Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA)

 - Class of 1936

Page 1 of 168

 

Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1936 volume:

(j JQorrrfft?r Polijtertjntclnstltute xixxmttXjf General Funb j03221 Ex-Libris This is the first time . . . THAT A COMPLETE DEPARTURE HAS BEEN MADE FROM THE TIME- HONORED STYLE OF PRE¬ VIOUS “PEDDLERS.” TRA¬ DITION HAS BEEN FOR¬ SAKEN ... IN ITS PLACE YOU WILL FIND A KEY¬ NOTE OF MODERNITY. As college men, tradition lias its place which should rightfully he kept, but as Engineers, it must be left behind, and in its stead should come those methods that are at once accepted and new. In presenting to you this Peddleii we hope that our efforts as Engi¬ neers will not lessen your enjoy¬ ment of it as college men, but rather will amplify it through the medium of simplicity. volume number nine | WORCESTER I Nineteen Thirty Six POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE Dedication To HERBERT FOSTER TAYLOR As an indication of onr esteem, and in appreciation of liis loyal service to the students and alumni of tlie Worcester Polytechnic Institute, the Class of 1936 dedicates this PEDDLER jj r i ni I C r President Ralph Earle From the day that he addressed us as the “Class of 1936” until the day of Commence¬ ment when we fulfilled that hope, we have had the utmost respect and admiration for President Earle. But now, as we look back on four short years of pleasant association with such a fine man, we begin to realize how great his influence has been upon us. Each of us has had many personal contacts with Prexy, and through them we have been privi¬ leged to meet one of the finest and squarest of men. President Earle, as we leave, the Class of 1936 salutes you! Dr. Moses U. Kaveii The Class of 1936 pays this tribute to Dr. Moses B. Kaven, ’85, for his loyalty as an Alumnus. It has not been the privilege of the class as individuals to become personally acquainted with Dr. Kaven, but throughout our years on the campus, we have become conscious of his influence. We know that he has contributed much, and modestly, to scholarship funds, and to equipment of the Washburn Shops with modern and efficient machine tools. Dr. Kaven graduated at the head of his class. He was elected to the Board of Trustees in 1920, and to life membership in 1925. The Institute conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Engineering in 1928. - • r X a i P MTjPIr Mil lfl| P i k The Trustees of Worcester Polytechnic Institute This board is known as the Corporation LIFE MEMBERS Charles Baker, Secretary 86 Foster St., Worcester Dr. Homer Gage, Treasurer 8 Chestnut St., Worcester Charles L. Allen 6 Academy St., Worcester Charles G. Stratton Hotel Bancroft, Worcester Henry J. J. E. Aldred Co., 40 Wall George I. Rockwood 2 Military Rd., Worcester Aldus C. Higgins 1 John Wing Rd., Worcester Moses B. Kaven 10 Germain St., Worcester Paul B. Morgan 21 Cedar Ct., Worcester LLE R ., New York City EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS Ralph Earle, Chairman 11 Boynton St., Worcester Rev. Shepherd Knapp 8 Institute Rd., Worcester Rev. Maxwell Savage 41 Lancaster St., Worcester George N. Jeppson 1 Drury Lane, Worcester Rev. Thomas S. Roy 661 Main St., Worcester Hon. John C. Mahoney Room 27, City Hall, Worcester TERM MEMBERS Term Expiring July 1, 1936 George W. Smith, Jr. George E. Williamson 10602 Lake Shore Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Strathmore Paper Co., West Springfield Samuel S. Edmands 295 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Term Expiring July 1, 1937 Samuel M. Stone Conrad N. Lauer 35 Stratford Rd., West Hartford, Conn. 1401 Arch Street., Philadelphia, Pa. Herbert H. Ferris 60 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Term Expiring July 1, 1938 George F. Booth Charles F. Bailey 20 Franklin St., Worcester Newport News Shipbuilding Dry Dock Co., Newport News, Va. Ernest W. Marshall 19 West 44th St., New York City Term Expiring July 1, 1939 George F. Fuller Harrison P. Eddy 15 Massachusetts Ave., Worcester Metcalf Eddy, Statler Bldg., Boston Ernest K. Gladding 190 Woodbridge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Term Expiring July 1, 1940 Howard F. Fritch Albert J. Gifford 207 Melrose St., Melrose Highlands 28 Prospect St., Shrewsbury F. Harold Daniels 2 Regent St., Worcester L. L. ATWOOD History and Modern Languages P. R. CARPENTER Physical Education Z. W. COOMBS English A. W. DUFF Physics Departmental Heads Page nineteen W. L. JENNINGS Chemical Engineering T. H. MORGAN Electrical Engineering R. K. MORLEY Mathematics A. S. RICHEY Business F. W. ROYS Mechanical Engineering J. C. ADAMS English and Publicity Departmental Heads Page twenty D. F. CALHANE Chemical Engineering H. W. DOWS Mechanical Engineering Professors Page twenty-one A. W. EWELL Chemical Engineering A. W. FRENCH Civil Engineering Professors Page twenty-two G. H. MacCULLOUGH Mechanical Engineering M. MASIUS Physics H. A. MAXFIELD Electrical Engineering K. G. MERRIAM Aeronautical Engineering C. F. MEYER Civil Engineering H. H. NEWELL Electrical Engineering Professors Page twenty-three W. L. PHINNEY Mathematics C. A. PIERCE Theoretical Electricity Professors Page twenty-four I. E. BIGLER Physical Education E. C. BROWN Mathematics W. R. DeVOE Mechanical Engineering H. B. FELDMAN Chemical Engineering J. E. FITZGERALD History and Modern Languages F. W. GRANT Physical Education Instructors D. G. DOWNING Mechanical Engineering S. H. FILLION Civil Engineering Page twenty-five B. L. GRAY Mechanical Engineering W. E. LAWTON Physics W. W. LOCKE Electrical Engineering L. J. HOOPER Mechanical Engineering C. G. JOHNSON Mechanical Engineering C. W. LARSON Mechanical Engineering E. HIGGENBOTTOM History and Modern Languages C. W. HUBBARD Mechanical Engineering Page twenty-six Instructors J. M. PETRIE Chemical Engineering A. J. SCHWIEGER Government and Economics Instructors W. W. MONROE Meehan ical Engineering V. SIEGFRIED Electrical Engineering E. R. SPAULDING Mechanical Engineering A. J. STAPLES Mechanical En gin eer ing V. R. OLSON Chemical Engineering M. L. PRICE Mechanical Engineering Page twenty-seven B. L. WELLMAN Mechanical Engineering J. H. WHENMAN Mechanical Engineering R. T. YOUNG Physics Page twenty-eight Instructors Permanent Class Officers Donald L. Edmunds, President John R. Brand, Vice-President Harold F. Hendrickson, Secretary Alan F. Shepardson, Treasurer C. Norman Svenson, Historian History— Hass of 1936 r J , HE Class of 1936 met for the hist time Monday, Sept. 26, 1932, in the lecture hall of the Electrical Engineering building. They came from all directions. Green? Yes, but filled with a desire to learn all that Tech had in store for them and to make their class one of the best. On that hrst day, 156 men gathered and began to make the history of this class. During that hrst hectic week we heard lectures ac¬ quainting us with the traditions of Tech and it was also during that week that we hrst en¬ countered our rivals, the Sophomores, or the class which talked much but did little. We had our hrst chance to become acquainted with the upper classmen at the Y. M. C. A. reception held in the gymnasium on the Friday after our arrival. After the reception we gathered in small groups to scare off the un- gentlemenly Sophomores and later, under the cover of darkness, crept to the athletic held and tore down their hag, much to their surprise. Yes, there were some guards but we made short work of them. Our hrst real clash was an organized one and it took place between the halves of the football game on Oct. 8. This was the annual paddle rush which we lost mainly because of our inexperience in this type of “Sport.” Perhaps the Sophs were taking revenge for the set-back they suffered th e pre¬ vious week when they tried, but failed, to make us perform for them during the halves of the game. About three a.m. on Sat., Oct. 22, a group from the class visited Alumni held and the result was that our class numerals were fastened about three-quarters of the distance up the flag pole with about 57 pounds of lard liberally spread on the pole and on the ground about it. The Sophs had quite a time shooting the hag down before the football game in the afternoon. On Oct. 29, the annual rope-pull was held at Institute Pond and this proved to be a very tiring affair to the “pullers” but very exciting to the crowd. It was only after hve minutes of extra pulling that the victor was finally announced and the result was that we were forced to wade through the icy waters of the pond. The class of ’35 was the winner of the track meet, but several men of varsity caliber were unearthed from our class. About this time “Ray” Casler received the Yankee Ingenuity Scholarship for his fine glider which was constructed from odds and ends and required many hours of hard work to perfect. Nov. 15 again found the two lower classes battling each other, this time on the soccer and football fields. The Sophs won the soccer game, Seniors Page thirty but the football game ended in a scoreless tie on a rain-soaked and muddy field. A few weeks passed and then before we knew it, we found ourselves in the midst of “Rush Week.” Studies were immediately forgotten and by the way most of us were treated it seemed that the upper¬ classmen thought that we were a pretty good class after all—and who were we to say other¬ wise? Then came pledging and after that, the upperclassmen made up for the royal “Rush Week ’ treatment by forcing the unlucky “Pledges” to clean house for them. Thus we started our fraternity life at Tech. The Class of ’36 made another attempt to subdue its rivals in the swimming meet but although our swimmers did their best, they were forced into defeat by a vastly superior team. However, we retaliated by defeating them in the class basketball game, 17-13. At the annual Tech Carnival on Jan. 20, we presented a skit under the direction of Charles Fowler, now departed from our midst. Even though we had “Famous” people from the class of ’36 to sing, play, and act, we were unable to make “Club Darby” a success, and as a re¬ sult ’35 walked off with the cup. No sooner had this affai r passed when we found ourselves about to enter the dreaded “exam” week. What a scare for some of us! But we found that after a week of worry, headaches, and what-nots most of us had survived and were ready to start the second term with a clean page and high ideals. Within a few weeks, we had our class elec¬ tions and “Clint Leach was elected president to succeed Mason Dudley. The other officers elected were: Bob Gould, vice-president; “Ham” Gurnham, secretary; Carl Borden, treasurer; and George Huntley, historian. The remaining weeks passed quickly and smoothly and it was not until late in the spring that we again encountered the Sophomores. The Class of ’36 met defeat at our rivals’ hands in a stirring tennis match. At the final assembly of the year, “Hatch” Gould was awarded the Skull trophy, while Carl Borden received honorable mention. Thus we finished our first eventful year at Tech, but not many months passed before we came back again as second year men ready and eager to take up the responsibility of guid¬ ing and teaching the Frosh the ways of Tech life. Immediately we began to gain decisive vic¬ tories over our inferior opponents. Such head¬ ings as—Sophs Beat Frosh on Track—Flag of ’36 Uncontested—Sophs Win Paddle Rush— and Rope Pull—are only a few of those show¬ ing the triumphs experienced by our class dur¬ ing that second year. The first term Sophomore officers were elected as follows: G. Chase, presi¬ dent; E. Krippendorf, secretary; J. McGrath, treasurer; G. Huntley, historian; J. Brand, vice- president. Thus it was that the year was started and with the close of the first semester, the Class of 1936, with the inter-class trophy well in its Seniors Page thirty-one possession, looked forward to the future for greater and more numerous successes. In the winter sports events, we had to he satisfied with a tie with the Freshmen in the swimming meet, hut we managed to eke out a win in the basketball game, 38-28, only to lose to the Juniors the next day. In the spring, the tennis team won its match with the Freshmen thus closing a highly successful season in the field of sports. On May 29, we held the annual Soph Hop at Sanford Riley Hall. The committee, headed by Don Edmunds as chairman, arranged a most pleasing and entertaining dance and our first attempt in running a class social affair was a great success. Several days after this affair, exams again claimed our attention, and, when these were completed, we departed homeward leaving behind us our second year of college. In the fall, we again returned, to pursue our classroom work as Juniors. We had now be¬ come upperclassmen in the true sense of the word and we put aside all interclass competi¬ tion, to try to acquire a little knowledge and to act as big brothers to the incoming Freshmen. The history now became more and more the history of individual triumphs. In football, Bill Miseveth was a tower of strength. Prac¬ tically the whole soccer team was made up of men from our class. In basketball, Fritz Henrickson, Norm Svenson, Vinny Grublevskas, Irving Bottcher, and Jim Phelps did their best for this sport. Harry Gray and Pop Lane were on the swimming team, the former holding sev¬ eral pool records. Dick Howes represented 36 on the baseball team while Carl Borden was a mainstay on the tennis tea m. The highlight of our Junior year was the week-end of May 3, having as its main attrac¬ tion the Junior Prom. “Doc” Peyton and his band provided the music for this gay affair held in the Hotel Bancroft. The rest of the week¬ end was filled with the Masque presentation of the “Hottentot,” the track meet, and the annual Round-Robin at the various fraternity houses. Shortly afterward, the Junior year ended with eleven of our members being tapped for Skull. The following September found us hack again, ready to take up the work of Seniors. How fine it was to feel that we were the real big hoys of the campus! Now we began to look into the future, to ponder over the years to come when we would he far away from the friends we had made and the school in which we had spent so many happy hours. The class had decreased in number from that first day in 1932, but we had become more closely knit together, likelong friendships and memories were founded, and we were filled with a desire to make the memory of the Class of 1936 a lasting one. The year passed swiftly and it was not long before plans were being made for Commence¬ ment week. We now held the final elections of our class. Don Edmunds was elected to pre¬ side over the meetings with Jack Brand ready to step in, in case of absence. Fritz Hen¬ rickson was selected to keep tabs on class activi¬ ties while A1 Shepardson was to keep the bank account balanced. The keeping of the class history was placed in the hands of Norm Svenson. Thus did the Class of 1936 spend four glorious years at Tech and as we look back over these years, we seem to suddenly realize how much they meant to us and that we must now go out into the world—alone—but proud that we can call ourselves sons of Worcester Tech. May God be with us in our future struggles for success. FAREWELL FRIENDS, FAREWELL. Seniors HARRY T. ANDERSON ©Yfl Mechanical Engineering Middleboro, Massachusetts Tech News Reporter (2), Junior Editor (3), News Editor (4) ; Aero Club (2, 3); A. S. M. E. (4) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (2). EDWARD W. ARMSTRONG ©x Mechanical Engineering Guild, New Hampshire WILLIAM F. ATWOOD, JR. General Science Waltham, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2) Seniors Page thirty-three ROBERT W. BAKER Mechanical Engineering Charlton, Massachusetts A. S. M. E. (3, 4) LEO T. BENOIT 2AE Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Class Golf (1, 2); Golf Team (1, 2, 3, Captain 4); Rope Pull (1, 2); Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee; Newman Club (1, 2, 3, President 4) CARL F. BENSON Mechanical Engineering No. Stonington, Connecticut Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Aero Club (4) ; A. S. M. E. (4) Seniors Page thirty-four WALTER F. BETH ©x Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts A. S. M. E. (3, 4); Assistant Editor Tech Bible (3), Editor-in-Chief Tech Bible (4) KARL H. BOHAKER ©x Electrical Engineering Falmouth, Massachusetts Chairman Junior Banquet Committee (3) ; Masque (2, 3, 4) ; Interfraternity Council (3) CARLETON W. BORDEN 4 2K, TBIT, Skull Mechanical Engineering Mystic, Connecticut Soccer (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Tennis (1, 2, 3, Captain 4) ; Class Basketball (1, 2, 3); Jay Vee Basketball (1, 2, 3); Class Treasurer (1) ; President (3) ; Vice-President (4) ; S. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4) ; A. S. M. E. (4) ; Circula¬ tion Mgr. Tech News (4) ; Tech Council (3, 4) ; Athletic Council (3, 4) ; Vice-President (3) ; Senior Banquet Committee; Soph Hop Committee; Tech Banquet Committee MW Seniors Page thirty-five IRVING H. BOTTCHER Civil Engineering Holden, Massachusetts Baseball (1, 2, 4) ; Basketball (2, 3, 4) ; A. S. C. E. JOHN R. BRAND 4 2K, TBIT, 2E, Skull Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Captain Class Soccer (1, 2); Soccer (1, 2, 3, Captain 4) ; Class Vice-President (2) ; Class Secretary (4) ; Perm¬ anent Vice-President; A. S. M. E. Vice-President (3), President (4) ; Tech Council (2, 4) ; Interfraternity Council (3) ; General Chairman Commencement Com¬ mittee GEORGE E. BROOKS Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts A. S. C. E. (3, 4) Seniors Page thirty-six ROGER W. BRUCE 2AE Electrical Engineering Westboro, Massachusetts Football Compet (2) ; Assistant Manager (3) ; Manager (4) DIXON C. BURDICK Chemical Engineering Manchester, Connecticut Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Jay Vee Basketball (2) ; Skep Chymists (3, 4) ; Rifle Club HAROLD S. BURR AXA Chem ica l Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Camera Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Skep Chymists (2, 3, 4) Seniors Page thirty-seven GEORGE W. BUSBY, JR. Chemical Engineering No. Andover, Massachusetts Band (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Skep Chymists (4) ; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Camera Club (1) JOHN R. CASLER ©x TBn General Science Worcester, Massach usetts Aero Club (1); Soph Act Committee; Football (2, 3, “W” 4); Track (3, 4) ALLAN R. CATHERON 4 rx Mechanical Engineering Needham, Massachusetts Rifle Team (2) Seniors Page thirty-eight GEORGE L. CHASE 4 FA TBIT Skull Mechanical Engineering Winsted, Connecticut Rope Pull (1, 2); Football (2, 3), Class (2) ; Swimming (1, 2), Class (1); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Quartet (3, 4) ; Class President (2a ) ; Tech Council (2, 3, 4) ; Junior Prom Committee, Commencement Committee; President Musical Association (4) ; Business Manager Tech Bible (4) PERRY P. CLARK ©Yft Civil Engineering Bridgeport, Connecticut Soccer (2) ; Jay Vee Basketball (2, 3) ; Baseball (4) ; Class Soccer (2) ; Class Basketball (2, 3, 4) ; Cheer Leader (4) ; Business Assistant Tech News (3) ; Business Manager (4) ; A. S. C. E. LORING COES, JR. Chemical Engineering Brookfield, Massachusetts Seniors Page thirty-nine NORMAN V. COYLE Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4) JOHN A. CRANE ©YO Mechanical Engineering Framingham, Massachusetts Class Football (2) ; Class Tennis (2) ; Class Golf (2) ABNER CRUMB Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Radio Club (1, 2, 3) ; Band (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Manager Band (3, 4); A. I. E. E. (3, 4); Paddle Rush (1, 2) Seniors Page forty EARL M. CURTIS 5 « Electrical Engineering New Bedford, Massachusetts Radio Club (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Fall Track Com¬ petitor (2); Student Branch A. I. E. E. (4), Treasurer; Soccer (4) FRANK E. CUTLER Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Interfraternity Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Interfraternity Relay (2, cf, 4); Interfraternity Baseball (4) WALTER G. DAHLSTROM, JR. AX A Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Soccer (1); Skeptical Chemists (3) Seniors Page forty-one M PAUL M. DOWNEY ©x Chemical Engineering Nashua, New Hampshire Band (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Boyntonians (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4) DONALD L. EDMUNDS AXA Mechanical Engineering Lyndonville, Vermont Senior Class President (4) ; Tech Council (4) ; Inter¬ fraternity Council (4) ; Band (1, 2) ; Boyntonians (2, 3, 4) ; Treasurer Aero Club (3) ; Vice-President (4) ; A. S. M. E. (3, 4) ; Chairman Sophomore Hop Com¬ mittee (2) ; Junior Prom Committee (3) ; Interfraternity Ball Committee (4); Freshman Swimming Team (1) ALFRED C. EKBERG 4 2K Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Class Swimming (1) ; Class Golf (1, 2) ; Class Soccer (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Varsity Soccer (2, 3); Varsity Golf (2) ; Manager Varsity Swimming (4) ; Manager Varsity Golf (4) Seniors Page forty-two WALTER B. EKLUND Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; Vice-President Musical Association (3) ; Quartet (2, 3, 4) HERBERT J. ERICKSON 4 2K TBn Mechanical Engineering Fall River, Massachusetts Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Varsity Soccer (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Masque (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Manager Basketball (4) ; Senior Gift Committee A. S. M. E. GEORGE B. ESTES ©x Mechanical Engineering Cuba, New York Jay Vee Basketball (1); Secretary of Class (3); Man¬ ager of Track, Spring and Indoor (4) ; A. S. M. E. (4) ; Aero Club (4) ; Interfraternity Sports Seniors Page forty-three C. H. JAMES ETHIER ©K £ Civil Engineering Brookfield, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (2) ; A. S. C. E. (2, 3, 4), Treasurer (4); Newman Club (2, 3, 4) ROBERT FOWLER, JR. ®x Electrical Engineering Winthrop, Massachusetts Soccer (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Camera Club (1, 2, 3); A. I. E. E. (3, 4); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (2) GEORGE W. FULLER AX A Mechanical Engineering Hampden, Connecticut Rope Pull (1, 2); Glee Club (2, 3); Varsity Relay Team (3, “W”); A. S. M. E. Seniors Page forty-four EDWARD K. GLADDING Chemical Engineering Newport, Rhode Island Rope Pull (1, 2) SCOTT K. GOODWIN ®x Mechanical Engineering Northampton, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (2) ; Assist. Manager Swimming Team (3); A. S. M. E. (3, 4) ALEXANDER L. GORDON 20 Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Camera Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (1, 2); Skeptical Chemist (2, 3, 4) ; Masque (2) ; Rifle Club (4), Treasurer (4); Interfraternity Basketball (3, 4); Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Tech News (1, 2) Seniors Page forty-five MARTIN C. GOWDEY ©K4 Civil Engineering Amherst, Massachusetts Rope Pull (1, 2); Rope Pull Committee (3); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Band (1, 2, 3); Newman C lub (1, 2, 3, 4); A. S. C. E. (2), Vice-President (3, 4); Tech News Reporter (1, 2); Half-Way-Through Banquet Committee (3) ; Junior Jacket Committee (2) ; Class Football (1, 2); Class Basketball (1); Class Gift Committee (4) HARRY C. GRAY ©x TBII Mechanical Engineering Pittsfield, Massachusetts Freshman Swimming (1); Varsity Swimming (2, 3, 4), Captain (4) ; Tech Council (4) WILLIAM H. GRIFFITHS Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Rope Pull (1); A. I. E. E. (3, 4) Seniors Page forty-six VINCENT P. GRUBLEVSKAS Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Freshman Swimming (1); Swimming (2); Basketball (3, 4) JULIUS E. GUILD ©YO TBn Mechanical Engineering Amesbury, Massachusetts Track (1, 2); Cross Country (2); Camera Club (1) ; Manager Tennis Team (4) ; A. S. M. E. A. HAMILTON GURNHAM ©Yfi Mechanical Engineering Ludlow, Massachusetts Peddler Staff (2, 3, 4); S. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3, 4); Class Secretary (1); Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Varsity Soccer (2, 3, 4) ; Soph Hop Committee; Chairman Junior Prom; Tech Carnival (1, 2, 3) ; Manager Baseball (4) Seniors Page forty-seven JOSEPH R. HASTINGS AXA Electrical Engineering Chicopee, Massachusetts Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Football (1) ; Glee Club (1) ; Track Compet (2) ; Assist. Manager Track (3) THOMAS J. HEALEY 2AE Electrical Engineering Auburn, Massachusetts Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Class Football (1, 2) ; Football (1, 2) HAROLD F. HENRICKSON ©X TBII Skull Mechanical Engineering Holden, Massachusetts Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4), Co-Captain (4); President W. P. I. A. A. (4); Class Treasurer (4) ; Permanent Class Secretary Seniors Page forty-eight L. BREWSTER HOWARD i rA Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts RICHARD S. HOWES ©YQ Skull Civil Engineering Middleboro, Massachusetts Baseball (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Class Basketball (2, 4); Soccer (4); Class Football (2); Band (1, 2) ; Chairman Tech Banquet (4) ; Athletic Association Treasurer (3) ; Tech Council (4) ; A. S. C. E. LEONARD G. HUMPHREY, JR ©Yfi Skull Mechanical Engineering Marblehead, Massachusetts Tech Council (4) ; Editor-in-Chief Tech News (4) ; Band; Jr. Prom Committee; Class Day Committee (5) Seniors Page forty-nine GEORGE W. HUNTLEY AX A Civil Engineering Newport, New Hampshire Golf (1); Class Football (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Masque (2, 3, 4), Vice-Pres. (4); Class Historian (1, 2), Secretary (3) ; Cosmo Club (3) ; S. C. A. (2, 3, 4), President (4) ; Tech Council (4) ; Chairman Class Gift Committee; At Home Day Committee; A. S. C. E. FRED E. HYATT AXA Mechanical Engineering Moorestown, New Jersey Assist. Manager Soccer (3) ; Jacket Committee (2) ; Masque (2, 3, 4), Secretary (4); Aero Club (2, 3, 4), Secretary (3), President (4); A. S. M. E. LEONARD W. JOHNSON 4 2K Mechanical Engineering Northboro, Massachusetts Glee Club (1) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Class Swimming (1, 2) ; Swimming (2, 4) ; A. S. M. E. Seniors Page fifty F. KENWOOD JONES ©Yi2 Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Freshman Swimming; Masque (1, 2, 3, 4), President (4) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Varsity Swimming (2, 4) ; Cheer Leader (3, 4), Head (4) ; Tech Council (4) RICHARD W. KEENAN 2H Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Newman Club (2, 3, 4) ; A. S. C. E. OSMOND L. KINNEY i rA Electrical Engineering Mystic, Connecticut Interclass Golf (2); Manager Golf (4) ; A. I. E. E. Seniors Page fifty-one ERNST P. L. KRIPPENDORF ©x Mechanical Engineering Lynn, Massachusetts Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Pres. (3, 4); Aero Club (2, 3) ; Newman Club (1, 2) ; Interfraternity Council (4) ; S. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Class Secretary (2), Historian (3); Rope Pull (2); Carnival Com¬ mittee (2); Masque (2, 3, 4), Gen. Manager (4); A. S. M. E., Vice-President (4) ; Commencement Committee ROBERT A. LANGER ©K b Electrical Engineering Glenbrook, Connecticut Tech News (2, 3), Junior Editor (3); Peddler Staff (3, 4), Feature Editor (4); Masque; A. I. E. E.; New¬ man Club, Secretary (4) ; Interfraternity Council (4) JAMES A. LANE AXA Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Class Swimming (1, 2) ; Class Tennis (1, 2) ; Swimming (2, 4); Tennis (4) Seniors Page fifty-two CLINTON E. LEECH ®YO TBn Skull Mechanical Engineering Springfield, Massachusetts Soccer (3, 4) ; Tech News (2, 3, 4), Editor-in-Chief (4) ; Class President (1); Tech Council (1, 2, 3, 4), Pres. 4); Swimming (1); Class Soccer (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Glee Club (1) ; Chairman Class Day Committee; Junior Marshall (3) ; Interfraternity Council (3) NATHAN R. LEVINE Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Class Track (1, 2) ; Class Basketball (4) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2,); A. S. C. E. RAYMOND J. LUTKAWICZ Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Skeptical Chemists (3, 4); Rifle Club (4) Seniors Page fifty-three john t. McGrath, jr. 2AE Skull General Science Worcester, Massachusetts Class Football (1, 2) ; Captain Class Track (1, 2) ; Track (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Class Treasurer (2); Class President (2), Vice-President (3); Tech Council (2, 3); Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4) HARRY F. McRELL, JR. ®x Chemical Engineering Pittsfield, Massachusetts Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Band (4); Camera Club 2) WILLIAM C. MAINE 4 2K Mechanical Engineering Willimantic, Connecticut Rope Pull (1); Basketball Jay Vee (1), Class (1) ; Masque (2, 3, 4), Business Manager (3); Manager Soccer (4) ; A. S. M. E., Secretary (4) Seniors Page fifty-four WESLYE L. MARTIN Electrical Engineering Pittsfield, Massachusetts Camera Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Rifle Club (4) ; Radio Club (4); A. I. E. E. ANGELO V. MAURIELLO Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Track (3, 4); Relay Team (4) CHESTER H. MINEHAN Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts S. C. A. (2, 3, 4); A. S. C. E. Seniors Page fifty-five WILLIAM MISEVETH 4 2K Skull Electrical Engineering Hampton, Connecticut Class Track (1, 2); Track (1, 2, 3, 4); Football (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Cosmo Club (2, 3) ; A. I. E. E. EDWARD Y. MONTVILLE ©K4 Electrical Engineering SOUTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Rope Pull (1, 2); Soph Hop Committee; Class Treasurer (3); Junior Prom Committee; Commencement Com¬ mittee; Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Class Football (1, 2); Basketball (3, 4) ; A. I. E. E. DAVID M. MORLEY AXA Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Fencing Club (1, 2, 3); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Peddler Advertising Manager (4); A. I. E. E. Seniors Page fifty-six REGINALD A. MORRILL ©YO Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Tech News (2, 3, 4), Sports Editor (4) ; Junior Banquet Committee; Band (1, 2); Rope Pull (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Assist. Manager Basketball (3) HERBERT A. NEUMAN Chemical Engineering Franklin, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Skep Chymists (2, 3, 4); Glee Club (2, 3, 4) YNGVE H. NORDSTROM 2H Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Skep Chymists (2, 3, 4) Seniors Page fifty-seven A. NELSON PARRY $rA Mechanical Engineering Portland, Maine Freshman Ball Committee (1); Football Compet (2); Soccer Compet (3); A. S. M. E. (4, 5) JAMES W. PHELPS 4 rA TBII Skull Mechanical Engineering McIndoes Falls, Vermont Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2); Varsity Bas¬ ketball (1, 2, 3), Class (1, 2, 3); Class Vice-President (2); Class Football (2); Tech Council (2, 3); Junior Marshall (3) ; Interfraternity Council (4) ; Chairman Senior Prom Committee (4) HAROLD N. PIERSON 4 2K Civil Engineering Hartford, Connecticut Track (1, 2); Assist. Manager Track (3); Tech News (1, 2, 3, 4); Managing Editor (4); Junior Prom Com¬ mittee; Junior Marshall (3) ; A. S. C. E. Seniors Page fifty-eight HAROLD F. POMEROY Electrical Engineering, Dalton, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Class Basketball (1) ; A. I. E. E. JOHN A. PORTER 2AE Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Jay Yee Basketball (1); Rope Pull (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Tech Council (3) ; Track (4) ; Aero Club (4) MICHAEL C. RALLIS ©YO Civil Engineering Lowell, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1); Class Soccer (2); A. S. C. E.; Class Basketball (2) Seniors Page fifty-nine MURRAY ROBINSON ©YO Electrical Engineering Washington, D. C. A. I. E. E. GEORGE E. ROCHEFORD 2AE Civil Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Soph Hop Committee; Senior Prom Committee JACOB A. SACKS 20 Chemical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Camera Club (1); Rifle Club, (3, 4); Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Skep Chymists (3, 4) Seniors Page sixty LOUIS SADICK Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Class Track (1, 2) ; Golf (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Jay Vee Basket¬ ball (1), Class (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Soph Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Commence¬ ment Committee G. ALAN SANBORN Mechanical Engineering Lawrence, Massachusetts ALAN F. SHEPARDSON 4 rA Chemical Engineering Pittsfield, Massachusetts President Camera Club (2, 3) ; Freshman Swimming Team; Football (2, 3); Reporter Tech News (2); Skep Chymists (2, 3, 4), Pres. (4); Junior Prom Com.; Permanent Class Treasurer; Executive Secretary Tech Council (3, 4); Peddler, Photographic Editor (4) Seniors Page sixty-one GEORGE A. SHERWIN ATO Mechanical Engineering Keene, New Hampshire Soccer (1, 2, 3), Class (1, 2); Tennis (1, 2, 3), Class (1, 2); Tech News (1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (4); Tech Carnival Committee (2) ; Soph Hop Committee; Junior Banquet Committee; Commencement Committee; Tech Council (4) ; Interfraternity Council (3) ; Peddler (1, 2, 3. 