdlunly's 'IV xquzul. lid lmnnis :md 'l't-d Cnllnn wcrc regulars on tho lH-xhlmm wutr 1mm. while Howit- Mur- smn :uul YuII Humrr Hm Vul'siu ammoun- erx dming lht lull. Sunhmn was u lrL-slmlun harriz-r. Highlight 01; the winter wustm was DL'K lumnul on tho xx'rcxlling muls. whim included Baglle. Stimson. 21ml Hmn'm. MI- ulhm lmlmc mix the vlcrlinn ul Smklx Pour km :ls mplnin ol the lecym l,illlc 'I'hu-n- Champion lcm'ing squad. 'l'hc Prc-Mcd. lnlcmulimml Relations. PH' Minislm'iul. .Xlwulcr. Cmmzul. and Outing Cluhx, and 11h: W3 1110:1111- 21H duimul mom- lx-ls lmm IllC ranks ml Della l'. XVall Hom'm was xiu-vln'vxidvnl ul DCI Dculsoh Vcrvin. Hun km: and Ralph Gliwm wm- zlssmizuul u'ilh YliS. Purim Downm was 21 nlcmlx-I' ul llu- Slmlcnl Spt-ukms Union. and BUIJ Dilh lwrlmmctl nohh us a thccl'lcmlcl. 'l'hc ulhwrs nl lhc pm! wzu WCI'UI RuhL-H 1i. Look. pumitlcnl: Ptnlm H. howncy, xiu'r Inuidcnl: RUle M. Gluningt-l. xlmmnl: Coulun P. I. P. Nmkivwiu. ll't ;lelH'l. lizllnn. I'L'umling wru-lulw: :lml NUPHUHURI' Ihnun. l'. H. IhuLnull. IL I. Uillx. RJ. lazulmun. 1'. IA laulunlu, l'. l'glm. H. V. Hmnvlli. I. IUIIIHUIL H, V l'hilliln. h, XI. thlmallu NuuchlJ-. ll. xlimwn. ILL anlumlh. KL HtilL-mun. 1. LR UH ll' NI l'lHlNlN Dnlln, Ll. l 1lHl.ll. Hullt'tk l' . la Nl lURS MHIL-Imn. R. IL Hugle IN I. HJIIIUL l. L LliIm-x. 1L5. lquH-l. H , I5. lnuk R, l'. lelkit'uiu, l, l'. IR'InLux, I'JL MhmullIJV. I RI'AIHHX It'nl. MIL uIlun.l ,, l mmu. N I . 'l IUR Lumcll. P. Hixhnp. H. IL Umxm'x. I'. H. lalmmc. H. I.. h-nix. ILU, Ll uningm. R. H, Hunlun. H. Nlimxml. L ll. llwn. II. H. Llime R. Huukim. P. Iu'll. U. I lAlIlliN. I . anucll. I'. anu l . R. Pmmlal, Sunhmn. R. anldulx. Ii. qung. II I07 ALPHA DELTA PHI Thc Mitltllctnwn Chapter of Mphzl Delta Phi is one of twcntyscwn t'hilPtCl's in the national ul'gunilutinn whith was founded in lills. hVZlN Samuel 18:36. IHBZ at Hamilton College In The 10ml thuplcr. t'hnrlctul in lhc result 0f the union 0! two lot'ztl sucictivs. Ihc Bctlizms and thc Lchanians. 'thc prt'sonl t'hztptcr house was huill in WHO t0 l'CplkUC thc lm'mcr slrut'lurc Cl'Ct'lCtl in 188-1. The renovation progl'zml. hcgun in 1947. was largely mmplctcd in the summer 01 HHS wilh the paintingl 01' the home ex. lcl'ior. Chapter zlllztirs were diluted this year In Bnh Pritt' and Bill Werner, sua'cssivc house presidents. wilh the aid nl David Mt'ClCllztntl, lumltt advism'. and Walter Czuh. rcs'itlcnt t'nunsclm'. Several mcmhcrs 4th the thupler were :lCliVC in various suricliCs: TNli. Ditk Ox'iall. Hank 5211mm. .h'l Stt'mlcr: Cardinal Key Bill XVIII;- hcnhm'st: Skull and St'rpcnt. chmt'r: Mtn- litzll Seven. Snlzlun. A low hmlhm'x Wt'l't' :HliVC lilcmrilx: Mur- I08 t'is Brown. managing editor ml the Cunlimtl. and Pete Ihkc and john Ogih'ict slzlll mcmr hcl's. In Fcln'uan Dlxkc hcrztmc cdilm'-iII-thivl ml the magaxinc. Dirk Mmcr wax :1 xlzlll member 01 the :thm. Fix'c hmthcrs wt'rc mcmhcrs ul th' Hmmm College: Morris Blown, Nirk Dciningcr. Huh Dcvztul. Ed Ferguson. and Hank Sztluun. Ogil- Vic was an ZlShUtithc menlhcl. All through lhc- tear the t'hztpter was rcprc- settled on ncarllx all the vztrsilt teams: 1001- lntll. Adair Ruhinwn. Ditk lillstis. and Norm Pyle; sot't'cr. Saluun; squash. Salaun 21ml Boll Prim: fcmting, jim l'tx'k :mtl Huh lllulhtm: WlelliIIg. Art Slcmk-r: lcnnis. Snlnun: lmwv ball. Dit'k Ox'izttt. Nitk Dciningcr: untl nzu'kt Bob szmn. Robinson. and Bob Crosby. The house was able to lmzlst 01 three lczml t'ilplililh: Sztlztun. t'u-t'uptztin ul' mum and captain 0i squash: Slcmlt-r. wrcslling: :Iml Ox'izllt, Izzlschall, 0n the whole. the 3m: hus lwvn H mm! suntt'sslul tmt' lm' Mphn Doll. 81'.NIURN Hllvu. R. IL hlgvll. IL III'iggx,L..I. Ihmm. NI. ll. 0min, K V Hum. IL IL Ik-iningcu X. IM'Vnul. IL I. Iilhlllll. I.I.. l'vlguum. I2. I . IIII1III.I.R,.III. l'IuIl. RJL III in: IV. R. INIC. xx. RnhinmILI L Nuluun. II. R. Slt'lnlcr. X. IL H'wl. H. U',. II, Wm m'x . .I- W.. II . Il xmks IhmIIL-xRII I'. Duxur. R. IV lhku. P. D. lx'cllLIY. H..-Il. XIunIumIaI, RHIII. Ogilm-RIA l. Rtmun. M IV. NCHHILL. R. 109 Nut'llJu X. Wuhllcullm'xl. W. H Wright. Ii. M. IIHk.II. K. SUPHOMURI'N lalhlis. R. UN Ix. Ludlum. R. l'hclpm RI I'im'snn. H. In lmlm. I H, Willinmx h, N. Rulhhki. X I:RI-NIHI 14X Ik-isu'l, In. L. Ihmu'l. IV Ii Hulu'nitllL l5. Ix. IismL H12. lxcmlull. I'LL H:1wl.R,IL HdllmkaV. I. Hunm. V l5. Purim. IL I. RCK'II. I'I Ruliinx. I Ii, N;ll13.:cl.R, I! l hlig.Ix IMNII. MIL. Wulvh. I. l-. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Iiwr xim'c IIIC InumIing ml the Gamma Phi Chaplcr OI Dclln Kappa Epsilon in I867. the kam Ilzu'c PIHH'II zl pmmincnl mlv zll IVL-s- loan; This past lxcal' was nu exception Im' il Inns won the men ml DKIi purlidpuling in men phase OI unnpm naivily 'I'hc looIImII 1mm Wilh blessed with lliplc lIchll Hum Forbes plulxing his Iusl and great- ml wuson. dmpkit'k spuizllixl Bill Nclmn. Ncil Ix'cIIcr, lalcnlcd wphmnurc gunnl who was I'huwn .IIIINCW Iinglund. 21ml linemen IVCIsh. HIIHHIII Gcmgv I'Im'hcs 21ml Dzm 'I'ulxlm Ich- Iqu-nmn. IInlmvs, :ImI Sou'cr xzuv ing IIIC mu. 'IIhc Ikkc nuu'him'. a sparkling inlrzlmurzll lmu'h Ioullmll unnhinnlion. mm its Ivzlguc rhmnpinnship umlvr captain Bill Ium. IVt-s won its lu't-nu-IIIIHI straight limllmll gmm', Ihc .smm's Hunt. and the Dckcs lurncd nut Im WIIIICI spans. Swimming couch MI. Curth listed among his top lxrrlnnm-rs mp- Izlin va'gc II'm'Ix-s, diving sensation Rug Imlor. I10 aw Iinh Hill. and Imk lildrcd. 'I'Iu- squash pirlm'c saw Messrs. Vila. Spel- mun. Ncwlnn'lx. uml XVirIdm-s plzllxing an ink purlnnl mlc. Hummuml mul IIisuum pImmI IIO 'IY squash. km and Bill Hunt helped out the basketball x'zxrsillx while Neil Iizllcmzul Keller and Dave IVclsh iuinul lun'm WIIII lhc wu-stling Icznn. Lou D'Amzlmlu was salm- mun nn IIIC Icnoing lcam. Spring saw the young men's Iancics turning l0 husclmll. lmtk. gnlI, and tennis. Bmlhms Dan 'IEQIm', VanZiIC. Hanan, Vila lmIslcruI Ihc Imsclmll team. IVIIiIc the day and umlls wcrc hcingr 11ml In Hukcl wivIding Spclmun. Nelson. and Hismnn. tho mu'k 1mm KL'IIH', IVCNI. wzls Ixrmg Imlslcrcd In Bcgg :ImI Knighl. 