Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) - Class of 1930 Page 1 of 472
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1930 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 472 of the 1930 volume: “
% 1 m i THE YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1930 FOUNDED 1841 YOLUME XXII NEW HAVEN- PUBLISHED FOR THE EDITORS BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS CONTENTS The Institute of Human Relations 15 By James Rowland Angell A Croup of Views 21 Administration 53 Class Organizations 67 The Quadrangle Plan 83 By Clarence W. Mendell Honor Societies 89 Senior Societies . . 101 Junior Fraternities . . 113 Sheff Clubs 147 Religious Activities . 173 Forensics . 185 The Clee Club Travels to Bermuda . . 193 By Sidney Oviatt Publications . . 199 University Athletics . 227 Military and Naval Units . . 331 Musical Clubs . . 341 Dramatics . . 351 Clubs . . 359 School Clubs . 385 Index . . 407 FOREWORD yALE has changed. Her buildings, her methods, her cus- toms, and her life have altered to keep step with the trend of modern times and to suit herself to the ever changing requirements for giving her sons a modern educa- tion. The purpose of the Yale Banner and Pot Pourri is to write a page of history each year, and to preserve for the fu- ture the proceedings of a year at Yale. It seems only fitting, therefore, that the year nineteen hundred thirty should be chronicled in the way the story was written — that is, in the modern way. This volume is distinctly different from its tradition-bound predecessors. Financial restrictions and the essential contents of the book have prevented many changes that might seem to be advisable, but such part as the editors have been able to take in making the Banner and Pot Pourri a more readable and interesting volume, they have taken. It is our hope that this volume is a worthy monument to this newest year, which is certainly not the least important in the annals of Yale. Wilbur Lucius Cross TO WILBUR LUCIUS CROSS Retiring dean, and successful developer of the Graduate School at Yale, a loyal friend of the undergraduate body whom he served for many years, the Founder of the Yale Review 1 ' and a distinguished scholar THIS BOOK IS MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED 1930 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI John Lord King Chairman Stowell Whitney Mears . Business and Subscription Manager Herbert Brook Assistant Business Manager Reuben Buck Robertson, Jr. ... Assistant Business Manager Gerard Cuyot Cameron Managing Editor Benjamin Crawford Illustration Editor Hubert Watson Art Editor Irving Dickinson Tate Assistant Editor George Wilson Wharton, Jr Assistant Editor THE INSTITUTE OF HUMAN RELATIONS LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! THE INSTITUTE OF HUMAN RELATIONS By James Rowland Angell THE Yale Institute of Human Relations, of which some account has been re- quested on this occasion, is the out- growth of plans which have been under consideration for several years. The history of that development is not without inter- est, but I confine myself at this time to a description of the program itself, with no reference to its historical features, beyond the general statement that the enterprise has been a natural evolution in which half a dozen separate academic and scientific groups have gradually become aware of their common interests and of the possi- bility — and the obvious advantages — of prosecuting them cooperatively, rather than independently as heretofore. Described in the broadest terms, the ob- ject of the Institute is to provide a research and teaching center for those University disciplines directly concerned with the problems of human nature and the social order. The purpose is to correlate knowl- edge and coordinate technique in related fields, that greater progress may be made in the understanding of human life, from the biological, psychological, and socio- logical viewpoints. Crime, poverty, disease, unemployment, social and political maladjustment, indi- vidual unhappiness and anxiety, we find everywhere about us. The Institute is con- cerned to try to bring to bear on an under- standing of all these ills, exhaustive knowl- edge of their many-sided basic causes, to the ultimate end, that, so far as human in- telligence permits, we may not only im- prove our curative procedures, but also, and above all, that we may learn how to set up preventive conditions which will progressively lessen the burden of human suffering and increase man ' s share of health and happiness. I would not convey the impression that the Institute is keyed exclusively, or even primarily, to direct humanitarian objec- tives. It is a scientific and educational en- terprise, intrinsically concerned with the effort to further the knowledge of human nature and society, to train men and women on the basis of such knowledge more intelligently and effectively to meet human needs; and, if it succeeds even par- tially in this task, it is inconceivable that the ultimate outcome of its efforts should not be a material alleviation of the present ills from which humanity suffers. It is the fuller, sounder life to which it looks. It is not irrelevant to recall that thought- ful persons, who had had contact with the problems of organization and administra- tion involved in the prosecution of the great war, were inevitably deeply impressed by the extraordinary resources of a physical and mechanical character which had been disclosed as being at the disposal of man- kind. But possibly more impressive to them was the obvious lack of any corresponding knowledge and command of the purely human resources. Despite the best efforts Howard Avenue Facade of the New Hospital Group 16 LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! Entrance to the Institute of Human Relations and the Sterling Hall of Medicine of thousands of intelligent persons, the number of round pegs turning up in square holes was little short of appalling, and the blunders and confusion ensuing cost many millions of dollars and many months of needless delay. The same wasteful diffi- culty had for a long time been recognized in industry and, after the restoration of peace, there was a fresh and aggressive ef- fort to deal more intelligently with these problems in the light of the experience gained in the war. Every department of life exhibited similar maladjustments and called for similar thoughtful study and search for remedies. Obviously the time had come for some form of human engineering, such as had not previously existed. The In- stitute of Human Relations is, in part at least, the result of the situation thus de- scribed. On the academic side, it has long been notorious that under the specializing trend, which has so largely dominated our upper branches of education, each department of study has tended to become a law unto it- self, magnifying its prerogatives and often disavowing either interest in, or responsi- bility for, any concerns outside its own nar- row boundaries. This condition, which, as every thoughtful observer is aware, has worked much educational havoc in our in- stitutions of higher learning, both here and abroad, is well satirized in the definition of the specialist as a man who gives his life to learning more and more about less and less. Naturally no one could, or would, challenge the remarkable contribu- tions which specialists have made to our knowledge of, and control over, the world in which we live. But there is abundant evi- dence that the time has come when a fresh synthesis of available knowledge is widely craved and in many quarters felt to be in- dispensable to enduring progress. In no realm is this more true than in those sci- ences, technologies, and skills which deal directly with the human individual and the organization of society. Nowhere is the op- portunity for coordinated attack upon ur- gent, unsolved problems more obvious, no- where is the absence of such cooperative approach more conspicuous. Clearly this program involves a number of University departments. Indeed, taken literally, there is no division of the Univer- sity which is not intrinsically related to such a program, nor any which might not make material contributions. At present, 17 LYALG-BAhNGR AND P0T-P0UWK however, it has been thought expedient to confine the initial steps to groups which are intimately related to the fundamental problems under consideration. Certain of these departments, like psychology, eco- nomics, and sociology, have their primary connection with the undergraduate colleges and the Graduate School. Others, like men- tal hygiene and psychiatry, pediatrics and the attack upon the varied forms of disease, find their anchorage in the School of Medi- cine, or in the Department in charge of the health of our students. Still others, involv- ing the study of crime and delinquency, as well as those affecting the legal aspects of economic and political issues, are directly significant for the School of Law. Obviously those which have to do with disturbances in the field of moral or religious belief, to say nothing of certain objectionable forms of overt conduct, are directly germane to problems constantly dealt with in the Di- vinity School and the Department of Edu- cation. Still others run out into questions affecting the Department of Public Health and certain branches of engineering, espe- cially those concerned with the manage- ment problems of industrial and business personnel. It is hardly necessary to extend the list further, although, as it stands, it is by no means complete. It may, however, be helpful to point out that practically all of the problems which come up in one or another of the University divisions men- tioned, when pursued to their ultimate issues, are found to concern all of these groups and others beside. For example, a case of disease brought into the children ' s clinic may prove to involve causative fac- tors which have to do with the social and economic conditions of the parents, with the nature and stability of their employ- ment; it may run out into heredity affect- ing the mental or physical condition of one, or both parents; it may concern neglect of the medical supervision of a school system, o r it may have to do with the imperfect ad- ministration of laws which may themselves be imperfectly drafted; and many other factors may have contributed to create the actual situation, a knowledge of which is not only necessary for determining effec- tive, curative measures, but also quite in- dispensable if society is to learn how to protect itself from an indefinite repetition of similar tragedies. To facilitate the cooperative attack of all these University interests upon basic problems in which they are conjointly in- terested, we are erecting, through a gen- erous gift from the Rockefeller Boards, a building to serve as headquarters of the H? Howard and Davenport Avenues Facade 18 LYALG-BAhMGR AND POTPOURRI! Institute in which there will be labora- tories and other accommodations for the psychiatric clinic, for the psycho-clinic dealing with the study of infancy and child life, for advanced work in psychology and for other advanced work in the field of sociology, economics, and government, in- cluding in the latter work which doubt- less will be conducted by members of the School of Law. The building is in immedi- ate proximity to many of the great medical and biological laboratories and, although some of the departments concerned, like the Department of Education and the En- gineering and Divinity groups, will not be geographically near at hand, the educa- tional integration of all the groups will go steadily forward. It is believed that by facilities such as are now set up, and with the cooperative program already described in active opera- tion, with the cordial support of the groups indicated, we shall not only be able to give students interested in any of the primary divisions concerned, such as medicine, law, psychology, sociology, education and gov- ernment, a far broader type of training than has hitherto been possible, but that we shall also be bringing to bear on the thor- ough understanding of many of the funda- mental problems confronted by modern so- ciety scientific resources such as have not previously existed. We are, moreover, con- fident that the indirect influences of the Institute on the entire University, and in- deed on the educational procedure of our time, will be strikingly fruitful. The Insti- tute will unquestionably serve as a tangible instance of what can be accomplished by focalizing all the resources of a great uni- versity on a common group of problems. 19 A CROUP OF VIEWS Brothers in Unity Court The War Memorial Colonnade Wrexham Tower Shefftown Entrance to Sterling Hall of Medicine ifiKti 4 ' The Memorial Gateway from Wright Hall Doorway in Killingworrh The New Book Stack Tower Wrexham Tower The Memorial Tower Gateway The Campus from the Air The Harkness Tower The Davenport Gateway The Cold Coast Wrexham Close President Angell 1YAL£-PAW€R AND POT-POURRI! CORPORATION James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. . President FELLOWS His Excellency the Governor of Connecticut ex officio His Honor the Lieutenant-Governor of Connecticut ex officio Alfred Lawrence Ripley, M.A Boston, Mass. John Villiers Farwell, M.A Chicago, III. Edwin Musser Herr, Sc.D New York City Clarence Blakeslee, M.A New Haven, Conn. Rev. William Adams Brown, Ph.D., D.D. . New York City George Grant Mason, M.A New York City Samuel Herbert Fisher, LL.B., M.A. . New York City Howell Cheney, M.A South Manchester, Conn. Vance Criswell McCormick, M.A. . . . Harrisburg, Pa. Francis Parsons, LL.B., M.A Hartford, Conn. Mortimer Norton Buckner, M.A. . . . New York City Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin, D.D. . . New York City Fred Towsley Murphy, M.D., M.A. . Detroit, Mich. Edward Belden Greene, M.A Cleveland, Ohio Thomas Walter Swan, LL.B., M.A. . . New York City Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford, D.D. . Providence, R. I. Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. . . . Provost Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A Secretary George Parmly Day, M.A Treasurer Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. Associate Treasurer and Comptroller 55 _YAL€ PAI 0 AND POT-POURRI! ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D President Charles Dudley Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D Provost Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A Secretary George Parmly Day, M.A Treasurer Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. . Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Andrew Keogh, M.A., Litt.D Librarian Robert Nelson Corwin, Ph.D. Chairman of the Board of Admissions Frederic Blair Johnson, M.A. . . . Bursar of the University Harry Judd Ostrander .... Cashier in the Treasurer ' s Office THE FRESHMAN YEAR SCHOOL OF MUSIC Percy Talbot Walden, Ph.D. . . . Dean David Stanley Smith, Mus.D. . . Dean Joseph Roy Ellis, M.A. . . . Registrar Richard Frank Donovan, Mus.B. Assistant Dean YALE COLLEGE Clarence Whittlesey Mendell, Ph.D. Dean SCHOOL OF FORESTRY Alfred Kindred Merritt, B.A. . Registrar Henry Solon Craves, LL.D. . . .Dean SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL SCHOOL OF NURSINC Charles Hyde Warren Ph.D. . Dean Annie Warburton Goodrich, R.N. , Sc.D. Loomis Havemeyer, Ph.D. . . . Registrar Dean GRADUATE SCHOOL PEABODY MUSEUM Wilbur Lucius Cross, Ph.D., Litt.D., L.H.D. Richard Swann Lull, Ph.D., Sc.D. Director Dean Edgar Stevenson Furniss, Ph.D. OBSERVATORY Associate Dean .- . c . . n , c „ „. Frank Schlesinger, Ph.D., Sc.D. . Director SCHOOL OF MEDICINE m-u ru i x ,, n n DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH Milton Charles Winternitz, M.D. . Dean Art hur Bliss Dayton, M.D. Assistant Dean James Cowan Greenway, M.D. . Director Orville Forrest Rogers, M.D. THE DIVINITY SCHOOL Assistant Director Rev. Luther Allan Weigle, Ph.D., D.D., CYMNASIUM LinD Dean William Gilbert Anderson, M.D., M.P.E., Dr.P.H Director SCHOOL OF LAW Charles Edward Clark, LL.B., M.A. Dean DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL STUDY AND BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS A|bert Beecher Crawford ph D Director Everett Victor Meeks, M.A., A.D.G.F., F.A. John Cabot Diller, Ph.B. Associate Director I. A Dean 56 Charles Seymour Provost Carl Albert Lohmann Secretary George Parmly Day Treasurer Thomas Wells Famam Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Clarence Whittlesey Mendell Dean of Yale College Percy Talbot Walden Dean of Freshmen Wilbur Lucius Cross Dean of Graduate School Charles Hyde Warren Dean of Sheffield Scientific School Charles Edward Clark Dean of School of Law Milton Charles Winternitz Dean of School of Medicine Everett Victor Meeks Dean of School of the Fine Arts Luther Allan Weigle Dean of Divinity School Henry Solon Craves Dean of School of Forestry David Stanley Smith Dean of School of Music Annie Warburton Goodrich Dean of School of Nursing LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI. ALUMNI BOARD The Alumni Board was established by vote of the Yale Corporation in 1906 to meet the desire of Yale graduates in dif- ferent sections of the country for rep- resentation in the councils of the Univer- sity. Every association with an active membership of one hundred is entitled to one representative on the Board, while as- sociations having two hundred or more members are entitled to two representa- tives. The executive committee is composed of the officers of the Board and the chair- man of the Alumni University Fund Asso- ciation, ex off ici is, and nine other mem- bers of the Board. Since the University administration and various alumni organi- zations are represented, ex officiis, on the Board it becomes the central alumni organization. OFFICERS Joseph W. Wear, ' 99 Chairman Franklin Trust Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Elton Hoyt, 2d, ' 10 First Vice-Chairman 2000 Union Trust Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. Stuart B. Sutphin, ' 03 .... Second Vice-Chairman 2103 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. Carl A. Lohmann, ' 10 Acting Secretary 1850 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Mr. Wear Chairman Mr. Hoyt First Vice-Chairman Mr. Sutphin Second Vice-Chairman Robert C. Deming, ' 11 New Haven, Conn. Sumner T. McKnight, ' 07 Minneapolis, Minn. Harry J. Mold, ' 03 S New York City C. Hayward Murphy, ex- ' 05 S Detroit, Mich. Elton Parks, ' 04 New York City Francis C. Pratt, ' 88 S Schenectady, N. Y. Mortimer A. Seabury, ' 09 Boston, Mass. John H. Winterbotham, ' 97 Chicago, III. John L. Yates, ' 94 S Milwaukee, Wis. John I. Downey, ' 97 S., ex officio Chairman of the Alumni University Fund Association Deceased Jan. 26, 1930. 61 LYALG-BAN 0 AND P0T-P0URDI! SCHOLARSHIP HONORS YALE COLLEGE RANKING SCHOLARS, CLASS OF 1930 SCHOLARS OF THE FIRST RANKt Arthur E. Bester, Jr. Simon Koletsky Ernest Brooks, Jr. William S. Chittenden Nathan Davis Charles J. Donahue Alfred Hayes, Jr. Edward S. Johnson, Jr. George E. Lewis William F. McKenna Saunders MacLane Henry C. Marshall Atwood H. Miller John M. Monahan Herman R. Nayer Fletcher E. Nyce, Jr. David S. Sampsell Stanley H. Sinton, Jr. John DeC. Stephenson Ellsworth E. Strock Donald D. Wright SCHOLARS OF THE SECOND RANK Scott Adams, Jr. Hulbert S. Aldrich John C. Avery William B. Boyd Giles E. Brown Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. Charles P. Clifford Chester R. de la Vergne, Jr. Piatt W. Dockery Donald C. Dunham Herbert G. Dyke Louis H. Ehrlich, Jr. William G. Fennell Edward McC. Fleming Brewster H. Gere Arthur S. Goldsmith Lawrence F. Hope Pearson Hunt Charles A. Janeway Millard A. Kelly Willem E. Keur Albert H. Kline Louis W. Ladd, Jr. John S. Lobb Joseph B. Lyman, Jr. Archibald T. MacAllister, Jr. John I. B. McCulloch Hugh J. MacDonald Kenneth MacLean John S. Manuel, Jr. William S. Manuel Kilbourne P. Marks Henry W. Metzger Alexander D. Moffat Jo E. Muckley Frederick C. Nash Louis E. Nassau Richard L. Norman Francis J. O ' Hara, Jr. John W. Parrish James T. Patterson, Jr. Robert L. Popper Allen K. Randolph Paul Riger Julien A. Ripley, Jr. Frederick M. Roberts Henry E. Russell Samuel Saltman Milton M. Sidney Wilson F. Smith, Jr. Robert F. Truesdell William H. Wade Robert J. Wiener Francis J. Wilcox Richard B. Wills Hiram E. Wooster JUNIOR APPOINTMENTS, CLASS OF 1931 PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS John L. Caskey Malvern B. Finkelstein Brooks Friebolin Cecil L Head Max Miller William E. Russell, Jr. Frederick J. Steinhardt HICH ORATIONS Charles Albom William D. Behnke John F. Bell Bernard Berman Brewster Bingham John A. Blacharski Howard B. Bowser Joseph Budnitz Albert L Coles John K. Dyer, Jr. Oscar R. Fuss Jacques C. Gemehl Edwin O. C. Gerschefski Grant Gilmore Rudolf B. Gottfried Ernest A. Hamill, 2d Irving B. Harris Henry L. Hartman Stephen P. Hofmayer Arthur S. Jarcho Joseph Kovner Marshall W. MacDuffie Edwin McElwain William K. McNair Joseph I. Miller Julian Miller Robert J. Nordhaus John A. Norton Bernard L. Poole John A. Reed Morris Tager Richard D. Weigle Samuel P. Weston, Jr. t First rank, general average of 90 or above; second rank, 85—89. 62 LYALG-BAI GR AND POT-POURBI! SCHOLARSHIP HONORS SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Degree of Bachelor of Science with Distinction 1929 Summa Cum Laude John L. Daley, Electrical Engineering Albert L. Ruiz, Mechanical Engineering Magna Cum Laude Edwin R. Baker, Chemistry Leon F. Doss, Electrical Engineering Charles R. Harte, Jr., Chemical Engineering Hugh Kaul, General Science Charles P. Knaebel, Mining Engineering Melvin Newman, Chemistry Robert B. Trench, Electrical Engineering Donald T. Ward, Industrial Engineering Cum Laude Stanley J. Bishop, Electrical Engineering John H. Ferdinandus, Electrical Engineering Howard Gambrill, Jr., Industrial Engineer- ing William M. Hawley, Industrial Engineering Louis Hurwitz, Physics Philip C. Michel, Physics Ralph W. Miner, Electrical Engineering John H. Morava, Civil Engineering Waldemere J. Olson, Mechanical Engineer- ing Aston T. Scott, Chemical Engineering George I. Staber, Mechanical Engineering General Two- Year Honors for Excellence in All Studies 1930 Richard H. Blythe, Jr., Plant Science Earl R. Bockstahler, Chemistry Warren Cooke, Industrial Engineering Donald M. Crawford, Electrical Engineering Arthur C. V. Diehl, Electrical Engineering Michael Fleischer, Chemistry George G. Fox, Biological Science Albert P. Gagnebin, Mechanical Engineer- ing George K. Hirst, Biological Science Willson H. Hunter, Mechanical Engineering Landon C. Lodge, Industrial Engineering Samuel P. McCalmont, Industrial Engineer- ing Jay L. Marsh, Chemical Engineering Frank L. Marting, General Science Roger H. Newton, Chemical Engineering Eugene P. Northrop, Mathematics Warren P. Spining, Industrial Engineering Frank R. Stocker, Civil Engineering Carl R. Webster, Civil Engineering Robert B. Whittredge, Electrical Engineer- ing Arthur K. Wing, Jr., Electrical Engineering General One-Year Honors for Excellence in All Studies 1931 James G. Baxter, Chemistry Charles H. Brooks, Chemistry Michael H. Bruno, Chemistry William Chalian, Biological Science Frederick D. Cowles, Industrial Engineering Morton B. Curley, Biological Science Gordon B. Dunn, Industrial Engineering Robert M. Ferris, 3d, Engineering Science Reginald A. Hackley, Engineering Science George D. Knopf, Chemistry Franklin W. Knowles, Industrial Engineer- ing Carl R. Kossack, Mathematics David B. Langmuir, Physics Walter L. Mitchell, Jr., Chemistry Edward T. O ' Donnell, Biological Science John B. Ogilvie, General Science Peter Richmond, Chemistry Orrin C. Rutledge, Engineering Science Minnott A. O. Stilson, Jr., Industrial Engi- neering Luis F. Valldejuli, Engineering Science Allen A. Watson, Engineering Science George Zalkan, Biological Science 63 LYALG-BAhMGB AND POTPOURRI! PRIZES AND PREMIUMS UNIVERSITY PRIZES AWARDED IN 1928-29 William Lccming Jelliffe Memorial Prixe — John Alexander Pope, Class of 1929. Montaigne Prixe — John Lester Lewine, Class of 1929; honorable mention, John Irvin Beggs McCulloch, Class of 1930. John Addison Porter Prixe — Stanley Mc- Crory Pargellis, B.A., University of Nevada 1918, B.A. Oxford University 1922, Ph.D. candidate in history, Gradu- ate School. George Washington Egleston Historical Prixe — Stephen Harding Hart, Class of 1929. Lloyd Mifflin Prixe — Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes, 2d, Class of 1929; honorable mention, Caryl Parker Haskins, Class of 1930. UNDERGRADUATE PRIZES AND PREMIUMS, 1928-29 YALE COLLEGE PRIZES NOT RESTRICTED TO A SINGLE CLASS Henry A. Beers Prixe in American Litera- ture — Thomas Hume Vance, Class of 1929; honorable mention, William Clark Carey, Class of 1929. John Hubbard Curtis Prixe — Herschel V. Williams, Jr., Class of 1931; honorable mention, Raoul Blumberg, Class of 1929. William W. DeForest Prixe in Spanish — Norman King Parsells, Class of 1929. Noyes-Cutter Prixe — Carroll Cameron Mil- ler, Class of 1931. John Addison Porter Prixe in American History — Isadore Henry Cohen, Class of 1929. Lucius F. Robinson Prixes — Junior-Senior Competition: First Prixe, John Paul Dickson, Class of 1929; Second Prixe, Stephen Harding Hart, Class of 1929; Third Prixe, James Francis Hogan, Class of 1930. Sophomore Competition: First Prixe, William Edwards Russell, Jr., Class of 1931; Second Prixe, Cecil Bul- lock, Class of 1931. Thacher Prixes — First Prixes, William George Fennell, John Irvin Beggs McCul- loch, Class of 1930; Second Prixes, War- ren Dwight Abbott, Jr., Class of 1930, 64 Maurice Marcus Feuerlicht, Jr., Paul Waitman Hoon, Class of 1931, Thomas Hume Vance, Class of 1929. Andrew D. White Prixes — Sophomore-Jun- ior-Senior Competition: William Harlan Hale, Class of 1931. Junior-Senior Com- petition: Caryl Parker Haskins, Class of 1930. Henry P. Wright Memorial Prixe — Henry Ladd Smith, Class of 1929. SENIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1929 David C. DeForest Prixe — Robert Emmett Houston, Jr.; honorable mention, Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes, 2d. Alpheus Henry Snow Prixe for Scholarship and Character — Arthur Baird Hersey. Townsend Premiums — Winslow Percy Leighton, Erwin Hall Steif, Huntington Miller, Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes, 2d, Thomas Hume Vance. Warren Memorial High Scholarship Prixe — Hans Alexander Klagsbrunn. JUNIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1930 Scott Prixe in French — Lawrence Frederick Hope. Scott Prixe in German — Paul Riger. Henry James TenEyck Prixes — First Prixe, Julien Ashton Ripley, Jr.; Second Prixe, John Irving Beggs McCulloch; Third Prize, William George Fennell. SOPHOMORE PRIZES, CLASS OF 1931 Donald Annis Prixe — Morris Tager. Benjamin F. Barge Mathematical Prixes — David Bulkeley Langmuir, 1931 S. C. Wyllys Betts Prixe — Grant Gilmore; honorable mention, Frederick Julian Steinhardt. Parker Dickson Buck Prixe — William David Behnke; honorable mention, Paul Waitman Hoon. SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL PRIZES NOT RESTRICTED TO A SINGLE CLASS Stone Trust Corporation (Book and Snake Society) Scholarship Prixes — For Ex- cellence in English: George Zalkan, Class of 1931. For Excellence in Mathematics: Michael H. Bruno, Class of 1931. For _YAL€ BArM€R AND POT-P0URBI! Excellence in Spanish: Phelps, Class of 1930. Austin Mead SENIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1929 William R. Belknap Prizes — For Excellence in Biological Studies: Ashley Pond, 3d. For Excellence in Geological Studies: David Gallagher. Russell Henry Chittenden Prize — Albert Louis Ruiz. For Excellence in Civil Engineering — Gur- don Dibble Pickert. For Excellence in Electrical Engineering — John Lincoln Daley. For Excellence in Mechanical Engineering — Albert Louis Ruiz. For Excellence in Metallurgy — Dana Went- worth Smith. Edward Oliver Lanphier Memorial Prize, For Excellence in Electrical Engineering — Allen Thurman Sinks. For Excellence in Mining Engineering — Charles Pray Knaebel. Chester Harding Plimpton Prize — John Asher Brandenburg. Thompson-Starrett Prize — Stanislaw Paw- lowski. SOPHOMORE PRIZES, CLASS OF 1931 Samuel Lewis Penfield Prize — Mansfield Merriman. For Excellence in Biology and Botany — Philip Franklin Partington. For Excellence in Drawing — Divided be- tween Nathaniel Bacon Greene and An- drew Bache Newcombe. For Excellence in Engineering Mechanics — Divided between Frederick Davenport Cowles and Reginald Armstrong Hackley. For Excellence in Physics — Engineering Croup: Frederick Davenport Cowles. Natural Science Croup: Philip Franklin Partington. For Excellence in All Studies of Sophomore Year — English Croup: Franklin Wendell Knowles. Natural Science Croup: George Dillon Knopf. THE FRESHMAN YEAR FRESHMAN PRIZES, CLASS OF 1932 Benjamin F. Barge Mathematical Prizes — First Prize, Marshall Hall; Second Prize, Richard Roger Fleisher; Third Prize, Mario Scalera. Berkeley Premiums — First Prize, Rufus Spalding Day, Jr.; Second Prize, Franklin Cary Salsbury; Third Prize, Graham An- derson. Hugh Chamberlain Creek Prize — Divided between David Burnett McCalmont, Jr. and Francis Rew Stanton. Samuel Henry Calpin Latin Prize — Vinton Lindley; honorable mention, Herbert Bertram Cohn. Henry A. Hurlbut Prize — Marshall Hall. McLaughlin Memorial Prizes — First Prize, Richard Mervin Bissell, Jr.; Second Prize, William Mason Smith, Jr. New York Yale Club Prizes — Highest Scholarship records for the year: First Prize, Groome McCa gue Gamble; Second Prize, Rufus Spalding Day, Jr.; Third Prize, Carl Raymond Schneider. Charms for the ten students having the highest general averages: Frederick Baldwin Adams, Jr., Rufus Spalding Day, Jr., Groome McCague Gamble, William Lu- domier Glowacki, Almon Chamberlin Greenman, Jacob Henry Krug, Samuel Daniel Kushlan, James Lester Reed, Mario Scalera, Carl Raymond Schneider. Prizes for Improvement (average over 80, under 90) : John Elmer Livak; (aver- age over 70, under 80) : Wayne Frank Comer and John Douglas Williams. Runk Scholarship — Richard Roger Fleisher. Winston Trowbridge Townsend Prizes — First Prize, George Edward Foster, Jr.; Second Prize, Richard Storrs Childs; Third Prize, James Herey Denison. Andrew D. White Prizes — Freshman Com- petition: George Bates Hatch. Woolsey Scholarship — Graham Anderson; honorable mention, Franklin Cary Sals- bury. 65 Front Row: Hanson, Palmer, Greene Back Row: Musser, Sprigg, Hall The Triennial Committee •_YAI£-BAI 0 AND POT-POURRI! ACADEMIC SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Maurice F. Hanson John M. Musser Class Secretary Class Treasurer CLASS BOOK COMMITTEE Maurice F. Hanson John M. Musser . John McM. Sprigg Ford H. Jones Thomas McK. Folds Chairman Business Manager Managing Editor Biographical Editor . . Art Editor Maurice F. Hanson Class Secretary CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Maurice F. Hanson Hulbert S. Aldrich Waldo W. Greene Robert A. Hall Chairman John M. Musser Arthur E. Palmer, Jr. TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE Arthur E. Palmer, Jr. ... Chairman John M. Musser Waldo W. Greene Maurice F. Hanson Robert A. Hall John McM. Sprigg SENIOR PROMENADE COMMITTEE Hulbert S. Aldrich John deF. Buckingham Chester W. Dudley, Jr. Raymond W. Ellis Maurice F. Hanson George B. Longstreth Herbert C. Miller, Jr. John McM. Sprigg Class Poet Tom Prideaux Class Orator John N. Hazard Class Historian Maurice F. Hanson Ivy Orator Henry E. Russell 69 Front Row: Warner, Bent, Everett Back Row: Robertson, Millard The Sheffield Class Day Committee 1YAL£-BAnnI€R AND POT-POURRI! SHEFFIELD SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Samuel P. McCalmont . Class Secretary Seymour Y. Warner, Jr. Class Treasurer CLASS BOOK COMMITTEE Samuel P. McCalmont .... Chairman Seymour Y. Warner Treasurer Arthur E. Rodger Frank R. Stocker Carl R. Webster Samuel P. McCalmont Class Secretary CLASS DAY COMMITTEE John P. Bent Randall W. Everett, Jr. Nelson W. Millard Chairman Reuben B. Robertson, Jr. Seymour Y. Warner, Jr. Class Historian John P. Bent Class Prophet Raymond E. Sargeant Class Orator Frank R. Stocker Ivy Orator Samuel P. McCalmont SENIOR PROM COMMITTEE Lee C. Ashley John P. Bent Augustus S. Blagden, Jr. Charles Ellis, Jr. James J. Holahan Arthur E. Rodger Seymour Y. Warner, Jr. Charles A. Yinkey, Jr. TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE Samuel P. McCalmont . . Chairman James J. Holahan John P. Bent 71 First Row: Ladd, Macdonald, Stewart, Swoope, Palmer, Hall, Aldrich, Musser, Hanson Second Row: Avery, Barres, Adriance, Cwin, Greene, Ellis Third Row: McLennan, Williams, Lindenberg, Loeser The College Student Council _YAL€ BAhN€R AND POTPOURRI! COLLEGE STUDENT COUNCIL A. E. PALMER, JR CHAIRMAN H. S. ALDRICH . . . SECRETARY AND TREASURER J.R.STEWART RECORDING SECRETARY Class of 1930 Class of 1931 H. S. Aldrich F. W. Loeser H. M. Ellis J. H. Macdonald W. W. Greene D. R. McLennan S. L. Gwin J. R. Stewart R. A. Hall W. M. Swoope M. F. Hanson A. L. Wiener L. W. Ladd J. M. Musser Class of 1932 A. E. Palmer, Jr. . D . , . J. R. Adriance T. P. Avery H. Barres J. T. Lindenberg S. G.Williams 73 Front Row: Bent, Booth, Millard, Motch, Everett, Ashley, Marting Warner, McCalmont Back Row: Stevens, Ferris, Blythe, Dunn, Rotan, Baton, Robertson The Sheffield Student Council LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! SHEFFIELD STUDENT COUNCIL RANDALL W. EVERETT, J R CHAIRMAN NELSON W. MILLARD SECRETARY Class of 1930 L. C. Ashley J. P. Bent R. H. Blythe, Jr. R. W. Everett, Jr. S. P. McCalmont F. L. Marting N.W. Millard R. B. Robertson, Jr. S. Y. Warner, Jr. Class of 1931 H. E. Baton, Jr. K. Dunn R. M. Ferris, 3d E. F. Motch E. R. Stevens Class of 1932 A. J. Booth, Jr. E. Rotan, 2d 75 Front Row: McCormick, Tanner, Stewart, McClintock, Walker Back Row: Messimer, Wiener, Loeser The College Interfraternity Council 1YALG-BAWCR AND POTPOURRI! COLLEGE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL 1929-1930 J. R. Stewart Chairman J. L. McCormick Secretary ). T. McClintock, Jr. . . Alpha Chi Rho J. R. Stewart .... Alpha Delta Phi A. E. B. Tanner . . . Alpha Sigma Phi J. L. McCormick . . . Beta Theta Pi A. L. Wiener Chi Psi F. W. Loeser . . Delta Kappa Epsilon J. M. Walker Psi Upsilon R. L. Messimer, Jr Zeta Psi 77 Front Row: Yinkey, Kirk, Ashley, Brown, Millard Back Row: Marting, Anderson, Rumsey The Sheffield President ' s Committee 1YALG--BAN4GR AND POT-POURRI. SHEFFIELD PRESIDENT ' S COMMITTEE 1929-1930 L. C. Ashley President N. W. Millard Treasurer E. R. Anderson Colony L. C. Ashley St. Anthony M. L. Brown Franklin C. D. Kirk Sachem F. L. Marting Vernon N. W. Millard St. Elmo H. V. Rumsey York C. A. Yinkey, Jr Cloister 79 Front Row: Stewart Second Row: Loeser Holbrook, Zink, McLennan, Walker, Dunn, Haslam, Mallory, Mcllvain Swoope, Messimer, Stevens, Lapham, Baton, McKown, Junior Promenade Committee LYALG-BANNGR AND POT-POURRI! JUNIOR PROMENADE COMMITTEE Kempton Dunn Chairman Donald R. McLennan, Jr Treasurer James R. Stewart Floor Manager 1931 John Holbrook Lewis A. Lapham Frederic W. Loeser Donald R. McLennan, jr. Stanford C. Mallory Robert L. Messimer, Jr. James R. Stewart Walter M. Swoope 1931 S. Henry E. Baton, Jr. Kempton Dunn John E. Haslam Robert W. Mcllvain, Frank B. McKown Earl R. Stevens Donald C. Walker Montague H. Zink Kempton Dunn, Chairman FORMER CHAIRMEN AND FLOOR MANAGERS Floor Floor Chairmen Managers Chairmen Managers 1873 S. L. Boyce 1902 B. C. Rumsey, 3d W. E. Day 1874 T. P. Wickes 1903 A. R. Lamb C. J. Hamlin 1875 D. A. Jones F. H. Jones 1904 J. F. Byers C. E. Adams 1876 J. Porter C. Johnson 1905 E. P. Rogers F. H. Day 1877 N. U. Walker F. J. Stimson 1906 B. D. Smith J. A. Stevenson 1878 H. C. Hollister C. H. Morgan 1907 C. Sumner W. McC. Blair 1879 J. D. Torreyson J. O. Perrin 1908 R. B. Shepard J. M. Townsend, Jr 1880 N. C. Osborn W. R. Innis 1909 J. B. Perrin R. B. Burch 1881 J. B. Dimmick Henry Ives 1910 Elton Hoyt, 2d S. M. Clement, Jr. 1882 A. P. French W. P. Eno 1911 F. W. Hyde F. F. Randolph 1883 F. W. Rogers E. B. Frost 1912 R. A. Gardner H. T. Clement 1884 T. C. Lawrence D. H. Wilcox 1913 V. Webb H. E. Sawyer 1885 S. R. Bertron H. S. Brooks 1914 H. A. Pumpelly J. Walker, 3d 1886 T. Darling E. C. Lambert 1915 E. M. Bostwick H. J. Crocker, Jr. 1887 J. Rogers, Jr. E. Allen 1916 H. W. LeGore S. A. Pumpelly 1888 S. J. Walker J. R. Sheffield 1917 L. Armour R. A. Lovett 1889 H. S. Robinson W. L. Armstrong 1918 A. V. Heely F. D. Carter 1890 A. C. McClintock S. Phelps 1919 DeF. Van Slyck C. S. Heminway 1891 C. B. Hoppin C. S. Brewster 1920 C. J. LaRoche J. E. Neville 1892 T. L. McClung H. A. Bayne 1921 W. Cheney J. S. Bush 1893 Francis Parsons A. S. Chisholm 1922 J. C. Dann J. S. Cooper, Jr. 1894 Thos. Cochran, Jr. H. P. Whitney 1923 E. F. Blair C. M. O ' Hearn 1895 William Sloane F. B. Harrison 1924 E. C. Bench J. S. Ewing 1896 A. E. Foote A. P. Stokes, Jr. 1925 E. P. Cottle, Jr. A. V. Stout, Jr. 1897 C. M. Fincke E. E. Garrison 1926 L. M. Noble R. B. McGunigle 1898 Crenville Parker F. H. Simmons 1927 C. T. Bingham A. C. Robertson 1899 W. E. S. Criswold F. H. Brooke 1928 J. K. Beeson C. E. Hayward, Jr. 1900 P. A. Rockefeller S. B. Camp 1929 R. A. Hall R. W. Everett, Jr. 1901 P. L. Mitchell H. S. Curtiss 81 THE QUADRANGLE PLAN ZMEW. OF GM James (jombie. ftog«f a , Architect- 1YALG--BANNO AND POT-POURRI! THE QUADRANGLE PLAN By Clarence Whittlesey Mendell yALE COLLEGE and the Freshman Year have twenty-five hundred under- graduates between them. They have adequate housing for two thousand. A little application of the simpler mathe- matical processes gives as an answer the first reason for the Quadrangle Plan. We need more rooms. That being the case, what is the best way of providing them? Here is where the more imaginative reaches of mathematics are essential. The question is simply whether it is better to build more undistributed rooms, continuing the pres- ent method of handling or to change that method and try to accomplish something more than the simple housing of five hun- dred more men. Two factors appeared when this ques- tion was raised. First, the general belief, expressed by undergraduates and alumni alike, has been for some time that the in- creased numbers had destroyed something which used to exist in the smaller, more closely knit classes. There was a sense of corporate unity, an esprit, which seems to be giving way to an undesirable individual- ism. The larger the crowd the more the in- dividual looks to the protection and fur- therance of his own interests as against those of the social unit and in return he gets less out of the social unit because that unit of necessity loses quality. Second, and this is somewhat more prob- lematical and less tangible, the under- graduate has expressed the belief that of late the contact between faculty and stu- dent outside of the classroom, the social contact, has been less and less satisfactory. Numbers affect this; weakening of the Col- lege esprit affects it. Now the Quadrangle Plan is primarily a housing plan, a social plan if you will. It aims to recover if possible something of the sense of corporate unity which has been lost, furnishing something to take the place of vanished class spirit. It aims to do this without losing the asset of enormous Uni- versity facilities which numbers make pos- sible. If Yale ceased to be a great Univer- sity, the College would have to face the loss of numberless very real advantages — library facilities, athletic facilities, mu- seums, laboratories, lectures, art and music opportunities, the chances for the attain- ment of no end of worthy ambitions. And again, the Quadrangle Plan aims to make possible the closer social contact between mature scholars and the undergraduate body. This also should be done without sacrificing the advantages of a great uni- versity. For only such a one can attract the mature scholar with whom such con- tact is of real and permanent value. The resulting plan is in many ways ex- perimental. It is not, as some would fear, destructive of the old Yale, so that if it fails to accomplish all that is hoped of it and is not the final answer to our ques- tions, Yale will still be with us either to try out other new ways or to return to the old. And so to the plan itself. For the pres- ent, at least, the Freshman Year will retain its individuality intact. To it will go some three quadrangles in which there will live no upperclassmen. In the remaining quad- rangles there will be seniors, juniors, and sophomores. This is a return to the earlier method of distribution prevalent down to the late nineties. The hope is that this mix- ture will be good in itself leading to worth- while friendships between lower and upper classmen and that it will assure the build- ing up and continuance of traditions which would be completely broken every three years under another system. Each quadrangle will house approxi- mately two hundred and fifty undergradu- ates. In addition there will be a master, the executive head of the quadrangle who will be in most instances a teaching member of the faculty. Other members of the faculty will have living quarters in the quadrangles and still others will have offices where they can in reasonable comfort do their work and hold their conferences. The allotment of rooms in each quad- rangle will be made by a method not un- like that used for the assignment of rooms at present. Each Sophomore-to-be will ap- ply for the quadrangle which he desires. A faculty committee will be charged with the handling of their choices and in case of an overdemand for a given quadrangle will decide, probably by lot, who has to take his second choice. This committee will also have the duty of reviewing the choices and taking steps to prevent the monopoly of any quadrangle by too homogeneous a group as for example men from one school only. There will probably be little for the committee to do in this line. There is no idea of assigning an assortment of types to each quadrangle. The dining halls are an essential element of the plan. The members of each quad- rangle will dine regularly in hall and may also have breakfast and lunch there if they 85 LYALG--BAWGR AND POT-POURRI! desire. In most cases they probably will so desire for the plans provide handsome halls and excellent food. This part of the project should go farthest toward developing the cohesion of the group. Conveniently near to the dining halls there will be lounge rooms and each quadrangle will probably have a library for ordinary reading or studying though not as a receptacle for any large number of books. Up to date there is no plan for combin- ing a change in the teaching method or general running of Yale College from the scholastic side with this new method of housing. The degree requirements, the course of study, and the teaching will be the same as at present for all men in Yale College and in the Freshman Year. In the future it is quite possible that if funds ever allow it a tutorial system might grow up which would very readily attach itself to the Quadrangle Plan of living but it is not at all involved in the present scheme. It is to be hoped that around each quad- rangle there will grow up social traditions that will give distinction to each and serve to differentiate them as time goes on. This would facilitate the development of in- formal athletic relations between the dif- ferent groups and gradually, so far as social life goes, each quadrangle would approach the status of a college. The conception of such a development raises at once the ques- tion of the future of the fraternities and so- cieties at Yale. It seems natural to think of them as becoming more and more the cen- ters in which men of the different quad- rangle groups with similar tastes might most easily get together and enjoy a com- mon club life. Rather than decreasing the T Er S J§C L Llvajion s- ' e R. ; ' ■' a krekitmd 86 LYAL£-0AhM€R AND POT-POURRI! value of the fraternities the Quadrangle Plan ought to give them more reason for existence and much more vitality. It is true that they will probably cease to be eating clubs as at present but there is no reason at all why they should not maintain facili- ties for serving meals and there is every reason in the world why they should serve a much more important function. For scat- tered throughout the quadrangles will be men with common interests who will al- ways form a congenial membership in one or another fraternity. If we could look a generation into the future I think we should see Yale College as a group of seven or eight quadrangles, each with its own particular quality, each with its own social group entirely conscious of its own identity and proud of its own traditions but all of them still loyal and effective parts of Yale College as a whole. Instead of gradually decreasing I think that the alumni interest in returning to the Col- lege for reunions will increase very mark- edly with a more intimate and vital interest around which to center. It has always proven true in the past that greater and more active loyalty to the part increases the intelligent devotion to the whole. The fear seems groundless that in trying to make better what we now have we are going to lose that which has been developed through more than two hundred years. Yale has surely grown to be large enough to satisfy the most ambitious booster. The present move is intended to safeguard the best tra- ditions of Yale which are to some degree at least threatened by this increased size. Yale is particularly fortunate to be able to try such an experiment and honest enough, I am sure, not to forget that it is an experi- ment and to judge it by its results. L WSUND FLOOP PLAV PPOPOSED ADMIMSTPiTlOV BUILDING SHEFFIELD SCHOOL, MJh UNIVBR3JTV- f t a a — n AP.CHIT Cr.S PHIUOELmiAm; 87 The Phi Beta Kappa Meeting Room 1YALG-PAKNGR AND P0T-P0UPPK PHI BETA KAPPA OFFICERS William E. Russell, Jr President Frederick J. Steinhardt Vice-President John F. Bell Secretary Richard D. Weigle Treasurer Edwin McElwain, 2d Librarian Hulbert S. Aldrich John C. Avery Arthur E. Bestor, Jr. Ernest Brooks, Jr. Giles E. Brown Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. William S. Chittenden Nathan Davis Piatt W. Dockery Charles J. Donahue Edward McC. Fleming Arthur S. Goldsmith Alfred Hayes, Jr. Pearson Hunt Charles A. Janeway Edward S. Johnson, Jr. Millard A. Kelly SENIORS Simon Koletsky Louis W. Ladd, Jr. Wilbur C. LeGore George E. Lewis John S. Lobb Joseph B. Lyman, Jr. Archibald T. Mac Al lister, Jr. John I. B. McCulloch William F. McKenna Kenneth MacLane Saunders MacLane John S. Manuel, Jr. William S. Manuel Henry C. Marshall Atwood H. Miller John M. Monahan Frederick C. Nash Herman R. Nayer Fletcher R. Nyce, Jr. Francis J. O ' Hara, Jr. Paul Riger Julien A. Ripley, Jr. Franklin M. Roberts Samuel Saltman David S. Sampsell Stanley H. Sinton, Jr. Gareth W. Speer John DeC. Stephenson E. Elmer Strock Robert J. Wiener Francis J. Wilcox Donald D. Wright John F. Bell Joseph Budnitz John L. Caskey John K. Dyer, Jr. Malvern B. Finkelstein Brooks Friebolin JUNIORS Rudolf B. Gottfried Cecil L. Head Harold A. Lachner Edwin McElwain, 2d Max Miller William E. Russell, Jr. George A. Saden Frederick J. Steinhardt Morris Tager Richard D. Weigle 91 LYALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI! LITERARY SOCIETY CHI DELTA THETA 1930 Edward S. Johnson, Jr. William D. Judson, Jr. John I. B. McCulloch Tom Prideaux Louis Putnam 1931 Lyttleton Fox, Jr. James P. Wade 1932 Jack Baur Richard S. Childs George H. Hamilton 92 _YAL£-BANN€R AND POT-POURRI! FORENSIC SOCIETY DELTA SIGMA RHO OFFICERS, 1929-1930 John I. B. McCulloch President William C. Fennell Secretary 1930 Warren D. Abbott, Jr. William E. Arnstein lohn A. Curtis William C. Fennell Charles A. Graham Carl Haskins John N. Hazard Pearson Hunt John I. B. McCulloch 1931 Maurice M. Feuerlicht, Jr. Paul W. Hoon John T. McClintock, Jr. HONORARY MEMBER Professor John C. Adams 93 LYALG-BANNO AND POT-POURRI! SCIENTIFIC HONORARY SOCIETY SIGMA XI Professor Joshua I. Professor Stuart R. Professor Albert F. Professor Lauren E OFFICERS Tracy President Brinkley Vice-President Hill Secretary Seelt Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATE MEMBERS SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL 1930 Richard H. Blythe, jr. Earl R. Bockstahler Warren Cooke Donald M. Crawford John C. Dean, Jr. Arthur C. V. Diehl Myron T. Doherty Frank H. Eastman, jr. Michael Fleischer George C. Fox Howard C. Frantz Albert P. Cagnebin George K. Hirst Willson H. Hunter Martin A. Kaehrle, Jr. 1931 David B. Langmuir 1930 Giles E. Brown Alfred Hayes, Jr. Simon Koletsky Louis W. Ladd, Jr. George E. Lewis 1931 John K. Dyer, Jr. YALE COLLEGE Harold J. P. Lesaius Samuel P. McCalmont Jay L. Marsh Frank L. Marting Roger H. Newton Eugene P. Northrop Sewall K. Oliver, Jr. Edmund W. Overstreet John W. Payne Warren P. Spining Frank R. Stocker Eligio J. Tavanlar Carl R. Webster Robert B. Whittredge Albert K. Wing, Jr. Charles H. Lanphier Saunders MacLane Herman R. Nayer Julien A. Ripley, Jr. Ellsworth E. Strock Donald D. Wright Max Miller 94 lyalg-panno and pot-pourri: HONORARY ENGINEERING SOCIETY TAU BETA PI OFFICERS Samuel P. McCalmont President Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr Vice-President Martin A. Kaehrle, Jr Treasurer Sewall K. Oliver, jr Corresponding Secretary Robert B. Whittredge Recording Secretary MEMBERS Warren Cooke Frank H. Eastman, Jr. Edward R. Florea Carl H. Hansen Hermann C. Hoffmann Dwight C. Hutchins William R. Jennings Martin A. Kaehrle, Jr. Harold J. P. Lesaius Landon C. Lodge Samuel P. McCalmont George T. Moore, Jr. Sewall K. Oliver, Jr. Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr Donald W. Smith Warren P. Spining Frank R. Stocker Carl R. Webster Robert B. Whittredge Arthur K. Wing, Jr. 95 LYALG-BANvO AND P0T-POURBI! ATHLETIC SOCIETY SIGMA DELTA PSI OFFICERS Robert A. Hall President Harlan M. Ellis Secretary Franklin T. Oldt, 2d Treasurer W. G. Anderson, M.D. H. S. Anderson COMMITTEE ON CERTIFICATION H. A. Farr Clarence W. Mendell Boyd Comstock Robert N. Corwin M. P. Aldrich, ' 22 P. Allen, Jr., ' 19 A. H. Ardrey, ' 21 C. L. Baldwin, ' 22 C. C. Becket, ' 13 W. D. Behnke, ' 31 H. Bingham, Jr., ' 25 J. H. Brinckerhoff, ' 23 S. C. P. Brown, ' 21 S. tP. W. Bunnell, ' 27 tT. Campbell, ' 23 S. W. Carr, ' 28 L Carter, ' 15 M. C. Cheney, ' 24 S. S. W. Colt, ' 17 tP. H. Crane, ' 22 C. C. Crittenden, ' 23 T. K. Cureton, Jr., ' 24 S. R. H. Cushing, ' 17 S. B. C. Cutler, ' 26 C. P. Deacon, ' 27 S. A. F. Dean, ' 29 W. W. Dean, ' 18 B. Dodd, ' 29 S. H. M. Ellis, ' 30 C. N. Estill, ' 23 J. C. Estill, ' 17 S. W. E. Estill, ' 18 S. Gill, ' 26 S. HONORARY MEMBERS George P. Day Frank M. Kanaly MEMBERS J. S. Gorby, ' 28 S. J. H. Grubb, ' 16 A. R. Gurney, ' 18 N. S. Hall, ' 30 R. A. Hall, ' 30 N. T. Hayes, ' 25 J. C. Herman, ' 15 A. C. Hoffman, Jr., ' 29 S. tA. Hulman, ' 24 S. O. Z. Ide, ' 15 L G. Jarvis, ' 18 S. W. L. Jelliffe, ' 23 H. S. Landon, ' 16 S. R. W. Landon, ' 21 G. H. Lazarus, ' 20 H. Lincoln, ' 30 J. J. Lincoln, ' 24 S. J. Locke, ' 24 A. M. Loveman, ' 15 J. H. McDill, ' 27 J. McEwen, 3d, ' 30 T. Means, ' 10 F. R. O ' Brien, ' 31 T. J. O ' Brien, ' 21 F. T. Oldt, 2d, ' 30 tW. M. Oler, Jr., ' 16 tj. W. Overton, ' 17 D. F. Parker, ' 18 H. L Perry, ' 16 Deceased. t Former presidents. R. J. H. Kiphuth John Mack N. A. Merriam C. M. Poore, ' 29 J. A. Pope, ' 29 H. Potter, ' 17 K. F. Potter, ' 19 S. Potter, ' 19 S. Robbins, 3d, ' 28 S. H. F. Rogers, ' 21 H. C. Rolf, ' 17 S. C. H. Ruddy, ' 22 T. N. St. Hill, ' 17 S. tW. B. Schleiter, ' 21 S. P. Scott, ' 28 W. P. Sessions, ' 23 F. K. Sheldon, ' 29 S. D. C. A. Smith, ' 21 J. W. B. Smith, ' 25 E. J. Stackpole, Jr., ' 15 C. J. Stewart, ' 18 L. L. Stott, ' 28 M. G. Talcott, Jr., ' 31 B. Thorne, ' 28 S. H. S. Thorne, ' 20 A. T. N. Tracy, ' 25 S. M. Treadwell, ' 24 H. R. Tyler, ' 28 tS. B. Waring, ' 25 E. R. Williams, ' 21 S. W. W. Wise, ' 23 96 LYALG-PAhMGR AND POTPOURRI! HONORARY ARCHITECTURAL FRATERNITY THE IKTINOS SOCIETY OFFICERS Robbins H. Miller President Charles R. Strickland Vice-President Robert H. Schutz, Jr Secretary Charles M. Brooks, Jr Treasurer MEMBERS Orien J. Allaire Richard Ayers William T. Barbour, Jr Carl E. Bierschenk Charles M. Brooks, Jr. Niel A. Connor Ford H. Cooper William B. Cram Arthur F. Dean Frederick W. Dunn Harold C. Ceyer Henry S. Goodwin Paul Groesse Everett M. Jones William R. Julianelle Eben Knowlton Theodore W. Lamb George T. Licht Robert H. Lienhard Stewart A. Lyford Gordon MacMaster Carroll L. V. Meeks Robbins H. Miller George H. Nelson Robert Norfleet George Oh I, Jr. Edward B. Page Worthen Paxton Stephen J. Potter Robert H. Schutz, Jr. Samuel A. Scoville Clyde J. Smith, Jr. Charles R. Strickland Robert A. Ward Mason B. Wells Henry D. Whitney Julian H. Whittlesey Willard Wilkins 97 MILITARY HONOR FRATERNITY OF CANNON AND CASTLE OFFICERS Frederick E. Cignoux, Jr President George B. Longstreth Vice-President Charles W. Earnshaw Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Field Artillery George H. Bowman, Jr. Horace Brock Cheney Cowles Richard L. Eaton Robert M. Ferguson Frederick E. Cignoux, Jr. Henry A. Kugeler George B. Longstreth John R. MacNeille, Jr. Earl S. Potter Hardie Scott Corps of Engineers Charles W. Earnshaw George H. Hodges, Jr. Cilman D. Kirk Robert C. Kirk Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr. Norman W. Spencer Hubert C. Watson 98 HONORARY MEMBERS Major J. A. Lester F.A. Capt. T. E. Buechler F.A. Lieut. J. J. Burns F.A. Lieut. C. G. Holle C.E. M  s It 1 I ATHENIAN CLUB SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS OFFICERS John E. Otterson President Warren T. Mosman Vice-President Hubert C. Watson Secretary William H. Greene Treasurer MEMBERS Joseph S. Azaro Donald D. Bayard John W. Benson James Birnie, Jr. Russell R. Camp Albert H. Goodwin Richard Cordon William H. Greene William B. Kehm Paul C. Lawler Richard B. Leipold Robert McKnight James 0. Mahoney, Jr. Warren T. Mosman John E. Otterson Mark McC. Robinson Joseph C. Schork John DeF. Stull Allen Tompkins Hubert C. Watson 99 feuw. i . ii i na in jmm _YAL£-BAKN€R AND POT-POURRI! SENIOR SOCIETY SKULL AND BONES ROBERT SEAMAN ALLISON, JR. HARLAN MONTGOMERY ELLIS RAYMOND WALLESER ELLIS ALBERT DeWOLF ERSKINE, JR. WALTER WOOD CARNSEY WALDO WITTENMYER GREENE SAMUEL LAWRENCE GWIN, JR. ROBERT ANDREW HALL CHARLES ALDERSON JANEWAY LOUIS WILLIAMS LADD, JR. GEORGE BROWN LONGSTRETH FRANK BYRON LOOK JOHN MILLER MUSSER ARTHUR EDWARD PALMER, JR. TOM PRIDEAUX 103 lyalg-banno and potpourri: SENIOR SOCIETY C. S. P. C. C. j. ADAMS BATCHELLER, JR. ERNEST BROOKS, JR. THATCHER MACOUN BROWN, JR. CHESTER WESLEY DUDLEY, JR. ROBERT MUNRO FERGUSON JOHN STEPHEN CRAETZER, JR. DANIEL HASTINGS HICKOK DENISON KITCHEL WILLIAM BOARDMAN MOSLE ROBERT CARTER NICHOLAS, JR. THOMAS CURTIS SCHWARTZBURG WOODRUFF RANKIN TAPPEN ROBERT WARD JOHN CRISTY WEST ROBERT FORSTER WILSON 105 _YALG-BAKN€R AND POTPOURRI! SENIOR SOCIETY WOLFS HEAD WODROW ARCH BALD JOHN deFOREST BUCKINGHAM GEORGE SHEPARD CHAPPELL, JR. JOHN NEWBOLD HAZARD CHARLES JOSEPH HELLER FORD HINCHMAN JONES SIDNEY BARNES KIESELHORST JOHN NORMAN LINDEKE FLETCHER ELLIS NYCE, JR. HENRY OLIVER, JR. JOSEPH WOOD OLIVER WILLIAM LEDWITH PAUL JOHN McMAHON SPRIGG WENDELL BASSETT THOMPSON JAMES KENT WILLING, JR. 107 LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! SENIOR SOCIETY ELIHU JOSEPH CLEGC CHARLES PARSONS CLIFFORD DeWITT DOMINICK JOHN EVARTS EDWARD McCLUNC FLEMING OWEN OSBORNE FREEMAN FREDERICK EVELYN CICNOUX, JR. TIMOTHY WATSON GOODRICH, 2d HEDGES JEROME MACDONALD EDGAR ATWATER MANNING, JR. WILLIAM SHERMAN MANUEL OGDEN DAYTON MILLER FRANK GREEN OSBORNE ROSWELL HOPKINS RUDD CORNELIUS DELANO WOOD, JR. 109 lyalg-pannigp and pot-pourri: SHEFFIELD HONOR SOCIETY AURELIAN JOHN PEALE BENT JOHN HENRY BEYER AUGUSTUS SILLIMAN BLACDEN, JR. RICHARD HENRY BLYTHE, JR. RANDALL WADE EVERETT, JR. HAMILTON HITT JOHN LORD KING SAMUEL PLUMER McCALMONT FRANK LOUIS MARTI NG NELSON WOODWORTH MILLARD REUBEN BUCK ROBERTSON, JR. SEYMOUR YARDLEY WARNER, JR. 110 _YALG--PAhN€R AND POT-POURRI! SHEFFIELD HONOR SOCIETY TORCH I LEE CHRISMAN ASHLEY JOHN MARSHALL BUDD CHARLES ELLIS, JR. CHARLES HARRY ENCLE JAMES JOSEPH HOLAHAN WILLIAM RANDOLPH JENNINGS JOHN EDWIN KING, JR. ARTHUR EDWIN RODGER THOMAS ANDERSON STANDISH, JR. FRANK RAYMOND STOCKER FREDERICK BAUGHMAN TRIMBLE CHARLES ARDEN YINKEY, JR. Ill LYALG-BAhWGR AND POT-POURRI! THE JUNIOR FRATERNITIES SEVERAL distinctive changes in the Junior fraternity situation have been brought about during the past year. Chi Psi and Alpha Delta Phi have moved into their recently constructed domiciles, and with plans in the making for Alpha Sigma Phi and Alpha Chi Rho, the comple- tion of the entire group is in the near fu- ture. The faculty, in scanning the scholastic averages of those in fraternities, were ap- parently not pleased and passed a rule for- bidding any man on scholastic action from being offered a hold-off or being extended the privileges of any house. In the eyes of many the Interfraternity Council made some steps in the right direc- tion when they instituted their new system of calling and hold-offs last fall. By having each sophomore designate his preferences on paper, the fraternities are able to tell what men they can expect to get; and by offering hold-offs in card form to be ac- cepted or refused a few hours later, the sophomores are better able to make their choices. By these two moves the urge to pact and break the interfraternity agree- ment is lessened. The traditional hold-off night, calcium night, and running are still an interesting part of undergraduate life. With the final disappearance of the old closed tombs in favor of the open-house plan the Junior Fraternity assumes a more social and less honorary position and is of more benefit to the college as a whole. J. R. S. 114 Tap Day Alpha Chi Rho LYALG BAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! JUNIOR FRATERNITY ALPHA CHI RHO FOUNDED 1905 1930 Scott Adams, Jr. Charles S. Burr Walter R. Clark, Montford Dunn Oliver R. Grace James Hale, Jr. Pearson Hunt Edward S. Johnson, Jr. John I. B. McCulloch Edward B. Mansfield Alexander D. Moffat John DeF. Pettus Charles M. Pond James K. Robertson Frederick E. C. Roelker Frederick R. Steckel Lewis B. Ward lonathan H. Wood 1931 Talbot W. Aldrich Eric A. Bergman Howard B. Bowser Robert W. Brown Thomas C. Chapin Howard L. Cobb William J. Dickel Louis Erhardt Henry J. Faeth Frederick B. Fitch George B. Forbes Walter S. Gubelman, jr. Francis C. Healey Raymond H. High Dean K. Howerton Orien M. Kaufman John H. Kopmeier Rudolph A. Light John T. McClintock, Jr. Miles F. McNiff, Jr. Edward C. Marsh Keith T. Middleton James K. Northam Charles B. Palmer Joseph S. Phelon Richard F. Prentis George W. Ryerson Livingston L. Satterthwaite Ward C. Thorne Harry D. Watts, Jr. 1932 Maskell W. Applegate, Jr. George E. Breen Samuel McL. Brooks Gordon Cameron Henry H. Clifford Newton D. Crane George Eustis Ford McM. Frank Richard 0. Gatewood, Jr. Emerson Y. Gledhill Hamlett Harrison Robert E. Kennedy William E. Maguire Frank J. McGuire Richard M. Morris George H. Pfeifer John F. Reddy, Jr. Griffith L. Resor, Jr. Frederick W. Smith Frederick A. Stebbins Harvey M. Templeton, Mason Throwbridge Frederick C. Turnbull Richard T. Williamson Montague C. Wright, J 117 Alpha Delta Phi LYAl£ PAhW£R AND POT-POURRI! ALPHA DELTA PHI FOUNDED 1836 1930 Lyman H. Ay res Ernest Brooks, Jr. John H. Buckingham Charles P. Clifford Harold Cooper Richard C. Elliott James Espy Robert W. Foster Walter W. Carnsey Frederick E. Cignoux, Jr. John F. Codman Timothy W. Goodrich, 2d John S. Craetzer, Jr. Alfred Hayes, Jr. John N. Hazard Joseph C. Hodges David W. James Robert C. Kimberly Louis W. Ladd, Jr. Francis D. McCaulley, Jr. John McEwen, 3d Euclid Martin Atwood H. Miller Thomas E. Moore John M. Musser Frank G. Osborne Arthur E. Palmer, Jr. Allen K. Randolph Lawrence S. Robbins, Jr. Roswell H. Rudd Dean Sage, Jr. Robinson Simonds Winston Sizer Sherwood W. Smith Wilson F. Smith, Jr. John McMahon Sprigg Bernard L. Thompson Robert MacD. C. Thrall Joseph W. Wells Cornelius D. Wood, Jr. 1931 Robert L. Anthony Donald C. Austin Richard M. Boardman, Jr. Dawson J. Burns, Jr. Percy Chubb, 2d David H. Clement William Crear, Jr. Harold L. Cruikshank Edward C. Curnen, Jr. Joseph S. Evans, Jr. William F. Grandy, Jr. Raymond R. Guest Thomas W. Hefferan, Jr. Roland D. Irving Herbert F. Kusterer Hamilton Lincoln Frank L. Luce, Jr. Lloyd W. A. Lydgate William S. McCaskey Edwin McElwain, 2d James McEvoy, Jr. Andrew D. Mcintosh, Jr. William L. Peltz Frank B. Porter, Jr. Seymour Saltus Burton C. Smith James R. Stewart Benjamin R. Sturges Walter M. Swoope Wyllys Terry, Jr. Arthur A. Thomas, 2d Ashley Thorndike Dudley L Vaill, Jr. John W. M. Whiting 1932 Daniel N. Adams James R. Adriance Arnold Berns, Jr. John P. Boruff, Jr. Francis R. Cowles Sumner McK. Crosby John P. Devaney Ford B. Draper Daniel England, Jr. William A. Gould Basil D. Henning William Van D. Hodges, Jr. Harry T. Jones, Jr. Mortimer H. Laundon, Jr. George L. Maltby, Jr. Rushmore H. Mariner William McLauchlan, 2d Alfred Ogden Frederic W. Porter Lamed D. Randolph Jack R. Reiss Boutelle Savage William Smyth Richard S. Storrs, Jr. Thomas P. Underwood Edward A. Wilson, Jr. 119 n ? 7 - rr . : ' «T Alpha Sigma Phi _YAL£-BAN I€R AND POTPOURRI: JUNIOR FRATERNITY ALPHA SIGMA PHI FOUNDED 1845 1930 Elbridge G. Anderson William C. Bagley, Jr. James M. Banner John K. Berry John C. Bogardus Merwin C. Camp Charles C. Child, 3d Barron Collier, Jr. Chester R. de la Vergne, Jr. Porter Dietrich William D. Duell Valentine L. Fine Harry M. Harris, 2d (Formerly Delta Beta Xi) Langdon A. Hooper Lawrence F. Hope Brooke W. Jones Millard A. Kelly Ralph C. Kuehn Harold A. Lachner Danforth H. Lombard Wayne W. Long Herbert M. Nichols John 0. Olson Edmund W. Overstreet Wilbur L Ross Richard M. Sawhill Neill W. Schoonmaker Wallace M. Sheridan Lewis Y. Smith, Jr. Morgan D. Smith James B. Sniffen Stephen J. Spingarn Frank O. Spinney Theodore Thomas Francis W. Tully, Jr. Frederick B. Tuttle Walter J. Watson Francis J. Wrinn Moreau Yeomans 1931 Hamilton Allen Arthur F. Brook Herbert Brook William L. Camp, 3d James H. M. Campbell Wain M. Churchman, Jr. Frederick W. Coates Robert L. Crowell Bromley DeMerritt William A. Goodrich, Jr. George A. Griffin William H. Holding Paul MacDonald Douglas E. Mann John R. Morris, 2d Horace R. Mustard Benjamin F. Nelson Edward B. Paine Frank B. Page Lucius E. Robertson Selden Rodman Ludlow P. Scott Cedric H. Spencer Arthur E. Tanner Albert C. Thompson Seelye C. Vidal James D. Washington John E. Willard, Jr. 1932 John Q. Adams Frederick A. Allis John K. Brines Edward P. Bullard, 3d Archibald Busby Bradford Butler, Jr. Russell E. Chase Thomas W. Corlett David B. Crittenden Henry W. Erving Samuel Fessenden Justin A. Godchaux Robert L. Goodale Almon C. Greenman Kenneth S. Hogg Theodore H. Lee Carleton C. Leedy William F. Newton William G. Perrin McMillan Robinson Roy C. Robinson Wilbur L. Scranton, Jr. Edward B. Self Edgar W. Warren Frank H. Whittemore David L. William John S. Wolf, Jr. 121 Beta Theta Pi LYALG-- AWGR AND POT-POURRI! JUNIOR FRATERNITY BETA THETA PI FOUNDED 1892 1930 Roger B. Alley John C. Avery John W. Barber Frederick C. Bull Walter E. Culbertson, Jr. Charles R. Evans Donald L. Ferris John C. Haas, Jr. George N. Henson James A. Kuhn William L. Leide Paul F. McDevitt Leigh M. Marlow William P. Marsh, Jr. Albert W. Morton, Jr. Walter S. Newhall Forrest J. Newman Franklin T. Oldt, 2d John M. Pearce Robert B. Phillips, 2d Howard C. Robinson James A. Rudy Frank R. Series, Jr. William P. Smith Grant M. Stadelman Stovall W. Travick John W. Van Siclen Howard T. Walden, Jr. Thomas J. Welch George Van V. Wolf 1931 William I. Abel I John A. Andrews, Jr. William D. Behnke John T. Bender, Jr. Robert Biggert James S. Bulkley Richard W. Condon Frank N. Conner Leo H. Cornellier John L. Cox, Jr. Frederick E. Darr Arthur G. DeVoe Sheldon J. Foster Charles C. Hardy Gilbert W. Heublein George A. Holloway Paul W. Hoon Elliott Jones John J. Lorenzen Alfred B. MacChesney, 3d John L. McCormick William S. McCormick Andrew H. Miller Truman W. Morsman James S. Murray, Jr. Bernard L. Poole Henry M. Putnam John J. Quinn Winthrop A. Smith. Alfred R. Sumner Morris G. Talcott, Jr. Paul R. Tilson John M. Trainer, Jr. Laut R. Wade Richard L. Wood Edward E. Yaggy, Jr. 1932 Charles S. Anderson Francis K. Beirn Pierre Bouscaren Henry H. Bromley Joel M. Burdick Frank A. Chisholm James MacC. Hannan Thomas P. Hawley Jack R. Howard GRADUATE SCHOOL William L. S. Fleming Frederick H. Keer Fred J. Kidde Robert E. Kohler Hart D. Leavitt Roland S. Littlefield James O. Moore, Jr. Stephanus Van C. Morris John A. Putnam Frank A. Seaver Herbert L. Puxley Edward B. Smith Guilford W. Snyder Harry M. Stevens, 2d Robert K. Steward James G. Taylor Bernard Townsend John D. Velie John R. Venning Bradford A. Warner 123 Chi Psi lyalg-bannigr and pot-pourbi: JUNIOR FRATERNITY CHI PSI FOUNDED 1905 1930 Henry D. Babcock Horace Brock John deF. Buckingham Ernest L. Busby Nelson R. Cherry Charles W. Dudley, Jr. Robert M. Ferguson James K. Cearhart, Jr. Charles W. Gillespie John M. Guiterman Robert A. Hall Charles J. Heller Francis V. Keesling, Jr. Henry A. Kugeler Edgar A. Manning, Jr. Robert T. McDevitt Agon I. Nelson Henry Oliver, Jr. William Raymond, Jr. Orville H. Schell, Jr. Thomas C. Schwartzburg Raoul N. Semler Hulbert Taft, Jr. Wendell B. Thompson Wirt F. Thompson Charles F. Wallace, Jr. Herbert St.J. Webb, Jr. James K. Willing, Jr. 1931 Richard H. Butler Philip S. Carr Lewis A. Carter Kimberly Cheney Samuel B. Childs, Jr. John E. Cookman Paul W. Cooley Frederic k B. Cooper, Edward D. Coy John M. Cross John W. Cross Willis S. De LaCour Charles H. Dickerman John H. Dillon, 2d Lyttleton Fox, Jr. John D. Garrison John B. Gates William F. Gillespie, Jr. Lyman S. Goodbody Charles W. Goodyear, Jr. George W. Hill, Jr. Ethan A. Hitchcock Elgin G. Ingram John C. McGlinn William L Polk John W. Seddon Stephen TenB. Terhune Andrew B. Wallace, Jr. Alexander L. Wiener Fraser Wilkins John G. Williams Thomas D. Williams 1932 Hoyt Ammidon Clark Andrews William B. Bachman William R. Bascom Laurence R. Blackhurst Edward C. Brewster John M. Brodie Franklin G. Brown Robert N. Brown Guerin B. Carmody Daniel Catlin Drayton Cochran Erastus Corning, 2d James A. Deering Charles M. Dodson Marc L. Fleishel, Jr. Rufus J. Foster, 2d John W. Huntington Winston H. Johnston Edward F. Knight Hardin H. Littell Albert B. Miller Seth M. Milliken Theodore I. Reese, Jr. Ezra J. Warner, Jr. Jarvis G. Wilcox 125 1 Delta Kappa Epsilon 1YAL£- ANnI€R AND POT-POURRI. JUNIOR FRATERNITY DELTA KAPPA EPSILON FOUNDED 1844 1930 Philip S. Agar Hulbert S. Aldrich Robert S. Allison, Jr. William D. Anderson Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. George S. Chappell, Jr. George P. Clayson, Jr. Joseph Clegg DeWitt Dominick Donald C. Dunham Harlan M. Ellis Raymond W. Ellis John Evarts Thomas McK. Folds Marshall W. Forrest Owen 0. Freeman Leonard F. Genz Mahlon A. Glascock Waldo W. Greene Samuel L. Gwin, Jr. Norman S. Hall Edwin O. Holter, Jr. John Howland, Jr. Sidney B. Kieselhorst Adrian Lambert George B. Longstreth Frank B. Look Kingsley Mabon Karl B. Michael Herbert C. Miller, Jr. Fletcher E. Nyce, Jr. William L Paul George A. Poole, Jr. Charles R. Pope Tom Prideaux Nathaniel Smith John A. Thomas Graham R. Treadway John S. Turner John Whitridge, Jr. 1931 Edward Austen John B. Boyle James Breckenridge Cecil Bullock James C. Cairns George A. Carden, Jr. Harry C. Coles James H. W. Conklin Gaylord Donnelley Franklin Farrel, 3d Robert M. Heurtematte Allan M. Hirsh, Jr. Isaac H. Houston Lewis A. Lapham Frederick J. Linehan Frederic W. Loeser Stuart D. Ludlum Charles R. McCormick, Jr. John H. Macdonald Marshall W. MacDuffie, Jr. William E. MacKay Donald R. McLennan, Jr. Andrew McNally, 3d Francis R. O ' Brien Herbert Parsons William P. Patterson Sartell P. Porter Joseph C. Rathborne John D. Reese Roby Robinson Guthrie R. Smith Charles S. Snead Francis T. Vincent 1932 William H. Abell Theodore P. Avery Herster Barres Allan W. Betts Edward M. Curley Colman Curtiss, Jr. Harold L. Fates John M. Hall Joseph Talcott Hall Deceased Joseph Twichell Hall James 0. Heyworth, Jr. Edward D. Husted Clarence B. Jones John T. Lindenberg John R. McCrary, Jr. Pendleton Miller Albert T. Phelps Michael G. Phipps Benjamin A. Rowland Albert T. Taylor Frederick W. Tullis Joseph E. Uihlein, Jr. James R. Walker, Jr. William W. White Samuel G. Williams John K. Winter 127 -4 hhka; ■% : 1 ' , ' -If Sa ■■• ' ' ' Psi Upsilon LYALG-PAhMGR AND POT-POURRI! JUNIOR FRATERNITY PSI UPSILON FOUNDED 1838 1930 Wodrow Archbald Adams Batcheller, Jr. Charles E. Brainard William M. Brewster Benjamin Cheney Roger W. Cheney Thomas S. Childs, Jr. Henry T. Clarke, 3d Maurice F. Hanson William B. Harding Daniel H. Hickok Robert M. Hitch, Jr. Clement G. Hurd Ford H. Jones Denison Kitchel John N. Lindeke Bruce A. MacDonald Maxwell Moore William B. Mosle Robert C. Nicholas, J Joseph W. Oliver Winthrop H. Palmer Earl S. Potter Henry E. Russell David S. Sampsell Hardie Scott Scott Stewart, Jr. Woodruff R. Tappen William H. Wade Robert Ward John C. West Holland Van E. Williams Robert F. Wilson 1931 Francis 0. Ayres, Jr. John H. Barnes, Jr. Marshall Bond, Jr. Harmar Brereton Henry W. Chambers, Edwin K. Chapin Daniel C. Cook James A. Draper, 3d Thomas R. Fisher, Jr. Robert W. Gillespie, Chauncey L. Griggs Thomas T. Hare, Jr. John Holbrook Philip D. Holden John A. Howell Jr. James R. Hunt, Jr. Elisha Lee, Jr. Craigh Leonard Edward L. Marsh, Jr Charles McKee Jr. Francis A. Nelson, J Lamont H. Nichols George S. Patterson, Jr. John M. Polk James B. Potts James G. Rogers, Jr. Reeve Schley, Jr. Rowland Stebbins, Jr. Ezekiel G. Stoddard John M. Walker James D. Welles Amos K. Wylie 1932 Frederick B. Adams, Jr. Edgar S. Auchincloss Richard S. Auchincloss Benjamin C. Betner, Jr. Dunbar W. Bostwick John G. Cavanagh Richard S. Childs Howard P. Cross Frank S. Eddy, Jr. Bruce Fenn, 2d James Flood David S. Gamble, 3d William F. Harrington, J Edwin S. Hunt, Jr. Stewart B. Iglehart Marshall H. Jones James Knott Allen L. Lindley, Jr. Douglas MacArthur, 2d William Marvel George P. Mills John P. Mills George Munson Robert F. Niven Robert C. Palmer Robert McN. Smith Thomas C. Sheffield David R. Wilmerding 129 Zeta Psi LYAL€-BAKN€I! AND POT-POUMI! JUNIOR FRATERNITY ZETA PS I 1930 George H. Bowman, Philip M. Burnett Jr. Homer M Robert M. William S Edward A. Donald N. Edwin N. Dodge Arthur Cibb Charles F. Gill Edward L. Hill Stewart O. H. lones Byington, Jr. Calfee, Jr. Chittenden Choate, Jr. Clark William D. Judson, Jr. Joseph S. Kendall, 3d Dyer B. Lawrence Albert McN. Littleton John S. Lobb Hedges Macdonald John R. MacNeille, Jr. Murrall MacNeille John S. Manuel, Jr. William S. Manuel Stowell W. Mears Ogden D. Miller Francis J. O ' Hara, Jr. Sidney Oviatt James T. Patterson, Jr. Horace W. Peters Allen Quimby, Jr. Edgar T. Sloan Bradford S. Tilney Joseph L. Townsend, Jr. Schuyler C. Wells, Jr. Herbert B. Wilcox, Jr. Howard H. Williams Arthur S. Wright 1931 Edmund T. Allen George N. Armstrong, Jr. Brewster Bingham George R. Black Henry B. Clark, Jr. Theodore W. Dominick Sawnie R. Gaston Fred B. Gleason, Jr. Samuel W. Hawley Thomas H. Hefferan Henry J. Heinz, 2d George G. Hoffman Chandler H. Kibbee James B. Lounsbury Joseph A. Lynch, Jr. Stanford C. Mallory David R. Mcllwaine Robert L. Messimer, Robert G. Olmsted Stewart Patterson Charles E. Payne Gregory S. Prince Laurance B. Rand Edwin B. Ross Robert W. Ryan Goodwin Stoddard Luther Tucker Edward McL. Watters George P. Whitelaw Herschel V. Williams 1932 Edward D. Bangs Anson McC. Beard Redfield D. Beckwith William M. Bowden Richard C. Carroll Robert Crafts Newhall Douglas Henry A. Fenn Robert D. Fordyce Charles MacK. Ganson Freeman E. Gates Milton W. Goss John L. Griswold John R. Hart Valdemar L. Knudsen Kirke P. Lincoln, Jr. David B. Manuel Grinnell Morris G. Sealy Newell Fitzhugh Scott, Jr. Frederick W. Squires Edwin A. Sweet Varnum Taylor Thomas S. Tyler Cameron Waterman, Morgan L. Whitney John R. Wilson 3d 131 Berzelius 1YALG BAW€R AND POT-POURRI! S. S. S. SOCIETY BERZELIUS FOUNDED 1848 Edward R. Anderson Jason Bacon Harold DeF. Beebe James L. Black, Jr. Stuart F. Brown Robert S. Bubb John M. Budd David W. Clark Frederick W. Coburn, Jr. Thomas C. Cochran Charlton D. Cooksey, Jr. Charles A. Cooper Charles D. Davidson Edward J. Doonan Alvah C. Drake Henry Dryfoos, 3d Richard M. Duff Perry E. Farnum Daniels B. Fisk George Corham Donald J. Heekin George M. Henderson John R. Higbie William E. Hill Joseph E. Hitt, Jr. George H. Hodges, Jr. Duncan L. Hooper Theodore G. Hoster William N. Hunter, Jr. Charles L. Johnson, Jr. Evan J. Kemp Thomas C. Kennedy John A. Kratz Harold H. Lihme John G. Miller Weld Morgan William B. Morton Raymond M. Owen, Jr. John A. Pardridge Samuel G. Payne, 4th John I. Pearce Frederick C. Rawolle, Jr. Charles S. Reed, Jr. Charles T. Rhodes Thomas McM. Rianhard, Joseph M. Shinnen George G. Smith Willard C. Stanley Frank R. Stocker John F. Stratton Arthur J. Taylor Clayton B. Thomas Phillip D. Thomas John S. Tritle, Jr. Roger Williams, Jr. Walter R. Williams, Jr. Noyes S. Wilmot Forbes K. Wilson 133 Book and Snake iyalg-banno and pot-pourri: S. S. S. SOCIETY BOOK AND SNAKE FOUNDED 1863 Leonard L. Aitken, Jr. John L. Bradley Alexander M. Brooks Joseph J. Brooks, 2d Edward C. Cahill LeRoy Clark, Jr. Cordon B. Dunn Richard H. Follis, Jr. Isaac H. Francis, 3d Horace H. Freeman George L. Green Howard M. Hanna, Jr. John T. Hargrave Newell H. Hargrave, Jr James J. Holahan Alan S. Howard Charles H. Howson, Jr. Robert M. Ingham, Jr. Merton F. Joyce Walter MacL. Lamont, Jr. Adam K. Luke, Jr. Robert W. Mcllvain, Jr. Garfield A. McKenzie Joseph P. Maine Marcus C. Mason, Jr. Dan T. Moore Elton F. Motch Richard Park Charles G. Pierie John A. Rathbun Tolbert N. Richardson, Jr. Hunter H. Romaine Charles L. Sturtevant, Jr. William R. Teller, Jr. Frederick B. Trimble Max C. Weber Charles A. Yinkey, Jr. 135 1YALG-BANNGR AND POT-POURRI! S. S. S. SOCIETY BETA XI FOUNDED 1929 Carl C. Birgstedt Earl R. Bockstahler Alger S. Bourn Boleslaw Chotkowski William P. Cunningham Paul De Cicco Gregory T. Dial Arthur C. V. Diehl Edward F. Falsey Albert P. Gagnebin Henry B. Callison Carl H. Hansen Everett L. Harry Roger B. Holmes Wilson H. Hunter Dwight C. Hutchins William A. Knapp Knowles B. Lawrence Robert C. Lemay Joseph H. Lorenz Lawrence A. Ludwig Byron E. Munroe Thomas F. Pendleton, Jr. Russel F. Perkins Richard W. Reppert, Jr. Edward J. Rockefeller Robert R. Rudolph John E. Soehrens Eligio J. Tavanlar William W. Terry Paul Thomson 136 LYALG-BAhMGR AND POT-POURBi: ' ' iili 1 m S. S. S. SOCIETY CHI PHI Conrad S. Baker Spencer D. Clayton John A. Cosmus, Jr. John T. Doherty Clarence H. Ericson Robert M. Ferris, 3d Edward R. Florea Peter VanD. Cott Taber Hamilton, Jr. John E. Haslam David B. Langmuir Joseph H. Little Robert P. McCombs John Merwin Walter L. Mitchell, Jr. Gerald K. Muessel Robert S. Newhall, 2d Benham S. Pond Nathan J. Pond Daniel C. Quigley Montgomery H. Robbins Horace V. Rumsey Charles S. Rust Carl R. Schneider William C. Scott, Jr. Earl R. Stevens Thomas W. Stevens Hugh V. Strong Seymour W. Strong Bishop W. Von Wettberg Joseph C. Woodward 137 LYALG-PAhNGP AND POT-POURRI! S. S. S. SOCIETY DELTA PSI FOUNDED 1869 Lee C. Ashley Alpheus C. Beane, Jr. Frank S. Bell John P. Bent George P. Biggs Augustus S. B lagden, Jr. Joseph W. Blagden Peter J. Brennan Rufus C. Brown, 3d John M. Burrall, Jr. Philip Dater Kempton Dunn Charles Ellis, Jr. Charles H. Engle Randall W. Everett, Jr. Richards Follett Montgomery P. Ford Thomas C. Ford William D. Fullerton Curtis C. Gary Gordon M. Henderson John H. Ingram Nahum E. Jennison John E. King, Jr. Henry R. Lanman Richard A. Lowndes Samuel P. McCalmont Malcolm S. Mackay, Jr. Frank B. McKown Richard S. Meredith Charles G. Miller, Jr. John E. Muhlfeld Wheeler Nazro Francis W. Pershing Frederic A. Potts Emanuel M. Rabinovitch Charles J. Ramsburg, Jr. Reuben B. Robertson, Jr. Edward Rotan, 2d Harold C. Sandberg Raymond E. Sargeant Samuel S. Savage Laurence R. Sherman Rayburn C. Smith, Jr. Thomas A. Standish, Jr. Harlow D. Thayer Laurence E. Tierney, Jr. John P. Treadwell, 3d John D. Upton Gerrit W. VanSchaick Frederick E. Weicker Charles O. Wood, Jr. William B. Wood Simon R. Zimmerman, Jr. 138 1YALG-PAWGR AND P0T-P0UPDI! S. S. S. SOCIETY PHI GAMMA DELTA Russel B. Bass Harold W. Beder, Jr. Harry C. Beggs William S. Bidle, Jr. Leland H. Burt Edgar B. Butler Henry Chisholm, Jr. Arthur D. Clark, Jr. Randolph H. Cook Winthrop O. Cook Walter E. Cornett John W. Cowper, Jr. Edward L. Cussler Andrew C. Dana Walter deF. Day Ferdinand H. Diebold Frederick C. Draper Richard B. Dunning Hamilton C. Eastman James H. Eddy William L. Funk Hubert A. Cosselin Alexander F. W. Hehmeyer Rudolph LeR. Kautz, Jr. John N. Kelley, Jr. Emery W. Kellogg Joseph W. Kennedy, Jr. Edward C. Leedy, Jr. Arthur R. Lewis, Jr. Walter W. Littell Robert E. MacCarthy Callaghan J. McCarthy Frank L. Marting Charles S. H. Mott John O. Nicklis Karl J. Ondricek, Jr. Paul A. Ortiz John S. Parke, Jr. Philip F. Partington Carlo M. Paterno George Peterson, Jr. George V. Phillips Oliver C. Pittman Lucien R. Shattuck, Jr. Alexander M. Smith John J. Sullivan Kenneth L. Terrell John B. Titcomb John C. Tracy Donald G. Walker 139 LYALG-BAWGR AND POT-P0URRK S. S. S. SOCIETY SACHEM HALL |ames H. Allyn William B. Barry Frederick C. Bassick Donald H. Battles Stanford C. Blish Horace D. Bregenzer Charles H. Brooks Charles H. Carpenter Charles H. Costello Frederick D. Cowles Heber H. Dunkle Charles W. Earnshaw Frank H. Eastman, Jr. Edward R. Eberle Reginald A. Hackley William B. Hall Allen W. Hammond Hans B. Hill William R. Jennings John A. Keyser Cilman D. Kirk Robert C. Kirk Charles N. Little Landon C. Lodge Mansfield Merriman Harvey R. Morrison Edward A. Nunn John B. Ogilvie Robert W. Pulliam William R. Ransom John C. Sims Norman W. Spencer Warren P. Spining Chadbourne A. Spring Cordon P. Thorn Joseph B. Thrall Wainwright Tuttle George A. Vogel Whitney Warner, Jr. Carl R. Webster Robert B. Whittredge William R. Willard Arnold A. Willcox Arthur K. Wing, Jr. Robert B. Wolf, Jr. William W. Woodbridge 140 lyalg-panno and pot-pourri: S. S. S. SOCIETY ST. ELMO FOUNDED 1888 Davis L. Baker, Jr. Simeon M. Barber, Jr. Horace W. R. Barry Henry E. Baton, Jr. James E. Beckwith John H. Beyer Richard H. Blythe, Jr. Albert J. Booth, Jr. Charles W. Buckley James N. Buckwalter James C. Campbell Merrit A. Cleveland Clement H. Cochran, Richard V. Fabian James P. Cossett, 2d Donald W. Henry Logan S. C. Hill Walter B. Hill, Jr. Hamilton Hitt Edward H. Hoffman Joseph F. Keeler John L. King Herman C. Kugeler William H. Lang Charles H. Lanphier Jr. Angus MacDonald Robert A. Maes Richard B. Mason, Jr. Oliver May Charles F. Miles Nelson W. Millard Caldwell H. Oliver Sewall K. Oliver Frank Q. O ' Neill Lloyd B. Osborne Frederick F. Payne John W. Peck Miles S. Pendleton John E. Phillips Frederick W. Schwerin Frank R. Sheldon Donald W. Smith William A. Stromeyer Kay Todd, Jr. Charles L. Twist Robert Walker Seymour Y. Warner, Jr. Burrell C. White, Jr. John S. C. Wilson, 3d 141 lYALG-PAhNGR AND POTPOURRI! S. S. S. SOCIETY THETA XI FOUNDED 1865 John B. Adams Albert B. Anderson Ledyard Avery David F. Black Charles N. Blunt Melville L. Brown Robinson D. Buck Morris B. Burlingham Spencer G. Carlton James A. Carney Robert E. Carr Frank B. Chase William H. Corbusier, George B. Crump Emil E. Cuntz Charles G. Davis Arthur H. Dumelin Frederick V. Ferber, Jr Tecumseh S. Fitch John L. Flanagan William A. Geer Robert M. Gorby John K. Hardcastle Charles W. Henning Harvey H. Heyser, Jr. William T. Hyde, Jr. Ernest W. Johnson 2d Owen C. Jones James L. Leonard Quentin McA. Losee Donald F. MacEachern Wendell L. McNeil Edward W. Moon, 3d George T. Moore, Jr. Charles L. Morris Louis F. Niezer Knowlton W. Oberlander Edward T. O ' Donnell Henry H. Palmer Daniel J. Proulx Robert L. Randolph, Jr. John J. Raskob, Jr. Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr. Peter Richmond Arthur E. Rodger Edward H. Roper Richard M. Sargent Richard W. Schuttenhelm Frederick C. Weber, Jr. Allanson P. Williams Douglas R. G. Williams Melvin H. Young Montague H. Zink 142 LYALG-BAhMGR AND POTPOURRI! UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY BOOK AND BOND FOUNDED 1889 Warren D. Abbott, Jr. William E. Arnstein Warren Cooke William C. Fennell Henry B. Fernald, Jr. Agnew Fisher George C. Fox Albert H. Goodwin James R. Graham George H. Hamilton Charles K. Hammer Douglas A. Harwood William V. Higgins Wayne D. Jones Gordon W. McBride Arthur W. McKown Oscar E. Maurer, Jr. William S. Maurer Lawrence C. Moore John A. Norton Burton B. Rogers Orrin C. Rutledge Francis A. Sanders Charles S. Schnelle Edwin M. Shultes, Jr. Edwin W. Small Gareth W. Speer Minnott A. O. Stilson, Robert F. Truesdell William H. Wetherill, Francis M. Woods Allen R. Yale 3d 143 LYALG-BANnO AND POT-POURRI! UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY SIGMA ALPHA MU Howard Antevil Arthur Z. Belous Lester L. Farber Leonard R. Frankel Irving B. Harris Frank Holtzman Arthur Jarcho Alfred Magrish Theodore R. Malsin Mendel Mazer Samuel Poze Abner A. Rednor Woodrow J. Sandler Herbert Schane Henry W. Simon Mathias F. Strashun Arnold Weiner I. Herbert Wilson 144 _YAL£-BAW€R AND POT-POURRI! 1595 UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY ZETA BETA TAU ALPHA LAMBDA CHAPTER Robert Adler Ju stin H. Bijur George C. Engel Robert Fuld Eric C. Cordon Samuel J. Crauman Stephen P. Hofmayer Joel Isenburg George M. Kohn, Jr. Richard K. Korn Lawrence B. Lehman Julius S. Loewenthal Joseph C. Meyer Melvin Newman Harry L. Osterweis Roil in G. Osterweis Robert B. Portis Theodore F. Rittenberg Oscar A. Rose Lee J. Spiegelberg Edward A. Stern Morris Wolf 145 LYALG-PAhN€R AND P0T-P0UR I: SHEFF. CLUBS Over Mantel, Cloister UNDERGRADUATE social life in the Sheffield Scientific School is centered around nine clubs, eight of which have houses and the ninth which does not as yet have a house. These clubs exert a considerable influ- ence in Sheff. and in the University. They are not as completely self-contained as is often thought. Teas and dances are given by the clubs during the fall at the more important football games. The house- parties at the end of the first term in Feb- ruary are a necessary accompaniment of the Junior Prom. House-parties are held again in the spring over the Derby Day week-end. These parties are patronized by the members of the College and in this way a social as well as a scholastic bond is maintained between Ac. and Sheff. An Intramural Sports Committee is re- sponsible for a year-long program of inter- house activities, consisting of touch foot- ball games in the fall, pool and billiard tournaments in the winter, and also an in- door relay race, and baseball games in the spring. Scholastic competition is also a feature of interhouse relations and a prize is awarded each year to the house having the highest average. During the winter term each house is host at a meeting which is open to the en- tire University. The speakers for these meetings are selected by the Byer ' s Hall Cabinet, there usually being three or four prominent outsiders and the remaining speakers chosen from among the faculty. The house system is governed by the Presidents Committee which is composed of the presidents of each of the eight clubs which have houses. All matters of inter- house relations are referred to this commit- tee and many valuable suggestions for the betterment of the social life in Sheff. have come from it. The clubs hold their elections in the fall, Rush Week usually being the first week in 148 December. The election period continues each evening for a week at the end of which time the sophomores are elected. However, the men live in the clubs only during their Junior and Senior years. The clubs are divided equally as to status, four being local organizations and four being chapters of national fraternities. The Colony is the oldest, having been founded in 1848, very shortly after the founding of the Scientific School. It is one of the local organizations and is known as the Berzelius Society. I t is located at 17 Hillhouse Avenue. 1863 saw the founding of the Cloister which is also a local organi- zation known as Book and Snake. It is at present situated at 1 Hillhouse Avenue. Franklin Hall, a chapter of the national fraternity Theta Xi, came into being in 1865 and is now located at 110 College Street. In 1868 another club had its begin- ning, St. Anthony Hall, a chapter of Delta Psi. In 1913 it moved into its present loca- tion at 133 College Street. York Hall was established in 1877 as a chapter of Chi Phi; 96 Wall Street is its address. St. Elmo was founded in 1889 as a chapter of Delta Phi. However, in 1925 it severed its national connections and has since been known as the St. Elmo Society. Its house is located at 111 Grove Street. Vernon Hall began its history in 1880 as a University fraternity, a chapter of Phi Gamma Delta. In 1903 its membership was restricted to members of the Sheffield Scientific School. It is now situated at 370 Temple Street. Sachem Hall was also founded as a University fraternity, a chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa, but in 1903 it also limited its membership to Sheff. During the past year it has sev- ered its national affiliations and joined the ranks of the local organizations. It is lo- cated at 124 Prospect Street. Scroll and Compass was founded in 1929 to fill the need of the men who were not in one of the other houses for a social organization. These clubs have made their mark in the life of the University. Furthermore, their in- fluence on their members is considerable. Extra-curricular as well as curricular activi- ties are stimulated and encouraged, and much is done to develop the men to the fullest realization of their abilities. The houses are responsible for many fine friendships as well. Through the honorary faculty members a much-needed social contact between the faculty and the un- dergraduates is well developed. Taken as a whole, the clubs have tried to work con- tinuously for the enrichment of under- graduate life and the development of char- acter. Richard H. Blythe, Jr. Living Room, Cloister The Red Room, Cloister Living Room of St. Anthony Living Room, St. Elmo Shefftown Living Room, St. Anthony The Colony LYALG-BAhWR AND POT-POURRI! Edward R. Anderson Jason Bacon Harold DeF. Beebe James L. Black, Jr. Stuart F. Brown Robert S. Bubb John M. Budd David W. Clark Frederick W. Coburn, Jr. Thomas C. Cochran Charlton D. Cooksey, jr. Charles A. Cooper Charles D. Davidson Edward J. Doonan Alvah C. Drake Henry Dryfoos, 3d Richard M. Duff Perry E. Farnum Daniels B. Fisk George Corham Donald J. Heekin George M. Henderson John R. Higbie William E. Hill Joseph E. Hitt, Jr. George H. Hodges, Jr. Duncan L. Hooper Theodore G. Hoster William N. Hunter, Jr. Charles L. Johnson, Jr. Evan J. Kemp Thomas C. Kennedy John A. Kratz Harold H. Lihme John G. Miller Weld Morgan William B. Morton Raymond M. Owen, Jr. John A. Pardridge Samuel G. Payne, 4th John I. Pearce Frederick C. Rawolle, Jr. Charles S. Reed, Jr. Charles T. Rhodes Thomas McM. Rianhard, Jr. Joseph M. Shinnen George G. Smith Willard C. Stanley Frank R. Stocker John F. Stratton Arthur J. Taylor Clayton B. Thomas Phillip D. Thomas John S. Tritle, Jr. Roger Williams, Jr. Walter R. Williams, Jr. Noyes S. Wilmot Forbes K. Wilson 153 The Cloister Club LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! Leonard L. Aitken, Jr. John L. Bradley Alexander M. Brooks Joseph J. Brooks, 2d Edward C. Cahill LeRoy Clark, Jr. Cordon B. Dunn Richard H. Follis, Jr. Isaac H. Francis, 3d Horace H. Freeman George L. Green Howard M. Hanna, Jr. John T. Hargrave Newell H. Hargrave, Jr. James J. Holahan Alan S. Howard Charles H. Howson, Jr. Robert M. Ingham, Jr. Merton F. Joyce Walter MacL. Lamont, Jr. Adam K. Luke, Jr. Robert W. Mcllvain, Jr. Garfield A. McKenzie Joseph P. Maine Marcus C. Mason, Jr. Dan T. Moore Elton F. Motch Richard Park Charles G. Pierie John A. Rathbun Tolbert N. Richardson, Jr. Hunter H. Romaine Charles L. Sturtevant, Jr. William R.Teller, Jr. Frederick B. Trimble Max C. Weber Charles A. Yinkey, Jr. 155 Franklin Hall 1YALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI: FRANKLIN HALL John B. Adams Albert B. Anderson Ledyard Avery David F. Black Charles N. Blunt Melville L. Brown Robinson D. Buck Morris B. Burlingham Spencer C. Carlton James A. Carney Robert E. Carr Frank B. Chase William H. Corbusier, 2d George B. Crump Emil E. Cuntz Charles G. Davis Arthur H. Dumelin Frederick V. Ferber, Jr. Tecumseh S. Fitch John L. Flanagan William A. Geer Robert M. Gorby John K. Hardcastle Charles W. Henning Harvey H. Heyser, Jr. William T. Hyde, Jr. Ernest W. Johnson Owen C. Jones James L. Leonard Quentin McA. Losee Donald F. McEachern Wendell L. McNeil Edward W. Moon, 3d George T. Moore, Jr. Charles L. Morris Louis F. Niezer Knowlton W. Oberlander Edward T. O ' Donnell Henry H. Palmer Daniel J. Proulx Robert L. Randolph, Jr. John J. Raskob, Jr. Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr. Peter Richmond Arthur E. Rodger Edward H. Roper Richard M. Sargent Richard W. Schuttenhelm Frederick C. Weber, Jr. Allanson P. Williams Douglas R. G. Williams Melvin H. Young Montague H. Zink 157 St. Anthony Hall LYAL£-PAI 0 AND POTPOURRI! ST. ANTHONY HALL Lee C. Ashley Alpheus C. Beane, jr. Frank S. Bell John P. Bent George P. Biggs Augustus S. Blagden, Jr. Joseph W. Blagden Peter J. Brennan Rufus C. Brown, 3d John M. Burrall, Jr. Philip Dater Kempton Dunn Charles Ellis, Jr. Charles H. Engle Randall W. Everett, Jr. Richards Follett Montgomery P. Ford Thomas C. Ford William D. Fullerton Curtis C. Gary Gordon M. Henderson John H. Ingram Nahum E. Jennison John E. King, Jr. Henry R. Lanman Richard A. Lowndes Samuel P. McCalmont Malcolm S. Mackay, Jr. Frank B. McKown Richard S. Meredith Charles G. Miller, Jr. John E. Muhlfeld Wheeler Nazro Francis W. Pershing Frederic A. Potts Emanuel M. Rabinovitch Charles J. Ramsburg, Jr. Reuben B. Robertson, J r. Edward Rotan, 2d Harold C. Sandberg Raymond E. Sargeant Samuel Summerfield Laurence R. Sherman Rayburn C. Smith, Jr. Thomas A. Standish, Jr. Harlow D. Thayer Laurence E. Tierney, Jr. John P. Treadwell, 3d John D. Upton Gerrit W. VanSchaick Frederick E. Weicker Charles O. Wood, Jr. William B. Wood Simon R. Zimmerman, Jr. 159 Sachem Hall iyalg-bakngr and potpourri: SACHEM HALL James H. Allyn William B. Barry Frederick C. Bassick Donald H. Battles Stanford C. Blish Horace D. Bregenzer Charles H. Brooks Charles H. Carpenter Charles H. Costello Frederick D. Cowles Heber H. Dunkle Charles W. Earnshaw Frank H. Eastman, Jr. Edward R. Eberle Reginald A. Hackley William B. Hall Allen W. Hammond Hans B. Hill William R. Jennings John A. Keyser Cilman D. Kirk Robert C. Kirk Charles N. Little Landon C. Lodge Mansfield Merriman Harvey R. Morrison Edward A. Nunn John B. Ogilvie Robert W. Pulliam William R. Ransom John C. Sims Norman W. Spencer Warren P. Spining Chadbourne A. Spring Cordon P. Thorn Joseph B. Thrall Wainwright Tuttle George A. Vogel Whitney Warner, Jr. Carl R. Webster Robert B. Whittredge William R. Willard Arnold A. Willcox Arthur K. Wing, Jr. Robert B. Wolf, Jr. William W. Woodbridge 161 St. Elmo Club _YAL£- AKN€R AND POT-POURRI! Davis L. Baker, Jr. Simeon M. Barber, Jr. Horace W. R. Barry Henry E. Baton, Jr. James E. Beckwith John H. Beyer Richard H. Blythe, Jr. Albert J. Booth, Jr. Charles W. Buckley James N. Buckwalter James C. Campbell Merrit A. Cleveland Clement H. Cochran, Richard V. Fabian James P. Cossett, 2d Donald W. Henry Logan S. C. Hill Walter B. Hill, Jr. Hamilton Hitt Edward H. Hoffman Joseph F. Keeler John L. King Herman C. Kugeler William H. Lang Charles H. Lanphier Jr. Angus MacDonald Robert A. Maes Richard B. Mason, Jr. Oliver May Charles F. Miles Nelson W. Millard Caldwell H. Oliver Sewall K. Oliver Frank Q. O ' Neill Lloyd B. Osborne Frederick F. Payne John W. Peck Miles S. Pendleton John E. Phillips Frederick W. Schwerin Frank R. Sheldon Donald W. Smith William A. Stromeyer Kay Todd, Jr. Charles L. Twist Robert Walker Seymour Y. Warner, Jr. Burrell C. White, Jr. John S. C. Wilson, 3d 163 Vernon Hall 1YAL-G--BANNGR AND POTPOURRI! Russel B. Bass Harold W. Beder, Jr. Harry C. Beggs William S. Bidle, Jr. Leland H. Burt Edgar B. Butler Henry Chisholm, Jr. Arthur D. Clark, Jr. Randolph H. Cook Winthrop O. Cook Walter E. Cornett John W. Cowper, Jr. Edward L. Cussler Andrew C. Dana Walter deF. Day Ferdinand H. Diebold Frederick C. Draper Richard B. Dunning Hamilton C. Eastman James H. Eddy William L Funk Hubert A. Cosselin Alexander F. W. Hehmeyer Rudolph LeR. Kautz, Jr. John N. Kelley, Jr. Emery W. Kellogg Joseph W. Kennedy, Jr. Edward C. Leedy, Jr. Arthur R. Lewis, Jr. Walter W. Littell Robert E. MacCarthy Callaghan J. McCarthy Frank L. Marting Charles S. H. Mott John O. Nicklis Karl J. Ondricek, Jr. Paul A. Ortiz John S. Parke, Jr. Philip F. Partington Carlo M. Paterno George Peterson, Jr. George V. Phillips Oliver C. Pittman Lucien R. Shattuck, Jr. Alexander M. Smith John J. Sullivan Kenneth L. Terrell John B. Titcomb John C. Tracy Donald G. Walker 165 York Hall _YAL£-BAI I€R AND P0T-P0URRI: Conrad S. Baker Spencer D. Clayton John A. Cosmus, Jr. John T. Doherty Clarence H. Ericson Robert M. Ferris, 3d Edward R. Florea Peter VanD. Cott Taber Hamilton, Jr. John E. Haslam David B. Langmuir Joseph H. Little Robert P. McCombs John Merwin Walter L Mitchell, J Gerald K. Muessel Robert S. Newhall, 2d Benham S. Pond Nathan J. Pond Daniel G. Quigley Montgomery H. Robbins Horace V. Rurmsey Charles S. Rust Carl R. Schneider William C. Scott, Jr. Earl R. Stevens Thomas W. Stevens Hugh V. Strong Seymour W. Strong Bishop W. Von Wettberg Joseph C. Woodward 167 Book and Bond 1YAL£-BAW€R AND POTPOURRI! BOOK AND BOND FOUNDED 1899 Warren D. Abbott, Jr. Oscar E. Maurer, Jr. William E. Arnstein William S. Maurer Warren Cooke Lawrence C. Moore William C. Fennell John A. Norton Henry B. Fernald, Jr. Burton B. Rogers Agnew Fisher Orrin C. Rutledge George C. Fox Francis A. Sanders Albert H. Goodwin Charles S. Schnelle James R. Graham Edwin M. Shultes, jr. George H. Hamilton Edwin W. Small Charles K. Hammer Gareth W. Speer Douglas A. Harwood Minnott A. 0. Stilson, Jr. William V. Higgins Robert F. Truesdale Wayne D. Jones William H. Wetherill, 3d Gordon W. McBride Francis M. Woods Arthur W. McKown Allen R. Yale 169 1YALG--PANNGR AND P0T-POUBRI: SCROLL AND COMPASS FOUNDED 1929 Carl C. Bergstedt Earl R. Bockstahler Alger S. Bourn Boleslaw Chotkowski William P. Cunningham Paul De Cicco Gregory T. Dial Arthur C. V. Diehl Edward F. Falsey Albert P. Cagnebin Henry B. Callison Carl H. Hansen Everett L. Harry Roger B. Holmes Willson H. Hunter Dwight C. Hutchins William A. Knapp Knowles B. Lawrence Robert C. Le May Joseph H. Lorenz Lawrence A. Ludwig Byron E. Monroe Thomas F. Pendleton, Jr. Russell F. Perkins Richard W. Reppert, Jr. Edward J. Rockefeller Robert R. Rudolph John E. Soehrens Eligio J. Tavanlar William W. Terry Paul Thomson 170 1YALG-PANN€R AND P0T-P0URRI! FOUNDATION OF SOCIETIES Linonia (Debating), 1735-1868, 1878- 80, 1904-6. Brothers in Unity (Debating), 1768-1878 (?). Phi Beta Kappa (Scholarship), 1780-. : Calliopean (Debating), 1819-53. Chi Delta Theta (Literary), 1 821—. Skull and Bones (Senior), 1832-. Alpha Delta Phi (Junior), 1836-71 ; (Aca- demic), 1888-96; (Junior), 1896-. Psi Upsilon (Junior), 1838-. Kappa Sigma Theta (Sophomore), 1838- 57. ' Kappa Sigma Epsilon (Freshman), 1840- 80. Scroll and Key (Senior), 1842-. Delta Kappa Epsilon (Junior), 1844- 5 Delta Kappa (Freshman), 1845-80. Alpha Sigma Phi (Sophomore), 1845-64; (as Delta Beta Xi, Sophomore) , 1864-75; (University, Celven Club ), 1907-24; (Junior), 1924-. :: Starand Dart (Senior), 1848-51. Berzelius, Colony (Sheffield), 1848-. : Sigma Delta (Freshman), 1849-60. L L. O. E. (Medical), 1852-72. : Vieta (Engineering), 1852-60. Gamma Nu (Freshman), 1855-89. Theta Upsilon (Law), 1859-60. :: S. B. (Medical), 1860-64. L. S. (Scientific), 1862-64. Book and Snake, Cloister (Sheffield), 1863-. ' Spade and Crave (Senior), 1864—67. Phi Theta Psi (Sophomore), 1864-76. Theta Xi, Franklin Hall (Sheffield), 1865-96, 1906-. Delta Psi, St. Anthony (Sheffield), 1 869-. ' Alpha Chi (Sheffield Freshman), 1872 (?)