Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)
- Class of 1935
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Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 384 of the 1935 volume:
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The 1935 YALE BANNER and POT POURRI m Entrance to Sterling Memorial Library YALE BANNER G POT POURRI rOUNDLD 1841 VOLUME. XXVII NILW HAVLN • CONNECTICUT 19 3 5 To EDWARD STEPHEN HARKNESS, ' 96 Whose farsiohtcd and intellioent dcnerositv has made possible the New Yale This Book Is Respectfully Dedicated Payne ' hitney (iymiias ' uiiii Sterlitig Law Buildings Jonathan Edwards College from Old Library Street Stt ' i iiia Divinity Onadraiide ' mM The Gold Coast Connecticut Hall Ahuuiii ] (11 Mcnuiruil Stciliiig Miinoi uil Libraiv jiom College Street ADMINISTRATION OFFICERS of the CORPORATION DEPARTMENTS COLLEGES UNDERGRADUATE CLASS OFFICERS COUNCILS and COMMITTEES PRESIDENT ANGELL The Second Year of the College Plan PRESIDENT JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL UNDERGRADUATE Yale has been most affected in the year just closing by three circumstances, on each of which I venture to comment briefly. And first a word concerning developments in Colleges. The second year of the Residential Colleges has seen Berkeley added to the earlier group of seven and, as this article goes to press, Timothy Dwight is nearing completion and will be opened in the autimin under the Mastership of James Grafton Rogers. To the deep regret of every one, Alan Valen- tine, Master of Pierson, leaves us to become President of the University of Rochester. In his two years as head of the College and Chairman of the Board of Admissions, he has made a bril- liant record of which Yale may well be proud. A Fellow of the College, Arnold Wolfers, has been chosen to succeed him. He is a scholar of international distinction in the field of govern- ment and a most delightful companion. In general, life in the Colleges has now be- come so well established that discussion is main- ly directed to transient sources of dissatisfaction, such as too many salads on the menu, or to a few more chronic issues, such as the effort of the College fraternities to secure conditions which will permit the brethren to patronize their grills to greater financial advantage. The incomparable benefits of the College life for the rank and file of students as compared with the conditions which maintained before 1933 are steadily becoming more widely recog- nized. .Self-supporting students, thanks to the bursary funds, are specially and properly ap- preciative. It is interesting to observe the crystallizing of individuality in each of the Colleges. A is quite different in tone from B, while both differ conspicuously from C, yet all have characteristics which are justly appreciated by their members. The sport program has pro- moted a healthy and good-natured rivalry. Most important of the strictly educational steps taken this year is the adoption by the College, the Sheffield Scientific School and the Engineering School o f comprehensive examina- tions to be given late in the senior year, and to cover the entire major subject which will ordin- arily have been pursued for the larger part of the preceding three years. This policy will in- evitably result in a far more thorough mastery of the field of concentration and will issue in a variety of consequences much to be desired — greater independence in work, greater initiative, the stimulation of more genuine thinking power and the like. It will also undoubtedly render the course more difficult and more men will pre- sumably fail at the end. But the compensating advantages are very real and highly important. The third policy which has been gradually developed is one bringing us into much more inti- mate and friendly contact with school boys who expect to come to Yale so that we can be of as- sistance in helping them to plan their work in school and subsequently at Yale, more or less as a unit. As part of this program, we are encourag- ing the schools to give able boys more advanced training than heretofore, so that, when they come to College, they may be entered at once in courses more mature than those ordinarily fol- lowed by freshmen. This year a large part of the Freshman Class has been granted this privilege and the results are in every way admirable. In conclusion, it may be added that this year has seen the establishment of the Y ' ale Political Union, from which we may justly expect fine things. It occurs simultaneously with a marked drift of students into the social sciences, es- pecially economics and government, with a pro- nounced swing toward work in international relations. The University has put forth special effort to make this latter division of our work the strongest offered by any institution either here or abroad. In looking back upon its senior year, the Class of 1935 will always have the pleasure of recalling the battle of Princeton, when a great Yale foot- ball team registered one of the most dramatic victories in the history of that tempestuous sport, to say nothing of the agreeable conference with Harvard the following Saturday. Taken all in all 1935 may well feel that it leaves Yale in sunshine, which only the financial clouds seriouslv threaten. 17 Corporation James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., President Fellows His Excellency the Governor of Connecti- cut, ex officio His Honor the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut, ex officio Rev. William Adams Brown, Ph.D., D.D. George Grant Mason, M.A. Samuel Herbert Fisher, LL.D. Howell Cheney, M.A. Vance Criswell McCormick, LL.D. Francis Parsons, LL.B., M.A. Frederick Trubee Mortimer Norton Buckner, LL.D. Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin, D.D., LL.D. S.T.D. Fred Towsley Murphy, M.D., M.A. Edward Belden Greene, M.A. Thomas Walter Swan, LL.B., M.A. Reeve Schley, LL.B., M.A. Thomas Day Thacher, LL.D. Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford, D.D. Edward Earned Ryerson, Jr., M.A. Davison, LL.D. Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D Provost Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A Secretary George Parmly Day, LL.D Treasurer Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Alumni Board OFFICERS William S. Moorehead, o6, 1732 OHver Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry A. Gardner, 05, 33 South Clark St., Chicago, 111. James M. Holcombe, Jr., ' 11,6 Myrtle St., Hartford, Conn. Carl A. Lohmann, ' 10, Yale Station, New Haven, Conn. Chairman First Vice-Chairman Second Vice- Ch a inn a n Acting Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 1934-35 Norman P. Clement, ' 07, Buffalo G. Maurice Congdon, ' 09, Providence EcKLEY B. CoxE, 3rd, ex- ' 1 8 S, Philadelphia Elton Hoyt, 2nd, ' 10, Cleveland Gilbert Kinney, ' 05, New York City C. Raymond Messinger, ' 06 S, Milwaukee Livingston Platt, ' 07, New York City Mortimer A. Seabury, ' 09, Boston Vanderbilt Webb, ' 13, New York City James E. Wheeler, ' 92, New Haven Officers of Administration James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A. George Parmly Day ' , LL.D. Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. Frederic Blair Johnson, M.A. Harry Judd Ostrander President Provost Secretary Treasurer Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Bursar Cashier in the Treasurer ' s Office BOARD OF ADMISSIONS Alan Valentine, M.A Chairman THE FRESHMAN YEAR Percy T. lbot ' . lden, Ph.D. Dean Edw. ' rd Simpson Noyes, Ph.D. Associate Dean YALE COLLEGE Clarence Whittlesey Mendell, Ph.D. Dean Alfred Kindred Merritt, B.A. Registrar HoLLON Augustine F.a.rr, Ph.D. Senior Class Officer Norman Sydney Buck, Ph.D. Junior Class Officer Nath.- niel Burton Par. dise, Ph.D. Sophomore Class Officer SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Charles Hyde Warren, Ph.D. Dean Loomis Havemeyer, Ph.D. . Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Robert Ernest Doherty, M.S. Loomis H.wemeyer, Ph.D. GRADUATE SCHOOL Edgar Stevenson Furniss, Ph.D., LL.D SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Milton Charles Winternitz, M.D. DIVINITY SCHOOL Luther Allan Weigle, Ph.D., D.D., Litt.D., LL.D Dean SCHOOL OF LAW Charles Edward Clark, LL.B., M.A., LL.D. Dean Ashbel Green Gulliver, LL.B. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS Everett Victor Meeks, Litt.D., A.D.G.F., Dean Registrar Dean Dean F.A.I.A. Dean SCHOOL OF MUSIC David Stanley Smith, M.A., Mus.D. Dean Richard Fr. nk Donovan, Mus.B. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF FORESTRY Henry Solon Gr. ' ves, LL.D. . Dean SCHOOL OF NURSING Effie J. ne T. ylor, M.A. . Dean UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Andrew Keogh, Litt.D. . Librarian Ch.arles Everett Rush, B.L.S., M.A. Associate Librarian PEABODY MUSEUM Richard Swann Lull, Ph.D., Sc.D. Director GALLERY OF FINE ARTS Everett Victor Meeks, Litt.D., A.D.G.F., F.A.I.A Director Theodore Sizer, M.A. . Associate Director OBSERVATORY Fr. nk Schlesinger, Ph.D., Sc.D. Director CHURCH OF CHRIST IN YALE UNIVERSITY Rev. Sidney Lovett, M.A. University Chaplain and Pastor DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL STUDY AND BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS Albert Beecher Crawford, Ph.D. Director Stuart Holmes Clement, M.A. Associate Director of the Department of Personnel Study Ogden Dayton Miller, Ph.B. Associate Director of the Bureau oj Appointments DEPARTMENTOF UNIVERSITY HEALTH Ja.mes Cowan Greenway, M.D. Director Orville Forrest Rogers, M.D. Assistant Director ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Malcolm Farmer, M.A. Chairman of the Board oJ Control UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS Cora C. Colburn, M.A. . . Director Front Rnw: Vaill, Bowles, Tufts Second Row: Collier, Brown. Daniels Academic Class Day Committee John Eliot Bowles Keith Spalding Brown Samuel Carnes Collier George Dudley Vaill Chairman Richard Ely Danielson, Jr BovvEN Charleton Tufts Jnhii E. Bowles Academic Senior Class Officers John Eliot Bowles. Samuel Carnes Collier Class Secretary Class Treasurer Triennial Committee John Eliot Bowles, Chairman Samuel Carnes Collier Clive Livingston Duval Richard Ely Danielson, Jr. Bowen Charleton Tufts George Dudley Vaill CLASS POET Charles Seymour, Jr. CLASS ORATOR Lyman Spitzer, Jr. CLASS HISTORIAN Bowen Ch. rleton Tufts IVY ORATOR Kevin MgInerney t:hainl«rlain. liaucr. Mviumui. Ciallan. Livings ton Sheffield Class Day Committee William A. Bauer Andrew T. Callan Thomas T. Chamberlain Chairman David L. Livingston John G. Munson, Jr. William A. Bauer Sheffield Class Officers William A. Bauer. Nelson M. Loud Class Secretary Class Treasurer William A. Bauer Triennial Committee William T. Sperry John G. Munson, Jr. CLASS HISTORIAN Stanley R. Morton CLASS PROPHET William T. Sperry CLASS ORATOR Max F. Millikan IVY ORATOR David L. Livingston 23 Fiiinl Row: Loud, Donahoe, Lott Second Row: Fessenden, Quarrier, Keeney, Bauer Sheffield Student Council Martin H. Donahoe, Jr. Chairman 24 Sheffield Student Council CLASS OF 1935 William A. Bauer Ralph C Bryant, Jr. Edward E. Fessenden, Jr. John H. Keeney don.ald c. lott Nelson M. Loud FiTZHUGH QUARRIER Donald C. Watson tiont Row: Livingston. Combs. Meehan Second Row: Horton. Cressy Sheffield Presidents ' Committee H. RRY Benjamin Combs Chairman Norman Leo Cressy George Frederick Horton, 3rd D. ' viD Livingstone Livingston John Andrew Meehan, Jr. 26 Front Row: Pinkham, Graham. ivveet Second Row: Ward, Whitehead, Roscoe, Wright Inter-Fraternity Council 1934-1935 Robert C. Graham President Reverdy Wadsworth Secretary Rk:hard a. R. Pinkham Treasurer Thew Wright, Jr Alpha Chi Rho Sidney E. Sweet, Jr Alpha Deha Phi Thomas J. Ward, Jr Alpha Sigma Phi Richard A. R. Pinkham Beta Theta Pi Robert C. Graham Chi Psi Mather K. Whitehead Delta Kappa Epsilon Jerome V. Roscoe , . ... I ' he Fence Reverdy Wadsworth Zeta Psi 27 ■' ; . MiMiii si, ,Im lin-..i! I .iwrence, Terry. Vaill. Sperry. Lott, Gardner Stcond Row: Cux, Hurtun. Mcchan. Clhainberlain, Pillsbury, Shepard Missing from picture: Fessenden Senior Prom Committee OFFICERS Henry Porter Baldwin Terry Chairmau William Thompson Sperry Floor Manager Clive Livingston Duval Treasurer I 28 Henrv P. B. Terrv Senior Prom Committee Thomas Taber Chamberlain Thomas Milton Cox, Jr. Edward Everett Fessenden, Jr. Edward Tytus G. rdner, Jr. George Frederick Horton, 3rd Thom. s Hoel Lawrence, Jr. Donald Clarence Lott Milton Fox M.a.rtin John Andrew Meehan, Jr. John Sargent Pillsbury, Jr. Roger Bulkley Shepard, Jr. John Pillsbury Snyder, Jr. George Dudley Vaill 29 fro7it Row: Despard, VVliitehead, Curtin, Hersey, Bryant, Davis, Roscoe Second Row: Frank, Upton, Rankin, Brown, Byers, Warner, Raymond Missing from picture: Bingham. Thayer Junior Prom Committee John R. Hersey Mather K. Whitehead Horace W. Davis, 2nd C. ' liainiiaii Floor Manager Treasurer Jonathan B. Bingham Bailey W. Brown Thomas W. Bryant, Jr. John F. Byers, Jr. Thomas F. Curtin, Jr. Victor R. Despard, Jr. Arthur A. Frank, Jr. Bernard C. Rankin Donald A. Ray.mond, Jr. Jerome V. Roscoe David B. Thayer Joseph Upton, Jr. John M. W.- rner 30 The Junior Promenade FOR the first time in many years, the Yale Junior Promenade was this year pronounced a success. No longer can it be said that the two outstand- ing social events of the country are the inaugural ball in Washington and the Yale Junior Promen- ade in New Haven. But after the dance which took place in Woolsey Hall on Friday evening, March 8, 1935, it can no longer be said either that the Yale Junior Promenade is a thing of the distant past. Over two thousand Yale men and their guests took part in the Prom of the Class of 1936, and seemed to enjoy themselves in waking, as the f ' ews put it, staid Woolsey Hall to vibrant life. Several factors helped to make the 1936 Prom the cen- tral event of, and not merely, as in late years, a poor excuse for, the most colorful week-end of the year. In the first place, the Promenade Committee was fortunate enough to engage the music of Paul Whiteman, and the King of Jazz furnished an evening of melody which made the hall seem small and the hours short. Secondly, the Sheff Clubs, whose dances have, in the past few years, cut merciless- ly into the length of the Prom and the size of the crowd, this year cooperated with the Promenade Committee to the extent of keeping their doors closed to the College until after the Prom was over at three. Thirdly, the evening ' s program was broken up by a variety of events, including a revival of the Grand March (which proved a bit sticky because of the size of the crowd) and of the system of program dances, the traditional Wooden Spoon ceremony, and a half hour ' s entertainment by the orchestra. Fourthly, the depressing surroundings were brightened up by colorful and decorative cartoons. Fifthly, the admission price for stags w-as reduced consider- ably. The week-end as a whole offered an almost be- wildering series of social and athletic events. John R. Hersey Dinner dances given by Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Chi Rho, Beta Theta Pi, and Chi Psi were followed by a Glee Club concert, which featured the popular Howard Twins, of the class of 1934, solos by B. D. Henning, 1932, and songs by the double quartet. At the same time, the University Basketball Team met Columbia in the Payne W ' hitney Gymnasium amphitheater. The Promenade itself opened with the Grand March, shortly after 10:30, which was followed by the first of the program dances. At about midnight, Charles Dunbar, Chairman of the Promenade Committee of the class of 1935, presented the Wooden Spoon to this year ' s Chairman, John Hersey. After this ceremony, supper, with entertainment by the Whiffen- poofs, was served in the dining hall. With the completion of the card dances after supper, the orchestra afforded its entertain- ment, the guests seating them- selves on the dance floor and in the galleries. With a half-hour of informal dancing, the Junior Promenade of the Class of 1936 became history. After the Promenade, club dances were given by Franklin, Sachem, St. Anthony, St. Elmo, Vernon, and York, each of them lasting until seven. Although Saturday was by this time well under way, there came at this point a hiatus of quiet, while the Prom crowd stopped to take a breath. Soon after lunchtime, however, things began to move again, if a little sluggishly. A performance of Yellow Jack was put on during the afternoon by the Dramat, a close swim- ming meet between Yale and Princeton took place, and these were followed by tea dances at Delta Kappa Epsilon, Vernon, and Franklin. An exciting hockey game with Harvard took up the first part of the evening, and later there were dances at Alpha Sigma Phi, The Fence, Franklin, St. Anthony, St. Elmo, Vernon, and York. Sunday, a day best described as droopy, was marked bv the Great Exodus. HONORS AG, SHEFF FRESHMAN PRIZES and HONORS HONOR SOCIETIES Scholarship Honors Yale College RANKING SCHOLARS, CLASS OF 1935 Stuart P. Atkins John W. Beardslee, 3rd Philip F. Belcher Lincoln C. Brownell John H. Cox Clive L. Duval John I. Ely Everett E. Gilbert Jack J. Albom Richard B. Baker Thomas D. S. Bassett John H. Batten Walter W. Bittner Joseph Blacharski, Jr. WiLLARD L. BlEVER Ralph S. Brown, Jr. Newton R. Calhoun Schuyler V. Cammann Robert I. C.- rlson William H. Ch. rles Malcolm S. Cohen Burr F. Colem.- n John Collins Samuel D. Cornell Stephen T. Crary WlLLL-KM M. DeGNAN J.-KMES F. DeVINE Maurice J. Dwyer, Jr. Morton Fearey SCHOLARS OF THE FIRST RANK Charles Goodwin Philip E. Jacob Asa C. LaFrance Duncan C. Lee J. coB H. London William L. McGovern Kevin McInerney ThOM.- S J. O ' SULLIV. N Henry Putzel, Jr. Willis L. M. Reese Thomas Rodd, 3rd Charles Seymour. Jr. Lym.i n Spitzer, Jr. Philip A. Wadsworth N ' alter Werner SCHOLARS OF THE SECOND RANK John A. Field Irving L Freedh.- nd George E. Hale, 2nd JuLE M. Hannaford, 3rd Edward B. Hincks William J. Holloran Sydney R. Kauffm- iin John S. Knott Stanley A. Leavy Paul D. MacLean Pardee Marshall Henry Moskowitz Frederick R. Pe.-vke A. RON W. Perlman Carl A. Peterson, Jr. Oscar L. Rand Stanley ' F. Reed, Jr. Thomas T. Richmond Monroe Rubinger Seymour St. John Wendell G. S. nford Philip H. Sher Louis G. Shields Lucien J. Sichel Allan H. Smith Benj.-siMin J. Sorin Donald R. Spaidal David V. T. Sprankle George S. Stillman William E. Stockhausen Frank B. Stone Morgan Y. Swirskv Daniel G. Tenney, Jr. James G. Thorburn, Jr. Samuel A. Toworoff Joseph E. Valk Eugene D. Wadsworth Eugene M. W. ith Fr. nkli.n p. Whitcraft, 3rd Willl- m White, Jr. Bernard Wolfe Vari JUNIOR APPOINTMENTS, CLASS OF 1936 John A. Bev.an Jonathan B. Bingham Robert B. Birge Rich. rd F. Cobb Th.- ddeus S. Danowski Bruce B. ' bcock Ch.-siRles B. B. ' vyly, Jr. Monroe C. Be. rdsley Irvine E. Bernstein John A. Blum Henry P. Brean H. rold Brown Westcott Burlingame, Jr. Crawford J. Campbell Robert H. Cory ' , Jr. David T. Dellinger Joel B. Dirlam Vincent D. Don.- hue Joseph B. Finkel PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS Daniel D. D. rling Oscar W. L. Dennis Thomas G. M. nning James H. Nichols HIGH ORATIONS Ralph Gancher Louis W. Goodkind Lee B. Harris Henry ' C. Harvey August Heckscher, 2nd John R. Hersey William R. Humphrey, Jr. John J. Ivers Oliver O. Jensen James G. Johnson, Jr. Frederick R. Klauck Lester J. Kohn Kenneth D. Kornreich Fred H. Lassiter William N. Lovell John E. Pfeiffer Bernard C. Rankin Robert A. Rosenb.a.um Irving H. Silverman D. ' Wtd E. Swift Bernard S. Peck Lovett C. Peters D. ' LLAS B. Pratt Bern. ' rd Rapoport Tom a. Ritzm. n Abr. h. m Rosenbloom Allan J. Ryan Abe E. Smick WlLLL- M E. SuLLIV. N Willi.- m F. T. ylor John W. Warrington W ' lLLiAM O. Webb Peter D. Whitney SiGMUND A. ZlER Se. JOHJ fm lio Edw, ge: Rose Will Geoi m G£} Ria tra ROIA Alfx 34 Scholarship Honors Sheffield Scientific School DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE WITH DISTINCTION 1934 SUMMA CUM LAUDE Jacob L. Kovner, Mathematics Thornton L. Page, Physics Benjamin I. Rouse, Jr., Plant Science MAGNA CUM LAUDE Yardley Beers, Physics Arthur M. Ross, Jr., Chemistry Russell R. Roetger, Applied Economic Sci- C.j mpbell H. Steketee, Applied Economic ence .Science CUM LAUDE Israel Aleinikoff, Applied Economic Science Se.wer a. B. ll- rd, Chemistry John .S. B.ancker, Plant Science Frederick H. Belden, Industrial Administra- tion Edw.ard V. Cohe.n, Applied Economic Sci- ence Milton J. Golden, Biological Science John G. Gordon, 3rd, Industrial Administra- tion J.ACOB VV. Hershey. Applied Economic Science Kenneth C. Ogden, Jr., Industrial Adminis- tration Alfred C. Orr. Applied Economic Science GENERAL TWO-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES 1935 Rosecrans B-aldwin, Applied Economic Sci- ence Roy N. B. rnett, Biological Science WiLLi.wi C. Bauman, Chemistry George C. Br.adley, Applied Economic .Sci- ence Fr. ' .nklin Carter, 3rd, Physics C1h. rles K. Fossett. Industrial Administration W. lter R. C. Golden, Biological Science Henry J. Riblet, Mathematics Theodore B. Rosenth.- l, Physics Ernest L. .S.ar.ason, Biological .Science W. ' RREN E. .Sherley, Industrial Administra- tion V.ARREN A. Tyrrell, Jr., Physics William S. V ' ickrey, Mathematics GENERAL ONE-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES i93 ' 3 Roger .S. Bender, Physics Robert V. Berliner, Biological Science Richard E. Bishop, Jr., Industrial Adminis- tration Duncan Bruce, Jr., Applied Economic Science Rol.and E. Fromm, Applied Economic Science Alfred J. Gagnon, Industrial Administration John B. Howard, Chemistry Richard W. Lipp.m. n, Biological .Science CoLi.x C. Murdoch, Industrial Administration Hervey C. P.arke, Chemistry Douglas S. Riggs, Biological .Science William H. Spencer, Industrial Administra- tion George J. Stricker, Biological Science Everett P. Tomlinson, Physics Bruno V.assel, Jr., Chemistry John H. Wentvvorth, Biological Science 35 Phi Beta Kappa Scholarship Honor Society 1 1 ' ZJiA :- - -.T ;r£i . Charles Seymour, Jr. . Philip Ernest Jacob Lyman Spitzer, Jr. Duncan Chaplin Lee John Albert Field CLASS OF 1934- JuLES Eugene Bern.ard, Jr. Moses Eli Glass Daniel Gaston MacMill.- n Daniel Joseph O ' Neill, Jr. William Polk. VVh. rton, Jr. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Member of Executive Committee (June Elections) William Lewis Sachse William Wright Stafford JuDsoN Stent DouGL.i s Jerome Thompson Gardiner Angell Stu. ' rt Pr- iTT Atkins Richard Brown B.aker John Henry B. tten, 3rd John Walter Beardslee, 3rd Philip Francis Belcher Leon Belenky Ralph Sharp Brown, Jr. Newton Reid Calhoun Burr Francis Coleman Samuel Douglas Cornell John Hadley Cox Clive Livingston Duval John Ingraham Ely John Albert Field Irving Israel Freedhand Everett Ed dy Gilbert Charles Goodwin George Ellery Hale, 2nd David Jeffreys Hopkins Jonathan Brewster Bingham Robert Bowen Birge Richard Ford Cobb Thaddeus Stanley D. nowski Daniel Dyer D. rling CLASS OF 1935 CLASS OF 1936 Philip Ernest Jacob Asa Curtis LaFrance St. nley Arnold Leavy Duncan Chaplin Lee William Lawrence McGovern P.ardee M.arshall Thomas Jefferson O ' Sullivan Henry Putzel, Jr. Osc. R Lewis Rand Willis Livingston Mesier Reese Thomas Rodd, 3rd Charles Seymour, Jr. Philip Herschel Sher LuciEN Jouvaud Sichel Lyman .Spitzer, Jr. FR. NK Bush Stone Edward Townsend, 2nd Philip Adrian Wadsworth Eugene Mersereau W. ' ith Walter Werner Oscar William Louis Dennis J. MEs Hastings Nichols Bernard Courtney Rankin Robert Abraham Rosenb.-iiUM Irving Ho v. rd Silverm.- n D.i iViD Everett Swift 36 Sigma Xi Scientific Honor Society Professor Barrett F. Dodge Professor Walter J. Wohlenberg Prof essor Leon S. Stone Doctor Harold H. Walker President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATE MEMBERS SENIORS IN SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL William C. Bauman Julian S. Gravely, Jr. Franklin Carter, 3rd Charles K. Fossett Walter R. C. Golden Theodore B. Rosenthal Warren E. Sherley William S. Viokrey SENIORS IN YALE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Meriwether L. Baxter, Jr. Joseph Levy George T. Broadfoot Joseph F. G. Miller Samuel E. Clements John A. Ridgnvay, Jr. George F. Horton, 3rd Arthur W. Sweeton, 3rd SENIORS IN YALE COLLEGE Jack J. Albom Everett E. Gilbert John Collins Harry M. Nodelman Harold H. Coppersmith Allan H. Smith John A. Field Eugene D. Wadsworth Bernard W ' olfe JUNIORS IN SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Robert W. Berliner Richard W. Lippman DOUGL.AS S. RiGGS JUNIORS IN YALE COLLEGE Robert A. Rosenbaum Irving H. Silverman 37 Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society OFFICERS George F. Horton, 3RD President Joseph F. G. Miller Vice-President WiLLL-iiM A. Bauer Treasurer Charles K. Fossett Corresponding Secretary Robert V. Downln ' g Recording Secretary MEMBERS William A. Bauer Robert T. Beers George T. Broadfoot Robert W. Downing Charles K. Fossett Samuel H. Fredericks, Jr. Herman J. Goldberger 1935 Arthur W. Sweeton, George F. Horton, 3RD Alexander Matthews, Jr. Joseph F. G. Miller John G. Munson, Jr. Robert R. Platt John N. Sherley VV.arren E. Sherley 3RD Philip V. D.arling John R. Edwards Horace W. French Alfred J. Gagnon 1936 EvERARD M. Williams Smith Hickenlooper, Jr. George H. Hogle Ch.arles T. Porter William H. Spencer Chi Delta Theta Literary Honor Society Graham Peck 1935 Charles Seymour, Jr. George S. de Mare 1936 Brendan M. Gill DwiGHT E. Robinson, Jr. Curtis C. Rodgers 1937 J.AMES M. Yost 39 SENIOR SOCIETIES Transitions in the Yale Social System By William H. Charles, 1935 AS the Class of 1935 launches into the sea of Yale graduates, it can look back on its four undergraduate years as a period in which social institutions at Yale have undergone a decided metamorphosis. Its first two years were spent in preparing for the College Plan, and the last two in adjusting itself to the new conditions ushered in by this system. As yet these adjustments are still in an embryonic stage, being dependent a great deal for their development upon the attitude with which the undergraduate faces them. The mere fact of a College Plan has neces- sitated a new and to some extent arbitrary rea- lignment of social groups, a changed and more diversified stratification. The essential differ- ence is that students are no longer segregated into four classes, or rather three classes and a Freshman group, but into eight Colleges, the result of which is a broader scope of associations among the different classes, but a narrower in each individual one. The Academic fraternities and Sheffield clubs have perhaps been most directly affected by the advent of the College Plan. Before the Fall of 1933, the eight Academic fraternities were primarily eating clubs. Because most of them were heavily burdened by mortgages and taxation, they drew heavily upon the proceeds of their grills for subsistence, as well as upon dues and initiation fees. In order more effectively to carry out the new College system, it was neces- sary for the University to require all the mem- bers of a College to eat at least ten meals a week in the College dining hall, or at any rate to pay $5.50 for these ten meals. By a charge of eight dollars for all twenty-one meals, eating there was made more attractive, for the fraternity grill could not approach this figure in economy, and still pay for itself and defray running ex- penses of the house. Thus it came about that a majority of fraternity members switched to their Colleges for the most part of their meals, and have as a consequence broadened their College acquaintances, at the same time maintaining allegiance to their fraternities. The adminis- tration, however, has repeatedly denied any attempt to squeeze out these organizations, but has held that the fraternity can continue in ex- istence so long as it can supply a raisnn d elre. that is, a legitimate social asset the advantages of which are commensurate with the expense in- volved . Sheffield Scientific School clui)s, though not harassed by the loss of eaters, for their members always have eaten elsewhere, have nevertheless had to face a diminution in interest, caused by the fact that many men find superior attractions in rooming in the Colleges, rather than in the clubs. This has meant that the total number of candidates for club rooming facilities has de- creased, and consequently several houses, Col- ony, Cloister, and Sachem Hall, have been sold to the University, and are now being used as Freshman dormitories. It has often been thought that fraternities on any campus are a divisive influence, but if they are divisive in the whole student body, it is agreed that they are generally cohesive within themselves. Many have clung tenaciously to the idea that the fraternity system cannot go hand in hand with the College Plan at Yale, and Cassandra-like have pointed with admonitory finger to the fact that the existence of one spells the death of the other, citing the dissolution of Alpha Delta Phi, the reorganization of Alpha Chi Rho, the changing the chapter of the national fraternity of Psi Upsilon into a local organization, the Fence, and the sale of the three Sheffield club houses to the University. But is there not the possibility that the cross-section advantages of the one can be grafted on the individual cohesion of the other to produce a completely articulated social system? Time only can answer this question. It must not be supposed that the new units have affected all social organizations. In a com- munity as large as Yale there are many groups which bear no relation to the new system and are thus unaffected by it. These can be roughly divided into three broad categories, honor soci- eties. Senior societies, and a heterogeneous col- lection of informal clubs. The first of these, the honor societies, admit a man for what he has done. The oldest is Phi Beta Kappa, founded here in i 781 . Scholastic attainment is the criteri- on, and an average mark of 90 has in the past usually assured an election in Junior year, while 84 or 85 ordinarily brings its reward in Senior 42 year. Scientific scholastic societies are Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi. Chi Deha Theta, the Hterary society, dates back to the early nine- teenth century, and is closely associated with the Elizabethan Club, where, among rare editions and literary treasures, the members hold forth over their tea-cups. Of more recent origin is the national forensic society. Delta Sigma Rho, started at Yale in 1912, in which the require- ment for admission is participation in two or more intercollegiate debates. Sigma Delta Psi is the youngest of the honor societies. In this, physical development is the qualification, and versatility in athletic ability is necessary to pass the rigid requirements in the different sports. The two Sheffield honor societies are Aurelian and Torch. Senior Societies, six in number, form the second broad category. These are secret, membership being based on what a man is and what he has done at College. In May, 1934, the historic site of Tap Day, where Juniors are tapped for the various societies, was changed from the elm in front of Durfee Hall on the Old Campus to Branford Court, and the gates lead- ing oflf the Court were screened with spruce to insure privacy. Informalitv, congeniality, and conviviality are the keynotes of the third large category. It is, perhaps illogical to group clubs together under this description, as many of them are poles apart. There is, however, one distinguish- ing feature common to all — membership is not automatic, as in some of the honor societies, and is generally limited in each one to a given field or activity in which there is a concrete com- munity of interest. To name but a few, there are the Yale Political Union, founded this year on the model of the Oxford Union, and striving toward an increased student interest in politics; the Whiffenpoofs, gentlemen songsters off on a spree ; the Pundits, a literary group led by- Professor Jack Crawford; the Yale Corinthian Yacht Club; the Mohicans; the Riffs; and in- numerable others. The social sands at Yale, as in any progressive community, are ever shifting, and though per- haps unperceived during the course of four years of undergraduate life, the forces of social flux are constantly at work. These four years are as plastic proportionately as is the much more extended period of easily discernible change, for example, from the belligerent Class Bullies of more than a hundred years ago to our present-day harljingers of amity, the Whiffen- poofs. Battell ' s Bell Strikes Five on Tap Day. May 18. 1934 43 Skull and Bones Founded 1832 John Eliot Bowles Samuel Carnes Collier Francis Clare Ccrtin Stanley Evert Fuller Frederick Peter Haas Joseph Hale Johnson William Skinner Kilborne John Sargent Pillsbury, Jr. Thomas Rodd, 3RD Charles Seymour, Jr. Roger Bulkley Shepard Lyman Spitzer, Jr. George Schley Stillman Henry Porter Baldwin Terry BowEN Charleton Tufts 45 I c. s. p. C. C. J. Scroll and Key Founded 1842 Alexander Gushing Brown, Jr. Howard Kirk Brown, Jr. Clive Livingston Duval Morton Fe. rey Paul Benj.-mviin Grosscup, Jr. Anson Boulton Herrick H. rvey CIhilds McGlintock, Jr. Str. tford Lee Morton, Jr. John Henry Overall, Jr. Thomas Thacher Richmond Francis D. v Rogers D.A.NIEL Gle. son Tennev, Jr. Sidney XoR vooD Towle, Jr. Malcolm Dougl. s V. tson Derick Vanderbilt Vebb 47 Wolf ' s Head Founded 1883 Henry Holmes Babcock Keith Spalding Brown Francis Patrick Garvan, Jr. John Goodyear George Owen Knapp, 2nd Milton Fox Martin Philip Carlyle Mertz Frank Hinchman Platt, 2nd Jay Ketcham Secor Louis Gerald Shields David Gould Stoddard Charles Barras Swope John Sheldon Tilney George Dudley ' aill Joseph Francis Weller, Jr. 49 m A- --iU. Elihu Founded 1903 Lloyd Aspinvvall, Jr. Hexry Platt Brightwell, Jr. John Kirkpatrick Edmonds John Robert Henry, Jr. WiLL. RD Deere Hosford, Jr. Howard Day Kellogg, Jr. Lucius Kingm.an Philip Conr. d Klein Robert Middleton Krementz VVillard Barriss McAllister, Jr. Harry Dorr Niles Douglas Burr Robinson William Hiram Sl.ay, Jr. Robert Oxn.ard Spr.ague William Stuart Walcott, 3RD 51 Berzelius Founded 1848 David Kincaid Armstrong Robert Horne Charles ViLLiAM Hamill Charles Warren Kellogg Colby Edward ' ermilve Cox, Jr. Frederick Cyril Cuthbertson John Albert Field Philip Ernest Jacob Stuart Milton Lamb Duncan Chaplin Lee Stuart Arnold McKenzie Allen Hurlburt Minor John Taylor Herbert Hilbish Wells Preston Leo Woodlock 53 Book and Snake Founded 1863 Wilfred Bancroft, Jr. George Crawford Bradley Alexander Bryan Alexander MacBurney Byers Colby Mitchel Chester. 3RD Frederick Ha ley Chute John Scott Clifford ' illi. m Clarke Cr.- ig, Jr. Richard Snow Crampton Charles Soutter Edgar J.AMES B.ARTON ElLIOTT Edmund Le.avenworth French J. MES Robert Griswold Stuart Trowbridge Hotchkiss John H. mling Keeney Thom.as Kr.amer King Thom. s Hoel Lawrence, Jr. Ledyard Mitchell, Jr. Arthur Murr. y Preston Angelo John Smith, Jr. Louis Benford Stoner BenJ-amin Irving T.aylor, Jr. Ch.arles Chester Wickwtre, Jr. 55 Aurelian University Honor Society Founded 1910 John Eliot Bowles Andrew Thomas Callan Richard Ely Danielson, Jr. Martin Hassett Donahoe, Jr. Lucius Robinson Gordon Frederick Peter Ha.«iS David Livingstone Livingston Max Fr.anklin Millikan John Gerhart Munson, Jr. Fitzhugh Quarrier Louis Ger.ald Shields WiLLi. M Thompson Sperry Seymour St. John Morris Wistar Stroud, 3RD Malcolm Douglas Watson 56 Torch University Honoi ' Society Founded 19 16 George Rosexgarten Atterbury Harry Benjamin Combs Charles Elmer Dlnbar Edward Tytus Gardner, Jr. John Goodyear Davis Olmsted Harrington Anson Boulton Herrick Milton Fox Martin John Sargent Pillsbury, Jr. Roger Bulkley Shepard, Jr. Erskine Eldridge Smith John Pillsbury Snyder, Jr. Henry Porter B. ldvvln Terry 57 JUNIOR FRATERNITIES and SHEFF CLUBS Alpha Chi Rho James L. Atherton Orville E. Babcock, Jr. Judson Biadway, Jr. John N. Carley Eugene W. Clark Eugene H. Dupee, Jr. Mahlon T. Everhart, Jr. Philip M. Fairbanks 1935 Clifford H. Forster Philip B. Fouke, Jr. David J. Hopkins Allan F. Hussey Myers C. Kinney John E. MacDonald John H. MacVey Lee H. N. Malone John F. Morse Robert R. Newell, Jr. Lawrence A. Pomeroy, Jr. Joseph N. Richardson Walter H. Schoellkopf, Jr. Robert E. Seltzer William D. Stockard Weslev P. Vordenberg Bruce A. Watson William C. L. Barker Marshall M. Bassick Edward F. Boyd, Jr. Harold Brown Conrad W. Buhler Charles L. Frambach. Jr Harold G. Holcomlie. Jr Robert C. Holland Jack W. Jordan 1936 Gerrit P. Judd, 4th Whitney T. Kelsey, Jr. Louis W. T. Lincoln John D. Meyer Franklin H. Miles, Jr. Frank D. O ' Reilly, Jr. Kenneth G. Peters Eldredge C. Pier Donald F. Rabbott John H. Richardson Henry B. deV. Schwab, Jr Warren D. Shear Oscar M. Shirey, Jr. Ralph B. Snow- John H. Stanger William B. Wise Robert S. Wright Thew Wright, Jr. Edward S. Abbott Wilbur M. Ailing, Jr. Thomas F. Armstrong Norman K. Arnold John V. Beam, Jr. Ronald M. Byrnes, Jr. Paul G. Darling 1937 Carll H. DeSilver Charles E. Edgerton LeGrand S. Elebash, Jr Frank Forester, Jr. Ernest J. Gilman Charles J. Harding Edward R. Harvey, Jr. Robert D. King George J. Marvin Roy A. Michaels VV ' illiam A. Moore Daniel Mungall, Jr. John S. S. Peirson Hugh Wilson 61 Alpha Delta Phi Founded 1836 Lloyd Aspinwall, Jr. John E. Bowles Henry P. Brightwell, Jr. Keith S. Brown William H. Charles Frederick H. Chute Warren K. Colby John R. Cooney Richard S. Crampton John K. Edmonds James B. Elliott Richard J. Goodrich 1935 Robert P. Griffing, Jr. Chauncey M. Griggs, 2nd Frederick P. Haas Jiile M. Hannaford, 3rd William H. Harrington John R. Henry, Jr. Stephen D. Hopkins Howard D. Kellogg, Jr. William F. Keyser Philip C. Klein Thomas H. Lawrence. Jr. William B. McAllister, Jr. Austen B. McGregor John W. Mailliard, 3rd Milton F. Martin Robert Milbank Douglas B. Robinson William P. Sargeant Roger B. Shepard, Jr. John P. Snyder, Jr. Benjamin L Taylor, Jr. John Taylor George D. Vaill Malcolm D. Watson George W. Allen Henry N. Barkhausen Ferdinand L. Belin, Jr. Russell W. Billman Gardner C. Carpenter Willard Gates Thomas F. Curtin, Jr. P. William A. Greene Wilbur R. Greenwood, Jr. 1936 William Hausberg Thomas Hildt, Jr. Hadlai A. Hull David A. Hyde John G. McMurtry George G. Mairs John B. Miller William H. Morgan Alonzo L. Neal Norman L. Neville Kennedy B. Parker Alexander T. Primm Samuel A. Scribner, Jr. Joseph G. Standart, Jr. John F. Sweeney Sidney E. Sweet, Jr. Hampden M. Swift Kent D. Wightman Louis Willard, Jr. 63 Arthur D. Allen, Jr. Warren D. Blatz, Jr. Robert O. Bovard Harold P. Buckingham Leonard D. Burgweger John S. Burrows, Jr. John B. Calfee Alexis C. Coudert Charles Dillingham Edgar S. Downs, Jr. George O. Elmore Robert M. Allen John C. Armstrong Lewis W. Baldwin Rowland S. Bosworth, Jr. Walter W. Bronson, 2nd Fayette Brown, Jr. Hugh M. Campbell William H. Clark Warner F. DeFoe Russell S. Dwight, Jr. William B. Ebert Iorgan Adams, Jr. Edward J. Baker Richard W. Barlow, 2nd Dexter B. Blake John S. Caldwell Hiram B. Carey, Jr. Ralph C. Carroll, Jr. Robert M. Davidson Robert J. Dodds, Jr. Alpha Sigma Phi Founded 1845 1935 Wilson S. Elmore Waller Farnham John S. Gifford Philip Goodell, Jr. George A. Hopkins, Jr. Chester A. Howard, Jr. Leonard G. James James S. Kemper, Jr. Paul G. King George O. Kingsbury, 3rd Richard H. Lynch Stuart A. McKenzie 1936 Frank NL Ewing, Jr. David Hamlin Lawrence A. Hart Charles T. Harther, Jr. Henry C. Harvey James G. Johnson, Jr. John R. Kendall Allan F. Kitchel, Jr. Glenn S. Knapp, Jr. Albert R. Lamb, Jr. Eric H. Morrison 1937 Lucius W. Evans William W. Green Ralph M. Greenlee Peter N. Hall John H. Hendrick Donald F. Hendrie Franklin Kennedy, Jr. Chester H. Loomis Clement A. McKaig William E. Merriss Joseph Mosenthal Gunnard A. Nelson Charles V. Newell Aaron L Sanson, 3rd Carlos W. Sherman Samuel D. Slade John E. Stonington Robert H. Temple James McL. Tompkins Lewis M. Webb, Jr. Preston L. Woodlock William S. Murray, Jr. Paul B. Sawyer, Jr. William J. Secor, Jr. Henry R. Stern, Jr. Philip L Taylor Robert E. S. Thompson Ulysses D. E. Walden Henry C. Walsh Thomas J. Ward, Jr. John B. Wells Edward C. R. Whitcraft George B. Morrill, Jr. Edward N. MuUer, Jr. Frank L. Orth Thomas B. Sharretts Ernest W. Smith Henry O. Smith, Jr. Roger C. Sullivan William G. Wigton James L. Wilson 65 Donald C. Adams David K. Armstrong Robert H. Charles Robert A. L. Ellis James A. Hetherington, 2nd Peter C. Hitt Lewis H. Hyde Allan M. Johnson Francis M. Knoblauch William J. Larkin, 2nd Arthur R. Andrews. 2nd Bruce Babcock Burrall Barnum Stephen L. Bartholomew Edward M. Beyer William H. Bixby, Jr. James H. Brewster William R. Burt Harold F. Curtis Nathaniel Ewinsf ' i ian H. Anderson Villiam A. Atlee Karl H. Behr, Jr. John C. G. Boyce Maxwell Brace, Jr. Hewitt Cochran Leonard R. Cowles William A. Cullman E. T. Bedford Davie Rector T. Davol Frederic L. Day, Jr. Beta Theta Pi Founded 1092 1935 Kevin Mclnerney Richard D. Matthews Albert S. B. Negley Harry D. Niles Gerard C. Smith Robert O. Sprague George R. Steiner Gordon M. Street Ed vin Thome, 2nd 1936 George B. Farnam John H. Ferguson Albert S. Field, Jr. David R. Francis Corwith Hamill Ferris S. Hetherington, Jr. Thomas F. Holden Albert W. Lindeke, Jr. Joseph Meade Ira C. Oehler John E. OKeefe, Jr. 1937 William S. Evans Richard L Galland John S. Griswold Arthur F. Hetherington. Jr. Henry G. Heedy, Jr. Charles Hicko.x Philip C. Honnold Stanley J. Keyes, Jr. Daniel V. McNamee, Jr. Villiam B. Marshall Spencer Montgomery, Jr. 67 Cyril Tyson Richard W. VanHorne Richard H. Wadhams Cope B. Walbridge George A. Wallace Roger Welles Frederick R. White, Jr. William White, Jr. Frederick L. Wilson Henry J. Wynkoop, Jr. Wingate H. Paine Frederick P. Palen James H. Parker, Jr. James D. Phinney Richard A. R. Pinkham Arnold Porter Franklin L Rawolle Dwight E. Robinson, Jr. .■lexis W. Thompson William L ' pthegrove Alfred S. Moses, Jr. Logan Munroe William M. Rees Albert E. Roraback, Ji Robert H. Rubin Hugh W. Saniord, Jr. David D. Steere John S. Turner Warren A. Tyson, Jr. John G. ' ogt Thomas E. Walton, Jr. Hera Rich John Ab Siepl Fran Chai Frtd Cb: Rid johr Shei i AnI Chi Psi John V. Aymar Henry H. Babcock Richard F. Baldwin, Jr. John F. Beauregard Alexander Bryan Stephen T. Crary Francis C. Curtin Charles S. Edgar Stanley E. Fuller Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Alexander S. Ballinger Charles Belknap, 2nd Webster M. Bull Charles C. Bunker Richard J. Cummins John S. Dalrymple, Jr. Sherman Farnham Robert C. Graham Oscar T. Lawler John Amos Daniel B. Badger Rynn Berry Louis V. Bossert William Boyd, Jr. Russ V. Bradley Christopher H. Buckley, Ji Roy D. Chapin, Jr. Donald C. Dayton Arthur J. Draper Samuel H. Eaton Joseph ' Farley 1935 Paul B. Grosscup, Jr. George G. Henry Walter M. Kelly Edward V. King Samuel B. Knight Robert M. Krementz Walter M. Krementz, Jr. Stuart M. Lamb James L. Lewis 1936 Luther Loomis Joseph F. Lord John J. Mack Hiram R. Mallinson Robert Marvel Edmund P. Pillsbury Theodore S. Proxmire, Jr. John A. Rand William B. Rand, Jr. 1937 John W. Field William J. H. Fischer, Jr. Robert C. Fisher Robert M. Gillespie George T. Hall Marcus B. Hall, Jr. Charles D. P. Hamilton, 3rd John R. Hollister William H. Hylan, Jr. David C. Jenney Sidney L. Lasell, Jr. Robert J. Lay Brendan T. Mclnerney 69 Pemberton H. Lincoln Stanley A. Page Frederick W. Preston Thomas T. Richmond Villard C. ShuU, 2nd Robert Sidenberg William H. Slay, Jr. Mark L. Sperry, 2nd Joseph F. Weller, Jr. Algernon S. Roberts Gustav Schwab, Jr. Bradley Smith Robert H. Spock Sidney A. Stein Fred K. Stewart Herbert J. Sugden Robert G. Sweeney William K. Townsend Joseph H. Woodward. 2nd Francis A. Macomber Edward J. Magee Constantine Mittendorf Willett S. Moore Albert H. Morrison Jay Robinson-DufF, Jr. Charles E. Rogers, 3rd James Schureman James L. Shaler Herbert D. Smith Robert E. Wall Edward F. Wheeler Delta Kappa Epsilon Howard Bissell, Jr. Joseph H. Bragdon Alfred P. Brooks Richard E. Danielson, Jr. Malcolm Farrel Morton Fearey Samuel A. Galpin Davis O. Harrington John W. Hornbing Charles T. Alexander James D. Auchincloss Charles L. Audette John W. Bailey John W. Barclay Richard J. Barr. Jr. Philip K. Bartow Robert E. Belknap. Jr. Jonathan B. Bingham James C. Castle John W. Childs Hugh J. Chisholm, Jr. John K. Deasy Thomas E. Barbour Preston I. Barnes George P. Bartholomew. Jr Clarkson Beard Robert H. Beckwith Samuel L. Brookfield Robert S. Carey William H. Chickering Thomas M. Crosby William D. Embree, Jr. Theodore W. Griggs Donald F. Haetcertv 1935 David Jenckes William S. Kilborne George O. Knapp, 2nd John T. Lambert Walter F. Lineberger, Jr. Ledyard Mitchell, Jr. Joseph B. Roberts Winthrop Rockefeller Jay K. Secor John Shallcross 1936 George S. Ebbert, Jr. Joseph E. Eggert, Jr. Gordon Fearey Henry A. Gardner, Jr. Jesse A. Hall Thomas W. Hall, Jr. Horace Havemeyer, Jr. Joseph H. Holmes, Jr. William E. Hughes William R. Humphrey, Jr. Chester B. Kerr Garfield King John M. Knapp 1937 . Carter C. Higgins Waldo C:. M. Johnston George G. Jordan Hov ard B. Kelsey Richard S. Keppelman Richard K. Linkroum Tasker G. Lowndes, 2nd John K. McEvoy John B. McLemore Donald G. McNeely Richard C. Miles Rudolph Montgelas Louis G. Shields George S. Stillman Morris W. Stroud, 3rd Walter W. Tavlor, Jr. Walter C. Teagle, Jr. John S. Tilney Bow en C. Tufts William S. Walcott, 3rd Joseph H. Worrall Thomas A. McCann Henry T. McKnight John W. Mettler, Jr. Richard A. Moore David H. Northrup Charles D. Preston Langdon C. Qiiimby Coles W. Raymond Whitelaw Reid Sidney D. Ripley, 2nd Cyril Sumner, Jr. Mather K. Whitehead Charles S. Woolsey Rogers C. B. Morton Wiiliam H. Orrick, Jr. DeWitt Peterkin, Jr. Murray Pope John B. Reigeluth Paul T. Rennell John B. Stevens Potter .Stewart Louis T. Stone, Jr. Dudley V. Sutphin Harold M. Turner, Jr. Tomlinson Wells The Fence Club (Tnimbull Trust Association, Incorporated 1862] John E. Bowles David R. C. Brown, Jr. William V. F. Brinley Howard K. Brown, Jr. Colbv M. Chester, 3rd Frederick H. Chute Samuel C. Collier William M. Drew Clive L. DuVal John K. Edmonds Benjamin M. England, 2nd Francis P. Garvan, Jr. Bradley Goodyear, Jr. John F. Byers, Jr. Robert D. Case Carroll J. Cavanaugh Stephen M. Clement Robert B. Cooke Horace W. Davis, 2nd Fred W. Fairman, Jr. Joseph P. Grace, Jr. Fred P. Hamilton, Jr. August Heckscher, 2nd Frederick W. Bellamy, Jr. Charles J. Blair, 2nd Arthur W ' . Bromfield Frederick H. Brooke, Jr. Charles C. Burke, 3rd Joseph M. Carey, 3rd Harold W. Carhart, Jr. Arthur B. Chace, 3rd Arthur W. Cocroft Thomas Curtiss 1935 John Goodyear Anson B. Herrick Joseph H. Johnson Harvey C. McClintock. Jr. Philip C. Mertz Allen H. Minor Stratford L. Morton, Jr. John S. Murtha John H. Oxerall, Jr. John S. Pillsbiuv, Jr. Douglas B. Robinson George E. Robson, Jr. Thomas Rodd, 3rd 1936 John R. Hersey Douglas F. Hickok Bryan E. Hooker Fred H. Lassiter Andrew M. McBurney, Jr. F. Laton McCartney C. James Mills George P. O ' Neil Arthur W. Pearce Bernard C. Rankin Joseph E. Rich 1937 Ralph D. Cutler, Jr. Bayard Dominick, 2nd Peter H. Dominick Andrew S. Gagarin Thomas C. Hewes Benjamin D. Hill Buell Hollister, Jr. Charles R. Hook, Jr. Allen S. Hubbard, Jr. E. Smith Jackson Elmore C. Kerr, Jr. Francis D. Rogers Roger B. Shepard, Jr. John P. Snyder, Jr. William E. Stockhausen David G. Stoddard David G. Tenney, Jr. Henry P. B. Terry .Sidney N. Towle, Jr. John V. Cance Eugene D. Wadsworth Philip A. Wadsworth Malcolm D. Watson Derick V. Webb Jerome V. Roscoe Blake Shepard Peter H. Smith, 3rd Thomas C. .Stockhausen John P. Sturges Robert C. Taylor Robert Train Louis Walker Robert E. L. Wilson, 3rd Arthur Winslow, 2nd Douglas H. McCrary William Maxwell John Middleton Roger Milliken Samuel W. Mills William H. Moore Wilson C. Potter Brendan Rafferty John W. Sumner, Jr. Alfred Wright, Jr. 73 Zeta Psi Nelson L. Barnes, Jr. Julius S. W. Bates Alexander C. Brow n, Jr. Alexander M. Byers John F. Callahan James H. Childs, Jr. Richard F. Corroon Edward V. Cox, Jr. Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd Frederick C. Cuthbertson Stewart J. O. . lsop Richard D. H. Banbury William K. Blethen Westcott Burlingame, Jr. Charles F. Chandler Melville Church, and Richard F. Cobb Robert B. Deford, Jr. Armin Elsaesser, Jr. Clinton H. Gates Carl T. Goepel John deK. Alsop Randall B. Averv John H. Burbank Hugh H. Butler Edward Comstock Julius Freiberg Richard S. Gallagher James G. Hanes, Jr. Dudley W. Hargra e Albert J. Jehle, Jr. 1935 William Ewing, Jr. R. Hamilton Fowler, Jr. Thomas A. Freiberg E. Carleton Granberv, Jr. Willard D. Hosford. jr. Thomas K. Krug A. Richard Lamb, Jr. Phillips Norton John C. Oliver, Jr. Frederick R. Peake Frank H. Piatt, 2nd 1936 Robert M. Henry Huston Huflman Charles F. Kling Paul L. Krug Henry L. McClintock Robert H. McCormick, 3rd Eugene Meyer, 3rd Charles Miller, 3rd George A. Murray Walter Perry, Jr. Jonathan W. Pine 1937 David A. Kennedy, nd Samuel ' . Kilboiu ' n Charles E. Littlefield, and Douglas W. Mabee, 2nd LeRoy McK. Makepeace Frederick Mears, Jr. GeolTreN Merris William ' J. Miller Albert L. Morris Robert C. Myers George T. Pack John P. Scully Charles Seymour, Jr. Lucien J. Sichel Lyman Spitzer, Jr. Charles B. Swope Clhester L Warren, Jr. Herbert H. Wells William A. Wells William l. Wherry, 3rd Nathaniel H. Willis Harry C. Royal, Jr. Joseph T. Ryerson, Jr. Robert H. Schultz K. Cortlandt Schu ler, Jr John F. Taylor Reverdy Wadsworth George B. Walton W. dsborn Webb John H. White Lyndon A. S. Wilson Theodore D. Woolsev George E. Percy John T. Robinson, Jr. Rochester R. Roby John F. B. Runnalls Edward Savage, Jr. David H. Smith Gilbert P. Strelinger, Jr. Edward A. Stursberg Walter B. Terry Harrv F. Wilkins 75 Franklin Hall THETA XI Founded 1865 Samuel C. Bronson Daniel A. Chase Harold S. Conklin, Jr. Milton H. S. Cooper 1935 Norman L. Cressy Franklin S. Harris Oliver M. Ober Peter L. Paull Robert R. Piatt Bennett H. Short Donald C. Watson Spencer F. Weaver, Jr. Jacob W. Bird, Jr. Milan R. Bump Paul C. Condit Norman P. Cooley, 2nd Robert B. English, Jr. Frank F. Ford 1936 William H. Gesell, Jr. Robert A. Gosling Thornton M. Hinkle Ralph D. Hunting, Jr. William H. Lamprecht, Jr. Williain C. Lyon Robert B. McKellar Otto W. Sartorius, Jr. Harry E. Sloan, Jr. Edward J. Turbert, Jr. Robert K. Wallace Henry S. Washburn, Jr. Thomas L. Blayney Richard N. Bromley Charles C. Christv 1937 Ernest P. Christner William J. Flanagan William P. Healy, Jr. Samuel P. King Robert D. Scott George W. Thorpe William H. Trimpi 77 Saint Anthony Hall DELTA P S I Founded 1869 George R. Atterbury Charles V. Brooks Henry D. Burrall Andrew T. Callan Harry B. Combs Martin H. Donahoe, Jr James O. Crittenden Victor R. Despard, Jr. Herbert R. Eshelman. Jr. Albert B. Fay John F. Gordon C. Frederic Greene ' 935S Charles E. Dunbar Edward T. Gardner. Ji Lucius R. Gordon John D. Hegeman Norman ' . King 1936S Thomas A. D. Jones, Jr. Charles S. Judson, Jr. Harry S. Leyman, Jr. Edmund P. Lunken John ' an N. Meyer Harry J. Miller, Jr. Samuel A. Pond Lesley McCreath, Jr. George C. Meyer, Jr. Erskine E. Smith William T. Sperry Robert M. Wheeler Edward D. Wilson Alfred M. Rankin William M. Stiger Samuel J. C. Townsend Joseph Upton, Jr. Rufus Wesson Samuel P. Williams, 3rd Joseph H. Bascom Jere Baxter, 3rd Henry P. Becton Thomas C. Brainerd Henry P. Coogan Edward C. Daoust, Jr. Albert B. Diss 1937S Francis G. Fabian, Jr. Alvin W. Fargo, Jr. Wilson P. Foss, 3rd David Haviland Daniel H. Heekin H. Stanley Horn, Jr. Chauncey F. Howe McKnight Kinne Harvey C. Knowles, Jr. James McCreath, 2nd Meredith L. Scott George P. Urban, Jr. Cornelius B. Watson, Jr. James M. Yost Thomas L Zimmerman 79 Saint Elmo Hall Founded 1888 Ralph P. Bassett Charles P. Blair Walter M. Brainard Craig Colgate, Jr. Thomas M. Cox, Jr. Edward A. Davis 1935 James DeAngelis John R. Dugan George P. Haas P. Norman Larsen David L. Livingston John H. Longley Stanley R. Morton John G. Munson, Jr. Fitzhugh Qjnarrier Harry M. Riley Dudley W. Rockwell Halsted B. ' anderPoel Hayward R. Alker Henry G. Allen Henri V. Bouscaren Bailey W. Brown Rufus K. Duer Ralph E. Ellis, Jr. 1936 Arthur A. Frank, Jr. George H. Hogle Birger L. Johnson, Jr. Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Lincoln ' . Meeker Paul H. Schroeder Edmond N. Skinner, Jr George S. Stearns Bruce W. Stiles Archibald L. Trull Thomas E. Wilson Howard A. Austin, Jr. Richard A. Cooke, Jr. Randall H. Decker, Jr. Rufus Easton William T. Hamilton, 3rd Lewis Johnson, and 1937 Robert L. Keeney. Jr. William E. Keeney William Mackie Miguel G. Mendoza Victor J. Mill, Jr. Charles .S. Mmison. Jr. Hugh .Samson Walter M. Sanders Harcourt F. Schutz Thomas R. Weymouth Harold M. Van Husan Douglass J. Yer.xa, Jr. Vernon Hall PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded 1908 Rosecrans Baldwin Robert T. Beers Paul J. Brown, Jr. Charles F. Burhans, Jr. David G. CahiJl Thomas T. Chamberlain 1935 Guy I. Colby, 3rd Lee V. V. Dauler Frederick W. Dempsey John R. Fulton Herman J. Goldberger Robert G. Lawrence Donald C. Lott John A. Meehan, Jr. Judd H. Redfield, Jr. Nathaniel R. Reyburn Henry J. Riblet Robert B. Warner Hamilton B. Webb Forrest V. Brown, 2nd Thomas W. Bryant, Jr. Glen H. Colby Alfred J. Gagnon Michael J. Holahan, Jr. William L Lingo, Jr. 1936 John N. McDonald. Jr. Albert H. Mitchell William F. Prestley Homer W. Robinson Robert J. Shallenb erger Nelson Sharpe, 3rd Charles R. Skinker, Jr. Ogden W. Sutro David B. Thayer Paul J. Thomas Howard M. Tuttle, Jr. John L Warner Rhea Baxter Arthiu- Y. Berry, Jr Thomas G. Burke William C. Chester Albert Curry, Jr. Alfred B. Dixon 1937 Francis L Fahy John A. Farrell Arthur O. Fulton, Jr. John A. Garrell William P. Healy, Jr. Albert H. Hoopes Robert S. Ligersoll Richard B. Latimer Geoffrey J. Letchworth, Jr. Lloyd B. Makepeace Henry D. Tallman Thomas M. Wells 83 York Hall CHI PHI Founded 1878 Ralph C. Bryant, Jr. William T. Carter, 3rd Lewis P. Cheney Samuel H. Fredericks, Jr. ' 935 James M. Fulton Morgan N. Holmes George F. Horton, 3rd Neil Macaeale, Jr. Henry A. Mattoon, Jr. Sterett R. Prevost, Jr. George B. Schlotterer . lan C. Vedder Guv W. Chamberlin Francis V. Eustis Horace V. French 1936 William A. Hebert, Jr. Frederick C. Heller Smith Hickenlooper, Jr. Harry S. Irons, Jr. Robert B. Lincoln Robert C. Tavlor Carl A. Bellinger Stuart R. Brinkley, Jr. Daniel S. Brinsmade Richard D. L. Higgins 1937 Thomas F. Maher, Jr. Harries A. Mumma, Jr. Herbert Scoville, Jr. Berger M. Shepard Stanislas G. Trembicki Frank R. Valentine, Jr. Frederick A. Wiggin Arthur Williams, 3rd 85 ct KE Book and Bond Founded 1899 Edward Goodwin Asherman Robert Bowen Birge Albert Corwin Brumley William Mason Bush Robert Irving Carlson Ralph Ewing Clark, Jr. James Joseph Aquinas Daly William Martin Degnan Gregory Francis Doonan Maurice John Dwyer, Jr. Edward Cuyler Hammond Robert Alfred Houde James Gladwin Kelsev Jack Adolphus Kyger William Lawrence McGovern Andrew Joseph McQvieeney John Bertrand Madigan George Louis Monjo Arthur Stuart Pitt Robert Esson Rew, Jr. Charles Stephen Stahlnecker Sherburn Moore Stanley Harry Nelson Stevens Edward Utley Thomas Charles Reynolds Varren Robert Pirrie Voods 87 Sachem Club John V. Harter, 36S Julian S. Gravely, Jr., ' 35S John A. Ridgway, Jr., 35E Edw. rd E. Fessenden, Jr., ' 35S John R. Edwards, ' 36E President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Chairman of Membership and Entertainment Committees House Manager Richard H. Abbott Edward E. Fessenden, Jr. John V. Harter John G. Ahlers, Jr. Carl A. Anderson Wilson K. Dickerman John R. Edwards Shackelford Bauer Archibald S. Foord 1935 E. Schuyler Powell John A. Ridgway, Jr. John N. Sherley Warren E. Sherley 1936 James Flett, Jr. James B. Fullman Arnold E. Kadue ' 937 Arthur E. Gramse Frederick A. Groesbeck Howard A. Lockwood, Jr. Richard H. Sperry Warren A. Tyrrell, Jr. G. Sherman Wing, Jr. John D. McAllister Frederick B. MacLaren, Jr. James C. Murray, Jr. Bruno Vassel, Jr. Innes D. MacCammond Curtis C. Page Yardley Beers GR. DUATE SCHOOL LAW SCHOOL Franklin LaPierre-Holmes William W. Hall, Jr. Charles A. Lippincott SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Henry W. Ryder ORGANIZATIONS PUBLICATIONS DRAMATICS MUSIC D E B AT I N G RELIGION Front Row: Whitlock. lirouwci, H de. Franklin, Sked Second Row: Swift, Jensen. Adam-N. Daxidson The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Lewis H. Hyde, 35 Reverdv R. H. Whitlock, ' 35 Wilson D. Sked, ' 35 Chairman Managing Editor Business Manager 1936 Ogden Brouwer, 3rd Oliver O. Jensen David E. Swift EDITORS 1937 Morgan Adams, Jr. Robert M. Davidson Jack Franklin R. Channing Barlow Norman F. Thompson, 3rd 92 The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri IT is the purpose of the editors oi ' the present volume to bring together the diverse cur- rents of a full college year and to knit them into a somewhat orderly and cohesive pattern. In our present Yale, with its heterogeneous activi- ties, made even more diverse with the advent of the College Plan, strange faces and new things are plenty; without some unifying agent ev-en the inured Senior would be somewhat at a loss to know what was going on about him. The task of bringing together all the various elements of what we know as Yale is the particular function of the Banner and Pot Pourri. There are several ways in which this material might be presented. It seemed fairly obvious that a certain amount of conservatism would not be amiss, if only that the editors might take refuge from the reproaches of their predeces- sors, and not lay themselves open to the many pitfalls which lie in the way of him who goes too far off the beaten track of journalistic propriety. In short, the editors have not succumbed to the allure of gaudy color or novel arrangement which grace many another college yearbook. On the other hand, they have not followed with too much scrutiny the example of their pre- decessors, valuable as it has in most cases been. To follow as discriminately as possible the mid- dle course between these two extremes has seemed most expedient. It is perhaps of interest to review briefly the changes which have been made, although most of them are fairly obvious. The sorry lot of photographs which has for many years past appeared in the Pot Pourri in a variety of forms and sizes has been summarily and decis- ively done away with once and for all. Wherever possible, notably in the sports section, articles have been substituted for statistics, in an at- tempt at making the book more inclusive, with- out sacrificing any of it conciseness. The section on the Colleges includes articles written by undergraduate members of each of the present units, in an agreeable variety of literary manners and styles. It is in these, necessarily short as they are, that the Pot Pourri makes its only in- ciu ' sion into the field of belles letlres. The changes in arrangement which have been made will need no explanation: they are few, and have been introduced only when a more orderly presentation seemed possible. Economies in the assembling of material and in publication have made it again possible this year to include the material of the Freshman I ' ear Book (now defunct as a separate publica- tion) within the Pot Pourri covers at approx- imately the same cost per copy as the older, somewhat emaciated volume. It has seemed best at the same time to increase the number of editors from three to four starting with the Reverdy R. H. Whitlock Wilson D. Sked college year 1936-37, thereby dividing the re- sponsibilities of the governing body more broad- ly- There are necessarily errors, always elusive, sometimes grievous, and never to be entirely eradicated by the most careful and painstaking procedure, in this volume. To avoid them every precaution has been taken; aware none the less that they are present, the editors in all sin- cerity take the present opportunity to ask for- bearance. Extreme care in all the details of editing has, it is hoped, averted gross incon- sistencies and inaccuracy. To the many contributors, literary and other- wise, who have made possible the present vol- ume, the editors e. press their sincere thanks. To make separate acknowledgments of many kindnesses is not here possible, since space will not permit; to those who have contributed articles, — the President of the University; the Messrs. Farmer, Kiphuth, Neale; the under- graduate members of the Colleges, and the sports managers — the editors are especially indebted. Messrs. Miller and Carroll have unstintingly devoted their time and attention to the many problems of direction and adminis- tration which have come to their attention in their capacities of Graduate Advisorship. Their advice and benevolent supervision have been based upon wisdom and experience, and have again and again proved invaluable. This volume, then, is not presented as a supreme and infallible achievement, but rather as the child of enthusiastic, if not always sound, effort. May it find a place of honorable recog- nition among its long line of predecessors! 94 ■- ' M i J 1 1 1 1 IM t ? «n Second Row: Teagle, Newell, Waltutt, Hale, Lamb, England. Krementz, R. Charles, Elliott Third Row: Van Home, Vaill, Tenney, Tufts. Matthews, Gilbert, Vordenberg The Yale News OFFICERS OF THE BO, RD Lv-MAN .Spitzer, Jr. . . Chairman S.AMUEL C.- iRNES CoLLiER Busiriess Manager Thom. s Hoel L.awrence, Jr Managing Editor WiLLL- M H.- MiLL Ch. rles . , , . Assignment Editor Loiis Gerald Shields Vice-Chairman J.AMES B.ARTON Elliott Assistant Bumiess Manager W.ALTER Cl.xrk Te.agle, Jr. .... Assistant Business Manager 95 Lyman Spitzer Jr. , Chairman Samuel Carnes Collier, Business Manager Thomas Hoel Lawrence Jr. , Managing Editor William Hamill Charles. Assignment Editor Louis Gerald Shields, Vice-Chairman James Barton Elliott, Assistant Business Manager Walter Clark Teagle, Jr.. Assistant Business Manager Editors R. H. Charles. 1935 R. M. Krementz. 1935 B. M. England 2nd, 1935 A. R. Lamb Jr., 1935 G. E. Hale 2nd. 1935 R. D. Matthews. 1935 W. S. Walcott 3rd, 1935 Charles Vance Newell, Sports Editor . ssoci. TE Editors C. L. P. . udette, 1936 H. N. Barkhausen, 1936 J. B. Bingham, 1936 L. W. Goodkind, 1936 J. R. Hersey, 1936 C. B. Kerr, 1936 P. L. Krug, 1936 H. T. McKnight, 1936 J. G. McMurtry, 1936 R. A. Moore, 1936 A. T. Primm. 1936 W. Reid, 1936 J. G. Standart Jr., 1936 J. F. Sweeney, 1936 R. E. S. Thompson, 1936 P. H. Behr, 1937 R. Berry. 1937 P. I. C-arnes, 1937 G. H. Doherty, 1937 J. W. Field, 1937 C. R. Hook, Jr., 1937 S. L. Lasell Jr., 1937 R. Milliken, 1937 W. H. Orrickjr., 1937 G. E. Percy, 1937 J. B. Stevens, 1937 P. Stewart, 1937 L. T. .Stone Jr., 1937 C.J. Tobin, Jr., 1937 G. P. Urban Jr., r937S E. A. Dingee, 1936, Advertising Promotion Manager Entered as second class matter, January 2, 1910, at the Post Office at New Haven, Conn., under the Act of March 3, 1878. Printed by The Van Dyck Printing Company. 945 Grand Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Subscription price $6.00 per year. PROFITS AND PROPAGANDA In his declaration that profits were to be taken out of war, Roosevelt has once more shown himself to be a consummate master of the politician ' s art. At a time when the robber barons of high industry are in disrepute as the instigators of the depression, his move is well calculated to appeal to the voting public. Pic- tures will be brought to mind of greedy, .selfish magnates, grinding money out of a bleeding country while her brave sons die in untold agony on the battlefield. The courage and righteousness of the President in clashing with these insidious forces of darkness will enhance his popularity. In point of fact, however, war profits are not the result of subversive monopolies, but are the direct result of economic forces. Wars are invari- ably financed by an inflation; any enterprise Lyman .Spitzer. Jr. that fails to show fat profits during an inflation is incredibly inefficient. Even if all firms were run by the most patriotic men, determined to sell to the government at not a penny more than cost, the rise in prices during the course of the inflation would reduce their fixed charges and increase the value of their inventories and still bring in substantial profits. For this reason the elimination of war profits will be a task of considerably greater difficulty and complexity than most people realize. Such a tax, if it is to have the effect the President describes, must be levied on all individuals, partnerships, and corporations that buy and sell commodities. Probably the fairest method would be virtuallv to confiscate all increases in profits from one year to the next. From an ethi- cal standpoint such a move would be highly de- sirable. As a step towards the elimination of war, however, such a measure evades all the real issues. Eliminating war profits will in no va ' affect the danger of armament races stimulated and abetted by private muiiilioii firms. It is profits in peace, not in war, that give rise to evils that are appearing daily in the Senate investigation. It is the heavy munition industries that engage in world wide militaristic propagan- da, that help to wreck naval conferences. To strike at these there is only one sure way — gov- ernment purchase of all factories devoted to manufacture of hea y munitions in their final stage. 