'IIIIL' sown man gull loam Imuslul Iiw Dckcx composed ul IIK' lwn I4'0I'Ixx Inqu-rs, Dliwoll. .Mulclmn. :lml IVIIIdm-s. Hm IIKI'Z :Irlixilim were In no mums unr lined in 1h:- ulhlclit IIt'III. Srholuslimlly IIIl' Dukes rose Imm lcnlh m Inurth plum on tho uunpus with cum glued lo the Izukmn Cup. Eric 8ng and .lvssc Holmes look mrc ol' the InIIcgc Libruyx and 12111ch Commiltcca rcspu- lichy. wIIiIc Harm Forbes and IIiII Siclwl'l- toiled Ior lhc xhgm. George IVIliu- was nul- spoken Inr Ihc Ih-Imlc team and Dlul RuI IicIII. vhirpml Im' lIH' IIOPUIHI I'IOUIICI'. szlinzlls. Chtcrlcmlcn Knight. 'l'qulor. 21ml Mm'ningslzn' kept up rumpus spiril. Station H'liS listed Bmlhcrs 'l'qulor uml Sichcn. 'lhhc Glee Club lmzmctl Redlicld. H'illizlms, :lml Bultmzln. lk-kc lrcshmvn lmrlhipulml in numerous zluixilivx and 51mm during Iht' mm and lunkcd pmmlh nl Neil lx'cllcr's award as Outstanding Freshnmn Alhlclc. 'lhhc Dckm also pain! with pride at several ulhcr :lthicwmvnls during the year. Dckc was the nnl'x house on Ullllliuh In M! its quota in the Campus Cheat Driw. 'Ihhc lmusc zuluplcd :1 war orphan lhmugh the Foster Parents plzm. Thc hnusc lmzlsls zl new dish wuxhcr and 5411-21! cllu'iC'H'lx under the dircrtion nl' Charlie Dihhlc. hm unml. N0 ncal m mention the mums ol lmusclmrlics and ulhcr .smiul :ulhiliCs. whirh are always great Ell thc Dckc House. l'was a must suumslul year, lhnnks 10 all the mcmhch and house presidcnls Dick Dculh and Jim lizllon. Sl-NIORH Hcilu-Il. W. X. lk'gg, I'.. K. I EHIUI. h. Rh Born. In W. Wcllvl. W. l-'.. Burmn. R. B. Whiw- 0- R' Ik'ulh. R. IL Dihhlcll. L. SOPHOHURI'N lunlunul. X Brmlignn. l'. I . l'm'ltn. hu R. Ihmligun. 0h H. lxnllu'x. H. I5. D'Amumlu. IV. II lliwnnn. R. A. Glauu'y. R. Ii lmmingx. J. D. bomh'ich. II. Ii. Mum l'urlunc. A. M. Llcgmw. 1L5. XIUI'IlngKlZIIh l. XV. lmlm. I.. l,. hIlIlliu. IL l5. Kvllcr N D. Nvuhun. P. C. lemnhcr. R. l,. leliclll. IL H'. Unh'mnwn. ht hi xlmlmnn. .I- IS. Miller. I. Y IX Nlrung. I. XI. I :nlor. D. 1.. Vila. L S. Vunlilc. N. l'. hVitldmw. hk I'h H'leh. X. D. Hlillimnx. R. I . Williams. lh C Wrighh Ii. '5. h 0111114. I. k ll'NlORx I:RIWIIHICV hulcrwn. HZ H. Hlvnmn. l . XI. HJIICIIIHII. IL H. Burbank. A, Ii. Cuvitlx. L. R. Dnlcsxiu. DHI. lhiunll. II x Il;lll:1lI.K,l, lilth'ul. .l- L. Hihhcn. I5. Ch Hmnmuml. 1L Lh Huuxum. W. I . Hill. IL I; Luau. IL hl llnInu-NJ. H. Nznugc. A. Ix'nighlJLU SIwJIJC. Nn'lwIL W, IL H'nnl. A. S. Rvmivn. IL C, Wul'n-n. I'L l5. HI BETA THETA PI 110111 1110111 Pi 11115 111111111011 115 11 1111111111111 111'111110111111111 111 311111111 1111110115111 111 182111. 111111 11115 11110 11l 1110 111'1g111111 111011111015 111 1110 1111111111 111111111. .11 111050111 11 1111.5 grown 111 11 1111'1111101'511111 111 11111011-111100 11111111015. 1110 111110111111 111111151110 1111111 111111 111110. 1110 11111101 11 1011 11150. 11.5 111111111'11111111 1110 110111 77111111 Pi. 1110 11151011111 1111111101. Mu 12115111111, 11115 111111111011 111 185111, 1110 11151 111011111015 11011134 111111111011 111 1110 11111111015111 .11111101'51. 11 141011 11111111 1110 1115111111 501011.115111'1011 11111111 111111 1100117111111 51111 1'011111111571111 1110 11111111115 1111 5111110 111110. 1110 11111110 Mu 11:115111111 1.5 1110 1110011 01111111110111 111 11115111111 $01011. 1110 11111150 10111111011 111 8011101111101111 111011540 11 141111111 111 1110110 110511111011 11'1111 1111110 111 1110 1111111101 11111111 115 1111' 1111111 115 11011101, 8111111 11111115. 111111 11111111111100. 111050 111011 111111111111 111111 1110111 051101101110 0111111111 111 10111101511111 111 111011511111111111111 111011 511111111 11111111105. 1111111101 1110 10111 110111 05110110111011 51111011111 10111101511111 11111101 11111111115 111111 12111111 111111 111111 1311111115;- 1111111. 11011511101 15'111 51111111011. 501101111105 1111111- 11131111111 111111 190115 1111115, 10111111015 111111 M11 Gown 111111 81001 M11155: 111111 11111101 11101'1111111110 5101111111. N111'111 1111111111111. '1'11050 111111015 W010 111111 1155151011 111 1110 0x10110111 11111110111111111 111111 work 111' 111011' 10111111111005. 1110 11111150 11115 1111 1111110 1111111111111111 111 1110 1111111115 11111111115 11111111105. 11 11115 10111050111011 1111 1110 1110111 111 Hunk 1111111113401111111 Mi1'11110l 111111 112 11111111111111111. 111111 1111111 5011011 115 1101125 011111115. 11511 1111ng 1111 1110 11154111 511111 11010 111111 11115111055 1111111113401: 601115.11- 11111'0111511154 1111111111401: 111111 1111111 P111105. 11115111055 115515111111. 150115 1111115 111111 51001 M11155 11010 111111111 011111115, 111111 11111 15111115. P111110 1111101111, 110111 1111101. 111111 111111 311111101 11010 10111111015. N111; N11k1111111 111111 11111 111111115 111111011 1111 1110 Ulla Pml1irlu. 1i11 11111101. 110111140 110111101. 111111 110111 1111101 11'01'0 11151 111111015 1111 1115.5. 1111110 511111 1511111 1111111011 in 1110 51111111115 011311100111101 110111111- 1110111. 111111111; 1110 11111511111111110 5111111115111 1111111115 111111011011 11111111 1110 110111 11111111015 11115 1110 111111111 11111 11111 110111 1111111111 1101 111 H1111L 1121111111401. 1110 B0111 11111150 111511 1411111011 111511111111111 111 1110 111111111111 1101111 111111 11111101 M11111 111111 111110 11111111110 501111154 115 111051110111 111111 50110- 11111, 1051101111011. 111 1110 11111115; 1101111111112111 C11111. 111 111111111111 111111111015. 111111 1111111101 11115 01011011 1110-111051110111 111 1115 111155. 111111 110111 111110111115 1111011 1111' 51111101111110 111 1110 1105111111111 50111110. 111111 P1110 1011 1110 11111150 111 1111110111 1111111055 I11 111111101 11 11111110 111151111111 1111 1110 111111010111011 111111 111111011 19118 1111111111110101'011. 11111112111111111. 11111' M11510. 111111 511111 1311111 11010 1111 1110 110511- 1111111 111111111111 511111111. 