4), Editor-in-Chief (4) BURTON H. SIMONS AXA Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; A. I. E. E. CHARLES E. SLIVA ©K4 Mechanical Engineering Turners Falls, Massachusetts Football (2, 3) ; Basketball (3) ; Tennis (3) ; Class Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Tennis (1, 2) ; Class Soccer (1, 2); Newman Club; Tech Carnival Committee Seniors Page sixty-two BENJAMIN H. SMITH, JR. Electrical Engineering Bloomfield, New Jersey Rope Pull (2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Cosmo Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Football (2) ; Tech News Reporter (2) ; Junior Business Assistant Peddler (3), Business Man¬ ager (4); A. I. E. E. KINGSTON C. SMITH AX A Electrical Engineering West Newton, Massachusetts Cross Country (1, 2, 3); Band (1); Class Track (1, 2) ; Class Football (2) ; A. I. E. E. Rope Pull (2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) JOSEPH A. STEAD ©x Civil Engineering Millbury, Massachusetts Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Secretary, A. S. C. E. (3), President (4); Tech Council (4) Seniors Page sixty-three WAYNE L. STEVENS Electrical Engineering West Brookfield, Massachusetts Football (1); Orchestra (1); Band (2) CARL N. SVENSON TBII Skull Electrical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Rope Pull (2) ; Paddle Rush (2) ; A. I. E. E., Secretary (4) ; Basketball (2, 3, 4) ; Co-Captain (4) ; Class Bas¬ ketball (2, 3, 4) ; Permanent Class Historian FREDERICK W. SWAN, JR. $rA Mechanical Engineering Dedham, Massachusetts Seniors Page sixty-four J. HEADEN THOMPSON Electrical Engineering Torrington, Connecticut Radio Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (1), President (2, 3); Tech News (1, 2) ; Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Peddler (2, 3, 4), Sports Editor (4); A. I. E. E. F. STANLEY WHITE ©x Mechanical Engineering Pawtucket, Rhode Island Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rifle Club (2, 3) ; Aero Club (4) ; Radio Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Treasurer (2, 3, 4); A. S. M. E. HAROLD C. WHITMAN ©YO Mechanical Engineering Marlboro, Massachusetts Soph Vig Committee; Glee Club (1, 2, 3) ; Carnival Committee (2) Seniors Page sixty-fire ABBOTT D. WILCOX AXA Mechanical Engineering Guilford, Connecticut Tech News (1, 2) ; Aero Club (2, 3, 4), Treasurer (2) ; Baseball Compet (2) ; A. S. M. E. GEORGE P. WOOD Mechanical Engineering SOUTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; Librarian (3, 4) HEWITT E. WILSON ©x Mechanical Engineering Manchester, Connecticut Rope Pull (1); Assist. Manager Track (3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); A. S. M. E. Seniors Page sixty-six JOHN H. WYMAN Electrical Engineering Medway, Massachusetts Radio Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Rifle Club (3); A. I. E. E. FREDERICK L. YEO 4 rA Civil Engineering Winchester, Massachusetts Camera Club (1) ; Compet Football (2) ; Sopb Hop Committee; Assist. Manager Football (3) ; A. S. C. E. JOHN D. CAHILL Mechanical Engineering Worcester, Massachusetts Seniors Page sixty-seven Jacob Bresslar Edwin Brewer Robert Bruce Anthony Capa relli Allen Chase Frederick Cole Gordon Creamer George Dautrich Mason Dudley Karl Eastman Alfred Edgerton Murray Edinburg Alton Fleming Charles Fowler Thomas Frary Norman Gaudreau Elmer Gifford Robert Gould Roger Guild William Hannah Daniel Harrington Mortimer Harris David Hill Hilliard Hiller Robert Hood Ralph Houdush Richard Hudson Trevor Hurst Edward Jaffee Charles McCormick Nelson Marshall Robert Maynard Lawrence Morrison David Morse Elwyn Murdock Guy Narartonis Philip Nigro Howard Osborn Henry Plimpton Charles Prentice William Procter Richard Remy John Richardson Dix Robbins Domenick Rossetti Anders Sandquist Herbert Sherwin Laurence Shields Stedman Smith Neil Starr William Titley Arthur Tripp Ray Wells Michael Wilson Robert Wright Lost, Strayed or Stolen Page sixty-eight Class of 1937 D. W. Woodward, President J. R. Case , Vice-President J. F. Moore, Secretary P. G. Atwood, Treasurer H. S. Fuller, Historian MECHANICAL ENGINEERING KINGSTON E. ATWOOD, Worcester, Mass. ATO; Chairman Junior Banquet (3); Chairman Tech Carnival (3); S. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2, 3); Soph Hop Com¬ mittee; Interfraternity Basketball. JOHN J. BALASEVICH, East Wareham, Mass. OX; Track (2, 3). JOHN R. CASEY, Worcester, Mass. AT 2; Newman Club (1, 2); Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3); Interfraternity Relay (2); Class Treasurer (2); Soph Hop Committee; Rope Pull (2) ; Class Vice-President (3) ' ; Tech Council; Tech Banquet Committee (3). CHAUNCEY D. CHADWICK, Randolph, Vt. $2K; Junior Varsity Basketball; Tech News (1), Junior Editor (2), News Editor (3); Junior Jacket Committee (2). WILLIAM COOPER CLARK, Fairview, Mass. Soccer (1, 2, 3) ; Masque Treasurer (3). HAROLD NEWTON COX, JR., Southold, L. I., N. Y. AXA; Bank (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Masque (2, 3); Cross Country (1, 2). ROLAND 0. FARRAR, Worcester, Mass. $2K; Football Assistant Manager-elect (2). PAUL R. GLAZIER, Millbury, Mass. 9X; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). HERBERT W. GRUNDSTROM, Worcester, Mass. $2I ; Football (1, 2, 3) ; Class Football (1, 2) ; Class Track (1, 2) ; Soph Class Nominating Committee (2) ; Fraternity Relay (1). HERBERT G. GUSTAFSON, Worcester, Mass. OX; Class Soccer (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush ( 1 , 2 ). CALEB D. HAMMOND, JR., Maplewood, N. J. $rA; Rope Pull (2) ; Class Rifle Team (1) ; Football Compet (2) ; Assistant Manager Football (3) ; Interfra¬ ternity Relay (3); Interfraternity Baseball (1, 2, 3); Football Manager Elect (3) ; Chairman Junior Prom Com¬ mittee (3) ; Cheerleader (3). JOHN HIGGINSON, Milford, Conn. AXA; Rope Pull (1); Paddle Rush (1); Compet Soccer (2); Junior Jacket Committee; A. S. M. E. (2, 3). WALTER HENRY HOLT, West Boylston, Mass. Glee Club (1, 2, 3) ; Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Soccer (1, 2, 3). A. HALLIER JOHNSON, Hopedale, Mass. Rifle Club (1, 2, 3); A. S. M. E. (3). C. W. LAUBIN, Hartford, Conn. Rifle Club (3); Camera Club (3). MAXWELL ELLIOT MARSHALL, Holyoke, Mass. 20 i ; Frosh Swimming; Swimming (2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2). DOUGLAS K. MERRILL, Ware, Mass. AXA; Class Tennis (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Tech Carnival Committee (2); Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Basketball Compet (2); Interfraternity Council Dele¬ gate (3); Junior Prom Committee (3). JAMES FUERY MOORE, Holyoke, Mass. OX; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Class Treasurer (1) ; Band (1, 2); Masque (1, 2); Class Football (1, 2); Tech Carnival Skit (1); Junior Jacket Committee; Glee Club (2); Peddler (2). THOMAS E. O’NEIL, Lynn, Mass. $2Iv; Class Soccer (1, 2); Class Secretary (2). CARL S. OTTO, South Hadley Center, Mass. OTQ; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Glee Club (2, 3); Class Tennis (2); Tech News, Assistant Manager (2) ; Business Manager (3). CHANDLER PLIMPTON PIERCE, Lunenburg, Mass. AXA; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Glee Club (2, 3); Assistant Manager of Spring Track (3); Junior Banquet Committee (3). WHELDON G. RICHARDS, Remsen, N. Y. AXA; A. S. M. E. (2, 3); Compet Football (1, 2); Compet Swimming (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Soph Hop Committee (2, 3). FRANCIS W. ROLLINS, Millbury, Mass. Band (1); A. S. M. E. (1, 3). J. MORRISON SMITH, Washington, D. C. ATO; Captain Freshman Swimming (1) ; Swimming (2, 3) ; Soccer (2) ; Football (3) ; Assistant Manager of Base¬ ball (3); Secretary Tech News (3); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Soph Hop Committee. VINCENT OLOF STROMBERG, Auburn, Mass. $2K. JAMES F. SWARTWOUT, JR., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Interclass Football (1); Radio Club (1); Paddle Rush (1); Dormitory Committee (1); Interclass Soccer (2); A. S. M. E. (2). FIELDING TAYLOR, JR., Haverhill, Mass. $FA; Class Football (1, 2); Varsity Football (1); Band (1); Varsity Baseball (1, 2). JOHN BLEVNEY WILLARD, New Rochelle, N. Y. $PA; Rope Pull (1, 2); Masque (1, 2); Soccer (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). BLAIR WHITCOMB, Fitchburg, Mass. AXA; Varsity Track (2); Glee Club (1, 2); Rifle Club (1, 2) ; Aero Club (1, 2) ; A. S. M. E. (2, 3) ; Rope Pull (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2). DANA WHITNEY WOODWARD, Bloomfield, N. J. $PA; Band (1); Masque (1); Dorm Comm. (1); Class Football (1, 2); Varsity (W) (2); Class Officer (1); Class President (2, 3); Tech Council (2, 3); Athletic Council (3) ; Assistant Manager Basketball (3) ; Junior Editor Tech Neivs (3); Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2, 3); Class Bas¬ ketball (3). Juniors Page seventy ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING PHILLIP G. ATWOOD, Worcester, Mass. ATS2; Carnival Skit (1); Paddle Rush (1); Class Soccer (2) ; Class Bowling (2) ; Soph Hop Committee (2) ; Assist. Manager Basketball (3) ; Class Treasurer (2, 3) ; Junior Prom Committee (3) ; Manager Elect Basketball. WILLIAM E. BROWN, Norwich, Conn. Band (1, 2, 3) ; Camera Club (1, 2, 3) ; A. I. E. E. (3). JULIAN RANDOLPH BUCK, Portland, Me. 0TO; Class Swimming (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (2) ; Class Secretary (2) ; Soph Hop Comm. (2) ; Interfraternity Council (3) ; Interfraternity Ball Comm. (3) ; Junior Banquet Comm. (3). WILLIAM E. CAREW, JR., Worcester, Mass. 2Iv; Football (1, 2) ; Track (1, 2, 3) ; A. I. E. E.; Class Football (1, 2); Peddler staff. JOHN H. CHAPMAN, Swampscott, Mass. Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Glee Club (1, 2) ; Varsity Swimming; Soph Hop Committee; Assistant Man¬ ager Tech News (2); Class Soccer (2); Circulating Manager Tech News (3); Manager-elect Varsity Soccer. JOHN HENRY COVELL, JR., Worcester, Mass. Rope Pull (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). C. CHAPIN CUTLER, Springfield, Mass. President Radio Club (3 ), Vice-President (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); A. I. E. E.; Assistant Manager Boyntonians (3). HENRY C. DEARBORN, Summit, N. J. 9TQ; Football (1, 2, 3); Freshman Swimming (1); Swim¬ ming (2, 3). RUNALD VINCENT DeFEO, New Haven, Conn. WILLIAM PARKE FRAWLEY, Worcester, Mass. ATO; TBIT; Paddle Rush (1); Track (1); Class Football (1, 2); Track (2, 3); A. S. M. E.; Varsity Football (2, 3) ; Soph Carnival Skit. WILLIAM FREMONT HAM, Worcester, Mass. 0TO; Baseball Compet (2); Class Soccer (1, 2); Tech Carnival Skit (2). R. PAUL HAMMOND, South Sudbury, Mass. 9X; Radio Club (3). DANIEL J. HASTINGS, JR., Worcester, Mass. TBIT; TK4 ; Junior Prom Comm.; Newman Club; Paddle Rush (1); Rope Pull (1). RALPH H. HOLMES, Worcester, Mass. Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1) ; A. I. E. E. STANLEY HYMAN, White Plains, N. Y. Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Soccer (1, 2); Peddler (2); Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2). BASIL C. KIMBALL, Westboro, Mass. 6X0; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Peddler MICHAEL HENRY MANZI, Millbrook, N. Y. FRANCIS HENRI MARCHAND, Webster, Mass. A. I. E. E.; Rifle Club. SAMUEL WILLIAM MENCOW, Worcester, Mass. 20 ' F; Relay (1, 2) ; Indoor Track (1, 2) ; Track (1, 2) ; Soph Jacket Comm.; Class Track (1, 2); Class Football (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (2) ; Soph Vigilance Committee. LAWRENCE F. MEROW, Worcester, Mass. 6K4 ; Captain of Frosh Rope Pull Team, Captain of Soph Rope Pull Team; Rifle Club (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Soph Hop Committee; Junior Banquet Committee: A. I. E. E. THOMAS MICHAEL NOLAN, Worcester, Mass. Soph Hop Committee. JOHN JOSEPH O’DONNELL, Shrewsbury, Mass. J. V. Basketball (3). FRANCIS WILLIAM PLANKEY, Dalton, Mass. ATO; Masque (1); Newman Club (1, 2); Class Soccer ( 1 , 2 ). JOHN E. POETON, Southbridge, Mass. AX A; Paddle Rush (1) ; Band (1, 2) ; Track (1, 2, 3). ALRIC H. POWELL, Worcester, Mass. J FA; TBIT; Class Soccer (1, 2); Varsity Soccer (3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Camera Club (2, 3); Cos¬ mopolitan (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Vice-President (3) ; Assistant Editor Tech Handbook (3) ; Photo Assistant on Peddler (3); A. I. E. E.; Soccer Compet (2); Paddle Rush; Rope Pull. ROBERT W. POWERS, Worcester, Mass. 2AE; Newman Club; Assistant Manager Cross Country (3) ; Junior Prom Committee; Chairman of Soph Carnival Act (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Inter¬ fraternity Council (3, 4); Frosh-Soph Soccer (2). ROBERT SEARLE RICH, Framingham Center, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Radio Club (1, 2, 3). ARTHUR J. SCHUMER, Brooklyn, N. Y. 204 ' ; Peddler (2, 3) ; Camera Club (1, 2, 3) ; Radio Club (2). GILBERT BARKER SMITH, Nichols, Conn. 6X0; Class Football (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2). WILLIAM MICHAEL STANTON, Wilton, N. H. Friars; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Radio Club (1, 2, 3) ; Newman Club (1, 2, 3) ; S. C. A. (3) ; A. I. E. E. (3). PAUL J. STONE, Auburn, Mass. AX A; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2). H. RICHARD TOWNSLEY, Ashfield, Mass. 4 2K; Football (W) (2); Track (1, 2, 3). NATHANIEL I. KORMAN, North Attleboro, Mass. Radio Club (1, 2); Secretary (2). STANLEY THOMAS LUSAS, Woodbury, Conn. Track (1, 2, 3) ; Radio Club (3) ; A. I. E. E. (3) ; Basket¬ ball (1); Rifle Club (1); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush ( 1 , 2 ). RICHARD J. LYMAN, Worcester, Mass. AXA ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Rifle Club (1); Class Rifle Team (1, 2); Captain (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; A. I. E. E. (3). WILLIAM W. WORTHLEY, Lowell, Mass. 4 2K; Soccer (1, 2); Radio Club; Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Tech Quartet (2, 3); Soph Skit (2); Soph Hop Com¬ mittee (2) ; Junior Editor Tech News (3) ; Secretary Glee Club (3). HENRY T. WROBEL. Worcester, Mass. Radio Club (1, 2, 3); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Chairman A. I. E. E. (3); Varsity Soccer (3); Class Soccer (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); At Home Day Committee (3); Tech Council (3). CIVIL ENGINEERING SIDNEY D. ALPERT, Chicopee Falls, Mass. STT ' E; Class Basketball (1, 2, 3) ; Band (1, 2, 3) ; Junioi Banquet Committee. DONALD BEEBE, Quaker Hill, Conn. f rA; Compet Tech News (1); Football (2) ; Baseball (2). BEVERLY ALLEN BENJAMIN, Shelburne Falls, Mass. ATtt; A. S. C. E. (2, 3); Business Manager Tech Carinval (3) ; ' Peddler (1, 2, 3); Assistant Editor (3); Masque (1, 2, 3) ; Business Manager (3) ; Assistant Swimming Man¬ ager (3) ; Manager-elect. WILLIAM S. BUSHELL, Hamden, Conn. 4 rA; Swimming Team (1); Peddler, Junior Editor; As¬ sistant Manager of Golf; A. S. C. E. JARL ARTHUR CARLSON, Worcester, Mass. $2K; Varsity Football (1, 2) ; Soph Hop Committee; Vice- President Class; Junior Banquet Committee. JERRY CAPUTO, Boston, Mass. ©X GORDON FREDERICK CROWTHER, Framingham, Mass. ATO; Band (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); A. S. C. E. MORTON SAMUEL FINE, Worcester, Mass. Band (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (3); Orchestra (2); A. S. C. E. (2, 3); Class Soccer (2); Soph Hop Committee (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). L. F. GRANDER, Worcester, Mass. Track (1) ; Cross Country. FRANCIS S. HARVEY, Worcester, Mass. TK4 ; Indoor Track (2); Relay (2); Baseball (1). WESLEY P. HOLBROOK, So. Weymouth. Mass. 9X; Band (1, 2, 3,) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3) ; A. S. C. E. (2, 3); Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2, 3); Masque (3); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Compet Swimming (2). Juniors Page seventy-one HAROLD I. JOHNSON, JR., Dedham, Mass. 9TQ; Class Football (1, 2); Class President (1); Class Tennis (1) ; Tech Council (1, 2) ; Tech News, Junior Editor (2); Tech Banquet Committee (2); Football (1, 2). CARL EARL LARSON, Jr., Marlborough, Conn. 0X; Track (1, 21. RICHARD R. LEONARD, Calais, Me. Tech Banquet Skit (2); Class Track (2). RAY KEYES LINSLEY, JR., Bristol, Conn. AXA; TBII; Assistant Manager Fall Track (3); Stage CHEMICAL ERVING ARUNDALE, East Orange, N. J. 0X; Band (2, 3); Skeptical Chemists (2, 3); Class Foot¬ ball (2); Class Basketball (3); Publicity Manager Masque (3). LAWRENCE K. BARBER. Brattleboro, Vt. 0X ; Band (1. 