96 The Cinema Sadie McK.ee ' is just the type of vehicle whicli does no one any good, and makes a point of handing a few a complete drubbing. If this picture had been used as a screen test for Mme. Joan Crawford or Messrs. Raymond or Tone, or any combination of the three, I am sure there would have resulted a wholesale failure and not e ' eryone feeling the better for it. Many people enjoy Franchot Tone ' s performances. I think beginning with Sally, Irene and Mary (produced in 1925) Joan Crawford has experienced a rather colorful career. Gene Raymond has had his moments too. unfortunately. But it just takes about one or two little tulips like Sadie McKee to ease anyone connected with it into Brooklyn personal appear- ances, and later to a contract with In ' incible Pictures. Inc. The mind that conceived this little ballad of how a show- girl pooks all over the mean snooty butler because he feeds gin to her alcoholic spouse whom she would any day jilt for the anus of a lover who is hacking about .Saranac. couldn ' t possibly rest for any length of time with such sor- didness. In that way lies madness. The fact that the author, or somebody (I ' m positive somebody did it because I saw- it was my very own eyes) concocted that lo -ely little scene in which Sadie attempts to pro -e her virtue by dismissing twelve servants from the household, is enough to make me wonder about his grip on life. After Gene Raymond folds. Miss Crawford and Mr. Tone trudge on mumbling impossible lines until the last threat appears, being a birthday party with a cake and candles and everything at ma ' s house. Things grow- sudden- ly blank at the sight of Franchot ' s last smile and the ushers carry you out shrieking into the night. B. C. T. Ten-Twenty Topics In these distressing days of Democracy and Doughnuts, with members of legislatures, cabinets, and women ' s clubs disfiguring each other ' s wax-like countenance, it is refresh- ing to hear a few faint sounds of the times that used to be — of the days of moated castles, crowns, and sceptres, of in- breeding and half wits, of all the many glamorous and sparkling elements which pertain to Royalty. Such faint sounds were given voice right in our very academic midst not many days ago, and we shall take steps to concern our- self with them for the nonce. Six gentlemen of the Old School were gathered together a convivial capacity, and the talk ran to this and that, finally settling itself upon the subject of thrones and the existing pretenders thereto. It was decided, after due leflection, that it was someone ' s duty to stand by that class of de- throned, oppressed indi -iduals who lurk about the hidden corners of the world, waiting, hoping, for an opportunity to reign once more. But there are too many of them. One cannot divide his loyalty among all of these would-be sovereigns, from the well-known European species to the little black boy in the South Sea kingdom who hopes some- day to regain the loin cloth and grass robe of his fii-ie, fat ancestors. The six finally decided to stand behind the last of the illustri ous Stuarts, one Rupprecht Wittelsbach, now- a resident of Germany; they dispatched a cable to Rupprecht, reading; REST .ASSURED OF OUR CONTINUED SUP- PORT FOR YOUR CLAIM TO ENGLISH CROWN, and signed it, The Jacobite Club of Saybrook College. Next they adopted a Latin motto, a free translation of which we hereby offer without their permission; Boots and Shoes, Boots and Shoes, Nine Fathom of Stout Hem- pen Cord for the Stomach, and Two if By Sea. The members of the Jacobite Club then crept off to their windy garrets, there to lie sleepless, with visions of ladies-in-waiting, gold-braided masters of the bedchamber, the billiard room, and the ice house dancing in their heads. The following day brought a little surprise, in the form of a cable to the Club, saying: THANK YOU T.RY MUCH FOR YOUR TELE- GRA.M. SIGNED, RUPPRECHT who probably thinks he ' s dealing with a band of dangerous lunatics — and who mav not be far from the truth. The Exception that Proves the Rule 97 c L= - •-: ■f(f MANY DANCES TO BE HELD BY VARIOUS FRATERNITIES AS SUPPLEMENT TO f uOM TWENTY-FIRST ALUMNI DAY TO BE CELEBRATED BY RETURNING GRADUATES, WITH RARE FINE ARTS AND LITERARY EXHIBITIONS FEATURING PROGRAM FIGHTING BULLDOG SEXTET COPS SERIES FROM TIGERS WINNING SECOND STRAIGHT ALUMNI TO VISIT CLASSES !l HI «  i III SI H BtBUT bSUE OF KECOKD PRAISED BY W. L. PHEPS YALE TO RESUME TRACK RIVALRY WITH CORNELL Will ' U Cb«f Throls or El.i AesinjI Po voful Itbauni DEFOREST PRIZE SPEAKING CONTEST TO TAKE fUCE Front Row: Berliss, Seymour, Peck Second Row: de Mare, Robinson, Gill. Yost Yale Literary Magazine Charles Seymour, Jr., 35, Chain. EDITORS Graham Peck, ' 35 Brendan M. Gill 36 George S. de Mare, ' 36 DwiGHT E. Robinson, ' 36 Curtis C. Rodgers, ' 36 J.A.MES M. Yost, ' 37 BUSINESS BOARD Arthur D. Berliss, Jr., ' 36, Business Manager Harman W. McBride, ' 36, Assistant Business Manager George H. Hogle, ' 36E, Advertising Manager Ogden W. Sutro, ' 36S, Circulation Manager James M. Fulton, 35S, Trade Manager David M. Tennent, ' 36 Julian M. Marks, ' 36 Lee B. H. rris, 36 David D. Steere, ' 37 Howard N. Porter, ' 38 Alfred F. Islan, ' 38 Robert H. Halsey, ' 38 99 The Lit ' s Hundredth Anniversary IN honor of the one himdredth birthday of the Old Lady a great collection of her most loyal sons, all of whom have gained fame in the world beyond the tether of her strong and inex- haustible apron-strings, will, in collaboration with the present board of editors, publish a commemorative centennial issue in February, 1936. There will be many striking features about this testament of devotion. Many — even the Old Lady herself, occasionally — are surprised at the great number of leading American novelists, poets, publishers, and statesmen she has man- aged to mother during the last century; manv, even now, when her deathlessness seems so plainly established, continue to be amazed that she survives flood, famine, and starvation, poverty spiritual and financial, and returns each year into the pleasantly murmurous forum ot undergraduate activities. But this centennial issue will do more than mark an epoch in the circle of college life; it will be a signal of America coming of age, a time for the casting back of memory and the resummoning of early dreams. Here, in one shape, visibly, are the incredible changes, the incredible lack of change, that stuff ' the country ' s two great centuries with drama and force; here, between her plain brown covers, can be found the whole record of national youth, growth, and maturity. This centennial issue will of course be one of the most important undertakings ever conceived at Yale; but more than that it will be one of the most important single publications in the his- tory of the country; it passes from the realm of undergraduate activity into the broader sphere of national interest. The Old Lady, rather to her surprise, but accepting with the grace of one too wise and old to be overly excited about any- thing, will be pleased and grateful to find her- self suddenly discussed from coast to coast. Dear ine, she will think, in her old-fashioned way, what scandal have I got myself into — or has my tippet slipped a little? The important thing will not be the fact that there is no scandal, but that she feels herself, at one hundred, emin- ently capable of being a party to one. Her actions have not yet become predictable — a badge of that youth which, she is fond of saying, is attributable to a nice taste in literary grand- children almost as young as she is herself. I Fio ment li ' Aa sweet said the vicar at the tea {delicately nudging a hole through the rococo mists of shifting punctuation) ' ' ' What sweet and tender ' ' {through a dainty cluster of polite interrogations) tender fun {round a coyly draped clue to potential exclamations) Jnn to heal {in an eager swarm of se- raphic asterisks) to beat, beat, beat, {across the fatal hint of un- spoken comma dashes) heat around the bush! Gr.. h.am Peck, 1935 i The Old Lady in Brown Speaks EH? What ' s that? Conservative Certainly not. I ' m a Liberal through and through. . . I am here to print undergraduate effusions. In my apartment the lamb and the lion may lie down together — If the lion wants to. Her eyes twinkled behind the square specta- cles. ' You see this comfit? I shall consume it with pleasure within the next five minutes. But I am not too old to chew tobacco, should it be offered me. I insist, however, that it be good tobacco. Charles Seymour, Jr., 1935 Nightmare WHEN midnight closes with me and my breath Drinks in the dark some tense instinct perfume, Wide-eyed, undreaming, through the moonless gloom I fall and fall, as fleet away from death As eager ghosts fly from the broken tomb; And no soft web of sleep can tangle me In cradles of sweet vision: I must be A feather falling in the gray sea ' s womb, A dead star dropping in the timeless sky, A faint word breaking in the cataract . . . The eyelids of the morning make me wise With fresh, calm sun. — Suddenly I am I And firm ' s the footing under me, the fact Of my sure strength. Last night was full of lies. Brendan M. Gill, 1936 THE rain will lall all night, said Bob. It was almost night then. We went over the wet porch and into the kitchen. The inside was hot, smelt of old beer. We had forgotten and left the stove burning. In the blue light from the stove, the table with its beer bottles looked like a Gothic cathedral. Bob went over and turned on the lamp above the sink. He went back to the shadows of the other side of the room and sank into a chair. I looked at the grey and blue lino- leum. The rain tapped the window. James M. Yost, 1937 IT was a calm night, very star-powdered and luminous. No moon had risen, or perhaps it had already set. In the distance we could see the lights of a large liner going in the same direction as we . . . ...In the split second that builds and des- troys dreams I leaned there entranced. By Christ, I thought, I shall write a wonderful story about that, called The Bremen Passes, yes THE BREMEN PASSES, a tense, dramatic tale of love at sea, full of mystery and moonlight I although there was no moonlight) and the stars, and he whispering to her I love you, and she replying: I shall love you always, dear, but I can never be yours. I am another ' s. And then the Bremen passing. I almost had a hemorrhage thinking of it. I wish I was back in Denver, said Clem at mv side. „, r-  r c George S. deMare, 1930 Lines from New York Poems BEI G too young to think, ril revel in our new archaic May, Colored as clear as crystal-mooned nights let warm as August sun: Archaic May sprung from our recent death. My instincts at the same time will remember The country rose is delicate and sweet. DVVIGHT E. ROBLNSON, I936 Lines from Les Petites, Etc. ARAI and hand we walked Post-midnight streets Of white Connecticut. The old women — U ho from luncheon sit Through the afternoon ' til ten And sway lace-pillowed rockers In a hostile silence. Sleuthing from their windows. Entrenched with altered cats And Lipton ' s tea — Have left their guard For musty sheets, Prepated a Hades for us. We pass. Curtis Rodger s, 1936 Fwnt Row: Granbery, Gifford, Wells, Krug, Duncan, Baldwin, Shallcross Second Row: Newell. Harrison. Brown. Tenney, Hale, Barton, Donahoe Inserts: Tutts, Peck. Hopkins v -. Thomas K. Krug rosecr. ns b.aldwin Stephen D. Hopkins Herbert H. Wells Robert D. Dunc. ' n John Shallcross . John S. Gifford Gr. ham Peck Chairman Business Manager Managing Editor Art Editor Literary Editor Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Art Editor J. T. Harrison, Jr., ' 35 D. R. Barton, ' 35 R. S. Brown, ' 35 BUSINESS STAFF R. R. Newell, Jr., ' 35 EDITORIAL STAFF M. H. Donahoe, ' 35 E. C. Granbery, ' 35 G. E. Hale, 2nd, ' 35 L. R. Gordon, 35 D. G. Tenney, Jr., ' 35 B. C. Tufts, ' 35 Yale Football By R. D. Duncan EARLY in the year, you say. For doleful thoughts, and sad farewells To Dear Old Yale? Perhaps. . . Save all that sort of thing for June: Let tears of sorrow dampen gowns of black. Not autumn tweeds, or gabardines that yet sur Last summer ' s wear, and linger on In chill November? True. There ' s time to laugh and sing, to tip The brimming bowl — there ' s ample time Before our bards begin to eulogize Yale ' s Greatest Class of Thirty-five. Yet, Senior, careless of the silent speed With which these Fourth Year days slip by Except when raising glass on high you sing. The saddest tale we have to tell. Pause a while, consider this — today ' s a day That marks a passing, one unsung That often slips unnoticed by, until it ' s late — An end. mv friend, for other blue-clad men wi clash With hated Crimson. But Blue will never be as Blue As now, nor Red as Red. We ' ll leave all mourning till that day in June When donned in funereal black into the world we come. But now let ' s drink a solemn toast To golden autumn days gone by, four years of them. Our thoughts, our memories are all the same. es.sentially. Best left unmuttered, pictures that we need not name. They go. . .We bid them fond farewell, and see the last of them. This day, pass on. So let us raise our glasses high, And drink to them, salute their passing, passing. . . Bigelow dear, we ' re going to have a baby Shucks. ' Only one more jug and eb ' s funeral tomorrou 103 Front Row: Shields, Griffing, Bowles, Peck. Uu al Second Row: Jacob, VanHorne, Tufts, Harringtnn. Vai 935 Academic Class Book Committee John Eliot Bowles Samuel Carnes Collier Louis Gerald Shields Clive Livingston Duval Graham Peck Davis Olmsted Harrington Richard Wurth VanHorne Chairman Treasurer EdiUir-in-Chief Biographical Editor Art Editor Photographic Editor Athletics Editor Robert Perkins Gripping, Ji Philip Ernest Jacob CONTRIBUTORS Thomas Kramer Krug Charles Seymour, Jr. Lyman Spitzer, Jr. BowEN Charleton Tufts George Dudley Vaill 104 if ' itl Row: Loud. Bauer, Keene Second Row: Clallan. Lutt. Morton, Donahoe 1935 Sheffield Class Book WiLLi. M A. Bauer Chairman Nelson M. Loud Treasurer JoH.N H. Keeney Editor-in-Chief Andrew T. Callan Martin H. Donahoe, Jr. Donald C. Lott Stanley R. Morton 105 Fwiil Hmv: V.u e Sliatlurk, lulls, Hughes, Gnttiug, Ciliute. Stillman. 1 aylor. Brooks Second Row: Dangler, Matthews, Mattern, Warrington, Thomas, Terry, Dalrymple, Wesson, Atherto Tliird Row: Millikan. Potter, Browne, Rossbach, Cooper, Ripley, Welles, Darbee, Small The Yale Dramatic Association Robert P. Griffing, Jr., 35 President Halsted Welles Director Frederick H. Chute, ' 35 Business Manager John S. Dalrymple, Jr., 36 Assistant Business Manager David Van T. Spr. nkle, ' 35 Technical Director John J. Hughes, ' 35 Production Manager 106 A. P. Brooks A. J. Browne, Jr. F. H. Chute S. C. Collier J. L. Cooper R. J. Goodrich R. P. Griffing, Jr. H. W. Hemingw.w •935 E. B. HiNCKs J. J. Hughes F. M. Knoblauch R. A. M.- ttern A. Matthews, Jr. M. F. MiLLIKAN G. Peck F. C. Shattuck M. C. Shipper R. E. Small D. V. Sprankle G. S. Stillman W. W. Taylor, Jr. E. U. Thomas B. C. Tufts S. J. O. Alsop W. R. Atherton I. F. Bodholt H. J. Chisholm, Jr. W. Hartshorne 1936 C. B. Kerr J. M. Knapp J. M. Mason H. W. McBride I. C. Oehler W. Reid S. D. Ripley, and R. M. ROSSBACH D. M. Tennent J. W. W. rrington L. E. C.- rtwright D. W. Dangler H. Darbee ' 937 W. J. GODSEY W. H. Orrick, Jr. J. S. Hartzell W. H. Potter R. R. RoBY W. B. Terry Frederick H. Chute Halsted Welles Robert P. Griffing, Jr. 107 Yale Dramatic Association IN the spring of 1934, the new Dramat Board presented its first production as a part of the annual Cominencement activities. The play chosen was Shakespeare ' s Two Gentlemen ol Verona staged by Halsted Welles, Dramat director since the resignation of Alexander Dean the previous Fall. The Two Gentlemen, ' although seldom acted and one of the least well-known of Shakespeare ' s plays, attracted one of the largest houses the Dramat has had in some time. Besides an excellent cast of Yale un- dergraduates, two professionals were engaged to appear. The more famous of the two was Lanny Ross, Yale ' 28, prominent radio singer and movie actor, who sang Who is Sylvia, written in the original play, and since then immortalized by the music of Franz Schubert. The other, hardly less well-known was Handsome Dan the Second, Yale mascot, playing the important role of Launce ' s dog. The first production of the Fall was Jules Verne ' s Around The World in Eighty Days, adapted for the stage by Thomas Wood Stevens. Under Mr. Welles ' direction, Eighty Days became one of the most successful and colorful plays in Dramat history. Its success in New- Haven was so great that the show entered into the most extensive tour any production has had since the days when entire vacation periods were devoted to sending the Dramat to Yale cities throughout the East and Middle West. Opening before two pre-view audiences, — the New Haven School children first, followed by a showing for the Yale School of Drama, Eighty Days completed a highly successful schedule in New Haven before its New York performance early in December for the benefit of Yale-in- China. After the vacation it was taken to Spring- field and Wellesley. One of the most complicated productions the Association has ever given, Eighty Days was a complete picture of life in the Gay Nineties. Elephants and railroad trains, maharajahs, American Indians, and cowbovs were seen in a great niunber ol scenes ranging from the quiet sobriety of a London Club to the danger of a San Francisco barroom. The last play of the season was Sidney How- ard ' s Yellow Jack, prominent candidate Ibr 1934s Pulitzer Prize, and one of the great American plays of recent years. This play cele- brated the Dramat ' s thirty-fifth anniversary, and its production received wide comment from prominent members of the theatrical pro- fession all over the country. Running the risk of comparison with the New York production the previous season, Yellow Jack stood out as one of the most dramatic and finished plays the Dramat has given, and its treatment under Mr. Welles ' direction, reached a high point of college theatre excellence. Coincident with Yellow Jack, the Dramat held an exhibition in the Sterling Memorial Library of the record of its first thirty five years, and an inter-college dramatic club conference, to which were invited representatives of fourteen colleges and universities in the east. Round table discussions on the important problems of the average club made for a better understand- ing of these problems and the methods of meet- ing them, and on the whole, this conference did more toward effectively meeting the problem of the organization of the dramatic club than any- thing that has ever been done in this country along those lines. Due to the extraordinary outcropping of dramatic talent in the University this year, the officers of the Dramat formed two new groups to take care of theatre-minded undergraduates who, because of their great number, could not be cast in Yellow Jack. These two groups de- veloped into the Freshman and the Jayvee Dramats, both producing plays under the direc- tion of Mr. Welles. The Freshman group did P. G. Wodehouse ' s Leave It to Psmith, ' ' and the Jayvees The Lower Depths, by Gogol. A great deal of the success of the Association this year has been due to the intelligent guidance of Halsted Welles, who has played the role of director of Dramat plays and adviser on Dramat policies with equal effectiveness and with telling success. Much of the Association ' s prominence in the theatre, as recognized by the professional stage as well as amateur groups, can be traced to his work and the devotion of the officers of the club to him and to theatre work in general. Robert P. Grifkixc;, Jr., President Front Row: Goodrich, Speny, Elliott, Bowles, Shields, 0 erall, Haas Second Row: Clement, Scully, Goodyear, Livingston, Field, Seymour, Lo ett Church of Christ THE Church of Christ of Yale University, one of the oldest institutions on the campus, was founded under the auspices of the college in the year 1756. Congregational in origin, it has offered to under- graduates and other members of the University community a non-denominational service. Both daily and Sunday worship is held under the guidance of the Chaplain, the Reverend Sidney Lovett, ' 13. The new policies inaugurated last year have been continued with marked success. A Board of Preachers composed of Messrs. Bradford, Buttrick, Coffin, McKee, Niebuhr, Sperry, Tittle, and Wicks have spent the week-ends as guests of the various colleges. In this way it has been made possible for an in- creasingly large number of undergraduates to get in closer touch with outstanding leaders of religious thought. Beginning at Thanksgiving and running through the winter months, vesper services have been held every afternoon in the Dwight Memorial Chapel: on Wednesday these have been conducted by various Headmasters of the more prominent Eastern preparatory schools and have proved to be of great interest. The regular morning chapel talks have at times been supplemented by organ recitals by- Professor Bozyan, as well as selected readings on appropriate religious subjects. The Undergraduates and Faculty are represented in the Church of Christ by a board of deacons annually elected from their respective groups. In this capacity they serve as a link between the congre- gation and the church officials promoting and forwarding the spirit and ideals of Christian faith. FACULTY DEACONS John C. Ad. ms Stuart H. Clement WiNTHROP M. Daniels Harry R. Rudin WiLMON H. Shelden Bruce Simonds Theodore Sizer James K. Whittemore 109 Front Row: Stevenson. Woolsey. Fox, Gregg, Jacob, Caldwell, Kield, LovcU, Lovejoy Second Row: Chatfield, Lasell, Weiler, Theuer, Talcott, Dowe, Pullman, Fletcher, James Third Row: Angell. Carroll, Gray, Lee, W. Swift, Dellinger, Smith, Tuttle, Sherk, Nichols Fourth Row: Mattern. Urick. Thompson, Vickery, Gellert, D. Swift, Luccock, Balfour, Cody, Birge Dwight Hall OFFICERS Philip E. Jacob, ' 35 . John A. Field, ' 35 John C. Russ, ' 35E John H. Cox, ' 35 Frederick S. Fox, Jr., ' 36 President Vice-President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF THE COMMITTEES John W. Beardslee, 3rd, Robert S. Simonds, ' 35 Robert G. Ernst, ' 35 William S. Vickrey, ' 35S Robert B. Birge, ' 36 Robert Eli Long, ' 36 William N. Lovell, ' 36 F. Allen Sherk, ' 36 David E. Swift, ' 36 David T. Dellinger, ' 36 Ellis J. Staley, Jr., ' 36 James H. Nichols, ' 36 E. Fay Campbell, ' 18 Donald Hevenson, ' 25 Allen P. Lovejoy, ' 34 Robert L. James, Jr. 3.5 Yale Hope Mission Boys ' Club Membership Social Problems World ' s Student Christian Federation Deputations Freshiuen Conferences Worship Public Relations Editor of the Dwight Hall Bulletin Meinbers-at-large of the Executive Committee SECRETARIES General Secretary Acting General Secretary Freshman Secretary .Student Secretarv J p. E. Jacob WE always thought the Yale Christian Association had life, perhaps somewhat obscured at times, but still throbbing steadily along. We were sure of it when the Incjuisitor kindly included Dwight Hall in one of his lengthy denunciations. Numbers mean, of course, absolutely nothing, but activity, and in religion, conviction, mean everything. In all of its significant contacts with over two hundred students, Dwight Hall stresses this individual, personal element, the give and take between student and student. The secretaries especially, have vitally moulded the lives of dozens of Yale men by their constant, sincere counsel, based on their deep Christian ideals. E. Fay Campbell, the General Secretary, is now on a year ' s leave of absence and Don Stevenson, ' 25, has substituted for him. The Freshman Secretary, A. P. Lovejoy, ' 34, lives in Dwight Hall, and really outside of it, too, for he calls on interested Freshmen in their rooms. The Cabinet of sixty active members, with a number more, including Freshmen, joining after Christmas, has been made the core of the Association. Its monthly meetings open with a worship period in the slender, Gothic Dwight Memorial Chapel. Adjournment to a comfortable meeting room for business is followed by a speaker of prominence who has had much interest in Dwight Hall ' s work. Sherwood Eddy, renowned Christian leader and world authority on international conditions, spoke at the April meeting, the first which was run by the 1936 officers. Not often organizationally-minded, this year Dwight Hall has distributed responsibility to ten committees. Boys ' work means now not just volunteer leadership for hobby and athletic groups at the New Haven Boys ' Club, but probation help for the Juvenile Court and leisure-time programs, at the Goodwill Industries and the Neighborhood House. The Yale Hope Mission secures the aid of many undergraduates in its program of Christian relief for the down and out. Gandhi and Non-Violence with Muriel Lester of London, a personal friend of Gandhi, speaking; The future of Missions in China by Dr. Francis Wei, visiting President of Central-China College; our own faculty on economics, philosophy, and religion; vocational forums; and study of Christianity in groups led by students, as well as faculty, give the more formal touch to the picture. Frequent dinners by interested students in the colleges make occasion to ask in as guest a foreign student studying here to tell of his country and its people ' s ideas. In the spring, the rustic Old Mill becomes a rendezvous for faculty and students to cook their supper and chew over the problems of war, the College Plan, the New Deal and What is Truth? Dwight Hall ' s activities extend beyond the campus. Deputations take men to nearby towns to conduct services and give the young people a conception of college and its efTects. The students bring back with them from these experiences a broader knowledge of rural attitudes. Intercollegiate confer- ences furnish great inspiration spiritually and socially, especially noticeable when the gathering is co-ed. Dwight Hall is also part of a world fellowship of Christian students and through one of its most vital committees tries constantly to refresh its thought with that of other countries and to remove through clear understanding and sympathetic appreciation those barriers of class and racial prejudice which so drastically defeat all attemps at a universal brotherhood. To this ideal many students stand dedicated, having come to believe that Jesus pointed to this as the unique way of living the fullest life. Catholic Club OFFICERS Rev. T. Lavvrason Riggs Chaplain Frederick H. Chute, ' 35 President Paul F. McCabe, ' 35 Vice-President William L. McGovern, ' 35 Secretary Thomas J. O ' Sullivan, ' 35 Treasurer GRADUATE SCHOOL J. T. Farrell SCHOOL OF MEDICINE R. Arrillaga-Torrens D.J, McGiUicuddy.Jr. J. D.J. Moore. SCHOOL OF LAW J.J. Shea D. M. Burke F. H. Chute J, S. Chfford B. F. Coleman R. F. Corroon F. J. Degnan J. S. Abell H. V. Bouscaren C.J. Cavanagh J.J. A. Daly T. S. Danowski J. P. Grace, Jr. T. F. Armstrong C. H. Buckley. Jr A. T. Daignauh A. H. Baer P. J. Bowers, Jr. J. B. Buckley ' ' M, K, Burke E, Carrillo F, M, Carroll, Jr. D. . . Deyine W. M. Drew J. P. Garyan.Jr. W, J. HoUoran J.J.Hughes K. E. Humphrey, Jr. F. C. Grant R. A. Houde P. L. Krug T. A. McCann A. J. McQueeney W. S. Hanson E. M. Jones .S. ' . Kilbourn W. J. Cummings. Jr, ], M. Dalev W. C. C. Day is M. . ' . Donohue. Jr. P. F. Foskett T. B. Himiphrey 1936 1938 T. K. Krug R. H. Lynch J. B, Madigan P. F. McCabe W. L. McGoyern K. Mclnerney R. , . Moore A. J. Ryan W. J. Secor, Jr. R. .S. Shriyer.Jr. T. C. Stockhausen L. . . LaMora W. T. Maroney P. A. McQuaid.Jr. D. F. Keefe W . J . Kennedy J. B. Lane J. M. McCann J. B. MacGuire G. A. McKinley L. Mitchell. Jr. J, S, Murtha T, J, O ' Sulliyan R. R, Prest.Jr. G. C. Smith W, E, Stockhausen W, E. Sullivan J. F, Sweeney R, F. Whalen A. Winslow. 2nd W. C. Zeller J. C. Morrissev S. D. Preston. Jr. D. F. Quigley.Jr. H.J. McMenamin J. M. McNulty D. T. O ' Brien C. T. O ' Connell J. A. ard Front Row: McKee, Althouse, Wirt. Bales, Hamill, Smith, Fasold, Kirhy, Harker Second Row: Theuer, Fisher, Evans, Sked, Murrill, Porter, Mills, Bowden, Dr. Lackland The Wesley Foundation THE Wesley Foundation is a lellowship oi ' Methodist students attending Yale Uni- versity which welcomes any student seeking; to discover a Christian way of Hie. It sponsors a Student Tea every Sunday at 5:00 P.M., during the school year in the Parlors of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, Elm and College Streets, across from Battell Chapel. Discussions by noted educators and students follow the Tea, including Professor R. L. Cal- houn, Professor Carl Young, Professor Richard Niebuhr, Alex M. Witherspoon, Reverend Sid- ney Lovett, Dean C. C. Mendell, and Miss Elizabeth Chase. Groups are conducted laoth on Sundays and during the week for a discussion of problems which affect the lives of students. Social functions are held monthlv dining the year. The Wesley Players, composed of students in- terested in drama, produce a number of one-act plays. Deputation Teams render service to young people ' s groups in neighboring churches. Contacts are established between students and many fine New Haven homes. The First Methodist Church has an affiliated membership of nearly one hundred students, who make it their Church Home in New Haven. This year over two hundred students partici- pated in the religious and social activities of the Wesley Foundation, while a great many more took advantage of other opportunities afforded by the First Methodist Episcopal Church. The New Haven Open Forum, meeting Sun- day evenings from November to January in- clusive, brought to New Haven as speakers: Reinhold Niebuhr, Kirby Page, S. G. Inman, Arthur Garfield Hays. A Religious Forum has had as speakers: Bishop F. J. McConnell, Edmund B. Chaffee, Lynn Harold Hough, Arlo Ayres Brown, Wil- liam L. Stidger, Frank Kingdon and James Gordon Gilkev. 113 ai . t;iiambri-laii Front Row: Barlow, Cappabianca, Strieker, E. Pri k. I.onw. 1 Second Row: Lawrence, Kellogg, Wadhams, Hemingway. J r Hedges. Sprague. Howe Tin) J Row: M. Smith, G. Merriss. Tuttle, Parker, W. Merriss, Welsh, Clemens, Gott, Gates. Knapp, Bayly Fourth Row: Kingman, Pinkham, Scoular, Lasell, Clapp, Cox, Russ, Behr. Walbridge, Griswold Fifth Row: T. Bassett, Clement, Powell, Overton, C. Peck, Noble, Gary University Glee Club George D. V.- ill, ' 35 Harvey W. Hemingway, ' 35 Thomas T. Chamberlain, ' 35S Howard D. Kellogg, Jr., 35 Stuart Miller, ' 36 Wenner V. Laise, ' 36 Mus. Mar.sh. ' ll M. Bartholomew, ' 07S Arthur E. Hall, ' 24 Mus. President Manager Librarian Publicity Alanager Assistant Manager Accompanist Musical Director Associate Director FIRST TENORS H. R. . lker, 36 R. P. Bassett. ' 35 T. D. S. Bassett, ' 35 C.B.Bayly, Jr., ' 36 M. A. Cappabianca. . rt. M. Corbert, ' 37 M. P. Jennings, ' 35 S. L. Lasell. Jr., ' 37 W. E. Merri.ss. ' 37 S. Miller. 36 R. A. R. Pinkham. ' 36 D. B. Scoular. Mus. ' SECOND TENORS B. W. Brown. ' 36 E.J. Clapp, Jr.. ' 36 G. S. Clemens. ' 36 S. M. Clement. ' 36 J. W. Gott. 36 B. D. Henning, 32 H. D. Kellogg. Jr. ' J. M. Knapp, ' 36 D. L. Livingston. ' 35 J. C. Russ. ' 35 C. W. Sherman. ' 35 R. O. Sprague. 35 G. D. Vaill, ' 35 R. H. Wadhams. 35 J. F. Welsh. ' 37 35 FIRST B. SSES R. W. Barlow, 2nd, ' 37 G. P. Bartholomew, Jr.. 37 J. M. Gates, Jr.. ' 36 ' ]. H. Cox. ' 35 R. W. Hedges. ' 35 H. W. Hemingway, ' 35 R. G. Lawrence. 35 R. Eli Long. 36 G. .Merriss. ' 37 . . G. 0 erton. 36 E. W. Peck. ' 36 E. S. Powell, ' 35, S. F. Smith, ' 36 C. B. Walbridge. ' 35 S. . . Willis. ' 36 SECOND BASSES K. H. Behr.Jr., ' 37 T. T. Chamberlain, ' 35 R. G. Ernst. ' 35 H. M. Garv. Law N. H. Gellert, Jr.. 37 J. S. Griswold. ' ' 37 ■B. Howe, 35 L. Kingman. 35 D. G. Noble, 36 J. H. Parker. Jr.. ' 36 D. E. Robinson, Jr.. ' 36 R. E. Small, ' 35 M. S. Smith. Grad. G.J. Strieker. ' ■iS H. . I. Tutllc. Jr.. ' 31; 114 The Glee Club at Jaeksuu ' Florida, i.ii ihe 1933-34 Spring luui The Yale Glee Club THE oldest and most active organization on the Yale Campus, th: Yale Glee Club has enjoyed a most successful year, featured by a tri- umphal tour of the deep South. Opening its sea- son by a joint concert with the Harvard Glee Club in Woolsey Hall the night before the Yale- Harvard Football game, the Club next traveled to Winsted, Conn., for a concert. On January 1 8th the annual New York Concert and Dance was presented before a brilliant audience in the Grand Ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; during the next few weeks a concert was pre- sented at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., while the Semi-Chorus joined with the New York Junior League in concerts in Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., and New York City. In addition, the Glee Club was a featured attraction on a nation- wide radio broadcast, and the Junior Promenade Concert was an added festive attraction of the midwinter week-end festivities in New Haven. The crowning event of the season, however, was the Spring vacation tour which opened with a concert at Irvington-on-Hudson on March 22. Then followed a boat trip to Florida, and con- certs in rapid succession at Jacksonville, Talla- hassee, New Orleans, Mobile, Birmingham, Asheville, Berea College, Louisville, Cincinnati, and ending up with a grand farewell concert in Pittsburgh. During the Spring the Glee Club gave per- formances at Mount Holyoke and Smith Colleges and in addition was host to the Vassar Glee Club at a joint concert in New Haven. The an- nual Commencement Concert in Woolsey Hall brought to a close a season which attracted greater acclaim, both on the campus and abroad, than in any previous year of the Glee Club ' s long history. H. RVEY V. Hemingw.w, Manager :i5 f ' tf ' r|t.tftttftk t f ' t i-4 University Choir E. Balestro, P.G. T. D. S. Bassett, ' 35 P. W. Behler A. M. K. Blume, P.G. M. A. Cappabianc:.a. P.G. S. W. Bell, Jr., P.G. M. P. BOOHER, P.G. M. G. Duncan, P.G. G. W. Engle, P.G. W. R. Back, Jr., P.G W. W. BiTTNER, ' 3 ' W. P. Glem J. H. Cox, ' 35 B. D. Atwood, P.G. A. R. Bellinger M. F. Burwell H. M. Gary R. G. Ernst, ' 35 FIRST TENOR R. Cargill A. D. Havekost, P.G. C. H. Jacobson A. Levett SECOND TENOR B. D. Henning, P.G. R. B. O. Hocking, P.G. M. M. Hyatt T. B. Lounsbury, P.G. FIRST BASS H. F. Hausser, P.G. A. T. MacAllister, Jr., P.G E. L. McAdam, Jr. R. F. Manvvell, P.G. SECOND BASS R. L. Goodale, P.G. W. B. Hart. P.G. C. H. Hopkins, P.G. J. C. Keene, P.G. P. K. Keene, P.G. L. A. Miller, P.G. B. N. Schilling, P.G. D. B. SCOULAR, P.G. J. L. Stokes, 2nd, P.G. E. O. Whitfield W. E. Merriss, ' 37 V. H. PiERSON. Jr., P.G. E. B. Pleasant, P.G. E. C. RoMPF, ' 37 G. H. Menke, P.G. J. H. MciRSE, P.G. W. V. Pirrrs, P.G. F. J. W ' l.MBLE H. P. Morgan, P.G. H. A. Mlmma, Jr., ' 37E E. G. O ' Neill, P.G. J. H. Parker, Jr.. 36 D. C. Railsback. Jr.. P.G 116 Universitv Band THE Band of 1935 has in many respects had a very successful season. It was increased in size from a fifty-four piece organization to a seventy-two piece one, a change which allowed the presentation at the football games of more elaborate formations than had been attempted for several years. It received from Neil S. Water- man, ' 30, a gift of a new glockenspiel which had long been desired. The week-end of the Princeton game proved to be one of the most enjoyable of the entire season, for the band played a concert at the Yale Club in New York the evening before the game, and was the guest of the Club that same night. It closed its pre-Christmas season with the customary playing of Christmas carols on the Old Campus and in the courts of all the Colleges. This year, it has in addition been active during the winter months, playing at several of the hockey games. In March, 1934, the band suffered a loss in the death of its devoted ioimder. treasurer a nd Faculty Adviser, Joseph R. Ellis, Registrar of the Freshman Year, who had fostered the band since its beginning. It was fortunate in getting as his successor Stuart H. Clement, of the De- partment of Personnel .Study, who has ably sup- ported it in this, his first year. The officers of the 1934- 1935 Yale University Band follow: John S. Knott, ' 35, Leader; R. D. Foothorap, ' 36S, Drum Major; John C. Gra- ham, ' 36, Manager; J. R. Edwards, ' 36E, Assist- ant Manager; .Stuart H. Clement, ' 17, Treasurer; Charles F. Smith, Director. Advisory Commit- tee: Lyman Spitzer, Jr., ' 35, Francis P. Garvan, Jr- ' ' 35 George D. ' aill, 35. The officers of the 1934- 1935 Yale University Band follow: John S. Knott, ' 35. Leader; Robert D. Foothorap, ■36E, Drum Major: John C. Graham. ' 36, Manager: John R. Edwards. ' 36S, . .ssistant Manager: Stuart H. Clem- ent, ' 17, Treasurer: Charles F. Smith, Director. Advisory Committee. Lyman Spitzer. Jr.. ' 35. Francis P. Garvan, Jr.. ' 35. George D. Vaill. 35. The band inembers are; Basses: — C. T. O ' Connell. F. ' . Root. Baritones: — H. D. Kelling, VV. M. MacLaury, D. M. Bridgham. Trombones: — R. Forbes, W. R. Benke, J. L Tracey. Jr., H. M. Garv. R. C. Taylor. N. T. Ficker. Jr. Horns:— L D. Fuller, F. D. Nichols, A. E. . nderson, Jr.. L. R. Cowles. Trumpets:— R. A. Smith. W. H. Champlin, Jr., R. K. Stolz. D. C. . die. L. P. Irons, D. Hartley, V. H. Husted, J. C. Roper. Jr.. J. C. Graham. C. .■. .Anderson, J. D. Mc- .■llister, H. N. Bowman, R.J. Zagraniski. Glockenspiel:— O. H. Helbig. Clarinet: — C. Tomasino, G. M. Reichgott, R. C. Her- man. W. H. Spencer, J. L Sachs. L. B. Lamb, J. F. Ed- wards, D. H. Baird. E. H. Kenyon. V. Pacelli, j. Mellitz. J. L. Murray, F. B. Korsmever. Saxophones:— K. M. Gagne. R. S. . llis. C. F. Whitney. F. M. Fox, S. F. -Ascher. Piccolos: — H. Turner, Jr.. R. Fogarty. Snare Drums: — R. V. V ' iering. F. . . Coe Jr., T. F. Wil- son, R. M. .-Mien, L. M. Virgadamo. Bass Drum:—]. R. Gillie. Cymbals: — W.J. Secor, Jr. Accordion: — W. B. Roulstone, Jr. Drum Carrier: — A. S. Deming. 117 tront Koiv: Garvan, Watson. Cinllit ' i . Hmwii. 1 Vn Second Row: Kilborne. Bingham. Duval University Budget Drive Charities contributed to are the Yale Hope Mission, the New Haven Coirmunity Chest, Yale-in- China, Yale-in-Labrador, and Dwight Hall. Samuel C. Collier, 1935 Chairman H. K. Brown, Jr., 1935 R. E. Danielson, Jr., 1935 M. H. DoNAHOE, Jr., 1935S ADVISORY BOARD L. Spitzer, Jr., 1935 C. L. Duval, 1935 F. P. Garv. ' SiN, Jr., 1935 W. S. Kilborne, 1935 118 BRAXFORD COLLEGE M. D. Watson 35, Captain S. L. Bartholomew, 37 M. F. Martin, ' 35 J. K. Edmonds, ' 35 H. D. Niks, ' 35 J. . . Field, ' 35 A. Porter, ' 35 R. H. Wadhams, ' 35 TRUMBULL COLLEGE K. S. Brown, ' 35, Captain O. Brouwer, 3rd, ' 36 F. C. Cuthbertson, ' 35 F. Brown, Jr., ' 36 VV. B. McAllister, Jr., ' 35 H.J. Chisholm, Jr., 36 W. P. Miller, ' 36 L. A. Weigle, Jr., ' 35 C. LHOUN COLLEGE L. G. Shields, 35, Captain C. J. Cavanagh, ' 36 S. Miller, 36 D. O Harrington, ' 35 W. B. Rand, Jr., 36 T. K. Krug, ' 35 J. T. Ryerson. Jr., ' 36 R. Wadsworth, ' 33 VANDERBILT GROUP W. S. Kilborne, ' 35, Captain D.J. Carr, ' 37 V. P. Foss. 3rd, ' 37 R. S. Gallagher, 37 D. F. Haggerty, ' 37 D. Haviland, 37 A. C. Keppelman, ' 37 R. Montgelas, ' 37 G. W. Percy, Jr., ' 37 J. L. Shaler, ' 37 G. P. Urban, Jr., 37 Wall, -37 DAVENPORT COLLEGE R. E. Danielson Jr., ' 35, Captain J. DeK. . lsop, ' 35 W. P. Curtiss, Jr., 35 R. D. Duncan, ' 35 G. B. Farnam. 36 R. O. Ferris, ' 36 J. M. Knapp, ' 36 R. H. Spock, ' 36 T. D. Woolsey, 36 WRIGHT GROUP F. P. G. RV. N, Jr., ' 35, Ca j am M. Collier, 37 T. M. Crosby, ' 37 A. S. Gagarin, ' 37 C. F. Howe. ' 37 J. Middleton, 37 S. W. Mills, ' 37 W. Moore, 37 H. M. Turner, Jr., ' 37 FRESHMAN C:OMMITTEE JONATHAN EDWARDS COLLEGE F. P. Haas, ' 35, Captain J. M. Gates, Jr., ' 35 R. H. Charles, ' 35 R. W. Gilpatric, ' 35 J. Goodyear, ' 35 L. H. Hyde, 35 W. Lee, ' 36 PIERSON COLLEGE H. P. B. Terry, ' 35, Captain H. X. Barkhau.sen, 36 R. . Moore, ' 36 H. C. McClintock, Jr., 35 W. Reid, 36 H. T. McKnight, ' 36 F. D. Rogers, 35 J. P. Snyder. Jr., ' 36 SAYBROOK COLLEGE J. E. Bowles. 35, Captain G. Fearey, ' 36 W. H. Harrington, ' 35 H. Havemeyer, Jr., ' 36 T. Hildt.Jr., ' 36 S. D. Hopkins, 35 E.J. Miles, Jr., ' 35 J. S. Murtha, 35 S. E. Sweet, Jr., ' 36 C. Beard. ' 37 P. H. Behr, ' 37 R. Berry, 37, W. P. Bonbright, ' 37 S. L. Brookfield, ' 37 P. L Carnes, ' 37 E.J. Dryer, Jr., ' 37 G. A. Eyer,Jr. ' 37 R. L. Linkroum, ' 37 W. McFerren. Jr., ' 37 J. B. McLemore, ' 37 R. Milliken, 37 W. H. Orrick, Jr., ' 37 D. Peterkin, Jr., ' 37 S. D. Preston, Jr., ' 37 J. W. Field, ' 37 J. S. Ciriswold, 37 13. Hollister, Jr., ' 37 C. R. Hook, Jr., ' 37 W. C. M. Johnston, H. B. Kelsey, ' 37 S. L. Lasell, Jr., 37 P. T. Rennell, 37 J. A. Richards, ' 37 C. E. Rogers, 3rd, ' 37 P. Stewart, ' 37 L. T. Stone, Jr., ' 37 D. V. Sutphin, ' 37 T. Wells, 37 37 SHEFFIELD HOUSE COMMITTEES M. H. Donahoe, Jr., ' 35S, Captain St. . nthonv York Hall ' Franklin Hall Vernon Hall St. Elino Law School Divinity School Medical School Graduate School C. S. Judson, Jr., ' 35S R. C. Bryant, Jr., ' 35S D. C. Watson, ' 35E D. C. Lett, ' 35S F. Quarrier, ' 35S H. Gillespie , Jr., Captain R. D. Weigle, Captain W. W. Pettus, Captain R. Q.. P. Chin, Captain 119 I I 1 11 I- h 1 ii uii Nhlhkau. l ' l a hriiii ' .i- Lee StLontJ Run Icnnant Spitzei Bingliani, Prui. Adams, Jacob, Dryer University Debating Team Max F. Millikan, 35S Duncan C. Lee, ' 35 . August Heckscher, 2d, ' 36 Edwin J. Dryer, Jr., 37 . Richard B. Tennant, 37 Chester B. Kerr, Jr., 36. Walter L. Pforzheimer, 35 Professor J. C. Adams cufic;er.s President Vice President Manager Assistant Manager Secretary Publicity Manager Member-at-Large Coach 1935 R. S. Brown, Jr. P. E. Jacob D. C. Lee M. F. Millikan V. L. Pforzheimer L. Spitzer, Jr. J. Strauss G. M. Tiffany ACTIVE MEMBERS 1936 J. B. Bingham W. H. Clark A. Heckscher, 2nd F. C. Heller C. B. Kerr D. B. Pratt W. V. Rostow ' 937 S. B. uer R. J. Cross E. J. Dryer, Jr. F. Kennedy, Jr. N. M. Levine J. B. McLemore J. B. S. tterthw-.-mte R. B. Tenn. ' Xnt Debating A CASUAL observer, glancing over the list of debates for the past year, might conclude that it was a quiet year for the Debating Associa- tion. He would be grossly in error. While the actual number of debates was somewhat less than in other years, the interest in those held more than made up for any quantitative de- ficiency. A change in policy, withdrawal from the Eastern Intercollegiate Debating League, jnade it possible to drop a great number of dull and profitless wrangles into which the League ' s schedule had previously forced the Association. This year a number of timelv and stimulating battles of wits were substituted for the usual rim of cut and dried debates. The first fruit of the new policy was a fall two- wav debate with Harvard on Resolved: that a vote of confidence be given the Roosevelt ad- ministration in the coming elections. Held the week before the elections, the New Haven con- test drew an unprecedented audience of 407 persons. J. B. Bingham, . Clark, and R. B. Tennant upheld the affirmative at home, while J. Strauss, V. Rostow, and E. Kenyon journeyed to Harvard to attack the Administration. There was no decision in either case, though the New Haven audience voted on the merits of the ques- tion, supporting Mr. Roosevelt overwhelmingly. Another good sized crowd came to hear D. C. Lee and W. Pforzheimer attack the proposition that peace is impossible under capitalism, put forward by two gentlemen from the University of Georgia. Two judges felt that the home team did the better job, though the audience disa- An invading pair from Dartmouth took on P. Jacob and W. Clark defending the socializa- tion of medicine. The Hanoverians avenged the defeat of their confi-eres on the gridiron, carrying oft the decision, in a decisive manner. The climax of the fall season came when M. F. Millikan and A. Heckscher met two Oxford gentlemen on the question. Resolved: that a strong trade union organization on a national basis is an essential of civilized society. The British team taking the affirmative position was composed of the son of Sir Stafford Cripps, leader of the British Labor Party, and Michael Foote, president of the Oxford Union .Society. Though there was no decision, another mam- moth audience of over three hundred felt that the battle was closely fought. In the winter term activity was restrained somewhat to allow the new Yale Political Union to get on its feet. Nonetheless two very satisfactory debates were held. D. C. Lee and E. A. Raymond travelled down to Columbia to maintain that the manufacture of munitions should be a government monopoly. On March 5 A. Heckscher and D. C. Lee defended cyni- cism as a wise way of life with a fervor that could spring only from conviction. The defen.se of faith was brought to these decadent eastern shores by two frontiersmen from Stanford Uni- versity. As this goes to press the spring schedule is in- complete, but the traditional Harvard- Yale- Princeton triangular tournament will, as usual, clima.x the season. The year has seen changes in policy, changes in personnel, changes in meth- od, but one thing has remained constant: the devotion and enthusiasm of Professor John Chester Adams. Each year debaters of the gradu- ating class pay him high tribute for his patient criticism, constant encouragement, and genial friendship. That others have done this before us detracts in no way from the sincerity of the gratitute and affection we feel. COLLEGES Berkeley College DURINCJ the first two or three weeks after college opened last September under- graduates emerging from the depths of Yale Static:! were seen to rub their startled eyes in amazement, struck apparently, like St. Paul on the road to Damascus, with a light too dazzling to behold. It was not a sign from heaven, how- ever but the bright gold weathervane swinging with lay gayety from brand-new, glistening Berkeley College. If the tone of these para- graphs smacks of the cloth, it is to be in keeping with the office of the man in whose honor the college is named; and on the same ground oc- casional solecisms must also be forgiven. We are not ashamed of the sybaritic appoint- ments of our public rooms; you do not touch a sore spot if you envy us our mysterious cata- combs winding interminably into all kinds of curious places; and we continue to wear that golden weathervane, in spite of ribald remarks from other and less resplendent colleges, like a white plume. But, as Cicero says, unless the in- terlinear is at fault, we will not mention the library, the lounge, the vast dining room, with its portrait of the Bishop and his family gathered at their own festal board weighing the merits of Number One and Number Two. We will waive all discussion of our actual physical equipment with the remark that it is the newest and best. There is a College located, it is said, in the gray pastures lying behind the Dramat, which gloried once in the number of important under- graduates who bivouacked there. This was a sordid kind of satisfaction, to be sure, but to confound those whose minds run in such chan- nels, it may as well be admitted that Berkeley shelters the chairmen or chairmen-to-be of the three undergraduate publications, and the two leading stars of the football team, as well as many another lesser dignitary — not that we wish to appear too superior to our less fortunate brothers, but only that we consider the combina- tion of literary and athletic talent such as this to be the very flower of episcopal enterprise. Our career as far as minor athletics is con- cerned has been, to put it mildly, checkered. The swimming team frequently consisted of one man who dove, swam every race, and oc- casionally even managed the relay by swimming under water Jrom post to post; the fencing team was also chosen from a squad of one man, while the bowling team, through a confusion of the terms bawling and bowling, ran into considerable difficulty. It seems that the higher things of the spirit have had the greater influence. As everybody knows, Berkeley e.xecuted the coup of the year by giving a huge party for the D ' Oyley Carte group during that mad week of Gilbert and Sullivan when no one took even a dry cut from Shubert ' s; and it has been said by many from other colleges, who were graciously permitted to attend, that it was the most success- ful single binge ever achieved in the universi- ty. Modesty alone prevents us from concurring in this opinion. There have been other parties as well, given by the Master, Mr. Seymour, and the Fellows, headed by Bishop Brewster, ' 68, who thinks nothing of climbing to the third floor to visit his friends of a class sixty-eight years later than his own; and, with a rare and appropriate wis- dom, the powers that be have refrained from attempting to develop too much undergraduate activity; whatever the members of the College wanted, was generously sanctioned, but the choosing was left in their own hands. This has given dignity and an adult restraint to the College that belies its tender eight or ten months of existence; it has preserved us from any prep-school atmosphere; and when a big party is given, it is as successful and enviable as the one during which snatches of Gilbert and Sullivan, Antoinette Burby, and that song in which the undergraduate wishes he were the Pope, shook the air before the painted figure of our illustrious godfather — a Bishop of the Church of England who did not seem much taken aback by the papistical leanings of the men who sat on the floor and stood on the chairs and tables the length of the long room over which he looked, a book of his own philosophy in his hand. No doubt he was thinking that, since he could hear nothing, there really was no shouting and laughter at all. Brf.nd.- n M. Gill 125 Berkeley College CHARLES SEYMOUR, MASTER Provost of the University, Ster- ling Professor of History, and Curator of the Edward M. House Collection HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness John M. S. Allison Professor of History. Charlton D. Cooksey Assistant Professor of Physics. Clive Day Seymour H. Knox Professor Economy. Albert G. Feuillerat Sterling Professor of French. S. wMUEL B. Hemingw. y Professor of English. Sherman Kent Instructor in History. of Politic FELLOWS Charles N,- gel, Jr. Assistant Professor of the History of Art, and Curator of Decorative Arts. Richard L. Purdy Assistant Professor of English. Carl F. Schreiber Professor of German, and Curator of the William A. Speck Collection of Goetheana. J. MES K. Whittemore Associate Professor of Mathematics. Alexander M. Witherspoon Assistant Professor of English. Walter J. Wohlenberg Sterling Professor of Mechanical Engineering. ASSOCIATE M.- rcel Aubert Professor of the History of Arts: Professor at Ecole des Chartes, and Curator of Medieval Sculpture in the Louvre. F. Lammot Belin Ph.B. 1 90 1 Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster B.A. 1868, D.D. 1B98, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut, Retired. Henri Focillon Professor of the History of Art; Professor at the Sorbonne. Frederick S. Jones Dean of Yale College. Emeritus. Paul Mellon B. A. 1929. FELLOWS Duncan Phillips B.A. 1908, honorary M.A. 1934. Russell G. Pruden Associate Curator of the Edward M. House Collection. Dr. Orville F. Rogers Assistant Director of the Department of Uni- versity Health, and Clinical Instructor in Medicine. George Dudley Seymour Honorary M.A. 191 3. H.AROLD Stanley B.A. 1908. Judge Thom. s W. Swan Fellow of the Yale Corporation. George E. Woodbine George Biuton Adams Professor of History. 126 Student Members, 1934-1935 A. Aaron C. T. Alexander G. W. Allen J. L. Anathan C. A. Anderson F. Armstrong E. G. Asherman S. P. Atkins H. H. Babcock E. P. Bags, 3rd T. Baldwin W. Bancroft, Jr. J. W. Barclay P. K. Bartow T. D. S. Bassett G. W. Bauer W. A. Bauer H. P. Becton W. S. Beinecke F. L. Belin , Jr. H. Bell R. Berry J. V. S. Blaisdell D. B. Blake W. W. Bodle G. C. Bradley G. T. Broadfoot A. R. Broadman S. L. Brookfield A. Bryan D. Bruce F. H. Buck. Jr. H. M. BudloncT W. E. C. Bulkeley J. H. Burbank W. R. Burt J. F. Byers, Jr. H. K. Cahn J. A. Caldwell, 3rd J. B. Calfee P. I. Carnes J. C. Castle W. Gates B. G. Chapman A. D. Church E. M. Church, Jr. L. Cianciolo G. S. Clemens J. S. Clifford C. Colgate, Jr. F. L. Conwav W. C. Craig,Jr. S. T. Crary R. C. Cussler J. B. Day J. V. B. Dean G. S. DeFreitas D. D. Doernberg, Jr. G. A. Douglass. Jr. M. J. Dwyer, Jr. J. E. Eaton C. S. Edgar A. Elsaesser, Jr. A. B. Fay J. P. Ferguson, Jr. J. W. Field A. .S. Foord C. L. Frambach, Jr. G. N. Gafford L. M. Gersten B. M. Gill R. M. Gillespie R. L. Goodkind J. P. Grace. Jr. J. C. Graham F. C. Grant P. W. A. Greene W. R. Greenwood, Jr. F. S. GrisvN ' old G. H. Griswold J. VV. Harter V. Hausberg V. A. Heberi, Jr. D. A. Hedley ' J. S. Herold R. Herold C. C.. Higg-ins D. J. Hopkins H. S. Horn D. R. Howe . R. Humphrey, 2nd M. M. Jackson L. G. James J. H. Keenev M. J. Keller . . C. Kelsey D. A. Kennedy, 2nd R. S. Keppelman G. Kinsr J. S. Knight S. B. Knight R. M. Kremcntz A. I. Kurlan W. W. LaPierre P. N. Larsen S. L. Lasell. Jr. I. L. Leyine A. W. Lindeke, Jr. D. L. Liyingston F. W. Loetscher, Ji S. Loewenstein N. M. Loud W. W. Low W. D. Lyon, Jr. J. D. McAllister F. L. McCartney R. H. McCormick, W. McFarland D. McGoodwin G. G. Mairs L. M. Makepeace R. F. Meffert G. Merriss J. V. N. Meyer B. T. Miller C. Miller, 3rd J. F. G. Miller C. J. Mills W. S. Moore W. H. Morgan W. B. Moses. Jr. H. E. Mumma J. G. Munson, Jr. D. E. Murray P. E. Nelbach R. R. Newell. Jr. L C. Oehler C. C. Page H. C:. Parke P. Pasquariello P. L. Paull G. T. Peck K. G. Peters L. C. Peters J. W. Pine M. A. Pond E. S. Powell A. M. Preston F. W. Preston E. G. Reid R. E. Rew, Jr. T. T. Richmond J. A. Ridgwav, Jr. D. S. Riggs F. B. Rogers E. S. Ronan, Jr. J. ' . Roscoe J. F. B. Runnalls J. F. Ruso J. J. Sachs M. Sargent, Jr. T. C. Savage R. H. Schultz H. B. deV. Schwab, Jr. E. D. Sedergren 3rd B. Shepard J. N. Sherley VV. E. Sherley C. W. Sherman H. H. Sherman S. T. Shevell L H. Silverman H. D. Smith P. H. Smith, 3rd E. J. Staley, Jr. J. B. Stevens P. Stewart T. C. Stockhausen J. O. Stoddart L. T. Stone, Jr. L. B. Stoner McN. S. Stringer, Jr. E. U. Thomas C. Tyson B. Vassel, Jr. W. S. Vickrey R. W. Viering L. Walker J. P. Wayne J. F. Weller. Jr. J. B. Wells W. Werner M. K. Whitehead W. S. Whitney R. E. L. Wilson, 3rd N. Wolanvk R. P. Woods 127 Branford College MAN treasures most those things which are intangible to him. If he be awarded the Caoix de Guerre, the metal of the cross is not valuable to him; it is that for which it has been given which is of inestimable worth. The words of a book and the pages upon which they are printed are of no significance placed beside the effect which they create. So. too, in writing of what will soon be a memory, and tinged with the romance of remembering, one cannot help to do more than stir to life a pleasant thought . . . It has been given to us to be the last class which shall graduate with the distinction of having been with the College Plan in our entirety since the plan was born. We have seen it grow out of a chaotic mass of speculation and whispering doubt, and we have grown with it until we ac- cept it casually. It has become for us another part of the immenseness of Yale. We have al- ready forgotten interclass athletics and think intramurally. We have found a unity and friendship in the college life which we have also come to accept as part of the New Yale. Since we have been born into a changing Yale, since we have lived with it for four years in its change, we do not see the extent of the flux it has under- gone. Only to those who have lived in the Gold Coast before Pierson and Davenport, Calhoun, Jonathan Edwards and Berkeley were built, is the greatness of the revolution apparent. It will be wondered, then, whether or not the College Plan is successful if we accept it so casual- ly. Has it been worth while to us in the two years of its existence? The present effe cts are obvious. Finer rooms, a more sociable existence, a better menu at the Dining Hall, an opportunity to participate in athletics hitherto not to be had, — these we have now, and these we accept as oiu ' due. It is in their very presentness that they can- not mean too much to us. They are of today, and will be scattered when today becomes yesterday. They do not represent the depth of meaning which the New Yale holds for us. We of Branford find and shall find that our memories will be inextricably meshed with our College. Sentimentality is to be frowned on by the student, a show of emotion is unheard of But already certain memories come crowding above the others. We come again from our Prep school to Yale in the Spring of the year, come with a proud father. Harkness is vivid in our eyes with the living green of the grass and Seniors (the Father says that only Seniors live in Harkness) in rumpled w hite flannels stretch- ing lazily in the sun or swinging a tennis racket. Some of them have towels about their necks, and their white sweaters are inside out. We come again into Harkness, a misty night in the fall of Freshman year. About us are two thousand students, shouting, pushing, crowding. We are nearly crushed as everyone tries to enter the Tower gateway at once. Inside there is silence. Then yells. Booth, Crowley. Bright College Years sounding in the damp air. The first time we have sung it. Yale is to play Har- vard on Saturday . . . No, we shall remember the Dining Hall, or our rooms, or the furnitiue of the Commons Room. They shall live in our memory. We shall remember Harkness Tower, black lace against a full moon. Branford Court in the winter, white and silent in the snow. The silence shattered by the din of a snowball battle from the roofs or the ground. Branford Court in the lazy Spring. A game of ball in the cool evening. Loose limbs stretched in the sun. Delicious iner- tia on the soft, warm grass. A hundred voices in song, with Dean Mendell in the alcoholic ward. Foam deep in the pitchers of silver. Laughing faces we shall not often see again, voices we shall not hear. Branford is more than a mere unit of the New Yale to us; it is the breath and the life of it. We have been given more than a College Plan, more than a Dining Hall and Dormitory. We have been given a memory, ...a memory that shall outlive the stones which gave it. John A. Field 129 Branford College CLARENCE WHITTLESEY MENDELL, MASTER Dean of Yale College, and Dunham Professor of Latin Language and Literatiu ' e HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Theodore Babbitt Listructor in Spanish. Andrew Barr, Jr. Assistant Professor of Accounting. Norman Sydney Buck Professor of Political Economy. George Lincoln Hendrickson Lampson Professor of Latin and Greek Liter- ature, Emeritus. Frederick Bliss Luquiens Professor of Spanish American Literature. H. rvey ' Claflin Mansfield Assistant Professor of Government. George Henry Nettleton Lampson Professor of English. Ainsworth O ' Brien-Moore Assistant Professor of Latin. Oystein Ore Sterling Professor of Mathematics. N.- thaniel Burton Paradise Assistant Professor of English. John William Ruff, Jr., Listructor in English. C HARLEs Joseph Tilden Strathcona Professor of Engineering Mechan- ics. Gilbert Norman Tucker Assistant Professor of History. Lorande Loss Woodruff Professor of Protozoology. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edward Grant Buckland LL.D. (LL.B. 1889, honorary M.A. 1895). Rev. George A. Buttrick D.D. 1932. Malcolm Farmer Chairman of the Board of Control of the Yale University Athletic Association. David Russell Lyman M.D. (honorary M.A. 1916). William Lyon Phelps Lampson Professor of English Literature, Em- eritus. Michael Ivanovich Rostovtzeff Sterling Professor of Ancient History and Classical Archaeology. Eugene Fr.ancis Savage William Leffingwell Professor of Painting. Thom. s Day Thacher Fellow of the Yale Corporation. William Fr.ancis Verdi Clinical Professor of Surgery. John Munro Woolsey LL.D. (B.A. 1898). 130 Student Members, 1934 -1935 R. M. Allen P. H. Anderson A. R. Andre vs R. H. Apple G. D. Arthur. Jr. R. D. H. Banbur - G. H. Barmeyer. Jr. .S. L. Bartholomew J. S. W. Bates R. S. Bender E. M. Bever C. P. Blair E. L. Bliss, Jr. ]. Bradvvav, Jr. R. Brill H. .S. Brooke H. Brown A. J. Browne, Jr. R. C. Bnant. ' jr. VV. Burlingame, Jr. D.J. Carr T. L. Ghamberlin F. N. Ghilds J. H. Childs, Jr. R. R. Clayton W. B. Coburn W.J. D. Coerr F. L. Comlev H. S. Conklin, Jr. J. L. Cooper S. D. Cornell J. H. Co.x T. M. Cox, Jr. R. S. Crampton J. L. Crawford L. S. Cruikshank J. F. Cullman, 3rd R. J. Cummins H. F. Damon, Jr. D. D. Darling ' H. L. Davidson W. R. Davis O. W. L. Dennis W. K. Dickerman M. H. Donahoe, Jr. R. W. Downing R. C. Duane J. R. Dugan V. B. Ebert E. D. Echols J. K. Edmonds ■j. B. Elliott R. A. L. Ellis G. O. Elmore V. S. Elmore W. Ewing, Jr. F. M. Fahy D. F. Fanton P. N. A. Farevaag J. H. Ferguson J. A. Field J. B. Finkel A. S. Finkelstein W. M. Ford, Jr. C. K. Fossett R. H. Fowler, Jr. F. S. Fox, Jr. S. H. Fredericks, Jr. L L Freedhand H. L. Freer J. D. Freer E. L. French R. Gaucher A. J. Giacomini J. H. Gifford B. A. Gimbel J. Gomez A. E. Good L. R. Gordon J. C. Graham R. B. Giierson CM. Griggs, 2nd J. R. Griswold F. P. Hamilton, Jr. J. M. Hannaford, 3rd W. S. Hanson R. N. Harris H. S. Hart, Jr. C. T. Harther.Jr. L. M. Hartman, 3rd V. Hartshorne H. S. Haycock J. D. Hegeman VV. L. Hehmeyer A. D. Hemelright H. VV. Hemingway VV. M. Highfield T. F. Holden R. C. Holland E. .S. Howland J. A. Hoyt, Jr. K. E. Humphrey, Jr. A. F. Hussev J. G. Johnson, Jr. P. D. Karsten, Jr. R. J. Kerry S. J. Keves, Jr. P. C. Klein R. L. Knight, Jr. J. S. Knott P. L. Krug A. L. Kurth S. M. Lamb T. H. Lawrence, Jr. C. Y. Lazarus J. L. Lewis P. H. Lincoln J. .S. Longo D. McDonald J. McDonald J.J. Mack T. G. Manning J. M. Marks M. F. Martin J. M. Mason A. Matthews, Jr. E. N. Maxwell J. Meade J. Melville R. Michaels E. B. Millard, Jr. F. Mills A. S. Moses, Jr. A. S. B. Neglev H. D. Niles B. O ' Connor J. E. O ' Keefe, Jr. R. Olcott P. L. Oppenheim A. G. Overton VV. H. Paine F. R. Peake M. C. Phelps R. A. R. Pinkham A. Porter R. R. Prest, Jr. L Randall, Jr. VV. Reed, Jr. D. F. Reinthal D. W. Rich. Jr. J. E. Rich J. L. Richards T. A. Ritzman VV. G. Roberts C. H. Rose, Jr. J. C. Russ L. Sale, Jr. L. J. Sanford VV. P. Sargeant P. B. Sawyer, Jr. J. L. Schmitt K. C. Schuyler, Jr. S. A. Scribner, Jr. VV. J. Secor, Jr. P. Shatkin F. L. Sheldon O. M. Shirey, Jr. VV. C. Shull, 2nd A. H. Smith A. J. Smith, Jr. S. A. Stein H. L. Stern, Jr. H. R. Stern, Jr. G. C. Stevens S. S. Stevenson F. K. Stewart F. B. Stone J. F. Sweeney b. W. Tait J. W. Taylor VV. F. Taylor R. H. Tenney P. J. Thomas G. E. Truesdell W. A. Tyson, Jr. G. D. Vaill P. D. Valas J. E. Valk R. VV. Van Home A. C. Vedder J. D. Venter N. M. Vose, Jr. R. H. VVadhams P. . . V ' adsworth H. S. VV ' ashbum, Jr. M. D. Watson R. Welles S. B. Welles VV. M. Wheeler, Ji ' . C. C. Wickwire, Jr. E. M. Wigley N. H. Willis R. VV. Wilson W. B. Wise R.J. Zagraniski 131 I Calhoun College CALHOUN is a modern foundation, and opened its doors as a college simultaneously with six others mentioned in this volume. It soon achieved distinction, however, for the beauty of its architecture, the talents of its inhabitants, and the vigor of its life. Tudor Gothic in design, its sixteenth century appearance is wisely con- fined to the exterior, and within the visitor will find luxurious rooms filled with secondhand fiuniture and tiled showers. The common rooms are especially attractive, with the possible exception oi the cloakroom, said to be insuffi- cient on rainy days. Competent observers have pronounced the dining room superior to that of any other college, since it avoids at once the aseptic pallor of Pierson and the vaulted vast- ness of Berkeley. This dining hall is the source not only of the daily sustenance of the inhabi- tants, but of occasional College Dinners, a tradi- tion dating from the foundation. The elegant cuisine and elocjuent speakers serve to enforce an almost unanimous attend- ance of the members, and fortunate would be the traveller who chanced to visit Calhoun when one was in progress. It is impossible to give dates, as these are movable feasts, governed by the solvency of the Beer Fund. He would see more than two hundred men, clad generally in the ancient ceremonial garl) of dinner jacket and soft shirt. At the head table would be the speaker, any guests from outside so fortunate as to have been invited, certain under- graduates selected for their position and parts, and the Master. His is the happy position of an unlimited monarch in a self-governing democ- racy. His function is rather to unite and counsel than to divide and rule, and so he does to the general satisfaction of the college. Throughout the hall the other three ranks of the college hierarchy sit mingled together, con- vincing proof of the degree of fellowship be- tween professor and student achieved in these colleges. First come the fellows, some of whom reside, while others merely alight, in the college apartments. They represent almost every branch, and a number of degrees, of learning; they may be seen at their best when they foregather twice weekly for lunch. While the undergraduates sit with bated forks, they emerge from the common room enveloped in an aiu ' a ot scholarship and sherry. The most important rite at lunch is the Salad, the making of which requires extreme nicety, especially as regards the inclusion of garlic, a cause of some dissension. To enumerate the merits of the Associate Fellows would require an Homeric catalogue. The great triumvirate of Law, Church, and .State is well represented (citing only examples) by Messrs. Webb, Riggs, and Aldrich. The nine Muses would beam approval on a group con- taining Poets Benet and Bacon, and Musician Moore. Indeed, to furnish every Associate Fel- low with a mythological sponsor of sufficiexat statme, it would be necessary to drag in the three Graces, the four Seasons, and the Seven against Thebes. Last come the undergraduates, also known as the great unwashed and the other half They are the most numerous of the inhabitants (one hundred an d eighty; Census of 1930; the birth- rate is very low), and it is for them presumably that the structure was erected. It provides ihem with bread and an occasional circus; but except for the betterment of the living quarters the existence of perhaps a majority is substan- liallv what it was in the era B.C. The sporting traveller, hunting with gun or camera, may bag in broad daylight specimens of the Common Immature Extrovert, and if he can detect the scent of gin and gingerale it may lead him to the lair of that happily vanishing American, the furcoated Rahrahboy. The prophets of these communities foresee a day when the intellectual life of the university will be centered in them, and speak not without honor of spiritual values and other such esoteric matters not apparent to the transient. What he will find in a place like Calhoun is first, an un- usual friendliness between Fellow and student; second, a budding intellectual independence; and third, a liberal education in gracious living. Tangible evidence of the latter trend may be gained by attending tea at the Master ' s, held in a room that is an incentive to brilliance. R.- LPH S. Brown ' Before College Plan. 133 Calhoun College ARNOLD VHITRIDGE. MASTER Professor of History, the Arts, and Letters. HONORARY FELLOW ' S President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Rudolph John Anderson Professor of Chemistry. Charles Frederick Tucker Brooke Sterhng Professor of Enghsh. Fred Rogers Fairchild Professor of Political Economy. Gordon Sherman Haight Instructor in English. Edward Billings Ham Assistant Professor of French. George McLean Harper Assistant Professor of Latin. Fr. nk Monaghan Instructor in History. Reginald Dean Root Instru ctor in Political Economy. Robert Selden Rose Professor of Spanish. Charles Humphry Trevely. n Instructor in German. Alan Tower W ' . term. n Associate Professor of Physics. St.anley Thom.as W ' illi.ams Professor of English. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS George Townsend Adee B.A. 1895. Richard Steere Aldrich B.A. 1906. Leonard Bacon B.A. 1909. Stephen Vincent Benet B.A. 1919. Mortimer Norton Buckner Fellow of the Yale Corporation. Stuart Holmes Clement Associate Director of the Department of Per- sonnel Study. James Dwight Dana B.A. 1911. James Cowan Greenway Director of the Department of University Health. WiLMARTH Sheldon Lewis Research Associate in the University Library. Douglas Stuart Moore B.A. 1915. Don. ' Kld Wall. ce Porter Clinical Professor of Pediatrics. Rev. T. L. wrason Riggs B.A. 1910. Joseph Rockwell Sw. ' n B.A., 1902. V.-iiNDERBILT VEBB B.A. 1913. I 134 I Student Members, 1934 -1935 T. F. Annstroiio L. W. Baldwin A. S. Ballinger D. R. Barton W. T, Battis W. C. Bauman E. W. Baxter M. L. Baxter, Jr. J. F. Beauregard R. H. Beckwith M. W. Bick A. T. Bigwood H. Bissell, Jr. W. H. Bonser H. O. Bostvvick, Jr. J. H. Bragdon J. H. Brewster A. P. Brooks R. S. Brown, Jr. C. H. Bucklev, Jr. W. M. Bush ■J. P. Butler, Jr. N. R. Calhoun J. F. Callahan J. N. Carley L. E. Cartwright E. E. N. Causton C. J. Cavanagh G. W. Chamberlin D. A. Chase R. G. Chatterton W. C. Chester L. D. Clark F. W. Cole, Jr. W. K. Cole D. T. Cook W. W. Corbet, Jr. R. F. Corroon R. H. Cory, Jr. J. O. Crittenden F. C. Curtin E. A. C urtis, Jr. H. F. Curtis A. L. Cushman T. S. Danowski A. W. Danziger, Jr. W. S. Davis D. C. Davton J. DeAngelis R. B. Delord.Jr. C. E. Dunbar S. H. Eaton R. G. Ernst F. W. Eschen, Jr. H. R. Eshelman, Jr. N. Ewing J. H. Faber E. E. Fessenden, Jr. E. C. Finn W. R. Foote C. H. Forster A. A. Frank, Jr. R. E. Fromm S. E. Fuller E. J. Gilman W. R. C. Golden J. W. Gott J. S. Gravely, Jr. J. C. Greene G. P. Greenhalgh, Jr. C. D. P. Hamilton, 3rd W. K. Hammond, 3rd D. O. Harrington J. T. Harrison, Jr. H. C. Harvev F. C. Heller ' VV. B. Heller D. T. Hellyer S. Hickenlooper, Jr. D. F. Hickok B. E. Hooker W. D. Hosford, Jr. F. W. Hunter D. A. Hyde A. C. Isra el R. K. Johnston C. L. Jones, Jr. J. F. Jordan H. D. Kelling J. G. Kelsey N. V. King R. A. Kinzer R. W. Knebel R. C. Knox, Jr. T. K. Krug R. L. LaidJaw J. T. Lambert H. S. Levman, Jr. L. F. Licht, Jr. L. Loom is J. L. McClenahan R. B. McKellar S. A. McKenzie J. H. MacVev D. P. Maier ' J. Martin, Jr. H. B. Matthews, Jr R. A. Michaels H. J. Miller, Jr. S. Miller A. H. Mitchell R. R. Moffett J. F. Morse R. C. B. Morton J. W. Mott M. L. MurriU A. H. Nathan F. K. Newman F. J. Nies T. J. Ogburn, 3rd J. C. Oliver, Jr. A. B. Osgood C. A. Peterson, Jr. J. D. Phinney L. A. Pomerov, Jr. J. Powel, Jr. W. F. Prestley A. T. Primm R. A. Pritchard, Jr D. F. Rabbott J. A. Rand O. L. Rand V. B. Rand, Jr. B. Rapoport H. C. Reynolds, Jr. J. H. Richardson ' M. S. Roesler R. L. Rosenthal H. Ross H. C. Rowland, Jr. E. Rust J. T. Ryerson, Jr. R. C. Savage B. N. SchiUina: M. Schling, Jr. C. Schnee W. H. Schoellkopf, Jr. S. M. Schreiber P. H. Schroeder G. Schwab, Jr. R. C. L. Scott J. K. Secor B. M. Shepard L. G. Shields M. C. Shiffer H. W. Slutskin E. E. Smith L. Sorotsk F. C. Soule W. B. Squire G. R. Starr, Jr. H. M. Stein L. Stein W. M. Stiger VV. W. Stoner L. C. Stork E. A. Sturlev A. M. Suffens E. Sullivan, Jr. H. M. Swift J. G. Thorburn, Jr. R. N. Thorne G. M. Tiffany W. Untermeyer, Jr. W. Upthegrove R. Wadsworth B. L. Ward H. B. Webb W. O. Webb L. Weiner S. Weintraub, Jr. W. A. Wells I. R. Wershow T. R. Weymouth W. M. Wherrw 3rd P. D. Whitnev C;. D. Williams H. Wilson P. L. Woodlock R. S. Wright K. Young, Jr. 135 Davenport College To say, as one is tempted to say, that from the roiled tumuh of University life Davenport College has stood aloof, would be to convey an impression unfortunately open to misconstruc- tion. It would be far from the truth even to inti- mate that these Georgian walls shelter anything remotely resembling snobbery or a spirit of non- cooperation. There is a germ of truth in the state- ment, nevertheless, which should not be ignored. We may take as a symbol, the sudden sense ot relief and relaxation which overtakes the wearied scholar as he turns off from the high school beflecked sidealks of York Street and passes into the ' green and pleasant land which is the larger of the two College courts. Here he finds something restful and unhurried which quite delightfully slows down the tempo of ex- istence to a relative lack of intensity. The whole outlook of Davenport is a startling proof of the purely mythical nature of the picture of College life conjured up by the cynics and campus funny- men two long years ago. Here there is no viciously artificial jingoism in the die for our dear college vein. Here is no microcosm! c replica of Yale, duplicating on a smaller and less satisfactory scale the advantages already present amply enough in the University itself Davenport has become an institution designed to increase the simple pleasure of living, — living as you choose in an atmosphere based as nearly as possible upon social inclination, a factor in- creasingly important and rare in modern Yale. The tendency is to a quiet reserve, sincere and unaffected. This in no way interferes with the spirit of friendliness and tolerance which is quite definitely to be felt in every College activity. The concerts and the talks, arranged with a discrim- inating care by Mr. Tuttle, are important parts ol the life, none the less so because they are in- formal, unforced, and satisfyingly pleasant. Davenport is building for the future. It would be absurd to think that the course of two years could determine inevitably and forever the character of a College, its foibles, its whims, its own particular charm. The grafting of borrowed feathers from other lands and other places upon the way of life here has been avoided. Whatever else time may make of Davenport, the product will not be artificial. One suspects that, in the long run, a tradition and a spirit will be formed in a natiu ' al process by the generations of Yale men who are destined to dwell within its walls, and by the dignified influence of its Master and Fellows, which will be strictly true to the virtues of the old Yale and not too impetuously eager for the passing phases of the new. Certain scenes necessarily stand out among the many which lighten one ' s thoughts of a year in Davenport. The velvet whiteness of the snow on a winter ' s evening or the gay colors of the Mas- ter ' s garden in the late Spring are but instances of the fact that there are many compensations for the general unpleasantness of New Haven weather. One is very likely to remember the picture of the gallant-but not overly successful College football team being run through signals by Mr. Tuttle on a particularly raw autumn afternoon or the pleasures of the first Thursday tea in the Common Room with Mrs. Tuttle serving. Athletically, Davenport might well be said to have adopted the motto, so controversial- ly set forth by a former University football cap- tain, a member of the college, We play for the fun of it. This attitude will probably create none of the stir which accompanied its original utterance, but it is to be hoped that at least it will tbre er Ibrm a formidable bulwark against the go-getter spirit which is its only substitute. Thom.as Rodd, 3rd 137 Davenport College HENRY EMERSON TUTTLE, MASTER Curator of Prints in the L ni versity. HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Richard Mervin Bissell, Jr. Research Assistant in Economics. Joseph Francis Jackson Assistant Professor of French. Champion Herbert Mathewson Professor of MetaUurgy and Metallograph Bayes M. ' rsh.