-81; (Sheffield), 1881-84. :: Teth Keth Men (Law), 1874-80. Lambda Sigma (Law), 1874-76. Phi Gamma Delta (Sheffield Junior), 1875; (Sheffield), 1880-82; (Univer- sity), 1888-98; Vernon Hall (Shef- field), 1908-. Nu Sigma Delta (Sophomore), 1875-76. ; He Boule (Sophomore), 1875-1902. :: Kappa Psi (Sophomore), 1875-1902. Alpha Kappa (Sophomore), 1878-84. No longer in existence. Chi Phi, York Hall (Sheffield), 1878-. : ' Eta Phi (Sophomore), 1879-1902. Wolf ' s Head (Senior), 1883-. ' Beta Chi ( — ) , 1883-(?). The Pundits (Literary), 1884-. Phi Delta Phi, Corbey Court (Law), 1 886-. : Theta Delta Chi (Sheffield), 1887-1900. Zeta Psi (Junior), 1888-. Delta Phi, St. Elmo (Sheffield) Alpha Kappa Kappa (Medical), II Sigma Nu (University), 1888-92. Nu Sigma Nu (Medical), 1890-. Book and Gavel (Law), 1890-; Phi Alpha Delta, 1893-. Reorganized 1921. Skull and Sceptre (Medical), 1891 — ; Phi Rho Sigma, 1907-. Beta Theta Pi (Academic), 1892-1906; (Junior), 1906-. Phi Sigma Kappa, Sachem Hall (Shef- field), 1893-. Sigma Chi (Scientific Honorary), 1896—. Book and Bond (University), 1899-. Elihu Club (Senior), 1903-. Alpha Chi Rho (University), 1905-24; (College), 1924-28; (Junior) 1928-. Xi Tau Kappa (Honorary Law), 1908—. Acacia (University), 1909-. Aurelian (Sheffield Honorary), 1910- Elizabethan Club, 191 1-. Delta Sigma Rho (Honorary Debating), 191 2-. Alpha Chi Sigma (Chemical), 191 4-. Sigma Delta Psi (Honorary Athletic), 1915—. Torch (Sheffield Honorary), 191 6-. Sigma Alpha Mu (University), 1 917—. Tau Epsilon Phi (University), 191 8- Zeta Beta Tau (University), 192.1—. Phi Chi (Medical), 1922-. Delta Theta Pi (Law), 1923-. Tau Beta Pi (Honorary Engineering), 1923-. Chi Psi (Junior), 1924-. Iktinos Society (Honorary Architectural), 1926-. Athenian Club (Art), 1926-. Cannon and Castle (Honorary Military), 1 929-. Scroll and Compass (Sheffield), 1929-. 171 lYAL€-BAhM€R AND POTPOURRI! Board of Deacons THE CHURCH OF CHRIST IN YALE UNIVERSITY THE Church of Christ in Yale Univer- sity, or the University Church, is the religious body to which church mem- bers are affiliated during their college courses. Governed by a Board of Deacons and administered by a resident pastor, the Church has all the organization of a regu- lar parish Church and a college Chapel combined. The Church changed materially in char- acter some years ago when the Students of the University voted that attendance should be voluntary. Their vote was sus- tained by the Corporation and from that time the Church found itself much in the position of the city churches. The attend- ance, to be sure, grew slimmer, but there appeared a new reverence and interest in the service which was absent under the older system. Preachers no longer lived in fear of a shuffling of feet or a barrage of coughs. The new interest was evidenced by a greater attempt to make the Church ap- peal to the students and faculty members. Each year students signified their willing- ness to transfer membership to, or affiliate with, this Church, while new members were received into the fellowship. Thus a real membership was developed. Then came the Rev. Elmore McKee to serve as resi- 174 dent Pastor, and act as the executive head of the Church. The Board of Deacons, composed of six men from the College and four men from the Sheffield Scientific School, is elected annually by the members of the classes, and the policy of the Church, and the conduct of the services is in their hands. The Church has since grown to include faculty members, and services are now held throughout the year, even during the vaca- tions. A Church School is conducted for the children of Faculty members, and Vesper Services are conducted during the Sundays of Advent and Lent. The Church at Yale presents a unique opportunity for experimentation. Being non-sectarian, any new form of service or change may be tried, and in this way the most valuable type of service may be found. As a result many types of daily serv- ice have been tried, some with great suc- cess. Whereas the attendance at services seems small at times in comparison with that of the compulsory period, it compares favorably with attendance in city churches, which do not draw their congregations from a group which has long been noted for a certain skepticism and a questioning of religious principles. 1YALG BAI I€R AND POT-POURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION THE University Christian Association has completed its forty-sixth year as a center of voluntary student Christian activity on the campus. Through its mem- bers, of Dwight Hall in the college, and Byers Hall in Sheff., it has attempted to provide opportunity for the informal study of religious questions, association with other men interested in making the Chris- tian faith vital to student life, and occasion for concrete useful service to the com- munity. The first end has been pursued in sev- eral ways. A number of small informal dis- cussion groups have been held to study such subjects as the Bible, the life and teaching of Christ, prayer, and the impact of science on religion. Other groups have dealt with the implications of religion for our modern world in the areas of industry, war, and politics, and the new responsi- bilities these place on the Christian min- istry and the foreign missionary project. These groups have met with the Associa- tion secretaries, with faculty members and upper-classmen. Bi-weekly cabinet meet- ings have been held out at the Old Mill — a bungalow owned by the Association and situated by an old mill pond in Chesh- ire. Here, where it is possible to get away from the hectic rush of the campus, there are opportunities for baseball, swimming, amateur cookery, and informal discussion by the wood fire. Then too, from time to time prominent men have spoken before the Association, as when Dr. Herbert Cray from London paid a three-day visit to the campus under Association auspices and ad- dressed a number of informal groups on The Christian Adventure. E. McC. Fleming R. H. Blythe In Sheff. a series of seven House Meet- ings was successfully run. They were ad- dressed by professors French, Haggard, Lull, and Fisher; Mr. Whiting Williams, Norman Thomas, and A. P. Kendall. The Association has sent delegates to a number of interesting student conferences throughout the year at which representa- tives from various New England colleges have met to discuss the relation of religion to campus and world problems. Such were the annual Northfield conference last June to which thirty Yale men went; confer- ences on the ministry in New York City, on missions at Northfield, on Cultural Con- flicts at Northampton; and perhaps most interesting of all, the annual midwinter conference at Northfield in February which this year discussed the Macintosh citizen- ship case and its implications for the rela- tion of the individual Christian to the state. Practical expression of one ' s religious convictions has always been an ideal of the Association work. A number of opportuni- ties for this have been presented. One of the most popular forms of interesting com- munity service is helping in the New Haven Boys ' Club. A number of men have been leading small club groups, and boy scout troops; coaching basketball, swimming, dramatics; tutoring, and teaching wood- work. Another interesting field for student welfare work in the community lies at the Yale Hope Mission. This institution, founded by Yale students in 1909, has grown to be one of the foremost rescue missions in the country. Recently moved from its outgrown quarters on Court Street, its new Crown Street building pro- 175 IYALG-PANnO AND P0T-P0URBI! vides much improved facilities for serving the transients and needy of the city with board and lodging, clothes, employment service, and friendly counsel. An under- graduate committee cooperates with the superintendent, Mr. MacDonald, in an ad- visory capacity, assisting at the gospel meetings, and organizing old clothes drives. Subcommittees supervise hospital and jail visitation. Few more valuable or interesting contacts with off-campus realities are to be had at Yale. Other forms of activity include the deputations of two or three men sent to a school or community church to talk and lead services; sponsoring the teas after the Christmas vesper services; organizing a re- ception for the incoming freshmen; co- operating with the Cosmopolitan Club; maintaining a library of religious and social material; and actively assisting in the work of the New England Council of the Student Christian Movement. The Association, whose work has suf- fered from the necessity of occupying tem- porary quarters in Durfee consequent to the removal of the old Dwight Hall building in 1926 is looking forward to entering the old Medical School library on the campus next year. Tentative architects ' plans promise a really beautiful building there in which the Association ' s future work may become more effective and useful, and in which its ideal of spontaneous student-initiated ex- pression of campus religion may find a fit- ting and inspiring center. 176 An Interior View of Battell Chapel Front Row: Moore, Brooks, Greene, Janeway, Fleming, Jennings, Lobb, Campbell, Brown Back Row: Hoon, Fulton, Wilmot, Painter, Bingham, Tucker, Yaggy, Knight The Executive Committee _YALG BAW€R AND POT-POURRI. COLLEGE CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Edward M. Fleming, ' 30 . Chairman COUNCIL G. W. Brooks, Jr ' 30 T. M. Brown, Jr ' 30 E. M. Fleming ' 30 W. W. Greene 30 C. A. Janeway ' 30 P. H. Jennings, Jr ' 30 J. S. Lobb ' 30 T. E. Moore ' 30 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE J. Baur, ' 32 C. A. Janeway, ' 30 B. Bingham, ' 31 P. H. Jennings, Jr., ' 30 G. W. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 E. V. Knight, ' 31 T. M. Brown, Jr., ' 30 J. S. Lobb, ' 30 E. M. Fleming, ' 30 T. E. Moore, ' 30 R. B. Fulton, ' 32 G. Morris, ' 32 W. W. Greene, ' 30 B. B. Rogers, ' 30 R. S. Hooker, Jr., ' 32 L. Tucker, ' 31 P. W. Hoon, ' 31 T. A. Wilmot, ' 32 CRADUATE SECRETARIES, 1929-30 E. Fay Campbell, ' 18 . General Secretary Frank W. Price Foreign Student Secretary Thomas Painter, ' 29 . . College Secretary James C. Rettie . . . Sheffield Secretary 179 Front Row: Peterson, Monroe, Spring, Hoffman, Blythe, Hill, Millard, Warner, McCalmont Back Row: Baker, Bidwell, Abbott, Willard, Earnshaw, Barry The Cabinet LYALG-BAnvO AND POT-POUBRI! SHEFFIELD CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Richard H. Blythe, Jr President Nelson W. Millard Vice-President Chadbourne A. Spring Secretary Samuel P. McCalmont Treasurer James C. Rettie Graduate Secretary CABINET 1930 C. T. Abbott R. H. Blythe, Jr. C. W. Earnshaw S. P. McCalmont N. W. Millard C. Peterson, Jr. C. A. Spring S. Y. Warner, Jr. 1931 C. S. Baker C. B. Bidwell W. B. Hill, Jr. W. I. Monroe, Jr. CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES S. P. McCalmont House Meetings W. B. Hill, Jr Boys ' Work R. H. Blythe, Jr Yale Hope Mission C. A. Spring Industrial Work 181 LYALG-BANNGR AND POTPOURRI! t ' i - 1 s ™« B l Hn J 1 - _9flH On HBfl ■HH . • ' Sfe. ' H ItfiBg IfiB IMLUl.Jp -■11. n.jj... ' S- y jiB YALE HOPE MISSION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Charles S. Campbell Chairman Frederick J. Dawless Vice-Chairman John W. MacDonald Superintendent Rev. E. Fay Campbell Secretary Donald C. North Treasurer F. H. Blakeslee L. L Gilbert Dr. Oscar E. Maurer R. H. Blythe, Jr. E. S. Grumman T. E. Moore G. W. Brooks W. C. Hutton Frederick Moule Dean C. R. Brown E. D. Keith Thomas Painter John Duncan H. C. Keith Prof. W. L. Phelps W. B. Easton, Jr. Prof. K. S. Latourette F. D. Price Dr. T. S. Evans Rev. E. M. McKee G. E. Purdue Dr. R. J. Ferguson Prof. F. O. Matthiessen J. C. Rettie E. M. Fleming UNDERGRADUATE COMMITTEE George W. Brooks Chairman Richard H. Blythe, Jr Vice-Chairman Thomas E. Moore Secretary 1930 E. M. Fleming J. N. Hazard L. B. Ward B. H. Gere J. D. Pettus 1931 B. Bingham A. A. Thomas, 2d L. Tucker E. V. Knight L. Thome H. V. Williams, Jr. W. C. Thorne 1932 C. A. Black W. G. Drogue E. L. Whittemore, 2d S. H. Gillespie, Jr. SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL C. W. Earnshaw W. B. Hill, Jr. 182 LYALG-PAhNGR AND POT-POURRI: CATHOLIC CLUB Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs Chaplain Maurice F. Hanson, ' 30 President Leonard F. Cenz, ' 30 Secretary-Treasurer SCHOOL OF MEDICINE P. L. Saffo SCHOOL OF LAW E. T. Carmody K. E. Ryan P. J. Ryan F. T. Carmody 1930 P. S. Agar M. F. Hanson W. F. McKenna L. F. Cenz H. J. MacDonald F. J. Wilcox J. S. Craetzer, Jr. J. McEwen, 3d 1931 J. B. Coleman, Jr. L Fox, Jr. E. B. O ' Brien J. H. Dillon, 2d J. H. Kopmeier J. J. Quinn T. C. C. Early J. A. Lynch, Jr. J. C. Rathborne 1931 S. W. J. Carr, Jr. E. J. Rockefeller L. F. Valldejuli E. F. Falsey 1932 F. A. Allis J. H. Denison J. B. Murphy A. McC. Beard, Jr. J. P. Coode W. R. Owens L. J. Cromie R. J. Cruol C. J. Ryan J. H. Cullinan J. E. Koehler B. A. Torchio J. A. Deering J. D. J. Moore, Jr. M. A. Walsh, Jr. C. A. Dempsey 1932 S. G. A. Burnie 1933 W. K. Cashin H. A. Cranelli J. R. Mooney C. N. Copley, Jr. J. P. Holihan J. F. Mormile J. S. Cotter W. B. Holihan J. F. Morrill R. J. Di Giorgio J. C. Kane A. P. Pasquariello C. C. Donovan M. Keeler M. D. Ryan F. M. Dukat J. N. Kelly, Jr. P. F. Schiaroli P. M. Dwyer A. L. Keyes H. J. Stuart, Jr. F. W. Fogarty J. M. McGauley J. F. Tidgewell, Jr. 183 lyalg-banngr and pot-pourri: DEBATING DEBATING has received greater sup- port, and aroused more interest this year than for many years past. If the success of the Association is measured by the number of debates won, it is true that the year has not been outstandingly suc- H. G. Dyke Winner of DeForest Prize cessful. But if it is measured in terms of in- creased audiences, more men out for de- bates, and a greater number of contests, as well as experimentation with new methods of debating, the year has been signally suc- cessful. Approximately fifty men have been interested in debating, the maximum audi- ence attracted was about two hundred and fifty, and teams have competed in a total of twelve intercollegiate debates, and three intra-mural debates. In picking subjects for discussion, an at- tempt has been made to arouse interest among a wide group. The emergence of women from the home, Yale education, the Atlantic Ocean as a deplorable factor, pres- ent political parties in the United States, censorship, the Pan-American arbitration treaty, and prohibition show the range and versatility of subjects debated. In four debates, that with New York and the three intra-murals, the parliamentary system has been used. The object attained by this method is greater participation of the audience in the discussion. These de- bates have proved popular and successful. Perhaps the most interesting was the dis- cussion on the Atlantic Ocean, sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, in the course of which Mr. Herbert Eivin and Mr. Geoffrey Crow- ther argued the merits of that body of water, and the audience voted overwhelm- ingly in favor of it. In another discussion, Yale education was attacked by some and defended by others of the undergraduates. This year Yale has held the presidency and secretaryship of the Eastern Intercol- legiate Debating League; W. D. Behnke, President, and W. G. Fennell, secretary- treasurer. The annual meeting of the League will be held in Middletown April 21. The three oratorical contests of the year have received good support and aroused much interest. The Parker Dickson Buck Prize for sophomores was divided between R. B. Fulton and W. H. Van Benschoten be- cause of the excellence of the two orations. Mr. Fulton spoke on American Fundamen- tals and Mr. Van Benschoten on A Redefinition of Patriotism. The Junior Exhibition and the TenEyck contest for juniors was won by P. W. Hoon with his oration on Introspection. The DeForest Prize, the oldest of the contests, estab- lished in 1843 by David C. DeForest, was awarded to H. G. Dyke for his speech on Negative America. The DeForest contest this year was marked by some of the finest speeches ever given in its history. P. W. Hoon Winner of TenEyck Contest 186 W. H. Van Benschoten Winner of Buck Prize R. B. Fulton Winner of Buck Prize W. D. Behnke Fence Orator Front Row: McCulloch, McClintock, Fennell, Feuerlicht, Williams Back Row: Van Benschoten, Fulton, Behnke, Dyke, Hoon The University Debating Team LYALG-BAnNGR AND POT-POURRI. YALE UNIVERSITY DEBATING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS William C. Fennell, ' 30 President John I. B. McCulloch, ' 30 Vice-President John T. McClintock, Jr., ' 31 Manager Ellis T. Williams, ' 30 Secretary Richard M. Bissell, Jr., ' 32 ... Assistant Manager Charles A. Graham, ' 30 Member at Large to the Executive Committee Prof. R. H. Gabriel HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. Edgar S. Furniss Prof. John C. Adams, Coach 1930 R. M. Calfee, Jr. J. A. Curtis H. C. Dyke W. C. Fennell C. A. Graham ACTIVE MEMBERS C. P. Haskins J. N. Hazard P. Hunt J. I. B. McCulloch R. G. Osterweis J. T. Patterson, Jr. J. A. Ripley, Jr. F. E. C. Roelker E. T. Williams 1930S. W. E. Arnstein 1931 W. D. Behnke M. M. Feuerlicht, Jr. C. L. Head P. W. Hoon J. T. McClintock, Jr. W. T. Schoyer R. D. Weigle 1932 R. M. Bissell, Jr. Henry A. Fenn R. B. Fulton D. B. McCalmont W. H. Van Benschoten SCHEDULE Yale-New York University (at New Haven) , November 13 . Won by New York Yale-Wesleyan (at Middletown), December 15 . . . Won by Wesleyan Yale-Pennsylvania (at New Haven), December 15 Won by Yale Yale-Amherst (at New Haven) , February 21 Won by Amherst Yale-Brown (at Providence) , February 21 Won by Brown Yale-Holyoke (at South Hadley) , February 21 Won by Holyoke Yale-Bates (at Lewiston) , March 15 Won by Bates Yale-Harvard (at Cambridge) , March 15 Won by Harvard Yale-Princeton (at New Haven) , March 15 ... Won by Yale Yale-Princeton (in New York over WJZ) , November 27 ... No decision Yale-Harvard (at New Haven) , on Prohibition, during April Yale-New Jersey Law School (at Newark) , during April 189 LYALG-BAhNGR AND P0T-POURRI: FRESHMAN DEBATING THE beginning of the year witnessed several changes. In previous times the members of the Freshman Debating Association had debated among themselves by dividing into two groups, the Court and the Wall. Instead of this system, it was thought better to have parliamentary debates with two speakers representing each side giving prepared speeches. Follow- ing such a plan, the subject of Compan- ionate Marriage was debated amid much enthusiasm. No more intrasociety meetings were held, however, because the attend- ance was not considered large enough to justify their continuation. It was decided to have the members of the Freshman group meet in conjunction with the Univer- sity Association, a policy that merited its inauguration by the success it received. Some speaking in the larger body was done by Freshmen, and the University meetings were thought more rewarding and interest- ing and inducive to Freshmen than gather- ings of their own body only. As a distinct unit, however, the Freshman debating or- ganization was not given up, for outside de- bates were continued. In the fall, a 1933 team met the Vassar Freshmen at Pough- keepsie but lost by a three to two decision. The same team was defeated in February by Choate School. Toward the end of April, a Freshman team journeyed to Cambridge to meet Harvard, and another group en- countered Princeton in New Haven. The executive committee of the Fresh- man Association consisted of W. A. Rill, C. Buek, and M. Parsons. In the first two outside debates, the team consisted of F. V. Lindley, C. W. Glenn, F. Ferriss, and P. Block. 190 THE YALE GLEE CLUB TRAVELS TO BERMUDA LYALG-PAN R AND POTPOUML BERMUDA TRIP OF THE YALE GLEE CLUB COLLEGE Glee Clubs have a strange tradition. A quarter of a century ago, they were not supposed to be par- ticularly musical, their main feature the yelling out of their own college songs, actual musicianship being unknown, except in rare instances. Thus observes the Royal Gazette and Colonist Daily of Hamilton, Bermuda, following an Easter vacation visit there by the Yale Glee Club. Further, One has only to recall the per- formances of the Yale men here to realize how far the college glee club has lately pro- gressed towards a definite goal in singing . . . the Yale men are capable of singing anything. Having a conductor and drill- master like Mr. Bartholomew ( ' 07 S.) , they need never hesitate, and their only limita- tion in programme-making is the capacity of their audiences. (But) . . . there is still a mite of college glee club tradition stick- ing to Yale. Press notices such as these, and accounts of the hospitality of the Bermudians from the members of the club, tend to remind us once more of the most successful European trip taken by the Glee Club in 1928. The Bermuda trip differed from the European trip only in scope and purpose. Its scope, in point of distance, covered an Easter vaca- tion rather than part of a summer. Its pur- pose was purely one of pleasure; and for the first time the Glee Club set foot on for- eign soil representing only its alma mater. (On the European trip Yale was the rep- resentative of the Intercollegiate Glee Club Council.) In its small way the Bermuda trip was a distinct musical achievement. The program selected and conducted by Mr. Bartholomew and sung so well by the thirty-five men of the Glee Club was an admirable one. At the outset the difficult problem presented itself of arranging three different programs to be sung on successive nights to practically the same audience. The three programs were so arranged as to repeat themselves but little, and were divided into groups of college songs, old English airs, American plantation songs, sea chanteys, and several classical selections. The Bermudians especially enjoyed Shen- andoah, John Peel, And When the Leaves, Schumann ' s Dreaming Lake, and Franck ' s Chorus of the Camel Drivers. The Gazette, again, notes that the soft singing of the club gave extreme delight, and there was never better heard in Bermuda. ... It would be difficult to assemble a more varied list of songs. . . . The Hotel Hamilton accommodated the Glee Club, and its manager, Mr. Sherrard, 194 was largely responsible for the fine pub- licity and the many local arrangements necessary. Largely through his aid the three concerts were given on Pier I on Saturday evening, April 6; in the Terrace Room of the Hamilton Hotel on Sunday evening; and in Mechanics Hall across the street on Monday evening. Each concert seemed to outstrip the one before it in vitality and en- thusiasm both on the part of the audience and the singers. All-day bicycle rides and the open hospitality of the vacation resort lent an atmosphere to the concerts that seems to arise in the Club only on foreign soil. The manager of the Glee Club, writing spiritedly in the News, says in part: The passage to Bermuda aboard the ' S.S. Ar- cadian ' was said to have been the roughest ever experienced by that vessel (outside of the time that it was torpedoed and lay on the bottom two years off the Irish coast). Those listed among the ' dead men ' early in the voyage joined the party by the second evening and inspired by a beautiful moon- light night took part in the serenading. The scarcity of young partners of the oppo- site sex and the immediate appropriation by the more socially inclined of those who were on board occasioned several renditions of Shall I, Wasting in Despair (second verse ends: What Care I, for Whom She Be? ). The Club ' s unfamiliarity with the drive to the left traffic system caused some con- fusion. We are told that two prominent citizens were appeased after a vehicular mix-up at the Hamilton Hotel corner only after the most profuse apologies on the part of a half dozen or so would-be Yale bicy- clers combining Keep in the Middle of the Road with the unfamiliar traffic regula- tions of Bermuda. All went well, however, until Saturday night ' s concert on Pier I, when the quartet gave up the ghost when they found themselves competing with a multitude of tinkling bicycle bells and a Salvation Army Band (in remote Ber- muda!) on the street below the pier. The Gazette writes about the quartet: Whatever one may think about the intro- duction of quartets into a chorus pro- gramme, the writer contends that this lets down the general tone, simply from the fact of its weakness as compared to the full chorus. . . . And yet the quartet sticks, and the Yale four did themselves proud in a group of plantation songs. The tenor soloist, Basil Henning, 1932, as usual was received with especial favor for his rendition of Bygone Ballads (1850, 1YALG BAI I€R AND POT-POURRI! etc.). This charming boy is just naturally funny, says the Bermuda paper, and in- stead of graduating from Yale and going into the bond business, he should join Sam Robbins (the local orchestra leader of diminutive size and great popularity) and help to make the world better, for it is not often given to extreme youth to approxi- mate a seasoned comedian. The appreciation shown during the con- certs seemed to point to a most happy se- lection of songs. On the program under Yale songs were Alma Mater (A Song for Old Yale), We Meet Again Tonight, Boys, Mother of Men, Amici, Wake, Freshmen, Wake. Included under Old English Airs were Down Among the Dead Men, John Peel, Hark, Jolly Shep- herds (this was the prize song in the In- tercollegiates and Yale won the rendition of that particular song) , Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes, and Shall I, Wast- ing. Of classical tinge were Franck ' s Chorus of the Camel Drivers, Schu- mann ' s Dreaming Lake, Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones, a magnificent hymn dating from the seventeenth century. Of lighter vein was von Othegraven ' s Hand- organ Man, sung by the Yale Club in the Intercollegiates. Black Eyed Susie, and Grandma Grunts were collected by Mr. Bartholomew from the mountains of North Carolina and were popular. The audiences were largely social, num- bering many from the Navy and Army, American winter residents, and a large con- tingent of visitors at hotels for the Easter season. The trip was, from every point of view, a great success. The Glee Club re- turned aboard the H.M.S. Bermuda, which, they say, rolls in dry-dock. The high point of the return trip was the gen- erous entertaining by Harry Cross, ' 96, of the entire Glee Club in the smoke room on the last night. His liberal hospitality soon warmed the club to an impromptu concert of the most modest nature, and the captain had to order the room cleared of the entire passenger list in order to prop- erly balance the boat and proceed on an even keel into the harbor of New York on April tenth. Those who went on the Bermuda trip were Director and Mrs. M. M. Bartholo- mew, ' 07 S., and their daughter; Sidney Oviatt, 1930, President; Edward Lea Marsh, 1931, Manager; Robert P. Oldham, 1931 M., Accompanist; James C. Brooks, 1930, Li- brarian; and the following singers: First Tenors: Howard Brunner, 1933; C. D. Davidson, 1930S.; Arthur Gibb, 1930; J. D. Lounsbury, 1931; E. L. Marsh, 1931; B. E. Monroe, 1930S.; L. E. Robert- son, 1931; E. P. Small, 1933. Second Tenors: D. N. Clark, 1930; F. R. Cowles, 1932; M. F. Driggs, 1931; Alfred 195 LYALG-PAWGR AND POT-POURRI: Hayes, Jr., 1930; Basil D. Henning, 1932; G. D. Marshall, 1930S.; H. Y. Tyler, 1931; G. P. Williams, 1931. First Basses; H. E. Baton, Jr., 1931; Donald Crawford, 1930S.; R. M. Ferris, 3d, 1931 S. ; G. B. Forbes, 1931; P. W. Hoon, 1931; D. C. Jellson, 1931 S. ; G. D. Kirk, 1930S.; C. E. Payne, 1931; J. W. Wells, 1930. Second Basses: J. C. Brooks, 1930; D. H. Clement, 1931 ; H. H. Clifford, 1932; A. L Harris, 1931; J. N. Hazard, 1930; J. M. Musser, 1930; Sidney Oviatt, 1930 (Leader) ; and Gibbs Sherrill, 1931. George S. (Sunny) Chappell, 1930, Sen- ior Manager, was unable to go on the trip at the last minute. — Sidney Oviatt in the Yale Alumni Weekly. 196 197 • PUBLICATIONS IIULSJ. IS FREQUENTLY KNOWN BY THE COMPANY IT KEEPS V.-Ut- L ; NI KIJM ' I ' V • NE ILL THE A I AT HA IIIK VA : HAN NEK AND i OT lul KKt  ri w m ■K. lour Ylv-fefertj-e ; it ou 4 o«il d f , ! «-■j .mm a fif. VA z. i ! v «° :he 36Lgt 36 Bid K ng I bine results, a t j records of t$ quent testiml ALE Li 1 t R. R MAGAi 5 5 o A fjlEW BdOK SNOiiv mnd Front Row: Judson, McCulloch, Prideaux, Woolner, Johnson Back Row: Pope, Putnam, Brainard The Yale Literary Magazine Board 1YALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI! Yale Literary Magazine Established 1836 Chairman Tom Prideaux Managing Editor William D. Judson, Jr. Business Manager Adolph Woolner Business Board Charles E. Bralnard Charles R. Pope Editors Edward S. Johnson, Jr. J. I. B. McCulloch Louis S. Putnam Lyttleton Fox, Jr. James Palmer Wade Nathan Davis George Heard Hamilton John Baur Commentary CHAIRMAN PRIDEAUX WHATEVER charges may be heaped against The Lady in Brown, no one should accuse her of being inactive during the past season. To be sure, subscribers have anxiously watched their mail-boxes in February for the arrival of the January Yale Literary Magazine, but such delays, we insist, are due to the Lady ' s capricious temperament which leads her onto indirect bypaths, rather than any tendency to fall asleep on the highroad. In October she attempted to haunt, startle, and waylay by assuming the title of Femme Seduisantc, and hiding her venerable sepia under an orange wrapper. The reviewer looked upon her with some approval, and, ironically enough, said that she represented a return to the old order of things, that in character she closely resembled the traditional Lit. of yesteryears. Taking their cue from this most unexpected of judgments, the editors plotted to win wide acclaim by catering to conservative tastes and resumed the custom of opening each issue with a Leader, a special sort of essay written by a member of the staff. Not for long, however, could modern youth toe the old line, and in the January number of the Lit. tradition was ignored with the printing of an essay on the naval conference, and a series of sketches on football by a well-known athlete. Such has been the restless nature of The Lady! OF course, the editors have had to w ithstand the annual barrage of criticism from the undergradu- ates. This year the words esoteric - ' and clique were stressed. But scarcely more than a momen- tary indignation was felt by the accused ones because they were so gratified at finding the subscription list over twice as large as in the preceding year. Moreover, the increasing interest which the contributors have shown in writing for the magazine seems to prove that at least in some degree the publication is justifying its existence. Perhaps this interest is not altogether genuine, for of late the criticisms of rejected manuscripts have been held at Tuttle ' s on the theory that the student writer can be more effec- tively soothed, encouraged, and made to appreciate high literary standards under the influence of beer. The six members of the 1930 editorial board have shown a marked predilection for expressing their souls in verse. To them can be applied Samuel Johnson ' s fine statement regarding himself and his cronies at Pembroke College, Sir, we were a nest of singing birds! 201 LYALG-BANslGB AND P0T-P0URRI! New York City THIS is the jungle blasted out of stone, The most barbaric jungle ever known. Here are the granite plants, the mineral petals, The sculptured foliage of rocks and metals. x- nd always night sways slowly down the street, A monstrous elephant on padded feet With two dim, maniac lamplights for its eyes, And day is like a bird of Paradise. Here beauty is a snarling lioness That glares within a stony wilderness. And yet no savage, adamantine bloom, Nor tropic birds of light, nor beasts of gloom, Nor violent beauty in a tawnv hide Can crush the sentimental lust inside The race of men, whose strongest fealties are The sobbing lvric and the hackneyed star. EDWARD JOHNSON ' Market Report YOU know about the lyric cricket? You know his grievous end? Well, then you know a man should purchase No stock in me, my friend. But you may tip it to vour broker I strongly recommend Amalgamated Ants and Beetles. They pay a dividend! A share in me is no investment I warn you now, my friend, Unless you want a song for interest, And have a hearth to lend. TOM PRIDEAUX Early Spring THAT mellowness which half reminded us of May Or depths of drowsy August, darkens to the sight. The dusty fragments of the morning are astray In grand disorder on the winds of night. This daintiness was artifice, and drooped too soon. Here fled apart, the restless day Resolves its native wildness into shifting light, — Our awkward April tangled in the moon. john i. b. Mcculloch 202 lYAL£-BAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! A Raindrop Rhyme A PENDANT of rain On the lobe of a cloud Grew tired of vain Vivisection of light In order to strain Prismic colors from white, And fled its role In the Promise of God To man, and stole Down to earth to wean From the soil the soul Of a dung-covered bean. LOUIS PUTXAM The Mn sic- Masters WHO are the music-masters Leading triumphal choirs Of early-morning songsters Singing in the briars? Who are the music-masters Leading the symphony Of harp and horn and tambourine That sinks and swells in me? NATHAN DAVIS Cyth erea IRON gates swing slowly, but they closed at last, And the bitch waked in her kennel, but dared not bark, For she knew these figures. Even in the dark She knew them for their oneness. From the vast Gate-bars to the more intimate grill of the door, Unspeaking they passed and stood in the spill of light Fallen smoothly from fountain chandeliers. To write Their delirious faces here and now were more Than should be dared. The marble of the stairs They sat upon was not more white than she. But he grew weary and infinite despairs Of his departure swept her. Suddenly She cried out, Stay, stay, in an agony of passion, And he started at the strained face so harridan-ashen. W. D. JUDSOX, JR. 203 Front Row: Mears, Tate, King, Wharton, Robertson Back Row: Brook, Cameron, Watson, Crawford The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Board LYALG-BAKNGR AND POT-POURBI! THE YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JOHN LORD KING Chairman STOWELL WHITNEY MEARS . Business and Subscription Manager HERBERT BROOK Assistant Business Manager REUBEN BUCK ROBERTSON, JR. . . Assistant Business Manager GERARD CUYOT CAMERON Managing Editor BENJAMIN CRAWFORD Illustration Editor HUBERT WATSON Art Editor IRVING DICKINSON TATE Assistant Editor GEORGE WILSON WHARTON, JR Assistant Editor N the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and forty one, a few industrious students of Yale College endeavored to put into print the varied activities of the students. This effort was followed a few years later by a similar movement, and thus the Yale Banner and the Pot Pourri, two separate and distinct publications, came into being. These papers, for they consisted merely of a sheet or two, lived together side by side for seventy years, rival publications. Quite naturally, both of them lost a considerable amount of money, which, unfortunately, is not only an asset, but a decided necessity to the continuation of any enterprise in this pecuniary age. And so, in nineteen hundred and eight, the Banner and the Pot Pourri consolidated to become the book that it now is. It has grown, as its weight indicates, from a sheet or two of paper to a volume of some size during its career of some ninety years. In fact, the statisticians tell us that the Yale Banner and Pot Pourri is the third oldest publication in the United States. With this venerable age behind it, the Banner has grown, quite unnoticed, a beau- tiful crop of moss on its broad and, we hope, capable back, a growth which has accumulated through the tradition-bound years which it has seen pass. The editors have been handicapped not only by the customs of the book, but also by the mate- rial that it must present to its readers each year. The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri is quite different from most college annuals in that it cannot print the individual his- tories of the graduating class. It must rely for its interest upon a catalogue of the year ' s events and upon many necessary lists of the activities of the undergraduates. In the past few years, we have added to our repertoire new sections — articles, pictures, drawings, all of which have added to the in- terest of the volume; but still the Banner ' s obvious use is as a catalogue of Yale ' s many-sided activities, and since it does not in any sense serve as a class book, its con- tinued existence must depend upon its use- fulness in this way. Readers this year will find quite a new spirit in the book. The editors, without de- parting too radically from their inherited traditions have attempted to make the pages more interesting by following the contemporary manner of composition and printing. It seems appropriate that in this modern day Yale ' s history for the year should be chronicled in a way suited to the style of the times. Some undoubtedly will think that our methods have been a bit too extreme, but it must be admitted that the pages are at least much more interesting to look at, and that the lists are more read- able. The modern trend of publication is comparatively new in this country, and is frankly an experiment for a college annual. It has, however, been used for a good many years in Europe and it is far beyond the ex- perimental stage. Whether this new trend is to be a success or a failure remains for the future to tell, but success or no, the Banner is giving it a trial this year. The editors feel that it is worth while to break the ice, so to speak, in what they think to be an intelligent step forward. Unquestion- ably, the book is more readable, the type is more legible, the pages are more interesting in themselves, the drawings speak for themselves. It has been the hope of the Banner and Pot Pourri board that in future years it would be feasible to publish two separate volumes, one, a volume containing articles about the doings of the current year, the progress of the University and the many ac- complishments and discoveries of its gradu- ate schools, the other, containing the fra- ternity lists, teams, and such catalogued activities. This is a fine scheme, and would certainly improve the book. Unfortunately there is the matter of finance entering into all the dreams and hopes of the Banner ' s future, and the noose is drawn tightly around our necks. Until the time that the Banner can exist with less monetary sup- port than is now necessary, the board can- 205 1YAL£-BAKN€R AND POT-POURRI! not let its thoughts wander so far afield. However, the future years may hold some- thing in store. To return to the present, and to the new form of the Pot Pourri. We are not under the illusion that this is the perfect form for a college year book, nor do we feel that this publication is a masterpiece of modern typography. But we do feel that such changes as we have taken the liberty to make have been in the nature of an im- provement, and have been a step forward in the annals of a time-honored publication. It has seemed only appropriate that we present modern Yale ' s latest year in a mod- ern way. J. L. King, Chairman S. W. Mears, Business Manager H. Watson, Art Editor 206 First Row: Manuel, Musser, Hanson, Ellis, Patterson Second Row: Calfee, Wade, Jennings, Macdonald, Tilney, Lambert, Crandin Third Row: Sprigg, Freeman, Clegg, Evarts The 1930 News Board 1YALG-BAW€R AND POT-POURRI! The Oldest College Daily Founded January 28, 1878 Entered as second class matter, January 2, 1910, at the Post ( trice at New Haven, Conn., under the Act of March 3, 1878. Maurice Francis Hanson, Chairman John Miller Musser, Business Manager Henry Stoddard Sherman Jr., Managing Editor Raymond Walleser Ellis, Managing Editor William Sherman Manuel, Assignment Editor James Tyler Patterson Jr., Vice-Chairman Rohert M. Calfee Jr., Assistant Business Manager Editors T. B. Grandin, 1930 H. Macdonald, 1930 P. H. Jennings Jr., 1930 B. S. Tilnev, 1930 A. Lambert. 1930 W. Wade, 1930 Associate F.n [TORS (l. R. Black, 1 31 K. B. Adams Jr., 1932 w L. Carv. 2nd, 1931 K. D. Beckwit ' h. 1932 K Chubb. 2nd, 1931 K. K. Beirn, 1932 1. S. Evans Jr., 1931 1. W. Ewell, 1932 K. M. Ferris, 3rd. 1931S 1. A. Flory, 1932 11. J. Heinz, 2nd, 1931 W S. Haines, 1932 ( . Leonard, 1931 W V. Hodges Jr., 1932 V A. I.ydgate, 1931 K. F. Niven, 1932 W L. Peltz, 1931 A. Ogden, 1932 K. Stebbins Jr., 1931 M S. Pendleton, 1932S K. I). Weigle, 1931 K. K. Stewart. 1932 F. Wilkins, 1931 H H. Villard, 1932 Died December 26, 1928 Theater Critic: Edward A. Choate Jr., 1930 Music Critic: John Evarts, 1930 Inquisitor: Hedges Macdonald, 1930 Member of Intercollegiate Newspaper Association The News does not necessarily endorse senti- ments expressed in communications. No communication will be printed in the News unless the writers ' names are left with the Chair- man of the News. Anonymity will be preserved if so desired. Editors for this issue: Tilney, Peltz, Adams Tuesday, January 38, 1930 TWO AND FIFTY YEARS Successfully bringing the limbo of departed Yale undergraduate publica- tions, the News today pauses and takes stock of her fifty-two years of continuous undergraduate pulse-tak- ing as the oldest college daily. Started as an unpretentious handbill in the seventies by two seniors who justified its birth by virtue of the dullness of the times and the demand for news among us, the sheet has steadily enlarged its scope and func- tion as a mouthpiece for the expres- sion of independent thought. The muse of history contains no record of the date when the News as- sumed the title of official doctor at- tending the ills of Yale, yet the energy of its editors through the years has lent validity to the original assump- tion. The lack of continuity which the yearly change of ownership more or less necessitates has given Yale a mass of suggestions which, if received and put into practice, would closely ap- proximate the Mexican ideal of a gen- eral for every private. Some boards have waxed radical, others have been ultra-conservative, while still a third group has been accused of steering a middle course. But out of the mass of theories advanced by each group of editors, however fantastic, a residue of ideas has survived to affect the progress of the University. In the strictest sense of the word, the News is not a newspaper. If it were, it would print a wide variety of the gossip so peculiar to the college campus. Advance dope sheets for fraternity and society elections would appear, and a prominent senior, sud- denly forsaking a job with the Na- tional City Bank for the divinity school, might find himself the subject of a human interest story in bold face type. Yale, however, does not want that type of paper, and conse- quently the News is faced with the problem of deciding what is cricket and what is not. The tendency in re- cent years to abandon stiffness and formality in news articles as well as the efforts to have prominent events covered by editors rather than heelers are trends which emphasize the edi- tors ' desire to depart as far as tradi- tion will permit from the stigma of the mere bulletin. The editorial page is a far cry from the comments of the editors who used to summarize their opinions with the enlightening state- ment that there are two sides to the question. The introduction of a roving reporter whose astute com- ments on the fads and foibles of the undergraduates have been received with great enthusiasm by the objects 209 LYALe-BAWGR AND POTPOURRI! Chairman Hanson of his wit is a feature which should be preserved, along with the perennial concession to the inhabitants of the extreme left, The Inquisitor. The canons of journalism are stern, and in this respect the News is no ex- ception. The challenge that the paper must appear daily has, however, un- fortunately often met with response stressing physical endurance rather than native ability. It is only recently that the News has divorced itself from the gruelling competitions which made its heelers busier than the most harassed Wall Street executive. Heel- ers in this day are pampered indi- viduals in comparison. The printer puts the paper to bed, and it is still on the street at 8 A. M. Despite the statement of a member of the Administration that he had dif- ficulty determining whether the first or the third column (the so-called humorous column) of the editorial page was meant to be taken seriously, the editors have derived great satis- faction from waking up in the morn- ing to see what they wrote and learning that their thoughts were be- ing received with a becoming serious- ness. The growth of the columnist idea has, along with various and sun- dry communications, made for a greater range of expression. All in all, the News is tough and happy. It owes its life to the belief of its editors that the status quo is far from satisfactory, and when they pass from that belief and join the som- nolent mass of undergraduates in musing on the gargoyles on Harkness Tower, its existence may well be ter- minated. Hey, Jim! Stick Your Head Out! If they want to keep the House Plan from being a flop, I would suggest among other things, that they get some old grad. to endow a messenger boy service for the new quadrangles. I always think of an English university as having a little peace and quiet, so if the House Plan is to bring any repose to the harassed undergraduates, it will be necessary first to do away with the present system of paging. Nowadays if you are at all popular and want to go over to dinner with somebody, all you have to do is stand in the middle of Branford and yell a few names until some- body comes to the window and you make the necessary arrangements, usually some such thing as Let ' s eat. There seems to be an inherent desire here for fellows to make themselves heard in a big way, and meal time isn ' t the only time of day that this is apparent. If you have a powerful pair of lungs and know a few of the right names, you can call yourself as good a Yale man as the next fellow, if not a little better. It ' s a lucky thing there aren ' t any sky- scraper dormitories here as they say there are west of the corn belt. Picture the plight of the poor student who hasn ' t any friends below the twelfth floor and tries to yell up to them to ask what the Econ. assignment is. He would no doubt get all mixed up and do some T. and B. by mistake. And think how out of things the fellow in the pent house would feel just because nobody had a big enough voice to carry thirty stories, and his name would never go booming into every room in the Campus. This reminds me of a game called Abe Abkowitz in one of the courts of Harkness back in 1927 when voices were almost as potent as today. It seems there was a fel- low living on the top floor named Abe Abkowitz and a friend of his used to yell up every meal or what seemed like every meal and Abe would come down. After a while people living in that court got tired of so much yelling, so one fellow yelled up to him and Abe came down, thinking it was his friend. He was pretty angry when he saw he had come down for nothing and a tussle ensued, in which Abe did himself glory. They made a game of it, played as follows : one fellow would go up to the top of the entry, the other player would yell up Oh, Abe Abkowits! Abe fckowitz! and the first fellow would come down and beat him up. The Student at Large. 