2, 3); Glee Club (2, 3); Peddler Staff ( 1, 2, 3) ; Ass’t Manager Spring Track (3) ; Skeptical Chemists (2, 3). KENNETH E. BENNETT, Fairhaven, Mass. MOSES G. COHEN, Worcester, Mass. Xft ' L; Band (1, 2, 3); Class Basketball (1, 2, 3); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Skeptical Chemists (2); Soph Hop Committee (2). FRANK E. CUTLER, Worcester, Mass. 212 , F. HENRY S. FULLER, Washington, D. C. ‘FLA; Class Historian (1, 2, 3) ; Yice-President Cosmopoli¬ tan Club (3) ; Skeptical Chemists (1, 2, 3) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2,); Rope Pull (1). WILLIAM F. HALL, Worcester, Mass. EDWARD H. HANSON, Worcester, Mass. 2AE; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Football (1) ; Swimming (1, 3); Track (3); Skeptical Chemists (3). ARTHUR W. JAEGER, Brooklyn, N. Y. 2AE. JOHN F. McGINNIS, Worcester, Mass. Rope Pull (1, 2); Skeptical Chemists (2). Manager Masque (3) ; Secretary A. S. C. E. (3) ; At Home Day Comm. (3); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Fencing Club (1); Masque (2, 3). FOSTER CLARK POWERS, Worcester, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2); A. S. C. E. (2, 3). OLIVER H. RAINE, Auburn, Mass. A. S. C. E., Vice-President (3). RAYMOND SCHUH, Southbridge, Mass. 0T12; Glee Club (1, 2); Rifle Club (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Class Vice-President (1); S. S. A. Cabinet (1). ENGINEERING CHARLES R. MICHEL, Upper Montclair, N. J. ‘FXIv; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Foot¬ ball (1); Class Soccer (2); Class Basketball (1, 2, 3); J. V. Basketb all (2, 3) ; Class Tennis (2, 3) ; Class Swimming (2) ; Varsity Tennis (2, 3) ; Camera Club (2, 3) ; Skepti¬ cal Chemists (2, 3). SAMUEL S. NAISTAT, Worcester, Mass. Glee Club (1, 2) ; Class Tennis (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Skeptical Chemists (2). JAMES B. PATCH, JR., Millville, N. J. Freshman Swimming, Glee Club (1, 3) ; Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2) ; Cross Country (3) ; Track (3) ; Class Soccer (2) ; Skeptical Chemists (2). RICHARD PROKOP, Bronxville, N. Y. 0X; RiHe Club (1, 2); Skeptical Chemists (2, 3). JOHN B. SUTLIFFE, Waterbury, Conn. ‘FFA; Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2, 3); Vice-Pres. (2); Skepti¬ cal Chemists (1, 2, 3), Vice-Pres. (2); Class Tennis (2); Cross Country (3) ; S. C. A. Cabinet (3) ; Dorm Committee (1); Tech News Editor (3); Tech Council (3); Banquet Committee (3); Soph Hop Committee (2). ROBERT WEBSTER, Hartford, Conn. l rA; Football (1, 2, 3); Track (1, 2, 31; Class Football (L 2). TALBOT F. WENTWORTH, Framingham Center, Mass. FrA; Skeptical Chemists (2, 3); Tennis (3). LEONARD YOUNG, Worcester, Mass. TBII; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Skeptical Chemists (2, 3). Juniors Page seventy-two Class of 1938 J. E. Germain, President R. M. Elliot, Vice-President R. F. Burke, Jr., Secretary E. E. Gustafson, Treasurer R. H. Nimmo, Historian MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LUCIAN T. ALLEN, Holden, Mass. I rA; Rifle Club (1, 2), President (2); Rifle Team (1, 2), Captain (2); Class Rifle Team (1, 2); Glee Club (2). WILLIAM B. ALLISON, Rutland, Mass. ROBERT A. BABCOCK, Canton, Mass. Glee Club (2); Aero Club (1, 2); Class Soccer (1); Tennis Compet (2). PAUL H. BERGSTROM, Holden, Mass. 9X; Basketball (1, 2) bWb; Class Soccer (1); Class Bowling (1); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). DONALD R. BISHOP, Newport, R. I. dTA; Football Compet (2). FREDERICK J. BURG, Brooklyn, N. Y. 2XN ' ; Rope Pull (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Soccer ( 2 ). PIERCE CHESWORTH, East. Milton, Mass. 2AE; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Class Foot¬ ball (2). DONALD B. CLARK, Eastford. Conn. Band (1, 2); Paddle Rush (2). ARTHUR A. DAVIS, Milton, Mass. ATQ; Glee Club (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1) ; Rope Pull ( 1 , 2 ). JOHN V. DELANY, Worcester, Mass. ATO; Newman Club (1, 2); Director (2). ALLEN R. DESCHERE, New Rochelle, N. Y. Tech News (1, 2); Junior Editor-elect; Glee Club (1, 2); Band (1, 2); Rope Pull (1). ROY S. EDMANDS, Westboro, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (2). RICHARD M. ELLIOTT, New Rochelle, N. Y. d FA; Football (1, 2) W; Basketball (1, 2) bWb; Class Football (1, 2) ; Class Basketball (1, 2) ; Class President (1) ; Class Vice-President (2) ; Tech Council (1, 2) ; Tecli Carnival Skit (1); Peddler (1, 2). E. MORTON FENNER, Millburn, N. J. 0X; Class Chairman (1) ; Assistant Manager-elect, Fall Track; Masque (1, 2) ; Assistant Publicity Manager (2) ; Junior Jacket Committee; Cosmopolitan Club (2); Peddler ( 1 ). ROBERT H. FIELD, Brooklyn, Conn. f 2K; Class Track (1, 2); A. S. M. E. (2). JOHN E. GERMAIN, Worcester, Mass. ZAE; Football (1, 2) W; Baseball (1, 2) W; Track (1) W; Class Football; Class President (2); Tech Council (2) ; At Home Day Committee (2) ; Tech Banquet Com¬ mittee (2). ALLEN II. GRIDLEY, JR., Pelham, N. Y. d FA; Football (1); Track (1); Glee Club (1, 2); Band (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Cosmopoli¬ tan Club (1); Masque (1, 2). ERNEST E. GUSTAFSON, Worcester, Mass. AXA; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Class Treasurer (2). CLARE W. HARRIS, Clinton, Mass. Class Bowling (2). J. ADAMS HOLBROOK, Worcester, Mass. AXA. MILTON P. HUBLEY, Worcester, Mass. Archery Club (2); Rifle Club (2). FRANK H. JENKINS, Worcester, Mass. ATO; Basketball (1, 2) W; Class Basketball (1, 2); Sophomore Hop Committee; Class Soccer (1, 2). GLEASON W. JEWETT, Gardner, Mass. 0TO; Rope Pull (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Basket¬ ball (1); Class Football (2); Aero Club (1, 2). ROBERT KARAKOOSH, Worcester, Mass. AXA; Aero Club (2); Camera Club (1, 2); Sophomore Hop Committee; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2). WALTER E. KNAPP. Worcester, Mass. d FA ; Band (1, 2). M. LEONARD KUNIHOLM, Gardner, Mass. 4 FA; Class Swimming (1, 2). JOHN G. LAWRENCE, Springfield, Vt. d FA; Rifle Team (2); Class Tennis (1); Class Soccer (1, 2); Class Rifle Team (2); Glee Club (1, 2); Rope Pull (1) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2). EVERETT W. LEACH, Worcester, Mass. 0T 2; Football (1, 2); Class Football (1, 2); Tech News (1, 2), Junior Editor-elect; Chairman Junior Jacket Com¬ mittee; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). RAYMOND H. TOLMAN, Worcester, Mass. Band (1, 2); Class Soccer (1, 2). EDWARD E. TURNER, Hamden Conn. d 2K; Assistant Manager-elect Soccer; Tech Carnival Skit ( 1 , 2 ). EARL R. VICKERY, JR., Millbury, Mass. 2AE; Class Football (2). JOSEPH H. WALL, Spencer, Mass. MASON B. WHITING, Norwich, Conn. AXA; Swimming (2); Rifle Club (1, 2); Rifle Team (1); Rope Pull (1); Head Coxswain. BYRON H. WILSON, Worcester, Mass. 0TS2; Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Tech News (1, 2) ; Junior Editor-elect. ROGER G. YOUNG, Norwich, Conn. t FA; Football (2) ; Class Football (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1); Assistant Manager-elect Basketball; Sophomore Hop Committee. Sophomores Page seventy-four CIVIL ENGINEERING ROBERT B. ABBE, South Windham, Conn. £2K; Band (1, 2); Masque (1, 2); Tech News (1, 2). THEODORE C. ANDREOPOULOS, Worcester, Mass. EDWARD W. ARMSTRONG, Springfield, Mass, era RALPH L. BERRY, Dorchester, Mass. AX A; Relay Team (2); Masque (2); Radio Club (1); Astronomy Club (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Cross Country Compet (2); A. S. C. E. (2). CHARLES C. BONIN, Yonkers, N. Y. I XK; Soccer (2); Track (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Tech News (1, 2); Assistant Editor-elect; Peddler (1, 2). RICHARD W. CLOHES, Shrewsbury, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2). ALBERT L. DELUDE, JR., Holyoke, Mass. 4 2K; Tech News (1, 2); Newman Club (1, 2); Paddle Rush (11; Rope Pull (1, 2). RICHARD J. DONOVAN, Worcester, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Class Soccer (2); Newman Club (1, 2). FREDERICK ESPER. Worcester, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Rope Pull (1) ; Newman Club (1, 2). ROGER E. GRANT, Kennebunk, Maine 9TQ; Football (1) W; Class Football (1); Class Presi¬ dent (1); Tennis (1, 2). WILLIAM J. HARMON, Leicester, Mass. Masque (1); Band (1, 2); Tech Banquet Skit (1). JAMES P. IRVINE, Worcester, Mass. 9X; Cross Country (1); Class Track (1, 2); Class Foot¬ ball (1); Band (1, 2); Boyntonians (1). ALBERT J. KULLAS, JR., Webster, Mass. Class Football (2). CHARLES L. LAVEZZOLI, Chester, Conn. Newman Club (1, 2). CARL J. LINDEGREN, Worcester, Mass. 9 TO; Track (2) ; Tech News (1, 2) ; Assistant Editor-elect. ARTHUR H. MALBOEF, Worcester, Mass. 0K t ; Vigilance Committee; Class Soccer (2). ANGELO G. MALLIS, Springfield, Mass. XAE; Rifle Team (1, 2); Class Rifle Team (1, 2); Tech Carnival Skit (1, 2); Class Soccer (2); Rope Pull (2); Rifle Club (1, 2) ; A. S. C. E. (2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2). DONALD L. M1LLIKEN, West Springfield, Mass. ‘fcXK; Class Soccer (1, 2); Tech Carnival Skit (1, 2). ROBERT W. O’BRIEN, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 2AE; Newman Club (1, 2); Sophomore Hop Committee. FRANCIS B. RITZ, Worcester, Mass. JOHN B. SCALZI, Hopedale, Mass. ROBERT C. STICKLE, Gardner, Mass. FRANCIS B. SWENSON, Walpole, Mass. 9X; Paddle Rush (1); Rope Pull (1); Glee Club (1, 2); Class Swimming (1); Track Compet (2). ROBERT M. TAFT, Worcester, Mass. 0TD; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Tech News (1, 2); Track (2); Class Track (1, 2); Chairman Soph¬ omore Hop Committee. FRANCIS L. WITKEGE, Worcester, Mass. Newman Club (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). CHEMISTRY ROBERT O. ALEXANDER, Worcester, Mass. Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Skeptical Chymists. G. GILBERT ASHWELL, Cranford, N. J. Relay Team (1, 2) W; Track (1, 2); Class Track (1) ; Class Football (1); Secretary Athletic Association (2). EUGENE BERTOZZI, JR., Framingham, Mass. Rope Pull (2). THOMAS M. BONNAR, New Bedford, Mass. J XK; Soccer (2); Class Soccer (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). NORMAN A. BOULEY, Worcester, Mass. 0Kd ; Soccer (1, 2) aWf; Swimming Team (1, 2); Class Soccer (1, 2) ; Class Swimming (1, 2) ; Class Bowling (1); Newman Club (1, 2); Skeptical Chymists (2); Sophomore Hop Committee. JOHN C. BRADSHAW, Chicopee Falls, Mass. Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Rifle Club (1, 2). ZIGMUND BURZYCKI, Norwich, Conn. Camera Club (1); Radio Club (1, 2); Newman Club ( 1 , 2 ). NORMAN C. COFFIN, Nantucket, Mass. J 2K; Track (1, 2) W; Class Track (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). LEO J. CRONIN, Worcester, Mass. 9K i ; Class Track (1); Class Soccer (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Junior Jacket Committee; Newman Club (1, 2). JOHN G. FOSTER, Bristol, Conn. Radio Club (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). THOMAS B. GRUZDIS, Worcester, Mass. 0K$; Swimming Team (1, 2) ; Skeptical Chymists (1, 2); Vice-President-elect (2). GEORGE E. HANFF, Pittsburgh, Pa. AX A; Radio Club (1, 2) ; Aero Club (2) ; Cosmopolitan Club (1); Astronomy Club (2) . WILLIAM D. HOLCOMB, Newtown, Conn. 4 rA; Track (1, 2); Class Track (1, 2); Skeptical Chymists (1, 2). WALTER J. HOWARD, Worcester, Mass. Tech News (1) ; Tech Carnival Skit (1) ; Skeptical Chymists (2). ERIC L. MAGER, Leominster, Mass. ARTHUR E. MARTELL, Worcester, Mass 9Iv t ; Rope Pull (2); Paddle Rush (1, 2). ROBERT NIMMO, Bloomfield, N. J. 0X; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Tennis (1, 2) tWt; Class Tennis (1); Class Track (1); Assistant Manager-elect Swimming; Tech Banquet Skit (1) ; Ped¬ dler (1, 2). JOHN F. PEAVEY, Springfield, Mass. 9X; Football (1); Soccer (2); Class Soccer (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 2) ; Assistant Manager Rifle Team (2 . HANS P. PETERSON, Hartford, Conn. Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2) ; Skeptical Chymists (2) ; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (2); Peddler (1). DONALD F. PETHYBRIDGE, Fitchburg, Mass. Paddle Rush (2). ARNET L. POWELL, Worcester, Mass. Paddle Rush (1); Class Track (1); Skeptical Chymists ( 2 ). MAURICE PRESSMAN, Milford, Mass. ROBERT E. PUPKAR, Worcester, Mass. 9Kd ; Rope Pull (1); Paddle Rush (2); Newman Club (1, 2); Skeptical Chymists (2). LOUIS M. SALTSMAN, Lowell, Mass. Sfi ' L; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (2); Skeptical Chymists (1, 2). WARREN H. SCHAFER, Westfield, Mass. Paddle Rush (2). CARLTON H. SCHUPP, East Port Chester, N. Y. XAE; Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Glee Club ( 1 , 2 ). DAVID G. SLOVIN, Worcester, Mass. XO ' L; Paddle Rush (1). ROBERT LINN SOMERVILLE, Bound Brook, N. J. J rA; Skeptical Chymists (1, 2). EDWARD J. TRAYNOR, Worcester, Mass. MURRAY C. WILSON, Rome, N. Y. ATI]; Football (1); Class Football (1); Tech Carnival Skit (1) ; Class Bowling (2) ; Assistant Manager-elect Football; Masque (2). M. WISHNESKI, Worcester, Mass. JOHN GENERAL SCIENCE ROBERT A. EVANS, Hartford, Conn. I rA; Swimming Team (1, 2) sWt; Class Swimming (1, 2); Band (1); Cosmopolitan Club (2); Radio Club (2); Paddle Rush (2); Rope Pull (2). Sophomores Page seventy-five ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SAMUEL A. ALUKAS, Worcester, Mass. 2AE; Baseball (1); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Newman Club (1, 2). JOHN A. BASKIS, Worcester, Mass. J. HARPER BLAISDELL, Winchester, Mass. f XK. RICHARD F. BURKE, JR., Williamsburg, Mass. 0K4 ; Basketball (2) ; Class Basketball (1, 2) ; Class Football (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Historian (1); Class Secretary (2); Newman Club Director (1, 2). ANDREW R. CONSTANT, JR., Grafton, Mass. AT12; Class Football (2); Class Basketball (1, 2); Class Bowling (1, 2); Class Swimming (2); Paddle Rush (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Compet Swimming Team (2); Junior Jacket Committee. ROBERT P. DAY, Methuen, Mass. AXA; Aero Club (1); Masque (2). WARREN H. DAVIS, JR., Nashua, N. H. 0X; Football (1, 21 ; Class Football (1, 2) ; Masque (1, 2). WILLIAM E. EATON, JR. NEIL A. FITZGERALD, Worcester, Mass. 2AE; Newman Club (1, 2) ; Secretary (2) ; A. I. E. E. (2). NORMAN M. GAM ACHE, Leominster, Mass. ZAE; Football (1, 2) W; Class Football (1); Track (1). RICHARD I. GRAY, Nashua, N. H. Aero Club (1); Radio Club (1, 2); Treasurer (2); Vigilance Committee; A. I. E. E. (2). JOHN C. HARVEY, JR., Chestnut, Hill, Mass. 0TO; Camera Club (1); Rifle Club (1, 2); Secretary (2); At-Home-Day Committee (2); Peddler (1, 2). HOWARD W. HAYNES, Bridgeport, Conn. t rA; Cosmopolitan Club (1, 2); Treasurer (2); Glee Club (1, 2); Camera Club (1, 2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Assistant Manager-elect Fall Track. WERNER P. HELD, South Hadley, Mass. RAYMOND K. HOUSTON, Worcester, Mass. AXA. DONALD W. HOWE, JR., Ware, Mass. AXA; Radio Club (1, 2). SHERWOOD S. HOWES, Patten, Maine AXA; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1); Swimming Team (1). HARRIS W. HOWLAND, West Hartford, Conn. 0X; Swimming Team (2, 3) sWt. ROBERT B. KEITH, Wollaston, Mass. Band (1, 2). PETER P. KOLISS, Farnumsville, Mass. Class Football (2); Rope Pull (2). BERNARD A. LOVELACE, Framingham, Mass. DANIEL G. MAZUR, Hartford, Conn. XO ' E; Rope Pull (1, 2) ; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Radio Club (1, 2); Aero Club (1); A. I. E. E. (2); Fall Track Compet (2). GEORGE W. McKENNA, Worcester, Mass. t rA; Glee Club (2) ; Radio Club (2) ; Newman Club (1, 2); Masque (2); Paddle Rush (2). BRIAN H. MINALGA, Gilbertville, Mass. 0X; Track (2) W; Class Track (1, 2); Class Swimming (1, 2); Aero Club (1). ARTHUR P. MOOSA, Worcester, Mass. ATO; Baseball (1, 2) W; Basketball (2) bWb; Class Basketball (2); Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Tech Council (2, 3) ; Secretary Athletic Association (2) ; Vice-President (3) ; Class Vice-President (2) ; Peddler Junior Editor. PAUL MICHAEL MURPHY, South Orange, N. J. 0X; Swimming Team (1, 2); Tech Carnival Committee (1, 2) ; Newman Club (1, 2) ; Baseball Compet (2) ; Class Historian (1). ROBERT G. POTTS, West Orange, N. J. i 2K; Paddle Rush (1, 2) ; Class Soccer (1) ; Football Compet (2) ; Assistant Manager-elect Swimming. ALBERT J. RASCO, JR., Worcester, Mass. HENRY M. RITZ, Worcester, Mass. Sfi ' E; Band (1, 2). EMORY K. ROGERS, Worcester, Mass. 2AE; Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Sec¬ retary (1); Newman Club (1, 2). MALCOLM G. SAFFORD, Springfield, Mass. Cabinet S. C. A. (2). RICHARD M. STAWIECKI, Webster, Mass. Rope Pull (1, 2); Paddle Rush (1, 2); Class Football (2); A. I. E. E. (2). ROBERT O. STEELE, Niagara Falls, N. Y. 2AE; Paddle Rush (1) ; Rope Pull (2) ; Tech Carnival Skit (2). ISADORE TOUBMAN, Hartford, Conn. XO ' E; Football (1, 2) W; Class Football (1, 2); Rope Pull (1) ; Tech Carnival Skit (1, 2) ; Junior Jacket Com¬ mittee; Baseball Compet (2). FRED E. WILEY, Hartford, Conn. 0X; Swimming Team (1, 2); Class Swimming Team (1, 2); Tech Carnival Skit (1, 2). Sophomores Page seventy-six Class of 1939 J. T. Rushton, Jr., President F. Beardsworth, Jr., Vice-President E. L. Kiem, Secretary W. J. Sexton, Jr., Treasurer W. R. Ahern, Historian SAMUEL ALFRED AARON, Webster. FRANK LESLIE ABBOTT, Worcester. i 2K. WALTER LEWIS ABEL, Waterbury, Conn. f rA; Cross Country; Interfraternity Swimming and Track. WILLIAM REGAN AHERN, Worcester. 