- ll Norton Instructor in Chemistry. David Edward Owen Assistant Professor of History. George Wilson Pierson Instructor in History. Frederick Albert Pottle Professor of English. Theodore Sizer Professor of the History of Art. Joseph Morgan Stokes Instructor in English. Chauncey Brewster Tinker Sterling Professor of English Literature. fellow of silliman college tempor. rily t.j ched to d. ' WEnport college Leonard Woods Lab.- ree Assistant Professor of History. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Dean Gooderh.am Acheson B.A. 1915 Malcolm Pratt Aldrich B.A. 1922. Allison Vincent Armour Ludlow Seguine Bull Lecturer in Egyptology. Starling Winston Childs Norman Vaux Don.- ldson B.A. 1915. Thomas Wells Farn.- lM Associate Treasurer and Comptroller of the University. Edward Beld en Greene Fellow of the Yale Corporation. Deane Keller Assistant Professor of Drawing and Painting. B. ncel La F. rge B.F.A. 1917. Reverend Sidney Lovett Chaplain of the University. Archibald MacLeish B.A. 191 5. Bruce Simonds Associate Professor of the History of Music. Malcolm Rutherford Thorpe Research Associate in Vertebrate Paleontology. Frederick Holme Wiggin B.A. 1904. Thornton Niven Wilder B.A. 1920. Student Members, 1934-1935 J, S. Abell M. Ackerman A. D. Allen, Jr. J. DeK. Alsop S.J. O. Alsop R. J. M. Altizer C. Altschvil J. L. Atherton J. Badman C Belknap, 2nd F. W. Bellamv, Jr. R. W. Berliner R. W. Billman P. Borie O. B. Bradley, Jr. W. B. Braman F. H. Brooke, Jr. C. B. D. Brown D. R. C. Brown, Jr. W. B. Brown D. Bruce, Jr. H. Buckman, Jr. W. M. Bull S. V. R. Cammann M. B. Canning F. Carter, 3rd R. M. Cass A. B. Chace, 3rd C. F. Chandler C. Chisholm D. S. Clark W. H. Clark A. W. Cocroft S. C. Collier J. Collins J. R. Cooney T. G. Crapster, Jr. W. P. Curtiss, Jr. A. T. Daignault J. S. Dalrymple, Jr. D. W. Dangler R. E. Danielson, Jr. P. V. I. Darling J. Davis F. J. Degnan E. A. Dingee A. B. Diss B. Dominick, 2nd P. H. Dominick E. S. Downs, Jr. W. M. Drew E. J. Dr er, Jr. H. D. Dulmage R. D. Duncan C. L. Duval F. G. Dyas, Jr. J. F. Edwards M. A. Eisner F. M. Ewing, Jr. G. R. M. Ewing, Jr. G. B. Farnam F. J. Fazzano M. Fearey R. O. Ferris A. S. Field, Jr. R. D. Foothorap F. Forester, Jr. A. S. Gagarin C. T. Goepel .A. Goldenthal A. E. Gramse H. B. Green W. E. Greene, Jr. P. B. Grosscup, Ji . B. Grosvenor, 2nd E. V. Gulick J. A. Hall R. H. Hamilton J. G. Hanes, Jr. M. R. Harka ' v W. B. Harris W. B. Hart E. W. Harvev W. V. A. Hauser R. M. Heavenrich E. F. Hills E. B. Hincks A. S. Hoev B. HoUister, Jr. W. J. Holloran R. A. Houde B. Howe H. Huffman J. J. Ivors D. Jenckes O. O. Jensen F. V. B. Jov E. C. Kerr, ' Jr. W. S. Kilborne E. V. King G. O. Kitapp, 2nd J. M. Knapp VV. R. Knowhon L. J. Kohn A. E. Laidlaw W. O. LaMotte, Jr. W. V. D. Lesley H. A. Lockwood, Jr. A. J. Lceb J. H. London D. W. Mabee, 2nd K. H. MacDuffie F. B. MacLaren, Jr. C. Marsh P. Marshall R. Marvel C. Marvin, Jr. D. A. Metz J. D. Mever J. E. Miller R. MiUiken A. H. Minor E. C. Mitchell R. D. Morgan S. L. Morton, Jr. G. A. Murray R. Nesbit, 3rd L G. Neuhof J. W. Nields A. E. Oelschlaeger, Jr. T.J. O ' Sullivan J. H. Overall, Jr. J. H. Parker, Jr. K.B.Parker ' J. L. Peck, Jr. E. P. Pillsburv J. S. Pillsburv, Jr. W. C. Potter ' D. B. Pratt J. H. Preston S. D. Preston, Jr. E. E. Purcell F. Quarrier E. A. Ravmoncl J. H. Redfield. Jr. W. L. M. Reese N. R. Reyburn J. H. Rhodes ' ]. B. Roberts R. R. Robv P. C. Roche T. Rodd, 3rd A. L Root J. H. Rossbach R. M. Rossba ch J. B. Satterthwaite H. Scherr, Jr. W. H. Scott C. E. Selover, Jr. D. A. Shapiro R. B. Shepard, Jr. W. H. Slav, Jr. R. E. Small E. W. Smith S. F. Smith R. H. Spock J. G. Standart, Jr. M. W. Stroud, 3rd C. B. Swope J. G. Talcott, Jr. W. C. Teagle, Jr. R. B. Tennant D. G. Tennev, Jr. W. B. Terry ' R. E. S. Thompson J. S. Tilney B. C. Tufts C. Tyler, 2nd D. K. Usher A. C. Valentine J. N. Vanderbilt A. O. Victor E. D. Wadsworth C. B. Walbridge R. K. Wallace W. C. Wallstein G. B. Walton W. L. Warren S. F. Weaver, Jr. J. B. Weiss T. M. Wells R. Wesson R. M. Wheeler J. H. White ■p. K. Wickham K. D. Wightmaii E. M. Williams, Jr. S. A. WiUis D. E. Winebrenner, 3rd M. Winer T. D. Woolsev 139 iMglf-- I 1 Jonathan Edwards College STANDING on the site olold Kent Clhemis- try Laboratory and Sloane Physics Labora- tory, Jonathan Edwards includes Dickinson and Wheelock Halls in the present quadrangle. These were named in honor of John Dickinson. Yale 1 706, the first president of Princeton, and Eleazer Wheelock, Yale 1733, the founder and first president of Dartmouth. The college has now achieved a nice balance of things intellect- ual, social, and athletic. Those who have been nurtured within its walls, their memories im- pressed with the picturesque images of The Noble Savage in the court and The Spider ' on the library window pane, are thankful that in its earlier days it was not deemed necessary to manufacture traditions: it is not a one-sided college. Jonathan Edwards has each year had the dis- tinction oi being the first to observe the anni- versary of its namesake, who was born on Octo- ber 3. This birthday party formally opens the social life of the college, which is perhaps its inost charming feature. Every Sunday after- noon, and at odd times during the week, the Master ' s house becomes a rendezvous for Fel- lows and students alike. Typical of what might be called this family spirit was the Christmas party given on the Thursday before vacation began. The faculty members, their wives and children gathered together with the students in the dining hall, decorated with a Christmas tree and lighted only by candles, there to dine together and blend their voices in the old- fashioned custom of singing carols. Members of the college were given an oppor- tunity to meet prominent visitors either at tea in the Master ' s house or at dinner in the Senior Common Room. The Academic Guest Suite was kept almost constantly in use this year. Its occupants included Visiting Professor Max Foerster of Munich, internationally known linguist; the Reverend Henry Sloane Coffin, President of the Union Theological Seminary; Dhan Gopal Mukerji, Hindu man of letters; Professor Roger B. Merriman, Master of Eliot House and Professor of History at Harvard; and Professor Kenneth Murdock, Master of Leverett House and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard. The college has been active along social-intel- lectual lines. Every Tuesday evening was the oc- casion of a Kaffee Klatsche, at which the mention of any word other than German cost the violator a certain embarrassment in the form of a pecuniar) ' levy. Similar in a way to this were the Political Club meetings on Wednesday nights, the members being addressed by a professor or some figure of political prominence. Out of this latter group as a nucleus was formed on December 3 an organization of great poten- tialities for the politically minded student — the Yale Political Union. Professor French and two fellows, John Chester Adams and A. Whitney Griswold, are faculty advisors of this courageous new development. Interest in intercollege athletics was keen, and Jonathan Edwards had the highest percentage of men who turned out for this form of exercise and recreation. The baseball team smothered all its college opponents last spring to win the championship. This was in a large measure due to the efforts of John Broaca, who coached the nine, and Charles Dillingham, the stellar pitcher. Nor was this the only title acquired, as fencing also found enough superior swordsmen here to dominate that sport. The crew came close to winning, but was 011 trowed by Vander- bilt in the final race at Derbv. We are proud of our college. We are proud of its Master, whose active duties were assumed by Roswell G. Ham while Professor French was commuting last fall between New Haven and Boston in order to give the lectures on the Low- ell Foundation, which was established in 1836. Qtiiet, dignified, intellectual and reserved, Jona- than Edwards College has this year fully justi- fied the perspicacity of those who named it. Living up to the times, it has maintained twentieth century standards and ideals as the great Puritan did those of the eighteenth. The Indians were impressed. So were the trus- tees of the young College of New Jersey, for in 1757 he became the third president of Prince- ton. In 1935 Yale has been similarly impressed. Robert H. Ch. rles 141 Jonathan Edwards College ROBERT DUDLEY FRENCH, MASTER Professor of English. HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS John Chester Adams Director of Undergraduate Literary Acti ities. Edward Wight Bakke Assistant Professor of Sociology. Robert Chapman Bates Instructor in French. Lewis Perry Curtis Paskus Fellow, and Instructor in History, the Arts, and Letters. Joseph Toy Curtiss Assistant Professor of English. Erwin Ramsdell Goodenough Professor of the History of Religion. Alfred Vhitney Griswold Instructor in History. Roswell Gray Ham Associate Professor of English. Egbert J. Miles Associate Professor of Mathematics. Holkins Dillingham Palmer Instructor in Architectviral Design. Henry Thompson Rowell Instructor in Classics. Blair Saxton Associate Professor of Chemistry. Rudolph Willard Assistant Professor of English. ASSOCIATE FELLOW ' S Rev. Henry Slo. ' ne Coffin President of Union Theological Seminary. Albert Beecher Crawford Director of the Department of Personnel Study. Joannes Gregoruis Dusser de B. renne Sterling Professor of Physiology. Max Forester Visiting Professor of English. Edgar Stevenson Furniss Dean of the Graduate School. Arthur Lehman Goodhart B.A. 1912. Austin Morris Harmon Lampson Professor of Greek. Carl Albert Lohmann Secretary of the University. Richard Swann Lull Sterling Professor of Paleontology, and Direc- tor of Peabody Museum. Edward Bliss Reed Lecturer on Music. Percy Talbot Walden Dean of Freshmen. Karl Young Professor of EnLrlish. 142 Student Members, 1934-1935 D. Arthur. Jr. R. A. Donaldson, 4th B. L. Johnson, Jr. D. R. Scholes W. R. Atherton G. A. Dudley D. S. Johnson J. L. .Schumann H. A. Austin, Jr. E. H. Dupee, Jr. H. E. Johnson H. Scoyille, Jr. W. C. L. Barker R. S. Dwight, Jr. G. P. Judd, 4th J. Shallcross R. J. Barr, Jr. F. W. Fairman, Jr. A. L. Keistr. Jr. B. Sherwood S. Bauer W. Farnham H.J. Kettell.Jr. B. T. Simmons, Jr. C. B. Bavlvjr. M. Farrel E. .S. Knishkowy C. M. Smith R. M. Beder E. J. Fasold W. M. Krementz, Jr. M. L. Sperry, 2nd R. Beresford J. Flett,Jr. G. A. Kubler, 3rd C. S. Stahlnecker L. E. Bierini er W.J. Ford, Jr. M. Ladd S. M. Stanley N. W. Blomfield E. P. Foster W. H. Laniprecht, Jr. F. M. Stark M. Blum H. M. Fuller VV. Lee G. R. Steinberg W. A. Borst R. W. Gilpatric R. B. Lincoln G. R. Steiner ' E. R. Boslev, Jr. L. VV. Goodkind W. F. Lineberger, Jr. B. W. Stiles N. I. Botwinik B. Goodyear, Jr. J. F. Lord J. E. Stonington H. V. Bouscaren J. Goodyear L. F. Loutrel, Jr. G. M. Street E. M. Brainard H. H. Gorson R. H. Lynch J. P. Sturges S. R. Brinklev, Jr. E. C. Granbery, Jr. J. G. McCuUough, 2nd R. C. Sullivan W. W. F. Brinley R. M. Greenlee E. E. McMeen W. H. Taft, 2nd D. S. Brinsmade G. C. Greenway, 3rd J. W. Mailliard, 3rd B. L Taylor, Jr. A. P. Brooks F. P. Haas R. C. Miles R. H. Temple H. Brooks F. B. Haddad S. B. Miles J. H. Thoerner, Jr. E. B. Brown G. E. Hale, 2nd J. .S. Miller G. D. Thorpe H. K. Brown, Jr. W. R. Hale L. Mitchell, Jr. F. B. Wadelton, Jr. A. C. Brumley T. W. Hall, Jr. E. H. Morrison C. L Warren, Jr. M. R. Binnp T. E. Hambleton H. A. Mumma, jr. J. Warren H. M. Campbell R. (;. Harlshorne, Jr. C. C. Murdoch b. V. Webb W. P. Campbell A. Heckscher, 2nd D. H. Northrup L. M. Webb, Jr. B. C. Cannon R. W. Hedges G. P. O ' Neil G. A. Weiler W. T. Carter, 3rd G. G. Henry C. W. Ordman E. A. Wendling R. D. Case J. A. Hetherington, 2nd A. W. Pearce E. C. R. Wliitcrafi J. M. Cates, Jr. W. Hirsh A. W. Peck F. P. Whitcraft, 3rd R. H. Charles P. C. Hitt B. S. Peck F. R. White, Jr. E. J. Clapp, Jr. H. G. Holcombe, Jr. R. S. Penn A. N. Williams R. E. Clark, Jr. J. H. Holmes, Jr. ' W. R. Pitkin, Jr. S. P. Williams, 3rd M. L. Cohn S. T. Hotchkiss H. R. Potter E. D. Wilson W. K. Colby W. P. House R. A. Preston H. W. Wind H. B. Combs C. A. Hov ard, Jr. l. S. Rabinowitz R. C. Winfield P. C. Condit M. D. Hoyt X. Richmond A. Winslow, 2nd R. B. Cooke W. E. Hughes ]. W. Ricketts A. Woodruff J. A. Crowley R. C. Huston S. D. Ripley, 2nd G. E. Woodruff H. W. Davis, ' 2nd L. H. Hyde J. T. Robinson. Jr. F. J. Woods G. S. de Mare H. S. Irons, Jr. G. E. Robson, Jr. C. S. Woolsey J. W. Deichler E. S. Jackson C. C. Rodgers J. H. Worrall C. Dillingham R. W. Jaryis,Jr. K. W. Rogers T. M. Zimmerman J. B. Dirlam M. P. Jennings A. L Sanson. 3rd 143 Pierson College SUPERFICIALLY speaking, the most un- fortunate aspect of the College System at Yale, so far as it is possible to generalize on varying and evolving material, lies in its self- consciousness. We may appear a little over anxious. The defunct Hoot found occasion during the past year to make characteristically gloomy comment on over-organization ' in Pierson. But to dwellers within the walls the criticism was too trivial even for breakfast conversation. It was evident ev ' en last year that committees might be formed, a Munchener club might be organized, but that the formation of organization had little relation to function. There is in exist- ence today a College Committee on Sundry Matters, but it has never met. The Falstafl Literary Club has become the rendezvous of the Undergraduate Mathematics Club. Machinery has indeed been set up in the College, but it still awaits its use. The old slogan of Activity for Activity ' s sake has no force outside the of- ficially limited Campus. Pierson College has demonstrated that there is room for a paradox in an all too straight-faced academic environ- ment. If a word must be found to characterize Pierson, the interested enquirer might well stop at paradox. What other term can describe the namesake of the i8th century Puritan hous- ing as it does the University Faculty ' s Young Radicals? Not only does the hoariest of the University ' s traditional figures protect as patron the youngest of all the groups of Fellows, but he sponsored in spirit the first dance to be given in any of the Colleges. No one as yet has men- tioned that the dance in question was held in a Dining Hall modeled on a Virginia Church; yet to all purposes and intents Abram Pierson enjoys his new home far more than that corner of the Old Campus hallowed by ' ' Hanc Statuam. ' Future biographers of our patron should look carefully for this hitherto unsuspected Gilbertian quirk of character. The Editors of the Record for September 26, 1934 must have felt such a touch of paradox when they described, in a barbed sentence, the Pierson boys as people of unmistakable respectability . . . highly esteemed where they are not well known. Yet the following descrip- tion patently has no mea ning: Here the num- bers on the doors indicate when one ' s great- great came to America. None admitted without spade shoes and a vent to his coat. As a Pierson man and a New Englander I resent the implica- tion that I am of Portuguese or Spanish descent: that is carrying the spirit of parado.x a little too far. Moreover I pride myself on my quaintly out-moded and conservative manner of dress in harmony with my intellectual and emotional tastes. Yet if a swarthy son of Oporto should sit down beside me at lunch I should not be more surprised than pleased; and there are certainly as many spade shoes as my own variety treading their way to the Dining Hall this very minute. There may be some who deplore the slow progress of intellectual advance in the Colleges. The criticism is again paradoxical. Until finan- cial provision is made, the efforts of resident Fellows as tutors must be practically non-exis- tent. Moreover, as in all matters pertaining to these new institutions, advances must be slow and natural. The intellectual climate at Yale is becoming more temperate with everv ' term; an opportunitv for solid, worthwhile contribution to scholarship in Pierson must be looked for in the near future. But not as yet. Under the genial, polished Balliolian phil- osophy of Master Valentine, Pierson has flour- ished. The charming understanding of true civilization on the part of Mrs. Valentine has been responsible not only for entertainment in the Master ' s House, but for the introduction of large, wooden salad bowls, functional salad bowls, into the Dining Hall. The question arises inevitably, Are Balliol influences at work in Pierson? Are there Gallic plots afoot? The writer finds Pierson delightfully and sanely American. He will never forget the evening when, upon entering the Dining Hall for dinner, he discovered the Secretary of the University, feet firmly on a chair, leading the entire College in a spirited rendition of Aura Lee. He hopes he will remember Pierson College always in those terms. -. c t CH.A.RLES Sey.mour, Jr. ' 45 Pierson College ALAN VALENTINE, MASTER Chairman of the Board oi Ad- missions, and Professor of His- tory, the Arts, and Letters HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Irston Robert Barnes Assistant Professor of PoHtical Economy. Arthur Eugene BESTOR,Jr. Instructor in History. R1CH.A.RD Foster Flint Assistant Professor of Geology. J.AMES Graham Leyburn Assistant Professor of the Science of Society. Kenneth MacLean Instructor in English. Arthur Moore Mizener Instructor in English. Andrew Richmond Morehouse Assistant Professor of French. Arnold Wolfers. Visiting Benjamin Christie Nangle Assistant Professor of English. Stanley McCrory Pargellis Assistant Professor of History. James Harvey Rogers Sterling Professor of Political Economy. Harry Rudolph Rudin Assistant Professor of History. William Merritt S.ale, Jr. Instructor in English. William Weldon Watson Associate Professor of Physics. Charles Bradford Welles Assistant Professor of Classics. Professor oi International Relations. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Frank Altschul B.A. 1908. Robert Nelson Corwin Professor of German and chairman of the Board of Admissions Emeritus. George Parmly Day Treasurer of the University Robert Frost Litt.D. 1924. John F.arquh. ' Vr Fulton Sterling Professor of Physiology. W.ALTON H.ale Hamilton Southmayd Professor of Law. Philip Hofer A.B. Harvard University, 1921. Assistant Director of the Pierpont Morgan Library. Robert James Menner Associate Professor of English. Fred Towsley Murphy Fellow of the Yale Corporation. Garrison Norton A.B. Harvard Uni ersity 1923. Wall, ce Notestein .Sterling Professor of English History Reeve Schley Fellow of the Yale Corporation. George Edgar Vincent B.A. 1855, LL.D. 191 1. Herbert Eustis Winlock Litt.D. 1933. 146 Student Members, 1934- 1935 W. E. Allaun, Jr. V. H. Anderson W. A. Atlee P. S. Babb D. B. Bads?er R. B. Baker H. N. Barkhausen N. L. Barnes, Jr. N. P. Beall, Jr. C. Beard M. C. Beardsley S. B. Beardslev, Jr. K. H. Behr. Jr. P. H. Behr R. C. Berman J. A. Bevan R. B. Birge J. C. Bissell C. J. Blair R. S. Blanchard V. K. Block D. B. Bloom J. A. Blum R. O. Bovard E. F. Boyd, Jr. R. V. Bradlev R. N. Bromley W. W. Bronson, 2nd L. C. Brownell M. G. Bulkelev, 3rd C. C. Bunker ' H. D. Burrall A. M. Byers R. S. Carey J. M. Carney, Jr. G. C. Carpenter T. T. Chamberlain P. S. Chambers M. M. Chatfield R. V. Cheesewright T. Cheney C. M. Chester, 3rd F. H. Chute S. M. Clement, 2nd R. F. Cobb B. F. Coleman A. C. Coudert E. V. Cox, Jr. J.J. Daly E. C. Daoust, Jr. H. C. Dawson F. L. Day, Jr. J. K. Deasv D. T. Dellinger J. F. Devine K. P. Dillon C. E. Edgerton H. .S. Elf, Jr. J. I. Ely B. M. England, and R. B. English, Jr. J. L. Fenton R. C. Fletcher C. D. Francis, Jr. J. Franklin S. A. Galpin F. P. Garvan, Jr. R. E. Gnade R. D. Golden E. R. Goodwin G. V. Gordon C. F. Greene G. J. Grumbach G. T. Hall P. N. Hall D. Hamlin L. E. Harriman B. L. Hatch J. R. Henry, Jr. R. M. Henrv A. B. Herrick T. M. Hinkle G. H. Hogle J. S. Holme J. R. Howell R. O. Hunt P. E. Jacob D. R. Johnson J. H. Johnson G. G. Jordan J. V. Jordan V. T. Kelsev J. R. Kendall F. Kennedy, Jr. V. F. Keyser A. F. Kitchel, Jr. G. S. Knapp F. M. Knoblauch K. D. Kornreigh P. B. Langmiiir . J. Larkin, 2nd E. L. Lasell R. B. Latimer O. r. Lawler S. A. Leabv D. C. Lee ' L M. Levine L. W. T. Lincoln V. N. Lovell H. V. McBride T. A. McCann H. C. McClintock, Jr H. L. McClintock F. R. McCreerv, Jr. H, G. ALacdonald, Jr. J. E. MacDonald A. B. McGregor K, Mclnerney H. T. McKnight P. D. NLacLean J. B. Madigan E. V. Mansfield R. A. Mattern R. D. L tthews E. D. Mavcrs T. V. Merrill VV. E. Merriss, 2nd P. C. Mertz J. V. Mettler, Jr. J. S. Miller L F. MiUikan R. A. Moore J. C. Murray, Jr. W. S. Murray, Jr. V. Mvers. Jr. C. G. Neaf J. H. Nichols P. Norton C. S. Oldach R. T. Parker, Jr. J. V. N. Peck V. L. Pforzheimer E. C. Pier F. H. Piatt, 2nd C. D. Preston S. G. Putt H. Putzel, Jr. L. C. Quimbv .S. F. Reed, Jr. V. Reid A. S. Roberts D. B. Roljinson F. D. Rogers R. A. Rosenbaum V. W. Rostow A.J. Rvan R. M Rvder S. St. John J. P. Scully C. Sevmoin , Jr. F. C. Shattuck P. H. Sher L. J. Sichel S. D. Slade H. E. Sloan, Jr. B. Smith G. C. Smith R. B. Snow J. P. Snyder, Jr. V. H. Spencer L. Spitzer. Jr. G. S. Stillman W. E. Stockhausen D. G. Stoddard C. S. Strauss J. Strauss C. V. Sweet B. H. Swenarton D. E. Swift W. E. Swift, Jr. R. D. Taggart H. P. B. terry R. VV. Thomas R. B. Thompson E. Thorne, 2nd S. N. Towle, Jr. F. B. Town R. J. Tracv J. C. Vance H. B. VanderPoel W. S. Walcott, 3rd W. G. Walker G. A. Wallace W. P. Ware C. R. Warren J. W. Warrington V. VVhite, Jr. L. VVillard, Jr. F. L. Wilson J. L. Wilson L. A. S. Wilson H. R. Wolcott T. Wright, Jr. H. J. Wynkoop, Jr. G. K. Young R. Zellner 147 Saybrook College AT a skit presented in November of this year by Saybrook men, Mother Yale introduced her seven hopefuls, the Colleges, to President Angell after a dinner in his honor. Saybrook ap- peared as a Boy Scout, thereby scoring herself for the much-spoken-of complex of over-regi- mentation, a malady most incident to the Col- lege Plan. This point is such a sore one that it was to Saybrook ' s credit that her criticism began at home, even though she has handled her regimentations or rules (no game is without them) with peculiar deftness. She has come off gracefully not because her committees have never met, as is noted of Pierson, but because her committees have met in a voluntary spirit and without illusions of grandeur. These principles, if unwritten, have been re- spected. The Music Committee suggested to a Glee Club member that he organize the Say- brook Gleemen; before long a double quartet appeared in the dining room that unquestion- ably enjoyed singing as much as the rest of the College enjoyed listening. The Dance Com- mittee with no undue effort presented us with several dances which, if not epochal, were suc- cessful and so far as I have heard interrupted the tenor of no one ' s existence. Out of the blue, notices appeared to the effect that voluntary courses ranging from Dante through Books of the Sea to the Origins of English Law were being offered by the Fellows of the Col- lege. Enrollment was a matter of applying in person to the instructor and consequently no- body fell into these weekly seminars by accident. Their titles augured their value. The half dozen meetings of each have been taking place in the evening in the Fellows rooms, and are free ol the drawbacks of regular lectures. The instruc- tor treats the subject he is most interested in, and is not obliged to talk down to his audience because he can talk with them- now that dis- cussion, an unduly neglected boon of education, has been made possible. Taking one of these courses is a imique pleasure, but more than that a chance to become acquainted with the Fel- low. Finally, the Library which is, if I may be excused a little jingoism, the best of all the Col- leges, seldom disappoints in supplying a needed book, often offering titles to be sought for in vain in Linonia or the Reserve Book Room. The whys and wherefores of its excellence are known only to Professor Smith and his Librari- ans. .Saybrook athletics have fared as well as in any college. Crew is still a problem, but the other sports are in good shape in the hands of a worthy company of quiet enthtisiasts, and, what ' s more, an interested public. From opinions thrown off at random I gather that the Fellows are no less delighted by Say- brook ' s offerings than the undergraduates. Most of them have long desired to know more students better than was possible before the birth of the Colleges and the consequent oppor- tunities of the small courses and the dining room. Professors, at heart, have something of the in- stincts of Mr. Perrin and Mr. Chips and some in the past have obeyed the call of schoolmastering. For the first time criticism is not bashful in their presence. On their part they have become integral auxiliaries in extra-curricular offairs. The Colleges, in brief, bid fair to become the outward expression of a deeper intellectual life. Yale is beginning to understand how much it was missing now that good talk has come into its own. My one prophecy is that if The Say- brook Seal tries its public again as full of good printed talk as it was last year, it will not be mortified by disregard. I hope a note to antiquaries, in reference to the College ' s name, will not be out of place after the actual conclusion. Anyone interested in pay- ing a visit to the village of Saybrook at the mouth of the Connecticut River will enjoy it. The site of Yale ' s first establishment and the nearby grave of Lady Fenwick have become far-off things as traditionally as Elihu Yale ' s church at Wrexham. , „ „ DwiGHr h. Robinson, Jr. [49 Saybrook College ELLIOTT DUNLAP SMITH, MASTER Professor of Industrial Rela- tions. HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Alfred Raymond Bellinger Associate Professor of Greek and Latin. Harold Glenn Dietrich Assistant Professor of Chemistry. William Douglas Curator of Glass and Ceramics in the Gallery of Fine Arts. William Huse Dunham, Jr. Assistant Professor of History. Samson Lane FAisoN,Jr. Instructor in the History of Art. John Archer Gee Assistant Professor of Ensrlish. Albert Galloway Keller William Graham Sumner Professor of the Science of Society. Angelo Lipari Associate Professor of Italian. Everett Victor Meeks Dean of the School of Fine Arts. Sydney Knox Mitchell Professor of History. John Collins Pope Assistant Professor of English. Olin Glenn S. ' SiXon Professor of Business Administration. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS John Milton Berdan Emily Sanford Professor of English Literature. Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford Fellow of the Yale Corporation. Arthur Linton Corbin Professor of Law on the William K. Towns- end Foundation. Robert Ernest Doherty Dean of the School of Engineering. W. LTER PrICH. ' iRD E. ' VTON Associate Professor of Playwriting. Morris Hadley, B.A. 191 6. Samuel Clark Harvey Professor of Surgery on the William H. Car- malt Foundation. H.ARRY BeNJ.AMIN JePSON Professor of Applied Music. Leigh Page Professor of Mathematical Physics. J.AMES Gamble Rogers, B.A. 1889. Edwin Cassius Taylor Street Professor of Painting and Design. Student Members, 1934-1935 J. G. Ahlers, jr. W. A. Aiken H. R. Alker H. G. Allen R. C. Allen, Jr. T. B. Anderson, ]r. G. Angell C. S. Arms D. K. Armstrong C. LaP. Audette F. M. Ayres, Jr. B. Babcock J. W. Bailev D. H. Baird G. H. Baldwin, Jr. B. Barnum P. R. Bass J. H. Batten, 3rd P. F. Belcher R. E. Belknap, Jr. C. C. Bennett A. D. Berliss, Jr. J. W. Bird, Jr R. E. Bishop, Jr. W. W. Bittner W. H. Bixby, Jr. W. D. Blatz, Jr. J. E. Bowles J. C. G. Boyce H. P. Brean P. E. Brown A. S. Brunjes H. P. Buckingham M. S. Bull D. M. Burke D. C. Burrows H. P. Burton, Jr. C. J. Campbell R. I. Carlson F. C. Carroll F. C. Gate, Jr. G. M. Chandlee. Jr. M. Church, and W. J. Clarke H. S. Cody, Jr. M. S. Cohen L. E. Cohn M. J. Coles H. S. Cook M. Cooke H. H. Coppersmith A. L. Cornish D. Crawford D. B. Curtiss L. N. Cutler J. A. Davenport W. F. DeFoe W. M. Degnan F. W. Dempsev V. R. Despard ' . Jr. R. E. Dormont R. C. Drake G. S. Ebbert, Jr. J. R. Eggert. jr. R. E. EUis, Jr. F. G. Fabian, Jr. J. A. Farrell G. Fearey T. F. Feldmann J. F. Ferguson, Jr. J. Q. Flint F. F. Ford D. R. Francis T. A. Freiberg A. J. Gagnon E. T. Gardner, Jr. H. A. Gardner, Jr. C:. F. Gieg J. S. Gifford C. Goodwin H. E. Gordon F. C Gratwick, Jr. J. Green R. P. Griffing, Jr. M. B. Hall, jr. C. HamiU E. C. Hammond R. A. Harman F. W. Harmon W. H. Harrington L. B. Harris L. A. Hart H. Havemeyer, Jr. J. F. Healey B. D. Henning R. E. Herman B. G. Hermanson N. R. Higgins T. Hildt, jr. N. L. Hope G. A. Hopkins. Jr. R. G. Hopkins S. D. Hopkins R. F. Hvuninski D. B. Jenks A. M. Johnson E. H. Johnson T. A. D. Jones, Jr. A. E. Kaclue T. C. Kahn M. S. Katz T. Kay P. B. Keach J. S. Kemper. Jr. R. W. Kenner E. H. Kenvon J. D. Kerr L. Kingman F. R. Klauck B. L. Kohlmann N. D. Konheim A. W. Krickl J. A. Kyger A. R. Lamb, Jr. B. K. Lathbury H. P. L. Laussucq, Jr. W. B. Leighton G. J. Letchworth, Jr. J. O. Levinson A. J. Loewenheim R. Edgar Long R. Eli Long R. M. Lubv R. T. Lumb T. D. MacCammond L. E. McFadden A. J. McKenna, Jr. N. M. Mackenzie J. G. McMurtry D. V. McNamee, Jr. A. S. Malsin R. C. Marshall G. C. Meyer, Jr. R. Milbank E. J. Miles, Jr. B. Mills, Jr. J. H. Mitchell A. C. Moore E. H. Morgan J. S. Murtiia A. L. Neal N. L. Neville D. G. Noble D. C. Northrop D. F. O ' Brien F. D. O ' Reilly, Jr. J. B. Packer, jr. ' F. M. Painter, Jr. F. P. Palen E. W. Peck T. D. Perry, Jr. J. E. Pfeiffer J. C:. Ramsey L. D. Randall F. M. Rawolle E. A. Raymond, 2nd D. E. Robinson, Jr. J. T. Robinson [. Rubinger A. M. Rudiger M. Sacks E. L. Sarason Z. E. Scott, Jr. W. D. Shear F. A. Sherk T. H. Shriver R. L. Sieg, Jr. W. D. Sked D. R. Spaidal R. O. Sprague D. V. Sprankle J. W. Squires J. H. Stanger G. S. Stearns F. B. Stilmar R. B. Stone J. E. Straub S. S. Straus G. J. Strieker S. E. Sweet, Jr. VV. H. Symmes, Jr. J. F. Taylor D. M. Tennent S. D. Thacher A. W. Thompson J. M. Tompkins W. K. Townsend J. L Tracey, Jr. E. L. Trist ' VV. A. Tyrrell, Jr. J. Upton, Jr. E. M. Waith M. C. Walker M. Wallman H. C. Walsh B. A. Watson R. L. Watson, Jr. W. Whiting R. R. H. Whitlock R. B. Wight E. A. Wilbur J. B. Williams G. S. Wing, Jr. W. Witman, ind E. J. Wofsev A. J. Wolf, jr. W. T. Woodland H. R. Wridit 151 I i Trumbull College ALTHOUGH the College Plan is still a baby, a degree of self-consciousness and college- spirit is already in development within the indi- vidual units. It has revealed itself not only in the field of athletics, but also in the realm of the intellectual, and gradually emerging from the experimental state, the colleges have proved themselves to be something in which the student may really take interest. He is no longer indiffer- ent to the activities of his college, but watches them closely and wishes to be included in them. In this struggle for individuality, Trumbull is no exception. Led by the critical exhortations of Bob Davidson, a burly porter, in the direction of athletics, and by the untiring efforts of the master, Dr. Bayne-Jones, in the advancement of the intellectual and social, it has progressed rapidly into the ranks of the foremost colleges. If an athlete fails to do his best in an inter-col- lege game or match, he is automatically on Bob ' s black list, but if a team wins an important struggle, the safest way to waste fifteen minutes is to pass within earshot of the enthusiastic porter. In addition to athletics there are many activi- ties within the college in which a student may find diversion. Once or twice a month Dr. Bayne- Jones has prominent men in the east as guests of the college. Their lectures are invariably at- tended by a capacity audience. Concerts and musical recitals add greatly to the entertain- ment available to the students, and their appre- ciation is well demonstrated by the interest they show. The master is very ably assisted by the southern hospitality of Mrs. Bayne-Jones, whose informal teas and dinners have endeared her to all who are acquainted with her. Follow- ing the weekly dinners of the Trumbull fellows in the dining hall, there are get-togethers in the lounge where advice is offered, jokes are told, and at not infrequent intervals, beer enlivens the conversation. While the tutorial system is still a thing of the future, the germ of it may be seen in weekly seminars given by a few of the fellows. Trumbull has the distinction of being the first college unit to publish its own paper. The Trumbullian. Its struggles through the first year of its life, and its consecjuetit success are due mainly to one of the Trumbullites who devoted his time and money to it, thinking only of the prestige that would thereby be added to his college. His efforts were rewarded when, in the second year of its publication, seventy-five per cent of the members of the college subscribed. Recently I became envolved in an extremely- heated argument with a student who has been prejudiced against the College Plan ever since it was an idea, and who insisted that he would send his sons to Princeton. Yet he was unable to give reasons for his arguments. In every college there are a few students who say that the plan has ruined their fraternity life, or that they should be allowed to eat wherever they wished, but the size of this opposition is growing smaller and smaller, which is a definite proof that the system is a benefit to the majority of the students and that they appreciate it for the advantages which it offers. I have seen Trumbull evolve from a few strips of modern Gothic architecture into one of the most attractive colleges on the campus, and the fact that a greater part of the student body enjoys itself more and gets more out of University life, is not to be denied. One of the most gratifying aspects of Trumbull College is the rapidity with which it has de- veloped. In its first year the members were somewhat disheartened by seeing their college jjelow the average in the published list of statis- tics. But the next year Trumbull found itself housing News men, Iron men, scholars, and artists, and college spirit suddenly reached a new high. With the coordination of all the students and the fellows, and with the personali- ty of Dr. Bayne-Jones at the helm, Trumbull rapidly climbed into the ranks of the leading colleges. Along with the other colleges, it has proved itself to be a unit in which each member participates without distinction. The college plan has formed a democracy that was impossi- lale under the old Yale. The range of friendship has increased, more opportunities have opened to the undergraduates in extra-curricular activi- ties, and, what is more important, the self-sup- porting students have been given a much greater chance to earn their way through Yale. Keith S. Brown 153 Trumbull College STANHOPE BAYXE-JONES. MASTER Professor of Bacteriology. i HONORARY FELLOWS President James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Robert R. R. Brooks Instructor in Political Economy. HoLLON Augustine F.- rr Associate Professor of German. Ralph Henry Gabriel Professor of History. Frederick Whiley Hilles Assistant Professor of English. Harry Mortimer Hubbell Talcott Professor of Greek. Henry M. ' Iirgenau Assistant Professor of Physics. John Spangler Nichol. s Associate Professor of Comparative Anatomy on the Bronson Foundation. Filmer S. C. Northrop Professor of Philosophy. Edw. rd Simpson Noyes Associate Dean of the Freshman Year and Associate Professor of English. Edw. ' rd Stevens Robinson Professor of Psychology. Edw. rd Sapir Sterling Professor of Anthropology and Lingu- istics. Joseph Seronde Benjamin F. Barge Professor ol Romance Languages and Literature. RoscoE Henry Suttie Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. John Arrend Timm Assistant Professor of Chemistry. H. lsted Welles Instructor in Plav Production. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Harvey Gushing Sterling Professor of Neurology. Richard Frank Donov. n Assistant Professor of the Theory of Music. S.- muel Herbert Fisher Fellow of the Yale Corporation. Clements Coll. ' rd Fry Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene. John Anson Garver B.A. 1875. Frederick Augustus Godley Associate Professor of Architecture. Andrew Keogh Univ ' ersitv Librarian and Sterling Protessor of Bibliography. William R.- ymond Longley Richard M. Colgate Professor of Mathematics. Chester R. y Longwell Henry Barnard Davis Professor of Geology. Underhill Moore Sterling Professor of Law. All. rdyce Nicoll Professor of the History of the Drama and Dramatic Criticism. George Henry Soule B.A. 1908. Charles-Edward Amorv Wixslow Anna M. R. Lauder Professor of Public Health Milton Charles Winternitz Dean of the School of Medicine and Anthony N. Bradv Professor of PathologN ' . 134 Student Members, 1934 1935 R. H. Abbott D. C. Adams H. S. Adams A. H. Adler, Jr. W. J. Allbrd, 3rd C. B. Allen A. E. Anderson, Jr. J. C. Armstrong L. Aspinwall, Jr. G. R. Atterbury W. A. Avery, Jr. R. Baldwin A. G. Bauer, Jr. J. W. Beardslee, 3rd J. W. Beecher, 2nd J. B. Bingham F. H. Blackmer W. K. Blethen W. L. Bleyer L. E. Blustein R. S. Bosworth, Jr. H. P. BrighlvvelJ, Jr. S. C. Bronson C. W. Brooks O. Brouwer, 3rd A. C. Brown, Jr. F. Brown, Jr. K. S. Brown J. B. Buchman A. E. Cavanagh W. H. Charles J. A. Chikovsky H. J. Chisholm, Jr. E. P. Christner C. Clarkson L. R. Cowles J. A. Crowley, Jr. W. A. Cullman T. F. Curtin, Jr. F. C. Cuthbertson P. B. Daghlian P. G. Darling A. W. Dautrich A. S. Deming E. G. Deming A. S. Denton L. A. Dewell D. C. Dillon, Jr. A. B. Di.xon D. Dodge J. F. Donohue A. J. Draper J. A. Drew J. T. Evan-i M. T. Everhart, Jr. P. M. Fairbanks S. Farnham P. B. Fouke, Jr. J. B. Fidlman D. H. Gaines R. I. Galland C. H. Gates W. H. Gesell, Jr. E. E. Gilbert R. J. Goodrich R. P. Graeber R. C. Graham W. W. Green B. I. Hackel J. C:. Hanrahan F. S. Harris J. Hartlev W. C. Headley F. J. Herrmann J. R. Hersey F. S. Hetherington, Jr T. C. Hewes A. M. Hodgens B. Hollister J. B. Howard J. J. Hughes H. A. Hull R. D. Hunting, Jr. E. M. Ingersoll J. L. Jack, Jr. S. R. Kauffman T. A. Keating. Jr. J. W. Keena L. M. Kellev H. D. Kellogg, Jr. C:. B. Kerr M. C. Kinnev C. F. Kling A. C. LaFrance F. H. Lassiter A. L. Leiner R. W. Lippman C. H. Loomis E. P. Liuiken W. B. McAllister, Jr. A. M. McBurney, Jr. W. L. McGovern J. N. McNaughton A. J. McQiieeney H. R. Mallinson W. T. Maroney M. F. Menton J. B. Miller W. P. Miller B. N. Mochan. Jr. G. L. Monjo W. A. Moore J. C. Morrissey J. Mosenthal H. Moskowitz R. Nahieian G. E. E. ' Nicklos W. S. D. Pattison D. C. Pease G. Peck W. H. Peck, Jr. O. Pelliccia, Jr. W. Perry, Jr. S. S. Persons A. S. Pitt R. R. Piatt C. T. Porter, Jr. T. S. Pro.xmire, Jr. A. M. Rankin B. C. Rankin C. W. Raymond D. Richardson J. H. Rosenwald R. B. Roth V. B. Roulstone. Jr. E. W. Rowan J. E. Rov H. C. Roval, Jr. B. T. Rulev W. G. Sanford D. B. Scoular R. E. Sinton G. T. Sisson J. D. Sloan A. E. Smick H . O. Smith, Jr. J. H. Smith B. J. Sorin R. H. Sperry W. T. Sperry E. Z. Steever, 4th R. L. Steiner H. N. Stevens G. W. Stevenson W. D. Stockard W. G. Succop W. E. Sullivan C. Sumner, Jr. R. G. Sweeney A. W. Sweeton, 3rd E. A. Tarlton J. Taylor R. C. Taylor W. W. Taylor, Jr. A. B. Timm, Jr. E. P. Tomlinson S. J. C. Townsend R. Train A. L. Trull J. W. Van Evera W. T. Van Huysen D. G. Voorhees W. P. Vordenberg L. F. Wallace R. B. Warner L. A. Weigle, Jr. H. J. Wright, Jr. J. W. Young, Jr. N. Zucker 155 I I ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION UNIVERSITY FRESHMAN and COLLEGE TEAM S University Athletics By Malcolm Farmer THE college year of 1934- 1935 in athletics, has been attended with an increasing niun- ber of administrative problems, brought about principally by curtailed financial resources due to reduction in athletic revenue. It has been possi- ble however, through drastic reductions in oper- ating expenses to continue activities in all branches of sport, with the exception of some teams in Junior Varsity competition. This year at very slight expense, a University Rifle Team has been added, bringing the total to teams in nineteen activities. The morale of our squads and fine spirit of our teams has been outstanding, and whether in victory or defeat, our Captains and their team- mates have been a credit to Yale. We are proud to have them wear the University ' s colors in action. The records of our teams for the past twelve months, in competition, indicates that Yale has had its fair share of success. Varsity: With Harvard, Yale won in crew, hockey, football, fencing, golf, lacrosse, soccer and swimming. Harvard won in boxing, cross country, indoor polo, outdoor polo, squash, tennis, track and wrestling. Baseball and basket- ball resulted in a tie. With Princeton, Yale won in baseball, crew, cross country, football, golf, hockev, indoor polo, outdoor polo, swimming, track and wrest- ling. Princeton won in basketball, fencing, lacrosse, tennis. Squash and soccer resulted in a tie. In all Varsity contests Yale won i qi — lost 68 — lied 3. Junior Varsity: With Harvard, Yale won in hockey, lacrosse, crew. Harvard won in base- Ijall, football and soccer. With Princeton, Yale won in football and in- door polo. Princeton won in crew and soccer. In all Junior Varsity contests Yale won 16 — lost 1 5 — tied I . Freshman: W ' ith Harvard, Yale won in basket- ball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, lacrosse, squash, soccer, swimming, tennis, track. Harvard won in baseball, boxing, hockey, wrestling. In all Freshman contests Yale won 79 — lost 38— tied 2. Progress was made during the year in the mat- ter of more efficient administration of the aflTairs of the Athletic Association. Commendation should be given to those whose duties have been increased because of cintailment in the staff per- sonnel, and to the tmdergraduate managers and assistant managers for their intelligent handling of the intricate problems in connection with their duties. The managers and their assistants ha -e is8 il played no small part in the affairs of the Associa- tion, and throughout the year these men on whose shoulders was carried considerable execu- tive detail, have handled the important work with interest and earnestness of purpose. An important addition was made to the Ath- letic organization early in 1934. Major Frank A. Wandle, a trainer of wide experience, joined the staff as conditioner of all athletic teams. This position requires his full attention from early Autumn until the end of the college year, and under his care the training and conditioning oi the various squads has been most effectively ac- complished. Just prior to the close of the basketball season, Elmer H. Ripley who for seven years has been with Yale, resigned his position. Mr. Ripley has been in charge of the coaching of basketball, and in the year preceding the advent of the College Plan, had been the coach of class football teams, as well as coach of Junior Varsity baseball, imtil these teams were discontinued. We extend to Mr. Ripley our sincere best wishes for success in whatever field he may enter. We have been fortunate in having Lt. William V. Davidson, U.S.M.C., Assistant Professor Naval Science and Tactics, on the staff of the R.O.T.C. Naval Unit. Lt. Davidson has given generously of his time in organizing and instruct- ing the Yale University Rifle Team. In the first year of its existence, this team has won twelve, and lost four of its matches. Target shooting re- quires a high degree of concentration and steady nerves. It is gratifying to see so many undergrad- uates interested and benefiting by this training. John .Skillman, than whom none are better in squash racquets, came to us in October. Under his tutelage our squash teams are aiming high for next year. Lt. Edward L. Strohbehn, Assistant Professor Military Science and Tactics detailed by the War Department of duty with the Army R.O.T. C. has taken up the reins of polo, both indoor and outdoor. He has developed and trained good THE FINISH OF THE ARSITY BO. T R. CE Vale wins by 2 4-5 lengths over Harvard at New London. June 22. 1934 159 teams, as well as being a proficient horseman himself. We have had a fine year under his coaching. The football coaching staff, headed by Ray- mond W. Pond, Yale ' 25, assisted by three men new to Yale, Earle Neale, D. E. Myers and Ivan Williamson, in charge of Varsity football; and Stewart P. Scott, Century Milstead and Walter Levering, in charge of Junior Varsity football, gave such a good account of themselves, as to scoreboard results, that any additions would be futile. The scoreboard however, does not tell the whole story, and the results of our football season even without the outstanding victories on the field, would have been a marked success. For many years we have not seen such morale in the squad, or such devotion to the task in hand, as was displayed by all concerned. The beneficial effect is being demonstrated in all branches of our athletic program. The swimming team continued its conquering course, and established new records under Bob Kiphuth ' s distinguished guidance. The Crew and Ed. Leader are again on top. The hockey team distinguished themselves by winning from both Harvard and Princeton, and by capturing the Eastern Luercollegiate crown. Coach Holcomb York lost his usual number of pounds during the season, which was an exciting one. Backed up by a fine team of hard workers who never let up, the season was highly suc- cessful. Golf under Ben Thomson is still at, or near the top, having won the Eastern Litercollegiates, and second place in the National Collegiates. Fencing spurred by the energy of Bob Grasson, and a determined team, succeeded in winning most of their matches, among others, defeating Army and Navy. Joe Wood in baseball; Mose King in boxing; E. P. Foster in lacrosse; Walter Leemann in soccer; William Hinchliff in tennis and squash; Frank Kanaly in track and cross country; and Ed. O ' Donnell in wrestling, have with their assistants all done fine work, and their teams have done well. We have a splendid coaching personnel, and facilities for play, both indoor and outdoor, are unequaled. It has been a year marked by unusual prowess, and all the boys taking part have contributed of themselves to keep Yale Athletics in the fore- front. DoleiKU-rs of Vale ' s Rt-curd of ij8 Consecuti%e Swimmint ' Victories iRo Graduate Committees FOOTBALL J. Field, ' ii, Chairman J. R. Bloomer, ' 05 E. C. Bench, ' 25 C. R. Black, Jr., x ' lyS H. E. TuTTLE, ' 14, ' 3oh W. Levering, x ' 33 BASEBALL B. WiNSLOW, ' 04, Chairman C. W. Littlefield, ' 03 W. F. Carter, ' 95 E. W. Warren, and, ' 32 R. B. Parker, ' 33 HOCKEY E. S. Bronson, ' 00, Chairman S. Stoddard, ' 99 J. E. Bierwirth, ' 17 J. O. BuLKLEY, ' 23 FENCING H. Hanway, ' 32, Chairman E. L. White, ' 09 J. R. Huffman, ' 26S BOXING F. S. BuTTERvvoRTH, ' 95, Chairman E. P. F. Eagan, ' 21S BASKETBALL W. P. Arnold, ' 15S, Chairman W. M. Barber, ' 05S C. C. Hardy, ' 31 SWIMMING A. Wilson, Jr., ' 13, Chairman O. Reid, ' 04 A. Hapke, ' 33 WRESTLING J. M. Brodie, ' 32, Chairman L. W. Gibbons, ' 02S J. B. Hart, ' 02 H. Snowden, ' 34 TRACK A. C. Gilbert, ' 09M, Chairman E. B. CoxE, 3rd, ' 18S J. T. Bryan, ' 14S H. H. Pease, ' 02 S F. P. Garvan, ' 97 H. S. Brooks, ' 85 C. S. Gage, ' 26 M. K. Douglas, ' 24S CREW F. Sheffield, ' 24, Chairman A. S. Blagden, 01 J. Curtiss, ' 79 A. H. Svvayne, 92 J. H. Whitney, ' 26 F. Robinson, ' 27 J. Jackson, ' 34 J. Warren, ' 27 GREENS R. S. Rose, ' 09, Chairman E. S. Bronson, ' 00 C. A. Lohmann, ' 10 FOOTBALL TICKETS M. N. Buckner, ' 95, Chairman A. L. Gates, ' 18 E. S. FuRNiss, ' 18 C. A. Lohmann, ' id M. Farmer, ' 04S F. P. Garvan, Jr., ' 35 H. F. Woodcock Board of Control M. Farmer Chairman J. C. Greenway Secretary G. P. Day Treasurer MEMBERS President J. R. Angell M. Farmer, ' 04S W. M. Blair, 07 Dean C. W. Mendell, ' 04 J. C. Greenway, ' 00 T. W. Farnam, ' 99 DE.AN C. H. Warren, ' 96S G. P. Day, ' 97 M. F. Martin, ' 35 Dean P. T. W.alden, ' 92S H. E. Tuttle, ' 14 J. P. Snyder, Jr., ' 35 A. L. Gates, ' 18 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE M. F.armer, Chairman J. C. Greenw.ay H. E. Tuttle M. F. Martin J. P. Snyder 161 Front Row: H K. Brown, Terry. Martin, Snyder, Garvan Second Riw: Shields, ,Secor, Miles. Livingston, K. S. Brown. Swope, Curtin Miising from Picture: Kilborne, Woodlock Undergraduate Athletic Association M. F. M.- RTIN H. K. Brown, Ji President Seaetary F. C. Curtin, ' 35, Football F. P. Garvan, Jr., ' 35, Football P. L. Woodlock, ' 35, Baseball H, K. Brown, Jr., ' 35, Baseball W. S. Kilborne, ' 35, Crew M. F. Martin, ' 35, Crew D. L. Livingston, ' 35S, Swimming K. S. Brown, ' 35, Track C. B. Swope, ' 35, Track J. P. Snyder, Jr., ' 35, ofAr ' L. G. Shields, ' 35, Hockey H. P. B. Terry, ' 35, Squash J. K. Secor, ' 35, Polo E. J. Miles, Jr., ' 35S, Basketball 162 Yale Football Records Since 1883 Record of Yale-Princeton games to 1883 873 — Princeton 3, Yale o 876 — Yale 2, Princeton o 877 — Princeton o, Yale o 878 — Princeton i touchdown, i goal; Yale o 879 — Princeton o, Yale o 880 — Princeton o, Yale o 881 — Princeton o, Yale o 882 — Yale 2 goals, 2 touchdowns, i safety; Princeton i goal, i safety. Record of Yale-Harvard games to i f 875 — Harvard 4 f g., 4 t. Yale o 876 — Harvard o — Yale i f.g. 878 — Harvard o — Yale i f.g. 879 — Harvard o — Yale o 880 — Harvard o — Yale i f.g., i t. 881 — Harvard 4s. Yale o 882 — Harvard 2s. Yale i g., 3 t. Yale vs. Points Yale vs. 58 Wesleyan 76 Wesleyan 90 Wesleyan 65 Rutgers 36 Stevens Institu te 46 Univ. of Penn. 97 Rutgers 46 Wesleyan 93 Columbia 39 .Amherst 64 Michigan Uni 30 Williams 6 Princeton 68 Boston Tech. 23 Har ard 2 69 50 Stevens Univ. of Penn. 1884 28 Crescents Yale vs. Points 70 . mherst 31 Wesleyan ■5 Wesleyan 96 Stevens Institute 10 Princeton 63 Wesleyan 76 Rutgers 10 1889 i ' 3 Dartmouth Yale vs. 46 Wesleyan 38 Wesleyan 18 Graduates 63 Wesleyan 48 Har ard 36 Williams 6 Princeton 4 60 Cornell 1885 vs. 4 ' 2 Amherst Yale Points 64 62 Trinity Columbia 55 Stevens 22 Univ. of Perm. 18 Wesleyan 30 Stevens 71 Wesleyan 18 Crescent . .C. 51 Inst, of Tech. 70 Cornell 52 Crescents 32 Amherst 53 Univ. of Penn 5 70 Williams 5 Princeton 6 52 Wesleyan 61 Wesleyan 6 Harvard Princeton Yale vs. Points 75 Wesleyan o 52 Wesleyan o 96 Technology o 54 .Stevens o 76 Williams o 1 36 W esleyan o 82 Crescents o 75 Univ. of Penn. o 29 Harvard 4 4 Princeton o Yale vs. Points 38 Wesleyan o 1 06 Wesleyan o 74 Williams o 50 Univ. of Penn. o 74 Rutgers o 68 Crescents o 74 Wesleyan 4 1 2 Princeton o 1 7 Harvard 8 1890 vs. Wesleyan Crescent . .C. Wesleyan Lehigh Orange Williams Amherst Wesleyan Crescent . .C. Rutgers Uni -. of Penn. Har ard Princeton 1891 Yale vs. Points 28 Wesleyan o 26 Crescent . ' .C. o 36 Trinity o 46 Williams 10 30 Stagg ' s Eleven 37 Orange . .C. 36 Lehigh 70 Crescent A.C. 76 Wesleyan 2 7 Amherst 48 Univ. of Penn. I o Harvard 19 Princeton Yale 6 26 32 22 29 vs. Points Wesleyan o Crescents o Williams o Manhattan . .C. o Amherst o Orange A.C. o Spring Y.M.C.. . o Tufts o Wesleyan o New York A.C. o Univ. of Penn. o HaiA-ard o Princeton o 1893 vs. Points Brown o Crescent A.C. o Dartmouth o .Amherst o Orange A.C. o Williams o U.S. Military Acad, o New York .-4.0. o Univ. of Penn. 6 Harvard o Princeton 6 Yale 42 43 1894 Trinity Brown Crescent A.C. Lehigh Dartmouth Orange A.C. Boston A.A. West Point Brown Tufts Lehigh Chicago A.C. Harvard Princeton Trinity Brown Union . mherst Crescent . .C. Dartmouth Orange . .C. Williams Boston . .C. Dartmouth West Point Carlisle Brown Orange A.C. Princeton Yale vs. Points 1 8 Brown o 12 Orange A.C. o 22 Williams o 42 Dartmouth o 12 Carlisle 6 12 Elizabeth . .C. 6 16 West Point 2 !o Boston A.A. o 18 Brown 6 16 New Jersey A.C. o 6 Princeton 24 1897 ale vs. Points 10 Trinity o 30 Wesleyan o 18 Amherst o 32 Williams o 10 Newton A.C. o 1 8 Brown 1 4 24 Carlisle 9 6 West Point (5 16 Chicago A.C. 6 o Harv ard o 6 Princeton o Yale vs. Points 5 Wesleyan o 34 Amherst o 23 Williams o 6 Newton . .C. o 22 Brown 6 18 Carlisle 5 10 West Point o 10 Chicago A.C. o o Princeton 6 o Harvard 1 7 163 1899 Yale vs. 23 .Amherst 46 Trinity ■28 Bates 12 Dartmouth 6 Wisconsin o C okimbia 24 West Point 42 Penn. State o Harvard to Princeton 22 Trinity 27 Amherst 30 Tufts 50 Bates 17 Dartmouth 30 Bowdoin 3B Wesleyan 12 Columbia 18 West Point 35 Carlisle 29 Princeton 28 Harvard 23 Trinity 6 Amherst 29 Tufts 24 Wesleyan 24 .Annapolis 45 Bowdoin 22 Penn. State 21 Bates 10 Columbia 5 West Point 35 Orange A.C 12 Princeton Harvard 1902 Points Trinity o Tufts 6 Amherst o Wesleyan o Brown o Univ. of Vermont o Penn. State o Syracuse o West Point 6 Bucknell 5 Princeton 5 Harvard o 1503 Yale vs. Points 35 Trinity o 1 9 Tufts o 46 Univ. of Vermont o 33 Wesleyan o 22 Springfield T.S. o 36 Holy Cross i o 27 Penn. State o 17 West Point 5 25 Columbia o 30 Syracuse o 6 Princeton 1 1 1 6 Harvard o 1904 Yale vs. Points 22 Wesleyan o 42 Trinity o 23 Holy Cross o 24 Penn. State o 6 Springfield T.S. o 1 7 Syracuse 9 6 West Point 1 1 34 Columbia o 22 Brown o 1 2 Princeton o 1 2 Harvard o ' 905 Yale vs. Points 2 7 Wesleyan o 1 6 .Syracuse o 24 Springfield T.S. o 30 Holy Cross o 12 Penn. State o 20 West Point o 53 Columbia o 1 1 Brown o 23 Princeton 4 6 Harvard o 1906 Yale vs. Points 2 1 Wesleyan o 5 1 .Syracuse o 12 Springfield o 1 7 Holy Cross o 10 Penn. State o 12 Amherst o 10 West Point 6 5 Brown o o Princeton o 6 Harvard o 1907 Yale vs. Points 2 5 Wesleyan o 1 1 Syracuse o 17 Springfield T.S. o 52 Holy Cross o West Point o 44 Villanova o 1 1 Wash, and JeflF. o 22 Brown o 1 2 Princeton i o 12 Harvard o 1908 Yale vs. Points 1 6 Wesleyan o 5 Syracuse o 18 Holy Cross o 6 West Point o 38 Wash, and Jeff. o 49 Mass. Agr. College o 1 o Brown i o 1 1 Princeton 6 o Harvard 4 1909 Yale vs. Points 1 1 Wesleyan o 1 5 Syracuse o 12 Holy Cross o 36 Springfield T.S. o 1 7 West Point o 36 Colgate o 34 Amherst o 23 Brown o 1 7 Princeton o 8 Harvard o 19TO a e vs. P( 22 Wesleyan 12 Syracuse 1 7 Tufts 1 2 Holy Cross 3 West Point o Vanderbilt 19 Colgate o Brown 5 Princeton Har -ard 1911 Yale NS. P 2 1 W ' esleyan 26 Holy Cross 1 2 .Syracuse 33 Virginia P.l. West Point 23 Colgate 28 New York Univ. 1 3 Brown 3 Princeton Harvard 1912 Yale vs. P 1 o Wesleyan 7 Holy Cross 16 Syracuse 16 Lafayette 6 West Point 13 Wash, and Jeff. 1 o Brown 6 Princeton o Harvard 1913 Yale vs. F 2 1 Wesleyan 1 o Holy Cross o Univ. of Maine 28 Lafayette Lehigh Wash, and Jetf. Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard 37 1914 vs. Poi Univ. of Maine Univ. of Virginia Lehigh Notre Dame Wash, and Jeff. Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard 1915 Yale vs. Points 7 37 Univ. of Maine o o Univ. of Virginia 10 Lehigh fi .Springfield T.S Wash, and Jeff, o Colgate o Brown 13 Princeton o Harx ' ard 16 1916 Yale vs. Points 25 Carnegie Inst. 61 Univ. of Virginia 3 12 Lehigh 19 Virginia Polv. 36 Wash, andjetf. 14 7 Colgate 3 6 Brown 21 10 Princeton 6 Harvard I9 ' 7 3 Yale vs. Po nts 7 Trinity 33 Naval Base 7 Loomis 1919 Yale vs. Po nts 20 Springfield College 34 North Carolina 7 3 Boston College 5 37 Tufts 3 Maryland 14 Brown 6 Princeton ' 3 3 Harvard 1920 10 Yale vs. Po nts 44 Carnegie Tech. 21 North Carolina 13 Boston College 21 24 W ' est Virginia 21 Colgate 7 14 Brown 10 Princeton 20 Harvard 9 Yale 3 48 13 13 18 7 6 38 4 7 36 20 Bates Vermont North Carolina Williams .Army Brown Maryland State Princeton Har ard 1922 vs. P Bates Carnegie Tech. North Carolina Iowa Williams .Army Brown Maryland Princeton Harvard 4 ■923 Yale vs. 53 North Care 40 Georgia 29 Bucknell 2 1 Brown 3 1 .Army 16 Marvland 164 2 7 Princeton Army ' 3 Har ard Maryland Princeton 1924 12 Harvard Yale vs. Points 27 North Carolir a 1927 7 Georgia 6 Yale vs. 14 Dartmouth ' 4 41 Bowdoin ' Brown 3 10 Georgia 7 Army 7 19 Brown 47 Maryland 10 Army 10 Princeton ' 9 Dartmouth ■9 Harvard 6 30 14 Maryland Princeton 1925 14 Harvard Yale vs. Points 53 Middlebury 1928 35 Georgia 7 Yale vs. ■3 Pennsylvania 16 27 Maine •20 Brown 7 21 Georgia 28 . rmv 32 Brovm 43 Maryland ■4 6 Army 12 Princeton 25 18 Dartmouth Har ard Maryland Princeton 1926 Harvard Yale vs. Points 55 Boston Univ. 1929 ■9 Georgia Yale vs. ■4 Dartmouth 7 89 Vermont Brown 7 Georgia 1 4 Brown 2 1 Army 16 Dartmouth 1 3 Maryland 6 Harvard 1 3 Princeton 1930 Yale vs. 38 Maine 40 Maryland 14 Georgia 2 1 Brown 7 . rmy o Dartmouth 66 Alfred 10 Princeton o Har ard ' 931 Yale vs. 1 9 Maine o 7 Georgia 26 27 Chicago o 6 Army 6 33 Dartmouth 33 52 St.John ' sof An ' pTs o 3 Harvard o Points Yale vs. o Bates Chicago Brown Army Dartmouth Princeton 51 Princeton ' 4 1 9 Harvard 1933 Yale vs. 14 Maine 14 W. and L. 1 4 Brown o Army 1 4 Dartmouth o Georgia 6 Harvard 2 Princeton ' 934 ale vs . 6 Columbia 14 Pennsylvania 37 Brown 1 2 Army 7 Dartmouth 7 Georgia 7 Princeton 1 4 Harvard Captain Curtin kicks off to Princeton 165 Major Y Men in College A. T. Callan, ' •J5S H.B. Ccirhs. ' 35S R. S. Crairplcn, 35 F. C. Curtin, ' 35 T. F. Curtin. Jr., 36 H. W. Eavis, srd, 36 J. DeAngelis, ' 35 FOOTBALL ]. K. Fc ' rrcrds. ' 35 L. M. Kelley, ' 37 M. L. Scott, ' syS ' S. E. Fuller. ' 35 E. V. King. ' 35 C. S. Strauss, ' 35 F. P. Gai an. Jr.. ' 35 S. L. Morten. Jr., ' 3 R. C. Taylor. ' 36 P. B. Grcsfcup. Jr.. 35 J. H. Overall, jr., ' 35 S. N. Towle, Jr., 35 R. Hercld, ' 36 ' B. C. Rankin. ' 35 R. Train, 36 J. R. Hei ev. 36 J. V. Rcscce. ' 36 M. K. Whitehead, ' 36 J. H.JchrKn, 35 ' R. H. Schultz, ' 36 H.J. Wright. Jr., 37 J. R. .Agen. ' 34 H. G. -Mien. ' 26$ J. S. Atwood, ' 34S J. W. Bailey. ' 36 R. E. Belknap, Jr., ' 36 D. W. Boardinan, ' 34 J. C. Castle, ' 36 E. M. Church, ' 34 R. E. Danielson, Jr., J. H. Holmes, Jr.. ' 36 J. H.Jackson, ' 34 W. S. Kilborne. ' 35 D. L. Livingstcn, ' 35S F. L. McCartney, ' 36 C. G. Meyer ' 36 H. C. Pease ' 34S J. S. Pillsbury.J F. Quarrier. ' 35 L. J. .Schaffer, 34 R. H. Spock, ' 36 B. L Taylor. Jr., 35 E. D. Wilson. ' 368 35 D. K. . ' Armstrong, 35 T. F. Curtin, Jr., ' 36 J. R. Dugan, ' 35S C. N. Fitz. ' 34 W. H. Gengarelly, P. C. Klein, ' 35 H. W. Lynch, ' 34 ' 34S V. P. McDonald. 348 S. . . McKenzie. ' 35 G. F. Parker. Jr., ' 34 B. C. Rankin. ' 36 S. B. Webb. 34 C. P. Williamson. 34 P. L. W ' oodlock, ' 35 G. B. Aaron, ' 34 J. S. Barrett, ' 34S K. S. Brown, ' 35 B. D. Bryan, ' 34 M. B. Canning, ' 35 H. B. Combs, ' 35 S J. L. Cooper, ' 35 C. E. Dunbar. ' 35S A. A. Forman, 3d. ' 34 W. W. Gibbs. ' 34 M.J. Hamilton. 34 H. B. Holcombe.Jr.. ' E. M. Ingersoll. ' 35 J. H. Johnson, ' 35 F. H. Lassitcr, ' 36 N. M. Loud, ' 35S A.J. McCrudden, ' 34 R. B. McKenzie. 34 A. H. Miner. 35 F. E. Pierce. Jr., 34 C. F. Pierson, ' 34 ler. ' 348 S. Prentice, ' 34 T. A. Ritzman, ' 36 C. H. Rose. Jr.. 35 E. E. Smith. ' 35S R. K. Spcfford. ' 34 W. L. Thcmpson. Jr., J. W. Turley.Jr., 34 CROSS COUNTRY . . H. Minor. ' 35 V. T. Woodland. ■37E W. K. Colby, ' 35 R. B. Cooke, ' 36 A. B. Herrick, ' 35 C.J. Mills, 36 G. E. Robson.Jr., ' 35 E. P. Pillsbury, ' 36 T. Rodd, 3rd, 35 D. B. Robinson, 35 B. Shepard, 36 R. B. Shepard, Jr., ' 35 J. P. Snyder, Jr., ' 35 D. G. Stcddard, ' 35 J. Barker. ' 34 A. C. Brown. Jr., 35 SWIMMING D. L. Livingston, 35S S. N. Loud, ' 34S C. F. Pierson. 34 W. L. Savell. ' 34 J. De. ngelis, ' 35 J. C. Dickson, 34 BASKETBALL F. C. Elliott, 35 J. M. Kennedv. Jr., 34 H. D. Kellogg. Jr.. -35 E. J. Miles. Jr.. ' 358 W. . . F. Saner. 34 E. H. Nikkei. ' 34 B. H. Reese. Jr.. 34 166 Minor Y Men in College D. K. Armstrcng. ' 35 M. D. Crcnwall, 34 J. DeAngelis, ' 35S J. C. Dkkscn, 34 ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL L. Aspinwall, ' 35 S. C. Bronscn. ' 35E I. L. Levine, ' 36 D. B. Badger, ' 37 W.j.D. Coerr. -36 E. N. Maxwell, ' 35 J. Badman, ' 37S R. M. Davidson, 37 W. S. Murray, Jr., 36 J. W. Bates, ' 35 W. G. Fawcett, 36S F. L. Orth, ' 37 F. L. Belin,.Ir., ' 36 M. P. Jennings, ' 35 L. C. Peters, ' 36 D. B. Blake. 37 W. J. Larkin, 2nd, ' 35 S. A. Pond, ' 36S R. Brill. -33 S. L. Lasell.Jr., ' 37 E. A. Raymond. 2nd. 37 J Wolcott. ' 35 BASKETBALL A. K. Hcwe. ' 348 H. D. Kelkgg.Jr.,-35 J. M. Kennedy. Jr.. 34 R. Kimball. ' 34 P. C. Klein. ' 35 E. J. Miles. Jr.. ' 358 E. H. Nikkei, ' 34 B. H. Reese. Jr.. ' 34 E. W. Smith, ' 37S J. H. Stanger. ' 36 A. W. Thompson, ' 36 J. L ' pton. Jr., ' 36S T..!. Ward. Jr., 36 B. .A. Watson, ' 35 R. M. Wheeler, ' 35S W. . . F. Saner. ' 34 M. D. Watson. ' 35 E. D. Wilson. ' 36S O. Erotiwer. 3id. 56 D. R, C. E.c«n.Jr,.-35 W. Gates. 36 B. M. Eenarest. ' 34 E. T. Gardner. Jr., ' 35S H. Huffman. ' 36 P. Thomsen. 34 I. L. Levine. 35 C. W. Sherman, ' 35 N.R.Calhoun. H. G. Holcombe. Jr.. 36 J. H. MacVey. ' 35 J. M. Tompkins, ' 35 . . Ridgway. ' 35S H. R. Esheliran.Jr.. ' 36S H.J. Goldkeiger. t S M. .Ackerman. ' 35 R. W. Bailey, •34E R. N. Barnum. ' 34 G. C. Bradley. ' 35S W.J. Cirawley. Jr.. 34 K. B. Parker, ' 36 B. Resnik. ' 34 F.H.Wright. ' 34 B. R. Shurley. 34 F. B. Town, 35 L.ACROSSE E. S. Dcwns.Jr.. 35 F. W. Hill. ' 34 A. P. Humphrey. 34 A. E. McCake. Jr.. 34 W. B. Mcses.Jr.. ' 35S W. H. Paine. ' 36 G. R. Pirrung. ' 34S W. W. Taylor. .Jr., 35 J. K. Train, Jr.. ' 34 F. D. V incent. Jr.. ' 34S O. Transue. 34 H. L. Weatherwax. 34 J. W. Walden, 34S A.P. W ' arner, 35S J. M. Warner. ' 36S E. C.R. Whitcraft, ' 36 M. Winer, ' 35 J. P. Grace, Jr., ' 36 R. B. Hennessy, Jr., ' 34 B. Goodyear. Jr.. ' R. D. Matthews, ' 35 W. B. Rand, Jr., ' 36 H. C. Royal, Jr.. ' 36 J. K. Secor, ' 35 N. H. Snow, 34 SQ.U.ASH RACQUETS F. D. Rrgers. ' 35 W. E. Stcckhau«en. 35 J. Strauss, ' 35 W. W. Taylor, Jr., ' 35 B. H. Ward, ' 34 H. P. B. Terry, 35 F. W. Uihlein, 34 SWIMMING D. P. Bishop. Jr.. 34 A. C. Brown. Jr., 35 H. P. Buckingham, ' 35 C.J. Campbell, ' 36 R. F. Corroon, ' 35 C. R. Eddy. 34 C. Harding, and J. R. Henry. Jr., ' 35 W. D. Hosford,Ji., ' 35 E. S. Howland, ' 35 N. V. King. 358 C.S.Judson.Jr.. ' 368 8. N. Loud, 348 E. Meyer, 3rd, ' 36 R. S. Penn, ' 36 T. D. Phillips. ' 358 E.J. Quinlan, Jr., ' 34 C. F. Stewart, ' 34 R. W. Wilson, 35 R. C. Winfield, ' 36 J. M. Carlisle. ' 4 T. R. Cobb. Jr., ' 34 L. S. DeLcne.Jr., ■34 R. E. Ellis. Jr., -368 L. Hill. ' 34 G. D. Hixcn. ' 34S ). G. McMurtry, ' 36 E. W. Mansfield. ' 368 E.J. Miles. Jr., ' S J. i-J. Moorhead, ' 34 W. L. M. Reese, 35 R. D. Stewart, ' 36 G. C. Stevens, ' 36 J. S. Tilney, ' 35 G. E. Wardman, ' 34S J. H. Wear, Jr., -34 W.ATER POLO J. Bilewitz, ' 36 W. W. Bronson. 