210 LYALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI: HEELERS FOR FIRST 1933 NEWS COMP. WILL REPORT IN FAYERWEATHER TODAY Deti.lt and Melbodi of Work Will Be EipUmrd to New Hetlef. In the Newt OSce  t 4. EDITORIAL WORK DISCUSSED UaJriineJ.ni el Ddfrreict Bctveta Tbr., Typei ol Edilonal Crudil U EaautaaJ lo All H«lrtt Uicbx ol Ihe Qui oi I93J oho intend bitfinnt 01 Fkmota I am ■J M F Hi . . IUQ OraftimMl j it V«u Daily Km i U H i«)u fiu...... tfuaci R W Hi.. ItM i EM i |U0 inder ol Ihe «nl errand credit - it flate of Ibc u.aal aiuEned aivj u ihj an under Handing ° s board The covering the heelers duty t .1 h II- b  I . that l.r u in order kah ill the uiUu ible. ..:-:, (hey III V they Uu lhroogh 1, H« tlanac.nc Ed. laded ir. ihc tpctsaJ a ■ijntd v ,r lot .;. ail lot Jei b totme -ted  iih •MAN ' S WANTS DETERMINE MEASURE OF LIFE 1 — BROWN Lilt ll Wanlini Something and Going For li Driermiiedly. N,t Wailior: For ll lo Come lo Vob. ■urmined lar ' ly by Ihc range and ; enlarging wanu. enlare.ng man- or ihrn-.wTTOt B ' eivd are 111 such people --they tHitl be rilled TV complacent Ti t- | ■■pi gn lono raaWtMd iContunmd oi Page Three) Crantland Rice Gives Yale Slight Edge Over Harvard if Booth and McLennan Play — Princeton Result Is a Tonic to Eli Team, Says Daley Cw,. T ...... n. y. v s THIRTY-SIX FELLOWSHIPS ARE PROVIDED BY YALE Sludfnli Having Already Obtained PhD. or Equivalent Conduct ReMarch Stndiei Here. MANY SUBJECTS INCLUDED Economic Greece. Opium Trade, X-H„, Ruorgirnenlo. id J Pieudcpigrapba Art Among Topici Studied. Day. Ph. 0. loom Hopkim. I9J5 ■in- •ttiini t wiib Profetsoe Michael I Rh- lovUcfl Ihc ccofioime Mr ol Grretr uMtr the Roman Empire ai reseated by uiHTiplioni research. Cecil Victor D iii Madrai. India, hai to™ U Yl bridle L ' micrsily. England Emanuel Cullei Engliih Tnpoi. Pirn laii honon with dislmciiori n Section il nd received the Ph. D in IW al(er an i Cambridge He it making a study . s™ tularty Chaim Kaplan L 10 hii rciearch in pieudepigTapha from Ral bin-ci Ihc scholarly tradition ol a Rabbi con bined with the (raining oi a Yale PhD i Scanilic languages and lllcraiuin. He li ai irmolinf to csubliih a correct reading arc preicr ed in many lanfua ci luch ai Greet Latui. Syiiac, Elhiopic and Slavonic On Sterling (ranii. lour lel1o i bavr been enabled lo go to hutorka] lources in Europe and England Ruben Lowryr Calhoun. Yale PhD 1923. Auburn Proleuoe oi Kiitoncal Tbeoloti. venl abroad lor intormation neceiiary to hit book on ThCrcnal Dandion During the lueamer he vii.ied the Genera) flrtiif) oAce in Edinburgh and (he recordt ol Kit-si Cotlege. Aberdeen. Scotland, ai well ii nrioni itcordi in Lordoo. Kcnl Roberli Greenneld. PhD. Johns Hopkini 1915. hai tone lo nonhern llal, 10 lecurc lonhcr maiciil rieceyiary 10 itody the econoen and ucial hulory el the Italian Ruorgimento and ihc chancier ol Minim Daiid Ed- • aid Oaen. Ph.D, Yale 1927. hat made a itudi oi the Indo Briiuh Optum Trade lo ,.1,1 I.I...I Early In Ihc Aril prriul .1 l«.lr.I 1,1c i frttt) M« than Yale d-d by a s— J deal, and k.ied ay though only a .old be Tl El.i cm back badly. Although Bold make h.raiell ditiger- Ir. tin ofl tackle lunjct lyi Ihc one adiajveJ the d h.m in a clai. «,th HOCKEY CANDIDATES ASKED TO ASSEMBLE IN LAMPSON Three Coacbet bod Captain Wilion Will Sp«k B-icflr on Hocke T Sea ion at Meelinj at 7:30. COOD SEASON ANTICIPATED ft thars of All But Too Ktrulari l  Latl Ytar ' t CbaDpiooibip Team Makti Cuacbti (ipiimuiK In Umpion Lyceom ih.i everiqi ai J 10 li... . :i t. J C CurtiL Capt Cady, I929S, and h ' j cipeci Ih ' u ord Fnadt by laat year ! cjiampionjjiip ag- Am.jr( Ihe lelter men who have returned th.l yeaoon are Captain R. F. Wilion. t«jQ, D R McLennan. IvJI. W K. Palmer, 1910. J C Bent, 1930. C S Snead. 1911. F Luce, 1931. F Farrell 1931. F NtlHM. |91|. O H Hkkok. IVM Bewlei (here will be a r Dorian will render Ihe totlo-.ne. fan ary. r l«na in C l nttr, by Bach. P«- ■oJr .. F Slmrf Um r, b, WDliu Thulyday ami Fri i Lynn Phelpi. V. will i Tocvll,. WednevJay. v ol Ulil  rrk. FRESHMEN DOWN HARVARD 13 TOO AS PARKER STARS Eli Yearling Back wilb Crowley To Make Scoring Punch, Leadi Teirn to Deaerved Vktory. CRIMSON UCKS OFFENSIVE Come i Within Scoring Dntar.ee Oolr u... i Dnrini Came— Capl. Weill Pll„ Well for Harvird. TV Har.ard ihr ch-cl lactor in i Capt Harry Well nc v,iihilood Ihc onilougtili backlicld beticr (han -a:. the ball lo iconng poiinon. In (he loonh period. Yale scored again in ihc umc nan- Iail JJ iiJi HawaId-JJ |0) l_ E U union Elaocrali L T. Haggerjon . Hanet L G Ho. land .., Hallowell C Jaikson Hafeman R. a Wabur Esltil. R T. R E Sulliyan Weill Q B Church Leonard L- H ftetat ,. Sc W1 R. H. Crowley HarJ, F. B. Score by periods Yale 6 7-1) H-r.arJ 0—0 Toochdowni— Crowley t Poiw alter louclidown— Sargcni (drop Inek). Sub-iiiutioni— Yale Freshmen Bionkie lo. Ja.Vvn. Will.ami lor Haggetion. Garn- «y lor Munson. Harper lor Sullivan, Jrahn- Haryard; Salionitall lor Enerly. Robinson lor Sallenslall, Lovell lor Barton. Feins lor tCont.nued ran Fogt S.n YALE ' S AERIAL DEFENSE CHIEFLY RESPONSIBLE FOR VICTORY OVER PRINCETON Harvard Conte.t Will Civt Ttio Opportunity to See if It Can Withstand Pining AtUtk. ELIS SUFFER MANY INJURIES Palner, Taylor. Bob Hall, Elba, ud Boolb Will Bt m Sbipc to Meet C rim mi at Cambridge Saluda  . Chiefly rcinonsibli lor Yalr ' y DO in- lerac dnplaycd by (he Et.i imtkaM the Tiaera ' pamng attack. All but week ihc Blue tnuad prepared io item an aerial ol- trnse. and ihc roull ol (hat work wai ihown ale •mothered dye TifcrV ! by lUowini Pnncelt nly nine ol l-coiy three The Harvard elevet d one Barry Wcud Bulldog in the Ian i Saturday at Cam- 5c1.ee. Hoot Etna r came Saturday,. t ion lor (he Harvar. me to return (o ,ti nalu.a) eondilion. The Pr.ntetan tram yuiUined two mjufr.. i Bill Yecklty, end. broke his tlbow bone, nd Ed W.timrr rcce.itr] tome bad miocjr ruisei aj (he reiuli ol Ihe lernfic bat lit e put up lor Ihe T. C rrs Don McLennan, second lubilitutc qoarirr, ■ai the ii ir lor Yale at aliened by Ihe ici (hat he gamed a total ol 208 yardi Mlir nalnif m canying BILL ROPER OF PRINCETON LAUDS WORK OF ELI TEAM Mat Slr.cn. and Wilab of Yale Praita Wittmer ' i Running— Feel Sabahed With Yalt I. .in.-. Playing. live ]uil al(er the game on Salurday Coach Bill Roper of Princeton way generout .n hn praiie ol ihe Yale learn. He s ij that it wai a fine game and thai (he Yale men deiervrd lo win. The Elii outplayed Prince- Ion throughout Ihe game but despite that il -. abeautilul game lo watch even from Ihe Princeton tland point. He laid thai the he Yale leam am the belter one and il inevilable retuli lollowed. Mr. Roper al ia.d (hat he ihoughi (hai the Yalr karri - he besi (hai Princeton had played th.l yea De.pite ihe Ion ol their nar. Booth, ih. -HI C.I hit prayeri al er Ihe encountei ■1 Hi Yecfcley had had been bnuicd and badly il thai he tullered no Head Coach Stevnu Ihe Princeton 1 eld ttt He reinarl rd on the Print td touratreout ■he besi backi ir that Pnnrelon 211 Pearson, Titcomb, Craefzer, Espy, Clayson The 1930 Pictorial Supplement 1 Board LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI: 1930 PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT John Stephen Graetzer Chairman George Phelps Clayson, J r Managing Editor James Espy Vice-Chairman Cray Wate Pearson Business Manager Henry Mitchell Putnam Assistant Business Manager John Bradish Titcomb Photographic Editor SINCE its introduction into Yale as a small experimental picture section of the regular Daily News, the pres- ent Pictorial Supplement has grown into a publication which has far exceeded the hopes of its founders. From humble beginnings in the fall of 1922, under the leadership of C. M. Pyn- chon, ' 25, a sheet that had an occasional appearance on the campus has developed in a short time into one which appears every week on schedule and boasts from four to ten pages of interesting pictorial matter. The Pictorial Supplement feels certain that it justifies its existence and that it is an important factor in acquainting the stu- dent body with the great variety of activi- ties, athletic and otherwise, which take place every day of the college year. News- paper items are at best only impressions of individual editors and for that reason are limited to the observation and ability of that particular person, while photographic news is the reproduction of the event itself. Following the policy inaugurated last year, the present editors have continued co- operating with the pictorial supplements of Harvard and Princeton so that advertisers may gain by increased publicity at lower rates. It is at the present time working hand in hand with the Dartmouth Pic- torial and five other collegiate publica- tions in the editing of a National Intercol- legiate Pictorial Magazine which should make its first appearance on the news- stands next fall. It is admitted that heeling the Pic does not take as much time and effort as is demanded in the competitions for the J. S. Craetzer, Chairman News itself, but the undergraduate who wishes to come into the most intimate con- tact with university affairs can pick no bet- ter medium than Pictorial. The 1930 editors leave office with a feel- ing of regret that their duties are over, but with the greatest confidence that the 1931 board will continue their work and bring the Pic to greater usefulness and interest in the future. 213 Front Row: Sage, Clegg, Clifford, Macdonald, McCandless, Cignoux, Wells Back Row: Agar, Weil, Howland, Longstreth, Kendall The 1930 Record Board LYALG-BANnO AND POT-POURBi: Hedges Macdonald, ' 30 F. E. Cignoux, Jr., ' 30 T. M. Folds, ' 30 . . Joseph Clegg, ' 30 S. C. Wells, Jr., ' 30 Dean Sage, Jr., ' 30 Chairman Business Manager . . Art Editor Managing Editor Circulation Manager Advertising Manager M. Weil, ' 30 Assistant Business Manager 1930 P. S. Agar S. M. Henry 1931 E. W. Beattie F. D. Dubarry J. Fabry, Art 1932 R. S. Crocker, Jr. E. Kingman 1930 C. P. Clifford 1931 T. M. Evans C. C. Hardy J. Keogh, Jr. 1932 C. C. Leedy C. B. Morris, Jr. 1933 F. H. Gillmore C. C. Cordon EDITORS J. Howland, Jr. W. D. Judson, Jr. R. D. Hamilton C. Leonard J. R. McCrary BUSINESS STAFF C. B. Longstreth A. D. Mcintosh, Jr. A. B. MacChesney R. L. Messimer, Jr. J. R. Nutt, Jr. W. H. Quayle J. Kendall H. D. McCandless C. E. Payne R. G. Stephens C. Morris G. W. Sherill W. Terry, Jr. E. B. Self R. F. Wagner, Jr. FROM 1872 to 1930 The Yale Record has progressed from a weekly news- paper to a somewhat blue-stockinged literary magazine and lately to its present incarnation as a humorous fortnightly. And from March 1929 to March 1930 its late lamented staff of editors retained this spirit of versatility to include in their six- teen issues wit, burlesque, and penetrating satire, with a few editorials of serious im- port and consequence. Why The Record? asked the Alumni Weekly early this spring, and almost sim- ultaneously the Yale News offered ad- vice on how to improve this fortnightly and keep it from what seemed to local orthodox editorial writers an early (and perhaps de- served) grave. But the magazine has con- tinued to flourish by reason of its basic principle, its thoroughly sound raison H. Macdonald, Chairman 215 iyalg-banno and pot-pourri: F. E. Cignoux, Jr. Business Manager d ' etre, that all is not perfect at Yale. Yet The Owl is not a crusader attacking the evils of college — he has too much of a sense of humor for that. He does not run a sword in the holes he sees in Yale ' s shining armor. He has much more fun tickling the great heavy body behind the armor with an irritating quill. There are certain obsessions prevalent in New Haven that are truly amusing to an outsider. Higher educat ion, post-war memories, the virtue of week-ending in New Haven, the moral benefit of Chapel, competition for competition ' s sake, the Yale spirit, the fraternity problem, and a thousand other problems — these go to make up the psychology of the Yale under- graduate and so to turn him into a potential loyal alumnus. He goes to a lecture to get education, he goes to his fraternity to get social contact, to the gym to get exercise, to New York for recreation, to the movies to see life. And he drinks to forget it all. Like a baker he takes a scoop of this and a pinch of that, but unlike the baker, he be- comes enamoured of each separate ingredi- ent and forgets that he is baking a cake. Looking down on this scene from the heights of his private perch, The Owl winks in amusement. He is an observer, a bystander, a commentator, and he allows the college to make no move that he does not see. But fortunately his perch is high enough to have a horizon broader than that of the youngsters he watches. When the paradoxes that develop out of the Yale psy- chology become too pronounced for him to retain his composure, he has only to gaze on sunnier and more verdant fields beyond the confines of the City of Elms turned Gothic. In this position one might accuse The Owl of snobbishness unwarranted even by his charming new building were it not for his custom of descending fort- nightly and lampooning those who work out orthodox Yale careers as their fathers had unwittingly done before them, and enheart- ening those who take Yale for granted and would go further during their college no- vitiate. These occasional outpourings by The Owl have been the reason of The Rec- ord in the past and so they have con- tinued. And the new Record building hints at the further service of added social activity to aid the natural gregarious in- stinct of the undergraduate. 216 LYALG-BAhNGR AND POTPOURRI: This year the News has been printing each day a definition of Yale or some feature of it by more prominent Yale graduates. Urged by the feeling that an undergraduate voice should speak out an undergraduate opinion while this definite exhibition is going on, we offer this : Vale is a large body of optimism, completely surrounded by traditions, and fortified at all points by insouciance. Its chief product is status quo, though it has been known to turn out (all too early in their undergraduate ca- reers ) men who later distinguished themselves more than is customary. Yale is a place of resi- dence, a time of good living, and a manner of thinking. In brief, Yale is a nervous experi- ence. ' Hell, let ' s get tight FRATERNITY ROW Lounges and libraries, Billiard and card rooms, Grills downstairs supporting the rest- Even the chapter rooms, Which, I suppose, have their uses. These are the fraternities, The good old Eli Hush Hush Houses Now turned into Eating clubs. In the past they grew and flourished As one may see; Their future has lately become A matter of uncertainty. Metamorphosis Little blocks of granite, Little beams of steel, Make us English overnight, Wonder how we ' ll feel ? Elis and Harvards Whereas the haughty Harvard highbrows With the superior look that damns At chorines elevate their eyebrows, Yale men raise theirs at choriambs Yale men raise theirs at choriambs And scorn the sensuous joys of Sapphics Slake the soul ' s thirst with little slams And wean their minds on Daily Graphics. Righteous and solemn as a vulture, Yale stolid, waits the judgment bell, When, crazed with intoxicating culture, Harvard will seek hilarious Hell. Harvard will seek hilarious Hell, Lured by the learned powers of darkness, But God will ask us all to dwell In Heaven, a replica of Harkness. 217 Front Row: Budd, Lodge, Stocker, Wing, Smith Back Row: Holly, Hodges The Yale Scientific Magazine Board LYALG-BAhMGR AND POT-POURRI! THE YALE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE Published Quarterly in the Interests of Science and En- gineering in the Sheffield Scientific School EDITORS Frank R. Stocker Chairman Arthur K. Wing, Jr Managing Editor Donald W. Smith Circulation Manager John M. Budd Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS C. H. Hodges, Jr., ' 30 S. H. H. Holly, ' 30 S. L. C. Lodge, 30 S. J. J. Brooks, 2d, ' 31 S. E. R. Eberle, ' 31 S. N. B. Greene, ' 31 S. W. N. Hunter, Jr., ' 31 S. E. C. Leedy, Jr., ' 31 S. R. A. Maes, ' 31 S. E. B. Nitchie, ' 31 S. J. E. Phillips, ' 31 S. C. L. Sturtevant, Jr., W. R. Willard, ' 31 S. 31 S. WITH the May, 1930, issue, The Yale Scientific Magazine begins its fourth year of publication. The magazine was founded in order to fur- ther the interests of science and engineer- ing in the Sheffield Scientific School. The success which has come to the magazine in these three years of publication has made it a permanent factor in the University. The faculty has been very generous in making valuable suggestions; and has sub- mitted much of the material for the maga- zine, which has widened its scope to in- clude reports of scientific progress in all departments of the University. A number of representative articles by prominent alumni and others in the outside world has been published. Several undergradu- ate articles have appeared, but it was not until this last year that this field was widened to include articles on problems of the Scientific School which are not pri- marily concerned with science and engi- neering. The magazine is also the official organ of the Yale Engineering Association, to which a section of each issue is devoted. The remainder of the contents of the magazine includes a four-page Pictorial Section, which offers scientific news in picture form; the Personalities, which are intimate biographical sketches of promi- nent members of the scientific faculty; and the Laboratory Notes, which report the work of the various departments. As the only undergraduate scientific publication, the magazine holds a unique position in the University. There are, there- fore, innumerable possibilities open in the future for further expansion and develop- ment. 219 Front Row: Miller, Sprigg, Folds, Hanson, Brown, Musser, Jones Back Row: Oviatt, Macdonald, Fleming, Howland, Hazard, Calfee ACADEMIC SENIOR CLASS BOOK, 1930 Maurice F. Hanson Chairman John M. Musser . Treasurer John M. Sprigg Managing Editor Herbert C. Miller, Jr Pictorial Editor Ford H. Jones Biographical Editor Thomas M. Folds Art Editor EDITORS Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. Robert M. Calfee, Jr. Edward M. Fleming John N. Hazard John Howland, Jr. Hedges Macdonald Sidney Oviatt 220 Front Row: Warner, McCalmont, Rodger Back Row: Webster, Stocker SHEFFIELD SENIOR CLASS BOOK, 1930 Samuel P. McCalmont Chairman Seymour Y. Warner, J r Treasurer COMMITTEE Arthur E. Rodger Frank R. Stocker Carl R. Webster 221 LYALG-BANNGR AND POT-POURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS TvVENTY-ONE years ago was an ex- citing time for the Yale University Press — its life was just beginning. The first quarters of the new Press were in a pigeonhole in a busy man ' s desk, and this desk was in a busy office downtown in New York. To its founders, to build up a Yale University Press seemed an exciting adventure, when they thought of all it might do for letters, and for scholars and scholarship. Year by year more and more of their plans were realized; and in Novem- ber, 1919, at the time of his retirement from the direction of the affairs of the University, President Arthur T. Hadley wrote: The thing on which I look back with most satisfaction in my whole ad- ministration is the development of the pub- lishing work of the University and the rec- ognition it has obtained throughout the world. I regard The Yale Review and the Yale University Press as our best products of the last twenty years. In that year, a decade ago, the Press was publishing a general list of fifty-three books, and in addition was engaged in issu- ing The Chronicles of America, a com- prehensive set of histories in fifty volumes that has since won nation-wide recognition, and also The Yale Shakespeare in forty carefully edited volumes. The total num- ber of titles comprised in its list at the end of 1919 was about 500; and in order to meet the requirements of a business that had become world-wide, the staff had grown to include twenty-two persons. The center of activities had been shifted to New Haven, where after overcrowding the available space in a house at the corner of Elm and High Streets they were moved to an old wooden frame building on College Street. Then a permanent home for the Yale University Press, and for the Printing Office which had been added to its organi- zation, was established as a memorial to Lieutenant Earl Trumbull Williams, Yale 1910, by his mother, Mrs. Harriet T. Wil- liams, through the purchase of the historic brick house at the corner of Elm and Tem- 222 pie Streets, fronting on the Green, which was built about 1830 and formerly be- longed to Governor Ingersoll of Connecti- cut; and the gift of this in memory of her son whose portrait honors its entrance hallway. In its New Haven headquarters (there is also a large office in New York) , the work of the Press has continued steadily to ex- pand. With the announcement of sixty vol- umes for this year, the list of all titles un- der its imprint has risen to 1,140; and in order to take care of the various branches of its growing business the main office staff has increased to nearly seventy. The Pageant of America, a unique pictorial history in fifteen volumes, has followed the earlier Chronicles of America. The set of The Yale Shakespeare has been com- pleted, including a biographical study, Shakespeare of Stratford by Professor Tucker Brooke. The Chronicles of Amer- ica Photoplays, based on the written Chronicles and carefully prepared under the supervision of scholars as a pioneer ex- periment in visual education in the field of history, has been begun and has won widespread praise from school authorities and community leaders. The Press has be- come publisher of the Economic and So- cial History of the World War, edi ted by Professor James T. Shotwell of Columbia University, for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; of the annual Survey of American Foreign Relations, prepared under the direction of Charles P. Howland, in charge of research for the Council on Foreign Relations of New York, and of other research publications of the Council in the field of international af- fairs; of the series of volumes issued each year by the Institute of Politics at Wil- liamstown, Massachusetts; of various vol- umes issued for The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; and of the Cornell Studies in English and the Studies of the Department of Archaeology of Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. The Press has also acquired and now publishes The Yale Review, edited by Wilbur LYALG£AhM€R AND POTPOURRI! Cross, which at the beginning of its twenty-first year commands a secure repu- tation both at home and abroad as the lead- ing American national quarterly. Among the volumes on our current list by members of the Yale faculty are Stretchers: The Story of a Hospital Unit on the Western Front by Professor Fred- erick A. Pottle; The Great Apes: A Study of Anthropoid Life by Professor Robert M. Yerkes and Ada W. Yerkes; American Foreign Relations 1929 published for the Council on Foreign Relations of New York and prepared under the direction of Charles P. Howland, Director of Research for the Council and Research Associate in Govern- ment at Yale University; The Evolution of Earth and Man edited by Professor George A. Baitsell; High Finance in the Sixties: Chapters from the Early History of the Erie Railway edited by Professor Fred- erick C. Hicks of the Yale School of Law; The Evolution of War by Professor Mau- rice R. Davie, which is Volume I of the Yale Publications in Economics, Social Sci- ence, and Government; The Principles of English Verse by the late Professor Charl- ton Miner Lewis, a new edition with a prefatory note by Professor Chauncey Brewster Tinker; The Life and Times of Laurence Sterne by Professor Wilbur Cross, Dean of the Graduate School, a one- volume edition of his recognized standard work; A Remarkable Ground Sloth by Professor Richard Swann Lull, a complete study of the ground sloth discovered in New Mexico early in 1928 and purchased soon afterward for the Peabody Museum at Yale; A History of Russia by Professor George Vernadsky; and The Memorial Quadrangle: A Book about Yale by Pro- fessor Robert Dudley French. It is a genuine satisfaction to be able to present at the same time such varied books from other sources as The Influence of Christ in the Ancient World by Terrot R. Glover, Classical Lecturer in St. John ' s Col- lege, Cambridge University, England; The Art and Religion of Fossil Man by Pro- fessor G. H. Luquet of Paris, translated by J. T. Russell, Jr.; The Truth about Ger- onimo by Britton Davis, formerly Assist- ant Chief of Staff to Gen. George Crook; a revised printing of Human Nature and Its Remaking by Professor William Ernest Hocking of Harvard University; Early American Portrait Painters by Cuthbert Lee, representative in New York City of the American Foundation of Arts of Wash- ington, D. C. ; England and the New Gold Standard by Professor William Adams Brown, Jr. of Brown University; Ancient Painting by Professor Mary Hamilton Swindler of Bryn Mawr College; a new edi- tion of The Anatomy and Physiology of Capillaries by Professor August Krogh of Copenhagen University; British Ballads from Maine by Phillips Barry, Fannie Hardy Eckstorm, and Mary Winslow Smyth; American Mesozoic Mammalia by George Gaylord Simpson, Associate Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City; Coleridge on Logic and Learning by Professor Alice D. Snyder of Vassar College; and Nationality: Its Na- ture and Problems by Bernard Joseph of London, with a foreword by Professor G. P. Gooch. 223 Front Row: Miller, Byington, Hargrave Back Row: Wharton, Fisher, Barley THE ELI BOOK (Founded 1909) With which is combined the Yale Freshman Handbook (Founded 1881) EDITORS Homer M. Byington, Jr., ' 30 Herbert C. Miller, Jr., ' 30 ASSISTANT EDITORS Thomas R. Fisher, Jr., ' 31 Albert C. Barley, Jr., ' 32 Newell H. Hargrave, ' 31 S. George W. Wharton, Jr., ' 32 224 Front Row: Fleishel, Curtiss, Laundon, Bassett, Ramsburg Back Row: Stevens, Kingman, Frank, Tate FRESHMAN YEAR BOOK BOARD OFFICERS, 1929-1930 M. H. Laundon, Jr., ' 32 Chairman E. W. Bates, ' 32 Managing Editor C. J. Ramsburg, Jr., ' 32 S Business Manager EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT J. A. Bassett ART EDITOR C. Curtiss, Jr. Eugene Kingman J. L. Frank HM. Stevens, 2d PHOTOCRAPHIC EDITOR I. D. Tate Marc Fleishel, Jr. 225 UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS LYALG-BAKNGR AND POT-POURRI: UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS T HE Athletic Department has always in mind its obligations and relations to the following: The University Administration The Undergraduates and other Students The Faculty The Alumni Other Universities The Public The Athletic Association is a department of the University administered by the Board of Control, representative of the University, faculty, students, and alumni. Harold F. Woodcock General Manager just as long as the undergraduates evince a wish to engage in athletic exercise, whether it be of a University, Junior Uni- versity, Freshman, or interclass teams or crews, the Athletic Association stands ready to continue to provide the organiza- tion for their convenience. More and more playing fields are being developed and im- proved; coaches are supplied for supervi- sion, teaching, and guidance; bus trans- portation to the playing fields and rowing courses is furnished free of charge; and in general the athletic authorities have been and are anticipating for years in advance the physical requirements of the present day wave of mass athletics. The high ma- jority of the undergraduates today evidently prefer actual engagement in sport for exer- cise or competition rather than watching others perform. In order to keep the athletic enterprise of the University in proper balance, the control is practically in the hands of the 228 faculty. Team and individual participation alike are subject to the sanction of the faculty since no individual can engage in organized athletics unless he is declared eligible; and no contests can be scheduled at home or away, until the events indi- vidually and collectively have received the formal approval of the Deans. Interest in the athletic teams is perhaps one of the closest contacts of the alumni with the University, and toward the fur- therance of this most beneficial tie the Athletic Association endeavors to accom- modate all interests concerned by seating by classes at football games, by arranging numerous contests on Alumni Day, and the Harvard baseball game and boat races at Commencement time and by the occasional sending out of teams such as for example the trip of the swimming team to Hawaii, which is to take place in the summer of 1930. The swimming team will engage in a few meets in the United States en route to Honolulu. Contacts with other universities and schools are expanding as a natural result of the increasing participation in athletics by the undergraduates. Each year there are more contests with other colleges between class teams and crews, junior university squads, and other groups, which tends toward placing these meets on a more in- formal basis. Yale ' s entrance in the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League in the spring of 1930 brings still more closely to- gether, at least in an athletic way, the member universities which include Colum- bia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and Yale. The University and general public have many common interests and the Athletic Association serves to aid in these relations in such ways as providing football tickets to outsiders, athletic exhibitions for civic and group functions, and in all possible contacts. The athletic equipment of the Univer- sity, with the exception of the gymnasium building, has now been developed to a point which is just about even with the demand. The playing field acreage has been ex- panded; the Coxe Field Gymnasium serves hundreds of athletic candidates; twelve new tennis courts will have been completed in the spring of 1930 making a total of thirty-eight tennis courts at Yale Field; and property has been acquired adjacent to Yale Field which will allow other further expansion as required in the future. It is hoped and believed that the University will LYALG-BAKNGR AND POT-POURRI! conclude arrangements to break ground for the new gymnasium in the very near fu- ture. With the completion of the new gym- nasium plant and the new swimming pools the undergraduates will find at their dis- posal every facility that could be desired and probably the most complete university athletic equipment in existence. There are two new departments of sport being encouraged at the University at the present time, namely rugby and 1 50- lb. football. As fast as the interest grows in these activities the Athletic Association will undoubtedly keep pace by finding fields, supplying coaching and general as- sistance for these new departments which will give the students a still wider choice of sport. It might be mentioned in passing that when an alumnus or a member of the Uni- versity attends a Yale athletic contest he not only supports the team by his presence but also contributes toward the financial obligations of the university athletic de- partment in expanding plant and personnel for placing athletics for all at the dis- posal of the undergraduates. H. F. W. 229 Beyer, Kieselhorst, Blagden, Oviatt, Longstreth, Hazard, Hitt, Dudley The Cheer Leaders Squires, Moore, Mears, Curtis The Football Program Committee 1YAL£-PAN 0 AND POT-POURRI! BOARD OF CONTROL 1929-1930 OFFICERS George H. Nettleton, ' 96 Chairman James C. Creenway, ' 00 Secretary George P. Day, ' 97 Treasurer Thomas W. Farnam, ' 99 Assistant Treasurer MEMBERS President James Rowland Angell Dean Clarence W. Mendell, ' 04 Dean Charles H. Warren, ' 96 S. Dean Percy T. Walden, ' 92 S. Professor j. R. Crawford Professor R. Selden Rose, ' 09 George T. Adee, ' 95 Malcolm P. Aldrich, ' 22 E. S. Bronson, ' 00 ). M. Cates, ' 06 L. Malcolm Farmer, ' 04 S. Alfred C. Gilbert, ' 09 M. W. W. Greene, ' 30 J. N. Hazard, ' 30 Hamilton Hitt, ' 30 S. T. A. D. Jones, ' 08 S. G. B. Longstreth, ' 30 Frederick Sheffield, ' 24 Burnside Winslow, ' 04 H. F. Woodcock 231 _YALG-PAN R AND POT-POURRI! COMMITTEES T. A. D. FOOTBALL Jones, ' 08 S. George T. Adee, ' 95 C. B. Esselstyn, ' 25 John Field, ' 11 A. L. Gates, ' 18 Chairman Charles Gould, ' 02 Winslow M. Lovejoy, ' 25 W. L. Richeson, ' 24 S. Louis E. Stoddard, ' 99 CREW Frederick Sheffield, ' 24 . S. Y. Hord, ' 21 Seth Low, ' 16 . Chairman J. S. Rockefeller, ' 24 B. M. Spock, ' 25 TRACK A. C. Gilbert, ' 09 M. . J. T. Bryan, ' 14 S. E. B. Coxe, 3d, ' 18 Chairman J. R. Kilpatrick, ' 11 W. M. Oler, Jr., ' 16 BASEBALL Burnside Winslow, ' 04 . M. P. Aldrich, ' 22 A. M. Hirsh, ' 01 Chairman J. F. Riddell, jr., ' 13 S. R. S. Rose, ' 09 HOCKEY E. S. Bronson, ' 00 E. Bierwirth, ' 17 O. Bulkley, ' 23 Chairman Sanford Stoddard, ' 99 Holcomb York, ' 17 232 Front Row: Hazard, Paul, Greene, Beyer, Hitt Back Row: Dudley, Kirk, Longstreth, Howland, Blagden, Kieselhorst UNDERGRADUATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 1929-1930 W. W. Greene, ' 30 J. N. Hazard, ' 30 . Chairman Secretary J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. A. S. Blagden, Jr., ' 30 S. C. W. Dudley, Jr., ' 30 H. Hitt, ' 30 S. J. Howland, Jr., ' 30 S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30 C. D. Kirk, ' 30 S. C. B. Longstreth, ' 30 W. L. Paul, ' 30 R. F. Wilson, ' 30 233 LYALG-BANsO AND POT-POURRI! MAJOR Y MEN FOOTBALL E. Austen, ' 31 H. Barres, ' 32 A. C. Beane, Jr., ' 31 S. A. J. Booth, ' 32 S. K. Dunn, ' 31 S. H. M. Ellis, ' 30 D. L. Ferris, ' 30 J. F. Codman, ' 30 W. W. Greene, ' 30 R. A. Hall, ' 30 T. T. Hare, Jr., ' 30 CREW A. S. Blagden, Jr., ' 30 S. W. W. Carnsey, ' 30 H. Hitt, ' 30 S. BASEBALL H. S. Aldrich, ' 30 J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. C. W. Dudley, ' 30 J. J. Holahan, ' 30 S. F. J. Linehan, ' 31 TRACK P. S. Carr, ' 31 C. P. Clayson, Jr., ' 30 W. A. Cone, ' 30 F. N. Connor, ' 31 B. S. Cunningham, ' 31 S. A. C. DeVoe, ' 31 C. H. Engle, ' 30 S. C. F. Gill, ' 30 CROSS COUNTRY M. D. Smith, ' 30 WRESTLING R. M. Sargent, ' 30 S. HOCKEY E. Austen, ' 31 J. P. Bent, ' 30 S. D. W. Bostwick, ' 32 J. E. Cookman, ' 31 C. Curtiss, Jr., ' 32 F. Farrel, 3d, ' 31 D. H. Hickok, ' 30 S. B. Iglehart, ' 32 SWIMMING J. K. Brines, ' 32 B. Butler, ' 32 E. C. Cahill, ' 30 S. D. H. Clement, ' 31 M. A. Glascock, ' 30 FENCING E. L. Hill, ' 30 234 T. P. Hawley, ' 32 D. H. Hickok, ' 30 L. W. Ladd, ' 30 F. J. Linehan, ' 31 F. W. Loeser, ' 31 J. McEwen, ' 30 D. R. McLennan, Jr., ' 31 F. L Marting, ' 30 S. H. C. Miller, ' 30 A. E. Palmer, ' 30 S. P. McCalmont, ' 30 S. W. B. Mosle, ' 30 J. J. Quinn, ' 31 R. B. Robertson, Jr., ' 30 S. C. S. Snead, ' 31 J. N. Hazard, ' 30 F. V. Keesling, Jr., ' 30 S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30 J. L. King, ' 30 S. J. H. Macdonald, ' 31 T. E. Moore, ' 30 F. R. O ' Brien, ' 31 F. T. Oldt, 2d, ' 30 W. F. Smith, Jr., ' 30 N. E. Jennison, ' 30 S. G. B. Longstreth, ' 30 F. L. Luce, Jr., ' 31 D. R. McLennan, Jr., ' 31 J. E. Muhlfeld, ' 32 S. F. A. Nelson, Jr., ' 31 W. H. Palmer, ' 3 0 J. Howland, ' 30 C. C. Leedy, ' 32 H. Lincoln, ' 31 R. L. Messimer, ' 31 E. W. Overstreet, ' 30 S. W. L. Paul, ' 30 G. V. Phillips, ' 30 S. C. S. Snead, ' 31 J. R. Stewart, ' 31 A. T. Taylor, ' 32 M. Tyson, ' 32 F. T. Vincent, ' 31 J. M. Walker, ' 31 J. C. West, ' 30 R. F. Wilson, ' 30 A. E. Palmer, ' 30 W. R. Tappen, ' 30 A. J. Taylor, ' 31 S. W. B. Thompson, ' 30 F. T. Vincent, ' 31 J. M. Walker, ' 31 H. C. Reiner, ' 30 M. D. Smith, ' 30 W. F. Smith, Jr., ' 30 M. G. Talcott, Jr., ' 31 F. B. Tuttle, ' 30 J. E. Uihlein, ' 32 F. E. Weicker, ' 31 S. G. V. V. Wolf, ' 30 R. Schley, Jr., ' 31 W. Sizer, ' 30 C. S. Snead, ' 31 E. G. Stoddard, ' 31 J. C. West, ' 30 R. F. Wilson, ' 30 J. K. Winter, ' 32 N. W. Millard, ' 30 S. F. E. Nyce, ' 30 L. B. Osborne, ' 32 S. L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 W. A. Walker, ' 30 _YALG-BAhN€R AND P0T-POURBI! MINOR Y MEN CREW E. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 D. Dominick, ' 30 C. S. Ford, ' 31 T. W. Hefferan, Jr., ' 31 E. O. Holter, Jr., ' 30 L. Thorne, ' 31 BASKETBALL A. C. Beane, Jr., ' 31 S. J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. A. J. Booth, ' 32 S. A. M. Freeman, ' 30 H. J. Gallagher, ' 31 E. Horwitz, ' 31 A. E. Nanry, ' 30 S. L. E. Nassau, ' 30 S. Patterson, ' 31 A. R. Pennell, ' 30 J. T. Townsend, ' 30 H. V. Williams, ' 30 BOXING F. A. Catyas, ' 30 CROSS COUNTRY W. H. Cleveland, ' 30 POLO J. L. Bradley, ' 31 5. J. C. Cavanagh, ' 32 R. M. Ferguson, ' 30 R. R. Guest, ' 31 G. D. Kirk, ' 31 S. C. R. McCormick, jr., ' 31 S. P. Porter, ' 31 J. C. Rathborne, ' 31 H. Scott, ' 30 COLF M. W. Forrest, ' 30 F. K. Wilson, ' 31 S. SWIMMING D. F. Fobes, ' 32 R. D. Howse, ' 30 E. C. Leedy, ' 31 S W. S. Manuel, ' 30 C. D. Mercer, ' 30 N. W. Millard, ' 30 S. R. M. Owen, ' 31 S. M. J. Roberts, ' 30 E. B. Paine, ' 31 W. M. Swoope, C. G. Zug, ' 31 WATER POLO A. Z. Belous, ' 31 F. W. Loeser, ' 31 M. W. Macduffie, ' 31 W. L. Paul, ' 30 J. L. Peyton, ' 30 L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 T. P. Underwood, ' 32 235 Captain Greene lYALG-PANNGR AND POT-POURRI! FOOTBALL SEASON THE football season of 1929 opened with a full four-week practice session in the spring. Every man not occupied with another sport was called out and a formidable squad of sixty reported. Much was accomplished in learning new plays and correcting the faults that had cropped up in the previous season. Regular practice started on September 15 with over a hundred men reporting to Head Coach M. A. Stevens. About forty men comprised the Blue Squad, the re- mainder making up the Gray Squad, also known as Dr. Bull ' s Squad. The outlook was favorable with seventeen letter men returning. The coaching staff was considerably strengthened with the addition of Adam Walsh as line coach, captain of the Notre Dame team of 1924. There was a new spirit, not always spoken but generally felt, after the previous disastrous season, and results easily bear this out. UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT, OCTOBER 5 The season opened auspiciously with an 89—0 victory over the University of Ver- mont, appearing in New Haven for the first time since 1921. As the score would indicate the game was not an especially in- teresting one, due to the far superior strength and numbers of the Yale team. Yale used three teams, thus giving every Coach Stevens man on the squad a chance to play. In spite of this overwhelming victory, there were still many weaknesses in the Yale at- tack and defense. The game gave no op- portunity for individual brilliance. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, OCTOBER 12 For the first time in history the Yale team ventured below the Mason-Dixon line to meet the University of Georgia on the occasion of the dedication of the new San- ford Stadium. Too much cannot be said for the fine hospitality that was shown the visitors, and the trip served to cement even further the relations between the two uni- versities. Yale was the heavy favorite, but when the game began, immediately follow- ing the dedication ceremonies, there was a different story to tell. Georgia won by the score of 15-0, by virtue of a blocked kick, a safety after a poor Yale pass from center, and a beautifully executed pass to V. Smith. The teamwork and fighting spirit of the Georgia eleven against a potentially stronger and more highly touted team were deciding factors. BROWN UNIVERSITY, OCTOBER 19 After defeat at the hands of Georgia, Yale came to her third game, that against Brown with the odds against her. It was a crucial game in the Yale schedule, and was won by the close score of 14—6. Brown took an early lead with a touchdown in the first period, but in the next period Booth scored from the 48-yard line in eight con- secutive plays, and in the third period re- peated this performance from mid-field. He kicked both points after touchdown. Brown with a formidable passing combina- tion of Fogarty and Edwards, was a con- stant threat up to the final whistle. The improvement in the Yale line was tremen- dous and the consistently effective work of Captain Green and Vincent was note- worthy. The clever running of Booth presaged his forthcoming brilliance in en- suing games. 239 lYALG-BANvO AND POT-POURRI! ARMY, OCTOBER 26 The annual mid-season excitement which characterizes the Yale-Army game was in no way missing as the Blue team sent the cadets down to a 21-13 defeat. Yale, still an unknown quantity, found herself be- hind at the end of the first period. Captain Cagle had intercepted a Yale pass for the first score and soon after passed to Murrel for the second West Point touchdown. In the second period an Army fumble gave Yale the ball on Army ' s 30-yard line and a series of rushes by Booth and Dunn with beautiful interference led to Yale ' s first score with Booth making the touchdown and kicking the point. An uninterrupted series of rushes by Booth in the third pe- riod brought the ball to the Army one- yard line where he plunged over for the second Yale score. Army then received the kickoff, punted from her 25-yard line to Booth who received the kick and ran seventy yards for a touchdown in one of the most spectacular dashes of the year. Although great credit is due Booth for his brilliant work in scor- ing all of Yale ' s twenty-one points it would not have been possible without the great driving power of the line and the fine inter- ference and defensive work of the backs. 240 DARTMOUTH, NOVEMBER 2 No less exciting was the game in which Yale beat the hitherto undefeated Dart- mouth team 16-12. In the first half of the game Yale decidedly outplayed their op- ponents but were unable to score more than a field goal by Booth. In the second half, Beane, recovering a Dartmouth fum- ble before it hit the ground, raced twenty- five yards for a touchdown. Soon after in four plays featured by Marsters ' s passes Dartmouth covered eighty-five yards for a touchdown, and on Yale ' s fumble of the kickoff, ran through Yale in three plays to lead 12-10. With darkness setting in and but a few minutes to go, Ellis intercepted a wild Dartmouth pass and raced ninety yards for the winning score. Although scor- ing on good breaks, Yale made twelve first downs to her opponent ' s six and gained by rushing 255 yards to Dartmouth ' s 101. The general work of the line and the running of Booth and Ellis featured the Yale attack, and the work of Marsters for Dartmouth is worthy of much praise. LYAL£-BANN€R AND POT-POURRI! MARYLAND, NOVEMBER 9 A let-down after the previous two games was inevitable, but nevertheless it was a great disappointment when the Maryland game resulted in a 13-13 tie, especially after the defeat of the previous year. The score was thirteen to nothing after Booth had accounted for both touchdowns and scored the extra point. Soon after the tide turned and Maryland rolled up thirteen points to tie the score. Yale ' s desperate last-minute efforts to score were in vain. Booth ' s work was consistently good, but there seemed to be none of the team play that characterized the two previous games. PRINCETON, NOVEMBER 16 The Princeton team came up to New Ha- ven to wind up a season fraught with nu- merous defeats, so that Yale was the de- cided favorite. However the Tiger eleven, with the vigor and courage she has never failed to display against Yale, held her scoreless for the first half. In the second half the Yale team came to life, and led by McLennan, who was so ably filling the in- jured Booth ' s shoes at quarterback, scored two touchdowns and one extra point. The first score came after a sixty-seven-yard drive, featuring McLennan, who finally scored and passed to Taylor for the extra point. In the final period Taylor shot a pass to Hickok, who made a spectacular catch WrJ Captain-Elect Vincent and romped across the line for a touch- down. The running and generalship of McLen- nan and the defensive work of Wittmer for Princeton were the features of the game. 241 Kicking Practice 1YALG PANN€R AND POT-POURRI! HARVARD, NOVEMBER 23 Predictions of a close game between Yale and Harvard proved well-founded, and it was not until after sixty minutes of good hard playing that Harvard gained the vic- tory by the score of 10-6. Wood of Harvard was the first to score, getting a field goal from the 25-yard line. Soon after, Wood passed to the Eli 1-yard line, and Harper took the ball over for the touchdown. With about a minute of the first half to go, Ellis took a pass from Booth and dodged and tugged his way to a touchdown. The score stayed at 10-6 the rest of the game, but both teams threatened to score constantly. The cold weather made the han dling of the ball extremely difficult, and it was note- worthy that there was scarcely any fum- bling. The defensive work of Ticknor in the Harvard line, the tackling of Douglas at end, and the work of Mays and Wood in the backfield featured the Harvard victory. For Yale the work of Captain Greene, ably assisted by Vincent, was outstanding. In conclusion, great credit is due Captain Greene and Coach Stevens for the re- markable rejuvenation of a Yale team that by the end of the season was rated among the best teams in the East. Greene ' s in- domitable courage, cheerfulness, and gen- ius for leadership ranks him with the best of Yale captains. Coach Stevens and his as- sistants, notably Adam Walsh, are to be heartily congratulated on the team ' s fine showing, and hopes are high for a cham- pionship season next year under Captain- elect Vincent. 243 First Row: Hall, Beane, McLennan, West, Barres, Booth Second Row: Dunn, Ellis, Palmer, Vincent, Capt. Greene, Marting, Miller, Austen, Taylor Third Row: McEwen, Phillips, Wilson, Snead, Linehan, Tyson Fourth Row: Stewart, Hawley, Hare, Codman, Ferris, Loeser, Paul, Mgr. The University Football Team lyalg-panno and pot-pourri: UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1930 F. T. Vincent, ' 31 John Holbrook, ' 31 W. H. Abell. ' 32 Captain Manager Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1929 Waldo W. Greene, ' 30 . Captain William L. Paul, ' 30 . . Manager John Holbrook, ' 31 . Assistant Manager W. L. Paul, ' 30 Manager of Football TEAM E. Austen, 31, h.b. H. Barres, ' 32, e. A. C. Beane, Jr., ' 31 S., A. J. Booth, ' 32 S., q.b. K. Dunn, ' 31 S., h.b. H. M. Ellis, ' 30, h.b. D. L. Ferris, ' 30, l.t. J. F. Codman, ' 30, e. W. W. Greene, ' 30, l.g R. A. Hall, ' 30, q.b. T. Hare, Jr., ' 31, r.g P. Hawley, ' 32, l.t. H. Hickok, ' 30, e. T. T. D. F. h.b. J. Linehan, ' 31, r.t. F. W. Loeser, ' 31, c. J. McEwen, ' 30, e. D. R. McLennan, ' 31, h.b. F. L. Marting, ' 30 S., l.t. H. C. Miller, ' 30, f.b. A. E. Palmer, Jr., ' 30, c. C. V. Phillips, ' 30 S., c. C. Snead, ' 31, h.b. J. R. Stewart, ' 31, r.g. A. T. Taylor, ' 32, h.b. M. Tyson, ' 32, l.g. F. T. Vincent, ' 31, r.g. J. C. West, ' 30, e. R. F. Wilson, ' 30, q.b. M. A. Stevens, ' 25 . . Adam Walsh C. A. Comerford, ' 18 S. W. A. Webster, ' 28 S. COACHES . Head Coach C. Assistant Coach L. Assistant Coach R. Assistant Coach C. A. Milstead, ' 26 M. Noble, ' 27 W. Pond, ' 25 . S. Connors Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Trainer 245 $ - UH-i 1 1 1   $fa y a -i A- f - 1 • ■$% % . Si i - « ' f ■-xm k V, % ' x ' a ' KaF ' i ■1 r. , ; ..j ' v. v ..- . - First Row: Munson, Jones, Harper, Waterman, Orshansky, Williams, Howland Second Row: Wright, Beane, Haggerson, Jackson, Wilbur, Sullivan, Church, Crowley, Curtiss Third Row: M. Williamson, C. Williamson, Browne, Burke, Sargent, Bronkie, Parker Fourth Row: Johnson, Knowles, Holihan, Carnsey, McCutcheon, Ham- ilton, Holbrook, Mgr. The 1933 Freshman Football Team LYALG4?AhN€R AND POT-POURRI! 