2AE; Class Historian; Masque; Carnival; Yankee Ingen¬ uity Scholarship. JOHN POWELL ALCOCK, New Bedford. ATf2; Cross Country; Freshman Swimming; Tech News; Glee Club. ARTHUR FREDERICK ALEXANDER, Clinton. Rope Pull. CHARLES HAROLD AMIDON, JR., Worcester. ex. ERIC SIGWARD ANDERSON, Worcester. AX A; Glee Club. ROLAND ANDERSON, Worcester. AX A; Astronomy Club; Camera Club; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. SAMUEL RICHARD ARONOWITZ, Worcester. 212 ' L; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush; Interfraternity Basketball and Baseball. WILLIAM ARTER, Worcester. em JAMES LOWELL BARTLETT, JR., So. Sudbury. £2K. FRED BEARDSWORTH, JR., Manville, R. I. I rA; Football; Baseball. THOMAS FRANCIS BEATTY, JR., Worcester. ROBERT VICTOR BERGSTROM, Worcester. 4 2K- Tech News KENNETH R. BLAISDELL, Springfield. AT12; Football; Freshman Swimming. HOWARD BLANCHARD, Millbury. J. V. Basketball; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. HENRY S. BLAUVELT, Montclair, N. J. t 2K; Track. JOHN BOOSAHDA, Worcester. Cosmopolitan Club; Skep. Chemist. CARL H. BORNER, Woodcliff, N. J. 0T12; Rifle Club; Aeronautics Club; Freshman Swimming. THOMAS G. BOURNE, New Rochelle, N. Y. i 2K; Freshman Soccer. DONALD A. BOWLER, Unionville, Conn. JACK F. BOYD, W. Hartford, Conn. 0T12; Rifle Team; Freshman Rifle Team; Paddle Rush. JOHN THOMAS BRADSHAW; Worcester. 2AE; Glee Club; Interfraternity Basketball and Baseball. MINOT A. BRIDGHAM, Brookline. dTA; Baseball. HARRISON KENFIELD BROWN, Worcester. Rope Pull. JAMES HUNTER BRYSON, Ware. ROGER R. BRYSON, Ware. Football. DONALD M. BURNESS, Pittsfield. AX A; Cross Country; Glee Club; Interfraternity Track; Swimming; Basketball; Class Track. WILDER CARSON, Worcester. Class Soccer. MALCOLM R. CHANDLER, Haverhill. f rA; Football; Track. ALLEN H. CHASE, Cheshire. 2AE. EARL E. CONANT, Auburn. CARLYLE M. CHICK, Silver Lake, N. H. AX A; Masque; Tech News; Dormitory Comm. ARTHUR N. COOLEY, Wellesley Hills. Paddle Rush. BRUCE CRABTREE, Worcester. Paddle Rush; Boyntonians; Band; Freshman Swimming Team. WILLIAM F. CROMBIE, Worcester. AT12; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush; Band. CHARLES W. CUMMINGS, Hollywood, Calif. 0X; Glee Club; Camera Club; Paddle Rush; Rope Pull; Freshman Swimming Team. MICHAEL F. DE LUCA, Worcester. EDWARD DENCH, So. Orange, N. J. 0X. GERALD DEROSIER, Brockton. 0X; Football; Track; Newman Club. APOSTLE T. DECVOS, Worcester. Freshman Soccer. RICHARD H. DEXTER, Springfield. 2AE; Band. JOHN DRISCOLL, Lynn. 0X; Newman Club; Football; Baseball; Basketball. EDGAR LEO DOUVILLE, Northbridge. HOWARD DUCHACEK, East Otis. d 2K. RALPH E. DUDLEY, E. Douglas. JOHN J. DUFFY, Leicester. 2AE. ROBERT C. DUNHAM, Quincy. 0T12. HILDING ERICKSON, Holden. Freshmen Page seventy-eight GEORGE EDWARD FEIKER. JR., Washington, D. C. 2AE. CHESTER FERGUSON, Bellows Falls, Vt. AXA; Cross Country; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush; Masque; Indoor Track. DONALD L. FOGG, Worcester. Paddle Rush, Rope Pull. FLOYD J. FOLMSBEE, Quincy. 0TO; Football; Basketball; Freshman Football and Basket¬ ball; Interfraternity Baseball and Track. CLARK E. FOLSCHILD, Worcester. THEODORE GORDON, Groton. GEORGE C. GRAHAM, Watertown. OX; Cosmopolitan Club. JACOB J. HAGOPIAN, Whitinsville. ROBERT J. HAMILTON, Madison, Me. i rA. GEORGE HAMPSON, Bloomfield, N. J. ATO; Freshman Swimming. ALBERT HANS, No. Billerica. WARREN LLOYD HARDY, Worcester. OX; Freshman Swimming, Rope Pull; Paddle Rush; Masque. ALBERT E. HARTHAN, Lynn. 2AE; Aero Club. AUGUST J. HERD, Worcester. 0X. EDMUND F. HIGGINS, Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. 0TO; Freshman Swimming. WILLIAM J. HILL, Sunapee, N. H. 4 2K. CARL K. HITCHON, Norwich, Conn. I rA. JOHN G. HOLLICK, W. Hartford, Conn. $2K; Soccer; Track. DONALD E. HOUSER, Melrose. d rA; Cross Country; Glee Club; Freshman Track; Inter¬ fraternity Relay. LAWRENCE M. HOWARTH, Royal Oak, Mich. ATO; Glee Club; Peddler. JOHN W. HUGHES, Springfield, Vt. ATO; Band; Glee Club. HAROLD W. HUMPHREY, JR., Canton Center, Conn. 4 2K; Track. DAVID HUNT, Columbia, Conn. AXA; Camera Club; Aero Club. ROGER L. IFFLAND. Torrington, Conn. Glee Club. ARTHUR JACKSON, Springfield. 0X; Football; Freshman Football. R. ADRIEN JACQUES, Worcester. ATO; Baseball. PAUL W. JOHNSON, Newport, N. H. AXA; Masque; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. THOMAS S. JOHNSON, Pigeon Cove. 0X. SAMUEL KAPLAN, Worcester. XO ' F; Paddle Rush; Rope Pull; Interfraternity Basketball and Baseball. JOHN KARNA, Port Chester, N. Y. I 2K; Freshman Swimming. ZARVIN G. KASPARIAN, Whitinsville. WILLIAM LEWIS KAY, Bloomfield, N. J. AXA. PAUL WARREN KEATING, Fitchburg. ATO; Tech News; Masque; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush; Newman Club; Tech Carnival; Freshman Swimming. ROGER A. KELSEY, Short Beach, Conn. CARL A. KEYSER, Washington, D. C. 0X; Cross Country; Camera Club; Masque; Freshman Track; Peddler. EDWIN L. KIEM, Maplewood, N. J. 0TO; Cross Country, Class Secretary; Chairman Dormitory Comm. RUSSEL KOROLYSHUN, Ansonia, Conn. TIvP; Football; Baseball; Basketball. JOSEPH R. KORORSEI, Worcester. FRED JOHN KRAEMER, JR., Rye, N. Y. $rA; Cross Country; Track. CHRISTIAN KUEHN, Scotch Plains, N. J. PHILIP KULIN, Webster. JOHN HOWARD LANCASTER, Douglaston, N. Y. ATO; Cross Country; Track; Tech News; Cosmopolitan Club. LEONARD B. LANDALL, Fitchburg. 2AE. WALTER B. LANG, JR., Westboro. d rA; Rope Pull; Cosmopolitan Club; Skep. Chemists; Tech News ALBERT LAVANAVICZA, Worcester. 0K4 . FRANK W. LEE, Lawrence, Mass. ATI2. CARL W. LEWIN, Hanover, N. H. 0TO; Football. VERNON LIBERTY, Whitinsville. 0TO; Football. ELMER C. LINDQUIST, Worcester. ERNEST N. LJUNGGREN, Springfield. i 2K; Boyntonians; Aero Club; Glee Club; Freshman Soccer; Paddle Rush. ROBERT S. LLOYD, Worcester. ' hPA; Rope Pull; Aero Club; Freshman Soccer and Track. ARNOLD R. LOVELL, West Boylston. WILLIAM STONEMAN LYHNE, JR., Bridgeport, Conn. 0TO; Freshman Rifle Team. DAVID McEWAN, So. Hadley. 3 rA; Soccer; Track; Golf; Basketball. KEITH E. McKEEMAN, Baldwin, N. Y. I 2K; Football; Freshman Football; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. DOUGLAS W. MARDEN. West Boylston. ROBERT W. MARTIN, Springfield. ATO; Football; Tech News; Freshman Swimming; Ped¬ dler. PHILIP E. MEANEY, Leominster. WARD D. MESSIMER, Ossining, N. Y. i 2K; Baseball. GARDNER W. MILLS, Brookville. d 2Iv; Tech News; Freshman Soccer. ROBERT B. MIRICK, Minneapolis, Minn. h2Iv; Camera Club; Band; Interfraternity Track. EDWIN MOGGIO, Chicopee Falls. 0K t . GEORGE MONHAMP, JR., Holyoke. 2AE; Football; Freshman Football. DONALD MORGAN, Longmeadow. JACK STANLEY MOSHER, Southbridge. d 2K; Interfraternity Baseball and Swimming. WILLIAM B. MULLER, Englewood, N. J. ©m ROBERT C. MURPHY, Worcester. JOHN H. NEWTON, Sutton. f 2K. ALBERT A. NIMS, Bloomfield, N. J. f 2K; Basketball; Aero Club; Cosmopolitan Club. ELMER E. NUTTING, Millbury. Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. PHILIP A. O’BRIEN, Worcester. 0K$; Freshman Soccer; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. DAVID OFFICER. Springfield. 0X; Freshman Swimming. STANLEY C. OLSON, Worcester. 0TO; Track; Freshman Track. ROBERT J. O’MALLEY, Worcester. 2AE. BRADFORD W. ORDWAY, Worcester. 0TO. NORMAN A. PACKARD, Lee. 0TO; Football. GEORGE WILLIAM PAULEY, Woonsocket, R. I. ATO. WILLIAM F. PAYNE, Worcester. GUNNAR V. PEARSON, Worcester. HENRY R. POPLAWSKI, Worcester. 0X; Paddle Rush; Football; Basketball, J. V. and Fresh¬ man Track; Interfraternity Swimming. Freshmen Page seventy-nine EDWIN F. PUTNAM, Worcester. ATO. FREDERICK S. PYNE, Worcester. AX A; Radio Club; Rope Pull. MELVIN T. RAFUSE, Worcester. ARTHUR H. RAND. Portsmouth, N. H. J rA; Football; Track; Freshman Football. ALBERT J. RASLAVSKY. Bridgeport. Conn. 0K t ; Football; Baseball; Basketball. LEO G. ROURKE, JR., Worcester. 2AE; Newman Club. JOHN T. RUSHTON, JR., Philadelphia, Pa. t TA; Class President; Football; Basketball; Baseball; Tech Council; Freshman Football anad Basketball; Tech Banquet Comm.; At Home Day Comm. DONALD E. RYAN. Amesbury. ex. EDWARD SANTO!AN, Worcester. SIDNEY E. SCOTT, Worcester. AXA; Freshman Bowling and Track; Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. ROBERT I. SCOVILLE, Torrington, Conn. BILLIE ATWOOD SCHMIDT, Worcester. WILLIAM J. SEXTON, Windsor, Conn, ex. GEORGE A. SHEDYAK, Webster. ANDREW SHULTZ, Worcester. RICHMOND W. SMITH, Walpole. ex. WALTER H. SODANO, Canton. i 2K; Football; Track; Freshman Carnival Skit. CLAIR STAUFFER, Ringtown, Pa. t 2Iv; Freshman Soccer and Bowling; Interfraternity Sports. CHARLES S. STEVENS, Worcester. ALEXANDER STEVENSON, Fall River 2AE ; Track. ALBERT C. STONE, Marblehead. d rA; Football; Baseball. RICHARD H. STOWE, West Millbury. Rope Pull; Paddle Rush. FRANS E. STRANDBERG, Worcester. AXA; Cross Country; Track; Freshman Track. LOUIS ELLIOTT STRATTON, Springfield, I 2K; Glee Club. ERNEST L. SYKES, Worcester. Band. GEORGE M. SYLVESTER, Worcester. WALTER F. TAYLOR, Millbury GORDON L. THOMPSON, Worcester. ATO; Band. CHARLES WILLIAM THULIN, Worcester. AXA; J. V. Basketball; Paddle Rush; Freshman Basket¬ ball; Interfraternity Baseball. ROBERT S. TRICK, New Milford, Conn. ROBERT W. TROTTIER. Lowell. 2AE; Rifle Club; Newman Club; Skep. Chemists. WILLIAM B. WADSWORTH, Concord. BRADFORD BATES WATERMAN, JR., E. Bridgewater. OX; Track. FRED N. WEBSTER. Webster. ROBERT F. WEST, Millville, N. J. AXA; Glee Club; Band. HAROLD E. WHITE, Worcester. 0X; Band; Boyntonians. WILLIAM WHITFIELD, Monson. AXA. RICHARD B. WILSON, Longmeadow. f 2K; Football; Glee Club; Dormitory Comm.; Freshman Carnival Act; Freshman Football; Interfraternity Sports. RICHARD M. WOOD, Stoneham. A TO. GEORGE YULE, Leominster. 2AE. ROBERT P. ZICKELL, Worcester. ATO. Page eighty Freshmen Worcester Tech Athletic Council Faculty: Pres. Ralph Earle; Prof. P. R. Carpenter; Prof. A. J. Knight; Prof. H. F. Taylor. Alumni: A. E. Rankin; A. S. Porter. Students: H. F. Henrickson, President; A. P. Moossa, Vice-President; D. W. Woodward, Treasurer; G. W. Ashwell, Secretary; C. W. Borden, Member-at-large. Athletic Council Page eighty-two WILLIAM MlSEVETH . Captain ROGER W. BRUCE. Manager IVAN E. BIGLER. Head Coach LTHOUGH aided by a promising array of freshman material secured by the so-called athletic scholarship plan inaugurated this year, the Tech football team compiled a record that, at best, might be termed as mediocre. After defeating the Coast Guard Academy for the first opening game win in a number of years, the Engineers dropped four straight decisions and then proceeded to take Rensselaer in the final encounter. The opener against the Guardsmen was played on the New London field with a number of Tech students among the spectators. The teams appeared evenly matched and when Bill Cass, the Coast Guard quarterback, drop-kicked a field goal from the 28-yard line, it appeared as though that would be the only score of the game. And the game might well have ended thus had not a last period break favored the Tech team. Jack Rushton, freshman end, inter¬ cepted a Cadet pass heaved from the Guards¬ men’s 35-yard stripe and raced on to the touch¬ down which meant a 6 to 3 victory. The Trinity eleven, undefeated in twelve suc¬ cessive encounters, was the next team met by the Engineers and the Hartford eleven tallied once in the opening period, twice in the third, and once in the fourth to compile 25 points while holding Tech scoreless. Until midway in the third period, Tech played the powerful Blue and Gold aggregation on even terms. After Trinity’s first score early in the game, the Engineers defense tightened and the offense clicked sufficiently to place the hall in the shadow of the Hartford goal posts on several occasions, but the punch necessary to score was lacking and each time Trinity retrieved the hall on downs. Jackie Germain, flashy Tech quar¬ terback, bore the brunt of the attack and was responsible for most of Tech’s long gains which, in the end, went for naught. With the third quarter pretty well shot, the Trinity combina¬ tion of Kobrosky and O’Malley started to click and two touchdowns were produced in quick order. Another tally at the opening of the last period ended the scoring. Captain Bill Mise- veth was outstanding on the defense for Tech. Connecticut State provided the opposition for Tech’s first home game and it looked like a home team victory until late in the game when the Nutmeg State team partially blocked a Tech kick, proceeded to score and then convert the extra point to set the score at 7 to 6. The Engineers’ lone tally came in the second period after a recovered fumble at midfield and a for¬ ward lateral pass play, Korolyshun to Rushton to Frawley, put the hall on the States 15-yard stripe. Several plays later Germain went over for the touchdown. The Massachusetts State eleven visited Alumni Football Page eighty-three field the following Saturday and outplayed Tech in all departments of the game to win, 20 to 0. The first tally came early in the game when the Staters blocked Johnson ' s kick, ran the ball to the three-yard line and then over for the touch¬ down. The try for the extra point failed. An¬ other blocked kick in the following period re¬ sulted in the second score with Lehr, State left end, running thirty yards to tally. Fred Riel converted the extra point on a placement. The Taube-coached machine boosted its total still further in the third quarter, Fred Riel pushing the ball over, after a series of line plunges and end runs had placed the Amherst team in a scor¬ ing position. Jackie Germain led the Engineers in a late rally which saw five successive first downs being recorded but the game ended be¬ fore any scoring could be done. In the last home game of the season, the Engineers put up a great fight against the classy Rhode Island State aggregation but a few bad breaks coupled with inability to apply the pres¬ sure when most needed resulted in a 23 to 6 verdict for the Rams. The State started out strong, working the ball down the field for a score during the first few minutes of play. Tech countered with a determined drive which placed the ball almost on the Rams’ goal line. They could not push over, however, and Rhode Island took the ball on downs. Following a punting duel, Germain snared a Rhode Island pass at midfield and by a beautiful bit of broken field running managed to elude the entire State team and cross the goal line. The spontaneous cheer that went up from the stands was short-lived, however, the referee declaring the play void due to an offside. Before the half ended, the Rams added another two points on a safety. Tech’s touchdown came in the third quarter after Ger¬ main and Korolyshun advanced the ball to the 8-yard line, Germain scoring on a center thrust. Two more State tallies were made in the final period. A lone touchdown resulting from a Rens¬ selaer fumble gave Tech a 7 to 0 win over the Troy Engineers in the season’s final. Both teams Football I’age eighty-four were greatly hampered by the muddy field and a slippery ball. The break came early in the game when the Rensselaer safety man fumbled Germain’s punt, Raslavsky recovering on the 11-yard marker. Carl Lewin gained four yards and then Germain slipped through tackle for the score. Lewin converted the extra point on a rush. Neither team threatened for the re¬ mainder of the half. The New York State team approached a score only once during the game when, after the hall had been advanced to the 15-yard stripe, Powers took Porter’s pass but in so doing lost his balance and fell onto the muddy field, the ball slipping from his grasp. Tech then took the ball on downs and punted out of danger. Captain Miseveth ended four years of brilliant playing at tackle with this game. He is the only man to he lost to the team through graduation but his going will leave a difficult gap to fill. Football Page eighty-jive HAROLD F. HENRICKSON. Co-Captain CARL N. SVENSON . Co-Captain HERBERT J. ERICKSON . Manager IVAN E. BIGLER . Coach ECH’S 1935-36 basketball team rippled the net for 560 points in winning ten out of fourteen encounters, to attain a record surpassed only by that of the New England championship team of 1921 and to give the Engineers an average of 40 points a game, or one for