11115 l1111 11111; 111011101 11111 I111 1110 111115111 1111111015. 11111110 H111 1111111- 111g111n11 11'115 1111 1110 1111511 1011111. 11111 11111101 111115 11 1111151510111 11111111 5401101 1111 1110 111111017 1i111115. 115515111111 1111111115. 1'2111111115 mcn. Pagc Sharp, Walh Purim, Shun Shur- wond, 21nd Polite Guucttu llcld plztrcs on 1110 various son'cr tczum. In inlrznnurzll sports the l'ratcmiu tom'h Iontlmll league was rc- organixcd this full. and the Bela mxu'hinc look runncr-up spot in a dost mntcsl. Sorial Chairman Charlie XVuldcn staged a gala hnuscparQ in November. Friday night ol the week cm! a H'cslcrn lhcmc prcdmninutcd. The house was dcrorzllctl lls u huricnda with saddles, muskvls. 21ml squuws. The prom and Max houscpartics wclc suu'cssl'ul events. Another lculurcd smwizll lilnaion was the ahmmi Irzmqucl. held during thv Amherst cquzllh NICXIORS lhll'losiL. I5. Ii. 81ml. D. I'M SL-msulx, P.II. lhu'kinglmm. R, C. erk, R. 1L Cook. K. II. CHM. D. 1L lirlungcr. IL Lull'imn, l.. I' Horn. H. lglchcurl. K. Knapp, D. W. Lumlhcrg I Humln'c. ll S'millL II 8mm. X. Ihulswm lh. D. N, XVlelm: D. M. Il'XIORS Brown. Ii, P, Curu-r. It. It. ChulclmlmL IL 8. IS. lhcr. II. CHII: laxunxx'I. Ii. IH , Hem. C. lL. Il'. Hdmun, D. R. PClt'lN. IL NI I'in'l't'r. D. IN I'lemLI, C. ll3 wock cud. 'l'hmugh the generous rnntrilmlimls ulI IIM- alumni, and wilh lhc conpcraliun ml the uni dcrgrudualc brothers, mum major improve- ments were made on the house during the summer 01' I948. This program under IIH' direction 0! the house manager. R20 Bunk. was focused on various aspects of tlu' home. The most notable of lhcsc was 1110 l'ex'mnping ol' the kilchcn lm'ilitics. This imprmmncnl has greatly increased the cllkicnq ol' lhc Bctu dining scrvitcs. Also altered wm lhc coal mom. providing much 1mm: :ulcquulv hang- mg arrangements. l'y no. .I- .L. In Snuml. In W. l'lcillcr. IHIII'I l'hillipxb. w. Shapiro, R-I' Sharp. 1'...Il'. Shcrhurnc. II. Ii xlmltlcn. PL M. IVuItlcn. C. F. H l'wilrIu-IIJI. l.. SOI'IIOMORM Cooper, R11, hm is; 17. XL, Il. Dilmm'c. 1X11. Hn-rle-I'. U, H. munnlmx. D. .I- III. Wicxc. I U. H'ilwll, R. N. II'R ESI l H ICN lElIrLinghum. II. L. II. Conrad. IX IL liumsa IV. 1C. Huh. 8'. A III LIIIICIIRLII. X lx'cuhlcxj. XI. IIlKLCIalalI UL'Km', Cu D, Miller. W. P. l'urics. IV..- RmnmmL R, 11. Sherwood. 1L M. lx'cnnctlyI. II. Moore. I l I Nun's, IV. 9., J'- Xivknlolf, R. S. DELTA TAU DELTA il'ht: auspii'ious ltilh war oi Gamma lulu of Delta Tau Doha was hcgun rm :1 sound now when the hmlhcn l'clumcd a wcck hc- iorc rushing to Ihm'oughh renovate the Dell Shcllcr. Umlcr lhc dircrlion oi house steward Bub Blink. the brothers ilcanul men lnn'litill oi the house, hmn lawn to 2min waxing aml finishing the llomisi and painting :1 good purl oi the interim: 'lihcir hard work wax well WHHHHICd. lmi lhc rushing pL-i'iml was nm- oli the most smb- wssl'ul Ihc Dells haw had in iu'cnl 3mm, attributable in gical purl m lhc linc work of Rushingl Chairman Lou H'iilsca. A lull delo- galion nl' hlIccn li'cshmcn zmd one EHiVHIH'C standing sllulmil wcrc pledged. A week after lhc traditional pledge Ix-m' 1mm. :1 thTL'SSilli dum'c in honm' of Hit ncuphlxlt' Dolls wax hchl. Mlm' this initiation 01 the pledges inln lhc Dell smial lilc. Lhc li'ulcrnili lumul tn the mum serious Zliiinil's 01 lhc Vicar, led by lhc vhuplcr UH'R'CH. Dunnm Fraser us president dm'nlcd mmh of his limit to Gummzl Zeta. while his Ullllplh positions as editor Hi the Aligm. mcmhm ol' the puhliuuions Imzml. member nl lhc Mistiml Sewn, 21nd rhziinmm of the Student Assemblies Commillcc. daimcd mmh 01' his limo Bah Fithian dix'idctl his lillH' among the xitc-pl'oxidmu'y. lhc ili'gux. and football. wilh HCl'h Hands sm'x'ing 215 llczlsurcr, zuul also a prmnincnt mcmhcn ul Iilt' Yurhl Chili and lhc limiting lcam. 21ml Iicilh Valentine zutingl us sCt'rclury. Il4 Mam uthcr Dells wen- mlix'c 0n lhc umipux also. The Argus Claimed the talents 0i Boh Filhizm. Bill Malamud, and Frank Rideoul. scuior editors; Boer Skillings, Jack Bussing. :iml Fi'cil Irwin. junior editors: and freshmen Ted Fisrhcr, Bdh Frazer. and Don l'm'tcr. rclmrtcrs. As well as being 0n the Aigm. Brother Ridcuul was a member of the mmpus Rushing Connniltcc. and Brother Malamud was home senator. 'lihc Atwaler Club had its Dell representa- tives in Dick Ramcltc. Larry Mason. Roger Knappc. Burr Morgan, and .100 liwzlhl. Bill Young and Bud Dursm were active in the Ihcalcr. Charlie juncs wm elected Cardinal Kci rcprcscnlalivc, and Bob Herbert was on tho scnalc Parlci Cmmnillcc and tho Ollu Pml. Hal Carnsi and Fred 'lircx'ilhit'k lcnl their x'nich In the Glee Club. and Andi XVissemann was wri active in rumpus reli- gious i'irclcs. Gig Gaviglio and Don Pm'lcr were prominent members oi the hand. Dirk Fischer was presidcnl 0f the Freshman Scnntc. while .lzu'k iliippc. Plait Holden. and Pour Linton wcrc senators. In the realm of lall spurts, Henri MCDHIL :Ihl. Dirk Grant. and Bob Fithian were 0n the football squad. whilc Ralph Jones and Gig Guviglio wcrc mrsillx son'cr mulcrinli Plalxing lrnsh football wcrc Dick Fisvhcr, Bill Rowe. and George Mach'cr. wilh SIXTCY vlziiming Bnh XVntmn. Returning again 10 soyizil Dclts wclumicd hark 21 large lhv 01 zitlix'ilics. number alumni ml the gratls' week end. Many old ties were reaffirmed. and a menmrahle week end ensued. Highlighting the lestirities was the initiation of Burr Morgan. Bud Dorsey. and lioh Herbert, and the presentation of the Ralph Osbourne Memorial 'limphlx to Fred Irwin as the outstanding member of last year's pledge delegation, No sooner were the Alumni gone than l'emale guests- hcgan ztl'l'iVing lnr the hill houseparly. The highlight oi the parti turned out to he the very popular ham dance held Friday night. iVith the house aptly decorated as a barn and with a genuine square dance hand. the Delts and their guests soon Iell into the rustic mood. A well at- lended em'ktail partt was held Salurtlat al'lerv noun following the game. antl an informal tlanee was held Saturdat evening. with the popular .1111th XVilliam's hand l'umishing the musie. 