1933 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS j. S. Wilbur, ' 33 John Holbrook, ' 31 C. S. Osbourn, ' 15 Captain Manager . Coach Captain Wilbur The following members of the team received numerals: F. E. Beane, 3d W. F. Bronkie W. K. Browne H. F. Burke E. M. Church, Jr. J. P. Crowley J. Curtiss, Jr. W. S. Carnsey, 3d F. S. Haggerson W. R. C. Hamilton H. H. Harper, Jr. W. B. Holihan D. Howland E. D. Jackson A. T. Johnson T. S. Jones J. A. Knowles W. T. McCutcheon V. Munson E. Orshansky, Jr. R. B. Parker J. A. Sargent P. H. Sullivan R. M. Waterman J. S. Wilbur O. K. Williams C. Williamson M. Williamson C. P. Wright SCORES Yale 12 Andover 6 Yale 6 Exeter 7 Yale 6 . . . . Hebron Academy 7 Yale 13 Roxbury 6 Yale 22 Princeton Yale 13 Harvard 247 Captain Beyer LYALG-BAWGR AND POTPOURRI! BASEBALL SEASON, 1929 WHEN Coach Wood began practice in the Cage shortly after mid- years, the prospects were dubious. Two outfielders on the 1928 team were lost by graduation as well as three infield men: Captain Vaughan, Schmidt, and Caldwell. The veterans were Captain Carvey, the ver- satile Grove, and Aldrich. As battery men Sawyer, Loud, Beyer, and Hoben promised further fine performances with Thompson as a relief pitcher. Several weeks of batting practice were held in the Cage before weather permitted the team to practice outside. THE SOUTHERN TRIP On April 3, the squad set out for Char- lottesville, Virginia, where the season opened with a 9 to 3 victory over the Uni- versity of Virginia. The starting line-up found a re-vamped team which was neces- sary because of the vacancies left by graduation. Grove, a shortstop, was moved to the outfield where, with the hard-hit- ting Garvey and McKenzie, he finished up the season with fine performances. Beyer was moved from catcher to second base, accompanied in the infield by Vincent at first, Taylor short, and Aldrich third. Saw- yer, Loud, and Miller bore the brunt of the pitching on the trip, and Hoben catching with Linehan as his substitute. Virginia lost a second game 10 to 2, and on Friday, April 5, the team went to Washington, de- feating the Navy 13 to 9 and Georgetown twice on consecutive days. Vincent, a fine first baseman, was injured in the first Georgetown game and his place was taken by Walker. The Columbia game at New York was called because of rain. The team returned to New Haven with an excellent start for a successful straight victories. season, with five loe Wood, Baseball Coach 249 PRELIMINARY GAMES The features of these games were the rapid development of Walker as a heavy hitter, who gained a berth at left field; the clever all-round playing of Grove in center; Garvey ' s hitting; Beyer ' s defensive work at second and Vincent ' s phenomenal batting achievements. Loud and Sawyer were con- sistent in their pitching, with Thompson coming up with fine improvement. Dart- mouth set Yale back by a 5 to 2 defeat in the opening home game; and in the next five weeks Yale won seven games and lost six, defeating Fordham, Boston University, Wesleyan, Tufts, Columbia, and Syracuse, breaking even with Pennsylvania, and los- ing to New York University, Georgetown, and Holy Cross, and Cornell twice. In be- tween the Yale-Harvard-Princeton series, Providence College and Brown were de- feated 4 to 1 and 1 1 to 6 respectively. 251 THE YALE-HARVARD The line-up in the series was: Grove, Carvey, and Walker in the outfield; Vin- cent, Beyer, Taylor, and Aldrich infielders; Loud, Sawyer, Thompson, pitchers; Hoben, catcher. In the first Princeton game Sawyer ' s arm weakened and he was relieved by Loud who lost a fine game 4-3 when Carter, Princeton catcher, hit a home run in the ninth. The game at Princeton Yale won 7 to 4. In the play-off at the Polo Grounds, Saw- 252 PRINCETON SERIES yer ' s sore arm did not hold up and a Prince- ton rally netted a 10 to 4 victory. The first Harvard game on Commence- ment Day was a batting fest for Yale, scor- ing a 16 to 1 victory. On the following day at Cambridge Loud defeated Harvard 6 to 4 to take the series. After the third Princeton game at New York, J. H. Beyer was elected Captain of the 1930 team. F. T. Vincent received a cup for knocking in the most runs. The 1930 Squad In the Cage First Row: Robertson, Quinn, Brockelman, Austen, Billhardt, Holahan Second Row: Aldrich, Taylor, Vincent, Hoben, Capt. Carvey, Grove, Sawyer, Loud, Walker Third Row: Mgr. Brown, Beyer, Linehan, Coach Wood, Thompson, Jennison, Snead, Coach Engle, Moose The 1929 University Baseball Team _YALG-PAI 0 AND POT-POURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY BASEBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. . . . Captain C. W. Dudley, Jr., ' 30 . . Manager E. C. Ingram, ' 31 Assistant Manager J. Wood Coach C. W. Dudley, jr., ' 30 Manager of Baseball TEAM, 1929 H. S. Aldrich, ' 30 J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. K. F. Billhardt, ' 29 S. J. J. Carvey, Capt., ' 29 M. J. Grove, ' 29 J. J. Hoben, ' 29 S. J. J. Holahan, ' 30 S. E. N. Jennison, ' 30 S. F. Linehan, ' 31 C. B. Loud, ' 29 J. Quinn, ' 31 R. Robertson, ' 30 S. R. A. Sawyer, ' 29 C. S. Snead, ' 31 A. Taylor, ' 31 S. W. B. Thompson, ' 30 F. T. Vincent, ' 31 J. M. Walker, ' 31 BASEBALL SCORES, 1929 Yale Opp. pril 4 Univ. of Virginia 9 3 May 9 5 Univ. of Virginia 10 2 11 6 Navy .... 13 9 15 8 Georgetown 6 4 18 9 Georgetown 7 2 25 10 Columbia rain 28 13 Dartmouth 2 5 30 20 Fordham 5 2 June 1 24 Boston Univ. 5 8 27 Univ. of Penn. 3 7 12 30 New York Univ. 2 15 May 1 Holy Cross 2 18 4 Univ. of Penn. 4 1 19 7 Wesleyan 10 22 Tufts Holy Cross Columbia Cornell Cornell Syracuse Georgetown Princeton Providence College Brown Princeton Harvard Harvard Princeton Yale Opp. 11 3 7 1 3 8 6 3 4 12 7 16 6 4 2 15 2 2 4 2 9 4 1 6 4 1 4 10 255 First Row: Ingram, Miles Second Row: Venning, Hall, Warren, Heim, Captain Booth, Newton, Maine, M. Jones, Wilson Third Row: Mgr. Dudley, H. Jones, Schane, Taylor, Pond, Coach Engle The 1932 Freshman Baseball Team 1YAL€ PAW€R AND POTPOURRI: 1932 FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1929 A. J. Booth Captain C. W. Dudley, Jr. . Manager C. Engle Coach Captain Booth TEAM A. J. Booth, Jr. W ' . F. Newton J. T. Hall c. W. Pond C. R. Heim H Schane J. H. Ingram A T. Taylor H. T. Jones, Jr. J. R. Venning M. H. Jones E. W. Warren, 2d J. P. Maine SCORES, 1929 1. Yale H. Wilson Opp. April 14 Worcester Academy 6 3 23 Hun School 16 10 27 U.S. Naval Tr Sta. 3 3 30 Choate 21 2 May 4 Andover 9 3 7 Roxbury 10 9 1 1 Exeter 1 2 14Milford 14 1 18 Princeton 18 1 25 Harvard 1 7 257 Captain Kieselhorst THE TRACK SEASON ' HE track acterized bril ing the part in Athletic Athletic season of 1929 was char- throughout the year by brilliant individual performances. Dur indoor season, Yale athletes took meets sponsored by the Boston Association and by the New York Club. Yale was also represented at the Millrose Games. In the A. A. U. Indoor Meet, Yale managed to take third place. The outcome of the Annual Intercollegiate Meet, however, was not so successful, Yale placing seventh. In the annual dual indoor meet with Cornell, Cornell won, 58—55, in a very close contest. The outdoor season was opened with the Penn Relays, followed by a Pennsylvania victory in the first out- door dual meet. Toward the end of the sea- son, Yale clinched the Big Three Cham- pionship with convincing triumphs over Princeton and Harvard. In the Annual Outdoor Intercollegiate Meet, Yale demon- strated her superiority over eastern rivals by placing fifth. Stanford, however, took first place by a decisive margin. Materially aided by the six first places won by Yale men, the combined Yale-Harvard forces pinned an overwhelming defeat on the Ox- ford-Cambridge team. The work of F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, Captain-elect S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30, and C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., was particu- larly brilliant throughout the season. Yale ' s national supremacy in the pole vault was demonstrated early in the fall of 1928 when F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, won the event in the National Junior A. A. U. Championships on October 13. In winning, Sturdy set a new National Junior record with a vault of 13 feet 3% inches. W. A. Cone, ' 30, placed third in this event. The Boston Athletic Association Games opened the indoor season on February 2. Six men made the trip, but due partly to the fact that the races were held on boards, none of our runners placed. Sturdy and A. Pond, 3d, ' 29 S., however, took first and third places respectively in the pole vault. Coach Connors 259 LYAL£-PAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! A week later, at the Millrose Games held in Madison Square Garden, the one-mile re- lay team, composed of S. W. Smith, ' 30, F. F. Ferguson, ' 30, F. B. Tuttle, ' 30, and C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., won over Washington Lee and Columbia. The two-mile relay team, composed of F. R. O ' Brien, ' 31, G. P. Clayson, Jr., ' 30, M. G. Talcott, ' 31, and W. E. deBuys, ' 29 S., lost a close race to Princeton. On February 19 the same two- mile relay team and eight other men com- peted in the New York Athletic Club Games. The relay team lost to both Prince- ton and Pennsylvania, but F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, won the pole vault at 14 feet, barely failing in his attempt to better the record of 14 feet 1 inch set by S. W. Carr, ' 28, a year ago. A. Pond, 3d, ' 29, took third in this event. The following Saturday, February 23, ten members of the team again competed in Madison Square Garden, this time in the National A. A. U. Championships. The team did unusually well, garnering 14 points to place Yale third. Sturdy won the pole vault at 13 feet 9 inches, A. Pond, 3d, placing third. C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., won the 300-yard run in fast time, while G. VanV. Wolf, ' 30, added two more points by tak- ing third in the high jump. The eighth Annual Indoor Intercolle- giate Meet took place on Saturday, March 2 at the 102d Engineers ' Armory in New York. Yale tallied in only two events. 260 Sturdy won the pole vault with a mark of 13 feet 1 3 A inches to break the intercolle- giate record made last year by S. W. Carr, ' 28. W. A. Cone, ' 30, and A. Pond, 3d, ' 29 S., tied for third place. In the high jump, H. Kaul, ' 29 S., and G. VanV. Wolf, ' 30, also tied for third. By scoring 10% points, Yale took seventh place. The Meet was won by New York University, chiefly on account of the brilliance of their colored star, Phil Edwards. The indoor season was brought to a close on March 9, when Cor- nell defeated Yale, 58 to 55, in their an- nual dual indoor meet. The lead shifted constantly, and four meet records were broken. F. B. Tuttle, ' 30, ran the 440-yard dash in 51 4 -. seconds, while Treman of Cornell did the 880 in 2 minutes and % seconds. Anderson of Cornell put the shot 47 feet 2Vs inches, and Sturdy vaulted 13 feet 3% inches. Yale athletes also took part in indoor meets under the auspices of the 43d Division, National Guard, in Hart- ford on March 18, and under the auspices of the New Haven Firemen ' s Athletic Asso- ciation at New Haven on March 20. The outdoor season was ushered in by the Penn Relays at Philadelphia on April 26 and 27. Yale ' s half-mile relay team, composed of S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30, F. B. Tuttle, ' 30, C. F. Gill, ' 30, and C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., finished second to the Ohio State team, which won in record time. The mile relay team finished fourth. In the indi- vidual events, F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, placed first in the pole vault, setting a new meet rec- ord at 13 feet 5 ' A inches. In the first out- door dual meet of the season, Pennsylvania triumphed over Yale 72% to 61 %, on May 4. Berlinger of Pennsylvania was the indi- vidual star of the meet, winning the jave- lin throw and the shot put, and placing in the high jump and pole vault. However, 5. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30, won the 100-yard dash and the low hurdles, while C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., came home first in the 220- yard and 440-yard dashes. Yale ' s weak- ness in the distance runs, the javelin throw, and the shot put cost her the meet. On May 18, Yale overwhelmed Prince- ton at Princeton, 86 to 49. S. B. Kiesel- horst, ' 30, and C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., again turned in remarkable performances, the former winning the 100-yard dash and the low hurdles; and the latter winning the 220-yard and the 440-yard dashes. Captain J. A. Brandenburg, ' 29 S., F. N. Conner, ' 31, and F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, also turned in good performances, winning the discus throw, the hammer throw, and the pole vault respectively. Hedges was the indi- vidual star for Princeton, winning the high jump, broad jump, and high hurdles. On the following Saturday, May 25, 1YAL -BAKNGR AND POT-POURRI! Yale met Harvard in the thirty-seventh dual meet between the two universities. This meet also served as the tryout to determine the members of the combined Yale-Harvard team to compete with the Oxford-Cambridge team in their biennial meet. Engle again captured the 220-yard and the 440-yard dashes, and Kieselhorst won the 100-yard dash. These victories more than counterbalanced Harvard ' s wins in the longer runs. Sturdy set a new meet record by winning the pole vault at 13 feet 7 inches. W. A. Cone, ' 30, and A. Pond, 3d, ' 29 S., completed a sweep in this event by tying for second at 13 feet. Captain Brandenburg won the discus, and Conner, the hammer throw. The meet went to Yale by the close score of 71 to 64. On May 31 and June 1, the team took part in the Intercollegiates at Philadelphia. S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30, ran the low hurdles to retain his last year ' s title. F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, managed to tie for first in the pole vault with Edmonds of Stanford and Wil- liams of Southern California at 13 feet 9 inches. C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., was barely beaten in the 440-yard dash by Bowen of Pittsburgh, who won in 48% seconds. Stanford won the meet, Yale taking fifth place. Smith, Clayson, Tuttle, Engle The Mile Relay Team YALE-HARVARD— OXFORD-CAMBRIDGE MEET After a two weeks ' training period, the Yale-Harvard team overwhelmed the Ox- ford-Cambridge team in their biennial meet at Soldiers ' Field, Cambridge. The English- men were able to garner only 3 ' 2 firsts, while the Americans won 8V2. Captain- elect S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30, accounted for wins in the 100-yard dash and in the low hurdles, setting a record in the latter event. C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., also was a double win- ner, running away with the 220-yard and the 440-yard dashes, equaling the record in the latter event. F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, set a new record in the pole vault at 13 feet, 3Vi inches. ]. S. O ' Gorman, ' 29 S., won the shot put, with J. E. Uihlein, ' 32, sensa- tional freshman, a close second. 261 First Row: Cone, Macdonald, Tuttle, M. D. Smith, Carr, O ' Brien, Talcott Second Row: Oldt, Wolf, Pond, Engle, Capt. Brandenburg, Kiesel- horst, Sturdy, Kaul, King Third Row: Moore, Hampton, Crile, Keesling, Gill, Cunningham, DeVoe, Clayson Fourth Row: W. F. Smith, Coach Kanaly, O ' Gorman, Mgr. Kaul, Conner, Coach Connors, Ferguson The 1929 University Track Team -YALG-PANNGR AND POT-POMI! UNIVERSITY TRACK TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30 . Captain J. N. Hazard, ' 30 . Manager S. Cook, ' 31 . Assistant Manager D C. S. Connors F. Kanaly . Head Coach Associate Coach J. N. Hazard, ' 30 Manager of Track ). A. Brandenburg P. S. Carr C. P. Clayson, Jr. W. A. Cone F. N. Conner C. H. Crile B. S. Cunningham A. C. DeVoe C. H. Engle F. F. Ferguson TRACK TEAM, 1929 Y Men C. F. Gill C. M. Hampton F. V. Keesling, Jr. S. B. Kieselhorst J. L King J. H. Macdonald T. E. Moore F. R. O ' Brien J. S. O ' Corman, Jr. F. T. Oldt, 2d A. Pond, 3d H. C. Reiner M. D. Smith W. F. Smith, Jr. F. H. Sturdy M. C. Talcott, Jr. F. B. Tuttle F. E. Weicker C. V. V. Wolf MEETS May 4, at New Haven, Penn 73%, Yale 61 V 3 May 18, at Princeton, Yale 86, Princeton 49 May 25, at New Haven, Yale 71, Harvard 64 INTERCOLLEGIATE MEET Held at Philadelphia, May 31 and June 1 Stanford 45% Southern California 21 Penn 18% New York University .... 14 Yale 13% PLACES WON BY YALE QUALIFIERS 220-yard low hurdles Kieselhorst, first 440-yard dash . Engle, second Pole vault . Sturdy, tied for first High jump Wolf, tied for fourth Pole vault . . . Pond, tied for fifth 220-yard dash .... Engle, sixth 263 First Row: Carroll, Tate, Madden, Kerr, Shinnen, Harrington, Henry Second Row: Taylor, Lee, Crawford, Anderson, Capt. Barres, Uihlein, Tritle, Paige, Johnson Third Row: Coach Kanaly, Worrall, Sheffield, Mgr. Hazard, Canson, Rowland, Coach Connors The 1932 Freshman Track Team _YAL£-BAW€R AND POT-POURRI! FRESHMAN TRACK ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929 H. Barres Captain J. N. Hazard .... Manager C. S. Connors Coach F. Kanaly Coach Captain Barres TEAM C. S. Anderson T. P. Avery H. Barres R. C. Carroll J. B. Crawford H. L. Fates C. M. Canson W. F. Harrington, D. W. Henry C. L. Johnson, Jr. F. H. Keer T. H. Lee J. C. Madden J. Paige, Jr. E. Rotan, 2d B. A. Rowland T. C. Sheffield J. M. Shinnen I. D. Tate J. C. Taylor J. S. Trifle, Jr. J. E. Uihlein, Jr. W. L. Worrall MEETS At New Haven, May 4, Yale 74 . Andover 52 At Princeton, May 18, Yale 62 Princeton 73 At New Haven, May 25, Yale 53 Y- Harvard 81 % 265 Front Row: Whittemore, Bryan, Bullock, W. F. Smith, M. D. Smith, Pope, Echols Back Row: Cleveland, Harrington, Duberg, Gaud, Coach Kanaly The University Cross Country Team _YALG--PAN 0 AND POT-POUWI! UNIVERSITY CROSS COUNTRY TEAM OFFICERS W. F. Smith, ' 30 . . . . Captain F. Kanaly Coach W. H. Cleveland, ' 30 . . Manager TEAM W. F. Smith, ' 30, Captain F. M. Bryan, ' 31 C. Bullock, ' 31 H. P. J. Duberg, ' 30 A. C. Echols, ' 30 H. T. Gaud, ' 31 S. W. H. Harrington, Jr., ' 32 C. R. Pope, ' 30 M. D. Smith, ' 30 F. H. Whittemore, ' 32 YALE-CORNELL MEET At Cornell, November 2, 1929 Cornell 19 Yale 54 YALE-HARVARD MEET At Cambridge, November 8, 1929 . . . Harvard 19 Yale 52 Individual Winner, Hallowell, Harvard 28 min. % sec. 1. Hallowell— 2. Smith— Y 3. Aldrich— H 4. Fox— H H ORDER OF FINISH 5. Barrie — H 6. Burr— H 7. Fobes— H 8. Bullock— Y 9. Hodges— H 10. F loathe— H YALE-PRINCETON MEET At New Haven, November 15, 1929 . . Princeton 27 Yale 28 Individual Winner, Smith, Yale . . 33 min. 16% sec. 1. Smith — Y 2. Brion — P 3. Harrington — Y 4. Saltus— P 5. Spencer — P 6. Bullock— Y 7. Meere — P 8. Pope— Y 9. Bell— P 10. Gaud— Y I.C. A. A. A. A. CHAMPIONSHIP MEET At Van Cortland Park, New York City . . . November 25, 1929 Individual Winner, Lindsay, Maine . . 30 min. 6 sec. 1. Penn . . . 62 2. Michigan State . 81 3. Bates .... 97 4. Syracuse . . . 114 ;: Low score wins. ORDER OF FINISH 5. Maine .... 141 6. Penn State . . 169 7. N. Y. U. . . . 185 8. Harvard 9. Manhattan 10. Cornell 218 256 278 267 Front Row: Dickinson, French, Capt. Woodland, Hill, Orr Back Row: Mgr. MacChesney, Schoyer, Cray, Thomas, Hotchkiss, Coach Kanaly The 1933 Freshman Cross Country Team 1YALG--BAKNGR AND P0T-POUR I! FRESHMAN CROSS COUNTRY TEAM OFFICERS H. C. Woodland .... Captain F. Kanaly Coach A. B. MacChesney, ' 31 . . Manager TEAM W.R.Bennett J. B. Orr, Jr. O.B.Dickinson L. M. Thomas, Jr. C T French H. C. Woodland H. L Hill MEETS At New Haven, October 29, 1929 . New Haven H. S. 48 Yale 22 At Cambridge, November 8, 1929 . . . Harvard 15 Yale 48 At New Haven, November 15, 1929 . . Princeton 33 Yale 24 FRESHMAN INTERCOLLECIATES At Van Cortland Park, New York City, November 25, 1929 ORDER OF FINIS H 1. N. Y. U. . . 2. Cornell 3. Syracuse . 4. Yale . . . 52 . 104 . 110 . 120 5. 6. 7. Penn State Union . . . . Columbia . 124 132 151 8. 9. 10 Manhattan Dartmouth M. 1. T. . . . 188 . 191 214 Low score wins. 269 Captain Blagden 1YAL£-BAKN€R AND POT-POURRI! CREW SEASON, 1929 AS we look back over the 1929 season, A- we find only one dark spot to mar an otherwise successful season. On Derby Day the powerful Columbia crew, which later won the Intercollegiate Regatta at Poughkeepsie, managed to nose Yale out in the final sprint after one of the most exciting and brilliant races ever witnessed on the Housatonic. Although the outcome of this event was not in our favor, Colum- bia was rated as the finest eight in the country, and the finish was so close that the spectators were not sure of the result until the judges had announced the winner. Against Princeton and Cornell Yale showed a decided improvement, winning by a good margin, while Harvard trailed by over four lengths at New London in the final race of the year. Thus the crew of 1929 will always be remembered as one of the best. At the annual rally on the twenty-eighth of September, the coaches and managers announced plans for the year, and the fol- lowing day the University squad, under Coach Ed Leader, had their initial workout at Derby. Within the next week the re- maining crew squads began work, swelling the number of participants to almost three hundred. Aided by good weather, rowing was continued until November fifteenth, when the annual fall Class Regatta took place. The Senior crew was the victor. After Christmas vacation work in the tank and on the machines began, several foot- ball players reporting to strengthen the various squads. During the brief midyear exam period all rowing was stopped, but on February 26 the three University crews took to the waters of New Haven Harbor. On March 11 rowing began at Derby, and continued until the Varsity squad moved to its quarters at Cales Ferry to prepare for the Harvard race. During the Easter vacation there were two workouts a day, and much shifting of positions was in order. Ed Leader seemed to be having some difficulty in finding a smooth combination. However, the final line-up was determined and underwent no change for the rest of the season. The racing season opened on April 27 with the Freshman 150-lb. crew rowing against Kent. The first Kent crew was very much heavier than our yearlings, winning by two lengths. The second Kent crew beat the Junior Varsity 150-lb. crew by a length. The Derby Day Regatta took place on May 4 between Yale, Columbia, and Penn- sylvania. The first race, for the 150-lb. crews, was won by Columbia, with Pennsyl- vania second and Yale third, a length sepa- rating the boats. It was a battle from the start, but the blue lightweights seemed to be outclassed in the final sprint. The Junior Varsity was very close with Columbia flash- ing into the lead in the last quarter mile. Columbia also took the laurels away from Yale and Pennsylvania in the Freshman event. The last race of the afternoon was the Varsity tilt. Columbia was the slight fa- E. O. Leader, Coach of Crew vorite, since they had been rowing together all season. Columbia got away first, and maintained her lead until the mile mark had been passed. At this point Penn had dropped back, and Yale had pulled up al- most on even terms with Columbia. Both crews were moving with long smooth strokes, and it was apparent that the finish would be close. As the two crews swung into the last half mile, the two stroke oars started to raise the beat until a hundred yards from the finish both crews were row- ing at a little better than forty. Yale had been gradually closing the distance, and it seemed for a moment as if they would catch their rivals. The distance to the finish, however, was too short, and Co- lumbia won by about a quarter of a length. The Class Crew Regatta was held on May 7, 8, and 9 under ideal rowing conditions. The Sophomore A crew was the winner. On May 18 the annual race against Cornell and Princeton was held on Lake Cayuga. With a slight drizzle falling and with a light breeze ruffling the surface of the 271 LYAL€ PAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! Christenson, Tappen, Turner, Rogers, Ladd, Goodbody, Goodyear, Hunt, Morris The Junior Varsity Crew, 1929 water, the Junior Varsity won the first race, but in the second, the Freshman crew was beaten by Cornell. By the time the Varsity race was ready to start, the breeze had in- creased, but the lake was only moderately rough. Yale showed a decided improvement in form and displayed much power, never being threatened during the entire race. At the finish the blue-tipped oars flashed across the line a length ahead of Cornell and two lengths ahead of Princeton. While the Varsity heavies were display- ing their superiority at Ithaca, the Varsity and Freshman 150-lb. crews and the Sophomore Class crew met Harvard on the Charles River. In the first race the water was very rough, making a high stroke im- possible and handicapping the low-rigged Yale Class crew to a marked extent. Har- vard won by several lengths, since they were used to the conditions. Through a misunderstanding, the distance of the Freshman 150-lb. race was changed at the last minute from the Henley distance of a mile and five-sixteenths to a mile. In spite of this handicap and of rough water, the Yale Freshman crew put up a beautiful fight, but were beaten by less than a quar- ter of a length. It was one of the most ex- citing races of the year, there never being 272 more than a few feet between the two crews. The last event between the Red and the Blue was the Varsity 150-lb. race, which was no less dramatic. Yale took the lead soon after the start, but Harvard nosed them out in the last quarter mile. One of the most exciting races of the year was the race on the Schuylkill at Phila- delphia, in which the third Varsity crew beat Harvard, Princeton, and Pennsylvania in a very close finish. The Varsity 1 50-lb. crew rowed a fine race, but the Harvard and Columbia lightweights were able to sprint at a higher stroke, and finished ahead of Yale by a length and a half-length re- spectively. On May 28, earlier than usual, the Var- sity and Freshman squads, managers, and coaches left for Gales Ferry aboard Mr. Sal- vage ' s yacht Colleen, an innovation which proved very pleasant. For the next week and a half examinations occupied much of the time, and light workouts were in order. As soon as the books were set aside, the workouts became longer, and fre- quent four-mile time trials were held. The Varsity line-up remained intact, but the Freshman and Junior Varsity eights under- went a series of changes to improve their speed. LYALG-BANnO and pgt-pgur i: On the afternoon of June 19, the com- bination crew met Harvard in a very ex- citing race. Already several yachts had come to anchor along the Thames course, and the day was ideal. Harvard got away to a beautiful start, but Yale pressed them closely until the last half mile, when Har- vard managed to win by less than a length. The day of the race dawned bright and clear, and from an early hour the spectator fleet swarmed up the river to positions as near the upstream finish line as their size permitted. Since the upper Thames is shal- low, most of the large yachts had to drop anchor below the submarine base. The smaller boats, however, clustered around the finish line, so that the spectators on the trains could hardly see the last quarter mile of the course. The first event of the morning was the Freshman race over the middle two miles of the four-mile course. Yale rowed a beautiful and quite unex- pected race to beat their rivals by a matter of feet after one of the most exciting sprints ever witnessed. Coming from behind in the last hundred yards, the Freshman eight managed to pass the Harvard crew just before the finish line. The Junior Var- sity race was not as close as the one pre- ceding it, and Yale had little trouble in win- ning by two lengths. Promptly at seven o ' clock the referee, from his launch under the railroad bridge, lined the two boats up and sent them off to a very even start. At the two-mile mark the blue-tipped oars were two lengths in the lead with little chance of being overhauled by a game but inferior Harvard eight. By the time the finish line was reached, Palmer had raised the stroke to an even thirty-eight, and Yale had increased her lead to almost five lengths. As they flashed by the final marker flags, the sound of whistles and horns from the spectator fleet made a din that paid a very fitting compli- ment to a fast and fighting Yale crew. Loomis, Palmer, Blagden, Brewster, Sutherland, Carnsey, McCalmont, Cushman, Mosle The University Crew 273 The Crew Squad at Gales Ferry LYALG BAhN€ AND POTPOURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY BOAT CLUB OFFICERS, 1929-1930 Augustus S. Blagden, Jr. Edwin O. Leader Hamilton Hitt, ' 30 S. ' 30 S. Captain Coach . Manager Donald G. Austin, ' 31 Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1928-1929 Robert E. Cushman, ' 29 Edwin O. Leader Roger C. Damon, ' 29 Captain Coach Manager Hamilton Hitt, ' 30 S. M anager of Crew UNIVERSITY CREW, 1928 -1929 Height Position Name Class Age ft. in. Weight Stroke A. E. Palmer, Jr. ' 30 20 6 2 188 7 A. S. Blagden, Jr. ' 30 S. 22 6 1 172 6 B. Brewster ' 29 21 6 2 172 5 C. W. Sutherland ' 29 21 6 2 188 4 W. W. Garnsey ' 30 21 6 2 180 3 S. P. McCalmont ' 30 S. 22 6 2 ' 2 175 2 R. E. Cushman ' 29 23 6 21 2 165 Bow W. B. Mosle Average ' 30 21 21 6 1 172 6 2 176 Cox. E. B. Loomis ' 29 22 5 7 113 275 Practice on the Housatonic LYALG-BAnNGR AND POT-POURRI! 150-POUND CREW SEASON M. Fenton, ' 29 . R. C. Damon, ' 29 Captain Manager YALE VERSUS COLUMBIA AND PENNSYLVANIA Derby, Conn., May 4, 1929 . Won by Columbia Columbia 7 min. 7 sec. Pennsylvania 7 min. 12 sec. Yale 7 min. 17% sec. M. Fenton, ' 29 .... 6 E. O. Holter, Jr., ' 30 . . 7 T. W. Hefferan, Jr., ' 31 Stroke H. Seely, ' 29 ... Cox. R. M. Putnam, ' 30 . Bow H. B. Ward, Jr., ' 29 . 2 E. H. Hoffman, ' 31 S. . 3 H. W. R. Barry, ' 31 S. . 4 DeW. Dominick, ' 30 . 5 YALE-HARVARD RACE Cambridge, Mass., May 18, 1929 . . Won by Harvard Harvard 6 min. 59 sec Yale 7 min. 1 sec. C. S. Ford, ' 31 . . H. B. Ward, Jr., ' 29 L. Thorne, ' 31 E. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 . DeW. Dominick, ' 30 Bow . 2 . 3 . 4 . 5 M. Fenton, ' 29 .... 6 E. O. Holter, Jr., ' 30 . . 7 T. W. Hefferan, Jr., ' 31 Stroke H. Seely, ' 29 ... Cox. YALE-COLUMBIA-HARVARD RACE Philadelphia, Pa., May 25, 1929 . Won by Harvard Columbia second. Yale third. Time: 6 min. 40% sec. C. S. Ford, ' 31 . . . Bow H. B. Ward, Jr., ' 29 . . 2 L. Thorne, ' 31 .... 3 E. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 ... 4 DeW. Dominick, ' 30 . . 5 M. Fenton, ' 29 .... 6 E. O. Holter, Jr., ' 30 . . 7 T. W. Hefferan, Jr., ' 31 Stroke H. Seely, ' 29 ... Cox. 277 Gillespie, Auchincloss, Currie, Coodale, Knott, Manuel, Munson, Cussler, Sweet The 1932 Freshman Crew LYALG-BANvO AND POT-POURRI: SEASON 1928-1929 1932 FRESHMAN CREW E. Currie, ' 32 Captain R. C. Damon, ' 29 . . Manager F. W. Spuhn Coach YALE-PENNSYLVANIA-COLUMBIA FRESHMAN RACE Derby, Conn., May 4, 1929 . Course two miles . Won by Columbia Columbia 10 min. 58 ' A sec. Yale 1 1 min. Pennsylvania 1 1 min. 9 sec. E. A. Sweet . . Bow E. L. Cussler . . . 2 C. Munson . . 3 W. W. Littell . . 4 J. Knott . . . E. C. Brewster E. L. Currie . R. S. Auchincloss S. H. Gillespie . 5 . 6 . 7 Stroke Cox. YALE-PRINCETON-CORNELL FRESHMAN RACE Lake Cayuga, N. Y., May 18, 1929 . Course two miles . Won by Cornell Cornell 10 min. 35 sec. Yale 10 min. 42 2 sec. Princeton 10 min. 43 sec. E. A. Sweet . . Bow E. L. Cussler . . . 2 C. Munson . . 3 W. W. Littell . . . 4 J. Knott . . . E. C. Brewster E. L. Currie . R. S. Auchincloss C. R. Conger . . 5 . 6 . 7 Stroke Cox. YALE-HARVARD FRESHMAN RACE New London, Conn., June 21, 1929 . Course two miles . Yale 11 min. 7 sec Harvard 11 Won by Yale min. 9% sec. E. A. Sweet . D. B. Manuel G. Munson E. L Cussler , Bow . 2 . 3 . 4 J. Knott . . . R. L. Goodale . E. L. Currie . R. S. Auchincloss S. H. Gillespie . 5 . 6 . 7 Stroke Cox. 279 Shwab, Marvel, Wilcox, Mills, Smith, VanSchaick, Bangs, Bowden, Gillespie The Freshman Light Crew lYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! FRESHMAN LIGHT CREW W. M. Bowden, ' 32 . Captain D. F. Grant Coach H. Hitt ' 30 S Manager YALE FRESHMAN VERSUS KENT SCHOOL Derby, Conn., April 27, 1929 . Won by Kent YALE 1. c. Wilcox . Bow c. p. Mills . . . . 2 A R. Smith . . . 3 C. P. Chapman . . . 4 D. S. Gamble, 3d G. W. VanSchaick E. D. Bangs . . W. M. Bowden C. R. Conger, 3d . 5 . 6 . 7 Stroke Cox. YALE FRESHMAN VERSUS HARVARD Cambridge, Mass., May 18, 1929 . Won by Harvard YALE H. M. Shwab, Jr. Bow W. Marvel . . 2 J. G. Wilcox . . . . 3 G. P. Mills . . . . 4 A. R. Smith . . G. W. VanSchaick E. D. Bangs . . W. M. Bowden . S. H. Gillespie, Jr. . 5 . 6 . 7 Stroke Cox. 281 Captain Wilson 1YALG- AKNGR AND POT-POURRI! HOCKEY SEASON THE season was formally opened on No- vember 18 with a meeting at Lamp- son Lyceum. Since only two members of last year ' s squad were lost by graduation, a great quantity of veteran material was present, as well as many promising sopho- mores. Speeches by Coach L. M. Noble, 1927, J. M. Cates, 1906, Athletic Director, Captain R. F. Wilson, Holcomb York, 1917, R. F. Vaughan, 1928, and Manager C. B. Longstreth featured the meeting. About two weeks ' practice was held in which the squad was divided into the varsity and Jun- ior varsity squads prior to the opening game with Boston University. Boston University brought a team of veterans down on December 1 1 to inau- gurate Yale ' s schedule. But they were no match for the Blue and Palmer, whose three unassisted goals were the features of the game, and they were defeated by a 6 to 2 score. Nelson, Schley, and Winter each contributed one goal to the Eli ' s total. No penalties were inflicted upon the Yale players. The University Club of Boston, which in past years has always provided stiff com- petition for Yale, lived up to its standard when on December 14 it held the Blue to a 1 to score. Nelson tallied in the first period. Learned, the spectacular goalie for the visitors, provided the thrills of the game when he successfully turned back all the dashes of the Yale forwards who were continually penetrating far into enemy ter- ritory. With the coming of Christmas vacation, Yale invaded Madison Square Garden on December 21 and nosed out Dartmouth College for a 3 to 2 victory. Dartmouth scored after fifteen minutes of the first period. Yale tied things up in the second and jumped ahead on two goals by Bost- wick. But Dartmouth snapped back. Then Nelson scored, leaving Yale ahead by a point as the last frame opened. The last pe- riod was hard fought and spectacular, but no further scoring was done. On December 29, after a week ' s rest, sixteen Blue skaters embarked by train for the Adirondacks, where at the Lake Placid Club they were to test the strength of the cream of the Middle Western crop, Michi- gan University. In spite of soft ice due to unexpected warm weather and many flur- ries of snow, Yale ran through her series of three games without a setback, the scores being 7 to 1, 1 to 0, and 8 to 2. In the first game on December 30, Yale was working smoothly, her offensive was clicking in mid-season style, and her whole squad of sixteen men, all of whom saw action, was in good condition. Bostwick repeated his Dartmouth performance, registering two, while Bent, Luce, Iglehart, Palmer, and Nelson also struck home for scores. In the second encounter on the next day, the Elis, without exerting themselves, just managed to squeeze out a 1 to win, with Iglehart credited with the only score. The game was as rough as it was ragged, nineteen men be- ing sent to the Penalty Box. Luce in the last of the series, entertained with a magnifi- cent solo exhibition of scoring. During one three-minute period he pushed the disk past the astonished opposing goalie three times. He added to this off and on during the battle with two other markers. Bost- wick, McLennan, and Schley added one each. For the first time during the week the weather was clear and the ice smooth. Returning to New York in the prime of condition, Yale was faced with the propo- sition of crossing sticks on January fourth with a team that had upset Harvard twice during the past week and had sadly de- molished a supposedly powerful Dartmouth team, 11 to 3. This was the Toronto Uni- versity sextet which, since its invasion into American soil, had remained undefeated. But Yale duplicated her feat of last year. She even toppled the Canadians by the same score, 3 to 2, as that of last year. The battle had championship flavor; papers said it would settle the intercollegiate title. After the game people claimed that seldom is better or faster college hockey than that of this struggle seen in the East. Toronto, led by Red Whitehead, opened the scoring early in the opening frame. This score re- mained during the first period. Yale came back strong in the next period, Luce, in three minutes of brilliant hockey, so char- acteristic of this Eli team during certain short intervals, sinking two shots. But, with twenty-nine seconds of the period left, Toronto retaliated with one. Traditional determination and bitterness characterized the last canto. Palmer put Yale ahead with a long shot. In the remaining minutes of play, Iglehart ' s poke checking featured the Blue ' s air-tight defense. Michigan Tech, reputed to be good and credited with a 3 to 3 tie with Princeton the week before, invaded the Blue ' s ground on January 7. The score, which was 15 to 0, indicates the one-sidedness of the game. Eighteen Blue-jerseyed warriors joined in the rout; eight of these entered the scoring column: Palmer with four goals, McLennan with 3, Bostwick and Luce each with 2, 283 iyalg-panvo and pot-pourri: Coach Noble Bent, Iglehart, and Muhlfeld and Nelson with one apiece. Because of the cancellation of the Dart- mouth game due to the lack of ice at Hanover on January 11, a game with the Boston Hockey Club, a new organization with considerable individual class, was sub- stituted on January 15. Yale repeated her double-figure performance of the last game, amassing 1 1 points to the Boston team ' s 3. Palmer ran wild, skating around the opposing defense at will and netting five goals. He was ably assisted by Luce, whose three goals, added to those of Bent, Cookman, and McLennan, made up the 11. Luce furnished a spectacular feat when, with two Yale men off the ice and the Boston players forcing for a score, he skated through the whole opposing team and slid one unassisted past the goalie. He repeated a few minutes later when one Yale man was serving a two-minute pen- alty. The team was handicapped by the ab- sence of Wilson and Farrel, owing to in- juries. With memories of a previous 1 to close call, Yale took on for the second time the University Club of Boston. The game, played on January 18, was closely fought during the first period. It was not until the middle of the second period that the first goal was netted off McLennan ' s stick. This started an offensive rampage which left the score 5 to at the end of this period and 8 to 1 at the close of the game. Luce, Palmer, and Nelson scored twice, while Bent and McLennan added one apiece. On January 22, Dartmouth, fresh from an 8 to 4 win over Princeton, entered the Arena with hopes of reversing the 3 to 2 score of the last encounter. They left a few hours later that night with an 1 1 to 1 score 284 staring them in the face. The Bulldog had bitten again with all his former vehemence. An unbelievable total of ten goals was chalked up after two periods of an irre- sistible Blue surge. Dartmouth, despite her willingness to fight continuously, although hopelessly outclassed, played raggedly, lacking the teamwork and defense which more practice might have produced. Luce scored three, Palmer, Bostwick, and Nel- son two, Bent and Hickok one. Mid-term vacation having given Wilson and Farrel enough time to recuperate from their injuries, Yale in full strength entered the game on February 8 with a strong Clarkson sextet. This small college from Potsdam, New York, had produced in the past many strong combinations. This year ' s aggregation was no exception. It was a fast and tricky lot of skaters, seriously handi- capped by the lack of substitutes, that fell a tough victim to the tune of 5 to 1 before Yale ' s offense. Wilson and Farrel seemed but slightly affected by their long rests, the former continuing his bearcat work at dumping attacking puckmen while the lat- ter showed his old skilful style before the nets. McLennan led the scoring with two tallies. Bent, Bostwick, and Palmer also contributed. Marquette University, bringing a crack sextet that had swept all opposition before its path in the Middle West, invaded New Haven on February 11. Although their team included MacKenzie and McFayden who are considered to be two of the most outstanding individual stars in college hockey, and although they had beaten the Army and Harvard, they could not stop Yale ' s last-minute rush which resulted in four goals to give the Elis an 8 to 3 victory. The visitor ' s defense consisting of three men lined up on the Blue line flanked closely by the two wingmen, caused Yale so much trouble that until three minutes before the end of the game they held Yale to a 4 to 3 score. But, after a solo dash by Palmer which resulted in a beautiful tally, with three and one-half minutes to go, the Blue ' s offensive cut loose, ran over a tired Marquette team, and netted the puck three more times. Palmer scored three times, Luce and McLennan twice, and Bent once. On the day after the Marquette game, February 12, Yale added one more victim to her already large total. This was the St. Nick ' s aggregation which included in its personnel many former college stars. Lack of proper practice, however, caused them a 7 to 1 defeat. Although Yale won the game, which was dull and slow, her offense failed to click properly. Palmer tallied twice, Luce, McLennan, Todd, Nelson, and Stod- dard once. LYAL£-BAhN€R AND POT-POURRI! With an impressive record of fourteen consecutive victories, Yale entered the first game of the series with Princeton on February 15, a distinct favorite. But the Orange and Black sextet offered a fierce resistance that checked Yale during most of the game and held her to a 4 to 2 win. Princeton brought up an inexperienced line made up completely of sophomores, but this trio, ably assisted by Adams and Liv- ingston on the defense, stopped the Blue advances time and again at the Blue line and forced Yale into ragged playing. Bent opened the scoring after just twenty-one seconds of the first period had gotten under way. Nelson added one more to the total before the Tigers woke up. In the second period the visiting team knotted the count. With the ejection in the final period of two Yale players, the Blue skaters seemed to suddenly become aroused with the result that Palmer and Bostwick polished the Tigers off with two quick goals. At Princeton the next week a well-or- ganized attack functioned smoothly enough to defeat Princeton in the second game of the series by a 5 to 1 score. Yale ' s ample supply of reserve material wore down the opponents sufficiently to allow Bent, Bost- Captain-Elect Luce 285 LYALG BANvl€R AND POT-POURRI: wick, McLennan, Palmer, and Wilson to score. Harvard surprised a not too cautious Yale team on March 1 and succeeded in accomplishing a feat which no other team this season had been able to do, and that was to beat the Blue sextet, 3 to 2. The Crimson team faced a not altogether hope- less task in this series. They had lost only to Marquette and Toronto and since being defeated had been strengthened by the re- turn of Giddens and had been improving steadily with each contest played. Practice with the Bruins had helped them consid- erably and the work which Tiny Thomp- son, the Bruins ' goalie, had spent instruct- ing Ellis was clearly evident in the re- markable showing of the Harvard goalie in the game. After a fierce but scoreless first period, Everett of Harvard opened the scor- ing after seven minutes of the second frame. McLennan retaliated within a min- ute. Then Bent shot a sizzling low one past Ellis that pushed Yale into the lead. This seemed enough to assure the Eli sextet of a victory but Wood converted a rebound of Giddens for the tying score with four minutes of the game left to play. In the overtime period it was Captain Putnam who pulled the noose tight and launched the Yale team through the trapdoor of de- feat when after two minutes of play he drew Curtiss out to lift the disk easily over him. Harvard, still showing her best form of the season, as she had all through the game, froze the puck and clung to her one point margin. Curtiss, seeing his first ex- tended action before the Blue ' s nets, showed up to good advantage and justified Coach Noble ' s decision in placing him in the starting line-up ahead of Farrel and Sizer. On March 8, Yale changed her style of play and displayed a continued air-tight de- fense, with the win gs closely guarding the Crimson flankmen. Never during the game, which was played in the new Boston Gar- den, was Yale really threatened, although the score of 3 to 1 indicates a closer strug- gle. Palmer discarded his usual purely of- fensive tactics and proved himself to be as valuable on the defense in covering a man as he is on the offense. Yale was seriously handicapped by the injury in the first game of Nelson, second-line center, but Cook- man ably substituted and opened the scor- ing in the first period. Harvard quickly evened matters and thus the score re- mained until the beginning of the second frame, when Luce charged down with Palmer skating alongside and dented the Harvard netting for the goal that broke the tie. Bostwick picked up a loose puck a few minutes afterward and flipped it into the 286 corner of the Crimson net to give Yale a safe 3 to 1 margin. The last chapter, al- though fierce and ragged, produced no scoring. It was their forceful, determined, and aggressive style of play that decided the issue in favor of the Blue skaters. Because of the deadlock resulting from these two games, a play-off was necessary. On Wednesday, March 12, Yale once again ventured into Boston territory to face Harvard. The odds were favoring Yale, partly because of the ineligibility of Stubbs, stellar Crimson wingman, and mostly be- cause of the Elis impressive showing in the Garden the Saturday before. Fourteen thou- sand people, just a thousand short of the number that attended the previous game, crowded into the Garden to watch a spec- tacular performance which, after three overtime periods of futile hockey, resulted in a 2 to 2 tie. Harvard came back, re- versed her style of play from the week be- fore, and held the Blue skaters on even terms for most of the game. After four minutes of the first period, Cunningham, Crimson defense man, sent the crowds into an uproar when he beat Curtiss on a shot that put Harvard ahead in the series. Palmer ten minutes later received a per- fect pass from Luce and easily sank the tying goal. The second period saw many penalties inflicted on Yale but no further scoring. With eight minutes of this period left, Gidden, who was continually threaten- ing the Eli defense, put Harvard ahead. This seemed to be enough to assure a vic- tory, but Hickok picked up a loose puck from in front of the nets and slammed it home for the tally that made it necessary for the two teams to enter three overtime periods which proved nothing concerning the relative merits of the two sextets ex- cept that they were playing about as close hockey as any two teams could be expected to play. And thus, as midnight approached the score had to remain 2 to 2. After frank and full consideration of Yale ' s preference and proposal to continue and conclude the Harvard-Yale Hockey series either in New York or in Boston, it is understood that no further play-off game will be held. Although not being able to claim the in- tercollegiate title because of the series with Harvard, it can be justly said that the Yale team went through one of its more suc- cessful seasons, having won seventeen games, lost one, and tied one. The follow- ing were awarded their Y: J. P. Bent, D. W. Bostwick, J. Cookman, C. Curtiss, F. Far- rel, 3d, D. H. Hickok, S. Iglehart, F. L. Luce, D. R. McLennan, J. Muhlfeld, F. A. Nelson, W. H. Palmer, R. Schley, W. Sizer, _YAL£-BAhN€R AND P0T-P0UMI. E. C. Stoddard, R. F. Wilson, and j. K. elected captain of next year ' s team, and the Winter. At the banquet held at the Hotel appointment of J. D. Garrison as Manager Taft on Monday, March 17, which offi- and H. T. Jones as Assistant Manager was daily closed the season, F. L. Luce was also announced. 287 First Row: Nelson, Bent Second Row: Bostwick, McLennan, Farrel, Luce, Capt. Wilson, Pal- mer, Curtiss, Hickok, Cookman Third Row: Iglehart, Muhlfeld, Schley, Coach Noble, Mgr. Longstreth, Winter, Stoddard, Sizer The University Hockey Team _YALG BANvl€R AND POTPOURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY HOCKEY TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 R. F. Wilson, ' 30 .... Captain G. B. Longstreth, ' 30 . . Manager J. D. Garrison, ' 31 Assistant Manager L. M. Noble, ' 27 Coach C. B. Longstreth, Manager TEAM, 1929-1930 J. P. Bent D. W. Bostwick J. E. Cookman C. Curtiss, Jr. F. Farrel, 3d D. H. Hickok S. B. Iglehart F. L. Luce, Jr. D. R. McLennan, Jr. J. E. Muhlfeld F. A. Nelson, Jr. W. H. Palmer R. Schley, Jr. W. Sizer E. C. Stoddard R. F. Wilson J. K. Winter SCORES Yale Opp. Dec. 11 Boston Univers ty 6 2 Dec. 14 University Club of Boston 1 Dec. 21 Dartmouth 3 2 Dec. 30 Michigan University . 