2nd. 36 J. C. Burke, ' 348 W. H. Clark, ' 36 H. H. Coppersmith, ' 35 R. C. Graham, ' 36 J. R. Cccrey, ' 35 R. .S. Cramptcn, ' 35 E. S. Downs, Jr.. 35 L. A. Hart, ' 56 W. Hirsh, and, ' 34 W. F. Keyser, ' 35 W. F. Martin, ' 34 J. S. Rashba. ' 34S WRESTLING H. A. Hull, ' 36 A. W. Lindeke.Jr.. 36 R. R. Piatt, ' 35S H. L. Stern. Jr.. ' 36 ,67 R. J. Shallenberger, ' 36S S. F. Weaver, Jr., ' 358 S. Weintraub, Jr., ' 36S P. P. Valas, 358 R. B. Wight, ' 35 CAPTAIN C:URTL Front Row: Train. Scott, Morton, Whitehead, Captain Curtin, Grosscup, Roscoe. Fuller, De. ' Vngelis Second Row: Johnson, Davis, King. Schultz, Edmonds, Gallan, T. Curtin, Hersey Third Row: Manager Garvan, Towle, Rankin. Wright, Strauss, Kelley, Crampton, Oxerall Francis C. Curtin ' 35 Francis P. Garvan, Jr., John F. Byers, Jr. ' 36 Raymond W. Pond, 25 35 Captain Aianager Assistant Manager Head Coach The 1934 Football Season Bv Dick ' an Horne YALE ' S 1934 football season was one of the most amazing in its long football history which dates back 62 years to 1872. The team was by no means the best that has ever played for Yale, but it is one which will be clearly remembered for many years, long after more successful elevens are forgotten. After the disastrous 1933 season the public at large was amused for weeks by the unavoidably highly publicized efforts of Yale to engage a coaching staff. Yale alumni were divided into two camps, one favoring the retention of gradu- ate coaching and the other the hiring of some miracle man from the West. In the middle of the winter, when he had everything arranged, Malcolm Farmer, chair- man of athletic control, announced the coaching staff. It was headed by Raymond W. Pond, 1925, and his assistants were Earle Neale of West Virginia, Dennis Myers of Iowa, and Ivan Williamson of Michigan. Farmer ' s announce- ment was greeted with a storm of protest, disap- proval and dire, gloomy prophecies by alumni and critical public alike. Reactionary alumni in New York even went so far as to wager that Yale wouldn ' t win a single game. The engaging of such an apparently muddled group of coaches would alone be a step long 169 remembered, but Farmer had done anodier thing which makes the 1934 season unic|iie. All early season setup games were eliminated, and Yale opened its season against Co- lumbia, 1934 Rose Bowl champ- ions, and then on successive Saturdays played Pennsylvania, Brown, Army, Dartmouth, Georgia, Princeton, and Har- vard. This docket of contests became known throughout the land as the suicide schedule. Had the material available been up to old Yale standards in quality and quantity, the cause for worry would not have been so great, but many valu- able men had been lost by graduation, and the freshman ten which Mai Stevens had coached in the fall of 1933 was one of the poorest in Yale ' s history. Farmer departed from the ' ' ' path of his predecessors twice more before the season opened, and both steps proved highly successful. He hired Frank Wan- die, trainer of Louisiana State teams, who had formerly been at West Point, to take charge oi all of Yale ' s teams, and then, upon Wandle ' s recommendation, had the foot- ball squad do its fall prelimin- ary training at the crew quart- ers at Gales Ferry instead of in New Haven. Despite all these measures the discontented still predicted terrible things for Yale football, and not without some reason, it must be admitted. Their wonder increased as the season wore on because Yale won five of those eight games, won its first Big Three championship in I o years, had a man seriously considered for All-America rat- ing for the first time since 1930, and won for itself the enviable distinction of once more being virile and tough, instead of country clubbish. The same 1 1 men who started the Princeton game stayed in action the en- tire 60 minutes and defeated their rivals, a 4-1 pre-game ' ' favorite, 7-0. It was unquestionably the winning of the Big Three title which made all Yale men satisfied with the season. Paradoxi- cally enough, the championship which Yale had won 10 years beibre was due largely to Ducky Pond ' s superb halfback play, and it was against Har ' ard on a pass from Roscoe 170 fitting that a decade later, in his debut as head coach, that his team could win the Harvard and Princeton games for him. Yale had won both these games several times between 1924 and 1 934, but the Big Three was oi- ficially disrupted by the Prince- ton-Harvard rift in 1926 and not restored until 1934. Yale did not have championship teams in ' 25 and 26. When Yale entrained tor Princeton lor the first ol the championship contests, it had won three and lost three of its preliminary games. Columbia had defeated the Blue, 12-6, in the season ' s opening game, but Yale had rallied to take Penn- sylvania, 14-6, and annihilate Brown, 37-0. High hopes for an Army victory were rudely smashed, but Yale made a game of the match, although losing, 20-12. Dartmouth came into the Bowl the following week, undefeated, untied, and unscored upon. Yale once again obliged, winning 7-2. Georgia as usual, came up out of the Deep South with a team which had not done much but which was good enough to defeat the Blue, 14-7, and earn for itself the distinction of being the only team in history to have beaten Yale five consecutive times. Before the Yale game Princeton had won over 20 straight victories, not having been beaten since the Michigan game in November, 1932. It had mauled Amherst, 75-0, and had run up awesome scores on such teams as Cornell, Le- high, and Harvard. Washington and Lee had given the proud, cocky Tiger a bad scare, leading 12-7, with two minutes to go; Le Van however saved the Princeton record by catching a pass which enabled his team to win, 14-12. Coach Crisler was supposed to have three teams, each one equally good, which could de- feat Yale. A few New Yorkers even offered such long odds as 6-1 that Yale would lose, and much of the betting was done on the margin of Princeton victory. A certain loyal group of Yale Captain-elect Whitehead people, however, had iaith in the team, backed their faith, and made the layers pay. Princeton entered the game terribly over-confident and Yale was grimly sure that it could and would win. It did, 7-0, on a pass, Roscoe to Kelley, half-way through the first quarter. Princeton had fumbled Captain Curtin ' s opening kick- off and recovered on its one- yard line. This accident shook their confidence, and Yale then kept the Orange and Black nicely backed up in its half of the field. After the second ex- change of punts by Le Van and Fuller, Roscoe ran a kick back to Princeton ' s 41 -yard line. Two running plays yielded a net loss of two yards. Roscoe called for a kick formation, but De Angelis centered the ball to him in his blocking back posi- tion. Kelley went straight down the field about 12 yards from his right end position, cut sharply to his left along the 30-yard line, leaped high to bat down Roscoe ' s hard thrown, center-alley pass, caught the ball, outran Kadlic, Princeton ' s quarterback, side-stepped Le Van and Sand- bach on the five-yard line, and drove over for a touchdown. Curtin place-kicked the extra point, and the scoring was over. Winning the game was not as easy as that, however. In the second period Le Van ran 45 yards from his 31 to Yale ' s 24. Train just man- aged to collar him from an angle. A pass, Le Van to McMillan, gave Princeton a first down on Yale ' s five-yard line, but the Blue line braced, and as one New York commentator wrote, threw the Princeton line in Spofford ' s face on his desperate, fourth-down plunge. ' At the beginning of the second half Princeton marched from its 29-yard line to Yale ' s seven in seven plays. The Yale line again tightened and held Princeton. Kadlic tried to go overhead and almost succeeded but Roscoe bumped Hugh McMillan out of bounds in the end zone as the Tiger end caught a flat pass. After that thrust 171 Yale sensed that it really had Princeton, and never again did the Tiger threaten. In the fourth period Curtin tried two field goals, one from the 35-yard line and another from the 15, but neither was good. Princeton grew panicky in this quarter. It put the ball in play only six times during the whole 15-minute period. Three of the plays were first-down punts, and the other three were pass plays. It was generally feared that after defeating Princeton the Yale team would be so beaten up physically and cocksure mentally that Har- vard ' s obviously poor team might defeat the Blue and thus ruin what promised to be a glorious ending of a momentous season. Yale quickly dispelled these fears when it took the field against Harvard in the Bowl. As soon as it got the ball it marched 55 yards on straight running plays to Harvard ' s 25-yard line before the Crimson could hold. With about four minutes of the period remaining Yale went from its 40-yard line to Harvard ' s one-foot line before fumbling. This push was marked by a 15-yard, Roscoe-to-Kelley pass and Roscoe ' s 18-yard sprint to Harvard ' s one-foot mark where he dropped the ball when tackled. He had tricked Harvard ' s ends by running from a fake, place-kick formation. However, two plays after Haley had kicked out from behind his goal line Roscoe shovelled a pass to Morton who cut back through tackle and ran 20 yards to score standing up. Curtin converted. Midway through the second quarter a 1 7- yard sprint by Rankin around Harvard ' s light end gave Yale a first down on the Crimson ' s four-yard line. After losing four yards on a smash Roscoe faded back and threw a long, flat pass to Kelley who caught the ball just a stride before he stepped out of the end zone. Curtin again converted to make the score, 14-0, and nothing Harvard could do in the second half changed this count. Y ' ale looked good against Columbia, Brown, and Dartmouth in the preliminary games, even though it lost to Columbia. Columbia came up with a team which was similar to Yale ' s in many ways. It, like Yale, lacked plentiful reserves, and defeated Yale 12-6. The game was played in a steady rain but that did not prevent either team from cutting loose with all they had. Al Barabas ran 72 yards from scrimmage on a cutback through tackle soon after the game started to open the scoring, but the point was not con- verted. In the third period he slammed through left tackle to score again after the Light Blue had driven 76 yards down the field. Yale scored in the last quarter on a long, Roscoe-to-Kelley pass. Columbia came back after that and pushed Yale up to its goal line, but Barabas was held on the one-foot line. Columbia gained 330 yards from scrimmage as compared to Yale ' s 92, figures which explain the result. Yale, however, looked good and gave its backers confidence for the future. These same supporters had cause for feeling gloomy the very next week after Yale defeated Pennsylvania, 14-6. Penn had a sophomore team which had lost to little Ursinus the previ- ous Saturday; yet Yale was lucky to defeat the Red and Blue. No one had the slightest inkling of what was to happen in the Brown game which followed the Pennsylvania game. Yale ' s poor showing against the latter caused Brown to be made an even choice. The folly of this move was e ' i- denced immediately after the kickoff when Yale paraded from its 34-yard line to a score by Whitehead. This overwhelming triumph made Yale ' s followers believe that Army might be defeated for the first time since 1929, but the Cadets swarmed over the Blue from start to finish, win- ning 20-12. The kickoff virtually decided the game. Yale fumbled, and Army recovered on Yale ' s 36. In four plays Stancook scored, kicked point, and Army had Yale 7-0. Two of those four plays were passes, Buckler to Stancook. Yale seemed panicky and unable to get together. Half way through the second quarter White- head attempted to punt from his seven-yard line, and Norman Edwards blocked the kick, Miller recovering on Yale ' s three-yard mark. In two plays King had gone over, and Stancook again converted, putting Army in front 14-0, Shortly before the end of the half. Army was de- clared guilty of clipping under a Yale punt and the Blue was given the ball on Army ' s 15, first down. On the first play Rankin circled Army ' s right end to score standing up. Curtin ' s at- tempted conversion was blocked. In the third quarter Army made two fine drives, the first of which was halted bv a lumble 172 on Yale ' s one-foot line, and the second was clim- axed by Buckler ' s going over from two yards out. Stancook missed his kick, so Yale theoretic- ally had hope, although trailing 20-6. Yale came back to score in the fourth period, Rankin buckling over from the three-yard line. Dartmouth with a new coach. Red Blaik, blew in from Hanover certain that the Bowl would be painted green this time. The Big Green had been running wild through the bush leaguers and had taken Harvard, lo-o. Yale politely, but firmly, burst the bubble, 7-2. It was a bitter loss for Dartmouth, but there were none of the usual breaks about which to crab. It also broke Dartmouth ' s morale, for it went to pieces thereafter, and took fancy beatings from Cornell and Princeton. Despite the fact that Georgia made football history when it defeated Yale, 14-7, the week before the Princeton game, Yale did not get e.xcited about the game or its outcome. Yale, aiming for Princeton, took the Georgia game in stride but its normal stride just wasn ' t adequate. Georgia was a whole lot better than had been supposed. Yale played without the services of Roscoe, who was in the infirmary with grip. Fuller ran 46 yards for a touchdown on the sixth play of the game, breaking through the center of the Georgia line on a delayed cut- back and outrunning the secondaries. Curtin kicked point to put Yale ahead, 7-0. Ten min- utes later Minot, on a similar play, ran 25 yards for a Georgia touchdown. Georgia ' s kick was wide, but Yale ' s offside gave them the point. Georgia went to work in the third period and Chapman, a big fullback, scored the winning touchdown after Yale had held for three downs inside the 10. Yale was correctly termed, A team with its feet in the Bowl and its heart and mind in Palmer Stadium. During the season Yale scored 104 points to 54 for its opponents. Larry Kelley, sophomore right end who was accorded All-America honor by several selectors and mention by every one, tallied five of the Blue ' s 16 touchdowns. His nearest rivals were Morton, Rankin, and White- head with three apiece. Roscoe and Fuller each scored once. H||H Hr «. iCIhS ? ™1HI bl ! m ' Y 1 i f { . ' ■i 1 Wi H MU m ■1 1 1 I mil K MJ ' ' B: B m Jyj Swope, Martin, K. .S. Brown, Kilborne, Snyder, H. K. Brown 173 Front Row: Hendrick, Smoyer, Kalison, Gratwick, Becton, Cohen, Trull, Venter Second Row: Billman. Smith, Northrop, Hughes, Captain Shepard, Degnan, Murdoch, Haviland, Townsend Third Row: Coach Engle, Gordon. Fahy, Judson, Doniinick, King, Cavanagh, Lynch, Standart, Coach Foster Fourth Rnv: Hanrahan, Scott, Allen, Buck, Granbery, Chatlield, Secor, Gates, Trainer Rigley Missing from juclure: Manager Walker, Weigle Roger B. Shepard, Jr., ' 35 Louis Walker, ' 36 . Edward C. Foster Clyde Engle Captain Manager Head Coaches The 150-lb. Football Season THE Yale 150-pound football team came through a fairly successful season this year, winning hall their games, losing two, and tying one. For an opener the men of Coach Foster met the local talent displayed by the Hopkins Grammar eleven. In this game the team showed up well, finally winning 13-0 over the schoolboy opposition. The next contest of the schedule was also played at the Yale field against Lafayette. The visitors offered a little more opposition than the Hopkins squad. Out of several chances to score, however, the 150 ' s were able to put the pigskin beyond the last white mark but once, the final score being 6-0. The next week, November 2, the Yale team went down to New Jersey to meet the boys of Rutgers and incidentally bow down for the first time in the worst defeat of the season, 12-0. Out for blood a week later the 150 ' s met the Loomis School team on their opponents field. The ball spent most of the time in the home team ' s territory, but the Yale men were unable to put it over once, being held by the Loomis line several times, and losing the ball through over eagerness the rest of the time. The only score of the game came when the school backfield dropped the ball on the ground in front of a Yale man, who immediately fell on it behind the line, making the score at the end of the game 2-0. Unable to duplicate the record of the Varsity against Princeton, the 150 ' s went down fighting to the last to a s lightly superior Tiger eleven, losing by one touchdown. In the last game of the season a team came up from Penn and, after a give and take affair, were able to return home with the knowledge that they had held the Yale outfit to a 6-6 tie. Lovis Walker, Manaser ' 74 Front Row: Snavely, Dickens, Butler, Ewart, Cooper, Danielson, Cookman Second Row: Brown, Colwell, Hamilton, Co-Captain Gallagher, Co-Captain Hessberg. Cady, Fairback. Gillies Third Row: Castle. Rafferty, Lowndes. Moray. Ogan. Stewart. Wheeler Fourth Row: Manager Byers, F. Peterson. D. Peterson. Weed. Brooks. .Smith Missing Jrom picture: Carter Albert Hessberg, 2nd, ' 38 Francis P. Gall. ' gher, ' 38 John F. Byers, Jr., ' 36 Reginald D. Root, ' 26 Co-Captains Manager Head Coach The Freshman Football Season IN spite of a slow start the Freshman football season was a fairly successful one. Exeter was the first team to invade New Haven, and left on the long end of a 16-0 score. However, the game was not as one sided as the score indicates, for, ably assisted by the work of Weed and Peter- son, the backs were able to get the ball into scor- ing position several times. The next week, October 13th, the teain jour- neyed to Andover, where they also met defeat, 6-0, against a better team than their opponents of the previous week. The highlight of the game was the kicking of Ewart. A week later the Freshmen registered their first victory by defeating a heavier and more experienced Roxbury eleven by a lone tally in the third period, after a series of long runs by Hessberg and Hamilton. On November loth the team travelled to Princeton where thev showed a reversion to their former habits in that they were unable to capitalize on their chances to score, the outcome finally being 14-0 for Princeton. Yale however, gained twice as many first downs as Princeton and completed five passes. On November 1 7th the season closed in a blaze of glory with a defeat administered to a highly favored Harvard team. The team played the best football of the whole season in this game, with quarterback Ewart playing sixty minutes of beautiful football. Hessberg and Colwell made the two touchdowns. The final contest of the season emphasized the fact that Reg Root as a coach can do wonders with an inexperienced group of Freshmen. His excellent record with the footballers of the class of 1936, among whom Roscoe, Train, and Whitehead, three members of the Iron Man team of 1934, were developed, is mirrored in this victory. t 17 t t j r J. r. DYERS, Jr., Manager ' 75 CAPTAIN SNYDER Front Row: Badger, Stoddard Second Row: Rodd, Towle, Robson, Mills. Snyder. Colby. Wilson, Herrick. Pillsbury Third Row: Manager Shields, Grace. Moore. Oooke. Robinson, Shepliard. C:oa h York John P. Snyder, Jr., ' 35 Louis G. .Shields, ' 35 . HoLCOMB York Captain Manager Coach The Hockey Season Bv Dick V. n Horne LIKE its immediate predecessor, Yale ' s 1934- ' 935 hockey team won the Big Three championship, but happily, unlike its predeces- sor it also won the Hobey Baker trophy, the Quadrangular hockey league ' s championship award. As in 1933- 1934 Princeton was defeated in straight games, and Harvard was subdued in the playoff. The difference between the two seasons was Dartmouth. The previous year the Green lost but one game to its Big Three rivals, the second Yale encounter, but this year it won only one, that from Princeton. Yale played a longer schedule than usual, participating in 2 1 games, winning 14 and losing seven, a better record than any Yale sextet had made since the time of Frank Luce ' s wonder team of 1930-31. It can be safely said that Yale met all the best amateur teams of the country, playing as it did such outfits as the Boston Olympics, McGill, Toronto, Clarkson Tech and Minnesota. The only amateur clubs not scheduled were the Metropolitan area ' s sham- amateur teams, which are really professional hockey league farms. Home-and-home series with McGill and Tor- onto have come into vogue the last two years. As might be expected, Yale did not fare too well facing this sterling Canadian opposition. A year ago the Blue managed to defeat Toronto on its home ic e, only to lose the return game in New 177 Haven. This year Toronto took both games but McGill, after having crushed Yale, 5-1, in Mont- real Forum early in December, lost a thrilling 2-1 contest in New Haven. The usual procedure on the Canadian Christ- mas trip is to disband the team until early in the New Year, but because four Yale seniors came from Minnesota a two-game series with the University of Minnesota was arranged and played just before Christmas. Captain John Snyder, Roger Shepard and Doug Robinson made their homes in Minneapo- lis or St. Paul, while George Robson came from Duluth. Minnesota is the perennial hockey power of the Mid-West, and the Yale team entered the series prepared for the worst. Much to Minnesota ' s great surprise Yale won both games rather easily, 2-0 and 3-1. The experience of having faced the fast Canadian teams on the way out proved to be an invalu- able asset to Yale. Preparations for the return Cc games with Toronto and Mc- Gill began before the end of Christmas vacation. Outclassed in Canada, Yale was encouraged by its fine showing in Minnesota, and played to win in the New Haven games of the series, rather than merely trying to hold down the score. Toronto, a 7-3 winner at home, trailed Yale i-o for a considerable portion of the game. A last period drive, however, enabled Toronto to tie it up and then go ahead at 2-1. Yale ' s gambling tactics of taking Goalie Snyder out and sending in six forwards enabled Toronto to score a final goal from beyond mid-ice in the final minute. Two nights later McGill came to town, fresh from an easy victory over Princeton. The first period ended in a i-i deadlock, but with only four sec- onds to play in the second period Dave Stoddard scored on McHugh. Despite thiee third-period penalties, Yale managed to hold this lead, John- ny Snyder exhibiting superb form. Yale ' s next hard game was with the Boston Olympics, a team which had defeated a fine Harvard outfit with ease. Yale caught the Olympics on an off-night and rang up a decisive 6-2 ictory. This game enabled Yale to break even in its relations with club teams, having lost a sloppily played 2-1 decision to the St. Nickolas Hockey Club in the season ' s first game. Yale ' s season from this point on became more interesting to the team ' s followers. Previous to this time Yale had been playing its preliminary games and now it was to begin meeting Prince- ton, Dartmouth and Harvard, with two easy games thrown in. These in- cluded a 10-2 triumph over Brown and a 9-1 victory over Colby. Earlier in the year Bos- ton University had been defeat- ed, 9-1, and Williams, 14-0. Inflated by its decisive defeat of the Olympics, Yale went into the Princeton game overconfi- dent and was hard-pressed to win, prevailing after a desperate struggle, i-o. Yale ' s highly de- veloped passing game did not work at all well, and, further- more, Stew Gregory, the Prince- ton goalie, had his greatest night. Warren Colby ' s drive ' ork early in the last period slipped by him when his vision was screened by a teammate. A game played the Wednesday following this close call at Princeton prevented Yale from proclaiming itself America ' s best college hockey team. Little Clarkson Tech from Potsdam, New York, which had defeated Yale the previous two years, came to New Haven with a squad of nine players and defeated Yale, 4-3. Yale held a 3-0 advantage at the beginning of the last period but the Clarkson crowd, individually much faster than Yale, bore down and won the game with two-and-a-half minutes to play, when Marion scored an unassisted goal on Snyder. Inasmuch as Clarkson had previously defeated Princeton and Dartmouth, it will be hard for Yale to proclaim itself the country ' s best college hockey team. Yale prepared itself for the Dartmouth games by meeting the New Haven Eagles (a profession- al team), losing 3-1. Having gone to Hanover the year before overconfident and having been defeated, 3-1, Yale was wary of the Green. Dartmouth, however, did not have the team it had the previous winter and Yale won without much trouble, 5-2. After a week of no skating (the Arena being used for a dog show) the Blue resumed practice for the second Dartmouth game. Dartmotith got away to an early lead on a goal by Reilly, but three goals by Moore in the second period plus Rodd ' s gave the Blue a 4-1 advantage. Mills increased this to 5-1 soon after the last period began, but sloppy playing by Yale and hard driving by Dart- mouth brought about a final score of 5-4. A week alter this game Princeton came up to New- Haven for the second game of the series. Yale, chagrined by its poor showing in the first game, went into the contest with the proper mental attitude and won, 8-2, a more accurate index of the relative abilities of the two teams. Goals by Rodd and Moore put the Blue ahead 2-0 after the first 20 minutes. Robson, Rodd, and Robinson ' s unassisted scores increased Yale ' s total to 5 in the second period. Princeton, however, scored on Cook ' s goal. All four goals were made in the first four minutes of the period. In the final period Yale again outscored its rivals, 3-1. Rodd ' s three goals made him high scorer. The Harvard series opened in Boston ' s Madi- son Square Garden, Saturday, March 2. Neither team had been defeated in league competition. Harvard had a much faster team but Yale had more teamwork. Yale also had a slight ad- vantage in goalies, Snyder being probably the best American college goalie. The theorists in- sisted that Harvard should win in Boston and Yale in New Haven, Boston ' s larger ice surface supposedly giving a faster team a marked ad- vantage. Yale realized the fondest hopes of its admirers by winning the first game, 3-2, in overtime on Warren Colby ' s goal. Harvard was infinitely faster than the Blue, but Snyder had a great night in the cage, and Yale ' s defense of Robson and Towle was both rugged and efficient. Har- vard lacked as good a defense and Emerson was not as brilliant a goalie as Snyder. This game Captain-elect Mi confounded the theorists, but the New Haven contest, the following Saturday should have seen Yale winning. Actually, however. Harvard, playing before an Arena jammed with Junior Prom guests, swamped Yale, 4-1. Its superior speed kept Yale on the defense and disorganized Yale ' s attack before it could get started. Yale ' s vaunted pass- ing attack did not evidence itself once. The 4-1 margin was not, however, a true indication of the abilities i)f the teams. Harvard allowed itself to en- ter the final game too confident ot its ability to in. Yale ' s players, while disappointed, still believed in themselves and ar- gued, contrary to all accepted hockey theory, that they ad- mittedly the slower team, would have the advantage on the larger Boston ice surface. To the consternation of Harvard and the critics Yale proved its contention to be true. Harvard scored first in both the first and second periods but each time Jimmy Mills tied the score. In the final period Doug Robinson beat Emerson with a drive from a melee in front of the Harvard cage, and the defense managed to hold the lead. THE SCORES Yale I St. Nicholas 2 Yale 9 Boston University I Yale I McGill 5 Yale 3 Toronto 7 Yale 2 Minnesota Yale 3 Minnesota I Yale Toronto 3 Yale 2 McGill I Yale 14 Williams Yale 6 Boston Olympic Club 2 Yale I Princeton Yale 3 Clarkson 4 Yale I New Haven Eagles 3 Yale 5 Dartmouth 2 Yale 9 Colby I Yale 5 Dartmouth 4 Yale 8 Princeton 2 Yale 10 Brown 2 Yale 3 Harvard 2 Yale I Harvard 4 Yale 3 Harvard (playoff) 2 179 THE HIGH SCORING SECOND FORWARD LINE Robinson, Shepard, Rodd Varsity Hockey Squad John P. Snyder, Jr., 35 Capta Daniel B. Badger, ' 37 Warren K. Colby, ' 35 Robert B. Cooke, ' 36 Andrew S. Gagarin, ' 37 Joseph P. Grace, Jr., ' 36 Anson B. Herrick, ' 35 Charles J. Mills, ' 36 William A. Moore, ' 37 Edmund P. Pillsbury, ' 36 Douglas B. Robinson, ' 35 George E. Robson, Jr., ' 35 Thomas Rodd, 3rd, ' 35 Roger B. Shepard, Jr., ' 35 David G. Stoddard, ' 35 Sidney N. Towle, Jr., ' 35 Lyndon A. .S. Wilson, 36 180 Front Row: Childs, Nagel Second Row: Cady, Gibson, Hooper, Muir, Captain Pearce, Thompson, Knowles. Swords, Fay Third Row: Trainer Wrigley, Hosley, Lerchen, Catherwood, Wyckoff, Manager Thompson Missing from picture: Fosburgh Richard I. Pearce, ' ;; Alexis W. Thompson, Richard Vaughan ' 36 Captain Manager Coach The Freshman Hockey Season THE Class of 1938 came close to being repre- sented by the best Yearling hockey team that has played for Yale during the past five or six years. Fast, aggressive, hard-shooting, the team apparently had everything that was neces- sary for a successful season, but somewhere the punch was missing when the big games rolled around at the end of the year and placed a taint on an otherwise satisfactory season. Early victories at the expense of Hillhouse, Choate, Kent, Mountain Lakes, Exeter, and Deerfield were more than offset by defeats at the hands of Hotchkiss, St. Paul ' s, Princeton 1938, and Har- vard 1938. The greatest influence on the 1938 squad was the presence of eight St. Paul ' s School gradu- ates, with five of them in the line-up that started against Princeton and Harvard. With this as a nucleus, Coach Dick Vaughan was able to mold a team that relied mainly upon a smooth passing attack for its victories, an attack that poor ice at Hotchkiss, St. Paul ' s, and Har - vard baffled more than any opponents could. Clint Childs, bespectacled center on the first line with Bill Hooper and Bob Nagel was the team ' s individual star, for Childs, besides being the fastest man on the team, was tied for scoring honors with two of his team-mates, and was one of the most consistent playmakers of the season. Of the thirty goals scored by the team against the opposition, Childs was responsible for five markers, four of them unassisted, with Jimmy Knowles, center on the second line and flanked by Johnny Gibson and Gere Swords, and Piete Fosburgh, defenseman, scoring a like number. Against Harvard, Yale ' s showing was the best that an Eli team has made against the Crimson freshmen during the past four years, for other Yearling teams have bowed by 13-4, 7-1, and 10-2 scores respectively. This year ' s game, a 3-2 win for Harvard, was decided by the breaks, with Harvard ' s undefeated record for the year remaining unshattei ' ed. Alexis W. Thompson, Manager li I c CAP7 I. BROWN Front Row: McKenzie, Turley Second Row: Forman. Hamilton, Prentice. Brown. Captain Warner. Thompson. Pierce, McCrudden, Lassiter Third Row: Manager Gibbs, Rose, Dunbar, Cooper, Ritzman. Spofl ' ord. Holcombe. Smith, IngersoU Missing from picture: Barrett, Byran. Combs, Minor, Pierson K.ARL D. V. RNER, ' 34S WlLLI. M W. GiBBS, ' 34 Fr. nk Kanaly Captain Manager Coach The 1934 Track Season Bv Dick V.a.n Horne YALE ' S 1934 track campaign was moderately successful from the point of view of the team and highly successful from an individualistic standpoint. The team won two and lost two dual meets, placed third in the indoor I.C.A.A. A. .4. championships and second outdoors. Keith Brown, 1935 captain-elect, broke the world indoor pole vaulting record in Madison Square Garden the night of February 1 7 when on his second try at the height he cleared 14 feet, 4 inches. This vault established Brown as the greatest vaulter Yale has ever had and the second greatest of all time, Bill Graber ' s out- door mark of 14 feet, four and three-eighths inches being the only superior achievement. Harvard and Cornell defeated Yale in dual meetings, the former, 78-57, and the latter, 61- 52. Yale proved itself far stronger than Penn- sylvania, winning, 86-49, and, despite heroic efforts by Princeton ' s phenomenal captain. Bill Bonthron, took its first meet from the Orange and Black in three years, 73-62. Having won the indoor championship in 1933, Yale was favored to repeat, but little Manhattan College, a New York Christian Brothers ' school, an institution which had not so much as scored a point in I.C. 4-A competition until 1930, scored 283 2 points, thanks to a group of great distance runners, to lead New York University and Yale. Yale atoned for this disappointing 183 performance by gathering 261 points in the outdoor chaiTipionship at Franklin Field to be runnerup to Stanford. This was the third suc- cessive year that Yale had led the East in the section ' s futile efforts to end the domination of the Californians. Had Coach Frank Kanaly had the usual Yale strength in the shot put and discus throw, the Blue might have gone through its dual meet schedule undefeated and might even have won the indoor title. In the Harvard meet which Yale thought it was going to win, the Crimson swept the dis- cus throw, took first and second in the shot, and made a clean sweep of the javelin for good measure. Against Cornell Yale could get only a third in the shot put. If the Blue could have produced the winner of this event, Yale would have won the meet. However, it was Cornell ' s supremacy in the hurdles which really cost Yale this meet. Yale trailed Man- hattan by 83 2 points and N.Y. U. by 41 in the indoor games. Exceptional strength in the weight events would have en- abled Yale to win the meet, and average performances would have secured a second place. Outdoors Stanford simply had too inuch power, concentrated ironically in the shot and discus events. The only unfortunate aspect of Keith Brown s record breaking vault was that he chose the wrong time to turn the trick. He was competing in the New York Athletic Club games which were featuring the first meeting of Bonthron, Yale ' s nemesis from Princeton, and Glenn Cun- ningham of Kansas, the two outstanding milers of the country, if not the world. Foot racing is always a more thrilling spectacle for the spec- tators, particularly so when two racers of the type of those men run. Brown ' s performance, far more brilliant than Bonthron ' s winning ef- fort of 4:14, simply did not catch the fancy of the crowd, largely because he won so easily, al- though his chief rival was Grabcr, the only man who has ever vaulted higher. Graber and Wirt Thompson, Brown ' s team Coach Kanaly mate, cleared 13 feet, 9 inches but missed out at 14 feet. Brown, as usual, gave his supporters a few anxious moments by missing his first two tries at this level but cleared it on his last vault. After resting briefly he attempted 14 feet, three inches but kicked the bar off the first time. His second try was successful. A measurement with steel tape showed that the bar was 14 feet, four inches a bove the takeoff. Keith let that incred- ible vault conclude his efforts for the evening. The indoor season included four club meets, the dual meet with Cornell in Ithaca, and the intercollegiate championships. The mile relay team competed in all those en- gagements, winning three matches. It had a match with M.I.T. the last Saturday night in January at the Boston Knights of Columbus games and to the great surprise of everyone was badly deleated. The next week the Millrose committee detailed it to race Colgate and Pennsylvania, a fine anchor leg by Captain Warner winning for the Blue in 3:29.8. Harvard won its special match with Yale in the feature event of the Boston A. A. meet the following week by a wide margin, doing 3:28.8. Matched against Princton and Maryland by the New York A.C. meet management, Yale triumphed time 3:27. A great anchor leg by W ' arner won th e relay against Cornell and made presentable the score of the meet Yale was sup- posed to win. Running on a flat armory floor, the team was timed in 3:30. Coach Kanaly broke up this team to strengthen his two-mile team for the indoor championship, and although it reached the final heat, it ran last. The Yale pole vaulting combination of Brown, Thompson, and Frank Pierce competed in all these meets except the Boston Knights of Columbus games. Three times Brown was the outright winner, once he tied with Thompson, and once Thompson defeated him. At the B.A.A., N.Y.A.C, and I.C.4-A. meets Brown took the gold medal, but he had to flip a coin for the watch with his team mate at the Millrose games. Brown, a meml er of the Jiuiior Prom committee, attended that function and then rode a train all day to compete against Cornell. Thompson defeated him by three inches, clear- ing 14 feet I inch to set an Ithaca drill shed record. By placing one, two, three in the I.C. 4-A. games this trio contributed 12 points to Yale ' s grand total of 20. Brown ' s winning vault of 14 feet, J ' g inches created a new record, the old one being 1 3 feet, gS ' inches, held jointly by Thompson and Ted Lee, another Yale man. A two-mile relay team was sent to the Mill- rose games and matched against N.Y.U., Columbia, Manhattan, and Boston College but ran fourth. Individual sprinters, hurdlers, high jumpers, and distance runners were sent to all these meets, but only John Turley and Max- well Hamilton placed, finishing second and third in a looo-yard handicap run at the N.Y. A.C. games. In former years the Cornell dual meet always followed the indoor intercoUegiales, but it was decided to have the meeting the same night the National A.A.U . championships were being settled in New York. Yale expected to win the meet, but Cornell strength in the hurdles, Mer- win, Irving, and Bennett won 17 of the 18 points at stake, produced a margin which Yale could not reduce. Yale won only two track events, the 330-yard run and the mile relay. Captain Warn- er personally accounting for both these victories, making up a 12-yard deficit in the relay. Be- sides Thompson ' s pole vault record Vipond and Kerr of Cornell established meet records of 4:22.4 and 9:34.5 for the mile and two-mile runs. Turley placed second to Vipond in both the mile and half-mile, and Allen Minor trailed Kerr in the two-mile run. Yale ' s pole vault power was all that the Blue had in the indoor championships. In addition to the 1 2 points won by the Brown-Thompson- Pierce combination Holcombe and Aaron se- cured four more by taking third and fifth in the 35-pound weight throw. A 3200 meter relay team of Prentice, Hamilton, Turley, and Warner picked up two points by finishing fourth. Fifths by Homer Rose in the broad jump and Allen Minor in the 3000 meter runs supplied the two points bringing the total to 20. Manhattan won the meet by garnering 21 points in the distance runs and relays. By placing third and fourth and first and third in the 1500 and 3000 meter runs Coach Waters ' men col- lected 13 points, and seconds in the 1600 and 3200 meter relays added 8 more. Outdoors Yale took a new lease on life and did much better work. Indoors, with its empha- sis on mile and two-mile relay racing, Yale did not reap the full benefit of the individual prow- ess of men like Warner and Turley and there being no sprint relays could not achieve any gain from its large group of good, but not out- standing sprinters. As usual, the Pennsylvania Relays opened the season. Yale did well, especially in the field events, except in one particular. For the first time in any competition in at least three years, Yale pole vaulters placed no better than third. Brown, trying to heal a bad tendon, did not Captain Karl Warner winning the 400-ineter race in the Princeton meet 185 compete, and Thompson and Pierce, badly off form, tied Hill of Lafayette for third at 13 feet. McWilliams of Princeton was the winner at 13 feet 9 inches. An 880 relay team of Ingersoll, Warner, Smith, and Spofford finished a close second to Cornell, but the four-mile relay team, for which high hopes were held, failed dismally, taking sixth. Hillmann, Holcombe, and Glou- cester Aaron displayed good form, winning first and third in the hammer throw. Tom Ritzman leaped a half-inch short of 23 feet in the broad jump to get a second. Dean Forman took a fourth in the shot put. Yale went into action at Franklin Field again the following Saturday, easily defeating Penn- sylvania. Sweeps of the 3000 meters, 200-meter low hurdles, hammer throw, and pole vault gave Yale a 36-point advantage. The rest of the competition was close, Yale securing but one more point than Penn as the 86-49 score indi- cates. Penn ' s Gene Venzke was the outstanding performer of the meet, defeating Johnny Tur- ley by 80 yards in the 1500, doing 3:54 flat. Bill Bonthron made history a week later on Yale field when, for the second consecutive year, he won three races, the 800, 1500, and 3000 meter runs from his Yale opponents. The rest of his Princeton team, however, did not give him enough support to defeat Yale; the Blue successfully guarding its i i -point margin, gained by romping off with first and second in the hammer and high jump, to the end. As a junior Bonthron had done the same thing against Yale, and as a result Princeton engineered an upset, lying Yale at 67! all. As a sophomore he had won the mile and two-mile runs and taken a second in the half Eight victories and a sec- ond in nine races against Yale is a real record. Since 191 5 Yale hasn ' t been able to win more than once or twice from Harvard at Cambridge while Harvard has met nothing but defeat in New Haven. Yale believed it was going to defeat Harvard and win itself a Big Three champion- ship, its first since 193 1. Harvard, however, had a better balanced team, and all its men performed up to expectations while Yale men disappointed in almost every event. The 78-57 score is a fair measure of the diffe rence between the teams that day. Harvard men swept the high hurdles, javelin, and discus. Yale took first and second in the low- hurdles and high jump, but Harvard offset these cleanups by similar feats in the shot put and 100- meter dash. Brown, Thompson, and Pierce swept the pole vault, but Harvard practically reciprocated by having Playfair and Woodard run one, two in the 3200. Stanford sent only seven men East to the out- door championships, and just three of them would have been enough to win the title. Yale led the East, scoring 2 } points, but the Palo Alto weight men, Johnny Lyman and Gordon Dunn, placed first and second and second and first in the shot and discus, respectively, to give the Californians a nucleus of 18 points on which to build their winning score of 35V4 points. Yale ' s pole vaulters delivered, Brown and Pierce tying for first and Thompson tying for third, giving the Blue a nucleus of 11I-2 points on which to build. Allan Blackman, Stanford sprinter, however, by winning the 4D0-meter run and taking third in the 200-meter dash, added eight points to an already substantial base. The efforts of these three men alone would have won the title for Stanford. The points won by Klopstock, a hurdler, and Mot- tram, a javelin thrower, were just precautionary. The 15 remaining Yale points came in drib- lets. Captain Warner, determined to win the 400-meter title, set a terrific pace all the way but tied up for the first time in his career, to be passed by Blackman and Ring of Holy Cross in the last 15 yards. Bob Spofford, running cour- ageously after having pulled a muscle against Harvard, took a fifth in the 200-meter dash. Charley Pierson was awarded third in the low hurdles after the Kirby automatic timer pictures of the finish had been reviewed. Johnny Turley ended a fine running career by gaining fourth in the 1500, and Al Minor saved a fifth in the 300G. Tom Ritzman, a sophomore, refused to let high pressure coinpetition bother him and secured a third in the broad jump. Hillman Holcombe contributed the last of Yale ' s points with a fifth in the hammer. Brown doubled up in the high jump, tied for third, and added three more points to his original contribution of four and a half 186 i Front Row: Michaels, Woodland Second Row: Bossert, Burke, . lofsin, Haggerty, Captain Pope, Wiclc, Burns. Daoust, Badman Third Row: Coach Avery, Fargo, Leeds, Wright, Eyerly. Juarrero, Manager Swope Missing from picture: Amos, Maas, Oldach Murray Pope, 37 Captain Charles B. Swope, ' 35 Manager Theodore P. Avery Coach The Freshman Track Season THE Freshman Track season was a fairly suc- cessful one this year, the team winning the triangular championship against Harvard and Princeton. The season opened April 28 against Andover, which had the best team they have put in the field for many years. The schoolboys were the ultimate victors, f) ] ::- Q 2- This was the first time that Andover has ever been able to overcome the Yearling track team in the history of the rivalry. The outstanding man for the losers was Capt. Pope, who ran second to Wolfe, the Andover sensation, in the hundred and the 220 and won the broad jump, the time in the hundred being ten flat. On May 12 the team inet Princeton as an added attraction with the Varsity meet. This meet was the most closely fought one of the season, the Eli team being victorious by the close margin of one point. The most surprising thlna; about this contest was the fact that the Yearlings really won on the number of seconds and thirds they were able to amass, Princeton taking most of the firsts. Woodland was the outstanding performer for Yale, turning in a first in the 1500-meter run and a second in the 3000. A week later the team journeyed to Cambridge where they again v ere able to overcome tough opposition and beat the Harvard Freshmen by a slender two-point margin, the final score being 68 ' 2-66 ' 2- As the score would seem to indicate, the two teams were very well balanced, neither seeming to be particularly superior in any de- partinent. The outcome was undecided until the last event, the pole vault. At the time it seeined that Harvard had a good chance to pull up ahead of the Blue Yearlings, but a surprise second place by Daoust gave Yale the points needed for victory. Ch.arles B. Swope, Manager 187 Front Row: Blacharski, Sherk, Dellinger, Captain Minor, Marvin, Woodland. Canning Second Row: Manager Goodrich, Watson, Richards. Berg, Coach Kanaly Allen H. Minor, 35 Richard J. Goodric;h, ' 35 Frank K.- naly Captain Manager- Coach f The Cross Country Season THE outstanding thing about the 1934 Cross Country season was the very large increase in the number of men corning out for the sport, and in the general interest shown. The meet with Cornell was scheduled for Sat- urday morning, October 27th, over the Yale Course. It was a muddy day, but the Yale team performed brilliantly to defeat Cornell, 21-35, Captain Minor leading his team-mates all the way over the five-mile course. The follow- ing Friday, November 2nd, found the Yale team in Cambridge for the triangular and dual meets with Harvard and Princeton. The race was a close one all of the way, but in the end Playfair, of Harvard, nosed out Yale ' s two chief contenders. Captain Minor and Woodland. Woodland distinguished himself by beating his own captain to the tape, finishing second behind Plavfair, while Minor took third. Can- ning, of Yale, took sixth while Dellinger took loth and Blacharski 13th, to fill out the Yale team of five. The first Princeton man to finish was Hogan, who took gth. In the triangular computation the scores were: Harvard 25, Yale 34, and Princeton 88. In the dual computation Harvard beat Yale 25-32, Yale beat Princeton I 7-49, and Harvard beat Princeton 15-54. A meet was scheduled with the New Haven Harriers for Tuesday, November 6th, but was cancelled because of bad weather. The final meet of the season was the I. C. A. A. A. A. meet at Van Cortlandt Park, in New York City, on Monday, November 19th. Yale did very well, placing fourth out of a field of 18 teams. The season of 1934 was not without its de- leats, as the record clearly shows, but the team was a good one, and gives evidence of the grow- ing strength of Yale Cross Country teams. Richard J. Goodrich, Manager 188 Front Row: King. Bund -, Captain Meneely, Logan, Cross Second Row: Manager Audette, Lovejoy, McMenamin, Pierce. Congdon, Coach Kanaly John K. Meneely, ' 38 Charles L. Audette, ' 36 Frank. Kan. ' iLY Captain Manager Coach The Freshman Cross Country Season AN exceptionally fine turnout marked the opening of the 1934 Freshman Cross Country season, and with this encouraging pros- pect Coach Kanaly started his men on an inten- sive trainin g program in preparation for the first meet. This was scheduled to have been with the Hillhouse High School team, on Friday, October 26th, but bad weather necessitated the cancellation of this meet. The following Friday the team journeyed to Cambridge with the Varsity team for the meet with Harvard and Princeton. Unfortunately this strategic engage- ment was the first competition of the season for the Freshmen, outside of inter-squad runs, and they suffered both from lack of experience and the necessity of running over a strange course. In the triangular scoring Princeton won with 23 points, while Yale and Harvard tied with 50 points each for second place. In the dual com- putation Princeton beat Harvard, 19-36, and Yale, 1 7-38, while Harvard also nosed out Yale, 26-29. On Monday, November igth, the team parti- pated in the I.C.A.A.A.A. meet in New York City. They finished loth out of a field of 13, in which a powerful Columbia team won first place. Captain Meneely was the first Yale man home, finishing in 29th place, while Cross placed 30th, Logan 43rd, King 49th, and Bundy 63rd. The Freshman season was not a great success, but it would seem that this was due largely to a lack of experience. Many men who partici- pated were trying Cross Country running for the first time in their lives, and yet many of them, like Captain Meneely, show much promise for the future. C;h.- rles L. Audette, Manager CAPTAIN V()0DL0C:K Front Row: Mascot R. Wood Second Row: Armstrong. Williamson, Gengarelly, Captain Parker, Woodlock, Curtin, Dugan Third Row: Coach Wood, Rankin, Fitz, Klein, McDonald, Lynch, Coach Engle, Manager Webb Missing from picture: McKenzie G. F. Parker, Jr., 34. Samuel B. Webb, 34 Joe Wood OFFICERS, .933-1934 Captain Manager Coach The 1934 Baseball Season Bv Dick Van Horne YALE ' S 1934 baseball season was anything but a success. The team staggered through a 2 1 -game schedule, managing to win but a third of those contests. Winner of the intercollegiate league championship in 1932 and runnerup last year, Yale could do no better than to finish sixth, heading only a wretched Princeton outfit. Strangely enough, five of the Blue ' s seven vic- tories of the campaign were won in league com- petition, a fortunate procedure. Yale fared well in Big Three competition. Princeton lost two straight games, and the Har- vard series was divided. For the first time since the beginning of athletic relations, if veteran observers ' memories do not fail, the Harvard and Princeton series was limited to two games regardless of the outcome. This policy caused the Harvard series to be recorded as indecisive. The reasons for the abandonment of the playoffs were three. A desire to economize, the fact that Harvard became a member of the inter- collegiate league in 1933, and Princeton ' s growing reluctance to sit around until late in June waiting for the Yale-Harvard issue to be settled, combined to produce the innovation. Yale ' s inability to place better than sixth in the seven-team league competition can be at- tributed to two departments, fielding and pitch- ing. The final averages showed that Yale stood sixth in team fieldina: and second in team hit- 191 ting. Such a combination might have dove- tailed to land Yale in a better final position, but the pitching was not consistently good. Captain George Parker won four and lost six games. Bern- ie Rankin won one, a 4-0 shutout over Harvard, and Charlie Fitz lost one. Against what may be termed the miscellane- ous opposition Yale could win only two games. Williams was humbled, 7-3, by Walker, a third baseman, and Holy Cross, perennially THE baseball power of the college world, lost to Parker, 9-3, at Worcester after having won an 1 1 -inning, 5-4 victory from Parker the previ- ous week in New Haven. Brown twice licked the Blue, and Army, Fordham, N.Y.U., and Providence scored single tri- umphs. Because the Springfield game had to be cancelled, Yale opened its season with the Dartmouth game, April 14, a league contest. The Blue proved equal to the occasion, defeating the Hanover contingent, 9-3. Parker allowed only three sin- gles, but five bases on balls and six errors allowed the opposi- tion to score three runs. In his next start, a week later in Philadelphia, Parker limited Penn to four hits, but his teammates could gather only three off Barton and Sked, and Yale lost, i -o. These two league engagements were interspaced by contests with Fordham and N.Y.U., leading New York nines, both of whom took Yale, the former, 14-3, and the latter, 4-3. Babe Young, sophomore Fordham first base- man, hit a home run which bounced off fresh- man field ' s third base dugout, a drive which traveled 419 feet, the longest ever recorded at Yale field. Parker squared his account with Penn by edging them out, 4-3, April 28. Both teams got nine hits, but Parker issued only three passes whereas Sked and Harrington gave six. Yale won the game in the eleventh when Woodlock ' s Texas Leaguer behind third scored Tommy Cur tin. Following this fine victory Yale suffered from a severe dearth ol ' Iriuniphs. Not until May 23, when Walker stopped Williams, could Yale win. Brown, Holy Cross, Dartmouth, Cornell, Co- lumbia, and Cornell again all stopped the Blue. The story was the same in these disheartening games. Either the pitching wasn ' t there, or the team couldn ' t hit. It seemed to be that when- ever a pitcher was in form, Yale couldn ' t hit worth a lick and when the team was producing hits, the opposition battered the Blue hurlers. Dave Harrington pitched the Brown game and the Bruins could get only nine hits off him. Yale got to Humphries for an equal number. Yale ' s six errors and inability to hit when it counted, and eleven men left on bases, accounted for the 9-2 score. Parker worked a beautiful game at Hanover in the return meeting with Dart- mouth, but a nightmare seventh inning cost Yale the game, 4-1. The Blue outhit the Green, 5-3, but two walks, two double steals, a wild pitch, an error, and a single gave Dartmouth three runs and victory. Both the Cornell games were lost because of failure to hit ' with men on bases and errors at critical stages. Parker worked the first contest, played in New Haven, and although hit freely, Cornell got 10 safeties, and Yale totalled 14 off Pasto. Unfortunately for Yale Pasto successfully bore down in every pinch and finally won the game, 6-4. Parker re- ported the Monday after this game with a sore arm and consequently Charley Fitz was as- signed to pitch the return game at Ithaca. He lasted eight innings but Cornell had no trouble in getting eight hits off his deliveries which, assisted by Yale ' s five errors, were enough to make the Big Red a 7-2 winner. The Williams victory was followed by Parker ' s 9-3 victory over Holy Cross at Worcester. Parker had control and kept the heavy-hitting Cru- saders in check. Of their eight hits, only Hoi - gan ' s double was an extra-base blow. Yale, on the other hand, picked up five runs off Sline in the first two innings and continued to get runs off Mulligan and Michaels, who were rushed to the rescue. 192 i tifjtt YALE 2 — HARVARD o T. F. Curtin, Jr., laying out a hit in the second game with Harvard This burst of brilliance, unfortunately, seemed to be too much for the team, and it immediately proceeded to lose four games in a row to Army, Columbia, Providence, and Brown. The Army game, played at West Point Memorial Day, was presented to the cadets on a platter when Yale made six atrocious errors, although outhitting the Army, 12 to 6. Bernie Rankin, who was destined to do great things in the second Har- vard game, pitched this game as well as the Providence and Brown contest, in both of which he was hit often and hard. Columbia defeated Yale, 26-6, at Baker Field the first week in June. The Lions gathered 24 hits, including seven doubles and one home run, off Parker, Fitz, Harrington, and Walker. These pitchers yielded 1 1 bases on balls, and the team made six errors behind them. The score was almost a league record, missing that dubious distinction (for Yale) by a single run, this same Columbia team having scored 27 runs against Cornell in 1932. Yale swept the Princeton series, taking the first game, 3- 1 , and the second by the more con- vincing margin of 14-5. Parker was credited with both victories although Bernie Rankin had to relieve him in the first and Charley Fitz took his place in the second. In the first, game, at New Haven, Parker was effective, holding the weak Tiger team to three hits but he was wild, walking three men in the ninth. At this point, with only one out, Rankin was sent in and, aided by a little luck and brilliant fielding, he saved the day. For six innings the second game was a close, exciting contest, Yale leading 4-3, but in the seventh 15 Yale hitters came up to bat, and 9 of them scored. It was the heaviest scoring inning on record for the league. Fitz relieved Parker in the ninth so that he might win his letter. A heavy, all-day rain forced a postponement of the first game of the Harvard series, and the series opened in Cambridge the following day, June 20, with the Crimson winning, 3-2. Park- er ' s opponent was Eddie Loughlin, Harvard ' s captain, and the game was a pitchers ' battle all the way. Parker allowed Harvard only three hits whereas Loughlin was nicked for five, but the latter wa lked five men to Parker ' s seven. Parker walked Gibbs and Fitzpatrick in the fourth. Following Prouty ' s single and Ware ' s double they both scored, providing what proved to be the winning margin. The next afternoon in New Haven Bernie Rankin pitched the first shutout of the last 12 years of Yale-Harvard relations winning, 2-0. He had his fast ball working, his control, and fine support. Harvard got only four hits, three singles, and Prouty ' s double. Yale made three errors behind Rankin, but none came at critical times. Woodlock played a sensational game at shortstop, accepting about 15 hard chances and making only two errors. 193 D. K. Armstrong, ' 35 R. S. Bosworth, Jr., ' 36 H. W. Carhart, Jr., ' 37 T. F. Curtin, Jr., ' 36 C. Dillingham, ' 35 J. R. Dugan, ' 35S THE BASEBALL TEAM 1934-35 T. C. Horton, ' 37 G. G. Jordan, ' 37 L. M. Kelley, ' 37 P. C. Klein, ' 35 W. J. Klimczak, ' 37S 1935 SCHEDULE April 9 Trinity May 18 April ID Springfield May 22 April 13 Columbia at New York May 25 April 1 7 Manhattan at New Haven May 29 April 20 Pennsylvania at Philadelphia June 1 April 24 Williams at Williamstown June 5 April 27 Pennsylvania at New Haven June 8 May I Brown at Providence June 1 2 May 4 Dartmouth at Yale June 15 May 8 Holy Cross at Worcester June 18 May II Columbia at New Haven June ig May 15 Dartmouth at Hanover June 21 S. A. McKenzie, ' 35 J. M. Noyes, ' 37S G. P. O ' Neil, ' 36 B. C. Rankin, ' 36 L. Walker, ' 36 P. L. Woodlock, ' 37 Cornell at Ithaca Brown at New Haven Cornell at New Haven Fordham at New Haven Holy Cross at New Haven Providence at New Haven Princeton at New Haven (Pending) Princeton at Princeton Harvard at New Haven Harvard at Cambridge Harvard at New London I The Varsity Baseball Team limbers up at Vale Kield lor a long and promising season ' Front Row: Horton, Miles, Captain Blake, Carhart, Hubbard Second Row: Manager Brow-n, Rennell, Kelley, Jordan, Doonan, Kohlmann Missing from picture: Field, Klimczak, Noyes Dexter B. Blake, ' 37 Captain H. K. Brown, Jr., ' 35 Manager Clyde Engle Coach The 1934 Freshman Baseball Season CAPTAIN BLAKE led his men into action on April 14th against the New Rochelle High School. The game turned into a complete rout in favor of Yale, the score resting at 13-3; Carhart of the cubs obtaining four safeties. On April i8th the team journeyed to Hotch- kiss and, playing far below form, was defeated 10-7. Carhart secured a home run and a double, but Yale could not time her hitting. Showing a return to form and giving their camp followers a ray of hope, the Freshmen beat Hillhouse 5-4. Collegiate Prep proved no competition for Coach Engle ' s proteges, falling beneath the heavy stick wielding of Jordan, Miles, and Car- hart and Loomis ' pitching to the score of 14-1. Then came Andover. The Yale team played far below par on the visit to this New England school, never seeming to come through in the pinches. Andover won 8-5 with Yale using three pitchers, Noyes, Loomis, and McNeely. On May ist Roxbury brought an exceedingly weak team to New Haven; the Freshmen exer- cising more of their leg muscles than anything else in the 2 1 -3 victory for Yale. The yearlings displayed their best form of the year in their defeat of Exeter on May 5th, 4-3. The game was closely fought, turning into a pitching duel between Noyes of Yale and Marells of the visitors. Providence, bringing down a team of con- siderable experience, beat the Freshmen 7-5. On May 12th, they went into a funk, losing to Princeton 9-4. Yale outhit its opponents, but never could seem to come through at the right times. Yale also made more errors than Prince- ton. Noyes and Horton did the pitching. The season was wound up in a closely fought, but nevertheless dissappointing, contest with Harvard. Horton and Jordan were the batteries for the Freshmen, and Kelley, the Yale first sacker, proved the highlight of the gaine when he tripled in the fifth to tie the score at two all. In the seventh Harvard eked out the one run necessary to win the game, 3-2. H. K. Brown, Jr., Manager 195 CAPTAIN KILBORXE Holmes, Jackson, Taylor, Wilson, Atvvood. . llen, Agen. Pillsbury, Kilborne John H. Jackson, ' 34 HoYT C. Pease, ' 34S Edwin O. Le. der OFFICERS 1933-1934 . Captain Manager Coach The 1934 Crew Season Bv Dick Van Horne MANY Yale crews have had their pictures labelled, Champions 19.. (or 18.. 