'lihe .Iihers sang during intermission. alter whieh a samlwit'h party was enjoyed. Suntlax afternoon saw an autumn dame. with a small emnho' plating, tm'ktail music, wind up the weekend at'tirilies. SENIORS 80PIIUMORICS Black. Rt F. liu'ald. J. XV. liraser, D. H. Hands. H. R. Knappe, R. 15. Lanter. C. 1L l'eterstnL C. Ii. Robinson. C. H. Srhirkjih. iliretilhiek. W. J. Valentine. K. H HussingJ. M. Cantey ll. 1'... Chapman. C. F. Chmrhill. H'. In tun igliu H. 15, Lillt-tte. tel. tntaut. R. Wi Ilt'l hel'l. R. L Ilnltmeistel. l . L. HYNIORN' Dietl. R. H. Dorset, L, K. Dull'. W. K. l'ilhiztn. R. h. t-iuer. W. H. Giles. N. iV. lmles.C. 1i. Malamuti. W. l. Malone. IL .L Mason. L. H, Mehmiald. t1. 0. Morgan. IL Ni Ritlnut, F. 15.. Willsea. L, P. it'issemamr N IR thng. W. 11 'l'he Iinal big stK'iill event ml the llrsl semester was the bullet supper Detembel' twelfth in honor nli the lat'ullt. XVell over a hundred l'aeulti members and their guests were present. and scented to enjoy themselves almost as mueh as the Delta Tans enjoyed having them as guests. The winter season again liouml the Dells Ht'tiVC in sports, with Brothers Ralph Jones. Charlie Robinson, and Hal Cartier 0n the varsity squash team. and Bob Fraser ml the frosh squash team. Bill Malamud engaged in wrestling, Brothers Herh Hamls. Newell Giles. Bill Churehill. Bill Young. Gig Gari- glio. and Carl Chapman were busy fencing. and Dirk Ramette could he liuuml with the swimming team. A strungl intramural basket- ball team was lieldetl hy the Dells. under the ruaehing 01 Carl Peterson. The winter was highlighted by initiation of the pledges. l'ulhm'ing Wilit'il was a most enjoyable banquet. The mngenial alums- phere was representative of the spirit ol the whole year. a year which the tthapter leels wnrtln of lung remembrance. Iiist'hel. R. l ,. Iiraler. R. L. Holden. I', C. l,intmt. l'. C. Hurlier. L. .L Klinznd. R. Pnrlel. IL R, Shun. A. D. I rexilhit'k. l, W. I t'ipli. .1 Hr XVUIIHII. IL Dr lru in. It . ,L ltmes. R. li. Htthtmaltl. ll. Httklillml, IL Skillings. In. P. Nu ilxgahle. R. 'l't l5 R ICSH M 1'. X Build. D. II. Iiraillnaietgjt W. Iiistthel'. IQ. R. ALPHA CHI RHO 'ch hmk Scplmnhcr wilh porhzlpa highm spirils lll'dll Crmvs llcw lo llu-il l'tmsl in am nllIL'r lhl'cc dclcguliuns in Phi Gamma Chuplcr's Ihil'llx-scxcn VJHI'S 0n the WCsIt-yun unnpus. 'l'hc nmllgzlgv Wllifll hml mused w mmh :mxicllx and worn had lx-vn paid nil in lull 2H th- annual .lum- Belmluvl. and had Icll th Ihcir lhc men with a dam slulc. .M mun us hmlhcrs had reassembled. lhm dmmul work rlollu-s. gmhhcd llu'ir paint lmuhcs. :lml pmu-ctlul lo Iclminl own mu- nl lllL' nim- suilm in llu- housv. 'Hu- wmml llmn' lmlhmmn wan Hllllpltlth I'cmmlclml. :Iml lhc liVing-mmn u-iling I'cpuilul. l'tulcl lhc DhL 0mm. lhc lmuw Wils val in xhipishulx- mn- ublc dilution ol House Managm dilinn llll'oughnul Ihc vnsuing nmnlhs. Al'lcr u highllx sut'wssl'ul lllsllillg program wcll-hzlmllctl by Rushingr Chairman .H Lu mirc. the house cmm'gml with u lull tlvlvgzr lion ul llk'NhllK'll. plux scwml uplu-nluwnvn. Fall pullit'x dL'NH'IHlHl ml the uninitiated. uni xuspcrling me'. 21ml lhc pledges WCIC Iml disappnimul in lhc calibre of Uphzl Chi R1103 umllilmlinn m the general lk-stixilim. Under the supervision ul NEH Halhmx'zu ml the stuizllunnmillcc.1101011le lhc llucc dann- wvt'k les. but the mum slnqum-uus week Ilb ends WCI'L' among Ihc mml cninlxnhlc ul am 011 uuupux. .hnong the other planned wcizll lkum litills oi the war. wcrc the annual Fiu'ulu 'l'cu hold in Omaha. and lhc joint bullet supper and lwcr pain with tho Triniu Cl'mx'x. House ntlucls Im' the war were: Sal Api- u-llu. president: jmk Mzu'ksclx. xiu' pI'cshlL'lII: Harris. Dilll Collislcl'. scrrvlzu'y Bill Vuhl vcn uhh managed the DilVC treasurer: zuul Chi Rho culing rluh. whkh was lilk-d lo t'klllku'ily throughout the um. Publication ml the dmplcr newspaper. Phi Gum Pllilingx. was Icsunlcd this your umlcr the editorship nl john Pullcin. Tho hrmhcrs ul .Uphzl Chi Rho Iclnt'wnl :1 good Him section olk mun :It'liw in unnlms activities and societies. .Izu'k Marksq was HFUIWCSHIL'IH of the College Body. and a Bill Brnnks wax :1 mmnlx'r ol Skull and Serpent 21ml mplain mumbm' OIL Mulh'ul Seven. 01' 1'16 wzlr's nmL loam. Frank johlwm uqr luincd lhc '1'055 u;unlr.x tczun lur the wound CUIISCCllIiVC war. and during the lilll hmkc lht' tonne rcun'd. George Kcilh rzlplaincd Ihc .IX' football team. whose starting harklicltl was almost cnlireh Chi le. lil'lu'c Young lu-Id 21 wgulul' posilinn nl lllc mum 1mm. Eight mcn represented lIlL' home in tho Glee Club. upholding Chi Rhn's reputation as OIIC 0! UK Ningingosl lmuacx nu Hlllllnls. 'l'ul Hmnhcrgcr was a member of the .Iibcrs. 21ml Shoru Svclvin headed radio station IVES. The house was represented in pnu'limlly UVCI'I vxlm-Hn'rit'ulur :u'lix'il'x 0n unnpus. Rilm ,Uphu Chi Rho In being clu'lcnl ll mcmln-r 'Iim lnnughl lul'lhcr plaudits In SENIORS Apiu-Ilzz. X lh'uoln', IL Curvy C. llnlhnuuy X. IIL-Inlu'rgcl. l. Imuirc. .I. Hucksm. I. 01 ion, R. whim R. I I:II I is. H, Huang, W. Iulmmn. Ix Kcilh, h. Humming. I le, l'. Nurcn. h lellcin.II. Rum. A. thlllIlKUHLI. w; I l. w. Il'xlous H Imurn. M. Collixn'l. H. Cullvr. ll. SUI'HUMORLQ lemlzlll. P. lhmull, K. M Phi Beta Kappa I215! lull. :llIkL' Inwxul llu-ir plt'ztsulv zmd salislzu'liun with lIlnlmgrzuluum :Iml alumni L-xr lhc suwcss nl Ihc past Icar and the high spirits ul' IIK' men in the house. .Uumni dul- hm'k IEH l. Phi Gamma ChuIHL-r was mguniml as tho ninlll ing In wlwn Ichlclxzm's nl' Im-nh IIIQIIHCI'S. Ilzlw I'olnmwl lm xisilx IIlllIllg llu' Inlxl wnmlmx. Nlm'lr. W. YnIIngI H. lhmwl. I . Czllgill. IN dennmu. K. IEmllt'L R. laxlx-y H l-RI'SHHI'N vanulm. I. hulmwn. L. Bulu-IyI. Kendall, H. Hurrixx G. M'hucnllltuI, Hmnlu l'. Hlmu'. P. I