7 1 Dec. 31 Michigan University 1 Jan. 1 Michigan University 8 2 Jan. 4 Toronto 3 2 Jan. 7 Michigan Tech 15 Jan. 1 5 Boston Hockey Club ' . 11 3 Jan. 18 University Club of Boston 8 1 Jan. 22 Dartmouth 11 1 Feb. 8 Clarkson Tech. 5 1 Feb. 11 Marquette 8 3 Feb. 12 St. Nicks 7 1 Feb. 15 Princeton 4 2 Feb. 22 Princeton 5 1 Mar 1 Harvard 2 3 Mar 8 Harvard 3 1 Mar 12 Harvard 2 2 289 Front Row: Tweedy, Fletcher, Barnes, Capt. Parker, Ryan, Cookman, Wiegand Back Row: Mgr. Garrison, Vaughan, Stone, Johnson, Wheeler, Gil- lette, Knox The 1933 Freshman Hockey Team 1YALG--PAW£R AND POT-POURRI! YALE FRESHMAN HOCKEY TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 R. B. Parker, ' 33 . . . Captain John Garrison, ' 31 . . Manager Richard Vaughan . . Coach M |v,1933 R. B. Parker, Captain TEAM C. T. Barnes A. S. Cookman, A. C. Fletcher W. P. Gillette A. T. Johnson D. Knox Jr. R. B. Parker Q. Ryan D. B. Stone H. L. Tweedy E. A. Wheeler F. J. Wiegand Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. 11 15 18 22 5 9 Feb. 12 Feb. 15 Feb. 22 Mar. 1 SCORES Yale Opp. Melrose H. S. 1 2 Choate 6 3 Morristown 5 1 Hotchkiss 8 1 Dartmouth, 1933 2 Kent 1 1 St. Paul ' s 2 3 Carteret 4 2 Princeton, 1933 2 3 Harvard, 1933 3 3 291 LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! THE BASKETBALL SEASON STARTING with only a thin nucleus, and under a new coaching system, the Yale Basketball Team finished with a unique record, winning all but one contest at home. Coach Elmer Ripley in his first Captain Nanry year put out a team which was Yale ' s best since 1923. They finished in a tie for third place in the Eastern Intercollegiate League and had the distinction of being the only team to beat Columbia, the champions. Captain- Elect Edward Horwitz was largely respon- sible for the success, finishing fourth among League scorers after leading over half the season, and deservedly winning the Joseph E. Fogarty Cup for the most valuable player. Captain Nanry showed brilliant form and always showed himself a splendid leader and inspiration for his teammates. S. Patterson, the most improved player on the squad, was awarded the Harold C. Woodcock Cup for the highest percentage in foul shooting, while to A. J. Booth went the new prize, the Elmer Ripley Cup — to the most improved and valuable sophomore. Starting with a decisive win over Up- sala, the Blue quintet continued with two 294 last-minute victories over Wesleyan and Providence, the former won almost single handed by the work of Schane, and the lat- ter featuring the work of Horwitz. Two days later the strong Fordham group, held until the final few minutes, broke through to score a none too impres- sive victory — 30—16. Assembled again during Christmas vaca- tion, Yale carried off all honors in its own Winter Tournament, outplaying Holy Cross to qualify and showing splendid form to top Georgetown, 26—23. Brown, however, in a hard-fought game just beat them out two days later, in spite of the brilliance of Horwitz and Booth. Manhattan, featuring a powerful offense, made it two defeats in a row. On its home court again Yale crushed Conn. Aggies 27-19, and Cornell 35-10. Horwitz and Nanry were brilliant, while Booth and Beyer proved invincible. The fol- lowing Saturday, on a slippery floor, Cornell showed a remarkable reversal of form, win- ning 23—19. Wednesday found Princeton playing inspired ball for a two-point victory after Horwitz and McGowan had been forced to leave on account of injuries. During the Winter Carnival, Yale con- tinued its losing streak away to drop the first game with Dartmouth, 35-39. M.I.T. in spite of previous victories, was defeated, 34-17, with Horwitz and Beane starring. Still unbeaten at home, Yale overcame the powerful Columbia outfit, 30-29, when Beane, inserted in the second half, ran wild; and a long shot by Booth assured the margin of victory. Dartmouth ' s earlier vic- tory was avenged 31—20, as Patterson and Beane shone in the best-played game of the year. On Alumni day, the Blue outplayed Princeton 30-24 with Horwitz and Beane playing the leading roles. But still pursued by the away-from-home jinx, Yale bowed to Columbia, 46-30, after leading them nearly all the first half, but beaten by the accurate shooting of Jones and Gregory. Penn administered the first home defeat, when the Blues ' defense broke in the sec- ond half to allow Brodbeck to score nine points, while Yale could not seem to settle down. Presenting a marvelous passing attack, feeding to Horwitz who rolled up fifteen points, Yale walked away from a much daunted Harvard team, 38-14. Patterson also played sensationally. In a post-season benefit game at Pough- keepsie, Yale overcame Colgate, 30—27, with Horwitz and Patterson outstanding. Front Row: Ringland, Townsend, Beyer, Horwitz, Capt. Nanry, Booth, Beane, Freeman, Gallagher Back Row: Coach Ripley, Hill, Lindenberg, Patterson, Mgr. Williams, Pennell, Quintal, Martin, Driscoll YALE UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 A. E. Nanry, ' 30 Captain Holland V. Williams, ' 30 Manager Elmer Ripley Coach SQUAD A. C. Beane, Jr., ' 31 S. J. H. Beyer, ' 30 S. A. J. Booth, Jr., ' 32 S. J. W. Farley, ' 31 A. M. Freeman, Jr., ' 30 H. J. Gallagher, ' 31 W. B. Hill, Jr., ' 31 S. E. Horwitz, ' 31 F. J. Linehan, ' 31 Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale 35 Yale 19 52 28 30 16 28 26 23 18 27 SCORES . . Upsala 19 Yale Wesleyan 24 Yale Providence 21 Yale . Fordham 30 Yale Holy Cross 20 Yale Georgetown 23 Yale Pennsylvania 27 Yale Manhattan 24 Yale Connecticut 19 Yale . . Cornell 10 Yale . . Cornell 23 Yale J. T. Lindenberg, ' 32 C. F. Martin, Jr., ' 32 A. P. McGowan, ' 32 A. E. Nanry, ' 30 S. S. Patterson, ' 31 A. R. Pennell, ' 30 T. G. Quintal, ' 32 P. Ringland, ' 32 J. L. Townsend, Jr., ' 30 21 Princeton 23 35 Dartmouth 39 34 M.I.T. 17 21 Conn.Lt. P. (Junior Varsity) 25 30 Columbia 29 31 Dartmouth 20 30 Princeton 24 30 Columbia 46 30 Pennsylvania 39 38 Harvard 14 30 Colgate 27 295 LYALG-BAhWGR AND POT-POURRI. THE UNIVERSITY SWIMMING SEASON yALE won the championship of the league for the sixth consecutive year, winning every one of its meets by a good margin. Perhaps the most noticeable feature of the whole season was the fact that so many first-rate men were developed Captain Howland who might be called upon with confidence. Having beaten the Alumni 51 to 11, the swimming team swung into its first official league meet against Pennsylvania at Phila- delphia. Due in part to the fine work of the dash men, the meet ended in a 46—14 vic- tory. At Wesleyan the team had its only chance to set new marks for the 20-yard course. Howland broke the Intercollegiate record in the 220-yard swim, while Millard succeeded in lowering the breaststroke mark for the 200-yard swim. Harte also turned in a very noteworthy performance in the 300-yard medley. Fordham provided little opposition except in the backstroke and 440-yard swim where Harms of Ford- ham took first over Yale. Against C.C.N.Y. the first team relay, consisting of Howland, Messimer, Butler, and Lincoln, swam an exceptionally fast time. Against the Navy Yale had the first chance to show her true power, since Navy was rated as one of the best teams in the 296 East. Captain Howland being on disability, the team was a bit handicapped. The 50- yard dash was won by Phillips of the Navy after a very close race with Messimer. Osborne turned in his fastest time of the year to win the 440, and Manuel ' s excellent diving gained another five points. The meet ended in favor of Yale, 44—18, as the relay team backstrokers and breaststrokers tal- lied the remaining points. Columbia, with a well-balanced team, had as its outstanding star Ruddy, a 440- yard swimmer. His performance and that of Messimer in the 50 were the outstanding events. Neither M.I.T. nor the Boy ' s Club presented a strong team. Brown with Hall, Brace, and Arnold in their line-up, gave the Blue swimmers some close races. Hall was beaten in the 50, but Arnold evened things up by defeating Cahill after a very close struggle in the backstroke. At Syracuse Yale met a well-balanced team that took the backstroke and 440 after close races in each event. Dartmouth was not as strong as usual, and Yale did not need any of their first string strength to win 44-18. The Rutgers meet was destined to be one of the closest league meets of the season. Yale sprang to an early lead, placing Messi- mer and Howland first and second in the 50, and Osborne and Leedy first and second in the 440. Kojac took first in the back- stroke and the 100-yard dash, equaling the Intercollegiate record in the latter. How- land swam a beautiful 50 as anchor man on the relay against Kojac to nose him out by inches. Princeton had this season, next to Yale, the strongest team in the league. In the first two events Yale sprang to lead. The dive was close but Brooks, Intercollegiate champion, beat Godchaux by a few points. Moles of Princeton excelled in the breast- stroke but in the relay Yale again was the winner. The final score was 40 to 22. Yale ' s superiority in the dashes was well proved in the Intercollegiate Individual Championships held at New Haven near the close of the season. Out of a possible four in each event, three men were qualified in the 50-yard dash, two in 440-yard swim, two in the 220-yard swim, one in the med- ley, two in the dive, one in the breaststroke, one in the backstroke, and three in the 100-yard dash. Howland won the 50, set- ting a new Intercollegiate record of 23%- Messimer finished second and Kojac third. Osborne and Leedy placed in both the 440 and the 220. Manuel got second in the dive, while Millard, who finished second in the breaststroke, was disqualified for his kick. On a point basis this meet was un- officially won by Yale. First Row: Smith, Jarcho, Mercer, Swoope, Kline, Braslin, Codchaux, C. Leedy Second Row: W. Manuel, Millard, Messimer, Capt. Howland, Cahill, Butler, Brines Third Row: Clement, Osborne, Berry, Creeman, Levine, Lincoln, Howse, J. Manuel, Paine Fourth Row: Coach Michael, Weber, Zug, Mgr. Roberts, E. Leedy, Partington, Page, Coach Kiphuth YALE UNIVERSITY SWIMMING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 J. Howland, Jr., ' 30 Captain M. J. Roberts, ' 30 Manager J. T. Bender, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager R. J. H. Kiphuth Coach TEAM J. K. Brines, ' 32 J. A. Codchaux, ' 32 J. S. Manuel, Jr., ' 30 F. E. Nyce, ' 30 B. Butler, Jr., ' 32 J. Howland, Jr., ' 30 W. S. Manuel, ' 30 L B. Osborne, ' 32 S. E. C. Cahill, ' 30 S. R. D. Howse, ' 30 C. D. Mercer, ' 30 R. M. Owen, ' 31 D. H. Clement, ' 31 C. C. Leedy, ' 32 R. L. Messimer, Jr., ' 31 E. B. Paine, ' 31 W. H. Cleveland, ' 30 E. C. Leedy, ' 31 S. N. W. Millard, ' 30 S. B. C. Smith, ' 31 D. E. Fobes, ' 32 H. Lincoln, ' 31 E. W. Moon, 3d, ' 32 S. W. M. Swoope, ' 31 M. A. Glascock, ' 30 C. C. Zug, ' 31 MEETS December 14 Yale 51 . . Alumni 11 February 22 Yale 47 Boy ' s Club 14 January 11 Yale 46 Pennsylvania 14 February 26 Yale 42 . . . Brown 20 January 22 Yale 49 . Wesleyan 26 March 1 Yale 46 . . Syracuse 16 February 12 Yale 44 . Fordham 18 March 5 Yale 44 . Dartmouth 18 February 14 Yale 44 . . . Navy 18 March 12 Yale 44 . . Rutgers 18 February 15 Yale 45 . . C.C.N.Y. 17 March 15 Yale 40 . Princeton 22 February 19 Yale 45 . . Columbia 17 March 31 Yale 42 . . Michigan 21 February 21 Yale 46 M.I.T. 16 March 21 22 Intercollegiates at New Haven Won by Yale 297 :yalG Bann€R and potpourri: THE WATER POLO SEASON, 1929-1930 THE Yale water polo team lost to the Alumni in the first game of the sea- son. In the Alumni were such former stars as Hynes, the high point scorer of the previous season, and Williams. Yale suf- Captain Rapoport fered its first real setback in the form of an injury to Captain Cwin which forced him from further competition. Cwin had been on the team since his sophomore year and was a valuable asset on the defense. He became one of the coaches and L. J. Rapo- port, ' 30, was elected to take his place. The first league meet was against Penn- sylvania at Philadelphia. Howland, captain of the swimming team, saw his first action as a water polo player, and his great speed accounted for four of the Eli goals. Under- wood played a good game at goal. The Bed- ford Y.M.C.A. gave the much heavier Yale team a scrap for its money but the great scoring power of Loeser and Rapoport could not be stopped and the final score found Yale on the right side of a 50 to 8 tally. Navy, last year ' s Intercollegiate Cham- pions, presented perhaps the finest water polo team ever seen in collegiate circles. They easily defeated Yale 60 to 15. O ' Beirne and Ruddy were outstanding for the Navy while credit is due to the entire Yale team for its scrappy defense against such odds. Against the C.C.N.Y. team the next eve- ning there was a marked improvement noted in the attack and the Blue team was able to win through its coordination, 52— 12. The entire squad saw action. Rapoport led the team in scoring against Columbia by five touch goals but once again Yale lost to a superior aggregation. The New York Athletic Club came to New Haven, having in its line-up some of the greatest players of the game such as Curren and Ruddy. More experienced and better coordinated, they easily beat Yale 38 to 4. From then on until the end of the season Yale came into its own with three straight victories. In the Syracuse game Rapoport made eight goals and was by far the most important cog in both the offense and the defense, though he was well aided by Pey- ton. Against the Dartmouth team Rapoport again starred in the offense, while Loeser and MacDuffie were also important factors. Out of the forty-four points scored by the Yale team Rapoport was responsible for thirty-five. Aided by Underwood, who was playing a great game at goal, Rapoport again and again made dashes up the side of the pool. Due to injuries received to its team dur- ing the first part of its season, Princeton canceled water polo in all of its league meets. 298 First Row: Keogh, 0. Rose, Loeser, Howland, Capt. Rapoport, Belous, MacDuffie, Curley, Houston Second Row: Poore, Riley, Douglas, Crubstein, H. Rose Third Row: Coach Michael, Mgr. Roberts, Coach Cwin, Coach Kiphuth YALE UNIVERSITY WATER POLO ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 Captain M. J. Roberts, ' 30 Manager J. T. Bender, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager R. J. H. Kiphuth Coach S. L Gwin, Jr., ' 30 Assistant Coach TEAM A Z Belous, ' 31 J. Howland, Jr., ' 30 W. McC. Miller, ' 32 C. C. Riley, ' 30 E. M. Curley, ' 32 J. Keogh, Jr., ' 31 W. L. Paul, ' 30 H. Rose, Jr., ' 32 J F Crubstein, ' 32 F. W. Loeser, ' 31 J. L Peyton, ' 30 T. P. Underwood, ' 32 M. Holstein, ' 30 M. W. MacDuffie, ' 31 C. C. Poore, ' 31 A. P. Williams, ' 32 S. I. H. Houston, ' 31 K. P. Marks, ' 30 L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 MEETS December 14 Yale 10 Alumni 11 January 11 Yale 51 ... Pennsylvania 31 February 12 Yale 50 . . Bedford Y.M.C.A. 8 February 14 Yale 15 Navy 60 February 15 Yale 52 C.C.N.Y. 12 February 19 Yale 28 Columbia 32 February 22 Yale 4 .... N.Y.A.C. 38 March 1 Yale 51 Syracuse 24 March 5 Yale 40 .... Dartmouth 19 March 12 Yale 44 Rutgers 26 March 15 Yale- Princeton. Forfeited by Princeton due to injuries. 299 LYALG-PAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! THE BOXING SEASON THE season opened as usual with the tournament on January 21. Excellent matches were held before a large crowd, featured by draw bouts by Walker, ' 32, vs. Cornellier, ' 31 ; Bubb, ' 32, vs. Nichols, ' 31 ; and an exhibition match be- Captain Catyas tween Ferris, ' 30, and Moises Jabay, a graduate student. The team made an excellent beginning by winning all seven bouts against Dart- mouth on February 22. The match was featured by four knockouts: one by Cor- nellier in the 135-lb. class; Captain Catyas, 145-lb. ; Nichols, 155-lb.; and Curnen, 165- Ib. Hartman, 115-lb. class, was forced to an extra round to win his bout. The team lost to the Army at West Point on March 1 by a score of 5—2. The matches on the whole were extremely close, Brown, 125-lb., and Nichols, 165-lb., winning their bouts. An innovation was introduced with a no- decision match with Cornell at Ithaca on March 8. This was done in order to foster boxing as a sport at Cornell, this being the first year of its official recognition there. Very exciting bouts were furnished by Walker, 135-lb., and Gatyas, 145-lb. The Yale team closed a very successful season by defeating Pennsylvania by 5—2 on March 15. The match was featured by the gameness of Home, Nichols ' opponent in the 155-lb. class, and by Ferris ' knockout of Trapp in the 175-lb. division. A meet with Harvard is practically as- sured for next year, which should greatly increase the interest in boxing at Yale. Mr. F. S. Butterworth, ' 95, one of Yale ' s great- est football players and an all around sportsman, has kindly presented a cup to be given in the interest of boxing at Yale. The cup this year was awarded to Captain Catyas. L. H. Cornellier, ' 31, was elected captain to lead next year ' s team. 300 Front Row: Hartman, Bubb, Curnen, Ferris, Capt. Gatyas, Heublein, Nichols, Cornellier, Brown Back Row: Coach King, Chun, White, Mgr. Wolf, Walker, Ass ' t Mgr. MacKay, Freeman, Yaggy UNIVERSITY BOXING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 F. A. Gatyas, ' 30 Captain G. V. V. Wolf, ' 30 Manager W. E. MacKay, ' 31 Assistant Manager Moses King Coach TEAM H. L. Hartman R. W. Brown . L. H. Cornellier J. R. Walker . F. A. Gatyas L. H. Nichols, R. S. Bubb . E. C. Curnen, Jr. D. L. Ferris G. W. Heublein 1 1 5-pound 125-pound 135-pound 135-pound 145-pound 1 55-pound 1 55-pound 165-pound 175-pound 175-pound class class class class class class class class class class SCHEDULE Yale 7 Dartmouth Yale 2 Army 5 Yale vs. Cornell .... No decision Yale 5 Pennsylvania 2 301 LYALG-PAhMGR AND P0T-P0URPK THE WRESTLING SEASON THE 1930 Wrestling Season has been marked by an increasing interest in the sport and a large daily turnout of can- didates. The team has had, on the whole, quite a successful season, despite defeats at the hands of Princeton and Harvard. Cap- Captain Sargent tain Sargent won the 145-lb. title at the In- tercollegiate Championships, while Rotan took second honors in the unlimited divi- sion. Throughout the season Sargent was un- defeated, and Whitridge and Wade have turned in consistently good performances. Bigwood, Rotan, and Brodie have also done very well as sophomores. In the first meet of the year the team de- feated M.I.T. by the score 24-8. The out- standing performances were given by Cap- tain Sargent and Brodie; the former scoring a quick fall, and the latter disposing of the M.I.T. captain by a time advantage of over three minutes. The following week Yale de- feated Brown, 26—6, to avenge the defeat of last year. The outstanding bout of the evening was when Cleason threw Hill iard in one minute and fifty-five seconds. After mid-year examinations, Yale con- tinued her winning streak by blanking Rutgers 28-0. In his bout against Her- skowitz, Wade not only proved himself a clever wrestler, but also provided a great deal of comedy. On February 15, Yale met Lafayette. Ed Rotan continued his string of victories by winning from Edraney with a time advantage. The week following Lehigh, Intercolle- giate Champions of 1929, came to New Ha- ven, with a record of victories marred only by one defeat at the hands of the Navy. It was a gruelling test, but Yale came through with a tie, despite an injury to Rotan ' s leg which kept him out of the running for the next two weeks. Besides the unlimited bout, Wade in the 175-lb. class showed great form against Blackmar. Princeton handed Yale her first defeat of the season, 15—11, on March first. The last bout of the afternoon, the unlimited, was the deciding factor. After putting up a beautiful fight, Smith finally succumbed to Barfield, who was later to become Intercol- legiate Champion in his class. The final dual meet of the season was against Harvard at Cambridge on the eighth of March. Yale, despite the able perform- ances of Brewster and Smith, substituting in the 175-lb. and unlimited classes respec- tively, went down to defeat to a score of 12-20. In the Eastern Intercollegiate Champion- ships Yale won a first and a second to take fifth place. Sargent repeated his perform- ance of last year by retaining the 145-lb. crown, while Rotan wrested second honors in the unlimited division. 302 Front Row: Bigwood, Cleason, Brodie, Capt. Sargent, Wade, Bacon, Cleveland Back Row: Mgr. Weatherby, Rotan, Brewster, Whitridge, Coach O ' Donnell YALE UNIVERSITY WRESTLING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 R. M. Sargent, ' 30 S Captain C. Weatherby, ' 30 Manager Eddie O ' Donnell Coach TEAM D. E. Bigwood, Jr., ' 32 S. E. L. Bacon, Jr., ' 31 . J. Whitridge, Jr., ' 30 R. M. Sargent, ' 30 S. . F. B. Cleason, Jr., ' 31 . M. A. Cleveland, ' 32 S. 115-lb. class J. M. Brodie, ' 32 125-lb. class W. H. Wade, ' 30 135-lb. class E. C. Brewste ' , ' 32 145-lb. class E. Rotan, 2d, ' 32 S 145-lb. class D. W. Smith, ' 30 S 145-lb. class 165-lb. class 175-lb. class 175-lb. class unlimited class unlimited class SCORES January 11 Yale 24 January 18 Yale 26 February 8 Yale 28 February 15 Yale 20 February 22 Yale 12 March 1 Yale 11 March 8 Yale 12 . M.I.T. 8 Brown 6 Rutgers Lafayette 7 Lehigh 12 Princeton 15 Harvard 20 March 15 Intercollegiates, Yale fifth place. 303 lyalg-pannicr and pot-pourri: THE TENNIS SEASON ON the trip taken during Easter vaca- tion, the Tennis Team started the 1929 season off in fine fashion by defeating the Navy, 6—3. Two days later, the Georgetown team was overwhelmed by the same score. The playing of Captain A. S. Wright and S. W. Mears, who was Captain Wright forced out of action later during the season with injuries, was largely responsible for the Yale victories. A match with the Balti- more Country Club was called off on ac- count of rain. The home season opened up on April 30 with an easy victory, 7—0, over Washington and Jefferson, followed the very next day by an 8—1 triumph over Am- herst. Luce and Ryan overwhelmed their respective opponents with a brilliant dis- play of tennis. On May 11, Yale defeated Lehigh, 7—2. The match between Ryan and Seligson was very close, the latter finally winning, 7—5, 2—6, 6—1. Pennsylvania was the next victim, Luce defeating Levine, 6—3, 6—3, in a well-played and interesting match. On May 23, the Yale Team bowed to the Hartford Country Club, 9-6. After a successful preliminary season, but handicapped by the loss of Wright and Mears, Yale went down to defeat at the hands of both Harvard and Princeton. In the Princeton match, although Princeton won, 6—3, all the matches were very close, Appel of Princeton just barely beating Ryan, 7-5, 8-6. On May 25, the last match of the sea- son, Harvard overcame Yale, 5—4, in the most exciting encounter in years. After each team had won three singles matches, Harvard clinched the match by taking two out of the three doubles battles. In the de- ciding match, Luce and Ryan went down in defeat before their respective singles victims. The Yale Intercollegiate Team was un- able to make much headway in the annual tournament, chiefly on account of the loss of such stars as Captain Wright, Luce, Mears, and Wiener through ineligibility and injuries. Luce was laid low the day be- fore the tournament with an attack of acute appendicitis. However, although Cox and Holloway were eliminated in the first round, Ryan pushed through to the fourth. In the middle of July, at Newport, R. I., the combined tennis strength of Harvard and Yale was overcome, 15—6, by the Eng- lishmen. After the twelve singles matches had been divided equally, the Oxford-Cam- bridge players proceeded to take all nine doubles matches. Ryan and Holloway each won one of their two singles matches, while Captain Wright defeated both of the opposing captains. 304 Front Row: Dickson, Pitman, Capt. Wright, Cox, Holloway Back Row: Todd, Luce, Ryan, Mears, Baldwin, Coach Hinchliff YALE UNIVERSITY TENNIS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1930 Arthur S. Wright, ' 30 Captain Frank G. Osborne, ' 30 Manager Robert Biggert, ' 31 Assistant Manager William E. Hinchliff Coach W. P. Baldwin C. H. Cox, Jr. J. P. Dickson C. A. Holloway TEAM, 1929 F. L. Luce, Jr. J. H. Pitman R. W. Ryan T. Todd SCORES Apr. 6 Yale 6 Navy 3 May 17 Yale 6 Pennsylvania 3 Apr. 8 Yale 6 Georgetown 3 May 18 Yale 3 Princeton 6 Apr. 30 Yale 7 Washington Jeff. May 23 Yale 6 Hartford C. C. 9 May 1 Yale 8 Amherst 1 May 25 Yale 4 Harvard 5 May 11 Yale 7 Lehigh 2 305 LYALG-BAhNGR AND POT-POURRI! THE LACROSSE SEASON WINNING four out of eight sched- uled contests, the 1929 Lacrosse Team, led by M. A. Maclntyre, 1929, turned in only a fair record of its possibilities. The season opened on April 13 against Swarthmore on the home field. Yale took •If! fi 1 wr K HSr -F Captain Reinhardt an early lead which was never threatened. At half time the score was 9 to 3. However, the second half was more closely contested and the game ended with the score 12 to 4 in favor of the Elis. E. V. Huggins, 1929, led the attack with six goals, while Cap- tain Maclntyre starred on the defense. On the following Saturday at New Ha- ven, the Blue met its first defeat at the hands of Union to the tune of 7 to 5. The game was hard fought throughout, but Union ' s superior attack and Yale ' s ragged passing gave the visitors a deserved win. Saturday, April 27, found the Elis pitted against the Crescent Athletic Club on the home field. This game was marked by the strong defensive play of both teams. Score- less until a few minutes from the final whistle when the Crescent attack finally broke through for a tally, the game ended with Yale on the short end of an annual 1-0 score. In New Haven on May 4, Derby Day, 306 Yale continued its losing streak, this time going down before the powerful St. John ' s team of Baltimore. After holding the visi- tors to a 3-2 lead in the first half, the Yale defense crumbled in the second period. The game ended 8 to 2 in favor of the Baltimore club. On the following Friday, May 10, at Hanover, the Elis broke their losing streak by taking Dartmouth into camp, 14—5. This contest was played under adverse weather conditions and was a slow affair despite the heavy scoring. Yale had little trouble in solving the Green ' s defense from the start and had its own way until the end. Huggins again led the scoring, while W. A. Smith, 1931, in the mid-field and Captain Maclntyre turned in stellar per- formances. Returning to the home field on the fol- lowing Saturday, May 18, the Elis had little difficulty in overcoming Colgate, 11-2. Yale led at the end of the first period, 9-1. Huggins continued his scoring streak with five goals. Captain Maclntyre, E. R. Ste- vens, 1931, and C. W. Bouck, 1929, also starred. At Princeton on May 25, the Blue again tasted defeat. Yale took an early lead and was well on the way to victory when with but a few minutes to play and the score 6 to 4, the Princeton attack suddenly found itself. From then on, the Yale defense cracked, and at the end of the regular time the score was a six-all tie. In the overtime the Princeton attack led by Captain Stinson ran through the demoralized Yale aggrega- tion to score two more goals. In the final game of the season Yale easily defeated Harvard, 7 to 3, in the Bowl. This was a slow affair from the start because of the excessive heat and the many substitutions necessary. Huggins and Ste- vens led the attack, while Smith in the mid-field and Captain Maclntyre in the de- fense starred. Although the season was not a complete success from the standpoint of victories, there were many consoling features. E. V. Huggins, 1929, the stellar attack man, scored a total of 32 goals and was placed on the mythical all-American team. Cap- tain Maclntyre played an outstandingly steady game at defense. Twenty-seven let- ters were awarded, and H. B. Reinhardt, 1930 S., was elected to lead the team in the 1930 campaign. The appointment of Man- ager L. S. Robbins, Jr., 1930, was also an- nounced. With eighteen letter men return- ing and a championship Freshman squad coming up, the prospects for 1930 are en- couraging. First Row: Dryfoos, Rust, Easton, Dodge, C. Kirk, Warner Second Row: Smith, Henderson, Huggins, Capt. Reinhardt, Maclntyre, Purcell, Bouck, Taggart, Rumsey Third Row: Hall, Thelman, Hoffman, Gaston, Stevens, Blythe Fourth Row: Coach Root, R. Kirk, Fields, Hedden, Mgr. Chadwick YALE UNIVERSITY LACROSSE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 H. B. Reinhardt, Jr., ' 30 S Captain L. S. Robbins, ' 30 Manager W. C. Wood, ' 31 Assistant Manager R. D. Root, ' 26 Coach C. S. Baker R. H. Blythe W. Bouck N. Dodge Dryfoos Easton, Jr. L. Feldman S. Fields S. R. Gaston TEAM, 1929 W. B. Hall W. R. Hedden G. M. Henderson H. C. Hoffman J. A. Howell E. V. Huggins G. D. Kirk R. C. Kirk M. A. Maclntyre S. C. Mallory ). F. Purcell H. B. Reinhardt, Jr. H. V. Rumsey C. S. Rust W. A. Smith E. R. Stevens R. B. Taggart S. Y. Warner, Jr. SCORES Yale 12 Swarthmore Yale 5 Union Yale Crescent A. C. Yale 2 St. John ' s 4 Yale 14 Dartmouth 5 7 Yale 11 Colgate 2 1 Yale 6 Princeton 8 8 Yale 7 Harvard 3 307 1YALG--PAWGR AND POT-POURRI! THE SOCCER SEASON THE season of 1929 saw the Univer- sity Soccer Team travel through a difficult schedule, undefeated until the final game with Harvard, which was but 2—1 after two overtime periods. Starting the season with the loss of nine men. Coach Leeman faced the difficult task of practically rebuilding the team that Captain Robertson swept through the 1928 season undefeated, to the championship of the Intercollegiate Football Association of America. A squad of forty men was on hand at the final prac- tice. The first game was played against the Hartford Thistles, a semi-pro outfit, and resulted in a victory for Yale, 2—1. The following week saw the University team win its first game against a collegiate opponent, Wesleyan. The score was 5—0. On October 19 the team met its first real test of the season when it played the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania; the game resulted in a 3—3 deadlock. The following week Yale met McGill University of Toronto in an intersectional game and clearly out- classed the Canadian team, winning 4—0. The University booters were slow in getting started, but once started, the McGill de- 308 fense presented no further difficulties for the accurately shooting Yale forwards. On November 1 occurred one of the most exciting games of the season when Yale defeated Dartmouth, 3-2. The Hano- ver team, started strongly and quickly, swept into a 2-0 lead. Then the Yale team found itself and just as quickly came back and scored three goals. On November 9 the team journeyed to Cornell and won handily, 4-1. Yale pressed the attack throughout, and was clearly su- perior to its opponent. On November 16 the annual game with Princeton was played and resulted in a 4-1 victory for the Blue. This was the second consecutive victory over the Tigers, and the first defeat of the year for Princeton. Yale held the upper hand throughout, and thrust aside all Princeton attacks until the final minutes of the game when Princeton man- aged to drive through one goal. The following week Yale suffered its only defeat of the year, losing to Harvard, 2—1. The game was played in two inches of snow, which made practically impossible the smooth functioning of the slow pass- ing attack which Coach Leeman had de- veloped. Spirit ran high throughout the game and both teams fought hard at every point. Harvard scored almost immediately after the kick-off, and held this advantage until the closing minutes of the game, when Yale finally drove a goal, tying the score, 1—1. The first extra period resulted in no score for either team and it wasn ' t until the second period that Harvard pushed over the final goal to win, 2—1. Although this defeat cost the team the championship, it came back on Thanksgiv- ing Day to defeat the Naval Academy team, 2—1. The game was closely played through- out, but superior passing by the Blue team resulted in victory. Two games were played by the Junior University Team; one against the Engle- wood Field Club resulting in a 4-1 victory, the other against the Crescent A. C. result- ing in a 5-2 victory. Thus the University Soccer Team won eight out of nine games, its one defeat costing it the championship of the league. A new team had to be developed from a nucleus of only three veterans, and the suc- cess of this team is indicative of the intelli- gent coaching and inspiring leadership of Walter Leeman. There were no individual stars on this team. The scoring was pretty well divided between Ashley, Carr, and Morris; but it was the concerted playing of the whole team that made the scores possible. First Row: Freeman, Kaehrle, Whitelaw, Lee, Smith Second Row: Knudsen, Henry, Ashley, Capt. Robertson, Rumsey, Bowman, Morris Third Row: Mgr. Dodge, Chittenden, Carr, Hardy, Nelson, Coach Leeman YALE UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 Reuben B. Robertson, Jr., ' 30 S Captain Edwin N. Dodge, ' 30 Manager George A. Vogel, ' 31 S Assistant Manager Walter Leeman Coach L. C. Ashley, ' 30 S. C. H. Bowman, Jr., ' 30 P. S. Carr, 31 W. S. Chittenden. ' 30 R. B. Freeman, ' 32 C. C. Hardy, ' 31 TEAM D. W. Henry, ' 32 S. M. A. Kaehrle, Jr., ' 30 S. V. L. Knudsen, ' 32 E. Lee, jr., ' 31 R. M. Morris, ' 32 F. A. Nelson, Jr., ' 31 R. B. Robertson, Jr., Capt. J. A. Rudy, ' 30 H. V. Rumsey, ' 30 S. B. C. Smith, ' 31 G. P. Whitelaw, ' 31 ' 30 S. SCORES Oct. 5 Yale 2 Hartford Thistles Oct. 12 Yale 5 Wesleyan Oct. 19 Yale 3 U. of Pennsylvania Oct. 25 Yale 4 McCill 1 3 Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. 23 Nov. 28 1 9 16 Yale 3 Yale 4 Yale 4 Yale 1 Yale 2 Dartmouth Cornell (away) Princeton Harvard (away) Navy 2 1 1 2 309 LYAL£-PAhN€R AND POT-POURRI! THE FENCING SEASON WHEN the 1930 University Fencing Squad reported to Coach Robert Grasson in December for organiza- tion and practice, it found itself materially weakened through the graduation of many of its outstanding members on the 1929 Captain Hill Championship team. The loss of former Captain F. S. Righeimer, 1929, the intercol- legiate three weapon title holder, was felt most keenly. However, a larger number of candidates turned out and by January 1 1 Coach Crasson had developed a smoothly working team, consisting for the most part of sophomores, ready for the initial meet with the ). Sanford Saltus Club. Yale lost 10—7 to what turned out later to be an un- defeated team. On the following Saturday the Yale team, led by Captain E. L. Hill, 1930, suc- ceeded in tying the strong New York Fencers ' Club 12-12. ). F. Potter, 1932, who captained the freshman team the pre- ceding year, was unbeaten and in the re- mainder of the season ' s meets was in- valuable to the team in his ability to win bouts in the foils. Three of his teammates, A. H. Busby, F. A. Allis, and W. R. Canada, also sophomores, were assured of their po- sitions on the University line-up at that time, and maintained successful records throughout the year. February 8 opened the intercollegiate schedule when the University met New York University, and the newly organized Junior Varsity team met the newly or- ganized Boston College fencing team. Both resulted in victories, 14-8 for the Varsity and 7-5 for the J.V. ' s. A week later the Yale swordsmen inflicted on Navy their first defeat in an exciting struggle ending 9-8 for Yale. In accordance with the custom initiated last year at Ithaca, a triangular meet with Cornell and Hamilton was held; Yale amassed twenty-two points to Hamilton ' s sixteen, and Cornell ' s thirteen. Shortly afterward victories over the Yale Graduate School, and the Penn. Athletic Club fol- lowed. In the match with Army, it was only after losing the sabre bouts that Yale suc- cumbed in a hard and exciting match. This one defeat in intercollegiate sport was made up by the much-hoped-for defeat of Harvard 10—7 the following week. A week later, the mythical Big-Three Champion- ship was annexed again with the defeat of Princeton by the same score. In the Intercollegiates held at the Hotel Astor in New York, Yale and Army tied for possession of the Three-Weapon Trophy; the University Team was first in both the foils and epee, and was fourth in the sabre. It is to be noted that Captain Hill retained his individual epee championship, and that J. F. Potter, 1932, won the individual foils championship after an exciting playoff for the title. 310 Front Row: Terrell, Walker, Capt. Hill, Busby, Potter Back Row: Mgr. Atwater, Canada, Allis, Coach Crasson YALE UNIVERSITY FENCING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1929-1930 E. L Hill, 30 Captain E. Taeymans Assistant Coach R. H. E. Crasson Coach R. H. Atwater, ' 30 Manager C. B. Bidwell, ' 31 S Assistant Manager TEAM Foils Epee Sabre 1. J. F. Potter, ' 32 1. E. L. Hill, ' 30 I. W. R. Canada, ' 32 2. A. H. Busby, Jr., ' 32 2. K. L. Terrell, ' 31 S. 2. F. A. Allis, ' 32 3. W. A. Walker, ' 30 MEETS Yale Opp. Jan. 11 J. Sanford Saltus Club 10 7 Jan. 18 New York Fencer ' s Club 12 12 Feb. 8 New York University . . 14 8 Feb. 15 Navy 9 8 Feb. 22 Hamilton 22 16 Feb. 22 Cornell 22 13 Feb. 26 Yale Graduate School .12 9 Mar. 1 Penn. Athletic Club . . 12 5 Mar. 8 Army 7 10 Mar. 15 Harvard 10 7 Mar. 22 Princeton 10 7 311 iyalg-bawgr and potpourri: THE POLO SEASON THE polo team with Folger, Potter, Scott, Rathborne in the starting line- up, began its outdoor season on April 27 at Chester, Pennsylvania, where it de- feated Pennsylvania Military College, 12 to 7. The succeeding game was a more diffi- Captain Scott cult one and in the final period Princeton eked out a goal for a win of 5—4. It was a close match and both teams played genuine polo. The following week the performance against Pennsylvania Military College was repeated on Phipps Field and the Yale team again rode to a 11—5 victory. Rathborne played a thrilling game at back taking the ball almost alone the length of the field. Yale got sweet revenge for her indoor defeats by Harvard when on May 5 ten goals were piled up to Harvard ' s scant three. The fact that Tim Clark was not with Harvard was a factor in their defeat. In the Outdoor Intercollegiate Yale again rode to the finals but Harvard with Clark back outplayed Yale to take the champion- ship title. Much credit is due Major Gates for the 312 coaching of Yale ' s polo teams for the last two years. He has worked hard and given a great deal of time to the work and has been the means of developing the polo talent to a successful degree. With Major Gates no longer here, Lieu- tenant Burns was promoted to varsity coaching and inaugurated a Fall Tourna- ment. There were five teams equally divided from the wealth of material and al- though run in tournament fashion each team played several games. After a short rest winter practice began in earnest De- cember 1 . January 18, Yale rode to victory in her first game of the season, defeating Squad- ron A, 24 , 2-10 1 2. The team lined up with Captain Hardie Scott at No. 1 ; S. P. Porter, No. 2; and J. C. Rathborne at back. The following week Yale again defeated the Squadron in New York by 13V2— 7! 2. On February 1 Yale barely nosed out Army at West Point by a 12-10 margin. R. R. Guest played two excellent periods at No. 2. Brooklyn Riding and Driving were forced to cancel their game and on February 15 the Yale team had the edge over a strong Princeton team and defeated them. The Yale team was again invited to Cin- cinnati and Cleveland for February 21 and 22 and, unfortunately, were nosed out in the last period at Cincinnati to lose 12— 14! 2, but in one of the best games of the season on Saturday won from Cleveland Troop A, MV2-6V2. Captain Scott and Ray Guest both played unusual games with long hitting and hard riding that thrilled the crowd. In two home games with Harvard March 1 and 15, Yale decisively defeated her old rival with I7V2-IV2 and 13V2-8V2. thus wiping out her accounts of last year. Pennsylvania Military College with a powerful trio was forced to take second place on March 8 with a loss of 1214—7. Rathborne played a powerful defensive and offensive game and the teamwork was machine-like. Yale entered three teams in the National Tournaments. The Varsity lined up for the Class A; Ferguson, Porter, and Bradley in Class C, and an officers ' team in Class D. Yale reached the finals in the Class A Tournament but was defeated by Army 9-71 2. The Junior Varsity and Freshmen each had six games and were undefeated. Cap- tain Baldwin, playing for the Freshmen, made forty-four goals in the six games of the freshman season. Front Row: Lt. Burns, McCormick, Rathborne, Capt. Scott, Guest, Porter, Bradley Back Row: Cavanagh, Walker, Newhall, Ferguson, Phipps, Riley, Mgr. Kirk YALE UNIVERSITY POLO TEAM OFFICERS H. Scott, ' 30 Captain C. D. Kirk, ' 30 S. Manager F. D. DuBarry, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager Lieut. J. J. Burns Coach TEAM J. L. Bradley, ' 31 S. R. R. Guest, ' 31 S. P. Porter, ' 31 J. G. Cavanagh, ' 32 C. R. McCormick, Jr., ' 31 J. C. Rathborne, ' 31 R. M. Ferguson, ' 30 H. Scott, ' 30 SCORES Outdoors — Spring of 1929 April 27 Yale 12 P.M.C. 7 May 4 Yale 4 Princeton 5 May 5 Yale 10 Harvard 3 May 11 Yale 11 P.M.C. 5 Indoors — Winter of 1930 January 18 Yale 24 ' 2 Squadron A IOV2 January 25 Yale 13 Viz Squadron A IV2 February 1 Yale 12 Army 10 February 15 Yale 12V 2 Princeton 9 February 21 Yale 12 Cincinnati R. D. C. 14 ' 2 February 22 Yale 131 2 .... 101st Cavalry, Cleveland 6 ' 2 March 1 Yale 17 ' 2 Harvard 1 V2 March 8 Yale 12 ' 2 P.M.C. 7 March 15 Yale 13V 2 Harvard 8V2 March 22 Yale IV2 .... Army 9 ( Intercollegiates) March 25 Yale 9V 2 . . . N.Y.A.C. 8 (Class A) April 5 Yale 10 Brooklyn R. D. C. IOV2 (Open) April 9 Yale 6 . . . . Optimists 13 (Class A) 313 LYAL£-BAW€R AND POT-POURBI! T HE growth of golf, and the interest shown in this sport at Yale, greatly increased during the 1929 season. Led Captain Forrest THE GOLF SEASON by Captain M. W. Forrest, ' 30, the team suffered only one defeat, that at the hands of Pennsylvania. Veterans on the team were A. M. Knapp and J. A. Roberts. The re- mainder of the team was composed of T. J. Aycock, Jr., F. K. Wilson, J. Merwin, and W. M. Swoope, who came up from the 1931 Freshman team. It was the Eli ' s second season in the In- tercollegiate Coif League. Yale defeated both Princeton and Harvard in League matches, but unfortunately lost to Penn- sylvania. This placed Yale in a tie for League honors with Princeton, each team having eight victories and one defeat. Outstanding individual feats were those of Aycock and Forrest, winner and runner- up respectively in the National Intercol- legiates. Aycock also won the Florida Open in 1929. The teams in the League boast many of the country ' s first-class golfers. George- town has McCarthy, Harvard has Finlay, winner of several tournaments, and Prince- ton ' s pride is Dunlap, a golfer of repute. The captain for the 1930 season is again M. W. Forrest, ' 30. The team lost several valuable men through graduation. The places of Knapp and Roberts are vacant, as is that of Aycock, who left at the end of the 1929 season. However, men from the Freshman team such as England, Lanman, and Coss can in all probability fill these vacancies. 314 Front Row: Bannerot, Knapp, Capt. Forrest, Joy, Aycock Back Row: Mgr. Earle, Swoope, Thompson, Roberts, Staadecker, Merwin YALE UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM OFFICERS, 1930 M. W. Forrest, ' 30 Captain C. H. Howson, Jr., ' 30 S Manager TEAM, 1929 T. J. Aycock, Jr. J. Merwin F. Bannerot J. A. Roberts M. W. Forrest, Capt. W. M. Swoope A. M. Knapp F. K. Wilson SCORES Yale Opponents Brown 8 Dartmouth 5 4 Williams 7 2 Colgate 5 1 M.I.T 6 Holy Cross 8 1 Princeton 9 Georgetown 5V2 3 ' 2 Pennsylvania 4 5 Wesleyan 9 Harvard 6 3 315 LYALG-BAhNGR AND P0T-P0URRI: THE SQUASH RACQUET SEASON DESPITE the fact that the team was greatly handicapped by the loss of the University Squash courts, it had a comparatively good season. For the practice it was able to get, the team used the New Haven Lawn Club courts, and the only home match, with Princeton, was played on Captain Gillespie the new Trinity College courts at Hartford. With the completion of the new Yale Gym- nasium, squash courts will be available for many more than have ever previously been able to play the game. The first match with the Racquet and Tennis Club in New York City was lost, 3 to 2, in a very interesting match. At Providence the following week-end, the Hope Club defeated Yale 3 to 2 in another close match. In these earlier matches, K. Mabon, 1930, and G. Patterson, 1931, were consistent winners. The game with Harvard was played at Cambridge this year, and resulted in an easy victory for the Crimson, 4 to 1. Captain C. W. Gillespie, 1930, pressed 0. Phipps to five games before the latter won. G. Patter- son, 1931, alone won his match for the single point for Yale. At Princeton in the first of a two-match series Yale lost, 3 to 2, by a larger margin than the score indicates. Donald Strachan, runner-up in the National Squash Tourna- ment this year and Princeton Captain, de- feated Captain Gillespie, 1930. G. Ingram, 1931, and K. Mabon, 1930, won their matches for Yale. In the second match held at Hartford, Yale defeated Princeton, 3 to 2, and K. Mabon, 1930, G. Patterson, 1931, and G. Cox, 1930, overcame their oppo- nents. Captain Strachan of Princeton was pressed to four games to win from Captain Gillespie. The team this year was made up of C. W. Gillespie, 1930, Captain and No. 1, G. Cox, 1930, No. 2, K. Mabon, 1930, No. 3, G. Patterson, 1931, No. 4, and G. Ingram, 1931, No. 5. 316 Mgr. Darr, Ingram, Capt. Gillespie, Cox, Patterson, Mabon YALE UNIVERSITY SQUASH TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 C. W. Gillespie, ' 30 Captain F. E. Darr, ' 31 Manager W. E. Hinchliff Coach C. H. Cox, Jr., ' 30 C. W. Gillespie, ' 30 E. G. Ingram, ' 31 TEAM K. Mabon, ' 30 G. S. Patterson, Jr., ' 31 SCORES Yale 2 . . New York Racquet Club 3 Yale 2 Hope Club of Providence 3 Yale 2 Princeton 3 Yale 3 Princeton 2 Yale 1 Harvard 4 Yale 6 . . . . Hartford Golf Club Yale 4 Greenwich Country Club 1 317 First Row: Click, Sullivan, Howland, Capt. Burke, Beane, Bender, Browne Second Row: Joy, Cennet, Pinson, Page, Ederheimer, Wechsler Third Row: Coach Ripley, Furcolowe, Cray, Vicnec, Vested, Chaffee, Mgr. Hardy YALE FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 H. F. Burke, ' 33 Captain C. C. Hardy, ' 31 Manager H. W. Carrington Coach TEAM J. W. Bannon, Jr. C. L. Ederheimer, Jr. F. E. Beane, 3d C. L. Furcolowe L. Bender A. Cennet W. N. Benedict M. Click W. K. Browne R. Cray H. F. Burke D. Howland R. B. Chaffee SCORES Yale 29 ... . Concordia Prep. 19 Yale 33 Yale 39 Crosby 23 Yale 23 Yale 28 ... . Roosevelt High 27 Yale 25 Yale 32 Naugatuck 45 Yale 28 Yale 40 Milford 24 Yale 27 Yale 12 Peekskill 18 Yale 28 Yale 24 Roxbury 38 Yale 30 Won 8— Lost 6 318 D. C. Joy T. H. Page, Jr. C. H. Pinson P. H. Sullivan H. S. Vested R. R. Wechsler Choate 22 Springfield 27 Roxbury 29 Princeton 23 Conn. Aggies 23 Warren Harding High 17 Harvard 32 First Row: Lapham, Cahill, Jamison, Lippincott, Highfield, Bosworth, Tully Second Row: Paul, Bixler, Phelps, Hersey, Capt. Hapke, Foster, Church, Anderson, Escher, Champion Third Row: Mooney, Cordon, Niven, Mgr. Bender, Carrigues, Gill- more, Coverdale, Oppel YALE FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 A. T. Hapke, Jr., ' 33 Captain J. T. Bender, Jr., ' 31 Manager W. I. Newton Coach TEAM R. C. Anderson W. H. Coverdale, Jr. R. M. Hersey, Jr. N. H. Mundy, Jr. M. D. Bixler J. H. Escher J. V. Jamison, 3d V. C. Niven C. A. Bosworth, 2d F. F. Foster F. D. Lapham R. Oppel, Jr. W W. Burson S. M. Carrigues C. S. Lee V. H. Paul D. G. Cahill F. H. Gillmore C. A. Lippincott D. S. Phelps, Jr. W J Champion, Jr. A. T. Hapke, Jr. J. R. Mooney A. H. Savage E. M. Church, Jr. S. K. Tully MEETS January 11 Yale 33 . . New Haven H. S. 29 January 18 Yale 37 Andover 25 February 8 Yale 37 Washington Central H. S. 25 February 12 Yale 37 Tome 29 February 15 Yale 34 . . Springfield 1933 28 February 19 Yale 44 Roxbury 18 February 22 Yale 40 .... Worcester 22 February 26 Yale 34 . . Flushing Y.M.C.A. 27 March 1 Yale 38 Exeter 28 March 5 Yale 49 .... Hotchkiss 13 March 8 Yale 25 Princeton 37 319 Front Row: Rostow, Siebert, Holihan, Jamison, Capt., Henshaw, Jen- nings, Boadwee Back Row: Ford, Bronson, Bender, Mgr., Cold, Rodnick FRESHMAN WATER POLO TEAM OFFICERS J. V. Jamison, 3d, ' 33 Captain J. T. Bender, Jr., ' 31 Manager W. I. Newton Coach TEAM R. C. Anderson H. N. Boadwee L. H. Bronson, Jr. R. C. Ford M Cold C. S. Henshaw Yale 38 Yale 20 Yale 16 W. B. Holihan J. V. Jamison, 3d N. D. Jennings O. R. Marshall E. V. Rostow H. E. Siebert MEETS New Haven H. S. 7 New Haven H. S. 7 . . N.Y.A.C. Jrs. 28 320 Front Row: Gignilliat, Furcolowe, Munson, Capt. Del Cenio, Shea, Smith, Bentley Back Row: Thomas, Wylie, Coach King, Mgr. MacKay, Levy, Madden FRESHMAN BOXING TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 N. Del Cenio, ' 33 Captain W. E. MacKay, ' 31 Manager Moses King Coach TEAM J. R. Bentley .... 