each minute of play for the first time in history. The team was co-captained by Norm Svenson and Fritz Henrickson, while the remainder of the squad included Vinney Grublevskas, A1 Raslavsky, Irv Bottcher, Dick Munson, Frank Jenkins, Dave McEwan, and Floyd Folmsbee. Jack Rushton, tall freshman center, started out with the team at the beginning of the season, hut was forced to retire from active play because of illness. The individual star of this powerful team moulded together by Pete Bigler was A1 Raslav¬ sky. The brilliant freshman center tallied a total of 171 points during the season, being listed among the high scorers of New England. His all around playing was of such caliber as to point him for a place alongside previous Tech “greats” in the all-time annals. The quintet opened the season on December 14 at Alumni Gymnasium in an auspicious manner, trimming the Coast Guard Academy five 36 to 23. Coach Bigler’s pupils, with Svenson and Raslavsky outstanding, took the lead early and were never headed. Tech’s air¬ tight zone defense baffled the Guardsmen and forced them to try long heaves, most of which failed to register. The Engineers put on a still better exhibition in trimming Boston University 49 to 25 the fol¬ lowing Friday at the gymnasium in the last start before vacation. Although facing a more ex¬ perienced team, the Boynton Hillers played cir¬ cles around their opponents, giving the spec¬ tators a sparkling exhibition of passing, inter¬ cepting, and plain and fancy shooting. Co-captains Norm Svenson and Fritz Hen¬ rickson led their cohorts against Assumption on January 14 in a game marking the inauguration of athletic relations between the two colleges. A continuation of the fine work displayed dur¬ ing the first two encounters enabled the home forces to turn in another victory. Led by the high scoring of Raslavsky who tallied 19 points to bring his total to an even 50 for three games, the Engineers accumulated 45 points to the Greyhound’s 26. The largest crowd in several seasons witnessed this conflict. Suffering humiliation the following Saturday, Tech went down to defeat at the hands of New Hampshire State, 39 to 34, thus spoiling what¬ ever hopes its followers had for an undefeated season. The Wildcats took the lead at the be¬ ginning while bewildered spectators watched unbelievingly. Midway in the first half the Basketball Page eighty-six Engineers spurted, and, at the half seemed headed for a victory with the Biglermen out in front 21 to 12. With the opening of the second half, however, the locals lapsed into a lethargic state, and the New Hampshire team quickly caught up with and then passed them. Things looked black for the Engineers fol¬ lowing the New Hampshire game. Rhode Island and Springfield were scheduled for the week preceding examinations with the Rhode Island game listed for Kingston, the first game away from home. Both games were lost despite the fact that Tech regained its old form and played brilliantly. With Svenson, Raslavsky, and Munson going on a scoring spree, the En¬ gineers held a three point margin over the Rams at the half, but they did not figure on Captain Jack Martin of the Rhode Island team. This player led his team on a scoring spree of its own, and when the final gun sounded the Rams were in the lead 54 to 49. Martin scored 26 of his team’s points. Springfield’s clever Olympic aspirants put on a flashy exhibition in trimming Tech 57 to 32. This crack quintet was too good for Tech even with the Engineers playing superbly. Emerging from exams without a casualty, the Engineers proceeded to crash their way back into the win column with a decisive 50 to 28 victory over Clark in the first game of the annual series between these two rivals. Although the Tech cagers were erratic at times, the early lead which they built up was never in danger. Vinney Grublevskas’ long field goal in the closing seconds gave Tech a 26 to 25 verdict over Northeastern in a hectic encounter which was close throughout. Playing on the Boston Y. M. C. A. court, the Engineers kept on even terms with the strong Huskies and matched them point for point. Basketball Page eighty-seven The first victory over Trinity in five years was gained in a mid-week game at Hartford when Tech completely outclassed the Nutmeg State team, winning 50 to 25. Led by Co¬ captain Svenson who found the hoop from all angles for a total of 18 points, the Boynton Hillers held a three point margin at the end of the half and then proceeded to turn the game into a rout. The victory was especially sweet to the Crimson and Grey rooters who had watched the Kobrosky-O’Malley combination run roughshod over the Engineer footballers last fall. Playing their third successive game on for¬ eign courts, the Biglermen gave their supporters a scare when they permitted Clark to hold a 17 to 8 lead over them at the half. The Engi¬ neers played their usual stellar game during the second half, however, and overcame the lead, winning 30 to 25. The Scarlet started out strong while the Engineers defense and offense were dead, and it wasn’t long before the South Enders had tallied 13 points whereas Tech had not chalked up a single point. A strong Tufts team handed Tech its fourth defeat of the season on the Medford court the following Wednesday, the final score being 38 to 25. One of the main reasons for the defeat was a player they called “Wojy” who, unfor¬ tunately, had a knack for getting through the Tech defense. Wojy tallied 17 points. Returning to the home court after an absence of three weeks, the Engineers snapped out of their slump and proceeded to outclass Mass. State, 40 to 26, in a game that was one of the fastest of the season. The Staters were making their last Worcester appearance under the guid¬ ance of Mel Taube, whose court teams had never known defeat at the hands of Tech. Little trouble was experienced in downing the Basketball Page eighty-eight Conn. State five on the Nutmeggers’ home court despite the fact that Svenson was unable to take part in the fray due to an injured leg. The State team started out as though it were going to give the Biglennen a tough battle, but the Engineers soon warmed up and slowly but surely drew away from their opponents. The final score was 48 to 30. Tech brought its season to a close with some of the most spectacular playing seen at the Alumni Gymnasium in a long while, staging a 13-point rally in the closing four minutes of play to whip a favored Brown team that had just finished trimming Yale and Rhode Island State. After leaping into an early lead which they managed to hold until midway into the second half, Tech faltered and the Bruins forged into the lead. With the score 40 to 33 against them and with the game drawing to a close, the Engineers, paced by Svenson and Jenkins, un¬ corked some sparkling passing and shooting and soon forged ahead. When the final gun sounded as a requiem to one of the most successful sea¬ sons ever experienced on Boynton Hill, the score was 46 to 41. Basketball Page eighty-nine RICHARD S. IIOWES. Captain A. HAMILTON GURNHAM . Manager IVAN E. BIGLER. Coach r jpWO victories over Clark sandwiched in be¬ tween five defeats at the hands of New Hampshire State, Trinity, Northeastern, Massa¬ chusetts State, and Connecticut State is the rec¬ ord of Tech’s 1935 baseball team. A scheduled game with Rhode Island State was rained out. The initial game with New Hampshire was lost by a 2 to 0 score, while Clark took a 7 to 0 setback in the first home game of the season. A 9 to 5 loss for the Crimson and Gray to Trinity, played on the latter’s field was followed by a wild “field day” at Alumni field. Mass. State tallied 17 runs with 24 hits against the 12 runs gained by Tech. These losses were somewhat offset by a win over our “arch” rivals, altho a not too decisive victory. Clark led in the second but “Ace” Howe’s home run tied the score, while in the next frame the South Enders scored three runs. This was overcome by Hibbard’s four sacker with bases full in the fifth, final score 7 to 5. The season closed with Connecticut State beating our Engineers array by an 8 to 2 score. Anders Sandquist was Tech’s star pitcher, playing in every game with Captain Ray Starrett as the other half of the battery. Baseball 1935 Page ninety r J ' , HE first four games of the 36 season gave Tech a .500 average. Tech won the opener with Northeastern, lost to Mass. State, R. I. State, and beat Clark. Alumni Field was the scene of the contest between Tech and Northeastern, Tech emerging victorious in the 10-inning game, 11 to 10. The Biglermen were behind up to the ninth inning, when they scored three runs to tie the score. In the first of the tenth Northeastern scored one but Tech came back to score two. Raslavsky pitched well from the fifth inning when he came into the game, while Jack Casey had a perfect slate, five hits out of five. Blake of Mass. State held Tech to three hits while the Amherst Team heat the Engineers 13 to 1, at the former’s field. Tech scored its lone run in the fourth when Germain hit and scored on Rushton’s bingle. Rhode Island State took the third game on Tech’s schedule by a 3 to 0 score. The Engi¬ neers failed to click at the crucial moments, thereby kept scoreless. Three innings of the Clark game were played on Saturday, May 9, before it was called be¬ cause of rain. The following Monday the game was played to a finish,—taking 13 innings. Tech led 3 to 0 in the third but Clark tied it up in the fourth. After this the Crimson and Gray remained behind just tying up the inning after Clark scored. Raslavsky, who pitched well throughout the game, hit a single in the 13th scoring Rushton from second to end the game. Baseball 1936 Page ninety-one JOHN R. BRAND . Captain WILLIAM C. MAINE. Manager EDWIN HIGGINBOTTOM. Coach HE soccer team, captained by Jack Brand, is the only Tech fall athletic aggregation which has reason to boast of its record, the hooters winning four of six encounters. Out¬ standing was the play of Dave McEwan, versa¬ tile freshman athlete who came to Tech with a great reputation and who has more than lived up to it. With McEwan tallying twice, the Engineers trimmed Mass. State in the opener, 3 to 2. Carl Borden scored Tech’s other point while Ace Howes, Tech goalie, warded off a number of potential State scores. McEwan and Borden continued their scoring spree the following week, tallying five points between them to enable Tech to defeat the Wesleyan hooters for the first time in five years. The Middletown, Conn., team could only pene- trait the Engineers’ defense for two goals. Conn. State was the next victim of the power¬ ful Higginbottom coached machine, the Nutmeg Staters bowing 4 to 1 as the Engineers played on their home field for the first time. Walter Holt gave Tech its first two tallies, booting the ball into the net twice in succession in the first period. Soccer Page ninety-two A last period rally by the strong Brown hooters ended Tech hopes for an undefeated season. Tech led 4 to 3 going into the last period, scores being made by Captain Brand, Holt, McEwan, and Jack Mudgett. The Provi¬ dence team tallied three times in the closing minutes, however, to win. Undaunted by their initial setback, the team came back strong to swamp Tufts, 9 to 2, McEwan personally accounting for five of the goals and Borden booting in three. A surprise defeat, 4 to 2, at the hands of Clark completed the season. The game was closely contested throughout but the Scarlet held the upper hand and a two goal margin when the final whistle blew. A number of the players composing this crack team will be lost to Coach Higginbottom next year through graduation. They are: Cap¬ tain Brand, Carl Borden, Ace Howes, Ham Gurnham, Herb Erickson, Clint Leech, Bob Fowler, and Walt Holt. Soccer Page ninety-three JOHN T. McGRATH GEORGE B. ESTES Captain Manager J. OLIVER JOHNSTONE Coach r J , HE 1935 spring track season was opened on May 4 with the powerful Rhode Island State aggregation as opposition. The visitors were strong in all events, and succeeded in piling up 108 points to the Engineers’ 27. The one bright spot on the afternoon’s program was the running of Ed Hatch, who equalled the college record in the 100-yard dash, and set a new marker in the 220-yard dash, doing the latter in 21 3 5 seconds. The trackmen met and defeated Tufts and Mass. State in a triangular affair at Medford the following week. The Engineers scored 65 1 2 points while Mass. State and Tufts trailed with 51 1 2 and 48 points respectively. Ed Hatch again led the field in the 100 and 220, while Jack McGrath won both the hurdle events. Tech played host to eleven colleges on May 18, when the annual Eastern Intercollegiate track meet was held. The Engineers were out¬ classed by the strong squads from Rhode Island State and Middlebury who ran away with the meet, scoring 56 1 3 and 30 points respec¬ tively. Tech scored 13 1 3 points to place fifth. Ed Hatch was Tech’s lone entrant in the New England Intercollegiates. He kept his record unbeaten by winning the 220-yard dash and, incidentally, in doing so he shattered the hopes of Holy Cross for annexing the meet title, two Crusaders following him across the finish line. Track 1935 0 START the 1936 track season Tech pounded out a smashing victory over Conn. State to the tune of 84-51. Jack McGrath, last year’s captain, starred in the meet with a total of 13 points for his afternoon’s work. Mai Chandler helped out with 11 points. Other leaders were Taft in the 880, Minalga and Hanson in the javelin, Miseveth and Townsley in the discus, and McEwan in the high jump. The following week, although Tech went down to defeat in the triangular meet at Amherst in which Mass. State, Tufts, and Tech participated, it had its proud moments. Jack McGrath, who was named captain for the re¬ mainder of the season, set a new record of 16.2 seconds in the high hurdles. Bill Miseveth also set a new mark of 122 feet 3 inches in the discus. The closely contested meet ended with Tufts in the lead with 61 1 2 points, Tech 51 1 2 points, and Mass. State, 51 points. Track 1936 Page ninety-five HARRY C. GRAY. Captain ALBERT C. EKBERG . Manager FRANK W. GRANT . Coach rp W0 wins in eight starts tells the story of the 1935-1936 swimming team. Although possessing a pair of consistent point-winners in Capt. Harry Gray, whose specialty was the dashes, and Bob Evans, a breaststroker, strength in the other events was lacking. The season opened on December 14 with the Connecticut State natators sinking the Engi¬ neers, 49 to 28, in the Fuller pool. Capt. Gray captured the 40 and 100-yard dashes and Evans took the 200-yard breaststroke event, setting a new college record for the event although given little opposition by the Nutmeggers entered in that event. With Gray equaling the college record in the 40-yard free style dash, Tech outscored the Coast Guard team, 50 to 27, in the first meet after the Christmas holidays. The following week, however, the tankers journeyed to Mass. State for their first meet away from home and were defeated by the same score, 50 to 27. Five pool records were set during the course of the meet, all being made by the Staters ex¬ cept the 50-yard free style mark which was set by Tech’s Gray. Wesleyan was next on the schedule, and the strong, well balanced Cardinals had little trou¬ ble in subduing Tech by a count of 58 to 19, Page ninety-six Swimming setting three new pool records in doing it. The Boynton Hillers next traveled to Hartford to suffer a 54 to 22 defeat at the hands of Trinity in a meet that had very little excitement. On Washington’s Birthday the worst defeat of the season was suffered in the Amherst pool where the Lord Jeffs won eight out of nine first places to tally 61 points to Tech’s 16. The only Tech win was in the breaststroke event where Evans edged out Kothe of Amherst. This meet marked Captain Gray’s first defeat of the season in the short dash event. The feature race of the day was the free style relay in which Amherst nosed out Tech by little more than a yard. In a meet much closer than the score would indicate, the Engineers finished on the short end of a 56 to 21 score when they clashed with Boston University. Possessing a determination to win from their fellow Engineers, the team rallied to take the final meet of the year from M. I. T. by a score of 50 to 27, and in so doing, captured all but two first places. Swimming Page ninety-seven r jpHE 1935 Cross-Country season was rather disastrous for the Tech cohorts. During the season, they met on following Saturdays the United States Coast Guard Academy, Trin¬ ity, Connecticut State, Mass. State, the Rhode Island State Rams, and the Engineers from Rensselaer, and failed to annex anything that resembled even a moral victory,—some of the losses being by perfect scores. However, this year’s team can be congratulated for the manner in which they stuck through the season, and next year every man on the team is scheduled to return, which should bode a bit more evil for their opponents. Page ninety-eight Cross-Country f J T HE loss of Ed Hatch, Tech’s outstanding track star of last year seriously handi¬ capped the relay team, although it still had four veterans in Mauriello, Harvey, Ashwell and Mencow. In its first appearance at the K. of C. Games held on January 25, it failed to look impres¬ sive, trailing behind Springfield, Middlebury HAROLD N. COX, Captain JOSEPH R. HASTINGS, Manager J. OLIVER JOHNSTONE, Coach and Mass. State. Two weeks later at the B.A.A.’s they did a little better and moved up a place in the same company. In the only indoor meet of the season, a tri¬ angular affair with Tufts and Mass. State, Tech again placed third, the points being as follows: Tufts 45, Mass. State 26 1 2, Tech 20 1 2. Winter Track Page ninety-nine ' T’HE Tennis season of 1935 was not as sue- and losing the other five. As the Peddler goes cessful as it might have been. The team to press, the 1936 team has won a match from played seven matches, winning one, tying one, Assumption and dropped one to Bowdoin. 