Iml'nlnn. R. llcun'. l . H'illlm. I. Lumlnlv, l5, Llich. R. Hummcll. R, llurl'iwn. R. Hilm-r. R. .Ionm' L. NixhulllL Nlmllmx C. Muil, ll. ll7 SIGMA NU ilihc Sigma Nu Fraternitt was founded at the Virginia Militztrt Instilutc in 1869. Thu lipsihm Gamma Chapter at tx'cslctan, ninety til'th in a national network embracing forti- six states and one hundred and eight tilaplm's, wus l'UHIIUti in WEN lmm tht- lnt'ul lrutm'nitt Limwn ilh Alpha Sigma Dcltzl. Cunlinuing the pattern set in the Iil'st low lithlitt'llli lxczu's nl expanding the membership oli the home. the chapter plctlgcd twelve mcn tilllillg the fall rtlshing program. a number whith will keep its membership in the fifties. zmtl still :lVOitl tht- m'cl't'rmvtling which ur- t'llH'Ctl immcdizttcli iliilCl' the war. The limit- mun delegation went on to distinguish itst-ll in cxtra-un't'itulzn' ilt'liViliCS. Three wore on lllC li'cshmzln sot't'ct' tcztm. two on tho yearling licnt'ing squad. and others in t't'oss-tntmtry. squash, tennis, and mu'k. M'tt-r lilL' resignations nl Crmtmztndcr jack RCitilaHl 21ml Lieutenant Cmnnlantlcr Gcnc Marin :It the beginning 01 the full term due to heavy StilCtilllCS. the positions were zunpl'x lillt'tl ht Brute B, Mcnin and Samuel P. Mamnct respectively. Untlcr their guidnntit' the house t'untinuctl to maintain an im- portant position in campus ztt'tivitics. hnth :tt'zltlcmit' 21ml t-xtm-t'uri'itiulzti'. XViIh brothers ztt'tiw in pratitimllt M'cry m'gzmilation and team. Sigma Nu had :1 yin ol Wilit'h it um Ix- jttslh ix? proud. iVith inu'tcn lx'uulnmlm and Bob RCZIHIUH in the Cardinals and six others in thc Clet- Chili: Lcnm licimun and Bob Nztglc as junim ttlitm's ol' the xliglm'; with lmlh Dit'k Monk, spzti'kplug nl Nomi Dunicls' Din , :mtl Bob Nztglc :ts tnllt-gc press :Igcnts scrx'ing tht: alumni othcc: 21ml Clilli Stanton. vlilt'k Rciv chard. Frank Nixon. and Ronnie Drinkhouw Inothu'ing and :uting in play at '92 'l'ht'zttrc -wilh this Vt-rsttlilitt-lhc chapter was assured ol :1 plate on campus. Beside the h'cslnncn. Paul Crone. Brtlt't' Monin. Gt-nrgt' it'litltz Iirt-tl Pll'lllit'c, 1511mm Keith. Bub Mctl. and Bill Bcrkmzm, as well as Charlie Bct'k. .Izlt'k Arms. Bob Pickett. Ray Gootlalc. Judge H'hitc, and Rug Hanl'ord all participated in some itltcn'ullcgiatc sport. Bi'ut'c KOCH, Rug Haskell. Fred Pl'Cllliu', Dzn'c 'l'rusk. Jerry Boln'ulli and 15mm Menin played in the hunt! Whitll later elected as next Item's director Fred Prentice. Dzn't- itcbh. president of the International Rela- tions Club. was sut'ccctlctl bi limes: Groth. The house also had its own t'mnlm' which played for numerous ut'utsimis. Sceniing to tzlkt- hczm lmm its initial suc- t't-sscs 01' rushing tho hnusc picked up SPCCtl as Ihe Iwur pl'oeeeded. The weather linzllly cleared lor Alumni Week liml. and on Oemher 23 mam grads unne Imtk to renew old Eu'tlllililllilllth. inspect lhe newlIx painted house, and meet the students. The allah' was highlighted by the freshmen delegationk Vit- lm'y 01' the HAmhersl lilling contest, and lhe Cardinal's win over 1113 Visiting gridnlen. 'l'hen HHHC l'zlll houseparlies, and with the Jelieul 01' the 'lhriniLIx muz'hine we rouhhfl gm wrong. A Be-Bop party, a formal to the mu- sic of Chick Hathaway's aggregation. cocktail parties.-interl'upled 01. course by :1 delightful afternoon in the cold Nm'emher air 21! Andrus Field as the Cards ground out their 22 um- serutive wineall these spelled out mle olk the most memorable m'msions 01' the lull season. The other parties during the war were equally as successful as the Trinity party. The Prom found the house reviving its tradi- tional Sunday afternoon WVhitc Cargo parties. The house glee duh under the three- tion of Fred Prentice helped to keep the spirit and fellmvship high, not only at parties. but throughout the year. The singing of rolleg'e songs was largely responsible for making the rhapler a more closely knit social group tlm year. The officers for the year were: David Riehards, steward; IIaek Richards. treasurer: and Charlie Henstcnhurg, recorder. FIiBRI'lRY NICNIORQ Crolh. ll. H. M:1rl'u.G. F. 1.0x ejoy. F. A. Mnmncy. 8. Melt. R. R. Oxel'slrmn. D. Ii. Prutl. D. L III'NIC SENIORS Brown. '1'. IC. Dulberg. H. Ne Ul'm'e, XV. M. Huge, C. Hensu-nhurg, C. W. Menin. B. B. Hunk. R. Nixon. l . Richards. D. K. Rithunls. II. Reichul'd.I1. I5, Russo. Re Sampson. G. Stanton. C. FL XVchh. D, D. Ill'NIORS Arms. .l- Chickering. A. Crone. P. R, Dliulo, C. Guotlule, Re IR Haskell, R. h'. Hzlnl'onl. R. S. Knlll'mzmn. XV. R. Keen. B. Reunion. R M. H'illinms, J. XVhile. II. H. SOPHOMORIN Udell. l'. M. Baldwin. N. 0. Beck. C. D. Berkmun. XV. We lickeu. l'. R. Keith. F. Ieimun. 1.. 3L Momell. S. Nngle. R. Ii. Prentice. F. H, hlhrucy. R. F. Trusk. D. XVhyle, Ce D. I:Rl-ZSHMICN Benhielli. C, 1.. Bohrulr. II. Drinkhousc. R. lillis, C. Unhel, P. S. James, P. Kyger, I'. Rnsenhhnh. M. Zondng, J- ll9 PHI SIGMA KAPPA The members ol the Alpha il'rilnn Chaplcr ol' Phi Sigma Kappa mntinucd. in 19481 the rchuthing prowss hcgun two years ago In 21 small nucleus OI returning x'clcmns. Al lhzll time the house. Closed during the war, lay in :1 slate 01' disrepair, but with the return to norlnzlh'y it had. by this Awar been more thzm restored to prewar status. XVith the addition 01' 21 pchgc delegation and 01' two translfcr sludcnts, thc 111emhcrship DI the house was :11 21 higher level than at any time prior t0 the walx 'Iihcrcl'm'c. with this IIH'I'CEISC in numbers, has 1111116 :111 increase also in quan- lil'x and scope ol' activities 011 the part of those ronccmcd. Outside 01 the usual enthusiastic partitilnr lion in imrzunural sports. Phi Sig was also well represented in inllcgc athletics. Sonic of the men who won letters were Iicn Hipplcr Mark Hallcr, I'I'csh- man lmmis: George Frantlis, jayvcc loothall: and Dave Bcchc. track: and Kay Yormilya, varsity baseball :15 1112111- agcr, Several Phi Sigs hchI important posiliuns 0n rumpus puhlimlions. 