1 15-pound class H. C. Gignilliat . . . 125-pound class C. L. Furcolowe . . . 135-pound class N. Del Genio .... 145-pound class H. Smith 155-pound class R. L. Levy 155-pound class C. A. Shea, Jr. ... 165-pound class N. V. V. F. Munson . . 175-pound class SCHEDULE Yale 7 M.I.T. Yale 5 Penn 1933 2 321 Front Row: Stanton, Gatewood, Capt. Bascom, Clayton, Smyth Back Row: Osborne, Mgr., Harte, Eddy, Warner FRESHMAN TENNIS TEAM OFFICERS, 1929 W. R. Bascom, ' 32 Captain F. C. Osborne, ' 30 Manager W. E. Hinchliff Coach TEAM W. R. Bascom J. W. Harte S. D. Clayton W. Smyth E. S. Eddy F. R. Stanton R. D. Gatewood, Jr. B. A. Warner SCORES Yale 9 Andover Yale 7 Penn 1932 2 Yale 4 Roxbury 5 Yale 1 Princeton 1932 8 Yale 4 Choate 5 Yale 4 Harvard 1932 5 322 First Row: McDede, Bullard, Mitchell, Williams, Mariner, Weber, Draper, Whitehead, Lamont Second Row: Martin, Scranton, Flygare, Kidde, Capt. Beggs, Corby, Jones, Criswold, Devaney Third Row: Coach O ' Leary, Corbin, Maltby, Hannan, Coach Lynch, Beard, McKeon, Curtiss, Mgr. Robbins FRESHMAN LACROSSE TEAM OFFICERS, 1929 H. C. Beggs, ' 32 Captain L. S. Robbins, Jr., ' 30 Manager W. J. Lynch Coach TEAM A M. Beard, r- J. L. Criswold C. L Maltby, Jr. H C. Beggs J. M. Hannan R. H. Mariner E. P. Bullard, 3d C. B. Jones C. F. Martin, Jr. D L. Corbin J. F. Keeler 0. Mitchell, Jr. C. Curtiss, Jr. F. J. Kidde W. L. Scranton, Jr. 1- P. Devaney W. M. Lamont, Jr. F. C. Weber, Jr. F. B. Draper J. S. McDede, Jr. J. H. Whitehead, Jr H 1. Flygare M. F. McKeon S. C. Williams R. M. Corby SCORES Yale Fresh men 8 Springfield Freshmen Yale Fresh men 9 Poly Prep 6 Yale Fresh men 1 Peekskill M. A. 7 Yale Fresh men 6 Erasmus 4 Yale Fresh men 6 Harvard Fres hmen 3 Yale Fresh men 3 Princeton Freshmen 2 323 First Row: Cropper, Barclay, DiCiorgio, Fisher, Rankin Second Row: Niven, Crane, Luce, Capt. Bannon, Hersey, Adams, Madden Third Row: Coach Sleath, O ' Meara, McKnight, Mgr. Vogel FRESHMAN ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1929 J. W. Bannon, Jr Captain C. Vogel Manager J. Sleath Coach TEAM R. C. Adams C. Avedon J. W. Bannon, Jr. A. H. Barclay, Jr. D. H. Burrel, 3d R. P. Crane, Jr. C. Crane B. M. Fisher S. R. Luce J. H. Madden V. C. Niven E. S. O ' Meara H. P. Rankin, Jr. E. C. Trenchard SCORES October 12 . . . Yale 3 Poly Prep October 19 Yale 2 Andover (away) 3 November 2 . Yale 1 Erasmus Hall 2 November 9. . . Yale Bradford Durfee H. S. 1 November 16 Yale 2 Princeton 3 November 23 Yale 2 . . . Harvard (at Cambridge) 324 Front Row: Yandell, King, Hall, Capt. McCauley, Donald, Rowland, Cropper Back Row: Coach Ed. O ' Donnell, Munson, Mgr. Putnam, Trexler, Coach John O ' Donnell FRESHMAN WRESTLING TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 J. M. McCauley, ' 33 Captain H. M. Putnam, ' 31 Manager John O ' Donnell Coach TEAM G. R. Rowland J. F. Cropper J. M. McCauley D. W. Yandell E. S. Hall . . F. A. J. King Donald 115-lb. class 125-lb. class 135-lb. class 145-lb. class 145-lb. class J. A. Sargent N. V. V. F. Munson E. D. Trexler, Jr. 145-lb. class . 155-lb. class 165-lb. class . 175-lb. class unlimited class January January February 11 IS SCORES Yale Yale Yale February 19 Yale March 1 Yale March 8 Yale 26 31 11 14 19 20 M.I.T. 10 Brown 5 Choate 16 Andover 15 Princeton 15 Harvard 16 325 Front Row: Ferriss, Terrell, Jelke, Capt. Ullman, Thomas, English, Bedeaux Back Row: Mgr. Bidwell, Wiepert, Remer, Korsmeyer, Canada, Coach Taeymans FRESHMAN FENCING TEAM J. B. Ullman, ' 33 . C. B. Bidwell, ' 31 S. R. H. E. Grasson E. Taeymans . Captain Manager Coach Assistant Coach TEAM Foils 1. J. B. Ullman 2. R. B. Korsmeyer 3. F. Ferriss 4. C. E. Bedaux, 2d 5. L. M. Woodruff Epee 1. E. F. Jelke 2. H. S. Terrell 3. J. English, Jr. MEETS Feb. 8 Milford Feb. 19 Roxbury Feb. 22 Brunswick Mar. 1 Columbia Mar. 5 Choate Mar. 15 Harvard Mar. 22 Princeton Sabre 1. W. M. Wiepert 2. E. G. Thomas, Jr. 3. A. E. Remer 4. C. L. Canada 5. J. F. Strauss, Jr. 6. J. R. Cuneo Yale Opp. 13 4 14 8 13 4 9 8 9 8 9 8 12 5 326 1 % $ 1 v- Set J ..JL f. tf ' v ■1 HE d %aH i ftf i : ■lull! 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 ■f 1 ai t 1 v V i« ! i ' ■«- ' 1 B ,. ii Jl K Front Row: Carter, Lanman, Capt. England, Lewis, L. M. Coss, Back Row: Underwood, Corning, M. W. Coss, Coach Thompson, Roby, Mgr. Howson FRESHMAN GOLF TEAM OFFICERS, 1929 D. England, Jr Captain C. H. Howson, Jr., 30 S Manager B. Thompson Coach TEAM P. S. Carter E. Corning, 2d D. England, Jr. L. M. Coss M. W. Coss Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale H. R. Lanman R. Lewis, Jr. W. S. Roby, Jr. T. P. Underwood SCORES 3 Choate 5 Bridgeport 3 Princeton Hotchkiss Buikeley . 6 Milford . 5 Roxbury . 6 Harvard 3 1 6 6 6 1 3 327 ' ' ■' : - : . ■-. 1 1 ' EsJH if h | ' ■■■■ifatfiM  i-4 f j vN, y u i Sr PE ■§ ■■sj f  m m - . ' | y i rj y - Mgr. DuBarry, Coddington, Clark, Capt. Baldwin, Crandin, Tuttle, Capt. Buechler FRESHMAN POLO TEAM OFFICERS, 1929-1930 L. A. Baldwin, ' 32 Captain F. D. DuBarry, Jr., ' 31 Manager Capt. T. E. Buechler Coach TEAM L. A. Baldwin R. B. Crandin S. C. Clark, Jr. S. E. Tuttle W. D. Coddington SCORES Yale Freshmen 14 Junior Varsity 6 Yale Freshmen 13 V2 Hartford Troop B 4Vi Yale Freshmen 6 . Army Plebes 10 Yale Freshmen 10 Princeton 1933 8 Yale Freshmen 12 Vz . Harvard 1933 -1 Yale Freshmen 14 . . Lawrenceville 8 ' 2 328 LYALG PANsl€R AND POT-POURRI. RESERVE OFFICERS 1 TRAINING CORPS YALE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY SCIENCE THE graduates of Yale University, al- ways loyal to its teachings, have ever been ready to serve their country in the hour of need. Many of them have served with the armed forces of the United States, in all our wars. Over nine thousand were in service during the World War. In times past, groups of undergraduates, ap- preciating the responsibilities of citizen- ship, have prepared themselves to satisfac- torily bear arms in defense of the country, while they were in college preparing for the other responsibilities of citizenship and life. During the nineties small groups of stu- dents organized for infantry drill. By 1897 two companies of students were drilling regularly. In 1915 Yale undergraduates formed a battery of field artillery and af- filiated themselves with the Connecticut Militia, for training. The present Field Ar- tillery and Engineer Units of the Reserve Officers ' Training Corps are the outgrowth of these earlier organizations. The Yale R.O.T.C. units are maintained by the United States government, and Army Officers are detailed to Yale to serve as instructors in the Department of Mili- tary Science, under the provisions of the National Defense Act of 1 920. The Mili- tary Department offers undergraduates an opportunity to prepare themselves for suc- cessfully exercising the privileges and ful- filling the obligations of citizenship. Nor- mal hours of credit toward graduation accrue for courses in the Department. Upon graduation, students who have satisfac- torily completed the four year Military Sci- ence course, and have attended the six- week camp during their Junior summer, are tendered commissions in the Officers ' Reserve Corps. INSTRUCTORS Major James A. Lester . . Field Artillery P. M.S. T. Captain Theodore E. Buechler .... Field Artillery Lieutenant John J. Burns .... Field Artillery Lieutenant Charles C. Holle . . . Corps of Engineers MEMBERS SENIORS Commissioned Second Lieutenants, Field Artillery Reserve C. E. Anderson C. W. Bishop J. C. Avery W. J. Barrett 332 C. H. H. Bowman, Brock Jr. J. H. Buckingham F. C. Bull J. Collins, Jr. LYALG-PANNGR AND POT-POURRI! C. Cowles R. L. Eaton R. M. Ferguson A. Cibb F. E. Cignoux, Jr J. E. Grace C. A. Graham S. L. Gwin, jr. C. P. Haskins S. M. Henry E. L. Hill M. Holstein H. A. Kugeler G. E. Lewis G. B. Longstreth J. R. MacNeille M. MacNeille E. B. Mansfield W. S. Newhall H. M. Nichols R. B. Parsons E. S. Potter C. Riley W. S. Roberts H. Scott E. E. Spingarn H. L. Stocking L. W. Stoddard S. W. Trawick M. Yeomans Commissioned Second Lieutenants, Corps of Engineers Reserve J. H. Allyn H. F. Bariffi M. L. Brown C. W. Earnshaw W. R. Hedden J. R. Higbie G. H. Hodges, Jr. G. D. Kirk R. C. Kirk H. J. P. Lesaius K. W. Oberlander H. B. Reinhardt, Jr. N. W. Spencer H. R. Tomlinson Field Artillery W. C. Adams L. A. Barna W. S. Baum J. T. Bender, Jr. J. S. Bulkley J. C. Cairns G. G. Cameron G. A. Carden, Jr. D. B. Caton J. G. Cavanagh K. Cheney R. L. Davies B. DeMeritt F. D. DuBarry, Jr JUNIORS E. F. Emrich S. A. Petrillo J. S. Evans, Jr. G. C. Poore E. P. Goss S. P. Porter W. S. Gubelmann, Jr. G. S. Prince F. S. Hess G. R. Ray B. M. Holden, Jr. L. P. Scott H. M. Hutton R. H. Scott S. Jenkins G. W. Sherrill 0. M. Kaufman R. C. Smith B. Lay, Jr. W. A. Smith W. S. McCaskey B. R. Sturges C. R. McCormick, Jr. R. F. Twinam S. C. Mallory S. Washburn, Jr. 333 LYALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI: Corps of Engineers R. V. Beatty M. H. Bruno W. T. Camp A. E. Clarke H. C. Eastman E. F. Falsey W. H. Cault S. J. Grauman A. W. Hammond J. E. Haslam R. L. Houck H. C. Kugeler H. I. Michaels A. B. Newcombe E. A. Nunn P. F. Partington R. B. Portis A. W. Small S. W. Strong A. A. Watson Field Artillery L. A. Baldwin J. S. Battell B. C. Betner, Jr. D. W. Bostwick W. D. Bowen A. J. Bruen, Jr. J. W. Burdick A. H. Busby, Jr. B. Butler, Jr. J. Connell F. R. Cowles J. B. Crawford C. Eustis J. W. Ewell R. R. Fleisher J. Flood j. A. Flory J. J. Gibbons S. I. Gilman J. P. Goode W. J. Gould, Jr. A. C. Greenman J. L. Griswold Corps of Engineers G. A. Burnie J. W. Cowper, Jr. N. deScianni C. A. Flarsheim J. T. Hargrave L. G. Hecker H. B. Hill W. E. Hill T. G. Hoster SOPHOMORES J. M. Hall J. T. Hall H. S. Harrison D. W. Henry J. O. Heyworth, Jr. K. S. Hogg, Jr. D. Hollister G. T. Howe H. W. Howell M. W. A. Hunt E. D. Husted S. B. Iglehart M. T. Jones R. R. Lansburgh C. C. Leedy N. N. Levy E. L. Luzzie D. MacArthur J. R. McCrary, Jr. J. C. Madden W. E. Maguire B. K. Mason H. F. Islieb E. W. Johnson C. N. Little C. S. Ott F. F. Payne R. W. Pulliam W. R. Ransom F. W. Schwerin R. C. Sellew, Jr. J. P. Mills O. Mitchell, Jr. G. S. Newell J. R. Newton A. W. Paddock B. S. Pond M. Robinson F. C. Salsbury J. J. Shea H. M. Shwab, Jr. D. S. Stone B. Townsend F. W. Tullis F. J. Tytus J. B. Tytus, 3d A. G. Walcott E. Walker, Jr. M. A. Walsh, Jr. R. T. Williamson E. F. Wilmerding, Jr. J. R. Wilson F. L. Wurzburg, Jr. C. B. Thomas W. H. Tucker J. D. Upton G. W. VanSchaick R. P. Vreeland, Jr. W. R. Williams, Jr. W. W. Woodbridge E. D. Zsiga R. C. Adams T. M. Adams E. L. Austin E. T. Barnard W. R. Bennett E. B. Bolles L. G. Brenne J. H. Brinton H. M. Brookfield, Jr. W. D. Coddington J. C. Coggill J. S. Cotter R. I. Cowlishaw 334 FRESHMEN S. R. Cullen J. Curtiss, Jr. R. J. DiGiorgio W. Dodge J. H. Dunbar, Jr. S. H. Durlacher M. Everett M. H. Fine E. C. Flynn L. W. Forman M. Y. Foster G. T. French A. Gennet T. B. Gilchrist, Jr. F. H. Gillmore R. B. Grandin S. S. Gray, Jr. F. B. Hall, Jr. N. L. Hartenberg H. Hazelton, Jr. B. S. Herrick R. W. Jackson J. C. Kane C. Keil D. M. Kellogg, Jr. A. L. Keyes 1YAL££AW€R AND POT-POURRI! F. j. King R. VanD. Knight C. A. Kubler W. H. Lambert J. H. Lay C. S. Lockwood, Jr. W. H. McKleroy M. S. McKnight O. R. Marshall M. H. Moldawan N. V. F. Munson J. B. Nichols T. H. Page, Jr. G. H. Parks H. Pease R. H. Phillips J. A. Polhemus S. Prentice H. P. Rankin, Jr. A. Rozen A. Rozovsky N. B. Sanborn D. L. Saylor F. F. Seyfarth R. H. Sherman A. Sinnickson D. C. Smith R. A. Smith, Jr. H. W. Sternberg C. L. Stone H. A. Stone, Jr. P. U. Sunderland, Jr. D. H. Taylor, Jr. J. H. Taylor M. P. Taylor H. S. Towle C. Townsend E. T. Turner S. E. Tuttle S. Vietor M. H. Warner J. A. Warren C. W. Williamson M. Williamson 335 1YAL£-BANN€R AND POT-POURRI! YALE NAVAL RESERVE UNIT SEA POWER is an American asset. With it, with an adequate merchant marine, we can maintain and increase a foreign trade that even today cares for 20 per cent of the products of American farms and fac- tories, and makes possible the mass pro- duction system. Mass production means cheap prices on individual goods. Yet de- stroy our merchant marine or interrupt the passage of our goods overseas, and you de- stroy American mass production and, in turn, American prosperity. Our surest eco- nomic defense is a national merchant marine, Navy-protected, that will insure prompt, regular delivery of goods and moderate shipping rates. The cry now is American bottoms for American com- merce — for who has ever heard of a suc- cessful department store whose goods are delivered by the carriers of a rival store. The Navy is cheap insurance for our na- tional life. Its very existence, its potential strength, serve to maintain order and stable business conditions, and to pro- tect our foreign business investments and our citizens abroad. It safeguards our own land and is, shall we say, an effective check on those nations who today might want, for sundry selfish reasons, to usurp some of our jealousy-creating abundance. The fat, prosperous, unprotected nation offers the greatest incentive to war; and so, under present world conditions, America has no choice but adequately to defend itself. Street ruffians do not attack physically-fit, well-trained boxers, nor do ordinary bur- glars attack householders whom they know to be well armed. An efficient naval machine is not the product of a day — its ships and its men are not built or trained in the passing of a week. Battleships, for instance, take two years to build. And when built under the haste and stress of war conditions, while the nation suffers insult and defeat because of lack of equipment, the cost is appalling — - much more than if a well-equipped arma- ment had been kept through the preceding years of peace. And most Americans do support their Navy loyally. The Navy itself, on the other hand, in order to guard its potential strength, must not only keep Fit To Fight, but, above all else, must provide for expansion in time of peril. It must have its well-trained re- serve of intelligent officers, keen men who know their jobs, around whom the expan- sion may take place. How suicidal would it be to rush out newly enlisted men under ill-trained, haphazard officers! How terri- ble to send American citizens out to war under leaders unskilled in ship or gun con- trol! One does not find the Pennsylvania Railroad sending out engine firemen who have been with the road a week to pilot the Broadway Limited. And so we have the Naval Reserve Offi- cers Training Corps established at Yale, at Harvard, and at four other colleges in the United States. The four-year course is taken by sixty men of each Yale class, men rigidly selected for mental keenness and Captain Cooke J. B. Harvie, Jr. 337 1YAL£-PAKN€R AND POT-POURRI! V if. UL . =?■physical capability. Under four years of careful tutelage by officers of the Navy, the students of the Battalion learn seaman- ship, naval ordnance and gunnery, celestial navigation and piloting, tactics, strategy, communications, naval engineering, and the rudiments of international law. Week-end cruises throughout the year on the reserve U.S. destroyer Fox and the U.S.S. Eagle 27 help the men get practical training, while the summer cruises aboard battle- ships afford opportunity for the students to acquaint themselves with regular Navy personnel, Navy administrative methods, and, above all, with the operation of the intricate floating fortresses that comprise our first line of defense. Firing practice with the broadside and main batteries is one of the thrilling and much anticipated incidents of the experience afloat. The summer cruise of roughly three weeks is required of all Juniors, and is optional with those in the lower classes. The graduating class of this year have availed themselves of cruises aboard the U.S.S. Florida in 1927 to Savannah, Ca. ; aboard the Wyo- ming in 1928 to Charleston, S. C, and Halifax, N. S. ; and aboard the New York in 1929 to the islands of Bermuda and Havana, Cuba. On June 14, 1930, the fleet flagship Texas will depart from New London carrying the Yale Unit to the Pan- ama Canal Zone. This June the Unit will send its first group of Ensigns out to the United States Naval Reserve Force — the finished prod- ucts of a comprehensive system to secure protection, prosperity, and peace for the Nation. Front Row: Dyke, Talmey, Harvie, Hollister, England Back Row: Hammer, Olson, Look, Walden, Forrest, O ' Hara The Graduating Ensigns 338 Munroe, Clark, Kirk, Oviatt MUSICAL CLUBS The Quartet THE sixty-third anniversary of the Yale Glee Club was marked with success due to the efforts of its director, Marshall Bartholomew, 1907 S., who re- turned to this country after spending last year in Europe doing work in the interest of international group singing. In answer to Mr. Bartholomew ' s first call for candidates in October the largest group of candidates that have ever turned out responded, the number being well over four hundred. The problem was to pick a glee club from this large assembly, train them, teach them new songs brought over from Europe, and form a club that could sing well as a unit. This Mr. Bartholomew did in short order. Concerts were given as usual with both Princeton and Harvard on the nights before the football games. And on December 14 came the annual New York Concert which musically was one of the finest ever given; financially, it fell slightly below previous records due to the famous stock market crash of 1929, which caused the pasteboards to be sold at slightly under par. On December 19, the annual barnstorm- ing swathe through the mid-west began. The club was now severed to forty-seven 342 members with Sidney Oviatt, ' 30, as leader. For entirely musical reasons Director Bar- tholomew accompanied throughout the trip. Financially successful, the tour proved one of the most eventful in recent years; several incidents of note occurred which deserve to be related. The itinerary in- cluded Springfield, Rochester, Erie, Chi- cago, Davenport, St. Louis, Cleveland, and Buffalo. In Rochester the men had to learn a new song in honor of Mai Hay, who suf- fered from a bruised optic after a terrific battle with the sidewalk. The new number was Black Eyed Susie. Proceeding west- ward the Club ran into violent snow storms, and not infrequently did dog sleds replace the rails. Dewey Dominick and Don Davidson, mushers from Nome, proved their ability with the whip and dried haddock. A fine concert was given in Chicago, following which the singers went to Davenport, Iowa, the farthest point of the trip. Here, on Christmas Eve, the pro- gram had to be announced by Director Bartholomew due to an unfortunate error of the management who left the printed programs on the baggage car which finally ended up in the Chicago Stockyards. On Christmas Day the Glee Club was enter- 1YALG--BAWGR AND POT-POURRI! M. M. Bartholomew Director M. Watkins Director tained in Chicago, and broadcast a half- hour program Christmas night. At mid- night the Club entrained for St. Louis, and on board, a Christmas party was held at which Mr. Bartholomew played Santa Claus, and the management entertained with a specialty act. On the way home suc- cessful stops were made in Columbus, Cleveland, and Buffalo, where the men were entertained by alumni and friends. After mid-year examinations an unu- sually successful concert was given during the Junior Promenade. Lancelot P. Ross, ' 28, sang a group of solos which was one of the best parts of the program. Basil Hen- ning, ' 32, singing for his first year on the University Clee Club, lived up to his repu- tation gained on the Christmas trip, and sang wonderfully. During the rest of the winter term concerts were given at Rye and Mount Vernon. Shortly afterward the Club entered the Intercollegiate Contest in New York on March II. Much interest surrounded the plans for the Bermuda trip during the Easter vaca- tion. A club of about thirty men sailed from New York on April 3 to give two concerts in Bermuda, returning April 11. During the spring Vassar, Sleepy Hollow, Montclair, Morristown, and other cities were on the list of concerts. The season was brought to a fitting close by the annual Commence- ment Concert in June. In brief, the Club has had an entirely satisfactory season under the directorship of Mr. Bartholomew, ' 07 S. Next year promises to be even better. Affairs will be handled by Lea Marsh, ' 31, Manager, and J. C. Rathborne, ' 31, Leader. S. Oviatt Leader S. Chappell, Jr. Manager 343 The University Glee Club LYALG-BAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! YALE UNIVERSITY CLEE CLUB M. M. Bartholomew, ' 07 S Director Morris W. Watkins Associate Director Sidney Oviatt, ' 30 President C. S. Chappell, Jr., ' 30 Manager E. L. Marsh, Jr., ' 31 Assistant Manager H. W. Chambers, Jr., ' 31 .... Publicity Manager J. C. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 Librarian FIRST TENORS F. B. Chase, ' 30 S. C. D. Davidson, ' 30 S. A. Cibb, ' 30 J. B. Lounsbury, ' 31 E. L. Marsh, Jr., ' 31 B. E. Monroe, ' 30 S. L. E. Robertson, ' 31 E. P. Small, ' 33 SECOND TENORS C. P. Chapman, ' 32 D. N. Clark, ' 30 F. R. Cowles, ' 32 W. D. Deuell, ' 30 M. F. Driggs, ' 31 A. Hayes, Jr., ' 30 B. D. Henning, ' 32 E. McM. Lewis, ' 30 C. D. Marshall, Jr., ' 30 S. C. S. Reed, Jr., ' 30S. C. S. Rodman, ' 31 H. Y. Tyler, ' 31 J. D. Washington, ' 31 FIRST BASSES H. E. Baton, Jr., ' 31 S. D. M. Crawford, ' 30 S. B. DeMeritt, ' 31 T. W. Dominick, ' 31 C. W. Earnshaw, ' 30 S. R. M. Ferris, 3d, ' 31 S. G. B. Forbes, ' 31 P. W. Hoon, ' 31 C. D. Kirk, ' 30 S. C. E. Payne, ' 31 J. C. Rathborne, ' 31 R. R. Rudolph, ' 32 S. J. W. Wells, ' 30 SECOND BASSES A. J. Bingham, ' 32 J. C. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 D. H. Clement, ' 31 H. H. Clifford, ' 32 D. Dominick, ' 30 J. C. Cemehl, 31 R. L. Goodale, ' 32 S. L. Cwin, Jr., ' 30 A. L. Harris, ' 31 M. Hay, ' 31 S. J. N. Hazard, ' 30 C. C. Miller, ' 31 J. M. Musser, ' 30 S. Oviatt, ' 30 J. C. Rogers, Jr., ' 31 G. W. Sherrill, ' 31 P. A. Mangano, ' 32 R. P. Oldham, ' 31 M. . Violinist Accompanist 345 The University Band _YALG--BANN€R AND POT-POURRI! THE UNIVERSITY BAND ANEW departure was introduced in band circles when the Yale Band cut its football unit to fifty pieces, in- stead of the eighty which it featured last year. This was done with little loss of vol- ume and a surprising gain in versatility and marching. The adoption of new uniforms and a more varied program likewise added to the improved caliber of the Football Band. The outstanding event of the football season w as the trip to Georgia, on which the Band accompanied the team. Concerts and parades featured the stay in Athens, and, through otherwise unfortunate cir- cumstances, the Band was able to demon- strate Yale courtesy and sportsmanship. The trip as a whole was looked upon as a successful attempt to justify the presence of the Band on future similar occasions. Through the efforts of Faculty Advisor Ellis and Coach Charles F. Smith the Band was enabled to play many concerts in New York, Boston, Hartford, Bridgeport, New Haven, and elsewhere. These concerts were featured by many original offerings and were well received at all times. At the present writing plans are being made for N. S. Waterman Leader of the Band further local excursions as well as an ex- tended European tour during the summer. There is no doubt but that the Band will have completed one of its most successful seasons, and it is looking forward to greater successes during the years of 1930-1931. OFFICERS, 1929-1930 Neil S. Waterman Leader Howard T. Crawford . Manager Mathias F. Strashun Assistant Manager Avard L. Bishop .... Librarian Frank I. E. McCuire Assistant Librarian OFFICERS, 1930-1931 Albert C. Thompson Howard T. Crawford Henry H. Palmer . Avard L. Bishop Frank J. E. McCuire Leader Manager Assistant Manager Librarian Assistant Librarian Charles F. Smith .... Professional Director Joseph R. Ellis (Registrar of Freshmen) . Treasurer TRUMPETS W. M. Bellemore A. L. Bishop R. A. Bruce F. D. Cowles S. DeMaio W. P. Everard F. J. E. McCuire j. H. Parker J. K. Robertson E. B. Self R. A. Stanley S. C. Vidal BARITONE J. K. Northam HORNS F. Kneil P. H. Palmer A. Weiner TROMBONES A. E. Clarke H. M. Gary B. H. Cere G. E. Moore J. W. Parrish F. W. Smith TUBAS H. E. Perrine H. I. Ross C. R. Webster C. W. Woolsey PICCOLO P. N. Doolittle SOPRANO SAXOPHONE A. C. Anders ALTO SAXOPHONES M. L. Gompertz A. C. Thompson S. T. Willis TENOR SAXOPHONE H. J. Lavietes CLARINETS R. H. Atwater W. G. Atwood J. English N. Everard H. W. Horn N. S. Irwin L. J. Rapoport G. W. Ryerson M. F. Strashun DRUMS H. T. Crawford J. Devlin D. English E. Lindbacker J. R. Titus BASS DRUM H. H. Palmer G. L. Porsche CYMBALS A. H. Miller 347 „ .:., ; ' i - fJ 1 jj -_ ... m . fit j P5!!? ■bbh - i9HH The College Choir 1YALG-BAKNO AND POT-POURRI! THE COLLEGE CHOIR FIRST TENORS H. W. Brunner, ' 33 A. C. Carr, P.C W. L. Funk. ' 30 S. J. T. Kimberly, ' 31 S. J. B. Lounsbury, ' 31 B. E. Monroe, ' 30 S. j. K. Northam, ' 31 L. E. Robertson, ' 31 A. B. Smither, C.S. J. A. Timm, Jr., Asst. Prof. W. j. Watson, ' 30 E. O. Whitefield, P.C. SECOND TENORS j. W. Benson, C.S. E. H. Birgman, ' 31 J. K. Brines, ' 32 M. F. Driggs, ' 31 R. L Cilpatric, P.C. J. Kai, ' 31 M. M. Kastendieck, C.S. C. D. Marshall, ' 30 S. M. W. Reese, ' 33 C. S. Rodman, ' 31 S. A. Scoville, P.C D. F. Smith, ' 32 H. Y. Tyler, ' 31 C. F. Virtue, P.C. J. D. Washington, ' 31 Professor Harry B. Jepson Director and Organist FIRST BASSES R. Ayres, P.C. R. L. Comstock, ' 32 S. B. DeMeritt, ' 31 R. M. Ferris, ' 31 S. C. B. Forbes, ' 31 P. W. Hoon, ' 31 G. D. Kirk, ' 30 S. A. T. MacAllister, ' 30 P. A. Mangano, ' 32 R. B. Mather, ' 33 C. E. Payne, ' 31 S. R. Usher, P.C. SECOND BASSES W. B. Bachman, ' 32 J. F. Bell, ' 31 A. J. Bingham, ' 32 I. B. Buss, P.C H. H. Clifford, ' 32 J. W. Cutler, P.C. J. C. Cemehl, ' 31 R. L. Coodale, ' 32 M. Hay, ' 30 E. V. Knight, ' 31 C. E. Miller, ' 31 H. P. Morgan, ' 31 j. D. Pettus, ' 30 R. W. Seitz, Inst. 349 First Row: Boruff, Ross, Calhoun, Hyde, Prideaux, Cowles, Fox Second Row: Craetzer, Longstreth, Coulter, Collins, Curtis, Allison, Wagner, Putnam, Wiener, Brown Third Row: Wolff, Velie, Peirsel, Crosby, Hugh es, Connell, Pope, Cosmus, Miller, Trowbridge Fourth Row: Bennethum, Houston, Streeter, Fitch, Foote, Caskey, Mead, Lapham, Evarts Fifth Row: Coddard, Caylord, Henson, Murphy, Kingman, Lambert, Dominick, Peters The University Dramatic Club 1YAL£-BAW€R AND P0T-P0URBI! THE YALE UNIVERSITY DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION OFFICERS R. S. Allison, Jr., 30 President L. S. Putnam, ' 30 Production Manager J. H. Coulter, ' 30 Art Director C. B. Longstreth, ' 30 Associate Manager J. A. Curtis, ' 30 Manager J. S. Craetzer, Jr., ' 30 Press Manager R. J. Wiener, ' 30 Secretary H. Brereton, ' 31 Assistant Manager 1930 R. S. Allison, Jr. T. M. Brown, Jr. E. A. Choate, Jr. J. Collins, Jr. J. H. Coulter C. Cowles J. A. Curtis D. Dominick J. Evarts E. M. Foote, Jr. M. J. Fox, Jr. W. S. Caylord, Jr. A. Cibb J. S. Craetzer, Jr. W. W. Greene MEMBERS S. M. Henry C. N. Henson S. O. Jones A. Lambert C. B. Longstreth H. C. Miller, Jr. F. A. Mulgrew, 3d L. S. Putnam T. Prideaux W. Sizer T. W. Wagner R. Ward J. C. West R. J. Wiener 1931 H. Brereton J. L. Caskey J. D. Garrison I. H. Houston J. N. Hyde L. A. Lapham C. Leonard L. J. Mead, Jr. J. L D. Peters J. C. Rathbome J. D. Ross J. W. Streeter H. V. Williams 1932 K. P. Bennethum J. P. Boruff, Jr. J. C. Calhoun, 3d J. Connell R. Cosmus S. McK. Crosby G. H. Fitch L. Goddard Dean C. W. Mendell ADVISORY BOARD R. H. Hughes E. Kingman J. B. Murphy T. Peirsel A. I. Smith, Jr. M. Trowbridge, J. D. Velie F. M. Wolff Dean E. V. Meeks FACULTY COMMITTEE Prof. J. M. Berdan Prof. J. R. Crawford Prof. S. B. Hemingway Prof. C. H. Nettleton Prof. W. L. Phelps Rev. T. L. Riggs 353 lYALG-BAhW€R AND POT-POURRI! DRAMATICS Robert S. Allison President Alexander Dean Coach NO previous class has seen the Dra- matic Association pass through such a crucial and important stage in its development. The first significant step taken by the 1930 Board was brought about by those far-sighted individuals, A. R. Connelly, ' 29, and J. A. Curtis, ' 30. This was the amalgamation of the Dramat. with the Playcraftsmen, which seemed to infuse new life into the older organization. This in turn made possible the second step: the engagement of a resident direc- tor. Through the courtesy of Professor Baker the services of Mr. Dean were se- cured. The final, and a most important step, was the financial reorganization, which, through the ability and energy of Manager Curtis, who devised the program, resulted in final solvency in the face of an overwhelming deficit. With such unusually finished actors as R. S. Allison and T. M. Brown, aided by their junior cohorts, H. V. Williams and J. D. Ross among others, it was a foregone conclusion that Bernard Shaw ' s Captain Brassbound ' s Conversion, so deftly di- rected by Alexander Dean, would be a suc- cess. But the wholly unprecedented ap- proval which three capacity audiences passed upon it was a surprise even to its producers, and necessitated the brilliant re- vival on the Princeton game week-end. Of this performance the New York Herald- Tribune reviewer, in a long article, said, I had not thought it possible that a band of undergraduates, and a coach, however earnest, could produce so polished a piece of work. President Angell remarked, This is so much the best Commencement 354 Play that I can remember, that I wish to record my personal appreciation of the achievement. Acute observers were prepared for this success by the three one-act plays which had been previously presented at Derby Day, when the remarkable phenomenon of turning away people through lack of space was first experienced by a Dramat. Board. It was in these productions, perhaps, that the versatility and imagination of L. S. Put- nam and J. H. Coulter were most evident, forecasting the effective sets of Brass- bound and Blayds which were to fol- low. The Board continued its policy of pre- John A. Curtis Manager A scene from The Truth about Blayds ' A scene from The March on El Rotan ' LYALG-BAhNGR AND POTPOURRI! senting plays at once meritorious and en- tertaining with The Truth about Blayds, by A. A. Milne. The finish and polish of the production attested the fine capacity of Messrs. Allison, Brown, Williams, and Fitch, all of whom might have been said to star. The New York Times considered the presentation Polished throughout, while the New York Herald-Tribune added, ' ' The Truth About Blayds ' proved to be one of the most finished presenta- tions ever given by the Yale Dramatic As- sociation. Local pride aroused even greater enthusiasm, the New Haven Register saying, Once more the Dramat. offered a performance which was able to transcend ordinary amateur efforts, and was worthy of being judged at its value as a polished professional piece of work. It is note- worthy that the fine Commencement pro- gram, edited by Curtis, was so successful that he produced another edition for Blayds. In both were found exclusive articles by such notables as Messrs. Arthur Hopkins and Leslie Howard, and the Misses Lynn Fontanne and Jane Cowl. This play inherited the roving nature of its fore- father, but instead of visiting Smith, capti- vated Wellesley (among others). Altogether 1929-30 was a most signifi- cant as well as successful year, and one to be noted in red letters in the long history of the Dramat. ' s dignified career. We have tried to give credit where credit was due, but there is insufficient space to notice the work of the entire Association. A scene from Captain Brassbound ' s Conversion ' 356 A scene from The Truth about Blayds ' L. S. Putnam Production Manager J. H. Coulter Art Director LYALG-BAWGR AND POT-POURRI! CLUBS ALTHOUGH Yale ' s skyline, life, and -A customs are changing startlingly these days, there remain still a few groups who can find time in the busy day to carry on the vestiges of what are known as Yale ' s old traditions. These organizations are not goals to be reached by aspiring jun- iors, but rather they are the means to afford relaxation from the arduous tasks and duties imposed upon gentlemen of leisure in the Senior Class by the great Yale machine. Some of these clubs were organized for no particular reason other than for con- geniality, and to perpetuate the niceties of wielding the cup in a traditional manner; others exist for more definite purposes. Some are very old, and some are new. Few of these clubs attempt to reform the methods of the world; they seem to be content with remaining undisturbed by the more practical minded. Of all the many groups, the Whiffen- poofs are probably the best known. They have lived up to their reputation as gentle- men songsters off on a spree for many, many years, and have lightened New Haven ' s spring evenings with song ever since the evening long ago at Mory ' s when they first assembled. Here, on a Tuesday night they still assemble to do homage to the almost forgotten past, and occasionally to serenade the Freshman Oval. They do this not to sing to the freshmen, but be- cause long ago, before Harkness Tower was even a dream, Whiffenpoofs had sung to their classmates there on the grass of Berkeley Oval. The Mohicans are reputed to be respon- sible for the doings on the Old Campus on Calcium night. They appear then in full war regalia and war paint with just a bit of fire water to prove to the universe the benefits of the latter. Their greatest contribution to Yale ' s happiness is that they tend to re- lieve the tenseness and difficulties of Rush Week. Of a more serious nature is the Eliza- bethan Club, whose members gather after- noons at the Club on College Street to dis- cuss things literary and otherwise, and to perpetuate the fast dying art of conversa- tion over a cup of tea brewed by the famous Simms and to smoke a long pipe. Here a fine contact is made between the under- graduates and the faculty, a bond which is seldom formed in Yale these days. The vault in the rear of the clubhouse contains many famous manuscripts, and a library that is one of the finest of its type in the world. The Pundits are another body for discus- sion whose destinies are guided by the genial Professor William Lyon Phelps. Its members are here enabled to find an in- tellectual communion which is sadly lack- ing in the classroom. A few years ago a group of sailors formed the Yale Corinthian Yacht Club, and once a week at Mory ' s take a dry cruise and swap yarns over the tall glasses. They have not confined their activities to dry land, but every spring foster a regatta between many of the Eastern colleges. These, then, are the more important clubs. While they are not highly organized, they nevertheless fill a vital need in the life of the University. Yale is rapidly becoming such a complex machine, that clubs of this type are coming to have a great importance. 361 1YALG-PAKNO AND POT-POURRI! THE ELIZABETHAN CLUB OFFICERS, 1929-1930 Charles F. Tucker Brown President John M. S. Allison, Jr Vice-President Andrew Keogh . Librarian Nathaniel B. Paradise Assistant Librarian Gilbert McC. Troxell Assistant Librarian UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS 1930 Robert S. Allison, Jr. Hedges Macdonald Arthur E. Bestor, Jr. Kenneth MacLean Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. Fletcher E. Nyce, Jr. Raymond W. Ellis Tom Prideaux Albert DeW. Erskine, Jr. Louis S. Putnam John Evarts Julien A. Ripley, Jr. John N. Hazard Ervin Seltz er Edward S. Johnson, Jr. Bradford S. Tilney William D. Judson, Jr. James K. Willing, Jr. Charles R. Langmuir 1931 Louis A. Lapham Craigh Leonard Francis C. Power Rowland Stebbins, Jr. Herschel V. Williams, Jr. 1932 John Baur Richard S. Childs Livingston Coddard George H. Hamilton 363 LYAL€ BAhM€R AND P0T-P0URBI. ' YALE UNIVERSITY CLUB OFFICERS F. H. Jones, 30 . . . President T. A. Standish, Jr., ' 30 S. Vice-President W. P. Patterson, ' 31 Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF COVERNORS 1931 E. K. Chapin W. P. Patterson j. G. Rogers, Jr. 1931 S. F. E. Weicker 1932 S. C. Williams D. R. Wilmerding 1932 S. E. Rotan, 2d 1930 W. Archbald S. L. Cwin, Jr. F. H. Jones J. W. Oliver W. R. Tappen 1930S. R. C. Brown, 3d T. A. Standish, Jr. F. H. Jones, President N the far-away eighties, it was the custom of the undergraduates to gather into small groups for the purpose of eating together. One of these groups, in 1880, conceived the brilliant idea of forming a club, which they called the University Club. By some means or other, they secured a building on Chapel Street next to the old Quinnipiac Club. The Club ' s popularity at once assured its successful continuance, and, with the entire undergraduate body to choose from, its membership soon grew into a select circle of congeniality. The membership steadily increased and in 1916 it moved to the building which it now oc- cupies. This was a great improvement and afforded to members an excellent dining room, as well as the facilities of writing room, library, and billiard tables. Here we see gathered together three times a day, the undergraduates of both the College and Shef f. The Club thus forms one of the best common meeting grounds for the members of these two schools and has always been a strong bond of union be- tween them. The Club is entirely governed by under- graduates and for this purpose a Board of Governors elected from College and Sheff. meets monthly to elect new members to the Club, investigate the financial status, and receive and attempt to combat com- plaints of every conceivable form. As a re- ward for these labors, the Board annually invites itself to an outing in the spring, where ceremonious homage is done to the honor of Bacchus and Ceres. On the site of the present U Club, the university is beginning construction this summer on the new Graduate School. This means, of course, the Club will have to move. The university owns the ground and the building where we are now located. When the House Plan goes into effect at Yale, it will probably mean the death of the Club. This will take place in five or six years and as a result there has been some talk of abandoning the Club after this year. It is sincerely hoped by the Board and all undergraduates that this will not come about, and that the university will find a new location for the Club suitable to both College and Sheff. men. At present, how- ever, plans for next year are very indefinite and we are unable to make any definite an- nouncements. Since its founding the Uni- versity Club has been an integral part of Yale ' s social system and it is to the interest of all undergraduates that it be continued as long as possible. 365 LYAL€ PAhN€R AND POT-POURRI. ' MEMBERS W. H. Abel I F. B. Adams, Jr. L. L. Aitken, Jr. D. E. Albright H. Ammidon C. Andrews J. A. Andrews W. S. Anthony W. D. Archbald L. C. Ashley E. S. Auchincloss R. S. Auchincloss D. C. Austin H. Babcock L. A. Baldwin A. C. Beane, Jr. A. McC. Beard, Jr. F. S. Bell J. P. Bent A. W. Betts G. P. Biggs R. M. Bissell, Jr. L. R. Blackhurst, Jr. A. S. Blagden, Jr. J. W. Blagden D. W. Bostwick W. D. Bowen J. B. Boyle J. L Bradley J. Breckenridge P. J. Brennan E. C. Brewster J. M. Brodie A. M. Brooks E. Brooks, Jr. C. C. Brooks J. J. Brooks, 2d F. C. Brown R. C. Brown, 3d R. N. Brown R. A. Buck P. M. Burnett J. M. Burrall, Jr. R. M. Calfee, Jr. J. C. Campbell E. T. Carmody F. T. Carmody C. B. Carmody W. L Cary, Jr. D. Catlin C. P. Chapman H. H. Chapman K. Cheney R. W. Cheney R. S. Childs S. B. Childs, Jr. F. A. Chisholm L Clark W. H. Cleveland D. Cochran J. Collins, Jr. 366 D. M. Compton R. Condon C. R. Conger, 3d J. C. Cook R. H. Cook H. R. Cooke E. Corning, 2d C. Cowles G. H. Cox, Jr. D. B. Crittenden R. S. Crocker, Jr. H. P. Cross E. Currie C. Curtiss, Jr. A. C. Dana P. Dater J. P. Devaney C. H. Dickerman J. H. Dillon, 2d C. M. Dodson D. Dominick G. Donnelly J. A. Draper, 3d F. D. DuBarry, Jr. C. B. Dunn K. Dunn F. S. Eddy, Jr. J. H. Eddy R. G. Elliott C. Ellis, Jr. D. England, Jr. C. H. Engle A. DeW. Erskine J. Espy T. M. Evans R. W. Everett, Jr. W. N. Farquhar B. Fenn J. Flood R. Follett S. C. Forbes M. P. Ford T. C. Ford R. J. Foster, 2d E. P. Frambach J. H. Francis, 3d W. D. Fullerton D. S. Gamble, 3d C. M. Ganson C. C. Gary J. B. Gates F. E. Gignoux, Jr. R. H. Goddard, Jr. E. P. Goss M. W. Goss C. L. Griggs J. L. Griswold R. R. Guest S. L. Gwin J. T. Hall Jos. T. Hall UNIVERSITY CLUB E. A. Hamill, 2d H. M. Hanna, Jr. W. F. Harrington, Jr. J. R. Hart J. N. Hazard G. M. Henderson B. D. Henning S. M. Henry G. N. Henson H. Hitt F. C. Hixon j. G. Hodges W. V. Hodges, Jr. J. J. Holahan E. O. Holter, Jr. C. M. Howell, Jr. J. Howland, Jr. R. D. Howse C. H. Howson, Jr. W. B. Hudson, Jr. E. S. Hunt, Jr. E. D. Husted S. B. Iglehart J. H. Ingram P. H. Jennings, Jr. N. E. Jennison W. H. Johnston C. B. Jones F. H. Jones H. T. Jones M. H. Jones J. E. King, Jr. D. Kitchel E. F. Knight J. Knott G. D. Lammers H. R. Lanman M. H. Laundon, Jr. H. D. Leavitt C. Leonard A. L. Lindley, Jr. H. H. Littell R. A. Lowndes J. R. Lyman K. Mabon R. A. Maes G. L. Maltby R. H. Mariner W. Marshall, Jr. W. Marvel M. C. Mason, Jr. R. S. Meredith L. P. Miles, Jr. A. B. Miller C. G. Miller, Jr. P. Miller S. M. Milliken G. P. Mills J. P. Mills T. E. Moore G. B. Morris, Jr. _YAL£-BAnN€R AND POT-POURRI: W. B. Mosle E. F. Motch C. S. H. Mott J. E. Muhlfeld F. A. Mulgrew, 3d C. Munson J. M. Musser D. MacArthur D. B. McCalmont, Jr. S. P. McCalmont C. J. McCarthy C. R. McCormick, Jr. E. McElwain J. McEvoy, Jr. R. W. Mcllvain, Jr. M. S. Mackay, Jr. F. B. McKown W. McLauchlan D. R. McLennan, Jr. W. Nazro R. C. Nicholas, Jr. R. F. Niven H. Norcross, Jr. F. C. Norman J. W. Oliver J. R. Page R. C. Palmer W. P. Patterson F. W. Pershing M. S. Phipps J. M. Polk F. B. Porter J. F. Potter F. A. Potts S. R. Prince, Jr. R. M. Putnam C. R. Ramsburg, Jr. T. I. Reese, Jr. T. N. Richardson M. J. Roberts W. S. Roberts R. B. Robertson, Jr. W. S. Roby, Jr. E. Rotan, 2d B. A. Rowland S. Saltus R. E. Sargent B. Savage G. F. Schafer J. W. Seddon J. D. Seely J. G. Seely R. D. Shaw T. C. Sheffield F. R. Sheldon L. R. Sherman H. McN. Shwab, Jr. R. Simonds A. R. Smith E. B. Smith R. C. Smith, Jr. R. McN. Smith J. M. Sprigg F. A. Standish, Jr. S. Stewart, Jr. R. S. Storrs, Jr. A. B. Strange, Jr. B. R. Sturges C. Sturtevant, Jr. W. M. Swoope W. R. Tappen S. T. Terhune H. D. Thayer L. E. Thomas, Jr. L. Thorne R. M. Thrall L. E. Tierney, Jr. J. Treadwell, 3d F. B. Trimble F. W. Tullis M. Tyson F. J. Tytus J. B. Tytus, 3d J. D. Upton C. W. VanSchaick J. D. Velie H. H. Villard J. R. Walker, Jr. L E. Walker E. J. Warner, Jr. S. Washburn, Jr. F. E. Weicker C. W. Wheeler J. C. Wilcox S. C. Williams T. D. Williams D. R. Wilmerding E. F. Wilmerding, Jr. J. R. Wilson J. C. Winslow J. K. Winter C. D. Wood, Jr. R. D. Wood, Jr. W. B. Wood C. A. Yinkey, Jr. S. R. Zimmerman FORMER PRESIDENTS 1880-81 J. E. Bowen 1881-82 W. E. Bailey 1882-83 C. F. Collins 1883-84 F. D. Bowen 1884-85 W. Catherwood 1885-86 C. L Bailey, Jr. 1886-87 J. Archibald, Jr. 1887-88 W. B. Brinsmade 1889-90 C. F. Peter 1890-91 E. V. Hale 1891-92 E. H. Floyd-Jones 1892-93 M. Taylor 1893-94 F. L. Polk 1894-95 C. Vanderbilt 1895-96 A. G. C. Sage 1896-97 R. S. Brewster 1897-98 J. M. Woolsey 1 898-99 C. A. Brayton 1915-16 C. Pratt 1 899-00 J. M. McCormick 1916-17 H. Taylor 1900-01 J. Day 1917-18 M. C. Ivison 1901-02 J. R. Swan 1918-19 W. A. Taylor, Jr. 1 902-03 R. R. McCormick 1919-20 S. H. Knox 1 903-04 J. B. Huff 1920-21 L. Foster 1904-05 E. P. Rogers 1921-22 C. A. Griscom, III 1905-06 E. Corning 1922-23 W. B. Hawks 1906-07 C. Truesdale 1923-24 C. M. Stewart 1 907-08 C. P. Dixon 1924-25 R. J. Luman 1 908-09 F. W. Murray, Jr. 1925-26 F. A. Potts 1 909-1 E. Hoyt, 2d 1926-27 F. F. Robinson 1910-11 M. J. O ' Brien, Jr. 1927-28 J. P. Satterfield 1911-12 H. L. R. Emmett 1928-29 G. W. Wyckoff 1912-13 C. H. Marshall 1929-30 F. H. Jones 1913-14 G. L. Smith 1914-15 M. P. Truesdale 367 THE MORY ' S ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1930-1931 Hon. John L. Cilson President Dr. Raynham Townshend Vice-President George E. Thompson Secretary Burnside Winslow Treasurer To serve until 1931 Ezekiel S. Bronson Omar W. Piatt Burnside Winslow Graham F. Thompson COVERNINC BOARD To serve until 1932 To serve until 1933 J. Frederick Baker Frederick D. Crave Stephen Whitney Edgar C. Lackland Philip Troup William A. Rice R. Selden Rose Chas. M. Bakewell 368 YALE CRENFELL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Sir Wilfred T. Crenfel I, M.D. . Honorary President Dr. Harry L. Paddon Superintendent of the Yale School Timothy W. Goodrich, 2d, ' 30 President E. Fay Campbell, ' 16 Permanent Secretary Chapin Riley, ' 30 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS P. K. Allen, ' 33 M. F. Driggs, ' 31 T. W. Goodrich, 2d, ' 30 D. Howland, ' 33 T. E. Moore, ' 30 C. Riley, ' 30 C. W. Sherrill, ' 31 S. Y. Warner, Jr., ' 30 S. W. H. Wetherill, 3d, ' 31 S. E. P. White, ' 31 369 Front Row: H. R. Cooke, Bingham, Lydgate, J. A. Baldwin, W. P. Baldwin Back Row: Chun, F. J. Cooke, L. A. Baldwin, E. Kai YALE HAWAIIAN CLUB OFFICERS L. W. A. Lydgate, ' 31 President W. P. Baldwin, ' 31 Secretary J. A. Baldwin, Law L. A. Baldwin, ' 33 W. P. Baldwin, ' 31 B. Bingham, ' 31 E. J. Q. Chun, ' 31 MEMBERS F. j. Cooke, ' 33 H. R. Cooke, ' 32 E. J. K. Kai, Jr., Law J. K. Kai, Jr., ' 31 V. L Knudsen, ' 32 370 LYAL££AhM€R AND POTPOURRI! YALE AERONAUTICAL SOCIETY OFFICERS, 1929-1930 C. L. Morris, ' 32 S President W. Hoffman, ' 32 Secretary E. F. Knight, ' 32 Treasurer MEMBERS William E. Arnstein George H. Baker S. Morgan Barber Edward T. Barnard Hugh N. Boadwee Chester P. Buckland Winston M. Bullard Charles L. Clarke Roy Fitzgerald, Jr. John A. C. Fraser Moises Cabay Samuel M. Carniques Walter Hoffman Robert L. Houck Richard E. Kaufman Edward F. Knight Leondro Kuvin Philip Lansdale John A. Long Malcolm S. Mackay, Jr. Lawrence J. Mead, Jr. Charles L. Morris John M. Murray John B. Orr, Jr. Edward H. Roper Tilden W. Southack Lucius S. Storrs, Jr. Paul U. Sunderland, |r. 371 YALE CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUB Rushmore H. Mariner, ' 32 Commodore Bennett Fisher, ' 31 Vice-Commodore Seth M. Milliken, Jr., ' 32 . . Secretary and Treasurer REGATTA COMMITTEE B. Fisher, Chairman S. M. Milliken, Jr. 0. May L.I.S.Y.R.A. Delegate R. H. Mariner Honorary Members C Sherman Hoyt Irving Newton MEMBERS Olin Stephens H. Barry R. H. Mariner W. Bowden Oliver May E. P. Bullard C. Meyer D. Cochran S. M. Milliken M. Dodge J. Muhlfeld F. S. Eddy G. S. Newall R. Fabian H. Parsons A. Fisher F. Perry B. Fisher T. Rianhard J. Flood S. Savage C. C. Gordon J. Streeter J. Graham F. Tytus H. Hitt J. Tytus E. H. Hoffman L. Tucker H. Hotchkiss G. Van Schaick C. B. Jones John West j. L King H. B. Wilcox E. F. Knight J. G. Wilcox H. Kusterer C. Williamson J. McEwen M. Williamson 372 Front Row: Rathborne, Lindeke, Cwin, Ellis, Hazard Back Row: Cibb, Chappell, Musser, Davidson WHIFFENPOOFS ' Trap R ock Chappell ' Ponzi Davidson ' Owl Ellis ' Blackeyed Susie Cibb Let her go Cwin John Hazard Lucky Lindeke Pitchpipe Musser Sir Single Rathborne 373 First Row: Buckingham, Nicholas, Dudley Second Row: Archbald, Oliver, Mosle, Schwartzburg Third Row: Tappen, Potter, West, Lindeke, Gillespie, Kitchel MOHICANS R. C. Nicholas, Jr. D. Kitchel . . Big Chief Little Chief Wodrow Archbald J. deF. Buckingham C. W. Dudley, Jr. C. W. Gillespie D. Kitchel J. N. Lindeke W. B. Mosle R. C. Nicholas, Jr. J. W. Oliver E. S. Potter T. C. Schwartzburg W. R. Tappen J. C. West 374 Front Row: Archbald, Oliver, Hanson, Bent, Hickok, Wilson Back Row: Nazro, Standish, Brown THE SWORD AND CUN CLUB W. Archbald J. P. Bent R. Brown M. F. Hanson D. H. Hickok W. Nazro J. W. Oliver T. Standish R. F. Wilson 375 Front Row: Hickok, Wilson Back Row: Freeman, Standish, Ward, Nazro CUP MEN Owen O. Freeman Daniel H. Hickok Wheeler Nazro Thomas A. Standish, Jr. Robert Ward Robert F. Wilson 376 First Row: Lapham, Barnes Second Row: Cooley, Fox, Hare Third Row: Garrison, Heurtematte, Howell THE MOUNTAIN JE MEN FICHE 1931 John H. Barnes, J Paul W. Cooley Lyttleton Fox, Jr. John D. Garrison Thomas T. Hare, Jr. Robert M. Heurtematte John Howell Lewis A. Lapham 377 First Row: Peck, Sheldon Second Row: Maes, King, Lanphier, Beyer, White Third Row: Payne, Wilson, Paxton BIG STICKS Ener Jean Beyer White Wing King Big Mop Maes Valspar Osborne Carbona Payne I. P. Lanphier, B. C. Little Mop Peck P. C. V. C. Paxton Baisaic Sheldon Feather Duster Wilson Ash Can White 378 PROFESSOR WILLIAM LYON PHELPS Maurice F. Hanson . . Secretary Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. George S. Chappell, Jr. Albert DeW. Erskine, Jr. John Evarts John S. Graetzer, Jr. Maurice F. Hanson Hedges Macdonald Herbert C. Miller, Jr. Fletcher E. Nyce, Jr. Tom Prideaux 379 _YALG-PAhM€R AND POT-POURRI! THE KIWIES nee cauda, nee alls ' S. T. Terhune Wee Kiwi KIWIES F. 0. Ayres, jr. E. K. Chapin J. B. Gates C. W. Goodyear, Jr. G. W. Hill, Jr. J. B. Potts S. T. Terhune 380 First Row: Clark, Curtis, Cibb Second Row : Oviatt, Cenz, Mears, Mil Third Row: Dominick, Jones er THE CALLIOPE CLUB Daddy Jones Cramp Oviatt Sis Cibb Sonny-Boy Miller Pop Mears Wifey Dominick Unc Cenz Auntie Clark Baby Curtis 381 Front Row: Prof. Carver, Catewood, Brown, Velie, Pres. Coulter, Pot- ter, Lapham, Erskine, Prof. Hill Back Row: MacLean, Fitch, Cook, Mulgrew, Mams, Allison, Stern, Prideaux Sherrill, Hazard, Wil- LES THELEMITES FACULTY ADVISORS Professor Hill Professor Garver OFFICERS J. H. Coulter, ' 30 President L. A. Lapham, ' 31 Treasurer L. Coddard, ' 32 Secretary MEMBERS 1930 Robert S. Allison, Jr. Kenneth MacLean Thatcher M. Brown, Jr. Felix A. Mulgrew, 3d John H. Coulter John M. Musser Albert DeW. Erskine, Jr. Fletcher E. Nyce, Jr. John N. Hazard Tom Prideaux 1931 Thomas T. Hare, Jr. Lewis A. Lapham Craigh Leonard 1932 Richard S. Childs John A. Cook Howard P. Cross George H. Fitch Joseph C. Rathborne Cibbs W. Sherrill Louis Stern, 2d Herschel V. Williams, Jr. Richard D. Gatewood, Jr. Livingston Goddard John F. Potter John D. Velie 382 THE YALE LIBERAL CLUB THE Yale Liberal Club is an organization which was started shortly after the war by a group of students who were interested in the attempt to discuss and formulate their opinion upon the issues arising in contemporary history. Its purpose has always been to attempt to stimulate undergraduate thought upon the economic, political, and social problems of the day. It has no creed save intelligence, and wishes to welcome all types of opinion. During the past year its activities have fallen into three classes. It has been respon- sible for bringing up a number of speakers of national prominence to Yale, whom the members of the Club were able to meet personally and who gave addresses before the whole undergraduate body. It has formed a nucleus for discussion groups, one of which, the Yale Fabian Society, has been very successful. And it has undertaken re- search in the economic situation of New Haven in its unemployment survey, which was begun this year in the hope that it would be completed next year. In the past the Club has always existed as an amorphous group without organiza- tion of any kind whatsoever. But it has shown potentialities in serving as a leaven to intellectual activity among undergradu- ates to such an extent that it has now been considered wise to give it a definite or- ganization. Hereafter there will be less de- pendence upon the leadership of a single individual. Several officers have been con- stituted each with a defined function, and a process of nomination and election must be gone through by each member before he can join the Club. 383 ASHEVILLE SCHOOL CLUB 1930 John C. Avery George M. Henson James A. Kuehn George A. Poole, Jr. John D. Seely William P. Smith Hubert H. Weiser 1930 S. Lee C. Ashley Ledyard Avery Randall W. Everett, Jr. Reuben B. Robertson, Jr. 1931 Rudolf B. Gottfried 1931 S. Henry T. Gaud 1932 Edward S. Brackett, Jr. Thomas C. Mendenhall, 2d 1932 S. Gerrit W. VanSchaick 1933 William N. Benedict Charles C. Bloomfield James S. Ellis Judson B. Shafer Richard V. Worthington 386 THE CANTERBURY CLUB OFFICER J. N. Early, Jr., ' 30 President MEMBERS 1930 James T. Byrne Joseph N. Early, Jr. 1933 Lawrence D. Cavanagh John D. Leary 1932 Donald Borden Cuerin B. Carmody Brady A. Torchio 387 THE CHOATE CLUB OFFICERS A. L. Weiner, ' 31 President E. C. Stoddard, ' 31 Vice-President J. H. Dillon, ' 31 Secretary-Treasurer 1930 W. E. Arnstein J. W. Barber R. S. Collins J. Espy F. C. Hamblin 1931 D. C. Austin C. A. Carden, Jr. J. L. Caskey W. Crear, Jr. J. H. Dillon, 2d O. H. George R. B. Gottfried T. W. Hefferan, Jr. H. J. Heinz, 2d 1932 W. B. Bachman D. W. Barrow J. Baur J. H. Bijur A. H. Busby, Jr. J. C. Calhoun B. Chester M. A. Cleveland J. A. Cook C. M. Dodson C. M. Fanoni B. Fenn, 2d E. A. Manning, Jr. H. W. Peters L. S. Robbins, Jr. R. M. Sargent W. R. Tappen J. N. Hyde P. W. Knapp C. H. Lanphier J. A. Lynch, Jr. C. McKee F. B. McKown L. J. Mead, Jr. B. L. Poole L. E. Robertson F. V. Ferber, Jr. D. S. Gamble, 3d R. D. Gatewood, Jr. E. A. Hardy W. H. Lang R. R. Lansburgh C. W. Leavenworth W. B. H. Legg R. Lewis, Jr. R. B. Mason M. H. May R. J. Mayer J. W. VanSiclen H. Watson T. J. Welch N. D. Rogers E. G. Stoddard, 2d L. E. Walker H. F. Wanning A. L. Weiner G. P. Williams T. D. Williams, Jr. J. C. Winslow R. L. Wood C. L. Morris N. R. Norton, Jr. W. J. Parrish, Jr. A. Scribner L. S. Storrs, Jr. B. Townsend E. Walker, Jr. F. O. Walther R. B. Wolf, Jr. M. C. Wright, Jr. 388 THE YALE CROTON CLUB OFFICERS J. C. West, ' 30 J. M. Polk, ' 31 President Secretary MEMBERS 1930 W. B. Mosle W. S. Roberts J. C. West 1931 B. Bingham B. Crane M. M. Hare J. M. Polk J. S. Rogers, Jr. C. W. Sherrill L. Thorne 1932 R. M. Bissell, Jr. R. S. Childs E. Corning, 2d H. P. Cross L. Coddard W. Marvel 1933 C. T. Barnes M. Hare, Jr. M. P. Huffman W. E. Hyde F. V. Lindley E. T. Turner 389 HACKLEY SCHOOL CLUB OFFICER Robert E. Carr, ' 30 S President MEMBERS Edward W. Beattie, Jr., ' Robert Breck, Art George F. C. Brown, ' 32 Robert E. Carr, ' 30 S. lohn B. Forrest, ' 32 31 Elliott Jones, ' 31 Edmund W. Kittredge, ' 33 Roland A. Perry, ' 32 Stewart F. Pletcher, ' 32 John A. Polhemus, ' 33 390 THE HAVERFORD CLUB Richard H. Blythe, Jr., Harry S. Henry, 3d, ' 31 OFFICERS 30 S. . . President Secretary MEMBERS Richard H. Blythe, Jr., ' 30 S. Charles H. Howson, Jr., ' 30 S. Henry B. Reinhardt, Jr., ' 30 S. Lewis Y. Smith, Jr., ' 30 Harry S. Henry, 3d, ' 31 Edward R. Loder, ' 31 Noah H. Swayne, 3d, ' 31 S. Edward B. Sweeney, ' 31 Donald W. Henry, 32 S. John H. Ingram, ' 32 S. Melvin T. Jones, ' 32 Joseph F. Keeler, ' 32 S. John S. Parke, Jr., ' 32 S. Joseph H. Brinton, 3d, ' 33 Walter Prokosch, ' 33 Elisha P. Wilbur, 3d, ' 33 391 ■' ■•- - ' ■- ?«• •■-. i ' ! j .i ' j --■■_- . •jc-? « KENT SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS J. P. Bent, ' 30 S President Kempton Dunn, ' 31 S Vice-President C. O. Davidson, ' 33 Secretary MEMBERS 1930 P. VanD. Beckwith C. E. Brainerd W. M. Brewster B. Cheney R. N. Fowler W. S. Caylord, Jr. T. B. Crandin M. Moore W. H. Palmer H. E. Russell 1930S. J. P. Bent A. M. Brooks P. V. Cott 1931 J. Breckenridge R. V. Fabian L. S. Goodbody R. D. Irving 1931 S. H. W. R. Barry Kempton Dunn P. Richmond M. H. Robbins R. Williams, Jr. 1932 E. C. Burbank C. R. Conger, 3d J. T. Hall 1932 S. E. L. Cussler T. Hamilton, Jr. W. W. Littell 1933 S. T. Abele J. M. Bridgman C. W. Cady F. J. Clement C. O. Davidson M. Everett J. M. Hamilton W. R. C. Hamilton W. B. Horton N. B. Sandborn 392 MILWAUKEE COUNTRY DAY CLUB OFFICERS T. C. Schwartzburg, ' 30 J. H. Kopmeier, ' 31 . President Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1930 E. L. Busby T. W. Goodrich T. C. Schwartzburg 1930S. J. F. Stratton 1931 J. H. Kopmeier 1931 S. S. J. Crauman 1932 D. E. Albright E. D. Bangs W. V. Johnston J. E. Koehler C. H. Pfeifer F. Scott, Jr. A. T. Taylor J. E. Uihlein 1933 G. W. Copeland A. J. Frank A. T. Hapke, Jr. 393 POMFRET SCHOOL CLUB MEMBERS 1930 Winston Sizer 1930S. Oliver May 1931 Charles S. Snead 1932 Anson McC. Beard, Jr. Allen W. Betts William M. Bowden James A. Deering Edwin A. Sweet Morgan L. Whitney 1932 S. Theodore C. Hoster 1933 William H. Coverdale, Jr. Martin L. Moore, Jr. Henry B. Robinson ART J. Cabot, 3d 394 ST. GEORGES SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS F. E. Cignoux, Jr., ' 30 President C. W. Wheeler, ' 31 Vice-President S. vanC. Morris, ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1930 C. H. Cox, Jr. F. E. Cignoux, Jr. W. M. Jackson F. H. Jones J. N. Lindeke P. C. Melville C. Peterson, Jr. 1931 W. M. Churchman, Jr. H. B. Clark, Jr. R. R. Guest C. W. Heublein A. R. Sumner C. W. Wheeler 1932 A. J. Bruen, Jr. S. vanC. Morris W. S. Roby, Jr. E. C. Sterling E. F. Wilmerding, Jr. 1933 E. M. Church, Jr. F. H. Gillmore J. A. Knowles W. H. McKleroy J. B. L. Reeves A. Sinnickson A. L. Stern S. Vietor Law School C. W. Haight 395 LYAL£-PAhN€R AND POT-POURRI! ST. LOUIS COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL CLUB 1930 John I. B. McCulloch Daniel Upthegrove, Jr. 1930 S. Landon C. Lodge 1931 Ethan A. Hitchcock William L Polk John W. Seddon 1931 S. Frank R. Sheldon 1932 Marshall Hall Max Putzel Rudolph S. Teasdale 1933 Franklin Ferris Malcolm W. Martin Lewis C. Nelson, 3d Vincent L. Price, Jr. Marvin E. Singleton, Edmond C. Thomas Hugo M. Walther 396 ST. MARKS SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS R. Ward, ' 30 . . T. T. Hare, Jr., ' 31 President Secretary MEMBERS 1930 H. D. Babcock A. Batcheller, Jr. E. Brooks, Jr. P. M. Burnett E. S. Potter R. Ward J. K. Willing, Jr. 1931 L. A. Carter C. W. Goodyear T. T. Hare, Jr. C. W. Hill F. B. Porter J. B. Potts 1932 C. Eustis R. H. I. Coddard, Jr. J. M. Hall J. O. Heyworth W. McLauchlan, 2d W. W. White F. L. Wurzburg, Jr. 1933 G. H. Babcock, 2d S. C. Clark, Jr. G. M. Congdon, Jr. A. J. Donald W. W. Herrick J. J. Jenkins J. L. Porter 397 THE SAINT PAUL ACADEMY CLUB OFFICERS J. M. Budd, ' 30 S. . President E. C. Leedy, jr., ' 31 S. Treasurer § MEMBERS 1930 1932 M. Dunn J. N. Lindeke C. C. Leedy M. Robinson 1930S. J. M. Budd 1932 S. C. B. Thomas 1931 K. Todd, Jr. 1. B. Harris C. T. Hill L. H. Nichols 1931 S. 1933 C. P. Noyes, 2d S. McM. Sheppard, Jr C. E. Smith E. C. Leedy, Jr. H. W. Smith 398 ST. PAULS SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS D. Kitchel, ' 30 President D. H. Hickok, ' 30 Vice-President C. Munson, ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1930 S. M. Barber, Jr. H. Brock R. W. Cheney B. Collier, Jr. P. W. Cooley R. C. Elliott C. W. Gillespie T. W. Goodrich, 2d D. H. Hickok G. H. Hodges, Jr. E. O. Holter, Jr. C. G. Hurd P. H. Jennings, Jr. N. E. Jennison D. Kitchel R. C. Nicholas, J. W. Oliver J. A. Pardridge J. A. Ripley, Jr. D. Sage, Jr. R. Simonds W. F. Smith, Jr. S. Stewart, Jr. W. F. Thompson W. A. Walker W. Whiting H. B. Wilcox, Jr. R. F. Wilson 1931 M. Bond, Jr. J. L Bradley P. Chubb, III F. Farrel, III L. Fox, Jr. H. M. Hanna, Jr. S. W. Hawley J. Holbrook J. R. Hunt, Jr. E. G. Ingram B. Lay, Jr. E. Lee, Jr. C. Leonard J. McEvoy S. C. Mallory F. A. Nelson, Jr. H. Parsons, Jr. G. S. Patterson, Jr. L. B. Rand J. C. Rathborne, Jr. S. Saltus R. Schley, Jr. R. Stebbins, Jr. B. R. Sturgis W. Terry, Jr. A. A. Thomas L. Tucker S. P. Weston, Jr. 1932 F. B. Adams, Jr. R. S. Auchincloss C. Bangs, Jr. E. D. Bangs D. W. Bostwick E. C. Brewster R. H. Carleton, Jr D. Catlin D. Cochran R. H. Crowe R. Follett W. D. Hollister H. W. Howell S. B. Iglehart J. Knott G. P. Mills G. Morris G. Munson J. I. Pearce M. G. Phipps T. I. Reese, Jr. T. C. Sheffield A. R. Smith W. M. Smith, Jr. D. S. Stone A. B. Strange, Jr. G. Wilcox D. Wilmerding S. K. Winter R. D. Wood, Jr. W. L Worrall, Jr. 1933 E. L. Brewster A. Brown H. R. Catherwood T. L. Clarke, Jr. M. F. Cocroft W. D. Coddington G. C. Coggill M. J. Dodge, Jr. J. H. Elkus C. W. Glenn H. W. Harrison, Jr. T. L. Jefferson, 4th A. T. Johnson J. H. Lay C. G. Meyer, Jr. E. G. Miller, Jr. N. V. V. F. Munson T. Munson Mel. Parsons R. W. Ripley T. W. Southack H. L. Stebbins L. M. Thomas, Jr. 399 THE SALISBURY SCHOOL CLUB J. H. Eddy, ' 30 S. P. T. Moore, 31 S. OFFICERS MEMBERS F. C. Bassick, ' 31 S. T. W. Corlett, ' 32 R. E. Cushman, ' 32 (Law) T. P. Hawley, ' 32 R. Follet, ' 32 S. R. C. Sellew, jr., ' 32 S. T. W. Stevens, ' 32 S. President Secretary A. Blair, ' 33 H. N. Boadwee, ' 33 T. V. Brooks, ' 33 T. D. Chatfield. ' 33 J. B. Eddy, ' 33 W. R. Wright, Jr., ' 33 E. A. M. Zuckert, ' 33 400 THE SANTA BARBARA SCHOOL CLUB MEMBERS 1930 R. M. Ferguson 1931 C. R. McCormick, Jr. S. P. Porter 1932 J. Flood R. F. Niven 1933 V. C. Niven 401 THE THACHER SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS J. H. Buckingham, 30 W. S. McCaskey, ' 31 President Secretary MEMBERS 1930 C. F. Adams, Jr. L. S. Ayres, 2d J. H. Buckingham J. Collins, Jr. C. Cowles W. S. Newhall T. Todd 1931 W. P. Baldwin N. W. Blanchard, 3d E. P. Coss C. L. Griggs W. S. McCaskey 1932 F. E. Gates T. K :rr V. L. Knudsen C. W ' . Snyder 1932 S. c. D. Cooksey, Jr 1933 L. A. Baldwin R. P. Crane, Jr. R. P. Hastings E. T. Knight P. V. Lansdale E. M. Neville F. A. M. Spencer 402 UNIVERSITY SCHOOL John S. Manuel, Jr., ' 30 President MEMBERS 1930 George H. Bowman, Jr. Donald C. Dunham Robert W. Foster Louis W. Ladd, Jr. John S. Manuel, Jr. William S. Manuel Lawrence S. Robbins, Jr. John M. Weil 1931 Walter C. Adams Stuart Jenkins Robert H. Trenkamp 1931 S. Henry Chisholm, Jr. William D. Fullerton Elton F. Motch John E. Phillips 1932 Harry H. Bromley Rufus S. Day, Jr. Walter H. Dippel John A. Flory Henry S. Harrison David B. Manuel Richard D. Peters Frederick W. Porter Frederick W. Smith John R. Venning 1932 S. William S. Bidle, Jr. Robert W. Pulliam Alexander M. Smith Whitney Warner 1933 Richard C. Adams Edward H. Anzalone James H. Dunbar, Jr. John A. C. Fraser James C. Cammel Charles J. Caspar Frederick J. King George S. Lockwood, Thompson Morrison William H. Quayle Henry P. Rankin, Jr. Jr. 403 THE WESTMINSTER CLUB OFFICERS S. Oviatt, ' 30 F. E. Darr, ' 31 President Secretary MEMBERS 1930 W. Archbald W. R. Clark, Jr. S. Oviatt W. Smith R. C. Stevens, Jr. C. D. Wood, Jr. 1931 J. H. Barnes, Jr. P. W. Cooley F. E. Darr D. D. Sullivan W. J. Wood 1931 S. C. D. Knopf B. C. White, Jr. 1932 A. C. Barley, Jr. F. W. Dickerman W. Hoffmann H. S. Sanger 1933 R. S. Brill F. B. Jelke W. L. Newton, Jr. C. A. Shea, Jr. D. F. Wolcott C. W. Williamson M. Williamson ART A. Browne 404 _YAL£-PAKN£R AND POT-POURRI! CHEMICAL FRATERNITY ALPHA CHI SIGMA 1930S. Charles H. Costello Henry H. Holly William R. Jennings 1931 S. Charles H. Brooks George B. Crump GRADUATE SCHOOL Frederick R. Conklin Charles A. Cook Russel W. Ehlers Berlin C. French Walter J. Hamer Jay L. Marsh George D. Marshall Edmund W. Overstreet Allen W. Hammond Roger B. Holmes Bingham J. Humphrey William M. McCord Charles M. Mason Leslie F. Nims Donald M. Rockwell John W. Payne Oliver S. Hull George D. Knopf Orion E. Schupp Julian M. Sturtevant Burton E. Tiffany Robert J. White 405 INDEX Administrative Officers Aeronautical Society Alpha Chi Rho . Alpha Chi Sigma Alpha Delta Phi . Alpha Sigma Phi Alumni Board Asheville School Club Athenian Club Aurelian Band Banner and Pot Pourri, Editors Baseball Association Freshman Season Basketball Association Freshman Season Berzelius Beta Theta Pi . Beta Xi Big Sticks . Board of Control Book and Bond Book and Bond Book and Snake . Boxing Association Freshman Season The Yale 56 371 117 405 119 121 61 386 99 110 347 205 13 255 257 249 295 318 294 133 123 136 378 231 143 169 135 301 321 300 408 ESTABLISHED 1818 f zmi CLOTHING ni mm% Wnxni in$ oirt£, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK • C WOOD ««OTHCRS Outfits for School and College Send for Illustrated Genera. Catalogue BRANCH STORES BOSTON Newbury corner of Berkeley Street newport palm beach 409 Calliope Club Cannon and Castle Canterbury Club Catholic Club Chi Delta Theta . Chi Phi Chi Psi Choate Club Choir Christian Association College Sheffield Church of Christ in Ya Cloister Club Clubs College Interfraternity Colony Committees. Athletic Contents Corinthian Yacht Club Corporation Crew Season Boat Club Freshman Freshman Light 150-lb. Season Cross Country Associat Freshman Cup Men e University Coune il 381 98 387 183 92 137 125 388 349 175 179 181 174 155 361 77 153 232 7 372 55 271 275 279 281 277 267 269 376 Deans Debating Association Freshman Association University 58 186 190 189 410 presenting GENTLEMEN ' S CLOTHES tailored by Hie key -Freeman HATS ACCESSORIES 0 distinguished character for all occasions FrTripier D Outfitters to Gentlemen • Established 1886 MADISON AVENUE AT FORTY-SIXTH STREET New York 0c x .r ; .n ;xn ; . ; . iv.3i;v ; ;3i;x3 % 411 Dedication Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi . Delta Sigma Rho Dramatics . Association 11 127 138 93 354 353 Eli Book . Elihu Elizabethan Club 224 109 363 Fencing Association Freshman Season Football Association Freshman Season Foreword Foundation of Societies Franklin Hall Freshman Year Book 311 326 310 245 247 239 9 171 157 225 Glee Club . Bermuda Trip Golf Association . Freshman Season Grenfell Association Groton Club Group of Views 345 194 315 327 314 369 389 21 Hackley Club Haverford Club 390 391 412 tf £ m H CQ UNTHE ACCOO COATS UR LINED COAT FUR MOTOR RC 3 FIFTH AV een 5 2nd and 5 3rd Sti New York O PS 1, . CD + CD pq HnpHPM 3E- . ' - - ' --- -• - ' ™ fa—?! J 1 - ' if . ' ' , 11 I H ©fir «J| a 1 ■k A special department occupying an entire floor is devoted ex- clusively to men ' s furs. . Tee. V 1 1 -=t - z !S wk, - ' iff-- 413 Hawaiian Club Hockey Association Freshman Season Hope Mission Iktinos Society Index to Advertisers Institute of Human Relations, The Junior Fraternities Junior Promenade Committee Kent School Club Kiwies, The Lacrosse Association Freshman Season Liberal Club Literary Magazine, The Yale Milwaukee Country Day School Mohicans .... Mory ' s Association, The Mountain, The Musical Clubs Naval Reserve Unit News, The Yale . Phi Beta Kappa . Phi Gamma Delta Pictorial Supplement, The Yale News 3T0 289 291 283 182 97 461 16 114 81 392 380 307 323 306 383 201 393 374 368 377 342 337 209 91 139 213 414 The Ne w brl iTrust Company Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits . . . $47,000,000 TRUSTEES H. M. Addinsell Harris, Forbes Company Frederic V. Allen Lee, Higginson Company Mortimer N. Buckner Chairman of the Board James C. Colgate James B. Colgate Company Alfred A. Cook Cook, Nathan Lehman Arthur J. Cumnock Catlin Si. Company, Inc. William F. Cutler American Brake Shoe Fdy. Co. Francis B. Davis, Jr. United States Rubber Company Harry P. Davison J. P. Morgan Company Robert W. De Forest De Forest Brothers George Doubleday Ingersoll-Rand Company Russell H. Dunham Hercules Powder Company Samuel H. Fisher New York John A. Garver Shearman Sterling Artemus L. Gates President Harvey ' D. Gibson Chairman, Executive Committee Charles Hayden Hayden, Stone Company F. N. Hoffstot Pressed Steel Car Company Walter Jennings New Yo rk Darwin P. Kingsley New York Life Insurance Co. Edward E. Loomis Lehigh Valley Railroad Co. Robert A. Lovett Brown Brothers Company Howard W. Maxwell Atlas Portland Cement Company Edward S. Moore New York Grayson M.-P. Murphy G. M.-P. Murphy Company Harry T. Peters New York Dean Sage Zabriskie, Sage, Gray Todd Louis Stewart, Sr. New York Vanderbilt Webb Murray, Aldrich Webb IOO BROADWAY 4OTH STREET AND MADISON AVENUE 57TH STREET AND FIFTH AVENUE 415 Polo Association . Freshman Season Pomfret School Club Prizes and Premiums Psi Upsilon Pundits, The Quadrangle Plan, The . Record, The Yale Reserve Officers ' 1 Training Co Sachem Hall Sachem Hall St. Anthony Hall St. Elmo . St. Elmo . St. George ' s School Club St. Louis Country Day Schoo St. Mark ' s School Club Saint Paul Academy Club St. Paul ' s School Club . Salisbury School Club . Santa Barbara School Club Scholarship Honors, College Sheffield Scientific Magazine, The Yale Scroll and Compass Scroll and Key Senior Class Book, Academic Sheffield Senior Class Officers, Academic Sheffield ps Club 313 328 312 394 64 129 379 83 215 332 140 161 159 141 163 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 62 63 219 170 105 220 221 69 71 416 rv The Uneeda Boy Says: There ' s an added pleasure in eat- ing when it ' s a Uneeda Bakers product for you know that it ' s always sure to be fresh, crisp and delicious. There is a choice of Lorna Doone Shortbread, Fig Newtons, Oreo Sandwich, Nabisco Sugar Wafers...and a host of other campus varieties- Remember to say, Uneeda Bakers when you ask for biscuit. You ' ll be certain then, to get the best. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Uneeda Bakers If you want to start the day with a cheerful outlook eat two Shredded Wheat biscuit every morning with good, rich milk and plenty of fruit. Shredded Wheat is the natural breakfast food for college men. It is easy to digest and contains all the necessary food elements. SHREDDED WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT 417 Sheff Clubs .... Sheffield President ' s Committee Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Delta Psi . Sigma Xi . Skull and Bones . Soccer Association Freshman Season Squash Racquet Association . Season Student Council, College Sheffield Swimming Association . Freshman Season Sword and Gun Club Tau Beta Pi Tennis Association Freshman Season Thacher School Club Thelemites, Les Theta Xi . Torch .... Track Association Freshman Season 148 79 144 96 94 103 309 324 308 317 316 73 75 297 319 296 375 95 305 322 304 402 382 142 111 263 265 259 Undergraduate Athletic Association University Athletics University Club, The Yale University Press, The Yale 233 228 365 222 418 THE KITT YH AWK . . a light sturdy plane built and sold in Mew Haven — designed for safe riving If you have an urge to fiy . then learn in the Kittyhawk ... a three- place plain- that appeals to students and experienced pilots alike because of its many safety features. It is a most difficult plane to spin and will land or take off easily in the small- est of fields. The facilities for in- struction at our New Haven base are many. We invite you to inquire about them. Fly over the Campus in a Kittyhawk A Kittyhawk plane powered with a Kinner Km h.p. motor may be chartered whenever you desire for long or short flights — See New Haven from the air. Fly right up into the sky and en- tertain your friends in this modern thrilling way. TheYikim; Flying BoatCompany S9 Shelton Avenue, New Haven. Connecticut The Viking Flying Boat Company also builds the Viking Amphibian or flying boat, companion to the Kittyhawk. LUDINGTON Runabouts Racing Craft Are Wi nner s ! Either one, runabouts or racing boats — you ' ll drive the finest in small boat design and construction if you drive a Ludington ! Ludinsrton Racing Boats— winners of many championships Ludington 17 foot Sportship— fleet, trim, runabout Scientifically designed for performance and beauty, Ludington boats are win- ning championships, are winning favor among those who appreciate real value in boats. If you ' ll write, we ' ll be glad to send you a catalogue. LUDINGTON Aircraft, Inc. 113 Atlantic Building Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Boat Division 419 University School Club 40.3 Vernon Hall 165 Water Polo Association Freshman Season Westminster Club Whiffenpoofs Wolf ' s Head Wrestling Association Freshman Season Y Men, Major Minor York Hall . Zeta Beta Tau . Zeta Psi 299 320 298 404 373 107 303 325 302 234 235 167 145 131 420 To Boston ! THE HOTEL LENOX For modern travelers by air, rail or highway, here ' s convenience, a cordial welcome and complete hotel service. 8y appointment, The Lenox is official Boston club-quarters for sportsmen- flyers, pilots and members of the Nat. Aero. Assn. The Brunswick is famous for its brilliant supper-dance assemblies and Leo Reisman ' s celebrated Hotel Brunswick Orchestra. Room with bath —Single, $3 - $5. Double, $4 ■$8 . L. C. PRIOR. President and Managing Director Chicago Reoresentati.e. HARRY K. McEVOY 208 So. LaSaile St., Chicago HOTEL BRUNSWICK SPARKMAN STEPHENS INCORPORATED NAVAL ARCHITECTS YACHT BROKERS MARINE INSURANCE Telephone Vanderbilt 2685 11 East 44th Street, New York ALOHA RATSEY LAPTHORN, INC. CITY ISLAND Established 1790 Sail Makers New Yokk City All descriptions of best plough steel wire rope in stock 421 L. F. Rothschild k Co. Members New York Stock Exchange 120 Broadway, New York City NEWARK ROCHESTER MONTREAL JERSEY CITY NEW ORLEANS A Complete Investment and Brokerage Service LEONARD A. HOCKSTADER ' 00 WILLARD E. LOEB ' 18 S HENRY C. SCHREIER ' 20 DRAYTON, PENINGTON COLKET Member New York Stock Exchange 111 BROADWAY NEW YORK New York City Offk es 54 East 54th Street 52 East 49th Street 44 Court Street, Brooklyn Branch Offices Philadelphia Rochester Syracuse Buffalo Utiea Bronxville Atlantic City George H. Burr Co. Investment Securities Commercial Paper 57 William Street New York City Direct Wires to Chicago - Pittsburgh - Philadelphia Boston - Detroit - Cincinnati Columbus Security and Commodity Orders Executed COLVIN CO. MEMBERS New York Stock Exchange New York Curb Exchange New York Produce Exchange Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Stock Exchange Pittsburgh Stock Exchange Winnipeg Grain Exchange Ft. Worth Grain Cotton Exchange 35 Wall Street, New York 39 So. La Salle St. CHICAGO Union Trust BIdg. PITTSBURGH New York Telephone — Whitehall 4380 422 HE RINCETON S |nn ALEXANDER ST., PRINCETON, N. J. IOO Rooms ivitb batbs NEW MODERN FIREPROOF The dining room facilities of The Inn are especially recommended to those visiting Princeton during the Yale- Princeton athletic contests. Accommodations for permanent and transient guests. J. HOWARD SLOCUM MANAGER INVITING HOSPITALITY For those who seek a hotel in Mid-town New York, The Barclay offers an atmos- phere of quiet Early American hospitality. 5Ke BARCLAY One Hundred Eleven East Forty-Eighth Street Warren T. Montgomery — Managing Director NEW YORK 423 :  g Dennis A. Blakeslee Presiden t Ray J. Reigeluth, 08 Treasurer Nathan Dane Vice President G. Vincent Macon i Secretary THE D WIGHT BUILDING COMPANY General Building Contractors 07 Church Street New Haven, Connecticut Builders of Beta Theta Pi, Psi Upsilon, Alpha Delta Phi, Chi Psi Fraternities and Yale Baseball Park Now under construction — Yale Health Building SENN HERRICK CORPORATION Reinforced Concrete 300 Madison Avenue New York City Telephone Murray Hill 4823-4 THE SPERRY k TREAT COMPANY General Contractors 294 Kimberly Avenue NEW HAVEN, CONN. G. A. TREAT, President S. T. WILLIS, Treasurer 1 1 424 Dress Well and Succeed ! Knowing how to dress is merely knowing where to buy. KNOX HATS SHOP OF JENKINS 940 Chapel Street New Haven THE ENGLISH BESPOKE BOOTMAKERS Faulkner S? Son 51-52 South Molt on St., Bond St., London, England have a permanent office at Room 1405, 51 East 42nd St., New York, and their principal repre- sentative will be visiting Hartford in the Fall. His complete itinerary will be sent on application to London or Xew York. THE GAMBLE-DESMOND CO. NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT FIFTY-ONE YEARS OF RELIABLE SERVICE 425 Walter Camp Memorial Gateway Chase and Company, Inc CLOTHING HATS and MEN ' S FURNISHINGS 1040 Chapel Street New Haven WE ARE OUTFITTING YALE MEN FOR SPORT, TRAVEL, BUSINESS AND FORMAL DAY AND EVENING WEAR WITH THE SAME HIGH STAND- ARD OF DISTINCTION AND QUALITY WITH WHICH WE HAVE SERVED THEM SINCE 1892 T A I L O R S ROY ' The Best Dressed Men at Yale Wear Roy Clothes ROY 1056 CHAPEL STREET HABERDASHERS 427 Harkness Memorial Room £62 ELM STREET U EAST 4A ' STREET NEW HAVEN EXECUTrvE OFFICES NEW HAVEN NEW YORK The seal that identifies quality and hand tail- oring in gentlemen ' s clothing of individu- ality and refinement. ' The Authentic Shop for Yale M ?tz f ' ▼ HE acceptance accorded this shop by Yale • - men and alumni for over a quarter of a century assures authenticity in smart dress — whether it be clothes or imported accessories. LANGROCK ELM STREET AT YALE CAMPUS Other stores: Harvard, Princeton, Brown, Williams, Andover, Exeter, Lawrenceville 49 Broadway, New York City 429 Nathan Hale Statue Correctness — just as men of refinement understand it, is the keynote of Rosenberg tailoring. Knowing you look your best, you forget about your clothes, and that is the first law of dress. 10H Chapel St. New Haven. Conn. CO. 1( East fi2nd St. New York City Gentlemen s Tailors and Furnishers New York The product of this organization is always of outstanding quality and noteworthy for good taste. A clien- tele embracing two generations of Yale men attest the uniform excellence of Press clothes. Four generations of Yale Men have been satisfied with the style, quality, and price of our Clothes I. KLEINER SON Established 1852 1098 Chapel Street Age Proves Merit FURNISHERS OF YALE DORMS NITURE STORE COR. ORANGE Sc CROWN STS. 95 YEARS OF GOOD FURNITURE 431 STAY AT LONDONS LATEST and BEST _ HOTEL Grosvenor House PARK LANE, W. i (jjrosvenor House overlooks Hyde Park and is the only Hotel in London which has a Bathroom, running Iced Water and a separate entrance lobby to every bedroom — each with unlimited wardrobe accommodation. Phone : Grosvenor 6363 Come to London Enjoy Yourself - N THE SPORTING EVENTS - OF 1930 Date Sport Event ] April 9 Boxing Amateur C ' ships . April 12 Rowing Ox. v. Cam. U. May 7 Racing 2000 Guineas J May 9 Racing 1000 Guineas May 12-16 Golf Ladies ' O. C ' ships May 15-16 Golf Walker CupMatch May 26 etc. Golf Amateur C ' ships iMay 29-Ju. i ' — — Royal Tournament { 1 June 4 Racing Derby ( ( June 6 Racing Oaks (June 12-14 — Horse Show y f June 13, etc. Cricket Eng. v. Australia ? June 16, etc. Golf Open C ' ships y J June 17-20 Racing Ascot Meeting ' June 17-21 Tattoo Aldershot Com. . ) June 18 Racing Hunt Cup J ) June 19 Racing Gold Cup J i June 19-28 Show Inter. Horse Show J ) June 23-July « L. Tennis WimbledonC ' ships ) June 27, etc. Cricket Eng. v. Australia J June 28 Polo Champion Cup ( July 2-5 Rowing Henley Regatta { ( July 2-5 Horse Show Aldershot Com. (July 4-5 Athletics A. A. A. C ' ships ( July 7, etc. Cricket Ox. v. Cam. U. 1 July 1 1 Cricket Eng. v. Australia ( ? July 1 1-12 Cricket Eton v. Harrow j i July 16, etc. Cricket Gents v. Players } Ju. 29 Aug. 1 Racing Goodwood Meeting ) Aug. 5-8 Yachting Cowes Regatta ) ) Aug. 16, etc. Cricket Eng. v. Australia ) Aug. 23 Motor Racing R.A.C. Tourist T. ) Sept. io Racing St. Leger j Sept. 30 Yachting America Cup(F.R.)( Oct. 15 Racing Cesarewitch Oct. 16-25 Motor Show SUMMER TARIFF (May 1 to Oct. 31) Single room with bathroom, from $6 Double Ditto, - - from $10 Suites from % 20 to $110 Telegrams. Grovhows, Audley, London 432 Over Twenty Years of Service to Yale Men We count among our customers hundreds of Yale Grads, former undergraduate customers. This is evidence of confidence in our service and merchandise. May we serve you? Just write us your needs. You must be pleased John F. Fitzgerald New Haven, Conn. ALEXANDER ' S Tailors to the Better- Dressed Man lO.ifi Chapel St. New Haven, Conn. 5(ii Fifth Ave. New York City ALDERMAN CLOTHES WHY Finest materials, expert workmanship, newest styles, all essential in tailoring clothes for the well-dressed man. Dependability and reputation of our organization. Catering for twenty years to discriminating students and business men. ALDERMAN TAILORS ENGLISH ACCESSORIES 9-2 College Street, Opp. Hotel Taft New Haven, Conn. 551 Fifth Avenue, French Building New York City 433 GEORGE HARRY ' S Restaurant and Soda Fountain §V2 10.00 Coupon Book for $9. 00 in Cash 5 381 TEMPLE STREET Next to St. Elmo 90 WALL STREET Opp. Van Sheff ±3± Yale Men! Meet at HARRYS where the food is wholesome and the atmosphere congenial $ Stuns at: 100-102 Church Street 236 York Street 1026 Chapel Street Men who are discriminating in their clothes, will appreciate the quality of our woolens the expert workmanship the distinctive designing through which we have so readily acquired an enviable reputation GUY % FINKEL Old English Tailors 1050 Chapel Street New Haven, Conn. 435 Columbia Records MASTERWORKS SERIES BACH Suite No. 3, in D Major By Desire Defauw and Orchestra of the Brussels Royal Conservatory. In 5 parts, on three twelve- inch records, with album. Set No. 135 §6.00 MOZART Quartet in B Flat (K. 458) ( Hunting: Quartet ) By Lener String Quartet ' Lener, Smilovits. Roth and Hartman). In 6 parts, on three twelve-inch records, with album. Set No. 134 (i.uo Greiff: Ballaoe is G Minor. Op. £4. Parts 1 and 2 Piano Solo. Leopold Godowsky Greig: Ballade in G Minor. Op. 24, Parts 3 and 4 Piano Solo. Leopold Godowsky WHITLOCKS BOOK STORE, Inc. 219-221 Kim Street, New Haven, Conn. Yale Blue Corona Typewriters FOR YALE MEN Supplies— Service Typewriters Rented WHITLOCKS BOOK STORE, Inc. 219-221 Elm Street. New Haven, Conn. Loomis ' Temple of Music 837-H39 Chapel Street PIANOS TO RENT SHEET MUSIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS If J FOR ANYTHING IN MUSIC COME TO LOO M I S 436 67 j CORPORATEO r x rj in TAILORS Our clothes have earned an enviable reputation and are acknowledged the standard of perfection in make, quality, and smartness. 1056 Chapel St. New Haven 516 Fifth Ave. New York A. Podoloff Sons, Inc. Real Estate Mortgages General Insurance 173 Church Street Ground floor next to City Hall New Haven Connecticut Harry Kapoport University Tailor Established 1884 New Haven 1024 Chapel Street New York City I I East Uth Street Fashionable College Clothes For Street Wear Sports Wear and Formal Occasions Webster Eisenlohr INCORPORATKD 187 Madison Avenue New York City Makers of: WEBSTER HENRIETTA CINCO TOM MOORE and LITTLE TOM Cigars 437 The Yale Co-operative Corporation Organized 1885 — Incorporated 1892 This society was founded by the students, conducted by the students and supported by the students. Its control is in the hands of the present Board of Directors. It has no capital stock. Its basic principle as set forth in its Constitution is to buy and deal in goods, wares and merchandise of every description and to sell the same to its members at prices as near the cost as practicable. The ratio of expense, or overhead, to gross sales has not exceeded 16%- The Present Board of Directors Prof. Wm. L. Phelps, President Prof. Avard L. Bishop, Secretary F. O. Robbins, Treasurer and Superintendent Mortimer Buckner, ' 95 George T. Adee, ' 95 Charles F. Robbins, 07 H. F. Woodcock, Y.A.A. G. H. Haight, Law School C. C. Bishop, Medical School E. F. Campbell, Divinity School Donald Cooksey, Graduate School Fletcher E. Nyce, 1930 S. P. McCalmont, 1930 S. R. L. Crowell, 1931 C. F. Miles, 1931 S. R. H. I. Goddard, Jr., 1932 M. F. Pendleton, 1932 S. Mercantile Safe Deposit Company 72 Church Street, New Haven 438 FloWerS and Decorations for oil Y ale Jccasions THE MYERS FLOWER SHOP 936 Chapel St. New Haven, Conn. Roxbury School Cheshire, Connecticut The Junior Department, for boys from twelve to fifteen years, is a special adaptation of the Roxbury method of small group instruction for the proper training of younger students. A. N. SHERIFF Headmaster ASHEVILLE SCHOOL, Asheville, North Carolina HOWARD BEMENT, Litt. D., Head Master This Preparatory School in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, ' The Land of the Sky, where a boy can develop under the most favorable climatic conditions east of the Rockies, has main- tained a remarkable Health Record over a period of twenty -nine years. An able Faculty, a carefully selected Clientele, a beautiful Campus, and surroundings that stimulate Intellectual Effort and promote Moral Health, make Asheville School an increasingly im- portant feeder of the great Colleges and Universities. The school is small enough to insure Intimate Fellowship between Faculty and Boys, yet large enough to give scope to a Variety of Interests outside of the Academic Work. 439 Entrance to Record Building Square blade-ends Easier and safer to handle MOST MEN like fishing- hut not fishing down the drain-pipe for a slippery razor blade. That ' s one of many reasons why a vast army of men are praising the New Gillette Blade. Its square ends can ' t slip out of soapy fingers; and how easily the new blade reaches into the tight little corners around the mouth, nose and ears! There are so many other big improvements that you won ' t ap- preciate them all until you try this New Gillette Shave yourself. Here are just a few: no more wiping or drying of parts. New blade resists rust. Razor pull is banished for- ever by new reinforced corners of ra- zorcap and cut-out cornersof blade. Sounds almost impossible to give you all this remarkable new shaving comfort for only one dol- lar, doesn ' t it? Yet your dealer has your New Gillette Razor set wait- ing for you — your choice, in fact, of five styles of handsome cases. Addi- tional new blades are priced at one dollar for ten and fifty cents for five. Enjoy this new shaving thrill tomorrow morning by seeing your dealer on your way home tonight. Gillette Safety Razor Co., Boston, U. S. A. 1 °° f° r ,e • ' 50c f° T fi ve - • ■The New Gillette Blades in the new green packet ■Gil l ette - Th, New Gillette Shave 441 House of Quality Always at Your Service THE FEDERAL PACKING CO., Inc. Fresh and Cured Meats Poultry, Provisions, Butter, Eggs, and Cheese H9-151 State St. New Haven Connecticut THE QUALITY GROCERY CO., Inc. A. J. Greene F. Bomman Q. G. Co. FOUNDED 1875 57-61 Broadway New Haven, Conn. Telephones 5-3104. 5-3105 5-3106 REMEMBER (ocomalt Judicious foodD 1 ! ] !° colate Flavff | COCOMALT — a delicious health drink — contains Vitamin D, the Sunshine Vitamin — adds 70% more nourishment to milk — builds strength — restores energy. DAVIS is a good baking powder. Always remember that you can bake it best with Davis. ■442 Fancy Frozen Desserts, Frappes, Mousses, and lees HARRIS-HART ICE CREAM Tel. Liberty 7005 . ' -in WINCHESTER AVENUE NEW HAVEN. CONN. Orders taken for All Social Festivities and Prom Activities raul ' s Academy r arber Shop 1075 Chapel Street the morris medicine shop has served yale students for 20 years 29 Dixwell Avenue New Haven, Conn. The ROGER SHERMAN Barber Shop SIX CHAIRS MANICURE % 74 College Street New Haven Connecticut 443 Thomas F. Murphy School of Dancing 102 Elm Street (Near Church Street) Telephone 6-3755 Learn to Dance Quickly and Correctly Expert Lady Assistants RELIABLE PIANOS Be sure to get our rental plan THE A. B. CLINTON CO. Phone 5-7884 223 Orange St. New Haven JOHN N. CHAMPION, INC. Floral and Pet Shoppe 20 Whitney Avenue NEW HAVEN, CONN. Tel. 7-8330 and 7-8331 444 Weir Hal An audience four times the size of a gathering at the Commencement Alumni Luncheons reads the Yale Alumni Weekly Established 1891 Edited by Edwin Oviatt, ' 96 Owned in Trust by a group of 50 repre- sentative alumni It is Your Yale Paper An ever-ready source of pleasure and information all through your graduate life. Subscription, $5.00 a year. We also conduct at our building at 315 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, LENDING LIBRARY and BOOKSHOP, Inc. The Book and Quill where at any time you can buy by mail, postpaid east of the Mississippi, all new books and first editions of modern authors, charged to your account if an Alumni Weekly subscriber. Follow the Critic on the Hearth book-review pages in the Alumni Weekly for up-to-date information on the best books to buy or give to others and send us your orders. 447 Arrlittrrtural rulptar Studio: 317 East 39th Street New York City SELECTED FOR THE ERECTION OF ARCHITECTURAL SCULPTURE FOR THE STERLING MEMORIAL LIBRARY U9 The Brick Row Book Shop INCORPORATED Is primarily a book shop for persons who have a feeling for books. It carries a diversified stock of Standard Sets, well-selected volumes in English Literature, First Editions, Association Books, Etchings, Prints and Autographs, as well as a large miscellaneous stock of second- hand books, and is, in fact, competent to under- take any of the obligations of a thoroughly equipped book shop. The Brick Row Book Shop was established and is maintained in New Haven and Princeton for under-graduates, while its main shops in New York are filling the needs of the larger collectors who have found that its stock is not excelled by any other dealer, either in this country or abroad. New Haven New York Princeton 304 Elm St. 42 East 50th St. 68£ Nassau St. 30 Broad St. 451 STEVE ' S New York JOE MADDEN New York City COHEN POWELL L O C A L A N D L O N G D I S T A N C E IKKKiii!!!! ■■■■■■■!■■■— •■■■WE MOVE, STORE, PACK, CRATE, AND SHIP Special Hates Quoted to all Students We have been handling Yale Students ' moving, storing, crating, and shipping for several years, as a specialty. 189 George Street, New Haven, Conn. 8-1380 P I A N O A N D F U R N I T U R E M O V E R S 452 Designers of America ' s Finest Yachts HENRY J. GIELOW INCORPORATED Naval Architects and Engineers 25 West 43d Street, New York Detroit Miami 453 YALE MEMORABILIA Our collection of books relating to Yale University is considered the most complete of any on sale. We can from stock fill wants for Banners and Pot Pourris back to the very early issues. We can replace a lost Class Book Pamphlets, Lectures and Addresses Class Poems and Orations Unique Books about Yale Pictures of Yale in the past Etchings of Present Day Yale Undergraduate Publications established isooy EDUCATIONAL BOOKS. BOOK STORE. ffg cutwrnuow pees. 15 BROADWAY MEW-HAVEN.CI 454 Moore Speed Pens NOW SHOWING The New Tiger-Eye Color also Jade Green. Pearlcraft, Ebon-Jet Black, Royal Blue. Made in beautiful desk sets and pen and pencil gift sets. WRITING PEN! MDmoHAiiY GVARAHTEED ROGER SHERMAN RY-THE-SEA at Momauguin, East Haven STEAK, CHICKEN and SHORE DINNERS GODFREY COOPER, INC. 32-44 Temple Street ' Where Service Originated Hour Service NEW HAVEN, CONN. HABERDASHER ' S Featuring Exclusive Merchandise Catering to Men of Distinction HATS SHIRTS TIES ENGLISH ACCESSORIES Opp. Hotel Taft New Haven 455 INVESTMENTS C. E. COTTING 70 Federal St. Boston, Mass. The New Haven Printing Co. PRINTING LITHOGRAPHING 101-105 Meadow Street NEW HAVEN : CONNECTICUT PACH BROS. Photographers to Yale Since 1878 1024 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. Official Photographer for the Banner and Pot Pourri The Yale Alumni Weekly The Yale Scientific Magazine The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine Printed by the QUINNIPIACK PRESS, INC. 26I CHAPEL STREET, NEW HAVEN Also printers for many undergraduate organizations HENRY W. FARNAM, JR., ' 17 ELMER D. KEITH, ' 10, FRANCIS B. COMSTOCK, ' 23 456 13roirningKmg 109 YEARS OLD Hats - - Shoes Haberdashery Men ' s Clothing French, Shriner and Urner Shoes Chapel and High Streets. New Hates Fifth Avenue and 4-5th Street, New York THE ROOSEVELT «o«c«e e e«e ooo«o  e o«e««o«o«o e«ete MADISON AVENUE AT 45TH STREET New York City Convenient to Grand Central Palace, with direct private passagewav to Grand Central Terminal. Onlv a short step from famous Fifth Avenue shops and the attractions of the Great White Way. THREE CHARMING RESTAURANTS The Hendrick Hudson— The Colonial —The Grill In the Grill nightlv, in season, GUY LOMBARDO and his Royal Cana- dian Orchestra presenting a new type ot musique moderne that has caught the tuneful ear of New York. Edward Clinton Fogg, Managing Director Direction of the United Hotels Company of America THE PLIMPTON PRESS Norwood Massachusetts — U. S. A. 457 The Champion Fibre Co. W2 TABLET LUMBER INDEX LIM E POST CARD TURPENTINE LP BOARD BOND CAUSTIC SODA ENVELOPE TANNIC ACID KRAFT COAL M. F. BOOK BINDEX BLEACHED SODA PULP BLEACHED SULPHATE PULP BLEACHED SULPHITE PULP S 5 Mills and Executive and Sales Offices at Canton, North Carolina 458 THE CHAMPION , HAMILTON. OHIO. 459 The Pleasure ' s Ours To do good printing — to give you what you should have without the least waste and at a price that you can afford to pay— is our work as well as our pleasure day after day. E. L. Hildreth Co., Printers Brattleboro, Vermont Engravers to the Banner If w P rjl k 3 W-. ' 1% i mw mm - ■« w .m F J l THE S ' rODDARD E 87 ORANGE STREE NGRAVING COMPANY T, NEW HAVEN, CONN. 460 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Alderman, Inc 433 Cohen and Powell 452 Alexander ' s 433 Colvin Co 422 Asheville School 439 Cotting. C. E 456 Barclay Hotel 423 Brick Row Book Shop. Inc. . . .451 Brooks Bros 409 Browning King 457 Burr, George H.. Co 422 Chambellan, Rene P 449 Chamberlain Furniture Co. . . .431 Champion Coated Paper Co. . . . 459 Champion Fibre Co 458 Champion, John X 444 Chase Co 427 Clinton, A. B., Co 444 Davis, R. B., Co 442 Drayton, Penington, Colket . . . 422 Dwight Building Co 424 Eisenlohr, Webster, Inc 437 Faulkner Son 425 Federal Packing Co 442 Feinstein, Inc 437 Fitzgerald, John F 433 Gamble-Desmond Co 425 Gamer-Botwick Co 429 George and Harry ' s 434 University Smoke Shop ' The Rendezvous of Yale Men SERVICE PROMPT— COURTEOUS FOUNTAIN Good Food at Low Prices LUNCH 1012 Chapel Street Opposite Bingham Hall TOBACCO 461 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS [continued] Gielow, Henry J., Inc 453 Podoloff, A.. Sons Gillette Safety Razor Co 441 Press, J. . . . Godfrey and Cooper 4.55 Grosvenor House 432 Gunther ' s Sons 413 Guv Finkel 435 437 431 Princeton Inn 423 Quality Grocery Store 442 Quinnipiack Press 456 Harris-Hart Co 443 Harry ' s Smoke Shop 435 Hildreth, E. L. Co 460 Jenkins. Shop of 425 Kirby, S. H.. Son 463 Kleiner, I., Son 431 Rapoport, Harry 437 Ratsey Lapthorn, Inc 421 Roger Sherman Barber Shop . . . 443 Roger Sherman Bv-The-Sea . . . 455 Roosevelt Hotel 457 Rosenberg, A. M 431 Rothschild, L. F., Co 422 Roxbury School .439 Rov Tailors 427 Langrock, D. T., Inc. Lenox Brunswick Hotels Loomis ' Temple of Music . Ludington Flying Service . 429 .421 436 419 Madden, Joe 452 Mercantile Safe Deposit Co. . . . 438 Moore Pen Co 455 Morris Medicine Shop 443 Murphy, T. F 444 Myers Flower Shop 439 National Biscuit Co. New Haven Printing Co. New York Trust Co. 417 456 4 1 5 Senn-Herrick Corporation Sparkman Stephens, Inc Sperry Treat Co. . Steve ' s Stoddard Engraving Co. Tripler, F. R. Co. 424 421 424 452 460 411 University Smoke Shop 461 Viking Flying Boat Co 419 Waltham Watch Co 463 White 455 Whitlock ' s Book Store .... 436,454 Pach Bros 456 Paul ' s Barber Shop 443 Yale Co-operative Association Plimpton Press 457 Yale Publishing Association 43S 447 462 SINCE 1854 -- Walthain has been making and selling fine timepieces in a wide range of prices. You may safely be guided by the experience of 26,000,000 others. A Suggestion - No. 100 Tank. $100 17 jewel, lY ligne movement, 14K White- or Green-gold case, curved back. 18K gold applied figured dial. Remembrances of Yale (Jewelry is the Permanent Souvenir) For yourself and for the folks at home you will value a lasting keepsake of close association of college years. A reminder of joyous, fleeting youth. 100 Years Serving Students Since our business was founded in 1830 we have had pride and pleasure in the serving of college men. All the celebrated old grads of a century have been our valued patrons: — and so we invite you to join that dis- tinguished group and trade here. S. H. KIRBY g SONS Jewelers Diamond Merchants Silversmiths ana 972 Chapel Street, New Haven Watch Makers 463
”
1927
1928
1929
1931
1932
1935
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.