1935 RECORD 5 0 7 5 5 3 4 CARLETON W. BORDEN, Captain JULIUS E. GUILD, Manager RUSSEL V. CORSINI, Coach Tech 1 M. I. T. Tech 7 Fitchburg Teachers Tech 0 Trinity Tech 2 Tufts Tech 4 Clark Tech 3 Providence Tech 3 Springfield Page one hundred Tennis HE 1935 Golf Team compiled something of a record among Tech Teams by winning five out of its six encounters, the lone defeat coming from the hands of the crack Holy Cross shot makers. At the time of this writing, the 1936 team is doing as well, showing a record of three wins without a loss. Tech 5 1935 RECORD M. I. T. 1 Tech 5i 2 Amherst % Tech 1 Holy Cross 5 Tech 6 Trinity 0 Tech 6 Boston College 0 Tech 4 Tufts 2 Golf Page one hundred one r J 1 HE Tech Jay Vee Basketball Team scored, under the leadership of Coach Tom Mc¬ Nulty, five wins and seven defeats, for the best record made by the Jay Vees in many seasons. Dick Elliott and Russ Korolyshun starred throughout the season. In both games played Jay Vees 29 Jay Vees 18 Jay Vees 12 Jay Vees 24 Jay Vees 18 Jay Vees 17 Jay Vees 20 Jay Vees 17 Jay Vees 33 Jay Vees 30 Jay Vees 16 Jay Vees 27 away from home the Jay Vees were victorious. The crack Lincoln Square Boys’ Club had a hard game on their hands when they defeated the Tech Seconds, and in the last game of the season, played against Classical, the play en¬ tered into an extra period hut only for a lost cause. Commerce 28 B. U. Freshmen 25 South High 20 St. John’s 28 Classical 11 St. Peter’s 13 Lincoln Sq. Boys Club 30 Clark Jay Vees 21 Trinity 23 Clark Jay Vees 27 Ionic Ave. Boys Club 29 Classical 28 Page one hundred two Jay Vee Basketball X HE Freshman Swimming team opened its sea¬ son by journeying to Worcester Academy only to meet a much stronger opponent and to be defeated 35 to 16. At this first showing the team seemed very well balanced, with the ex¬ ception of the dives; Kama showed consid¬ erable possibilities in the dashes, Officer in the back stroke, and Crabtree in the breast stroke. Several weeks later the Ionic Avenue Boys’ Club challenged the Freshmen in their own pool, and again the first year men went down in defeat, 49 to 12. By the time the Lincoln Square Boys’ Club met the Freshmen, they had improved considerably under Frank’s coaching and held their challengers 39 to 23. Hampson came into his own in the 220 and showed signs of improving even more. The last meet of the season was a return one with the Academy which the latter won, 36 to 23. Freshmen Swimming Team Page one hundred three LUCIEN T. ALLEN, Captain JOHN C. HARVEY, JR., Secretary ALEXANDER L. GORDON, Treasurer RICHARD PROKOP, Manager r J 1 HE Worcester Tech Rifle Team completed a very successful season by winning the majority of its meets. The first opponent, the Worcester Pistol and Rifle Club, was defeated very easily in spite of the fact that their team consisted of experienced and veteran riflemen. From then on, the matches, some of which were postal and the rest shoulder to shoulder, were held about every two weeks, with the competi¬ tion and enthusiasm running high. Of the fif¬ teen matches shot, only five were lost, and these by small margins. Inspired by the success in the other matches, the members put in extra practice and wound up the season in a satis¬ factory fashion by defeating the sharpshooters from Lowell Textile Institute in two consecutive matches. The Rifle Club which sponsors the Team held meetings every two weeks with discussions by members of the club and occasionally by col¬ lectors and manufacturers of firearms who kindly consented to present their experiences to the club. Rifle Page one hundred four V ' V ' v ' V v v 4vS , • ' % £ % v ' ts ' £ ► V 0 ' V « i Mr. Paul R. Swan Prof. Harold J. Gay James W. Phelps Leo T. Benoit George A. Sherwin Ernst P. L. Krippendorf Donald L. Edmunds John R. Brand Julian R. Buck Runald V. DeFeo Chairman Secretary- Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Tau Omega Theta Chi Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Sigma Kappa Theta Upsilon Omega Theta Kappa Phi Page one hundred six Interfraternity Council MEMBER WITH DISTINCTION President Ralph Earle Herbert F. Taylor Donald G. Downing FACULTY M. Lawrence Price Ivan E. Bigler MEMBERS Carleton W. Borden John R. Brand George L. Chase Harold F. Henrickson Richard S. Howes Leonard G. Clinton E. Leech James T. McGrath, Jr. William Miseveth James W. Phelps Carl N. Svenson Humphrey, Jr. Skull Page one hundred seven President Ralph Earle Prof. F. J. Adams Prof. C. M. Allen Dr. R. A. Beth Dr. F. R. Butler Prof. H. W. Dows Mr. S. H. Fillion Prof. A. W. French Mr. L. J. Hooper Mr. C. W. Hubbard Prof. C. D. Knight Dr. G. H. MacCullough Prof. H. A. Maxfield Prof. C. F. Meyer Prof. H. H. Newell Prof. A. S. Richey Mr. E. R. Spaulding Mr. A. M. Tarbox Mr. B. L. Wellman C. W. Borden J. R. Brand G. L. Chase D. L. Edmunds H. J. Erickson H. C. Gray 1936 J. E. Guild H. F. Henrickson J. A. Lane C. E. Leech Y. H. Nordstrom J. W. Phelps C. N. Svenson W. P. Frawley D. J. Hastings, Jr. R. K. Linsley, Jr. 1937 C. S. Otto A. H. Powell J. F. Swartout, Jr. L. A. Young Tau Beta Pi Page one hundred eight MEMBERS FOR THE YEAR 1935-1936 Professor F. J. Adams Professor C. M. Allen Professor R. A. Beth Professor F. R. Butler Professor H. W. Dows Professor A. W. Duff Professor G. A. Gaffert Professor H. J. Gay Professor J. W. Howe Professor W. L. Jennings Professor A. J. Knight Professor C. D. Knight Professor G. H. MacCullough Professor M. Masius Mr. H. B. Feldman Mr. S. H. Fillion Mr. W. E. Lawton Mr. J. M. Petrie ASSOCIATE Mr. J. R. Brand Mr. G. E. Brooks Mr. L. Coes, Jr. Mr. D. L. Edmunds Mr. S. K. Goodwin Mr. C. W. Hubbard Mr. R. W. Keenan Mr. R. T Professor H. A. Maxfield Professor K. G. Merriam Professor C. F. Meyer Professor T. H. Morgan Professor R. K. Morley Professor H. H. Newell Professor C. A. Pierce Professor W. L. Phinney Professor S. J. Plimpton Professor F. W. Roys Professor H. Rice Professor A. L. Smith Professor M. E. Smith Professor H. F. Taylor Mr. M. L. Price Mr. E. R. Spaulding Mr. A. J. Staples Mr. A. M. Tarbox MEMBERS Mr. J. A. Lane Mr. L. L. Libby Mr. Y. H. Nordstrom Mr. V. Siegfried Mr. B. H. Smith, Jr. Mr. V. F. Sepavitch Mr. G. P. Whitcomb Young Sigma Xi Page one hundred nine FACULTY MEMBERS William L. Phinney 1936 L. Brewster Howard Osmond L. Kinney A. Nelson Parry Frederick L. Yeo 1937 Caleb D. Hammond, J Alric H. Powell John B. Sutliffe Fielding Taylor, Jr. James W. Phelps Alan F. Shepardson Frederick W. Swan . Robert F. Webster John B. Willard Dana W. Woodward Talbot F. Wentworth Leland L. Atwood George L. Chase Allan R. Catheron James K. Healy Donald L. Beebe William S. Bushell Walter B. Bauer Henry S. Fuller Donald L. Bishop Richard M. Elliott Allen H. Gridley, Jr. Howard W. Haynes Walter L. Abel Fred Beardsworth, Jr. Minot A. Bridgham Robert J. Hamilton 1938 William D. Holcomb Martin L. Kuniholm Walter E. Knapp John G. Lawrence Robert A. Evans 1939 Carl K. Hitchon Donald E. Houser Fred J. Kraemer, Jr. Walter E. Lang, Jr. Albert C. Stone HOUSE PRIVILEGES G. Alan Sanborn George W. McKenna Robert L. Somerville Roger G. Young Lucian T. Allen Robert S. Lloyd David McEwan Arthur H. Rand John T. Rushton Phi Gamma Delta Page one hundred ten Leo T. Benoit 1936 John A. Porter Roger W. Bruce George E. Rocheford John Despotopulos 1937 Robert W. Powers Edward H. Hanson John T. McGrath Samuel B. Alukas 1938 Ely W. Moore Pierce Chesworth Robert T. O’Brien Neil A. Fitzgerald Raymond J. Perreault Norman A. Gamache Emory K. Rogers John E. Germaine Carlton C. Schupp A. George Mallis Robert 0. Steele Henry Mieczkowski Earl R. Vickery William T. Ahern 1939 Philip E. Meaney John T. Bradshaw George E. Monchamp, Jr. Allen H. Chase Robert J. O’Malley Richard H. Dexter Leo G. Ronrke, Jr. John J. Duffy Alexander Stevenson G. Edward Fieker Robert W. Trottier Albert E. Harthan William B. Wardsworth Leonard B. Landell George W. Yule Sigma Alpha Epsilon Page one hundred eleven FACULTY Prof. Howard P. Fairfield Prof. Hobart H. Newell Prof. Theodore H. Morgan 1936 Mr. John E. Fitzgerald Thomas F. McNulty George A. Sherwin Max H. Voigt 1937 Philip G. Atwood Gordon F. Crowther Kingston E. Atwood Frank Ellsworth Beverly A. Benjamin William P. Frawley John R. Casey Francis W. Plankey J. Morrison Smith 1938 Frederick B. Banan, Jr. John V. Delaney Andrew R. Constant Frank H. Jenkins Arthur A. Davis Arthur P. Moosa Murray C. Wilson 1939 John P. Alcoek Paul W. Keating Frank W. Lee John H. Lancaster William Crombie Robert W. Martin George Hampson G. William Pauley Lawrence M. Howarth Edwin F. Putnam J. William Hughes Edward Roszco R. Adrien Jacques Richard M. Wood Robert P. Zickell Page one hundred twelve Alpha Tau Omega FACULTY Richard A. Beth Carl F. Meyer Samuel J. Plimpton Arthur M. Tarbox Victor Siegfried 1936 Edward W. Armstrong Irving H. Bottcher Albert 0. Bell Paul M. Downey Walter F. Beth George B. Estes Karl H. Bohaker Robert Fowler, Jr. J. Raymond Casler Scott K. Goodwin Harry C. Gray Harold F. Henrickson Ernst P. L. Krippendorf Harry F. McRell Joseph A. Stead F. Stanley White Hewitt E. Wilson 1937 Erving Arundale John J. Balasevich L. Kimball Barber Paul R. Glazier Paul H. Bergstrom Warren H. Davis, Jr. Edmund M. Fenner James P. Irvone Charles H. Amidon, Jr. Charles E. Dench Charles W. Cummings Gerald A. Derosier John M. Driscoll George C. Graham Herbert F. Gustafson Rogert P. Hammond Wesley P. Holbrook Har ris W. Howland 1938 Herbert F. Lundquist Paul M. Murphy Gerald E. McAndrew Brian A. Minalga Fred E. Wiley 1939 Warren L. Hardy August J. Herd Arthur J. Jackson Thomas S. Johnson Christian Keuhn David A. Officer Theta Chi Carl Larson James F. Moore Sidney F. Perkins Richard Prokop Rol jert H. Nimmo John F. Peavey Warren R. Spofford Francis B. Swenson Richard H. Poplawski Donald E. Ryan William J. Sexton Richmond W. Smith Bradford S. Waterman Harold E. White Page one hundred thirteen FACULTY Professor Carl D. Knight Professor Harold A. Maxfield Mr. William W. Locke Professor Raymond K. Morley 1936 H. S. Burr J. A. Lane W. G. Dahlstrom, Jr. D. G. MacMillan D. L. Edmunds D. M. Morley G. W. Fuller B. H. Simons J. R. Hastings, Jr. K. C. Smith G. W. Huntley D. L. Watkins F. E. Hyatt A. D. Wilcox 1937 H. N. Cox, Jr. D. K. Merrill L. F. Grander C. P. Pierce J. Higginson J. E. Poeton R. K. Linsley W. G. Richards R. J. Lyman P. J. Stone M. B. Whitcomb 1938 R. L. Berry J. A. Holbrook R. P. Day R. K. Houston R. I. Gray D. W. Howe, Jr. E. E. Gustafson S. S. Howes G. E. Hanff R. Karakoosh M. B. Whiting 1939 E. S. Anderson W. L. Kay R. N. Anderson D. W. Marden D. M. Burness F. S. Pyne C. M. Chick S. E. Scott C. I. Ferguson F. E. Strandberg D. H. Hunt C. W. Thulin P. W. Johnson R. F. West W. Whitfield Lambda Chi Alpha Page one hundred fourteen 1936 Carleton W. Borden John R. Brand Alfred C. Ekberg Herbert J. Erickson 1937 Leonard W. Johnson William C. Maine William Miseveth Harold N. Pierson William E. Carew, Jr. Jarl A. Carlson Chauncy D. Chadwick John H. Chapman Roland 0. Farrar Charles R. Michel Vincent 0. Stromberg Harold R. Townsley William W. Worthley 1938 Robert B. Abbe J. Harper Blaisdell, Jr. Charles C. Bonin Thomas M. Bonnar Norman C. Coffin Albert L. Delude, Jr. Robert H. Field Herbert W. Grundstrom Thomas W. McKnight Donald L. Milliken John S. Mudgett Thomas E. O’Neil Robert G. Potts Edward A. Sawtell Edward E. Turner 1939 Frank L. Abbott James L. Bartlett, Jr. Robert V. Bergstrom Henry S. Blauvelt Thomas G. Bourne Howard Duchacek William J. Hill John G. Hollick Harold W. Humphrey Oiva J. Kama Ernest N. Ljunggren Keith E. McKeeman Ward D. Messimer Gardner W. Mills Robert B. Mirick Jack S. Mosher John H. Newton Albert A. Nims, Jr. Walter H. Sodano Clair E. Stauffer Louis E. Stratton Richard B. Wilson Phi Sigma Kappa Page one hundred fifteen FACULTY Prof. J. W. Howe Prof. K. S. Merriam Prof. A. J. Knight Dr. G. H. MacCullough Mr. E. R. Spaulding 1936 Harry T. Anderson Leonard G. Humphrey, Jr. Perry P. Clark F. Kenwood Jones John A. Crane Clinton E. Leech Herbert F. Gale Reginald A. Morrill Edward K. Gladding Michael C. Rallis Julius E. Guild Murray Robinson A. Hamilton Gurnham Gilbert B. Smith Richard S. Howes 1937 Harold C. Whitman Julian R. Buck Harold I. Johnson, Jr. Henry C. Dearborn Basil C. Kimball William F. Ham Carl S. Otto Raymond W. 1938 Schuh Edward W. Armstrong C. John Lindegren, Jr. Roger E. Grant Richard G. Munson John C. Harvey, Jr. S. Philip Stafford Gleason W. Jewett Robert M. Taft Everett W. Leach 1939 Byron H. Wilson William Alter Carl W. Lewin Jack F. Boyd Vernon J. Liberty Carl H. Borner William S. Lyhnne, Jr. Robert C. Dunham William B. Mullen, Jr. Andrew M. Fine, Jr. Stanley C. Olsen Floyd J. Folmsbee Bradford W. Ordway Edmund F. Higgins Norman A. Packard Edwin L. Kiem William F. Payne Theta Upsilon Omega Page one hundred sixteen FACULTY MEMBER Stanley H. Fillion Edward F. Cronin Rnnald V. DeFeo James C. H. Ethier Martin C. Gowdey 1936 Robert A. Langer Angelo V. Mauriello Edward V. Montville Charles E. Sliva William M. Stanton 1937 Francis S. Harvey John F. McGinnis Daniel J. Hastings, Jr. Michael H. Manzi Lawrence F. Merow Norman A. Bonley Leo J. Cronin Zigmund Burzychi 1938 Richard F. Burke Arthur E. Martell Robert E. Pupkar Arthur H. Malhoeuf 1939 Thomas F. Beatty, Jr. Eugene L. Gravlin Russell Korolyshun Donald L. Bowler Edwin M. Moggio John P. Molony Albert J. Raslavsky Philip A. O’Brien Albert M. Lavanavicza Tlieta Kappa Phi Page one hundred seventeen Frank E. Cutler Alexander L. Gordon 1936 Nathan R. Levine Jacob A. Sacks Louis Sadick Sidney D. Alpert Moses G. Cohen Morton S. Fine Frederick J. Burg Daniel G. Mazur Frank S. Raphael 1937 Maxwell E. Marshall Samuel W. Mencow Samuel S. Naistat Arthur J. Schumer 1938 Henry M. Ritz Louis M. Saltsman David G. Slovin Isadore Toubman Samuel R. Aronowitz 1939 Samuel Kaplan Sigma Omega Psi Page one hundred eighteen fVV c f v £ ; ' ' V N ' , i .