0n the literary side. 'I'mn Priu- was :1 Iaithlill vonlrilmlor OIL Iic- l20 lion m the Cardinal, while Bill Manahzm, :1rlisl-i11-1'csi1lcm'c. did scx'cml anus 21ml :1rl l'culurcs Im' lhnl pL-i'imlii'ul. ihgm men in- fIlHIUI Cohan ilvnkins 21nd Sclh Rumor ol Ihc sports dclmrlnmll 21ml Mark Hallcr ul Ihv news departmcnl. IVES was rcprcscnlul hlx Rnsncr and Dwight Van dc Yule. In other and more 111i511cllzmcous zu'lix'itim the look Bob Stcwsns 11nd Jenkins were members, rcapcu house also zulivc intci'csl. lively. ol' the. College Body InlmnmraI Ath- Ielit's 21nd Constitutional Cmnmillccs. Doug Holic was serrctan 211111 Phil Pullnw treasurer 01' the Christian Assm'izltion Sophomore Cahi- nct, while the scm'clzu'yship ml the limnomirs Club fell 10 DICk FoxaII. 'l'rarkmzln Lcn Hip- plcr was :1 member ol 'INlC 21ml Dirk Preston lhc R0521 Club. Several 21fI'iIizncd members 01' Honors headed the house were ;1Isn with CHI Icgc. Pcr usual. social Iilc was In no 111021115 ncglcrtcd. Al Phi Sig. 115 clsm'hcrc, I21II house- pmtics were :1 great 51111055. The now lrcsh men delegation was given its Iirsl 121m: 01' XVcslcyzln panics :1l :1 pIt'tIgc tIzmw hchI mrly i11 Oiimhvr. Mmll H'ulil lm lhc ulpuhlc munugcnu-m nl' the house and lm lhc stimulmiun nl inlcr- ml 011 llu- lml'l ul nu-mhcm muxl ho giwn 1n its firsl 1mm ulhu'l'x. They were: prvsidcnl. LR xlil' x l l- H l'IHN IN Hill. ILN. XI'IIURI Hlnnxl', H. HlIvJI. IL mesm, I D, II'HMIII, IL I. Klilmxy XI. l'. l'n-xlnn. R5. Pliun IL. I Nlmvnx. R. l', Il'Xlokx Bvcllc. U. ll. L;nll;1xLx.N l'vnxlmun. R. x. laiwl . IL I I. Ilipplm . C.l. It-nLinx. ILL UsumhnlL HZ I'I Uilm'll . l'. limb .Slcu-nx: xiu--Inmidcnl, Duu- Plcsunl; su'rclun. Dzn'c Milm'l. Mrhufl. L. H. h-Il1lilx;I.A. K. NUHIOHURIN I'qu'IJIUH II. IImnllixJ-I I lh'bl'ulll MIX IlullrI.NLHN Il. anwllJ'. I. IIoivJ-JL II. Uinhvll. IV. N. II. ti E IH-zlxurcr. Clill I'mlllm' IX H. PHNHIII. D, U, Islnzll. Ii I'.. II. Nlt'u;nl.R. N lmlm. I1 .. II I'Rl-NIHIIWx Rumh. I. lxI. IL RmnmA. lnhi. I. R. Vzm lh' VJIH'. IL. II SIGMA CHI Nlml Sigma Clli'x will IL-Im-mlx'l' IUIH :15 lhv um ul rult-un'uliun :md lclcxisinn. liwrlxnm- knew llml workers had been lnm 0n the Ilouw ulI xummm' lung. Inn no 0113 was quite pu-pzu'ul lm' lhc sight that gn-vlml hix gum in tho lull when he cmcrcd lllL' door lhix limo In pulling out inslczul 01 pushing in. It lnnL Inzu'titc 10 got used m the duo! 11ml IIIL' ships that 110 at zuuhm' 0n the dining mum walls. Tilt xzn'icd and. in some msL-s. sulrlling tnlmx mm! in individual mmm welt le nllcn as nnl llH'lPh u point 01 dcpm'lurv lm h'vnliul rearrangement and buying, sprrcx. Hut In the lime rushing .slurlctl it was evident that Chuck 'lviclmul's inmginzuiw plans had lnmlimlllx ll'zmslm'mcd the interior ol Sigma Chi and mzulc il onc ol' lhc most plcnxunl plzlu-x un animus. Sigma Chi mu all m a xcrtx linc start and llu- cnlhusizmn gsnL-I'zttul 2n the beginning was sustained Im' the rust ml the 'L'le'. Under lhc slcwzmlship of Rabbit Vilwn. the dining' duh xcnul holler meals than cwr :lml rv- IHH'IHI :1 tunxidsmblc pmlil. Al hm-nm lullmx'ul in 1111' wake ml 111111'1 iul man Chm'k Ticlmul and was in stalled :15 another Inurricd Comul in chm- bur. Other oHum's u'crc: Bob Burke, pm umsul: Guhln Gimlclc, zunmlulor: H'ill NC!- Ilcmn. quzmstm': Bub Lungwm'lh. magixtm: 11ml X'iIlit lx'.uglm'. Lllslos. an'c Bzmlm'l mus vlmlul In tho wnzlln- um! ummilm-d vdilm nl lllL' Nulnwg Sig. Alton :1 Wu suucsslul rushing season. mml Sigma Chi'x .sclllml down In :Hlullu-l' um 01 lilwml aluullitm. vazltiw ulmlasm xlnmlr ing on Lmnpus dropped lml cxIm-cun'iullul :u'lhilitx wow :15 numcmm and diwrsiliul us mm. .Xl Amount W113 sports cdilur ol lllL' sligm, Sluhln Hiulcy 2m cml on Xlemzln's umlclculul lootlmll loam, Gil .Hlnuhl prvsL dcnl ml 02 'I l1cutcr s Paint and Pmulvr Club. :mtl Gcm- Rogislvr 21nd Dzlw Buttlm'l mu- mcmhcrs ol the lixuulix'c Cabinet ol llw Christian Xsstwinlion. But it didn't slop with lhcsc lllL'lllbL'l's In um menus: Sigma Chi hml ilx linger in just about QVCU pic Ull Ulllllulh. Also nut lm' l'oollmll wcrc Bob Gzlnlnm'. Divk Lums. and Gone Rtgistm'. Spunk Yuri dun WEB um- ol lhc tnllcgck um dimmu- Hnmcrs: zmd Rabbit XVinn. Cum- DL-mmm and 1.21113 Suullun. pluth xnrsillx basketball. 0n the Allgm u'L-rc John Criucmlcn. Dun- Iiultlol'l. Bob Lcmhcl. H'nll Munnini. Russ Donlilllc, and Bub Lumlin. Dirk Laxurus was statinn manager ol YliS. gun! a number nl people won- m'liw :il '92 Thum-r including Bub Tharp. Hul jnncx. and .Im- Blake. Sigma Chi was well rcprcscnlcd in the Choir Inn with Bob Thulp. Dum Nclsnn. Bob Rzlndlcs. :nul luhn Crillcmlcn. Nor wns lhc smiul HSPL'CI ntglcnlctl. l'mlc! lhu :u-gis nl ,Im- Blake. mcinl dmilmzm. czuh pmllx .wmnul m be lu'lIt-r than Ihv hlsL lispcv tiulh nmzlhlc was the lull hmm'pzn'u :u whivh Sigma Uni IL-xixul lhv traulitinn nl' H'mvning an annual Mx'u'lhczn'l. Miss Ivan Brooks of Vzhxzu was uunl'dctl this honor and in hm' uunl wmc Min lel'lix lHumzm zlml Misx Runnit- .Iusxh. lmlh nl Conn Cth-gv. OlIu-I Imlt'wnrlln lculurcs 2H IMIIIICN wmx- Inc's HM k, mils and huh d'uvm'u-x mppcd IJI the mud musiv ol' H'illic Hunter and his hand. It Wils 21 30:11 Hi mum things: wctk cm! vulnsionx, lim KIu-hlcriMunmus lixlruw unlinzmz Iizlldmlk smoking imkvl, I'll Onl'x Happens When I Dumc H'ilh You. lhu mulch Imlil. M H'Iu- Mun H'Im Cmm- 'l'u Minnow Stllhl. nhzl' ImppcnmlP. Big limlhcl Bub Iinn-n. whul il is this thing?. the mul- mr xhznks, Boom litmmk Nemesis. ,I'hc Now Inmlun Slm'x: whzuhu mix. WIHII. WImIE: Shmnm, IIIC ln'c dollar lOlHII. SL-lmsliun L21 lh-Ilzl. Hill lIlC huppiul. nml son'icsl to ace the war slip :uvm xvm'c Sigma Chi's grzuluulcu Gil Allmwlll. Dirk Lululm. Sluhln Hlelvs. Rabbit Wilwn. Harm Aulolinu. Inc Blake. Phil Grilhlh, 11ml SImuL Yonlml. To them it was the shmlcsl um n! 1110111 all. xLNIURN lnngumlh. RI HIHHIILL. P. l.m;lx ll. hdulmn, ll. UIIIIH. D. HlnLv. I XclllL-lmL IV. Llillilll. l'. Sumlun. IN I.1Il;lllh, R. xhzm. R. xynwm R. NmilllJL MntlnlLll. I'NIIWILIL Lardner. B. H NIORK Lukcnx. R, Ukcrllx. W1. Mmlix. 