1. Johnny Jackson ' s boat will have its picture thus appropriately described, and it will also be en- titled to the designation, ' Record breaker. Ed Leader ' s big, heavy eight defeated M.I.T., Pennsylvania, Columbia, Princeton, and Cor- nell in the preliminary races and then at New London defeated Harvard for the first time in three years. It did more than merely defeat Harvard. It won by three full lengths and set a new record for the Bartlett ' s Cove to the rail- road bridge course of 19:51.8, bettering by more than 10 seconds the old mark of 20:01.6 made by Hai-vard in 191 6. Along in the winter close observers of Yale rowing began to feel that Leader would have a big, heavy crew which could go four miles against Harvard but which might not be much as a sprint crew. During the three previous seasons, years in which Yale would go up to New London with a stylish boat load of sprinters only to be rowed off the river by Harvard ' s gang of stevedores, Yale crews had not been particularly big nor heavy. Toward spring Leader had a first crew of Kilborne, Pillsbury, Agen, Allen, Atwood, Wilson, Taylor, and Jackson boated with Holmes at coxswain. These nine men rowed together in three of the foin- races, Agen ' s indisposition 197 during the Carnegie Cup races at Derby forcing the placing of McCartney in his seat. These oarsmen averaged 184 pounds, six feet three inches, and aij years. Weight, height, and maturity were on their side. Doubts about their ability to sprint were, to a large extent, dis- pelled after three weeks on the Housatonic and after a late April race with M.I.T. on Lake Quinsigamond at Worcester practically all fears that this heavy boatload might not be able to sprint vanished. After Yale won the Blackwell Cup from Pennsylvania and Columbia on the Harlem at New York the last traces of worry disappeared. Princeton people had an idea that the Orange and Black boat might give the Blue a run in the Carnegie Cup race at Derby but Yale rowed the carefully timed, deliberate race that it had in its two previous tests and triumphed handily. After this demonstration of its ability Yale was generally con- ceded to have the best sprint crew in the country. However, many Yale sympathizers were still worried because Yale had done virtually the same thing q- three times before only to have Harvard win, largely through sheer strength, at New London. This worry grew continually during the many pre-race days and reached its peak only 48 hours before race time when Harvard, defying all training axioms, rowed a time trial over the full course just before sun down and was clocked in 20:44.8. This performance changed the bet- ting odds, but did not affect the Yale crew, and the Blue led the Crimson from start to finish. The race with M.LT. on Lake Quinsigamond April 28 opened the season. It was an economy race, the Yale shells being hauled up on trailers the day before the race and the crew going up by train the very morning of the competition. In the varsity race only Yale and Tech competed. The crews rowed the Henley distance of a mile and five-sixteenths with Yale the winner by two and a half lengths in the good time of 6:45.2. Tech was timed in 6:55.8. Lake Quinsi- gamond, long regarded as one of the finest courses in America, was still, and conditions, except for a decided chill, were ideal. Jackson, stroking, did not rush the start and consequently did not overtake the high-stroking Tech eight until almost a quarter of a mile had passed. At the half Yale was stroking 34 to the minute and had a half length lead on Tech which was in- creased to a length at the mile. Yale ' s superior power began to tell in the final five-sixteenths, the Blue going another length and a half ahead of M.I.T. The Blackwell Cup regatta, rowed on Coluiubia ' s home course over the Harlem River in New York, May 5, was featured by Yale ' s coldly-calcu- lated, deliberate pacing. Yale rowed all its races much as Paavo Nurmi, the noted Finn used to run his races, rating itself by the clock regardless of what the opposition was doing. In the varsity race Pennsyl- vania took an early lead over Yale with Columbia close up and before long had three- quarters of a length on the Blue. Jackson kept the stroke Lj.2jp down to 31 or 32, but Yale ' s smooth oarsmanship and power became noticeable, and at Washington Bridge Yale was even with Penn and at High bridge was a half length ahead. Jackson did not whip up the beat through the final half of the two- mile race; Penn held on grimly, but Yale was an easy winner by a length and a quarter. It was timed in 8:30.2 and Penn in 8:34. Columbia was far back, finishing in 8:54. An odd feature of the regatta was the fact that the jayvee race, rowed a half hour earlier at the height of an ebb tide, was won by Yale ' s boat in the much faster time of 8:18.8. Before the Carnegie Cup race against Prince- ton and Cornell, there was a skeptical element which wondered if this Yale crew could, if it had to, take the stroke up without going to pieces. Yale ' s magnificent final quarter-mile drive to win over a determined Princeton outfit proved definitely that Leader ' s men could stick up the couiu without any trouble. After an even, fair start Yale led Princeton by a deck and Cornell by a half-length at the half mile flags. Princeton was still with Yale at the mile, but Cornell was slipping back. Jackson was stroking 32 to the minute with Princeton and Cornell a couple of beats higher. A t the mile Princeton tried the daring stunt of sprinting, and by push- ing the stroke up to 37 or 38 Armstrong was able to bring his boat up to Yale ' s. Jackson did not change his pace at all and entering the final quarter Princeton was still even. At the mile and three-quarters flags, Holmes gave the signal to let it out, Jackson easily and steadily sending the stroke up to 40 and opening up a length on a Princeton crew which refused to buckle. Yale was caught in 10:51.2 for the two-miles, Prince- ton in 10:54.4 and Cornell in 11:05, all good times considering the head wind. Three years of accumulated disappointment as the result of discouraging victories by Har- vard ' s great stevedore crews of Cassedy, Salton- stall, Bacon, Bancroft and company made Yale ' s sweep of the Thames and the setting of a record more acceptable than usual. Yale was favored to win, but at least one of those three preceding, unfortunate Yale crews had been favorites only to lose. Harvard ' s impressive time trial two days before the race alarmed many, but it didn ' t bother a Yale crew which had implicit faith in itself The Thames was rough during the morning freshman and jayvee contests, and the times were slow. The crowds witnessing this half of the regatta were far larger than usual because Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., was rowing at Number 6 in the Harvard freshman boat, and the President had come up from Washington to lend paternal support. The Yale crew refused to be accommodating and defeated a heavily favored Hai-vard combination by a length. The Yale jayvees had no trouble v ' inning by two and a half lengths. By evening the wind had died away to noth- ing, making racing conditions perfect for the varsity race. Yale ' s great crew took advantage of the ebb tide and smooth water to set its fine record of 19:51.8. After the rush of the start Yale dropped its stroke down to 28 or 29 and had no trouble in holding Harvard a length or more to the rear down to the last mile. At the half the boats were even with Yale doing 30 and Hai vard 32. At the mile, still rowing the same beat, Yale had a third of a length. The Blue shell moved slowly and steadily away from Harvard ' s faster- stroking boat until entering the fourth and last mile Yale was a length and a half in front. At three and a half Yale had opened up another half length, and through the last half another whole length was added to the lead, making Yale a winner by three full lengths. Harvard ' s lime was 20:01.6, a clocking which exactly equalled the old record of the Crimson ' s 1916 eight. Y. LE JUNIOR V. RSITY DEFE. TS H. RV. RD BY -2 LENGTHS 199 Schaff ' er, Castle, Belknap, Danielson, Agen, Livingston, Bailey, Boardman, Spock HoYT C. Pease, ' 34S Edwin O. Leader Manager Coach The Junior Varsity Crew Season WHEN the Yale Junior Varsity Crew swept past Penn on dripping wet May 5 last spring, the season opened auspiciously, to end in a blaze of glory at New London on June 22, when Harvard fell before the mighty surge of a perfectly coordinated Yale eight. In the Blackwell Cup Regatta, staged be- tween the three classic rivals, Yale, Pennsyl- vania, and Columbia, Yale felt her way in- trepidly through the unmentionable debris of the Harlem River to finish the i 3-4 mile course in 8:184-5, while Penn drew up a distant second in 8:25. At the sound of the gun, Penn had shot forward into the lead, which she still maintained at the half-way marker. Yale, increasing her stroke continued to gain on her fast failing rival, and finally overhauled her with a quarter to go. From that point to the finish line the Blue Boat made a steady pull to take a well-earned victory. Columbia, the perfect host, pursued gamely, but far to the rear, and finished in 8:41. Two weeks later, when Derby Day brought colorful crowds to the banks of the Housatonic, the J.V. crews of Cornell, Princeton and Yale arrayed themselves in line of battle. Cornell and Princeton jumped the Yale boat at the start, and were off while the Elis were still Ijacking up to the stake boat, hi a neck and neck flight down the river, Princeton finally managed to nose out Yale, and finished a fifth of a second ahead of Yale in 10:45 1-5. Cornell outstroked both boats, and crossed the line in 10:42 1-5. After at Gales Ferry the J.V. Boat had left Leader ' s big Varsity crew in its wake in a four- mile practice run, it seemed fairly certain that the J.V ' s. would iiave little difficulty in over- coming Harvard at New London on the 22nd of June. The Crimson challenged the Yale lead twice in the two-mile stretch, but Harvard was not a menace after the first half, and Yale surged ahead in grand fashion to finish in 9:40 2-5, while Harvard crossed the line in 9 48 2-5. Alexis W. Thompson, Manager } £ -i: -. ' . .. ...i iirP t,1; J1::i,i:| Curtiss. Babcork. RUev. Ludlow. Weller. Robinson. C:aptain Johnson, Truslow. Walden Eads Johnson Jr., 348 Fred Spuhn HoYT C. Pease, ' 34S Captain Coach Manager The University 150-lb. Crew Season THE varsity 150-pound crew Ijegan the rac- ing season by an unexpected victory at Lake Qiiinsigamond. Cornell, a newcomer in this event, was handicapped by a long trip and a borrowed shell. Yale managed to put them astern with little trouble and to overtake M.I.T. near the finish, leading them in by over half a length in spite of the heavy odds that favored the technicians. Reassured by the powerful sprint that had enabled them to win the first race, the fifties turned back the threats of Pennsylvania and Columbia the next week in a close contest on the Harlem River. Almost overcome by tidal waves underneath the Washington Bridge the Yale boat managed to stay together and to cross the line a bare deck-length ahead of the Penn boat which in turn led Columbia by the same margin. In the Goldthwaite Cup Regatta held on Derby Day the light-weights avenged their de - feat of the year before by surging past the worn- out Princeton eight near the finish of the race. Unable to match the fresh burst of speed, Prince- ton lagged by a half-length while Harvard was far astern, burnt out after their initial sprint. Having been led through a successful season by Coach Spuhn and by the initiative of experi- enced Captain Johnson, the 150 crew sailed for England to enter the Henley Royal Regatta in early July. On the first and second days Yale defeated First Trinity (Cambridge) and Tabor Academy, also from America. The quarter- finals on the third day proved to be the end of the Eli string of victories, for on that day they bowed to the Thames Rowing Club, winner of the finals. Milton F. Martin, Assistant Manager Front Row: Cdogan Second Row: Reigeluth, Hall, Austin, Eyer. Higgins, Griggs, Montgelas Johnson L. Johnson, ' 37 Don Grant Milton F. Martin, ' 35 Captain Coach Manager The 1934 Freshman Crew Season THE Yale Freshman Crew opened its season at Kent on April 28. Sure neither of the course or of the beat, the Freshman Heavies lost by a length in a slow race in which Kent main- tained a slight lead irom the start which it was able to hold to the finish. Yale took second at the Blackwell Regatta held at New York on May 5, the Penn Fresh- man boat taking first over a one and three- quarter mile course. The Penn crew stepped into a big lead at the start and finished in 8:20; although the Blue boat raised the stroke near the finish line, it was not able to overhaul its strong competitors in black and orange and finished in 8:24. Columbia brought up the rear with a time of 8:34. Cornell, Princeton, and Yale competed in the Carnegie Cup Regatta held at Derby on May 19. The crews rowed a two-mile covuse with Cornell well in the lead at the one-mile marker. Finishing in 10:58, she left her two competitors alone to fight it out all the way down the course. With a long sweep in a breathtaking finish Princeton nosed out Yale by a small lead, finish- ing in 1 1 :07 4-5. At the Yale-Harvard Regatta, ablaze with its attendant cortege of crowds, yachts, and color the Blue Boat found itself confronted with a strong Harvard crew on June 22. With the odds strongly in favor of the Crimson, Yale went onto the field with three untried men and high hopes. Captain Johnson held his men to a fast thirty- five count, and with intermittent leg drives stove off all the efforts of a gallant Harvard boat to keep pace with its fast flight down the river. Leading at the mile, the Yale Boat finished the two mile course in 9:47 3-5, with Harvard trailing along to finish in 9:51. Milton F. Martin, Manager Front Row: Matthews Second Row: Mabee, Bascom. Robinson, Captain Brookfield, Walton, Johnston, Comley, Barnes Samuel L. Brookfield, ' 37 Captain Fred Spuhn Coach Milton F. Martin, ' 35 Manager The 1934 Freshman 150-lb. Crew Season i AT Newport the Freshman 150-pound crew inaugurated the 1934 season against St. George on May 5. The stern four of the Yale boat lost to the first St. George crew over a half- mile course. Although the Freshmen had con- siderable difficulty in pulling together at the start, a magnificent spurt at the end almost succeeded in catching the .St. George boat. The time was 3:00. The Yale Boat met Princeton for the second race of the season at Derby on May 19. As was expected, the Princeton boat won the race over a Henley course with a timing of 6:46, as against Yale ' s 6:53. Defeat was partially due to an ex- cessivelv high Yale stroke down the course, which left but little to give at the finish. In the last half-mile the Princeton crew gained over a length to win by a full length and three-quarters. As in the Princeton race, Yale proved un- equal to Harvard in the last half-mile of thee las- sie encounter at Derby on May 26. Starting at a slightly lower stroke than Harvard, the Yale boat succeeded in holding even with the Crimson until two crabs caught in quick succession spelled disaster and lost a precious length for Yale. With a valiant spurt the Yale boat came along-side again in the second half of the course, but lacked the endurance to hold out against Harvard and trailed by a length at the finish. Milton F. Martin, Manager 203 Physical Education By Robert J. H. Kiphuth I ' THE Department of Physical Education at Yale as a section of the University Health Department is in its third year in the new Payne Whitney Gymnasium. During this time it has de- voted its efforts to carrying on many of the activities engaged in at the old gymnasium on Elm street and with the splendid facilities and opportimities in the new plant for increasing its scope and usefulness, the physical education program has naturally been greatly enlarged. One of the first tasks of the Department was to find out how many people were exercising, the type of activities engaged in, and the approxi- mate amoimt of time consumed. An increasingly accurate record of attendance has been kept dur- ing the past three years, and the simimary shows that exercise attendance is increasing each year. This, naturally, is to be expected with increased facilities at the Yale fields and in the new Payne Whitney Gymnasium. Records for the past year show that 96.2% of the entire undergraduate body have taken part in some organized or supervised activity and 51.5% were regular in their attendance. Students in this classification exercised at least two periods a week. The re- maining number of the gS.s ' j, who exercised fluctuated between those who were almost regu- lar to those who may have been present only once. The aims of the Physical Education Depart- ment in its program for the undergraduates at Yale University include : 1 . The development ol ' organic and functional power 2. The development of lasting habits of personal hygiene 3. The development of neuro-muscular skills 4. The development of interest in play and recreation 5. The development of social and ethical standards For many years the general Body Building classes at Yale have been very popular with the undergraduates. This type of exercise has proved to be very effective in the development of great organic vigor. Many free movements involving the big muscles of the trunk furnish tremendous stimulation to the circulation and body metabo- lism in general. For men who do not have time for games and play, for those looking for a quick work-out or development of deficient musculature, this type of exercise is very efficacious. Body Building popularity is evident from the voluntary enroll- ment of 819 men last year. During the Orthopaedic examinations, a part of the general medical examination, a great many men are found deficient in their body posture and correct body mechanics. The undergraduates thus indicated for corrective exercises are placed in case groups and giveir 204 exercises particvilarly suited to their physical and mechanical lack. Approximately 60% of the Freshman Class are assigned each year to this group but with periodical reexaminations many are released as soon as their correction warrants. Last year all but 8 of those indicated for cor- rective exercises were passed by the examining orthopaedic surgeon at the end of the course. Yet another group in individual and body building gvmnastics are those men referred for exercise by the University Health Department and the coaches. The cases from the University Health Department include cardiacs, over- weights, under-weights, and post-operative con- ditions. Co-operation with the coaches has evolved a system of developmental exercises that certain sports find exceedingly beneficial. Swim- ming, soccer, hockey, and crew have been gi en special group attention from time to time, and the coaches feel that increased efficiency has followed these drills. In all of these exercises the aim is to increase the strength and power of the large muscles of the trunk so essential in all sports and in particular the muscles essential to execute the special movements which are pecul- iar to a sport. For example, the hockey man needs special exercises for the hip joint flexors, adductors of the thighs, dorsi flexors of the feet. The crew man must have marked flexion in the knee, ankle and hip joints as well as a strong back. The swimmer must have strong depressors of the arms and unusual strength of the hip joint flexors and extensors. .Since coming into the new gymnasium the department has been very much interested in the teaching of ' carry-over skills, emphasizing certain activities which a man can utilize to advantage as a hobby for leisure time in a way not possible in team sports. Squash racquets or handball, golf and swimming were singled out as activities of great value, which could be included at this time in the testing and teaching program. It is to be hoped that tennis will be added later on. The results of the tests in these recreative sport skills given the entire Freshman class last year are as follows : Number of men who could swim 778 9 .73 ' r Number of men who could play golf 441 52 . 56 ' f Number of men who could play squash or handball 374 44.57 ' Number of men proficient in three sports 269 Si.oef ' c Number of men proficient in two sports 560 66.74% Number of men proficient in one sport 798 95.11% Number of inen not proficient in any sport 33 3-93 ' f That this type of work is essential in a physical education program is quite evident from the following which shows that the athletic type (men out for teams) show a greater percentage in skills deficiency than the non-athletic type. Of the above 306 men proficient in only one skill about 51 ' ; were candidates for a competitive sport and 49 were not of this competitive sport group. Of course, the figures for one or two years do not necessarily prove much, but it will be in- teresting to watch these percentages from year to year to see whether or not the team sport man on entering college continues to be less skillful in these recreational sports than his less athletic class-mate. Certaitr experimental projects are undertaken each season by the Physical Education Depart- ment, in co-operation with the Department of University Health. These projects, concerned with general hygiene and the physiology of exercise, have a specific as well as a general value in sport skill and training. Among the interesting extension groups meeting for exercise in the gymnasium are the Campus Police numbering 66. These men have three classes a day three days a week and are given general body building exercises followed by some game like volley ball. Every Saturday morning at 9:00 o ' clock the sons of the faculty meet for exercise and play. Boys ranging in age from 5 to 15 years are given the freedom of the building to engage in those activities in which they are most interested. The older boys play basketball, squash, tennis, fence or box. The younger members engage in organ- ized gym games and at the end of the morning the entire group goes into the pool for a swim. This group numbers 78. The Physical Education Department feels it has made a healthy beginning toward the real- ization of its aims and looks to the future with the hope of greater usefulness. ( Eliminating swimming which is a required test. 306 men in the class were proficient in only one of these skills). 205 Front Row: R. Miles, Larsen Second Row: E. Wilson, Watson, T. Wilson, Captain E. Miles, Klein, Armstrong, McNeely Third Row: Manager Niles, Cummins, Carey, McNeil, Coach Ripley The Basketball Season Dec. Feb. Mar. 8 13 Yale Yale 21 43 Stamford Providence 31 26 (away) 15 Yale 23 Fordham 22 (away) 12 Yale 41 P.M.C. 23 15 19 22 Yale Yale Yale 3 ' 37 12 Columbia Williams Penn 44 28 23 (away (away) 26 Yale 30 Cornell 28 (away) 31 Yale 29 Georgetown 32 2 Yale 28 Penn 32 (away) 6 Yale 33 N.Y.C. 29 9 12 16 Yale Yale Yale 20 17 44 Dartmouth C.C.N.Y. Cornell 42 24 31 (away) (away) 18 Yale 37 Dartmouth 33 22 27 Yale Yale 19 36 Princeton Harvard 22 24 (away) 2 Yale 43 Brown 23 6 Yale 44 Princeton 39 8 Yale 18 Columbia 29 16 Yale 18 Harsard 35 (away) 206 The Basketball Season OFFICERS Egbert J. Miles, Jr. ' 35S Captain Harry D. Niles, ' 35 Manager Ellis J. Stalky, Jr., ' 36 Assistant Manager Elmer H. Ripley Coach David K. Armstrong, ' 35 Robert H. Beckwith, ' 37 Robert S. Carey, ' 37 Richard J. Cummins, ' 36 TEAM Philip C. Klein, 35 P. Norman Larsen, 35S Donald G. McNeely, ' 37 Robert L. McNeil, Jr., ' 36S Richard C. Miles, ' 37 Malcolm D. Watson, ' 35 Edward D. Wilson, ' 35S Thomas E. Wilson, ' 36S RARELY does the sporting world see such an erratic team as Yale ' s 1934-35 quintet turned out to be. High hopes were held for this team when practice began in November, what with such players as the Miles brothers, the Wilsons, Tom and Ned, Jimmy DeAngelis, Larry Kelley, and Phil Klein available. Con- sidered as a whole the season was one of bitter disappointment, although it had its redeeming features. Ever since Bob O ' Conneirs team had won the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League champ- ionship in 1932-33, undergraduates ' thinking about basketball had Ijeen done in terms of another championship outfit. Before the League season began Eggie Miles ' team was picked to finish in the first three and was considered the only possible threat to Pennsylvania, 1933-34 titleholder. The very first League game of the season, that with Columbia at Morningside Heights, disil- lusioned Y ale, the Light Blue winning, 44-31. A week later Pennsylvania succeeded in winning its first game from Yale on the Payne Whitney Gymnasium floor, smothering an impotent Yale crowd, 23-12. Immediately after this game Larry Kelley parted company with the team and when, without him, Cornell was defeated, 30-28, at Ithaca it looked as if Yale were finally going to get rolling. Pennsylvania, however, pricked Yale ' s bubble a second time, winning, 32-38 in the Palestra. Yale was still confident but Dartmouth rolled up a 42-20 score at Hanover, playing before its Winter Carnival crowd. Yale pulled itself to- gether, trimming Cornell, 44-31, on a Saturday night, and squaring the Dartmouth series the following Monday night, 37-33. Just when it again appeared as if Yale were about to mow down all remaining opposition, Princeton, a decided underdog, took a tight 22-19 game before an appreciative Princeton Alumni Day crowd. Yale quickly atoned for this by subduing Hai ' vard, 36-24, at New Haven and winning the second Princeton game, 44-39. Definitely out of the running for the champ- ionship at this point, Yale could, however, by defeating Columbia in the next-to-last League game give Penn a clear-cut title to the champion- ship. Unfortunately, Yale had a bad night and, unable to exploit Columbia ' s rather mediocre playing, lost 29-18. The final game of the season, Harvard at Cambridge, came as an anti- climax. Playing without Captain Miles, Klein and Beckwith, Yale lost its first game to the Crimson since 1927, 34-18, but nevertheless finished fourth in the final league standings. The great feature of the season was the 33-29 overtime victory over N.Y.U. in Payne Wliitney, February 6. N.Y.U. had been undefeated for two years, had played the best teams in the coun- try and was considered to be the nation ' s out- standing team. Yale caught New York in an overconfident mood and played perfect, in- spired basketball. Two other non-league games were notable. In December Yale won its first game in history from Fordham in New York, 23-22. Brown came down from Providence in early March boasting a long winning streak and was beaten, 43-33. Eggie Miles was the team ' s outstanding player, being selected as second-string all- League guard. His younger brother. Bud, was consistently good as a defensive guard. Tom Wilson was intermittently good at forward and Ned Wilson ' s tremendous height enabled Yale to get the tap more than its share of times. Had Bob Beckwith and Phil Klein not been held back by early season injuries the first part of Yale ' s league campaign would have been more successful. This team was destined to be Yale ' s last Ripley-coached outfit. Ripley came to New Haven in 1929 and put Yale basketball on a high plane after it had languished in the doldrums for years. He resigned his position just before the second Yale-Princeton game. Dick V. n Horne, 1935 207 Front Row: Paul, Corroon Second Row: Howland, King, Buckingham, Clooke, Captain Li ingston, Rogers. Wilson, Brown Third Row: Christner, Wiggin. Mittendorf. Ferguson. Henry, Stiles, Cahill, Easton Fourth Row: Coach Michaels, Anderson, Wilcox. Richards. Manager . dams, Colgate, Hendrie. Coach Kiphuth Missing jrom f ' icturc: Hoyt. The Swimming Season David L. Livingston, ' 35 Captain Donald C. Adams, ' 35 Manager Robert J. H. Kiphuth Coach SEASON Dec. 15 Yale 54 Alumni 8 Jan. 16 Yale o N.Y.U. o 19 Yale 45 Brown 26 22 Yale o Wesleyan o 23 Yale 61 Springfield 16 (away) 26 Yale 49 Pennsylvania 22 Feb. I Yale o C.C.N.Y. o (away) 8 Yale o Dartmouth o (away) 16 Yale o Columbia o 22 Yale 59 Boys ' Club of N.Y. 12 27 Yale o Rutgers o Mar. 2 Yale o Navy o (away) 5 Yale Carnival 9 Yale 54 Princeton 1 7 13 Yale 38 Harvard 33 (away) 22, 23 Yale Intercollegiates (away) 29, 30 Yale N.C.A.A. (away) 208 The Swimming Season Bv Dick Van Horne i YALE ' S 1934-35 swimming season was more than a mere repetition of the i o consecutive preceding seasons, during which no college team was able to defeat Yale in a dual meet. It was distinctive not because Yale won its ele -- enth straight Intercollegiate Swimming Associ- ation championship trophy, and not because Yale ' s incredible number of consecutive vic- tories was increased to 139, but because of the tremendous power, individually and collective- ly, of Bob Kiphuth ' s squad. The great profusion with which record-break- ing performances occurred was unusual and ex- cited undergraduate interest, although attend- ance figures wovild not so indicate. Yale failed only once in its five league meets with Pennsyl- vania, C.C.N.Y., Columbia, Navy and Rutgers to win by 50 points or more. Swimming Penn January 26 in New Haven Yale won, 49-22. Had Kiphuth concentrated on crushing Penn instead of saving Charley Rogers, Dick Cooke, Dick Wilson and Captain Dave Livingston for their successful 400-yard relay record attempt (3:34), the sweep would have been complete. At the end of the league season Yale swimmers were credited with best performances for the year in every event except the 50-yard dash and the 200-yard breast stroke. Dick Cooke, a sopho- more, swam a 53.6 loo against Rutgers and a 2:16.4 220 against Columbia, thereby making himself holder of two best performances for the year. Norris Hoyt, a junior, broke Carl Leedy ' s Yale record, and joined Cooke among the elite when he did 4:56 for the 440 against Pennsyl- vania. Two men, both sophomores, Charley Rogers and Connie Mittendorf, shared honors for the 150-yard back stroke. Rogers was timed in 1:42.6 in the Columbia meet, February i, and 1 1 days later in the Rutgers meet Mitten- dorf equalled this time. Both men stand also as coholders of a Yale record, Mittendorf, oddly enough, having lowered House ' s old mark of 1 :43.2 to 1 :43 flat in the Pennsylvania meet. Toby Henry did the best diving of the year against Navy, scoring 1 29 points. The 400-yard relay team ' s time of 3:34 in the Pennsylvania meet stood not only as a league record, but also as a National Collegiate Record. Those four men, combining with Norris Hoyt, Dick Corroon and Norman King, accounted for four long-course American records during the week of Febiuary 24. Rogers, Cooke, Wilson and Livingston established a time of 4:04.8 for the 400-meter route. They also set a standard of 3:43 for the 400-yard distance. By having Cor- roon and King carry on after the 400-yard point had been reached, a si.x-man team record of 5:39.4 for 600-yard was made. Cooke, Wilson and Livingston, swimming with Hoyt as leadoff, opened the record assaults that week by doing 8:32.4 for 800 yards. A fourth indication of Yale ' s might was fur- nished by a freshman. Captain Johnny Macionis. The first swimmer ever to come to Yale already classed as great, Macionis did not disappoint as is so often the case, but proceeded to swim a 2:10.8 220, the fastest ever swum by anyone save Johnny W ' eissmuller, and a 4:45.6 440, faster than any one else except Jack Medica ' s 4-42- The easiest meets ol the season were those with the Alumni, which opened the year, December 15, with Springfield, and with New York Boys ' Club. The Alumni were humiliated 54-8, while Springfield, specifying that it wanted Yale ' s best men to swim, fell, 61-16. The Boys ' Club, not the power it was in the days of Kojac and Fissler, was thrashed, 59-12. It would be difficult to designate one meet as being the hardest because Yale won all without any trouble whatsoever. The Harvard ineet score, 38-33, was the closest, but that means little, Kiphvith ' s pastime of allowing meets to be concluded with close scores being well known. Yale had that meet won with two events and the relay to be swum. To give fellows a chance to win Y ' s Kiphuth sent in second-stringers, thereby allowing Harvard to make a presentable show- ing. The Navy meet was probably the hardest from a physical point of view. The team en- trained at New Haven at seven in the morni ng, arrived at Annapolis just in time to swim, and left for home immediately after the meet. Added to this was the fact that Navy ' s pool measures 50 yards whereas almost every other college tank is only 25 yards long. Yale ' s facilities al- lowed Kiphuth to accustom his men to the long course, what with a 167-foot practice pool equipped with a movable bulkhead. In addition to the league meets and those with the Alumni, Springfield Boys ' Club, and Harvard, Yale met N.Y.U., Brown, Wesleyan, Dartmouth, and Princeton. Wesleyan and N.Y.U. could offer no competition. Dartmouth was no threat to Yale, but the meet, one of the features of the Hanover Winter Carnival, attracted a capacity crowd, eager to pay stiff admission prices, a situ- ation rarely occurring at New Haven because of Yale ' s obvious superiority. Brown came down from Providence hoping to do things, but when Livingston unre eled a 24.1 50, Wilson a 2:19 220, and Hoyt a 5:02.8 440 Brown had nothing in the way of an answer. Princeton also arrived in New Haven expecting to engineer an upset, but made a poorer showing than Brown, losing 54-17 as against Brown ' s 45-26. 209 Front Row: Larkin. Stanger. Da idson. Levine. Coerr, Raymond Second Row: Smith, Badger. Upton, Maxwell, Captain Murray, Bronson, Brill, Ward, Orth Third Row: Manager Hopkins, Peters, Lasell. Thompson, Foss, Belin, Blake, Coach Leeman Missing from fiiclure: Badman, Jennings, Pond William S. Murray, Jr., ' 36 George A. Hopkins, Jr., ' 35 Walter Leeman Captain Manager Coach The Association Football Season ALTHOUGH the Soccer Team won four games, tied two, and lost three, its season was a better one than such summary statistics might indicate. Coach Leeman ' s hooters had lost one-goal victories to Pennsylvania and Har- vard which might easily have been converted into triumphs for the Blue. With a 3-1 victory over the Bridgeport All- Scots in an early practice game already to their credit, the Blue aggregation set out in dead earnest against M.LT. on October 13, upsetting the invaders 3-0. Three days later the Eli hooters journeyed to Middletown to overcome Wesleyan 3-1. Placed on the defensive throughout the first half by a fast and aggressive Wesleyan forward line, the Blue defense showed up to advantage, with Captain Murray outstanding at fullback. Battling through two overtime periods on October 20, Yale was unable to break a i-i tie with Brown. The following week witnessed Yale ' s first defeat at the hands of a strong Springfield aggregation. Journeying to Annapolis on November 3, the bulldog hooters rose to avenge the upset of a ' eek before by swamping the Navy team 4- 1 . Playing away again a week later, Yale met its second defeat of the season at Pennsylvania, dropping 2-1 the blue ' s chances of winning the Intercollegiate Soccer Championship. Meeting Wesleyan for the second time on November 13, Yale came out on top. Over- powering a strong forward line, the Blue ended a threatening deadlock with a i-o victory. Travelling to Princeton on the 1 7th, the Elis played the hardest game of the year; at the end of an overtime period, in which the Princeton defense held out valiantly against a not too strong Yale attack, the score stood at i-i. Closing the season with the Harvard en- counter a week later, the Yale aggregation found formidable opposition in a determined Crimson defense, and its seemingly invincible attack was thwarted, the Crimson eking out a i-o victory. George A. Hopkins, Jr., Manager Front Row: Smick, Newman Second Row: Northrup, Huffman, Galland. Captain Gardner, Barr, Loomis, Higgins Third Row: Kaufman, Coach Del Genio, Dillingham, Manager Sperry, Raymond, Coach King Missing jrom picture: Ewing, Goodyear, Thomas, Watson Edward T. Gardner, Jr., ' 35S Mark L. Sperry, 2nd, ' 35 Moses King Captain Manager Coach The Boxing Season ALTHOUGH last year ' s veterans were lost by graduation and sickness, the 1934-35 Boxing Team, made up entirely of new men, with the exception of Captain E. T. Gardner, Jr., 1935S, came through with only one defeat. Jinxed by what Coach King called the worst hard luck since I ' ve been coaching, the weakened University team went down against an experienced Army team, 5-2, in the opening game of the season. R. I. Galland, 1937, and Huston Huffman, 1936, were the only win- ners for the Blue in the 155 and 165. The next week the team won a surprise vic- tory over a much sung Cornell team, 5-3. Wat- son, injured in the Army meet, was replaced by Dick Barr, 1936, who drew with a more experi- enced man. Galland again won in good form, and Luke Loomis in the best bout of the day shaded his man for a victory. Huffman, also injured at Army, was replaced by Raymond, who lost to Captain Crauser of Cornell. Captain Gardner defeated his man with a splendid exhi- bition of pugilistic skill. On Alumni Day before the largest crowd of the year the Eli team avenged with a 5-3 victory last year ' s defeat at the hands of the U. S. Coast Guard Academy on New London. Galland continued on his unbeaten path against Pennsylvania, and the invaders were turned back 5-3. The climax of the season was reached in the Har ' ard meet at Cambridge. Frank Newman, 1936, dislocating his shoulder in the first round of the 115-pound division, lost after a valiant fight. Gardner fought his way to victory in the best bout of his four year career. A. .Smith, 1936, lost in a fine match, and Galland fell in defeat for the first time in pitched battle with Captain Smith of Harvard. In a feverish duel in which he floored his man four times. Chuck Higgins won a clean decision, tying the score at 41. -4; . Mark L. Sperry, 1935 Front Row: Evans, E. Deming, Mitchell, Captain Tompkins, MacVey, A. Deming, Calhoun Second Row: Manager Griffing, Gafford, Holcombe, Ridgway, Coach Grasson James M. Tompkins, ' 35 Captain Robert P. Griffing, Jr., ' 35 Manager R. H. E. Grasson Coach The Fencinor Season UNDER the leadeiship of Captain Jimmie Tompkins, the fencing team wound up a successful season with a third place in the three- weapon championships in the forty-second an- nual meeting of the Intercollegiate fencing asso- ciation in New York on the last week end of March. Having been the mainstays of the team in dual meet tests. Captain Tompkins in the epee and John MacVey in the sabre distin- guished themselves against powerful opponents to contribute to Yale ' s third place. H. G. Hol- combe, ' 36, leader of the foils group, did con- sistently good work all year but was unable to raise the foils team.s position against the strong trios of several of the other teams in the inter- collegiate competition. The Yale team fought five other colleges this year in regular schedule, and one informal in- vitation match with Rollins College, of Florida, on a northern trip. Of the first five Army, Navy, and Harvard were defeated, the Army offering the closest competition. Rollins received a 15-6 defeat. Columbia won 17-10, and Princeton also by the meager margin of 9-8. An earlier defeat by the New York Fencers Club was made up for by a 14-13 victory over a strong Salle d ' Armes Vince team, also from New York. The earlier season schedule was given over to informal matches under the auspices of the Connecticut branch of the Amateur Fencer ' s League Association, held in the Yale gym. Foil, epee, and sabre teams of member groups from various parts of the state competed. A great many of the team will be leaving this year, but Coach Grasson has several men who have showed promise for a strong group next year. Holcombe, in the foils, will return, and both John Evans ' 37 in the epee and John Mitchell ' 37 in the foils did good work this year. Among those in the graduating class whose work will be a distinct loss to the team are N.P. Calhoun, Captain Tompkins, John MacVey, and Jack Ridgway, but with a nucleus of five returning letter men, the prospects of turning out a championship team next .season look bright. Robert P. CIriffing, Jr., Manager Front Row: Shurly, Goldberger, Captain I ' ransue, I ' uwn Second Row: Weatherwax, Levinson, Parker, Resnik Oliver M. Transue, ' 34 Captain William K. Haverstick, ' 34 Manager Bernard Thomson Coach The 934 Golf Season TN the spring of 1934 the Yale ' arsity GoU ' - - Team played ten collegiate matches, three informal matches, and competed in the National Intercollegiates. The season on the whole was a successful one, the team receiving only one de- feat at the hands of Princeton, which was avenged later in the season by a Yale victory of 8} to Princeton ' s 1 2 if a play-off match to de- termine the winner of the Eastern Intercollegi- ate League. Thus the Yale team maintained its League Championship for the fourth consecu- tive year. At the beginning of the season Yale administered defeat to Lehigh and Franklin and Marshall by scores of 6 to 3 and 6 to o respec- tively. The first group of League matches was played at Philadelphia, where Yale defeated Georgetown and Pennsylvania, and was de- feated by Princeton. Yale then defeated Wil- liams and Brown, both quite decisively at a later date in New Haven. After the examination period Yale defeated Holy Cross, Dartinouth and Harvard by the scores of 5I2 to 3I2! 6 ' 2 to 2I2) and 5I2 to 3I2 respectively. At the end of the season the team attended the National Intercollegiates at Cleveland and was unfortunate in losing out to Michigan by only three strokes, but nevertheless securing a second place, of which they were more than worthy. During the season three informal Country Club matches were played by the Yale team, which was composed of eight men instead of the usual six. The first was played at Hartford, where Yale won by 81 2 to 31 . Another was played at the Woodway Course in Stamford, and still another at the Greenwich Country Club, both of which matches were won by Yale. Outstanding among the Yale Golfers was Oliver Transue, 1934, who led his team in most every instance to victory. The Spring Tourna- ment of 1934 was also won by O. Transue, 1 934. The Fall Tournament of 1 934 was won by J. P. Ferguson, Jr., 1936. F. B. Town, 1935, was elected captain of the team for 1935. Charles C. Wickwire, Jr., Manager 213 Front Row: Whitcraft, Bailey Second Row: Barnum, McCabe, ' incent. Taylor. Captain Train, Crawley, .- ckerman, Bradley, Humphrey Third Row: C oach Smith. Moses. Warner. Trainer Rigley. Walden. Paine, Manager Pirrung John K. Train, Jr., 34 Captain Gilbert R. Pirrung, ' 34S Manager William A. Smith Coach The 1934 Lacrosse Season COACH Pink Smith did a fine job ol ' whipping poor varsity material into a team that made a very creditable showing with one of the hardest schedules Yale ever faced. After two practice games during Spring Vacation with Stevens Institute and C.C.N.Y., the team em- barked on its difficult schedule with a 10-2 vic- tory over a strong Alumni team. The following Saturday they crushed Brown by a score of 8-2, with Ralph Bailey ' 34 responsible for five of the Blue tallies. The Elis journeyed South to Mary- land the next week-end, but bowed to a power- ful aggregation in a rough game, ending with a count of 1 2-0. Two days later the Blues dropped another game, 9-5, to the Mt. Washington Club. The team had not yet fully recovered from this strenuous competition the next week, when they lost a 5-4 decision to Dartmouth in spite of a val- iant second-half rally. The Elis led Army 3-1 at the first quarter of that game, but the superior condition of the Cadets won them a 6-3 victory. On Derby Day a powerful Princeton team vanquished Yale 7-5 in a hard-fought battle, which saw the Blues outscore the Tigers 4-1 in the second half The season came to a climax with the exciting game with Harvard, in which Yale nosed her out 8-7 in an overtime period. At the end of the first half Harvard led 4-0, but a rejuvenated Bulldog team came back to tie the score 6 all at the end of the regular playing time. In the extra period Yale scored first on a goal by Walt Taylor ' 35. Harvard again tied the count shortly after, but Bradley ' 35S cinched the game for the Blues just before the whistle. After the game W. W. Taylor ' 35 was elected Captain to succeed J. K. Train ' 34, stellar AU- American defense man. Robert Temple, Manager 214 I Front Row: Coach Strohbehn, Wilson. Captain Se Second Row: P. Dominick, B. Dominick, Embree Jay K. Secor, ' 35 . Fred R. White, Jr., ' 35 Lt. Edward L. Strohbehn r, Rand, Manager White Captain Manager Coach The Polo Season UNDER the tutelage of their new coach, Lt. E. L. Strohbehn, Yale ' s varsity Polo teams showed up well the past season against a bevy of strong opponents. The opening games were played against Farmington Valley, and resulted in two hard fought victories for the Blue. The first contest, at Hartford, went to Yale 15-14; when again a week later the Yale trio pitted themselves against Farmington, after a furious contest they took the match i4 2-io. With appetites whetted by these early season triumphs, the trio journeyed West on February 1st, but went down to defeat to the Detroit Eagles Ii ' ;-I2i25 in a thrilling game which went into a sudden death chukker. The fol- lowing night the 107th Cleveland Cavalry fell prey to the Eli mallet swingers 17-13 ' ,, although Rand smashed through with 14 tallies. The fol- lowing Saturday Yale suffered her second de- feat, 12-16, at the hands of a strong Army team in the West Point Riding Hall. Playing host to the Pennsylvania Military College, Yale routed the Cadets i7V2-5 2 a week later. Another Blue victory was rung up the next week when Yale defeated a highly touted Boulder Brook trio iyA- yi at Scarsdale. The climax of the season came on March 2nd, when Yale, after trailing during most of the fray, eked out a i2 -io vic- tory over Princeton. Playing in Boston the follow- ing .Saturday, the Cantabs, seizing every oppor- tunity, piled up an early lead which Yale tried desperately, but without avail, to break. Har- vard was finally victorious 7-1 ijj. The Junior Varsity team, broke even in its schedule, winning three and dropping a like nvimber of games. A last minute foul prevented the Jawees from at least holding at deadlock a strong Beaver Brook aggregation, and Yale went down in defeat 1 1 - 1 1 j 2 . Meeting Army ' s Jayvee riders in the next game, the Yale mallet swingers took them easily, 7-2. Yale lost the next contest 5 2-1 3 ' 2 to the powerful Farmington Valley riders, and a week later went to Hartford to down the Governor ' s Horse Guard Team 9 ' 2-5! ' 2- The Jay ' ees also climaxed their season riding rough shod to down the Tigers 24-8, with Wilson and Lubree each scoring ten times. Travelling to Wilkes-Barre, the Eli riders lost to the 109th F.A. 9-1012. Fred R. White, Jr., Manager 215 Front Row: Goodkind, Captain MacLaren, Edwards Second Row: Coach Davidson, Wadelton, Hinlile, Jenks Frederick B. MacLaren, Jr. Captain W. W. Davidson . dap tain Coach The Rifle Season THE Yale Rifle Team completed its first season with an impressive record for a team in its first year. In eleven shoulder-to-shoulder matches the team won eight and lost three, de- feating Harvard, Princeton, the Coast Guard Academy, Northeastern University, Norwich, City College of New York, Connecticut State and Fordham. The team lost to Army, M.I.T., and the first of the two matches with Connecti- cut State. In the National Intercollegiates the Team placed third in the northeastern section to win over all the New England teams, with a score which threatens to place Yale among the first twelve rifle teams in the country. All the matches were shot according to the Intercollegiate rules of the National Rifle Asso- ciation, with a five-man team, each man firing ten shots for record in each of the three posi- tions: prone, kneeling, and standing. Credit for the successful season goes to Cap- tain W. W. Davidson, U.S.M.C, former rifle coach at the United States Naval Academy. Owing to his efforts the team improved con- stantly as the season progressed, and fired their highest score of the year in the Intercollegiate Matches. C aptain-elect Wadelton led his team in scor- ing with the average of 265.56; Captain Mac- Laren was second with 264.58; Jenks had 263.- 69; Goodkind 257.38; Edwards 254.29; and Hinkle 251 .50. The spring outdoor season consists of two tri- angular matches between Yale, Harvard, and Princeton, shot according to Dewar Match con- ditions prone at fifty and one hundred yards. Frederick B. MacLaren, Jr. 216 Front Row: Strauss, Hollister, Captain Terry, Rogers, Stockhausen Second Row: Manager Sprague, Wells, Davie, Stillman, Taylor. Coach SkiUman Henry P. B. Terry, 35 Robert O. Sprague, 35 John Skillman Captain Manager Coach The Squash Racquets Season THE most conspicuous innovation of the ' 935 Squash Season was the appointment ot the nationally famous John Skillman as head coach of the Varsity squad. With a preponder- ance of last year ' s men still available as a working nucleus, the season was approached with a great deal more optimism than usual. The early be- ginning of practice also added to this feeling. Captain Baldwin Terry keeping the interest at a fever pitch. The first match of the year was an informal one held on the home courts of the Round Hill Club of Greenwich early in Decem- ber, proving the first of a number of victories for Yale. In January competition was greatly increased, as evidenced by the continual activity of the challenge board, nimibering over one hundred names. The first Princeton match, played in the Yale courts in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium, resulted in a 4-1 victory. Lady Luck failed to smile, however, when the score was reversed in the return match played in the Princeton courts. The only really serious disappointment of the year was experienced in an 8-1 defeat in the nine-man match with Harvard. The final college opposition was literally demolished in an easy victory over an inexperienced five from M.LT. The remaining matches of the year were those played in the Connecticut State Squash League. In this series of encoimters the team defeated the New Haven Lawn Club, the Hartford Golf Club, and the Hartford Racquet Club. The intercollegiate championships, played on the Yale courts, put an exciting climax on the season with a record list of representatives from seven colleges. Captain Terry performed out- standingly and reached the finals where he was beaten by the superb playing and superior tactics of Germaine Gledden of Harvard. In addition to this enviable team record, certain members of the first five made creditable showings in the various tournaments in the East, the Atlantic Coast, the National Squash Racquet, the New York State, i n which Terry and Rogers reached the semi-finals, and the Connecticut, in which they were finalists. Robert O. Sprague, Manager 217 Front Row: Carlisle, Mansfield, Stevens, Captain Moorhead, Miles, McMurtney, Wardman Second Row: Coach Hinchliff, Hill, Reese, Ellis, Tilney, Manager Wear Missing from ficture: Hixon. DeLone John U. Moorhead, ' 34 James H. Wear, Jr., ' 34 William E. Hinchliff Captain Manager Coach The 934 Tennis Season THE Tennis Team opened its season against a weak Amherst team. Stevens and Captain Moorhead played steady and even tennis and won in straight sets. Playing against the 7th Regiment Tennis Team in the second match, Yale lost 8-5. Moorhead ' s opponent, Bowman, had beaten the French champion Barotra. The Varsity defeated the undefeated University of Virginia in an easy match by an 8- 1 score in the third game of the season. George Stevens, pro- moted to the No. I position, played accurately to win. Handicapped by the absence of Miles and Mansfield due to a misunderstanding, Yale succumbed to Pennsylvania at Philadelphia 6-3. liOsing two matches by default, the brilliant playing of Stevens and Moorhead did not stave off defeat. Columbia went down 8-1 in the fifth match, proving to be no match for Yale ' s team led by Capt. Moorhead, Stevens, and Mansfield, who won in straight sets. Yale lost a 5-4 match with the usually strong North Carolina team. Stevens added another victory to his string, making it six straight. Yale did well in the doubles, Stevens and Moorhead, and Miles and Mansfield turning in wins. The next day Yale lost another 5-4 match to Dartmouth, who opened her season against Yale. This was the second contest in two days which had depended on the outcome of one match. Princeton ' s imdefeated team crushed Yale in the eighth match of the season 8-1. Mansfield defeated Big Bill Tilden ' s nephew for the only Eli victory. Playing Williams at Wil- liamstown, Yale fought hard to win a 5-4 decis- ion. Stevens was extended to the limit in winning his eighth victory of the season. Wardman came back after losing a love set only to lose a bitterly contested third set and the match. The season closed with Yale losing 12-3 to a strong Harvard team. Mansfield and Miles in the singles, and the doubles team of Carlisle and Wardman were the only Yale winners. Although the final results indicated a weak team, the two 5-4 de- cisions and the Pennsylvania misunderstanding deprive Coach Hinchlifi ' s men of due glory. J. H. We. ' r, Jr. Manager 218 Front Row: Cochran, Bronson Second Row: Weintraub, Cooney. Wea ' er, Captain Downs, Hart. Bryant. Shepard Third Row: Coach Michaels. Shallenberger, Bilewitz, Manager Adams, Clark, Coach Kiphuth Edgar .S. Downs, Jr., ' 35 DoN. LD C. Adams, ' 35 Robert J. H. Kiphuth Captain Manager Coach The Water Polo Season THE year began auspiciously with a one- sided victory over an Alumni team, 24-3. Hart tallied fifteen points on five touch goals to lead the University team while the Alumni were unable to score until augmented by Cooney of the undergraduates. On January igth the team received its initial setback at the hands of the Bedford Y 13-8 in a game character- ized more by Yale ' s weaktiess than the oppon- ents ' strength. The following week the National Champions, the New York Athletic Club, were held to a surprisingly low score and given their first scare in several years. The result 21-1 1 indi- cates a greater margin of superiority than was actually present. The league contests began with a 20-8 victory over Pennsylvania in which Yale was able to score almost at will. Hart with nine points and Bronson with six led the Eli attack, and became a much-feared combination in intercollegiate water polo circles. C.C.N.Y. proved to be of even less resistance the next week and wilted 34-12. The all-important game with Columbia, last year ' s champions, ended as expected with Yale on the short end of a 27-7 score. In this game Columbia deinonstrated the power and finesse which eventually led it to its second successive title. True to the promise shown earlier in the season, Bronson again bore the brunt of Yale ' s fruitless attack. Yale came back eleven days later to take the measure of Rutger ' s poloists in an extremely hard-fought struggle. The lead changed hands five times during the contest and it is a tribute to the team ' s spirit that it finally emerged a 27-24 victor. The final league game was a disappointing 23-6 loss to Navy, partly attributable to the long train ride in the morning preceding the iTiatch. Bryant and Bronson scored Yale ' s points in the midst of many Navy goals. The season ended with a heart-breaking defeat, 14-13, at the hands of the Queens Y in the National Championships in New York. Donald C. Adams, Manager 219 [ Front Raw: Carne -. Kinne Second Row: Rawolle, Piatt, Graham, Captain Hull, Lindeke, Valas, Atlee Third Row: Coach E. O ' Donnell, Fabian, Manager Smith, Love, Coach J. O ' Donnell, Walker Hadlai a. Hull, ' 36 Angelo J. Smith, Jr., ' 35S Edward O ' Donnell Captain Manager Coach The Wrestling Season COACH Eddie O ' Donnell started this season, his ninth at Yale, with less than half of last years team available. Captain Hull looked very promising and lived up to all expectations, being undefeated except in the finals of the Eastern Intercollegiates. The first meet, after a preliminary practice session with the New Britain Y. M. C. A., taken by Yale, 27-3, was with Brown and was won by Yale with a score of 1 83 -2 to II 3 2- w here that McKnight Kinne, 19378, started his winning streak which was to continue through all the dual meets of this season. The next week the team went to West Point and defeated a strong Army team iSJ - On February gth, Yale met its first defeat when Lehigh won 20-12. Kinne, Capt. Hull, Fabian, and Graham all won their bouts, but in spite of these the team was not strong enough to over- come Lehigh, who were later to win first place in the Eastern Intercollegiates. The following week Yale defeated Chicago with a score of i 7- I I . The surprise of this meet was the easy victory of Hamilton Love, 1937, over Whiteside of Chi- cago, a far more experienced heavyweight. Yale defeated M.LT. by the decisive score of 27-3, in the next meet. At Princeton on February 27th, Yale won by a score of 17-11. The winning wrestlers on the Yale team were Kinne, Valas, Hull, Walker, and Graham. Just three days after the Princeton Meet, Yale was defeated by Harvard, score 24- 6. Captain Hull and Love were the only winners, and Kinne was out of the line-up because of an injury received at Princeton. Yale placed second in the New England In- tercollegiates which were held at Boston. Cap- tain Hull won the 145-lb. championship, and Kinne, Valas, Walker, Lindeke, and Love all won second places. Rawolle was unable to com- pete because of illness. The following week Yale won fourth place in the Eastern Intercollegiates at Philadelphia. Captain Hull, Kinne, and Valas took second place and Walker third place. Angelo J. Smith, Jr., Manager Front Row: Latham. Hills, Abrams, Brooks, Wilson, Captain Hamilton, .Smith, Charter, Magnuson, Bil- lingsley, C unningham Second Row: Coach Campbell, Hughes, Keeney, Peltz, MacFarlane, Boyce, Keefe. Saunders, Pond, Man- ager Babcock Third Row: Kramer, McCormick, Moore. Lee, Jones, Sargent Harry T. Hamilton, Jr., ' 38 Bruce Babcock, ' 36 V. Campbell .... Captain Manager Coach The Freshman Association Football Season C ' OACH CAMPBELL ' S yearlings completed a successful season with but a single de- feat, that administered by Princeton, to mar an unblemished record. Twice downing New- Haven and West Haven Highs in a decisive manner, the Freshmen won for the second con- secutive season the coveted Qiiinnipiack Soccer League Trophy. The Vale aggregation opened the season auspiciously with a 3-1 victory over New Haven High, in which the stronger Yale line was held back by the brilliant work of the opposing goalie. The following week saw the Freshmen held to a scoreless tie by a strong defensive Central High team. Playing their second Quinnipiack League game, the Freshmen swarmed over a weak West Haven High team to score a 6-2 victory. Pond and Keeney were outstanding in leading the attack. October 31 witnessed the elimination of New Haven High from any chance of winning the Quinnipiack League Championship when the Freshmen outplayed them in every department of the game to win 4- 1 . Continuing their winning streak, the Yearlings downed Tilden High 4-1 on November 3. The Blue offense and defense functioned perfectly and the outcome of the game was evident from the end of the first quarter. On November 7 the Freshmen clinched the Qiiinnipiack League championship by over- whelming a baffled West Haven High team 6-0. Stuyvesant High next fell before the withering Freshman attack, the score at the final whistle standing at 3-0. Keeney played brilliantly from the Blue forward line, scoring two of his team ' s tallies. The Blue team lost its first game to an aggres- sive Princeton aggregation, falling to the score of 4-2. Meeting Harvard on November 23, the Fresh- man team partly compensated for the furious onslaught of the Tiger with a 3-2 victory. Bruce B.abcock, Manager UMitirmtiifi Front Row: Jellinghaus, Wells, Co-Captain F. Gallagher, Co-Captain Frantz, Peterson. Currier Second Row: Manager Staley, Frank, Foskett, L. Gallagher, Coach Williamson Carroll L. Frantz, ' 38 | Francis P. Gallagher, ' 38 Ellis J. Staley, Jr., ' 36 Ivan Williamson Co-Captains Manager Coach The Freshman Basketball Season IN spite of many handicaps due to numerous injuries and scholastic inehgibles, the 1938 Basketball team enjoyed a very successful season, winnirig nine out of their 14 games. This season marked the initial appearance of Ivan William- son as freshman coach, and to him goes a great deal of the credit for developing a strong team from the rather mediocre material which com- prised the squad at the beginning of the season. The team got off on an excellent start, winning the first 8 games. The winning streak, however, was broken through the loss of Weinberger through an injury and Frank through his scho- lastic ineligibility. The victories against Law- renceville and Choate had been hard won battles in which the hard playing of Clint Frank, Car- roll Frantz, and Frank Gallagher was outstand- ing. The Curtis High School game marked the peak of the season, characterized by a superla- tively good offensive and defensive play which led to the defeat of the highly touted New York team. The last part of the season was not as suc- cessful as the first half, and the team found itselt with an inexperienced line-up facing its most difficult opponents. However, after sound beatings at the hands of Roxbury and Taft, the freshmen proved that former records meant nothing in the Princeton meet, when the Tiger cubs went down in defeat with the decisive score of 31-20. The superior playing of Peterson, Frank and Larry Gallagher, and Mackintosh on the defense was highly responsible for the victory over what had been termed one of Princeton ' s greatest Freshman teams. After the Princeton game hardship again struck the Freshman team when Peterson was declared ineligible and Mackintosh was lost because of illness. However, the Freshmen played a very spirited game against Harvard, lost by one point in the overtiine period. Frank, who was reinstated just prior to the Harvard game, played exceptionally well. The season was a very pleasant one and Coach Williamson developed a ninnber of players who appear ready to assume their place on the Var- sity squad next year. Ellis J. Staley, Jr., Manager Front Row: Tenney, Co-Captaia Carrcll. Co-Captain, Danielson, Jones Second Row: Linthicum, Coach King. Stewart, Manager Wells, Smith Missing from picture: Proxmire, Thompson, Weed James D. Danielson, ' 38 Robert E. Carroll, ' 38 John B. Wells, ' 36 Moses King . Co-Captains Manager Coach The Freshman Boxing Season OPENING its season along with the Varsity on January 28, the Freshman Boxing team, represented by 21 entries in 8 classes, showed considerable promise, and stepped forth with a galaxy of embryo talent. The most evenly con- tested class was the 145-lb., which produced three men about equal in ability, Jones, Tenney and Proxmire. Others to show marked ability were Linthicum in the 135 and Carroll in the 155-lb. classes, respectively. The first contest with an outside team took place on February 23 against the M.I.T. Fresh- men, who had brought an outfit to New Haven which bade fair to threaten seriously the Year- lings. Yale vindicated herself admirably, al- though many of the M.I.T. men had had previ- ous experience. Bob Linthicum succeeded in getting a draw with Lucien of M.I.T., and George Weed turned the tables to K.O. M.I.T. heavyweight Wallach in 2 minutes and 22 sec- onds of the first round. The best fight on the card was in the 155-lb. class; Bob Carroll out- punched the M.I.T. contestant to gain a close decision. Packing punches with all their might right from the opening bell, the bruisers dropped in exhaustion at the close of the last frame. With no man in the 175-lb. class, M.I.T. for- feited to Danielson. Two weeks later a rather depleted line-up made the trip to Cambridge with the Varsity to meet the Harvard Freshmen. With Thompson in the place of Lawrence in the 1 15-lb. class, and with Jones for Tenney in the 145, and Stewart for Captain Carroll in the 155, the Harvard team had a considerable edge over the Blue, and took the first two bouts without difficulty. Linthicum put his Harvard lad to rout, although Jones lost to a stiff puncher in the 145, and Stewart was given a draw. The next entrant. Bob Smith, dropped a decision to the t 65-pound husky of Harvard, but Danielson smashed out a smart victory in one of the finest performances of the afternoon. In the final contest big George Weed hammered the Harvard heavy about the ring in grand style, but not being able to make up for other defeats, the Freshmen dropped the first contest on record to Harvard. John B. Wells, Manager 223 Front Row: Randall, Ramsey, Viscidi, Captain Grasson, Perakos, Stilson, Miller Second Row: Manager Taylor, Coe, Streeter, Walker, Scott, Seybolt, Ebel, Coach Grasson Missing from picture: O ' Connell. Seymour Maurice A. R. Grasson, ' 38 Captain Robert C. Taylor, ' 36S Manager A. Grasson Coach The Freshman Fencing Season THE past season was an extremely successful one for the Freshman Fencing team with not a meet lost and the majority won by comfortable margins. The first competition of the season was not a regular meet, but the Epee tourna- ment of the Connecticut division of the Ama- teur Fencing League of America, held in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium. Maurice Grasson took first place and Viscidi third. The season officially opened February 2nd with the New Haven Commercial High meet which the Yearlings easily won i8-g with Grasson and Viscidi leading the attack. After this meet Grasson was elected captain of the team. On the 8th, Hillhouse followed Com- mercial in bowing down to the Freshmen, though the meet was very close, as Hillhouse had one of the best teams they have put out in several years. February 20th the team met a group from Loomis and won 12-5, taking eight out of the nine matches in the foils. Cetrulo of Loomis was the only visitor able to overcome his man, Captain Grasson. In the epee and the sabre Yale won half the matches. Viscidi and Perakos were outstanding, each winning three matches in the foil division. March i6th Princeton bowed to the greatly superior Blue team with a rather decisive score, 18-9. Captain Grasson led the attack upon the Tiger team, able assisted by Viscidi and Per- akos. In the last meet of the season Harvard also fell victim to the well used weapons of Coach Grasson ' s protegees. With a wealth of material advancing into the Varsity ranks next year, the freshman aggrega- tion bids fair to carry on the form and spirit which made this year a great one in the annals of Yale fencing history. Robert C. T.aylor, Manaacr 224 Front Row: Ericson. Eaton. Captain Munson. Mclncrney, Walker Second Row: Manager Wickwire. Hewes. Fisher Charles S. Munson, Jr. Ch. rles C. Wickwire, Jr. Ben Thompson Captain Manager Coach The 1934 Freshman Golf Season THE Freshman Golf team opened its 1 934 season against Collegiate on . pril 30. Play- ing in a strong, cool wind, the freshmen, with Captain Munson at the head of the list, swung their way to a 4-2 victory, and inaugurated a long series of victories to end only with the closing match against Harvard on May 2 1 . After defeating Taft, 3 2-2 i on May 7, the freshmen took up their clubs the next week against the strong Princeton aggregation. It was a good day on the greens for the freshmen, and they took over the Tiger cubs with the impres- sive score of 8-1 . Choate and Hotchkiss followed the sons of old Nassau into black obscurity, being driven into defeat by a strong swinging freshman group, with scores of 8-1 and 33 2-2 4 respectively. The climax of the season came in the match against Harvard on May 2 1 . Captain C. S. Sherry Munson blazed the trail to a spec- tacular Eli victory with six birdies in a round of even par, playing at the Belmont Hill Country club in Boston. It was Munson ' s second bril- liant round of the day; he also defeated Captain Peterson of the Crimson, 6-5. B. Mclnerney, turning in a 7-6 victory over Pattee of Harvard, rounded out the season in good form. Under the tutelage of Ben Thompson, the freshmen turned in a series of well won victories over a long string of opponents, and can look for greater triumphs in full-fledged varsity competition. With Captain Munson at the head of the card of low scorers, a formidable ag- gregation will pass this spring into the varsity ranks, there to repeat, if possible, the phenom- inal series of straight victories just past. Charles C. Wickwire, Jr., . rt«a ( ' ; ' 225 Fro?]t Row. Stein. Burbank Second Row: Hill. Dickson. Gutterman, Captain Walker, Boyce, Farrell, Sharretts Third Row: Manatter Temple, Baker, Anderson, Davis, Coach Foster M. Cooper Walker, ' 37 Captain Robert H. Temple, ' 35 Manager Edward P. Foster Coach The 1934 Freshman Lacrosse Season A SMALL Freshman squad under the able tutelage of Coach E. P. Foster started prac- tice in the cage during February. The majority of the candidates were inexperienced but they soon learned the rudiments of the game and by the time of the opening contest with the Spring- field Freshmen they presented a well coordin- ated aggregation. The weak Springfield ten, handicapped by only one week ' s practice, was snowed under l)y a 1 2-2 score, Cooper Walker, Johnny Boyce, and Art Williams leading the Yale attack. Alexander Hamilton High School of Brooklyn, N. Y., 1933 P.S.A.L. champions, outclassed Yale in the next game by 6 to 2. The following week Peekskill Military Academy was nosed out, 8 to 7, in an overtime game replete with thrills, the lead alternating throughout the con- test. A powerful Poly Prep team ran rough shod over the Blue ten, their whirlwind attack and greater size proving too much for the yearlings to cope with. The final score amounted to twelve for the Brooklynites and four for the Elis. On May sixth Yale travelled to Princeton where Captain Cooper Walker ' s men fell before the rugged onslaught of the Tigers by a i o to 5 count. Derby Day saw the Freshmen find them- selves for the first time. Their fast, smooth attack piled up thirteen goals against a bewildered Harvard defense, while the Crimson attack was almost completely stopped by the Yale defense, which yielded but one goal and kept the Can- tabs from getting a clear shot at the net. Captain Walker, Johnny Boyce, Scjueek But- ler, and Art Williams were the outstanding members of the small squad. William J. Sec;or, Jr., Manager 226 Coach Strohbehn, Chesney, Beals. Captj 1, Manager Rj Walter M. Jeffords, Jr., ' 38 Captain John A. Rand, ' 36 Manager Lt. Edward L. Strohbehn Coach The Freshman Polo Season THE Freshman polo team had a not wholly successful season. Early in the season they were handicapped by the loss of some of their best players through ineligibility. An inexperi- enced team met Avon Old Farms on January 19th, and suffered a decisive defeat at the hands of a hard riding combination. The line-up was: J. G. Chesney i, D. T. Deals 2, and F. S. Whit- man 3. The team was considerably strengthened by the addition of W. Jeffords, a more experi- enced player, subsequently elected captain. He assumed No. 2 position, and Beals took Ches- ney ' s position at No. i . They met a strong Hart- ford Troop trio on February 2nd, and were the victors by a narrow margin, the score being 10- q. Encouraged by their win, the Freshmen left for Lawrenceville on February 22nd, to meet the strongest school team in the East. Chesney was back at No. i , and Beals alternated at back with Whitman. Yale played a splendid game but was defeated ii} 2 ' oM- Jeffords starred with nine goals while Chesney was a strong, steady for- ward. On the following day something hap- pened to the blue trio, for Princeton 1938 trimmed them with the overwhelming score of 1 3- 1. The fol lowing week the Junior Varsity mallets rode over the Freshmen to the tune of 17-5. Always optimistic, Yale journeyed to Hartford on March gth to meet the Governor ' s Horse Guard second team. On a strange floor and strange ponies, the cubs emerged victorious with a score of 1 1-5. Though Harvard was re- ported to have an exceedingly strong Freshman trio, Yale was still hopeful. They met at New Haven on March i6th, but the visitors proved too powerful an aggregation for Yale ' s lack of ex- perience. The score was 13-3; Jeffords again starred for the Elis. Though the season was not successful, the Freshmen poloists are certainly to be congratu- lated for their fight. Only two members of the team had had any experience whatever, and it was only by the team ' s enthusiastic interest and determination that Yale was not further scored upon. Jeffords was an able and inspiring captain. John A. R. nd, Manager 227 Humphrey, Bate, Slick, Captain Cookman, Mayer, Tuohy, Auchincloss George E. Cookman, ' 38 WiLLi. ' M R. Humphrey, 2nd, ' 36 William E. Hinchliff John Skillman Captain Manager Coaches The Freshman Squash Racquets Season UNDER the able guidance of Coaches Hinchhff and SkiUman, and with four men handed down from the powerful Exeter team of the year before, the top ranking Fresh- men squash players gave promise of prowess early in the season. Still a bit uncoordinated and unpolished, the Freshmen could not seem to hit their stride, and lost their first match, that against the Princeton yearlings. The unbroken string of victories which trailed along with the outfit all the rest of the season began the next week, when the Freshmen de- feated Choale, 4-1. A bit skeptical as to the o utcome of the clash with the Harvard cubs at Cambridge, whither the Yale team journeyed on the second of February, especially after the trouncing at the hands of Princeton in the opener, Yale notwithstanding was able to swing its way into victory over a strong Crimson aggregation 3-2. In this meet, with Mayer at No. 5, the line-up of Cookman, Auchincloss, Tuohy, Bate, and Slick, which advanced in bat- tle formation in all the other meets, was broken. At Hartford on February 16 the Freshmen met and easily conquered 4-1 the C team of the Hartford Golf Club. Tom Slick, who found him- self pitted against an opponent who should have been at No. i, was outplayed, and lost a hard match. En route to Hartford, George Cookman had been chosen to head the team during the course of its career. Cookman had played at No. I all year, and had been a constant con- tributor to the scoring column. In an informal match, the avenging Fresh- men blanked the ineffective Alumni 5-0. Con- tinuing on their triumphal procession, they next made Dave Harrington ' s Intramural squash champions from Calhoun bend before their strong arms, and took over that august outfit, which had already during the season emerged at the top in the inter-college elimination compe- tition, and folded them up neatly at the small end of a 4-1 score. Clinching the Connecticut C League title, the Elis overwhelmed Pomfret 5-0, and without the loss of a game, ended a very successful season. William R. Humphrey, 2nd, Manager 228 I I Front Row: DiFilippo, Burgess Second Row: Wyckoff, Conrad, Bowers, Brueckel. Macionis. Humphrey, Moor, Cunningham. Weaver Third Row: Coach Newton, Kababian, Wright. Stern, Judd, Mathews. Mgr. Pond John J. Macionis, 38 Samuel A. Pond, ' 36S W. I. Newton Capiat?! Manager Coach The Freshman Swimming Season THE 1938 swimming team did not ha c a too successful season. Out of a total of 14 meets they lost four and won 10. The winter season started with a trip away to Lawrenceville, the freshmen winning 41-27. Outstanding for the freshmen were Bowers, Macionis, and Brueckel, the latter winning the 220 freestyle in the good time of 2:22.8. The following week Montclair Y.M.C.A. brought a good team to New Haven only to be turned back by the close score of 39-36. Plavier for the visitors won the backstroke in i : i i .4. On Satur- day February 2nd, the team travelled to Exeter to meet its first defeat of the year. John Macionis, swimming his first distance race of the season, broke the Exeter pool record for the 200 yard freestyle by over 10 seconds. On Feb- ruary 9 two freshman teams easily defeated New Haven High School and Commercial High School. In the middle of the next week the West- minster School was defeated 44-2 1 . The meet was far closer than the score would indicate. Kent and Lvnch of Westminster were hard to beat, the former winning the breast stroke and backstroke. Hotchkiss was defeated rather easily on February i6th, Harrison showing a very de- cided improvement in the breast stroke with the time of i : 1 1 .4. Macionis in an attempt at the world ' s 220 record covered that distance in 2:13 seconds only 1-5 of a second away from the present intercollegiate record. The meet with the Providence Boys ' Club on February 22nd produced some remarkable times. Higgins of the visiting team established a new American record in the lOO-yard breast stroke with the time ot 1 :04.8. The Mercersburg meet on March 2 again resulted in defeat for the freshmen, with the score 46-29. Harrison again showed promise in the breast stroke, winning in i :o9.6. Macionis was a double victor, his time of 53.6 in the 100 being outstanding. The Princeton meet proved to be an easy victory, the score being 48-3 1 . Confronted by a strong Harvard freshman swimming team, the freshmen were unable to win, although the meet was not decided until the relay. S.