%% ' ' , v ' ’ ..o ' c«- rt ( ' ,: A® $. ' 1 ' V c t .o ► v y FACULTY President Earle Professor C. D. Knight 1936 Professor Rice C. W. Borden J. R. Brand G. L. Chase D. L. Edmunds H. C. Gray H. F. Henrickson R. S. Howes 1937 G. W. Huntley F. K. Jones J. A. Lane C. E. Leach A. F. Shepardson G. A. Sherwin J. A. Stead J. R. Casey H. I. Johnson A. P. Moossa 1938 J. B. Sutliffe D. W. Woodward H. T. Wrobel R. M. Elliott 1939 J. E. Germain F. Beardsworth, Jr. J. T. Rushton, Jr. Tech Council Page one hundred twenty - n|- 4 e- ' m iH - K Jm Mr. Paul R. Swan. George W. Huntley Ernest P. L. Krippendorf A. Hamilton Gurnham . . Carleton W. Borden Kingston E. Atwood . .. John B. Sutliffe. Robert Steele . Malcolm Safford . . Faculty Advisor . President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Chairman Social Committee . Campus Service . Chapel . Dormitory Student Christian Association Page one hundred twenty-one STAFF George A. Sherwin . Editor-in-Chief Benjamin H. Smith, Jr . Business Manager David M. Morley . Advertising Manager Alan F. Siiepardson . Photographic Editor J. Headen Thompson . Sports Editor Robert A. Lancer . Feature Editor A. Hamilton Gurnham . Class Editor B. Allen Benjamin . Art Editor Thomas E. O ' Neill . Assist. Adv. Manager William M. Stanton . Assist. Bus. Manager Junior Editors L. K. Barber B. C. Kimball A. J. Schumer W. S. Bushell J. F. Moore J. M. Smith W. E. Carew, Jr. The Peddler Page one hundred twenty-two ' J ' HE Peddler is no longer a Class Book pub¬ lished only for the graduating class—but has developed rather into a true Year Book, reflecting the spirit of the undergraduate as well as the Senior. In keeping with this tendency is the financial plan, now in effect three years, which makes it possible for every student in college to secure the Peddler at a greatly re¬ duced price. Those who purchase this book should remember that they are now receiving, and will continue to receive as long as they lend support to the Peddler plan, four books—a complete record of their college days—at less cost than Seniors formerly paid for one issue. The editing of this book is no mean task; it involves hundreds of hours of work by the staff and particularly the editor-in-chief. No one man and no one group, however, can accom¬ plish such a task without the utmost cooperation of every individual and every organization in this college. May next year’s staff receive this cooperation to an even greater degree and thereby produce a better annual. The Peddler Page one hundred twenty-three Editor-in-Chief Clinton E. Leech, ’36 Managing Editor Harold N. Pierson, ”36 Associate Editor Reginald A. Morrill, ’36 Secretary George A. Sherwin, ' 36 Business Manager Perry P. Clark, ’36 News Editor Harry T. Anderson, ’36 Circulation Manager Carleton W. Borden, ’36 C. D. Chadwick H. I. Johnson Carl S. Otto C. C. Bonin A. L. Delude Junior Editors J. M. Smith J. B. Sutliffe Reporters A. R. Deschere C. J. Lindegren E. W. Leach D. W. Woodward W. W. Worthley T. W. McKnight B. H. Wilson Business Assistants John H. Chapman Tech New s Page one hundred twenty-jour LMOST from its conception, Tech has had some kind of college publication other than the Yearbook. The first news sheet was the W. P. I. Weekly, which continued for only a few years before it had to be dropped because of financial difficulties. From that time until 1910, the Alumni jour¬ nal was the official organ of the students as well as the Alumni, but in that year, a score of stu¬ dents formed the Tech News Association which fostered the Tech News in its infant form. For twenty-six years this Association has brought to the student body as faithfully as possible all the items of interest upon the Hill, and now it enters its twenty-seventh year with student and administrative support, a financially sound organization, progressive and capable of con¬ tinually exerting sound influence upon student life and view-point. Tech News Page one hundred twenty-jive OFFICERS F. Kenwood Jones. George W. Huntley . Frederick E. Hyatt, Jr. James F. Moore. Ernst P. Krippendorf. B. Allen Benjamin. Erving Arundale. Ray K. Linsley, Jr. Mr. Donald G. Downing. Mr. Albert F. Smith . . President . . . Vice-President . Secretary . . Treasurer General Manager Business Manager Publicity Manager . . Stage Manager . Faculty Advisor . Coach R. B. Abbe W. R. Ahearn R. L. Berry K. H. Bohaker C. M. Chick W. C. Clark H. N. Cox, Jr. W. H. Davis, Jr. R. P. Day H. J. Erickson MEMBERS E. M. Fenner C. I. Ferguson, Jr. A. L. Gordon A. H. Gridley W. L. Hardy W. P. Holbrook J. P. Irvine P. W. Johnson T. S. Johnson P. W. Keating C. A. Keyser R. A. Langer W. C. Maine G. W. McKenna J. J. O’Donnell J. B. Sutliff F. W. Swan, Jr. M. C. Wilson D. W. Woodward Page one hundred twenty-six Masque Leo T. Benoit Thomas O’Neil Runald DeFoe Neil Fitzgerald John R. Casey . ... Pi esident V ice-President Treasurer Secretary Program Director Paul Downey Senior Directors William Stanton Edward Cronin John V. Delaney Junior Directors Robert Powers Lawrence Merow Richard Burke Sophomore Directors George McKenna Robert O’Brien John Bradshaw Freshman Directors John Driscoll Donald Ryan Newman Club Page one hundred twenty-seven Mr. J. Edward Fitzgerald . . . Musical Advisor and Treasurer Mr. Clifford F. Green. Glee Club Director Mr. William F. Lynch. Band Director George L. Chase. President Alric H. Powell. Vice-President William W. Worthley. Secretary George P. Wood. Librarian Musical Association l J age one hundred twenty-eight r J 1 HE Glee Club, this year, was one of the best that Tech has had for the past few years. The success of this organization is in no small part due to Mr. Clifford Green, whose unending interest and ambition enabled the club to present many individual concerts and three combined concerts, two with Framingham State Teachers College and one with Wellesley. This latter concert, with Wellesley, was the high point of the entire season. The quartet added consider¬ ably to the success of all these concerts, as well as aiding in other school affairs. The Boyntonians were just about the best orchestra that the school has ever had. They provided music for the Dorm Dances, after basketball games and for many other outside engagements. The band, as directed by Mr. Lynch with the able assistance of Gordon Thompson, the first baton swinger we have had in many years, pro¬ vided music at the football and basketball games and should be commended for their fine work. Musical Association Page one hundred twenty-nine PERSONNEL Harold S. Burr. William E. Brown. Carl A. Keyser . Prof. Charles J. Adams. . President Secretary-Treasurer . Member-at-Large , . . Faculty Advisor Charles W. Cummings Alexander L. Gordon Howard W. Haynes David H. Hunt Weslye L. Martin Robert B. Mirick Alan F. Shepardson Arthur J. Schumer Earl R. Vickery, Jr. Mr. Stanley H. Fillion The Camera Club Page one hundred thirty OFFICERS C. Chapin Cutler President Nathaniel I. Korman . Vice-President Donald W. Howe. Secretary Richard I. Gray. Treasurer W. Downing Messimer. Chief Operator Prof. Hobart H. Newell. Faculty Advisor J OW in its 25th year, the Tech Radio Cluh, one of the oldest organizations of its kind in existence, continued its forward strides, put¬ ting the finishing touches on an efficient, modern amateur radio station which has been in the process of construction for the past three years. That the members of the club did their work well in building the station is evidenced by the numerous cards received from stations the world over with which communication has been estab¬ lished. Radio Club Page one hundred thirty-one President Ralph Earle Leland L. Atwood Zelotes W. Coombs A. Wilmer Duff John E. Fitzgerald FACULTY George H. Haynes Walter L. Jennings Albert J. Schwieger Victor Siegfried Paul R. Swan STUDENTS John K. Boosahda Carlyle M. Chick Robert A. Evans Edmund M. Fenner Henry S. Fuller George C. Graham, Jr. Allen H. Gridley, Jr. Wesley P. Holbrook Ernest P. L. Krippendorf John H. Lancaster Walter E. Lang, Jr. William Miseveth Albert A. Nims, Jr. Hans Peterson Alric H. Powell Benjamin H. Smith, Jr. Richmond W. Smith, Jr. Warren R. Spofford John B. Sutliffe Fred E. Wiley Dana W. Woodward Page one hundred thirty-two Cosmopolitan Club Frederick E. Hyatt, Jr . President Donald L. Edmunds . Vice-President Storms H. Blauyelt . Secretary Douglas K. Merrill . Treasurer Mr. Ellis R. Spaulding . Faculty Advisor R. Babcock J. Bartlett C. F. Benson G. Hanff A. L. Harthan D. Hunt G. Jewett R. Karakoosh E. Ljunggren R. L. Lloyd A. L. Nims J. A. Porter D. D. Stratton F. S. White A. D. Wilcox Aero Club Page one hundred thirty-three John R. Brand Chairman Ernst P. L. Krippendorf . Vice-Chairman William C. Maine . Secretary Robert W. Baker . Treasurer HE student branch of the A. S. M. E. is com¬ prised of students and faculty of the Mechanical Engineering Department. The primary purpose of this organization is to ac¬ quaint its members with the current phases of mechanical engineering through the medium of speakers, periodicals dealing with subjects being studied, and slides and motion pictures of prominent developments. Meetings are lield monthly in Boynton Hall at which speakers of national reputation are presented. These meet¬ ings present to the student a chance to hear some of the practical problems that practicing en¬ gineers come in contact with, and how they have been solved. This organization has been very active in the past year in presenting an interest¬ ing and instructive program. Student Branch A.S.M.E. Page one hundred thirty-four Joseph Stead President Oliver Raine . Vice-President Ray Linsley. Secretary James Ethier. Treasurer r J ' HE student branch of the A. S. C. E. is com¬ prised of students and faculty of the Civil Engineering Department. The primary purpose of this organization is to acquaint its members with the current phases of civil engineering through the medium of speakers, periodicals dealing with subjects being studied, and slides and motion pictures of prominent developments. Meetings are held monthly in Boynton Hall at which speakers of national reputation are pre¬ sented. These meetings present to the student a chance to hear some of the practical problems that practicing engineers come in contact with, and how they have been solved. This organiza¬ tion has been very active the past year in pre¬ senting an interesting and instructive program. Student Branch A.S.C.E. Page one hundred thirty-five PERSONNEL Graduate Students W. E. Dempsey V. F. P. Sepavich L. L. Libby 1936 J. A. Sukaskas A. Crumb H. F. Pomeroy E. Curtis V. P. Grublevskas R. Fowler 0. L. Kinney W. H. Griffiths E. V. Montville D. Morley B. H. Smith, Jr. B. H. Simons W. L. Stevens J. H. Wyman J. H. Thompson G. MacMillan 1937 W. Miseveth W. E. Brown W. M. Stanton A. P. Moossa F. H. Marchand J. E. Poeton A. H. Powell H. T. Wrobel W. Price H. R. Townsley 1938 D. G. Mazur N. A. Fitzgerald I. W. Taubman R. P. Day R. I. Gray R. M. Stawiecki Student Branch A.I.E.E. Page one hundred thirty-six Doctor Jennings Doctor Butler Doctor Calhane Doctor Smith Mr. Feldman Mr. Petrie Mr. Whitcomb Mr. Olson Mr. Romanoff Dixon C. Burdick Harold S. Burr Paul M. Downey Loring Coes, Jr. Yngve H. Nordstrom Alan F. Shepardson Herbert A. Neuman Walter G. Dahlstrom, Jr. Alexander L. Gordon Jacob A. Sacks George W. Busby, Jr. Edward K. Gladding Raymond J. Lutkawicz James A. Lane Erving Arundale L. Kimball Barber Henry S. Fuller John F. McGinnis Samuel S. Naistat James B. Patch John B. Sutliffe Richard Prokop William F. Hall Kenneth E. Bennett Edward H. Hanson Richard F. Harvey Arthur W. Jaeger Charles R. Michel Robert F. Webster Thomas M. Nolan Leonard A. Young Moses G. Cohen Talbot F. Wentworth Robert E. Pupkar Thomas B. Gruzdis Robert L. Somerville Louis M. Saltsman David G. Slovin William D. Holcomb John P. Alcock Allan H. Chase Arthur E. Martell Norman A. Bouley Russell Korolyshun Robert W. Trottier John M. Wishneski John K. Boosahda Harold E. White John M. Driscoll Walter J. Howard John C. Bradshaw Leo J. Cronin Robert 0. Alexander Hans P. Peterson Walter L. Abel Edward Roszko Walter E. Lang, Jr. George C. Graham, Jr. Donald A. Morgan Edward J. Traynor Arnet L. Powell John W. Hughes Skeptical Chymists Page one hundred thirty-seven Page one hundred thirty-eight CLAFLIN-SUMNER COAL COMPANY A FUEL FOR EVERY NEED Anthracite and Bituminous Coal New England Coke Furnace and Fuel Oil 32 Pleasant Street Dial 4-5331 TECH 5miL TMlTEi? - OR SOME OTHER NITE - THE. (W)HOOPSTCR WHO WENT RIGHT BY THE BASKET ft ' y WORKS-EYE VIEW OP FOULj o , SHOT IN EMBRYO STAGE 0 FRATERNITY BROTHER FROM STAG UN£ OFFERS TO SHARE YOUR DATE.” Established 1847 Incorporated 1925 TUCKER AND RICE, Inc. Contractors and Engineers FOR Plumbing — Heating — Power Piping Air Conditioning — Commercial Refrigeration 11 Garden St. Worcester, Mass. Denholm McKay Co. MEN’S SHOPS featuring many nationally famous lines-clothing and toggery STREET FLOOR STEVENS “WALNUT HILL” TARGET RIFLE For Accuracy Excerpt From a Recent Letter: “I belong to a Rifle Club and we have quite a variety of rifles. One rifle in par¬ ticular is a ... . with a special made barrel. We set these rifles side by side in a machine rest and at 100 yards my Stevens grouped 1.19 inches and the .... 2.14 inches. Out of 3 targets my Stevens averaged 1.53 and the .... 2.32 inches. “I am very much pleased with this rifle and am strong for Stevens. Yours truly, J. R. Wilson 2708 Lafayette St., Sioux City, la.” Send for descriptive literature J. STEVENS ARMS CO. Division of Savage Arms Corporation Chicopee Falls, Mass. COMPLIMENTS OF THE Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA 90 Broad Street NEW YORK Morgan Continuous Rolling Mills FOR BILLETS — MERCHANT BARS — SMALL SHAPES —SKELP — HOOPS AND STRIPS — COTTON TIES — WIRE RODS — WIRE MILL EQUIPMENT — PRODUCER GAS MACHINES — FURNACE CONTROLS MORGAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Graduates of the W. P. . are always welcome at THE HEALD MACHINE CO. Internal and Surface Grinding Machines Precision Boring Machines Arcade Malleable Iron Co. Tlie Davis Press Incorporated Malleable Iron Castings Good Printing WORCESTER, MASS. Office and Foundry Established 1850 WORCESTER, MASS. Albany and Muskeego Sts. Incorporated 1906 44 Portland Street JOHNSON BASSETT, Inc. Worcester, Massachusetts 1870-1936 With our compliments and best wishes for the success of the Class of 1936 OUR PRODUCTS WOOL SPINNING DEPARTMENT WOOL SPINNING MACHINERY AND ACCESSORIES BOBBIN WINDERS ENGRAVING MACHINE DEPARTMENT ENGRAVING MACHINES ROLL TURNING LA THES ENLARGING CAMERAS PANTOGRAPHS ROLL POLISHING LATHES RULING MACHINES POTATO BAGGING MACHINERY POTATO BAGGERS—LARGE AND SMALL MODELS “WHAT FOOD, THE MORSELS THEY SERVE’’ GEORGE Alpha Tau Omega “MOTHER” HANLEY Theta Kappa Phi HERB TROLLOPE “JACK” HUPPER Phi Gamma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa AMOS WASGATT DAN NICHOLSON Theta Upsilon Omega Theta Chi ED GRANGER Lambda Chi Alpha HIRAM GEARY Sigma Alpha Epsilon NORTON ABRASIVES Telephone 3-9434 Honey Dew Restaurant WE SPECIALIZE IN STEAKS AND CHOPS Counter and Booth Service 205 MAIN ST. WORCESTER Established 1821 Incorporated 1918 ELWOOD ADAMS, Inc. 154-156 Main Street WORCESTER, MASS. Hardware — Tools — Paint Lighting Fixtures and Fireplace Furnishings They serve countless industries —for grinding, polishing, tool sharpening and pressure blast¬ ing. They make floor tile and stair treads non-slip. They are employed in the manufacture of laboratory ware and refractories, in porous plates and tubes, and in abrasive paper and cloth. NORTON COMPANY WORCESTER, MASS. Behr Manning Division, Troy, N. Y, “Whenever you see me, you can rely on the In- i surance being cor- I rect.” L.- INSURANCE TO THE RESCUE STARK, JOHNSON STINSON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUILDING ALBERT E. FAY, ’95 Attorney at Law Formerly of Southgate, Fay, and Hawley Counsel in Patent Causes Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Franklin St. Room 510 Tel. 5-5088 The Cover of This Book is one of the CELEBRATED KINGSCRAFT COVERS Manufactured by the Kingsport Press, Inc. Kingsport, Tenn. The W.P.I., S.C.A. wishes the members of the Class of 1936 the best of success and happiness. Estah. 1874 WORCESTER TELEGRAM THE EVENING GAZETTE SUNDAY TELEGRAM Ineorp. 1899 J. W. BISHOP COMPANY GENERAL CONTRACTORS Main Office: 109 Foster Street WORCESTER, MASS. NEW YORK BOSTON CAMBRIDGE PROVIDENCE Radio Station WTAG Builders of Sanford Riley Hall COMPLI MENTS OF CLASS OF 1937 COMPLIMENTS OF THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL OF W. P. I. PHI GAMMA DELTA LAMBDA CHI ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON PHI SIGMA KAPPA ALPHA TAU OMEGA THETA UPSILON OMEGA THETA CHI THETA KAPPA PHI COMPLIMENTS OF CLASS OF 1938 The Truth at Last As I was plodding to M. E. Lab one day I heard one dirty Mechanic say To another, “If I made out the hour plan, I’d see to it that no man, Except perhaps some lousy scab, Ever had to go to E. E. Lab. Those fools known as E. E. instructors Know less than ten Greek vegetable hucksters.” The next week as I sat up until two Finishing the report that was due The previous day, the thought struck me That perhaps the powers that be Deliberately hired such guys, So that after June we’d be wise, And if we ever had to deal with such men We would not say Amen, And quit. While here We learned to handle them without fear. What’s been done once can he done again. But why did God ever make such men? COMPLIMENTS OF CLASS OF 1939 We Urge All Tech Men to Patronize Our Advertisers AS ALUMNI - - - - Keep In Touch With Tech Activities Subscribe to the Tech News IT ' S THE REPEAT ORDERS THAT TELL THE STORY There are so many institutions for whom we have printed publications, year in and year out, that we have had a lot of fun and satisfaction doin g business. Quit shopping around, let Heffernan do it and forget there is such a thing as printing troubles. THE HEFFERNAN PRESS 150 Fremont Street WORCESTER, MASS. Printers to the Peddler and other good publications. SAW DUST ; : • FANTASY


Suggestions in the Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) collection:

Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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