15. UninL I. WHILE. lhnLr. R. Duniclx. I . Ilillrlnlvn. I Hillix. Ii. Fullhlu Dodgy. I. Limlclc. I. Il:ulcx'. W, 'IRIAHIHI'X Hunnini, W, IIV IL HnlL-In. D. Lmuw. h. chhlt'llu. Huulllllv. R. Shuxhu. I. ILMIu-I. B. lhgup. R, Lumlin. l5. liulmulll. VL'IwnJL lillllmk l5. RumlIt-x. H. hm-nm. L Ridmmml. I . Mull. I2 NUPHIHIURI'H Nlllilh. V, HLIHIUH. ll Nlllhl. A. Dolmmm L, lmlur. Ix. IWWK H- Robbins. I Ix'llgll'l. H'. lmlms. K. JOHN WESLEYAN CLUB .Ulnllml llu- nmlh suliun ml Clark Hull In the :ulminixnulinn lm' ilx tlulmmmx, llu Jnlnil chlm Club lwgnn llu- ncu' um suu'csslulh with thy prclmruliml ol Ihcil mx'n mmm 1m nu'ulmmlx. The club ulililul the lower Hum lm' tllllllOUllls :uul th cnlirc .s-xliun lm' 1mi- domes. Delighted mcmhm's t'rmvdcd the lung Ihing mum to sing songs l cln1'c lll': lil'c, and gulcd :Ippruiuliwllx 1n thn- jm'kson Cup. :nvunlul the dub 101' its high skhulnxm mmu ago. the higlu-xl in III: histon ol lhv unnlm Iiliull. kntkipklting in mulling lol' this lint time, the Juhn XVCslctx Club lliqllil'Cil 21H vxwl'cnl hcslmlzm dclcgzninn. 'l'hc now mcmbcrs wore inducted into the club with 1111 imIHCSsiw lirc- side tcrcnmm. presided mm In Irwin Hmu. president. In addition 10 llu- liVing mum, Ihcrc was a lllOdCl'IlisliGllh furnished liln'zn'ymusir mum. and :1 homc-linnlcumznml gunu- mum l'cnluring Mull Ccll'um's liarl'x American mural. Vilh the start ol the new scmz-su-l' 1h: lullmving olhwrs were eluted: Irwin HL'I'U. pl'csidvnl: Ralph Slum. x'iu'rprvsidcn': Hull Cartel; scnumr: .Iuc Yemll. treasurer: and Hill Lane, surclun. These men dil'm'tml the dub through two popular xmiul zllluirs. llu- Junior l'mnl :lml llu- spring hnuwpuru. Sllt'h pm: IN vnlliul 1mm Imlxs :Ih Huu- Mmo, 1.011 Rllw man. Xm-l Sdnwig, Kcilll H'Ililing. and Mill mevvnlhul unmihulml lo the mulluwwidc spilil ul lt'slixiu. Mhlclirzllh indinul members 01 lhc dull imludcd: anm Kullmn. Irmk uml mms- q'uunlu; 'lolm Silliman. wrestling: Frank Gnukm, basketball: Dun Rubin. swimming: Len Rummm. Imwlmll: Pvln- Briggs and Tom Giwn. Inning: .Hdcn Gilmzln and Jim Slupplv. track: Charlie I idI;:1ll. mu'k uml mum. and .Im- Dmhinskvx. Inuk uml t'tmlhzlll. Dirk H'hiltakcr managed the lmtk squad. Tho rluh wax slmngh Icprcscnlul in llu Outings, Club. lid Moun- was eluted president during the scumd semester and Carl link. Irmsuu-r. KPH Yiding. Ralph Slum. and .100 chll wmc tln'cc ul llu- Illohl zutiw upper duwm-n lmnidpslling 0n the 51:11! 01 XVliS How .120 XUlic. lu'hr Iliull tlhumr. uml Ilolm Olmn. chll. Slum. Loon P1012155. Hcl'h Lcwm'. OlmlL XVuldu liishcr. and Bob Ilurrix xmrkml an the xlrgm. Hzm ix :llw scrx'cd l'zlilhlulllx lhc OLIA l'onklln. Unmihuling In llll' Cuul'nul were Mink Suchumll. .Xl Newman. and Tom Angrcss. Don Smith u'zh u .Iilm. and .U Stewart. 15ml Ron-Hs uml .IUC vall u'm- Curdinzllx. Glu- Clublwn inrlmlml Mnorc. Ix'ulllnn. :Iml llNRtHY. 'mh Bullet. Pclt- lx'mnm'. Dun lAiml- xuy uml Mill Hmkvn wmc in the Chain, Arliu- in tho 'chzllcr wm'c John Sillimzm. 101mm Feldman. VhiLin L'w Hurkcn, Dzn'c Briggs. john Hudson. Tidbull and Jim Carson. Tho duh W35 mn'icd tn the semi- KlaNIURK hlgu-xx. W. L Curson.j, l'. Umlu'r. A. P. Umrludr. x. D'lis'olm. IX X liiwllx'luin. H. Hcltlx I . lk-hlmun..1, hihixiwu. P. llmll. L Iummr IE Kululmluk. V. LCHIUII. V. l.mimk;n. L l.imlmx. IL Locuvmhnl, U. qulnml, M OgnmLC. Sloinmcu. h 810mm. k t st upplv. .l- Whillukm, R. Ii. ll XlURN liillillgx L Ihmllcll. R. Briggs. P. lhlllcr R hmhinski. I, HmLCH. H. bilmull. M LL'IILIIHL H. hm'dml. G. LlluLuL Ii Kin. ll Xluil..l, Hume. la Muhnl'ull'. H Kililm. S. Nillim;m.j. Slum. R. hnzlls ml the inllzmlulul dclmlc In l'om Mun and .lim V01pcn. 'lkmtx D'lisopn and Mill lncwenthul were honored with Phi Beta Kappa keys. and Lovinskus mzulc Sigma Xi. Nmilh. IL lilllmllll. chlIJ, Vhiling, Nvil H'itling. Ix. xUI'HOUURlN huh. I . Briggs. D. then. I, Hurlis. R. HorLJi. lllulmn.j, lutnlmmlu Ix'ullmn. I5. l.;IRuv. 0. Iron. h. Hmm; D, leml. l I'mlnw. 1,. Rina. X. Rnlwrlm. H. Rumuzm. L. Nhllllllll, l'. thucig. N I hilu'zmll. . H'cn. IL H'cn. I Whiling. Kcigh leiuj, l'thslHll-X Mun. I. Bcillvll. R, l-'ixhcr, W. lvunc. W. I um-I'.j Hurray'l. Row. R. Rulwn. D. H'olpcll.J. luuu P, The members of the class of '49 shall forever hold Close to them the age old traditions involved 'in XVcslcyan graduation ceremonies: the planting of the ivy as pcrfonncd above by David jonlan '48. the always impressive alumni procession. Those graduation activities shall nlxs'ays remain symbolic of the very tradition that is XVcslcyun. and all t unur which surrounds her name. CENTRAL NEWS AND SMOKE SHOP Complete Line of Pipes Kaywoodie - Dr. Grabow Emperor Fountain Service 284 MAIN STREET Opp. Post Office Closest Place to Campus ior Sandwiches and Salads TO TAKE OUT Miller's Delicalessen Call Us for Your Party Needs 125 College Slreet Tel. 7-0455 THE PALACE THEATER Your Friendly Theater Where the Big Pictures Play SAL. ADORNO, SR. AT CAMP'S Arrow Shirts Stetson Hats Westminster Hosiery MacGregor Sportswear Fashion Park Clothes Strook Sport Coats Haspel Seersucker Suits R. W. CAMP C0. 