- MUEL A. Pond, Manaeer 229 Front Row: Makepeace, Metz, Captain Kingman, Scoville, Badger Second Row: Coach Hinchliff, Hollister, Lockwood, Lasell, Manager Hedges Barclay A. Kingman, ' 37. Robert W. Hedges, ' 35S William E. Hinchliff Captain Manager Coach The 934 Freshman Tennis Season THE Freshman Tennis Team a;ot off to a flying start against Kent last spring, and won their first match 8-1 without great difficulty; King- man and Lasell, displaying mid-season form, led the team in the No. i and No. 2 positions. The prospect of a string of easy triumphs was broken, however, in the meet against Choate at Wallingford, in which the Freshmen were hard pressed by a fast-swinging, insuperable aggrega- tion. Scoville and Metz turned in the only singles and Metz, teamed with Hollister, took the only match in the doubles. Choate victories in all the other matches chalked up a score of 6-3 in a series of brilliant contests. Unnerved before a large gallery, the Freshmen went down before a strong Princeton team, 5-4, in a lively series of matches in which a slight edge over their opponents in speed and net play conceded to the Tiger the laurels. Undaunted by the Princeton defeat, the Freshmen met Roxbury in New Haven, and conquered the invaders decisively 8- 1 . Jim Hinch- liff, son of the Yale coach, took the only match for Roxbury after a hard fought battle with Lasell. In the most flashing match of the season, Captain Kingman struck his pace and swung a hard-fought victory over Jack Behr, stellar perforiner on the Roxbury team. Against the Crimson the Elis won an easy triumph, and ended the season in a blaze of glory, taking over Harvard 8- 1 , although the invaders played hard tennis from start to finish. Scoville completed his season with a perfect record, not having lost a single match, while Lockwood lost one; the team as a whole func- tioned perfectly, and bids fair to show further spectacular performance. The Schedule; Yale 8. Kent i; Yale 3, Choate 6; Yale 4, Princeton 5; Yale 8, Roxbury i ; Yale 8, Harvard i . The Team: i, Kingman (Captain); 2, Lasell; 3, Lockwood: 4, Scoville; 5, Metz; 6, Badger; 7, Hollister; 8, Makepeace; 9, Wright. Robert W. Hedges, Manager 230 Front Row: Cutler, ' heeler. Captain Woodland, Smith, Williams Second Row: Coach J. O ' Donnell. Snavely, Manager Langmuir, Fish, Coach E. O ' Donnell Missing Jrom picture: Dickens, Lawrence George H. Woodland, ' 2 Peter B. Langmuir, ' 36 John O ' Donnell Captain Manager Coach The Freshman WrestUng Season THE Freshman Wfestling season was fairly successful, although only two members of the team. Captain Woodland and Wheeler, had had previous experience. The first match of the year was with Brown and ended in a 16-16 deadlock, despite Cutler ' s decisive victory over Espo and Woodland ' s win over Ginecal. The team next travelled to Taft, where it was overridden by a strong prep school aggregation, to fall in a sad 21-1 i defeat. Wheeler in the 155-pound class threw Brown of Taft, and Woodland defeated Clarke to star for the freshmen. The following Saturday found the wrestlers at Choate, where Williams, Cutler, and Wheeler starred to give the Blue a 19-13 triumph. Although spurred on by an aggressive victory by W ' oodland over the inighty Wyoming Seminary captain, the freshmen fell before that institution, suffering badly at the tail end of a 23-1 1 score. The succeeding week saw the freshmen reach the climax of the 1934-35 season. Both the New Haven High and the M.I.T. aggregations fell before their onslaught, with scores of 29-3 and 30-8 respectively. Encouraged by these over- whelming victories, the Elis embarked with light hearts for Princeton, but lost to a superla- tively good opposing team. The only win for Yal e was in the 126-pound class, in which Williams threw Carter of Princeton. Despite another spectacular performance by Williams, Har ' ard battered its way to victory the next week at New Haven, and won the meet 19-9. At the Intercollegiate championships, held at M.I.T., Wheeler in the 155-pound class was the only winner for Yale, although Woodland, Cut- ler, and Lawrence came through with second and third places. Handicapped all through the year by the want of polished men to carry through for Yale, Coach John O ' Donnell succeeded in a remark- able degree in smoothing over a bunch of raw recruits and developing them into an effective organization. Peter B. I angmuir, Manager 231 I Intercollegiate Athletics By W. H. Neale COLLEGE Athletics have definitely taken their place in the athletic program of the University and are satisfying the athletic inter- ests of a large group of students who heretofore did not take part in competiitve sports. For years the main objection to sports in general by most educators has been that too many watch the games and very few play. The College ath- letic program has gone a long way in erasing this objection. The general idea behind this program is to make the games as informal as possible and still keep the same qualities in the games that make Varsity sports popular. Stu- dents arrange their practice periods, having as many or few as desired, but there are frequent scheduled games. The games are made to ap- pear like Varsity contests, exclusive of the crowd. Competent officials referee the games, a trainer is hired, and a doctor is on the field to care for any serious injury. The playing surfaces and equipment for these games are not inferior to those used by Varsity teams. Playing in league competition and declaring a College Champion that has the privilege of playing against the Championship team of the Harvard House league, has met with the wholehearted support of the College athletes. Thus, the main reasons why 1 200 students took part in College ath- letics the first year were due to the fact that ( i ) it had a certain amount of organization to make it run smoothly, (2) Athletic Secretaries and Captains of teams helped build up interest by frequent contacts with team members and also solicited fellow students who needed only a slight urge to get them away from their rooms and on to the playing field, (3) competent of- ficials, excellent playing fields and equipment, (4) many games played, with league standings kept to increase competitive interest, (5) enjoy- able part ofVarsity sports kept, while eliminating the tiresome and (6) immense amount of publici- ty from the Yale Daily News. In the spring of 1934, Inter-College Athletics were finishing their first year under the Resi- dential College Plan at Yale. This new athletic program had been fairly well established by this time because of the two previous successful seasons in fall and winter sports. The students were familiar with their Athletic Secretaries and Assistant Athletic Secretaries and most of the other students in their Colleges who were interested in playing on their College teams. They had also familiarized themselves with the general workings of College athletics, and 232 therefore, it was much easier to organize teams and have them play through the spring schedule. The spring program, as approved by the Inter-College Athletic Council, included 36 baseball games; two leagues in golf, with each team playing at least four matches and a final championship match for the championship of the College; two leagues in crew, with each crew rowing five races and a final three crew regatta for the championship; 36 tennis matches; and a track meet, including all outdoor track events. This program proved to be popular with the students as it carried out the general idea in College athletics that there will be many games and few practice periods. Baseball, with 188 students playing during the season, appeared to be the most popular spring sport. Jonathan Edwards College, helped by the coaching of John Broaca, the superb pitching of C. Dilling- ham, and a well-balanced team, captured the league championship with comparative ease. At the end of the season this team journeyed to Cambridge and showed their superiority over the championship Kirkland House team at Harvard by winning 11 to o. College tennis held second place in popularity during the spring, with 145 students playing in Inter-College matches. With nine men on a team, the schedule of 36 games was completed with Calhoun Col- lege and Wright Group being tied for first place. In the play-off, Wright won this all-important match and also won the right to meet the win- ning House team from Har ' ard. Leverett House, representing Harvard, defeated the Wright team in a spectacular match by the score of 4 to 3. Under the capable direction of Bob Butler, the College crews, after practicing through the fall and winter seasons, started their outdoor workouts at the Harbor immedi- ately following spring vacation. The College crews were handicapped by not having full crews turn out regularly from all the Colleges. After three weeks of dual racing, the three crews of Vanderbilt, Wright, and Jonathan Edwards forged ahead, due to their regularity in turning out for practice. These three crews were matched in a final College regatta at Derby on May 18, with the Sophomores from Vanderbilt winning the College championship. However, their glory was shortlived as they were defeated by a superior Brooks House crew from Harvard by 2i lengths over the Henley distance. The evening of the race, the Harvard crew and tennis teams were entertained at a dinner by the Vanderbilt crew and Wright tennis team at the Alpha Delta House. After this dinner they were further entertained by a beer party and motion pictures in the Ray Tompkins House. The Yale Golf Course was the scene of 16 Inter-College golf matches during the four weeks of competi- tion. Vanderbilt Group, after winning the Col- lege championship, was able to also defeat the Adams House team at Harvard by the score of 1Y0 to I Vo- Although this was oiu first spring season for College teams, the popularity of these spring sports was evident by the number — 589 — who turned out to play in Inter-College compe- tition. In order to tie together the three seasons dur- ing the College year and also reward a team for placing near the top in all of our College leagues, an AU-Around Championship trophy was awarded for the best performance of any Col- lege during the year. Points were awarded in each sport, primarily based on the popularity of the sport, with each College in the league receiving a certain percentage of the total points according to the place in which they finish. The winner of this competition was in doubt until the final league standings were tabulated. Naturally, this increased the interest in the spring sports and did a great deal to keep all the teams playing until the final match. The trophy which was donated by the Committee on College athletics, composed of George Adee, Selden Rose, and Malcolm Aldrich, was pre- sented to the Wright Group by President Angell in a formal presentation in Wright Court. After the first year it was comparatively easier to arrange the program for the second year, profiting by the mistakes made in the beginning and improving wherever pcssible. The Inter- College football league of 45 games in the fall of 1934, showed some improvement in interest. The teams were on the whole better, and the number — 277 — showed an increase over the number that reported for the games the previous year. Vanderbilt Group, led by its energetic Athletic Secretary, J. W. Pine and capable Captain, A. L. Morris, won the league champ- ionship and was awarded the Brink Thorne Football Trophy. This was done only after 233 I gruelling battles with Trumbull College, coached by Dick Vaughan, and Berkeley College, coached by Dave Livingston, whose teams ended the season tied for second place in the league. Al- though favored to win in their game with Win- throp House (Harvard), their two sturdy tack- les, H. Love and G. Strelinger, were injured prior to the game. This hampered their chance for victory and they lost to a better coached team, 1 2 to o. More students — 1 72 — took part in the touch football league, and the play and general interest showed considerable improve- ment over the 1933 season. Pierson College went through the season undefeated and con- tinued their unblemished record by winning from Lowell House (Harvard) 30 to 18. The winter season of 1935 brought out a few new developments that seem to be a healthy indication of the increasing interest and spirit developing in these College teams. A surprising amount of games were scheduled by the basket- ball Captains with local teams and nearby pre- paratory schools. Teams in all the leagues were of a higher calibre and the games were closely contested, with not so many games having lopsided scores. In hockey and basketball it was necessary to have play-off games to decide the league winner. The basketball league, being divided into two halves, ended with a three-way tie between Saybrook, Branford, and Trumbull in the first half The second half also ended in a three-way tie, with Branford, Calhoun, and Pierson lead- ing. Trumbull College emerged as the winner of the first half while Branford skimmed through the second half play-off. Branford College, with such stars as S. Scribner, F. Stewart, and J. Edmonds won a hard fought victory (14-10) over the highly favored Trumbull College team, composed of such luminaries as L. Kelley, R. Train, and T. Curtin. After leading 1 1 to 4 at the quarter, the effects of the Prom started to show on the Branford players, and they lost to Lowell House (Harvard) 36 to 23. With five Colleges fighting for the championship and 1 78 players taking part, we approached the perfect situation that would be ideal in all league com- petition. Leagues in hockey, with 1 64 playing, in swim- ming with 132 and squash with 102, held the major interests in the winter program. Pierson College had great difficulty in disposing of Wright in the championship hockey play-off, The first game finishing in a 2-2 deadlock after two overtime periods. The next game was won by Pierson College 4 to 3 by scoring in an over- time period, and they, therefore, won the St. Paul ' s School Hockey Trophy. In swimming, Pierson College had little trouble in winning all their meets, but lost to Adams House 34 to 28 in the Harvard House-Yale College champion- ship meet. The squash league developed into another year for Calhoun College against the field. In two years of Inter-College competition, this College has not lost a match. Furthermore, they were victorious against the favored Eliot House team in the House-College match 5 to o. After two years of Inter-College competition, those closely associated with this program believe that College Athletics have played an important part in bringing the Colleges at Yale closer together. They have made it possible for the students to get acquainted with each other and, due to the large number playing in com- petitive sports, have made the University ath- letically minded and thus raised the morale of the University teams in an indirect way. The College teams have given a large group of stu- dents a new interest in their daily life at Yale and have definitely aroused a certain amount of College spirit, therefore forming each College into a unit that would have been impossible in such a shor t time without Inter-College Ath- letics. 234 l-irml Rim: Boiiscan-n, Dillinyham. Hemingway. e:aptain Minor, Mailliard, Horton Second Row: Broaca, Sichel, Murdoch, Colby, Marckwald, Lee, Loutrel, Snowden The 1934 Jonathan Edwards Baseball Season THE first leg of the Inter-College Baseball Cup was won in the spring of 1934 by Jona- than Edwards. Under the able tutelege of pro- fessional John Broaca, ' 34, of the Yankees, the team played with the aggressive snap of a major league outfit, winning all its scheduled games without exception. Captain J. Ramsey Minor, ' 34 proved an able field general and in addition contributed much good outfielding and many base hits. The indi- vidual starring honors, however, go to Charlie Dillingham, ' 35, who proved invaluable on the mound. In the seven-inning games of the league, he was credited with seventy-four strike- outs in seven starts. His fast ball and slow twister, carrying with it a beautiful change of pace, proved incomprehensible to all opposition and he never failed to come through in the pinches. Barclay Cooke, doing relief duty, proved an able substitute. The infield of Greenway, Colby, Bouscaren, and Lee delighted in breaking up opposing rallies with its spectacular stops and fast double plays, while Minor, Mailliard, and Hemingway ably handled the otitfield assignments. The one non-resident member of the outfit was Red Horton, imported from ShefFtown to team with Dillingham in an all Texas battery. Largely responsible for the season ' s success was the coach, Johnny Broaca, who was a veritable spark-plug at all times. Pacing up and down the first-base coaching line, he ran the team with professional precision as well as rending the air with his inimitable exhortations. As a result of this tactical practice, the Calhoun game was won in the ninth by two squeezed-in runs. Tall, wrestling Harry Snowdon, acting as Manager, score-keeper, and Bat-boy, completed the board of strategy. The final game of the Intercollege season was played with a much-touted Pierson nine. When the dust had finally settled on Meadow Field, however, there was Jonathan Edwards on the long end of a twenty to two score. Fresh from this victory and with an appetite whetted with the taste of victory, the team went on to Cam- bridge to meet the champions of the Harvard House League. There, behind Dillingham, they held Kirkland House scoreless and knocked three pitchers out of the box to score eleven runs, bringing the Crimson bacon back to High Street. Colby caught the last ball and after the game it was autographed by the entire aggregation and presented to Mrs. French, the team ' s loudest rooter, in memory of her voice, lost somewhere in the lengthening shadows of Soldiers Field. 235 Front Row: Truesdell, Ebert, Captain Ellis, Edmonds, Hehmeyer Second Row: Stewart, McDonald, Scribner The Branford Basketball Season WITH only J. Edmonds and R. Ellis re- maining from the 1934 team, Branford was given but an outside chance to win the basketball league this year. The Branford ag- gregation, however, astounded everyone except themselves by wading through the opposition in the first half of the series with the loss of only one game. They defeated the highly rated Trumbull team 23-17, finishing this half in a tie with Saybrook and Trumbull. The half ended with a loss to Saybrook in the play-offs 24-20; Trumbull subsequently defeated Say- brook. In the second half, after losing the first game to Trumbull 32-26, Branford overcame all re- maining opposition, including Saybrook, by a decisive score. The half ended with Branford, Clalhoun, and Pierson tied for first place. Cal- houn fell an easy victim to the Branford attack, but the Pierson game was a real thriller. Bran- ford led at one stage 21-4, then barely staved off a Pierson rally to win 29-27, and with the vic- tory the right to meet Trumbull in the final championship game. This game was played in excellent form, the Branford five winning 14-10. A fine aggressive attack was led by F. Stewart and D. McDonald, who had joined the outfit during the second half of the competition. Branford played Lowell House the day after the Prom and were decisively beaten after gaining an early lead. Although it is difficult to single out individual stars for the team, since all were outstanding at different times, figures show that Sam Scribner was high scorer. Johnny Edmonds was perhaps the most dependable all-around player on the team, which was at best erratic. Feeling the need of practice sessions, the team played sloppy basketball much of the time, winning most of the games by virtue of one sustained spiu ' t. 236 XN I-umt li.w: Can-.uio Second Row: Cook. Meyer. Miller. Jordan. Harris. Ebbert. C ' arpenter. Chase The 1934 Vanderbilt College Crew Season A SMOOTH and polished Vanderbilt crew- emerged in the spring to show the effects ot steady practice in the tanks since fall. In its first encounter, it pulled away from Davenport to win by two lengths over the Henley distance, and made promise of offering a strong bid for the Inter-college title. By opening up a lead of five lengths over Saybrook in the next race, Vanderbilt won undisputed title to first place in League II, while Wright edged out Branford and Jonathan Edwards to rank first in the League I standing. The races for the Intercollege Championship took place on May 16, with Vanderbilt, Wright, and Jonathan Edwards vying for first honors. Showing the same power and coordination which had characterized their stroke during the pre- ceeding season, Vanderbilt gained the Inter- college Crew championship, but the race was close enough to indicate that the losers were making a valiant bid. Vanderbilt covered the Henley distance in 6:50, opening up a half a length of water over Jonathan Edwards, while Wright finished third. On May 26, giving way to a more powerful and more finished eight, Vanderbilt was de- feated by Phillips Brooks House of Harvard, which was timed in 6:49. The Crimson jumped the lead, but the Vanderbilt eight quickened their stroke to take the lead at the mile mark. However, the pace was a little fast for the Blue boat, and a half a mile from the finish the Harvard House team drew up alongside, and then proceeded to pull away, in spite of the at- tempted sprint of the Vanderbilt eight, which finally lost by 2 1-4 lengths. The men who rowed dming the season for Vanderbilt were: W. H. Bixby, Jr., ' 36; G. C. Carpenter, ' 36S, A. Carrano, ' 35S; P. S. Chambers, Jr., ' 36; D. A. Chase, ' 35S; D. T. Cook, I art; J. A. Criscuolo, Jr., m; G. S. Ebbert, Jr., ' 36; F. C. Gratwick, Jr., ' 36; W. B. Harris, ' 36; J. F.Jordan, ' 36S; J. V. Meyer, ' 36S; W. P. Miller, ' 36E; J. W. Nields, ' 36; A. Porter, ' 36. 237 Steinberg, C. M. Sn The Jonathan Edwards Fencing Season WHEN Jonathan Edwards again turned back Saybrook in the intercollege fencing finals this year, the sons of the eminent Puritan divine repeated their spectacular last year ' s performance, and emerged the champions of the college fencing teams. Successive victories in their respective leagues culminated in the final contest in which the Alpha League, represented by Jonathan Edwards College, snapped the trophy from the rival Beta League, represented by a strong thrusting Saybrook aggregation. In the Alpha League, Jonathan Edwards ex- perienced little difficulty in winning all its matches. The strongest opposition was en- countered in the meet with Davenport, which, coming up from its last year ' s position at the bottom of the ladder, bade fair to carry the laurel of victory. Only after Blum of Jonathan Edwards had thrust through the winning point which broke a 4-4 tie in the bout with Scherr of Davenport, did Davenport lose her place in the intercollegiate competition. Trumbull had been the pre-season favorite in the Beta League; McGovern, Pitt, and the two Demings gave her an apparently overwhelming strength in the sabre and epee. When the match against Saybrook ' s two-man team composed of Coles and Keach came, however, Trumbull ' s mighty four fell, and to Saybrook fell the victory in the Beta League. The triumph was decisive, Saybrook ' s men having swept four bouts away from their baffled neighbors across Elm Street. In the finals, Jonathan Edwards was conceded a slight edge. With eight bouts scheduled in the sabre and epee, J. E. fought valiantly, and with a strong finish in the sabre, emerged triumphant, five points to three, over its opponent. Blum, Smith, and Steinberg represented Jonathan Edwards, and rolled up a final score of 2 in the epee against Saybrook ' s 2, and 3 in the sabre against their opponents ' r . Alpha League Jonathan Edwards Davenport ' anderl)ilt Berkeley Calhoun Bet. Le. gue Saybrook Trumbull Wright Pierson Branford 238 i Front Row: Feidelson, Lasell, Farley. Barnes. Fuller. Flanagan. Korn Second Row: Lucey, Higgins Third Row: Urban. Munroe. Bryant. Love. Captain Morris. Blackford, Myers. Strelinger, Robinson- Duff Fourth Row: Manager Burbank. Faculty Advisor Harper. Durham. Sanford. Rubin. Grant, Yerxa, Saunders, Bird, Coach Pine The Vanderbilt Football Season THE Vanderbilt squad with fighting resolve opened the season on October gth against Wright, in a game marked by frequent fumbles. The next game ended in a 6-6 tie with Berkeley, which made its score on a sleeper play, while Vanderbilt scored by the line plunging ability of Blackford at fullback. On the 15th the Red teain crushed a weak Branford aggregation, 20-0. After Saybrook, cowered lay Vanderbilt ' s triumphal march, had forfeited, the Sophomores next took a strong Pierson team to task, and pushed them back into defeat, 20-0. Vanderbilt scored on two long sustained drives down the field, and on a 40-yard run by Captain Morris. Jonathan Edwards also defaulted, and the next week Vanderbilt fought an exciting game with Davenport, winning by a last quarter drive from their own 20-yard line, and making the only score of the game. The seventh of November saw the leaders pitted against Trumbull in the most evenly matched contest of the season. After a dull beginning, Trumbull intercepted a pass and scored, although it failed to make the point. In the third period, the Sophomores could not be stopped, and after another thrilling march, crossed the goal line, despite a fighting stand by Trumbull. Johnny Bird, star quarterback, con- verted the point and made the score 7-6 for Vanderbilt. The last game was with a fighting Calhoun team, which Vanderbilt won 18-7. On November 1 7th, Vanderbilt met a well trained, vigorous Winthrop House team at Cambridge. Playing a weak first half, Vander- bilt was scored on when Winthrop took ad- vantage of a blocked kick. Although Vander- bilt succeeded in advancing the ball to Win- throp ' s 5-yard line in the second half, it was lost on downs, and run back for another Winthrop touchdown in a series of brilliant drives. The Crimson won the contest 12-0 and thus ended the second season of intramural football at Yale. Too much credit for the success of the Van- derbilt season cannot be given to Coach Pine and his assistant Bill Morgan, whose enthusi- asm, coupled with the interest of Mr. Harper as faculty advisor, built up the largest squad seen on the intramural fields this year. 239 Captain Colby, Winslow, Northrup, Hamilton The I 934 Vanderbilt Golf Season THE Vanderbilt Golf team, swinging its way to victory in a series of 1 6 intercollege matches last spring, carried the first year of intercollegi- ate golf at Yale to a grand climax with a y ' i- ' ' 2 triumph over the jubiliant Adams House aggre- gation from Harvard, and quieted in a decisive fashion those skeptics who had predicted an early and unnatural death for this foundling sport. Although this was the first spring season for intramural teams at Yale, among them golf, the Yale course attracted in considerable num- bers part of the 589 men who went out for col- lege sports last spring. Guy Colby, 1937, followed by an enthusiastic group of Sophomores, first met Saybrook on April 24, and swung their way into a 2-1 vic- tory. Although hampered by early season roughness and blistering winds, the Vanderbilt group showed form and finish. A well-coordin- ated team, consisting of Captain Colby, Levin- son, Schuyler, Haynsworth, Winslow, and Cavanagh, followed through most of the season. Pierson fell 3-1 on May i, before the well balanced tactics of Haynsworth and Colby. On May 8, Branford went down 4-0; two days later, Vanderbilt defeated the last of the string of opponents in the League Series, Calhoun, 3-1, with Levinson turning in a brilliant card. The play-off with the victors in the Beta League came on May 15th. Wright, like Van- derbilt, had run through a hard schedule of college games, and offered the most formidable opposition of the season. Vanderbilt ran down the Wright swingers, and with victory came the coveted Haviland Trophy. Playing Adams House of Harvard on the 15th, Vanderbilt, under the tutelage of Captain Colby, who had thrashed his way through the whole season with a brilliant swath of victories, ran over the Crimson aggregation in an un- compromising manner, the final score being 7 ' 2-i ' . The 1934 schedule and scores iollow; April 24: Vanderbilt 2, Saybrook i. May i: Vander- bilt 3, Pierson i. May 8: Vanderbilt 4, Branford o. May 10: Vanderbilt 3, Calhoun i. May 15: Vanderbilt 3, Wright i (playoff ). May 17: Vanderbilt 7 ' j, Adams House i ' 2. 240 I-wiil Row: Wilson, McClmtock. Chute. Jordan. St. John. Burrah Second Row: Larkin, McCann, Town. Kendall The Pierson Hockey Season SWEEPING undefeated through a seven game schedule, Pierson went on to a hard fought victory in two cfose play-off games with Wright. Before these final contests, only one goal had been tallied against Pierson, while the champs managed to net forty-five. Led by St. John, Chute, and McClintock in the first line, Pierson trounced Jonathan Ed- wards in a one-sided opening contest, 9-1 . In the first period Lynch of J. E. chalked up the one and only marker for the season against the smooth-playing league leaders. In the finest exhibition of the winter campaign Pierson next trounced a highly touted Wright aggregation, 3-0. In addition to the first line, Capt. Francis Knoblauch and Badger starred for the victors. After Calhoun was easily disposed of, 6-0, only St. John ' s second period tally saved Pierson from trouble against a stubborn Berkeley, which was downed by the bare margin of 1-0. Branford, too, offered rather severe opposition, but met defeat on goals by Chute and St. John. Jordan, in the nets for Pierson, played a fine game as combination goalie and short-stop. With Knob- lauch, Walker, and Wilson breaking into the scoring column a wobbly Vanderbilt team was out-scored 9-0. While Larkin rested peacefully in the cage his team mates had a bloody field day against an even more ineffectual Trumbull outfit, scoring a 15-0 defeat. Wright, beating Davenport, then won the right to meet Pierson in a two game play-off. In the first of these Pierson earned a 2-2 tie on a last minute goal by McClintock, after blowing a one goal lead. Two over-time periods were played, but to no avail. On the following day, after overcoming a three goal handicap amassed by Wilson and Chute, Wright was finally beaten in an over-time period on .St. John ' s shot from the side, 4-3. Among those who played with the winning Pierson aggregation were: D. B. Badger, ' 37, H. D. Buriall, ' 35S, F. H. Chute, ' 35, G. G. Jordan, ' 37, J. R. Kendall, ' 36, F. M. Knob- lauch, ' 35, W. J. Larkin, 2nd, ' 35, T. A. Mc- Cann, ' 36, H. C. McClintock, Jr. ' 35, H. T. McKnight, ' 36, S. St. John, ' 35, F. B. Town, ' 35, W. G. Walker, ' 36, F. L. Wilson, ' 36. 241 Eschen, Sullivan, Captain Bissell. Harrington, Bauman, Primm The Calhoun Squash Season THE Calhoun squash team kept up its bril- liant work ol ' the past year by defeating every college in the intramural competition this season and set a new precedent by defeating the championship House team from Harvard by the undisputably safe margin of 5-0. The team lost only one match in all, and that to a Prep school aggregation which came down from Choate to win 4- 1 . Their first victim was the five from Saybrook whom they beat decisively and easily, 4-1. After defeating Trumbull with comparative ease Cal- houn came up against one of the toughest match- es of the whole schedule, Davenport. The final outcome was in doubt until the very last match, which was added to the champions ' total with the greatest relief. Their neighbors from Berkeley were the next to feel the racquets of the victorious team, losing gamely, but hopelessly, to the tune of4-i. The next match, played February 16 with Choate, proved to be a comedown from the high level usually trod by the Calhoun squashers, for the invaders were able to return to Walling- ford and say that they had managed to keep all but one of the members of the supposedly in- vincible Calhoun squash team from winning his match. The outcome of this contest, however, did not affect the league standing and unde- feated record of the College team, for the game was a non-official one. Three days later this blemish was entirely eradicated by a stellar shutout defeat skillfully administered to the Sophomore group repre- senting Vanderbilt on the courts. This period seems to have been just about the peak of the season, since the next game, against Jonathan Edwards, was also a shutout. In practically the same circumstances under which Davenport was vanquished, the team met Pierson and had their serious worries, not allayed until the last game of the last individual match. By thus defeating all the college squash teams, Calhoun gained the right to meet the five from the v inning House at Harvard, Lowell. The team was very anxious to add the scalp of this team to their collection, for the year before the same Harvard House had administered a dose of cold water to the Yale men by winning all five matches. This year, however, the tables were turned and the boys from Lowell returned to Cambridge a sadder and subjugated flock, having bowed to the superior foot and racquet work of Bissell, Sullivan, Bau man, Primm, and Eschen. These five, with Harrington, were the six men usually at the top of the ladder, all playing a brand of squash well above that of the average college team. 242 Front Row: Franklin, Boyd. McGregor. V ' anderPocl. Bulkeley Second Row: Henrv. Clement. Babb. Behr. Brownell The Pierson Swimming Season THE race for the IntercoUege Swimming Championship was a hotly contested one. From the outset Pierson looked fairly formidable with its addition of E. F. Boyd, Jr. 36, V. V. Bronson, and ' 36, M. G. Bulkeley ' 36 and R. M. Henry ' 36, who were last year stellar performers in the circuit. With a bev y of free-style swim- mers, Pierson entered the fray to emerge vic- torious, almost always by the margin of the free- style events. In the opening meet of the season with Bran- ford, Pierson came out the winner by a score of 47-19. The enjoyable part of this meet was the uncovering of a good diver in E. Thorne, who was a consistent winner throughout the season. In rather one-sided meets Pierson overcame Berkeley, 37-28, Calhoun, 47-19, and Trumbull, 41-25, with R. M. Henry, W. W. Bronson, and A. B. McGregor consistent winners in the 50, 220, and 100 yard freestyles, respectively. On February 8th Pierson was almost toppled from the ranks of the undefeated by a spirited Saybrook team. This meet was a tie at the re- lay; and it was only when R. M. Henry, swim- ming the anchor leg of a closely contested relay, finished in front to w in by inches the event and the meet, the score being 35-31. E. Thorne and W . W. Bronson were the only first place winners. The next week Pierson came, saw, and con- quered a strong ' anderbilt team 37-29. Here Pierson men swept through the free stvle events with A. B. McGregor, R. M. Henry, M. G. Bulkeley, and A. F. Kitchel setting an intercol- lege record of i :43 in the relay. Vanderbilt retaliated by sweeping the breast stroke and back stroke, and by taking third in the dive. In the last week of the season, Pierson met the Wright group, which was the last logical con- tender for the championship. In what was sup- posed to be a close meet, Wright was routed 41- 25. Boyd and Kitchel were outstanding per- formers, breaking records in the 220 and 100 respectively. Jonathan Edwards was easily taken over and Pierson finished its nine-meet schedule undefeated. At the Swimming Carnival, the Pierson relay team of M. G. Bulkeley, R. M. Henry, E. F. Boyd, and H. B. VanderPoel won the Intercol- lege relay championship. On March 2nd the Pierson Championship team met the Phillips Brooks House at Harvard and tasted defeat for the first time this year, 36-28. The meet was closely contested through- out and only went to Harvard after their winning- the relay by a yard and a half Bulkeley, Vander Poel, Clement, and McGregor were outstanding. 243 Silverman, Schwab. Bronson. Ferris. Hawkes. Murray. Lincoln, McCarthy. Gott The 1934 Wright Tennis Season THE Wright group completed an undefeated season to win the intramural intercollege tennis crown for the year 1934. The first of their unbroken line of victories was scored at the expense of the rival Vanderbilt group. By keep- ing up this good work until the end of the season, the Wright group finally met the Davenport nine and downed them, too, in the closest match of the season, 5-4. Of the players comprising the team, Murray, No. i, and Lincoln, No. 6, showed to the best advantage, though all the men were well above the average for the league. Murray lost only one or two of his matches, while Lincoln was undefeated, thus turning in one of the few imblemished records for the season. By gaining the top position in the intercol- lege ladder, Wright had the honor of meeting the victorious Lowell House team from Harvard which came to New Haven soon after the end of the regular season. Due largely to the fact that they were used to playing a nine man team and that Harvard only brought down seven, the Yale team was at a decided disadvantage and, since the men in the last brackets on the list were nearly as good as those higher up, bowed to the invaders 4-3. The match was undecided until the last set of the last individual match, for the first were evenly split, but in the last the Crimson triuinphed in straight sets. Following the contest, the tennis teams joined forces with the Intercollege and House champion crews in a banquet at the Alpha Delt House. The greatest advantage of the Wright group lav in the enthusiasm of the whole group, kept at a fever heat through the inspiring leadership of Captain Hawkes. He saw to it that there was a full team ready to take the courts for every match and kept the players on the lower rungs of the challenge list busy trying to better their position on the ladder. Thus Wright did not have to forfeit a single match all year and was able to have the best players of the group representing them. 244 FionI Row: Ohester. Mertz. Captain Snyder. England. Chute Second R ow: Robinson. .St. John. Manager McGregor. McChntock. Bradley The Pierson Touch Football Season SPORTING a fast, clever passing attack the Pierson touch-football team breezed through the league undefeated, winning nine contests, losing none. Then, splitting its squad into two sections and acquiring several men from the college football aggregation, Pierson went on to defeat both Eliot and Lowell Houses of Harvard. Opening the season on October 2, Pierson ran a hard-fighting Branford team into the ground, 48-18. Robinson, St. John, and Mertz proved the focal points in an attack that wove up and down the field to the complete bewilder- ment of the opposition. After Calhoun defaulted, the champs ran into their only serious opposi- tion of the campaign against Trumbull. With several regulars out of the line-up they just man- aged to nose out their opponents, 12-6, Mc- Clintock ' s score proving a decisive factor. Say- brook obligingly defaulted, but against Jona- than Edwards Pierson had another field-dav. With Chester, Bradley, and Stoddard leading the attack, the total ran up to 42-12. After Wright failed to put a team in the field, the smooth-playing victors whitewashed a be- nighted Vanderbilt aggregation, as a total of forty-eight points were tallied. Robinson and St. John again proved themselves the class of the league as long distance passers. Coming up against the winner and runner-up of the Harvard competition, Pierson emerged a double victor. The regulars, playing Eliot House, fell behind in the first period, but recov- ering rapidly scored four consecutive touch- downs to put the game on ice. Capt. Kimball of Eliot scored again, but the contest ended, 24- 12. The Pierson All-Stars, locking horns with the second-place Lowell combine, were equally successful with five passes from Rostow to Henry, and one to Thome, winning the game decisively, 30-18. 245 ACTIVITIES MILITARY, NAVAL SOCIAL and SCHOOL CLUBS « Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps STAFF ORGANIZATION Battalion Commander : Lieutenant Commander Jay Depew Freer Sub-Commander: ' LmvT ' E AtiT R. W. Downing Commissary Officer: Ensign J. S. Gravely, Jr. Adjutant: Lieutenant R. H. Tenney Chief Petty Officer: C. P. O., D. Dodge COLOR BEARERS First P.O., W. F. Lineberger, Jr. Third P.O..]. B. Wells Second P.O., C. B. D. Brown Fourth P.O., R. E. Belknap, Jr. FIRST COMPANY -Company Commander: G. R. Atterbury FIRST PLATOON Platoon Leader: Lieut, (jg) R. L. Schultz,Jr. Mustering P.O. and Right Guide: I St P.O.— J. M. Fulton Left Guide: 2nd P.O.— R. E. Rew, Jr. Vd P.O.— G. M. Street 3rd P.O.— R. C. Huston Scjuad Leaders: 4th P.O. — B. Babcock 4th P.O.— R. C. Duane 4th P.O.— I. C. Oehler 1936 H. M. Campbell A. L. Trull S. T. Hotchkiss A. Bildner J. T. Brugger, Jr J. B. Day F. C. Cady M. D. Cooper, Jr R. A. Davies E. H. Forrest L. E. Bieringer J. W. Jordan J. S. Herold 1937 A. F. Hetheringlon,Jr. J. B. McGivney, Jr. J. T. Robinson, Jr. J. R. Shepard 1938 W. N. Holbrook H. T. Irwin, Jr. C. M. Lynge, Jr. W. Perkins A. L. Webre SECOND PLATOON Platoon Leader: Ensign A. M. Johnson Mustering P. O. and Right Guide: ist P.O.— S. H. Fredericks, Jr. Left Guide: 2nd P.O.— D. G. Stoddard 3rd P.O.— G. A. Wallace 3rd P.O.— J. F. Weller, Jr. Squad Leaders: 4th P.O. — B. W. Brown 4th P.O. — D. G. Noble 4th P.O.— W. R. Greenwood, Jr. 1936 J. H. Rhodes F. Armstrong A. Winslow, 2nd W. W. Low W. M. Stiger ■937 M. Adams C. E. Snioyer, Jr. E. H. Allen R. S. Ingersoll D. Q.. Ross J. M. McNaughton R. D. Heinl, Jr. 1938 J. H. Castle, Jr. N. Dalrymple A. F. Edwards, Jr. R. H. Halsev.Jr. O. C. Hugo ' . B. Korsmeyer R. Lorenzini G. W. Oberst E. H. Seymour P. C. Wyckoff 248 • SECOND COMPANY Company Cnmmander: VV. W. Bittner FIRST PLATOON Platoon Leader: Lieut, (jg) R. P. Bassett Mustering P.O. and Right Guide: I St P.O.--R. L. Sieg,Jr. Left Guide: 2nd P.O.— H. Bissell, Jr. 3rd P.O.— C. V. Brooks 3rd P.O. — W.S. Walcott, 3rd S ' uad Leaders: 4th P.O.— J. VV. Bird, Jr. 4th P.O.— F. C. Heller 4th P.O.— S. A. Willis C. C. Rodgers B. W. Stiles 1936 SECOND PLATOON Platoon Leader: Ensign J. G. Thorburn, Jr. Mustering P.O. and Right Guide: I St P.O.— M. Farrell Left Guide: 2nd P.O. — J. Stonington 3rd P.O.— P. N. Larsen 3rd P.O. — G. O. Knapp, 2nd Squad Leaders: 4th P.O. — R. D. Foothorap 4th P.O. — D. E. Winebrenner, 3rd 4th P.O.— L F. Bodholt 1936 M. S. Stringer, Jr. M. M. Chatfield C. S. Judson J. Badman F. M. Fahy A. E. Good L. Johnson, II D. C. Adie H. E. BiUingsley H. R. Cunningham R. W. Harter D. R. Levy ' 937 1938 M. B. Hall, Jr. C. Mittendorf D. D. Steere J. M. Yost O. W. Mellick T. S. Page R. van Benschoten L. P. White R. C. Barlow A. G. Bauer, Jr. G. H. C;olby S. Hickenlooper, Jr. F. H. Brooke R. T. Davol R. D. Scott H. J. Korn R. W. Baker, Jr. E. M. Blair J. H. Dempsey, Jr. R. C. GoodiTian R. Johnson, Jr. 1937 J. S. Miller C. S. Stahlnecker F. B. Wadelton, Jr. R. A. Pritchard, Jr. J. L. Shaler F. A. Wiggin J. C. Anderson C. W. Logan A. K. Mills, Jr. H. P. Scott, 3rd P. B. Terenzio G. H. Weed D. G. Wright THIRD COMPANY Company Commander: K. H. Hamilton FIRST PLATOON Platoon Leader: Lieut, (jg) J. Taylor Mustering P.O. and Ris,ht Guide: I St P.O.— J. F. Cullman, 3rd Left Guide: 2nd P.O.— W. F. Keyser 3rd P.O.— J. R. Gillie 3rd P.O. — J. S. Burrows, Jr. 3rd P.O.— R. A. L. Ellis Squad Leaders: 4th P.O. — G. S. Clemens 4th P.O.— H. A. Hull ' 936 SECOND PLATOON Platoon Leader: Ensign J. D. Venter Mustering P.O. and Right Guide: ist P.O.— G. C. Bradley Left Guide: 2nd P.O. — J. A. Hetherington, 3rd P.O.— J. W. Deichler 3rd P.O. — F. W. Dempsey 3rd P.O.— R. S. Blanchard Squad Leaders: 4th P.O. — L. F. Loutrel, Jr. 4th P.O.— A. D. Berliss, Jr. 4th P.O.— D. H. Northrup E. W. Smith A. B. Fav 0. M. Shirey, Jr. G. B. Morrill, Jr. E. P. Tomlinson T. G. Crapster, Jr. S. Farnham H. Huffman J. G. Kelsey J. C. Murray, Jr. J. L. Schumann 1937 R. V. Bradlev G. T. Hanley, Jr. H.S.Cody, jr. J.D.Kerr A. W. Fargo C. G. Myers E. C. .Schroeder 1938 P. H. Behr K. H. Behr, Jr. A. W. Cocroft H. W E. Burlingame 1937 R. L. Goodkind R. C. B. Morton T. R. Robinson, Jr. . .Santord, Jr. •938 D. F. Keefe A. W. Bedell D. H. Howard D. F. Currier D. A. Matricaria J. W. Carlisle F. A. Lewis, Jr. A. R. Dawe F. T. McKeon J. H. Dempsey J. Gribbell, 2nd C. T. O ' Connell A. Shelden, 3rd J. P. Gibbs, Jr. J. C. Roper, Jr. E. M. Gordon W. F. Slaymaker A. Hessberg, 2nd J- L. B. Tewksbury, Jr. Seronde, Jr. 249 March Formation of the YaW H.i (.„„,, Reserve Officers Training Corps Having completed the prescribed course in the Reserve Officers Training Corps, the following named seniors were commissioned Second Lieutenants in the Officers Reserve Corps of the United States Army: FIELD ARTILLERY C. Altschul D. B. Bloom J. B. Calfee W. B. Coburn E. V. Cox, Jr. L. A. Dewell G. A. Douglass, Jr. E. D. Echols W. Ewing, Jr. W. J. Ford, Jr. H. L. Freer F. P. Garvan, Jr. R. W. Gilpatric J. E. Claffey S. E. Clements R. J. Goodrich D. O. Harrington W. H. Harrington H. W. Hemingway W. D. Hosford, Jr. B. Howe A. L. Keiser, Jr. H. D. Kellogg, Jr. R. C. Knox, Jr. S. M. Lamb W. V. D. Ledley L. F. Licht, Jr. N. M. Loud H. C. McClintock, Jr. E. E. McMeen J. W. Mailliard, 3rd P. Marshall R. Milbank F. R. Peake E. S. Phillips F. H. Piatt, 2d J. F. Ruso M. Sargent, Jr. J. K. Secor CORPS OF ENGINEERS H. B. Combs D. L. Livinsfston F.Quarrier W. A. Tyrrell. Jr. M. L. Sperry, 2nd G. R. Steiner W. C. Teagle, Jr. H. P. B. Terry J. H. Thoerner, Jr. R. W. Van Home S. F. Weaver, Jr. G. A. Weiler R. Welles W. A. Wells W. M. Wherry, 3rd F. R. White, Jr. D. C. Watson 251 CI i,mi( Roil: l,dn.,i,. Maj..i ll,«kr., Milbaiik, HamiiKlun. Mi CiliiUcK k. Sctcir, 1.1. Hfdfkm Seco nd Row: Lt. Strohbehn. Lt. Svihra, Wells. Combs. Goodrich. Lamb. Watson Third Row: Lt. Pearson, Marshall. Livingston. Wherry, Kellogg Cannon and Castle Military Honor Fraternity OFFICERS D.WID O. H. ' RRINGTON J.w K. Secor Harry B. Combs Edward V. Cox, Jr. Francis P. Garvan, Jr. Richard J. Goodrich Davis O. Harrington Howard D. Kellogg, Jr. MEMBERS Stuart M. Lamb David L. Livingston Harvey C. McClintock, Jr. Pardee Marshall Robert Milbank F. Robinson Peake President Secretary- Treasurer Fitzhugh Qltarrier Jay K. Secor Henry P. B. Terry Malcolm D. Watson William A. Wells William M. Wherry, 3rd HONORARY MEMBERS Major R. W. Hocker Lt. T, B. Hedekin Lt. R. W. Pearson Lt. E. L. Strohbehn Lt. a. Svihra 252 Yale Grenfell Association OFFICERS Sir Wilfred T. Grenfell, M.D. Dr. Harry L. Paddon William P. House, ' 35 Charles Belknap, 2nd, ' 36 E. Fay Campbell, ' 16 Honorary President Superintendent of Yale School President Secretary- Treasurer Permanent Secretary MEMBERS C. Belknap, and, ' 36 E. M. Brainard, 36 H. E. Butler, Jr., ' 38 S. V. Cammann, ' 35 G. A. DouGL. ss, Jr., ' 35 E. S. Downs, Jr., ' 35 D. G. Stodd. rd, T. H. Gregg, ' 37 V. P. House, ' 35 R. W. Huntington, Med. R. D. Matthews, ' 35 A. H. Minor, ' 35 J. P. Scully, ' 35 35 253 Bnrie. Baker, McBride Round Table OFFICERS Richard B. Baker, ' 35 . Harman W. McBride, ' 36 Peter Borie, ' 35 Harvey C. Mansfield . . President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Advisor D. W. Bent R. B. Birge J. C. Bissell V. K. Block A. J. Browne, Jr. L. C. Brownell J. A. Caldwell, 3rd F. Carter, 3rd F. N. Childs D. S. Clark B. F. Coleman J. H. Cox G. B. Farnam MEMBERS R. H. Footman R. Gancher L. W. Goodkind L. B. Harris C. Hickox P. E. Jacob M. J. Keller A. C. Kelsey J. S. Kemper, Jr. J. M. Knapp L. J. Kohn J. H. London A. P. LOVEJOY J. E. MacDonald J. Mellitz J. C. Morrissey W. Myers, Jr. W. L. Pforzheimer W. L. M. Reese L. J. Sanford R. E. Small T. Stix G. F. Trowbridge J. W. Warrington T. D. Woolsey 254 Front Row: Heckscher, Bingham, Millikan, Tennant, Moore Second Row: Donahoe, McKnight, Nichols, Stewart. Barkhausen, J. Goodyear, Sweet The Political Union IN the spring of 1934 a group of people led by Mr. A. Whitney Griswold of the History Department had an idea. It wasn ' t a new idea. Fundamentally it was the same idea that brought a number of young Englishmen together at Cambridge at the beginning of the Nineteenth Century. The essence of the idea was that a university group should be established to come to conclus- ions about national questions following the procedure used by the national legislature. The purpose was twofold: to gain some acquaintance with the issues involved in the major problems facing the nation, and to become familiar with the nature and methods of practical politics. Out of that idea sprang the Yale Political Union. Finally on December 3 they were ready. A banquet was held to organize and solidify a picked group of fifty-four charter members. Mr. Griswold, Professor Adams, and Professor Spyk- man laid their blessing on the organization and pointed out its great possibilities. At the first meeting a telegram of congratula- tion was received from President Roosevelt. Following its reading. President Angell officially opened the meeting and debate on the bill be- fore the House, Resolved: that the United States should balance its budget for the fiscal year 1936, proceeded under the chairmanship of Max Millikan, President of the Union. Lyman Spitzer, ' 35, and R. M. Bissell of the Economics Department supported the bill, which was at- tacked by A. Heckscher, J. B. Bingham, and Mr. George Soule, Editor of the New Republic. After active floor debate, the previous question was moved and carried. Result: Aye, 43; No, 46; Abstaining, 5 1 . The second meeting was held February 1 3. The bill with which debate opened, Resolved: that Tammany Hall is a good thing, was sup- ported by the Liberal Party under the leader- ship of C. Woolsey and R. Moore and attacked by both other parties. It was defeated by an overwhelming vote about the middle of the eve- ning. A second bill opposing the passage through the state legislature of a criminal syndicalism law was passed unanimously after heated discus- sion of amendments. 255 Mory ' s Association OFFICERS FOR 1935 John L. Gilson, 1899 President Charles M. Bakewell, 1905H Vice-President BuRNSiDE WiNSLOw, 1 904 Treasurer George E. Thompson, 1895S Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS To serve until ig G To serve until igj To serve until ig S Thomas W. Farnam, 1899 Ezekiel S. Bronson, 1900 J. Frederick Baker, 1909 William A. Rice, 1886S Omar W. Platt, 1899 J. Dwight Dana, 191 i R. Selden Rose, 1909 Graham F. Thompson, 1907S Frederick D. Grave, 191 iS Philip Troup, 1900S Burnside Winslow, 1904 T. A. D.Jones, 1908S ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE J. Frederick Baker, 1909, Chairman J. Dwight Dana, 191 i William A. Rice, 1886S HOUSE COMMITTEE Frederick D. Grave, igi iS, Chainnan George E. Thompson, 1895S 256 !! ' Pitch-Pipe Chamberlain ' CalHope Collier ' Grape-Nuts Kellogg ' Holy- Yodel Miller ' Wready-to- Wretch Rogers BARFLIES ' MacWater McClintock ' Loud Stroud Herry-Terry Sperry Laigue Sprague Prodder Stoddard Tittering Tufts Popocatapetl Vaill HONOR. RY MEMBERS White Keys Howard Black Keys Howard The Whiffenpoofs THE ancient and honorable order ol VVhiflen- poots was formed about twenty-five years ago. Originally composed of seven men (with the motto We are Seven ) it has since increased its nimibers for one reason or another. At one time there were seven singers, a manager, and a perpetual guest, the latter being forbidden to sing, although under compulsion to be present at meetings. More recently the organization has included one or two Barflies, whose duty is to prepare concoctions of a refreshing nature to be consumed during rehearsals. This year ' s group contains ten singers and two of these concoctors. It has also been the custom for some time to elect honorary members; Lawrence Tib- bett was taken in by the 1934 men, and the Howard Twins by this year ' s crowd. Whiffenpoof activities have undergone chang- es, too, but not particularly radical ones. For some time it was customary for the organiza- ation to put on an act between the halves at the Brown football game, but this has been discon- tinued. Present-day engagements for the Whiffs include singing at the annual Junior Prom, the Aews banquet, at the various college beer parties, and, of course, at Mory ' s and on the Campus once a week. The old Whiffs speak with sadness of the passing of the sundial in Berkeley Oval, around which they used to gather to sere- nade the Freshmen, and of other spots now gone. However, the new college quadrangles have been found excellent places for singing, and there is no immediate possibility that Whiffen- poof music will die out with the old buildings. The strains of the marching song, Aj Liicka Liicka (pronounced Ay Lushka Lushka), will always bring weary students from their desks to hang out of the windows over the courts, and the well-loved Whiffenpoof Song will continue to ring out over the crowded tables down at Mory ' s for many generations. George D. Vaill 257 The Pundits Professor Jack R. Crawford Joseph H. Bragdon Martin H. Donahoe, Jr. David Jenckes Otto T. Mallery, Jr. Max F. Millikan Angelo J. Smith, Jr. WiLLi.AM T. Sperry Lyman Spitzer, Jr. George S. Stillman Daniel G. Tenney, Jr. 058 The Mohicans Bia: Chief BeatinE; Around The Bush Brown Brave Giddy-ap-whoa Miu ' tha Brave Live-in-loin Danielson Brave Rain in the puss Grosscup Brave Steaming Stud Pillsbury Brave Leaping Longhorn Morton Brave Manv Horse Slav Brave Grab-a-bus Tenney Brave Hairy Fairy Terry Squaw Sling-the-sheet Mertz Squaw Fever Water Worrall Squaw Fallen Chest J. Goodyear Papoose Plenty Paw Drew 259 I! ii Andover Club 1935 J. H. Batten, 3rd A. T. Bigwood H. P. Brightwell, Jr. H. K. Brown, Jr. K. S. Brown H. P. Buckinsjham J. P. Butler, jr. L. D. Clark J. S. Cliffbrd J. L. Cooper F. C. Cuthbertson M. H. Donahoe, Jr. J. B. Elliott E. L. French J. S. Gifford H.J. Goldberger R. J. Goodrich J. S. Gravely, Jr. R. P. Griffing, Jr. J. R. Griswold B. Grosvenor, 2nd F. P. Haas J. D. Hegeman E. B. Hincks S. T. Hotchkiss H. D. Kellogg, Jr. E. V. King N. V. King L. Kingman T. H. Lawrence, Jr W. V. D. Ledlev W. F. Lineberger, Jr. A. B. McGregor K. Mclnerney A. S. Malsin R. Milbank M. F. Millikan W. S. Murray, Jr. G. Peck F. H. Piatt, 2nd A. M. Preston F. Qiiarrier C. H. Rose, Jr. R. B. Roth G. B. Schlotterer R. C. L. Scott W, H. Slay, Jr. L. Spitzer, Jr. D. V. T. Sprankle C. S. Strauss C. B. Swope J. Taylor J. F. Taylor J. McL. Tompkins G. D. VaiU W. T. Van Huysen W. S. Vickrey W. S. Walcott, 3rd R. M. Wheeler C. C. VVickwire, Jr. P. L. Woodlock 1936 C. T. Alexander R. M. Allen W. R. Atherton E. P. Bagg, 3rd J. W. Barclay R. J. Barr, Jr. P. K. Bartow C. B. Bayly, Jr. W. S. Beinecke J. E. Bird R. B. Birge J. V. S. Blaisdell B. W. Brown D. Bruce, Jr. M. R. Bump C. C. Bunker R. D. Case F. C. Gate, Jr. J. M. Gates, Jr. W. Gates E. J. Clapp, Jr. R. B. Cooke R. H. Cory, Jr. H. F. Damon, Jr. H. W. Davis, 3rd J. V. B. Dean J. K. Deasy G. S. deMare G. B. Farnam H. A. Gardner, Jr. R. E. Gnade C. F. Greene W. R. Greenwood, Jr R. N. Harris H. S. Hart, Jr. W. Hausberg, 2nd R. M. Heavenrich W. A. Hebert, Jr. R. C. Holland N. L. Hope W. E. Hughes A. C. Israel O. O. Jensen R. B. Lincoln V. N. Lovell E. VV. Mansfield J. S. Miller R. A. Mcore A. L. Neal D. H. Norlhrup G. P. O ' Neil F. D. O ' Reillv, Jr. 260 V. H. Paine L. C. Peters J. H. Preston L. C. Qtiimby J. H. Rhodes J. H. Richardson T. A. ' Ritzman H. C Royal, Jr. T. C. Savage R. H. Schultz B. Smith S. F. Smith H. R. Stern, Jr. S. E. Sweet, Jr. H. L. Stern, Jr. A. W. Thompson V. K. Townsend J. Upton, Jr. U. D. E. VValden T. J. Ward, Jr. M. K. Whitehead L. Willard, Jr. N. H. Willis C. S. Woolsey 1937 H. A. Austin, Jr. R. B. Avery D. B. Badger J. Badman T. E. Barbour G. P. Bartholomew, Jr W. Beach R. Berry F. M. Blount A. B. Bower W. Boyd, Jr. T. C. Brainerd A. W. Bromfield V. C. Chester W. B. Church, Jr. F. J. Clifford, Jr. F. L. Comlev E. Comstock T. M. Crosby R. M. Davenport, Jr. C. G. G. Dav J. L. Doyle H. D. Dulmage C;. E. Edgerton W. D. Embree, Jr. R. Ferguson, Jr. T. H. Gregg E, V. Gulick G. T. Hall W. K. Hammond, 3rd L. M. Hartman, 3rd D. Haviland H. K. Heller C. R. Hook, Jr. C. F. Howe R. S. IngersoU D. C. Jennev P. J. Kann ' R. L. Keeney, Jr. R. J. Kerry S. L. Lasell, Jr. R. L. Linkroum R. E. Long K. H. MacDuffie G. X. McLanahan A. R. Mc Williams, Jr. M. R. Mason N. W. Nichols A. W. Peck, Jr. G. T. Peck J. C. Ramsey D. A. Raymond, Jr. J. B. Reigeluth H. M. Ri eber H. Samson W. M. Sanders W. H. Scott H. Scoville, Jr. T. B. Sharretts R. C. Sullivan J. W. Sumner, Jr. W. F. Taylor S. Thome J. L. Toohey, Jr. W. H. Trimpi A. Williams, 3rd E. J. Wofsev F. G. Woodruff S. F. Abbey W. H, Allen E. A. Beddall P. J. Bowers, Jr. J. H. Castle, Jr. W. L. Chamberlin,Jr J. L. Collens M. D. Cooper, Jr. T. A. Cushman, Jr. N. Dalrymple C. F. Daniels R. M. Davidson H. W. Davis, Jr. A. M. Fine, Jr. J. C. Fox R. M. Gibson R. S. G. Hall R. H. Halsev V. H. Hardin? M. C. Harper, Jr. A. T. Haviland R. Heinz A. P. Hixon O. C. Hugo R. W. Hull H. T. Irwin, Jr. H. P. Johnson R. Keenev, Jr. R. F. Kilpatrick, Ji J.J. Kinney, Jr. J. B. Knowles R. R. Kurson J. L. Latham P. M Little G. H. Lowe, 3rd J.X. McWeeney C. M. Magnuson P. W. Mathews D. Miller, Jr. W. C. Miller J. C. Mitchell R.J. Munroe, Jr. G. W. Patteson H. O. Perkins F. A. Peterson, Jr. J. E. Petrie L. Pierce R. L. Phillips F. C. Powell D. F. Qiiigley, Jr. K. G. Rafferty W. N. Randell S. M. Rogers M. D. Sanders D. C. Sargent E. H. Seymour C. Shartenberg, Jr. R. V. Smith T. G. Smith C. B. Soper J. B. Stevens. Jr. W. C. Taylor T. Thacher D. M. Thompson W. E. Urick, Jr. E. S. Washburn B. Watson J. M. Weaver S. W ' eis W. J. Whipple E. D. Whiting W. G. W ' igton R. P. Williams J. M. Woolsey, Jr. P. York, Jr. 261 Berkshire School Club L. G. Shields 1935 R. H. Tennev V. R. Davis F. W. Fairman, Ji 1936 J. F. Lord R. Olcott S. P. Williams, 3rd J. Davis A. B. Diss R. S. Gallagher 1937 A. L. Morris R. C. Myers B. G. Rafferty G. P. Strelinger, Jr. J. A. Wade, Jr. T. M. Wells V. D. Andrus G. B. Berger, Jr. K. G. Raffertv 26 ' J Canterbury School Club John F. Sweeney, ' 36 . J. F. Callahan R. F. Conoon P. L. Krug C. P. Carroll, Jr. E. C. Bailly, Jr. G. B. Carmody OFFICER MEMBERS 1935 T. K. Krug 1936 1937 1938 C. J. Callahan Law School President T. H. Shriver G. C. Smith J. F. Sweeney V. L. Dougherty R.S. Shriver, Jr. J. D. Leary 263 Choate School Club T. D. S. Bassett A. P. Brooks E. B. Brown H. M. Budlong W, M. Bush J. H. Childs, Jr. R. R. Clayton J. A. Drew J. G. Ahlers, Jr. A. R. Andrews J. C. Armstrong R. D. H. Banbury H. N. Barkhausen J. A. Blum A. C. Brumley C. C. Bunker V. L. Burt J. C. Castle A. D. Church I. T. Axton, Jr. W. A. Borsl V. Burnham H. H. Butler R. M. Byrnes, Jr. R. C. Durham L. S. Elebash, Jr. F. G. Fabian, Jr. A. E. Fulton, Jr. D. W. Allen H. T. Barrow A. F. Bosworth R. L. Cohen H. B. Comen C. E. Doty, Jr. W. S. Epstein P. L. Ferber J. L Ely E. E. Fessenden, Jr. J. R. Fulton B. A. Gimbel P. B. Grosscup, Jr. P. C. Hitt W. P. House D. Jenckes T. G. Crapster, Jr. J. O. Crittenden T. F. Curtin, Jr. E. A. Dingee G. S. Ebbert, Jr. A. Elsaesser, Jr. R. C. Graham D. Hamlin A. Hart H. Havemeyer, Jr. S. Hickenlooper E. F. Chaster D. F. Haggertv E. Hall M. B. Hall, Jr. V. P. Healy, Jr. V. S. Holmes P. C. Honnold F. Juarrero R. Heinz C. W. Mackie, 3rd J. M. McNulty V. G. Mendosa G. W. Millett, Jr. A. W. Murphy J. L. Murray 1935 V. M. Kelly .S. M. Lamb G. L. Monjo S. R. Morton J. G. Munson, Jr. O. Pelliccia, Jr. M. S. Roesler .S. St. John 1936 H. A. Hull R. L. Knight, Jr. R. T. Lumb L. E. McFadden A.J. McKenna, Jr. C. Miller, 3rd B. Mills, Jr. D. G. Noble A. E. Oelschlaeger, Jr. D. C. Pease R. A. R. Pinkham 1937 A. M. Kier S. Lowenstein D. A. McGraw C. A. McKaig M. G. Mendoza D. A. Metz J. Morse H. A. Mumma, Jr. •938 J. F. Nash F. B. Nichols VV. P. O ' Gorman S. Parsons V. M. Pedroso C. B. Phvie T. K. Pickhardt C. Seymour, Jr. F. C. Shattuck L.J. Sichel W. H. Slay, Jr. G. W. Stevenson D. G. Tennev, Jr. W. A. Wells ■W. M. Wherry, 3rd D. Richardson W. D. Shear B. Smith R. L. Steiner G. C. Stevens E. A. Stursberg R. G. Sweenev C. W. Sweet J. C. Townsend H. C. Walsh A. Winslow, 2nd L. Munroe E. A. Raymond D. O- Ross E. S. Sholes H. D. Tallman G. W ' . Thorpe W. Waller, 3rd J. L Yost A. J. Sweet, Jr. E. P. Taylor F. B. Vanderbilt C. B. Ward, Jr. R. T. Wheeler F. W. White G. H. Woodland P. G. Wvckoff II 264 Groton School Club T. M. Adams W. W. F. Brinley R. E. Danielson, Jr. S.J. O. Alsop J. B. Bingham 1935 C. L. Duval S. A. Galpin V. S. Kilborne 1936 C. F. Chandler G. Fearey H. Huffman J. Shallcross J. S. Tilney E. D. Wadsworth W. O. Webb T. D. Woolsey J. deK. Alsop R. J. Cross 1937 G. A. Ever, Jr. B. Hollister, Jr. R. Milliken H. Auchincloss, Jr. R. W. Baker, Jr. E. M. Blair H. H. Bundy,Jr. J. D. Danielson E. K. Hadden C. D. McCormick W. B. H. Sawyer J. V. Webb, Jr. 265 I! I { ' Yale-Hermon School Club John L. Schmitt, ' 36 Peter N. A. Farevaag, 36 Jose Gomez, 36 President Secretary Treasurer E. L. Bliss, Jr. E. N. Maxwell P. N. A. Farevaag W. J. Flanagan C. C. Higgins J. J. Arrom C. A. Carmean 1935 R R. Piatt 1936 J- Gomez 1937 T. C. Horton T. Kay C. F. Maas 1938 E. S. Haswell R. L. Watson, Jr. R. B. Wiglit J. L. Schmitt C. E. Rogers, 3rd W. T. Voodland H. L. King W. J. MacQuiilan 266 Hotchkiss School Club C. Altschul P. H. Anderson J. L. Athcrton G. R. Atierbury H. H. Babcock H. Bissell. Jr. W. D. Blatz, Jr. J. Bradw av, Jr. J. H. Bragdon C. W. Brooks A. Bryan R. C ' Bryant, Jr. J. B. Calfee F. N. Childs W. B. Coburn S. T. Crary J. F. Cullman, 3rd W. P. Curtiss, Jr. G. A. Douglass, Jr. G. O. Elmore W. S. Elmore B. M. England, 2nd E. T. Gardner, Jr. 1935 F. P. Garvan, Jr. E. C. Granbery, Jr. D. O. Harrington E. V. Harvey H. W. Hemingway G. A. Hopkins, Jr. R. M. Krementz J. T. Lambert W. J. Larkin, 2nd P. H. Lincoln G. C;. Meyer, Jr. J. L. Peck, Jr. M. C. Phelps W. R. Pitkin, Jr. F. W. Preston J. H. Redfield, Jr. J. H. Rossbach J. K. Secor, Jr. R. E. Small W. W. Taylor, Jr. W. C. Teagle, Jr. A. C. Vedder J. F. Weller, Jr. H. R. Alker G. W. Allen G. D. Arthur, Jr. N. L. Barnes, Jr. F. L. Belin, Jr. W. K. Block R. S. Bosworth, Jr. J. H. Brewster, 3rd F. Brown, Jr. M. G. Bulkeley, 3rd G. C. Carpenter R. A. Donaldson, 4th T. W. Hall, Jr. C. HamiU H. C. Harvey J. R. Hersey T. Hildt, Jr. G. P. Judd, 4th C!. S. Judson, Jr. C. Kelsey, Jr. 1936 J. L Knapp S. B. Knight H. S. Levman, Ji H. VV. McBride R. B. McKellar J. V. Mever J. B. Miller S. Miller N. L. Neville J. H. Nichols J. W. Nields J. W. N. Peck W. Perry, Jr. S. A. Pond C. D. Preston L. D. Randall J. G. Standart, Jr. K. D. Wightman T. Wright, Jr. J. Amos M. Brown T. G. Burke L. E. Cartwright R. D. Chapin, Jr. W. H. Chickering V. C. Cogswell R. A. Cooke, Jr. A. E. Crane D. W. Dangler J. B. Day A. W. Fargo, Jr. W. S. Parish, Jr. J. W. Field R. M. Gillespie J. S. Griswold J. T. Hoag H. B. Kelsey R. S. Keppelman 1937 W. McFerren, Jr. D. W. Mabee, 2nd G. Merriss VV. E. Merriss C. Mittendorf C. Morrison W. H. Orrick, Jr. J. L. Shaler H. DeVV. Smith D. D. Steere W. F. Stevens P. Stewart H. M. Turner, Jr. G. P. Urban, Jr. S. Walker T. Wells W. S. Whitney G. A. Wyeth, Jr. D. C. Adie C. G. Adsit, Jr. W. F. Barrett, Jr. C. C. Brace W. W. Brown B. ). Burke H.E. Butler, Jr. T. F. Caldwell C Carver, 3rd B. L Cleaveland E. H. Cobb F. H. Collins, 2nd F. R. Cunningham L. B. Dean A. F. Edwards, Jr. A. M. Foord H. P. Garland, 2nd W. L. Gary E. B. Hamlin, Jr. A. P. Hixon W. T. Hodge 1938 T. Hooker, Jr. H. W. Hunsiker, Jr. C. B. Kaufman R. Kaufman J. R. Kelsey L. A. Lovejoy R. Mallory, 3rd R. A. Manuel . . W. Olmstead P. Peltz C:. M. Sanford J. G. Scarff R. W. Small S. L. Smith, Jr. J. R. Thompson N. F. Thompson, 3rd F. R. Van Vechten, Jr. O. G. Villard, Jr. C. B. Wheeler R. B. Wilson C. R. Wyckoff, Jr. 267 Kent School Club S. V. R. Canimaiin A. B. Herrick H. C. McClintockJr. L. McCreath, Jr. J. F. Morse J. B. Roberts 1935 L. J. Sanford D. G. Stoddard R. N. Thorne J. C. Vance J. D. Venter 1936 L. W. Baldwin E. M. Brainard N. P. Cooley, and R. O. Ferris C. Beard C. J. Blair, and J. H. Burbank R. C. Cussler E. H. Abbe L. Bancroft F. C. Cady A. S. Field, Jr. J. W. Gott D. F. Hickok B. E. Hooker L. S. Jackson L. Johnson, and G. G. Jordan R. A. Davies R. G. Donald 1937 1938 D. R. Johnson E. C. Pier N. Richmond J. V. Roscoe D. A. Kennedy, and J. McCreath, and D. Peterkin, Jr. L. B. Dunham, Jr. Ci. M. Hiunphreys W. M. Stiger J. P. Sturges J. H. White J. F. B. Runnalls J. B. Stevens L. T. Stone, Jr. W. S. Manning H. S. Noble J. P. Polk Kingswood School Club 1935 F. V. Cole, Jr. C. Goodwin 1936 L. B. Stoner V. E. C. Bulkeley B. M. Gill E. J. Turbert, Jr W. K. Cole D. R. Howe R. W. Viering R. B. English, Jr H. E. Sloan, Jr. W. H. Spencer •937 J. B. Wells H. B. Carey, Jr. B. H. Smith, Jr. 1938 E. W. Smith O. W. Means, Jr. J. R. Robinson, Jr. R. K. Stolz N. R. Moray, Jr. R. R. D. Stout 269 Lawrenceville School Club R. C. Miles, ' 37 President M. D. Watson, ' 35 • Secretary-Treasurer R. O. Bovard W. T. Carter, 3rd R. E. Ellis, Jr. S. H. Fredericks, Jr J. A. Hetherington, H. R. Eshelman, Jr. W. S. Evans A. A. Frank, Jr. H. B. Barron K. H. Behr, Jr. P. H. Behr A. F. Hetherington, v. C. Aderente R. C. Bagley L. L. Beach, Jr. A. Brooks V. N. Carter H. R. Cunningham D. H. Dommerich C. E. Frank 1935 G. F. Horton, 3rd L. H. Hyde J. S. Kemper, Jr. F. W. Loetscher, Jr R. T. Parker, Jr E. E. Purcell R. E. Rew, Jr. P. B. Sawyer, Jr 2nd 1936 C. T. Harther, Jr. E. B. Millard, Jr. S.J. Keyes, Jr. H. A. Richards J. R. Hollister W. H. Hylan, Jr. R.J. Lay 1937 S. A. Lynde, 2nd R. C. Miles C. C. Perkins W. H. Husted J. W. Hyatt, 3rd W. M. Jeffords, Jr. R. Johnson, Jr. G. M. Lauck, Jr. A. C. Lawrence D. R. Levy ■938 C. W. Mackey W. Mackintosh M. G. Magnuson, R. McClellan O. W. Mellick J. H. Millard B. Milnor, Ir. VV. D. Sked R. O. Sprague R. H. VVadhams M. D. Watson G. D. Thorpe F. B. Wadelton, Jr. J. A. Richards R. B. Stone J. G. Vogt T. M. Zimmerman T. S. Page G. Parker F. T. Powers, Jr. H. P. Scott, 3rd W. F. Slaymaker G. W. Sumner J. K. Vulte A. J. Wadhams, Jr. 270 Loomis School Club 1935 J. E. Bowles R. Brill M. S. Bull H. D. Burrall J. C. Bissell J. W. Bissell E. F. Boyd, Jr. T. L. Chamberlin E. V. Cox, Jr. R. S. Crampton R. G. Ernst D. D. Darling A. S. Deming E. G. Deming J. C. Graham W. H. Harrington J. H. Johnson J. H. Longley 1936 H. G. Holcombe, Jr. H. S. Irons, Jr. L. F. Loutrel VV. P. Miller J. Mosenthal J. S. Martha J. H. Rosenwald G. W. Raymond W. Reed, Jr. F. B. Stilmar R. E. S. Thompson 1937 R. Baxter C. C. Brank R. W. Clark, Jr. D. H. Davis W, E. Greene, Jr. P. N. Hall W. T. Hamilton, 3rd F. Kennedy, Jr. R. B. Latimer C. H. Loomis D. Piffard K. G. Reinhart R. M. Rvder M. Snider H. O. Smith, Jr. R. D. Taggart J. L. Wilson D. L. Brooks F. R. Chase R. V. Cutler W. T. Getman G. E. Hall, Jr. E. B. Miller, Jr. 1938 E. C. Smith G. F. Trowbridge R. S. Tweedv VV. K. White R. E. W ' ilbur A. T. Wolfson 271 R. W. Downing F. G. Dyas, Jr. M. T. Everhart, Jr A. H. Adler, Jr. R.J. Burke T. F. Feldmann J. S. S. Peirson C. E. Elting H. T. Hostetter V. H. Lilly Mercersburg Club I 1935 H. L. Freer A. D. Hemelright J. D. Freer M. C. Kinney J. L. Lewis 1936 J. H. Ferguson J. L. Schumann R. D. Foothorap B. W. Stiles A. J. Loeb D. E. Winebrenner, 3rd J. E. O ' Keefe, Jr. 1937 C. E. Smoyer, Jr. ■938 J. J. Macionis H. H. Phillips, 2nd H. J. McMenamin G. H. Weiler, Jr. A. K. Mills, Jr. S. G. Weiss 272 1 fcsfj 4 ' ' -- :- ' iC! ' - - ' ' ■■■:- - -mm s L r ..... ,.., ,. Pomfret School Club 1935 L. C. Campliell R D. Matthews J. D. Clemens 1936 A. S. Ballinger D T. Cook G. S. Clemens F. C. Gratwick, Jr ' 937 H. L. Ferguson, Jr. R Montgelas H, E. Hosley, Jr. 1938 K. R. Morgan D. B. Robinson E. Thorne, 2nd J. F. Jordan J. A. Rand J. A. Vielor, Jr. D. D. WiUcox, Jr. H. E. Hosley, Jr. 273 .1 St. Louis Country Day School Club OFFICER ROBER ' I H. Charles, 35 MEMBERS 1935 . Preiideiil R. H. Cliarles W. H. Charles W. M. Drew S. L. Morton, Jr. J. H. Overall, Jr. 1936 H. Putzel,Jr. W. H. Bixl)y, Jr. N. Ewing D. R. Francis A. T. Primm L. Sale, Jr. H. M. Swift 1937 W. Upthegrove T. L. Blayney C. C. Christy W. H. Potter 1938 G. P. Strelinger, Jr. D. Fairback, Jr. R. S. Gieson A. C. Gunter P. B. Jamison, Jr E. S. Jones R. W. Kalish, Jr. A. Lieber, Jr. R. E. Lord, Jr. W. R. Orthwein, Ji W. C;. Petlus.Jr. 274 H. V. Stephens, Jr. . J. L. Taylor D. F. Wear St. Mark ' s School Club officp:rs John Goodyear Peter H. Smith, 3RD President Ice-Presidenl R. Baldwin C. Colgate, Ji G. King R. H. McC:ormick, 3rd F. W. Bellamy, Jr. H. W. Carhart, Jr. J. H. Congdon, 2nd W. Ewing, Jr. MEMBERS 1935 1936 B. Goodyear, Jr. J. Goodyear G. G. Henry J. T. Ryerson, Jr. H. B. deV. Schwab, Jr. R. Wadsworth G. Schwalj, Jr. P. H. Smith, 3rd J. V. Warrington 1937 B. Dominick, 2nd P. H. Dominick C. H. Mellon, Jr. W. C. Potter 1938 J. R. Dilworth N. Williams, Jr 275 St. Paul Academy Club C. M. Griggs, 2nd ' 935 J. M. Hannafnrd, 3rd R. B. Shepard, jr. V. C. Shull, 2nd L. W. Goodkind R. N. Harris A. W. Lindeke, Jr. 1936 G. G. Mairs I. C. Oehler J. H. Richardson T. C. Savage B, Shepard F. M. Stark M. S. Stringer, Jr. J. B. Bucliman R. L. Goodkind 1937 T. W. Griggs D. B, Jenks J. D. Kerr D. G. McNeelv J. H. Binger E. H. Drake 1938 E. M. Hammes E. N. Launders, 3rd J. W. Seeger ij6 Taft School Club 1935 W. E. Allaun, Jr. T. B. Anderson, Jr. J. S. W. Bates J. N. Carley T. T. Chamberlain J. CloUins H. B. Combs A. C:. Coudert J. H. Cox C. Dillingham W. Farnham R. H. Fowler, Jr. T. A. Freiberg E. E. Gilbert M. N. Holmes P. D. MacLean S. F. Reed, Jr. G. E. Robson, Jr. M. Sargent, Jr. H. H. Sherman M. L. Sperry% 2nd R. Welles F. R. While, Ji. F. L. Wilson 1 93 D. Arthur, Jr. G. H. Baldwin, Jr. L. E. Bieringer J. A. Caldwell, 3rd H. M. Campbell W. P. Campbell S. Bauer D. B. Blak e R. V. Bradley G. H. Brown C. C. Burke, 3rd W. Carmalt, Jr. R. C. Carroll, Jr. W.J. Clarke D. B. Curtiss W. F. DeFoe R. S. Dwight, Jr. G.J. Grumbach N. D. Clortwright M. W. Ehrich, Jr. W.J. H. Fischer, Jr R. C. Fisher J. Freiberg R. W. Gaines J. S. Hartzell B. L. Johnson, Jr E. P. Lunken D. McGoodwin E. H. Morrison F. M. Rawolle 1937 T. Hetzler, Jr. A. S. Hubbard, Jr. B. T. Mclnerney R. C. McNeil W. Maxwell J. C. Morrissey C. S. Munson, Jr. K. C. Schuyler, Jr. J. W. Squires C. S. Stahlnecker J. W. Taylor S. D. Thacher C. C. Page W. H. Potter R. H. Schutz W. H. Taft, and R. E. Wall H.J. Wright, Jr. 1938 S. A. Bayless L. W. Bowers R. B. Broadbent J. B. S. Campbell D. N. B. Carey A. H. Dankin F. M. Davison F. C. Esty R. S. Cast, Jr. J. Gribbel, 2nd W. R. Innis D. F. Keefe B. B. Kramer A. W. Lamson M. R. Levy M. F. Luria F. T. McKeon B. A. MacLean S. Mitchell E. C. Rogers, Jr. J. C. Roper, Jr. E. D. Schattman P. V. Snyder C. B. Soper H. Stoughton J. S. Taintor, Jr. W. E. Woodford, 3rd 277 Thacher School Club OFFICER E. M. Waith, 35 President H. B. Bishop MEMBERS 1935 VV. F. Lineberger, Jr. E. M. Waith 1936 F. M. Ayres, Jr. J. C. Greene E. L. Lasell W. K. Cole G. P. Greenhalgh. Jr. N. L. Nevi lle S. A. Pond S. D. Thacher M. Adams, Jr. W. H. Chickering 1937 R. M. Cooke S. L. Lasell, Jr. R. M. Davidson L. M. Makepeace W. H. Orrick, Jr. G. B. Pinchot D. A. Garwood i93« O. W. Hills J. G. Whitney 278 Williston Academy Club Fred H. Havward. Antonio J. Giacomini Peter R. Paladino A. S. Foord A. J. Giacomini A. E. Gramse F. A. Groesbcck R. G. Hartshornc, Jr. OFFIGERS MEMBERS J. B. Pond President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer F. H. Hayward J. J. Lewis H. A. Lockwood, Jr. . D. MacCamniond P. R. Paladino HONORARY MEMBERS Ogden D. Miller Eric Russell 279 The EDITORS of the YALE BANNER and POT POURRI wish to express their sincere appreciation to Malcohii G. Duncan for the art work in this volume; to W. Jouett Blackburn of the Andover Press for his invaluable assis- tance in producing the book; to William Wade of the Jahn and Oilier Engraving Oompany for his help and suggestions; to both the Pach Brothers and the Zamsky studio for their cooperation in taking the photographs; to the Gallery of Fine Arts for the dedication picture; to the personnel of the Bureau of Appointments for help in many tedious tasks; and to our other numerous helpers and contributors. The generous cooperation of the Yale Alumni W ' eek- ly has made possible the inclusion of the athletic action pictures, for whicli we wish to record our appreciation. We wish to express our thanks and goodwill to our advertisers who have made this volume financially possi- ble. We hope and trust our readers will peruse the follow- ing pages with as much diligence as those preceding. Freshman Section Class of 1938 Edward Howard Abbf. Age; 20 55 Alleghany Rd. Hampton. ' a. Prepared at Kent Lawrence Brundige Arrams, Jr. Age; 19 16 Woodland Ave., Glen Kidge, N.J. Prepared at Exeter . ctivities. Soccer Thomas Hamilton .Ad.ams . ' ge; 17 yoi . bercorn St. Savannah. Ga. Prepared at Episcopal High Activities: 150-lb. Crew, Bo. ing Douglas Cameron .Adil Age: 19 168 Morgan St. Holyoke. Mass. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities; Glee Club, 150-lb. Crew, Outing Club Charles George .Adsit.Jk. Age: 19 Ft. Des Moines Hotel Des Moines, Iowa Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Crew Frederic Freeman .A.llen 40 Hawthorn St., RnihiNter. i . Y. Prepared at Hill Wing.ate Haggett .Ailhn Age: 19 26 Mason Rd.. Xewton Centre, Mass. Prepared t Andover Rk.hard Skinner .Allis Age: 19 61 Cottage .A e. . ' Xnsonia, Conn. Prepared at .Ansonia High School and .Andover . ctivities: Band .Alex. nder Louis . nderson .Age: 1 9 Wayzata, Minn. Prepared at Exeter 1 .Skipwith Wilmer .Athfv .Age; 17 571 7 Roland .Ave., Baltimore, Md. Prepared at Woodberry Forest Hugh .Auchincloss, Jr. Age. 1 9 171 East 7otli St.. Xew York Cit - Prepared at Groton .Activities: Squash Team .Augustus Hostetter B.aer .Age: 18 Jackson St., Belleville, 111. Prepared at Belleville High School Edward Cashman Baillv. Age: 1 8 25t Soundview Ave.. White Plains, N. Y. Prepared at Canterbury Activities; Boxing Richard Wheeler Baker, [r. Age 1 8 4 Xewlin Rd., Princeton. X. ]. Prepared at Groton .- ctivities; Glee Club. Seroncl Football Team. French CUub Langford B. ld vin .Age: 1 8 1 1 Dudley PL. Yonkers, X. Y. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School DoN. LD Church B. lfour. Jr. Age: 1 8 427 Sixth .Ave.. S.W. Rochester. Minn. Prepared at Shattuck Military .Academy . ctivities: Swimming. Glee Club Philip Ball Age: 17 1280 Union St., Brooklyn. X. Y. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High School .Activities: I ' ale Record C. rltox Mont.agce B. rlow . ge: 18 930 Woodland .Ave. Plainfield, X.J. Prepared at Exeter Robert Ch.anning B- rlo v .Age: 17 7-, Brewster Rd.. Scarsdale, X. Y. Prepared at Scarsdale High School .Activities: Lacrosse Squad. A. le B. nner and Pot-Pourri William Felton B. rrett. Jr. -Age; 19 Sky Farm Great Barrington. M ass. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities; Wrestling. Crew Harrison T.wlor Barrow .Age: 18 394 Whitney .A e. Xew Haven, Conn. Prepared at Choate John Calvin B. scom Age: 19 47 Claverach Dr.. Clayton. Mo. Prepared at John Burroughs School .Activities: Squash Squad. Crew- Squad Oscar Mortimer B. te. Jr. Age: 18 . rden Lane, Essex Fells. X. J. Prepared at Exeter .Acti ities; Squash Team Edgar Farrar Bateson, Jr. Age; 19 L2() E. 79th St., Xew York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School .Activities: Dwight Hall. Dance Committee, Crew 283 Andrew Gabriel Bato Age: 1 6 227 Park Ave., East Orange. X. ] Prepared at East Orange High School Shipley Armstrong B.-wlfs Age; 19 3436 Vista Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Taft School David Thomas Beals, 3RD Age: 19 843 West 56th St., Kansas City, Mo. Prepared at Fountain Valley School, Pembroke Country Day School .Activities: Polo Team Edward .A. Beddali .Age: 18 1 810 Michigan Ave. Miami Beach, Fla. Prepared at Ando er Activities: Crew Squad Arthur Willson Bedell 344 State St., Albany, N. ' Prepared at Albany . cadem Irvine Ft:RM. N Belser. Jr. Age 17 Heathwood, Columbia, S. C. Prepared at Episcopal High School, Alexandria, Va. -Activities: Football. Basketljall James Edgar Bennett Age: 18 203 Maplewood Dr. Cranbury . N.J. Prepared at Peddie School Henry Edmund Billingsley 2540 Arlington Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Prepared at University School .Activities: Glee Club, Dramatics, Soccer James Henry Binger 2020 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Prepared at St. Paul .Academy .Activities: Crew. Hockey Edward McCormick Blair Lake Forest, 111. Prepared at Groton .Acti ities: Swimming, 150-lb.Crew D. ' id Dwight Bloomfield .Age: 19 750 W. Michigan .Ave. Jackson, Mich. Prepared at The Hill School Jay ' an Winkle Blounf .Age: 18 2815 High St., Des Moines, Iowa Prepared at Roosevelt High School .Activities: 150-lb. Crew, Dwight Hall I I I Da id Nelson Blume Age: i8 15 Arlington St.. Pittsfield, Mass. Prepared at Pittsfield High School. Pasadena Junior College .Activities; 150-lb. Crew Stanley Robert Bookstein Age: 19 863 Myrtle Ave., Albany, N. V. Prepared at Albany Academy .Arthur Ferguson Bosworth Age: 20 301 High St.. Denver, Colo. Prepared at Choate Lloyd Wheaton Bowers Age: 18 895 Park . e.. New York City Prepared at Taft Philip James Bowers. Jr. Age: 20 372 Charlton .Ave.. South Orange, N.J. Prepared at Andover Activities: Swimming Team Fred Grayson Boyce. 3RD Age: 18 4102 Green wav, Baltimore. Md. Prepared at Gilman .Activities: Soccer Squad CiHARLES Clement BR. cr, .Age: 19 Bo.K 1032, Syracuse, N. V. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Acti ities: Crew, Dramat Epas.mo Luci. ' k.N Br-i ncxto .Age: 18 152 Minor St., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Robert P.wson Brett 250 Center St., West Haven.Conn. Prepared at West Haven High School Robert Benjamin Bro.adbent .Age: 18 103(1 Dixwell.Ave.,Hamden,Conn. Prepared at Taft Marvin Kommel Broder .Age: 18 I-, West 8ist St., New York City Prepared at Poly Prep . cti ' ities: Polo Squad Vincent Ralph Brogn. .Age: 18 Bayswater St., East Boston, Mass. Prepared at Boston Latin Activities: Coxswain on Crew, Wrestling Anson Brooks Age: 20 2445 Park Ave.. Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Soccer, Glee Club Douf L. s Lef. Brooks Age: 18 4 ' , Park Ave., Windsor, Conn. Prepared at Loomis Activities: Football WiLi.ARD Walker Brown Age: 19 261- Berkshire Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football Team, Crew. Glee Club William French Browni.f.e Age: 18 634 Rockledge Ave. Topeka, Kan. Prepared at Topeka High Schoi Lee Peter Bbueckel I52t Roosevelt Ave., .Steubenville, Ohio Prepared at Steubenville Hi . cti School iities: Swimming J. nls Blc.ii. n. n Buf ki.i; - . ge: 19 287 South Broadway, Tarrytown, N. ■. Prepared at Portsmouth .Srln .Activities: Radio C:luli Samuel W ' althall Bi ' DD, Jr. Age: 19 R.F.D. 2, Richmond. a. Prepared at St. Christopher ' s School, St. Paul ' s School Joseph Rawden Buell, Jr. Age: 18 660 Hillside Ave.. Glen Ellyn, 111. I ' repared at Glendard High .School Activities: Crew Harni.v Hollister Bundv. Jr. Age: 19 133 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Prepared at Groton Aiti itics: Cross-Country Team, Sc|uash Squad Bern. rd J. mes Burke . ge: 18 305 Chatsworth Gardens, Larchmont, N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss Malcolm Kevin Burke -.25 Park Ave., New York C ' ity Prepared at Newman .School .Activities: i -,o-lb. Crew, Dramat E. STON Burlingame •Age: 1 8 .Altamont, N. Y. Prepared at .Albany .Academy .Ac lixities: Football Squad Edwin Gladding Birrows Age: 17 lyr. Linden St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at American Communit - School, Beirut, Syria; Moses Brown Henry Emerson Bitler, Ir. Age: 18 Seabright. N.J. Prepared at Hotchkiss . ctivities; Football. Glee Club Tracy F.airf.xx C ' ..ald vell . ge; 18 166 East 66th St., New York Cil Prepared at Hotchkiss and Deane Activities: Glee Club. Outing Club, Radio Club, ' arsity Glee Club, Spring Squad John Braxton Siebern Campbeli, .Age: 18 ' Yamoyden, Morrow. Ohio Prepared at Taft .Activities: Glee Club Robert Abbe Campbell Age: 19 12 St. Ronan Terr., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Exeter Thom- s Leake Campbell 5705 Bartlett St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shadyside . cadcm D. NFORD Newton B. rney C . ge: 18 Farmington, Conn. Prepared at Taft .Activities: Glee Club John William Carlisle .Age. 21 Feek ' s Lane Locust Valley, L.L, N.Y. Prepared at Choate, Browning, Horace Mann .Activities 150-lb. Crew Enrique C arrillo .Age: 20 .Amargiu-a 23, Havana, Cuba Prepared at Institute of Habana, Newman Frank Mich. el Carroll. Jr. .Age: 18 5244 Lakewood .Ave., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Chicago Latin School .Acti ities: Lacrosse. French Club RiiHLRT Ernst Carroll .Age: 18 72 Dudley St.. Fall River, Mass. Prepared at Culver Military Ac- ademy .Activities: Boxing Team. Co- Captain Victor Neuhaus Carter Age: 17 Clourtlandt PI., Houston, Texas Prepared at Lawrenceville .Activities: Football William Phklps Carter Age: 1 8 Greenley Rd., New CanaanX ' onn. Prepared at Adirondack-Florida School, Exeter Activities ' Soccer Team Charles Everett Cartvvright 2263 Parkwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Prepared at Cranbrook School Activities: Glee Club Charles Carver, 3RD Age; 19 Wynnewood, Pa. Prepared at Hotchkiss. St.. lbaiis John Harvard Castle. Jr. . ge; 18 q Argyle Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Prepared at Andover John Cotton Cathervvood Age; 1 9 4442 Grand Blvd., Chicago, 111 Prepared at St. Paul ' s School . ctivities; Hockev William Hilton Champlin, Jr. . ge: 19 Rochester Hill. Rochester, N. H. Prepared at Exeter .■Xctivities; Band Fr. nc:is Robertson Ch. se .A.ge: 18 Middle Haddam, Conn. Prepared at Loomis . ctivities. Lacrosse Squad John George Chesney Age: 20 10 Park .Ave., New York City Prepared at Holderness, East Orange High School Activities: Track, Polo, Football. Undergraduate Medical Club William Coffeen Childs . ge: 18 830 N. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park. 111. Prepared at . sheville Br. dford Ir. Cle. vel. nd Age: 19 Lakeville, Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss Joseph Edwin Clifford . ge: 18 325 Clifton . ve.. Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Blake School . ctivities: Glee Club, Dramat . lexander Russell Cochran. Jr. .- ge: 18 Central Conovanas, Puerto Rico Prepared at Suffield School Richard Leon Cohen Age: i8 65 Broadview Ave.. New Rochelle, X. Y. Prepared at Choate JON.- THAN L. TIMER CoLLENS Age: 19 2544 Wellington Rd.. Cleveland. Ohio Prepared at Andover Francis Howard Collins, 2nd . ge; 20 7 Lake . ve.. Colorado Springs. Colo. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities: 150-lb. Crew Squad D.wiD Griffith Colwell . ge: 18 1020 Lincoln .Ave.,Loveland. Colo. Prepared at Loveland High School Activities; Football Team. Basket- ball. Winter Track Johns Hopkins Congdon, 2nd Age: 19 87 Cooke St., Providence. R. L Prepared at St. Mark ' s .Activities: Cross Countrv. Track WiLLI.AM Br. DLEV CoN.NORS Age: 18 867 De Craw Ave., Newark, N.J. Prepared at Newark Academy John Robert Conrad Age: 19 1099 P elham Rd., Winnetka, 111. Prepared at New Trier High School .Activities: Swimming Bernard Todd Converse, |r. .Age: 18 County Line Rd. and Lowry Lane. Rosemont, Pa. Prepared at Episcopal .Academy .Activities: Dance Committee. Social Problems Club George Eustis Cookman .Age: 18 285 Broad .Ave., Englewood. N.J. Prepared at Exeter .Activities: Football, Squash Capt. M.AiRicE Diehl Cooper, Jr.- .Age: 18 5430 .Aylesboro .Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Andover .Activities: Football Harold H.arlow CoRniN, Jr. .Age: 20 I Rittenhouse Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Prepared at The Romford School .Activities: Football Squad, Base- ball William Ward Cr.awford .Age: 20 32 Hart PL, .Akron, Ohio Prepared at Exeter JuDsoN Bridgman Cross Age: 18 19 Hillside Ave.. Winchester. Mass. Prepared at Winchester Hicfh School . ctivities: Ciross Country, Track. Radio Club W.ALTER Joseph Cummi.n ' gs. Jr. . ge: 18 1500 Lake .Shore Dr.. Chicago, 111. Prepared at Chicago Latin School. St. . lban s School . cti%ities: .Xews. Dramat. Lit FR.aiNK RUGER CuNNINGH.AM 2173 North Bay Rd., Miami Beach. Fla. Prepared at Hotchkiss D.wiD Fletcher Currier Age: 19 Scarborough, N. Y. Prepared at Milton Academy .Activities; Basketball James Drinkwater Curwen .Age: 18 City Point, Fla. Prepared at Tome and Roxbiir Trevor . rnoed Cushman. Jr. . ge: 20 ii: Perkins St., Melrose. Mass. Prepared at Ando er Activities: Hockcv, Baseball Ric:hard Woolsey Cutler 168 King St., Westport, Conn. Prepared at Rumsey Hall. Loomis NORNLJ,N DaLRVMPLE . ge: 18 1 1 1 Cambridge St.. Winchester. Mass. Prepared at . ndover Activities: Tennis Willl m Howard D. nforth Age: 18 1890 Rudwick Rd., Cle eland, Ohio Prepared at Western Reserve .Academy Ch.xrles Flowers D. niels 24 Maugus Ave., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Prepared at , ndover J. MLs Deering Danielson Age: 19 Groton, Mass. Prepared at Groton Activities: Football, Bo.xing .XlIX. NDER H. RR ' i ' D. NKIN Age: 19 77 Prescott St.. Torrington, Conn. Prepared at Taft 290 Bradflte Warwick Danenport Age; 1 8 6i i8 St. .Andrew ' s Lane, Richmond, ' a. Prepared at St. Christopher ' s School .Activities: Golf Squad .Anthony Joseph D.avidonis 150-152 Xorth Main St.. . nsonia. Conn. Prepared at . nsonia High Schoril H. ROLD William D.wis, . ge: 19 164 Blvd., Pelham, . . V. Prepared at Andover Activities: Glee Club Luther Berbvhili, Dams Age: .8 277 Park . ve.. New York Cit Prepared at Culver Military Academy WiLLi.- M Curtis C.vrroll Davis .Age: ig 5 Stratford Rd.. Baltimore, Md. Prepared at Boys ' Latin School Fenton McCreerv D.wison .Age: 1 8 Parkside Drive, Flint. Mich. Prepared at Taft C HARLEs Godfrey Gunther D. y Age: 21 1 141 Forest Rd., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Andover Richard Ward Day Age: 18 34 Kirkland St.. C ambridge, Mass. Prepared at Belmont Hill School .Activities: Football. Baseball Louis B.ailey De. ' SlN .Age; 18 30 .Se ' er .St., Worcester. Mass. Prepared at Hotchkiss . ctivities: 150-lb. Crew, Glee Club JoH.N Hoey Dempsey .Age: 21 Canaan, Conn. Prepared at Blair .Acaden .Activities: Crew James Howard Dempsey, Jr. .Age: 18 1 28 1 4 Lake Shore Blvd., Cleveland. Ohio Prepared at Uni ersity School .Activities; Crew Squad Gordon Hastings Dent .Age: 18 2660 Catherine Rd.. .Altadena, Calif Prepared at Exeter 291 Monroe Irving Diamond Age; 17 697 West End Ave., New York Cit Prepared at Columbia Grammar Howard CIarr Dibble Age: 17 217 W. Howard St., Portage, Wis. Prepared at Drury High School, North . dams. Mass. WiLU. M Thomas Dickens Age: 18 1 106 Douglas St., Alexandria. Minn. Prepared at .Alexandria High School Activities: Football. Wrestling L. WRENCE MlCH. EL DiFlLIPPO Age: 19 19 Barry St., Dorchester, Mass. Prepared at Boston English High. Exeter Acti ities: Football .Squad. .Swim- ming Team Joseph Richardson Dilworth Age: 18 Roslyn, Long Island, N. Y. Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Hockey Squad Fr. nk Dearing Dobi.e Age: 19 Pleasant St., Hingham, Mas; Prepared at Exeter D.wiD H.-ww-ARD W. Doh. n Age: 18 Darlington, Pa. Prepared at William Pen n Charter School DlDLEV H.-VLL DOMMERICH Age: 19 .Stanwich Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Lawrenceville Michael . mbrose Donohue, Jr. .Age: 19 497 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, 111. Prepared at F. W. Parker School, Chicago .Activities: Tennis, Dramat C:h. rles Edw.ard Doty, Jr. Age: 19 13875 Lake .Ave., Lakewood,Ohio Prepared at Choate .Activities: Swimming Emerson H.adley Drake .Age: 18 435 Portland -Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Prepared at St. Paul .Academy William Robert Duff .Age: 18 1433 Denniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side .Academy . . tivities: Glee Club 292 Philip Richard Duggan Age: 1 9 Glen Head, N. Y. Prepared at St. Paul ' s Activities: Club Football, Track. Tennis Angier Biddle Duke Age: 19 Old Westbury, Long Island, N. Y. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School . ctivities: Squash La vrenc;e Boardm. n Dinham. Jr. Age: 19 . rlington . ve.. Riverdale, New York City Prepared at Kent .Activities; Hockey Squad John Joseph D ' Wyngaert Age: 18 315 Verona . ve., Newark, N. |. Prepared at Barringer High School VV. LLEs Thom. s Ed.mondson 148 MansHeldSt., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School . llen Fullton Ed v. rds, Jr. . ge: 19 31 Lothrop Rd.. Grosse Pointe Farms. Mich. Prepared at Hotchkiss . ctivities: Glee Club, Ski Team. Outing Club CIharles Eastman Elting Age: 18 West Hill, Winchester, Va. Prepared at Mercersburg .Activities: 150-lb. Crew Theobald Henry Engelhardt. .]R- A je: 18 127 Oxford Blvd., Garden City. L. I., N. Y. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Franklin Escher.Jr. Age: 19 140 Hillside , ve., Englewood. N.J. Prepared at Englewood Country School .Activities: Ricord Irving Willi.vh Etkind Age: 18 213 Newhall St., New Ha en, Conn. I ' repared at New Haven High School Bav. rd Ewing Age: 19 East 88th St., New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s Dickson F.mrb. ck. Jr. -Age: 20 5783 Waterman St., St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at Salisbury School Activities: Football, Baseball 293 Frederick Zerban B. Farnam Age; 19 415 Humphrey St.. Xew Haven. Clonn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar. Deerfield Andrew Melligk Fine,, Jr. Age: 19 1708 North Washington Ave. Scranton, Pa. Prepared at . ndo ' er Malcolm Wendt Finlav?on Age: 18 1 33 1 Yellowstone Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Prepared at Western Reser Academy Activities: Football. Track John Fischer Age: 16 77! West 3rd St.. Williamsport. Pa. Prepared at Dickinson Seminar Williamsport High School Activities: Boxing Benjamin Reeves Fisher 1740 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side Academy, Exeter Activities: Football Squad, Track Squad, Glee Club James Joseph Flynn, 3RD Age: 18 408 Chews Landing Rd., Haddonfield, NJ. Prepared at Haddonfield High School Al. n M. tthiessex Foor Age: 19 Kerhonkson. X. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss Robert Lake Foote Age: 19 1048 Forest . ve., E anston, 111. Prepared at Hill Edg.ar Hull Forrest Age: 18 128 Colonial Parkway Manhasset, N. Y. Prepared at Manhasset High School, Exeter P.a,UL FR.a.NCIS FOSKETT Age: 20 50 Laurel .St., East Weymouth. Mass. Prepared at Weymouth High School, Deerfield Charles R.wmond Fowler .■ge: 18 22 Highland St.. Xew Haven. Conn. Prepared at Xew Ha en High .School Fr. nklin Harper Fowler, Jr. . ge : 1 7 1947 Broadway, Xew York City Prepared at Lawrence Academy, Guilford College .- rti ities: Centro Espai iol 294 Ralph McIntosh Fox 905 North East St., Blnomington, 111. Prepared at Lake Forest . ' kcademN- John Castles Fr-ancis . ge: 19 70 East 77th .St.. Xew York City Prepared at Morristown .School, Hill .Activities: Track Clinton Ed v. rd Fr.ank Age; 19 800 Sheridan Rd.. Evanston. 111. Prepared at Lawrenceville. Evan- ston High .School Activities: Basketball Team Carroll Lenford Fr.antz .■ge: 18 35! Lincoln St.. Longmont. Colo. Prepared at Longmont High School Activities: Basketball Trumbull Frazer -Age: 20 P. O. Box 289, .AsheviUe. X. C Prepared at Hill Elihu Friedm.ann Age: 18 721 North Webster .Ave., Scranton, Pa. Prepared at Scranton Central High School, Wyoming Sem- inary Lucius Denison Fuller Age; 19 98 North Main St.. West Hartford, Conn. Prepared at West Hartford High School, Exeter .Activities: Universitv Band Herbert Benj.amin Gabriel .Age: 18 318 Brookhii .Ave., BrooklyTi, N. Y. Prepared at Brooklyn Boys High School. Peddie .Activities; Baseball Squad William Henry Cage, Jr. Age; 19 241 5 Seminole Ave., Detroit,Mich. Prepared at Detroit Universit - School, Grosse Pointe High School Fr.ancis Patrick Gall.agher Age: 20 .Mill Hill Terrace. Fairfield, Conn. Prepared at Roger Ludlow High School Harry Parsons Garland, ; Age: 19 76 North St., Saco, Me. Prepared at Hotchkiss David Alonzo Garwood Age: 18 171 Northwood Rd., Riverside, 111. Prepared at Thacher .Activities: Glee Club. Soccer Squad, Dwight Hall 295 WvNDHAM Lewis Gary Age: 19 4 East 88th St., New York Cu-. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Ir int; Activities: Football, !50-lb. C rew. Dramat Robert Shaeffer Gast.Jr. Age: 19 1801 Greenwood St.. Pueblo, Colo Prepared at Taft Activities: Basketball .Squad Franklin McKee G. tes Age; 19 79 . ' Kfterglow Ave.. Montclair, N.J. Prepared at Montclair . cadem - Fr. ncis George Geer Age: 18 1 10 East 76th St., New York Cats Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Philip Genovese Age: 18 25 Judson . ' ve.. New Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Edgar Paine German Age: 16 West Redding, Conn. Prepared at New York Milita . cademy, Danburv High School .Activities: Glee Club J. ' MEs Philip Giebs, Jr. Age: 18 1404 . venue O, Huntsville, Tex. Prepared at McCallie School Robert McKenzie Gibson Age: 19 48 Walnut Crescent Montclair. N.J. Prepared at Montclair High .School, Andover .Activities: Glee Club Row ' E Sutter Giesen Age: 20 St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Countrv Dav J.AMES Perry Gillies, Jr. .Age: 18 1 148 Oakley Ave., Winnetka, 111. Prepared at North Shore Country Day School .Activities: Football, Crew Leon Godchaux.Jr. Age: 17 5 E erett PI., New Orleans, La. Prepared at Exeter . cti ities: Dramat, Basketball Squad CiLORCM; J.- coB Goldberg ' .Age; 18 34 Strawberry Hill . ve., Stamford, CVmn. Prepared at Stamford High School 296 GiiRAi.D Lawrence C;oldstein Age: 17 I 755 Ocean Parkway Prooklyn, N. Y. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School Richard Campe Goodman Age; 18 1220 Graydon Ave., Norfolk, Va. Prepared at Maury High School Activities: Lacrosse Edward McGuire Gordon Age; 18 10 E. Ogelthorpe .Ave., Savannah, Ga. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Gordon Grand, Jr. Age: 18 Millbrook, N. Y. Prepared at Hill Activities: Hockey Squad Warren Clark Gr.w Age; 19 3 Garden Rd., Brockton, Mass. Prepared at Brockton High School. Exeter .Activities: Dwight Hall Cabinet RicH. RD Walter Greenberg .Age. 18 .}.6 Johnson .Ave., Newark. N. J. Prepared at Newark .Academy .Activities: Swimming Peter Stetson Greene 899 E. Valley Rd., Montecito, Santa Barbara, Cal. Prepared at Santa Barbara John Gribbel, 2nd .Age: 18 Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Prepared at Chestnut Hill Acade- my, Taft Activities: Crew Millen Griffith, ]r. .Age; 18 Ross, Marin County, Cal. Prepared at Tamalpais .School Andrew Ch. rles Gunter Age; 18 37 Portland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School George Elisha Hall, Jr. Age: 17 I W ' est Park Ave., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Loomis Activities: Soccer, Swimming Robert Hurtin Halsey, Jr. Age: 18 17 East 89th St., New York City Prepared at .Andover Activities: .Assistant Publicity Manager of Lit 97 E ERr,TT Rubi(;am Hamii.ion Age: 1 8 6443 W ' ydown Blvd. . St . Louis. Mu Prepared at John Burroughs School .Activities: Football Team Harry Thomas Hamilton. Jr. Age. 18 24 Ridge Rd., Summit, N. J. Prepared at Asheville, Exeter . ctivities: Soccer (Captain)- El Centro Espai Kil Elbert Bacon Hamlin, Jr. .• ge: 18 Litchfield. Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss Ernest Magfarlane Hammes. Jr. Age: 18 1456 Summit Ave., St. Paul. Minn. Prepared at St. Paul Academy John .Alexander H.vrman .Age: 19 St. Paul ' s School, Concord, N. H. Prepared at .St. Paul ' s John Gallup Harrison . ge: 18 2509 Irving Ave., South Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Blake School .Acti -itics: .Swimming •Albert Tag H. ' Wiland Age; 17 164 Elmwood Dr., Orange, N. J. Prepared at Andover Daniel James He. lv, Jr. Age: 20 63 ' 2 Canner .St.. New Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High .School Rust Heinz Age: 21 Morewood Hts., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Choate, Andover James Norvin Heldman .Age: 18 3993 Rose Hill .Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at VVahiut Hills Richard Heller .Age: 19 375 Howard .A e.. W ' oodmere. L. L, N. V. Prepared at W ' oodmere .Academy .Albert Hessberg, 2Nn .Age: 18 700 Western .Ave., .Albany, N. Y. Prepared at .Albany .Academy Activities: Football Team, C a- Claptain. Track Team 298 Nathan Grikr Hills Age; 20 313 Forest Ave.. Oak Park. 111. Prepared at Oak Park High School Oscar Weir Hills Age: 18 1 195 Shenandoah Rd., San Marino, Cal. Prepared at Thacher .Activities: Soccer Paul Hirsch, 2nd Age: 17 Aberdeen Hotel Bavard St., Pittsburgh. Pa. Prepared at University School Alexander Paul Hixon Age: 19 1050 .■rden Rd., Pasadena, Cal. Prepared at Hotchkiss, .Andn Edward P.ainter Hobart Age: 18 ■2 1 9 Tennyson . ve. , Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side .Academy William Thomas Hodge, Ju. Age: 20 Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, Conn Prepared at Hotchkiss William Nichols Holbrook Age: 19 471 Central Ave., New Ha en, Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Ross Nichols Holl. nd Age; 18 34 Eucalyptus Lane, .Santa Barbara, Cal. Prepared at Cranbrook. Sant Barbara Thom. s Hooker, Jr. . ge: 18 300 E.R. Rd., New Haven. C ' onn. Prepared at Hotchkiss William THOM. s Hooper. Jr. Age: 19 10 Bainbridge Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School .Activities; Hockey Team, 150-lb. Crew Samuel Hopkins Age: 20 21 East 70th St.. New York City Prepared at St. George ' s, Roxbury .Activities ' Swimming Huber Tabb Hostetter Age: 18 257 Frederick St., Hanover, Pa. Prepared at Mercersburg ' Deceased Febru 99 Daggett Horton Howard Age: 1 8 21 Alfred Drowne Rd., West Banington. R. I. Prepared at Moses Brown Calderon Howe Age: 19 i8 ' 2i H Street, N.W. Washington. D. C. Prepared at St. Paul ' s Schm Acti ' ities: i f o-lb. Crew. Glee Club Richard Morris Hughes, tnh Age: 18 240 Delaware Ave., We,st Pittston, Pa. Prepared at Newman School. Wyoming Seminary .Activities: Soccer Squad, Swimming Squad Robert Wallace Hull Age: 17 1435 Lowell Rd.. Schenectady, N. Y. Prepared at Andover .-Vtivities; Math Club Thomas Beacom Humphrey Age: 1 8 2520 Park Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Blake School Activities: Swimming John B. Hunter, Jr. Age: 18 190 Cooper Ave., Montclair, N.J. Prepared at Montclair High School .Activities: Crew Squad, Glee Cllub President II H k 1 Henry Goemann Husted Age: 17 615 Clhatham Ct., Toledo, Ohio Prepared at C:ieveland Universitv School William Hardee Husted Age: 19 978 Elm Ridge Dr.. Glencoe. 111. Prepared at Storm King, Law- renceville Bernard Lee Hutchinson, Jr. Age: 18 2904 Fairfield Ave.. Cincinnati. Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School John Wesley Hy.- tt, 3RD .Age: 19 Short Hills, N.J. I ' repared at Lawrenceville James McNaull Hvslop Age: 17 34-47 80th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Prepared at Friends Seminary David B. ldwin Irwin -Age: 19 687 Blackthorn Rd., Winnetka, 111. Prepared at The Ridge School (Johannesburg, South Africa!, John Burroughs Adivilies: Glee Club, Fencing 300 Henry Taylor Irwin. Jr. Age; 1 8 Edgeworth, Sewickley. Pa. Prepared at Indian River School. Florida Preparatory School. Andoser Alfred Falk Isl. n. Jr. Age: 19 40 East 66th St., New York City Prepared at Westminster Activities: Tale Literary Magazine Paul B.. iley Jamison, Jr. Age: ' 18 6105 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis. Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day Walter Morrison Jefeords, Jr Age: 20 Glen Riddle. Pa. Prepared at Lawrenceville Acti ities: Polo Carl Frederic Jellinghaus, Jr. Age: 18 440 Park .Ave., New York City Prepared at Hill Activities: Basketball C RL Oscar Johns, Jr. Age: 17 220 S. Euclid ■ve., Westfield, N.J. Prepared at Peddie Edwin Scoville Jones Age: 19 4638 Pershing . ve.. St. Loui.s, Mo. Prepared at Andover, St. Louis Country Day Pl. iRson Sands Jones Age: 19 Orchard . ve.. ' oodsdale Wheeling, West a. Prepared at Hill . ctivities; .Soccer Squad, Bo.xing Team Da id Joseph Joseph. Jr. Age: 19 1047 Lenox PI., Clincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School CIhARLES MoSELEY JuDD, 2ND Age: 1 8 330 Howe Ave., Oak Park. 111. Prepared at Oak Park High School .Activities: Swimming. 150-lb. C ' rew. Freshman Forensic Societv Ralph Willi.a.m Kalish, Jr. .Age: 18 7305 Maryland Ave., St. Louis. Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School -Activities: Football C HARLEf Bernard Kaufmann Age: 18 46 St. John ' s PI., New Canaan, Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss, CloUege de Geneve 301 Robert Kaufmann Age: 17 46 St. John ' s PL, New Cianaan, Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss, College Geneve P. UL Blakf.slee Kee.abtan Age: 17 682 Prospect St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven Hig School, Exeter Donald Foran Keefe Age: 18 16 Hillside Rd., New London, Conn. Prepared at Taft iitie : Soccer, Debating, Nr, Stephen Edwards Keeler. |i Age: 18 263 W. Franklin Ave.. Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Chicago Latin, Shat- tiuk, Blake Bavne Kelley Age: ig 131 East g4th St., New York Ci Prepared at St. George ' s Activities: Sala Italiana William James Kennedy Age; 19 1334 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven Higli .School. Hopkins Grammar WiNTHROP Sargent Kennedy Age: 16 (1401 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. I ' lepared at . rnold Prep |ames Lester Kilp. tru;k, |r. Age- 18 lib-, Park . ve., New York City Prepared at Newark Academy RiNOLAND Fisher Kilpatrick, Jr. Age: 20 I Sutton Place South New York City Prepared at . ndover . .li ities: Crew, la e Rernnl John Joseph Kinney. Jr. .Age: 19 310 Winthrop . e.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School, .Ando er James Burbank Knowles Byram Shore, Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Andoser . ctivities: Hocke - Frederick Br.w Korsmlvlr Age: 17 21 Donellan Rd., Scarsdale. X. V. Prepared at Scarsdale High School .Activities: Band, Lacrosse .Sc|uad 302 Boris Bennett Kramer Age; 1 8 1 1 5 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Taft Activities: Soccer WiEi.iAM A. Wallace Krebs, Jr. Age; 1 8 1617 East 22nd St.. Tulsa. Okla. Prepared at Tulsa Central High School Activities; Debating. . ' iwi Philip Debold Lagerquist Age; 18 37 .South Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Prepared at Horace Mann LoMAX Benjamin Lamb Age; 17 Marks. Miss. Prepared at Marks High .Schoi Activities; Band. Debating Alfred Ward Lamson Age: 19 Madeira, Ohio Prepared at Taft Activities; Glee Club Stanley Edwin Mortimer LANu . ge; 16 Ivy Hill Rd.. Ridgefield. Conn. Prepared at Ridgefield High School . ctivities: Debating James Linds. v Latham Age; 19 17 Parkway. Montclair. X.J. Prepared at .Andover .Vtivilies; Soccer, iale Recmd Gerold McKee L. ' uck,Jr. Age; 18 344 Highland Ave., Montclair, N.J. Prepared at Lawrenceville .Activities; Glee Club, Golf ■. shton Christal L.wvrence Age: 18 197 Clinton Ave., New Brighton, N. Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville . rmistead Mason Lee Age: 19 Chatham. Va. Prepared at .Asheville . ctivities: .Soccer Team. Dwight Hall Cabinet Lawrence Theodore Lee Age- 19 2 1 01 Connecticut .Ave., Washington. D. C. Prepared at .Avon Old Farms, University School Robert Owen Lehmann Age: iB 3662 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Chicago Latin School 303 Wii.uAM Godfrey Lerchen. Jr. Age: 1 8 Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Prepared at Cranbrook .School Activities: Hockev Team William Leslie, 2nd Age: 21 25 East 94th .St., New Yoi k City Prepared at Salisbury, Westmii ster, Hun David Maurice Levitt Age: 17 I Vista Drive, Great Neck, N. ' Prepared at Exeter Donald Roc.helle Lew Age: 19 929 Bellevue Ave.. Trenton. N. Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities; Crew Squad M. UKii:E RoBiiRT Lew Age: 18 10 West 86th St., New York City Prepared at Taft Activities: Wrestling .Sc(uad Erancis Albert Lewis, [k. .• ge: 18 Eishers Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Prepared at St. George ' s ; ctivities; 1 50-lb. Crew .Scjiuitl Norman Fo vli:r Lkvdkn Age: 17 Eastview Ave.. Pleasantvillc. N.Y. Prepared at Pleasantvillc High School Activities; Band . ' VpTHtiR LiEnER, Jr. .- ge: 18 4512 Westminster PI.. St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Countrv Day WAi.rER Herman Lilly . ge: 19 .525 44th St., N.W. Washington, D. C. Prepared at Western High School, Mercersburg Activities: Swimming Frank Robertson Linthicum Age: 18 34.05 Greenway Baltimore, Md. Prepared at Gilman C ountry Day School, Penn Charter . ctivities: Boxing, Glee CUub PrI ' .scott Mannino Liitle . ge: 18 ] 584 Dorchester Rd., Birmingham. Mich. Prepared at Cranbrook School, Andover Activities: Dramat, Baseball Roc.er Endicott Lord. Jr. . ge: 19 ' i35 ' Waterman St.. St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Countrs- Day Robert Asor Lorknzini Age; 1 8 1703 State St.. Hamden. Conn Prepared at New Ha en High School Lindsay Alexander Lovejoy Age: 19 58 Jackman St., Janesville. Wise. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities: Cross Country John L.amb Lovett. Jr. Age: 18 R. 2, Adams Rd.. Birmingham, Mich. Prepared at Cjanbrook School -Activities: Football. Track. Wrestling George H.ale Lowe. 3RD Age: 18 8 .Acorn St., Boston, Mass. Prepared at . ndover .Activities: Crew Christopher Lowndes Age: 18 5408 Roland .Ave.. Baltimore, Md. Prepared at Oilman Coimtry School .Activities: Football Team James Thomae Mc.Andrews Age: 17 2440 Lakeview .Ave.. Chicago, 111. Prepared at F. W. Parker School .Activities: Crew John Moore McC.ann Age: 17 303 Ridgewood A e., Mirmeapolis. Minn. Prepared at Blake School .Activities: Dramat Robert McClell. n .Age: 19 Cambridge, X. Y. Prepared at Lawrence ille William Dunlop McClintock Age: 22 654 Humboldt St., Denver. Colo. Prepared at East Denver High School Charles Deering McCormick .Age: 19 2450 Lake View .Ave.. Chicago. 111. Prepared at Groton .Activities: Soccer John Joseph M- cio.xis .Age: 18 113 Green St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Prepared at Philadelphia Central High School, Mercersburg -Activities: Swimming Frederick Thom. s McKeo-V -Age: 18 131 Edgehill Rd.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School, Taft 305 Charles William Mackey Age: 1 8 1514 Liberty St., Franklin, Pa. Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Golf Gerard .Al.-xn McKinley Age: 18 803 Monticello PI., Evan.ston, 111. Prepared at Evanston Township High School Robert Allen McLaughlin Age: 19 Fox Chapel Rd., Pittsburgh. Pa. Prepared at Shadyside Academy Waldo Moore MacLaury Age: 19 131 Manor Ave., Westbury, N.V. Prepared at Westbury High Schc « ! . ctivities: Band. Glee Club Berton Allan M.acLean Age: 18 II Liberty St., Batavia, N. Y. Prepared at Taft Activities; Crew .Squad, Glee Club Hugh James McMenamin . ' ge: 18 5 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa. Prepared at Mercersburg .Activities: Cross Countr ' Willard Chalmers McMullen Age: 17 41 Oakwood Ave., Upper Montclair. N.J. Prepared at Montclair High School Ward McX. lly Age: 20 1041 Jud.son Ave., Evanston, 111. Prepared at Hill, Evanston Town- ship High School Joseph Munroe McNulty .Age: 18 558 Hawthorne PI., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Chicago Latin, Mis.s Harris ' School, Choate John X. vier McWeenev . ge: 18 - ' 34 Glen Ave., Port Chester, N.Y. Prepared at Andover Activities: Football . I. RK Graham Magnuson. Jr. Age; 20 7 (iracie Square, New York City Prepared at Lawrenccsille Hakrv Burto.n Mallorv, Jr . ge: 18 Briar Ridge, Danbury, Conn. I ' rcpared at Wooster School 306 Robert Mallorv. 3RD Age: 18 95 Milton Rd., Rye. X. V. Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Dramat, Rifle Squad Robert Fidelis Malonev. Jr. Age: 19 1509 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side .Academy William Sinkler Manntnc; Age: 19 183 Livingston St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Kent Richard .Andrews M. .nvll . ge: 18 2517 North Park Blvd.. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Prepared at University Schoul Hotchkiss -Activities- Glee Club, Draniai Swimming Squad RiCH.ARD N ' oRREUTER M- RSH-- LL Age: 1 9 155 East Genesee St... Auburn.NA ' . Prepared at Exeter ' . TSON Co V. N M.ARSH-ALL Age: 19 5521 Dunmoyle St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Blair Academy. .Arnold School William Grier Martin .Age: 18 Chappaqua, N. Y. Prepared at Exeter Ellsworth Goodwin Mason Age: 17 Ridgewood Ave., Oakville, Conn. Prepared at Watertown High School I ' rescott Wesslau Mathews Age: 19 J42 Hubbard .Ave.. Stamford. Conn. Prepared at .Ando er . cti ities: Swiinming Team John ' . n alkenbl rg M. tthew i .Age: 18 Fayetteville, Tenn. Prepared at Culver Military .Academy .Activities: Football George .Andrew Mayer .Age: 18 2426 North Terrace -Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Dav Oliver William Means, Jr. Age: 20 J4 Forest .St., Hartford. Cbnn. Prepared at Kingswood 307 Orville Waring Mellick Age: 20 Rumson, X.J. Prepared at La vTence ille Victor Gonzales Mendoza Age: 19 La Coronela, Marianao Habana, Cuba Prepared at Newman School. Clhoate John Kimberlv Meneely Age: 18 Coeymans, N. Y. Prepared at Albany Academy Activities: Cross Country, Track Robert Briggs Merrick .A.ge; 18 Audley St., South Orange, N. J Prepared at Exeter. Columbia High School William CLiPPORn Mes-tnger Age: 20 3123 North Lake Drive Milwaukee. Wis. Prepared at Hill, Milwaukee Coun- try Day School Activities: Football. Crew David Wright Miller Age: 18 Brookbound, Claverack. N.Y. Prepared at Roxbury School .- ctivities: Fencing Durando Miller. Jr. Age: i8 Witherbee Court Pelham Manor, N. Y. Prepared at .Andover Henry Forster Miller .Age: 18 680 Madison Ave.. New York City Prepared at Milton William Carey Miller . ge: 19 1 01 West 55th St.. New York City Prepared at Andover .- lfred Keister Mills, Jr. -Age: 20 Annville, Pa. Prepared at Mercersburg .Activities: Track Bennett Milnor, Jr. .Age: 20 61 Lloyd Rd., Montclair. . . J. Prepared at Lawrencexiile John Clark Mitchell, 2nd .Age : 1 7 I -,40 East Third .A e. Denver, Col. Prepared at .Ando er Activities: . ' ews 308 Sherman Mitchell Age: 20 70 Ridge Rd.. Grosse Pointe Farms. Mirb Walter Allison Moor Age; 19 914 South Aiken Ave.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side . cademy Acti ities: Swimming. Glee C.lub John Ch.amberl. in Moore . ge: 20 Melrose Rd., Auburn, N. Y. Prepared at Gunnery . ctivities: Glee Club, Debating Norman Read Mor. v. Jr. Age: 19 Mansfield Depot, Conn. Prepared at Lawrenceville, Kings- wood . ctivities; Football. Glee Clulj Kenneth Remsen Morgan . ge: .8 100 Park Ave., New York City Prepared at Pomfret Activities: Lit, Dramat David J.vmes Morrow Age: 18 1059 Chilco St.. ' ancouver. B.C. Prepared at Chesterfield Schi King George High Schortl Edw.ard Kiper Moss . ge: 18 550 Park . ve., Xew York City Prepared at Culver Military .■cademv Kalko Ernest Moykkynen .• ge: 18 Lincoln St., Niantic, Conn. Prepared at Bulkeley School .Activities: Track Malcolm Muir. Jr. Age; 19 1 17 E. 72nd St.. Xew Y ' ork City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School .Activities: Hockey Ralph Judson Munroe. Jr. . ge: 18 3 Edgewood .Ave., Larchmont. N. Y ' . Prepared at .Aidover . i,FPED Whitney Murphy Age; 19 170 Lincoln St., Englewood, N.J. Prepared at Choate Iamfs Edw. rd Mlrphy, Jr. . ge: 18 164 Lombard St.. Xew Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School. Roxbury 309 John Lewis Murray Age: 20 Seville, Ohio Prepared at Choate Activities: Band Robert Arthur Nagel Age: ig 16 Prospect St., Walpole. Mass. Prepared at Walpole High Schc .Activities: Hockey John Franklin N. sh Age. 19 2905 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio Prepared at Choate Activities; Golf Squad Roger Cleveland Newberry Age: 18 18900 Shelburne Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Cross Countr - Abbott .Arthur Newman Age: I 7 588 State St., Bridgeport, Conn Prepared at Bridgeport Centr:il High School Activities: Squash John Roger Newstedt .Age: 18 2591 Observatory Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills Hi School Activities: Swimming, Draiii;i( GEORCiE Emory Nichols .Age: 18 430 Edgewood .A -e., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School Henry .Stebbins Noble .Age: 18 New Canaan, Conn. Prepared at Kent George William Oberst Age: 19 1 14 Lilac .St., New Ha en, Conn . Prepared at New Haven High .School IvDvviN Richard Oberw. ger .Age: 18 25 East 86 Street jSiew York City Prepared at Lincoln School .Acti ' ities: Forensic Forum Denis Thomas O ' Brien, 3RD .Age: 17 East Molin St., Meriden. Conn. Prepared at Meriden High School Charles Thomas O ' Connell .Age: 18 iji South Cliff St... Ansonia, Conn Prepared at .Ansonia High School .Activities: Fencing 310 William Patrick O ' Gorman Age: 1 9 825 Fifth Ave.. New York City Prepared at Brownins;. Ghoate David Brown Oliver, 2nd Age; 21 Woodland Rd., Sewickley. Pa. Prepared at Hill Henrv Willi. .m Oliver Age; 1 9 5522 Fifth . ve., Pittsburgh. Pa. Prepared at Shadvside Academv. St. PauFsSchool Robert Willi. m J. Ollavos Age: 18 99 Putnam Ave., Hamden, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Willi.am Robert Orthwein. Jr. Age; 18 1 1 Beverly PL, St. Louis. Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Dav School Melvin Palliser Osborne Age: 1 8 3I19 Capitol . ve., Omaha. Xel Prepared at Omaha Central C:harles Elliott P.mne . ge: 1 7 Knoll Rd.. Redlands. Cal. Prepared at Webb School Activities; Baseball WiLI.I.WI BuTTERFIELD P.SiLMER . ge: 20 321 South Garfield Ave.. Jonesville. Wis. Prepared at Lake Forest . cademy . ctivities; Crew Gilbert Parker Age: 19 28 Gorlies Ave., Pelham. N. Y. Prepared at Lawrence ille Activities: Bibliophiles Garland Wiley P. tteson Age: 20 20 Hawthorne Rd.. Wellesley Hills. Mass. Prepared at . ndover RiCH.JlRD InMAN PE.iRCE Age: 19 30 East 68th St.. New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School . ctivities: Hockey Victor Manuel Pedroso Age- 19 .Aguiar 65, Habana. Cuba Prepared at Choate Sperie Perakos Age: 19 482 Lincoln Rd., Xevv Britain, Conn. Prepared at Roxbury Activities: Fencing Horace (Jrnille Perkins Age: 18 Fox Run Lane, Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Andover Woodbury Perkins Age: 19 Caaggy Rd.. Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Gunnery Robert Charles Persons .Age: 18 490 .Salisbury St., Worcester, Mass. Prepared at New York Military . ' cademy .Activities: Crew William Frederick Peter .Age: 18 601 North Chestnut St., .Seymour. Ind. Prepared at Shields High School Dan Mc:Cloud Petersc x Age: 20 279 Belleview Blvd., Steubenville, Ohio Prepared at Kiskminietas Springs. Greenbriar Miliatry, Ohio State- University John Edward Petrie Age: 20 27 Church St., Cooperstown, N. Y. Prepared at Andover Activities: Glee Club IIarrv Herm.an Phillips, 2.nd 327 Lincoln St., Johnstown, Pa. Prepared at Mercersburg Richard Lincoln Phillips Age: 17 888 Park Ave., New York City Pi (pared at .Andover CmiRCHiLL Bell Phvfe Age: 21 1 125 Park Ave., New York City Prepared at Adirondack-Florida .School, Choate Thomas Kahle Pickh.ardt Age: 18 117 East 8oth St., New York City Prepared at Choate Lincoln Pierce .Age: 19 64 . lumni .Ave.. Providence, R.L Prepared at Blair Academy, Moses Brown . ( ti itirs: Cross Countrv. Track 312 George Morris Piersol. Jr. Age: 1 8 1 91 3 Spruce St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Prepared at William Penn Charter School .Vtivities; Glee Club. Indoor Polo J. MEf Br.xdford Pond . ge: 19 15 Main St.. Easthampton, Mas ' Prepared at Williston . cti ities: Soccer How.ARD Newton Porter . ge: 18 169 Coldspring St., Xew Haven, Conn. Prepared at Episcopal . ctivities: Lit, Chess Club Wesley Joseph Potts . ge: 19 Walnut . ve.. Wayne. Pa. Prepared at Haverford Frank Cobirn Powell .■ge: 19 3316 Washington Blvd.. Indianapolis, Ind. Prepared at Park School, . ndover :,Es . lex. nder Pul. ski Age: 19 83 Davis St.. Greenfield. Mass. Prepared at Greenfield School. Deerfield High . ctivities: Dramal. Lacrosse Elmer R.and.all Ramsey, Jr. .Age: 19 57 Valley Rd.. Larchmont, N. Y. Prepared at Roxbury ■Activities: Fencing Philip Curtis R. nd Age: 20 246 Church St., New Haven .Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar. Asheville William Irvinc; Randall Age: 19 3 Pond St., Framingham, Mass. Prepared at Framingham High School . ctivilies: Fencing Team George William Reese, Jr. .Age: 18 •2977 Fontenay Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Prepared at University School Howard Harry Renn .Age: 18 1 50 Riverside Drive New York City Prepared at Chicago Latin School .Activities: Baseball, French Club Cl. rke Leslie Richards, Jr. .Age: 18 342 Forest Park .Ave., Springfield. Mass. Prepared at Deerfield 313 Albert Clifton Rickey Age: 17 969 East Moreland Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Prepared at Central High School Activities: Debating, 150-lb.Crew Henry Lithgow Roberts Age: 18 2327 Birch St., Denver, Col. Prepared at East High School Logan Thomson Robertson Age: 18 Grove Park, Asheville, N. C. Prepared at . sh ille ErSKINE Cl. ' RK RoCiERS.jR. Age: 18 Maple St., Hud.son Falls, N. Y. Prepared at Taft Joseph Ch. rle? Roper, Jr. Age: 19 227 East 68th St., New York City Prepared at Taft .Activities: Band Richard J.ay Roseman Age: 17 16 Johnson . Ave., Newark, N.J. Prepared at Montclair .Acadenr Harvey Nehemiah Rubin Age; 17 II I Park Ave., New York City Prepared at Horace Mann Herbert Willlmu Salzmj . ge: 18 3 1 5 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Reali School, (Palestine) .Acti ' ities: Debating Alfred F. nton S.anford. 2nd Age: 17 2828 Kingston Pike, Knoxville. Tenn. Prepared at . she ille CuRTiss Moseley S. nford Age: 19 Woodside Dr., Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities: Crew D.AViD Collier S.argent Age; 19 Ieadow Lane, Greenwich. Com Prepared at . ndo ' er .Activities: Dance C ommittee Edw.ard Nelson S. l:nders, 3RD Age: 19 Dellwood, White Bear Lake, Minn. Prepared at St. Paul .Academy .Activities: C rew Squad ji4 ROBEKT ' l RNON PhELPS SaLNDERS Age. 17 3618 Porter St., N.W ' ., Washington, D. C. Prepared at St. Albans Activities: Baseball ' icTOR Henry H. rcourt S. ' UNDERS Age: 21 44 Shirley St., Nassau, X.P., Bahamas Prepared at Canford School. Dor- set. Hopkins Grammar School WiLiiAM Ballard Hoyt Sanvvek Age: 19 770 West Ferrv St.. Buffalo, N. Y. Prepared at Groton .Activities: Wrestling Squad, Ski Team V Denning Sch. ttman Age- 20 12 Pinehurst Ave.. New York City Prepared at Taft Amos Egmont Schermerhorn Age: 20 The Plains, ' a. Prepared at Brooks VlLLL M C:HRISTLJiN ScHMEISSER . Age: 19 2 1 7 Northway, Guilford Baltimore. Md. Prepared at Gilman C:ountr)- School Activities: Swimming Squad, La- crosse Squad, Glee Club, Draniat Theodore Fenton Scholz .Age: 17 Merrivale Rd.. Great Xeck, L. I.. X. Y. Prepared at Great Xeck High School Ellis Heaton Scott Age- 19 Gates House, Bridgewater, Mass. Prepared at Springfield Technical High School .Activities: Fencing Philip William Seipp .Age: 19 232 East Walton PI.. Chicago, 111. Prepared at Chicago Latin School .Vtivities: Dramat John Francis Sevbolt Age: 18 I o C.rescenl Rd., Longmeadow, Mass. Prepared at Springfield Technical High School .Activities: Fencing Edw. rd Hovey Seymour Age: 18 Porchuck Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at Andover, Brunswick School .Activities: Fencing C raig McColl Sharpe Age: 17 6015 Wavne Ave., Philadelphia. Pa. Prepared at Germantown .Academv 313 Allan Shelden, 3id Age: 1 8 2550 Iroquois Ave., Detroit. Mich. Prepared at Brooks Activities: Crevi ' Albert Villi. ' m Sherer. Jr. .Age: 19 5830 Stony Island Ave.. Chicago, III. Prepared at .Asheville Activities: Baseball, .Soccer S.IlMUEl H. rri£ Shevelson. 1 1 Age: 19 454 Iowa St., Oak Park. III. Prepared at Oak Park Higli .School Robert S. rgent Shriver, |i Age: 19 1 1 70 Fifth Ave., New York C:ii Prepared at Canterbury Activitic ' i: J l ' ews Robert Lawrence Simpson Age: 19 9 Sands .St., Waterbury, Conn. Prepared at Taft Activities: Track Henry Sinton Age; 18 945 Green .St.. San Francisco, Cal. Prepared at Menlo School, Star ford University . ctivities: .Swimming Sf[uad Thom.as Edison Slo.ane Age: 19 Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N..J. I ' reparcd at Montclair . cadem Robert William Small Age: 18 235 Paine Ave., New Rochelle. N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Squash Ch.- rles DeWitt Smith . ge. 18 1061 Rahway Rd., Plainfield, N.J. Prepared at Gunnery, Exeter .■ctivities: Soccer Team. Hockey .Squad James Emerson Smith Age: 18 607 Pitcairn PI., Pittsbuigh, Pa. Prepared at Shady .Side .Academy .Acti ' ities: Fencing. Dramat Rohert Vernon Smith .Age: 18 5001 1 6th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Prepared at Central High School, .Ando er Activities: Football, Boxing Stanley Howard L. Smith .Age: 20 Bay view .Ave., Norlhport, L. I., N. Y. Prepared at Roxbury . ctl itics: Basketball, Baseball :ii(, Thomas Garrett Smith Age: 1 8 Linwood, Utah Prepared at Moses Brown, Aiidover John Geoffrey Snavelv Age: 19 942 Dresden Rd.. East Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Shaw High School. (East Cle eland) Peter Vreeland Snyder Age: iq 57 Beverly Rd.. Great Neck, L. I.. X. Y. Prepared at Tal ' t Jacob Solomon Age; 17 82 Steams Rd,. Brookline, Mass, Prepared at Brookline High School Acti ' ities: Lacrosse Clinton Burr Soper Age: 19 1 122 East Monroe St., Bloomington, 111. Prepared at Andover. Taft Harrison Clinton ' Stackpole • Age: 20 728 Maurus St., St. Mary ' s, Pa. Prepared at Valley Forge Militars Academv. . she -ille HoYT .Arthur Ste. rns Age: 18 1 89 10 So, Woodland Rd,, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at L ' ni ersity School Richard Ira Steiber . ge: 18 3376 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Bridgeport Central High School .Activities: Football .Squad. Bowling League How.ard Voorheis Stephens, Jr. Age: 18 5515 Lindell Blvd.. St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School -Arthur Stern. Jr. Age: 17 ' 451 West End .Ave., . ew York City Prepared at Columbia Grammar School -Activities. Swimming Joseph Benson Stevens, Jr. Age: 18 Stratton Rd., New Rochelle. X.Y. Prepared at .Andover -Activities: Track John Henderson Stewart, Jr. -Age: 18 1 14 East 84th St., Xew York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School .Activities: Football, Boxing 317 Tom Stix Age: 1 8 631 E. Mitchell Ave.. Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills Robert Kark Stolz Age; 18 99 Shernnan St.. Hartford, Conn. Prepared at William Hall High School. Kingswood .Vtivities: Band Hooker Stoughton Age: 19 High St., Thomaston, Conn. Prepared at Taft RicH. RD Deming Stout Age: 18 1606 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Kingswood Activities: Radio Club John M.- ther Street Age: 19 Revonah Ave., Stamford, Conn. Prepared at Deerfield, Stamford High School .Al.i.n Lee Strei!s. nd Age: 16 575 Park . ve.. New York City Prepared at Columbia Grammar School I{a ■ball Frederic Augustus Strong, 3RD Age: 18 44 Blackman PL. Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Ashe ille William Youngs Strong . ge: 20 Setauket. L. I.. N. Y. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Harry Lawson Sturla. Jr. Age: 18 942 No. Kenilworth . ve.. Oak Park. 111. Prepared at Oak Park High George Warren Sumner Age: 19 Rivermere Apt., Bronxville, N. Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville Robert , lfredo Sun Age: 21 840 N. Fountain Ave., Springfield, Ohio Prepared at Lawrence ille, . sheville . lirei) Jay Sweet, Jr. Age: 20 I ' edcsco Point, Swampscott, Mass, Prepared at Choate . ctivities: Record John Bryant Swern Age: 19 814 N. Ridgeland Ave., Oak Park. 111. Prepared at Oak Park and Ri er Forest Township High School Activities; Debating Team J.wiEs Spencer T.aintor. Jr. Age- 19 21 Lexington Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Kingswood, Taft Frederick Fancher T.wlor .Age: 18 Farley Rd., Short Hills, X. J. Prepared at Millburn High School .■cti -ities: Swimming John L.- ngford Taylor Age: 19 6 214 Forsythe Blvd., St. Louis. Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country- Day School W ' h.LI.A.M C lRTIS T. YLOR Age: 17 165 Everit St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at .Ando er . ctivities: i o-lb. Crew ' lLLI.. M LeON. RD TenNEY- .• ge: 20 2318 Park Ave.. Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Blake. .Aiken. St. PauKs Peter Bernard Terenzio . ge: 19 32 Lines St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School, Roxbury Lyndon Blaine Tewksbcry, Jr. Age: 17 25 Garrison Rd., Hingham Center, Mass. Prepared at Hingham High School Dan-id Mc.Millan Thompson .• ge: 19 Hidden Field, . ' ndover, Mass. Prepared at . ' Vndover .Activities: Football Squad. Hockey Team John Russell Thompson .Age: 17 3 Ridge Rd.. Bronxville. . . Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss .-Activities: Boxing Xorm.an Frederic Thompson. 3RD .■ge: 18 181 7 National .Ave.. Rockford, 111. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities: B.anner . . d Pot- PoiRRi Board. Baseball, ■400 Club Ralph Emerson Thompson, Jr. .Age: 18 428 Warren St., Brookline, Mass. Prepared at Noble and Greenough 319. DwiGHT Johnston Thomson Age; 19 College Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at . sheville Activities; Baseball Merle Thorpe, Jr. Age: 17 Pocks Hill, Bethesda, Md. Prepared at St. Albans, Exeter George Fox Trowbridge Age; 18 25 East gth .St., New York C:ii Prepared at Loomis Activities; Soccer Squad, Round Table Club John Joseph Tuohv Age; 18 61 Beverlv Rd., Great Neck, L. I.. N. Y. Prepared at Exeter Activities; Squash Team Robert Arnold Turner Age; 20 107 Vista Terr., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Willi? E. Urick. Jr. Age; 18 2031 Dracena Drive HoU ' wood, Cal. Prepared at Andover, John Marsh- all High School, Hollywood High School Activities; Wrestling, Forensic Forum, Dwight Hall Cabinet, Glee Club, Debating Team Frederick Brown Utley, Jr. Age; 18 726 St. James St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Prepared at Peabody High School Richard Ide v. n Benschoten Age; 19 Scottsdale, Ariz. Prepared at Scottsdale High School Frederick Bedford X ' . nderbilt Age: 19 740 Park Ave., New ' ork C:it - Prepared at Choate Frederick Rust ' . n ' echten. ]f . ge; 18 28 Walnut St., Rye, N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss . cti -ities; .Swimming Squad Elias Beall ' . n Z.. ndt Age: 21 2108 Alston . ve.. Fort Worth, Tex. Prepared at Heidelberg College . ctivities: Crew Leon.ard Charles N ' enerlso . ge: 16 66 Franklin St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Prepared at Bridgeport Central High Scliool 320 Oswald Garrison ' illard. Jr. Age: 1 8 79 East 79th St.. New York Citv Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Glee Club Philip Viscidi . ge: 18 83 West Market St., Newark, N.J. Prepared at Barringer High ScViool Activities: Fencing, Italian Society John Knapp Vulte Age: 20 47 Park Ave., New Rochelle. N. Y. Prepared at Lavvrence ille .■leion J.- mes W.adh. ms, Jr. Age: 18 Buttonwood Rd., Dongan Hills, N. Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Soccer Squad. Glee Club J. MES Walker. Jr. Age: 18 714 S. Garfield . ve.. Hinsdale. 111. Prepared at Hinsdale Township High School Activities; Fencing Arthur .Xllen W.ard. Jr. Age: 19 Tellippalai. Ceylon Prepared at Kingswood. Deerfield Activities: Outing Club, Cosmo- politan Club, Undergrad Med. Club Charles Bonnell Ward, Jr. Age; 19 Floiham Park, N.J. Prepared at Choate William Mahr Waugh Age; 19 J I East 194th St., Euclid, Ohio Prepared at University School Dwic.HT Filley Wear Age: 18 40 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School Activities: Crew James Watson Webb, Jr. Age: 19 Westbury, L. I., N. Y. Prepared at Groton . lfred Labremont W ' ebre, Jr. Age: 19 348 Merion Rd., Merion, Pa. Prepared at St. Joseph ' s Prep, Lower Merion High School .Activities: Boxing. Lacrosse, Glee Cnub George Haines Weed Age; 18 21 East 36th St., Savannah, Ga. Piepared at Woodberry Forest School 321 George Henry Weiler, Jr. Age: 1 8 Milroy, Pa. Prepared at Rutherford High School, Mercersburg John Joseph Weinberger Age: 19 209 S. Elmer Ave.. Sayre. Pa Prepared at Hill Activities: Basketball. Glee Clii SiGFRiED Weis Age: 19 N. Front St., Sunbury. Pa- Prepared at . ndover Melvin J.-w W ' elitoff Age: 16 8701 Shore Rd., Brooklyn. N. Prepared at Irving School Thomas Lynch Wentling Age: 1 9 135 Seminary Ave., Greens burg, Pa. Prepared at Greensburg Higl School, Shadv Side .Acadenn Thomas Forrester Wf.ttstein .|R- Age: 18 2 Park Place, Keokuk. It.ua Prepared at Keokuk High S( houl Galvin Carr Bur.nes Wheeler Age: 20 2807 Frederick Ave., St. Joseph, Mo. Prepared at Hotchkiss, Santa Barbara . ctivities: Football kert Th.atcher Whfeler Age: 19 1447 . stor St., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Choate Wii.LEAM Jenks Whipple Age: 18 4 Wheeler .Ave.. Worcester. Mass. Prepared at .Ando ' er Frederick Wilder White . ge: 18 Winchendon Springs, Mass. Prepared at Choate . ctivities: Golf Squad L.wvrence Phipps White Age: 18 C:hesu()ld Lane. Ha erford, Pa. Prepared at St. Paul ' s, Evans, Lawrenceville .Activities: Glee Club E erett D.wts Whiting .• ge: 20 West Tisbury. Mass. Prepared at .Andover ( ti ities: Freshman Wrestling Team 322 lC.TOR E.MANLEL VVhITLOCK. Jr. Age: 1 8 137 East 95th St.. New York Ciity Prepared at Fieldston Schonl. Blair . cademy Fr. ncis Slinglvff Whitm.w. Jr. .Age; 18 Stevenson P.O. . Baltimore Co. . Md. Prepared at Oilman Country School -Activities: Polo Ch. rles Fl.agg Whit.nev. Jr. .Age: 18 19 Kingsland Terr,. Burlington. Vt. Prepared at Burlington High School, Ecole Internationale (Geneva. Switzerland) .Activities: Band |. MES Goodrich Whit.nev .Age: 18 3240 Pacific .Ave., .San Francisco. Cal. Prepared at Thacher .Acti ' ities: Soccer Team XoRM. N Williams. Jr. -Age: 19 ' oodstock, Vt. Prepared at St. Mark ' s .Activities: Debating Team Wii.i.i. M Collin Willla.ms Age: 19 40 Bank St., Sussex, N.J. Prepared at Fayetteville High School -Mlrritt .Alvin Williamson Age: 19 94 Bunker Hill St., Lancaster, N. H. Prepared at Lancaster .Academy E.xeter Robert Bec;ker Wilson Age: 19 2020 Rockwood Blvd., .Spokane. W ' ash. Prepared at Hotchkiss . nDRE V TfJBI. S WOLFSON .Age: 17 23 Cnbb .Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Prepared at Loomis George Hills Woodi.. nd Age: 19 336 Leicester Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Prepared at Choate .Activities: Wrestling, Captain John Ml.nro Woolsev. Jr. .Age: 18 131 East 66th St., New York City Prepared at Andover .Activities: News Board Robert Bedford Woolsey -Age: 17 935 Church St., Beloit. Wis. Prepared at Beloit College, Burr Training School, Roosevelt Junior High .School. Lake Forest .Academy 323 Donald Graham Wright Age: 1 8 2994 Courtland Blvd., Shaker ' Heights, Cleveland, Ohi Prepared at University Schocil Activities: Swimming Ernest Bevier Wright Age: 20 Bishop PI., New Brunswick. N. Prepared at Brooks Clinton Randolph Wyckoff.Jk Age: 20 48 Oakland PI.. BufTalo, N. V. Prepared at Hotchkiss -Activities: Hockey Peter Gerritsen Wyckoff Age: 20 4,i5 East 57th St., New York City Prepared at LeRosey, Choate . ctivities: Track, Swimming P. LMER York. Jr. Age: 20 301 Otis St., West Newton, Mass. Prepared at Newton High School, .Andover Activities: Football. Basketball. Track Frederick Henry Zahn, J r. Age: 19 2208 North Indiana Ave., Oklahoma City, Okla. epared at Classen High School Felix Zw ' eig Age: 18 1324 Hanna St., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Prepared at Central High School .- ctivities: Debating 324 Stephen FuRNifs Abbey Age: 2 1 Southport. Conn. Prepared at Andover Vincent Carl Aderente Age: 19 42-24 208th St., Bayside, N. Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville D- ' WiD VViLLi.wi Allen . ge: 18 Watertown, Conn. Prepared at Choate Edw.ard H. lket Allen Age: 19 26 County St., Taunton, Mass. Prepared at Taunton High School Vincent Dykem. ' .n Andrus Age: 19 192 Ocean Drive East Stamford, Conn. ViLLi. M Cl. rk Arkell. Jr. Age: 20 277 Maple St.. Englewood, N.J. Prepared at Asheville Jose Jua,n Arrom Age: 24 Oriente, Mayari, Cuba Prepared at Mount Heriiiou D.wiD Lee . twood Age: 18 152 Walnut St., Winsted, Conn. Prepared at Gilbert School .Activities: Basketball, Dramatic Club R. LPH Colt Baglev . ge: 20 Wayzata, Minn. Prepared at Blake (Minneapolis) Lawrenceville Frank Alex.ander Baird Age: 18 3142 Fairfield .Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Bridgeport Central High School Vincent Carmen Barbarito Age: 18 671 First Ave., West Haven, Conn. Prepared at West Ha ' en High School Lindgren Bancroft Age: 1 9 Ridgefield, Conn. Prepared at Kent Activities: Crew Irving Barnett Age: 17 30 Harvard Rd., Garden City, N, Y. Prepared at Sewanhaka High School Leslie Lloyd Be.ach, Jr. Age: 21 44 Broadway, Lawrence, L.L,N.Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville Bruce Lee BE.At:DETTE 269 W. Huron St., Pontiac, Mich, Prepared at Cranbrook D.W ' iD Joel Benj.amin Age: 17 1000 West 59th St.. Kansas City, Mo. Prepared at Pembroke Countrv Day MiCH.- EL Bennett Age: I 7 400 Mansfield St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Avon Old Farms George Bart Berger, Jr. Age: 20 5516 Fifth .Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side .Academv . Fessendeii. Berkshire Morton Compton Betts Age: 20 Gvven and Keller Rds., Indian Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Coburn, Milford Harrison Howe Bickford .Age: 20 32 Rankin St., Worcester, Mass. Prepared at Governor Dummer Robert Elliott Bl.ackford Age: 19 241 Summit .Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Prepared at Hill .Arthur Willl Blackman. Jr. .Age: 20 181 Walnut St.. Brookline, Mass. Prepared at Roxbury Latin J. MES Wright Blair .Age: 21 2242 Robinwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Prepared at Taft, .A on Old Farms .Activities: Football, Baseball, Radio Club .Samuel Sikes Bo. rd, Jr, Age: 19 25 Long Dr., Hempstead, N. Y. Prepared at McBurney Maxwell Leverett Br.ain. rd Age: 19 1090 Prospect .Ave., Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Kent, Wassookeag P.AUL Frederick Br.andt .Age: 18 177 Edson .Ave., Wateibury, Conn. Prepared at Crosby High School Charle? Martin Brenn, n, Jr. Age: 20 163 East Rock Rd., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Taft. New Haven High School Vanwyck Brinkerhoff, Jr. Age: 19 2056 Calumet .Ave.. Toledo. Ohio Prepared at Exeter Newton Buckner Age: 21 570 Park Ave., New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Lee Parker Burgess Age: 18 i8Bartlett Rd., East Ha ' en, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School Louis Buslovitz Age; 17 177 Newhall St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Fr.ancis Cowles C. dv Age: 19 Farmington, Conn. Prepared at Kent .Activities: Football, Hockey Ch. rle? Jeremiah C.IiLlahan ' Age: 18 31 North Marshall St., Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Cianterbury 325 Curtis Alfred Carmean Age: 1 8 Mount Hermon, Mass. Prepared at Mount Hermon William Svl to Casparis A e: 20 401 1 Collins A ' e.. Miami Beach. Fla. Prepared at Exeter William Lavvjon Ch. mberlin.Jr. Age: 19 Waveily, Pa. Prepared at Andover Cl ' nton Lowrie Childs. Jr. . ge: ig Shields. Pa. Prepared at .St. Paul ' s School William Bowen Church. Jr. . ge: 20 861 Broad St.. Meriden, Conn. Prepared at Choate, Westminster, Andover Ed v.ard Huntington Cobb .Age: 18 Canaan. Conn. Prepared at Taft. Hotchkiss Frederick . tkins Coe, Jr. Age: 18 614 Park Ave. ,Mechanicville,N.Y. Prepared at Mechanicville High School Activities: Band Sidney Joseph Cohen Age: 17 841 .Ave. C. Bayonne. N. J. Prepared at Bayonne High School Howard Barry Comen Age: 17 808 Orange St., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School, Choate Chester .Adg.ate Congdon, 2nd Age: 19 1701 East First St., Duluth, Minn. Prepared at Hill Robert Bossert Cooney . ge: 19 1 301 President St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. Prepared at Exeter Xvm.NN Dillin(;ham Cortrioiit Age: 20 2 G ' ace Ct., Brooklyn, X. V. Prepared at Episcopal Atadems. St. Bernard ' s, Taft Robert St. fford Craic, Age: 19 1 86 1 Burnette .Ave.. East Cleveland. Ohio Prepared at .Shaw High School Richard Gree.nwood Cre.jidick Age: 20 77 Loomis PL, New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High .School Hugh R.alston Cun.ningham Age: 19 232 Forest Ave.. Glen Ridge. N.J. Prepared at Lawrenceville .Activities: Soccer Team. Football Robert James CuRt.EV Age: 19 70 Linden .A e.. Bridgeport. Conn. Prepared at Exeter John Maher Daley Age: 19 41 Huntington Rd.. Newton, Mass. Prepared at Newton High School RicH.XRD .Arthur D.wies Age: 19 27 Exeter St., Forest Hills. N. Y. Prepared at Kent .Albert Rolke Dawe Age: 18 2846 North Bartlett . ve.. Milwaukee. Wis. Prepared at Riverside High School .Activities: Dwight Hall C:abinet. Dranrat Walter Barry Decker . ge: 21 Brooklawn Park, Bridgeport.Conn. Prepared at Taft, Milford Edward Joseph Debenthal . ge: 17 Madison. Conn. Prepared al Hand High School Robert Gordon Don. ld Age: 21 .American Consulate. Milan. Italy Prepared at Kent Robert L. nsing Dunning .Age: 18 66 Watchung .Ave., Upper Montclair. N. J. Prepared at Montclair High School .Activities: Track 326 Robert Henry Ebel .Age: 18 34 Ford .St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School Robert William Epling. Jr. .Age: 21 447 Ea.st 57th St., New York City Prepared at Collegiate, Westminster John Edwin Eckliind. Jr. .Age: 18 235 Newton .Ave.. Jamestown. N. A ' . Prepared at Jamestown Hieh School .Activities: Debating Stew-i rt Eastman Elting .Age: 20 West Hill, Winchester, Va. Prepared at Tabor William .Stanley Ep.stein Age: 18 222 East 82nd St., New York City Prepared at Townsend Harris Hall High School, Choate .Activities: Fencing Frederick Cowles Esty ' Age. 19 20 Vernon St., Framingham, Mass. Prepared at Taft George Etzel Age: 18 33 Farren .Ave.. New- Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Ha -eir High .School Charles Diven Ew.art Age: 19 336 West Division St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haxen High School. Hopkins John Irving F. rian Age: 18 80 Walworth .Ave.. .Scarsdale, N. Y. Prepared at Scarsdale High .School Wii.i.i.AM .Stamp.s Parish. Jr. .Age; 22 778 Park .Ave., New A ' ork City Prepared at Los .Alamos Rarrch. Hotchkiss Paul Eugene Farren Age; 20 338 Greenwich Ave., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at Northwestern Universitv Charles Jar vis Fay, Jr. . ge: 21 C) East 79th St., New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss Charles Napoleon Feidelson.Jr. Age: 17 2914 Rhodes Circle Birmingham. . la. Prepared at Ramsav and Phillips High School Paul Ludwig Ferber Age: 19 720 Summit . ve.. Hackensack, N.J. Prepared at Choate .Activities: Tennis Nicholas Fish Age: 20 Mt. Kisco. N. Y. Prepared at Gunnery Burton Reuben Fisher Age: 17 4621 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn. N. Y. Prepared at New Utrecht High Edward Philip Fitzc:erald . ge: 18 40 .Sheldon Terr.. New Hasen. Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School John Joseph Fitzgerald Age: 20 178 Ellsworth Ave.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School, Roxburv Clifford Lee Forbes . ge: 18 25 Ocean . ve.. Larchmont. N.Y. Prepared at Maniaroneck High School. Worcester . cademy Pieter Whitney Foseurgh .Age: 20 30 Sutton PI.. New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Frank Mileord Fox .Age: 18 723 Clinton Springs. Cincinnati. Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School Joseph C. rrere Fox Age: 19 Spuyten Duyvil, New York City Prepared at .Andover Herbert Aaronson Friedman Age: 17 25 .Argonne St., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Herman John Friedman Age: 17 2816 Edgehill Rd„ Cleveland,Ohio Prepared at University School, Cleveland Heights High School LwvRENCE Hartley Gall.agher .Age: 18 Dedham Mass. Prepared at Dedham High School .Activities: Basketball. Track Roy Thomas Garland .Age: 20 28 Dale .Ave., Gloucester, Mass. Prepared at Exeter William T.aylor Getm. n .Age: 18 925 Delaware .Ave.. Buffalo. N. Y. Prepared at Nichols Countiy Day School, Loomis John Gibson, 3RX Age: 19 1234 Bennington .Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Lawrence Charles Goldsmith Age: 18 loi Walworth .Ave.. Scarsdale. N. Y. Prepared at Scarsdale High School Maurice .Arthur Grasson Age: 20 102 York Square New Haven. Conn. Prepared at Exetei. New Haven High School Charles Emmett Gr. xes Age : 19 123 .Avon St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School 327 .Allan Joseph Greene Age: 22 498 Howe Ave., Shelton, Conn. Prepared at Shelton High .School Robert Parker Grinnell Age: 19 2625 East 2nd St., Duluth, Minn. Prepared at Central High School Benedict Gropp .Age: 18 53-18 90th St., Elmhurst. N. Y. Prepared at Newtown High School Roderick Stephen Hall Age: 19 1 85 East Ave., So. Norwalk, Conn. Prepared at Andover Activities: Outing Club Henry Dennis Hammond. Jr. Age: 19 9 West 14th St., New York City Prepared at Trinity .School Ger. ld Thomas Hanley, Jr. Age: 22 South Main St., Warren. K. L Prepared at Middlesex, Providenc e Country Day William Henry Harding Age: 19 26 Waterbury Rd., Montclair,. .J. Prepared at .Andover .Activities: Track Marion Clay Harper. Jr. .Age: 18 14 Sutton PI., New York Ciiy Prepared at .Andover Gordon N.ash Harrington .Age: 18 443 Thompson .Ave., East Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Robert William Harter .Age: 18 South Salem. N. Y. D.«td Hartley Age: 19 3800 East Superior St., Duluth, Minn. Prepared at Hill .Activities: Hockey, 150-lb. Crew. Band Edward Stearns Haswell .Age: 20 66 Morris St.. .Albany. N. Y. Prepared at .Albany High School, Mount Hermon Morton Henry Herzog.Jr. Age: 1 8 Schenley Apartments, Pittsburgh. Pa. Prepared at Milford Martin H.«.rold Heyman Age: 17 615 Central Ave., New Ha en. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School J. ' kMEs Donahue Hinchliff Age: 19 84 Linden St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School, Roxbury Alonzo Gibbs Hinkley, Jr. Age: 18 7 1 1 Lafayette Ave. , Buffalo, N. Y. Prepared at Nichols Country Day School, Exeter Milton Hoffenberg Age: 16 258 Cedar St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Henry Everton Hosley.Jr. .Age: 19 1056 Whitney . ve.. New Ha en, Conn. Prepared at Hotchkiss. Ponifret Otto Clarence Hugo . ge: 20 Billard St.. Meriden, Conn. Prepared at Mount Hermon. . ndo er H. ROLD Whiting Hunsiker. Jr. Age: 19 703 West Ferry St., Buffalo, N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss Guy Michael Humphreys Age: 18 61 Summer St., Forest Hills, L. L, N. Y. Prepared at Kent William Reynolds Innis Age: 18 125 Hope St., Providence, R. L Prepared at Taft Lionel Stewart Jackson Age: 19 871 Prospect St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Kent How.XRD Pr. tt Johnso.n Age: 18 ' 39 High .St., Montclair, N. J. Prepared at .Andox er .Activities: Crew R. NKiN Johnson. Jr. Age: 19 3 Greenholm, Princeton, X. J. Prepared at Lawrence ille John Hardy Jones Age: 19 356 North Main St., Wallingford, Conn. Prepared at Westminster John E. K.wser. Jr. , ge: 18 3 Rydal PL. Montclair, N. J. Prepared at Montclair .Xcadenn Rockwell Keenly. Jr. Age: 18 74 Wexford St., Springfield, Mass. Prepared at .Andover John Reeve Kelsey .Age: 18 2255 Robinwood Ave., Toledo. Ohio Prepared at Hotchkiss Forrest Lee Kenner .Age: 18 403 Baker .Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy Halbert Louis King Age: 17 Readsboro, ' t. Prepared at Mount Hermon .Activities: Cross Country John Bruce Kirby, Jr. .Age: 19 18 Blackwell Ave.. Wildwood, N.J. Prepared at Clayton High School Robert Reginald Kurso.n ' .Age; 19 60 Norfolk St., Bangor, Me. Prepared at .Andover .Activities: Dramat BERrK.AM L.XMHERT Age: 19 279 Ocean Parkway Brooklyn. N. Y. Prepared at New Utrecht High School, Milford 328 John Burns L.a.ne Age: 17 30 North Terrace Maplewood. N.J. Prepared at Columbia High School James Bernard Lefebre .Age: 19 141 Huntington .Ave.. New Haven. Conn. Prepared at . ew Ha en High School Merrill Kirk Linds.-w, Jr. -Age: 20 978 Ridge Rd., Hamden, Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar. Exeter C harles William Logan .Age: 18 139 -Angus St., Hamden. Conn. Prepared at New Ha -en High .School Mortimer Frank Luri. .Age: 20 1736 Mineral Spring Rd.. Reading. Pa. Prepared at Taft Robert Edw. rd Luccock Age: 19 300 Ridgewood .Ave., Hamden, Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Philip Robert Lynch Age: 17 78 George St.. New Ha en. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School C. RL Melbv Lynge. Jr. Age: 19 140 Brook view .Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Roger Ludlowe High School. Milford .Activities: Centro Espanol de Yale Edw. rd Willl m McCarthy .Age: 1 7 736 Orange St.. New Ha en, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en Higli School John Henry McDo.nough Age: 17 193 Housatonic Dr.. Devon, Conn. Prepared at Warren Harding High School, Milford High School Wayne Hummer MacFarlane Age; 20 191 5 Knox Ave.. South Minneapolis, Minn. Prepared at Blake School, Lawrenceville Durban , lexander McGr.aw Age: 19 Hutton Rd., Oakmont, Pa. Prepared at C hoate John Frederick MacGuigan Age; 20 19 Wright Ave., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at University of Michigan James Butler MacGuire .■ge; 19 28 East 78th St., New York City Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School Charles William Mackie. 3RD Age; 20 4 Harrison . Xve., Montclair, N.J. Prepared at Choate William M- ckintosh .Age; 19 47 Valley Rd., Bronxville. N. Y. Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Glee Club, Basketball Team William Robinson McIlvai.n, 2nd . ge; 18 Reading Blvd., Wyomissing, Pa. Prepared at Hill William James MacQuillan Huntington St., Hartford. Conn. Prepared at Mount Hermon .Activities: Soccer Charles McNair Magnu. on Age; 18 7 Gracie Square, New York City Prepared at . ndover, Lawrenceville DwiGHT Sterling M. llett. Jr. Age: 20 322 Mercer .Ave., Roselle, N.J. Prepared at Roselle High School -Activities: Football, Baseball Horace Edmond Man.acher .Age: 18 789 St. Mark ' s .Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High .School, Brown Tutoring School .Activities: Golf, Lacrosse Richard Friend AL rcus .Age: 18 527 Fourth St.. New Orleans. La. Prepared at Exeter .Anthony Hubbard M- rsh. ll -Age: 19 3419 Wabash PI . , Cleveland. Ohio Prepared at Cleveland Central High School John Stanwood Martin .Age: 19 Wedgwood. Wyncote, Pa. Prepared at St. George ' s George James M- rvin .Age; 19 140 Main St.. Binghamton. N. Y. Prepared at Binghamton Central High School Dor 10 .Anthony M.at rig aria Age: 20 73 Howard .Ave., .Ansonia, Conn. Prepared at Pine High School. .Ansonia High School Harry Farnham Me.adow .Age; 17 283 NortonSt.,New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Charles Henry Mellon, Jr. .Age: 20 Convent, N.J. Prepared at St. Mark ' s Morris Metznir .Age: 21 34 Legion .Ave., New Ha en.C:onn. Prepared at New Haven High School James Houston Millard .Age; 20 27 East 62nd St.. New York City Prepared at Lawrenceville Everett Burton Miller. Jr. .Age: 18 22 Linwold Dr., ' est Hartford, Conn. Prepared at West Hartford High School. Loomis .Activities: Glee Club Gardner Willard Millett, Jr. .Age; 19 1 1 70 Fifth .Ave.. New York City Prepared at Choate .Activities: Track M.J.RK Lincoln Mitchell, Jr. .Age: 21 203 McMillan St., Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Westminster James Keeler Morgan .Age; 19 324 East 1 8th St., New York City Prepared at Poughkeepsie Higli School, Exeter John Villi.- m Morrison. Jr. .Age; 21 5296 Westminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Countrv Day Hugo Victor Neuh.als.Jr. .Age: 20 9 Remington Lane, Houston, Tex. Prepared at Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va., St. Paul ' s School Rk;hard Griswold Newton Age: 21 65 Laurel Rd., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School, Roxbury Frank Billings Nichols Age: 17 1550 North State St., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Choate Grover Nelson North .Age: 18 189 Cornelia St., Plattsburg, N. Y. Prepared at Plattsburg High School. St. Paul ' s School .Ashley Williams Olmsted Age; 19 161 Windsor Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss John Ottavi.ano, Jr. .Age: 17 640 Chapel St.. New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Thom. s .Stokes P. ge .Age: 18 1958 Vallejo St., .San Francisco, Calif, Prepared at Tamalpais School, Lawrenceville 329 Peter Romeo Paladino Age: 23 40 Dartmouth St., Pittsfield.Mass. Prepared at Williston GlOACrHTNO SiSTO Parrei,i,a Age: 18 231 Forbes Ave., New Haven,Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School .Seymour Parsons . ge: 18 40 West Schiller St.. Chicago. 111. Prepared at Choate Philip Peltz Age: 19 62 So. Swan St., .Albany, N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss .Activities: Glee Club. Dramat Homer Guy Perkins Age: 18 1332 Quinnipiac Ave., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Frederick , lmon Peterson, Jr. Age: ig Indian Field Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Prepared at .Andover William George Petitjean .Age: 17 R.F.D.. Naugatuck, Conn. Prepared at Naugatuck High School Edward Willi. ' m Petrillo .Age: 18 31 .Auburn .St., . ew Haven, Conn. Prepared at .New Ha en Higli School William Grymes Pettus, Jr. .Age: 18 4367 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at St. Louis Country Da ' School Irving Pickus Age: 18 182 Peck .Ave., West Haven, Conn. Prepared at West Haven High .School J. MEs Potter Polk .Age: 20 6 East 68th St., New York City Prepared at Groton. Kent MORRI? POSENER .Age: 18 226 Union Ave., West Haven. Conn. Prepared at West Ha en High .School Frank Thomas Powers. Jr. Age: 19 Duck Pond Rd., Glen Cove. L. I.. N. Y. Prepared at La vrence ille Ed v. rd Willi.. m Proxmire .Age: 19 t70 Deerpath .Ave., ' Lake Forest. 111. Prepared at Hill .Activities: Football. Bo.xing David Fr. nci? Qciglev, Jr. .Age: 18 Oakdale St., Brockton. Mass. Prepared at Ando ' er, Governor Dummer Kevin Gelshenen J. Raffertv Age: 19 Glenville Rd., Greenwich. Clonn. Prepared at Berkshire. .Andover Willi. ' m Newell Randell .Age: 20 318 Court St.. .Auburn. Me. Prepared at Lewiston High School. .Ando er James Jay Reis. Jr. .Age: 19 3950 Rose Hill .Ave., Cincinnati, Ohic) Prepared at Walnut Hills High School John Joseph Riehle Age: 18 242 Lincoln Parkwav, Buffalo, N, Y. Prepared at Lafayette High School .Actix ' ities: Crew Fped Bernard Rosnigk Age: 17 2034 Northampton .St., Holyoke, Mass. Prepared at Holyoke High School William Nelson Runvon Age: 18 136 East gth St., Plainfield, .N . J. Prepared at Plainfield High School, Exeter Frederick Michael S. liba .Age: 2 1 278 Broadway. Lawrence, Mass. Prepared at Roxbuiy .VlALr:nLM Drcjste S. nders .Age: 18 51 .Myrtle .Ave.. Montclair. N. J. Prepared at .Andover Philip S. pir .Age: 18 I 76 .Armorv St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Hyde Park High School. New Ha%en High School .Activities: Bowling Harlow Dow Sa -. ge. Jr. .Age: 18 30 Church Lane, Scarsdale. N. Y. Prepared at Exeter .Activities: Swimming Team Joseph Francis Sav. ge, Jr. Age. 21 1045 Park .Ave., New York City Prepared at Exeter J. .MEs Griffith Sc. rff Age: 19 ' Powenis ' , San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic Prepared at Rumsev Hall. Hotchkiss H.AROLD MoORE ScHILLER .Age: 18 40 West Prospect .St., New Ha en, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School WlI.I.lAM GUST. VE ScHMIUr .Age: 19 3f) Gale .Av ' e., Meriden. Clonn. Prepared at Meriden High School Gifford Bryce Pinchot Age: 19 Milford. Pa. Prepared al Tafl. I ' hacher, .A Old Farms Stuart Moeller Rogers Age: 19 201 Everit St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Gi ' ammar, . ndovcr. Ro xburv Henry Pepper Scott, 3RI) .Age : 1 9 8 Red Oak Rd.. Wilmington, Del. Prepared at Lawrenceville .Activities: Baseball 330 William Edwakd Seamon Age: 1 8 I lo Mayhew Dr.. South Orange. N.J. Prepared at Peddie John William Seeger Age: i8 780 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Prepared at St. Paul .Academy Activities: Football. Crew Joseph Seronde, Jr. Age: 17 20 Wilton Rd., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at Prospect Hill Fenmore Roger Shapiro .Age; 17 493 Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Bridgeport Central High School C.H- RLES ShARTEN ' BERG. 1r. Age: 18 50 Arlington St., Pawtucket, R. I. Prepared at Providence Country Dav, .Andover Earl C.- rter Shedd Age: 20 R.F.D., Manchester, Conn. Prepared at Manchester High School William Blunt Sherman .Age: 20 361 Ashford Ave.. Dobbs Ferry. N. Y. Prepared at Barnard, Silver Bay Hacklev Robert Thom.as Shinkle .Age: 18 269 McCormick PI., Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Hughes High .School Everett Stu. rt Sholes Age: 21 1 1 130 Magnolia Dr., Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Hawken, Choate Irwtn Siegel Age: 18 179 Ellsworth .Ave., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Ha en High School. Milford Bennett Norm. n Silver Age: 17 1830 Park .Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Prepared at Bridgeport Central High School Frank Reebel Simon ■Age; 19 124 Henry St.. Manchester, Conn. Prepared at Exeter William Frederick Sl.wmaker .Age: 20 427 North Duke St.. Lancaster. Pa. Prepared at Lawrenceville .Activities: Glee Club Thomas Baker Slick Age: 18 327 W. i8th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Prepared at Exeter .Activities; Squash Team, Centro Espafiol Everett C-. pron Smith Age: 19 116 East St., Methuen. Mass. Prepared at E. F. Searles High .School, Loomis .Activities: Track Lewis Richard Smith Age: 18 20 Grove St., Middletown, N. Y. Prepared at Middletown High .School Robert .Ashton Smith Age: 18 52 Edgewood .Ave., Nutley, N. J. Prepared at Nutley High School ■Sc.oTT Lord .Smith. Jr. .Age: 20 1 13 .Academy St., Poughkeepsie. N. Y. Prepared at Hotchkiss Theodore Bo. rdm. n S.mock, Jr. Age: 18 301 East 2ist St., New York City Prepared at Stuysesant High School ' .Activities: Boxing D.AViD Jones Spindler .Age: 21 I 124 Milton .Ave., Swissvale, Pa. Prepared at Swissvale High .School, Exeter Sherm. n Ramsey Squire Age: 19 Washington .Ave., North Haven, Conn. Prepared at Lyman Hall High School Carter Stilson .Age: 18 26B W ' iUow St., New Haven. Conn. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar .Activities: Crew. Fencing, Glee Club George .Allen .Streeter .Age: 18 2022 Eutaw PI.. Baltimore, Md. Prepared at Boys ' Latin School .Activities: Fencing Gerard Steddiford Swords .Age- 20 147 East 72nd .St., New York City Prepared at Bovee, St. Paul ' s School Benjamin Trueelood Taylor .Age: 18 44 Mason Dr., New Britain, Conn. Prepared at New Britain High School Edvv. bd Palmer T.aylor .Age: 21 129 Westerly Terrace Hartford, Conn, Prepared at Choate James Robert Taylor Stonev Church Rd., Saddle River. N.J. Prepared at Ridgewood High School Thomas Thacher 16 East 73rd St., New York City Prepared at Fessenden. .Andover George Hauser Theuer .Age: 18 17022 Endora Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Collinwood High School Activities: Dwight Hall Stewart Thorne Age: 22 Park .Ave., New York City Prepared at .Andover 331 Charles Tomasino Age; 17 1820 Boulevard, New Ha -en. Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Danip;l Allen Treat, 3RD Age: 20 Sampson Ave., Milford, Conn. Prepared at Milford High Scliool Renwick Senior Tweedv Age: iq 645 Glenbrook Rd., Glenbrook, Conn. Prepared at Loomis .Activities: Track Eugene Merritt ' anLoan. Jr. Age; 17 Athens. N. Y. Prepared at Athens High School Robert Adam Vested . ge: 20 6901 Oglesby . ' ve., Chicago, 111. Prepared at Hyde Park High School. Roxbury J. ' iMES Alex.ander W.ard . ge: 18 8 Governors Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Prepared at Portsmouth P. i ' L George John VVargo Age; 17 527 Oldroyd St., Devon, Conn. Prepared at Milford High School Antonio Johnston Waring. Jr. Age; 19 2912 Atlantic Ave., Savannah.Ga. Prepared at St. Albans Activities; Dramat, Lil Brow.n Watson Age; 18 1673 Franklin Ave., Columbus, Ohio Prepared at Andover John Marsh. ll Weaver . ge: 19 139 Prospect Ave.. Douglaston, L. I., N. Y ' . Prepared at Andover . ctivities; Swimming Squad Edwin Richard Weinerman . ge; 17 127 Warrenton .- ve., Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Hartford High School .- ctivilies; Forensic Forum Jav Rogers Weiselberg .- ge; 17 2j Woodlawn Terr., VVaterbury. Conn. Prepared at Crosby High School Samuel Grove Weiss Age; 19 630 Chestnut St., Lebanon, Pa, Prepared at Mercersburg . ctivities; Glee Club William Lacey Wells Age; 18 Main St., Farmington, Conn. Prepared at Farmington High School .Vtivities; Basketball Henry Edvv. rd Wenden, Jr. . ge; 18 94 Livingston St., New Haven, Conn. Prepared at New Haven High School Clarkson Wentz Age; 19 335 Woodley Rd.. Merion, Pa. Prepared at Episcopal, Haverford Fr.ank Everts Werneren, Jr. Age; 20 R.F.D. . o. 2, Birmingham. Mich. Prepared at Cranbrook School .Activities; Swimming Squad ' iLLi. M KoLB White Age; 17 17 East View St., West Hartford, Conn. Prepared at Loomis James Payton Whitters, Jr. .Age; 19 7 Pleasant St., Taunton, Mass. Prepared at Worcester Academy .Activities; Track Ru;h. rd Emery Wilbur Age; 18 Wardman Park Hotel Washington, D. C. Prepared at Uni ersity School (C-le elandK Loomis Donald Wilhelm, Jr. -Age; 20 160 Myrtle .Ave., Westport. Conn. Prepared at Staples High School, Exeter RoBERr Petticrew Williams Age: 17 (1300 .North Rosebury Dr., St. Louis, Mo. Prepared at Ando er . tixities: Lacrosse John Oliver Wilson .Age; 18 270 Park Ave., New York City Prepared at St. Bernard ' s, Exeter Stu.- rt Stro.nc; Wilson, Jr. Age: 19 Deposit, N, Y. Prepared at Truson High .School, Exeter .Activities; C entro Espanol Thom.as Fred Wilson .Age; 18 1 1097 Lake .Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at West High Schofil .Activities: Band L. WRE.NCE La.mer Winslow, Jr. .Age; 19 Wickliffe, Ohio Prepared at .Asheviile William Porter Witherow, Jr, Age; 19 5448 Northumberland .St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared at Shady Side, .St Paul ' s School W.ALTER Emerson Woodford, 3RD Oenoke A e.. New Canaan, Conn. Prepared at St. Luke ' s, Tat ' t John Clinton Work, Jr. .Age: 21 West Hills, Huntington, N. Y. Prepared at .St. Paul ' s School Bertram Yood Age; 18 1074 Boulevard, Bayonne, N.J. Prepared at Bayonne High School How. rd Lath. lm Young Age- 20 Orient, L. L. N. Y. Prepared at E.xeter .Acti ' lties; Track P.vuL Daniel Zem. ny .Age; 18 R.F.D. I, Box 280, Fairfield, Conn. Prepared at Roger Ludlowe High .School Glenn Baker Zwiebel .Age; 19 Litchfield Rd.. Watertown. Conn. Prepared at Taft. WiUiston .332 College Allocations for 1935 -1936 Index and Advertisements College Directory 1935-1936 Berkeley College Alexander, C. T. Allen, G. W. Anderson, G. A. Armstrong, F. Bagg, E. P. Bartow, P. K. Beinecke, W. S. Belin, F. L., Jr. Bell, H. Blaisdell, J. V. Bodle, W. W. Broadman, A. R. Bruce, D. Bulkeley, W. E. C. Burt, W. R. Byers, J. F., Jr. Cahn, H. K. Caldwell, J. A., 3rd Castle, J. C. Cates, W. Clemens, G. S. Dean, J. V. B. Eaton, J. E. Ferguson, J. P., Jr. Frambach, C. L., Jr. Gafford, G. N. Gersten, L. M. CLASS OF 1936 Gill, B. M. Grace, J. P., Jr. Graham, J. C. Grant, F. C. Greene, P. W. A. Greenwood, W. R., Jr. Griswold, F. S. Griswold, G. H. Harter, J. W. Hausberg, W. Herold, R. Howe, D. R. Humphrey, W. R., 2nd Jackson, M. M. Keller, M. J. Kelsey, A. C. King, G. Knight, S. B. Levine, I. L. Lindeke, A. W., Jr. Low, W. W. McAllister, J. D. McCartney, F. L. McCormick, R. H., 3rd McFarland, W. McGoodwin, D. Mairs, G. G. Miller, B. T. Miller, C, 3rd Mills, C.J. Morgan, W. H. Oehler, L C. Parke, H. C. Peters, K. G. Peters, L. C. Riggs, D. S. Rogers, F. B. Roscoe, J. V. Sachs, J. J. Savage, T. C. Schultz, R. H. Schwab, H. B. deV.,Jr Shevell, S. T. Silverman, L H. Smith, P. H., 3rd Staley, E. J.. Jr. Stockhausen, T. C. Stringer, M. S., Jr. Vassel, B., Jr. Viering, R. W. Walker, L. Wells, J. B. Whitehead, M. K. Wilson, R. E. L., 3rd Fay, A. B. Hebert, W. A., Jr. Aaron, A. Ascher, S. F. Barclay, J. W. Beckton, H. P. Berry, R. Blake, D. B. Brookfield, S. L. Brugger, J. T., Jr. Burbank, J. H. Carnes, P. L Church, A. D. Cianciolo, L. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Herold, J. S. CLASS OF 1937 Cogswell, V. C. Corbert, M. Cussler, R. C. Field, J. W. Foord, A. S. Gennett, N. W., Jr. Gillespie, R. M. Goodkind, R. L. Griswoid, J. S. Heedy, H. G., Jr. Hetherington, A. F., Jr. Higgins, C. C. Meyer, J. V. N. Judson, C. S., Jr. Hill, B. D. Hoag, J. T. Horn, C. D. Horn, H. S. Jenney, D. C. Kelsey, H. B. Kennedy, D. A. Keppelman, R. S. Kier, A. M. KlebanofT, S. G. Kohl, R. W. Lasell, S. L., Jr. OC:f j-:. :s :. :f ' ' . ' ' :f ' : ' V T R I P L E R ' S T w store devoted exclusively to MEN ' S APPAREL eatuj- ' nig the new and correct style preferences of university men and sportsmen. The Jinest clothes ready for le-earing tailored for us by H I c K F. V - F K E E M A N . Accessories and hats from the leading quality makers here and abroad FrTripiers [g. OUTFITTERS TO GENTLEMEN Established 1886 MADISON AVENUE AT 46- NEW YORK t 6 ' ;3 i- ;v ! ; : ; :x - ' - ' Loewenstein, S. McEvoy, J. K. McFerren, W., Jr. Macomber, F. A. Makepiece, L. M. Meniss, G. Montgelas, R. Moore, W. S. Morse, J. Page, C. C. Barrett, W. F., Jr. Brown, W. W. Burke, B. J. Butler, H. E., Jr. Cleaveland, B. I. Cookman, G. E. Day, C. G. G. Dibble, H. C. Foord, A. M. Fox, R. McI. Becton, H. P. Blayney, T. L. Brainard, T. C. Christy, C. C. Decker, R. H., Jr. Fargo, A. W. Herbert, W. A., Jr. Pasquariello, P. Peck, G. T. Pine, J. W. Pitman, F. A. Rogers, C. E., 3rd Runnalls, J. F. B. Sedergren, E. D. Smith, D. H. Smith, H. D. CLASS OF 1938 Gary, W. L. Gropp, B. Hamlin, E. B., Jr. Harman, J. A. Barter. R. W. Hugo, O. C. Hunsiker, H. W., Jr. Kayser, J. E. Kilpatrick, R. F.,Jr. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Herold,J. S. Jackson, L. S. King, S, P. Knowles, H. C., Jr. Liebman, M. McCreath, J., H Meeker, L. V. Smith, S. J. Steere, D. D. Stevens, J. B. Stewart, P. Stone, L. T., Jr. Vogt, J. G. Wells, T. Whitney, H., McA. Whitney, W. S. Wiggin, F. A. Lamb, L. B., Jr. Latham, J. L. Mallory, H. B. Parsons, S. Paladino, P. R. Peltz, P. Pond, J. B. Smith, L. R. Smith, S. L., Jr. Thompson, J. R. Meyer, J. V. Sanders, W. M. Schroeder, P. H. Skinner, E. N., Jr. Stiles, B. W. Taylor, R. C. Urban, G. P. Allen, R. M. Andrews, A. R. Arthur, G. D., Jr. Banbury, R. D. H. Bender, R. S. Beyer, E. M. Brown, H. Burlingame, W., Jr. Chamberlin, T. L. Coerr, W.J. D. Cruikshank, L. S. Cummins, R. J. Damon, H. F., Jr. Darling, D. D. Davidson, H. L. Davis, W. R. Dennis, O. W. L. Dickerman, W. K. Donahue, V. D. Duane, R. C. Eberl, W. B. Branford College CLASS OF 1936 Farevaag, P.N. A. Ferguson, J. H. Finkel, J. B. Finkelstein, A. S. Ford, W. M., Jr. Fox, F. S., Jr. Gancher, R. Gifford, J. H. Gomez, J. P. Gosling, R. A. Graham, J. C. Hamilton, F. P., Jr. Hanson, W. S. Harris, R. N. Hart, H. S., Jr. Harther, C. T., Jr. Hartshorne, W. Haycock, H. S. Hehmeyer, W. L. Holden, T. F. Holland, R, C. Johnson, J. G., Jr. Karsten, P. D., Jr. Knight, R. L., Jr. Krug, P. L. Longo, J. S. McDonald, D. Mack, J. J. Manning, T. G. Marks, J. M. Mason, J. M. Meade, J. L. Millard, E. B., Jr. Mills, F. Moher, P. J. O ' Keefe, J. E. Olcott, R. Oppenheim, P. L. Overton, A. G. Paine, W. H. Pinkham, R. A. R. Porter, A. ESTABLISHED 1818 IfJVs pirni5liin5S. Hats r$h (js MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Times Change To a casual eye, the changes in men ' s clothing from year to year are comparatively slight. A new angle to a lapel, a new breadth and squareness in a shoulder, a new shaping of a jacket — these tremendous trifles never shout their arrival for shouldn ' t I Hut taken in the aggregate and over a long perif)d — they mean going into a complete- ly new business every little while. (Compare the over-stuffed stiffness of the nineties, the sparse narrnw lines i f the nineteeii-twenties, and the comfortably-draped yet ac- curately-fitted rliithe of til-. lay. ' ' There :iic few nmtinuiTin standards — except, of course, l!r(Kik Hrothers ' staiidanK of taste. i|iiality and workm inship, w ' hich do not and ill not ever change. BRANCHES NEW YORK: ONE WALL STREET BURY COR. BERKELEY STREET BOSTON • At Xuml)er 17,5 Whitney Ave- nue, directly acrcss the .street from Yale ' .s t ' amou.s Peabody Mu.seum, i.s the Home Office of the Security of New Haven, one of New Eng- land ' s substantial fire insurance or- ganizations. • Like Yale University, the Security of New Haven, founded in 1841, is a permanent, enduring and strong in- stitution. It will continue through the years as a company giving depend- able .stock fire insurance protection and .service to its policyholders and agents. OF New Haven.Cohnecticut New Haven Con ' Ii|SuranccCompainj OF New Haven Connecticut Randall, I., Jr. Reinthal, D. F. Reed, W., Jr. Rich, D. W.,Jr. Rich, J. E. Ritzman, T. A. Roberts, W. G. Sale, L., Jr. Sawder, P. B., Jr. Scmitt, J. L. Schuyler, K. C, Jr Scribner, S. A. Secor, W. J., Jr. Shatkin, P. Sheldon, F. L. Stein, S. A. Stern, H. L., Jr. Stern, H. R., Jr. Stevens, G. C. Stewart, F. K. Sweeney, J. F. Tail, D. W. Taylor, J. W. Washburn, H. S., Jr. Wise, W. B. Adams, M., Jr. Alofsin, F. B. Barbour, T. E. Barlow, R. W., and Bartholomew, G. P., Jr Bartholomew, S. L. Baxter, R. Bennett, G. T. Bildner, A. Blumenthal, D. Bower, A. B. Burke, T. G. Carey, H. B.,Jr. Carr, D. J. Chickering, W. H. Cochran, H. Comley, F. L. Crane, A. E. Davenport, R. H., Jr. Davidson, R. M. Embree, W. D., Jr. Endfield, C. Evans, L. W. Evans, W. S. Fahy, F. M. CLASS OF 1937 Fanton, D. F. Feldman, J. D. Ferguson, R., Jr. Gellert, N. H. ,Jr. Good, A. E. Grierson, R. B. Hartman, L. M., 3rd Higgins, R. D. L. Johnson, J. W., Jr. Kavanagh, P. E. Kerry, R. J. Keyes, S. J., Jr. Kurth, A. L. Lazurus. C. Y. Linkroum, R. L. McDonald, J. McGivney, J. B., Jr. Maher, T. F., Jr. Marshall, W. B. Michaels, R. Mill, V. J., Jr. Montgomery, S., Jr. Moses, A. S., Jr. Munroe, L. O ' Connor, B. Orrick, W. H., Jr. Parry, H.J. Percy, G. E. Pfeiffer, P. N. Pierson, W. S. Richards, J. L. Rollo, H. Ross, D. Q. Schine, H. L. Schnelle. K. E. Sheen, A. Shirey, O. M., Jr. Smith, E. W. Taylor, W. F. Tyson, W. A., Jr. Valentine, F. R., Jr. Vose, N. M., Jr. Walton, T. E., Jr. Washbtirn, E. S. Welles, S. B. Wigley, E. M. Williams, C. P. Woods, N. S. Zagraniski, R. J. Aderente, V. C. Barlow, R. C. Barnett, I. Carroll, F. M., Jr. Dawe, A. R. Dempsey, J. H. Forrest, E. H. Garland, H. P., II Hall, G. E., Jr. Hamilton, H. T., Jr. CLASS OF 1938 Howard, D. H. Korsmeyer, F. B. Levy, D. R. Lovejoy, L. A. McMenamin, H. J. Manacher, H. E. Merrick, R. B. Mills, A. K.,Jr. Moore, J. C. Pierce, L. Pulaski, C. A. Renn, H. H. Rickey, A. C. Stearns, H. A. Taintor, J. S., Jr. Trowbridge, G. F. Walker, J., Jr. Ward, A. A., Jr. Waugh, W. M. Williamson, M. A. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Brown, B. W. Fahv, F. M. Higgins, R. D. L. Keeney, R. L. Maher, T. F., Jr. Mendoza, M. G. Mill, V. J., Jr. Schutz, H. F. Thomas, P. J. Trembicki, S. G. Williams, A., 3rd PHIL ' S Barber Shops Your Personal Ajipearance Depends on Your Choice of a Barber. You INIay be Certain of Satisfaction at Phil ' s. Tiro Shops ( ' oiircnioilli Located WALL STREET Across from Van Sheff YORK STREET Next to Yale ( ' o-op (Meml)er of the University Discount Plan) HOTEL NORTHAMPTON nud WIGGINS OLD TAVERN ' An Inn of Colonial Charm ' ' European Plan $ ' •2.50 up Special Week-end Room Rates to College Students Excellent Food — Popular Prices Saturday ISight Dinner Dances Parking in Rear Garage Opposite Sagal-Lou Farms GRADE A and CERTIFIED ] IILK i.s produced under most rigid laboratory control by dairy specialist.s Drink Scu al-Loii Farms Milk ' ' The Students ' Choice MONTHLY STORAGE WASHING— SIMONIZING LUBRICATING COMMERCIAL GARAGE 178 GEORGE STREET Between Church and Temple Calhoun Gollese CLASS OF 1936 Baldwin, L. W. Ballins er, A. S. Baxter, E. W. Blck, M. W. Bilewitz, J. Bostwick, H. O. Brewster, J. H. Cavanagh, C. J. Chatterton, R. G. Cole, W. K. Cory, R. H. Curtis, E. A. Curtis, H. F. Cushman, A. L. Danowski, T. S. Davis, W. S. Deford, R. B. Ewing, N. Fromm, R. E. Gott.J. W. Greene, J. C. Greenhalgh, G. P. Harvey, H. C. Heckman, R. S. Hellyer, D. T. Hooker, B. E. Israel, A. C. Johnston, R. K. Kelsey, J. G. Kinzer, R. A. Knebel, R. W. Leavenworth, W. N. Leyman, H. S. Loomis, L. Martin, J. Miller, S. Mott, J. W. Newman, F. K. Osgood, A. B. Phinney, J. D. Powel, J. Prestley, W. F. Primm, A. T. Rabbott, D. F. Rand, J. A. Rand, W. B. Rapoport, B. Richardson, J. H. Ross, H. Ryerson, J. T. Savage, R. C. Schling, M. Schnee, C. Schoellkopf, W. H. Schreiber, S. M. Schwab, G. Selzer, R. Soule, F. C. Starr, G. R. Stein, H. M. S toner, W. W. Sullivan, E. Untermeyer, W. Upthegrove, W. Wadsworth, R. Ward, B. L. Webb, W. O. Ciner, L. Weintraub, S. Wershow, L R. Whitney, P. D. Wright, R. S. Young, K. CLASS OF 1937 Amos, J. Armstrong, T. F. Beckwith, R. H. Bonser, W. H. Bown, C:. T. Buckley, C. H. Burns, C. E. Carey, J. M., 3rd Carhart, H. W.,Jr. Cartwright, L. E. Chester, W. C. Curtiss, T. Danziger, A. W. Dayton, D. C. Doherty, G. H. Downs, B. S. Eaton, S. H. Faber,J. H. Farley, J. Finn, E. C. Foote, W. R. Francis, D. L., 2nd Gilman, E. J. Hamilton, C. D.P. Hammond, W. K. Heller, W. B. Hickok, D. F. Hubbard, A. S. Jr. Hunter, F. W. Huntington, A. B. Kelling; H. D. LaMond, C. deW. Love, J. A. McClenahan, J. L. McCrary, D. A. McNeil, R. C. Matthews, H. B. Michaels, R. A. Middleton, J. Mills, S. W. Moore, W. H. Morton, R. C. B. Murrill, M. L. Nichols, N. W. Ogburn. T. J. Pattison, A. L. Pritchard, R. A. Rosenthal, R. L. Rowland, H. C. Rust, E. Schureman, ]. Shaler, J. L. Shepard, B. M. Sorotsky, L. Squire, W. B. Stein, L. Sturley, E. A. Sumner, J. W., Jr Wall, R. E. Warner, H. E. Weida, C;. A., Jr. Wevmouth, T. R. Wheeler, E. F. Wick, P. R., Jr. Williams, C. D. Wilson, H. Young, C. M. Vacations? Week-Ends? Over Night? no matter how long you plan to stay in New York .... you will enjoy stopping at the HOTEL PRESIDENT 48th Street West of IVway convenience of location easy accessibility to all points of interest . . comfortable, modern rooms equipped with shower . . . bath . . . radio DAILY RATES - $ ' 2.;5() Single - $3.50 Double IV rife for information concerning 2 mid 3 Day Tours including Room, Meals, Entertainment Billingsley, H. E. Brainard, M. L. Crawford, W. W. Donald, R. G. Doty, C. E., Jr. Ewart, C. D. Foote, R. L. Gibson, R. McK. Jeffords, W. M., Jr. Keeler, S. E., Jr. Baxter, J., Ill Chamberlin, G. W. Chester, W. C. Crittenden, J. O. Eshelman, H. R. CLASS OF 1938 Kelley, B. Kirby, J. B., Jr. Linthicum, F. R. Macionis, J. J. Messinger. W. C. Miller, E.B., Jr. Noble, H. S. Osborne, M. P. Po rter, H. N. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Frank, A. A., Jr. Heller, F. C. Hickenlooper, S., Jr. Howe, C. F. Jones, C. L. Jordan, J. F. Powell, F. C. Proxmire, E. W. Randall, W. I. Reese, G. W., Jr. Shelden, A., HI Smith, E. C. Villard, O. G., Jr. Waring, A. J., Jr. Whipple, W. J. Wright, D. G. Leyman, R. S., Jr. McKellar, R. B. Miller, H. J. Mitchell, A. H. Weymouth, T. R. Abell, J. S. Alsop, S.J. O. Altizer, R. J. M. Berliner, R. W. Billman, R. W. Braman. W. B. Bruce, D., Jr. Buckman, H., Jr. Bull, W. M. Chandler, C. F. Clark, D. S. Clark, W. H. Crapster, T. G., Jr. Dalrymple, J. S., Jr. DarUng, P. V. I. Dingee, E. A. Ewing, F. M., Jr. Farnam, G. B. Field, A. S., Jr. Foothorap, R. D. Goepel, C. T. Goldenthal, A. Hall, J. A. Harkavy, M. R. Harris, W. B. Hauser, W. V. A. Davenport College CLASS OF 1936 Heavenrich, R. M. Houde, R. A. Huffman, H. Ivers, J. J. Jensen, O. O. King, E. V. Knapp, J. M. Kohn, L. J. Laidlaw, A. E. LaMotte, W. O., Jr. Loeb, A.J. MacLaren, F. B., Jr. Marvel, R. Marvin, C, Jr. Meyer, J. D. Miller, J. E. Morgan, R. D. Murray, G. A. Nields, J. W. Oelschlaeger, A. E., Jr. Parker, J. ' H., Jr. Parker, K. B. Pillsbury, E. P. Pratt, D. B. Preston, J. H. Purcell, E. E. Raymond, E. A. Rhodes, J. H. Roche, P. C. Root, A. L Rossbach, R. M. Scherr, H., Jr. Selover, C. E., Jr. Shapiro, D. A. Smith, E. W. Smith, S. F. Spock, R. H. Standart, J. G., Jr. Tyler, C, 2nd Usher, D. K. Valentine, A. C. Victor, A. O. Wallstein, W. C. Walton, G. B. White, J. H. Wickham, P. K. Wightman, K. D. Williams, E. M. Willis, S. A. Winebrenner, D. E., 3rd Woolsey, T. D. Alsop, J. deK. Arbib, R. S., Jr. Badman, J. Baker, E. J. CLASS OF 1937 Belknap, C, 2nd Bellamy, F. W., Jr. Brooke, F. H., Jr. Butler, H. H. Byrnes, R. M., Jr. Chisholm, C. Clark, E. D., Jr. Cocroft, A. W. ELM CITY TUTORING SCHOOL 17 BROADWAY For College Tutoring NATR. FRANCIS, ' 02 ' 08s, Director NEW HAVEN, CONN. Phone 7-1038 The New Merriam- Webster The new Merriam-Web- ster, now ready, is the most important contri- bution to educational equipment in 25 years. Easy to use and its en- cyclopedic treatment of thousands of topics makes it indispensable to all. Webster ' s New International Dictionary Second Edition The work of outstanding authorities. 600,000 entries. Magnificent plates in color and half tone. Thousands of new woids. 12,000 terms illustrated. Thousands of encyclopedic articles. 3vS,0G0 geographical entries. 13,000 biographi- cal entries. 3,300 pages. Write for free illustrated booklet with specimen pages. G. C. IVIerriam Co., Springfield, IVIass. LONG ' S 61 CHURCH STREET NEW HAVEN YOUR COLLEGE OUTFITTER CLOTHING. HABERDASHERY, HATS and SHOES of QUALITY and TASTE Always the newest styles at prices that tak,e economics seriously Brown s Antique Furniture Exchange 953-55 THIRD AVENUE NEW YORK, N. Y. Broinf s Antique F tniiture Exchange request the pleasure of a visit to inspect a fine collection of 18th Century English and American Antiques and Works of Art ivhich they have recently secured at to-day s prices Wholesale and Ketail TELEPHONE PLAZA 3-8944 Cross, R. ). Cutler, R D. Daignalt, A. T. Dangler, D. W. Davie, E. T. B. Davis, J. DeSilver, C. H. Dickinson, H. F. Diss, A. B. Dominick, B., 2nd Dominick, P. H. Dryer, E. J., Jr. Dulmage, H. D. Elebash, LeG. S., Jr. Ever, G. A., Jr. Fischer, W.J. H., Jr. Fitzpatrick, E. J., Jr. Forester, F., Jr. Gagarin, A. S. Goldsmith, J. M. Gramse, A. E. Greene, W. E., Jr. Gulick, E. V. Gutterman, W. T. Hanes, J. G., Jr. Hayward, F. H., Jr. Heller, H. K. Hetzler, T., Jr. Hollister, B., Jr. Hook, C. R., Jr. Johnston, W. C. M. Kerr, E. C.,Jr. King, R. D. Lewis, J. J. Lockwood, H. A., Jr. MacDuffie, K. H. Mabee, D. W., 2nd Marsh, C. Mears, F., 2nd Metz, D. A. Milliken, R. Mitchell, E. C. Neuhof, M. G. Perkins, C. C. Pettit, T. S. Potter, W. C. Preston, S. D., Jr. Roby, R. R. Romberg, C. A. Rosenfeld, A. H., Jr. Satterthwaite, J. B. Scott, W. H. Tennant, R. B. Terry, W. B. Vanderbilt, J. N. Waller, W., 3rd Warren, R. B. Wells, T. M. Welsh, J. F. WiUco.x, D. D., Jr. Adams, T. H. Adie, D. C. Auchincloss, H., Jr. Balfour, D. C, Jr. Belser, I. F., Jr. Blair, E. McC. Bloomfield, D. D. Boyce, F. G., HI Brandt, P. F. Bundy, H. H. Carroll R. E. Champlin, W. H., Jr. Conrad, J. R. Diss, A. B. Ford. F. F. CLASS OF 1938 Farnam, F. Z. B. Kramer, B. B. Kurson, R. R. Lane, J. B. McCormick, C. D. McKeon, F. T. Miller, H. F. Morgan, J. K. Morgan, K. R. Nash, J. F. Pickhardt, T. K. Roper, J. C, Jr. Sargent, D. C. Sawyer, W. B. H. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Lynch, A. L. W ' allace, R. K. Schattman, E. D. Schermerhorn, A. E. Small, R. W. Spindler. D. J. Stilson, C. Streusand, A. L. Weed, G. H. Weis, S. Wheeler, R. T. White, F. W. Williams, N., Jr. Woodland, G. H. Wright, E. B. Wells, T. M. Wesson, R. Jonathan Edwards College . therton, W. R. Barker, W. C. L. Barr, R. J., Jr. Bayly, C. B., Jr. Bieringer, L. E. Bouscaren, H. V. Brumley, A. C. Campbell, H. M. Case, R. D. Gates, J. M., Jr. Clapp, E.J.,jr. CLASS OF 1936 Clark, R. E., Jr. Cohn, M. L. Cooke, R. B. Davis, H. W., 2nd de Mare, G. S. Dirlam, J. B. Dudley, G. A. Dwight, R. S., Jr. Fairman, F. W., Jr. Farrel, M. Flett,J.,Jr. Ford, W. J., Jr. Goodkind, L. W. Haddad, F. B. Hall, T. W., Jr. Heckscher, A., 2nd Holcombe, H. G., Jr. Holmes, J. H. Hotchkiss, S. T. Hoyt, N. D. Hughes, W. E. Irons, H. S., Jr. . J i X ST. RE4iil KOOF DINNER AND SUPPER DANCING JOHNNY GREEN Youthful Composer Pianisr, Donee Maestro WITH HIS ORCHESTRA MARJORY LOGAN Versatile Vocalist IS ENTERTAINMENT During Dinner and Supper •€ DINNER Weekdays $3.50, Saturdoy $4.00 SUPPER COUVERT Weekdays $1 00, Saturday $2 00 1 HEADQUARTERS FOR MEN ' S RACCOON COATS AND FUR LINED COATS GUNTHER 666 FIFTH AVENUE NEAR 53RD ST. NEW YORK The Yale Co-operative Corporation . . . is a Connecticut corporation existing under the laws of the State regulating the formation of cor- porations without capital stock. There are no stockholders in the Co-op. The Store was started in a small way in 1885 and incorporated in 1893. It has had 50 years of ex- perience in serving the University community. The Officers and Directors are members of the Faculty, Alumni, and Undergraduate Body of Yale University, and serve without pay, devoting their attention to the conduct of the business and to guiding its policies. Only direct employees of the Store receive salaries for their services. Earnings of the Store over and above what is re- quired for the conduct of the business can be used only to be returned to the members who join the corporation, and such returns are directly propor- tional to their purchases at the Store. YALE CO-OP Mftjy fiafliL BOOKS STATIONERY SPORTING GOODS MEN ' S CLOTHING TOILET ARTICLES PIPES— TOBACCO THE UNIVERSITY STORE Jarvis, R. W. Jr. Judd, R. H. Lee, W. Lincoln, R. B. Lord, J. F. Loutrel, L. F., Jr. McCuUough, J. G., 2nd Miller, J. S. Mitchell, L.,Jr. Morrison, E. H. Murdoch, C. C. Northrup, D. H. O ' Neil, G. P. Pearce, A. W. Peck, B. S. Rabinowitz, M. S. Richmond, N. Ripley, S. D., 2nd Rodgers, C. C. Schumann, J. L. Smith, C. M. Stahlnecker, C. S. Stanley, S. M. Stark, F. M. Steiner, G. R. Sturges, J. P. Thorpe, G. D. Wadelton, F. B., Jr. Warren, J. Whitcraft, E. C. R. White, F. R., Jr. Williams, A. N. Winfield, R. C. Winslow, A., and Woodruff, G. E. Woodruff, A. Woods, F. J. Woolsey, C. S. WorralhJ. H. CLASS OF 1937 Austin, H. A., Jr. Bauer, S. Beam, J. V.,Jr. Bernd, W. E., Jr. Bird, J. E. Blair, C.J., 2nd Blomfield, N. W. Borst, W. A. Botwinik, N. L Brainard, E. M. Brank, C. C. Brinkley, S. R., Jr. Bromfield, A. W. Brooks, H. Burke, C. C., 3rd Carroll, R. C, Jr. Darbee, H. Donaldson, R. A., 4th Edwards, R. A. Fasold, E. J. Florman, N. K. Gaines, R. W. Gorson, H. H. Greenblatt, M. H. Greenlee, R. M. Harding, C. J. Hargrave, D. W. Hufford, K. K. Jackson, E. S. Knishkowy. E. S. Lango, H. W. Magilnick, M. J. Martin, J. D. Maxwell, W. Mellitz, J. Miles, R. C. Miles, S. B. Morrison, K. A. Mumma, H. A., Jr. Mungall, D., Jr. Penn, R. S. Polk, O. B.,Jr. Potter, H. R. Potter, W. H. Rafferty, B. G. Robinson, J. T., Jr. Rogers, K. W. Scoville, H., Jr. Steinberg, G. R. Stevens, W. F. Sullivan, R. C. Taft, W. H. Walker, S. Wind, H. W. Wyeth, G. A., Jr. Yudkin, G. J. Zimmerman, T. M. CLASS OF i( Ball, P. Bayless, S. A. Bowers, L. W. Burrows, L. W. Carter, W. P. Carver, C, III Corbin, H. H., Jr. Feidelson, C. N., Jr. Garwood, D. A. Hills, N. G. Hills, O. W. Hutchinson, B. L., Jr Kaufmann, C. B., Jr. Kaufmann, R. MacGuire, J. B. McWeeney, J. X. Newstedt, J. R. Olmsted, A. W. Rosnick, F. B. Saunders, R. P. Schmidt, W. G. VanVechten, F. R., Jr. Ward, J. A. Weiler, G. H., Jr, Weiss, S. G. Wenden, H. E., Jr. Whitney, J. G. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Austin, H. A., Jr. Bouscaren, H. V. Brinsmade, D. S. Bump, M. R., Jr. Condit, P. C. Flanagan, W. J. Footman, H. R. Hale, W. R. Healy, W. P., Jr. Lamprecht, W. H., Jr. Scoville, H., Jr. Zimmerman, T. M. HtRfS SPttO t«RG ' . t!p7i Ihese are competitive times! Often the going is rough ! You have to l)e in top-notch shape — whether you ' re sprinting on the track or sprinting through the ordinary daily routine. That ' s why you shouhl eat at least one meal a day of Shredded Wheat and milk. For each delicious Shredde«l heat Bis- cuit is packed full of the energy you need. It supplies a natural balance of the vital health elements— i ' ji their most nppe- lizinsi and digestible form. Shredded Wheat is whole wheat — nothing added, nothing taken atvay. That means you get just the right amount of mineral salts, cal- cium, carhohydrates, proteins, vitamins, phosphorus, iron and hran. Get set I —for the most gruel- ing sprint. Try Shredded Wheat today! SHJIEDDED WHEAT ISt NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Uneeda Bakers ' Pierson College Barkhausen, H. N. Barnes, N. L., Jr. Beall, N. P., Jr. Beardsley, M. C. Berman, R. C. Bevan, J. A. Birge, R. B. Bissell, J. C. Blair, C. J. Blanchard, R. S. Block, W. K. Blum, J. A. Boyd, E. F., Jr. Bronson, W. W., and Bulkeley, M. G., 3rd Bunker, C. C. Carpenter, G. C. Chambers, P. S. Chatfield, M. M. Cheesewright, R. W. Clement, S. M., 2nd Cobb, R. F. Daly, J. J. Deasy, J. K. Bellinger, D. T. Ely, H. S.,Jr. English, R. B., Jr. Fenton, J. L. Francis, C. D., Jr. Gnade, R. E. CLASS OF 1936 Grumbach, G. J. Hamlin, D. Harriman, L. E. Henry, R. M. Howell, J. R. Johnson, D. R. Jordan, J. W. Kelsey, W. T. Kendall, J. R. Kitchel, A. F., Jr. Knapp, G. S. Kornreich, K. D. Langmuir, P. B. Lasell, E. L. Lawler, O. T. Levine, M. M. Lincoln, L. W. T. Lovell, W. N. McBride, H. W. McCann, T. A. McClintock, H. L. McCreery, F. R., Jr. Macdonald, H. G., Jr. McKnight, H. T. Mansfield, E. W. Mayers, E. D. Merrill, T. W. Mettler, J. W., Jr. Moore, R. A. Murray, J. C, Jr. Murray, W. S., Jr. Neal, C. G. Nichols, J. H. Peck, J. W. N. Pier, E. C. Preston, C. D. Qiiimby, L. C. Reid, W. Roberts, A. S. Rosenbaum, R. A. Rostow, W. W. Ryan, A. J. Smith, B. Snow, R. B. Sweet, C. W. Swenarton, B. H. Swift, D. E. Swift, W. E.,Jr. Thomas, R. W. Tracy, R. J. Walker, W. G. Ware, W. P. Warrington, J. W. Willard, L., Jr. Wilson, F. L. Wilson, L. A. S. Wolcott, H. R. Wright, T., Jr. Zellner, R. I Ailing, W. M., Jr. Anderson, V. H. Atlee, W. A. Badger, D. B., 2nd Bakalar, M. Barnes, A. MacC, Jr. Beardsley, S. B., Jr. Behr, K. H,, Jr. Behr, P. H. Bent, D. W. Bissell, J. W. Blount, F. McL Bradley, R. V. Brody, B. L. Bromley, R. N. Brown, A. B. Brown, J. Burbank, K. Carey, R. S. Cheney, T. Crosby, T. M. CLASS OF 1937 Dawson, H. C. Day, F. L.,Jr. Edgerton, C. E. Fisher, R. C. Fitch, P. H. Fletcher, R. C. Forster, J. E. Franklin, J. Golden, R. D. Goodwin, E. R. Griggs, T. W. Hail, E. Hall, G. T. Hall, P. N. Heinl, R. D., Jr. Hendrick, J. H. Hendrie, D. F. Hollander, G. H. Holme, J. S. Jarman, J. H., Jr. Jones, E. M. Jordan, G. G. Katz, W. S. Kaufman, E. S. Kilbourn, J. F., Jr. Kilbourn, S., VanD. Latimer, R. B. Lichenstein, J. M. Mclnerney, B. McLemore, J. B. McNeely, D. G. Merriss, W. E., 2nd Moir, E. MacF. Moore, K. U. Morrison, C. Munson, C. S., Jr. Myers, J. N. Peck, A. W., Jr. Peterkin, D., Jr. Pope, M. Reigelulh, J. B. Rennell, P. T. cJallo StllillO, 5nc, % %. 424 Madison Avenue i:y v y K H New York City V pP • W9tti| -T ' . Specializing in personal portraiture for Year Books ■V ▲. • Finest quality work plus unequalled service NEW HAVEN ' S LEADING THEATRES POLI BIJOU COLLEGE THE HOME OF ALL BIG HITS Rubin, R. H. Ryder, R. M. Sanford, H. W., Jr. Schwartz, D. D. Sutphin, D. V., 2nd Taggert, R. D. Tobin, C. J., Jr. Turner, H. McL., Jr. Wilson, J. L. Bailly, E. C.Jr. Baker, R. W., Jr. Bateson, E. F., Jr. Burke, M. K. Campbell, R. A. C ' .arrillo, E. Clifibrd, J. E., II Congdon, J. H., II Day, R. W. Francis, J. C. Gibbs,J. P. Bascom, J. H. Broadbent, R. B. Bromley, R. N. Daoust, E. CI., Jr. Duer, R. K. CILA.SS OF 1938 Harding, W. H. Keefe, D. F. Lee, A. M. McCann, J. M. Matthews, J. V. Murray, J. L. Nichols, G. E. Randell, W. N. Roberts, H. L. Runyon, W. N. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS English, R. B. Greene, C. F. Hinkle, T. M. Hogle, G. H. Shevelson, S. H., Jr. Shriver, R. S., Jr. Slick, T. B. Smith, T. G. Thacher, T. VVeinerman, E. R. Weinberger, J.J. Wilson, J. O. Wilson, S. S., Jr. Woolsey, J. M., Jr. Woolsev, R. B. Latimer, R. B. Sloan, H. E. .Spencer, W. H. Squire, S. R. Watson, C. B. Saybrook College Ahlers, J. G., Jr. Alker, H. R. Allen, H. G. Audette, C. LaP. Avres, F. M., Jr. Babcock, B. Bailey, J. W. Baldwin, G. H., Jr. Barnum, B. Belknap, R. E.,Jr. Berliss, A. D., Jr. Bird, J. W. Jr. Bishop, R. E. Jr. Bi.xby, W. H. Jr. Brean, H. P. Burrows, D. C. Campbell, C. J. Carroll, F. C. Gate, F. C, Jr. Chandlee, G. M., Jr. Church, M., 2iid Clarke, W.J. Coles, M. J. Cornish, A. L. Curtiss, D. B. Cutler, L. N. DeFoe, W. F. Dorm out. R. E. CLASS OF 1936 Drake, R. C. Ebbert, G. S., Jr. Eggert, J. R., Jr. Fearey, G. Feldmann, T. F. Ferguson, J. F., Jr. Flint, J. Q.. Francis, D. R., 3rd Gardner, H. A., Jr. Gordon, H. E. Gratwick, F. C, Jr. Hamill, C. Hairis, L. B. Hart, L. A. Havemever, H., Jr. Healey, J. F. Herman, R. E. Hildt, T., Jr. Hope, N. L. Hopkins, R. G. Huminski, R. F. Kadue, A. E. Klauck, F. R. Lamb, A. R., Jr. Levinson, J. O. Long, R. Eli Luby, R. M. Lumb, R. T. McKenna, A. J., Jr. McMurtrv, J. G. Mills, B., jr. Neal, A. L. Neville, N. L. Noble, D. G. Northrup, D. C;. O ' Reilly, F. D., Jr. Painter, F. M., Jr. Palen, F. P., Jr. Peck, E. W. Pfeiffer, J. E. Randall, L. D. Rawolle, F. M. Robinson, D. E., Jr. Rudiger, A. M. Scott Z. E., Jr. Shear. W. D. Sherk, F. A. Shriver, T. H. Squires, J. W. Stanger, J. H. Stilmar, F. B. Straus, S. S. Strieker, G. J. Sweet, S. E., Jr. Taylor, J. F. Tennant, D. M. II BLANKETING B.T.U ' s.««. is a fiiiirtioii well-performed by K M PIPE INSULATIONS. Ileathif; sys- tems reaeh their highest eflieieney ami eosts are held to a minimum when K M Insulations are applied to heating pipes. At Yale, K M PIPE INSULATION has been installed in the following hiiildings, as a safeguard against heat loss: Central Power Plant Sterling Power Plant Pierson Sage Power Plant Elm Dormitories Chemieal Laboratory Osborne Zoological Laboratory Sterling Laboratory Payne Whitney Gymnasium Keasbey Mattison Co. II a:mbler, penna. SPERRy BARNES HAMS BACON Prepared by a special dry cure process developed nearly a century ago, which imparts a distinc- tive flavor found only in these products. THE Sperry Barnes Company NEW HAVEN, CONN. If your father was a Yale man, he prob- ably had his barber- ins done by ... . EMIL H. KOSSACK Yale Barber Since 1893 262 2 YORK STREET Opposite Saybrook Telephone 8-5861 The Rosenbaiim Tutoring School A record of twenty-nine years of successful tutoring We refer jou to any upperclassman ABEL G. CUGELL, IQVm CflRGY GRflni who plays at the Paramount UJ€LL GROomcD mcn use monflRCH LflunDCRinG and DRY CL€flninG Their clothing and linens have that professionally laundered appearance, while suits and overcoats reflect our Individual Attention Dry Cleaning. They become outstanding. Branch Office: 2S0 York Street MDNTIRCH LnUNORY 149-157 DERBY flVE i( SS:|jlP NEW H?1VEN,CaN( EVERYTHINQ STERILIZED R SPECIflL LAUNDRY SERVICE FOR STUDENTS SHIRTS hava just the proper amount of sizing. The collars are comfortable — no scratching nor bulging — points lay flat. BUTTOnS on shirts and other articles of clothing are replaced or securely fastened when our inspections show it to be necessary. DflRninG SOCKS and repairing all garments are part of our service free to students. 10% DISCOUriT for cash and carry at our Branch Office, 260 York St., opp. Harkness. NDNnRCH LnUNDHY EVERYTHINQ STERILIZED Thacher, S. D. Thompson, A. W. Town send, W. K. Walsh, H. C. Wilbur, E. A. Williams, J. B. Wright, H. R. Allen, R. C, Jr. Arms, C. S. Baird, D. H. Bass, P. R. Bennett, C:. C. Bishop, H. R. Bonbright, W. P. Boyce, J. C. G. Brace, M. Jr. Brown, McI. Bryant, R. W. Chapin, R. O., Jr. Cody, H. S., Jr. Cohn, L. E. Cook, H. S. C:ooke, M. Davol, R. T. DeLorenzo, J. P. Drexel, A. Ducibella, S. F. Fabian, F. G., Jr. Farrell, J. A. Gagne, R. M. Gieg, C. F. Grossbeck, F. A. Haggerty, D. F. Hail M. B., Jr. CLASS OF 1937 Harman, R. A. Harmon, F. W. Hermanson, B. G. Higgins, N. R. Hollister, J. R. Holzman, I. J. Hutchins, L. W. Hylan, W. H., Jr. Jenks, D. B. Katz, M. R. Katz, M. S. Kay, T. Keach, P. B. Kenner, R. W. Kenyon, E. H. Kerr, J. D. Kohlmann, B. L. Krickl, A. W. Lathbury, B. K. Laussucq, H. P. L., Jr. Letchworth, G. J., Jr. Lewis, M. B. Long, R., Edgar Lynde, S. A., 2nd MacCammond, L D. McFadden, L. E. McKenna, A. J., Jr. McMuUen, H. W. McNamee, D. V., Jr. McWilliams, A. R., Jr. Marshall, R. C. Meyer. E. Mitchell, J. H. Morrill, G. B., Jr. Packer, J. B., Jr. Percy, G. W., ' jr. Ramsey, J. C. Raymond, E. A. Richard, J. A. Robinson, J. T. Robinson-Dufi J., Jr. Sachs, M. Skeats, J. M. Smoyer, C. E,, 2nd Stone, R. B. Straub, J. E. Tracey, J. L, Jr. Turner, J. S. Walker, M. C. Wallman, M. Wilson, F. B. Wofsev, E. J. Woodland, W. T. Woodruff, F. G. CLASS OF ic Athey, S. W. Board, S. S., Jr. Brooks, D. L. Buckley, J. E. Chase, F. R. Collens, J. L. Cutler, R. W. Danforth, W. H. Dankin, A. H. DiFilippo, L. M. Donohue, M. A., Jr. Escher, F., Jr. Gabriel, H. B. Hostetter, H. T. Kenner, F. L. King, H. L. Krebs, W. A. W,, Jr. Lehmann, R. O. McAndre AS, J. T. McMullen, W. C. Mason, E. G. O ' Brien, D. T. Peter, W. F., HI Petitjean, W. G. Thompson, N. F., HI VanBenschoten, R. L Watson, B. Williams, R. P. Alkcr, H. R. Allen, H. G. Bird, J. W. Dempsey, F. W. Despard, V. Easton, R. . ON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Ellis, R. E. Fabian, F. G., Jr. Farrell, J. A. Gagnon, A. J. Jon es, T. A. D., Jr. Leighton, W. B. Letchworth, G. J., Jr. Pond, S. A. Robinson, T. R., Jr Stearns, G. S. Trull, A. L. Upton, J., Jr. Woodland, W. T. Hats by WHITE of New Haven As typical of Yale as the streets for which they are named Agencies in all principal cities throughout the country 1020 Chapel St., opp. Vanderbilt NEW HAVEN ' S LEADING THEATRE Featuring the Finest in Screen and Stage Attractions ' HOME OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES ' Timothy Dwight College Ahlers, J. G.,Jr. Angelopoulos, N. C. Bodholt, I. F. Campbell, W. P. Gates, J. M., Jr. Coles, V. R. (Henrv Fellow) Abbott, G., Jr. Alexander, R. F. Ammann, M. C. Anderson, J. C. Armstrong, R. G. Arnold, N. K. Avery, R. B. Axton, I. T., Jr. Barber, G. H., Jr. Barron, H. B. Bauer, J. B. Benoist, H., Jr. Blume, A. E. Bourdon, E. R. Bowen, V. T. Boyd, W., Jr. Caldwell, J. S. Carr, R. B. Carroll, C. P., Jr. Carroll, D. G. Clark, R. W., Jr. Clifford, F. J.,Jr. Comstock, E. Davis, D. H. Dodds, R. J., Jr. Donovan, J. A., Jr. Dougherty, W. L. CLASS OF 1936 Clapp, E. J., Jr. Hyde, D. A. Katzman, B. McGoodwin, D. McKenna, A. J., Jr. CLASS OF 1937 Dulmage, H. D. Egan, T. P. Ehrich, M. W., Jr. Ericson, E. W. Farian, R. A. Ficker, N. T. Forbes, R. S. Fuller, D. C. Fytelson, M. Ghaster, E. F. Grant, J. B. Gregg, T. H. Hartzell, J. S. Harvey, E. R., Jr. Hicko.x, C. Honnold, P. C. Hoopes, A. H. Hunter, D. Jehle,A.J.,Jr. Juarrero, F. Kann, P. J. Keyes, F. Keyes, T. F., Jr. Korn, H.J. London, F. M., Jr. Love, H. M. Lucey, R. E. Randall, L. D. Shapiro, D. A. Swift, H. M. Walsh, H. C. Zier, S. A. McKaig, C. A. McLanahan, G. X. McQuaid, P. A., Jr. Maas, C;. F. Magee, E.J. Matthews, H. B., Jr. Muller, E. N., Jr. Orth, F. L. Patton, J. J. Pierson, J. S. .S. Ramsbottom, J. Rees, W. M. Riley, W. P. Robinson, R. S. Saunders, W. K. Schroeder, E. C. Schutz, R. H. Sharretts, T. B. Shepard, J. R. Smidt, T. R. Stanford, R. B. Stratton, F. P. Stursberg, E. A. Thorpe, G. W. Tomeu-Lamar, G. A. Toohey, J. L., Jr. Wilkins, H. F. Wittenberg, L., Jr. Arrom, J. J. Bancroft, L. Barlow, CM. Bedell, A. W. Brogna, V. R. Burlingame, E. Campbell, T. L. Catherwood. J. C. Childs, C. L., Jr. Cohen, S. J. Creadick, R. G. Danielson, J. D. Davidonis, A. C. J. Davis, H. W., Jr. Dempsey, J. H., Jr. CLASS OF 1938 Dilworth, J. R. Duff, W. R. Duggan, P. R., Jr. Duke, A. B. Fish, N. Fisher, Benjamin R. Fisher, Burton R. Flynn,J. J., 3rd Fosburgh, P. W. Fuller, L. D. Giesen, R. S. Goldstein, G. L. Gordon, E. McG. Greene, A. J. Gunter, A. C. Hessberg, A., 2d Hodge, W. T., Jr. Holbrook, W. N. Hooper, W. T., Jr. Howe, C. Hull, R. W. Husted, W. H. Hyslop, J. McN. Jamison, P. B., Jr. Johnson, H. P. Jones, E. S. Judd, C. M., H Keeney, R., Jr. Kilpatrick, J. L.,Jr. Leyden, N. F. For a day or a week in New York — William Sloane House y.M.c.A 1493 rooms at 75c and $1.00 doubles $1.30 -$1.50 Clean Comfortable Convenient 356 W. 34 ' St. at Ninth Ave. BRyant 9-9870 Lieber, A., Jr. Lord, R. E., Jr. McLaughlin, R. A. MacQuillan, W. J. Mackintosh, W. Maloney, R. F., Jr. Meneely, J. K., Jr. Miller, D., Jr. Millet, G. W., Jr. Mitchell, J. C, II Moor, W. A. Muir, M., Jr. Murphy, A. W. Cooke, R. A. Haviland, D. Holshan, M. J. Ingersoll, R. S. Johnson, L., Ill Neuhaus, H. V. Jr. Newberry, R. C. Newton, R. G. Oliver, H. W. Orthwein, W. R., Jr. Pearce, R. I. Perkins, W. Pettus, W. G., Jr. Roseman, R. J. Savage, J. F., Jr. Shinkle, R. T. Simpson, R. L. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Kinne, McK. McNeil, R. L., Jr. Makepeace, L. B. Mestre, G. O. Stewart, J. H., Jr. Swords, G. S. Taylor, W. C. Viscidi, P. Wear, D. F. Webb, J. W., Jr. Webre, A. L., Jr. Wentling, T. L. Wettstein, T. F., Ji Wilson, R. B. Wilson, T. F. Yood, B. Zweig, F. Raymond, D. A. Sharpe, N. Tuttle, H. M. Yer. a, D.J. Yost, J. M. Adler, A. H.,Jr. Allen, C. B. Anderson, A. E., Jr. Armstrong, J. C. Avery, W. A., Jr. Bauer, A. G., Jr. Beecher, J. W., 2nd Bingham, J. B. Blackmer, F. H. Blethen, W. K. Blustein, L. E. Bosworth, R. S., Jr. Brouwer, O., 3rd Brown, F., Jr. Cavanagh, A. E. Chikovskv, J. A. Chisholm ' , H. J.,Jr. Curtin, T. F., Jr. Daghlian, P. B. Deming, A. S. Deming, E. G. Denton, A. S. Donohue, J. F. Farnham, S. Adams, H. S. Altbrd, W. J., 3rd Amory, E. H., Jr. Arnolsky, E. M. Ballard, C. E., Jr. Trumb ull College CLASS OF 1936 Fullman, J. B. Graeber, R. P. Graham, R. C. Hanrahan, J. C. Hersey, J. R. Hetherington, F. S., Jr. Howard, J. B. Hull, H. A. Keating, T. A., Jr. Kerr, C. B. Kling, C. F. Lassiter, F. H. Leiner, A. L. Lippman, R. W. McBurney, A. M., Jr. McQueeney, A. J. Mallinson, H. R. Maroney, W. T. Menton, M. F. Miller, J. B. Miller, W. P. Nahigian, R. Pease, D. C. Peck, W. H., Jr. Perry, W., Jr. CLASS OF 1937 Brown, G. H. Buchman, J. B. Buck, G. S. Clarmalt, W., Jr. Christner, E. P. Pierpont, J. R. Porter, C. T., Jr. Rankin, B. C. Raymond, C. W. Richardson, D. Ruley, B. T. Sinton, R. E. Sisson, G. T. Sloan, J. D. Smick, A. E. Sperry, R. H. Steever, E. Z., 4th Steiner, R. L. Succop, W. G. Sullivan, W. E. Sumner, C, Jr. Sweeney, R. G. Taylor, R. C. Timm, A. B., Jr. Tomlinson, E. P. Train, R. Voorhees, D. G. Wallace, L. F. Young, J. W., Jr. Cowles, L. R. Cullman, W. A. Darling, P. G. Dickevs R. E. Dixon ' A. B. PHONE 8-8400 OTTO SCHIEBEL, Mgr. Sheff Garage A A Storage, Washing, Greasing Emergency Service and Towing Emergency Service Conveniently Located 385 TEMPLE STREET NEW HAVEN, CONN. ESTABUSHED 1898 Glouskifv Fox Jewelers to Yule Men Makers of Fraternity Pins, Trophies Medals and Club Charms Designs and Estimates Furnished lOOS CHAPEL STREET 0pp. Yale Art School TAILORS — IMPORTERS ACCESSORIES When in New York visit our New York store at 562 Fifth Avenue Corner 46th Street. Make it your headquarters and meeting place. Every courtesy will he extended to you. New Haven 1050 Chapel St. New York 562 Fifth Ave. OUINNIPIACK PRESS, INC. 261 CHAPEL STREET, NEW HAVEN HENRY W. FARNAM, Jr., ' 17. President PERIODICALS BOOKS COMMERCIAL PRINTING CATALOGS BINDING PRINTERS TO MANY YALE UNDERGRADUATE ORGANIZATIONS Draper, A. J. Durham, R. C. Evans, J. T. Foran, J. A. Fox, W. C, Jr. Freed, R. N. Freiberg, J. Gallagher, R. S. Gallaiid, R. I. Gates, C. H. Green, W. W. Hartley, J. Hewes, T. C. Hotkin, D. Jablonski, E. J. Jack, J. L., Jr. Kaufman, H. A. Kenna,J. W. Kelley, L. M. Littlefield, C. E Loomis, C. H. Lyons, H.J. McNaughton, J. N Margulies, C. Mason, M. R. Miller, W. J. Mochan, B. N Molnar, G.J. Moore, W. A. Morris, A. L. Morrissey, J. C. Morse, R. T. Murtha, A. H. Myers, R. C. Nicklos, G. E. E. 2nd ■Jr. Peters, J. H. Proxmire, T. S., Jr. Rieber, H. M. Roraback, A. E., Jr. Roulstone, W. B., Jr. Royal, H. C., Jr. Savage, E., Jr. Sinish, K. W. Smith, H. O., Jr. Strelinger, G. P., Jr. Strobridge, W. B. Thomson, C. D. Townsend, S. J. C. Trull, A. L. Turner, A. J. Wade, J. A. Jr. Wright, H. J., Jr. Bato, A. G. Bennett, J. E. Colwell, D. G. Ecklund, J. E. Finlayson, M. W. Foskett, P. F. Christner, E. P. Dixon, A. B. Gesell, W. H. CLASS OF 1938 Frantz, C. L. Jones, J. H. Luccock, R. E. Marvin, G. J. Ollayos, R. W. J. Sapir, P. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS Hunting, R. D. Lunken, E. P. Scott, E. H. Seamon, W. E. Seybolt, J. F. Seymour, E. H. Smith, R. A. Streeter, G. A. Rankin, A. M. Townsend, S. J. C. Turbert, E. J., Jr. feaiurinq ROGERS PEET CLOTHES including Rogers Peet ' s famous FORECASTER clothes at «45 1048 Chapel Street New Haven Ind ex Administration . . 14 Advertisements iii Alpha Clii Rho 60 Alpha Delta Phi 62 Alpha Sigma Phi 64 Alumni Board 18 Andover School CUub 260 Association Football Season University Team 210 Freshman Team 221 Athletics 156 Major Sports Teams 1 68 Minor Sports Teams 206 College Teams 235 Aurelian 56 Band 1 1 y Banner and Pot Pourri 92 Baseball Season University Association . . . . igi Freshman Team 195 Championship Jonathan Edwards Baseball Team 235 Basketball Season University Association .... 206 Freshman Team 222 Championship Branford Basketball Team 236 Berkeley College 124, 11 Berkshire School Ckib 262 Berzelius 52 Beta Theta Pi 66 Board of Control, Athletic . . . . 161 Book and Bond 86 Book and Snake 54 Boxing Seasoii University Association . . . . 211 Freshman Team 223 Branford College 128, iv Budget Committees 118 Calhoun College 132, viii Campus Views 6 Cannon and Castle 252 Canterbury School C!lul) 263 Catholic Club 112 Cheer Leaders 1 73 Chi Delta Theta 39 Chi Psi 68 Choate School Club 264 Choir 116 Church of Christ in Yale University . . 109 Colleges 122 Corporation 18 Cross Country Season University Association . . . . 188 Freshman Team 189 Crew Season University Boat Club . . . . 197 Junior University Crew .... 200 University 150-lb. Crew .... 201 Freshman Crew 202 Freshman 150-Pound Crew . . . 203 Championship Vanderbilt Crew . . 237 Davenport College 136, x Debating 120 Dedication 5 Delta Kappa Epsilon 70 Directory of College Allocations for 1935- 1936 I Dramatic Association 106 Dwight Hall no Elihu 50 Fence Club 72 Fencing Season University Association . . . . 212 Freshman Team 224 C ' hampionship Jon. Edwards Team 238 Football Records 163 Football Season University Association . . . . 169 University 150-lb. Team . . . . 174 Freshman Team 1 75 Championship ' anderbilt Football Team 239 Franklin Hall 76 Do you know thiit Vrinccton is a delightful pLice to week-end or vacation Thcit the Princeton Inn offers the facilities of the exclusive resort hotels t That special, attractive, weekly rates, including t??eals, are quoted through- out the year? We solicit your inquiries. Address: J. HOWARD SLOCUM, Mane iger THE PRINCETON INN Under the same management . . . THE FLANDERS, Ocean City, N. J. Freshman Biographies 282 (In Freshman Fdition only) Glee Club 114 Golf Season University Association . . . . 213 Freshman Team 225 Ghampionship Vanderhilt Golf Team 240 Grenfell Association 253 Graduate Committees, Athletic . . . 161 Groton School Club 2(35 Hermon School Club 266 Hockey Season University Association . . . . 177 Freshman Team 181 Championship Pierson Hockey Team 241 Honors and Honor Societies ... 32 Hotchkiss School Club 267 Intercollegiate Athletics, by W. H. Neale 232 Interfraternity Council 27 Jonathan Edwards College. . . 140, xii Junior Fraternities 58 Kent School Club 268 Kingswood School Club 269 Lacrosse Season University Association . . . .214 Freshman Team 226 Lawrenceville School Club . . . .270 Literary Magazine 99 Loomis School Club 271 Mercersburg School Club 272 Miscellaneous Activities 246 Mohicans 259 Mory ' s Association 256 Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps 248 News 95 Officers of the University 19 Organizations 90 Phi Beta Kappa 36 Physical Education, by Robert J. H. Kiphuth 204 Pierson College .... 144, xviii Political Union 255 Polo Season University Association . . . . 215 Freshman Team 227 Pomfret School Club 273 Promenade Committees Junior 30 Senior 28 Pundits 258 Record 102 Reserve Officers Training Corps . . . 250 Rifle Association 216 Rovmd Table 254 Sachem Club 88 St. Anthony Hall 78 St. Elmo 80 St. Louis Country Day School Club . . 274 St. Mark ' s School Club 275 St. Paul Academy Club 276 Saybrook College 148, xx Scholarship Honors Academic 34 Sheffield 35 Scroll and Key 46 Second Year of the College Plan, by James R. Angell 17 Senior Class Books Academic 104 Sheffield 105 Senior Class Officers Academic 21 Sheffield 23 Senior Societies 40 Sheff Clubs 58 Sheffield Presidents Committee ... 26 Sigma Xi 37 Skull and Bones 44 Social Life under the College Plan, by VV. H. Charles, ' 35 42 Squash Racquets Season University Association . . . . 217 Freshman Team 228 Championship Calhoun Squash-Racquets Team 242 CHARLES MERBERG AND SONS, INC. 317 KEMBERLY AVE., NEW HAVEN, CONN. Tony Williams Co. . ' 51 Fair street Phone o-IO+ ' i Handler. ' of Iligli (iradc California and Florida Oranges and Graptfrnif Bananas a .Specialty Jerry Cappiello Private Tailor with Qualily Prices Special to College Men 7 Hughes Place 5-6045 The HAM) Wai .v the BEST Wtn BEST HAND LAUNDRY Servinii Vale for orer Twelve ijears Our many satisfied customers are our best advertisement Look for the truck at Vale Station. Bring your laundry tliere on the way to class and SA e YOUR MONEY Inqinrc (ihaiit nitr nntiual flat rules now. Student Councils Sheffield 24 Interfraternity ...... 27 Swimming Season University Association 208 Freshman Team 229 Championship Pierson Swimming Team 243 Taft School Club 277 Tau Beta Pi 38 Tennis Season University Association . . . .218 Freshman Team 230 Championship Wright Tennis Team 244 Thacher School Club 278 Timothy Dwight College .... xxvi Torch 57 Touch Football Championship Pierson Team . . . 245 Track Season University Association . . . . 183 Freshman Team 187 Trimibull College 152, xxvin Undergraduate Athletic Association . . 162 University Athletics, by Malcolm Farmer 158 Vernon Hall 82 Water Polo .Association 219 Wesley Foundation 113 Whiffenpoofs 257 Williston School Club 279 Wolf ' s Head 48 Wrestling Season University Association .... 220 Freshman Team 231 Y Men Major 166 Minor 167 York Hall 84 Zeta Psi 74 Associated Student Agencies Run by self-supporting students with the official sanction of the Bureau of Appointments, the Student Agencies offer the most complete service to Yale men at the lowest possible prices. All the every-day necessities of the undergraduate such as room furnishings, fire-wood, suit pressing, laundry, typing, etc., are handled by these organizations from their general office at 1 1 1 1 Chapel Street. Make inquiries at iiii Chapel Street or at the Bureau of Appointments, 144 Grove Street. List of Agencies Banner Blotter Bowl Concession Box Bureau of Accommodations Calendar Cap and Gown Christmas Card Commons News Stand Dance Orchestra Desk Calendar Distributing Eli Book Furniture General Sales Yale Index Laundry Magazine Newspaper Pictttre Pipe Print Student Tutoring Service Suit Pressing Supply Service Transfer Typewriting University Discount Plan Wood Writing Paper Yale Guide Keep in touch wi th your classmates and with Yale through the new Yale Alumni Weekly E.stal)lislie(l l)y the Ydlc Xcws in 1S91 and now owned by a corporation consisting of representative Yale gradu- ates from all over the country, the Yale Alumni Weekly was this spring- adjudged the best alumni ])ul)lication among the major universities ' and getting bettei- every minute. Your Alumni Weekly contains not only the cream of l niversity news, digested for the tired business man. and fascinating articles on woi ' ld affairs by men on the Faculty who know their stuff, but also behind-the-scoie news of Campus goings-on and athletics by Dick Moore; many pictures; and volumin- ous perst)nal notes from the Class Secretary and the Secretary ' s Office about your classmates, in the Alumni Notes. Hop on lioard at the ridiculously low subscrip- tion price (below) for Classes less than four years out, and be one of those who knows what ' s going on up at New Haven and what your friends are doing after grad- uation. Special Subscription Rale for the Class of 193.5 until the Triennial Re- union in 1938 — .S2.50 per man per year, paid in advance. W hy not start with the July, 1935. Commencement Number, containing the story and pictures of your graduation? 72 pages you ' ll never forget. We Yale Alumni Weekly 315 Whitney Avenue New Haven, Conn. NEWARK FRUIT COMPANY, Inc. Wholesale Fruit and Produce Native Produce Our Specialty 54 HILL STREET NEW HAVEN Owned and operated by Yale men 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 Banner an d Pot Pourris liack to the very early issues. KV (■«« replace a losr Class Bool; Pa mphlets, Lectures ami Addresses Class Poems and Orations Unique Books about Vale Pictures of Vale in the Pasi Etchings of Present Day Yale J ' ndrrijradndtr Pulilicnlions EDUCATIONAL BOOKS. 5 BROADWAY. NEW HAVEN. CT 24 HOUR SERVICE The Downtown Garase Complete Motor Service and Monthly Storage Crown and High Streets New Haven, Conn. Phone 7-1445 JAMES J. McDonnell Iniportcr tind RiuiMer of the FINEST COFFEE A]jproved and served at Y;de The Colleges, Dining Halls, Fraternities and Clubs i:5!) MEADOW STREET NEW HAVEN. CONN. SOUND manafierul pohcie;, and lone successful experience have provided qi us wiih sufficient equipment adequate personnel and ample resources to render dependable service as artists and makers of fine prmting plates. That you will be secure from chance, is our first promise. JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., - Chicago, Illinois In ihe foreground - Ft. Dearborn re-erected in Grant Park on Chicago ' s lake front. Illustration by Jahn 6- Oilier Art Studios. yfficial Photographer to the Yale Banner Pot Pourri Yale Senior Academic Year Bool Yale Senior Sheffield Year Book The views in this pul)Hcatioii are but a few of the many others we have on file of the Yale Campus. Prints can be secured in 11x14 inch size mounted on white mounts. Negatives of the students jjhotographed in this book are also on file, dui)licale phototfraplis can be obtained by writing to ZAMSKY STUDIO YALE RECORD BUILDING ' •254 ' YoHK Street New Haven, Conn. Plioingnipher.i for more than ONE HJjyDRED .school and college annuals each year ll T rivately T rinted The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri is a fine example of a limited edition, privately printed. The staff of this book and an increasing number of other private publishers have been turning to organizations which specialize in the production of fine brochures, magazines, and privately printed books. For more than a century The Andover Press has served such publishers, planning and printing class annuals, descriptive booklets, genealogies, and other quality publications. THE ANDOVER PRESS ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS Telephone Andover 143 School and College P r i u tt I or over a Ceiiturv
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