412 Main Street MIDDLETOWN, CONN. RECORDS RADIOS REPAIRS TELEVISION G. U. REED 143 WILLIAM STREET NEW YORK BAKERY Retail Wholesale Phone 6-0469 114 Main Street l2? C. B. STONE, Inc. Sm. Dlsmmnms in! Williams OIL-O-MATIC H, Mm: Dunvslu: and Indusniul OH Burml Eqmww 1H tiUIIHR , BURNER UNITS - AIR CONDITIONING FUEL AND RANGE OIL ASK FOR HEATING SURVEY FREE 53 Vfulchk Street Phone 6-6601 MIDDLETOWN, CONN. S. Edelherg 8: Son AT ALLING'S Complete Cleaning and You Will Find Pressing Service A Complete Line Tails and Tuxedos ior Rem Of Sporting Equipment 105 COLLEGE STREET 476 MAIN STREET Tel. 7.1330 Next to Middletown Press Flowers 101' All Occasions WOODWARD FLOVVERS BY WI E V R DRUG STORE THE PERENNIAL Dependable Prescription GARDENS . Serv1ce QM FARM HILL ROAM i HDDLETOWN Phone 7-0231 240 Main Street pmm bmqb MIDDLETOWN, CONN. DANIELS FARM Compliments of DAIRY PRODUCTS R. GURLAND Telephone 6-7007 WHOLESALE FRUIT and PRODUCE Millbrook Road MIDDLETOWN 4347 Sumner Street MIDDLETOWN, CONN. I30 Excellent Food . . . Well Served UNITED RESTAURANT Air-Conditioned SEA FOOD COCKTAIL BAR 275 MAIN STREET MIDDLETOWN, CONN. Phone 6-9981 HERBERT'S MEN'S CLOTHING cmd HABERDASHERY 399 MAIN STREET Compliments of MITCHELL'S PAINT STORE PAINTS - WALL PAPER PICTURE FRAMING 143 WILLIAM STREET Tel. 7-1088 THE CENTRAL UPHOLSTERING CO. Living Room Suites and Slip Covers Made to Order ALSO ODD PIECES Workmanship Guaranteed 95 CENTER ST. 011 Main SM MIDDLETOWN MIDDLETOWN, CONN. PUBLIC MARKET Complete Food Store 480 MAIN STREET Compliments of HAZEN'S BOOK STORE MIDDLETOWN, CONN. Compliments of THE MIDDLETOWN PRESS STANDARD ENAMELWARE AMERICAN RADIATOR HEATING EQUIPMENT MIDDLESEX SUPPLY CO. MIDDLETOWN, CONN. I3! F R A N C 0 ' S Package Siore Cor. SPRING and ROME AVENUE We Specialize in Quick Free Deliveries Daily Between 8 A.M. to 11 P.M. SEE US FOR YOUR PARTY NEEDS KEG BEER - FREE COOLER ICE SUPPLIED 7-1456 'Thluplmnr- Tvlwxxhrmw B. 8: R. PACKING C0. New Haven. Conn. WHOLESALERS Prime Meats Fish Dairy Products Frosted Fruits Vegetables Middletown's Best Equipped Meat - Groceries and Vegetables Delicatessen and Bakery POPULAR FOOD MARKET COLLEGE SODA SHOP l 15 COLLEGE STREET Qlexi lo the Middlesex ThealeH Ice Cream - Candy - Cigareues Magazines - Patent Medicines Sundries MIDDLETOWN TYPEWRITER C0. Office Machines - WANT SERVICE? Supplies 117 College Street Phone 6-3433 COLLEGE PRINTING YOUNG'S 182 Court Street I32 HOME OF GOOD THINGS TO EAT AND DRINK HERRMANN'S DELICATESSEN LIQUOR SHOPPE Representaiives in Middletown for S. S. PIERCE'S FINE FOODS AND LIQUORS 138-144 MAIN STREET MIDDLETOWN, CONN. Say It With F lowers from Founiain's, Geato's, Greco's, Howarth's, Keser's Perennial Gardens THE GUSTAV LOEWENTHAL LUMBER COMPANY 82 BERLIN STREET MIDDLETOWN. CONN. Phone 6-7768 I33 1878 1949 Over Seventy Years of Service to Wesleyan RICE, DAVIS 82 DAILEY Realtors - Insurers Surety Bonds GUY AND RICE BUILDING DIAL MIDDLETOWN 6-6635 IULIUS KAIRIS. Prop. Phone 6-9824 JULIUS GRILL Dine and Dance FOREST CITY LAUNDRY Catering to Banquets, Weddings, Panies and all Social Functions lust OH Campus We Serve Only the Best TASTY FOOD AT POPULAR PRICES TELEVISION THE DAYLIGHT LAUNDRY 97 Court Street, Middletown FREE PARKING on William Street HARTFORD APRON 8r TOWEL SUPPLY C0., Inc. 29 LAFAYETTE STREET Phone: 5-2186 5-2187 HARTFORD. CONN. I34 COMPLIMENTS OF THE RUSSELL MANUFACTURING CO. Incorporated in 1834 MIDDLE'I'OWN CONNECTICUT THE WELSH COMPANY Largest Manufacturers of Collapsible Baby Carriages in the World ST. LOUIS MISSOURI THE HOUSE OF SERVICE Tailor - Clothier - Haberdasher D R A K E , S Grey Flannels Ready Made Clothing RADIO . TELEVISION - SOUND SIGNDRELLI CLOTHES RADIO REPAIRS 7 RECORDS Cutaways - Full Dress and Tuxedos APPLIANCES For All Occasions 171 Main Street Tel. 6-7854 284 MAIN STREET I35 F rom Today's Dollar Penny for Penny Your Best Food Buy Is MILK! THE MITCHELL DAIRY COMPANY ADVICE ON REPAIRS for the WESLEYAN CAR-OWNER A N D Y ' S CALSO STATION Do Maintenance Costs Keep You Broke? Stop in and Use Our Lift - Tools - Washstcmd FREE OF CHARGE Road Service 26 BROAD STREET Phone 7-0851 Keep Your Group Together Travel By Bus FOR SAFE DEPENDABLE ECONOMIC TRANSPORTATION Consult THE CONNECTICUT COMPANY l36 STANDARD TIRE CO., Inc. GOODYEAR TIRES TEXACO GAS Phone 6-9812 117 MAIN STREET BACON BROTHERS, Inc. 412 Main Street Middletown, Conn. GILBARCO OIL BURNERS IOHNSON'S FLOOR WAX KITCHEN UTENSILS CUT-RATE Liquor - Wines - Beer V E T R O ' S WE REFUSE TO BE UNDERSOLD PHONE 6-3187 S. I. MILARDO. Prop. Qualiiy Baked Goods KELLY BAKERY. Inc. 48 RAPALLO AVENUE MIDDLETOWN, CONN. MODERN BARBER SHOP 5 Barbers in Attendance Service and Good Workmanship Biggest Shop in Town 195 MAIN STREET MIDDLETOWN, CONN. MIDDLETOWN PLATE GLASS CO. PLATE 7 ART v AUTO 7 WINDOW GLASS cmd MIRRORS 151 William Sh'eet Middletown, Conn. Phone 6-3039 Oiext to corner 01 Broad Streell INVESTMENT BANKING LEEDY. WHEELER 6. ALLEMAN ORLANDO, FLORIDA Com; ,HI'JIDIHIT fJ COLLEGE RESTAURANT 137 PERSONALIZED PORTRAITS and it's all done With LIGHTS! 'there's mugin- in lights . . . zuhl :1 light here. plate a slmllighl there. and ymr lmrlmil lakes ml lhe uppean'aun-e of real hmn 21ml individuality. Your Vantine photographer knmss hms lighlinghr elfeels run he hesl used. . . . me easily they can refleel your persmlulily. Your Vunline phologrupher knows hesl htm lu secure the shurph elt'hed photograph your engraver dtsiHN of lhe imlmrlalnl senior year. . . . The Vietm'ies of lhe ulhlelil- teams. . . . The hrillium-e nl' soeiul occasions. . . . The Prom . . . The play . . . The tlehules. . . . The expression of everyday life on the rumpus. 'l'hul personalized portraits hy Vunline are illllml'lillll is ullesled lo hy the fact that over 300 sehuols uml volleges repeatedly enlrlhl lheir photographie xun'k lo Vunline. Official Photographer for the 1949 OLLA PODBIDA WARREN KAY VANTINE STUDIO 132 Boylston Street BOSTON. MASS. l38 CHARLES S. HOWARTH Wormerly Curran's Flori50 Flowers for All Occasions 100 WASHINGTON STREET SCHAEFFER'S BAKERY WEDDING and PARTY CAKES Our Specialty SODA AND LUNCHEONETTE We Supply the College PARKER AND EVERSHARP PENS Phone Orders Delivered MIDDLETOWN phone 63031 166 Main Street Tel. 7-2835 PELTON'S DRUG STORES 108 Main Street at William CJOIHPHHICNS 01 Tel. 7-2581 180 Main Street at Silver F R E U N D I S Tel. 50135 CIGARS A CIGARETTES - PIPES Iewelers 390 MAIN STREET MIDDLETOWN Compliments of THE CONNECTICUT POWER COMPANY A. J . BELLOBUONO BUILDING CONTRACTOR Pine Street Extension MIDDLETOWN Phone 6-0039


Suggestions in the Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) collection:

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952


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